Apr 26 Sunday
Bring any functioning and non-functioning IT-related electronics in, and PCs for People will safely remove all personalized data and information from your devices. Any items related to your electronics are accepted, from phone cords to servers. They will also take all TVs (including grandma's big old CRT/tube console), cable boxes, game consoles, MP3 players, printers, projectors ... you can check the list at https://www.pcsforpeople.org/faqs/, but if it is related to an information technology or an audio/video device, bring it on in!
Drop-offs will be staffed on Sunday, April 26 from 1 - 3 PM.
"Resonant Site" is an immersive art installation coming to the Pikesville Armory in April of 2026 (two consecutive weekends). It's a multi-screen audiovisual exhibit exploring the intersection of industry and the environment in Baltimore, where water meets land in the region, by Maryland artist duo Collis Donadio.
Free to attend and open to all. Picnic and family-friendly! Rain or shine (exhibit is indoors). Ample free parking on site.
Exhibit Hours:April 17, 18, 19: 1-6pmApril 25, 26: 1-6pm
More info and RSVP: https://wl.donorperfect.net/weblink/weblink.aspx?name=E362285&id=29
*** For Updates and Details Visit www.PikesvilleArmory.org/Events ***Instagram: @pikesville_armory | Facebook: @PikesvilleMDarmory | LinkedIn: @Pikesville-Armory-Foundation
Arthur and Friends Make a Musical! Book and Lyrics by John Maclay Music and Lyrics by Brett Ryback Based on the Arthur book series by Marc Brown
Directed by Zack Callis Choreographed by Kiersten Gasemy
Run time: Around one (1) hour and fifteen (15) minutes with no intermission.This show is appropriate for audiences of all ages.
About: Mr. Ratburn's class is putting on a show – but Arthur's not so sure he's ready! With help from his family and friends, Arthur learns that being yourself is the best part of any performance. A fun, feel-good musical for the whole family!
Step into the shimmering world of The Glass Menagerie, Tennessee Williams’ haunting and beautiful memory play that has captivated audiences for generations. This deeply moving story, rich with longing, fragile dreams, and unforgettable characters, reflects the heart-tugging tension between hope and reality—perfectly resonant for anyone who’s ever chased big dreams while holding tight to family ties. As the Wingfield family navigates love, loss, and the tug of the past, you’ll be drawn into a world as delicate and stunning as the glass menagerie itself. Join us at Church Hill Theatre for an evening of poetic drama and emotional depth that will stay with you long after the curtain falls. Don’t miss this regional favorite!
Exiled, the magician Prospero rules over a remote island with his daughter. As past betrayals resurface, redemption and forgiveness collide in a storm of magic in Shakespeare’s spellbinding, final masterpiece.
The show runs Friday, April 24 through Sunday, May 17.
Based on the beloved Newbery Medal- and National Book Award-winning novel—and the hit 2003 film starring Shia LaBeouf, Sigourney Weaver, and Jon Voight—this theatrical adaptation is a thrilling ride for audiences of all ages. When teenager Stanley Yelnats is hit by a pair of falling sneakers, his unlucky family curse strikes again. Wrongly convicted of stealing the sneakers and sent to the mysterious Camp Green Lake, Stanley joins a ragtag group of boys digging endless holes under the blistering sun—all in the name of building character. But as the layers of dirt pile up, so do the secrets buried beneath them. Part mystery, part adventure, and packed with heart, Holes is a wildly imaginative tale about friendship, fate, and the courage it takes to rewrite your story. Holes is “a fast-paced and inventive family show that works on every level” (The Stage).
1999 Newbery Medal1998 National Book Award for Young People’s Literature1999 Boston Globe-Horn Book Award for Fiction
Baltimore Choral Arts will be joined by the Deer Creek Children's Chorus and soloists from the Peabody Opera program to perform Mahler’s "Symphony of a Thousand." This performance will feature an organ and percussion accompaniment, allowing the 150+ voices of the symphonic chorus to ring out in Grace Church.
This is the harrowing story of the Jews, resistance fighters, and young men escaping forced labor, who owed their lives to the staff at the ARTIS Amsterdam Royal Zoo during WWII. Infrared photography and lyrical poetry, reveal the psychological landscapes of the individuals who lived in constant fear, not knowing from day to day whether their hiding places might be exposed. Nazi soldiers loved the zoo and visited daily, not realizing that a wall away people were in hiding. Images and text chronicle the struggles of ordinary peoplecaught in extraordinary circumstances as they spend time with their memories, take flight with imagination,and experience longing, grief and at times terror. It was a huge group effort that kept 200-300 people alive as they hid in animal enclosures, in kitchens, attics and stables all located in the beautiful and pristine grounds of the zoo.
With famine raging, freezing temperatures in Amsterdam and the needed secrecy of all involved, it is miraculous that all survived their time at the ARTIS Zoo.
THE CRUCIBLE
BY ARTHUR MILLERDIRECTED BY JULIE HERBER
APRIL 3 – 26
Preview April 2ASL Interpreted Performance April 10
A group of teenage girls creates mass hysteria as they accuse fellow villagers of witchcraft in the rigid Puritan society of Salem, Massachusetts in 1692. The accused face the choice of maintaining their ideals or conforming in order to survive in this play about the dangers of unchecked fear, the fragility of justice, and the consequences of history.
The Park School’s high school literary magazine, The Old Court Journal, is delighted to host its second-ever reading at the Ivy Bookshop! In addition to reading their favorite works by published authors, the magazine’s student staff, and other passionate students and teachers will be reading directly from their original submissions to the magazine. After school or work, stop by the Ivy’s downstairs patio on April 17 at 6 p.m, for an evening of fresh, budding literary creativity. There will be music, refreshments, and light appetizers.
Copies of The Old Court Journal will be available at the event.