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  • With a theme of I'll Be Home For Christmas, the Lighted Christmas Parade and Festival in Downtown Leonard is set for Saturday, December 6, 2025. The festival gets underway at 4:30 p.m. Saturday with kids craft activities, hot chocolate and baked goods. The parade lineup begins at 5:00 p.m. The Christmas Tree Lighting and Christmas Parade begins at 6:00 p.m.
  • Sweets, Spirits and Sparkles is the center’s annual holiday shopping extravaganza. This year it will be on Saturday, Dec 6. Shopping hours are from 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. There is no admission fee to come shop at the center. There will be 15 local vendors set up inside the center, selling handcrafted items. The gift shop and gallery will also have items for sale. For the second year in a row, the center will be hosting an online bake sale, dubbed the Sweets Online Auction on Thursday, Dec 4. Bidding on homemade pies, cakes, cookies and other holiday treats will start online at 10:00 a.m. and end at 5:30 p.m.
  • Lights on the Farm will return to Heritage Farmstead Museum for its 5th holiday season from November 28 to December 28 with more than two million dazzling lights once again adorning the 19th-century historical site’s 13 original buildings. Located at 1900 West 15th Street in Plano, the event welcomes around 30,000 each year with charming light displays set against the Heritage Farm Museum’s more than four acres of charming year-round attractions.
  • Celebrate the season at the 47th Annual Holiday in the Highlands Home Tour on Friday, December 5, presented by the Lake Highlands Women’s League and Walne Family Holdings. From 10:00 a.m.–7:00 p.m., guests can step inside four beautifully decorated Lake Highlands homes, each showcasing unique architecture, thoughtful renovations, and festive holiday décor.
  • Celebrate the most wonderful time of the year with Holiday Stroll at Artisan Circle. In partnership with Terra Mediterranean at Artisan Circle, this festive, free, family-friendly celebration brings the magic of the holidays to Fort Worth’s Cultural District with live music, free hot chocolate and a variety of hands-on events for young and old, alike. (photo by Kelly Stewart)

  • 1956 – The Million Dollar Quartet (Elvis Presley, Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins, and Johnny Cash) get together at Sun Studio for the first and last time. "Million Dollar Quartet" is a recording of an impromptu jam session involving Elvis Presley, Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins and Johnny Cash made on December 4, 1956 at the Sun Record Studios in Memphis, Tennessee. An article about the session was published in the Memphis Press-Scimitar under the title "Million Dollar Quartet". The recording was first released in Europe in 1981 as The Million Dollar Quartet with 17 tracks. A few years later more tracks were discovered and released as The Complete Million Dollar Session. In 1990, the recordings were released in the United States as Elvis Presley: The Million Dollar Quartet. This session is considered a seminal moment in rock and roll. The jam session seems to have happened by pure chance. Perkins, who by this time had already met success with "Blue Suede Shoes," had come into the studios that day accompanied by his brothers Clayton and Jay and by drummer W.S. Holland, their aim being to record some new material, including a revamped version of an old blues song, "Matchbox." Sam Phillips, the owner of Sun Records, who wanted to try to fatten this sparse rockabilly instrumentation, had brought in his latest acquisition, Jerry Lee Lewis, still unknown outside Memphis, to play piano (at the time, a Wurlitzer Spinet) on the Perkins session. Lewis's first Sun single would be released a few days later. Sometime in the early afternoon, 21-year-old Elvis Presley, a former Sun artist now with RCA Victor, arrived to pay a casual visit accompanied by a girlfriend, Marilyn Evans. After chatting with Phillips in the control room, Presley listened to the playback of Perkins's session, which he pronounced to be good. Then he went into the studio and some time later, the jam session began. At some point during the session, Sun artist Johnny Cash, who had recently enjoyed a few hit records on the country charts, arrived as well. (Cash wrote in his autobiography Cash that he had been first to arrive at the Sun Studio that day, wanting to listen in on the Perkins recording session.) Jack Clement was engineering that day and remembers saying to himself "I think I'd be remiss not to record this," and so he did. After running through a number of songs, Elvis and his girlfriend Evans slipped out as Jerry Lee pounded away on the piano. Cash wrote in Cash that "no one wanted to follow Jerry Lee, not even Elvis." Whatever Elvis's feelings may or may not have been in regard to "following" Lewis, Presley was clearly the "star" of the impromptu jam session, which consisted largely of snippets of gospel songs that the four artists had all grown up singing. The recordings show Elvis, the most nationally and internationally famous of the four at the time, to be the focal point of what was a casual, spur-of-the-moment gathering of four artists who would each go on to contribute greatly to the seismic shift in popular music in the late 1950s.