Southeast

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This workshop will address the very heart of interpreting: Meaning. How do we manage the finer shades of meaning, address subtleties found in language and express the unspoken? As interpreters, we determine meaning through a combination of factors such as context, intonation, intent, setting, and other linguistic features. To accurately interpret we must look past the individual words to determine the intended meaning of the speaker.

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Chattanooga State Community College Veteran’s Support Center and the Theatre Department have partnered with The Telling Project, a national performing arts non-profit that employs theater to deepen the understanding of military and veterans’ experiences. This event will be captioned. 

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Join us for KCTAD's "Welcome Back" Cook Out on September 17th! Come down to KCD and watch the UT vs Ohio game on the SEC Network with us. We will have cornhole boards set up and ready to play. We will also be cooking out, so come hungry! For $5, you can get either one hamburger or two hotdogs, both of which come with a bag of chips and a drink. All the "fixin's" will be provided! Still hungry?? No worries--you can get extra for only $2.50!

Click the event page for details including food costs and activities available.
See you all there!

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Bursting with imagination, this exuberant whistle-stop tour through Verne is a trip worth making.

The intrepid Phileas Fogg with his loyal valet, Passepartout, voyage from Victorian London through the Indian subcontinent, to Asia and across the Pacific to America on a wager that he will return in precisely 80 days. Literally, a theatrical tour-de-force.

This production may employ the use of theatrical haze and/or fog. Interpreting available. 

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In a world of the “Supermom” and a shattering glass ceiling, this feminist play considers the conflicts that come with the pursuit of success and the desire to “have it all.” Open captioning available. 

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The tradition continues – anew!

With a BRAND NEW LOOK and a NEW ADAPTATION, we return with a classic holiday favorite. Join us as Ebenezer Scrooge gets one last chance for redemption when he sees his past, present, and the possibilities for the future with four persuasive ghosts. This play will be interpreted.

This production may employ the use of theatrical haze and/or fog.

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Three wayward adolescents on the cusp of adulthood navigate Reagan-era New York, recreating their broken homes in their dysfunctional friendships and bungled attempts to find love. Open Captioning provided.

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This searing play chronicles the historical events in the Massachusetts Bay Colony. The fear and accusations of Salem may be an aberration of the American Dream, but it has lent its name to later witch hunts that recur from time to time in the ongoing American story. Open Captioning Provided.

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After three months, our beloved vertical sign and marquee will back on Gay Street brighter and better than ever. Join us for a celebration of its relighting. We will have self-guided tours of the stage and backstage areas from 6-8 p.m. House organist Dr. Bill Snyder will play the Mighty Wurlitzer organ, and a caricature artist will draw guests with the iconic Tennessee Theatre marquee. Interpreters will be available starting at 7pm. At 8pm, we will move outside onto Gay Street, which will be closed in front of the theatre, for a countdown to relight the sign and marquee!

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Each year the National Storytelling Festival brings well known storytellers from many diverse cultures together for a wonderful weekend of laughs and sighs, tears and warmth- reminding us that we are all a part of one human community.