Ticket to Concert at Mayo Performing Arts Center in Morristown (Up to 71% Off). Three Shows and Two Options Available.
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Historic venue welcomes Zeppelin tribute Get the Led Out, jazz group The Miles Davis Experience & exuberant Parsons Dance troupe
Music can soothe one’s fiery temper, propel a rousing dance, or distract a roommate long enough so you can sell his television at a pawnshop. Experience the stunning power of sound with today’s deal to the Mayo Performing Arts Center in Morristown. Choose from the following performances:
- Get the Led Out on Friday, November 4, at 8 p.m.
- For $16, you get one ticket for a seat in Section A (a $37 value).
- For $20, you get one ticket for a seat in the Premium section (a $42 value).
- The Miles Davis Experience on Saturday, November 5, at 8 p.m.
- For $16, you get one ticket for a seat in Section A or B (a $37 value).
- For $20, you get one ticket for a seat in the Premium section (a $42 value).
- Parsons Dance on Thursday, November 17, at 8 p.m.
- For $12, you get one ticket for a seat in Section A or B (a $42 value).
- For $20, you get one ticket for a seat in the Premium section (a $47 value).<p>
Valid seats appear in red (Section A), blue (Section B), and yellow (Premium) on the venue’s seating chart. Customers can begin exchanging Groupons for tickets starting October 24 by calling (973) 539-8008 or visiting the Mayo Performing Arts Center.
The Mayo Performing Arts Center continues its 17th season of entertaining, enriching, and educating Northern New Jersey with a trio of performances. Philadelphia-based sextet Get the Led Out swing their curly manes in unison as they carry forth the torch of Led Zeppelin with a set that stretches across the legendary British group’s career like a pair of eight-legged spandex pants. The Miles Davis Experience picks up the tribute theme as Ambrose Akinmusire sends his trumpet into a tizzy to recapture the bebops, blue notes, and syncopations of jazz music through the lens of Davis. The secret to choreographer David Parsons’ rousing success, writes Deborah Jowitt of the Village Voice, is his ability to “cloak … super-fine techniques in a kind of charming ease.” Athletic dancers draw on both skill and sensuality in routines bold enough to make the Macarena look positively elegiac. Built in 1937 as a movie palace, the theater retains its old-fashioned charm as audiences applaud, head-bob, and beatbox along to performances in modern comfort.
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About Mayo Performing Arts Center
The Mayo Performing Arts Center straddles time. While one foot is planted in the old-fashioned charm of the 1930s movie-palace golden age, the other is firmly in the tech-savvy modern day. Between is a stretch of history that saw the theater fall into disrepair and then resurrect itself to its star-studded heyday thanks to volunteers. Since its 1994 rebirth, the center has welcomed everyone from the Kirov Orchestra of St. Petersburg to Ringo Starr and Aretha Franklin. But, if the Mayo Center were a tripod, its third foot would certainly reach toward the future—a suite of education studios is on site to cultivate the next generation of performers.