Monthly Archives: October 2011

Tom Ghianuly’s 50 Years

Last Saturday, I got what’s left of my hair cut.

Not exactly blog-worthy — except for this:

When Tom Ghianuly — who has been my barber at his Compo shop since I was a teenager, and who cut my father’s hair for even longer — asked what was new, I couldn’t tell him.

I couldn’t mention that the next day, over 100 of his many customers, friends and admirers had planned a surprise dinner in honor of his 50 years in business.

It’s not easy to keep a secret from a barber — especially one as well-connected and curious as Tom — but these guys did.

Tom Ghianuly listens as his friends and fans honor him.

The event was the brainchild of attorney Dick Berkowitz.  He had help from a group that included Jim Schadt, Alan Nevas, Ron Gordon, Les Giegerich and Steve Siegelaub.

It’s a microcosm of Tom’s clients and fans:  a former CEO of Reader’s Digest,a retired US District Court judge, a guy who built half of Westport — all there to honor their longtime, beloved barber.

Giegerich — 96 years old — was almost 50 when Tom started cutting his hair.  Seigelaub was 5.

That half-century span spoke volumes about Tom.

So did the presence of the Brooks family — Tom’s longtime landlord at Compo Shopping Center.  How often do landlords fete their tenants?

A few people spoke.  They presented Tom and his wife Carolyn with a weekend at the Ocean House at Watch Hill.

In typical Tom fashion, he never expected anything like this — even after half a century of work, even after seeing the Birchwood Country Club parking lot filled as he and the Berkowitzes drove up.  (Dick had told Tom he’d take him and Carolyn out to dinner.)

“Boy, this place is packed!” Tom said.

He had no idea it was packed for him.

First Selectman Gordon Joseloff praises Tom Ghianuly.

First Selectman Gordon Joseloff was one of the many Westporters already inside.  When the ceremony began, he read a proclamation.  Then he gave a framed copy to Tom, to hang in his shop.

I’m guessing that on Tuesday — when Compo Center Barber Shop reopened — Tom was embarrassed to put the proclamation up.  He’s much more comfortable with the many photos of historic Westport he’s collected, and which line the walls.

But after 5 decades, Tom Ghianuly is a very important part of town history too.

A League Of Its Own

In 1949, Westport stood on the brink of change.

No one knew what the 2nd half of the 20th century would bring — but the town had already begun moving toward something different, modern and new.

A group of women wanted to influence the future.  They were smart and energetic — and, despite their many responsibilities as housewives and mothers, they found time to work for Westport.

That year — sitting around a tea set in Mrs. Wolcott Street’s Myrtle Avenue home — they formed a chapter of the League of Women Voters.

Over the next 6 decades, the organization grew — in numbers and influence.  The LWV helped determine the structure of the nascent Representative Town Meeting (RTM); later, the League made sure there was open space on the Post Road, and led the crusade to “green” it.  Look at the Post Road today in Westport — compared to neighboring Norwalk — and you’ll see the lasting effect the LWV has had on our town.

League of Women Voters members, 1966.

Two years ago John Hartwell — an LWV member (it’s not just for men anymore!), who was taking video production classes at Norwalk Community College — was asked to tape a coffee celebrating the Westport chapter’s 60th anniversary.  Four former LWV presidents were scheduled to speak.

A detached retina forced John to cancel.  To make amends, he promised to interview the 4 ex-presidents in their homes.

The stories he heard — and the careers the LWV launched — amazed and inspired him.

Julie Belaga

For example, after her League presidency, Julie Belaga served in the Connecticut Legislature, ran for governor, served as New England director of the EPA, and was appointed by President Clinton to the Export-Import Bank.

Jackie Heneage went on to serve 2 terms as first selectman — the 1st woman ever elected to the post.

Pat Porio had a long career after her service as president.

By the time John interviewed the 4th woman — 5-time LWV president Lisa Shufro — he realized there were many more voices to be heard.  He vowed to direct a video — and asked Lisa to produce it.

Sixteen more interviews followed.  There were visits to the house where the League was founded.  Hours and hours of footage — and hundreds and hundreds of stories — had to be edited down to the final 43-minute product.

Two themes emerge from “A League of Their Own.”  One is how the LWV empowered so many women.  For example, Martha Aasen went on to become the national organization’s official observer at the UN; she then worked full-time there.

Ann Gill was a major force on Westport’s Planning and Zoning Commission for years.  The list goes on and on.

From left: Marty Hauhuth, Ann Gill, Barbara Butler, Mary Jenkins, Jacqueline Heneage -- LWV members, and accomplished women all.

The 2nd major theme is the impact the LWV had on Westport.

The video debuted at the League’s annual meeting in June.  It was shown at the Westport Library in September, and Senior Center earlier this month.

Always, the feedback was the same:  Wow!

Women interviewed for the film were impressed how well their stories were told.  Other viewers remarked how much they learned about the League — and Westport.

Seeing and hearing about women who have gained so much from the LWV — and in turn have given so much back, to their town and country — brought tears to the eyes of some.

You can watch the film now:  click here.

Or you can go to the Westport Historical Society this Sunday (October 30), for a showing.  Afterward, 2 of the League’s living legends — Jackie Heneage, and Selma Miriam (a leading proponent of Project Concern, and the founder and longtime owner of Bridgeport’s Bloodroot restaurant and bookstore) — will talk, and answer questions.

The video’s title is a pun on the League of Women’s Voters — and the 1992 film about women’s professional baseball — but it aptly describes the role of this organization in the life of our town.

For 6 decades, Westport’s LWV has been in a league of its own.

A screenshot from "A League of Its Own."


Come On, Irene!

A North Avenue-area resident’s patience is wearing thin.

The alert reader sent this photo

along with a note that this debris — leaves, brush, whatnot — has sat opposite Bedford Middle School since Hurricane Irene in August.

Drivers veer around it, into the other lane.  Joggers, walkers, nannies with strollers step out into the road to avoid it.

Our alert reader would move it himself, but he says there’s too much, it’s too heavy and he’s too old.

On the other hand, he says:  Riverside Avenue is much worse.

Nick Ordway: “The Arts Are Oxygen”

Last Sunday, Nick Ordway received a Horizon Award — as an emerging young artist — at the Westport Arts Awards.

It was a great ceremony.  And even though he’s still “emerging,” the Oscar-nominated filmmaker — a Staples grad, Princeton and NYU grad — spoke with the wisdom of the ages.

In his brief speech, he told the Town Hall crowd:

I had a very happy adolescence here in Westport, and I think I can attribute much of that to the prominent role that art had in my life and in this community.

Nick Ordway

When a community supports and fosters the arts, it’s as if it’s planting a new stand of trees.  Everyone can see that trees are beautiful, but what people forget is how much vital oxygen they provide for everyone.

The arts produce a different kind of oxygen, absolutely essential yet equally invisible — so much so that art’s true worth is oftentimes overlooked, and funding and support for the arts are missing on society’s balance sheet.

While some art might have substantial commercial value, much of the arts exists beyond the marketplace.  That’s because the arts have a worth beyond the quantifiable.

The beauty and truth of the arts serve as a consistent reminder of what matters in our lives, and what it means to be human.  They give some people a sense of purpose, and help others just to get through the day.  And they bring us together as a community — they even did so today.

Rather than a commodity to be bought and sold, art is, rather, a gift to be shared and enjoyed.  As an artist, I am merely trying to give back both to art itself, for inspiring and transforming me in so many ways, and to the communities and very special family that helped expose me to the arts in the first place.

So thank you Westport, thank you teachers and parents and friends and other members of this vital community; thank you for recognizing me today. I only hope that through my art I can continue to give back what you’ve given to me.

Remembering Ralph Steinman

It was a riveting story:  Ralph Steinman won this year’s Nobel Prize for Medicine.  The Westport scientist was honored for discoveries about the immune system that led to new treatments for, and prevention of, cancer and infectious diseases.

Steinman used his discoveries to treat himself for pancreatic cancer.  But he lost his 4-year battle on September 30 — 3 days before he was announced as the Nobel winner.

Posthumous Nobels are not allowed.  But the Foundation determined this one had been awarded in good faith.  The honor stood.

Ralph Steinman, Nobel winner -- and Westporter.

Yes, an intriguing — probably even made-for-TV movie — story.  But in the swirl of publicity around Dr. Steinman the Nobel awardee, little was said about Ralph Steinman the husband, father and longtime resident.

Last weekend his twin daughters, Lesley and Alexis, talked about their dad.

He’d worked at Rockefeller since 1971, but he and his wife Claudia wanted to raise their family outside New York City.  They moved first to Sleepy Hollow, but the schools weren’t good enough.  Firm believers in public education, they heard about Westport from friends, investigated, and were sold — in large part because of the schools.

“It was the best of both worlds,” Lesley says.  “He loved the beach, he could commute to New York, and we could get a great education.”

The Steinmans moved here in 1983:  2nd-graders Lesley and Alexis, and their 5th-grade brother Adam.

Ralph Steinman with his 3 young kids, at their North Avenue home.

“Dad worked all the time,” Alexis says.  “He’d take stacks of journals to the beach.  Around the house he gardened, chopped firewood and barbecued.  He relished being ‘in the country,’ but his life was work.”

A world renowned scientist does plenty of traveling.  “He was away an insane amount,” Lesley says.  “There were meetings all over the planet.  But he never got to see any of the places.”

He spent years trying to convince skeptics that his dendritic cell immunology work had merit.

His world, Alexis says, “wasn’t Westport.  It was the scientific community.  That’s why he chilled out whenever he got back here.”

Steinman relished taking his children to to his Rockefeller lab.  “There were pipettes, centrifuges, and mice that he would touch and make them pee.  It was very cool,” Lesley laughs.

Steinman said he had no hobbies — though he skied and played tennis — and “he told all the kids we were way too multi-faceted to go into science,” Alexis says.  She and her sister both live on the West Coast, and are involved in artistic endeavors.  Adam has a law degree from Yale.

“It’s interesting:  Dad taught us to be good scientists without explicitly couching it as ‘science,'” Lesley says.

“He taught us to be critical thinkers, to make decisions based on sound data, to collaborate and not compete, and to work hard.  He never pressured us to go into the natural sciences, but he always encouraged us to be good scientists.”

When Steinman was diagnosed with cancer in 2007, he convinced doctors to harvest his dendritic cells, so he could grow his own and do his own therapy.  “They don’t let many people take their own tumors out of the hospital and work on them,” Lesley notes.

“Luckily he had success.  That, and chemotherapy, helped him live as long as he did.”

The Steinman family, in a recent photo.

Also in 2007 Steinman won the Lasker Award — the “American Nobel.”  He knew that might lead to a Nobel — which he hoped to get, because it would generate more support for his research — but when he did not win it in 2008 or 2009, Lesley says, “he just went back to work.”

He died this year without learning he’d won the Nobel Prize — though, Lesley says, “we like to think he knows he got it.”

In the days following his death, they’ve heard from hundreds of Steinman’s colleagues and former students.  As often happens, his wife and children have learned a lot they never knew.

“He was a matchmaker in the lab!” Alexis says with surprise.  “We found out about all these marriages he helped arrange, and all the kids that resulted.”

“We got a lot of emails from renowned scientists who came through his lab,” Lesley says.  “They talked about how inspired they were by him.  They said they carry his excitement with them, and now they use his lessons with their own students.”

His children also discovered “how proud he was of us,” says Alexis.  “I work in costumes in L.A.  I never knew he was so impressed with Lesley and my creativity, and that he knew how hard we work.”

At the same time, Alexis adds, “We told his colleagues and students how much he thought of them, because he always told us.  But they didn’t know.  I think that was how he kept all of us from being spoiled.”

Claudia and Ralph Steinman

While Steinman was a “father” to so many scientists — and was often away from home — Claudia did most of the child-rearing (while pursuing a full-time career in real estate).

“They complemented each other so well,” Lesley says.  “They were very different, but very much in love.  They were always so affectionate with each other.

“And he always said he would not have been as successful without her love and support.”

David Waldman’s Request

David Waldman sent “06880” the particulars of his recent zoning change request:

On Thursday October 20th, the partners of Bedford Square submitted to the Planning and Zoning Commission a request to change the zoning on 35 Church Lane from RORD to BCD.

Our partnership purchased the property in late 2010 with the hopes of combining it with our redevelopment of the old YMCA and Fire House.  The re-zoning is just the first of several steps required to achieve our ultimate goal; a sustainable development with the proper density, scale, character and diversity of uses (commercial and residential) which would help to create a more vibrant downtown, day and night.

35 Church Lane

Although we made a clear presentation to the commission, it is evident from the public comments that there is a still some confusion as to what we are requesting. Below are the key points of our request:

1) Whether the property is zoned RORD or BCD, the same amount of commercial space would be allowed – the key difference is that we would be able to provide more residential in the BCD.

2) The zone change would allow us to build no more than 19,859 s/f in 2 separate buildings and each building could not be larger than 10,000 sf nor higher than 3 stories or 35 feet.

3) The zone change would allow us to create a single underground parking lot with over 100 parking spaces.

4) The zone changes allows for a natural and compatible infill to activities on both ends of Church Lane.

In summary, the benefits of our proposal and ultimately a zone change are:

• More on-site parking

• More downtown housing

• More downtown activity

• More tax revenue

• Compatibility with Town Plan objectives

We care deeply about the character of our town, the quality of our development and its overall success.  It is our goal to create something that enhances downtown Westport and stimulates activity at all times of the day.  This project on Church Lane and Elm Street will be something all residents and visitors to Westport will be proud to have in the Downtown area.

Sincerely,
David A. Waldman
On behalf of Bedford Square Associates LLC

The Last Dance For Joanne Kahn

When Joanne Kahn’s parents took her to the New York City Ballet — she thinks it was “The Nutcracker” — she fell in love with the beauty and grace of dance.

“It was a chance to leave yourself behind, and reach another level of creativity we don’t usually tap into,” she recalls.

Joanne was all of 6 years old.

She started dance lessons soon after.  At New York’s High School of Performing Arts, she received more serious training.  She also studied at the School of American Ballet.

After Cornell University, Joanne helped write a show on the history of American musical theater for a cultural trip sponsored by the State Department.  She moved to Boston, where her husband was in law school, and earned a master’s in education.

Back in New York Joanne taught at Friends Seminary; moved to Paris for her husband’s job; had 2 children, and took more dance classes.

Joanne Kahn works with Clay Singer (Tony) and Michelle Pauker (Maria), in rehearsals for next month's Staples Players production of "West Side Story." (Photo by Kerry Long)

In 1975 the Kahns moved to Westport.  She got involved in the Westport Community Theatre; helped form Stageworks; choreographed for local schools — and in 1988 her son Jason’s friend John Morgan told her Staples Players needed a choreographer.

She introduced herself to director Al Pia, and offered to help.  “In his wonderful way he just said, ‘Welcome aboard!'” she recalls.

Their 1st collaboration was “Anything Goes.”  And — for the next 22 years — Joanne Kahn was Staples Players’ superb choreographer.

She continued after Al retired in 1996.  She worked with Judy Luster for 4 years; since then, she and David Roth have taken Players to even more spectacular dance heights.

Through “Cabaret,” “Runaways,” “A Chorus Line” — where she worked with Broadway dancer and Staples alum Bradley Jones to teach the original “phenomenal” choreography — and through “The Fantasticks,” “Tommy, “Jesus Christ Superstar,” “Fiddler on the Roof” and nearly too many others to count — Joanne has turned talented high school actors and singers into tremendous dancers.

It hasn’t been easy — but Joanne has loved every minute of it.

Her role, she says, is “working with the director.  I try to translate the director’s thoughts and vision into movement and staging.”

In 2009 -- at Staples Players' 50th anniversary celebration -- Joanne Kahn danced in "One," the classic number from "A Chorus Line." (Photo by Kerry Long)

While most Staples Players are talented actors, and some have wonderful voices, few have dance backgrounds.  “I have to understand what they can and can’t do,” she says — while challenging them to do more than they ever have, or thought they could.

“My job is to make them look their best — and shine.”

Now she’s working on a phenomenal dance production — “West Side Story.”  It opens November 11.

When it closes the following weekend though, she won’t start thinking about the next show.  After more than 2 decades as Staples Playears choreographer, Joanne Kahn is hanging up her dance shoes.

Her husband retired.  They’ve been spending half the year in Sarasota.  Now they’ve sold their house here, so Joanne’s long Westport connection has ended.

She has “loved and cherished” her job.  “It’s been a privilege and a pleasure to have worked with Al, Judy and David,” Joanne says.  “They’ve sustained me, and enriched my life.”

The actors have also inspired her.  Staples Players is “a very dedicated group who understand theater can be ‘serious fun,'” she notes.

“That’s rare.  At other high schools kids enjoy putting on shows.  But they don’t regard it on a ‘professional level.’  Players is not just an after-school activity.  The kids love what they do, and they’re phenomenally dedicated.  That rubs off on all the rest of them on the ‘team.'”

Joanne Kahn confers with dance captain Alexa Babbin, and actors Max Stampa-Brown and Chris Nicoletti during rehearsals for the 2008 show, "How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying." (Photo by Kerry Long)

Joanne loves working with high school students.  “They’re adults,” she says.  “You can talk to them.  They understand your sense of humor — and the nuances you seek in choreography.  They really get it.”

Leaving now, she admits, is “bittersweet.  The level of excellence is phenomenal.”

But if a choreographer is going to take a final bow, “West Side Story” is the place to do it.

“It’s a magnificent dance show,” she says.  “You don’t get much better than Jerome Robbins.  And I love the story and the music.

“The cast is incredible,” Joanne adds.  “The dance captains are magnificent.  The kids have learned the original choreography.

“This show is so moving to me.  The message is universal:  How do we resolve our differences and get along?  Getting that message across through dance and song is so important.”

And what is so important to Staples Players is that — for 22 years — Joanne Kahn has helped high school actors become confident, compelling dancers.  For over 2 decades, she’s helped thousands of teenagers deliver countless important messages.

Take that final bow, Joanne.   You deserve one more turn in the spotlight.

(“West Side Story” will be presented November 11, 12, 17, 18 and 19 at 7:30 p.m., and November 13 at 2 p.m.  For more information, click here.)

Candlelight By Day

For nearly 70 years, the local holiday season was heralded by Staples’ Candlelight Concert.

Founded in 1940 by legendary music maestro John Ohanian, it’s survived wars (both military and cultural), changes in education, and the school’s move from Riverside Avenue  to North Avenue.

Alumni -- like these choir members from 1979 -- attend the Candlelight Concert every year.

Sure, a couple of decades ago, the band joined the choir and orchestra onstage.  But the concert may still be the only place in the world the haunting and obscure “Sing We Noel” processional can be heard these days.

Yet now the Candlelight Concert is starting to fade away.

Last year the long-standing performance schedule — Friday night at 7 p.m., Saturday at 7 and 9:30 — was changed.  The 1st Saturday show was moved 5 hours earlier — t0 2 p.m.  The evening performance began at 8 p.m.

The same times are set for this year.

The idea was to provide more opportunities for parents for young children, and senior citizens.

That’s commendable.  But it misses the mark.

Young kids are not the target audience.  And seniors could be served by a dress rehearsal on Friday afternoon — an idea the music teachers favor.

Hallelujah!

The final Saturday show has always been the most festive — high-energy, emotional, a true kickoff to the holiday season.  It’s been something Staples musicians look forward to their entire high school careers — because the seats are filled with alumni.  All are invited on stage for a rousing finale:  the “Hallelujah Chorus.”

Alums — off in college, or no longer in town but back for the holidays — know there will be seats available at that final show.  They don’t get them ahead of time, as concert-goers do for the other ones.

The new schedule — with 2 p.m. and 8 p.m. shows — means that hundreds of musicians spend an entire Saturday, right before the holidays, backstage or onstage.  That’s a lot to ask.

Then there’s the ambience.  “How can you have a Candlelight concert when there’s sunlight streaming in the back door?” one frustrated performer asks.

Some traditions change.  Some are worth saving.

For 7 decades the Candlelight Concert — twice on Saturday night — was one of the best.

DJ And Jim

During his radio and broadcast career at Staples, DJ Sixsmith covered football — and soccer, basketball, volleyball, indoor track, rugby, everything except (I think) Ultimate Frisbee — with the skill and professionalism of pros like Jim Nantz.

Which, last summer, brought him to the attention of — Jim Nantz.

Stamford Advocate sportswriter Dave Ruden (a Staples grad) had taken an interest in DJ.  Dave asked his friend Jim (CBS’ star broadcaster, and a longtime Westporter) to meet with DJ and his WWPT/Wrecker radio colleagues Eric Gallanty and Brandon Edelson.

“Jim is so busy.  We expected a half hour lunch at Gold’s,” DJ says.  “But he spent 2 hours talking about sports and TV.  It was amazing he took that much time for us.”

DJ Sixsmith, Jim Nantz, Brandon Edelson and Eric Gallanty hang after lunch at Gold's this summer.

At Staples’ Back to School Night this year, DJ’s mom saw Jim.  She introduced herself, thanked him for his help — and was surprised when he suggested DJ join him in an NFL booth.  Jim gave her his email.

DJ had just begun his 1st year at Fordham University.  Most freshmen start at the bottom at WFUV, the school’s highly regarded radio station.  Thanks to his Staples experience, DJ was already covering women’s volleyball, and helping with football broadcasts.

Seizing the opportunity, he emailed Jim.  The broadcaster quickly invited him to last Sunday’s Giants-Bills game at the New Meadowlands Stadium.

On Friday, DJ spent hours in the production truck.  He watched all the planning sessions, and asked plenty of questions.

Two days later he was in the CBS booth.  The sightlines were fantastic; the inspiration, intense.

He met Phil Simms — Jim’s broadcast partner — then went back down to the truck for the 1st half.  During the 3rd and 4th quarters DJ stood a few feet from Jim and Phil, wearing a headset, listening to and watching them work.

“It’s a view almost no one has,” DJ recalls.  “And there I was, in my second month of college.  It blew my mind.”

He was awed by how easy the broadcasters made everything look — and how difficult calling a game is.  “You’re not following a script,” DJ says.  “You really have to be alert and creative, all the time.”

He was also impressed by the number of people involved in the telecast, from graphics to ads to go-fers.

Not to mention the food.  “No one went hungry,” he laughs.

“It kind of made our little operation at Staples seem like a different world,” he says.

DJ Sixsmith prepares to broadcast Fordham women's volleyball, from Rose Hill Gym.

The experience “reaffirmed how much I want this as my career,” DJ says.

“Jim was so happy, so enthusiastic about what he was doing.  I realized that’s how happy I am too.”

Back at Fordham — and college women’s volleyball, not NFL football — he says, “I’ll continue to hone my skills however WFUV wants to use me.”

He is thankful for the boost Mike Zito and Jim Honeycutt gave him at Staples — and for the kindness Dave Ruden and Jim Nantz are showing him now.

It’s no stretch to say that one day he will pay it forward to a Staples student — perhaps yet unborn — who wants to be a star broadcaster too.  Just like his hero, DJ Sixsmith.

Win Win Win Win

Dinner at the Gillespie Center was special on September 9.  Students in Staples’ advanced culinary arts class, along with the Culinary Arts Club, prepared and served food for residents of the town homeless shelter.

They did it again October 14.  And they’ll continue throughout the school year, on the 2nd Friday of each month.

That’s good, and it makes a nice story.  But there’s much more.

The culinary students create menus featuring fresh local produce and meat.  Chef Cecily Gans purchases the items at the Westport Farmers’ Market, held every Thursday in the Imperial Avenue parking lot.

Westport Sunrise Rotary provides funding for the food.  Club members also pick up and deliver the food to the Gillespie Center, and coordinate serving with the students.

And the Staples PTA donates funds for essential, um, staples like oil, vinegar and rice.

Talk about a win-win-win-win situation:

  • Students learn about community service, preparing meals with fresh ingredients, and supporting community agriculture programs.
  • The Farmers’ Market helps fill an important need.
  • Sunrise Rotary plays a key role, assisting students and the Gillespie Center.
  • And men and women facing hard times eat healthful, great-tasting meals.

Staples culinary students, with Chef Cecily Gans (3rd from left).