Today’s entertainment picks:


Today’s entertainment picks:

v Youngstown Phantoms, 7:05 p.m.: The local hockey team takes on Team USA at Covelli Centre; call 330-747-7825 for tickets.

v “The Wizard of Oz,” 7:30 p.m.: It’s all a dream. Or is it? The musical is on stage at New Castle Playhouse, 202 E. Long Ave., New Castle, Pa.; 654-3437.

v Jeff Blanchard, 8 p.m.: Comedian returns to action at the Comedy Cellar at Mojo’s Pub and Grill, 6292 Mahoning Ave., Austintown; 330-793-6656.

v Sam Goodwill, 10 p.m.: Modern rock ’n’ roll at Suzie’s Dogs and Drafts, 34 N. Phelps St., Youngstown; 330-234-228-9158.

v All-City Class Reunion, 9 p.m.: This annual post-Thanksgiving day party will feature vocalist Monica Corley and Youngstown’s Total Package Band ($10). It’s at the B&O banquet hall, 530 Mahoning Ave., Youngstown.

“Unforgettable” (8 p.m., A&E): Did you remember “Unforgettable”? The Poppy Montgomery crime serial, cast off by CBS, launches Season 4 on its new cable home. Skeet Ulrich joins the cast. 8 p.m., A&E.

“Santa Claus Is Comin’ To Town” 8 p.m., ABC: You’d better watch (it’s driving you crazy that I didn’t include “out,” isn’t it?).

TV listings, B6

ENTERTAINMENT NEWS

Family movie night at Jewish center

YOUNGSTOWN

The Jewish Community center, 505 Gypsy Lane, will have a family movie night Dec. 8. Families are welcome to wear pajamas and bring a sleeping bag and pillow to watch “An American Tail.” Popcorn and refreshments will be served. Register at jccyoungstown.org. For information, call Courtney Lockshaw at 330-746-3250, ext. 283, or Clockshaw@jccyoungstown.org. Registration is required.

Jolie goes to bat for Cambodia film fest

PHNOM PENH, Cambodia

The little-known Cambodia International Film Festival is getting a star-powered boost this year from Angelina Jolie Pitt.

The Hollywood star, who is in Cambodia filming her latest movie, will serve as president of the festival’s honorary committee, organizers said. The festival in the capital, Phnom Penh, runs next Friday through Dec. 10 and is screening 130 films from 34 countries.

“Cambodia’s rich history, long culture and talented people mean it has a huge amount to offer the region and the world,” Jolie Pitt said in a statement issued by the festival.

Festival adviser Cedric Eloy, head of the Cambodian Film Commission, said Jolie Pitt’s role would provide moral support and help “bring attention to the rebirth of the Cambodian film industry.” Cambodia’s film industry was devastated by the murderous reign of the Khmer Rouge in the 1970s. The regime executed artists, writers and filmmakers as part of its Maoist vision to eliminate the educated elite and transform the country into an agrarian utopia.

Jolie Pitt is filming an adaptation of a Khmer Rouge biography, “First They Killed My Father,” based on a 2000 memoir by Cambodian author and human-rights activist Luong Ung.