Author Archives: Dan Woog

Perrin’s Wins

Perrin Delorey was an avid Little League player.

Eight years ago, the Greens Farms Elementary School 4th grader died in an automobile accident.

Every year since, Westport Little League has presented Perrin Delorey Awards to deserving young players.

Saturday’s ceremony was particularly special — and poignant. Today, Perrin’s friends, teammates and classmates graduate from Staples High School.

Saturday was a big day in Westport baseball for another reason: The Staples Wreckers won the state championship.

Westport Little League president Jeff Brill is the father of Connor Brill — a senior, and a Staples star.

It was a big day for Jeff, and he could not be in 2 places — Westport, and Middletown’s Palmer Field — at once. But on Friday, he wrote this note to the Delorey family. 

We historically play all of our Little League championship games on the same Saturday, and present the awards at a single ceremony.

It was not possible this year to schedule all of the games on the same Saturday, due to various conflicts for the kids and coaches with other events. As a result, we are bringing the other 2026 winners and their families to this ceremony.

They are Ryan Acampora (Majors), Wynn Donnerstag (AAA), Colton Galati (AA) and Major Martino (A).

The Delorey family (left), and Perrin Delorey Award winners.

I am pleased to tell you that the Cubs (with number 5 retired for Perrin) beat the Phillies today on the 8th anniversary in a karmic ending and won the game, including for Perrin.

That brings me to my own conflict. The Staples varsity baseball team is playing in the championship game at noon tomorrow in Middletown. It will be the end of the baseball journey for many of these boys, including my son.

It is with a heavy heart that I will be unable attend the ceremony tomorrow at Kowalsky Field (where Perrin’s bench and banner are located) with you, as we honor the 2026 winners of Perrin’s award prior to the A League championship game.

It was very important to me to attend and introduce the awards this year, given that he would have graduated on Monday and the inaugural Staples Tuition Grants fund was launched this year.

Despite my best efforts to re-schedule the Little League championship game to morning or late afternoon tomorrow, and with some optimism hoped the Staples game would be scheduled for the late afternoon or evening slot, I was unsuccessful given other scheduling conflicts.

Desmin Borges, one of our commissioners (and the 2026 Cubs manager coincidentally) will be presenting tomorrow on my behalf.

Perrin Award ceremony.

While Desmin may lack in interaction with Perrin and unfamiliarity with the prior history of the award, he surpasses me in passion, energy and presentation. He will ensure that the winners are duly acknowledged, and welcomed into the pantheon of prior winners in your presence.

I learned that he has a deep understanding of the importance of these awards, and how special the moment is, when we met today to prepare. When the rainbow appeared, Desmin noted, “Perrin is here with us.”

You will hear this passion when he introduces the teams before the national anthem.

Other members of our board will attend as well.  I have asked one of them to record the proceedings so I can watch later in the day.

And starting at noon, 2 of Perrin’s former Cub teammates and several of his classmates and friends will take the field to try to bring home the state championship for Staples 2 days before graduation, while another of his friends going back to elementary school calls the game on the radio.

The team will once again try its best, and seek to win one for Perrin. I will have his baseball card in my pocket.

Go Wreckers — and congratulation to the 2026 Cubs and the Perry Delorey winners.

PS: James Delorey and his 2 daughters came to the bus send-off for the baseball team at Staples on Saturday morning. They wore Cubs and Westport baseball jerseys.

PPS: So how did the Wreckers celebrate? They and their families headed over to the Brills’ house.

Icing on the cake: They watched the New York Knicks win a championship of their own.

PPPS: Jeff Brill coached Perrin and Connor Brill, when both were Cubs.

Westport Little League canceled the championship game that year. A memorial service was held.

Now, 8 year later, the Cubs won the AA Little League title — and Perrin’s former teammates won the high school state championship. It is quite a story. 

Major Martino (left), one of the 4 Perrin Delorey Award winners.

Life After Death: Susan Filan, Heroic Divorce Coach

One moment, Susan Filan was near the top of the legal world: a prosecutor, trial lawyer and MSNBC senior analyst.

Energized by a COVID-inspired pivot, she had earned a master’s degree in Indigenous people’s law. She was ready to start a new career, in that field.

The next moment — June 2, 2022 — Filan was crossing the Post Road, from Patagonia toward Barnes & Noble.

Suddenly, a car slammed into her. She was flipped onto the windshield. Her head hit the street.

She saw herself hovering above her body. She wondered if she was dead.

Quickly though, Filan was back in her body. She could not see or move. But she felt pain, and heard sirens. She also heard a first responder say, “Oh, it’s not a fatality.”

Filan wondered whether the flight she was taking to France 3 days later would have to be postponed.

She had no idea what lay ahead: 5 surgeries in a year. Learning to walk again. The knowledge that her new life would never be the same as her old one.

“The person who left my body was not the same one who returned,” she explains. “That person died.”

For a while, she thought she would go back to litigating. But, she realized, “my heart doesn’t work that way any more.”

She asked herself an existential question: “Who am I?”

Susan Filan

The answer, she has come to realize, is someone very different. Filan has discovered a much different life. It brings her joy. As painful as recovery has been, she relishes the opportunity to live that new life.

Filan continues to assist people in need. Yet she does it now as a “divorce coach.” She works with clients to protect their family, finances and future.

“I have a 67-year-old body. But I feel brand new,” she says. “I love this opportunity to help, in any way I can.

Divorce forces “major life decisions, when people are least equipped to think clearly,” Filan notes.

They worry that one wrong move will cost them everything. They don’t know who to trust, or where to turn next. They may make decisions out of fear, or because they’re overwhelmed. Legal fees soar. And they walk into crucial meetings feeling alone, with no one in their corner.

Filan is.

As someone with a second chance on life, Filan has learned not to waste time on “frivolous arguments. They’re obstacles to who you want to be.”

So she directs her energy — and that of her clients — to practical matters. Like making the right decisions, protecting children and finances, and restoring a feeling of control.

“I’ve been on both sides of the courtroom,” Filan says. “Now I’m on yours.

“Your lawyer handles your case. I handle you.”

The divorce coach knows all about judges and attorneys. And she has been through her own difficult divorce.

She uses her experience and insights to guide clients through every step: selecting the right legal and financial team; understanding discovery, depositions, mediation and hearings; preparation for meetings; addressing co-parenting and custody, both legally and emotionally; navigating communication with an ex, and building a life on the other side.

At a time when emotions are high, Filan offers a steady, calming — and very human — mooring place. Men and women who have been clients praise her knowledge, communication, wisdom, strength and compassion.

That’s no surprise.

“People going through divorce can lose their identity,” says Filan. “They may not be sure what they want, or who they want to be.”

After her accident, she too lost her identity. She asked herself the same questions.

Just over 4 years ago, Susan Filan nearly died. She discovered a new identity.

Now, she helps other people, in the depths of their own personal crises — find theirs.

(For Susan Filan’s website, click here.)

(“06880” often profiles Westporters, doing important work in a wide variety of ways. If you enjoy these stories — or anything else on our hyper-local blog — please click here to support us. Thanks!)

Pic Of The Day #3343

Saugatuck River, under the I-95 bridge (Photo/Tracy Porosoff)

A Very Proud Westport Day

Westport celebrated its 6th annual Pride Day today with the largest crowd, the most community organizations — and the best weather — ever.

Jesup Green was awash in rainbows: flags, t-shirts, even dog collars.

Politicians, from Senator Richard Blumenthal to 1st Selectman Kevin Christie, spoke. All sent strong messages of inclusivity, joy, and the power of love.

Senator Richard Blumenthal said, “This is what America looks like.”

But the stage really belonged to entertainers. Staples Players, former Player (and Broadway actor) Jamie Martin Mann, a drag queen — and a young dancer — made the day special for the hundreds of LGBTQ attendees, and allies.

Staples Players — many wearing “Players Pride” t-shirts — sang “One Day More,” a rousing song about conflicting hopes, fears and destinies, from “Les Misérables.”

it was a very prideful day indeed.

Vendors, non-partisan groups and religious organizations all had booths at Jesup Green. (Photo/Thomas Samaranayake)

Van Goldberg wowed the crowd with his dance routine.

Political figures from Hartford and Westport were all smiles. The group sang “Happy Birthday” to Lee Goldstein and Abby Tolan. Both  Board of Education members celebrated birthdays today.

The Saugatuck Church contingent — and Westport Police — were all smiles.

Senator Richard Blumenthal (2nd from left) and the Homes with Hope crew: Katherine Murray, Helen McAlinden, Thomas Samaranayake. (Contributed photo)

Broadway actor Jamie Martin Mann sang, and gave a speech and poem about growing up in Westport. He credited Greens Farms Elementary School music teacher Suzanne Sherman Propp, Bedford Middle School principal Adam Rosen and Staples Players directors David Roth and Kerry Long with creating safe environments, where he could learn to be himself. (All photos/Dan Woog unless otherwise noted)

Photo Challenge #598

Last week’s Photo Challenge was not very challenging.

A full 2 dozen readers quickly — and correctly — identified the blue object in Bruce McFadden’s image as one of the unique dome lights at the Levitt Pavilion. (Click here to see.)

Nice to know that Elaine Marino, Joyce Barnhart, Jan Carpenter, Brian Taylor, Seth Schachter, Lynn Untermeyer Miller, Susanne Atkins, Jonathan McClure, Katie Carmody, Diane Silfen, Pete Powell, Richard Hyman, Arthur Hayes, Sal Liccione, Susan Iseman, Lisa Hayes, Amy Schneider, Paul Cahill, Seth Braunstein, Darcy Sledge, Beth Berkowitz, Rachel Sara Halperin, Matt McGrath and Cat Malkin are not just fans of the outdoor theater.

They’re also very observant.

Is today’s Photo Challenge any tougher?

We’ll see.

If you know where in Westport you’d find this, click “Comments” below.

(Photo/Ken Bernhard)

(Every Sunday, “06880” hosts this Photo Challenge. We challenge you too to support your hyper-local blog. Please click here to make a tax-deductible contribution. Thank you!)

Roundup: State Champs! And Other Stuff …

Staples has another state champion!

The baseball team was 2 outs away from the “LL” (extra large schools) title yesterday, at Middletown’s Palmer Field.

A dramatic 7th inning home run tied the game for Trumbull.

But in the top of the 8th — the first extra inning in high school — the Wreckers went to work.  Starting pitcher Cole Landgraf drove in the winning run.

Relief pitcher Lukas Snow got the win, surrendering just 1 run in 4 innings. Charlie Fitch came on in the 8th, and quickly mowed down 3 Eagles.

The third time was the charm for the blue-and-whites. They’d lost in the championship in 2023 and ’24, after winning it all in 2019.

Congratulations to coach Jack McFarland and the Wreckers, on a grand slam season!

Click here or below for highlights and interviews, from Gametime CT.

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How did you spend yesterday’s Worldwide Knit in Public Day?

This group of happy knitters, stitchers, crocheters, embroiders (and probably more) celebrated with (of course) all their “stuff,” on the Westport Library Riverwalk.

(Photo/Molly Alger)

They stopped for a couple of moments to pose for a photo.

Then it was right back to their fun, creative work.

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Speaking of the Library (and environs): The Great Duck Race is back.

And so is Sunny the Duck.

He/she/it was inflated yesterday. Sunny advertises Westport Sunrise Rotary’s 17th annual duck event.

(Photo/Mark Mathias)

Set for Saturday, June 27 (10 a.m. to 2 p.m.), it’s one of our town’s most fun traditions.

Thousands of rubber ducks race. Each has a raffle ticket number. The 10 winners share $10,000 in prizes — while supporting a great cause.

The day includes games, kids’ activities, food and music. Click here to get your duck in a row — er, a race.

And click here or below, for a time-lapse video of a type of inflation that we can actually like.

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Also yesterday: Over 1,500 Westporters of all ages kicked off summer, with a special Compo Beach event hosted by the Parks & Recreation Department.

Parks & Rec employees hosted …

Kids activities, games, food, non-profit booths, fire trucks and more helped get everyone in the mood for a great season.

… and kids played …

The perfect weather didn’t hurt. It was a welcome change from the original rainy, cool day in May.

… and there was plenty of food …

… and swag for all. (All photos/Carm Roda)

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To celebrate America 250, the Westport Garden Club is presenting pop-up floral displays around town.

Today they honor Flag Day, at the Compo Beach entrance. Nancy Diamond, Lynn Saphire and Paula Argosh worked on the project.

Next up: Independence Day (the Minute Man Monument), and Constitution Day (Town Hall steps).

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Lots of natural things qualify for inclusion in our daily “Westport … Naturally” feature.

Including clouds.

Ken Runkel spotted this interesting formation Friday night, at Compo Beach:

(Photo/Ken Runkel)

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And finally: Happy Flag Day!

(Whether you celebrate today by flying Old Glory or cheering on UFC fighters, we hope you’ll take time to salute “06880” too. As in: Please click here to support our work. This American thanks you!)

[OPINION] You Are Welcome. You Are Valued. You Belong.

Adam Drake, his wife Lindsey and their children Malin and Parker have lived in Westport for 11 years. He is a member of Westport’s Representative Town Meeting (RTM), serving District 3

Adam is a writer and co-founder of Reflekta, a company that preserves family stories and intergenerational memory. The other day, he posted this piece on his personal website.

Today — as Westport prepared for its town-wide Pride celebration (12 p.m., Jesup Green) — it’s a great time to publish it here.

I made the mistake of reading the comment sections from local communities’ Pride flag-raising events, and grew disheartened with many of the messages shared there. They were rude, hateful, and incredibly ignorant. (Though I was thrilled to see one commenter end up being arrested for disrupting a Pride event in his town.)

But I had to take a step back, take a breath, and realize that the people saying these things are so filled with hate and anger that to live that way must be horribly suffocating. Imagine going through life carrying that much vitriol in your heart, and the only way to ease your pain is through the suffering of others?

Adam and Lindsey Drake and their children, at 2025 Westport Pride.

I have always believed something very simple, and I mean very simple, which is helpful because I am often at my best when the moral math does not require one to open Microsoft Excel.

No one should ever tell you who you can and cannot love.

That’s it.

That’s the whole idea.

I don’t think love needs a permission slip. I don’t think someone’s identity should be treated like a zoning variance. I don’t think a person should have to walk into a room and silently calculate how much of themselves they are allowed to bring with them.

And as an RTM member in Westport, as a friend, as a father, as a neighbor, and as someone who has spent a lifetime trying, sometimes clumsily, to become a better human being, I think allyship starts right there.

It starts with us saying: You are welcome here.

Not conditionally. Not quietly. Not in a “we support you, but please don’t make anyone uncomfortable” kind of way.

We need to do this fully.

Adam Drake was in the crowd earlier this month, when 1st Selectman Kevin Christie and Westport Pride president Brian McGunagle raised the rainbow flag at Jesup Green.

The LGBTQ community is not an abstract issue. It is not a debate topic. It is not a political wedge or a cable news chyron. It is our friends. Our family members. Our classmates. Our coaches. Our teachers. Our doctors. Our artists. Our business owners. Our kids. Our neighbors standing next to us in line at Coffee An’, or Trader Joe’s, or the dump, where, incidentally, all Westport residents eventually meet and silently judge each other’s recycling habits. (I promise to tie up my cardboard next time.)

And if you live in a community long enough, you learn that belonging is not created by proclamations alone. It is created in the small moments. The way we speak. The way we listen. The way we show up when someone is being targeted. The way we make it clear that nobody has to shrink themselves to fit into the town they already belong to.

I wrote about this in an op-ed for the Westport Journal a few months ago when a fellow RTM member had some questionable takes on celebrating a member of our community who also happened to be gay.

The numbers matter here. Gallup has reported that 9.3% of U.S. adults identify as LGBTQ+, nearly double the share from just a few years ago.

In Connecticut, UCLA’s Williams Institute estimates that roughly 170,500 adults identify as LGBT.

These are not small numbers. These are not “somewhere else” numbers. These are our communities. These are our towns. These are people sitting beside us at meetings, cheering at games, volunteering at schools, serving on boards, running businesses, raising families, and making Westport better.

A broad range of Westporters welcomed Pride Month at Jesup Green.

And yet, despite all the progress made, the burden remains real. The Trevor Project’s 2025 survey found that 44% of LGBTQ+ young people who wanted mental health care in the past year were not able to get it. That statistic alone should stop all of us in our tracks. Because when young people are struggling, when they are wondering whether they are safe, accepted, loved, or understood, the adults in the room have a responsibility. Not just the parents.

All of us.

The neighbors. The coaches. The elected officials. The people with microphones at public meetings. The people who write fever dream posts on Facebook who are no doubt inspired by whatever propaganda they saw that morning on Fox News.

Being an ally does not mean being perfect. Which is great because I would have been disqualified sometime around 1987.

It does not mean you always know the exact right word to use or that you never make a mistake. It means you care enough to learn. It means you care enough to apologize when you get it wrong. It means you care enough to stand beside people even when it would be easier to stay quiet.

 

Westport walked the talk when it approved a rainbow crosswalk. An actual rainbow over Jesup Road is a nice touch. (Photo/Svea Vocke)

As an RTM member, I believe local government has a role to play in making people feel seen and protected. That does not mean every meeting needs to become a culture war cage match. In fact, I would very much prefer fewer cage matches in general, White House front lawn, or otherwise.

It means we should speak with care. It means we should remember that our words travel farther than the room. It means that when we discuss people’s lives, identities, families, and dignity, we do so with humility.

Westport likes to think of itself as welcoming, thoughtful, educated, and engaged. Most of the time, I believe that is true. But being a welcoming community is not a trophy you win once and put on a shelf. It is a practice. It is something we have to keep choosing.

We choose it when LGBTQ kids see adults defending them, not debating them.

We choose it when same-sex couples feel as ordinary and celebrated as any other couple holding hands on Main Street.

We choose it when transgender and nonbinary neighbors are given the dignity every person deserves.

We choose it when we refuse to let cruelty off the hook as “just an opinion.”

And we choose it when we make a safe place for joy, not just tolerance.

Saugatuck Church celebrates Pride with fun and joy. (Photo/Lois Himes)

That matters because tolerance is not enough. We need to move away from “Fine, you can be here,” to “We’re glad you are.”

That is the kind of community I know and want Westport to be.

I want LGBTQ people to know that they do not have to earn their place here. They already have it. I want young people to know that the adults around them are not waiting to judge them, but ready to support them. I want families to know that love, in all its forms, is something this community should celebrate loudly, warmly, and without apology.

And yes, sometimes awkwardly. Because let’s be honest, some of us are going to overthink the wording, make the sign too small, clap at the wrong time, or wear a rainbow pin slightly crooked. But I will take awkward love over polished indifference every single time.

Being an ally is not about being the hero of someone else’s story. It is about making sure nobody has to stand alone in theirs. So I’ll come back to where I started. No one should ever tell you who you can and cannot love. Not a government. Not a neighbor. Not a school board. Not a stranger on the internet. Not anyone. Love is hard enough without asking people to defend it.

In Westport, and everywhere else, we should be brave enough, kind enough, and decent enough to say what should never have been controversial in the first place:

You are welcome.

You are valued.

You belong.

(The “06880” Opinion pages are open to all. Send submissions to 06880blog@gmail.com. To support this hyper-local blog, click here. Thank you!)

Pic Of The Day #3342

Parker Harding footbridge (Photo/John Maloney)

Roundup: Juneteenth & Pride; Trump & Blood …

Westport’s first-ever town-wide Juneteenth celebration will be a great one.

The Westport Museum for History & Culture and TEAM Westport will offer 3 free Black History Walking Tours, on our nation’s newest federal holiday.

In addition, the Westport Rotary Club has funded a day of free admission to the museum’s exhibition “The Real Revolution,” an explanation of the Revolutionary War through untold stories. They include a mother with sons on opposing sides; enslaved men risking their lives for freedom, and a woman posing as a man in the fight for liberty, The museum is open from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. on June 19 .

The 90-minute tours are based on the museum’s exhibition “Remembered: The History of African Americans in Westport,” which traces the stories of Black Westporters from the colonial era to the present day.

Participants will visit sites connected to Westport’s African American history. Registration is required (click here), and participation is limited to 20 people per tour. Two tours begin at 10 a.m.; the third starts at 4 p.m.

Part of the 2018 exhibit at the Westport Museum of History & Culture.

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Yesterday, the New York Times published an interesting piece, with 8 prominent American historians.

The subject: President Trump’s new gold plaques in the West Wing, summarizing all 47 US presidencies.

“They are peppered with falsehoods, misrepresentations, insults, praise, self-promotion and erratic capitalizations,” the Times says.

President Trump, with the West Wing plaques. A photo of an autopen stands in for President Biden, in between the 2 Trump presidencies. (Photo/Doug Mills for the New York Times)

Among the historians: Marc Selverstone. The 1980 Staples High School graduate is the University of Virginia Miller Center’s director of presidential studies, and co-chair of its Presidential Recordings Program.

He and the others — including Douglas Brinkley of Rice University, and Sean Wilentz of Princeton — examined and annotated every plaque. Click here for the full story, with annotations. (Hat tip: Dave Harrison)

Marc Selverstone

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The LGBTQ community — and allies and friends — celebrate Pride tomorrow (Sunday, 12 p.m.), on Jesup Green.

Among the featured guests: Senator Richard Blumenthal, and Staples 2021 graduate/Broadway star Jamie Mann.

The 6th annual always-fun event includes live music, food trucks, local artisan vendors and information booths. It’s family friendly — and Westport at its most inclusive.

Getting creative, at last year’s Pride. (Photo/Dan Woog)

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We posted a passel of rainbow photos last night.

All over town, folks snapped images of the spectacular scene, and sent them to “06880.”

This one came in a few minutes ago. It’s a bit late — but special enough to slip in here.

One more reason to love Compo Beach, and so much else about our town.

(Photo/Amanda Meltzer)

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The #1 cause of preventable death after an injury is bleeding.

Would you know what to do, before first responders arrive?

Westport Volunteer Emergency Medical Service can help. On Thursday (June 18, 7 to 8:45 p.m.), they offer a free “Stop the Bleed” class. Click here for details, and to register.

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Michael Aitkenhead’s passion for the outdoors is well known.

A former Staples High School environmental science teacher who is now at Weston High, he also spent several years as the Wakeman Town Farm farmer.

This summer, he joins an expedition to a largely unexplored part of the Peruvian Andes: the Boiling River. The group includes teachers, scientists and journalists.

Aitkenhead is a teaching fellow of The Explorers Club. The 122-year-old international organization is dedicated to research, exploration and conservation.

Explorers Club president emeritus Richard Wiese — another Westonite – will be on the trip too. The group will explore 3 sites, where water temperatures surpass 200 degrees F.

Aitkenhead told “Weston Today,” “This has been a bucket list trip since I was in junior high school.” Click here for the full story. (Hat tip: Sal Liccione)

Michael Aitkenhead, in his Staples days. 

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Speaking of Weston: It’s not on the water.

But on June 28 (5:30 p.m.), One Bad Oyster comes to town.

The upbeat band brings “ska, surf and happiness” to the Weston History & Culture Center’s outdoor concert series, “Music at the Barn.” It’s a family event; bring a lawn chair and picnic.

Tickets are available at the door or online ($15 members, $20 non-members; under 12 free).

One Bad Oyster

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June is dog license month.

Coco Christie — and Coco’s friend, 1st Selectman Kevin Christie — remind you it’s time to renew. Click here to do it online — and receive the tag by mail.

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Congratulations to Kieran Anand and Jonny Greenspan!

The Staples tennis players defeated several tough opponents — including 2 Greenwich teams — to become CIAC (state) doubles champions.

They’re the 19th state doubles champs in Staples history, and the 6th under coach Kris Hrisovulos.

Kieran Anand and Jonny Greenspan

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High school performers are the focus of the Westport Country Playhouse’s next masterclass.

“Acting the Song” (June 28, 2 to 4 p.m.) focuses on bringing songs to life through acting. It’s led by Broadway actor and teaching artist Shereen Ahmed.

The fee is $100, and is limited to 15 participants. Scholarships are available. For details and registration, click here. Questons? Emai  mmeath@westportplayhouse.org.

Shereen Ahmed

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Jane Yolen — the very prolific children’s author of 450 books — died Thursday in Hatfield, Massachusetts. She was 87.

She was also a 1956 graduate of Staples High School.

She was as accomplished as a teenager as she was in her professional career. At Staples she was news editor of the school paper Inklings, captain of the girls basketball team, and vice president of the Spanish and Latin Clubs.

She also sang in the choir, served on the yearbook and Soundings literary magazine staffs, won 2 “Voice of Democracy” contests, and worked as a Westport Library page and Sunday school teacher.

Yolen went on to Smith College, and published her 1st book at 22. She also raised 3 children.

Click here for an obituary published by People magazine. Click here for a 2015 “06880” story. 

Jane Yolen, Staples 1955-56 basketball captain.

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A bird this beautiful would stand out anywhere.

Photographed against a gorgeous background by Tammy Barry, it’s perfect for today’s “Westport … Naturally” feature.

(Photo/Tammy Barry)

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And finally … for some reason, the item about the new presidential plaques in the West Wing (story above) reminded us of this song:

(Our daily Roundup is like Forrest Gump’s chocolates: You never know what you’re gonna get. If you like being surprised — and informed — please click here to support our work. Thank you!)

Online Art Gallery #322

Duane Cohen leads off today, with an untitled — but very familiar — scene.

Well, it will be familiar to anyone who lived here in the 1950s and early ’60s, anyway.

It’s followed by 2 even more recognizable scenes. Then we’ve got our usual very eclectic mix of subjects and styles.

All are — as always — welcome. No matter your age; the style or subject you choose — and whether you’re a first-timer or old-timer — we want your submissions. Watercolors, oils, charcoal, pen-and-ink, acrylics, mixed media, digital, lithographs, collages, macramé, jewelry, sculpture, decoupage, needlepoint — we want whatever you’ve got.

Just email a JPG to 06880blog@gmail.com. And please include the medium you’re working in.

Untitled (Duane Cohen; Available for purchase — click here)

“Longshore Country Club on a Foggy Morning” — watercolor (Kathleen Burke; Available for purchase; click here)

“Compo This Morning” (Marina Drasnin)

 

“Central Park” (Michael Chait — Available for purchase; click here)

“Bursting with Joy” (Lucy Johnson)

“Into the Woods” — acrylic pouring (Dorothy Robertshaw — Available for purchase; click here)

“Distorted Daisy” (Patricia McMahon — Available for purchase; click here)

“Chico’s” — found paper collage (Amy Schneider)

Untitled (Tom Doran — Available for purchase; click here)

“Patterned Fruit” — still life (Emilia Francis, age 7 — One River Art student)

“The Quite Overtaking” (Nancy Breakstone — Available for purchase; click here)

“Please No College Textbooks” — children’s little library; thanks to Mo Willems (Eric Bosch)

“Supe” (Martin Ripchick; Available for purchase; click here)

“I Love You!” — watercolor crayon (Steve Stein)

 

Untitled (Lawrence Weisman)

(Entrance is free to our online art gallery –as it has been for 6 years. But please consider an anniversary donation! Just click here — and thank you!)