Tag Archives: Levitt Pavilion

Roundup: Budget Hearings, Public Safety Facility,Westport Book Shop …

The Board of Finance will hold public hearings soon about proposed 2025-26 budgets.

Superintendent of schools Thomas Scarice and Board of Education chair Lee Goldstein present their budget on March 24. 1st Selectwoman Jen Tooker offers the town budget on March 25. Both meetings begin at 7:30 p.m., in the Town Hall auditorium.

The sessions will be broadcast on Optimum Channel 79, and/or livestreamed on the town website. (On the website, select “How Do I” heading, then “Watch Town Meetings”.)

Click here to see both budgets.

Budget hearings begin March 24, at Town Hall.

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Last month, Westporters were invited to a presentation about the proposed public safety complex. The new facility would bring the Police and Fire Departments, and Emergency Medical Services, under one roof.

The site most often mentioned is on the Sherwood Island Connector. On April 3  (1 p.m.), residents are invited to the I-95 Exit 18 commuter parking lot, to tour the location, view site maps and provide feedback.

Town officials, project planners and public safety representatives will answer questions and provide details about the project’s goals and benefits to the community.

Questions? Call Fire Chief Nick Marsan at (203) 341-5000, or email nmarsan@westportct.gov.

The meeting place for the April 3 tour of a proposed public safety facility: the I-95 Exit commuter parking lot, on the Sherwood Island Connector. The entrance would be just north of this site.

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The Westport Library was packed yesterday, for the Westport Book Shop’s annual benefit.

Since opening across Jesup Green from the Library 2021, the store has provided over 8,750 hours of paid part-time employment and job training for more than a dozen people with disabilities.

Employees learning and use skills — from retail to computer and photography — that are transferable to other environments, and interact often with customers.

Meanwhile, book sales have also generated more than $200,000 for the Library.

​The benefit supported both the Westport Book Shop and the Library. There was entertainment from the Staples Jazz Ensemble, plenty of food and drink, and silent and live auctions.

All the employees were there, proudly helping out.

And every attendee got a book, signed by prolific author Ed McBain.

Westport Book Shop employee Bella Rizzi greeted guests. She sat behind a book that had been made into an artful vase. (Photo/Dan Woog)

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The long-awaited opening of Sushi Jin is near.

A sneak peek at the new Main Street restaurant comes next Friday (March 21, 5:30 p.m.).

Coldwell Banker’s Judy Michaelis is hosting a pre-opening celebration. And as guests enjoy the very intriguing menu, they’ll also be doing something good.

100% of all ticket proceeds go to Westport EMS. For those who don’t know: Our fantastic Emergency Medical Service has to pay for everthing. Ambulances, fly cars, medical equipment, medications, training for the current and next generation of volunteer EMTs serving the community, even Band-Aids — they fund it all. (The price for an ambulance these days is about $400,000, if that helps you plan a donation.)

Click here for tickets, and more information. See you at Sushi Jin!

(Photo/Sal Liccione)

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Just around the corner from Sushi Jin, the Levitt is getting ready for its opening.

It’s been around a lot longer — more than 50 years — and it knows how to put on a show.

Or many shows.

For example:

Early bird pricing ends soon for Pigeons Playing Ping Pong, and the Infamous Stringdusters with Melt (June 1).

Umphrey’s McGee (July 11). Ticket sales for the eclectic improv-rock band start at 10 a.m. today (Friday).

Tickets are on sale now for I’m With Her, with Ken Pomeroy. The highly regarded folk trio offers a VIP experience: early admission to the show, a stripped-down intimate short performance, and a Q-and-A.

As always, members enjoy discounts and pre-sales on paid-ticket programming — while helping support the 50-plus nights of free shows. Click here for details.

I’m With Her (that’s the name of the trio).

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Six large photos by New York Times Pulitzer Prize-winner Lynsey Addario are on display at the Senior Center.

They’re part of the 1991 Staples High School graduate’s series “Veiled Rebellion,” depicting many facets of women’s lives in Afghanistan. Other works from the series hang at the Westport Library, Staples and Town Hall.

On Wednesday, Westport Public Art Collections member Jilda Manikas gave a presentation about the photographer and her photos, at the Senior Center.

Lynsey’s proud mother Camille was there. She answered questions from the audience, including about Lynsey’s recent work in Ukraine.

(Lynsey Addario for the New York Times)

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You’re never too young to help others.

The Greens Farms Elementary School Long Neck Leaders — a leadership group of students in grades 3-5 — recently created a community fundraiser to support Rach’s Hope.

The non-profit honors Rachel Doran, a member of the GFS class of 2008. Her sister Ellie also attended Greens Farms.

Their mother, Lisa Doran, is a GFS literacy coach. The Long Neck Leaders invited her to teach them about the charity, which helps families weather the storm of a child’s critical illness.

The students then promoted an all-school pajama day. (Rachel made and sold PJs in local shops, a project she started during elementary school.)

The PJ Day raised $1,300 — much of it thanks to the personal connections the students felt.

The Dorans look forward to Rach’s Hope’s adult fundraiser. The 2025 PJ Gala is March 29 (FTC, Fairfield). The evening includes live music, great food, and plenty of love and hope. For tickets and more information, click here.

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Chris Dobransky has developed a devoted Instagram following, for his recipes and reviews.

He and his family order regularly from Ed’s Fusion, the Italian-and-Mexican spot across from Stop & Shop. He likes the friendly family feel.

Chris wants “06880” readers to know about a new item: birria.

The Mexican dish dates back to the 16th century, when Spanish conquistadors introduced domesticated livestock, including goats, to Mexico.

Ed’s Fusion’s birria is made with tender beef brisket, Chris says. It’s cooked for over 6 hours on low heat in a broth with a “secret: blend of spices. There are several forms, including tacos, but quesadillas, calzones and pizza.

Each birria item comes with green chile and habanero sauces, and a spiced consomme.

Birria choices, at Ed’s Fusion.

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Last night’s lunar eclipse was one of nature’s rare, but fascinating, events.

Jacqui O’Brien photographed the full “worm room” before it began, for today’s “Westport … Naturally” feature. “See the halo,” she says.

(Photo/Jacqui O’Brien)

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And finally … Happy Pi Day, to all who celebrate!

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Roundup: Jamie Mann, Pigeons Playing Ping Pong, Shonda’s Video …

Westport will soon have a new Broadway star.

Staples High School Class of 2021 graduate Jamie Mann makes his Great White Way debut this spring in the new show “Stranger Things: The First Shadow.”

The prequel to the popular Netflix show is set 24 years before the TV show’s first season. Jamie plays the teenage version of Ted Wheeler, Mike Wheeler’s jock dad, and understudies James Hopper, Jr.

Alison Jay plays Joyce Maldonado (the Winona Ryder character). She and Jamie became friends in 2022, while working on the workshop for the play at Netflix in Los Angeles.

Jamie had been on the Netflix set before. He starred as Brody in “Country Comfort,”during part of his junior and senior year at Staples High School.

Westporters know Jamie from his roles with Staples Players, and as a longtime student of Cynthia Gibb’s Triple Threat Academy. (Jamie now teaches  dance classes and offers private dance and acting coaching).

During Bedford Middle School, Jamie played Billy Elliot in theaters throughout the East Coast. He will graduate remotely, with a BFA from the University of Michigan’s musical theater program this spring.

“Stranger Things” opens on April 22. Previews begin March 28. For tickets and more information, click here.

Jamie Mann (Photo/Michael Kushner)

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Speaking of theater: “Broadway’s Bad Boys” opened at the Westport Country Playhouse last night. The 4-night run ends Sunday.

Performed by 3 Broadway actors — Sam Gravitte (“Wicked”), Kevin Massey (“A Gentleman’s Guide to Love and Murder”) and Julius Thomas III (“Hamilton”) — who played villains in musicals, the production includes “Phantom of the Opera,” “Beauty and the Beast,” and Professor Harold Hill of “Music Man.”

Curtain call at the Westport Country Playhouse last night. (Hat tip and photo/Dave Matlow)

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Speaking still of entertainment: It’s only January, but the Levitt Pavilion has announced its first acts of the season.

Pigeons Playing Ping Pong and The Infamous Stringdusters — those are bands — will be joined by New York’s Melt, on June 1.

The funk/bluegrass/indie soul tour will play just 5 venues across the Northeast. Ours is one of them.

It won’t be the Levitt’s opener, though. The 2025 season runs from may through October, with a combination of paid-ticket shows and 50 free dates. More shows will be announced soon.

Tickets go on sale today (Friday), at 10 a.m. Click here to purchase, and for informatio on the “enchanced concert experience” package.

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A capacity crowd filled the Westport Library’s Trefz Forum last on Sunday, for our town’s 19th annual Martin Luther King Day celebration.

The event included a wide-ranging discussion with noted producer Shonda Rhimes, and novelist/playwright/professor Trey Ellis. Both are Westport residents.

If you missed it — or if you were there, and want to see it again (along with a pair of great performances by gospel singer Christian Servance) — click below:

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Earlier this week, “06880” reported on Lynda Bluestein’s 2 wind phones, at the Westport Library.

We followed up by noting that a third wind phone — a disconnected rotary telephone, through which users can stay connected with loved ones who have died — was just installed at Greenfield Congregational Church.

Now there’s more news about Lynda, a longtime Unitarian Universalist Congregation in Westport member and staunch advocate for medical aid in dying legislation.

This is a story about choice, not death.

Lynda Bluestein would not take ‘no’ for an answer. Because Medical Aid in Dying is not legal in Connecticut, Lynda is forced to find another way to die peacefully.

This is an intimate and gripping look into what it takes to legally die on one’s own terms in the United States. Other Side delves into the systemic, familial and emotional complexities of navigating an untrodden medical landscape while terminally ill.

A 90-minute documentary about her life and death — “Other Side” — has just been accepted by South by Southwest.

Its world premiere is scheduled for the prestigious film festival in March.

Lynda Bluestein, in a scene from “Other Side.”

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Yesterday, Westport Police received a report from a friend that William Hill has not been seen since Monday.

He is homeless, avoiding shelters, but visits friends at Sasco Creek Village daily. Given the extreme cold this past week, friends and the Police are extremely concerned for his welfare.

Hill is 62, between 5-7 and 5-11 tall, medium build, with salt and pepper hair, and a moustache. He was last seen wearing a black jacket and pushing a gray Trek bicycle with a rack, carrying bags and a knapsack on his back.

Anyone with information that can help locate William Hill should call the Police Department: 203-341-6000.

William Hill, in a younger photograph.

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Congratulations to Jo Ann Miller!

Her third novella in the “Abbey Lane” fiction series, “Deadly Donations,” has just been published.

Here, the former investigative reporter turned private detective encounters the effect of huge donations by foreign countries to American universities.

The Network Contagion Research Institute reports that over $47 billion has been donated, much of it not reported, and coming from authoritarian Middle East countries.

Meanwhile, hate crimes and antisemitic acts increased over 200% on campuses.  When Abbey’s activist client is murdered, she delves into those corrupt donations. Click here to purchase on Amazon.

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The Westport Library is cozy and welcoming. One of the many wart employees is Heli Stagg.

This week, she ventured out from the Library café — which she runs — to photograph the nearby Saugatuck River.

Today’s “Westport … Naturally” photo is a great reason to appreciate our local beauty.

And then get something nice and warm, served by Heli at the café.

(Photo/Heli Stagg)

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And finally … Never heard of Pigeons Playing Ping Pong — the band that will headline the June 1 Levitt Pavilion concert (story above)?

Click below!

(Every day, the Roundup highlights future events, recaps past ones, and covers everything else in between. If you enjoy our hyper-local coverage, please click here to support our work. Thannk you!) 

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Icy Saugatuck River, and Levitt Pavilion (Photo/Heli Stagg)

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Levitt Pavilion (Photo/Nancy Breakstone)

 

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Levitt Pavilion sunset (Photo/Johanna Keyser Rossi)

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Levitt Pavilion, from Grace Salmon Park (Photo/Johanna Keyser Rossi)

Roundup: Brad Tursi, Recovery Benefit, Lynsey Addario …

Brad Tursi rocked his return to Westport.

The Old Dominion singer/songwriter/guitarist — with a passel of Country Music Association awards — is a 1997 Staples High School graduate.

Brad was best known there as a soccer player.

But he’s honed his musical craft in the years since. Now — while still a member of Old Dominion — he’s embarked on a solo career.

Backed by a very tight 5-piece band, and hot off the release of his new “Parallel Love” album, Brad delighted a full house at the Levitt Pavilion last night.

It was the group’s first public performance, he said. And his first as a solo artist.

The Levitt was also, he noted, where he first played, with Staples friends Ryan O’Neill and Dan Asher. O’Neill (now known as Ryan Smith) joined him for a final number.

Brad bantered with the audience. Many were long-time Westport friends (and a couple of his old soccer coaches). He gave shout-outs to his mom.

It was a wonderful Westport night, with a big-time entertainer who was nonetheless thrilled to be back home.

Brad Tursi, at the Levitt Pavilion. (Photo/Dan Woog)

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It’s late notice. But an event today is worth noting, even with just a few hours to go.

This afternoon (4 p.m.), Mitchells of Westport hosts a benefit for Recovery Community Development. The non-profit offers men and women in 12-step and other addiction economic programs the job skills, supportive housing and social services needed to become productive citizens in Bridgeport and Norwalk.

Guest speaker Craig Melvin — the NBC “Today” News anchor, and a Westport resident — will discuss his own family legacy of addiction and incarceration. He’ll describe the power of transformation, redemption and faith, and explore the challenges facing all dads. (He’s the father of 2 young children.) Click here for tickets.

Tony Kiniry, executive director of Recovery Community Development, spoke about the work his organization does — and previewed today’s event — at Friday’s Sunrise Rotary Club meeting. Bill Mitchell also praised RDC’s work.

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Our “06880” blog is “where Westport meets the world.”

And today we’ve got a small-world story, courtesy of Wakeman Town Farm.

The other day, on a random spot on a random island in the out-of-the-way Azores, 2 groups of travelers randomly found each other.

Ashley Constantino — a descendant of the Wakeman family, which for decades owned the Cross Highway farm property — was with one group. Alex Brandfon was with another. He spotted Ashley’s boyfriend’s WTF hoodie.

They chatted, discovered their local connection, and took this photo. WTF!

Chance encounter, in the Azores.

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Speaking of the world: Internationally renowned New York Times photojournalist (and 1991 Staples High School graduate) Lynsey Addario’s new exhibit, “RAW,” opened Friday, at Lyle & King Gallery on Henry Street, in lower Manhattan.

Dave Matlow was at the gallery yesterday. He took photos of Lynsey’s images, which were shot in Afghanistan, Syria, Ukraine, Kenya, Panama and many other countries.

The exhibit runs through November 9.

Lynsey Addario’s work, on display. (Photo/Dave Matlow)

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Today’s “Westport … Naturally” features our first-ever Eastern kingbird.

Naturally, the regal-looking image comes from one of our favorite wildlife photographers: Lou Weinberg.

(Photo/Lou Weinberg)

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And finally … Happy Father-Daughter Day!

(Fathers! Daughters! And everyone else! If you enjoy “06880,” please click here to help support our work. We rely almost entirely on contributions from readers like you. Thank you.)

Roundup: Lanternflies, Flooding, Tim Lewis …

A couple of days ago, Compo’s South Beach was hit with an infestation of spotted lanternflies.

They were everywhere, by the thousands.

Westport’s Parks & Recreation Department told a caller that they have sprayed.

Those lanternflies are ferocious.

In just a day or so, they’d already decimated some of the bark.

Look closely at the photo. The bark is already decimated.

(Hat tip and photos/Ken Schwartz)

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More environmental news: Though yesterday was gorgeous (and the last full day of summer), the near-full moon and high tide brought flooding at Quentin Road by Compo Beach Road.

(Photo/Tracy Porosoff)

An odd-looking scene, for sure.

But perhaps something that will soon be the new normal?

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Speaking (still) of the environment — as autumn has us thinking about trees and leaves — “06880” reader (and former federal attorney) Scooter Swanson cites Connecticut case law that finds “property owners have the right to trim branches or roots of a neighbor that encroaches onto their property up to the property line.”

There is no applicable state or local ordinance regarding such issue, he adds

Swanson notes that he is not licensed in Connecticut. “This is merely informative and not intended as legal advice,” he says.

Trees and property lines can become neighbor issues in Westport. (Photo/Roger Wolfe)

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The Levitt Pavilion’s summer series continued last night — the last full day of summer — with Tower of Power.

(Photo/Susan Garment)

Shows continue into the fall. One of the highlights: Westport native Brad Tursi — Old Dominion’s lead guitarist/vocalist — appears on October 12, with his own band. Click here for full Levitt details.

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Nearby, across the parking lot, yesterday’s StoryFest panels featured a couple of Westport-bred authors.

Caroline Wolff was part of the “Thriller!” event (photo below). Chris Knapp spoke on “Incorporating History: Past, Present and Future.”

(Photo/Dinkin Fotografix)

StoryFest ’24 is dedicated to Sybil Steinberg, longtime Westport Library advocate, friend, and creator of “Sybil’s List” book recommendations.

State Representative Jonathan Steinberg remembered and honored his mother yesterday (photo below).

 

The largest literary festival in Connecticut ends today. Click here for a list of all that’s happening.

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With Halloween near, the Westport Country Playhouse presents “Ghost Stories and Legends” (October 10, 7 p.m.).

The event — part of the Barnstormer Series in the barn (under candlelight!) — is an evening of classic stories of the supernatural, with Broadway’s John Rapson.

He’ll present a special version of his solo show of Washington Irving’s “The Legend of Sleepy Hollow,” along with other with other ghostly tales.

Rapson says, “I guarantee laughs, chills and thrills. Just try not to lose your head…”

Tickets are $20. To purchase, and for more information,  click here.

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All women — and men — are invited to a special event, as part of National Domestic Violence Awareness Month.

Authors Dr. Christine M. Cocchiola — a therapist and expert on coercive control — and divorce coach Amy Polacko will discuss their new book, “Framed: Women in the Family Court Underworld.”

It’s set for October 8 (7 p.m., Unitarian Universalist Congregation in Westport).

“Framed” exposes how domestic abuse victims are treated in the legal system, using stories from women around the world. 

The talk will focus on red flags to look for in relationships, what is coercive control, the crisis in family courts, and how to protect oneself.

The event is sponsored by the Westport Domestic Violence Task Force and Rock the Walls, a non-profit offering help to victims and survivors of domestic abuse.

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In the aftermath of Westport resident Tim Lewis’ death in July from pancreatic cancer — at 58, just a month shy of his 23rd wedding anniversary — his family and friends have set up a non-profit foundation.

They say: “While Tim’s life was shortened, his purpose and passion were always strong and his desire to help others defined much of his life.

“Tim balanced a demanding career with a tireless devotion to his family. He loved his wife and and kids deeply and actively. Tim was famous for coordinating play dates, soccer schedules, date night, violin and drum lessons, all while ordering fall clothing for the kids (to their chagrin) and making high-stakes work conference calls.

“He was a memory-making mastermind, relentless in his pursuit of family time through neighborhood walks, vacation hikes, and beach dinners. Even when it was just sitting at the kitchen table doing puzzles, being with family was the life experience Tim most valued.

“Our goal is to help other people and families struggling with the particularly challenging diagnosis of pancreatic cancer through research, clinical trials, and support.

Click here for details, and to donate.

Tim Lewis

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On Thursday, the Longshore Ladies Nine Hole Golfers held their annual charity event at Longshore.

The women once again chose the Westport Woman’s Club food closet as their beneficiary.

They collected 4 grocery carts of food donations, and nearly $1,000 in cash.

Golfers’ donations, at the Westport Woman’s Club.

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At another golf event last week, the inaugural “Shank it for Shea” golf event drew a great turnout to Birchwood Country Club.

Significant funds were raised to advance Long QT Syndrome research and improve treatment options for those affected — including Mark and Kira Greenfield’s daughter Shea.

The event builds on 2 previous fundraisers. Both were dance-oriented, and were called “Shake it for Shea.”

The Greenfields are onto something. They do great work — and they do it with smiles. Perhaps the next one may be for skateboarders: “Shred it for Shea.”

For more details on their “Hearts in Harmony” Foundation, click here.

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Despite spotted lanternflies and sunshine flooding (stories above), there continue to be beautiful scenes by the shore.

Matt Murray sends this gorgeous heron shot, for our daily “Westport … Naturally” feature.

(Photo/Matt Murray)

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And finally … today is the first day of fall.

Plenty of Westporters think it’s the best season of the year. But it is so transient.

Enjoy every day of it!

(Fall, winter, spring, summer — “06880” is here for you. Please click this link, to support our 24/7/366 work. Thank you!)

Roundup: Roxane Gay, ABBA, Christian Siriano …

StoryFest ’24 opened with a bang last night.

Author and activist Roxane Gay chatted on the Westport Library stage with writer Oliver Radclyffe. His memoir, “Frighten the Horses,” will be published this fall by Roxane Gay Books.

In just 7 years, StoryFest — the Library’s annual celebration of reading, writing, ideas and community — has become the largest literary festival in Connecticut.

Every genre of storytelling is covered, along with live podcast recordings, a special tribute to longtime and beloved Library friend Sybil Steinberg, the 2024 Westport Prize for Literature, a pitchfest and more. Click here for today and tomorrow’s jam-packed schedules.

Oliver Radclyffe and Roxane Gay share a moment.

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Meanwhile, a few yards away, a packed lawn enjoyed ABBA.

Well, not exactly the legendary Swedish group. This was a tribute band. But they sure sounded the same.

Getting ready to enjoy the festivities — with appropriate glasses and neckwear — were (below, left to right) Gwen Tutun, Judy Burke, Toni Essertier, Ellen Bowen and Cathy Colgan. Mamma mia!

The entertainment continues tonight at the Levitt, with Tower of Power. The ticketed show begins at 7:30 p.m. Click here for more information.

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You (probably) watched the first 2 debates of the election season, on CNN and ABC.

You can watch the third one live — right here at Town Hall.

On October 10 (7 p.m),, Westport’s League of Women Voters hosts candidates for State Senate District 26, and State Representative District 136. (The Norwalk LWV will host one for State Representative District 143; details to come.)

Questions can be sent in advance to lwvwestportct@yahoo.com.

The debate is co-sponsored by the PTA Council, Westport Sunshine Rotary Club, Y’s Men, Y’s Women and Westport Rotary Club.

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The Wall Street Journal calls it “‘Shark Tank’ meets Home Shopping Network.”

A new TV show next week features Amazon sellers pitching their products to a studio audience and judges. Among the panelists: designer (and Westport resident) Christian Siriano.

Finalists will have their inventions sold in a new Amazon “Buy It Now” online store. The winner of each episode will earn $20,000.

Click here for the full story. (Hat tip: Dave Briggs)

Christian Siriano

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What a blessing!

Everyone is invited to the Saugatuck Congregational Church lawn on Sunday, September 29, for a 10 a.m. blessing service. All pets are welcome — but on leashes or in carriers.

Photos are fine too. Even “stuffies”!

At 11 a.m., rescues and shelters will offer pets of all ages at a special adoption event. There will be food trucks too, and surprises for kids.

The Great Lawn of Saugatuck Congregational Church is well suited to a Blessing of the Animals.

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Westport author Diane Parrish launches her new book, “Something Better,” at Westport Library on October 8 (6:30 p.m.). She’ll chat with her daughter, fellow author Amanda Parrish Morgan

In the book — set largely in Connecticut — Parrish pulls back the façade of carefully cultivated suburbs. With flashes of humor and insight, she examines notions of forgiveness and faith. Click here for more information.

Diane Parrish (center), and Amanda Parrish Morgan.

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The Weston History & Culture Center offers history experiences for all every Thursday and Sunday (1 to 4 p.m.), from now through November 24.

Visitors can:

Explore “Weston…What Lies Beneath.” The exhibit looks at one of Weston’s oldest homes, the Peter Thorp House. Through objects, rare photographs, videos and hands-on activities, discover what lies beneath and who lived above. Youngsters can dig for artifacts in the Kids Corner.

Take a guided tour of the Coley House, learning how the Coley family lived, worked and played during the 1940s. Kids can play with toys and games from that era, build with Lincoln Logs, and type on a typewriter.

Enjoy autumn with a stroll through the Daniel E. Offutt III Sculpture Garden.

Tickets at the door are $5 for adults, $3 for children; free for members of the Weston History & Culture Center.

Sculpture garden at Weston History & Culture Center.

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Former Westport resident Kathleen Elliott died peacefully on September 4. She was 73, and lived in Charlestown, Massachusetts.

An honors graduate of Northeastern University in economics, Kathy then earned an MBA from Boston University,

She had a long career at David L Babson, including vice president on the investment council. She was the first woman elected to the board of directors.

After leaving David L Babson, Kathy became interested in angel investing. She mentored several women-led companies. The experience led her to co-author a book, “The Old Girls’ Network.”

Kathy spent many hours enjoying tennis at Longwood Cricket Club, golfing at Turner Hill in Ipswich, Massachusetts, and skiing and golfing in Telluride, Colorado.

Her family says, “She had many friends, and was known for her kind-hearted, humble and upbeat nature, especially her creative wit and intelligence. Her excellent athletic skills and gracious sportsmanship made her everyone’s favorite tennis and golf partner.”

She is survived by her partner of 26 years, Ann Beard of 26 years; sisters Margaret Markovic (John) of Trumbull and Mary Sikorski (Brian) of Westport; brother Robert Elliott of Fairfield; niece Kathleen Haimoff and her children, James, Maya and David of Fairfield, and nephews Joseph Sikorski of Norwalk, and James Sikorski (Adrienne) of Brooklyn, and their son Charles.

Services will be private. Donations may be made to Angel Memorial Animal Hospital in Boston, and the Kaplan Family Hospice House in Danvers, Massachusetts.

Kathleen Elliott

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Flamingos are known for standing on one leg.

Other birds: not so much.

But here is this guy (or maybe gal) gull, posing for today’s “Westport … Naturally” shot at Compo Beach.

Try as he/she might though, they’re just not stately.

(Photo/Richard Fogel)

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And finally … “06880” did not get a chance to see the Levitt tribute band last night. But who doesn’t love a good ABBA song or two (or five)?

(Sure, there’s a lot going on this weekend. But you can count on “06880” to cover it all. If you’ve got a spare minute, please click here and spare some change to support our work. Thank you!)

Unsung Heroes #351

Last weekend was one of the most remarkable in memory.

Under spectacular late-summer skies, several organizations held important fundraisers.

The Westport Country Playhouse, Wakeman Town Farm, Westport Volunteer Emergency Medical Services and Levitt Pavilion all threw great bashes. All depend on donors to do the amazing things they do.

The Westport Weston Chamber of Commerce’s annual Slice of Saugatuck is part fundraiser too. Each year, they donate thousands of dollars from proceeds to Homes with Hope’s food pantry.

Thousands of Westporters ate, drank, danced and were entertained at those events.

At the Levitt Pavilion, Peter Frampton came alive.

Two days earlier, the Westport Library’s biggest gala of the year, “Booked for the Evening,” was the most successful — and fun — in its 25-year history. Billie Jean King, Chris Evert and Chris McKendry wowed a sellout crowd.

And this weekend, 1,500 more will head to Compo Beach. Proceeds from the Westport Rotary Club’s LobsterFest will allow that group to donate hundreds of thousands of dollars, to dozens of organizations in Fairfield County and abroad.

Parties like these make Westport a wonderful place to live. In addition to money raised, they create a sense of community. They make us smile, and feel good about ourselves, our neighbors and our town.

But none of those events happen overnight.

Each takes months of meticulous planning. From the big items — talent, food, decorations, auction items, publicity — to the smaller ones like programs, signage, tablecloths and a squintillion other details, a successful fundraiser relies on a huge pool of volunteers.

Wakeman Town Farm’s HarvestFest was fantastic. But who arranged for the singer? Figured out where he’d sing? Got the flowers, and put them there?

The overall chairs get thanked profusely. They thank their committee chairs. All deserve their kudos.

But it’s the grunt work of all the un-thanked men, women and teenagers who ace a Billie Jean King evening, help Peter Frampton sing, and feed (then clean up) 3,000 lobsters.

So to all those who worked on any of those events. Or will work this weekend. Or worked in the past, and may in the future:

Thank you. You are our unsung — but greatly appreciated — heroes of the week.

(Unsung Hero is a weekly “06880” feature. To nominate a hero, email 06880blog@gmail.com. To support our work, please click here. Thank you!)