Enjoy diverse concerts in the park this...
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Enjoy diverse concerts
in the park this summer
Surf City is going to be alive with music this summer.
Three separate city-sponsored series present plenty of opportunity
to enjoy a diverse array of music for everyone in the family. For
seven weeks in the summer, the Huntington Beach Concert Band will be
hosting the “Concerts in the Park,” a Sunday afternoon big band and
jazz series. The city also sponsors a range of concerts at the
Huntington Beach Pier Plaza, while the Huntington Beach Art Center
presents its own line of jazz performances.
The “Concert in the Park” series begins this Sunday with a concert
by the city’s own Huntington Beach Concert Band, a 32-year-old
60-member performance band that regularly performs Americana, big
band and patriotic music.
“We get together and have a great time making music together,”
band member Thomas Ridley said.
Audience members are encouraged to bring their own blankets and
chairs, and even a picnic dinner. All concerts begin at 5 p.m. Here
is a list of the bands playing the series this summer:
* Sunday: Huntington Beach Concert Band
* July 3: Moonlight Express -- Standard and classic big band swing
music
* July 10: Los Angeles Police Jazz -- Jazz standards
* July 17: Symphonic Band of Orange -- Patriotic music and
traditional marches
* July 24: Tom Kubis and the Golden West Jazz Orchestra --
Contemporary straight-ahead jazz
* July 31: Huntington Beach Concert Band
* August 7: Bones West -- Trombone ensemble with big band
arrangements of piano, bass and drums.
Those looking for a musical experience closer to the water should
check out the many concerts held each Sunday at the Huntington Beach
Pier. Concerts are organized through the Community Services
Department and begin at 1 p.m.
* Sunday: Leroy Thomas & the Zydeco Road Runners -- zydeco, blues,
R&B;, Cajun and other forms of Louisiana music.
* July 10: Earl Thomas -- R&B; and soul; Bill Magee Band -- guitar
virtuosos with New York/Chicago blues sound.
* July 17: The Bone Daddys -- Funk, African, R&B;, soul, reggae,
roots, rockabilly and more.
* August 7: Surfing Sunday’s concert series, sponsored by Surfing
Music
* August 21: Katia Moreas and -- World music
* August 28: Conjunto Jardin -- Salsa music
The Huntington Beach Art Center also hosts its own jazz series at
538 Main St. This Sunday at 4:30 p.m., the center will be hosting
jazz vocalist Dee Dee McNeil. For more information, call (714)
374-1650.
Reality TV show casting call in H.B.
Real estate mogul Donald Trump wants to “fire” you.
Producers for “The Apprentice” television show are holding an open
casting call in Huntington Beach Saturday to recruit contestants for
the popular NBC reality series. The audition will begin at 9 a.m. at
the 5 Points Plaza shopping center.
Producer Scott Salyers said he expected between 200 to 800 to
audition Saturday. Contestants will be interviewed in small groups of
six to 12 and asked to debate popular topics. Last year contestants
debated who they supported in the November 2004 election. After the
group sessions, producers will call back participants for a second
one-on-one interview -- the second step in a very long casting
process.
“From the time they do the first interview to actually making it
on the show, it takes about two months,” Salyers said.
Orange County is the first stop on a 16-stop cross-county casting
tour that will stretch through July and end in San Diego, Salyers
said. Between 16 to 18 people are expected to be cast for the show,
which will tape in the fall and air in Spring 2006.
Salyers encourages applicants to wear normal work attire to the
casting call, and act natural.
“Don’t try to be someone you’re not,” he said. “The best thing you
can do is just be yourself.”
Contestants are only asked to bring a completed application, which
can be downloaded from NBC.com.
Hyatt names new general manager
Cheryl L. Phelps, a 31-year hospitality industry veteran, has been
named general manager of the 517-room Hyatt Regency Huntington Beach
Resort & Spa. She replaces the property’s original general manager,
Cormac O’Modhrain, who is joining the resort’s ownership group, the
Robert Mayer Corporation, as president of its new Hospitality
Management Company.
This promotion marks Phelps’ 16th career move with the Hyatt
during her 31 years at the company, and is a homecoming for the
longtime Huntington Beach resident.
“Hyatt Regency Huntington Beach Resort & Spa is one of the most
spectacular resorts in the Hyatt portfolio, and I am honored by this
appointment,” said Phelps in a press release. “I am looking forward
to contributing to the resort’s continued success and to becoming
actively involved in the community.”
Phelps is currently a vice president and managing director for
Hyatt and also serves as general manager of the 522-room Hyatt
Regency Long Beach. She began her career as a front desk agent at the
Hyatt Regency Houston.
During the course of her career, she has served in various line
and managerial positions with Hyatt Hotels, and has managed eight of
the company’s properties ranging in size from 283 rooms to 1,234
rooms. In 1979, she became the first female general manager for Hyatt
Hotels at the Queen Mary in Long Beach, then a Hyatt property. She
has served as general manager of Hyatt City of Commerce, Calif.;
Hyatt Regency Tampa, Fla.; Hyatt Regency Houston; Hyatt Regency
Waikiki, Honolulu; Park Hyatt San Francisco; Hyatt Regency San
Francisco Airport, and Hyatt Regency Long Beach.
In 1992, she was named regional managing director over six Hyatt
hotels in Northern California. She has been nominated for general
manager of the year three times, and was awarded the honor in 1989.
Phelps graduated with distinction with a bachelor of arts degree
from the University of Hawaii. She completed the Kellogg Executive
Program at the Graduate School of Management at Northwestern
University in 1991. Throughout her career she has been actively
involved in industry and public/community organizations, serving on
numerous boards of directors. She also dedicates a significant
percentage of her free time to mentoring university-level students
pursuing careers in hotel and restaurant management.
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