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Though there’s still plenty of snow on the ground, the weather is warming and it’s a great time to get out to some local events. The hosts two Easter egg-decorating workshops on Saturday. In the Ukrainian , learn the decades-old tradition of egg writing with wax and dyes.
The workshop, open to ages 12 and up, runs from 10 a.m. to noon.
The explores the ancient technique of etching designs on eggs with acid or vinegar, which produces a three-dimensional effect. It runs from 1 to 3 p.m.
All materials are provided and no experience is needed. Learn more at . presents A Little Bit of Everything, an evening of music featuring trombone soloist Oleksandr Samarin from Ukraine.
A variety of works for the evening include The Blue Bells of Scotland, the Overture to Mozart’s The Magic Flute, some marches and some opera. The concert is Saturday at the Broadway Theatre at 7:30 p.m.
Learn more at . The 49th annual is in Saskatoon this year, raising funds to support the Kinsmen Foundation in purchasing medical equipment and funding travel for people in the province. The 20-hour telethon features live performances from 80 Saskatchewan entertainers.
This year’s hosting cast includes Beverley Mahood, Jeffery Straker, Tenille Arts and Dione Taylor, alongside the Telemiracle House Band. The event runs Saturday at 9 p.m.
to Sunday at 5 p.m. at Prairieland Park.
Support the fundraiser in person, over the phone or online. Learn more at . Mongrels, the first feature film by Korean Canadian director Jerome Yoo, comes to Saskatoon on Saturday.
In rural Canada in the 1990s, a Korean widower and his two children try to find footing in their new home while navigating their grief. The huntsman father was hired to eradicate feral canines that plague their new town. His teenage son is learning how to be a man and his young daughter dreams of ways to bring her mother back.
The film is showing at the Roxy Theatre. Learn more at . The Saskatchewan-made documentary Reserve 107: A Path Forward is an update on 2016’s Reserve 107: Reconciliation on the Prairies.
The film follows the story of the landless Young Chippewayan band and their claim to the Stoney Knoll First Nation’s land, which was illegally taken from them in 1897 and sold to Mennonite and Lutheran settlers. The three communities are working together to right past wrongs, and the government accepted the land claim in 2024. Offering reconciliation inspiration to communities across Canada, the film screens Sunday at Lakeview Church at 3 p.
m. Learn more at . presents Sleeping Beauty.
The world-famous classical ballet tells the fairy-tale story of a young woman placed under a sleeping spell for a hundred years, only to be awakened by a kiss. Told in three acts, the ballet focuses on the magical elements and the interpretation of the story as a nature allegory. A familiar story that appeals to a child’s imagination and an adult’s heart, the performance is Sunday at TCU Place at 7:30 p.
m. Learn more at . Burnt Thicket Theatre’s performance of has changed venues, now running Friday to March 8 at Studio 914.
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