Archive for July, 2011

Residents, Restaurant Owners and City Chew Over Details of New Food Truck

Sunday, July 31st, 2011

Food trucks are cropping up all over Boston, eliciting largely positive reactions from hungry, on-the-go consumers, while garnering equally nervous ones from area restaurant owners.

Charlestown residents, public officers and the owner of Go Fish! Mobile Food Truck met on Wednesday to discuss the controversial opening of a food truck in the Navy Yard.

Neighborhood liaison Danielle Valle Fitzgerald arranged the meeting at the Constitution Inn after the news of the coming food truck took many neighbors and restaurant owners by surprise. People were further puzzled after the truck didn’t show up Wednesday, July 13, when the city had announced it would be there.

Now the truck’s hours and location are clear: Go Fish! serves lunch from 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Friday, Saturday and Sunday at the intersection of 5th Street and 1st Avenue in the Navy Yard.

Still, it might take time for neighbors to come to terms with the new business in town.

Janet Knott, the chief of staff to City Councilor Salvatore LaMattina, attempted to assuage wariness toward the truck.

“Having a food truck in the Yard, even though it showed up unannounced, is a good thing,” she said.

Friends of the Charlestown Navy Yard presented locals’ concerns

Michael Parker, who presides over the Friends of the Charlestown Navy Yard, said that the city’s process of opening the Navy Yard to a food truck felt like a “stealth mission.” He said members of the Charlestown Neighborhood Council had complained that no member of the mayor’s food truck committee had ever presented them with a plan.

“Usually in Charlestown, a sparrow doesn’t drop without the CNC getting involved,” he said.

City officials at the meeting said they told restaurant owners within 100 feet of the truck site about the new business, in accordance with an ordinance. But residents criticized the city for not explicitly telling restaurants throughout the entire Navy Yard what was happening.

Knott apologized on behalf of the city for not better notifying the council and nearby restaurants about Go Fish!

Some worry that the truck will damage restaurant business in the Navy Yard

One man at the meeting said that food trucks would jeopardize business for restaurants in the Navy Yard, a concern that Parker said several restaurant owners shared.

“If you have people buying sandwiches at City Hall, they’re not buying sandwiches somewhere else,” the man said, referring to the food trucks that operate in the plaza.

He said that while Go Fish! operates in a highly trafficked area of the Navy Yard, visitors might not know where to find ‘tucked-away’ restaurants, especially because there are no signs pointing toward them. Therefore, he said it’s more likely for tourists and others to “impulse buy” at the truck.

“We need to have our local businesses on a level playing field,” he said.

Meanwhile, Rafael Carbonell, who works in the city’s Office of Business Development and sits on the mayor’s Food Truck Committee, said he thinks the trucks would complement surrounding restaurants. He added that according to rules laid out by the city, food trucks couldn’t compete with restaurants by serving the same meals.

In spite of that rule, Parker said that some of the food that Go Fish! sells appears on the menu at Tavern on the Water, one of the several restaurants that he said didn’t know about the opening of the truck.

But Go Fish! owner David Stein said that while his truck and the restaurant both serve seafood, the sit-down experience at Tavern on the Water differed from the on-street take-out one at his establishment.

“The last thing I want to do is negatively impact somebody developing a restaurant,” said Stein, who said he had owned a restaurant for some 30 years.

“But a little competition, if it brings attention to an area, it can have a benefit by bringing people to a neighborhood,” he added.

Officials say city doesn’t give financial breaks to food truck owners

Parker said that restaurant owners believed that the city was subsidizing the cost of opening food trucks, but both a member of the food committee and Stein guaranteed otherwise.

Edith Murnane, the city’s Director of Food Initiatives, told the audience that it costs food truck owners more money to get permits and licenses than it does restaurant owners.

Murnane estimated that food truck owners in Boston would pay approximately $54,000 each year to park on public property and comply with the rules for managing a truck. Later, she shed additional light on what, exactly, the projected sum refers to.

“The $54,000 is an estimate for what it might cost a food truck operator to do business,” Murnane said. “And, as I outlined in the meeting, it includes: permitting, gps and an estimate on the rent or monthly payments associated with owning or renting a food truck,” she said, noting that the numbers are based on an estimate that food trucks can cost between $50,000 – $100,000 to purchase.

“The money also covers the licensing fee for a ‘tier-1′ location such as Charlestown and an estimate on what it might cost to rent commissary space to service the food truck,” she added.

Stein said that by the time his permit expires at the end of December, he will have paid the city about $10,000 to serve lunch three times a week in Charlestown and four times a week in the Christian Science Center.

“I can tell you that the city has in no way subsidized my truck,” Stein said.

Parker thanked Stein for clearing up the myth.

After he finished taking questions from the audience, Parker gave a short speech, saying he didn’t want to “stamp out entrepreneurial spirit.”

He suggested that the group meet again sometime early next year to evaluate the effect Go Fish! will have had on the neighborhood.

Re-posted from the Charlestown Patch, By Amanda Kersey

Tori Amos to play Boston’s Orpheum Theatre

Saturday, July 30th, 2011

Tori Amos has announced the US leg of her “Night of Hunters” tour which will bring her to Massachusetts in December. The singer-songwriter will play Boston’s Orpheum Theatre on Tuesday, December 6. Tickets for the show, which range in price from $39.50 to $49.50, will go on sale Friday at 10 a.m. through Ticketmaster. Tori Amos

Amos will be touring in support of her forthcoming album, Night of Hunters, which is scheduled to hit stores in September. The album was inspired by select classical pieces spanning the last 400 years. With Night of Hunters, Amos carries on the classical tradition of variations on a theme: taking inspiration from classical forms to create a bold new work while paying tribute to the mastery of the original compositions.

On Night of Hunters, which she wrote and produced, Amos commented in a press release, “I have used the structure of a classical song cycle to tell an ongoing, modern story. The protagonist is a woman who finds herself in the dying embers of a relationship. In the course of one night she goes through an initiation of sorts that leads her to reinvent herself allowing the listener to follow her on a journey to explore complex musical and emotional subject matter.”

“One of the main themes explored on this album is the hunter and the hunted and how both exist within us,” the singer explained.

Night of Hunters, her 12th studio effort, follows 2009′s Midwinter Graces. For the new album, Amos broke a decade-long collaboration with her studio and touring bandmates to work with a variety of new musicians, including the Apollon Musagète Quartet.

Re-posted from Boston Music Spotlight

It’s official: Jerry Remy’s Sports Bar & Grill coming to Fall River

Friday, July 29th, 2011
FALL RIVER —

The waterfront announcement Thursday that Jerry Remy’s Sports Bar & Grill has “a preliminary signed agreement” to make Fall River its next hot spot may have been an extra-base hit for the city and the development team headed by Anthony Cordeiro.

But based on raised expectations the past couple of months, the ball fell short of a home run for the public-private-political partnership being touted next to Bicentennial Park.

Remy, a city native raised in Somerset, was not in town for the announcement. He was at Fenway Park, calling the Red Sox game, just as he has for more than two decades since his playing career ended.

Instead, his managing partner, John Mascia, joined Mayor Will Flanagan, Fall River Economic Development Executive Vice President Kenneth Fiola Jr. at Thursday’s event. Cordeiro and one of his two partners, Larry Couto, were also there to push the $3 million project ahead.

“We do have a preliminary signed deal with Tony and his partners to bring Remy’s to the waterfront,” Mascia said. Construction should start late this fall if all the conditions of the deal are met, he said.

The sports-themed restaurant would bring about 70 jobs, Flanagan said, and help open expansion opportunities, including a longer boardwalk past the park.

Fiola, at a brief press conference, called it “a significant real estate announcement.”

Its roots began a year ago when Remy’s examined a setup at the closed Regatta next to Heritage State Park, Fiola said.

Mascia said last month the chain plans to open its Fall River location by May or June of next year. The 5,000-square-foot indoor restaurant will seat 250 diners, and two outdoor spaces totaling 4,000 square feet could seat about 400 more at tables facing the Taunton River. The site had been the Quaker Fabric headquarters.

Remy’s in Fall River would be the chain’s fourth location and its first outside Boston. The other locations are at Logan Airport, on Boylston Street near Fenway Park, and in the Seaport District in South Boston.

Plans are to build “10 to 20 more in three or four years,” Mascia said. When asked if obstacles they need to overcome could halt the project, Mascia said, “Everybody wants to meet the conditions. It’s a matter of the timeline. He said the four to six months of construction was key.

Mascia and Cordeiro listed conditions to cement the deal: improvement of what is now one-way access on Davol Street past their site, that requires President Avenue area traffic to head north and return south. They also need the City Council to ease waterfront zoning requirements via a proposal pushed by Flanagan.

“We’d like to see it rezoned so other people can come in and develop the area,” Mascia said.

Showing his big-league orientation, Mascia said they’d also prefer that the recently improved state boat launch be expanded to handle transient boat traffic pulling in.

After the past month or so saying an announcement could be imminent, and several teasing tweets from the restaurant group, Cordeiro said bringing “the Remy’s brand” to his site carried a significant cost and required repayment commitments.

He and his partners as Commonwealth Landing LLC said they’d invest more than $3 million as part of a $16 million overall project cost for the five-story building. The top stories will house rental apartments, with the lower levels designated for commercial and office space.

Cordeiro said recent guarantees by the Remy group “made it easy for us to come up with that money.”

He also lauded Flanagan’s commitment to this project after he served on the mayor’s economic development transition team early in Flanagan’s administration.

In turn, Flanagan praised “three successful businessmen” – Cordeiro, Couto and third partner Alan Macomber – who “are willing to make an investment in the city.”

Remy’s coming to the former major leaguer’s native city “shows their faith and commitment in our community,” he said.

Flanagan said their eatery/pubs bring a “family atmosphere” with state-of-the-art audio-visual systems.

He and Fiola alluded to political backing needed from the Massachusetts Department of Transportation, the state economic development office, U.S. Rep. James McGovern and area legislators to make infrastructure to expand opportunities.

“We have to vet a conceptual design with the DOT,” Fiola said when asked about their progress.

The Landing partnership purchased the property with 5½ waterfront acres for $1.5 million at bankruptcy auction just over a year ago.

Re-posted from the Herald News

By Michael Holtzman,  Herald News Staff Reporter

Bars go up in smoke

Monday, July 25th, 2011

The 2004 law that established a workplace smoking ban in Massachusetts carved out an exception for cigar bars, because of the veryCigars & Cognac - Chester Niteowl logical assumption that, well, folks who work at an establishment built exclusively around smoking cigars have made an affirmative choice to be exposed to cigar smoke.

Boston officials, however, decided they needed to save those people from their own personal and professional choices. So with the backing of Mayor Tom Menino the unelected Public Health Commission adopted a ban on cigar and hookah bars. Shut your doors, the city told these small businesses, giving them until 2018 to do it. Several of the bars didn’t wait that long.

The House and Senate earlier this month inserted an outside section into the state budget that would grandfather in existing cigar bars in Boston, Worcester and Springfield, the second year they’ve tried to do so. But Gov. Deval Patrick isn’t having it. He vetoed the measure because he objects to preventing local officials “from protecting the public health of their citizens.”

Yes, long live the nanny state!

Frankly, with the exception of the poor business owners trying to keep their doors open, everyone comes out of this looking bad.

The city — for its arrogant determination to make health choices for grownups, to put local shops out of business, driving their workers to the unemployment line — and for the use of an unelected board to make it all happen. And while we’re not crazy about using the state budget as a vehicle to reverse bad policy, in this case lawmakers at least tried to get the job done.

What remains is for the Legislature to override the governor’s veto so a relative handful of entrepreneurs and the customers they serve can continue in business without the long arm of government getting in the way.

By Boston Herald Editorial Staff, Reposted from Bostonherald.com

John Pinette, “Still Hungry”

Thursday, July 21st, 2011

Comedian John Pinette teeters on a tightrope when it comes to delivering his funny stories. How much focus can he put on new stuff John Pinettewhen fans want to hear the classic stuff that makes them laugh until they cry, regardless of how many times they’ve heard the skits?

But really, it doesn’t matter which direction he goes. One thing is solid—this is one tightrope walker who won’t fall on his face. His ability to make people laugh, regardless of what he talks about (food and his travels mostly), is his safety net. Besides, if he did lose his footing, he’d put it in the act. Where do you think things like the “water park” and the “Chinese buffet” came from?

John Pinette went from counting beans to talking about them. In a much younger day, he was an accountant. The term “funny accountant” is a definite oxymoron and Pinette soon realized his career choice fit him about the same as a thong bathing suit. When the epiphany hit, it couldn’t have been in a better location—Boston, the ever-flowing East Coast well-spring of comedic talent. When he took to microphones in comedy clubs there, he was in the tank with the big fish.

And it didn’t take Pinette long to get noticed. Not because of his girth, but rather because of his disarming style of comedy. Here was a guy who was not afraid to laugh at himself and do so in a witty and clever manner—with timing reminiscent of Jack Benny and character creation like Jonathan Winters.

Since his early days on the Boston comedy circuit, Pinette has gone on to tour from one end of the country to the other delivering a routine that strikes common chords through common threads—food and travel. His first comedy CD, Show Me The Buffet was an all-you-can-laugh-at affair that catapulted Pinette to national prominence.

However, in a move to preserve his health—at the risk of sinking his act—Pinette has been losing weight. In 2004, he released a DVD called Say Nay, Nay which was the result of a long-term routine developed by a series of trainers.

But John Pinette has weight to spare—still maintaining a rotund figure with an affinity for buffets. DVDs like, I’m Starvin’, released in 2009, keeps the food war fires fanned and fueled.

Pinette’s credits are many: he was named Stand-Up Comedian of the Year by the American Comedy Awards in 1999 and has received a Gemini Award nomination for his televised performance at the Montreal Comedy Festival in 2000. He has also dipped his toes into acting in both television and film, appearing in such projects as Duets starring Gwenyth Paltrow; Dear God starring Greg Kinnear; The Punisher starring John Travolta; and as the car-jack victim in the final episode of “Seinfeld.”

Pinette has also tried his hand at musical theater, spending nearly two years in the Broadway show and the touring company of  “Hairspray”—in drag in the role of Edna Turnblad, the mother.

But Pinette has been back to doing what he does best—on stage telling funny stories from one side of the country to the other. This includes an upcoming performance in Laughlin at the Aquarius on Saturday, July 23, with his cherub-like demeanor fully in tact.

We caught up with Pinette via a phone interview. Here’s his take:

On what he’s been doing lately…

PINETTE: I’ve been vacationing in Vermont with my family. I didn’t know it was the home of Ben & Jerry’s. Now it’s the home of Ben & Jerry’s and John’s. I was staying at an inn and people were saying, “George Washington stayed there.’ I was looking around and thinking, they haven’t done a lot since then. He probably told them it was shabby and needed some work done. My travels are definitely part of my act.

On his style of comedy…

PINETTE: I like being a storyteller. If you tell a story correctly, the laughs will come. A story shouldn’t be funny at the end, it should be funny all the way through—with ups and downs and crescendos. I love it and work on it constantly.

I do love my audiences. They’ve stuck with me for 25 years and I don’t like the idea of disappointing them. I don’t like that at all.

On his latest project…

PINETTE: My comedy special “Still Hungry” comes out Friday, July 29, on the Comedy Channel. Since I did the special in December, I’ve written a new half hour of material.

Comedy is always a work in progress for me—as well as for the audience. I can’t parrot the same stuff. How can you get people to listen if you can’t listen to yourself. Like a lot of stuff that doesn’t make the cut, if I didn’t find it funny, I wouldn’t talk about it.

I do a lot of writing on stage and I won’t put it on paper until I’ve done it on stage. Because if it doesn’t work on stage, I’m just wasting paper.

“Still Hungry” is a double entendre. Food will always be part of material, though people might say, “he still talks about food,” even with the weight loss. But there are 45 shows on TV on cupcakes so I talk about food. Also there’s the fact I do enjoy talking about food and am more comfortable when doing so.

On being his own tough critic…

PINETTE: I don’t think I’m harshly critical of myself. I think that fades away with time. I’m critical in a good way.

Comedy is something I love to do and I love the feeling I get making people laugh. Believe me, you don’t want me working on your roof.

On whether the dieting is biting into his cherub-like demeanor…

PINETTE: I’m always working on exercise, which is easier when I’m not so busy touring. But it doesn’t matter how much I do, believe me, losing my cherub-like demeanor will never happen. I will never open a yoga studio. I know a lot more about nutrition, but one day I could snap and they’ll find me slumped over the wheel of an ice cream truck.

On how he juggles classic bits with new material…

PINETTE: I tell people, let the act take it’s course. It’s like when you go to Disneyworld now—there’s the old and the new. I’m an entertainer, not a high-end artist. I like to move on, but I’ve snuck the old in there in such a way it’s so secret, people will need a decoder ring. People will see one and say, “here it is, it’s in there.”

I love the line in the Stevie Nicks’  song “Landslide”—‘I’ve been afraid of changing ‘cause I built my life around you.’ There’s that old saying that where God closes a door, somewhere he opens a window—if you lose the weight, you fit through the window.

On his impeccable timing and ability to master dialects…

PINETTE: It’s just very organic. I just found people and then incorporated them in my stories. It’s stylized to make it a funnier story—yet there’s truth in the dialect; it’s not cartoonish or demeaning culturally.

On whether he’ll have an opening act.

PINETTE: No. Comedy is like an elliptical. You start out doing five minutes a night and then you gradually get up to 10 and 15 minutes until you’re doing an hour and a half. It took me a lot of time to get there so I want to hold onto my ability to do that. I don’t want to make people wait. That’s bulls—. I’m like, “let’s get a mic and a bottle of water, and start this thing.

I always get great audiences in Laughlin. They always get a lot of show from me.

On his favorite thing about doing stand-up…

PINETTE: I just like the fact that I take more chances than I ever have. The first five years, I never changed. But then I thought, what happens when I can’t talk about Monica Lewinski? And it came to me: make up another joke. Even though I’m more comfortable now (as a comic), it’s not easy. It will never be easy. If it was easy, it wouldn’t be fun.

On his least favorite thing about stand-up…

PINETTE: The traveling. But then I’m happy doing what I do, so I don’t mind the ride.

On hecklers…

PINETTE: I rarely get hecklers. I don’t invite them, I don’t encourage it. Some comics encourage it. If you don’t encourage it, it’s not an issue.

On whether there’s more musical theater in his future…

PINETTE: Actually there will be more singing bits in the act. Musical theater is a tremendous amount of work. I’m thankful for it, but it’s a lot of work. Right now I’m tied up doing 40 weeks this year because of the special. After that things will vary, so we’ll see what happens next. I don’t want to lose the clubs. I learn a lot there.

On working clean…

PINETTE: The corporate gigs expect a clean comic and good audiences love a clean comic. I love the idea of being conscious of that and respectful of that. I’m not saying I don’t let something slip. Everybody does once in a while.  But I don’t think about saying the f— word. The graphic material—I don’t do that. How dirty can you get talking about cake?

Re-posted from the Laughlin Entertainer

Staycation over – Boston’s tourism industry expects number of visitors could top prerecession figure

Tuesday, July 19th, 2011

Don Sniffin hadn’t taken his family on a real vacation since he was laid off from his job as a software engineer in Boulder, Colo., in Faneuil Hall2007.

But this summer, securely reemployed, Sniffin, his wife, and their three children – ages 11, 14, and 17 – flew east for a nine-day holiday in Boston, Plymouth, Cape Cod, and Maine.

“This is the biggest trip we’ve taken in a number of years,’’ said Sniffin, 48, as he followed a costumed tour guide along the Freedom Trail.

The Sniffins aren’t the only ones breaking out of staycation mode. After big drops in 2008 and 2009, Boston and Cambridge are attracting an increasing number of vacationers, and this year local tourism officials expect visitors to exceed the 20.8 million people who came to the region in 2007, just before the last recession began.

This still doesn’t come close to the record years of 1999 and 2000, when “everyone was walking around with these platinum American Express cards,’’ said Patrick Moscaritolo, president of the Greater Boston Convention and Visitors Bureau, but a recovery appears to be in full swing.

Three of the biggest attractions in Boston have weathered the economic problems of the past 4 1/2 years in different ways. The Freedom Trail experienced its only drop in visitors in 2008; Old Town Trolley Tours faltered in 2009. The Museum of Science had decreases in 2008 and 2010 but a banner year in between, due to a wildly popular “Harry Potter’’ exhibit. Officials at all three expect this year to top or equal the numbers in 2007.

Looking to next year, some tourism operators are positively giddy, citing the reopening of the Boston Tea Party Ships & Museum, the 100th anniversary of Fenway Park, and bicentennial commemorations of the War of 1812 on the USS Constitution. New restaurants on the South Boston Waterfront and increased awareness of the Boston Harbor Islands are also attracting more visitors.

“I think we’re entering a golden era of tourism here,’’ said Matthew Murphy, general manager of Old Town Trolley Tours.

It didn’t take major Boston milestones to impress 10-year-old Olivia Smith from Michigan, who was taking in the sights aboard an orange and green Old Town trolley with her mother, Danielle, last week. All she needed was a dunce cap with the words “fart machine,’’ which she got at a Faneuil Hall eatery. “Dick’s Last Resort is like the best restaurant ever,’’ she said.

That more than made up for her allergic reaction to Boston cream pie at the Omni Parker House – the very place the dessert was invented.

Despite the recent surge in visitors, tourism officials agree the economy is still weighing on the industry. With gas prices high, savings accounts low, and the national unemployment rate stuck above 9 percent, everyone is watching spending and searching for a deal. Free admission at the Museum of Science, for example, attracted a horde of visitors Friday. The garage filled by 10:30 a.m., and exhibit halls swarmed with families checking out a giant grasshopper and a slice of a 2,000-year-old sequoia tree.

Karen and Sean Aherne of Shrewsbury surprised their four children, ages 2 to 9, with a trip to the museum when they realized they could save more than $100. The health care management company where Sean works has had three rounds of layoffs, and concerns about the economy have made saving money a way of life for them.

“You can’t just spend money willy nilly,’’ he said. “We never did that . . .’’

“But we do it less so now,’’ his wife added.

The mentality is much different than it was five years ago, said Phil DeStefano, statistical analyst at the Museum of Science. “People are looking for bargains,’’ he said. “If you say free anything, they’re going to go.’’

By Katie Johnston, re-posted from Boston.com

Photo by David L. Ryan, Globe/Staff

Skating back to the scene of the rivalry

Monday, July 18th, 2011

TONYA & NANCY: The Rock Opera Presented by: Paul Boghosian/Harborside FilmsTonya & Nancy: The Rock Opera

At: Oberon, Cambridge, Monday through Thursday. Tickets: $25-$45. 866-811-4111,

www.cluboberon.com

The news that Tonya Harding and Nancy Kerrigan are back in the spotlight together may inspire a moan of “Why? Why? Why?’’

But wait, this is “Tonya & Nancy: The Rock Opera.’’ The show, which comes to Oberon Monday through Thursday, harks back to 1994, when the figure-skating rivalry between Massachusetts-bred star Kerrigan and Oregon bad girl Harding erupted into one of the first great celebrity train wrecks of the modern tabloid era. When Kerrigan was whacked on the knee with a metal baton just weeks before the Winter Olympics, in an attack planned by members of Harding’s camp, her repeated wails of “Why?’’ became the signature soundbite of weeks of heavy news coverage.

“I was obsessed with this Tonya and Nancy story from the very beginning,’’ says librettist Elizabeth Searle, of Arlington.

“This whole culture is obsessed, for better or worse, with these celebrity scandal tabloid stories. And my own feeling is, as a writer, it’s kind of your job, in a higher sense, to plug into your culture at the moment,’’ she says. “I feel as a writer I’m holding a divining rod trying to find the sources of energy. And my divining rod quivers with this material. It’s charged material.’’

Tonya and Nancy figured in her 2001 story collection ‘‘Celebrities in Disgrace,’’ and in 2006 she collaborated with her niece, composer Abigail Al-Doory Cross, on the 30-minute chamber opera “Tonya & Nancy: The Opera,’’ which premiered at the same Cambridge venue when it was known as Zero Arrow Theater.

“It seemed to me a natural subject for an opera, because it has the operatic emotions, the whining, the jealousy, the violence, the longing for attention,’’ Searle said. “I felt like it could be an opera for our times.’’

That version has been produced a few times – including partly on ice in Minnesota last year, Searle says. Meanwhile, the creators were also talking with Triangle Productions of Portland, Ore., Tonya’s hometown, about a longer version. They decided a rock musical was the way to go, and they found Los Angeles composer and Berklee College of Music graduate Michael Teoli, another Boston-area native.

“We’re really trying to put the rock back in the rock opera,’’ says Teoli. “A lot of things that call themselves rock operas are a little light on the rock element and more musical theater… . It’s almost a metal musical.’’

The rock opera has been produced on stage several times since it debuted in 2008 in Oregon. Looking for new venue possibilities, the creators brought it to Oberon for three performances in January to test out what they’re calling the “club version.’’ That means a slightly shorter show (60 minutes instead of 90) in which they use the whole venue, including having the actresses “skate’’ around the club atop large cubes pushed around by members of the chorus.

“It’s pretty intense. There’s a scene where the entire incredibly big-voiced ensemble is singing ‘Fall, Nancy, fall!’ while I’m doing incredibly difficult balancing poses on top of this big box,’’ says actress Kristen Lee Sergeant, who plays Nancy.

Darcie Champagne, who plays Tonya, also plays Tatiana in “The Donkey Show’’ at Oberon.

When the chamber opera premiered at Zero Arrow, Sergeant was pursuing an opera career and sang the role of Tonya. Now the Manchester-by-the-Sea native is singing with jazz bands in New York and appearing in musicals, and she has switched roles.

“They’re similar in that both have demons, but Nancy’s are more in her head,’’ Sergeant says. “She has to fight the inner voices telling her she can’t do it, that she’s a screw-up, blah blah blah. Tonya, on the other hand, has to deal with actual people telling her that.’’

The two skaters’ reactions to the show are predictably different. Harding came to the Portland premiere, Searles says, and went out with the cast afterward: “She played video poker all night.’’

Kerrigan, who won a silver medal at the Olympics a few weeks after the attack, is aware of the show but hasn’t seen it, Searle says. “Tonya & Nancy: The Rock Opera’’ makes no mention of the recent Kerrigan family tragedy that thrust Nancy back into the news. “We just wish her the best,’’ Searle said.

The show is as much about our tabloid culture as it is about two women, Searle says. The chorus often turns into a pack of slavering reporters.

“People are obsessed with these stories, and they read a lot of them in a very surface way, and then there’s this sort of longing to go deeper. Why does this fascinate us? What would it be like to be these characters? What does this story say about us?’’ Searle said.

By Joel Brown, Globe Correspondent- re-posted from Boston.com

Saint to close doors

Friday, July 15th, 2011

For nearly a decade, Saint has been a happening spot. Indeed, when the Back Saint Night club BostonBay boite opened in ’02, Boston’s nightlife scene suddenly got a whole lot groovier. “We were creating a nightlife trend for grown-ups,’’ says owner Brian Lesser. “It was something unique, fusing entertainment, nightlife, and food.’’ It was a scene enjoyed not only by urbanites, but also a slew of celebrities, who would slip into Lesser’s lounge with the expectation of partying discreetly with a cool crowd. Well, all good things must pass, and that time has come for Saint. The club on Exeter Street is closing its doors July 24. Lesser plans to reopen in the same location but wouldn’t dish on the details. “We want to stay at the forefront of what we do, and this is the time to go ahead and do a reconcept and bring something new back to the city.’’ What distinguished Saint from so many other nightspots in the city was the vibe, exemplified by the all-red Bordello Room, a comfy collection of sofas and low tables arranged around a long bar. The long list of celebs who hung out at Saint included Sting, Justin Timberlake, members of the Rolling Stones and Maroon 5, Robbie Williams, John Mellencamp, Val Kilmer, Michael Jordan, and Derek Jeter. Paul Pierce held his 30th birthday party there (he likes Asti Spumante). Duran Duran drank lustily at the bar. And one strange night Richard Dreyfuss, Tony Hawk, and Gene Simmons were all at separate tables. “Saint’s always been a place to party, not get paid,’’ says Lesser. “Celebrities may get paid to appear at other clubs, but they come here to have fun.’’ The next couple of weeks will be the last couple of weeks at Saint, so Lesser and the staff are planning to celebrate. And, as always, they’ll do it in style.

By Mark Shanahan & Meredith Goldstein -Re-posted from Boston.com

Stanley Cup pays club surprise visit

Wednesday, July 13th, 2011

NEWBURYPORT — The Stanley Cup weighs about 35 pounds, has been kissed by thousands of people over the years and is widely Stanley Cup at Michael's harborside in Newburyport, MAconsidered to be the most prestigious trophy in all of sports.

And on Saturday evening, some local hockey fans were lucky enough to get a glimpse of it and even kiss it when the cup made an impromptu visit to Michael’s Harborside on the Newburyport waterfront for more than an hour.

The Boston Bruins won this year’s Stanley Cup championship in June, defeating the Vancouver Canucks in a grueling yet thrilling seven-game series. It was the sixth time the spoked B’s have won the cup since its first year in the National Hockey League in 1924.

Per a long-standing tradition, every player and staff member is allowed to keep the cup for a day. Over the years, the cup has been in swimming pools, on mountain peaks and other out-of-the-ordinary places.

For all of Saturday, the trophy was in the hands of Boston Bruins equipment manager and New Hampshire resident Keith Robinson. After taking the cup to his native Tewksbury, Robinson brought it to Michael’s Harborside, where he has become a longtime regular since mooring his boat nearby on the Merrimack River.

“It was gracious of him to bring it to Michael’s and to the city of Newburyport,” Michael’s Harborside manager Kris Summit said.

Summit said Robinson set up the visit with general manager Matt Kirk, who then spread the news to his other managers. But the customers inside the restaurant had no idea the Cup would be coming until it was carried on to the lower deck by its National Hockey League-appointed guardians.

About 200 people were able to get up close and personal with the Cup after it was placed outside on the restaurant’s tiki deck shortly before 11 p.m. The lower-level deck offered plenty of room for fans waiting in line for their chance to touch it as well as great vantage points for the folks taking in the scene from the deck above.

Summit said the Cup’s appearance was kept quiet, per Robinson’s request, to avoid a duplication of its appearance in Tewksbury, a fundraiser that drew thousands of people in a short time.

“It was absolutely awesome. Customers were amazingly gracious and organized. Nobody got out of hand; they were so ecstatic to see it,” Summit said.

Among those waiting in line for a chance to touch the Cup were Sean Jansen and his wife, Amber, of Salisbury, who heard from a friend that the Cup was in Newburyport.

“I was a little starstruck,” Sean Jansen said.

Despite the fact that the Cup’s visit was kept on the down low, it didn’t take long for photos of the cup’s visit to make it onto countless Facebook and Twitter profiles and be sent by email. Jansen said many fans came wearing their Boston Bruins jerseys, showing there has been little letdown in total excitement over the Bruins squad, which won its first Stanley Cup since 1972.

Re-posted from the Eagle Tribune-  7/11/11 By Dave Rogers, Staff writer

But seriously . . . Weylu’s hall of fame idea is no joke

Sunday, July 10th, 2011

Two entrepreneurs shop around their plan to honor comedians, but funding is scarce and the old restaurant site is crumbling.

SAUGUS – Heard the one about the guy from Las Vegas who was driving up Route 1 and thought he had found the Forbidden City?

The old Weylu’s, the giant Chinese restaurant built to replicate the Imperial Palace, would be a great spot for the National Comedians Hall of Fame, he thought. After all, Route 1 in Saugus has always given people a little chuckle. It has an orange dinosaur, a neon cactus, and a leaning tower of pizza. Why not add Charlie Chaplin’s hat, Austin Powers’s suit, and a Howdy Doody puppet?

“It’s an iconic building,’’ Matt Adragna, 52, said of the long-closed restaurant. “It just seems to be a fitting place for us.’’

But is he joking? Maybe Niagara Falls, that old, sweet honeymoon spot, would be a better match? Or Jamestown, N.Y., the hometown of comedy queen Lucille Ball?

The upstate New York cities are also in the running for the nonprofit museum proposed by Adragna and his business partner, Tony Belmont of Florida.

Three days after the May 11 announcement of a $50 million plan to remake the old Weylu’s into the hall of fame, Belmont made a pitch to open the museum on Main Street in Niagara Falls, according to Mayor Paul Dyson of that city.

“We listened to their proposal,’’ Dyson said in a telephone interview. “We told them we were interested in hearing more about it.’’

Jamestown officials could not be reached for comment.

Andrew Bisignani, town manager in Saugus, is skeptical about the proposal. The 65,000-square-foot building would be turned into exhibit space, classrooms, a 300-seat auditorium, a gift shop, and a restaurant.

But since the announcement was made May 11 at Weylu’s to a group of local and state officials, there has been little discussion, Bisignani said.

“I’m not so sure it’s a viable project,’’ he said. “I haven’t heard much since that day, except for some e-mails saying that they have offers from Buffalo, Pennsylvania, and so on. I told him, ‘Do what you have to do.’ Saugus can’t match that.’’

Over the past 20 or so years, Adragna and Belmont have been making the circuit, pitching the idea of a hall of fame and museum to cities across the country. A meeting in Boston six years ago went nowhere, said Adragna.

Buffalo, Baltimore, and Philadelphia have also been talked about. In 2007, a temporary venue, named the National Comedy Hall of Fame, opened in Madeira Beach, Fla., a tiny community near Clearwater.

“It was a small location that we used only as a test site for one summer,’’ Adragna said. “The response was overwhelming, but it was just too small.’’

The duo initially set their sights on Las Vegas, where Adragna worked as a marketing professional. “We were looking to build on the strip,’’ he said. “We had some options, but each one fell through. When the economy crashed in 2008, we decided to look elsewhere.’’

So Adragna rented a Dodge Neon to scout locations on the East Coast. He was headed for Maine when he spotted the deserted Chinese restaurant overlooking Route 1. “I remembered that it was Weylu’s,’’ said Adragna, whose wife is from East Boston. “It’s changed quite a bit, but the site is still beautiful.’’

The three-story restaurant, built at a cost of $13 million, has a troubled history. While it opened to great promise in 1989, the mammoth restaurant soon ran into trouble.

A stubborn recession in the early 1990s hurt business almost from the start. The restaurant fell behind on tax payments to the town, mortgage payments to the bank, and employment taxes to the state.

The Bank of China eventually foreclosed, and founder Rick Chang pleaded guilty to 19 counts of failing to make employer tax contributions. He was sentenced to 20 days in jail. Weylu’s closed in 1998, after the bankruptcy court ordered it liquidated.

In 2002, Bank of China sold the restaurant, which sits on 10.5 acres, to a New York-based Chinese restaurant group. Since that year, four different Asian-themed restaurants and nightclubs have opened and closed at the site.

Since then, once-opulent Weylu’s has been like a white elephant. Broken glass, cracked plaster, and rubbish scar the inside, where patrons were once served by staff dressed in tuxedos. Outside, the giant pagoda that welcomed guests at the foot of the driveway is chipped and faded. Tall grass and cracked pavement spoils the formerly well-groomed grounds.

“It’s really a shame,’’ said Paul Rupp, economic development consultant for Saugus. “It was very, very high-end there. . . . It was built for a singular purpose. It’s not the type of structure that just anything could go in there.’’

Adragna said he has signed a purchase-and-sale agreement to buy the property for $6.5 million from Golden Mountain LLC of New York, the current owner. The town assesses the value of the restaurant and land at $2.5 million, according to town records.

Golden Mountain also owes the town $181,000 in real estate taxes and in fees owed to the Fire Department for providing a fire watch after a series of false alarms, said Wendy Hatch, the town accountant.

James Mao, a representative of Golden Mountain LLC, declined to comment when contacted by the Globe. He said he is not an owner, only a representative of them.

Adragna said the property needs a new roof, estimated to cost more than $150,000. That has become a sticking point in negotiations, he said.

“We had to renegotiate the pricing because of the roof,’’ Adragna said. “The insulation is wet, and the wood is rotting. It can’t be repaired; it must be replaced.’’

And then, of course, there are the talks with Niagara Falls and Jamestown.

“We do have a very attractive offer from the city of Niagara Falls,’’ Adragna said. “It’s an offer, but it hasn’t been agreed to.’’

But Dyson, the Niagara Falls mayor, said the city has made no offer of financial assistance. He and other officials did provide Adragna and Belmont with letters of intent stating their interest in working with them, he said.

“We basically just said it’s an interesting idea that we’ll talk to them about,’’ Dyson said.

Their proposal calls for the city of Niagara Falls to purchase a building on Main Street, transform it into a museum, and lease it to the National Comedy Hall of Fame for five years, Dyson said.

After five years, the museum would be turned over to the city, he added.

Dyson said he would look at a feasibility study or business plan, but added, “We have no interest and are in no position to run a Comedy Hall of Fame.’’

Saugus – where finances are so tight that voters had to approve a one-time tax increase to pay last winter’s $1 million snow removal deficit – has not been approached about financing the attraction, Bisignani said.

“We are not in any sort of position to pledge any kind of financial resources,’’ he said.

The nonprofit Comedy Hall of Fame Inc. was formed in Florida. Adragna and Belmont also registered the names National Comedians Hall of Fame and the National Comedy Hall of Fame, Florida public records show.

The nonprofit says it has thousands of pieces of comedy memorabilia stored in a Florida warehouse, just waiting to be laughed at. Minnie Pearl was the first star inducted into the hall, during a ceremony in Nashville in 1994 attended by George H.W. Bush, the former president, Adragna said.

Since then, A-list comedians, including Carol Burnett and Bill Cosby, have been inducted, along with legends such as Lucille Ball and Jonathan Winters, he added.

“Our collection is estimated in the multimillion-dollar range,’’ Adragna said, adding that they recently acquired new items in an auction by singer Debbie Reynolds.

But finding a permanent home has not been easy. Investors will not give money until a site is acquired, he said. Banks want to see solid backing before loaning money. Their website – www.comedianshalloffame.org, which shows a picture of the old Weylu’s with an opening date of 2012 – asks comedy fans to make donations to a building campaign.

Adragna is also trying to sell corporate sponsorships, but that effort has hit a snag. A brochure for the Saugus site listed Bank of America and Verizon Wireless as sponsors, but spokesmen for each company said the firms are not sponsors and asked that their logos be removed.

Adragna said the logos have been removed. “It was a mistake on my part,’’ he said. “We had received some small grant money from a Bank of America branch in Las Vegas and a Verizon store there.

“I thought we could use the logos. Once they told us not to use them, I stopped.’’

He said he is now focused on finding a fitting spot for his hall of fame.

“I like the Weylu’s building a lot,’’ Adragna said, adding that he recently moved to Boston. “I want to get this deal done. I don’t care if people laugh at me. It’s a viable concept.’’

By Kathy McCabe, kmccabe@globe.com Re-posted from Boston.com