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    Home»Arts and Entertainment»“Mysteries of the Muggy Own” at Sedona Heritage Museum
    Arts and Entertainment

    “Mysteries of the Muggy Own” at Sedona Heritage Museum

    June 21, 2011No Comments
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    Mike Peach Spins Tales of Early Arizona

    05172011SHS1Sedona, AZ (June 21, 2011) – The Sedona Heritage Museum presents Michael Peach in a performance of “Mysteries of the Mogollon (or Muggy Own)” at 1:30 p.m. on Saturday, July 2 at the Sedona Heritage Museum.

    “A man may work from sun to sun, and woman’s work is never done, and there’s no rest for the wicked ’til the grave.  But if you die in Arizona – just in case nobody warned ya – those just might not be the rules by which the game gets played,” quotes award-winning actor and playwright Michael Peach from his new show Mysteries of the Muggy-Own.  Audiences are invited to hear Mike use historical narrative, cowboy poetry, and tongue-in-cheek fun to weave stories of murder, mischief, mayhem and mirth from Arizona’s territorial and contemporary history.  Cowboys, cattle, outlaws, and wildlife figure prominently as he spins tales of situations fraught with peril.  Informative and fun!

    Sedona Gift Shop

    06212011MikePch1The show is about an hour long and appropriate for all audiences.     Tickets are $6, with children under 12 free.  Museum admission is separate.

    The Museum’s latest special exhibit:  “T-Shirts: Messages of Sedona” is now on display.
    The Sedona Historical Society operates the Sedona Heritage Museum on the historic Jordan Farmstead at 735 Jordan Rd in Jordan Historical Park.  The Museum is open daily at 11:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.  For more info about this special presentation or the Museum, 928-282-7038.

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    cowboy poetry Miker peach mogollon rim sedona heritage museum

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    The Politics of Pain

     

    The Politics of Pain

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    If there’s one thing nearly every living organism on this planet shares, it is the ability to feel pain. The pain of hunger. Of loneliness. Of illness. The pain of broken bones and broken bodies, broken hearts and broken homes. The pain of poverty, depression, the death of someone we love—and, eventually, the anticipation of our own death. Pain, in all its shapes and shadows, is the one certainty life gives us all. No one escapes it.

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    The Politics of Pain

     

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    If there’s one thing nearly every living organism on this planet shares, it is the ability to feel pain. The pain of hunger. Of loneliness. Of illness. The pain of broken bones and broken bodies, broken hearts and broken homes. The pain of poverty, depression, the death of someone we love—and, eventually, the anticipation of our own death. Pain, in all its shapes and shadows, is the one certainty life gives us all. No one escapes it.

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    The Politics of Pain

     

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    If there’s one thing nearly every living organism on this planet shares, it is the ability to feel pain. The pain of hunger. Of loneliness. Of illness. The pain of broken bones and broken bodies, broken hearts and broken homes. The pain of poverty, depression, the death of someone we love—and, eventually, the anticipation of our own death. Pain, in all its shapes and shadows, is the one certainty life gives us all. No one escapes it.

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    The Politics of Pain

     

    The Politics of Pain

    If there’s one thing nearly every living organism on this planet shares, it is the ability to feel pain. The pain of hunger. Of loneliness. Of illness. The pain of broken bones and broken bodies, broken hearts and broken homes. The pain of poverty, depression, the death of someone we love—and, eventually, the anticipation of our own death. Pain, in all its shapes and shadows, is the one certainty life gives us all. No one escapes it.

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    The Politics of Pain

     

    The Politics of Pain

    If there’s one thing nearly every living organism on this planet shares, it is the ability to feel pain. The pain of hunger. Of loneliness. Of illness. The pain of broken bones and broken bodies, broken hearts and broken homes. The pain of poverty, depression, the death of someone we love—and, eventually, the anticipation of our own death. Pain, in all its shapes and shadows, is the one certainty life gives us all. No one escapes it.

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    The Politics of Pain

     

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