The list of famous Westporters is vast and well-known. Paul Newman, Joanne Woodward, Shonda Rhimes, Rodney Dangerfield, Bette Davis, Michael Douglas, Rod Serling, Martha Stewart, Harvey Weinstein, Michael Bolton, Marilyn Monroe, Liz Taylor, Robert Ludlum, Jim Nantz, Harry Reasoner, Meat Loaf, Nile Rodgers, Neil Sedaka, Frank Deford, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Charles Lindbergh, Fiorello La Guardia, James Comey — and those are only a few.
So why do we never mention Johnny Marks?
This Christmas, it’s appropriate to remember the man who for many years had a home on Green Acre Lane, off South Compo.
He died in 1985 from complications of diabetes. His son continued to live there.
Johnny Marks
Marks wrote “Rudolph, the Red-Nosed Reindeer” — the classic tune that, since its first release by Gene Autry in 1949, has sold nearly 200 million records.
That was just the start. Marks formed his own publishing company — St. Nicholas Music — and churned out a slew of other Christmas classics: “I Heard the Bells on Christmas Day,” “Rockin’ Around the Christmas Tree,” “Run, Rudolph, Run” and “Have a Holly Jolly Christmas” among them.
Not bad for a Jewish kid from Mount Vernon, New York.
A few years ago, I wrote about Johnny Marks. I said I didn’t know much about his life in Westport. I asked readers to chime in.
Jim Rodebush wrote: “Johnny Marks was a daily Compo Beach guy. He sat in the same spot with the same group of people. I worked at Compo from 1972 until 1977 and got to know him just to say hello.
“Fast forward a couple of years and I was working in New York. Having lunch one day in Washington Square; Johnny was playing speed chess.
“He saw me, but my hair was short and I was in a suit and tie. He came over and asked how he knew me. I replied, ‘Compo Beach.’ He laughed, and we had a nice conversation about Westport and Compo.”
Sherri Daley noted, “Decades ago. I was drinking at a local bar with the man I loved. We chatted with a handsome older gentleman about everything from Schopenhauer to antique cars. When the bartender announced he was closing up, the old gent invited us over to his house.
“We followed him. It was December and the roads were icy and black, but we managed to get to his house and struggle up the icy stone walk. He told us to get some champagne out of the fridge. That was all there was in it: 6 bottles of Dom Perignon. I got one and we followed him into the living room.
“The room was huge, with very little furniture and a grand piano. The parquet floors were polished to a high gloss; the moon and the piano reflected in the wood. We could see snow falling out the large windows
“Of course I asked the old gent if he played, and of course he said he did. He played us everything from Beethoven to old show tunes. Then, around dawn, with a wink at me, he said, ‘Let me play you a little something I wrote.’
And he played ‘Rudolph, the Red-nosed Reindeer.’
“Three years later, I read the old gent’s obituary in the Wall Street Journal. It was the first time I knew his name.”
Jon Nicholson added, “In the late ’70s, Andy Rothman and I played 9 holes of golf with a much older man that we were teamed up with by the starter. The gentleman was very patient with us, as Andy and I hacked our way around Longshore.
“He continued on when we stopped at the halfway house. The woman running the snack shack informed us who he was, which was of course exciting to a couple of teenagers. Oh, the inane questions we could have asked!”
Ann Chernow said, “We met Mr. Marks at several Westport parties. He and his son were always charming, and fun to be with. I think of him every Christmas when his songs play often.”
Let’s not forget Johnny Marks. He’ll go down in history!
ENCORE! The character of Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer was created 10 years before Marks wrote the song by his brother-in-law, Robert L. May, as an assignment for Montgomery Ward.
May’s granddaughter Margie lived in Westport. She attended Saugatuck Elementary School, Bedford Junior High, and Staples High (Class of 1966).
It’s a small world. But Rudolph made sure Santa covered it all!
(“06880” is truly “Where Westport meets the world. If you enjoy stories like this, please click here to support our work. Thank you!)
If you needed any more proof that Westport is racing headlong into the holiday season: Tonight (Saturday) at 5 p.m., the William F. Cribari Bridge gets lit.
As always, Al’s Angels do the honors. Also as always, everyone is invited
Sure, it’s a few days early. But, Al DiGuido says, “we believe that our world needs a beacon of hope and love right now (as always). We are called to be a light in the world!”
Al’s Angels does so much for Westport — from providing the inspirational Saugatuck bridge lights, to giving holiday meals and gifts to children (and their families) battling cancer, rare blood diseases, natural disasters and severe financial hardship. Click here to give back to this great organization.
The Cribari Bridge over the river in Saugatuck will be lit at 5 p.m. tonight. (Photo/January Stewart)
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Westport’s $217 million budget pays for a lot — everything from Public Works trucks, to Band-Aids at the Aspetuck Health District.
But one big item is missing: the Volunteer Emergency Medical Service.
Astonishingly. from the ambulance that helps save your life, to the Band-Aids they offer, they raise all their own funds.
Now that you’ve picked yourself up off the floor (and hopefully, don’t need medical attention for it), read on.
Our wonderful WVEMS recently kicked off their annual fundraising drive with letters to everyone in town.
It might be easy to overlook it, in the rush of year-end pleas by many very worthy organizations (and, um, others).
Don’t.
The request comes with a new option: to donate on a recurring (weekly, monthly or yearly) basis. That’s the lifeblood (ho ho) of many groups.
Right now, they’re fund raising for a crucial need: 3 new ambulances. They have life cycles of their own, and (like many of us) they’re headed toward their expiration date.
Two of the 3 have been paid for, by very generous donors. Residents need to pitch in for the third — and for everything inside.
“Ever since October 7 — when I woke up to an email from a friend in Jerusalem saying “I am safe, but war has begun” — I have felt a sense of shock and sorrow as probably you have, too.
“This has been made worse by my astonishment that so many, while protesting for peace and justice for the innocent people of Gaza, did not first condemn the slaughter, rape, torture and kidnapping of innocent people on that day.
“I also want a safe, peaceful resolution for Gaza. But I do not want to live in a world where the slaughter of innocents for any cause is contextualized as reasonable, or even as ‘glorious.’
“I realized I could do something to help myself cope with the grief and to hopefully let art do the talking.”
Elaine made 4 “prayer drawing videos,” with 7 hostage children. One is below; click on, to view.
“My hope is to keep all our hearts open to our shared humanity, through the eyes of these children. B’ Shalom and with love,” she adds.
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“Below Surface” — the award-winning 19-minute documentary about the Westport Weston Family Y’s AquaFitness program — is going national.
Its TV debut is tomorrow (Sunday, November 19, 10 a.m., Lifetime Channel).
It’s inspiring, powerful — and filled with Westporters you’ll recognize.
Connecticut viewers got a sneak peek this week. AquaFit instructor (and star of the film) Patty Kondub, and producer (and AquaFitter) Mary Lake Polan were interviewed on NBC’s CTLive.
Everyone into the pool. And then out, to watch tomorrow!
“A Father’s Promise” is a powerful story about the aftermath of Sandy Hook, and the mission to end gun violence in America.
It tells the story of musician Mark Barden. After his son Daniel was murdered 11 years ago, he became an activist. Along the way, he rediscovered his lost passion for music.
It’s appropriate that on December 7 — the night before the world premiere — a multi-artist benefit concert at New York University will raise funds (and be filmed for a documentary).
Among the performers: Sheryl Crow, Peter Frampton, Bernie Williams — and Aztec Two-Step 2.0, featuring Westporters Rex Fowler and Dodie Pettit.
Click here for tickets, and more information. Click below for the movie trailer:
Ever wonder what Christmas was like during World War II?
The Weston History & Culture Center’s Coley House is decorated like 80 years ago. It shows what life was like when 3 generations of one family occupied the home.
Guided tours are December 7 (2 and 3 p.m.); December 9, 10, 16, 17, 21 and January 4, 6 and 7 (1, 2 and 3 p.m.).
Tickets are $5 for Weston History & Culture Center members, $10 for non-members. Click here to purchase.
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The Levitt Pavilion is headed to Stamford.
Westport’s outdoor entertainment venue has teamed up with the Palace Theatre. Together they present DakhaBrakha — a world music quintet from Kyiv, Ukraine — this Sunday (November 19, 7 p.m., Palace Theatre, Stamford).
The group embraces folk, indie rock, pop, hip hop and avant-garde styles. Theie show includes global orchestrations and Ukrainian traditional instrumentation.
Click here for more information, including tickets.
Two former 1st selectpersons joined the town’s current chief executive at Christ & Holy Trinity Church, at a memorial service for longtime town volunteer Paul Hammond. Martha Hauhuth served from 1985-89; Jim Marpe served 2 terms prior to Jen Tooker.
From left: Jim Marpe, Martha Hauhuth, Jen Tooker. (Photo/Andrea Moore)
Westport resident John Murphy died Monday. He was 85.
A graduate of the College of the Holy Cross, he had a long career as a sales and marketing executive at the American Can Company.
His obituary says: “John was an eternal optimist, with a kind heart and open mind. His spirit was indomitable, and he was a prodigious hiker and reader, especially history. He was a people person, keenly interested in making connections and naturally curious about everyone he met. John sidestepped small talk, instead, he was out to disarm you, with charm and a wicked sense of humor….
“He was an avid newspaper reader, often found behind a copy of the Wall Street Journal (though an ardent, active Democrat), and always curious and engaged in the world around him. He loved to travel to the European countryside, especially Italy, taking in the history, people, and wonderful food. He loved the Yankees, and the Giants, and accepted his sons’ betrayal with the Patriots.
His and his college sweetheart, Connie Dixon, raised 3 children. He coached them in sports, and was president of the Redding Boys & Girls Club.
In his later years, John found a dear companion in Marleen Salko. They spent years enjoying yoga, walks on Westport’s beaches, and time with good friends. He made great friendships through the Y’s Men of Westport & Weston, especially the hiking group. He also volunteered driving people to medical appointments.
John is survived by his children Mark (Katya), Chris (Jennifer) and Kirsten Hedberg (Eric), and grandchildren Megan, Christopher and Valerie Murphy, abd Finn, Tess and Ingrid Hedberg; Diana and Charlie Healy; his longtime companion Marleen Salko, and sisters Mary and Annie Murphy. He was predeceased by his wife Connie.
A celebration of John’s life will be held at the Westport Library on Saturday, November 25 (2 to 4 p.m.). Family and friends are invited to gather and share memories. In lieu of flowers, please consider a donation to the Nature Conservancy.
John Murphy
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The weather was great yesterday for fishing, at Burying Hill Beach. Let’s hope the fish were biting for the stars of today’s “Westport … Naturally” photo.
And finally … it’s hard for a cartoon character to have a birthday.
But today is considered the official birthday for Mickey Mouse. On this day in 1928 — 95 years ago — he first debuted in the short film “Steamboat Willy.”
(If you found something to do this weekend — or any other day — on “06880,” please consider supporting your hyper-local blog. Just click here. Thank you!)
A few tickets remain for our first-ever “Historic Homes of 06880” house tour.
This Sunday’s event (November 5, 2 to 5 p.m.) is a chance to see 4 homes — all from the 1700s — that have been featured in our blog.
“06880” often reports on teardowns, new construction, and the loss of beloved landmarks.
But Sunday’s tour highlights the meticulous, loving, creative — and handsome — work that Westporters do to renovate, restore and reimagine homes that have stood for centuries.
All are on main roads. (No surprise: That’s where people built houses, back in the day.)
You’ve driven by all of them. Now you’ll get a chance to admire them from the inside.
There’s 29 North Avenue — the tiny house on the left heading north toward Staples High School. Annette Norton (the owner of Savvy + Grace) has spent 2 years on her top-to-bottom, inside-and-out renovation.
It draws appreciative looks from all who pass by (and was chronicled last spring on “06880”).
29 North Avenue
When the Angotti family bought the he 1707 Nathaniel Finch house at 6 Old Hill Road, it was sagging and dilapidated.
Rather than tearing it down, they embarked on a 2-year restoration project using authentic building material methods, without a single nail or screw. It is now one of the gems of the historic Old Hill neighborhood, a shining example that the past remains alive, more than 3 centuries later.
6 Old Hill Road
The home at 39 Cross Highway, near the corner of Weston Road, is much admired, very visible and extensively remodeled.
The homeowners’ work was recently rewarded with a Historic District Commission Preservation Award.
39 Cross Highway
Further east, 190 Cross Highway is a barn that stood when the British marched by on their way to Danbury. Today, it has been remodeled into a funky, very cool working artists’ studio.
190 Cross Highway barn
“06880” tells stories. As you explore all 4 houses, you’ll learn the stories behind each one.
Homeowners, members of “06880”‘s board of directors, and our friends and co-sponsors at KMS Team at Compass will point out cool aspects of each home. We’ll answer questions. You’ll get a brochure explaining the 4 houses too..”
Tickets are $60 each, $100 for 2. Proceeds help fund “06880”‘s work — which, as always, chronicles Westport’s past, present and future.
Click here for tickets. It’s our “Donate” page. Please note “Historic Homes of ‘06880’” with your order.
When Mark Lassoff moved to Westport, he had never thought about TV or radio. Upon graduating from Staples High School 4 years later, he’d made a major mark in both. (He also starred on the wrestling team.)
Mark’s journey took him to the University of Texas, work in the Lone Star State, then back to this area.
Mark Lassoff
He founded Framework Tech, a company that helps brands build engaging, broadcast-quality, instructional media.
Mark also produces online titles to help people learn skills like coding, design, and digital productivity.
Now he’s written a book.
“The Ultimate Guide to Creating Online Learning Video: A Comprehensive Handbook for Instructional Designers” blends professional insights, friendly advice, and light-hearted humor.
Mark gives Westport a nice shout-out in the introduction. He writes:
I took my first video production class in 1988.
My high school had a television studio. I was so excited that I enrolled in Mr. Green’s TV production class the first semester of my freshman year.
It was a different world then.
We recorded on 3/4-inch tapes. We used an analog linear editing machine. We produced graphics on a Chryon machine capable of 8-bit text. The text looked like it was being rendered by an Atari 400 in 1985. We had an Amiga 500
as well, but no one knew how to use it.
Still, we produced real video.
Early on, with my friend Evan Stein, I directed “Extra Help,” a live television
show where teachers provided homework help to students.
We had a full studio crew including camera operators, a floor manager, technical director and audio technician. None of us were older than 16.
From that crew, Emily Reich (now Emily Shem-Tov) would go on to work as a
director of product support operations for Netflix.
Evin Lowe stayed on the production side of things, becoming one of the few female gaffers on commercial television productions. Evin has worked on shows for Netflix and Stars.
As a senior I had the opportunity to work on the crew for “MiggsB on TV,” a local public-access talk show hosted by designer Miggs Burroughs.
“Miggs B on TV”
This was shot in the same professional-level studio as our local “News 12” production. I worked as the audio technician. In addition to getting yelled at by a real television director, I was able to place a microphone on female professional
wrestlers, musicians, and local nutcases.
By the time I was 18, I had produced everything from summer camp videos to local commercials. I had even had the opportunity to work on a couple of local cable news productions.
Fast forward 30 years. I now have my own studio. It’s less than 10 miles from
the high school where I took Mr. Green’s class. The Chyron machine has been
replaced with an Apple Mac and Adobe Photoshop. The expensive studio cameras have been replaced with prosumer video cameras that cost a fraction of what those old studio cameras did. The editing is non-linear, digital, and often
completed in Starbucks, using a laptop.
The world has changed… and it hasn’t.
I still feel a sense of excitement and joy when I see something I created on screen.
Sure, it’s not exactly Avatar, but I’m proud of the videos I produce and grateful I getto do this for a living.
Our little studio in Connecticut produces hundreds of hours of video each year that teach people career-defining skills like coding, graphic design, and digital
productivity.
We produce with a small crew, and without tremendously expensive equipment. Our whole studio cost less than $15,000.
We’re known in the industry for “punching above our weight,” and producing broadcast-level content with a small-scale budget.
Despite small budgets and limited resources, we’ve been successful over the last 12 years and have enrolled over 2.5 million people in our video courses.
The work we do in creating these videos helps people do their jobs, improve their careers, and learn critical skills.
The video you produce on workplace safety or chemical storage may not win an
Oscar, but it may save someone’s life.
The video you write on preventing workplace sexual harassment won’t win any Golden Globes, but it might help a new college graduate avoid painful workplace experiences.
This is important work. It’s also joyful work.
I recognize that I am privileged to do this for a living and remain forever in debt to a high school in Connecticut that introduced me to this field.
(“The Ultimate Guide to Creating Online Learning Video” by Mark Lassoff is available on Amazon.)
(“06880” often highlights the work of Staples High School students — current and past. To help us continue our work, please click here. Thank you!)
Have you ever wanted to peek inside 29 North Avenue — the tiny house on the left heading north toward Staples High School, now lovingly renovated by Annette Norton (and chronicled last spring on “06880”)?
29 North Avenue
What about the oldest house in Westport — built around 1683 on what is now Long Lots Road, and the only pre-1700s structure still in town?
The oldest home in Westport. (Photo/Larry Untermeyer)
Maybe a tour of 39 Cross Highway, the extensively remodeled home near the corner of Weston Road that recently won a Historic District Commission Preservation Award?
39 Cross Highway
Or — further up Cross Highway — a barn that stood when the British marched by on their way to Danbury, and is now a handsome/funky/very cool artists’ studio?
Cross Highway barn.
This fall, you can see all of them.
In one day.
The 4 unique properties are part of “06880”‘s first-ever “Historic Homes Tour.” The event — Sunday, November 5 (2 to 5 p.m.) — is a perfect event for our hyper-local blog.
“06880” often celebrates Westport’s rich history. We honor homeowners who preserve the past, while enhancing their neighborhoods by giving new life to old properties.
“06880” tells stories. As you explore all 4 houses, you’ll learn the stories behind each one.
Homeowners, and members of “06880”‘s board of directors, will point out cool aspects of each home. We’ll answer questions. You’ll get a brochure explaining the 4 houses too.
Our friends at KMS Team at Compass are sponsoring the “Historic Homes of ‘06880’ tour.”
Tickets are $60 each, $100 for 2. Proceeds help fund “06880”‘s work — which, as always, chronicles Westport’s past, present and future.
Click here for tickets. It’s our “Donate” page. Please note “Historic Homes of ‘06880’” with your order.’
Westport may not be the Perfume Capital of the World.
But between Baron Walter Langer von Langenhoff — the founder of Evyan Perfumes, whose 20th-century White Shoulders has been called “the iconic American fragrance” — and Claudia Cusani’s new Westport Parfum, we punch at least a little bit over our weight.
Claudia — a 1973 Staples High School graduate — is the owner of Cusani Perfumes.
She’s also a Berklee College of Music alum, a former jazz singer and holistic healer. But today’s we feature her new fragrance. Claudia writes:
Inspiration for a fragrance can come from almost anywhere. In the case of Westport Parfum, it came from my hometown. Last year, news of an upcoming high-school reunion got me feeling very sentimental about my old stomping grounds — what the French call la nostalgie — and I thought it would be interesting to translate those feelings into a fragrance.
Claudia Cusani
Westport, Connecticut is a small coastal town, full of history and pretty scenery and charming old architecture. When I was coming of age there, it was home to quite a few professional creative types, and the town had an air of genteel bohemianism. For me it was an encouraging environment, a place where I felt supported in exploring my own creative instincts.
At the same time, Westport is classic small-town New England, with its winding country lanes, rocky beaches and Colonial homes. A strong historical vibe pervades the town, perhaps best exemplified by the Revolutionary War cannons that have sat squarely on the town beach for 250 years (yes, really! — they’re a relic from the Battle of Compo Hill).
[EDITOR’S NOTE: Sorry, Claudia. They’re replicas. But the battle actually took place!]
And Westport’s agricultural roots as a nineteenth-century onion farming community — at one time it was the onion capital of the country — preceded its reputation as an artist’s haven, which began around 1910 and continues to this day.
Westport’s dualistic town character … its bedrock of tradition on the one hand, and its large creative community on the other … has always kept it interesting. Not just another suburban outpost, it’s got an energy that’s both cosmopolitan and comforting which draws in visitors from far and wide.
To name just a few of the many enjoyable things to do in Westport, there are beaches and marinas, a vibrant shopping district, fabulous restaurants, the Westport Playhouse, art galleries and historical societies, and the Levitt Pavilion for the Performing Arts (where yours truly was the teenaged singer in the first band to ever perform there, many moons ago).
Of course, like everyone everywhere, growing up meant navigating various rites of passage, some of which I managed more gracefully than others. I’m grateful for my family and friends in Westport who loved and nurtured me through those years.
There were wonderful townspeople as well, like Sally the Record Store Lady, everyone at The Remarkable Bookshop, the guys at Westport Pizzeria and Oscar’s Deli, and many memorable others. They were all a part of my formative years, and for that, and for the sheer fortune of growing up there, I feel blessed.
Westport Parfum — redolent of woody, smoky autumns and fresh, green-smelling springs, of rivers and beaches and saltwater and tides, of the deep cool of summer shade, of home and comfort and, most of all, of nostalgia.
It’s a place forever imprinted with cherished memories. And though I eventually went off to live in other parts of the world, in a certain way, it will always be home to me.
Westport is a fragrance in the aromatic fougère family. It opens with fresh citrus and herbal top notes, segues into a powdery green floral heart, and dries down to a smooth, woody-amber base. It has a dreamy, ethereal quality that is counterbalanced by the depths of its marine and amber facets.
Key notes are spearmint, sage, bergamot, basil, lavender, magnolia, rose, jasmine, ambrette seed, vanilla, benzoin, seaweed, opopanax and patchouli.
Westport is built around 2 olfactive themes. An earthy, agrestic theme — through the use of hay, oakmoss, vetiver, patchouli, seaweed and other notes — evokes the natural environment of beaches and saltwater, woods and grassy fields, bracing autumns ablaze with turning leaves.
And a nostalgic theme — expressed through a cozy amber accord of vanilla, benzoin and labdanum, plus the deep comfort of roses and magnolia — reflects my emotional connection to the town.
Like all of my fragrances, Westport is hand-blended, 100% plant-based, synthetic-free and unisex.
In composing Westport, I wanted to create a rich aromatic experience that resonates for you the way the town does for me. I hope you enjoy it.
(Inspired to try Westport Parfum? Click here. For more about Cusani Perfumes, click here. Hat tip: Susan Woog Wagner)
(Here’s a sweet idea: Please click here, to support “06880.” Thank you!)
As Westport grapples with the need for a new Long Lots Elementary School, the options — renovate or rebuild? — find echoes in a debate more than a quarter century ago.
In 1996, town officials debated what to do with Greens Farms Elementary.
The parallels with today are not exact. GFS had been closed more than a decade earlier, then converted into the Westport Arts Center.
But the controversy over the possible displacement of a major town institution — the WAC then, the Westport Community Gardens now — are similar.
100 plots, at the Westport Community Gardens just south of Long Lots Elementary School. (Drone photo/Franco Fellah)
On October 20, 1996, the New York Times published a long story in its Connecticut section about the issue. It was written by James Lomuscio, editor of the Westport News.
Alert “06880” reader (and former educator) Werner Liepolt found the piece online, and sent it to “06880.” It’s worth reading, to see how much has changed since then.
In 1920, in a gray-shingled house near Compo Beach in Westport, F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote ”The Beautiful and the Damned.” In 1950, J. D. Salinger holed up in a house on South Compo Road to write ”The Catcher in the Rye.” And James White, a native of Westport, recalls chatting with a struggling, young screenwriter named Rod Serling as he labored over ”Requiem for a Heavyweight” in the Westport Public Library.
The iconic (and Photoshopped) shot of F. Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald, Photoshopped in front of their Westport home.
Other kinds of artists have also been drawn to the town, a little more than an hour by train from New York City. The illustrator Stevan Dohanos, for example, gleaned many scenes for Saturday Evening Post covers from Westport. James Earle Fraser, famous for his ”End of the Trail” sculpture and for designing the buffalo nickel also lived in town. And there have been scores of Broadway and Hollywood performers, from Bette Davis to to Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward. ”Maybe it’s the geography, the folklore, or just something in the air,” said Burt Chernow, first president of the Westport Arts Center and current chairman of the town’s Arts Advisory Council.
It was that artistic heritage that Mr. Chernow, William Seiden (the First Selectman at the time) and others wanted to preserve when they formed the town-sponsored Westport Arts Center in the Greens Farms school in 1984. The building was one of five elementary schools shut down due to declining enrollments in the late 1970’s and early 1980’s.
When it opened, Mr. Seiden said the center would provide affordable studio space to struggling artists.
”Typically, when people with money come into communities the artists pack up and leave for less expensive areas,” said Mr. Seiden in 1984. ”We want to keep the artists here.” (Mr. Seiden himself had been a child actor who appeared in the ”Boys Town” movies and ”The Hunchback of Notre Dame.”)
With studio space in the center starting at $8.50 a square foot a month — compared to upwards of $25 a square foot elsewhere town — scores of artists have adopted the classrooms just as in other places they moved in on vacated factory space.
Burt Chernow
”We have over 100 members in the Theater Artists Workshop using the center, and there are more than 30 visual artists here,” said Mr. Chernow. ”At any given time you have close to 150 to 200 people, including musicians, using it.”
Over the years, many artists have come to consider the Greens Farms school a permanent location. Heida Hermanns, the concert pianist and president of Performers of Connecticut, even sold a Chagall painting to finance converting the school gymnasium into a concert hall in memory of her husband, Artur Holde.
But a lot has changed in Westport over the last 10 years. The elementary school age population has nearly doubled, going from 975 students in 1987 to 1,869 in 1996, according to school officials, and now the Board of Education wants to reclaim the Greens Farms building, a proposal that pits two town hallmarks, art and education, against each other.
The arts center is currently in its sixth year of a 10-year lease, and tomorrow the school superintendant, Dr. Paul Kelleher, is expected to deliver a list of options to the Board of Selectmen. Among them are: discontinuing the arts center’s lease in 2000, dissolving the lease sooner, or figuring out a way school children and artists can share the building.
”Let me tell you, we’re out of space, and if we have any more elementary growth as of next year we’ll have no classrooms for them,” said Dr. Kelleher. He said that despite additions and the use of modular classrooms the town’s three remaining elementary schools — Coleytown, Bedford and Kings Highway — are already at capacity.
”We’re beyond the point of posturing,” said Ira Bloom, chairman of the Westport Board of Education. ”We need space, and we need it quick.”
Of the five elementary schools closed more than a decade ago, school officials say the Greens Farms building, on nine acres at the corner of the Post Road and Morningside Drive South, is best suited to reuse. The Bedford Elementary School is now used as the town hall. Last month, the Saugatuck School officially opened as housing for elderly people. In the early 80’s the Burr Farms School was razed, and three years ago the town subdivided the land and sold the lots. The Hills Point school building, now being used for nursery schooling, is not properly designed for reuse as a school, Dr. Kelleher said.
After the original Saugatuck Elementary School on Bridge Street closed, it was adapted for use as co-op housing for older residents.
That leaves Greens Farms. School officials say it would cost substantially less — $11.5 million — to renovate there than it would to build a new school on town-owned property — $16 million.
The executive director of the Westport Arts Center, Marilyn Hersey, argued that students would be better served by a new building.
”Listen, the kids need a school, but they deserve a state-of-the-art new school,” said Ms. Hersey. Greens Farms, constructed in the early 1900’s, lacks accessibility for those with disabilities as well as adequate parking; there are asbestos-covered pipes and a driveway with an incline too steep for school buses in icy weather, she said. ”And why anyone would want to put an elementary school on the Post Road is beyond me,” she added.
Dr. Kelleher responded by citing engineering and architectural reports that say the old building can be reused. ”I am respectful of the history of the arts in Westport and the commitment of time and money to the arts center over the past 10 years,” he said. ”But I feel less respectful of their comments over the suitability of the building as a school.”
Herzl Emanuel, at work.
Herzl Emanuel, a sculptor, was one of the first artists to get a space at the center. A W.P.A. artist who later spent more than 30 years working in a small studio in Rome, Italy, Mr. Emanuel now works in the same room that was his son Adam’s third-grade classroom more than 25 years ago. Mr. Emanuel said he believes the school board wants the Greens Farms building because art is no longer a community-wide priority.
Westport, he said, ”is no longer characterized by a huge knowledgeability and appreciation of the arts. Their foremost concerns are the usual prosaic interests in material things: their homes, their vacations and their shopping malls. In short, we are no longer different from other communities in the area.”
Caroly Van Duyn, a multimedia artist who works in paint and clay, and who has been at the center for four years, agreed the character of the town has changed. ”I grew up in town near Old Mill Beach, and my mother was an artist and my father a designer, and all of their friends were artists,” she said. ”So, growing up as an artist in Westport was nothing unusual.
”This conflict has been a real eye-opener to me because I’ve come to realize that not everyone here is supportive of the arts,” added Ms. Van Duyn. ”Where are we going to disperse to? If this building is reclaimed, some people will go into their homes and be less visible, or they will move out of town, which is sad for the community.”
Ms. Hersey describes the center as a community resource through its concerts, art shows and educational programs. ”We give back to the town’s children $100,000 a year in programming,” said Ms. Hersey. ”There are also scholarships to high schools in Westport and Weston. There’s the Young Artists Competition.”
Mr. Bloom, of the Board of Education, said that while he acknowledged the arts center’s value to the community there was a more pressing need. ”I spent a lot of time there with my own daughter who is involved in the theater groups,” he said. ”But I think you have to look at the big picture and the changes in demographics in recent years. Our primary responsibility has to be to adequately educate our children.”
Mr. Bloom added that reclaiming the Greens Farms building would not preclude establishing an arts center elsewhere in town. ”In my judgment that’s a problem that can be solved,” he said.
Greens Farms Elementary was ultimately reclaimed, and reopened …
Joseph Arcudi, Westport’s First Selectman, has suggested that the artists and the Board of Education share the building. ”The win-win situation would be for both the arts center and the Board of Ed to share it,” said Mr. Arcudi. ”I think it can be done.”
But Mr. Chernow fears a shared use would be ”the worst of both possible worlds.”
”You wouldn’t get the school of the 21st century, and you wouldn’t get the art center that Westport deserves,” he said.
Mr. Chernow added that any savings the town would net reclaiming Greens Farms would be offset by the cost setting up a new arts center.
Early this month, art and education stood side by side at a ceremony at the Kings Highway elementary school, celebrating the restoration of two John Steuart Curry frescoes, ”Comedy” and ”Tragedy,” painted in 1934.
”I’ve looked through decades of old newspaper clippings,” said Alice Shelton, a chairwoman of the Kings Highway P.T.A. ”In 1925 Westport was described as the town that believed in schools. In another article I found it was called a town made famous for its artists.
”I hope that these trends will continue,” she added, ”so that Westport will be known in the 21st century as a community that continues to care about its schools and its artists.”
Ultimately, Greens Farms was reclaimed, and reopened as an elementary school. The Westport Arts Center moved to its own building on Riverside Avenue (today it’s MoCA of Westport, on Newtown Turnpike.).
What’s next for Long Lots, and the Westport Community Gardens? That chapter has not yet been written.
… and the Westport Arts Center moved to its own building, on Riverside Avenue.
(“06880” was the first media outlet to report on the Long Lots/ Community Gardens story. We’ll continue to cover it. And we hope readers will continue to support our work. Please click here to contribute. Thank you!)
First it was National Hall. The handsome brick building on the west side of the Saugatuck River housed — among other things — a bank, newspaper, meeting hall, and (in 1884) the first few months of Horace Staples’ new school.
In the 1900s it became Fairfield Furniture. Painted white, its 3 floors were filled with — you guessed it — sofas, tables and the like.
The roof was filled with something else: a century of bird droppings.
When the Tauck family considered buying it in the late 1980s, that almost became a structural-defect deal-breaker.
But the Taucks persevered. Their painstaking renovation returned it to its original splendor, this time as a boutique hotel and high-end restaurant.
In the years since, the rechristened National Hall has been the site of other restaurants, offices and a real estate firm.
Last week it — well, the top floor window and adjacent molding — was the subject of our Photo Challenge. (Click here to see.)
Fred Cantor, Rick Leonard, Diane Silfen, Andrew Colabella, Molly Alger, Jonathan McClure, Jim Dickenson, Seth Braunstein, Kenny Gilbertie, Jodie Aujla and Clark Thiemann quickly knew the answer.
Most of them are longtime Westporters. All have, I am sure, sat in traffic often, gazing up at that sight: one of our town’s most historic structures.
Speaking of history: Who remembers Ross Perot’s run for president in 1996? (I didn’t; I thought his only attempt was in ’92.)
It lives on in Westport. But where?
(Photo/James R. Morgan)
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In 1958 Charlie Taylor, his parents, and younger siblings John and Fran moved to Westport from rural western Kentucky.
Charlie Taylor, in the 1959 Staples yearbook.
It was a culture shock for the Staples High School sophomore. He found friends on the football team and Downshifters hot rod club, and retains a fondness for the town.
Though long removed from here — he’s had successful dual careers with Vanderbilt University and as a Nashville singer/songwriter — he is an avid “0688o” reader.
This summer, Charlie’s thoughts turn to Mahackeno. Today’s it’s a thriving co-ed day camp, on the grounds of the Westport Weston Family YMCA.
Back in the day — when the Y was downtown — it was an equally beloved boys-only camp, in the woods off Wilton Road. Charlie writes:
Ah, Camp Mahackeno!
I was a counselor in training there when I was 15. Bruce Jamison was the director. He had come to Westport from a Y in Massachusetts, and was probably in his late 20’s with a young family. He was an early advisor to the Downshifters as well, along with football and track coach Paul Lane.
Summers were spectacular, with canoe trips full of 6-year-old campers out on the Saugatuck River, and swimming lessons.
Swimming in the Saugatuck River.
All-night campouts were a highlight of the summer for the kids. I remember my first romantic adventures that summer with an older counselor, and my first beer party. (The names are redacted to protect the innocent.)
I remember folk songs around the campfire by Steve Yollen, and in the mornings campers in a circle around the flag saying the Pledge of Allegiance.
Pledge of Allegiance, at Camp Mahackeno.
Eventually my dad hired Bruce to work for the nascent American Cancer Society. He had a brilliant career there, before starting his own fundraising consulting career in Denver.
Westport artist Stephan Dohanos used Camp Mahackeno — and campers there — for this Saturday Evening Post cover.
Camp Mahackeno was the winter headquarters for the Downshifters. It was well equipped, with acetylene torches for metal work. I remember a chain hoist rigged for engine removal/installations as well. Maybe it was attached to a tripod of metal poles.
A magazine story on the Downshifters.
There was a lot of camaraderie there. A radio helped us stay abreast of the newest hits of the day on the night shift from WINS, WABC, Murray the K and Alan Freed.
The Downshifters at Camp Mahackeno, with a Model A Ford.
Westport was a hidden gem back then. It was close to New York, but just far away enough to have its own pristine identity.
Put another way: It was a million miles away from my home town of Mayfield, Kentucky (or what’s left of it now, after a tornado almost totally ripped it off the map in December, 2021; this week, it endured extreme flooding).
To move from rural Kentucky in 1958, and then grow up in Westport, were two radically different experiences. I’m lucky I was able to experience those two different worlds as a teenager.
When I went back to visit my friends in Mayfield during high school, people thought I was making up stories about Staples and the Downshifters, the beach, the hot rods, and of course access to theaters in New York.
Not to mention Paul Newman sightings, working for the Bedford estate on Beachside Avenue, lifeguarding at Compo, Burying Hill and the rest.
Westport shaped me into who I have become. I’ll be forever grateful to my dad for having the vision to move our family there.
Since 1958, the high school drama troupe has produced hundreds of musicals, dramas, Shakespeare plays, even an original anti-war show that won national awards and ended up at the UN.
Some people know the back story: In the ’50s, Staples student Christopher Lloyd asked his English teacher, Craig Matheson, for help starting a drama club.
Yes, that Christopher Lloyd. The rest is theatrical history.
Ten years later, Mark Groth served as president of Players’ Stage and Technical Staff. Now — nearly 6 decades after that — he has a story to tell.
And it involves Christopher Lloyd.
“Great Scott!”
You hear that voice, and you know immediately who it is.
I was watching the “Mandalorian” (I know, I’m slow), and I heard it.
Holy %#*!! That’s Christopher Lloyd, as a bad guy.
He is now is 84 years old. Back at the Players’ 50th anniversary alumni celebration, Peter Hirst and I had a chance to talk to Craig Matheson about Players’ history.
He told us stories about Christopher Lloyd, and some “interesting” tales about what he was like back then.
Craig was incredibly supportive of him, and made sure he graduated. Chris really was the first Staples Player alum.
1958 yearbook photo and writeup. (Courtesy of Jack Backiel)
Back to now. I am not a big fan of “fan expos,” with their stable of “celebrities,” and all manner of costumes, merchandise and true believers in full array.
But I saw that Christopher Lloyd would be at the Denver Convention Center, not far from my home.
The ticket was mostly affordable attendance, with a stunning cost for the live autograph session.
As Doc Brown would say, “well, what the hell.”
The room is about 1 1/2 football fields. It held over 200 exhibitors. There were 40 signing tables for autographs of stars.
I got there at 3 p.m. for a 4 p.m. signing time. Thirty serious fans were already in line — including a full-dress Doc Brown (white coat, white wig, carrying an RC car controller with antenna).
They were selling posters, model DeLoreans (at about the price of a real one), key chains, etc.
Chris showed up at 4:20, and started signing. He took a break just as I got to the front.
I was up first when he came back. I introduced myself as a 1967 Staples Player from Westport. I told him that Craig Matheson, who he might remember, spoke of him as being there at the beginning.
I said Craig has told us some stories about him. He smiled said, “let’s not get into that.”
I explained it was apparent he was the very first Players alumnus. I wanted his autograph to put in the Players archives, so folks could see it and celebrate his history.
I told him Craig was very proud of his trifecta resume of cinema, television and live theater.
He was very pleased, and signed the sheet I brought. I told him it was only 6 decades, but if he would accept, I would like to finally give him his own Players t-shirt.
I had my 50th anniversary t-shirt that I had only worn once, newly washed and ironed. He was very moved.
I handed it to him, and asked if I could get a photo. He smiled, held it up and thanked me.
I thanked him for a lifetime of enjoyment of his work. He reached out and shook my hand.
It was an honor to meet and talk with him. He is a charming man — and still working.
And — speaking of the future: “Back to the Future: The Musical” is in previews right now. The official opening date is August 3.
(“o6880” covers Westport’s past, present and future. Please click here to support our work, with a tax-deductible contribution. Thank you!)
Colorado Governor Jared Polis takes a selfie with Christopher Lloyd. (All photos/Mark Groth)
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