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All Soul’s Weekend culminates with its largest event, a parade called the All Soul’s Procession. According to MMOS, “The All Souls Procession is perhaps one of the most important, inclusive and authentic public ceremonies in North America today.” [12] Participants often dress up, wear masks, paint their faces, create intricate artistic installations, and tow altars, also engaging in ...
The first pride parade in Phoenix took place in 1981, and it was organized by the Lesbian & Gay Pride Planning Committee, which was led by Kirk Baxter and BJ Bud. [1] The first parade was a march from Patriots Square Park (now the site of CityScape ) to the Arizona State Capitol . [ 4 ]
A parade in Gainsville celebrating the town’s 100th birthday. Aug. 14, 1953: 11-month-old Jamelyn Eldredge, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Eldredge, can’t believe her eyes as she sees her ...
Clown College was the brainchild of Irvin Feld, the owner of Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus, and longtime Ringling clown and front man Bill Ballantine.In 1968, Ringling had only a handful of clowns, most of them over fifty years of age.
M5 Industries (M5) is a special effects company located in San Francisco, California, best known as the working lab of the TV series MythBusters.Founded in 1997 by Jamie Hyneman, it specialized in producing props for movies and television.
Colly Wobble, a clown toy in CBeebies TV show Moon and Me; Crackers the Clown, played by Peter Brocco – "bad-guy" clown in the Adventures of Superman episode titled "The Clown Who Cried". Dodo Delwyn – once a famous Ziegfeld star, is reduced to playing clowns in burlesque and amusement parks in 1953 film The Clown; played by Red Skelton
Theater Works is a non-profit community theater company that operates out of the Peoria Center for the Performing Arts in Peoria, Arizona. The company produces more than 200 events a year for audiences of all ages, including their own productions as well as running and managing outside productions and rentals that use the arts center. [1]
In addition to the Suns, the Coliseum hosted the Phoenix Roadrunners of the Western Hockey League from 1967 to 1974 and the WHA from 1974 to 1977 and of the now-defunct International Hockey League from 1989 to 1997, the Phoenix Racquets of World Team Tennis from 1975 to 1978, the Arizona Thunder of the World Indoor Soccer League from 1998 to ...