And the new concessionaire at Compo Beach and Longshore will be …
… either NG Entertainment/Nikki Glekas Collective of Westport, or Braxtons Hospitality Group of Bridgeport.
They were the 2 businesses who followed through with a bid, to the Parks & Recreation Department. One will be chosen to succeed Hook’d on the Sound, the beleaguered operator since 2020.
Parks & Rec director Erik Barbieri is forming an evaluation panel, to do interviews next week.
The hope is to have a concessionaire operating this summer. If that’s not possible, food trucks will be used.

Beachgoers look forward to the return of a concessionaire with the community spirit of Joey’s by the Shore. (Photo/Lynn Untermeyer Miller)
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Congratulations to 19 Staples High School “high honors” students.
They’ll graduate in June with a special seal, with grade point averages in the top 4 percent of the Class of 2026.
Principal Stafford Thomas notes, “the most astonishing aspect of this accomplishment is that these students were involved in a number of extracurriculars and various aspects of school life. These activities took a great deal of time, focus and concentration outside of the classroom as well.
“We were lucky to have had them for four years, and we will no doubt be hearing about their next great achievements in the years to come.”
The high honors students are listed in the photo below:

Front row (from left): Isabel Jo, Taylor Serotta, Olivia Cohn, Emma Asiel, Jake Shufro, Ava Carter, Carly Mulhern, Olivia Morgeson, Uma Choudhury. Rear: Matthew Tybur, Gunnar Eklund, Nolan Francis, Rajan Sekhar, Kevin Cano, Jay Hari, Miles Kahn, Rei Seltzer, Anderson Seo, Andersen Yee.
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More Staples kudos: Orphenians — for 70 years the school’s premier elite vocal ensemble – have racked up another honor.
Tomorrow they’ll be a showcase choir at the Connecticut Music Educators Association All-State Festival, at the Convention Center in Hartford. They’ll perform 6 numbers, for music teachers from all over the state.
Director Lauren Pine hailed her nearly 50 singers’ talent, passion and dedication. After missing a number of rehearsals due to weather this winter, they came in before school and on weekends to prepare for the All-State Festival.
But that’s not the only Orphenians news. Next year they’ll head to Austria, to sing and work with famed composer/conductor Jake Runestad.
Over the years they’ve performed at venues like La Sagrada Familia in Barcelona, and Radio City Music Hall.

Staples Orphenians
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Jeanne Reed read about this weekend’s upcoming tag sale at Bloodroot with interest.
Then, she was intrigued to learn that the iconic vegan/feminist Black Rock restaurant — co-founded 49 years ago by Westporter Selma Miriam — may have a second life, after its closure in December.
The Connecticut Post reports that the Aspetuck Land Trust may acquire the 1.7-acre site. It would become a nature preserve, and possible community garden.
“We’d love to preserve the land and name the property after the restaurant and just honor all the work and effort and integrity of what they put in there all those years,” said David Brant, Aspetuck’s executive director. “They were ahead of their time.”

Selma Miriam, at Bloodroot. She died last year.
VersoFest ’26 kicked off last night, with a reception and artist talk on … sneakers.
Sean “Opus 1” Williams is presenting “The SneakerVangelisT,” an exhibit named after his sneaker world name.
Sneakers are wearable art that serve both self expression and function. Some models offer a canvas for artistic expression. Others make a muse. The exhibit provides examples of both.
Williams discussed all that and more, in a conversation with Westport artist Miggs Burroughs, and fellow VersoFest artist Holly Danger.
Four days of VersoFest music, media and creativity kicks off tonight, with a talk featuring Ani DiFranco. Click here for a schedule and full details of VersoFest ’26.

Sean “Opus 1” Williams (center), with Holly Danger and Miggs Burroughs. (Photo copyright DinkinESH Fotografix)
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Three early-season shows have been added to the Levitt Pavilion calendar.
The Disco Biscuits — the Philadelphia-based “trans-fusion” band that bridges the gap between EDM and jam rock — play 2 dates: Friday and Saturday, June 12 and 13. They drew a great crowd last year, during their 30th anniversary tour.
Dark Star Orchestra also returns. They’ll bring the Grateful Dead’s music to life the next week (June 21).
Tickets for both groups go on sale tomorrow (Friday) at 10 a.m. Click here to purchase, and for more information.

Dark Star Orchestra
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Speaking of the Levitt: The sun created a very cool halo over Westport yesterday morning.
Franco Fellah captured this image:

(Photo/Franco Fellah)
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Speaking of entertainment: “Primary Trust” opens at the Westport Country Playhouse on April 14.
As part of the run-up, Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Eboni Booth recorded a short video about her touching, humorous and inventive show exploring the power of connections.
Playhouse artistic director Mark Shanahan says: “As one of the most celebrated new works in modern American theatre, ‘Primary Trust’ has resonated with audiences across the country.
“There’s a good reason this work has been so widely embraced. It’s a play about kindness and healing — exactly the kind of story we need to hear right now.”
Click here for more information, and tickets.
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The Westport Rotary Club got an update Tuesday on the Westport Museum for History & Culture.
Michele Rubin — director of education, programs and development at the former Westport Historical Society (and a 1981 Staples High School graduate) — described the Museum’s mission: to bring Westport’s full history to the widest audience possible.
As the nation celebrates 250 years since the signing of the Declaration of Independence, an exhibit opening April 25 will look back at events surrounding the Revolutionary War.

Michele Rubin, at the Westport Rotary Club. (Hat tip and photo/Dave Matlow)
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Dozens of Westporters started last weekend with plenty of pancakes.
They packed VFW Post 399, for a breakfast hosted by Westport Troop 139, and other Connecticut troops.
It was a fundraiser for the Scouts’ trip to a jamboree in Scotland this summer.
They thank the Staples Gridiron Club, Adam Vengrow and the VFW Women’s Auxiliary for “overwhelming support.”
And of course, all the residents who arrived famished, and left well fed.

Dig in!
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The Sea Street Quartet makes their world debut on Sunday — in Westport.
The string foursome present an afternoon of music by Franz Schubert and Joe Hisaiahi at the United Methodist Church on Weston Road (3 p.m.).
Admission is $10, at the door.

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Judith Katz’s caption for today’s “Westport … Naturally” photo — “And just like that!” — says it all.

(Photo/Judith Katz)
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And finally … Westport Rotary Club members are a smart bunch.
But they probably learned a thing or two Tuesday, about the Westport Museum for History & Culture. And about history itself.
(You don’t need to know much about history to know that “06880” is “where Westport meets the world” — and that we rely on support from readers. Please click here to donate. Thank you!)




















































