24 March 7th–March 13th, 2019 phoenixnewtimes.com phoenix new Times | mUsIC | CAFe | FILm | CULtURe | Night+Day | FeAtURe | neWs | oPInIon | FeeDBACK | Contents | 48-player singles draw and a 16-team dou- bles draw. Monday’s tournament play starts at 10 a.m. Evening matches are scheduled for 6:30 p.m. Weekday tickets are $20, and the event benefits Phoenix Children’s Hospital. Visit arizonatennis- classic.com. LYNN TRIMBLE ▼ ART HAVE A PINT It’s been said a pint of beer can help you tap into your creative side, so why not fire up your imagination even more with the glass that holds your suds? At Design Your Own Beer Can Pint Glass, you can choose a design for your chalice that speaks to you. Are you feeling bold? Then sketch out your own drawing on a dishwasher-safe piece of can- shaped glassware. You’ll be sure to impress your friends at your next beer tasting. Raise your glass from 6 to 9 p.m. on Monday, March 11, at Social Hall, 715 South McClintock Drive in Tempe. Tickets are $20, which includes all the materials to create your glass, some craft beer to put in it, and light snacks. For more information, visit modernwhichcraft.com. JASON KEIL TUE 3/12 ▼ MUSIC FOUR SOOTHE You might have heard Jacob Szeley playing cello for Battlestar Galactica or The Walk- ing Dead, or seen him perform with Mary J. Blige or Avril Lavigne. Now, you can wit- ness him in concert, as part of a group called Quarteto Nuevo. They’re performing at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, March 12, at ASU Kerr Cultural Center, 6110 North Scotts- dale Road, Scottsdale. They’ve drawn high praise from the folks who pick Kerr’s line- up: “We booked Quartet Nuevo because the group has marvelously diverse mem- bers and they pull so many wonderful in- fluences into their sound.” Basically, they blend centuries-old rhythms with modern grooves. Tickets start at $25. Visit asuevents.asu.edu. LYNN TRIMBLE ▼ FILM EASY DOES IT For this month’s ASU Film School selection at the Alamo Drafthouse Cinema’s Tempe location, Professor Jason Scott will dis- cuss Easy Rider’s influence on cinema 50 years later. Starring Peter Fonda and a young Jack Nicholson and filmed throughout Ari- zona, the movie explored how an entire generation raised on rock and LSD went looking for freedom and never found it. Best known for its explosive soundtrack, director Dennis Hopper’s modern take on the West- ern ushered in an era of independent film. Get your motor running at 7 p.m. on Tuesday, March 12, at 1140 East Baseline Road in Tempe. Tickets are $7. For more information, visit drafthouse.com. JASON KEIL WED 3/13 ▼ CULTURE FAMILY TIES The Diary of Anne Frank is one of the most popular books in history, depicting the life of a Jewish girl during World War II as she hid from the Nazis with her family, later to be discovered and expelled to a concentra- tion camp. Eva Schloss, Frank’s stepsister, was with her during this harrowing expe- rience. During A Historic Evening with Anne Frank’s Stepsister Eva Schloss, the Holo- caust educator recounts her time with her friend and stepsister and how it shaped the woman she is today. This moving presentation begins at 7 p.m. on Wednesday, March 13, at Chandler Center for the Arts, 250 North Arizona Av- enue in Chandler. Tickets are $10 to $180. For more information, visit chabadcenter. com. JASON KEIL Night & Day listings are offered free to New Times readers, but inclusion is not guaranteed. Send submissions by email to Culture Editor Douglas Markowitz ([email protected]), fax (602‑340‑8806), or mail (New Times, 1201 E. Jefferson St., Phoenix, AZ 85034). Please include ZIP code. Continuing items must be resubmitted monthly. No submissions will be taken by telephone. Deadline is noon Tuesday for the following week’s issue, but it’s best to send information three weeks in advance. Search our complete listings online. Steve Steinhardt The fab four: Quarteto Nuevo.