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Take a Bow

In May 2015, theatergoers could hardly visit a South Florida stage without seeing a production tied to Michael McKeever. In mid-May, the theater company he co-founded, Zoetic Stage, opened Harold Pinterโ€™s โ€œBetrayalโ€ at the Adrienne Arsht Center in Miami, which, with a set designed by McKeever, became the best-selling play in the companyโ€™s history. The

Your Show of Shows

The Fort Lauderdale International Boat Show often is called South Floridaโ€™s Super Bowl of boating. Perhaps it has gained this reputation over the years because, show producers say, it makes more of an economic impact than pro footballโ€™s annual championship game. Last year, the boat show generated an estimated $531.5 million for the local economy.

Here to Stay

Little about the childhood of Florida Panthers right winger Reilly Smith runs contrary to the stereotype of a Canadian family with three boys. Yes, they were all in skates shortly after bidding adieu to diapers. And, yes, they lived and breathed hockeyโ€”but, as the youngest brother, Smith at least had options when it came to

For the Fun of the Game

Doug Moxโ€™s team of Parkland All-Stars were on the verge of making local Little League baseball history. Still, he didnโ€™t let the pressure keep his squad of 12- and 13-year-olds from having some fun 3,000 miles away from home. However, not every coach at the Little League Intermediate World Series, held this August in Livermore,

Marching On

Itโ€™s competition time for Stoneman Douglas Eagle Regiment marching band Marching bands have come a long way from being halftime entertainment during high school football games. Todayโ€™s band members are โ€œmusical athletes,โ€ says Alex Kaminsky, director of the award-winning Eagle Regiment competitive marching band at Stoneman Douglas High. Drive by the school around 5 p.m.

Profile in Courage

  This Thanksgiving, Michelle Rohloff will be thankful for more than her family and friends. Sheโ€™ll also be raising a glass in celebration of her life. The holiday will fall on Nov. 24, the day she found out she had breast cancer two years ago. โ€œI literally stopped right where I was,โ€ Rohloff says, recalling

7 questions with Lakeisha Frith

Assistant executive director, Greater Miami Youth Symphony 1ย Music was a part of your life since childhood. When did you know you wanted to teach? Iโ€™ve always been a teacher in some regard. When I started playing at school, once I got to sixth grade, we were helping the fifth-graders. When I was in high school,

STAR POWER

Charlie Cinnamon would rather not talk about himself. Mention his name to anyone in the South Florida arts community, and theyโ€™ll tell you heโ€™s the stuff of legend. But when it comes to himself, the Coconut Grove resident defers. โ€œWhy donโ€™t you do a story on โ€ฆโ€ he suggests. โ€œOr how about โ€ฆโ€ Thatโ€™s Cinnamonโ€™s

Heroes in the Making

  Ed and Crissi Boland had been, as they put it, โ€œup to their eyeballs in superheroes.โ€ Their childrenโ€”Charlie, 8, and Jamie, 6โ€”like most boys their age, had lived and breathed the comic book characters who could leap tall buildings in a single bound. But the Bolands, especially Crissi, didnโ€™t feel good about the supposed

dragonfly takes dora

I remember when Doral was known as the place where Carnival Cruise Lines had its headquarters and the Blue Monster golf course reigned supreme. Now, itโ€™s known for Downtown Doral, a 120-acre parcel that eventually will have 10 restaurants and 70 retail establishments. And itโ€™s the home of Dragonfly Izakaya & Fish Market. The restaurant,