Wondering how you can help the local economy and help keep your favorite spots in business? Make a purchase now that can be used at a future date by buying a gift card or membership! The following businesses offer online purchase options for gift cards or memberships. And some, such as the Oakland A’s tickets, you can get a full refund if the event is canceled.

Click through our ever-growing list below to find out where to share some local love.

Aldea

BADM

Bay Area Children’s Theatre

Camp EDMO

Code Rev

Community Music Together

CuriOdyssey & CuriOdyssey Memberships

Exploratorium

Hiller Aviation Museum

Kidz2Pros

Nature Bridge

Oakland Zoo

Oakland Athletics

SF Opera

Play-Well

Private Chef Club

Recess Collective

San Francisco Zoo

Symphony

Terra Marin Camp

The Joy of Learning- Educational Therapy with Art

Three Bears Soap

Tum E Time

 

PSST! Want us to add your business to this list? Fill out this short form and we’ll add you ASAP! 

 

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While it may not be ideal for many, staying at home is essential to flattening the curve. Even still, if you’re wondering just how you’ll keep the kids entertained when everything is being canceled or postponed, we have you covered. Check out some of these great ideas for weekend family fun!

Photo: iStock

Cook Together

Get out of your usual food routine and try breakfast for dinner, these unique hot dog recipes or a brand-new chocolate chip cookie recipe. You can find loads of recipes for kids here.

Movie Night, Here We Come

Put on the PJs, pop the popcorn and pick one of these family-friendly flicks that will have you all laughing on the couch.

Delve into Science

Channel your inner Bill Nye and try out these science experiments that you can do with stuff you have around the house. You just might learn something yourself!

Quarantine Book Club

Start a book club! It’s easier than you think. There are tons of books we love about NYC, and some are flat out must-reads. Pick a few from the list to read with the kids, and talk about your favorite parts!

Virtual Lunch Dates

Since we’re all practicing social distancing, and visiting grandparents isn’t recommended, why not schedule virtual visits with video calls, homemade cards, and letters? It’s a great way to keep in touch when you can’t be there. Psst: it even works for playdates!

Go on Safari

No, really. With the Cincinnati Zoo offering virtual safaris, and many other zoos around the country offering virtual tours, a trip to the zoo is just a click away!

Local Scavenger Hunts

If the weather is cooperating and you just can’t face another day in the house, turn a walk around the neighborhood into a scavenger hunt with some of these ready-to-print options.

Magic Potion Workshop

Turn your kitchen into a magic workshop with these super fun potion recipe ideas!

Spend a Night at the Opera

The Metropolitan Opera recently announced they would stream encore performances via their website each night. Play dress up with the kids and have a night “in” at the opera!

When all else fails, check out this ultimate list of indoor activities for kids. There are over 100 to choose from! 

– Jesseca Stenson

featured image: iStock

After having to cancel their upcoming performances due to coronavirus concerns, the Metropolitan Opera announced it would stream encore presentations from the award-winning Live in HD series of cinema transmissions on the company website for the duration of the closure. This new offering will begin Mar. 16 with the 2010 HD performance of Bizet’s Carmen Director Yannick Nézet-Séguin and starring Elīna Garanča in the title role and Roberto Alagna as Don José.

Auditorium chairs

All “Nightly Met Opera Streams” will begin at 7:30pm EDT and will remain available via the homepage for 20 hours. The homepage link will open the performance on the Met Opera on Demand streaming service. The performance will also be viewable on all Met Opera on Demand apps.

“We’d like to provide some grand opera solace to opera lovers in these extraordinarily difficult times,” said Met General Manager Peter Gelb. “Every night, we’ll be offering a different complete operatic gem from our collection of HD presentations from the past 14 years.”

Monday, March 16 – Bizet’s Carmen

Conducted by Yannick Nézet-Séguin, starring Elīna Garanča and Roberto Alagna. Transmitted live on January 16, 2010.

Tuesday, March 17 – Puccini’s La Bohème

Conducted by Nicola Luisotti, starring Angela Gheorghiu and Ramón Vargas. Transmitted live on April 5, 2008.

Wednesday, March 18 – Verdi’s Il Trovatore

Conducted by Marco Armiliato, starring Anna Netrebko, Dolora Zajick, Yonghoon Lee, and Dmitri Hvorostovsky. Transmitted live on October 3, 2015.

Thursday, March 19 – Verdi’s La Traviata

Conducted by Yannick Nézet-Séguin, starring Diana Damrau, Juan Diego Flórez, and Quinn Kelsey. Transmitted live on December 15, 2018.

Friday, March 20 – Donizetti’s La Fille du Régiment

Conducted by Marco Armiliato, starring Natalie Dessay and Juan Diego Flórez. Transmitted live on April 26, 2008.

Saturday, March 21 – Donizetti’s Lucia di Lammermoor

Conducted by Marco Armiliato, starring Anna Netrebko, Piotr Beczała, and Mariusz Kwiecien. Transmitted live on February 7, 2009.

Sunday, March 22 – Tchaikovsky’s Eugene Onegin

Conducted by Valery Gergiev, starring Renée Fleming, Ramón Vargas, and Dmitri Hvorostovsky. Transmitted live on February 24, 2007.

—Jennifer Swartvagher

Featured photo: Pixabay via Pexels

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Photo: mariamichelle via pixabay

Have you ever noticed that when you take your kid to the park and you’re there to meet them at the bottom of the slide, they could go down a hundred times? Here they come with a smile, hair blowing back, arms outstretched, and you catch them. It’s like a celebration and reunion all in one. But when you go to the park with the ladies, and you stand and talk, all the kids get bored of the playground after a few trips down the slide. There is something magical in being cherished and celebrated that brings freshness and courage.

When I was a little girl, every day when I got home from morning kindergarten, my mom would greet me with a lunch tray. On it was a sandwich, usually butter and peanut butter, and a red plastic cup filled with milk. I’d eat my lunch and then we’d watch “Mr. Roger’s Neighborhood.” My mom came to all my junior high basketball games and cheered for me. (At the highest-scoring game of my career, I made 4 points). She came to visit me in college and sat down to read my honors thesis cover-to-cover. When I was in medical school, she flew across the country to hear me present at a symposium in Carmel, California and we walked along the rocky beach and gathered shells and watched the sea lions.

My mom gave me space to have my own experience but was always there to reunite and celebrate. She believed in me to near ridiculous proportions, seeing no bounds to my potential or opportunities. In her mind, nothing was “out of my league.” For instance, once we went to the symphony to hear the famous Joshua Bell play a violin concerto. I overheard her telling someone, “You know, I always thought my daughter would marry Joshua Bell someday.” The other concertgoer raised her eyebrows and said, “Oh! Were they dating?” “No, they’ve never met,” my mom admitted. Minor detail. My actual husband, with whom I’m raising eight beautiful boys, was the better catch for me anyway. All humor aside, my mom’s absolute devotion opened the world to me.

So, fast-forward to last week when I was on the phone with my oldest son. I was simultaneously marveling and lamenting at the seeming centrifugal force upon our family as we all grow and change. He’s at college studying opera and learning things that take him beyond what any of us will experience or understand. His brother is serving as a missionary in Thailand. He bikes around the village and eats foods we’ve never tried (and likely never will) like raw crab and fried crickets. I see the centrifugal force in operation with every son down the line, coming like an inescapable prophecy. Even my youngest, who is 4, just learned to ride a two-wheeled bike. For now, he circles our cul-de-sac, but it’s only a matter of time.

Sometimes this anticipatory grief from a nest that is “emptying” makes me want to hold on too tightly. I hear other moms in my small, insular community say they’ll never let their kids venture further than the college in town. I get that, but I don’t get that. As a pediatrician with a behavioral focus, I see firsthand the so-called “failure to launch” epidemic. There are many factors at play, but perhaps one is a motherly “launch ambivalence” of which I too am guilty. We want our kids to go off and experience life, but at the same time, we don’t want them to go. Author Rochelle Weinstein said, “A mother’s job is to teach her children not to need her anymore. The hardest part of that job is accepting success.” Personally, I’m in denial. I hope we’ll always need each other to some degree, because of the bonds we’ve created.

My husband and I have been intentional about teaching our kids life skills and inspiring them to independence, but their adventurousness and self-sufficiency is beyond what we have given. My instinct has been to try to do everything I can for my kids and optimize their every experience, which anthropologist David Lancy would consider a recipe for failure-to-launch. In his book, “The Anthropology of Childhood,” he writes of his work in a remote Liberian village where he observed children thriving and independent because of what he called “benign neglect”—they had no one fussing over them; rather, there was a general trust in the natural growth process. Perhaps having eight kids and the inadvertent but naturally resulting in “benign neglect” has saved me from a future with eight unemployed grown men living in my basement.

It’s always a balance between stepping in and stepping back. For now, I’ll enjoy the six boys still under my roof and the two who are out venturing. I’ll cherish them, but maybe I can let go of some of that mom-guilt for not being there every single minute, because it’s actually allowing them to grow up, as painful as it feels. All my cumulative, devoted efforts thus far have helped them grow too—my efforts, plus a distillation of devotion passed through the generations.

I say to believe in your kids ridiculously; believe they can do and be anything. Cherish them and hold them tightly while you have them, then let them loose onto the world’s playground. But no matter how old they get, be there to meet them at the bottom of the slide.

—Dr. Mary Wilde

I am an integrative pediatrician, author and mom of 8. I am the owner of Imagine Pediatrics Behavioral Health and Wellness and creator of the Overcoming Childhood Anxiety online courses and the Compassion Parenting program. I love singing, hiking and eating ice cream! Learn more at drmarywilde.com.

Everyone’s favorite ghoulish gal is getting ready to celebrate the Halloween season with brand new episodes of Vampirina on Disney Junior.

The month of October will officially be known as the “HalloVeen” season as Disney Junior rolls out four brand new Halloween-themed episodes of Vampirina. The episodes will find the Hauntley family celebrating both Halloween and Día de los Muertos, as well as premiering a very special musical episode titled “Vamp-Opera” in which Vampirina accidentally puts the whole town under a singing spell.

You might recognize a few new voices on the series as guest stars Henry Winkler (Barry) and Sara Ramirez (Grey’s Anatomy) join the cast.

The new episodes will begin airing on Disney Junior on Oct. 4 with the episode titled “Trick-or-Treaters” in which the Hauntleys go trick-or-treating as themselves.

—Shahrzad Warkentin

Featured photo: Disney Junior via YouTube

 

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Guest judge Jay Leno used the coveted golden buzzer to put one awesomely talented 10-year-old through to America’s Got Talent’s live rounds. And the talented kiddo’s performance wasn’t what anyone expected!

Ten-year-old Emanne Beasha has a voice to envy, but instead of the typical tween or teen pop you might expect from someone her age, Beasha is more of an opera diva.

https://www.instagram.com/p/B02AOPNBxti/

Beasha wowed viewers and the judges with her performance of “Caruso” sung completely in Italian. AGT’s Howie Mandel said of Beasha’s powerful operatic performance, “You’re only 10-years-old, and we are seeing acts come out here and they’re sweating, and they’re not performing to par, they’re not stepping it up, and they’re double your age.” Mandel went on to add, “And then you come out here and you show them how it’s done.”

Leno, who gave the young star the go-ahead with the golden buzzer said, “I feel like I am witness to something extremely special.” And we totally agree!

—Erica Loop

Featured photo: America’s Got Talent via Instagram 

 

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When my daughter was in fourth grade, she sang a solo in her school’s production of Schoolhouse Rock. I was sitting in the auditorium behind two men. A few bars into her rendition of “Elbow Room,” one turned to the other and said, ”I’m guessing this ain’t her first rodeo.”

Of course, I was thrilled to hear this compliment and it was all I could do to keep myself from tapping the guy on the shoulder and gushing about how she takes voice lessons and dreams of being a stage performer.

I share this because this week my daughter and I will head downtown to sign a contract with her first talent agent. As I sat in the waiting room during her recent audition and heard her nail a high note in a song from the opera The Sorcerer, I marveled at how she, at 12, teaches me to aim higher, be braver—and in the words of Theodore Roosevelt by way of Brene Brown, to “dare greatly.”

My daughter has maintained a single-minded focus when it comes to her vision. She says things like, “When I’m performing in a stadium…” or “When I live in New York and sing on Broadway…” She lets her imagination run free. She believes in herself.

So by the time she sang in front of the agents, they too could tell that this wasn’t her first rodeo, either.

Which got me thinking: What are my talents? How far back can I trace them? And in what ways do my experiences count for more than I allow?

If you’re like me, you may not give yourself credit for the bumps and bruises you’ve endured, or the many the times you’ve been knocked down and gotten right back up on that horse. Maybe you don’t want to remember the failures or, worse—believe that you’d be farther along if you’d made different choices.

The interesting thing about a rodeo is that it involves feats most people would never undertake. It’s scary. Participating in one requires an extremely specific skill set (or a huge dose of craziness). Success is measured in split seconds.

I’ve been to a rodeo only once. In my early twenties, I worked for a concession company and had a one-night gig selling beer in the grandstand at a rodeo. I was also working in my first real job as a copywriter and just beginning my first novel. I didn’t think that one night at a rodeo would contribute in any way to my dream of being a writer.

But here it is: 30 years later, showing up on the page.

My point is that I’ve realized something important: everything I do is in service to my dream. Every frightening moment, every detour, every cringe-worthy experience. And every success, shining moment or surprising achievement.

That night at the school assembly, I heard my daughter sing, “The way was opened up for those with bravery.”

Yes, bravery is required.

Life is like a charging bull or a wild horse. It will buck me off. All I can do is embrace the failures and the chaos, make mistakes, be willing to fall on my face in front of others, to show my underbelly, to be less than perfect. I can keep doing what I love; in my case, that’s writing.

And I can thank my daughter for reminding me to dream big. I can remember that, whether I see it or not, there are throngs of people waiting, watching and rooting for me.

And they’re rooting for you, too.

This post originally appeared on www.TammyLetherer.com.

Tammy Letherer is an author, writing coach and blogger. She holds a degree in Journalism from Indiana University and has enjoyed a long, varied professional writing career. She is the author of a memoir, The Buddha at My Table (release date October 2018) and a novel, Hello Loved Ones. She lives in Chicago with her children.

Toting your tots around town in LA traffic isn’t exactly fun. If you’re tired of wrestling over the radio knob during your drive, jump on the podcast bandwagon instead. Make long commutes a breeze by loading your playlist up with these awesome LA podcasts made for kids (that grown-ups will love, too). All of these podcasts are available on iTunes and absolutely free to download.  The 405 just got a lot more do-able!

photo: Shahrzad Warkentin

Book Club For Kids
Book Club originally started in 2000 as a radio show on NPR affiliate KPCC in Pasadena. The host, Kitty Felde, wanted to give kids something fun to listen to amid the adult chatter on public radio. The show, which features real kids across the country discussing books they’ve read, was a success and has now been brought into the digital age as a podcast. Each episode covers a different kid’s title, from classics, like Old Yeller, to modern favorites, like Beautiful Creatures. They also feature special guests, like the book’s author or a celebrity guest reader.

Best For: 8 & up (depending on your child’s reading level)

Best Episodes: The Westing Game, Spy School, A Mango Shaped Space

Online: bookclubforkids.org

Ear Snacks
Award-winning LA kindie sensation Andrew & Polly are probably already on your regular playlist rotation, but even if you’re not familiar with their tunes you will want to check out their kid’s podcast, Ear Snacks. Between their quirky, eclectic, just plain awesome songs, and the interviews with kids and adult experts on all things kid-related, this podcast has it all. Each episode is focused around a topic, like how to tell when it’s going to rain or the magic of shadows and shifts back and forth between interviews and music, perfect for younger listeners with shorter attention spans. The best songs of the first season are also now available on a new album, Ear Snacks: Songs From The Podcast.

Best For: Ages 2–9

Best Episodes: Fruit!, Shadows!, Rain!, and don’t miss bonus episodes like Who Are The Beatles?

Online: andrewandpolly.com

The Imaginary Accomplishments Podcast
Part space opera, part NPR interview style, part Sports Center, with a sprinkle of fake commercials mixed in, this zany, imaginative storytelling podcast is the brainchild of Todd McHatton, a SoCal songwriter and artist, known for his psychedelic, indie rock kids albums and comics. The fairly new series only has six episodes so far, but your adventure-loving listeners are sure to be hooked. More, please!

Best For: Ages 5–12

Best Episodes: Pilot, What Does Stoked Mean?

Online: mchatton.com

Brains On!
STEM lovers and generally inquisitive kids with fall in love with this science podcast, produced by LA NPR affiliate 89.3 KPCC, that answers all of your tots curious questions. Topics on everything, from how we know the age of dinosaur bones, to explaining how the Internet works, will lay a little knowledge on young (and old) listeners. Kids co-host the show and interview experts, like snake handlers and food scientists.

Best For: 5 & up

Best Episodes: How Do Airplanes Fly?, Fire vs. Lasers, Fart Smarts, How Do You Catch A Cold?

Online: brainson.org

Hidden History of Los Angeles
If you have a budding history buff on your hands you might want to turn your ears on this simple, but very informative podcast all about the little known history of Los Angeles. The show, narrated by Robert Peterson, answers questions like, what’s the oldest building in Los Angeles and how did ‪Echo Park get its name? This podcast series is not made specifically kids, but it’s generally appropriate for your older curious kids. A few episodes touch briefly on some more mature subjects (ie. Spolier Alert: Griffith J. Griffith’s attempted murder of his wife) so we recommend giving a listen before you share.

Best For: Ages 9 & up

Best Episodes: What Is The Oldest Building In LA?, Why Are There Giant Holes In ‪Irwindale?, LA’s Original Name

Online: hiddenhistoryla.com

What are your family’s go-to podcasts (local or anywhere!) for a long car ride? Share any we missed in the comments!

—Shahrzad Warkentin

Even for the most savvy New York parent, Lincoln Center can be kind of overwhelming. It’s that massive (16 acre), white marble (actually, it’s a limestone known as Travertine) complex on the west side where all types of art — frequently broadcast on PBS — happens. Opera, ballet, film, classical and jazz music concerts, and even swing dancing goes down there, and you’re pretty sure it’s got stuff your kid would like — but how are you supposed to navigate all that culture? The answer: the new and and improved family-friendly program from Lincoln Center, LC Kids.

photo: Lincoln Center

Introducing LC kids

While the name LC Kids is not new — previously, it has operated as a family membership with rates starting at $500 — the offerings, accessibility, and structure of the new Lincoln Center family-friendly program are. The revamped LC Kids includes a new slate of programming for families, a new web site, and more affordable membership rates.

Shows Just for Kids

LC Kids will be kicking off with a boffo Spring Fling celebration on May 9 (more on that later), but the new kids programming has already started rolling out. April brought the one man show “Sleeping Beauty with David Gonzalez” and a Greatest Hits show from musical sketch comedy group the Story Pirates. Upcoming events include a performance by the R&B-influenced musicians from Chad H’Sao Oria,  and a show from storyteller and singer Charlotte Blake Alston.

photo: Lincoln Center

New Membership Levels

The new LC Kids will introduce a new pricing structure for memberships, including a level that’s free. All members will receive a subscription to the monthly LC Kids eNewsletter, invitations to LC Kids events, discounts on Lincoln Center tours and special offers for family-friendly performances in NYC. Benefits of paying memberships, which start at $125, vary, but include priority access to tickets, discounts on shows across campus and access to exclusive kid-friendly events. (For the big bucks, perks include meet and greets with performers, backstage tours, access to last-minute seats and sold out shows, and more.)

photo: Christine and Hagen Graf via Flickr

A New Web Site

The revamped LC Kids will now also have its own dedicated web site at kids.lincolncenter.org, featuring all of the family-friendly programming happening throughout the Lincoln Center campus. This will include not only the newly-developed roster of LC Kids programming, but events, shows and performances from the companies in residence such as The Metropolitan Opera, the New York City Ballet, the New York Philharmonic and Jazz at Lincoln Center. (An example: “Bugs Bunny at the Symphony” with the New York Philharmonic on May 14-16.)

photo: Lincoln Center

The Big Kickoff

LC Kids officially launches on May 9, and Lincoln Center is celebrating with Spring Fling, a free day of performances, crafts and activities across the plazas of Lincoln Center from 11 a.m. -2 p.m. Highlights include a 45-minute singalong with Dan Zanes at the Revson Fountain, instrument tryouts with the New York Philharmonic, a scavenger hunt, and clowns from the Big Apple Circus. Additionally, an interactive Dance-Along Story Time event with Angelina Ballerina and author Katharine Holabird will take place in the David Rubenstein Atrium, and kids will be invited to a dance lesson under the tent in Damrosh Park. A full schedule of events for the day can be found here.

Lincoln Center’s LC Kids
Online: kids.lincolncenter.org

Have you been to Lincoln Center with your kids? What did you see? Tell us in the comments below!

—Mimi O’Connor

 

Opera (noun): A super boring performance where very large people screech in a foreign language. See also: interminable, nap time, old-fashioned.  If that’s your definition of opera, it’s time to change that! Under the direction of Placido Domingo, LA Opera is hosting a Family Day on March 8 with a vibrant and exciting production that makes opera come to life for kids—and parents, too.

Opera + Kids = Disaster. Right? Wrong!
Opera and kids sounds a bit like oil and water, but more expensive and potentially more embarrassing, when you have to abandon your seats after fifteen minutes because they clamor (loudly) that “this is boring.” That seems like an obvious conclusion—until you actually take your kids to the opera. Opera is loud, dramatic, musical, and the sets and scenes are busy and ever changing. It’s perfect entertainment for your little A.D.D. drama addict. None other than Placido Domingo knows this: Opera is for everyone. So this year he has created the Domingo Family Days. For kid friendly operas (not an oxymoron!), the LA Opera has a matinee show book-ended by themed activities for the whole family to enjoy, while learning more about the opera.

Even Elmer Fudd Likes It
The Family Day opera this spring is The Barber of Seville (yes, the one you know from watching Bugs Bunny). It’s the story of the dashing Count Almaviva who has lost his heart to the beautiful Rosina, who has a mean guardian determined to marry her himself. Figaro comes to the rescue, and the barber conjures up wacky schemes to unite the young lovers.  And it’s got a score you can’t get out of your head.  (In a good way, unlike say, The Doc McStuffins theme song.)

First, There’s The Pre-Show
Before the show, you’ll head up to the 5th Floor of the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion. A teaching artist leads fun acting workshops that explore themes from the opera and help kids understand the elements of theater. There will be tables of props from the Opera that kids can play with, as well a kite making workshop. With a stunning view of the city and hills and popcorn, drinks and cookies to tide you till intermission, it’s a perfect way to start the day.

Then, Your Seat. And Their Seat, Too.
Something is already waiting for you—a booster. You can reserve one beforehand, and the opera staff will have it waiting in your child’s seat. And here’s one more thing you can reserve: intermission drinks and snacks. Your little one doesn’t want to wait in line when the break rolls around. So pre-order & pay and your treat (a little champers for you, a big bag o’ gummy bears for them) is ready and waiting. Then it’s showtime. And because you’ve accessed the special website (you’ll get access when you get family package tickets) with description and kid friendly activities, you all know the plot.  But just in case you forget, the words, in English, are displayed to the sides of the stage throughout the show.

There’s More Show After The Show
Post-show it’s time to meet the cast. Back to the 5th floor you go, where a whole new table of treats await, so you can nosh and nibble and pick up your kites while you wait to have your program signed by these singing sensations, who are happy to meet and talk with the next generation of opera lovers.  It’s a thrill for kids to meet the stars, and you can tell that it’s exciting for the singers as well.  They really take their time with the kids, answering all questions as well as asking what the kids enjoyed.

More Opera…
Now that your little one is a fan (and your fear is banished), be sure to check out the other family shows that the LA Opera stages for kids across the city:
Opera Tales Tour  – Free shows in public libraries.
Saturday Mornings at the Opera – Twice a year shows just for kids.
Community Opera – Free community opera performances.

And before we say, “That’s all folks,” one last link to get you in the mood. Click here to hear a little of the music, courtesy of everyone’s favorite bunny.

Domingo Family Day is March 8, family pre-show activities start at 12:30 p.m., curtain is at 2 p.m.
The show is best for kids 5 & up.
Tickets start at $17, get tickets to Family Day by calling the box office.

Dorothy Chandler Concert Hall
Grand Ave, Downtown LA
Phone: 213-972-8001
Online: laopera.org/tickets

Have you taken your kids to the opera? What did they think? We’d love to hear your experiences in the comments below.

-Meghan Rose

 All photos courtesy of Meghan Rose and the LA Opera.