Multiple acts from the island will grace the stage at the Memorial Day Weekend event.
Bernadette Pajer is back again with her Professor Bradshaw Mysteries.
Chiara D’Angelo’s deep connection to the earth started with her passion for the Puget Sound. She has been swimming in it year-round since she was a small child, at first off the Kingston beach where she was born and now here on Bainbridge Island.
Tom Kelly moved to Bainbridge Island in 1989 as a sports reporter for the Seattle Times. It was high time for sports reporting around then. Ken Griffey Jr. was cracking a bat for the Mariners, and Seahawks wide-reciever Steve Largent retired the same year.
This year on Sunday, Feb. 24, in its 41st consecutive year on Bainbridge Island. t’s one of the few days a year that ferry riders don’t take their car and cyclists of all types come together for one hilly ride.
In the past few weeks, the Pegasus has brought in additions to their above-the-door marquee that owners Jocelyn and Jeff Waite are hoping will encourage another facet to their European-style coffee house: an evening hub.
This Friday, The Paradise Theater School will be bringing Welles to the Bainbridge Island Museum of Art in its performance, “Rosebud: The Lives of Orson Welles.”
Bob McAllister has been an English and theater teacher on the island since the Vietnam War.
Bainbridge High School’s Student Run One Acts is one of the most attended events of the year for the school’s drama students.
Storytelling is one of those age-old traditions that today collects dust as a faint but fond memory of our childhood. And though briefly revived with the birth of our own families, it is again left behind as our children grow too old to sit in bed and listen to us read the sing-along books we collected for them.
The Bainbridge Symphony Orchestra announced violinist Marianne Martinoli, 15, of Monroe as their 2013 Young Artist Concerto Competition winner.
BPA presentation of the ‘25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee’ promises a comedy show good for kids and adults alike.
Stewart Daniels has been doing art for more than 30 years, both as a hobby and commercially. Today, his paintings look little like the work of his past and yet they reflect Daniels becoming the man he always was.