Monthly Archives: May 2010

Teens Tackle ‘Children’s Hour’

The Children’s Hour” — Lillian Hellman’s ground-breaking 1934 play about lies and lesbianism — was banned in Boston, Chicago and London.

It’s an intense, multi-faceted challenge for any director and actor.

Which makes it a perfect vehicle for Staples Players’ last studio production of the season.

Caley Baretta — the senior director — is drawn to the show because of the realism of the characters and script.  She’s taken every directing class at Staples, and has assistant directed many mainstages and Black Box plays.  This is her first effort as head director.

“I wanted something with meaning — no song and dance,” she says.

She’s gotten her wish.

In addition to the subject matter and emotional journeys the characters undergo, there’s another challenge:  All but 2 of the cast are freshmen and sophomores.

“For some of them, it’s their 1st real show,” Caley says.

“That’s exciting for me — not limiting.  Their energy and drive are amazing.”

Caley cried when she got her cast together, to show Staples Players director and drama instructor David Roth.

“Directing is my passion,” she says.  “I’m so grateful to have this as my first chance to really strut my stuff.”

Next year at Northwestern University, Caley will major in drama — with a concentration in directing.  She’ll double major in education or psychology.

“To be a director, you need to know more than theater,” she explains.

When “The Children’s Hour” opens tomorrow, Caley’s grandparents will be in the audience.  They live in Florida, and have never seen a show she’s worked on.

Odds are strong this won’t be their last.

(“The Children’s Hour” is presented tomorrow [Friday, May 28] at 7:30 p.m., and Saturday, May 29 at 2 p.m. and 7:30 p.m.  Click on www.StaplesPlayers.com for tickets.  Click here for Matt Van Gessel’s superb trailer.)

Don’t Tread On Them

The Westport Tea meeting Monday night at the Westport Public Library received plenty of attention — before the event, and after.

Flying much lower under the radar was an event last month — also at the library — sponsored by the Fairfield County Committee of Safety.

According to their website, it is

a non-partisan, grass-roots advocacy organization active throughout the 50 United States.  Its purpose is to exercise the freedoms of speech, association, and petition guaranteed by the First Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, in order to educate Americans about, and mobilize them for political action around, the fundamental principles of liberty and self-government set out in the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, and the Bill of Rights.

So far so good.  Now read on:

All too many rogue public officials in the General Government in Washington, D.C., have usurped powers never delegated to them by the Constitution, thereby violating their oaths or affirmations to support the Constitution, undermining the federal system, and depriving the States and the people of powers and rights reserved to them by the Constitution.

Recognizing the danger this situation poses, a majority of the States have reasserted their sovereignty through resolutions under the Tenth Amendment to the Constitution.  Although this a good first step, further action is necessary to enforce these declarations.

In particular, the States and the people must take firm control of the two most important powers of sovereignty: the Power of the Purse—through establishment in each State of an economically sound and constitutionally proper alternative currency based on silver and gold; and the Power of the Sword—through revitalization of the Militia of the several States along strict constitutional lines.

Committees of Safety intends, by means of peaceful mass grass-roots political activism, to restore the Power of the Purse and the Power of the Sword to the American people through their State governments.

Central to this plan is an Economic Security Bill through which each State can adopt an alternative State currency of silver and gold, managed and protected through a revitalized State Militia, in order to protect the State’s governmental finances, and eventually the State’s entire private economy, against a collapse of the Federal Reserve System.  The establishment of economic security is the necessary first step in a comprehensive strategy that aims at returning the provision of all “national security” to local control by the people themselves.

There are 32 members — or, as they call themselves, “Constitutional Activists” — in the Fairfield County group.  Their next meeting is Saturday June 26 (2:30 p.m.):  a showing of the film “Don’t Tread On Me:  Rise of the  Republic.”

The website says of the movie:

From the Tea Party Movement to State Legislators, the American people are drawing a line in the sand.  On what side of it will you stand?  Has the government our Founders created been forgotten by Washington DC?  Is a Patriot Uprising ready to capture the spirit of 1776?

“Don’t Tread On Me: Rise of the Republic” gives the viewer a look into the movements, mindset, and legislation that will catapult the “Great Restoration” into households across America.

The Committee of Safety will screen “Don’t Tread On Me” at the Westport Public Library.  No word from them yet on whether that’s an institution they’d also like to overthrow.

Championing The Chappa

Like many events, the Chappa Invitational Golf Tournament is more than a name.

And this year — as Westport celebrates the 50th anniversary of the town’s purchase of Longshore — is a good time to look back on the name (and the man) behind one of the top high school golf events in the country.

Mike Chappa, in his Staples football uniform

When over 80 Connecticut schools tee off at Longshore on Thursday, May 27 they’ll play in memory of a true — and now forgotten — legend.  Here’s what they (and, these days, too many Westporters) don’t know about Mike Chappa.

A lifelong resident of town, Chappa graduated from Staples in 1927.  He captained the football and basketball teams, and played baseball — and is still regarded as one of the most all-around Wrecker athletes ever.

At Georgetown University he earned All-American football status for his aggressive 2-way play — as both an offensive and defensive end.

Returning to Staples after World War II as a social studies teacher, he coached football with Frank Dornfeld — another Georgetown All-American (tailback).

But Chappa’s great love was golf.  He coached Staples’ linksmen from 1955 through ’68.  His last year, the team was 15-0 and won the state championship.  He was named Coach of the Year.

The following spring, he dropped dead of a massive heart attack — on the 16th green at Longshore.

Since 1970, the Chappa Invitational has been sponsored by Staples, the Longshore Men’s  Golf Association and Westport Parks & Rec.  The 2-man better ball event allows small schools to compete equally with the big boys.

It’s also the only high school golf event spectators are allowed — in fact, encouraged — to attend.

Over the years, they’ve seen some memorable moments.  Once, an upstate team with a commanding lead left, to get home for an awards dinner.  Another team tied them for 1st.  Officials called the northerners, who turned around, drove back, jumped out of their car – and beat the other team in a 1-hole sudden death playoff.

Even more improbably, a few years ago Trinity Catholic had the lead, and left for their senior prom.  Another team drew even.  Staples coach Tom Owen called Trinity at the prom.  Golfers came back — with their dates in gowns.  Trinity lost on the 3rd hole of sudden death — perhaps they were distracted — but photos of the players and the dates on their course live on.

Fairfield’s J.J. Henry — now a PGA pro — was Connecticut’s top high school golfer in the early 1990s.  He played in the Chappa each year — but had never won.  In his senior year, he needed only a par at the 18th hole to take the title.  He didn’t do it.

Westporter Carl Swanson — a captain on the 1966 team — remembers Chappa well.  The coach didn’t say much — sometimes just pointing his arm to convey the message “keep it straight!” — though Chappa did once ask Swanson, when his concentration level lagged:  “Carl, is it golf or women?”

Chappa, Swanson says, gained respect through is “quiet, authoritative demeanor — never scolding, never yelling.  It was understood that you were to play well, and it was your responsibility to do so.  But you also knew that he had your back.”

He was much louder on the football sidelines — “very emotional and excitable,” recalls former Wrecker Tom Allen — but football is supposed to be that way.

Swanson hopes to volunteer at this year’s Chappa tournament.  He remembers the early years of Longshore as a public golf course, and to the man who put Staples golf on the high school map.

There is no more important “link” than that.

Dylan Murray and Andrew Gai led Staples to an undefeated record, and the state golf championship, last year.

Tea Time In Westport

Nearly 90 people jammed the Westport Library’s McManus Room for last night’s 1st Westport Tea meeting.

But anyone looking for red meat was disappointed.  Organizer Dean Slack served up mostly appetizers.

The 10-year Westporter — a self-described businessperson with no previous experience in politics — returned over and over to 3 main themes:

We need officers.  We need volunteers.  We need money.

Organizers of last night's Westport Tea meeting asked that faces of attendees not be photographed.

Westport Tea, he emphasized, is a non-profit association.  It’s not a political party, or a “Tea Party PAC.”  Westport Tea is a social organization that educates voters.

Some of the crowd stirred when Slack touched on Westport Tea’s 3 main principles:  fiscal responsibility, limited government and capitalism.  They wanted to vent about everything wrong with America today — I guess that would be fiscal irresponsibility, intrusive government, and socialism.

But Slack wasn’t going there.  He returned again and again to the need for officers, volunteers and money.

If the 1773 Tea Party organizing committee held meetings like last night’s, Westporters today would be hoping England wins the World Cup.

Slack differentiated Westport Tea from the national movement of a similar name.  “This is not the fanatical Tea Party thing you see on TV,” he said.

That led to a brief discussion about the advantages and disadvantages of the TP name.  They’re both about the same things, Slack said — “less government, less taxes, free markets, an emphasis on the Constitution” — but then it was back to the need for officers and volunteers.

And money.

“Democracy,” Slack said, “is not free.”

It was not Paul Revere.

It was not Rand Paul.

It was not Ayn Rand.

It was Tea time, Westport-style.

(For more information on Westport Tea, call Dean Slack at 203-226-2619, or email: WestportTea@gmail.com.)

Bedford Students Find Higher Ground

It’s a sad but true fact of middle school life:  Kids get bullied.

They’re called “retard,” “lardass” and “gay.”  They get pushed and shoved, or — sometimes worse — ignored.

Bullying is front and center at Bedford.  But that’s okay:  The school’s acting group is tackling the issue head on, with a production of “Higher Ground.”

The play — set for this Thursday and Friday, May 27 and 28 (7:30 p.m.) — addresses various types of bullying.  The central character is teased and harassed when he walks away after insinuations are made about his sexuality.

The title comes from an image of youngsters running — like animals — to higher ground, to escape predators.

Some of the cast of "Higher Ground." (Photo by Kerry Long)

“The kids love it,” says Bedford drama teacher Karen McCormick.  “It’s honest and true.  They really relate to it.”

Students at Sherwood Middle School in Oregon related to it too — especially because it was written by their drama teacher, Jennie Brown.  But school administrators there banned the play, after parents objected.  Officials said the play was too mature for many students, and might have offended audience members.

McCormick has the full backing of colleagues.  Principal Cary Bell is so enthusiastic, he asked the cast to perform the show for the entire school.  He’s even been written into one scene.

“I don’t know what effect it will have on the audience,” McCormick says.  “But the 40 or 50 kids involved in the play are all talking about it, and thinking about it.”

Bedford is even bringing Brown — the author and teacher — to Westport.

She’ll talk to Bedford students about bullying — and will finally see her play performed at a middle school.

(Tickets for this Thursday and Friday’s 7:30 p.m. performances of “Higher Ground” are available at the door.)

Thanks For Asking!

For years I’ve been a 6 a.m. regular at the Y.

For almost as long, Patti has been there behind the front desk.  Her smile and cheerful greeting make those long steps to the Fitness Center a little less steep, the early morning hour a little more bearable.

For the past few weeks, I nursed a hernia (surgery went well — thanks, Dr. Meinke!).  As a result, I cut back on my Y visits.

When I walked in the other day, Patty was on the case.

“You were on my list to call,” she said.  “I haven’t seen you in a while.  Is everything okay?”

She was relieved to hear it is.

And I was relieved by her concern.  It made my day week month year decade.

Eco-ing A Vital Message

Today’s 2nd annual Eco-Fest flooded the Levitt Pavilion with 1,500 hungry folks.

Kids, Staples students, parents and grandparents — all were hungry for environmental information, free food, and good music.

They got it — and more.

I’m not sure which I enjoyed most:  seeing so many committed young people earnestly manning booths; the pulled pork from Bobby Q’s, or the “Pump It Up, Baby!” video by Walter Kosner, Mikey Holmes and Helen Martin Block (shown at the library) that must be the funniest look ever at septic systems.

I know what I didn’t like:  Taking an online test, and learning that if every human being on earth followed my daily habits, we’d need 2.9 planets to live on.

“That’s okay,” the student at the laptop said.  “Mine came out to 6.  But I’m trying to cut down.”

Thanks to Eco-Fest, we all have a little more knowledge about how to do it.

Darien High students Ryan Dirvin and Rahul Datta, with mentor Westporter Leo Cirino, show off the hydrogen fuel cell car they designed. "You can drink the exhaust," they claim.

Jonathan Steinberg hosts a toilet toss. Hit the target, win a prize -- and think about waste products.

Free pulled pork from Bobby Q's, pizza from Skinny Pines, cupcakes from the Staples culinary department, Newman's Own drinks -- and of course, compostable cups.

Violinist Jeff Cheng and guitarist/vocalist Max Stampa-Brown -- 2 of the many musical acts at EcoFest 2.

Rada Raps

Andrew Medina likes “older” music — R&B and rap.

“Stuff from the ’90s,” he explains.  “You know, Eminem’s old albums.”

When you’re a Staples sophomore, the ’90s are ancient history.

Andrew is better known — on YouTube, anyway — as Rada.  The name comes from his old Coleytown Middle School choir, Camerata.

Rada

“I can somewhat sing,” Rada says.  “But I’m more of a rapper.”

Which is why these days his music consists of writing and rapping.

“I was raised on rap,” Rada reports.  “My parents listened to it, so I was into it from a young age.”

He appreciates rap’s “freedom to say what you want.  You can get anything out of your system.”

Two months ago Rada made his first recording, in a Queens studio.  His 3 remixes include “Bonita Appelbaum,” by A Tribe Called Quest.

“The other stuff isn’t as old,” he says.

Ouch.

The recording process was stressful, Rada notes.  “I had to do it over and over to get it perfect.  There’s all kinds of voiceovers and background stuff.”

Reaction at Staples has been very positive, he says.  Students like it.  And his English teacher, Dan Geraghty, asked Rada to rap for the class.

“I don’t think I have a style — I just capture the beat,” Rada says.  “Maybe I’m like Drake.”

Rada adds:  “I don’t rap about ghetto topics, guns or degrading women.  I was never into that.”

His songs are about “situations I get myself into, being with my friends, being with my girlfriend.”

He tries to erase the stereotype that all rap is negative.  “It can be motivational, inspirational,” he says.

Rada hopes to take his music far, professionally.  He’s starting locally — with a performance June 19 at Toquet Hall.  It will be his 1st show.

“I’m nervous,” he admits.  “But I’m getting lots of support.”

Everyone is invited.

Even rap fans old enough to remember the ’90s.

(Click here for Rada’s YouTube channel.)

CT Bites

CT bites.

No, it’s not a teenager’s lament on the lame life in the Land of Steady Habits.

CTBites.com is a blog — a clever, wide-ranging, sometimes-irreverent-but-always-interesting look at food in Fairfield County.

That’s food in all its forms.

There are pages on:

  • Eating In (recipes, cooking classes)
  • Eating Out (restaurants, food festivals and farm events, wine tastings, chef comings and goings)
  • Ingredients (ice cream names, green tips to reduce your carbon footprint)
  • Kids Bites (teaching children to cook; family-friendly joints)
  • Gadgets (onion goggles, coffee makers)
  • Food Talk (forums on the best pizza place, best bartenders, and everything in between)

CTBites is the brainchild of Stephanie Webster.  A New Yorker-turned-Seattleite, she’s lived in Westport for not quite 2 years.  But she’s already nailed our food scene.

She launched her blog last July, after realizing that — unless New York and Seattle — Fairfield County foodies did not frequent Yelp.

Or any other restaurant review blog.

In just 10 months, CTBites has grown “exponentially,” Stephanie says.  She’s added food-loving, good-writing friends as contributors.  They attract about 7,000 unique visitors a month — and it’s almost all by word of mouth.

Now, Stephanie says, she’s ready to turn her attention to really marketing — and monetizing — her blog.

The restaurant reviews are the initial draw for readers, and the most popular pages.  “We’re not the standard Patricia Brooks/New York Times reviews,” Stephanie notes.  “We get down to the nitty gritty.”

Readers like the blog’s community feel.  CT Bites has sponsored monthly prix fixe lunches, where contributors and foodies meet and mingle.

CTBites.com sponsored a prix fixe lunch at The Dressing Room.

So how is the food scene in Fairfield County?

“Considerably better than I thought,” Stephanie answers quickly.  “I like the hidden gems.  Places like Le Farm are excellent, but I also like places like Bereket.  It’s a Turkish restaurant behind a gas station in Bridgeport, and it looks like a complete dive.  But it’s just like being in Istanbul.

“This isn’t Manhattan, where you’ve got a great place every 2 blocks.  But there are plenty of good places around.”

Stephanie finds the the farm-to-table movement “exciting.”  She’s also excited by the recent move of John Holzwarth, former executive chef at The Dressing Room, to The Boathouse at the Saugatuck Rowing Club.

“People love that there’s something out there — a window on Fairfield County,” Stephanie says of her site.

“And it goes both ways.  Farmers and chefs like being part of the dialogue too.”

Stephanie Webster is happy to give them — and everyone else in Fairfield County who eats — something to chew on.

Rotary Rocks Westport

Giving away $40,000 in less than 30 minutes is child’s play in Washington.

In Westport, it merits an “06880” post.

Westport Rotary did the honors this week, at their Community Partners lunch.  One representative from each organization was invited as a Rotary guest at the Inn at Longshore — and there were smiles all around as Steve Halstead handed out checks to groups ranging (alphabetically) from ABC (A Better Chance of Westport) to the Y.

After calling it “the happiest day of the year for Rotarians,” Todd Mauerman reminded his colleagues that it was time to start fund raising for next year’s giveaways.  Before the lunch was done, members turned their attention to the annual golf and tennis tournaments at Longshore on Wednesday, June 9.

Interested in helping raise money that the Rotary can then give away?  The cost is $185 per golfer ($720 for a foursome), $85 for tennis.  Entry fees include both breakfast and lunch.  Call Tony Riggio (golf, 203-227-6877) or Irwin Lebish (tennis, 203-222-0626).

Steve Halstead (far left) and representatives of many organizations smile as they raise their money-filled envelopes. (Photo by Dave Matlow)

PS:  Want a full list of organizations the Rotarians helped?  Here it is:

  • A Better Chance of Westport
  • ARK
  • Boy Scouts of CT
  • Bridgeport Child Advocacy Coalition
  • Builders Beyond Borders
  • CLASP Homes
  • Domestic Violence Crisis Center
  • Dr. Appleby School Health Center
  • Earthplace
  • Family Reentry
  • First Night
  • George Washington Carver Center
  • Girl Scouts of CT
  • Grant a Smile
  • Habitat for Humanity
  • Interfaith Housing Assoc (HwH)
  • Levitt Pavilion
  • LINKS
  • Longshore 50th
  • Make a Difference Day
  • Mercy Learning Center
  • Necessities, Inc.
  • Norwalk Arts and Crafts
  • Norwalk Symphony Orchestra
  • Norwalk Youth Symphony
  • Positive Directions
  • Project Return
  • Smart Kids
  • Staples PTA  Post Prom
  • Staples Tuition Grants
  • STAR
  • Susan Fund
  • Westport Country Playhouse
  • Westport Department of Human Services
  • Westport EMS
  • Westport Historical Society
  • Westport/Weston Family Y