Violinist Lindsey Stirling will play at Dickies Arena on December 5.
Photo by Shervin Lainez
Award-winning rock violinist and former Dancing With the Stars contestant Lindsey Stirling will come to Fort Worth as part of her Snow Waltz Holiday Tour, playing at Dickies Arena on Friday, December 5.
The 23-city tour will start on November 18 in University Park, Pennsylvania, running through December 23. In addition to Fort Worth, Stirling will also go to the Houston suburb Sugar Land and Austin suburb Cedar Park.
This tour will come directly on the heels of the world tour in support of her 2024 album, Duality, which ends on October 11. Stirling had 2024 dates in Dallas, Austin, Houston, and San Antonio as part of that tour.
This is the fourth consecutive year that Stirling has gone on Snow Waltz tour, which has the same name as her second Christmas album that came out in 2022.
The tour promises "a magical holiday experience with whimsical yet daring choreography, stunning visuals, and genre-defying arrangements of holiday classics and originals that captivate fans of all ages."
Stirling knows her way around choreography, competing on Dancing with the Stars in 2017, where she was the runner-up alongside professional dancer Mark Ballas.
The Citi Cardmember Presale, VIP tickets, and the artist presale for the tour will start on Tuesday, August 19.
Fort Worth fans can purchase tickets early during the venue presale starting on Wednesday, August 20 at 10 am through Friday, August 22 at 9 AM with unlock code DICKIES at Ticketmaster.com.
The general public can buy tickets starting on August 22 at 10 am via Ticketmaster.com.
With 12 Oscar nominations in the past 12 years in multiple categories, Bradley Cooper has turned into not only an acclaimed actor, but also a touted filmmaker. Given that pedigree, it might be difficult to remember that he first gained recognition as a comedy star in movies like Wedding Crashers, Yes Man, and The Hangover series. For his latest directorial effort, he has married comedy with drama in Is This Thing On?.
Unlike the previous two films he directed, Cooper only has a supporting role, ceding the lead to Will Arnett. Arnett plays Alex Novak, who, as the film begins, is starting the process of divorce from his wife of 20 years, Tess (Laura Dern). Forced to move to a depressing apartment in New York City and only getting limited time with his two kids, Alex finds the unexpected outlet of stand up comedy when he signs up for open mic night at the famous Comedy Cellar.
The film follows Alex as he continues to pursue comedy while still having to see Tess on a regular basis, thanks to a shared custody agreement and get-togethers with friends like Balls & Christine (Cooper and Andra Day) and Stephen & Geoffrey (real life couple Sean Hayes and Scott Icenogle). While the comedy serves as a form of counseling for Alex, truly moving on proves more difficult than expected.
The film, co-written by Cooper with Arnett and Mark Chappell, is loosely based on the real-life story of British comedian John Bishop, so one of the biggest things they needed to get right was the comedy itself. Alex’s marital situation lends his comedy more of a confessional style than actual jokes, and his evolution in that space is done well. Shooting in the actual Comedy Cellar and populating the club with real comedians like Amy Sedaris, Jordan Jensen, Reggie Conquest, and more gives those scenes an extra dose of realism.
As if to underscore the personal and emotional nature of the story, Cooper and cinematographer Matthew Libatique make liberal use of closeups with handheld cameras. The camera is constantly moving around and often seems to be right in the actors’ faces, something that is most noticeable when Alex is performing. As if the stories Alex was telling weren’t intimate enough, having Arnett's entire face fill the frame forces the audience to pay attention to what his character is saying.
If there is something to knock about the film, it’s a lack of dramatic stakes. While there’s natural tension between Alex and Tess due to the divorce, it’s way less than in a movie like, say, Marriage Story. There’s also a sneaking suspicion that Cooper was just looking to have fun with the film, casting himself as the comic sidekick and working with good friends like Arnett and Hayes. If ever there was a good hang divorce movie, this is it.
Arnett rarely gets to be in movies, much less as the lead, but he ably embodies this somewhat dramatic part. It helps that he’s given a great scene partner like Dern, who knows when to dial her acting up or down for a particular situation. Cooper and Day are also good despite their story being slightly superfluous, and Christine Ebersole and Ciarán Hinds as Alex’s parents lend the film some extra gravitas.
Is This Thing On? is a much different type of film from Cooper’s first two directorial efforts, A Star is Born and Maestro, and it’s nice to see the filmmaker offer something new. It has a relatable story for anyone who has ever been married while offering an element of uniqueness with someone discovering an undiscovered skill late in life.
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Is This Thing On? opens wide in theaters on January 9.