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THE FESTIVAL IN BRIEF

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<i> Compiled from reports by Shauna Snow, Kiku Iwata, Lewis Segal, John Henken and Diane Haithman. </i>

Box-Office Update:

Seventeen shows are sold out and festival officials now expect to surpass the 60% capacity originally predicted for 230 ticketed programs.

Sold out are all five performances of “The Temptation of St. Anthony” by New York’s Wooster Group, four Bread and Puppet Theater shows, three evening shows by performance artist Rachel Rosenthal, three of eight “Jupiter 35” programs by Los Angeles Poverty Department, and opening nights of “The Legend of the Water Flame” and performance artist Guillermo Gomez Pena.

An additional Rosenthal matinee has been added Sept. 16 at 2 p.m.

All $40 tickets for Royal Court Dancers’ program at the Arboretum as well as the Cambodians’ performances there are sold out.

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Festival officials have upped projected ticket revenue figures from $600,000 to $650,000.

Dial Some Familiar Voices

The days of Orson Welles and radio dramas like “This Is Your FBI,” “The Shadow,” “Sam Spade,” “Dragnet” and “The Life of Riley” have been brought back to life on the CARS telephone hot line: (213) 688-ARTS. The computer-operated service began Sunday, listing events in both the curated festival and the connected Open Festival by date, discipline and, in some cases, by geography. Organizers hope that it will provide a form of entertainment besides merely giving lists through the voices of such notable old-time radio stars as Les Tremayne (a veteran of some 30,000 radio programs), Parley Bear (Chester in “Gunsmoke”), Robert Rockwell (Philip Boynton in “Our Miss Brooks”) and Vance Colvig (the original Bozo the Clown); other recognizable voices include Jeanette Nolan, Peggy Webber, Dick Wilson and Lou Krugman. All are members of the Los Angeles-based California Artist Repertory Theater, which has about 100 members from radio’s heyday in the 1940s.

Shamans to Visit Korea Town

Two performances by the Chindo Ssitkim-Kut Korean Shamans have been added Sunday at the Korea Town Plaza shopping center at 928 S. Western Ave. A traditional ceremony will begin at 2 p.m. and a performance of folk music will be held at 3:30 p.m. Information: (213) 623-7400.

Bolivian Sounds

Bolivian music ensemble Miriam Mita Ayllu Sankayo has been added to the Sept. 9 “Andean Winds” program at UCLA’s Sunset Canyon Amphitheater. The group will perform traditional Incan music, replacing the originally scheduled Ecuadoran ensemble Runa Pacha,(cq) which was dropped from the festival lineup last month because of visa problems. A festival spokesman said that no “Around Town” performances are currently scheduled for the Bolivian group, although such appearances might be added at a later date.

The Philharmonic Connection

Philharmonic assistant conductor David Alan Miller will conduct the original “Cabinet of Dr. Caligari” Sept. 13 at Hollywood Bowl. John Nelson had previously been announced as conductor. The Los Angeles Philharmonic/Los Angeles Festival program, held in conjunction with a live performance of John Adams’ “Harmonielehre,” is a replacement for festival director Peter Sellars’ silent-film parody, “The Cabinet of Dr. Ramirez.” The program also includes a sampler of ethnic music and dance from other festival events.

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