Tag Archives: Trey Ellis

Roundup: Beach Demolitions, Kristin Chenoweth, Satchel Paige & Trey Ellis …

One of the most well-known homes in Westport — the only one on the north (left) side of the Compo Cove footpath, just over the pedestrian bridge at Sherwood Mill Pond — may soon be a memory.

A “Demolition” sign hangs next to the front door of the house owned for years by Mike Katz, the cowboy hat-wearing man-about-town.

The 43 Compo Mill Cove home — built in 1942 — was originally located across the path, on the right. It boasts an unobstructed view of the Mill Pond. But it’s been unoccupied for quite a while, and seems not to have been maintained since then.

Compo Cove home, with demolition sign  next to the front door. (Photo/Dinkin Fotografix)

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That’s not the only beach neighborhood home on the chopping block

This one — at 21 Norwalk Avenue, off Soundview Drive — also bears a “Demolition” notice.

(Photo/Dan Woog)

It was built in 1920 — 104 years ago.

Clearly, it’s had some work done over the past century. The non-winterized cottages that were there for much of the 1900s were not like this.

It will sure be interesting to see what the new construction looks like.

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This Saturday’s Westport Country Playhouse’s gala features Emmy and Tony Award winner Kristin Chenoweth, Drama Desk Award-winning conductor and music director Mary-Mitchell Campbell — plus a host of Broadway performers — in a tribute to Cy Coleman (September 14, 7 p.m.).

Like any good benefit, this one includes some very cool live auction items. Among them:

  • 2 tickets to Steve Martin & Martin Short’s “The Dukes of Funnytown!” at Foxwoods, and a post-show meet and greet with the stars.
  • 4 tickets to “Wicked,” and a backstage tour to meet the cast.
  • Dinner for 10 catered by Gabriele’s, on the Playhouse stage with artistic director Mark Shanahan and managing director Beth Huisking.

Raffle boxes are available too, for a chance to win 2 jewelry pieces by designer Marco Bicego.

For tickets and more information, click here.

Kristin Chenoweth

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Speaking of the Playhouse: They kicked off another intriguing “Script in Hand” season last night, with “Satchel Paige and the Kansas City Swing.”

The show — about the last days of baseball’s Negro Leagues — was enthusiastically received.

The cast of “Satchel Paige,” with playwright/director Trey Ellis of Westport (back row, center) and Playhouse stage manager Megan Smith (front, 3rd from left). (Photo/Dave Matlow) 

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For decades, longtime Westport resident Jo Ann Miller was an executive in the garment industry.

When international travel wore her down, she became a top real estate agent.

All along, she continued to produce art. As a sculptor, she collaborated with the late Kelley Spearen on many projects.

She also wrote an account of her first attempt at a marathon. The foreward was by her former next door neighbor, and her father’s wing man: John Glenn.

Now Miller is out with a work of fiction. It’s about the aftermath of a July 4, 2004 SEAL team celebration in Iraq that went terribly wrong. The terrorists never forgot. Twenty years later, they seek revenge.

“Terrorist Revenge” will be available soon, at Amazon.

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Local author Michael Hendricks and artist Rebecca Ross greeted their many fans this weekend, at the Westport Book Shop.

They signed copies of “In the Beginning! A Love Story.”

Susie Kowalsky — who sent the photo below — is a huge fan. She bought 5 copies, “to share with the little ones I know and love.”

Rebecca Ross and Michael Hendricks, at the Westport Book Shop.

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Guitarist Ed Cherry is well known for his long association with Dizzy Gillespie. Since the bandleader’s death in 1993, Cherry has worked with Paquito D’Rivera, Jon Faddis, John Patton, Hamiet Bluiett, Henry Threadgill, Paula West and Dr. Lonnie Smith.

He has recorded many albums as a leader, and appeared on countless records as a featured soloist.

This Thursday (September 12), he highlights Jazz at the Post (VFW Joseph J. Clinton Post 399; shows at 7:30 and 8:45 p.m.; dinner from 8 p.m.; $20 music cover, $15 for veterans and students; click here for reservations).

Cherry is joined by bassist Essiet Essiet, drummer Jason Tiemann and saxophonist Greg “The Jazz Rabbi” Wall.

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Entrepreneur and real estate developer Stanley Seligson died peacefully at his Westport home, surrounded by his family, on Thursday. He was 90.

Stanley attended the Williston Northampton School, and the University of Connecticut.

Following his father’s death in 1953, Stanley assumed responsibility for the family’s wholesale business, S&S Tobacco. He grew the original company into one of the largest distributors of candy, tobacco, vending and arcade machines in the Northeast.

In 1979, Stanley formed Seligson Properties. The real estate firm has invested in, developed, managed and built nearly 3 million square feet of property. He was the driving force behind many key developments in Norwalk.

Stanley was dedicated to his hometown of Norwalk. He served as an advisor and board member to institutions including the Greater Norwalk Chamber of Commerce, Norwalk YMCA, Maritime Aquarium, Lockwood-Mathews Mansion Museum, and others

He was named Industry Man of the Year by the Anti-Defamation League and Distributor of the Year by Philip Morris, among other honors.

Stanley had a passion for travel. His family says he “enjoyed many of the finer things in life, but always remained down to earth. He equally valued the simple pleasures found at his homes in Connecticut and Florida.” Stanley cherished these moments.

Stanley was an avid golfer. He learned from top instructors, and played many renowned courses. He was a founding member of Rolling Hills Country Club in Wilton, and was a member of Birchwood Country Club in Westport; Burning Tree Club  in Bethesda, Maryland; and Trump International Golf Club and The Mar-a-Lago Club in Florida.

He is survived by his wife of over 50 years, Carole; children Shana and Todd Seligson, sister Suzanne Serlin, and Mary Hill.

A funeral service will be held tomorrow (Wednesday, September 11, 11 a.m., Temple Israel), with a lunch at 2 p.m. at Rolling Hills Country Club in Wilton.

In lieu of flowers, donations in memory of Stanley M. Seligson may be made to Shirley Ryan AbilityLab (Intensive Aphasia Program) or Smilow Cancer Hospital of Yale New Haven Health.

Stanley Seligson

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Today’s “Westport … Naturally” photo — which she calls “Blue Sky and Goldfinch” — comes from Tracy Porosoff:

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And finally … on this date in 1724, “Jesu, der du meine Seele” — one of Johan Sebastian Bach’s most famous church cantatas — was performed for the first time, in Leipzig.

(Stop! Don’t press the “bach” button — at least, not without first clicking here, to make a tax-deductible contribution to “06880.” Thank you!)

 

Roundup: Cellphones, Comedy, Childcare …

Greens Farms Academy’s new cellphone ban — the subject of this morning’s “06880” post — parallels a discussion underway among Westport’s public school administrators and parents.

Last month, superintendent of schools Thomas Scarice was a guest on my “06880” podcast. For half an hour, he spoke strongly and directly about his reasons for proposing a ban in Westport schools — and acknowledging the challenges.

Click below for the fascinating discussion.

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Homelessness is no laughing matter.

But “Stand Up for Homes with Hope” sure is.

The great non-profit — which does so much to fight homelessness and hunger in Westport — hosts an annual fundraiser, with some of America’s best comics. It’s an evening of laughs, for a fantastic cause.

This year’s featured comedian is Dustin Nickerson. His “Overwhelmed” debut in 2020 is one of the highest rated special on Amazon Prime Video.

He’s been featured on Comedy Central, Netflix, the Late Show with James Carden, Fox and Hulu, and is heard regularly on Sirius Radio XM.

Mark the date: Saturday, September 28 (Quick Center, Fairfield University). Tickets are $175 (including cocktails and a light supper, 6:30 p.m.) and $75 (performance only, 8:30 p.m.). Click here to purchase, and for more information.

Dustin Nickerson

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After-school childcare is one of the toughest juggling acts for working parents.

Once again this year, the Westport Public Schools and Westport Weston Family YMCA are coordinating care for children in grades K-5.

The program offers a variety of educational and physical activities, including STEM, art, outdoor play, social-emotional learning, and more.

It runs until 6 p.m., and includes transportation to the Y. Click here for details.

Westport YMCA after-school childcare.

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For many shoppers, CraftWestport marks the start of the holiday season.

This year’s event is November 2-3, in the Staples High School fieldhouse. Over 175 vendors will participate, showcasing ceramics, textiles, woodworking, jewelry, glass art, skincare products, food and more. The event is a benefit for the Westport Young Woman’s League.

All-weekend admission is $11; seniors 62+ are $10; children 12-18 are $5; those under 12 are free. Click here for more details.

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“Script in Hand” is one of the Westport Country Playhouse most popular features.

The 2024 season returns with a special twist. “Satchel Paige and the Kansas City Swing” was directed and co-written by Trey Ellis — the noted Westport novelist/ screenwriter/playwriter/essayist/director.

In 1947, Satchel Paige was a charismatic pitcher, and Negro Leagues legend.

But as Jackie Robinson embarked upon a historic first season in the majors, Paige’s fame was eclipsed, and his desire for greater respect increasingly frustrated.

Set in Kansas City during a barnstorming tour, this jazz-infused tale portrays an America on the brink of change, capturing the struggle for equality on and off the field. “Satchel Paige and the Kansas City Swing” is a powerful story of resilience and transformation, at a defining moment in the nation’s history.

All tickets are $30. Click here to purchase, and for more details.

Trey Ellis

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The Peter Thorp House — one of Weston’s oldest and most intriguing homes — is open to the public next month.

The Weston History & Culture Center offers guided tours — plus a rose garden cocktail party, music performance and raffle — on September 29 (4 to 7 p.m.).

Proceeds support the Weston History & Culture Center’s upcoming permanent exhibit in the Coley Barn, “Weston at Work.” It explores the town’s industrial past through manufacturing, agriculture and textile production, highlighting the overlooked contributions of enslaved, free Black, immigrant, women and child laborers from the 18th to early 20th centuries.

Early bird tickets are $125, and include 5 complimentary raffle tickets.

Click here to purchase, and for more information.

Peter Thorp House rose garden, circa 1945, when it was owned by opera star James Melton. (Photo/Margo Melton Nutt)

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Westport Police made 1 custodial arrest between August 7 and 14.

A 67-year-old Westport man was charged with criminal violation of a civil protection order, and criminal mischief, following a complaint that, despite an order barring him from assaulting, threatening, abusing, harassing, following, interfering with or stalking the protected person, he placed a bible on a table outside of the residence, opened to a specific verse and with a knife stabbed through the pages.

Six days later, Westport police officers and firefighters responded to his residence after a report of a fire. He was in the back yard, near recently burned grass. It was determined he had been performing a “ritual” when he set the grass on diew.

He posted a $50,000 bond, and will appear August 22 in Stamford Superior Court.

Westport Police also issued these citations:

Driving while texting: 12 citations

  • Traveling unreasonably fast: 11
  • Failure to obey traffic control signals: 7
  • Operating a motor vehicle under suspension: 5
  • Failure to comply with state traffic commission regulations: 5
  • Operating a motor vehicle without a license: 4
  • Failure to obey stop sign: 3
  • Failure to renew registration: 3
  • Failure to drive in the proper lane: 2
  • Failure to insure a motor vehicle: 2
  • Operating a motor vehicle without minimum insurance 2
  • Simple trespass: 1
  • Reckless driving: 1
  • Passing in no-passing zone: 1
  • Following too closely: 1
  • Improper stop: 1
  • Falsified marker, license or registration: 1
  • improper use of marker: 1
  • Failure to carry insurance card: 1
  • Failure to return license: 1
  • Operating an unregistered motor vehicle: 1
  • Operating a motor vehicle without tint inspection: 1
  • Illegal operation by a motor carrier: 1.

Tinted windows must be inspected!

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Every day, kids hang out at Wakeman Field.

Is this some kind of strange ball they kicked through the goalpost?

(Photo/Cathy Utz)

Nope.

Just the sun doing what it does every day: setting.

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Longtime Westport Rotary Club member Lyla Steenbergen addressed the organization at its Tuesday lunch meeting.

As chair of the International Giving Committee, she presented an overview of the local group’s current projects.

For several years, she has helped equip and enlarge a hospital in Uganda. This year, the Rotarians will add a vision and dental clinic.

Other projects include NicaPhoto, which creates after-school programs in Nicaragua; Gift of Life, which funds pediatric heart surgeries, and M-Lisada, which brings education programs and scholarships to 2,100 youngsters Uganda.

Westport Rotary is also involved in water, irrigation and sanitation projects in Nepal and Kenya. 

Lyla Steenbergen (Photo/Dave Matlow)

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The weather the past few days has been spectacular.

It’s that time of year when summer is ending, but the craziness of a new school year has not yet begun.

Everyone is chill.

Including this guy, who is relaxing just like the rest of us.

Ben Meyer spotted him at Owenoke near Gray’s Creek, posing for today’s “Westport … Naturally” feature photo.

(Photo/Ben Meyer)

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And finally … in honor of Trey Ellis’ Script in Hand show at the Westport Country Playhouse, “Satchel Paige and the Kansas City Swing”:

(As summer fades, “06880” helps you get ready for the “new year.” Thanks for sending us the news we need — and for supporting us with a few bucks, too. Please click here. Thank you!) 

Craig Melvin, Trey Ellis, Senator Blumenthal Join MLK Celebration

Several very big names join guest of honor Dr. Clarence B. Jones for the 18th annual Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. celebration this Sunday (January 14, 3 p.m., Westport Library).

NBC News anchor and co-host of the 3rd Hour of TODAY Craig Melvin will moderate the discussion. Violin virtuoso Kersten Stevens performs, while novelist, playwright and filmmaker Trey Ellis introduces Dr. Jones. Melvin and Ellis are Westport residents.

US Senator Richard Blumenthal and Representative Ritchie Torres of New York will also speak.

“I couldn’t envision a more incredible lineup for what promises to be a memorable afternoon,” says Westport Library director Bill Harmer.

“The appearances speak to the remarkable life and accomplishments of Dr. Clarence B. Jones and the enduring legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.”

The 18th annual celebration is a partnership between the Library, TEAM Westport, and the Westport Country Playhouse, as well as the Westport/Weston Interfaith Clergy and Council, the 2 groups that hosted the inaugural celebration in 2006.

The celebration is free to attend (registration is highly encouraged). There will be a livestream available on the Library’s YouTube channel.

The day’s guest of honor, Dr. Jones, served as legal counsel, strategic advisor, and draft speechwriter to Dr. King from 1960 until King’s assassination inn 1968. He wrote the first 7 paragraphs of the iconic “I Have a Dream” speech.

“06880” Podcast: Trey Ellis

Trey Ellis is one of the most interesting — and accomplished — people in Westport.

He is a leading chronicle of the Black experience. An award-winning novelist, Emmy and Peabody-honored filmmaker, playwright and professor of screenwriting in the Graduate School at Columbia University, he recently served as executive producer and interviewer for the HBO documentaries “True Justice: Bryan Stevenson’s Fight For Equality,” and “King in the Wilderness.”

The other day, I spoke with Trey. We talked about writing, creativity, Black lives here and elsewhere, raising children in Westport, and much more.

It was a fascinating, wide-ranging conversation. Click here for the newest “06880: The Podcast” episode.

Screenshot from the Trey Ellis podcast.

Roundup: IRS, MLK, WCP, More

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Congressman Jim Himes reminds residents of free tax filing resource,

The Volunteer Income Tax Assistance program offers federal and state tax help to people earning under $56,000 a year. VITA is largely virtual this year, but there are also some drop-off locations. Click here to learn more.

The Connecticut Department of Revenue Services provides free tax help over by phone. Call 860-297-5770 to schedule an online appointment.

The University of Connecticut School of Law offers federal and state tax assistance for low-income Connecticut residence by phone. Call 860-570-5165 to learn more or book an appointment.

Click here for links to more tax assistance.

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“King in the Wilderness” is an Emmy-winning HBO documentary about the last 3 days of Martin Luther King’s life. At the end of the 1960s, the Black Power movement saw the civil rights leader’s focus on nonviolence as a weakness, while President Lyndon Johnson believe his antiwar activism was dangerous. King himself was tormented by doubts about his philosophy and future.

The executive producer was Westporter Trey Ellis. He’s an award-winning novelist, Emmy and Peabody-winning filmmaker, playwright, professor of screenwriting in the Graduate School of Film at Columbia University, and contributor to The New Yorker, New York TimesWashington Post and NPR.

On Thursday, February 25 (7 p.m.), the Westport Library hosts a conversation between Ellis and TEAM Westport chair Harold Bailey. Registrants can view the film for one week prior to the event. There is no charge; click here to register.

The program is part of Westport READS. This year’s them is “Towards a More Perfect Union: Confronting Racism.”

Trey Ellis

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The popular Westport Country Playhouse “Script in Hand” play-reading series returns Monday, February 22 (7 p.m.).

This time, audiences can hear the scripts in their own homes. The virtual performance is also available on demand any time, from noon February 23 through February 28.

This reading — “A Sherlock Carol” — should be particularly fun. It’s about a grown-up Tiny Tim, who asks Sherlock Holmes to investigate the death of Ebenezer Scrooge. Six actors take on the famed characters of Arthur Conan Doyle and Charles Dickens. Click here for more information, and tickets.

In addition, the Playhouse presents a free virtual conversation about Thornton Wilder’s timeless “Our Town” — particularly as it applies to the 21st century.

It’s this Sunday (February 14, 3 p.m.), on the Playhouse website and YouTube channel (Westport Playhouse).

Participants include Howard Sherman, author of a new book about “Our Town”; Anne Keefe, associate artistic director with Joanne Woodward for the Playhouse’s 2002 production of “Our Town,” and Jake Robards, who appeared in that show. The host is Playhouse artistic director Mark Lamos.

In other WCP news, the Playhouse has announced the 13 members of its inaugural Youth Council. They include Staples High School students Henry Carson, Kate Davitt and Sophia Vellotti, plus Cessa Lewis, a Westporter who attends St. Luke’s School.

“A Sherlock Carol”

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Suzuki Music Schools’ Connecticut Guitar Festival returns for a 4th year on March 5 to 7 — virtually, of course. It’s all part of the Westport-based organization’s mission to make international artists accessible to everyone — for free.

For a list of events, click here. For an overview of the entire festival and artists, click here.

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And finally … pioneering jazz pianist Chick Corea died Tuesday in Florida, of cancer. He was 79.

 

 

“King In The Wilderness” Comes Home

It’s been 50 years since Martin Luther King was gunned down in Memphis. He was just 39 years old.

King was part of a generation of courageous, determined and energetic civil rights leaders. Some are gone. Others are alive — and still fighting for social justice.

But they’re in their 70s, 80s and 90s. They won’t be here forever. It’s fallen to a new generation to pass along their stories — and keep their hopes and dreams alive.

Trey Ellis is one of those storytellers. The Westporter is a leading voice of the African American experience.

Trey Ellis

He’s written movies, books, TV shows and a play about the Tuskegee Airmen. He’s been a political pundit, social critic and Huffington Post contributor; won a Peabody and been nominated for an Emmy.

He teaches at Columbia University, was a non-resident fellow at Harvard, and taught or lectured at Yale, NYU, and in Brazil and France.

But his most recent project was extra-special. He served as executive producer for “King in the Wilderness.” The 2-hour documentary showed a side of the civil rights icon and Nobel Peace Prize winner that’s seldom discussed today: a conflicted leader who at the time of his death was assailed by critics on both the left and right.

Ellis spent a year crisscrossing the country, interviewing 17 men and women who lived, breathed and molded the civil rights movement.

John Lewis, Jesse Jackson, Marian Wright Edelman, Joan Baez — all spoke with candor and insight about Martin Luther King. Ellis also interviewed unsung heroes of the movement, like Diane Nash.

This Wednesday (June 13, 7 p.m., Bowtie Cinema, 542 Westport Avenue, Norwalk), the Westport Library and TEAM Westport host a free screening of the film. It premiered in January at Sundance, then was shown at the Smithsonian’s Museum of African American History and New York’s Riverside Church, before airing on HBO in April.

Making the film was “the experience of a lifetime,” Ellis says. He held intimate conversations with men and women who shaped our nation’s history. He worked with rare archival footage, some of it never before seen by the public.

He helped bring nuance — and human frailty — to a man who has become shrouded in myth.

In the final years of his life, which the documentary focuses on, King was “more radical, and more disregarded” than most of us remember, or realize, says Kenneth Turan of the Los Angeles Times and NPR.

New York Times columnist Charles Blow notes, “I consider myself kind of a King fanatic, King-ophile … And I was just shocked by  how much I leaned, how much new footage I had never seen.”

Wednesday’s Bowtie screening will be followed by a Q-and-A with Ellis.

The executive producer is proud of his film. And — because he’s a professor too — he’s eager to put his work in a larger context.

“With the state of the nation so fractured,” Ellis says, “‘King in the Wilderness’ seems ripped from today’s headlines.”

(The June 13 screening of “King in the Wilderness” is free. However, pre-registration is required. Click here for a free ticket; click here for more information.)

Trey Ellis And Martin Luther King: In The Wilderness

Fifty years ago today, a bullet ended Martin Luther King’s life — and changed the course of American history.

Two nights ago, HBO aired “King in the Wilderness.” The 2-hour documentary showed a side of the civil rights icon and Nobel Peace Prize winner that’s seldom discussed today: a conflicted leader who, at the time of his death, was assailed by critics on both the left and right.

Trey Ellis

Westporter Trey Ellis served as executive producer. He’s accomplished plenty in his life. He’s written movies, books, TV shows and a play about the Tuskegee Airmen. He’s been a political pundit, social critic and Huffington Post contributor; won a Peabody and been nominated for an Emmy.

He teaches at Columbia University, was a non-resident fellow at Harvard, and taught or lectured at Yale, NYU, and in Brazil and France.

But this project was special. Ellis spent a year crisscrossing the country, interviewing 17 men and women who lived, breathed and molded the civil rights movement.

John Lewis, Jesse Jackson, Marian Wright Edelman, Joan Baez — all spoke with candor and insight about Martin Luther King. Ellis also interviewed unsung heroes of the movement, like Diane Nash.

A special camera allowed Ellis and his subjects to look directly into each other’s eyes as they talked. Each 2-hour interview was thrilling.

“It was a very collaborative effort,” Ellis says of the film. He worked closely with director Peter Kunhardt (a 6-time Emmy winner) and co-executive producer Taylor Branch (who wrote the landmark trilogy “America in the King Years”).

In the midst of so many gauzy, hagiographic 50th-anniversary retrospectives, this documentary is different.

“When most people think of Martin Luther King, it’s ‘I have a dream,'” Ellis says.

“He was 25 years old when he first worked on the Montgomery bus boycott. He was 39 in 1968. His great successes were behind him. But he still kept working for social justice. He loved humanity.”

In the last year of his life, King was criticized by some whites for speaking out against the Vietnam War — and by some African Americans for his insistence on non-violence. His embrace of economic inequality issues also drew criticism.

Ellis’ film examines all of that, unflinchingly.

“He wasn’t perfect. He was human,” the executive producer says. “He was funny, irreverent, and at the end of his life he was depressed.”

Dr. Martin Luther King

“King in the Wilderness” premiered in January at Sundance. It was was shown at the Smithsonian’s Museum of African American History, and at New York’s Riverside Church, where on this day in 1967 — exactly a year before he was murdered — Dr. King preached a fiery sermon that denounced not just Vietnam, but America’s entire foreign and domestic policy.

“It’s been a wild ride,” Ellis says of the past year.

His adventure continues. Today he’s in Montgomery, Alabama — the city where King first preached, and helped organize the year-long bus boycott.

Ellis is there working on his next project: an HBO documentary on the history of racial violence in America.

That’s a subject as important today as it was 100 years ago.

And on April 4, 1968.

(For more information on HBO’s “King in the Wilderness” — including viewing options — click here. For an interview with Trey Ellis and Peter Kunhardt about the film, click below.)

Old Mill Rocks

Alert “06880” reader Trey Ellis is a nationally known writer, political pundit, social critic and university professor.

He’s also a Westporter, with a pretty good eye for our town’s natural beauty.

Yesterday, he snapped this image from Old Mill Beach.

Click on or hover over image to enlarge. (Photo/Trey Ellis)

Click on or hover over image to enlarge. (Photo/Trey Ellis)

Once again — as with all his work — Trey’s perspective is special, and unique.


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Trey Ellis Tells Tuskegee Airmen’s Tale

Trey Ellis had done a lot of things in his life.

He’s written movies, books and TV shows. He’s been a political pundit, a social critic and a Huffington Post contributor. He’s won a Peabody, been nominated for an Emmy and shortlisted for a PEN Award.

Trey Ellis

Trey Ellis

He teaches at Columbia University, was a non-resident fellow at Harvard, and taught or lectured at Yale, NYU, the University of New Mexico, and in Brazil and France.

But until a decade ago, the Westport resident had never written a play.

That’s when the Lincoln Center Institute commissioned a work by Ellis about the Tuskegee Airmen. He’d already earned honors for a 1995 HBO film on the African American pilots who overcame fierce racism to become one of World War II’s finest US fighter groups. They never lost a bomber.

Ellis and Ricardo Khan turned the movie into an hour-long play, called “Fly.” Originally aimed at students, a longer version was staged a few years later at the Vineyard Theater in Massachusetts, then the Crossroads Theater in New Jersey — one of America’s leading black companies.

It’s since moved on to Ford’s Theatre in Washington — where several of the real Tuskegee Airmen saw it — and the Pasadena Playhouse.

Ellis is very proud of “Fly.” The other day — quoting Martin Luther King — he noted that while the arc of the moral universe is long, it bends toward justice. However, the playwright added, recent racial strife in America has made stories like the Airmen’s more relevant and important than ever.

Fly - Trey Ellis

Now “Fly” — which the New York Times called “a superior piece of theatrical synergy” — is coming to the New Victory Theater on 42nd Street. It runs March 11-27.

Ellis will be there. So will his family — including his son Chet (the name of one of the show’s main characters), and Chet’s friends.

But there’s one more place Ellis would like to see it produced: the Westport Country Playhouse.

“I go to as many productions there as I can,” the playwright says. “I would love to bring this to my adopted hometown.”

Amanda Freeman’s “Parentables” Posts

Amanda Freeman spent 10 years “trying to get out of New York.” She had earned her MFA in creative writing at Columbia, and enjoyed teaching the subject at CUNY — particularly to low-income women. But the final straw was an “awful experience” trying to get her daughter into kindergarten.

Her husband — the writer/commentator/professor Trey Ellis — fell in love with Westport. A year ago, they moved here. “I would have gone anywhere,” Amanda admits.

Though the city is more exciting for adults, she and Trey love seeing their children walk out the door to play outside. The kids are taking full advantage of so much that Westport offers.

Amanda Freeman, Trey Ellis, and their blended family.

As they do, Amanda writes.

Her specialties are blended families and single parenting. Like any good writer, she’s focusing on what she knows.

Her first husband left to pursue another relationship — while Amanda was pregnant. She raised her daughter alone (with help from friends and family).

When her daughter was 18 months old, Amanda was writing a single parent’s guide to New York. She met a single dad: Trey. The rest is history — and a blended family. (Their kids are now 13, 10 and 6.)

Amanda’s guest posts on the New York Times Motherlode blog caught the eye of folks at Parentables, a TLC blog. This summer, she joined the staff. Now, in addition to her teaching and parenting gigs, she blogs 3 times a week.

Oh, yeah. Amanda is also working toward her Ph.D. in sociology. Her focus: the American family.

Amanda has blogged about “sweaty palms at 1st grade orientation,” “commuting with your toddler” and “what happens when a tomboy gives birth to a princess.” (As a one-time “militant feminist,” that topic is intensely personal for her.)

Amanda writes about “things that people think, but are afraid to say out loud.” Her posts certainly resonate. Around town, women offer critiques and suggest story ideas.

Amanda Freeman

As a sociologist — and a parenting blogger — Amanda has a unique eye on Westport’s “mommy culture.” While a number of women hold full-time jobs – many in New York City — plenty of others have chosen to stay home. (While only about 7% of the national population of middle- and upper-class mothers don’t work outside the home, in Westport it’s much higher.)

Those stay-at-home moms “help make the schools fantastic,” Amanda says. “So many women volunteer so much time and energy and expertise.”

However, she says, “it does create a special social culture. Sometimes I feel like I’m just darting in and out of the schools.”

Every woman makes her own choice. For Amanda, blogging about parenting is a great option.

“So much of parenting is frantic,” she says. “You just try to get through the day.

“Writing about kids makes me hyper-aware. I like being able to reflect on parenting, and writing helps me do that. I appreciate that opportunity.”

As do countless readers — on Amanda’s road, back in New York City, and around the country.