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Page 2 THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, APRIL 10, 2026 UNO PIZZERIA | FROM Page 1 and live music with a DJ. The fi rst 30 tables also received a free regular cheese deep dish pizza. Korom is the defi nition of the American Dream. An immigrant to Boston, she started as the General Manager of the Revere restaurant before rising through the ranks and buying the location to reopen it. UNO Pizzeria & Grill Revere is located at 399 Squire Rd. in Revere. Beethoven and More Highlight North Shore Philharmonic Spring Concert M usic Director Robert Lehmann conducts a program that features Beethoven’s Symphony No. 2 in the North Shore Philharmonic Orchestra “Spring Concert” Sunday, April 19 at 3 p.m. at Swampscott High School Auditorium. The concert also showcases contralto Emily Marvosh in Johann Christoph Bach’s “Lamento” and Caroline Shaw’s “Is a Rose.” The concert opens with Richard Strauss “Serenade.” Tickets, $35 and $30, are available online at nspo.org and will be available at the door on the day of the concert.  Mayor Patrick Keefe, along with city and state offi cials, joined owners Amalia Korom and Dee Dee Edmondson-Korom at the Grand Reopening of UNO Pizzeria & Grill this past week. Pictured from left, State Representative Jessica Giannino, Councillor Chris Giannino, School Board member John Kingston, Councillor Ira Novoselsky (holding ribbon), city councillors Paul Argenzio, Marc Silvestri, Angela Guarino-Sawaya and Joanne McKenna, City offi cial John Festa (background) and School Committee member Anthony Caggiano. (Photo credit City of Revere/Facebook) Music Director Lehmann lauded Beethoven’s Second symphony as one of the composer’s “sunniest works, very much in the style of the great masters Haydn and Mozart.” Lehmann commented that the piece “also was a springboard into (Beethoven’s) own future compositional style, one that would break established molds of the Classical-era style and pave the way for the new ‘Romantic’ period.” Lehmann expressed excitement in welcoming contralto Emily Marvosh onto the NSPO stage. She has appeared recently with the Handel and Haydn SociMusic Director Robert Lehmann conducts the North Shore Philharmonic Orchestra Spring Concert Sunday, April 19 3 p.m. at Swampscott High School featuring music of Beethoven, Straus, JC Bach and more. ety, St. Thomas Fifth Avenue, Boston Symphony Orchestra, and the Rhode Island Philharmonic, among others. Emily will sing two works, a soulful Lament by Johann Christoph Bach, (an older cousin to the more famous Johann Sebastian Bach) and a new work by the American composer Caroline Shaw, “Is a Rose.” “’Is a Rose’ is a trilogy of songs set as an orchestral song-cycle composed in 2019”, said Lehmann. “It explores the themes of nature, love and fragility. The work features poetry by Robert Burns, Jacob Polley and Shaw herself. The cycle revolves around the rose as a symbol of beauty, transience, and memory. Shaw’s compositional style is a blend of neo-Baroque and contemporary idioms which seamlessly showcases ‘old’ music in a contemporary setting.” Composer Richard Strauss wrote the concert’s opening piece, “Serenade for Wind Instruments” early in his career. Lehmann noted that Strauss, like Beethoven, paid respect to the Classical traditions in this charming piece that evokes the elegance of a bygone era. The North Shore Philharmonic Orchestra, established in 1947, is staff ed largely by volunteer players and is committed to providing access to quality music at an aff ordable price to communities north of Boston. The Orchestra strives to develop, train and provide opportunities for young and amateur musicians, while providing a large range of programs covering the full range of symphonic and pops repertoire for a diverse public. For full concert information, visit www.nspo.org or contact info@nspo.org.

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