Today’s entertainment picks:


Today’s entertainment picks:

v Barry Manilow, 7:30 p.m.: The pop-music legend in concert ($16.75 to $146.75; seats are scarce) at Covelli Centre with opening act Dave Koz; ticketmaster.

v You’ve Got a Friend, 7:30 p.m.: The music of James Taylor and Carole King, performed by Kirsti Manna and Jonathan Birchfield ($33 to $45) and a 24-piece orchestra, at Orr Auditorium, Westminster College, New Wilmington, Pa.; 724-946-7354 or westminster.edu.

v “Cosi Fan Tutte,” 7:30 p.m.: Opera ($16, $8 for non-YSU students) at Youngstown State University’s Ford Theater, inside Bliss Hall; 330-941-3106.

v Federal Frenzy, 2 to 11 p.m.: This free music and art festival, featuring Reel Big Fish and about two dozen other bands, takes place on West Federal Street in downtown Youngstown, and in the adjacent bars and eateries.

v Natalie Sprouse, 7:30 p.m.: Jazz and blues singer in an intimate cabaret show ($25) at Overture Restaurant/Flad Pavilion at DeYor Performing Arts Center, 260 W. Federal St., downtown; 330-740-0264.

“Sherpa” (9 p.m., Discovery): “Sherpa” is a new documentary that examines how the Sherpa community united to reclaim Mount Everest after the 2014 avalanche that killed 16 of its members. The film follows their protests for higher wages and better work safety.

For complete listings, see TV Week magazine, included with today’s paper.

LOCAL TOPICS ON TV

“Community Connection” (Sunday at 6:30 a.m. on 21 WFMJ-TV and 11 a.m. on WBCB-TV): Men of Faith will present the Men’s Rally in the Valley, and Bob Popa, coordinator of the event, will join host Madonna Chism Pinkard to discuss the free event.

Next, Dean Lance Grahn and Daniel Palmer of Kent State University-Trumbull campus will discuss the free career and health fairs on the campus.

“A Conversation with Dee” (today at 6:30 p.m. on MyYTV and Sunday at 7:30 a.m. on WYTV-TV): Host Dee Crawford will welcome Kimberly Calvert of the Youngstown/Warren Regional Chamber. Calvert will share details of the upcoming Athena Awards.

ENTERTAINMENT NEWS

Looted painting goes on the block

NEW YORK

A 17th-century Dutch painting looted by the Nazis and recovered by the Monuments Men is going to auction.

Sotheby’s is offering Gabriel Metsu’s “An Officer Paying Court to a Young Woman” on May 26. The pre-sale estimate is $6 million to $8 million.

Austria’s Rothschild family had owned it for decades. But due to bureaucratic wrangling after World War II, it wasn’t physically returned to them until 1998.

It was sold at Christie’s in 1999 for $1.2 million. Markings on the back track its movement throughout Austria during World War II.

The Nazis seized the work from the Rothschilds’ Vienna palace in 1938 and then moved it to the salt mines in Altausee.

The Monuments Men recovered artworks from the mines before they could be destroyed under Adolf Hitler’s 1945 Nero Decree.