What to do this weekend and beyond

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Thursday, Oct. 22


Ballet Jorgen performs Tchaikovsky’s ballet Sleeping Beauty with Aurora in a family-friendly (ages 8 and up) story of enduring love, for one night only, 7:30 p.m., Centrepointe Theatres. Tickets: $40-$53. centrepointetheatres.com

The three-day St. Lawrence Film Festival has screenings from Ottawa to Brockville into Potsdam, New York, starting with a gala celebrating the 35th anniversary of The Blues Brothers with guest Dan Akroyd and a special screening, 6 p.m., Canadian Museum of History. Tickets for gala: $100-$200; festival pass: $25-$75. www.stlawrencefilm.com


Egodeath performs Stephen & Me.


For the second “weekend,” Fresh Meat 4 theatre festival brings the newest, least-smelly, most delicious, original 20-minute performances by local performers, invited to push the concept of theatre to its limits. This time, it includes full-audience participation in Tolerance, and another piece about a 25-year-old woman who falls in love with Stephen Harper from a distance —and must be heartbroken this week. Five performances are shown in rotation each evening, starting at 8 p.m., Arts Court, 2 Daly Ave. Tickets: $20-$25/night. www.freshmeatfest.com

Your questions and concerns about the Gatineau Park, Greenbelt and urban lands will be heard as researchers and scientists reveal some of their findings at a public meeting, 6:30 to 8:30 p.m., NCC Headquarters, 40 Elgin St. Register to attend at www.ncc-ccn.gc.ca

The Ottawa International Writers’ Festival is underway and today is about cultures: at 5:30 p.m., Archibald Ritter discusses Entrepreneurial Cuba; at 6:30 p.m. learn about First Peoples, First Stories with lee Maracle, Bev Sellars and Joseph Boyden or explore Acadian poetry; and at 8;30 p.m. the spotlight is on Irish Fiction with Gavin Corbett, Claire Louise Bennett and Colin Berrett. writersfestival.org

Photos: What to do this week


Wondering what to do this week? We have ideas.

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    Dan Aykroyd (right, as Elwood Blues) will return to his hometown for a 35th anniversary screening of The Blues Brothers (also starring John Belushi) at the Canadian Museum of History, where he will perform with the Downchild Blues Band.

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    The Food and Agriculture Museum is hosting a barnyard Halloween.

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    Rosie and the Riveters play vintage-inspired songs. Lisa Landrie / supplied

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    Raise your concerns about the capital's green lands at an NCC meeting..

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    Puppetry of the Penis is a non-sexual show, but definitely involves a lot of full-frontal nudity, at Algonquin Commons Theatre.

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    It's Giveaway Weekend in Ottawa. Anais Voski / Ottawa Citizen

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    Comedian Debra DiGiovanni is in Ottawa with her "best friend."

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    Artist David Lidbetter is offering a workshop at the Art Materials Trade Show and Fair.

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    Chef and cookbook author Anna Olson will share holiday tips at the' Ottawa Food and Wine Show.

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    Enjoy halloween at the Food and Agriculture Museum.

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    The Ottawa Police Service is recruiting call centre agents.

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    The Slocan Ramblers play Westboro Masonic Hall on Oct. 24.

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    No End in Sight by Tavi Wwisz at EBA open studio even until Nov. 8.

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    Enjoy Lounge music at Le Nordik before it gets too cold to imagine being outside in nothing but a bathrobe. Supplied / Le Nordik

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    The Gloucester Cathedral Choir performs for the first time in Ottawa on two nights this week. Chris Smith / Supplied

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    Incomparable comedian Billy Connolly p[lays a sold out show at the NAC this week.

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    See Tim Curry, Barry Bostwick and Susan Sarandon in The Rocky Horror Picture Show for free this week.

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    Ottawa singer-songwriter Amanda Rheaume plays the Babes4Breasts concert.

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    The World War Women exhibit opens this week.

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    Deal of the week, for just $10 see Skye Wallace at The Black Sheep Inn.

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    The Billings Estate is having a child-sized Halloween Party.

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    Egodeath performs Stephen & Me -- about a 25-year-old woman who falls in love with Stephen Harper, at the Fresh Meat festival. MJ Gervais / supplied

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    The Standstills are Renee Couture and Johnny Fox.

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    Spend an evening with artist Simon Brascoupé at a fundrasier for the Odawa Centre.

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    Makin' it Grain is a five-course beer-pairing dinner on Oct. 29 with help from David Wallace of Around the Block Butcher Shop, Josh McJannett of Dominion City Brewing Co., Chef Stephen LaSalle of Albion Rooms and artist Eryn O'Neill.

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    Cumberland Heritage Village Museum is hosting a Haunted Historic Village on Oct. 30 at 7 p.m. Marc Brousseau / supplied

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    Winner of Burlesque Idol 2015 Miranda Rights, queen of Halloween, is performing at Zombie Strippers on Oct. 31.

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    The 24th Street Wailers play The Rainbow.

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    Jeremy Fisher is an honourary babe at the Babes4Breasts concert.

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    Klingande plays #Scream2015 at EY Centre.

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    The Peptides are going to sing and dance through the DiscoA Apocalypse on Oct. 31

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    Mementos by Sayward Johnson at EBA open studio even until Nov. 8.

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    Newsies the musical is at the NAC.

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    Blasterjaxx play #Scream2015 Hallowen party at EY Centre.
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Friday, Oct. 23


World War Women exhibit opens today.


It’s a day for women:

The World War Women exhibit opens at the Canadian War Museum, examining how the lives of Canadian women were transformed in World Wars I and II as they took on new roles. Most arrestingly, women who were affected by the wars will share their personal stories one-on-one with visitors, depending on their availability, throughout the exhibit until March. warmuseum.ca


We can stay in the 1940’s with Rosie and the Riveters, an emerging all-woman quartet from the prairies who write vintage-themed originals and cover favourites with “sass,” 7:30 p.m., LIVE on Elgin, 220 Elgin St. (they’re about to release their debut album, Good Clean Fun.) Tickets: $10 in advance, $12 at the door. www.liveonelgin.com



Billy Connolly is back in Ottawa.


The off-Broadway hit Girls Night: The Musical, best described as Desperate Housewives meets Mama Mia!, encourages audience dancing and sing-alongs to popular hits, 8:30 p.m, Centrepointe Theatres. Tickets: $49.50 centrepointetheatres.com

Incorrigible British comedian Billy Connolly‘s show at the NAC tonight is sold out — but we are told some tickets may be released for sale at different times this week — so keep checking this link: ticketmaster.ca

Continuing with the incomparable, comedic show Puppetry of the Penis has two Australian men do “dick tricks” — manipulate their genitalia into shapes, landmarks and objects, with a camera projecting the detail so all in the audience can see, 7 p.m., Algonquin Commons Theatre. Cringeworthy? Fascinating? You tell us. (Obviously an adult-only show with non-sexual, full-frontal male nudity.) Tickets: $30-$48.50.


Rolf Klausener’s musical project The Acorn’s latest EP, Vieux Loup, is a series of electro-informed, acoustic folk-pop beauties and they’re playing them live at The Black Sheep Inn — *and* have arranged a party bus from Babylon club at 7:30 p.m. with limited seating (obviously). theblacksheepinn.com


Rock-blues duo The Standstills make lots of claims on their website — built the pyramids, drank absinthe with Van Gogh, fed pigeons with Tesla — and we doubt them all but are still amazed the two of them alone are able to produce such arena-worthy, rock anthems , 10 p.m., House of Targ. Tickets: $10. spectrasonic.com

For some contemporary jazz, the Artie Roth Quartet is touring in support of its latest record, Discern, 7:30 p.m., GigSpace. Tickets: $20. gigspaceottawa.com

Every day, the promoter seems to be releasing another batch of tickets for the “sold-out” three-hour set from music producer Markus Schulz, 9 p.m. (He goes on at 11 p.m.), Barrymore’s. Tickets: $40. www.dnalive.ca

Saturday, Oct. 24


Who will you run into at the Mayors trick-or-treat party.


Join Mayor Jim Watson 9th annual Halloween gathering (a bit early…) with costumed characters handing out treats, a witches’ den to explore, pumpkin decorating and more for the entire family, in support of the Ottawa Food Bank’s Baby Supply Cupboard, 4 to 7 p.m., City Hall. Admission: non-perishable baby supply item. ottawa.ca

It’s Ottawa-wide Giveaway Weekend, so set anything you no longer want at the curb and wait for people to come by an claim them. Make sure to only take items marked with “FREE” on them — cars and bikes, for instance, are not usually up for grabs. For suggestions on making this weekend work well, visit ottawa.ca.


Then join the Thrill the World re-enactment of Michael Jackson’s Thriller video, at 6 p.m. at the National Gallery of Canada. Events begin at 2:30 p.m. with registration, followed by zombie make-up — by donation, Thriller dance classes, rehearsal at 5:45 p.m., then the main event. Proceeds go to the Candlelighters childhood cancer support programs. (Find a dance tutorial on the website.) www.thrilltheworld.ottawa.ca #TTWOttawa2015


Carlington Park has long been a popular snowboard and toboggan hill.


All are welcome at the Community Crafting day, where treats will be tried, friends will be made and decorations will be created for the Urban Market’s event the following weekend, 11 a.m. West End Well Co-op. www.urbancraftmarket.com

Be determined to enjoy winter and get some snow gear at the Ski, Snowboard and Travel show (oh, wait, this means one can book a trip away from the cold …), 10 a.m. to 5 p.m, EY Centre. Free admission. ottawaskishow.com

Trick or Treat to a Wicked Beat is a kid-friendly, bilingual, musical event with dancers from the School of Dance and the NAC Orchestra, 1:30 and 3:30 p.m., NAC Southam Hall. Costumes, we imagine, are welcome. Tickets: From $23. nac-cna.ca

Musicians will be playing on their stoops in Hintonburg at the Ottawa Porchest, 1 to 4 p.m., with family-friendly, acoustic/unplugged performances. (Got a porch to share with a musician? Let them know.) www.ottawaporchfest.ca

The Light the Night Walk for the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society invites all to bring a lantern (red for supporters, white for patients and survivors, gold for loved ones lost) for 5 p.m., Lansdowne Park. llscanada.org

Award-winning comedian Debra DiGiovanni (Last Comic Standing, Video On Trial, The Debaters, Match Game) joins “best friend” Darcy Michael (Just for Laughs, The Debaters) on two-city tour, with Ottawa as the other stop, 8 p.m., Ottawa Little Theatre. Tickets: $30. www.ottawalittletheatre.com

The 9th annual Babes4Breasts concert to benefit Breast Cancer research includes Oh Susanna, Sarah macDougall, Amanda Rheaume and honorary-babe Jeremy Fisher, 8 p.m., St. Alban’s Church, 4343 King Edward Ave. Tickets: $25 in advance; $30 at the door. www.babes4breasts.com


The 24th Street Wailers bring their funky, blues rock party informed by early 50’s music to The Rainbow, so wear your dancing shoes, 10 p.m. Tickets: $12 in advance, $15 at the door. http://the24thstreetwailers.com


Tickets are in high demand for energetic, bluegrass/folk band The Slocan Ramblers’ show, whose sophomore album will be released in the next few weeks, 7:30 p.m., Westboro Masonic Hall, 430 Churchill Ave. N. Tickets: $20. www.rasputins.ca

Sunday, Oct. 25


Halloween for the whole family — and another with beer.


Halloween hijinks get started early at the Cumberland Heritage Village Museum, with safe trick-or-treating in the museum for all ages and period-appropriate candy, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., 2940 Old Montreal Rd.Costumes encouraged. They are also hosting a haunted historic village on Friday, Oct. 30, where fear — and spooky dolls, if the photos are anything to go by — is on the menu. ottawa.ca/museums

Adults can enjoy some pre-Halloween pumpkin carving with beer at the Mill Street Brew Pub, also featuring an un-named scary movie, 7 p.m., 555 Wellington St. (Pumpkins are provided gratis.) millstreetbrewpub.ca

Pets are welcome at the outdoor Chinatown Craft Market — thought it will move indoors if rain threatens — with local makers and crafters exhibiting their goods, noon to 4 p.m., 651 Somerset St. W. No admission.


Two film festivals end today: The Inside Out LGBT festival has screenings from noon to about 10 p.m., starting with How to Win at Checkers Every Time, about a scrappy orphan living in poverty in Bangkok with his openly-gay older brother and aunt, (ByTowne, 12:15 p.m., insideout.ca); the African Film Festival closes with Haitian film Lumumba, about the rise to power and eventual assassination of the first PM of independent Congo, (4 p.m., Carleton University, www.cfi-icf.ca).

Travel, health, beauty, food and business information is available at the Ottawa Fall National Women’s Show, with fashion shows — including some firefighters on the runway — and over 200 vendors, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., EY Centre. Admission: $12. www.nationalwomensshow.com



Dora the Explorer and Diego are making an appearance at the Ottawa Parent & Child Expo, with information for parents on health to camps, and events for kids from face painting to gymnastics playzone, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. all weekend, Nepean Sportsplex. Tickets: $4-$6, or $12/family of four. parentandchildexpo.ca


Play some Atari this Sunday.


The 3rd Vintage Video Game Tournament invites gamers of all kinds to register a team — though you can just show up alone on the day — and try three-decades of space-themed gaming history on four different consoles, 2 p.m., to benefit charity Kind Space, 331 Cooper St. Registration: Free, but pledges encouraged. www.kindspace.ca

Declutter the house, says House of Paintx urban festival, and bring any clothes, music, shoes anything someone else might enjoy to a swap event, with tunes from DJ Bow Tie Willie, guest performances and live painting, noon to 4 p.m., 1076 Wellington St. W. (Leftover items will be donated to the Salvation Army.) houseofpaint.ca

The Ottawa Police are recruiting call centre agents and are hosting an information session for interested applicants, 7 to 8 p.m., Algonquin College, 1385 Woodroffe Ave. www.ottawapolice.ca

Monday, Oct. 26


It’s been 40 years since Frankenfurter first pranced across our screens.


No bags or coats will be allowed inside for the free screening of The Rocky Horror Picture Show, in the 40th anniversary year of the once-subculture movie, which makes us think props such as water guns, newspapers and toast might not be welcome, 7 p.m., Algonquin Commons Theatre. (But no one can make you check your strut.) Tickets: Free! www.algonquinsa.com

Canada’s first poet Laureate, novelist and historian Goerge Bowering will chat about writing life, the craft and how ones must experiment, noon, Christ Church Cathedral, 414 Sparks St. Tickets: 45-$10. writersfestival.org

Uber or taxi? Have your say on the city’s regulation review and read discussion papers being released on the city’s website, then sign up for a consultation workshop or share your views at taxi@ottawa.ca or 613-580-TAXI.

Looking for an alternative to Halloween candy? The City of Ottawa is offering Trick or Swim or Skate tickets, valid from Nov. 1 to Jan. 31 for regularly scheduled public swims and skates at select city pools and arenas. Pick these out to hand out to trick-or-treaters at rec centres and pools Cost: $10 for 10.

Tuesday, Oct. 27


For the first time, the 500-year-old, world-renowned Gloucester Cathedral Choir of 20 boy choristers and 12 adults from the UK will perform in Ottawa, singing 20th and 21st century sacred music along with St. Matthew’s choirs, 7 p.m., St. Matthew’s Anglican Church, 130 Glebe Ave. The choir will then perform at Evensong on Wednesday at 6 p.m., Christ Church Cathedral, 439 Queen St. Tickets: Freewill donation. www.stmatthewsottawa.ca


Newsies is on at the NAC.


For more energetic lads, the Broadway musical hit Newsies with leaping paper boys standing up to the powerful, opens for a six-day run at the National Arts Centre, 8 p.m. Tickets: $35-$105. nac-cna.ca

Unsure where to start with your garden? Paul Zammit, director of horticulture at the Toronto Botanical Gardens will be sharing personal tips on growing vegetables and other yummy additions in gardens of all sizes, by gardeners of all skill levels and ages, in a lively presentation for the Ottawa Horticulture Society, 7:30 p.m., Tom Brown Arena, 141 Bayview Rd. All welcome: $10. www.ottawahort.org

Wednesday, Oct. 28


St. James Cemetery is the site of a ghost walk through history.


Homer’s The Odyssey will come to life as storyteller Jan Andrews recounts some of Odysseus’ adventures (or misadventures …) for a memorable, transportive evening, 7 p.m., Mississippi Public Library, 155 High St., Almonte. Free, but donations to the library accepted. (Might be a good idea to reserve a seat, at 613-256-3030 or 613-256-1037.)

Do the howlings from the ‘dead grounds’ near Carleton Place’s St. James Cemetery from a wolf protector, or the ghosts of the unavenged children of one of Canada’s first convicted multiple murderers? Learn more on a Cemetery Ghost Walk, 6:30 p.m., 8th Line of Ramsay. Tickets: $10. www.cpbheritagemuseum.com


Practise giving Jimmy Fallon a challenge at the open, Lip Sync Battle hosted by Jesse Reynolds, with actual prizes — from binoculars to coaching sessions, 8:30 p.m., The Rainbow. Tickets: $5. This is a fundraiser for local filmmaker Lisa Meuser’s feature film, Me, My Mom and a Whistle.

First Nations artist Simon Brascoupé will be live-painting and telling stories, with someone winning the $1,800 piece of art as part of a fundraising evening for the Odawa Centre, offering programs for the local Aboriginal community, 6:30 p.m., 150 City Centre Ave. Tickets: $25-$40. odawa.on.ca / http://bit.ly/1LmuoMd

Thursday, Oct. 29


Detail of Mementos by Sayward Johnson at EBA open studio event.


The Enriched Bread Artists are opening their studios for their annual showcase in the multi-levelled old home of the bread manufacturer, starting with an event and performance from 6 to 9 p.m., then on all this weekend and next, 951 Gladstone Ave. Admission: Free. www.enrichedbreadartists.com

Makin’ It Grain is a five-course, beer-pairing, storytelling dinner at Dominion City Brewing Co., with Albion Rooms’ chef Stephen LaSalle, artist Eryn O’Neill, David Wallace of Around the Block Butcher Shop, Bread By Us bakers and more to benefit FarmWorks, empowering young people through Operation Go Home, 6:30 p.m., 5510 Canotek Rd. Tickets: $85. www.makingitgrain.ca


Le Nordik Spa will be playing lounge music from 6 p.m. to midnight (hopefully curbing any shushing when you chat with friends), cocktails and hourly Aufguss rituals in their Finnish sauna, involving a 10-minute infusion of essential oils meant to have healthful properties, 16 Chemin Nordik, Old Chelsea. Cost: $59, no reservation required. www.lenordik.com

Friday, Oct. 30


The Ottawa Wine and Food Show starts Oct. 30.


The Ottawa Wine and Food show 30th anniversary show has culinary royalty Anna Olson and others offering holiday tips, an expanded tasting alley and events, a carvery, a caviar bar, vegetarian food stations and let’s not forget the 1,400 wines. Open noon to 10 p.m. tonight, noon to 4:30 p.m. and 5:30 to 10 p.m. on Saturday, noon to 5:30 p.m. on Sunday, Shaw Centre. Tickets: $25/day pass, $50/VIP and Saturday After Five, $150/tasting alley, with other prices for events on the website. However, on Sunday, the tasting floor pass is only $19.85 — set to the year people started dressing up to line-up for booze began. (Also, apparently VIP tickets mean no “line-ups, ever.”) www.ottawawineandfoodfestival.com

Artists create the best they can in 20 minutes at the competitive, live Art Battle, while a crowd hovers close by, drinks in hand, to judge them and name a winner, 7 p.m., Arts Court, 2 Daly Ave. It’s surprisingly action-filled, and the audience can also bid on items they want to take home. Tickets: $10-$20. artbattle.ca


For more zen and the best deal of the week, see singer-songwriter Sky Wallace who we, in our less erudite moments, say is a folk dream/narrative mash-up of Joni Mitchell and a darker Lisa Loeb, play with psych-folker Ora Cogan and local songwriter Trails, 8:30 p.m., The Black Sheep Inn, Wakefield. www.theblacksheepinn.com

Giant Bugs have invaded the Museum of Nature at this edition of Nature Nocturne, where the erstwhile castle gets turned into a nightclub, with music and visuals from Spins and Needles, 8 p.m. to midnight, 240 McLeod St. Tickets:$25. (FYI: Bug costumes encouraged.) nature.ca


There will be some faith with the noise at a Halloween metal bash at House of Targ, who have booked Indianapolis Christian prog-metal group Forevermore, playing with Ottawa noisemakers Maou Mindu, Here Comes Bigfoot, The Great diversion and Earthworks, 10 p.m., House of Targ. Tickets: $10. www.houseoftarg.com



Saturday, Oct. 31


What will your pumpkin look like?


Isn’t it satisfying when Halloween falls on an actual weekend and one can dance/party/consume-too-much-candy with impunity?

But first, for something non-spooky, the inaugural Art Materials Trade Show and Pop up Art Fair, is on this weekend with workshops (intro to oil, framing better, drawing class, etc.), networking events and a chance to buy materials, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Hellenic Reception Centre, 1315 Prince of Wales Dr. (They will also be doing free face painting all day Saturday for Halloween— so it cannot be completely escaped.) Admission: $5, free when pre-register for a class. www.artschoolfair.com

Also, non-profit Heartwood House is having their annual sale of unclaimed items from OC Transpo — for the first time including cellphones, noon to 2 p.m., 404 McArthur Ave. www.heartwoodhouse.ca


The Billings Estate is having a child-sized Halloween Party.


Now, for the Halloween events.

For the whole family:

It’s a Barnyard Halloween at the Canada Agriculture and Food Museum with scavenger hunts, costume parade and pumpkin decorating, 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Included with admission. cafmuseum.techno-science.ca

The Billings Estate is hosting a Halloween Party from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. with trick-or-treating, child-sized haunted houses and a monster-shooting gallery, 2100 Cabot St. Tickets: $6, $16/family. www.ottawa.ca/museums

The Hintonburger is becoming the Hauntedburger for one day only, with a the last visit of the season from The Merry Dairy offering pumpkin ice cream cone and other treats, noon to 3 p.m., 1096 Wellington St. W.

And burn that off at a family yoga Halloween party at Rama Lotus, appropriate for ages 4 to 9 years accompanied by an adult, 1 to 2 pm. Kids are welcome in costume and drop-in fees apply. www.ottawayoga.ca

The whole family can boogie at the Wakefield Centre Halloween Dance Party in their Haunted Great Hall, with music from DJ Amber D, prizes for best costume, pizza slices for sale and cash bar for those of correct age, 6:30 p.m., 38 Valley Dr. Tickets: $3, $10/family, to benefit WAY Food Program.


Miranda Rights, burlesque queen of Halloween, is performing at Zombie Strippers.


For the adults:

Eschewing typical typecasting, these seductive zombies will be stripping at a Halloween-themed event from Rockalily Burlesque at the haunted Babylon Club, including drag kings, vaudeville and pole dancing, 9 p.m. Tickets: $12 in advance, $15 at the door. (This show tends to sell out.) zombiestripers.eventbrite.ca

There are over $6,000 in costume prizes to be won at the #Scream2015 night of horror and fright at a transformed EY Centre, with electro/house music from Dutch performers Blasterjaxx, France’s Klingande and more, 9 p.m. Tickets: $35-$55+. www.facebook.com/dnapresents


It’s rock and metal at Hellbros Halloweiner at Zaphod Beeblebrox, with performance by the titular rock group, Black Oak Decline and Perfect Gentleman on “devil’s night,” costumes encouraged, 8:30 p.m., 27 York St. Tickets: $10 in advance, $12 at the door. zaphods.ca

Likely to sell-out, funk-soul band The Hornettes will pay homage to his purpleness, at the Prince Halloween event, with opener Bella Cat Blues, 8 p.m., The Black Sheep Inn, Wakefield. Tickets: 410 in adva.ce (There is a party bus leaving from Ottawa, info at hornettespartybus@gmail.com.)


The Peptides are going to sing and dance through the DiscoA Apocalypse on Oct. 31


Barrymore’s 16th annual Halloween Charity Ball encourages the most-outlandish costumes for their contest prizes, intriguing spiritual practices, will have an unnamed celebrity MC and outlandish decorations, all to benefit local charities and non-profit groups (also unnamed) and, due to people upset at the door it was sold out, tickets are only being sold in advance. Tickets: $20-$25. www.ticketzone.com/barrymores

The Disco Apocalypse is upon us and the nine-members of The Peptides are going to dance and sing right through it — or until their sequins melt, at their Hallowe’en party, supported by the Canadian Centre for Gender and Sexual Diversity, 8:30 p.m. until the end, St. Alban’s Church, 454 King Edward Ave. Tickets: $12 in advance, $15 at the door. www.thepeptides.com

Halloween Psycho Puppet Freeplay Pinball Party is exactly as it sounds, a freeplay pinball event, with puppet games, puppet theatre, music, videos, dancing, some terror (for the Halloween part) and your fantastic costumes — that do not have to be puppet-themed, but how cool if they were?, 9 p.m., House of Targ. Tickets: $10 at th door. www.houseoftarg.com

Big Jeezus Truck band are going to “wake and rock the dead” at their annual Halloween Ball with The Ginger Fox Band and Fuzzy Bunny Slaughterhouse — much more fun than they sound, 10 p.m., 76 Murray St. Tickets: $10. therainbow.ca

Submit event information to kendemann@ottawacitizen.com, by 8 a.m. Monday, two weeks before the event. Photos are welcome.

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