Country Club Living - Palm Beach North - February 2026
F E B R U A R Y 2 0 2 6 | C O U N T R Y C L U B L I V I N G - PA L M B E A C H N O R T H 1 1 Today, Jeremy conveys a positive feeling and an appreciative tone for his tremendous experience with TMRW Sports and Palm Beach State, reminding us how supporting a student leads to careers, significant roles in the community, and economic mobility that serves entire families. What’s ahead for Jeremy Moser and his future? “I plan to grow my knowledge and expertise through certification and training and eventually pursue a master’s degree.” Since graduating, Jeremy is enjoying a thriving career, a testament to how his life has been impacted through the power of higher education. And there are more Jeremys out there. Scholarships, program support, and more make stories like Jeremy’s possible. Because of you (those reading his story now), Palm Beach State College can equip our young people, adult learners, and the greater community with possibilities for a better future. To empower students like Jeremy, the Foundation for Palm Beach State College invites you to give hope, make an impact, and change a life by becoming a donor. Andria M. Cunningham, MSW, CFRE CEO PBSC Foundation email: cunninga@pbsc.edu phone: 954.330.5761 T heatregoers coast-to-coast and worldwide are familiar with Alfred Uhry’s Pulitzer Prize-winning Driving Miss Daisy , which tells the story of an unlikely, life-changing friend- ship between Daisy Werthan, a 72-year-old Jewish widow, and Hoke Coleburn, a Black chauffeur hired by her son Boolie. Driving Miss Daisy is generally considered sweet and sentimental – which it is – but it is so much more than that. The play premiered in 1987, but speaks in numerous ways to these fraught times. There have been so many arti- cles published in recent years about the lone- liness that often accompanies aging, a reality beautifully realized by Uhry. It’s also a play about friendship, about communicating, about listening to each other, about breaking down walls, about learning to respect one another, about empathy and trust, about overcoming prejudice. It is for all these reasons that Palm Beach Dra- maworks Producing Artistic Director William Hayes chose to stage Driving Miss Daisy as part of the company’s 2025-26 season. PBD is a nonprofit theatre company founded in 2000 and located in the heart of West Palm Beach. Each season, the award-winning company pro- duces five plays, offering entertaining, edgy, and enthralling classics, contemporary works, and world premiere plays – what PBD calls “Theatre to Think About.” Driving Miss Daisy runs from February 6 through March 1. Driving Miss Daisy is presented in association with Barrington Stage Company and will be directed by Julianne Boyd, Barrington Stage’s founding artistic director. The production stars theatre veterans Debra Jo Rupp and Ray An- thony Thomas, both making their PBD de- buts. Daisy’s son, Boolie, is played by PBD veteran Matthew W. Ko- rinko. To learn more about Palm Beach Dramaworks, vis it palmbeachdramaworks.org. Don & Ann Brown Theatre 201 Clematis Street West Palm Beach, Florida 33401 Theatre to Think About Driving Miss Daisy set sketch. Scenic design: Bert Scott Driving Miss Daisy costume sketches. Costume Design: Brian O’Keefe Palm Beach Dramaworks Driving Miss Daisy
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