Monthly Archives: November 2009

DIRT In Westport

John Morello is DIRT

John Morello is DIRT

Two years ago “DIRT” — a 1-man show about drug and alcohol abuse — took Staples by storm.

Actor John Morello’s performance — honest, powerful, heart-rending, all that stuff that is so important for teenagers to hear, and so difficult to convey — struck a compelling chord.  Students talked about it for days.  For some, it even sank in.

DIRT returns to Westport this Monday (7:30 p.m., Town Hall auditorium).  This time the sponsor — Staples’ Teen Awareness Group — invites all Westport students and parents to attend.

Westporters face many tough choices, every day.  This is an easy one:  Go!

Hey, Barnes & Noble — Only 48 More Shopping Days Left…

…until Christmas.

And there’s still 4 to go before Veterans Day.

Shopping days left

The Levitt Facelift

When the Westport Public Library moved to its current site in 1986, it was on — but not part of — the  Saugatuck River.  Not until renovation a decade later did the library take advantage of its spectacular location, with the addition of broad-windowed reading rooms, and an upgrade of the patio near the riverwalk.

The Levitt Pavilion got there 1st — it opened in 1973 — and for far longer it too has been a riverfront property in name more than fact.

Now the Levitt is ready for a facelift.  A $5 million public-private partnership will provide a new performing stage, with amenities, and an actual entry pavilion.  It will also bring the seating area closer –aesthetically, if not physically — to the river.

Though the entryway (with a concession stand, bathrooms and ticket booth; think Longshore, near the pool and tennis courts), and the enhanced stage (with more comfortable facilities for performers), have garnered most of the attention, the riverwalk aspect could have the greatest impact on the pavilion-going public.

Right now, the library riverwalk peters out where the Levitt begins.  Thick underbrush obliterates much of the river view — and provides a perfect setting for a homeless encampment that few Westporters realize exist.

The proposed renovation — now working its way through town bodies — is one more way to make existing town-owned land more user-friendly.  This fall, we’ve seen great improvements to the Sherwood Mill Pond Preserve  and Pasacreta Park.

Now — after 36 years – it’s the Levitt’s turn.

It’s an idea whose time has come.  But as we upgrade our premier outdoor performing arts center — as we make it truly a home away from home not just for concert-goers, but everyone who wants to embrace the river that runs through our town — let’s make sure we also take care of the men and women for whom the site is the only home they have.

WESTPORT LEVITT PAVILION

The original Levitt Pavilion. It looks a bit better now -- but not much. (Photo copyright by Jerry Dougherty)

(475), Part 2

I posted this story last May.  It created a flutter of interest, but that quickly died.  Well, November 14 is now a week from tomorrow.  I have seen nothing — no news stories, ads, public service announcements — about this event that will change one of our most ingrained habits forever.

So here we go again:

I hate to be the bearer of bad news, but:

Next November 14, life gets more complicated for everyone in Westport.  That’s the day we must begin dialing the area code for every phone call we make — even those to fellow Westporters with numbers beginning 227-, 221-, etc.

The reason:  On December 12, phone companies start assigning a new area code for this part of Connecticut.  Now, in addition to 203, western Connecticut will be 475 territory.  And 7-digit numbers will go the way of the rotary phone.

(The Hartford area gets a new area code too — 959 — to go along with 860.  But we’re used to dialing 10 digits for our northern neighbors, as if they were in Florida or Wyoming.)

There is no new cost to call numbers that are now free.

No financial cost, that is.  But think of all the time we’ll spend updating every 7-digit number programmed into our landlines and cell phones.  And don’t forget all those fax machines, security systems, speed dialers, call forwarding systems and other equipment.

The population of Connecticut has remained steady for years.  Stores and restaurants are in a race to see which can go out of business first.

So why do we need a new area code — and the loss forever of 7-digit dialing?

Must be all those 9-year-olds with iPhones.

Rotary phone

“Letters Home”

Veteran’s Day is a holiday that Westport hardly celebrates.  More like “hurriedly observes” — if that.

Next Wednesday, things change.

This Veteran’s Day, the Westport Country Playhouse and Westport Arts Center team up to honor our vets.  Noted actor Brian Dennehy hosts a Playhouse presentation of “Letters Home” — a dramatic production of actual letters written by US troops serving in Iraq and Afghanistan.

In the Playhouse lobby, the WAC will install an exhibition.  “Daily Exchanges:  US Soldiers in Iraq — The Ordinary in Images” features photographs and videos depicting the everyday life of troops serving in war.

Staples grad Spencer Platt — a world-renowned photojournalist – will be represented in the exhibit.

A reception and guided tour of the art exhibit begins at 6 p.m. next Wednesday, followed by “Letters Home” at 7.

A panel discussion follows the play.  Afterward, curator Terri Smith and artist/veteran Paul Kaiser will comment on the exhibition.

(Tickets to “Letters Home” are $15 for the general public, $10 for veterans.  Call 203-227-4177, or click here.  For more information on the exhibition, call 203-222-7070, or click here.  The art exhibition will also be on display in the Playhouse lobby on Thurs., Nov. 12 from 1-6 p.m., and Fri., Nov. 13 from noon-6 p.m.)

Paul Kaiser's photograph

Paul Kaiser's photograph will be on exhibit at the Westport Country Playhouse's Veterans Day salute.

WWPT Around The World

WWPT_logoIn the 1960s and ’70s, WWPT was 1 of the 1st high school radio stations in the country.

Later, ‘PT pioneered high school sports broacasting.  Its sportscasters have won awards, and the station recently added remote capabilities to air any kind of game imaginable.

Now, the Staples radio station has conquered the world.

If you’ve got an internet connection, you can now listen to WWPT — “Wrecker Radio” — from anywhere on the planet.  Just click on www.wwptfm.com for a live stream.  Eclectic music, talk shows, sports broadcasts, even ‘PT’s live concerts — all are available 24/7/365.

For even more connectivity, users can click on the station logo in the middle of the stream box.  A chat window appears, to make a request or talk with the station directly.

Or, as decades of listeners have done, you can pick up the phone and call:  203-341-1381.

Congrats And Thanks

The results are in.  Westport remains a Democratic town.

Congratulations to all the winners — selectmen, Boards of Finance and Education, Assessment Appeals, Planning and Zoning, Zoning Appeals and RTM.

And thanks too to the non-winners.  You put yourselves out there; you offered alternatives; you made municipal democracy work.

ivotedstickerThe only losers, in fact, are Westporters who did not vote.  If you did not exercise the right that generations of Americans have fought — and, in some cases, died — for, you should forfeit your right to complain.

If you voted yesterday, fire away about town affairs.  If you stayed home, please shut up for the next 2 years.

Running — And Smiling

Whenever I watch joggers — including, yeah you, the guy who wears all black at 5:45 every morning, runs through red lights and thinks drivers can actually see him — I’m surprised at how unhappy they look.  They seem to hate what they’re doing.  And they’re always alone.

Which is why a loosely organized local runners’ group seems like so much fun.

joggers clubBegun a few years ago by David Menoni, his wife and a few friends from Fitness Edge, it has grown to include runners of all ages.  They have varying goals — get fit, stay fit, increase distance, prepare for a marathon or Ironman, meet other runners, socialize — but they are united by one thing:  They enjoy themselves.

The Jogger’s Club meets at Compo Beach on Saturdays, at 8 a.m.  They set off at varying paces, covering different distances.  At 9 they gather back at the pavilion, to chat, cheer for each other, and enjoy coffee (courtesy of Great Cakes) and bagels (thanks, Village Bagels).

“It’s a small group,” admits Deirdre O’Farrelly.  “But it’s a great way to feel alive early on a Saturday morning.”

“This is great people who like to have fun,” David Menoni adds.  “Moving the legs is secondary.

“There are no rules, no boundaries, no limits.  It’s quite peaceful to know that.  Sometimes it’s just nice to be free for 1 hour every Saturday.

“We have pregnant women walking, jogger strollers running, even dogs yupping along.

“Every week is a different route for everyone.  Fortunately we’re big enough so you always have a friend at your pace to talk to.”

The free coffee and bagels are great.  And right now, an injured marathoner has been baking what David calls “arguably the best muffins I’ve ever had.  I’d come just for those.”

Though burning calories to make room for them doesn’t hurt.

Sunrise Rotary Saves The Children

Sunrise RotaryWestport’s Sunrise Rotary often joins with organizations around the world to do good work.

The most recent partnership is right down the road.

Sunrise Rotary hooked up with Westport-based Save the Children, on a literacy project in Haiti.

blog - Save the ChildrenThe Haitian office of Save the Children provided planning, organization and logistics to purchase and stock elementary school textbooks for a new lending library in the remote town of Maissade Centre.  Sunrise Rotary helped provide funds.

Over 1,000 language, math and science books were purchased.  Funds also went to physically set up the library, and train administrative staff.

It takes a village to raise a child — or, in this case, our village helping another.

I Voted…

Did you?