Pics Of The Day #2303

Compo Beach sunrise through the pavilion … (Photo/Jimmy Izzo)

… and over the jetty (Photo/Chuck Davis)

“06880” Podcast: Carleigh Welsh

From Willie Nelson, Cyndi Lauper and Tina Turner to Twiddle, DNR and the Hall Family children’s shows, the Levitt Pavilion entertains, energizes and inspires audiences.

It all happens underneath the stars, on the banks of the Saugatuck River.

And — except for those mega-stars — it’s all free.

Carleigh Welsh is the Levitt’s longtime director of marketing and communications. The other day, she strolled a few feet from the Pavilion to the Westport Library to chat about the summer-long series: its history, its impact on audiences, and how it all happens.

Click below for our conversation. It’s quite, um, entertaining.

(“06880” is your hyper-local blog — and a non-profit. Please click here to support our work. Thank you!)

Roundup: Linda Blair, Hubert Humphrey, Appletree Oak …

Yesterday’s “06880” Roundup noted the imminent destruction of a large white oak tree on Appletree Trail. A new home and swimming pool will be built on the property.

It did not happen as scheduled. Neighbor Cathy Morrison reports, “We may have temporarily halted the tree removal. The tree people needed access to remove it from our private street, and the residents won’t let the large trucks and equipment have access from our street. We pay to pave and plow it; the town doesn’t.”

White oak tree on Appletree Trail. (Photo/Cathy Morrison)

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Westport Volunteer Emergency Medical Services always needs help. Here’s your chance.

EMT (Emergency Medical Technician) and EMR (Emergency Medical Responder) classes begin August 31. They run through December.

Classes are generally held Tuesdays and Thursdays, with some Saturdays.

They’re thorough. They’re intense. They’re also very important.

Click here for details. And thanks to all who enroll.

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The death of director William Friedkin yesterday brought renewed attention to one of his most notable films.

Describing “The Exorcist,” William Grimes writes: “it was a suspenseful, often gruesome, cinematic study of evil at work in the modern world — evil conceived in almost medieval terms.”

Linda Blair, as the possessed girl, gave a terrifying performance enhanced by eye-popping special effects. In a cinematic moment that entered into legend, she spewed a jet of green vomit — actually a blend of oatmeal and pea soup — straight into the face of a priest played by Jason Miller. Even more startling, during the exorcism later in the film, her head spun full circle on her shoulders, grinning maniacally.

Westporters of a certain age remember Linda Blair well. She was a 14-year-old Staples High School student in 1973 — and had been working as a model and actress for years — when she was chosen from 600 others for the role of Regan.

She earned a Golden Globe Award, was nominated for an Oscar — and received death threats for her “blasphemy.”

Linda Blair in “The Exorcist.” (Photo courtesy of Warner Bros., via the New York Times)

The Times obituary notes:

The film, released in late December 1973, became a phenomenal hit, one of Hollywood’s top-grossing movies to date, with ticket sales of more than $200 million (the equivalent of about $1.3 billion today). It was also the first horror film to be nominated for a best picture Oscar. (It lost to “The Sting.”)

In New York, audiences lined up for hours in the freezing cold, while scalpers sold tickets for three times their face value. Vincent Canby, in The New York Times, dismissed the film as “claptrap” but pronounced it “the biggest thing to hit the industry since Mary Pickford, popcorn, pornography and ‘The Godfather.”

Click here for the full obituary. Click here for more on Linda Blair.

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In the long, convoluted history of civil rights in America, the 1948 Democcratic Party’s plank — which led President Truman to desegregate the armed forces — is often forgotten.

But it — and the role played by Minneapolis mayor (and US Senate candidate) Hubert Humphrey were crucial moments.

New York Times journalist, award-winning author and Columbia University professor Samuel Freedman explores those days in his new book, “Into the Bright Sunshine: Young Hubert Humphrey and the Fight for Civil Rights,” at the Westport Library on August 23 (7 p.m.). Books will be available for sale and signing.

There are 2 Westport connections.

Freedman will be interviewed on the Trefz Forum stage by journalist/author/editor Daniel Gross, who lives here.

And last year Freedman’s son Aaron married Carly Machlis. She grew up here, and graduated from Staples High School in 2009.

Click here for more information on Freedman’s appearance.

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The Weston History & Culture Center offers 2 free summer program, for children ages 6-10.

“1940s Fun & Games Kids Camp” runs Thursday, August 17. Children will play with toys and games from the ’40s, and create crafts and art work from the era.

“Weston Illustrated Art Camp” follows on Wednesday, August 23. Both are 10 to 11:30 a.m. Youngsters will learn about artists who lived and worked in Weston. They’ll go on a scavenger hunt through the “Weston Illustrated” exhibit; create a cartoon strip, sculpt with clay, and create a toy.

Both programs will be taught by WHCC executive director Samantha Fargione, assisted by college and high school interns majoring in history. Click here to register, and for more information.

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Abstract art?

(Photo/Mark Mathias)

No.

A tree at Winslow Park — and today’s “Westport … Naturally” featured photo.

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And finally … back to Linda Blair (story above). In the 1980s — a decade after starring in “The Exorcist” — she dated singer Rick James for 2 years.

He wrote “Cold Blooded” about her, after she had an abortion without his knowledge.

(Where else but “06880” will you find Linda Blair and Hubert Humphrey together? That’s why this blog is “Where Westport Meets the World.” Please click here to help us continue our work. Thank you!)

E-Sports: Weston High Prepares For Another Varsity Season

It’s early August. Soon, high school sports teams start pre-season practice. The fall season is just a few weeks away.

At Weston High, that means cross country, field hockey, football, soccer, swim and dive, and volleyball.

Plus e-sports.

Don’t laugh. Don’t make snide remarks about “sitting in front of a computer playing video games.” Don’t show your ignorance.

E-sports is a billion-dollar business. Nearly 200 colleges offer $10 million in scholarships to players.

Weston — which includes e-sports as a varsity sport — is a leader in Connecticut. And Connecticut is a leading state, nationally.

Dan Ungar is the Trojans’ coach. It’s one of his many jobs in Weston — he’s also a special education paraprofessional, and runs an after-school fitness program — and his passion for it is clear.

Dan Ungar was featured on the PlayVS e-sports website.

He’s quick to note that e-sports — aka “online gaming competition” — really is a sport.

It involves teamwork. It demands communication, collaboration, critical thinking, creativity, problem-solving and leadership.

The action moves fast. Situations change rapidly. Teammates must be laser-focused.

And they’re in it to win it.

The Connecticut Interscholastic Athletic Conference (CIAC) oversees all high school sports in the state. They were the first state organization in the US to sanction e-sports, back in 2018.

Five years later, the National Federation of High School Associations — the official US oversight body — has e-sports partnerships with nearly 2 dozen states.

Games include League of Legends, Rocket League and Super Smash Bros. Ultimate. One season runs from fall through December. A second one is January through the end of April.

Weston High School Trojans

Ungar is a full varsity coach. He goes to the same meetings, and is held to the same standards, as any basketball or lacrosse coach. He has “the full backing” of school administrators.

Athletic director Mark Berkowitz often asks, “What do you need?” Ungar says.

(Other resources come from PlayVS, the official CIAC and NFHS e-sports platform partner.)

E-sports players are, in many ways, treated equally too. Flyers show upcoming matches; results are announced on the morning TV show; the team has a dinner, and gives awards.

There are differences, of course. Instead of crowded bleachers at fields or the gym, only a few spectators fit in the computer lab, where competitions are held.

Though meets are virtual, the state championship is live, at Quinnipiac University’s modern e-sports arena.

“That was like playing with the pros,” Ungar says. “It was so exciting. The kids deserved that atmosphere. They represent our school, and are proud of it. They work hard.”

Their hard work pays off. Both captains who graduated this June earned e-sports scholarships — one to Clark University, the other to Clarkson.

Ungar — who was one of the first 8 e-sports coaches in the country, when he started 6 years ago — has a roster of about 20 players. (Some schools in the state have up to 60.)

They represent “every type of kid imaginable,” the coach says.

“We’ve got both genders, and non-binary. They’re difference races. But they’ve become a team, and a family.”

Like any varsity coach, Ungar balances the demands of the present with the need to build for the future. This year, he’s excited to welcome a talented crop of incoming 9th graders.

“The sky’s the limit,” he says — referring both to the Weston team, and the future of e-sports.

ESPN airs competitions. They sell out Madison Square Garden.

Ungar’s e-sports players dream of being engineers, computer and software programmers and game designers.

One may even become a professional e-sports player.

Hey, any varsity athlete can dream…

Pic Of The Day #2302

Old Mill tidal current (Photo/June Rose Whittaker)

Roundup: Long Lots School, Appletree Trail, Beach Tents …

This will no doubt be the most listened-to “Westport … What’s Happening” podcast ever.

In this week’s edition — sponsored, as always, by the Y’s Men of Westport and Weston — 1st Selectwoman Jen Tooker and Long Lots School Building Committee chair Jay Keenan chat about the future of the elementary school.

Keenan begins with a brief background of the committee itself. He describes 3 options — renovate the existing structure, construct an addition, or build a new school on the property — and discusses their implications (buses, parking, draining, neighbors) and stakeholders (including the Westport Community Gardens and youth sports).

Options for the Gardens, Keenan says, are that they remain; that they’re modified, or that they’re relocated elsewhere on the property.

“Our main priority is the school, and the children,” the chair notes. “All the rest is juggling” a variety of elements.

The committee’s goal is to have a report to Tooker by the end of August. That will be followed by presentations to the Board of Finance, Board of Education and Representative Town Meeting, with requests for money to complete the design work.

Keenan hopes for “a bid-able set of drawings” within 10-12 months.

Click below to hear the full podcast.

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One real estate change that is definitely happening: This white oak tree at 22 Appletree Trail is scheduled to be removed, perhaps as early as today.

(Photo/Cathy Morrison)

It will be replaced by a new home, and pool.

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Speaking of the beach: What’s with the recent epidemic of tents?

Yesterday afternoon, I counted more than 2 dozen at Compo. More than half were blue-and-white striped.

(Photo/Dan Woog)

Back in the day — like, 2019 — tents were few and far between. Now they’ve taken over.

I’d love to know what’s behind this sudden surge in tents, generally — and, more particularly, this special style.

Please click “Comments” below.

But be nice. Don’t throw shade.

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On Saturday, “06880” featured some very cool drone photos of Longshore Sailing School.

They were shot by Brandon Malin. The multi-talented 2020 Staples High School graduate is a rising University of Michigan senior, noted lighting designer and photographer, who has spent this summer working at the Sailing School.

On Saturday night, at their annual staff dinner  — just a few hours after his photos appeared — Brandon received the “Jimmy A” Spirit Award. It’s Longshore Sailing’s highest honor.

Named for Jim Adelman — a longtime employee and Westport resident — it is given each year to a staff member who embodies exemplary character, a willingness to put others before themselves, and a passion for Longshore Sailing School.

LSS president Jane Pimentel says, “Brandon is a jack of all trades, and a master of them all. He has the best interest of Longshore Sailing School and its staff on his mind at all times. He is a kind soul, someone you can depend on, and just a great human. He is a great example of what it means to represent the spirit of Jimmy A.”

Brandon Malin, with his Jimmy A Award.

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Today, the Westport Rotary Club premieres a new video podcast.

“Westport Rotary Speaks” is hosted by member Ifeseyi Adedoyin. The 3- to 4-minute videos will post at least once a month on Rotary’s website, and its social media platforms (Instagram @Westportrotary; YouTube WestportRotarySpeaks; LinkedIn Westport Rotary Club).

This month’s shows will focus on LobsterFest. Next month, club members will discuss a variety of topics.

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Lou Weinberg’s has a “real” job: He’s a teacher.

His volunteer job as chair of the Westport Community Gardens takes a ton of time too.

But Lou still finds time to be a wildlife photographer.

Today’s “Westport … Naturally” image is one of his bumblebee shots. Ever the educator, Lou writes:

“Thousands of bees, including this, use the Gardens and Long Lots Preserve as a food source and for habitat. This bumblebee adds to the pollen sack on its leg by gathering from shrubby Saint John’s Wort located in the Gardens.

“If you like feeding bees, plant St. John’s Wort! Nature wins!”

(Photo/Lou Weinberg)

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And finally … in honor of Brandon Malin, and his Longshore Sailing School award (story above):

(Another week … and another week of “06880.” We started in 2009, and have never missed a day. Please help us continue. Click here to make a contribution. And thank you!)

 

“Bea’s Folly”: Looking Back At A Legendary Home

John Kerry, George McGovern, Eugene McCarthy and Bella Abzug held fundraisers there.

Ted Kennedy practiced his speech in a bathroom there.

Robert Redford, Pete Seeger and Don McLean all hung out there, underneath the iconic peace sign.

107 Harbor Road, aka “Bea’s Folly.”

“There” is 107 Harbor Road. Known also as “Bea’s Folly,” the house — owned and renovated by Bea and Sid Milwe, then by their daughter Liz and her husband Peter Wormser — is hardly the oldest home in Westport.

But it is as historic as any from our town’s storied past.

The Milwe family has some history too. In the 1950s, Sid worked in Bloomingdale’s fur department. Paid on commission, summers were notoriously tough.

He tried to unionize the department store’s employees. He was promptly fired — and blacklisted.

Bea and Sid Milwe.

Sid borrowed money from family and friends. He and Bea — a social worker — bought land in Stratford, and opened Stratford Town Fair.

The unique department store, with departments like dresses and records, but also a diner, bakery and Ferris wheel, was quite successful.

It was also quite a ways from the Milwes’ home in Mamaroneck. Hunting for a home closer to Stratford, they wandered off I-95 Exit 17.

On Saugatuck Shores’ Marine Avenue, they spotted a “for rent” sign.

After 6 years there, they bought an unheated summer home at 107 Harbor Road. They hired local architect Larry Michaels to winterize and modernize it. Henry Wright added special details, like a circular staircase and mahogany molding.

Bea’s Folly is filled with artwork, like this piece behind state legislators Will Haskell and Jonathan Steinberg at a fundraiser.

Inspired by a trip to Japan, the Milwes added a rock garden in back, where the Saugatuck River meets Long Island Sound. A teenager named Bruce Beinfield helped.

The boulders came from Gault. Sid hired a crane, to lift them over the house.

Bea and Sid collected sculptures from Westporters like Stanley Bleifeld, and works from their many artists friends.

The Milwes became important parts of the community. Sid bought the Country Gal building on Main Street, and Center Court indoor tennis. He was elected to the Zoning Board of Appeals. (He was also a founder of the American Shakespeare Theater in Stratford.)

The couple were politically active too. Sid started Businessmen for Nuclear Disarmament. Bea began a Westport chapter of the International League for Peace and Freedom.

Together, they helped found Fairpress — a more liberal alternative to the conservative Westport News — and the downtown World Affairs Center.

When a group of Westporters lay down on the Post Road bridge to protest President Nixon’s bombing of Cambodia, Bea and Liz were among them.

The group was arrested, and brought to the police station. Sid showed up, with donuts and coffee — for them, and the officers.

“We’re all one community here,” he said.

Robert Redford attended a fundraiser for Congressional candidate Toby Moffett. Liz’s niece Alison (right) seems unimpressed.

Bea went back to college. At Sarah Lawrence, she learned how to make documentary films. One followed 3 Westport mothers who struggled to make ends meet. Another was on life after prison; a third, on inspiring Bridgeport women.

Bea filmed women’s conferences around the world, and followed Hillary Clinton to China.

Back home, the large living room was a gathering place for political candidates — usually progressives. Several statewide campaign managers, who could not afford housing in Fairfield County, lived gratis for months with the Milwes.

107 Harbor Road helped filled the coffers — and launch the careers — of Connecticut politicians like Congressmen Toby Moffett and Jim Himes, and state legislators Jonathan Steinberg and Will Haskell.

“Bea’s Folly” was also the site of salon dinners. “There were lively discussions,” Liz recalls. “People did not always have the same points of view.”

A neighbor who attended said, “I’m a Republican. But I love Bea!”

It was not all politics, all the time. Sid hosted Tuesday night poker games in the living room, with guests like actor Mason Adams and TV host Sonny Fox.

Eventually, Liz’s husband Peter — an architect — designed a separate poker room, over the garage.

Another memorable event at Bea’s Folly: the wedding of Liz Milwe and Peter Wormser.

Their 4th of July fireworks parties were legendary. Up to 400 guests filled the property. “There was everyone, from Richard Blumenthal, Max and Barbara Wilk, Bill Buckley and Tracy Sugarman, to my parents’ butcher,” Liz says. “My parents loved them all.”

Still, politics were an integral part of the Milwes’ lives. Sid supported a Bridgeport breakfast program run by the Black Panthers. When one of their leaders was charged with a crime he did not commit, Sid and Bea put up their home as collateral for bail.

Decades after the 1960s, teenagers hung out on the Milwes’ deck to work on Will Haskell’s State Senate campaign.

Now the time has come for Liz to downsize. She found a smaller place around the corner, on her beloved Saugatuck Island. A “wonderful couple” bought Bea’s Folly. She moves in later this month.

Liz will take some of the art, and the peace sign that her late husband Peter made years ago.

“It’s sad, but it’s a new chapter,” she says. “I’ll still be part of this wonderful community. And I’ll still have Bea and Sid inside me.”

Liz Milwe inherited her mother’s entertaining gene. As an RTM member, she has hosted many parties for the entire non-partisan body, and for her District 1 residents specifically. This Instagram screenshot from her grateful RTM colleague Jimmy Izzo.

First though, there’s one more event.

More than a decade ago, Bea met a young congressional hopeful named Jim Himes. “I’m getting too old,” she told her daughter Liz. “You run a fundraiser for him.”

On August 20, she’ll host another — for his 8th House campaign. “It’s the nicest way I know way to honor the house, and my parents,” Liz says.

FUN FACT: Sid Milwe gave the house its name — “Bea’s Folly” — as it was being renovated. “Things kept getting more and more complicated,” Liz remembers.

“But he loved the house too.”

(If it happens — or happened — in Westport, you’ll read about it on “06880.” Please click here to support our work. Thank you!)

Pic Of The Day #2301

Compo Beach clouds (Photo/Michael Tomashefsky)

Photo Challenge #449

Remember Ross Perot?

If you’re at the Greens Farms railroad station, and glance up at a certain utility pole, you’ll see his 1996 campaign sticker.

That was his second presidential campaign. He received 8% of the votes, less than half of his 19% in ’92 (which, some historians believe, tilted the election to Bill Clinton).

Perot’s ’96 run for the White House is long forgotten. But his sticker endures. (Click here to see.)

Alan Shinbaum, Nanette Buziakk Lexow and Andrew Colabella all have seen it at the station, and identified it correctly. They had a lot more success than Ross Perot’s political ambitions.

Today’s Photo Challenge may be another tough one.

But, as I learned long ago: Our “06880” readers are a very observant bunch.

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

(Photo/Jodie Brooke Aujla)

Art In The (Community) Garden

Dozens of Westporters of all ages flocked to the Community Gardens yesterday.

Gardeners, artists and art-lovers alike celebrated the Gardens’ 20th anniversary with an “Art in the Gardens” event.

In collaboration with the Artists Collective of Westport, they created art in the 100-plot garden itself, and the adjoining Long Lots Preserve.

Community Gardens director Lou Weinberg calls it “a smashing success. People seeing this for the first time really get that ‘Oh, wow!’ reaction.

“It’s a pleasure to show them what we’ve created here. We are proud to share these 2 fabric-of-the-community, environmental and educational assets.”

Next up: a Westport Community Gardens pop-up (August 27, 1 p.m.).

(All photos/Lou Weinberg)

Community Gardens members Pam Barkentin and Karen LaCosta coordinated the event, with help from Miggs Burroughs of the Westport Artists Collective.

(“06880” covers Westport’s arts and environmental news — and much more — regularly. Please click here to support our work. Thank you!)