• OIFF: 2026 Classic Film Series

    Orcas Center - Center Stage 917 Mt. Baker Road, Eastsound, WA, United States

    The Orcas Island Film Festival is thrilled to announce the 2026 edition of its beloved Classic Film Series, this year themed “Films on Film”—a curated exploration of movies that turn the camera on themselves. From silent-era masterpieces to biting Hollywood satire, surrealist introspection, documentary treasure hunting, and behind-the-scenes chaos, this series celebrates the art of filmmaking by showcasing films about the making of films.

    For as long as cinema has existed, filmmakers have been irresistibly drawn to examining their own craft. Audiences have always been fascinated by the worlds behind the lens—how stories are imagined, shaped, produced, and sometimes barely survived. This year’s series invites viewers to step into that meta-cinematic world and experience how film history has reflected on its own evolution.

    FREE
  • On Screen: Hamlet (NT Live)

    Trapped between duty and doubt, surrounded by power and privilege, young Prince Hamlet dares to ask the ultimate question – you know the one. Olivier Award-winner Hiran Abeysekera (The Father and the Assassin, Life of Pi) is Hamlet in this fearless, contemporary take on Shakespeare’s famous tragedy.

    $10 – $65
  • A Journey Through Strings and Stories

    Orcas Center - Center Stage 917 Mt. Baker Road, Eastsound, WA, United States

    Experience the spellbinding artistry of Hiroya Tsukamoto, a master of fingerstyle guitar and evocative storytelling that transcends cultural boundaries.

    $10 – $70
  • Soulful sounds of Stephanie Anne Johnson

    Orcas Center - Center Stage 917 Mt. Baker Road, Eastsound, WA, United States

    Experience the spellbinding artistry of Hiroya Tsukamoto, a master of fingerstyle guitar and evocative storytelling that transcends cultural boundaries.

    $10 – $70
  • Victims of Love – A Tribute to the Eagles

    Orcas Center - Center Stage 917 Mt. Baker Road, Eastsound, WA, United States

    Victims of Love — A Tribute to the Eagles, is composed of five Seattle-area music veterans who formed a project to give anyone within earshot the opportunity to hear the Eagles songs they love played live. Victims of Love dedicates themselves to the perfect recreation of the Eagles’ 5-part harmonies and intrinsic instrumentation and guitar work from the Eagles best-selling albums. Come out and catch a Victims of Love show to enjoy all your favorite Eagles songs performed live!

    $10 – $70
  • February Art Opening

    Visual Arts Committee Presents: Featured Artist: Susan Slapin Community Show: Bugs, Insects, Spiders, Oh my! Opening: Friday, February 13th; 5:30pm - 7pm On Display: February 13th - March 18th All […]

    FREE
  • Grease

    Orcas Center - Center Stage 917 Mt. Baker Road, Eastsound, WA, United States

    An all-local cast is revving up to present this classic musical on the main stage, directed by Liz Doane and choreographed by the Orcas Dance Collective with musical direction by Pedro De La Victoria. Shows are Feb. 27-28, March 1, 6-8 and 13-14, starting at 7 p.m. On March 1 and 8, matinees are at 2 p.m.

    $10 – $70
  • An Evening with Diego Salvetti

    Orcas Center - Center Stage 917 Mt. Baker Road, Eastsound, WA, United States

    Diego Salvetti is Italian and comes from a musical family. He started his musical studies at seven years old, studying with his father and started studying classical guitar with the Italian composer and guitarist Giovanni Podera.
    At the age of 11, Diego won first prize at the 13th National Guitar Competition in Genova, Italy, “Pasquale Taraffo.”
    Successively, Diego started studying with Maestro Giorgio Oltremari at the Bergamo Conservatory “G. Donizetti”. After 10 years in the conservatory, he graduated with top grades in classical guitar.

    $10 – $70
  • Artrageous

    Orcas Center - Center Stage 917 Mt. Baker Road, Eastsound, WA, United States

    Imagine the excitement of a team of exceptional artists painting at electric speed, creating giant works of art before your eyes. “Artrageous” is a 3D visual concert that fuses the mesmerizing music of original recording artists and composers with multisensory, dynamic live art curated by the award-winning artists. The combined experience creates an immersive journey that fosters lasting memories, a sense of purpose and joy and stimulates your mind and senses. This family-friendly event is on Wednesday, March 4 at 7 p.m. on Orcas Center’s main stage.

    $10 – $70
  • On Screen: Cinderella (Met Opera)

    The Met’s abridged, English-language version of Massenet’s enchanting fairy-tale opera returns to theaters! Previously recorded live, this performance stars mezzo-soprano Isabel Leonard as the rags-to-riches title character alongside mezzo-soprano Emily D’Angelo as the lovestruck Prince Charming, with Emmanuel Villaume on the podium.

    $10 – $50
  • March Art Opening: Indigenous Art

    The Visual Arts Committee (VAC) is excited to present the next community show art opening: Indigenous Art & Portraits.

    FREE
  • On Screen: Tristan und Isolde (Met Opera)

    After years of anticipation, a truly unmissable event arrives as the electrifying Lise Davidsen tackles one of the ultimate roles for dramatic soprano: the Irish princess Isolde in Wagner’s transcendent meditation on love and death. Heroic tenor Michael Spyres stars opposite Davidsen as the love-drunk Tristan. The momentous occasion also marks the advent of a new, Met-debut staging by Yuval Sharon—hailed by The New York Times as “the most visionary opera director of his generation” and the first American to direct an opera at the famed Wagner festival in Bayreuth—as well as Music Director Yannick Nézet-Séguin’s first time leading Tristan und Isolde at the Met. Mezzo-soprano Ekaterina Gubanova reprises her signature portrayal of Brangäne, alongside bass-baritone Tomasz Konieczny, who sings Kurwenal after celebrated Met appearances in Wagner’s Der Fliegende Holländer and Ring cycle. Bass-baritone Ryan Speedo Green makes an important role debut as King Marke.

    $10 – $50
  • On Screen: Eugene Onegin (Met Opera)

    Following her acclaimed 2024 company debut in Puccini’s Madama Butterfly, soprano Asmik Grigorian returns to the Met as Tatiana, the lovestruck young heroine in this ardent operatic adaptation of Pushkin. Baritone Igor Golovatenko reprises his portrayal of the urbane Onegin, who realizes his affection for her all too late. The Met’s evocative production, directed by Tony Award–winner Deborah Warner, “offers a beautifully detailed reading of … Tchaikovsky’s lyrical romance” (The Telegraph).

    $10 – $50
  • On Screen: El Último Sueño de Frida y Diego (Met Opera)

    American composer Gabriela Lena Frank makes her Met debut with her first opera, a magical-realist portrait of Mexico’s painterly power couple Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera, with libretto by Pulitzer Prize–winning playwright Nilo Cruz. Fashioned as a reversal of the Orpheus and Euridice myth, the story depicts Frida, sung by leading mezzo-soprano Isabel Leonard, leaving the underworld on the Day of the Dead and reuniting with Diego, portrayed by baritone Carlos Álvarez. The famously feuding pair briefly relive their tumultuous love, embracing both the passion and the pain before bidding the land of the living a final farewell. Yannick Nézet-Séguin conducts the Met premiere of Frank’s opera, a “confident, richly imagined score” (The New Yorker) that “bursts with color and fresh individuality” (Los Angeles Times). The vibrant new production, taking enthusiastic inspiration from Frida and Diego’s paintings, is directed and choreographed by Deborah Colker, following her remarkable 2024 debut staging of Ainadamar.

    $10 – $50