Category: Events

Events for adults, families and kids in Newton, MA.

  • Spring Seasonings: A Taste of Newton and Needham

    Spring Seasonings: A Taste of Newton and Needham

    Monday, May 5

    Newton Marriott Hotel

    Up to 40 of Newton’s and Needham’s top restaurants will participate in the annual ‘Spring Seasonings: A Taste of Newton and Needham, May 5 at the Newton Marriott Hotel.

    The popular all-you-can-eat event includes many of the area’s newest establishments but also many returning favorites.  Attendees will enjoy bite-sized versions of dishes taken directly from the menus of the area’s top chefs plus extensive wine tasting and beer samplings.

    “This is the only night of the year when you can sample culinary creations from Newton’s and Needham’s best restaurants under one roof,” said Greg Reibman, president of the Newton-Needham Chamber “We’re especially excited about the 2014 version because the dining scene in our two communities has exploded this year.”

     

    PARTICIPATING RESTAURANTS INCLUDE

    • Cabot’s Ice Cream and Restaurant
    • Cook Newton
    • Davio’s Cucina
    • Del Frisco’s Grille
    • Dunn Gaherin’s
    • Fiorella’s
    • Inna’s Kitchen
    • O’Hara’s Food & Spirits
    • Riverbend Restaurant
    • Terry O’Reilly’s
    • The Capital Grille
    • Volante Farms
    • Walnut Grille
    • Whole Foods Market
    • The Biltmore Bar & Grille
    • Bokx 109
    • Stacy’s Juicebar
    • The Center Café
    • Treat Cupcake Bar
    • BRIO Tuscan Grille
    • Gari Japanese Fusion Bistro
    • The Cottage
    • Crowne Plaza -Newton
    • Social Restaurant and Bar
    • Bertucci’s -Needham
    • Sheraton Needham Hotel
    • Masala Art
    • Tommy Doyle’s/ Mick Morgan’s
    • Not Your Average Joe’s
    • Comella’s
    • Pinkberry
    • Seasons 52
    • JP Licks
    • Legal Seafoods

    This year, the Chamber has added wine and beer pairings from two of Needham’s brand new liquor stores – Bin Ends and Needham Center Fine Wines – and from Craft Beer Cellar in Newton, as part of the price of admission.

    Tickets for Spring Seasonings are $50 but will be available online at www.nnchamber.com at a discounted price of $40 for the general public and just $35 for members of the Newton-Needham Chamber of Commerce.

    Spring Seasonings: A Taste of Newton and Needham

     

  • World Premiere of 9-Man with Director Ursula Liang!

    World Premiere of 9-Man with Director Ursula Liang!

    9-MAN WORLD PREMIERE

    Independent Film Festival Boston
    Sunday April 27th, 1pm
    Somerville Theatre, main screen
    55 Davis Square
    Advance tickets ($1 cheaper)

     

    The Chinese Historical Society of New England and the Boston Asian American Film Festival/AARW host a special reception in Davis Square following the screening at the Somerville Theatre, part of the Independent Film Festival of Boston.

    To purchase tickets, please go here.

    Questions, email info@chsne.org or call 617.338.4339

    Come celebrate the World Premiere of 9-Man with Director Ursula Liang!

  • Kids Cooking Class with ChopChop Cookbook at Wellesley Book Store

    Kids Cooking Class with ChopChop Cookbook at Wellesley Book Store

    Kids Cooking Class with ChopChop Cookbook at Wellesley Book Store

    ChopChop Magazine Editor Sally Sampson has expanded the boundaries of her kids cooking magazine with a new cookbook: CHOPCHOP: The Kids’ Guide to Cooking Real Food with Your Family. Complete with family-favorite recipes from the magazine plus dozens of new recipes, the ChopChop cookbook redefines what it means to cook and eat healthily by bringing kids and adults together on exciting projects in the kitchen. The event will demonstrate how to make delicious yogurt parfaits at home.

    There will be two cooking classes:
    2:30 pm: Ages 5-8
    3:30 pm: Ages 9-12

    ABOUT THE AUTHOR
    Sally Sampson is the founder of ChopChop magazine and the author and coauthor of numerous cookbooks, including the James Beard Award-nominated The $50 Dinner Party, Throw Me a Bone, and The Olives Table. She has contributed to Self, Bon Appétit, Food & Wine, The Atlantic, The Boston Globe, and The Boston Phoenix. She lives with her family in Watertown, Massachusetts.

    Go here to sign up.

    cooking class book event for kids Wellesley book store

  • 200 Volunteers Needed for Peirce Community Playground Build!

    200 Volunteers Needed for Peirce Community Playground Build!

    Earlier this school year, the Peirce elementary school community came together to raise funds to build a much needed new playground at their school.

    Their current playground has begun to rot and Newton Parks and Recreation has reported that it will soon be unsafe for play.

    The new playground, which will be assembled over the course of two days – Saturday, May 17 and Sunday, May 18 – will require the effort of 200 volunteers.

    If you are interested in helping Peirce assemble their new playground, you can visit peirceplayground.comto learn more about the project and to sign up for a shift.

    We need to secure 40-60 volunteers for each shift throughout the day on Saturday, May 17 and Sunday, May 18.

    Peirce Elementary School playground build

    Please note:
    All volunteers must be at least 18 years old. No children will be allowed anywhere on Peirce property on Build Days.

    No skills or experience required. There is a job for everyone!

    Bring friends, grandparents or non-Peirce neighbors to join with you for a shift (share the link above or sign them up directly).

    Visit www.peirceplayground.com for additional information about the Community Build and what to expect.

    Peirce Elementary School Newton new playground

  • Meet Grace Lin at Where The Mountain Meets the Moon Show at NNHS

    Meet Grace Lin at Where The Mountain Meets the Moon Show at NNHS

    Chinese Historical Society of New England
    presents
    Grace Lin

    Best-Selling Children’s Author & Artist
    Presentation & Reception
    in honor of
    “Where the Mountain Meets the Moon”

    premiering at Wheelock Family Theatre

    Where The Mountain Meets the Moon play at Wheelock Family Theater

    Sunday, April 13 at 1 pm
    The Film Lecture Hall at Newton North High School
    457 Walnut Street, Newton

    Tickets: $5 for members and $10 for non-membersJoin award-winning, best-selling Massachusetts author/illustrator Grace Lin for a special presentation on “Embracing the Multicultural Label” and discussion on adapting Newbery Award honored book “Where the Mountain Meets the Moon” for stage performance. A book signing (bring your own books, and books will also be available) and reception will follow the presentation.

    Wheelock Family Theatre is presenting “Where the Mountain Meets the Moon” April 11-May 11. The play is adapted from the Newbery Honor Award winning book of the same name, by bestselling author/artist and MA resident Grace Lin!

    Grace Lin Where The Mountain Meets the Moon show at Newton North High School

    Want to see the show at Wheelock Family Theatre?

    Save $5-$10 per ticket by purchasing tickets for the Fri 4/18 and Sat 4/19 shows of “Where the Mountain Meets the Moon” from the Chinese Historical Society of New England and proceeds will benefit the Chinese Historical Society of New England educational programs. (Chinese Historical Society of New England Tickets are $15/mezzanine and $25/orchestra!)

    Download a flyer here.
    Purchase tickets here.

  • Dr. Paul Watanabe Speaking at Newton Free Library

    Dr. Paul Watanabe Speaking at Newton Free Library

    Please join

    Newton Asian Pacific American Network

    in celebration of
    Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month

    to learn about the
    culture, traditions, and history of Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders
    in the United States in a display and a keynote by

    Paul Watanabe, Ph.D.
    University of Massachusetts, Boston

    Paul Watanabe, Ph.D.

    on Tuesday, May 6 at 6:30pm

    Newton Free Library, Druker Auditorium
    330 Homer Street, Newton, MA

    Free and all are welcome. Light refreshments provided
    For RSVP/information: Betty Chan, bettychanmsw@gmail.com

    Newton Asian Pacific American Network is dedicated to the diversity well-being of Newton by celebrating cultural heritage, promoting intercultural dialogue, and improving access to resources for all Asian Americans in Newton.

    Paul Watanabe is a member of the Board of Directors of Political Research Associates, the Board of Directors of the Nisei Student Relocation Commemorative Fund, and the National Academic Board of the Asian American Policy Review. His principal research and teaching interests are in the areas of American foreign policy, American political behavior, ethnic group politics, and Asian Americans. He is the author of Ethnic Groups, Congress, and American Foreign Policy and principal author of A Dream Deferred: Changing Demographics, New Opportunities, and Challenges for Boston. His articles have appeared in Asian American Policy ReviewBusiness in the Contemporary WorldNew England Journal of Public PolicyPolitical Psychology, PS: Political Science and Politics, Public Perspective, and World Today. He regularly contributes analysis and commentary to national and local television, radio, newspapers, and newsmagazines. He has a PhD in Political Science from Harvard University.

    A Japanese American originally from Murray, Utah, Dr. Paul Watanabe knows firsthand of the Japanese internment that took place in the United States following the Pearl Harbor bombing. He recalls that his brother, only five days old at the time, and mother were sent to an assembly center—essentially a former horse stall at the Santa Ana racetrack in California—and later to a concentration camp in the early 1940s. For Milton students, he traced the history of the internment initiative: it was supported numerous times by the Supreme Court, and it spawned multiple and diverse reactions among Japanese Americans. The question of that time is the question of today, he said. “What is the right balance between preserving civil rights and protecting national security?” Dr. Watanabe of the University of Massachusetts Department of Political Science, Milton’s ninth annual speaker in the Hong Kong Distinguished Lecture Series, posed the question.

    He compared Americans’ response to Arab Americans following the September 11 tragedy to the response toward Japanese Americans during World War II. The need, he said, for the government to make distinctions between “us and them” internationally is easier to manage than drawing that line domestically. He implored students to understand the impact on Americans among us who end up caught in a web of suspicion and innuendo, whose self-esteem is taken away, whose identity is challenged. He pointed to the young Sikhs living in New York who wear turbans on their heads over their long hair, which is sacred to their beliefs. “Cutting their hair is going entirely against the will of their heritage and their family; cutting their hair is like cutting out their hearts, and yet following the September 11 attacks, many of them did it,” Professor Watanabe explained. “It was the price these individuals paid in these circumstances because it was the price of getting by.”

    Dr. Watanabe described the Japanese Americans detained in the 1940s as “resourceful” and “heroic.” Some, despite their government-imposed detainment, answered the military draft from their concentration camps, serving in a much-decorated regiment. Others resisted, often to devastating consequences. Draft resisters served time in federal prison. “My mother refused to disallow her allegiance to the emperor of Japan because she had never vowed allegiance to him in the first place,” Dr. Watanabe recalls. “Although born in the U.S., she was stripped of her citizenship because of her position.” Though no mass removal of populations has occurred in the United States following the September 11 attacks, people of Arab descent have experienced surveillance, interrogations, and detainment. Dr. Watanabe shared recent Gallup poll results revealing that 1/3 of Americans still believe that internment camps are a reasonable practice.

    “When someone, because of his race, religion, or ethnicity is held in suspicion,” Dr. Watanabe concluded, “we all potentially become the victims of suspicions ourselves. It is not so easy to draw the line between us and them. Aren’t we all diminished and damaged in some significant way when others people’s sense of self, identity and dignity are compromised? I want this nation to be secure, but I also want it to be worth securing. I want it to be worth dying for. You can’t often have it both ways: all freedoms all the time, or all security all the time. You have to figure out the balance—the reasonable and rational limitations both to preserving freedom and protecting security.”

    Dr. Paul Watanabe received his doctorate from Harvard University. At the University of Massachusetts, Boston, his interests are international relations, the foreign policymaking process, strategic and defense policy, American political behavior, and ethnic group politics. He is co-director for Asian-American studies, and is co-author of A Dream Deferred: Changing Demographics, Challenges and New Opportunities in Boston. Dr. Watanabe has authored many publications and his articles have appeared in Political PsychologyWorld TodayPublic Perspective and Business in the Contemporary World.  From Milton Academy

  • Small Business Events from Newton Needham Chamber of Commerce

    Small Business Events from Newton Needham Chamber of Commerce

    Coffee Connect at Avery Crossing FREE

    When: Tuesday, April 8 at 8 a.m.

    Where: 110 West Street, Needham
Cost: Free

    The April edition of the Newton-Needham Chamber’s popular morning networking event returns to Needham Heights. Coffee Connects are open to members and non-members and offer a chance to learn more about the Chamber, our mission, our members and our programs. It’s free but advance registration is requested at nnchamber.com or call 617-244-5300

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    Three Steps to Success with Twitter for Your Business 

    When: Two separate sessions on Thursday, April 10 from 3-5 p.m. or Friday, April 11 from 9-11 a.m.

    Where: Top Banana Educational Foundation, 56 Winchester St., Newton

    $60

    With 500 million Tweets a day and 230 million active users, people turn to Twitter to bring them closer to the things they care about. So stop wasting time and connect your business to what people are talking about right now. Attend this workshop to learn Twitter basics and how to create a cohesive Twitter presence and compelling profile. Learn how to build your following and engage with your audience to generate quality leads and customers! Finally discover best practices, tools, view real life examples and of course how to measure your activity. Advance registration required at nnchamber.com or call 617-244-5300

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    Business After Hours at The Historic Durant-Kenrick House


    When: Thurs. April 17, 5:30-7 p.m.

    Where: 286 Waverly Ave., Newton

    $20

    Join the Newton-Needham Chamber of Commerce for an afterhours cocktail party at the Newton’s newest history museum. Join us for a tour, networking and refreshments. Advance registration required at nnchamber.com or call 617-244-5300

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     Small Business Month Forum Featuring the 2014 Candidates for Governor

    Wednesday, April 30 from 7:30-10 a.m.

    Lasell College, DeWitt Hall, 80 Maple St., Newton

    Cost: Free

    All of the declared 2014 candidates for Massachusetts Governor, regardless of political affiliation, have been invited to participate in this forum. Each candidate will be asked to speak about the role and impact of small business in the economic development of Massachusetts and their vision for supporting small businesses, followed by questions asked directly by area small business owners and the Lasell community. The program will begin at 8 a.m. Registration, light breakfast and networking begins at 7:30 a.m. Advance registration required at nnchamber.com or call 617-244-5300

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    Spring Seasonings: A Taste of Newton & Needham 

    When: Monday, May 5 from 5:30-8 p.m.

    Where: Newton Marriott Hotel, 2345 Commonwealth Ave, Newton

    $40 in advance, $50 day of the event

    Newton and Needham’s largest food event of the year, “Spring Seasonings: A Taste of Newton and Needham” returns to the Newton Marriott Hotel Monday, May 5. Once again, up to 40 area restaurants are expected to participate.  Tickets available at nnchamber.com or call 617-244-5300

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    Facebook  for  Business, A Two-Part Series

    When: Two separate sessions on Friday, May 9 from 9-11 a.m. and Friday, May 30 from 9-11 a.m.

    Where: Top Banana Educational Foundation, 56 Winchester St., Newton

    $120 for the both sessions

    In a recent survey businesses overwhelming preferred to have a Facebook page with 2 million fans over a Super Bowl ad! If you currently have a Facebook business page with at least 50 fans and have had limited success, this series is for you! Each session is two hours. Please bring your wifi capable laptop (not iPad) Advance registration required at nnchamber.com or call 617-244-5300

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    A Salute to Newton & Needham’s Small Businesses  FREE

    When: Wednesday, May 14, 5:30-7 p.m.

    Where: Newton Marriott Hotel outdoor pavilion, 2345 Commonwealth Ave, Newton

    Cost: Free for chamber members, $15 non-members

    Join us for a special event, along the banks of the Charles River at the Newton Marriott Hotel, as we honor members of the Newton-Needham Chamber of Commerce. Advance registration required at nnchamber.com or call 617-244-5300.


    Newton Needham Chamber of Commerce small business events

  • Wheelock Family Theatre: Where The Mountain Meets the Moon

    Wheelock Family Theatre: Where The Mountain Meets the Moon

    Wheelock Family Theatre has received rave reviews as a forward-thinking performance arts environment that is bringing a fresh and much needed perspective to musicals.

    It was also heartening to see Wheelock Family Theatre’s terrific recent production of “Hairspray’’ and note that the lead role of Tracy Turnblad — which typically goes to a white actress — was played by Jenna Lea Scott, who is Asian-American. The choice was an example of the kind of nontraditional casting that has opened up opportunities for nonwhite actors while presenting a fuller picture of the world to audiences. The Boston Globe

     

    They are doing it again by bringing Grace Lin’s Newbery Honor chapter book, Where the Mountain Meets the Moon, to life as a play.

    Where The Mountain Meets the Moon play at Wheelock Family Theater

    Where the Mountain Meets the Moon

    April 11 – May 11, 2014

    Friday nights at 7:30; Saturday and Sunday matinees at 3:00

    School vacation week matinees at 1:00; Tue 4/22 – Fri 4/25

    ASL/Audio-description dates: Friday May 9 at 7:30 and Sunday May 11 at 3:00

    All public performances offer open captioning

    Relaxed performance: Sat 5/3 at 10:00am

    For booking your school to attend the Yawkey School Matinee series please contact the box office at 617-879-2300 or tickets@wheelock.edu

    Adapted for the stage by Jeannine Coulombe. Directed by Jane Staab.

    Inspired by her father’s stories of the Jade Dragon and the Old Man of the Moon, young Minli sets off on an extraordinary journey to change her family’s fortune. She encounters magical creatures along the way, including a dragon that accompanies her on her quest, and finds her questions answered in unexpected ways. WFT proudly presents the East Coast premiere of Grace Lin’s Newbery honored novel.

    Recommended for adults, teens and youth 5+.

    Buy tickets here.

  • Tour NewTV and Win Prizes!

    Tour NewTV and Win Prizes!

    “Experience NewTV: Join Us on Tuesday, April 8, 6-8pm

    You’re invited to tour the NewTV facility and explore our HD control room and studio, HD Dolby 7.1 surround sound screening room and our cutting-edge training center.Learn more about NewTV’s full roster of production and post-production courses.

    ***Both active members and new members will have the chance to win some amazing prizes from local business and restaurants.

    For more info on the event and membership, please contact Member Services Coordinator, Michael Sills at michaelcs@newtv.org and visit NewTV Open House.
  • Music with Philip: Parent/Child Events and Classes

    Music with Philip: Parent/Child Events and Classes

    UPCOMING SHOWS!!!
     
    What: VANESSA TRIEN AND PHILIP ALEXANDER together again! 
    It’s the 7TH ANNUAL FAMILY CONCERT to benefit the BROOKLINE EARLY EDUCATION PROGRAM.  Featuring a mash-up of our two bands playing a mix of her tunes and mine! All ages welcome.
    When: Sunday April 6th, 10:30am
    Where: Temple Ohabei Shalom, 1187 Beacon Street, Brookline, MA

    Tickets: $8 kids / $10 adults.  Purchase now at www.beeppto.org

     

    What: TALES OF WONDER! A Musical Storytelling Show

    Mountains Of Toys… Wisecracking Rabbits… Dancing Bananas! SAY WHAT?!!?  Kids will laugh as Philip performs whimsical original and folkloric stories with humor, flair and soundscapes to spark the imagination.
    When: Wednesday April 23rd, 10:30am
    Where: Coolidge Corner Branch of The Brookline Public Library, 31 Pleasant Street Brookline MA 02446
    Tickets: FREE!!!
    Music with Philip: Events and Classes
    Sing, Play, Grow! 
    Spring Semester Schedule
     
    GOOD MORNING MUSIC
    Mondays @ 9:30am
    March 31 to June 16
    10 week series: $220
    A SONG, A SNACK, A STORY!
    Mondays @ 1pm
    March 31 to June 16
    10 week series: $220
    Note: All classes are  for children with parent or caregiver, 45 minutes long, and held at  50 Sewall Ave, Brookline, MA. 
    To sample a class, RSVP to Philip@singplaygrow.com
    Info and Registration at