Tag Archives: Lynn Untermeyer Miller

“Sing We Noel…”

A little more brass and percussion in “Sing We Noel.”

Classical works, longtime favorites, plus selections from around the world, played and sung with skill, passion and joy.

Staples High School’s 85th annual Candlelight Concert — the first of 3 weekend shows — thrilled and inspired a full house last night.

As always, it was the Music Department’s gift to the town.

As always, it was the greatest gift of the holiday season.

“06880” photographer Lynn Untermeyer Miller — a former Candlelight Concert performer herself — shares these images, from a night of wonder.

Staples Class of 1961 graduate Lucy Weberling (above) and her sister Janet (SHS ’63) traveled from Oklahoma, just for this year’s Candlelight Concert. (Photo/Dan Woog)

Longtime Candlelight stalwarts: former Staples principal John Dodig, and Jackie-of-all-trades Alice Addicks.

Directors (from left) Carrie Mascaro (orchestra), Caitlin Serpliss an Kevin Mazzarella (band), Jeri Brima (orchestra) and Lauren Pine (choral), after the “Hallelujah Chorus.” (Photo/Dan Woog)

(All photos/Lynn Untermeyer Miller unless otherwise noted)

Unsung Heroes #362

Lynn Untermeyer Miller hasn’t seen every Candlelight Concert.

There have been 84 years of them. The Staples High School Class of 1971 graduate is only 71 years old.

But she’s been to plenty, beginning with her years as a student.

She’ll be there again this week, for the Staples Music Department’s annual gift to the town.

She’ll be joined by hundreds of other grateful Westporters. Parents will proudly watch their teenage singers, and orchestra and band members, as they perform complex pieces with talent, passion and pride.

A small part of the large Candlelight Concert. 

Westporters whose own kid have long graduated — or never went to Staples, or are not yet there — will thrill to the concert too, appreciating the mix of tradition and change that has sustained the Candlelight Concert for over 8 decades.

Middle and elementary school boys and girls will dream of the day they can take part in the remarkable event.

And alumni will stride, with excitement and smiles, onto the stage for the finale: a rousing rendition of Handel’s “Hallelujah Chorus.” The massed group — a couple of hundred current musicians, and dozens who preceded them — is part of what makes the Candlelight Concert so special.

The “Hallelujah Chorus” ends the Candlelight Concert. The “Sing We Noel” processional begins it. (Photos/Lynn Untermeyer Miller)

But none of it would happen without this week’s Unsung Heroes: the Music Department.

The staff — Jeri Brima, Carrie Mascaro, Kevin Mazzarella, Lauren Pine, Caitlin Serpliss and Gregg Winters, plus townwide music coordinator Steve Zimmerman and administrative assistant Liz Shaffer — have been working toward this moment since the summer.

They have great talent to work with. Our superb middle and elementary school music teachers deserve a great hand, for preparing the high schoolers so well.

John Ohanian created the first Candlelight Concert, in 1940.

No list of Unsung Heroes would be complete without the men and women who created, nurtured and grew the Candlelight Concert, from before World War II to today.

John Ohanian, George Weigle, John Hanulik, Bob Genualdi, Jack Adams, Nick Mariconda, Alice Lipson, Luke Rosenberg, and many other music educators, are the reason Candlelight has evolved, flourished — and made the holidays special — for over 80 years.

They, and everyone else associated with the Candlelight Concert, are true Unsung Heroes.

Take a bow!

ENCORE: One of the great Candlelight traditions is the “Sing We Noel” processional. Click here to learn about its unique back story.

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

Lynn Miller’s Compo

Whether you live here now, or have not been back in decades, Compo Beach is in your soul.

We think of Compo as never changing.

That’s true.

Yet every day — every hour — is also different. The light, the colors, the scenery are never the same.

Lynn Untermeyer Miller is one of our favorite photographers.

The other day (okay, to be fair: it was the “06880” party), the 1971 Staples High School graduate took her camera to Compo.

The results are timeless. They’re precious.

And they remind us, once again, that wherever we go, our beach is our home.

(All photos/Lynn Untermeyer Miller)

“06880: Pick Of The Pics” Book Published!

It started with a casual conversation.

Lynn Untermeyer Miller — a longtime friend and very talented photographer, whose images had been a hallmark of “06880” ever since its launch in 2009 — suggested a regular photo feature.

They would be shots of local scenes — not tied to a particular story. Just a way to tie current and former residents together, and strengthen our “06880” community (online and off).

Click!

The name came quickly. “Pic of the Day” launched on April 17, 2017.

The very first “Pic of the Day”: Behind the Black Duck, on the Saugatuck River. (Photo Lynn Untermeyer  Miller)

Every night since, at 9 p.m., I’ve posted an image of Westport. Some are recognizable and relatable; others are artistic, whimsical or surprising. All are new, and fresh.

Every day since — over 2,100 times — I’ve posted a Pic of the Day. Prominent photographers have sent in shots; so have people who never published a photo. Some are in their 90s, like Lynn’s father Larry Untermeyer; others are teenagers.

The subjects range all over town: Nyala Farm. Longshore. The Levitt Pavilion. Staples high School. The train station. Main Street. The Greens Farms post office.

The Westport Library is a popular spot for Pics of the Day. (Photo/Lynn Untermeyer Miller)

Over the years, readers suggested I compile some of the many great photos into a picture book. It was a great idea — and one I had no time to pursue.

Last spring, I got my first-ever assistant through Staples’ superb Senior Internship program. Lyah Muktavaram was an Inklings editor, with a passion for journalism.

She loved the picture book idea. She quickly showed she had an eye for picking the best ones — the prettiest, the most compelling or colorful or whatever — and laying them out in a clever, striking and thematic way.

Lyah taught herself production. She emailed each photographer for permission. She handled all the back-end publishing stuff with professionalism, promptness, and an intuitive understanding of what “06880’s Pics of the Day” are all about.

Lyah’s work coincided with “06880”‘s move to non-profit status. Our mission is to “create a community for Westporters old and new, near and far, through sharing stories, news, events, history and perspectives, uniting all who love our hometown.”

“06880: Pick of the Pics” has just been published. Proceeds will help us fulfill that mission.

Click here to purchase “06880: Pic of the Picks.” Thank you!

The front cover features an iconic photo by Bruce Borner.

“06880: Pick of the Pics” includes summer photos of Sherwood Mill Pond, and winter skating the PAL Longshore ice rink. (Photos by Merri Mueller and Michael Winser)

Travels With Larry

In many ways, Larry Untermeyer’s life mirrors lots of residents who arrived in the 1950s and ’60s.

He’s a Korean veteran (Army special services). He worked in TV (“Pulse,” the first-ever morning show) and advertising (JWT, Hill & Knowlton, his own firm).

He and his wife Nikki raised 2 kids. When she retired after 23 years as a Weston Middle School teacher, they traveled the world. With good friends Ted and Carol Diamond, they visited 30 countries.

Larry Untermeyer and his daughter, Lynn Untermeyer Miller. (Photo/Mike Elliot)

She died nearly 6 years ago, of pancreatic cancer. That’s where Untermeyer’s story diverges a bit from other Westport 91-year-olds.

A month after Nikki died, he had a major operation and almost died. He had to learn to walk and write all over again.

Just a couple of months later, he took a trip. He spent 3 months in southeast Asia.

By himself.

His daughter Lynn — a longtime “06880” photographer — was terrified.

Untermeyer had a wonderful time. He calls it “one of the most extraordinary trips of my life.”

It was not his last. He’s traveled overseas 6 times since then. Untermeyer just returned from several wonderful weeks in Tanzania. It was his 7th time there. Each trip has been to a different country.

The Serengeti in Tanzania. (Photo/Larry Untermeyer)

His traveling companion was Bill Balch. A former Westporter whose wife died a year and a half ago, he now lives at Meadow Ridge. Previously, the men traveled to Greece — where they rented a car, and also sailed through the islands — and, on another trip, throughout Europe.

The 2 men knew each other through the Y’s Men’s Camera Club. Untermeyer had carried a camera throughout his many trips as an advertising executive. In retirement he became a noted photographer for, among other outlets, “06880” and WestportNow.

Untermeyer and Balch shot over 7,600 photos. They captured “every creature that crawled, walked and swam in the rivers and lakes,” as well as “birds of all sizes and color, on the wing and under brush.”

(Photo/Larry Untermeyer)

Untermeyer timed the trip to photograph the annual migration of more than a million wildebeests and zebras. They gather on the wide open plains of the Serengeti, heading several hundred miles north.

“It’s a sight to behold and to photograph,” Untermeyer says.

He and Balch also spent time in the Ngorongoro Crater, an ancient collapsed volcano where rare beasts and birds graze and roam.

Bill Balch and Larry Untermeyer.

Two days before she died, Nikki told her husband of 62 years, “Keep doing what you’re doing. You’ll live a long, long time.”

He heeded her words. Traveling — and photography — is energizing, Untermeyer says.

“I never wanted to sit around and feel sorry for myself,” he says. “I’m very lucky to have my health and my brain, and to be able to use my camera. As long as I can move around, I’m happy.”

Photography has been “a constant thread through my life. From my early days to now, it’s been a steady force.”

Untermeyer is already planning his next trip. It may be Portugal. Or Namibia.

Actually, that sounds like 2 more trips, for Westport’s favorite 91-year-old photographer.

(Photo/Larry Untermeyer)