Today’s entertainment picks:
Today’s entertainment picks:
v Greek Festival, 3 to 10 p.m.: Greek food, music, dance and more at Archangel Michael Greek Orthodox Church, 401 12th St., Campbell; 330-755-9072.
v “Sherlock Holmes and the West End Horror,” 7:30 p.m.: The super sleuth is in action at Victorian Players Theater, 702 Mahoning Ave., Youngstown; 330-746-5455.
v “Greater Tuna,” 7:30 p.m.: Eccentric comedy about a small Texas town at New Castle Playhouse, 212 E. Long Ave., New Castle, Pa.; 724-654-3437.
v “Only Make Believe,” 7 p.m.: Move Over Broadway Productions’ musical Valentine’s Day show at St. Michael Church, state Route 46, Canfield; 330-533-8789.
v David Allan Coe, 9 p.m.: Country- music rebel at The Cellar, 162 S. Bridge St., Struthers; 330-750-0199.
‘House’ will end 8-year run on Fox
LOS ANGELES
Fox’s medical drama “House” is ending its eight-year run this season.
The show’s producers, including Emmy-nominated star Hugh Laurie, said it was a “painful” decision but that the time had come to bring “House” to a close.
The drama stars Laurie as Dr. Gregory House, a brilliant but troubled physician with a gift for unraveling medical mysteries. Omar Epps, Robert Sean Leonard and Charlyne Yi are part of the ensemble cast.
In a statement Wednesday, Laurie and his fellow producers said they imagined Dr. House as an “enigmatic creature” and that it was best for him to vanish while there was still mystery in the air.
The season-finale date for “House,” which airs at 9 p.m. Monday, was not announced.
Rembrandt exhibit at art museum
CLEVELAND
The Cleveland Museum of Art will present “Rembrandt in America,” the first major exhibition to explore how the desire for Rembrandt paintings by American collectors fueled research about the artist’s work. It will be on display Feb. 19 to May 28.
The groundbreaking exhibition contains more than 50 works, with about 30 autographed paintings by Rembrandt van Rijn, the largest number of the artist’s authentic paintings assembled from American collections in a century. Additional works on view were thought to be by the renowned Dutch artist when they entered American collections, but their attributions no longer can be maintained. “Rembrandt in America” therefore also offers a survey of Rembrandt as a painter and as a master, including works produced by his studio and a broader network of adapters, followers and copyists.
The exhibition will include a unique gallery where visitors can examine Rembrandt’s 1635 “Portrait of a Woman” using a variety of scientific tools.
For more information, go to clevelandart.org.
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