Events:

  • Soul Power

    Soul, funk, and disco.

    March 14 @ 10:00 pm - March 15 @ 2:00 am
  • Newport St. Patrick’s Day Parade

    One of the three big parades that split the Saturdays of March. Ends at St Augustine’s Church. Featuring all kinds of bands, clowns, reenactors, organizations and oh, so much green.

    March 15 @ 11:00 am - 2:00 pm
  • Roomful of Blues

    Locally based masters of blues music.

    March 15 @ 8:00 pm - 11:00 pm
  • Eric Lindell

    New Orleans-based singer/songwriter and guitarist who melds West Coast rock, swampy Gulf Coast R&B, hard country, and Memphis soul into a hybrid that blazes a trail of its own.

    March 15 @ 8:00 pm - 11:00 pm
  • Playing Dead

    Phil Lesh of the Grateful Dead birthday show by a tribute band.

    March 15 @ 9:00 pm - March 16 @ 12:00 am
  • School Of Rock Seekonk

    Spring mid-season performance.

    March 16 @ 12:00 pm - 5:00 pm
  • Greg Abate Quartet

    Tribute to famed old-tiimey saxophonist Charlie Parker.

    March 16 @ 6:00 pm - 9:30 pm
  • The Splinters

    Bluegrass and old-time string band delivers a relentless groove to accompany their tight 3-part harmonies.

    March 19 @ 8:30 pm - 11:30 pm
  • Jim Carpenter

    Electric blues saxophonist, singer, songwriter, arranger, and record producer.

    March 20 @ 8:00 pm - 11:00 pm
  • Into The Woods

    This classic musical follows a Baker and his wife, who wish to have a child; Cinderella, who wishes to attend the King’s Festival; and Jack, who wishes his cow would

    March 21 - April 6

Juli Parker

Juli Parker is a feminist actor, director, and writer. She has a BA in Theatre/Dance from the University of Maine, an MA in Women's Studies from the University of Alabama, and a Ph.D. in Interdisciplinary Arts & Sciences with a focus in Theatre and Women's Studies from the Union Institute & University. She is the editor of a 2010 anthology Representations of Murderous Women in Literature, Theatre, Film, and Television: Examining the Patriarchal Presuppositions Behind the Treatment of Murderesses in Fiction and Reality. She has been the director of the UMass Dartmouth’s Center for Women, Gender & Sexuality for 19 years. She has been seen on stage at 2nd Story Theatre, The Barker Playhouse and recently directed at Epic Theater Company. She writes a weekly blog, The Feminist Critic, (thefeministcritic.com) providing weekly critiques of theatre, film, books, politics and pop culture from a feminist perspective. She and her amazing cook of a husband have a bluetick coonhound, a bernese mountain dog, a cat and two vintage trailers.