Thank you!
Your support is sustaining the future of local news in our communities.

America’s Favorite Cat Videos, On the Big Screen

America’s Favorite Cat Videos, On the Big Screen
The most amusing cat videos of the past year are featured in “CatVideoFest 2021,” which opens this weekend at The Moviehouse in Millerton, N.Y.  
Photo by Adina Voicu from Pixabay​

There are many reasons to rejoice that the beloved Millerton, N.Y., movie theater, The Moviehouse, is open again (and now has an elevator and an ice machine!).

New owners David Maltby and Chelsea Altman also are working hard to schedule films that are diverse, timely, interesting — and quirky. There was the screening of “Jaws,” in time for national Shark Week, for example. Also unexpected was the screening of the remastered version of the erotic French thriller, “La Piscine.”

Coming up this weekend: A film that pays homage to the animal that many believe is responsible for the success of the YouTube online video channel: the cat.

From July 23 to 25, The Moviehouse will show the hour-long “CatVideoFest 2021.” As YouTube has shown, you don’t have to be a cat, own a cat or even particularly like cats to like videos about cats. 

Preview materials about the film say that, “CatVideoFest is a compilation reel of the latest and best cat videos culled from countless hours of unique submissions and sourced animations, music videos and classic internet powerhouses. CatVideoFest is a joyous communal experience, only available in theaters.”

In other words, you could watch cat videos alone at home, but isn’t it much more fun to watch and laugh along with your friends and neighbors? Best of all, 10% of ticket sales from The Moviehouse screenings  will go to the Little Guild in West Cornwall, Conn. 

Tickets are $8.50 and $10.50 and can be ordered online ahead of time at www.themoviehouse.net. 

For those who are more interested in cool cats than in real cats, the theater is also showing the documentary film about the late chef and general cool cat Anthony Bourdain this month.

Latest News

Great Country Mutt Show returns as animal shelter surrenders rise

Great Dane “Axel” with owner Sage Breyette in the Best Lap Dog Over 40 lbs. contest at last year’s Great Country Mutt Show

Aly Morrissey

Tail wags, floppy ears and a healthy dose of canine charm will take center stage June 7 as The Little Guild hosts its annual Great Country Mutt Show at Lime Rock Park in Falls Village.

Last year’s Great Country Mutt Show attracted more than 200 dogs and 800 people. Founded by renowned designer Bunny Williams as a benefit for the Little Guild, the tongue-in-cheek, Westminster-style event has grown into one of the organization’s signature annual fundraisers and community celebrations. The show remains free and open to the public, and adoptable dogs may attend when appropriate.

Keep ReadingShow less

Savannah Stevenson’s second act

Savannah Stevenson’s second act

Savannah Stevenson as Mrs. Paroo and Elliott Andrews who plays Harold Hill in the nationally touring production of “The Music Man.”

Marshall Meadows
Sharing laughter, tears, music and dancing through stories that illuminate our common humanity touches us in a way that builds connection, empathy and genuine community.
— Savannah Stevenson

Savannah Stevenson has lived enough lives already to make most people feel lazy.

She grew up in Atlanta in a musical family, with a father who played “The Sound of Music” cassette tapes in the car and a mother who played hymns on the piano. She went to Carnegie Mellon to study musical theater, moved to New York afterward and, for a while, imagined a life onstage.

Keep ReadingShow less
Kelly’s Kitchen Take 2 nourishes body and soul

Kelly and Bob McCarthy under the deliberately misspelled sign at their Kelly’s Kitchen Take 2.

Jack Sheedy

The ornate wooden sign is deliberately misspelled: “Apathecary.”

It greets visitors as soon as they walk into Kelly’s Kitchen Take 2 in Colebrook, described on the store’s website as “a charming sanctuary where time-honored traditions meet artisanal craftsmanship.” Co-founder Kelly McCarthy said, “I work with energy, and I’m all about the herbal tinctures and working with naturopaths and more natural medicine.” She said the misspelled sign is meant to denote a section of the store as “a path to wellness.”

Keep ReadingShow less
google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.

Artists and patrons gather for Stissing Center auction preview

Artists Yael Meridan Schori and Talya Baharal at Mad Rose Gallery’s preview of Stissing Center’s Art Auction.

Natalia Zukerman

The upstairs room at Mad Rose Gallery in Millerton was filled with paintings, photographs, drawings, sculpture and ceramics on Saturday, May 30, as artists, collectors and supporters gathered for a reception previewing Stissing Center’s 2nd Annual Art Auction Fundraiser.

The exhibition offers an early look at nearly 60 works donated by artists from the Hudson Valley and beyond, all to benefit Stissing Center’s year-round programming, including music, theater, dance, film, children’s events and community gatherings. The auction itself will take place at Stissing Center in Pine Plains on June 13 from 5 to 7 p.m.

Keep ReadingShow less

Bobby’s chicken enchiladas

Bobby’s chicken enchiladas

Bobby’s chicken enchiladas

Bobby Graham

Each month, Dugazon owners Bobby Graham and Matthew Marden share a recipe inspired by the traditions, stories and sense of welcome at the heart of their shop in Sharon, Connecticut. Visit Dugazon at 19 W. Main St. Wednesday-Sunday, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. and online at dugazonshop.com.

We share a love of Mexican food, and these chicken enchiladas have become a favorite at our table. Creamy, comforting and reliably crowd-pleasing, they’re equally at home on a busy weeknight or at a casual gathering with friends. The creamy chicken filling, green chilies and generous layer of melted cheese make it the sort of dish that disappears quickly and is requested often.Best of all, the dish can be assembled a day ahead and baked just before serving, making it a welcome option when you’d rather spend time with guests than in the kitchen.

Keep ReadingShow less
Yale Norfolk School of Art returns for another summer of creativity

The Yale Norfolk summer art program hosts open community drawing classes on Tuesday evenings and Saturday mornings.

Sok Songa

For more than 80 years, the Ellen Battell Stoeckel Trust has endowed Yale University’s summer music and art programs in Norfolk. The renowned Yale Norfolk School of Art opened the 2026 summer season May 23, sharing its final week with Yale’s new music workshop. The art school is held in the historic Alfredo Taylor-designed Art Barn, located on a trail behind the 70-acre estate’s Whitehouse on the village green.

“Yale Norfolk brings together a diverse group of students who have demonstrated passion in artmaking and are exemplary community members,” explained the program’s co-director, Lisa Sigal. The student body is composed of 26 rising college seniors selected from more than 200 applicants. Participants come from across the country and from a growing number of international locations.Students live in dormitories on the estate alongside faculty and staff.

Keep ReadingShow less
google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.

google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.