• Home
  • popular
  • News
  • Restaurants + Bars
  • City Life
  • Entertainment
  • Travel
  • Real Estate
  • Arts
  • Society
  • Home + Design
  • Fashion + Beauty
  • Innovation
  • Sports
  • events
  • submit-new-event
  • subscribe
  • about
  • children
  • education
  • health
  • series
  • promoted
  • eventdetail
  • Veterans
  • Social Services
  • Arts + Culture
  • Animals
  • LGBTQ
  • New Charity
  • South Padre FW
  • Visit Frisco FW
  • Wrangler FW
  • Dogfish Head FW
  • LovBe FW
  • Claire St Amant podcast FW
  • Nasher FW
  • Greystar Jameson
  • Luck Springs FW
  • Fort Worth Tastemaker Awards 2021
  • Texas Motorplex FW
  • Port Aransas FW
  • Milan Laser
  • Bandera FW
  • Proximo Spirits FW
  • Balcones FW
  • Greystar Burnett Lofts
  • The Neighborhood Guide
  • Highland Park Village FW
  • 2021 Gift Guide
  • Music Lane FW
  • Pioneer FW
  • 2022 Tastemaker Awards
  • Fort Worth Stock Show & Rodeo
  • Central Market FW
  • Athletic Brewing FW
  • Into the Garden
  • Panther City LAX
  • Bud Light Next FW
  • EnerGenie FW
  • El Paso FW
  • Visit Lubbock
  • JW Marriott San Antonio FW
  • Travel Texas
  • FWTX Renewable You
  • Where to Eat
  • Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth
  • Formula 1 Giveaway
  • Fort Worth Charity Challenge 2016
  • Texas Wine Talk Fort Worth
  • Okay to Say
  • Tastemaker Awards 2016 Fort Worth
  • Texas Traveler Fort Worth
  • Soldiers' Angels
  • Okay to Say Fort Worth
  • Bob's Steak and Chop House Fort Worth
  • Top Texans Under 30 Fort Worth
  • Shipt Fort Worth
  • State Fair of Texas 2016 Fort Worth
  • Soldier's Angels Fort Worth
  • WestBend Fort Worth
  • Tastemakers Forth Worth 2017
  • Winedown Relay at Waterside
  • DFW Showcase Tour of Homes FW
  • West 7th Crockett Creates
  • Sunset Sessions at Waterside
  • Galveston.com Fort Worth
  • Choctaw Fort Worth
  • Reliant Bright Ideas Fort Worth
  • State Fair 2017 Fort Worth
  • Methodist Health System Fort Worth
  • Eatzis
  • The Lofts at West 7th
  • Elan River District
  • Choctaw Fort Worth 2018
  • Elan West 7th
  • Crockett Row
  • 'Tis the Season Fort Worth
  • Joseph Berkes Williams Trew
  • Clean Juice Bar
  • Omni Hotels Fort Worth
  • Opendoor Fort Worth
  • Fort Worth Tastemakers 2018
  • San Marcos Fort Worth
  • City of Burleson Fort Worth
  • Visit Taos FW
  • Fort Worth Charity Guide
  • Pinstack Fort Worth
  • Pinstripes
  • GiftingMap Fort Worth
  • Woodchuck Cider Fort Worth
  • Partners Card Fort Worth 2018
  • Dallas Bike Ride Fort Worth
  • Waterside
  • Fort Worth Season's Eatings
  • Cirque Du Soleil Amaluna Fort Worth
  • Trinity Residences
  • Holiday Happenings Fort Worth 2018
  • Crockett Row food hall
  • Sundance Square
  • B&B Butchers Fort Worth
  • Grimaldi's Fort Worth
  • Galveston 2019 Fort Worth
  • Fort Worth Tastemaker Awards 2019
  • Trinity at Left Bank
  • Visit Plano
  • Omni Barton Creek FW
  • Lang Partners
  • Woodford Reserve FW
  • Bank of America Kaaboo FW
  • Valencia Group Hotels FW
  • Weekend Event Planner Fort Worth
  • Summer Getaways FW
  • VRBO Fort Worth
  • BestHotelRates.com FW
  • Real Weddings Fort Worth 2019
  • B.B. Lemon Fort Worth
  • Oskar Blues Wild Basin Fort Worth
  • Vine Connections Fort Worth
  • Deep Ellum Brewing Co FW
  • Cigar City Margarita Gose FW
  • Getaways FW
  • Crook Marker FW
  • Fort Worth Tastemaker Awards 2020
  • Fit in the City
  • CBD Take Out FW
  • Father's Day Gift Guide 2020 FW
  • Matthews and Associates FW
  • Travel Juneau FW
  • Grandes Vinos FW
  • Cutwater Spirits FW
  • RV Share FW
  • Babe Wine FW
  • Recovery Resource Council FW
  • Brixos FW
  • Gift Guide 2020 FW
  • Texas Original
  • Lalamove FW
  • Bourbon Takeover
  • Jobs
  • Advertising Inquiry
  • media sponsorship request
  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Suggestions
  • Authors
  • Trinity Metro
  • Log in

16th Van Cliburn International Piano Competition

Cliburn names 6 finalists going for gold at 2022 competition in Fort Worth

Stephanie Allmon Merry
Jun 12, 2022 | 10:40 pm
Dmytro Choni, 28, Ukraine
Dmytro Choni, 28, Ukraine
Photo courtesy of The Cliburn

UPDATE 6-18-2022: The Cliburn Competition winners have been announced; find the list here.

---

Six pianists have moved on to the final round of the Sixteenth Van Cliburn International Piano Competition, setting the stage for an epic showdown to the end.

These six finalists are now vying for a gold medal, $100,000 cash, and an international career are:

  • Dmytro Choni, Ukraine, 28
  • Anna Geniushene, Russia, 31
  • Uladzislau Khandohi, Belarus, 20
  • Yunchan Lim, South Korea, 18
  • Ilya Shmukler, Russia, 27
  • Clayton Stephenson, United States, 23

Cliburn Competition jury chair Marin Alsop made the announcement June 12 on stage at Bass Performance Hall in downtown Fort Worth. It came after the conclusion of the semifinal round, in which 12 of the original 30 competitors played both a 60-minute recital and a Mozart concerto with maestro Nicholas McGegan and the Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra.

A closer look at the field
Notably, the field has two of the initial six Russians remaining, and one from Belarus. A crowd favorite, Ilya Shmukler competed in the 2017 Cliburn International Competition.

The one remaining American candidate, Clayton Stephenson, easily won over the Fort Worth audience early in the competition, as many remember him as a prize-winner in the inaugural Cliburn Junior Competition in 2015. His playing has been described as joyful and full of charisma.

Ukrainian pianist Dmytro Choni has received a warm and generous response from the crowds each time he's taken the stage, and he's naturally attracted worldwide media attention.

Of four South Korean semifinalists, only Yunchan Lim — described as a "powerhouse" virtuoso — made it through.

Russian Anna Geniushene is the only remaining woman in the competition. She was the final contestant to play in the semifinal round before the nine-member jury of internationally famous pianists voted, using a simple "yes-no-maybe" ballot.

Lim and Geniushene represent both the youngest (18) and the oldest (31) pianists in the competition.

In his powerful and timely opening remarks onstage, Cliburn board chairman Jeff King underscored the power of music to transcend geopolitics.

"You have affirmed that we all have more in common than not, that we are all brothers and sisters together, and that we all share the same dreams," he told the competitors. "Van Cliburn said, 'If you hold on to the beauty and inspiration and the clarity that is music, you will have an anchor and you will not be swayed ...' Thank you for being who you are all that you do as you bring the healing energy that is music to our world."

On to the finals
The final round will run June 14-18 at Bass Hall. All six finalists perform two concertos, to be selected from two separate lists, with the Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra and Alsop, conductor. Click on the contestants' names in the bulleted list, above, to find out what each is playing in the next round.

The final round performance schedule will be announced on Monday, June 13. (Note that there are no competition performances on that day.)

Winners will be announced at the conclusion of play, about 7 pm Saturday, June 18.

Besides receiving cash prizes, the gold, silver, and bronze medalists all will receive "a comprehensive and personalized career management package, to include three years of concert bookings, artistic planning mentorship, traditional and social media training, logistics support, and tax and financial planning guidance, as well as commercial recording releases and a complete promotional package," the Cliburn says. The winner will get a global career launch, including management around the world.

Tickets to the final round and and awards ceremony are available here, and each performance will be webcast for free; the public also can vote for the Audience Award-winner online.

Also during finals week, a number of free Cliburn "festival" events will take place around Bass Hall. They include a jury symposium, a screening of the Alsop biopic documentary Conductor, and "Piano Lunches" featuring contestants who were eliminated in previous rounds.

If you're planning to head to the competition, here are nine pro tips to make the most of the experience.

Ukrainian pianist Dmytro Choni has advanced to the finals.

Dmytro Choni, Cliburn Competition
Photo courtesy of The Cliburn
Ukrainian pianist Dmytro Choni has advanced to the finals.
awardsmusicconcertssymphony
news/arts

CultureMap Emails Are Awesome
Get Fort Worth intel delivered daily.

We will not share or sell your email address.

most read posts

Texas' Big Bend named one of the world's must-see destinations for 2023

These are the 7 best food and drink events in Fort Worth this week

Charming Hill Country destination named among most dynamic 'micropolitan' areas in U.S.

Movies in the sky

8 essential tips for sky-high fun at Fort Worth's new Rooftop Cinema Club

Stephanie Allmon Merry
Nov 3, 2022 | 3:40 pm
Rooftop Cinema Club Fort Worth
Photo courtesy of Worthington Renaissance Hotel

Rooftop Cinema Club is on the Mezzanine Terrace of the Worthington Renaissance Hotel.

After months of anticipation and a few delays, the new Rooftop Cinema Club Downtown Fort Worth finally premiered on November 1. The al fresco urban cinema at the Worthington Renaissance Hotel is more than an outdoor movie theater — it's a whole experience. (And a great date night.) But where, exactly, is it, and where do you park? Here are some tips for making the most of an evening at the Rooftop Cinema, based on an opening-night experience and information from the venue.

Where it is
The actual address for Rooftop Cinema Club is 235 Throckmorton St., Fort Worth. This is different from the The Worthington Renaissance Hotel's address, 200 Main St. It's advertised as being on the "Mezzanine Level," which may not mean anything to Fort Worthians who've never stayed at the hotel and had reason to find the Mezzanine Level.

Specifically, the entrance to Rooftop Cinema Club faces Throckmorton Street (across from Jimmy John's). If you're on the Toro Toro side of the hotel, you're on the opposite side and need to walk all the way to the other end. Once you find the entrance, walk up a couple flights of stairs and you'll be on the third-floor Mezzanine Level.

If you start from inside the hotel, take the elevators to the "M' level and simply walk outside to the terrace. Which brings us to ...

Where to park
Do not valet at the hotel or you'll end up paying the hotel's general valet price. What you want to do is self-park in The Worthington Renaissance garage, whose entrance is near the entrance to the Rooftop Cinema off Throckmorton, just north of 2nd Street.

You'll get a rate of $10 if you bring your parking ticket to the box office — don't forget that!

There's also nearby street parking, and if you're up for a walk, Sundance Square lots and garages are free on weekday evenings and weekends.

Tip: If you dine at the hotel restaurant Toro Toro before or after a movie, you'll receive complimentary valet parking up to three hours. There's a special Toro Toro "Show on the Road" menu offered from 5-6:30 pm for pre-cinema dining. You can also get 10 percent off your Toro Toro bill when you show your movie ticket. Which brings up...

Food and drink
You do not need to eat before you arrive at the Rooftop Cinema. Concessions go beyond popcorn, candy, and cokes (though they do have them all) and into a limited menu of chef-driven dishes served from a concession stand on-site.

Toro Toro chef Richard Sandoval helped create an "elevated" menuthat includes pulled pork tacos, hot dogs, chips with salsa and brisket queso, and more. To be clear, we're not talking $3 nachos and $2 tacos. Think $12-$18 per dish. A limited selection of cocktails, beer, and wine is for sale for $7-$12, too.

Bringing in your own food or beverages is not allowed.

Rooftop Cinema ClubYou can easily move between the lounge and theater areas.Photo by Michael Merry

What to bring
BYOB a blanket. The venue will be open on cold winter nights and searing summer days. Dress appropriately for the outdoors (don't forget hats and sunscreen on sunny days), and on these current chilly fall evenings, bring a blanket or throw to snuggle under. You can also toss it over a chair or loveseat and reserve your spot before the movie starts.

Starting December 1, they'll offer wind-proof, Rooftop Cinema Club-branded blankets for purchase. Blankets can be brought back each time for a free treat.

What if it rains?
Light rain probably won't thwart a movie showing (bring a poncho), but if inclement weather affects the guest experience, they say, screenings may be canceled. They outline the official procedure:

"In the event of a cancelled screening, we will notify you as soon as possible via email with details on how to transfer your tickets to another screening or obtain a refund. If creating an account, please be sure to use the same email address you used to purchase your tickets. You can also check the current status of your screening on its thumbnail visible on the venue page or its booking page."

More information about ticket transfer is here.

Rooftop Cinema ClubEveryone gets a set of personal wireless headphones. Photo courtesy of Rooftop Cinema Club

The movie-watching experience
This is not your father's drive-in. Guests sit in either single or double, love seat-style Adirondack chairs (depending on which ticket you buy; see below), with cushions and wide armrests for drinks; side tables help contain food trays and popcorn cartons.

Upon entry, everyone is given a pair of personal wireless headphones, "silent-disco" style. Movie audio is piped in loud and clear. (You still may hear some street and airplane noise, but if you're paying attention to the movie, ambient noises are not distracting.) Suddenly craving Raisinets? You can move easily between the theater and concession areas with the headphones on during the film, and you won't "miss" much. The headphones are turned back in at the end.

A large, L-E-D movie screen has a crisp picture quality, right under the moon and stars. (To this eye, the lights coming from inside the office building behind it were slightly intrusive — but maybe they'll read this and start to turn them off at the end of the day.)

You'll want to arrive on time for your movie; unlike most modern movie theaters, there aren't 30 minutes of previews and commercials.

Rooftop Cinema Club Fort WorthThe outdoor theater is surrounded by downtown buildings.Photo courtesy of Worthington Renaissance Hotel.

What else to do
The whole venue feels like a backyard party, complete with high-top tables, lounge areas, games, and even an old pick-up truck for photo opps. (It can be rented out for special events and private screenings.) Arrive early or stay late to play cornhole, ping-pong, or Cards Against Humanity. Don't miss the chance for a sky-high selfie against Fort Worth landmarks like the Tarrant County Courthouse clock tower.

Rooftop Cinema ClubPhoto opps abound.Photo courtesy of Worthington Renaissance Hotel

Ticketing
All tickets are sold online only, but can be purchased up until movie starts. Standard tickets range from $17.50–$26.50, depending on ticket type and time of day:

  • Adirondack chair only: $17.50-$19.50
  • Adirondack chair with popcorn: $22.50
  • Loveseat with popcorn: $26.50

Active, retired, and family of military personnel can get 15 percent off with the code FortWorthMilitary2022. (Bring any form of valid military ID as proof.) Students can get 10 percent off with the code FortWorthStudent2022. (Active student ID or student schedule required as proof.)

A complete list of upcoming movies is here. There are special Open Caption screenings for the hearing impaired, sing-a-longs, dog friendly "Wooftop" events, and more special programming (like "corny Christmas classics") planned.

Note that all screenings before 4:30 pm are open to all ages, while screenings starting at 4:30 pm or later are strictly for those 18 and older.

filmhotelsopeningsdowntownmovies
news/arts

CultureMap Emails Are Awesome
Get Fort Worth intel delivered daily.

We will not share or sell your email address.

most read posts

Texas' Big Bend named one of the world's must-see destinations for 2023

These are the 7 best food and drink events in Fort Worth this week

Charming Hill Country destination named among most dynamic 'micropolitan' areas in U.S.

Movie review

The Good Nurse flatlines as a great serial killer movie despite Oscar-winning stars

Alex Bentley
Nov 3, 2022 | 1:00 pm
The Good Nurse flatlines as a great serial killer movie despite Oscar-winning stars
Photo by JoJo Whilden / Netflix

Eddie Redmayne and Jessica Chastain in The Good Nurse

It could be argued that American audiences and content makers have an uncomfortable obsession with serial killers. That fixation has only grown through the years with the proliferation of true crime podcasts and streaming shows, each of which has returned to mass murderers repeatedly. A relatively recent killer with an unusual method is showcased in the new Netflix film, The Good Nurse.

But anyone expected a dark and gritty film may be disappointed, as the film shifts focus from the killer, Charlie Cullen (Eddie Redmayne), to one of his co-workers, Amy Loughren (Jessica Chastain). A nurse at Parkfield Memorial Hospital in New Jersey in 2003, she becomes quick friends with Charlie after he starts there as a night nurse.

Their bond, one which becomes tighter after Charlie helps hide the fact that Amy has a debilitating heart condition, keeps her from understanding that Charlie is killing patients, poisoning them by injecting insulin into random IV bags in the hospital’s storage room. It’s only when an internal hospital investigation triggers a police inquiry led by detectives Tim Braun (Noah Emmerich) and Danny Baldwin (Nnamdi Asomugha) that Amy starts to have her doubts.

Directed by Tobias Lindholm and written by Kristy Wilson-Cairns, the film is well done, but never achieves the gravitas that would transform it into something great. Part of this is because the filmmakers never show Charlie as having any outward signs of being evil. He has a bland niceness about him that conceals his lurid impulses; that’s an effective way of showing that you can never know what’s happening in another person’s mind, but an ineffective way of building drama in a film.

The telegraphed nature of Amy and Charlie’s friendship takes on the feel of a slightly higher-class Lifetime movie, one that doesn’t quite fit the expectations brought by two Oscar winners in the lead roles. What ends up being more compelling is the hospital administrators, led by Linda Garran (Kim Dickens), covering up Charlie’s crimes for unknown reasons, and the doggedness of the two detectives trying to discover what exactly is happening.

On another note that’s admittedly a minor quibble, the film’s title does the story no favors. Using The Good… as the start of a title is a vastly overused crutch. Recent examples on both TV and in movies have included The Good Doctor, The Good Fight, The Good Wife, The Good Place, The Good Boss, and The Good House. Sometimes a film can overcome the plainness of such a title, but The Good Nurse is hampered by it.

Chastain and Redmayne each give respectable performances, but they’re nowhere near the award-worthy ones they’ve put on in the past. The most notable actor in the film winds up being Asomugha, a former NFL player who’s been inching into the entertainment industry over the past decade. He’s flat-out great in this role and could use it as a springboard to bigger and better parts.

The Good Nurse has its fair share of interesting moments and accomplished actors to bring them to life, but it falls short of being a must-watch. It’s a serial killer movie that mostly omits the killing, taking most of its reason for being with it.

---

The Good Nurse is now streaming on Netflix.

Eddie Redmayne and Jessica Chastain in The Good Nurse

Photo by JoJo Whilden / Netflix

Eddie Redmayne and Jessica Chastain in The Good Nurse

moviesfilm
news/arts

CultureMap Emails Are Awesome
Get Fort Worth intel delivered daily.

We will not share or sell your email address.

most read posts

Texas' Big Bend named one of the world's must-see destinations for 2023

These are the 7 best food and drink events in Fort Worth this week

Charming Hill Country destination named among most dynamic 'micropolitan' areas in U.S.

Ice Cream News

Fort Worth gets its first taste of acclaimed New York ice cream shop

Teresa Gubbins
Nov 3, 2022 | 10:30 am
van leeuwen ice cream
Courtesy of Van Leeuwen

Their amazing ice cream is justifiably acclaimed.

An artisanal ice cream shop from New York is making its Fort Worth debut: Van Leeuwen, the Brooklyn-born ice cream brand, is opening a location in Fort Worth's WestBend development.

According to a release, the shop will open Thursday, November 10, with a party from 12-4 pm, when they'll be serving scoops for $1. It's located at 1653 River Run #141, and will be open Sunday-Thursday from 12-11 pm, and Friday-Saturday from 12 pm-12 am.

Van Leeuwen Ice Cream was started in 2008 out of a yellow truck on the streets of New York by Ben Van Leeuwen, Pete Van Leeuwen, and Laura O’Neill. They now have shops across New York, California, Pennsylvania, Texas, Colorado, and Connecticut. Pints and ice cream bars are also sold in grocery stores, and they'll ship nationwide from their website.

They're famous for their French-style ice cream, which means lots of cream and egg yolks, and for unique flavors like Honeycomb, Praline Butter Cake, Marionberry Cheesecake, and Earl Grey Tea.

They also offer sundaes, ice cream sandwiches, root beer floats, and milkshakes, and are especially beloved for their vegan and non-dairy selection made from oat and cashew milk, in flavors such as Churros & Fudge, Peanut Butter Brownie Honeycomb, and Cookies & Cream Caramel Swirl.

They also use high-quality ingredients such as pistachios from Mount Etna in Sicily, marionberries from their Oregon farm partner Stahlbush Island Farms, Rishi Tea for their Earl Grey Tea flavor, and for Texas, Praline Butter Cake, made with Texas pecans.

Fort Worth will be their 37th storefront nationally and their fifth in Texas, following their store in Dallas' West Village, plus three locations in Houston, and they have another location in the works for Dallas on Lovers Lane in spring 2023.

“We are psyched to open our first scoop shop in Fort Worth. Texas has been very good to us and we plan to expand further,” says Ben Van Leeuwen in a statement. “We can’t wait to bring the goodness that is Van Leeuwen ice cream to this unique and historic city.”

openingsice-cream
news/arts

CultureMap Emails Are Awesome
Get Fort Worth intel delivered daily.

We will not share or sell your email address.

most read posts

Texas' Big Bend named one of the world's must-see destinations for 2023

These are the 7 best food and drink events in Fort Worth this week

Charming Hill Country destination named among most dynamic 'micropolitan' areas in U.S.

Loading Next Story...