Baroque Bash.” Performers include Russian pianist Dmitry Kirichenko, Colombian classical fusion singer Andrea Saenz, a selection of famous arias by San Diego Opera Company’s Caroline Nelms and Felipe Prado, and more. $35–$40.
WHEN: Sunday, April 23, 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. WHERE: Del Mar Fairgrounds, 2260 Jimmy Durante Boulevard, Del Mar.
allegromusicfestival.com
MARGIN OF ERROR. Over the course of an evening a famous scien- tist, his wife, and two of his students confront each other in that margin of error where reason goes blind, passions ignite, and the ambitious, the arrogant, and the vengeful turn love and deceit into a science. Through May 7 at the Lyceum Theatre, 79 Horton Plaza, downtown. Theater, page 61.
EARTHFAIR The 28th annual EarthFair in Balboa Park includes more than 300 groups and businesses. New this year: a cli- mate-science area, hydrogen-powered cars, Cannabis Village, Native Soil, flower-seed balls, bamboo sunglasses, an Endless Summer raffle for a street- legal e-cart, and low-carbon-footprint shoes. Returning: Puppet Insurgency, the Earth Day Parade, original art murals to color, free valet bicycle parking, Try Transit, Reuse & Repair, eARTh, rescue parrots, and reclaimed wood watches. We’re not sure what a few of those are, but they sound
THURSDAY, APRIL 20: ASIAN FILM FESTIVAL SPRING SHOWCASE: WINDOW HORSES impactful.
WHEN: Sunday, April 23, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. WHERE: Throughout Balboa Park.
earthdayweb.org
EARTH DAY AT WORLDBEAT As part of Earth Day, WorldBeat has 50 arts and crafts vendors, global-flavored food, children’s earth crafts, “the world’s largest seed swap,” and World- music bands including Sister Carol, Black Slate, Rob Symeonn (and many more), plus all kinds of dancing and drumming: Native American drum and dance, Afro-Cuban dance and percus- sion, Brazilian samba, Egyptian drum and dance, Japanese taiko….
WHEN: Sunday, April 23, noon to 7 p.m. WHERE: WorldBeat Cultural Center, 2100 Park Boulevard, Balboa Park.
events.worldbeatcenter.org
AVOCADO FESTIVAL The 31st annual festival of the agricul- tural heritage of Fallbrook offers a big Avocado Central area with a guacamole
a tranquil setting, mist hanging in the air, the sound of buzzing insects, and a lone figure waving a long fishing rod rhythmically back and forth. Working a fly into perfect position on the glassy, calm water, he lets it lie and starts stripping — pulling the line to work the lure back toward himself. The peaceful setting turns violent as the once-placid early-morning water on San Diego Bay explodes to life as a spotted bay bass tumbles and rolls on the line — this time, a shrimp fly does the trick. Read more in Waterfront, page 38.
AVOCADO FESTIVAL
contest, Art of the Avocado contest entries on display, the Avo 500 chil- dren’s car race, and a Best-Decorated Avocado contest. With over 450 ven- dors, an artisan walk, food courts, a community stage with local talent, kids’ activities and contests, and live music in the beer-and- wine garden.
WHEN: Sunday, April 23, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. WHERE: Along Main Street, downtown Fallbrook.
bit.ly/1hxCCTP
FLY FISHERS PUT ON A CLINIC. Every Sunday, the San Diego Fly Fishers offer a free fly-casting clinic at Lake Murray. The scene:
EARTHFAIR
THE PROMISE. James Cromwell spent more time speaking with the Reader’s Scott Marks than he did appearing in the movie. Find out why, plus get a sneak peek at this year’s San Diego Asian Film Festival’s Spring Showcase in this week’s movie pages. Movies, page 57.
WEREWOLF AMERICAN PUB. A Gaslamp-area bar manages to appear like a true neighbor- hood spot in an area that at times feels like a theme park vision of what an urban down-
town should be. The first
thing down the hatch are the Homer Cakes, a stack of pancakes with jelly between each cake and a donut glaze and sprinkles on top. “Mmm, donuts.” Feast, page 41.
San Diego Reader April 20, 2017 31
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