Providence 10/03/14

Page 1

october 3-9, 2014 | rhode island’s largest weekly | Free

art

abstract realism

andrew paul woolbright’s ‘shrinebeast’ at yellow peril _by greg cook | p 14

public records 101 It’s true: knowledge is power. Here’s a primer on how to dig up court documents, state employee salaries, election dirt, and much more _by philip eil | p 8

is as the projo turns th j t in ‘Middle class squeeze’ hits Fountain St | p 6 us

!

murderous fun

Brown Theatre’s Sweeney Todd | p 13


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facebook.com/ProvidencePhoenix | @ProvPhoenix | Providence.thePhoenix.com | the Providence Phoenix | october 3, 2014 3

Faust-Oberfest!

octoBER 3, 2014

contents

BiEr WurSt MuSic FuN ! Outside of Faust Hofbrauhaus

in this issue p 13

(Located in the Dean Hotel)

122 Fountain St. providence ri p 21

p8

8 puBlic REcoRds 101 _ B Y p hilip Eil

Friday Oct. 3rd 4 to 11pm Musical guests: HEctOr 3

A primer on how to dig up court documents, election dirt, and more.

10 dining _BY chRi s cont i

The spEakEasY BaR & gRill is all the rage on Thames Street in Newport.

12 homEgRown pRoduct _ B Y chRis con ti

Devoted to downtown: auRoRa lights up Westminster St.

13 thEatER _BY Bi ll Rod RiguE z

Murderous fun: Brown Theatre stages swEEnEY todd.

Saturday Oct. 4th Noon to 11pm SupriSE MuSical GuEStS!

14 aRt _ BY gRE g cook

Between abstract and realism: andREw paul woolBRight at Yellow Peril.

21 film

“Short Takes” on thE disappEaRancE of ElEanoR RigBY, gonE giRl, and more.

the usuaL stuff 4

phillipE & JoRgE’s cool, cool woRld

The BlowJo vs. the Bud-I | Farewell to Joe Vileno

4 6

JEn soREnsEn this Just in

The “middle class squeeze” hits Fountain Street | Brown plants a ball and chain on campus

11

8 daYs a wEEk

Punk-rockers Rough Francis come roaring out of Burlington, VT | Polaris bring the sounds of The Adventures of Pete & Pete to life at the Met | Taste Trekkers invite you to Foodie Day

22 moonsigns

_ B Y sY mB ol in E da i

22 JonEsin’ _pu z z l E B Y ma tt J o n Es

Polaris | p 11

Providence

Providence | PortLand voL. xxvii | no. 39

stePhen m. mindich PubLishEr + ChairMan

everett finkeLstein

ChiEf oPErating offiCEr

offices ProvidEnCE 150 chestnut st, Providence, ri 02903 401.273.6397 | fax 401.273.0920 wEbsitE Providence thePhoenix.com PortLand 65 west commerciaL st, suite 207, PortLand, me 04101 | 207.773.8900 | fax 207.773.8905 subsCriPtions buLk rate $74/6 months, $156/1 year, aLLow 7-14 days for deLivery. caLL 401.273.6397 CoPyright © 2014 by the Providence Phoenix, inc. aLL rights reserved. reProduction without Permission, by any method whatsoever, is Prohibited. PrintEd by mass web Printing co., inc., 314 washington st, auburn, ma 01501 | 508.832.5317

Managing Editor Lou PaPineau nEws Editor PhiLiP eiL Contributing Editors biLL rodriguez, Johnette rodriguez Contributing writErs rudy cheeks, chris conti, greg cook, chiP young Contributing PhotograPhErs nataLJa kent, richard mccaffrey graPhiC dEsignErs andrew caLiPa, Jennifer soares aCCount ExECutivEs bruce aLLen, micheLe camPeLLone, scott hanna, Leah schroeder advErtising oPErations ManagEr adam oPPenheimer dirECtor of adMinistration rachaeL mindich sEnior aCCountant kathryn simoes MEdia oPErations Coordinator ryan mccabe CirCuLation kevin dorgan thE PhoEnix MEdia/CoMMuniCations grouP ChairMan stePhen m. mindich ChiEf oPErating offiCEr everett finkeLstein

SuNday Oct. 5th 2 -10 pm Musical Guests: MiSS WENSday & tHE cOtilliONS

come One, come all! prOSt!


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Phillipe + Jorge’s Cool, Cool World

lies and damned lies Blowjo vs. the Bud-i; golf = garish; farewell, joe The Urinal is making no

bones about how it feels f about Buddy “Vincent A.” Cian-

ci’s bid for mayor of Our Little Towne. The September 24 editorial titled “Cianci’s Half-Truths,” stating the former mayor would stop at nothing including “halftruths and outright lies” to slake his thirst for his former seat of power at City Hall, didn’t leave a great deal to the imagination. Sandwiched between articles reminding readers that Cianci is a twice-convicted felon, and a PolitiFact piece that deemed a Bud-I campaign claim to be a “half-truth,” readers are starting to believe the guns are drawn at Fountain Street and aimed at a certain now-shining pate. Some media analysts have noted that this ill-concealed hatred of the Bud-I may backfire on the BlowJo, since it’s not as if the paper doesn’t already have enough detractors. The paper’s outright contempt for Cianci may sway undecided voters in Buddy’s favor, invoking the famed “Why don’t they leave that poor man alone?” local sentiment that cropped up during New England mob boss Raymond Patriarca’s final days. The Bud-I has been among those critics of The Other Paper, constantly calling the rapidly shrinking daily “The Providence Pamphlet” on his erstwhile WPRO radio talk show, and taking jabs at the empty suits there every chance he got. But as P&J pointed out in this space last week in regard to organizers of the anti-Cianci PAC, the Bud-I doesn’t take kindly to personal attacks, and has a verrry long memory about assaults on his character, warranted or not. “Revenge” isn't Cianci’s middle name, but it may as well be. So the newbie ProJo ownership better guard their Fountain fortress with an Israeli “Iron Dome”style system of missile-intercepting rockets if Cianci is elected in November. The fact that the mayor’s office is only two blocks away from Urinal headquarters may make for some interesting new routes to work being taken by the BlowJo’s fourth floor denizens, lest they bump into the BudI on the street and get more than an earful. P&J see the number of parking tickets and wheel boots distributed in the environs surrounding Fountain Street going up exponentially, should Bud-I 3.0 become a reality. That’s no half-truth.

SportS FaShion police

The upcoming appearance of professional superior behaviorist Tim Gunn, from Project Runway, at URI’s Edwards Auditorium that has P&J

feeling obliged to leap into fashion critique-ing. Everyone knows that legions of people, quite rightly, have identified golf attire as the most glaring example of sartorial bad taste on the planet. Suffice it to say the only time outrageous plaid, pastel-infected, and madras-plagued golf outfits ever looked suitable for human wear was when they were worn by Rodney Dangerfield in Caddyshack. But then again, what do you expect from a bunch of rich white Republicans whose wives and PR advisors generally dress them for work? Golfing’s recent Ryder Cup, a biannual competition between the best US pro golfers and their European counterparts that’s the biggest golf event of any year it is played, showcased why Americans are not looked upon as masters of elegant sports styling. (And the Yanks should have known better. At the 2010 Cup, team captain Corey Pavin found a way to finagle his wife into a job designing

Jen SorenSen

players’ attire. Not only were the resultant rags non-traditional and hideous, but because of the way the rain suits were constructed, they leaked badly, and America’s top players found themselves drenched while playing, while the Euros were comfy and dry. The Americans, not coincidentally, lost. Thanks, Corey.) At this year’s three-day event, the players from Great Britain and the continent wore nicely matched, color-coordinated outfits with a classic look every day. Well played. The US team, on the other hand, were kitted out in sweaters that looked like they’d been picked off the remainders rack at Walmart. The first day uniform featured a ghastly, barely recognizable embroidery of the Ryder Cup trophy on the front, while the second featured a garish embossed American flag. You almost expected to see “PINK” stenciled across the rear ends of their pants. And on the critical last day, our

boys were sent out clad in a combination that would have made even Dangerfield wince: blue and white striped shirts and red pants that made your eyes water at fifty paces. It was almost comical to see old pros like Jim Furyk and Phil Mickelson walking around looking — and no doubt feeling — like they had lost a bet and had to wear the clown suits as a result. Oh, forgot to mention . . . the Europeans kicked our ass — again. As any fashionista worth their Chanel or Armani will tell you, less is more. Less is more.

radio J-o-e

Last week, P&J were deeply saddened to learn of the passing of our good friend, Joseph Vileno. We had known Joe for more than 35 years, and he was a classic Providence character, political activist, and working-class hero. He was a regular presence at such bygone Providence watering holes as Leo’s on Chestnut Street and Hope’s on Washington Street, where he held

court and provoked lively debates in his booming, instantly recognizable voice — hence, the sobriquet “Radio JOE.” A graduate of La Salle Academy and Providence College, Joe eventually earned a master’s degree from Wayne State University. His professional specialty was urban affairs and housing and he had worked for city governments in Detroit, San Francisco, Boston, and Providence. If anyone knew the landscape of urban politics in America, it was Joe Vileno. You could learn a lot about the history of the civil rights movement and fair housing by listening to his stories. Joe was always active in politics and he served as chairman of Providence’s Eleventh Ward Democratic Committee in South Providence, where he made his home. In 1986, he made a run for mayor of Providence, challenging incumbent Joseph Paolino in a Democratic primary (Joe V. was a lifelong Democrat). In recent years, Joe underwent surgery for heart ailments, but still managed to hang out at Nick-aNee’s and produce and host a public access cable TV show, Viewpoint, where he interviewed a wide range of political figures from across the state. And Joe knew Italian food just like he knew urban politics and the inside of a barroom. It was always a great treat to find out about the latest off-the-radar place for good pasta from Joe. He leaves his son, Aram, and daughter, Cara, and grandchildren, Sylvia and Alex. There will never be another like Radio JOE.

KudoS and congratS . . .

. . . to Jorge’s hometown, the center of the universe, Pawtucket, Vo Dilun, and its just-announced latest crew of inductees into the city’s Hall of Fame. This year it’s an all-woman extravaganza. The 2014 inductees are Joan Crawley (former director of Pawtucket’s Leon Mathieu Senior Center), the late Kathleen Magill (former City Councilor), and Miriam Plitt (President of the City’s Commission on Arts & Culture). This year’s historical inductee will be Elizabeth Higginson Weeden, a 19th-century philanthropist who established the Elizabeth Higginson Weeden Home for Indigent and Infirm Females. A new award has also been created this year, “Person of the Year,” and that honor will be given to State Senator Donna Nesselbush. Congratulations to all of these fine Ladies of the Bucket. (A note from Phillipe: Jorge is too modest to say so, but he, too, is in The Bucket’s Hall of Fame.) ^


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“I still believe that the most important takeaway from this entire enterprise is the truth — historic truth.”

This Just In

_martin puryear

As The ProJo Turns

Institutions

The ‘middle class squeeze’ comes to Fountain Street

in memory, brown plants a ball and chain on campus

taKinG it tO tHe Street The ProJo protest. worries of longtime Guild President, John Hill (“We are very concerned about LMG/GateHouse’s plan to cut as many as 40 jobs in January and February”), and subsequent response from interim Journal publisher Bernie Szachara (“We’ll choose to respect the bargaining process and defer to conveying our issues there as much as possible”). But, you can’t say a whole lot with 209 words. We’re already up to 151 in this article. So we thought we’d fill out the picture a bit. The September 26 article didn’t mention how precipitously the Providence Newspaper Guild’s numbers have dropped in recent years, due to repeated rounds of layoffs, buyouts, and premature retirements. As recently as the mid2000s, the Guild represented more than 400 reporters, photographers, and other staffers at the ProJo. Now, after 22 layoffs during September’s Belo-to-GateHouse ownership transition, that number hovers around 140. While GateHouse recently posted four editorial jobs online, including sports writing and investigative reporting positions, Hill tells us, “adding four and subtracting 40 is still lousy math.” The article also didn’t mention that the “about 85 members and supporters of the Providence Newspaper Guild” included 85-yearold retired ProJo reporter and former Guild president, Jack Thompson, who covered news and politics at the paper in the 1960s and ’70s. Marching in the picket with the aid of a cane, Thompson said that it’s “a disgrace, the way they’re treating these people.” The paper used to be considered one of the ten best in the

country, he said. “I don’t think that’s the case anymore, but it’s still a good paper. And it’s gonna be a hell of a lot worse when they lose these people.” The article didn’t mention that, during the protest, workers from the coffee-and-wieners joint across the street, Coffee King, joined the picket. Or that, toward the end of the hour, a white 18-wheeler marked “TEAMSTERS LOCAL 251 RHODE ISLAND” rolled down Fountain Street, blaring its horn for most of the length of the Journal’s block. Or that, at various times, members of the crowd chanted, “Providence Journal, what do you say? Workers rights are here to stay!” The article didn’t mention that the bright green fliers handed out by picketers (“The 22 layoffs already created a newsroom that doesn’t reflect our great diversity. We now have one reporter of color and not one writer who speaks Spanish fluently,” read one of its bullet points) ended with a call to action: “Support the Providence Newspaper Guild by writing Letters to Kirk Davis, CEO, of GateHouse Media, Bernard Szachara, Providence Journal Interim Publisher; and Ali Zoibi, Director of Labor Relations, GateHouse Media. Send them to 75 Fountain St., Providence, RI, 02902, and send a copy to us.” And the article didn’t note the bitter irony that currently befalls Journal employees. While dozens go to work apparently knowing their days are numbered (Hill says numerous employees were told by the news owners they’d be staying, only to receive letters informing them of early-2015 termination dates), they may be writing, reporting, copy-editing, or laying out stories like “RI Wages Flatlining as Workers Struggle” and “Rhode Island’s Middle Class Loses Ground As Rich Get Richer, Poor Get Poorer” for the Journal’s ongoing “Middle Class Squeeze” series. The Phoenix reached out to Bernie Szachara for a comment on the current situation, but he declined to add anything beyond his previous Journal quote. And executive editor Karen Bordeleau didn’t respond to our email and phone inquiries. That said, Bordeleau’s comments in a September 28 Journal article previewing the paper’s October 2 “What’s Happening to Rhode Island’s Middle Class?” forum at Rhode Island College are worth reprinting here. “As Rhode Islanders, we are not only witnessing the contraction of the middle class, we are experiencing it,” she told writer G. Wayne Miller, one of many Journal reporters who marched in the picket. “The middle class is the supporting structure of our economy. If we don’t find a way to keep it standing, everything else will come crashing down.”

_Philip Eil

mikE cohEa

The Providence Journal ran a 209-word story titled “Newspaper Guild Protests Job Cuts, Transfers” on page A5 of its September 26 edition. The story laid out the basics of the previous day’s lunch-hour picket outside the paper’s headquarters: the “signs with slogans such as ‘My R.I. job matters’”; the fliers that “noted recent layoffs at the Journal and criticized plans to shift some positions early next year to a GateHouse design center in Austin, Texas”; the musical accompaniment by members of the What Cheer? Brigade marching band; the

f

It was a sunny and steamy afternoon on September 27 on Brown University’s front green, when around 3:30 pm, inside a white tent overflowing with guests, Martin Puryear stepped to the podium. Behind the 73-year-old, Yale-trained, MoMA-exhibited, National Medal of Artsreceiving, MacArthur Foundation “genius grant”-winning sculptor’s right shoulder was Brown’s signature building: University Hall, which, in March, served as the inspiration for a 600-pound replica cake commissioned to kick off the University’s 250th anniversary celebration. The building, constructed in 1770, also played a key role in 2006’s Report of the Brown University Steering Committee on Slavery and Justice, the 85-page product of then-president Ruth Simmons’ institutional soul-searching mission. “[T]he construction of the building was financed through a public subscription campaign,” reads page 12 of the report. “A few donors honored pledges by providing the labor of their slaves for a set number of days.” Behind Puryear’s other shoulder was Brown’s newest work of public art: a partially-submerged, eight-feet-diameter ball of iron, from which three giant chain links — the last one snapped in half, its broken edges gleaming with a mirror-like coating — reach skyward. Nearby, a waist-high circular slab of granite bore an engraving that began, “This memorial recognizes Brown University’s connection to the trans-Atlantic slave trade and the work of Africans and African-Americans, enslaved and free, who helped build our university, Rhode Island, and the nation.” A few sentences down, it read, “Brown University was a beneficiary of this trade.” What follows are Puryear’s remarks from that Saturday afternoon dedication ceremony, a somber interlude during Brown’s 250-themed “Fall Celebration” weekend packed with tours, performances, forums, and a football game against Harvard followed by a fireworks show. Puryear’s words have been edited slightly, for length.

artiSt at WOrK Puryear.

“I was honored to be chosen to collaborate in bringing this memorial into being. Initially, I was honored, and after I took on the project I realized what a weight it is to try to memorialize something as shameful as the practice of buying and selling human beings, which went on for so long in this country. It became a real chore and it felt as though something that didn’t really allow much for my own usual involvement [and] engagement with my sense of freedom as an artist to tap into my fantasies, my musings as an artist. It was a very, very overwhelming sense of responsibility to historical truth. And how do you use your art to somehow do justice to that historical truth? “Brown wanted a sculpture, and I’m a sculptor, so I was able to provide a sculpture. But that was, as I said, complicated and difficult. But I still believe that the most important takeaway from this entire enterprise is the truth, historic truth. “After all, who knew that Rhode Island was the center of the business of the slave trade? I had no idea. And as this plaque will attest, over 1000 slaving voyages originated from Rhode Island to West Africa. “So, in grappling with this project, we went through, together with ...the art committee, historians, a number of iterations. It was not a simple process. For me, the most complicated part of this was finding the right tone that this project should take. It had to completely avoid blame, moralizing; it simply had to present the facts. “So, I chose to create an object, because Brown wanted a sculpture, which would be something in the nature of an industrial artifact. Because slavery was, in fact, an industrial reality. It was a way that this society created wealth. It was a way that it measured wealth. And to me the memorial should reflect that. And I hope that I’ve created an industrial artifact that is partially buried — mostly buried — but will never, ever disappear from memory. “For that reason, I chose to create the work in ductile cast iron — an industrial material, not bronze, which is used for heroic monuments celebrating respected realities. This is an industrial monument, so it’s made in an industrial foundry, with an industrial process [from] over four tons of ductile cast iron. And ductile cast iron is not brittle, like grey iron; it’s much more resilient and robust. And it’s designed to last as long as any building on this campus. “As I said, it’s meant to be a permanent memorial. The only part of the memorial which I think will require maintenance at all is the polished break on the end of the chain. That’s created from polished stainless. And that will occasionally benefit from being buffed up with some stainless steel polish. So keep the freedom alive: buff the end of that break on the chain. “[This is] also a blunt monument. It doesn’t require a degree in Art History to look at it and, together with the text, understand what it’s about.” _Philip Eil


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public records 101 knowledge is power! inform thyself! _By ph il ip e il On September 15, the freedom of information advocacy organization, ACCESS/RI, released Access Limited: An Audit of Compliance With the Rhode Island Public Records Laws, a 131-page report examining how Rhode Island’s 39 cities and towns, and 24 of our state and quasi-public agencies — from the Airport Corporation to the Department of Health to the State Police — are living up to the state’s recently-enhanced Access to Public Records Act (APRA). The report, produced with the help of the Boston-based “collaborative news site and public records request platform,” Muckrock, didn’t paint a pretty picture. Among its numerous recommendations for reform was a prescription for “A Change in Culture.” Citing the need to “reverse a deep-rooted attitude of secrecy that seems embedded in too many agencies,” the report’s authors stated, “There can be little question that a culture of indifference — if not outright hostility — to the public’s right to know is a key reason for the less-than-stellar results detailed in this audit. Too many agencies appear to consider complying with open records requests a burden rather than what it actually is and should be — a core mission of their agency.” Now, before your eyes glaze over from reading words like “audit” and “public records,” let’s talk about what this stuff actually means. Access Limited found that 10 of 24 state and quasi-public agencies audited didn’t have anyone on staff properly trained and certified to handle public records requests. This included the General Assembly — aka, the government body that tinkers with our tax structure, fast-tracked the multimillion dollar bill allowing 38 Studios to happen, and, in general, writes and re-writes the rules by which everyone plays in this state. The report also found that almost a fourth of the offices surveyed — 32 of 137, including 14 out of 38 police departments — failed to properly post their public record-requesting procedures online. Nearly half of the 39 police departments surveyed failed to respond to requests for arrest logs within the legally-mandated 48 hours (for a weekday request) or 72 hours (for a weekend/holiday request). The report also described troubling in-person requests to law enforcement agencies that were met with erroneous refusals and claims that such information was “confidential” or “no one gets that.” In a darkly ironic twist, the report found that state Auditor General’s office, which, according to its own mission statement, “exists to support the State Legislature and Federal Government in meeting their constitutional responsibilities and to help improve the performance and accountability of government” was the “worst agency by far” in terms of overall agency compliance with state records laws. Think about that for a second. Now is perhaps a good time to tell you that ACCESS/RI President and URI journalism professor emeritus Linda Lotridge Levin calls public records the “bedrock of democracy.” We technically own these police reports and school superintendents’ contracts, she says, “and they’re overseen and taken care

If your thirst for numbers isn’t quenched by all of this, the transparency portal also offers breakdowns of Commerce RI loans, state revenues and expenditures, motion picture tax credits, and state contracts over $1 million.

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COURT AND LEGAL RECORDS

of by your employees, whether they’re state employees or local employees.” “Transparency is absolutely critical a democratic society,” longtime RI ACLU executive director and fellow ACCESS/RI board member Steve Brown adds. “It’s not enough to have elected officials of government agencies doing government work, if you can’t find out exactly what it is they’re doing.” So this week, given the state’s underwhelming Access Limited performance — not to mention recent alleged beach concessions-contract shenanigans involving a state rep and the former head of the Rhode Island Democratic party; the March 2014 raid by federal agents on former Speaker of the House Gordon Fox’s home and office; the ongoing 38 Studios meltdown; and the leading-in-the-polls mayoral candidacy of twice-convicted Buddy Cianci in Providence — we decided to present a two-part article. Part one is to simply encourage you to peruse Access Limited, which is available online at accessri.org/foi-audits. html. Public info advocates tend to be modest, non-showboating folks, so we’re happy to hype this on their behalf. Not only are the findings in the report sweeping, detailed, and disturbing, but it also includes appendices stuffed with forms for filing records requests at offices and agencies from Woonsocket to Westerly. Since, as the report points out, simply finding how to properly make a request can often pose a roadblock, Access Limited’s ready-to-use training wheels make record-combing in Rhode Island exponentially easier for the rest of us. In that same spirit, we’re happy to introduce the second part of the article. Thanks to help from some local reporters and good-government advocates, we put together a public-info starter kit to help you start digging. Remember, public records are essentially the receipts for the tax money you fork

over every year. You may not always stay home on Saturday nights to read them. But you ought to be able to know where they are and how to retrieve them when you want to. Half civics lesson, half haunted hayride — this is your Public Records 101 course for the Ocean State. (Note: the bullet points that aren’t attributed to anyone in the following list come from me, Phoenix news editor, Phil Eil.)

STATE EMPLOYEE SALARIES

Let’s start simple, shall we? The amount of money state workers bring home each year is a) publicly available, and b) easily accessible via the state’s “transparency portal” at www.transparency.ri.gov/ payroll. Credit goes to the makers of this site for how straightforward it is. How much does Governor Lincoln Chafee make? Type in “Chafee,” click “Search,” and, bingo, a table of info appears with his name, job title, and total earnings for Fiscal Year 2014: $129,210.12. How about URI basketball coach — and perennial highest-paid state employee — Dan Hurley? $627,499.96. Rhode Island College president Nancy Carriuolo? $200,196.88. State Police superintendent and Department of Public Safety commissioner Steven O’Donnell? $159,084.74. But it isn’t just marquee names that are searchable. Type in a name like “Smith” and you’ll get a cross-section of state operations, from a principal marine biologist at the Department of Environmental Management ($52,080.19), to a correctional officer ($96,696.69), to a seasonal dietary assistant at the Department of Behavioral Healthy, Developmental Disabilities, and Hospitals ($11,429.08), to a chief of data operations at the Department of Administration ($79,261.90).

From WJAR Channel 10 investigative reporter Katie Davis: “Criminal Records: If a criminal case has ever been in District/Superior court in Rhode Island, you can find it online at courtconnect.courts.state.ri.us. So . . . if you want to know whether someone was ever arrested, even if the charges were later dropped, this is a good first step. Step two would be to go to the courthouse and pull the file to get specifics, such [as] an affidavit. [It’s the] same deal with Federal court on pacer.gov, although there is a fee to use the site and it’s a little more complicated. But PACER has most docs online as PDFs, saving you a trip to the courthouse. “Mugshots: Individual police departments may or may not give these out (which NBC 10 believes is bogus, by the way). But the ACI will email you a photo, as long as the case is no longer pending. So . . . if someone ever did time in Rhode Island, you can get a mugshot and the basic info about their stay (how long, discipline record, etc.) through the ACI. Many times you can get an old photo of someone who’s currently in the news. “Police Reports: As long as the incident didn’t involve minors, you should be able to get a copy of the police report just by showing up at any police department and asking (you may have to pay a small fee for copies). Just give a name or address and approximate date. Find out why cops showed up on your street, whether or not anyone was arrested, etc.”

PACER?

What is this PACER thing Katie is talking about? It’s a magical place (full name: Public Access to Court Electronic Records) where indictments, lawsuits, transcripts, motions, and other documents from federal courts, coast to coast, live. It’s here where you’ll find the docket (aka the log of events and documents) from Buddy Cianci’s “Plunder Dome” proceedings; 38 Studios bankruptcy filings; the latest salvos in the ongoing squabble between the owners of Providence’s “Superman” building (the Massachusettsbased High Rock Development) and its last major tenant (Bank of America); lawsuits involving CVS, Brown University, Alex and Ani, the Providence School Board . . . the list keeps going. To stroll the digital halls of PACER is to find yourself inside the whirlwind of legal activity taking place in our country every day. But, a word of warning: PACER’s 10 cent-per-page viewing/download rate may not sound like a lot, but it can add up fast.

DIGGING FOR ELECTION DIRT

From Rhode Island Public Radio political reporter Ian Donnis: “Back in the distant past — say, 2002 — reporters and other curious people


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had to schlep down to the Branch Avenue office of the state Board of Elections to review state candidates’ campaign finance filings. Thanks to the Internet, the filings are now just a few clicks away (elections.state. ri.us/finance) and they offer insight into all kinds of questions, from the big picture (How are the gubernatorial candidates doing with their fundraising?) to avenues for further inquiry (Which industries contribute the most in particular races? Why do people from out of state contribute to RI candidates?). “Candidates are required to file other paperwork with the Board of Elections, including when they formally organize a campaign. It was by finding such a filing in 2010 that I was able to break the news that Gina Raimondo was running for state treasurer. The Board of Elections also tracks third-party independent expenditures, an increasingly prominent piece of campaign spending. (It was through such filings that reporters were able to show how a five-figure contribution from a Walmart heiress made its way to an independent group backing lieutenant governor candidate Daniel McKee during the recent primary.) The state Board of Elections’ Web site is one of the best ways for examining the money that courses and flows throughout our political system. “See also opensecrets.org, a Washington group that tracks the influence of money in politics, and the Federal Election Commission, for federal candidates.”

how Americans use their time? Want to know which companies are getting the most consumer complaints? How about census numbers, government information on your food, or weather data? It’s all there. There are more than 100,000 datasets, all searchable by keyword. “[Finally,] one of the first steps a company has to take before starting the process of opening is to file for a certificate of zoning compliance. It was fall of 2011 when a check of certificates in Pawtucket’s zoning office tipped me off before anyone else that the city was about to become a craft beer destination. Owners of two new breweries, High Jinx (now Foolproof) and the Bucket Brewery, had both filed for certificates within days of each other and without knowing about each other. A quick trip to City Hall landed me a pretty good story and a newfound love of craft beer.”

‘The state Board of Elections’ Web site is one of the best ways for examining the money that courses and flows throughout our political system.’

A POTPOURRI OF PUBLIC INFO

Online news editor and Pawtucket and North Providence reporter for The Valley Breeze Ethan Shorey: “Curious about what vacant commercial properties near you might soon be occupied by something undesirable? Websites like loopnet.com not only show available properties by community, but often give hints as to what those properties are being marketed for. “Few websites offer more pure data than catalog.data. gov/dataset. Want to know

YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO REMAIN ANONYMOUS WHEN MAKING RECORDS REQUESTS

Common Cause RI executive director John Marion: “At first, that didn’t seem that important to me. But, as I’ve heard stories over the years, of people who have been publicly intimidated by government, the value of being able to do this anonymously, I think, is greatly enhanced. You might not think, if you go ask for tax records or whatever, that there’s value in anonymity. But there’s a real attitude sometimes with government, [of] ‘It’s the government’s information. Why would you want it?’ “[But] there are people out there who fear retribution from local government. So, there’s a value to letting people make these anonymous requests.”

BONUS ITEM: YOU ALSO HAVE THE RIGHT TO FILM AND RECORD COPS

It may be more of a first-amendment issue than a public-records fight, but we couldn’t help including this ever-important item from ACLU Rhode Island executive director Steve Brown: “The First Circuit Court of Appeals, which is the federal appeals court that has jurisdiction over Rhode Island, has issued a few very strong decisions confirming that members of the public have a first-amendment right to record law enforcement activity occurring in public. “Like any right, it’s not absolute. You don’t have a right to record when it would actually interfere with the police conduct that’s taking place. So, if you’re across the street and you see the police pull over a car and you want to record it, you have the right to do that. You don’t have the right to walk across the street and get in between the officer and the driver to record it. “But the court made very clear that the ability of the public to record police activity in public is an essential exercise of a right guaranteed by the first amendment.” ^

Philip Eil can be reached at peil@phx.com. Follow him on Twitter @phileil.

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• We provide 10 weeks of the nicotine patch and compensation up to $593.

CALL (877) 688-4247 to see if you qualify! You can also find us online at www.quitwithbrown.org/ourprojects and scroll down to the Quit for Health study for more information and link to answer our screening questions online.

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Research Study Smokers Wanted If you are a cigarette smoker 21 years of age or older, you may be eligible to participate in a research study by Brown University investigators examining alcohol use and smoking and a single dose of an FDA approved medication that may affect craving.

Participation includes completion of three sessions, two of which involve consuming alcohol and smoking in our lab and taking the study medication or a placebo. Participants can earn up to $328 by completing the study.

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To learn more about the study, call (401) 863-6684.

SMOKERS NEEDED Have you received treatment for drinking or drug use in the past year?

A 6-month research study is being conducted to compare the effects of smoking cigarettes that vary in nicotine content for 6 weeks. May earn up to $599 in store gift cards.

If interested call (401) 863-6464 or toll free at 1-877-374-6577

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food

OUR RATING

outstanding excellent good average Poor

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$ = $15 or less $$ = $16-$22 $$$ = $23-$30 $$$$ = $31 and up Based on average entrée price

speakeasy bar & grill all the rage on thames _b y chr is conti There are plenty of reasons why the Speakeasy Bar and Grill has become a year-round hit in the heart of Newport. Sure, there’s the prime locale on Thames Street, but it’s the creative menu offerings and outstanding overall value that keep the locals (and capital city landlubbers) coming back for more. Founded by a local trio of industry veterans and backed by a talented executive chef, the Speakeasy hoists the “casual fine dining” banner above the occasionally chaotic atmosphere. The husband-and-wife team of Michelle Carter and Josh Miles are front-of-house pros dating back SAVORY seared tuna at speakeasy. to their tenure at the nearby West Deck, where they met (and eventually recruited) chef (and JWU grad) Rob A full wine list is available (plus stanBiela. Co-owner Kevin “Sully” Sullivan made dard and local brews on draft and bottle), his indelible mark as the former owner of though we know to always start with a craft beer mecca Pour Judgement. You’ll ofpint of bartender (and chef Rob’s brother) ten find Josh behind the bar slinging drinks Michael’s red sangria. It is a refreshing and talking up his Pittsburgh Steelers (ugh) and potent kick in the pants. while Michelle flies around the dining room Sandwiches range from the Grilled resetting tables and expediting entrees. Swordfish with lemon caper aioli, an absoA narrow walkway leads to the hostess lute steal at $14 (served with fries), to the stand just inside and can make for a hectic Speakeasy Burger ($9), a behemoth built scene, with patrons debating whether to on Texas toast, slathered with PB&J, and wait for a table or attempt to squeeze in at topped with bacon and American cheese. the lengthy bar which extends to the outMain courses worth crossing the bridge(s) door area, while yet another bachelorette for include the decadent Lobster Gnocchi party bus unloads out front. The fleet($27), a panko-crusted hunk of swordfish footed waitstaff may be better off trading with tarragon and whole grain mustard in their all-black uniforms for fluorescent ($24), and the braised short ribs with roastcolors and a megaphone to pardon their ed barley ($19). Jill couldn’t decide whether way through the crowd. to ride the surf or hit the turf, until our The rich, dark wood interior is compleserver informed there was one Carpetbagmented by tables adorned in white linens. ger special ($32) remaining — a baconOn our most recent visit, my fiancée Jill wrapped filet (cooked to a perfect mediumand I scored a table for two in back, slightly rare) with a split lobster tail jutting out, perched above the bustling main floor. Our served with garlicky mashed spuds and busy server Melissa had her head on a swivel ratatouille on the side. I savored the Seared but we never felt rushed as she reviewed the Sesame Crusted Tuna ($23), fanned out evening’s specials. Chef Biela’s two-page over soba noodles and topped with sliced menu (all items available for lunch and din- avocado, scallions, hoisin glaze, and sriraner) soars above and beyond the “bar and cha aioli. Alas, the rotating list of in-house grill” genre, which always makes for some desserts was a total afterthought, though tough decisions among the 18 or so appetizour neighboring table gave two forks up to ers. The Escargots & Portobello Mushroom the bread pudding and chocolate lava cake. ($9.50) is a must-have every time I visit. The Yes, the Speakeasy can get loud at plump shelled snails arrive in a small casnight, but take advantage of the fastserole dish, bathing in a garlic and red wine approaching offseason for a more relaxed sauce along with hearty slices of mushdining experience, and jump on the Monrooms. I will pit this dish against any escar- day/Tuesday night two-for-$35 entrée spegot recipe in the state. The same applies for cial, too. You surely cannot go wrong. ^ the Portuguese Mac & Cheese ($8.50), with savory bits of chorizo mingling with perfectly al dente pasta. I may have found a new menu favorite — the Mussels Catalan ($14), with white wine, garlic, tomatoes, and Kalamata olives in a light cream sauce. Simply 401.846.0514 | sPeakeasybarandgrill.com 250 thames st, newPort outstanding. The Bermuda fish chowder mon-thurs, 5-9 Pm; Fri, 5-10 Pm; sat, ($8) trumps their New England clam chow12-10 Pm; sun, 12-9 Pm der, and those in need of a unique calamari preparation should take note of the Chinese major credit cards Five Spice style, sautéed in brown butter Full bar with almonds, black currants, spicy humsidewalk-level accessible mus, and pita chips.

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facebook.com/ProvidencePhoenix | @ProvPhoenix | Providence.thePhoenix.com | the Providence Phoenix | october 3, 2014 11

editors picks ’ f Regina Carter Quintet live bait and mom’s plate FirstWorks presents

Jazz virtuosity from a genius violinist

Photo by David Katzenstein

_compiled by lou papineau

saturday | polaris @ the Met friday 3 bringing the noise

Do you like it loud? Then you’ll like rough francis, straight outta Burlington, VT. The brothers Hackney (and two pals) were inspired by Death, a ’70s punk band which included their dad and uncle. They draw on ’60s garage rock and ’80s hardcore, and cite the Who, the Damned, MC5 and the Stooges (and Bob Ross) as influences. They’ve been ripping it up all over the USA and will bring a bit more volume than is usually heard at the Columbus Theatre, 270 Broadway, Providence, at 9 pm | $10 advance, $12 day of show | columbustheatre.com

scary sharing

Get a head start on Halloween at this month’s Live

bait: true stories from reaL PeoPLe. The theme is

“The Horror . . . The Horror.” As always, a creative take on the topic is encouraged. You know the drill: put your name in the fishbowl; if Phil “The Ghost” Goldman calls you up, start spewing (six-minute limit, no notes/rants). The hair-raising sharing starts at 10 om at 95 Empire Black Box, Providence | $7 | 401.489.2555

saturday 4 re-Pete & Pete

In the ’90s, Nickelodeon hosted a slew of delightfully offbeat shows,

which are fondly remembered by then-youth and then-parents alike. Some semi-subversive and notso-subtly twisted concepts were served up for a massive audience; we treasure The Ren & Stimpy Show, All That, KaBlam!, Cousin Skeeter, Rocko’s Modern Life, CatDog, and The Adventures of Pete & Pete. The latter was a wonderfully surreal show — endlessly inventive and bemusing and boundarypushing (including characters known as the Girl Scout of Death, Hat Head, OpenFace, Pit Stain, Papercut, the Urinator, and Mom’s Plate — the plate in the Pete’s mom’s head, which is featured in the opening credits). The then-parents’ heads were turned by the parade of guests: Marshall Crenshaw, Art Donovan, Chris Elliott, Gordon Gano, Steve Buscemi, Janeane Garofalo, Adam West, Frank Gifford, Iggy Pop, Debbie Harry, Patty Hearst, LL Cool J, and Michael Stipe. And the “house band” was PoLaris — aka, Miracle Legion (without Mr. Ray): Mark J. Mulcahy and local lads Scott Boutier and Dave McCaffrey (aka Muggy, Jersey, and Harris). They were seen playing the theme song, “Hey Sandy,” on the front lawn of the Wrigleys’ house, supplied other tunes during the show’s three-year run, and were featured as a garage band in the “Hard Day’s Pete” ep. If you missed all the fun, head to YouTube and prepare to binge. Polaris has only played one show, in LA in 2012. But fans who know every bit of the lore

we just typed are beyond thrilled to hear that they’re embarking on a nine-date tour — dubbed “Waiting For October” (named for a song from Pete & Pete, natch) — which will kick off at the Met, 1005 Main St, Pawtucket (dates in Brooklyn and Philly in November are already sold out). The Adventures-ous soundtrack will come to life — bolstered by “Happy Green Moon Face,” the first new Polaris song since 1996. To borrow the catchphrase from another Nick show, it’ll be nothing but happy happy joy joy in the air. Nonpareils (a legendary local mid-’90s band whose appearance is equally celebratory) and Bird & Horse will share the bill. Showtime is 8:30 pm | $15 advance, $20 day of show | 401.729.1005 | themetri.com

yum toWn

Providence has garnered quite the rep as a gourmet haven (the Boston Globe and the Wall Street Journal both added to the huzzahs last week). taste trekkers is presenting its Food & Travel Expo, and today is foodie day at the Biltmore Hotel. The event is stuffed with culinary delights from “Taste Trekkers Tens” (10-minute talks) to “Edible Sessions” (45-minute deep dives into dishes from around the world) to the Hope & Main Tasting Pavilion, with food and drink samples from local restaurants and artisanal food producers. Hungry yet? Go to taste trekkers.com to order tickets ($50 advance, $65 door) and all the details

“A knockout violinist who leads a knockout band!” —O Magazine

Saturday, October 18 - 8pm RISD Auditorium

Get tickets ($20-$44) first-works.org or 401-421-4281 Season Media sponsors:


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SEND INFO TO hO mEgr OwN p r OD u cT@gmaIl. cO m

homegrown product devoted to downtown aurOra lIghTS up wESTmINSTEr STrEET _By chr IS c ONTI Kudos and props to the

October schedule is jampacked just about every night of the week (most around $5 of downtown — billed as a and many with no cover all “cabaret lounge and art space night), with 20 events lined with the future of Providence up, and this month’s gallery on its mind.” In less than five exhibitions will feature paintmonths, the former site of ings by RISD alum Colin Bliss. the Roots Cultural Center (and Get down to Aurora on Octothe sorely missed Providence ber 18 and celebrate the Girls Black Repertory Company) Rock! RI five-year anniversary has been plenty busy with with a kickass lineup featuran abundance of multi-genre ing Roz & the Rice Cakes, shows, art exhibits, and Mother Tongue, Secret Lover, engaging weekly and monthly Gertrude Atherton (yes!), and events. many more performing “good “Aurora is still a work covers of bad songs.” The in progress, but we aim to show is all ages with a $5 dobe a community space where nation at the door. all are welcome,” Jenny Once-a-month gatherings Young, their booking/promoinclude the Jazz Jam Session tions ace, said when we spoke (second Wednesdays); DJ Nick earlier this week. One thing Hallstrom spins underground is certain — Aurora is in house music and dance clasvery capable hands and hopesics; a get-together for defully here to stay. Young signers in Providence called “I’VE GOT YOUR OLD ID/AND YOU’RE ALL DRESSED and creative director Sam the Clambake; and organist/ UP LIKE THE CURE” The Devotion poster. White (who also founded composer JPA Falzone (of the wildly successful Woolly Vio/Mire) will host a “Piano Fair) were hired by Arnold “Buff” Chace of urban Lounge” twice this month from 7-10 pm, appealing to the development giant Cornish Associates to oversee the after work/dinner crowds. Be sure to visit auroraprovidiverse programming schedule, which ranges from dence.com for updates/event/times. panel discussions to heavy metal and hip-hop shows Plus, I need to plug a new monthly gig called “Devo(Milkbread and Zumo Kollie rocked the stage last weektion,” presented by local music vets Nick Bishop and my end). Talk about a nice variety — the official opening old pal Michael Lamantia (known to all as Mikey Lams). night party featured the Sugar Honey Iced Tea, Night The duo have been friends for more than 15 years and Mom, the Atlantic Thrills, DJs, and aerialist Thea Ulrich shared time in hardcore crew Lifers. Lams paid dues tourswinging above the dance floor. And judging by the ing the country as a teenager with A Trillion Barnacle ongoing happenings, White and Young seem more Lapse, followed by the fuzzed-out indie-electro outfit than willing to expand the freak scene quotient, with MakeUpBreakUp, and most recently the grimy blues-rock events catering to the nearby AS220 and RISD crowds, duo Detroit Rebellion. Don’t expect cheesy retro nonsense and well beyond. here — Lams unleashed a block of My Bloody Valentine, The craft cocktail menu is another reason to swing Joy Division, and Afghan Whigs at the Devotion debut by Aurora (the venue is open nightly), spearheaded by last month. mixologist mastermind Jay Carr of the Eddy. Dude has “None of our sets are pre-scripted — that’s the fun pretty much singlehandedly flipped the script on what part,” Bishop said. “I only have an educated guess at a proper, refined cocktail list should entail in the capital what Mike’s going to bring to the table and vice versa, so city, and Aurora bar manager Audrey King slings a mean the excitement comes in playing off whatever we throw Mai Tai as well as a century-old “Karate Punch” recipe, at each other. We wanted to do something that would among other alluring libations (along with a select craft span a wide array of years and genres, which should crebeer list). ate some really interesting vibes.” ^ I may toss back an El Diablo or three this Friday (the 3rd) when 2013 WBRU Rock Hunt champs Torn Shorts “DEVOTION: ’80s + ’90s + Post-Millennium Tension!” | headline with special guests the Can’t Nots, the Stilts, Thursday, October 9 @ 10 pm | Aurora, 276 Westminster St, and the Big Lonesome, all for just $5 at the door. Aurora’s Providence | Free | 401.837.5438 | auroraprovidence.com

team behind the verf satile Aurora in the heart

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725 Hope Street Providence 401-274-9464

The Parlour’s a ‘Gas’

SpEnd fOUR niGhTS On nORTh main ST!

Bookend your weekend at the parlour on ThURSdaY (the 2nd) for

the four-night all-star fundraising bash “Life’s a Gas” benefitf ing the Trudeau Center. The opening night roster

features some of Lil Rhody’s best singer-songwriters — aLLysen CaLLery, Keith McCurdy, BiLLy Moretti, dyLan sevey, and more, and will continue through Sunday, with a suggested donation at the door. Expect some serious booty-shaking on fRidaY (the 3rd) at dusk with Boo City, von donovan, and philly’s st. JaMes & the apostLes ($7, 401.714.0444). also on friday, thoMas Gardner Jr. (ex-Someday providence) celebrates an Ep release at fatt Squirrel (401.808.6898); Ben Shaw (milkbread) hosts the

bimonthly series “is this Jazz?” continues at aS220 (401.831.9327); and nick-a-nee’s (401.861.7290) hosts a freebie featuring the Johnny Watson BLues Band (21+). On SaTURdaY (the 4th), head to Tavern on the hill in West Greenwich (401.385.3835) for neil Young all-star tribute crew younG rust; and Stone Soup Coffeehouse kicks off a new season in an old location (Slater mill, 401.248.4692) with folkbluesman Geoff MuLdaur. On SUndaY (the 5th), the hoWLin’ Brothers play the Roots hoot concert house in peace dale (401.965.0833); and the final “Life’s a Gas” gig at the parlour has Bad MotherfuCKer, Junior Beat, heCtor 3, and Japan’s red sneaKers. ahead to a busy WEdnESdaY (the 8th): some funky blues on hand at dusk with the Lovers Key (fL), ChanneL 9, northeast traffiC, and shotGun; aS220 presents nYC’s the shivers with locals Way out, vio/Mire, and more (all-ages, $6); and the weekly Bluegrass Throedown at nick-a-nee’s rolls on with aCoustiCana.

off the couch


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theater murderous fun brown’s sweeney todd _by bill r o drig ue z

danielle perelman

of Fleet Street have followed up the play of the same name by Christopher Bond? “Hey, let’s fun-up the story of serial killing and cannibalism with some bubbly tunes!” Stephen Sondheim, who did the music and lyrics, probably said to Hugh Wheeler, who wrote the book. It’s such a darkly delicious tale that Curt Columbus, the artistic director of Trinity Rep, wanted to direct the current Brown University Theatre production (through October 5). Music direction is by Brown senior Lizzie Callas. This is a lively experience from the outset, when the ensemble scowls and growls the thunderous title song: “Lift your razor high, Sweeney! Hear it singing! Yes! Stick it in the rosy skin of righteousness!” Shudder. The production attempts to frame the anger in the story in the context of the Occupy Movement and its amorphous resentment of pesky authority. Before the play proper begins, two “policemen” stroll around, hassling actors playing theatergoers. The performance is being put on by the occupiers on a makeshift stage. The time is 1846, and we first see Sweeney (Patrick Madden) just after he has disembarked in London from a ship, saying farewell to providential shipmate Anthony Hope (Jesse Weil), who had rescued his temporary companion on a raft. Sweeney — his real name is Benjamin Barker — has returned illegally, having been banned for life 15 years before and shipped to Australia on a trumped-up charge. He lost his wife Lucy, who poisoned herself after he left, and his young daughter Johanna (Katherine Doherty) to Judge Turpin (Skylar Fox), who had been lusting after Lucy and now has turned his lecherous attentions to Johanna, who has been his ward. So behind Sweeney’s murderous seething is a trifecta of personal injustices that the judge has inflicted on him. Good luck, Turpin. Sweeney decides that “we all deserve to die,” so at his barber chair he

goes about cutting the throats of strangers to town and others who won’t be missed. Madden gives good glower, and balancing that dark energy is the perfectly delightful performance of Natalie McDonald as Mrs. Nellie Lovett, who starts out as Sweeney’s landlady and ends up as his lover and co-conspirator. It’s possible that perky, thoughtless malevolence has been portrayed elsewhere with more charm and entertaining insouciance, but not that I’ve witnessed. A lightbulb brightens over her head when it occurs to her that all these meaty young men Sweeney is planning to dispatch will be going to waste above her bakery, which has been serving “the worst meat pies in London,” by her admission. What a bold entrepreneur. Their celebratory song that concludes Act I, “A Little Priest,” is a hoot and boosts his spirits: “Those crunching noises pervading the air,” he observes: “It’s man devouring man, my dear/And then who are we to deny it in here?” Besides our naughty duo, other characters and actors portraying them add to the grim fun. Beadle Bamford may be an obsequious minion to the dour judge, but Elias Spector-Zabusky adds a dimension of cagey character and an impressive singing voice. Frankie Troncoso is engaging as the hapless Toby Ragg, assistant to the phony Italian Barber Adolfo Pirelli (Evan Strouss), Sweeney’s professional competition. Sarah Gage is the hunched and libidinous Beggar Woman who is constantly bothering men. It’s a strength of this musical that so many of its songs not only propel the plot but also enhance the characterizations. My favorite in this regard is “Not While I’m Around,” in which Toby and Mrs. Lovett express their mutual fond affection and intention to protect each other. “Johanna” has the same mood and theme, as Sweeney and Anthony separately sing of their fondness for the young woman. In contrast, Mrs. Lovett’s “Parlor Songs” is a light distraction while Sweeney is murdering the Beadle. After its Broadway production 35 years ago, Sweeney Todd grabbed up both the Tony and the Olivier awards for best new musical, on Broadway and in London. Its 19th-century murderous mayhem was no more dated then than it is now, and it won’t be in the future, not as long as vicarious revenge quickens the hearts of us guiltily enjoying it. ^

OCCUPIERS The brown crew.

This is Today’s Country Music E R I C C H U R C H

We theater lovers must really be sick

puppies. Otherwise, why would the f 1979 musical Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber

#CATITUDE

CatCountry.com


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www.narrowscenter.org 20 minutes from Providence 16 Anawan Street, Fall River MA 02721 (near Battleship Cove) (508) 324-1926 Doors open @ 7pm Show starts @ 8pm (unless otherwise noted) • Special low-noiSe air conditioning SyStem •

Fri. 10/3: Country/ honkytonk /rockabilly

the SweetBacK SiSterS Sat. 10/4: Blues force …

SHemeKia copeland

FOR THE ROSES a frame from The Last Romantic.

art

between realism and abstraction Woolbright’s “shrinebeast’ at yelloW peril _by gr eg CooK Can sentiment be “an act of po-

litical resistance”? That’s an idea f Andrew Paul Woolbright is testing out

thurS. 10/9: Jazz!

tHe greg aBate QUartet/ eXpanSionS: tHe daVe lieBman groUp Fri. 10/10:

rUSted root 10/11: Julian Lage & Chris Eldridge, 10/15: Richard Thompson (sold out)

Get off stinky tobacco!

in his exhibit “ShrineBeast” at Yellow Peril Gallery (60 Valley St, Providence, through October 5). At the center of the room is Time Machine, a NordicTrack ski exercise contraption modified by a wad of white foam insulation stuck on top that looks something like a curdled cloud. Woolbright invites you to slide your head into an opening in the side of the blob lined with pink fur such that it might bring to mind a vagina. (My head was too big to squeeze in easily, so I gave up out of fear of getting stuck in there. Psychoanalyze the meaning of that, Dr. Freud.) Inside, I spied a little video screen showing repeating footage of people jogging. I couldn’t tell, but I’m told it’s video of George W. Bush jogging on the morning A CURDLED CLOUD Woolbright’s Time Machine. of September 11, 2001. So Time Machine is a device to foster pretty dreams that maybe temporarily transport us back to if for a picnic. But here the artist and his wife have blank the seeming calm before everything burned that sunny day. red eyes and marble white skin stained bloody red — “When I met my wife, I found myself able to return to perhaps from the roses garbing them, but they look like an optimism, sincerity and sentiment that I eventually wounded mannequins or zombies. Rather than optimism recognized as pre-9/11,” Woolbright writes. He describes and romance and tenderness, in many of his scenes it it as “Clinton era American optimism, love and sentiment feels like Woolbright is portraying romantic relationships in opposition to the millenarianism, nihilism, irony, as bloody ruins. slacktivism, failed neo-liberalism, and the resurgence of Which I don’t think is what he intended. The intrigucultural conservatism we are currently experiencing.” ing gonzo rituals he creates for his videos and paintings It feels like too rosy a description of the Clinton era, leave you with powerful feelings — weird, disoriented, but there’s no doubt that we could all use some loving sordid, sexy, wary, curious feelings. And the guy can after our post-9/11 monster years of wars, torture, drownpaint — large and lush confections in rose reds and leafy ing New Orleans, financial collapse, Gulf oil spill, and greens melting along the boundary between realism and killings of Trayvon Martin and Michael Brown. Much as abstraction. I look forward to seeing more. I want the Time Machine to rewind back to the beginning, to be an act of daydream resistance against all this pain, The three-person show “Perspectives | Translations | what I feel is its inevitable failure. Refractions” at the Wheeler School’s Chazan Gallery In Woolbright’s 11-minute video The Last Romantic, he (228 Angell St, Providence, through October 8) includes sits in the back of a white stretch limo, naked except for Jeff Bertwell’s bland watercolor drawings of patterns roses that wrap around his face and trunk. He wiggles that look like river stones or quarry walls, and Saberah his toes in a pile of flower petals. His hand pets a white Malik’s birds and stones and (maybe) hearts sculpted out beaded purse-thing on the seat beside him, suggestively of organza, which feel too precious, but there’s potential fingering its opening. for magic here. The video, a clunky, Matthew Barney-on-zero-budget Check out Laurie Sverdlove’s vivid oil paintings of cacaffair, cuts to a scene of Woolbright projectile vomiting ti, wildflower meadows, weedy patches, and lily ponds roses. It then shows him blossoming under (what and his wife, naked save look like) nets or pergofor roses dotting their las or cracking up geoskin, sitting (via the desic domes. She paints magic of video effects) them hot, with neon in a golden palace room, yellows and pepper reds picking flowers off of and lots of lines that themselves and passzigzag or snake around, ing them to each other, crackling with energy. as rose petals swarm in On her website, she says the air above. The video she’s “fascinated by the cuts to a scene of him violence and cataclysms squatting naked save for of nature as well as some roses in a field of by the environmental tall grass like a schlubby destruction caused by Pan. humans.” I registered In his oil painting Fort something strange goof the ShrineBeasts, a nude ing on — but it was man and woman peek more like someone starout of a makeshift tent ing at her garden and of bed sheets set up unimagining feral alien CRACKLING WITH ENERGY sverdlove’s Ohashi Plants. der the shade of a tree as worlds. ^

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16 october 3, 2014 | the providence phoenix | providence.thephoenix.com | @provphoenix | facebook.com/providencephoenix

noted, most Unless otherwise 9 pm. nd oU ar rt shows sta . es tim irm nf Call to Co

Listings CLUBS THURSDAY 2

AURORA | Providence | Swindle CITY SIDE | Woonsocket | Them Apples CLUB EGO | Providence | Star Search

Thursday [talent contest/drag show/dance party] THE 88 LOUNGE | Providence | 8 pm | Brooks Milgate THE FATT SQUIRREL | Providence | One Drop Thursday with DJ Paul Michael FETE LOUNGE | Providence | 8 pm | Vacationer + Brick & Mortar + Jetty GILLIGAN’S ISLAND | Westerly | Open mic hosted by Bob Lavalley IRON WORKS TAVERN | Warwick | Betsy Listenfelt KNICKERBOCKER CAFE | Westerly | 8 pm | Open Mike with host band Ms. Marci & the Lovesick Hounds MARINER GRILLE | Narragansett | 7 pm | Alger Mitchell MEDIATOR STAGE | Providence | 7 pm | Open mic hosted by Don Tassone THE MET | Pawtucket | 8 pm | Bayside + I Am the Avalanche + Seaway NEWPORT BLUES CAFE | Felix Brown NICK-A-NEE’S | Providence | Driftwood Soldier ONE PELHAM EAST | Newport | Jason Cardinal 133 CLUB | East Providence | Mac Odom Band PERKS & CORKS | Westerly | Men With Guitars

PERRY MILL TAVERN & MUSIC HALL | Newport | Throwback

Thursday with DJ Double G PICASSO’S PIZZA & PUB | Warwick | 9:30 pm | Karaoke with DJ Bobby Devine RI RA | Providence | Wicked Cool Karaoke hosted by Ronnie THE SALON | Providence | DJ Handsome J SIMON’S 677 | Providence | Joel Ortez TIPSY SEAGULL DOCKSIDE PUB | Fall River, MA | 7 pm | C.J. Martin THE WHISKEY REPUBLIC | Providence | Vinny Vibe

FRIDAY 3

See Club Directory for phone numbers and addresses. AS220 | Providence | 8:30 pm | Is This Jazz? featuring Alon Nechushtan with Venture Bound Trio + City of Four AURORA | Providence | Torn Shorts + the Stilts + the Can’t Nots + the Big Lonesome BOONDOCKS BAR & GRILL | Fall River, MA | What Matters? BOVI’S | East Providence | Damaged Goods CADY’S TAVERN | Chepachet | Steve Malec & Electric Flood CHAN’S | Woonsocket | 8 pm | Michelle Willson & the Evil Gal Festival Orchestra CITY SIDE | Woonsocket | The Kulprits CLUB EGO | Providence | Twerk Friday with DK Rukiz CLUB ROXX | North Kingstown | Outnumbered THE CONTINENTAL | Smithfield | 7 pm | Deb Hopkins CUSTOM HOUSE COFFEE | Middletown | 5 pm | Open mic with John Hillmann & Graham Gibbs DAN’S PLACE | West Greenwich | Sunday Gravy DUSK | Providence | Boo City + St. James & the Apostles + Von Donovan 1150 OAK BAR & GRILL | Cranston | Lansdowne + Prospect Hill THE 88 LOUNGE | Providence | 6 pm | Viana Newton | 9 pm | Tom Chace FINN’S HARBORSIDE | East Greenwich | 5:30 pm | Alger Mitchell GAME 7 SPORTS BAR & GRILL | Plainville, MA | Brian Cabral

GREENWICH HOTEL | East Greenwich | Dan Lilley & the Keepers HANK’S DOWN SOUTH | Narragansett | 8 pm | Tom Burgess IRON WORKS TAVERN | Warwick | Mike Colletta KNICKERBOCKER CAFE | Westerly | 8 pm | Girls, Guns & Glory + the Hoolios THE LAST RESORT | Smithfield | Brother To Brother LIGHTHOUSE BAR AT TWIN RIVER

| Lincoln | Santa Mamba

LUPO’S HEARTBREAK HOTEL |

Providence | 7 pm | The Wonder Years

+ the Story So Far + Modern Baseball + Gnarwolves MARINER GRILLE | Narragansett | 7:30 pm | The Dunn Brothers with Gil Pope THE MET | Pawtucket | Max Creek NARRAGANSETT CAFE | Jamestown | Fat City NEWPORT BLUES CAFE | Felix Brown NEWPORT GRAND | Take Two NEWS CAFE | Pawtucket | Biscuit City NICK-A-NEE’S | Providence | Johnny Watson Blues Band OAK HILL TAVERN | North Kingstown | Dick & Jane OCEAN MIST | Matunuck | Phokus ONE PELHAM EAST | Newport | Bearfight 133 CLUB | East Providence | Stone Leaf PERKS & CORKS | Westerly | The Baker Brothers POWERS PUB | Cranston | Jimmy Legs

RHODE ISLAND BILLIARD BAR & BISTRO | North Providence | Pearl Band

THE SALON | Providence | Upstairs

| DJ Nick de Paris & DJ La Rochelle | Downstairs | DJ Dox Ellis THE SPOT UNDERGROUND | Providence | Viral Sound TIPSY SEAGULL DOCKSIDE PUB | Fall River, MA | 7 pm | John Sage UNCLE RONNIE’S RED TAVERN | Burrillville | Greg Hodde’s Blue Reign VANILLA BEAN CAFE | Pomfret, CT | 7:30 pm | Open mic featuring Heather Fay THE WHISKEY REPUBLIC | Providence | 5 pm | Brian Twohey | 9 pm | DJ Dirty DEK

SATURDAY 4

AS220 | Providence | Harris Hawk + J/Q + bloodpheasant

AURORA | Providence | Public Access with DJ Nick Hallstrom

BOONDOCKS BAR & GRILL | Fall

River, MA | Wild Nites BOVI’S | East Providence | Half-Star Hotel

CADY’S TAVERN | Chepachet | Johnny Watson Jr.

CAFE ZOG | Providence | 8 pm | The Baskethouse with G.W. Mercure

CHAN’S | Woonsocket | 8 pm | Anthony Gomes

CITY SIDE | Woonsocket | What Matters? CLUB EGO | Providence | Suger Ego Saturday with DJ Rich Ladue

CLUB ROXX | North Kingstown | Fuzz Box

THE 88 LOUNGE | Providence | 7 pm | Danny Arico | 10 pm | Guest acts

GAME 7 SPORTS BAR & GRILL |

Plainville, MA | Mike Lebon GREENWICH HOTEL | East Greenwich

| 8:30 pm | Open mic

HANK’S DOWN SOUTH | Narragansett | Barley Hoppers

IRON WORKS TAVERN | Warwick | Triad

JAVA MADNESS | Wakefield | 11 am | T.C. Ethier | 2 pm | Open mic JIMMY’S SALOON | Newport | The Rap Up with Messy Tye + Big Gs + Dutty + Redd Rebel + Ams Uno + P. Seize KNICKERBOCKER CAFE | Westerly | 9 pm | Soul Shot THE LAST RESORT | Smithfield | Mercy Bullets

LIGHTHOUSE BAR AT TWIN RIVER | Lincoln | Dezyne

LUXURY BOX SPORTS BAR &

GRILL | Seekonk, MA | Felix Brown MANCHESTER 65 | West Warwick |

Dropkicks & Drumsticks with Moment of Clarity + Shore City + Sweet Babylon + the Eradicates MARINER GRILLE | Narragansett | 7:30 pm | Shawn Reilly THE MET | Pawtucket | 8:30 pm | Polaris + Nonpareils + Bird & Horse NARRAGANSETT CAFE | Jamestown | 5 Flavor Discount NEWPORT GRAND | Rumors NEWS CAFE | Pawtucket | Karma & the Truth OAK HILL TAVERN | North Kingstown | Sol Music OCEAN MIST | Matunuck | Dr. Slick OLIVES | Providence | World Premiere ONE PELHAM EAST | Newport | eNVy 133 CLUB | East Providence | Travis Colby Band O’ROURKE’S BAR & GRILL | Warwick | Shananagans PERKS & CORKS | Westerly | The Hornets POWERS PUB | Cranston | Mike & Mark

RHODE ISLAND BILLIARD BAR & BISTRO | North Providence | The Automatics

THE SALON | Providence | Upstairs

| DJ Michael Moyal | Downstairs | Turn Up Saturday with DJ Ill Will THE SPOT UNDERGROUND | Providence | Viral Sound TIPSY SEAGULL DOCKSIDE PUB | Fall River, MA | 3 pm | The Khourys VANILLA BEAN CAFE | Pomfret, CT | 8 pm | SloGrass THE WHISKEY REPUBLIC | Providence | Funhouse + DJ Obie

SUNDAY 5

AS220 | Providence | 8 pm | The

Empire Revue presents “The Mystery Show!,” with the Superchief Trio + the Sparkling Beatniks, guests Jones & Boyce + Stevie Lightnin + Niraj Shah + Bettysioux Tailor + Tim Vargulish + host Keith Munslow AURORA | Providence | 7:30 pm | Lion Eye Music with Becky Bass and Rose Weaver BOUNDARY BREWHOUSE | Pawtucket | 7 pm | Open blues jam with Wolfie & the Jam Daddies CADY’S TAVERN | Chepachet | 3 pm | Open mic blues jam with the Rick Harrington Band CLUB EGO | Providence | X Room Sunday [all-male revue with guest gay porn stars] THE 88 LOUNGE | Providence | 5:30 pm | Danny Arico | 8:30 pm | Sunday Sing-Along/Karaoke FIREHOUSE 13 | Providence | 4 pm | Expire + Rude Awakening + Caught In a Crowd + Test of Time + Waste of Life GILLIGAN’S ISLAND | Westerly | Steve Chrisitan HANK’S DOWN SOUTH | Narragansett | 4 pm | Papa Joe Show JAVA MADNESS | Wakefield | 11 am | Grace Rennick KNICKERBOCKER CAFE | Westerly | 2 pm | Mitchfest 6 with Johnny & the East Coast Rockers [2 pm] + the Soupy Boys [3:30 pm] + Nolan Leite & Mavy Gravy [4:45 pm] + Neal Vitullo & the Vipers featuring Dave Howard [5 pm] + Rick Russell & the Cadillac Horns with Mr. Nick, Lisa Marie, Cheryl Arena, Al Copley, and other guests [6:30 pm] | Proceeds benefit Hospice Rhode Island in memory of James “Mitch” Christina THE LAST RESORT | Smithfield | Something Else

LIGHTHOUSE BAR AT TWIN RIVER

| Lincoln | 2 pm | Niki Luparelli & the Gold Diggers THE MET | Pawtucket | 8 pm | The Airborne Toxic Event MURPHY’S LAW | Pawtucket | 9 pm | Sunday Night Blues Jam NARRAGANSETT CAFE | Jamestown | 4 pm | Detroit Breakdown OCEAN MIST | Matunuck | 3:30 pm | Swerving Cadillacs

ONE PELHAM EAST | Newport | Ryan McHugh from Brick Park

O’ROURKE’S BAR & GRILL |

Warwick | 5:30 pm | Gary Gramolilni PERKS & CORKS | Westerly | 8 pm | Will Evans

PICASSO’S PIZZA & PUB | Warwick | Karaoke with DJ Bobby Devine

MONDAY 6

BOVI’S | East Providence | John Allmark’s Jazz Orchestra

THE 88 LOUNGE | Providence | 8

pm | Piano jam open mic with host Travis Colby GREENWICH HOTEL | East Greenwich | 7 pm | Hotel Jam Night NICK-A-NEE’S | Providence | The House Combo THE PARLOUR | Providence | Reggae Night with Upsetta International + the Natural Element Band PERKS & CORKS | Westerly | Songwriters’ open mic

TUESDAY 7

AURORA | Providence | 7 pm | Piano Lounge with JPA Falzone

GREENWICH HOTEL | East Greenwich

| 8:30 pm | Open mic THE MET | Pawtucket | 7:30 pm | X Ambassadors & Jamie N Commons + Madi Diaz MURPHY’S LAW | Pawtucket | 7 pm | Groove E Tuesday with Joe Potenza, Ben Ricci, and Gene Rosati 95 EMPIRE BLACK BOX | Providence | 8 pm | Lewis M. + Medusah Black + Vatic + hoste Jared Paul ONE PELHAM EAST | Newport | Stu Sinclair from Never In Vegas THE PARLOUR | Providence | 7:30 pm | Open mic night POWERS PUB | Cranston | Acoustic karaoke THE SALON | Providence | 8:30 pm | Kimi’s Movie Night

WEDNESDAY 8

AS220 | Providence | Roses + the Shivers + Way Out + Vio/Mire + Biel Barret AURORA | Providence | 8 pm | Jazz Jam with Chris Gagnon, Joe Godfrey, Chris Lacaille, and Matt Passeroni CLUB EGO | Providence | Alter Ego [fetish/fantasy night] DUSK | Providence | The Lovers Key + Northeast Traffic + Shotgun + Channel 9 FETE | Providence | 7 pm | Ab-Soul with Bas GILLIGAN’S ISLAND | Westerly | Karaoke with DJ Deelish KNICKERBOCKER CAFE | Westerly | 7:30 pm | Superchief Trio NICK-A-NEE’S | Providence | The Bluegrass Throedown with Acousticana 133 CLUB | East Providence | Karaoke with Big Bill O’ROURKE’S BAR & GRILL | Warwick | 8:30 pm | Brian Twohey THE PARLOUR | Providence | The Funky Autocrats PERKS & CORKS | Westerly | 8 pm | John Speziale & Friends POWERS PUB | Cranston | Jay Ferguson from Chicago Robbery RI RA | Providence | Acoustic Music Nite THE SALON | Providence | 10 pm | Free Up Wednesday with DJ Moy THE SPOT UNDERGROUND | Providence | Palo!

THURSDAY 9

AS220 | Providence | 6 pm | Songwrit-

ers In the Round | 9:30 pm | Brother Moon + El Bonitos + Speak Easy AURORA | Providence | Devotion: ’80s + ’90s + post-millennium tension with DJs Nick Bishop + Mikey Lams BOONDOCKS BAR & GRILL | Fall River, MA | Mixtape CITY SIDE | Woonsocket | Batteries Not Included CLUB EGO | Providence | Star Search Thursday [talent contest/drag show/dance party]


facebook.com/providencephoenix | @provphoenix | providence.thephoenix.com | the providence phoenix | october 3, 2014 17

THE 88 LOUNGE | Providence | 7 pm

| Sweet Little Variety Show | 10 pm | Brooks Milgate 1150 OAK BAR & GRILL | Cranston | Royal Bliss + Bobaflex + Blameshift THE FATT SQUIRREL | Providence | One Drop Thursday with DJ Paul Michael GILLIGAN’S ISLAND | Westerly | Open mic hosted by Bob Lavalley IRON WORKS TAVERN | Warwick | Betsy Listenfelt KNICKERBOCKER CAFE | Westerly | 8 pm | Open Mike with host band Green Tea MARINER GRILLE | Narragansett | 7 pm | Lori Silvia MEDIATOR STAGE | Providence | 7 pm | Open mic hosted by Don Tassone THE MET | Pawtucket | 8:30 pm | J Prozac + the Parkwoods + Glenn Robinson Band + the Really Heavy NICK-A-NEE’S | Providence | Friends of Dennis 133 CLUB | East Providence | Mac Odom Band PERKS & CORKS | Westerly | Tally-Jo

PERRY MILL TAVERN & MUSIC HALL | Newport | Throwback

Thursday with DJ Double G PICASSO’S PIZZA & PUB | Warwick | 9:30 pm | Karaoke with DJ Bobby Devine POWERS PUB | Cranston | Mike & Mark RI RA | Providence | Wicked Cool Karaoke hosted by Ronnie THE SALON | Providence | DJ Handsome J THE SPOT UNDERGROUND | Providence | Descemer Bueno & Friends THE WHISKEY REPUBLIC | Providence | Richard Fraioli & Vinny Vibe

COMEDY THURSDAY 2

THE WPRO ROAST OF MATT ALLEN | 8 pm | Comedy Connection, 39 Warren Ave, East Providence | $20 [proceeds benefit We Share Hope] | 401.438.8383 | ricomedyconnection. com

ROBERT KELLY | Thurs-Fri 8 pm; Sat 8 + 10:30 pm | Comix at Foxwoods, 350 Trolley Line Blvd, Mashantucket, CT | $15-$40 advance | 860.312.6649 | foxwoods.com

FRIDAY 3

CHRIS DISTEFANO | Fri 8 pm; Sat

8 + 10:30 pm | Comedy Connection, East Providence | $15 HARDCORE COMEDY SHOW hosted by Brian Beaudoin | 10:30 pm | Comedy Connection, East Providence | $15 THE BIT PLAYERS | Fri 8 pm; Sat 8 + 10 pm | Firehouse Theater, 4 Equality Park Pl, Newport | $15, $10 Sat @ 10 pm [BYOB] | 401.849.3473 | bitplayers.net BRING YOUR OWN IMPROV | 7 [family-friendly show] + 9 pm | Warwick Museum of Art, 3259 Post Rd | $5 | 401.737.0010 | bringyourown improv.com FRIDAY NIGHT LIVE with improvised song, dance, and skits | Everett, 9 Duncan Ave, Providence | $5 | 401.831.9479 | everettri.org MICETO IMPROV | 9:30 pm | Contemporary Theater, 327 Main St, Wakefield | $7 | 401.218.0282 | contemporarytheatercompany.com BRIAN REGAN | 9 pm | The Grand Theater at Foxwoods, 350 Trolley Line Blvd, Mashantucket, CT | $30$50 | 866.646.0050 | foxwoods.com ROBERT KELLY | See listing for Thurs

SATURDAY 4

COMEDY ROAST OF FRANK O’DONNELL | 8 pm | The Vets, 1 Av-

enue of the Arts, Providence | $35 | 401.421.ARTS | vmari.com

ACE ACETO’S ROYAL FLUSH COMEDY SHOW with Christina Thomas,

Stephanie Peters, and Mike Prior | 9 pm | Newport Grand Event Center, 150 Admiral Kalbfus Rd | Free | 401.849.5000 | newportgrand.com IMPROV JONES | 10 pm | 95 Empire Black Box, 95 Empire St, Providence | $5 | 401.831.9327 | facebook.com/ improvjones ROBERT KELLY | See listing for Thurs CHRIS DISTEFANO | See listing for Fri THE BIT PLAYERS | See listing for Fri

SUNDAY 5

COMEDY SHOWCASE | 8 pm | Come-

dy Connection, East Providence | $10

THURSDAY 9

ARIES SPEARS | 8 pm | Comedy

Connection, East Providence | $25

NICK DIPAOLO | 8 pm | Comix at

Foxwoods, Mashantucket, CT | $20$50 advance

CONCERTS POPULAR THURSDAY 2

AYLA BROWN | 7:30 pm | Stadium

Theatre, 28 Monument Sq, Woonsocket | $21 | 401.762.4545 | stadium theatre.com SEAN ROWE | 9 pm | Columbus Theatre, 270 Broadway, Providence | $10 advance, $12 day of show | columbus theatre.com

FRIDAY 3

MICHAEL TROY + Chuck Williams | Sandywoods Center For the Arts, 43 Muse Way, Tiverton | $10 advance, $12 door [BYOB + food] | 401.241.7349 or sandywoodsmusic.com ROUGH FRANCIS | 9 pm | Columbus Theatre, 270 Broadway, Providence | $10 advance, $12 day of show | columbustheatre.com SWEETBACK SISTERS | 8 pm | Narrows Center For the Arts, 16 Anawan St, Fall River, MA | $22 advance, $25 day of show | 508.324.1926 | narrows center.org THE WAILERS: 30TH ANNIVERSARY OF LEGEND TOUR | 8 pm | Park

Theatre, 848 Park Ave, Cranston | $27 + $37 | 401.467.7275 | parktheatre ri.com

SATURDAY 4

GEOFF MULDAUR | 7 pm | Stone Soup Coffeehouse @ Slater Mill, 67 Roosevelt Ave, Pawtucket | $20 | 401.248.4692 | stonesoupcoffeehouse. com

JO DEE MESSINA | 8 pm | Stadium

Theatre, 28 Monument Sq, Woonsocket | $36-$51 | 401.762.4545 | stadiumtheatre.com MAGNOLIA CAJUN BAND | 7:30 pm | Sandywoods Center For the Arts, 43 Muse Way, Tiverton | $12 advance, $15 door [BYOB + food] | 401.241.7349 | sandywoodsmusic.com MARCO BENEVENTO | 9 pm | Columbus Theatre, 270 Broadway, Providence | $15 advance, $20 day of show | columbustheatre.com NORTH SEA GAS | 8 pm | Blackstone River Theatre, 549 Broad St, Cumberland | $15 | 401.725.9272 | riverfolk.org SHEMEIKA COPELAND | 8 pm | Narrows Center For the Arts, 16 Anawan St, Fall River, MA | $27 advance, $30 day of show | 508.324.1926 | narrows center.org

TWINKIE CLARK OF THE CLARK SISTERS | 7 pm | Park Theatre,

848 Park Ave, Cranston | $25-$50 | 401.467.7275 | parktheatreri.com

SUNDAY 5

DOM FLEMONS TRIO + Grace & Tony | 8 pm | Columbus Theatre, 270 Broadway, Providence | $15 advance, $17 day of show | columbustheatre.com SOAH: SINGING OUT AGAINST HUNGER | A benefit with host Gary

Fish | 6 pm | Sandywoods Center For the Arts, 43 Muse Way, Tiverton | Donations for SOAH encouraged | 401.241.7349 | sandywoodsmusic.com

TUESDAY 7

OPEN MIKE FEATURING MIKE LAUREANNO | 7 pm | Sandywoods

THE FATT SQUIRREL | 150 Chestnut St, Providence | 401.808.6898 FÊTE | 401.383.1112 | 103 Dike St, Providence | fetemusic.com FINN’S HARBORSIDE | 401.884.6363 | 38 Water St, East Greenwich | finnsharborside.com GAME 7 SPORTS BAR & GRILL | 508.643.2700 | 60 Man Mar Dr, Plainville, MA | game7sportsbar andgrill.com GILLIGAN’S ISLAND | 401.315.5556 | 105 White Rock Rd, Westerly GREENWICH HOTEL | 401.884.4200 | 162 Main St, East Greenwich | facebook.com/greenwichhotel HANK’S DOWN SOUTH | 401.792.9200 | 33 State St, Narragansett | facebook.com/HanksDownSouthRI INDIGO PIZZA | 401.615.9600 | 599 Tiogue Ave, Coventry | indigopizza.com IRON WORKS TAVERN | 401.739.5111 | 697 Jefferson Blvd, Warwick | theironworkstavern.com JAVA MADNESS | 401.788.0088 | 134 Salt Pond Rd, Wakefield | javamadness.com THE KNICKERBOCKER | 401.315.5070 | 35 Railroad Ave, Westerly | theknickerbockercafe.com THE LAST RESORT | 401.349.3500 | 325 Farnum Pike, Smithfield | thelastresortri.com L’ATTITUDE | 401.780.8700 | 2190 Broad St, Cranston | lattituderi. com LIGHTHOUSE BAR AT TWIN RIVER | 877.82.RIVER | 100 Twin River Rd, Lincoln | twinriver.com LOCAL 121 | 401.274.2121 | 121 Washington St, Providence | local121.com LUPO’S HEARTBREAK HOTEL | 401.331.5876 | 79 Washington St, Providence | lupos.com MACHINES WITH MAGNETS | 401.261.4938 | 400 Main St, Pawtucket | machineswithmagnets.com

THE MALTED BARLEY | 401.315.2184 | 42 High St, Westerly | themalted barleyri.com MANCHESTER 65 | 65 Manchester St, West Warwick | manchester 65.com MARINER GRILL | 401.284.3282 | 142 Point Judith Rd, Narragansett | marinergrille.com THE MEDIATOR | 401.461.3683 | 50 Rounds Ave, Providence THE MET | 401.729.1005 | 1005 Main St, Pawtucket | themetri.com MURPHY’S LAW | 401.724.5522 | 2 George St, Pawtucket | murphys lawri.com NARRAGANSETT CAFE | 401.423.2150 | 25 Narragansett Ave, Jamestown | narragansettcafe.com/ NEWPORT BLUES CAFE | 401.841.5510 | 286 Thames St | newportblues.com NEWPORT GRAND | 401.849.5000 | 150 Admiral Kalbfus Rd, Newport | newportgrand.com NEWS CAFE | 401.728.6475 | 43 Broad St, Pawtucket NICK-A-NEE’S | 401.861.7290 | 75 South St, Providence NOREY’S | 401.847.4971 | 156 Broadway, Newport | noreys.com OAK HILL TAVERN | 401.294.3282 | 565 Tower Hill Rd, North Kingstown | oakhilltavern.com OCEAN MIST | 401.782.3740 | 895 Matunuck Beach Rd, Matunuck | oceanmist.net OLIVES | 401.751.1200 | 108 North Main St, Providence | olivesrocks.com 133 CLUB | 401.438.1330 | 29 Warren Ave, East Providence ONE PELHAM EAST | 401.847.9460 | 270 Thames St, Newport | thepelham.com O’ROURKE’S BAR & GRILL | 401.228.7444 | 23 Peck Ln, Warwick | orourkesbarandgrill.com THE PARLOUR | 401.383.5858 | 1119 North Main St, Providence | facebook.com/ParlourRI

Pink Drink & Dessert Menu all Month! After Work Under $5 Menu Every Monday thru Friday

Center For the Arts, 43 Muse Way, Tiverton | Free {BYOB + food] | 401.241.7349 | sandywoodsmusic. com

THE SENEGAL ST. JOSEPH GOSPEL CHOIR will perform a program of Negro spirituals, traditional African songs, and masses | 7:30 pm | Roberts Hall Auditorium at Rhode Island College, 600 Mount Pleasant Ave, Providence | $35, $30 seniors, $15 students | 401.456.8144 | ric. edu/pfa

Yuengs & Wings! $7.95 Every Sunday: Noon—11 PM

Continued on p 18

CLUB DIRECTORY THE ARENA BAR & GRILL | 401.369.7100 | 641 Atwood ve, Cranston | thearenari.com AS220 | 401.831.9327 | 115 Empire St, Providence ATLANTIC SPORTS BAR | 401.816.5996 | 70 Shove St, Tiverton | facebook. com/atlanticsportsbarandrestaurant AURORA | 401.272.5722 | 276 Westminster St, Providence | aurora providence.com BLU ON THE WATER | 401.885.3700 | 20 Water St, East Greenwich | blueonthewater.com BOONDOCKS BAR & GRILL | 508.673.2200 | 46 Water St, Fall River, MA | myboondocks.com BOUNDARY BREWHOUSE | 401.725.4260 | 67 Garrity St, Pawtucket | facebook. com/Boundarybrewhouse BOVI’S | 401.434.9670 | 278 Taunton Ave, East Providence CADY’S TAVERN | 401.568.4102 | 2168 Putnam Pike, Chepachet | cadystavern.com CAFE ZOG | 401.421.2213 | 239 Wickenden St, Providence | cafezog.com CHAN’S | 401.765.1900 | 267 Main St, Woonsocket | chanseggrollsand jazz.com CHIEFTAIN PUB | 508.643.9031 | 23 Washington St, Plainville, MA | chieftainpub.com CITY SIDE | 401.235.9026 | 74 South Main St, Woonsocket | citysideri.com CLUB EGO | 73 Richmond St, Providence | EGOPVD.com THE CONTINENTAL | 401.233.1800 | 332 Farnum Pike, Smithfield | smithfieldcontinental.com DAN’S PLACE | 401.392.3092 | 880 Victory Hwy, West Greenwich | danspizzaplace.com DIVE BAR | 401.272.2000 | 201 Westminster St, Providence DUSK | 401.714.0444 | 301 Harris Ave, Providence | duskprovidence.com 88 LOUNGE | 401.437.8830 | 55 Union St, Providence | 88pianolounge.com

October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month!

PERKS & CORKS | 401.596.1260 | 48 High St, Westerly | perksand corks.com PERRY MILL TAVERN & MUSIC HALL | 401.846.0907 | 337 Thames St, Newport | perrymilltavern. com PICASSO’S PIZZA AND PUB | 401.739.5030 | 2323 Warwick Ave, Warwick | picassosrocks.com POWERS PUB | 401.714.0655 | 27 Aborn St, Cranston | powerspub. com RALPH’S DINER | 508.753.9543 | 148 Grove St, Worcester, MA | myspace.com/ralphsdiner RHODE ISLAND BILLIARD BAR & BISTRO | 401.232.1331 | 2026 Smith St, North Providence | RIBBB.com RI RA | 401.272.1953 | 50 Exchange Terrace, Providence | rira.com THE SALON | 401.865.6330 | 57 Eddy St, Providence | thesalonpvd.com SIMON’S 677 | 401.270.6144 | 677 Valley St, Providence | facebook. com/simons677 THE SPOT UNDERGROUND | 401.383.7133 | 101 Richmond St, Providence | thespotprovidence. com STEVIE D’S BAR & GRILL | 401.658.2591 | 80 Manville Hill Rd, Cumberland | stevie-ds.com TAVERN ON BROADWAY | 401.619.5675 | 16 Broadway, Newport | tavern onbroadway.com 39 WEST | 401.944.7770 | 39 Phenix Ave, Cranston | 39westri.com UNCLE RONNIE’S RED TAVERN | 401.568.6243 | 2692 Victory Hwy, Burrillville | uncleronniesred tavern.com VANILLA BEAN CAFE | 860.928.1562 | Rts 44, 169 and 97, Pomfret, CT | thevanillabeancafe.com WHISKEY REPUBLIC | 401.588.5158 | 515 South Water St, Providence | TheWhiskeyRepublic.com

Thursday, October 9 Blue Moon Paint the Pint Promo

“Passport to Wine: First Stop Italy” October 23 Call 272-5852 to reserve your tickets now! Limited seating available.

AT THE PROVIDENCE MARRIOTT ONE ORMS STREET PROVIDENCE, RI

401-272-5852 MARRIOTTPROVIDENCE.COM ALWAYS FREE & EASY PARKING


18 october 3, 2014 | the providence phoenix | providence.thephoenix.com | @provphoenix | facebook.com/providencephoenix

No REPAIR too LARGE (or small)!

Listings Continued from p 17

WEDNESDAY 8

guitar repair • amp repair • accessories www.Nollguitars.com 173 macklin st. cranston, ri

(401) 275-0880

C&L Stables Guided Public Trail Rides (17 Miles of Trails) TRAIL RIDES RATES: $30 PER HOUR Summer BEACH & BAYSIDE RIDES: $45-$65 Camps

Barn Phone: 401-886-5246 ENGLISH

&

WESTERN LESSONS AVAILABLE

Hours: Summer 10am to 6pm

We Accept

AN ALL-STAR EVENING OF LATIN POP with the Brown University

Jazz Band, Descemer Bueno, Kelvis Ochoa, and Leslie Cartaya | 7 pm | Brown University’s Granoff Center for the Creative Arts, Martinos Auditorium, 154 Angell St, Providence | Free, but tickets are required [eventbrite.com/e/all-star-nightof-latin-pop-with-descemer-buenoand-the-brown-jazz-band-tickets9071478035?aff=SRCH] | brown.edu/ academics/latin-american-caribbeanstudies/clacs-fall-2014-events

the Arts, 16 Anawan St, Fall River, MA | $27 advance, $30 day of show | 508.324.1926 | narrowscenter.org

JULIAN LAGE & CHRIS ELDRIDGE | 7:30 pm | Garde Arts Center, 325 State St, New London, CT | $43 | 860.444.7373 | gardearts.org

CLASSICAL

(CALL FOR RESERVATION ACCORDING TO TIDE)

http://candlstables.info

THURSDAY 9

GREG ABATE QUARTET + EXPANSIONS: THE DAVE LIEBMAN GROUP | 8 pm | Narrows Center For

Goddard Memorial State Park, Warwick, RI

RIDING LESSONS: PONY RIDES: $5

SEAN HAYES + Eric & Erica | 8 pm | Columbus Theatre, 270 Broadway, Providence | $18 advance, $20 day of show | columbustheatre.com

(We suggest calling for reservations)

Closed Mondays (except holidays) Reservations Required Spring, Fall & Winter Weekday Reservations

SATURDAY 4

PHOEBUS ENSEMBLE will perform

works by Bach, Chopin, Poulenc, Schubert, Bozza, and Gould | 7:30 pm | Goff Memorial Hall, 124 Bay State Rd, Rehoboth, MA | $16, $14 seniors, $6 students + children | 508.252.3956 | carpentermuseum. org/Arts.htm

SUNDAY 5

HWAUM BOSTON CHAMBER ORCHESTRA | 5 pm | Brown Univer-

Chamber musiC ConCerts

2014 2015 season

Today’s top international classical performers, in a fantastic venue, and at an unbeatable price.

sity’s Granoff Center for the Creative Arts, Martinos Auditorium, 154 Angell St, Providence | $20 | students. brown.edu/KGSA

THE RHODE ISLAND COLLEGE CHAMBER ORCHESTRA AND SMALL ENSEMBLES | 7:30 pm |

Helen Forman Theatre at the John Nazarian Center For the Performing Arts at Rhode Island College, 600 Mt Pleasant Ave, Providence | Free | 401.456.8144 | ric.edu/pfa

EVENTS THROUGH NOV 2

no rants, no stand-up routines, sixminute limit] | Hosted by Phil “The Ghost” Goldman and Jerry “The Nutty Professor” Gregoire | 10 pm | 95 Empire Black Box, 95 Empire St, Providence | $7 | 401.489.2555

SATURDAY 4

2014 FOOD & TRAVEL EXPO | Oct 4

10 am-4 pm, Foodie Day, featuring Taste Trekkers Tens [10-minute talks by culinary experts] + Edible Sessions [three 45-minute sessions about dishes from particular regions] + the Hope & Main Tasting Pavilion [with food and drink from dozens of local restaurants and artisanal food producers] + more [$50 advance, $65 day of show] | Oct 5, a Scavenger Hunt throughout downtown Providence, which starts at noon at the Providence Arcade [65 Weybosset St] | Enter by yourself or with a team and compete for prizes [$10] | Biltmore Hotel, 11 Dorrance St, Providence | tastetrekkers.com/expo

40TH ANNUAL HARVEST FAIR

with more than 60 artisans and crafters + a home and garden competition + children’s crafts and games + hayrides + skill and strength contests + food + a beer garden + music [Oct 4: Clara Maurer + Spindle Rock River Rats + Pitcher’s Garage Band + the Rank Strangers + Chuck Ciany & Natasha Harrison; Oct 5: Dylan Sevey & the Gentlemen + Allysen Callery + Haunt the House + Bob Kendall + Smith & Weeden] | 10 am-5 pm | Norman Bird Sanctuary, 583 Third Beach Rd, Middletown | $6, $3 ages 3-12, free under 3 | 401.846.2577 | normanbirdsanctuary.org WWE LIVE | 7:30 pm | Dunkin’ Donuts Center, 1 LaSalle Sq, Providence | $50-$95 | 401.331.6700 | ticketmaster.com

SUNDAY 5

AN EVENING WITH TIM GUNN | 8 pm | Edwards Auditorium, University of Rhode Island, Upper College Road, Kingston | $25 + $30 | 855.387.4849 | theryancenter.com 2014 FOOD & TRAVEL EXPO | See listing for Sat 40TH ANNUAL HARVEST FAIR | See listing for Sat

WEDNESDAY 8

FLUXUS MOON CABARET: BLOOD HUNTER MOON with performances, video, and sound by Eli V. Manuscript + Gyna Bootleg + Africanus Okokon + ISLANDS | 10 pm | Psychic Readings, 95 Empire St, Providence | $3 | 401.831.9327 | as220.org

THURSDAY 9

GHOULISH GALA TO BENEFIT GALLERY NIGHT PROVIDENCE | 7 pm |

Fete, 103 Dike St, Providence | $20 | 401.383.1112 | fetemusic.com NEWPORT GALLERY NIGHT | 5-9 pm | 76 Bellevue Ave | Free | 401.848.0550 | newportgalleries.org

JACK-O-LANTERN SPECTACULAR |

Wed • october 15, 2014 • 7:30pm

dover String Quartet

Music by Haydn, Viktor Ullmann and Kaija Saariaho

The theme is “Jack-O-Lanterns A to Z,” with more than 5000 illuminated pumpkins arrayed in alphabetical order, with highlights from history and popular culture | Nightly 6-11 pm [till midnight on Sat] through Nov 2 | Roger Williams Park Zoo, 1000 Elmwood Ave, Providence | Mon-Thurs, $12, $10 seniors, $9 ages 3-12, free under 3; Fri-Sun, $16, $14 seniors, $13 ages 3-12, free under | 401.785.3510 | rwpzoo.org

FRIDAY 3

LIVE BAIT: TRUE STORIES FROM REAL PEOPLE | This month’s

theme: “The Horror . . . The Horror” | If you want to share a story, put your name in the fishbowl; when your name is called, tell it [no notes,

Wed • November 12, 2014 • 7:30pm

Ariel String Quartet

Music by Mozart, Bartók, and Beethoven TiCkeTS

8 www.ricmc.org '401-863-2416 Nazarian Center for the Performing Arts

Sapinsley Hall - At Rhode Island College / 600 Mt. Pleasant Ave.

FILM THURSDAY 2 + 9

“FROM FANGS TO BANGS AND BEYOND: THE EVOLUTION OF THE VAMPIRE IN FILM” | Oct 2: Nosferatu

[1921] | Oct 9: Dracula [1931] | 6 pm | Providence Public Library, 150 Empire St | Free | 401.455.8000 | provlib.org

FRIDAY 3-SUNDAY 5

HISPANIC ARTS AND BOOK FESTIVAL with readings + storytelling

+ workshops + authors from Rhode Island, Massachusetts, New York, New Jersey, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, and more + keynote speaker Ángela Hernández Núñez, who will discuss “Las Zonas Insoluble en la Vida de las Poetas [Insoluble Areas In the Lives of Poets]” + visual artists + more | Fri-Sun | South Providence Library, 441 Prairie Ave, Providence | 401.467.2619 | provcomlib.org

SUNDAY 5

PETER JOHNSON will read from his new novel, The Life and Times of Benny Alvarez | 12:30 pm | Books On the Square, 471 Angell St, Providence | 401.331.9097 | booksq.com

TUESDAY 7

EDWARD PAVLIC will read from

his poetry | 2:30 pm | Brown University McCormack Family Theater, 70 Brown St, Providence | Free | 401.863.3260 | brown.edu/cw

THURSDAY 9

ROBERT A. GEAKE will read from, discuss, and sign his new book, Colonial New England Curiosities: Remarkable Occurrences, Miracles & Madness | 5:30 pm | Brown Bookstore, 244 Thayer St, Providence | 401.863.3168 | brown.edu/campus-life/support/ bookstore/events

TALKS MONDAY 6

“ARE YOUR OLD BOOKS VALUABLE?” | A program with Ray

Rickman, who will estimate up to three of your books | 7 pm | Weaver Library, 41 Grove St, East Providence | Free | 401.434.2453 | eastprovidence library.org

TUESDAY 7

“LATIN AMERICA? WHAT LIES AHEAD FOR THE REGION,” a talk

by by former President of Chile Ricardo Lagos | 6 pm | Brown University]s Watson Institute, 111 Thayer St, Providence | Free | watson.brown. edu/events/2014/ricardo-lagosquo-vadis-latin-america-what-liesahead-region

“SLIPPERY SLOPE OF DOOM: WHAT COULD POSSIBLY GO WRONG WITH OUR INSTRUMENTED WORLD?” | A talk by Col.

Gregory Conti, an associate professor of computer science and director of the Cyber Research Center at the United States Military Academy at West Point | Part of URI’s Fall 2014 Honors Colloquium, “Cybersecurity & Privacy” | 7:30 pm | Edwards Auditorium, University of Rhode Island, Upper College Road, Kingston | Free | 401.874.2381 | uri.edu/hc

WEDNESDAY 8

“THE ELECTORAL DETERMINANTS OF COUNTERTERRORISM,” a

talk by Erica Chenoweth, associate professor at the University of Denver | 5 pm | Brown University] s Watson Institute, 111 Thayer St, Providence | Free | watson.brown. edu/events/2014/erica-chenowethelectoral-determinants-counter terrorism

MONDAY 6

“GIRLS WITH GUNS: A CRITICAL FILM SERIES” | This week: Haywire

| 6 pm | Providence Public Library, 150 Empire St | Free | 401.455.8000 | provlib.org

LIT EVENTS THURSDAY 2

CHRISTOPHER BAKKEN will read

from, discuss, and sign his new book, Honey, Olives, Octopus: Adventures At the Greek Table | 5:30 pm | Brown Bookstore, 244 Thayer St, Providence | 401.863.3168 | brown.edu/campuslife/support/bookstore/events PROVIDENCE POETRY SLAM | 8 pm | AS220, 115 Empire St, Providence | $4 | 401.831.9327 | as220.org

ART GALLERIES ARTISTS’ COOPERATIVE GALLERY OF WESTERLY | 401.596.2221 | 7

Canal St | westerlyarts.com | Tues-Sat

10 am-5 pm | Through Nov 2: “All Members’ Show,” work by artist members and associate members ARTPROV GALLERY | 401.641.5182 | 150 Chestnut St, Providence | art providence.com | Through Oct 10: “Earthen Elements,” abstract paintings by Vibha Nanda AS220 | 401.831.9327 | 115 Empire St, Providence | as220.org | Wed-Fri 1-6 pm; Sat 12-5 pm + by appointment | Oct 4-25: “I, Barfly,” by new

paintings by Nate Shaw | “Urban Voyeur,” new photographs by Vivian Madrid | New work by Margaret Worthen AS220 PROJECT SPACE | 401.831.9327 | 93 Mathewson St, Providence | as220. org | Wed-Fri 1-6 pm; Sat 12-5 pm + by appointment | Oct 4-25: “truth of the matter,” new work by Lisa perez | “Please Simplify,” new work by Margie Butler

BANNISTER GALLERY AT RHODE ISLAND COLLEGE | 401.456.9765 |

600 Mount Pleasant Ave, Providence | ric.edu/bannister | Tues-Fri 12-8 pm

| Through Oct 24: “Embodied: The Figure In Paint,” works by Susanna Coffey, Bob Collins, Ann Gale, Catherine Kehoe, Francoise McAree, and Patrice Sullivan

BROWN UNIVERSITY’S WATSON INSTITUTE | 111 Thayer St, Providence

| Through Oct 31: photographs of Rio de Janeiro by Cesar Barreto

CHAZAN GALLERY AT WHEELER

| 401.421.9230 | 228 Angell St, Providence | chazangallery.org | Tues-Sat 11

am-4 pm; Sun 2-4 pm | Through Oct 8: “perspectives | translations | refractions,” works by Jeffrey Bertwell, Saberah Malik, and Laurie Sverdlove COASTAL LIVING GALLERY | 83 Brown St, Wickford | coastalliving gallery.com | Through Sept 29: “Sunsets & History,” photography by Andre Louis | Through Oct 31: “Pour & Scratch,” paitnings by Elizabeth Kirby Sullivan and Carolina Arensten

COURTHOUSE CENTER FOR THE ARTS | 401.782.1018 | 3481 Kingstown

Rd, West Kingston | courthousearts. org | Through Oct 9: “The 2014 Fall Art Exhibit,” with new work by Eileen Lee Singer, Donna Caster, and A.J. Greenwood

DAVID WINTON BELL GALLERY |

401 863.2932 | List Art Center, Brown University, 64 College St, Providence | brown.edu/Facilities/ David_Winton_Bell_Gallery | Mon-Fri 11

am- 4 pm; Sat + Sun 1-4 pm | Through Oct 12: “Audible Spaces,” sound installations by Zarouhie Abdalian and [The User] and at the Cohen Gallery at the Perry and Marty Granoff Center for the Creative Arts [154 Angell St] by Tristan Perich DEBLOIS GALLERY | 401.847.9977 | 134 Aquidneck Ave, Middletown | debloisgallery.com | Tues-Sun 12-5 pm | Oct 4-26: “Coordinates,” oil on linen landscapes by Peter Dickison | “Fantasy Figures,” ceramic sculptures by Nina Hope Pfanstiehl | “The Personality of Cuba,” photography by Pao DEDEE SHATTUCK GALLERY | 508.636.4177 | 1 Partners Ln, Westport, MA | dedeeshattuckgallery. com | Tues-Sat 10 am-5 pm; Sun 12-5 pm | Through Nov 9: Digital art and furniture design by Jean-Pierre Hébert and Gail Fredell GRIN | 60 Valley St #3, Providence | grinprovidence.com | Sat 12-5 pm | Through Oct 11: “Making/Unmaking,” new work by Charlie Smith HERA GALLERY | 401.789.1488 | 10 High St, Wakefield | heragallery. org | Wed-Fri 1-5 pm; Sat 10 am-4 pm | Through Oct 11: “New Visions,” works by Iris Donnelly, Connie Greene, Elizabeth Lind, Jill McLaughlin, Mara Trachtenberg, and M.J. Yeager

HOXIE GALLERY AT THE WESTERLY LIBRARY | 401.596.2877 | 44

Broad St, Westerly | westerlylibrary. org | Through Sept 26: “Recent and

Retro Works,” by Suzanne Dickson Albert and Susanne Riette

IMAGO FOUNDATION FOR THE ARTS | 401.245.0173 | 36 Market St,

Warren | imagofoundation4art.org | Thurs 4-8 pm, Fri + Sat 12-8 pm | Through Oct 12: works by Lisa Legato, the Globalheart Project, and Christiane Corbat, plus a wood-fired kiln event featuring Rose EssonDawson, Seth Rainville, Hollis Engley, Kimberly Sheerin Medeiros, Ron Mello, Elizabeth Mayhew, Linda Megathlin, Anne Marie Rossi, Lenny Rumpler, Michael Scriven, and Howard Windham, plus student artists Melissa Cruz, Jennifer Norton, Sarah Springer, and Jessica Tranvo JAMESTOWN ARTS CENTER | 401.560.0979 | 18 Valley St | jamestown artcenter.org | Wed-Sat 10 am-2 pm | Through Oct 17: “Second Home,” works by Alice O’Neill, Colgate Searle, and Dan O’Neill


facebook.com/providencephoenix | @provphoenix | providence.thephoenix.com | the providence phoenix | october 3, 2014 19

Slater Memorial Park, Armistice Blvd, Pawtucket | rhodeisland watercolorsociety.wildapricot.org |

Tues-Sat 10 am-4 pm; Sun 1-5 pm | Through Oct 2: “The Artist Travels,” an open juried show | Oct 5-23: “RIWS Member Group Show,” works by Jerry Aissis, Denise Cornwall, Allen Halle, Donna Kenny-Kirwan, and Ben Macomber

SOL KOFFLER GRADUATE STUDENT GALLERY | 169 Weybosset St,

Providence | risd.edu/About/Galleries_Exhibitions/Sol_Koffler | Sun-Fri

12-5 pm | Oct 3-19: “Painting Graduate Student Exhibition”

SOUTH COUNTY ART ASSOCIATION | 401.783.2195 | 2587 Kingstown Rd, Kingston | southcountyart.org | WedSun 10 am-6 pm; Fri 10 am-8 pm | Through Oct 11: “The Great Art Heist,” a member-donated artwork fundraiser

STUDIO Z/GALLERY Z BUTCHER BLOCK MILL | 401.454.8844 | 25 Eagle

St, Providence | galleryzprov.com |

Through Oct 11: “Photographic Odyssesys & Escapades,” by Larry Sykes

URI PROVIDENCE CAMPUS GALLERY | 401.277.5206 | 80 Washington

St | uri.edu/prov | Mon-Thurs 9 am-9

pm; Fri + Sat 9 am-4 pm | Through Oct 31: “Solamente Tamara: Colorful Soul,” a mixed media exhibit by Tamara Diaz

WICKFORD ART ASSOCIATION GALLERY | 401.294.6840 | 36 Beach

St, North Kingstown | wickfordart.org | Tues-Sat 11 am-3 pm; Sun 12-3 pm | Oct 3-26: “Abstract/Avant Garde” WOODS-GERRY HOUSE | 401.454.6141 | 62 Prospect St, Providence | risd.edu/About/Galleries_ Exhibitions/Woods_Gerry | Mon-Sat 10 am-5 pm; Sun 2-5 pm | Through Oct 5: “RISD In Rome: European Honors Program” YELLOW PERIL GALLERY | 401.861.1535 | 60 Valley St #5, Providence | yellowperilmedia.com/ gallery | Wed-Fri 3-8 pm; other days by appointment | Through Oct 5: “ShrineBeast,” a mixed media exhibition about alternate realities and the transformative nature of love by Andrew Paul Woolbright | Oct 9-Nov 16: “Mile High, Red Hot,” a mixed media dual exhibition by Garcia Sinclair and Nafis White

MUSEUMS BRISTOL ART MUSEUM |

401.253.4400 | 10 Wardwell St | bristol artmuseum.org | Wed-Sun 1-4 pm |

Through Oct 19: “Objects For Work, Objects For Play, and Objects To Cherish,” with fine art jewelry by Kelly Jean Conroy, interdisciplinary works by Candis Dixon, pencils by Dalton Ghetti, paintings by Dan Golden, miniature sugar carvings by Judith G. Klausner, photography by Dan McManus, and drawings by David Shapleigh NEWPORT ART MUSEUM | 401.848.8200 | 76 Bellevue Ave | newportartmuseum.org | Tues-Sat 11 am-4 pm; Sun 12-4 pm | Admission $10 adults; $8 seniors; $6 students and military personnel with ID; free for children 5 and under | Through Jan 4: “Palate to Plate: Prints & Recipes From Members of the Boston Printmakers” | Through Jan 11: “Solemnities,” works by Claudia Flynn RISD MUSEUM | 401.454.6500 | 224 Benefit St, Providence | risdmuseum.

THEATER BROWN UNIVERSITY THEATRE |

401.863.3283 | brown.edu/academics/ theatre-arts-performance-studies | Leeds Theatre, Lyman Hall, 83 Waterman St, Providence | Through Oct 5:

Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street, by Stephen Sondheim and Hugh Wheeler, directed by Curt Columbus, artistic director of Trinity Rep | Thurs-Sat 8 pm + Sun 3 pm | $15, $12 seniors, $7 students GAMM THEATRE | 401.723.4266 | gammtheatre.org | 172 Exchange St, Pawtucket | Through Oct 3: Grounded, by George Brant | Oct 2 7 pm + Oct 3 8 pm | $41 + $49 OCEAN STATE THEATRE | 401.921.6800 | oceanstatetheatre.org | 1245 Jefferson Blvd, Warwick | Through Oct 19: My Fair Lady by Lerner & Loewe, adapted from George Bernard Shaw’s Pygmalion | This week: Oct 2 2 + 7:30 pm + Oct 3 + 8 + 9 7:30 pm + Oct 5 2 pm | $39-$54 OUT LOUD THEATRE | 401.490.9475

START SHOPPING NOW AT THEPHOENIX.COM/DEALS

RHODE ISLAND WATERCOLOR SOCIETY GALLERY | 401.726.1876 |

LOADS OF GREAT DEALS ON RESTAURANTS, SALONS, TRAVEL AND EVENTS.

Oct 25: “Third Annual Poster Exhibition,” with works by Ghost-Town, Doe Eyed, Land Land, LeDouxville, and Little Friends of Printmaking PROVIDENCE ART CLUB | 401.331.1114 | 11 Thomas St | providence artclub.org | Mon-Fri 12-4 pm; Sat-Sun 2-4 pm | Through Oct 17: works by William Heydt, Timothy Philbrick, and Johanna McKenzie | “Calendar Days,” works by Nancy Hart PROVIDENCE PUBLIC LIBRARY | 401.455.8000 | 150 Empire St | provlib. org | Mon + Thurs 12-8 pm; Tues + Wed 10 am-6 pm; Fri + Sat 9 am5:30 pm | Through Oct 30: “Protecting Providence: Three Centuries of Policing In Rhode Island’s Capital”

til 9 pm] | Admission $12; $10 seniors; $5 college students, $3 ages 5-18; free every Sun 10 am-1 pm | Through Nov 16: “UuDam Tran Nguyen: Waltz of the Machine Equestrians,” a video installation | Through Jan 4: “What Nerve! Alternative Figures in American Art, 1960 to the Present,” which “proposes an alternate history of figurative painting, sculpture, and vernacular image-making from 1960 to the present that has been largely overlooked and undervalued. At the heart of ‘What Nerve!’ are four miniexhibitions based on crucial shows, spaces, and groups in Chicago (the Hairy Who), San Francisco (Funk), Ann Arbor (Destroy All Monsters), and Providence (Forcefield) — places outside the artistic focal point of New York” | Through Feb 22: “Circus,” with 40 circus-themed paintings, drawings, prints, photographs, and posters from 1850-1960 WARWICK MUSEUM OF ART | 401.737.0010 | 3259 Post Rd | warwick museum.org | Tues + Wed + Fri 12-4 pm, Thurs 4-8 pm, Sat 10 am-2 pm | Through Oct 25: “28th Annual RI Open,” a juried exhibit

HALF OFF EVERYTHING, ALL THE TIME!

Anawan St, Fall River, MA | narrows center.org | Wed-Sat 12-5 pm | Through

org | Tues-Sun 10 am-5 pm [Thurs un-

SATURDAY SUNDAY BRUNCH Enjoy CAV’s eclectic ambiance Award winning calamari Great Hamburger Great Selection of Beers and Wines Bistro Menu Sunday through Thursday Full Menu 7 days a week. WWW.CAVRESTAUANT.COM 14 IMPERIAL PLACE PROVIDNECE • 751-9164 less than a mi le from Brown University

| outloudtheatre.org | At the Artists’ Exchange, 50 Rolfe Sq, Cranston | Through Oct 4: Metamorphoses, by Ovid, translated by Mary Zimmerman | Thurs-Sat 7:30 pm | $15, $12 students + seniors

THE RHODE ISLAND SHAKESPEARE THEATRE | 401.782.1018 |

PAUL & AL

courthousecenterstage.org | At the Couthouse Center For the Arts, 3481 Kingstown Rd, West Kingston | Oct

9-19: The Impaler’s Progress, by Mark Carter | Thurs-Sun 8 pm | $TBA 2ND STORY THEATRE | 401.247.4200 | 2ndstorytheatre.com | 28 Market St, Warren | Oct 3-Nov 2: Enron, by Lucy Prebble | This week:Oct 3 + 4 + 9 7:30 pm | $30, $21 under 21 [previews Oct 3-5 $10] STADIUM THEATRE | 401.762.4545 | stadiumtheatre.com | 28 Monument Sq, Woonsocket | Oct 8-10 6:30 pm: Awesome ’80s Prom: An Interactive Dinner Show | $36

TRINITY REPERTORY COMPANY

| 401.351.4242 | trinityrep.com | 201 Washington St, Providence | Through Oct 5: Ivanov, a world premiere translation of Anton Chekhov’s play by Curt Columbus | Oct 2 + 4 7:30 pm + Oct 5 2 pm | $28-$68

UNIVERSITY OF RHODE ISLAND THEATRE | At J Studio, 105 Upper

College Rd, Kingston | Oct 9-19: Seminar, by Theresa Rebeck | Thurs-Sat 7:30 pm + Sun 3 pm | $20,$15 seniors, $12 students

THE WILBURY THEATRE GROUP | 401.400.7100 | thewilburygroup.org | 393 Broad St, Providence | Through

Oct 12: This Beautiful City, by Steven Cosson and Jim Lewis, with music and lyrics by Michael Friedman | “A new documentary-style play that details the explosion of America’s evangelical Christian movement” | Thurs-Sat 7:30 pm + Sun 2 pm

ZEITERION PERFORMING ARTS CENTER | 508.994.2900 | zeiterion.

org | 684 Purchase St, New Bedford, MA | Oct 9 8 pm: Jekyll & Hyde | $39-$59

FROM A BRAND THAT YOU TRUST

NARROWS CENTER FOR THE ARTS GALLERY | 508.324.1926 | 16

Weekday Mornings 5:30-10:00

Listen Live at 94HJY.COM


20 OCTOBER 3, 2014 | ThE pROvidEnCE phOEnix | pROvidEnCE.ThEphOEnix.COm | @pROvphOEnix | faCEBOOk.COm/pROvidEnCEphOEnix

Unless otherwise noted, these listings are for Thurs Oct 2 through Thurs Oct 9. Times can and do change without notice, so please call the theater before heading out.

film AVON CINEMA

260 Thayer St, Providence | 401.421.3315

THE SKELETON TWINS | Thurs: 6:25, 8:25 MY OLD LADY | Thurs: 2, 4:10 LOVE IS STRANGE | Starts Fri + Mon + Tues + Thurs: 2:15, 4:15, 6:20, 8:20 | Sat-Sun: 4:15, 6:20, 8:20 | Wed: 2:15, 4:15, 6:20 WETLANDS | Fri-Sat: 10:15 | Sat-Sun: 2:05

The Best in Independent Cinema Providence Phoenix Best Cinema in Rhode Island 2014 Yankee Magazineʼs Best Cinema in New England 2014

THE DISAPEARANCE OF ELEANOR RIGBY

MEMPHIS

WHAT IF AN ENITRE CITY COULD FEED ITSELF?

10/3 ... 2, 4:30, 9:30 10/4 ... 12, 2:30, 7:30, 10 10/3 ... 7 (Q&A WITH DIRECTOR) 10/5 ... 6:30, 9 10/4 ... 5 (Q&A WITH DIRECTOR) 10/6 & 10/7 ... 2, 6:30, 9 10/5 ... 12, 2 10/8 ... 6:30, 9 10/6 - 10/9 ... 4:30 10/9 ... 2 204 S. MAIN ST. PROVIDENCE RI 02903 CABLECARCINEMA.COM 401.272.3970

10/5 @ 4PM

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>>>WWW.ARTISTS-EXCHANGE.ORG<<< ARTISTS’ EXCHANGE | 50 ROLFE SQUARE CRANSTON | 401.490.9475

50 ROLFE SQ CRANSTON RI

PATRIOTS VS BUFFALO TOUR

OcTOBeR 11 – 13, 2014 INCLUDES: Round Trip Motor Coach Game Tickets and Transportation to the Game Imperial Suites and Hotel Niagra Falls Breakfast Sunday and Monday Rate Subject to Change Per Person Double Occupancy Call for Single, Triple and Quad Occupancy Passports May be Needed

ALAN HOCHMAN TOURS 401-274-TRIP (8747) • WWW.274TRIP.COM

CABLE CAR CINEMA

204 South Main St, Providence | 401.272.3970

LAST DAYS IN VIETNAM | Thurs: 7:30 THE TRIP TO ITALY | Thurs: 5:15, 9:45 BOYHOOD | Thurs: 2 THE DISAPPEARANCE OF ELEANOR RIGBY | Starts Fri: 2, 4:30, 9:30 | Sat: 12, 2:30, 7:30, 10 | Sun: 6:30, 9 | Mon-Tues: 2, 6:30, 9 | Wed: 6:30, 9 | Thurs: 2 MEMPHIS | Starts Fri: 7 | Sat: 5 [Q&A with director Tim Sutton following Fri + Sat screenings] | Sun: 12, 2 | MonThurs: 4:30 FARM-CITY, STATE | Sun: 4 MAGIC LANTERN CINEMA | Thurs [10.9]: 7

CINEMAWORLD

622 George Washington Hwy, Lincoln | 401.333.8676

These listings are for Thurs 10.2-Mon 10.6. Call for updates or go to cinemaworldonline.com. THE BOXTROLLS 3D | Thurs: 3, 5:45 TUSK | Thurs: 5, 7:25, 9:50 JIMI: ALL IS BY MY SIDE | Starts Fri: 11, 1:35, 4:55, 7:40, 10:15 ANNABELLE | Thurs: 7, 9:20 | Fri-Mon: 11:15, 12:30, 1:45, 3, 5, 6:05, 7:30, 8:15, 9, 9:45 | Fri-Sat late show: 10:30 GONE GIRL | Thurs: 10 | Fri-Mon: 11, 1, 4, 7, 9:50 LEFT BEHIND | Thurs: 7 | Fri-Mon: 11:05, 1:30, 4:30, 7:20, 9:45 THE BOXTROLLS | 11:20, 1:35, 4:30, 6:45, 9:05 THE EQUALIZER | 11:15, 12:15, 1:15, 2:15, 4:15, 5:15, 7:15, 8:15, 9:15* [*10.2 only 9, 10 THE MAZE RUNNER | Thurs: 11:15, 1:45, 3, 4:15, 7:05, 9:45 | Fri-Mon: 11:10, 1:5, 4:35, 7:05, 9:35 THIS IS WHERE I LEAVE YOU | 11:25, 1:50, 4:10, 7:35*, 10:15* [*10.2 only 7:15, 9:35] A WALK AMONG THE TOMBSTONES | Thurs: 1:50, 4:15, 6:05, 7:20, 9:45 | FriMon: 11:30, 2:05, 4:40, 7:15, 10:05 THE DROP | 2:20, 7:10 NO GOOD DEED | Thurs: 11:50, 2:05, 4:20, 7:30, 9:35 | Fri-Mon: 2:05, 4:20, 6:55 DOLPHIN TALE 2 | Thurs: 11:30, 1:50, 2:45, 4:10, 6:45, 9:25 | Fri-Mon: 11:35, 2, 4:25, 6:50, 9:25 IF I STAY | Thurs: 4:25, 9:20 | Fri-Mon: 4:40, 9:40 LET’S BE COPS | Thurs: 1:55, 8:30 | Fri-Mon: 4:45, 9:50 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES | 11:55, 2:10, 7:25* [*no show 10.2] GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY | 11:40, 3:55, 6:40

EAST PROVIDENCE 10 60 Newport Ave | 401.438.1100

SEX TAPE | Thurs: 1, 3:10, 5:20, 7:30, 9:40 STEP UP: ALL IN | Thurs: 12:10, 2:35, 5:05, 7:30, 9:55 BEGIN AGAIN | Starts Fri: 12:10, 2:45, 5:05, 7:25, 9:45 BOYHOOD | Starts Fri: 12:55, 5, 8:30 INTO THE STORM | Starts Fri: 12:25, 2:30, 4:40, 6:50, 9:10 SIN CITY: A DAME TO KILL FOR | Starts Fri: 12:35, 2:55, 5:15, 7:30, 9:50 PLANES: FIRE & RESCUE | Thurs: 12:55, 3:05, 5, 6:55, 8:50 | Fri-Thurs: 12:45, 3:10, 5:05, 7:05, 9 HERCULES | 12, 2:20, 4:45, 7, 9:15 THE PURGE: ANARCHY | 7:15, 9:40 DAWN OF THE PLANET OF THE APES | 12:15, 3:20, 6:45, 9:30

HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON 2 | 12:30, 2:55, 5:10, 7:20, 9:35 MALEFICENT | 12:20, 2:40, 4:55, 7:10, 9:25 TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION | Thurs: 12:35, 4, 7:25 | Fri-Thurs: 12:05, 3:30

ENTERTAINMENT CINEMAS

30 Village Square Dr, South Kingstown | 401.792.8008

THE GIVER | Thurs: 1:15, 6:45 GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY | Thurs: 1, 6:35 THE HUNDRED-FOOT JOURNEY | Thurs: 3:45, 9:10 IF I STAY | Thurs: 4, 9 ANNABELLE | Starts Fri: 1:45, 4:25, 7:20, 9:40 GONE GIRL | Starts Fri: 12:45, 3:40, 6:40, 9:35 THE BOXTROLLS | 12:40, 2:45, 4:50, 7, 9:10 THE EQUALIZER | Thurs: 1:25, 4:15, 7, 9:45 | Fri-Thurs: 1, 4, 6:45, 9:35 THE MAZE RUNNER | 1:30, 4, 7:10, 9:40 THIS IS WHERE I LEAVE YOU | 1:40, 4:25, 7:15, 9:30 A WALK AMONG THE TOMBSTONES | 1:15, 4:10, 6:45, 9:30 DOLPHIN TALE 2 | 1:20, 3:55, 6:50, 9:10

ISLAND CINEMAS 10 105 Chase Ln, Middletown | 401.847.3456

THE DROP | Thurs: 3:45, 7:20, 9:35 ANNABELLE | Starts Fri: 1:20, 3:50, 7:30, 9:40 GONE GIRL | Starts Fri: 12:40, 3:35, 6:30, 9:20 THE BOXTROLLS | 12:30, 2:35, 4:35, 7, 9:10 THE EQUALIZER | 1:15, 4:05, 6:50, 9:30 THE MAZE RUNNER | 1:30, 4:15, 7:10, 9:30 THIS IS WHERE I LEAVE YOU | 1, 3:30, 7, 9:25 A WALK AMONG THE TOMBSTONES | 1:15, 3:50, 7:15, 9:35 DOLPHIN TALE 2 | 1:10, 4, 6:45, 9 NO GOOD DEED | 1:25, 4, 7:25, 9:40 GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY | 1:20, 4:10, 6:55, 9:25

JANE PICKENS THEATER 49 Touro St, Newport | 401.846.5252

THE TRIP TO ITALY | Thurs: 4:45, 7 MY OLD LADY | Starts Fri: 4:45, 7 | Sat-Sun: 2:30, 4:45, 7 | Mon-Thurs: 4:45, 7

PROVIDENCE PLACE CINEMAS 16

Providence Place | 800.315.4000

DOLPHIN TALE 2 | Thurs: 3:45, 6:20, 8:50 THE DROP | Thurs: 4:15, 6:45, 9:15 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES | Thurs: 1:55, 4:30 TUSK | Thurs: 9:20 ANNABELLE | Thurs: 7, 9:30 | FriThurs: 11:55, 12:25, 2:20, 2:50, 4:50, 5:20, 7:25, 7:55, 10, 10:35 | Fri-Sat late show: 12:30 BANG BANG | Thurs: 12:05, 3:30, 6:50, 10:10 | Fri-Thurs: 11:50, 3:05, 6:25, 9:50 GONE GIRL | Thurs: 10 | Fri-Thurs: 12, 12:30, 3:15, 3:45, 6:30, 7, 9:45, 10:20 | Fri-Sat late show: 11:50 GOVINDUDU ANDARIVADELE | Thurs: 11:45, 3:15, 6:40, 10 Fri-Thurs: 12:05, 3:25, 6:45, 10:10 MAS NEGRO QUE LA NOCHE [DARKER THAN NIGHT] 3D | 7:25, 9:55 | Fri-Sat late show: 12:25 MAS NEGRO QUE LA NOCHE [DARKER THAN NIGHT] | Thurs: 11:45, 2:20, 4:55 | Fri-Thurs: 11:35 am THE BOXTROLLS 3D | 12:25, 9:50 | Fri-Sat late show: 12:10 THE BOXTROLLS | 2:50, 5:10, 7:30 THE EQUALIZER | 12:40, 1:40, 3:40, 4:40, 6:40, 7:40, 9:35 | Fri-Sat late show: 11:30, 12

THE EQUALIZER: THE IMAX EXPERIENCE | 1:10, 4:10, 7:10, 10:05 THE MAZE RUNNER | 1:20, 1:50, 4:25, 5, 7:10, 7:40, 9:45* [*no show 10.2], 10:15 | Fri-Sat late show: 12:20 THIS IS WHERE I LEAVE YOU | Thurs: 1:45, 4:50 | Fri-Thurs: 11:30, 1:55, 4:20, 6:50, 9:20 A WALK AMONG THE TOMBSTONES | Thurs: 1:35, 4:35, 7:15, 10 | Fri-Thurs: 2:05, 4:45, 7:20, 9:55 | Fri-Sat late show: 12:30 NO GOOD DEED | Thurs: 12:30, 2:35, 4:45 | Fri-Thurs: 12:55, 3, 5:5, 7:15, 9:20 | Fri-Sat late show: 11:25 LET’S BE COPS | Thurs: 2:45, 5:20, 7:50, 10:35 | Fri-Thurs: 12:10, 2:35, 5:05, 7:30, 10 | Fri-Sat late show: 12:25 GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY | 1, 3:50, 6:35, 9:25 | Fri-Sat late show: 12:05

SHOWCASE CINEMAS SEEKONK ROUTE 6 Seekonk Square, Seekonk, MA | 800.315.4000

GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY | Thurs: 12:40, 3:50, 6:50 ANNABELLE | Thurs: 7 | Fri-Thurs: 12:25, 2:55, 5:15, 7:35 | Fri-Sat late show: 10 GONE GIRL | Starts Fri: 12:10, 12:40, 3:20, 3:50, 6:30, 7 | Fri-Sat late show: 9:40, 10:10 THE BOXTROLLS 3D | Thurs: 12:20, 7:20 | Fri-Sat late show: 10:05 THE BOXTROLLS | Thurs: 2:40, 5 | FriThurs: 12:20, 2:40, 5, 7:20 THE EQUALIZER | Thurs: 12:35, 1:05, 4, 4:30, 7, 7:30 | Fri-Thurs: 12:35, 1:05, 3:45, 4:15, 6:45, 7:15 | Fri-Sat late show: 9:45, 10:15 THE MAZE RUNNER | 12:30, 3:55, 6:55 | Fri-Sat late show: 9:55 THIS IS WHERE I LEAVE YOU | Thurs: 2:45, 5:10, 7:35 | Fri-Thurs: 12:50, 4:05, 6:50 | Fri-Sat late show: 9:30 A WALK AMONG THE TOMBSTONES | 12:45, 4, 7:10 | Fri-Sat late show: 9:50 THE DROP | Thurs: 12:55, 4:20, 7:15 | Fri-Sat late show: 9:35 DOLPHIN TALE 2 | 12:55, 4:10, 7:05* [*no show 10.2]

SHOWCASE CINEMAS WARWICK 1200 Quaker Ln | 800.315.4000

NO GOOD DEED | Thurs: 1:10, 3:15, 5:15, 7:40, 10:05 LEFT BEHIND | Starts Fri: 1:10, 4:10, 6:50, 9:35 | Fri-Sat late show: 12:10 ANNABELLE | Thurs: 7, 9:30 | FriThurs: 11:45, 2:15, 4:45, 7:15, 9:50 | Fri-Sat late show: 12:15 GONE GIRL | Thurs: 10 | Fri-Thurs: 12, 12:30, 3:15, 3:45, 6:30, 7:05, 9:45, 10:15 | Fri-Sat late show: 11:55 THE SKELETON TWINS | 12:20, 2:40, 4:55, 7:10, 9:25 THE BOXTROLLS 3D | 9:10 | Fri-Sat late show: 11:30 THE BOXTROLLS | Thurs: 2:20, 4:40, 7 | Fri-Thurs: 11:30, 1:50, 4:20, 6:45 THE EQUALIZER | 12:35, 1, 3:30, 4, 6:35, 7:05, 9:30, 10 | Fri-Sat late show: 11:40 MY OLD LADY | Thurs: 11:50, 2:15, 4:45, 7:25, 9:55 | Fri-Thurs: 1:35, 4:15, 7:25, 9:55 | Fri-Sat late show: 12:25 THE MAZE RUNNER | 1:15, 4:05, 7:05, 9:40 | Fri-Sat late show: 12:15 THIS IS WHERE I LEAVE YOU | 12:25, 2:55, 5:20, 7:45, 10:20 A WALK AMONG THE TOMBSTONES | 1:25, 4:35, 7:30* [*10.2 only 7:15], 10:10 DOLPHIN TALE 2 | 12:55, 3:55, 6:55, 9:20 THE DROP | 1:40, 4:30, 7:20, 10:05* [*10.2 only 9:45] THE HUNDRED-FOOT JOURNEY | 3:35, 6:45 GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY | 12:50, 9:30 | Fri-Sat late show: 12:15

SHOWCASE CINEMAS WARWICK MALL 400 Bald Hill Rd | 800.315.4000

THE GIVER | Thurs: 7:40 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES | Thurs: 12, 2:30, 5:15

ANNABELLE | Thurs: 7, 9:30 | FriThurs: 12:30, 3, 5:30, 8, 10:35 GONE GIRL | Thurs: 10 | Fri-Thurs: 12:12, 12:45, 3:30, 4, 6:45, 7:15, 10, 10:30 THE BOXTROLLS 3D | 9:50 THE BOXTROLLS | 12:20, 2:50, 5:10, 7:30 THE EQUALIZER | 12:25, 12:55, 3:20, 3:50, 6:40, 7:10, 9:45, 10:15 THE MAZE RUNNER | 1:20, 1:50, 4:10, 4:40, 6:50, 7:20, 9:55, 10:25 THIS IS WHERE I LEAVE YOU | Thurs: 12:30, 2:55, 5:20, 7:50, 10:30 | FriThurs: 12, 2:30, 5, 7:50, 10:20 A WALK AMONG THE TOMBSTONES | Thurs: 1:35, 4:10, 7:10, 10:10 | FriThurs: 1:35, 4:15, 7:05, 9:40 NO GOOD DEED | Thurs: 12:55, 3, 5:05, 7:25, 9:30 | Fri-Thurs: 9:15 DOLPHIN TALE 2 | 1:15, 3:45, 6:30 IF I STAY | 1 GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY | Thurs: 1, 3:50 | Fri-Thurs: 3:55, 6:35, 9:20

SHOWCASE CINEMAS NORTH ATTLEBORO

640 South Washington St, North Attleboro, MA | 800.315.4000

ANNABELLE | Thurs: 7 | Fri-Thurs: 1:45, 4:45, 7:45 | Fri-Sat late show: 10:20 GONE GIRL | Starts Fri: 12:30, 3:45, 7 | Fri-Sat late show: 10:15 THE BOXTROLLS 3D | Thurs: 12:30, 7:30 | Fri-Sat late show: 9:50 THE BOXTROLLS | Thurs: 2:50, 5:10 | Fri-Thurs: 12:30, 2:50, 5:10, 7:30 THE EQUALIZER | Thurs: 1, 4, 7 | FriThurs: 12:35, 3:35, 6:30 | Fri-Sat late show: 9:30 THE MAZE RUNNER | 1:15, 4:25, 7:05 | Fri-Sat late show: 9:40 THIS IS WHERE I LEAVE YOU | Thurs: 12:35, 3, 5:25, 7:50 | Fri-Thurs: 1:30, 4:30, 7:50 | Fri-Sat late show: 10:10 A WALK AMONG THE TOMBSTONES | 1:35, 4:35, 7:15 | Fri-Sat late show: 10 NO GOOD DEED | 12:55, 3:10, 5:20, 7:35 | Fri-Sat late show: 9:55 DOLPHIN TALE 2 | 1:20, 4:20, 6:50 | Fri-Sat late show: 9:20 THE GIVER | 7:25 | Fri-Sat late show: 9:45 LET’S BE COPS | 1:55, 5:05, 7:40 | FriSat late show: 10:05 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES | Thurs: 1:45, 4:20, 6:55 | Fri-Thurs: 1:50, 4:50 GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY | 12:50, 3:50, 6:35 | Fri-Sat late show: 9:25

SWANSEA STADIUM 12

207 Swansea Mall Dr, Swansea, MA | 508.674.6700

ANNABELLE | Thurs: 7, 9:30 | Fri-Sun: 1:10, 1:40, 4:05, 7:05, 7:35, 10 | MonThurs: 1:10, 4:05, 7:05, 10 GONE GIRL | Thurs: 10 | Fri-Sun: 12:40, 1, 4, 7, 7:20, 10:40 | Mon-Thurs: 12:40, 4, 7:20, 10:40 LEFT BEHIND | Thurs: 7:05, 9:50 | FriThurs: 1:05, 4:35, 7:30, 10:35 DOLPHIN TALE 2 | Starts Fri: 12:50, 4:15, 7:15, 10:10* [*no show 10.9] THE BOXTROLLS 3D | Thurs: 4:45, 10 | Fri-Thurs: 4:50, 10:25* [*no show 10.9] THE BOXTROLLS | Thurs: :05, 7:15 | Fri-Thurs: 1:30, 7:55* [*no show 10.9] THE EQUALIZER | Thurs: 1:30, 1:50, 4:35, 4:55, 7:40, 8, 10:45 | Fri-Thurs: 12:45, 1:15, 3:50, 4:25*, 7:10, 7:40*, 10:15, 10:45* [*no shows 10.9] THE MAZE RUNNER | Thurs: 2:05, 4:20, 4:50, 7:05, 7:35, 10:05, 10:35 | Fri-Thurs: 12:55, 4:30, 7:25, 10:30 THIS IS WHERE I LEAVE YOU | Thurs: 2:15, 4:45, 7:45, 10:30 | Fri-Thurs: 1:20, 4:40, 7:45, 10:20 A WALK AMONG THE TOMBSTONES | Thurs: 1:50, 4:40, 7:25, 10:15 | FriThurs: 4:10, 10:05 THE DROP | Thurs: 4:25 | Fri-Sun: 4:20, 10:20 | Mon-Thurs: 1, 4:20, 7, 10:20 NO GOOD DEED | Thurs: 2:20, 5, 7:55, 10:20 | Fri-Thurs: 1:25, 4:45, 7:50, 10:25 ALEXANDER AND THE TERRIBLE, HORRIBLE, NO GOOD, VERY BAD DAY | Thurs [10.9]: 7, 9:15 DRACULA UNTOLD | Thurs [10.9]: 8, 10:30 THE JUDGE | Thurs [10.9]: 10


facebook.com/ProvidencePhoenix | @ProvPhoenix | Providence.thePhoenix.com | the Providence Phoenix | october 3, 2014 21

OuR RAtING

film Short Takes movie reviews in brief XXXW

tHE DISAPPEARANCE OF ELEANOR RIGBY 122 minUtes | r | cable car No one really knows what happens inside a marriage except the spouses — and sometimes not even they do, because even the closest couples keep secrets from one another. Novelist Evan S. Connell came closer than most to a rounded portrait when he wrote the classic Mrs. Bridge (1959) and Mr. Bridge (1969), whose stories sometimes overlapped but whose perspectives were strictly limited; following his lead, writer-director Ned Benson made his feature debut in 2013 with two versions of The Disappearance of Eleanor Rigby, one subtitled Her and the other Him. I haven’t seen either of those movies, but this combination of the two, subtitled Them, is so maturely written, richly characterized, and flawlessly acted that I can’t wait until they’re made available. Jessica Chastain and James McAvoy star as a New England couple who have separated in the wake of a family tragedy; the fine supporting cast includes William Hurt, Isabelle Huppert, Ciarán Hinds, Viola Davis, Bill Hader, and Jess Weixler. _J.R. Jones

XXXW

LOVE IS StRANGE 94 minUtes | r | avon One of the most heartrending films ever made, Leo McCarey’s Make Way for Tomorrow

separaTe lives Chastain and McAvoy in The Disappearance of Eleanor Rigby.

Masterpiece Good Okay Not Good Stinks

XXXX XXX XX X Z

(1937) centers on a long-married couple who lose their home and are forced to split up, each rooming unhappily with one of their children. That story was rooted in the economic realities of the Depression, whereas this unofficial remake by writer-director Ira Sachs (Forty Shades of Blue, Keep the Lights On) springs from the shifting social landscape of same-sex unions: the elderly sweethearts this time around are gay New Yorkers (Alfred Molina and John Lithgow) who consecrate their many years together by tying the knot but, after the marriage gets one of them fired from his job at a Catholic school, must vacate their rent-controlled apartment. Preserved from the original, and beautifully realized in Sachs’s sensitive characterization, are the pain of separation and the despair of becoming a burden on the next generation. With Marisa Tomei, Darren E. Burrows, and Charlie Tahan. _J.R. Jones

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CRANstoN, RI PRoVIdENCE, RI

XX

GONE GIRL 149 minUtes | r | cinemaworld + entertainment + island + Providence Place 16 + showcase + swansea stadiUm 12 Gillian Flynn’s twist-laden mystery novel gets a somber, respectful screen treatment from David Fincher (The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo, The Social Network), which has the unfortunate effect of diminishing the book’s diabolical fun and heightening its dull misanthropy. In small-town Missouri, a local man (Ben Affleck) becomes a murder suspect after his cool-blond New Yorker wife (Rosamund Pike) goes missing; the usual media circus follows, but appearances are deceiving. Even at two and a half hours the movie is terminally overplotted, and the two leads both sink under the weight of their selfish, spiteful characters. But there are strong supporting performances from Carrie Coon as the husband’s loyal sister and Kim Dickens as the shrewd police detective investigating the case. Flynn wrote the script; with Neil Patrick Harris, Tyler Perry, and Patrick Fugit. _J.R. Jones

rama lang’s Bowla Cranston, RI

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capsule reviews XW tHE EQuALIZER | 2014 | Denzel

Washington stars as a former CIA operative (and needless to say, a human killing machine) who singlehandedly takes on the entire Russian mafia. This violent action thriller is based on the ’80s TV series with Edward Woodward, though director Antoine Fuqua (Training Day) also borrows heavily from David Fincher, aping the arty grunge of Fight Club, the preternatural lighting of Zodiac, and the claustrophobic interiors of The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo. Fuqua isn’t the only one desperate to elevate the routine material; screenwriter David Wenk shoehorns in a needless subplot in which the hero mentors a young loser at the local Home Depot, and Washington grandstands his way through several heated soliloquys. With Chloe Grace Moretz and Marton Csokas. | 132m |

a bloody bath in Los Angeles, his sister invites him to convalesce with her and her new husband in New York. Like most comic actors doing straight drama, Wiig and Hader acquit themselves admirably, though their most persuasive scenes are those that show the siblings goofing around together like overgrown kids; neither actor can summon up the nihilistic despair that drives someone to take his own life. Most of the story transpires between those two extremes, showing how the character’ shared emotional damage has deformed their respective love relationships. Writing and directing his second feature, Craig Johnson demonstrates a knowing sense of how consciously, and helplessly, some people destroy themselves. With Luke Wilson, Ty Burrell, and Joanna Gleason. | 93m |

XXX tHE SKELEtON tWINS |

X tHIS IS WHERE I LEAVE YOu |

and Bill Hader play fraternal twins scarred by their father’s suicide years earlier and each contemplating the same exit route; after the gay brother is narrowly rescued from

Tina Fey, and Adam Driver star in this big-screen sitcom about a dysfunctional family reuniting for a funeral. Screenwriter Jonathan Tropper (adapting his novel) defines

2014 | SNL veterans Kristen Wiig

2014 | Jane Fonda, Jason Bateman,

every character with a single, overarching foible (Bateman is timid, Driver is irresponsible, etc). One by one, each of them acknowledges his or her problem, they talk it out, and by the end of the week everybody’s OK. The laughs are about as cheap as the sentimentality — I counted at least four gags involving a threeyear-old and his training toilet. Shawn Levy (Night At the Museum) directed. | 103m |

XW A WALK AMONG tHE tOMB-

StONES | 2014 | Liam Neeson is a

private investigator trailing two sickos who prey on the wives of rich drug traffickers. Adapted from a novel by Lawrence Block, this revenge thriller evokes Charles Bronson vehicles from the mid-1970s, right down to the title. It’s nasty, cynical, and heavy on the torture, though writer-director Scott Frank, working with the gifted cinematographer Mihai Malaimare Jr. (The Master), achieves a thick, foreboding atmosphere. As usual, Neeson gives a more thoughtful performance than the material deserves. With Dan Stevens. | 114m |

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Great Cellar Stories Moments #32

Moon signs 1

BOB DY L A N GOES PO LK A

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No one cares. Bob continues experimenting.

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Cellar Stories Used Books, New Books 1/2 Price!

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111 Mathewson Street, Providence 521-2665 www.cellarstories.com

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20 taps, no crap, full pints, outdoor beer garden great music, surprisingly good food daily from 4 PM 1

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Beer • Booze • Rock & Roll 17

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Friday october 3

1718 Westminster Street, Providence, RI 1

Waxing moon in capricorn, moon void-of-course 12:18 pm until 4 am friday when it moves into aquarius. vOc moons in capricorn tell us to look beneath the hood, and pull a few wires “just to see what happens.” a day to arrive at a logical conclusion by taking a few swoops and dashes. Super-focused: capricorn, taurus, virgo, Scorpio, Sagittarius, aquarius, and pisces. Slightly bedazzled: Leo, Gemini, Libra, cancer, and aries. 11

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Waxing moon in aquarius, moon voidof-course 2:32 pm until 5:24 am Sunday. do tasks that aren’t repetitious, or that have some novelty (e.g., if you work out, now’s the time to exercise all the muscles). fantasy is attractive to Sagittarius, aquarius, pisces, aries, Gemini, Libra, capricorn, and virgo. taurus, Leo, and Scorpio could do things their own way, and then wonder what YOUr problem is! 13

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Waxing moon in pisces. today and tomorrow are useful for stockpiling supplies related to secrets, parties, and unexpected good times. artists flourish during this lunar phase and virgo, Gemini, Libra, Leo, and Sagittarius could be extra-sensitive, particularly when it comes to reading into a situation. however, capricorn, aquarius, pisces, aries, taurus, cancer, and Scorpio have “x-ray vision” when it comes to understanding problems that baffle others. 14

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Monday october 6

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Waxing moon in aquarius. today and tomorrow are excellent for hearing (or spreading) wild ideas, rumors, and new 12

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sunday october 5

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plans. Strange affections are also a theme, as the moon, venus, and mars are completely at odds with one another. Sagittarius, aquarius, pisces, aries, Gemini, Libra, capricorn, and virgo will be eager for novel experiences. taurus, Leo, and Scorpio may resist being “rushed.”

saturday october 4

Alas, we will not be able to see our eclipse, but this is a small and perfect poem. The full moon in Aries opposes the sun in Libra, and all relationships may come to a full stop for reassessment, particularly for Capricorn, Cancer, Aries and Libra who usually don’t like surprises, but could be cool with ensues. More on Facebook—visit Sally Cragin Astrology. We can all get a little more done during the full moon.

S!

JUDA

I stood out in the open cold / To see the essence of the eclipse / Which was its perfect darkness / I stood in 2 4 5 6 7 the cold3 on the porch / And could not think of anything so perfect / As a man’s hope of light in the face 18 19 20 21 22 23 of darkness _richard eberhart, “The eclipse”

_b y sy Mb o l i ne DA i

Waxing moon in pisces, moon void-ofcourse 3:38 pm until 6:07 am, tuesday. Super day for musicians, photographers, psychological insights, or identifying with prisoners. the onrushing full moon presages a very exciting and social week, but tonight could be sentimental, and even a bit soggy for virgo, Gemini, Sagittarius, cancer. better to take a hint from capricorn, aquarius, pisces, aries, taurus, Leo, Libra, and Scorpio and pursue artistic or sensual activities. 15

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tuesday october 7

Waxing moon in aries, total lunar eclipse (alas not visible on the east coast of north america). eclipses traditional portend a fall from power or grace, so look around and see if folks who have been full of hubris are getting a comeuppance. pisces, Scorpio, taurus, virgo, capricorn, and cancer are often the observers, while Libra, Leo, Sagittarius, aries, aquarius, and Gemini are the ones drawing attention to themselves! 16

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full moon in aries, the hunter’s moon, also my birthday! You know the drill— full moon frenzy takes many forms and the phrase “what did you mean by that?” could spring to the lips of cancer, capricorn, and Libra, who could feel irritable, especially if they have to say “i’m fine,” more than twice to inquiries. aquarius, pisces, aries, taurus, Gemini, Sagittarius, virgo, Leo, and Scorpio: be social, and do projects you can finish quickly. 17

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Moon KeyS 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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Jonesin’ _by matt Jones F “the short version”— Saving a few letters. Across 1 “Let’s go,” to dora 6 it can make a date 10 Show segments 14 rewrite 15 carmen or cartman 16 “We’ve got trouble!” 17 terrible dictionary definition of fortified wine? 19 ipod model 20 tater tots maker 21 time out for timothy Leary 23 take back 25 empty ___ syndrome 26 instrument for hawaiians and hipsters 29 paper format? 32 Shaggy’s voice 36 Without company 37 kenny Loggins’s “danger ___” 38 “ewwww!” 39 hero’s pursuit 40 ninth Greek letter 41 plumlike fruit 42 One of holder’s predecessors 43 called off 44 california’s big ___ 45 major inconveniences 47 pad prik khing’s cuisine 49 Queen of hip hop 54 Spiny anteaters 58 put under 59 Speaker of cooperstown 60 be a hasty actor? 62 nutmeg-flavored drinks 63 killing time

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center of activity needing a massage mad Libs category Sporty Jaguar

Down 1 contrail’s makeup 2 “i ___ mi amor” (color me badd #1 hit) 3 paddock parents 4 adrian tomine comic “___ nerve” 5 bowl location 6 mpG component 7 vegas Strip casino 8 clarence’s role on “the mod Squad” 9 north america’s highest mountain 10 family tree branches 11 #1 hits like “all about that balsa” and “Shake it Oak”? 12 “the bluest eye” author morrison 13 pick up a few things 18 cold and clammy 22 dennis’s sister, in “always Sunny” 24 Washington-area airport 27 Supposedly crazy birds 28 Join the club 30 Start the pot 31 in need of jumper cables 32 x, in a love letter 33 “because freedom can’t protect itself” org. 34 fashionable school for hybrid outerwear?

© 2 0 1 4 J o n e s i n ’ C r o s s w o r d s | e d i to r @ Jo n e s i n Cr o s s w o r d s . C o m

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potato feature popular wine, for short farmer’s storage co-star of bea, betty, and rue Suckered right there on the map ___ fit (tantrum) Word said with a head slap iggy azalea hit accepted without question

53 “Siddhartha” novelist hermann 54 active volcano in Sicily 55 comfy shoe 56 brad’s role in “inglourious basterds” 57 colleague of Scotty and Spock 61 Stimpy’s counterpart Solution iS on page 18

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