Scott Bryce — the 1975 Staples High School graduate, and longtime Weston resident best known to daytime television viewers as Craig Montgomery on CBS’s “As the World Turns” — died Sunday at Yale New Haven Hospital, after an aggressive battle with stomach and esophageal cancer. He was 68.
His death drew an outpouring of tributes from fans and colleagues who recalled his professionalism, charisma and humor.
Born in New York City, Bryce came by his love of acting honestly. Soap opera was already in his blood. His father, Ed Bryce, was a daytime veteran who played Bill Bauer on “Guiding Light” for over 2 decades, while his mother, Dorothy Bryce, was an actress who appeared on daytime serials including “The Doctors,” plus other prime time and commercial work.
Scott Bryce
Scott followed in his parents’ footsteps, appearing in 280 episodes of “As the World Turns” across the 1980s until 2008.
His performance as the scheming, seductive Craig Montgomery earned him 2 Daytime Emmy nominations for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series.
Bryce ranged widely. He was daytime TV’s most notorious antihero, a network sitcom husband, a movie villain, and a familiar face on prestige dramas.
His work ranged from “The Golden Girls,” to appearing in the first episode of “Sex and the City,” to “Lethal Weapon 3,” and what Scott mentioned as the most fun of his career,“ Up Close and Personal.”
That adaptability carried him from soap opera scheming to sketch comedy to hourlong drama, without ever settling into a single type. His rare durability kept him working steadily for over 50 years.
Scott was also a devoted husband, father, mentor, and friend to those closest to him.
He stayed deeply connected to his co-stars and fellow Staples Players. They, together with his loving family, were of great comfort in his last weeks.
His obituary says, “Scott is remembered as a gifted performer and an even better man whose warmth extended well beyond the screen. He was every bit as funny, charismatic and quick-witted in real life as he was on screen, bringing laughter and joy to those fortunate enough to know him.”
He is survived by his wife, Jodi Stevens; their son, Jackson Bryce; Scott’s brothers David and Phil; his nephew David, and niece Heather.
A celebration of life will be held in late September.
His obituary concludes: “’All the world’s a stage, and all the men and women merely players.’ Scott played his part beautifully — may the light, laughter and love he brought into the world forever live on.”
Not many people have the honor of being stopped — on the street, at the post office, in restaurants — by people who say, “Thank you. You saved my life.”
Dr. Bruny Germain does.
Regularly.
Most Westporters have never met him. But for those who have, he is indeed an Unsung Hero.
Dr. Germain retired last month, after 47 years as a psychiatrist. He worked not in private practice, but at the hospital now known as The Shores Mental Health, part of St. Vincent’s Medical Center. Decades earlier, it was Hall-Brooke Hospital.
Dr. Germain was beloved by colleagues as well as patients. His impact on all was profound.
Dr. Bruny Germain
The Haiti native came to the US in 1975. After residency at the University of Connecticut, he considered moving to Atlanta or Florida. But he started dating a woman from Wallingford. He interviewed with Hall-Brooke’s Elisabeth Solomon and Rosalie Aberman — and stayed in the Land of Steady Habits for the next 5 decades.
Dr. Germain had many roles, including several stints as medical director. But he always treated patients. Direct care was his passion.
The last time he missed work was 33 years ago. He was not sick, he explains; his daughter was, and his wife was working.)
Much has changed in the psychiatric profession. Under managed care, stays are shorter. There is more outpatient treatment.
Mental illness is less stigmatized today than in years past — though it has not disappeared. Dr. Germain wants patients, and their families, to know that mental health is no less important than physical health.
Dr. Germain — a distinguished life fellow of the American Psychiatric Association — is not calling this step “retirement.” It’s a “sabbatical,” allowing him to spend more time with his wife and grandchildren.
The Shores’ chief of psychiatry Dr. Tobias Wasser is filled with admiration.
“He’s been here longer than I’ve been alive,” Dr. Wasser says. “I came in as his ‘boss.’ But he was so gracious.
“His longevity is a testament to his commitment to the most ill individuals, struggling to recover from mental health challenges.
“He’s a gracious colleague. He’s onboarded many generations of psychiatrists.”
Dr. Bruny Germain, with Shores colleagues. They were not born when he began practicing at the facility, then called Hall-Brooke.
“He’s also a wonderful teacher. We partner with Quinnipiac’s medical school, and he’s won Teacher of the Year.”
Dr. Germain’s early training was in the classic Freudian model, Dr. Wasser says. But as the field changed, he adapted well.
“He’s very thoughtful. He explains things clearly. He instills hope,” Dr. Wasser adds.
Dr. Germain is also “gregarious, outgoing and fun-loving.” Both doctors are part of the same tennis group, and Dr. Germain has played into his 70s.
Dr. Wasser has seen a number of Dr. Germain’s patients return later. Some request him again. Others simply come back to thank him.
If they haven’t already done so, in a chance meeting on the street, in the post office or at a restaurant.
Congratulations, Dr. Bruny Germain, on your 47 years serving patients, on your “sabbatical” — and as your well-deserved selection as this week’s “06880” Unsung Hero. (Hat tip: Lisa Wexler)
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Discussion of lights on Wakeman and PJ Romano Fields continues at Monday’s Planning & Zoning Commission meeting (July 20, 6 p.m., Zoom).
The clock re-set after Parks & Recreation Department director Erik Barbieri resubmitted the application, after questions and comments during previous P&Z meetings.
The registrars of voters begin memory card and tabulator testing on Tuesday (July 21, 9:30 a.m., Town Hall Room 212D).
The public is welcome to observe, through the testing is complete.
Meanwhile, there’s an “enrollment session” on Friday, July 24 (5 to 7 p.m., Town Hall, Room 107) to register voters before the August 11 primary elections.
Voters can also enroll any time at the registrar of voters’ office any time during normal business hours.
A tabulator (foreground) at the Westport Library polling place. (Photo/Dan Woog)
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Singer-songwriter MT Jones brings his soulful vibe to the Levitt Pavilion this Sunday (7 p.m.; free).
Before his appearance, he chatted with Weston Today’s Jaclyn Jeffrey. They spoke about his hit album “Joy,” his journey from young musician to session player, then on to a solo career writing original songs, his creative process, and the legendary robust Liverpool music scene.
The curtain rose last night on legendary detective Hercule Poirot, as he investigates “Agatha Christie’s The Murder of Roger Ackroyd.” The show runs through August 1, at Westport Country Playhouse.
A free Symposium is set for this Sunday (July 19), following the 3 p.m. performance.
“Christie at 100…Still Going Strong” will discuss why her mysteries continue to sell 4 million copies a year. Guest speakers include author and co-founder of the Connecticut Chapter of Sisters in Crime Elise Hart Kipness, and mystery writer and CrimeConn festival founder Chris Knopf.
Kelle Ruden — leader of The Usual Suspects, a long-running mystery book discussion group at rhe Westport Library — will moderate.
Anthony Cochrane as Hercule Poirot in “Agatha Christie’s The Murder of Roger Ackroyd.” (Photo/Mark Smith)
Speaking of theater: There are 2 Westport connections to “Rosie,” the “riveting” new musical with a one-night-only presentation at Greenwich House Theater (August 4, 7 p.m.).
The music and lyrics for the show — about the girl in the bandana behind the iconic World War II poster, as she reconciles her feminism with the diverse and complex world — were written by 2013 Staples High School graduate Jake Landau.
Fellow Staples alum Lauren Weinberger is the developmental producer.
Growing up here, our lives are shaped by our families, friends, neighborhoods, schools and activities.
But with the passage of time, many of us look back at our young years with fondness. The tough days disappear. We remember the good times.
Raymond Marra has a different perspective.
Raymond Marra
His parents moved here in 1965, when he was in 4th grade. They were drawn by the “schools, opportunity, and exposure to people who might elevate rather than limit us.”
All that was true, Marra says. At the same time, he felt out of place in this “affluent, competitive” town.
He struggled in school. He did not play sports. Friendships were “shallow and fleeting.”
Much of his childhood was shaped by “relentless bullying, intimidation, humiliation, and quiet self-doubt.” He did not know who he was, and could not imagine what he would become.
But the Staples Class of 1974 graduate was shaped too by a “fiercely independent mother” and a “brilliant, exacting father.” They instilled in him “resilience, discipline and an unspoken expectation to rise.”
Six decades later, he has tried to explain all those thoughts, feelings, contradictions and concerns. He’s written “Finding My Way in Westport: A Memoir of Discipline, Rebellion, and Resistance.”
It’s an exploration of how “what seemed an idyllic suburban town on the surface became the place where (he) first learned about pressure, expectations, resilience and independence.”
Marra began writing stories of his youth — challenging, funny, important, mundane, from Kings Highway Elementary, Bedford Junior High and Staples — on his iPhone, as a way to leave a legacy for his daughter. His parents, he says, had many stories, but never wrote them down.
After a while, he realized he had enough for a book. He’s not an author — he’s spent 40 years selling security systems to corporations — but the vignettes formed 40 chapters.
They range far and wide. He writes about his mother, a realtor who “went on strike” for a long while, checking out emotionally from her family. (She also had the “guts and balls” to approach Paul Newman at Silver’s. And, Marra says, she eventually “came back” from what seems to be depression.)
Readers who know Marra have said they are surprised to read some details of his childhood, but now understand where he gets his drive.
People who do not know him — particularly young people — may relate, he says, to someone who gets knocked down, but stands up for himself.
Bedford Junior High School (now Saugatuck Elementary) was not an easy place for an unsure 7th through 9th grader.
After that turbulent youth, Marra returned to the area.
Why?
“I love Westport,” he says simply. (Marra lives in Weston, but is here almost every day.)
Seeing a place like Mitchells (where his father bought suits) and the Washing Well (where he went 60 years ago with his father and brother) helps ground him.
“My memories are great, despite all the troubles,” Marra says. “This is a great community. It has so much to offer.
“I’m just a regular guy. My parents scraped together enough to buy a home, because they wanted to raise 2 boys here.”
Now, Raymond Marra is telling that story.
It’s not everyone’s Westport. But it’s his. And we can all learn from it.
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Jim Honeycutt — who faithfully recorded nearly all of directors David Roth and Kerry Long’s Staples Players shows — missed the summer 2012 “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory” (family vacation).
Many actors have gone on to successful careers — often in entertainment. They include:
Matthew Van Gessel (Willy Wonda) is an actor, director and writer. He played Isaac Goodenow in the “The Sudbury Devil,” appeared in the film “Bookworm,” was featured as an actor in the project RedDrop, and was cast as Father Rand in “The Vampires of New Orleans.”
Will Haskell(Charlie Bucket) went on to serve 2 terms as Connecticut state senator — one of the youngest state legislators in the country.
Johnny Shea (Granpa Joe) is a New York based actor. He has appeared in “Spring Awakening” and “Peter Pan” and more, at Goodspeed, Shakespeare Theater Chicago, Portland Stage Company and others.
Sylvie Lexow (Grandma Josephine) is a senior marketing operations and program manager.
Ryder Chasin (Phineouse Trout) is a television writer, creative and comedian in Brooklyn.
Cara McNiff(Violet Beauregarde) graduated from Elon University with a degree in musical theater. She is still involved in theater. as a regional booking manager.
Joe Badion (Mike Teavee) is a graduate of Northwestern University’s Bienen School of Music. He teaches upper school music at the Town School in New York.
Zoe Samuels (Matilda) is an associate strategy director at Edelman. She graduated with a degree in theater and Chinese from Middlebury College.
Daniel Pauker is a technical animator. He has a passion for 3D software and systems.
But you sure know his music. “Love Shack,” “Hot Hot Hot,” “Living in America” == he played on them. And much more.
Crispin is a saxophonist, songwriter, producer/arranger, and co-founder the Uptown Horns.
He has toured and recorded with the Rolling Stones, James Brown, Ray Charles, the B-52s, Robert Plant, Solomon Burke, Joe Cocker, Debbie Harry, Aretha Franklin — to name a few.
Crispin continues to perform live and on TV with friends like Darlene Love and Steven Van Zandt. The other day, we chatted on our local stage — the Westport Library — about his life in music, his ties to Westport, and lots more.
Dick Fincher’s impact on Westport’s green spaces is enormous.
So it’s fitting that this Saturday (July 18, 10 a.m.), his life and legacy will be honored with the dedication of a commemorative plaque at the Lillian Wadsworth Arboretum. The public is invited.
As both a private citizen and Tree Board chair, Fincher was a driving force behind the creation of the arboretum at the corner of Stonybrook Road and Woodside Lane, around the corner from his home.
Fincher died in 2024, at 86. In addition to his Tree Board service, he was an Earthplace and Staples Tuition Grants board member, and Christ & Holy Trinity Church vestryman.
Dick Fincher, at the Wadsworth Arboretum.
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Gone, but not forgotten.
That’s the theme of “Looking for History,” MoCA\CT’s summer exhibit. Ellen Harvey is one of 3 artists addressing themes of memory, loss and place.
She’s included 4 places dear to Westporters’ heart: The Remarkable Book Shop, Allen’s Clam House, Cedar Brook Café and Bloodroot.
This Thursday (July 16, 5:30 p.m.; free), MoCA visitors get a chance to talk about them — and many other beloved (and now vanished) local landmarks.
Harvey and Westport preservation advocate Ed Gerber will chat with “06880” founder Dan Woog about the cultural and emotional significance of lost places.
You’ll get a chance to talk about your own “local places” too — restaurants, stores, hangouts and more.
The event is sponsored by the CORA Foundation, whose founder and president is Westporter Robin Tauck. Most grants — which center around arts and culture — are international. This one is local.
Here at “06880” central, we sometimes assume everyone knows everything about every live outdoor music option in the area.
Well, you know what they say about “when you assume…”
So — apropos of nothing, other than an opportunity educate our readers about all things local, and courtesy of the KMS Team at Compass — here are some things you may already know.
And some you may not.
The Levitt Pavilion offers over 50 free nights of programming, at a beautiful venue on the banks of the Saugatuck Rive.
All summer long, the Westport Downtown Association sponsors live music on Friday and Saturday evenings on Church Lane.
A favorite is Music at the Barn, at the Weston History & Culture Center. Kick back with a BYO picnic, and enjoy select Sunday evenings.
Lachat Town Farm also offers monthly concerts, with food trucks and the Barn Bar.
Fairfield’s Sherman Green is the place to be on Thursdays and Sundays, with beachy cover bands and tribute acts. Sweet Sounds of Summer are full of family fun there too, with bands sponsored by Saugatuck Sweets and Al’s Angels.
Norwalk’s First Taxing District has free concerts at the Norwalk Green’s gazebo several Saturdays in the summer.
Catch larger outdoor performances by the shore every Wednesday night at Calf Pasture Beach. Tuesday nights are open jam sessions (time slot sign up at 6:30 p.m.) at Freese Park.
The Wilton Library hosts free, public concerts (indoors) from 5:00 PM to 6:30 PM on Thursdays.
Levitt Pavilion: Westport’s premier outdoor music venue. (Photo/Susan Garment)
An indoor music venue — and not limited to summer — is VFW Post 399 (Riverside Avenue at the Saugatuck Avenue fork).
Every Thursday, the Jazz Society of Fairfield County sponsors “Jazz at the Post.”
This week’s headliner is Mitch Schechter (July 16, shows at 7:30 and 8:45 p.m.; doors and dinner service at 6:45). He’s joined by bassist Takashi Otsuka, drummer Charlie Descarfino, and saxophonist Greg “The Jazz Rabbi” Wall.
This Friday (July 17; doors open 6 p.m., show time 8), 5 talented comedians –John Ziegler, Brendan Ryan, Linda Marcus Smith, Helaine Witt, plus resident comic Joe Pontillo — take the stage.
Tickets are $20 online, $25 at the door, with a 1-drink minimum. NOTE: Previous comedy shows have sold out.
And finally … in honor of MoCA\CT’s upcoming event honoring “lost places”:
(“06880” often looks back on the Westport that was — while always providing insights into our town today, and a look at tomorrow. If you enjoy our coverage, please click here to support us. Thanks!)
The bad news: Weston Center lost its only restaurant a year ago.
The good news: It now has a dive bar.
So far, The Chase seems to be doing better than its predecessor, The Lunch Box.
Both are owned and operated by the husband-and-wife team of Josh and Jessica Tolk. And both are examples of the changing tastes and demographics — and the effects of COVID — on Weston.
Josh and Jessica Tolk.
Tolk — a commercial realtor — has worked with Weston Center since 1990. He and his wife bought the popular Lunch Box restaurant — the only place to eat (besides Georgetown or Westport) in 2014. They served breakfast, lunch and dinner, 7 days a week.
2019 was their best year. Then came the pandemic — and new arrivals, from Manhattan and Brooklyn.
“People’s eating habits changed,” Josh says. “They’re willing to hop in their car, and spend more money in fancier places. That’s why the Sherwood Diner closes early now.”
Three years ago, the Lunch Box ended breakfast.
Tolk — who grew up in Trumbull, and wrestled at Fairfield Prep — fondly remembers Westport bar/restaurants like Masters and Pumpernickel Pub. The only similar place now, he says, is the Black Duck.
He and Jessica missed those places. So they decided to recreate one, right there in Weston.
They spent 9 months making design and structural changes. A new entrance now directly faces Weston Road (Route 57).
On Memorial Day weekend, The Chase (named for the Tolks’ dog) was ready.
It wasn’t even a soft launch. The owners opened the doors, and hoped people would come.
They did.
Inside, they found the the trappings of a dive bar: beer cans from Tolk’s decades-old collection. Neon signs. A juke box. TVs in front; video games in back. Pizza and fried food. (The menu will be expanded soon.)
Beer cans galore …
It’s almost all bar seating, and high tops. There are 3 regular tables.
The only things lacking from a true dive bar, Tolk jokes, are “sawdust and filthy bathrooms.”
Soon, people were 3 deep at the bar.
… and a down-home vibe.
They keep coming.
They’re all ages — parents looking to socialize after the kids go to bed. Older folks happy to hang out. Restaurant workers from Westport, Norwalk, Bethel, Redding and Ridgefield, unwinding after their own places close.
The Chase opens at 3 p.m. Many patrons are there at last call — anywhere between 12:30 and 1:30 a.m.
On a recent night, Josh says, it was filled with “local families with kids, landscapers and a Hell’s Angel. I’d accomplished what I wanted!”
People “were caught off guard” when The Chase opened, Josh notes. There was some negativity on social media, but many more positive comments.
“It’s still early,” the owner says. “We’re going to grow organically.”
Meanwhile — with the Lunch Box closed — Westonites are clamoring for breakfast again. (Go figure.)
A new spot may open up nearby.
Watch this space — and, from a spot at The Chase, Weston Center — for news.
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