Pecha Kucha 42

Pecha Kucha is back with another eclectic evening of speakers!

“Who’s your Daddy?” Janay Johnson, executive director of the Bozeman Public Library Foundation, got a stunning answer to that question when she took a DNA test recently.

In a very different journey of discovery, Barbara Phinney, describes her recent off-the-beaten-path hike with a group of five on the “Camino” de Costa Rica, a six-year-old trek through the back-country, staying in people’s homes and seeing a very different side of this beautiful land. Jacob Myers presents on his travels to a much colder part of the world with “What it Takes: My Journey Alone in Antarctica.”

Steve Sarles, who was a park ranger at Yellowstone for 18 years and then worked three years as a snow-coach driver/guide, shares his special passion for the park in the winter. Peggy Kimmet talks about what it was like to take a coach into Yellowstone more than 100 years ago in her PK on the Morning Glory Stage Coach. The M-Y Line operated from 1898-1912, and carried passengers from the railroad station at Monida, MT through the Centennial Valley to the Dwelle's stage stop just outside of present-day West Yellowstone.

Mary Sadowski regales us with another piece of Montana history with her stories about Bear Canyon, including tales of a tough woman homesteader, Bozeman’s first ski area, bootlegging, and the long-gone logging town of Commissary.

Steve and Anna Neff have been retracing and reliving history, with their passion for riding abandoned railroad tracks in Montana and California on “rail-bikes” they built themselves.

In another effort to preserve history, local architect Rob Pertzborn offers “the rest of the story” about the remarkable transformation and rebirth of the US Bank building on Main Street in Bozeman.

Award-winning author and MSU English Instructor Glen Chamberlain presents “An Autobiography of Bozeman Creek,” her tribute to the creek so important to the local water supply and so close to the hearts of many long-time residents.

Aaron Banfield offers insight into a side of Bozeman restaurants many of us have never seen, having worked as a dishwasher, sous-chef and baker at more than 30 local eating establishments over the past 20 years. Tracey Robecker talks about surviving the sudden death of her husband, the common and often inappropriate ways people react when they do not know what to say or do, and will provide some practical ways that friends and family can be helpful in the healing process.

Emcee will be Bradford Rosenbloom, actor, director and Montana State University public speaking instructor.

Pecha Kucha (peh-chak-cha which means “chit-chat” in Japanese) offers anyone with a passion or a vision – designers, artists, inventors, architects, adventurers, entrepreneurs – an opportunity to share their ideas with the community during a fast-paced, friendly social get-together. Created in 2003 by Tokyo-based architects Astrid Klein and Mark Dytham, it has been used by millions of people all across the world. There’s just one catch – presenters have only

20 slides x 20 seconds each, a total of 6 minutes, 40 seconds!

GET TICKETS

Cost: $10.50 gen admission, $7 students

Time(s)

Wed. May. 15   6:40pm

Thu. May. 16   6:40pm


Location
The Ellen Theatre
17 W. Main St.
Bozeman, MT 59715
(406) 585-5885
theellentheatre.com