Monthly Archives: May 2009

Where The Hell Is Matt? (And Why The Hell Did He Write A Book?)

During a recent library talk on technology, a well-connected Westporter invoked the name Matt Harding.

blog - Matt Harding TurkeyMatt is an Internet sensation.  His homemade videos — showing him dancing long-limbedly, spastically, poorly — have been viewed 75 million times.  He’s danced in Mongolia, Cambodia, Antarctica.  Machu Picchu, Namibia, New York. Fiji, the DMZ and Iceland.  And everywhere in between.

During the Q-and-A, I asked the library speaker:  “Did you know Matt is from Westport?”

He had no idea.

If you think about it, it makes sense.  Staples — from which Matt graduated in 1994 — is a place that has long given students the sense that a great world awaits them.  Staples students often indulge their wanderlust — and it helps that many have families that can support great post-college adventures.

Yet Matt wasn’t one of those.  As a junior, his father advised him not go to college; Matt just wasn’t ready.  So he worked in video games — as a magazine editor and game designer — and eventually landed in Australia.

That surprised him.  Unlike many peers, he was not a traveler growing up.  But now he was ready to see the world — and see it he did.

Since 2002 he’s danced his way across the planet.  He’s danced on the Trans-Siberian Railway, on top of Kilimanjaro, and on “Good Morning America.”

He’s picked up a corporate sponsor too.  And now he’s an author.

Where The Hell Is Matt?Where The Hell Is Matt?  Dancing Badly Across The World tells Matt’s backstory.  He describes almost indescribable adventures on every continent, with an honesty his parents no doubt cringe at.  There are plenty of photos too.   They’re not National Geographic quality, but then again those photographers didn’t dance in Timbuktu.

These days, Matt calls Seattle home (not that he’s there a hell of a lot).  But it’s safe to say he wouldn’t be there — wouldn’t be anywhere, let alone a worldwide Internet sensation — if he hadn’t had a bit of Westport in him, way back when.

The Duck Gets Its Due

A good-sized crowd was on hand last night at the Black Duck.  That’s not unusual.  But the attraction this time was not the burgers, steamers or nachos.

Nor did the TVs show the Yankees or Mets. In what may be a Duck first, the sets were turned to The Food Network.

Black Duck Cafe, Westport CT

“Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives” — one of the network’s most popular shows — featured the Black Duck.  Customers hooped and hollered as they watched the restaurant, the food, even themselves on national TV.

It was so loud, owner Pete Aitkin had a hard time hearing.  But the words were all good:  kudos for the clams casino and steak au poivre.  Back-and-forth banter between Pete, host Guy Fieri and chef Tim Miller.  And plenty of props from satisfied patrons.

The show didn’t just happen.  A “local radio personality” — the network would not reveal more — suggested a feature on the Duck.  Pete was asked to send menus, photos of the food and restaurant, even a copy of his latest Health Department report.

A camera crew spent 2 days at the Duck last October.  It was a homecoming of sorts for Guy.  As a kid he visited relatives in Weston, and fondly remembered riding his bike to Westport Pizzeria.  (Delighted to hear it’s still here, he asked Pete how to get there.)

Several hours of filming was edited down to 8 minutes.  But the result pleased Pete, his staff and his regulars.

It will also please Pete’s purse strings.  This morning, he fielded several calls from people needing directions.  One man lives out by the casinos.

The show was first scheduled for January, then April.  Like a table at any good “diner, drive-in or dive” — or the Duck — it was well worth the wait.

No Propane Cylinders

Super Stop & Shop, Westport CTFor a friendly neighborhood megastore, Super Stop & Shop sure has lots of warnings.

The cigarette stuff I get (although one sign would suffice).  But “no propane cylinders”?

Has that been a problem in the past?  I don’t recall any incidents of shoppers hauling propane cylinders inside.   And if they did, what happened?  Were there like explosions and stuff?

If propane cylinders haven’t been an issue (knock wood), maybe we shouldn’t count on dumb luck to protect us in the future.  I think Stop & Shop should start listing everything Westport shoppers might be tempted to bring into the store, unless specifically told not to.  For example:

“No vials of anthrax allowed in store.”

“Please!  Keep enriched plutonium in your car.”

“Notice:  Shoulder anti-aircraft missiles prohibited by law.”

And don’t forget little pictographs, for non-English-speaking terrorists and children who can’t yet read.

Sing A Song Of Westport

Westport has plenty:  Great schools.  Nice beaches.  Restaurants up the wazoo.

But we don’t have a song.

On Sunday, June 14 that will change.

Suzanne Sherman Propp

Suzanne Sherman Propp

“In Wonderful Westport” premieres that day, courtesy of Green’s Farms School music teacher Suzanne Propp and her gang of 2nd graders.  They’ll sing the tune as part of the Westport Historical Society’s 18th Annual Hidden Garden Tour and Garden Marketplace, across from Town Hall.

Propp and colleague Cheryl Buck were teaching their students songs like “Downtown” and “Take Me Home, Country Roads.”  When it came to the suburbs, all they found was teenage angst.

Propp and Buck asked the kids to brainstorm about Westport.  They shouted out icons like the Minuteman statue, Compo cannons and Westport Country Playhouse.

Teachers and students collaborated on a song that also included famous families, like Bedford, Burr, Coley and Sturges.  Rhyming them all was not easy, but then again those names have never been in a song before.  It’s the thought that counts.

The song begins:  “There are thousands of stories in Westport/ Here by the shores of the Long Island Sound/ Where the Saugatuck River is flowing/ Can’t imagine a much nicer town.”

Okay, it’s not “New York, New York,” “I Left My Heart in San Francisco” or even “Galveston.”

We don’t have Frank Sinatra, Tony Bennett or Glen Campbell.

We’ve got something better:  Suzanne Sherman Propp.

(Suzanne Sherman Propp’s new children’s CD, “Play,” is available at www.suzanneshermanpropp.com, on iTunes, and at Westport’s Barnes & Noble.)

Happy Memorial Day!

Everyone loves a parade.  This crew gathered in front of the Carpenters' house on Myrtle Avenue.

Everyone loves a parade. This crew gathered in front of the Carpenters' house on Myrtle Avenue.

World War I veterans might have felt at home in this parade car.

World War I veterans might have felt at home in this parade car.

Westport's Memorial Day parade is not complete without Little Leaguers.

Westport's Memorial Day parade is not complete without Little Leaguers.

Bill Vornkahl (podium) leads his 39th Memorial Day ceremony. From left are First Selectman Gordon Joseloff, and grand marshal Ed See.

Bill Vornkahl (podium) leads his 39th Memorial Day ceremony. Seated in front from left are First Selectman Gordon Joseloff, and grand marshal Ed See. Mr. See, who was also grand marshal in 1946 -- just after World War II -- gave a powerful speech, ranging from the status of Westport veterans after World War II to the draft and torture.

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Staples trumpeter Cameron Bruce plays the echo for "Taps." Joey Genetti also soloed.

Bravo! Bravo! Bravo!

For 50 years, Staples Players has made magic on stage.

Last night’s 50th anniversary gala may have been the most magical moment of all.

For 4 hours, past and current cast members sang and danced their way through half a century of Players history.

I make my living with words — but words can’t describe last night.  It was an astonishing tribute to the power of theater to transform lives — and to a school system and town that nourishes that power.

If you were there, you know what I’m talking about.

If you were not — you missed a true highlight of Westport history.

Thanks to all involved, for reminding us once again why Staples Players is one singular sensation.

Broadway star Bradley Jones joins current cast members for a rousing number.

Broadway star Bradley Jones joins current cast members for a rousing number. (Photo by Kerry Long)

Four "generations" of Players casts joined together for one great number. (Photo by Kerry Long)

Four "generations" of Players casts joined together for one great number. (Photo by Kerry Long)

Peter Hirst '68 reprised his Everyman role in the original drama "War and Pieces" -- this time surrounded by current Staples Players. (Photo by Kerry Long)

Peter Hirst '68 reprised his Everyman role in the original drama "War and Pieces" -- this time surrounded by current Staples Players. (Photo by Kerry Long)

The Testostertones a cappella group reunited for the 1st time in 10 years. They sounded way cool. (Photo by Kerry Long)

The Testostertones a cappella group reunited for the 1st time in 10 years. They sounded way cool. (Photo by Kerry Long)

Players 50th - Kerry 4

Current Players director David Roth honors founder Craig Matheson. The plaque will hang outside the Black Box Theatre, next to a similar one for Al Pia. (Photo by Kerry Long)

Players 50th Kerry replace

A small segment of the large cast of alumni on stage for the finale. (Photo by Kerry Long)

I Love A Parade

And you should too.  Particularly if it’s Westport’s Memorial Day parade.

In an iPod world, tomorrow morning’s event is a Victrola.

Everything about it screams a simpler era.  There is a pancake breakfast.  School bands play Sousa marches.  Veterans salute.

Extended families crowd sidewalks, searching for a marching child, parent or friend to cheer.  Others gather on Myrtle Avenue lawns, in front of handsome Victorian homes.

Westport CT Memorial Day parade

Police officers, firefighters, town officials, drum-and-bugle corps — all pass by in a happy jumble.  Kids jam floats, tossing candy to the crowd.  A little child pulls the horn on a huge diesel truck.

For an hour or two tomorrow, you don’t have to look cool.  You don’t have to be cool, or act cool.

You just have to be there.  Wave a flag.  Wave hi to friends and neighbors.  Wave to the EMTs, the state troopers, the men and women from World War II, Korea and Vietnam, and the kids from Iraq and Afghanistan.

When the parade is over, wander to the green in front of Town Hall.  Listen to the invocation, a couple of speeches, some patriotic music.

Look around.  Enjoy the view.  Think about everyone — veterans and others — who sacrificed so much so you could be at that spot, at that moment.

This is Westport.  This is America.  This is Memorial Day.

See you there.

Westport Memorial Day parade

The Show Goes On — Staples Players’ 50th

Friday night’s 50th anniversary celebration of Staples Players was spectacular — but it was just a curtain-raiser for Sunday’s affair.

Over 200 Players alumni — actors, dancers, singers, tech crew and more — will gather at 5:30 p.m. in the auditorium for a truly legendary evening.  Included in the cast:  several Broadway veterans (and 2 Tony Award nominees).

A few seats are still available.  Click on www.StaplesPlayers.com for details.

Recent graduates Britt Hennemuth and Megan Watt are emcees for Players' special 50th anniversary show.

Recent graduates Britt Hennemuth and Megan Watt emcee Players' special 50th anniversary show. (Photo by Kerry Long)

Film director Adam Marcus and his brother, Broadway veteran Kipp Marcus, welcome 200 fellow Players alums at the 50th gala.

Film director Adam Marcus and his brother, Broadway veteran Kipp Marcus, welcome 200 fellow Players alums at the 50th gala. (Photo by Kerry Long)

Kevin Watt and Max Stampa-Brown reprise a classic show at the Players' 50th anniversary. (Photo by Kerry Long)

Kevin Watt and Max Stampa-Brown reprise a classic show at the Players' 50th anniversary. (Photo by Kerry Long)

See Ed See

Most Westporters watch the Memorial Day parade for a specific reason:  to see their tuba player.  Their Indian Guide.  Their Democratic Woman of Westport.

And the military flyover is way cool.

american-flag-2aOn Monday, though, be sure to pay attention to the grand marshal.  Ed See deserves at least a hearty, heart-felt wave.

At 94 years old, he’s been a lawyer long enough to have participated in some of Westport’s most important cases.  As a World War II vet, he epitomizes everything Memorial Day is supposed to be about — and it’s not cookouts and clambakes.

Two days after Pearl Harbor — already working for a Westport law firm — See tried to enlist in the Marines.  He was turned down because of poor eyesight, but his perseverence landed him a spot in the Army’s Counter Intelligence Corps.

In the Pacific, working out of General Douglas MacArthur’s office, he helped interrogate captured Japanese soldiers.

After 2 1/2 years, See finally came home. He saw his newborn son for the 1st time. Ready to return overseas — and facing possible death, in the much-feared invasion of Japan — he had  a final dinner in New York with Hereward Wake, the man who later became his law partner.

Word came:  The Japanese had surrendered.

In the 64 years since then, See has served Westport with distinction.  He worked on housing affairs, veterans issues and much, much more.

On Monday we’ll get a chance to honor Ed See, as a military veteran and a veteran Westporter.  He’ll be the grand marshal riding in a fire truck.  Take time out from watching your soccer player, your drummer, your Shriner.

Give it up for  Ed See.  For longer than most of us have been alive, he’s given of himself for us.

If You Love It, Let It Go

All year long, Staples’ Advanced Placement Biology students have been raising brown trout.  The fertilized eggs came from Connecticut’s Department of Environmental Protection.

They’re now fingerlings. Next Tuesday and Friday they’ll be released into the Saugatuck River (Weston’s Keene Park, 7:45 a.m.).  The hope is they’ll grow into adult fish.

The “Trout in the Classroom” program — whose goal is to educate students about the importance of clean water — operates in 20 states; 70 classrooms are in Connecticut.  Staples’ program was funded by the PTA, and coordinated by the Nutmeg Chapter of Trout Unlimited.

No word on whether the students will follow their trout all the way back to the dinner plate.

blog - trout