Micah Soloshatz Goes “Beyond The Mic” — Big League

Writing a book is an impressive achievement.

Writing one of over 300 pages on the story of baseball, through interviews with nearly 2 dozen broadcasters — including Huge Names like Bob Costas, Chip Caray and Suzyn Waldman — is very impressive.

And to do it while just a junior at Weston High School — well, that’s the equivalent of throwing a perfect game and winning the World Series with a walk-off grand slam.

But it’s what Micah Soloshatz has just done.

“Beyond the Mic: Behind the Scenes Stories from America’s Best and Brightest Broadcasters” was published earlier this month.

Micah Soloshatz, and his book.

Icons of the broadcasting world — many of them Ford C. Frick Award winners (their equivalent of a Cy Young) — shared never-before-told stories with Micah. They offer advice for aspiring baseball broadcasters.

As a new season begins, the book is a perfect companion to watching your favorite team.

So what’s “Beyond the Mic” — or, more appropriately, beyond Micah?

The book began in 2023 with an 8th grade “Launch Class” project at Indian Hill Middle School in Cincinnati, where he lived then. (His family moved from Westport, when he was in 1st grade.)

Students picked a subject they were passionate about, and created a research-based project.

Baseball is Micah’s passion. He lived just 20 minutes from the Reds’ Great American Ball Park. During COVID — when he couldn’t go to games — he became an avid radio listener.

Cincinnati has a rich baseball history. It’s where the professional sport was born (the 1869 Red Stockings were the first “openly salaried” team). So Micah contacted Reds play-by-play voice John Sadak  public address announcer Joe Zerhuse.

Micah Soloshatz with (from left) John Sadak and former Reds star Barry Larkin. In 2021 he joined their TV broadcast team. 

Both were generous with their time. Micah realized this could become bigger than just a school project

With the confidence of a star athlete, he approached Reds’ legend (and Baseball Hall of Fame inductee) Marty Brennaman. Slowly, the book idea took shape.

For the next couple of years — continuing after a move to Weston — Micah pursued the top broadcasters in baseball.

He met Dave Sims — now the Yankees’ play-by-play commentator — when he worked with the Seattle Mariners, at the team’s hotel.

Micah and Dave Sims.

Again like an athlete, the more Micah worked at his craft — in this case, interviewing — the better he got. He honed his questions — different for each subject — and grew more comfortable asking them.

His young age was not a deterrent.

“People were so open and generous with their time,” he reports. “They saw me as someone who wanted to learn about what they do. I hope I lived up to it.”

Micah Soloshatz with Marty Brennaman. The legendary broadcaster called Cincinnati Reds games from 1974 to 2019.

Costas — the 29-time Emmy Award winner with MLB Network and NBC Sports (and the host of 12 Olympic Games) — was the biggest get.

Micah sent him a letter. The broadcaster called back. They spoke via Zoom for well over an hour.

There were in-person moments too. Philadelphia Phillies PA announcer Dan Baker invited Micah to Citizens Bank Park. He toured the media room, and watched on the field as Baker worked the game.

The 19 interviews include those who not yet in the majors, like Nick Curran of the AAA Louisville Bats and Jack Dooley of the AA Hartford Yard Goats. Micah wanted to share their stories too.

New York Yankees broadcasters John Sterling and Suzyn Waldman.

To prepare for interviews Micah used SABRE (Society for American Baseball Research) archives, the Baseball Hall of Fame, ESPN, MLB.com, YouTube — anything he could find.

At the end of each session Micah asked advice, for himself and other aspiring broadcasters.

Many said something like: It doesn’t matter what sport. You may not know anything about boxing or lacrosse. But say yes to every opportunity — and then learn everything there is to know.

The bulk of “Beyond the Mic” is transcriptions of the interviews. But Micah includes a fascinating, in-depth history of baseball broadcasting (it began in 1921, at Pittsburgh’s Forbes Field), along with a glossary and very extensive bibliography.

It’s a home run. Micah’s 8th grade teacher should be very, very proud.

(“Beyond the Mic” is available on Amazon. Click here to purchase.)

(“06880” regularly covers sports, the media, the accomplishments of teenagers — and, like today, their intersection. If you enjoy stories like these, please click here to support our work.)

Pic Of The Day #3288

Compo Beach tulips (Photo/Mary Sikorski)

“Then & Now”: #9

Several side streets on a small stretch off North Avenue have seen big changes in the past 2 decades.

Today’s edition of “Then & Now” — photographer Dave Matlow’s series of teardowns, and the homes that replaced them — concentrates on those roads, a few yards from Bedford Middle School.

Melon Patch Lane, March 2015 …

… and April 2026.

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Peach Lot Place, October 2012 …

… and April 2026.

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Pleasant Valley Lane, June 2006 …

… and April 2026.

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Reimer Road, January 2010 …

… and April 2026.

(“06880” regularly covers Westport real estate, history … and much more. If you enjoy features like this, please click here to support our work.)

Remembering Lowrie Gibb

Many Westporters knew Lowrie Gibb.

A town resident for nearly 50 years, he was a familiar presence at Winslow Park, and Compo and Old Mill Beaches — biking, running, walking a dog, planting a tree and chatting.

Many other Westporters knew Lowrie’s work, if not his name. He spent years — independently, and with a disregard for rules — creating and maintaining a series of walking trails at Winslow Park. (He got Lyme disease in the process.) Everyone who walks in the Winslow woods owes him a debt of gratitude.

Lowrie died April 8 at Norwalk Hospital, of complications of pneumonia. He was 87.

Lowrie Gibb with Rosie, at Winslow Park. (Photo/Jo Shields Sherman)

Lowrie — known also for his vintage Volvo station wagons and idiosyncratic attire — had roots on the New Jersey shore. But he had a keen appreciation for Westport’s location at the juncture of the Saugatuck River and Long Island Sound. He admired the town’s waterways, and outdoor amenities.

Lowrie explored his native Rumson, New Jersey Lowrie by bike. He learned to sail there too.

Later in Westport, he delighted in a wooden Lightning sailboat — like those of his youth — that he found for sale. He kept it at Compo Beach, maintained it meticulously, and took friends and family for frequent jaunts on the Sound.

He also enjoyed rowing, sculling and paddling.

A multi-sport athlete, Lowrie was especially recognized as a skier. He learned at an early age in Stowe, Vermont with his father and 2 brothers. He pursued other winter sports, like skating and pond hockey, in New Jersey.

There was a 2-year adventure in Half Moon Bay, California during World War II, while Lowrie’s father, a Navy captain, served in the Pacific.

In 1951 Lowrie’s family moved to a dairy farm in Weybridge, Vermont. His father, Arthur Gibb, served in the Vermont House of Representatives and Senate.

A Republican and staunch environmentalist, Arthur chaired the commission that created Act 250 — the strictest environmental protection law in the nation at the time. Senator Gibb also played in important role in Vermont’s no-billboard law, and the introduction of recycling. His father’s environmentalism had a strong influence on Lowrie.

Lowrie Gibb helped create and maintain many walking paths at Winslow Park. (Photo/Mark Mathias)

Lowrie attended local public schools, then Mount Hermon. At Middlebury College he studied history, and competed in giant slalom, slalom, the 50-meter jump and Nordic.

He trained in the western US and South America, and tried out for the 1960 Olympic team in Nordic.

After college Lowrie married and started a family. They lived in Stowe and Manchester, Vermont where he taught school.

In 1967 the Gibbs moved to Westport. He chose the town carefully, for its waterfront, public access to recreational spaces, and excellent schools. He loved Westport, and often said it had more to offer than any place else in the world.

During snowstorms, Lowrie would wax his children’s skis. They’d go out at night, before the streets were plowed.

Lowrie was passionate about land use, with a special interest in integrating nature into communities. He was always on the lookout for a good spot for a pocket park, a tree or a trail.

For some years he worked in real estate development. But his commitment to using land to serve a public need for open space and recreation found its ultimate expression later, and on a smaller scale.

Lowrie Gibb

He might have become a landscape architect, like one of his grandfathers who designed urban parks. But he always preferred an unconventional path.

Lowrie loved trees — especially elms, for their majestic canopied crowns. Lamenting their destruction by disease, he planted 30 saplings of Liberty elm, a resistant strain, in his backyard.

When the trees were big enough, he re-planted them all around Westport. (Like his creation of the Winslow trails, this too was illegal.)

Today those elms can be seen across from Town Hall and the Seabury Center, in the median off I-95 Exit 18, in an Ambler Road back yard, and many other places.

Lowrie was a longtime regular at Longshore’s Westport PAL rink, figure skating with grace and ease. As recently as last month, at 87, he made a track and skied in his backyard.

When there was no snow or ice, he ran at Compo Beach and Grace Salmon Park.

Lowrie is survived by his daughters, Cynthia and Rebecca.

Contributions in his memory can be made to the charities he supported — the Humane Society, Defenders of Wildlife, Best Friends Sanctuary in Utah, and St. Jude’s.

Cynthia and Rebecca suggest also “continuing his work at Winslow Park, picking up trash, clearing branches from trails, and caring for it like your own yard.”

Isabel Jo, Uma Choudhury Lead Staples Class Of ’26

The top 2 students in Staples High School’s Class of 2026 are standouts in the classroom, of course.

But Isabel Jo and Uma Choudhury – the valedictorian and salutatorian, respectively – are accomplished far beyond the classroom too.

Isabel is an All-State musician (in two instruments). She has spent a decade as a competitive horseback rider. And she is an active member of the school’s No Place for Hate organization.

Uma is a black belt in taekwando. She also captains Staples’ Science Olympiad team, and is president of the Math Honor Society.

Both young women – products of the Westport Public Schools since elementary school — will speak at graduation ceremonies on June 15.

Isabel’s musical career began at Coleytown Elementary School. It continued through Coleytown Middle School. Instructor Jim Andrews gave her a great foundation, she says. At Staples, where she plays both viola and violin, she is concertmistress of both the Symphonic and Chamber Orchestras.

Her interest in horses began even earlier. Her family was looking for houses in Westport, and passed a barn. Isabel was fascinated.

Isabel Jo

She rides now at the Fairfield County Hunt Club. She competes in equitation – the highest level of jumping – at national events. In May she’ll do her senior internship at the Hunt Club, working with horses.

With No Place for Hate, Isabel helps educate younger students about bullying and bias, during Staples’ Connections periods.

Classes like Advanced Placement Chemistry with William Jones have challenged Isabel. At Dartmouth College she plans to study the subject, as well as statistics and music.

Her four years of orchestra classes are among her most favorite at Staples. Isabel credits teachers Carrie Mascaro and Jeri Brima with “fostering a welcoming community for everyone, no matter what role music plays in their lives.” For her, it is a central part of life.

“Music is the universal language,” Isabel notes. “It unites people around a common role, despite whatever differences they have.”

Isabel downplays her achievement of earning the highest grade point average among the 400-plus students in this year’s graduating class.

“So many kids work hard. There’s so much luck involved, in being .01 point lower or higher.”

Her favorite part of high school has been “finding a group of people,” primarily in orchestra. “They don’t all think alike. But they’ve understood my goals, and supported me. At the end of my time here, I really appreciate that.”

Uma’s path to salutatorian was similarly unplanned, and equally well-rounded.

As a black belt in taekwando, she has learned to “do things I couldn’t have imagined doing.” She gives back too, by helping out at a summer camp.

Uma’s main Science Olympiad events are code busters (math-related decrypting and encrypting cyphers), and physics-related circuits and electricity. She earned a gold medal in ecology last year, after medaling in code busters as a sophomore.

Uma Choudhury

Her freshman Applied Algorithmic Design course – a programming class with Dr. Nick Morgan – sparked an interest in computer programming. It combines her passions for math, physics and biology. She hopes to pursue it in college, perhaps in a research capacity.

But Uma was also excited by her junior year Contemporary World Studies class, with Cathy Schager. “We looked at issues, researched them and discussed them,” she says. “When you’re caught up with academics you can’t always see what’s going on in the world. But Ms. Schager was very helpful, and made sure we did.”

Other inspiring teachers included Noreen McGoldrick, an English instructor who helped Uma become a better writer and reader, and Philip Abraham, whose AP Statistics Class was “interesting, fun, and applicable to lots of different  fields.”

Like Isabel, Uma did not set out to achieve a top GPA. “I just wanted to do well for myself,” she says. Her selection as salutatorian was “a happy surprise.’

She will do her senior internship at Citizen Invention, a Westport-based science education program. In the fall, she heads to Carnegie Mellon University.

 

(“06880” reports regularly on the accomplishments of Westport’s teenagers — and on all our schools. To support stories like this, please make a tax-deductible donation by clicking here. Thanks!)

Roundup: Bookcycle, Playhouse, Alzheimer’s …

Yesterday’s Roundup reported that the Remarkable Bookcycle — the mobile lending library that pays homage to Westport’s beloved former bookstore — is back at its popular perch: Soundview Drive, by Compo Beach.

We gave a shout-out to Larry Roberts, who repaired the Bookcycle after it was damaged this winter.

The Bookcycle, with damage …

A few minutes after the story was posted — without having seen it — Larry emailed us: “We returned the Bookcycle to the beach this morning. She required some extensive rebuilding after her run in with a snowplow. Perhaps a little worse for wear, she’ll perform her ‘little free library’ duties for the summer season.

… and ready to be transported back to Compo Beach …

“Some of the books had to be disposed of, due to snow and water damage. I’m hopeful that some of her fans might be able to donate some more to fill out the shelves.

“Cheers,
Larry & Sondra Roberts (Staples High School Classes of 1985 and ’86)”

… where it is now back “home.” (Photos/Larry Roberts)

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Also in yesterday’s Roundup: A rave review of “Primary Trust,” the Pulitzer Prize-winning show currently running at the Westport Country Playhouse.

Quickly, 2 more praise-filled emails followed.

Annie Keefe — a longtime artistic employee, now a trustee — said, “I know I’m biased. ‘Primary Trust’ is not a play I had seen before, so I went in with no expectations.

“I was blown away. The audience was on the edge of their seats, breathing in unison as this cast of skillful actors took us on such a moving journey. I urge you to take a flyer on this one. It won the Pulitzer for a reason. You’ll leave feeling a little better in a fraught world.”

Adam Lubarsky also loved the show.

His late brother Drew apprenticed at the Playhouse, and studied under Joanne Woodward for 2 seasons while at Boston University. Their mother Thelma held an annual subscription at the WCP for decaces, beginning the year they moved to Westport in 1956.

Adam said, “It totally deserved the Pulitzer. It’s a modern show that I believe will live the way ‘Death of a Salesman’ has over the decades. 

“The theater wasn’t full for opening night, but it should be. It’s one act, and riveting throughout.”

“Primary Trust” runs through May 2. For show times, tickets and more information, click here.

“Primary Trust” (from left) :  Greg Stuhr, Alphonso Walker Jr., Lance Coadie Williams. (Photo/Carol Rosegg)

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Chris Marcocci — the founder of Local to Market, a branding marketing professional, and a passionate Westporter — died suddenly in 2024.

But his spirit and legacy live on.

Chris Marcocci, in his Westport store.

On Saturday, the Chris Marcocci Emerging Brand Award was presented at the Big Connecticut Food Event, held at the Yale School of Management.

The recipients, Black Girl Kimchi, were recognized as a rising force in the state’s food and beverage community. The honor includes a $10,000 check.

The Chris Marcocci Award celebrates innovation, authenticity, quality ingredients and the entrepreneurial spirit of emerging brands. He was a dedicated advisor with Food and Bev Connect, volunteering as a mentor to early-stage companies. Chris offered guidance in marketing, strategy and access to critical resources, with a deep commitment to helping others succeed.

Black Girl Kimchi embodies those values through its bold, culturally rooted approach to a traditionally Korean staple, reimagined with a fresh and distinctive voice.

The award was presented by Chris’ wife Rita, in front of an audience of industry leaders, entrepreneurs and community supporters.

Meanwhile, Black Girl Kimchi is on a roll. They’ll be featured at the Westport Farmers’ Market for the first time this May.

Black Girl Kimchi winners, with Rita Marcocci (right).

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Like many Westporters, Mary Sue Teplitz, Dina Upton, Lori Snow and Michelle Mitnick’s lives have been impacted by Alzheimer’s disease.

The women are doing something to help. On May 1 (6 to 8 p.m., Intensity Racquet Club, Norwalk), they’re hosting their 3rd annual Pickleball to Slam Alzheimer’s.

Today, close to 80,000 people live with Alzheimer’s in Connecticut; there are at least twice as many caregivers, including unpaid family members and friends.

The Alzheimer’s Association funds research, drives risk reduction and early detection, and maximizes quality care and support. They offer a 24/7 free helpline, along with educational programs and support groups.

All funds raised at the pickleball event go toward the organization’s Fairfield County Walk to End Alzheimer’s (October 25, Sherwood Island State Park). To register, and for more information, click here.

Pickleball to Slam Alzheimer’s is dedicated to Carolyn Rothenberg and Gary Cosgrave — 2 of the many people diagnosed with Alzheimer’s.

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For many, the teardown of a house means the end of its life.

But in the midst of rubble on Buena Vista Drive, a new life is already poking through.

It’s a different kind of “Westport … Naturally” photo.

But a great one to start the week with.

(Photo/Tracy Porosoff)

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And finally … happy 4/20!

(It’s traditional to celebrate 4/20 with a donation to “06880.” Well, maybe not — but it should be! Please click here to be part of this great event. Thank you!)

 

Westport Tech Museum: Way More Than Toys In The Attic

Westport is filled with hidden gems. Haskins Preserve, the pedestrian path on Compo Cove, the miracle auto repair workers at Vautrin and J&J, any dish at Jeera Thai … not everyone knows about those jewels. But everyone should.

Yet perhaps the coolest — and most secret — of all is inaccessible to nearly everyone.

There — in the attic of a private home — Jay Babina runs the Westport Tech Museum.

You can tour it online. And on Facebook.

Because it’s in his parents’ house (Jay is finishing up his first year at Manhattanville College), it’s not open to the public.

But one of the great perks about publishing “06880” is the chance to go where almost no one else can.

I’ve posted twice about Jay’s Westport Tech Museum (click here and here).

I’ve described his astonishing collection of over 500 computers, video games, calculators, cameras, radios and more.

Just a portion of the Westport Tech Museum. (Photo/Jay Babina)

From a Commodore Amiga 1000, Osborne 1, Apple IIe and original Macintosh, to a 1910 Edison light bulb that still shines, and a 1905 crank telephone that still rings, Jay has scoured the world (and eBay) to find rare, important, classic, quirky and historic products.

The other day, I paid my third visit to what may be the most astonishing private museum in America.

Jay — who haunts the internet with the tenacity and instincts of Kojak, Columbo and Jessica Fletcher combined — proudly showed off a host of new acquisitions.

He began with the most beautiful object in his collection: a hand-painted horn from an early Thomas Edison phonograph.

That was impressive enough. But then Jay picked up a wax cylinder — the precursor to “records.”

I was astonished.

But I was even more gobsmacked seconds later, when Jay placed the cylinder on the phonograph — and played it.

Music recorded well over a century ago filled the attic. I could have ended the tour right then, and been thrilled.

But Jay had much more to show.

Decades after the phonograph — as LP records were being replaced by 45s (kids: ask your grandparents) — the transistor revolutionized radio.

Of course, Jay had a transistor radio.

Of course, it was one of the first ever produced.

Of course, he also had a very early transistor. That’s how Jay rolls.

Transistor radio (right); transistor in a plastic cube (left).

Soon, we got into the “modern” era. (Still: Kids, ask your parents.)

Jay recently added the first commercial beeper pager (a 1964 Motorola Pageboy) to his collection.

The first two-way messaging pager was the 1995 Motorola Tango. But — because Jay does not do things half-heartedly — he has it in a pre-release version, when it was called SkyTel. He searched for 5 years, and finally found it on eBay.

Who remembers answering machines? A better question: Who remembers the very first ones — with little tape reels inside?

Jay does. (Even though he was not born for another 3-plus decades.)

His museum now includes the first consumer residential answering machine: the 1971 Phone-Mate 400.

It was complicated. Callers had to be instructed what to do.

It still works. Unfortunately, Jay’s Tech Museum lacks one thing: a landline to plug it into.

The first answering machine included separate tape reels for the outgoing message, and incoming calls. 

Then came an early cellphone with camera …

… and one of the first VHS recorders …

… plus another item Jay searched for for years: a Sony Walkman. This 1980 model was the first in the US; it came a year after the device took Japan by storm.

Jay showed me — and explained, in historical detail — an HP35 (the world’s first scientific pocket calculator, the “slide rule killer” that some feared would lead to the decline of math skills across America); a Rocket e-book reader, which retailed for $499 and debuted 9 years before the Kindle, and a PalmPilot, with a whopping 128K of memory.

Of course, Jay also found an original box.

There are plenty of original iPhones floating around.

But who has an original bag (rear in photo below), issued by Apple only to customers ordering on the very first launch date (June 29, 2007)?

Jay Babina, of course.

Every item has a back story. And Jay tells them all well.

Of the Commodore home computer, he describes the company’s price war with Texas Instruments.

Commodore slashed the price from $525 to $49. They lost $300 million in one quarter, and went bankrupt in 1994.

Jay has a Commodore (below) and a TI99. Both have dial-up modems. Both still work.

Jay is fascinated by failure.

In 1995, Nintendo’s Virtual Boy — a 32-bit tabletop console, marketed as the first to display stereoscopic 3D graphics — caused headaches and eye strain. It was a spectacular flop.

His Westport Tech Museum celebrates it all: failures and successes. Innovation and improvement. Products that look silly, and those that are beautiful.

Which brings us to one of the newest items on display in Jay’s attic: David Pogue’s just-published sweeping and mammoth (608 pages) book, “Apple: The First 50 Years.”

(All photos/Dan Woog, unless otherwise noted)

Like Jay, he is obsessed with both the broad arc of technological history, and the countless unique, often overlooked stories that contribute to it.

Pogue spent 2 decades in Westport.

Somehow, he never found his way up to Jay’s attic.

Now — as a regular contributor to “CBS Sunday Morning” — would be a great time for him to check it out.

But if he does, both he and Jay may never come down.

(“06880” often shines a light on remarkable young Westporters. If you enjoy stories like this, please click here to support our work. Thank you!)

Pic Of The Day #3287

Compo Cove, from Hillspoint Road (Photo/JD Dworkow)

Photo Challenge #590

Eleven readers identified the old cast iron box stuck to the side of a brick building — last week’s Photo Challenge. (Click here to see.)

But only 2 of them knew what it was used for.

Morley Boyd and Andrew Colabella noted it’s an alarm box, on the side of what for decades was the Westport Bank & Trust building, where Church Lane runs into Post Road East.

They did not explain exactly what kind of alarm. But it was a lot more important for a bank than for its next use (Patagonia).

Soon, the building will house the offices of Compass real estate. No need for alarm!

Besides Morley and Andrew, the other readers who knew the location — though not the function — were Seth Schachter, Jaime Bairaktaris, Clark Thiemann, Susan Iseman, Pete Powell, Jude Siegel, Jack Backiel and Sal Liccione.

This week’s Photo Challenge is an outdoor sculpture — that much is clear.

We have plenty of great art, all over town.

But where exactly is this one?

If you know where in Westport you’d see it, click “Comments” below.

And if you know the title and sculptor, please add that in too.

(Photo/Janine Scotti)

(Every Sunday, “06880” hosts this Photo Challenge. We challenge you too to support your hyper-local blog. Please click here to make a tax-deductible contribution. Thank you!)

Roundup: Primary Trust, Free Seedlings, Remarkable Bookcycle …

Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward’s long and loving association with the Westport Country Playhouse is well known.

Melissa Newman is keeping up that tradition.

The couple’s daughter — still a local resident — says, “in honor of my lovely parents, I encourage everyone you to head to the Playhouse to see ‘Primary Trust.’

“It’s a sweet and thoughtful play, and a lovely production. Please go if you have a chance, and spread the word.

“As my dad once said, ‘Your local theater is like your ball team. You don’t just go when they win.’ To me, this one is a winner.

Theater does not just have to be a diversion. Revivals and classics are its bread and butter, but when you take chances on less familiar plays, you signal to the Playhouse that you support the idea of a communal journey, an opportunity to analyze and discuss, give feedback, and be part of a real theater community.

“So: Make a night of it!”

“Primary Trust” runs through May 2. For show times, tickets and more information, click here.

From left: Alphonso Walker Jr. and Lance Coadie Williams in “Primary Trust.” (Photo/Carol Rosegg)

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Get your seeds!

The Westport Tree Board celebrates Arbor Day with a tree seedling giveaway this Friday (April 24, 3 to 5 p.m., rear of Town Hall near the softball field).

You’ve got your choice of ninebark, blackgum or witch hazel. First come, first served!

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One more sign of spring: The Compo Beach Bookcycle is back!

The free lending library — with a nod to Westport’s beloved 20th-century bookstore — has for several years enjoyed a special spot at the start of Soundview Drive, near the drop-off and pick-up spot.

But this winter, it was damaged by a snow plow.

With its creator, author Jane Green, no longer living nearby, what would happen?

“06880” posted a photo.

Within minutes, Larry Roberts offered to help.

The Remarkable Bookcycle has been repaired. It’s ready for readers.

But remember: It only works if you give, as well as take.

That — along with Larry’s great volunteer efforts — is the Westport way.

(Photo/Totney Benson)

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We’re still enjoying daffodils, all over Westport.

And by “we” I mean Yogi Bear. He posed for today’s “Westport … Naturally” feature photo at Bedford Middle School.

(Photo/Cat Malkin)

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And finally … this is Big Brother/Big Sister Appreciation Week.

Here’s the Big Brother I appreciate:

(Sometimes these Roundups are long. Sometimes they’re not. But every day — without fail — we provide news, information, photos and music. Please click here to support our 24/7/365 work. Thanks!)