Arts & Entertainment
On Location In Massachusetts With Clooney, Affleck: Patch PM
Also: Police racism | Kids celebrate girl's last cancer treatment | Janey running for mayor | Mandatory vaccines | 'Hemingway' doc | More.

WOBURN, MA — It's Tuesday, April 6. Here's what you should know this afternoon:
- A board member accused Chief Steven Sargent of lying about racism in the department during a Worcester Board of Health meeting.
- A Natick woman charged in connection to the Jan. 6 U.S. Capitol riot had her case pushed back by two months due to the enormity of the investigation.
- "The Tender Bar," a movie directed by George Clooney and starring Ben Affleck, was on location in the Wakefield.
Scroll down for more on those and other stories Patch has been covering in Massachusetts today.
Today's Top Story
The latest sightings of George Clooney and Ben Affleck in Massachusetts were reported in Wakefield, where film crews shot at an old bowling alley Monday.
Find out what's happening in Woburnfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Clooney is directing the film adaptation of "The Tender Bar," a 2005 memoir by J. R. Moehringer, and production is on location at several places in eastern Massachusetts. Scenes have also been filmed in Beverly and Watertown since principal photography began Feb. 22. Filming is set to finish later this month.
In addition to Affleck, the film features "American Horror Story" star Lily Rabe and "X-Men" actor Tye Sheridan. Christopher Lloyd, Sondra James, Max Martini, Michael Braun, Matthew Delamater, Max Casella, Rhenzy Feliz, Ivan Leung, Briana Middleton, and Daniel Ranieri round out the rest of the top-billed cast.
Find out what's happening in Woburnfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Development began in 2013, but production did not get the green light until Clooney signed on as director after Amazon Studios picked up the rights last July. The film is about a boy seeking replacement for his father, who disappeared shortly after his birth, and bonds with his uncle and the patrons at a bar.
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Tuesday's Other Top Stories
Delay in Capitol riot case against town meeting member: A Natick woman charged in connection to the Jan. 6 U.S. Capitol riot had her case pushed back by two months due to the enormity of the investigation, according to federal prosecutors. Suzanne Ianni, an elected Town Meeting member, was arrested by the FBI in January and charged at federal court in Boston. Prosecutors are prioritizing cases against defendants being held in jail; Ianni was released after her arraignment.
Today's feel good story: Teachers and students at Brown Elementary School in Peabody came together to help make it a special day for a classmate who recently completed her cancer treatments. Peabody Public Schools said Harper Reis, who has battled Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia since 2018, completed a final round of treatments on Sunday before returning to school on Monday.
More feel-good news:
Chief accused of lying about racism in police department: More than a hundred residents and city officials attended a Worcester Board of Health public hearing on racism and police brutality Monday night — an event some members of the board had been trying to hold since the summer. During the meeting a board member accused Chief Steven Sargent of lying about racism in the department.
Cue the next debate in the coronavirus pandemic: Northeastern University will require all students returning to campus this fall to be fully vaccinated against the coronavirus before their first day of class. Northeastern is the first major Massachusetts school to announce a mandatory vaccination policy. That could be a hot topic in coming months as more schools and origanizations consider mandatory vaccinations.
For information on getting a coronavirus vaccine in Massachusetts, visit Patch's information hub.
They Said It
"I am running for a full term as Mayor to ensure a better, stronger city for every Bostonian."
- Acting Boston Mayor Kim Janey, who announced her plans to run for a full term.
By The Numbers
$500: The amount a North Andover woman charged for unlicensed, silicone butt injections between 2004 and 2019. Gladys Araceli Ceron, 72, pleaded guilty Friday to five counts of "delivery for pay of an adulterated or misbranded medical device received in interstate commerce with the intent to defraud or mislead."
Tonight's Best Bets
- The Bruins play the Flyers in Philadelphia at 7 p.m.
- The Red Sox try to get a second straight win when they host the Rays at 7:10 p.m.
- The Celtics host the 76ers at 7:30.
- PBS airs the second of three parts of "Hemingway" by Ken Burns at 8 p.m.. Material from the Hemingway collection at the JFK Library, some of it never before publicly released, plays a leading role in the series.
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