The Greensheet (Houston, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 527, Ed. 1 Friday, December 3, 2010 Page: 6 of 44
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Page 6
December 3-9, 2010
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Entertainment
NINTH ANNUAL FESTIVAL OF LIGHTS
TO INCLUDE NEW FEATURES
& SPECIAL FRIDAY DEALS
Moody Gardens Adds Kids Snow Zone, Food Drive and
More to Gulf Coast's Largest Holiday Lighting Event.
This year's opening day
celebration will begin at 4
p.m. Nov. 13 and will
include performances
by local groups,
including the Galveston
Ballet, the Sugar Land
First United Methodist
Church Choir, and Leah
White & The Magic Mirrors.
While guests are being entertained, they
can also explore a variety of Festival of
Lights activities, from ice skating to
watching Santa feed penguins in the
Moody Gardens aquarium.
Photos with Santa will be available
nightly throughout the festival, which
will be open Thursdays - Saturdays
Nov. 13 to Dec. 11, excluding Nov. 18.
The festival will also be open Dec. 12.
Festival of Lights will be open daily
from Dec. 16 to Jan. 1.
In addition to the festival, guests can
also catch holiday-themed films in the
Moody Gardens IMAX® 3D Theater,
Ridefilm Theater and 4D Special FX®
Theater, or check out the holiday aerial
acrobatics show Imagine Christmas in
the Moody Gardens Convention Center
between Dec. 16 and Dec. 26. The show
comes with a dinner buffet.
Admission to Festival of Lights is
$5.95. Tickets to select additional
attractions, such as the IMAX® 3D
holiday film, Ridefilm, Discovery
Museum, Aquarium Pyramid, Colonel
Paddlewheel Boat and outdoor ice
skating rink, can be purchased for $5
each when accompanied by a Festival of
Lights ticket. Imagine Christmas tickets
(including dinner) are $45 for adults and
$25 for children 12 years and younger.
Hotel packages are also available.
Major sponsors of this year's Festival
of Lights include: Cadillac, PepsiCo,
Morris Architects, CHPA Consulting
Engineers, American Marble, Baker
Concrete, Chuoke Plumbing, Forman
Equipment & Contracting, Gilbane
Builders, Hunton Trane, Kelso
Concrete, Letsos Co., Houston
Community Newspapers, KPRC-TV
Channel 2, and KKBQ FM 92.9. For
more information call 800-582-4673 or
visit www.moodygardens.org.
This holiday
season kids won't need
unusually frigid weather
to enjoy the rare chance to '
play in Texas snow. That
is, not if they come to
Moody Gardens' ninth annual Festival
of Lights.
This year's festival - to be held Nov.
13 to Jan. 1 in Galveston - will feature a
new Snow Zone play area for kids,
which will be offered on Friday nights
throughout the holiday lighting event.
Admission to the Snow Zone is just $5
with the purchase of a Festival of Lights
ticket and allows kids to play in the
snow for as long as they'd like.
Also new to the festival will be Moody
Gardens' "Food Drive Fridays,'' where
guests can bring a non-perishable food
item on any Friday and receive 2-for-l
admission to the festival. The food drive
program will benefit Galveston and
Houston food banks.
■'Festival of Lights at Moody Gardens
has become a family tradition for many
of our guests that come out every year to
celebrate the holiday season with us,"
said John Zendt, president of Moody
Gardens. "We're glad to give them
something new and exciting to enjoy
this year while also allowing them to
contribute to a worthy cause."
Festival of Lights is the Gulf Coast's
largest holiday lighting event, receiving
more than 85,000 visitors annually. It
includes a mile-long trail of more than a
million lights and 100 sound-enhanced
animated displays sparkling over the
beautiful Galveston Bay. Every year,
Santa Claus starts the festival magic by
parachuting in to Moody Gardens to flip
a switch that transforms the 242-acre
property into a glistening wonderland.
Northwest Houston Greensheet
Visit us at thegreensheet.com
Business 713-371 -3500 Personal 713-371 -3600
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The Greensheet (Houston, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 527, Ed. 1 Friday, December 3, 2010, newspaper, December 3, 2010; Houston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth397660/m1/6/?q=green+energy: accessed June 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .