FELD COMBINES TWO DISNEY SHOWS FOR 90-CITY TOUR

Sofia the First & Jake and the Never Land Pirates join forces for Pirate and Princess Adventure tour

By Dave Brooks for Venues Today, May 21, 2013. Original Article

Feld Entertainment is combining two popular Disney Junior TV programs for a new family show with an ambitious touring schedule.

Disney Junior Live On Tour! Pirate and Princess Adventure will play over 90 markets during its marathon nine-month run, including a stop at the Dolby Theater in Hollywood, Feld’s first play at the old Kodak Theatre since 2005. Pirate and Princess Adventure combines TV shows “Sofia the First” and “Jake and the Never Land Pirates” into a two-act show performance with appearances by Mickey and Minnie Mouse, Cinderella, Peter Pan and Tinker Bell. Each Pirate and Princess Adventure show will begin with a preshow opening by Disney character Doc McStuffins. The fictional six-year-old will lead a sing-along of “The Check-Up Song” and provide “tender love and care” to her stuffed animal friends.

“It’s the first time we’re taking two different TV properties and combining them into one show,” said producer Alana Feld, who is heading up the tour. Act I is set in the Kingdom of Enchancia, with Sofia seeking out the perfect gifts for her subjects, eventually getting some musical help from Cinderalla. Act II has Jake in Never Land, battling Captain Hook in an epic contest that includes an impressive flying sequence.

“From a production standpoint, this is one of the most advanced shows we have done,” said Feld, noting that her team will utilize a frontal projection system that will allow them to display animation on any part of the stage, including the characters themselves. The projection stunt mirrored Carrie Underwood’s critically acclaimed performance at this year’s Grammys, where a kaleidoscope of colored images were projected on the country singer’s dress in a visually stunning display.

Also new this year — interactive light toys that change color with the show on stage. Sophia will wear an amulet that changes color based on the storyline. Fans can purchase an interactive amulet “that will glow when Sophia’s amulet glows,” Feld said. “It’s part of our ongoing effort to keep our shows very interactive.”

The show is aimed at Feld’s youngest audience, newborns to five year olds.  “Doc McStuffins” and “Jake and the Never Land Pirates” ranked as cable TV’s Top 2 series for all kids ages 2-5, pulling in a combined 83 million viewers. Disney Junior Live On Tour! Pirate and Princess Adventure will be directed and choreographed by Fred Tallaksen, whose Feld credits include Disney’s Phineas and Ferb: The Best Live Tour Ever! and Disney Live! Mickey’s Music Festival, and Ringling Bros. Barnum & Bailey Presents Fully Charged, Gold Edition. Emmy-nominated producer Bradley Zweig wrote an original script for the performance.

The show will be the first performance rehearsed at Feld’s new production facility in Ellenton, Fla., beginning in two weeks. The show will launch July 26 at Johnny Mercer Theatre in Savannah, Ga., and eventually wrap with a 10-day run at Madison Square Garden, New York.

Feld’s Disney Live shows are “often a young fan’s first theatrical experience,” said Feld. “Children everywhere are falling in love with Sofia and Jake, and we are thrilled to bring these popular Disney Junior characters to the stage for the first time ever.”

Interviewed for this article: Alana Feld, (703) 749-5505

Memorial Day Parade & Ceremony at Memorial Coliseum on Monday, May 27

WATCHFIRE EVENT TO BE HELD MAY 24-25        

FORT WAYNE, Ind. – The public is invited to support the Allen County Council of Veterans during the annual Memorial Day Parade and Ceremony at the Allen County War Memorial Coliseum on Monday, May 27.

The parade, which begins at the corner of Parnell Avenue and State Boulevard, will start at approximately 11:00 a.m. and end at the Coliseum. After the parade, there will be a Memorial Day ceremony just outside of the Coliseum’s Memorial Hall.

Additionally, the Allen County Council of Veterans will hold their annual Watchfire event from 9:00 p.m. on Friday, May 24 until 9:00 p.m. on Saturday, May 25 at the Veterans Memorial Shrine, located at 2122 O’Day Road, Fort Wayne, IN 46818.

For more information about the Memorial Day Parade and Ceremony, as well as, the Watchfire event, contact Allen County Council of Veterans c/o Craig Savage at (260) 747-2977 or via email at patricia.allison1@frontier.com.

Allen County War Memorial Coliseum No. 8 In The World on Venues Today “Top Stop” List For March – April 2013

FORT WAYNE, Ind. – The Allen County War Memorial Coliseum in Fort Wayne, Indiana, is No. 8 in the world for concert ticket sales, among similar-sized venues, on the Venues Today “Top Stop” rankings for the March – April 2013 reporting period.

The ranking, released in the May 2013 issue of Venues Today, was based on concert and event grosses from March 16 through April 15, as reported to the industry leading publication.

The top four venues on the list were the Brisbane (Australia) Entertainment Centre at No. 1; the Sydney (Australia) Entertainment Centre in at No. 2; and the Vector Arena in Auckland, New Zealand at No. 3; and the Bi-Lo Center in Greenville, S.C.

This most recent ranking included the Kid Rock “Rebel Soul Tour” concert on March 16 and the sold out Carrie Underwood “Blown Away Tour” show on April 14. The rankings are among similar sized venues, seating between 10,001 and 15,000 people.

For more information, visit www.venuestoday.com.

Confident Consumer: How to get hot concert tickets

- By Jayne O’Donnell, USA TODAY, April 10, 2013, Original Article

The easiest way to get tickets to a hot concert is to “get to know a rock star — or a rock star’s mother.”

Nothing else quite compares with those options offered by Mark Campana, co-president of North American concerts for Live Nation, Ticketmaster’s parent company. But there are, fortunately, other ways to increase your chances.

The advocacy group Fan Freedom says the odds are working against consumers hoping to get good seats — or any seat — when concert tickets go on sale to the public. Up to 90% of the seats may already be sold.

Many tickets are allocated to various pre-sales outlets, including those for the artist’s fan club, radio station listeners, certain credit card holders and season-ticket holders at the place where the concert is being held, says Fan Freedom spokesman Chris Grimm. These pre-sales typically take place in the week leading up to the public sale.

That phenomenon makes it sound a bit less impressive when an artist such as Justin Bieber sells out, say, Madison Square Garden in a matter of minutes after the public sale starts.

Nashville’s NewsChannel 5 reported that the public sale last summer for Bieber’s concert in that city only included 1,001 tickets out of almost 14,000 issued. The station also released documents it obtained through a Freedom of Information Act request from Bridgestone Arena showing Bieber’s tour sold at least 17 close-in seats on Ticketmaster’s resale site, TicketsNow.

A spokeswoman for Bieber did not respond to a request for comment.

Eyebrow-raising ticket activity is hardly limited to the artists. Ticket resellers, known pejoratively as scalpers, aren’t only seedy-looking types lurking outside arenas. It’s become big business, as some resellers use software tools known as “bots” to buy large blocks of tickets while making it look like a bunch of individual purchases, says Campana. He notes prices in the resale market for different artists’ tickets are tracked as if on a stock exchange.

The big ticket companies, in an effort to clamp down on scalpers, are increasingly making it tough for average ticket holders to sell or give away their own tickets. Paperless tickets now often can’t be used by anyone other than the purchaser, or at least, the purchaser has to show up with identification and the credit card used to buy the tickets.

A coalition of consumer groups, including the Consumer Federation of America, joined Fan Freedom recently in asking federal and state officials to clamp down on electronic tickets that prevent consumers from freely transferring or reselling them.

The Federal Trade Commission hasn’t commented on that practice, but did reach a settlement with Ticketmaster and TicketsNow, in 2010 about what it called “bait and switch” practices in ticket sales for Bruce Springsteen concerts. The companies told people who went online for the public sale that none were available and steered them to TicketsNow, the FTC said.

Ticketmaster agreed to pay refunds to consumers who bought tickets for 14 Springsteen concerts through TicketsNow, and “to be clear about the costs and risks” of buying through its reseller sites.

Ticketmaster also failed to tell buyers that many of the resale tickets advertised on TicketsNow.com didn’t exist — even though they often took money for them, the FTC said. An important red flag for any ticket shopper: Watch out for anyone selling tickets who can’t say exactly where the seats are.

Against all the odds, it’s still possible to prevail in the world of concert shopping. If you can’t beat the system — and you really can’t without that rock star relationship — the best advice is to get in on the pre-sales and read all the fine print before making your purchase.

Artists, not surprisingly, reserve a big chunk of tickets for members of their fan clubs, some of whom have to pay to join the clubs. Membership can also include advance notice of upcoming tours.

“Fans who are not a member of the fan club have no clue if they’re competing for only 1,000 or 2,000 tickets available,” says Grimm.

More to keep in mind:

• Other pre-sales: Credit card companies, especially American Express, often get the second biggest chunk of early tickets. Citibank and Mastercard, as well, often have special deals for cardholders. Radio stations that have pre-sale tickets will usually alert listeners to check their websites to get the code needed to order tickets. Several independent websites also offer pre-sale codes, often for a fee, but Grimm warns against using them.

• Standing in lineIt can still work, Campana says. Venues that open their physical box offices will often count the people standing in line — if it’s a reasonable number — and take that number out of public sale.

• Additional optionsEven if you missed the pre-sales and struck out during the public sale, there can still be hope. Tickets can surface in the days and weeks before a concert. People sometimes return tickets, or seats become available again because credit card payments are declined, says Campana. Tours may release additional seats to the public, sometimes even in the day or two before the event, when plans for the stage change and there’s room for more seats, for example.

• Watch out, though: If there’s a chance you may not be able to use tickets, make sure you can sell or give them away if it would otherwise be a financial — or emotional — loss. Be careful when looking online for tickets or pre-sales. As with any big-ticket purchase, there are plenty of impostors out there.

• Don’t get mad at the ticket seller when you can’t get tickets. The musicians and their tour managers control much of what goes on with ticketing, says Campana. The tour selects a concert promoter in an area. That promoter selects the concert hall or other venue, and that determines who’s selling the tickets, because of contractual relationships.

“They can allocate however they want — we just want them to be honest,” Grimm says of artists, ticket sellers and concert venues.

Who’s behind what in the ticket world:

• Live Nation: A concert promotion and ticketing firm that also owns the biggest ticket seller, Ticketmaster.

• Eventbrite: One of the largest primary ticket sellers.

• TicketsNow: Ticket resale site run by Ticketmaster.

• Fan Freedom: Advocacy group funded by the ticket trading site StubHub, among others, to fight the move toward non-transferable tickets and other ticket sale practices, including a lack of disclosure about available tickets.

• Fans First: Lobbying group backed by the ticket and entertainment industries to fight scalping.

• Ticket Liquidator: One of the biggest ticket resellers.

• TicketNetwork: Another big ticket reseller.

Kenny Chesney “No Shoes Nation Tour” Thursday, May 16 with Eli Young Band and special guest Kacey Musgraves

    FORT WAYNE, Ind. – Kenny Chesney will bring his “No Shoes Nation Tour” to the Allen County War Memorial Coliseum on Thursday, May 16 at 7:00 p.m., with the Eli Young Band and special guest Kacey Musgraves.

            Tickets are $79.50, $39.50 and $25.00 and will go on sale Friday, March 8 at 10:00 a.m. at the Memorial Coliseum Ticket Office, www.ticketmaster.com, all Ticketmaster outlets and charge-by-phone at (800) 745-3000.

“The No Shoes Nation are the best music fans in the world – that’s why we named the tour after the fans! They love these songs like they live their lives in’em, and we take that serious,” Chesney says.

“They come out every summer and throw everything they got at us so hard, that’s why we rehearse – just the band – for a couple weeks before we even think about production! The music has to be right, so we’re gonna make sure we’re ready.”

The tour will kick off March 16 at Tampa’s Raymond James Stadium, and will play a mixture of NFL stadiums, arenas and outdoor amphitheaters across the country.

Monster X Tour, March 15 & 16

 FORT WAYNE, Ind. – The Monster X Tour, with the nation’s most competitive MONSTER TRUCKS and Moto X Freestyle riders, will invade the Allen County War Memorial Coliseum Expo Center March 15 & 16 for shows at 7:30 p.m. each night.

          

Ticketsare on sale now at the Memorial Coliseum Ticket Office, online at www.ticketmaster.com, all Ticketmaster outlets, select Wal-Mart stores and charge-by-phone at (800) 745-3000.

See these incredible 10,000-pound, car crushing giants compete in Racing and Wheelie Contests and then rock the house with amazing Freestyle Action during the Monster X Tour! Plus you can meet the drivers and see the trucks up close at the pre-event Autograph Pit Party.

Side acts are scheduled to include:

  • MOTO X FREESTYLE – TOP riders across North America and X-Game medalists will be performing tricks including Roof Scraping Cliffhangers, Double Grabs, Superman Seat Grabs and many more!
  • Lawn Mowers – Watch as these hard core racers go head-to-head.
  • AMERICAN THUNDER RIDE TRUCK – Get the ride of your life on-board a real Monster Truck during the Pit Party and Intermission!

For more information, go to www.monsterxtour.com.

Q&A WITH FANS FIRST COALITION’S MICHAEL MARION

This interview was conducted by Pollstar.

What is the Fans First Coalition?

Fans First Coalition is a group of buildings, artists, promoters, ticket companies that are concerned about what’s been going on the last couple years with scalping.

How is Fans First funded?

At this point, Ticketmaster is our main benefactor. I myself am the GM of the Verizon Arena in Little Rock, Ark., and while I am president, I’m certainly not paid by Ticketmaster. Our board (Rose Presents’ Rand Levy, Target Center’s David Balcer and PNC Arena’s William L. Traurig) is all volunteers.

What are some of the major issues Fans First is working to address?

It’s obviously about scalping. Over the past few years as paperless ticketing has rolled out, scalpers have become nervous and upset that [paperless] might impinge on their business and people wouldn’t have to pay exorbitant prices for tickets. So they’ve put together this Fan Freedom Project where they’re paying Jon Potter to go out and be an advocate for the cause of the scalpers.

All of [our board members] in the last couple years have been involved in fighting legislation in our own states where the scalpers are trying to change the laws so they’ll work better for them. Specifically, they’re trying to ban paperless so people can’t get tickets at face value. They want to be able to get [those tickets] themselves and sell them at the big prices.

We looked around as a group and decided that maybe we ought to get together and do something. Ticketmaster agreed to help us out and to finance this organization to be available to the various states where there are coalitions – Florida Facility Managers comes to mind. Right now they’re in the middle of a big battle with the scalpers and we’re a resource for them.

That’s what brought us together and what we continue to deal with is scalpers trying to change the laws so they’re advantageous to the scalpers. Of course they hide behind, “Oh, we’re doing it for the fans.” But when you look at the fact that Jon Potter is paid by Stubhub, he must be trying to do something for the scalpers.

Where does the Coalition stand on ticket ownership?

[Scalpers] have tried various methods of banning paperless tickets so fans couldn’t get tickets at face value and the scalpers could get all the tickets they want.

If you look at any state in the country, case law says that a ticket to an event or movie is a license and it’s always been a license. I’ve never had a phone call from a patron complaining, “My ticket is a license and I’m not happy about that.”

It’s not a piece of property and it’s never been a piece of property but the scalpers figured out that if they make it property, they can do with it whatever they want and there won’t be conditions set on it. We recognize it for what it is. The law says it’s a license, and we recognize it for what it is. Our position is that case law is correct and it is a license.

Ticketmaster recently rolled out ticket transfer capabilities. Is this in line with the mission of Fans First?

Let’s talk about paperless for a minute. With paperless ticketing, it’s not all or nothing. When we do Jimmy Buffet, George Strait or Fleetwood Mac, it’s only paperless for about a third of the house. It’s not the whole house, but the scalpers only really care about one third of the best seats. That’s who we’re trying to thwart here is the scalpers taking that face-value inventory and turning around and reselling it.

We want the fans to be able buy the tickets at face value. If somebody’s in the upper deck, I’m not really worried about those [tickets] going to scalpers because scalpers don’t want to buy those tickets.

Going back to your question, I think technology is such that we’re all going to be using our cell phones for ticketing. If I buy four tickets and I need to transfer one to my wife, that’s fine. When I board a plane now, I don’t get a boarding pass. It’s on my phone. The idea that somebody buys four tickets and needs to transfer them to someone else is no different than them buying four tickets and delivering them to somebody.

But paperless tickets will be non-transferable. When we turn on transfer [capabilities] with our ticketing system, those 4,000 paperless tickets won’t be part of it. I don’t see it as a conflict with what we’re trying to do – it’s a decision that each building and each artist makes. Eric Church went out with paperless tickets, Michael Bublé went out with paperless. They didn’t make every ticket in the house paperless. They just picked the seats that the scalpers want and made those paperless. That choice by the buildings, artists and promoters will continue.

Do artist fan clubs and presales eat up too many of the tickets these days?

The scalpers try to spin this like it’s some big secret, like there’s some cabal that’s trying to take all these tickets out of inventory and not make them available to the fans.

The fan club is just that – it’s people who love Taylor Swift or Fleetwood Mac or whomever, so they join the fan club. One of the benefits of the fan club is access to the tickets. So what, they’re a fan, they got the tickets.

An onsale these days is an ongoing process. It’s not a time and a date. There’s a variety of onsales and none of these are secrets. Nobody is trying to hide that the fan club has its own presale or that the building has a presale. We advertise, we send out emails, we encourage people to join our database. We don’t guarantee you get an opportunity for a presale on every show, but we’ve got more than 100,000 people on that list and they are people that want to go to concerts. We know that they’re interested already.

Now don’t get me wrong, I know scalpers are in these clubs. I’m not that naïve. But a lot of the fan clubs will do will-call only so the people who buy those fan club tickets have to come to the ticket window the day of the show to get those tickets. There’s an effort there in trying to thwart the scalpers’ efforts with the fan clubs and the presale.

What about the reports we’ve seen where just a few thousand seats from a 20,000-cap arena are available at the onsale. Some would call that practice false advertising.

When the Apple store debuted the iPhone 5, did they have to say how many phones they had in stock? When an artist goes on sale, are they supposed to have the entire house available? Again, the fan club is not a secret. There’s nothing nefarious about building presales. Nobody is hiding that, and it’s advertised everywhere.

As an organization, this is a problem that [Potter] and the scalpers have made up. Their goal – besides banning paperless ticketing – is to get everybody off them as much as possible by trying to make things that we do as buildings or as artists look nefarious. Their whole goal is to shift the focus off of them taking my $95 Fleetwood Mac ticket and selling it for $400. They don’t want to talk about that. You’ll never hear Fan Freedom talk about scalpers and all the things they’re doing to try to jack up the price on patrons.

In a recent interview with Pollstar, Potter claimed venues, ticketing companies, artists and promoters try to hide the practice of ticket holds and presales and place the blame on scalpers.

It’s misdirection on his part because we’re not trying to hide anything. On my web page it says “In The Know!” You can sign up for our email blast for event notification and sometimes there are presales.

Keep in mind that for every artist and every building, we’re all about getting people in our building. We’re not about keeping them out. We thrive, we survive, we get our bills paid. We enjoy what we do because we’re getting people to come into our building and have a good time. I tell my staff, “We’re not making widgets here, we’re selling a good time!” We want to do everything we can to get people in the door. We’re not trying to make them mad or keep them away.

We’ve been doing paperless ticketing for almost four years now and I get virtually no complaints. Don’t get me wrong. At any given point, there’s some little issue like somebody’s credit card expires but we do everything we can to get people in our building because it’s to our benefit.

The Fan Freedom Project claims it’s seeking to bring transparency and full disclosure to the purchase process. Your group also touts transparency and full disclosure. Can you explain where the differences lie?

When Jon and his group talk about transparency, they want to know what tickets are available at the onsale so that they can say, “This show did really well with the fan-club presale. This is going to be a hot ticket. I’d better be sure and get in.” Or, “It looks like they didn’t sell a lot in the fan-club presale. Maybe I don’t need to worry about getting so many tickets.” So it’s kind of like giving the bank robber the combination to the safe.

When we say transparency, we’re saying, “OK, you listed a ticket for a Luke Bryan show that’s going to play the Verizon Arena in September and it’s not on sale yet. We have not printed one ticket yet but Mr. Scalper, you’re offering tickets to that show.” That’s one of the things building managers complain about. A show’s getting ready to go on sale and you go on StubHub and all the scalpers have tickets listed everywhere.

What’s funny is they’ll list the top row of the building and then say, “We will get you this ticket or better.” So that’s not being transparent – they don’t have those tickets. We’d like for the scalper to say, “I don’t have these tickets.” We’d just as soon they don’t offer them at all.

We’d also like the scalpers to quit listing sites like verizonarenaboxoffice.com. That’s not us. We sued one last year and settled within a matter of days when a scalper was listing our name and pretending to be our box office. We’d like for that to stop.

We’ve had people come down here asking about tickets because they’ve bought from one of these sites and thought they’d bought from us. When you’re buying tickets from a scalper, we’d like for the scalper to say who they are and how you can contact them. Those are some of the transparency issues we think about.

Paperless ticketed shows have helped keep scalpers out of the mix but some say the practice can make it “harder to get into one of these concerts than it is to get on an airplane.” Is there a point where paperless tickets may simply become too onerous?

The purchase process is the exact same. It’s just like buying a ticket. The key is that you have to show up the night of show with your ID and the credit card you bought [the ticket] with. We say that right on the purchase page before you buy your ticket so people know that.

Scalpers talk about letting the free market decide. Well we’ve been doing paperless for four years and our shows are well attended. The people have spoken and they’re fine with paperless ticketing. Nobody is staying away because of paperless.

Most people buy tickets not to transfer them, but to come to the show. The only people that care about transfer are the scalpers. We did a survey after one of our shows with 4,000 paperless and 88 percent of people said they would do paperless again in order to get tickets at face value.

It’s not onerous. The scalpers want to make it sound onerous. They say it’s going to take longer to get in the building. When we started doing paperless, you’d walk up with three people, scan your credit card and all four of you would walk in the building, instead of having to scan four individual tickets. At worst it’s the same, and at best, they’re getting in a little faster.

Scalpers also have this notion that people have to gather together before they walk into the building, and isn’t it awful? A lot of people do that anyway. When I work a show, I’m usually outside in the crowd helping to direct people. I remember seeing a guy and I could tell he was waiting for other people with his paperless confirmation in hand. I went up and asked him, “You have a paperless ticket and have to wait for three other people. Are you OK with that knowing you got this ticket at face value and didn’t have to worry about buying from a scalper?” He said of course he was.

Scalpers also want to make it seem like grandma bought every ticket in the house and she can’t send her grandson.

Grandma didn’t buy every ticket in the house. Usually, somebody that’s going bought the ticket. But when you come across a younger show, we’ll tell them, if you’ll send along a copy of grandma’s ID and bring grandma’s credit card, we’ll let them in. Because we’re about getting people in the building, not keeping people out!

 

So there’s nothing onerous about [paperless]. If it was, we would have quit a long time ago.

 

Any closing thoughts?

Fans First is here to support efforts to get the tickets to the fans at face value. If I had my druthers, scalping would end tomorrow. But if it’s going to continue, it should certainly be more transparent.

Allen County War Memorial Coliseum No. 4 In The World on Venues Today “Top Stop” List For December 2012 – January 2013

Venue Also Named “Prime Site” By Facilities Magazine For Twelfth Consecutive Year

 FORT WAYNE, Ind. – The Allen County War Memorial Coliseum in Fort Wayne, Indiana, is No. 4 in the world for concert ticket sales, among similar-sized venues, on the Venues Today “Top Stop” rankings for the December 2012 – January 2013 reporting period.

The ranking, released in the February 2013 issue of Venues Today, was based on concert and event grosses from December 16 through January 15, as reported to the industry leading publication.

The top three venues on the list were the Brisbane (Aus.) Entertainment Centre at No. 1; Sydney (Aus.) Entertainment Centre at No. 2; Intrust Bank Arena, Wichita, Kansas at No. 3.

The Memorial Coliseum had three different events appear on the VT Hot Tickets list for the same reporting period: Harlem Globetrotters on December 30 at No. 13; the Indoor Midget Car Races, December 28 & 29, at No. 11; and the sold out Zac Brown Band concert on January 11 coming in at No. 6. The rankings are among similar sized venues, seating between 10,001 and 15,000 people.

For more information, visit www.venuestoday.com.

FACILITIES MAGAZINE

The Allen County War Memorial Coliseum has been named a “Prime Site” by Facilities Magazine for the twelfth consecutive year.

Facilities Magazine, one of the top publications in the industry, salutes the finest venues in North America with its “Prime Site Award.” Members of the selection committee are industry executives who are directly involved in site selection, including promoters, booking agents and event planners.

For more information about the Facilities Magazine Prime Site Award, visit www.facilitiesonline.com.

Barry Manilow To Perform On April 18

FORT WAYNE, Ind. – Barry Manilow’s unparalleled career encompasses virtually every arena of music, including performing, composing, arranging and producing. He will bring that talent to Fort Wayne for a show at the Allen County War Memorial Coliseum in Fort Wayne on Thursday, April 18 at 7:30 p.m.

A Songwriters Hall of Fame inductee, Manilow has triumphed in every medium of entertainment.  With worldwide record sales exceeding 80 million, Barry Manilow is ranked as the top Adult Contemporary chart artist of all time with 50 Top 40 Hits, just the fifth artist to make at least 50 visits in the AC chart’s 51-year history.

Manilow has produced, arranged, and released over 40 albums over the course of his career.  This pop icon has written hundreds of songs and performed around the globe thrilling millions of fans, winning a Grammy, two Emmys, a Tony Award and an Oscar nomination along the way.

Women’s Expo celebrates five years in Fort Wayne

By Fort Wayne Daily NewsThe Fort Wayne Women’s Expo will mark its fifth year on Feb. 23 and 24 at the Allen County War Memorial Coliseum.

Hours are 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday. Admission is $5 at the door or $4 from at the box office or from Ticketmaster.

Highlights include shopping, fashion shows, cooking demonstrations, and health and wellness features. Visitors may receive complimentary hand and back massages; plus makeup application and hair styling by Masters of Cosmetology. Saturday’s entertainment includes a fashion show by Jackie’s Place Boutique. Cooking demonstrations will take place all weekend, by local chefs and cookbook authors such as Margy Hooker of Tanglewood Berry Farm and Parkview Regional Medical Center nutritionists.

The Women’s Expo will incorporate a charitable event into the fifth-anniversary show. The Vera Bradley Foundation for Breast Cancer will raffle several prizes including Vera Bradley bags, gift baskets of cosmetics, gourmet chocolate and other donations from exhibitors. Raffle proceeds will benefit the foundation.

Renee Anderson, the CEO of the Women’s Expo, said, “We are proud to incorporate important women’s health issues into the Women’s Expo. Parkview Regional Medical Center, a local sponsor is also emphasizing women’s health initiatives, screenings and wellness programs. We hope by incorporating these well respected health organizations into a fun-filled event we will be able to support missions of raising awareness and funds for life-saving research.”

“The heart of the event is still a shopping extravaganza with an enormous array of products and services that cater to women,” Anderson said.

The Fort Wayne Women’s Expo is sponsored by Parkview Regional Medical Center, The Home Depot, Centers for Pain Relief / Inquest Health System, Faerber’s Bee Windows, Fort Wayne Nissan, A Party Apart, Masters of Cosmetology and radio station V 102.9.