Jun 11 Thursday
In 1985, 1986 and 1992 older community members from the Lee Senior Center worked with renowned multi-generational, multi-ability choreographer Liz Lerman to prepare for an Inside/Out performance called Still Crossing. In 1993 Lee Senior Center members danced in an off-site piece called HERE about the Housatonic River in partnership with the Housatonic River Initiative, a Lee-based nonprofit organization. Get to see exclusive videos of these seniors rehearsing, performing, and being interviewed and learn more about how these productions came together.
This is a free event that will be held at the Lee Council on Aging located at 21 Crossway Street in Lee. Lunch to follow.
Be sure to check out the "Jacob's Pillow in Lee, Mass." exhibit at the Lee Library during June 2026. The exhibit traces the long and often overlooked relationship between the internationally renowned dance hub Jacob’s Pillow, and the neighboring town of Lee from the early 1930s to today. The exhibit is made possible, in part, through a grant from the Lee Cultural Council, a local agency funded by the Mass Cultural Council, a state agency.
Explore how gay history is intertwined with Jacob's Pillow’s very beginnings, often hiding in plain sight. Speaker: Norton Owen, Historian & Founding Director of Preservation for Jacob's Pillow Dance Festival. Sponsored by Berkshire Pride and Berkshire Stonewall Community Coalition.
This event is part of a June 2026 exhibit, "Jacob's Pillow in Lee, Mass." at in the Scolforo Gallery at the Lee Library. The exhibit traces the long and often overlooked relationship between the internationally renowned dance hub Jacob’s Pillow, and the neighboring town of Lee from the early 1930s to today.
This exhibit is made possible, in part, through a grant from the Lee Cultural Council, a local agency funded by the Mass Cultural Council, a state agency.
The Four Seasons Reimagined is a love letter to Mother Nature – an epic new work that invites audiences into a living, breathing world shaped by sound, movement, light, and design. Composer and electronic music innovator Dan Deacon creates and performs a bold original score, inspired by Vivaldi’s iconic work, igniting an immersive landscape where the seasons pulse with urgency and wonder. Four visionary choreographers, Morgann Runacre-Temple (Summer), Penny Saunders (Fall), Jamar Roberts (Winter), and Trey McIntyre (Spring), each bring a distinct season to life, revealing nature as the driving force at the heart of the story: fragile, fierce, and magnificently alive.
Supported in part by Saratoga Performing Arts Center.
Co-commissioned with ArtPhilly’s What Now: 2026 Festival and Highmark Mann, in honor of America250.
Jun 22 Monday
Join the Lee Historical Society for a conversation with Madeline Cantarella Culpo, Founder-Artistic Director of Cantarella School of Dance and Albany Berkshire Ballet. She will be joined by some of her former students who took ballet classes in Lee from the 1950s to the 1980s.
Refreshments will be provided by the Lee Historical Society.
Culpo grew up in the Berkshires taking dance lessons with various local instructors. As a teenager in 1949 and 1950, she had the opportunity to take dance classes at Jacob’s Pillow. After attending the Juilliard School, Culpo returned to the Berkshires in 1955 and opened the Cantarella School of Dance on North Street in Pittsfield. Beginning that first year, she offered off-site lessons in both Lee and Adams.
"Miss Madeline" would bring her students to Jacob’s Pillow at least once a summer so they could see professional dance and see what they could become. Beginning in 1958, Ted Shawn, the founder of Jacob’s Pillow, attended Cantarella’s annual end of year recital in Pittsfield High School’s auditorium and awarded outstanding students scholarships to enroll in Jacob’s Pillow’s summer dance school, University of the Dance. Several outstanding dance students from Lee were scholarship recipients.
This discussion is presented as part of the month-long June exhibit in the Scolforo Gallery titled “Jacob’s Pillow in Lee, Mass.” The exhibit traces the long and often overlooked relationship between the internationally renowned dance hub Jacob’s Pillow, and the neighboring town of Lee from the early 1930s to today. This exhibit is made possible, in part, through a grant from the Lee Cultural Council, a local agency funded by the Mass Cultural Council, a state agency.
Jun 29 Monday
To conclude the month-long exhibit “Jacob’s Pillow in Lee, Mass.,” hosted by the Lee Library, the Lee Chamber of Commerce is sponsoring a closing reception with three speakers from Lee: Alex Heddinger, Vinny Vigilante, and Bill Yehle. They will lead a discussion on marketing, tourism, and business relations between Jacob’s Pillow and the Town of Lee.
Alex Heddinger is the Director of the Lee Chamber of Commerce and a past Jacob’s Pillow intern and staff member. Vinny Vigilante is Director of Facilities, Safety & Security at Jacob's Pillow, and Bill Yehle is a former Production Manager at Jacob's Pillow. They will be joined by Lee business leaders and staff from Lee Town Hall.
Each summer, the connection between Jacob’s Pillow and the town of Lee comes alive in ways both ordinary and extraordinary. Marketing interns walk up and down Main Street asking shop owners if they can hang posters. Vendors from Lee have provided a vast range of goods and services over the decades. Performers, students, and interns stop for coffee, a meal, or an ice cream cone. Local businesses advertise in the festival program, hoping to catch the attention of visitors who travel through Lee on their way to Becket. These everyday interactions, repeated year after year, have built a long and layered relationship between the Pillow and Lee. What began as a simple stop along the road to the festival has grown into a partnership that links art, commerce, and community.
The exhibit at the Lee Library was researched and curated by Joshua D. Bloom and is made possible, in part, through a grant from the Lee Cultural Council, a local agency funded by the Mass Cultural Council, a state agency.
Jul 08 Wednesday
A fan-favorite since SPAC’s grand opening in 1966, New York City Ballet’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream returns to celebrate 60 years of world-class dance and summer magic.
Inspired by Shakespeare’s beloved comedy and set to Mendelssohn’s music, Balanchine’s masterpiece bursts with color, charm, and endless delight.
A Midsummer Night’s Dream
Wednesday • Jul 08, 2026 • 7:30pm
Thursday • Jul 9, 2026 • 7:30pm
Friday • Jul 10, 2026 • 7:30pm
Saturday • Jul 11, 2026 • 2:00pm
New York City Ballet’s 2026 season at SPAC runs July 8-11, featuring full-length story ballet A Midsummer Night's Dream, George Balanchine’s romantic masterpiece Serenade, Jerome Robbins’ Opus 19/The Dreamer and a new work by choreographed by Tiler Peck.
Learn more and buy tickets at spac.org
Jul 09 Thursday
Jul 10 Friday
Experience signature works and an exciting premiere with George Balanchine’s romantic masterpiece Serenade; Jerome Robbins’ Opus 19/The Dreamer, set to Prokofiev’s feverish concerto; and a new work by NYCB Principal Dancer Tiler Peck, which will have its world premiere as part of NYCB’s 2026 Spring Gala.
Part of New York City Ballet’s 2026 season at SPAC running July 8-11, along with full-length story ballet A Midsummer Night's Dream.
Innovators & Icons
Friday • Jul 10, 2026 • 2:00pm
Saturday • Jul 11, 2026 • 7:30pm
Jul 11 Saturday