Arts & Entertainment 9-21-16

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IN THE NEWS

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September 21, 2016

THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman

The Independent

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C-2 September 21, 2016

THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman

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Hampton

Company

www.hamptonjam.com


IN THE NEWS

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THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman

September 21, 2016

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C-4 September 21, 2016

THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman

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IN THE NEWS

Independent/Nicole Teitler

The 32nd Annual Harriman Cup took place on Saturday at the Bethpage Polo at the park grounds in Bethpage State Park. The collegiate polo match between University of Virginia and Yale was an invigorating, sold out event. UVA was victorious in a final score of 10 - 4.

Comments, rants, raves and effusive praise welcome at: isitjustme.com

Independent/Jessica Mackin

Meredith O’Connor, multi CMA winning artist, James Otto, and Madeline Stuart, the first model with Down Syndrome were on hand at the Vivienne Hu runway show as party of NYFW The Shows. The event was a benefit for the Carol Galvin Foundation.


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THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman

September 21, 2016

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Paula Poundstone

Deadline for submissions is Thursday at noon. Email to jessica@indyeastend. com.

Music

Tito Batista

Bay Street Theater in Sag Harbor presents Tito Batista and The Black Rose Orchestra on Saturday at 8 PM. Visit www.baystreet.org.

Stephen Talkhouse

The Stephen Talkhouse in Amagansett presents Outrageous Open Mic Night at 8 PM tonight. On Saturday, MamaLee, Rose & The HooDoo Loungers at 7 PM and Fast Five at 10 PM. On Sunday, Mitch Winston and the Band of Natural Selection at 6:30 PM and The Woodworkers at 8 PM. Visit www. stephentalkhouse.com.

Suffolk Theater

The Suffolk Theater in Riverhead presents The Brooklyn Bridge on Friday at 8 PM. On Saturday, Robby Krieger of The Doors. On Sunday, Sweet Adelines The LI Sound Chorus. Visit www. suffolktheater.com.

Samantha Hankey

Samantha Hankey, the mezzosoprano will sing Saturday in a benefit for the Choral Society of the Hamptons at the 100-year-old Woodhouse Playhouse in East Hampton at 5:30 PM.

Theater

Neverlanded

Our Fabulous Variety Show presents Neverlanded, Peter Pan, a modern re-telling of the boy who never grew up at Guild Hall this weekend, Friday through Sunday. Proceeds benefit the Southampton Fresh Air Home. For tickets visit www.ourfabulousvarietyshow.org.

Revisiting Steve

Guild Hall in East Hampton presents JDTLab: Revisiting Steve, an evening of cabaret celebrating Stephen Sondheim’s career in musical theatre Tuesday at

7:30 PM. Visit www.guildhall.org.

Words

Art/History/Amagansett

In its third week, the Amagansett Free Library’s Art/History/Amagansett conversation series continues with programs held on Saturday exploring the lives of artists Thomas Moran and Mar y Nimmo Moran and a Sunday seminar on public relations and social media for artists. The programs are free and open to the public with reservations at 631-2673810 or amaglibrary.org.

Marders Reading

The Parrish Ar t Museum and Bomb Magazine will present four distinguished writers, Candace Bushnell, Jacqueline Weld Drake, Gregory Helberg and Bob Morris at a reading on Saturday at 5 PM at Marders in Bridgehampton. Betsy Sussler, editor in chief and publisher of Bomb, will be the host. The event is free and open to the public.

Comedy

Paula Poundstone

Bay Street Theater in Sag Harbor presents Paula Poundstone on Thursday at 8 PM. Visit www.baystreet.org.

Film

Women Artists

The fall film series “Women Artists as Victims” at the Pollock-Krasner House in Springs will highlight four female artists who faced adversity and struggled to overcome emotional and physical suffering. Admission is free, and no reservations are required. The series is organized by film historian and art critic Marion Wolberg Weiss, who will introduce the films and lead a discussion following the screenings. This Friday it’s a screening of Big Eyes starring Amy Adams and Christoph Waltz, directed by Tim Burton, at 7 PM.

Submit Your Artwork The Independent is looking to feature your work of art for our "Artist Of The Week" column. Email submissions along with a short artist bio to jessica@indyeastend.com.

The Doors Guitarist Robby Krieger

Independent/Jo Lopez

Legendary Doors guitarist Robby Krieger - who wrote "Light My Fire," "Roadhouse Blues," "Love Her Madly," "Peace Frog" and other rock classics – is set to perform with his group at the historic Suffolk Theater in Riverhead on Saturday night. Voted by Rolling Stone magazine as one of the top 100 Guitarists of All Time, Krieger is considered in many ways the backbone of The Doors sound -- one of rock’s most influential groups. While Doors singer Jim Morrison and keyboardist Ray Manzarek are often cited for their contributions to rock music, it was Krieger who helped pen the majority of The Doors songs, as well as some of their biggest hits according to Allmusic.com. Further, Krieger’s style which fused flamenco, jazz, and other world music genres, “pushed beyond rock at a time when most players were still bound to the blues,” according to Rolling Stone magazine. This fusion of genres helped The Doors to become one of the most influential, successful, and experimental groups of the 1960s – helping to shape the psychedelic sound and forge their own path beyond that. The current incar nation of Krieger’s band includes his son Waylon on vocals – who lends a very convincing Morrison tinge, insiders say. The rest of the band

includes: Ty Dennis, drums; Phil Che, bass; and Nathan Wilmarth, Keys. The show is expected to focus on The Doors repertoire and Krieger’s own unique and inimitable guitar style. Tickets start at $49. Doors open at 6:30 PM and the show starts at 8 PM. Visit www.suffolktheater.com for more info. J.M.

Shelter Tails

September is Healthy Cat Month! We are offering a Free Wellness Visit ($35 value) with every cat or kitten adoption! Meet our many kittens & cats in need of furever homes! We have over 80 kittens to choose from!

Adopt a Patient Pet & get a $50 Hampton Coffee Gift Card! Please patronize our Thrift Shop located at 30 Jagger Lane in Southampton Village!


C-6 September 21, 2016

THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman

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Will Ryan: An Artistic Awakening Into The Mystic by Will Ryan and Paton Miller.

That Low And Rumbling Absolute by Will Ryan and John Messenger.

By Nicole Teitler

ON THE COVER: Feel Free by Will Ryan and Richard Burton.

The East End is a breeding ground for creative minds, but much more it breeds compassion. Artist Will Ryan is the result of these two concepts.

O CEAN V ISTA R ESORT A MAGANSETT U NITS F OR S ALE S TARTING

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$175,000

LOW M ONTHLY M AINTENANCE

J AN @MW EIN R EALTY. COM 631.871.1899 M Wein Realty, Inc. 34 N. Perry Road Shelter Island, NY 11964 WWW.MWEINREALTY.COM

Living in Amagansett, near Lazy Point, Ryan walks to the beach or bay side with his flute to regenerate his soul, enjoying the heartwarming marine blues that surround him. However, not everything in Ryan’s life has been a symphony of tranquility and beauty. In 2015, he was diagnosed with Amyloidosis, a form of cancer that creates malformed protein cells in the bone marrow, which can shut down any organ in the body. Upon receiving this news, Ryan searched the Internet for any information he could. Time and time again the word ‘fatal’ popped onto the screen, prompting him to see a doctor at NYU Hospital. Though the chemotherapy made him sick, in his efforts to remain positive Ryan booked a trip to Europe. When he came home fatigue and heart failure took over and he soon found himself at The Amyloidosis Center at Boston University School of Medicine, a center dedicated to Amyloidosis research and treatment. Doctors recommended Ryan undergo a stem cell transplant at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York to prevent further spreading of the disease. His doctor, Dr. Heather Landeau, performed the operation and even did a heart biopsy. “If the doctor was in I was in. We did it and I just tried to stay positive. I didn’t want any kind of depression overcome me, it wouldn’t do any good.” Ryan claims Buddhist training helped his attitude during the whole process. That, along with the help of supportive family and friends who kept informed.

Continued on page c-7.


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Will Ryan

CONTINUED FROM PAGE C-6. “I knew I was going in for basically the battle of my life, the main event,” Ryan’s optimism overcame the fear. With ten million stem cells being transplanted from his bone marrow into his blood stream in February 2015, Ryan endured five to six weeks of hospital visits undergoing tremendous amounts of chemo aimed to kill his immune system in order to regenerate his body. “I really had a great life. I could let go, but the choice [to live] was mine.” One night during Ryan’s sleep, a week or so after the transplant started, he had a vivid hallucination of a young, fourteen year old self visiting him. “Fourteen year old Will said, ‘We’re not done yet,’ and I was like, ‘We’re not?’ He said, ‘No, we have a lot of work to do.’” And with a sigh of relief adult Will Ryan was ready to take on whatever was ahead. Over a year later, slowly gaining the weight back from his arduous journey, Ryan focuses every day on gratitude and compassion. “Ever y moment is precious, may I be awake in this moment and realize that.” Through all the pain has come an artistic awakening. Introducing East End Duets, an art show that will run Thursday through October 9 in which Will Ryan collaborates with over 30 artists. “I learned a lot in collaborating with people. When to yield and when to hold your ground. Respect the other person.” As the summer has come to an official close, Ryan looks back at everything with a big smile on his face. “It’s one of the best summers in my life, and I’ve had some good summers,” he laughs. “Playing with my friends and being healthy. Having the results be the exhibition, nobody got hurt in the process.” Duets is comprised of collaborations of pieces in varied media – sculpture, paintings, and collage among them. When asked how he envisions himself as a painting on someone’s wall, “I would really like to be painted with a smile on my face, and my family and my friends with their arms around me. That would be the nicest painting done.” The opening reception will be this Saturday from 5 PM to 7 PM at The White Room Gallery at 241 Main Street in Bridgehampton. Donations and some proceeds from each sale will go to the adult bone marrow transplant program at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York. Artists include Paton Miller, Dan Welden, John Messinger, Dennis Leri, David Geiser, Scott Bluedorn, Mark Seidenfeld, PipiDeer, Darlene Charneco, Jeff Muhs, Martin Magna, Perry Burns, Athos Zacharias, Eric Ernst, Bob Golden, Sally Breen, Janet Jennings, Andrea McCafferty, Daphne Stern, Barbara Dilorenzo, Gabriel Raacke, Charles Waller, Abby

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Abrams, Steve Joester, Mark Wilson, Randy Willier, Dennis Short, Josie Fields, Chris West, Jack Who, Mark Zimmerman, Anna Dillingham, Michele Dragonetti, Clare Schoenheimer, Daniel Schoenheimer, Laura Benjamin, Robert Perez, Lauren Loscialo, and William Quigley. For more information visit www. thewhiteroom.gallery.

Tempest by Will Ryan and Scott Bluedorn.

September 21, 2016

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C-8 September 21, 2016

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IN THE NEWS

Independent/Charles Addams

Cartoon by Charles Addams.

Deadline for submissions is Thursday at noon. Email to jessica@indyeastend. com.

East End Duets

The White Room Gallery presents Will Ryan’s “East End Duets.” There will be an opening reception on Saturday from 5 to 7 PM. The show will run through October 9.

The Wednesday Group

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The Wednesday Group will be exhibiting this season’s plein air paintings at the Water Mill Museum from Thursday through October 3. This season the artists painted The Nature Conservancy sites of Long Island as

well as other venues from the East End. The exhibit will be held in the Main Gallery and the Discovery Room where the artists will place their plein air paintings from the paint out and workshop. There will be a reception on Saturday from 4 to 7 PM to celebrate the season and meet the artists. In addition to the exhibit, The Wednesday Group will paint out on the museum grounds on Wednesday, September 28, from 9 AM until noon. On Saturday, October 1, Howard Rose, renowned plein air painter and instructor, will hold a workshop at the museum. Participating artists are David Bolliger, Barbara Jones, Cynthia

THE WEDNESDAY GROUP Plein Air Painters of the East End

Artwork by Michele Dragonetti in EQUINOX.

Loewen, Jean Mahoney, Deb Palmer, Alyce Peifer, Gene Samuelson, Christine Chew Smith, Cynthia Sobel, Frank Sofo, Pam Vossen, Aurelio Torres, and Dan Weidmann.

EQUINOX

Orlou-Arts presents “EQUINOX,” a weekend of form and color. The group exhibition features seven of the area's most interesting artists at Ashawagh Hall in Springs this weekend. A reception will take place on Saturday from 6 to 10 PM. The show will feature works in a variety of mediums including painting, photography, mixed media and sculpture. The artists showing will be Eddie Cortes, Michele Dragonetti, Julie Small Gamby, Dennis Lawrence, Jon Tierney, Miles Partington, and Orlou-Arts.

Chas Addams

WATER MILL MUSEUM

Southampton Arts Center presents “Chas Addams: Family And Friends,” an iconic compilation of works by

September 22 - October 3, 2016 Museum hours: 11 am - 5 pm Closed Tuesday & Wednesday

Reception: Saturday, September 24 4 - 7 pm — plus —

ARTISTS PAINT OUT Wednesday, September 28 9 am - 12 noon — plus —

HOWARD ROSE WORKSHOP Saturday, October 1 9:30 am - 12:30 pm

For Workshop details contact: alycepeifer@yahoo.com

famed New Yorker cartoonist Charles Addams, who was an East End resident until his death in 1988. This delightful exhibition is back by popular demand after being mounted in 2013 during the Southampton Arts Center’s inaugural season and will be on view through October 31. This exhibit encompasses more than fifty original works from all aspects and genres of subject matter including The Addams Family cartoons, on which the television series and feature films were based. An opening reception will be held Saturday from 5 to 7 PM.

Living Well

The East Hampton Historical Society presents “Living Well Is The Best Revenge: A Jazz Age Fable of Sara and Gerald Murphy” at the Clinton Academy Museum. The show runs through October 10. The exhibition follows Gerald and Sara Murphy from when they first met in East Hampton. Gerald and Sara Murphy were, to many of their contemporaries, the most beautiful couple of the 1920s. A Curatorial Tour of “Living Well” will be held on Saturday at 10 AM and Saturday, October 29, at 10 AM.

ONGOING 631-287TOTS 631-287-TOTS

Inspiration Plus Exhibition

Inspiration Plus presents an elegant and serene gallery and event space, envisioned, birthed, and hand-wrought by internationally respected artist and good neighbor, Dan Welden. Ellen Peckham and Bertha Rogers, both poets and visual artists, have their work displayed in the Gallery. The exhibition will be available by appointment through October 2. For more information visit www. InspirationPlus.org.


IN THE NEWS

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September 21, 2016

THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman

Sweet Charities

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By Jessica Mackin

Deadline for submissions is Thursday at noon. Email to jessica@indyeastend. com.

23 to vwsipoet@optonline.net or call 631-749-2394 or 631-603-4719.

Lets Get Crackin

The North Fork Breast Health Coalition is holding the 18th annual “5K Walk for Breast Cancer Awareness” on Sunday. The fundraiser takes place at the Riverhead location of Tanger Outlet Center, which sponsors the event. Participants can pre-register or register from 7:30-8:45 AM that morning. The walk begins at 9 AM. The registration fee to participate in the 5K Walk is $25 if paid by Thursday and $30 if paid on the day of the event. The first 300 entrants will receive an official walk gift bag. To register email NFBHC@optonline. net. Visit www.northforkbreasthealth. org for more info.

Fighting Chance, the free cancer counseling center on the East End, will host the “Lets Get Crackin” lobster bash at Duryea’s Lobster Deck in Montauk on Friday with seatings at noon and 1:30 PM. Tickets are $50 and all proceeds support the work of Fighting Chance. For reservations call 631-725-4646.

Wines & Canines

The Kent Animal Shelter’s 2016 “Wines & Canines Run/Walk For Homeless Pets” will be held on Sunday from 11 AM to 2 PM. Save homeless pets and enjoy scenic vineyards during peak harvest season on the North Fork. Take a very special leisurely walk/run at Baiting Hollow Farm Vineyard then join other pet families for a prize auction, raffle, pet costume contest, pet/owner look-alike contest, pet trick contest, dogs on leashes, adoptable pets, wine and food, Kent’s traveling pet boutique, live afternoon music, and more. It’s a $30 minimum donation per person and children 12 and under are free. Registration begins at 10 AM, walkers and runners may start the course anytime between 11 AM and 1 PM. Registration and information are available at www.KentAnimalShelter. com or call 631-727-5731.

High Tea

“High Tea with Poetry and Music,” a benefit for the Lustgarten Foundation for Pancreatic Cancer Research and Cure, will be held on Sunday from 4 to 6 PM, at Bovenkamp Studio in Sagaponack. The cost is $20 and includes the poetry book Neuron Mirror for attendees. The book by Virginia Walker and Michael Walsh is dedicated to four East End poets who died of pancreatic cancer. Friends will read poems by the four poets: Robert Long, Siv Cedering, Diana Chang, and Antje Katcher. The readers are Canio Pavone, Fran Castan, Janice Bishop, and Carol Sherman. Seating is limited. RSVP by September

Breast Cancer Awareness

Golf Tournament

Eleanor Whitmore Early Childhood Center invites you to a Golf Tournament on September 28 at the Maidstone Club in East Hampton. The cost is $2650 for a foursome of $700 for an individual player. Proceeds from the outing will benefit EWECC’s Scholarship fund and programming. The entry fee includes a welcome package including a sleeve of Maidstone logo balls and a Maidstone h a t , 1 8 h o l e s o n M a i d s t o n e ’s championship West Course plus use of the practice range. Cocktails, hors d’oeuvres, light fare, and awards will follow the tournament. Call Maureen Wikane or Beth Johnson at 631-324-5560 or email events@ewecc.org.

ARF’s 23rd Annual Stroll to the Sea Dog Walk artwork by Isaac Mizrahi.

volunteers, and interns. The support makes it possible to operate the only Marine Mammal and Sea Turtle Rescue Program in New York State.

Stroll To The Sea

ARF’s 23rd Annual Stroll to the Sea Dog Walk at Mulford Farm in East Hampton will be held from 9 AM to noon on Saturday, October 8. The fun family event promotes responsible dog ownership and awareness of ARF. Mutts, purebreds and pedigrees are all invited to take the two-mile walk to the ocean and back to help the animals at the ARF Adoption Center. The morning includes free refreshments, a free t-shirt (artwork by Isaac Mizrahi),

free ARF tote bag, free nail clippings for dogs, dog treats, contests, a dog agility course, and music by noted Hamptons folksinger Sandy Rapp. Pre-registration starts at $30 at arfhamptons.org, day of the event it’s $35. To register by phone call Jean 631-537-0400 ext. 219.

Montauk Playhouse

The Montauk Playhouse Foundation’s Annual Chinese Auction will be held on Sunday, October 9, from 11 AM to 3 PM at Montauk’s Fall Festival, on the Village Green. There will be 100+ prizes, live music by the 3Bs, treats, and a silent auction of sports and entertainment memorabilia.

Oceans Of Hope

The Riverhead Foundation's 16th Annual “Oceans of Hope Gala” will be held on Friday, September 30, at the Long Island Aquarium and Exhibition Center. This year, guests will enjoy a festive Mardi Gras-themed cocktail party featuring live jazz, New Orleans-inspired cuisine and lively entertainment. Guests will also have the opportunity to take a behind-the-scenes guided tour of the marine animal hospital, which is located on-site, and to meet marine biologists,

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C-10 September 21, 2016

THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman

East End Calendar Highlights Compiled By Kitty Merrill

Each week we’ll highlight local community events and library offerings presented by area institutions and organizations. It’s on you to send ‘em in, kids. Deadline for submissions is Thursday at noon. Email news@ indyeastend.com.

East Hampton FRIDAY 9•23•16 • From 1 to 3 PM, learn how to download eBooks for free from East Hampton Library’s database. Call 631-324-0222 ext. 3 to register. SATURDAY 9•24•16 • The Montauk Historical Society/Second House Museum present a craft fair this weekend, opening 10 AM Saturday, closing 6 PM Sunday. All types of affordable arts & crafts are represented on the grounds of the Second House Museum.

Southampton FRIDAY 9•23•16 • Alan N. DeCarlo, M.D., will be at Rogers Memorial Library at 10:15 AM, to discuss the Broken Heart Syndrome. He will talk about the heart as a symbol of romantic love, and offer an explanation for the curious phenomenon of loved ones passing away in close proximity to one another. Register at www. myrml.org or call 631- 283-0774 ext. 523. SATURDAY 9•24•16 • Southampton Town Historic Division presents a

gravestone preservation workshop at the North End Burying Ground on North Main Street in Southampton from 9 AM to 4 PM. Stone conservator Joel C. Snodgrass leads this demonstration workshop at one of Southampton Town’s oldest Colonial-era burying grounds. Presented under the auspices of Sundy A. Schermeyer, Southampton Town Clerk, the Historic Division offers this hands-on workshop to demonstrate “best practices”in preservation, from gentle cleaning methods to reattaching fragments and resetting tilted stones in danger of falling. The workshops are open to the public and free of charge Space is limited and reservations are suggested. For information, call #631-287-5740; or email zstudenroth@southamptontownny.gov • From 9 AM to noon the Horticultural Alliance of the Hamptons hosts a yard and plant sale. Location: HAH Library at the Bridgehampton Community House, lower level, entrance on School Street • St Mary’s Church on Ponquogue Avenue in Hampton Bays is the place for a fall festival from 11 AM to 4 PM. We’re talking pumpkin decorating, face painting, games for the kids, vendors and lots of food. SUNDAY 9•25•15 • Join the Group for the East End for a wildlife search along Dune Road west of the Shinnecock Inlet in Hampton Bays. The trip is timed to coincide with low tide, which should enhance the chance to see diverse shorebirds and wading birds. If winds are blowing from the northwest, migrating swallows, hawks, dragonflies, and butterflies

Friends. Family. Community. Dermot PJ Dolan, Agent 2228 Montauk Hwy Bridgehampton, NY 11932 Bus: 631-537-2622 Bus: 212-380-8318 dermot@dermotdolan.com

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will compete for attention. Please bring binoculars. For reservations or more information, please contact Steve

IN THE NEWS

Biasetti at 631-765-6450 ext. 205 or sbiasetti@ eastendenvironment.org. (9 to 11:30 AM)

C.H.E. Around The Campfire

Independent / Courtesy Katherine C.H.E.

Local singer/songwriter Katherine C.H.E.’s Campfire Sessions made number one folk album within the first three days of its release last Thursday.

By Kitty Merrill Katherine C.H.E. released her Campfire Sessions CD last Thursday. Within three days it hit number one in the folk album category on Amazon. Weary from all the disheartening news in the headlines this year, C.H.E. responds with a CD that takes the listener to a simpler time and place. You can hear the campfire and the crickets, and all the songs are performed simply by Katherine with just her voice and guitar (plus the sound of the LIRR on “Wabash Cannonball”). Nine of the 11 tracks were written by C.H.E. this year. Sessions is balanced out with her own arrangements of classic traditionals “House of the Rising Sun” and “Wabash Cannonball.” In the latter, she adds her own experience to this classic folk tune with references to rail lines her grandfather worked and a verse in honor of her father. A native of Nashville, C.H.E. grew up surrounded by music and literally singing around the campfire. She remembers, “Whenever we’d get together with friends for a meal, out would come the instruments, and we’d all sing songs around the fire. I was blessed to grow up around so many talented musicians who loved nothing more than sharing their love of music with a younger generation. “There’s a magic world of light and music that is created when making music around a campfire. It is a special feeling I long for in these days when it can feel scary to even look at the news to see what frightening event is making headlines now.” According to C.H.E. being a songwriter is a powerful thing. “No matter what is going on, it can be resolved in song, “ she said. That power is articulated in “I think I’ll write a song.”

The power of love – its poignance, its sweetness -- is woven through several of the album’s tracks. “Tennessee Time” is based on true story of a friend’s husband who set his watch to “Tennessee Time” to feel closer to his wife when she was home in Tennessee tending to her sick mother. In “All I Want To Do Is Kiss You” C.H.E. reflects on “the deliciousness of being with someone you want to kiss all day long. This song has magical, great-kiss-attracting qualities.” C.H.E. articulates love and loss in “Kaleidoscope Angel,” written, she said, “for everyone who has ever lost anyone to addiction.” Turning to a more universal type of love, Sessions includes “a meditation on being the change you wish to see in the world – the peace and the love,” revealed in the track “Be The Peace.” Her “Thank You Song” simply says thanks. “Safe To Remember” originally started as a song of explanation for the “memory aids” C. H. E. uses during performances. “In its writing, it became more,” she explained. C.H.E. revels in inspiration that can come from unlikely sources. “If I Had One Wish” is inspired by a story on “Dancing with the Stars.” One of the stars upon describing a tough year in her life said, “I just wish I could go back and tell that little girl that everything will be OK.” “I Am a Winner” is about the national fascination with watching competitions from football to “The Voice.” C.H.E. hosts a weekly show “Music in the Hamptons” which airs each weekend on LTV. Campfire Sessions is available via iTunes and Amazon and locally at Innersleeve Records in Amagansett.


IN THE NEWS

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

REAL ESTATE

astrology & all Highlights of the week: Mercury turns direct tomorrow, so expect all forms of communications to become easier in the coming weeks. The Sun enters Libra on Friday to meet Jupiter and we start to feel more optimistic and relaxed about our future. Plus, we can use the fun. Pluto starts to go direct on Saturday. Plans now on hold can slowly start to move ahead, much to our relief. All these planets moving forward can make us feel a little unsettled, excited, or even fearful, but as we enter into the new chapters of our lives, the fog of uncertainty will lift.

Joanne Wolff

holidays wholeheartedly. There is a new employment on the horizon, so put money worries on hold. CAPRICORN (12/21 - 1/20) Your normally staid demeanor might be tested this week as rumors fly around the workplace or neighborhood. Are they true? You’ll have to see for yourself. AQUARIUS (1/20 - 2/18) Money comes under your laser focus this week.

Yours, mine and ours will be discussed. Taking a course to hone those skills at work might be an option.

LIBRA (9/23 - 10/22) With the Sun and Jupiter in your sign, you are ready to party like it’s 1999. Enjoy the birthday glow but keep an eye on your money and diet. Romance can take you by surprise. SCORPIO (10/22 - 11/22) The revolving door of friends, lovers, and money can make your head spin. Don’t go to the dark side and keep the faith that everything eventually works out for the best. SAGITTARIUS (11/22 - 12/21) Your home may require some TLC at this time. Once you get the home in order, you can enjoy the upcoming

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GEMINI (5/21 - 6/22) Talking about what matters to you instead of idle chatter will bring you closer to friends, family, and mate. Your ambitions are not pipe dreams but it might take putting some serious thought into planning a successful launch.

VIRGO (8/23 - 9/23) It is really time for you to take a rest. You do not have to manage every aspect of your life down to a nanosecond. There are changes coming in relationships with pals and partners. Rest up!

Picture Your AD Here!

TAURUS (4/20 - 5/20) Creative projects seem appealing to you this week. Trying something new might help you to relax and get in touch with your artistic self. Try a paint night out with friends.

LEO (7/23 - 8/23) Finding the money to do those home repairs is easier once you set your mind to it. The shifts at work will eventually be a benefit if you play it cool and wait for the other shoe to drop.

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phone, as well as parties and charity events.
 To reach Joanne, call or text 516-996-5354.

PISCES (2/19 - 3/20) The roller coaster ride is nearly at the end. When it stops, you will be better able to see who and what is left. Trust in fate and enjoy the ride.

ARIES (3/20 - 4/20) Can career plans start to look hopeful? With some networking and word-of-mouth, you just might start to put out the right feelers. Romance can blossom when least expected.

CANCER (6/22 - 7/23) Although there is no place like home, the desire to travel will call to you. Gather those travel brochures and a cup of tea and while snuggling in the sofa. Plan a memory.

September 21, 2016

THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman



UPSCALE CHAMPIONSHIP GOLF—OPEN TO THE PUBLIC 7 DAYS Just a Short Drive from All East End Locations       

One Day Ladies Clinics Junior Golf Camps All summer long

     

  




C-12 September 21, 2016

REAL ESTATE

THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

IN THE NEWS

Broadway Reporting From

(& Sometimes Off)

By Isa Goldberg

personalities all hoping to be the one chosen to ascend and go to heaven. Choreographically it’s a fun show to watch, and fortunately, this cast is well suited to portraying slinky smooth and often catty critters. Most especially, Ahmad Simmons as Alonzo resonates with a contagious presence. And Georgina Pazcoguin of the New York City Ballet is as skillful as she is graceful. To top it off, the British singing star, Leona Lewis’ reprise of “Memory” is actually spectacular.

Aubergine

Dinner at Ray’s father’s house is hardly a lively event. Father (Stephen Park) is receiving hospice care at home and his son Ray (Tim Kang), with no more appetite than his failing dad, is surviving on Ensure. Still, the conversation, or should I say the communication, all takes place around food. In this Proustian-inspired drama by Julia Cho, the evocation of ”memory” is far less iridescent than Sir Andrew’s famous song would have it. Still, Julia

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Independent/Matthew Murphy

Cats reborn at the Neil Simon Theater on Broadway, with Andrew Lloyd Webber’s memorable tunes, is precisely that, an evening of song and dance whose purpose is to entertain. With the original director, Trevor Nunn, and choreographer, Andy Blankenbuehler, recreating Gillian Lynne’s choreography, you can be sure this revival is a lot like the original 1982 Broadway production. Staged in a somewhat smaller space by the original designer, John Napier, the set looks like a junkyard from hell, with objects magnified as though viewed from the perspective of the diminutive four-legged creatures of the title. But what dazzles the eye are the projection designs (Brad Peterson) and the lighting (Natasha Katz). Of course these cats are a lot like people, as TS Eliot opined in Old Possum’s Book of Practical Cats, from which this show draws its inspiration. Oddly, seeing the show now, it evokes the earlier Broadway musical, A Chorus Line. Through the anthropomorphic metaphor, we meet a group of

guin as a Pazco Georgin roadway. CATS on B Victoria in

A Day By The Sea

Cho’s new play, artfully directed by Kate Whoriskey, brings to heart the experience of loss and reconciliation in touching, heartfelt, and even humorous ways. This, despite the fact that the characters are not always appealing, and the action, at times, oddly repetitive. Much credit goes to the cast. Tim Kang as the frustrated son - a professional chef – cuts through the charred fragments of his memory to achieve a delicate sense of accord within himself, and a sensitivity for others that is rare, indeed. As Cornelia, the girlfriend he once abandoned, Sue Jean Kim provides a lively presence, often interpreting his thoughts with a benign twist. In addition, Jessica Love as Diane who opens the play with a rather dry monologue about the loss of her father disappears from the action, only to return in the end with a most toothsome moment. A sweet surprise, Aubergine plays off Broadway at Playwright’s Horizons.

In revival by The Mint Theater off Broadway, N.C. Hunter’s A Day by the Sea is an interesting anomaly. Directed by Austin Pendleton, the production has all the makings of a drawing room comedy, save that the set (Charles Morgan) is not always realistic and the action not necessarily comic. Still, the focus is on the reveries of the privileged denizens of this seaside village of Dorset, England, around 1953. Here, we meet a troubled diplomat, faced with the uncertainty of his political future. In effect, Julian (played by Julian Elfer) is a mirror of his nation - rich in history, yet faltering at an unpredictable future. As portrayed by Elfer, Julian is a man of quiet revelries and ambiguities. He’s joined by Jill Tanner as his mother, George Morfogen as the ageing patriarch, and Katie Firth, who brings the play full circle. Once an orphan, raised by Julian’s family, she returns, a widow and a young mother. As Hunter would have it, life goes on for these folks, far from the limelight, somewhere between ennui and human comedy.

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IN THE NEWS

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

REAL ESTATE

THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman

September 21, 2016

C-13

Independent Dining

Navy Beach And Navy SEAL Foundation members of the Naval Special Warfare community. This year’s guest of honor was Long Island native RDML (SEAL)

E

Thomas R. Richards, USN ret., former Commander of Naval Special Warfare Command, a highly decorated veteran. J.M.

ASTPORT LIQUORS Monday 9-6, Tuesday-Thursday Friday• &•Closed Saturday 9-9, 12-6 Open 12pm 6pm onSunday Monday OpenSunday Sunday 12pm-9-8, - 6pm Monday 12-7pm

Tastings Every Sat. 3-7 pm

Senior Discount Tuesday

All Cards AllMajor Major Credit Credit Cards & DebitAccepted Cards Accepted

Gift Wrapping LOTTO IN STORE

$

1.00 Off 10.00 Purchase $

Not to be combined with other offers.

$

2.00 Off 20.00 Purchase $

Not to be combined with other offers.

15 Eastport Manor Road • Eastport • 325-1388 • Open 9 am (In the Eastport Shopping Center, next to King Kullen)

Independent/Stephanie Lewin

47 Montauk Highway, East Hampton, NY (631) 604-5585

Navy Beach partner Franklin Ferguson and Larry Kelly (Former Senior Rule of Law Advisor US State Department Southern Iraq).

Navy Beach in Montauk has announced the results of a fourth successful season of raising awareness for and funds on behalf of the Navy SEAL Foundation, a not-for-profit organization that provides immediate and ongoing support and assistance to the Naval Special Warfare community and their families. This year, the restaurant’s efforts raised $30,000 in funds for the organization, bringing the four-year total of fundraising for NSF to over

$90,000. This year, the restaurant’s varied efforts included a “dine & donate” program running from Memorial Day Weekend through Labor Day during which lunch and dinner checks collected at least $1 per meal while allowing customers to donate additional funds at their own discretion and an annual cocktail party fundraiser in June that was attended by many local residents and business owners as well as active and retired

Featuring all your favorite dishes & items. The best Japanese food in town! Zokkon Sushi available at Hampton Market Place

Happy Hour Mon.- Wed 5-7pm Free Sushi Thursday at the Bar 5-7pm Serving Dinner 7 Nights


C-14 September 21, 2016

THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman

REAL ESTATE

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

IN THE NEWS

Sesame Ginger Steak Salad Ingredients (serves 4) 1lb hanger or skirt steak 2 large carrots 2 zucchini 1 head of cabbage 1 tbs minced ginger 1 bunch of chopped cilantro 1 bulb of celery root 1 bunch scallion Dressing Ingredients 1 tbs Dijon mustard 1 oz soy sauce 2 tbs chopped ginger

1/4 cup orange juice 1 tsp sesame oil 1 shallot 2 tbs rice wine vinegar 1/2 cup of vegetable oil Pinch of salt This salad is fairly easy to make, however the quality of the salad relies heavily on thin precision knife cuts of the vegetables. This recipe will be a good test of your knife skills in the kitchen, and, this being said, you will need a mandolin food slicer to cut proper thin julienne (or long thin stick like cuts). First you want your vegetables clean, so wash them and peel the ones that have skin, like carrots and celery root. Now carefully adjust your mandolin to a very thin setting and begin slicing the vegetables. Then line up the pieces and finish the job with a chef knife. The result should be long thin slices of vegetables. Mix all vegetables and herbs in a bowl and set aside. Cut the steak into strips (always cut against the grain). Heat the grill and marinate the steak in a bit of soy sauce

and some of the dressing you've made while the grill heats. You can mix the vegetable salad with the remaining dressing just before you put the steak on the grill because it will not take long to cook. Plate the salad and top with the hot

juicy steak and enjoy. Dressing Put all ingredients except the oil in your blender cup and blend on high slowly adding the oil and maybe just a bit of warm water to set the emulsion.

1770 House Pre-Theatre

The 1770 House in East Hampton presents a $27 two-course pre-theatre prix fixe dinner timed to Guild Hall’s JDT Lab shows on September 27, and October 4. Diners reserving with the code JDTLab may enjoy the prix fixe dinner with selections from Chef Michael Rozzi’s a la carte diner menu (starter and main or main and dessert) starting at 5:30 PM, with orders into the kitchen by 6:30 PM, to be in time for the 7:30 PM curtain just steps across Main Street. Autumn dishes by Chef Rozzi may include his unique presentations of peach, fennel and baby Chiogga beet salad with Balsam Farms mesclun and radicchio with Banyuls dressing; chilled ‘Jersey Red’ tomato soup with housesmoked local tuna salad and Browder’s organic egg; halibut with heirloom cherry tomatoes and sweet corn crudo with sweet potato greens; striped bass with local peppers and onions, heirloom tomato jam and purslane; and-cut fettuccine with house-made local rabbit sausage alongside green and gold bar zucchini, marjoram and Reggiano broth and roasted garlic. The Guild Hall JDTLab program, devoted to fostering East End performing artists and cultivating audiences for their work, is presented free of charge. J.M.


IN THE NEWS

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

REAL ESTATE

September 21, 2016

THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman

C-15

Food & Beverage

Compiled By Jessica Mackin

Submit your specials! Deadline for submissions is Thursday at noon. Email to jessica@indyeastend.com.

Octoberfest

Southampton Publick House will kick off Octoberfest on Friday, September 30, with the official tapping of their signature Octoberfest Lager. The first Octoberfest Lager keg will be tapped at the start of happy hour at 4 PM. As well dinner specials will be tailored to German style fare such as: Sauerbraten, ale braised short ribs, Bratwurst and Knockwurst Platter, horseradish-crusted cod and smoked salmon salad. Happy hour specials will be offered including $5 pints, $7 house wines by the glass and $7 well drinks. The Octoberfest Lager is one of the most anticipated seasonal brews of the year at the Southampton Publick House. It is brewed in the heat of summer and cold-fermented and aged for weeks prior to serving. This results in an exceptionally smooth taste and drinkablilty. They brew the Octoberfest Lager with four types of imported German malts (which impart a mellow toastiness) and German hops for the most authentic flavor. For further information visit www.

Baiting Hollow Farm Baiting Hollow Farm Vineyard presents Craig Rose from 11:30 AM to 1:30 PM followed by The Smoking Gun from 2 to 6 PM on Saturday. The vineyard will also host The Pamela Betty Band from 2 to 6 PM on Sunday. www. baitinghollowfarmvineyard.com. Castello di Borghese Castello di Borghese Vineyard holds a winemaker’s walk vineyard tour and wine tasting on Thursday and Sunday at 1 PM. Call for reservations, 631-734-5111.

Clovis Point Vineyard Clovis Point Vineyard in Jamesport is open daily. Sunday to Thursday from 11 AM to 6 PM; 11 AM to 7 PM on Fridays and Saturdays. Saturday from 2 to 5 PM Firefly will be performing live music. Sunday music by TJ Brown will be playing from 1:30 to 4:30 PM. Visit www.clovispointwines.com. Lieb Cellars On Saturday from 4 to 6 PM enjoy live music by Rob Europe. www. liebcellars.com. Pindar Vineyards The fall live music series continues with Bob Carney from 1 to 5 PM on. Joe Caggio plays from 1 to 5 PM on Sunday and the Nice Buns Food Truck will be on hand. Visit www.pindar.net for more

publick.com or call 631-283-2800.

Potluck Supper

Slow Food East End will hold its Annual Meeting and Potluck Supper on Sunday at the Quinipet Camp and Retreat Center on Shelter Island. This is Slow Food’s biggest and best potluck supper of the year. It’s also the time to “meet the candidates” for Slow Food East End’s board and learn more about Slow Food’s events, educational programs and goals for the future. This year a 12-Piece Anolon Tri-Ply Clad Cookware Set will be raffled off towards the end of the meeting. The Annual Meeting is free and open to all. Advance reservations are required. Reservations may be made on the events page at www.slowfoodeastend. org. Guests should bring a dish to share made from local ingredients – from the garden, CSA, or local farm stand or market. Each dish should serve 6-8 people. Guests are also asked to bring a local beverage to share.

ONGOING SPECIALS Nick & Toni’s Brunch Nick

&

To n i ’ s

in

East

Nick & Toni’s Brunch

Hampton is bringing back brunch every Sunday from 11:30 AM to 2:30 PM. Brunch will feature an a la carte menu with specialty brunch cocktails. Call Nick & Toni’s at 631-3243550.

Almond Specials

Almond Restaurant in Bridgehampton announces new daily specials for the fall. Meatless Mondays will continue offering a three course meatless menu for $35 all night on Mondays. Tuesdays are

steak frites night with a featured steak frites for $19.95. Thursday nights enjoy ½ dozen Montauk pearl oysters or ½ dozen shrimp cocktail for $10 at the bar or at tables. On Sundays grab a burger and a beer at the bar for $15. A $29 three-course prix fixe will be offered from 5:30 to 7 PM every night. For reservations contact Almond at 631-537-5665.

Monday Night Football

Southampton Publick House will kick off Monday Night Football with

Continued on page c-16.

information. Sannino Bella Vita Sannino Bella Vita Vineyard in Peconic offers Vine to Wine Tour, the most comprehensive wine tour in the region, from 1 to 2:30 PM on Saturday and Sunday. Visit www.sanninovineyard.com. Sherwood House Sherwood House Vineyards in Jamesport presents live music in the tasting room every Saturday from 2 to 6 PM. Visit www. sherwoodhousevineyards.com. Shinn Estate Shinn Estate Vineyards is hosting Noah’s Food Truck from 5 to 7:30 PM Friday. Saturday, it’s Otto and Maria’s traditional Guatemalan dishes with their food truck from 5:30 to 7:30 PM. Also, on Saturday and Sunday at 1:30 PM will be the Vineyard Walk with Barbara Shinn, and starting at 2:30 PM will be the Winery & Barrel Cellar Tour. Visit www.shinnestatevineyards.com. Wölffer Estate Wölffer Estate Vineyard in Sagaponack presents Sunset Fridays and Saturdays take place each week at the wine stand from 5 PM until sunset. This Friday, Certain Moves plays. Saturday, it’s Lynn Blue. Visit www.wolffer.com for more information.

66 Newtown Lane East Hampton (Behind the front building, next to the Middle School across the street from Stop & Shop

Chinese Cuisine, Thai Menu (New) Sushi Coming This Summer

OPEN 7 DAYS Mon.- Thurs.: 11:00am-10:00pm Fri.-Sat.: 11:00am-10:30pm Sun.: 12:00 noon-10:00pm

We Deliver • NO M.S.G.

Tel: (631) 324-1999 (631) 324-1908 STOP & SHOP


C-16 September 21, 2016

REAL ESTATE

THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman

Food & Bev

CONTINUED FROM PAGE C-15. Monday Night Madness specials. Starting at 5 PM every Monday enjoy $5 pints, $6 burgers, and 50 cent wings. View the games on the 7 flat screen TVs in the inside bar or on the 9 flat screen TVs in the outside bar. The Southampton Publick House

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

IN THE NEWS

presents Happy Hour Monday through Friday from 4 to 7 PM. Southampton Public House is open 7 days for lunch and dinner. For further information visit www.publick. com or call 631-283-2800.

Football Specials

Townline BBQ in Sagaponack presents happy hour and football specials available Thursday and Friday from 4 to 7 PM and Saturday, Sunday, and Monday all day. These specials are only available at the bar. Also free pool is offered during happy hour.

Zigmund’s Bar

18 Park Place East Hampton 324-5400 Breakfast - Lunch - Dinner Take Out Orders

Zigmund’s Bar in Bridgehampton, a new bar inspired by the location's popular 90’s bar The Wild Rose, will offer Happy Hour Thursday through Saturday evenings until sunset with $5 rose, beer, and Lamb Chops. Thursday is Karaoke Night starting at 9 PM. Live music on Friday starts at 9:15 PM. On Saturday it’s retro sounds by DJ Drop D starting at 9 PM. Sunday there are football specials from 1 to 8 PM. For further information visit www. zigmundsbar.com.

Sen Happy Hour

Sen in Sag Harbor presents Happy Hour Monday through Thursday from 5:30 to 7 PM. Enjoy $8 Kettle One martinis, $8 Canton Royal; ginger liquor and champagne, and $6 red and white wine.

Indian Wells Tavern

Buckley’s Inn Between

Happy Hour weekdays at Buckley’s Inn Between in Hampton Bays run from 4 to 7 PM. On Thursdays, it’s Buckley’s famous wing night with $15 all you can eat wings and all you can drink Miller Lite from 10 PM to 1 AM and music by DJ Pauly.

Indian Wells Tavern

Indian Wells Tavern in Amagansett has announced new fall football specials. A special snacks menu will be offered on Sundays and Thursdays in the bar area along with a special drink menu. The special drink menu will be offered during the Monday

night football games, along with the Burger Night promotion, which includes a burger of your choice, half-dozen wings, and draft beer – all for $25. There will also be prizes and giveaways during the games. The menus include Tavern wings, nachos, quesadillas, Asian potstickers, homemade beef chili, New England clam chowder and more. For further information call Indian Wells Tavern at 631-267-0400.

Prime Time

Prime Time at The Palm in East Hampton takes place Sunday through Friday from 5 to 7 PM with half off “Prime Bites” at the Palm Bar.

Japanese RestauRant and sushi BaR

ly n o r a b e h Beef t t a Qu Slider esa

s$

2ea. dilla s N s n Load achos $ $3ea. ca old e d F 2.95 $3ce c ht Hap rie p i g are o y Hour i Food s $2 L f nly a S vaila .95 o t rs ble a pecials t the Coo ler Lighpecials bar Milher drink s ot plus

Fine Dining Specializing in Japanese Cuisine & Sushi Offering Lunch & Dinner Menus and Exotic Cocktails We also have a Tatami Room

Open 7 Days for Lunch & Dinner

All regular menu appetizers 1/2 price Happy Hour Food Specials are only available at the bar. Excluding Shellfish.

Cliff’s Elbow Room

631-267-7600 40 Montauk Highway Amagansett, NY

1549 Main Road, Jamesport

722-3292

www.elbowroomli.com

Happy Hour Mon.-Fri. 5-7pm

Cliff’s Elbow Too!

1085 Franklinville Road, Laurel

298-3262

LIKE US ON FACEBOOK

facebook.com/cliffselbowroom

Happy Hour Tues.-Sat. 5-7pm

Cliff’s Rendezvous 313 E. Main Street Riverhead

727-6880

www.cliffsrendezvous.com

Happy Hour Mon.-Fri. 5-7 All Day Sun.


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