Tag Archives: Chuck D

Roundup: Inn At Longshore, Chuck D, Playhouse Piano …

Renovations to the Inn at Longshore — long awaited, and much needed — will be presented to the Planning & Zoning Commission on Monday (April 8, 7 p.m., Zoom).

Interior work includes a new HVAC system, replacement of windows and doors, more guest rooms (and renovation of current rooms), updated ballroom and drawing rooms, updated lobby, completely remodeled kitchen, plumbing and electrical upgrades, and ADA compliance updates.

Architect Ken Nadler has proposed a new entrance with a porte cochère.

Other exterior renovations include a series of patios extending across the length of the building with access to the lawn and shoreline, new landscaping, upgraded exterior lighting and signage, and replacement of siding and roofing.

Site improvements also include a new drive entrance, enhanced parking, and a robust landscaping plan.

The estimated cost is $5 million.

Click here for the Zoom link to the P&Z meeting. It will also be livestreamed on www.westportct.gov, and shown on Optimum Channel 79.

To see all P&Z materials, click here; then scroll down to 260 Compo Road South.

Inn at Longshore plan, prepared by LandTech. Click on or hover over to enlarge.

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A little rain failed to dampen the VersoFest crowd last night.

Five days of panels, workshops, performances and more kicked off with Chuck D — the front man of Public Enemy — in conversation with Johnny Temple of Akashic Books.

His talk ranged from music, TV and film to politics and his new book.

VersoFest continues tonight with the Lemon Twigs and DJ Hysterica. Click here for a full schedule of VersoFest ’24, and more information.

Chuck D with Johnny Temple, last night at the Westport Library … (Photo/Dinkin Fotografix)

… and the sold-out crowd. Most VersoFest events are free.

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The last few days of rain and wind have brought down trees, all around town.

This was the scene (below) early today on Hillandale Road.

It was quite a welcome to the neighborhood. The new owners moved in a month ago.

(Photo/Bob Weingarten)

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Accidental overdoses kill 2.5 times more Americans than car crashes.

On April 10 (7 to 8 p.m., Toquet Hall), you can learn how to recognize an opioid overdose, and use Narcan to save a life.

Margaret Watt, Westport Prevention Coalition (WPC) co-chair and prevention director at Positive Directions, provides the training. 30 Narcan kits will be available to participants. Click here to register.

In addition, from now through June the WPI is making the documentary “If They Had Known” available for streaming.

The 35-minute film was created by the college friends and family of a college student who died after mixing alcohol and Xanax. It shows the dangers of drinking while taking drugs like antidepressants or ADHD meds.

To receive the streaming link, click here.

Both events are offered in conjunction with Staples High School’s annual “Invest in Yourself Day,” which prepares seniors for life after high school and recognizes Alcohol Awareness Month.

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As the Westport Country Playhouse transitions to a year-round performing arts center, they need a permanent, on-stage piano — not a rental.

They’re hoping someone can donate a piano, for upcoming concerts on their historic stage. As a not-for-profit 501(c)(3) organization, the Playhouse will provide a letter acknowledging the piano donation for tax purposes,

To comply with artist contracts, they’re seeking one of these:

  • 9-foot Steinway Model D concert grand
  • 9-foot Yamaha Model C series (CFX)
  • 7-foot Steinway Model B classic grand
  • 7-foot Yamaha Model C series (CF6).

If you — or someone you know — is downsizing, or for any other reason can donate a piano, email westportcountryplayhousepiano@gmail.com.

It may not be done in time for Judy Collins’ show on April 12. But Bernadette Peters is at the Playhouse May 19.

And many more talented acts follow.

Your piano could be on the Westport Country Playhouse stage.

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Soap opera fans, hold back your tears: Today is Jamie Martin Mann’s last day on “Days of Our Lives.”

The 2021 Staples High School graduate had split his time between Los Angeles — where the TV show is filmed — and Ann Arbor, where he is a junior at the University of Michigan.

Mann — who starred in Staples Players productions before graduation — is a musical theater major. Balancing academics and acting became increasingly difficult.

According to Soap Opera Digest, the 2021 Staples High School graduate “wraps up his brief but memorable run as tortured teen Tate Black on a high note …

“After 6 months of angst and drama, including being arrested for a crime he didn’t commit and sent to rehab, his ‘Days of Our Lives’ character was finally exonerated, much to the actor’s delight.

“I felt a lot of gratitude that I had the chance to close the storyline,” says Mann.

Click here for the full Soap Opera Digest story.

Jamie Martin Mann (Photo courtesy of XJJohnson/jpistudios.com)

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As Big Y prepares to take over the former Barnes & Noble space, Westporters continue to wonder: WTF happened to Amazon Fresh?

After much hoopla and a few months of renovation (plus some back-and-forth with town officials over the size of their sign), the mammoth company abandoned plans to open their cutting-edge grocery store in Westport (and other places).

The high-tech idea had been that shoppers’ purchases would automatically register without the need for a checkout counter. Customers could just pick up their items, walk out, and be charged electronically.

Not so fast.

According to The Byte: “Instead of closing the technological loop with pure automation and AI, the company also had to rely on an army of over 1,000 workers in India, who were acting as remote cashiers.”

They called it “a highly invasive marketing ploy to get more customers to shop at its stores, while actively undercutting the local job market.” 

Click here for the full story. (Hat tip: Mark Lassoff)

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Splash of Pink is celebrating over 2 decades in business, with an expansion just in time for Mother’s Day.

The family-owned Playhouse Square store hosts a “grand re-opening” celebration on May 1 (2 to 7 p.m.).

They’ll also offer special promotions, discounts and events throughout May, in honor of their 20-year anniversary.

Click here for Splash of Pink’s Facebook page. Click here for their Instagram.

Splash of Pink

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The Connecticut Humane Society urgently needs donations of dry dog food.

Its pet food pantry provides nutrition for pets of families facing financial hardships. It’s looking for dry dog food, specifically Purina One, Pedigree, Blue Buffalo, and any other grain-free brands.

Donations of dry dog food (and other pet-related items) can be dropped off at the Humane Society, 455 Post Road East.

Cash donations can be made online at CThumane.org/Donate, or by check to the address above.

Every dog deserves to eat.

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Westporter Alison Ziering Walmark is a longtime Fairfield Theatre Company board member — and chair of this Friday’s disco party fundraiser.

At 8 p.m. on April 5, the FTC Warehouse will transform into Studio 54. The night incudes specialty drinks, music, dancing, disco balls, lights and memorable beats.

Awards will be presented for Best Costume, Best Dancer(s), Best Group, and more. Festive attire is encouraged.

Proceeds support Fairfield Theatre Company’s music, art, film, theatre, education and culture programs. 

Click here for tickets, and more information.

See you Friday at the Fairfield Theatre Company Warehouse!

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Coleytown Company’s production of “Footloose” debuts this weekend.

Friday’s opening night performance at Coleytown Middle School is sold out. But some excellent seats remain for Saturday (April 6, 1 and 7 p.m.) and Sunday (April 7, 1 p.m.).

The high-energy dancing and music are great for all ages. Click here for tickets.

Ariel (Ella Grove) and Ren (Lucas Soares van Keulen), in “Footloose.”

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Westport Police made no custodial arrests between March 27 and April 3.

They issued these citations:

  • Operating a motor vehicle without a license: 3 citations
  • Operating an unregistered motor vehicle: 3
  • Operating a motor vehicle under suspension: 2
  • Failure to obey traffic control signals: 2
  • School zone violation: 1
  • Larceny: 1
  • Disorderly conduct: 1
  • Failure to display lights: 1
  • Operating a motor vehicle without minimum insurance: 1
  • Failure to comply with state traffic commission regulations: 1
  • Failure to return plates: 1

Slow down when approaching a school zone!

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We all know the relationship between cats and mice.

So today’s “Westport … Naturally” photo should come as no surprise: A cat — looking quite fat and satisfied — guarding “The Mouse House” on Compo Road South.

(Photo/Tammy Barry)

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And finally … in honor of Friday’s disco party fundraiser at Fairfield Theatre Company (story above), how about something with a Saturday theme?

(Put on your bell bottoms, crop tops and silky shirts. But before hitting the disco floor, please consider a contribution to “06880.” We never go out of style. Just click here — and thank you!)

Doors’ John Densmore Lights VersoFest’s Fire

In 1967 — just 2 months after “Light My Fire” rocketed the Doors to worldwide fame — they played at Staples High School.

In April, one Door returns to Westport.

Drummer John Densmore joins Alisyn Camerota in conversation on April 6.

He’s the latest addition to VersoFest 2024. In just 3 years, the Westport Library’s music/media/and more event has become Connecticut’s premier festival and conference.

This year’s VersoFest spans 5 days — April 3 through 7. It includes Chuck D in conversation with Akashic Books publisher Johnny Temple, and David Bowie, T. Rex and Thin Lizzy music producer Tony Visconti chatting with WFUV’s Paul Cavalconte.

John Densmore (Photo/Jeff Katz Photography)

Densmore’s musical pedigree is legendary. He is a member of the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, and the recipient of a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award and a star on Hollywood’s Walk of Fame.

His book “The Doors Unhinged” describes his conflict with bandmates over the right to use the group’s name, and depicts the struggle as a reflection of a much larger societal issue.

Camerota — the Westporter and CNN anchor — is no stranger to music. She came of age in the punk-rock late 1970s. Her new memoir, “Combat Love,” details those years, and her bonds with the band Shrapnel.

Other VersoFest 2024 highlights include The Lemon Twigs with DJ Hysterica, and the Spin Doctors with singer-songwriter Nick Depuy.

From left: The Lemon Twigs, DJ Hysterica, Nick Depuy, Spin Doctors

VersoFest also features panels and workshops all day Saturday and Sunday, April 6 and 7.

Highlights include Audrey Golden, author of “I Thought I Heard You Speak: Women At Factory Records,” in conversation with New Haven Independent’s Karen Ponzio; a panel on the wild lore of WPLR’s 1975 Fleetwood Mac broadcast, featuring an early incarnation of the Stevie Nicks and Lindsay Buckingham era with broadcaster Dick Kalt, and a Pitch Your Podcast Panel by CT Public with on-air personality Meg Dalton and Peabody Award winning “Uncivil” podcaster Jack Hitt.

Back again: VersoFest’s popular live music oral history podcast “Glam to Punk — A Fashion Round Table: Alice Cooper, Bowie, Blondie and Beyond” with Cindy Dunaway, Tish & Snooky (Manic Panic), and Dennis Dunaway (original Alice Cooper bassist), moderated by SNL Band singer and frequent Westport Library collaborator Christine Ohlman.

From left: VersoFest Record Fair; “Diamond Dogs at 50” David Bowie exhibit 

The weekend also includes a record fair curated by Record Riots. Collector Paul Brenton brings a “Diamond Dogs at 50” David Bowie exhibit, featuring the original stage models from the 1974 Diamond Dogs tour, and other rare items.

The festival concludes with a celebration of hip hop’s first film, “Wild Style,” featuring Tony Tone of the Cold Crush Brothers, the return of Grand Wizzard Theodore, as well as Prince Whipper Whip, DJ Ultamite, Grand Master Caz, JDL, Easy AD, Almighty Kay Gee, and Rodney C.

From left: “Wild Style”; Fairfield County native Tony Tone of the Cold Crush Brothers.

All VersoFest performances, panels, and workshops are free or at market rates.

For complete VersoFest 2024 information — including tickets — click here. The full schedule is below.

 

VersoFest Kickoff: Hip Hop Icon Chuck D

Chuck D will be in the house.

The co-founder and leader of Public Enemy, and part of the supergroup Prophets of Rage, will discuss his life, work, and recent graphic novel STEWdio: The Naphic Grovel ARTrilogy of Chuck D, as the kickoff conversation to VersoFest 2024.

The event — a conversation with Johnny Temple, publisher of Brooklyn’s urban/political Akashic Books — is set for the Westport Library on Wednesday, April 3 (7 p.m.).

Chuck D is a hip hop icon, social activist, author, film producer and digital music pioneer.

VersoFest is the Library’s annual music and media festival and conference. Most performances, panels and workshops are free.

“We are absolutely thrilled to have Chuck D join us,” says Library executive director Bill Harmer.

“His groundbreaking contributions to music and social activism have made a profound impact on our culture. We can’t wait for our community to engage with his incredible insights and talent.”

Chuck D rose to acclaim in the 1980s with albums addressing issues about race, rage and inequality. The New York Times named Public Enemy’s It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back to their list of the “25 Most Significant Albums of the Last Century. In 2005 the Library of Congress added Fear of a Black Planet to its National Recording Registry.

In 2013, Public Enemy was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. When the National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington curated its archive, the group was asked to donate iconic items.

(Photo/Travis Shinn)

In 2020, Public Enemy received a Lifetime Achievement Award at the Grammys. “Fight The Power” was named #2 on Rolling Stone’s 2021 list of 500 Greatest Songs of All Time (which also included “Bring The Noise”).

“I wanted to curate, present, navigate, teach, and lead the hip hop art, making it something that people would revere,” Chuck D told the New Yorker last year. “I was educated in the arts ever since I was a little kid. My mother started Roosevelt Community Theater in 1973 in New York. I was under Frank Frazier’s tutelage as an art teacher [in] 1972. I go to Adelphi University to become a commercial artist. But as what? I had no idea. Hip hop as an idea got me through college.”

In June 2016, Chuck D debuted Prophets of Rage, with former Rage Against the Machine members Tom Morello, Tim Commerford and Brad Wilk, plus Cypress Hill’s B-Real and DJ Lord of Public Enemy. He formed Enemy Radio in 2019, the DJ-MC sound system component of Public Enemy and toured Europe with Wu-Tang and De La Soul.

Chuck D is also a visual artist whose work has been shown in galleries nationwide, a best-selling author (This Day In Rap and Hip Hop History), a highly sought speaker on the college circuit, and a record label founder of SpitSlam.

Chuck D also has served as national spokesperson for Rock The Vote, the National Urban League, the National Alliance of African American Athletes, and Hip Hop Public Health. In 2018, he was named the chairman of the Celebrity Board for the Universal Hip Hop Museum in New York.

Tickets are $50 and available for purchase here. Click here for more information on VersoFest 2024.