Monthly Archives: May 2010

The Grim Reaper

Today was Grim Reaper Day at Staples.

To raise awareness of the dangers of drunk driving, the Teen Awareness Group (TAG) plastered the halls and lockers with informational signs and graphic posters.

Every 30 minutes, EMTs pulled a volunteer student out of class, painted his or her face white — and sent the teenager back, a chilling reminder of how often an American loses his life in an alcohol-related crash.

A sobering assembly — featuring a 25-year-old Fairfield woman whose life was shattered when her parents and grandparents were killed by a drunk driver — reinforced the important message.

Now we just need TAG to repeat the day — for adults.

Word

Tom Brokaw, E.L. Doctorow, Calvin Trillin, Wendy Wasserstein, Pete Hamill, Martin Scorsese, Doris Kearns Goodwin, David Halberstam and Will Shortz.

If that was a clue — a long one — in a New York Times crossword puzzle, the answer would be:

Westport Library honorees.

The list is broad and diverse:  authors, historians, a TV newsman, a playwright, a film director.

On Thursday, May 27, the Library adds “crossword puzzle editor” to the list.

Will Shortz

Like previous “Booked for the Evening” honorees, Shortz loves words and language.  His forte is unique — games — but he is adored by millions of Americans for the joy he takes in puns, puzzles and wordplay.

He is sui generis — the only person in the world with a degree in enigmatology (“the study of puzzles”).  He also earned a law degree from the University of Virginia, a factoid that must delight hard-core fans (and puzzle his parents).

Shortz — who in his spare time is puzzlemaster for NPR’s “Weekend Edition Sunday” — has a long relationship with libraries in general, and Westport’s in particular.

Though he amassed many reference works in his Pleasantville, NY home — from the OED to specialized works covering opera, poetry, art, baseball, whatever — and he now uses the internet for most research, Shortz still frequents his local library.  He considers it “a friend, a place I can use whenever I want.”

In 2001 he agreed to provide puzzles for the Westport Library’s 1st crossword championship.  Ten years later, he’s still at it.  The “great time and great people” keep drawing him back.

On May 27, Shortz will talk a bit, then play interactive word games with the Westporters honoring him.  “We’ll test people,” he says.  “We’ll have fun.”

And if he were to clue “Westport” into a puzzle?

On a Monday, he says, it might be basic:  “Connecticut town on Long Island Sound.”

For a Saturday, though, he’d “find a fact that would be interesting to many people, but not well known. You’d need a lot of crossing letters to solve it.”

Sort of like:  Town whose library honored a puzzlemaster in 2010.

(Click here for tickets to the Westport Public Library’s “Booked for the Evening” benefit event.)

‘Breaking Upwards’ Breaks Into NPR

Breaking Upwards” — the breakout film by Westport’s Daryl Wein that’s earned raves across the country — got an impressive shout-out today.

NPR’s “Morning Edition” used it to frame a story that examined a new trend in movies.

“Indies On Demand:  Now The Festival’s At Your Place” began:

Until recently, if you wanted to work on your indie cred by seeing the Next Big Thing in independent film, you had to hop on a plane to Sundance, Toronto or Tribeca.  But a growing number of independent films are also available on cable across the country as video-on-demand rentals — even while they’re playing in theaters and at film festivals.

Case in point:  the much-buzzed-about millennials romantic comedy Breaking Upwards, in which 20-something stars Daryl Wein and Zoe Lister-Jones breathe life and humor back into a genre you might have given up for dead.  Even before the film opened on the big screen in New York, you could watch it all over the country on cable TV, as a video-on-demand rental.

Wein explained why video-on-demand is not only not cannibalizing his audience — it’s helping it:

If someone at home rents it for six bucks, that’s something that might be more appealing to them so they don’t have to leave their house and go spend $12 in the theater, and then if they like it, they tell their friend, who may actually prefer to go see it in the theater.  So that right there helps us.

But not even the most indie-friendly 20-something — like Lister-Jones, Wein’s girlfriend, co-star, co-writer and co-producer — is ready to go all-video-on-demand, all the time.

“The ritual is lost,” she admits, comparing watching a movie at home, rather than on a big screen in an actual theater.

(Click here to read and/or listen to the entire NPR “Morning Edition” story.)

Daryl Wein and Zoe Lister-Jones -- see them in theaters, and through video on demand. (Photo by Alex Bergman)

Be Nice

Note to cashiers at Mobil Self-Serve, CVS and Dunkin’ Donuts:

After I hand you money, and you give me change, and I say “thank you,” it is acceptable to reply with any of these phrases:

  • “You’re welcome.”
  • “Happy to help.”
  • “Have a nice day.”

It is not okay to look right past me into space, and say nothing at all.

Inside The Actors Studio

Audiences at “Book of Days” — Staples Players’ Black Box Theater production that opens tonight and runs through Sunday — will see a complex show.  Part murder mystery, part family saga, part comedy, it’s an intriguing, contemporary piece set in a small, present-day Midwestern town.

Part of the plot involves a play within a play.  It’s challenging to the actors — but that’s been the hallmark of Players since their founding 51 years ago.

And — as this cast proves — acting is not simply an after-school activity at Staples.  It’s a way of life — an all-consuming passion that often extends into college, and beyond.

In fact, of the 12 actors in “Book of Days,” nearly all will continue their theater education once they leave Westport.

Glenn Leo explains a crucial idea, as Shannon Walsh and Dan Shure listen. (Photo by Kerry Long)

Shannon Walsh, for example, will study acting next year at NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts.  A gymnast nearly full time until junior year, she leaped into acting full time.  She took classes in New York, joined Players — and less than 2 years later was accepted into a very competitive acting program.

Maya Hubbard will also got to NYU for acting — at the same Stella Adler Studio as Shannon.

Dan Shure will study theater directing at Skidmore College.

Max Stampa-Brown, whose “Book of Days” character speaks in tongues — talk about a challenge! — is headed to the University of North Carolina School of the Arts, for acting.

The passion for theater extends to the tech crew too.  Sound technician Robinson Batteau will study audio production next year at SUNY-Purchase.

Jake Yarmoff -- the sheriff -- is engrossed in the action with Maya Hubbard and Alison Manning. (Photo by Kerry Long)

Current juniors are burnishing their resume this summer. Max Samuels will attend a summer acting program at Yale, while Matt Van Gessel, Whitney Andrews and Glenn Leo all plan to audition for college acting or directing programs.

(Matt might want to show colleges the trailer he made for the show — click here for a great YouTube clip.)

The cast and crew has had just 5 weeks to prepare for “Book of Days” — a compressed time frame that’s given them a taste of the real theater world.  They developed characters, memorized lines and blocked scenes with the seriousness this show demands.

“They’ve been an inspiration to us as directors,” said directors David Roth and Kerry Long.  “The way they’ve risen to the challenge has made us even more confident of their success at their college programs.”

Which is where so many Players end up, when their Staples days are done.

(“Book of Days” will be presented tonight, tomorrow and Saturday (May 13-15,  7:30 p.m.) and Sunday (May 16, 3 p.m.) in the Black Box Theater.  Click here to order tickets.)

Mamma Mia!

The list of stars who have headlined the Levitt Pavilion’s fundraising gala is long and storied: Willie Nelson. Ray Charles. Smokey Robinson. Tom Jones. The Beach Boys. Chuck Berry.

Now add Abba.

Well, actually, Abba Lite.

On June 19 it’s “The Music of Abba, With Arrival” — a tribute band.

They’ll star in a pre-season event — one of two or three each year that help underwrite a summer of otherwise free entertainment.

The big name has not yet been announced. Stay tuned.

Abba or Arrival? You decide.

Moving The Baldwin Boulder

As most of Westport knows by now, Herb Baldwin was a major force in the town’s 1960 purchase of Longshore.  In just 18 days, Baldwin — the first selectman — persuaded the Board of Finance and RTM to pay $1.9 million for the 169-acre property.

If you don’t know that history, you must be hiding under a rock.

Herb Baldwin

Perhaps it’s the rock — boulder, actually — tucked under the fir trees separating Longshore’s 1st tee and 18th green.  The boulder — and a plaque commemorating the event — were installed 25 or so years ago.  Over time, the boulder has nearly vanished from sight.

Tomorrow (Thursday) at 10 a.m., Baldwin’s boulder will be moved to a more prominent spot.  The new location — just 25 feet away, at the corner of the roadway next to the 1st tee — is actually the intersection of Julian Brodie and (ta da!) Herb Baldwin Drives.

Baldwin is long gone, but Allen Raymond — a member of his kitchen cabinet, and another important figure in the purchase of Longshore — hopes to be on hand.

Rotary Club members will be there too.  That’s also appropriate:  Baldwin will be honored at the Rotary’s June 9 golf and tennis outing, and at an invitation-only “Friends of Longshore” celebration later that day.  Members of the Baldwin family expect to attend.

Just think — in only 18 days, perhaps the biggest land acquisition in Westport history went from idea to completion.

Let’s  hope the front-end loader has as easy a time hefting the Baldwin boulder.

Septic Switching

It’s taken decades, but the Post Road — at least in Westport — now looks decent.  Trees and flowers grace many businesses; shopping centers have been renovated, office buildings constructed with at least lip service given to looks.

Then there is Roger’s Septic Tanks.

“06880” has nothing against septic systems.  Without them, we would definitely be up that proverbial creek.

But Roger’s is just about the last holdout, long after the rest of the Post Road was greened and preened.  Trucks and septic tank innards fill the dirt lot, with no pretense of landscaping to be found.

Roger's Septic Tanks. The flowers in the foreground belong to the BP gas station next door.

“06880” reader Wendy Crowther reminds us the site has a storied history. Before Roger, the place was called Bob’s Welding.  Donna Summer shot an early music video there.  Wendy can’t remember the song, but says sparks from welding equipment flew around in the background.

That was its high point.  For years it’s been an eyesore.

Now a “For Lease” sign stands out front.  It’s a “development site” — suggested as “office space.”

This may be the 1st time in history we’d love to see a new bank built.

Afghanistan Comes To Westport

With few exceptions, Westporters are far removed from the war in Afghanistan.  We don’t know anyone serving there, and because the news involves bombs and indecipherable local feuds — not the more familiar finance and entertainment — we easily ignore it.

LTC Tania Chacho

With few exceptions, Tania Chacho’s working life revolves around Afghanistan. A lieutenant colonel who served in peacekeeping and stabilization efforts all over the world, she now directs the comparative politics program at West Point.  Soon after graduating, many of her students end up in Afghanistan.

Westporters who have not thought much about Afghanistan can do so tonight (May 11) — from the comfort of the Westport Public Library.  At 7:30 p.m. LTC Chacho will speak about coalition and American strategies, and the factors that may help or hinder success.

As familiar as Chacho is with military affairs and defense policy, she is equally at home in Westport.  Her husband, LTC Jonathan Liba, is a Staples grad.  His parents still live here.

He has been in Kabul since July — giving Chacho a particularly keen interest in the country.

As a professor, she examines every issue through many angles.  As a military officer, though, she realizes “you see things through your perspective — your mission.  It’s not easy getting a sense of the larger picture.”

The result, she says, is “lots of different information, varying senses of what we’re trying to accomplish.  It’s not easy to assess.”

But there is one thing she’s certain of:  her students.

“My cadets are amazing,” she says.  “They have an awesome, incredible responsibility.  It’s inspiring to see their dedication.  Their eyes are wide open.

“I’m biased, but I invite anyone into my classes to see what we’re talking about, and how my cadets are responding.  You’ll be impressed.”

And if you can’t get to West Point to see Chacho — lieutenant colonel and professor — in action, do the next best thing.  Get to the library tonight.

The Baton Passes From Lipson To Miller

For 21 years — always seen from behind — Alice Lipson’s flowing, braided hair has been the “face” of Staples choral music.

Next fall, the director’s hair will be much shorter.  And male.

Justin Miller has verbally accepted an offer to succeed Lipson — retiring after 35 years in the Westport school system — as director of Staples’ choruses, choirs and Orphenians.

He is only the 3rd choral director in the past 51 years.  From 1959 to 1989, George Weigle held the post.

It is a position of great tradition — as Miller well knows.  A Westporter from 1st grade on, he sang for Lipson between 1998 and 2001.

Justin Miller holds up the "Choir of the World" trophy last year in Wales.

It is a position of great importance t00 — and Miller is up to the task.  Not yet 30, he is a founder, past president and current musical director of the Westminster Chorus.  Last year they were crowned international champs — winning the “Choir of the World” Pavarotti Trophy in Wales — while in 2007 they earned an international chorus gold medal.

In Wales they beat out choirs from major American universities, and accomplished European choirs.  One judge called them “musical butter — soft, inviting and delicious.”

The chance to return to Staples — where he acted in “Chorus Line” as a freshman, toured Scotland with “Pippin,” and led the now-legendary barbershop group the Testostertones — lured Miller east from California, where he now teaches.

“Westport is a really special community,” he says.

“As a student teacher, and through festivals I’ve been a part of, I’ve learned it’s hard to find an entire town that is as involved in the success of its high school as Westport is.

“There are strong programs in other places, but there’s something special about Westport.  It’s why I wanted to come back.”

He double majored in choral directing and music education at Chapman University, then began work on his master’s.

Miller has found success out West.  In addition to Westminster, he was part of 3 international chorus championships with the Masters of Harmony.

Though young, he has held choral leadership positions for years — directing, as well as handling budgets and preparing for competitions.

Miller traveled to Westport over his spring break from Tesoro High School in Orange County to interview with teachers and administrators, and teach a freshman chorus class.  Fortuitously, superintendent Elliott Landon was in Los Angeles during our own spring break, and interviewed Miller there.

How does he feel about replacing Lipson, a legend?

“I can’t replace her,” Miller says.  “She’s been there so long, and so much of the program is representative of her.

“There are things I’ll do differently, because we’re different people.  But luckily I was in choir and Orphenians.  I know her style.  Hopefully I can make it a smooth transition.”

One difference:  He hopes to introduce “modern composers, who are rock stars in the choral world,” into the repertoire.

He would like to enter more festivals and contests, and sing for other schools and choral directors.  “Their feedback on what we’re doing is important,” Miller says.

He may also incorporate his Testostertones experience into the curriculum, organizing small ensembles with contemporary music.

And he might reintroduce Fine Arts Nights — a Lipson innovation — with evenings of musical theater, pops and classical music.

“Alice had the benefit of coming from a middle school,” Miller says.  “I don’t know many people at Staples any more.

“I look forward to getting to know the juniors and seniors.  The more a choir feels like a family, the more quality work we’ll be able to do.”

As Alice Lipson passes her choir family on to Justin Miller — the next leader, and young enough to be her son — she knows the next Staples chorus generation is in good hands.

Hallelujah!

(Click here for the Westminster Chorus in action in Wales last year — and here for a great YouTube video of Miller’s reaction at the international championship presentation.)