Portland Monthly Magazine April 2013

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Portland Monthly ® Magazine

Young Guns | stars at bars | new fiction

Maine’s City Magazine

April 2013

Volume 28, No. 2

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Boone's Fish House & Oyster Room Chef Harding Lee Smith’s New Waterfront Room

..Introducing: ..Introducing:

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from TOP: staff illustration/photos by Charles C. Ebbets & cynthia farr-weinfeld; cynthia farr-weinfeld; Bethany & dan photography; Hertfordshire Natural History Society

April

25

47

Features

Departments

25

Renaissance Revival

33

Mutiny on the Bounty II

37

Unforgettable

10 From the Editor 12 Letters 14 Imperatifs 16 Goings On 23 Chowder 57 Restaurant Review

42 47

60

See how we’re getting down to business as a big-league hotel destination. By Patrick Venne After the disaster comes the inquiry. By Colin W. Sargent The ebb and flow of John Marin’s renown is as varied as the view from Cape Split. By Colin W. Sargent

Clone Zones

Portland sports bars are another planet, but the aliens are friendly. By Christopher Riccardo

Français où Franco?

Maine loves ethnic restaurants–so where is the Franco-American food scene? By Claire Z. Cramer

50 Zero Dark Seventeen

Resourceful high school filmmakers in Brunswick shake up the grown-ups. By Jeanee Dudley

Cover: Prenuptial Tailgate by Bethany & Dan Cox. See “Unbridled Brides,” page 60.

Boston’s Equator

58 Dining Guide Special advertising section

60 Weddings Guide Unbridled Brides

91 House of the Month The Lillian Springer House, a John Calvin Stevens classic on Craigie Street

96 New England

Homes & Living

102 Fiction

”A Shower at the Beach” By Adam Purple

104 Flash april

2013 9


editorial Colin W. Sargent, Editor & Publisher

24”3"x×24” oilon onPanel canvas 5" Oil The Crooked Mile Cafe Bruce Habowski DawnTracy inLight, Anson, Maine Medling Morning Monhegan 24” x 24” oil on canvas 3" × 5" Oil on Panel

20" Bruce x Tracy 24" Oil on Canvas Habowski Medling Paul Black

Featuring works of fine Featuringoriginal original works of fine Featuring original works of fine Featuring original works of fine photography, and limitedart,art, photography, and limitedart, photography, and limitedart, photography, and limitededition prints by regional edition prints by regional edition prints edition byregional regional andprints localby artists. andlocal local artists. and artists. and local artists. 372 Fore Street

372 Fore Street 372 Street Portland, Maine 04101 372 Fore Fore Street Portland, Maine 04101 (207) 874-8084 Portland, 04101 (207) Maine 874-808404101 Portland, Maine www.forestreetgallery.com www.forestreetgallery.com 207 207 874-8084 874-8084 www.forestreetgallery.com www.forestreetgallery.com

www.dcolejewelers.com 1 0 p o r t l a n d m o n t h ly m a g a z i n e

I love the phrase in film noir, “He turned up missing.” Or “She turned up missing.” It’s phenomenologically impossible. And yet the Beatles turned up missing on American Idol recently. Challenged to cover famous Lennon/McCartney hits, contestants shrugged and said they’d never heard the songs before. Never? Not one tune from the entire Beatles catalog? Never in an elevator, or covered by a band in a bar, even in a garage? I won’t forget the look of fear in Idol judge Randy Jackson’s eyes. This whole vanishing sense of being here and (not) here. So strange, the beautiful things that get covered by the sands washed in by culture’s tide. Here in Maine, I keep bumping into evidence there was a world before Star Wars, even as I walk along the waves. One of my favorite talismans is the fragments of brain and star coral I discover while walking on beaches here. Often they’re covered by sand, near breakwaters. If brain and star coral are not native to Maine, and do not naturally appear in latitudes north of Bermuda, how on earth did they get here? By Death Star? Actually, the coral turns up (missing) here from a world far, far away, carried by curious spaceships that traveled exclusively on the surface of the sea. They navigated by the stars, these arcane craft, and when they sailed to our frigid ports they bore fragrant spices from the Caribbean that could not be transported below the water line because the brackish water in the bilges would ruin what was being carried. Because the coffee and spice cargoes, including nutmeg, allspice, mace, cloves, cinnamon, tamarind, bay leaves, and dried chilies, needed to be stowed above the water line, the spaceship captains compensated by adding ballast along the keel to keep their ships upright. So while they were docked in exotic planets like Antigua and Nevis, they cut and threw live and dead brain and star coral into the bilges of their ships, tossing it overboard near the breakwaters of Maine ports upon arrival. I’ve found pieces of brain coral on Gooch’s Beach in Kennebunk, near the breakwater. I’ve also found coral at the mouth of the Saco River. From phenomenological impossibility to devastating bookend or conversation piece (it sure beats a bleached starfish in your window). Or better still, look at it and marvel if you find a piece among the rocks and seaweed. What’s that Brian McKnight song again? Now I remember. Let It Be.

from top: Rhonda Farnham; file

The Crooked Mile Cafe Dawn in Anson, Maine

Turned Up Missing


Portland 165 State Street, Portland, Maine 04101 Phone: (207) 775-4339 Fax: (207) 775-2334 E-mail: staff@portlandmonthly.com www.portlandmagazine.com

SOUTHPORT SILVER Handcrafted Silver and Copper Jewelry

Colin W. Sargent Founding Editor & Publisher editor@portlandmonthly.com Nancy Sargent Jesse Stenbak Robert T. Witkowski

Art & Production Art Director Associate Publisher staff@portlandmonthly.com Design Director

Advertising Anna J. Nelson Advertising Director anna@portlandmonthly.com Amanda Commander Advertising Executive amanda@portlandmonthly.com Nikki Kelly Marketing editorial Claire Z. Cramer Assistant Editor & Publisher claire@portlandmonthly.com Colin S. Sargent Special Features & Archives Jason Hjort Webmaster Diane Hudson Flash · Reviews Jeanee Dudley Goings On Cynthia Farr-Weinfeld Contributing Photographer accounting Sarah Campbellton Controller sarah@portlandmonthly.com

172 Route One, Falmouth | 207.781.5651

Maine’s City Magazine

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interns Rosalie Darrell, Margaret Leahy, Roux Lobozzo, Christopher Riccardo subscriptions To subscribe please send your address and a check for $39 (1 yr.), $55 (2 yrs.), or $65 (3 yrs.) to Portland Magazine 165 State Street Portland, ME 04101 or subscribe online at www.portlandmagazine.com

Portland Magazine is published by Sargent Publishing, Inc. All cor­re­ spondence should be addressed to 165 State Street, Portland, ME 04101. Advertising Office: 165 State Street, Portland, ME 04101. (207) 775-4339. Repeat internet rights are understood to be purchased with all stories and artwork. For questions regarding advertising invoic­ ing and payments, call Sarah Campbellton. Newsstand Cover Date: April 2013, published in March, 2013, Vol. 28, No. 2, copyright 2013. Portland Magazine is mailed at thirdclass mail rates in Portland, ME 04101 (ISSN: 1073-1857). Opin­ ions expressed in articles are those of authors and do not represent editorial positions of Portland Magazine. Letters to the editor are welcome and will be treated as unconditionally as­ signed for publication and copyright purposes and as subject to Portland Magazine’s unrestricted right to edit and comment edi­ torially. Responsible only for that portion of any advertisement which is printed incorrectly. Advertisers are responsible for copy­ rights of materials they submit. Nothing in this issue may be re­ printed in whole or in part without written permission from the publishers. Submissions welcome, but we take no responsibility for unsolicited materials. Portland Magazine is published 10 times annually by Sargent Publishing, Inc., 165 State Street, Portland, Maine, 04101, with news­stand cover dates of Winterguide, February/March, April, May, Summerguide, July/August, September, October, November, and December. Portland Magazine is the winner of 40 American Graphic Design Awards presented by Graphic Design USA for excellence in publication design.

S a r g e n t

P u b l i sh i n g , i nc .

april

2013 11


Honor your family with a work of art

letters editor@portlandmonthly.com

Affordable, Locally Carved Maine Craftsmanship

PORTLAND Monthly

220 Main Street (Route 1) South Portland 767-2233 (800) 540-7866 www.mainememorial.com

Magazine February/March 2013 hoMe & garden

Cemetery Memorials since 1919

Certified Memorialist

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Paul A. DiMatteo

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Groucho in Maine

[Regarding your editorial in the February/ March issue, here’s a Groucho Marx quote I love:] “Outside of a dog, a book is man’s best friend. Inside of a dog it’s too dark to read.” Gwen Thompson, Brooklyn, NY

Social Medium

Sponsored by: L.L.Bean | Maine Home + Design | maine | MPBN Acadia Insurance | United Insurance | The Portland Press Herald/Maine Sunday Telegram

I look forward to your excellent magazine every month and have learned a great deal of local social history from reading it over the years. Robert Libby, Chebeague Island

Illustration by Daniel Minter

Hope Floats

Sponsored by: L.L.Bean | Maine Home + Design | maine | Migis Hotel Group | MPBN Acadia Insurance | United Insurance | Portland Press Herald/Maine Sunday Telegram

PROFESSIONAL THEATER MADE IN MAINE

Supported in part by an award from the National Endowment for the Arts. Art Works.

Tickets: 207.774.0465 | www.portlandstage.org 1 2 p o r t l a n d m o n t h ly m a g a z i n e

The USS JFK Museum is pleased to announce we were the successful bidder for what may be the oldest artifact concerning the USS Hornet–a bronze medallion awarded to Captain Biddle for his capture of the HMS Penguin during the War of 1812. We will present the medal to the USS Hornet Museum in Alameda, California, this November, in a ceremony aboard the carrier museum. Donations to sponsor the event may be sent to the USS John F. Kennedy Museum, P.O. Box 683, Portland, ME 04104. Names of donors of $500 or more will be displayed with the medallion. The USS JFK Museum is diligently working to find a permanent home for the JFK in New England. Richard Fitzgerald, Portland

Bag It

Oh yes! Love her product! [JustKim bags in “Imperatifs,” February/March 2013]. Kathy Pauley, Liberty


Wood for your home Flooring Paneling Trim Treads Counters

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Forget Me Nots

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Now accepting seasonal clothing and accessories 781-8252 U.S. Route One Falmouth, Maine

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One of a Kind and Custom Orders (207)384-0970 • www.tearsofthesea.com april

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Impera Lobster Gumbo Cirque du Cinema The Portland Children’s Film Festival April 4-7 lights up kid-centric independent films from across the globe. Includes seminars & screenings for local film prodigies from elementary to high school age in venues across the city. “The Gulf of Maine Research Institute will feature the animal-rescue documentary Otter 501, followed by a Skype with the filmmaker,” says festival organizer Leah Coplon. Also showing: the TED Talks film World Peace & Other Fourth Grade Achievements and the animated quest tale A Letter to Momo. $5, portlandchildrensfilmfestival.com–Roux Lobozzo

Lost your edge? Auburn’s New England School of Metalwork will help you find your inner bladesmith. “Now that the American Bladesmithing Society has ranked us in the top three in the country,” says Nicolas Rossi, “enrollment has skyrocketed.” Beginners sharpen their skills in Japanese kitchen cutlery, folded Damascus steel, swordsmithing, and leather sheathing. “Student trends drive our instruction,” says Rossi. This spring, look for world-renowned blacksmith Kevin Cashen, star of PBS’s Secrets of the Viking Sword, to bring you a slice of life. Classes from $450, newenglandschoolofmetalwork.com/bladesmithing

14 portland monthly magazine

“Maine is really close to New Orleans,” says Gina Platt of Victoria Mansion. “Several Maine regiments were in the assault on New Orleans during the Civil War, and in the late 1850s, more displaced Mainers were living in Louisiana than any other Confederate state.” Then there’s Maine-born Ruggles Sylvester Morse, who created the Victoria Mansion in 1860 from “the fortune he made in luxury New Orleans hotels.” Through May 21, the Mansion hosts “New Orleans & the Civil War,” a book discussion series celebrating antebellum NOLA (April 23, A Separate Country by Robert Hicks) building toward a photo exhibit opening May 1. Best of all, bring “homemade regional dishes” from the Crescent City. Or simmer down and stop at Po’ Boys & Pickles on your way over. victoriamansion.org

Channel Crossings


tÍfs

Where the farm is the table.

An evening at graze includes a tour of the farm and an outdoor dinner with the farmers and chefs who partnered to create the freshest possible seasonal fare.

Only ten dates are available for this unique summer tour and dine experience. Make reservations today!

You’ll share food that was raised, planted, nurtured and harvested within minutes from where you dine. What we can't get on the farm, we’ll procure from the best local purveyors.

is a division of

Clockwise from top left: portland children’s film festival/Harry Powers; courtesy victoria mansion; costume shopper; courtesy Heather perry/swimvacation; sword-seekyee.com

Run for the Roses

Maine Historical Society’s 16th Annual Mad Hatter Affair blows into town May 4. Show off your moves with the Tony Boffa Band, cool off with a mint julep, and watch the Kentucky Derby live on a 60” screen at The Woodlands in Falmouth. Auctioneer Kaja Veilleux of Thomaston Place Auction Galleries presides over the live and silent auctions of such treasures as tours of the State House, a historic map of Casco Bay, and vacations at donors’ cottages throughout the state. And of course there’s the Hat Contest. “The wackiest I’ve seen? I can’t choose between the duct tape, lobster, or tropical bird hats!” says MHS’s Elizabeth Nash. Prizes include a bottle of Woodford Reserve Kentucky bourbon with this year’s signature label. Tix from $100. mainehistory.org/support_gala

theblacktieco.com

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at PINELAND FARMS in New Gloucester, where The Black Tie Company proudly serves as the exclusive caterer.

If Michael Jordan draws crowds at basketball camps, who makes a splash at swim camps? Olympic-distance triathlete Cortney Linville and former Colby college swim star & National Geographic photographer/ videographer Heather Perry headline July 20–27 at SwimVacation at Camp Taconnet, according to George “Hopper” McDonough. Beginners through pros share an island retreat with private cottages on Great Pond in Belgrade. Essential to know: McDonough, a collegiate swimmer himself, earned his nickname after he shaved his head for competitions and according to legend bore an uncanny resemblance to “Grasshopper,” the lead character in Kung Fu. .4 days/$750, swimvacation.com

Phoenix Studio

Restoration and Design of Fine Art Glass since 1976

Visit us at www.phoenixstudio.com or stop by our gallery at 630 Forest Ave Portland, Maine to see more! Call 207.774.4154 for more info april

2013 15


31

1

4

April Fools’ Day

Two lights Lobster shack opens for 2013 season lobstershacktwolights.com

Sea Dogs Opening day v. Trenton Thunder (NY Yankees), 6 pm, Hadlock Field, $8-$10, portland.seadogs.mlb.com

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9

Carrie Underwood ‘Blown Away’ Tour with special guest Hunter Hayes, 7:30 pm, Cumberland County Civic Center, $43.50-$63.50, thecivicenter.com

27th Annual Chocolate Lovers’ Fling Enjoy a decadent multi-course chocolate tasting and silent auction to benefit SARSSM. 1 pm, seating at 12:30, $50, Holiday Inn By the Bay, sarsonline.org

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Maine Wildlife Park Opens April 13 Visit and learn about the state’s native critters– from moose to lynx to fox to coyote. 9:30am-4:30pm, Gray, kids- $5 adults- $7, maine.gov

The True Story of the Three Little Pigs presented by Portland Ovations, 3 pm, Merrill Auditorium, $11, tickets.porttix.com

28 “Totally Awesome ‘80s!” Portland Symphony Orchestra POPS! April 27-28, Sat. 7:30pm, Sun. 2:30 pm; Merrill Auditorium, $26-$71, tickets.porttix.com

23 Spring Fever Literary Dinners Maine Writers & Publishers Alliance hosts a series of dinners with celebrated authors, 6 pm, multiple restaurants, mainewriters.org/event/ spring-fever-literary-dinners/

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Great Big Sea Doors 6:30 pm, show 7:30 pm; State Theater, $32.50-$46.50, reserved seating, thestatetheater.com

Bear Management Cathance River Education Alliance Community Nature Program–Wildlife Ecologist John Wood describes his research and close encounters with our Maine black bears working on “The Bear Crew,” important research both dangerous and inspiring. 6:30 pm, Topsham Public Library, Topsham, creamaine.org

1 6 p o r t l a n d m o n t h ly m a g a z i n e

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Slavic Soul Party! Fiery Balkan brass, throbbing funk grooves, Gypsy accordion wizardry, and virtuoso jazz chops! 7 pm, Camden Opera House, $10-$35, baychamberconcerts.org

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leo Kottke Lobby/Bar opens 5pm, dinner begins 6pm, show 8pm; Stone Mountain Arts Center, Brownfield, $50 (plus $3 handling fee), stonemountainartscenter.com

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Star trek:The next generation–Best of both worlds 7 pm; Cinemagic Grand, South Portland & Brunswick 10, $10, fathomevents.com

Kentucky Derby Live simulcast from Churchill Downs at Downs Club, Scarborough Downs

Caribbean Night With The Pan Fried Steel Drum Band Doors 7 pm, Show 7:30 pm; advance tickets $10, day of show $15; the Opera House at Boothbay Harbor,www.boothbayoperahouse.com

13

schumann: under the influence Jonathan Biss & Elias String Quartet, presented by Portland Ovations, 7:30 pm, Hannaford Hall, USM-Portland,$42-$46, tickets.porttix.com

18

Patriots Day

Southwest Airlines Begins service to PWM southwestairlines.com

21

11

5

Annual Patriots Day Celebration Colonial re-enactment, bazaar/ craft show, restaurant tastings, entertainment & more; most events are free,ogunquit,visitogunquit.org

19 HAIR Broadway National Tour Presented by Portland Ovations, 8 pm, Merrill Auditorium, $51-$76, tickets. porttix.com

26

Annual Smelt Fry, 5–9 pm, Columbia Falls Fire Dept. grounds, $4-$6, $20 max. per family, 483-4336

4 Buffet dinner & betting 2 pm, post time at 6:20 pm. Scarborough Downs, $2 min. bet, scarboroughdowns.com

from left, Line 1: carstravelfood.com; Wikimedia commons/The Braxton University; portland sea dogs/ DVM Sports; Slavic Soul Party. Line 2: file; carrie underwood; meadowmere.com. Line 3: southwest airlines/file; allhdwallpapers; RCA Victor Broadway line 4: file; star tek: the next generation/ Paramount Television; Torviewtoronto. line 5: Gracie Films/Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation/file; churchill downs/kentucky derby

goingson Datebook April


goingson Events Calendar

Galleries Art Gallery at UNE, 716 Stevens Ave., Portland. Maine Women Pioneers III, through Jul. 21. 221-4499 une.edu/artgallery Bates College Museum of Art, 75 Russell St., Lewiston. Senior Exhibition, Apr. 5-May 25; Recent Acquisitions, Apr. 6-May 25. 786-6259 bates.edu/museum

A chance encounter A network discovered A passion ignited A road revealed

Bowdoin College Museum of Art, 1 Bath Road, Brunswick. Simply Devine: Gods & Demigode in the Ancient Mediterranean, Mar. 8-Jun. 2; Per Kirkeby, Mar 30-Jun 16; Sense of Scale, Measure of Color, Apr. 4- Jun. 2; Unity and Fragmentation, Apr. 4-Jun. 2. 725-3275 bowdoin.edu/art-museum First Friday Art Walk, downtown Portland. Visit local galleries, studios, and museums, Apr. 5, May 3, Jun. 7. firstfridayartwalk.com

USM is everywhere — with faculty, students, alumni, organizations, and businesses all connecting to help pave your way. USM: The road is open.

Maine Historical Society Museum, 489 Congress St., Portland. Wired: How Electricity Came to Maine, through May 26. 774-1822 mainehistory.org Portland Museum of Art, 7 Congress Sq., Portland. Blueberry Rakers: Photos by David Brooks Stess, opens Apr. 6. 775-6148 portlandmuseum.org

Where do you want to go? usm.maine.edu/go

Theater City Theater, 205 Main St., Biddeford. Legends: The Music of Judy Garland, May 17-26; 9 to 5: The Musical, Jul. 19 – Aug. 4. 282-0849 citytheater.org Hackmatack Playhouse, 538 School St., Berwick. Hound of the Baskervilles, Jun. 21-Jul. 26; Sound of Music, Jul. 10-27. 698-1807 hackmatack.org Lakewood Theatre, 76 Theatre Rd., Madison. Bingo: The Winning Musical, May 23-Jun. 1; SelfHelp, Jun. 6-15; The Game’s Afoot, Jun. 20-29; The Pajama Game, Jul. 4-13; In-Laws, Outlaws and Other People (That Should Be Shot), Jul 18-27. 474-7176 lakewoodtheater.org Lyric Music Theater, 176 Sawyer Street, South Portland. The Drowsy Chaperone, Apr. 12-27; Deathtrap, Jun. 21-30. 799-1421 lyricmusictheater.org Merrill Auditorium, 20 Myrtle St., Portland. HAIR, Apr. 19; The True Story of the Three Little Pigs, Apr. 21; MOMIX: Botanica, May 9; Alice in Wonderland, May 11 -12. 842-0800 porttix.com Ogunquit Playhouse, 10 Main St., Ogunquit. The Rat Pack is Back, May 22-Jun. 8; Thoroughly Modern Millie, Jun. 12-Jul. 6; Mel Brooks’ Musical, Young Frankenstein, Jul. 10-27. 646-5511 ogunquitplayhouse.org

Business, meet Pleasure. If you’re looking for the perfect spot to unleash creativity, run a work session that’s unencumbered by the world’s distractions or gather members for a conference where the sky’s the limit,

retreat to Pineland Farms.

Pineland Farms offers:

- a central location (5 minutes off the Maine Turnpike and 20 minutes from Portland and Lewiston/Auburn) - seven fully equipped conference and meeting spaces with audio, visual and wifi - ample free parking - miles of recreational trails, farm tours and outdoor activities for every season - charming overnight accommodations with retreat options - fully tented patio for corporate events - full service on-site catering

Penobscot Theatre Company, 131 Main St., Bangor. Around the World in 80 Days, May 15-Jun. 2. 947-6618 penobscottheatre.org Portland Players, 420 Cottage Rd., South Portland. All Shook Up, May 17-Jun. 2. 799-7337 portlandplayers.org Portland Stage, 25A Forest Ave., Portland. Love/ Sick, Mar. 26-Apr. 21; Wittenburg, Apr. 30-May 19. 780-5151 portlandstage.org

image: Alexandra Daley-Clark Photography

pinelandfarms.org/functions

I

HOST

info@theblacktie.com

I

207.761.6665

at PINELAND FARMS in New Gloucester, where The Black Tie Company proudly serves as the exclusive caterer. april

2013 17


Feel Like a Guest, Live Like a Local

goingson Events Calendar

In the heart of downtown Camden, two blocks from the harbor, shops & restaurants Schoolhouse Arts Center, Rt. 114, Sebago Lake Village. Hold on Molly, Apr. 12-21; MOMonologues 2: Off to School, May 10-19. 642-3743 schoolhousearts.org Snowlion Repertory Company, Ludcke Auditorium, UNE Portland, 716 Stevens Ave, Portland. The Freaks Club, June 13-23. 598-9305 snowlionrep.org Theater at Monmouth, 796 Main Street, Monmouth. The Legend of Finn MacCool, May 20-24; The Knight of the Burning Pestle, Jul. 5-Aug. 16. 933-9999 theateratmonmouth.org

The Good House Bed & Breakfast

Waterville Opera House, 1 Common St., Waterville. Monty Python’s Spamalot, Apr. 7-14; Playtime, Apr. 22; Let it Shine, May 4. 873-7000 operahouse.org Westbrook Performing Arts Center, 471 Stroudwater St., Westbrook. Groove National Dance Competition, Apr. 12-14; Portland Community Chorus, May 3-4; Step Up 2 Dance Competition, May 5. 857-3860 westbrookpac.org

Music Classic 1840 Victorian • Full Breakfast • King-Size Beds • Private Baths • Low Rates

camdengoodhouse.com • 207-706-6291

Asylum, 121 Center St., Portland. Karaoke, every W; 80s Dance Party, every Th.; Living Color 25th Anniversary Tour, April 21; Mason Jennings, May 10. 772-8274 portlandasylum.com Bayside Bowl, 58 Alder St., Portland. Jerks of Grass, every Th; MAMM Jams, Apr. 5; May 3; Jun. 7.

Come see the largest collection of casual furnishing & accessories in New England. Choose from hundreds of styles available now in stock or custom order.

Windsor Sling by Tropitone

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Route 4 Berwick, Maine. 1-877-LOWERYS (1-877-569-3797) or (207) 384-5903. www.LowerysPatio.com Fax (207) 384-2077 1 8 p o r t l a n d m o n t h ly m a g a z i n e


A chance encounter

791-2695 baysidebowl.com Blue, 650 Congress St., Portland. Traditional Irish Session, every W; Night with Seth Warner & Friends, Apr. 4; Jason Myles Goss, OKBARI, Evan King Group, Apr. 5; Wurlibird Jazz, Mike Beling Trio, Apr. 6; Barn Swallows, Bluegrass Jam, Apr. 11; Day for Night, Leo DiSanto, Ed Desjardins & Friends, Apr. 12; Lincoln Allen Jazz, Forbes Quartet, Apr. 13; Night with SORCHA & Friends, Apr. 18; In the Round with Shanna, Matt Meyer, Big Lonesome, Apr. 19; Sean Mencher, Mark Tipton Duo, Apr. 20; Samuel James & Dana Gross, Apr. 25; Bob Rasero, Robert Sarazin Blake, Meghan Yates, Apr. 26; Three Point Jazz, Hardy Bros. Trio, Apr. 27; Potato Pickers, Teg Glandon, May 2; Jennie Backstrom, OKBARI, Evan King Group, May 3; Abram Taylor, Domino Jazz, May 4; Barn Swallows, Bluegrass Jam, May 9; Carte Blanche, Rocky & the Pressers, May 10, Sarah Fard, May 11; In the Round with Shanna, Acheson Gown, May 17; Sean Mencher, May 18; Samuel James & Dana Gross, May 23; Bob Rasero, Trapparatus, May 24; Hattie Simon, Hardy Bros. Trio, May 25; Joyce Anderson, Lay-Z-Gait, May 30; New English Band, Conor Mulroy, Builder of the House, May 31. 774-4111 portcityblue.com

A network discovered A passion ignited A road revealed

USM is everywhere — with faculty, students, alumni, organizations, and businesses all connecting to help pave your way. USM: The road is open.

Where do you want to go?

Dogfish Bar and Grille, 128 Free St., Portland. Acoustic Open Mic, every W; Happy Hour with Travis James Humphrey, Happy Hour with Travis James Humphrey; live jazz every F; Matt Meyer & Gumption

usm.maine.edu/go

HARVARDPILGRIM.ORG/SALTnPEPA

TO R E N K. T C R A A B A P YOUR HAVE US IN. T N U O C SM

april

2013 19


goingson Events Calendar

www.BradfordsRugGallery.com 297 Forest Avenue Portland, ME p: 207.772.3843 | f: 207.773.2849

L.L.BEAN KIDS’ CAMP

give your child a summer to remember expert instruction from certified L.L.Bean Outdoor Discovery Schools® instructors in a fun, safe environment fun activities like archery, kayaking, fly casting, slack lining, stand-up paddleboarding and arts and crafts ages: 6-12 welcome dates: June 24-August 23 Monday through Friday

Junction, Apr. 6; Southbound Outlaws, Apr. 11; Sean Mencher, Apr. 13; Dapper Gents, Apr. 18; Jason Lambert, Elroy, Apr. 20; Griffin Sherry & Ghost of Paul Revere, Apr. 25; Shanna Underwood, May 2; Matt Meyer, May 4; Sean Mencher, May 11; Dapper Gents, May 16; Evan & the Silent Sams, May 18; Griffin Sherry, May 23. 772-5483 thedogfishbarandgrille.com Empire Dine and Dance, 575 Congress St., Portland. Bluegrass, every Mon. 879-8988 portlandempire.com Gingko Blue, 455 Fore St., Portland. Gypsy Caravan, Apr. 11; Rick Miller, Apr. 12; Tommy O’Connell & Juke Joint Devils, Apr. 13; Lorraine Bohland w/Terry Foster, Apr. 17; Mike James’ Blue Lions, Apr. 18; Travis James Humphrey & Retro Rockets, Apr. 19; Poor Howard & Bullfrog, Poke Chop & Other White Meats, Apr. 20; Peter Merrill Trio, Apr. 24; Hot Club du Monde, Apr. 25; Tommy O’Connell & Juke Joint Devils, Apr. 26; Blue Steel Express, Apr. 27; Octane, May 1; Tony Boffa Quartet, May 2; Gary Richardson, Poke Chop, May 3; Poor Howard & Bullfrog, Scott Davis Blues Band, May 4; Standard Issues, May 8; ProfTones, May 9; Rick Miller, May 10; David Mello Trio, Travis James Humphrey & Retro Rockets, May 11; Lorraine Bohland w/ Terry Foster, May 15; Gypsy Caravan, May 16; Black Cat Road, May 18. 541-9190 ginkoblue.com Hannaford Hall, USM, 88 Bedford Street, Portland. Jonathan Bliss & Elias String Quartet, Apr. 11; Imani Winds, May 2. 842-0800 porttix.com

hours: 9 a.m.- 4 p.m.* location: Freeport, ME Early drop-off and late pick-up available

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Jonathan’s, 92 Bournes Ln., Ogunquit. April Verch, Apr. 26; Judy Collins, May 25. 646-4526 jonathansrestaurant.com Merrill Auditorium, 20 Myrtle St., Portland. Enigma Variations, Apr. 9; Mathis der Maler, Apr. 14; Totally Awesome ‘80s, Apr. 27-28; Mahler’s Fifth Symphony, May 5-7; MOMIX: Botanica, May 9; STOMP, May 15; Carnival of the Animals, May 19. 842-0800 porttix.com One Longfellow Square, 181 State St., Portland. Daisy Castro’s Gypsy Moth Quartet, Apr. 12; Willie Porter, Apr. 13; Decompression Chamber Music, Apr. 15; Portland Jazz Orchestra, Apr. 18; Junior Brown, Apr. 19; Brown Bird, Apr. 20; Laura Cortese Acoustic Project, Apr. 25; Rosa Noreen’s Annual Springtime Spectacular, Apr. 27; Maya Sharp, May 3; Big Sandy and his Fly Rite Boys, May 9; Eliza Gilkyson, May 10; Tricky Britches, May 11; James McCartney, May 16; Heritage Blues Quartet, May 17; Putnam Smith, May 19; Decompression Chamber Orchestra, May 20; Portland Jazz Orchestra, May 23; Gibson Brothers, Jun. 1. 761-1757 onelongfellowsquare.com State Theatre, 609 Congress St., Portland. Family of the Year, Apr. 7; Three Days Grace, Apr. 17; Chris Young, Apr. 18; STS9, Apr. 18; One More Time, Apr. 22; Great Big Sea, Apr. 24; Generationals, Apr. 27; MGMT, Apr. 30; Rebelution, May 2; Keller Williams, May 4; Clutch, May 4; Silversun Pickups, May 7; Josh Ritter & the Royal City Band, May 8; Iron & Wine, May 18; Bloc

Party, Jun. 4. 956-6000 statetheatreportland.com

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Stone Mountain Arts Center, 695 Dug Way Road, Brownfield. Alejandro Escovedo & the Sensitive Boys, Apr. 5; Tim O’Brien, Apr. 6; Barn Burner with Christian McNeill & Sea Monsters, Apr. 12; Carolina Chocolate Drops, Apr. 14-15; Leo Kottke, Apr. 18; April Verch, Apr. 27; Jonathan Edwards, May 4; Steep Canyon Rangers, May 5; Asleep at the Wheel, May 11; Blind Boys of Alabama, May 22; Recession Session with Thomas Snow, May 25; Aaron Neville, May 26; Toots & the Maytals, May 26-27; Waltzing for Dreamers, May 30; Rustic Overtones, Jun. 14. 935-7292 carolnoonanmusic.com

RSVP, 887 Forest Ave., Portland. Wine tasting every second W, 4-7pm. 773-8808

Tasty Events Toast on the Coast, charity gala benefits Easter Seals of Maine, Ocean Gateway Pier, Portland. Fine food and wine by participating local restaurants, $50, 6-9 pm, Apr. 11. 828-0754, eastersealsme.org Browne Trading Company, 262 Commercial St., Portland. Wine tasting every third Th, 5-7pm. 7757560 brownetrading.com Chadwick Bed & Breakfast, 140 Chadwick St., Portland. Simply Southern Italian, Tapas Party, Apr. 27 -29. 774-5141 thechadwick.com Old Port Wine Merchants, 223 Commercial St., Portland. Wine tasting every third W, 4-7:30pm.

The

Miles Sofa

Salt Exchange, 245 Commercial St., Portland. Bourbon tastings, first F of every month. 347-5687 thesaltexchange.net The West End Deli & Catering, 133 Spring St., Portland. Wine tasting every first F, 6-8pm. 874-6426 thewestenddeli.com

Don’t Miss Architalx, Portland Museum of Art, 7 Congress Square. 25th annual Voices of Design Lecture Series. Florian Idenburg, Apr. 11; Janna Leavitt, Apr. 18; Matthias Hollwich, Apr. 25. architalx.org Maine Comic Arts Festival, 46 Commercial St., Portland. Writers, artists, and publishers with featured guest, Jeff Smith, May 19. mecaf.blogspot.com Mud Fest: Food, ATVs, games, music, beer, and mud wrestling. Presque Isle Fairgrounds, 84 Mechanic St., Presque Isle, May 25. 249-9936. Parrothead Festival, charity event with music, festivities, and margaritas. Sunday River, 15 South Ridge Rd., Newry. Apr. 5-7. 824-3000 sundayriver.com –Compiled by Jeanee Dudley

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2013 21


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Clockwise from top left: Courtesy of MECA/The Rotary Club of Portland (5); WGME-13; file; 20th Century Fox; buzzfeed.com (Yes we are aware that George Washington was not at lexington or concord); courtesy Joyce marie II/Virginia Taylor

Chowder A tasty b l e n d o f t h e fabulous, noteworthy, and a b s u r d .

Thirteen O’Clock

The Monument Square clock is so broke, “it’s only right twice a day,”says Cyrus Hagge of the Portland Rotary. So why not let MECA students and faculty jazz it up with “urban illustrations”designed to give passers-by a double take? In turn, an April charity auction of the art will help fund the whopping $25,000 repair and maintenance. Watch for he restored clock’s return to the square in July. –Christopher Riccardo

A Stranger in Tangier

Who knew the pride of Virginia’s Tangier Island ferry fleet is a lobster boat from Maine? “I paid $16,800 for the hull,” says Mark Crockett of the 36-foot Joyce Marie II, built at Brooklin’s Atlantic Boat Company in 1988. Yes, but what stopped him from featuring a Chesapeake Bay deadrise for the tourists instead? “At first I used it as my commercial crabber,” he confides. “It’s built for the Atlantic; the deadrise is only good on the bay. Then, four summers ago, I changed it all over myself when we started the ferry service.”

An Anchor to Foolward WGME-13 anchor Adrienne Stein is in the money, thanks to “quarterly visits (royalty checks) from Uncle Borat.” In 2005, Sasha Baron Cohen invaded her Jackson, Mississippi TV station to inflict his schtick on her news crew. Pregnant at the time, she never appears in Borat, but because her name is mentioned, the royalty checks keep rolling in. “Borat paid for all [my baby’s] hospital bills.” –Christopher Riccardo

Maine McNuggets “Taxation Without Recreation!” The IRS will keep you running this year, even if the Boston Marathon doesn’t. “Patriot’s Day no longer has a tax-day exemption,” says IRS’s Peggy Riley. Blame it on “more and more e-filing, which has shut down the paper processing center in Andover’s IRS office.” Because of its Massachusetts location, Andover always observed the holiday. Instead, the geeks in Hartford now receive most of the payments. Ouch. Talk about a shot heard ’round the pocket book.

The East Branch of the Swift River is a veritable…gold mine. “One day, a Byron farmer was sitting down to his dinner–there was a nugget inside his roast chicken,” says Rosey Susbury of Coos Canyon Rock & Gift. The Maine Gold Panning Society has 300 members; in the summer thousands more try their luck, though few find more than a flake or two. “It’s kind of like lottery tickets–if there was a trick to it, everybody’d be in the river.” cooscanyonrockandgift.com–Margaret Leahy april

2013 23


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Portland has hotel fever–big, beautiful showplaces are in the works, with restaurants and event spaces. If we build them, will they come?

staff illustration/Robert Witkowski

By Patrick Venne

d Visitors Bureau

Uptown sophisticate–the stately Portland Press Herald headquarters at the top of Exchange Street is soon to be reincarnated as a lifestyle hotel. april

2013 25


Grand Hotels

How do you top the Top of the East?

K From top: As far as the eye can see from the Top of the East, now under renovation atop the soon-to-be Westin Portland Harborview; the former Eastland Park Hotel’s landmark sign will nevertheless remain on Portland’s skyline. 2 6 p o r t l a n d m o n t h ly m a g a z i n e

Keenly aware of how their presence will transform Portland’s existing assets, a new renaissance of hotels is rising–quite literally–to meet an impressive demand for Portland’s unique quality of place. In the heart of the Arts District, investors are steadily working toward upgrading the 12-story landmark formerly known as the Eastland Park Hotel into the Westin Portland Harborview. According to Jeffrey Cappellieri, Westin’s area director of sales and marketing, the developers hope the hotel will play a role in transforming the Arts District into “one of Portland’s most dynamic

from top: cynthia farr-weinfeld; courtesy; portland harborview/Daly Gray, Inc.

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neighborhoods for creativity, food, music, and business.” While this evolution is well underway already, Westin’s contribution will include 16,000 square feet of top-of-theline, versatile event and exhibition space. The 1927 Eastland Grand Ballroom, for instance, will be restored to its original breathtaking proportions, replete with ‘grand staircase’ and balcony as each originally existed. And talk about lofty aspirations. The Westin’s bid to recapture the top of the market is dramatized by more than doubling the size of the Top of the East to turn it into a venue

It just makes sense.

AUGUSTA I BANGOR I BRUNSWICK I ELLSWORTH I PORTLAND 1-800-564-0111 I eatonpeabody.com april

2013 27


vid Mitchell, Christopher Rogers, Lauren Schaefer-Bove, Zara Machatine, Steve Guthrie, Dana Ricker

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(l to r): David Mitchell, Christopher Rogers, Lauren Schaefer-Bove, Zara Machatine, Steve Guthrie, Dana Ricker

(l to r): David Mitchell, Christopher Rogers, Lauren Schaefer-Bove, Zara Machatine, Steve Guthrie, Dana Ricker (l to r): David Mitchell, Christopher Rogers, Lauren Schaefer-Bove, Zara Machatine, Steve Guthrie, Dana Ricker

High glass–The Hyatt Place shooting up on the corner of

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Union and Fore streets will transform a former empty lot. • Estate Planning • Corporate and Business Retirement (l to r): David Mitchell, Christopher Rogers, Lauren Schaefer-Bove, Zara Machatine, Steve Guthrie, Dana Ricker ogers, Lauren Schaefer-Bove, Zara Machatine, Steve Guthrie, Dana Ricker (l to r): David Mitchell, Christopher Rogers, Lauren Schaefer-Bove, Zara Machatine, Steve Guthrie, Dana Ricker • Retirement Planning • Wealth Advisory Services Estate Planning Corporate andPlanning Business Retirement more on par with Top of the Mark in San Corporate and Businessdesigned Retirement•to • Estate andtheBusiness Retirement roviding Strategies assist you with Wealth Creation, • Corporate • Trusts Planning • Executive Financial Services Francisco, offering sweeping vistas of the Retirement • Wealth Advisory Services Wealth Advisory Services Planning • Wealth Advisory Services Steve Guthrie David• Retirement M. Mitchell reservation and (l to r): David Mitchell, Distribution Christopher Rogers, Lauren Schaefer-Bove, Zara Machatine, Steve Guthrie, Dana Ricker Portland skyline, harbor, and beyond. The Trusts • Executive Financial Services Executive Financial Services • Trusts • Executive Financial Services Senior Vice President Vice President Westin is ambitiously scheduled to open in Providing Strategies designed to assist you with Wealth Creation, Financial Advisor Financial Advisor December after deep restoration from top to Steve Guthrie David M. Mitchell Estate Planning Preservation and Distribution • Corporate and Business Retirement bottom, all the way to raw cement. Providing Strategies designed to assist you with Wealth tCreation, Financial Planning Specialis Senior VicePlanning President Vice President teve Guthrie M. Mitchell Retirement •David Wealth Advisory Services avid M. Mitchell Steve Guthrie M.Wealth Mitchell Several blocksCreation, east, on the corner of Providing Strategies designed to assist you with Providing Strategies designed to assist you with Wealth Creation, Preservation and Distribution • Estate Planning • Corporate and Business Retirement ategies designed to assist you with Wealth Creation, Providing Strategies designed to assistDavid you with Financial Advisor Financial Advisor enior Vice President Vice President Trusts • Executive Financial Services Exchange and Congress streets, the former • Retirement Planning •Senior Wealth Advisory Services and Creation, Distribution ce President Vice Vice President Wealth Preservation, andPresident Distribution and DistributionPreservation Preservation and Distribution t Financial Planning Specialis • Trusts • Executive Financial Services headquarters of the Portland Press Herald is nancial Advisor Financial Advisor • Estate Planning •Financial Corporate and Business Retirement Dana M. A. Ricker Christopher G. Rogers nancial Advisor Advisor Financial Advisor avid Mitchell Dana A. Ricker • Retirement Planning • Wealth Advisory Services being completely reimagined. The historic Planning •to Corporate andPlanning Business Retirement Financial Planning Specialis tCreation, • CorporateFinancial Corporate and Retirement and Business RetirementSpecialist gnancial Vice President Senior Vice President Providing Strategies assist you with Wealth ••• Estate Corporate andtBusiness Businessdesigned retirement •• Estate Estate Planning Planning Specialis Planning • Trusts • Executive Financial Services home to reporters, typesetters, and other • Retirement Planning • Wealth Advisory Services ce President Vice•Mitchell President teve Guthrie David M. nning Advisory Services • Retirement Planning • Wealth Advisory Services Steve David M. Mitchell •• Wealth WealthGuthrie Advisory Service Retirement Planning Preservation and Distribution Dana A.Advisor Ricker Christopher G. Rogers r Financial Financial Adviso •• Trusts • Executive Financial Services Gannett and Blethen nighthawks will underFinancial Services • Executive Financial Services Senior Vice President Vice President • Executive Executive Financial Service •• Trusts Trusts Advisor nancial Advisor Financial enior Vice President Vice President Vice President Senior Vice President t Financial Planning Specialis go a $20-million renovation and become, in Financial Advisor Financial StevePlanning Guthrie David M.Advisor Mitchell ana A. Advisor Ricker Christopher G.Ricker Rogers • Estate • Corporate and Business Retirement hristopher G. Rogers Dana A. Christopher G. Rogers nancial Financial Advisor nancial Planning Specialist Financial Planning Specialist t Financial Planning Specialis the third quarter of 2014, a 110-room, highSenior Vice President Vice President rServices Financial Advisor Financial Adviso Guthrie M. Mitchell •Steve Retirement Planning •David Wealth Advisory David M. Mitchell Steve Guthrie David M. Mitchell ce President Senior Vice President Financial Financial AdvisorSpecialist enior Vice Planning President Vice President Senior Vice President Financial Planning end boutique “lifestyle” hotel–in the vein of Vice Advisor President President •Senior Trusts •Vice Executive Financial Services Financial Specialis t dent Vice President Senior Vice President Vice President Financial Planning Specialis t nancial Advisor Financial Adviso r the CharlesMark Financial Advisor Financial Advisor A. Ricker G. Rogers nancial Financial Advisor Financial AdvisoinrBoston. The customized r Dana LaurenAdviso Schaefer-Bove ZaraChristopher Machatine Financial Advisor Financial Advisor Financial Advisor David M. Mitchell Dana A. Ricker David M. Mitchell A. Ricker hristopher G. Rogers Steve Guthrie Financial Planning Specialis t Vice President Senior Vice President space, designed nancial Planning Specialis t Financial Planning Specialist ClientFinancial Specialis t by Portland’s Archetype Planning Specialist Financial Planning Vice President ViceMitchell President Vice President President Senior Registered Associate Service Associate Steve Guthrie David M. Dana A.Advisor Ricker Christopher G.r Rogers Financial Financial Adviso

Architects, may very well be known as The xchange, a name floated more in light of ChristopherEG. Rogers the venue’s ability to serve as a nexus for the Senior Vice President Zara cultural traffic–ideas, scenes, conversation, Financial Adviso r Machatine art, tastes, and history–than Client Service Associatefor its eponySenior Vice President Senior Vice President Dana A. Ricker Christopher G. Rogers Senior Vice President Vice President 100 Middle Street, 3rd Floor Lauren Schaefer-Bove ZaraSenior Machatine theportlandharborgroup@mssb.com mous street location. According to developer Vice President Senior Vice President Financial Advisor Financial Advisor enior Registered Associate Client Service Associate Financial Advisor Senior Registered Associate Client Service Associate Financial Advisor Jim Brady, an experienced Portland investor Portland, ME 04101 Lauren Schaefer-Bove Zara Machatine Financial Advisor Financial AdvisorSchaefer-Bove 100Machatine Middle Street, 3rd Floor http://fa.morganstanleyindividual.com/theportlandharborgroup/ er-Bove Zara Lauren Zara Machatine 00 Middle Street, 3rd Floor Senior Registered Associate Client Service Associate t Financial Planning Specialis behind the project, it will be a “high-design” Portland, ME 04101 100 Middle Street, 3rd Floor auren Schaefer-Bove Zara Machatine d800-442-6722 Associate Client Service Associate SeniorMachatine Registered Associate Client Service Associate theportlandharborgroup@mssb.com Lauren Schaefer-Bove Zara 207-771-0800 100 Middle Street, 3rd Floor Lauren Schaefer-Bove theportlandharborgroup@mssb.com ortland, ME 04101 hotel marketed toward sophisticated visiZara Machatine Portland, ME Associate 04101 enior Registered Associate Senior Registered AssociateClient Service ClientAssociate Service http://fa.morganstanleyindividual.com/theportlandharborgroup/ Portland, ME 04101 http://fa.morganstanleyindividual.com/theportlandharborgroup/ Senior Registered Associate tors attracted by Portland’s vibrancy. “Steps Client Service Associate 100 Middle Street, 3rd Floor eportlandharborgroup@mssb.com et, 3rd Floor 100 Middle Street, 3rd Floor Lauren Schaefer-Bove Machatine theportlandharborgroup@mssb.com theportlandharborgroup@mssb.com 800-442-6722 207-771-0800 Zara 800-442-6722 207-771-0800 away, miles apart” is how he describes the Portland, ME 04101 101 Portland, ME 04101 Senior Registered Associate Client Service Associate http://fa.morganstanleyindividual.com/theportlandharborgroup/ tp://fa.morganstanleyindividual.com/theportlandharborgroup/ /theportlandharborgroup/ http://fa.morganstanleyindividual.com/theportlandharborgroup/ theportlandharborgroup@mssb.com warm, innovative, and creative space he orgroup@mssb.com theportlandharborgroup@mssb.com 800-442-6722 0 Middle Street, 3rd Floor 207-771-0800 00-442-6722 207-771-0800 http://fa.morganstanleyindividual.com/theportlandharborgroup/ hopes to develop as an “experiential” hotel stanleyindividual.com/theportlandharborgroup/ http://fa.morganstanleyindividual.com/theportlandharborgroup/ 800-442-6722 207-771-0800 100 Middle 3rd 100 Middle Street, Street, 3rdFloor Floor ortland, ME 04101 800-442-6722 207-771-0800 207-771-0800 800-442-6722 207-771-0800 with a “phenomenal” restaurant space. That Portland, ME Portland, ME04101 04101 eportlandharborgroup@mssb.com is, while The Exchange sits merely “steps theportlandharborgroup@ms.com theportlandharborgroup@mssb.com http://fa.morganstanleyindividual.com/theportlandharborgroup/ away” from the Old Port’s many offerings, tp://fa.morganstanleyindividual.com/theportlandharborgroup/ http://fa.morganstanleyindividual.com/theportlandharborgroup/ 800-442-6722 207-771-0800 800-442-6722 207-771-0800 it will be “miles apart” from anything else in 00-442-6722 207-771-0800 the market today. Brady studied the experiential trend, visiting the award-winning Iron Horse Hotel in Milwaukee. Set in a converted 100-year-old MorganStanley StanleySmith and itsBarney Financial do not provide tax provide or legal tax advise. Please consult yourconsult personal taxpersonal advisor tax regarding warehouse with a highly rated restaurant, Morgan andAdvisors its Financial Advisors do not or legal advice. Please your advisortaxation regarding and tax and planning and your attorney for personal trusts. This material has been for informational purposes only and notisan taxation tax planning and your attorney for personal trusts. This material hasprepared been prepared for informational purposes onlyisand not an an outdoor lounge abutting an active railoffer to buy or sell or a solicitation of any offer to buy or sell any security/instrument or to participate in any trading strategy. offer to buy or sell or a solicitation of any offer to buy or sell any security/instrument or to participate in any trading strategy. Morgan Stanley Smith Barney and its Financial Advisors do not provide tax or legal advice. Please consult your personal tax advisor regarding road, motorcycle memorabilia in the lobby, taxation and tax planning and your attorney for personal trusts. This material has been prepared for informational purposes only and is not an ©©2012 2012 Morgan Stanley Smith Barney LLC. Member SIPC. GP11-01363P-N09/11 7049517 MAR009 03/12 Morgan Stanley LLC. Member SIPC. GP11-01363P-NO9/11 7049517 MAR009 03/12 offer to buy sell or a solicitation of any buy or selltax any security/instrument to participate in any trading strategy. anley Smith Barney and its orFinancial Advisors dooffer nottoprovide or legal advice.orPlease consult your personal tax advisor regarding Stanley Smith Barney its Financial Advisors do not provide tax or legal advice. Please consult your personal tax advisor regarding nd tax planningMorgan and your attorney forand personal trusts. This material has been prepared for informational purposes only and is not and an lots of personality, the Iron Horse “out-

Financial Advisors do not©provide tax or legal advice. consult your personal Morgan regarding Stanley Smith Barney and its Financial Advisors not provide tax or legal advice. Please consult your personal tax advisor regarding 2012 Morgan Stanley SmithPlease Barney LLC. Member SIPC. tax advisor GP11-01363P-N09/11 7049517doMAR009 03/12 taxation and tax planning and your attorney for personal trusts. This material has been prepared for informational purposes only and is not an torney for personal trusts. This material has been prepared for informational only taxation and is not andan tax planning and your attorney personal trusts. This material has been prepared for informational purposes only and is not an y or sell or a solicitation offer to of buy sell anyorpurposes security/instrument toparticipate participate in for any trading strategy. offer to buy or of sellany or a solicitation any or offer to buy sell any security/instrument or or to in any trading strategy. f any offer to buy Barney or2sell security/instrument to o participate trading offer to buy advice. or sell or Please a solicitation of any offer buy or sell any or to participate in any trading strategy. 8 any p and o rits t lFinancial a n d orm n t hdolinnot yanym a gstrategy. az in tanley Smith Advisors provide tax orelegal consult yourtopersonal taxsecurity/instrument advisor regarding JOB INFORMATION SPECIFICATIONS ©and 2012 your Morgan Stanley LLC. Member GP11-01363P-N09/11 7049517NOTES MAR009 03/12 tax planning attorney forBarney personal trusts.SIPC. This material hasMorgan been prepared for informational purposes only and is not an GP11-01363P-N09/11 7049517 MAR009 03/12 organ Stanley Smith Barney LLC.Smith Member SIPC. GP11-01363P-N09/11 7049517 MAR009 03/12 ynd LLC. Member SIPC. GP11-01363P-N09/11 7049517 MAR009 © 2012 03/12 Barney LLC. Member SIPC. PROJ. NO.: TRIM SIZE: 7067101 4.75" ×Stanley 9.9063"Smith

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FINISHED SIZE: 4.75" × or uy or sell or a solicitation of any offer toJOBbuy orINFORMATION sell any security/instrument to participate in any trading strategy. 9.9063" JOB SPECIFICATIONS MSSB Chin Harbor Ad Morgan Stanley Smith Barney and its NAME: Financial Advisors do Group not provide tax or legal advice. Please consult your personal taxNOTES advisor regarding BLEED: NA PROJ. do NO.: 7067101 TRIM SIZE: 4.75" 9.9063" ey Smith Barney and and its tax Financial Advisors not provide taxThis ormaterial legal advice. Please your personal taxis not advisor regarding taxation planning and your attorney for personal trusts. has been× prepared forconsult informational purposes only and an BINDERY:

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enior Vice President Senior Vice President ana A. Ricker Christopher G. Advisor Rogers Advisor Financial Financial Advisor Financial Senior Vice PresidentSpecialist Zara Vice President Lauren Schaefer-Bove Machatine ViceA. President Senior Vice President Financial Planning Dana Ricker Christopher G. Rogers ce President Vice President Christopher G. Rogers Dana A.Advisor Ricker Financial Advisor Advisor Planning SpecialistSeniorFinancial Financial Planning Financial Planning Specialist nancial Financial Financial Planning Specialist r Financial Advisor Financial Adviso Senior Advisor Registered Associate Client Service Associate Vice President Senior Vice President Senior Vice President Vice President Financial Planning Specialist auren Schaefer-Bove Zara Machatine r nancial Advisor Financial Adviso Financial Planning Specialis t 100 Middle Street, 3rd Floor ara Machatine Lauren Schaefer-Bove Financial Financial Adviso rAdvisor Financial Adviso Financial r Rogers LaurenAdvisor Schaefer-Bove Zara Machatine Christopher G. Steve Guthrie Christopher G. Rogers enior Registered Associate Associate t nancial Planning Specialis Financial Planning Specialis t Client Service Portland, ME 04101 Steve Guthrie g Specialis Financial Planning Specialis t t Senior Registered Associate Client Service Associate ient Service Associate Senior Registered Associate auren Schaefer-Bove Zara Machatine


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april

2013 29


The Bay House International Exposure • Local Expertise

U n d e r C o n s t ru c t i o n , O c c u p a n c y F a l l 2 0 1 3

15 Middle STreeT

The Bay House is the first contemporary condominium residence to anchor Portland’s waterfront district. Architecturally designed to complement the spirit of this historic neighborhood, The Bay House pays tribute to Portland’s past, but emphasizes today’s modern lifestyle. With ten different floor plans and 42 singlelevel units, residents at The Bay House enjoy a variety of sophisticated amenities and options. Open floor plans feature custom kitchens with Prices range from $200,000 for a studio up to $795,000 for a spacious 3-bedroom unit. granite, hardwood floors, luxurious baths, stateof-the-art systems, central air conditioning, gas fireplaces, underground parking and private Sandy Johnson & Gail Landry | 207-415-2128 & 207-650-8893 outdoor space.

International Exposure International Exposure www.bayhouseportland.com one union wharf • portland • 207.773.0262 Local Expertise Local Expertise


Grand Hotels bold all-glass first floor will have a rhythm which, according to Soley, is meant to be a “playful counterpoint to the structures across the street,” connecting residents and visitors alike to “both current reality and past history.” The 24-hour activity generated by Hyatt Place will bring a big shot of new energy to the Old Port, and capitalize upon the “intangibles” that draw so many visitors to its one-of-a-kind establishments every year. We all know that downtown Portland has, as Soley describes it, “a bit of magic,” but the Hyatt Place will let a younger international set feel they’re rediscovering this for the first time. The city’s enchantments are also being expanded by Vin Veroneau, president of Portland-based J.B. Brown & Sons, who cut his teeth on the Boston market. At the western edge of the Old Port, at the corner of Commercial and Maple streets

Portland’s Only All-Suite Waterfront Hotel

(Continued on page 82)

courtesy alouette beach resort/mark muller architects

Luxury in Old Orchard

Outside Portland, the epiphenomenon of new hotels is echoed by the nearly completed Alouette Suites, designed by Portland architect Mark Mueller to bring a luxury client base to a memorable sweep of Old Orchard Beach. “We think our story is exciting as part of the Portland scene and also as part of the revitalization of Old Orchard Beach on its own,” says Fred Kennedy of the ripple effect. Yes, but why exactly now, in 2013? “We’re a small, family-run business, and we’re beginning our 14th year in Old Orchard. Old Orchard Beach has perhaps lagged a bit behind other vacation destinations in Maine for keeping pace with the newest and best guest accommodations—the new Alouette Suites signals a changed attitude and a desire to move Old Orchard Beach back to the top echelon of vacation spots in New England.” The move will delight “our present clientele and open new markets.” Specifically, he’s engaging a demographic responding to “the extended-stay offerings…with high-end oneand two-bedroom suites, all with private beach views and kitchens.” A number of these four-season suites include “fireplaces, spa bathrooms, soaking tubs, on-site sauna, and top-notch health guest membership. Guests can enjoy a full breakfast available each morning in our own Alouette Cafe throughout the year.”

® ®

145 FORE STREET • PORTLAND, MAINE 04101 207.761.1660 • WWW.RESIDENCEINNDOWNTOWNPORTLAND.COM


1912


Controversy

from top: courtesy US Coast Guard/ Petty Officer 2nd Class Tim Kuklewski; AP Photo/The Virginian-Pilot, The’ N. Pham

A second mutiny erupts during the Bounty hearings over why Capt. Robin Walbridge sailed the MGM replica into Hurricane Sandy.

Mutiny on the Bounty

The final glimpse of the HMS Bounty on October 29, 2012; and below, handling the truth–Lt. Commander Andrew Grant, left; Commander Kevin Carroll, center; and US Coast Guard Lt. Charles Mellor on February 12, 2013, in Portsmouth, Virginia, the first day of the joint Coast Guard and National Transportation Safety Board hearing into the Bounty’s sinking during Hurricane Sandy.

By Co l i n W. S a r g e n t

PORTSMOUTH, VIRGINIA. The sign outside the conference room with the tall white doors whispers, “Coast Guard

Investigation, HMS Bounty, General Session, Salon 6, Portsmouth Ballroom.” A jostle of TV vans with minicams waits in the dazzling sunshine outside the Renaissance Hotel for a thunderbolt of truth (suitable for editing into a 15-second spot). Some of the most stunning testimony here is coming from Mainers. Todd Kosakowski of Boothbay Harbor Shipyard has just revealed 29 photos showing the Bounty just before she finished her last round of repairs, pre-Hurricane Sandy. As the website gCaptain describes it, “Kosakowski told NTSB investigator Captain Rob Jones that he believes 75 percent of the framing above the waterline on Bounty may have been rotten, but that the ship’s representative in the yard, Captain Robin

APril

2013 33


Controversy Walbridge, declined any further search for rotted wood. He convinced Kosakowski that they would make the repairs before their next Coast Guard hull inspection.” In all, “At least four people with ties to Maine [have given] key testimony–two yard workers and two Maine Maritime Academy graduates for the crew,” according to report­ er Matthew White, who has emailed Portland Magazine background insights on the affair. They are: Jessica Hewitt, an MMA grad­ uate; Bounty second mate Matt Sanders, an MMA alum; and shipyard employees Kosakowski and Joe Jakomovicz, now retired from the yard.

American’s waterfront editor Stephen Rappaport: “In 2006, after serving as the set of Disney’s 2005 Pirates of the Caribbean II, [the Bounty] underwent a massive res­ toration at Samples [Boothbay Harbor] Shipyard... Since that time, Bounty has sailed all over the world, visiting Tahiti and the Galapagos Islands among other distant ports, under the aegis of the nonprofit HMS Bounty Organization in Greenport of New York’s Long Island.” Which is not to say Bounty wasn’t over 50 years old and on borrowed time by then (there had to be some reason Ted Turner unloaded her after picking her up with

in mock sea battles). Who had the heart to tell Bounty her best days were behind her? As I write this, third mate Daniel Cleve­ land is testifying, answering a panel mem­ ber’s question, “How long were you taking rolls of 45 degrees?” “Honestly, it’s very hard to gauge.” Who can vouchsafe a better answer, given the 90-knot winds Bounty was facing during the teeth of the storm? Here, in retrospect, out of the wind, panel members need to hear themselves think: “Please silence all communication devices. Please refrain from departing or entering the

“...The Bounty operated on the fringe of the tall-ship world, a kind of counterculture in which vessels try to eke out a profit...”

Clockwise from above: Bounty calls at Star Island in the Isles of Shoals; chief mate John Svendsen at the February hearing on the sinking; third mate Daniel Cleveland takes his turn; Boothbay Harbor Boatyard worker Todd Kosakowski, who provided testimony and photos; boatswain Laura Groves is sworn in.

Faces in the Crowd

White, a former Navy man and Virginian-Pilot staff writer, is among those present here as the author of a Los Angeles Magazine story with a West Coast angle featuring deckhand Claudene Christian, 42, the other Bounty crewmember who drowned beyond Capt. Walbridge, 63, lost when the Bounty sank 90 miles off Cape Hatteras on October 30, 2012. When she joined Bounty’s crew, Christian, a former USC “Song Girl,” claimed descent from Fletcher Christian, master’s mate of the original 40-man crew who mutinied on HMS Bounty in 1789. Here in Maine, Bounty was making port visits as late as September 2012, including a celebrated stop in Castine Harbor (tours for Maine Maritime Academy), looking apparently seaworthy. Wrote The Ellsworth 3 4 p o r t l a n d m o n t h ly m a g a z i n e

MGM film rights in 1986). In an April 2013 story for Outside Magazine, Kathryn Miles ticks off no fewer than three of her over­ hauls in Boothbay–2001, 2006, and 2012– while acknowledging the work “never fully addressed persistent leaking.” If Bounty was a wreck, she was our wreck. Given the kiss of death as a “fringe” dockside attraction, the replica, rescued from burning in 1961 by Marlon Brando af­ ter Mutiny on the Bounty wrapped, had be­ come a floating heartbreak, unlicensed to transport passengers, limping from repair to expensive repair even while the crowds cheered (though not as loudly as they do for younger, sexier tall ships such as the rakish Pride of Baltimore II, which gives rides to in-port visitors, fires cannon while enter­ ing and leaving port, and even participates

room except during periods of recess. Do not enter while testimony is in progress.”

Reef Points

In spite of overwhelming sentiment (crew members excepted) that Capt. Walbridge took an unacceptably grave risk by racing around the hurricane, or even “‘over the top’” of the storm, as the Los Angeles Times has reported, these hearings have now clari­ fied that on the other hand, Bounty had re­ cently handled herself well in extremely rough weather. In fact, she’d sailed success­ fully through “a typhoon in the Pacific” in 2010, according to third mate Dan Cleveland and boatswain Laura Groves. As for the madness of riding out a hur­ ricane in the first place, this isn’t a new ‘crazy’ idea. In fact, the U.S. Navy ordered

Clockwise from left: courtesy Star Island Corporation; WAVY10 NEWS (2); Boothbay Harbor Shipyard; WAVY10

–Capt. Daniel Parrott, quoted in Outside Magazine.


21 ships out to sea from their berths in Hampton Roads a few days before Sandy struck (with the internet and cell phones at his disposal, Walbridge was aware of this), then reversed its decision a day later. By then, Bounty had already started to make a run for it, starting south in ideal weather from New London in a race toward her winter quarters in St. Petersburg, Florida, where lucrative tours awaited. Still, a Navy combatant is hardly an historic vessel. “No,” testified Capt. Bert Rogers of Tall Ships America, as reported by the web site gCaptain: “I would have sought safer berth upriver”–snug as a bug in New London. Complicating this is the unfathomable news cycle that seems to christen every storm the Storm of the Century, with accompanying music and graphics. More and more, the viewer-hungry media cries wolf. With this in mind, fringe-attraction theorists might venture that Bounty simply couldn’t afford to stay up north and let the waves and wind beat her senseless near land, resulting in further expensive repairs. Follow the money. More inside skinny: Before Capt. Walbridge left dock in New London and set out for Florida, he called his crew together, told them his plan, and said anyone could leave if he or she questioned his judgment. No one left his side. When Bounty started taking on water, it was from a multitude of sources above and below decks. “The only thing that was clear is that there was an open seam in the engine room above the waterline in the port side,” testified boatswain Laura Groves testified. “You could hear water coming in when we rolled.” The bilge pumps couldn’t keep up with it, the engine went dead, the lights went dark for the last time, and Bounty rolled in a nightmare of screams and bright orange survival suits. Capt. Walbridge was last seen on deck in his survival suit–shades of George Clooney in The Perfect Storm? What keeps me up at night: As proof against the icy loneliness, the surviving crewmembers sang sea chanteys in the liferafts as the helicopters closed in the pre-dawn darkness. What song would you choose to sing if you knew it might be your last? n There are many sides to this mystery, impossible to tell in one story. Do you have any inside information about the Bounty or fond recollections? We welcome your comments. Email editor@portlandmonthly.com.

>>

Michael Libby Artist

Real Men. Real Clothes. 237 Commercial Street Portland, Maine 207-699-5575 portlanddrygoods.com

Maine MaritiMe MuseuM Dedication/Open House June 1

Even more Spectacular!

Six 120-foot masts are being added this spring to the sculpture of the Wyoming. New England’s largest public work of art will be even more awe-inspiring. Of course, there’s also…

Tours of Bath Iron Works* Lighthouse River Cruises P&S historic shipyard Victorian-era Donnell House Fishing schooner Sherman Zwicker Shipbuilding & nautical demonstrations 7 family friendly exhibits 20-acre waterfront campus Open daily 9:30 to 5 *Reservations required. Tickets and information available online.

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2013 35


N. C. Wyeth, Eseldorf was a paradise for us boys (detail); oil on canvas, 40 x 33 1/8 in, collection of the Brandywine River Museum

Every Picture Tells a Story

N.C. WYETH Illustrations from the Brandywine River Museum

April 27–December 29, 2013

16 Museum Street, Rockland, ME 04841 • 207-596-6457 • farnsworthmuseum.org Celebrating Maine’s role in American art Exhibition sponsored: Anna Mae and George Twigg III, Anonymous, and Richard Gilder and Lois Chiles The primary media sponsor of this exhibition is Maine Home + Design


Cfrom top: colby museum of art; Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution

trends

Unforgettable Who says, “‘John Who?’”

Y

ou may not be surprised to learn that Maine’s (and Manhattan’s) fantastic 20th century watercolorist John Marin (1870-1953) is dead. But if you admire his work as I do, you’ll be shocked to learn he’s dead as a painter, too. In his wistful Wall Street Journal story “How a Great American Artist Vanished From the Critical Scope,” writer Terry Teachout begins, “Sooner or later, everyone who writes about John Marin gets around to mentioning the 1948 Look magazine poll of 68

by co l i n W. S a r g e n t

critics, curators, and museum directors who, when asked to name America’s greatest living painters, put him at the top of the list. Five years later, the headline of Mr. Marin’s New York Times obituary described him as “Artist Considered by Many as ‘America’s No. 1 Master.’” No less a highbrow than the art critic Clement Greenberg concurred, predicting that Mr. Marin and Jackson Pollock would “compete for recognition as the greatest American painter of the 20th century.” Everybody knows who Jackson Pollock april

2013 37


trends

Previous page: Stonington, Maine, 1923, water color and charcoal; John Marin painting at Cape Split. This page, clockwise from top left: Downtown the El, 1921, etching; Brooklyn Bridge, 1912, watercolor and graphite; Movement Gray and Blue, 1952, oil; Island (Ship’s Stern), 1934, watercolor; From Seeing Cape Split, 1935, oil on canvas; White Waves on Sand, Maine,1917, watercolor and charcoal.

is. He’s Ed Harris, the Oscar-winning actor. But now we’re waiting for the other shoe to drop. If Marin’s work is so wonderful, then why is the world forgetting about him? “Well, Jackson Pollock certainly jumped ahead,” laughs Bruce Brown, art collector, independent curator, and curator emeritus at the Center for Maine Contemporary Art. “But 3 8 p o r t l a n d m o n t h ly m a g a z i n e

John Marin doesn’t take a back seat to just a­ bout anyone.” (As a measure of this, Brown has selected seven important Marins he feels will stand the test of time–they appear throughout this story.) Actually, it’s New York that’s forgetting Marin (the fish rots first from the head). Teachout makes the sad point that “it’s been 21 years since a major


Clockwise from top left: HARRIS SCHRANK FINE PRINTS; wikimedia commons/john marin; goantiques.com; Portland Museum of Art; bohemianfineart.com; colby museum of art Gift of John Marin, Jr. and Norma B. Marin

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U.S. museum last put together a full-scale retrospective of his work,” then drives the nail in the coffin: “New York’s Museum of Modern Art owns 25 Marins—but not a single one of them is currently on view.” Portland Museum of Art’s 2011 show, he reflects without rancor (Teachout is a frequent visitor here, and loves it), is “medium size.” He attended the show, and notes that even the Portland catalog laments that Marin is now “the missing man among the pantheon of great American modernists.” Again, why? “The standard explanation,” Teachout writes, “is that even though he marched to the edge of abstraction, it seems never to have occurred to [Marin] to turn his back on the visible world. ‘The sea that I paint may not be the sea,’ he wrote, ‘but it is a sea–not an abstraction.’ After the rise of Abstract Expressionism in the 1940s, his deeprooted belief in representation came to be seen as…quaint.” Marin’s contemporary stylings were too “homegrown” at precisely the worst time. “Postwar connoisseurs were increasingly suspicious of distinctively American artists who failed to partake of the ‘international style’ of art, be it in architecture, abstract painting, classical music or anything else.” Aha! It’s America’s “nagging sense of cultural inferiority.” For the moment, at least, the Marin we love is just not Euro-cool enough. Où sont les neiges d’antan? n

PORTLAND

TM

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2013 39


AMERICAN IMPRESSIONISM

Break of Dawn by Robert Spring, oil on canvas, 30˝ x 36˝

Reflections on the Water, Saco River by Louis Guarnaccia, oil on linen 30˝ x 40˝

58 Maine Street, Brunswick, Maine 04011

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28 Bayview Street, Camden, Maine 04843

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CONTEMPORARY REALISM

Into a Heel by Sergio Roffo, oil on canvas, 22˝ x 32˝

Island in the Marsh by Arnold Desmarais, oil on panel, 18˝ x 24˝

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local flavor

clone noun \klon\: an excessively imitative fan of Jim Rome’s smack-talk sports show [a genetic reduplication] –jimrome.stucknut.com/smacktionary.php

Clone Zones At Portland’s sports bars, it pays to know the score. 4 2 p o r t l a n d m o n t h ly m a g a z i n e

by by CCH HRRIISSto topph heerr RRIICC CCARDO ARDO


ALL PHOTOS BY CYNTHIA FARR-WEINFELD

Rivalries, 10 Cotton Street “I like to come here because my groundfish trawler is docked right down the street,” says Rob Tetreault sitting at Rivalries’ bar doing a crossword puzzle with the staff. “I went to Deering High with most of the people who work here.” Bartender Jen Meader is the resident “Meter Maid” who warns all in earshot that city parking employees are ticketing outside.“We need a light to turn on a signal,” she laughs.“This is how we look out for each other–and our regulars.” “We’re the only sports bar in town that gets all of the TV sports entertainment packages,” 30 screens on two floors, says owner Lance Meader.“But here, football is king.” A pril

2013 43


XANDER BOGAERTS

JACKIE BRADLEY JR. Photo by Dave Cleaveland/Maine Imaging

2013 SEASON 207-879-9500

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4 4 p o r t l a n d m o n t h ly m a g a z i n e

Asylum Sports Bar Grab two tickets to paradise and you might just find yourself sitting with Eddie Money on one side and Goth kids on the other.A few tables away, a scrum of Celtics jerseys, black togas, and cowboy hats has gathered–surprise–to curse theYankees. Here, the bar, concert hall, and dance club all blend together, and you’re invited to carry your beverage between these

Pat’s Pizza, As the short hockey season heads to playoffs, Bruins fans head to the 20-ounce mug club in front of Pat’s 16 hi-def TVs.“When the Bruins score, the whole place cheers,” says bar manager David Gerrish. “It’s their social networking.” Gerrish is always ready to serve “Kyle, Alex, two different Bills, Leslie, Dave, Caleb, Darren, Charlie, Steve, Patrick,” among many other regulars.Waitress Abby Kestner adds,“We created a


local flavor

& Grill, 121 Center St. three worlds.“Head office staff for both the Pirates and the Red Claws are regulars here for lunch,” says Bill Kaspert, bartender for 13 of the Asylum’s 15 years.“Fab Melo came in the other night.” The 7-foot-tall, Brazlianborn Red Claws center is hard to miss. Eight satellite dishes vibrate into 16 high-def screens,the largest at 110 inches.“We crank the game sound,” Kaspert shouts.

30 Market St. drink and put it on our menu based on Kyle. The “Mug 12 Margarita” has a splash of cranberry juice–Kyle’s mug is No. 12, and he’s been drinking margaritas this way ever since we opened 3 years ago.” “You can get a group of your buddies and watch the Bruins game on our 10-foot, pull-down projection TV upstairs,” Gerrish says, adding a secret:“What people don’t know is that the space is reserved at no fee. ”

Binga’s Stadium, 77 Free St. “We’ve got the biggest smoker in the state,” says floor manager Elena Senore.“It’s 10 feet long with 10 separate racks inside.We can smoke whole pigs.” Thirty two sauces dreamed up by Binga’s guru Heather Gibson flavor their namesake chicken wings and can be paired with 26 draft beers. To catch a view of most of the 20 screens,“the upper

deck is great,” says Alec Altman. If you’re there for just one game, enjoy “individual TVs in the booths.” When things get elbow to elbow, slip downstairs to luxuriate “in 12 first-class United Airlines seats,” says Altman. “Regulars love them and tend to take that space over” to play skee ball or pool while watching nine 54-inch screens.“You can reserve them, but you don’t have to.”

Pizza Villa, 940 Congress St. “Pizza-Villains,” as the insiders style them­selves, love the guy in the Hawaiian shirt (he has 4 dozen),” bartender Doug Johnson. “The shirts I pick up in the Caribbean every year made in St. Lucia get the best reaction.” To act like a regular, you’re going to have to order the garlic chicken pizza.As for what to drink with it “Although most people order draft beer, our whiskey

sales are right up there.” (Did we mention this place is right by the Greyhound Bus Station?) Better bring your Benjamins, too because although you can pay for your pies with plastic,it’s cash-only up front at the bar– and there’s a $2 service fee the ATM. n

>>For more, visit atportlandmonthly.com/portmag/2013/03/ clone-zones-extras

April

2013 45


On Sale Now • On Sale Now

June 20

May 16

June 21

August 2 On Sale Soon • Line up announced March 18

AUGUST 7

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July 17

Tickets available via waterfrontconcerts.com, Waterfront Pavilion in Bangor

in Bangor

all Ticketmaster outlets, charge-by-phone at 1-800-745-3000 or the venue box office located at Mark’s Music in Brewer.


We’re a food-crazy border state, so where are the starry Franco-American restaurants?

Hungry eye

by claire Z. Cramer

E

Français

veryone knows poutine, the retro pile-up of french fries, gravy, and cheese curds. The hearty Canadian treat has rocketed into the wider foodie-sphere and can be found all around Portland, including in a few fancy iterations like the East Ender’s lobster poutine and Duckfat’s silken version with local cheese curds and duck gravy. But where is the rest of traditional Franco-American or Acadian cuisine? Not the fancy dishes from France that everyone knows, such as escargots and boeuf bourguignon, but the hearty, filling home cooking based in French and French Canadian traditional recipes, later invigorated with seasonal ingredients available in Acadian settlements in Aroostook and Hancock County–pork, salmon, and potatoes. Ployes, the pancakes or griddle bread, spring from milled Aroostook buckwheat. Tourtière, a holiday meat pie made of ground pork and onions in a pastry crust, was once the traditional meal after midnight mass on Christmas Eve, and tarte au saumon (salmon pie) also baked in pastry, can be wrapped and taken into the woods for a day of logging, hunting, or fishing. Cretons, the lightly spiced coarse pâté of minced pork, make a sturdy breakfast when spread on bread. The legendary E. W. Mailhot Sausage Co. in Lewiston produces pork sausages, blood sausages, cretons, salmon pies, and pork pies and distributes them to markets large and small, from mom and pop shops to Hannaford supermarkets, all over Maine and into New Hampshire and Massachusetts. So why does the wholesale business

from top: retouche-nmrod.com; cynthia farr-weinfeld (2)

Franco? extend to just a few restaurants? Is there no way to recast these savory specialties as upscale offal in the manner of sweetbreads and brains? Remember when everyone was mad for bone marrow? “You got me there. I just don’t know,” says Marc Mailhot. “I’m doing what my father and grandfather did, and this is my market. People cook at home. They tell me new things they do with our products. Someone told me they put cretons into crab rangoon shells and fried them up for appetizers. People put it on crackers with cream cheese to have with drinks.” Alive and well in home kitchens, must Franco food remain on the fringe, the stuff of ethnic fairs and festivals?

Au Contraire

“You can find Franco-American food at restaurants and diners in Aroostook,” says Lisa Michaud of the Franco-American Centre at the University of Maine in Orono. Two Rivers Lunch in Allagash serves a few Franco dishes, such as pea soup, chicken and dumplings, raisin pie, and sugar pie. At Crystal Lynn’s in Madawaska, The cretons chronicles, from top: Pork cretons on toast with a dab of mustard make a classic FrancoAmerican breakfast; Sunday brunch at the Frog & Turtle in Westbrook includes subtly spiced, house-made cretons in their signature Franco-American eggs benedict; country pâté at Petite Jacqueline is very French and very likely the inspiration for the New-World cretons that followed in Acadian Canada and Maine. april

2013 47


Hungry eye

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you can order cretons with your ployes, as well as chicken stew and patates fricassées. Then there’s Robin’s Restaurant in Van Buren: “Oh sure, we have the poutine, and ployes with butter and syrup for breakfast. And stew on Saturdays,” says server Velma Ouellette. “It’s kind of a thick soup, with chicken, potatoes, and dumplings, and that’s pretty much it, but the big thing is the dumplings. They’re really good.” In Auburn, Rolly’s Diner is a cheerful outpost of Franco tradition and assimilation, owned by Ken and Rolande (Rolly) Blais for the past 19 years. “We serve salmon pies from Grant’s Bakery in Lewiston on Fridays. A wedge of pie with a choice of potato and egg sauce–real simple, but traditional–it’s a bechamel sauce with hardboiled eggs chopped up in it,” says Ken. He acknowledges the difference between French and Franco-American food. French restaurants “are really fine French dining.” Deep down, “Franco food is comfort food.” He calls patates fricassées thrifty reuse: “They’d take cold leftover potatoes and fry them like home fries with pieces of salt pork.


We don’t make them here, but we serve cretons–people spread it on toast or make it into a sandwich. Then there’s our creton-and-cheese omelet. And ployes, sure. A lot of the traditional Franco things make great breakfast.” Call Rolly’s a full participant in the local FrancoAmerican food economy, serving Grant’s pies, Mailhot’s sausages, and using ploye mix from Bouchard Family Farms in Fort Kent. Bags of Bouchard’s mixes, like Mailhot’s sausages, can be found in markets all over Maine. The company grows and mills its own buckwheat and has been packaging and selling it for 30 years. As a fat- and gluten-free vegan product, ployes, the humble breakfast companion to maple syrup and dipper for chicken stew, is poised for stardom.

the invisible barrier

Delicately spiced house-made cretons headline the Franco-American eggs benedict offered for brunch at the Frog & Turtle pub in Westbrook. Owner/chef James Tranchemontagne says the story of Franco cuisine is “complicated…it doesn’t translate to com-

mercial success…a lot of it is filler food–turnips, apples, carrots, head cheese, sugar pie. I do a lot of stuff here [at the pub] that stems from my upbringing, but…French-Canadian is more of the culture of the people than a style of their food. I come from a large family. There was no money to go out and the meals at home were way better.” Rhea Côté Robbins, author of the memoir Wednesday’s Child, echoes Tranchemontagne’s sentiments. “Atmosphere provides the flavor in which the dishes are served… You can go to places in Maine and get the full-fledged real-deal atmosphere of the culture at some of the festivals in the French heritage towns, [where] you can find the traditional foods for sale. [But] class is assigned to those foods, and that is an invisible barrier.” Regarding the concept of a four-star Franco-centric restaurant: “Given the climate in which the Franco-American culture exists, a parallel or underground universe, it will take some time. We need some type of youthful creativity that takes the ordinary to places such as the [Frog &Turtle does] in

Westbrook. But I bet it will happen.” And maybe we ought to just appreciate the similarities between French and Franco food and not over-think the issue. You can order crèpes at Rolly’s, made with Memère Blais’s recipe, and you can find French crèpes in Portland at the Merry Table crèperie and at Petite Jacqueline, after all. Steve Corry, executive chef and owner of Petite Jacqueline with his wife Michelle, insists, “We stick to classic French bistro dishes here.” But when Jacqueline’s chef Ian Hayward presents a wooden board on which neat triangles of pâté de campagne with baguette toasts and grainy mustard are prettily arranged, who can argue that this is not the city cousin to country cretons? None of which will put Justin Timberlake in a booth at Rolly’s Diner in Auburn, as was claimed in a TripAdvisor posting that spread elsewhere on the internet. “Just a prank, but we got a kick out of it,” says Ken Blais. Hey, it sounded plausible. Maybe that’s all it takes. For anything exciting to happen, it has to begin with wishful thinking. n

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The Arts

Zero Dark By J e a n e e D u d l e y

5 0 p o r t l a n d m o n t h ly m a g a z i n e

WE ARE SPEEDING through the woods in a white van. A baby-faced freedom fighter, WHITE SUNGLASSES, is at the wheel. He yells to his comrades, “Weapons hot–eliminate all hostilities!” The bay doors slide open. TWO SOLDIERS swing out with automatic weapons as the camera VIBRATES. POV WHITE SUNGLASSES. Now we’re zooming toward two young SENTRIES blocking our way. Clearly visible behind

them is a “Welcome Golfers!”sign. In spite of its otherness, the setting looks suspiciously like…the former Brunswick Naval Air Station. The laser soundtrack bumps with a glitchy, industrial beat like a first-personshooter video game, except this is real movie footage. After a less-than-polite exchange of GUNFIRE, the sentries’ upper torsos EXPLODE into red mist as we careen past.


We call it art when Oliver Stone and Katherine Bigelow fictionalize warfare and violence on screen, so why do we slap their wrists when Brunswick teen filmmakers do the same thing? A closer look at the controversy reveals that, in fact, the kids are all right.

Ccourtesy USN Films

Seventeen B Two more armed GUARDS in BLACK HOODIES flank a large stenciled GATE CLOSED sign. Good luck to them! The driver’s-side shooter, bandoliered and one-handing a Kalashnikov-like AIRSOFT gun, add two more to the body count as we swing right around the concrete barrier. ANOTHER DEFENDER, looking a bit like the honor student you saw stacking books at Curtis Memorial Library, menac-

es in black hoodie until he, too, falls victim to SPECIAL FX and–“Remember to Like and Favorite for awesomeness!”–CGI (computer-generated images). TIGHT SHOT on a SNIPER IN BLACK, his scope locked on the approaching van. A CLOSER LOOK reveals his ski goggles. (Sugarloaf USA?) WE FOLLOW the sniper’s bullet from his gun until it smashes the driver’s-side window into another red explosion… BRAVO THREE is down!

efore you dismiss this as a film club movie created in Brunswick by a group of high-school students, fully as sweet as it is scary, consider: Along with a suite of other YouTube clips by the talented USN Films, this three-minute, fifty-seven-second independent film entitled The Extraction has earned no fewer than 9,308,000 internet views and is still clicking. When you select it, a POP-UP ad for Blackberry shimmers onscreen. April

2013 51


The Arts Clockwise from top: USN’s action videos on YouTube as seen on your iPad; student actors in costume with unloaded ersatz weapons prepare to shoot a scene–all the sounds and flashes of gunfire and explosions are edited in later; scouting locations for a day of filming in sunny Brunswick.

USN Films, led by Brunswick High senior Paul Kousky, produces short, violent, stylized movies involving hostage situations, guerilla warfare, and zombies. Kousky and his team film all over Brunswick, on public and private property. Kousky started making films several years ago, encouraged by a teacher in middle school, and has learned editing techniques from a filmmaker he follows on YouTube. “FreddyW makes movies like this, and he also produces tutorials,” says Kousky. “We use Airsoft guns on our films. They aren’t loaded. It’s all acting, and then things like gunfire and blood are edited in afterwards.” 5 2 p o r t l a n d m o n t h ly m a g a z i n e

Once Kousky and his crew punched up their efforts with sophisticated special effects, people started paying attention. The crew’s first YouTube channel gained thousands of views, and Kousky saw the opportunity to turn a profit. Today, USN sells space to advertisers like the University of Phoenix and Microsoft Office 365 and reinvests the money into props and costumes to add touches of realism. The cash also provides on-set snacks and drinks for crewmembers, who spend full days acting out dramatic scenes inspired by video games, real events, and classic films. “As of today, we have over 31 thousand subscribers and over 9 million video views for

says. “So far, we’ve made three episodes, and we hope to continue with more. The series is about a post-apocalyptic world plagued by a disease that turns people into zombies or ‘walkers’–dead people who feed on humans and can transmit the disease through their bite. “Most of our videos feature two teams battling it out against each other. One is what we call the ‘U.S.’ team–they wear the same uniforms and camouflage as U.S. soldiers, and are the ‘good guys.’ The other ‘terrorist’ team ‘bad guys’ wear dark clothes and camouflage similar to what video games portray ‘bad guys’ as looking like. The plots for most of our videos involve the U.S. team rescuing a prisoner, as in

Clockwise from top: staff illustration/USN films; courtesy USN films (2)

our USN Films,” Kousky notes. “Our other channel, PDK Films, has 45 thousand subscribers and over 44 million video views. My contract with YouTube prevents me from revealing how much I make, but it is quite substantial. I recently bought a new 2013 Honda Accord Sport [MSRP: $24,180] and paid for it all at once. I’m partnered with YouTube, so they find me advertisers with relevant ads, and they get a cut of the profits. It’s done through Google AdSense, and I get paid each month.” The action-packed films add energy and impact to common film and video game themes. “Our video series called The Biohazard has more plot,” Kousky


The Extraction; stopping an execution, like our most recent video, uploaded yesterday, titled The Execution; or infiltrating a base to hack a computer, as in Amphibious Assault.” A January 2013 story about the teens in the Portland Press Herald mentioned a video on their YouTube channel that had been filmed at the former Brunswick Naval Air Station and at Curtis Memorial Library. This caught the attention of the Regional Development Authority. The agency contacted local police, who then issued a trespass warning to the teens. “Access to the base was through two different ways,” Kousky explains. “The first couple times we filmed there, we just drove through the front gate since it’s open to the public. No fences were hopped, no slipping under barbed wire or anything like that. The last time we filmed there, we filmed at the back gate near the golf course. There was a sign that said the area was open to pedestrian and bicycle traffic, so we walked back and filmed there. People would bike or walk through and stand on the side and watch.” It should be noted that Paul Kousky (the son of LCDR Todd Kousky, a former Navy P-3 Orion pilot and 1989 Naval Academy graduate who flew with Patrol Squadron 92 out of Brunswick Naval Air Station) is not exactly a stranger to the Navy base, and naming his film company USN is a subtle homage. “That Friday,”continues Kousky, “we all got called into the office, individually, to meet with our assistant principal and the school resource officer. We all had to sign the trespass warnings.” He acknowledges that much of the community has been supportive, and he understands local concerns surrounding filming in public with wardrobe and props like face masks and Airsoft guns. “An article in the Bangor Daily News came out on Sunday, then on Monday we had individual meetings with our school principal,” he reports. “They basically said this can’t happen at school, that we couldn’t bring the Airsoft guns onto school property. That’s never been something we’d do. The entire thing has gone on with a weird tone, and it feels accusatory, but people don’t know that we’re not just running around with guns. “We put a lot of thought into our videos,” Kousky explains. “Planning, between the script and logistics, can take a week or two before we can even start filming. The editing is contingent upon how much time I have. Everyone on the crew is involved in sports and extracurricular activities. A lot of us are Boy Scouts. I’m a Life april

2013 53


The Arts

PortlandMag_DownEast.qxd 3/1/13 10:42 AM Page 1

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5 4 p o r t l a n d m o n t h ly m a g a z i n e

Scout. I’ve completed all of the requirements for Eagle Scout except my project. This summer I’ll be doing that, making trail signs.” Kousky is also a lector at his church and volunteered as a student tutor last spring with the Riverview Foundation. (His instructive nature is also seen on USN’s YouTube channel, in tutorial films that demonstrate and explain with his voiceovers how to insert stock video explosions and muzzle flashes into original footage.) “I’ve been involved in student government all through high school,” he continues. “I’m class president, and I’m involved with fundraising and senior activities like prom. I play a sport every season. In fall, it’s soccer. I swim in the winter, and this spring I’m playing tennis.” In a twist of irony, Paul Kousky and a member of his film crew, Nate Hassett, volunteer together at Curtis Memorial Library. While the group was initially banned from the library altogether as a result of the newspaper coverage, the library’s director has since met with some of the students and parents to open the doors for conversation. “A week ago, my mom and I went in for a meeting,” Kousky says. “The director wanted to make it clear that the reason everyone freaked out was because the guns looked real and were displayed in a public place. We all worked it out, so I can go shelf books again.” The library director did not return phone calls about reversing the decision to banish the students. Kousky and Hassett have been making films together for years. “The first video we made was for a middle school physics project,” Hassett says. “We showed the physics of sledding by building different ramps and showing how it all works with speed, momentum, and friction. After that, Paul bought his own camera online, and he was filming everything.” Today, Kousky shoots with a Canon Rebel T3i and a Glidecam HD2000 for stabilization and has learned the editing process with programs like Adobe Premier Pro CS5, and After Effects CS5. Hassett mostly acts in the films, saying that most of the production is left up to Kousky. Hassett attends North Yarmouth Academy and was spared the trespass warnings and meetings with principals. Still, he says, people talk, and he feels the media has portrayed USN Films unfairly. “The Times Record ran an article on us and called it ‘Kids Shooting Kids.’ My response to that is, I understand how may-


from top: Courtesy USN Films; United Artists/file

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be someone would think we were using real guns and call the police. What’s offensive is relating that to recent events, making a connection to the Newtown incident. “There’s a double standard,” he continues. “We’re kids. There’s no parental supervision. When kids are making movies like this, people find the negatives quickly.” “I think adults question our First Amendment rights because they think that the way we express ourselves artistically is reflective of how we are as humans, which isn’t true,” Kousky says. “Action and violence is part of being a teenage boy. What kind of videos do they expect us to make? A romance? A drama? A science-fiction? Adults need to realize that not only does action and violence interest us, but it also interests other teenage boys across the nation, and those teenage boys are our audience. We supply the demand.” Kousky sees a deeper message in the graphic films he creates and those that have inspired him. “I watch a lot of classic action movies. Some of my favorites are Red Dawn, Rocky, and Rambo. Zero Dark Thirty is one of the current Oscar movies that I find most similar to what I do. I admire action videos with lots of shooting and explosions because I find it entertaining and exciting. Some adults were appalled at our work, but a lot more seemed supportive and encouraging.” Kousky and his team of 20 or so high school students are well aware of the sensitivity surrounding youths and violence. “People are jumping to conclusions about us. It’s not fair to say that people who watch or make violent movies are more prone to partake in violent acts. Some people would say violence is being glamorized, that we’re trying to make it look good. But with many violent films, like Saving Private Ryan, filmmakers are showing the bad side of war and how awful it is.” Paul Kousky has a promising future. “On October 10, I received a letter of assurance at the U.S. Naval Academy as long as they got a nomination for me. A week later, they received a presidential nomination, so there’s a place for me there. I’m waiting to hear back from Boston University with a Navy ROTC scholarship. My goal is to become a Navy pilot,” he says, a position he can reach through either program. And if the Navy doesn’t work out, he has already established an open door to a career in filmmaking. n

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6/1/12 11:54 AM


restaurantreview Colin S. Sargent

A sleek, stylish Thai restaurant takes off in Boston’s South End thanks to the talent and hospitality of a daring Rangeley chef and his daughter.

from top: Colin S. Sargent; courtesy Thai Food Network (2)

E

Road Warrior:

quator glows from its trendy South End digs at 1721 Washington Street in Boston, a beacon to Mainers. On this spot, restaurateur Sarah Sriweawnetr (daughter to Rangeley chef Sam Sriweawnetr, the real-life hero behind Ben Affleck’s Oscar-winner Argo [see our story, WinterGuide 2013]) has launched her dream with investment from her dad. Dreaming of summer on a recent evening, we (Continued on page 59)

On the Equator April

2013 57


Open Daily From 11:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m.

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Barnacle Billy’s, known for luxury lobster, steamed clams, large lusty drinks, barbecued chicken, homemade clam chowder & of course, the lobster roll & lobster stew. Features an extensive indoor & sundeck seating where guests can enjoy both the beauty of the harbor & the ocean beyond. Perkins Cove. barnbilly.com, 646-5575 Boda is a “very Thai” kitchen & lounge. Delicious selections of Thai home-style entrees, street-vendor inspired grilled skewers, tapas, & a full bar. Vegetarian options available. Come experience an eating culture of Thailand! No reservations required & parking is available. Late-night menu served until 1am. Open Tu-Su from 5pm-1am. 671 Congress St., Portland, 347-7557 Brea Lu Cafe has been serving up breakfast & lunch for 23 years! Favorite menu choices include 12 specialty omelets, build-your-own breakfast burritos, Belgian waffles with fruit, eggs Benedict & homemade corned beef hash. Lunch features homemade chili, fresh made-to-order sandwiches, burgers & wraps. Open daily, 7am-2pm. 428 Forest Ave., Portland, 772-9202 Bull Feeney’s Authentic Irish pub & restaurant, serving delicious scratch-made sandwiches, steaks, seafood & hearty Irish fare, pouring local craft & premium imported brews, as well as Maine’s most extensive selection of single malt Scotch & Irish whiskies. Live music five nights. Open 7 days 11:30am-1am. Kitchen closes at 10pm. 375 Fore St., Old Port, 773-7210, bullfeeneys.com DiMillo’s On the Water serves the freshest lobster, seafood, Black Angus cuts of beef, Italian fare & more. DiMillo’s offers fabulous views of the water in Portland Harbor from every table, Famous Lobster Rolls, clam chowder, haddock chowder, lobster stew & delicious salads. Serving from 11am. Commercial St., Old Port, 772-2216, dimillos.com Eve’s at the Garden takes a fresh and local approach to food. We use ingredients from Maine’s coastal waters and farms: jumbo scallops, naturally raised pork and beef, sustainably raised fish and shellfish, and Maine lobster. Outdoor dining in our serene garden all summer long. Free valet parking with dinner. Lunch 11:30-2, dinner 5-9:30. 468 Fore St., Portland, 775-9090, Evesatthegarden.com Fish Bones American Grill A casual upscale restaurant offering creative American cuisine. Specialties include grilled wheat crust crostones, unique entrée salads & creative dinner offerings. Located in the heart of Lewiston in the historic Bates Mill Complex with off-street parking. Come get hooked! Lunch & dinner M-F; dinner only Sa; closed Sunday. 333-3663, fishbonesmaine.com * The Great Impasta, a long-standing restaurant located on Maine St., serves Mediterranean-inspired food with a concentration on Italian dishes. This restaurant is a favorite of both locals & those from away. Incredible, fragrant aromas from the open kitchen hit you the moment you walk through the door. Vegan & gluten-free menus available. 2 Maine St., historic Brunswick, 729-5858, thegreatimpasta.com Great Lost Bear A full bar with 70 beer taps of Maine & American Craft breweries & a large Belgian selection. Menu features salads, burgers, a large vegetarian selection & the best nachos & buffalo wings in town. Discover where the natives go when they’re restless! Every day 11:30am-11:30pm. 540 Forest Ave., in the Woodfords area of Portland, 772-0300, greatlostbear.com Hurricane Restaurant’s lunch and dinner menus feature the finest seafood on Maine’s coast seven days a

5 8 p o r t l a n d m o n t h ly m a g a z i n e


restaurantreview week. Enjoy $10 off every bottle of wine on Wednesdays. Sunday Brunch ‘til 3:30 p.m. and Buck-a-Shuck oysters every Sunday night. Discover our award-winning wine list, house-made pastries, signature cocktails, and extraordinary five-star New England Cuisine. Dock Square, Kennebunkport, 967-9111, hurricanerestaurant.com Lotus Chinese and Japanese Restaurant We feature full-service bar and lounge area, sushi bar, Chinese traditional food not available outside of Boston, friendly atmosphere and courteous service. 251 U.S. Rte. 1, Falmouth (Falmouth Shopping Plaza), 781-3453 Maria’s Restaurant and Catering Neapolitan Italian cooking at its finest. Maine Sunday Telegram four-star restaurant. Homemade Cavatelli Pasta, Zuppa Di Pesce Fra Diavolo, New England’s best Eggplant Parmigiana, Pistachio Gelato, Italian-Style cakes, Neapolitan five-star wines. Come see Tony and Gregorio; they’ll take excellent care of you. Entrées start at $10. Open Tu–Sa. 337 Cumberland Ave, Portland, 772-9232, 233-9232, mariasrestaurant.com

On the Equator (continued from page 57)

did our very best to order just what Sam might have cooked the nights he helped hide six American diplomats in Tehran 34 years ago after their escape from the besieged embassy. (These days, Sam owns and operates Thai Blossom restaurant in Rangeley.) Ice-cold bottled Singha beer from Thailand provides the perfect way for our party of three to cool down a basil kick. Fusion reigns as we jump into the Equator Combo ($15.95), chicken satay, golden bags, spring rolls, crab shumai, winter shrimp, and vege-

Pedro’s focuses on simple yet full-flavored Mexican and Latino food. Offering tacos, burritos and an impressive array of margaritas, sangria, beer and wine. Especiales de la semana (specials of the week) keep the menu varied and fresh and showcase different Latino cultures. Seasonal outdoor dining available. Open daily, 12-10. 181 Port Rd., Kennebunk, 967-5544, pedrosmaine.com Pier 77 & The Ramp Bar & Grill are owned & managed by Kate & Chef Peter Morency. Pier 77 has a formal dining room w/stunning views of Cape Porpoise Harbor & live music each weekend, while the Ramp is more casual, w/its own bar menu at hard-tobeat prices. 967-8500, pier77restaurant.com * The Pepperclub/Good Egg Café Two favorites, same location! Pepperclub’s (see Frommer’s Guide to N.E.) world cuisine blackboard menu lists five vegetarian, three fish & three meat entrées, including an organic beef burger. Relaxed, affordable dining on the edge of the Old Port. Free parking. Pepperclub, daily from 5pm; Good Egg Café, Tu-F 7-11am, Sa-Su 8am-1pm. 78 Middle St., 772-0531, pepperclubrestaurant.com

from top: BosGuy.com; courtesy Thai Food Network (2)

The Salt Exchange features Contemporary American cuisine in moderate portions using local, sustainable, and heirloom ingredients. Fresh local fish & produce daily. Full bar, Happy Hour, sidewalk seating. Open for Lunch M-Sa 11:30am & Dinner 5:30pm. Free parking in the evening. 245 Commercial St., Portland, 347-5687, thesaltexchange.net Silly’s & Silly’s with a Twist, chosen “Best Bargain” by Yankee Magazine now features something for everyone, including weekend brunch along with vegan & gluten-free options. Silly’s staff, voted “Best Service” by Phoenix readers, presents all-scratch kitchen food in a whimsical setting either inside or in the garden patio. Open Tu-F, 11am, and Sa-Su, 9am. 40 Washington Ave., 772-0360, sillys.com Walter’s Chef Owner Jeff Buerhaus is inspired by global influences. Seasonal menus, accented by creative daily specials, are complemented by Walter’s extensive wine list and inventive cocktail creations. The comfortable dining room and vibrant bar create a casually upscale atmosphere. Lunch M-F 11:30am-2:30pm, Dinner M-Sa, 5pm-CL., Bar menu M-F 2:30pm-CL, Sa 5pm-CL. Two Portland Square on Union St., 871-9258, waltersportland.com *reservations recommended

Previous page: Equator inside and out; Tamarind Duck. This page, from top: Tom Yum soup; chef Sam Sriweawnetr shares his sentiment to “make it right before it goes out the kitchen door”; shrimp salad flaunts an orchid-blossom garnish.

table tempura. We add a second order of spring rolls ($6.95) to prevent any unfair division. All of the appetizers are perfectly cooked, crispy without being crunchy. The spring rolls in particular burst with the original flavors of the vegetables, just spicy enough on the inside to taste. When Sarah tells us the sauce on the pad thai ($10.95) is made with her father’s special recipe, developed while working culinary assignments for diplomats around the world (which was how he was in a position to be our man in Tehran in 1979 in the first place), how can we prevent ourselves from taking part? For a second entree, we enjoy the Spicy Combo ($12.95), a stir fry with vegetables, beef, chicken, and pork, and for something cooler, the Yum Nua ($13.95)–beef salad with a delicious hint of lime.

“My father had a hand in designing Equator’s entire menu,” says Sarah. “There’s a deep sense of his talent in the Avocado Shrimp, that’s made with red curry sauce on jumbo shrimp and grilled avocado. I can’t look at it without thinking of him.” Though Sarah’s eclectic panAsian theme is the secret to her success, reaching all the way to Korean cuisine and original specialties such as Sam’s Avocado Shrimp and Tamarind Duck, “the Thai cuisine and the prime South End location” are at the heart of this family business. Equator delivers to all major downtown hotels. We recommend Argo on demand. n Equator, 1721 Washington Street, Boston, MA 617-5366386 www.equatorrestaurantma.com Visit Restaurant Reviews at portlandmonthly.com/portmag/ category/reviews.

>>

april

2013 59


www.andreekehn.com

ANDREE KEHN WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY


maineWeddingguide

Lyndsey & Ben Your wedding, your way.

Unbridled Brides

From Sta ff & Wi r e R e p o r ts

from top; courtesy bethany & dan photography; Alexandra Daley-Clark Photography

April in Paris

It’s all about the story. “Our bride Gabrielle Stevens is wearing a retro dress that goes back in time–it has a very ‘40s or ‘50s feel,” says photographer Alexandra C. Daley-Clark. “We chose Wharf Street because it has that old European feel. We could be just off the Champs-Elysées with the street lamps, the cobblestones, the creperie, and the bicycles. When people outside Maine see this shot, they always assume Europe.” Just look at the groom. “Ron Schmidt looks like he just floated up from the Boulevard! Sometimes you see an image and it just has that certain feel that lends itself to be seen in a sepia tone or black & white.” La Tour Eiffel? “That would’ve been extra.” “I paired a vintage dress with modern purple patent pumps….so there was a bit of ‘something old’ and ‘something new,’” Gabrielle says. Just like the Forest City. “We wanted to show how beautiful, romantic, and worldly Portland can be.”

W

Gabrielle & Ron Now That’s Entertainment

ish you were here…not really, my C-List friends. Suddenly, sweepingly, the wedding industry is becoming refreshingly more personal. For starters, how about an authentic Left Bank engagement picture, staged on Wharf Street (above)? Who said Portland isn’t the Paris of the Northeast?

If you have family members working in regional arts venues, why not go up on stage yourselves? That’s right, be the show. Lyndsey and Ben Russell’s wedding was so over-the-top, it vibrated across town from prenuptial toasts at Gritty McDuff’s (see front cover) to a heart-pounding reception for 170 in Port City Music Hall. “The most outlandish thing we did was tap the kegs ourselves to kick off the reception,” Lyndsey says. “It really offered a unique and fun atmosphere. It felt like a big party the moment you stepped in the door. People raved.” Other examples of jouissance: “We didn’t really follow traditions. Bridesmaids didn’t wear matching dresses, we didn’t do a bouquet or garter toss, we served gourmet finger foods and passed apps only (mini sliders, fries, fondu).” Sorry, limo drivers: “We used a school bus as our mode of transportation.” More unusual details: “Ben and the groomsmen were running a litapril

2013 61


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maineWeddingguide tle late because they were off shooting skeet and lost track of the time.” As for the beery exchange of vows, “Our officiant was Ben’s aunt–if she noticed [we’d had a few], she didn’t mention it–Ben’s aunt and uncle used to be affiliated with Stone Coast Brewing Co.”

Melanie & Chris

Justine Johnson

Bowl You Over

Or maybe you’d like to game your wedding like Melanie Morin, who married Chris Michaud at The Sports Arena in Bangor. In this case, ‘nice pins’ refers to the bride. We’re not saying everyone got totally waxed here, but instead of having a first dance, they shared an intimate “first air-hockey game,” Melanie laughs. As for the cute composition of the bridal party, it’s a perfect strike. n

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at PINELAND FARMS in New Gloucester, where The Black Tie Company proudly serves as the exclusive caterer.

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Perfect Place The

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Choose your Island Escape… from one of these fine properties in Bar Harbor and Ellsworth, close to Acadia National Park

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2013 67


maineWeddingguide

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New England-Made Products & Gifts for All Occasions

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A Romantic Background for Your Wedding garden ceremony & reception packages for up to 200 guests

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Limousines, Town Cars, Shuttles, Antique Bentley

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2013 69


maineWeddingguide

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Spring Meadows Golf & Country Club

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Located in a beautiful, rustic setting, our full-service facility accommodates up to 200 guests and is the perfect site for ceremonies, receptions and rehearsals.

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59 Lewiston Rd., Gray, ME 04039 (207) 657-5820 x205 peggy@springmeadowsbanquet.com springmeadowsbanquet.com

At Midcoast Farmers Markets or

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Let Us Make Your Special Day Even More Memorable Your Perfect Wedding Inn the Heart of Downtown Portland. By the Bay offers you the best that Portland has to offer with state-of-the-art banquet facilities, hotel parking, and wedding-guest accommodations. Centered within walking distance of 15 houses of worship, City Hall, and offering on-site ceremonies, By The Bay is Portland’s premier location serving all wedding celebrations.

g Maine? ur Home Port.

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Holiday Inn 88 Spring Street Portland, Maine 04101 (207) 775-2311 • 800-345-5050 • www.innbythebay.com 239 guest rooms with amenities • Executive rooms and suites • Free Internet access Large indoor pool, fitness center and sauna • 10 minutes from Portland International Jetport, Amtrak Train Station, and Bus Terminals • Courtesy vans available • Minutes from 295 & 95

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For more than a century, the Whitehall Inn has been the leading venue for wedding receptions and rehearsal dinners in midcoast Maine. The quintessential Inn is located in the heart of

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Camden, one of Maine’s most picturesque towns. History abounds in our elegant and spacious facilities, with affordable reception plans customized to suit your desires.

52 High Street, Camden, ME • 1-800-789-6565 or 207-236-3391 • www.whitehall-inn.com

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2013 71


maineWeddingguide

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Special Occasion, Mother of the Bride & Evening Wear for the Petite, Missy & Plus Sized Woman

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PORTLAND 580 Congress Street (207) 772-5404

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A Tr a d i t i o n o f

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Falmouth Country Club

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now booking for rehearsals, ceremonies, receptions, and special events Popham Beach, Maine • www.pophambeachclub.com

tours & information: (207) 442-8725 • info@pophambeachclub.com

Banquet Room accommodates up to 200 guests and features panoramic views of the golf course Wrap-around porch and beautiful front parlor offer superb settings for photos Rehearsal dinners, ceremonies, receptions

The Bath Golf Club

387 Whiskeag Road • Bath, ME • (207) 442-8411

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50 Exchange St. Portland, Me 04101 207-253-8075

17 Ocean Ave. Kennebunkport, Me 04104 207-967-1258

Buyers & Sellers of Estate & Antique Jewelry

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maineWeddingguide

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Wedding Cakes…Elegant… Affordable…Delicious!

For all your special occasions!

Up to date fedoras for your sense of style!

Consultations and Tastings Available by Appointment

Queen of Hats

560 Congress Street ~ Portland, Maine

554 Shore Road, Cape Elizabeth • 207-799-0671 • donna@cookiejarbakers.com

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Untitled-1 1 M a i n e ’ s M o s t b e a u t i f u l M o u n ta in village

Bethel Your Mountain Wedding De stination

3/8/2013 2:17:42 PM

bear Mountain inn 207.583.4404 bearmtninn.com

Harvest gold gallery 207.925.6502 harvestgoldgallery.com

the bethel inn resort 800.654.0125 bethelinn.com

Marta’s bakery 207.583.2250 www.martasbakery.com

Carol savage Photography 207.836.3505 carolsavagephotography.com

Phoenix Weddings & events 207.824.2222 phoenixhouseandwell.com

ellie andrews, Wedding officiant 207.592.9614 bit.ly/weddingsbyellie

Pooh Corner farm florist 207.836.3276 poohfarm.com

good food store & Catering Co. 800.879.8926 goodfoodbethel.com

rooster’s roadhouse & Catering services 207.824.0309 roostersroadhouse.com

see these wedding businesses and learn more about weddings in bethel at www.bethelmaine.com | 800-442-5826 scan for mobile site 7 6 p o r t l a n d m o n t h ly m a g a z i n e


Churchill

Cross Jewelers

PM413

Upstairs Downtown 570 Congress St., Portland, Maine

Open Mon - Fri 9:30am - 5:00pm and the first Saturday of each month

1-800-433-2988

www.CrossJewelers.com


From the stonewall-lined and tree-covered road leading you into our village, to the sweeping vistas from atop Cadillac Mountain, there is a special mystique to Bar Harbor.

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A short drive, but feels like a world away. photo by Ken Canning, Vetta, Getty Images

VisitBarHarboronline.com | 888.540.9997


Experience Luxury Offering Comfort, Luxury & Elegance being Chauffeured, Engagement to Honeymoon Select Limos Accommodate Up to 20 Guests Professional Service Throughout Maine Multiple Event Discount

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I do! I do! Maine Wedding Ceremonies Beryl Cole, Notary Public, 207-730-2797

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584 Congress Street Portland, ME 04101 207-774-5946 584 Congress Street Portland, ME 04101 117 Brown Street Westbrook, ME 04092 207-774-5946 207-854-2518 117 Brown Street Westbrook, ME 04092 1-800-SUN-LILY 207-854-2518 www.harmonsbartons.com 1-800-SUN-LILY

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maineWeddingguide

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Falmouth Flowers & Gifts 781-5533 Gift certificates for gift giving, traditional and contemporary holiday arrangements, wide variety of quality fresh flowers, new gift selections and interesting candles. Delivery to all the Greater Portland area.

Spring is knocking 58 Washington Avenue, Portland On the web: falmouthflowersandgifts.com On Facebook: Falmouth Flowers and Gifts Portland

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Maine’s City Magazine april 2013 Volume

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28, no. 2

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Currier’s Flying Service, Inc. Moosehead Lake, Greenville Jct., ME 04442 On Route 15 next to the Railroad Trestle

• Sightseeing Tours • Moose Watches • Other Daily Specials

207-695-2778 Serving the Moosehead Lake Wilderness Area with meticulously maintained Vintage Airplanes FAA Licensed Air Taxi Certificate

april

2013 81


From left: A 44-room hotel is now under construction on Great Diamond Island; the Courtyard Marriott planned for Commercial Street at Maple Street will contribute to the Old Port’s expansion to the west.

Renaissance Revival (continued from page 31)

in the Gorham’s Corner district, Veroneau’s commercial and industrial real estate management and development firm (founded in 1828 by John Bundy Brown, the merchant prince and hotelier who helped invent and market Portland the first time around) is actively developing a shimmering $17.5-million, mixed-use palace encompassing 131 hotel rooms of a Courtyard by Marriott to open in June 2014. The sweeping project will also house first-floor retail or restaurant space and 14 high-end apartments on the sixth floor. According to Veroneau, “This property

extends the Old Port west” and will offer the “best of both worlds” by providing a relaxed atmosphere of relative quiet while affording patrons and guests a location easily walkable to the social activities of nearby blocks. The hotel may also, at some point, serve as the anchor to a larger block of residential and commercial developments on sites to its north and west. And if the success of this project is any indication of the likelihood of longer-term plans coming to fruition, a thriving neighborhood is sure to emerge here. “Interest has been robust,” Veroneau says, in future high-end “market-

rate” apartments with considerable amenities and likely rental rates of $2,500 to $3,000 per month. Why all the optimism and investment? Whatever the weather, our star is rising. Portland’s explosion of new development is being fueled in large part by its status as a destination city. Even during a global economic downturn, the city has successfully added rooms to its downtown sub-market and continues to see major hotels proposed even outside of the downtown core, including one at the heart of the multi-million dollar multi-venue attraction known as

architectural design by canal 5 Studio, Portland me

hyatt Place

intermed

135 Sheridan

Building Portland develoPment Consulting owner’s rePresentative 8 2 p o r t l a n d m o n t h ly m a g a z i n e

www.shinbergconsulting.com

from left: Archetype architects; staff illustration/ robert witkowski/courtesy J.B. Brown & Assoc/opechee construction corporation

Grand Hotels


Live Work Play IN THE HEART OF SACO-BIDDEFORD

REDEFINING BUILDINGS THAT

U R B A N

L I V I N G

•Loft-Style Apartments

•Art & Event Space

DEFINED OUR PAST

AT

I T S

B E S T

•Walk to Downtown Culture & Entertainment

•Class A & B Office Space

•Quality Restaurants

•Upscale Hotel & Restaurant Opening 2014

•River & City Views

•Available Off-Street Parking

•Amtrak to Boston & Portland

PEPPERELL M I L L C A M P U S

2 Main St. Biddeford | (207) 282-5577 | pepperellmillcampus.com


Grand Hotels

“People have been looking out this way for a long time,” says Windham’s economic development director Tom Bartell. “There’s been a need for recognized, branded hotel space for business travel as well as for tourism. I keep hearing about business travelers calling in this area having to take hotel rooms in Portland because they can’t find anything out here.” He confirms that Heyland Development of York had their plan approved in January to build a 74-room MainStay Suites and 9,000 square feet of retail space in three phases on Route 302 in Windham. MainStay Suites is part of the Choice­­Hotels network, focused on extended stays and rooms with kitchenettes.

YOU CAN’T BUY A BETTER DOOR. Carriage House doors have always been the gold standard of custom garage doors. Since we built our first door, we have been the industry leader. And that is not a position that we are ever willing to relinquish. Carriage House doors are meticulously handcrafted to your specifications and made from the finest materials available. Exceptional workmanship, superior woods and professional hardware ensure longlasting beauty, reliable performance, and low maintenance.

DSI

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Door Services, Inc.

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mainstay suites

Windham Follows the Trend


staff illustration/chris riccardo/archetype architects/cbre the boulos company

the Forefront at Thompson’s Point. As proposed, the 30-acre site adjacent to the Downeaster train and Concord Trailways bus stations will house the Maine Red Claws basketball team, a hotel, a mixed-use event center, parking garage, restaurant, and office buildings. Success breeds success–of a yearround nature. “But of course, a lot can go wrong,”says Charles Colgan, professor of public policy and management at USM’s Muskie School of Public Service. “I think the economy is poised to improve, and my forecasts show this. The hotel development reflects the increase in business travel to Portland” on top of its ever-increasing reputation as a tourist destination. But? “Markets have a way of building things until they are over-supplied, “ he continues. “If they do all build these hotels and they all do open within a year or so of each other, rooms will be cheap. And this will be a great for the consumer. “Hotels are like vegetable sellers–they have a perishable commodity. A room unsold tonight can’t be sold tomorrow. They have

The Forefront at Thompson’s Point, viewed from Interstate 295 in this rendering, is ambitiously planned to include a number of attractions beyond the hotel and restaurant.

to be competitive. An oversupply is not a bad thing for Portland.” The great thing is, “someone out there is making some big bets on Portland, and each of these builders has its own strategy. They’ve calculated expected, acceptable vacancy rate numbers, but they won’t share them.” “I’ll be amazed if they’re all going to pull it off,” says Cape Elizabeth investment guru Evan Livada. “Obviously, interest rates are at the lowest in the history of the world, so it’s a great time to borrow, and Portland is getting a tremendous reputation as the best little city in the country, but who knows? “I wish them all the luck. In the summer they’ll do very well, but I don’t see how they won’t be fighting for market share in the winter…But they said we’d have too many

high-end restaurants, too, didn’t they?” Livada laughs. Additional demand for the city’s unique attributes is sure to be generated through the enormous supply of newcomers destined to explore our city streets in the very near future. “It’s kind of a ‘back to the future’ trend in the way people travel,” says Charles Colgan. “The car vacation, where you just keep driving, is fading because of the cost of gas. People are going back to destination vacations. You go somewhere, stay a week, and you want a place with a lot going on. Which is why you go to Portland.” And perhaps Great Diamond Island, too. A 44-room hotel in Diamond Cove, designed by busy Archetype Architects for Hart Hotels (whose in-town flagship is the Portland Har­

Research a Great Retirement Former Washington DC area residents who own a summer farmhouse in Waldoboro, Carolyn Bryant and Don Sarles bought a cottage at Thornton Oaks in early 2010 as their winter home. Carolyn says “Bowdoin College provides a fine library that I can use for musicological research (though officially retired, I’ve continued editing and writing for Oxford University Press). The local public library has also been extremely helpful in finding abstruse journals and scholarly books for me.” Don, a long-time choral singer, has joined an excellent choir. “We especially appreciate the strong sense of community at Thornton Oaks. We have formed close friendships and feel very much at home.” Searching for a stimulating community? Learn more about Thornton Oaks and Brunswick. Contact Henry Recknagel at 800-729-8033 or thoaks@gwi.net. We also invite you to visit our website to meet more of our residents. An affiliate of

MID COAST HEALTH SERVICES

Retirement Community

25 Thornton Way ~ Brunswick, Maine www.thorntonoaks.com april

2013 85


Maide for You Your Personal Cleaning Service

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bor Hotel) is under construction, with a projected opening in the spring of 2014. Colgan, who studies coastal cities and their economies, suggests, “If you look at similar-sized East Coast cities, you’ll see more hotel development. Charleston, South Carolina is a good example.” Charleston Area Convention and Visitors

Bureau deputy director Perrin Lawson echoes Colgan’s conviction that when there is investment commitment from proven hotel groups, “you know there was a whole lot of study beforehand”of the local market to earn that commitment. “Plus, the classification of the tourism and hospitality industry has changed in recent years. It’s

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courtesy pepperell mill campus

The paradigm shift continues in Biddeford. Scott Joslin, chief operating officer of The Mills at Pepperell, is heading up an effort to transform Building 20 into an industrial-tech boutique hotel, with original windows and floors and exposed beams. The 6,000-square-foot, 180-seat restaurant, anchored by a well-known chef, will command the street level, along with an industrial-chic bar celebrating the textile mill’s work ethic and Franco-American roots. The next three floors will be given over to 40 rooms. Building No. 20, vacant since the days of West Point Pepperell, will include 10,000 square feet of conference/event space. The venture will receive a reported $5 million from its owner, the Mills at Pepperell. Joslin’s target market is “UNE alums & clientele, SMMC clients, business and Amtrak travelers, and summer travelers looking for off-the-beaten-path attractions.”


Grand Hotels legitimate economic development that is intertwined with other industries. Demand is not nearly as cyclical as it used to be; there are not nearly the peaks and valleys. Tourism today is a quality-of-life issue. You want to live here because it’s the sort of place you’d want to visit if you didn’t.” Portland’s appeal is no longer limited to warmer months. No longer are we a stopover for those venturing to summer destinations downeast or elsewhere, a drab cluster of motor hotels with lackluster twinlobster specials à la Vallee’s at the former Exit 8. There’s something singular about the heart of Portland (consider the new, redefining energy, for example, at Boone’s restaurant on the waterfront), and it’s entirely unrelated to Maine’s status as a popular summertime getaway. Is it appropriate, then, to say Portland has “arrived?” No. In light of its record of prosperity throughout the centuries, a more appropriate characterization is, “We’re back.” n

>>For more, visit at portlandmonthly.com/portmag/2013/03/ new-hotels-extras

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r e v e F g n i r p S h c t Ca nquit! In Ogu ur Sign up for o t a E-Newsletter rg .o it u q www.ogun

Ogunquit Maine is the premier destination to satisfy all of your spring and summer wishes. Experience miles of beautiful sandy beaches, quaint seaport coves, fine dining, superior accommodations and a selection of unique shops and businesses in one convenient location.

Amore Breakfast/Café Amore 207-646-6661/207-646-6660 www.amorebreakfast.com

The Barrel Stave, Retail Gift Shop 207-646-8298 www.barrelstave.com

Feile Restaurant & Pub

207-251-4065 www.feilerestaurantandpub.com

Fisherman’s Catch

207-646-8780 www.fishermanscatchwells.com

The Beaches Motel & Cottages

Five-O Shore Road Restaurant

Bintliff’s Restaurant, Ogunquit

Gorges Grant Hotel

Caffé Prego

The Inn On Shore Road

207-216-4065 www.beachesofmaine.com 207-646-3111 www.bintliffsogunquit.com 207-646-7734 www.caffepregoogt.com

Carriage House Motel, Cottages and Suites

207-646-2159 or 888-213-4720 www.mainecarriagehouse.com

Clay Hill Farm Restaurant 207-361-2272 www.clayhillfarm.com

Cornerstone Artisanal Pizza & Craft Beer

207-646-5001 www.five-oshoreroad.com 800-646-5001 www.ogunquit.com

207-646-2181 www.theinnonshoreroad.com

Inn Season Resorts The Falls at Ogunquit

866-469-8222 www.8664myvacation.com/resorts/fao

Juniper Hill Inn

800-646-4544 www.ogunquit.com

Katie’s on Shore Road

207-646-4118 www.cornerstoneogt.com

207-641-2780 www.katiescafeonshoreroad.com

Dragonfly Guest House

Knight’s Quilt Shop

207-216-4848 www.dragonflyguesthouse.com

The Dunes on the Waterfront 207-646-2612 www.dunesonthewaterfront.com

207-361-2500 www.mainequiltshop.com

Mainely Quilts Gift Shop 207-985-4250 www.mainelyquilts.com


2013 Calendar of Events

Meadowmere Resort 207-646-9661 www.meadowmere.com

For more information on these events, go to www.visitogunquit.org.

The Milestone

April 12-14 ~ 23rd Annual Patriots Day Celebration

800-646-6453 www.ogunquit.com

Join us as we go back to our roots, with historical characters walking the streets, musterings, and fife & drum concerts. Re-enactments, cookout, taste-tests, and craft fair round out the weekend.

Moon Over Maine

207-646-6666 www.moonovermaine.com

May 11 ~ Aids Walk May 25-27 ~ NAMES Project AIDS Memorial Quilt Display June 7-8 ~ Annual Chamber Music Festival June 29 ~ Ogunquit Lifeguard Dash - All are welcome.

The Neptune Inn On the Beach 207-646-2632 www.theneptuneinn.com

Benefits Ogunquit Lifeguard Rescue equipment. 5K beach run.

Ogunquit Rental Properties

July ~ July 4th Fireworks August 22 ~ 40th Annual Sidewalk Art Show & Sale More than 70 artists showcase and sell their work on the

207-646-1500 www.ogunquitrentalproperties.com

sidewalks and parking lots of downtown Ogunquit. (Raindate: August 23rd)

Photography by Katherine

September ~ Capriccio - A two-week long celebration of

207-451-3734 www.kathsimages.com

the arts. September 7th Capriccio Festival of Kites-Sponsored by Ogunquit Rotary Club and Ogunquit Performing Arts. 207646-2261. (Rain date: September 8th)

Raspberri’s Restaurant

September 14 ~ Annual Lobster Dash - 5 mile beach

800-646-5001 www.ogunquit.com

run. FMI visit www.lobsterdash.com.

October 25-27 ~ 10th Annual OgunquitFest A fun-

filled weekend of fall-themed events including pumpkin and cookie decorating, costume parade, classic car show, craft show, fun house, high heel race, bed race, wagon rides, storytelling, and a scarecrow contest and more!

Rockmere Lodge 207-646-2985 www.rockmere.com

November 10 ~ 5th Annual Celebrations by the Sea Wedding Expo brings together a variety of experienced

Seaside Vacation Rentals

local vendors and professionals who can help you plan your special day by the sea.

866-681-8081 www.seasiderentals.com

December 7-8 & 13-15 ~ 27th Annual Christmas by the Sea Celebration. Concerts, caroling, tastings, visit

Swamp John’s Fine Art Jewelry

with Santa, parades, tree lightings, Santa’s Village, ornament making, storytelling, bonfire, hay rides, craft shows.

207-646- 9414 www.swampjohns.com

All Event dates and times are subject to change.

t io n a n ti s e D n o s a e Yo u r 4 S

Tanger Outlet Centers

1-800-406-4490 www.tangeroutlet.com/kittery

Terrace by the Sea

207-646-3232 www.terracebythesea.com

Village Food Market

Wells-Ogunquit Resort Motel & Cottages 207-646-8588 www.wells-ogunquit.com

The Wild Blueberry Restaurant 207-646-0990 www.thewildblueberryrestaurant.com

Photo by Robert Joyner

207-646-2122 www.villagefoodmarket.com

OGUNQUIT CHAMBER OF COMMERCE 36 Main Street (US Rt 1) Ogunquit, ME 03907

207-646-2939 www.ogunquit.org www.visitogunquit.org


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Pediatric Ophthalmology

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Corneal/External Diseases and Surgery

Optical Shop and Contact Lenses

207-774-8277 • MaineEyeCenter.com Lowell Street Campus

15 Lowell Street, Portland, ME 04102

Stroudwater Campus

1685 Congress Street, 3rd Floor, Portland, ME 04102


HOUSEOFTHEMONTH Colin W. Sargent

Keller Williams Realty/Joel Bolton / VirtualToursinHD

Lovely Bones John Calvin Stevens designed a whimsical enclave on Craigie Street. Number 160 was for a favorite aunt.

W

orld War I, the war to end all wars, had changed everything. With his uncanny ear for architectural trends, John Calvin Stevens removed from the West End to experiment with “country living” just off Brighton Avenue, designing six suburban cottages for his extended family on Craigie Street. “He moved out here because they wanted to

get out of Bowdoin Street,” says Tom Ranello of Keller Williams Realty, who is offering the house and lot at 160 Craigie Street for $449,900. “From the September 1, 1921, blueprints, we know that Stevens and his son, John Howard Stevens, designed this particular house for his aunt, Mrs. Lillian Spring.” Mrs. Spring’s husband, Arthur T. Spring,

Join our Team

linda painter

dennis gleason

linda.painter@swanagency.com

dennis.gleason@swanagency.com

bob venard

brianne o’donnell

alyssa bouthot

alyssa.bouthot@swanagency.com

kim swan

charlie mcbrady

charlie.mcbrady@swanagency.com

rebekah lee

Mid-Coast Group & Greater Portland Group

robert.venard@swanagency.com

brianne@swanagency.com

kim.swan@swanagency.com

rebekah.lee@swanagency.com

www.swanagency.com bar harbor, mid-coast, greater portland and inn/b&b 207.288.5818 | blue hill 207.374.2020 | northeast harbor 207.276.5080 each office is independently owned and operated.

april

2013 91


fencing Safety • Security • Style Voted Portland’s best fence company

commercial & residential since 1957

14 Rochester St., Westbrook

854-2463

burnsfencing.com

Monday through Friday 4pm to 1am Saturday & Sunday 12pm to 1am 188A State Street, Portland 207.899.3277 lfkportland.com

9 2 p o r t l a n d m o n t h ly m a g a z i n e

was a senior officer at Fidelity Trust Co., headquartered in Monument Square. Immediately downhill from the rose cottage John Calvin Stevens designed for himself, this 3,000-square-foot landmark once welcomed with an attached garage, “but it was taken down,” Ranello says, with a twocar unattached replacement slipped behind the house for privacy. Features include top-notch carpentry, classic center hallways with vistas (a Stephens signature), a library with built-ins, a second-floor sunroom with 1920s paneling and strapping (we love the early picture window), master

Keller Williams Realty/Joel Bolton / VirtualToursinHD

BURNS’

HOUSEOFTHEMONTH


Bare Wall Seeks Mature Pictures For conversation, friendship, and possibly more.

What my friends think I do

jesse stenbak

What my kids think I do bedroom with bath en suite, and an English garden sloping toward a brilliant sunset. Lost to time is the original banister, replaced by a white metal railing. The deco kitchen with Nutone vent and aluminum sink are almost as cool as the central air, but we’re betting a new owner will replace them. This is classic Portland, Deering High School to the bones, a fantastic four-bedroom castle for a growing family. Taxes are $7,652. n

partnered with I Maine WhatNow my family thinks do

gallery VoxPhotographs, I am excited to offer my services in helping you select just the right images for your home or office. We represent photo-based art from over 30 Maine artists, as well as Vintage and Maine Heritage images. Stay put. I will bring it all to you. What I really do Call for details.

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Home Staging. It works.

Home Staging • Interior Redesign • Photo-Styling Moving Services/Downsizing • Set Design • Art Consulting Home Staging • Interior Redesign • Senior Downsizing 776-9558 Serving Greater Portland

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2013 93


H O U S E

F O R

S A L E

PINE CoNE oN HIGH LAKESIDE LIVING,WHISPERING PINES

• 2 Bedrooms • 2 Bathrooms • Washer & dryer • Fieldstone gas fireplace • 2 Decks over the lake • Private dock included • Granite countertops • All-stainless kitchen

N

OW THIS IS MAINE.

Escape to the most romantic retreat you could ever imagine. Only six minutes from Exit 53 off the turnpike and 10 minutes from Portland, this year-round getaway on Highland Lake in Falyear-round mouth makes you feel you’re in Shangri-La. As you take the Blackstrap Road in Falmouth and turn onto Mast Road, you can almost feel the silent lake moving closer as you turn right on Huston Road and approach below whispering pines. When you reach the lake, you’ve made it. No. 66 is a classic cedar-shingled cottage with red metal roof and storage building. Inside the vaulted knotty-pine threshold, the door opens to a dramatic stone gas fireplace for intimate nights as you look beyond to enormous blue views of the

lake through a wall of windows that opens to a spectacular second-floor deck. At night, the stars. It’s impossible to walk out here without catching your breath. To your left is the kitchen, in stainless and Deer Isle granite. Off the kitchen is a bath with shower, and tucked in a corner against the water like the bow of a ship is a romantic dining room below the sweep of spruce trees. You will see eagles from here as they glide and fish across the lake, as well as deer, foxes, pheasants, and loons. You’ll find yourself, too. It’s such a fantastic getaway that no fewer than three novels have been written from the writer’s desk that looks across the water, by three differ-

John Hatcher, Keller Williams


A D V E R T I S E M E N T

LAND LAKE

& FALMOUTH SCHOOLS YEAR-ROUND LAKEFRONT HOME–ONLY 15 MINUTES FROM PORTLAND

ent residents. In winter, there’s legendary ice fishing, cross-country skiing, and snowmobiling. A spiral staircase descends to the lake-level bedroom with gas heater, all in knotty pine (you’ll love morning coffee on your private lakeside deck), while a stairway to the second floor opens up to the master suite, with full bath, windows on the water, and walk-in closet. This idyll is ideal for young families who love Falmouth schools and desire an easy commute to downtown Portland, or dreamers who crave the most private lot on this three-and-one-half-mile lake–the closest experience of this kind to Portland and the Old Port. Visit Pine Cone for a tour. You’ll never forget your time here. Not just great for making family memories, Pine Cone can also pay for itself with its great potential and history of weekly rentals. Priced to sell at $325,000.

775-2121 • www.JohnHatcher.us


N e w En g l a n d H o m e s & L i v i n g

“Your Real Estate Source for The Rangeley Region” RANgeLeY LAke

Classic RL Cottage w/Permanent Dock on Oquossoc Cove. 3-BR w/Loft, Open Views, Deck, Level Lawn to the Water’s Edge. $425,000

caryn Dreyfuss Broker

(207) 233-8275

caryn@citycoverealty.com RANgeLeY viLLAge

cuPSuPTic LAke

Exceptional Late 1800’s Village Home. Beautifully Updated w/4-BR, 4 Bath, Roomy & Bright, RL Views. $349,000

Rare offering on Cupsuptic Lake w/4-BR, Open Floor Plan, Rustic Stone FP, 2 Screen Porches, Views. Private, Deep Frontage, Abutting Conservation Lands. $459,000

oQuoSSoc

The LoDgeS

DALLAS PLT

Custom Built 4-BR Log Home on 3+ Private Acres Spacious 4-BR Condo w/Spectacular Rangeley w/Stunning CupsupticLake/Sunset Views. Chef’s Lake Views & Sunsets. Many Upgrades, Kitchen, Screened Porch, Workshop. $379,000 Comfortable Layout, Sold Furnished. $339,000

Well Maintained 3-BR Chalet w/Pine Interior, Stone FP, Mt Views, 2-CarGarage on 2 Wooded Acres. Just Minutes to Saddleback. $212,500

2455 Main Street • P.O. Box 1234 • Rangeley, ME 04970

www.realestateinrangeley.com

Crosby Manor Estates A distinctive condominium community on Penobscot Bay in Belfast, Maine. Convenient in-city location. Short walking distance to downtown waterfront. Visit us by boat or by car off Route 1.

Y2 ONL

237 Waldoboro Road, Jefferson, ME 04348 207-549-5657 • FAX 207-549-5647

ING!

AIN REM

Brokers Welcome

Selling

3-story luxury condominiums just 250 ft. from the water’s edge. Upper and lower decks. Approximately 3,000 sq. ft., 3 bedrooms, 4-1/2 baths, master-bedroom suite.

Starting price $350,000

Sugarloaf Area ASK ABOUT DEVELOPER’S CLOSEOUT SALE

Maine McLean Group, LLC 49 Bayside Dr., Belfast, ME 04915 Toll Free: 1-888-438-4422

www.oceancondo.com 9 6 p o r t l a n d m o n t h ly m a g a z i n e

Coplin Plantation, Maine–Just 6 miles north of Sugarloaf is this year-round camp with 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, and large open living area. Minutes from skiing, snowmobiling, hiking…Outdoor recreation in 4 seasons. $105,000

www.BlackDuckRealty.com email: info@blackduckrealty.com


PORTLAND - Sought after East End: Completely renovated 2 bedroom/2 bath condo. Custom kitchen w/ granite, stainless,& built-ins. Extra large living space w/ tons of natural light, good size bedrooms, W/D in unit, and private deck & garage plus lots of storage! $309,500

PORTLAND - Historic Deering Street PORTLAND - New in 2006, this fabulous offers this fabulously sunny condo w/ a Intown Townhome offers the most on Portnewer birch/black granite/stainless kitchen, land's peninsula! Chinese mahogany wood newer hardwood floors, marble bath floor, floors, gas fireplace, central air & vac, and and a beautiful restoration of period wood- PORTLAND designer master bath after w/ bubble jet tub. 2 uNDER CONTRACT - Sought East End: work! Parking, storage & onsite laudry. Be Completely private decks, private garage and bath water renovated 2 bedroom/2 close to it all! $177,500 viewsCustom from every room! $449,000 condo. kitchen w/ granite, stainless,& built-ins. Extra large living space w/ tons of natural light, good size bedrooms, W/D in unit, and private deck & garage plus lots of storage! $309,500

N e w En g l a n d H o m e s & L i v i n g PORTLAND - Enjoy the conveinence of intown living; 1st floor in the Arts District! This neat and clean 2 bedroom condo has hardwood floors throughout w/direct access to common garden at your back door!Many building improvements make this a sound investment. Pets ok. $178,500

PORTLAND - Hip Loft-Style Condo located in a cool location! Fabulous open design 2 B/R contemporary floor plan offers flexible living. Features gas fireplace, concrete floors, & extra high ceilings. Parking & private patio space. Walk to Whole Foods & so much more! $249,000

uNDER CONTRACT uNDER CONTRACT President: Greater Portland Board of REALTORS

Call Ed Gardner today for real estate services in the Greater Portland Area. (207) 415-4493

uNDER CONTRACT uNDER CONTRACT uNDER CONTRACT

27

uNDER

PORTLAND - Sought after East End: Completely renovated 2 bedroom/2 bath condo. Custom kitchen w/ granite, stainless,& built-ins. Extra large living space w/ tons of natural light, good size bedrooms, W/D in unit, and private deck & garage plus lots of storage! $309,500 CONTRACT

PORTLAND - Historic Deering Street offers this fabulously sunny condo w/ a newer birch/black granite/stainless kitchen, newer hardwood floors, marble bath floor, and a beautiful restoration of period woodwork! Parking, storage & onsite laudry. Be close to it all! $177,500

PORTLAND - New in 2006, this fabulous Intown Townhome offers the most on Portland's peninsula! Chinese mahogany wood floors, gas fireplace, central air & vac, and designer master bath w/ bubble jet tub. 2 private decks, private garage and water views from every room! $449,000

Greater Portland

PORTLAND - West End showplace PORTLAND - Wonderful country setting PORTLAND - Enjoy the conveinence of with top quality designer finishes! just minutes to town & shops! This "alintown living; 1st floor in the Arts District! ght afterEast EastEnd: End: PORTLAND - Historic Deering Street condo PORTLAND - New in 2006, this fabulous t after PORTLAND - Historic Deering Street PORTLAND - New in fabulous Superb Quality Design = 2006, 2 Fpl'sthis (G&W), most new" home features hardwood floors, This neat and clean 2 bedroom condo d2 2bedroom/2 bedroom/2bath bath offers this fabulously sunny condo Intown Townhome offers the most on Portoffers this fabulously sunny condo w/ aw/ a Stylish Intown Townhome the most on Portmarble baths,offers beautiful custom front to back livingroom w/wood burning has hardwood floors throughout w/direct en w/ granite, stainnewer birch/black granite/stainless kitchen, land's peninsula! Chinese mahogany wood PORTLAND - West End showplace PORTLAND - Wonderful country setting PORTLAND - Enjoy the conveinence of n w/ granite, stainnewer birch/black granite/stainless kitchen, kitchen land's peninsula! Chinese mahogany wood with banquet seating, extra large fireplace, andfinishes! 3- New car garage. 32006, bedrooms &This PORTLAND access to living; common garden yourwith back PORTLAND–Sought-after East End: Completely condo with top quality designer just minutes to town &fabulous shops! "alintown 1st floor in the showplace Arts at District! PORTLAND–New in 2006, this fabulous Intown PORTLAND–West End showplace condo top PORTLAND–Historic Deering Street offers this - West End PORTLAND Sought after East End: PORTLAND Historic Deering Street PORTLAND New in this fabulous Sought after East End: PORTLAND Historic Deering Street PORTLAND in 2006, this fabulous PORTLAND Sought after East End: PORTLAND Historic Deering Street PORTLAND New in 2006, this alarge largeliving livingspace spacew/w/PORTLAND newer hardwood floors, marble bath floor, floors, gas fireplace, central air & vac, and newer hardwood floors, marble bath floor, floors, gasEnd: fireplace, period central air & vac, and Quality Superb Design =plus 2 Fpl'sunfinished (G&W), most new" home features hardwood floors, This neat and clean 2 bedroom condo master with built-ins, pantry, private 3Deering baths bonus area offer door!Many improvements make -Custom Sought after East PORTLAND -aHistoric Street PORTLAND - New inPort2006, this fabulous renovated 2-bedroom /2 PORTLAND 2-bath condo. Townhome offers the most on Portland’s peninsula! quality designer fibuilding nishes! Superb Quality Design–2 fabulously sunny condo w/ sunny acondo newer birch/black condo with top quality designer finishes! Completely renovated 2 bedroom/2 bath offers this fabulously condo w/ a Intown Townhome offers the most on Completely renovated 2 bedroom/2 bath offers this fabulously sunny w/ Intown Townhome offers the most on PortCompletely renovated bedroom/2 bath offers this fabulously sunny condo w/ a Intown Townhome offers the most on PortStylish marble baths, beautiful custom front to back livingroom w/wood burning has hardwood floors throughout w/direct good size bedrooms, and a beautiful restoration of period wooddesigner master bath w/ bubble jet tub. 2 ood size bedrooms, andkitchen a beautiful restoration of & period wooddesigner master bath w/ bubble jet tub. 2 sunny deck, parking and storage. This is a must lots of space & flexibility. $459,000 this a sound investment. Pets ok. $178,500 Completely renovated 2 bedroom/2 bath offers this fabulously condo w/ a Intown Townhome offers the most on Portw/ granite, stainless built-ins. Extra Chinese mahogany wood fl oors, gas fi replace, cenfi replaces (G&W), Stylish marble baths, beautiful kitchen with banquet seating, extra large fireplace, and 3 car garage. 3 bedrooms & access to common garden at your back granite/stainless kitchen, newer hardwood fl oors, Superb door!Many Qualitybuilding Design = 2 Fpl's (G&W), condo. Custom kitchen w/ granite, stainnewer birch/black granite/stainless kitchen, land's peninsula! Chinese mahogany wood Custom kitchen w/w/ granite, stainbirch/black granite/stainless land's peninsula! Chinese mahogany wood condo. Custom kitchen granite, stainnewer birch/black granite/stainless kitchen, land's peninsula! Chinese mahogany wood vatedeck deck&&garage garage condo. work! Parking, storage & onsite laudry. Benewer private decks, private garage and water ate work! storage onsite laudry. Besize private decks, private garage and kitchen, water master with tral built-ins, period pantry, private 3 baths plus unfinished bonus area offer improvements make large maskitchen w/home! granite, newer birch/black granite/stainless kitchen, land's peninsula! Chinese mahogany wood largeParking, living space w/tons & ofcondo. naturalCustom light, good see 645,000 air & vac, and designer master bath w/vac, custom kitchen withinvestment. banquet seating, extra marble bath flstainoor, floors, and afloors, beautiful restoration offloor, peStylish marble beautiful custom less,& Extra large living space newer hardwood marble bath floors, gas fireplace, central air &bubble vac, less,& built-ins. Extra large living space w/ hardwood marble bath floor, floors, gas fireplace, central airair vac, and less,& Extra large living space w/ w/newer newer hardwood floors, marble bath floor, floors, gas fireplace, central & andand deck, parking and storage. This is a must lots of space && flexibility. $459,000 this a sound baths, Pets ok. $178,500 $309,500 close to it all! views from every room! $449,000 309,500 close tobuilt-ins. it built-ins. all! $177,500 views from every $449,000 Extra large living space w/room! newer hardwood floors, marble floor,decks, floors, fireplace, central air & vac, and bedrooms,W/D in$177,500 unit, andless,& privatebuilt-ins. deck & garage jet tub. bath 2 private private gas garage and water ter with built-ins, period pantry, private deck, parking riod woodwork! Parking, storage & onsite laudry. see home! 645,000 tons of natural light, good size bedrooms, and a beautiful restoration of period wood-designer designer master bath w/ bubble jet tons of natural light, good size bedrooms, aand beautiful restoration of of period woodmaster bath w/w/ bubble jetjet tub. 2tub. tons of natural light, good size bedrooms, and a beautiful restoration period wooddesigner master bath bubble tub. 2 2kitchen with banquet seating, extra large tons of natural light, good of period wooddesigner master bath w/ bubble jet tub. 2 a must see home! 645,000 plus lots of storage! $309,500 views from every room! $449,000 and storage. This is Be size closebedrooms, to it all! $177,500and a beautiful restoration master with built-ins, period pantry, private W/D in unit, and private deck & garage work! Parking, storage & Parking, onsite laudry. private decks, private garage and water W/D in in unit, and private deck &in garage work! Parking, storage &work! onsite laudry. BeBeBe decks, private garage and water W/D unit, and private deck & garage work! Parking, storage & onsite laudry. private decks, garage and water W/D unit, and private deck & garage storage &private onsite laudry. Beprivate private decks, private garage and water parking and storage. This is a must plus lots of storage! $309,500 close toall! it$177,500 all! $177,500 views from every room! $449,000 plus lots of storage! $309,500 close to to it all! from every room! $449,000 plus lots of storage! $309,500 close it $177,500 views from every room! $449,000 plus lots of storage! $309,500 close to it all! $177,500 views views from every room! deck, $449,000 see home! 645,000

PORTLAND - Hip Loft-Style Condo located in a cool location! Fabulous open design 2 B/R contemporary floor plan offers flexible living. Features gas fireplace, concrete floors, & extra high ceilings. Parking & private patio space. Walk to Whole Foods & so much more! $249,000

eater Portland reater Portland EALTORS REALTORS

PORTLAND - Hip Loft-Style Condo PORTLAND - Hip Loft-Style Condo located in a cool location! Fabulous open PORTLAND - Hip Loft-Style Condo design 2 B/R plan oflocated in acontemporary cool location!floor Fabulous open located in a cool location! Fabulous open PORTLAND - Loft-Style Hip Loft-Style Condo - Hip PORTLAND - Hip Loft-Style Condo fers flexible living. Features gasfloor fireplace, design 2Condo B/R contemporary floor plan ofdesign 2 B/R contemporary plan of- PORTLAND located in a cool location! Fabulous open in in a cool location! open located a cool location! Fabulous open fersFabulous flexible living. Features gas fireplace, concrete floors,living. & extra high ceilings. fers flexible Features gas fireplace,located design 2 B/R contemporary floor of- high ceilings. design 2 B/R contemporary floor plan ofdesign 2 B/R contemporary floor plan concrete floors,plan &ofextra Parking & private space. to concrete floors, patio & extra highWalk ceilings. fers flexible living. Features gas fireplace, fers flexible living. Features gas fireplace, fers flexible living. Features gas fireplace, Parking & private patio space. Walk to Whole Foods & so much Parking & private patiomore! space.$249,000 Walk to concrete floors, & extra high ceilings. floors, && extra high ceilings. concrete floors, extra high ceilings. Whole Foods & so much more! $249,000 Whole Foods & so much more! $249,000 concrete Parking & private patio space. Walk Parking && private patio space. Walk to to to Parking private patio space. Walk Call Ed Gardner today for real Whole Foods & so much more! $249,000 Whole Foods && soso much more! $249,000 Whole Foods much more! $249,000 President: Greater Portland

27

PORTLAND - Won just minutes to town most new" home fe front to back livingr fireplace, and 3 car 3 baths plus unfinish lots of space & flex

PORTLAND - Hip located in a cool loc design 2 B/R contem fers flexible living. concrete floors, & e Parking & private p Whole Foods & so m

Greater Portland

27

Greater Portland Area. (207) 415-4493 President: Greater Portland Board of REALTORS

Greater Portland Greater Portland Greater Portland

Greater Portland Greater Portland

PORTLAND–Hip Loft-Style Condo located in the conveinence of intown PORTLAND–Wonderful country setting just min- PORTLAND–Enjoy - Hip Loft-Style Condo End PORTLAND - Wonderful country setting PORTLAND - Enjoy the conveinence ofliv- ofPORTLAND Endshowplace showplace PORTLAND - Wonderful country setting PORTLAND - Enjoy the conveinence utes to townto&town shops! “almost new” home ing; 1st flliving; oor in the Arts District! This neatDistrict! and President: clean located a cool location! Fabulous openFabulous design 2-bedroom Greater Call Ed Gardner today for real in aPortland cool location! open ytydesigner just minutes & This shops! This "al-"alintown 1st floor in the Arts designerfinishes! finishes! just minutes to town & shops! This intown living; 1st floor in the Arts District! 2-bedroom condo has hardwood floors throughout contemporary floor plan offersfloor flexible living. features hardwood floors, front to back livingroom Board of REALTORS services in the design 2 B/R contemporary plan of- the conveinenceestate ngn==2 2Fpl's most new" home features hardwood floors, This neatneat and clean 2 bedroom condo PORTLAND West End showplace PORTLAND Wonderful country setting PORTLAND Enjoy of Fpl's(G&W), (G&W), PORTLAND most new" home features hardwood floors, This and clean 2 bedroom condo with direct access garden at your back PORTLAND Features gas filiving. replace, concrete flconveinence oors & extra of high with burning fi replace, and 3 burning car garage. 3PORTLAND Greater Portland Area. PORTLAND - West End showplace PORTLAND - common Wonderful country setting PORTLAND -Features Enjoy the -livingroom West End showplace - Wonderful country setting - Enjoy thethe conveinence PORTLAND - West End showplace PORTLAND - to Wonderful country setting PORTLAND - Enjoy of of fers flexible gasconveinence fireplace, beautiful front towood back w/wood has hardwood floors throughout w/direct condo with top quality designer finishes! justthroughout minutes to town &a shops! This "al- & private intown living; 1st floor in the Arts District! beautifulcustom custom front to back livingroom w/wood burning has hardwood floors w/direct ceilings. Parking patio space. Walk to bedrooms & 3 baths plus unfi nished bonus area ofdoor! Many building improvements make this (207) 415-4493 condo with designer finishes! just minutes to town & at shops! This "al- intown intown living; 1st floor inceilings. the Arts District! condo with toptop quality designer finishes! minutes to to town && shops! This "alliving; 1st floor inhigh thethe Arts District! condo with quality designer finishes! just minutes town shops! This "alintown living; 1st floor in Arts District! floors, & extra seating, extra large fireplace, and 3top carquality garage. 3 bedrooms & just access to common garden your back 27 featuresconcrete Superb Quality Design = 2 access Fpl's (G&W), most new" hardwood floors, This neat and clean 2 bedroom condo seating, extra large fireplace, and 3 flcar 3(G&W), bedrooms &most tohome common garden at home your back sound investment. Pets OK. $178,500 Whole Foods &clean soclean much $249,000 fer lots of Quality space & exibility. Superb Design 2 area Fpl's (G&W), most new" home features hardwood floors,This This neat and clean 2hardwood bedroom condo Quality Design =garage. 2=Stylish Fpl's new" home features hardwood floors, neat and 2 has bedroom condo Quality Design 2=$459,000 Fpl's (G&W), most new" features hardwood floors, This neat and 2more! bedroom condo Parking & private patio space. Walk to throughout w/direct period pantry, private Superb 3Superb baths plus unfinished bonus offer door!Many building improvements make marble baths, beautiful custom front to back livingroom w/wood burning floors , period pantry, privateStylish 3Stylish baths plus unfinished bonus area offer door!Many building improvements makehashas marble baths, beautiful custom front to back livingroom w/wood has hardwood throughout w/direct baths, beautiful custom toa to back livingroom w/wood burning floors throughout w/direct Stylish marble baths, beautiful custom front back livingroom w/wood burning hardwood throughout w/direct Whole Foods & so floors much more! $249,000 age. This is a must lots ofmarble space & flexibility. $459,000 this sound investment. Pets ok.and $178,500 kitchen with banquet front seating, large fireplace, 3burning car garage. 3hardwood bedrooms & floors access to common garden at your back orage. This is a must kitchen lots ofwith space & flexibility. $459,000 thisextra aand sound investment. ok. $178,500 kitchen with banquet seating, extra large fireplace, fireplace, 3garage. car 3 bedrooms access to common garden atbuilding your back with banquet seating, extra large 3and car 3 bedrooms & & &bonus access to to common garden at at your back kitchen banquet seating, extra large fireplace, and 3 car garage. 3Pets bedrooms access common garden your back master with built-ins, period pantry, private 3garage. baths plus unfinished area offer door!Many improvements make master with built-ins, period pantry, private 3 baths plus unfinished bonus area offer door!Many building improvements makePets ok. $178,500 master with built-ins, period pantry, private 3 baths plus unfinished bonus area offer door!Many building improvements make master with built-ins, period pantry, private 3 baths plus unfinished bonus area offer door!Many building improvements make deck, parking and storage. This is a must lots of space & flexibility. $459,000 this a sound investment. President: Greater Portland Call Ed Gardner today for real deck, parking and storage. This is a must lots of space & flexibility. $459,000 this a sound investment. Pets ok. $178,500 deck, parking and storage. This is a must lots of space & flexibility. $459,000 this a sound investment. Pets ok. $178,500 deck, parking and storage. This is a must lots of space & flexibility. $459,000 this a sound investment. Pets ok. $178,500 see home! 645,000 see home! 645,000 seesee home! 645,000 home! 645,000 Board of REALTORS estate services in the

PORTLAND - His offers this fabulousl newer birch/black g newer hardwood flo and a beautiful resto work! Parking, stora close to it all! $177,

Greater Portland

PORTLAND - Wonderful country setting just minutes to town & shops! This "almost new" home features hardwood floors, front to back livingroom w/wood burning fireplace, and 3 car garage. 3 bedrooms & 3 baths plus unfinished bonus area offer lots of space & flexibility. $459,000

Greater Portland

PORTLAND - West End showplace condo with top quality designer finishes! Superb Quality Design = 2 Fpl's (G&W), Stylish marble baths, beautiful custom kitchen with banquet seating, extra large master with built-ins, period pantry, private deck, parking and storage. This is a must see home! 645,000

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Board of REALTORS

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fiction Adam Purple

A Shower at the Beach T

he thought occurs to Helen, as she waits for the water, that she really ought be naked. Outdoors and naked, just as she was many times before, in this very same place. Her earliest memories are here, at her grandmother’s cottage, facing Wells Beach. It was an ominous place to her then, with its steep roof and broad dormer, the windows like dark, slitted eyes that stared out at the Atlantic. But the inside was welcoming and cozy, all beadboard and blowing curtains, with a sleeping loft that was a favorite spot for Helen and her cousins. Helen’s mother often told her of how the cottage used to be, when she herself was a girl. The cottage then was more like a rustic camp, an outpost without phone or television, the electricity often lost to storms and wind. A favorite story was of the outdoor shower, where just off the porch, hanging from a nail, there once was a rusty sprinkler head, stolen from a watering can. With a dangling garden hose fed by a cold-water faucet, it served its Spartan purpose, just as her Yankee grandfather, builder of both cottage and shower, had intended. By the time Helen came along, the shower had, at her grandmother’s insistence, evolved into a permanent wooden enclosure, plumbed with hot and cold running water. Her grandfather, unable to indulge in such a wasteful extravagance used it not at all, and kept a worrying eye on the water meter. But with her grandmother’s bless1 0 2 p o r t l a n d m o n t h ly m a g a z i n e


Clockwise from top left: staff illustration/ the william brown project/MATTHEW HRANEK

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ing, young Helen would crowd in with her cousins, all in their suits, giggling as they rinsed off the salt and sand of another beach day–a warm, hidden treat after the numbing cold of the Atlantic. But hidden is a relative term. The shower walls, loosely spaced planks of driftwoodgrey, extend from knee to just overhead. Above is the brilliant summer sky, with scolding gulls peeking down; below is sandy ground, where strangers’ feet walk by, almost close enough to touch. From outside, where boys might casually linger on their way up the shore path, one can see the bathers’ bare legs–the same legs that were seen, in greater exposure, not moments ago on the beach. Yet the vision at the shower is somehow all the more tantalizing; out in the open air, behind the cracks and knotholes of that divider, someone stands wet, tan, and possibly naked. As a teenager, having graduated to bikinis and solitary showers, Helen would have it no other way. That is how Tom first saw her, if only her tan legs, the summer of her junior year at Bowdoin. By the next summer they were married, and Helen would share the stall with him, terrified that her grandmother, napping on the porch just a few feet away, might hear (she did). The following summer, there was a baby. Subsequent summers, subsequent children, meant that her showers were once again shared, but only with little feet, everyone in suits or diapers. When her children became teenagers themselves, their showers grew frequent and long, exhausting the hot water, leaving her thankful that her grandfather had long since passed. What they did in there, she pretended not to know–but was wistful just the same. To this day, she still thinks of the place as her grandmother’s. But the cottage is hers now, a treasure handed down. Her own children are grown and gone. They returned only this July, the first since Helen’s divorce. Now she can watch as the tradition closes full circle. The cottage is again abuzz with the promise and delights of summer. Her grandchildren sleep in the loft and crowd the shower, all squeals and giggles. She allows herself the mantle of noontime naps on the porch. For the afternoon swim, she wears a new, trim swimsuit from Bean’s. She still showers alone. But now, for the first time since she would flaunt a daring two-piece, Helen remembers to take it off. n

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Enjoy our fully stocked bar, local beer list, and international wine list.

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New England Sports Network Spring Training Kickoff Tour at BINGAS STADIUM in Portland, from left: 1. Don Orsillo, Jerry Remy

Strike A Chord at Asylum in Portland, from left: 1. Nancy Keast, Matthew Keast 2. Eamon & Rory Lovejoy

Wild Duck Pub Local. Fresh. Unexpected. Open May 1st

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Relax into our comfortable, upscale pub atmosphere, or sit on our screened-in deck overlooking the beautiful Highland Green golf course.

HOMER CARIBbEAN GALA at portland museum of art in 3 congress square, from left: 1. Margaret Burgess, Carolyn Murray 2. Sharon Howell, Liz Scheffee, Ineke Schair, Caroline Pratt 3. Jacqueline & Joe Soley

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CVB member mixer at Margaritas restaurant in portland arts district, from left: 1. Shannon Marden, Elissa English 2. Caitlin Prentice, Kristen Hill 3. Angela Emery, Jay Ellis, Rebecca Doman, Shay Bellas 4. Jenna Cote, Terri Kelly 5. David Davis, Alan Saric

Come delight in our inspired pub cuisine, including house-made soups, fresh salads and sandwiches, and unexpected entrees.

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Altrusa’s Great Chili Chowder Challenge at holiday inn by the bay in Portland, from left: 1. Manny Caulk, Mike Tarpinian 2. PPD Ass’t. Chief Vern Malloch, WMTW8’s Norm Karkos 3. Sarah Starcher , Mike Skillin 4. Chuck Igo, John Coyne 5. Kelly Walsh, Cassandra Kennie, Amanda Gould

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18th Annual WMPG Fat Tuesday Cajun Cooking Challenge at USM Woodbury Campus Center in Portland, from left: 1. Molly Payne, Jennifer Hiltonsmith 2. Craig Howard, Christopher Milligan 3. Eric Sawyer, Cat Smith

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robert Burns Supper at the Inn at Brunswick Station in Brunswick, from left: 1. Kathy Bridge; Jim Toast 2. Jonathan & Tricia Shapiro 3. Jennifer & Marvin Hinkley 4. Margaret Mayo, Pauletter Oboyski 5. Sue & Bob Cameron 1

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Tuesday - Saturday, Lunch and Dinner beginning at 11:30AM Sunday Brunch, 9AM - 1PM For reservations and information, please call us: 207-406-2109

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114 Village Drive, Topsham, Maine at Highland Green, A Masterpiece of Maine Living 1 0 WDP_Portland 4 p o r t lMagazine_032013.indd a n d m o n t h1l y m a g a z i n e

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