Portland 05/23/14

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art

dinner + movie

right at home

get on board

exploring shape and craft at corey daniels gallery _by mariah bergeron | p 12

this just in

maine brew bus expands its offerings

damp but not defeated

p 26

tar sands rally recap

_by deirdre fulton

_by chelsea cook p4

may 23-29, 2014 | Portland’s news + arts + entertainment authority | Free

news + features

Caffiene lessons ‘cupping’ helps clarify coffee preferences _by Kate mccarty p8

what did you expect? On Supernova, Ray LaMontagne mixes it up — per usual _by sam pfeifle | p 17

theater

horizontal hostility

Stigmata gets a staged reading | p 14

!

best comedian One we forgot | p 4


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4 May 23, 2014 | the portland phoenix | portland.thephoenix.coM

damp But not deFeated Protesters gathered in Deering Oaks Park last Saturday to rally against tar sands.

this Just in

HAPPY HOUR: Mon-Fri. 4-7pm Wed.

The weekend of May 31-June 1 sees Sanford open the venue doors for the town’s first international film festival. Thirty films are slated to play at four locations over the course of the weekend, with over 25 local restaurants and shops offering discounts for festival attendees and filmmakers alike. It’s an impressive feat considering the entire event was less than two months in the making. Why the short timeline? “The story starts with the Lewiston-Auburn Film Festival [LAFF] being shut down 10 days before opening night,” says James Harmon, a teacher at Sanford High School and spearheader of the Sanford Film Festival. Harmon teaches a class called Rebound for at-risk students at SHS; last year, a filmmaking class that was part of the program’s summer curriculum. The kids were enthusiastic to say the least. “We had an 85-page script in less than 10 days, cast it immediately and took 22 days to film it,” Harmon recalls. All students participated in the editing process, or “they had to create a DVD extra.” The film, #YOLO, which centers on a group of young misfits and their misadventures, took the better part of the fall semester to finish. Harmon downplays his contribution. “I just filled in the blanks. Some color correction here and there,” he says. “It’s the kids that did all the work.” Harmon did, however, submit the film to LAFF, where it was accepted and slated to screen during the first weekend in April. Imagine the collective disappointment when Joshua Shea, LAFF founder, was arrested on the charge of possessing child

pornography in late March. “[Shea] had the keys to the kingdom,” Harmon says. “All the contracts were under his watch.” There were attempts to salvage the festival, but none succeeded. With filmmakers scrambling to find new places to show their films, Harmon decided to bring his students’ film home to Sanford for a screening. He reached out on March 27 to both Mayor Tom Cote and Synergize Sanford, a group dedicated to local creative and entrepreneurial growth. From there, the

The Sanford film festival rose out of the ashes of LAFF, which was cancelled in March. Sanford Film Festival was born, with 15 (out of 50) films from LAFF joining in along with five films from outside the United States. “We more than doubled our count after putting up the website,” Harmon reports. The support of the Sanford community has been equally overwhelming to filmmakers — both local and international. Andrew Bard, director of Dystopia, a post-apocalyptic sci-fi film, was especially surprised. “I spoke to the manager of Premiere Rentals to see about renting one — just one — television to show film trailers at the reception, and they gave me four!”

F Meanwhile, the emerGe Festival,

which also was born out of LAFF’s collapse, will run Friday, June 13 and Saturday, June 14 at six venues in the twin cities of Lewiston and Auburn. Starting with a (Baxter, duh) Beer and Horror night on Friday, the 13th, where they’ll screen Corey Norman’s The Hanover House (see “Slow-burning horror,” by Deirdre Fulton, May 9), and closing on Saturday evening with the highly anticipated reveal of Boo Dog Films’ feature comedy Richard3, directed by Michael Michlon, Emerge could end up eclipsing the besmirched predecessor it stepped in to replace.

F And in other local film news, the

BluestoCKinG Film series, which runs

July 18-19 at SPACE Gallery this year, recently became the first US film festival to earn Sweden’s A-Rating, meaning that it passes what’s known as the Bechdel Test (for a film to qualify, it must feature two or more female named characters, who talk to each other about something other than men). The Bluestocking festival only considers films that pass the test.

Best Maine Comedian: Krazy Jake We screwed up and left out the write-up for Best Maine Comedian in our big Best Of supplement last week. Whoops! Maine native Krazy JaKe Hodgdon is brash, blue-collar, and hilarious, known for regular stints on the Bob Marley Comedy Tour and and stand-up gigs around Maine and beyond. A quick look at his Facebook page or website seems to suggest he’s always working, either on the road or coming up with new material, plus he’s currently shooting a TV show and movie. He doesn’t shy away from much, but no matter how hard he pushes the envelope, his energy and enthusiasm endear him to audiences far and wide. It’s no surprise he’s considered one of Maine’s rising comedic talents! See for yourself at his shows at the Big Easy June 6-7. Learn more at krazyjakecomedy.com And in related news, the location of the Common Ground Country Fair was misttated in the write-up for Best Fair/Festival. The annual agricultural celebration takes place in Unity, not Union.

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not giving up

he says. Several local businesses are extending discounts throughout the entire month of June. The committee is still finalizing this information and will publish it on the website (sanfordfilmfest.com) in the coming days. The festival opens at 10 am on Saturday, May 31 and runs through Sunday June 1 at the Curtis Lake Church, City Hall Auditorium, The Little Theater (Horror/Adult only), and Sanford High School.

dept. of corrections

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no tar Sands

Sanford rolls out the red carpet

_Chelsea Cook

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The wind and chilly drizzle did nothing to dampen the spirit of anti-tar sands ralliers in Deering Oaks Park last Saturday, May 17. The event was held as part of a nationwide “Day of Action Against Dirty Fuels,” and, as speaker after speaker told the crowd of about 45 people, they don’t come much dirtier than tar sands. Dubbed a “carbon time bomb” by NASA scientist James Hansen, tar sands are a type of petroleum deposit containing a mix of sand, clay, water, and an extremely thick, sticky form of crude oil called bitumen, which resembles tar — hence the term “tar sands.” The carbon-intensive stuff is found in underground, and to extract and refine it involves “diluting it with a toxic stew of chemicals,” said Glen Brand, director of the Sierra Club’s Maine chapter, one of several groups that helped organize the rally. What makes it even more dangerous is what happens if it spills. Unlike conventional oil, it doesn’t evaporate. “The stuff sinks first, and then it sticks to the bottom of the body of water,” Brand said. Activists frequently cite a 2010 tar sands spill in Kalamazoo, Michigan, in which a pipeline was punctured and spilled one million gallons into the Kalamazoo River. “It was the biggest inland oil spill in the history of the country,” Brand said. “The river is still not cleaned up, and there are areas that will never recover.” That’s one of several reasons Mainers don’t want tar sands being transported through the state — a spill near Sebago Lake, which provides drinking water for Greater Portland, would be catastrophic. The rally’s purpose was to send a strong “No Tar Sands” message to both President Barack Obama and local officials. While a recent Washington Post-ABC poll showed that about two-thirds of the American public supports construction of the Keystone XL pipeline, which requires a presidential permit to move forward, Obama’s still hemming and hawing; the matter has been in a holding pattern for two years now, with the State Department announcing in April that it would delay its decision until after the Nebraska Supreme Court rules in a related case. “[Obama] said he would not approve it if it threatened climate control, and we want him to honor his promise and say no,” Brand said. Meanwhile, on the local level, the danger of pipeline reversal bringing tar sands oil into Maine and South Portland still lurks. Protect South Portland, another co-organizer of the rally, narrowly lost in its attempt last fall to block tar sands at the ballot box, but it remains vigilant, convinced that the Portland Pipe Line Company (which they point out is a sub-subsidiary of Exxon) is looking to reverse the flow in its decades-old pipeline to accommodate diluted bitumen from Western Canada. “New infrastructure — like two 70-foot smokestacks in Bug Light Park — was proposed that would turn the town into a conduit for the dirtiest oil on the planet,” said Emily Figdor of Environment Maine, recalling campaign talking points. Other speakers included Phil Coupe of Revision Energy, and Dylan Voorhees of NRCM, both advocating for renewable energy sources such as solar. “I know it’s hard to believe today, but Maine gets 33 percent more sunshine than Germany, the world’s solar leader,” Coupe joked. And Sarah Lachance of 350 Maine spoke to the intersection of tar sands and social justice issues as they concern the First Nations people of Alberta, ground zero for tar sands. “They’re becoming sick and their traditional hunting territory is being obliterated,” LaChance said. “Their kids are baffled.” Portland mayor Michael Brennan had the final word, citing the receipt of an Urban Land Institute grant as evidence of the region’s commitment to addressing global warming. “Portland and South Portland have been selected as two cities for an $800,000 research grant based on climate change and sea-level rise,” he said, ending on a confident note while praising the attendees’ steadfastness. “If we didn’t have faith, we wouldn’t be standing in the rain to say no to tar sands in our state.”

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_Chelsea Cook

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6 May 23, 2014 | the portland phoenix | portland.thephoenix.coM

_BY A L D I AM O N

Diverse city

politics + other Mistakes

_BY ShAY StewArt-BouleY blackgirlinmaine@gmail.com

Good liquor gonna carry me down I thought for sure this would be the year I’d finally stop traveling to New Hampshire to buy almost all my booze. It appears I was wrong. In 2013, Gerry Reid, then the director of the Maine Bureau of Alcoholic Beverages and Lottery Operations (motto: If We Controlled Pot And Prostitution, We’d Have It All), announced that when the state’s new 10-year wholesale liquor contract took effect on July 1, 2014, the prices of 500 “high-traffic spirits” would be reduced to roughly what those products cost in the Granite State. No more need for long road trips south to replenish supplies. No more badgering friends and acquaintances heading north to stop and pick up a few bottles. And best of all, no more paying exorbitant prices at Maine agency stores when the liquor cabinet was empty and the demand for cocktails was immediate. Except none of that is going to happen. Reid retired in February, and with him seemingly went the idea of matching New Hampshire’s bargain prices. Instead, the bureau will be pursuing a policy of occasionally discounting a few high-volume items, while leaving the majority of its inventory ticketed well above that of the competition in the state next door. According to Tim Poulin, who until this week was the bureau’s acting director, come July and August, “we’ll see the most aggressive prices we’ve had in years.” Aggressive? Is this going to be one of those promotions where you better buy some hooch in Maine or you’ll get punched out? Poulin said the new strategy calls for sometimes matching or coming close to New Hampshire’s regular

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_BY D AV ID KIS h

prices on big sellers. But he admitted Maine wouldn’t even attempt to undersell the competition’s famous discounts. “We can’t compete with them on specials,” Poulin said. “We’d be losing too much money.” OK, let’s talk about losing money. A couple of years ago, New Hampshire did a study of credit card sales, which showed that 8 percent of its liquor revenue came from Maine. Poulin called that figure “a little low,” because it doesn’t take into account cash transactions. He estimated the real number was more like 10 percent or around $35 million a year. As anyone familiar with the bar and restaurant industry will tell you, that figure is also probably on the light side, since a sizeable portion of Maine’s watering holes ignores state law and buys a significant amount of its booze on the far side of the Piscataqua River. Our actual lost business is likely well above $50 million annually. Maine could alleviate a lot of that loss very simply. It could change its statutes to end state control of retail prices, and let agency stores (and competition among them) dictate how much liquor would sell for. But legislators refuse to even consider that idea, because it might result in higher prices in remote, rural areas and better deals in more populated regions and border towns. In other words, alcohol would be subject to the same market forces as groceries, hardware, heating fuels, and pharmaceuticals, all of which somehow manage to survive the perils of our economy without government price controls. Nevertheless, Poulin believes a strategy of educating locals and tourists about Maine’s sorta, kinda, sometimes lower prices (unless, like me, you prefer to drink something that’s not a top seller) will reduce the amount of lost business by 25 percent

the first year and as much as 50 percent over time. “We have to get consumers in Maine to understand we have a new pricing strategy,” he said. “It’s not going to be an easy task.” He’s right about that. It’s going to take a brilliant marketing campaign to convince imbibers that our neighboring state isn’t a better deal, so long as New Hampshire’s regular price for a 1.75 liter bottle of Captain Morgan’s spiced rum ($24.99) is lower than Maine’s current sale price ($26.99). When the Captain is on special across the bridge (as it is right now), it’s only $21.99. Maybe you’re a Scotch drinker. The Famous Grouse 1.75 liter would normally set you back $43.99 in Maine, but it’s aggressively priced in May at a mere $40.99. Of course, it’s regularly only $39.99 in New Hampshire, but on sale now for $29.99. And even if those pricing disparities are reduced once the new policies take effect in July, that won’t affect top-shelf liquor and more obscure brands, which will continue to sport mark-ups in Maine of $5, $10, and even $20 above the New Hampshire prices. It’s possible that new bureau director Gregory Mineo — a former marketing director for Absolut and Seagram brands, who started work this week — will eventually overcome the barely post-Prohibition mindset that permeates his agency and inject a little free-market capitalism into the system. But I’ve got my doubts. Until there’s a significant shift in attitude, I’ll continue to head south on I-95 to do my shopping. ^

Unless, of course, you’d be kind enough to pick me up a few things on your way north. If so, email me at aldiamon@herniahill.net, and I’ll send you my list.

race still matters f “race matters … this refusal to accept the stark reality that race matters is regrettable. the way to stop discrimination on the basis of race is to speak openly and candidly on the subject of race, and to apply the constitution with eyes open to the unfortunate effects of centuries of racial discrimination.” So said United States Supreme court Justice Sonia Sotomayor in her dissenting opinion in Schuette v. coalition to Defend affirmative action, in which the high court upheld a voter-approved change to the Michigan state constitution that prevents public colleges from using race as a factor in its admissions. race does indeed matter, no matter how much we pretend that it does not, because pretending never really changes things — only action and intentionality create change. the american way of pretense when it comes to racial bias and racism is but one of the reasons that it seems we are bombarded by race-based stories in the media in our 24/7 news cycle. eventually our secrets begin to spill out of the closet we’ve stuffed them into, and instead of cleaning up, we just push even harder against the door in a vain attempt to keep everything inside. this past month, la clippers owner donald Sterling was caught on tape telling his mixed-race girlfriend that he didn’t want her socializing with african americans, including basketball legend Magic Johnson. of course, Sterling vehemently denies being a racist — after all, he was dating a mixed-race woman whose background is part black. ah, the infamous “i can’t be racist; i have a friend of a different race” defense, which is often the best way to let people know you really are racist. closer to home here in Maine, in neighboring new hampshire, Wolfeboro police commissioner robert copeland admitted to calling the president of the United States a racial slur. copeland has insisted he won’t apologize for his offensive language and while many came out to protest in a town of 6,300 people, less than 10 percent were reported to be in attendance at a public meeting where residents called for copeland’s resignation. Far too many people dismiss such stories as being isolated incidents or the province of aging dinosaurs, but that isn’t true at all. earlier this year, the new York Times ran a piece on the rise of racial tensions on college campuses. despite being raised to be “color-blind,” many young adults grapple with racial bias because we learn from our families, and what we don’t say matters just as much as what we do say. in other words, what does it mean when we say that we are all equal but we live in spaces where the only people we see look just like us? Kids notice these things. if the only images we have of others is coming from a media that limits its scope of representation, what does that mean for our kids? For us? We cling to language and concepts such as ‘tolerance’ and ‘diversity’ but to be the ‘tolerated’ person is to know that you are not truly accepted. Most of us tolerate things like taxes and the occasional root canal, but do we like them? do we seek them out? of course not. that is how tolerance feels to those who are being tolerated. diversity as a concept doesn’t quite work either because too many times, diversity creates an illusion that does not get to the heart of structural inequity. instead, we see a few diverse faces and assume all is well. But when it comes to matters of race, often that is not the case. the copelands and the Sterlings are obviously extreme perpetrators of racism, and it’s easy for us to lay our full wrath upon them. But if we aren’t actively working to create a truly inclusive and accepting culture and if we don’t discard the belief that white culture is the baseline standard, perhaps we aren’t far removed from them as would like to believe. if our attempts to be inclusive amount to little more than masturbatory self-congratulation and pointless navel gazing, then we may do better to cut the crap and acknowledge our own inner racists. ^

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portland.thephoenix.coM | the portland phoenix | May 23, 2014 9

THe HARBOR View AT

where coffee reigns supreme cuppings help clarify java preferences _B y ka t e m c c a r ty Portland makes it onto many lists for its food and drink scene; some of the accolades are noteworthy (like Bon Appétit’s “foodiest small town” in 2009), while others are forgettable (namely the ones comparing our Portland to the other Portland). But the results of a Men’s Health study recently made us take notice: Portland is the number one coffee-loving city in the United States. To create these rankings, the study surveyed households in 100 major metropolitan areas, considering the number that own coffeemakers and buy coffee; the amount spent on coffee; the number of coffee shops per capita; and the number of individuals that drink five or more cups a day. Though that last number may be less important than you’d think — according to Maine author Murray Carpenter in his recent book Caffeinated, as a country, we’re drinking less coffee today than our grandparents were. Rather, the recent proliferation of coffee houses and roasters in Portland points to a growing appreciation for a quality cup of coffee rather than a high quantity of it. Recently, the coffee industry has entered what is described as its “third wave;” the first wave being the introduction of widespread consumption of coffee in our country in the 1950s and ’60s. First wave coffee companies sought to maximize profits, in part by creating demand for their product as part of a daily ritual. Second wave coffee is the movement most of us are familiar with and saw the rise of differing roast levels, publicized countries of origin, and espresso drinks. Coffee houses embracing a third wave philosophy now pay close attention to every step of coffee production, from growing

f

it’s an art a latte from Bard coffee.

pour it over Brittany the barista at work at Bard coffee on middle street. to harvesting to roasting to brewing. Vien Dobui, Tandem Coffee’s wholesale accounts manager, explains that producers have only started growing coffee with an eye towards quality in the last 10 years. Much like wine, coffee grown in different parts of the world expresses different characteristics based on the climate and soil. Coffee roasters are now paying more attention to these flavor subtleties and roasting beans accordingly. The way coffee professionals evaluate the quality of coffee beans is a standardized smelling and tasting ritual called ‘cupping.’ Cuppings help coffee wholesalers determine if beans are worth buying and coffee roasters determine to what degree to roast coffee beans, among other things. The cupping process aims to control as many variables as possible, so one tastes only the flavors inherent in the coffee beans, rather than those imparted by the roasting process. Tandem Coffee offers cuppings to the public to help coffee aficionados (or wannabes) learn more about coffee flavors. I attended a cupping at Tandem Coffee in an attempt to expand my limited

knowledge of my own coffee preferences. While I always brew coffee at home and enjoy several cups throughout the morning, I don’t pay much attention to the pedigree. Beyond rejecting a very dark roast, I had no inkling whether I’d prefer a Kenyan coffee to a Columbian. The day I attended Tandem’s cupping, Vien Dobui prepared four samples for us to try. Two were roasted by Tandem’s owner Will Pratt: a Costa Rican and an Ethiopian coffee. Another Ethiopian varietal was sent to Tandem as a sample, and the fourth was a natural Ethiopian coffee from Seattle-based Slate Coffee Roasters. The cupping was attended by a small group of regulars, both young and old. I was graciously welcomed into the group and shown the routine. First, we sniffed the dry coffee grounds. Dobui then meticulously poured hot water over the grounds, allowing them to steep. We rotated around the table, bending to sniff the brewing coffee. After it was steeped, we selected silver-plated spoons to “break the crust,” or swipe our spoons through the floating coffee grounds to release the aromas trapped beneath. After the second round of smelling, Dobui removed the floating grounds and the tasting began. We were encouraged to violently slurp up our coffee (Dobui demonstrated with the most vehement of sips) to aspirate the coffee over all of our taste buds. Because I was concerned with choking on hot coffee in front of strangers, I stuck with a more modest slurp. For about 20 minutes, we circled the table, taking repeated sips of coffee. Different flavors become more pronounced as the coffee cools, so an extended tasting allows you to experience a range of aroma and taste. While sipping the four samples, my thoughts went like this: “Hmm, tastes like coffee... also tastes like coffee... yup, coffee again... Woah!” The fourth coffee tasted radically different due to the processing method. The Ethiopian coffee from Slate was naturally processed, meaning the fruits of the coffee plant, called “cherries” (inside of which you’ll find the “bean” or seed), are dried in the sun rather than mechanically pulped and then dried. The resulting coffee frequently is full of berry flavors; this one tasted like someone had infused it with blueberry syrup. After our tasting had concluded, we then shared our thoughts on the various flavors we detected. Tasting descriptors are notoriously wacky, but the ones I heard were relatively tame. Many found the Costa Rican roasted by Tandem to contain caramel flavors; Dobui explained caramelized sugar flavors are created by a darker roast. Other descriptors pertained to the acidity of the coffee (typically fruit flavors), the body (any flavor other than fruit), and the mouth-feel.

JOneS LAnDinG Peaks island, Maine At a ‘cupping,’ we’re expected to violently slurp our coffee, so as to aspirate it over all our taste buds.

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BooK Learning a display of costa rican coffee at coffee By Design. Determined to continue my coffee flavor education, I headed to the Speckled Ax on Congress Street and ordered two different kinds of coffee to taste side-by-side. When I explained my project to the barista, she exclaimed, “Oooh, you’re one of us!” which made me laugh. She selected a Kenyan and a Columbian coffee, described as tasting of, among other things, “cola” and “pineapple,” respectively. I detected neither, but did taste a noticeable difference between the two. The Kenyan coffee had a tomato-like acidity, while the Colombian expressed a pleasing sweetness as it cooled. The baristas continued to check in with me at my perch at the bar to discuss the coffees’ characteristics. Coffee By Design’s new space on Diamond Street in East Bayside offers plenty of room to sit and contemplate the flavors in your mug. The staff plans to offer regularly scheduled public cuppings this summer; in the meantime, their attentive staff is happy to recommend a coffee for your palate. The barista recommended a sweeter, nuttier-tasting Peruvian coffee, because I drink my coffee with cream. I tried it straight up first and appreciated the lighter roast, what CBD calls their “peak” roast. This light roasting style allows the flavors of the coffee to shine, rather than being dominated by a darker

French or Italian roast. This new location is a mecca for coffee geeks, with multiple high-tech brewing methods and a station for creating your own blend of coffee beans for home use. At Bard Coffee, store manager Brittany Feltovic prepared me two Kenyan coffees: one naturally processed and one washed. The natural coffee tasted very different than the one I’d experienced at Tandem Coffee, but I couldn’t quite articulate how. Feltovic coached me, saying she tasted “juicy lime,” rather than the more common berry flavors, but no matter how hard I thought of a key lime pie or a margarita, I didn’t quite get there. Unlike wine, coffee’s flavor differences are subtle. When drank side-by-side, coffees certainly taste different, but identifying those fruity, buttery, and smoky flavors requires an experienced palate. The cuppings at Tandem Coffee provide the perfect environment for training your taste buds, while Portland’s many coffee houses offer ever-expanding options for finding your favorite flavors. Look for a second location from Tandem Coffee this summer at 742 Congress Street in the West End. ^

tandem Coffee roasters cuppings | 122 anderson st, portland | Fridays at 12 pm | 207.899.0235

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f MiCroMasse, at Elements, in Biddeford on May 23. thursday 22 CUTS LIKE A KNIFE | Excit-

ing literary events abound this weekend, starting with the Slice Magazine Literary Bash at Longfellow Books tonight. Slice is a Brooklyn-based non-profit literary magazine that connects writers to the publishing world (see Deirdre Fulton’s interview with Slice creative director Celia Johnson in last week’s paper). Tonight’s event will showcase writers who appeared in recent issues, like Joshua Bodwell of the Maine Writers and Publishers Alliance, Douglas Milliken, whose To Sleep As Animals came out last week, and CJ Hauser, whose fiction has appeared in publications like Esquire and Tin House. There’ll be craft brew from Biddeford’s new Banded Horn Brewing Co. on hand, too. 7 pm. Longfellow Books, One Monument Way, Portland. 207.772.4045. oN SpECIAL ToNIghT | Meanwhile, down in Portsmouth, acclaimed novelist Kate Christensen (who lives in Portland these days) reads from her literary memoir, Blue Plate Special: An Autobiography of My Appetites. The ac-

claimed book is a rumination on Christensen’s unusual upbringing and her “history of hunger” — for both food and happiness. 7 pm at RiverRun Bookstore, 142 Fleet St., Portsmouth, NH. 603.431.2100.

friday 23 poRTLAND pop | We love the

“Sour Bubblegum” descriptor employed by Dean ForD, who plays tonight at Empire. Ford is the closest thing Portland has to its very own Bruno Mars — but with a little more edge. He’s a little pop, a little rock, and definitely a hella good live show. Joining him on stage is BanD apoLLo who is known for coining the term “swag rock.” Sigh. I will leave that term open for interpretation. Also playing is one show nothing: a straightforward, energetic rock trio. $6. 9:30 pm. Empire, 575 Congress St, Portland. 207.747.5063 MACRo ELEMENTS | The jazz trio MiCroMasse has been called one of the coolest acts in Portland, and they take their brand of groove to Biddeford tonight.

est work from radical local playwright Carolyn Gage. Directed by Stephanie Ross, Stigmata tells the story of a 16th century Italian nun and her struggles to “keep her sexuality and her ambition alive in an environment of brutal religious repression.” For more on the show, check out Megan Grumbling’s piece on page 14. This evening’s performance will be followed by a talk-back. $5 suggested donation. 7 pm. Mayo Street Arts, 10 Mayo St., Portland. BAND TogEThER | Three local bands join together tonight for a great local cause. The groups MetaL Feathers, FoaM CastLes, and Contrapposto team up to support the University of Southern Maine chapter of engineers without BorDers as it gets ready to head down to Guatemala to install a solar panel array at an orphanage. A silent auction featuring artwork by Patrick Corrigan, Justin Richel, and Kimberly Convery will take place over the course of the evening. Doors at 8; show starts at 8:30 pm. $10. SPACE Gallery, 538 Congress St,, Portland. 207.828.5600. LA LA LA FEST | The LaLapaLaLa MusiC & arts FestivaL kicks off today in New Hampshire. What can you expect from this year’s festival? Loads of great local music, art, poetry, and something called a “liquid light show.” Among the live performers will be acoustic-folk act Chris Merril, psychedelic punk group Manic Midnight, and “classy”

JUNE 5

co-ed hip hop group Million Suns. Artists such as Hannah Ellingwood, Maggie Schier, Marisa Kang, and many more will be selling their arts and crafts at the festival. Starting at 12 pm. At the Stone Church Meeting House, 5 Granite St., Newmarket, NH. 603.659.6321.

sunday 25 IT’S BACK! | Depending on whether or not you have Monday off (for Memorial Day), you may want to throw down on Sunday. And by throw down, I mean party your little pants off. And where better to do this than a beautiful island in Casco Bay that’ll be pulsing with reggae music for the first time since last summer? That’s right, it’s Peaks Island/Jones Landing/reggae sunDay season! Catch a late-morning/early-afternoon ferry across the water and jam with local faves royaL haMMer for the day. 11-5 pm. Jones Landing, Peaks Island. SoNgBIRD | Portland’s musical sweetheart anna LoMBarD plays tonight at One Longfellow Square. Her music is emotive storytelling influenced by the likes of Aimee Mann and Susan Tedeschi. She’ll be joined for her set by special guest and accomplished guitarist Adam Agati, a Maine native who now lives in New York City. Opening for Lombard will be

The group features a stellar trio of local musicians: organist Peter Dugas, guitarist Max Cantlin, and drummer Chris Sweet. These boys are inspired by the jazz organ groups of the 1950s and ’60s but also enjoy throwing in traditional and contemporary African and Latin music into the mix. Sounds pretty cool, huh? That’s free at 8 pm. Elements: Books Coffee Beer, 265 Main St., Biddeford. 207.710.2011.

*reserved seating

the Brooklyn-based future roots band the Boston Boys, who got together only two years ago and have already played all over the world. Watch for their third EP coming this month. $15. 8 pm. One Longfellow Square, 181 State St, Portland. 207.761.1757.

whAT’S Up wITh ThAT pEARL EARRINg | Many have wondered

(myself included) how the famous Dutch painter Johannes Vermeer painted works that were similar to photographs 150 years before the invention of photography. No joke, I’ve actually thought about this before. Luckily, Texasbased inventor Tim Jenison was proactive about answering the question that has plagued many art dorks around the world. The result was an epic research project that turned into the documentary called tim’S Vermeer, which tracks Jenison’s journey over eight years of research to find answers. Screening today at 2, 6, and 8 pm at Frontier Café in Fort Andross, Brunswick. 207.725.5222.

SEASoNAL LAUNCh | Start your

g2g To ThIS | Today marks

f ottMar LieBert, at Jonathan’s, in Ogunquit on May 28.

JUNE 13

f Dean ForD, at Empire, Portland on Friday, May 23.

monday 26

saturday 24 a worldwide protest against Monsanto and the agribusiness practices it stands for. If you care about where your food comes from, and what’s in it, head to Monument Square for the MarCh against Monsanto, where protesters will rally before a march starting at 2 pm. Wear red in global solidarity. Email marchagainstmonsanto.portland@gmail. com for more information. pERIoD DRAMA | Tonight at Mayo Street Arts, catch the staged reading of Stigmata: a tragedy in three actS, the lat-

JUNE 6

Memorial Day outside (the forecast looks perfect) with some lobster and live music at Portland Lobster Company (winner of a whopping three awards in our Best Of poll, including Best Patio/Outdoor Bar and Best Lobster Roll)? Yeah baby, they’re open again. Thank god for lobster and summer. Also, beer. Providing the tunes is the Portland group now is now, who have been playing their alternative rock covers and originals around town since 2001. 12 pm at 180 Commercial St., Portland. 207.775.2112. BEER + BoUNCy CASTLE | Not full yet? Memorial Day marks the beginning of a lot of great summer pastimes like grilling and drinking while its warm outside (because some of us don’t let the seasons dictate our imbibing habits). But then there are those pesky children you made. How do they fit into your outdoor activities? Well, you simply must attend events that meld drinking, grilling, and

kids. Happily, there’s the FaMiLy Feast MeMoriaL Day Bash in East Bayside today, with Tandem Coffee Roasters, Bunker Brewing Co., and an inflatable castle (fingers crossed it doesn’t blow away with your children inside, which actually happened in New York recently). $20. 12-7 pm at 122 Anderson St., Portland. Get more info at facebook.com/familyfeastmaine.

tuEsday 27 AT ThE SCREEN DooR | Tonight

is a special night for Port Veritas. Not only do they host their monthly open MiC & poetry sLaM, including a fourth-Tuesday round of Individual World Poetry Slam Qualifiers (a cumulative 3-2-1 slam, meaning the first round is three minutes, the second round is two, and the third is one) but former Poet Laureate of Portland Bruce Spang, featured in Nick Schroeder’s recent poetry round-up (see “Lips don’t lie,” April 25) will do a reading. Of Spang’s latest, Boy at the Screen Door, Schroeder wrote: “He languishes over the musculature of bodies, the sensememory of once-in-a-lifetime moments; the currents waxing and waning through cycles of nature and desire.” $2.50 at 7 pm. Bull Feeney’s, 375 Fore St., Portland. 207.773.7210. hE IS ThE BEST ThINg| Moody singer-songwriter and the subject of this week’s cover story, ray LaMontagne, returns to Portland tonight, with a new set of musicians and a new album to hawk: Supernova, released this month. Joining him will be Southern singer-songwriter and guitarist Jason isBeLL, formerly of the Drive-By Truckers. Tickets are $4050. 7:30 pm. Cumberland County Civic Center, 48 Free St., Portalnd. 207.775.3458.

WEdnEsday 28 BARCELoNA NIghTS | ottMar LieBert, who performs

with PARKER MILLSAP

tonight with his band Luna negra at Jonathan’s in Ogunquit, has had an interesting life. The German-born guitarist and producer, best known for his Spanish-influenced music and “Nouveau Flamenco” style, was ordained as a Zen monk in 2006. It makes sense, then, that the beauty of this music comes from its simplicity; Leibert and Luna Negra use only a flamenco guitar, bass, and percussion, giving their sound plenty of breathing space. $42.50. 8 pm. 92 Bourne Ln., Ogunquit. 207.646.4777. JUMpER CABLE | The farmfresh Yarmouth eatery Gather not only offers a delicious menu but also plays host to charming Acoustic Wednesdays. This evening, dine on a made-fromscratch dinner and listen to the tunes of local singer-songwriter Jenny JuMpstart, who has been singing in Maine for almost 20 years now and has a great old-timey sound to her. 7 pm at 189 Main St., Yarmouth. 207.847.3250.

JUNE 15

JUNE 25

JULY 8

THE MALLETT BROTHERS BAND, SPOSE, THE WRECKING, THE OTHER BONES, MODEL AIRPLANE, THE KENYA HALL BAND, NICK LAVALLE WITH THE MAINE YOUTH ROCK ORCHESTRA

thursday 29 wELCoME hoME | Next week, Geno’s Rock Club fills the stage once again with five great acts. To help celebrate the homecoming of hip-hop performer BrzowsKi, DJ/producer MiKe CLouDs and DJ Moshe from their tour of Europe, these fellas are (hip)-hopping right back on the stage. Joining them will be Kiddead and Sofa Brown. $5. 9:30 pm at 625 Congress St., Portland. 207.221.2382. CLANDESTINE RIppLES | Also next Thursday, One Longfellow Square hosts the rippLe eFFeCt proJeCt MasqueraDe BaLL, with proceeds helping to provide material and financial support to independent orphanages in Sub-Saharan Africa. There will be music, dancing, hors d’oeuvres, a door prize, a silent auction, and a cash bar. $30-35. 7 pm. 181 State St., Portland. 207.760.1757.

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Now Open Monday - Saturday 11 a.m. - 8 p.m. VOTED “BEST CHEAP EATS” 3 YEARS IN A ROW! DISARmINGLy DomeSTIC From l to r on wall: ‘division Painting #114,’ ‘Counterform Painting #47,’ and ‘division Painting #116,’ all by Frederick lynch (oil on canvas over panel); on floor: ‘sunshine,” by duane Paluska (painted wood). The sweet appeal of viewing art in the Corey Daniels Gallery comes from the sense of a space being in use, a neardomestic atmosphere. While the guts of the 19th century colonial house and barn have been modernized into stark, slick caverns of concrete and glass, the careful curation of the gallery’s personal collection of furniture and objects d’art breaks the pristine vacuum of the usual white-wall reverence. It is a calculated casual disarmament of the usually austere art experience for “Install 4,” a group show for Jeff Kellar, Frederick Lynch, and Duane Paluska. In collaboration with Paluska’s ICON Gallery in Brunswick, curator Miles Spadone orchestrates the work of these Maine artists into a visual panel discussion on shape, material, and craft. Thematically clean-lined and tensionfraught, the contemplation of shape readily beams out of each painting and sculptural element. The slow burn of the exhibition is how adroitly all three artists navigate the gray area between two- and three-dimensional art, and how that transposition from one to the other is mutually informing. The building, etching, and layering of material in each painting pulls it off the wall. Each sculpture draws a line or blocks a color to be either a stilllife to copy, or a prototype for study. In a chicken-and-egg fashion, it’s hard to decipher whether the positive/negative battle on the canvas inspired the joinery of wood and enamel, or vice versa, but that experimentation of spatial relationships oscillates back and forth from piece to piece. “Install 4” is a deceptively large show, miraculously uncramped along the walls, tables, and onto the floor. The pieces are so naturally at home in the space, the show suggests a well-appointed living room more than museum hall. It’s an accessible aesthetic imperative to Spadone’s crafted intent. These living craftsmen benefit from a living environment, one that suggests the pursuit of new questions, rather than a canonized answer. Paluska’s grace is holding the paintbrush and saw in the same hand. His collages of acrylic swathes with canvas and linen so crisply abut as to appear to be

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puzzle boxes neatly set together. His sculptures detail the playful divergences that happen in his formal fine woodworking shop — perfectly joined angles bent like broken frames, defiantly dysfunctional furniture pieces, and coolly lounging vessels. The tessellated geometries of Lynch’s tightly-packed patterns get biological in their repetition, multiplying fractals like an algal bloom or crystals under the microscope. Existing on huge canvases as numbered Division Paintings or in his free-standing Division Pieces of wood, glass, and aluminum, Lynch’s lines buzz from the confinement of their space on the plane. When these individual forms are extracted and honed in wood outlines, their orphaned isolation is palpable. The quiet weight of Kellar’s gorgeous high-contrast silhouette shapes is created from the complex application of resin, clay, and pigment to aluminum plates. Through layering, polishing, and incising of this composite, a depth builds up creating a supple, encaustic-like surface. The blacks are deeply black, the whites are luminescent, with a minutely blurred glow at each line edge. Set slightly away from the wall, the paper-think edge of aluminum floats the forms as if the view is actually a window looking out to distant brutalist buildings on the horizon. The effect is an unphotographable, in-person viewing experience. When he applies this same mixture to his small wood pieces, it has a similarly softening effect. These office-desk-sized objects appear shy in the scope of the other works, but escape preciousness in their sharp execution. From the common languages of the three artists’ dialogue, viewers may easily tease out the classic conversations regarding form, function, material — but the great subtext of “Install 4” is the inherent community that these works arise out of; a community that savors the debating of conformation, wrestling of elements, and laboring of craft. ^

“INSTALL 4,” mixed media work by Jeff Kellar + Frederick Lynch + Duane Paluska | through June 6 | at Corey Daniels Gallery, 2208 Post Rd, Wells | 207.646.5301

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gage’s new plaY acknowledges contradiction _BY megan gr u mB ling The Convent of the Mother of God, a 17th century religious order in Italy, seethes with seductions, power plays and manipulated “miracles.” At the center of this intrigue is Benedetta Carlini, an educated, masculine, and highly sexualized young women who escapes parental abuse, manipulates her way to a position of power in the convent, and then proceeds to abuse that power — both in order to keep it, and for her own pleasure. Her rise and fall make up the story of Stigmata, a new play by Carolyn Gage, which receives a staged reading this weekend at Mayo Street Arts. In the first scenes of Stigmata, we see Benedetta as a sexually precocious teenager at home, directing her reluctant friends in a re-enactment of the rape of Saint Agnes, in which Benedetta plays the Saint. Her mother promptly PReCoCiouS AnD PoweRfuL Julia reddy as Benedetta hauls her off to the convent, carlini in carolyn gage’s Stigmata. where Benedetta is initially rejected on basis of her class, but is accepted after faking her first mirof Stephanie Ross, also features Beth acle. Later, Benedetta has a relationship Chasse, Amanda Painter, Beth Somerwith the Abbess close enough to arouse ville, and Megan Tripaldi, and Saturday suspicion. Once the Abbess dies, Benenight’s performance will be followed by a detta manages to succeed her, but goes on talk-back (led by myself). to institute the same instruments of paThe cultural significance of the era of triarchal and religious repression — whipStigmata, Gage explains, is one of a “latepings, hair shirts, punishments of silence stage cultural recovery” of lesbian culture: — at which women like herself have long “Cultures recover from traumatic silence chafed. Stigmata forces us to ask, as Gage and secrecy in stages that are similar to writes in the introduction to her script, those experienced by individual survivors.” whether Benedetta is “perpetrating fraud The earliest stages of recovery, in this foror creatively manipulating the system to mulation, find the victim casting off the retain her authenticity?” stereotypes imposed upon them by the domGage was first drawn to Carlini’s story inant culture, and instead taking up new, some time ago, reading Stanford historian positive ones. By the later stages, however, Judith C. Brown’s Immodest Acts: The Life of the victim demonstrates “the ability to tola Lesbian Nun in Renaissance Italy, a scholarly erate contradiction, to hold simultaneously account of the woman’s trial, based on in consciousness two conflicting ideas,” Inquisition records. Years later, having and can acknowledge conditions or persolived and worked in many communities nas with more moral ambiguity. of women, Gage was struck by the social In our own time, Gage says, lesbian culphenomenon she came to know as “horiture “has barely begun to emerge from the zontal hostility,” or community members trauma of the closet”; accordingly, a new fighting amongst themselves. “It’s easier emergence of positive lesbian archetypes for women to attack other women about is apparent across a wide swath of popular issues that are not the source of our opculture. But no community comprises only pression,” argues Gage, “than it is to positive archetypes. The story of Benedetta identify and attack the institutions that presents a complicated, often disturbing are the real problem.” Gage came to see protagonist who is neither all black nor all the world described in Brown’s book as white. Gage writes that her goal has been “a crucible for horizontal hostility,” and to present “a lesbian central character who the woman at the center of the story as is both survivor and perpetrator.” In doing “larger-than-life in so many ways — a draso, she challenges us to acknowledge the matist’s dream!” grays and contradictions of Benedetta CarThis complex character of Benedetta lini and other such victims, and to develop will be played, in this weekend’s staged our compassion for them. ^ reading, by Julia Reddy, a sensitive and powerful actress who has previously Stigmata, by Carolyn Gage | Directed by acted in Acorn Productions’ Cymbeline and Stephanie Ross | Produced by Cauldron and Mad Horse’s The Play About the Baby. The Labrys Productions, at Mayo Street Arts, cast of 13, working under the direction May 24 and 25 | 207.879.4629

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There is a bridge in “Smashing,” coming late in Ray LaMontagne’s new Supernova, where many of the wonderfully produced instruments fall away and there is nothing left to focus on but his raspy voice: “I look at you, and I don’t know who I am/ I look at you, I see my life is a sham … I fooled you once and I can do it again.” As with the best of LaMontagne’s work, his delivery is infused with passion and heartache and nostalgia, the kind of emotion that makes you feel like he can peek right into your very soul. Even as he’s straight-up telling you that he’s been fucking with you all along. Long-time fans should appreciate that he then, just as he’s at his most dour, fires right back into a rave-up, hardcharging: “I’ll be the one who stays/ You should be here with me now.” In one couplet, he references and turns on their head two of the darkest, and most delicately pretty, works from Till the Sun Turns Black, the album that is LaMontagne’s defining moment for many of his fans — those who were hooked by Trouble, but then absolutely crushed by the immensity of Black’s exploration of the human condition. “There’s nothing I want more/ Than to wake up on your floor,” he sang on “Can I Stay,” an expression of primal love and devotion. “Don’t lose your faith in me/ And I will try not to lose faith in you,” he sang of the implicit bargain we make with our loved ones. And so it’s perhaps not surprising that those same fans hear lyrics like “as a child we ran through fields of clover,” paired with sunshiney guitars and keyboards in Supernova’s opening “Lavender,” and think: Fuck, what a bunch of derivative flowerchild, ’60s bullshit. Or the title track. Wow. There are shades of Smash Mouth’s “Walking on the Sun” in that flavor of pop, centered around an acoustic guitar, but with an electric guitar climbing into a glockenspiel’s plink and bouncy keyboards to go with escapist lyrics: “Gonna get out of here, and never come back.” I mean: “I want you, to be my girl”? And that video, with all the psychedelic animation, like the video feed from LaMontagne’s 17-yearold acid trips? For real? Nor does any of this mention the fact that he’s jettisoned, for his new album and tour, the band that sounded so tight on his last tour and with whom he was so enamored that he actually released his last record, God Willin’ and the Creek Don’t

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Those who want to proclaim this album as “happy Ray” clearly need to listen more closely.

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LoyAL to hIs Muse erstwhile mainer Ray lamontagne used to work in a shoe factory in lewiston (and we’ll never let him forget it). Rise, as Ray LaMontagne and the Pariah Dogs. (It, like, comes up different in iTunes and stuff.) But if you were expecting Ray to stay the course, you really haven’t been paying attention. He never worried about satisfying a fan base that fell in love with the Van Morrison-meets-Otis Redding bluesfolk of Trouble. He was never tied to producer Ethan Johns, who helped him craft that sound (or Jonathan Wyman and the Jeremiah Freed boys before that, for what it’s worth). He will tell you without any hesitation that he thinks much of his old work is terrible, and letting him know that you love songs like “One Lonesome Saddle” or “I Wish I Could Change Your Mind,” from before Trouble, is basically an insult. Above all, LaMontagne is loyal to his muse. If that means working with a whole new set of Nashville session musicians and the Black Keys’ Dan Auerbach as producer, then that’s what’s going to happen. And thus, his rootsy, Americana sound

— which won him a Grammy I can assure you he doesn’t give a shit about — has been replaced on Supernova with something approaching British invasion, Humble Pie and the Small Faces and the Kinks. Often, it doesn’t sound very much like a band at all, rather a slew of instruments expertly placed with studio wizardry. “Pick up a Gun” is almost industrial in the open, with a digital percussion and a swirling, Eastern keyboard. It’s as experimental as some of the recent Metal Feathers stuff, with a wash of cymbal and twanging distortion. But then everything clears up for LaMontagne’s vocals, dreamy and seemingly content, even as the lyrics are dour and mean-spirited: “Never want to see your face again … alone in the dark/ Can’t find me/ That’s okay, can’t feel a thing.” Really, those who want to proclaim this album as “happy Ray” clearly need to listen more closely. Sure, “Airwaves” is just about the

perfect song for doing a whole lot of nothing but sitting by the lake on a sunny day, with a calypso vibe and chiming ukulele. The finish is exquisite, with late electric guitar, just picking a couple of notes, a pair of lingering Spaghetti Western string lines competing in the channels, roiling floor toms, even a faint blast of Wurlitzer from time to time and some spacey keyboards. But LaMontagne drops in an almost pained panting in the postchorus and the couple comprising Rusty James and Betty Sue are consumed and made nothing by the Southern California they inhabit: “Makes you feel like you’re already part of the past.” “She’s the One” opens as full rock band, with a muted guitar descending, and LaMontagne is as aggressive as you’ve heard him. Not the bandleader from “Three More Days,” but more growling and animalistic. It’s just shy of being heavy, thanks to rounded and warm edges, but the “I just got to get to know that girl” is more stalker than lover. Even “Ojai,” which ought to appeal most to fans of his older material, with its “Stand By Me” qualities, isn’t anything like happy, despite the dreamy acoustic strum. It’s the story of a guy who just can’t win: “It’s not like he gave in/ He just never got that/ Second wind.” But damn if that bridge isn’t wondrous, with piano dancing through it and leading into a finish I can’t wait to see executed on stage. How will all these pieces come together? How will they capture the pure nostalgia of “Drive-In Movies,” with its dueling electric guitars of slightly different tone and punched-in chime for the chorus? As always, LaMontagne’s voice is the center, which could easily carry the song with nothing but an acoustic guitar, if circumstances called for it. When you strip away the producer, the instrumentalists, even LaMontagne’s voice, what’s always left is the songwriting; if you’re a fan of Ray’s and find yourself disappointed by the songwriting here, then I don’t know what to tell you. He continues to be an inventive storyteller, to play expertly with the verse-chorus-verse trope, and to always have another surprise up his sleeve. It’s just different. Which is the same as it’s always been. ^

Supernova | Released by Ray LaMontagne | on RCA Records | with Jason Isbell | at Cumberland County Civic Center, in Portland | May 27 | www.raylamontagne.com


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FRIDAY 23

dance night with DJ Asia | 9 pm | $10, $20 youth 18-20 BAYSIDE BOWL | Portland | Bottom of the East | 8 pm BIG EASY | Portland | Travis James Humphrey & the Honky Tonk Love Machine | 10 pm BLUE | Portland | Steve Wark Jazz Ensemble | 6 pm BUBBA’S SULKY LOUNGE | Portland | “Everything Dance Party,” with DJ Jon | 7 pm CREMA COFFEE COMPANY | Portland | Dave Bullard | 11 am DOBRA TEA | Portland | Spoonmaker’s Diamond | 8 pm EMPIRE | Portland | Chaos Sauce + Shut Down Brown | 10 pm GINZA TOWN | Portland | karaoke | 8:30 pm LOCAL SPROUTS COOPERATIVE | Portland | Tom Whitehead MARK’S PLACE | Portland | Ya Favorite Homie JR | 10 pm OASIS | Portland | upstairs: DJ Lenza | 9 pm OLD PORT TAVERN | Portland | DJ Tubbs | 9 pm PORTLAND EAGLES | Portland | Chris Cole | 7 pm PROFENNO’S | Westbrook | DJ Jim Fahey | 9 pm SALVAGE BBQ & SMOKEHOUSE | Portland | “American Music Night,” performers TBA | 10 pm SEASONS GRILLE | Portland | karaoke with Long Island Larry | 8:30 pm | Dom Colizzi + Trisha Mason Band | 9 pm SILVER HOUSE TAVERN | Portland | karaoke | 9 pm SPACE GALLERY | Portland | Metal Feathers + Contrapposto + Foam Castles | 8:30 pm | $10-12 STYXX | Portland | back room: DJ Chris O | 9 pm | front room: DJ Duran | 9 pm

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SUNDAY 25

GREATER PORTLAND THURSDAY 22

51 WHARF | Portland | DJ Revolve |

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SEA DOG BREWING/SOUTH PORTLAND | South Portland | karaoke | 10 pm SEASONS GRILLE | Portland | DJ Colin

| 7 pm

SILVER HOUSE TAVERN | Portland |

karaoke | 9 pm

STOCKHOUSE | Westbrook | Now is

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Vudu Sister | 8:30 pm BAYSIDE BOWL | Portland | Lisa/Liza | 8 pm BLUE | Portland | Josh Doughty + Brendan Hogan + Last Sip BUBBA’S SULKY LOUNGE | Portland | “’80s Night,” with DJ Jon | 7 pm | $5 BUCK’S NAKED BBQ/PORTLAND | Portland | “acoustic night,” performers TBA | 4 pm BULL FEENEY’S | Portland | Mama’s Boomshack | 9:30 pm THE DOGFISH BAR AND GRILLE | Portland | Travis James Humphrey | 5 pm EMPIRE | Portland | Dean Ford + One Shot Nothing + Band Apollo | 9:30 pm | $6 GINZA TOWN | Portland | karaoke | 8:30 pm LOCAL SPROUTS COOPERATIVE | Portland | Zach Higgins + Chris Pulsoni OLD PORT TAVERN | Portland | DJ Mike Mahoney | 9 pm PORTLAND EAGLES | Portland | Steve Clancy | 7 pm PROFENNO’S | Westbrook | karaoke with DJ Bob Libby | 9 pm SEASONS GRILLE | Portland | DJ Chuck Igo | 5 pm | DJ Scotty Russell | 9 pm SILVER HOUSE TAVERN | Portland | karaoke | 9 pm SKYBOX BAR AND GRILL | Westbrook | DJ Kerry | 9 pm | $5 STYXX | Portland | back room: DJ Cherry Lemonade | 9 pm | front room: DJ Tony B | 9 pm UNION STATION BILLIARDS | Portland | karaoke with TJ the DJ | 9 pm

SATURDAY 24

51 WHARF | Portland | lounge: DJ

Tony B | 9 pm | main floor: DJ Jay-C | 9 pm ANDY’S OLD PORT PUB | Portland | Adele & Jude | 8:30 pm

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Mike Krapovicky | 5:30 pm BASSLINES | Portland | “Chaos,” dance night with Ya Favorite Homie JR | 8 pm | $10, $20 youth 18-20 BRIAN BORU | Portland | Irish session | 3 pm LFK | Portland | Dave Connolly | 2 pm LOCAL SPROUTS COOPERATIVE | Portland | Sean Mencher & Friends | 11 am OLD PORT TAVERN | Portland | karaoke with DJ Mike Mahoney | 9 pm PROFENNO’S | Westbrook | open mic | 6 pm STYXX | Portland | karaoke with Cherry Lemonade | 7 pm

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ANDY’S OLD PORT PUB | Portland | James Wholey | 6:30 pm

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MJ’S WINE BAR | Portland | open jazz

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ACOUSTIC ARTISANS | Portland |

Maeve Gilchrest + Nic Gareiss | 7 pm ANDY’S OLD PORT PUB | Portland | Annalise Emerick | 6:30 pm BLUE | Portland | acoustic jam session | 8:30 pm GRITTY MCDUFF’S | Portland | Travis James Humphrey | 10 pm LOCAL 188 | Portland | Jaw Gems | 10 pm MAMA’S CROWBAR | Portland | “Piano Night,” with Jimmy Dority | 9 pm MARK’S PLACE | Portland | DJ Roy

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THURSDAY 29

51 WHARF | Portland | DJ Revolve |

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Dating Easy

| Bad Kitty & the Phat Cats Band | 7 pm BEAR’S DEN TAVERN | Dover Foxcroft | Midnight Rose BLACK BEAR CAFE | Naples | Paddy Mills BLUE MOON LOUNGE | Skowhegan | DJ Montana Green BRAY’S BREWPUB | Naples | Blues Mafia | 9:30 pm CLUB TEXAS | Auburn | Candy Striper Death Orgy + Ascent to Power + Endgame + Pigboat + Ripfence + Sylvia | 5 pm ELEMENTS: BOOKS COFFEE BEER | Biddeford | First Person Plural | 7 pm FATBOY’S SALOON | Biddeford | DJ Dennis the Lil’ Musicman FUSION | Lewiston | DJ Kool V | 9 pm THE GREEN ROOM | Sanford | DJ BPhat | 9 pm HIGHLANDS COFFEE HOUSE | Thomaston | Blind Albert | 7 pm HOLLYWOOD SLOTS | Bangor | JuiceBox | 9 pm KERRYMEN PUB | Saco | Easy Money Band | 8 pm THE LIBERAL CUP | Hallowell | Forecity Drifters | 9 pm MAINE STREET | Ogunquit | DJ Joe Gauthreaux | 9 pm MAINELY BREWS | Waterville | Smoked Salmon | 8 pm MCSEAGULL’S | Boothbay Harbor | Boneheads MEMORY LANE MUSIC HALL | Standish | Substitutes + Radio Star MILLBROOK TAVERN & GRILLE | Bethel | Shawn Tooley | 7 pm MINE OYSTER | Boothbay Harbor | Mama’s Boomshack MONTSWEAG ROADHOUSE | Woolwich | Pitch Black Ribbons MOOSE ALLEY | Rangeley | Scott & Joe Band | 9 pm MR. GOODBAR | Old Orchard Beach | Stolen Mojo OLD MILL PUB | Skowhegan | St. Huckleberry PEDRO O’HARA’S/LEWISTON | Lewiston | Denny Breau | 7 pm PENOBSCOT POUR HOUSE | Bangor | Dueling Pianos ROOSTER’S | Augusta | Brad and Bons RUN OF THE MILL BREWPUB | Saco | Steve Jones SAMOSET RESORT | Rockport | Primo Cubano | 3 pm SEA DOG BREWING/TOPSHAM | Topsham | karaoke with DJ Stormin Norman | 10 pm SIDE STREET CAFE | Bar Harbor | Larks | 9 pm SILVER SPUR | Mechanic Falls | Cowboy Billy SILVER STREET TAVERN | Waterville | Michael Reny

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302 SMOKEHOUSE & TAVERN | Fryeburg | Tom Rebmann | 11 am

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Skowhegan | open mic jam | 5 pm BRAY’S BREWPUB | Naples | jam ses-

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THE BRUNSWICK OCEANSIDE GRILLE | Old Orchard Beach | Local 109

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HOLLYWOOD SLOTS | Bangor | karaoke | 6 pm

THE KENNEBEC WHARF | Hallowell |

open jam with Chris Poulson | 5 pm THE LIBERAL CUP | Hallowell | Golden Oak | 6 pm MAINE STREET | Ogunquit | karaoke | 9 pm MR. GOODBAR | Old Orchard Beach | Leppardmania [Def Leppard tribute] NARAL’S EXPERIENCE ARABIA | Auburn | open mic with Johnny Rock | 8 pm THE OLDE MILL TAVERN | Harrison | open mic | 5 pm RAVEN’S ROOST | Brunswick | open mic with Yankee Wailer | 3 pm SIDE STREET CAFE | Bar Harbor | Tim Lewis | 6 pm TAILGATE BAR & GRILL | Gray | open mic blues jam | 4 pm

MONDAY 26

THE BRUNSWICK OCEANSIDE GRILLE | Old Orchard Beach | Diezel

| 1 pm

BYRNES IRISH PUB/BATH | Bath | Irish session | 7 pm FOG BAR & CAFE | Rockland | open mic | 8 pm KERRYMEN PUB | Saco | open mic | 7 pm MAINELY BREWS | Waterville | open mic with Mike Rodrigue | 9 pm PADDY MURPHY’S | Bangor | karaoke | 9:30 pm PEDRO O’HARA’S/LEWISTON | Lewiston | open mic with Mike Krapovicky | 6:30 pm TIME OUT PUB | Rockland | Alexis P. Suter Band | $15

TUESDAY 27

AMERICAN LEGION POST 56 | York |

AdvAntAge FunerAl & CremAtion 899-4605 www.AdvAntAgeportlAnd.Com

eford | Travis James Humphrey | 9 pm CHARLAMAGNE’S | Augusta | open

mic with John Hasnip | 7:30 pm COLE FARMS | Gray | open mic EASY STREET LOUNGE | Hallowell | open mic | 8 pm FATBOY’S SALOON | Biddeford | acoustic open mic | 8 pm FREEDOM CAFE | Naples | karaoke FRONT STREET PUBLIC HOUSE | Bath | open mic FUSION | Lewiston | open mic & karaoke GFB SCOTTISH PUB | Old Orchard Beach | karaoke THE GIN MILL | Augusta | open mic | 7:30 pm THE KENNEBEC WHARF | Hallowell | open jam with Yikes It’s Josh | 9 pm NARAL’S EXPERIENCE ARABIA | Auburn | open mic blues jam | 7 pm THE RACK | Carabassett | open mic | 6 pm READFIELD EMPORIUM | Readfield | open mic | 6 pm ROOSTER’S | Augusta | Scott & Rick SEA DOG BREWING/TOPSHAM | Topsham | open mic | 9:30 pm SEA40 | Lewiston | open mic with Nick Racioppi | 7 pm SILVER STREET TAVERN | Waterville | open mic SPEAKEASY | Rockland | open mic | 8 pm TANTRUM | Bangor | karaoke UNION HOUSE PUB & PIZZA | Biddeford | open mic | 6 pm WATER STREET GRILL | Gardiner | DJ Roger Collins WOODMAN’S BAR & GRILL | Orono | open mic | 10 pm

THURSDAY 29

302 SMOKEHOUSE & TAVERN | Frye-

burg | open mic | 8:30 pm BEAR’S DEN TAVERN | Dover Foxcroft | karaoke

BRAY’S BREWPUB | Naples | karaoke with DJ Billy Adams | 9:30 pm

BYRNES IRISH PUB/BRUNSWICK |

Brunswick | karaoke | 8:30 pm THE CAGE | Lewiston | open blues jam

| 7 pm

CAPTAIN BLY’S TAVERN | Buckfield | open mic | 7 pm

CAPTAIN DANIEL STONE INN | Brunswick | open mic | 6 pm

CHAMPIONS SPORTS BAR | Biddeford | karaoke with DJ Caleb Biggers | 9:30 pm

CLUB TEXAS | Auburn | DJ B-Set | 6 pm GFB SCOTTISH PUB | Old Orchard Beach | Robert Johnson Project

HIGHLANDS COFFEE HOUSE | Thomaston | open mic | 6 pm

THE LIBERAL CUP | Hallowell | Steve Jones Band | 7 pm

LOMPOC CAFE | Bar Harbor | open mic MAINELY BREWS | Waterville | kara-

oke | 9 pm

MINE OYSTER | Boothbay Harbor | Shakes

MONTSWEAG ROADHOUSE | Wool-

Brunswick | Irish session | 7 pm

NARAL’S EXPERIENCE ARABIA |

Kittery Point | open mic | 7 pm CARMEN VERANDAH | Bar Harbor |

| 8 pm

CAPTAIN & PATTY’S RESTAURANT |

Call 899-4605

THE BRUNSWICK OCEANSIDE GRILLE | Old Orchard Beach | open mic

open mic | 6 pm

BYRNES IRISH PUB/BRUNSWICK |

Sponsored by Advantage, your pocket friendly provider:

THURSDAY 22

CHAMPIONS SPORTS BAR | Bidd-

DJ VJ

Thanks for putting clothes on your neighbor’s back.

karaoke | 8 pm

| 7 pm

oke with TJ the DJ

Thanks for helping us reduce landfills.

NEW HAMPSHIRE

BLUE MOON LOUNGE | Skowhegan |

Continued from p 19 TAILGATE BAR & GRILL | Gray | kara-

Thanks for helping us create jobs.

WEDNESDAY 28

open mic | 9 pm CLUB 737 | Bath | open mic with Yankee Wailer | 9 pm DOWN UNDER CLUB | Bangor | karaoke | 7:30 pm IRISH TWINS PUB | Lewiston | open mic | 7 pm LION’S PRIDE | Brunswick | open mic | 7 pm MAIN TAVERN | Bangor | open mic | 9 pm MAINELY BREWS | Waterville | Dave Mello | 6 pm | open blues jam | 9 pm MONTSWEAG ROADHOUSE | Woolwich | open mic | 7 pm PADDY MURPHY’S | Bangor | open mic | 9:30 pm ROOSTER’S | Augusta | Christine Poulson & Steve Jones RUN OF THE MILL BREWPUB | Saco | open mic | 8 pm SHENANIGANS | Augusta | open mic SILVER STREET TAVERN | Waterville | karaoke TRAIN’S TAVERN | Lebanon | open mic | 7 pm WATER STREET GRILL | Gardiner | open mic

wich | Fighting Fiction

CARA IRISH PUB & RESTAURANT | Dover | bluegrass jam with Steve Roy | 9 pm CENTRAL WAVE | Dover | Ken Ormes Trio CHOP SHOP PUB | Seabrook | karaoke | 8 pm DOVER BRICK HOUSE | Dover | Pitch Black Ribbons | 9 pm THE HOLY GRAIL | Epping | Karen Grenier | 8 pm MARTINGALE WHARF | Portsmouth | Don Campbell | 9 pm MILLIE’S TAVERN | Hampton | Norman Bishop THE RED DOOR | Portsmouth | Pile + Grass Is Green + Family Planning + Rick Rude RUDI’S | Portsmouth | Mike Stockbridge | 6 pm STONE CHURCH | Newmarket | Jordan Tirrell Wysocki & Jim Predergast | 6 pm THIRSTY MOOSE TAPHOUSE | Portsmouth | Ol’ Factory | 9 pm

FRIDAY 23

CARTELLI’S BAR AND GRILL | Dover

| Dave Nappi | 5 pm CENTRAL WAVE | Dover | Drama Squad DJs CHOP SHOP PUB | Seabrook | Funnel DANIEL STREET TAVERN | Portsmouth | karaoke DOLPHIN STRIKER | Portsmouth | Now is Now | 9:30 pm FURY’S PUBLICK HOUSE | Dover | Pat & The Hats GRILL 28 | Portsmouth | James Gilmore HARLOW’S PUB | Peterborough | Youngest Sun | $8 THE HOLY GRAIL | Epping | Sirateau | 8 pm KELLEY’S ROW | Dover | Fling | 9 pm KJ’S SPORTS BAR | Newmarket | karaoke | 9 pm MILLIE’S TAVERN | Hampton | karaoke RUDI’S | Portsmouth | Duke & Guest | 6 pm SAVORY SQUARE BISTRO | Hampton | Dave Gerard THE SPAGHETTI STAIN | Dover | DJ Jett | 9:30 pm STONE CHURCH | Newmarket | Ghost Dinner Band + Gang of Thieves | $6/$8 THIRSTY MOOSE TAPHOUSE | Portsmouth | Funktapuss | 9 pm WALLY’S PUB | Hampton | Last Laugh | 9 pm

SATURDAY 24

CENTRAL WAVE | Dover | Drama Squad DJs

CHOP SHOP PUB | Seabrook | Wildside

DANIEL STREET TAVERN | Ports-

mouth | karaoke

DOLPHIN STRIKER | Portsmouth | Amorphous Band | 9:30 pm DOVER BRICK HOUSE | Dover | Band Without Hands + Dino Heart + Escape Pod + Potsy + Raunchy Randos | $7 FURY’S PUBLICK HOUSE | Dover | Amulus

GARY’S RESTAURANT & SPORTS LOUNGE | Rochester | Classic Invasion HARLOW’S PUB | Peterborough | All

DJ Baby Bok Choy + DJ T-Coz | 8 pm THE OAK AND THE AX | Biddeford | Older Men + Dog + Methuin Muir + Pitch | 8 pm | $8 OLD GOAT | Richmond | open mic | 8 pm OLD MILL PUB | Skowhegan | Bob Lovelace ROOSTER’S | Augusta | Christine Poulson RUN OF THE MILL BREWPUB | Saco | Dapper Gents SEA DOG BREWING/BANGOR | Bangor | karaoke | 9 pm SILVER STREET TAVERN | Waterville | Jim Pryor SKIP’S LOUNGE | Buxton | open mic | 7 pm SUDS PUB | Bethel | Denny Breau | 9 pm TAILGATE BAR & GRILL | Gray | open mic | 8 pm TORCHES GRILL HOUSE | Kennebunk | open mic | 7 pm TRAIN’S TAVERN | Lebanon | karaoke with DJ Dick WATER STREET GRILL | Gardiner | DJ Roger Collins

Greenland | open mic | 7 pm

CARA IRISH PUB & RESTAURANT | Dover | Celtic bluegrass open session

Good :: Feel Good Collective | $8 THE HOLY GRAIL | Epping | Sidecar | 8:30 pm KELLEY’S ROW | Dover | Shana Stack Band | 9 pm | $5 MARTINGALE WHARF | Portsmouth | Retroactivists | 9 pm THE OAR HOUSE | Portsmouth | Don Severance | 7 pm PORTSMOUTH GAS LIGHT | Portsmouth | Phil & the Blanks | 7 pm THE RED DOOR | Portsmouth | Bobby Nakib RUDI’S | Portsmouth | PJ Donahue Combo | 6 pm SAVORY SQUARE BISTRO | Hampton | Judith Murray SEA KETCH | Hampton | Leo & Company | 1 pm | Steve Tolley | 6 pm THE SPAGHETTI STAIN | Dover | DJ Shawny O & DJ MK3 | 9:30 pm STONE CHURCH | Newmarket | Rustic Overtones + Dave Drouhin + | $12/$15 THIRSTY MOOSE TAPHOUSE | Portsmouth | Stop Tito | 9 pm WALLY’S PUB | Hampton | Whiskey Wild | 9 pm

mouth | open mic | 8 pm DOLPHIN STRIKER | Portsmouth | Joel

SUNDAY 25

FURY’S PUBLICK HOUSE | Dover | Stop

Dover | Irish session | 5 pm

HARLOW’S PUB | Peterborough | open

CARA IRISH PUB & RESTAURANT |

| 7 pm

CENTRAL WAVE | Dover | karaoke DOLPHIN STRIKER | Portsmouth | Dave Gerard | 8 pm Theriault | 9 pm

GARY’S RESTAURANT & SPORTS LOUNGE | Rochester | karaoke | 7 pm MILLIE’S TAVERN | Hampton | ka-

raoke

PRESS ROOM | Portsmouth | jazz jam

with Larry Garland | 6 pm SONNY’S TAVERN | Dover | Soggy Po’ Boys | 9 pm STONE CHURCH | Newmarket | bluegrass jam | 9 pm THIRSTY MOOSE TAPHOUSE | Portsmouth | open mic | 8 pm

WEDNESDAY 28

BLUE MERMAID | Portsmouth | open

mic | 8:30 pm

CENTRAL WAVE | Dover | karaoke DANIEL STREET TAVERN | PortsCage | 8 pm

Tito Collective

mic | 8 pm

DOLPHIN STRIKER | Portsmouth |

| 9 pm

Tim Gurshin | 7 pm

DOVER BRICK HOUSE | Dover | Dan

Walker + Jim Dozet | 10 am | karaoke with DJ Erich Kruger | 10 pm

GARY’S RESTAURANT & SPORTS LOUNGE | Rochester | Saxx Roxx PORTSMOUTH GAS LIGHT | Ports-

mouth | Donegans | 6 pm PRESS ROOM | Portsmouth | Katie

Seiler Quintet | 6 pm THE RED DOOR | Portsmouth | Green Lion Crew | 8 pm RI RA/PORTSMOUTH | Portsmouth | Irish session | 5 pm | Oran Mor | 7 pm RUDI’S | Portsmouth | Jarod Steer Trio | 10 am SEA KETCH | Hampton | Ray Zerkle | 1 pm STONE CHURCH | Newmarket | open mic with Dave Ogden | 7 pm

MONDAY 26

CARA IRISH PUB & RESTAURANT | Dover | karaoke

DOLPHIN STRIKER | Portsmouth | Old

School | 9 pm

ORCHARD STREET CHOP SHOP |

Dover | open mic with Dave Ogden | 8 pm THE RED DOOR | Portsmouth | Dag Shaw + Andrew Polakow SEA KETCH | Hampton | Ray Zerkle | 1 pm SONNY’S TAVERN | Dover | punk/ metal DJ night | 10 pm SPRING HILL TAVERN | Portsmouth | Old School | 9 pm STONE CHURCH | Newmarket | open blues jam | 7 pm

TUESDAY 27

BLUE MERMAID | Portsmouth |

“Honky Tonk Night,” with Seldom Playwrights

Anna Lombard

OPEN MIC | 6 pm | Union House Pub & Pizza, North Dam Mill, 2 Main St, 18230, Biddeford | 207.590.4825

“PORTLAND COMEDY SHOWCASE,” PERFORMERS TBA | 8 pm | Bull

Feeney’s, 375 Fore St, Portland | $5 | 207.773.7210

FURY’S PUBLICK HOUSE | Dover | Tim

DANIEL STREET TAVERN | Ports-

mouth | karaoke

Auburn | open mic with Johnny Rock

NOCTURNEM DRAFT HAUS | Bangor |

BRAMBER VALLEY BAR-B-BAR |

THE RED DOOR | Portsmouth | Evaredy RI RA/PORTSMOUTH | Portsmouth | Great Bay Sailor | 7 pm

RUDI’S | Portsmouth | Dimitri | 6 pm | Dimitri Yiannicopulus | 6 pm

WALLY’S PUB | Hampton | DJ Provo | 7

pm | Black Tide + Threat Signal + Affiance + Hatchet | 8 pm

CONCERTS CLASSICAL THURSDAY 22

PORTLAND STRING QUARTET | Boothbay Harbor Opera House, 86 Townsend Ave, Boothbay Harbor | 207.633.6855

SATURDAY 24

SUZANNE NANCE | 7:30 pm | Franco-

American Heritage Center, 46 Cedar St, Lewiston | $28 | 207.689.2000

SUNDAY 25

ALBERT MELTON & RANDALL MULLIN | 3 pm | Cathedral Church of St. Luke, 143 State Street, Portland | suggested donation $10/$5 SEACOAST WIND ENSEMBLE | 7:30 pm | Fryeburg Academy, Eastman Performing Arts Center, 745 Main St, Fryeburg | 207.935.9232 or fryeburgacademy.org

TUESDAY 27

PORTLAND SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA

Trio

THURSDAY 22

| 8 pm

DOLPHIN STRIKER | Portsmouth | Blue Birds | 9 pm

DOVER BRICK HOUSE | Dover | Dan Walker | 9 pm

MARTINGALE WHARF | Portsmouth | Brooks Hubbard | 9 pm MILLIE’S TAVERN | Hampton | Norman Bishop THE RED DOOR | Portsmouth | Tell Stories + Wren Kitz + Peter Squires RUDI’S | Portsmouth | Max Logue + Tiger Rulon Miller | 6 pm STONE CHURCH | Newmarket | Jordan Tirrell Wysocki & Jim Predergast | 6 pm

COMEDY THURSDAY 22

“A NIGHT OF STAND UP COMEDY,” WITH SAMUEL BENNETT, ET AL. |

7:30 pm | Players’ Ring, 105 Marcy St, Portsmouth, NH | $12, $10 seniors | 603.436.8123 or www.playersring.org COMEDY ON THE SQUARE | 7 pm | Spire 29, 29 School St, Gorham | $5 | 207.222.2068

FRIDAY 23

JOEYOKE | Fri-Tue Fri-Tues | 9 pm |

Sunset Deck, the Pier, Old Orchard Beach | 207.934.3532 ROB STEEN | Gold Room, 510 Warren Ave, Portland | 207.221.2343

SATURDAY 24

“COMEDY SHOW,” COMICS TBA | 10

pm | Freeport Theater of Awesome, 5 Depot St, Freeport | 800.838.3006 JOEYOKE | See listing for Fri

SUNDAY 25

JOEYOKE | See listing for Fri OPEN MIC | 9 pm | Mama’s Crowbar, 189 Congress St, Portland | 207.773.9230

MONDAY 26

JOEYOKE | See listing for Fri

TUESDAY 27

JOEYOKE | See listing for Fri

WEDNESDAY 28

“COMEDY NIGHT,” WITH JAY GROVE | 9 pm | Cara Irish Pub & Restaurant, 11 Fourth St, Dover, NH | 603.343.4390

Peaks Island, Portland | 207.766.5652 SUEDE | 8 pm | Jonathan’s, 92 Bourne Ln, Ogunquit | $30 | 207.646.4777 or jonathansrestaurant.com

MONDAY 26

HAT TRICK | See listing for Fri

| 7:30 pm | Cumberland County Civic Center, 48 Free St, 1st Floor, Portland | $40-50 | 207.775.3458 or theciviccenter.com

POPULAR

CHOP SHOP PUB | Seabrook | karaoke

“REGGAE SUNDAY KICK-OFF WITH EL GRANDE” | 12 pm | Jones Landing,

American Heritage Center, 46 Cedar St, Lewiston | $14/$16 | 207.689.2000

| 9 pm

CENTRAL WAVE | Dover | Ken Ormes

pm | One Longfellow Square, 181 State St, Portland | $15 | 207.761.1757 HAT TRICK | See listing for Fri JAZZ BRUNCH | 10 am | One Longfellow Square, 181 State St, Portland | $8 | 207.761.1757 JONATHAN EDWARDS | 8 pm | Stone Mountain Arts Center, 695 Dug Way Rd, Brownfield | $33 | 207.935.7292

TUESDAY 27

IGOR LOVCHINSKY | 7:30 pm | Franco-

CARA IRISH PUB & RESTAURANT |

Dover | bluegrass jam with Steve Roy

ANNA LOMBARD + BOSTON BOYS | 8

FRIDAY 23

| 9:30 am | Bates College, Olin Arts Center, 75 Russell St, Lewiston | $1.50 | 207.786.6135

THURSDAY 29

SUNDAY 25

GREEN LION CREW | Thurs 9 pm | Inn On the Blues, 7 Ocean Ave, York Beach | 207.351.3221 MONKEES | 8 pm | Hampton Beach Casino Ballroom, 169 Ocean Blvd, Hampton, NH | 603.929.4100 PORTLAND JAZZ ORCHESTRA | 8 pm | One Longfellow Square, 181 State St, Portland | $5 | 207.761.1757 ”TURNSTILE THURSDAY,” FREEFORM OPEN MIC | Thurs 7 pm | Com-

munity Television Network Theater, 516 Congress St, Portland | 207.775.2900

FRIDAY 23

CHAD PERRONE | 8 pm | Tupelo Music

Hall, 2 Young Rd, Londonderry, NH | $17 | 603.437.5100 or tupelohalllondonderry.com HAT TRICK | Fri + Sun-Mon 2-7 pm | Sunset Deck, the Pier, Old Orchard Beach | 207.934.3532 JAMES MCGARVEY | 9 pm | Inn On the Blues, 7 Ocean Ave, York Beach | 207.351.3221 SCOTT DAMGAARD | Fri-Sat Fri-Sat 9:30 pm | Hooligan’s Irish Pub, 2 Old Orchard Rd, Old Orchard Beach | 207.934.4063 STEEL PANTHER | 8 pm | Hampton Beach Casino Ballroom, 169 Ocean Blvd, Hampton, NH | $23 | 603.929.4100 WALKENHORSE | 9 pm | Pier Patio Pub, 2 Old Orchard St, Old Orchard Beach | 207.934.3595

SATURDAY 24

COUNTRY ROAD | Jimmy the Greek’s/

South Portland, 115 Philbrook Rd, South Portland | 207.774.7335 FORGET THE NIGHT | 10 am | Keith Anderson Community Center, 19 Bennoch Rd, Orono NORTH OF NASHVILLE | 8:30 pm | Harmony Hall, 383 Gray St, North Yarmouth | $10; BYOB | 207.657.4300 OTTMAR LIEBERT & LUNA NEGRA | 8 pm | Tupelo Music Hall, 2 Young Rd, Londonderry, NH | $45 | 603.437.5100 or tupelohalllondonderry.com SCOTT DAMGAARD | See listing for Fri SOULED OUT | 9 pm | Pier Patio Pub, 2 Old Orchard St, Old Orchard Beach | 207.934.3595 TIM THERIAULT | 9 pm | Inn On the Blues, 7 Ocean Ave, York Beach | 207.351.3221 TOM WOPAT | 7 pm | Jonathan’s, 92 Bourne Ln, Ogunquit | $27.50 | 207.646.4777 or jonathansrestaurant. com

JASON ISBELL + RAY LAMONTAGNE

Special Occasions at Bonobo Family, friends, local craft beer, good wine, locally sourced food, cheerful staff *Make

your event wildly delicious Birthdays, Graduations, Promotions 46 pine st @ brackett • in the west end 3 4 7 - 8 2 6 7 bonobopizza.com

’11

WEDNESDAY 28

MAEVE GILCHREST + NIC GAREISS | 7 pm | Skye Theatre, 2 Highland Dr, Carthage | $15 | 207.562.4445

OTTMAR LIEBERT & LUNA NEGRA | 8 pm | Jonathan’s, 92 Bourne Ln, Ogunquit | $42.50 | 207.646.4777 or jonathansrestaurant.com

PORTLAND SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA | 10:30 am | East End Commu-

nity School, 195 North St, Portland | 207.874.8228

THURSDAY 29

BILLY MACK COLLECTOR + TURNY LES + FIL CORBITT + HOLY SHADOW + CONNOR BRUCE | 6:30 pm | Meg Perry Center, 36 Market St, Portland | 207.619.4206 or megperrycenter.com GREENCARDS | 8 pm | Jonathan’s, 92 Bourne Ln, Ogunquit | $22.50 | 207.646.4777 or jonathansrestaurant. com GREEN LION CREW | See listing for Thurs

JAKE OWEN + ELI YOUNG BAND + CADILLAC THREE | 7 pm | Meadow-

brook U.S. Cellular Pavilion, 72 Meadowbrook Ln, Lake Winnipesaukee, Gilford, NH | $30-50 | 603.293.4700 or meadowbrook.net

TIM MCGRAW + KIP MOORE + CASSADEE POPE | 6 pm | Darling’s Water-

front Pavilion, 1 Railroad St, Bangor | $28.25-102.25 | 800.745.3000

“TURNSTILE THURSDAY,” FREEFORM OPEN MIC | See listing for

Thurs

DANCE PARTICIPATORY THURSDAY 22

SALSA DANCING WITH DJ BRAULIO |

BaseBall season is in Full swing! order your custom plaques or trophies today.

8 pm | Pearl, 444 Fore St, Portland | $5 | 207.653.8486

FRIDAY 23

INTERNATIONAL FOLK DANCE |

6:30 pm | People Plus/Brunswick, 35 Union St, Brunswick | $8, $5 seniors/ students | 207.700.7577

WEDNESDAY 28

WEDNESDAY NIGHT STOMP WITH PORTLAND SWING PROJECT | 7:30

pm | Acoustic Artisans, 594 Congress St, Portland | $5-10 sugg. donation | 207.671.6029 | acousticartisans.com

THURSDAY 29

“RIPPLE EFFECT PROJECT MASQUERADE BALL” | 7 pm | One Long-

fellow Square, 181 State St, Portland | $30/$35 | 207.761.1757

SALSA DANCING WITH DJ BRAULIO | See listing for Thurs

PERFORMANCE THURSDAY 22

“SHORT TERM DANCE VARIETY SHOW” | 5 pm | Bates College, Schaef-

fer Black Box Theater, 329 College St, Lewiston | 207.786.6400

FRIDAY 23

“VAUDE-VILLAGE” | with performances from Mr. Dean Diggins + Linette Miles + Jennifer Cormier + Elizabeth Burd + Joel Eckhaus + Continued on p 22

Trophy Warehouse 1021 ocean ave, porTland • (207) 773-4062 WWW.TrophyWarehousene.com


portLand.thephoenix.coM | the portLand phoenix | May 23, 2014 23

STEPHEN LONGFELLOW + BETSY SHOLL | 7 pm | RiverRun Bookstore,

Listings

142 Fleet St, Portsmouth, NH | 603.431.2100 or riverrunbookstore.com

TALKS Continued from p 21 illusionist Leland Faulkner | 7:30 pm | The Dance Hall, 7 Walker St, Kittery | $12 | 207.439.0114

SATURDAY 24

”GMO, OMG, WTF ARE WE EATING,” MARCH AGAINST MONSANTO | 2 pm | Monument Square, Congress St, Portland | 207.774.9979

SUNDAY 25

”17TH ANNUAL REDHOOK/RUNNER’S ALLEY 5KX” | 11 am | Redhook Ale Brewery, 35 Corporate Dr, Portsmouth, NH | $30 | 603.430.8600 x18

”AN EVENING WITH BECKY AND DYLAN BAKER” | 4 pm | College of

the Atlantic, 105 Eden St, Bar Harbor | $50 | 207.288.9500

RED HOT & LADY LIKE BURLESQUE

| 7 pm | Iron Tails Saloon, 559 Rte 109, Acton | 207.650.9345

OUTDOORS SATURDAY 24

“PAINTING IN THE WOODS” | 1

pm | Fields Pond Audubon Center, 216 Fields Pond, Holden | $10 | 207.989.2591

MONDAY 26

“SNOWY EGRET 5K RUN/WALK” |

South Portland’s New Premier Tanning Salon

8:30 pm | Scarborough Marsh Audubon Center, Pine Point Rd (Rte 9), Scarborough | $14 | 207.883.5100

FAIRS & FESTIVALS SATURDAY 24

“LALAPALALA MUSIC & ARTS FESTIVAL” | noon | Stone Church, 5 Gran-

ite St, Newmarket, NH | 603.659.6321

MAine’s neW sunless AirBrusH sYsteM eXPerience inFinitY sun tHe rolls roYce oF sunless tAnninG onlY $25 For tHe MontH oF MAY WitH tHis Ad 45 Western Ave so. PortlAnd next door to tropical smoothie Be sure to like us on FAceBook

COME GOLF WITH US! $35 WITH CART!! (REG. $50) offer expires 5/22/14 cannot be combined with any other offer. one person per coupon, each player must have a coupon to receive this offer.

FOOD WEDNESDAY 28

PORTLAND FARMERS’ MARKET | 7

am | Monument Square, Congress St, Portland | 207.774.9979

MONDAY 26

“FAMILY FEAST MEMORIAL DAY BASH” | 12-8 pm | with Bunker Brewing Co. + Tandem Coffee Roasters | 122 Anderson St, Portland | $20 | facebook.com/FamilyFeastMaine

POETRY & PROSE THURSDAY 22

DOUGLAS W. MILLIKEN; JOSHUA BODWELL; CJ HAUSER;MIRA MARIA PTACIN; JUSTIN TAYLOR; KIMBERLY ELKINS | 7 pm | Longfellow

Books, 1 Monument Way, Portland | 207.772.4045 or longfellowbooks.com KATE CHRISTENSEN | reads and discusses Blue Plate Special | 7 pm | RiverRun Bookstore, 142 Fleet St, Portsmouth, NH | 603.431.2100 or riverrunbookstore.com

THURSDAY 22

CHIP KIDD | graphic design talk & com-

edy show | 5:30 pm | Port City Music Hall, 504 Congress St, Portland | $30 | 207.899.4990 or portcitymusichall.com

SATURDAY 24

“IS RICHARD ESTES FOR REAL?” BY TED CONNELLY | 1 pm | Portland Muse-

um of Art, 7 Congress Square, Portland | 207.775.6148 or portlandmuseum.org

THEATER CITY THEATER | 207.282.0849 | citytheater.org | 205 Main St, Biddeford | May 23-

25: You Can’t Take It With You | Fri-Sat 7:30 pm; Sun 2 pm | $20 CROSS INSURANCE CENTER | 207.947.7345 | 74 Gilman Rd, Bangor | May 28: Mamma Mia! | 7:30 pm | $50-$90

DRAMATIC REPERTORY COMPANY

| dramaticrep.org | Portland Ballet Studio Theater, 517 Forest Ave, Portland | May 29-June 8: Equivocation | 7:30 pm | call for tickets

FREEPORT THEATER OF AWESOME

| 800.838.3006 | 5 Depot St, Freeport | May 24: American Songbook | 7 pm

LONG CREEK YOUTH DEVELOPMENT CENTER | 207. 822.2600 | 675 Westbrook

St, South Portland | May 22-June 10: Days of Change | 9:30 am

MAD HORSE THEATRE COMPANY

| 207.747.4148 | Mad Horse Theater, 24 Mosher St, South Portland | May 29-June 22: Grey Gardens | 7:30 pm | $20, $15 seniors/students (Thurs pay-whatyou-can) MAYO STREET ARTS | 207.615.3609 | 10 Mayo St, Portland | May 24-25: staged reading of Stigmata by Carolyn Gage | Sat 7 pm; Sun 2 pm MUSIC HALL | 603.436.2400 | themusichall.org | 131 Congress St, Portsmouth, NH | May 24: “Sing-Along Sound of Music” | 7 pm | $22

NEW HAMPSHIRE THEATRE PROJECT | 603.431.6644 | 959 Islington St,

Portsmouth, NH | May 23-25: Arsenic &

Old Lace | Fri-Sat 7 pm; Sun 2 pm | call for tickets

ORION PERFORMING ARTS CENTER | 207.729.3891 | 66 Republic Ave, Topsham

| May 22: “Man of La Mancha” | 2 pm | $70 $55 $45 PLAYERS’ RING | 603.436.8123 | playersring.org | 105 Marcy St, Portsmouth, NH | May 23-25: Marie Antoinette: The Color of Flesh | Fri-Sat 8 pm; Sun 2 pm | $12, $10 seniors PORTLAND PLAYERS | 207.799.7337 | 420 Cottage Rd, Portland | May 23-June 1: The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas | Fri-Sat 7:30 pm; Sun 2 pm | $20 ROCHESTER OPERA HOUSE | 603.335.1992 | 31 Wakefield St, Rochester, NH | May 25: Freckleface Strawberry | 2 pm | $12 SEACOAST REPERTORY THEATRE | 603.433.4472 | seacoastrep.org | 125 Bow St, Portsmouth, NH | May 22-25: The Last 5 Years | Thurs 7:30 pm; Fri-Sat 8 pm; Sun 2 pm | $22-30 | May 28-30: The Diary of Anne Frank | Wed-Thurs 7:30 pm | $22-30 SPACE GALLERY | 207.828.5600 | space538.org | 538 Congress St, Portland | May 24: “A Night of Reproduction” | 8:30 pm | $10/$12

MONDAY 26

“POETRY ON TAP” | open mic

& featured poets | 9 pm | Mama’s Crowbar, 189 Congress St, Portland | 207.773.9230

TUESDAY 27

OPEN MIC & POETRY SLAM | with

Port Veritas & featured poets | 7 pm | Bull Feeney’s, 375 Fore St, Portland | $2.50-3 | 207.773.7210

THURSDAY 29

BECKI SMITH | reads and discusses

her book Starting Out:Life Lessons for Graduates | 7 pm | Longfellow Books, 1 Monument Way, Portland | 207.772.4045 or longfellowbooks.com

ART GALLERIES 3 FISH GALLERY | 207.773.4773 | 377

Cumberland Ave, Portland | 3fishgallery. com | Thurs-Sat 1-4 pm & by appoint-

ment | Through May 31: “N.O.W. (New Old World),” printmaking by Edwige Charlot 45 MEMORIAL CIRCLE | 207.622.3813 | Lobby Gallery, 45 Memorial Circle, Augusta | Through June 27: “New England Moments,” paintings by Christine Sullivan

AARHUS GALLERY | 207.338.0001 |

50 Main St, Belfast | aarhusgallery.com

| Tues-Sun 11 am-5:30 pm | Through June 1: “Sky,” mixed media group exhibition ARISTELLE | 207.842.6000 | 92 Exchange St, Portland | Through May 31: “Celebrating Mothers,” photography by Shelly Rose + Beltrami & Co. Studio ART DEPARTMENT | 207.294.2797 | 611 Congress St, Portland | theartdepartment.me | Through May 31: “Jurassic Park 12: Welcome to the Jungle,” mixed media ART HOUSE PICTURE FRAMES | 207.221.3443 | 61 Pleasant St #110, Bakery Building, Portland | arthousepictureframes.com | Mon-Fri 10 am-6 pm; Sat 10 am-4 pm | Through June 30: “Chris Beneman: The High Line Series,” monotypes & collagraphs AUCOCISCO GALLERIES | 207.775.2222 | 89 Exchange St, Portland | aucocisco.com | Thurs-Sat 9 am5 pm | Through Aug 16: “Summer Salon,” mixed media group exhibition BLACK CAT COFFEE | 207.956.6686 | 463 Stevens Ave, Portland | Through May 31: “Recent Paintings in Oils & Pastels,” by Don Drake CASCO BAY FRAMES | 207.774.1260 | 295 Forest Ave, Ste 6, Portland | Through June 30: “15th Annual Employee Art Show,” mixed media by Michael Argondizza + Tony Cox + Matthew Fox Rosler + Michael Fraser + Holly Karolkowski + Laurel Lopez

CENTER FOR MAINE CONTEMPORARY ART | 207.236.2875 | 162 Russell

Ave, Rockport | artsmaine.org | May 24-July 6: “Four Painters: Hannah Bureau, Elizabeth Hoy, Robin Reynolds, Jay Wu” | May 24-July 6: Jon Imber: “Force of Nature,” paintings | May 24-July 6: Mary Armstrong: “Troposphere @ 12 Kilometers of Heaven,” paintings | reception May 24 4-6 pm | May 24-July 6: Shoshannah White: “Undercurrent,” mixed media CIA CAFE | 207.747.4414 | 72 Ocean St, South Portland | Through June 30: wood works by Carole Kainlor

COFFEE BY DESIGN/CONGRESS ST | 207.772.5533 | 620 Congress St,

Portland | Mon-Wed 6:30 am-8 pm; Thurs-Sat 6:30 am-9 pm; Sun 7 am8 pm | Through May 31: “Kettles & Pots,” collages by Leslie Bailey COFFEE BY DESIGN/INDIA ST | 207.879.2233 | 67 India St, Portland | Mon-Fri 6:30 am-7 pm; Sat-Sun 7 am6 pm | Through May 31: “Kettles & Pots,” collages by Leslie Bailey COMMON STREET ARTS | 207.749.4368 | 20 Common St, Waterville | commonstreetarts.com | WedSat noon-6 pm | Through June 28: In the Presence of Wildness CONSTELLATION ART GALLERY | 207.409.6617 | 511 Congress St, Portland | constellationgallery.webs.com | Mon-Thurs noon-4 pm; Fri noon-4 pm & 6-8 pm; Sat 2-8 pm | Through May 28: “Vivacity,” works by David Marshall + Geeta Ramni + Wayne Ross + Anastasia Weigle COREY DANIELS GALLERY | 207.646.5301 | 2208 Post Rd, Wells | Mon-Thurs 10 am-5 pm; Sat 11 am-4 pm | Through June 6: “Install 4,” works by Jeff Kellar + Frederick Lynch + Duane Paluska COURTHOUSE GALLERY | 207.667.6611 | 6 Court St, Ellsworth | Mon-Sat 10 am-5 pm | Through June 20: “Spring Exhibition,” mixed media group show DIGITALITERACY GALLERY | 207.253.5678 | 44 Forest Ave, Portland | digitaliteracy.com | call for hours | Through May 31: paintings by Jane Croteau + W.K. Gilbert + pastel works by Tomas Baleztena DOWLING WALSH GALLERY | 207.596.0084 | 357 Main St, Rockland | dowlingwalsh.com | call for hours | Through May 31: paintings by Greta Ault van Campen + Amy Lowry EDWARD T. POLLACK FINE ARTS | 617.610.7173 | 25 Forest Ave, Portland | Wed-Sat 11 am-6 pm | Through May 27: “AD 20/21 Boston Print Fair” | Through May 30: “Boston Print Fair Highlights” | Through May 30: “Posters” | Through May 30: “Will Barnet at 100,” paintings | Through May 31: “Autum 2012 Exhibition,” mixed media | Through June 9: “The Woodcut Show,” group exhibition | Through June 30: “Recent Acquisitions,” mixed media

FORE RIVER GALLERY | 207.791.2723 | 87 Market St, Portland | forerivergallery. com | Wed-Sat 11 am-6 pm | Through May 31: “Revamp,” mixed media works

GEORGE MARSHALL STORE GALLERY | 207.351.1083 | 140 Lindsay Rd,

York | georgemarshallstoregallery.org |

Thurs-Sat 11 am-5 pm; Sun 1-5 pm | Through June 1: “Momentum XII -Justin Kirchoff: Half-Life,” photography | Through June 1: “Sanctuary Arts -- Spreading the Word,” mixed media group exhibition GREENHUT GALLERIES | 207.772.2693 | 146 Middle St, Portland | greenhutgalleries.com | Mon-Fri 10 am-5:30 pm; Sat 10 am-5 pm | Through May 31: paintings by Ed Douglas HARLOW GALLERY | 207.622.3813 | 160 Water St, Hallowell | harlowgallery. org | Wed-Sat noon-6 pm; Sun-Tues by appointment | Through May 31: “Art2014: 19th Annual Juried Art Show,” mixed media group exhibition HARMON & BARTON’S | 207.650.3437 | 584 Congress St, Portland | harmonsbartons.com | 8 am-5:30 pm | Through May 31: “In Full Bloom: A New Season,” acrylic works by Jean Beal + Alice Kirkpatrick HEAD GAMES SALON | 207.773.8393 | 116 Free St, Portland | Through May 31: mixed media works by David Cray & Justin Butler HERON POINT GALLERY | 207.773.0822 | 63 Market St, Portland | heronpointstudio.com | Tues-Sat 11 am-6 pm | Through May 31: “Glass Bracelets,” by Bonnie Faulkner

Entrance through alley-way on lower exchange st at key bank sign.

Chad Perrone

Horas: Mon-Thu 4-1 Fri 3-1 Sat & Sun 12-1

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RICHARD BOYD GALLERY |

207.792.1097 | Island Ave & Epps St, Peaks Island | Thurs-Sun 10 am-5 pm |

Through May 31: “Wildlife & Animal Themed Art,” mixed media group exhibition RIVER ARTS | 207.563.1507 | 241 Rte 1, Damariscotta | Tues-Sat 10 am-4 pm; Sun noon-4 pm | Through May 22: “My Community: Day to Day,” mixed media group exhibition RIVER TREE ARTS | 207.967.9120 | 35 Western Ave, Kennebunk | rivertreearts. org | Mon-Fri 10 am-6 pm; Sat 10 am-4 pm | Through May 24: Ron Rovner: “Santa Fe Home,” paintings

museum-about.xml | Tues-Sat 10 am-5

pm | Through May 24: “Polish Posters: Art & Illusion” | Through May 24: “Senior Thesis Exhibition 2014,” mixed media student exhibition

BOWDOIN COLLEGE MUSEUM OF ART | 207.725.3275 | 245 Maine St,

Brunswick | bowdoin.edu/art-museum | Tues-Wed + Fri-Sat 10 am-5 pm; Thurs 10 am-8:30 pm; Sun 1-5 pm | Free admission; donations welcome | Through June 1: “Surrealism in MoHOLE IN THE WALL STUDIOWORKS tion,” short films | Through June 1: | 207.655.4952 | Rte 302, Raymond | “The Object Show: Discoveries in Through May 28: “Into the Garden,” Bowdoin Collections” | Through June oil works by Dave G. Hall HOME1: “Under the Surface: Surrealist PhoGROWN HERB & TEA | 207.774.3484 | tography” | Through June 8: “Frontier 195 Congress St, Portland | homegrownROUX & CYR INTERNATIONAL FINE Visions: The American West in Image herbandtea.com | Tues-Sat noon-5 pm ART GALLERY | 207.576.7787 | 48 & Myth,” works on paper | Ongoing: | Through May 31: “Orchidaceae,” Free Street, Portland | Through May “American Artists at Work, 1840-1950” gouache works by Allen West 31: “Russian Master Paints New Eng+ “Contemporary Masters, 1950 to the land,” oil paintings by Stas Borodin JUST US CHICKENS GALLERY | Want the pic on one side, text on the other, black background –&they’re notofsure Present” + “Lovers Saints: Art the 207.439.4209 | 16A Shapleigh Rd, Kittery SACO RIVER GRAPHICS GALLERY Renaissance” | call for hours | ThroughifMay 31: want pot- the| text 516 Congress St, Portland they to be white or a| Through light yellow Italian to match the image, would be tery works by Mary Sweeney 31: “Nature water-if that’s COLBY COLLEGE 207.859.5600 interested to seeMay it with bothEmbossed,” color options possible. (I |assume that| Muwould color & copper panels by Chong & KITTERY ART ASSOCIATION | seum of Art, 5600 Mayflower Hill Dr, Warelatively easy to change the text color, but let me know if it’s not!!) Judi Lim 207.967.0049 | 8 Coleman Ave, Kittery terville | colby.edu/museum | Tues-Sat | kitteryartassociation.orgText 10 am-5 pm; Sun noon-5 pm | Free ad| Sat noon-6 SEACOAST ARTIST ASSOCIATION (please keep capitalized and lowercase as presented): mission | Through June 8: “American pm; Sun noon-5 pm | Through June 1: GALLERY | 603.778.8856 | 225 Water Weathervanes from a Distinguished “K-12 Art Show,” student exhibition St, Exeter, NH | Tues-Sat 10 am-5 pm DARKWORKZ| Through May 31: “Take a Closer Maine Collection” | Through June 8: LANDING GALLERY | 207.594.4544 | 8 Elm St, Rockland | landingart.com art boutique Look,” mixed media group exhibition “Histories of Now: Six Artists from Cairo,” video works | Through June 8: | Tues-Sat 11 am-5 pm; Sun noon-5 SPACE GALLERY | 207.828.5600 | 538 “Julianne Swartz: Affirmation,” sound pm | Through June 1: “2014 Season Congress St, Portland | space538.org | 574group CONGRESS suitenoon-6 201 pm | Through June installation | Through June 8: “Spaces Invitational,” mixed media Wed-Sat & Places: Chinese Art from the Lunderexhibition 6: “Long Distance,” (2nd floor, above OTTO Pizza)collage works Colville Collection & the Museum of by Jenny Odell | Through June 27: MAINE CHARITABLE MECHANIC Fine Arts, Boston” | Through June 8: “Expected Outcomes,” multimedia ASSOCIATION | 207.773.8396 | 519 ConESOTERIC BOOKS “The Lunder Collection: A Gift of Art works by Kim Largey | Through June gress St, Portland | mainecharitablemto Colby College” | Through June 29: 28: “Lag,” sculptural installation by echanicassociation.com | Tues-Thurs ART and 10 JEWELRY “Alex Katz: Assembly II,” paintings, Marnie Briggs + John Zane Zappas am-3 pm | Through May 31: “Abstract TAROT CARDS cutouts, & works on paper | Ongoing: Mixed-Up Media Spring Show,” acrylTHE DOGFISH BAR AND GRILLE | “Process & Place:JOURNALS Exploring the Design ics by Zoo Cain 207.772.5483OILS | 128 Free St,HANDMADE Portland | INCENSE, ESSENTIAL and LEATHER Evolution of the Alfond-Lunder Family MAINELY FRAMES AND GALLERY | thedogfishbarandgrille.com | Mon-Sat Pavilion” + “Alex Katz Collection” 11:30 am-12:30 am; Sun noon-8 pm | 207.828.0031 | 541 Congress St, Portland – SUN 11AM TIL 7PM Through May 31: “Collage Photogra| Mon-Wed 10 am-6 pm;WED Thurs-Fri 10 DYER LIBRARY/SACO MUSEUM | phy,” by Evearad Stelfox am-8 pm; Sat 10 am-6 pm; Sun 1-4 207.283.3861 | 371 Main St, Saco | sapm | Through May 31: “Abstract-RealTHE OLD WHITE CHURCH | comuseum.org | Tues-Thurs noon-4 facebook.com/DARKWORKZART ism,” drawings by Adam Stephanus pm; Fri noon-8 pm; Sat 10 am-4 pm; 207.642.4219 | 15 Salmon Falls Rd, Sun noon-4 pm | Through May 31: MONKITREE GALLERY |207-245-0592 207.512.4679 | Buxton | Through May 25: “My Maine: Nature Photography by Jennifer Brown The Paintings of Michael McDonald” 263 Water St, Gardiner | Tues-Fri 10 am| Through May 31: “Sacy Bay Art6 pm;Sat noon-6 pm | Through June 7: TIME GALLERY | 207.874.9868 | Comists,” mixed media group exhibition “Working Through,” works by Jamie munity Television Network, 516 Con| Through June 15: “Pastel Painter of Ribisi-Braley gress St, Portland | Mon-Fri 10 am-6 Maine,” international juried exhibition pm | Through May 31: “M.S. McKenNAHCOTTA | 603.433.1705 | 110 Conzie’s Mixed Media Show” FARNSWORTH ART MUSEUM | gress St, Portsmouth, NH | nahcotta. VESTIBULE 594 | 594 Congress St, 207.596.6457 | 16 Museum St, Rockland com | Mon-Wed 10 am-6 pm; ThursSat 10 am-8 pm; Sun 11 am-5 pm | | farnsworthmuseum.org | 10 am-5 pm, Portland | Through May 31: oil paintThrough June 1: “Alisson May Kipings by Kelly Ufkin open until 8 pm with free admission huth: Shelter,” installation Wed | $12, seniors & students $10; WATERFALL ARTS | 207.388.2222 | under 17 free & Rockland residents OAK STREET LOFTS GALLERY | 256 High St, Belfast | Tues-Fri 10 am-5 free | Admission $12; $10 seniors and pm; by appointment | Through May 207.553.7780 | 72 Oak St, Portland | call students; free for youth under 17 and 30: “Print,” group printmaking show for hours | Through May 31: mixed Rockland residents | Through Sept 28: media works by Savannah Walz ZERO STATION | 207.347.7000 | 222 “Coloring Vision: From Impressionism OMI’S COFFEE SHOP | 207.747.4488 | Anderson St, Portland | Tues-Sat 10 to Modernism,” paintings | Through am-6 pm | Through June 27: “You 28 Brackett St, Portland | Through May Dec 31: “Ideals of Beauty: The Nude,” Can’t Get There From Here,” mixed 31: “Reflections,” mixed media works mixed media | Through Dec 31: “The media group exhibition | reception by YES Art Works artists Wyeths, Maine, & the Sea,” paintings May 30 5-8 pm PACANATURALS | 207.797.5565 | 23 & works on paper Temple St, Portland | Through May 31: oil & fresco paintings by Kelly Ufkin ICA AT MECA | 207.879.5742 | 522 PHOPA GALLERY | 207.317.6721 | 132 Congress St, Portland | Wed-Sun 11 am-5 pm; Thurs 11 am-7 pm | Through AFRICAN CENTER FOR THE SACRED Washington Ave, Portland | Wed-Sat March 31: “We Are What We Hide,” noon-5 pm | Through May 31: “BeARTS AT THE MUSEUM OF AFRICAN long-running exhibit in- & outside neath the Surface,” works on paper by CULTURE | 207.871.7188 | 13 Brown St, gallery walls Avy Claire + Anne-Claude Cotty + NanPortland | museumafricanculture.org | cy Manter | artists’ talk May 31 2 pm Tues-Fri 10:30 am-4 pm; Sat noon-4 MAINE COLLEGE OF ART | pm | $5 suggested donation | Through PORTLAND PUBLIC LIBRARY | 207.775.3052 | 522 Congress St, Portland May 31: “Ethiopia: Revisiting the Afar | meca.edu | Mon-Fri 8 am-8 pm; Sat207.871.1700 | Lewis Art Gallery, 5 Tribesmen,” photography by Nanci Sun 12 pm-5 pm | Through May 23: Monument Sq, Portland | portlandliKahn | Ongoing: “An Exhibition of “In Habit: 2014 Senior Thesis Exhibibrary.com/programs/LewisGallery.htm Bronze” tion,” mixed media student works | | Mon-Thurs 10 am-6 pm; Fri 10 am-7 Through June 4: paintings by Anne pm; Sat 10 am-5 pm | Through May BATES COLLEGE MUSEUM OF ART Ireland 30: “Sea Smoke,” mixed media group | 207.786.6158 | 75 Russell St, Olin exhibition Continued on p 24 Arts Center, Lewiston | bates.edu/

be

574 CONGRESS suite 201 (2nd floor, above OTTO Pizza ) • ESOTERIC BOOKS • ART and JEWELRY • TAROT CARDS • INCENSE, ESSENTIAL OILS and HANDMADE LEATHER JOURNALS WED – SUN 11AM TIL 7PM

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May 29: Tiny Tots: Finger-painting 10:30am; Star Show 11:30am; Tide Pool Touch Tank 3:30pm

Listings

“The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas” at Portland Players

Continued from p 23 OGUNQUIT MUSEUM OF ART | 207.646.4909 | 543 Shore Rd, Ogunquit | ogunquitmuseum.org |

See the VIP Difference

Authorized deAler

207.773.7333

1038 Brighton Avenue | PortlAnd

Mon-Sat 10:30 am- 5 pm; Sun 2-5 pm | Through June 15: “Recent Acquisitions,” mixed media | Through June 22: paintings by John Laurent | Through Oct 31: “Henry Strater: Arizona Winters, 1933-1938,” paintings PORTLAND MUSEUM OF ART | 207.775.6148 | 7 Congress Square, Portland | portlandmuseum.org | Tues-Thurs + Sat-Sun 10 am-5 pm; Fri 10 am-9 pm | Admission $12; $10 students/seniors; $6 youth 13-17; free for youth 12 & under and for all Fri 5-9 pm | Through Sept 7: “Richard Estes’s Realism,” paintings | Through June 1: “Art in Process: Weather in High School Art & Science,” student works | Through June 15: “Preserving Creative Spaces: The Historic Artists’ Homes & Studios Program,” documentary installation | Through July 27: “PMA Family Space: Clint Fulkerson,” drawings | Through Aug 3: “George Daniell: Picturing Monhegan Island,” photographs & drawings | Through Aug 24: “Andrea Sulzer: throughoutsideways,” drawings & prints

UNIVERSITY OF MAINE MUSEUM OF ART | 207.561.3350 | Norumbega

Hall, 40 Harlow St, Bangor | umma. umaine.edu | Mon-Sat 10 am-5 pm

29 SALMON FALLS RD | PO BOX 1 · BAR MILLS, ME 04004-0001

DAVID MALLETT

Singer-songwriter, David Mallett returns to SRT, after an unforgettable sold out show last year! Known for his carefully written, poetic offerings, his body of work has provided material for an eclectic list of artists that includes Alison Krauss, Pete Seeger, Hal Ketchum, Emmylou Harris, John Denver and the Muppets.

$25 · SATURDAY, MAY 31 - 7:30 PM

ZEMYA

A Cappella at The Old White Church

Zemya is a Maine-based women’s a cappella group known for singing a wide range of world folk music - from the Balkans, Russia and the Republic of Georgia to South Africa, the Americas and the British Isles.

$18/$16 · SATURDAY, JUNE 14 - 7:30 PM

Tickets & Info: 207-929-6472 or SACORIVERTHEATRE.ORG

The King’s head greaT food

crafT beer

do you have a passion for food and craft beer?

Possess good knowledge of whisky and wine? Do you work hard and have fun with customers? If so, we want you. We are hiring servers, bartenders and kitchen staff for an upscale-casual gastropub starting soon in the Old Port. Call Justin at 518-637-8784. Resumes can be dropped off at 254 Commercial St. at the door marked 14.

(The restaurant is behind Browne Trading and In’f initi.)

| Free admission | Through June 7: “Amy Beeler: Passion & Adornment,” sculpture & jewelry works | Through June 7: “Joe Kelly: Works from 2007-2014,” sculptures & drawings | Through June 7: “Looking Back Six Years -- Part One: Selected New Acquisitions,” mixed media | Ongoing: “Selections from the Permanent Collection”

UNIVERSITY OF NEW ENGLAND PORTLAND | 207.221.4499 | Art Gallery,

716 Stevens Ave, Portland | une.edu/artgallery | Wed 1-4 pm; Thurs 1-7 pm; Fri-

Sun 1-4 pm | Through June 14: “The Painting of John Calvin Stevens” | Through June 15: “Recent Acquisitions & Selections from the Permanent Collection,” mixed media | Ongoing: paintings & photography by Maine artists + labyrinth installation

UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN MAINE - LEWISTON/AUBURN

| 207.753.6500 | Atrium Gallery, 51 Westminster St, Lewiston | usm. maine.edu/lac/art/exhibits.html |

Mon-Thurs 8 am-8 pm; Fri 8 am-4:30 pm | Free admission | Through June 6: “Ant Farm: At the Nexus of Art

& Science,” installation by Colleen Kinsella + Vivien Russe + Rebecca Goodale + Dorothy Schwartz

UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN MAINE - PORTLAND | 207.780.4270 | Kate

Cheney Chappell Center for Book Arts, Great Reading Room, 7th Floor, Glickman Library, 314 Forest Ave, Portland | usm.maine.edu/bookarts |

Mon-Thurs 7:45 am-11 pm; Fri 7:45 am-8 pm; Sat 10 am-8 pm; Sun 10 am-11 pm | Through May 31: “Rescued, Redeemed, Revived,” book arts | Through Aug 14: “Charting an Empire: The Atlantic Neptune,” cartographic exhibition

OTHER MUSEUMS ABBE MUSEUM | 207.288.3519 | 26

Mount Desert St, Bar Harbor | abbemuseum.org | Thurs-Sat 10 am-4 pm

| Through Dec 31: “Twisted Path III: Questions of Balance” | Ongoing: “Layers of Time: Archaeology at the Abbe Museum” + “Dr. Abbe’s Museum”

CHILDREN’S MUSEUM & THEATRE OF MAINE | 207.828.1234 | 142 Free

St, Portland | kitetails.com | Tues-Sat

10 am-5 pm; Sun noon-5 pm; Mon during school vacations | $10, $9 seniors, $7 youth under 17, free under 6; first Friday of the month is free 5-8 pm | May 22: Tiny Tots: Shaker Making 10:30am; Folk Music Singa-long 11:30am; Tide Pool Touch Tank 3:30pm | May 23: Eye-Spy Slime Game 10:30am; Calls of the Wild 11:30am; Photo Detectives 3pm | May 24: Meet the Animals 10:30am; The Eyeball Show 11am; Open Art Studio 2-3pm; Smooshy Smelly Science 3:30pm | May 25: Maine Natural Foods Day 10:30am-12:30pm; Young Engineers: Build-a-City 12:30pm; Mini-Raft Building 2pm | May 26: Color Play: Warm and Cold 11am; Young Engineers: Build-a-City 1pm | May 27: Wacky Play-Doh Sculptures 11am; Photo Detectives 3pm | May 28: Open Art Studio 11am-12pm; Young Engineers: Build-a-City 3:30pm |

CHILDREN’S MUSEUM OF NEW HAMPSHIRE | 603.742.2002 | 6

Washington St, Dover, NH | TuesSat 10 am-5 pm; Sun noon-5 pm | Admission $7, seniors $6 | Through May 26: “Through the Lens: A Look at Our Diverse World,” photography MAINE HISTORICAL SOCIETY | 207.774.1822 | 489 Congress St, Portland | mainehistory.org | Tues-Sat 10 am-5 pm | $8, $7 seniors/students, $2 children, kids under 6 free | Through May 26: “From Slavery to Maine,” archival exhibition | Through May 26: “This Rebellion: Maine & the Civil War” MAINE MARITIME MUSEUM | 207.443.1316 | 243 Washington St, Bath | mainemaritimemuseum.org | Daily 9:30 am-5 pm | Admission $10, $9 seniors, $7 for children seven through 17, free for children six and under | Through June 1: “Going Coastal: Humor, Parody, & Amusement of a Maritime Nature” | Through June 1: “Those Contrary Winds: Weather & its Effects on Ships, Mariners, & Maritime History” | Ongoing: “A Maritime History of Maine” + “A Shipyard in Maine: Percy & Small & the Great Schooners” + “Snow Squall: Last of the American Clipper Ships” MAINE STATE MUSEUM | 207.287.2301 | 83 State House Stn, Augusta | mainestatemuseum.org | Mon-Fri 9 am-5 pm; Sat 10 am-4 pm; Sun 1-4 pm | Admission $2, $1 for seniors and children ages 6-18, under 6 free | Through April 30: “Maine Voices from the Civil War” | Ongoing: 12,000-plus years of Maine’s history, in homes, nature, shops, mills, ships, & factories

PEARY-MACMILLAN ARCTIC MUSEUM | 207.725.3416 | Bowdoin

College, Hubbard Hall, 5 College St, Brunswick | bowdoin.edu/arcticmuseum/index.shtml | Tues-Sat

10 am-5 pm; Sun 2-5 pm | Free | Through Aug 31: “Animal Allies: Inuit Views of the Natural World” | Ongoing: “Cape Dorset & Beyond: Inuit Art from the Marcia & Robert Ellis Collection” + “Robert E. Peary & His Northern World” + “Faces of Greenland: Ivory Carvings from the Bareguard Collection” SOUTHWORTH PLANETARIUM | 207.780.4249 | Science Building, 70

Falmouth St, University of Southern Maine - Portland, | usm.maine.edu/ planet | call for hours | free | May

2: Dinosaurs at Dusk 7pm; Eight Planets and Counting 8:30pm | May 23: Ibex Full Dome Show 7pm; Two Small Pieces of Glass 8:30pm y 24: Rusty Rocket’s Last Blast 3pm | May 25: Eight Planets and Counting 3pm | May 26: Dinosaurs at Dusk 1pm | May 28:Ibex Full Dome Show 1pm

CLUB DIRECTORY 302 SMOKEHOUSE & TAVERN |

207.935.3021 | 636 Main St, Fryeburg

317 MAIN ST MUSIC CENTER CAFE | 207.846.9559 | 317 Main St,

Yarmouth

51 WHARF | 207.774.1151 | 51 Wharf

St, Portland

ACOUSTIC ARTISANS | 207.671.6029 | 594 Congress St, Portland ADAMS STREET PUB | 207.283.4992 | 5 Adams St, Biddeford ALISSON’S RESTAURANT | 207.967.4841 | 5 Dock Sq, Kennebunkport AMERICAN LEGION POST 56 | 207.363.0376 | 9 Hannaford Dr, York ANDY’S OLD PORT PUB | 207.874.2639 | 94 Commercial St, Portland ANNIE’S IRISH PUB | 207.251.4335 | 369 Main St, Ogunquit ASYLUM | 207.772.8274 | 121 Center St, Portland BASSLINES | 207.699.4263 | Binga’s Stadium, 23 Brown St, Portland BAYSIDE BOWL | 207.791.2695 | 58 Alder St, Portland BEAR’S DEN TAVERN | 207.564.8733 | 73 North St, Dover Foxcroft BENCHWARMERS | 207.729.4800 | 212 Maine St, Brunswick BIG EASY | 207.894.0633 | 55 Market St, Portland BILLY’S TAVERN | 207.354.1177 | 1 Starr St, Thomaston BINGA’S STADIUM | 207.347.6072 | 77 Free St, Portland BLACK ANCHOR VILLAGE PUB | 207.374.7012 | 50 Main St, Blue Hill BLACK BEAR CAFE | 207.693.4770 | 215 Roosevelt Trail, Naples BLUE | 207.774.4111 | 650A Congress St, Portland BLUE MERMAID | 603.427.2583 | 409 The Hill, Portsmouth, NH BRAY’S BREWPUB | 207.693.6806 | Rte 302 and Rte 35, Naples BRIAN BORU | 207.780.1506 | 57 Center St, Portland BRITISH BEER COMPANY | 603.501.0515 | 2 Portwalk Place, Portsmouth, NH

DANIEL STREET TAVERN | 603.430.1011 | 111 Daniel St, Portsmouth, NH DOBRA TEA | 207.370.1890 | 151 Middle St, Portland THE DOGFISH BAR AND GRILLE | 207.772.5483 | 128 Free St, Portland DOGFISH CAFE | 207.253.5400 | 953 Congress St, Portland DOLPHIN STRIKER | 603.431.5222 | 15 Bow St, Portsmouth, NH DOVER BRICK HOUSE | 603.749.3838 | 2 Orchard St, Dover, NH DOWN UNDER CLUB | 207.992.2550 | Seasons Grille & Sports Lounge, 427 Main St, Bangor EASY STREET LOUNGE | 207.622.3360 | 7 Front St, Hallowell ELEMENTS: BOOKS COFFEE BEER | 207.710.2011 | 265 Main St, Biddeford EMPIRE | 207.879.8988 | 575 Congress St, Portland FAST BREAKS | 207.782.3305 | 1465 Lisbon St, Lewiston FAT BELLY’S | 603.610.4227 | 2 Bow St, Portsmouth, NH FATBOY’S SALOON | 207.766.8862 | 65 Main St, Biddeford FEDERAL JACK’S | 207.967.4322 | 8 Western Ave, Kennebunk

FEILE IRISH RESTAURANT AND PUB

| 207.251.4065 | 1619 Post Rd, Wells FLASK LOUNGE | 207.772.3122 | 117 Spring St, Portland FOG BAR & CAFE | 207.593.9371 | 328 Main St, Rockland THE FOGGY GOGGLE | 207.824.5056 | South Ridge Lodge, Sunday River, Newry FREEDOM CAFE | 207.693.3700 | 923 Roosevelt Trail, Naples FROG AND TURTLE | 207.591.4185 | 3 Bridge St, Westbrook FRONT STREET PUBLIC HOUSE | 207.442.6700 | 102 Front St, Bath FRONTIER CAFE | 207.725.5222 | Fort Andross, 14 Maine St, Brunswick FUSION | 207.330.3775 | 490 Pleasant St, Lewiston

GARY’S RESTAURANT & SPORTS LOUNGE | 603.335.4279 | 38 Milton Rd,

| 50 Wharf St, Portland BULL FEENEY’S | 207.773.7210 | 375 Fore St, Portland BULL MOOSE LOUNGE | 207.924.7286 | Moosehead Trail Motor Lodge, 300 Corrina Rd, Dexter BYRNES IRISH PUB/BATH | 207.443.6776 | 98 Center St, Bath

Rochester, NH GATHER | 207.847.3250 | 189 Main St, Yarmouth GENO’S ROCK CLUB | 207.221.2382 | 625 Congress St, Portland GFB SCOTTISH PUB | 207.934.8432 | 32 Old Orchard St, Old Orchard Beach THE GIN MILL | 207.620.9200 | 302 Water St, Augusta GINZA TOWN | 207.878.9993 | 1053 Forest Ave, Portland THE GREEN ROOM | 207.490.5798 | 898 Main St, Sanford GRILL 28 | 603.766.6466 | Pease Golf Course, 200 Grafton Rd, Portsmouth, NH GRITTY MCDUFF’S | 207.772.2739 | 396 Fore St, Portland GRITTY MCDUFF’S/AUBURN | 207.782.7228 | 68 Main St, Auburn GUTHRIE’S | 207.376.3344 | 115 Middle St, Lewiston HARLOW’S PUB | 603.924.6365 | 3 School St, Peterborough, NH

Brunswick

ter St, Hallowell

THE BRUNSWICK OCEANSIDE GRILLE | 207.934.2171 | 39 West

Grand Ave, Old Orchard Beach BUBBA’S SULKY LOUNGE | 207.828.0549 | 92 Portland St, Portland

BUCK’S NAKED BBQ/FREEPORT |

207.865.0600 | 581 Rte 1, Freeport

BUCK’S NAKED BBQ/PORTLAND |

BYRNES IRISH PUB/BRUNSWICK HIGHER GROUNDS COFFEEHOUSE | 207.729.9400 | 16 Station Ave, AND TAVERN | 207.621.1234 | 119 Wa-

THE CAGE | 207.783.0668 | 97 Ash St, Lewiston CAMPFIRE GRILLE | 207.803.2255 | 656 North High St, Bridgton

CAPTAIN & PATTY’S RESTAURANT | 207.439.3655 | 90 Pepperrell Rd, Kittery Point

CAPTAIN BLY’S TAVERN |

207.336.2126 | 371 Turner St, Buckfield CAPTAIN DANIEL STONE INN | 207.373.1824 | 10 Water St, Brunswick CHAMPIONS SPORTS BAR | 207.282.7900 | 15 Thornton St, Biddeford CHAPS SALOON | 207.347.1101 | 1301 Long Plains Rd, Buxton CHARLAMAGNE’S | 207.242.2711 | 228 Water St, Augusta CHOP SHOP PUB | 603.760.7706 | 920 Lafayette Rd, Seabrook, NH CLUB 737 | 207.442.0748 | 737 Washington St, Bath CLUB TEXAS | 207.784.7785 | 150 Center St, Auburn COLE FARMS | 207.657.4714 | 64 Lewiston Rd, Gray CREMA COFFEE COMPANY | | 9 Commercial St, Portland

HIGHLANDS COFFEE HOUSE | 207.354.4162 | 189 Main St, Thomaston HOLLYWOOD SLOTS | 877.779.7771 | 500 Main St, Bangor THE HOLY GRAIL | 603.679.9559 | 64 Main St, Epping, NH IRISH TWINS PUB | 207.376.3088 | 743 Main St, Lewiston IRON TAILS SALOON | 207.850.1142 | 559 Rte 109, Acton JIMMY THE GREEK’S/OLD ORCHARD BEACH | 207.934.7499 | 215 Saco Ave, Old Orchard Beach

KELLEY’S ROW | 603.750.7081 | 421

Central Ave, Dover, NH

THE KENNEBEC WHARF |

207.622.9290 | 1 Wharf St, Hallowell

KERRYMEN PUB | 207.282.7425 | 512 Main St, Saco

KJ’S SPORTS BAR | 603.659.2329 |

North Main St, Newmarket, NH LAST CALL | 207.934.9082 | 4 1st St, Old Orchard Beach LFK | 207.899.3277 | 188A State St, Portland THE LIBERAL CUP | 207.623.2739 | 115 Water St, Hallowell LILAC CITY GRILLE | 603.332.3984 | 45 N Main St, Rochester, NH

LION’S PRIDE | 207.373.1840 | 112 Pleas-

THE RED DOOR | 603.373.6827 | 107

LITTLE TAP HOUSE | 207.518.9283 | 106

RI RA/PORTLAND | 207.761.4446 | 72

ant St, Brunswick

High St, Portland LOCAL 188 | 207.761.7909 | 685 Congress St, Portland LOCAL SPROUTS COOPERATIVE | 207.899.3529 | 649 Congress St, Portland LOMPOC CAFE | 207.288.9392 | 36 Rodick St, Bar Harbor MAIN TAVERN | 207.947.7012 | 152 Main St, Bangor MAINE STREET | 207.646.5101 | 195 Maine St, Ogunquit MAINELY BREWS | 207.873.2457 | 1 Post Office Sq, Waterville MAMA’S CROWBAR | 207.773.9230 | 189 Congress St, Portland MARK’S PLACE | 207.899.3333 | 416 Fore St, Portland MARTINGALE WHARF | 603.431.0091 | 99 Bow St, Portsmouth, NH MATHEW’S PUB | 207.253.1812 | 133 Free St, Portland MAXWELL’S PUB | 207.646.2345 | 243 Main St, Ogunquit MAYO STREET ARTS | 207.615.3609 | 10 Mayo St, Portland MCSEAGULL’S | 207.633.5900 | Gulf Dock, Boothbay Harbor MEMORY LANE MUSIC HALL | 207.642.3363 | 35 Blake Rd, Standish MILLIE’S TAVERN | 603.967.4777 | 17 L St, Hampton, NH MINE OYSTER | 207.633.6616 | 16 Wharf St, Pier 1, Boothbay Harbor MJ’S WINE BAR | 207.653.6278 | 1 City Center, Portland MONTSWEAG ROADHOUSE | 207.443.6563 | Rte 1, Woolwich MOOSE ALLEY | 207.864.9955 | 2809 Main St, Rangeley MR. GOODBAR | 207.934.9100 | 8B West Grand Ave, Old Orchard Beach MYRTLE STREET TAVERN | 207.596.6250 | 12 Myrtle St, Rockland NARAL’S EXPERIENCE ARABIA | 207.344.3201 | 34 Court St, Auburn NOCTURNEM DRAFT HAUS | 207.907.4380 | 56 Main St, Bangor THE OAK AND THE AX | | 140 Main St, Ste 107-Back Alley, Biddeford THE OAR HOUSE | 603.436.4025 | 55 Ceres St, Portsmouth, NH OASIS | 207.370.9048 | 42 Wharf St, Portland OLD GOAT | 207.737.4628 | 33 Main St, Richmond OLD MILL PUB | 207.474.6627 | 39 Water St, Skowhegan OLD PORT TAVERN | 207.774.0444 | 11 Moulton St, Portland THE OLDE MILL TAVERN | 207.583.9077 | 56 Main St, Harrison ORCHARD STREET CHOP SHOP | 603.749.0006 | 1 Orchard St, Dover, NH OTTO | 207.773.7099 | 574-6 Congress St, Portland PADDY MURPHY’S | 207.945.6800 | 26 Main St, Bangor PEARL | 207.653.8486 | 444 Fore St, Portland PEDRO O’HARA’S/LEWISTON | 207.783.6200 | 134 Main St, Lewiston PEDRO’S | 207.967.5544 | 181 Port Rd, Kennebunk PENOBSCOT POUR HOUSE | 207.941.8805 | 14 Larkin St, Bangor PHOENIX HOUSE & WELL | 207.824.2222 | 9 Timberline Dr, Newry PLEASANT NOTE COFFEEHOUSE | 207.783.0461 | First Universalist Church of Auburn, 169 Pleasant St, Auburn PORT CITY MUSIC HALL | 207.899.4990 | 504 Congress St, Portland PORTHOLE RESTAURANT | 207.773.4653 | 20 Custom House Wharf, Portland PORTLAND EAGLES | 207.773.9448 | 184 Saint John St, Portland PORTLAND LOBSTER CO | 207.775.2112 | 180 Commercial St, Portland PORTSMOUTH GAS LIGHT | 603.430.8582 | 64 Market St, Portsmouth, NH PRESS ROOM | 603.431.5186 | 77 Daniel St, Portsmouth, NH PROFENNO’S | 207.856.0011 | 934 Main St, Westbrook THE RACK | 207.237.2211 | 5016 Access Rd, Carabassett RAVEN’S ROOST | 207.406.2359 | 103 Pleasant St, Brunswick READFIELD EMPORIUM | 207.685.7348 | 1146 Main St, Readfield

State St, Portsmouth, NH

Commercial St, Portland RI RA/PORTSMOUTH | 603.319.1680 | 22 Market St, Portsmouth, NH ROOSTER’S | 207.622.2625 | 110 Community Dr, Augusta ROUND TOP COFFEEHOUSE | 207.677.2354 | Round Top Farm, Main St, Damariscotta RUDI’S | 603.430.7834 | 20 High St, Portsmouth, NH RUN OF THE MILL BREWPUB | 207.571.9648 | 100 Main St, Saco Island, Saco SALVAGE BBQ & SMOKEHOUSE | | 919 Congress St, Portland SAMOSET RESORT | 207.596.6055 | 220 Warrenton St, Rockport SEA DOG BREWING/BANGOR | 207.947.8009 | 26 Front St, Bangor

SEA DOG BREWING/SOUTH PORTLAND | 207.871.7000 | 125 Western

Ave, South Portland

SEA DOG BREWING/TOPSHAM |

207.725.0162 | 1 Maine St, Great Mill Island, Topsham SEA KETCH | 603.926.0324 | 127 Ocean Blvd, Hampton, NH SEA40 | 207.795.6888 | 40 East Ave, Lewiston SEASONS GRILLE | 207.775.6538 | 155 Riverside St, Portland SHEEPSCOT GENERAL | 207.549.5185 | 98 Townhouse Rd, Whitefield SHENANIGANS | 207.213.4105 | 349 Water St, Augusta SIDE STREET CAFE | 207.801.2591 | 49 Rodick St, Bar Harbor SILVER HOUSE TAVERN | 207.772.9885 | 123 Commercial St, Portland SILVER SPUR | 207.345.3211 | 272 Lewiston St, Mechanic Falls SILVER STREET TAVERN | 207.680.2163 | 2 Silver St, Waterville SKIP’S LOUNGE | 207.929.9985 | 299 Narragansett Trail, Buxton SKYBOX BAR AND GRILL | 207.854.9012 | 212 Brown St, Westbrook SLAINTE | 207.828.0900 | 24 Preble St, Portland

Sexy club clotheS, ShoeS and acceSSorieS you can’t find anywhere elSe! ASK ABOUT OUR REFERRAL PROGRAM TO EARN A FREE DRESS!

449 Forest Avenue, PortlAnd | 207.797.3366

local beer live music comedy scratch food poetry pub quiz

SLATES RESTAURANT AND BAKERY | 207.622.4104 | 169 Water St, Hallowell

SMILIN’ MOOSE PUBLYK HOUSE AND TAVERN | 207.739.6006 | 10 Market Sq, South Paris

SOLO BISTRO | 207.443.3378 | 128 Front St, Bath

SONNY’S | 207.772.7774 | 83 Exchange St, Portland SOUTHSIDE TAVERN | 207.474.6073 | 1 Waterville Rd, Skowhegan SPACE GALLERY | 207.828.5600 | 538 Congress St, Portland THE SPAGHETTI STAIN | 603.343.5257 | 421 Central Ave, Dover, NH SPARE TIME | 207.878.2695 | City Sports Grille, 867 Riverside St, Portland SPRING POINT TAVERN | 207.733.2245 | 175 Pickett St, South Portland STOCKHOUSE | 207.854.5600 | 506 Main St, Westbrook STONE CHURCH | 603.659.6321 | 5 Granite St, Newmarket, NH STYXX | 207.828.0822 | 3 Spring St, Portland SUDS PUB | 207.824.6558 | Sudbury Inn Main St, Bethel TAILGATE BAR & GRILL | 207.657.7973 | 61 Portland Rd, Gray THIRSTY MOOSE TAPHOUSE | 603.427.8645 | 21 Congress St, Portsmouth, NH THE THIRSTY PIG | 207.773.2469 | 37 Exchange St, Portland TIME OUT PUB | 207.593.9336 | 275 Main St, Rockland TORCHES GRILL HOUSE | 207.467.3288 | 102 York St, Kennebunk TOWNHOUSE PUB | 207.284.7411 | 5 Storer St, Saco UNION HOUSE PUB & PIZZA | 207.590.4825 | North Dam Mill, 2 Main St, 18-230, Biddeford UNION STATION BILLIARDS | 207.899.3693 | 272 St John St, Portland WALLY’S PUB | 603.926.6954 | 144 Ashworth Ave, Hampton, NH WATER STREET GRILL | 207.582.9464 | 463 Water St, Gardiner WILLY’S ALE ROOM | 207.636.3369 | Rte 109, Acton ZACKERY’S | 207.774.5601 | Fireside Inn & Suites, 81 Riverside St, Portland

Sunday - Friday 4 - 7p: All Drafts $3 All Whiskies 20% off Thursday & Friday 5 - 6p: BACON & CHEESE Happy Hour Thursday 9:30p:

The Dapper Gents

$2 PBR & Bud 16oz Cans Friday 9:30p: OC & The Offbeats upstairs Jake McCurdy downstairs

Saturday 9:30p:

Skösh upstairs

Dave Rowe downstairs

Sunday 9:30p: Roots, Rhythm & Dub Monday 8p: Geeks Who Drink Tuesday 7p: Tuesday 9:30p: Wednesday 8-10p: Wednesday 8-11p:

Poetry Slam Open Mic Comedy Squid Jiggers

$3 Baxter Stowaway/Seasonal Drafts

portland’s pub 375 Fore Street in the heart oF the old Port 773.7210 Facebook.com/bullFeeneyS @bullFeeneyS


26 May 23, 2014 | the portland phoenix | portland.thephoenix.coM

Our Ratings

dinner + Movie

MOvie Review

Dining Review

outstanding excellent good average poor

$ = $15 or less $$ = $16-$22 $$$ = $23-$30 $$$$ = $31 and up

xxxx xxx xx x z

Based on average entrée price

the wheels on the bus go glug, glug, glug maine Brew Bus launches new tours and service Last month, the Maine Brewers’ Guild released an economic impact study showing that Maine’s breweries sold $92.5 million worth of beer last year, while employing close to 1500 workers. Our state is home to the fifth highest number of breweries per capita in the United States, with 4.7 breweries per 100,000 21-plus adults; as of today there are 53 breweries in Maine, and several more are slated to open later this year. The craft brew industry is expected to grow by 200 percent over the next four years, the guild reports. So it makes sense that the Maine Brew Bus, our favorite local designated driver founded by Zachary and Allison Poole, is expanding right along with the breweries it promotes on its all-inclusive beer tours. Over a beer at In’finiti last week (a starting point for several of the company’s tours), Maine Brew Bus “Vice Principal” (they like playing up the educational aspect) Don Littlefield told me about how they’ve added a bus to their fleet — purchased the day after Christmas, “Mabel” boasts a few more “creature comforts,” like air-conditioning — as well as several new itineraries. The “SudS and SpiritS” tour visits three spots in Portland that brew beer or distill spirits (and one that does both) — New England Distilling, where they make gin, rum,

f

and Maine’s first post-prohibition whiskey, Gunpowder Rye; Foundation Brewing, a new draft-only production brewery on Industrial Way; and In’finiti Fermentation and Distillation. The “York CountY BountY” tour takes advantage of the brewery boom in York County, where there are 16 breweries and counting. With stops at the new Banded Horn Brewing Co. in Biddeford; the Elements beer/coffee/books emporium, also in Biddeford (where visitors can taste the beers of Gneiss Brewing out of Limerick); and Funky Bow Brewery and Beer Company in Lyman, this ride offers a taste of what’s going on, beer-wise, south of Portland. (The Southern Crawl tour, the details of which are still being worked out, will also explore this area, with stops in Wells, York, Biddeford, and Saco.) The Brew Bus will also offer its first-ever Sunday tour this year: the “northern expoSure” loop, which will take visitors to Baxter Brewing in Lewiston, then on to the new Ebenezer’s Brewpub in Brunswick, a sister locale to the famous (and remote) Ebenezer’s Pub in Lovell. That tour wraps up with a stop at the Maine Beer Co. in Freeport, which is expanding its line-up in 2014. And that’s not all. Other tours are in the works for Fridays, Mondays, and even

nate Bowman, Bowman produc ti ons

_ By d e ird r e fu lton

a Learning experienCe Brew Bus riders gather ’round at the urban farm fermentory, a stop on the local pour tour. Tuesdays, with stops around Portland and beyond. The Brew Bus will also continue its “Progressive Beer Dinner Series;” the first of the season takes place next Wednesday, May 28 with Atlantic Brewing Co. out of Bar Harbor. For $70, participants will enjoy welcome beer and apps at the Little Tap House in Portland, followed by additional food courses at Tuscan Bistro in Freeport, Royal River Grillhouse in Yarmouth, and the Top of the East — all paired with Atlantic Brewing Co. beers and with transportation provided, of course.

Also keep your eyes peeled this summer for the bright green bus serving as a shuttle during happy hour (4-7 pm) on Tuesdays and Wednesdays. The Maine Brew Bus “Hop and Go Shuttle” will make a loop around Portland, stopping at 10 established locations to let riders on and off (the service will be free for riders and funded by charging the official stops a bi-monthly rate). The service starts next month. ^

Learn more at themainebrewbus.com.

Parade — June 21

FShort Takes xx BLenDeD 117 MinUtes | pG=13 | westbrook cineMaGic + clarks pond + saco cineMaGic + aUbUrn + nordica + sMitty’s biddeford, sanford, & windhaM In this bawdy, ugly farce a widowed father (Adam Sandler) goes on a disastrous blind date with a single mom (Drew Barrymore) only to wind up sharing a hotel room with her when their families are accidentally booked on the same African vacation. As their dysfunctional kids bond, the two gradually fall for each other; the film is sweet in stretches, but screenwriters Ivan Menchell and Clare Sera deflate every sentimental gesture with a sophomoric quip. Unlike comic greats Groucho Marx and Jerry Lewis, who deflected sincerity with style and impudence, Sandler is simply cruel; his movies would be more likable if the

_drew hunt

xxx LOCKe 84 MinUtes | r | nickelodeon + railroad sqUare A married construction foreman (Tom Hardy) abandons his responsibilities the night before an important job and drives to a London hospital, where a woman with whom he had a fling is about to give birth to his child. Written and directed by Steven Knight, this British release functions as sort of a mobile chamber drama: the action is confined entirely to the protagonist’s car, and the story unfolds through cell phone calls to his wife, who’s devastated; his boss, who’s enraged; and

Festival — June 21

The Pride Portland! Parade and Festival are Saturday, June 21. Here is a full list of Pride week events. For more information, visit: www.prideportland.org

Movie reviews in brief

jokes weren’t so mean-spirited and the characters such sexist and racist caricatures. Frank Coraci directed; with Kevin Nealon and Terry Crews.

Pride Portland! 2014 — 10 Days of Events!

his panicked exlover. The conceit is riveting at first because Knight forgoes any backstory or exposition, though as the foreman’s plight becomes clear, the tension quickly dissipates. Visually the film is a Dogme 95-esque exercise in minimalism and available resources; Knight uses passing streetlights and reflections in the car’s windows to dreamy, impressionistic effect, but this is dispelled by Hardy’s garrulous scene chewing. Featuring the voices of Ruth Wilson and Ben Daniels.

_drew hunt

xx MiLLiOn DOLLAR ARM 124 MinUtes | pG | westbrook

Blended

cineMaGic + clarks pond + aUbUrn + lewiston + saco cineMaGic + sMitty’s biddeford, sanford & windhaM You’d never guess this Disney sports drama was scripted by Thomas McCarthy, writerdirector of such meaty independent releases as The Visitor (2007) and Win Win (2011); it’s a completely by-the-numbers affair about a sports-marketing agent (Jon Hamm) who sets out

to recruit major-league baseball players from India but learns the sturdy lesson that sports should be fun instead of an exercise in moneygrubbing. The story is encrusted with formula: the cute young doctor (Lake Bell) who rents the hero’s backyard apartment and appears on cue to offer one-liners and life advice, the cranky old baseball scout (Alan Arkin) who comes along to India and rips on everyone in sight, the wide-eyed teenagers with good arms (Suraj Sharma, Madhur Mittal) who journey to America and get into trouble like naughty children. The movie was inspired by the real-life experiences of agent J.B. Bernstein, but the story stretches all the way back to Disney’s Jan-Michael Vincent comedy The World’s Greatest Athlete (1973). Craig Gillespie directed; with Aasif Mandvi and Bill Paxton.

_Jr Jones

Friday June 13

Raising the Rainbow: Celebration & Rally — Location TBD — 5:30pm Outright Prom — Holiday Inn by the Bay, Portland —7:30pm–10:30pm Pride Portland! Kick-Off Party: Requiem for the Disco — Grace Restaurant, Portland —9pm–1am

Saturday June 14

Rainbow Run / Walk 5K — Back Bay, Portland — 8am–11am — 5k Run — Rain of Shine Pride Ball Tournament — Preble Street Field, Portland — 11am–3pm

Sunday June 15

Woof — Quarry Run Dog Park, Ocean Ave, Portland — 2pm–4pm

Monday June 16

Dinnah’ on the Lawn — Fort Sumner Park, Portland — 5:30pm–8:30pm

Tuesday June 17

Shake Your Asana!: Pride on the Mat — Location TBD — 6pm–7:15pm “Wizard of Oz” Sing-a-Long — USM Parking Garage Rooftop, Portland —7:30pm–10:30pm

Wednesday June 18

“Pride” the Musical — Rivalries, Portland — 7pm–11pm Drag Bingo — Blackstones, 4pm–8pm & Styxx, 9pm — Bingo between local bars. Maine LGBT History: Life & Activism in the 70s — Rines Auditorium, Portland Public Library — 7pm–8:30pm

Thursday June 19

Bayside Bowl — Bayside Bowl, Portland — 9pm–1am. EQME Spirit of Pride Summer Party — Ocean Gateway, Portland — 6pm–8:30pm

Friday June 20

Queer Critical Mass Bicycle Ride — Western Prom — 5:15pm–6:30pm Portland Dyke March — Monument Square — 7:30pm— Ending at 1 Longfellow with an after party. Maine LIFE Events Jungle Dance Party — Mainestreet, Ogunquit — 8pm–1am Styxx & Stones — Styxx / Blackstones / One Longfellow, Portland — 9pm–1am

Saturday June 21

Pride Interfaith Service— First Parish Church, Portland — 9am Pride Portland! Parade — Congress Street, Portland — 12noon Pride Portland! Festival — Deering Oaks Park, Portland — 1pm–5pm Maine LIFE Events Freedom Dance Party — Port City Music Hall, Portland 8pm–1am

Sunday June 22

Pride Portland! Finale Tea Dance — The Inn on Peaks Island —12:30pm–5pm

Pride Portland! Sponsors:


28 May 23, 2014 | the portland phoenix | portland.thephoenix.coM

Unless otherwise noted, all film listings this week are for Friday, May 23 through Thursday, May 29. Times can and do change without notice, so do call the theater before heading out. For up-to-date film-schedule information, check the Portland Phoenix Web site at thePhoenix.com.

dinner + Movie CInEMaGIC Grand

333 Clarks Pond Parkway, South Portland | 207.772.6023

tHE aMaZInG SPIdEr-Man 2 | 12:15, 3:30, 6:45, 9:45 BlEndEd | 11:15, 1:50, 4:30, 7:10, 9:50 GodZIlla | 1, 4, 7:10, 10 MIllIon dollar arM | 1, 4, 7, 9:50 nEIGHBorS | 11:20 am, 2, 4:30, 7, 9:40 tHE otHEr WoMan | 11:15 am, 1:50, 4:30, 7:20, 9:50 tHE raIlWaY Man | 11:15 am, 1:45, 4:15, 7:15, 9:45 X-MEn: daYS oF FUtUrE PaSt | 12:30, 3:30, 6:45, 9:40

nICKElodEon CInEMaS 1 Temple St, Portland | 207.772.4022

BEllE | 1:45, 4:15, 7:15, 9:35 CHEF | 1:15, 4, 7, 9:40 FIndInG VIVIan MaIEr | 2:45 Grand BUdaPESt HotEl | 12:30, 6:40 GodZIlla | 1, 3:45, 6:45, 9:30 nEIGHBorS | 12:45, 3, 5:15, 7:30, 9:45 loCKE | 4:45, 8:50 tHE raIlWaY Man | 1:30, 4:30, 6:50, 9:20

WEStBrooK CInEMaGIC

183 County Rd, Westbrook | 207.774.3456

tHE aMaZInG SPIdEr-Man 2 | noon, 3:20, 6:30, 9:35 BEarS | 12:20, 2:30, 4:40 BlEndEd | 11:40 am, 2:15, 4:50, 7:30, 10

CaPtaIn aMErICa: tHE WIntEr SoldIEr | 12:15, 3:30, 6:50, 9:40 dIVErGEnt | 12:10, 3:20, 6:40, 9:40 GodZIlla | 12:10, 12:30, 3:20, 3:40, 6:50, 7:10, 9:35, 9:50

GodZIlla 3d | 11:40 am, 3, 6:30, 9:15 HEaVEn IS For rEal | 6:45, 9:15 lEGEndS oF oZ: dorotHY’S rEtUrn | noon, 2:20, 4:40 MIllIon dollar arM | 12:30, 3:30, 7, 9:45

MoMS’ nIGHt oUt | 11:50 am, 2:20, 4:40, 7:30, 9:50 nEIGHBorS | 11:50 am, 2:10, 4:30, 7:15, 9:50 tHE otHEr WoMan | 7, 9:50 rIo 2 | 11:50 am, 2:15, 4:40, 7:20, 9:45 X-MEn: daYS oF FUtUrE PaSt | 11:40 am, 12:20, 3:10, 3:50, 6:40, 7:10, 9:30, 10 X-MEn: daYS oF FUtUrE PaSt 3d | noon, 3:30, 7, 9:50

MaInE

PaSt | Fri-Sun: 8:20 BlEndEd + GodZIlla | Fri-Sun: 8:20 X-MEn: daYS oF FUtUrE PaSt + tHE otHEr WoMan | Mon-Wed: 8:20

ColonIal tHEatrE

163 High St, Belfast | 207.338.1930 Call for shows & times.

EVEnInGStar CInEMa

Tontine Mall, 149 Maine St, Brunswick | 207.729.5486 Call for shows & times.

FrontIEr CInEMa

14 Maine St, Brunswick | 207.725.5222

FIndInG VIVIan MaIEr | Tues: 2, 6, 8 | Wed: 2, 6 | Thurs: 2, 6, 8 tIM’S VErMEEr | Fri: 2, 6, 8 | Sat: 2 | Sun: 2, 6, 8

HarBor tHEatrE

185 Townsend Ave, Boothbay Harbor | 207.633.0438

tHE otHEr WoMan | Fri-Sat: 7 | Sun: 3

tHE Grand BUdaPESt HotEl | Mon-Wed: 7

lEWISton FlaGSHIP 10

855 Lisbon St, Lewiston | 207.777.5010

tHE aMaZInG SPIdEr-Man 2 |

12:20, 3:35, 6:40 BlEndEd | 1:05, 4:20, 7:20 dIVErGEnt | 12:15, 3:20, 6:35 GodZIlla | 12:50, 4:05, 7:25 MIllIon dollar arM | 12:45, 3:25, 6:50 MUPPEtS MoSt WantEd | 12:45, 3:30 nEIGHBorS | 1:15, 4:10, 7:35 non-StoP | 7:40 tHE otHEr WoMan | 1:20, 4:25, 7:10 rIo 2 | 1, 3:55, 6:55 X-MEn: daYS oF FUtUrE PaSt | 12:30, 3:40, 7:05

lInColn tHEatEr 2 Theater St, Damariscotta | 207.563.3424

BEarS | Fri-Sun: 2, 7 | Wed: 7 | Thu: 2, 7

tHE MaGIC lantErn

9 Depot St, Bridgton | 207.647.5065 Call for shows & times.

narroW GaUGE CInEMaS 15 Front St, Farmington | 207.778.4877 Call for shows & times.

nordICa tHEatrE

1 Freeport Village Station, Suite 125, Freeport | 207.865.9000

BlEndEd | 1:10, 4:10, 7, 9:35 GodZIlla | 4:15, 7:10 GodZIlla 3d | Fri-Sun: 12:45, 9:50 |

rEGal BrUnSWICK 10 19 Gurnet Rd, Brunswick | 207.798.3996 Call for shows & times.

SaCo CInEMaGIC & IMaX

783 Portland Rd, Rte 1, Saco | 207.282.6234

BEarS | 12:30, 2:40, 4:40 BlEndEd | 12:20, 3, 7, 9:40 CaPtaIn aMErICa: tHE WIntEr SoldIEr | 8 FadInG GIGolo | 12:20, 2:30, 4:50, 7:30, 9:40

X-MEn: daYS oF FUtUrE PaSt |

Mon-Thurs: 12:45

GodZIlla | 12:30, 3:30, 6:45, 9:30 GodZIlla 3d - IMaX | 1, 4, 7:15, 10 MIllIon dollar arM | noon, 4,

3:45, 6:40

7:10, 10

| 12:40, 9:40

4:40, 7:20, 9:40 nEIGHBorS | noon, 2:20, 4:40, 7:30, 10 tHE otHEr WoMan | 12:30, 3, 7, 9:30 tHE QUIEt onES | 12:20, 2:40, 5, 7:20, 9:30 tHE raIlWaY Man | 1, 3:30, 7:30, 10 rIo 2 | noon, 2:20, 4:40

X-MEn: daYS oF FUtUrE PaSt 3d

oXFord FlaGSHIP 7 1570 Main Street, Oxford | 207.743.2219 Call for shows & times.

raIlroad SQUarE CInEMa 17 Railroad Sq, Waterville | 207.873.6526

BEllE | Fri: 2:30, 4:40, 6:50, 9 | SatSun: 12:20, 2:30, 4:40, 6:50, 9 | Mon: 12:20, 2:30, 4:40, 6:50 | Tue-Thu: 2:30, 4:40, 6:50 FEd UP | Fri: 3:10, 5:10, 7:10, 9 | SatSun: 1:10, 3:10, 5:10, 7:10, 9 | Mon: 1:10, 3:10, 5:10, 7:10 | Tue-Thu: 3:10, 5:10, 7:10 FadInG GIGolo | Fri: 2:50, 7, 9:05 | Sat: 12:40, 2:50, 7, 9:05 | Sun: 12:40, 2:50, 7, 9:05 | Mon: 12:40, 2:50, 7 | Tue-Thu: 2:50, 7 God’S PoCKEt | 4:55

rEEl PIZZa CInEraMa 33 Kennebec Place, Bar Harbor | 207.288.3828

Grand BUdaPESt HotEl | 6, 8 X-MEn: daYS oF FUtUrE PaSt | 5:30, 8:15

MoMS’ nIGHt oUt | noon, 2:20,

SaCo drIVE-In tHEatEr

969 Portland Rd, Saco | 207.284.1016

X-MEn: daYS oF FUtUrE PaSt + tHE otHEr WoMan | Fri-Sat: 8:10

SMIttY’S CInEMaBIddEFord

420 Alfred St, Five Points Shopping Center, Biddeford | 207.282.2224

tHE aMaZInG SPIdEr-Man | Fri-

Sat: noon, 3:15, 6:45, 9:45 | Sun-Mon: noon, 3, 6:45 | Tue: 3:30, 7 BlEndEd | Fri-Sat: noon, 3:30, 6:30, 10 | Sun-Mon: 12, 3:30, 6:30 | Tue-Thu: 3:30, 7 GHoStBUStErS | Wed: 7 GodZIlla | Fri-Sat: 12:30, 3:15, 4, 7, 10 | Sun-Mon: 12:30, 3:15, 4, 7 | Tue: 3:30, 4, 6:30

MIllIon dollar arM | Fri-Sat: 12:30, 3:30, 6:45, 10 | Sun-Mon: 12:30, 3:30, 6:45 | Tue: 4, 6:30 nEIGHBorS | Fri-Sat: 12:30, 4, 7:15, 10 | Sun-Mon: 12:30, 4, 7:15 | Tue: 4, 7 rIo 2 | Fri-Mon: noon, 6:30 | Tue: 6:30 tHE SIXtH SEnSE | Wed: 7 X-MEn: daYS oF FUtUrE PaSt | Fr-Sat: noon, 12:30, 3, 3:30, 6:15, 7:30, 9:30, 9:45 | Sun-Mon: noon, 12:30, 3, 3:30, 6:15, 7 | Tue-Thu: 3:30, 4, 6:30, 7

SMIttY’S CInEMaSanFord 1364 Main St, Sanford | 207.490.0000 Call for shows & times.

SMIttY’S CInEMaWIndHaM

795 Roosevelt Trail, Windham | 207.892.7000

tHE aMaZInG SPIdEr-Man 2 | FriSat: noon, 3:30, 6:45, 9:45 | Sun-Mon: noon, 3:30, 6:45 | Tue-Thu: 3:30, 6:45 BlEndEd | Fri-Sat: noon, 3:15, 7, 10 | Sun-Mon: 12, 3:15, 7 | Tue-Thu: 4, 7 GHoStBUStErS | Wed: 7 GodZIlla | Fri-Sat: 12:30, 3:45, 6:15, 6:30, 9:45 | Sun-Mon: 12:30, 3:45, 6:15, 6:30 | Tue: 3:45, 6:45, 7 MIllIon dollar arM | Fri-Sat: 11:45 am, 3, 6:15, 9:45 | Sun-Mon: 12:30, 3:30, 6:30 | Mon-Thu: 3:30, 6:45 nEIGHBorS | Fri-Sat: 12:45, 4, 7:30, 10 | Sun: 12:45, 4, 7 | Mon-Thu: 4, 7 rIo 2 | Fri-Mon: 12:15, 4 | Tue: 4 X-MEn: daYS oF FUtUrE PaSt | Fri-Sat: 12:45, 4:15, 7:45, 10 | Sun-Mon: 12:45, 4:15, 7:45 | Tue-Thu: 3:30, 7:15

SPotlIGHt CInEMaS 6 Stillwater Ave, Orono | 207.827.7411 Call for shows & times.

StonInGton oPEra HoUSE

Main St, Stonington | 207.367.2788

BEnEatH tHE HarVESt SKY | Fri: 8

Attorney Christopher Leddy “As a former prosecutor I have insight that allows me to develop legal strategies to favorably resolve OUI/criminal cases for my clients.” www.atrlaw.pro Reach Chris directly at 699-4814 Ainsworth, Thelin & Raftice, P.A. 7 Ocean Street, South Portland, Maine 04106

Strand tHEatrE

345 Main St, Rockland | 207.594.0070

tHE Grand BUdaPESt HotEl | Fri: 5:30, 8 | Sat: 3, 5:30, 8 | Sun: 3, 5:30 | Mon: 7 | Tue: 1, 7 | Wed-Thu: 7

tHoMaSton FlaGSHIP 10

9 Moody Dr, Thomaston | 207.594.2100 Call for shows & times.

nEW HaMPSHIrE tHE MUSIC Hall

28 Chestnut St, Portsmouth | 603.436.9900

tHE anonYMoUS PEoPlE | Thu: 6:45

nYMPHoManIaC Vol. 2 | Fri-

Wed: 7

oMar | Fri-Thu: 7

rEGal FoX rUn StadIUM 15

45 Gosling Rd, Portsmouth | 603.431.6116 Call for shows & times.

SERVING FOOD UNTIL 12:30AM EVERY DAY, WEEKEND BRUNCH FROM 10AM

188A State Street, Portland, Maine find us on facebook 207.899.3277 Mon.–Fri. 4pm-1am | Sat. & Sun. 10am-1am

FIlM SPECIalS MECHanICS Hall 519 Congress St, Portland | 207.773.8396

SIGrId on HEr 14tH BIrtHdaY | Fri: 8

Portland MUSEUM oF art

7 Congress Square, Portland | 207.775.6148

JUSt a SIGH | Fri: 6:30 | Sat-Sun: 2

Moms’ Night Out

la rg N es o t w rth at ern er an Ne d wE am n us gla em nd en ’s tp ar k!

movie Th e a Te r lisT ing s

Portland

CAN YOU AFFORD TO LOSE YOUR LICENSE FOR 150 DAYS?

alaMo tHEatrE

85 Main St, Bucksport | 207.469.0924

HEaVEn IS For rEal | Fri-Sat: 7:30 | Sun: 2

aUBUrn FlaGSHIP 10

746 Center St, Auburn | 207.786.8605

tHE aMaZInG SPIdEr-Man 2 | 12:20, 3:20, 7:20

BlEndEd | 1:10, 4:10, 7:10, 9:45 GodZIlla | 12:40, 3:40, 6:55, 9:35 GodZIlla 3d | 1:30, 4:30, 7:30 HEaVEn IS For rEal | 1, 4, 6:50 MIllIon dollar arM | 12:50, 3:50, 7, 9:45

nEIGHBorS | 12:10, 2:30, 4:45, 7:15, 9:30 tHE otHEr WoMan | 7:05, 9:25 rIo 2 | noon, 2:20, 4:40 X-MEn: daYS oF FUtUrE PaSt | 12:30, 3:30, 6:45, 9:15, 9:40

X-MEn: daYS oF FUtUrE PaSt 3d | 1:20, 4:20, 7:25

BrIdGton tWIn drIVE-In tHEatrE 383 Portland Rd, Bridgton | 207.647.8666

rIo 2 + X-MEn: daYS oF FUtUrE

207.284.5139 • US Route 1 • Saco, ME • www.funtownsplashtownusa.com

Funtown USA Rides opens May 10! Splashtown USA Water Park opens June 14!


30 May 23, 2014 | the portland phoenix | portland.thephoenix.coM

F

Back page Jonesin’

_by syMbo line Da i The week of the waning moon is always good for lunar gazing. You can see the maria (the black basalt seas) in full relief, and a decent pair of binoculars reveals the jagged edges of the craters as the Earth’s shadow falls across the moon. This week, you’ll want to continue developing projects that began earlier in the month, but also look for shortcuts. I love this lunar phase because no matter what else is going on, that urge to shop prevails (thus tidily negating emotional or intellectual upheaval). So go through your closet, and try new combinations. Don’t you love a forecast this shallow? For more, email sally@moonsigns.net.

f

_ by M a t t J o n es

“Make it rain”

— it’ll be your downfall

Across 1 Brother of dubya 4 does nothing 10 “and others” abbreviation 14 let go 15 Fed. securities 16 1958 chevalier musical 17 actress Kirshner 18 like some fibrillation 19 agents under J. edgar hoover, informally 20 put effort into test prep 22 Serviceability 23 ex-r.e.M. lead 24 hiccups, e.g. 27 “dang straight!” 30 certain Sooner 3 1 problem while drying out 33 Backside 34 not quite transparent 35 in-basket stamp: abbr. 37 necklace part 39 address for Bill and ted 1

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detach Become less hostile irish airline ___ lingus research your blind date, say Mister, in rio polar expedition vehicle 10-rated Bo amateur Bunk up cupid’s specialty Bar in a steering mechanism “32 Flavors” singer diFranco attack of the flu leisurely walk alkali in cleansers Barracks bunks Where everything from the theme answers collects young bloke 6

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Down 1 impromptu concerts 2 Goes offstage 3 reason cosmetology is a no-go? 4 “Freeze!” 5 Where sand and plastic shovels go? 6 When tripled, a 1970 war film 7 Make Kool-aid 8 abacus piece 9 Fashionable initials 10 Sandwich spread 11 party in new york city? 12 Get better in barrels 13 Jeremy of the nBa 21 “lock Up the Wolves” metal band 22 “___ and away” 24 the two things tires do best? 25 “harold and ___” 26 nasty expression 28 course for U.S. immigrants 29 “___ how i roll” 31 “hugs not ___” 32 carpentry joint part 36 horse-drawn vehicles, despite their name 38 that naval vessel 41 cosmetics aisle brand 43 Sweet-talk 47 day division, in Venice 50 Great rift Valley locale 52 in ___ (as found) 53 alpaca group 54 longtime yankees nickname 55 conked out 56 “resurrection” network 57 ranch call 58 cough syrup amt. 24

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Waning moon in aries. the waning moon is about “ends” not “beginnings,” but it’s a great time to start a diet or stop a habit. the theme is “barbeque” and creativity, so those home-cooks will have fun devising unlikely marinades. those in tune with the moon: aries, pisces, Sagittarius, leo, aquarius, taurus, and Gemini. Slightly peeved: cancer, capricorn, Virgo, Scorpio, and libra. 29

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Waning moon in taurus. consumerism wins! acquisitive and luxury-loving, the taurus moon gives permission for all kinds of indulgence, and having a kick-back Monday comes easiest to pisces, cancer, aquarius, Scorpio, Virgo, and libra. luxury-loving leo, aries, Sagittarius, Gemini, taurus, and capricorn could be derailed by unexpected social opportunities. 31

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tuesday May 27 16

dark of the moon in taurus, moon void-of-course 5:10 am until 2:40 pm Wednesday. the “dark” interlude means accidents can happen, mainly due to rashness. Misunderstandings arise over trivia (“i don’t like how you said that”), and it can be an accident-prone time. however, “random encounters” could bring a change of direction worth exploring. do not make firm decisions and if you do, hold off on announcing them. easy to lose small stuff (where are the keys?). But do try a new path, or a new tactic. this goes for all 12 signs. 32

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This horoscope traces the passage of the moon, not the sun. Simply read from day to day to watch the moon’s influence as it moves through the signs of the zodiac. | When the moon is in your sun sign, you are beginning a new 28-day emotional cycle, and you can expect increased insight and emotionality. When the moon moves into the sun sign opposite yours (see below), expect to have difficulties dealing with the opposite sex, family, or authority figures; social or romantic activities will not be at their best. | When the moon is in Aries, it opposes Libra, and vice versa. Other oppositions are Taurus/Scorpio, Gemini/Sagittarius, Cancer/Capricorn, Leo/Aquarius, and Virgo/Pisces. The moon stays in each sign approximately two and a half days. | As the moon moves between signs, it will sometimes become “void of course,” making no major angles to planets. Consider this a null time and try to avoid making or implementing decisions if you can. But it’s great for brainstorming. | For Symboline Dai’s sun-sign horoscopes and advice column, visit our Web site at thePhoenix.com. Symboline Dai can be reached at sally@moonsigns.net.

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