Spring Downtown Community Cleanup
The Spring Downtown Community Cleanup begins April 6 at 5:00 pm at the Coral Gables Chamber of Commerce, followed by refreshments at Books & Books.
The Spring Downtown Community Cleanup begins April 6 at 5:00 pm at the Coral Gables Chamber of Commerce, followed by refreshments at Books & Books.
Graziano's is celebrating National Empanada Day on April 8 with $1.99 empanadas all day at all locations. One day, one price, one of Argentina's most beloved dishes.
The Adrienne Arsht Center presents a special screening of The Notebook at Coral Gables Art Cinema ahead of the stage musical's run at the Arsht Center May 5 through 10. The film stars Rachel McAdams and Ryan Gosling and is based on the Nicholas Sparks novel. The stage production features music by Ingrid Michaelson.
A rare opportunity to hear from pioneering glass artist Tom Patti as he traces more than five decades of creative evolution, interdisciplinary collaboration, and the curiosity that has shaped his groundbreaking career.
Titanic welcomes the Anthony Invino Big Band, an 18-piece ensemble of students and professors from the UM Frost School of Music for a special live recorded performance you don't want to miss.
A virtual discussion from the Cuban Heritage Collection explores Afro-Cuban history through new research by María Elena Díaz and Raquel Alicia Otheguy.
Five Senses of Guatemala is a one-evening cultural program featuring live marimba, Guatemalan food and drink tastings, visual projections, and a focus on the country's Holy Week traditions. The event connects to the Museum's current exhibition on the sawdust carpet tradition from La Antigua Guatemala, one of Coral Gables' Sister Cities.
The Frost Jazz Orchestra performs original centennial compositions at Gusman Hall in its fourth annual live album recording, directed by Dr. John Daversa. The program features works written by ensemble members in honor of the University of Miami and Frost School of Music's 100th anniversary.
A Life Illuminated is a documentary following marine biologist Dr. Edie Widder as she descends 3,300 feet into the ocean to document deep-sea bioluminescence. Directed by Tasha Van Zandt and an official Toronto International Film Festival selection, the screening includes a conversation moderated by documentary programmer Thom Powers.
When 19-year-old Zac Brettler fell from the balcony of a London luxury apartment into the Thames, police were quick to call it a suicide. His parents were not so sure. In London Falling, Patrick Radden Keefe traces what Zac was really doing in the months before his death, a secret life built around a false identity as the son of a Russian billionaire, and what that story reveals about a city swimming in money that few want to look at too closely.
