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M A N H AT TA N

|

B R O O K LY N

|

QUEENS

|

LONG ISLAND

|

THE HAMPTONS

|

August 2, 2013 Page 9

THE NORTH FORK

|

RIVERDALE

|

WESTCHESTER/PUTNAM

|

FLORIDA

OPEN HOUSE By aPPOINtmENt Bridgehampton South | $8,250,000 This 8,500 sf home has 8 en suite bedrooms, Gaggenau kitchen, formal dining, sun room, library, media room, Gunite pool and outdoor living room with fireplace. Room for tennis. Web# H54681. Lori Barbaria 516.702.5649 | lbarbaria@elliman.com

OPEN HOUSE By aPPOINtmENt amagansett | $8,200,000 | By the beach – south of Further Lane. A modern interpretation of a Traditional Hamptons Estate. A magnificent 8,500 sf home with gracious, airy interiors that seamlessly integrate to the outdoors. Web# H23070. Josiane Fleming 631.766.8950

OPEN HOUSE SUN. 8/4 | 1-3Pm 5 west Hills Court, Southampton $3,795,000 | A 6,500 sf home features 7 bedrooms, 8 baths, gourmet eat-in kitchen, formal dining room, sunroom overlooking beautiful gardens on a secluded 1.2-acres with pool. Web# H18759. Lynda Ireland 631.537.6439

OPEN HOUSE By aPPOINtmENt water mill | $3,695,000 | Gated, private estate with tennis, Gunite pool with waterfall and pool house. On 5.5 acres, 8,000 sf, 8 bedrooms, 7.5 baths, 3 fireplaces, chef’s kitchen. Doubleheight ceilings, light-filled, bay views. Web# H31558. Lori Barbaria 516.702.5649 | lbarbaria@elliman.com

OPEN HOUSE Sat. 8/3 | 12-1Pm 16 acorn Place, amagansett $2,450,000 | Amagansett Bell Estate with 6,000 sf, 5 en suite bedrooms and 8.5 marble baths. A private shy 2-acre showplace. Entertaining rooms overlooking a heated Gunite pool. Web# H0155403. Lili Elsis 631.433.0099

OPEN HOUSE Sat. 8/3 | 12-1Pm 46 John Street, Southampton $1,580,000 | 1920s Village home renovated and upgraded. Porch to front parlor has original fireplace and is light filled. Features 4 bedrooms, 3.5 baths and large master. Web# H54496. Lori Barbaria 516.702.5649 | lbarbaria@elliman.com

OPEN HOUSE Sat. 8/3 | 11am-1Pm 249 Sebonac Road, Southampton $1,399,000 | This beautiful Post & Beam home offers 4 bedrooms, 4 baths includes a private guest wing and extra room, and a heated Gunite pool on 1.35 secluded acres. Web# H25490. Richard Doyle 631.204.2719

OPEN HOUSE Sat. 8/3 | 12:30-2Pm 181 Bay avenue, Hampton Bays $995,000 | Situated on 1.6 lushly landscaped acres with master suite, balcony waterviews, 3 baths, living room, fireplace, wet bar, central air, eat-in kitchen and dining patio. Web# H24012. Codi Garcete 516.381.1031

OPEN HOUSE Sat. 8/3 | 1-3Pm 16 Jackson avenue, East Quogue $865,000 | Complete renovation in 2004 on this 8 room home with 5 bedrooms, 3 new baths, new granite kitchen, vaulted ceilings, fireplace, water views, 2 master suites, large deck and garage. Web# H23326. adriana Jurcev 917.678.6543

OPEN HOUSE SUN. 8/4 | 12-1:30Pm 121 w. tiana Rd, Hampton Bays $449,000 | Oversized Ranch features 1,800 sf with 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, dining room, family room, kitchen, office/laundry room and central air. Lush backyard, with room for a pool. F# 66993. Constance Porto 631.723.2721

OCEaNFRONt IN mONtaUK montauk | $9,100,000 | Oceanfront location that is perhaps the most ideal in the State of New York, on a dead-end street. Full deep acre extends 400 ft back with elevation over 50 ft above sea level. Web# H15016. Raymond G. Lord III 631.267.7387

watERFRONt maGNIFICENCE Hampton Bays | $3,500,000 | This exquisite 6,000 sf waterfront home, featured in House magazine, offers top-of-the-line amenities. Complete home smart technology, 2 floating ramps, dock and a waterfront saltwater pool. Web# H40454. Patrick mcLaughlin 917.359.4138

PICtURE PERFECt SOUtH water mill | $3,400,000 | Modern lightfilled 6-bedroom, 7-bath home features state-of-the-art kitchen, game room, office, screened-in porch and patios that overlooks reserve, heated pool, manicured grounds and tennis. Near Flying Point Beach. Web# H34652. Cynthia Barrett 917.865.9917

watERFRONt BEaCH HOUSE Quogue | $2,999,000 | Find your serenity overlooking the open bay, on one of Quogue’s most prized Village streets. This mythical beach house resides on 2 plus acres with 4 charming bedrooms. Web# H10837. Lynn November 631.288.6244

SPECtaCULaR watERFRONt Quogue | $1,550,000 | Mesmerizing sunset views on 2.2 acres. Build your dream house with room for pool, tennis court and guest house. Permits will be in place for 6 bedrooms, pool and tennis. Web# H1818. Sylvia Dorfberger 516.790.4678

watERVIEwS POStmODERN Southampton | $1,375,000 | This immaculate home offers 5 bedrooms 3.5 baths, custom kitchen, deck sits atop a cupola, and water as far as the eye can see. The green features keep maintenance costs low. Web# H35293. ann Pallister 631.723.2721

aRtISt OaSIS montauk | $1,195,000 | This hidden treasure sits on a double lot with a 3-bedroom home, huge 2-story detached garage and several smaller out buildings to house your dream studio and cabana. Cathedral ceilings, skylights and pool. Web# H51052. Kim Fagerland 631.902.1384

GatEway tO SOUtHamPtON Southampton | $849,000 | This striking 3,100 sf Contemporary offers open and airy living over 3 floors. Soaring living spaces and an open flow accentuate the floor plan and gives the home a distinctively modern feel. Web# H29093. tyler mattson 631.267.7372

CHaRmING CaPE Hampton Bays | $399,000 Charming home with 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, living area with high ceilings and wood burning fireplace opens to eat-in kitchen, garage and room for pool and expansion. Close to village, and ocean beaches. Web# H18593. Brenda Giufurta 631.204.2770

GREat HOmE, GREat LOCatION Hampton Bays $349,000 Close to all Hampton Bays has to offer, this 3-bedroom, 1-bath, completely redone home, includes an eat-in kitchen and living room, on an oversized property. Web# H31286. Constance Porto 631.723.2721

FOR GUIDANCE AND INSIGHT ON ALL THINGS REAL ESTATE, PUT THE POWER OF ELLIMAN TO WORK FOR YOU. ASKELLIMAN.COM © 2013 Douglas Elliman Real Estate. All material presented herein is intended for information purposes only. While, this information is believed to be correct, it is represented subject to errors, omissions, changes or withdrawal without notice. All property information, including, but not limited to square footage, room count, number of bedrooms and the school district in property listings are deemed reliable, but should be verified by your own attorney, architect or zoning expert. Equal Housing Opportunity.

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HAMPTONS PANACHE HOMES

wATErfrONT – gATEd sIx ACrE EsTATE

Westhampton | $10,999,999 | Web# H21200

sECLudEd TurN-kEy EsTATE

Quogue | $3,999,000 | Web# H13463

vILLAgE CLAssIC wITh wATEr vIEws

Westhampton Beach | Price Upon Request | Web# H12008

LyNN NOvEMbEr 631.680.4111 lnovember@elliman.com

AskELLIMAN.COM © 2013 Douglas Elliman Real Estate. All material presented herein is intended for information purposes only. While, this information is believed to be correct, it is represented subject to errors, omissions, changes or withdrawal without notice. All property information, including, but not limited to square footage, room count, number of bedrooms and the school district in property listings are deemed reliable, but should be verified by your own attorney, architect or zoning expert. Equal Housing Opportunity.

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DAN’S PAPERS

August 2, 2013 Page 13

WE cAN’T DEFiNE

TRuE LoVE. BUT WE KNoW IT WHEN WE SEE IT.

Before he became a part of her family, he was a part of ours. Bideawee’s trainers taught him to be wellbehaved. Our animal hospitals made sure he was healthy and our matchmakers and volunteers made sure that he was properly socialized so he’s prepared for their life-long journey together. For 110 years, Bideawee has been bringing together pets and people for the journey of a lifetime. Come see the difference our commitment makes by visiting one of our locations, Bideawee.org or calling 866-262-8133.

animal people for people who love animals ®

Proud Pet Adoption Partner of the New York Yankees

Manhattan · Westhampton · 866.262.8133 · bideawee.org

All New York Yankees trademarks and copyrights are owned by the New York Yankees and used with the permission of the New York Yankees.

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DAN’S PAPERS

Page 14 August 2, 2013

FREE DELIVERY ON ORDERS OVER $100 PER ADDRESS IN NY & CT

Join our e-mail List!

FREE DELIVERY ON ORDERS OVER $100 PER ADDRESS IN NY & CT

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FREE DELIVERY ON ORDERS OVER $100 PER ADDRESS IN NY & CT

At 59TH & PARK AVENUE fast and easy ordering online at sherry-lehmann.com

low prices, perfect storage & Great service!

Wine & Spirits Merchants Since 1934 “Blue Ribbon”

Summer Delivery Service

Delivers to The Hamptons!

Sherry-Lehmann is proud to offer FREE DELIVERY to any point in New York State and Connecticut on any order over $100. We would also like to call your attention to our special “BLUE RIBBON” deliveries. We can accept orders up to 3pm the day before our scheduled “Blue Ribbon” truck goes to your area.

TO THE HAMPTONS, NORTHFORK & FIRE ISLAND: Saturdays, our special Blue Ribbon Service delivers from Bay Shore to Montauk Point, from Baiting Hollow to Orient Point, and to Fire Island on orders of 3 or more cases, or over $195. Orders can be placed up to 2pm, Friday. When ordering, please specify Blue Ribbon Service. Orders below the minimum are delivered via common carrier usually within 24 to 48 hours.

Hamptons

Domaines ott Rosé “Chateau Romassan’’ 2012 Bottle $3995 Case $47940

From Bandol on the Cote d’Azur in Provence comes France’s most famous rosé. This gorgeously dry rosé is distinguished by its amazingly creamy and velvety smooth texture, exceptional nose of bright apricot and peach, perfect balance and a wonderful finish. (B7720)

CHAtEAu D’ESCLANS COtES DE PrOvENCE ENCE rOSé “WHiSPEriNg ANgEL” 2012 Bottle $1995 Case $23940 Look for ripe red fruits, with hints of minerals and flowers. This delicious bottle is a perfect, easy-quaffing wine for lunch, dinner or a delicious glass anywhere. (B5788)

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Chateau maRgui Rosé (COtEAuX vArOiS EN PrOvENCE) 2012 Bottle $2195 Case $26340

The wine is a beautiful light pink color, infused with aromas of fresh wild strawberry, cherry and peach. Some minerality with a hint of spice which is a perfect balance to the silky texture. This delicious blend of cinsault and grenache is perfect with food or simply a glass by itself. (B6315)

DOmAiNE HOuCHArt St. viCtOirE Rosé 2012 Bottle $1995 Case $23940

The wine from Jerome Quiot, Chateauneuf superstar is a beautiful, light pink color with lovely flavors of strawberry, raspberry, white peach and hints of almond, with a certain minerality that comes from the terroir. (B6363)

mAS DE gOurgONNiEr LES BAuX DE PrOvENCE rOSé 2012 Bottle $1295 Case $15540

This storied domaine, run with passion and skill by Luc and Lucienne Cartier, has been farming and making wine organically for decades. The blend of this perennially amazing rosé has more Syrah than usual giving a soft texture and fruitier finish than recent vintages as well as a little Carignan to lend a spicy note and add complexity. (B6402)

CHAtEAu mirAvAL COtES DE PrOvENCE rOSé “Pitt & JOLiE’’ 2012 Bottle $2395 Case $28740

The new sunny, south of France, Mediterranean wine from Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie! “Refined and elegant, with pure flavors of dried red berry and tangerine, and a focused finish with flint and spice notes.” – wine Spectator (B6319)

Consists of 2 each of the Rosés from the South of France listed here. We have hand-picked these 6 rosés for your summertime sampling. Whether it’s for sipping poolside, or as the perfect pairing for your warm-weather meal, we’ve got a rosé for you. (6648)

Also AvAilAble in A 6 bottle sAmpler! Hamptons 6 bottle Rosé Sampler - $134.95 Consists of 1 bottle of each of the Rosés from the South of France listed here. (B6406)

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August 2, 2013 Page 17

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DAN’S PAPERS

Page 18 August 2, 2013

danspapers.com

VOLUME LIV NUMBER 20

This issue is dedicated to the people of Montauk and others who rallied to save Lobsterman John Aldridge from the sea.

AUGUST 2, 2013

41 Radio Station Vandalized?

43 It Hit the Bat

45 7-Eleven

47 Miracle at Sea

by Dan Rattiner Doings in Connecticut affect a listerner on Eastern Long Island

by Dan Rattiner How behaivor at a cricket match went viral around the world

by Dan Rattiner Sag Harbor, Greenport, undocumented immigrants, exploitation

by Kelly Laffey Montauk lobsterman rescued after spending 12 hours floating in the Atlantic

35 South O’ the Highway

50 Jazz Age by Joan Baum Looking back on the Jazz Age in East Hampton.

60 Need Sand to Fill Your Summer Bucket List? Here it Is!

ShelTered iSlAnder

All the latest Hamptons celebrity news

37 Hamptons Subway by Dan Rattiner

38 Police Blotter by David Lion Rattiner All the news that’s not fit to print on the East End

53 Dan’s Kite Fly Returns This Sunday, August 4

Your route to where the beautiful people play

keep fiT

61 The Circle We Run In

72 Roid Rage in the Hamptons?

54 An Evening in the

by Samantha Dell’Olio An entry from the Dan’s Papers Literary Prize Competition

by Kelly Laffey What has become of baseball and steroids?

by Lee Meyer A dance theater experience by the Neopolitical Cowgirls

neiGhbor

dr. GAdGeT

63 Stewart Lane

73 Singing in the East End Rain

by Sandra Hale Schulman Turning garbage into art

by Lee Meyer An iconic Broadway producers steps on stage at Bay Street Theatre

58 Sag Harbor to Host

who’S here

Speaker on Reform Judaism

65 John Catsimatidis

74 The Big Things Mean So Much

by Allyson Zacharoff Rabbi Rick Jacobs, presdient of the Union for Reform Judiasm, to speak in Sag Harbor

by Dan Rattiner Politician, Businessman

by Stacy Dermont Everything counts in large amounts.

59 Stanford White Buildings

by David Lion Rattiner Lessons from doing laundry

56 Cindy Pease Roe

42

by Sally Flynn The Royal Baby is here! But we have stories too...

GUeST eSSAy

by Arturio Figurio Will you be there?

Garden of Eden

39 PAGE 27

by Dan’s Staff Will you check everything off your summer bucket list?

71 Baby-Faced on the Island

Continue to Dazzle East Enders

by Joan Baum A look at the area’s standing Stanford White buildings

by Matthew Apfel A review of karaoke apps hAmpTonS epicUre

dAvid lion’S den

67 Of Smells and Laundry

honorinG The ArTiST

69 Giancarlo Impiglia by Marion Wolberg-Weiss

clASSic cArS

75 Old Is Hot! by Bob Gelber Why do people collect cars?

76 News Briefs 77 Dan’s Goes To...


danspapers.com

DAN’S PAPERS

August 2, 2013 Page 19

THE ANT GUA & BARBUDA hamptons challenge 2013 Sponsored by the Antigua & Barbuda Ministry of Tourism

ATTENTION SAILORS

Compete for the BIGGEST SAILING PRIZE in the Northeast! All expense paid trip to Antigua for Captain & Crew to race in Antigua Sailing Week 2014!

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Page 20 August 2, 2013

DAN’S PAPERS

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August 2, 2013 Page 21

Home Insurance Many have saved $1,000’s

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Page 22 August 2, 2013

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CONTINUED

wine GUide

m onTAU k

79 Long Island’s First Vineyard: Castello di Borghese

Long Island

99 Natural Beauty and Newsworthy New Shops by Stephanie de Troy Summer fun, summer shopping

100 Shop (for a Cause) at 86 Restaurant Review:

by Debbie Slevin Perry Balz of Old Field Vineyard in Southold; Kelly Urbanik of Macari in Mattituck

Lucky J’s

over The bArrel

Time Capsule

81 It Takes a Lot of Beer to Make a Good Wine by Lenn Thompson Summer sippers

82 Mattebella Encourages

hoUSe & home

Shop ‘Til yoU drop

by Nicholas Chowske A tasting at Long Island’s oldest winery

80 Women Winemakers Take

lifeSTyle

by Lee Meyer Fried chicken all the way

Sunset

by Sharon Feiereisen Gail Rothwell’s Shop at Sunset event benefits The Retreat view from The GArden

101 Plants Behaving Badly

87 Fisher’s Tower: Montauk’s

by Jeanelle Meyers How to reign in those wild varietals

by Lisa Tannenbaum The story of Fisher’s Tower in Montauk Green

88 Montauk Calendar

Community Gardening

by Debbie Slevin A shared organic garden thrives in Southold

102 Nightlife Calendar

84 10 Wines You Won’t Find at Société du Vin

103 Calendar 107 Kids’ Calendar

by Oliver Peterson What you won’t be served at the new Bridgehampton hotspot

85 North Fork Calendar

A r T S & e n T e r TAi n m enT 89 Theater Review: Singin’

in the Rain

by Genevieve Horsburgh At The Gateway Playhouse in Patchogue ArT commenTAry

90 Sculpture Garden at Guild Hall: Joel Perlman

food & dininG 93 Stan Goldberg, Past, Present and Future by Lee Meyer Life after Archie

94 Quilting with Friends by Inga Carlsen Weekly gathering

92 Long Island Center Makes

by Genevieve Horsburgh

Simple ArT of cookinG

by Stacy Dermont

Maison Blanche

114 Restaurant Review: Madison & Main

110 Cold Soups Are a Hot

dininG oUT

115 A Guide to Local

by Lee Meyer

Favorites

96 Movies

by The book

by Joan Baum “Tomorrow There WIll be Apricots” by Jessica Soffer

by Sharon Feiereisen Carrie Berk of “Peace, Love and Cupcakes”

Summer Treat

Wolverine

Family Dynamics

113 Restaurant Review: La

Sweet as a Cupcake

by Silvia Lehrer Gazpacho!

96 Movie Review: The

by Marion Wolberg-Weiss A hidden oasis

91 Novel Explores Truths,

109 Young Hamptons Author

Side diSh

Hot flicks this week

111 From Fresh to Gula Gula

reAl eSTAT e

97 Elephant Awareness

by Aji Jones Where to dine (and save!) this weekend

132 Real Estate Sales

112 Ecoeastend.com, a

by David Lion Rattiner One of the hottest seasons in recent memory

by Debbie Slevin A convenient famers market

133 Everything Over

by Robert Ottone Bringing awareness of the elephant tragedy to Guild Hall

Learning Fun

98 Art Events

by Andrea Aurichio Long Island Science Center

Openings aross the North and South Forks

Convenient Farmers Market

158 County Road 39 • Southampton, NY 11968 • 631-537-0500 • Classified Phone 631-537-4900 • Classified Fax 631-287-0428 Dan’s Papers was founded in 1960 by Dan Rattiner and is the first free resort newspaper in America.

Looking Up

A Million

116 Service Directory 129 Classified


danspapers.com

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Summer Values

Westhampton Waterfront Westhampton. Ranch style home with cottage. Three bedroom, 2 bath main house, cottage features 2 bedrooms and 1 bath on 1.25 acres. Pool, tennis, dock and gorgeous water views on Beaver Dam Creek. Access to Moriches Bay and Shinnecock Inlet. Buildable .50 acre lot adjoins property. A very special opportunity. Exclusive. $1.2m Web# 20718

OPEN HOUSE | Sun. 8/4, 11AM-1PM | 11 North Quarter Road

OPEN HOUSE | Sat. 8/3, 11AM-1 PM | 33C Baycrest Avenue

Contemporary on Lush Grounds Westhampton. Contemporary 4 bedroom, 3 full bath home. Granite kitchen with stainless steel appliances and Viking gas stove. Lush 1 acre property, pool with pool house, and detached 2-car garage with loft. Full finished basement with separate entrance. Wonderful spacious yard with lovely gardens. Exclusive. $949K Web# 53627

WonderfuL Waterfront property Westhampton. Private 1.25 acres on Beaver Dam Creek. Three bedroom (with bonus room and loft) 2 bath Ranch with pool, tennis, and floating dock. Enjoy the waterview and scenic natural setting. Take your boat for a ride to Moriches Bay or Shinnecock Inlet. Across from golf course, minutes to village and beaches. Exclusive. $1.1m Web# 19197

2012 Muliti-Million Dollar Club Karen V. Andrews Licensed RE Salesperson m: 917.355.5566 karen. andrews@corcoran.com

THE HAMPTONS

SHELTER ISLAND

Equal Housing Opportunity. The Corcoran Group is a licensed real estate broker. 92 Main Street, Westhampton Beach, NY 11978 | 631.288.6900

THE HAMPTONS

SHELTER ISLAND

NORTH FORK

NORTH FORK

28252


DAN’S PAPERS

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August 2, 2013 Page 25

Celebrate Our 15th Anniversary! In Partnership with

Celebrating Cole Porter

Vince Gill

Huey Lewis and The News

John Hiatt & The Combo

“Sports” 30th Anniversary Tour

It’s Delightful, It’s De-Lovely

All T hat’s Good In Country Music

Generously sponsored by Mary & Frank Skillern.

Generously sponsored in part by Anita & John Brennan.

Saturday August 10

Sunday August 11

Saturday August 17

Sunday August 18

Rita Rudner

Pilobolus

Brett Dennen

Michael Bolton

T he Queen of Clever One-Liners

Gravity-Defying Dynamism

Generously sponsored in part by Kristin & John Miller and the Kuhn Family.

A Memphis Masterpiece

Timeless Balladeer

Generously sponsored by Maggie Gilliam.

California Folk Singer

Gernerously sponsored by Donna & Marvin Schwartz.

Thursday August 22

Saturday August 24

Thursday August 29

Friday August 30

Tommy Tune

Fancy Nancy: The Musical

The Waterboys

Bruce Hornsby

Poetic Rock and Roll

Musical Shape Shifter

Sunday September 1

Friday September 27

Saturday September 28

Taps, Tunes and Tall Tales Generously sponsored by The WHBPAC Advisory Council.

Saturday August 31

Family Friendly Fun

Visit whbpac.org for Our Entire Line-up of Shows

3 ways to purchase tickets:

† Funding provided, in part, by Suffolk County

Media Sponsors...

This program is made possible by the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Andrew Cuomo and the New York State Legislature.

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DAN’S PAPERS

danspapers.com

August 2, 2013 Page 27

DR. GREENBERG IS IN THE HAMPTONS. The Views are AMAZING this Year.

COSMETIC PLASTIC SURGERY Voted One of The BEST Cosmetic Surgeons 8 Consecutive Years* Featured on ABC, CBS, Fox News, The New York Times, US Weekly and Inside Edition. Listen to Dr. Greenberg’s Cosmetic Surgery Talk Show on PARTY 105.3FM Saturdays at 9 a.m. and KJOY 98.3FM Saturdays at 10 p.m.

CALL FOR YOUR COMPLIMENTARY CONSULTATION

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Not an Actual Patient

25816


DAN’S PAPERS

Page 28 August 2, 2013

START HERE

If you don’t start here, then you’re not really

RADio StAtioN VANDAlizED?

A. noT in SoUThAmpTon b. noT in monTAUk c. noT in new york ciTy d. mAybe in connecTicUT

3.

page 43

A. when The lUck rAn oUT b. when The people GoT fired c. when The ownerS GoT ArreSTed d. when The coffee iS fine

7-ElEVEN

tHE HAmPtoNS

Get 27 more great ideas on page 30

Southampton Village is supporting a plan to provide a ferry service across Lake Agawam from a floating dock to the west of Lake Agawam Park by Monument Square to a pier at the southern end of the lake where people would be able to walk from that ferry slip across a street and to the beach at the end of Gin Lane just to the end of the Southampton Bathing Corporation. As time goes by there are more and more ways to get around the Hamptons without a car. There’s electric shuttle carts in the downtowns, launches out to the boats in Sag Harbor, county busses, bike lanes, they’re even talking “scoot” trains on the railroads. Call us the Nifty Hamptons -- DR 5.

kEyS to A loSt moNtAuk fiSHERmAN’S SuRViVAl

1. rUbber booTS 2. knife

31 tHiNgS to Do oN tHE EASt END bEfoRE lAboR DAy

A. Go ShArk divinG b. join The GUinneSS 100 clUb c. GeT yoUr jAckSon pollock on d. Slow down

tHE Nifty HAmPtoNS

page 45

9.

wHo’S DiNiNg out iN

page 40

littlE kNowN SPoRtS 1. whiST 2. crickeT 3. friSbee Golf 4. bAnG-A-mole

6.

3. U.S. coAST GUArd 4. hope

page 47

nUmber of The week: 2

7.

kitE-flyiNg woRlD RECoRDS KITE FLY

41

ST

page 53

2.

4.

starting where you’re supposed to start.

1. jerry Seinfeld 2. GwyneTh pAlTrow 3. derek jeTer 4. hUGh jAckmAn

page 41

1.

danspapers.com

biGGeST: 3,445 SqUAre feeT SmAlleST: 5mm lonGeST: 3,394 feeT hiGheST: 31,955 feeT moST fUn: dAn’S kiTe fly ThiS weekend 8.

HoliDAyS to CElEbRAtE tHiS wEEk

AUG 7

nATionAl liGhThoUSe dAy

AUG 2 nATionAl ice creAm SAndwich dAy AUG 3 nATionAl mUSTArd dAy AUG 4 U.S. coAST GUArd dAy AUG 5 work like A doG dAy AUG 6 wiGGle yoUr ToeS dAy Find reason to celebrate ever day at DansPapers.com

nUmber of women behind “one womAn winery.” leArn more AboUT lonG iSlAnd wine in oUr wine GUide pAGe 79


DAN’S PAPERS

danspapers.com

August 2, 2013 Page 29

Uncompromised Unsinkability Announcing Modern Yachts’ Newest Boat Line

Modern Yachts is the exclusive dealer on Long Island for EdgeWater.

188CC

www.ewboats.com

335EX

280CX

Performance – unparalleled ride and fuel economy. Reliability – composite materials, heavy-duty components, Yamaha-powered. Versatility – practical features for any best-in-class performance. Safety – exceeds industry standards for “unsinkable boats” status. Mattituck

Hampton Bays

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11455 Main Road

36 Newtown Rd

33 Library Avenue

For quality used boats visit us at MarineMax Affiliate

www.surfside3east.com

28202


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Page 30 August 2, 2013

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Get in your garage Every Time. Opens and closes your door...even when the power is out! • The Battery Backup System ensures your garage door opener continues to work.

WORKS EVEN WHEN THE POWER IS OUT.

Model 8550 Includes:Smart Control Panel 3-Button Premium Remote Control

• Powerful DC motor belt drive system is durable, ultra-quiet and maintenance-freeMyQ® technology enables you to close your garage door or turn the lights on or off using a smartphone or computer from anywhere • Lifetime motor and belt warranty

631.224.3500 www.AjGarageDoor.com

Locally Owned & Operated

Fri. Sat. and Sun. Appointments Available 28026


DAN’S PAPERS

August 2, 2013 Page 31

23249

danspapers.com


KKG-Dans Jr Pg 7.12 & 7.19 7/1/13 9:58 AM Page 1

DAN’S PAPERS

Page 32 August 2, 2013

danspapers.com

Chief Executive Officer Bob Edelman, bedelman@danspapers.com President and Editor-in-Chief Dan Rattiner, dan@danspapers.com

Editorial Director Print & Digital Eric Feil, ericf@danspapers.com

Our Bridgehampton Store has Expanded!!

Senior Editor Stacy Dermont, stacy@danspapers.com Web Editors David Lion Rattiner, david@danspapers.com Oliver Peterson, oliver@danspapers.com

Our Largest Selection of Produce Ever!

Sections Editor Kelly Laffey, kelly@danspapers.com

We spent all winter building, so we could deliver you the largest, freshest and tastiest selection of produce ever this summer! We handpicked the best fruits and vegetables money can buy, including an even bigger selection of local, seasonal and organic. Come on in, you will not believe your eyes!

Photo Coordinator Tom Kochie, tkochie@danspapers.com Summer Editors Stephanie de Troy, Lee Meyer Director of Technology Dennis Rodriguez, dennis@danspapers.com Editorial Intern Cameron Costa

Publisher Steven McKenna, smckenna@danspapers.com Associate Publishers Catherine Ellams, Kathy Rae, Tom W. Ratcliffe III

Visit our new East End Café

Account Managers Denise Bornschein, Jean Lynch

• A Grab and Go or Build your Own Sandwich Shoppe • Freshly Chopped Salads • Sushi made fresh daily on our premises • A Healthy Juice Bar with Carrot Juice, Dieter’s Delight, Spring Refresher and many more to choose from.

Senior Inside Account Manager Richard Scalera Inside Account Managers Kathy Camarata, Steve Daniel Art Director Tina Guiomar, artdir@danspapers.com Production Manager Genevieve Horsburgh, gen@danspapers.com Graphic Design Flora Cannon, flora@danspapers.com Gracemarie Louis Business Manager Margo Abrams, mabrams@danspapers.com

Now Available in the Hamptons

Marketing & Event Manager Ellen Dioguardi, ellen@danspapers.com Sales Coordinator Evy Ramunno, evy@danspapers.com Marketing Coordinator Lisa Barone, lisa@danspapers.com Distribution Coordinator Dave Caldwell, delivery@danspapers.com

11932 Bridgehampton o 11962 Sagaponack o 11976 Watermill o 11963 Sag Harbor/North Haven 11968 Southampton o 11975 Wainscott o 11937 East Hampton

Contributing Writers Matthew Apfel, Joan Baum, Sally Flynn, Alex Goetzfried, Steve Haweeli, Anthony Holbrook, George Holzman III, Kelly Krieger, Silvia Lehrer, Tamara Matthews-Stephenson, Jeanelle Myers, Robert Ottone, Sandra Hale Schulman, Susan Saiter-Sullivan, Debbie Slevin, Kendra Sommers, Lenn Thompson, Marion Wolberg-Weiss

(631) 414-1260 • (631) 414-1261 • www.kingkullen.com/shoponline Home delivery available to limited areas for an additional fee. Pick-up available at Bridgehampton only.

Contributing Artists And Photographers Nick Chowske, Kimberly Goff, Barry Gordin, Katlean de Monchy, Richard Lewin, Stephanie Lewin, Michael Paraskevas, Nancy Pollera, Tom W. Ratcliffe III

King Kullen’s eastern Long Island locations include: Bridgehampton 2044 Montauk Hwy. (631) 537-2681

Cutchogue 315-25 Main Rd. (631) 734-5737

Center Moriches 552 Montauk Hwy. (631) 878-9094

Eastport 25 Eastport Manor Rd. (631) 325-9698

Hampton Bays

Riverhead

52 East Montauk Hwy (631) 728-6759

795 Old Country Rd. (631) 369-0746

Manorville

460 County Rd. 111 (631) 399-1506

Dan’s Advisory Board Ken Auletta, Barbaralee Diamonstein-Spielvogel, Avery Corman, Frazer Dougherty, Audrey Flack, Walter Isaacson Billy Joel, John Roland, Mort Zuckerman

Wading River 6233 Route 25A (631) 929-1328

MANHATTAN MEDIA Chairman of the Board: Richard Burns rburns@manhattanmedia.com CEO: Joanne Harras jharras@manhattanmedia.com

Hampton Bays 260 W. Montauk Hwy (631) 723-3071

Dan’s Papers LLC., is a division of Manhattan Media, publishers of AVENUE magazine, New York Family and producers of The New York Baby Show and AVENUE Antiques, Art & Design at the Armory. © 2013 Manhattan Media, LLC 72 Madison Ave, 11th Floor, New York, NY 10016 t: 212.268.8600 f: 212.268.0577 www.manhattanmedia.com

Help Us Help Our Planet: Please Deposit Your Used Plastic Bags In The Recycle Bin Found In Our Entrance.

27962

www.kingkullen.com King Kullen is a proud supporter of Long Island Farmers

Dan’s Papers • 158 County Road 39, Southampton, NY 11968 631.537.0500 • Open Monday - Friday 8:30am - 5:00pm


DAN’S PAPERS

danspapers.com

4 SUNSET BEACH ROAD, SAG HARBOR OPEN HOUSE, SAT., AUG 3, 10-2PM Exclusive. W#25128. $3,695,000 Linda Statam 631.725.3510 lstatam@1TownandCountry.com

SOUTHOLD HIDDEN GEM AMONG THE NORTH FORK VINES Exclusive. Web#23067. $895,000 Nick Planamento 631.948.0143 nplanamento@1TownandCountry.com

EAST HAMPTON LIGHT FILLED WITH ENDLESS DETAILS Exclusive. Web#54126. $695,000 Janet Hummel 516.635.5552 jhummel@1TownandCountry.com

August 2, 2013 Page 33

SAG HARBOR 2 GREAT LOTS Exclusive. Web#08882. $449,000 each Linda Batiancela 516.729.8123 lbatiancela@1townandcountry.com

MATTITUCK POINT PLEASANT ESTATE Exclusive. Web#14896. $2,335,000 Nicholas Planamento 631.948.0143 nplanamento@1TownandCountry.com

HAMPTON BAYS 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH , PRIVATE SETTING Exclusive. Web#20438. $429,000 Loretta Carolan 516.819.7716 lcarolan@1TownandCountry.com

66 OYSTER SHORES ROAD, EAST HAMPTON OPEN HOUSE, SAT., AUGUST 3, 11-12:30PM Exclusive. Web#55505. $1,495,000 Holly Rubenstein 631.875.0780 hrubenstein@1TownandCountry.com

WATER MILL BEST INVESTMENT SOUTH OF HIGHWAY Exclusive. Web#44494. $1,750,000 Janice Dalston Kreymborg 631.283.8821 jkreymborg@1TownandCountry.com

EAST HAMPTON BEAUTIFUL CEDAR SHINGLED CAPE Exclusive. Web#50685. $599,000 Richard Swift 516.455.6820 rswift@1townandcountry.com

ACCESS THE POWER OF DEEP ROOTS 1TownandCountry.com Owned and Operated by Town & Country Real Estate of the East End LLC

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DAVID YURMAN, JOHN HARDY, GEORG JENSEN, ETC.

Rolex & Patek’s UP TO $100,000

Antique Jewelry

Rare Autographs

Signed Watches

Signed Jewelry

WE ARE BUYING! JEWELRY, WATCHES, GEMSTONES, DIAMONDS, COINS, PAPER MONEY, STERLING SILVER & MORE

CARTIER, TIFFANY & OSCAR HEYMAN

Signed Jewelry UP TO $150,000

Fine Sterling Silver

ONE CARAT & LARGER

Newer Jewelry

Rolex Watches

Breitling Watches

Large Diamonds UP TO $200,000

Complicated Watches UP TO $50,000

THURSDAY, FRIDAY & SATURDAY AUGUST 1, 2 & 3

Y

Also Looking For: Broken Gold And Silver Jewelry, Disney Cells, Old Fountain Pens, Vintage Toys And Banks, Old Unusual Items!

ou may have thousands of dollars worth of items gathering dust… almost everyone has something of value they no longer need or want: inherited items, jewelry that no longer fits your style, gold and silver items that are old or broken, watches no longer worn, even small antiques, and even old toys. Items that may be useless to you - may be considered real treasures. So bring your items in, because... We take the time to explain the value of each of your items, so you know exactly what’s in your possession. Based on this evaluation, we may make you an offer that you can accept, if you wish, for there is never any pressure to sell…

FREE CONSULTATIONS

As a personal service to you, we’re pleased to bring to our store, several national experts, each with over 25 years of national buying experience, so you can be assured of a knowledgeable evaluation of all of your items. - Rose Jewelers

Our goal is to create satisfied clients through our expert knowledge, while delivering the best value, and service available. We have built our reputation on these qualities that our clients have appreciated for over 25 years… As you know, you can rely on the long-standing reputation of Rose Jewelers and you can rely on our expert evaluation of your items as well. And, we will offer you our best price possible and will pay you immediately. Don’t miss this opportunity to find out what you may have! Your items may be exactly what we, and the collectors from our vast international network, are looking for - thereby giving your items a new life in the market.

REASONS TO SELL: 1. A local name and trusted company to professionally evaluate your items, instead of dealing with strangers at a hotel buy… 2. The educational experience - you’ll learn exactly what you have in your possession… 3. Your heirlooms finding the right home… 4. The peace of mind that comes with simplifying your life.

DON’T MISS THIS OPPORTUNITY TO FIND OUT WHAT YOU MAY HAVE!

SOUTHAMPTON 57 MAIN STREET

(631) 283-5757 All Prices Based On Rarity And Condition.

28068

EVENT HOURS: THURSDAY, AUGUST 1 10-5:30 FRIDAY, AUGUST 2 10-5:30 SATURDAY, AUGUST 3 10-5:30


DAN’S PAPERS

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August 2, 2013 Page 35

Tick & Mosquito Control s

Since 1976

24747

Bo t

Summer Piano rentalS/SaleS

i ca l S o l u t i

on

an

PARTY SPRAYS

Showroom In watermIll Yamaha, SteInwaY and more Piano’S From $995 and UP Live entertainment

PianoBarn

www.pianobarn.com

WWW.TICKCONTROL.COM

6 3 1

287-9700 East Hampton 324-9700 Southold 765-9700

27689

Summer Piano Rental/ Sales

SPORTSMAN’S “akc pupS Since 1962”

World’s FINEST Pianos, all in one showroom...

Outstanding Selection of AKC and Designer Puppies

Sag Harbor’s Donna Karan and Water Mill’s Kelly Ripa hosted the 16th annual Super Saturday event last weekend. The designer sale, held at Nova’s Ark Project in Water Mill, raised over $3.5 million for the Ovarian Cancer Research Fund. Donna Karan and daughter Gabby have purchased the Enclave Inn in Bridgehampton. Listed last year for $2.69 million, the hotel has 10 guest rooms and sits on 1.5 acres. The Karans will reportedly start renovations this fall and plan to reopen the inn in spring 2014.

We Buy, Sell, Rent, Move & Tune

1267018

6 3 1

Call Mike 631-726-4640

Southampton

Long Island’s Only Dealer for NEW: Many parents on premises. all our breeding dogs are genetically tested.

Day Care • BoarDing • Training

World renowned for our SteinWAyS

Veterinarians on staff Visit our 6 acre facility

277 Walt Whitman Rd (Rte. 110) Huntington Station, NY 11746 (5 minutes off LIE and Parkway)

631.351.9000

www.faustharrisonpianos.com Also in Manhattan & White Plains

631-727-3550

25738

Longtime South Fork resident Richard Gere put his North Haven home on the market last week. The property boasts 12 bedrooms and 12 bathrooms on six waterfront acres. Asking price? Only $65 million!

27880

Lady Gaga attended “Devil’s Heaven,” the 20th Annual Watermill Center benefit, last weekend. The pop star bid on works by Marina Abramovic and Dieter Meier. Other guests included Hugh Jackman, Winona Ryder, Anne Hearst, Jay McInerney, Lady Gaga Cindy Sherman, Kenny Scharf, LuAnn de Lesseps and Campion and Tatiana Platt. See photos on page 39.

6 3 1

L.i.e. exit 69 north 1.5 miles. Manorville, new York www.sportsmanskennels.com more info...www.jettykoon.com

27039

Southampton resident Rachael Ray’s 2013 ASPCA $100K Challenge, a three-month contest for animal shelters vying for prize grants, has resulted in more than 18,000 adoptions in its first month alone! Rachael Ray

Come to our Concept Store at:

Alec and Hilaria Baldwin are expecting their first child next week! Who was that guy on keyboard with The Nancy Atlas Project at The Surf Lodge on Wednesday night? Sag Harbor rocker Dan Koontz. Nancy Atlas’s final performance of the season is scheduled for this Sunday, August 4, at Gosman’s Restaurant. Her daughter is due August 28! Barbara Walters did some shopping close to home at Christopher Fischer in Southampton. Fischer has just opened a baby pop-up shop at Christopher Fischer Southampton. “Christopher Fischer Baby” used to be (Cont’d on page 40)

Affordable programs for garden and lawn maintenance Available! 24173

Become a Fan on Facebook

5.03 CTS ROUND DIAMOND G.I.A. CERTIFIED SI1 QUALITY - D COLOR (APPRAISED $180,000.00 ) SALE PRICE $139,000.00 FOR MORE INFO CONTACT SALVATORE OLIVO - PRIVATE SHOWING AVAILABLE 801 County Rd. 39 Suite 13 Southampton

631.259.2100

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August 2, 2013 Page 37

P

AV E

W ES

SU JE S

TH AM PT Q O UI N O G UE LE W IS RO AD EA ST Q UI O G HA UE M PT O N BA SH YS IN NE CO CK SO UT HA M PT W O AT N ER M IL L SA G HA RB O BR R ID G EH AM EA PT ST O HA N M PT O M N AI N BE AC AM H AG AN SE TT BE AC H HA NA M PT PE O AG N UE LO BT ST ER RO M LL O NT AU K BE DI AC TC H H PL AI NS CA M P HE RO M O NT AU K PO IN T

“Along with the New York Subway System, Hamptons Subway is the only underground transit system in the State of New York.”

The H amptons Subway Newsletter By DAN RATTINeR

Week of August 5–11, 2013 Riders this past week: 13,825 Rider miles this past week: 121,912 DOWN IN THE TUBE Several celebrities were seen riding the Hamptons Subway trains this week. They included Sandra Bullock, Jennifer Aniston, Jon Stewart, Hugh Grant, Bill O’Reilly and Jason Kidd. Also seen riding the subway was our gracious Mayor of Southampton Village Mark Epley, between Amagansett and East Hampton. What were you doing out of your jurisdiction, sir? JOB OPENINGS Two of our seven celebrity spotters riding the trains looking for celebs to report on will be going back to college next week. People wishing to intern for the final three weeks of the summer should contact our personnel department located at our main office in Hampton Bays. Bring references and a resumé. The job is noon to 8 p.m. Thursday-Monday (including Sunday.)

DELAYS The J Train Express will not be stopping at the Bridgehampton stop between 7 and 11 p.m. next Thursday. Track maintenance is the reason. We are sorry for the inconvenience. CHINESE ACROBATS After the successful debut of our cultural program at which the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra performed the famous Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky’s “1812 Overture” on the Southampton platform Saturday evening two weeks ago, our Subway Commissioner has ordered the rest of this summer’s cultural program to proceed. The famous Chunking Chinese High Flier Trapeze Troop #5 will appear on our Southampton platform on Saturday August 17 at 7 p.m. However, there’s a problem. Unlike the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra, which was able to perform on the platform, with a pathway where busy straphangers could go around them to get on the trains (except for when the cannon was fired, of course,) the 37 acrobats in this Chinese troupe need to get a running start from a quarter mile away, along the narrow maintenance walkways that line the

sides of the subway tunnels at each end, which, even though there’s a railing, will require that, for safety reasons according to Metropolitan Transit Authority (MTA) rules, the trains cannot run during the 45 minutes this act is underway. It’s hoped, however that something can be worked out. The acrobats have come such a long, long way. SUBWAY TOKEN DISCOUNTS ENDING Since Hamptons Subway opened all those years ago, local residents who can provide proof of residency receive a 40% discount on all subway swipe card purchases. Last week, however, it was announced that this program would be discontinued. We here at the Newsletter and elsewhere working for Hamptons Subway are deeply grieved at this decision. We wonder why it is so. COMMISSIONER ASPINALL’S MESSAGE Employees at Hamptons Subway and elsewhere in the Hamptons are entitled to an explanation about why we are discontinuing this discount program. Here it is. The Hamptons has changed. The balance has shifted. The Hamptons are no longer Bumpkinville. We are now a worldclass resort. And so, we have decided that the discount purchases will continue, but they will now be given to celebrities, and the money lost in giving celebrities discounts will have to be made up by taking away the discounts previously offered to locals. I hope that explains things. Celebrities may register at any token booth by presenting their Wikipedia biographies, in printed form to the attendee there for consideration in this program.

Now at the Legendary American Hotel in Sag Harbor • 45 main street

631.725.7467 24322

shop at www.bondno9.com. follow us on facebook and twitter.

SagHarbor4.5x6c.indd 1

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DAN’S PAPERS

danspapers.com

When in Bridgehampton, please visit By DAvID LIoN RATTINeR

NOT COCA-COLA A driver in Montauk was arrested last week after he was found to be high on cocaine and cocaine was found inside his vehicle. Police responded after a call came in that a man appeared drunk behind the wheel. Cops approached a car sitting parked with its reverse lights and brake lights on, and found the driver passed out behind the wheel, under the influence of cocaine and alcohol, and babbling to himself. NOT DEREK JETER A man who was blocked into a parking spot by a tour bus and was unable to get out became so angry at the bus driver that he pulled a baseball bat from his car and started to curse at the driver. Police were called and the fight was broken up. No homeruns were hit, no runners were left on base, but an arrest was made.

Simon Hantai | Etude | Oil on Canvas | 52 x 52 inches

Julian Beck Fine Paintings

BAD HOUSECLEANER A housecleaner in Westhampton was arrested after after forging checks that her clients would leave her after she completed her work. The scam came to light when the woman attempted to add a few zeros to the checks that were written out to her and went to cash them. The scam was foiled when, well, the homeowners noticed they were paying the cleaning lady more than they remembered leaving her.

Bridgehampton, 2454 Main Street Tel: 631 613 6200 - 631 702 3581

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SHELTER ISLAND Old Man McGumbus—104 years old, current Grand Almighty Ruler for the Shelter Island Shark-Bear-Hawk Society, current World Record holder for most marriages and divorces in a single lifetime, Head Coach for the Shelter Island Rugby club and former World War II fighter pilot—was arrested last week for inciting a riot. The old man organized the largest protest in SI history on the corners of Pigs and Whistle Lane and West Honey Pot Avenue against the gluten-free diet, or “Satan’s diet.” McGumbus appeared intoxicated with rage, holding a pizza and screaming through a bullhorn. A crowd formed, which turned into a keg party. McGumbus, upset that nobody was listening to him and that half of the partygoers were glutenfree fanatics, punched a man, who tried hitting back but punched another man instead. Since most male tourists on Shelter Island can’t fight, the poorly landed punches created a domino effect, starting a riot. McGumbus was arrested at 3 a.m., in his underwear, eating pizza. BOLOGNA A Southampton man reported a bologna sandwich was thrown at him while he was walking. The report is highly suspicious considering that nobody in the Hamptons eats bologna sandwiches.

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Star Jones with Pinky

August 2, 2013 Page 39

Ovarian Cancer Research Fund’s Super Saturday 16 The 16th annual Super Saturday was held at Nova’s Ark Project in Water Mill. OCRF’s fun-filled, family-oriented daylong fundraiser once dubbed “the Rolls Royce of garage sales” included merchandise from over 200 prominent designers. Super Saturday was created in 1998 by Donna Karan and the late Liz Tilberis. In 2012, Super Saturday raised over $3.5 million for the Ovarian Cancer Research Fund. Photographs by Barry Gordin

Susan Lucci (Daytime Emmy Award Winner “All My Children”)

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Celebrity Stylist June Ambrose with her children Summer and Chance

Devil’s Heaven - Watermill Center Summer Benefit The Watermill Center’s “Devil’s Heaven” Benefit was something to experience and a place to be seen Saturday night! Photographs by Tom Kochie

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Sag Harbor’s Nicole Miller was at Guild Hall on Sunday, interviewed by Fern Mallis. Miller told her story of her rise through the fashion ranks and took time to mingle with guests at the postinterview brunch.

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The lives of great literary lions who made the Hamptons their creative haven, including Truman Capote, George Plimpton, Kurt Vonnegut, e.L. Doctorow, James Salter, Robert Caro and Peter Matthiessen, are explored in this month’s issue of (Cont’d on page 52)


DAN’S PAPERS

danspapers.com

August 2, 2013 Page 41

Radio Station Vandalized? Doings in Fairfield, Connecticut Affect a Listener on Eastern Long Island By DAN RATTINeR

I

think I witnessed a radio station being vandalized on Sunday morning. It was 7:32 a.m., and I had been listening to one of my favorite programs on FM radio, which is a weekly show called StoryCorps. This is a pre-recorded show where actors and other celebrities read very excellent short stories to the listeners for one hour. It starts at 7 a.m. It’s pre-recorded. The stories are actually read before a live audience at Symphony Space on Manhattan’s west side. Usually there are two or three of them during the hour. There’s often laughter and lots of applause. Just before 7:32 a.m., a reader had completed the first story, which was about the goings on in the mind of a high-priced Manhattan dog walker as he takes Sir Henry and Blackie on their appointed rounds on the Upper East Side. Sir Henry is a dachshund. Blackie is a poodle. They encounter a woman who hates dogs. They encounter an old man in a wheelchair. After the applause, the moderator began interviewing the author of this story, Lydia Millet, who had been at Symphony Space to hear her story being read. Had she known someone who had a dog named Sir Henry? Did she have a dog herself? At that moment, before the author could answer, the program suddenly was something else,

and now, without any introduction, we were listening to the story of a love affair, as told by two actors, one the man and the other a woman, who were Tweeting each other in anticipation of meeting somewhere. You don’t seem a Sagittarius. Laughter. This, of course, was very disconcerting. What happened to the dog lady? And then, quite suddenly, the station went off the air. It stayed that way for about 15 seconds, at which time another bit of StoryCorps came on, this time another bit of an interview with an author whose story had just apparently been read, who was now defending himself to the moderator about something she had just asked him. “Why did I move to Ireland? Well, it was because the libraries in America banned my books, not only the erotic ones, but also my children’s books. I couldn’t have that. What was the point?” “I can understand that,” the narrator said. And then, once again, the station signal went out. This time, it stayed out for more than a minute. I had been listening, beginning at 7 a.m., in bed. So after the minute, figuring that was it, I got up and went into the bathroom and started brushing my teeth. And then the radio station came back on. It said only two words, “…voluptuous body…” and then it was back off the air again. And it (Cont’d on next page)

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Radio (Continued from previous page) stayed off. Anybody who was trying to tune to 89.9 FM at that time got nothing. It was as if the station was not there. I should mention at this point that 89.9 is a station that broadcasts from Fairfield, Connecticut. As you know, most FM radio signals are only good for about 50 miles, so here in the Hamptons, we don’t get any FM from New York City. We get three public stations, two of which are from Connecticut, so we get all the interesting news of that state. If you are a regular Hamptons FM radio listener like me, then you know that Jodi Rell was a really good governor of Connecticut for the one-anda-half terms she served. She was a little-know lieutenant governor and she got appointed when John Roland resigned during a corruption investigation. I wished she had run for a second full term of her own, but I guess she had had enough. There is a third station. This is Peconic Public Radio at 88.9 FM, an independent station based in Southampton. I sometimes listen to that, too. But they don’t get StoryCorps. And they don’t get Jodi Rell, either. Anyway, my wife slept through all of this. She’s a heavy sleeper and I listen to StoryCorps with the radio on soft. It ends at 8 a.m. She stirs. Ten minutes later, we start our day. Anyway, at this point, in the bathroom, I now washed my face and shaved and tried to consider what was going on in the 89.9 studio in Fairfield, Connecticut. Here’s what I finally decided happened:

Anybody who was trying to tune to 89.9 FM at that time got nothing. It was as if that station was not there. Broadcasting a pre-recorded show at 7 a.m. is a not very satisfying job. When I was in college, I worked at a radio station. Being there at 7 a.m. Sunday morning is awful. At that hour, you only need one person there, someone to press the button to go from one recording to another. There’s not even anybody else there to talk to at that hour. In my imagination, this person had, on the prior Friday when the boss was in asked, considering the odd weekend hours he had to work, for a raise. The boss turned him down. He—in my mind, it was a he—wasn’t making much anyway. And this is the “thank you” they give me for what I do, he thought. As the interview started with the lady whose dog walker story had just been read, he had enough. He’d been listening. Who cared about a goddamn dog walker? He took it off the air in the middle, and replaced it with some other StoryCorps thing. It was about the Tweeting love affair people. That was good for just 20 seconds. The hell with them. He turned it off. Now he got up and went searching around for something else to put on, returning with the middle of an interview with some guy who wrote porn. Well, la de da. At

this point, I believe, some uniformed security people, having been telephoned by a horrified radio station manager, burst in, turned THAT off, wrestled this disgruntled employee to the ground and then bodily carried him out of the studio and into the street to release him in the general direction of his car parked there, which I believe was a 2007 Hyundai Sonata. And that was the end of that. It was now 10 minutes to eight; 89.9 was still off the air. Well, what do the security people know about how to turn things back on? Undoubtedly, help was on the way. They’d have it straightened out soon. Thus is life in Connecticut and the Hamptons. In case you were not aware of it, Dan’s Papers sponsors a $6,000 prize for short nonfiction essays judged in an annual competition. The gates opened for the 2013 competition in April. The contest ended on July 30. Essays were between 600 and 1,500 words, had to be about the East End in a meaningful way, and were submitted online at literaryprize.danspapers.com, where you can read about last year’s contest, watch a video of the 2012 awards ceremony, and learn everything you want to know about the contest. The awards ceremony and the awarding of the 2013 prize will take place on August 26 at 8 p.m. in the John Drew Theater in East Hampton. Keynote speaker is E. L. Doctorow. Pia Lindstrom will read the winning entry to the audience, a la “StoryCorps.” Come to see if you won.


DAN’S PAPERS

August 2, 2013 Page 43

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It Hit the Bat How Behavior at a Cricket Match Went Viral Around the World By DAN RATTINeR

O

n one of those minor sports networks on TV the other day, I paused to watch a football game between Indiana and Purdue that was played in 1998. The show was called The Big Ten’s Greatest Games. It’s hard to believe this was 15 years ago. But there were clues. The video was not hi-def and colors were washed out. And on one long run in the fourth quarter, a crucial touchdown pass was called back because it was ruled the receiver stepped out-of-bounds on the 20-yard line as he eluded a tackler and headed for the goal line. A replay— they had replays—showed that he never did step out of bounds. “Well, that’s how the referee ruled,” the announcer said. “So that’s all that mattered.” Besides the fact that today an instant replay would have reversed the call on the sidelines, it was interesting to note that the coach for the offensive team did make a fuss, but not a big fuss, and it got him nowhere, as he expected. The receiver said nothing. It did cost the game in the end. Today, there was an article on the front page of The New York Times sports section about a relatively unimportant cricket match that took place in Nottingham England between

the English national cricket team and the Australian national cricket team. A player had done something that would have gotten him out. He knew it. He looked at the umpire. The umpire hadn’t seen it. The player, batting, got his bat back in position to continue on. And so the game continued on. As it turned out, that little fib by the player did change the outcome of the game. But it also went to the heart of what’s supposed to be the most polite and honest sport in the world. It has since become an international incident. The player, even before the umpire had ruled, should have walked away from the plate, knowing he was out. At that point, even if the umpire tried to rule he was not out, the player would have prevailed. That, people say, is how you play cricket. By the rules. Here’s what the incident was all about. You know cricket is a crazy game. So follow this. There’s a pitcher and a catcher, and also a batter who hits with a flat-bladed bat. The idea is for the pitcher to throw the ball—it’s a hard cork-and-leather ball and some pitchers can throw it close to 100 miles an hour—and with that ball, hit a wooden post (a “stump”) set up in the ground in front of the catcher. If he can do that—the batter might miss it—then the batter is out and has to walk off, his “innings,”

as they are called, over. What the batter tries to do is hit the ball so it’s not caught on the fly. If it bounces first, and the batter is usually trying to hit grounders, he gets a “run” and stays up. There are no balls and strikes. That’s the whole game. It may be difficult for the pitcher to get the ball to hit the post behind the catcher. And it may not be often that the batter swings and misses. Usually, it’s pretty easy for a skilled batsman to hit the ball away. Thus a good batter can score dozens of runs before getting “out.” Even hundreds. Batters have been known to stay up at bat for hours, even days. And then there are the little rules that deal with smaller matters. And it’s one of these that this was about. What if, for instance, the pitcher hits the batter with the ball and it pops up and a fielder catches it, which would ordinarily be an out? Well, of course, it’s not an out. It’s a “run,” and the pitcher might get a warning card or something. In this case, the batter was Stuart Broad for England. England was behind. He was scoring run after run, however. And then, the pitcher sent the ball in very close to the batter and there was the clear sound of ball hitting bat. It popped up and a fielder caught it. Everyone in (Con’t on next page) the stadium apparently

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DAN’S PAPERS

Page 44 August 2, 2013

Cricket

danspapers.com

(Continued from previous page)

heard that sound, even saw it hit—all except the umpire. Broad looked at the umpire. The umpire signaled “run.” And so, in a game where nobody ever, ever challenges a ruling, the match went on. Broad scored 28 more runs before he was out. In the end, and this match went on for two days—they actually break for “tea” frequently—the final score was 590 for England, 576 for Australia. Had Broad been called out (the term in cricket is “walk,”) his last 28 runs never would have happened. It should be noticed here that around the world there are tens of millions of fanatics who follow cricket. When Broad failed to “walk,” the Twittering began. And it continued on until the end of the match. And it was not so much that the wrong team won—who knows how it might

They whistled at girls, passed beer back and forth between them, jostled and shoved each other, even threw cups of beer at one another. have turned out if Broad had walked when he should—but that the ancient ethic of good manners and politeness were disregarded. The man had been out. As a gentleman, he should have walked off even before the umpire ruled. “What has this come to?” Twittered one enthusiast. Numerous Twitters referred to a famous walk-

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off in a crucial match between Sri Lanka and Australia in 2003 when a star player, Adam Gilchrist, had walked off, knowing his bat had hit the ball when no one saw or heard it, before the umpire could rule. “If ever there was a true Spirit of Cricket, it took the day off at Trent Bridge when Stuart Broad blatantly nicked a delivery to first slip but chose not to walk,” wrote sports columnist Paul Hayward in The Daily Telegraph. A “slip” is a particular position a fielder plays in cricket. What did come as a surprise, however, was the reaction of most of the players on both sides of the contest. In today’s world, there’s too much at stake, particularly financially. They had no quarrel with what Broad did. Within the normal politeness and good manners, he could not be blamed for trying to avoid hurting his team. Here, today, in the Hamptons, there is no cricket played that I know ofxxx. But there is golf. And when it’s played, on a private course by millionaires and billionaires, they do it really fast, practically speed-walking down the fairways, hitting the ball as quickly as possible when they get to it and then moving along to hit it again. It’s called power golf. Those not so good or powerful have to give way when the speed golfers approach. Let them through. And we do. A wealthy mogul’s golf match might get completed in half the time it takes everybody else. And when nobody is looking and the lie is bad, who knows? The idea is to beat the opponent. And many of them know what to do. The story of Stuart Broad, as told in this article, might have taught you the way cricket is played. Certainly it taught me. In all my travels during my life, I have sat through much of a day watching a cricket match (having no idea what was going on) only twice. Once it was in a stadium in Barbados. A very important match that I was lucky to get tickets to. It was the second day. On the first day, almost all work stopped in Barbados, or at least slowed down, as everyone on this entire island listened to the game over portable radios they carried around, or watched it on TV in bars and hotel lobbies. I had no idea what was going on in that stadium on the second day, but people were cheering all over the place. I also once got to watch a cricket match in a stadium in downtown Auckland, New Zealand. This was a whole different story. Although the game looked exactly the same as the other, all the players in their white shirts and pants and hats and all the good mannered camaraderie between them, the stadium was an uproarious mess of slobberingly drunk drunks. They whistled at pretty girls, passed beer back and forth between them, jostled and shoved one another, even threw cups of beer at one another (and the girls) and had no particular interest in the match at all except at special moments, which might occur at twohour intervals, when something very good was happening for the home team. Then they’d get up and cheer, and some of them would fall over. I do hope cricket recovers from this malfeasance. We need cricket in this world.


DAN’S PAPERS

danspapers.com

August 2, 2013 Page 45

7-Eleven Sag Harbor, Greenport, Undocumented Immigrants, Exploitation

I

f you go into the Sag Harbor 7-Eleven today, it will appear to you that everything is exactly the same as it always was, except for the employees. They are completely different. A change in ownership? Where have the former employees, mostly Pakistanis and Filipinos, gone? They were here yesterday, now they are not. It’s been much more profound than that. And what has happened at that 7-Eleven, is, if proven true, an extraordinary story and a remarkable indictment of local real estate rental enforcement, immigration policies, business procedures, the lack of government oversight and personal exploitation. The American way of life might be better than any other, but apparently not always by much. It was all explained in an extraordinary press conference held three weeks ago by U.S. Attorney Loretta E. Lynch, who appeared along with agents from the public affairs office for Immigration and Customs Enforcement Homeland Security Investigations and other enforcement organizations. Involved is the 7-Eleven in Sag Harbor, along with the 7-Elevens in Greenport and Cutchogue. 7-Eleven, a Japanese-owned conglomerate, has more stores around the world than any other franchise, including McDonald’s. All

together there are more than 50,000 7-Eleven stores worldwide. Some 7-Elevens are owned by the parent company. But most are run as franchises, with individual entrepreneurs getting a franchise license and running one or more stores. Though headquartered in Japan, 7-Eleven has sub-headquarters in every country, here in America in Dallas. Here, in sum, is what U.S. Attorney Loretta E. Lynch said at the press conference and what can be gathered from other sources. A very well-to-do couple lives in a grand mansion in Head of the Harbor on Long Island, and this couple, together, or in combination with other members of their extended family, own, co-own and control twelve 7-Eleven franchises, most on Long Island and the remainder in Virginia. They are being accused of bilking more than $182 million in the last 13 years from the revenues that have come through the door, not from the register, but from manipulations made to their employees’ pay. A number of their employees were illegal immigrants, largely from Pakistan and the Philippines. Fearing deportation, Lynch said, they kept quiet about this for years and years. Lynch described how this worked. According to the indictments, these people would be brought over, put up in unregulated homes this wealthy couple had bought or rented near

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the stores they owned, required to pay a rent in cash, and then were required to work long hours at the 7-Eleven, often 100 hours a week. These employees who worked 100 hours a week would be paid for only 25 to 30 hours. How could workers get so little for 100 hours of work? N.Y. State Police Superintendent Joseph A. D’Amico said they believe the illegal immigrants were provided with false documentation. The couple are alleged to have stolen the names and Social Security numbers from children as young as eight, some dead people and at least one Coast Guard cadet. They would then, according to the indictment, put the false information into the company’s automated payroll system. Dallas would get the information, which all looked proper, then they would honor the requested payroll and send the wages to the defendants, who were then to pay the employees. According the charges, the defendants paid the employees less than they were supposed to and kept what ended up being millions for themselves. As a result of all this, the following things have happened. The couple, who are naturalized American citizens, are originally from Pakistan and are Farrukh Baig, 57, and his wife Bushra Baig, 49. The Baigs are being held without bail. The charges include conspiring to commit wire fraud, stealing identities and concealing (Cont’d on next page) and harboring illegal

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DAN’S PAPERS

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7-Eleven (Cont’d from previous page) And so, the coffee at 7-Eleven is still being served as always. The store did not miss a beat...except that one day it opened late. immigrants. Seven other people, either from Pakistan or the Philippines, have also been charged. The federal government has moved to forfeit the franchise rights to ten 7-Eleven stores in New York and four in Virginia. They have also put into forfeiture five houses in New York Dan's Full Details Bleed:CC Dans full 10/1/12 1:46 PM Page 1 where employees lived in what one official Dan's Full Details Bleed:CC Dans full 10/1/12 1:46 PM Page 1 described as “plantation” circumstances.

A lawyer for the Baigs said his clients were not guilty and were operating their businesses in the best American tradition while abiding by all the proper laws. A spokesperson for 7-Eleven, Margaret Chabris, said 7-Eleven, Inc. “will take aggressive actions to audit the employment status of all its franchisees’ employees. 7-Eleven Inc. is taking steps to assume corporate operation of the stores involved in this action so we can continue to serve our guests. We continue to cooperate with federal authorities in this matter.” And so, the coffee at 7-Eleven is still being served as always. The store did not miss a beat, except that one day it opened late. You’d hardly know the difference in the service at the store The coffee is still flowing at 7-eleven.

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between then and now. Except it has all new employees. Years ago, when the franchise applicant for 7-Eleven applied to open the store in Sag Harbor, the townspeople vigorously opposed the application. Businesses in that town needed to be owned by people who live in the town, they said. That way we know them and they know us. 7-Eleven is a corporate situation run from far, far away. The Village of Sag Harbor had no laws that could keep 7-Eleven away. And so the store came and opened. And now, if these allegations prove true, we know the rest.

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Miracle at Sea

The Heroic Rescue of Montauk Fisherman John Aldridge By KeLLy LAFFey

Lost at sea” stories so rarely have a happy ending. But few rescue efforts have such unconditional community support as Montauk recently provided to lost-and-found local lobsterman John Aldridge. As much as Montauk radiates the energy of an idyllic seaside resort community, there’s also a determined quality amongst all who love the hamlet, a side that was on display last week when Aldridge was plucked from the Deep Blue by the U.S. Coast Guard. The miraculous rescue occurred nine hours after an intense search began and 12 and a half hours after Aldridge fell overboard in the dark, early morning hours of Wednesday, July 24, buoyed by his rubber boots and an unwavering will to survive. He went into survival mode. “Dying wasn’t an option,” confirmed Aldridge in a press conference, while holding his young nephew. During his time in the water, Aldridge had a knife in his pocket, and he was able to cut lobster buoys loose. He used those, as well as his boots, as flotation devices. Aldridge’s fishing boat Anna Mary left Montauk the evening of July 23. He fell overboard sometime around 3:30 a.m. on July 24 after he went to move a cooler and the handle snapped. Fishing partner Anthony Sosinski woke up a few hours later and realized his friend was missing.

“He (Aldridge) left clues,” said Sosinski. “I started backtracking my steps and analyzing the boat.” Sosinski, nicknamed “Little Anthony,” initially feared that Aldridge had drowned in one of the 2,000-pound lobster tanks on board. He quickly took inventory of his ship, which was 62 miles offshore at the time. “There were stacked coolers on the boat that were moved, and one had a broken handle,” said Little Anthony.

“When I first went in at night, I saw a fin or two...[I thought] I just got to keep my composure, I can’t panic...” Anthony charted his course and called the Coast Guard to ask for air support. A call also went out to the local fishermen. “Our fishing friends offshore basically stopped what they were doing and headed in my direction,” said Little Anthony, explaining that boats lined up a half mile apart either in an east-west direction or a north-south direction to form a grid. “The local fishermen really, really stepped up and helped Anthony patrol the waters closer

in,” says local resident and musician Nancy Atlas. “That freed up the helicopters to do longer runs.” Two rescue boat crews from Station Montauk, two Coast Guard 87-foot rescue patrol boats, aircraft and two rescue helicopters from ASCC, along with several good Samaritans and local fishing vessels, searched about nine hours to find Aldridge. The coordination between the vessels and the Coast Guard allowed them to cover an area of 660 square miles, approximately the size of 378,000 American football fields. “All of the local support and the federal government support was unprecedented,” noted Little Anthony. “It’s very telling, how the community came together,” confirms Atlas. There are rumors, though unconfirmed, that Jimmy Buffett and his boat the Last Mango were among those in the search party. Even if that proves untrue, his song “Fins” rung a little too close to home for Aldridge that fateful night. “When I first went in at night, I saw a fin or two,” said Aldridge. “[I thought] I just got to keep my composure, I can’t panic… “I grabbed my boots, filled them with air and threw them under my arms,” said Aldridge. “The water was warm,” he added. The current temperature of the Atlantic is about 75 degrees. Rescue efforts spanned the better part of Wednesday. John spotted (Cont’d on next page)

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Rescue (Cont’d from previous page) “The swimmer said, ‘We’ve been looking for you for nine hours’ and I was like, ‘I’ve been looking for you for 12 hours.’”

Courtesy U.S. Coast Guard

various ships while floating, but “they were all looking away from me,” he says. “He told me I passed him two times,” says Anthony. “[He said] ‘I saw you and all I could think about were the burgers in the cooler.’” Aldridge was found by the Coast Guard approximately 43 miles south of Montauk. He was taken to Falmouth Hospital on Cape Cod

and was treated for dehydration, exposure and hypothermia. “The swimmer came out and jumped in the water and said ‘We’ve been looking for you for nine hours’ and I was like, ‘I’ve been looking for you for 12 hours,’” said Aldridge in the press conference. Likely adding to the challenges of spotting a man in the immense expanse of ocean, Aldridge was wearing a blue shirt, from the Anna Mary’s Blessing of the Fleet 2012. “Everyone gets a shirt [for the Blessing of the Fleet],” says Anthony. “Same shirt, same team.” Incidentally, some fishermen have become disenfranchised with the Blessing of the Fleet as of late because of the amount of regulations involved in the ceremony, says Anthony, who

Cathy Patterson, Aldridge’s sister, upon hearing he was saved

says he was ticketed for not having enough lifejackets on board about “two or three years ago.” “It’s like ticketing someone for not wearing a seatbelt in a parade,” Anthony deadpans. But that hasn’t taken away from the purity of the yearly Montauk tradition, and its ties to this latest rescue story. “It’s for everyone who loves that ocean. It’s the start of our season and is a time for remembrance; for everyone to be safe.” The next blessing of the fleet is nearly a year away. But, Atlas notes that an amazing thing through all this is that Anthony is already back out at sea, having left this past weekend. The media coverage was slightly overwhelming. “He’s just happy that his friend is alive…He said ‘I just need to get back on the ocean. I’m my calmest there.’” Aldridge too, plans to get back on the sea soon, according to Anthony. “He’s still working, just not out on the ocean,” he said from his post out at sea. “He just needs to heal.”

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New Historical exhibit Looks Back on Jazz Age By JoAN BAuM

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hat a great subtitle for fans of the Jazz Age, if not also alliteration: “Clothes, Clubs and Contraband” aptly references distinctive features of this iconic period in American cultural history—which The East Hampton Historical Society (EHHS) is celebrating at the Clinton Academy Museum in an attractive exhibit, “Jazz Age East Hampton (1919-1933).” A slang word said to be of uncertain origin, “jazz” is likely related to “jism” or its variant “jizz,” a term generally defined as spirit, excitement or propulsive energy. To judge from the historic photographs, decorative arts, artifacts and period fashions on display at the academy, however, it would seem that the sexual suggestions of the word yielded to the societal on Long Island, with the era’s pleasures reflecting the sartorial and social world of local gentry rather than the demimonde of African Americans and others in New Orleans who put jazz on the map as music. “Jazz Age East Hampton” is a treat for the eyes. It includes swimsuits, children’s outfits, dresses, jewelry, parasols, a banjo, athletic medal awards, wooden golf clubs and a croquet set. A special section of the room is devoted to the Ladies Village Improvement Society (LVIS) and the Maidstone Club. And, oh yes, that third “C” of the subtitle: “contraband.” Would you believe there’s even a half-full, decades-old bottle of liquor, most likely whiskey, says EHHS Executive Director Richard Barons and his wife

Roseanne, who curated this show. The Jazz Age, after all, paralleled the era of Prohibition. The booze, boat contraband recovered nine miles south of Jones Inlet in 80 feet of water, dates to October 1922, and gives off a slight scent if you sniff the new cork and have a potent imagination. The inspiration for the exhibit came to him, Barons says, when he went online to the Library of Congress (LC) to check something and lo! saw a bunch of images on the LC website, many of lush, local gardens in the area. And, of course, he relies, as always, on the kindness of area families and friends who keep donating items to EHHS. Peggy Sherrill, for example, came in bearing a beaded red dress (she had been equally generous with photos for the EHHS exhibit “The Long Island Express: Rare Photographs of East Hampton Town After the 1938 Hurricane”). To judge from the sleeveless tunic-style dresses on show, red would seem to have been the default color of the period, with black a runner up, and red, white and black a frequent color combination, especially in Orientalinspired dresses and kimonos, embroidery still intact. As for swim wear, for men and women, though made of wool, the suits look modern and comfortable. Among dressing table artifacts, there’s a “hair receiver,” which Barons explains was where women stored brushed-out hair to be used as ornaments, a tradition that dates to he 19th century, possibly earlier. The jewelry is elegant and simple, reminding Barons of a

It includes swimsuits, children’s outfits, dresses, jewelry, parasols, a banjo, athletic medal awards, wooden golf clubs and a croquet set. famous saying of Coco Chanel: “Before leaving the house, a lady should stop, look in the mirror, and remove one piece of jewelry.” And men, how about those gentleman’s collars? Several photographic images have not been seen before, Barons notes. Some will startle—the Montauk fishing pier, for example, a zeppelin going by, a reminder that there had been a dirigible station in Montauk; a hand-colored photo of the recently opened Montauk Manor, with horses and hitching post out front; a picture of three golfers posing for the camera, clubs in hand, ties and long socks de rigueur. The remarkable garden photos show the Italianate influence prominent at the time, pergolas and all. A particularly gorgeous back yard turns out to be a photo of a painting by Childe Hassam of his cottage on Egypt Lane. “Jazz Age East Hampton (1919–1933) Clothes, Clubs, and Contraband” at Clinton Academy Museum, 151 Main Street, East Hampton. Through October 13. Special tour by EHHS Executive Director Richard Barons, August 17. Free. Donations always appreciated. Call 631-324-6850 for further info or visit the EHHS website.

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East Ender Rachel Zoe launched her new online Boutique, BareNecessities.com, filled with designer apparel and lingerie. La Palestra Kids Foundation Benefit 2013 will take place in Wainscott on August 3, hosted by Michael McGlone. The event will be catered by Sam Talbot. The host committee includes Liam Neeson, Frances McDormand, Noah emmerich, Joel Cohen and more.

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Some galas are rockin’ wild fun, others are dreamily elegant, like the Southampton Animal Foundation’s 4th Annual Unconditional Love Benefit. Under an ethereal night sky, animal lovers who walk the walk with their money and volunteering—and then dance the dance— gathered at the waterfront home of Honorary Chair Sandra McConnell to dine and to bid on art, jewelry and other auction items, then show off their moves on the floor to the Alex Donner orchestra. Elegance didn’t preclude some very serious fundraising that night; Master of Ceremonies Chuck (Continued on page 62)

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Dan’s Kite Fly Returns This Sunday, August 4 By ARTuRo FigARo

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he Dan’s Papers 41st Annual Kite Fly is almost here, and we expect to see some wild wind structures at Sagg Main Beach! Upon arrival, make sure you fill out a short registration card to be entered to win in variety of different kite categories including, but not limited to: most colorful, best homemade, funniest, most exotic, highest kite, longest tail and a new addition, “Best Dance Party Kite” thanks to our friends at All For The East End (AFTEE), who will have information about their world class music event, AFTEE’s Nile Rodgers Dance Party—East End which will take place on August 19 at Martha Clara Vineyards.

raises FUN. One of those rare FREE events for the entire family on the beach, Dan’s Kite Fly is something everyone should experience at least once. Many continue to come back year after year. So, we invite outdoor enthusiasts of all kinds to come celebrate 41 years of kite-flying tradition with Dan’s Papers on August 4, beginning after 5:30 p.m. at Sagg Main Beach in Sagaponack (judging begins around 6 p.m.). The event will be accompanied by activities provided by Party Kidz, including face painting, jugglers and magicians—to keep the kids entertained between kite flying duties while parents enjoy the scenic views and celebrate the simple joy of being active and outdoors with live music by

the Jim Turner Band. So get your dancing shoes ready (if you feel like it)! The Town of Southampton will lift stickerparking restrictions for the parking lot at Sagg Main Beach after 5:30 p.m., allowing visitors to attend the event for the annual cost of… nothing, as long as they park in the beach parking lot. Locals, summer visitors, and amateur kiteflyers have all flocked to the beaches to catch sight of the majestic spectacle. Come down and experience a unique, homegrown event that has offered families a stellar line up of activities since 1972, making this event the oldest kite festival on the East End. We hope to see you there!

Dan’s Papers Kite Fly is a beloved Hamptons event.

Just don’t get your hopes up for nailing the world record for biggest kite: Kite enthusiast Peter Lynn of New Zealand won that honor when he flew a kite that he called “The Big One” over the sea in Southsea, England at the 2005 Portsmouth International Kite Festival. The contraption, in the shape of a Kuwaiti flag, measured in at 138 ft. x 82 ft. That’s about 3,445 square feet—nearly 30% larger than the average American home. The kite was ramair inflated, took about 750 hours to build, and shattered the 1997 Guinness record for World’s Largest Kite previously held by…Peter Lynn, the godfather of kite innovation, who is widely credited with the popularization of such activities as kite-surfing and kite-buggying, and owns patents on dozens of different kite designs. There’s a reason why Newsday named Dan’s Kite-Fly as one of the Top 50 Family Things To Do during the Long Island summer season for two years in a row. What’s better than ending a Sunday beach day, fully embracing the salty smells and calming ocean breezes with something as joyful as kite flying? Dan’s Papers’ Kite Fly is a Hamptons institution and has even spawned similar events, some of which raise huge sums of money for worthy causes. But Dan’s Kite Fly doesn’t raise funds; it only

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evening in the Garden of eden

This isn’t going to end well.” That’s the first thing that came to my mind as I watched the Maker (best described as an impish, god-like mad scientist) bring her creation to life. Beautiful and innocent, this certainly wasn’t Frankenstein’s monster, but something felt very wrong as the creation— we’ll call her Eve—gasped her first breaths and stumbled out of the operating room, confused, struggling to stay alive. But she got her bearings and eventually stood on her own two feet, her stunning beauty on display for all to see. She was already too perfect, but the Maker wasn’t finished yet. She soon brought out a tall, strong man with a vacant stare. Eve was frightened of the Man, and he was frightened of her. But then their hands touched. The three crows that had been watching the action and assisting the Maker nodded in satisfaction to each other and flew off. The Maker was elated; I could see it in her face. But then they saw the tree. Off in the distance, a tree without leaves slowly emitted a pink light that seemed to beckon to Eve and Man. They approached it in awe; as I squinted I thought it was an apple tree, but then I realized that the branches held things—a Dolce & Gabbana shopping bag, an issue of Metropolitan, a case of makeup and many other things. Eve and Man gravitated, strangely, toward a newspaper and apron. The Maker panicked, screaming for them to get away HDS_Dans.Reg_6.187x6_c.pdf

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from the tree, but it was no use. Eve and Man took their new belongings, linked arms and happily rushed off. I wanted to follow them, but I was too concerned for the Maker. She was frantic as she searched through her plans and instructions for some kind of failsafe, but there was nothing of use. With no other option, the Maker took off after her creations. Things only went downhill from there. I heard music coming from a small, darkened room and I looked inside. Eve and Man were playing house...but was it a game, or something much more serious? As Eve and Man played out their fantasy of eve is born the perfect American couple, the scene started to warp. Man became overwhelmed and ran out; the Maker stormed in and tried to reason with Eve, who was angry and stormed off. I heard a noise coming from the area with the tree, so I ran back. Eve, Man and the Maker weren’t alone. Another stunningly beautiful woman, who some called Lilith, was having her way with Man, who was both horrified and in ecstasy.

planned? Well, I’ll let you find out for yourselves.

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When he realized that what he was doing was wrong, he ran off, leaving Lilith alone. She threw a temper tantrum, but then composed herself. “Out of my way!” she screamed to no one in particular as she stomped off in her red high heels. Soon, Lilith returned with Eve, who was confused but excited by her new “friend.” Lilith had plans for poor Eve, and those plans were something that nobody—not Man, not the Maker, not anyone—could stop. When I next saw the Maker, she was despondent in her laboratory. What had happened to her creations? What had gone wrong? What could she do to set things back to the way they were supposed to be? And what exactly did Lilith have Tom Kochie

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Cindy Pease Roe: Turning Garbage to Art By SANDRA HALe SCHuLMAN

A

s one of the top nautical painters in the Northeast, Cindy Pease Roe’s work is dependant on the health and beauty of the sea and the shore. “Take a walk along any beach in Long Island now,” says Roe, “and washed ashore you’ll find plastic printed party balloons—the new enemy left behind by beach partiers—polythene grocery store bags, bottles, containers, plastic drums, expanded polystyrene packing, polyurethane foam pieces, pieces of polypropylene fishing net and discarded lengths of rope and buoys. Together with traffic cones, disposable lighters, vehicle tires and toothbrushes, these items are casually thrown away on land and at sea and carried ashore by wind and tide.” According to Greenpeace International, “The very thing that makes plastic items useful to consumers, their durability and stability, also makes them a problem in marine environments. Around 100 million tons of plastic are produced each year of which about 10% ends up in the sea. About 20% of this is from ships and platforms, the rest from land.” But one person’s trash is another person’s treasure. “I collect all this plastic trash, bleach it— some items may be toxic—and then sort it into large pails by color and material,” Roe says. “Then I start to make art with it.” Roe began with wreath shapes in various colors and themes, and then made larger

animal shaped sculptures using wire frames. “Herman” the turtle is wonderfully whimsical, flying through the air as formerly perilous fishing lures and netting animate his shell. “Rudolph” the life-size deer is stuffed with large plastic bottles, and party balloon ribbon gives him a curly springy head. These pieces are a component of a larger plastic awareness series that transforms the destructive elements of plastic into a constructive form of art. Last fall, 4th graders at Greenport Elementary School went on a bus to a beach on the North Shore, collecting plastic to make art with for the library. They made wreaths and small reindeer. Kids react with sheer delight and amazement to the statues, so Roe connected with the Oyster Pond Elementary School, which initially began as a conversation started with a group of students about the importance of recycling and the consequences of litter. After sharing information, organizations and some sobering statistics, Roe and the students set out to the shore in a big school bus with gloves and buckets to begin their observation and collection of found plastic. “I was surprised how few of the kids were aware of the plastic on the beach, because they don’t go very often,” says Roe. “Once I trained their eye to see the stuff, they found so much of it. The worst is the party balloons, as they are usually filled with helium and they escape from the outdoors parties. Then they get carried out

Recycled art supplies

over the ocean, where they eventually fall into the water. Turtles think they’re jellyfish—one of their favorite foods—and eat them, then they choke and it kills them. Another problem is that even the plastic that is small and gets ground up and is ingested by marine life. Then we eat it. I don’t want to freak the kids out too much, so we make it fun. The art on their walls is a permanent reminder of what is happening to the sea and shore.” Each class participated in the project from the collection and sorting, to the final construction of a 5-foot sculpture of a fish compiled of their reclaimed material. The big fish was on display at the school science fair. “I care so deeply about our waterfront,” says Roe. “And I love marine life, this is how I can help my community through the art. Cindy Pease Roe Studio, 190 Stirling Street, Greenport, cindypeaseroe.com

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Sag Harbor to Host Special Speaker on Reform Judaism

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his Friday night, Temple Adas Israel in Sag Harbor will host a very special guest speaker: Rabbi Rick Jacobs, president of the Union for Reform Judaism (URJ). Those who attend services will have the opportunity to hear Rabbi Jacobs speak about “Renovating Jewish Life: The Reform Movement at a Crossroads.” The URJ movement is often described as one of the more liberal parts of Judaism; the URJ spoke out strongly in support of gay marriage during the Supreme Court rulings last month. With more than 1.5 million estimated Reform Jews in North America, Reform Judaism is considered the largest Jewish movement in North America. Rabbi Jacobs has served as president of the URJ since June 2012, following other successful positions, including 20 years serving as leader of the Westchester Reform Temple (WRT) in Scarsdale. “I’m looking Rabbi Rick Jacobs forward to getting to know the [Temple Adas] congregation and the wider community,” Rabbi Jacobs said last week. The way in which Rabbi Jacobs’ guest appearance came about was coincidental. Last summer, Rabbi Jacobs happened to attend Saturday morning Shabbat services at Temple

Adas Israel. “He sometimes finds himself on the East End,” explains Rabbi Leon Morris, the leader of Temple Adas Israel. Last year’s visit came at a less-than-auspicious time—the Saturday morning after the largest Friday night services the Temple had seen, so few people attended. But Rabbi Jacobs accepted the invitation to return, and will discuss the crossroads at which many religious communities find themselves today, hopefully to a larger crowd. “People are not going to automatically join today as they might have in a previous generation,” he explains. This drop in religious affiliation means that some synagogues, both in the Reform movement and those outside the movement, often have dwindling numbers, and some have even had to close their doors. This development, combined with other challenges that the Reform movement faces—how to engage more young people, how to improve upon outdated structures—are large issues that Rabbi Jacobs spends much of his time thinking about and analyzing. Rabbi Jacobs outlines three strategic areas that the URJ sees as critical to improving the functioning of this body, which was formed in 1873 by Rabbi Isaac Mayer Wise as the Union of American Hebrew Congregations. Courtesy URJ.org

By ALLySoN ZACHARoFF

“We want to catalyze congregational change,” Rabbi Jacobs explains as the first pillar. He poses the question, “Is Hebrew School still a model we suffer through?” Engaging the next generation is the second pillar, helping engage teenagers and young adults fresh out of college who might have lost connection with their synagogue after their Bat and Bar Mitzvahs. As a third objective, Rabbi Jacobs wants to “extend our reach beyond the walls of synagogues.” This could mean offering classes for interfaith couples seeking to raise their children Jewish, or welcoming LGBT individuals. “He was always a model of the best that’s out there—the most innovative programming, the most innovative synagogue,” Rabbi Morris explains. “Almost everything we’re doing is a kind of outreach to Jews who haven’t connected with their Jewishness.” He sees this visit as “an opportunity to reflect on what the meaning of our affiliation with the Reform movement is.” In another realm, Rabbi Jacobs has worked with the Reform movement to make sure that even beyond the Jewish community, that the URJ reaches out to other faiths to forge stronger connections in an increasingly diverse United States. The Reform movement organized the first interfaith response to the Newtown shooting, “We’re definitely involved in working across the waterfront of the interfaith world.” Visitors are welcome at Shabbat services this Friday night at 8 p.m. to hear Rabbi Rick Jacobs speak. 30 Atlantic Avenue, Sag Harbor.

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Stanford White Buildings Continue to Dazzle east enders By JoAN BAuM

The orchard, property of James Lawrence Breese

cedar shingles themselves, eminently suited to hold up in salt air—were inseparable from their settings. But they were also sensitive to how they fronted on a street, a touch of the urban in the otherwise farmland environment of Southampton. In The Houses of McKim, Mead

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and White, White’s great grandson, Samuel G. White, AIA, writes about White’s design of the 1889 Samuel Longstreth Parrish House, for example, as a “dialogue between house, open space and street that is a paradigm of the simultaneously (Continued on page 64)

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ix, speculates Southampton Historical Society archivist Mary Cummings on the number of Stanford White houses still extant in the Southampton area. These include the Shinnecock Hills Golf Club Clubhouse, arguably, the best known; White Fence, a.k.a. the Samuel Parrish House on First Neck Lane; the William Merritt Chase House in Shinnecock Hills; the Edward Mead house on Hill Street; the James Hampden Robb House, a.k.a. the Dolphins; and the Breese Estate, a.k.a. the Orchard, later called Whitefield, whose exterior was mainly designed by McKim (of McKim, Mead and White), though White did the spectacular Music Room interior. But were there, or are there, more, that might evidence details of the legendary architect? Cummings is not sure, but she does know that two local residences—the J.F Pupke House and White Caps—did not survive. The principals of McKim, Mead and White worked in such close conjunction with one another (if not always in close harmony), and with their clients, fellow club men whom White knew well, that it can be difficult at times to separate out specific White contributions, including revisions, as houses underwent multi-year construction. Although McKim or Mead took the lead on some projects, White absorbed more of the credit because of his fame. White “cottages”—their wide verandas, tall posts and window and door arrangements planned to accommodate cooling breezes, the

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DAN’S PAPERS

Page 60 August 2, 2013

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Need Sand to Fill your Summer Bucket List? Here It Is By STACy DeRMoNT, STePHANIe De TRoy, GeNevIeve HoRSBuRGH, KeLLy LAFFey, Lee MeyeR, oLIveR PeTeRSoN

T

here are 31 days until Labor Day, which means that summer’s light is fleeting. But if you’re a glass-half-full kind of person, that a solid month of Hamptonsy Hamptons adventures to be had. What will you accomplish each day before Tumbleweed Tuesday hits? Be sure to check these items off your bucket list before summer fades away... 1. Grab an ice cream cone. But not just any cone. The quintessential Sag Harbor ice cream experience is Big Olaf’s. It’s been down on the wharf for decades—it’s the fabled ice creamery

where novelist Colson Whitehead’s protagonist in Sag Harbor spends a summer burning his fingers while making waffle cones. To this day there’s a little Plexiglass station set up in the front where you can delight in watching teenagers singe their fingertips for the sake of waffle conery. Get a small peanut butter waffle cone dipped in Reese’s pieces and go with it to a nearby bench to watch the sunset as you lick your way to a blissful sugar high. 2. Try skishing off Georgica. This new extreme sport puts fishermen in the water with their prey, wearing fins and carrying a rod and reel. 3. Visit the LongHouse Reserve. 4. Go for a bike ride around Shelter Island. Enjoy the beauty of a place with no stoplights.

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5. Bike to Montauk, exploring the back roads for a Southampton-to-Montauk ride. 6. Go to East Hampton Point for reggae night. 7. Go to La Plage Sundays at Navy Beach for Winston Irie in Montauk. 8. Try a yoga class at PURE yoga in East Hampton. 9. Cruise to tunes from the DansPapers.com 100 Songs of Summer playlist. 10. Head to the Pollock-Krasner House in Springs with your kids for a drip-painting class—and don’t miss the chance to stand on the actual paint-covered studio floor where Jackson Pollock dripped his way into history. 11. Go to Bay Burger in Sag Harbor for a Buffalo Chicken Sandwich, fries and tots. 12. Skydive in Calverton—and fork out the extra dough for a video to relive the moment. 13. Don’t miss the crazy fun of the Hampton Classic. It’s the best for celebrity spotting, and you’ll see the most beautiful and talented horses this country has to offer. 14. Go boating in Sag Harbor to see a whole different view of the Hamptons! 15. Watch the sunrise from a lifeguard stand 16. Shark dive! Get into a cage with a local charter and drop into a chum slick amid the denizens of the deep. 17. Attend Dan’s Papers Kite Fly August 4. 18. See A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum at Bay Street, August 6–September 1. 19. Get inducted into the Guinness 100 Club with 100 pints at Buckley’s in Hampton Bays... maybe not all in one day, of course. 20. Hit up one of the farmers markets and create a meal that is truly local. Also: Learn to grill, if you haven’t already! 21. Spend an entire day outside. Sunrise, run to the beach, nap in the sand, attend an outdoor concert…wear sunscreen, bear with the bugs...this won’t be possible in a few weeks. 22. Try your hand at stand up paddle surfing. (Maybe watch a YouTube video before attempting this.) 23. East as many lobster rolls as you can get your hands on. Bonus points if the meat comes straight from Montauk. 24. Slow to 35 mph heading East as Sunrise Highway becomes CR-39. Go ahead. Try it. You’ll be the first one. 25. Run through a pack of seagulls. 26. Go to bed earlier so you can wake up and seize the day. 27. Turn the AC off for a night. Pick a coolish one, open the windows, and fall asleep to the symphony of crickets. 28. Ride Hamptons Free Ride to the beach. Even if you have a sticker. Doesn’t it seem fun to cruise around in those little electric vehicles? 29. Stop at Goldberg’s for bagels and Hampton Coffee for an iced latte on your way out here, and enjoy your East End bounty at the beach. 30. Start a pickup game of Ultimate Frisbee or touch football on the beach. Diving for the ball or Frisbee is encouraged. 31. Hit up your favorite winery for their live music series, grab yourself a glass of red, white or rosé and toast the magic of another fabulous East End summer. What’s on your personal East End bucket list for the rest of Summer 2013? Share with us at DansPapers.com.


DAN’S PAPERS

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August 2, 2013 Page 61

GUEST ESSAY

The Circle We Run In By SAMANTHA DeLL’oLIo

I

could not wait to get to there. Tonight we would pick up my cousins on the way to Noyac. I guess all my stuff was packed. I mean, I didn’t really think about it much back then. Clothes consisted of T-shirts and cutoffs and the Converse I had on could last all summer. I would probably swap clothes with my cousin. Maybe we’d get lucky and steal something from our sisters because they were older, and always had the right stuff, but all we really cared about on this journey was family and food. After pulling over in a quiet residential block in Coney Island where my cousins lived, I stretched my 30-minute cramped legs as my mom stuffed their luggage in. The smell of this Atlantic was the perfect appetizer before meeting its unpredictable but incredibly beautiful sister 100 miles away. My parents had a beach cottage near Sag Harbor. We lived in Manhattan and came out for a month each July. “Can I get a soda out?” I interrupt my mom as she’s talking to my uncle about traffic. “Share it! And don’t knock over the eggplant or the tray with the cookies while you’re there!” she says in an annoyed but loving way. Who brings leftover eggplant on a trip to the Hamptons? We do. Mom rushed to get out of the apartment so she wants the rest of her dinner when we get there. Other families order Chinese or simply just brush their teeth and go to bed after a long Samantha Dell’Olio is a freelance book publicist and has worked at both Random House and Penguin. She has been coming to Long Island’s East End her entire life. She currently lives in Manhattan with her husband and young daughter.

car ride. Not us. We’re Italian and “the kitchen never closes” as my mom always complains. The exits on the LIE breeze by as we make jokes, interrupt one another and pass around bags of crinkly chips and pretzels. As the roads quiet, so do our voices. The windows are open now. We don’t need air conditioning since the sea breeze fills our congested city lungs with sweet memories and prospects of more to come. The dividers in the road are perfectly spaced and the sound of our wheels falling into them put everyone in a trance. As we turn off 27 to more twists and turns, mom perks up at the wheel to search for deer. No one wants to ruin Rudolph’s summer vacation. The crickets greet us with a warm country welcome and by the time we turn into our pitch-black driveway they sound as if they have invaded the glove compartment. The following day we arrive at Circle—a private beach resting on Noyac Bay with wavy, blue water and succulent, salty clams. For some, this is just another Hamptons masterpiece with hand-painted sunsets and camel-colored sand dunes cascading in the distance. To us, the city kids so happy to escape the sidewalk heat, it’s everything. It’s where we learned to swim, watch fireworks light up the loud night and where we first held the hands of nervous teenage boys. It represents everything beautiful and untouched on the East End. It’s an oasis that doesn’t change even as the surrounding bungalows add a fence and soft-colored hydrangeas grow past a kitchen window. Circle Beach will always be the same in our adoring eyes. Today we’re here schlepping striped beach chairs and library books we won’t ever open. We have already forgotten (Continued on page 66)

This essay is one of the many nonfiction essays entered in the Dan’s Papers $6,000 Literary Prize competition. We editors liked this entry and present it here, hoping you’ll like it. For more go to literaryprize. danspapers.com.


DAN’S PAPERS

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Scarborough, honoree Jill Rappaport, Board President Jonathan McCann and Board Member Jay Durante were hard-driving auctioneers. Martin Shafiroff, seated next to daughter elizabeth, raised his hand a few times during bidding, while his wife, Executive Chairwoman Jean Shafiroff, floated among tables in a white ball gown adorned with black bows, enticing guests to bid on a ruby-and-diamondstudded poodle brooch, which went for $5,000. Other guests included Southampton Mayor Mark epley and his wife, Marianne, famous trainer Aimee Sadler, who heads the shelter’s program, Jewel Morris, founding president of Pet Philanthropy Circle, Honorary Chair Susan Allen, Stacey Coleman of the Animal Farm Foundation, and animal behaviorist Pamela Reid of the ASPCA, who was given a gift for her works on behalf of animals. EMM Group and Fiji Water hosted a pool party, where guests played lawn bowling and croquet with Hilary Duff at a luscious and secluded Sag Harbor estate. Duff was the eye candy, and the endless aqua-blue display of Couture Candy Buffets was the other kind.

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As the world was still reeling from the thrill of royal baby news, Hamptonite Jimmy Fallon and his wife, Nancy Juvonen Fallon, welcomed a baby daughter, Winnie Rose Fallon, last Tuesday. The late-night star joked the night before “Did you guys hear? It finally happened! Kate Middleton gave birth to a baby boy today! Yep, the baby weighed about 8 pounds, then Americans were like, ‘How much is that in dollars? The New York Post reports that the new mom has been spending much of this summer at their Sagaponack home. Hamptons regular Beyoncé used her celeb power for good at a concert in Boston Tuesday. The superstar invited victims of April’s marathon bombings backstage before her performance. The three women, who had all lost limbs in the attack, posed for pictures with the superstar. Sag Harbor painter JoAnne Williams Carter is recovering from her recent surgery and is expected to return home on Labor Day. Go Jo! Get your South O’ the Highway every day at DansPapers.com


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August 2, 2013 Page 63

Courtesy Bay Street Theatre

Neighbor

By LEE mEyER

I

f I were to list all of Broadway producer Stewart Lane’s credits and accomplishments, there’d be no need to write an article about him. The storied and extremely successful showbiz vet has produced a ton of Tony and other award-winning plays and musicals, written several successful books and owns a Broadway theater. But this August, Lane will be putting on a different hat—“an Erronius one,” to be exact, in the Bay Street Theatre’s production of Larry Gelbart, Burt Shevelove and Stephen Sondheim’s A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum. I spoke with Lane about the production, his career and his greatest accomplishments. “This was an opportunity to ‘walk the boards,’” Lane says of his return to acting. Lane is a graduate of Boston University, where he studied acting, and is excited that he’ll be performing at the Bay Street Theatre. “I’ve always been a big supporter of the Bay Street Theatre. And this show gives me the opportunity to do what I love and be with my family.” Lane is looking forward to playing the wacky character of Erronius. “I see him as the Mr. Magoo character; he has more of a ‘sight problem’ than anything else,” Lane chuckles. But Forum isn’t the only project on Lane’s plate. Perhaps his most high-profile project right now is the upcoming Broadway production of Romeo and Juliet, with The Lord of the Rings star Orlando Bloom and multiple Tonynominee Condola Rashad as the star-crossed lovers. Lane can’t wait for audiences to see the show, which will retain the classical text. “It’s more contemporary, though. We’re excited to have two young, talented people in this more

Stewart Lane PRODUCER

An iconic Broadway producer steps onstage at the Bay Street Theatre. modern setting.” Earlier this year, Lane produced a brief run of Jekyll & Hide, which has gone on to a successful tour. But Jekyll & Hide is a blip on the radar compared to some of Lane’s other shows. One show that he holds especially dear to his heart is La Cage Aux Follies, which he worked on in 1987. “That was my second Broadway nomination,” he recalls, “and my first win. To have my dreams realized that I was right all these years! You believe in yourself, sure, but there’s always that nagging doubt otherwise.” But it was during a trip to the Hamptons when Lane knew he had truly arrived. “It was also my first time out there in the Hamptons. I grew up on Long Island, but I never really made it past Syosset,” he chuckles. “We had just won the Tony; I had been out there invited to a party, and it was a typical party for the Hamptons, but for me it was spectacular! And I’m sitting at this table with all these [Broadway] people I would read about...sitting with them!”

While Lane’s educational training is more “classical, because I’m the owner/manager of the Palace Theater I’ve got to keep the theater filled with hits.” As a result, many of the highly successful projects Lane’s worked on have been big, mainstream musicals, like Thoroughly Modern Millie, which made a star out of its lead, Sutton Foster. “Like Bernadette Peters, she’s one of ‘those’—she stays with the show the entire run. She had that kind of a loyalty to the show.” Lane has also worked with the legendary Peters when she starred as Mama Rose in Gypsy in 2007. A recent project close to Lane’s heart is an adaptation of the classic RKO film Top Hat, which won the prestigious Olivier Award for Best New Musical on the West End in London. “This is one of those projects...going back 35 years, I made a list of shows I wanted to see on stage. This one was on the list. Like 42nd Street, it really stood on its own as a theater piece.” Lane first began developing the piece 30 years ago, when Irving Berlin, who composed the music for the film, was still alive. The show premiered on tour, proved successful, and moved to the West End. “We added ten other Irving Berlin songs to it,” Lane notes. “It’s more of a rethinking, a ‘theatricalization’ of a cinema piece.” While shows that use pre-existing songs are sometimes looked down upon by theatergoers, Lane thinks there’s a place for them. “What’s happened is we’ve discovered an acceptable form. If you can do a Jersey Boys, it’ll be embraced critically and commercially; if you do a Mamma Mia! it will be embraced more commercially.” Lane thinks the familiar music is comforting to audiences. Lane’s respect and (Continued on page 68)


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Page 64 August 2, 2013

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White (Continued from page 59)

Southampton Historical

designs as well. He and his firm changed the face of New York City and made Southampton the place to be in summer (thanks also to the railroad). In Houses of the Hamptons, Gary Lawrence and Anne Surchin note that the Dolphins, 1895, exemplary of White’s “deliberate informality,” helped inspire the trend of sprawling seaside villas, rambling Shingle Style houses and 50-room cottages of “every conceivable style.” “Shingle Style” became synonymous with McKim, Mead and White, and though the Shingle Style era lasted only 10 years, Surchin says, its influence is “forever.” Whether modest, as the seven original Montauk Association houses (1882-1884) or custom-made (as the Orchard, whose plan built out from an existing farmhouse), the style made its mark for beautiful functionality and quiet elegance. But, oh! the difference between Shingle Style then and now, as Surchin points out. Today, Shingle Style houses are “so over the top,” crowding out the natural surroundings that were essential to the firm’s designs. What historic White gems remain, restored or refurbished, most still in private hands, testify to a time when grand country houses humbled themselves, at least on the outside, before the dictates of Nature and made harmony with the environment an integral part of their stunning aesthetic designs.

Samuel Parrish’s niece and nephew at White Fence; William Merritt Chase House

which is just a bit off center, meaning you can’t enter head on. They would also use an irregular number of columns out front. The William Merritt Chase House, 1892, was incredibly innovative—Samuel White calls it “the ultimate family house”—because it reflected the dual use of the house as studio and home, its cleverly constructed doors and slightly raised room levels, and that expansive 2nd floor, designed to invite both intimacy and community. Now, 160 years after White’s birth and 107 years after his murder, Stanford White continues to be regarded as one of this country’s most influential architects He was the architect of choice among the Gilded Age set, a “tastemaker,” Cummings says, who set the standard for people of wealth and culture, not only with his buildings but with his interior

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public and private nature of the best suburban domestic architecture.” Though faithful to the Shingle Style, for which the firm is known, the partners explored new possibilities, never replicating earlier achievements. Surchin calls the firm “experimental,” especially regarding what they did with floor plans, staircases and roofs. In the book In Search of Modern Architecture: A Tribute to Henry-Russell Hitchcock, it’s noted that the 1886 Edward Mead House on Hill Street and Halsey Neck Lane “followed” a New England Colonial look the firm had established in Newport, but that the principals adapted a Dutch gambrel farmhouse-type roof (famously seen in the Shinnecock Hills Golf Club Clubhouse), and subtly subverted symmetry, as in their trademark wide Dutch front door

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August 2, 2013 Page 65

Who’s Here By DAN RATTINeR

ohn Catsimatidis, who has had a house in the Hamptons for more than 30 years, is running for Mayor of New York this fall. A billionaire several times over, he received the Liberal Party endorsement last month. He hopes to have the Republican nomination after winning the primary in September. Mike Bloomberg, the current Mayor, won with these two endorsements. Catsimatidis, a businessman like Bloomberg, hopes to follow in Bloomberg’s footsteps. “With Mayor Bloomberg, more than $100 million in new jobs flowed into New York City. With my experience, I can keep that flow going,” Catsimatidis says. John Catsimatidis’ life is a true rags to riches tale. Born on the small Greek island of Nisyros, just off the coast of Turkey, he was brought to America by his mother and father when he was six months old. His father’s two brothers were already in America. But they had to vouch for their third brother and his family before they could be let in. “There was no government safety net then,” John says. “If my father ran into debts, his brothers would have to pay them.” His father’s first job? “He became a bus boy at Longchamps Restaurant on Lexington Avenue. Because his native language was Italian.” He spoke Italian, coming from a Greek Island off the coast of Turkey? This required an explanation. John gave it. “Nisyros was originally a Turkish island that, at the beginning of the 20th century got gifted to the Italians,” he said. “After the Second World War, which the Italians lost, the island was gifted to Greece. This happened in 1948, the year I was born. Turns out that I was conceived an Italian, but then nine months later, I was born a Greek.” Thus an Italian man, who had worked for 30 years for the Italian government guarding a lighthouse on the island, fathered a Greek son who he brought to America to become an American citizen. Only in America. John attended Brooklyn Technical High School, graduated in 1966, then went to NYU, where he studied to get a B.S. in Engineering. His goal was, while at NYU, to be an astronaut and go to the moon. (In 1962, President Kennedy vowed to put a man on the moon by the end of the decade, and he did, but it was not to be John.) What happened was that to pay for college, John took a job in a grocery store on 137th Street in the Bronx owned by the uncle of a college friend and got interested in the grocery business. He decided, at the age of 20, to open his own grocery store and he did, buying an existing store on 99th Street and Broadway which the former owners had called Seven Eleven. It was not related to 7-Eleven. But, as the former owners told him, “if 7-Eleven came to New York, they’d have to buy us out.” A year later, John opened another store, on 87th and Broadway, which he called Red Apple. And from there he began to expand. “By the time I was 25, I had ten stores and was making a million dollars a year in profit.

Dan Rattiner

J

John Catsimatidis PoLITICIAN & BuSINeSSMAN

A legendary businessman prepares to make another mark on New York City At first, my vendors helped me open the stores by offering me credit. I did not use banks. Later on though, I did.” We were talking in John’s offices, which occupy the third floor of a building on Eleventh Avenue, between 56th and 57th Streets. “One of the vendors who gave me credit was just up here last week and I showed him around. He’s in his 80s now.” John got interested in flying. He became a licensed jet pilot, taking instruction at the Ramapo Airport upstate when he was about 25. After a while, as a rich young man at the time, he hired a pilot for his planes. Then, in 1977 when he was 29, Atlantic City opened as a gambling resort to rival Las Vegas. “I thought, well, here is a business opportunity. People from New Jersey or New York would take the bus down to Atlantic City. But people from farther away would want to fly down. I talked to my pilot. We’d go into business ferrying people down from Connecticut and Massachusetts.” John began buying airplanes. There’s a picture on the wall of one of his first airplanes, a twin engine jet, that his company United Jet Fleet used. “You see the letters RD on the side?” he asked me. I told him I did. “That plane was built for

Roy Disney before I bought it.” Soon afterwards, he bought Capitol Air Express and was operating more than 40 airplanes on numerous routes around the country and around the world. That company today is known as NetJets. John also began to buy commercial real estate. He had all these food stores. “But these businesses were only as good as the land they were on. If they were on leased properties, you had nothing. I wanted us to own the land the food stores were on.” In 1986 when he was 38 years old, he purchased the Gristedes supermarket chain of 50 stores and changed the names of all his other stores to the Gristedes name. The following year, he took what was probably the biggest business gamble of his life. He’d wanted to get into the gas station mini-market business and found a firm in upstate New York that consisted of a string of 300 mini-marts and gas stations backed up by the United Refining Company of Warren, Pennsylvania, which was also part of the business. This business was going into bankruptcy. It owed more than $100 million in debts, which were unsecured and would go away in the bankruptcy. Once in bankruptcy, though, he was able to buy it out of bankruptcy for $7 million. “I borrowed the money from J.P. Morgan using the real estate I owned as collateral. And then I discovered the value of the oil company. The mini-marts and gas station were just the tail on the dog. The oil company, if I could put in leadership and get it in the right direction, could be worth a fortune.” When John bought the company in January of 1987, he met with the creditors committee. They had no security. After the bankruptcy, he had no reason to pay them. But he said he would do his best when the profits came in. “I met with them monthly. In June, I was able to tell them we had a $7.5 million profit. I could begin to repay them. I had now gained their respect. They said keep it up. And I did. Soon, I was able to pay back the whole $100 million. I paid them 100 cents on the dollar. This was unheard of. But I did it. I also saved 6,000 jobs.” Last year, the oil company did $6 billion in business and made $500 million. In 1988, John married his longtime secretary, Margo Vondersaar. She had been his first secretary (he hired her when he was 29) and had been with him through thick and thin, including an earlier marriage that did not work out for John. Margo Catsimatidis, who is one of New York City’s prominent philanthropists, continues to work with him. Born of Russian and Polish heritage, she grew up in a poor family in Indiana and studied to be a ballerina. At age 12, she was the youngest ballerina to be invited to perform with the Bolshoi Ballet. But soon thereafter, she suffered an injury that prevented her following this career path. Today, she supports many of New York City’s charities, and is on the steering committee of the Alzheimer’s Association and the Board of the Parkinson’s Disease (Continued on page 70)


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Guest (Continued from page 61) and plastic forks so we can dip into the bubbling eggplant parmigiana that practically steams open the small Tupperware. Our Cromer’s Country Market fried chicken almost cracks a tooth at first bite but opens up to a steamy soft surprise on the other end. We wash it down with Hampton Dairy Iced Tea—a summery, sugar staple that we can’t find anywhere west of exit 70. We eat, go back for a dip, lay around, trade candies, talk about tomorrow and the next day at Circle. Someone brings up the possibility of spending the day at the Mecox or Scott Cameron. We shrug. The bay is all we need. A wave runner speeds past and my younger boy cousin says he’s going to get one when he grows up. We tease him and decide to go back into the water. It’s nearing 5 o’clock now and the sun is just right. Some folks are packing up. We’re just getting started. A few of us race out towards the buoys but I lay back to float. With my head halfway in the water and my feet up, I can only hear the thud of my calm heartbeat. I look up into the endless sky as the water effortlessly shifts my body ever so slowly. I can smell a mix of SPF, sea life and the hint of gasoline. It all blends together in an aromatic bundle of summer’s best memories. I want to bottle it up and wear it all winter under my coat in New York. I tap my foot down and touch the soft beach floor and peek up for a second to find my bearings. I’m still close to shore and the view is just as incredible from here. I realize this must be what heaven is like and then remember mom promised us Conca D’Oro tonight. Maybe I’ve already arrived. Bigstock.com

our Bagel Buoy breakfast and dream of what’s to come from our crammed cooler. We have crumbled brown paper bags full of sugarcoated treats from The Whalebone and mom has prepared fresh scrambled eggs infused with perfectly seasoned potatoes that are stuffed into warm semolina heroes. There are local apples and peaches so bright in color they could only be grown at a nearby farm. We have paper plates

our kitchen never closed.

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Twenty years later, I’m back at Circle Beach and watch my daughter splash in the same water that my cousins and I called home.

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Twenty years later I’m back at Circle Beach with my young daughter. I watch her splash in the same water that my cousins and I called home. She and I walk the long, rocky shore at low tide and watch hundreds of hermit crabs run in front of our wet toes and quickly descend underground. It’s another bright day at our family’s quiet paradise and my mother, now a grandmother of six, unwraps her hot foils for the next generation. I sit back onto some of the same chairs we carried down all those years ago and take a bite of something she packed as I gaze across this majestic bay that has been the epicenter of so much of my happiness. Colored sails zip past us as new children splash and squeal with glee. Nothing has changed. Circle is the same beautiful beach from our childhood. The only difference is that now I may only have half of mom’s homemade lunch. Somewhere between those memorable summers and now, I found out about calories.


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August 2, 2013 Page 67

It All Comes Out in the Wash By DAvID LIoN RATTINeR

One of my biggest pet peeves in life is doing laundry. I don’t mind doing it, per se, I mind the fact that it uses up so much electricity. Ever since I was a kid, I enjoyed the act of doing laundry. That evolved into an actual need to do laundry. I can tell if a shirt has been worn just once. If it has, I feel this indescribable need to put it in the laundry basket and do a load.

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I put my gym clothes back in my bag, then attempted to cleverly hang them inside my car with the window open. They would dry quickly in the sun, I reasoned, and they wouldn’t smell. This entire operation worked flawlessly for three days, and I started to feel like I had discovered a new way to live (and save that electricity). The only problem was my socks, which I stuffed at the bottom of my bag. As far as I know, there are no socks out there made out of bathing suit material. I remember when I used to work at the beach in the summertime and almost never wore a T-shirt. I basically lived in my bathing suit during the day and would shower off at the beach. It was very “off-the-gridish.” This little

system I had at the gym brought me back to that, and I saw no real problem with it until I began to realize that there was no way I could account for the stinky gym socks, outside of throwing them in the garbage. I could not bear the idea of my gym socks, uncleansed, lingering in my car during the day. I attempted, on day three, to wear my gym socks as my work socks. This is not recommended. My dream in life, at the current moment, anyway, is for somebody to make a pair of shoes that you can wear to the gym that are not flip-flops, but are waterproof and can be worn without socks and can pass the “shoes are required” rule that all gyms have. Unless this happens, all of my efforts have been in vain.

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Neighbor (Continued from page 63) “I’ve always believed that good actors in major roles are exciting, regardless of race. Why can’t Denzel Washington play Julius Caesar?” admiration for the theater world led to some interesting writing projects, as well. Jews on Broadway is a book “celebrating the Jewish contribution to theater in the 20th Century,” he explains. “I take it decade by decade, exploring how [the Jewish community] molded the American theater. Among the figures featured in the book: Charles Strouse, who composed Bye Bye Birdie; Ellen Adler, daughter of legendary

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along with Best Man, “worked really well.” Lane also wrote Let’s Put on a Show, a guide for play producing, whether it be a high school theater or a major regional company. “I’ve had a huge positive reaction to it,” Lane says. “It’s a very practical book. I filled it with real-life answers and anecdotes.” Lane’s had an iconic career as a Broadway producer and doesn’t plan on slowing down, but he’s gleeful about Forum. “The Bay Street Theatre...you have some of the best talent in the world. These actors can do anything.” For more information on Stewart Lane, go to MrBroadway.com. For more information and tickets for A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum, go to baystreet.org.

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acting teacher Stella Adler; and more. “A large part of this history was the family dynasties [who ran the theater world],” Lane notes. Lane’s upcoming 2014 book, Black Broadway, explores and celebrates the African-American Broadway experience. “I think that when you step back—we’re relatively young culturally, and the trajectory we’re setting today will decide where that ends up,” he says. Lane’s also got a refreshing outlook on theater. “I’ve always believed that good actors in major roles are exciting [regardless of race]. Unless the race of a character is in the story, why can’t Denzel Washington play Julius Caesar?” he asks. “The only criteria is that you have to be good,” he says, noting that his allBlack version of A Streetcar Named Desire,

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August 2, 2013 Page 69

Cover Artist Giancarlo Impiglia By MARIoN WoLBeRG-WeISS

T

Giancarlo Impiglia

off to Istanbul, Turkey, tomorrow. What are you up to there? I’ll be there for a few days and then giving a talk about Byzantine mosaics in Palermo, Sicily, then Rome, where I can eat real Italian food. The subject of mosaics is off-topic for you. I studied them in school. My first school was Liceo Artistico and then at the Academy of Fine Arts where I learned about frescoes and mosaics. I was captivated by the Italian Renaissance and drawing from life. What else captivated you as a student? When we were young, we wanted to change the world. We wanted to invent modern ways of doing things. We were passionate about Jackson Pollock, Willem de Kooning and Abstract Expressionism. I also loved studying film when I went to the Italian Center of Cinematography. We learned about filmmakers who had nothing in their hands, who invented themselves, like Fellini and De Sica.

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his week’s cover artist, Giancarlo Impiglia, is a big believer in history and aesthetic legacy. He’s not only passionate about his early influences in Italy where he was born but also about a desire to leave a personal signature on his work. As he indicates in his book Paintings For the Queens and Collected Works, artists must hold on to their identity, style and vision with a sense of continuity. Impiglia describes his art in the book as a “sublime illusion, and artists must hold on to their illusions in order to produce their work.” This statement rings true when we consider his recurring unrealistic style that combines abstraction with Cubist-like images. Yet “illusion” may also signify his theme: the unreality of life that his characters experience. your cover image, “Napa Carabiniers,” is not like your abstract style that you are associated with. It’s more realistic, but the figures still are faceless, like your signature work. How did the painting come about? The grape pickers are faceless because they are anonymous, and also because I wanted to stress that nature is more important than the people working in the vineyards. I had an exhibit in Napa, California, at the Robert Mondavi Winery, and a collector from Alabama was there and commissioned me to do the painting. He was a wine collector, too. I know you like to travel and absorb the history of various places. For example, you’re

Tell me about your family. I met my wife, Nina, first in Rome. Then I moved to New York in the early 1970s and ran into her when she came to a club I was playing music in. We happened to live near each other and didn’t know it. Then we moved to Rome for a few years and then came back to the States. My son Christopher is a writer and wrote an epic poem, The Song of the Fall, about the defense of Constantinople. He’s studying for his masters in Creative Writing at the New School. My other son, Thomas, is an architect in London, designing buildings and furniture. How were they influenced by your interests and art? They grew up in a certain environment, surrounded by history and art, and we traveled a lot. They developed an interest in creativity, meeting interesting people, like poets, artists, even business and sports people. We went all over. Now they go themselves; to Iceland three years ago. They made a documentary there. How much attention do you pay to the art market? I don’t pay too much attention to what’s going on on the outside. Being an artist, I am free to do what I want. Free to decide on my own, not be influenced by art trends, like installations. I stick to my colors and brushes and paint.


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Who (Continued from page 65) Foundation. She and her husband are patrons of the National Juvenile Diabetes Foundation and Chair the Police Athletic League’s annual Holiday Party for over 1000 needy New York City children. Margo is also a member of the West Side Chamber of Commerce, and under her direction turned a small block party into one of the City’s largest public events—the Columbus Avenue Festival. The Catsimatidises are also big supporters of the Greek Orthodox Church of the Hamptons in Southampton. They’ve also hosted many dinners in their home for Presidents, Vice Presidents, Governors and other politicians. Margo is, along with her husband, the Publisher of the Hellenic Times, the largest Greek American newspaper in the United States. She and her husband have also

John wants to bring the World’s Fair to New York City in 2015, just as Mayor LaGuardia did in 1939 and Mayor Lindsay did in 1964. given generously to John’s former high school, Brooklyn Tech, which now has a $10 million endowment for new programs there. Margo and John have two children, daughter Andrea, who married Christopher Cox, the grandson of Richard Nixon, last year. Andrea is a graduate of the Stern Business School at NYU. Margo and John’s son is John Jr. 20, who is a sophomore at NYU.

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In the 1980s, John and Margo bought a home in Westhampton Beach. In recent years they have built an oceanfront home in East Quogue, but they have kept their old family home in Westhampton Beach, which is often used by their grown children and their guests. I asked Margo what she loved most about being out here and she said it is a place where everyone can relax, especially her husband. She loves to cook and entertain. “Truth is, I never know who John is going to bring home for dinner. It could be three people or it could be 30. So I’m always ready for 30.” Running for mayor, John Catsimatidis proposed that high schools in New York City offer non-college degrees in such things as electrical work, plumbing and steel work. He says “I think we owe it to our youth to teach them how to make a living and earn the American dream.” He also wants the older men in these trades—a 64-year-old electrician, for example—to be empowered to teach the kids what they know. This proposal was recently embraced by Mayor Bloomberg. John wants to bring the World’s Fair to New York City in 2015, just as Mayor LaGuardia did in 1939 and Mayor Lindsay did in 1964. He is a supporter of safety on our streets and safety against terrorism and is an admirer of NYC Police Chief Ray Kelly. He wants to offer incentives to bring more computer jobs to “Silicon Alley” in the meatpacking district of Manhattan. John does not think it matters that he run on one party line or another. He quotes Mayor LaGuardia. “It’s not about being a Democrat or Republican. It’s about being a New Yorker.”

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Baby-Faced on Shelter Island By SALLy FLyNN

“John, if you’re trying to manage the timing of new pregnancies on the Island, I advise you to skip the tequila.” “Do you think it would make a difference?” “About nine times out of ten, John. Nine times out of ten.” (Meanwhile, at the North Ferry) “What squares did you get on the pool?” “What pool?” “The baby pool for Janet. It’s her third kid, we’ve got a pool going on whether she’ll have the kid in the hospital, at home or on the boat.” “Has that ever really happened? Has anybody been born on the ferry?” “Born? I don’t know. Conceived, sure. But born? I don’t think so.”

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At long last the royal baby is born, and England’s monarchy is secured for the next three generations. The pregnancy was watched almost as closely as they are watched on Shelter Island, with the same attention to lineage as well. “Janet’s pregnant?” “Yes. She’s due in August.” “Oh Louise, she had better let the north ferry guys know in advance so she can skip the line if she’s in labor.”

“We got three girls due in August?” “And five due in September, John.” “Why do they bunch up like that? Can’t we do some kind of planning on this island? No more than two women due a month. Don’t they realize we put ourselves on high alert for them? And why do they always bunch up in September?” “Child births peak nationwide in September John, nine months after New Year’s Eve.” “Well, maybe they can get away with that on the mainland, but I say we organize a ‘Let the Fire Crew Plan Your Pregnancy’ campaign.” “The title might need a little work, John.” “We’ll throw a cocktail party to launch the campaign, you know, say it with tequila.”

It might not be royal, but it sure is cute!

“Of course they know—this is Shelter Island— who doesn’t know she’s pregnant? We’ve got six pregnancies on the Island this summer. The North Ferry guys always get you on the boat first if you’re in labor. They don’t want to deliver a baby on the boat. They’d have to punch an extra ticket for the kid, the mother would probably ask one of them to drive the car for her to get off the ferry, it would really disrupt their routine.” “What if the baby is born after midnight, after the ferry shuts down, Louise? Lots of babies are born at night you know, and like the old bible passage says, ‘As ye sow, so shall ye reap.’” “First off, you know the top EMTs can call the ferry any time to transport a woman in labor and if she doesn’t make it, the EMTs at the fire station can certainly deliver a baby.” “That’s right, they have that Jaws of Life thing.” “Um, well I suppose in an extreme case they might use that.” “Who’s the baby related to, Louise?” “A typical Island pedigree. It would be related to all the Island families from A to M on its mother’s side and all the families from N to Z on its father’s side.” “I know what you mean, Louise, whenever I fill out the ‘Who To Call In Event of Emergency’ card for my kids at school, it reads like a who’s who on Shelter Island. Do you know what she’s going to name it?” “If it’s a girl, she’s thinking of Mary or Patricia. That covers six aunts, three great aunts, and one great grandmother. If it’s a boy, she’s thinking of John Michael, and that covers eleven uncles and cousins, and both grandfathers.” (Meanwhile, at the firehouse…)

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Roid Rage in the Hamptons? drivers are worse than him to ban A-Rod for life in July drivers? Let’s spread exchange for something like It’s August, which means some patience. Trust me, $10 million to Selig’s favorite that Roid Rage is about you’ll get to where you’re charity. If the ailing slugger to hit the Hamptons. Or going. is cut, Steinbrenner donates something like that. And the aforementioned $10 million, making back the Roid Rage is defined East End visitor who is millions still left on A-Rod’s as extremely aggressive waiting to hear from Major contract. or hostile behavior due League Baseball about The American public to steroid use. While only his latest punishment for has proven that they can one East End visitor—to his use of PEDs? As of this forgive someone for using my knowledge—has writing, he’s flirting with Barry Bonds’ homerun ball in the HoF steroids. Numerous articles actually admitted to steroid use, the end- suspension from the game for life, and he’ll get have been written about how steroids actually of-summer driving scene certainly exhibits what’s coming to him too. saved baseball in the mid-90s. We gave Lance otherwise. If I was Hal Steinbrenner, I’d be in MLB Armstrong the benefit of the doubt for well over Is it a scientifically proven fact that August Commish Bud Selig’s office right now, begging a decade, before the whole scandal blew up in his face again. We even have a sense of humor about it—Barry Bonds’ home run ball is in the Baseball Hall of Fame with an asterisk branded on it, courtesy of billionaire Marc Ecco who purchased the ball and then posed an online t poll asking the public what he should do with it. s Hurrican Mo tions e a What you can’t be forgiven for is lying about l l a Inst ithin 2 Shutters it. Multiple times. Subscribing to the deny-atw eks we all-costs school of thought only serves to make you seem like an even bigger jerk when you’re caught. One of the more interesting college assignments I had to complete was for a journalism class; it was to defend the more controversial side of a hot-button topic. We each picked our poison, and I went with “How Steroids Saved Baseball.” The concept is not that far-fetched. In 1994, players went on strike for a total of 232 games, cancelling the World Series for the first time in the modern era. The lost season was a culmination of years of player-management Retra ctable r e disputes, and attendance was even waning prior g r La Scree ns & New 8” to the lockout. Pergo 14’la Cov What lockouts tend to prove is that people n o i ers ct Proje don’t need the sport in their lives. Sure, diehards welcome it back. But regular Joe’s often become disenfranchised with the greed that seemingly permeates contract negotiations. After the lockout, game attendance continued its downward tailspin. Until the likes of Mark McGwire, Sammy Sosa, Ken Griffey Jr. and Greg Vaughn came along. The foursome finished with 50 or more homeruns, the most number of players to • GO Green...reduce air conditioning costs by 25% collectively achieve that stat in one season ever. Sosa and McGwire chased history during the • Sunesta® Awnings are custom made with over 200 fabric options available 1998 season, each neck-and-neck to beat Roger Maris’s single-season home run record of 61. • Block the sun, lower your energy costs & reduce indoor temperatures all at once Both did, though McGwire knocked 70 over the wall to Sosa’s 66. • Call us today for a free in-home estimate But for those who closely watched the action, don’t you feel cheated, even a little bit? Steroids are a modern-day prisoner’s dilemma. If everyone does them, those who don’t miss out—they’re not as strong; their bats aren’t as powerful. Since The rules for PEDs may not have been as cut1997 and-dry 15 years ago. But that’s certainly not the case today. Ryan Braun, who was suspended for 65 games, should have his 2012 MVP award taken away. And Alex Rodriguez should serve as an example of what can happen to repeat offenders who Call Carol or Bill Duffy mistakenly believe that they can coast through 888-awning-8 for a free estimate their career—breaking major rules and lying about it—unscathed. Wikipedia

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Singin’ in the East End Rain July is usually the best weather month of the season. June can be chilly, and August can bring hurricanes. July is perfect. So what’s the deal this year? We’ve seen weeks of impossibly hot and humid conditions and by rain worthy of Noah’s Ark. I’m writing this from Palo Alto. The weather here is spectacular, but I’ll try not to rub it in. Rainy weather on the East End poses unique challenges. The roads are already choked with traffic. There are limited movies, indoor activities, and restaurants. And with East Hampton Bowl officially closed, the situation is dire indeed. Here’s an idea: why not stay home and do karaoke? Yeah, I know what you’re thinking. Been there, done that. So ’90s. The equipment is clunky and expensive. The songs are lame. Guess what? All those excuses are lame. Thanks to the magic of the smart phone, and the app store, you can spend these rainy Saturdays making sweet music with your friends and family. Here are some ideas: The Game For those of you with console systems such as Xbox or Wii, there are lots of karaoke games worth checking out. Many are branded with songs from popular TV shows and movies, like Glee. If you’re tone deaf like me, try Def Jam Rapstar—a hip-hop/rap version of karaoke, with no “singing” required. Then there’s a game called Wii Karaoke U. A phenomenon in Asia, this game is coming to Europe and rumored to be coming to the States for download on the new HD Wii U system. Wii Karaoke U is popular for several reasons. First, you can compete live against other Wii users from around the world, in real time. Pretty cool. Even cooler: you can create this little dancing avatar character to represent you as your virtual performer. You can purchase costumes, props and other gear for your karaoke pal. Another interesting fact: Wii Karaoke U is free to download; you only pay by the hours you play. This might not seem like a big deal, but in the world of console games, where it’s always been about paying money upfront for your content, this is a big change. The App What if you don’t own a console system? Are you supposed to sit there on the couch, with your bored, poorly behaved children, humming a tune and wishing you could belt out a Britney Spears or Donna Summer classic to lighten the mood and save your marriage? Have no fear. There are several good apps that can instantly turn your smart phone into a connected karaoke booth. RedKaraoke is quite popular and highly rated. The app is free to download and comes with several basic tracks, but you’ll need to purchase song credits to access the best tunes and freshest beats. You also need to sign up for an account, which takes time and is slightly annoying. Overall, the karaoke experience is fun. You can adjust size and speed of the lyrics on your

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The Big Things Mean So Much... If “it’s the little things in life that mean so much,” what about the really small stuff? I’m thinking about the many small celebrations that can happen in a week, or even a day, on the East End. On Fridays after work I often shoot over to the Hayground Farmers Market in Bridgehampton to pick up some Gula Gula empanadas and fresh bread and a side of what’s-in-season-this-week.

Last Friday I started thinking about my visit to this farmers market early in the day. As much as I’m into Gula Gula’s seasonal empanadas (i.e. Balsam Farm corn and onion, yum!) and the Indian potato ones rock my world—my fallback artisanal empanada is the vegetarian greens empanada. The greens are always cooked just My tomatoes this week so, very lightly spiced. The mix changes a bit depending on what

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ARTISTS AND WRITERS 65TH ANNUAL CHARITY SOFTBALL GAME SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 2013 GAME:

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HERRICK PARK, EAST HAMPTON RAIN DATE: AUGUST 24

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CHILDREN UNDER 12: FREE

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greens look the best to owner Luchi Masliah on the given week—chards, kales, wild spinach—it’s all good. I developed a distinct hankering for some greens empanadas in their delish wholewheat crusts, specifically one large and one small empanada. Only after I’d purchased them and dotted them with chimichurri sauce and strolled around the market eating them, did it occur to me that this was pretty raving weird—to get one large and one small of the same kind of empanada. Call me an empanada connoisseur—it did the trick. On to dessert, naturally, at Joe & Liza’s Ice Cream market stand. A scoop of Rum Raisin in a sugar cone was just the thing. Definitely a sugar cone moment. What’s this? GOLDEN raisins instead of the more common dark raisins? Hmmm, it’s lighter; it’s a nice counterpoint to the rum flavor. I support this decision. A stop at the Wölffer Estate table reminded me that their new batch of vinegar was released months ago—it was high time I snapped up a bottle—so I did. This year their vinegar is in a tall, cylindrical bottle, instead of a glass jug. I like it. And this rosé vinegar is precisely the right foil for the mix of Sun Gold, peach and heirloom tomatoes now ripening in my garden. Mixed with some good quality olive oil and black pepper—it’s summer perfection. Now that we’ve come this far together, dear reader, I’m going to come out of the closet on some foodie issues. Hold onto your hops, it’s about to get heretical. Bear in mind that my views are mine alone and don’t reflect those of this magazine or company. #1. Fresh pepper. I don’t always use freshlyground pepper. For some things I prefer the more laidback ground-and-stored-in-a-jar pepper. There are a few dishes for which I actually prefer a finely aged (some would say “degraded”) white pepper as a note. #2. EVOO. It’s overrated, it’s not for cooking and it’s not for every salad. I like it on bread and on endive, but most of the time I prefer some nice, friendly non-virgin of an olive oil. I don’t want the clean, pure olive flavor of EVOO overtaking all other flavors. #3. Flavored olive oils. Blech! Why inject a strong flavor into some unsuspecting fat? Why have I been making muffins with blood orangeflavored olive oil for months? Because someone gave me a bottle of the stuff and it’s too strong to use in anything else. Do you need to cover a nice salad in cotton candy in order to get it down? Of course not. #4. Red wine. I prefer white. There, I said it. Yes, I’m a food critic. Yes, I know my way around wine tastings and wine pairings. Yes, I know that red wine can age forever and develop and it has so much more going on. I. Don’t. Care. Of course, white wines don’t stand up to steak, but I don’t often choose to eat steak. I generally prefer a good, dry white, and I’m not alone. S. Dermont

By STACy DeRMoNT

You can go right ahead and send your letters of foodie indignation to stacy@danspapers.com.


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DAN’S PAPERS

August 2, 2013 Page 75

When It Comes to Cars, What’s Old Is Hot! By BoB GeLBeR

There is a scene in the film Raiders of the Lost Ark where one of the archaeologists takes off his wristwatch and explains to another actor in the scene something like this: “Take this cheap watch and bury it in the sand and in 500 years when it’s found it could be worth a fortune.” The same can be said of many old cars built within the last 100 years. However, if they were buried in the sand, they probably would be seriously rusty.

Sure, I’ve had my Ford v-8s and love those old flatheads, and a love affair with Ferrari v-12s, who hasn’t? But why do car people like us admire old cars? There could be many reasons. I personally enjoy old cars because they bring back memories. I’ve collected both American and foreign cars, but prefer small cars rather than large. Why? Maybe it’s because of my early association with sports cars and racing. And practically, you have to admit, it’s much

easier to clean a small car. Small foreign cars are my preference because most of them have small engines and design details very different from American cars. Sure, I’ve had my Ford V-8s and love those old flatheads, and a love affair with Ferrari V-12s, who hasn’t? But those simple 1300 cc MGs motors and those charming and beautiful aluminum engines in Alfa Romeos were beauties to see and hear. Even the old VW air-cooled motor was something a little special. Hell, it was even at the wrong end of the car. Dr. Porsche souped it up and put the motor at the wrong end of another car, on which he put his name. Speaking of small motors, the sweetest Porsche motor ever made was the baby 2-liter engine in the original 1965 series 91I. It only produced 130 horsepower, but at 6,500 RPMs it sounded like a serious event.. I’m sure a lot of you out there have your reasons for liking old cars. Perhaps you’re a Ford guy because your dad taught you to drive in his Country Squire. Many Chevy guys probably had a poster of a Corvette on their bedroom wall when they were in high school, and now have a show quality ’63 Stingray nestled under a warm cover in their garage. Heck, you treat that thing better than yourself. The Ferrari, Porsche and Mercedes collectors are a different breed. They really don’t like old cars, but they do like expensive toys. As Zero Mostel said, “If you got it, flaunt it.” There’s absolutely nothing wrong with that. If I ever “got it,” I would own every great Ferrari and

edsel, anyone?

Porsche and Benz ever built. If you want to make me jealous, pull up in a mint Ferrari 275 GTB-4 Longnose, or a Porsche Carrera Speedster or, especially, a Mercedes 300SLGullwing moving on Rudge center lock wheels. Oh, the 300SL doesn’t have to be “mint,” I’ll salivate over one in any condition. Then there are the car collectors who like oddball cars, like Fiats, Studebakers, Saabs and Edsels. Truth be told, these guys like odd cars because they themselves are probably a little off-center. You know, the guy on the block who painted his house blue. Or who dresses like a Serbian. They are the kind of folks you shy away from at car shows. Nice enough people, but you just don’t want to bond with them. So why old cars? Maybe they’re a lot like people. Interesting, each a little different and if not well taken care of, they show their age.

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NEWS BRIEFS COMPILED BY KELLY LAFFEY

Roxy Montauk Classic Report: Water Sommelier Surf Competition Comes to the Hamptons Begins This Weekend MoNTAuK: Roxy, the line of women’s surf wear by the makers of Quiksilver, is playing host and sponsor to a women’s surf contest in Montauk this weekend. The Roxy Montauk Classic will be held at legendary surfing hotspot Ditch Plains Beach on August 3 and August 4. Created for amateur women surfers, the event is open to those ages six and up. Registration is free for all divisions, including longboard and short board divisions, split by age groups. Pro women surfers on the Roxy team, including Kelia Moniz, Bruna Schmitz, and four-time world champion Lisa Anderson will all show off their skills and then sign autographs in tents from 12:30–1 p.m. on both days. The sidelines will be as much fun as the water, with raffles, giveaways and games. There will also be Paul Mitchell hairstylists creating custom beach-like hairstyles for spectators. To register or learn more about the schedule of events, visit roxy. com/montaukclassic.

Southampton Hospital Named One of the Nation’s Most Wired Hospitals SouTHAMPToN: Southampton Hospital has been recognized as one of the “Most Wired” hospitals by Hospitals & Health Networks magazine in its July issue. Hospitals & Health Networks asked hospitals to answer questions regarding their IT/technology programs. Southampton President and CEO Robert S. Chaloner notes that “Healthcare information is a Board-level priority and a critical part of Southampton Hospital’s strategic plan...” Southampton was recognized as a “Most Wired” hospital because it “employs intrusion detection systems to protect patient privacy and security of patient data, and to check drug interactions and drug allergies when medications are ordered,” among other factors.

Is Long Island tap water the most delicious in the world?

eAST eND: They say you’re either an east Coast person or a West Coast person. Or, to put it another way, do you prefer to drink the best tap water in the country—the tap water that has made New York pizza and bagels internationally famous; or do you prefer to have a water sommelier curate a menu of gourmet bottled waters to pair with your meal? Yes, apparently water sommeliers are the wave of the future. At least in Los Angeles’ Ray’s and Stark, the farm-to-table restaurant serving the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. The eatery launched its first water menu on Monday. Compiled by water sommelier Martin Riese, who was certified after taking a weeklong course at a school in Germany, the menu features 20 waters from 10 different countries. “All waters have unique tastes, and a lot of Americans think water is just water, but I completely don’t believe in that,” said Riese in an interview with the Los Angeles Times. “Water has so many interesting nuances.” It’s no small wonder the idea for a gourmet H2O tasting has taken off on the West Coast. “Smell this tap water. It smells like chlorine,” Riese confirmed, with a look of disgust. “As a restaurant person here in L.A., I can say I would never drink that water. When you have good food, good wine and good spirits, you don’t want to contaminate that with this water.” It’s well known that New York and Long Island do not share L.A.’s chlorinated predicament. And the Suffolk County Water Authority was voted to have the best tasting water on Long Island back in May. But, not to be outdone by L.A., the Hamptons has recently seen its first water sommelier, H. Twooh, come to the area. Gourmet water menus have also been offered in Europe, most famously in Paris. Though admittedly with less experience than Riese—Twooh only took a weekend-long training class offered at a spring in Poland—Twooh has found success with his menus. However, unlike its cosmopolitan counterparts, all menus include Long Island tap water, in addition to rarities like Antarctic glacial runoff and ostrich tears. “Despite the overwhelming amount of bottled water options—with a number of distinctive flavors—Long Island tap water is by far the most requested item on my menu,” says Twooh. He is pleased with the response, as Twooh recently launched a “take back the tap” campaign in an effort to curtail the amount of waste generated from plastic bottles. “The hardest thing is to get the different waters into the country,” said Riese in the Times. “For instance, I’m a huge fan of Tasmania rainwater, it’s completely cool, but I can’t get it here in the United States. So I had to find like waters that I can actually access.”

Bridge Bancorp Net Income Up 6% BRIDGeHAMPToN: Bridge Bancorp, Inc. the parent company of The Bridgehampton National Bank has announced second quarter results for 2013. Highlights of the company’s quarterly financial results include: —Net income of $3.3 million and $.36 per share, a 6% increase in net income over 2012. —Returns on average assets and equity of .79% and 10.74%, respectively. —Net interest income of $12.3 million, an increase of $.5 million over 2012, with a net interest margin of 3.23%. —$1.73 billion total assets, June 2013, 23% higher than June 2012. —Loans exceeded $900 million, with growth of $222 million or 33%, compared to June 2012. —Deposits of $1.46 billion, an 18% increase compared to the second quarter of 2012. “During the second quarter of 2013, we continue to realize benefits from our strategic initiatives: strong growth in loans and core deposits with increased net interest income and net income. Our increased scale offsets the lower net interest margins associated with the increasingly challenging interest rate environment,” commented Kevin M. O’Connor, President and CEO, Bridge Bancorp, Inc.

Hampton Classic Horse Show Partners with Longines BRIDGeHAMPToN: The Hampton Classic Horse Show, which runs August 25 through September 1, has announced a long-term partnership with renowned watchmaker Longines. Longines will assume title partnership of the Saturday afternoon Grand Prix, the $40,000 Grand Prix and presenting partnership of Friday afternoon’s $50,000 Spy Coast Farm/ Young Horse Show. Longines will also offer the Longines Rider Challenge, which will award $30,000 to the rider who accumulates the most points in the horse show’s Open Jumper Division.


DAN’S PAPERS

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DAN’S GOES TO...

August 2, 2013 Page 77

9th Annual Hamptons Happening Feast The 9th Annual "Hamptons Happening" Feast was a smashing hit. The proceeds will be used to benefit the Samuel Waxman Cancer Research Foundation. Hundreds of people gathered together under a huge tent on Ken and Maria Fishel's estate in Brideghampton. CBS news anchor Chris Wragge was the Master of Ceremonies. The Executive Chefs of Todd English's many restaurants were serving all sorts of unique, yummy dishes. Cupcakes, chocolate and an ice cream sandwich bar were also available for those with a sweet tooth. Photographs by Megan Lane

Gurney's Inn Spatini Cocktail Party Saturday night was party night on the breathtaking oceanfront Seawater Spa roof. Gurney's Inn in Montauk held their annual Spatini Cocktail Party. Proceeds benefited The Retreat Domestic Violence Services. Photographs by Stéphanie Lewin

1.

4.

2.

3.

1. From left- Bettina Klinger, Chef Todd English, Diane Spilker, Phil D'ancono, Marc Spilker and Oliver English 2. Chris Coleman was the Executive Chef at The Raw Bar. He is also the head chef at Petaluma in Manhattan. 3. CBS Anchor, Chris Wragge, was the Master of Ceremonies 4. Charlie Forsman with Mia and Eva Fahler

The Hampton Preventive Health and Sustainable Technology Expo The Hampton Preventive Health and Sustainable Technology Expo in Sag Harbor provided two days of information, education, food demos, healthy products, a film, a Slow Food Dinner party, and a presentation about our changing health care system by Congressman Tim Bishop. Photographs by Kimberly Goff Bobby Stringfield and Desirée Marana presented Gurney's Inn's own Seawater Spa product line

Ana Nieto, Organizer of the event and owner of Turtle Shell Health, Holly Durning, Acupuncurist and Collaborator

Yuka Silvera, Amy Ma

Congressman Tim Bishop spoke on health care

Locally Abstracted Benefiting WPPB Radio, 88.3 FM Montauk Brewing Company Co-owners Vaughan Cutillo and Joe Sullivan shared their delicious brews

Karyn Mannix contemporary & Hampton Hang Gallery presented: Locally Abstracted, Benefiting WPPB Radio 88.3 FM July 26- August 11. Photographs by Kimberly Goff

1. 4.

Gurney's Seawater Spa made sure that everyone went home feeling good

2.

3.

1. Steven Zaluski, Athos Zacharias, Evan Zatti, Steve Haweeli, Mary Antczak, Artists included in "Locally Abstracted" 2. Alfredo Merat, Vanessa Cuccia (musicians) 3. Nick Hargrave-Musician, Wally Smith-WPPB Radio, Pamela Topham-artist/weaver 4. Karyn Mannix, Ashley Dye, Gallery DirectorsHampton Hang Gallery and Karyn Mannix Contemporary


DAN’S PAPERS

Page 78 August 2, 2013

DAN’S GOES TO...

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Art Southampton Art Southampton opened to a packed house and enthusiastic crowds featuring artists from around the world. Photographs by Tom Kochie

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1. Southampton Mayor Mark Epley found himself surrounded by Artist Kevin Berlin's Alien Invasion 2. Philip John Galati and Princess Angelique Monet of A.F.I. World Peace Initiative 3. Eric Fischl 4. Jean Shafiroff and Portrait Artist Ike' Ude' 5. Vered 6. Stephan Keszler 7. Jeff Muhs and Beth McNeil Muhs

7.

2013 Chefs Dinner & Meet the Chefs Cocktail Party The grounds of the Hayground School in Bridgehampton became a giant food fest on Sunday, with dozens of top chefs sharing their scrumptious specialties. Restaurateur Toni Ross's Annual Event benefits the Jeff Salaway (Toni's late husband) Scholarship Fund and the Hayground School. Photographs by Richard Lewin

Artist Christa Maiwald with her portrait of Chef Honoree Eric Ripert of Le Bernardin Restaurant...and Eric

The many top top chefs pause for a shot with Toni Ross

The Topping Rose House Family (Chef Tom Colicchio, second from left; Director of Food and Beverage Landy Labadie, third from left; Chef de Cuisine Ty Kotz, fourth from left; Eliza Nordeman in grey dress)

Artist Bastienne Schmidt with her BFF Toni Ross

David Blum shares his Crown Maple Syrup with Nick & Toni's Chef Joe Realmuto


DAN’S PAPERS

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August 2, 2013 Page 79

WINE GUIDE

NORTH FORK EVENTS So much to see and do this weekend!

WINERIES

Drink in the whole North Fork!

By nicHOLAS cHOwSke

O

ver the last few years, the North Fork Wine Trail has grown to include more than 50 vineyards, wineries and tasting rooms. But which one was first? As it turns out, it’s Castello di Borghese Vineyard and Winery in Cutchogue, whose first vines were planted in 1973. The vineyard was originally owned by Louisa and Alex Hargrave, who ran it until 1999 when they sold it to Marco and Anne Marie Borghese. Castello di Borghese is an 80-acre farm, 40 of which are devoted to growing grapes, where the Borghese’s currently live. The vineyard is easy to spot on Route 48—you can’t miss the ramshackle flatbed truck stacked with old wine barrels spelling out “Pinot Noir.” The pinot grape is notoriously difficult to grow on Long Island, but Castello di Borghese seems to do it with ease. They work so well with it, in fact, that they use it in four different wines, including a white pinot, which happened to be the first wine I tasted on my visit. The 2012 Bianco di Pino Noir is a fruit-forward white made from skinned pinot noir grapes, fermented in stainless-steel barrels. This white has the consistency of a chardonnay with a peach-like flavor. It’s not overpoweringly sweet, but it tastes great—last year’s first run sold out in two months. The second wine I tasted was the 2012 Estate Riesling. This wine has a unique sour-apple flavor. It’s not overly sweet, but the residual sugar on the end leaves you with a flavor of apricot and sweet pear. Next on my flight was the 2012 Estate Chardonnay.

This steel-fermented white has a medium body that is crisp and refreshing. It has a bright flavor with apple and citrus notes and a hint of vanilla. The last white I tasted was the 2012 Sauvignon Blanc. This oaked white has a lot of citrus notes along with a bit of lemon zest. It’s a very light and refreshing white wine with a dry, clean flavor that is perfect of a hot summer day. I made my way on to Castello di Borghese’s reds, and began with the 2008 Estate Reserve Pino Noir. The two other wines Castello di Borghese makes with their prized pinot noir grapes are a barrel-fermented pinot noir and a rosé. The 2008 Estate Reserve Pino Noir is done in the French Bordeaux style and is aged in vintage French oak barrels. This red has a lot black cherry notes and a spicy finish with a burst of cinnamon and tea. The next red I tried was the 2007 Merlot, which I was pleasantly surprised with. This merlot has cherry and plum flavors, and it is semi-dry, so it’s not overwhelming on the palate. The wine is also fairly light for a merlot, so it has a great drinkability. Following the merlot, it was on to the cabernets. The first I tried was the 2010 Cabernet-Franc. The cabernet-franc grape has done very well on Long Island. This deep red wine is layered with toasted oak, dark berry and vanilla notes on the nose, and has an earthy, almost herbal, spiciness that compliments its tart cherry and plum flavors. The second Cabernet on my list was the 2010 Cabernet Sauvignon Reserve. This bold red is nearly purple in color and blossoms with cherry, chocolate

N. Chowske

LI’s First Vineyard, Castello di Borghese

can’t be missed from Route 48!

and currant flavors. This wine will age dramatically. Castello di Borghese’s crown jewel, their 2007 Meritage, is a blend of these three reds. The merlot, cabernet franc and cabernet sauvignon are perfectly balanced, creating layers of spice, dark and red berries and plum that come together for a delicate but complex finish. After every great tasting comes dessert, and mine was Allegra—the ice wine. This sweet wine, named for the Borghese’s daughter, is made from late-harvest chardonnay grapes that are handpicked at their peak sugar content and then flash-frozen. Allegra is thick, and sweet, with apricot fragrance and flavor. Visit Castello di Borghese at 17150 County Road 48, Cutchogue. 631-734-5111, castellodiborghese.com

H à { T Ç Ç â tÄ DINNER IN THE VINES tà The Lenz Winery GUEST CHEFS

ERIK ORLOWSKI & JOHN URBINATI, THE FIFTH SEASON 34 East Broadway, Port Jefferson

8.24.13

5-course wine dinner prepared & served in the vineyard Produce donated by

R & M ANDREWS FAMILY FARM 1038 Sound Avenue, Wading River

General Public: $175 Lenz Subscribers: $125

RSVP: 631 734 6010 28151


WINE guIDE

Page 80 August 2, 2013

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Women Winemakers Take Long Island! By deBBie SLevin

T

wo Women. Two Winemakers. Two Weddings. When every day is consumed with the land and the grape, it is no wonder that these two winemakers would each choose to be married amidst the vines that define their professional and personal lives. Perry Baiz is the fifth generation to work the farm, first established in 1640, at The Old Field Vineyard in Southold and was married there in mid-July to Zachary Bliss, a boat builder from Shelter Island. The guests were served wine she made with her mother, Ros. Kelly Urbanik will be married this autumn at Macari Vineyards in Mattituck, where she has been the winemaker for the past three years. She is marrying Rob Koch, a mechanical engineer who was raised there. Urbanik came to wine-making naturally—the third generation of an Italian family that settled in Napa Valley. “My grandpa had a little vineyard we used to take care of,” she says. “It was always part of our lives.”

The women all have one thing in common: Winemaking is their way of life. It’s their passion and vocation. Urbanik went to college at nearby UC Davis. “I didn’t want to go too far from home,” she says, “I was going to play volleyball but at end of freshman year… I took the Intro to Wine class. I realized this could be what I do.” After graduation, she took an

internship In Burgundy, France. “As the harvest started, I moved into the winery, that’s when I decided I wanted to be a winemaker.” Baiz went to school for environmental biology while her mother was making wine. “I went off and taught scuba diving and travelled,” she says. “My parents never pressured me, they let me work in the vineyard for however much I wanted. Mom was in the winery, so it was a natural flow… I decided that this job rocked!” Ros Baiz, Perry’s mom, had a circuitous route to winemaking, with stints in television (Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood,) studying nursing at 40, antiques and the ministry. But the land called to her. Marrying Christian Baiz in 1984, they lived in Westchester but came often to the family farm where he had a small plot. “His was the second planting [on Long Island]… he got the vines from Louisa [Hargrave],” she says. “About 10 years later … he would sit out there in his vines—they were his mistress!” she laughs. But winemaking is not easy. Baiz credits local wine men Bob Henn, who worked for Pindar at the time, Howard Dickerson and Sam McCullough for teaching her most of what she knows. “Bob took me into the fields and asked me ‘what are the vines telling you. I want you to feel the wine.’” “I am more of a biologist than a chemist,” says Perry, who cares deeply about protecting the vineyard. “We have always had sustainable practices. That is second nature to us, and the right thing to do.” Urbanik, now a long way from California, has made her home on the North Fork. “The Macaris are very passionate about the vineyard and the winery… Its not just a business, its their life.” Her decision to be married at there was easy. “They treat me like one of the family. I never worked somewhere where I felt so

women winemakers make their mark on the east end.

appreciated. It’s a good feeling.” The women all have one thing in common: Winemaking is their way of life. It is their passion and vocation. “I think I just surprise myself by loving it as much as I do,” says the elder Baiz. “It’s the quiet of being out there… I look down the long row. I see the sparkling water. There is this energy out there... between the trees and the vines and the water…” And it has taught them life lessons, as well. “What I have learned,” she says, “is that vines are very resilient, you can’t worry, nature is not perfect. You have to have an enormous amount of patience… You have a crop that is sitting out there, hanging heavy. The fruit is gorgeous... and then the rain comes, wind comes, fungus comes... Really? You’ve done everything right, and it just didn’t work.” But these women are resilient, too. They will sit down with a glass of wine when the work is done and plan for next year.

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WINE guIDE

August 2, 2013 Page 81

It Takes a Lot of Beer to Make a Good Wine... By Lenn tHOmPSOn

There is a saying in the wine industry that “It takes a lot of beer to make good wine.” Vineyard and winery crews work hard. And at the end of a long day in the field or in the cellar, many turn to beer rather than wine to quench their thirst. I don’t work at a winery— though I’ve been known to enjoy a pint or three with those that do—but I’ve come up with my own version of this saying: It takes a lot of beer to get through a hot, muggy Long Island summer. You’ll find wine in my glass nearly every day— mostly with meals, although beer has a place on my dinner table too. I’m a craft beer guy too. Typically, I’ll reach for a pale ale or IPA—the hoppier the better. But in the summer, when you’re looking for refreshment, even a hop head like me likes to look elsewhere for lower-alcohol beers that hit the spot after mowing the lawn or chasing my kids around the yard/beach/wherever. And of course, I like to drink local when I’m drinking beer. At least much of the time. We won’t get into the debate over what “local beer” means in terms of where the ingredients are brewed or who brews them or where. That’s a complex and intricate topic better argued beyond the 700 words of this weekly column. Instead, here are five of the local beers I’ve been enjoying the most of this summer:

(and maybe even written) not-sonice things about this beer in the past, when I’ve found it too sweet; too syrupy. This year’s batch nails the balance—you can still taste the orange blossom honey used during brewing, but it doesn’t stand out. This is a tasty, floral-scented golden ale that is refreshing and ideally suited to post-lawn mower duty. Rocky Point Artisan Brewers Hefeweizen. Now to probably the most obscure beer on this list— from one of Long Island’s smallest nanobreweries. I’ve known the guys behind RPAB since well before they opened to the public (one

Southampton’s double white

is a fellow beverage writer who used to work with me a bit) and they live and brew just a couple miles from my home. While so many are going for bigger, hoppier, more alcohol styles in the beer world, RPAB focuses on the classic, largely German and Belgian styles. This hefe— available on draft at a handful of bars, restaurants and growler fill stations—is classically German in style. Unfiltered and opaque in your glass, it’s yeasty, bright and refreshing. I love it so much that I served a keg of it at my last big summer BBQ. It didn’t last the night.

Southampton double white Ale. It’s hard not to consider this a classic Long Island summer beer at this point. Though it isn’t the lowest-alcohol white beer around at 6.5% abv, it’s readily available, available in bottle (unlike many of the beers on this list) and is like a classic Belgian wit ale on steroids— more citrus, more spice, etc.

It takes a lot of beer to get through a hot, muggy Long Island summer. I like to drink local when I’m drinking beer. Port Jeff Brewing carolina common Ale. For the most part, I don’t care for “fruit beers”—beers with fruit pulp or flavoring added—nothing beyond a little citrus peel, please. But this newly released (only one batch) collaboration ale between Port Jeff Brewing and North Carolina’s Foothill Brewing is an exception to my personal rule. Carolina peaches bring a certain fruity sweetness without being the dominant flavor. Any distinct peach flavor only peeks through at the end of the finish—in a refreshing way rather than a soda way. This one is only available for growler fills at the brewery, and they only made one batch. Get it soon before it’s gone. Blue Point Brewing company white iPA. I’m actually not keen on this “<insert color here> IPA” trend in beer these days. Black IPAs are hoppy brown ales or porters. Red IPAs are hoppy red ales. Don’t get caught up in the branding or think that these are new styles! Similarly, a white IPA is really just a hoppy white ale, but this one from Blue Point is one of my local favorites. It’ll please a crowd at a party while keeping hop heads like me coming back for more. Bonus—it’s available in cans, always a plus. Greenport Harbor Brewing Summer Ale. I’ve said

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Mattebella Encourages Community Gardening Because she draws them to her with her welcoming spirit and generosity, Tobin’s friends and club members are willing to do the dirty work. Down on their knees on a beautiful weekend day, they toiled preparing beds and planting arugula, tomatoes, beets and over 100 brussels sprouts seedlings she started at her home in Westhampton. Sharon Goetchius, a retired Special Education teacher for Western Suffolk BOCES was in the garden most of the morning, hand-patting the soil into long, smooth hills awaiting lettuce seeds. “I had pizza at Grana [in Jamesport] and this wonderful wine from Mattebella. I asked the waitress where the winery was, and she said ‘you need to go.’ So we went right from there,” says Goetchius. “I love the wine and fell in love with [Christine]…I loved the whole atmosphere.” The garden started three years ago as three plots

By deBBie SLevin

I

f you feed them, they will come. And dig. And plant. And weed. And harvest. And passing around some sangria made from the vines right over your shoulder doesn’t hurt, either. Christine Tobin, owner, with her husband Mark, of Mattebella Vineyards in Southold, understands hospitality and building a loyal client base. But her shared organic garden isn’t a gimmick to increase business. “Chris Tobin is vital and to spend time around her is nourishing. That’s why I came,” says Kevin Cahill, a wine club member, ardent farmer, and artist who runs a boat for the Peconic Bay Scallop Project. “The human side of her is as open as you can get. I don’t drink [but] when I go there, the sort of people I meet are the most diverse, likeable and interesting people…”

mattebella brings the community together over good wine!

Summer is Here. More Than a Decade of Estate-Bottled, Award-Winning, Local Wines Produced by Herbicide-Free, Sustainable Viticulture Lieb Cellars Blanc de Blancs 91 points – Wine Enthusiast Lieb Cellars Bridge Lane Rose´ Top 14 Rose´s – Chicago Tribune Lieb Cellars Pinot Blanc “The texture draws you in...” Top 12 Great American Value Wines – New York Times Open 12-7pm, Seven Days, Year Round n

Check Our Website for Weekly Events and Specials Visit Our Tasting Rooms 631.298.1942

Lieb Cellars Oregon Road

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35 Cox Neck Road, Mattituck, NY 11952

designed to bring in beneficial insects for the grape vines. “I did it myself with some kids and friends from Florida,” where the Tobins used to live full-time. “Unbeknownst to me,” says Tobin, “my friend had dropped a whole box of seeds throughout the garden and all summer my garden was covered in pumpkins. I was handing them out at the vineyard.” When local people would come in for a bottle of wine, Tobin sent them home with some of the produce from the garden. “I asked what they were having for dinner,” she says, “then gave them a little basil, some arugula for the salad.” During last year’s harvest event, club members picked grapes with the staff and then enjoyed a collective lunch. “Everyone loved it, so I did a series of impromptu harvests. People came. I was really surprised.” But Kahill knows how the Tobins do it. “They are enthusiastic and interested and listen intently. It’s a funny thing. I am reminded of Huckleberry Finn, when Tom Sawyer starts painting the fence. ‘This is so great, everyone wants to join in.’ And she feeds you!” he says. And her food is delicious. Don’t miss her homemade fig jam, which she pairs with local cheeses for tastings of their wine, as well as her brownies. She also makes a mean corn bread. This year, Tobin sent out an email about the spring planting and had an overwhelming response. “People loved the idea,” she says. “[They] want to dive in and be involved. And they all come away with an appreciation of how hard farming is, and develop a connection to the place.” “I live and breath gardening,” says Goetchius. “And I thought that doing a community project like this would be so much fun... Everybody gets that good feeling and the wine is good!” Goetchius and her husband are particularly fond of Mattebella’s Famiglia, 2008 Chadonnay. “Most evenings, at 5 p.m., I like to sit by my pool with my husband. We are having cheese and probably sliced peaches and that wine. That to me, is the epitome of the summer!” Mattebella offers 30 minute walking tours and an opportunity to see the new garden on Saturdays at 11 a.m. Visitors will learn about the different grapes, tasting how the flavors vary between the different clones of their six varieties of chardonnay. The vineyard tour with a flight is $17 and includes six full tastings. Enjoy. See you at the harvest.


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10 Wines You Won’t Find at Société du Vin cardboard box with flavors like Sweet Merlot, Sweet Chardonnay and Chablis.

By OLiveR PeteRSOn

L

eslie Alexander’s ultra-exclusive Société du Vin wine club is opened in Bridgehampton this summer, welcoming anyone willing to pay the $50,000 entry fee and $8,000 in annual dues. At least four times per year, the club will serve up some fancy vintages for esteemed guests. These are not among them. 10. Franzia Box wine Franzia proudly calls itself “The World’s Most Popular Wine,” and why not? It comes in massive quantities, easy-pour boxes and a variety of tantalizing flavors. Their “Vintner Select” wines go down smooth and stay “true to the varietal flavor.” Instead of “the overpowering flavor of oak,” enjoy the essence of plastic, colostomy-style bags and

9. French Red wine [in a can] This canned red finally makes it possible to shotgun your table wine and finish by smashing the can on your forehead. Ever try that with a bottle? It hurts. Now wine enthusiasts can fit in at Super Bowl parties, barbecues and tailgate gatherings. Just knocking ‘em back with the boys, right?

that matters, as the ladies can attest. 7. kosher wine It’s not just for Passover anymore. Right when you thought Manischewitz wine couldn’t get any better, they added Cherry and Blackberry as companions to the original Concord Grape flavor. Any wine that shares its flavor with the better half of a peanut butter and jelly sandwich has to be good. 6. counterfeit Playboy wine This unique treasure from Bucharest, Romania is as pleasing to the eye as it is to the palate. It’s unclear what type of grape is used or what region the wine is from, but each bottle of “emot10ns” features a different Playboy playmate with the month and year they appeared in the magazine. Will your fellow sommeliers catch how the makers of this classic replaced the “I” and “O” in “emotions” with the number 10? That’s because each girl pictured is a “10.” Witty ain’t it?

Italian • Seafood • Waterfront

8. well Hung vineyards Nothing says “exclusive” like a unique and littleknown brand to impress your friends. Add a quirky label that alludes to man parts and you’ll be the belle of the balls. Started by three adventurous women, Well Hung Vineyard is a small operation with a small vineyard in the Monticello AVA, but it’s not the size

Italian • Seafood • Waterfront

Porto Bello Porto Bello Ristorante Ristorante

5. md 20/20—Best known as “mad dog” 20/20 What could be cooler than a fortified wine with a nickname more well known than its actual name? Some might call MD 20/20 “bum wine,” but that would N be insulting to the flavorful concoction. Bottled IA L A BEST IT in Westfield, NY by the Mogen David (“MD”) wine this sweet, always kosher treat with a bite Dinner 7 Days from 4 pm Reopening Friday, April 6 company, became known as Mad Dog 20/20. Try the delicious (call forHour reservation) Happy with Complementary Hors d’Oeuvres “Red Grape Wine” flavor or get your Prince on and sip some silky smooth “Purple Rain.” Serving dinner 4 p.m. till 10 p.m. Friday and Saturday 1410 Manhanset venue Dinner in Brewer ’s from 1-8 p.m. will be served and EasteraSunday stirling harBor Marina 4. vampire merlot 1410 Mon ANHANSET AVENUE IN BREWER’S STIRLING HARBOR MARINA Catering or off premises Catering on or www.portobellonorthfork.com Just 1 mile east Imported from Transylvania, Vampire wine is dark off premises of Greenport Village and mysterious and red, so it looks like blood. See? fax: 477-1511 477-1515 It’s like drinking blood, like a vampire! Because www.portobellonorthfork.com • 477.1515 vampires drink blood and red wine kind of looks like blood! Slap a spooky label on it and the point is driven home like a stake in Edward Cullen’s heart. Red wine is also sexy, like vampires. Vampires are sexy. As seen in

As seen in

27876

Of LONG ISLAND

631 - 294 - 7755 www. bestlongislandwineries.com

3. two-Buck chuck [charles Shaw chardonnay] Owned by Trader Joe’s, Charles Shaw’s California Chardonnay proved that wine doesn’t have to be expensive to be good. At $2 a bottle, this white changed the game and was henceforth called “TwoBuck Chuck” by its many admirers. It’s fruity, uncomplicated and meant to be drunk young (and often), according to the maker. Unfortunately, it’s just doesn’t cost enough for most East End oenophiles.

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Since 1950

2. cisco Another fortified delight, Cisco is the Cadillac of hobo wines. A thick and syrupy libation somewhere between Robitussin and a melted Slurpee (the one where you mix every flavor), this stuff is famous for causing blackouts, memory loss and belligerent outbursts for most connoisseurs. Now in eight fruity flavors—Black Cherry, Blue Raspberry, Orange Pineapple and Peach among them—Cisco “has been a consumer favorite for years,” says the makers at Canandaigua winery in Canandaigua, NY. “Strong, yet sweet and fruity, Cisco offers a high-quality flavor selection to satisfy every palate at affordable prices.” All thanks to Coley King, the Director of Winemaking at this New York winery. Yes, that’s right, they are winemakers at a winery. 1. Baby mice wine Awww, how cute, right? Baby Mice Wine sounds adorable and great until you realize it actually contains baby mice. Made in Korea, this rice wine is a traditional health tonic perfect for the Hamptons epicure who has everything. Each of the 12 recentlyborn pinkies is drowned alive in the bottle, which is then left to ferment, allowing the baby mouse essence to infuse the clear saki-like spirit. You may want to drink this one through your teeth.


WINE guIDE

danspapers.com

NORTH FORK For more events happening this week, check out: Arts & Galleries Listings pg. 93, Calendar pg. 103, Kids’ Calendar pg. 108

THuRSDAy, AuguST 1 OPen StitcH At ALtmAn’S 6–8 p.m. Thursdays. UFO (UnFinished Object) Group, aka Open Stitch Meetings, bring your knitting, crochet or any project and get it done in the company of friendly stitchers. Altman’s Needle & Fiber Arts, 195 Love Ln, Mattituck. 631-298-7181 OPen mic niGHt At PecOnic BAy wineRy 6–9 p.m. 31320 Main Road, Cutchogue. Join MC Rocky Divello for an open mic at the winery. 631-734-7361 ROLLinG tHUndeR At tHe ALL StAR 8 p.m.–midnight $18 All you can bowl, including shoes. Every Thursday. Pizza & drink specials. 96 Main Road, Riverhead. 631-998-3565 theallstar.com

FRIDAy, AuguST 2 Live mUSic At RAPHAeL vineyARd And wineRy 1:30–4:30 p.m. Live music by Norman Vincent. 39390 Route 25, Peconic. Also on Sundays. 631-765-1100 raphaelwine.com FRidAy niGHt Live mUSic At tHe ALL StAR 4–7 p.m., Happy hour and free buffet. 9 p.m., Joe Hampton & The Kingpins. 96 Main Road, Riverhead. 631-998-3565 theallstar.com FRidAy niGHt FLiGHtS At tHe nORtH FORk tAStinG ROOm 4–7 p.m., through 6/28. Enjoy a gourmet happy hour with appetizer specials, $5 pints and featured wines, all with live music. 3225 Sound Avenue, Riverhead. 631-727-9513 northforktastingroom.com SPeciAL eXHiBit At HALLOckviLLe Learn all about the rich history of an iconic Sound Avenue landmark. Open to the public on Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays from noon–4 p.m. 6038 Sound Ave., Riverhead. 631-298-5292 hallockville.com FRidAy niGHtS At LieB ceLLARS OReGOn ROAd 6–9 p.m. Live music, glasses and bottles of wine and local beer on tap. Tasty bites by In-House Epicurian, Alicia Valle. Rain or shine. Open every day from 12–7. Half-priced glasses 4–7 p.m. at Lieb Mattituck, Mon.–Fri. 13050 Oregon Road, Cutchogue. 631-298-1942 Live mUSic At tHe nORtH FORk tAStinG ROOm 6–10 p.m., Listen to local musician Walter Finley while you sample Long Island beer and wine. Get there early to enjoy “Friday Night Flights,” a gourmet happy hour 4–7 p.m. 3225 Sound Avenue, Riverhead. 631-727-9513 northforktastingroom.com mOvieS At tHe SHeLteR iSLAnd LiBRARy 7 p.m., Fridays. 37 North Ferry Road, Shelter Island. 631-749-0042 shelterislandpubliclibrary.org Live mUSic At tweedS 7–10 p.m. Various artists on Friday Nights. 17 East Main Street, Riverhead. 631-208-3151 tweedsrestaurant.com

SATuRDAy, AuguST 3 GReenPORt FARmeRS mARket 9 a.m.–1 p.m., Saturdays through 10/12. United Methodist Church, 621 Main St., Greenport. SHeLteR iSLAnd FARmeRS mARket 9 a.m.–12:30 p.m., Saturdays through 9/21. Shelter Island Historical Society, 16 South Ferry Rd., Shelter Island. 631-749-0025 shelterislandhistorical.org FLAndeRS FARm FReSH FOOd mARket 9 a.m.–1 p.m., Saturdays through 10/12. David W. Crohan Community Center, 655 Flanders Rd. diG intO StORieS At SHeLteR iSLAnd LiBRARy 10:30 a.m., Saturdays. Enjoy exciting stories and a fun craft. 37 North Ferry Road, Shelter Island. 631-749-0042 shelterislandpubliclibrary.org viP vine tO wine tOUR At SAnninO BeLLA vitA vineyARd 1 p.m. Also on 8/4, 8/10, 8/17, 8/18, 8/24, 8/25 & 8/31. Mini viticulture and winemaking tour given by owner and winemaker, Anthony Sannino. Includes tasting, cheese plate and special discounts. $20 per person. 1375 Peconic Lane, Peconic. 631-734-8282 sanninovineyard.com HAUnted LiGHtHOUSe cRUiSe 4–8 p.m. Embark on a narrated cruise with up-close views of 4 haunted lighthouses, debark for a tour of “Bug” Light, and enjoy a deli box lunch, snack and glass of wine or bottle of water. $85/$90/$60. The East End Seaport Museum is located in the village of Greenport, near the Shelter Island Ferry Dock. 631-477-2100 eastendseaport.org Live mUSic eveRy SAtURdAy At LenZ wineRy 2–5 p.m. Also on Sundays. Bob Stack is performing. The Lenz Winery, Main Road (Route 25), Peconic. 631-734-6010 lenzwine.com Live mUSic eveRy SAtURdAy At LieB ceLLARS OReGOn ROAd 2–6 p.m. Rain or shine. Open every day from 12–7. 13050 Oregon Road, Cutchogue. 631-298-1942 liebcellars.com Live mUSic At tHe nORtH FORk tAStinG ROOm 4–8 p.m. Ahmad Ali will be performing as you sample the best wine and beer of Long Island. 3225 Sound Avenue, Riverhead. 631-727-9513 northforktastingroom.com Live mUSic At diLiBeRtO wineRy 7:30 p.m. Long Island Opera presents “Opera on the Vines” Concert series. $35 in advance, $40 at the door. Diliberto Winery, 250 Manor Lane, Jamesport. 631-722-3416 dilibertowinery.com PeRLmAn mUSic PROGRAm wORkS in PROceSS cOnceRtS 7:30 p.m. Also on 8/9, 10, 14, 16 and 17. Clark Arts Center, Shelter Island Campus. Free and open to the public. 73 Shore Road, Shelter Island. 212-877-5045 perlmanmusicprogram.org Live mUSic At tweedS 7–10 p.m., Saturdays. Tommy Keys plays jazz and barrelhouse boogie every week. 17 East Main Street, Riverhead. 631-208-3151 tweedsrestaurant.com

August 2, 2013 Page 85

OPICK OF THE WEEK SATURDAY, AUGUST 3

Perlman Music Program Works in Progress Concert 7:30 p.m. (see below) of sparkling for $11. From 2–6 p.m., live music by Steve Fredericks. 3225 Sound Avenue, Riverhead. 631-727-9513 northforktastingroom.com Live mUSic At RAPHAeL vineyARd And wineRy 1:30–4:30 p.m. Live music by Norman Vincent. 39390 Route 25, Peconic. 631-765-1100 raphaelwine.com Live mUSic At diLiBeRtO wineRy 1:30–4:30 p.m. Live music with Danny Keys; 3–4 p.m. enjoy a fresh mozzarella and homemade pasta demo! Diliberto Winery, 250 Manor Lane, Jamesport. 631-722-3416 dilibertowinery.com Live mUSic At cORey cReek vineyARdS 1–5 p.m. Live music at Corey Creek, 45470 Main Rd., Route 25, Southold. Custom catering. 631-765-4168 bedellcellers.com Live mUSic At BedeLL ceLLARS 1–5 p.m. Live music at Bedell Cellars, 36225 Main Road, Cutchogue, 631-734-7537 Live mUSic eveRy SAtURdAy At LenZ wineRy 2–5 p.m. Also on Saturdays. Howie Smith is performing. The Lenz Winery, Main Road (Route 25), Peconic. 631-734-6010 lenzwine.com wOOdwORkinG cLASS At HALLOckviLLe 4–6 p.m. Ages 12 and up. Learn old-fashioned woodworking at the historic North Fork farm. $35 includes materials. Hallockville Museum Farm, 6038 Sound Ave., Riverhead. Reserve your space, 631-298-5292 hallockv@optonline.net RememBeRinG ReBeccA: A mUSicAL tRiBUte At RAm’S HeAd inn 7:30–9:30 p.m. Shelter Island remembers Rebecca Doresy with the friends, family and musicians who loved her. 108 Ram Island Drive, Shelter Island. tickleslapmusic@optonline.net; rebeccadorsey.com

WEDNESDAy, AuguST 7 wedneSdAy GiRLS niGHt OUt At cOOPeRAGe inn 3:30–10 p.m. Enjoy $5 Appetizers & Cosmos, $15 Full Dinner Menu, & more specials. Every Wednesday, 2218 Sound Avenue, Calverton. 631-727-8994 cooperageinn.com PeRLmAn mUSic PROGRAm cHAmBeR mUSic cLASSeS 8/7–8/8, 7 p.m. Merry Peckham is directing a chamber music class with students of the Summer Music School. Free and open to the public. 73 Shore Road, Shelter Island. 212-877-5045 perlmanmusicprogram.org wedneSdAy cOnceRtS At SiLveRSmitH’S cORneR 7:30 p.m. Enjoy the 23rd season of the summer showcase concert series. Silversmith’s Corner, Young’s Ave & Route 25, Southold.

SuNDAy, AuguST 4 SPARkLinG SUndAyS At tHe nORtH FORk tAStinG ROOm Noon–8 p.m., through 6/30. Enjoy a flight of three or a glass

Send listings to kelly@danspapers.com before noon on Friday. Check out DansPapers.com for more listings and events.

FRidAy niGHt FiRe PitS: JAmeSPORt vineyARdS 7 p.m. 1216 Main Rd., Jamesport. Serving wine until 9 p.m. 631-722-5256 jamesportwines.com JUdy cARmicHAeL At SUFFOLk tHeAteR 8 p.m. Judy Carmichael and her Trio present an evening of swinging music, sultry vocals and sassy humor! $30, at door $35. 118 E. Main St., Riverhead. 631-727-4343 suffolktheater.com Live mUSic eveRy FRidAy At tHe ALL StAR ReStAURAnt & BOwLinG LOUnGe 9 p.m.–midnight. Live local bands weekly. Come early for happy hour, free buffet and drink specials. 96 Main Road, Riverhead. 631-998-3565 theallstar.com

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DAN’S PAPERS

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FiShER’S towER

EvENtS

A piece of town history.

For the whole family!

By lee meyer

A

s a fan of Southern-style comfort food (deep fried, indulgent, artery-clogging), I was very excited to hear about the opening of Lucky J’s in Montauk. A popular food truck and restaurant in Texas, the Lucky J’s menu offers several variations on one comfort food staple: chicken and waffles. You’d be forgiven if you haven’t thought of chicken and waffles as two foods that go together—it’s a Southern dish, to be sure—but one forkful of deep fried chicken on top of a waffle and drizzled (or smothered, depending on how you like it) with maple syrup and you’ll be hooked. I took my father, a foodie with an affinity for unconventional dishes, to the new eatery and we were pleased with the experience. Lucky J’s is a tiny restaurant in Montauk, not far from Gosman’s Dock, and we passed the building twice before finding it. Once we walked inside, though, my concerns that Lucky J’s was a glorified fast food joint were assuaged. The friendly waitress greeted us and told us to sit wherever we’d like, whether at the counter or at a table. We chose a table so we could have a little more room. To start, we both tried the Jamaican Jerk Slaw and Fried Pickle Chips. With various greens and radish, the Jerk Slaw sauce was sweet and tangy, with a little kick. I found it to be very refreshing in the summer heat. I’m not much of a pickle fan, but the batter was nice and tasty and the pickle was crunchy. Next, we shared the the Squawk and Cheese, a boneless chicken tender over macaroni

and cheese (don’t reach for the Tums yet, we’ve got a ways to go!). The macaroni and cheese was creamy and soft, and the chicken strip was nicely battered and soft. The flavors work well together. We were both impressed by the “Ms. M,” breakfast “Waffle Taco” with chicken, bacon and Swiss cheese. Lucky J’s is famous for their Waffle Taco; the soft, fluffy waffle acts as the “taco shell.” The savory bacon and Swiss cheese, along with the soft boneless chicken strip was overwhelming to look at, but surprisingly light. It was at this moment that my father noted that nothing we’d tried yet was greasy at all; everything was cooked just right and looked and tasted fresh. Finally, we tried the “2 x 2,” two pieces of fried chicken (boned) on top of waffles. The owner, Jason, suggested we pour some syrup over the dish, which we happily did. The fried chicken was crispy, tasty white meat, and the waffle was just right: a little crispy, but moist and soft inside. We drizzled some syrup over the dish, and the combination of the sweet syrup and the fried chicken nearly sent me over the edge. You haven’t lived until you’ve had fried chicken and maple syrup. Seriously. By the time my father and I were finished, we were more than satisfied. But we weren’t feeling overly stuffed or “food guilty,” as I often am when I’ve indulged in something delicious a little too much. I asked Jason about the batter on the fried chicken, and he mysteriously noted it was his “secret recipe.” Lucky J’s is open 24/7 for the summer. Jason noted that before Lucky J’s opened, 7-Eleven was the only

Courtesy Lucky J’s

Restaurant Review: Lucky J’s

Chicken and waffles topped with jerk slaw

late-night food option in Montauk! The restaurant is busiest at night, and waffle tacos are sold all day and night. I can’t wait to go back and try the Brady, which is chicken and Swiss cheese doused in honey and hot sauce and wrapped in a waffle with bacon cooked into it. If you or your fellow diner is vegetarian, you can try the Grandma Andy, a waffle taco with Nutella, peanut butter, honey and bananas. Lucky J’s is highly recommended—I hope to go back there again soon. Lucky J’s is located at 440 West Lake Drive in Montauk and is open 24/7 through September. For more information on Lucky J’s call 631-668-6555 or go to luckyjs.com.

NEW!! St Stop op by the the harbor’ harborr’s most most ppopular opular spot, spot, SAMMY’S! SAMMY’S! LLocated ocated next next do orr, servingg lun ch an dinner daily, daily, door, lunch andd dinner ffeaturing eaturing fresh fresh fish and and seafood, seaf eafood, overlooking overlooking the the harbor. harborr. Great place Gr eat pla ce ffor or a ccold old drink nk on a hot hot evening, evening, too! too!

home of the montauk/mercury grand slam inshore fishing tournament • august 16, 17 & 18

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Fisher’s Tower: Montauk’s Time Capsule real estate crash of 1929. Fisher would bring potential investors up to his office in the penthouse and let them survey the land from the 365° view, choosing their land from that vantage point. World War II activated Montauk as a military outpost and the building saw use as an officer quarters, as Osmers wrote about in his book.

By lisa tannenBaum

T

he story of Fisher’s Tower begins with Carl Fisher and the development of Montauk. Carl Fisher purchased the entire 9,000-acre Montauk peninsula in 1925 for $2.5 million. He intended to develop Montauk into the “Miami Beach of the North,” as he had successfully developed Miami Beach into a thriving resort community. He did that by developing roads and railway transportation to the formerly swampy Miami. In 1926, Fisher started to develop Montauk as a summer retreat for resort-goers. He began clearing roads and installing power lines to get the infrastructure built up to remake this backwater into a resort. In 1927, Fisher’s Tower was built. He kept building throughout the stock market crash of 1929, although his property was mortgaged against the Miami Beach development and eventually went bankrupt in 1932. He spent $12 million total but the resort failed to achieve the international success that Fisher hoped for. The Montauk Point project the tower at montauk at left, formerly Fisher’s tower went into receivership. Osmers referred me to Montauk librarian Robin By the end of 1932, Fisher had built the Montauk Yacht Club, Manor, Playhouse and Downs golf Strong who had additional information about the tower. She said that Fisher had built the same course, and the seven-story Fisher’s Tower. Tracking down information about Fisher’s Tower building in Miami Beach, whish was no longer was not easy. For the tallest, most prominent building standing, and that it was used as an administrative in the village, it sure leads an anonymous life on the building. She relayed the same story about Fisher internet these days. I started out by talking to Henry bringing potential buyers up to his penthouse office Osmers, the historian at the Montauk Lighthouse. He to view the land from a panoramic perspective. She gave me references from two of his books, American said that Richard T. Gilmartin, another real estate Gibraltar about Montauk’s role in World War II, and developer, later had his office in the building. And then she referred me to another East Ender On Eagles Beak, a broad history of Montauk. The building sat empty after Carl Fisher went who had an office in the building, the one and only bankrupt in 1932 from the stock market and resultant Dan Rattiner, founder of Dan’s Papers. She told me to

The Real Montauk Still Exists You just have to know where to look

call the building the “White Elephant” when I asked him about it, which I did. I got a reply to an e-mail requesting a time and a phone number to chat. Twenty minutes into the conversation, we had gotten to the end of the story of Rattiner and the White Elephant of Fisher’s Tower, because it was the only tall tower in town. The culmination of the story was that Rattiner rescued papers he had found during his time there—correspondance from 1938—when Fisher’s company last used the building. Six folders of letters were all that Rattiner could carry when he last went there in 1975, finding the building unlocked. He had heard that it was going to be converted into apartments, and rushed to save the last remnants of historical material. In 2000, Rattiner donated the documents to the Wilsonian Museum of Americana in Miami Beach. In 1960, Rattiner, while in college, had started a paper called The Pioneer that he was running during the summers. He got tired of working out of his parents’ house and asked the Montauk Improvement Society, the only tenant of the ground floor of the tower at the time, if he could use some space in the tower. Floors two through seven were vacant and frozen in time from 1938, with office furniture and filing cabinets left intact. The penthouse was still furnished with a bedroom set as the pied a terre of Carl Fisher. Rattiner took up an office on the second floor, stringing a phone wire on the outside of the buiding. There was no electricity, heat, water or lights, so when a typewriter salesman came to sell Rattiner an electric typewriter, there was nowhere to plug it in. A White Elephant indeed. Today, the building is divided into 21 luxury condominiums with views of the ocean and is called The Tower at Montauk, at 55 Euclid Avenue.

Chicken FORWaffles SPEED

Serving up our Famous Chicken and Waffles and other Southern Classics from Memorial Day til Columbus Day Innovative Cuisine. Fresh Sushi. Local Lobster and Seafood. Serving Lunch and Dinner Daily. Eat-in and Take-out available. And Still the best views on the East End. Check out Gosmans.com for a complete list of concert dates, menus and more!

@facebook.com/gosmans

484 West Lake Dr. Montauk Harbor 668-2549

26870

Open 24/7 July and August! 440 West Lake Drive, Montauk NY 11954 (631) 668-8555 www.luckyjs.com 25230

Call 631.537.0500 to advertise. 26183


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Page 88 August 2, 2013

MONTAUK

THE BACKYARD RESTAURANT AT SOLÉ EAST 1–6 p.m., Relax poolside with DJ music, lunch service from 11:30 a.m., dinner from 5:30 p.m., DJ music starting at 10 p.m. 90 Second House Road, Montauk. 631-668-2105 soleeast.com/restaurant

For more events happening this week, check out:

LIVE MUSIC AT MONTAUK YACHT CLUB 1 p.m., Saturdays with the Dan Bailey Tribe. 32 Star Island Road, Montauk. 888-MYC-8668 montaukyachtclub.com

North Fork Calendar pg. 85, Calendar pg. 103 Kids Calendar pg. 103, Arts & Galleries pg. 98

tHursday, august 1 MONTAUK FARMERS MARKET 9 a.m.–2 p.m. Thursdays through 10/17. Village Green, Center of Town. 631-668-2428

LIVE MUSIC AT THE MONTAUKET 5 p.m. start. Enjoy the sunsets overlooking Gardiner’s Island and Fort Pond Bay. The Montauket, 88 Firestone Road. 631-668-5992.

BEACH VOLLEYBALL LEAGUE AT GURNEY’S 4 person Co-Ed volleyball league every Thursday. Bar and food available. Gurney’s, 290 Montauk Highway, Montauk. 631-668-2345 gurneysinn.com

REGGAE AT THE SLOPPY TUNA 5–10 p.m., Saturdays. 10 p.m.–4 a.m. Late Night dancing with your favorite DJs. 148 S Emerson Ave, Montauk. 631-647-8000 thesloppytuna.com

MARGARITA MADNESS 6 p.m., Weekly. Camerena Tequila models will shake up specialty margaritas. Small bites available and Soul Junkies will be jamming. At 360 East at Montauk Downs, 50 South Fairview Ave., Montauk.. 631-483-5025 lessing.com

SUMMER CONCERT SERIES AT SOLÉ EAST 6:30 p.m. Enjoy Reggae artist Maxi Priest. On 8/10, solo acoustic performance by David Longstreth of Dirty Projectors. 90 Second House Road, Montauk. 631-668-2105 soleeast.com/restaurant

FrIday, august 2

2013 DIAMOND IN THE ROUGH GALA 7–11 p.m. Montauk Playhouse Community Center is putting together the details for this year’s marquis event and it’s going to be better than ever! Mark your calendar now. For sponsorship opportunities and details, please visit montaukplayhouse.org

LIVE MUSIC AT SWALLOW EAST 7 p.m. Live music every Friday. 474 West Lake Dr., Montauk. 631-668-8344 swalloweastrestaurant.com KARAOKE AT GURNEY’S 9 p.m. Fridays, with Des & Linda. Gurney’s Inn Resort Spa and Conference Center. 290 Old Montauk Hwy, 631-668-2345 gurneysinn.com. HARRY-OKE FRIDAYS AT LIARS’ CLUB 10 p.m. Fridays. 401 W. Lake Drive, Montauk. 631-668-9597

saturday, august 3 HAMPTONS 2013 SUP RACE: BLOCK ISLAND CHALLENCE 8 a.m. start. Montauk to Block Island, Elite Open Ocean Race Crossing. 18-mile down wind course, support boat required. 631-537-2716 mainbeach.com MTK COMMUNITY CHURCH RUMMAGE SALE 9 a.m.–noon. Every Saturday at Montauk Community Church. 850 Montauk Hwy. 631-668-2022 montaukcommunitychurch.org. MONTAUK POINT LIGHTHOUSE & GIFT SHOP Open daily. 2000 Montauk Hwy, Montauk. Montauklighthouse.com LIVE MUSIC AT THE SLOPPY TUNA Noon–4 p.m. Live music from Jefferson Thomas Band. 148 S Emerson Ave, Montauk. 631-647-8000 thesloppytuna.com TASTINGS AT THE MONTAUK BREWING COMPANY Noon–5 p.m., Saturdays & Sundays. 62 S. Erie Ave, Montauk. 631-834-2627 montaukbrewingco.com SOUND WAVES AT THE HOUSE Noon–7 p.m., Saturdays through 8/31. The Montauk Beach House, 55 South Elmwood Ave., Montauk. Invitation only, contact 631-668-2112 thembh.com HAPPENINGS:

Friday: Live Acoustic 8/3 Max Priest Saturday: MTKDavid Acoustic SunsetofConcert Series 8/10 Longstreth Dirty Projectors Acoustic 7pm Performance DJ Bridget (day-poolside, night-inside) SUNDAYDay Poolside Brunch Sunday (11am-3pm) LIVE Bosso Novo DuoLive & Bossa Sunday Night Poolside Brazilian Brunch Nova Duo 7pm HIFF Surf Surf Series: Picaresque Cinema Series @7PM

JAMIE LIDELL AT THE SURF LODGE MONTAUK Jamie Lidell is performing, call for show time and other details. 183 Edgemere Street, Montauk. 631-483-5037 thesurflodge.com DANCING AT GURNEY’S 9 p.m. Saturdays, Live Music or DJ. Gurney’s Inn Resort Spa and Conference Center. 290 Old Montauk Hwy, 631-668-2345 gurneysinn.com LIVE MUSIC AT SHAWONG 9 p.m. Live music with every Saturday. The 3Bs. Main Street, Montauk, 631-668-3050 shawong.com KARAOKE NIGHT 10 p.m., Saturdays. Cross Eyed Clam Bar & Grill, 440 West Lake Drive. 631-668-8065

sunday, august 4 BOOZY BRUNCH AT THE CROSS EYED CLAM Noon–4 p.m., Sundays. DJ Dance Music, endless mimosas, bloody marys and sangria. $40 per guest. Cross Eyed Clam Bar & Grill, 440 West Lake Drive. 631-668-8065 POLKA BRUNCH AT ZUM SCHNEIDER 11 a.m.–5 p.m. With Benjamin Ickies on accordion an Erica Mancini on percussion. Best beer in town & authentic German cuisine. 4 South Elmwood Ave, Montauk. 631-238-5963 zumschneider.com OUTDOOR MUSIC AT THE SLOPPY TUNA 4:30–8:30 p.m. Live music with Bobby Nathan Band.148 S Emerson Ave, Montauk. 631-647-8000 thesloppytuna.com COOL COCKTAILS AT THE BLACKWELL RUM SHACK 5–9 p.m., Saturdays and Sundays. Enjoy the music of hostess Lysa Cooper and Damon Degraff. 161 Second House Road, Montauk. LOVE LA PLAGE SUNDAYS AT NAVY BEACH 5 p.m. Sundays. Live music with Winston Irie, also on 8/18 & 9/1. Twister plays on 8/11 & 8/25. 16 Navy Road, Montauk. 631-668-6868 navybeach.com NANCY ATLAS AT GOSMAN’S DOCK 6 p.m. Bring blankets or beach chairs. Always a favorite! 500 West Lake Drive, Montauk. 631-668-5330 gosmans.com LIVE MUSIC AT SWALLOW EAST 7 p.m. Live music every Sunday. 474 West Lake Dr., Montauk. 631-668-8344 swalloweastrestaurant.com

monday, august 5

Restaurant: 631-668-9739

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CONCERT ON THE GREEN 6:30 p.m. Every Monday night, sponsored by the Montauk

danspapers.com

O PICk oF tHE WEEk Saturday, August 4

Nancy Atlas at Gosman’s Dock 6 p.m. (See listing at left)

Chamber of Commerce and other Montauk businesses. This week, enjoy The Lone Sharks. Bring a chair and blanket. Village Green, Montauk. LIVE MUSIC AT THE POINT BAR & GRILL 10 p.m., Mondays. Todd the Guitar Guy. 697 Montauk Highway, Montauk. 631-668-1500 pointbarandgrill.com

tuEsday, august 6 LIVE MUSIC AT SWALLOW EAST 7 p.m. Live music every Tuesday. 474 West Lake Dr., Montauk. 631-668-8344 swalloweastrestaurant.com SUMMER BEACH CONCERTS AT GURNEY’S Tuesdays. Drink promos, and enjoy bonfires, volleyball and food. Gurney’s, 290 Montauk Highway, Montauk. 631-668-2345 gurneysinn.com

WEdnEsday, august 7 NANCY ATLAS AT SURF LODGE 6 p.m. Wednesdays through 7/31. 83 Edgemere St., Montauk. 631-283-5216 thesurflodge.com LOBSTER BAKE AT GURNEY’S 6–8:30 p.m., Wednesdays. Enjoy a leisurely and scenic lobster dinner indoors or on the patio of Gurney’s. Gurney’s, 290 Montauk Highway, Montauk. 631-668-2345 gurneysinn.com

tHursday, august 8 MONTAUK FARMERS MARKET 9 a.m.–2 p.m. Thursdays through 10/17. Village Green, Center of Town. 631-668-2428. NATIONAL CIRCUS PROJECT AT MONTAUK PLAYHOUSE 7 p.m. with a special “Circus Skills Workshop” for kids at 4 p.m. All ages will delight in this Family Fest tradition. Sponsored by Willow Unique Gifts. $15 per person, $50 for the four-part Family Fest series. 240 Edgemere St., Montauk. 631-668-1124 montaukplayhouse.org

FrIday, august 9 LIVE MUSIC AT SWALLOW EAST 7 p.m. Live music every Friday. 474 West Lake Dr., Montauk. 631-668-8344 swalloweastrestaurant.com KARAOKE AT GURNEY’S 9 p.m. Fridays, with Des & Linda. Gurney’s Inn Resort Spa and Conference Center. 290 Old Montauk Hwy, 631-668-2345, gurneysinn.com. HARRY-OKE FRIDAYS AT LIARS’ CLUB 10 p.m. Fridays. 401 W. Lake Drive, Montauk. 631-668-9597

uPComIng and ongoIng MONTAUK HISTORICAL SOCIETY CRAFT FAIR 8/10, 10 a.m.–6 p.m. A two-day event with handmade crafts, seashell and beach glass art and more. Montauk Second House, Montauk Highway, Montauk. For details, 631-668-5340 SUMMER CONCERT SERIES AT SOLÉ EAST 8/10, 6:30 p.m. Enjoy David Longstreth of the Dirty Projectors. 90 Second House Road, Montauk. 631-668-2105 soleeast.com/restaurant THE HOT POCKETS AT GOSMAN’S DOCK 8/11, 6 p.m. Bring lawn chairs or blankets and enjoy Classic Rock from The Hot Pockets. 500 West Lake Drive, Montauk. 631-668-5330 gosmans.com

Send Day by Day Calendar listings to kelly@danspapers.com before noon on Friday. Check out DansPapers.com for more listings and events.


DAN’S PAPERS

danspapers.com

August 2, 2013 Page 89

BOOK REVIEW

ART EVENTS

Tomorrow there will be Apricots!

Openings, closings see and be seen.

Singing (And Tapping!) In the Rain

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he Gateway Playhouse continues its 2013 season with one of the greatest musicals of all time, Singin’ in the Rain. This romantic comedy, adapted from the 1952 movie of the same name, takes us on a hilarious journey with “Hollywoodland” residents Don Lockwood, Lina Lamont, Cosmo Brown and Kathy Selden. Don Lockwood, played by the dashing Jeremy Benton, is a silent film star and Lina Lamont is the (spoiled) starlet sidekick he is reluctantly attached to. Both are at a turning point in their careers. Technology in film is advancing and soon moviemakers will find a way to put image and sound together. The conundrum there—Lina’s nailson-a-chalkboard voice. Yes, it is that bad. Kudos to Gretchen Bieber for portraying a fantastically annoying Lina—I loved and hated every shrill sound that came out of her mouth! When Bieber sings as Lina, it’s obvious she’s covering up a knockout voice that we only hear glimmers of, right underneath the surface of Lina’s screeching. Funnyman Cosmo Brown, played by John Scacchetti, is Lockwood’s boyhood best friend. Although Lina (with the influence of their studio Monumental Pictures) fancies herself in love with Don, he cannot tolerate her and only does so to keep the peace. After the premier of Lockwood and Lamont’s The Royal Rascal, Don escapes his fans and finds himself on a bench with a surprised Kathy Selden. Kathy, a

to his heart’s content. Eventually self-proclaimed “real stage” actress, Lina, who tries futilely to thwart played by Shannon O’Bryan, the budding romance between mocks Don’s silent film career Don and Kathy, discovers the before disappearing into the night. conspiracy to dub Kathy’s voice Although they kept their banter over her own. After Lina threatens light, Don is clearly smitten by the R.F. into agreeing to force Kathy to elusive Kathy, as well as intrigued work as Lina’s voiceover, Cosmo and more than a little hurt by her and Don plot successfully to expose accusations. Lina’s scheme. Don divulges to the After searching for her, Don is audience that Kathy is the real star delighted to find Kathy when she of The Dancing Cavalier, and the unexpectedly shows up dancing pair finally reveals their romance to out of a cake at a party thrown by the public. studio head R.F. Simpson, played The finale scene is an exhilarating by Gateway favorite Steve Brady. reprise of “Singin’ in the Rain” that When a competing studio produces you won’t soon forget. Bravo to a a wildly successful talking movie, truly talented cast who didn’t miss Monumental Pictures is pressured a beat. The delightful sound of tap to do the same with its upcoming dancing feet resounded in my head film The Dueling Cavalier, with Jeremy Benton as Don Lockwood. long after I left the theater. Director stars Lockwood and Lamont. After a disastrously funny version of the film is released, Rick Conant and Choreographer Kelli Barclay have it is decided that the movie must be changed to The done justice to the popular movie and Broadway Dancing Cavalier, a musical version. The problem show, and put another hit on Gateway’s long and lies, again, with Lina’s jarring voice. Cosmo and Don growing list of them. concoct a scheme to dub Kathy’s voice over Lina’s Singin’ in the Rain plays at the Patchogue Theater voice. They all decide Lina cannot find out. The series of events that unfolds will have you through August 10. Next up is Ballroom with a Twist, laughing out loud, amid outstanding dance numbers which will feature stars from Dancing with the Stars, such as “Make ‘em Laugh,” “Good Mornin’,” and the America Idol, and So You Think You Can Dance, all-time favorite “Singin’ in the Rain.” You can’t help appearing on stage in Patchogue August 13-18. For more information, go 1to pacsc.org. but grin at the love-struck Dan'sCampaignAug2_Bay Don as he tap dancesST 7/25/13 5:27 PM Page Jeff Bellante

By Genevieve horsBurGh

HISTORIC LANDMARK THEATER | SUPPER CLUB | LIVE PERFORMANCE

We stayed in Sag Harbor for our community! Won’t you PLEASE help keep us here?

JUDY CARMICHAEL: “I Love Being Here With You!” Friday, August 2, 8pm $30 advance / $35 at the door

ALEX TORRES & his Latin Orchestra

Saturday Supper Club August 3, 8pm $25 show only in advance/ $30 at the door/ $65 all inclusive

8th Annual Long Island Comedy Festival

In addition to live, professional theater and theater arts educational programs, Bay Street Theatre serves as a year-round community center hosting:

Friday, August 9, 8pm $25 advance/$30 at the door Tyler Gildin, Jack Simmons, Erik Rivera, Maria Walsh, Host: Paul Anthony

• East End Players • Hayground School

DIAMOND: One Hot Night!

• Josh Levine Memorial Foundation • Take 2 Film Festival

The Music of Neil Diamond Saturday Supper Club August 10, 8pm $30 in advance/ $35 at the door/ $70 all inclusive

On stage at The Suffolk Theater 631-727-4343

Spelling Bee, The Musical

• Studio 3 Ballet • The Sag Harbor Elementary Variety Show • Southampton Hospital • Santa’s Visit • The Retreat • Sag Harbor Chamber

Monday, August 12, 7:30pm $12 children 12 and under $15 adult

SONGTRAILS: Caroline Doctorow, Hugh Prestwood & Inda Eaton

Thursday, August 15, 8pm $15 24324

DONATE NOW:

631-725-0818 or www.baystreet.org

• Literature Live! • Sag Harbor Volunteer Ambulance Corp. • Sag Harbor School District • STAGES • Children’s Museum of the East End • Local community fundraisers

And many more!

Bay Street Theatre is a not for profit 501( c ) 3 organization and your entire donation is tax-deductible according to IRS regulations

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ARTS & ENTERTAINmENT

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Sculpture Garden at Guild Hall: Joel Perlman Perlman’s materials and configurations catch our eye immediately, the bronze and steel shapes are seemingly hard-edged (literally and figuratively) yet often they are lyrical as well, including works that are also in the Wasserstein Gallery inside Guild Hall itself. What’s also arresting is the fact that some of the sculptures are shapes that Perlman cut and then welded together. This means of construction gives the pieces a strength and presence going beyond their lyrical quality: such contradiction is another outstanding aspect of Perlman’s

By marion woLBerG-weiss

Barbara Jo Howard

The Sculpture Garden at Guild Hall is a hidden oasis, showing noteworthy works of diverse styles and materials. Situated at the back of the building, it’s a pleasure to experience the ongoing sculpture exhibits, especially in the open air. Although some viewers might not realize that there’s such a garden on Guild Hall’s grounds, it’s doubly pleasant to come upon the unique shapes as we walk around the premises. The current show by Joel Perlman is no exception where diversity is a key element. work by Joel Perlman

Barbara Jo Howard

art and craft. Speaking of “construction,” it’s obvious that Perlman was influenced by Russian Constructivism; according to some observers, his work during the 1970s also shared a commonality with Minimalism (this critic thinks of sculpture by Louise Nevelson, in this regard, although her materials are different). Another reference perhaps may even be Perlman’s 1998 work, “High Spirit,” which reminds this critic of the new World Trade Center building. A quick look at the 104-story structure from a few miles away shows how the clouds engulf its spiral as tiny lights twinkle on its surface. Of course, Perlman’s “High Spirit” was not influenced by the new World Trade Center edifice, but both configurations evoke the same feeling and have a similar shape. The effects of both pieces are stunning.

work by Joel Perlman

While such references all go to demonstrate that Perlman’s work has a legacy deriving from fascinating sources, the current exhibit features pieces that convey other aspects. For example, his circular forms that meld into each other signify continuity and a sense of eternity. His circles within circles suggest the same themes. Perlman’s small sculptures inside the Wasserstein Gallery continue the circular motif, but they are more decorative, suggesting patterns and real objects. For example, “Bronze Cyclone” recalls a ride at Coney Island. Another piece, “Tribeca,” evokes the image of a drum. “Green Space” looks like a particularly dangerous ride at a carnival. Such observations are not meant to be critical of Perlman’s images. Rather, the shapes suggest that he has so captured our imagination that we can’t help going along for the ride.

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Joel Perlman’s sculpture will be on display until Oct. 14, 2013 at East Hampton’s Guild Hall, 158 Main Street. Guildhall.org


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ARTS & ENTERTAINmENT

August 2, 2013 Page 91

New Novel Explores Truths in Family Dynamics By Joan Baum

The Arabic expression Bukra fil mish mash mash, loosely translated as when pigs fly, or forget it, unless you believe the impossible can happen, was the inspiration, Jessica Soffer says, for her debut novel, Tomorrow There Will be Apricots (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt). Also translated as “tomorrow the apricots will bloom,” the proverb takes on a more promising connotation as the narrative develops, suggesting that longed-for hope just might trump despair, at least in fantasy. Such is the strength of Soffer’s moving, beautifully conceived and written quest for family that the reader hopes that faith and love will prevail over a history of pain and adversity. It’s exemplary of the author’s professionalism that though her characters move toward some peace and understanding, their deep inner conflicts are left unresolved.

As each character inhabits the theme of longing for family, the reader readjusts perspective, though it’s only at the end when full truths emerge. Other characters include the lonely, sensitive 19-year Blot, who works in a bookstore, on whom Lorca has a crush. He, too, has a troubled life, but he reaches out to Lorca, unaware for a while of the extent of her self-mutilations. In the Victoria chapters, Dottie, an upstairs neighbor, first seen only as a busybody, takes on greater complexity as well. It’s impressive the way Soffer crafts so many figures who enhance the theme but keeps the focus on her quartet—Lorca,

Victoria, Joseph and Blot whose individual discordant sounds gel into an unexpected, deeply affecting harmony. Masgouf, a fish dish originally prepared on the banks of the Tigris and Euphrates, and grilled with tamarind and lemon and other spices, may be gone but it’s not forgotten. The recipe, along with others for Shakrlama, a dessert the author recalls from Passover dinners, and Bamia, a tomato and okra-based spice dish often eaten with meat dumplings, are included at the end, all “From the Kitchen of Jessica Soffer.” Food for thought, indeed.

As each character inhabits the theme of longing for family, the reader readjusts perspective, but it’s at the end when full truths emerge. Soffer, who has an MFA from Hunter College and teaches fiction at Connecticut College, has been published in numerous periodicals, among them Vogue, The New York Times and Granta. The girl at the center of Apricots appeared first in a short story about a highly sensitive, intelligent, lonely teenager who continually cuts and burns herself because of the lack of a relationship with her mother, “a kind of villain,” but Lorca’s evolution in the novel also has to do with an “image” that popped into Soffer’s head one day—“a young girl and an old woman cooking together, barefoot.” Although the book is on the longish side, it might be said that it’s extended dilation on the theme of yearning out of loneliness—an adolescent girl’s for her mother’s love, and an older woman’s for her dead husband and for a child she gave up 40 years earlier—gives the story the breadth it needs to advance the theme in subtly tragic and humorous ways, and make it credible. Such things can happen, if the need is strong enough: strangers separated by a wide age difference come together because of a traditional but elusive national Iraqi dish—Masgouf—and they come to believe, they want to believe, they are related in other ways as well. Lorca, a precocious 14-year-old (Williams Sonoma has the best knives for cutting herself), named by her father for the Spanish poet and playwright Federico Garcia Lorca, wants desperately to learn how to make Masgouf because she has heard her mother say she loved it. Victoria, in her 80s, is mourning the recent loss of her husband Joseph, who was her “all in all.” Lorca and Victoria alternate first-person chapters, each infusing their stream of consciousness with imagery about food. Both are excellent cooks. Joseph, with whom Victoria once ran a well regarded restaurant—one of the specialties was Masgouf—also has chapters, but these are in the third person. Each chapter refines what’s come before, with every character expressing the need, the desire and the anguished passion for affection, particularly young Lorca. Her beautiful, brilliant mother, narcissistic and cruel, a celebrated chef who has cast off her “wimp” of a husband, is planning to ship Lorca off to boarding school to deal with her problem.

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Long Island Center Makes Learning Fun By anDrea aurichio

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hen Joan Rivers holds court on her television program The Fashion Police, she says, “This dress is so ugly it is probably good at math” and everyone laughs. People think science is boring and consider it the provenance of geeks and nerds. A visit to the Long Island Science Center in Riverhead will change your mind forever. You’ll become a really cool geek with an understanding of the world enhanced by scientific knowledge. You’ll learn how and why things work and discover “stuff” you never thought about before. It will change your life, or at least, make you look at the world in a more informed way. You can have a birthday party at the Center and learn to make silly putty, also known as phlubber. If you are not that scientific, you can learn how to

make ice cream and why the process produces a smooth textured substance instead of an ice cube. You girly girls can have a Spa party and learn how to make lip balm. Boys are allowed at the Spa parties too, but rarely show up. All this and more awaits you in the wonderful world of science at the Center in Riverhead. You can learn about birds, the environment and how a lot of things work and get merit badges if you are into Scouting. That’s right, Cubs and Brownies, the Center has a long list of programs designed to help you get those colorful badges that look so impressive on your sash. “Science is all around us all the time,” Michele Pelletier, the Executive Director of the Center said. The Center, in a vintage building at 11 West Main Street for the last 10 years, is in the process of relocating. The building is in contract to be sold

The concept for the Center was a manifestation of Gibbs’ belief in hands-on, tactile education where students learn by doing. to developers planning to raise the structure and build a luxury apartment house complex on the river front property. “We are moving to a larger facility,” Pellieter said. The new center will be larger, making it possible to accommodate school groups and visitors at the same time. The move to a larger building reflects the growth and popularity of the Science Center, which began in a small classroom in Shoreham/Wading River presided over by the Center’s founder and first Executive Director Delia Gibbs, who was affiliated with the Shoreham Wading River Museum for years.

18th ANNUAL

®

CREATING A LEGACY FOR WOMEN’S HEALTH

5K (3.1 mile) Race/Walk

sanctioned by USA Track & Field

Sunday, August 18, 2013 at 9:00am, rain or shine Start and Finish at Southampton Hospital; register 7:30am to 8:30am $30 per person preregistered; $40 per person day of race Register Today Call 631-907-1952 to request team kits and race applications

www.ellensrun.org Timed by Granite State Race Services with the Chrono track disposable race chips Over-the-top Runners’ Raffle with loads of great prizes Sponsors as of July 17:

Ellen’s Run is a registered trademark of The Ellen P. Hermanson Foundation

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Gibbs retired last year after more than a decade at the helm. The concept for the Center was a manifestation of Gibbs’ belief in hands on, tactile education where students learn by doing. Gibbs took a broad view of science education. Her vision went beyond a simple chemistry experiment or a day of bird watching. Gibbs wanted to train students to “lead locally” and “compete globally with programs designed to encourage students to think outside the box and to question the world around them.“Science is everywhere,” Pelletier said. “It is part of everyday life. We are talking on the phone right now,” she said, “and that is technology and science.” Pelletier, a former schoolteacher and farm manager is a graduate of Greenport High School and Cornell University. She decided to return to the East End after years of living and working Upstate. “I miss the water and the nautical environment,” Pelletier said. When Gibbs stepped down and the Directorship was opening up, Pelletier, who had been teaching part time in Mattituck/Cutchogue school district submitted her resume. The Center offers internships to middle school, high school and college students interested in getting involved. Volunteers are welcomed, too. “Science is interesting and it is fun,” Pellieter said. “It is not about memorizing the Periodic Table of Elements. Einstein said never commit anything to memory that is readily available.” There are a lot of us who wish our high school chemistry teachers thought that way. lisciencecenter.org


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ARTS & ENTERTAINmENT

August 2, 2013 Page 93

Stan Goldberg Past, Present, Future By Lee meyer

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hen I spoke with iconic comic book artist and Hamptons resident Stan Goldberg, he had just come back from the Southampton Cultural Center, where he had been practicing his modeldrawing skills. At first, I was surprised—why would a legendary artist like Goldberg need practice? After all, the 81-year-old Goldberg has been in the business since he was 17 and working at Marvel Comics under the equally iconic writer Stan Lee. But Goldberg has a different philosophy; although he hasn’t worked for Archie Comics in several years, he has worked consistently and believes that it’s always good to practice. Goldberg hasn’t slowed down yet, and his life after Archie is brimming with activity. “I started with Marvel when I was 17,” Goldberg marvels. “I joke with Stan [Lee] that I was 17 and he was 27 back then, and we laugh.” Lee, who is credited with co-creating characters like Spider-Man, the Fantastic Four, the X-Men, the Incredible Hulk and more, worked with Goldberg for many years and helped him get his start in the comic book world. “Stan tried different ways [of creating comics]; he used the ‘Marvel Method’ with me, which had no dialogue,” Goldberg explains. The Marvel Method, which is still used today by several creators, involves the artist working from a detailed outline developed by the writer, with the writer writing in the dialogue afterward. Goldberg was responsible for a ton of heavy lifting in his early years at Marvel. “I did the coloring for Fantastic Four for the first six years,” he says, noting that it was time-consuming but immensely rewarding to bring that world to life. Fun fact: Goldberg did a Marvel/Archie crossover called Archie Meets the Punisher! Goldberg worked on Archie for 40 years, drawing the adventures and love triangle of Archie, Betty and Veronica. His final project for Archie turned out to be a six-issue special series, Archie Marries...in which Archie marries Betty in one story and Veronica in another. “Those six issues became my swan song at Archie,” Goldberg sighs. The circumstances surrounding Goldberg’s exit from the company are a bit murky; Goldberg cites behind-the-scenes changes as what ultimately ended his time there, and he admits to being upset that 40 years of work ended in such an unceremonious way, but doesn’t let it get him too down. “Look, Jerry Siegel and Joe Schuster created Superman in 1938, got 130 bucks and that was it. The comic book industry is hit and run.” Goldberg prefers to keep hitting.

on The Three Stooges and illustrating several hardcover Nancy Drew books. When asked about the workshop he attended at Southampton Cultural Center, Goldberg explained that it’s not just about drawing the model. “It’s the blanket, the chair she’s sitting on...I like to make little stories as I draw. You see, people don’t just stand there with nothing going on. I drew the people who were behind the model on the other end of the room.” Goldberg believes that worldbuilding and continuity in art is very important and something that many aspiring comic book artists forget. The Hamptons have many living legends, but it’s great to meet one as down-to-earth as Stan Goldberg.

“I’ve achieved my goals,” he reflects toward the end of the conversation, “and I can’t imagine slowing down.”

“You see, people don’t just stand there with nothing going on. I draw the people who were behind the model.” In fact, Goldberg’s been working consistently. In addition to one-shot projects like The Simpsons Comics #183 (which casts the characters in a parody of Archie) and cover art for Marvel, Goldberg has been working on projects that are very important to him. One such project is Rise Above, a comic book about bullying that’s being used to teach kids in schools. “I always make sure something like that has a lot of entertainment, but has a good, important message,” he says, noting that he considers books like these books the most important he’s ever worked on. Goldberg’s worked on educational books throughout his career. “I did books that the FBI gave out that dealt with drugs, alcohol and another subject that should be talked about more, which is what happens when there’s a sudden death in a young boy or girl’s family,” he explains, noting that he’s also had a lot of support from organizations like the Elks Club and Kiwanis. Goldberg is also working on comics based

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Quilting With Friends

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TU ES DA Y!

e are six ladies and one gentleman who quilt on the North Fork. We gather on Wednesday mornings to create the most beautiful quilted projects this side of the Peconic. Our beloved instructor, Maryann, and her husband Tom, host our quilting classes in their Southold Victorian home. They also host weekend quilting retreats, moonlight quilting, quilting bingo, holiday parties, and potluck dinners. The back of the house has the most interesting screened-in, wrap-around porch that conforms to the contours of the house. It’s here, in early summer, that we sit on floral-cushioned wicker chairs munching on strawberry-spinach-leaf salad, assorted finger sandwiches, and yogurt parfait. From the porch can be seen a beautiful, flower-filled garden, which

is amazing considering the deer population in Southold. In addition to socializing, we do actually spend most of our time sewing. To get to the sewing room, one must pass through the living room with its high, embossed tin ceiling. The room is furnished with lovely, carefully chosen Victorian-era antiques. There’s a huge bow window with cushioned seating. The white lace curtains are a beautiful rose pattern. It is here that Maryann and Tom display their Victoriandecorated Christmas tree each year. The sewing room is a huge, well-lit room lined with shelves containing cheerfully colored fabrics in hundreds of patterns. Several wall hangings and quilts adorn the walls. In addition to traditional patterns like Log Cabin, Drunkard’s Path, and Dresden Plate, we have

Denise Bornschein

By inGa carLson

Quilt by charles Bornschein

quilted many of Maryann’s original designs. Our projects include table runners, wall hangings for every season and holiday, and quilts from crib size to king size. Our finished products may be used to adorn our own homes, given as gifts, or for charity. We talk and laugh (and even cry on occasion), so much so that Maryann rings a little bell when she needs to get our attention. Cherished friendships have been forged over the years, and we have supported each other through thick and thin. After class last week, I received a frantic phone call from Carolyn. Her husband had left an oscillating lawn sprinkler running while he went out. In his absence, the water pressure increased significantly until the sprinkler reached the upstairs open window of her sewing room. She had mopped up the floor and the tables, but feared that her expensive sewing machine was ruined! We both wailed in dismay. My husband Charlie interrupted, telling her to make sure the plug was out, then to tip the machine

ST AR TS

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Denise Bornschein

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Conrad John Schuck

Jackie Hoffman

August 6-9 previews sponsored by The Harold & Mimi Steinberg Charitable Trust The Shubert Foundation

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so that the water would run out down by the feed dog end. She complied and we could hear the sound of water dripping into a wastebasket. He told her to dry the machine using paper towels, Q-tips (for small spaces), and a hair dryer on low heat. By unscrewing and removing the side panel, she could access the inside of the machine. He assured her that this procedure would work; it had worked on our electric frying pan that had accidentally been submerged. The important thing was to not use it until it was dry—about a week to make sure. They both agreed it should be checked out at the sewing machine repair shop to be certain everything was all right. He told her that it would work because the machines are made of plastic and they are fairly indestructible. A week later, Carolyn called and said, “I can’t believe it! I plugged in the sewing machine and it works fine! It even does all those fancy, intricate stitches! I’m so happy!.” I was amazed and said, “In other words, if your machine had gone down with the Titanic, and was retrieved, it would still work.” We all chuckled. “Well, thank God,” said Carolyn, “and thank you. See you in quilting class. Bye now.” “Bye,” I said.


ARTS & ENTERTAINmENT

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August 2, 2013 Page 95

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Tastes A Mano Osteria A Taste of the North Fork Arthur on Smith Bistro 72 BLT Prime Bonnie Jean’s Claudio’s Comtesse Thérèse Bistro Cuvée at The Greenporter Hotel First & South Foody’s Fresh Gourmet Sorbet by the Sorbabes Grana Trattoria Antica Jedediah Hawkins Inn Kitchen A Bistro La Maison Blanche

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Judy CarmiChael Trio I Love Being Here with You an evening of Swinging music, Sultry Vocals and Sassy humor Grammy Nominated pianist/vocalist Judy Carmichael celebrates her newly released CD “I Love Being Here With You” at the historic Suffolk Theater, performing songs from the CD by Peggy Lee, Cole Porter, Irving Berlin and other greats from the American Songbook.

august 2nd @8:00 pm Suffolk TheaTer 118 E. Main Street Riverhead

Tickets: (631) 727-4343 Additional info on concert and new CD: www.judycarmichael.com 28264


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ARTS & ENTERTAINmENT

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Movie Review: The Wolverine By Lee meyer

I

n the startling opening moments of James Mangold’s The Wolverine, Logan (Real life East Ender Hugh Jackman) rescues Yashida, a young Japanese soldier who was too afraid to commit harakiri with the rest of his battalion in World War II, as a mushroom cloud envelops Nagasaki in the distance. Logan, of course, can’t die due to a genetic mutation that allows him to sprout claws and gives him a super healing factor. This could make for pretty boring viewing—what fun is it if your hero is never actually in danger? Luckily, the film finds a way to imperil our hero when he goes to Japan to visit Yashida (Haruhiko Yamanouchi), now a terminally ill old man, who wants to repay Logan with a gift: mortality. Yashida knows that Logan is not a happy man, and if Logan gives over his healing factor via advanced technology, Yashida will be cured. Logan rejects the “gift,” and Yashida dies later that night. At the funeral, Logan is shot saving Yashida’s beautiful granddaughter Mariko (Tao Okamoto) from a Yakuza attack and realizes that he’s not healing like he should. Something is rotten in the state of Tokyo... As convoluted as the plot sounds, the film unfolds like a conventional Japanese crime drama that’s been interrupted by an American superhero. Based on a comic book story by Chris Claremont, the film is much more mature than most summer film fare. Refreshingly, answers to the film’s central mystery are doled out slowly and sparingly— until the flashy climax that reminds viewers they are watching a summer superhero blockbuster. While the final 20 minutes leave the moody tone behind, Mangold doesn’t forget the groundwork he’s laid for the last hour-and-a-half and resolves the story in

satisfying fashion. Uncompromisingly violent for a film rated PG-13, Mangold pulls no punches when it comes to the various deaths and murders in the film, which range from “honorable suicide” and guns to a gruesome sequence late in the film that gives new meaning to the term “open heart surgery.” Jackman, in his sixth performance as Wolverine—he starred in the

first three X-Men films, the abysmal X-Men Origins: Wolverine and made a cameo in X-Men: First Class— completely owns the role in the same way that Sean Connery owned James Bond. He has chemistry with everyone he shares scenes with, particularly Rila Fukushima as Yukio, a deadly assassin for the Yashida family-cum-Wolverine sidekick who also happens to be the sweet, funny best friend of Mariko. Okamoto

makes a strong impression as Mariko, adding layers to what could easily have been a “damsel in distress” role and her (easily forecast) romance with Logan is believable and sexy. Svetlana Khodchenkova doesn’t fare so well as the villainous Viper; whether it’s due to her campy performance or her goofy dialogue, the character just doesn’t fit with the rest of the cast. Her ridiculous expository lines during the film’s climax don’t do her any favors. But it’s no surprise that Khodchenkova’s blonde, sultry, green spandexclad character doesn’t resonate, especially when the rest of the movie is remarkably subtle. Jackman’s character is (unwittingly) schooled in honor and pride throughout the film, as Logan struggles to understand the reasoning behind the Japanese characters’ motivation and why it’s so important to his World War II comrade to not succumb to cancer. The themes of mortality, honor and finding meaning are potent and often poignant; Jackman and Mangold have imbued Wolverine with more heart and soul than most characters in this genre (the character is infinitely more relatable than the latest incarnation of Superman featured in this summer’s Man of Steel). But the movie’s not all meaningful insights and existential musings—there are several stunningly realized action sequences, like the tightly choreographed fight that breaks out in the funeral early in the movie; a brawl atop the Bullet Train between Logan and an unusually agile Yakuza ninja; and the aforementioned “open heart surgery” scene in which Logan operates on himself while Yukio defends him in a samurai duel with one of the central villains. It’s not hard to recommend The Wolverine, with its excellent performances, compelling characters, a strong story and solid direction. And stay after the credits for one final surprise twist.

Movies... Hot Flicks tHis Week cockneys vs. Zombies A British take on the semi-comedy zombie film, the idea being that working class Londoners, or “cockneys,” are confronted with zombies. The stereotypical cockney is a sort of no-nonsense, tell-it-like-it-is, pugnacious guy (or woman, for that matter) who is proud of being working class and suspicious of “toffs.” Cockneys are also known for being practically unintelligible to Americans because of their thick accents and their elaborate slang—the rhyming slang that replaces certain words or phrases with rhymes. Cockneys vs. Zombies, like Shaun of the Dead and Zombieland before it, has a good time poking fun at the clichés of zombie movies and reveling in the violence of a group of unlikely heroes. The canyons The Canyons is a movie that’s clearly designed to stir controversy. Lindsay Lohan, whose brushes with prison and stints in rehab have made her life tabloid fodder for years, starring in an unrated film (which is tantamount to an NC-17 rating) that has all the signs of being soft-core porn, at least on some level. On another level, the film was directed by a serious, reputable director (Paul Schrader) and written by a celebrated novelist (Bret Easton Ellis), which places it in rare company. There have been very few essentially

X-rated films (NC-17 is a euphemism for X) with A-list casts and production teams: Last Tango, Henry & June, Midnight Cowboy. Now that porn is pretty much ubiquitous, perhaps we’re due for a film that tries to elevate the genre with story and production values. (Then again, who watches porn for that?) At any rate, Lindsay Lohan presumably hopes to further her image as a drugged-out slut, and this might help, if anyone is paying attention. 2 Guns Mark Wahlberg and Denzel Washington play Marcus Stigman and Bobby Trench in this anti-buddy film about two agents (from different enforcement agencies) who wind up working together. The main joke in 2 Guns revolves around Stigman and Trench’s dislike and disregard for each other—they are constantly squabbling and making life hard for each other. You know what’s going to happen, don’t you?

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The sign (+) when following the name of a theater indicates that a show has an infrared assistive listening device. Please confirm with the theater before arriving to make sure they are available.


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ARTS & ENTERTAINmENT

August 2, 2013 Page 97

Elephant Awareness at Guild Hall By roBerT oTTone

E

veryone is driven by a cause; some selfish needs and wants, others, more altruistic. Davina Dobie falls into the second grouping. One of the most passionate and fascinating people I’ve ever had the chance to speak with during my relatively short writing career, Dobie puts the plight of the elephant before any other and openly discusses the absurdity of the ivory trade. I always knew about the ivory trade and its effect on Asian and African elephants. But I never understood how anyone could actually be so monstrous as to genuinely want items made out of ivory. It seems ridiculous, but apparently, it’s still a major issue. Dobie is hoping to change that by hosting a night at Guild Hall, through her organization The Silent Trumpet. By presenting the National Geographic documentary Battle For the Elephants, Dobie hopes to raise awareness for the horrors happening every day to the elephant by African and Asian poachers. “It’s important for people to be aware of what’s happening. Once you dive into it, there’s so much information, it’s shocking,” Dobie said. “It’s tragic, and honestly, I cry every time I read about it. It’s so brutal.”

going on,” Dobie said. “I was pleasantly surprised by the positive reaction. I’m very happy, but it needs to get out further. I believe with this event, The Battle For the Elephants, it’ll make a ripple, if not a tidal wave, which would be nice. It remains to be seen, but I’m doing everything in my life to make it happen. Africa in its unity needs to make the elephant and rhinoceros (which is also under great threat of extinction for its horn) International Treasures. The same model for preserving the panda in China needs to be instituted for the elephant in Africa.” I was moved listening to Dobie talk about the plight of the elephant. I feel it’s one of the more worthy causes out there and while it’s not necessarily in the news all the time, it’s certainly something that should be at the forefront of everyone’s mind. This is a horrifically brutal trade these days, driven by greed and the desire to illustrate one’s status. Those

Starting in 1900, there were 10 million wild elephants roaming the beautiful plains of Africa. By 2012, there were less than half a million. on the East End really don’t need to display their status, so, why not set a trend? Help stop one of the ugliest animal-related massacres in the world by not chasing after ivory. On August 10, go to Guild Hall and watch a presentation of Battle For the Elephants for a good cause. Learn more by visiting Guild Hall online. “We’ve got very interesting people coming to talk, attached to various foundations, so it should be an enlightening evening,” Dobie said.

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One of the more shocking things I learned while chatting about the elephants was how the numbers dwindled so much over the span of a hundred or so years. Starting in 1900, there were around 10 million wild elephants roaming and living the beautiful plains of Africa. By 2012, there were less than half a million. These are genocide numbers. “The purpose of the screening of Battle for the Elephants is awareness and knowledge. By watching this film, the audience will come to understand and notice the massive war we face in this plight to save the elephant; in that Asia has little concept of what horrors truly lie behind what they conceive as a mere luxury or status symbol,” Dobie said. “Atrocious, quite honestly!” Dobie, an artist, is from Kenya and draws upon what she loves through her artistic endeavors. When she came to New York, the original idea was to get her artwork out to the public and showcase her abilities. “I got involved after a couple of meetings where we set up groups to try and make a few changes,” Dobie said. “The slaughter is just horrific. When I came here [to New York], I thought, ‘What could I do?’ and wanted to bring awareness to this part of the world to Long Island. I was surprised to see how little people knew about what was going on.” “East Enders are very receptive to the atrocities

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ART EVENTS For more events happening this week, check out: North Fork Calendar pg. 85, Kids Calendar pg. 108, Calendar pg. 103

OPenings and events PAINTING CLASSES AT MADOO 9 a.m.–noon. Saturdays through 8/17. Water Mill-based artist Eric Dever will teach a class on painting fundamentals. $300/$350. The Madoo Conservancy, 618 Sagg Main Street, Sagaponack. 631-537-8200 info@madoo.org MASTER ARTIST SERIES AT CANIO’S 8/1. 4 p.m. Studio visit with James McMullan, and on 9/5 with Sheila Isham. $75 for the package and $30 for a single visit. Each includes a studio tour, opportunity to meet the artist, and a closing reception with light refreshments. 631-725-4926 caniosbooks.com LARRY WOLHANDLER AT LAWRENCE FINE ART 8/1. “Larry Wolhandler: Squared.” 37 Newtown Lane, East Hampton. 631-604-5525 lawrence-fine-arts.com “SUMMERTIME” AT SOUTHAMPTON CULTURAL CENTER 8/1, 5–7 p.m. Reception for group show with artists Priscilla Bowden, Louise Eastman, Cornelia Foss, R.J.T. Haynes, Paton Miller, Louise Peabody, Anne Seelbach and Lewis Zacks. 7/29 through 8/27. 25 Pond St., Southampton. scc-arts.org DREW DOGGETT EXHIBITION 8/1–2, 6–8:30 p.m. opening receptions. Drew Doggett Photography presents “Discovering the Horses of Sable Island.” On view through 9/30. Sylvester & Co. at Home, 154 Main Street, Amagansett. Asia@drewdoggett.com CAROL GOLD AT MITTITUCK-LAUREL LIBRARY 8/1–8/31. “Island Dreams” is an exhibit of Southern and Norther seascapes, landscapes and floral oils and giclees. On view daily except Sundays. Opening reception 8/16, 2–5 p.m. Mattituck-Laurel Library Art Gallery, 13900 Main Road, Mattituck. 631-298-1096 LAUREN LYONS AT QUOGUE LIBRARY ART GALLERY 8/1–9/2. Self-taught photographer Lauren Lyons’ “Memory Motel: An iPhone Photo Gallery” is on view. All photos have been shot using Instagram with no color of light enhancement from Photoshop. 90 Main Street, Quogue. 631-653-4224 quoguelibrary.org SALT AIR SUMMER EXHIBITION AT WHALING MUSEUM 8/2, 6 p.m. opening reception. “Almost Beachfront,” curated by D.A. Pennebaker, Chris Hegedus and Scott Sandell. Sag Harbor Whaling Museum, 200 Main Street, Sag Harbor. 631-625-0700 sagharborwhalingmuseum.org AI WEIWEI AT THE LONGHOUSE RESERVE 8/2. Internationally acclaimed Chinese contemporary artist and political dissident Ai Weiwei will open his 12-piece art installation, “Circle of Animals/Zodiac Heads: Gold.” LongHouse Reserve, 133 Hands Creek Road, East Hampton. 631-604-5330 longhouse.org 67th ANNUAL CLOTHESLINE ART SALE 8/3, 9 a.m.–4 p.m. Guild Hall proudly hosts this community event that showcases original works by nearly 400 East End artists. Works range in price from $50–$2,000, with all proceeds split 50/50 between the artist and Guild Hall’s arts programming. Artist entry fee for up to 5 works, $10. 158 Main Street, East Hampton. To request a registration packet, info@guildhall.org

arts & entertainment

NAN GOLDIN AT QF GALLERY 8/3, 6–8 p.m. Opening reception. Curated by Carrie Mackin. On view through 8/18. 98 Newtown Lane, East Hampton. 347-324-6619 qfgallery.com THE SPRINGS ART BIKE TOUR 8/4, 9:30–11:30 a.m. (rain date 8/5). Start at Amagansett Beach & Bicycle, corner of Montauk and Cross Highway, for a guided bike tour of historic art sites in the Springs hamlet of East Hampton. At each stop, hear insightful commentary on the history of artists living in the area. Final stop for lunch at Brent’s General Store. $39 per person, does not include lunch or bicycle. 631-283-2118 parrishart.org GREGORY LLEWELLYN AT 4 NORTH MAIN GALLERY 8/7. Curated by Jason Grodski. On view through 8/13. 4 North Main Gallery, 1 North Main Street, Southampton. 631-835-9839 info@4northmaingallery.com EAST END ARTS H2O 8/9. After a spring open call for artists, entries selected by jurors Peter Marcelle and Bruce Helander will be included in the show at East End Arts Gallery 8/9–9/27. 133 East Main Street, Riverhead. For details, visit eastendarts.org or contact Gallery Director Jane Kirkwood at 631-727-0900 GUILD HALL SUMMER GALA 8/9, 5–11 p.m. Celebrating Chuck Close. An evening of music, dancing, dining and a live art auction held at the Bridgehampton estate of Louise and Leonard Riggio. Exclusive preview of “Chuck Close: Recent Works” from 5–7 p.m., at the museum, cocktails and dinner to follow at the Riggio home. Tickets begin at $500. 158 Main Street, East Hampton. 631-324-0806 ext. 13 or 14 ckaller@guildhall.org AMAGANSETT ART: ACROSS THE YEARS 8/9, 2–6 p.m. Second Annual exhibition and sale of works by more than 40 artists to benefit the Amagansett Historical Association. Through September 15. Fri.–Sun, 2–6 p.m., through Labor Day; Sat. & Sun. only after. Jackson Carriage House, Main Street and Windmill Lane, Amagansett. MICHELLE STUART AT THE PARRISH 8/9, 6 p.m. Spend an hour with artist Michelle Stuart, who will take participants on a guided tour of her exhibition, “Michelle Stuart: Drawn from Nature,” followed by a facilitated conversation in the Lichtenstein Theatre. $10, free for members, children and students. Advance reservations recommended. Parrish Art Museum, 279 Montauk Highway, Water Mill. 631-283-2118 parrishart.org FABULOUS FISH SCULPTURES AT ROGERS MANSION 8/10, 4–6 p.m. opening. John Rist, Jr. will display his colorful multi-media fish sculptures. On view through 11/2, 11 a.m.–4 p.m. $4 adults, free for members and children. Rogers Mansion, 17 Meetinghouse Lane, Southampton. 631-329-9115 pianofest.com CHUCK CLOSE AND ROBERT STORR AT GUILD HALL 8/10, 3–4 p.m. Chuck Close in conversation with Robert Storr. Free admission. 158 Main Street, East Hampton. 631-324-0806 guildhall.org CHUCK CLOSE: RECENT WORKS AT GUILD HALL 8/10, 4–6 p.m. Opening reception of recent paintings, prints and tapestries by Chuck Close. Free admission. On view through 10/14. 158 Main Street, East Hampton. 631-324-0806 guildhall.org ART AT SOUTHAMPTON CENTER 8/10, 6–8 p.m. Opening reception with featured artists Eric Corriel, Wade Kavanaugh & Stephen B. Nguyen, Aurora Robson and Krista Dragomer. Following the reception, on the outdoor grounds there will be images from photographers reflecting adventures across the seas. 25 Jobs Lane, Southampton. Southamptoncenter.org

AMAGANSETT AUDIOVISION FESTIVAL AT NEOTERIC 8/3, 4 p.m.–12 a.m. and 8/4, 4 p.m.–9 p.m. Neoteric Fine Art is presenting the 2nd annual multimedia festival featuring live music, performance and visual art. Acoustic showcase on Sunday, followed by screenings from local film makers. $10 at door, $15 for weekend pass, and $10 for silent disco. 208 Main St., Amagansett. 631-838-7518 neotericfineart.com

ANDY WARHOL FILM AT GUILD HALL 8/14, 8 p.m. In Lana Jokel’s film, Warhol discusses life, society, money and art. The film includes lively exchanged with Philip Johnson, Barbara Rose and othersm as well as insights from friends and art world figures. Followed by Q&A with director. Free admission. Guild Hall Center for Visual & Performing Arts, 158 Main Street, East Hampton. 631-324-0806 GuildHall.org

TARA GREER AT GLENN HOROWITZ BOOKSELLER 8/3, 6–8 p.m. Opening reception for “Carrying Silence,” with accompanying limited edition publication. 87 Newtown Lane, East Hampton. 631-324-5511 glennhorowitz.com

ARTISTS AND WRITERS CELEBRITY SOFTBALL GAME 8/17, 2 p.m., batting practice at noon. Support East End Hospice, East Hampton Day Care Learning Center, Phoenix Houses of Long Island, and The Retreat in the

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OPiCK OF tHe WeeK August 3-4

Amagansett AudioVision Festival at Neoteric (See below) 65th annual celebrity softball game in East Hampton. Herrick Park, Newtown Lane, East Hampton. 917-741-6257 artistswritersgame.com HUANG YONG PING/CHEN ZHEN FILM AT GUILD HALL 8/21, 8 p.m. Two Chinese avant-garde artists come to New York to create and oversee their installation works at the New Museum of Contemporary Art in 1993. The film shows the story behind their journey to the West and the impact they have had on the contemporary art world. Free admission. Guild Hall Center for Visual & Performing Arts, 158 Main Street, East Hampton. 631-324-0806 GuildHall.org STEVE JOESTER AT LAWRENCE FINE ART 8/22. Artist photographer Steve Joester. 37 Newtown Lane, East Hampton. 631-604-5525 lawrence-fine-arts.com ALEX FERRONE AT ASHAWAGH HALL 8/22. Alex Ferrone is exhibiting works from his series “Aerial Observations,” a fine art photographic interpretive study of water and land areas of Long Island. On view through 8/25. Ashawagh Hall, 780 Springs Fireplace Road, East Hampton. 631-324-5671 ashawagh-hall.org E. L. BROWN AT ILLE ARTS 8/24, 6–8 p.m. Enjoy the recent work of E. L. Brown. On view through 9/16. 216a Main Street, Amagansett. 631-905-9894 illearts.com SALT AIR SUMMER EXHIBITION AT WHALING MUSEUM 8/24, 6:30 p.m. opening reception. The Parrish Road Show hits Sag Harbor with Almond Zigmund’s “Interruptions Repeated.” Sag Harbor Whaling Museum, 200 Main Street, Sag Harbor. 631-625-0700 sagharborwhalingmuseum.org TETE A TETE AT QF GALLERY 8/24, Opening reception. Curated by Mickalene Thomas. On view through 9/15. 98 Newtown Lane, East Hampton. 347-324-6619 qfgallery.com DON CHRISTENSEN AT ILLE ARTS 8/25, 4–6 p.m. On view through 9/16. Enjoy Don Christensen’s recent work. 216a Main Street, Amagansett. 631-905-9894 illearts.com CHERYL MACHAT DORSKIND AT REMSENBURG ACADEMY 8/26, 5–7 p.m. “Photopaintings,” artist reception. On view through 8/11. 130 South Rd., Remsenburg. Remsenburgassociation.com

OngOing CHRISTOPHER ENGEL “OPEN DOOR” AT KRAMORIS Solo exhibition on view through 8/8. Romany Kramoris Gallery, 41 Main Street, Sag Harbor. 631-725-2499 kramorisgallery.com AAKASH NIHALANI: ARRANGED AT TRIPOLI GALLERY New work by “tape” installation/street artist Aakash Nihalani. On view through 8/11. 30a Jobs Lane, Southampton. 631-377-3715 tripoligallery.com EAST END PHOTOGRAPHERS SUMMER EXHIBITION East End Photographers 25th Anniversary summer show. Through 8/11. At the Water Mill Museum, 41 Old Mill Road, Water Mill. 631-726-4625 watermillmuseum.org JAZZ AGE EAST HAMPTON The exhibition “Clothes, Clubs, and Contraband,” opens. On view through 10/13. Free admission, donations welcome. Saturdays, 10 a.m.–5 p.m. & Sundays, Noon–5 p.m. Clinton Academy Museum, 151 Main Street, East Hampton. 631-267-3182 cwhitmoregardens.com

Send gallery listings to kelly@danspapers.com before noon on Friday. Check out www.DansPapers.com for more listings and events. Check out DansPapers.com for more listings and events.


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DAN’S PAPERS

SHOP ‘TIL YOU DROP

August 2, 2013 Page 99 GOODIES

Where to find the bargains this weekend.

For you, family and friends

Natural Beauty & Newsworthy New Shops! By STePHANIe De TrOy

Summer is all about letting go of that polished look we covet during the cooler months. From tousled hair to flip flops, the look is really head-to-toe laid back and relaxed. I’ve even given up on pedicures— one trip to the beach and it’s ruined—and have succumbed to the occasional DYI paint job, leaving chips for a week or two. The trick, however, is keeping the balance between au naturel and groomed. It may be summer, but you never know who you’ll run into in the Hamptons! With my new Silk ‘n Swirl Facial Cleansing Power Brush, which pretty much looks like one of those Clairsonic things you’ve seen at Sephora, my skin feels smoother than ever. I’ve never enjoyed anything more, well, in the realm of cleansing, than the feeling of those soft bristles. Best part of all is that clean skin eliminates the need for excessive makeup and allows for a very natural, summery look. Find yours at silkn.com! Next you’ll have to pamper and protect your newly exfoliated skin with a nice moisturizer. I’m currently enjoying Peter Lamas Nourishing Buriti Oil Moisturizer. The lightweight formula is 100% vegan, paraben-free and contains pro-vitamins A and

studio offers classes in ballet, pointe, E, aloe leaf extract, avocado oil and modern, musical theatre, hip hop, tap, macademia seed oil that replenish acrobatics and adult classes in ballet moisture—and buriti oil (which comes barre workout. Now registering for fall from the fruit of the moriche palm tree classes. Call 631-591-1539. and contains high levels of amazing Hamptons Wardrobe Pop Up Sale! stuff). PeterLamas.com. The FabInjection experience Complete the look with a Dr. includes by appointment sales, Hauschka Lipstick Novum—a new exclusive trunk shows, personal limited edition of all-natural lip-tone styling and more. Located on the enhancing lipsticks. With my fair skin, I second floor of 2 Newtown Lane, East alternate between Miraculous Rose for Hampton. Call 631-604-5059 or visit night and Laid-Back Apricot for day. August 8, 5–8 p.m. fabinjection.com. Dr. Hauschka makes incredible holistic Thirty 3 South: This eclectic store is a fusion of skin-care products too, which I’ve seen available at my favorite Hamptons health-food store, Second modern home accents and antique one of a kind Nature Markets, at 70 Main Street, Southampton, collectibles. Stop in at Thirty 3 South, 87 Jobs Lane, 631-283-8117, and in East Hampton at 41 Newtown Southampton or give them a ring at 631-377-1928. Christopher Fischer Baby debuts pop-up store Lane, 631-324-5257. See more at drhauscka.com! Our editorial staff is all “aswim” with The Swims at Christopher Fischer Southampton, now through Loafer from Swims Norway. Available in a wide Labor Day. Sneek peak the Fall 2013 collection, variety of bright colors, they are comfy rubber and which features crew neck sweaters with owls, foxes, nylon loafers with ventilation gills on the sides that hedgehogs and more. 52 Jobs Lane, Southampton. let the summer air flow. Handy for use on a boat, 631-204-9090 christopherfischer.com. Mark your calendar for Shop At Sunset to benefit The at the ocean or in the city, and they’re washable! Available at Sunbarth on 53 Jobs Lane, Southampton. Retreat on August 8, 5–8 p.m. The event features truck shows, gifts with purchases, snacks, music and more! Swims.com Participating stores in East Hampton, Bridgehampton New Kids: This is truly music to my ears! Peconic Ballet and Sag Harbor will donate a portion of proceeds to Theatre opened a professional dance school located The Retreat. To learn more about the Retreat and at 71 East Main Street in Riverhead. Providing dance the amazing things they are doing to help vicitms of education for all ages, the state of the art sprung-floor domestic violence, visit theretreatinc.org.

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LIfESTYLE

Page 100 August 2, 2013

danspapers.com

Shop (For a Cause) At Sunset

G

ail Rothwell is bringing her version of Fashion’s Night Out to the Hamptons on August 8 with Shop at Sunset. The third annual charitable shopping initiative will take place in East Hampton, Sag Harbor, and Bridgehampton as retailers join forces to raise funds for the Retreat, the only nonprofit domestic violence agency serving the East End of Long Island. Taking place from 5-8 p.m., Shop at Sunset will include trunk shows, music, special offers and refreshments. Rothwell tells us more about this event and her famed namesake East End boutique. It’s been almost a decade since you left your position as president of Nine West. Do you ever look back with any regrets? I enjoyed my time at Nine West. I was there in the beginning, about 10 years, when the founders,

Vince Camuto and Jerome Fisher, were still very much involved; the company ran with a very entrepreneurial spirit. I’ve looked forward, but when I do reflect, I truly enjoyed those years! What made you decide to move to the Hamptons permanently? My move out east was a decision based on wanting a different quality of life. I’d traveled my whole career to work out of the city, as well as traveling on a plane throughout every month. At one point did you first think about opening your boutique, and why east Hampton? I was living here 6 months when I realized I wanted to do something so I decided that I would open the shop to create a place that reflected my own aesthetic. Who is your target demographic? My target demographic is a woman with her own

Courtesy Gail Rothwell

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Gail rothwell

The Hamptons “Go-To” Builder

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sense of style. She enjoys adding new pieces by season, which updates and enhances her wardrobe. How do you go about finding the brands you stock in your boutique? I shop the market in both New York and Europe and I look at Style.com. What do you think are Hampton essentials that every woman should own for Fall? Some must haves are The Row leather pant with an ankle zip and their leather jacket, Celine short shearling reversible jacket, and Jason Wu sleeveless black dress with a red stripe down the center. What do you wear day to day? Every day I wear black slacks, a new seasonal tops, a blazer, and my everyday jewelry is Antonia Miletto hand carved ebony and 18k white gold, Shawn Warren drop pear shaped black diamond earrings, and Janis Provisor semiprecious stone necklaces and earrings. How does your day-to-day life compare now to when you were at Nine West? It took a while to get used to not having the team that I was used to sharing business and life with! I am fortunate that Kate Horan from East Hampton joined me about four years ago so instead of 20 people it’s Kate and I! I laugh some days when it’s really busy...it gets the adrenaline moving. What are some of the biggest challenges when it comes to running a store in the Hamptons? It’s an everyday business from Memorial Day through Labor Day; then it is a Thursday through Monday business through December 15 after that strictly Saturday and Sunday, but the biggest challenge is the unpredictable weather! How did you come up with the idea for Annual Shop At Sunset? What better way to get a woman out shopping than for a cause! It’s a take-off of Fashions Night Out. This is the third year for East Hampton, the second for Sag Harbor and this year we have been able to get Bridgehampton involved as well. The shops stay open late and some donate a percentage of the evening’s net proceeds to The Retreat. We offer in-store raffles, light bites, and fun! This year, thanks to East Hampton’s Mayor Frank F. Rickenbach Jr., we have additional excitement—for the first time in Herrick Park in East Hampton at 8:30pm we are showing ET under the stars on a 30-foot screen all participants and donors will be advertised on the big screen! It’s a wonderful way to bring family together for a night on the lawn with snacks and beverage. Can you tell us about some of the retailers that will be participating this year and about the happenings we can expect? The best way to tell the businesses that are participating is to look for the orange and bright blue “Shop at Sunset” posters in the windows.


DAN’S PAPERS

danspapers.com GARDEN

August 2, 2013 Page 101 CALENDAR

What’s happening in our microclimate.

Events for families, kids and singles.

Plants Behaving Badly By jeANeLLe MyerS

It’s time to talk about some badly behaved plants again. They not only behave badly in your landscape or garden, but if they escape, can invade the area at large. I have seen them at several local garden centers which is appropriate: If attended to with ever-diligent care for the duration of their life (!), they can be useful. I have recently returned to a garden where I worked several years ago. It has had no care for only two years. I explained to the previous owner, when he told me that he wanted the wisteria on the roof, that it was a terrible idea, as the plant would try to “eat” the roof. He insisted so we installed pipes to keep it raised above the roof and made sure that only one tendril occupied each pipe. In the last two years with no care, those tendrils have grown to 3” in diameter, pulled the pipes from the roof and covered it creating too much moisture inside the building. Tendrils from the trunk had grown into the surrounding shrubs and lawn. We removed it and reduced the mother vine considerably to find that the roof must be replaced. Wisteria is a beautiful plant but do not plant it unless it can be maintained forever by a knowledgeable gardener. It’s easier to maintain in a pot and can be “topiaried” into a striking tree form.

Tick & Mosquito Control

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growing on a bannister. If I don’t keep it On this property, there are four clipped, it takes over the bannister and stands of running-type bamboo. They the adjoining boardwalk. Sprouts from are each surrounded with a barrier. The the ever-running roots appear 30’ away newest one, inside a plastic bamboo from the mother. barrier raised 3” above the soil surface, I don’t find trumpet vine a beautiful is the only one that did not escape. plant but if in a tree form, it is easier to The other ones in cement barriers maintain…with diligent attention. escaped into the lawn and the gardens I recently visited a property where through tiny cracks they made larger, the owner had planted ivy under every or by runners growing over the edge tree and shrub on the property in of the barrier. In the last two years, the a new planting to avoid seeing soil stands have become so dense that they under them. Very quickly the ivy will have become unattractive and have grow into the lawn, into the shrubs, also considerably blocked air flow to Wisteria madness potentially covering them, and to the gardens and trees. the tops of the trees if not regularly Another client has bamboo that’s not in a barrier and throws up culms into his entire pruned, maybe weekly. Ivy covering shrubs will keep yard. He must break them off regularly or the yard out sun and eventually kill them. It will climb trees will become a bamboo stand. Removing bamboo and can, when it has completely occupied the tree, kill it and/or cause it to fall, especially in wind. It involves large machinery and years of effort. Bamboo is a beautiful plant. It makes a good hedge, can cover your house creating moisture problems, birds love it and it sounds magical in the breeze. destroy the surface of the building and provide living But even in a barrier, it must be regularly monitored spaces for undesirable insects. There are several lovely and interesting kinds of for escapes and thinned yearly. There are clumping varieties. They are a very different form but are ivy. They should be used in a situation where they will be maintained consistently...maybe in a pot. pleasing in their ways. These plants are dangerous to your property, and There’s a trumpet vine growing on a tree that has climbed to the top in two years and will need to be your neighbor’s and they are difficult to remove. removed. We removed a trumpet vine several years Jeanelle Myers is a professional gardener, landscaper ago that had grown to the top of the chimney and covered the side of a house on another property. and consultant. For gardening discussion you can call I have a client who has one of sentimental value her at 631-434-5067.

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Page 102 August 2, 2013

NIGHTLIFE For more events happening this week, check out: North Fork Calendar pg. 85 Arts & Galleries pg. 98, Kids Calendar pg. 108

THuRSDAy, AuguST 1 TWILIGHT THURSDAYS AT WöLFFER ESTATE 5–8 p.m. Live music with Clinton Curtis, wines by the bottle, cheese and charcuterie plates for purchase. In the Tasting Room, Wölffer Estate, 139 Sagg Rd, Sagaponack. 631-537-5106 wolffer.com LIVE MUSIC AT HARBOR BISTRO 6–9 p.m. Michael Pour performs on acoustic 12-string guitar and vocals. Harbor Bistro, 313 Three Mile Harbor Rd., East Hampton. 631-324-7300 harborbistro.net THE JAM SESSION AT BAY BURGER 7–9 p.m. Thursdays. The Jam Session & The Thursday Night Live Band. Bay Burger, 1742 Sag Harbor Turnpike, Sag Harbor. No cover charge. 631-899-3915 thejamsession.org STEVE FREDERICKS AT MUSE IN THE HARBOR 7–10 p.m. Thursdays. Steve Fredericks will perform every Thursday, no cover. 16 Main Street, Sag Harbor. 631-899-4810 museintheharbor.com LIVE MUSIC AT HOTEL FISH AND LOUNGE 8 p.m., Live music every Thursday with Hondo. 87 North Road, Hampton Bays, 631-728-9511 OPEN MIC NIGHT AT NORTH SEA TAVERN 8 p.m., Thursdays. Bring your guitars, mandolins, ukeleles and bongos. Bring your fans, family and other band members. Late night dining, full bar and specials for this weekly event. Must sign up by 9:45 p.m. to be assured a slot. North Sea Tavern, 1271 North Sea Road, Southampton. 516-768-5974 LADIES NIGHT AT AGAVE’S TEQUILA AND RUM BAR 8:30 p.m. Thursdays. Ladies Night is all night, with DJ. 142 Mill Road, Westhampton Beach. 631-998-4200 agaveswhb.com NEO-POLITICAL COWGIRLS PRESENT EVE Through 8/4. The Neo-Political Cowgirls are bringing their edgy and provocative dance theatre immersion production EVE. As the audience moves freely through 13 rooms, a story unfolds through music, movement and art. Includes a nightly lounge hosted by The Cuddy American Gastropub. $35 online, $40 at the door. LTV Studios, 75 Industrial Road, Wainscott. Npcowgirls.org

FRIDAy, AuguST 2 HAPPY HOUR AT SOUTHAMPTON PUBLICK HOUSE 4 p.m.–midnight. Happy hour all night with DJ Dory at 10 p.m. 40 Bowden Square, Southampton. 631-283-2800 publick.com SUNSET FRIDAYS AT THE WöLFFER WINE STAND 5–8 p.m. Live music with The Dan Bailey Tribe, wines by the bottle or glass, and cheese and charcuterie plates for purchase. Wölffer Estate Wine Stand, 3312 Montauk Highway, Sagaponack. 631-537-5106 wolffer.com MUSIC ON THE PATIO 6–8 p.m. Come down to Duck Walk South Friday evenings to start your weekend with a glass of wine. Tasting bar closes at 7:30 p.m. 231 Montauk Highway. Music weather permitting. 631-726-7555 LIVE MUSIC AT HARBOR BISTRO 6–9 p.m. Michael Pour performs on acoustic 12 string guitar and vocals. Harbor Bistro, 313 Three Mile Harbor Rd., East Hampton. 631-324-7300 harborbistro.net OPEN JAM AT HOTEL FISH AND LOUNGE 7–11 p.m. Hondo’s open jam on Fridays. 87 North Road, Shinnecock Hills 631-728-9511 LIVE MUSIC AT STARR BOGGS 8–11 p.m. every Friday and Saturday. Jazz in the garden of the Starr Boggs Restaurant. Vanessa Trouble and Darren

DAN’S PAPERS Ottati alternate. 6 Parlato Drive, Westhampton. 631-288-3500 starrboggsrestaurant.com FRIDAY INDUSTRY NIGHT AT NORTH SEA TAVERN Friday night DJ, drink specials and special events hosted by WEHM. No cover. Catch Hamptons Singers and Songwriters on Monday nights. Call for times. 1271 North Sea Road, Southampton. 631-259-2998 northseatavern.com THE BOX DOES THE HAMPTONS 11 p.m.–late. The world renown cabaret comes to Sienna Retaurant & Ultralounge. 44 Three Mile Harbor Rd., East Hampton. reservations@theboxnyc.com

SATuRDAy, AuguST 3 SUNSET SATURDAYS AT THE WINE STAND 5–8 p.m. Live music with Hopefully Forgiven, wines by the bottle or glass and cheese and charcuterie plates for purchase. Wölffer Estate Wine Stand, 3312 Montauk Highway, Sagaponack. 631-537-5106 wolffer.com 2013 DIAMOND IN THE ROUGH GALA 7–11 p.m. Montauk Playhouse Community Center is putting together the details for this year’s marquis event and it’s going to be better than ever! Mark your calendar now. For sponsorship opportunities and details, please visit montaukplayhouse.org WHBPAC PRESENTS NATALIE COLE 8:30 p.m. Backed by a 12-piece band, she’ll perform her greatest hits with soul-shaking flavor. Tickets start at $145. 76 Main Street, Westhampton Beach. 631-288-1500 whbpac.org CONCERTS AT HOTEL FISH AND LOUNGE 8–11 p.m. Live concerts every Saturday. 87 North Road, Shinnecock Hills 631-728-9511 SATURDAYS AT SOUTHAMPTON PUBLICK HOUSE 10 p.m., DJ Brian Evans spins Hamptons classics every Saturday in the taproom. 40 Bowden Square, Southampton. 631-283-2800 publick.com KARAOKE AT MERCADO 10 p.m. Saturdays. 1970 Montauk Highway, Bridgehampton. 631-237-1334 mercadony.com

SuNDAy, AuguST 4

danspapers.com

OPICK OF THE WEEK Friday, August 2

The Dan Bailey Tribe at Wölffer (See below)

JONNY HIRSCH AT AGAWAM PARK 8/7, 6:30–8:30 p.m. Bring a chair and a blanket. Free, donations highly appreciated. Agawam Park, Southampton. No rain date. For latest updates on the Concerts in the Parks Series, visit scc-arts.org LADIES NIGHT AT SOUTHAMPTON PUBLICK HOUSE 9:30 p.m. DJ Tony spins Hamptons classics. 40 Bowden Square, Southampton. 631-283-2800 publick.com

THuRSDAy, AuguST 8 TWILIGHT THURSDAYS AT WöLFFER ESTATE 5–8 p.m. Live music. Wines by the bottle or glass; cheese and charcuterie plates for purchase. In the Tasting Room, Wölffer Estate, 139 Sagg Rd, Sagaponack. 631-537-5106 wolffer.com THE JAM SESSION AT BAY BURGER 7–9 p.m. Thursdays.. The Jam Session & The Thursday Night Live Band. Bay Burger, 1742 Sag Harbor Turnpike, Sag Harbor. No cover charge. 631-899-3915 thejamsession.org LIVE MUSIC AT MUSE 7–11 p.m. Live music every Thursday at Muse in the Harbor Restaurant & Lounge, 16 Main Street, Sag Harbor. 631-899-4810 museintheharbor.com LIVE MUSIC AT HOTEL FISH AND LOUNGE 8 p.m., Live music every Thursday with Hondo. 87 North Road, Shinnecock Hills 631-728-9511

FRIDAy, AuguST 9 SUNSET FRIDAYS AT THE WINE STAND 5–8 p.m. Live music. Wines by the bottle or glass, and cheese and charcuterie plates for purchase. Wölffer Estate Wine Stand, 3312 Montauk Highway, Sagaponack. 631-537-5106 wolffer.com

MARGARITA SUNDAYS AT HOTEL FISH AND LOUNGE 4–8 p.m. Open jam for Margarita Sundays. 87 North Road, Shinnecock Hills 631-728-9511

MUSIC ON THE PATIO 6–8 p.m. Come down to Duck Walk South Friday evenings to start your weekend with a glass of wine. Tasting bar closes at 7:30 p.m. 231 Montauk Highway. Music weather permitting. 631-726-7555

MAMALEE ROSE & FRIENDS AT RACE LANE 5–7 p.m., Join Race Lane every Sunday for live music by Mamalee Rose & Friends! 31 Race Lane, East Hampton. 631-324-5022 racelanerestaurant.com

uPCOmINg AND ONgOINg

LIVE MUSIC ON THE DECK 6–9 p.m., Majestic Reggae Band. East Hampton Point, 295 Three Mile Harbor/Hog Creek Road, East Hampton. 631-329-2800 easthamptonpoint.com WHBPAC PRESENTS BUDDY GUY 8:30 p.m. Rock & Roll Hall of Famer and blues legend. Tickets start at $75. 76 Main Street, Westhampton Beach. 631-288-1500 whbpac.org

mONDAy, AuguST 5 LIVE MUSIC ON THE DECK 6–9 p.m., Jim Turner Trio perform at East Hampton Point, 295 Three Mile Harbor/Hog Creek Road, East Hampton. 631329-2800 easthamptonpoint.com

TuESDAy, AuguST 6 JAZZ AT PIERRE’S 6:30–9:30 p.m. 2468 Main St., Bridgehampton. Morris Goldberg on sax, Jane Hastay on piano, Peter Martin Weiss on bass. 631-537-5110 pierresbridgehampton.com

WEDNESDAy, AuguST 7 HAPPY HOUR AT 230 ELM 4–7 p.m. Underground Sound with Scott Hopkins showcases local talent every Wednesday from 7 p.m.–1 a.m. Karaoke with Adam Webb is on Thursdays from 8 p.m.–midnight. 230 Elm Street, Southampton. 631-377-3900 230elm.com

AUTHORS NIGHT 8/10. 5–7:30 p.m., Authors Reception. Enjoy hors d’oeuvres and wine, meet your favorite authors, buy their books and have them inscribed. 8 p.m. Dinner Parties. Tickets start at $100 for the cocktail reception to $2,500 for the dinner parties. Benefits the East Hampton Library. For details, 631-324-0222 ext. 7 authorsnight.org WHBPAC PRESENTS VINCE GILL 8/11, 8:30 p.m. Country Music Hall of Fame superstar! Tickets start at $100. 76 Main Street, Westhampton Beach. 631-288-1500 whbpac.org THE DAVID BROMBERG QUINTET AT THE TALKHOUSE 8/17, doors open at 6 p.m., set begins at 8 p.m. The David Bromberg Quintet will perform, $80/$95. 161 Main Street, Amagansett. 631-267-3117 stephentalkhouse.com WHBPAC PRESENTS JOHN HIATT & THE COMBO 8/17, 8:30 p.m. A Memphis masterpiece. Tickets start at $60. 76 Main Street, Westhampton Beach. 631-288-1500 whbpac.org AFTEE DANCE PARTY 8/19, 6 p.m. The BNB Presents AFTEE’s Nile Rodgers Dance Party! Martha Clara Vineyards, rain or shine. Proceeds benefit AFTEE, East End non-profits. Tickets start at $50, VIP packages available. 6025 Sound Ave., Riverhead. 631-599-9297 AFTEE.org Send Calendar listings to kelly@danspapers.com before noon on Friday. Check out DansPapers.com for more listings and events.


DAN’S PAPERS

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CALENDAR For more events happening this week, check out: North Fork Calendar pg. 85 Arts & Galleries pg. 98, Kids Calendar pg. 108

bENEFITS PERLMAN MUSIC PROGRAM ANNUAL SUMMER BENEFIT CONCERT & DINNER 8/2, 6 p.m., Reception featuring local wines and signature cocktails. 7 p.m., Concert conducted by Maestros Itzhak Perlman and Patrick Romano. 8 p.m. Dinner highlighting dishes from Shelter Island’s best restaurants. 73 Shore Road, Shelter Island. To request an invitation, purchase tickets and learn more, please call 212-877-5045 perlmanmusicprogram.org 67TH ANNUAL CLOTHESLINE ART SALE 8/3, 9 a.m.–4 p.m. Guild Hall proudly hosts this community event that showcases original works by nearly 400 East End artists. Works range in price from $50–$2,000, with all proceeds split 50/50 between the artist and Guild Hall’s arts programming. Artist entry fee for up to 5 works, $10. 158 Main Street, East Hampton. To request a registration packet, info@guildhall.org WATER MILL FESTIVAL AND BENEFIT 8/3, 11 a.m.–4 p.m. Help preserve the East End by supporting Group for the East End and Inform. Free kids festival with snacks, drinks, arts and crafts, customized sneaker painting and more. Ambassadors from the Group for the East End will have an educational booth for kids. 4 p.m.–9 p.m., benefit party and cocktail reception with live music, a fashion show, appetizers, a silent auction, goody bags and more. 670 Montauk Highway, Water Mill. Groupfortheeastend.org, informinc.org SOUTHAMPTON HOSPITAL GALA 8/3, 6:30–11 p.m. A “Forward to the Future” themed summer party where attendees will enjoy dinner by Robbins Wolfe Eventeurs and dancing to the Alex Donner Orchestra. Table sponsorships begin at $7500 and tickets are $750 per person. Under the Art Southampton Pavilion on the Elks Property, 605 County Rd. 39, Southampton. For tickets, please contact Southampton Hospital Foundation, 631-726-8700 ext. 3, or klucas@southamptonhospital.org 2013 DIAMOND IN THE ROUGH GALA 8/3, 7–11 p.m. Montauk Playhouse Community Center is putting together the details for this year’s marquis event and it’s going to be better than ever! Mark your calendar now. For details, please visit montaukplayhouse.org FASHION INSIDERS AT GUILD HALL 8/4, 11 a.m. Fern Mallis invites you inside the fashion industry with Simon Doonan, creative ambassador for Barneys New York. $15/$13, $75 VIP ticket includes a meet and greet reception and catering. John Drew Theater at Guild Hall, 158 Main St., East Hampton. 631-324-4050 guildhall.org WHBPAC’S “BE OUR GUEST” GALA 8/9, 6 p.m. Choose to come just for the cocktail party at the Stanford White mansion in Quogue, or make it a complete experience and continue on to select private residences for summer feasts designed with great care by each host. Sign up early! Cocktail party ticket is $175, with dinner is $300. Contact Roberta Shoten, 631-288-2350, ext.17 RobertaS@whbpac.org GUILD HALL SUMMER GALA 8/9, 5–11 p.m. Celebrating Chuck Close. An evening of music, dancing, dining and a live art auction held at the Bridgehampton estate of Louise and Leonard Riggio. Exclusive preview of “Chuck Close: Recent Works” from 5–7 p.m., at the museum, cocktails and dinner to follow at the Riggio home. Tickets begin at $500. 158 Main Street, East Hampton. 631-324-0806 ext. 13 or 14 ckaller@guildhall.org AUTHORS NIGHT 8/10. 5–7:30 p.m., Authors Reception. Enjoy hors d’oeuvres and wine, meet your favorite authors, buy their books and have them inscribed. Location TBA. 8 p.m. Dinner Parties. Locations will be announced when invitations are mailed. Tickets start at $100 for the cocktail reception to $2,500 for

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the dinner parties. Benefits the East Hampton Library. For details, 631-324-0222 ext. 7 authorsnight.org TENNIS PRO-AM & OUTSTANDING IN THE FIELD FARM TO TABLE DINNER 8/10. The event benefits Wellness in the Schools (WITS) for kids in New York City public schools. The Tennis ProAm tournament is from 2–4 p.m. and the four-course with wine pairing dinner will be from 5–9 p.m. at SPORTIME Amagansett Dunes Field. 150 Town Ln, East Hampton. Tickets $100–$750, available at brownpapertickets.com. ARTISTS & WRITERS PRE-GAME PARTY AT LTV STUDIO 8/16, 6–8:30 p.m. Celebrate and take part in the auction benefiting East End Hospice, East Hampton Day Care Learning Center, Phoenix House and The Retreat. LTV Studio, 75 Industrial Road, Wainscott. Tickets at LTVeh.org ARTISTS & WRITERS ANNUAL CELEBRITY SOFTBALL GAME 8/17, 2 p.m. game time, batting practice at noon. Suggested donations of $10 benefit East End Hospice, East Hampton Day Care Learning Center, Phoenix House and The Retreat. Enjoy hotdogs, burgers, Snapple, and Joe & Liza’s Ice Cream. Herrick Park, East Hampton. Rain date 8/24. artistswritersgame.org PADDLE AND PARTY FOR PINK 8/17, 3 p.m. registration, 4 p.m. race start. Exclusive North Haven location, triangular course in Shelter Island Sound. Join paddle boarding fanatics and raise funds for The Breast Cancer Research Foundation. Sunset party at the waterfront estate of Lisa and Richard Perry, alongside co-chairs Maria and Larry Baum. For tickets, paddleforpink. org 646-497-2697 ARF’S BOW WOW MEOW BALL 8/17, 6:30 p.m. Cocktails and raw bar, 8 p.m. dinner and dancing, 9:30 p.m. Junior after party. Peter Duchin with his orchestra. Presented for the first time at the ARF Adoption Center, 90 Daniels Hole Road, Wainscott. Arfhamptons.org THE ELLEN HERMANSON FOUNDATION PINK APRON PARTY 8/17, 7–10 p.m. To benefit the Ellen Hermanson Breast Cancer Center at Southampton Hospital. Chair, Andrea Warshaw Wernick, NYC Anti Aging, Life & Style Coach fabatanyage.com. To date, 23 fabulous female chefs! Tickets are $300 and up. Fabulous Water Mill venue TBA. THE 18th ANNUAL ELLEN’S RUN 8/19, 9 a.m. start, 7:30–8:30 a.m. registration. Support Women’s Health with a 5K Race/Walk sanctioned by USA Track & Field. Start and finish at Southampton Hospital. $30 per person preregistered, $40 per person day of race. To benefit the Ellen Hermanson Breast Cancer Center at Southampton Hospital. To register, 631-907-1952, ellensrun.org AFTEE DANCE PARTY 8/19, 6 p.m. The BNB Presents AFTEE’s Nile Rodgers Dance Party! Martha Clara Vineyards, rain or shine. Proceeds benefit AFTEE, All for the East End. Tickets start at $50, VIP packages available. 6025 Sound Ave., Riverhead. 631-5999297 AFTEE.org CTREE AT SEBONACK 8/22. Honor Wölffer Estates Stables for a very special

OPICK OF THE WEEK Saturday, August 3

Southampton Hospital Gala (See below)

evening of cocktails and a silent auction. Sebonack Golf Club, 405 Sebonac Road, Southampton. For sponsorship, 631-779-2835 info@ctreeny.org DUNK YOUR KICKS BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 8/24, 9 a.m tip-off. The Max Cure Foundation presents a 3 on 3 tournament for youth and adult. All proceeds benefit pediatric cancer causes. Donate a pair of already worn sneakers. Registration closes 8/17. Celebrity appearances, BBQ, live performances, silent auction and much more. The Ross School, 18 Goodfriend Dr., East Hampton. 631-965-5293 info@maxcure.org HARVEST EAST END 8/24, 6–7 p.m., VIP reception, 7–9:30 p.m. General Admission. McCall Vineyard & Ranch, Cutchogue. The Wine & Food Classic presented by Wine Enthusiast. For tickets and details, visit harvesteastend.com EVENING IN THE HAMPTONS 8/31, 7–10 p.m. New York City Mission Society benefit at the estate of ted and Dina Merrill Hartley in East Hampton. Food, drinks, fireworks and special musical guest performances by Tony Award nominee Christine Andreas and singer Cole Rumbough. For tickets and more about the charity, 212-674-3500 ext. 208 nycmissionsociety.org BRUNCH: A CULINARY TOUR OF BRIDGE GARDENS 9/1. Save the date! Featuring local wines and foods prepared by chef Bryan Futerman of Foodies, with ingredients found throughout the Bridge Gardens. $125 per person. Benefits the Peconic Land Trust, 36 Mitchell Lane, Bridgehampton. 631-537-7440 peconiclandtrust.org

THuRSDAy, AuguST 1 SOL YOGA AT THE EAST QUOGUE PARK 7–8:15 a.m. & 6–7:15 p.m., Tuesdays & Thursdays. By donation. Bring a mat, towel and dress warm. The East Quogue Park is located at Montauk Highway & Lewis Road. For more info, contact Inloveandinservice@gmail.com MONTAUK FARMERS MARKET 9 a.m.–2 p.m. Thursdays, through 10/17. Village Green, center of town, Montauk. THE NEO-POLITICAL COWGIRLS PRESENT “EVE” AT LVT STUDIOS 8 p.m. A unique theater experience including dance theater immersion, music, story and art. Proceeds benefit Bay Street Theatre. $55. At LTV Studios, 75 Industrial Road, Wainscott. For tickets, visit Npcowgirls.org

FRIDAy, AuguST 2 EAST HAMPTON FARMERS MARKET 9 a.m.–1 p.m. Fridays, through 8/30. 136 North Main St. (Nick and Toni’s parking lot), East Hampton.

Think outside the box store! Timeless & Trendy Toys Games * Arts & Crafts Squishables * Ugly Dolls Novelty Items * Party Goods Copy & Fax Service Jewelry * Fine Stationary Souvenirs * Mad Libs Camp Cards & Gifts

Lynne’s Cards & Gifts

Lynne’s Cards & Gifts

137 Main Street, Westhampton Beach Telephone: (631) 288-1312 Open 7 Days a Week Year Round Since 1989 www.LynnesCardsandGifts.com 26212

The Peconic Land Trust conserves Long Island’s working farms, natural lands, and heritage for our communities now and in the future. To learn more, please call us at 631.283.3195 or visit our website at www.PeconicLandTrust.org.

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CALENDAR HAYGROUND SCHOOL FARMERS MARKET 3–6:30 p.m. Fridays, through 8/30. 151 Mitchell Lane, Bridgehampton FRIDAYS AT FIVE PRESENT ERIC FISCHL 5–6 p.m. The Hampton Library presents Eric Fischl, artist and author. $15. Beverages, hors d’oeuvres in the garden behind the library. Gates open at 4:30 p.m. 2478 Main St., Bridgehampton. 631-537-0015 FILMS ON THE HAYWALL AT MARDERS Nightfall. The Russians are Coming The Russians are Coming is playing. 120 Snake Hollow Road, Bridgehampton. 631-702-2306 THE BEACH BUMZ BAND BENEFIT CONCERT 6 p.m. Doors open, 8 p.m., Concert begins. Silent auction with prizes. $25/$60 VIP (VIP includes pre-concert reception with beer, wine and soda) on sale at Lynne’s Cards & Gifts and Westhampton T Shirt, Westhampton Beach, and at Immaculate Conception Church Rectory. Immaculate Conception Parrish Center, Quiogue. 631-680-9879 EAST END OR BUSK AT THE PARRISH 5–8 p.m. Andy Suzuki & The Method. Free with museum admission. Parrish Art Museum, 279 Montauk Highway, Water Mill. 631-283-2118 parrishart.org

Humanity Block Island Challenge. Train for this 18-mile open ocean crossing every Sunday at 11 a.m. 352 Montauk Highway, Wainscott. 631-537-7873 mainbeach.com

SOUTHAMPTON FARMERS MARKET 9 a.m.–2 p.m. Sundays through 10/13. West side grounds of Southampton Center, 23 Jobs Lane, Southampton.

WHISKEY HILL RAMBLE 10–11 a.m. Meet on Mill path off Lopers Path, Bridgehampton, for a 1.7 mile hike with ocean views. Led by Jean Dodds, 631-848-2255 southamptontrails.org

SOUTHAMPTON ANTIQUES FAIR 9 a.m.–3 p.m. Antiques, furniture, jewelry, vintage clothing and more. White House, 159 Main St., corner of Jagger Lane, Southampton. Vendors needed, for more info call 631-283-2492

ARCHITECTURAL HISTORY RAMBLE 10–11 a.m. Historical Society director Richard Barons will lead a walk around Town Pond focusing on local history and architecture. Mulford Farm Museum, 10 James Lane, East Hampton. 631-324-6850 easthamptonhistory.org BEAD NECKLACES AT ROGERS MEMORIAL LIBRARY 3 p.m. Carol O’Connor will lead a workshop creating a long necklace from glass beads. $10 at registration. Memorial Library, 91 Coopers Farm Road, Southampton. To register, 631-283-0774 ext. 523 myrml.org READING AT CANIO’S BOOKS 5 p.m. Dock to Dish cosponsors Paul Greenberg’s reading from Four Fish. Canio’s Books, 290 Main Street, Sag Harbor, 631-725-4926 caniosbooks.com BRIDGEHAMPTON CHAMBER MUSIC FESTIVAL 6:30–7:30 p.m. Saturday soiree with Mozart. Bridgehampton Presbyterian Church, 2429, Montauk Highway, Bridgehampton. Tickets $30. bcmf.org

SAtuRDAy, AuguSt 3 SPRINGS FARMERS MARKET 9 a.m.–1 p.m. Saturdays, through 8/31. Ashawagh Hall, 780 Springs Fire Place Road, East Hampton. WESTHAMPTON BEACH FARMERS MARKET 9 a.m.–1 p.m. Saturdays through 11/16. 85 Mill Road, Westhampton Beach. whbcc.org SAG HARBOR FARMERS MARKET 9 a.m.–1 p.m. Saturdays, through 10/26. At 10 a.m., Amy Ma will discuss the medicinal and healing properties of Asian vegetables that you can grow in your own backyard. Bay and Burke Streets, in front of the Breakwater Yacht Club, Sag Harbor. sagharborfarmersmarket.org EAST HAMPTON SAND CASTLE CONTEST 9 a.m.–4 p.m. Atlantic Ave Beach, clamshellfoundation.org

Amagansett.

ANNUAL MARY O. FRITCHIE OUTDOOR ART SHOW 10 a.m.–6 p.m. Enjoy the 41th annual juried outdoor art show with over 100 fine artists from near and far. Also 8/4, 10 a.m.–5 p.m. The Village Green, 170 Main Street and Mill Road, Westhampton. WesthamptonChamber.com 631-288-3337 PADDLERS FOR HUMANITY Main Beach Surf & Sport is hosting another Paddlers for

CRAIG CLAIBORNE: FOOD JOURNALISM PIONEER Artifacts, books and photographs tell the story of Claiborne’s life and journalism career. Free admission, donations appreciated. On view through 10/13 at the Clinton Academy Museum, 151 Main Street, East Hampton. 631-267-3182 cwhitmoregardens.com POETRY MARATHON 5 p.m., This week, Patty Noble and Gloria Beckerman. Hosted by the East Hampton Historical Society. East Hampton Town Marine Museum, 301 Bluff Road, Amagansett. 631-324-6850 easthamptonhistory.org DAN’S PAPERS KITE FLY 2013 5:30 p.m. Scenic Sagg Main Beach. For details, check DansPapers.com BACKYARD KOSHER BARBEQUE 5:30–8:30 p.m. Enjoy an all-you-can-eat buffet of classic BBQ dishes. Also on 9/1. 13 Woods Lane, East Hampton. $30 adults/$15 children. RSVP to Hamptons@jewishli.com BRIDGEHAMPTON CHAMBER MUSIC FESTIVAL 6:30–7:30 p.m. Musical Mélange with Boccherini, Mendelssohn and more. Bridgehampton Presbyterian Church, 2429, Montauk Highway, Bridgehampton. Tickets $40/$50. bcmf.org

Courtesy Guild Hall

SOUTHAMPTON REVIEW LAUNCH PARTY 7:30 p.m. Readings by Billy Collins and Roger Rosenblatt to launch the summer issue of “TSR: The Southampton Review.” Free admission. Reception to follow. Avram Theater, Stony Brook Southampton, 239 Montauk Highway, Southampton. RSVP to 631-632-5031 thesouthamptonreview@stonybrook.edu FILM @ SOUTHAMPTON CENTER FRIDAY MOVIES UNDER THE STARS 8:30 p.m. Free screening series on the Arboretum Lawn. This week enjoy Safety Last. Bring your beach chairs and blankets. Pianofest pre-show concert at 7:30 p.m. 25 Jobs Lane, Southampton. southamptoncenter.org

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Annual Clothesline Art returns Aug. 3

WHBPAC PRESENTS BUDDY GUY 8:30 p.m. Rock & Roll Hall of Famer and blues legend. Tickets start at $75. 76 Main Street, Westhampton Beach. 631-288-1500 whbpac.org

MoNDAy, AuguSt 5

FILM @ SOUTHAMPTON CENTER 7:30 p.m. A new partner with The Hamptons International Film Festival, the Southampton Center is presenting a free screening series. This week enjoy “Drinking Buddies,” the story of two co-workers at a craft brewery who share a flirtatious attraction. 90 minutes, rated R. Free beer tasting at 6 p.m. hosted by Southampton Publick House! 25 Jobs Lane, Southampton. southamptoncenter.org

LEARNING AT JEWISH CENTER OF THE HAMPTONS 9:30 a.m., Mondays through 8/19. A study of the Second Book of Kings in Hebrew with Rabbi Zimmerman, new students welcome. Also at 9:30, a course on the Hebrew alphabet and beginning Hebrew reading skills. At 10:30, enjoy a summer philosophy course with Susan Pashman. Free for members, $200 fee for non-members. 56 Woods Lane, East Hampton. 631-324-9858 jcoh.org

WHBPAC PRESENTS NATALIE COLE 8:30 p.m. Backed by a 12-piece band, she’ll perform her greatest hits with soul-shaking flavor. Tickets start at $145. 76 Main Street, Westhampton Beach. 631-288-1500 whbpac.org

MONDAY NIGHT ZUMBA AT ROGERS MEMORIAL LIBRARY 7–7:45 p.m. Anastasia Azanova will lead Zumba. $25 registration. Rogers Memorial Library, 91 Coopers Farm Road, Southampton. To register, 631-283-0774 ext. 523 myrml.org

MUSICAL COMEDIES AT GUILD HALL 8:30 p.m. Also on 8/4 at 2 p.m. Noel Coward presents “Tonight at 8:30,” starring Blythe Danner and Simon Jones. Enjoy three one-act pieces: “Hands Across the Sea,” “Family Album” and “Red Peppers.” The Living Room restaurant is offering a special prix fixe menu for patrons attending each play. Tickets start at $38, available online. The John Drew Theater in the Dina Merrill Pavilion at Guild Hall, 158 Main St., East Hampton. 631-324-0806 guildhall.org.

tuESDAy, AuguSt 6

SuNDAy, AuguSt 4 LONG POND GREENBELT SOUTH CIRCUIT 8:30–10 a.m. Meet at Poxabogue County Park on Old Farm Road, Sagaponack. Fast-paced 3.5 mile hike through grasslands and oak forest with views of Crooked Pond. Led by Dai Dayton, 631-745-0689 southamptontrails.org

SOL YOGA AT THE EAST QUOGUE PARK 7–8:15 a.m. & 6–7:15 p.m., Tuesdays & Thursdays. By donation. Bring a mat, towel and dress warm. The East Quogue Park is located at Montauk Highway & Lewis Road. For more info, contact Inloveandinservice@gmail.com PRELUDE & OVERTURE STRING ENSEMBLE WORKSHOPS 4:30–5:30 p.m., Tuesdays through 8/27. Student violinists, cellists, and bassists are welcome to attend this weekly workshop for all ages and all skill levels. Conducted by Prelude Ensemble Director Steve Watson. 631-287-4377 scc@scc-arts.org SAG HARBOR COMMUNITY BAND 8–9 p.m. Free outdoor concerts every Tuesday in August in

Prevent Home Electronics Damage and Failures! An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure For free consultation on making your home electronic systems run safe, smooth and trouble free Call Applied Lightning Safety Group Today 631-345-6185 www.lightningproof.com

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KITE F LY

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SUNDAY AUG 4th @5:30 PM

Judging begins @6:00 PM

SAGG MAIN BEACH SAGAPONACK The “Original” Hamptons Kite Fly event

Over 20 cA cAtegOrIeS INclUDINg:

Most colorful, Highest Flying, Best Nautical, Oldest Kite Flyer, Youngest Kite Flyer, Best Homemade & Most Beautiful

GAMES FOR THE KIDS

MUSIC BY JIM TURNER

Bring your own food, drink, blanket and chairs FACE PAINTING é MAGICIAN é JUGGLERS AND MORE!

Parking Sticker Restrictions will be suspended for the Sagg Main Beach Parking Lot as of 5:30pm. All other parking notifications will be enforced.

For Information: 631-537-1789 SPONSORED BY 28195


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CALENDAR front of the American Legion on Bay Street, Sag Harbor. Bring a folding chair. 631-725-0429 A FUNNY THING HAPPENED ON THE WAY TO THE FORUM AT BAY STREET THEATRE 8 p.m. Book by Burt Shevelove & Larry Gelbart, Music & Lyrics by Stephen Sondheim. Check website for additional dates & times through 9/1. Tickets start at $67. Bay Street Theatre, Corner of Bay and Main Streets, Sag Harbor. 631-7258500 baystreet.org LIFELONG LEARNING AT ROSS Ross School is offering Lifelong Learning opportunities for adults, including daytime academic-year courses with a Ross Institute Certificate of continuing education upon successful completion. 18 Goodfriend Drive, East Hampton. For more details, 631-907-5555 ross.org/adult

wEDNESDAy, AuguSt 7 ART WORKSHOP AT THE PARRISH ART MUSEUM 9:30 a.m.–12:30 p.m. Barbara Thomas will teach outdoor painting techniques to students working in any medium. Students 15 and older, all skill levels welcome. $350/$300 for five sessions. 279 Montauk Highway, Water Mill. 631-283-2118 ext. 130 parrishart.org COOKING AT PECONIC LAND TRUST 5–7 p.m., Cooking workshop with Chef Peter Berley. 36 Mitchell Lane, Bridgehampton. 631-537-7440 peconiclandtrust.org JONNY HIRSCH AT AGAWAM PARK 6:30–8:30 p.m. Bring a chair and a blanket. Free, donations

highly appreciated. Agawam Park, Southampton. For latest updates on the Concerts in the Parks Series, visit scc-arts.org

thuRSDAy, AuguSt 8 OUTDOOR MOVIE NIGHT 8:30 p.m. Bring a beach chair, blanket, family and friends and watch E.T. under the stars at Herrick Park, Newtown Lane, East Hampton. $10, $5 under 12. Proceeds benefit The Retreat. 631-329-4398 theretreatinc.org

fRiDAy, AuguSt 9 SOUTHAMPTON GARDEN CLUB 9 a.m.–5 p.m. Centennial Lecture and Garden Tour. $100 per ticket. Southampton Cultural Center, 25 Pond Lane, Southampton. 631-283-2226 SGCNY.com EAST HAMPTON FARMERS MARKET 9 a.m.–1 p.m. Fridays, through 8/30. 136 North Main St. (Nick and Toni’s parking lot), East Hampton. HAYGROUND SCHOOL FARMERS MARKET 3–6:30 p.m. Fridays, through 8/30. 151 Mitchell Lane, Bridgehampton THE GREAT FOOD TRUCK DERBY 4–7:30 p.m. A foodie bonanza of ethnic and mobile eats alongside New York wine, beer and non-alcoholic offerings. Benefiting Hayground School and Jeff’s Kitchen. $60. Hayground School, Mitchells Ln., Bridgehampton. Edibleeastend.com

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BRIDGEHAMPTON CHAMBER MUSIC FESTIVAL 6 p.m. Wine tasting and appetizers, 7 p.m. concert. “Midnight in Paris: An evening of French Music Where Classical Meets Jazz,” $100/$150. Channing Sculpture Garden, 1927 Scuttle Hole Rd., Bridgehampton. bcmf.org FILMS ON THE HAYWALL AT MARDERS Nightfall. The Ghost and Mrs. Muir is playing. 120 Snake Hollow Road, Bridgehampton. 631-702-2306 FRIDAY MOVIES UNDER THE STARS 8:30 p.m. This week enjoy winner of the Cinematography Award at the Sundance Film Festival, “Ain’t Them Bodies Saints.” Bring your beach chairs and blankets. 25 Jobs Lane, Southampton. southamptoncenter.org

uPcomiNg AND oNgoiNg 2013 DAN’S PAPERS LITERARY PRIZE FOR NONFICTION Dan’s Literary Prize will award a total of $6,000 to the top three writers selected by our panel of judges. Are you the best writer of nonfiction on the East End? Contest ends 7/31, First prize $5,000, Two Runners Up $500 each. Winners announced at the John Drew Theater of Guild Hall in East Hampton on 8/26. $25 per entry. Visit our website for official rules to enter, Danshamptons.com/literaryprize or email for more information, info@danspapers.com Send Calendar listings to kelly@danspapers.com before noon on Friday. Check out DansPapers.com for more listings and events.

SHOP AT SUNSET 5–8 p.m. Shops in East Hampton, Sag Harbor and Bridgehampton will be staying open late to participate in The Retreat’s 3rd Annual charity shopping event. For a list of participating shops, visit theretreatinc.org.

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR REALLY? Hey, Dan! When is the last time you visited Istanbul? The current government favors the destruction of a major civic square in Istanbul to build a mosque. There is strong evidence of other governmental theocratic leanings, not least in its efforts to curtail the power of the Turkish armed forces. Do you really believe that Turkey is a supporter of Israel? Is that why it recalled its ambassador over the illegal blockade by a Turkish ship? You seem to approve, as I do, of Egyptian military intervention when political and social democracy was threatened, but why then do you favor the Turkish government’s efforts to curtail the potential of such intervention in Turkey should it’s theocratic inclinations become more manifest? Philip Foster New York Call in the military when leaders start terrorizing non-Muslims —DR THANKS Hi Joan and Stacy, I wasn’t on duty today but the person who was said that a good number of people who had seen the Dan’s story (“Painter Annie Cooper Boyd’s Rich Legacy Lives On,” by Joan Baum, July 26 issue) came in today. Power of Joan and Dan’s! Jean Held We’re always happy to promote the East End’s historical treasures!—SD SAVED Dear Stacy, Really appreciated and enjoyed the story about local cemeteries (“Help Save a Cemetery Near You This Weekend!” by Lee Meyer, July 12 issue). Hope you can do more like that—sharing local history and

inviting people to help preserve it. My wife and I participated in the workshop and learned a lot. Without your article we wouldn’t have known. Warmly, Ernest Farrino Shinnecock Hills Thanks! I’ve been fascinated by cemeteries and their histories since I was growing up down the road from the North Otto Cemetery.—SD AT WAR Dear Dan, What with today’s political morass I thought back to my introduction to voting and political parties. Back in the early ’50s there was a “Conflict” involving Korea. It was labeled such but it was no different than all the following unprecipitated “conflicts” called wars, the last real conscionable one being WWII. Back then young people were not as politically savvy as they are today, at least not in my Lower East Side (since gentrified to East Village). I questioned Democratic President Truman’s wisdom concerning the atom bombings in Japan and it was upsetting. Although I admired FDR, I decided that I would always be an Independent voter. But then I heard this introspective proclamation, which embodied the very essence of America’s greatness. Corny no doubt, but it was as though the Statue Liberty could talk. It stated: “Should any political party attempt to abolish Social Security, unemployment insurance, and eliminate labor laws and farm programs, you would not hear of that party again in our political history. There is a tiny splinter group, of course, that believes you can do these things. Among them are Texas oil millionaires, and an occasional politician or business man and they are stupid.”

That was Republican President Dwight D. Eisenhower, whatta guy. I thought to myself at the time, “his party is my party.” Ah, but that was then, a long, long time ago, and this is now and the party’s over. It seems as though that “splinter” he mentioned has festered and has sadly infected the once Grand Old Party. As for those “Texas oil millionaires and an occasional politician or business man,” stupid as suggested or not, their greed more than compensates for any intelligence they may or may not lack. They have put our country up for sale to the highest bidder in the process of their goal: for-profit privatization of America. Hopefully Ike was prophetic about the demise of any party who would destroy the very tenets, the foundation of what had made this country great and the envy of the world. Nicholas Zizelis Amagansett We live in a land of very, very great opportunity.—DR CLOSE, BUT… Dear Dan, In his article (Classic Cars column, July 5 issue) about the Jaguar XKE (an iconic sports car if there ever was one), Robert Gelber gets a very basic fact about it very wrong:. The E-Type was introduced in 1961, not 1963 (which he infers in one sentence) and certainly not in 1964, which he directly states. The XKE was one of the most significant cars built in the 20th century because it might have been the most beautiful. Nicholas Saridakis Hampton Bays Vroom! Vroom!—DR Email your letters to askdan@danspapers.com


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KIDS’ CALENDAR For more events happening this week, check out: North Fork Calendar pg. 85, Calendar pg. 103, Arts & Galleries Listings pg. 98

THURSDAY, AUGUST 1 rHyMe TIMe 10–10:30 a.m. The Hampton Library, 2478 Main Street, Bridgehampton. Songs, rhymes, stories and art exploration. Children ages 1–3. Contact Emily Herrick at emily@hamptonlibrary.org 631-537-0015 STOrIeS, SONGS & PLAyTIMe 10:30 a.m. John Jermain Library. 34 West Water Street, Sag Harbor. Librarian Susann will read a short story, do finger plays, sing songs & nursery rhymes, dance with children and put out toys for playtime. Ages 1–4. 631-725-0049 johnjermain.org LeGO MANIA! 3:30–4:30 p.m. The Hampton Library, 2478 Main Street, Bridgehampton. Create anything you like with Legos at the library! A great chance for parents to relax and socialize. Ages 4–10. Contact Emily Herrick at 631-537-0015 emily@hamptonlibrary.org MOVIeS FOr TWeeNS AND FAMILIeS AT AMAGANSeTT Free LIBrAry 3:30 p.m. Thursdays through 8/22. Snacks provided. 215 Main Street, Amagansett.631-267-3810 amaglibrary.org KIDS’ TAeKWONDO 4–5 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays. Evolution fitness, 33 Hill Street, Southampton. Kids develop coordination, focus and confidence. Ages 6–12. $10/class. 631-488-4252 evolutionhamptons.com

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fRIDAY, AUGUST 2 PUPPeT PLAy GrOUP AT GOAT ON A BOAT PUPPeT THeATre 9:30–11 a.m. Fridays. Free play, songs, games, circle fun, and a Minkie the Monkey puppet show. Ages 3 and under with their grown-ups. $15 members, $25 drop-in. 4 East Union Street, Sag Harbor. 631-725-4193 goatonaboat.org MUSIC TOGeTHer By THe DUNeS 9:30 or 10:30 a.m. Fridays. Children’s Museum of the East End, 376 Bridgehampton Turnpike, Bridgehampton. For more information contact Ina Ferrara 631-764-4180. For other locations, registration, and schedule, visit mtbythedunes.com POLLACK FAMILy DrIP PAINTING 10 a.m.–11:30 a.m. Thursdays & Fridays. Reservations required, $30 per person. Pollack-Krasner House, 830 Springs Fireplace Rd, East Hampton. 631-329-2811 jacksonpollock.wordpress.com SHAKe, rATTLe & rOLL 10 a.m. Fridays. Amagansett Free Library, 215 Main Street, Amagansett. Parents/Caregivers with toddler’s 10–36 months olds are invited to join us for an hour of interactive play. 631-267-3810 amaglibrary.org OPeN STUDIO FOr TeeNS AT THe PArrISH ArT MUSeUM 11 a.m.–1 p.m. First Saturday of every month. Free with museum admission: $10 Adults, Children under 18 free. Reservations required. 279 Montauk Highway, Water Mill. 631-283-2118 parrishart.org SHArK DIVe 11 a.m. Daily. ages 12 and up (12–17 must be accompanied by a parent). Long Island Aquarium and Exhibition Center, 431 East Main Street, Riverhead. The Aquarium puts you into a cage in the middle of more than 10 circling sharks! No diving certification necessary. $155/nonmembers, $140/ members (includes aquarium admission). 631-208-9200 longislandaquarium.com

CHILD AND GrOWN UP BOOK CHAT AT MONTAUK LIBrAry 11:30–Noon. Let’s read stories together! Grades K–3. Every Friday through 8/9. 871 Montauk Highway, Montauk. 631-668-3377 montauklibrary.org PUPPeT SHOWS IN AMAGANSeTT SQUAre 5:30 p.m. “A La Carte in a Fool’s Kitchen,” Also on 8/2 “The Reluctant Dragon.” puppetstakelongisland.com GUILD HALL FILMS AT THe FArM: THe SOUND OF MUSIC 8 p.m. In partnership with East Hampton Historical Society. Rain date 8/5. $5, free for 5 and under. Mulford Farm, 10 James Lane, East Hampton. 631-324-0806 guildhall.org

SATURDAY, AUGUST 3 LA PALeSTrA KIDS BeNeFIT 2013 A full day benefiting the La Palestra Kids Program. 9:30 a.m., Adult Exercise: Pat’s “Kitchen Sink” Workout. 11 a.m. Family Classes. Noon, Lunch catered by Celebrity Top Chef Sam Talbot. 6:30 p.m. Orange Carpet & Cocktail Party. 8–10:30 p.m. Dinner and benefit concert with live performances headlined by Adam Duritz, lead singer from Counting Crows, Bene Winans and Ray Chew Live Band. East Hampton Studio, 75 Industrian Road, Wainscott. RSVP: 917-975-6572 ShariF@emcionline.com PUPPeT SHOWS AT GOAT ON A BOAT PUPPeT THeATre 11 a.m. Thurs., Fri. & Sat. through 8/31. $10, $9 grandparents and members, $5 under 3. 4 East Union Street, Sag Harbor. 631-725-4193 goatonaboat.org BeST OF NeW yOrK INTerNATIONAL CHILDreN’S FILM FeSTIVAL AT THe PArrISH 11 a.m.–5 p.m. The Parrish teams up with New York International Children’s Film Festival to showcase the best of short global cinema for young people aged 3–18. $10, free for members, children and students. 279 Montauk Highway, Water Mill. 631-283-2118 parrishart.org Free ArTS NyC KIDSFeST HAMPTONS 1–4 p.m. A one-of-a-kind celebration of art and creativity

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sponsored by Armani Jr., Crewcuts, Divalysscious Moms, Havaianas and more. Hampton Country Day Camp, 191 Buckskill Road, East Hampton. Freeartsnyc.org BOOK SIGNING AT SUGAr DADDy’S TOy STOre 3–5 p.m. Michael Paraskevas will be signing his latest book Taffy Saltwater’s Yummy Summer Day. Sugar Daddy’s Toy Store, 103 Main St., Westhampton Beach. 631-288-3537 STOry & CrAFT TIMe 3:30 p.m. Join for a story and mask-making! Perfect for families. Amagansett Free Library, 215 Main Street, Amagansett. 631-267-3810 amaglibrary.org STOrIeS & CrAFTS AT AMAGANSeTT Free LIBrAry 3:30 p.m. Saturdays. 215 Main St., Amagansett. 631-267-3810 amaglibrary.org A DreAM FOr PeACe PerFOrMANCe 4 p.m. Talented singers ages 7–11 will perform songs of peace from around the world. $15 or more donation, a portion of proceeds will go to Heifer International. Christ Episcopal Church, Hampton Rd., Sag Harbor. 631-275-1851 sandcastlevoices.com

SUNDAY, AUGUST 4 SUNDAy STOry TIMe 1:30 p.m. East Hampton Library, 159 Main Street, East Hampton. Open up your child’s mind with stories from our picture book collections. Ages 3–plus. 631-324-0222 SUNDAy GAMeS 3:30–4:30 p.m. Sundays. John Jermain Library. 34 West Water Street, Sag Harbor. Get away from TV screens and challenge your friends or family to a friendly board game competition. We’ll provide a variety of games including Chutes & Ladders, Candyland, Apples to Apples and others. Ages 3–9. 631-725-0049 johnjermain.org

mONDAY, AUGUST 5 PUPPeT PLAy GrOUP ON A BOAT PUPPeT THeATre 9 a.m. Mondays & Fridays through 8/26. Free play, songs, games, circle fun and a Minkie the Monkey puppet show. Ages 3 and under with their grown-ups. $15 members, $25 drop-in. 4 East Union Street, Sag Harbor. 631-725-4193 goatonaboat.org THeATer CAMP AT PArrISH ArT MUSeUM 8/5–8/16, 10 a.m.–3 p.m. daily. Children 8 and up can learn improvisation, script-writing, set construction, and costume design. Led by Kate Mueth. $1,000/$750 for Parrish members. 279 Montauk Highway, Water Mill. 631-283-2118 parrishart.org TOT ArT AT GOAT ON A BOAT PUPPeT THeATre 10:15 a.m. Mondays through 8/30. For kids ages 2–4 and their grown-ups. An hour of crafty fun! $15 members/$25 drop-in. 4 East Union Street, Sag Harbor. 631-725-4193 goatonaboat.org Free LUNCHeS FOr yOUTH 11 a.m.–1 p.m. Mondays, Tuesdays & Wednesdays through

8/28. Any youth under the age of 18 can get a free lunch at the site. Participants can take a break in the youth center and enjoy activities. Offered through the State of New York’s Summer Food Service Program. Flanders Youth Center, David Crohan Community Center, 655 Flanders Road. 631-704-2425 southamptontownny.gov/youthbureau CHILDreN’S MILLING AT WATer MILL MUSeUM 11:30 a.m., Mondays through 8/12. Also on 9/16 & 9/23. Children and families learn all about the giant stone wheels and wooden gears that grind the grain at the Water Mill Museum. Admission is free, donations benefit the preservation and restoration of this non-profit. 631-726-4625 watermillmuseum.org WIGGLe AND GIGGLe WITH BOOKS 11:30–noon, East Hampton Library, 159 Main Street, East Hampton. Children will enjoy this interactive time with books as they listen to the words and move with the story. Babies–3 years. 631-324-0222x2 childrens@easthamptonlibrary.org

TUESDAY, AUGUST 6

THURSDAY, AUGUST 8

BABIeS & BOOKIeS AT HAMPTON BAyS LIBrAry 10–10:30 a.m., Tuesdays. Storytime, interactive fingerplays, songs and flannel boards for newborns to 24 months with adult. 52 Ponquogue Avenue, Hampton Bays. 631-728-6241 hamptonbayslibrary.org

rHyMe TIMe 10–10:30 a.m. The Hampton Library, 2478 Main Street, Bridgehampton. Songs, rhymes, stories and art exploration. Children ages 1–3. Contact Emily Herrick at emily@hamptonlibrary.org 631-537-0015

THe ArT OF PLAy 10–11 a.m., For children from birth to 4 years old. Special time for parents and caregivers to play with their young children. Toys, puzzles, dramatic play, art exploration and more. Hampton Library, 2478 Main Street, Bridgehampton. 631-537-0015 hamptonlibrary.org

STOrIeS, SONGS & PLAyTIMe 10:30 a.m. John Jermain Library. 34 West Water Street, Sag Harbor. Librarian Susann will read a short story, do finger plays, sing songs & nursery rhymes, dance with children and put out toys for playtime. Ages 1–4. 631-725-0049 johnjermain.org

FIrST STOry TIMe Tuesdays, 10:15–11 a.m. For caregivers and their tots through 4 years old. Join us for stories, flannel boards, puppets, songs and fun. A perfect introduction to story time for young children. Amagansett Free Library, 215 Main Street, Amagansett. 631-267-3810 amaglibrary.org

LeGO MANIA! 3:30–4:30 p.m. The Hampton Library, 2478 Main Street, Bridgehampton. Create anything you like with Legos at the library! A great chance for parents to relax and socialize. Ages 4–10. Contact Emily Herrick at 631-537-0015 emily@hamptonlibrary.org

TOT CAMP AT GOAT ON A BOAT PUPPeT THeATre 9:30–Noon. Tues., Wed. & Thurs. through 8/27. For three year olds. Music, art, crafts, stories, outdoor fun! Space is limited, registration required. 4 East Union Street, Sag Harbor. 631-725-4193 goatonaboat.org

MOVIeS FOr TWeeNS AND FAMILIeS AT AMAGANSeTT Free LIBrAry 3:30 p.m. Thursdays through 8/22. Snacks provided. 631-267-3810 amaglibrary.org

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7 WeeKLy WALKABOUTS AT THe rOSS SCHOOL 9 a.m., 1 p.m., Wednesdays. Interested families can meet administrators and take tours of either the Upper or Lower School Campus in Bridgehampton. Upper School, 18 Goodfriend Drive, East Hampton. Lower School, 379 Butter

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KIDS’ TAeKWONDO 4–5 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays. Evolution fitness, 33 Hill Street, Southampton. Kids develop coordination, focus and confidence. Children that practice Martial Arts are more likely to do better in school, as they learn values that are not taught in formal education like courtesy, integrity, perseverance, self-control, courage and discipline. Ages 6–12. $10/class. 631-488-4252 evolutionhamptons.com NATIONAL CIrCUS PrOjeCT AT MONTAUK PLAyHOUSe 7 p.m. with a special “Circus Skills Workshop” for kids at 4 p.m. All ages will delight in this Family Fest tradition. Sponsored by Willow Unique Gifts. $15 per person, $50 for the four-part Family Fest series. 240 Edgemere St., Montauk. 631-668-1124 montaukplayhouse.org

i ca l S o l u t i

631-287-TOTS Hampton Pediatric Dental Associates specializes in general dental care for young people. We believe that good dental habits started at a young age will last a lifetime. Our office is designed to make children (& their parents) feel comfortable in a situation that many adults choose to avoid! Our hours will accommodate even the most hectic schedule. 1045403 26143

DIG IN: DINOSAUrS AT AMAGANSeTT Free LIBrAry 3:30 p.m. Presented by Cornell. Wednesdays. 631-267-3810 amaglibrary.org

FILM NIGHTS FOr TWeeNS AND FAMILIeS AT AMAGANSeTT Free LIBrAry 6 p.m. Wednesdays through 8/21. Snacks provided. 215 Main St., Amagansett. 631-267-3810 amaglibrary.org

s

FOR CHILDREN TEENS & HANDICAPPED

GrOW WITH Me: MOMMy AND Me yOGA 11 a.m. It’s never too early to begin to nurture the body/ mind/spirit connection in children. Parents are invited to bring their children (ages 1–4 years old) to the Quogue Library for their Mommy and Me classes. 90 Quogue Street, Quogue. 631-653-4224 quoguelibrary.org

Free CONCerTS AT PONQUOGUe BeACH 6–9 p.m. Provided by Southampton Youth Bureau and Project Vibe. Ponquogue Beach, Hampton Bays. 631-702-2425 southamptontownny.gov/youthbureau

on

DENTISTRY

BABy BOOGIeS AND TODDLerS TANGO AT WeSTHAMPTON Free LIBrAry 10 a.m. & 11 a.m., For ages 3–23 months and ages 2–4 years Get ready to wiggle and giggle with Miss Nicole and clap your hands and stomp your feet, 7 Library Avenue, Westhampton Beach, 631-288-3335

KIDFeST HANDS-ON WOrKSHOPS AT GUILD HALL 4–4:45 p.m., Wednesdays through 8/28. Enjoy arts and crafts workshops for ages five and up. $10/$8 per workshop, $80/$64 for series. Boots Lamb Education Center at Guild Hall, 158 Main Street, East Hampton. 631-324-0806 guildhall.org

an

DR. NANCY COSENZA

Lane, Bridgehampton. For more information, 631-907-5000 ross.org

STAGeS SUMMer CAMP IN SAG HArBOr Helene Leonard leads two sessions of Summer Musical Theater Camp for young actors. Southampton Town Recreation Center, 1370A Majors Path, Southampton. 631-287-1511 stagesworkshop.org

24748

KIDS’ CALENDAR

danspapers.com

Southampton

287-9700 East Hampton 324-9700 Southold 765-9700

fRIDAY, AUGUST 9 PUPPeT PLAy GrOUP AT GOAT ON A BOAT PUPPeT THeATre 9:30–11 a.m. Fridays, also on Mondays. Free play, songs, games, circle fun and a Minkie the Monkey puppet show. Ages 3 and under with their grown-ups. $15 members, $25 drop-in, $200 for summer. 4 East Union Street, Sag Harbor. 631-725-4193 goatonaboat.org Send KidCalendar listings to kelly@danspapers.com before noon on Friday. Check out DansPapers.com for more listings and events.


DAN’S PAPERS

danspapers.com

August 2, 2013 Page 109

SIMPLE

SIDE DISH

See what’s cooking now.

Where to save while dining out.

Young Hamptons Author Sweet as a Cupcake BY sHAron feIereIsen

I

f you have a pre-teen, odds are you’ve heard of The Cupcake Club, a book series written by 10-year-old Carrie Berk and her mom, New York Times bestselling author Sheryl Berk. It’s so popular, in fact, that Peace, Love and Cupcakes, the first book in the series, is being developed into a children’s musical at Vital Theatre in New York City for a Spring 2014 debut. We spoke with Southampton resident and cupcake connoisseur Carrie Berk to find out more. How did the idea for this series come about? Four years ago, my teacher taught us about realistic fiction. I was really into Judy Moody books, and I would always write sequels to them. My teacher said, “You should write your own original characters, not someone else’s,” and the rest is history. What is it about cupcakes that makes them so special, versus, say...cookies? Cupcakes are little pieces of art! They have so many elements to them: the cake, the filling, the frosting, the piping technique, the decoration. A cookie is a cookie! You really can’t do much to it! Can you tell us about some of your favorite cupcakes in the Hamptons? I was really impressed with Tate’s. I love their cookies, but when I tried their cupcakes....wow! Very moist cake, very creamy frosting. I also liked Water Mill Cupcake a lot. We drove out to the store one

weekend and I sampled so many flavors. I’ve also tried the Blue Duck cupcakes at Blue Duck Bakery—so cute! What separates a bad cupcake from a great cupcake? A bad cupcake is dry and flavorless and its frosting is way too sweet and whippy. A great cupcake is moist, bursting with flavor, has just the right balance of sweetness, and has a texture that enhances it. I’m also a fan of decorations—I like my cupcakes to leap off the bakery shelf! Do you have a favorite cupcake recipe that you make at home? We make a great butter cream frosting—we’ve really perfected it. You need the perfect balance of butter and sugar. You’ve interviewed a number of famous bakers. Any who were particularly memorable? Anyone you’d love to meet? I love Buddy Valastro, The Cake Boss. He just made my graduation cake from elementary school. I also love the sisters from DC Cupcakes and Sprinkles owner Candace Nelson. My very first interview was with Crumbs CEO and founder Jason Bauer. He is amazing. I just saw him last year at Super Saturday! Your book Peace, Love and Cupcakes is about more than just cupcakes. It also tackles serious issues of bullying. Is that something inspired from personal experience?

A lot of the things I write about come from things I’ve seen. I also included issues like divorcing parents, juvenile diabetes and crushes in the other books in the series. I think it’s important and it helps kids understand they’re not alone. How did the musical come about? Can you tell us a little bit about what we can expect? My mom and I are huge Broadway buffs, so we’re so excited! Vital Theatre in New York City came to us and asked if they could do Peace, Love and Cupcakes as a musical. We said, “YES!!!!!” Any cupcakes you’re dying to try that you haven’t tried yet? I love trying cupcakes from all over the world. I’ve tried some from Rome, London, Paris, Mexico, Puerto Rico and Canada. I would really like to try Japanese or Chinese cupcakes—or Spanish ones. I’d like to know how other countries around the world make cupcakes. What’s your all-time favorite cupcake? Red Velvet and Salted Caramel. You’ve done so much already. What do you want to be when you grow up? I really want to be a New York Times bestselling author like my mom! Or maybe have my own show like Martha Stewart or Rachel Ray? My dream, though, is to be a judge on Cupcake Wars.

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food & dining

Page 110 August 2, 2013

danspapers.com

Cold Soups Are a Hot Summer Treat BY SIlvIA lEHRER

The ideal openers for meals on the dog days of summer are cold soups. With so many summer fruits and vegetables hitting the peak of freshness it’s just a matter of minimal cooking or no cooking at all, adding broth or other liquid and seasonings then blending the soup to a smooth puree. Gerry Hayden, executive chef/owner, with his wife Claudia Fleming, pastry chef of the North Fork Table and Inn, offers his Catapano’s goat farm-inspired chilled grape soup with goat yoghurt and goat cheese, one of my chef recipe picks from Savoring the Hamptons: Discovering the Food and Wine of Long Island’s East End. There are at least 10 different recipes for gazpacho in my cold soup files. Here I choose Gazpacho in the Spanish Manner. While most authorities agree that the original gazpacho was made from bread paired with water and seasoned with olive oil, vinegar, garlic and salt, the gazpacho below is clearly a delicious update. Any time a do-ahead dish is refrigerated whether a soup or salad or a dish to be reheated, remember that cold tends to mute flavors. The allure of cold soups requires that seasonings be intensified so be sure to taste before serving and adjust as necessary. GAZPACHO IN THE SPANISH MANNER There are many new and creative recipes for gazpacho made with ingredients such as yellow tomatoes, chilies and shrimp and other nouvelle ideas. Whatever the case, most authorities agree that the

original gazpachos were made from bread paired with water and seasoned with olive oil, vinegar, garlic and salt. No doubt, the addition of tomatoes came after the discovery of the New World. Serves 6 to 8 2 7-minute farm-fresh coddled eggs 1 medium red onion, sliced 1 cucumber, seeded and sliced 1 large sweet red bell pepper, trimmed, seeded and coarsely chopped* 2 cloves garlic, peeled and sliced 2 slices stale white bread, crusts removed and cubed 1/4 cup extra-virgin olive oil 2 1/2 pounds, about 5 to 6 ripe tomatoes, coarsely chopped 2 tablespoons red wine vinegar 1/2 teaspoon salt 1 cup tomato juice Accompaniments: Tiny dice of onion, cucumber, tomato and croutons. Or garnish with drizzle of crème fraiche, tiny dice of sweet yellow pepper and cilantro leaves. (This is newer.) 1. Gently lower eggs into a saucepan of simmering water. Remove from heat, cover pan tightly and let stand for 7 minutes. Immerse in cold water to stop the cooking. Peel and set aside. 2. Place onion, cucumber, pepper and garlic in work bowl of food processor or blender, and pulse for several seconds to chop and mix ingredients, stopping to push down sides with a rubber spatula as necessary. Add tomatoes; pulse for several seconds

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GERRY HAYDEN’S GREEN GRAPE GAZPACHO Gerry Hayden, the executive chef/owner of the North Fork Table & Inn in Southold, prepared this quick and easy Spanish inspired gazpacho at a Hampton’s summer fund-raising event. Chef Hayden incorporates Catapano Dairy Farm’s goat’s milk yogurt for this delectably milky soup. Serves 6

*Note: Marcona almonds known as the ‘queen of almonds’ are imported from Spain. They may be difficult to find and are pricey. For my version blanch at least 2 cups of whole almonds, peel, and while still wet transfer to a parchment lined baking sheet in one layer. Add 2 full tablespoons kosher or sea salt, toss through the almonds then let dry on the sheet pan, covered lightly with a clean kitchen towel, for 48 hours. Uncover and transfer almonds on a single layer on lined sheet pan to a preheated 225 oven for 1 hour-1 hour and 15 minutes until toasty beige. Use what you need to garnish the soup then store the remaining salted almonds in a covered tin—they’ll keep for weeks and make a wonderful snack at cocktail time.

Tweed’s ResTauRanT & Buffalo BaR 17 East Main Street • Riverhead, NY 11901

To serve: Serve well chilled from a tureen or individual bowls. Garnish with accompaniments if desired.

2. Serve well chilled with a drizzle of remaining olive oil and sliced salted almond garnish.

Best Waiter Thomas McSwaine

Li ve Well

3. Break eggs into the work bowl with remaining vegetables. Add bread, oil, vinegar, seasonings and tomato juice. Pulse just to mix and transfer to vegetables in bowl. Refrigerate covered in a suitable container up to done day ahead.

1. Place the yogurt, grapes, almonds, goat’s milk, coriander seeds and 1 tablespoon olive oil in a blender. Blend until ingredients are thoroughly pureed and smooth. Refrigerate the soup for 3 to 4 hours or overnight until ready to serve.

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Breakfast

longer until thoroughly incorporated but still slightly chunky. Transfer half the pureed vegetables into a large bowl.

1 pint plain yogurt, preferably goat’s yogurt 1/2 pound seedless green grapes, washed 1/4 cup blanched and toasted almonds 4 ounces goat cheese, preferably Catapano 1 teaspoon toasted coriander seeds 3 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil, divided 16 marcona almonds* roasted, salted and coarsely sliced

BISON | STEAKS | CHOPS | DUCK | SEAFOOD

Open 7 Days

Cold and tasty

Reprinted from Silvia Lehrer’s Savoring the Hamptons: Discovering the Food and Wine of Long island’s East End.


fooD & DININg

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August 2, 2013 Page 111

From Fresh to Gula Gula BY AjI jones

fresH in Bridgehampton offers menu items to satisfy vegetarian and vegan diets for lunch and dinner seven days a week. Specialty items include raw fresh summer roll with julienned hearts of romaine, beets, carrots, avocado, peppers, scallions and asparagus wrapped in a collard green leaf with tomato chipotle vegan aioli ($16); Thai red curried summer vegetables with zucchini squash, spinach, carrots, string beans, asparagus, leeks, bamboo shoots and onions, coconut milk, ginger and cilantro in a garlic and red curry paste ($9); and Mecox Bay dairy raw milk cheese plate with Atlantic mist camembert, cheddar, gruyere and aged shawondasse with fresh berries on tasted baguette ($16). 631-537-4700 360 eAsT at Montauk Downs in Montauk offers a 19th Hole menu daily from 5:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. The menu includes marinated sliced hanger steak with mozzarella cheese, crispy onions, lettuce and tomato on garlic bread with a choice of French fries, potato salad or side salad ($10.95); open faced grilled cheese, bacon and tomato with choice of French fries, potato salad or side salad ($6.95); and roast beef melt with garlic bread, mozzarella cheese, au jus, lettuce and tomato with a choice of French fries, potato salad or side salad ($9.75). 631-483-5025 eDIBle eAsT enD presents The Great Food Truck Derby in Brideghampton on Friday, August 9 from 4 to 7:30 p.m. Trucks from Manhattan to Montauk will gather at the Hayground School for an evening of ethnic and local mobile eats along with regional wine and craft beer. Participating trucks include Montaco serving fish, pollo verde and roasted veggie tacos; Hamptons Foodie serving sesame noodles and shrimp ceviche; and Silver Spoon Specialties serving pulled pork sliders. The cost is $60 per person and includes one serving at

every food truck and complimentary beverages. Buy tickets at bit.ly/GreatFoodTruckDerby2013. 631-537-4673 eDGeWATer resTAurAnT in Hampton Bays serves dinner Thursday through Monday beginning at 5 p.m. and Tuesday and Wednesday beginning at 4 p.m. Dinner selections include cod livornese roasted with an herb crust and topped with pomodoro, capers, whole roasted garlic and pitted kalamata olives and served over braised white beans ($26); grilled herb crusted chicken with diced tomato, red onion and feta cheese served over arugula and sliced beets ($23); and grilled filet mignon topped with a crimini mushroom sauce and shrimp oreganata over spinach served with roasted potatoes ($38). 631-723-2323 THe CAnAl CAfé in Hampton Bays is open for lunch and dinner Monday through Sunday beginning at 12 p.m. Dinner entrées include grilled flank stead sandwich with sautéed onions, melted swiss and served with fries and coleslaw; fried shrimp hero with beer battered shrimp, slaw and tartar on toasted ciabatta with fries; and crab cakes with jumbo lump crab meat and served with fries and coleslaw. 631-723-2155 MIrko’s resTAurAnT in East Hampton is open for dinner. Menu selections include spice-rubbedroasted Long Island duck breast with wild rice griddle cake, blueberry compote, orange-honey pomegranate sauce ($39); herb and panko crusted halibut with sautéed kale asparagus, wild mushrooms, truffle oil vinaigrette and carrot juice ($39); and pappardelle pasta with fresh asparagus, lobster, caramelized fennel, leeks, lemon zest and red pepper chile flakes ($44). 631-726-4444 Luchi Masliah’s famous GulA GulA eMPAnADAs are now available—hot and delicious— from Sag Town Coffee at 78 Main Street in Sag Harbor 631-725-8696, sagtowncoffee.com. Now in season: Balsam Farm organic corn and onion empanadas! To order empanadas in quantity call Gula Gula at 516-429-1529.

The BesT Prix Fixe in The hamPTons 3 Course $2700 Mon - Wed 5:00 – 6:30

Steak and Fries $1900 Mon – Wed 5:00 – 6:30

Lobster Night $2100 Tuesday Only 5:00 – 6:30

Prime Rib Night Wednesday $2100 “WOW” 5:00 – 6:30

Buckley’s Inn Between Monday is build your own burger night, and Two for One wings at the bar, Tuesday is Two for One Entrees, for $23.95 Wednesday is Three course Price Fixe Thursday is Steak Night.

Specials not available Holiday Weekends

Open-7 Days a week Lunch • 11:30am-5pm Dinner • 5pm-10pm

bobby van’s

27376

main street, bridgehampton

Where the North Fork ends and delicious begins. Delicious. Fresh. Local. A raw bar that boasts several varieties of oysters shucked-to-order. Diners, expect a wonderful experience.

This is the Hamptons!

ph 631-537-0590 f 631-537-1983 great food in a comfortable setting

136 FRONT STREET, GREENPORT, NY 11944 631477 6720 | CHEFNOAHS.COM more info...www.jettykoon.com

28177

22785

139 W. Montauk Highway, Hampton Bays • 631-728-7197


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danspapers.com

BY DeBBIe slevIn

L

ove fresh fruit and vegetables? Good cheese? Delicious baked goods? Not willing to brave the traffic on Route 27 for a bushel of tomatoes, a bunch of basil and a crusty baguette? Then have I got a service for YOU: Let the bruschetta begin! Farm to Front Door, a Hamptons online market, is the brainchild of Cathy Badard and Lesa Tinker. Badard, who lives fulltime in Southampton “had a pipedream,” says Tinker. She wanted to share “all things green on the east end: painters, gardeners…[she has a] pure interest in healthy living, supporting the locals farmers, being ecoconscious. Our ultimate goal was to do more with the farmers, and now we have this: Farm to Front Door.” The initial website, which still functions as an umbrella for Farm to Front Door, is ecoeastend. com, which lists events and vendors that promote ecologically sound living. “Cathy moved out when her kids were little and got to appreciate the way of life out here,” says Tinker. “You live and eat the natural life. This is her main passion.” With a strong commitment to feeding their families in a wholesome and nutritious fashion they thought, “Wouldn’t it be great if more people could access this, especially those who are too busy to do it? Wouldn’t it be great if all your farm produce was sitting on your door step.” Rather than wonder and dream, Badard and Tinker decided to make it happen. The two women do it all themselves, with the aid of two helpers. No strangers to the business world, they already had

oLd stove pub v

Go to ecoeastend.com

“But it would be great if more people ate the fresh produce and they could appreciate what they have been missing out on. It would be fabulous.” Tinker is quick to point out that Farm to Front Door is not a CSA (Community Supported Agriculture). Customers choose their items and order online. The company delivers for a small fee. They also send out a newsletter once a month with updates on new products and services. Although there has been much interest in having the service extend to New York City, they are not there yet. Tinker says there are a plethora of farmers markets already functioning, but doesn’t dismiss the idea entirely. Right now their season parallels the Hamptons season, with their last delivery featuring Thanksgiving treats, including turkeys from North Sea Farms in Southampton and decorative gourds for the table. “Ultimately, we would like it to be all year, except for the fruit and vegetables.” Ecoeastend.com

75 MAIN

Free Wi-Fi !

zach erdem presents

SinCe 1969 v

open 7 days Lunch: Sat – Sun noon – 3

prix Fixe all day: Sun – Thurs 4 Courses $29

H O T E L . R E S T A U R A N T . B A R

Open 7 Days BreakFast, Lunch anD Dinner

auThenTic Greek cuisine

“10 Best Restaurants on Long Island” ...USA Today Travel

open 7 days

cheF Mark MiLiteLLO

annOunceD his new Menu is nOw Being serveD at 75 Main! has

2010 Greece’s “chef Of The Year” emmanouil aslanoglou

the awarD-winning cheF FrOM Mark’s Las OLas Mark’s Mizner park Mark’s nOrth MiaMi Beach

prix Fixe all day 4 Courses $34 Sunday – Thursday

wOn Best restaurant in aMerica ny tiMes Best cheF in aMerica JaMes BearD awarD-winning cheF

Fresh Fish Flown in Daily from Around The world

every weDnesDay ceLeBrity Magician Live piano – Fri & sat

Reservations

631v 537 v 3300 3516 Montauk Hwy v Sagaponack

26037

the know-how. Badard has worked in business and fashion and is currently a real estate broker with Corcoran in Southampton. Tinker, who left Australia on a 12-month vacation 25 years ago, managed the London offices of an Australian publishing company, and does extensive volunteer work for her children’s school. In business already three years, they have had “a lot of trial runs and different names but we ironed out the kinks,” Tinker says. Thursdays through Saturdays are their busiest days. They try to make all deliveries on the day the order is placed and service the Hamptons from Montauk to Quogue. “We have certain farm stands that we especially like because their product is so good,” says Tinker. “The vendors are all easy to work with, accommodating and supportive. It broadens their outreach as well.” Their stock includes fresh eggs, home-made ice cream from Bay Burger, Paul’s Caesar Dressing, Halsey Pickles, cheeses from Mecox Bay Dairy, and tea from Plain T, in addition to local corn, flowers, pies and accoutrements. “The apple cider donuts from Milk Pail are really good,” adds Tinker. The women have divided the labor. Tinker maintains the website, keeping it up-to-date. Badard meets with the vendors and handles social media. They both share the shopping and delivery chores. They have had a 50% increase from year to year. And are still growing. “Expanding the business is the million dollar question...We have a vehicle that cruises around and the driver gets stopped and asked for information all the time. It would be great if the business doubled, but I am not sure I want to do that for the next ten years.” Tinker thinks about it and nods her head.

facebook.com

Ecoeastend.com a Convenient Farmers Market

kevin nichOLas

reserVaTions 631 . 287. 5500

the haMptOns hOttest entertainer

136 Main St . Southampton

75 Main Street • Southampton www.75main.com • 75main.restaurant@gmail.com

www.NammosNY.com 26043

631-283-7575

24684


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August 2, 2013 Page 113

Restaurant Review: La Maison Blanche BY GenevIeve HorsBurGH

f you’re like me you don’t visit Shelter Island often, and if you do it’s just to pass through to Greenport or Sag Harbor—but I’ve just found a reason to make it a destination, and that reason is called La Maison Blanche. Whether you are looking for a day-cation with the family or a romantic getaway, La Maison Blanche, which is also an inn, is a place you need to try. The menu is French-Italian, with a few American touches. To start we sampled the traditional French onion soup, and I look for an onion soup that has thin, wonderfully caramelized onions in it and I found that here. The onions were sweet and incredibly tender, almost melting in my mouth. The broth was rich and flavorful, seasoned to perfection. The soft melted cheese—a mix of mozzarella and swiss, perhaps—was slightly tangy and paired wonderfully with the robust beef broth. We also sampled the soup of the day, which was a delightfully woodsy cream of mushroom soup. It was not as heavy as I was anticipating; instead I found it to be wonderfully light and full of hearty mushroom flavor. Next we tried the Burrata and Tomato appetizer, and if you’ve never had burrata, this is the place to try it! Burrata—which means “buttered” in Italian—is a deliciously fresh Italian cheese. The outer shell of the cheese is solid mozzarella, while on the inside there is both decadent cream and mozzarella, creating a silky, soft texture that begs to be spread on bread, although eating it straight up isn’t a bad option either. At La Maison Blanche, this creamy cheese is served surrounded by haricots vert and olives, drizzled with extra virgin olive oil and sweet balsamic vinegar. Although a most decadent appetizer, I enjoyed every single bite and I hope to go back to enjoy it again.

G. Horsburgh

I

Confit de Conard, a duck entrée

paired with fingerling potatoes and dusted with some French salt. The meat was cooked superbly,

and we enjoyed the surprise little sprinkling of salt on top. It’s very French, very fancy, and it makes you feel very special. For dessert we chose a classic crème brulee, which was slightly sweet and wonderfully creamy on the inside, with that crispy sugar crust to offset the creamy custard and create quite the party in your mouth. We also had a made-to-order chocolate fondante, a creation of chocolate cake with a hot chocolate center, paired with vanilla ice cream. This one would satisfy your most intense chocolate craving.

Located near the famous Crescent Beach on Shelter Island, La Maison Blanche is a gorgeous setting for any occasion. For more information, visit them on the web at maisonblanchehotel.com.

Any event even short notices

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26705

Burrata with tomatoes, haricots vert and olives.

Open 7 days for lunch & dinner Sunday Brunch 11am - 3pm Enjoy the freshest seafood in the Hamptons from our ocean view deck.

Indoor / Outdoor Bar Now Open Monday -Thursday 5 -7pm price appetizers & drink specials Thursday Night Top of the Lady Night Friday 5 -7pm Happy Hour Complimentary buffet & drink specials

1/2

363 Dune Road l Hampton Bays 631 - 728 - 5239

28250

The Calamari appetizer also caught my eye, as this version was baked rather than fried and so I was intrigued. Would they be crispy enough to satisfy me? Our server explained that the chef marinates them (in buttermilk most likely) to make them tender, and then they are breaded to order and baked. They came out and I found myself amazed. Not only were they crispy, they were tender and flavorful, with a bit of spice to tease your taste buds. For my entrée I chose the Confit de Canard, a duck leg and thigh served atop sautéed wild mushrooms and roasted fingerling potatoes. Our server asked if I wanted my skin crispy and of course I said yes; is there any other way to have your duck? It came out flawlessly crisp, and I savored each bite. To me, duck tastes like a combination of chicken and beef, and I prefer the juicy dark meat pieces laid before me. Paired with all kinds of mushrooms, including chanterelles, creminis, oysters and buttons, all cooked together and eaten with a mouthful of savory duck. A perfect bite. Hubby had the Filet au Sel, a beautiful filet medallion


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BY sTACY DerMonT

W

hat’s new at Michael Gluckman’s Madison & Main restaurant? Just about everything. It opened just four months ago in the former New Paradise Café space on Sag Harbor’s Main Street— but the interior paint job makes it look like this eatery has been there forever. They plan to remain open seven days, year-round. The bar already has a bustling fan base. By now the menu should include a lot of local produce, in addition to local fish and seafood from Gosman’s Dock in Montauk. I was happy to see Amagansett Sea Salt on every table! My husband and I went to check it all out a couple months ago, before the bold-face names started pouring in.

We shared a Homemade fresh Berry Shortcake with blueberries and strawberries and whipped cream. It was a two-person job. Buttery. There’s a distinctly European vibe—the music, the candles, the dark wood and exposed tabletops. The wine list offers choice picks from France, Italy and California as well as our own Wölffer Estate Vineyard in Sagaponack. Plus Long Island beers including Long Ireland’s Celtic Ale and Blue Point’s Hoptical Illusion. Chef/co-owner Eric Miller popped round to say a friendly “hello” to all the diners. I took M&M’s Drinks Menu advice to “relax and sip our special creations” to heart and ordered a Sag Harbor Triple Rum Punch. The Pyrat rum,

ut e o le tak ailab av

27031

Celebrity Chef = Gaetano Chef’s TasTing = sun - Thu @5PM 3 Course Dinner salad = Pasta = entrée

peach schnapps, Malibu rum, Meyers rum and fresh-squeezed orange was pretty served in a tall glass—and tasty. Husband went with a Madison & Main Single Malt Old Fashioned with 12-yearold McCallans whisky, a cube of Brazilian sugar, artisan bitters and a splash of Maraschino liqueur. He commented that “it’s unusual to have a mixed drink made from whisky— but this one works.” We started with some light bread and a savory spread. Husband ordered the sag Harbor’s latest hit Wild Giant Shrimp Cocktail from M&M’s Raw Bar, served over ice with freshly grated horseradish cocktail sauce and pepper salsa on a tall silver dish. It was an impressive presentation. He found the shrimp a tad overcooked to his taste. I had Charleston Wild Giant Shrimp with creamy grits and crispy shallots. Good shrimp, tame grits. Then came my favorite dish of the night—Petite Ravioli of Fresh Peas in a braised summer vegetable broth topped with North Fork microgreens. The riced sweet pea and scallion filling was still very hot when served and it had a vibrant flavor and great texture. Husband’s entrée was a generous serving of Montauk Tuna served with roasted, Sicilian-style eggplant, garlic and pine nuts. He quite liked it. French press coffee, anyone? No, thanks, but we

Kurt Leggard

Restaurant Review: Madison & Main

did indulge in a glass of a substantial port. And we shared a Homemade Fresh Berry Shortcake with blueberries and strawberries and a generous amount of whipped cream. It was a two-person job. Buttery. I asked co-owner Michael Gluckman what his favorite dishes on the menu are. He said, “I like the tuna and our aged steaks. We want to be a local favorite year-round. We’re child-friendly and we have a kids menu, everything’s homemade!” Now’s just the time to sit out on Madison & Main’s patio at the back. Manager Alfredo Merat told us he’ll be hosting acoustic happy hours and poetry readings… Madison & Main, 126 Main Street, Sag Harbor, 631-725-6246, madisonandmainrestaurant.com

a hamptons destination like no other Seafood • Steaks • Lobsters • Music

Come Join Us and sample the incredible selection of family style Cooking Reservations suggested = $30 per person

94 Dune Road • E. Quogue • NY 11942 631-653-0653 www.dockerswaterside.com

Call for information = 631.996.4550 674 montauk Highway = East Quogue

22711

Open for Lunch & Dinner 7 Days = 11am – 10pm 25822

Whitney’s

Chinese • Japanese • Malaysian Thai • Vietnamese

Delicatessen & Caterers

Fine Food Since 1986

Lunch • Dinner • Sushi & Sake Bar On/Off Premise Catering

Catering Available Open 7 days from 12pm Lunch Specials & Takeout Available

Backyard & corporate BBQ’s starting at

131 West Montauk Highway Hampton Bays, New York 11946

631-728-8838

food

Zagat Survey 2006/2013 25

www.matsulin.com

dECor

$14.95 per person

The North Mall 98 Old Riverhead Rd., Westhampton Beach 631.288.6297 Fax: 631.288.4219 Vist us on Facebook.com/Whitneysdeli

sErviCE

20 22 27849

27361

www.whitneysdeli.com

26892


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A Guide to Local Favorites SoUTHAMPToN AND HAMPToN BAYS 75 MAIn resTAurAnT AnD lounGe Italian/American $$$ Executive chef Mark Militello. Open daily, 8 a.m.–4:30 p.m. Dinner 4:30 p.m.–midnight, 75 Main Street, Southampton. 631-283-7575, 75main.com. BuCkleY’s Inn BeTWeen Irish/American $$ A family friendly restaurant with an extensive menu including their famous burger, steaks, salads and authentic Irish fare. Offering a great selection of beers on tap, including Guinness, Harp and Bass. Fantastic Value Nights: Monday build-your-own-burger and two-for-one wings at the bar; Tuesday is twofor-one entrées; Wednesday three-course prix fixe; Thursday Steak Night. 139 Montauk Highway, Hampton Bays. 631-728-7197, buckleysinnbetween.com. DoCkers American $$$ A lively waterfront restaurant and bar with the most beautiful sunsets and water views in the Hamptons. 180 waterfront seats, two outdoor living rooms, three bars and a menu that is an eclectic mix of Creative American Cuisine with an emphasis on fresh seafood, steaks and lobsters, Live music by great bands. The casual, relaxing and friendly environment is by design with a certain “on vacation” feeling. 94 Dune Road E. Quogue 631-653-0653, dockerswaterside.com MATsulIn Asian $$ Finest Asian Cuisine. Zagat-Rated. Lunch, Dinner, Sushi & Sake Bar. Catering available. Open daily from noon. 131 West Montauk Highway, Hampton Bays. 631-728-8838, matsulin.com. nAMMos Greek $$$ Authentic Greek Cuisine. Open 7 Daily, Fresh Fish flown in daily. Featuring 2010 Greece’s Chef of the year Emmanouil Aslanoglou. Prix Fixe All Day four courses $34. Reservations. 136 Main Street, Southampton 631-287-5500.

EAST HAMPToN AND MoNTAUK Cross eYeD ClAM BAr & GrIll Seafood and Chops Seafood, prime steaks and chops, amazing burgers, fish tacos, cocktails and more! Late night entertainment. Breakfast and lunch at the Clam Shack. Dinner daily from 4 p.m. 440 West Lake Drive, Montauk Harbor, Montauk. 631-668-8065. GeorGICA resTAurAnT & lounGe American $$$ Eclectic American, High-energy dining. Contemporary delicious food. Meats, pastas, desserts and more. Overlooking Georgica Pond.108 Wainscott Stone Rd. Wainscott. 631-537-6255, georgicarestaurant.com nAvY BeACH International $$$ Montauk’s favorite beachfront restaurant. Serving Lunch and Dinner 7 days. New menu items! 16 Navy Road, Montauk. 631-668-6868, navybeach.com. rACe lAne Local Cuisine $$$ Sourcing fresh, seasonal produce for their new spring menu. Innovation and a touch of the multicultural make it a special dining experience. Open seven days a week from 5 p.m., $33 price fix available Monday-Thursday until 6:30, Friday and Saturday until 6 p.m. Outdoor bar and patio now open. 31 Race Lane, East Hampton. 631-324-5022, racelanerestaurant.com.

BRIDgEHAMPToN AND SAg HARBoR BoBBY vAn’s Steak and Fish $$$ Steakhouse classics and fresh fish. Open 363 days for lunch, dinner and weekend brunch. Open Mon –Fri.

11:30 a.m.–10:30 p.m. Sat. 11:30 a.m.–10:30 p.m., Sun. 11:30–10 p.m. Main St., Bridgehampton. 631-537-0590, bobbyvans.com.

DININg oUT KEY:

Jamesport Avenue, Jamesport 631-722-2900, jedediahhawkins.com.

Price Range Local Wine Kid-Friendly

noAH’s Seafood $$$ HAMPTon Coffee CoMPAnY Seafood-inspired small plates with a nod to Espresso Bar, Bakery, Cafe & Coffee For complete local producers. Open 7 days for lunch and Roastery $ restaurant listings dinner from 11:30 a.m. to 10 p.m. On Friday A Hamptons classic since 1994 and more dining and Saturday, The Lounge @ Noah’s serves and a Dan’s Papers “Best of the information, visit a late night small bites menu and specialty Best!” Famous hand-roasted danshamptons.com cocktails with a DJ until 2 a.m. Outdoor coffee, real baristas, muffins and dining available.136 Front Street, Greenport. bagels, egg sandwiches, a Mexican 631-477-6720, chefnoahschwartz.com. Grill and more. Open 6 a.m.–8 p.m. daily, year round. Locations in Water Mill olD MIll Inn next to The Green Thumb farmstand and in Local Cuisine $$$ Westhampton Beach across from Village Hall Built in 1820, delights customers with great waterfront and now in Southampton on the highway next dining on the deck overlooking Mattituck Inlet and by to BMW. Also anywhere with their Mercedes woodburning fireplace in the pub. This destination Mobile Espresso Unit for your event! 631-726-Cofe or visit restaurant in North Fork wine country showcases fresh, them on Twitter and Facebook. local ingredients. Voted Best Of The Best Bar, bringing tophamptoncoffeecompany.com. notch artists to the East End. Reservations recommended. 631-298-8080, oldmillinn.com. Muse In THe HArBor New American $$$ orIenT BY THe seA Open seven days. Open for brunch Monday through Seafood $ Thursday (11 a.m.–3 p.m.) and Saturdays and Sundays Restaurant and full-service marina. Offering an extensive (10 a.m.–3 p.m.) Dinner nightly beginning at 5:30 p.m. Live menu of local seafood and fresh vegetables. Located next music Thursdays and Mondays. 16 Main Street, Sag Harbor. to Cross Sound Ferry. Dine while you overlook beautiful 631-899-4810, museintheharbor.com. Gardiners Bay on our outdoor deck. Open 7 days for lunch and dinner. 40200 Main Road, Orient. 631-323-2424, olD sTove PuB orientbythesea.com. American $$$ A Hamptons classic since 1969. Perfectly charred steaks PorTo Bello at the oldest stove in the Hamptons. Open 7 Days, lunch Italian $$ Saturday and Sunday noon–3 p.m., Prix Fixe Sunday– Celebrating 21 years, in their original location on the Thursday four courses $29. Live piano Friday and waterfront at 1410 Manhanset Ave., Brewer’s Marina, Saturday. Reservations 3516 Montauk HWY Sagaponack. Greenport. Offering local and imported wines, Porto Bello is 631-537-3300. one of the North Fork’s hidden treasures! 631-477-1515. osTerIA sAlInA TouCH of venICe Sicilian/Italian $$ Italian $$ Think Sicilian ingredients like extra virgin olive oil, Proudly serving the North Fork for over 20 years. currants, pine nuts, fava beans couscous & candied We take advantage of all the North Fork has to offer, oranges. Authentic Sicilian and family recipes from the preparing local cuisine with Italian soul. Extensive wine Aeolian Island of Salina, including Caponatina, Bucatini con list featuring local and Italian wines, full bar with happy Sarde, Pesce Spada, Polpo, Artisanal Cannoli and Salina’s hour specials. Private room available for all occasions. signature dessert, “Panino di Gelato.” 95 School Street, Special chef’s family-style menu available for small groups. Bridgehampton. 631-613-6469, osteriasalina.com. Winner of BOB 2012 Best Summer Drink: Blueberry Lemonade. 28350 Main Road, Cutchogue. 631-298-5851, PIerre’s touchofvenice.com. Casual French $$$ Euro-chic but casual French restaurant and bar. Late RIvERHEAD, WESTHAMPToN, SPEoNK dinner and bar on weekdays. Open 7 days. Brunch Fri.– Sun., 10 a.m.–5 p.m. 2468 Main Street, Bridgehampton. THe All sTAr 631-537-5110, pierresbridgehampton.com. All American $$ Premiere bowling, sports bar and entertainment venue. sen resTAurAnT This industrial chic-inspired facility boasts 22 state-of-theSushi and More $$$ art bowling lanes, VIP room with six private lanes, vortex Chicken, beef and shrimp favorites with a selection of sushi bar with 12 inverted beer taps. 96 Main Road, Riverhead, and sashimi. Opens 5:30 p.m. daily. 23 Main Street, Sag 631-998-3565, theallstar.com. Harbor. 631-725-1774, senrestaurant.com.

NoRTH foRK AND SHELTER ISLAND ClIff’s elBoW rooM Steak and Seafood $$ The best aged and marinated steak, freshest seafood and local wines, in a casual, warm atmosphere. Lunch and dinner. Two locations: 1549 Main Road, Jamesport, 631722-3292; 1065 Franklinville Rd., Laurel. 631-298-3262, elbowroomli.com. leGenDs American $$$ In historic New Suffolk for 20 years, offers “The Best of Both Worlds:” Fine dining in the sophisticated, cozy and eclectic dining room, and the classic bar with rich, warm woods and brass accents—both serve the same innovative food. Late-night burgers and light fare. 835 1st Street, New Suffolk. 631-734-5123, legends-restaurant.com. luCe & HAWkIns AT jeDeDIAH HAWkIns Inn American $$ An ever-evolving menu that places an emphasis on local and sustainably grown ingredients. “Excellent food and excellent service in an excellent ambiance.” Newsday. 400

BuoY one Seafood & Steak $$ Offering the freshest fish and finest steaks, daily specials, Eat in or Take out. Call to inquire about our Buoy One Clam Bake. 62 Montauk Hwy., Westhampton 631-998-3808 & 1175 W. Main Street, Riverhead 631-208-9737, buoyone.com. Also in Huntington! roADHouse PIZZA Brick Oven Pizza $ Nestled on the Peconic River in Riverhead, dine inside or outside while enjoying Brick Oven Pizza, fresh salads, pasta and hot and cold heroes made to order. Gluten-free pizza and pasta available. Beer and wine available. On-and-off premises catering available. Located at 1111 W. Main St., Riverhead. 631-208-9888, roadhousepizza.com. TWeeD’s Continental $$ Located in historic Riverhead, Tweed’s Restaurant & Buffalo Bar in the J.J. Sullivan Hotel serves the finest local food specialties and wines representing the best L.I. vineyards. Open 7 days for lunch and dinner. 17 E. Main St. 631-208-3151, tweedsrestaurant.com. Check out DansHamptons.com for more listings and events.


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Junk Removal 1-800-Got-Junk? (631) 750-9181 (800) 468-5865 www.1800GotJunk.com

Property Management Chaloners of the Hamptons (917) 862-1354 www.chalonersofthehamptons.com

Pool & Spa P B Backyard Masters (631) 501-7665 w www.poolandspalongisland.com

Security/Alarms Berkoski Home Security (631) 283-9300 www.berkoskisecurity.com

Roofing

Line Roofing & Siding (631) 287-5042 www.631LINE.com

Plumbing / Heating ti Hardy Plumbing, Heating & AC (631) 283-9333 www.hardyplumbing.com

Gutters

Gutter Helmet of Long Island Corp. (631) 218-0241

www.gutterhelmetofli.com

Moving M oving & Storage De Despatch of Southampton (63 (631) 283-3000 www.despatchmovers.com

Window Replacement Renewal By Andersen of L.I. (877) 844-9162 http://renewal-by-andersen-long-island.com

Siding Fast Home Improvement (631) 259-2229 www.fasthomeimprovement.com

Garage Doors

Propane Gas

Titan Overhead Doors (631) 804-3911 www.titanoverheaddoors.com

Petro Propane (855) 4U-PROPANE

(855) 487-7672

Basement Waterproofing Complete Basement Systems, LLC (516) 409-8822 (631) 935-0005 www.completebasementsystems.com

Fuel Oil Hardy/Berkoski Fuel (631) 283-9607 (631) 283-7700 www.hardyfuel.com

Window Treatments Wondrous Window Designs (631) 744-3533 www.wondrouswindowdesigns.com

Air / Heating / Geothermal Audio/Video

Hardy Plumbing, Heating & AC (631) 287-1674 www.hardyplumbing.com

The Interactive Home Design (718) 472-4663 (631) 287-2644 www.interactivehomenyc.com

Oil Tanks Abandon/Testing Clearview Environmental (631) 569-2667 www.clearviewenvironmental.com

Finished Basements Gates / Deer Fence/ Screening Trees

V.B. Contracting Inc (631) 474-9236 www.vbcontracting.com

East End Fence & Gate (631) EAST END eastenddesign@aol.com (631) 327-8363

Generators Maccarone Plumbing (631) 283-9007 www.maccaroneplumbing.com

SService D Directory’s

Make Your House A Home To place your business on this page,

please call 631-537-4900


dan’s PaPers

danspapers.com

August 2, 2013 Page 117

PERSONAL SERVICES/ENTERTAINMENT Ma s s a g e H e a l s

Susan Krieger, L.Ac. MS •Facial Rejuvenation – Anti Aging •Acupuncture•Acupressure •Health & Nutrition Consultations

privaTe/group Yoga

for You & Your Child in the comfort of your home

Available to come to Homes, Hotels & Boats

631-786-6406 jvassallo42@gmail.com

Foot Relaxation Center

27513

Acupuncture with Amalia Haddad, MS, L.Ac.

(Located in the Calverton Commons)

Appointment and Walk-In Welcome!

Special

Foot Reflexology Open 7 Days a Week 60 min $28 26271 Mon-Sat: 10:30 am-8:00pm Sun: 10:30am-6:00pm

646-322-0526 • www.acupnuncturewithamalia.com

631.287.1465 Southampton

Any event, even short notices 917-754-2543 | 516-423-6377

•Shiatsu • Sweedish •Deep Tissue •Signature Massage

spuntinoeastend@gmail.com

Tuscan and Sicilian Cuisine Salads, barbecued vegetables Fresh local produce, fish Argentine Parrilladas

Relaxing The Hamptons One Body At A Time (Outcalls to your Home, Party, or Boat)

26704

917-484-0018

Erika@luxbodywork.com www.luxbodywork.net

Ancient SpA VoyAge

26066

Spa Delights Include •Deep Tissue Massage • Mini Facials • Relexology • Acupuncture

Lose 3-5 lbs Instantly

Herbal Body Wraps • Spa Parties Gina (646) 415-2208 (24/7) office*residence*yacht*hotel

26140

20% Off Spa Parties All Summer Long!!

Superlative and Luxurious Spa Services Call to book a perfect individual or couple’s treatment.

Licensed Massage TherapisT for 15 years

$60 per hour

In-home services avilable We’d be happy to come to you! 71 Hill Street Southampton, NY

631-537-4900

www.ananasspa.com

adinfo@danspapers.com

Head, shoulder, neck massage

Adults Children In Home or Studio

• Trigger poinT Therapy • aroMaTherapy

Open 7 days a week

27056

16 Hill Street # 3, Southampton

631-287-1118

By Claudia Matles

• swedish deep Tissue • refLexoLogy

Mon - Sat: 10:30 am - 7:30 pm Sunday: 11 am - 7 :00 pm

26639

24187

WELLNESS INSTITUTE

Locations in Southampton, Hampton Bays & East Hampton Call 728-WELL • www.hamptonswellnessinstitute.com

Having Family & Friends Over? Call One of Dan’s Service Directories & Treat Yourself to Some Help

New York’s Complete Transportation Company for over 40 Years

NYC + The Hamptons

631 793-0872 Email: jrdibar@yahoo.com

THE ED & PHYLLIS DAVIS

• Massage • Acupuncture • Personal Training • Zumba • TRX • Fitness for Kids • Yoga & More!

Airport Experts • Corporate Accounts • Wedding Groups • Bachelor/ette Parties • Entertaining Clients

Relax & Rejuvenate in the comfort of your home with

Sinéad’s Massage & Mobile Spa Service. Promoting Wellness in the Hamptons & NYC

561-301-3230 www.sineadsmassage.com

sineadsmassage@gmail.com

24073 24073

24 HOUR SERVICE AVAILABLE 7 DAYS A WEEK

OUR FLEET CONSISTS OF: Executive Sedans • Limousines • Vans & Buses

631-721-7515

22319

Symmetry Studio

FOR RESERVATIONS (631) 589-3500 • HAMPTONS (631) 728-0063

www.colonialtransportation.com

26245

The Hampton’s Premiere Pilates facility since 1998.

Pilates • GYROtONiC Yamuna Body Rolling & Boutique

631.204.0122

symmetrystudio.com 395 County Rd. 39A Southampton, N.Y. 11968

BeSt rateS guaranteed & VIp SerVICe Vineyard tours, nights out, Weddings, nYC to montauk

25181

$35 per hour

Foot Reflexology

(diagonally east across the street from the movie theater)

PILATES, YOGA & HEALTH COUNSELING

Janet DiBartolo

Our advertisers renew their Service Directory ads year after year. Call our Classified Department and make Dan’s Papers your storefront.

Massage Yon Ka Paris Facials Manicures & Pedicures Body Treatments Endermologic Microdermabrasion ...and much more!

631-287-9099

Summer Special

631 288 5992 www.cateredevent.com 26229

631-559-8444

28109

Classical Acupuncture Facial Rejuv., Reiki

Full service events BBQ and Clam Bake parties Delivered gourmet food

From Manhattan to Montauk and every space in between.

Bodywork by Erika

Classified Dept open 5 days! M-F 8:30am-6pm 631-537-4900

Serving The Hamptons For Over 25 Years!

SPUNTINO – Caterers

26858

Lauren Matzen, MAc

Helping you take back control of your life from the burden that clutter causes.

Homes & Offices Home Staging Pack & Move

631-591-2783

4482 Middle Country Rd. Calverton, NY 11933

26534

Hampton Yoga Healing Arts & NYC

by Kristi Constanteles

Licensed Massage TherapisT

susankriegerhealth.com

Allergies, Asthma, Anxiety, Headaches, Pain, Sciatica, Weight Reduction

Organizing Expert Organizational Coach

John Vassallo

25578

917-678-2484

Deep Tissue - Swedish - Hawaiin & Thai Body

24887

• La Carezza Spa Southampton • NYC Home Visits

Paul Evans Caterers

B odywork /y oga

Southampton (800) 498-5788 | (631) 287-5466 27087

mVLImo.Com

To Place Service Directory or Classified ads, contact the Classified Dept. at 631-537-4900 M-F 8:30-6pm danspapers.com


dan’s PaPers

Page 118 August 2, 2013

danspapers.com

ENTERTAINMENT/PARTY SERVICES Since 1976!

Summer Piano Rental

Party Performers H Magicians H Face Painters H Petting Zoo H Pony Rides Reptiles H Balloon artists H Beach Sports Party H Foam Party Machine H dJ’s Jugglers H Guitar Sing-alongs H tattoo artists H hair Braiders H Princesses New Costume Characters H inflatables H Jumpers H Rock Wall H water Slides H dunk tanks Popcorn H Cotton Candy H Snow Cones H hot dog Carts H Slime Machine Foam Party H ice Cream truck H tents H tables H Chairs H Balloons H Much More! MeNtioN daN’S PaPerS - Get 2 free hourS of reNtalS Me

631-765-2500 H p a r t y k i d z n y . c o m

Backyard Bashes Barbecues Benefits Birthdays Special Events

Allan Zola Kronzek

631-725-3391 www.allankronzek.com

THE ENTERTAINMENT SPECIALISTS

*FULLY LICENSED & INSURED*

-Photo Booths -Casino Nights -Lounge Furniture -Tents,Tables,Chairs -DJs, MC’s, Karaoke -Game Rentals

p

-Obstacle Courses -Water Slides -Mechanical Bull -Unique Photo Items -Pop Noggins -VR Simulators

Tubs of Fun

Disc Jockey

Beach Parties/BBQ’s Cocktail Receptions Corporate Events Private Parties Baby Showers Wedding Events Restroom Attendants Available Upon Request

631.902.0123

www.AgesEvents.com

nypartyworks.com

m

631.501.1414

ou

r

Info@afterthevent.com or Call Us 866.711.7871

27838

tion

stric

Re

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n ntio rs & Me Pape food E s ’ E . Dant a FRhine!y Apply Ge Mac s Ma

es

s

Rockwalls

Solo or Band Parties Private Events BBQ’s

We specialize in pre-event support and after-event clean up services!

ty ar

your

-Carnivals -Euro Bungy -Bounces -Laser Tag -Dunk Tanks -Food Machines

Hampton Balloon

&

party rentals New For 2013 Laser Tag

24883

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106 Mariner Drive, Southampton NY

Servers • Bartenders • Captains Barback Staff • Kitchen Preps Cooks & Grillers • Butlers Food Runners 26650

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The Edward z Daniels n Ensembles

631-589-6999

silverplatterserviceinc.com

spservers@optonline.net

Check out our video at

jazztriony.com 631•747•5965

26481

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25329

631 287 9040 Call 631.537.0500 to advertise.

25533

“Don’t just have any party, have an amazing party”

amaziNgpaRtieS.com

Ray Red Entertainment Private Functions, Parties, BBQ’s... Acoustic Rock from 60’s to Present

631-725-7533 Google: “Ray Red”

24835

Sophisticated Live Music

By Alex Alexander LIKE THIS ARTICLE

AmAzing PArties & toys

Event Planning - DJs/Bands - Costume Characters Clowns - Petting Zoo & Pony Rides - Bungee Run Moon Bouncers - Disney Princess Bouncer Mickey Mouse Clubhouse - Tsunami Slide Inflatable Obstacle Course - Largest Tropical Water Slide Dunk Tank - Face Painting - Party Hair Wrapping Tattoos - Tent - Tables & Chairs Linens We’ll Beat ANY Balloons/Arches - Party Supplies & Toys Competitors Pool Decor Favors - Balloon Bouquets - Carnival Games Hot Dog Cart - Popcorn Cotton - Candy - SnoCones Rental Prices Highly recommended by many Hampton in The businesses such as The Meadow Club and Hamptons! The Children School to name a few..

631-725-5626

www.jimturnermusic.com

-InsuredNYC, The Hamptons, LI Entertainment company of the NY Jets 25951

Cool and Hot Live Music for All Events by

our 31st year

www.TheHamptonBalloon.com

Sound Systems, Lighting, Plasma TVʼs, Effects and more. -Free Online Planner-

25368

(631) 726-4640

Jim Turner

Proudly Serving the Hamptons for over 30 years A ce t Yo ur Servi

AYS

•Waiters •Bartenders •Grill Chefs

27318

631.589.4174 aysstaff.com

Like Dan’s on Facebook!

alexanderlivemusic.com

(516)790-9369 25212

All of our employees are covered by workers compensation and liability insurance

To advertise in the most widely read Service Directory in the Hamptons, call Dan’s Classified Dept

631-537-4900

To Place Service Directory or Classified ads, contact the Classified Dept. at 631-537-4900 M-F 8:30-6pm danspapers.com

25021

23376

PianoBarn.com

www. Buy•Sell•Rent•Move•Tune

H H I New for 2013H• 35’Shark water Slide/lifeGuardS I I

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dan’s PaPers

danspapers.com

August 2, 2013 Page 119

PARTY SERVICES/HOME SERVICES AERIAL PhOTOGRAPhY homes, Businesses, Events, Boats, Gift Certificates

25512

PhOTOMOTIONS (631) 368-6972

Classified Dept open 5 days! M-F 8:30am-6pm 631-537-4900

capture today forever

www.peek-images.com

917-254-3756

631-734-2827 25939

24354

Contemporary Portraits and Family Photography

Air Conditioning/Heating Heat Pumps/Humidification Radiant Heat Specialist

Family-owned Business that offers 24/7 Emergency Service, Free Estimates and Affordable Maintenance Contracts. 25290

Helicopter Charter

Filipkowski Air, Inc

631-727-2762

KOLB MECHANICAL

25201

email: info@flandershvac.com www.FlandersHVAC.com

Heating and Air Conditioning

NORTH FORK

Custom Audio & Video

LIKE THIS ARTICLE

Like Dan’s on Facebook!

Whole House Audio & Video Home Theater • Security Integration Lighting Control • Shade Control Computer Networks • Audio Prewire Showroom At 6615 Main Rd., Mattituck

% 0 0 1

21684

WATERPROOFING

25803

319102.6827

Dan’s Classifieds and Service Directory

Young’s Wood Finishing Inc.

Leo Young

Shop 631-730-6616 Office 631-664-8669

www.youngswoodfinishing.com

631l 283 l 0758

comfort convenience enjoyment peace of mind

In Home Touch Up/Repair Service

A Master in the Art of Wood Finishing

Made in the USA-Keeping jobs at home ®

Different than any other • Will keep your basement dry

Servicing & installing audio/video and Home theaters on the east end since 2001

open: 8:30am-6pm Monday–Friday

Southampton 631.283.3455

new york 646.580.3318

Licensed by the n.y.S. Department of State Lic# 12000275600

631-537-4900

www.systemsdesignco.com

Architectural Finishing

24342

MINEOLA SIGNS & AWNINGS

W Call TODAY for your complimentary in-home consultation Professional measuring and expert installation

www.mineolasigns.com ALUMINUM & FABRIC AWNINGS RETRACTABLES RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL

Hunter Douglas Certified Professional Dealer

24/7 Service

SENIOR CITIZEN DISCOUNT

M iv Rece Before

0% to 60 60 months months 0% interest interest for up to 27530

www.BudgetBlinds.com/HamptonBay Somfy Certified Installer.

• Roof & Chimney Leaks Stopped • Any Roof Repairs & New Installations • Chimney Cleaned, Repaired & Rebuilds • New Siding & Window Installations • Gutters Cleaned, Repaired & Replaced

F OF ted 25us% resen stimate P e B E t ing

Find us online at

Thinking about motorized blinds or shades? We’re only a phone call away!

ROOFING • CHIMNEY • SIDING • GUTTERS (888) 909-3505

631-329-8663 24329

don

We Are The Shutter Specialists · We Cover Thu - 02/21/2013 - 2:02:27Any PM Window 319102.6827 · Any Size · Any Shape

• (Dry & Healthy)

FREE estimates (516) 857- 6462

19423

Furniture Re-Finishing & Repair

NO

water SYSTEM THE

22839

2/21/2013 - 2:02:27 PM

-Serving the East End for 31 Years -

A division of Mildew Busters

631-287-2403 631-298-4545 www.nfav.com

n e e Gr

• Air quAlity lity /SPore teSting teS te eSting Sting • rAdon rAdon te tteSting eS eS • Mold re rreMediAtion eMedi eM MediA ediAAtion tion • BlAck BlAck Ack Mold Mold SPeciAliStS • BASeMent BASeM BASe eMent Ment / crAwl crAwl crA Awl SPA SPAce wAterProofing cell # 631-495-6826 eastendwaterproofing.com

20876

Clean Air is Trane Air™

18733

27686

631-267-2242

www.kolbmechanical.com

www.donerightroofingandchimneyinc.comxxxxx

Call 631.537.0500 to advertise.

To Place Service Directory or Classified ads, contact the Classified Dept. at 631-537-4900 M-F 8:30-6pm danspapers.com


dan’s PaPers

Page 120 August 2, 2013

danspapers.com

HOME SERVICES 2010

Fast, Friendly, Professional Service www.acechimneyexperts.com

CSIA Certified Technician

a division of Custom modular Homes of long island

Dan’s Best of the Best

631.726.9300

qualitycraftedhomesonline.com

24550

Pete Vella

Suffolk Lic. 47706-H

OF THE

Quality Crafted Homes

Schindler Enterprises

We work your hours!

The East End’s premier cleaning and maintenance company

Carpet Cleaning

dan w. Leach custOm decks

Dan’s Classifieds and Service Directory

287-4600

schindlerenterprises.net 27252

House Washing • Fine Area Rug Care Window Cleaning • Exterior Cleaning • Deck Care Property Management • Flooring • Mobile Auto Detailing

open: 8:30am-6pm Monday–Friday

Spring Cleaning / Rentals Organization / Staging Party Setups & Clean-ups

& Upholstery Cleaning LLC

Family Owned , Operated & Insured

• Area Rugs • Tile & Grout

SH License #001839

Insured

www.southamptonhandyman.com

east end since 1982

wh+sh+eh Licensed & insured

Thinking about a new deck? Do it once. Do it right.

Outdoor Furniture • Water Removal 24277

Cleaning ServiCe

“Let the professionals do the Work” Tel. 631.236.8874 reSidenTial • CommerCial

Get Ready foR SummeR adveRtiSe youR employment oppoRtunity in dan’S Call 631-537-4900

Trex Certified

Cisnes Carpentry Corp • Carpentry • Roofing • Custom Cabinets • Decks • Siding • Interior Moulding • Doors/Window Installation • Floor Installation/Refinishing • Finished Basements • Fencing • Complete Home Renovations For all your Home Improvement Needs. From Cottages to Castles on the East End.

Licensed and Insured Southampton

Composite Cedar Mahogany Ipe See our web site for more!

East Hampton 27514

P T

25044

631-205-9200

Call Today

631-928-0263 631-413-9339

Suffolk County

631.287.2300 www.spchomeimprovement.com

631-903-5708

www.CisnesCarpentryCorp.com 21820

Decks Built to last a lifetime Composite • Wood • Vinyl deCks

MBB Builders General ContraCtinG The finest in all restorations

decorative Painting • decorative Moldings • • Plaster Techniques • • stone • • stucco •

• 25157

If You’re a Handyman Looking To Do Work This Summer, Advertise Your Services in Dan’s

Call 631-537-4900

631-238-4245 631-238-4245

Fully Licensed & Insured Lic.# 49495-H 22395

liCensed • insured • Workers Compensation Certified trex, Azek And timberteCh instAller

Family Owned Business

Moises Benitez

631-374-4389 631-680-1818

your outdoor family room awaits

Convenient offices in Hamptons & Manhattan

27699

631-220-1335

email: stephen@eZ-decks.com

To Place Service Directory or Classified ads, contact the Classified Dept. at 631-537-4900 M-F 8:30-6pm danspapers.com

24186

Sylvia STephani owner

27699

631-287-9277

631-345-9393

24607

Flo’s Cleaning Service

• designed & instaLLed with cabLe raiLing • bLue star mahOgany • ipe • cedar • pOwerwashing • aLL repairs • check Out Our phOtO gaLLery! • Landscaping • masOnry • staining • prOmpt • reLiabLe • prOfessiOnaL QuaLity

Owner Operated danwLeach@aOL.cOm

631-537-4900 Cousins Carpet

24455

maximize your existing space • Custom construction $ in our factory saves Any Order you money over $1000 • Closets, free-standing With this coupon. Coupon must be presented at units, home offices, estimate appointment. Not valid with other discounts or prior Long Island’s Closet Experts media centers, pantries... purchases. • Huge variety of finishes, 516-223-2232 Offer expires 9-20-13 www.CustomClosetsDirect.com styles and components Serving The East End • Owner on premises Call Today for a FREE In-Home Consultation • Guaranteed for the FREE Installation life of your home Quality solutions at the RIGHT price!

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Fax (631)648-7480

Nassau H0436720000

(631) 648-7474


August 2, 2013 Page 121

HOME SERVICES Elegant Electric, Inc.

Expert House Washing & Power Washing

n e e Gr

Decks • Brick & Stucco Roofs • Siding • Teak Furniture

% 0 0 1

All Types of Electrical Work for Renovations and New Homes

Call today for a free estimate

• New Installations • Service Upgrades • Panel and Generator Installation • Landscape Lighting

631-495-6826 • www.mildewbusters.com

(516) 902-1413

reSidential and CommerCial ClientS.

800-704-GATE (4283)

24534

30 YEArs ExpEriEncE 24535

❖ All Major Credit Cards Accepted www.ellisdecks.com ❖ 631-275-0921

M.R.C.

ElECtRiCal ContRaCtoRs

We work your hours!

24-Hour EmErgEncy SErvicE For ALL Your eLectricAL needs

Dan’s Classifieds and Service Directory

Residential • Commercial

roberts asphalt co.

Oil & Stone Driveway Specialist

Blacktop Driveways/Parking Areas Custom Masonry, Cobblestone & Paving Stone New Construction and Resurfacing Free Estimates Family Owned & Operated For Over 37 Years

Full Service Electrical Contracting

www.mrcec.com 631-287-2768

Residential/Commercial LED Lighting • Landscape Lighting Generators Provided & Serviced

Danspapers.com

23824

(631)287-6060

• (631)324-6060

open: 8:30am-6pm Monday–Friday

631-537-4900

LIC #4015-ME

OceanElectric.net

21074

Licensed & insured

S.H. Lic. L002553

Supplying a Complete line of gateS and gate operatorS for

automated gate openerS • Access equipment

Free Estimates

631-475-1906 • RobertsAsphalt@aol.com

AlphA Entry GAtE SyStEmS

25942

Hamptons New York

Licensed & Insured

❖ Deck Construction ❖ Design ❖ Sanding ❖ Staining ❖ Pressure Washing and More

26664

24126

24560

Find us on angie’s List!

NEW HOMES

over 25 years

GJS Electric, LLC

Custom masonry • Belgium Block • Brick Pavers • Stoops • Patios • Pool Scapes ExCavatIon • Grading • Backhoe •Topsoil • Drainage asPhaLt PavInG • Driveways • Parking lots • Tennis Courts • Maintenance

and RE NOVATIONS

Lighting Design/Controls • Home Automation Computer Networks Audio/Video/HomeTheater Landscape Lighting • Automatic Generator Sales

23958

(631) 878-2804

www.rosemar.com

Builders of Custom driveway Gate systems Arbors • screening Trees PergolAs • Pool • sTone

www.gjselectric.com licensed/insured (631) 298-4545 • (631) 287-2403 xxxxx

22301

GrEat PrICEs! QuaLIty WorK! Free Estimates

ProfessionAl fence insTAllATion

ENVIRO-DUCT William J. Shea ElEctric cleaning Brothers Electric LLC S 30

Air Quality issues & testing mold remediation

Lower Heating & A/c costs & improve your Air Quality! enviroductny.com Serving the East End

631-283-0758 27683

Go Green!

• All Phases of Electrical Work • Security Systems • Surveillance Systems • Home Automation

Lic/Ins Owner/Operated Over 20 Years Experience

Office: 631-403-4050 Cell: 631-525-3543 Brotherselectricny.com

23646

air duct cleaning chimney cleaning & repair dryer vent cleaning • wet basements Lic#27335-H, SHL002637

tons New York

dan’s PaPers

danspapers.com

631-eAsT-enD 327-8363

12222

eastenddesign@aol.com

erving the hamptonS for yearS

24-hr Emergency Service

Our Electrical Services Include: • Lighting & Electrical Repairs • House & Home Office Wiring • Generator Sales & Installations • Computer, Telephone Wiring • Home Automation Services

5 Years Straight!

service directory deadline 5pm Thursday

Deer conTrol sPeciAlisTs

631-668-1600

WilliamJSheaElectric.com Liscensed & Insured

LIC # 3842ME

DO IT “THE SHEA WAY”

Hidden Pet Containment Systems

Sales • Installation • Training • Repair Call today for $50 off a new system! (excludes Basic)

631 979-9439 • www.FidosFences.com

22345

To Place Service Directory or Classified ads, contact the Classified Dept. at 631-537-4900 M-F 8:30-6pm danspapers.com

24280


dan’s PaPers

Page 122 August 2, 2013

danspapers.com

HOME SERVICES

GUTTERS 631-758-0812 SEE OUR NEW WEBSITE

WWW.DQGINC.COM COPPER & ALUMINUM PROFESSIONAL INSTALATIONS & CLEANING . ATTENTION TO DETAIL UNMATCHED CRAFTSMANSHIP &

CERTIFIED DEALER FOR

CR Wood Floors

George

631-466-1272

516-903-2099

Installations Sanding Refinishing Free Estimates

Specializing in

D.Q.G. New Art.indd 1

30 Years Experience-Owner Operated

631-599-2454 631-909-2030

Lic’d

D’Alessio Flooring Total Shop-At-Home Service

D.Q.G. INC. GUTTERS

1/31/10 3:20 PM

•Hardwood Flooring •Carpets and Area Rugs •Vinyl & Laminates •Sanding & Refinishing

20170

Copper & Aluminum Professional Installations & Cleaning Attention to Detail Un-matched Craftmanship Suffolk Lic. 15194-H 631-758-0812 www.DQGINC.com

Over 35 Years of Experience Ins’d

631-478-2385

28051

Handy Hamptons

Installations • Sanding Finishing • Repairs Custom Staining & Decks

Over 10,000 Long Island dogs safely contained! Locally serving the Hamptons since 1985.

my only business is making hardwood flooring beautiful! “A family business”

service directory deadline 5pm Thursday

Reliable Wood Flooring

Sanding System “the atomic DCS” Sanding & Finishing Installations Buffing & Waxing Starting at $1.99 SF Residential • Commercial

720 Montauk Highway, Water Mill, NY

631-726-6019

1.888.9DUSTFREE

caninecontrol.invisiblefence.com ©2013 Invisible Fence, Inc.

23222

Canine Control Company

Call for Free price Quote

Danspapers.com

10% off all decking & painting

• now through labor day • Kitchen • Bath • doors • Windows • decking • moulding • sheetrock • painting • Finished Basements • Custom Woodworking Call phillip totah 631-949-2522 handyhamptons@aol.com lic. ins.

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Fine Carpentry

Free Estimates

Alterations • Renovation Built in Cabinets Interior Trimwork Kitchen Installation (including IKEA)

Also Available Sat & Sun 26272

28181

Dust Free

28186

631-878-3625 licensed & insured

ReliableWoodFlooring.com

Floor & Home

Lic# 43698-H

S hardwood Flooring

24488

Champion

General ContraCtinG

Licensed & Insured

Carpet one

Quality CraFtsmansHip WitH attention to detail

631-236-7086

ReliableWoodFlooring.com

Handy Mike

Alex Tel: 631-258-5608 www.alexkhgc.com

Since 1975 Father - Son Team All Phases of Carpentry

alexkhgc@gmail.com

23696

CCC_DansPapers_MAY2013_1_5x3.indd 4/25/2013 1 9:46:15 AM

Licensed & Insured

23381

Marcin

21914

• Fencing •PVC •Azek •Decks •Outdoor Showers • Railings •Arbors •Driveway Gates • Custom Raised Garden & Veg. Planters (complete with Irrigation) Lic Loo3213 •Deer Fencing/Spraying • Pet Guard •Screening with Trees by Professional Arborist

28158

Fence Co.

GUTTER PROTECTION

*Automatic Gate Operators Installed, Replaced, Repaired *Telephone Entry Systems and Cameras *Deer Driveway Gates * All Types of Fence Custom Made *Decks *Railing * Sunrooms *Awnings * Deer Fence Cedar Siding * Brick Pavers & General Construction

Kitchens, Baths Deck Repairs Paint/Spackle Power Washing Licensed & Insured

Suffolk Lic # 4432 SH L002528

Because You Didn’t Drive All The Way Out Here To Sweat In The Dark!

Custom made entry Gates

631-850-4374

sTeven’s HandYman service

FAMILy OwnED AnD OPERATED 40 yEARS

State-of-the-Art Backup Power Technology

Ph 631 878-6303 Fx 631 878-7525

Quarterly On Site Maintenance • Weekly Off Site Monitoring When the power goes out, we are your SOLUTION

CRAFTSMAnFEnCEAnDDECk.nET

27700

EastHamptonEnergy.com

Call 631.537.0500 to advertise.

27567

631-283-6526

Res. Comm. Lic. #47949h

25671

DBA as Four Seasons Aluminum Siding

Siding, Windows, Doors

Handling all Your HandYman needs & THen some. •Carpentry •painting •DeCks •roofing •siDing •repairs •Basements •moulDings •powerwashing •Caretaking, etC. Free Estimates, References 631-599-9654

We work your hours! Dan’s Classifieds and Service Directory open: 8:30am-6pm Monday–Friday

631-537-4900

www.DogGuardofLI.com 25938

1-800-329-PETS

Veterinarian Approved • Indoor Systems Lifetime Warranty • Made In The USA

631-537-4900

DEXTER

Your Gutter Helmet, Sunshade, Roofing and Siding Professionals!

CONTRACTING

Serving the community for over 25 years Specializing in all phases of Home Remodeling Custom Builder

631-218-0241

Free Estimates Never Clean You Gutters Again!

26713

To advertise in the most widely read Service Directory in the Hamptons, call Dan’s Classified Dept

Lic

631-287-1617

To Place Service Directory or Classified ads, contact the Classified Dept. at 631-537-4900 M-F 8:30-6pm danspapers.com

Ins 24353


dan’s PaPers

danspapers.com

August 2, 2013 Page 123

HOME SERVICES Complete Kitchen & Bath Remodeling

heimer Constructio nRenovations/Additions r e y n Be

HOUSE WATCHING

Licensed & Insured

DESIGN • SALES • INSTALLATION

Professional & Dependable References Available

24581

“Designing & Building Residential Golf Greens in the Hamptons for over 20 YEARS”

• KITCHENS • BATHROOMS

cell 516.449.1389 office 631.324.2028

SH L000242 EH 6015-2010

hamptonshomebuilder.com “Over 30 years of distinctive craftsmanship”

“We Turn Your Dreams to Greens”

20 Years Experience

EPA Certified Home Remodeler

Low-Cost FuLL serviCe Lawn MaintenanCe

For Information: 631.744.0214

• COUNTER TOPS

FREE ESTIMATES

Servicing Nassau & Suffolk since 1990

• TILE WORKS

Seed, Sod & Irrigation Trees & Shrubs Flower Gardens Deer Fencing Organic Fertilization Seasonal Clean up

annaghslandscaping.com

personalputtinggreens.com

• WOOD FLOORS

26459

CORP.

25065

Lic.

Cell (631) 484-2224

24201

by Jim

Decks, Roofing, Siding Interior-Exterior Trim Kitchens/Baths, Flooring Basements, Windows & Doors Design • Permits • Management

631.728.3290

Lic #41767-H

Lic 6772-HI Insured

L001935

Ins.

• CARPENTRy • WINDOWS • DOORS

• Landscapes • Floral Gardens Installation • Organic Products Maintenance

• HOME IMPROVEMENTS

765-5772

631-

AhrensBuildingCorp.com

dan w. Leach custOm BuiLder

• interiOr aLteratiOns & cOnstructiOn speciaLists • decks designed & instaLLed • Finished Basements • siding • painting • tiLe • check Out Our phOtO gaLLery • prOmpt • reLiaBLe • prOFessiOnaL QuaLity

631-345-9393

east end since 1982

19373

Owner Operated danwLeach@aOL.cOm

wh+sh+eh Licensed & insured

Modern to Classic Design Be Inspired

Insured

Bathrooms Do it Now

Completely Tiled bathroom in as little as a week

Visit our New Showroom 2272 Montauk Hwy. Bridgehampton, NY 11932

631.537.7200 HamptonDesign.com

28031

Call 631.725.7551 LIKE www.unlimitedearthcare.com THIS ARTICLE

Like Dan’s on Facebook!

www.hlicorp.com

I 631-723-3190

Commercial and Residential 20+ Years Experience All Work Guaranteed Owner on Site Free Estimates

Setting the Standard in Workmanship

Pesticide Application

• Spraying • Deep Root Fertilizing • Trimming • Pruning • Stump Removal • Planting & Transplanting • Drains • Storm Cleanup • Complete Lawn Program • Masonry • Landscape Design • Grading • Brush Clearing • Irrigation 25890 • Sod & Seed • Soil Analysis • Low Voltage Lighting

WE DO IT RIGHT!

The Lic/InsSH SH The Best BestReferences References•Lic/Ins 25415

SERVICE ● INSTALLATION ● REPAIRS

Design • Install • Maintain

The East End Irrigation Specialist FULLY INSURED Lic #38320-RP

A Fair Price For Excellent Work

Serving Montauk to Southampton

631-205-5700

www.IrrigationSolutions.com Rain Dance

East Hampton Lic #7279

Southampton Lic #L001472

23938

(631)-205-5700

Rain Dance

Since 1999

631-668-1266 Pesticide Applicator T1860914

28174

IRRIGATION Service a Installation

2013 SeASON CONTRACTS • Serving Montauk to Southampton

Tel/Fax: 631.668.6639 raindanceeirg@yahoo.com

25183

Licensed • Insured

All Island

service directory deadline 5pm Thursday

Landscaping

Landscape Design Masonry • Shrub/Flowers Garden Care Property Management

631-287-6880

26460

26094

Call 631-537-4900

25198

NYS Certified Arborist & Designer on Staff

Call Now: Peter Rant 631-281-3462 631-286-3462

If You’re a Handyman Looking To Do Work This Summer, Advertise Your Services in Dan’s

Affordable programs for garden and lawn maintenance Available!

Licensed and Insured

HL

Expert Tiling Peter Rant

All Jobs Big and Small All Exterior and Interior • Handyman Projects • Decks & Fence • Painting • Windows • Land Clearing • Misc. • Bath & Kitchen Renovation Specializing in Project Mgt. References Available Licensed & Insured MIKe 631-324-2028 CeLL 631-831-5761 26457

• Lawn Care Transplanting • Hedge Care

25182

Licensed

North Rd. Commons #19 Route 48 & Cox Lane Cutchogue

www.earthwaterandstone.com

Danspapers.com

Complete Landscape Provider Lawn Maintenance, Design, planting installation, clean-up, fertilizing, tree trimming, tree removal, flower gardens, indoor flowers, complete property management Call Jim or Mike 26458

516.819.6358

Showroom

18357

Charles r. ahrens • Owner Operated

24668

east hamptOn, nY • Custom Homes & Additions • Roofing & Siding • Construction Management • Basements & Decks • Framing • Complete Renovations • Window Replacement • Kitchen & Bathrooms • Complete Architectural Design Services

631-324-2028 631-723-3212

References available

To Place Service Directory or Classified ads, contact the Classified Dept. at 631-537-4900 M-F 8:30-6pm danspapers.com


dan’s PaPers

Page 124 August 2, 2013

danspapers.com

HOME SERVICES Superior Landscaping Solutions, Inc.

NYS DEC Business Reg # 11417

27274

• Masonry, Belgian Blocks, Pavers • Weekly Maintenance • Mowing � • Drywells and Drainage Systems • Irrigation Systems Installed • Driveways, Walkways, Retaining Walls • Tree and Shrub Planting, Trimming & Removal • Sod and Seed Lawns Installed • Bobcat Service Major Credit Cards • Spring and Storm Cleanups • Gutter Cleaning Accepted peconicbaylandscapes.com Lic. 631-909-3454 Ins.

(631) 353-1754 Cell

Linda Nelson decorative garden design + service

Dan’s Classifieds and Service Directory

Licensed

insured

Best View Landscaping & Masonry Landscaping & garden Maintenance Lawn Mowing sod & reseeding spring clean-ups Fall clean -ups Mulching Weeding edging

Hedge Trimming Tree Planting Tree removal irrigation Work Fences Bobcat services

EH LIC # 6378 SH LIC # L00225

631-324-4212

countryside-eastend.com

coMpLete Masonry Work • Cobblestone Edges • Aprons • Walls • Brickwork • Patios Walkways • Stone Work • Driveways

23490

Excellent references Free estimates Juan Marquina

Cell 631-513-9924

bestviewlandscapingandmasonryinc.com

bestviewland@ymail.com

Ins.

26836

service directory deadline 5pm Thursday

26095

Licensed & Insured

631-831-7634 • east HaMpton • www.MgMasonry.coM

24845

Anita Valenti Outdoorexpressionsinc.com

OCEAN STONE & TILE

Lawn Care Tree Care Grounds Maintenance Tree Pruning Tree Removal

• Tile Work (all phases)

Shore Line

Licensed

Your local Dock Builder & Marine Contractor From Refacing & Repair to New Construction All phases of bulkheading, piers, floating docks...

631.661.2169

shorelinebulkheading.com email: Bulkheading@aol.com

24318

MASONRY SHOWROOMS

Tide Water Dock Building Company Inc.

•Mulch

(All Colors Available)

•Topsoil •Gravel•Sand •Blue Stone Delivered

Call for Pricing

631-278-7745

25025

SOUTHAMPTON MASONRY All Masonry & Ceramic Tile Supplies

peconiclawncare.com (631) 283-0289

Southampton, NY • 631 259-8200 East Hampton, NY • 631 329-2300

• Bulkheading • Gabions • Floating Docks & Docks • House Piling • Rock Retaining Walls

Insured

Excellent Local References

BULKHEADING

24402

25399 27954

631-283-5714 Licensed & Insured

FirepLaces Lawn Maintenance BarBecues FaLL cLeanup Brick, stone patios tree reMovaL

• Brick Patios & Walks • Belgian Block Curbing • Pool Patios & Coping • Cultured Stone

Lic# 29998-H

• Design • Installation • Garden Renovations • Transplanting • Ponds / Waterfalls • Fine Gardening • Lawn Maintenance • Re-vegetations • Perennial Gardens • Natural Screenings • Irrigation Installations/Service • Tree / Shrub Pruning & Removals • Spring / Fall Cleanups • Sod • Mulch • Bobcat Service / Land Clearing • Also Specializing in Masonry • Landscape Lighting Excellent References

Christopher Edward’s Landscape

MASONRY LANDSCAPING DESIGN CONSTRUCTION

631-537-4900

• Landscape Design • Installation & Maintenance • Container Planting • Perennial Gardens • Lawn Services • Grading

631.504.9274

• Sea Shore Planting Specialist • Bluff Stabilization • Dune Restoration • Native Planting • Landscape & Garden Installation • Hydroseeding

516-381-7477

open: 8:30am-6pm Monday–Friday

Countryside Lawn & Tree

êpROFeSSiOnal Tile cleaningê craftsmantilemarble@gmail.com

We work your hours!

Devine Design

631-772-4535

SpecialiZing in all TYpeS OF Tile & QualiTY MaRBle WORK cuSTOM DeSignS

handmade gifts

24291

Landscape Design & Maintenance • Scheduled Maintenance • New Installations • Advanced Lawn Care

Craftsman Tile & Marble

631-766-7131

631.287.1075

LICENSED • INSURED

FREE ESTIMATES

26489

createaerie.com

www.ottooutdoorkitchens.com

25027

NYS DEC Certified Applicator LIC # C1811065

Suffolk LIC # 45887-H

19592

To Our Clients THANK YOU

LIC #’s SH 002970-0 EH 5254

631-287-OTTO (6880)

TILE SHOWROOMS Wainscott, NY • 631 537-6353 Southampton, NY • 631 259-8200

24276

RELIABLE QUALITY SERVICE Turf Expert • Member GCSAA • NYS DEC Certified Applicator 25 years of Experience • Call for Appointment •Licensed • Insured

Outdoor Kitchen Design/Construction Wood-Fired Pizza Ovens & Fire-Pits • Travelling Brick Oven Menu Planning & Catering for Private Events

26019

www.billfoxgrounds.com

• Landscape Maintenance Weekly Lawn and Garden Maintenance Pruning Spring/Fall Clean Ups • Gardening Annual/Perennial Plantings, Privacy Planting,Installation, Mulch, Woodchips, Topsoil • Landscape Construction Land Clearing, Grading, Filling, Drainage Systems, Retaining Walls and Planters Installed, Seed/Sod Lawns, Pond/Waterfall Installation • Masonry • Planning Design

24278

631-765-3130 • 631-283-8025

LANDSCAPING SERVICE Tree Expert Tree Cutting & Pruning Trimming - Edging Mulching Planting Transplanting - Clean Ups Lawn Mowing - Weeding Garden Maintenance Mason - Driveways Cobblestone - Patio Bobcat Service

24516

JOSE CAMACHO

(631) 878-5103 (631) 766-0771

www.oceansstone.com

Inspections & Testing

Brad C. Slack Certified Indoor Environmentalist

Now Offering Thermal Imaging 7 days a week at Office: 631.929.5454 Cell: 631.252.7775 email: Brad@themoldpro.com web: www.themoldpro.com Montauk to Manhattan

24303

Contact Kenny

631-728-3364

Complete Waterfront Contracting Floating Crane Service 23370

Classified Deadline 12 pm Monday

Your#1 Resource

To find the Service Providers you need. Tax Directory • Mind, Beauty & Spirit Design • Going Green Entertaining • Home Services

To Place Service Directory or Classified ads, contact the Classified Dept. at 631-537-4900 M-F 8:30-6pm danspapers.com

26185


dan’s PaPers

danspapers.com

August 2, 2013 Page 125

HOME SERVICES ENVIRO-DUCT cleaning

Oil Tank

Lic#27335-H, SHL002637

Air Quality issues & testing mold remediation

Lower Heating & A/c costs & improve your Air Quality! enviroductny.com

All work guaranteed Free Estimates Interior, Exterior, Powerwashing, Custom Work, Staining, Experienced & Reliable

631-696-8150 Call 631.537.0500 to advertise.

clearviewenvironmental.com

Office: # 631-569-2667 Emergencies: 631-455-1905

Serving the East End

631-283-0758

A Brush of Fate Painting, InC.

Go Green!

4 Generations of Quality Home Improvements

n e e Gr

A division of Mildew Busters

On the South Fork.

InterIor • exterIor

GC Painting & PowErwashing

• Air quAlity lity /SPore teSting teS te eSting Sting • rAdon rAdon te tteSting eS eS • Mold re rreMediAtion eMedi eM MediA ediAAtion tion • BlAck BlAck Ack Mold Mold SPeciAliStS • BASeMent BASeM BASe eMent Ment / crAwl crAwl crA Awl SPA SPAce wAterProofing cell # 631-495-6826 eastendwaterproofing.com

Staining & Painting • Mildew Control Licensed & Insured • Free estimates

Kathleen L. Ploeger • 631.725.8368

Over 20 Yrs Experience

intErior/ExtErior homE imProvEmEnts

21996

% 0 0 1

Licensed & Insured

19154

-Serving the East End for 31 Years -

24489

26149

Nick Cordovano

25199

26062

air duct cleaning chimney cleaning & repair dryer vent cleaning • wet basements

AbAndonments ndonments RemovAls InstAllAtIons * testIng tAnk PumP outs dewAteRIng 24/7 oIl sPIll CleAn uP nYsdeC, ePA & CountY lIsCensed FRee estImAtes & AdvICe

All Pro Painting

Oil Tank Oil Tank

Visit Us On The Web @ danspapers.com

Deck Maintenance & RepaiR

mold removal

p ainting & S taining Low Prices

Mobile Self-Storage aND MoViNg

BEst PricEs EstFimreaetes 27701

631-728-9090

Stop Getting Bugged

Protect your family and your home! • Insect Control • Poison Ivy Removal • Lawn Care • Organic Programs

Serving the East End for over 15 years!

DiNOME PAiNTiNG INTERIOR

iNC.

Catering the Hamptons for over 30 years

Immediate Response and Results Guaranteed!

Painting • Staining • Wallpaper Installation & Removal • Faux Finishes

631499-4300

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WWW.DESPATCHMOVERS.COM

(631) 283-3000 * (212) 924-4181 * (631) 329-5601

24536

NYDOT # T12050 USDOT # 1372409

Flat Rate PRicing Local • Long Distance • Overseas

(631) 321-7172 www.mjmovinginc.com

Family Owned & Operated

NYS DOT T35255 LIC/INS • US DOT 1086657 24176

631-537-4900 adinfo@danspapers.com

1.5” W x 2.5” H

PARTY SPRAYS

Golden Touch Painting Best Price for Painting • Interior/Exterior Powerwashing & Deck Staining Licensed & Insured Tel: 631-878-3131 • Cell: 516-818-3769 goldentouchpainter.com

Having Family & Friends Over? Call One of Dan’s Service Directories & Treat Yourself to Some Help

an

TICKCONTROL.COM

i ca l S o l u t i

s

Moving & Storage NYC To East End Daily • Express Delivery To All Points On The East Coast

Christopher T DiNome 631.283.6727 www.dinomepaintinginc.com

on

Southampton

Our advertisers renew their Service Directory ads year after year. Call our Classified Department and make Dan’s Papers your storefront.

26875

* Serving All Your Moving Needs * Call for a Free No Obligation Estimate And Let’s Make Despatch Your Mover of Choice

Danspapers.com

26413

LOCAL * LONG DISTANCE * OVERSEAS

alternativeearthcare.com

25205

24871

26274

Bo t

Owned and Operated by Long Islanders

26847

www.zippyShell.coM

Southampton 631-287-9700 EastHampton 631-324-9700 Southold 631-765-9700

To Place Service Directory or Classified ads, contact the Classified Dept. at 631-537-4900 M-F 8:30-6pm danspapers.com


dan’s PaPers

Page 126 August 2, 2013

danspapers.com

HOME SERVICES Kazdin Pool & Spa

Vinyl and Gunite

• Vinyl + Gunite Construction • Spas • Supplies • Service

287-4600

schindlerenterprises.net

833 County Rd. 39, Southampton, NY 11968

Carpet & Upholstery Cleaning • Fine Area Rug Care Window Cleaning • Exterior Cleaning • Deck Care Property Management • Flooring • Mobile Auto Detailing

26717

24403

162 e. Montauk Hwy., HaMPton bays, ny 11946

House Washing

For A Lasting Impression

We specialize in eco-friendly and energy-efficient systems.

bluemagicpools@aol.com Great References! Ins. Lic. Experience Excellence Efficiency

The East End’s premier cleaning and maintenance company

Established 1972

• Construction • Renovation • Openings/ Closings • Weekly maintenance • Repairs • glow-in-the-dark tiles

631-655-5550 631-281-0131

Schindler Enterprises

631-283-4884

26873

www.kazdin.com

Clearview House Washing Service

MARBLE DUSTING Long Island Marble

Serving the Hamptons Seven Days a Week

Eco�Friendly Solutions Pool & Spa Opening & Closing Baby Fence Installation Saltwater Pool Conversions Weekly Service

Is Your Solution To Pest Paranoia!

www.���POOL.com

* Botanical Products availaBle

Free Estimates NYS Certified Applicators

631-726-4777 631-324-7474

631 594-2788 Hampton Bays 631-736-7214 Coram

No Subcontractors

“For A Crystal Clean Splash”

• Openings / Closings • Weekly Maintenance • Heaters • Repairs / Renovations • Leak Detection • Construction / Design • Vinyl / Gunite • Natural Solutions LICENSED AND INSURED www.riseandshinepools.com

• Mahogany Free estimates • Aluminum Siding • Treks 1-888-wash-me-2 • Painted & Stained Surfaces 631-288-5111

www.washme2.com

% 0 0 1

631-495-6826 • www.mildewbusters.com

Sales • Chemicals • Pool Repairs • Construction and Renovations • Weekly Maintenance

24017

Serving the East End for over 25 Years

631-325-8929

631-653-6131 • 631-259-8929

EAST END ProPerty ManagMent

Hampton Pool Pros Professional & Reliable Service Guaranteed

24336

631 838-3097 email

Dan’s Classifieds and Service Directory

631-537-4900

25008

Call Now For Details!

JW’s Pool Service • Loop-Loc Covers Lessons to Maintain Your Pool

25155

631-287-4888 Danspapers.com

• Certified pool operator on staff • Opening / Closing, Repairs • Weekly & Bi-Weekly Service • Loop Loc safety cover, fences • Pool Heaters • Pool Liners • Coping,Tile & Marble Dusting • Renovations • Leak Detection Service Lic. 631-874-0745 Ins.

jwpoolservice@aol.com

24562

•Property Management •House Watching •Emergencies •Home Inspections

631-909-7028

www.TwinForksPM.com info@TwinForksPM.com

A Full Service Company

• Openings & Closings • Repairs • Weekly Service

open: 8:30am-6pm Monday–Friday

**Valid with Signed 1 Yr Service Contract with Hampton Pool Pros Full Service. Deduction taken w/ final payment at end of contract

Hamptons Leak Detection Specialists

Bonded Insured East Quogue - Center Moriches

28122

New Customers Only

poolpros99@gmail.com

P.O. Box 382 Eastport, NY 11941 hamptonpetwatch@gmail.com

eepmanagement@optonline.net

$150 OFF

Call Today to Start Service

Lic. Ins.

• Weekly Service • Liners • Pumps & Filters • Safety Covers

Free Estimates

• Saltwater Generators • Patios, Decks & Landscaping

26098

• Opening / Closing • Repairs • Renovations • Heaters

Animal Care in Your Home. Trustworthy & Reliable ...References NAPPS Member

(631) 745-6079

631.445.8560

**All Phases of Service, Renovation & Repairs **

Hampton Pet Watch

n e e Gr

Decks • Brick & Stucco Roofs • Siding • Teak Furniture

Call today for a free estimate

631 259 4409

www.nardypest.com

Go Green!

Expert House Washing & Power Washing

23644

Rise s& Shine Pools outhampton

24340

Lic. BBB Ins.

24125

Serving the Hamptons 55 Years

24853

38198-H

Nardy Pest CoNtrol

• Quality Service • Dependable & Reliable • Cedar • Vinyl Siding • Licensed & Insured

25327

���.���.POOL

Relax…

Power Washing Without The Damaging Pressure Specializing In Mildew Removal

24332

Tick Trauma! Ant Anxiety! Mouse Mania!

Dusting Inc. Experts in Resurfacing of Commercial & Residential Gunite Swimming Pools & Spas. Coping, Tile & Pool Renovations. LongIslandDusting.Net

Pools & Spas Service, Maintenance & Repairs Openings & Closings Safety Covers Salt Generators

631-834-8174 24836

Lic # 40528-H Insured

Lic’d Bonded Insured 24292

If You’re a Handyman Looking To Do Work This Summer, Advertise Your Services in Dan’s

Call 631-537-4900

To Place Service Directory or Classified ads, contact the Classified Dept. at 631-537-4900 M-F 8:30-6pm danspapers.com

27832

J.P Mulvey PluMbing & Heating, inC. www.MulveyPluMbing.CoM

24422

631.725.0725

Blue Magic Pools

MulveyPluMbing@oPtonline.net

We offer All Natural & Standard solutions. Event Applications for any size area. www.mosquitosquad.com

Something New, Something Blue

(631) 283-2234 (631) 728-6347 FaX: (631) 728-6982

22661

Protect your family, friends & pets from mosquitoes, fleas & ticks.


dan’s PaPers

danspapers.com

August 2, 2013 Page 127

HOME SERVICES ROOFING • CHIMNEY • SIDING • GUTTERS • Roof & Chimney Leaks Stopped • Any Roof Repairs & New Installations • Chimney Cleaned, Repaired & Rebuilds • New Siding & Window Installations • Gutters Cleaned, Repaired & Replaced

<

RESCUE VALET

(888) 909-3505 24/7 Service

Mus eceiving R Before

Family owned & operated • 7o th Anniversary

SENIOR CITIZEN DISCOUNT

0% to 60 60 months months 0% interest interest for up to

www.donerightroofingandchimneyinc.comxxxxx

Residential Commercial

24949

Your car. Our driver.

Licensed Insured

RoofInG & sIdInG speCIaLIst – CaRpentRy woRk masteR CoppeR woRk – sLate – fLat Roof

woRk GuaRanteed! fRee estImates wILL Beat any wRItten Quote

chauffeur service • designated driver • private driver Your Car - our Driver. 25067

631-259-2229

www.fasthomeImpRovement.Com

Licensed & insured certified

protecting Homes on the east end since 2001 Southampton 631.283.3455

Suffolk License #22,857-HI

27693

25173

new york 646.580.3318

Licensed by the n.y.S. Department of State Lic# 12000275600

www.systemsdesignco.com

631.345.2539

think trees think fox fox tree service

BiologicalInsect Insect&&Disease DiseaseControl ControlPrograms ProgramsAvailable Available Biological

Removals & Stump Grinding Storm Damage Repairs

Working with Nature

6 3 1 .2 8 3 .6think 7 0 0 • www.foxtreeservice.com think trees trees

www.mStevenSRoofing.com

SOuthamptOn

Working withPrograms Nature Biological Insect & Disease Control Available Plant Health Care Biological Insect & Fine Pruning Disease Control Fertilization Programs Available WoorrkkiControl inngg wwiitthh NNaattuurree W Tick & Mosquito

fox tree service

comfort convenience enjoyment peace of mind

22841

New Roofs • ReRoofiNg wood ReplacemeNt • leak RepaiR

on

www.hamptonsnightowl.com

Erik.631.903.0193 • Rodolfo.631.965.8461

fox tree service Working with Nature

Roofing SpecialiStS Speciali

“A” RAted

25307

24177

F OF ted 25% resen stimate E t Be P

19422

631-287-3117 631-329-1250

631 324 2827 w w w. r e s c u eva l e t . c o m

Biological Insect & Disease Control Programs Available

think trees think fox think fox Joe’s sewer think fox & Drain 631.28 www.foxtreeservice.com foxtreeservice.com 7 0 0 • www.foxtreeservice.com 631.28 33..666 737100.2008 3••.6www.foxtreeservice.com • Cesspools & septiC tanks pumped

Angie’s List

Incorporated 1976, Serving the East End for Over 30 years

Certified Arborist • Registered Consulting Arborist

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dan’s PaPers

Page 128 August 2, 2013

danspapers.com

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dan’s PaPers

danspapers.com

August 2, 2013 Page 129

EMPLOYMENT/CLASSIFIEDS Classified & service directories

Phone: 631.537.4900 • email: adinfo@danspapers.com • Fax: 631.287.0426 158 County Rd, Southhampton nY 11968 hours: 8:30am-6pm, monday thru Friday Publication distributed Thursday & Friday DeaDlines: Classified: monday 12pm service Directory: Thursday 5pm

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dan’s PaPers

Page 130 August 2, 2013

danspapers.com

27519

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danspapers.com

dan’s PaPers

August 2, 2013 Page 131

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT/REAL ESTATE AND LAND FOR SALE

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DAN’S PAPERS

Page 132 August 2, 2013

danspapers.com

EVERYTHING OVER A MILLION

UNDER A MILLION

Beautiful homes sold this week.

Bargains on the East End.

Real Estate Sales Looking Up

L

ower interest rates, a rising stock market and aggressive buyers are making this year’s real estate market on the East End one of the hottest in recent memory. The real estate market has been enjoying an increasing number of housing trades, which has brought those awaiting second quarter numbers for 2013 plenty to be happy about. This quarter in the Hamptons, there were 675 homes sold, a 25.5% increase compared to last year. Other numbers in Douglas Elliman’s quarterly report showed that, compared to the first quarter, the second quarter increased in terms of houses sold by a whopping 94.5%. Paul Brennan, the Hamptons Manager for Douglas Elliman, who has an office in Bridgehampton, has noticed that when it comes to the luxury home market between $1 million and $5 million, buyers are moving with a sense of urgency. “It’s busy in the 1-to-5-million range, but the higher end is at a lull for the moment. Interest rates are beginning to rise, so people are getting into the game before they get locked out,” Brennan explains. Since banks have kept interest rates low for a long time in order to encourage buying, real estate buyers and investors have taken notice and the early birds have jumped on board. The recent report by Douglas Elliman indicates that the Hamptons is also showing a drop in real estate inventory, which would logically further demand and put pressure on prices to go up.

For the second quarter, inventory fell 12.5% compared to last year. So what happens next? The news of hot prices can continue to attract new buyers, but “if interest rates continue to rise,” Brennan explains, “it will slow down the market until the public gets used to the new normal.” But there are plenty of talking heads out there who believe that banks will continue the policy of low interest rates as long as the Federal Reserve does the same. So who’s buying? Thanks to a thrilling ride on Wall Street always be selling. this year, investment bankers and Wall Street traders are back inside real estate offices in the the transactions are at the ‘low end’ of the market, Hamptons, looking to invest their money while at which suggests a bottom-up recover versus the topthe same time enjoy property in one of the most down. Hopefully that’s a good sign of sustainability.” Of course, in the Hamptons, the low end is unlike beautiful places in the world, just two hours away from New York City. “It’s mostly Wall Street people most markets around the world. The median sales who are buying, but I’ve also noticed that there are a price of a home this quarter on the East End was $920,000, which is up significantly from $850,000 lot of Europeans buying as well,” Brennan says. As far as the slow-down in the super high-end compared to last year. And in nearly every sector of homes ($10 million and up), the lack of action can the Hamptons market, there were price increases, be attributed in part to the fiscal cliff fears of 2012. which is a relief to home owners looking to sell but “I think that slowness in the high end that’s taking can leave prospective buyers feeling a little pressure place now is due to the high volume of fiscal cliff to make buying decisions now so that they don’t transactions that took place in the fourth quarter miss out on opportunities today that may not be of 2012. The high end always runs in spurts, so there tomorrow. It’s not a dramatic turn of the table, this is very normal,” Brennan says. “It’s a very but the data is suggesting things are moving toward interesting market, in that currently the majority of a sellers’ market.

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AMAGANSETT Marcia & Persifor Oliver to John R. Kline, 249 Bluff Road, $2,075,000

NORTH HAVEN Ann & Howard Chwatsky to Amy Rebecca Kelly, 25 South Harbor Drive $3,560,000

Laurence W. Cohen to 2 Mitchell Dunes Lane LLC, 2 Mitchell Dunes Lane, $1,162,500

QUIOGUE Sheelagh M. Manno Trust to 25 Sheppard Street LLC, 25 Sheppard Street, $1,550,000

BAITING HOLLOW William F. Andes (Referee) to Knolls of Fox Hill Inc., Flagg Hill Drive, $1,289,591

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August 2, 2013 Page 133

SAG HARBOR Sag Harbor Destination Inc to 126 Main Street Associates, LLC, 126 Main Street, $1,005,000

BRIDGEHAMPTON Morvetta LLC to Kidd Construction Co Inc., 101 Hildreth Avenue, $3,900,000

SAGAPONACk Georgia Lee Hedges Thayer to Joann & Lars Svanberg, 170 Wainscott Harbor Road, $2,600,000

785 Lopers Path LLC to Town of Southampton, Lopers Path, $1,500,000

SHELTER ISLAND Lear-Ruig Partners LLC to Churchill & Churchill LLC, 25 Ram Island Road, $14,230,000

EAST HAMPTON James O. Wettereau to David Dove, 101 Old Stone Highway, $2,400,000

SOUTHAMPTON Landco Mortgage Bankers Inc. to Mindy & Steven Shulman, 14 Petrel Road, $1,065,000

EAST QUOGUE Claudette & Russell Engle to Lawrence & Linda West 38 Peacock Path, $1,350,000

WATER MILL Eastern Developers Inc to Christine & Michael Ippolito, 750 Edge of Woods Road, $1,875,000

MONTAUk Charles & Josephine Saviano to Cindy E. Mandera, 40 Kettle Hole Road, $1,565,000

Client: GA Keen Realty Advisors East End Publication: Dan’s Papers Issue Date: 8/7/13 Size: 3 x 2.875”

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WESTHAMPTON DUNES 664 Dune Road LLC to Mary & Michael Craig, 664 Dune Road, $1,300,000

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ORIENT Nicholas & Shirley Karas to Robert & Sharon Kuehn 990 Windward Road, $645,000

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Page 134 August 2, 2013

REAL ESTATE

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danspapers.com

REAL ESTATE

August 2, 2013 Page 135

27207


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Page 136 August 2, 2013

danspapers.com

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The Animal Rescue Fund of the Hamptons presents the

BOW WOW MEOW BALL honoring

BERNADETTE PETERS Saturday, August 17 Award presented by Beth Ostrosky Stern Emcee Dick Cavett 6:3Opm Cocktails, Dinner & Dancing 9:30pm Junior After Party for Drinks, Dessert & Dancing Peter Duchin & his Orchestra

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