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South Carolina State Fair
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Center for Carolina Living Whee! Amusement rides elicit squeals and laughs at the South Carolina State Fair every October in Columbia. The two-week event shows off the state’s best livestock, produce, baked and canned goods, arts, crafts and photography. Don’t leave without a corn dog.
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Blue Vases
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Center for Carolina Living There’s no dearth of blues in the Carolinas, where the music, crafts and visual arts reflect the area’s natural beauty. Many artisans create their works in Asheville, a historic mountain city famous for its fine artwork.
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ive years ago, when Deborah Smith was offered the job of Director of the Newberry Opera House, she dropped into the small town of Newberry to have a look around.

What she saw convinced her to leave Vermont and move south.

“Newberry is the best place in the world I could think of to be right now,” she says. “There is such strong desire to make this area a real cultural hub, and it’s rare that you find that kind of vision and that kind of determination in such a wonderful setting.”

Perhaps it is precisely Ms. Smith’s skill in bringing in so many different artists that makes the Newberry Opera House so beloved by the hundreds of theatergoers who attend the performances. They range from Arlo Guthrie, to the Oak Ridge Boys, and from the dance company, Momix, to the Hungarian Symphony.

The intimacy of the 426-seat theatre certainly doesn’t hurt, especially when combined with excellent lighting and sound systems, and an orchestra pit that easily accommodates Broadway and operatic productions.
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pera Houses are enjoying a renaissance in the Carolinas. In addition to the Newberry Opera House, Abbeville Opera House was restored in 1968 and presents a variety of programs. Both facilities provide a more intimate experience – where audiences can actually see the actors’ expressions and feel the rhythm pounding a few feet away.

Speaking of pounding rhythms, dance companies in many larger Carolina towns offer everything from classical ballet to modern jazz and tap. For those who yearn for the bright lights of Broadway, national touring companies bring the best of the Great White Way down south, allowing virtually anyone living in the Carolinas access to great theatre.

Recent seasons have brought world-class performances of “Rent,” “Blast,“ “Mamma Mia,” “Aida,” “The Lion King,” and more. Along the Grand Strand, a dozen live theatres with frequently-changing productions give vacationers and residents entertainment away from the beach and golf course.

The Dock Street Theatre in Charleston, South Carolina, offers aficionados of live theatre a sense of history. Today, more than 260 years after it began, Dock Street still delights and inspires. In the Midlands of South Carolina, Trustus Theatre has blazed new trails with professional theatre and often avant-garde productions. Columbia’s own Town Theatre offers more traditional, family-style productions. Entertaining audiences for more than 80 years, it’s the oldest continuously-operating community theatre in the United States.
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Center for Carolina Living There In the coolness of the Blue Ridge Mountains, the state theatre of North Carolina, Flat Rock Playhouse, delights its patrons every May through October and attracts top talent from New York and beyond.

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For residents who like to dabble in the arts, local theatre groups provide creative outlets. These groups have combined their talents and passions to produce polished performances of hundreds of plays each year.

Now, while live performances delight the soul, the ability to contemplate paintings from the Masters can be equally electrifying! Art lovers can do no better than to start at the Greenville County Museum of Art in South Carolina, which houses the best collection of watercolors by Andrew Wyeth found at any public museum in the U.S. The Mint Museum in Charlotte draws visitors worldwide, and features an extensive collection of works from Ansel Adams and James McNeill Whistler.

Since 1956, the Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art, headquartered in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, has fostered artistic excellence, supported the creation of significant new artworks and educated audiences in the art of our time.

Carolinians enjoy the benefits of more than 2,000 arts organizations and 100 arts councils. They can be spectators or participants, or work behind the scenes as docents, ticket takers, stage crews or make-up artists.

In fact, it is the wealth of arts and culture that helped convince international companies, including Roche Carolina and Honda, to relocate to small towns. Management recognized those areas would offer their executives all the amenities. Both Carolinas have long-range plans to support the arts. As a result, the future is very promising for artists and for those who enjoy the fruits of their labor.

Have some fun. Get some expert feedback. Post your Carolina Arts and Festival questions, comments and experiences on the "Carolinas Message Board."

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handcrafted in the blue ridge: discovering the crafts, artisans, and studios of western north carolina  

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Katherine O. Pettit has worked as a writer, magazine editor, printer and public relations consultant. The Columbia resident has published more than 250 articles in magazines and newspapers. Her writing explores a variety of subjects including travel, lifestyles, business and management. Center for Carolina Living
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