Today’s entertainment picks:


Today’s entertainment picks:

v Drive In Movie Night, 7:30 p.m.: Bring a lawn chair or a blanket and the kids for a free screening of “Jurassic Park” at the new Youngstown Foundation Amphitheatre. The Night Owls band will take the stage first, with the movie starting at dusk.

v Mount Carmel Society Italian Fest, 6-11 p.m.: The sleepy village of Lowellville gets into party mode for this large and traditional festival; mtcarmelclub.com.

v “Peter Pan,” 7:30 p.m.: Kent State Trumbull Theater’s summer stock production of the beloved family musical ($18, $16 for senior citizens and students, $14 for children 12 and under) opens tonight. The campus is at 4314 Mahoning Ave. NW, Warren; 330-675-8887.

v Columbiana Wine Festival, 2-9 p.m.: Live music, delicious foods, art vendors and of course, regional wines, are the focus of this event ($30 at the gate) at Firestone Farms Town Center in Columbiana; tourcolumbianaohio.com.

v Party on the Plaza, 6-11 p.m.: Join the outdoor party on North Phelps Street in downtown Youngstown to celebrate the end of the work week. Admission is free. Sparky B, SWAGG and No Funk No Justice will perform on an outdoor stage.

“Marvel’s Agents of SHIELD” (8 p.m., ABC): The party’s over, and now the team must trust each other in order to face impending doom and an enemy that’s closer than they think.

TV listings, B5

ENTERTAINMENT NEWS

Donna Summer musical tickets

CLEVELAND

Tickets for the touring production of “SUMMER: The Donna Summer Musical” at Playhouse Square will go on sale July 29. Call 216-241-6000 or go to playhousesquare.org.

“SUMMER” will run from Oct. 8 to 27.

The musical has a score featuring more than 20 of Summer’s hits, including “Love to Love You Baby,” “Bad Girls” and “Hot Stuff.” Go to playhousesquare.org for performance times.

Louvre removes name from gallery

PARIS

France’s Louvre Museum in Paris has become the first major institution to remove the Sackler family name after protests erupted against the family that is blamed for the deadly opioid crisis in the United States.

At the Louvre’s Oriental Antiquities gallery, an Associated Press photographer late Wednesday saw tape covering multiple placards bearing the name that has long been associated with arts patronage around the world. A sign listing family members by name had been removed from its place on the wall, with only the holes and outline remaining.

The Sackler family owns Purdue Pharma, which is facing some 2,000 lawsuits in the U.S. over its role in the opioid crisis that has claimed 400,000 lives in two decades.

Institutions that benefited from the family’s largesse have been targeted by activists, led by the artist Nan Goldin. New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Tate group of galleries in London have said they will no longer accept Sackler money, and the Sackler Trust has frozen new donations.