Jun 14 Saturday
Experience the sights, sounds and aromas of the electrifying midway with exciting rides and games for all ages and deep-fried treats, sweets and other tasty carnival eats.
Admission and parking are free.
Unlimited ride wristbands (for riders 36" & taller) are $42 on site ($40 cash price) or online before 5 pm Thurs., June 12 for $29 each, 2/$55 or 4/$99.
Ride tickets are also available on the midway. Online pre-sale special: $45/50 tickets + 1 free ride. (Rides take multiple tickets each.)
Visit the website for coupon savings on rides and food and event updates.
Midway hours: 5-10 pm Monday - Thursday, 5-11 pm Friday, noon-11 pm Saturday, noon-10 pm Sunday. Guests under 18 must be accompanied by an adult age 21+.
More information: 866-666-3247 or DreamlandAmusements.comhttps://tinyurl.com/y24vbu6a
Long Island's largest fair is back with a variety of family entertainment, Saturday night Fireworks by Grucci, midway rides and games for all ages, and favorite fair food for every appetite.
Free with admission:
• Circus Murcia (The Globe of Death, high-wire, aerial acts, jugglers, clowns & more)• Big Bee Transforming Robot Car• BMX Freestyle Stunt Show• The Dinosaur Experience• Educational petting zoo
Fair admission: $5 (free for kids under 36" tall). Parking is free.
The online deal is not valid on Thursday Carload Nights, when unlimited rides and admission are $62 per vehicle ($60 cash) for all legally seat-belted occupants.
Ride tickets are also available on site. Pre-sale special: $45/50 tickets + 1 free ride. (Rides take multiple tickets each.)
Fair hours: 5-11 pm weekdays and 3-11 pm Saturday - Sunday (Exit 53S off the LIE). Guests under 18 must be accompanied by an adult age 21+.
More information: 866-666-FAIR (3247) or https://LongIslandFunFest.com
A chamber music concert by the Goldstein-Peled-Fiterstein Trio (piano, cello and clarinet) performing works by Beethoven, Bach, Poulenc, Chopin and Stutschewsky.
TheatreWorks New Milford will present the world premiere of Upstate, written, directed, and starring Emmy© Award-winner Dorothy Lyman from May 2nd to 24th (weekends). The play centers around three generations of women who meet upstate over President’s Day weekend to decide the fate of their family farm and its matriarch.Dorothy Lyman is a two-time Emmy© Award-winner for her work as Opal Gardner on “All My Children” and is widely known for her co-starring role on “Mama’s Family,” alongside Vicki Lawrence and Carol Burnett. In addition to her numerous film and television appearances, Ms. Lyman also directed 75 episodes of Fran Drescher’s sitcom “The Nanny.” Her other plays are Enemy (an adaptation of Ibsen’s An Enemy of the People), A Rage in Tenure and Soft Landing (directed by John Tillinger) were all developed and produced by Players Workshop in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico. In addition to Ms. Lyman playing the role of Elizabeth, the cast includes Jamie Spannhake as Betsy and Thomas Ovitt as Jason, both from Washington, CT, Kevin Sosbe as Tom, Kay Mickelson as Liz and Patti Reese as Christie, all from New Milford, CT. Keli Solomon is producer.
Jun 15 Sunday
Looking for the perfect staycation destination?
Whether you're planning family adventures, a cultural date, or quality time with grandkids, the Bruce offers captivating experiences for every visitor.
With a wide selection of programs and events, from interactive science to stunning art collections, there's always something new to spark your curiosity this summer!
Enjoy 10% off all membership levels.Use code: SummerFun10Valid through June 30, 2025
Perfect for:
Teacher thank-you giftsSummer birthdaysFamily adventuresStaycation outingEscape the summer heatRainy day
Create unforgettable memories while exploring science, art, and nature together – or gift a membership to share the wonder with someone special!
Romney: Brilliant Contrasts in Georgian England, co-organized by the Yale University Art Gallery and the Yale Center for British Art to celebrate the YCBA’s reopening, features the work of the British portrait painter George Romney (1734–1802). Remembered today for his fashionable likenesses of wealthy patrons, Romney was rivaled in late 18th-century London only by the now better-known artists Thomas Gainsborough and Sir Joshua Reynolds. His aspirations to be a history painter were never realized, but his many drawings serve as a testament to those greater ambitions. These swiftly executed sketches reveal a mastery of form, line, and light, while his proficiency as a musician and early experience building musical instruments distinguish him among his polymath contemporaries. To fully explore the era’s subjects and sensibilities, paintings and drawings by Romney from both museums are shown alongside selections from the Morris Steinert Collection of Musical Instruments. Unveiling the contrasts in his artistic practice, the exhibition presents a forceful vision—one that has resonated with admirers through the centuries, from William Blake in Romney’s own time to the portraitist Kehinde Wiley today.
David Goldblatt: No Ulterior Motive is a major traveling retrospective exhibition that spans the seven decades of this South African photographer’s career, from the 1950s to the 2010s, demonstrating Goldblatt’s commitment to showing the realities of daily life in his country. The exhibition and accompanying publication bring together roughly 150 works by Goldblatt from the collections of the Yale University Art Gallery and the Art Institute of Chicago—two major Goldblatt repositories—including his early black-and-white photography and his post-apartheid, large-format color photography. Also included in the exhibition are photographs by some of Goldblatt’s peers, such as Ernest Cole, Santu Mofokeng, and Jo Ractliffe, as well as a generation of younger South Africans, many of whom Goldblatt mentored, including Lebohang Kganye and Zanele Muholi, placing Goldblatt within a broader and intergenerational network of photographers. This ambitious project honors the life and career of an artist who used his work to celebrate his country’s working-class people, the landscape, and the built environment.
Join us for an amazing two day workshop in the printmaking studio of the Prellwitz family, founded in 1911 by Edith and Henry Prellwitz. Work on prints and drawings of your own in the historic studio overlooking the blue waters of Peconic Bay. Learn new printmaking techniques, get new inspiration and enjoy the summer breeze in Peconic.
Katharine Hepburn was married once, to Ludlow Ogden Smith, in 1928. She kept her Babani gown, which was sold after she passed away and stored for twenty years. The Katharine Hepburn Museum has brought this dress back home to Connecticut and it will be exhibited alongside two others - one from the play "The Lake" (1933) and one from the film "The Sea of Grass" (1947) to create a stunning trio. This beautiful exhibit brings together Kate’s stage, screen, and personal lives in a never-before-seen way.
Museum Hours:Tuesday through Friday 10 AM to 4 PM and one hour prior to performances. Closed major holidays.
Additional Summer Hours: Saturday and Sunday, 12 to 4 PM in July & August only
This fantastic biennial event will showcase artwork by some of the region’s finest artists and will include art demonstrations and activities for children and adults- all celebrating the timeless themes of nature and agrarian life inspired by our property and the surrounding areas.
All Artwork is For Sale, proceeds from the sale of artwork benefit the programs at New Pond Farm Education Center
More details can be found at https://newpondfarm.org/artshow/