FOOD & DRINK
David Sanborn dies; saxophone legend played Syracuse Jazz Fest and Woodstock
David Sanborn, a Grammy-winning saxophonist who played the Syracuse Jazz Festival and Woodstock, has died. He was 78. NPR reports Sanborn died Sunday in Tarrytown, N.Y. An official statement said the cause of death was complications due to prostate cancer, which he had been battling since 2018. If you purchase...
Hudson Valley Homeowners: Master Spring Mouse Control with These Tips!
Don't wait for a mouse to takeover your Hudson Valley home! Take action now to keep your home pest-free this spring. • Food Storage: Safeguard all food items in airtight containers, particularly grains and cereals. Not only does this preserve the freshness of your Lucky Charms, but it also reduces the attractiveness of your home by limiting the food supply. That Nickleback CD collection will ALSO reduce the attractiveness of your home.
Happy Mother’s Day from Mid-Hudson News
The entire team at Mid-Hudson News and I would like to wish a Happy Mother’s Day to all the wonderful moms in the Hudson Valley. Our mothers are the backbone of our families: They are caring, loving, patient and hardworking, and it is important that we recognize all that they selflessly do for us today and every day. My mom taught me so much and has always been there for me, and my wonderful wife, Erin, has done the same for our three children.
THEATER REVIEW: ‘Uncle Vanya’ plays at Bridge Street Theatre in Catskill, N.Y. through May 19
Bridge Street Theatre in Catskill, N.Y. Written by Anton Chekhov, adapted by Conor McPherson. Vanya is 47, single, frustrated, living with his mother and his niece and a few devoted servants in a farmhouse on depleted land far from the woman he loves, who has married Vanya’s aged brother-in-law. His niece, Sonya, is in love with Vanya’s best friend, a doctor who drinks too much and is in love with Vanya’s sister-in-law. At the end of the fourth act, Vanya and Sonya are pretty much where they were at the start of Act One: little changed, still frustrated, and still committed to one another personally and professionally. Playwright Anton Chekhov clearly wants us to know that the incidents in our lives don’t necessarily move us onto a new level of life but merely gently shove us back into our own reality. The current production at Bridge Street Theatre in Catskill, N.Y. uses the talents of many wonderful people to deliver the playwright’s message of the futility of life’s passing experiences.
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