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Spock's Beard: Acoustic SNOW

FROM NEAL MORSE: This video includes the two final shows I played as a member of Spock’s Beard. They were both acoustic performances to relatively small groups, to promote the SNOW album. This was the only time some of these songs were played by the line up who recorded the album, and I have to say it was a very emotional time for me, knowing that this would be the final time I would play with my brothers in the band. The setlist for each show is slightly different but they include: “The Good Don’t Last,” “Thoughts II,” “Stranger In A Strange Land,” “Open Wide The Floodgates,” “Pride (In The Name Of Love),” “Carie,” “June,” “Looking For Answers,” “Solitary Soul,” “Wind At My Back,” and “The Doorway.”

Spock's Beard: Acoustic SNOW

NR 2021
Kipps - The New Half a Sixpence Musical

Charlie Stemp stars as the eponymous Arthur Kipps, an orphan and over-worked draper’s assistant at Shalford’s Bazaar, Folkestone, at the turn of the last century. He is a charming but ordinary young man who, along with his fellow apprentices, dreams of a better and more fulfilling world, but he likes his fun just like any other, except not quite. When Kipps unexpectedly inherits a fortune that propels him into high society, it confuses everything he thought he knew about life.

Kipps - The New Half a Sixpence Musical

NR 2021
The Boys in Red Hats

On January 18, 2019, 17-year old Nick Sandmann, a student at the affluent Covington Catholic High School in Kentucky, was internationally villainized on social media and in the 24-hour news cycle as he and his classmates appeared to confront Native American elder Nathan Phillips on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C. during a March for Life rally. Video clips of the interaction went viral overnight and Sandmann and his classmates faced worldwide outrage as the entire Covington Catholic community became the center of uncomfortable conversations about racism, privilege and politics.

The Boys in Red Hats

NR 2021
The Distance You Have Come

Every day we each make a series of decisions, some big and some small but all that shape our future. We are all on a journey of self-discovery, juggling life, love and loss along the way. We all have to choose the steps we take and will each meet people who will change our path forever. In a song cycle of his most acclaimed works, sung by some of the best voices in the west end, award winning composer and lyricist Scott Alan leads us through a year in the intertwined lives of six people facing the joy and heartache of the human experience, as they each search for their own version of happiness – which is, after all, what it’s all about.

The Distance You Have Come

NR 2021
Yukon's Wild Grizzlies

Deep in Canada's remote Yukon, a dramatic coming of age story unfolds involving an adolescent grizzly named Sophie. Wildlife filmmaker Phil Timpany has chronicled her all her life. Now he's capturing her first steps into adulthood--and motherhood--and the many challenges threatening both her and her rambunctious cubs. Witness Sophie's journey as she learns the ropes, trying to balance her own needs with feeding and protecting her young. More than half of all grizzly cubs die in their first year, so Sophie has little room for error.

Yukon's Wild Grizzlies

7.5 2021
Children of Shanghai

Bear Grylls narrates the story of the first foster children in China's 3,000-year history. British former footballer Robert Glover moved to Shanghai with his wife and six young children in 1998 and persuaded the Chinese government to move a million children out of orphanages and into foster families. The documentary films the very first families and the orphans, many of whom are now successful young professionals. It also tells the story of the Glovers, a six-child family in a nation of one-child families.

Children of Shanghai

10.0 2021