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About Us |
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Press RoomMedia Contact: David Perry (415) 864-6397 Chabot Space & Science Center presents new planetarium show, The Sky Tonight, on Friday and Saturday evenings beginning October 13 Special holiday season planetarium show, The Christmas Sky, runs December 1 - 31. Show will feature performances by Piedmont Children’s Choir on December 8 & 9. New wide format film SOLARMAX continues. NOTE TO EDITORS: new Chabot info phone number: (510) 336-7300 13 October 2000, Oakland, CA: The new Chabot Space & Science Center today announced two new shows for its world-class Ask Jeeves Planetarium: The Sky Tonight, taking place every Friday and Saturday evening at 7:30pm and 8:30pm beginning on October 13; and The Christmas Sky, from December 1 - 31. Both shows have been created and will be led by Chabot Director of Astronomy, Jose Olivarez. Following the Friday and Saturday evening shows of The Sky Tonight, attendees will be able to view the heavens through Chabot’s two historic dome-housed telescopes (nicknamed “Leah” and “Rachel”). From December 1 - 31, Chabot will present a special holiday planetarium show, The Christmas Sky, showing the night-time sky as it would have looked over the Holy Land 2000 years ago. Adding to this special holiday presentation will be four performances by Oakland’s internationally-acclaimed Piedmont Children’s Choir (December 8th & 9th at 7:30pm and 8:45pm). Following its recent West Coast premiere at the Center, the new wide-format film, SOLARMAX, continues its run in the Tien MegaDome theater in rotation with Amazing Journeys and To Be An Astronaut. (A full schedule of film and planetarium events accompanies this release and is available with downloadable images at www.chabotspace.org) “The Sky Tonight is a wonderful and wondrous introduction to Jupiter, Saturn, the Andromeda Galaxy, familiar constellations and the Milky Way,” said Olivarez. “Attendees are encouraged to bring binoculars to observe the more-than-9,000 stars in the planetarium and the endless array in the sky outdoors.” The new wide format film, SOLARMAX, is about humankind’s struggle to understand the sun and the sun-earth relationship – from earliest times to the present day. The film traces the ascent of humans as expressed by our developing understanding of the sun, and through it, our universe. The underlying theme of the film is the triumph of knowledge over ignorance – of light over darkness. The title refers to the 11-year cycle of maximum solar activity that scientists call “solarmax.” The run reaches one of these peaks in 2000 and 2001, in which sunspots, solar flares, and other phenomena are more frequent and more intense. The effects of “solarmax” on earth include increased activity of the Auroras (the Northern and Southern Lights), and interruptions of electronic communications. The film crew has traveled around the world to visit historical sites of sun worship, see scientists studying the sun, and capture the majesty of a total solar eclipse. SOLARMAX was directed, produced and written by John Weiley for Heliograph Pty. Ltd. and is distributed by the Museum of Science and Industry, Chicago. The score was composed by Nigel Westlake, co-producer was Robert Eather, and the executive producer was John Wickstrom. SOLARMAX received its world premiere on June 27, 2000 before Her Majesty, Queen Elizabeth II at the opening of the new Imax cinema at the Science Museum of London. Chabot Space & Science Center information Location: 10000 Skyline Blvd., Oakland, CA 94619 Film Schedule for the Tien MegaDome Theater: Tickets: Tickets may be purchased at the door. Advance tickets are available on-line at www.ticketweb.com or by phone at (510) 601-TWEB. Schedule for the Ask Jeeves Planetarium: Center Hours: Open Tuesday - Sunday Info Phone: (510) 336-7300 Website: www.chabotspace.org Admission: $8.00/$5.50 seniors and children. Additional charge for Ask Jeeves Planetarium and Tien MegaDome Theater Overview of Offerings at Chabot Space & Science Center: The Soul of Night is currently playing on a daily basis in the Ask Jeeves Planetarium, with The Sky Tonight featured on Friday and Saturday evenings. A special holiday planetarium show, The Christmas Sky, will run from December 1 through 31. Showing in the Tien MegaDome Theater are the wide-format films SOLARMAX, To Be An Astronaut and Amazing Journeys. Permanent exhibits include the interactive “Planetary Landscapes,” “Our Place in the Universe,” and “History of California Astronomy 1850-1950: Observatories, Telescope Makers, and their Instruments.” The International Space Station HAB-LAB module, on loan from Boeing, will be in the Exhibit Hall through December. The new Chabot Space & Science Center is an innovative teaching and learning center focusing on astronomy and the inter-relationships of all the sciences. Its telescope and observatory complex, domed-screen wide-format film theater, planetarium, exhibits and natural park setting are a place where students, teachers and the public can imagine, understand and learn to shape their future. For information and tickets, please call (510) 336-7300. www.chabotspace.org. END | |||||||||||
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