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CONTENTS
BRUCE VANWYNGARDEN Editor SHARA CLARK Managing Editor JACKSON BAKER Senior Editor TOBY SELLS Associate Editor CHRIS MCCOY Film and TV Editor ALEX GREENE Music Editor JULIA BAKER, MICHAEL DONAHUE MAYA SMITH, JON W. SPARKS Staff Writers JESSE DAVIS Copy Editor, Calendar Editor JEN CLARKE, RANDY HASPEL, AYLEN MERCADO, RICHARD MURFF, FRANK MURTAUGH, MEGHAN STUTHARD Contributing Columnists ANTHONY SAIN Grizzlies Reporter ANDREA FENISE Fashion Editor KENNETH NEILL Founding Publisher
OUR 1597TH ISSUE 10.03.19 A few weeks ago in this space, I wrote about the likelihood that our readers would soon be unable to find the Flyer at local Kroger stores. It was the result of a decision made at Kroger’s corporate headquarters in Cincinnati that no free publications would be allowed in any of its stores after October 15th. The Kroger company claimed that the decision was made because “more publications continue to shift to digital formats, resulting in less customers using the products.” (Let’s forgive them their use of “less” when they meant “fewer”; there probably aren’t many English majors in the Kroger corporate food chain.) But the fact is that while it’s true that paid print circulation is declining at many daily newspapers, it’s actually increasing at free publications. The Flyer is a member of the Association of Alternative Newsmedia (AAN), a national organization of around 100 alternative newsweeklies, many of which are in cities where Kroger is the dominant grocery retailer. AAN has started a nationwide campaign called “Don’t Lose Local News,” but frankly, it doesn’t appear to be having much effect. Colorado Springs Independent founder John Weiss said last week that the pickup number for his publication in that city’s Krogers had grown to 17,000 in recent years. Berl Schwartz, publisher of the Lansing City Pulse, said his paper’s pickup rate in Kroger had almost tripled since 2012. “The price of daily papers has increased steeply while content has declined just as sharply,” said Schwartz. “As a result, many readers have stopped buying print dailies. In market after market, free alternative weeklies have filled a big hole in local news.” Weiss has launched an “un30 30 boycott” in Colorado Springs. MEMPHIS “Keep shopping at the stores,” ELECTIO he says, “but while there, ask to GUIDE N speak to the manager on duty to request that they keep our paper available.” In Lansing last week, the city council passed a resolution asking Kroger corporate leadPride ers to reconsider their decision. Memphis Similar actions are happening in other alt-weekly cities, including Cincinnati, Omaha, Salt Lake City, Oakland, and elsewhere. But barring an unlikely last-minute corporate change of mind, readers in those cities — and in Memphis — will have to start picking up their local alt-weekly at other locations. In Memphis, 9,000 copies of the Flyer are (or were) picked up in Kroger stores each week, nearly a quarter of our circulation. The Kroger pickup rate was around 95 percent, meaning there weren’t many papers left at the end of the week — and that lots of Memphians relied on Kroger for access to the paper. I was manning a Flyer booth at an event a couple weeks back, one of those deals where companies set up informational tables and hand out keychains and pens and other tchotchkes. We had a stack of Flyers on the table, and they went like hotcakes. I was surprised and gratified at how many folks, many of them older African Americans, told me how much they appreciated the Flyer. And many of them added, “I pick it up at Kroger every week.” So, what are we going to do with those 9,000 papers? We’re working on it. We’re increasing the draw at many of our other locations, especially those in Midtown and Downtown. We’re currently at all locations of Cash Saver, Superlo, Huey’s, Jack Pirtle’s, Central BBQ, and any public library. We’re also adding new locations, including (as of October 15th) all CVS pharmacies and Exxon stations — with more to come. N E WS & O P I N I O N THE FLY-BY - 4 We’ll keep you apprised as other NY TIMES CROSSWORD - 5 distribution agreements are made. (WalPOLITICS - 7 greens, are you listening?) If you have a VIEWPOINT - 9 suggestion or a question about locations, BEST OF MEMPHIS PARTY - 10 email our distribution manager Carrie COVER STORY O’Guin (oguin@memphisflyer.com). “DOLEMITE IS MY NAME” BY CHRIS MCCOY - 16 We are also in the process of creatSPORTS - 21 ing a pickup location guide/map that WE RECOMMEND - 22 will be printed in the paper on occaMUSIC - 24 sion and put online permanently. In a AFTER DARK - 26 city like Memphis, a free publication CALENDAR - 34 HEALTH - 48 like the Flyer is a valuable source of THEATER - 50 news and information, and we intend CANNABEAT - 52 to keep getting it into the hands of FOOD NEWS - 54 those who want to read it — Kroger or FOOD - 56 no Kroger. C L AS S I F I E D S - 6 0 Bruce VanWyngarden LAST WORD - 63 brucev@memphisflyer.com
3
THE
fly-by
MEMernet A round-up of Memphis on the World Wide Web. R O C KY WHAT? Tracy Dobbins is the artist behind a new series of painted rocks hidden around town, à la 901 Rocks. “These are my tittie rocks,” Dobbins explained on Instagram three weeks ago. “They are rocks that look like titties.” One such rock was discovered at the Cooper-Young gazebo Saturday night. Look for them online at #rockytittn. R OYA L P R I D E
Credit: Emmett Campbell
October 3-9, 2019
White Station Homecoming Royalty winner Brandon Allen set social media ablaze last weekend. “As [Shelby County Schools] superintendent, I support student voice and expression,” Dr. Joris M. Ray wrote in a Saturday Facebook post. MORE PRIDE
Here’s hoping your social scrolls were as rainbow-riffic as ours on Saturday as the Mid-South Pride parade rolled on Beale Street.
4
{
Questions, Answers + Attitude Edited by Toby Sells
W E E K T H AT W A S By Flyer staff
Executions, Protest, & OK Dates loom for death-row inmates, living wages sought at U of M, and new hate symbols. AG S E E KS E X EC UTI O N S Two of the nine men who could soon be executed by the state were convicted in Shelby County. Last week, Tennessee Attorney General Herbert Slatery quietly requested execution dates for nine men now on death row in Tennessee. Five men have been executed here since August 2018. Tony Von Carruthers was convicted in Memphis for a 1994 triple homicide. Pervis Tyrone Payne was convicted of the 1987 murder of a woman and her 2-year-old daughter. P R OTEST FO R CAM P US WO R K E R S The Memphis Young Democratic Socialists (901YDS) protested Clockwise from top left: Death-row inmates awaiting execution dates, a new boat dock at the University of Memphis last for Wolf River Greenway trail, protestors at U of M, the OK/white power symbol week, asking for a living wage for all campus workers and a more equitable campus. The South Memphis Future & Funk Community Art The protest materialized as U of M president David Rudd Garden, designed by artist Tobacco Brown, is planned for a was to get a near $100,000 salary increase. It came a day vacant lot on McMillan Street in South Memphis’ Lauderafter Rudd turned down the raise. dale Subdivision. 901YDS wants all campus workers to earn a living wage, An existing Uptown community garden may soon be transincluding those hired under a work-study contract, those formed into a food forest, a garden that mimics forest growth earning a stipend, part-time and full-time employees, with edible plants, to provide the community with access to graduate workers, and adjunct professors. Earlier this year, naturally grown food, including seasonal and native produce. Rudd promised all campus employees would make at least The Wolf River Conservancy is planning a boat dock near $15 per hour in the next two years. the recently constructed Epping Way section of the Wolf River Greenway trail to expand access to the 20-acre lake there. D R U G FO R C E STR I K ES AGAI N The Appalachian Regional Prescription Opioid (ARPO) F I R E STATI O N S FO R LOST P ETS strike force struck again in Memphis last week, indicting 13 If you find a lost pet here, you can now take it to any of the in the region with charges related to prescription drugs. The Memphis Fire Services Division stations around the city to first strike earlier this year hit 60 medical professionals who help them be reunited with their owner. In partnership with allegedly distributed more than 23 million pills to patients. Memphis Animal Services, each of the city’s 58 fire stations is equipped with microchip scanners. P R I NTE R’S ALLEY C LOS E D Shelby County District Attorney General Amy Weirich anO K, B OWL C UT AD D E D TO HATE LI ST nounced last week that Printer’s Alley was closed as a public The OK hand symbol was one of 36 symbols the Antinuisance. The move comes after an investigation showed the Defamation League added to its “Hate On Display” online database this year. Many of the symbols, memes, and slobar to have a pattern “of narcotics trafficking, unlicensed gans added this year are white supremacist symbols adopted liquor sales, and other criminal activity,” according to Weirecently by the alt-right segment of the white supremacist rich. The bar could reopen, but a hearing on the matter was movement. Other symbols included white supremacist mass postponed last week. killer Dylann Roof ’s bowl cut, the Happy Merchant meme, and the “diversity = white genocide” slogan. GAR D E N S, B OAT D O C K O N D E C K New projects are in the works, fueled with money from Visit the News Blog at memphisflyer.com for fuller versions of crowd-funding website ioby. these stories and more local news.
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Edited by Will Shortz
Boneless cut named for a New York restaurant Saucer in the sky, for short ___ Alto, Calif. Carrying a gun Very off-color Some showy blossoms, informally City north of Carson City Samples “Later!” 180° from SSW Jet that evades radar detection The biblical wise men, by tradition Slobbers Corner PC key Steer clear of Sup
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NEWS & OPINION
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Edited by Will Shortz
Love & Security {
CITY REPORTER By Maya Smith
The University of Tennessee Health Science Center (UTHSC) is taking proactive steps to deter acts of hate and violence on campus by concurrently beefing up its security and reviving its anti-hate campaign. The school’s anti-hate campaign began last fall and was brought back this school year to reiterate the school’s commitment to having a hate-free, diverse campus. As an institute of higher education and the state’s only public academic health science university, Dr. Scott Strome, the Robert Kaplan Executive Dean of the UTHSC College of Medicine, said it was important to acknowledge that “we need to set value standards and exemplify what we believe is the right thing to do.” “We believe in diversity in all of its forms — by that I mean color of the skin, ethnic diversity, gender diversity, and all different types of diversity,” Strome said. “When we can bring people who are diverse together, it makes us stronger as a university and stronger as a culture.” Strome said the university not only recognizes and welcomes diversity, but “we simply won’t tolerate anybody who directs malice toward another individual for any reason.” Strome believes “hate starts locally” with jokes that “may seem funny, but are off color and hurtful.” With efforts like the campaign, Strome said his hope is that students and faculty will learn to call
out insensitive words or actions, including those said or done in jest, when they witness them on campus. “When those things start happening, we want the students and faculty to step in and say ‘Hey, that’s not funny,’” Strome said. “‘That actually hurts, and that’s not sensitive to who we are today. Stop it.’ So, my hope is that we never have acts that are broadly classified as hate crimes.” Kennard Brown, UTHSC’s executive vice chancellor and chief of operations, said though the school works hard to create a culture of tolerance on campus, “You can never negate the human element.” Because of this, UTHSC puts measures in place to prepare for acts of violence or other major incidents. Brown said the university has about $30 million worth of security upgrades in the works. Some of those improvements include installing nearly 2,700 additional cameras around campus. “So we literally are watching everything in our environment to the degree that we can.” Other recent changes include installing automated locking systems and card swipe-controlled entrances, employing security guards to man all of the campus’ public buildings, and hiring additional campus police officers.
MAYA SMITH
UTHSC takes two paths toward a safer campus.
Signs at UTHSC outline the school’s anti-hate campaign. Brown said UTHSC has more than 40 uniformed police officers who patrol the campus and the broader Medical District, functioning “almost like a precinct of the Memphis Police Department.” “No security system is all-encompassing,” Brown said. “But we think we thought of most of the elements that we believe will make our environment a secure one if the need arises. As comprehensive as we make it, we still think about it every day. We still make a tremendous effort to stay on the proverbial edge of new technology coming out.” “The evolution of campus security,” Brown said, will be an “ongoing activity.”
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POLITICS By Jackson Baker
LeMichael Wilson, candidate for mayor, is eloquent, downright ubiquitous, and as hard-working as a candidate can be. Moreover, he is able to suggest that it’s time for a change without focusing on negative talking points. Wilson has been running for mayor for two solid years and has raised enough money to satisfy the posted thresholds for all the debates that should have happened but didn’t, due to the annoying maneuvers of two acknowledged contenders, Mayor Jim Strickland and former Mayor Willie Herenton. The amiable restaurateur and civic figure believes, with some reason, that he should be considered among the leaders in the mayoral race — not as a virtual unknown or as some sort of adjunct to the presumed Big Three of Strickland, Herenton, and Tami Sawyer. For the most part, though, there is where he has lingered in the public mind for most of the mayoral race. This is despite his own claim that he has seen polling rating him no worse than third among the candidates. Wilson has criticized the city’s reliance on PILOT (payment in lieu of taxation) financing to induce new industry to relocate here and would tie the use of that and other inducements to criteria ensuring not only strict compliance by the favored industries but to measurable spinoffs in pay and housing for local residents. He promises a general house-cleaning of citizen advisory boards to make sure ordinary Memphians are fully represented on them. The realities of electioneering in our time are such that very little evidence exists for the prospects of a Wilson victory on October 3rd. Though it is axiomatic that, through a combination of ego or insulation against the pains and rigors of running, all — or virtually all — active candidates see themselves as possible winners, successful outcomes for long-shot entries like Wilson are few and far between. Still, it’s hard not to appreciate the good will and sincerity behind Wilson’s self-introduction at a recent meagerly attended forum sponsored by the NAACP: “Good evening. My name is LeMichael Wilson. I’m running for
mayor of Memphis. My campaign is all about fighting for people. My push is to build a better Memphis to be the gateway of new beginnings. We all know what our issues are, but who’s going to be the best one that’s going to push us forward with solutions and to change the quality of life for the people who live in the city of Memphis. I would love everyone’s support. And that’s it.” Frank W. Johnson is one of several candidates for Memphis City Council positions who began their efforts as lesser-known personalities taking on well-known incumbents — in Johnson’s case the redoubtable incumbent Cheyenne Johnson, who, during her electoral career as Shelby County Assessor, was able to win consistently as a Democrat, even during Republicandominated election eras. Says Frank Johnson: “I have taught school, worked on the primary board with the Shelby County Democrats [and have been] a grassroots committee representative for District 10. Also, I continue to work around the issue of environmental justice and the problems with lead in our drinking water.”
None of this is meant to downplay the virtues or potential of other candidates unmentioned here, many of them well-known, several of them respected incumbents. This column is meant to extol the fact that this year’s candidate field is varied. In several appearances, Johnson has made much of his upbringing in southeast Memphis, “next to the Defense Depot, one of the most contaminated areas in the city.” He speaks convincingly of a history of contamination and of serious, lifethreatening illness experienced by his own mother and sister from the effect of “living next to mustard-gas canisters in the ground.” Johnson is passionate about the subject of gentrification, which he defines as a way “they get us [the city’s underserved] out of our properties … in both black and white areas.” continued on page 8
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Highlighting several deserving candidates who may not have had their time on center stage.
NEWS & OPINION
One Last Look
7
POLITICS continued from page 7 He characterizes gentrification as “Reaganomics revisited,” a mode of development whereby “we give rich people money and hope they come back and give us some of that money.” He maintains, “Our mayor’s offices, our councils, our commissions have all been compromised by this corporate money. “There was a time in the 1980s,” he continues, “when there were grocery stores on every corner. There was equity in our communities, but we’ve been starved of money. They bait us with bags of money, wanting us to decorate our communities before they take them from us. We need to reinvest in our communities, renovate our homes, rehabilitate our schools, and pay a living wage.” Much of that indictment is rhetorical, of course, and needs to be documented with incontrovertible fact, but it speaks to a growing perception among many that developers now have a stranglehold on city government. Several of the other impressive new faces this year adorn the ballot of the much-ballyhooed People’s Convention II that met in early June under the auspices of the Rev. Earle Fisher et al: Pearl Eva Walker in Super District 8 Position 1; Mauricio Calvo in Super District 9, Position 2; Michalyn Easter-Thomas in District 7 (whose stock has risen in proportion to the piling-up mishaps of another challenger to incumbent Berlin Boyd, Thurston Smith); Erika Sugarmon in District 9, Position 1, who is a bridge to civil rights tradition and the Democratic mainstream.
There are such impressive newcomers as Jerred Price, who comes from the field of music and is yet another alternative in District 7; Cat Allen in Super District 8, Position 3; and John Emery in District 2. And there is a reprise appearance on the ballot of the reform-minded John Marek in District 5. None of this is meant to downplay the virtues or potential of other candidates unmentioned here, many of them well-known, several of them respected incumbents. This column is meant merely to extol the fact that this year’s candidate field is unusually rich and varied, and, win or lose, many of its members will continue to be heard from, one way or another. • Steve Cohen and Jim Cooper, Democratic congressmen from Tennessee districts 9 and 5, respectively, have co-sponsored H.R. 4464, the Ranked Choice Voting Act, which would require the use of Ranked Choice Voting (RCV) for all federal Congressional elections in the United States. RCV, which allows for majority winners in multi-candidate races by resampling and redistributing ballots of runner-up candidates, was approved by Memphis voters in a 2008 referendum and re-approved in a second referendum in 2018, and was originally scheduled by Election Administrator Linda Phillips to use in the current city election. But a combination of opposition from incumbent Council members and the state Election Coordinator’s office managed to stymie the effort for now. The law sought by Cohen and Cooper would apply only to federal elections, however, not state or local ones.
October 3-9, 2019
C O M M E N TA R Y b y G r e g C r a v e n s
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VIEWPOINT By Richard Cohen
Last Dance
THE BEST
have done it for nothing. Back in 2017, I helped produce a documentary for HBO on the life of Ben Bradlee. HBO called it The Newspaperman, and I thought, how wonderful, how apt. That was Bradlee and, with the same permission he gave me to write a column, I take that appellation for myself as well. It is, I think, the highest of callings, and I never wanted to be anything else. You go to work and someone pins an imaginary badge on you and deputizes you to go forth and discover life, ask questions, turn over rocks, and, in the case of a column, think so hard it’s physically draining. I had grown up reading the onceliberal New York Post. It was a brave, scrappy paper with great, iconoclastic writers, particularly its columnists. I gorged on Murray Kempton, Jimmy Cannon, and Pete Hamill. I read them all, envied them all, and wanted to be like them. Later, I became a copyboy for the New York Herald Tribune and noticed that reporters were required to read the paper. They got paid for it. Amazing. Professional ballplayers must feel the same way. Imagine getting paid to play a game!
You go to work and someone pins an imaginary badge on you and deputizes you to go forth and discover life, ask questions, turn over rocks, and think so hard it’s physically draining. That first day at the Post, I was assigned a desk next to Carl Bernstein. We became fast friends and so, like a barnacle on a ship, I attached myself to him and Bob Woodward, going through Watergate with them. Earlier, I watched in awe and pride as the Post risked all sorts of legal and financial penalties to publish the Pentagon Papers after The New York Times had been enjoined from doing so. This was one great newspaper that I had just walked into. Again, what luck! Now, it is over. I have written books and screenplays and will continue to do so. My girlfriend and I are going to Paris for a month, and we’re getting a dog. I will have time to walk it now. I will miss newspapering, but I know I had the best it ever had to offer. I was very lucky indeed. This is Richard Cohen’s last column for the Washington Post Writers Group.
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m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
I’ve been lucky. In February 1968, I came down to Washington from the Columbia University Gaduate School of Journalism to do some research, stopped up at The Washington Post, and walked out with a job. A week later, for reasons I never understood, I got a raise. After graduating in June, I started work, and now, 51 years later, I am about to stop. This is my final column. I think I’ve earned that raise. In 1976, eight years after I started, I was offered a local column. Ben Bradlee, the executive editor, made the offer at a lunch I had requested so I could tell him I was quitting. A rival news organization had offered to make me its White House correspondent. But before I could resign, Bradlee upset my plans. I never got around to quitting and never told Bradlee I had intended to. I was lucky. Bradlee asked me to show him five sample columns. Instead, knowing I need the juice of a deadline, I wrote one the next day and gave it to the city editor. “I’m the new local columnist,” I brazenly told him. “Check with Bradlee.” He never did. The next day, my column was in the paper. I was lucky. Back then, I wrote three columns a week — an exhausting but exhilarating schedule. Little by little, I broadened my scope until, in Bradlee’s telling, he picked up the paper one day and discovered that I was in Beirut. By fiat, he moved me from the Metro page to the A Section and, later, at the insistence of the publisher, to the op-ed page. I wrote what I wanted from where I wanted, and not once did the publishers ever tell me what to write or what not to write. On occasion, though, Katharine Graham offered some constructive criticism. Once, at a formal lunch for the new Russian ambassador, she strode purposely across the dining room to tell me that my column that morning “was a real piece of s---.” “Don’t hold back, Katharine,” I responded. “Tell me what you really think.” She laughed. There were no better bosses than the Grahams — and, more recently, Jeff Bezos. I roamed the world on their dime. Flying into Cairo for the first time, I looked out the window. A sandstorm obscured the pyramids, but I envisioned them anyway and could not get over the fact that I was being paid to see them. What fools the Grahams were. I would
ENTERTAINMENT
NEWS & OPINION
An iconic columnist bids farewell and looks back on 50 years of newspapering.
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photos by Don Perry and Cole Wheeler Last Wednesday, the Flyer celebrated another Best of Memphis. Friends of the Flyer, advertisers, and BOM winners gathered at the Creative Arts Building at Tiger Lane to make merry. There was food galore, and there were drinks. Marcella & Her Lovers, Stax Academy Band, and Lucky 7 Brass Band provided a funky, soulful soundtrack to the evening, and Opera Memphis turned up, too. There were chants of Toga! Toga! Toga! Okay, maybe I went too far with the last bit, but there was a guy wearing a toga. As always, we thank everyone who voted in BOM. It just wouldn’t work without you. We also thank the folks at Liberty Bowl/Spectra for hosting the event. And a special thanks to our sponsors this year, Independent Bank, Principle Toyota, European Wax Center, Southland Casino Racing, Envy Nail Bar, Memphis Made Brewing Co., Meddlesome Brewing Company, Buffalo Trace, Wheatley Vodka, Fireball Whisky, Acrobat Oregon Wines, Paddy’s Old Irish Whiskey, Sunbelt Rentals, A. S. Barbaro Distributing, and Southern Glazer’s. — Jesse Davis
October 3-9, 2019
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Dolemite
Is My Name
ORY R ST E V CO
BY C
McC H R IS
OY
(above) Eddie Murphy as Rudy Ray Moore; (opposite bottom) Craig Brewer, Scott Alexander, and Larry Karaszewski at the Los Angeles premiere of Dolemite Is My Name
How Eddie Murphy and Craig Brewer created a raucous tribute to a hero of black cinema.
October 3-9, 2019
I
t’s July 2018, and the Orpheum Theatre in Downtown Los Angeles is teeming with activity. The old movie palace’s basement is packed with background actors getting dressed and made up in ’70s finery — bell bottoms, afros, and clashing patterns — to appear in Dolemite Is My Name. On one side of the cavernous lobby is “video village,” where technicians, producers, and crew huddle around monitors, adjust controls, and clutch headphones to their ears, watching the action onscreen. On the other side of the lobby, director Craig Brewer and cinematographer Eric Steelberg are setting up a tracking shot with a pair of stand-ins. Once they’re satisfied that the complex choreography of camera, lighting, and extras is right, a call goes out from the assistant director. “Clear the set.” Eddie Murphy is ready for his close-up.
You Can’t Remake Dolemite A year later, Brewer is on the phone in Brooklyn, where, the day before, he 16 shot scenes for Coming 2 America with James Earl Jones. Dolemite Is My Name
has just had a triumphant premiere at the prestigious Toronto International Film Festival, with the first audiences raving about Murphy’s performance. I ask Brewer how he came to helm the film for Netflix. “I had heard that there were rumblings that they were trying to remake Dolemite. As much as my mind always tries to go to a place of, ‘How can Dolemite be remade?’ There’s the basic story of a man who’s in prison, who, for whatever reason, is let out, now into a different world, where everything he had is now under the control of somebody else … then I thought, ‘Craig. Stop. Footloose, maybe. Some other movies, maybe. But Dolemite is special because it’s funny.’ You can’t just do an action drama out of Dolemite. It’s beautiful because of its production flaws, and that’s why — especially among independent filmmakers — we love it so much. Of all the blaxploitation movies, it’s perhaps the most incredulous and head-scratching. I can’t even think about doing a Dolemite remake. “Then my agent called me a year later and said, ‘We have the script called Dolemite Is My Name, and I think you should read it.’ I don’t
think I’m the guy for it because I just don’t think that it can be redone. He said, ‘Wait a minute. This is a script from Larry Karaszewski and Scott Alexander. It’s about Rudy Ray Moore making Dolemite, and Eddie Murphy’s going to play him.’ And I said YES! He said, ‘Well I think you should read the script first, and I think you should talk to the producers …’ And I was like, ‘Of course, but if you’re looking for my response, I’m in.’”
Everything Falls Apart Rudy Ray Moore grew up the son of a sharecropper in Fort Smith, Arkansas. As soon as he was old enough, he moved to Los Angeles to try to make it in show business. He tried first as a singer, then as a comedian, then a combination of both, before he created the character of Dolemite, a big-talking street pimp whose rhyming braggadocio translated into a series of hit “party records” — comedy routines often backed by slinky soul music, packed with dirty words, street wisdom, and transgressive situations. After a series of unlikely, underground hits (which included a Dolemite Christmas
album), he leveraged his fame in the African-American community into making an independent movie based on the character. At the time, the term for films aimed at the inner city markets was “blaxploitation.” “What makes Dolemite so special is that it’s one of a kind,” says Karaszewski. “A lot of the blaxploitation movies are trying to be sort of generic action pictures with African-American leads. That made them special and cool because you hadn’t seen African Americans in those roles before, where they were tough cops. But Rudy’s movie goes to another level on top of that. He’s making fun of the genre, while also trying to be the genre at the same time. He’s a comedian. They were meant to be laughed at. But they were also meant to be, ‘Look at that! It’s a cool car chase!’” Karaszewski and his writing partner Alexander met in film school and have been working together for more than two decades. They often finish each other’s thoughts. “Shaft, Superfly, Black Caesar are kind of urban action films,” Alexander says. “They’re taking their leading men seriously. They’re cool, they’re good-looking, they’ve got goodlooking chicks, the gun, and the suit. Rudy is a doughy comic who is not an
actor, and he cannot do kung fu. But he was making the movie he wanted to see. He wanted to have kung fu and ladies and car chases. …” “… and he made it through sheer force of personality,” says Karaszewski. “It comes out on the screen.” Alexander and Karaszewski wrote the 1994 classic, Ed Wood. Directed by Tim Burton and starring Johnny Depp as the real-life “worst director ever,” the film earned an Academy Award for Martin Landau’s portrayal of the original Dracula, Bela Lugosi. “When we meet big-time, successful directors, a lot of times they’ll pull us aside and say, ‘I feel just like Ed Wood.’ That’s the whole point of the Orson Welles scene toward the end of the movie. It doesn’t matter if you’re the best filmmaker of all time or the worst filmmaker of all time, you still have the same problems,” says Karaszewski. Among the fans of Ed Wood was one Eddie Murphy. When the man who saved Saturday Night Live, the star of Beverly Hills Cop, Trading Places, and Coming to America, saw the film in the mid-1990s, he called up Alexander and Karaszewski with a proposition. A week later, the three of them were in a room with Rudy Ray Moore. “He told us what he would like to see in a movie about his life and that Eddie would be perfect for the part,” says Alexander. “We thought, ‘Oh my
god, this is going to be the greatest movie of all time!’ And then it just fell to pieces. That’s what happens in Hollywood — you get excited, and nine times out of 10, nothing happens.”
Craig Brewer knows that feeling. He’s been riding the Hollywood roller coaster since 2005, when Hustle & Flow
rescue, set a record when it was bought by Paramount for $9 million in a late-night, Park City, Utah, bidding war. It went on to win an Academy Award for Three 6 Mafia’s “It’s Hard Out Here for a Pimp” and earn a Best Actor nomination for its star, Terrence Howard. For a movie made on a shoestring
became a breakout hit at the Sundance Film Festival. The film, which Brewer fought for years to get financed before producer John Singleton rode to the
budget in Memphis, Hustle has had an extraordinary cultural impact, becoming a staple on cable television and inspiring Memphis Grizzlies fans
Stuck in Turnaround
to adopt “Whoop That Trick” as an unofficial fight song. The scenes of Howard, Taraji P. Henson, DJ Qualls, and Anthony Anderson creating music in a North Memphis shotgun house have been copied endlessly by filmmakers looking to create inspirational moments. Brewer’s controversial next film, Black Snake Moan, gave Samuel L. Jackson one of the best roles of his long career and introduced the phrase “chained to the radiator” into the lexicon. Brewer gained a reputation as an excellent script doctor, and, in 2011, he was tapped by Paramount Pictures to remake their seminal 1984 dance movie Footloose. The next year, he stepped in as executive producer to save the troubled Katie Perry movie Part of Me, and it became the seventh-highest grossing documentary of all time. He was clearly Memphis’ most successful filmmaker and had an enviable career by any Hollywood standards. After Footloose, Brewer was attached to write and direct The Legend of Tarzan for Warner Brothers. It was to be his introduction into the continued on page 18
COVER STORY m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
(l-r) Craig Robinson, Keegan-Michael Key, Eddie Murphy, Tituss Burgess, and Mike Epps
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6005 Park Ave, Suite 704, Memphis, TN 38119 (901) 761-8100 • www.midsouthwellnessclinicformen.com Dolemite has a star-studded cast — Snoop Dogg (top) plays a radio DJ; Craig Robinson (below) plays Ben Taylor in Dolemite Is My Name.
October 3-9, 2019
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exclusive club of directors trusted with $100-million budgets. He wrote a screenplay that turned heads in Hollywood, but studio politics tore the production apart, and, amid spiraling budget estimates and executive turmoil, the project was shelved. When The Legend of Tarzan was eventually completed in 2016, Brewer’s script formed the backbone of the picture, but he still had to fight for his screenwriting credit. What the public didn’t see were the dozens of projects that never got off the ground. There was Maggie Lynn, a music epic Brewer wrote about a country singer rocketing to fame; there was Mother Trucker, a script about the infamous Tennessee inmate who broke out of jail and stole Crystal Gayle’s tour bus in an effort to visit his dying mother. He pitched a Star Wars movie to Lucasfilm honcho Kathleen Kennedy and a reboot of The Creature From the Black Lagoon to Universal. Nothing gained any traction. At the same time, his long marriage to wife Jodi Brewer was on the rocks. The pair eventually separated but did not divorce. Brewer felt like his
life was falling apart. “I bought a big house,” he says. “I bought into a lot of the trappings of being a successful filmmaker. And then suddenly, some of those things began to dry up, and I got very scared. … Movies have been going through such a change, and I was beginning to get really bitter about it. Tarzan and that whole developments situation was not ideal, and I had been trying to get these other movies going with the studio system, any way I could, and it just wasn’t happening.” It was friends from his past who brought him back. In 2015, Terrence Howard and Taraji P. Henson, whom Brewer made stars in Hustle & Flow, became the lead actors on Empire, a wildly successful Fox show created by Lee Daniels. “I would say it’s quite true that if John Singleton helped start my career,” says Brewer, “Lee Daniels helped bring me back.” Daniels hired Brewer for the second season of Empire. “I wanted to be in a room working with a bunch of other writers. I wanted to be on set filming somebody else’s vision. I’d like to just be a director and just be a writer for a while and help the product be the best it can be and hopefully bring my best to it. It was just so fortunate that I got to
“Does Eddie Really Want to Do This?” In 1996, Alexander and Karaszewski wrote The People vs. Larry Flynt. “We had such a good time shooting that movie in Memphis,” says Alexander. “We got to know D’Army Bailey. He was a blast. As soon as [director] Milos Forman met him, he said, ‘Let’s turn him into an actor.’” Later, Karaszewski would become a regular at the Indie Memphis Film Festival, serving on juries and just coming back to have fun and watch movies. In 2016, Alexander and Karaszewski wrote and produced the 10-episode miniseries The People vs. O.J. Simpson for the FX anthology show American Crime Story. It became a ratings sensation and was nominated for 22 Emmy Awards, ultimately winning nine, including Outstanding Limited Series and awards for actors Sterling K. Brown, Sarah Paulson, and Courtney B. Vance.
“I bought a big house,” Craig Brewer says. “I bought into a lot of the trappings of being a successful filmmaker. And then suddenly, some of those things began to dry up.” “After we did the O.J. thing, a lot of people wanted to do projects with us,” says Karaszewski. The writing partners decided to use the opportunity to revisit some dream projects that had failed to launch, like the Rudy Ray Moore story. “We had producers John Davis and John Fox contact Eddie to see if he was still into this idea. Not only was he ready, he was eager. That’s how we got to Netflix.” Murphy, who was semi-retired, wowed the Netflix executives at the pitch meeting. “Eddie is very open about this,” says Alexander. “He says, ‘I
was just enjoying sitting on my couch, playing with my kids, and hanging out.’ He has a whole brood. Coming in to Netflix, they said, ‘Does Eddie really want to do this?’ So Eddie showed up at the Netflix meeting and summoned his superpowers. He turned into Rudy and started doing ‘Signifying Monkey.’ The Netflix people were like, ‘Holy shit! This is for real!’ Larry and I barely opened our mouths in that pitch meeting. You got Eddie in the room doing it. What more do you want?” Karaszewski suggested they talk to Brewer for the director slot. “It was my first time meeting Craig, and I was blown away,” says Alexander. “He said,
‘It’s a movie about duality’, and no one else had actually said that out loud.”
The Man Who Was Fearless Once word of Murphy’s commitment to the project got out, Keegan-Michael Key signed on as Jerry Jones, the playwright Moore enlists to script his dream project. Chris Rock and Snoop Dogg got cameos as DJs who helped Moore in his career. Mike Epps and Craig Robinson became members of Moore’s entourage. But the biggest get was Wesley Snipes as D’Urville Martin, the blaxploitation star who appeared in
Black Caesar and whom Moore cajoled into directing Dolemite. Brewer says he came to identify deeply with his subject. “Rudy Ray Moore made his own records. He forged his own path. I couldn’t help but feel a connection to it. There were many times that I thought, I know that because of the material that I’m drawn to and even the mentors in my life, like John Singleton and Stephanie Allain, and more recently Lee Daniels, I know that there’s a lot of material that I have that has predominantly AfricanAmerican stories, and I did begin to continued on page 58
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COVER STORY m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
do Empire. I loved the show so much, and I loved what Lee had created: his beautifully subversive, outlandish antics that I think break down walls, not just with race, with culture, with class, but just what people would think is appropriate.” Brewer worked in the Empire writer’s room for three seasons, directing 10 episodes. Brewer says he found his joy “just writing scripts, being in a room with a bunch of creative people, and learning to listen, trying to not perform all the time.”
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S P O R TS B y Fr a n k M u r t a u g h
Tiger Thoughts Three developments concerning U of M football.
So our first lesson: Football teams aren’t memorialized for strong starts. Rather, it’s strong finishes that get carved in granite. The Tigers’ start is no mirage. They’ve beaten an SEC foe (Ole Miss) and a team that’s given them fits since becoming a conference rival (Navy). The four wins have the Tigers ranked 23rd in the country in one poll (coaches) and on the cusp of entering the AP rankings. The unblemished record is absolutely required for any discussion of an American Athletic Conference championship (SMU is also 4-0), to say nothing of a berth in a New Year’s Six bowl game. (There are currently three “Group of Five” teams in the AP Top 25: Boise State, UCF, and SMU.) Going undefeated for a third of the season is worthy of recognition,
• The Tigers have a .500 record for the decade, and this is also significant. Memphis has been playing football since 1912, but the program has only enjoyed four decades with more wins than losses, and the most recent was the 1970s (60-48-1). After starting the current decade by going 3-21 over two seasons under coach Larry Porter, Memphis has managed to climb to .500 (59-59) with a stretch that will include six consecutive winning seasons for the first time in more than a half-century (1959-64). Even Fuente was 10 games under .500 after his first two seasons (7-17). The Tigers must finish the season with at least four more wins than losses, of course, to secure a break-even mark for the decade. The achievement would be a significant statement on the big-picture rise of a program once considered little more than a fall distraction before basketball season tipped off. • Brady White became a star quarterback in the win over Navy. It’s ironic, considering the boos White heard during the first half of last Thursday’s game as the Midshipmen took a 20-7 lead. But the Tigers don’t beat Navy without White’s right arm. Over a 15-minute stretch of the second half, White threw touchdown passes of short (5 yards), long (73), and intermediate (31) length to erase that deficit and give the Tigers a key win over an AAC division rival. White heard the boos, but he smiled (slightly) when asked about them after the game, noting that they bother his parents more than they affect his approach or performance. “My mindset is the next play,” emphasized White, who ignores social media during the season, relishes various platforms for impacting lives positively as an athlete in the spotlight. “I’m my biggest critic. I wasn’t playing like myself [in the first half]. But I settled down; I knew I had the support. The defense kept us close. We came out and executed. I’m blessed to have the teammates and coaching staff we have.” White isn’t the only prominent Tiger feeling blessed in these undefeated days. “That guy is pretty dang special,” added Tiger coach Mike Norvell. “I’m glad to coach him.”
m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
LARRY KUZNIEWSKI
Tigers quarterback Brady White
particularly in these parts, but it’s the next two-thirds that will determine the 2019 Tigers’ place in the history books.
NEWS & OPINION
H
ow significant is the Tigers’ 4-0 start? Since World War II, the Memphis program has boasted a 4-0 record exactly three times. In 1961, coach Spook Murphy’s Tigers started 6-0 before losing (to Mississippi State) in late October and finishing the season 8-2. Then in 2015, Justin Fuente — and quarterback Paxton Lynch — helped Memphis win its first eight games and climb to a ranking of 15th in the country. Alas, that Tiger team lost four of its last five games before Fuente departed for Virginia Tech.
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steppin’ out
We Recommend: Culture, News + Reviews By Julia Baker
Michal Menert, a Polish-American electronic music producer known for his experimentation with nu jazz, hip-hop, and trip-hop sounds and for his collaborations with fellow electronic artist Pretty Lights and Grateful Dead and Dead & Company percussionist Mickey Hart, makes his way to Growlers to perform a solo DJ set. Although he’s not specifically promoting it, his latest album Slow Coast III, released in March, features a range of experimental techniques and instruments, such as the taishōgoto (a Japanese stringed instrument). “A long time ago, we realized we’ll never have a perfectly tuned and precise studio at home, so instead of making things sound perfect and sterile, we started to purposely pursue terrible sounding things that we could refine into interesting tunes,” says Menert. “I feel lucky that I’ve been able to do things on my own terms, without having to cater to trends.” The album, a third installment of Menert’s Slow Coast series, was inspired by his love for fantasy and for the Northern California coast. “This installment of Slow Coast was inspired by a hazy fantasy realm I was imagining while piecing it together,” he says. “I pictured dark skies, a sorcerer returning from exile, and a world of destructive chaos desperate for magic. All of these things play out in my mind with the rocky coasts and giant redwood forests around me serving as backgrounds, even though the narrative isn’t necessarily apparent in the music itself.” Between finding the right balance between touring and recording, Menert is looking forward to his performance in Memphis. “One of my favorite people, Brock from Zoogma, is from there, and he’s definitely shown me a hell of a good time with great people in Memphis,” he says. MICHAL MENERT WITH DEFCON ENGAGED, MAVERICK 1990, AND CEL SHADE AT GROWLERS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3RD, 9 P.M.-1 A.M., $15/ADVANCE, $20/DOOR.
October 3-9, 2019
Bridgett Spillers shares the story of her battle with breast cancer. Health, p. 48
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THURSDAY October 3
FRIDAY October 4
Steve Heard Opening Reception Memphis Jewish Community Center, 6560 Poplar, 5:30-7:30 p.m. Opening reception for an exhibition of local artist Steve Heard’s work, which is inspired by Memphis cityscapes. Exhibition on view in the Shainberg Art Gallery through October 31st.
Fall Plant Sale Memphis Botanic Garden, 750 Cherry, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. You need some plants in your life. This seasonal sale features pansies, violas, ornamental cabbage, kale, and more. Not sure what ornamental cabbage is? Neither are we. Go find out! Proceeds support ongoing nature-based and horticultural programs.
Unwind for Hope Hope House, 23 S. Idlewild, 6-8 p.m., $25 Benefiting Hope House, event celebrates women living with HIV and AIDS. Includes wine, food from Beauty Shop Restaurant, and art for sale from local female artists. Art by Erica Bodine, Por Fuego Lento, Urban Hardware, and more.
Memphis International Auto Show Memphis Cook Convention Center, 255 N. Main, 10 a.m.-9 p.m., $6-$8 Like cars? Hundreds of the newest cars, trucks, and SUVS on display. Test drive, see the latest technology, and more. Runs through Sunday.
Spice up your autumn latte with pumpkin and … corn? Yep. Corn. Food, p. 56
Bluff City Fair Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium and Fairgrounds, 335 S. Hollywood, 4-11 p.m., $5-$10 Carnival rides, fair food, live entertainment, and family fun! Fair runs through October 13th, with ride discount days on Tuesdays and Thursdays.
Sinbad Chuckles Comedy House, 1770 Dexter Springs Loop, 6:45 p.m. or 8:45 p.m. show, $37.50-$55 Actor and comedian Sinbad, ranked among the 100 Greatest Stand-Ups of All Time by Comedy Central, comes to Chuckles. Also performing on Saturday and Sunday.
Beers, Bites and Bids The OAM Network, 1350 Concourse, Ste. 142, 6-9 p.m. Silent auction, live podcasts (Memphis Musicology, Basic Podcast, Dear Millennials, and You Can See Me in the Dark), and a raffle ($5/ticket) for a podcast start-up package. Must be present online or in-house to win.
Head Over Heels Circuit Playhouse, 51 S. Cooper, 8 p.m., $15-$27 Backed by the music of the Go-Go’s, the kingdom of Arcadia goes on a daring quest to protect their famous “Beat.” They will find love, deceit, and misinterpreted prophecy, but will Arcadia be saved? Through October 27th.
JASON MACLEOD
Space Jazz
Michal Menert
It’s all in the hips.
Go With the Flow Ellen Phillips twirled her LED hula hoop around the dance floor at the new Black Lodge on Cleveland during CooperYoung Fest weekend, spinning out custom patterns like cartoon slices of pizza and Mario Kart mushrooms. I approached her and asked where she got such a stunning hula hoop. She handed me her hoop and replied, “Here, do you want to play with it?” A novice at best, I spun the hoop around my waist for a moment, wishing I’d known more hoop tricks. As it turns out, Phillips is a professional hooper and a leader of Grind City Flow Festival, a team of instructors dedicated to providing the Memphis community with flow arts workshops. The group has organized a series of hoop instruction and choreography classes for attendees at Paint Memphis, an annual one-day festival committed to bringing artists together for a collaborative mural project. “So someone comes in, learns to waist hoop, learns to hoop juggle, does a little fun paint hooping,” she says. “We’ll drill holes in some of the hoops and put paint inside them, and hoopers will just spin the hoop around their waist, and they’ll be creating art.” Phillips and her colleague, Hallie Star, will also lead a flash mob choreography workshop, teaching basic tricks and moves to students, who will use what they’ve learned to perform alongside Mighty Souls Brass Band at the festival. “Everyone’s invited to come out,” she says. “It doesn’t matter what gender or size you are. Hooping is good for everyone. And we’re excited to be hosting the first official World Hoop Day celebration in Memphis.” WORLD HOOP DAY CELEBRATION AT PAINT MEMPHIS 2019, HISTORIC LAMAR THEATRE, 1688-1730 LAMAR AVE., SATURDAY, OCTOBER 5TH, 2-10 P.M., FREE.
SATURDAY October 5
SUNDAY October 6
Frayser Local Arts Festival Arkwings Foundation, 2034 James, 11 a.m.-7 p.m. Free indoor/outdoor festival features poetry readings, dance, music, art exhibits, creative activities, screenings, and more. Shop handmade items from residents of Frayser and the Mid-South.
Nerdtoberfest Two Rivers Bookstore, 2172 Young, noon-5 p.m. We’re nerds, and we’re not ashamed to admit it. Celebrate your nerdiness with book discounts, live music from Jack Alberson and Cryptic Mags, and free (while supplies last) Butter Beer and Romulan Ale. Free to attend.
Fall Fest Craft Fair Meddlesome Brewing Company, 7750 Trinity, Ste. 114, Cordova, noon-5 p.m. Featuring 19 vendors offering wares from pottery and soap to jewelry and food. Free event includes a new beer release and live music from Josh Waddell and Chris Hamlett.
Paint Memphis 1716 Lamar, 4-10 p.m. Watch 100 artists from Memphis and across the U.S. live paint. Live musical performances by Mighty Souls Brass Band, IMAKEMADBEATS, AWFM (A Weirdo From Memphis), and more. Free to attend, and food trucks on site.
Don Lifted with Optic Sink Harbor Town Amphitheater, 740 Harbor Bend, 3-6:30 p.m., $5 Music from multi-disciplined hiphop artist Don Lifted and Optic Sink, minimal synth project from Natalie Hoffmann (NOTS) and Ben Bauermeister (Magic Kids/Toxie). Taco Fest Hi Tone, 412 N. Cleveland, 6-9 p.m., $10 Eat tacos from Mariachi Tacos! food truck and the Hi Tone kitchen. Comedy from Katrina Coleman and friends, live music by HEELS, and Moth Moth Moth drag show. Proceeds benefit Abortion AF, a national nonprofit fighting for reproductive rights.
m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
Michael Khanlarian (above) plays the titular role in Tennessee Shakespeare Co.’s production of Julius Caesar. Theater, p. 50
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
GRIND CITY FLOW FESTIVAL
By Julia Baker
23
MUSIC By Jesse Davis
Alternative Antenna club gets a historic marker.
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hat do Congressman Steve Cohen, psychedelic swampabily band the Hellcats, and the Sex Pistols all have in common? They share a connection to the Antenna club, Memphis’ first alternative venue, a music space and bar that catered to all things weird and wild in the Bluff City. Rep. Cohen was the club’s attorney, the Hellcats were one of the bands who played there. And the Sex Pistols, many Antenna patrons agree, fired the shot that helped kick off the enterprise. The Antenna opened in 1981 and closed in 1995; in its place now are an event rental space and the new Crab ’N Go restaurant. But the storied Madison Avenue venue will get its due this Saturday, October 5th, with the unveiling of a historic marker, followed by musical performances by Antennaera bands at nearby venues. The day before the unveiling, C. Scott McCoy’s (aka Flyer film editor Chris McCoy) award-winning Antenna documentary will screen at Black Lodge, with an after-party at the Lamplighter. With the closure of Stax Records in 1976 and the death of Elvis Presley in ’77, the Memphis music scene entered a state of suspended animation. Bands still played, but the forward momentum was stalled. Then, in 1978, the Sex Pistols played Memphis, providing the jolt the city needed. That spark of inspiration ignited a thousand (or at least a dozen) punk bands, according to former Antenna owner Steve McGehee. “When the Sex Pistols played here in Memphis, it really launched a lot of the music I was doing. It was like, ‘Oh, well, I can do this,’” McGehee recalls. “It’s the same thing with me with the club. I went to Atlanta and New York. I was wanting to open a club, and I would go in, and they were just dives. I was like, ‘I could do this.’” That punk rock ethos informed much of what became the Antenna. Inspired by the Sex Pistols and led by Tav Falco’s Panther Burns (featuring Alex Chilton), the Randy Band, the Scruffs, and the Klitz when the club was called the Well, the venue was an oasis of reckless originality. “It was the home base for the DIY movement,” says Doug Easley of the venue, founder of Easley McCain Recording, the studio that eventually drew bands such as Sonic Youth,
Pavement, and Wilco to Memphis. That was well after acts like Panther Burns, Pezz, and the Grifters had already cut tracks there. Easley was a fixture at the Antenna, sometimes playing with bands there, sometimes recording those bands in his home studio. One of the bands who cut its teeth on Antenna’s stage was Distemper, featuring a young Mike McCarthy, a fixture of the Memphis arts and music scene. It was McCarthy McGehee turned to when he decided it was time to secure the Antenna’s place in history. “Mike McCarthy is quite a force of nature,” McGehee says. “He’s preserving a lot of music history.” McCarthy, who sculpted the new Johnny Cash statue in Cooper-Young, helped set the historical marker machine in motion. “We were approved by unanimous vote,” McGehee says. “I was kind of surprised by that because of always being the punk rocker and being vilified back in the day.” “A lot of people were afraid of the Antenna. They were totally freaked out by it. They were afraid they’d get spit on or something,” Easley adds.
All this is covered in depth in the Antenna documentary, along with clips of dozens of bands and gloriously camp black-and-white footage of a bespectacled Tav Falco, holding a large tome and hypnotically reciting clever asides about the club’s early years. Antenna hosted local and national bands of vastly different sounds — punk, hardcore, country, and new wave — and pioneered all-ages shows in the city. It was, essentially, a box with a PA system and a bar. But for 15 years, that box gave Memphians a place to play, to experiment with sound and stage presence. And that is something worth remembering. Screening of the Antenna documentary Friday, October 4th, 7 p.m., at Black Lodge. Alex Greene & the Weeds play the Lamplighter October 4th after the screening. The marker unveiling is Saturday, October 5th, 4:30 p.m., at 1588 Madison. Antenna bands will perform at Murphy’s, B-Side, and the Lamplighter Lounge after the ceremony.
25
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
SCOTT BRADLEE’S POSTMODERN JUKEBOX THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3RD THE ORPHEUM
HEART FRIDAY, OCTOBER 4TH FEDEXFORUM
BEN FOLDS FRIDAY, OCTOBER 4TH LEVITT SHELL
After Dark: Live Music Schedule October 3 - 9 p.m.-midnight; Baunie and Soul Sundays, 7 p.m.-midnight.
Mollie Fontaine Lounge
FedExForum
King’s Palace Cafe Tap Room
191 BEALE
168 BEALE 576-2220
Blind Bear Speakeasy
Dim the Lights featuring live music and DJs First Saturday of every month, 10 p.m.
119 S. MAIN, PEMBROKE SQUARE 417-8435
The Orpheum
Polk Mondays, 7-11 p.m.; Brad Birkedahl Band Wednesdays, 7 p.m.
Alfred’s 197 BEALE 525-3711
Gary Hardy & Memphis 2 Thursdays-Saturdays, 6-9 p.m.; Karaoke Thursdays, TuesdaysWednesdays, 9 p.m.-1 a.m. and Sundays-Mondays, 10 p.m.-2 a.m.; Mandi Thomas Fridays, Saturdays, 6-9 p.m.; The 901 Heavy Hitters Fridays, Saturdays, 10 p.m.-2 a.m.; Flyin’ Ryan Fridays, Saturdays, 2:30 a.m.; Memphis Jazz Orchestra Sundays, 6-9 p.m.
Heart, Joan Jett & the Blackhearts Friday, Oct. 4, 7 p.m.; Chris Stapleton’s AllAmerican Road Show with Brothers Osborne, Kendell Marvel Saturday, Oct. 5, 7 p.m.
B.B. King’s Blues Club
Itta Bena
143 BEALE 524-KING
The King Beez Thursdays, 5 p.m.; B.B. King’s All Stars Tuesdays, Thursdays, 8 p.m. and Fridays, Saturdays, 9 p.m.; Lisa G and Flic’s Pic’s Band Saturdays, Sundays, 12:30 p.m.; Brimstone Jones First Saturday of every month, 5 p.m.; P.S. Band First Wednesday, Sunday of every month, 7 p.m.; Memphis Jones Sundays, Wednesdays 5:30 p.m.
Blue Note Bar & Grill 341-345 BEALE 577-1089
Queen Ann and the Memphis Blues Masters Fridays, Saturdays, 8 p.m.-midnight.
Blues City Cafe 138 BEALE 526-3637
182 BEALE 528-0150
200 BEALE 527-2687
The Amazing Rhythmatics Tuesdays, Thursdays-Sundays, 7 p.m.-1 a.m. 145 BEALE 578-3031
Nat “King” Kerr Fridays, Saturdays, 9-10 p.m.
King Jerry Lawler’s Hall of Fame Bar & Grille 159 BEALE
Lunch on Beale with Chris Gales Wednesdays-Sundays, 12-4 p.m.; Eric Hughes solo/ acoustic Thursdays, 5-8 p.m.; Karaoke Mondays-Thursdays, Sundays, 8 p.m.; Live Bands Fridays, Saturdays, 8 p.m.
King’s Palace Cafe 162 BEALE 521-1851
David Bowen Thursdays, 5:309:30 p.m., Fridays, Saturdays, 6:30-10:30 p.m., and Sundays, 5:30-9:30 p.m.
King’s Palace Cafe Patio 162 BEALE 521-1851
Rum Boogie Cafe
Sonny Mack MondaysFridays, 2-6 p.m.; Cowboy Neil Mondays, Tuesdays, Thursdays, 7 p.m.-midnight and Saturdays, Sundays, 2-6 p.m.; Fuzzy Wednesdays, Fridays, 7
Eric Hughes Band Wednesdays, Thursdays, 7-11 p.m.; FreeWorld Fridays, Saturdays, 9 p.m.-1 a.m.; Memphis Blues Masters Sundays, 7-11 p.m.; Vince Johnson and the Plantation Allstars Mondays, Tuesdays, 7-11 p.m.
Rum Boogie Cafe Blues Hall
Live Music Thursdays-Saturdays, 10 p.m.
Brass Door Irish Pub 152 MADISON 572-1813
Live Music Fridays; Carma Karaoke with Carla Worth Saturdays, 9-11 p.m.
Center for Southern Folklore Hall 119 S. MAIN, PEMBROKE SQUARE 525-3655
Delta Cats, Billy Gibson & Linear Smith First Friday of every month, 11:30 a.m.1:30 p.m.
182 BEALE 528-0150
Vince Johnson and the Plantation Allstars Saturdays, 4:30-8:30 p.m. and Thursdays, 8 p.m.-midnight; Memphis Blues Masters Mondays, Thursdays, 8 p.m.-midnight; Tony Holiday Friday, Oct. 4, 9 p.m.-1 a.m.; Cowboy Neil Band Sundays, 8 p.m.-midnight; Delta Project Tuesdays, 8 p.m.-midnight.
Silky O’Sullivan’s
Dirty Crow Inn 855 KENTUCKY
The Accessories Sundays; Bobbie Stacks and Friends Wednesdays, 7-10 p.m.
Flying Saucer Draught Emporium 130 PEABODY PLACE 523-8536
Songwriters with Roland and Friends Mondays, 7-10 p.m.
183 BEALE 522-9596
Dueling Pianos Thursdays, Wednesdays, 9 p.m.-1 a.m., Fridays, Saturdays, 9 p.m.-3 a.m., and Sundays, Tuesdays, 8 p.m.midnight.
Harbor Town Amphitheater
Keith Palusso Tuesday, Oct. 8, 7 p.m.
Paulette’s RIVER INN, 50 HARBOR TOWN SQUARE 260-3300
Live Pianist Thursdays, 5:30-8:30 p.m., Fridays and Saturdays, 5:30-9 p.m., Sundays, 11 a.m.-2 p.m., and Mondays-Wednesdays, 5:30-8 p.m.
Regina’s 60 N. MAIN
Richard Wilson Saturdays, 3-5 p.m.; Open Mic Night Saturdays, 4-7 p.m.
Don Lifted, Optic Sink Sunday, Oct. 6, 3 p.m.
Huey’s Downtown 77 S. SECOND 527-2700
Health Sciences Park CORNER OF MADISON AND DUNLAP
Fridays at Health Sciences Park: Mommy Jamz! Friday, Oct. 4, 12-1 p.m.
Sunrise 670 JEFFERSON
Rory Sullivan Jazz Trio Sunday, Oct. 6, 10 a.m.-1 p.m.
South Main Ghost River Brewing 827 S. MAIN 278-0087
Sunday Evening Slowdown: Rev Neil Down Sunday, Oct. 6, 6-7:30 p.m.
Spindini 383 S. MAIN 578-2767
Deborah Swiney Jazz Trio Oct. 4-5, 7-10 p.m.
Rumba Room 303 S. MAIN 523-0020
Swing Dance with Elizabeth Wise Saturday, Oct. 5, 6-9 p.m.; Salsa Night Saturdays, 8:30 p.m.-3 a.m.
The Silly Goose 100 PEABODY PLACE 435-6915
DJ Cody Fridays, Saturdays, 10 p.m.
740 HARBOR BEND
Tin Roof 315 BEALE
203 S. MAIN 525-3000
Scott Bradlee’s Postmodern Jukebox Thursday, Oct. 3, 8 p.m.; Lyle Lovett and his Acoustic Group Saturday, Oct. 5, 8 p.m.
Medical Center
The Vault 124 GE PATTERSON
Amber Rae Dunn Friday, Oct. 4, 8-11 p.m.; Eric Hughes Saturday, Oct. 5, 9 p.m.-midnight.
Five O’Clock Shadows Sunday, Oct. 6, 8:30 p.m.-midnight.
B-Side 1555 MADISON 347-6813
Antenna Tribute Show Saturday, Oct. 5, 4:30-11:30 p.m.; Devil Train Mondays, 8 p.m.; David Cousar Tuesdays, 9 p.m.; Outer Ring Wednesdays, 9 p.m.
Bar DKDC 964 S. COOPER 272-0830
Goner Third Thursday Every third Thursday; These Two Thursday, Oct. 3, 10 p.m.; Marcella & Her Lovers Friday, Oct. 4, 10 p.m.; Obruni Dance Band Saturday, Oct. 5, 10 p.m.;
continued on page 29
October 3-9, 2019
Sean Apple Thursdays, 4-7:30 p.m.; Blind Mississippi Morris Fridays, Saturdays, 5-9 p.m.; Earl “The Pearl” Banks Tuesdays, 7 p.m. and Saturdays, 12:30-4:30 p.m.; Brandon Cunning Band Sundays, 5-9 p.m.; FreeWorld Sundays, 9:30 p.m.-1:30 a.m.; Landon Lane with Rodney
Handy Bar
Big Don Valentine’s Three Piece Chicken and a Biscuit Blues Band Thursdays, Tuesdays, 8 p.m.-midnight; Delta Project Fridays, Saturdays, 9 p.m.-1 a.m.
679 ADAMS 524-1886
26
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Heart brings the Love Alive Tour with Joan Jett and the Blackhearts and special guest Lucie Silvas. Tickets available!
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Seven-time Grammy winner brings the Cry Pretty Tour 360 with Maddie & Tae and Runaway June. Tickets available!
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“WE'LL DRIVE YOU TO DRINK!” Every Saturday, visit 3 local craft breweries for tours, talks with the brewers, and of course BEER!
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ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
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BEST HOTEL
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October 3-9, 2019
THANK YOU MEMPHIS FOR VOTING US AS THE BEST HOTEL 2019
28
After Dark: Live Music Schedule October 3 - 9
Blue Monkey 2012 MADISON 272-BLUE
Karaoke Thursdays, 9 p.m.midnight.
Boscos 2120 MADISON 432-2222
Sunday Brunch with Joyce Cobb Sundays, 11:30 a.m.2:30 p.m.
Canvas 1737 MADISON 443-5232
Karaoke Thursdays, 9:30 p.m.; Kyle Pruzina Live Mondays, 10 p.m.-midnight.
Celtic Crossing 903 S. COOPER 274-5151
Jeremy Stanfill and Joshua Cosby Sundays, 6-9 p.m.; Candy Company Mondays.
The Cove 2559 BROAD 730-0719
Ed Finney & Neptune’s Army with Deb Swiney Thursdays, 8 p.m.; Wayde Peck Fridays, 6 p.m.; The Skitch Saturdays, 6 p.m.; Jazz Jam with Frog Squad Sundays, 6 p.m.; Ben MindenBirkenmaier Wednesdays, 6 p.m.; Karaoke Wednesdays, 8 p.m.
MVTANT, The Pop Ritual, SciFi Industries Thursday, Oct. 3, 10 p.m.; Kongos, Fitness, Yip Yops Friday, Oct. 4, 10 p.m.; I Miss The Old Kanye Saturday, Oct. 5, 10 p.m.; Panther Ray, Mystic Light Casino, Ben Ricketts Sunday, Oct. 6, 9 p.m.; Regional Justice Center, Theifs Hand, Knoll Monday, Oct. 7, 8 p.m.; Memphis Songwriter Showcase Tuesday, Oct. 8, 8 p.m.; Cost 2 Coast Live Tuesday, Oct. 8, 9 p.m.
and Belvedere Monday, Oct. 7, 6 p.m.; Stone Gas Album Release Tuesday, Oct. 8, 7 p.m.; Breeze Cayolle & New Orleans Wednesdays, 5:30 p.m.; Memphis Allstars Wednesday, Oct. 9, 8 p.m.
Lamplighter Lounge 1702 MADISON 726-9916
Antenna Screening AfterParty with Alex Greene & the Weeds Friday, Oct. 4, 10:30 p.m.; Antenna Tribute Show Saturday, Oct. 5.
First Sunday of every month, 12-3 p.m.
Memphis Blues Society Juke Jam Sundays, 4 p.m.
Al Chymia Shrine Center
Murphy’s
5770 SHELBY OAKS
1589 MADISON 726-4193
Antenna Tribute Show Friday, Oct. 4, 5 p.m.-midnight; Richard James, Dos Bros Friday, Oct. 4, 10 p.m.; 40 Watt Moon Sunday, Oct. 6, 6 p.m.
University of Memphis
P&H Cafe
535 S. HIGHLAND 454-7771
1532 MADISON 726-0906
Rockstar Karaoke Fridays; Open Mic Music Mondays, 9 p.m.-
The Bluff DJ Ben Murray Thursdays, 10 p.m.; Muscadine Bloodline Saturday, Oct. 5, 7:30 p.m.;
FUEL THE
Karaoke Tuesdays, 9 p.m.
East of Wangs 6069 PARK 763-0676
Eddie Harrison Tuesdays, 6:30-9 p.m.; Lee Gardner Wednesdays, 6:30-9 p.m.
Larry Cunningham ThursdaysSaturdays; Aislynn Rappe Sundays; Keith Kimbrough Mondays-Wednesdays.
Howard Vance Guitar Academy 978 REDDOCH 767-6940
First Friday at Five Coffee House Concert First Friday of every month, 5 p.m.
Huey’s Poplar 4872 POPLAR 682-7729
Jamie Baker & the VIPs Sunday, Oct. 6, 8:30 p.m.-midnight.
Mortimer’s 590 N. PERKINS 761-9321
Van Duren Solo Thursdays, 6:30-8:30 p.m.
1350 CONCOURSE
FREQ UENT FLYERS HEL P K EEP THE FREE P RES S FREE .
Dru’s Place 1474 MADISON 275-8082
T.J. Mulligan’s 1817 KIRBY 755-2481
Karaoke Tuesdays, 8 p.m.
Always independent, always free (no paywall — ever), Memphis Flyer is your source for the best in local news and information. And we aim to expand and enhance our work. That’s why we’re asking you to join us as a Frequent Flyer member. You’ll get membership perks while helping us continue to deliver the kind of independent journalism you’ve come to expect.
Karaoke Fridays-Sundays.
The Green Room at Crosstown Arts 1350 CONCOURSE, SUITE 280 507-8030
An Intimate Evening with Susan Marshall Saturday, Oct. 5, 7:30-9:30 p.m.; Odeya Nini: A Solo Voice Tuesday, Oct. 8, 7:30-9:30 p.m.; Huntertones Wednesday, Oct. 9, 7:30-9:30 p.m.
Michal Menert, Defcon Engaged, Maverick 1990, Cel Shade Thursday, Oct. 3, 9 p.m.; Christone “Kingfish” Ingram Friday, Oct. 4, 8 p.m.; 2019 Fall Music Video and Recording Giveaway Saturday, Oct. 5, 5:30 p.m.; Silence the Voice, Keep Me Alive, Time & Eternity, Insular Sunday, Oct. 6, 8 p.m.; Michale Graves, Joecephus and the George Jonestown Massacre Monday, Oct. 7, 8 p.m.; Bay Faction, Telehope, Darity, Laramie, Mons VI Tuesday, Oct. 8, 8 p.m.; Don Babylon, Wagoneer, Magnum Dopus, Liv and the Rosebuds Wednesday, Oct. 9, 7:30 p.m.
Craft Republic 5101 SANDERLIN 763-2013
551 S. MENDENHALL 762-8200
FREE PRESS
The MD’s perform The Beatles’ Revolver Friday, Oct. 4, 8-10 p.m.; Kafe Kirk with Wycliffe Gordon Sunday, Oct. 6, 6-8 p.m.
1911 POPLAR 244-7904
Hot Club Jazz a la Django Reinhardt Sunday, Oct. 6, 4-6 p.m.
Folk’s Folly Prime Steak House
Crosstown Theater
Growlers
East Memphis
Poplar/I-240 Neil’s Music Room 5727 QUINCE 682-2300
Eddie Smith Fridays, 8 p.m.; Debbie Jamison & Friends Tuesdays, 6-10 p.m.; Elmo and the Shades Wednesdays, 8 p.m.midnight.
Owen Brennan’s THE REGALIA, 6150 POPLAR 761-0990
s u p p o r t . m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m Huey’s Midtown
Levitt Shell
1927 MADISON 726-4372
OVERTON PARK 272-2722
Breeze Cayolle Sunday, Oct. 6, 4-7 p.m.; Royal Blues Band Sunday, Oct. 6, 8:30 p.m.midnight.
Lafayette’s Music Room 2119 MADISON 207-5097
Cowboy Mouth Thursday, Oct. 3, 8 p.m.; The Debbie Jamison Band Friday, Oct. 4, 6:30 p.m.; Forever Abbey Road Friday, Oct. 4, 10 p.m.; Land Divided Saturday, Oct. 5, 10:30 a.m.; Amanda Raye Saturday, Oct. 5, 2 p.m.; The Generics Saturday, Oct. 5, 6:30 p.m.; WALRUS Saturday, Oct. 5, 10 p.m.; Joe Restivo 4 Sundays, 11 a.m.; Jeffrey & The Pacemakers Sunday, Oct. 6, 3 p.m.; Steven Page, The Talbott Brothers Sunday, Oct. 6, 7 p.m.; Madison Line Mondays featuring Amy Howson, Sweet T and the Bulldozers,
Trout Steak Revival Thursday, Oct. 3, 7-8:30 p.m.; Shell Yeah: Ben Folds Friday, Oct. 4, 8-10 p.m.; Daz Rinko Saturday, Oct. 5, 7-8:30 p.m.; Boulevards Sunday, Oct. 6, 7-8:30 p.m.
Midtown Crossing Grill 394 N. WATKINS 443-0502
Natalie James and the Professor Saturdays, Sundays, 11 a.m.-3 p.m.; “The Happening” Open Songwriter Showcase Tuesdays, 6:30-9:30 p.m.
Minglewood Hall 1555 MADISON 312-6058
Euge Groove, Nick Colionne Friday, Oct. 4, 8 p.m.
Mulan Asian Bistro 2149 YOUNG 347-3965
Chris Gales Sunday Brunch
midnight.
Railgarten 2160 CENTRAL
Chingy and Raz B. of B2K Friday, Oct. 4, 7 p.m.; Silent Disco Friday, Oct. 4, 9 p.m.; Shamarr Allen Saturday, Oct. 5, 8 p.m.
The Tower Courtyard at Overton Square 2092 TRIMBLE PLACE
Tennessee Screamers Friday, Oct. 4, 7-9 p.m.; Josh Waddell Saturday, Oct. 5, 7-9 p.m.; Delta Joe Sanders Sunday, Oct. 6, 7-9 p.m.
Lannie McMillan Jazz Trio Sundays, 10 a.m.-2 p.m.
Bluegrass Brunch with the River Bluff Clan Sundays, 11 a.m.
Oasis Hookah Lounge & Cafe 663 S. HIGHLAND 729-6960
Live Music with DJ ALXANDR Fridays, 10 p.m.-2 a.m.; Live Music with Coldway Saturdays, 10 p.m.-2 a.m.
Triple S 1747 WALKER 421-6239
Barbie’s Barlight Lounge 661 N. MENDENHALL
Possum Daddy’s Karaoke Saturdays, 9 p.m.-2 a.m.
High Point Pub 477 HIGH POINT TERRACE 452-9203
Pubapalooza with Stereo Joe Every other Wednesday, 8-11 p.m.
Friday Karaoke Fridays, 7-11 p.m.; Fun-Filled Fridays First Friday of every month, 8 p.m.midnight.
Wild Bill’s
Ubee’s
1580 VOLLINTINE 207-3975
521 S. HIGHLAND 323-0900
The Wild Bill’s Band with Tony Chapman, Charles Cason, and Miss Joyce Henderson Fridays, Saturdays, 11 p.m.-3 a.m.;
Summer/Berclair
Karaoke Wednesdays, 9 p.m.-2 a.m.
continued on page 30
m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
Mary Gagz and Her Gaggle of Drags Mondays, 8:30-11 p.m.; Lahna Deering Tuesday, Oct. 8, 8 p.m.; Tsushi-Mamire Wednesday, Oct. 9, 8 p.m.
Hi Tone 412-414 N. CLEVELAND 278-TONE
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
continued from page 26
29
After Dark: Live Music Schedule October 3 - 9 continued from page 29
Cordova Huey’s Cordova 1771 N. GERMANTOWN PKWY. 318-3030
GET HAPPY
ANGELA INGERSOLL SINGS
JUDY GARLAND OCT 18 / 7:30P.M. Virtuoso Show Filled With Judy Garland Favorites.
STEVE TRASH
ROCKIN’ ECO HERO!
OCT. 12 / 2:30PM Family Fun – Teaching Kids How to Save Our Home – Planet Earth.
2019-20 SEASON & TICKETS @ BPACC.ORG Box Office 901.385.5588 / Box Office Hours 10A.M. to 2P.M.
Whitehaven/ Airport
John Paul Keith Sunday, Oct. 6, 8:30 p.m.-midnight; Sarah & Tristan Tuesday, Oct. 8, 6-9 p.m.
Marlowe’s Ribs & Restaurant
880 N. GERMANTOWN PKWY.
4381 ELVIS PRESLEY 332-4159
T.J. Mulligan’s Cordova
Rock-n-Roll Cafe
The Southern Edition Band Tuesdays.
3855 ELVIS PRESLEY 398-6528
Elvis Tribute featuring Michael Cullipher Thursdays-Saturdays, 8 p.m.; Live Entertainment Mondays-Saturdays, 8 p.m.; Elvis Gospel Music Show Fridays, 1-2:30 p.m.; Karaoke hosted by DJ Maddy Wednesdays, 8-11 p.m.
8071 TRINITY 756-4480
Frayser/Millington Harpo’s Hogpin 4212 HWY 51 N. 530-0414
Arlington/Eads/ Oakland/Lakeland Rizzi’s/Paradiso Pub 6230 GREENLEE 592-0344
Live Music Thursdays, Wednesdays, 7-10 p.m.; Karaoke and Dance Music with DJ Funn Fridays, 9 p.m.
Bartlett
Marc Cohn Saturday, Oct. 5, 7:30 p.m.
Hadley’s Pub 2779 WHITTEN 266-5006
Rockstar Karaoke with Charlie Belt Thursdays, 8 p.m.
Old Whitten Tavern 2465 WHITTEN 379-1965
Live Music Fridays, 9 p.m.-1 a.m.
RockHouse Live 5709 RALEIGH-LAGRANGE 386-7222
Live Bands Fridays, Saturdays, 8 p.m.; Karaoke Mondays, Tuesdays, Sundays, 8 p.m.-2:30 a.m.; Live Band Karaoke Wednesdays, 8 p.m.-midnight.
Shelby Forest General Store 7729 BENJESTOWN 876-5770
Steak Night with Tony Butler and the Shelby Forest Pioneers Fridays, 6-8 p.m.; Cecil Yancy Saturday, Oct. 5, 12-3 p.m.
Collierville Huey’s Collierville 2130 W. POPLAR 854-4455
JAVA Trio Sunday, Oct. 6, 4-7 p.m.; The 45s Sunday, Oct. 6, 8-11:30 p.m.
The Crossing Bar & Grill 7281 HACKS CROSS, OLIVE BRANCH, MS 662-893-6242
Karaoke with Buddha Tuesdays, Thursdays, 8 p.m.midnight.
Dan McGuinness 3964 GOODMAN, SOUTHAVEN, MS 662-890-7611
Acoustic Music Tuesdays.
Fox and Hound Tavern 6565 TOWNE CENTER, SOUTHAVEN, MS 662-536-2200
Live Music Thursdays, 5 p.m.; Karaoke Tuesdays.
Live Music Saturdays, 9 p.m.
Gold Strike Casino
Huey’s Millington
1010 CASINO CENTER, TUNICA, MS 1-888-245-7829
8570 HWY 51 N.
The Chaulkies Sunday, Oct. 6, 6-9 p.m.
Pop’s Bar & Grill
3663 APPLING 385-6440
October 3-9, 2019
Richard Wilson Wednesdays, 6-8 p.m.
Karaoke with DJ Stylez Thursdays, Sundays, 10 p.m.
Bartlett Performing Arts and Conference Center
30
My Favorite Place
North Mississippi/ Tunica
6365 NAVY 872-0353
Possum Daddy or DJ Turtle Thursdays, 5-9 p.m.; CeCee Fridays, 8 p.m.-1 a.m.; Possum Daddy Karaoke Wednesdays, 6-10 p.m. and Saturdays, 7-11 p.m.; DJ Turtle or CeCee First Sunday of every month, 5-9 p.m.
Toni Green’s Palace 4212 HWY 51 N.
Toni Green’s Palace MondaysSundays, 7 p.m.; Live DJ Thursdays, Fridays, 7 p.m.
Germantown Germantown Performing Arts Center 1801 EXETER 751-7500
An Evening with Sutton Foster Friday, Oct. 4, 8 p.m.; Lucky 7 Brass Band Saturday, Oct. 5, 9:30 a.m.
Huey’s Southwind 7825 WINCHESTER 624-8911
The Tony Holiday Band Sunday, Oct. 6, 8:30 p.m.midnight; The Fabulous Doo-Vays Wednesday, Oct. 9, 6-9 p.m.
Huey’s Germantown 7677 FARMINGTON 318-3034
Young Petty Thieves Sunday, Oct. 6, 8-11:30 p.m.; Patio Pirates Wednesday, Oct. 9, 6-9 p.m.
Ice Bar & Grill 4202 HACKS CROSS 757-1423
Unwind Wednesdays Wednesdays, 6 p.m.-midnight.
Russo’s New York Pizzeria & Wine Bar 9087 POPLAR 755-0092
Live Music on the patio Thursdays-Saturdays, 7-10 p.m.
Boyz II Men Friday, Oct. 4, 9 p.m.
Hollywood Casino 1150 CASINO STRIP RESORT, TUNICA, MS 662-357-7700
Live Entertainment Fridays, Saturdays, 9 p.m.-1 a.m.
Horseshoe Casino Tunica 1021 CASINO CENTER, TUNICA, MS 800-357-5600
Beatles vs. Stones: A Musical Showdown Friday, Oct. 4, 8 p.m.
Huey’s Southaven 7090 MALCO, SOUTHAVEN, MS 662-349-7097
The Bar Misfits Sunday, Oct. 6, 8:30 p.m.-midnight.
Raleigh Stage Stop 2951 CELA 382-1576
Open Mic Night and Steak Night Thursdays, 6 p.m.midnight; Blues Jam hosted by Brad Webb Thursdays, 7-11 p.m.
West Memphis/ Eastern Arkansas Southland Park 1550 N. INGRAM, WEST MEMPHIS, AR 800-467-6182
Live Music Fridays, Saturdays, 10 p.m.; Live Band Karaoke Wednesdays, 7 p.m.
The New Backdour Bar & Grill 302 S. AVALON 596-7115
DJ Stylez Wednesdays, 8 p.m.-1 a.m.
BES T I N M E M PH I S
SADDLE CREEK | MUD ISL AND | OXFORD NAILBARAND.CO | @NAILBARANDCO
m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
for voting us
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
Thank You
31
Important Facts About DOVATO
October 3-9, 2019
This is only a brief summary of important information about DOVATO and does not replace talking to your healthcare provider about your condition and treatment. What is the Most Important Information I Should Know about DOVATO? If you have both human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV-1) and hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection, DOVATO can cause serious side effects, including: • Resistant HBV infection. Your healthcare provider will test you for HBV infection before you start treatment with DOVATO. If you have HIV-1 and hepatitis B, the hepatitis B virus can change (mutate) during your treatment with DOVATO and become harder to treat (resistant). It is not known if DOVATO is safe and effective in people who have HIV-1 and HBV infection. • Worsening of HBV infection. If you have HIV-1 and HBV infection, your HBV may get worse (flare-up) if you stop taking DOVATO. A “flare-up” is when your HBV infection suddenly returns in a worse way than before. Worsening liver disease can be serious and may lead to death. ° Do not run out of DOVATO. Refill your prescription or talk to your healthcare provider before your DOVATO is all gone. ° Do not stop DOVATO without first talking to your healthcare provider. If you stop taking DOVATO, your healthcare provider will need to check your health often and do blood tests regularly for several months to check your liver. What is DOVATO? DOVATO is a prescription medicine that is used without other antiretroviral medicines to treat HIV-1 infection in adults: who have not received antiretroviral medicines in the past, and without known resistance to the medicines dolutegravir or lamivudine. HIV-1 is the virus that causes Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS). It is not known if DOVATO is safe and effective in children. Who should not take DOVATO? Do Not Take DOVATO if You: • have ever had an allergic reaction to a medicine that contains dolutegravir or lamivudine. • take dofetilide. What should I tell my healthcare provider before using DOVATO? Tell your healthcare provider about all of your medical conditions, including if you: • have or have had liver problems, including hepatitis B or C infection. • have kidney problems. • are pregnant or plan to become pregnant. One of the medicines in DOVATO (dolutegravir) may harm your unborn baby. ° You should not take DOVATO if you are planning to become pregnant or during the first 12 weeks of pregnancy. Your healthcare provider may prescribe a different medicine if you are planning to become pregnant or become pregnant during treatment with DOVATO. ° If you can become pregnant, your healthcare provider will perform a pregnancy test before you start treatment with DOVATO. ° If you can become pregnant, you should consistently use effective birth control (contraception) during treatment with DOVATO. ° Tell your healthcare provider right away if you are planning to become pregnant, you become pregnant, or think you may be pregnant during treatment with DOVATO.
©2019 ViiV Healthcare or licensor. DLLADVT190008 June 2019 Produced in USA.
Learn more about Kalvin and DOVATO at DOVATO.com
32
Tell your healthcare provider about all of your medical conditions, including if you: (cont’d) • are breastfeeding or plan to breastfeed. Do not breastfeed if you take DOVATO. ° You should not breastfeed if you have HIV-1 because of the risk of passing HIV-1 to your baby. One of the medicines in DOVATO (lamivudine) passes into your breastmilk. ° Talk with your healthcare provider about the best way to feed your baby. ° Tell your healthcare provider about all the medicines you take, including prescription and over-the-counter medicines, vitamins, and herbal supplements. Some medicines interact with DOVATO. Keep a list of your medicines and show it to your healthcare provider and pharmacist when you get a new medicine. • You can ask your healthcare provider or pharmacist for a list of medicines that interact with DOVATO. • Do not start taking a new medicine without telling your healthcare provider. Your healthcare provider can tell you if it is safe to take DOVATO with other medicines. What are Possible Side Effects of DOVATO? DOVATO can cause serious side effects, including: • Those in the “What is the Most Important Information I Should Know about DOVATO?” section. • Allergic reactions. Call your healthcare provider right away if you develop a rash with DOVATO. Stop taking DOVATO and get medical help right away if you develop a rash with any of the following signs or symptoms: fever; generally ill feeling; tiredness; muscle or joint aches; blisters or sores in mouth; blisters or peeling of the skin; redness or swelling of the eyes; swelling of the mouth, face, lips, or tongue; problems breathing. • Liver problems. People with a history of hepatitis B or C virus may have an increased risk of developing new or worsening changes in certain liver tests during treatment with DOVATO. Liver problems, including liver failure, have also happened in people without a history of liver disease or other risk factors. Your healthcare provider may do blood tests to check your liver. Tell your healthcare provider right away if you get any of the following signs or symptoms of liver problems: your skin or the white part of your eyes turns yellow (jaundice); dark or “tea-colored” urine; light-colored stools (bowel movements); nausea or vomiting; loss of appetite; and/or pain, aching, or tenderness on the right side of your stomach area. • Too much lactic acid in your blood (lactic acidosis). Lactic acidosis is a serious medical emergency that can lead to death. Tell your healthcare provider right away if you get any of the following symptoms that could be signs of lactic acidosis: feel very weak or tired; unusual (not normal) muscle pain; trouble breathing; stomach pain with nausea and vomiting; feel cold, especially in your arms and legs; feel dizzy or lightheaded; and/or a fast or irregular heartbeat. • Lactic acidosis can also lead to severe liver problems, which can lead to death. Your liver may become large (hepatomegaly) and you may develop fat in your liver (steatosis). Tell your healthcare provider right away if you get any of the signs or symptoms of liver problems which are listed above under “Liver problems.” You may be more likely to get lactic acidosis or severe liver problems if you are female or very overweight (obese).
SO MUCH GOES INTO WHO I AM HIV MEDICINE IS ONE PART OF IT. Reasons to ask your doctor about DOVATO: DOVATO can help you reach and then stay undetectable* with just 2 medicines in 1 pill. That means fewer medicines† in your body while taking DOVATO
You can take it any time of day with or without food (around the same time each day)—giving you flexibility
DOVATO is a once-a-day complete treatment for adults who are new to HIV-1 medicine. Results may vary. *Undetectable means reducing the HIV in your blood to very low levels (less than 50 copies per mL). † As compared with 3-drug regimens.
KALVIN‡ Living with HIV
Trademark is owned by or licensed to the ViiV Healthcare group of companies. Compensated by ViiV Healthcare
‡
Could DOVATO be right for you? Ask your doctor today.
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
What are Possible Side Effects of DOVATO (cont’d)? • Changes in your immune system (Immune Reconstitution Syndrome) can happen when you start taking HIV-1 medicines. Your immune system may get stronger and begin to fight infections that have been hidden in your body for a long time. Tell your healthcare provider right away if you start having new symptoms after you start taking DOVATO. • The most common side effects of DOVATO include: headache; diarrhea; nausea; trouble sleeping; and tiredness. These are not all the possible side effects of DOVATO. Call your doctor for medical advice about side effects. You are encouraged to report negative side effects of prescription drugs to the FDA. Visit www.fda.gov/medwatch, or call 1-800-FDA-1088. Where Can I Find More Information? • Talk to your healthcare provider or pharmacist. • Go to DOVATO.com or call 1-877-844-8872, where you can also get FDA-approved labeling.
33
at C R O S S T O W N A R T S
NOW ARRIVING AT YOUR
T H E AT E R
Circuit Playhouse
10|5 An Intimate Evening with
SUSAN MARSHALL Doors at 7:00 pm / Music at 7:30 pm $10
9.28
THE MD’S PERFORM THE BEATLES’ REVOLVER TIME: 8:00pm - 10:00pm PLACE: Crosstown Theater $20
10|9 HUNTERTONES with STAX Academy Students
Doors at 7:00 pm / Music at 7:30 pm $10
10|11
at
C R O S S T O W N T H E AT E R
9.29
SCOTT SHARRARD & THE BO-KEYS Doors at 7:30 pm / Music at 8:00 pm $10
Join Grammy-winning saxophonist KIRK WHALUM for Kafé Kirk, a monthly jazz series in Crosstown Theater featuring musical and spiritual collaborations with special guest artists.
THIS MONTH’S WYCLI F F E GUEST GO R D ON SUNDAY th
tober 6 Oc6PM
KAFÉ KIRK with SPECIAL GUEST WYCLIFFE GORDON
TIME: 6:00pm - 8:00pm PLACE: Crosstown Theater $45
10|13 SCOTT MULVAHILL Doors at 7:00 pm / Music at 7:30 pm $10
DOORS AT 5 PM PERFORMANCE AT 6 PM GENERAL ADMISSION: $45 | VIP: $60 TICKETS: CROSSTOWNARTS.ORG
1350 CONCOURSE AVE / MEMPHIS, TN 38104
October 3-9, 2019
10|25
9.30
STORYCORPS LISTENING EVENT
TIME: 6:30pm - 7:30pm PLACE: Big Stairs FREE
THE LOVE LIGHT ORCHESTRA ft. John Nemeth Doors at 7:00 pm / Music at 7:30 pm $10
10|27 TULSA REVIEW ft. John Fullbright, Paul Benjaman, Jacob Tovar & Jesse Aycock
Doors at 7:00 pm / Music at 7:30 pm $10
www.crosstownarts.org/greenroom 34
CROSSTOWNCONCOURSE.COM/EVENTS
CALENDAR of EVENTS: OCT. 3 - 9
1350 CONCOURSE AVE. SUITE 280
Head Over Heels, jukebox musical comedy with music and lyrics from the catalog of the Go-Go’s. www.playhouseonthesquare.org. Oct. 4-27. 51 S. COOPER (725-0776).
Hattiloo Theatre
Between Riverside and Crazy, ex-cop and recent widower Walter “Pops” Washington and his newly paroled son Junior have spent a lifetime living between Riverside and crazy. But now, the NYPD is demanding his signature to close an outstanding lawsuit, the landlord wants him out, the liquor store is closed — and the church won’t leave him alone. When the struggle to keep one of New York City’s last great rent-stabilized apartments collides with old wounds, sketchy new houseguests, and a final ultimatum, it seems that the old days may be dead and gone. hattiloo. org. $35. Through Oct. 20. 37 S. COOPER (502-3486).
The Orpheum
Dear Evan Hansen, a letter that was never meant to be seen, a lie that was never meant to be told, a life he never dreamed he could have. Evan Hansen is about to get the one thing he’s always wanted: a chance to finally fit in. orpheum-memphis.com. $35-$130. Tuesdays-Fridays, 7:30 p.m. Through Oct. 11. 203 S. MAIN (525-3000).
Playhouse on the Square
Send the date, time, place, cost, info, phone number, a brief description, and photos — two weeks in advance — to calendar@ memphisflyer.com or P.O. Box 1738, Memphis, TN 38101. DUE TO SPACE LIMITATIONS, ONGOING WEEKLY EVENTS WILL APPEAR IN THE FLYER’S ONLINE CALENDAR ONLY.
Tennessee Shakespeare Company
Tennessee Shakespeare Company: Julius Caesar, the Tennessee Shakespeare Company presents a story of people divided by wealth, poverty, and political radicalism, as conspirators assassinate Caesar for the good of the Republic. (759-0604), tnshakespeare.org. $15-$39. Thurs.-Sat., 7:30 p.m., and Sun., 3 p.m. Through Oct. 6. 7950 TRINITY (759-0604).
On Golden Pond, aging couple Ethel and Norman Thayer spend each summer at their home on the lake. They are visited by daughter Chelsea with her fiancé Billy Ray and his son Billy Ray Jr. www.playhouseonthesquare. org. Through Oct. 6.
TheatreSouth
66 S. COOPER (726-4656).
INSIDE FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH, 1000 S. COOPER (726-0800).
“Facing the Sun” by John Torina at Jay Etkin Gallery, October 4th, 6-9 p.m.
Wakey, Wakey, Guy seems to rouse from a nap and says, “Is it now? I thought I had more time.” And then Wakey, Wakey is off to an examination of Guy’s life. $20. Fri., Sat., 8-9:30 p.m., and Sun., 2-3:30 p.m. Through Oct. 6.
continued on page 36
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ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
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PAY IT FORWARD & GET PAID
35
CALENDAR: OCTOBER 3 - 9 continued from page 34 ART I ST R EC E PTI O N S
Art Body Soul Studio
Opening Reception for Erica McCarren, artist talks and exhibition with wine and hors d’oeuvres. (207-4161), artbodysoulstudio.com. Free. Fri., Oct. 4, 6-8 p.m. 1024 SOUTH YATES (207-4161).
Circuit Playhouse
Opening Reception for “Hot Pink Love Potion,” exhibition of new work by Meredith Wilson. Fri., Oct. 4, 5-8 p.m. 51 S. COOPER (725-0776).
Jay Etkin Gallery
“I Can’t Believe It’s Colored Pencil,” featuring Melissa Bess at St. George’s Episcopal Church, through Oct. 27th
Cooper-Young Art Tours
For more information, featured artists, and pop-up performances, visit website. First Friday of every month, 6-9 p.m. COOPER-YOUNG DISTRICT, CORNER OF COOPER AND YOUNG, COOPERYOUNG.COM.
ArtsMemphis
“Unfolding: The Next Chapter in Memphis,” exhibition of visual art by local Memphis artists, curated by Kenneth Wayne Alexander. (578-2787), artsmemphis.org. Free. Ongoing, 5:30-7:30 p.m.
First Sundays: 30 Years Better
What started 30 years ago is back, featuring work from old and new local painters, jewelers, photographers, sculptors, and more. With open old-fashioned guitar pull and Memphis Drum Tribe. First Sunday of every month, 3-8 p.m. Through Dec. 29.
575 S. MENDENHALL (578-2787).
Belz Museum of Asian and Judaic Art
“Chinese Symbols in Art,” ancient Chinese pottery and bronze. belzmuseum.org. Ongoing.
WESTY’S, 346 N MAIN (543-3278).
Opening Reception for “Facing the Sun,” exhibition of new work by John Torina. Fri., Oct. 4, 6-9 p.m. 942 COOPER (550-0064).
L Ross Gallery
Opening Reception for “Still Bloom,” exhibition of work by Niles Wallace. Fri., Oct. 4, 6-8 p.m. 5040 SANDERLIN (767-2200).
OT H E R ART HAP P E N I N G S
Casting Demonstration
Saturdays, Sundays, 1:30 p.m. METAL MUSEUM, 374 METAL MUSEUM DR. (774-6380), METALMUSEUM.ORG.
Open Late
Galleries and gardens will be open late. Free with admission. Every third Thursday, 6-8 p.m.
119 S. MAIN, IN THE PEMBROKE SQUARE BUILDING (523-ARTS).
Buckman Arts Center at St. Mary’s School
THE DIXON GALLERY & GARDENS, 4339 PARK (761-5250), DIXON.ORG.
Paint Memphis
Annual arts festival that will host over 100 artists who will paint one of the largest collaborative murals in Tennessee, including the historic Lamar Theatre. Live music, food trucks, and vendors on site. Event takes place between Kyle Avenue and Lamar. Free. Sat., Oct. 5, 4-10 p.m. VARIOUS LOCATIONS, SEE WEBSITE FOR MORE INFORMATION, PAINTMEMPHIS.ORG.
ONGOI NG ART
Art Museum at the University of Memphis (AMUM)
“If I Had a Camera,” civil rights photography by Art Shay Through Oct. 5. “Africa: Art of a Continent,” permanent exhibition of African art from the Martha and Robert Fogelman collection. Ongoing. “IEAA Ancient Egyptian Col-
lection,” permanent exhibition of Egyptian antiquities ranging from 3800 B.C.E. to 700 C.E. from the Institute of Egyptian Art and Archaeology collection. Ongoing.
Art Village Gallery
142 COMMUNICATION & FINE ARTS BUILDING (678-2224).
410 S. MAIN (521-0782).
“Out of Africa: Inhabitants of the Earth,” exhibition of work by Nigerian artist Uchay Joel Chima. www.artvillagegallery. com. Ongoing.
“New Works by Todd Berry and Jan Shivley,” exhibition featuring paintings by Todd Berry and whimsical jewelry by Jan Shivley. Through Oct. 28. 60 N. PERKINS EXT. (537-1483).
Church Health
“Seasons of Change,” exhibition of new work by Danny Broadway. A portion of proceeds from sales of artworks will benefit Church Health. Through Oct. 7. 1350 CONCOURSE.
continued on page 38
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ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
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37
CALENDAR: OCTOBER 3 - 9 continued from page 36 Circuit Playhouse
“Hot Pink Love Potion,” exhibition of new work by Meredith Wilson. Oct. 4-Nov. 4. 51 S. COOPER (725-0776).
Clough-Hanson Gallery
“Machera Floors,” Johana Moscoso’s “Machera Floors” are a series of large-scale floor sculptures accompanied by process videos in which the artist and her peers dance Colombian cumbia and salsa over unfired porcelain tiles. The exhibition looks at gender and Latinx culture through dance. Through Oct. 12. Senior Thesis Exhibition, exhibition of work by Rhodes studio art majors Olivia Rowe, Charlotte Sechrist, Qian Xu, Sara Lynn Abbott, and Melissa Kiker. www.rhodes.edu/events. Ongoing. RHODES COLLEGE, 2000 N. PARKWAY (843-3000).
Crosstown Arts at The Concourse
“Counterpoint,” exhibition of new work by Scott Carter, a former Crosstown Arts resident artist. Through Oct. 20. “Residual Imprint,” exhibition of new work by Jia Wang, a former Crosstown Arts resident artist. Through Oct. 20. “The Sin Park,” exhibition of new work by Wang Chen, a former Crosstown Arts resident artist. Through Oct. 20. 1350 CONCOURSE, SUITE 280 (507-8030).
“Season of Change” by Danny Broadway at Church Health, on view through Monday, October 7th
David Lusk Gallery
“Let It Last,” exhibition of new work by Hamlett Dobbins. Through Oct. 12. 97 TILLMAN (767-3800).
The Dixon Gallery & Gardens
Flicker Street Studio
“Place Shapes,” exhibition of recent work by Elizabeth Alley. dixon.org. Through Oct. 6. “Central to Their Lives: Southern Women Artists in the Johnson Collection,” exhibition spanning the decades between the late 1890s and early 1960s, which examines the particularly complex challenges female artists confronted in a traditionally conservative region during a period in which women’s social, cultural, and political roles were being redefined and reinterpreted. dixon.org. Through Oct. 13. “Kate Freeman Clark,” exhibition that brings together nearly 40 paintings by Southern-born Impressionist. Clark’s work was defined by her intimate portraits of family and friends, bucolic landscapes, and compelling still life paintings. dixon.org. Through Oct. 13.
“Marks and Objects,” exhibition of work by Binder Projects artist Alex Paulus. The work, grounded in pop culture references, renders a humorous and surreal landscape for the viewer. (674-5855), binderprojects.com. Ongoing. 74 FLICKER (767-2999).
Fogelman Galleries of Contemporary Art, University of Memphis
“Kulcher,” exhibition of photography by Lawrence Jasud. Through Oct. 11. “Not Dead Wood,” exhibition of new work by Jean Koeller. Through Oct. 4. 3715 CENTRAL.
Germantown Performing Arts Center “New Light,” exhibition of work from the Jack Robinson archives. gpacweb.com. Through Oct. 31, 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
4339 PARK (761-5250).
Eclectic Eye
“My Memphis View,” exhibition of new work by Mary-Ellen Kelly. Through Nov. 6. 242 S. COOPER (276-3937).
1801 EXETER (751-7500).
Edge Gallery
Folk Artists, exhibition of work by Debra Edge, John Sadowski, Nancy White, Bill Brookshire, and other folk artists. Ongoing. 509 S. MAIN (647-9242).
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Epiphany Salon & Gallery “Seeing Dots,” exhibition of new works by Dale Martin and Julie Nouwen. Through Oct. 23. 726 NORTH PARKWAY (406-3026).
FireHouse Community Arts Center
Mosal Morszart, works by Black Arts Alliance artist. memphisblackartsalliance.org. Ongoing. 985 S. BELLEVUE (948-9522).
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continued from page 38 Graceland
“Hillbilly Rock,” exhibition featuring items from The Marty Stuart Collection. graceland.com. Ongoing. 3717 ELVIS PRESLEY (332-3322).
Jack Robinson Photography Gallery
“Hang Zone Vol. 2,” exhibition of works by Kristen Rambo, Jonah Westbrook, and Nick Hewlett. (5760708), Free. Mondays-Fridays, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Through Nov. 20. 44 HULING (576-0708).
Jay Etkin Gallery
“Facing the Sun,” exhibition of new work by John Torina. Oct. 4-Nov. 1. David Hall, exhibition of watercolor works on paper. www.jayetkingallery.com. Ongoing. 942 COOPER (550-0064).
L Ross Gallery
“Still Bloom,” exhibition of work by Niles Wallace. Saturdays, 11 a.m.-3 p.m., and Tuesdays-Fridays, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Through Oct. 26. 5040 SANDERLIN (767-2200).
Marshall Arts Gallery
“Love of Art” and “Memphis,” exhibition of work by Nikki Gardner and Debra Edge by appointment only. Ongoing.
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639 MARSHALL (679-6837).
“Ancient Egyptian Collection” at the Art Museum at the University of Memphis, permanent collection Memphis Botanic Garden
“Terry DeWitt: A Retrospective,” exhibition of work by DeWitt, a retired architect and architectural illustrator and watercolor artist. Mondays-Saturdays, 11 a.m.2 p.m. Through Oct. 30. “Hughes Art Show,” exhibition of works by Dr. Allen Hughes, Anne Hughes Sayle, Jane Hughes Coble, Jane’s daughter Anne Trainer, their cousin Nancy Hughes Coe, and her daughter Elizabeth Wade. Through Oct. 30. Twilight Thursdays, extended hours staying open til sunset. Each week will have a different highlight from plants to pets. www.memphisbotanicgarden.com. Thursdays. “Bicentennial Blues Bed,” new, year-long planting celebrating the Bluff City’s bicentennial, located just outside of the Four Seasons Garden. www.memphisbotanicgarden.com. Ongoing. 750 CHERRY (636-4100).
Memphis Brooks Museum of Art
“Arts of Global Africa,” exhibition of historic and contemporary works in a range of different media presenting an expansive vision of Africa’s artistry. www. brooksmuseum.org. Through
June 21, 2021. Rotunda Projects: Federico Uribe, exhibition of magical creatures and playful installations from everyday objects. www.brooksmuseum.org. Through Oct. 11. “Small Passion,” exhibition of work by Albrecht Dürer, who has long been recognized as one of the most influential artists of the European Renaissance and one of the finest printmakers in the history of art. Through Oct. 27. “About Face,” exhibition located in the Education Gallery highlighting the different ways artists interpret the connection between emotion and expression. Ongoing. “Drawing Memory: Essence of Memphis,” exhibition of works inspired by nsibidi, a sacred means of communication among male secret societies in southeastern Nigeria by Victor Ekpuk. www.brooksmuseum.org. Ongoing. 1934 POPLAR (544-6209).
Memphis College of Art “Horn Island 35,” Through Oct. 4. 1930 POPLAR (272-5100).
Overton Park Gallery
“Feibelman/Gooch,” exhibition of paintings by Lewis Feibelman and sculptures by Mark Gooch. Through Oct. 10. Dorothy Northern and Jennifer Sargent, exhibition of works. Ongoing. 1581 OVERTON PARK (229-2967).
continued on page 42
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CALENDAR: OCTOBER 3 - 9 Playhouse on the Square
“Brick and Blumenthal,” exhibition of new works by V.A. Brick and Kelly Blumenthal. Sundays, 12-5 p.m., and Tuesdays-Saturdays, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Through Nov. 3. “Fiber2Film2Fiber,” exhibition of new work by Judith Dierkes. Mondays-Sundays, noon Through Nov. 3. “Daily Pleasures,” exhibition of new work by Martha Kelly. marthakellyart.com. Through Nov. 3. 66 S. COOPER (726-4656).
Ross Gallery
“The Great Moon Hoax,” exhibition of new works by Mark Schoon and Casey McGuire. The full title is “The Great Moon Hoax: Science and the Recreation of the Artificial.” Through Oct. 30. CHRISTIAN BROTHERS UNIVERSITY, PLOUGH LIBRARY, 650 E. PARKWAY S. (321-3000).
Slave Haven Underground Railroad Museum
“Images of Africa Before & After the Middle Passage,” exhibition of photography by Jeff and Shaakira Edison. (5273427), slavehavenmemphis. com. Ongoing. 826 N. SECOND STREET (527-3427).
“I Can’t Believe It’s Colored Pencil,” the Memphis CPSA District Chapter members create portraiture, landscape, floral, wildlife, and abstract pieces in a wide range of styles. The chapter provides a forum for individual artistic growth and education with monthly meetings, educational presentations, field trips, exhibits and workshops. (754-7282), stgchurch.org. Mondays-Fridays, 10 a.m.-4 p.m., and Sundays, 9 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Through Oct. 27.
October 3-9, 2019
drop-in and pay what you can. First Monday of every month, 6-7 p.m. 2085 MONROE (274-7139).
PO ET RY / S PO K E N WO R D
Cafe Eclectic
2425 SOUTH GERMANTOWN (754-7282).
Sue Layman Designs
Sue Layman Designs Ongoing Art, exhibition of oil-on-canvas paintings featuring brilliant colors and daring geometric shapes. (409-7870), suelaymandesigns.com. Ongoing. 125 G.E. PATTERSON (409-7870).
Talbot Heirs
Debra Edge Art, ongoing. 99 S. SECOND (527-9772).
Village Frame & Art
“20th Century Memphis Photographs,” exhibition of work by Charlie Ivey and Virginia Schoenster, Wednesdays, 10 a.m.-6 p.m. 540 S. MENDENHALL (767-8882).
WKNO Studio
“WinterArts,” exhibition of works by the stars of WinterArts, the holiday artists’
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Bill Maher of Politically Incorrect, Real Time, and Religulous at The Orpheum, Friday, October 4th, 8 p.m.
St. George’s Episcopal Church
market that opens the day after Thanksgiving. (458-2521), wkno.org. Free. MondaysFridays, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Through Oct. 30.
Chapter of the Alzheimer’s Association. Bid on silent auction items from gift cards to local artists’ work. Sun., Oct. 6, 2-4 p.m.
7151 CHERRY FARMS (458-2521).
BARTLETT UNITED METHODIST CHURCH, 5676 STAGE (484-4059), SQUAREDANCEMEMPHIS.COM.
DA N C E
Argentine Tango Society All level dancers; everyone is welcome. $10. Wednesdays, 6-7:30 p.m.
BERT FERGUSON COMMUNITY CENTER, 8085 TRINITY (341-9282).
Dance for a Cure
Social dancing for a good cause. First-timers will be shown the basics in square and line dancing. This event is an annual fund-raiser for the Mid-South
C O M E DY
Hi Tone
Taco Festival, annual comedy by Katrina Coleman and friends, with live music from HEELS and special guests and drag by Moth Moth Moth. Tacos by Mariachi Tacos. All proceeds will benefit Abortion AF (formerly Lady Parts Justice), a national nonprofit
org fighting for reproductive rights. (598-8360). $10. Sun., Oct. 6, 6-9 p.m. 412-414 N. CLEVELAND (278-TONE).
The Orpheum
Bill Maher, performance by the star of Politically Incorrect, Real Time, and Religulous. www. orpheum-memphis.com. $48$103. Fri., Oct. 4, 8 p.m. 203 S. MAIN (525-3000).
TheatreWorks
Beginner’s Improv Workshop, if you’ve ever wanted to try improv comedy but don’t know where to start, this is the perfect space for you. If you love doing improv and just want to do more, this is also a perfect space for you. This workshop is a
Poetry Society of Tennessee Open Mic Readings, join the Poetry Society of Tennessee for poetry readings on the second Wednesday of each month. Bring original poetry to read (traditional or performance poetry). For more information see the website, poetrytennesse.org. Free. Wed., Oct. 9, 7-8 p.m. 603 N. MCLEAN (725-1718).
Poplar-White Station Branch Library
Poetry Society of Tennessee Monthly Meeting, (361-0077), First Saturday of every month, 2-4 p.m. 5094 POPLAR (682-1616).
continued on page 44
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CALENDAR: OCTOBER 3 - 9 continued from page 42 B O O KS I G N I N G S
Booksigning by Jamie Sumner
Author discusses and signs her new book, Roll With It. Wed., Oct. 9, 6 p.m. NOVEL, 387 PERKINS EXT. (922-5526).
L ECT U R E / S P EA K E R
Constitution Day
U.S. Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer speaks. The lecture will take place in McNeill Concert Hall. The event is open to the public; seating is limited. Thurs., Oct. 3, 6 p.m. RHODES COLLEGE, 2000 N. PARKWAY (843-3000).
TO U R S
Bicentennial History Hikes
Meet at the guest services desk in the Visitor Center. Tuesdays, 2 p.m. LICHTERMAN NATURE CENTER, 5992 QUINCE (767-7322), MEMPHISMUSEUMS.ORG.
Calvary Episcopal Church Tours
Docent-led tours discuss stained glass windows, architecture, and symbols in Christian art. Free. Second Wednesday, Sunday of every month, 11:15 a.m. CALVARY EPISCOPAL CHURCH, 102 N. SECOND (525-6602), CALVARYMEMPHIS.ORG.
City Tasting Tours
Savor tastings at five eateries, interact with chefs and managers, and sample local flavors while strolling down Main Street and enjoying new art installations and historic landmarks. Wednesdays-Saturdays, 1:30 p.m.
Fall Plant Sale
WWW.CITYTASTINGTOURS.COM.
Seasonal plant sale in the nursery, featuring a display of varieties of pansies, violas, ornamental cabbage, kale, and more. The selection of perennials will be larger than ever, and plants are well-suited to thrive in the Mid-South climate. Fri., Oct. 4, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
Cutting Garden Tours
MEMPHIS BOTANIC GARDEN, 750 CHERRY (636-4100).
Garden docents will focus on the cutting garden each week on Saturday morning. Meet in the Catmur Foyer to see the large urn design and start tour. Saturdays, 10 a.m.-noon.
F E ST IVA LS
Bluff City Fair
THE DIXON GALLERY & GARDENS, 4339 PARK (761-5250), DIXON.ORG.
Yellow Fever Rock & Roll Ghost Tour
See what used to be, Memphisstyle, with Mike McCarthy. Call to schedule a personal tour. Ongoing. (486-6325), WWW.FACEBOOK.COM/ YELLOWROCKGHOST.
E X P OS / S A LES
Creative Works Market
Presented by Big Cartel, the Creative Works Market showcases curated apparel, prints, pins, and handmade goods from 36 designers, makers, manufacturers, and brands from across the country. Free. Fri., Oct. 4, 10 a.m.-6 p.m., and Sat., Oct. 5, 10 a.m.-6 p.m. THE HALLORAN CENTRE, 225 S. MAIN (428-4357).
Family fair with shows, live music, fair food, carnival rides, and kids rides. $10-$25. Oct. 4-13. TIGER LANE, 335 SOUTH HOLLYWOOD, BLUFFCITYFAIR.COM.
Left Bank Festival
Annual festival, this year celebrating Willie Mitchell and featuring the Hi Rhythm Section with guest vocalist Don Bryant. Arts and crafts, 5 and 10K runs, music and a catfishcooking contest on the west bank of the Mississippi River. Presented by Southland Casino Racing and the City of West Memphis. Free. Sat., Oct. 5, 10 a.m.-6 p.m. BIG RIVER CROSSING, CHANNEL 3 DRIVE (870-733-6793), LEFTBANKFESTIVAL.COM.
Memphis International Auto Show
Hundreds of new vehicles are rolling back into the Memphis Cook Convention Center. $8
thanks THANKS FOR for thanks VOTING voting for voting 50%
adults, $6 seniors and military, kids 12 and under free. Oct. 4-5, 10 a.m.-9 p.m., and Sun., Oct. 6, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. MEMPHIS COOK CONVENTION CENTER, 255 N. MAIN, MEMPHISAUTOSHOW.COM.
Nerdtoberfest
First annual celebration all things nerdy. Everything in store will be 15 percent off for anyone in costume (cosplay, Oktoberfest, or Halloween). There will be both Butter Beer and Romulan Ale, free while supplies last. Sat., Oct. 5, 12-5 p.m. TWO RIVERS BOOK STORE, 2171 YOUNG (630-8088).
S PO R TS / F IT N E S S
Camp Good Grief 5K and 1-Mile Fun Run Family fun includes 5K, onemile fun run, moon bounces, face-painting, hot dogs and hamburgers, a dove release, and finisher medals and fine jewelry for first place male and female finishers. $25. Sun., Oct. 6, 2-4 p.m. MEMORIAL PARK FUNERAL HOME & CEMETERY, 5668 POPLAR (302-9980), CAMPGOODGRIEF5K. RACEROSTER.COM.
Fitness Under the Stars
Free outdoor yoga, barre, spin, and aerobics classes led by a collective of local fitness studios. Fridays, 6 p.m. Through Oct. 18. MUD ISLAND RIVER PARK,
mances about historical female role models, or discover your inner scientist with hands-on experiments and dissection. Sat., Oct. 5, 10 a.m.-2 p.m.
125 N. FRONT (576-7241).
Walk ‘n’ Talk
Sip on a cup of tea or coffee from Fourth Cup while you listen to Memphians’ stories and share ideas with others. Wednesdays, 6:45-7:30 a.m.
HUTCHISON SCHOOL, 1740 RIDGEWAY (761-2220), STRONGGIRLFEST.ORG.
RIVER GARDEN, 51 RIVERSIDE DRIVE (312-9190), MEMPHISRIVERPARKS.ORG.
F U N D -R AI S E R S
Art for Elephants
M E ETI N G S
KIDS
Help support elephants in the wild at Art for Elephants on Saturday, October 5, at Memphis Zoo, included with Zoo admission. Experience special elephant enrichments and bid on paintings created by elephants. Proceeds from this event go to Elephants for Africa, a charity committed to protecting the endangered African elephant. Free. Sat., Oct. 5, 10 a.m.-2 p.m.
PAW Patrol: Adventure Play
MEMPHIS ZOO, 2000 PRENTISS PLACE IN OVERTON PARK (333-6500), MEMPHISZOO.ORG.
Meristem Women’s Book Club
Read and explore written works by women and LGBT authors. Second Wednesday of every month, 7 p.m. OUTMEMPHIS: THE LGBTQ CENTER OF THE MID-SOUTH, 892 S. COOPER (278-6422), WWW.MGLCC.ORG.
Free-flowing exhibit with activities encouraging teamwork, self confidence, and playing the roles of the rescuing heroes. Included with museum admission. Through Feb. 2, 2020, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
Collierville Education Foundation Fund-Raiser
Event to help CEF further its mission of providing the tools to Collierville schools. Fifteen percent of net sales goes to CEF. Mon., Oct. 7, 11 a.m.
CHILDREN’S MUSEUM OF MEMPHIS, 2525 CENTRAL (458-2678), CMOM.COM.
STIX, MERCHANTS PARK CIRCLE, CARRIAGE CROSSING (854-3399).
Strong GIRL Fest
Compete in the all-girl Olympic agility course, test your engineering skills to build bridges, get your hands dirty with urban farming, watch girl-led perfor-
Pick Life
The Incarnation Catholic Church’s first annual pop-up beer garden, with music by
continued on page 46
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continued from page 44 Bailey Bigger and her brother Wyly. Tickets include entry, a souvenir glass, beer, and food. $50. Thurs., Oct. 3, 6:15-9 p.m. CHURCH OF THE INCARNATION, 360 BRAY STATION, COLLIERVILLE (488-3739).
Spaytacular Gala
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Annual fund-raiser for Spay Memphis, with food, drinks, live music, and WKNO’s Kacky Walton. Tickets are $45 in advance/$55 at the door. Sun., Oct. 6, 6-10 p.m. ANF ARCHITECTS, 1500 UNION.
S P E C IA L E V E N TS
Antenna Historical Marker Event
Unveiling of historical marker across the street from Murphy’s at 1588 Madison with live a sidewalk performance by Ross Johnson and Jeff Evans, followed by happy hour at Murphy’s from 5:30 to 6 p.m. and then performances from bands that played at the Antenna at three venues (easy walking distance near the historic location), B-Side, Murphy’s, and the Lamplighter. Sat., Oct. 5, 4:30 p.m. MURPHY’S, 1589 MADISON (726-4193).
October 3-9, 2019
Ask Me Anything
46
Raise the frequency of your love life!
Memphis Friendship Foundation is hosting an opportunity to ask open and honest questions of faith communities to promote mutual understanding and respect. Featuring food trucks, live music from the Reba Russell Band, and various faith community representatives. Free. Sat., Oct. 5, 11 a.m.-1 p.m. HEALTH SCIENCES PARK, CORNER OF MADISON AND DUNLAP (3371346).
Back to the Moon: For Good
Call Jessica to set up your one on one consultation at 901-232-6835 or visit our website vibematchmaking.com @vibematchmaking
Planetarium show that lets the audience relive the thrills of lunar exploration. Various times, see website for details. Ongoing. AUTOZONE DOME PLANETARIUM, MEMPHIS PINK PALACE MUSEUM, 3050 CENTRAL (636-2362), MEMPHISMUSEUMS.ORG.
Barber Motorsports Museum Presents: A Century of the American Motorcycle
Left Bank Festival and 5K and 10K at Big River Crossing, Saturday, October 5th, 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Exhibition, curated by the Barber Vintage Motorsports Museum, exploring a century of the American motorcycle. Mondays-Sundays, 11 a.m.-7 p.m. Through Nov. 23. GRACELAND EXHIBITION CENTER, 3717 ELVIS PRESLEY BLVD. (3323322), WWW.GRACELAND.COM.
Bring Your Plane to Work Day: Fly-In and Career Day
Feature exhibitors from local flight schools, aviation groups, military recruiters, and aviation colleges. Student will learn about aviation careers and opportunities in the Memphis area. Sat., Oct. 5, 9 a.m.-3 p.m. SIGNATURE FLIGHT SUPPORT, 2488 WINCHESTER (233-7759), ALDENAVIATION.COM.
City of Hope: Resurrection City and the 1968 Poor People’s Campaign
The Poor People’s Campaign — a grassroots, multiracial movement — drew thousands of people to Washington, D.C., to demand social reforms while living side-by-side on the National Mall in a tent city known as Resurrection City. This poster exhibition explores the history and legacy of this important moment in U.S. history. Through June 30, 2020. MEMPHIS PINK PALACE MUSEUM, 3050 CENTRAL (636-2362).
Fab Fridays Laser Light Show
State-of-the-art laser light tribute shows, featuring Pink Floyd, Led Zeppelin, and more. Fridays, 7, 8 & 9 p.m. AUTOZONE DOME PLANETARIUM, MEMPHIS PINK PALACE MUSEUM, 3050 CENTRAL (636-2362), WWW. MEMPHISMUSEUMS.ORG.
Sundara First Anniversary Celebration An evening of food, wine, and company. Free. Thurs., Oct. 3, 6-8 p.m. SUNDARA WELLNESS, 1314 PEABODY (321-5803).
Girls Night Out Against Domestic Violence Mothers, daughters, girl-
friends, and counselors are invited to talk about domestic violence prevention. Learn the signs of abuse, where to get help, and how to be help to someone you know. Proof of attendance available for credit if needed. Hosted by Walking Into A New Life and the Whitehaven Library. Free. Thurs., Oct. 3, 5-6 p.m. WHITEHAVEN BRANCH LIBRARY, 4120 MILLBRANCH (466-6182).
Making Memphis: 200 Years of Community
Bicentennial celebration, the exhibit illustrates how the threads of Memphis history form a larger story or web of history. Through Oct. 20. MEMPHIS PINK PALACE MUSEUM, 3050 CENTRAL (636-2362), MEMPHISMUSEUMS.ORG.
Night Out With the Vets LGBTQ veterans will be offering up jello shots for a $1 donation each benefiting LGBTQ Veterans Alliance. $5. First Saturday of every month, 9 p.m.-midnight.
DRU’S PLACE, 1474 MADISON (870-740-2992), WWW.LGBTQVETERANSALLIANCE.COM.
Silent Retreat
This one-day retreat will give you the opportunity to revitalize yourself, clear your mind, deepen your understanding of self and others, and discover sources of strength within you. $108. Sat., Oct. 5, 8 a.m.-5:30 p.m. ART BODY SOUL STUDIO, 1024 SOUTH YATES (207-4161), ARTBODYSOULSTUDIO.COM.
StoryCorps Listening Event
StoryCorps has recorded over 100 interviews between friends, family members, and colleagues of the Mid-South community. And for the past month, they’ve been visiting Memphis. They’ll share some of their stories by the Big Stairs at Crosstown Concourse. Free. Tues., Oct. 8, 6:30-8 p.m. CROSSTOWN CONCOURSE, 1350 CONCOURSE.
Sun, Earth, Universe
A new interactive museum exhibit about Earth and space. Ongoing. MEMPHIS PINK PALACE MUSEUM, 3050 CENTRAL (636-2362).
CALENDAR: OCTOBER 3 - 9
OLD DOMINICK DISTILLERY, 305 S. FRONT (729-7146).
Toy Train Show
The Casey Jones Chapter of the Train Collectors Association is kicking off their 2019-2020 train show season. There will be lots of O-gauge trains and accessories available to browse. $5 per family. Sat., Oct. 5, 9 a.m.-2 p.m. ST. GEORGE’S EPISCOPAL CHURCH, 2425 SOUTH GERMANTOWN (7547282), MEMPHISMODELRAILROADERS.COM.
VolunCheers
Drinks and snacks are provided for volunteer happy hour to help a different organization with a specific task each month. Usually held the second Tuesday each month. For location and time, see website. Ages 21+ Second Tuesday of every month. VARIOUS LOCATIONS, SEE WEBSITE FOR MORE INFORMATION, VOLUNTEERODYSSEY.COM.
World Hoop Day
Grind City Flow Fest is partnering with Paint Memphis 2019 to throw one giant party to honor Memphis artists and the hula hoop community. At 1688 Lamar. Sat., Oct. 5, 2-10 p.m. SEE WEBSITE FOR MORE INFORMATION, PAINTMEMPHIS.ORG.
H O LI DAY EVE N TS
Mid-South Maze $8. Through Nov. 3.
AGRICENTER INTERNATIONAL, SHOWPLACE ARENA, 105 S. GERMANTOWN, MIDSOUTHMAZE.COM.
FO O D & D R I N K EV E N TS
Flight Tour: A Taste of Memphis
Up to 16 people per bike enjoy a flight of local spirits and brew during this twohour pub-crawl with Sprock n’ Roll’s bike bar to Old Dominick Distillery and Ghost River Brewing Tap Room. BYOB, but no glass tour. $315-$400. Fridays, Saturdays, 12-8 p.m. DOWNTOWN MEMPHIS, VARIOUS LOCATIONS (500-7101), SPROCKNROLLMEMPHIS.COM.
Food Truck Garden Party: Star Wars Night
Food trucks for October are The Fiesta Wagon, New Wing Order, CHOMP Food Truck, and Delish Mobile Bakery. Cover includes one drink ticket and admission to the event. $5 for members and $10 for non-members. Wed., Oct. 9, 5-8 p.m. MEMPHIS BOTANIC GARDEN, 750 CHERRY (636-4100).
Inky Barley Release
Hook Point Brewing Company launches their Scottish stout, Inky Barley. Sat., Oct. 5, 5 p.m. HIGHLANDER RESTAURANT & PUB, 78 N. MAIN.
Oktoberfest
The Edge-area brewery comes prepared with Oktoberfest and other traditional German beers. Music from Airshow, Arkansauce, and Boom Chicken. Edge Alley will be doing up their traditional Bavarian fare to serve the hungry masses. Sun., Oct. 6, noon. HIGH COTTON BREWING CO., 598 MONROE (896-9977).
Sunday Supper Series
Includes new cocktails, new bar menu, and a family-style, dinner. Call or visit website for reservations. $40. Sundays, 3-9 p.m. GRAY CANARY, 301 FRONT, THEGRAYCANARY.COM.
Wine Under Wings 2019
Salute to the Navy, Marine Corps, and Coast Guard personnel. Wine-tasting, live swing music, and more are part of the festivities amid military and vintage aircraft. $100. Thurs., Oct. 3, 6:30-10 p.m. WILSON AVIATION, 2930 WINCHESTER (570-2967), NAVYLEAGUEMEMPHIS.ORG.
F I LM
Antenna
Antenna, the original alternative club in Memphis, ground zero for new music for 15 years, and the place where the Midtown music scene was forged, is getting an official historical marker on October 5th. The night before the big celebration, the Lodge is presenting a rare opportunity to see the awardwinning documentary film. Free. Fri., Oct. 4, 7-10 p.m. BLACK LODGE, 405 N. CLEVELAND (272-7744).
Bessie Coleman, First Black Aviatrix
Known for performing flying tricks, Coleman’s nicknames were “Brave Bessie” and “Queen Bess.” Presented in French with English subtitles. Fri., Oct. 4, 5 p.m. LEMOYNE-OWEN COLLEGE, 807 WALKER (435-1000).
Dead Poet’s Society
English teacher John Keating inspires his students to look at poetry with a different perspective of authentic knowledge and feelings. Thurs., Oct. 3, 7-9:30 p.m. THE TOWER COURTYARD AT OVERTON SQUARE, 2092 TRIMBLE PLACE.
Dumb County Live Recording of Script Reading
A movie so insane and expensive to make that Piano Man Pictures wants you to experience it somehow. With an ensemble cast including the disgusting, racist town sheriff, the too-cool-for-school preacher, the out-of-work me-
chanic literally named Cornfed, and the yankee couple whose car broke down on the edge of town. Sat., Oct. 5, 7:30 p.m.
BEA U T Y MA X
A BEAUTY STORE AND SALON
BLACK LODGE, 405 N. CLEVELAND (272-7744).
Flying Free: The Bessie Coleman Story
Presented by Tales of Aviation, the story of the first AfricanAmerican woman to obtain a pilot’s license. Coleman grew up during a time when aviation schools in the United States would not let her learn to fly because of both her gender and race. So she taught herself French and moved to France, where she earned her license. Fri., Oct. 4, noon. SOUTHWEST TENNESSEE COMMUNITY COLLEGE, UNION AVENUE CAMPUS, 737 UNION (333-5300).
Donate $5 or more to Think Pink Memphis, and receive a Smarty Pits aluminum-free deodorant for FREE!
Gandhi
This acclaimed biographical drama presents major events in the life of Mohandas Gandhi, the beloved Indian leader who stood against British rule over his country. Free. Fri., Oct. 4 through Wed., Oct. 9. AJAY THEATRES - HOLLYWOOD 20 CINEMA, 6711 STAGE ROAD (763-FILM).
Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix
With their warning about Lord Voldemort’s return scoffed at, Harry and Dumbledore are targeted by the Wizard authorities as an authoritarian bureaucrat slowly seizes power at Hogwarts. Oct. 5-6, 4 p.m.
This October, Beauty Max is raising awareness and funds for Think Pink Memphis, an organization dedicated to supporting local survivors of breast cancer. Smarty Pits donates $.30 for every large stick deodorant to breast cancer research and free deodorant to oncology centers, cancer support events and non-profit groups.
7588 WEST FARMINGTON BLVD. GERMANTOWN, TN 38138 (901)758-8460 • WWW.BEAUTYMAXGTOWN.COM
CTI 3D GIANT THEATER, IN THE MEMPHIS PINK PALACE MUSEUM, 3050 CENTRAL (636-2362).
Hispanic Film Festival
The University of Memphis Spanish club and department of world languages hosts this festival to celebrate Hispanic Heritage Month. All movies will be shown in Spanish with English subtitles. Wed., Oct. 9, 6:30-8:30 p.m. UNIVERSITY OF MEMPHIS, UNIVERSITY CENTER.
Hyenas
Dramaan is the most popular man in Colobane, but when a woman from his past, now exorbitantly wealthy, returns to the town, things begin to change. Sun., Oct. 6, 5-7 p.m.
m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
This event serves up a morning of 25-minute “tastes” of different workouts available in the greater Memphis area. The workouts will range from HIIT to yoga. Tasting tours of the distillery are available as a cool-down option after the workouts. $35 in advance. Sun., Oct. 6, 8:30 a.m.-1 p.m.
Party: Hook Point Brewing Company
RHODES COLLEGE, 2000 N. PARKWAY (843-3000).
Poltergeist
A family’s home is haunted by a host of demonic ghosts. Fridays, 7-9 p.m. Through Oct. 18.
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
Taste of Fitness Memphis
CTI 3D GIANT THEATER, IN THE MEMPHIS PINK PALACE MUSEUM, 3050 CENTRAL (636-2362).
Superpower Dogs 3D
From hurricanes, earthquakes, and avalanches, canine rescuers use their incredible super senses to locate and rescue victims of disasters. Various showtimes, check website for more details. Ongoing. CTI 3D GIANT THEATER, IN THE MEMPHIS PINK PALACE MUSEUM, 3050 CENTRAL (636-2362).
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H E A LT H F E AT U R E B y S h a r a C l a r k
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Local nurse urges us to be aware of breast health.
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medicine that penetrates the hair follicles. Today, Spillers is an advocate for others going through the breast cancer experience. Her oncologist refers patients interested in doing cold caps to her to guide them through the process. “It usually turns into more as they find out I have been through everything,” she says. “I often talk to them several times, helping them through their journey. People will send others my way just for encouragement.” Spillers, 41, and her family relocated from Abilene, Texas, to the Memphis area two years ago after her husband, now a FedEx pilot, retired from the Air Force. Shortly after the move, she went through that second breast cancer journey and was treated at West Cancer Center in Germantown. “Today I have an excellent prognosis,” Spillers says. “I’ve been cancer free for a year.” Bridgett Spillers
JAIME ROGL PHOTOGRAPHY
F
amily Nurse Practitioner (FNP) Bridgett Spillers’ life changed on October 15, 2015. “I was going through my nightly routine and had a slight itch on my back,” she says. “I reached around to scratch and felt something odd in my left breast.” As an FNP — and with sites like WebMD at our fingertips — Spillers knows it’s easy to self-diagnose. “Sometimes too much knowledge is a curse,” she says. But she was sure what she felt was a lump, despite having a clinical breast exam done two months prior and receiving a negative result on a breast cancer gene risk test. It would be two weeks before she could get in to see an oncologist, but “after a battery of tests,” Spillers says, “I was diagnosed with HER2positive breast cancer.” The earliest stages of a cancer diagnosis are often the most arduous, she adds. “There are more questions than answers, and no matter how hard you try, it’s difficult not to think the worst.” HER2 is an aggressive cancer. She thought about her husband and three young children — would she be there for them? What would happen to her career? What about a mastectomy, chemo, radiation? Spillers says her emotional turning point came after meeting with an oncologist and formulating a plan because “every day of waiting was delaying the fight and hurting my chances of a successful outcome.” Spillers went through six rounds of chemotherapy, but after the fourth, the treatment plan “was validated,” she says, “because the tumor was undetectable via ultrasound.” After chemo, she underwent a double mastectomy, followed later by reconstruction. A follow-up biopsy showed she “had a pathological complete response — no detectable cancer. “For about six months, my life was back to normal, cancer was in my rearview, or so I thought,” Spillers says. But, like before, it started with an itch … The cancer came back. The second time around, Spillers had a lumpectomy, followed by 12 weeks of chemo, six weeks of radiation, and another year of antibodies. “My hair had just grown back,” she says, “so I was determined to try to preserve it. I’d heard about cold caps, so I researched and decided to give it a try. It was cumbersome but preserved my newly grown hair.” Cold caps are worn by some cancer patients to help reduce hair loss by decreasing the amount of chemo
Statistics suggest one in eight women will develop breast cancer. And Spillers says, “Early detection is key. Having routine check-ups important, but doing self-exams is just as important. Periodic exams help you get used to how your breast tissue feels, so that you can feel when something is different.” If you or a loved one receives a breast cancer diagnosis, Spillers says to talk with your health-care provider to learn about treatment options and devise a plan of attack that’s best for you. But perhaps most importantly, remain positive. “It is a long journey,” she says. “Approaching it one step at a time makes it more bearable. I have a saying: Keep your faith, have hope, and choose joy. I make an effort to choose joy, even when I struggle.”
SATURDAY
Oct 26
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10AM until 1:30PM For more info, please visit
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ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
Join representatives from public, private, charter, parochial, and other community schools and programs at the second annual Mid-South School Expo!
m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
2019
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T H E AT E R B y A l e x G r e e n e
Et tu, Brute? Tennessee Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar.
and his Acoustic Group
October 3-9, 2019
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noises of sea waves, chanting mobs, and sword play, sounds that are effectively combined with strategic lighting cues during the play itself; and the haunting music by the Westerlies suggests darker tones. But all of this seems to work at cross-purposes with the flat-white lighting palette. Similar cross-purposes are at work in the cast as well. In many cases, this enhances the play, as when Michael Khanlarian, as Caesar, evokes arrogance and benevolence in equal measure. This is true to the work’s refusal to paint any character as a villain, yet also can undercut the dramatic need for Caesar’s power grab to be so outrageous that assassination seems the only option left to the conspirators. As it is, their motivation to kill their leader, and their inner struggle with such motivation, seems lost in the face of Caesar’s geniality.
JOEY MILLER/TSC
I
t has been said that Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar is a play without villains, and that makes its tragedy all the more poignant. The point of the drama may be that violent solutions to political struggles will only backfire in the end, no matter how noble the intentions of its perpetrators. As a corollary, the play demands that we see both good and bad in all political actors, irrespective of their ideologies. It’s a point that Tennessee Shakespeare Company’s (TSC) production of the play, which opened last Friday and continues through Sunday, October 6th, conveys well. And in the current divisive political era, it’s perhaps the message we most need to hear. The Bard seemed to intuit the drama’s universal themes. After Caesar’s death, Cassius pauses to ask, “How many ages hence shall this our lofty scene be acted over, in states unborn and accents yet unkown?” Yet the perennial relevance of the play can obscure its deep ambivalence about seizing power by any means necessary. TSC’s staging avoids any literalist trappings, and thus remains true to the play’s original evenhandedness. True, the program does reprint, without comment, the Declaration of Independence (like the play, slightly abridged by the company), suggesting obliquely that we apply its lessons to our own country and time. But beyond that, director and company founder Dan McCleary avoids any overt linkage of the drama to our age. That was obvious before the play even began on opening night, when McCleary welcomed the audience to TSC’s “history museum.” It’s an accurate description of the set created by scenic designer Brian Ruggaber, a multi-level faux-marble courtyard dotted with displays of Roman swords and ruined statuary. The lighting design by Jeremy Allen Fisher accentuates this by largely favoring the full illumination of a museum display. The overall effect suggests that the narrative’s events be seen at a safe remove. While such an approach can emphasize Julius Caesar’s universality, it can also mute the darker elements of the story. Visions of the bloody dead rising up to speak to the guilty lose their frightful, gothic edge when so brilliantly illuminated. And yet the imaginative sound design by Eric Sefton compensates for this to a degree. Even while being seated, one hears the
Marc Antony (Phil Darius Wallace) and Caesar (Michael Khanlarian)
Nonetheless, Paul Bernardo brings a gravitas and urgency to Cassius that evokes enough inner torment over the decisions he and the other conspirators make to fuel the play’s momentum. And Phil Darius Wallace may well be this production’s most valuable player, portraying both the noble Marc Antony and the doddering, comedic Casca with equal aplomb. The actor’s challenge with all Elizabethan writing is to deliver the lines with enough nuance and dynamism to suggest real conversation, as opposed to recitation. These two fine thespians excel at this, with the rest of the cast following suit for much of the production. Yet the overall effect is to present the story somewhat abstractly: as a well-lit thought experiment, set out on a pedestal, ripe for contemplation. In the end, that may be the truest way to make this historical drama relevant to today’s climate of authoritarianism and resistance.
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Planner to search for potential terms to target. Cannabis also makes the list of prohibited content on Google AdWords. Thanks to all of this, CBD companies can’t use pay-per-click ads for advertising. An Arkansas company is side-stepping some of this by influencing social-media influencers. Little Rock-based Tree of Life Seeds launched its “CBDisLife” campaign last week. “What we’re doing is reaching out to social media gurus with large audiences who use CBD oil,” said Jason Martin, Tree of Life CEO. “They share how the products have benefited them, which clears up common misconceptions about CBD products and educates the general public.” The company said once other people catch onto the “CBDisLife influencer movement” they can join and share their stories, no matter their audience size.
’Dat CBD Life The legal cannabis industry in America, while lucrative, is still so young that its growing pains are numerous. For example, many banks won’t do business with cannabis retailers because cannabis is still illegal on the federal level. This means many cannabis retailers run as cash-only operations, leading to higher risks of robbery. Marketing cannabidiol (CBD) products can also be tricky. Thanks to those federal laws and a myriad of different state laws, getting messages to consumers online comes with high hurdles. For example, CBD ads are often banned from social media. Google doesn’t even allow marketing firms to use its Keyword
Cannabis Cafe On Monday, a Los Angeles Times story gave the ins and outs of The Lowell Cafe. The first-of-its-kind cannabis cafe in West Hollywood will allow diners to smoke cannabis inside and outside the restaurant, thanks to a new license issued by the city. Says the Times: “When you arrive, you will be seated at a table and greeted by a flower host (also known as a ‘budtender’) who will serve as your cannabis guide. He or she will drill you on your past cannabis experiences (whether you’re Snoop Dogg-level or haven’t smoked since high school or at all) and help personalize your cannabis order. You also will have a server from whom you can order food and nonalcoholic beverages.”
Can
·
OCT. 6
oves are afoot to open one of three approved medical marijuana dispensaries in West Memphis as plans have been submitted for a Body and Mind dispensary on OK Street. Body and Mind is a Vancouver-based, publicly traded company investing in cannabis cultivation with a production facility in Nevada. Its products include dried flower, edibles, topicals, extracts, and vape pen cartridges. Body and Mind strains have won the Las Vegas Hempfest Cup 2016, High Times Top Ten, and the NorCal Secret Cup. The company will team up with Arkansas’ Comprehensive Care Group to open the West Memphis dispensary. The project will get underway with $1.2 million in start-up costs, according to a news release issued by Body and Mind. Plans for the new dispensary in West Memphis must first be approved by city leaders there.
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NOTICE OF INTENT TO REQUEST RELEASE OF FUNDS FOR TIERED PROJECTS AND PROGRAMS On or about October 16, 2019 Shelby County will submit a request to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) for the amount of $2,600,000 for the release of federal funds under Title I of the Housing and Community Development Act of 1974 (CDBG), the HOME Investment Partnerships Program year funds under the National Affordable Housing Act of 1990 (HOME) to undertake the following project: Homeowner Rehabilitation Program ($1,800,000 - HOME and $800,000 - CDBG) – A program that provides funding for rehabilitation of owner occupied single family homes. It is estimated that 90homes will be serviced during the 2019-2023 federal FY Tier 2 Site Specific Review: The site-specific reviews will cover the following laws and authorities not addressed in the tier 1 broad review and will be addressed in the tier 2 site specific review for each address under this program when addresses become known. Level of Environmental Review Citation: Site Specific Review: The site specific reviews will cover the following laws: HUD Regulations at 24 CFR 58.6 Other Requirements, and Environmental Criteria and Standards and Site Contamination for 24 CFR Part 51 Subpart C. Estimated Projects Cost: $2,600,000. The activities proposed are categorically excluded under HUD regulations at 24 CFR Part 58 from National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) requirements per 24 CFR Part 58.5(a)(3)(i). An Environmental Review Record (ERR) that documents the environmental determinations for these projects is on file at the Shelby County Department of Housing 1075 Mullins Station Rd, Memphis, TN 38134 where the ERR can be examined and may be examined or copied weekdays 8:00 A.M to 4:30 P.M. PUBLIC COMMENTS Any individual, group, or agency may submit written comments on the ERR to the Shelby County Department of Housing Office, 1075 Mullins Station Rd, Memphis, TN 38134. All comments received by October 16, 2019 will be considered by the Shelby County prior to authorizing submission of a request for release of funds.
Lee Harris Mayor, Shelby County
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
OBJECTIONS TO RELEASE OF FUNDS HUD will consider objections to its release of funds and the Shelby County certification received for a period of fifteen days following its actual receipt of the request only if they are on one of the following bases: (a) the certification was not executed by the Certifying Officer or other officer of Shelby County approved by HUD; (b) Shelby County has omitted a step or failed to make a decision or finding required by HUD regulations at 24 CFR Part 58; (c) the grant recipient or other participants in the project have committed funds or incurred costs not authorized by 24 CFR Part 58 before approval of a release of funds by HUD; or (d) another Federal agency acting pursuant to 40 CFR Part 1504 has submitted a written finding that the project is unsatisfactory from the standpoint of environmental quality. Objections must be prepared and submitted in accordance with the required procedures (24 CFR Part 58) and shall be addressed to the Director of Community Planning and Development Division, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development located at HUD CPD, 710 Locust Street Suite 30, Knoxville, Tennessee 37902. Potential objectors should contact HUD to verify the actual last day of the objection period.
m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
ENVIRONMENTAL CERTIFICATION Shelby County certifies to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) that Lee Harris, in his capacity as Mayor of Shelby County, consents to accept the jurisdiction of the Federal Courts if an action is brought to enforce responsibilities in relation to the environmental review process and that these responsibilities have been satisfied. HUD’s approval of the certification satisfies its responsibilities under NEPA and related laws and authorities, and allows the Shelby County Housing Department to use HUD Program funds.
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FOOD NEWS By Michael Donahue
MEMPHIS
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adds different ingredients for the flavors. Among them are a Tahitian vanilla, which he did for Low Fi. “And then I make a goat milk caramel sauce,” he says. “It’s like a tangy caramel sauce made with goat milk. And I swirl the goat milk caramel into the vanilla.” The container idea dates to his childhood. “We would go to Huey’s back in the day, and you’d get a kid’s meal and they’d give you — I think it was — Klinke ice cream. That has somehow stayed in my head,” O’Brien says. “We could sell pints or even larger containers, but just having that little single-serve, this little bit of ice cream, it’s got nostalgia to it.” His wooden spoons are concave, but they’re flat on the bottom so all the ice cream can be scraped out of the container. The ice cream in containers are popu-
MICHAEL DONAHUE
1ST PLACE
emember those little cups of hard ice cream you ate with a flat wooden spoon at parties when you were in grade school? So does Schuyler O’Brien. He created “over yonder. delightfully crafted ice cream,” which he serves in 3.5-ounce individual containers with wooden gelato spoons. And the ice cream is soft. The ice cream is available in the nitro coffee floats at Low Fi Coffee inside Stock & Belle on South Main on Trolley Night, which is held the last Friday of every month. O’Brien plans to eventually sell the containers at Low Fi, but, for now, they can be purchased in quantities of 25 or more through AMF (A Moveable Feast) Catering, where he’s chef de cuisine. “It’s a brand of AMF right now, but I make every single batch,” O’Brien says. Schuyler O’Brien, 29, began O’Brien making the ice cream 10 years ago. “Same exact recipe,” he says. “This started when I was in culinary school and I made ice cream for the first time.” He made it in his advanced baking and pastry class at Le Cordon Bleu College of Culinary Arts in Orlando, Florida. “I had always seen people make ice cream, but it’s like American ice cream, where you just mix sugar and milk and whatever. Well, what I do is a classic French-style ice cream. So it’s actually a stirred custard. The base is heavy cream, whole milk, and then egg yolks and sugar.” It’s a crème anglaise — a “classic French sauce” if you don’t freeze it, O’Brien says. “Then once you freeze it, it becomes the ice cream. It’s a super old-school way to make ice cream, but there’s so much labor put into it.” O’Brien continued to make ice cream after he graduated and worked at Capriccio Grill at The Peabody, Blackberry Farm in Walland, Tennessee, and Catherine & Mary’s, where he was sous chef. “I’ve had three ice cream machines, all of them the home commercial ones that have the compressor in it,” he says. “Not the ones where you have to freeze the bowl. It’s a pretty big investment for me to just do as a hobby, to have an ice cream machine, but I would always have [ice cream] in the freezer.” The base is the same, but O’Brien
lar at catering events. “We passed them out when we were cutting the cake for this wedding, and people lost their minds,” he says. “They thought it was the coolest damn thing — that they’re getting these little gourmet ice creams with the cake.” As for the name, O’Brien wanted something “that was kind of Southern and kind of had some feel to it.” “Over yonder” with the “delightfully crafted ice cream” tagline “just feels good,” he says. O’Brien also is in graduate school in the hospitality program at the University of Memphis. And he’s assistant to the director at the Kemmons Wilson Culinary Institute at U of M. He’s always coming up with new ideas for over yonder. ice cream. “The possibilities are endless,” he says. “And no one is really doing this single-serve-type thing.” And, O’Brien says, “Next summer, I want to have three or four of those little carts and just roll out there, sell these little portions.” To order over yonder. ice cream, call AMF Catering at 522-9453.
THANK YOU, AGAIN, MEMPHIS! H VOTED BEST BAR H VOTED BEST BEER GARDEN
THANKS MEMPHIS FOR ALL OF YOUR VOTES
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55
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pie-flavored foods. If people want to consume pumpkin pie spices, and clearly they do, I suggest combining them with corn. Corn is sweeter than squash, and if prepared properly, creamier as well. So sweet and creamy, in fact, that corn, pumpkin spices, and a pinch of salt are all you really need to make a pumpkin pie-flavored drink. Pumpkin pie spice is a mix of ground cinnamon, cloves, nutmeg, allspice, and ginger. These roots, seeds, and bark share the trait of somehow tasting sweet without actually being sweet. In the presence of actual sweet ingredients, they really pucker up. Back to that corn spice drink. When my wife took a sip, what she said was music to my ears. Our kids swarmed into the kitchen, took sips, and said the same thing she had: “It tastes like pumpkin pie!” This was encouraging, but one question remained: Could I use my corny concoction in a pumpkin spice latte, aka the “PSL”? I took a trip to Starbucks and paid five bucks for the smallest cup they had. I didn’t taste any coffee, only pumpkin pie, but the barista claimed she added a shot. I took it home and added a shot of homemade espresso, which made it taste kind of funny. Apparently, too much coffee makes the funny taste that pumpkin can have stand out, which is the opposite of what pumpkin spice does. The corn spice latte (CSL), meanwhile, had none of that funniness, no matter how much coffee I added. And I added plenty. And when I added chocolate powder to the corn-coction, the resulting corn spice mocha (CSM) made me smile like a goofy jack-o-lantern. This recipe for corn spice drink that tastes like pumpkin pie includes a chocolate option, as well as directions for adding either variation to coffee drinks. To my taste, the CSL and CSM don’t require added sugar or milk because corn is so sweet and creamy. But if you want Starbucks-level decadence, adding sweetener and creamer is the easy part. For simplicity, I used a commercial
mix of ground pumpkin pie spice. For the extreme DIYers, here is a recipe for the mix: three teaspoons each of cloves and allspice, four teaspoons each of nutmeg and ginger, and six tablespoons cinnamon, all ground. Makes 2 servings • 2 ears sweet corn, shucked (or 2 cups frozen corn) • 2 cups water • ¼ teaspoon salt • 2 teaspoons pumpkin spices • Optional: 1 tablespoon cocoa powder • For corn spice latte or mocha base: ¼ cup (or more) heavy cream, 2 tablespoons (or more) sugar Cut off the tip of the cob and hold it tip down on a cutting board. Place a filet knife or the narrowest knife you can find about halfway down the cob and cut straight down, as close to the cob as possible, slicing off a sheet of kernels. Rotate your grip and slice off another sheet. Repeat until you’ve removed all the kernels (about a cup and a half from an average size ear).
ARII LEVAUX
W
hen people say they like pumpkin spiceflavored foods, what they mean is they like pumpkin
DIY PSL kit starts with (clockwise from bottom left) cinnamon, allspice, ginger, nutmeg, and cloves
Add the corn, along with the salt, spices, and chocolate, if using, to a pot with the water. On medium heat, stir together with a fork and bring to a simmer. Simmer for 5 minutes, covered. Turn off heat and allow to cool. When cool enough to work with, add to a blender, preferably a powerful one like a Vitamix. Start on the lowest speed, gradually increase the speed to high, and blend on high for about 60 seconds in a Vitamix, longer in a lesser blender. Keep going until it’s utterly smooth. If you wish to make a coffee drink, instead blend for 30 seconds on medium, and strain out the corn chunks and fibers. If you have a weak blender, do this, too. Pour the liquified or strained corn spices back into the pot and return to a simmer. Serve hot or cold.
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ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
continued from page 19 second-guess whether or not I’m a person to tell this story. But I couldn’t help but see all of my connections to it. I couldn’t help but see a guy in Los Angeles from the South with doors slamming in his face, basically turning to a rag-tag group of friends and saying, ‘Well, what if we just did it anyway?’” Brewer came to see the duality of the character was central to the story’s appeal. “I think it’s important for all the artists that I’ve had in my life. I get excited thinking about Rudy Ray Moore through the lens of Al Kapone and Harlan T. Bobo. I think I have a side of me that wants things to be larger than life — big music that hits right on an edit. But there is another side of me that’s at times insecure and wanting reassurance from friends and family around me.” Without his Dolemite costume, Moore “just looks like a normal, nice guy. Then you put on that wig, that hat, that jacket, and that cane, and the idea that he could escape into this man who was fearless ultimately helps that man who has fear,” Brewer says. “There are times that the whole ‘fake it till you make it’ is a healthy program when you’re trying to begin something. “It’s also something I see in Eddie’s work. I wouldn’t say there are two personalities, but there are definitely
two sides of the same coin. It’s there in The Nutty Professor, in Coming to America, definitely in Trading Places. It’s also in Eddie’s personal manner. He’s a very real, intellectual, soft-spoken man who doesn’t feel a need to perform for everybody in the room until it’s time for him to perform. Then this iconic entertainer suddenly emerges, and you’re like, ‘Wow! Where did this come from?’” Karaszewski says Brewer’s direction was integral to the final product. “I remember one of the first days on the set, we were filming one of the scenes from the chitlin’ circuit montage. I was standing there with Scott and said, ‘Thank god we actually got someone who knows what it looks like.’ Craig has been to these places. He knows that the signs with the booze specials have half the letters missing. He knows that there’s a smoker out in the back parking lot smoking some ribs and brisket. It has that lived-in feel. That was always our fear, that someone would take the script and make the superficial version of the story. It is very easy to make fun of the fact that Rudy is making a bad movie. What Craig did was add that realness that gave the movie a humanity.” Alexander says the production had a joy to it that is rare in the highpressure Hollywood world. “Being on his set was a blast. Craig created such a positive environment, it was a total joy
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“It is very easy to make fun of the fact that Rudy is making a bad movie. What Craig did was add that realness that gave the movie a humanity,” Larry Karaszewski says. to be on the set each day. Sometimes, actors who weren’t even working were just kind of hanging around. When we were shooting the closing shot of the movie, which is a big, elaborate crane shot, Craig had a little boom box where he would play music and sync it up. Eddie would do the take, then everyone would huddle around the monitor and Craig would say, ‘Let’s do playback!’ And he would do it with the music. It was like we were getting to watch the movie in real time! It was just so fun.” For Brewer, who had set so many of his films in Memphis, getting to shoot in L.A. was a dream come true. “We’re in Griffith Park, up in the mountains, and doing a ’70s car chase scene, where a police car is chasing Dolemite’s
car, sirens blaring, everything. I call action, and we’ve got two cameras going, and the car’s tires are squealing around the corner. I yelled ‘cut’ and just started going ‘Whoo hoo! Yes!’ I turned to the crew and said, ‘I’m sure y’all have probably filmed thousands of car chases. That was my first, and it couldn’t have been better!’”
A Dream Picture Coming 13 years after being nominated for Best Supporting Actor in Dreamgirls, Eddie Murphy’s performance in Dolemite Is My Name is a revelation. He’s funny, of course — Murphy and his late brother Charlie were doing Dolemite routines while they were preteens — but he is also vulnerable, as in the opening scene when he’s trying to get a DJ, played by Snoop Dogg, to spin his lame R&B records. The script is the spiritual successor to Ed Wood, telling the story of Moore’s transformation from a record store clerk and flailing nightclub comic to a comedy legend. Not only is Murphy good, but the deep cast of Moore’s collaborators all have fleshed-out characters to play. Snipes is perfection as the drunk director who bolts at the first hint that something better is coming along. Da’Vine Joy Randolph is a big discovery as Lady Reed, Dolemite’s partner in crime.
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF POINSETT COUNTY, ARKANSAS DOMESTIC RELATIONS DIVISION JOHN WALCK VS. JENNIFER WALCK
PLAINTIFF
NO. DR-2015-173
DEFENDANT NOTICE OF COMMISSIONER’S SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, That in pursuance of the authority and directions contained in the Order of Sale of Marital Property contained in that certain Decree of Divorce appearing in paragraph 4(d), of the Circuit Court of Poinsett County, made and entered on August 26, 2016, in a certain cause No. DR-2015-173 then pending therein between John Walck and Jennifer Walck, the undersigned, as Commissioner of said Court will offer for sale at public venue to the highest bidder, at the main entrance of the County Courthouse in which said Court is held in Harrisburg, Arkansas in the County of Poinsett, with the hours prescribed by law for judicial sales, on the 8TH day of October, 2019, at 10:30 a.m., the following described real property situated in Shelby County, Tennessee to wit: 1.
Lot 96, FINAL PLAT, PHASE II, SUTTON PLACE P.D., as shown on plat of record in Plat Book 217, Page 3, in the Register’s Office of Shelby County, Tennessee, to which plat reference is hereby made for a more particular description of said property. Being part of the same property as conveyed to IRONGATE HOMES, LLC, by Deed recorded at Instrument Number 09050092, in the Register’s Office of Shelby County, Tennessee.
2. 3. 4. 5.
Boat: 1990 Sea Ray 20’ Cuddy Cabin boat. Hull # SERV32611990 Boat Trailer: 1992 Load Rite, ID# 4E0dR014N2000135 Camper: 1985 Mallard Model 1US, body type TL Furniture: a. 4 piece leather sofa b. Dining table c. (8) Dinning chairs d. (4) Bar stools e. King size memory foam bed f. 8 x 11 area rug
TERMS OF SALE: The Cordova, Tennessee property shall be sold by public sale by the Poinsett County Circuit Clerk acting as Commissioner, within (60) days of the entry of the Decree, unless the parties agree otherwise. Notice of the sale shall be provided in Jonesboro Sun, in Craighead County and The Memphis Flyer in Shelby County, A one (1) time a week for four (4) consecutive weeks prior to the date of sale. The final publication shall be no more than (10) days prior to the sale. The proceeds from the sales shall first be applied to the payment of any debt existing thereon, and the costs of the sales. Misty Russell Commissioner
JOKER (R)
10/3 THE GOONIES 10/10 THE BIG LEBOWSKI 10/17 SIXTEEN CANDLES
m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
was the key to getting the film’s tone exactly right. “I am sure it’s possible to make a Martin Scorsese-style, darker examination of Rudy Ray Moore. I just don’t know if that’s really the spirit of Rudy Ray Moore. He was really happy. He was about entertainment and fun, but I think we have the appropriate amount of vulnerability in the movie. Eddie is not just in it for the yucks. He’s portraying a very real character and somebody who means a lot to him because he was a huge fan. It’s been a dream of his to make this movie for more than a decade.” For Karaszewski, Craig’s background as a scrappy indie filmmaker who broke into the Hollywood system made him the perfect person to helm Dolemite Is My Name. “No one was going to hand Craig Brewer or Rudy Ray Moore a bunch of money to go make their dreams come true, so they had to do it themselves.”
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
Keegan-Michael Key gets laughs as the intellectual straight man to Moore’s outlandish street performer. Memphian Claude Phillips, who has been in every Brewer movie since Hustle & Flow, cameos as a hobo who teaches Moore the rhyming cadence that would eventually make him known as one of the godfathers of rap. Scott Bomar, Memphis musician and producer, composed the soulful score, which was recorded in Memphis. “We were trying to make a fun, entertaining movie,” says Karaszewski. “We didn’t realize how audiences would take it as inspirational. They look at the can-do spirit of Rudy Ray Moore. If someone closes a door in his face, he will open up another door. There’s so much comedy in the movie, but the inspiration is played sincere and played honest, so audiences come away with that.” Brewer says Murphy’s performance
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THE LAST WORD by Maya Smith
Brandon Allen
It was one small step for a teenager, Brandon Allen, but a giant leap for humankind. I’m sure you’ve seen it or read about it by now, but last week White Station High School (Go Spartans!) did something historic and important when they crowned Allen Homecoming Royalty — not king, not queen, just royalty. It only takes small steps to pave the way for change and make equality a reality, and White Station is well on its way. What happened last week is a win for not just Allen, but the entire LGBTQ+ community. It’s a big deal. There’s much to be said about it. First, there’s Allen, the brave high school senior who unashamedly (and rightfully so) wore a sparkling gold dress to homecoming and who is obviously not afraid to be his authentic self. This is what not conforming to the norms that you don’t agree with looks like. This is what being a trailblazer looks like. This is what courage looks like. Then there are the students. The students who support him, accept him, and ultimately voted for him. They clearly understand what it means to be open-minded, to be kind, and to be an ally. And if the world needs anything right now, it is more people like these students — who know how to truly be tolerant. If these kids are the future, then the future is sure to be bright. If these are our future mayors, lawmakers, doctors, lawyers, and judges, we might be in good hands. This is progress. Seven years ago, I was a senior at White Station, and I don’t think I, or many of my peers, were half as open-minded or tolerant as these students. And we definitely didn’t have an ounce of the boldness Allen possesses. The world is changing. I think the crazy and ubiquitous acts of hate and violence occurring in this country are a double-edged sword. The effects are devastating on one hand, but on the other hand, they are forcing youth to grow up faster, to mature quicker, and to realize early that tolerance is the antidote to hate. So hats off to these kids for showing us adults the way. Still, Allen’s win wouldn’t have been possible without the school and its administration opening the door and setting a tone of tolerance. This year, for the first time, the school ditched its traditional, binary titles of Homecoming King and Queen, and instead introduced the gender neutral, allencompassing Homecoming Royalty title. White Station’s principal, Carrye Holland, even in the face of critics and haters, explained the school’s position best in a Facebook post: “Here’s the thing: it’s Brandon’s right to run for homecoming court under Title IX. It’s the students’ choice of who they want to support as homecoming royalty. I’m exceedingly proud to be the principal of our amazing school. You don’t have to agree, but disrespectful comments will be deleted. WSHS loves and supports everyone, regardless of who they are or what they believe. Thank you for the love and light from so many of you.” Taking this stand, doing the right thing by all students, even when you know everyone won’t agree, is huge. We need so much more of this in this world. We need more Allens and more Hollands to stand up. We have got to start taking steps like White Station has done to make everyone feel included and valued no matter who they are or how they identify. If the world continues to ignore those whose identity differs from what’s considered “traditional” or “normal,” then we will forever be dimming the light of people like Allen. We need lights like his to permeate the darkness and the hate that seems to prevail in this country. I’m glad the White Station community not only sees Allen for who he is, but they also accept him, respect him, and let his light shine uninhibitedly. This is real, tangible progress, and I’m proud that it happened at my alma mater. But honestly, I’d be just as proud to see it happen at any school in the city or across the country. Because this is what we need more of — more tolerance and love, less hate and violence. Maya Smith is a Flyer staff writer.
m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
EMMETT CAMPBELL
White Station High School sets a new bar for tolerance and acceptance.
THE LAST WORD
One Giant Leap
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