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Comedy, 'Creatures,' and Concerts at Bay Street This Weekend

Nancy Atlas and Clark Gayton at Bay Street Theater last year
Nancy Atlas and Clark Gayton at Bay Street Theater last year
Michael Heller
Nancy Atlas and the Nancy Atlas Project return to the stage at 8 tonight with the final concert of this winter’s Fireside Sessions
By
Star Staff

Bay Street Theater in Sag Harbor will offer refuge from the bleakness of early spring this weekend with two nights of rock ’n’ roll, a new All Star Comedy Show, and a film from the vaults of the Hamptons International Film Festival.    

Nancy Atlas and the Nancy Atlas Project return to the stage at 8 tonight with the final concert of this winter’s Fireside Sessions. Ms. Atlas’s guest will be Clark Gayton, a musician and composer who has played trombone with such artists as Bruce Springsteen, Sting, Whitney Houston, Rihanna, Prince, Stevie Wonder, and Wyclef Jean. Tickets are $25 and going fast.

A handful of tickets also remains for Saturday’s 8 p.m. performance by Eaglemania, the Eagles tribute band that has been performing for more than 40 years. Consisting of veteran musicians, the band plays all the Eagles’ hits as well as material from solo albums by Don Henley, Glen Frey, and Joe Walsh. Tickets are $35.

The comedian Joseph Vecsey of Optimum Cable TV’s “The Un-Movers” and Comedy Central’s “Comics to Watch” will host tomorrow evening’s All Star Comedy Show. This week’s guest comics are Jamie Roberts (MTV, Tidal, XM Radio, and “Law and Order”), Anthony DeVito (Comedy Central’s “Adam Devine’s House Party” and “The Jim Gaffigan Show”) and Jay Nog (Gotham Comedy Live and Sirius XM). Tickets for the 8 p.m. show are $30.

The Hamptons International Film Festival’s peripatetic 25th anniversary screenings will touch down at Bay Street on Sunday at 6 p.m. with “Heavenly Creatures,” a blend of fantasy, dark humor, and history directed by Peter Jackson. Shown at the 1994 festival, the film stars Kate Winslet and Melanie Lynskey in the true story of two teens convicted of murder in a 1954 court case. Tickets are $10.

 

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