Milton Glaser on Film
In collaboration with its neighbor The Church, the Sag Harbor Cinema will screen “Milton Glaser: To Inform and Delight,” a documentary about the influential graphic designer, on Monday at 4 p.m. Glaser’s work is on view at The Church in its current exhibition, “Yes, No, and WOW: The Push Pin Studios Revolution.”
The 2008 film, directed by Wendy Keys, reveals the full breadth of Glaser’s artistic output, from newspapers and magazine designs, interior spaces, logos, and brand identities, to prints, drawings, posters, and paintings. It also illuminates moments of his personal life and captures his warmth, humor, and intelligence, says the cinema.
The screening will be followed by a conversation between Ms. Keys and April Gornik, the co-curator of “Yes, No, and WOW,” moderated by Giulia D’Agnolo Vallan, the cinema’s founding artistic director.
Classical Concert
The 47th season of the Shelter Island Friends of Music will conclude on Sunday at 6 p.m. with a free performance by the Ariel Quartet at the island’s Presbyterian Church.
Formed over 25 years ago, the quartet’s recent highlights include a sold-out Carnegie Hall debut, a series of performances at Lincoln Center, and the release of a Brahms and Bartok album for Avie Records. The group also serves as the Faculty Quartet-in-Residence at the University of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music.
The program will include music by Felix Mendelssohn, Maurice Ravel, and Lera Auerbach, a contemporary Austrian-American composer. A reception with the musicians will follow the concert.
A Film Fund-Raiser
A lot has happened to Lounah Starr since she was born in Bergama, Turkey, in 1917. Remarkably, the 107-year-old Holocaust survivor is still alive, and living in East Hampton.
Her granddaughter, Aelfie Oudghiri, is developing a documentary on Ms. Starr’s life, including her accounts of wartime Paris and her discovery of painting, which she took up at the age of 63.
Having secured $75,000 in development funds, Ms. Oudghiri needs an additional $50,000 to complete production and post-production. A gathering to discuss the project will be held on Sunday from 3 to 5 p.m. at 39 North Main Street, East Hampton. Rabbi Josh Franklin will introduce the program, some early scenes will be screened, and a brief virtual conversation with the filmmaker will take place.
Those interested in attending have been asked to email Mike Kilcoyne, [email protected].
Jazz Jamboree
East End Jazz, a nonprofit dedicated to preserving and expanding the world of jazz, will take over The Church in Sag Harbor with two programs on Saturday. Both will feature Olivia Foschi, a vocalist, Iris Ornig, a bassist, Cecilia Coleman, a pianist, and Brian Woodruff, a drummer.
For Family Jazz Jam Play-Along, set for 2:30 p.m., the musicians will invite participants to learn about the building blocks of jazz through call-and-response exercises, movement-based lessons, and improvisation techniques. No prior music experience is necessary. Tickets are $15, $10 for members, free for children under the age of 12, with R.S.V.P. required.
A World Tour through Jazz Music will happen at 5:30 p.m. The concert will include lullabies, love songs, and traditional folk tunes, showcasing the diversity and beauty of music worldwide, reimagined and transformed through improvisation. Tickets are $20, $15 for members, free for those under 12.
A pass for both program costs $30, $20 for members, free for children.
Music at the Temple
The Glam Jam returns to the inner sanctum of Sag Harbor’s Masonic Temple tonight from 7 to 9. The evening will be hosted by two all-female bands, Ur Mom and Fisties. Walk-in musicians can sign up to join the jam. Admission is a can of nonperishable food, which will be donated to local food pantries.
The Masonic Music Series will host Bingo Bango, a local cover band featuring Robert Florio on guitar, Catherine Caylus on bass, Steven Skoldberg on keys, and Alex Sarkis on drums. Set for Saturday at 8 p.m., admission is $20 at the door or online at masonicmusicseries.com.
Garden Sale and Talk
The annual yard sale of the Horticultural Alliance of the Hamptons will take place on Saturday from 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., rain or shine, on the grounds of the Bridgehampton Community House and inside the alliance’s John LoGerfo Library.
The sale, which is free and open to everyone, will include gently used items such as tools, plant shelves, garden ornaments, pots and containers, garden books, and other garden-related items. Plant material will also be for sale. All proceeds will benefit the library.
“Gravel Gardens: Gardens for Our Changing Climate,” a talk by Jeff Epping, is set for Sunday afternoon at 2 at the community house. Mr. Epping recently retired after 28 years as director of horticulture at Olbrich Botanical Gardens in Madison, Wis., where he practiced environmentally conscious gardening.
The talk will posit earth-friendly gravel gardens — which need little water, no fertilizer or chemicals, no organic mulches, and little time or money to maintain — as an alternative to unsustainable, chemically dependent, pollution-causing lawns.
Tickets are $10, free for members.
Drag Bingo
Our Fabulous Variety Show and LTV Studios in Wainscott will present an evening of drag bingo, hosted by the show’s drag queens RaffaShow and Julia Von Cartier, on Sunday at 5 p.m. at LTV. In addition to bingo, prizes, and pop-up drag performances, concession snacks, wine and beer, and talking tacos will be available for purchase.
Tickets, which include three bingo cards, are $25, with additional cards available for purchase throughout the event. Cabaret tables, which seat up to four and come with gift bags and six bingo cards per person, will be available for $200.