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Clark Bruckner Said,%u2018 %u2018 A w e s o m e %u2019 %u2019What do you say?Brunch All Day Sunday448 Atlantic Ave., Brooklyn, NY 11217 237-2271W here th e world's g r e a te st a u d ien cem e e ts th e w orld's g r e a te st p erform ers.THE TEMPTATIONS* MILTON BERLE%u2022 CHITA RIVERA%u2022 VIC DAMONE%u2022 APRILE MILLO %u2022 SIMON ESTES # ROBERTA ALEXANDER %u2022 MADAMA BUTTERFLY, NEW YORK CITY OPERA NATIONAL CO. %u2022 THE MOSTLY MOZART FESTIVAL ORCHESTRA* BATSHEVA DANCE COMPANY OF ISRAEL* HUNGARIAN STATE FOLK FESTIVAL* MARIA BENITEZ SPANISH DANCE COMPANY# JOSE GRECOAll for a s little a s $7.50 a ticket!For 1 9 8 6 -8 7 su b sc r ip tio n in form ation call(718) 4 3 4 -4 2 4 2BROOKLYN CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS AT BROOKLYN COLLEGEHere Comes The BrideContinued from Page 9in 1941 my father took it over and made itinto a retail business.%u201dHenrietta%u2019s carries a full line of manufacturers%u2014Milady, Joelle, Mendicino%u2014atdresses ranging from $250 to $2,000. For$250 you can buy a polyester chiffon withchantilly lace; while for $2,000 you will beswathed in imported French peau de soie,embroidered with Alencon lace, seed pearlsand bugle beads with an extra long train.So when Debbie and Paul exchangedvows on Sunday afternoon, June 22nd, theywere continuing a tradition of Henrietta%u2019sbrides.In fact, Henrietta%u2019s first customer, SadieGrillo, was so satisfied she returned lastmonth to select a gown for her fiftieth anniversary. Her mauve-colored silk withbeading cost $325, more than triple whatshe paid 50 years ago. But no matter whatthe cost, %u201cOh Promise Me%u201d has replaced%u201cCome Live With Me and Be My Love%u201d inthe eighties.Kids Fete LibertyThe Penny Bridge Players for Childrenwill celebrate the centennial of the Statue ofLiberty with a special week of performances of %u201cSweet Land of Liberty,%u201d whosemusical score was written by LewisHardee, and book by Jane Stanton. Theshow is directed by Stanton, choreographedby Warren Kelly, with musical direction byHardee.Performances will be held in the Undercroft of the Assumption Church, 59Cranberry St., between Henry and HicksStreets. They are June 30,1:30pm, July 1, 2,3 ,10:30am and 1:30pm, July 4 ,10:30am, andJuly 5, 2pm. Admission is $3.75, with specialgroup rates available. For further information call 522-0255.are some of the activities children will enjoy at the Children%u2019s Museum and inBrower Park behind the Museum throughJuly and August.To start the senes Thomas Hewitt wmhold a %u201cPapier Mache Lady%u201d lecture andworkshop on July 3 at 6pm. A production of%u201cLady of the Harbor%u201d by Don Quijote Experimental Children%u2019s Theatre will be givenon July 5th and 6th at 1:30 and 3:30pm eachday. A voluntary contribution of $2 foradults and $1 for children is suggested bythe Museum.The Bard For ChildrenA program of performance workshops bythe City of New York Park Department%u2019sShakespeare Company will be held for teens13-18 this summer. The idea behind it is toget young people involved in acting andunderstanding Shakespeare%u2019s works. Youngactors, would-be actors or those who simplywant to learn more about the Elizabethanstage are taught by five professional actors,all of whom have extensively performedand taught Shakespeare.Held in Prospect Park for Brooklynites,the workshops use texts from Shakespeare%u2019splays, music of his day, stage combattechniques, Commedia dell%u2019arte (clowning)and masks to bring the playwright%u2019s worksto life. Registration is July 2nd, 10am, at theProspect Park Picnic House. Classes startofficially on July 7 at 1pm, and continue onMondays and Wednesdays at 1pm untilAugust 15. The free program concludes onthe 15th with a performance of selectedscenes.%u201cWe are inviting young New Yorkers tospend an exciting summer outside in our City%u2019s parks, learning and playingShakespeare,%u201d said Chief of RecreationWilliam Castro. %u201cTeenagers will discoverthat Shakespeare can be great fun whenthey get involved in performing as opposedto just reading his words.%u201d For further information call (212 ) 360-8143.Floating Films in ParkA rare event for film lovers will be coming to Prospect Park on June 27 at 9pm.The Floating Cinema has toured the northeast since 1981, but this is one of its fewNew York appearances. This visual treat includes two floating screens, set asail onProspect Park Lake in this case, with largerear projection screens mounted on thevessels.Films have been specially created for thisdual-screen set-up, with images jumpingfrom one screen to the other, and light, color and sound vanishing and re-emergingfrom the darkness. This free one-hour performance appeals to both young and olderaudiences with its production of %u201cAliceUnderwater.%u201d Three other short films,which have been commissioned by filmmakers Erica Beckman, Robert Breer, andGeorge Griffin, will be shown as well.This cinematic water ballet is sponsoredby the New York City Deparment ofCultural Affairs, with the help of theDepartment of Parks and Recreation. Theaudience should gather at dusk; in case ofrain, the performance will be June 28 at thesame time. The audience will sit at theshoreline by Wollman Rink, near theParkside and Ocean Aves. entrance. To findout about weather cancellation or for information, call (212) 533-7304.Chapel Series StartsThe sixth annual Summer Festival at theChapel of the First Unitarian Church beginsJune 30, and features Barbara Oldham,french horn, Rick Dolan, violin, andassisting them, Leah Bowes, piano, andJudith Otten, soprano. The program includes the Brahms%u2019 Horn Trio; %u201cAuf demStrom%u201d by Franz Schubert for soprano,horn and piano; and music by J.S. Bach forviolin and cantata excerpts for soprano andviolin.Oldham has performed extensively, bothas soloist and in various orchestras. She is afounding member of the Quintet of theAmericas, has performed with the ColoradoPhilharmonic, Radio City Music Hall Symphony Orchestra, Queens Symphony andhas been in the orchestra pit for numerousballets and Broadway hits.The concert series will continuethroughout the summer on alternating Monday nights. All performances are $5, andstart at 8pm. The July 14 concert featuresTheodore Mook, violoncello; July 28features Matthew Sullivan, oboe and C.Bryan Rulon, synthesist; August 11 includesJudith Otten, soprano, and James Hamlin,trumpet, and the last show, on August 25,features Julia Heyer, soprano, and DavidAnchel, bass-baritone. All concerts are heldat the chapel, on Pierrepont St. and Monroe|P1 SuSu%u2019s Specials of The W e e k * Summer is Fami!y ^U yComplete Soft Shod Crab Dlnnor..................................... S9 95(Includes soup, entree i dessert)Orange Pool S te a k ......................................................... $8.50Moo Shu Fantasia.................. $8.95Oeneral Iso%u2019s Spicy Chicken............................................ $8.50RESTAURANT %u2022 BAR %u2022 CATERERSv y W \\ _/ t v w %u2019a \\ j%u00bb ^ w ' J m60 HENRY STREET (cor. CRANBERRY) BROOKLYN, N.Y.ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED. Free door to door pick up service for dinner customersQuick Delivery

