JANUARY | FEBRUARY 2019
THE
REAL ESTATE ISSUE
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CONTENTS
60
JANUARY/FEBRUARY 2019
Photo Credit: Mainsail Hotels
Reborn: The rise and fall and rise again of The Fenway Hotel by David Warner
6 Publisher’s Letter 8
Editor’s Letter
14 dR Picks: New Year, New You
17 Real Estate, Real Lives: Profiles of six industry leaders. 18 Suzan Decker Ross 20 Tim Clemmons 22 Toni Everett 24 Brian & Debbie Taub 26 Bobby Alvarez By Eric Snider Photos by Todd
54 Valentine Getaways: Not-So-Long-Distance Romance by Mary Lou Janson
76 Arts: How Did We Get Here? Theater veterans Mimi & Rich Rice by Mitzi Gordon & Tom Kramer
28 Sarasota’s Surprising Rug Emporium
78 Arts: The Generous Vision of Painter Jane Bunker by David Warner
by David Warner
33 48 4
Real Estate: This is Florida Living Travel: Switzerland’s Lavaux Wine Region by Megan Padilla
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70 Health: The Gift of Life at TGH
58 Valentine Dining: 5 Ultra-Romantic 72 Fashion: Styles for Restaurants Florida’s “cold” by Mary Lou Janson & David season Warner 74 Sports: 10 Reasons You Gotta Go To Valspar by David Warner
Bates
30 Not Your Grandma’s Appliances By Janan Talafer
66 Auto: The Truck Artist by Mitzi Gordon
74 62 Dining Out: The Final Straw by Heidi Kurpiela 64 Wine: Brian Seel’s Vineration by Eric Kennedy
81 A&E Guide: Hamilton, MUSE and more…
96 Back Page: The Fun of Helping Others by Thomas L. duPont
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FROM THE PUBLISHER Dear Reader, Welcome to 2019. Admittedly, by the time you read this you will be well into the new year. But Happy New Year! It’s going to be quite a year with a lot going on. Both sides of the Bay are alive with great projects, events and milestones that will mark this year as truly unique. Be sure to note that this is our Real Estate Issue with 14 pages of editorial and advertising featuring some of the most exciting, admirable and expensive properties on the market. Our cover home is the magnificent, Tuscan-style estate hidden away in Largo on the Intracoastal Waterway. Yes, that’s an infinity-wall pool up in the air. And for those of you who want to participate, find the dR symbol on the cover and e-mail me at tdupont@duPontREGISTRY.com. We will announce the winner when the correct location is sent in. New to the masthead this issue is Bruce Bicknell, a graphic arts production guru with tons of experience and expertise that is already revolutionizing our production process. Welcome Bruce. Are you looking to promote your business in a marketplace full of readers that are interested in the finer things in life? Look no further than here and on our website www.dupontregistrytampabay.com. Contact any of our media relationship specialists for help. All of us at duPont REGISTRY Tampa Bay wish you and your families and friends a happy, healthy and prosperous new year. Let us know of any unique happenings in your neighborhood. Happy Living,
Thomas L. duPont Publisher/CEO P.S. Special thanks to Kevin King of Tack Sharp Media for the real estate section cover on page 33. The Kellogg mansion on the Intracoastal just north of Dunedin is a beautiful and unusual Florida residence, made even more spectacular by Kevin’s astonishing photographs. Kevin can be reached at kevinking@tacksharpmedia.com.
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FROM THE EDITOR
Saturday, January 26 at 9:00 a.m.
No, that’s not me in the pic — I should have so much hair — it’s our Cairn terrier, Walter. He’s enjoying the view from his new digs in a downtown St. Pete high-rise, where my husband and I moved in the middle of the Christmas rush after selling our home of 15 years. So yes, there was not a little irony in the fact that, while I was editing this, duPont Registry Tampa Bay’s Real Estate Issue, I was up to my ears in, well, real estate. Or rather, the contingencies of shifting life from one piece of real estate to another, with all the contracts and boxes and free-floating angst such a move entails. And as for Christmas — well, let me just say I’m glad we purchased a couple of nifty little decorator numbers from the Festival of Trees (see p. 91), or else there would have been no Christmas tree action happening in our neck of the woods. All this is to say that I have grown increasingly aware of the challenges and skill sets brought to bear every day by people in the real estate professions. That’s one reason I’m excited that this issue includes behind-the-scenes portraits of six such professionals in our special “Real Estate, Real Lives” section, with revealing interviews by Eric Snider and striking photos by Todd Bates. (See p. 27 for a quote that seems uniquely apt in relation to some of the fantastic manses advertised on p. 33-46.) Elsewhere in this edition, we fill your minds with dreams of escape to Switzerland’s Lavaux wine region and suggestions for some romantic getaways that won’t require jumping on a plane — including a brand new hotel in a grand old building. Looking ahead to the new year, our dR Picks include 10 ways to invigorate your mind and body; looking back to years past, we launch a new series, “How Did We Get Here?” in which writer Mitzi Gordon and photographer Tom Kramer talk to key figures in the growth of Tampa Bay’s lively arts scene. And for everything (well, almost everything) you need to know about what’s happening right now in the arts (including who to call to snag those elusive Hamilton tickets), our A&E Calendar is bigger than ever. There’s lots more — cold-weather fashions, hand-painted trucks, a golf championship that’s not just about golf, a painter of uncommon generosity. To be sure, though, generosity is not all that uncommon around here, as evidenced by the many good causes celebrated in our Party/People pages, and on our own Back Page, where the message is a good one to carry with you all year long. Here’s hoping your new year is full of good news — and if you see Walter on the balcony, give him a wave.
David Warner Editor in Chief
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PUBLISHER/CEO Thomas L. duPont EDITOR-IN-CHIEF David Warner MANAGING EDITOR Bruce Bicknell DIGITAL MARKETING Eric Kennedy SOCIAL MEDIA Karissa Letchworth CONTENT CONTRIBUTORS Todd Bates, Mitzi Gordon, Mary Lou Janson, Eric Kennedy, Tom Kramer, Heidi Kurpiela, Tracy Negoshian, Megan Padilla, Eric Snider, Janan Talafer TAMPA BAY ADVERTISING DIRECTOR Ed Barry SALES MANAGER/COMMUNITY RELATIONS Molly duPont #JF19-SydEntel-218652-q-kn.qxp_Layout 1 1/7/19 10:59 AM Page 1
ADVERTISING EXECUTIVES Ron Barreto, Marty Binder, Cindy Carr, Sharon Castellano, John D. Chapman, Kathy DeCesare, Jill Massicotte DESIGN Elizabeth B. Kobal, Khoi Nguyen PRESS MANAGEMENT Charlie Walsh PRODUCTION MANAGER Tony Alvis
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The duPont REGISTRY™ is copyright 2019 by Registry Media, LLC. All rights reserved. duPont REGISTRY™, duPont REGISTRY Luxury Living in Tampa Bay, the Steering Wheel design, dupontregistry.com™, and various titles and headings herein, are trademarks of duPont Publishing, Inc. and may not be reproduced without written consent. Printed in the U.S.A. Published six times per year. Single copies available at your newsstand or call our publishing office for shipping information. Canadian GST not included in cover price. The pictures for sale and the written offer for sale are the responsibility of the individual advertiser. duPont REGISTRY™ and duPont Publishing, Inc. make no representation or warranty for accuracy or content. All photos become the property of duPont Publishing, Inc. when printed unless otherwise agreed to by the Publisher.
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dR PICKS: NEW YEAR, NEW YOU Try pilates. Pilates is a unique form of exercise, just as each person’s body and goals are unique. Meet your own physical needs and goals at Pilates by Athena, where you can arrange for private hourly or half-hourly training on all Pilates equipment. With over 500 exercises and rehabilitation exercises, you’ll find multiple routes to a healthier you. 118 Clearwater-Largo Road S., Largo, 727-678-3807.
Stretch yourself at Pilates by Athena.
Tap into your inner goddess. Women’s empowerment guru Sierra Bender, known for her trademarked Goddess workshops, is opening her new 4 Body Fit™ Institute in St. Petersburg this year, kicking things off with a “Goddess in the Bedroom” retreat Feb. 8-10. The retreat is billed as a “sexy and passionate workshop for single and married women” that includes “aromatherapy, tantric and healing exercises, massage, Goddess to the Core® Inside Out Workout™ (including yoga, weight training, exercise bands, and breath work) and discussions on women’s sexual fitness and health.” Retreat, $499 (includes personal aromatherapy blend & supplies), 3001 16th St. N., St. Petersburg, 888-794-3330, 4BodyFitInstitute.com.
Take a dose of elderberry syrup. Elderberries contain antioxidants, and many believe they can relieve colds, fight the flu, and boost the immune system. The elixir made from the berry at South Tampa’s Necessary Elements is so popular that the proprietor, herbalist and massage therapist Amanda Boyette, posts updates on her Facebook page when a new shipment is coming in. 18-oz. bottle, $20; 16 oz., $35, @ NecessaryElementsofSouthTampa.
Sierra Bender and her husband, Will Higbee, at the Red Power Party, a private event at the 4 Body Fit™ Institute in December.
An elixir so popular at Necessary Elements that it’s hard to keep it in the store.
Hire a trainer who makes house calls. Always finding excuses not to go to the gym? Here’s a solution: Find a trainer who comes to you. Tom Bauer is a licensed personal trainer and massage therapist who’s excellent at judging where your limitations are, particularly if you’re someone for whom injury, weight or age has affected balance and function. He’s fun, relaxed, upbeat — and if you’ve got a mat and a ball, maybe some weights or an exercise bike in your home, or better yet at that gym you never go to — he will set up a routine that’s right for you. He can schedule at-home massages, too, for the same price as a training session. (He’s also a certified welder, though there’s probably less call for welding house calls.) Tom Bauer personal training sessions, $65 an hour, 727-215-6043.
Trainer Tom Bauer shows how it’s done at a downtown St. Pete gym.
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dR PICKS: NEW YEAR, NEW IDEAS Attend the St. Petersburg Conference on World Affairs. How do you make sense of an increasingly confusing world? Here’s one way: Spend a weekend engrossed in stimulating discussions about critical international issues with top intelligence officials, diplomats, media and academic experts. A cooperative venture of a group of civic-minded St. Petersburg residents and the University of South Florida St. Petersburg, it might be just what you need right now — and it’s free! Just make sure to register ahead of time via the conference website or by phone, and plan ahead; seating is first-come, first-served. Feb. 12, 5 p.m.: Keynote speech by Chas Freeman, former U.S. Ambassador to Saudi Arabia. Feb. 13-15: Daily panel discussions, USFSP University Student Center, 200 6th Ave. S., and USFSP Lynn Pippenger Hall, 700 4th St. S. 727-873-4872, worldaffairsconference.com.
Take a class at the Morean Arts Center. The Morean (pronounced Mor-eeyun) is known for its gallery, its hot shop (site of popular glass-blowing demos) and for its Chihuly Collection, the museum devoted to internationally renowned glass artist Dale Chihuly. But it’s also home to a mind-enriching menu of classes in a wide variety of genres, with teachers well-known on the local art scene like painters Marc Levasseur and Neverne Covington and innovative writing workshops like “Writer’s Gym,” where “just like personal trainers, we’ll give each other the tips, tricks and gentle pushes which build strong writing muscles,” taught in partnership with Keep St. Pete Lit’s LitSpace Literary Arts Institute. Winter Session 1: Jan. 7-Feb 17; Winter Session 2: Feb. 25-Apr. 7; Spring Session: Apr. 15-May 26. Each session lasts 6 weeks, with class meeting once per week. 719 Central Ave., 727-822-7872, moreanartscenter.org.
Exercise your creative writing muscles at the Morean/ LitSpace “Writer’s Gym.” Photo by Tara Quellhorst.
Lou Holtz, Michio Kaku, Jenna Bush Hager, Carl Hiassen, and Platon are the speakers in Tampa Theatre’s “Limelight” series.
Subscribe to Limelight. You’re bound to learn something new, and get entertained, too, if you attend Tampa Theatre’s inaugural speaker series, Limelight. The lineup is irresistibly eclectic: legendary football coach Lou Holtz (Mar. 12); theoretical physicist Michio Kaku (Apr. 4); NBC correspondent and presidential daughter Jenna Bush Hager (Apr. 23); Florida’s favorite columnist/novelist/pot-stirrer Carl Hiaasen (May 14); and renowned photographer Platon (June 6). Series subscriptions are on sale now for $275-$375 at the theater’s box office and online for an additional fee. A select number of Platinum packages (premium seating, cocktail receptions) are also available. Fun fact from the Tampa Theatre crew: The word “limelight” derives from the invention in the early 1800s of theatrical lighting technology using quicklime, which bathed any scene in an intense white glow when burned at a temperature of more than 4500°F and focused through a thick glass lens. For the first time, plays could simulate sunlight, and individual performers could be highlighted. The technology’s name soon took on a life of its own, forever associated with the bright glow of fame. Look for Limelight’s famous speakers to shed new light on their areas of expertise. Tampa Theatre, 711 N. Franklin St., Tampa, tampatheatre.org. Carl Hiaasen photo by Tom Chapman.
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dR PICKS: NEW YEAR, NEW LOOK Get a new headshot. When you need a good photo of yourself but a selfie just won’t do, let award-winning professional photographer Jessica McKnight give you the image upgrade your beautiful face deserves. A 20-minute headshot session is $150, and includes two edited high-resolution images. Additional images can be purchased à la carte, or buy the full collection. Her Clearwater space includes two separate studios and a hair and makeup bar, too ($80 for makeup; $150 for hair and makeup). 1433 S. Fort Harrison Ave., Clearwater, 727-269-7740, jessicamcknight.com
Portraits both dressy and casual by Jessica McKnight.
Edit your closet. Start the New Year off right with a closet edit by fashion stylist Michelle Bremer of Runway Translator. Michelle will curate your wardrobe and help to refine your personal style — fresh New Year, fresh new YOU! 813-7589587, michelle@runwaytranslator.com
Michelle Bremer of Runway Translator..
Make an appointment with your Arbonne lady (or gentleman). Arbonne International is a 35-year-old cosmetics company that has brought the old door-to-door multi-level marketing model into the 21st century, with an emphasis on health and wellness, selling botanically based products that are scientifically tested (but never on animals). Try their Genius Ultra to maximize application of your favorite skincare product with ultrasound waves (starting at $152). Ask Amber about Arbonne’s preferred client discount membership and referral rewards program. AmberAllechi.Arbonne.com
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REAL ESTATE, REAL LIVES
Real Estate, Real Lives Behind the scenes with people making a mark on Tampa Bay’s residential landscape. INTERVIEWS BY ERIC SNIDER • PHOTOGRAPHS BY TODD BATES
T
heir imprint is everywhere. Where we live, where we eat, work and play. When we take a stroll or gaze out the car window. Tampa Bay is brimming with real estate professionals. They shape our neighborhoods, ‘burbs, commercial centers and downtowns. They are the risk-takers for whom a fickle market can mean boom or bust — and lately, they’ve been on a roll. For this issue, we have chosen six esteemed real estate professionals who work in five disciplines essential to the industry. They are hard-working and visionary, thick-skinned and sensitive. They serve their clients above all. And each has a deep and abiding connection with Tampa Bay. Here are their stories.
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Todd Bates
REAL ESTATE, REAL LIVES
Suzan Decker Ross 18 www.duPontREGISTRY.com www.duPontREGISTRYtampabay.com
REAL ESTATE, REAL LIVES
She Loves The Big Reveal
Interior Designer Suzan Decker Ross
I
n the back corner of the waiting room of Decker Ross out on her own, opening up in an 850-square-foot office on Interiors in Clearwater, next to a small sign that says West Bay Drive with a $50 desk and a used fax machine. The “Relaxation Zone,” one piece of furniture exerts its own company now operates out of an eye-catching, two-story modern gravitational pull. building amid strip malls on Court Street, just east of downtown. Seconds after arriving, I’m drawn to the big, black massage I ask Suzan to tell me about a project that really put her chair. As I look it over, about to have a seat, Suzan Decker Ross company on the map. She pauses, her expression turns quizzical, emerges from her office. She greets me with a warm smile and a then brightens. “My goodness, it was HGTV,” she says. “We handshake, then insists that I take off my shoes and make myself won the ‘Designer’s Challenge’ in the mid-2000s.” Decker Ross comfortable in the chair. I do as told. It envelops me — rollers Interiors competed with two other firms to design a couple of ripple my arms, move up and down my back, thighs, buttocks, rooms in a Belleair luxury home. That exposure led to a stint as the bottoms of my feet. The machine is a marvel. Suzan looks the Design Guru on Newschannel 8’s Daytime program. on, beaming. Suzan’s overseas buying trips have given her insight into She has the kind of vibrant personality that’s been a design trends and how international ultimately influences The major asset during her career as a top interior designer local. “It starts in Europe, then goes to California and HGTV in Tampa Bay. Her firm of eight women marked eventually ends up in Florida,” she says, adding, ‘Designer’s its 25th anniversary in 2018, and celebrated “This part of Florida is more Midwestern, not as Challenge’ winner by doing about 300 projects, ranging from flashy, more earthy.” has built one of the Bay $5,000 bathrooms to entire mega-mansions But just to be clear: You want flashy? She’ll area’s most and commercial projects for six-figure fees. give you flashy. in-demand While Decker Ross’s taste runs “contemporary, One of Suzan’s prestige projects, among her firms. with clean lines,” and she lives on the beach with her favorites, was the Capitol Theater in Clearwater. As second husband, Edward Mitchell, in a home with a part of a design team that made over the historic venue coastal-style interior, her business is all about delivering what into a classy, 750-seat music hall, she helped develop the color the customer desires. “Some know exactly what they want and scheme, the hard surfaces, even the ironwork on the exterior. can describe it, but I would say that more of them can’t quite put When doing a home, Decker Ross takes a floor-to-ceiling, it all together,” Suzan says. turnkey approach. “We want them to be able to walk in with a That’s when she or one of her staff breaks out design magazines toothbrush,” she says. and “inspiration photos” for clients to identify looks they like. Suzan’s favorite part of her job is the reveal, not much They ask probing questions about the client’s lifestyle. How do different than the ones on TV. She and her team — three or four they entertain? Do they have animals? Allergies? designers, plus assistants — occupy the home for several hours “I tell them it’s like a puzzle,” Suzan explains. “You look at to perform a full installation right down to the last detail. “Some the box and see what it looks like finished. Then you throw the of the clients want to be there during the process, but I really puzzle pieces out on the table and start to build it.” encourage them to leave, go grab lunch,” she says. “Personally, I Suzan Decker grew up in Ocean Township, New Jersey — like it when the clients come back, we have them close their eyes, about 50 miles south of New York City — and, like so many then walk them in. It’s so wonderful to watch their faces.” other young people in the late 1970s, headed to Florida more or Sometimes the reveal goes to great lengths. “When we finished less on a whim. “There was something about the name ‘Clear- Radiance MedSpa [in Belleair Bluffs], Stephanie Schlageter, the water,’” she quips, grinning. owner, marched her whole team down the sidewalk,” Suzan Suzan attended St. Petersburg Junior College, earning degrees recalls. “There was paper on the windows. And they were in interior design and fashion merchandising. She followed that blindfolded.” up by working as an in-house designer for local furniture stores. With that, Suzan Decker Ross’s face lights up — again. After seven years at Harrison Furniture & Interiors, she struck www.duPontREGISTRYtampabay.com www.duPontREGISTRY.com 19
Todd Bates
REAL ESTATE, REAL LIVES
Tim Clemmons 20 www.duPontREGISTRY.com www.duPontREGISTRYtampabay.com
REAL ESTATE, REAL LIVES
HE SAW THE FUTURE Architect Tim Clemmons
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eddling his bicycle along the streets of downtown Tim spent his early life in rural Tennessee, near the Alabama St. Petersburg, clad in snug black jeans, a rumpled white border. His father, a U.S. Air Force sergeant, moved the family button-down and beige sport jacket, Tim Clemmons is the to Eglin Air Force Base in the Florida Panhandle when Tim was model of contemporary urbanism. 11. He’d had no exposure to architecture, but in the fifth grade he Most days are bike days. His 2014 Ford Fusion hybrid is parked realized he was good at drawing and math. “Someone said, ‘You by his townhome a few blocks north. It’s a four-unit place near should be an architect,’ and, without really knowing what it was, Sundial that he and three friends developed on a 50-by-100-foot lot I started saying that’s what I was going to be,” Tim recalls. The and moved into 21 years ago. At the time, it was downtown’s first notion stuck. He did his architecture studies — undergrad and post-grad — at new residential building since 1981. That project was the first significant pillar in the 59-year-old University of Florida. Tim first visited downtown St. Petersburg on architect’s over-arching professional mission. a Sunday in 1982, while a grad student at UF. He didn’t see “God’s “When I was around 30, I thought about what I wanted my waiting room,” but rather a beautiful waterfront and “good bones.” career goal to be, and that was to make downtown St. Petersburg “I had a favorable first impression,” he remembers of downtown, a thriving, vibrant, urban place — more so than, say, me designing “but I didn’t see a single person.” 10 individual masterpiece buildings,” Tim muses. “I never styled The newly minted architect moved to Tampa and took a job with myself as one of these architects who is purely, naturally gifted, but the firm Rowe Holmes. He relocated to St. Pete in ’84. A couple of I thought I could help take these two square miles to the next years later, Tim and his new wife scraped together $2,500 and level.” moved to San Francisco. He fell under the thrall of urban So the next time you’re inclined to pinch yourself about living, but his West Coast odyssey lasted only a year and a Three what downtown St. Pete has become, know that Tim half. When his wife got pregnant, she wanted to return decades ago, Clemmons played no small role. home to St. Pete to be near family. he envisioned His firm, Place Architecture, specializes The couple divorced two years later. downtown St. Pete as a in multi-family residential. Tim’s projects Tim considered returning to that other Bay thriving urban center, and include the Bliss tower, The Salvador, 475 area, but ultimately decided to stay in St. Pete has done all he could Condominium, and the Morean Arts Center. Ten to be near his daughter, Alexa — and to apply his to make it years ago, he began designing major renovations for passion for urbanism. He lives in his 1,550-square happen. affordable-housing high-rises that were built in the ’70s, foot condo with his second wife, Robin, whom he mostly occupied by seniors. That led to designing new married this year. buildings like Campbell Landings and The Graham. Tim feels that his early-career activism, at times Over time, his reach has spread to nearby cities, where his controversial, has served him well. “Most architects are timid firm designed Tampa’s Armature Works, a popular mixed-use when it comes to discussions about their cities for fear of offending development. His current marquee project, due to break ground people who could be potential clients,” he says. “I made some soon, is The Sanctuary, a 17-story luxury condo building on enemies, but made more friends, and I think I’ve gotten more Bayshore Boulevard in Tampa. business by being outspoken than by keeping my mouth shut.” But it hasn’t just been the stuff he’s helped build. It’s also projects While Tim feels generally good about downtown St. Pete these he helped prevent. Tim and a group of other activists fought against days, he offers a note of caution. Bay Plaza, a 1980s master plan bent on turning a fair portion of “The big developers are aware of us now and with that comes downtown into what he calls a “big, homogenous mall.” After an influx of money,” he explains. “They’re not doing bad projects, demolishing a few historic buildings, including the Soreno Hotel but they are doing fewer and fewer, bigger and bigger projects. I in ’92, Bay Plaza withered away. Urban disaster averted, in Tim’s like to see 10, 20 buildings per block instead of one building per view. block. “We like to think we deserve the credit,” Tim says with a grin. “So you got to be careful what you wish for,” he warns. “You “We did slow the project down. But it was mostly the economy.” just might get it.”
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Todd Bates
REAL ESTATE, REAL LIVES
Toni Everett 22 22 www.duPontREGISTRY.com www.duPontREGISTRYtampabay.com
REAL ESTATE, REAL LIVES
SHE KNOWS THE BUSINESS Realtor Toni Everett
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s the photographer clicks away, Toni Everett stands She accepted the challenge. “I wanted to see how it would work by the gate of a stately South Tampa mansion and out with my family,” she says. “As it turned out, we managed it calls over. “Are you getting the house in the shot?” She pretty well. They were proud of me.” gestures behind her with a sweep of the arm. A woman running a jobsite was certainly unique for the time. “Yeah, it’s in there, but this shoot’s about you,” the But Toni wouldn’t be pushed around. “The workers didn’t photographer replies with a chuckle. know what to make of me,” she recalls with a mischievous grin. “I wanna sell this house,” she chirps back — not rude, but “They’d try to steal things. I just told them I’d call the police.” not kidding either. That’s Toni, a veteran — some might say Toni completed, marketed and sold out the Pinnacle building. legendary — Tampa realtor, in the business for more than 35 How does she explain her rookie triumph? “It just happened,” years. she says. “I’ve never thought much about it.” The Toni Everett Company, founded on January 1, 1983, Success bred success. More high-rise pre-sales and specializes in pre-selling and conversion-selling high-rise condos, conversion sales followed: The Bayshore Regency. Howell Park as well as listing and selling luxury homes. In the last decade Condominiums. Plaza Harbour Island. She and another agent or so, her clients have included Tampa Bay Lightning star ran the on-site sales center for the ill-fated Trump Tower in Steven Stamkos, Cigar City Brewing founder Joey Redner, and downtown Tampa, which unfortunately never advanced beyond Heritage Insurance Holdings CEO Bruce Thomas Lucas a vacant lot. (Tampa Bay’s highest paid chief executive in 2015, with Toni’s wide-ranging real estate experience — including $27.3 million in compensation). Her website touts $80 construction, marketing and design — has provided her million in sales volume “in a given year.” a professional advantage. “I’m not just a sales agent,” On this balmy, late-November afternoon, Toni she declares. “I stop by buildings, check on their is dressed in a beige pantsuit, her hair boldly progress, offer advice in all sorts of ways.” “I’m not just a sales black, her lipstick red, her dark eyes sharp Toni diversified into single-family agent. I offer advice in all and intense. She operates in a hurry, with homes, ultimately becoming a major player sorts of ways.” an air of impatience. A photo shoot and an in the South Tampa high-end sector. The Toni interview — just another task in a busy day. Everett Company has roughly 30 agents operating Many years ago she was, to use a term from back out of offices on Bayshore and Harbour Island. They when, a housewife. Toni grew up in Davis Islands, the include Toni’s daughter, Henderson Everett Lee. Toni’s daughter of prominent surgeon Anthony Perzia, part of a son, Anthony Everett, operates his Everett Realty Services large, multi-generational Tampa family. She graduated from out of office space he shares with his mother. Academy of the Holy Names, then attended Rollins College in Sonny Everett died in 2009 at age 72, having realized his Winter Park, where she met her husband, Horace Henderson dream of being a Broadway producer. According to Playbill, his Everett, known as Sonny. credits include Avenue Q (associate producer) and In the Heights After finishing the Tobé-Coburn School for fashion in New (producer). York City, Toni returned to Tampa with marketing, interior Toni, true to her character, forged on. design and public relations skills. She earned a real estate license. Back at the South Tampa mansion, awaiting the photo shoot, Rather than embark on a career, though, she opted to stay home she sits in the driver’s seat of her Jaguar. Anyone hoping she’ll and raise her children while Sonny worked in the insurance offer insight into how she built a compact real estate empire, business. or to ponder what might have been if she’d not received that Then fate intervened. An advertising firm asked her to take improbable job opportunity all those years ago, is bound to over a nearly finished high-rise on Bayshore. The contractor be disappointed. “When I was just starting out, a man in the had gone bankrupt. The improbable job offer — plucking a business told me I was a natural,” she says, when asked again homemaker to finish a condo project — resulted, Toni says, about the reasons for her success. “I’ve had a lot of fun.” in large part from Tampa’s tight-knit culture. “I knew them Across the street is a three-story, walled-and-gated, through my husband’s business friends,” she says. “We’d go 11,469-square-foot, five-bedroom estate listed at $6.65 million. to a lot of parties. Tampa was a small town then. Everyone knew It needs selling. everyone.” www.duPontREGISTRYtampabay.com www.duPontREGISTRY.com 23
Todd Bates
REAL ESTATE, REAL LIVES
Brian and Debbie Taub 24 24 www.duPontREGISTRY.com www.duPontREGISTRYtampabay.com
REAL ESTATE, REAL LIVES
THEYDevelopers DO ITBrian ALL TOGETHER and Debbie Taub
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his mom ‘n’ pop shop is no corner deli. a satellite office in Boca Raton and take over a $200 million T aub Entities — co-owned and co-operated by real estate portfolio. He wound up developing and selling the Brian and Debbie Taub (pronounced “Towb”) — whole shebang. develops townhomes, office and retail buildings, and high-rise In the early ’90s, the Taubs would park in a vacant lot on condos (most recently the Bliss tower, a prestigious address in the fringes of the Hyde Park commercial district. They became downtown St. Pete). enticed by its For Sale sign. Recognizing a development They have no employees. They are their own project opportunity — albeit a counterintuitive one because it managers. The Taubs gave up office space in a building they was during a real estate lull — they paid $160,000 for the developed to do business out of their Harbour Island home in lot and developed four townhomes in accordance with the an office outfitted with one desk. “We like to say we keep the neighborhood’s historic requirements. seat warm for each other,” Debbie quips. Brian was still working full time for the company that owned The couple, married 40 years with three grown daughters Boot Ranch in Palm Harbor, so Debbie was pressed into duty and a granddaughter, do not work in separate silos, but instead — willingly. They layered a formal business partnership atop collaborate on every aspect of the business — from land their life partnership. acquisition to concepting to design, right down to interior Brian and Debbie followed up with successful residential finishes. They outsource architecture, construction projects in Harbour Island and ventured across the Bay to and other facets, but remain fully entwined in each develop luxury condo buildings on Sand Key Beach. Taub project from start to finish. Entities also built the Whole Foods on 4th Street North Taub Entities does one project at a time, and in St. Pete and the Bay Tower office building on no two are the same. Their current endeavor Bayshore. “We like to say we is the much-anticipated 17-story condo All of this activity has meant plenty of keep the seat warm for building on Bayshore Boulevard called together time for the Taubs — more together each other,” Debbie quips. The Sanctuary, due to break ground in time than most married couples would dare. So early ’19. It’s believed to be the first highon to the obvious question: What’s their secret? rise in Tampa Bay to feature one residence Start with a deep and abiding love, of course. And, (3,900 square feet) per floor. The penthouse as I witnessed sitting with them at their dining room takes up two floors. Each unit will have customized table, they really like each other. “And mutual respect,” elements and floor-to-ceiling windows that offer Debbie says. “Every decision is mutual or we don’t move panoramic views. They range in price from $2.44 million forward. We don’t push ideas on each other, which might to $6 million. Several have been pre-sold. (Tim Clemmons, make the other feel uncomfortable.” profiled on p. 20-21, is the architect; he also designed Bliss.) The remarkably fit and youthful couple begin most days “A lot of people’s objections to condo living are about shared with an exercise session, which they do separately. They walls and a lack of privacy,” Brian says. “The Sanctuary is are generally by each other’s side during work hours, but different. Debbie coined the phrase ‘single family living in the occasionally split up to divide and conquer. Dinners are sky.’” sacrosanct. “We always eat dinner together,” Debbie says. This harmonious partnership dates back to the summer of “Always, always, always.” 1974, when Debbie Simon of Cleveland, Ohio was thumbing Brian chimes in, “And unlike a lot of empty-nesters who eat through a photo book of fellow incoming freshmen at Ohio out five days a week, we prefer to eat at home.” He likes to State. She spotted a boy from Akron named Brian Taub and grill. “We’re pretty boring,” Debbie adds. remarked, “I’m going to marry this guy.” The Taubs have no plans to expand their boutique business They met on a double date — each was with another model. It allows them full control, they say, and the ability person — as first-semester freshmen, and became an item to maintain a personal touch with clients and contractors. shortly after. Brian and Debbie married during senior year, They’re never tempted to compromise their integrity. and after graduation Brian went to work for a construction And, day in and day out, they have each other’s backs. “We business owned by Debbie’s family. They arrived in Florida work in a risky industry,” Brian says. “When you write the in ’85 when an Ohio savings-and-loan enlisted Brian to set up checks yourself, it’s a different kind of gut check.” www.duPontREGISTRYtampabay.com 25 www.duPontREGISTRY.com 25
Todd Bates
REAL ESTATE, REAL LIVES
Bobby Alvarez 26 www.duPontREGISTRY.com www.duPontREGISTRYtampabay.com
REAL ESTATE, REAL LIVES
HE’LL BUILD YOUR DREAM Home Builder Bobby Alvarez
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he conference room walls of Alvarez Homes in he lived in as a kid. Bobby was 11 when his large family Carrollwood are covered with large, unframed photos fled Cuba and arrived in Miami in 1960 with nothing. Nine of stunningly opulent houses, all of which the company people crammed into a small rental house, four brothers in built, no two of which are the same. “We’ve done over 450 one bedroom. His father, a once prominent businessman, took of them and never the same one twice,” says Bobby Alvarez, three jobs, one of them selling encyclopedias. But because Jose founder and president, in a tone that’s more matter-of-fact Alvarez spoke fluent English — having done post-graduate than proud. work at Columbia University in New York — he landed a job Bobby pulls a photo off the Velcro wall and brings it over. It’s with an oil company and relocated the family to Tampa in ’62. the 42,000-square-foot, $20 million estate of Don Wallace, the Their house in the Palma Ceia neighborhood cost $17,000, “RV King,” on Lake Thonotosassa — the company’s biggest Bobby recalls. project ever. The “French castle,” as Bobby describes it, is He went to Jesuit High School, then on to University of an outlier. Most of his houses run from $1.5 million to $3.5 Florida. After college, he and a friend helped design, open million. and manage the Brass Balloon, a popular restaurant and disco Alvarez has built homes for billionaire Eddie DeBartolo Jr., in the long-gone Tampa Bay Center mall. He met Kathy the shopping mall magnate and former owner of the San while doing damage control after a waiter dumped a bowl of Francisco 49ers; Vince Naimoli, the original owner of spaghetti in her boots. the Tampa Bay (Devil) Rays; former Tampa Bay Buc Bobby acquired his construction license and went to and current Monday Night Football announcer work for Islander Homes as general sales manager. He Booger McFarland; New York Yankees legend struck out on his own in 1983. His breakthrough came “Some of my Mariano Rivera; and tennis pro Jennifer a couple years later when a developer approached customers have Capriati. him to take over 32 lots in Odessa as the exclusive homes with rooms they’ve When Bobby says his company custom homebuilder. “At the time, new houses never been in,” he says, builds custom homes, he means it in the area were going for around a hundred shaking his head and in the most comprehensive way. The thousand,” Bobby recalls. “Ours ranged from 375 grinning. process starts when he meets with potential to 450, which people thought was outrageous.” Not clients to come up with ideas. That leads to the buyers. Hammock Woods became a prestigious a round of preliminary spec drawings and a suburban Tampa address. proposal. Then some tweaking; then, if all goes well, In 2009, in the wake of the housing crash, Bobby and his a deal. team spun off a new venture called Alvarez New Concepts. Alvarez Homes often helps with a site search — “finding “It came about because of a lack of things to do at the time,” the right location is the hardest thing,” Bobby says — and he says. always acts as the general contractor. They work with a small They acquired a lot in Hyde Park and constructed a home pool of favored architects. Occasionally, they even put buyers that emphasized green, safe and efficient living, while meeting together with finance people, although Bobby says about half the neighborhood’s historic requirements. His son, Brian, an of his houses are cash deals. attorney and Alvarez Homes partner who handles the legal Alvarez Homes sees its projects through to when the owners work, now lives in it. turn the key — and when they walk in, the interiors are The idea blossomed. “Just about everything we do these days finished. “We take them by the hand the whole time,” he says. is New Concepts,” Bobby says. Bobby and his wife Kathy do not live in an Alvarez home. At 68, Bobby Alvarez gladly remains the client point man Their remodeled 1950s ranch house in South Tampa runs for his company. He rarely lets his cell phone go to voicemail about 4,000 square feet. “Maybe I can’t afford one of my — it might be a client, or an opportunity, or a problem. This houses,” he quips. Turning serious, Bobby says he wouldn’t affable, unassuming fellow rightfully does not consider himself feel comfortable living in a capacious mansion. “Some of my a closer, or even a salesman. He offers prospective customers customers have homes with rooms they’ve never been in,” he frank advice on their dream homes, even if it’s not always what says, shaking his head and grinning. they want to hear. “I try to put myself in their shoes,” he says, His current residence is certainly a step up from the one “and help them make the best decisions they can.” 27 www.duPontREGISTRYtampabay.com 27 www.duPontREGISTRY.com
REAL ESTATE | FLOOR COVERINGS
Art For Your Floor
A Sarasota store with international cred and a rug for every pocketbook.
Larry Biddle
STORY BY DAVID WARNER
Rugs As Art owner John Murse (right) with son Jesse.
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rug is the one that sells,” his excitement about the inventory ohn Murse has always regarded the design and prois infectious. He’s still in awe at the endless possibilities of duction of rugs as an art form. But the name of his Sarasota store, Rugs As Art, can be problematic. color and pattern that a rug artisan can produce, and he “That has screwed up so many people,” he says. even takes part in creating rugs himself. Sitting behind his ofSome potential customers automatically assume because of fice computer, he’s like a kid with a video game as he shows the name that the prices will be too high. “They think it’s the off the software that allows him to make the fine adjustments Robb & Stucky of area rugs.” in a design that will eventually become the production template On the other hand, if you’ve read online that for factories in India or China. And because his is an the store has more than 4,000 rugs in stock in a international business, he’s as full of good yarns There’s (no pun intended) as any world traveler; ask him 20,000-square-foot showroom, you might assume nothing like us in about the Turkish tea set in his office, or the conit’s a giant, featureless discount rug warehouse. Neither preconception is accurate. The elegant the U.S.,” says John voluted supply line that brings so-called “dowry rugs” from the Middle East into Florida. facade of the emporium on S. Tamiami Trail Murse of Rugs His enthusiasm is impressive for a man who’s reinforces the high-end aura, but go inside and As Art. been in the same business for 33 years. That posyou’ll find modestly priced rugs as well as showitive energy may be why he’s lasted so long, and why pieces like the 9x12 $4,999 stunner mounted on the the store has won so many awards, voted Best Rug Store In wall behind the big semi-circular front counter. And while America during the International Rug Market in Atlanta, one the facility is plenty large, it doesn’t feel overwhelming. But here’s the thing — the reason Rugs As Art makes per- of America’s top 50 retailers by Home Accents Today (the only rug store on the list) and 2018 Retailer of the Year by the Sarasota fect sense as a name for this business is that Murse, 68, is in Chamber of Commerce, among many other accolades. his own way an artist. Though he says “my personal favorite
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David Warner
REAL ESTATE | FLOOR COVERINGS
Murse in his 20,000-square-foot showroom; Jesse is on the phone behind the counter at left.
birds make purchases that are shipped all over the country. “There’s nothing like us in the U.S.,” says John Murse. And if, even with 4,000 rugs to choose from, you don’t see exactly what you want, Rugs As Art can custom-design one just for you. Ask to see the “color poms” — a box lined with little knobs of yarn in a Crayola-worthy range of colors that’s like a painter’s palette, ready for you and the store’s resident designer to create a rug that’s uniquely yours. See? Rugs As Art! Rugs As Art, 6650 South Tamiami Trail (U.S. 41), Sarasota, 941-921-1900 / 1-800-733-7847, rugsasart.com.
Larry Biddle
An engineer by training, Murse discovered his flair for retail during a break from his studies at Penn State when he took a job with a carpet company and cut his teeth selling in Lancaster County. When he decided to strike out on his own, relatives who knew the area suggested he try Sarasota. Beginning with an 800-square-foot store in the Gulf Gate shopping district in1986, he grew the business enough to move to a larger facility three years later and then to his present address in 2001. At first, he thought 20,000 square feet would be too big; now, selling up to 500 rugs a week, he wishes sometimes he had more space. The key to the store’s success, says Murse, is what he calls the “the three S’s: selection, savings and service.” With thousands of handmade, machine-made and custom rugs, prices 35 percent lower than most, and 30 employees, many of them longtimers who know the inventory intimately, the S’s do seem to be covered. For instance, because color is such an important factor in a rug purchase, Rugs As Art lets customers take them home for a bit before making the final purchase, just to see how they fit with the decor. “Just don’t take them home for a party,” adds Murse’s son Jesse, one of two Murse siblings who work at the store. A trim, handsome 40-year-old, Jesse is a good touchstone for the clientele, the core of whom are professional women between 35 and 50, as well as retirees and down-sizers. (With “two kids and two dogs,” he says his own purchasing power is more in line with the store’s “lower-income side.”) Customers come from as far away as Jacksonville, and snow-
Choose the hues for your custom rug from this box of “color poms.”
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REAL ESTATE | KITCHEN TRENDS
These Are Not Your Grandma’s Appliances Or even your mom’s.
True Residential | Appliance
STORY BY JANAN TALAFER
TRUE HUE: Blue makes a statement in this 2019 kitchen.
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t’s all about the glamour in today’s tech-savvy kitchens. Look for the perfect marriage of artistry, color and design with amazing “smart” tech features that make life easier.
Smoldering hues Color as a design element will also be showing up in 2019 luxury kitchens. “Color is being used to create a special vibe,” says Bair. “Sometimes it’s as simple as a different color handle or hardware to draw attention to the The art’s in the fridge stainless appliance, or it can be all out and bold like an “Performance, quality of materials and dependability will accent wall. The sky is the limit.” Vintage styling with retro always be important, but artistry is the future of where colors from the ’50s, ’60s, and ’70s are also making a appliances are going,” says Brandon Bair, luxury comeback. appliance expert at Appliance Gallery. “All the Color is even showing up on hoods over Color is being top brands are using aesthetics to distinguish their the stove. “Hoods with a pop of color offer used to create a artistic flair and dimension,” says Jennifer products in the marketplace.” And why shouldn’t your kitchen appliances be special vibe. Hettich, Tampa showroom branch manager just as beautiful as any piece of furniture in your for Ferguson Bath, Kitchen & Lighting Gallery. home? It’s an exciting new trend for 2019. Look “The hood is definitely one kitchen appliance no further than Dacor’s Atelier Edition Porcelain where homeowners are introducing more creativity to Refrigerator. the kitchen.” “Talk about creative flair,” says Bair. Open the refrigerator But color doesn’t have to shout to be noticed. Hettich and freezer doors to reveal an all-porcelain interior that feasays subtle tones ranging from warm light gray to a cool tures hand-painted fine art. Dacor will add the art for you, or matte black are being incorporated into lighting, faucets invite a local artist of your choice to do the finishing touch. and appliances.
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SubZero | Ferguson Bath, Kitchen & Lighting Gallery
REAL ESTATE | KITCHEN TRENDS
MATTE IS THE NEW BLACK: An integrated column refrigerator from SubZero.
The latest dish(washers) Dishwashers are getting a makeover, too. They’re quieter and more energy-efficient. “Manufacturers continue their focus on energy and water-efficiency — how to create a dishwasher with maximum cleaning power using as little water and electricity as possible,” says Hettich. Cove is introducing a new line of dishwashers that might be this year’s trendsetter. “Cove dishwashers have been super-engineered with amenities like stainless steel racks and a variety of custom wash and dry options to make sure that
dishes, glasses and utensils come out spotlessly clean and dry,” says Bair. But the appliance’s most unique feature is the ability to move the racks around, rotating them or laying them down to give homeowners maximum flexibility in how to stack everything just right. Dream on As the new focal point for the home, kitchens are reflecting a level of luxury, expression and creativity light years away from their former utilitarian role. Your dream kitchen for entertaining family and friends is just around the corner.
Cove | Appliance Gallery
Toward a smarter kitchen Sometimes all you need to do to improve your kitchen is increase its functionality. Look for common-sense add-ons such as sinks with an integrated cutting board that offer an additional workstation, or water-efficient faucets that fill pots and pans to the exact level you need. But if you’re looking for the “wow” factor, turn to technology, which is making kitchen appliances smarter than ever. Almost every luxury manufacturer is incorporating smart home technology into its kitchen product. “As platforms like Google Home or Amazon Alexa are more widely adopted, we’re seeing people use voice command to control the oven or view the contents of the refrigerator via an app on their smartphone,” says Hettich. “You can even preheat your oven using a mobile device or access guides that offer step-by-step meal instruction and cooking tips, including the right pan to use and the best temperature setting.”
WASH WITH FLAIR: Dishwashers from Cove have been super-engineered with new amenities.
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Jacqueline Hubbard, M.D. BOARD CERTIFIED CHILD, ADOLESCENT, AND ADULT PSYCHIATRIST Offering expert treatment for Anxiety, OCD, Depression, ADHD, Binge Eating Disorder, Autism Spectrum Disorder, and assisting LGBTQ patients Strong emphasis on patient privacy, discreet evidencebased treatment plans, and confidentiality Appointments available at convenient times, including weekends, and Telepsychiatry (computer video call) All interactions with the physician, not medical support staff
"My goal is to provide my patients with a superior level of care, convenient scheduling and access options, strict confidentiality, and no unnecessary barriers to your communicating directly with me." - Jacqueline Hubbard, M.D., ABPN
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147 2nd Ave. S. Suite 303, St. Petersburg, FL 33701 www.HubbardMD.com 727-877-8225 3:05 PM Page 1
Unique Design Solutions Built Around Our Clients
Lic#C10858
Tampa 813.749.7999
Orlando 407.767.7111
CLOSETS | OFFICES | PANTRIES | WALLBEDS | GARAGES | MEDIA CENTERS | LAUNDRY ROOMS 32
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LUXURY LIFESTYLE REAL ESTATE
This is Florida Living Who Needs a Fireplace?
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REAL ESTATE
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A One-of-a-Kind Oasis
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ne of the last great estates on Clearwater Harbor, with views that are second to none. Old world charm meets contemporary design in the 14-bedroom, 12.5-bath mansion, built in 1915 on the site of an abandoned Seminole fort by the original developer of Harbor Oaks, and now the most opulent compound in Clearwater, recently remodeled using exquisite materials from around the world The compound also includes a covered dock, a seven-car garage and a newly remodeled guest house with three beds, three baths and a living room. An exquisite piece of art for the most discerning buyer — because where else will you find a property that spans an entire block and is directly on the water with magnificent views? Offered for $15,900,000. Terri Novitsky | 727-298-8888 Lauren Michaels Real Estate Partners
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REAL ESTATE
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REAL ESTATE
We Are Pleased to Announce
Coastal Properties Group opens sister company with Christie’s in ASPEN, CO
Find your piece of paradise in Colorado… Contact your Coastal Advisor Today
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418 BUTTONWOOD LANE, HARBOR BLUFFS
Your family will love this waterfront 4/4.5 home with dock amenities. An open living plan includes a new kitchen with stainless steel appliances, family room fireplace, butler’s pantry and new wood look tile floors. The master offers two walk-in closets, whirlpool tub and walk-in shower. Enjoy taking a dip in the pristine pebble tec swimming pool or entertaining on the expansive paver pool deck overlooking the Intracoastal. Offered at $1,895,000 | 418ButtonwoodLane.com
212 LEEWARD ISLAND, CLEARWATER
This remodeled Island Estates waterfront 3/3 home features a covered dock with two lifts plus a Pebble Tec pool set on a deck of pavers. There are abundant living spaces, a family room fireplace, office built-in cabinets, remodeled kitchen with breakfast bar, Corian counters and stainless appliances and a master retreat with lots of closet space and great bath. Offered at $1,149,000 | 212LeewardIsland.com
1330 PRESERVATION WAY, OLDSMAR
This custom built 6,460 sq ft home offers soaring ceilings, 4 bedrooms, 4 full and 1 half bath. Private view of the waterway and multi-acre preserve which can be enjoyed from the lanai that runs the length of the house. This home is located in “The Preserve”, a gated community within East Lake Woodlands. Golf, tennis & social memberships available at the private country club. Desirable school district and convenient to shopping, airports and beaches. Offered at $970,000 | 1330PreservationWay.com C .# LIC
-9 09 The | 727.432.9019 | www.TheThornCollection.com 5 Thorn Collection
©2018 Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. Operated by a subsidiary of NRT LLC. Coldwell Banker, the Coldwell Banker logo, Coldwell Banker Previews International and the Previews logo are registered and unregistered service marks owned by Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. The property information.
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960 GULF BLVD, BELLEAIR SHORE
This magnificent gated 5 bedroom, 7.5 bath Gulf front custom estate boasts countless amenities. Elegant formal rooms combine with an open family room, wet bar, gourmet kitchen and breakfast area. The master retreat offers a morning bar, luxury bath with custom walk-in closet and adjoining terrace. A casual living room overlooks the pool and spa with outdoor kitchen. Offered at $5,995,000 | 960GulfBlvd.com
414 BUTTONWOOD LANE, HARBOR BLUFFS
Overlooking the Intracoastal Waterway, this Harbor Bluffs 4 bedroom, 4.5 bath custom home boasts a multitude of special amenities such as a dock with 2 boat lifts and a pool with spillover spa. The open plan offers both formal and casual living areas with a granite and stainless island kitchen. The split master suite includes a study, 2 bonus rooms and a bath on ground level. Offered at $1,799,000 | 414ButtonwoodLane.com
205 BAYVIEW DRIVE, BELLEAIR
Enjoy your morning coffee on the front patio of this timelessly designed custom 4 bedroom, 4 full and 2 half bath home in Belleair’s most desirable location. Survey the panoramic vistas of Clearwater Harbor from the dining room, living room and Florida room. The remodeled open kitchen includes granite counters, Dacor gas cook top and Sub Zero refrigerator. Sliding doors lead to the large Pebble Sheen salt water pool. This home is positioned high and dry on an approximately 40 foot high bluff and no flood insurance is required. Offered at $1,695,000 | 205BayviewDrive.com
The Thorn Collection | 727.432.9019 | www.TheThornCollection.com Š2018 Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. Operated by a subsidiary of NRT LLC. Coldwell Banker, the Coldwell Banker logo, Coldwell Banker Previews International and the Previews logo are registered and unregistered service marks owned by Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. The property information.
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Dania Perry
Waterfront and Luxury Home Specialist MOBILE: 727-215-2045 dania.perry@gmail.com www.DaniaPerry.com
#1 Selling Realtor in Tampa Bay Dania sold $128M+ in 2018 and $725M+ since 2010 Pen din
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BELLEVIEW ISLAND - BELLEAIR Located in an exclusive gated oasis overlooking Clearwater’s beautiful intracoastal waterway, this palatial waterfront residence is one of Tampa Bay’s finest. Spectacular ceilings, scintillating marble floors, regal columns, custom inlaid woodwork, elegant crystal chandeliers and a dazzling flying staircase adorn this remarkable 12,389 total sqft estate. Offered for $4,395,000.
BRIGHTWATERS - SNELL ISLE ST. PETERSBURG
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Brilliantly redesigned in 2015 with an uncommon coastal contemporary executive elegance, this remarkable 5,000+ sqft, 5 bedroom, 5 bath waterfront residence enjoys inspiring luxury finishes and beautiful open -9 spaces - inside and out. Superb master suite, 09 5 resplendent living areas, sumptuous kitchen. Offered for $2,495,000.
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BATH CLUB ESTATES NORTH REDINGTON BEACH This exceptional coastal contemporary luxury estate with a rare island ambiance boasts a huge 12,050 total sqft under roof. Stunning gourmet kitchen, beautiful covered balconies, remarkable master wing and dazzling pool/spa. Wide 135ft seawall supports deep water dock, dual boat lifts and floating dock. Offered for $2,599,000.
SUNSET DRIVE – ST. PETERSBURG
ELEGANCE, HISTORY AND SPLENDOR! This 1928-built, 7381 sqft Italian Villa Masterpiece was once the winter estate of the legendary Babe Ruth. Astonishing $2.1M restoration. A sublime, sophisticated and impeccably finished, iconic waterfront residence. Offered for $2,299,000.
The Dania Difference • The Professional Difference • The Real Difference in Real Estate CENTURY 21 JIM WHITE AND ASSOC. • 10645 Gulf Blvd., Treasure Island, FL 33706 42
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#1 Century 21 Realtor in the World For Five Consecutive Years!
Dania Perry
Waterfront and Luxury Home Specialist MOBILE: 727-215-2045 dania.perry@gmail.com www.DaniaPerry.com
BAYSIDE DRIVE – CLEARWATER BEACH
COLUMBUS DRIVE – TIERRA VERDE
Luxurious, Brand New Coastal Contemporary Waterfront Residence is a short walk to the Powdersoft Sands of Clearwater Beach! Huge open spaces, exceptional high-quality construction & rich, lavish finishes define this beautiful 5 Bedroom, 5.2 Bath 9205 total sqft home with rare 10-car garage parking & rapid deep water access to the Gulf. Offered for $2,675,000.
Located where the intracoastal waterway meets the Gulf of Mexico, this magnificently crafted 4 bedroom, 4 1/2 bath, 8608 total sqft estate delivers some of the most spectacular open water views in Florida! Lavish gourmet kitchen, towering 20ft-high window views of the Gulf and a uniquely elevated waterfront pool deck. Offered for $2,590,000.
TAMPA PALMS - TAMPA FORTUNE 500 EXECUTIVE ELEGANCE across the sweeping private grounds of this extraordinary 5 Bedroom, 6.2 Bath 14,064 total sqft Luxury Estate. Mammoth 23ft-high ceilings, fabulous theater/game room, plush CEO’s Office, Grand Master Suite, stunning 55,000 cu.ft. pool deck enclosure, lavish overnight cabana. An absolute dream. Offered for $2,450,000.
VIZCAYA – REDINGTON BEACH
Sweeping panoramic views of the Gulf! Located in a small, private beachfront community, this magnificent 3 bedroom, 3940 sqft, 2car garage residence enjoys a stunning 53ft-wide covered oceanfront balcony, an immense luxury kitchen an elegant theater room and much more. Amazing private cabana opens to a world class pool/spa. Offered for $2,199,000.
Thank You Tampa Bay for Another Record Breaking Year! CENTURY 21 JIM WHITE AND ASSOC. • 10645 Gulf Blvd., Treasure Island, FL 33706 www.duPontREGISTRYtampabay.com
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THE BEST OF!
10 MEMOR ABLE LISTINGS As we enter the new year I can’t help but feel honored to represent my clients and market their homes. Thanks to a ll for a memorable 2018. Best of Belleair T
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Best of Belleair Beach
39 N Pine Circle, Belleair Offered at $1,875,000 NorthPineForSale.com
480 Palm Isle SE, Clearwater Beach Sold for $2,100,000
Best Kitchen
Best Views
LD SO
118 Harbor View Lane, Belleair Bluffs Offered at $4,490,000 LiveInHarborBluffs.com
Best of Island Estates LD SO
482 Harbor Drive N, Indian Rocks Beach Sold for $1,800,000
Best Curb Appeal ED
520 Gulf Blvd, Belleair Shores Sold for $5,700,000
Best of Indian Rocks Beach LD SO
704 Eldorado Ave, Clearwater Beach Sold for $3,750,000
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3104 Wedgewood Drive, Belleair Beach Sold for $1,175,000
Best of Clearwater Beach LD SO
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Best of Belleair Shore
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219 Sarasota Road, Belleair Sold for $1,300,000
Best Historic Home
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409 St Andrews Drive, Belleair Offered at $2,750,000 BelleviewIslandHomes.com
802 Druid Road S, Belleair Sold for $11,180,000
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727-408-4888 • Gu l fVi ewL i v i ng.com 603 Indian Rocks Road Belleair, FL 33756
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Finest Real Estate in Tampa Bay
Tampa: Rare Davis Island waterfront estate with 5 beds, 4.5 baths, 5,456 sq. ft., and a covered boat lift. $2,949,000. Evan Pedone, 727-459-5543.
Largo: Magnificent 15,000 total sq. ft. waterfront estate with 5 beds, 8.5 baths, and stunning views. $2,699,000. Chris Stivers, 727-542-5729.
Belleair Beach: New construction! Custom 4,302 sq. ft. waterfront home with 5 beds and 4 baths. $2,399,000. Steve Kepler, 727-647-6696.
Harbor Bluffs: New construction! Custom 4 bed, 3.5 bath, 9,000 total sq. ft. waterfront pool home. $2,277,700. Petra Will, 352-207-0830.
North Redington Beach: Stunning Gulf front unit featuring 4 beds and 4.5 baths in over 5,000 sq. ft. $2,100,000. Steve Kepler, 727-647-6696.
Belleair Bluffs: Prime location! Two commercial buildings located on Indian Rocks Road. $1,299,000. Kelly Kepler, 727-515-6887.
Belleair: Gorgeous 3 bed, 2 bath plus 2 offices, 2,366 sq. ft. waterfront home with sparkling views. $1,195,000. Steve Kepler, 727-647-6696.
Harbor Bluffs: Immaculate home in Harbor Bluffs boasting 3,437 sq. ft., 3 beds, 4 baths, plus office. $779,000. Petra Will, 352-207-0830.
Indian Rocks Beach: Fully furnished! Rare 2 bed, 2 bath, 1,110 sq. ft. double balcony waterfront unit. $494,000. Bridget Cortes, 813-404-3847.
Belleair 2955 West Bay Drive Belleair Bluffs belleair.evusa.com 727-461-1000
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Madeira Beach 14225 Gulf Boulevard Madeira Beach madeirabeach.evusa.com 727-394-7365
South Tampa 2605 S MacDill Avenue Tampa southtampa.evusa.com 813-258-9000
St. Pete 433 Central Avenue St. Petersburg stpete.evusa.com 727-295-0000
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1102 BEACH TRL | INDIAN ROCKS BEACH | $3,250,000 Scott Ferguson | 727-744-0993
313 HERMOSITA DR | ST PETE BEACH | $1,999,000 Bob Cargo | 727-244-5365
421 BUTTONWOOD LN | LARGO | $1,999,900 Susan Lube | 727-480-1890
206 WINDWARD ISLAND | CLEARWATER BEACH | $969,000 Linda Ross Preston 813-318-2408
1344 MONTEREY BLVD | ST PETERSBURG | $1,370,000 Megan Bower | 727-742-2699
3312 W. MORRISON AVE | TAMPA | $1,099,000 -9 Debbie McGinty 813-416-2646
672 SOUNDVIEW DRIVE | PALM HARBOR | $3,199,000 Ken Rossi & Laren Jansen | 727-474-9955
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180 BEACH DRIVE NE. #701 | ST PETERSBURG | $3,000,000 Liz Heinkel | 727-239-5623
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Megan Padilla
TRAVEL
A layer of mist separates the mirror-like surface of Lake Geneva from the French Alps across the lake. 48
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TRAVEL
Set In Stone
An upcoming festival invites exploration of Switzerland’s Lavaux wine region on the slopes of Lake Geneva. STORY BY MEGAN PADILLA
Tasting the local grape After lunch, we first walk along the lake in Cully (coo-yee), midway between Lausanne and Vevey (vuh-vay), where a layer of mist separates the mirror-like surface from the dramatic French Alps across the lake (Switzerland is on the north side of the lake, France is on the south). Then we turn back through town, cutting between houses with French doors and wild roses in the garden. There’s an honor-system wine stand beside the road. We take a bottle and leave 10 Swiss francs in the box, not yet realizing that there’ll be plenty of opportunity to taste our way through the Lavaux. Before this trip, I’d never tasted Swiss wine (they keep it for themselves!). Now, we’re drinking it like water. I’m at the back of the pack, breathing hard as the path climbs straight uphill. It’s October and the white Chasselas grapes are still being hand-harvested, just as they have been for centuries. The golden-tinged leaves provide a patina of fall foliage. Below, a majestic steam-powered paddle boat steals attention as she glides across the lake. We reach a speck of a village named Riex and head to a caveau (wine cellar) for refreshment. Only Chasselas grapes are grown here, but it’s up to the winemakers to interpret them. The grapes themselves carry little distinction. They are sponges, soaking up the taste of sunshine and of millions-of-years-old minerals carried off the Rhone glacier from high in the Alps. They are the story of families who have tended the earth, vines and fruit with precision, passion and a long view for sustainability since the 1500s.
We’d intended to walk in a loop, returning to Cully to catch a train on to Vevey. But everyone is enjoying the outing too much to stop, so we continue east along the level path called the Route de la Corniche that cuts across the hillside. It’s after 5 p.m. when we arrive at the train station in Rivaz. Everyone is tired, happy and even a little bit hungry. Five times a century A few days later I go to the museum of the ancient society called the Confrérie des Vignerons, the brotherhood of winegrowers, that organizes the Fête des Vignerons. There I meet Mr. François Margot, the abbot-president. Among the artifacts, costumes and architectural models of past stadium designs, the first thing I learn from Margot is that the festival isn’t actually about the wine. Though that doesn’t stop him from opening a bottle of grand cru. I’ve barely had my first cup of coffee, but happily accept a glass (or two) as Mr. Margot explains. The Fête des Vignerons honors the winegrowers and the workers. The first one in 1797 was more like a “parade celebrating the religion of wine,” he said.
Megan Padilla
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leisurely three-course lunch with wine usually demands a post-prandial nap. But when you’re enjoying that lunch in Switzerland with friends while overlooking Lake Geneva in the heart of the historic Lavaux wine region, a digestive stroll afterwards is definitely in order. The blueprint for the Lavaux was literally set in stone by Benedictine monks who in the 12th century tamed the steep southfacing slopes of Lake Geneva into terraced vineyards by building hundreds of rows of stone walls. Today, they are the cornerstone of the Lavaux UNESCO World Heritage Site. In this region, the cultural and economic connection to viniculture is entrenched in timeless traditions, including a once-per-generation festival dating to 1797 that reappears this summer for only the 12th time in its history. I may not get to attend the festival, but I can certainly explore the landscape (and the wine) that spawned it.
The region’s Chasselas grapes soak up the taste of sunshine and millions-of-years-old minerals.
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Gregoire Chappuis
TRAVEL
Vineyards with a view.
Room with a view When I return to my room at the Grand Hotel du Lac that afternoon, I sit on my balcony overlooking the manicured garden and the glorious Lake Geneva to enjoy a late-afternoon libation in the warm glow of the setting sun. Attending the Fête des Vignerons would be a once-in-a-lifetime experience and I hope to return for it. But if I can’t, that’s ok too. The festival is an elevated moment to celebrate the beauty, history, wine, food, traditions and hospitality of a region whose identity is as solid as those stone walls set in place so many years ago. I am grateful to be experiencing it all right now. 50
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A view from the balcony at the Grand Hotel du Lac.
Photograph by Todd Bates Megan Padilla
The Confrérie exists to regulate and control the vineyard production of this region, thus ensuring economic longevity. “Our mission is to take a longview look at the balance between the ground and the grapes,” he explains. For instance, if the vines aren’t cut correctly, they invite pests and disease. The Fête des Vignerons was created to recognize best practices in viniculture by the winemakers and evolved into a stadium-sized theatrical production featuring a cast of 5,500 locals. They rehearse for the better part of a year, buy their own costumes and take time off work for the 20 performances scheduled between July 18 through August 11. This year’s Fête des Vignerons is only the 12th production since the first in 1797 because the Confrérie set out guidelines stating that it cannot occur more than five times per century. The festival is so unique that UNESCO recently included it on its list of living traditions that contribute to the “intangible cultural heritage of humanity.” Since the last winegrowers’ festival happened during the early days of the internet in 1999, the 2019 festival will be the first to attract a wider international audience. Not everyone who travels to Vevey will have a ticket to the mainstage, says Margot. During the festival, the town itself becomes a second stage with food and wine tastings, parades, music and street performers showcasing customs from all of Switzerland.
Maude Rion
TRAVEL
Beau-Rivage Palace
In October, the golden-tinged leaves in the vineyards provide a patina of fall foliage.
Megan Padilla
The terrace at the Beau-Rivage Palace.
Vevey’s old town reveals itself in flower-festooned shops and cozy sidewalk cafes.
Plan Your Trip Experience the culture, food, wine and legendary Swiss hospitality of the Lake Geneva region, bookended by Lausanne and Vevey. Both cities are situated on the northeast shore of Lake Geneva and flourished during the Belle Époque era of the late 1800s and early 1900s. With tree-lined promenades beside the lake, the borrowed scenery of the Alps, and 150-year old grand hotels that are still at the top of their game, the “beautiful era” doesn’t seem so long ago. Fly to Geneva. There are many routes that offer a U.S. connecting flight direct to Geneva. [Alternatively, Edelweiss flies direct from Tampa International Airport to Zurich, and from there you can connect to Geneva.] Then take a train to Lausanne (45 minutes) or Vevey (about an hour). The Lavaux Vineyard Terraces are in between. Start planning at lake-geneva-region.ch. Where to stay In Lausanne, stay at one of the luxury Old World standards in the Sandoz Foundation Hotels portfolio. The Lausanne Palace (opened in 1915) is located high up the slope, and lakeview rooms have incredible views of the city. The Beau-Rivage Palace (from 1861) is lakeside and feels more like a resort hotel. Both have spas, Michelin-starred restaurants and five-star concierge service. The Grand Hotel du Lac (1868) overlooks Lake Geneva in Vevey and is a full-service, intimate hotel with just 50 guest rooms. Hotel Major Davel is a more budget-friendly option that opened last year in Cully after a complete makeover by the owner who was the longtime general manager of the Lausanne Palace. Fourteen simple but elegant rooms overlook the plaza and Lake Geneva. Attending the Fete de Vignerons The winegrowers festival is July 18 through August 11 in Vevey. You must purchase tickets in advance to one of the 20 performances. Book online at fetedesvignerons.ch/en/tickets. Hotel and ticket packages are available through the official Montreux Riviera region tourism organization at hotelfevi19.ch (click EN for English). The Lausanne Palace and Beau-Rivage Palace have secured top category tickets to every performance for their guests to purchase at face value. www.duPontREGISTRYtampabay.com
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WIN SEASON TICKETS TO ALL* TTB THEATRES! Post a selfie with a playbill from any TTB show to #THEATRETAMPABAY
Member Theatres American Stage freeFall Theatre Busch Gardens Early Bird Dinner Theatre St. Petersburg Opera Jobsite Theater Lab Theater Project Opera Tampa Powerstories Silver Meteor Gallery Stages Productions Tampa Repertory Theatre Theatre Exceptional Stageworks Theatre Aeon Life Theatre Innovocative Theatre Spanish Lyric Theatre studio@620 Theatre One
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JOIN US THIS APRIL & MAY FOR OUR PETE DYE GOLF GETAWAY PACKAGE SUNDAY – THURSDAY ONLY, APRIL 22 – MAY 31, 2019 Located just two hours south of Tampa, this Spring is the perfect time to experience The Gasparilla Inn and Florida as it was meant to be. Enjoy fine dining, pristine beaches and play our magnificent Pete Dye-designed golf course, an island within an island with spectacular views of Charlotte Harbor. This package includes deluxe room and 18 holes of golf with cart.
500 Palm Avenue P.O. Box 1088 Boca Grande, FL 33921 • 844.238.9203 • www.gasparillainn.com ® Florida As It Was Meant To Be is a registered trademark of The Gasparilla Inn & Club.
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VALENTINE GETAWAYS
STORY BY MARY LOU JANSON
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ong for a romantic escape that focuses more on being there than getting there? Book a room at a world-class inn, or check out the restoration of a local landmark. Enjoy Florida’s oldest city, learn from a top chef — or let a scenic river lull you to sleep. These experiences are all within driving distance of Tampa Bay — and all offer more than just a room with a view. Epicurean Hotel This Hyde Park hideaway located in the heart of an historic Tampa neighborhood welcomes guests to enjoy an array of wining, dining and unwinding experiences. The 137-room hotel goes to extraordinary measures to provide guests with a variety of ways to celebrate, and participate in, great food and fine wines. From the Lobby Bar to its rooftop counterpart, the Edge, discover an abundance of creative cocktails,
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craft beers and excellent wines to sip as well as menu items perfect for pairing. Élevage, the hotel’s signature restaurant, offers a more elevated menu with dishes like brioche-encrusted halibut or a hand-made pasta boasting a goat cheese mousse. Or venture across the street to visit the world-famous Bern’s Steak House that helped inspire the culinary concept behind the Epicurean. For those between-meal moments, visit the selectively stocked lobby-level Bern’s Fine Wines & Spirits shop. Spa Evangeline features treatments incorporating plant-based oils, fresh herbs and Arabica bean extract. The Epicurean Theatre hosts cooking demonstrations, wine pairings and appearances by local, regional and national chefs that may be an appealing addition to any stay. Epicurean Hotel, 1207 S. Howard Ave., Tampa, 813-999-8700, marriott.com
VALENTINE GETAWAYS Alfond Inn at Rollins One of the world’s leading hotels, according to Travel + Leisure rankings, is less than a two-hour drive away. The Alfond Inn at Rollins is located in Winter Park, a destination renowned for chic boutiques, fine dining and museums. That means this full-service accommodation is ideal for great day trips, local nightlife and anything in between.
The 112-room boutique property boasts affiliations with Rollins College and the Cornell Fine Arts Museum, distinctions that definitely place it in a class all its own. Rollins, a private liberal arts college, owns the Alfond, an arrangement that allows profits to endow student scholarships. Couples who cherish art can book “A Night at the Museum” package that includes admissions to local museums, or simply stroll along the hotel halls to enjoy the current installation of contemporary art from a private collection. Great works of art, a lively location and a stylish place to stay. What’s not to love?
The Alfond Inn, 300 E. New England Ave., Winter Park, 407-326-0801, thealfondinn.com
Belleview Inn A beloved landmark that played a pivotal role in establishing the local hospitality industry, the former Belleview Biltmore Hotel has shed some of its girth but maintains the same grandeur and elegance that earned it recognition as “The White Queen of the Gulf.”
The lavishly restored 35-room Belleview Inn not only dazzles with its contemporary decor, but also offers guests sweeping views of the nearby waterfront, access to exceptional dining and spa treatments, and private beach privileges on what is considered one of the country’s best, Clearwater Beach. A staggering 820,000 square feet in its day, it’s more modest in size now but no less impressive, granting it membership in an elite group of America’s historic hotels. For a romantic retreat, consider a spacious suite complete with a claw-footed bathtub for a sublime soak. Enjoy the convenience of morning doorstep deliveries of baskets filled with fruit, juices and baked goods. Evenings offer a celebration on the west-facing porch, saluting Florida’s signature sunsets that set the sky ablaze.
Belleview Inn, 25 Belleview Blvd., Belleview, 727-674-4127, thebelleviewinn.com
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VALENTINE GETAWAYS Casa Monica Resort & Spa Enjoy a good time while enjoying the good life. The Casa Monica Resort & Spa creates quite the first impression with the Moorish flourishes and ornate architecture of its facade. Additional opulence awaits within the grand lobby, outfitted with gilded mirrors and ornate chandeliers, while the 138 guest rooms and suites are adorned with red velvet tufted headboards and richly colored tapestry rugs.
Contrast that lavish lifestyle with the charm of St. Augustine, America’s oldest continuously occupied city, characterized by cobblestone streets, historic sites and Atlantic Ocean beaches. Revisit the Spanish roots of this city with stops at the Castillo de San Marcos and Fountain of Youth before prepping for a couple’s massage at the hotel’s Poseidon Spa. Admire the art and artists showcased in the Grand Bohemian Gallery, dress for dinner at the Costa Brava restaurant and finish the day enjoying live music in the Cobalt Lounge while savoring a signature raspberry sparkler martini.
Floating Cottage Fishing for an offshore adventure that partners the convenience of a private cabin with the novelty of being on the water? Floating Cottage lets you stay high and dry while relaxing within a well-furnished, nicely designed cross between a tiny house and a houseboat.
The calming waters of the St. Johns River will lull guests to sleep whether they are tucked into the queensize loft bed beneath a cathedral ceiling or snuggling on the first-floor, full-size sofa bed. All of the creature comforts of home are here, along with creatures of the river like turtles and manatees. Make meals utilizing the kitchen’s five-burner gas stove, full-size refrigerator and ice dispenser, ideal for keeping champagne chilled. Explore the waterfront aboard complimentary kayaks or head downtown to take in Sanford’s acclaimed restaurants, vibrant craft beer scene and charming businesses that include Wondermade, featuring handcrafted marshmallows boasting boozy flavors like bourbon and oh-so-rich toppings like 24 karat edible gold.
Casa Monica Resort & Spa, 95 Cordova St., St. Augustine, 904-827-1888, marriott.com Floating Cottage, St. Johns River, Sanford, airbnb.com/rooms/18295922
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Enrollment Open House Jan. 17 & Feb. 21
Visit our campus between 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. at your convenience
www.skycrest.us 129 N. Belcher Road Clearwater, FL 33765 727-797-1186 tel • 727-797-8516 fax
Iconic. Historic. Now Open. Dunedin, FL | FenwayHotel.com
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VALENTINE DINING
Tampa Bay’s Five Most Romantic Restaurants Can’t-miss spots for fine food and idyllic atmosphere, perfect for sharing with the one you love.
Alsace
STORY BY MARY LOU JANSON & DAVID WARNER
The cozy interior of Alsace French Bistro in Tierra Verde.
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France and are immediately transported back to all the nice memories they have. Everything is homemade and cooked with family recipes which is perfect for a date, anniversary and even a proposal, of which we have had a few.” 1120 Pinellas Bayway S., Tierra Verde, 727-8675800, alsace.french.bistro.free.fr. —MLJ
Alsace French Bistro This intimate restaurant is the perfect place for two to rendezvous and indulge in succulent escargot, velvety paté or steamy French onion soup. And that’s, literally, just for starters; Alsace offers a tantalizing selection of classic French foods, including crepes both sweet and savory, entrees (the osso buco is wonderful) and desserts that are all expertly made in-house. The atmosphere seals the romantic deal. Located a bit off the beaten path on the ground floor of a retail plaza in Tierra Verde, the cozy space is filled with imported art, antiques and furnishings that give the restaurant not just personality but also a personal touch. “We made this restaurant as authentic as you can get it here in the U.S. All of the furniture and decorations come straight from Europe, particularly France and Germany,” said Chef David Weiss, who owns and operates Alsace with Sébastien Kappler. “Most of our customers have visited
“It’s perfect for a date, anniversary or even a proposal, of which we have had a few.” — Alsace Chef David Weiss.
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Alsace
hether newly in love or longtime partners, a special dinner can provide couples pause from their busy lives to focus on caring and sharing — especially while enjoying a favorite dish paired with a fine wine or a decadent dessert. Here are some romantic places to taste and toast with a loved one.
VALENTINE DINING
The sleek, chic interior of Mise en Place.
Mise en Place The Tampa Bay area has had a love affair with Mise en Place for decades. When the independent restaurant boldly burst onto the local dining scene, it immediately became a game-changer and has never looked back. Today, the enduring and endearing restaurant comfortably hosts parties of two to parties of 200 in its sleek, chic venue near the University of Tampa and just across the river from downtown. Always the trendsetter, Mise never falters from its mission to create freshly prepared, seasonally influenced, innovative Modern American cuisine that continues to resonate with everyone from first-timers to faithful fans. Able to accommodate 180 within its main dining room alone, the spacious restaurant seems much smaller and more private due to its soft lighting and intimate enclaves. Mise en Place has hosted many a first date, marriage proposal, rehearsal dinner and wedding anniversary celebration, and those longstanding, heartfelt traditions show no signs of slowing. 442 W. Grand Central Ave., Tampa, 813-254-5373, miseonline.com. — MLJ
Cafe Ponte Christopher Ponte’s flagship restaurant in Clearwater may be a go-to spot for business lunches and office parties (the whole place was abuzz during the holidays), but it’s also an ideal destination for a Serious Date, a Big Anniversary or just some quiet time alone with your spouse. How can a restaurant be this busy yet make you feel like you’re the only couple in the room? The answer is service; impeccably executed but never stuffy, it’s at once friendly and dignified. And the food! We can safely assert that you will never have a bad meal at Cafe Ponte (and if you start off your meal with the wild mushroom soup with truffle cream and chives, you will automatically achieve Date Night success). 13505 Icot Blvd., Ste. 214, Clearwater, 727-538-5768, cafeponte.com. —DW
Ophelia’s on the Bay I cannot remember a dining experience more hauntingly romantic than the dockside table for two I once shared with my husband at Ophelia’s, where our dinner companion was a great blue heron standing majestically stock still a few feet away as dusk settled on Little Sarasota Bay. There’s really no place quite like Ophelia’s. Even the journey there is slightly exotic, whether you arrive by car via Midnight Pass Road or by boat (look for marker 48 on the Intracoastal Waterway). And it’s not just the view that’s worth the trip; the food will seduce you, too, from Mediterranean bronzino in a bourbon-maple glaze to a double rack of Cervena venison. 9105 Midnight Pass Road, Siesta Key, 941-349-2212, opheliasonthebay. net. —DW David Warner
Armani’s One look at this lovely restaurant and you are sure to get the look of love from your dinner date in return. Armani’s occupies the entire 14th floor of the Grand Hyatt Tampa Bay Hotel, allowing guests to soak in stunning views of the Old Tampa Bay waterfront, the surrounding shores and even downtown Tampa. Admire the skyline, sunset or overhead stars from the floor-to-ceiling dining room windows or the al fresco rooftop lounge before eventually shifting your attention to the menu of Northern Italian cuisine. Try a selection of cured Italian meats, aged cheeses, seafood and crudo vegetables before taking a traditional route and ordering pasta, risotto or gnocchi — or (depending on your date) go a little wild and opt for elk or wild boar. (And to get the evening off to a truly blissful start, have a martini or two in the lounge and enjoy some romance-enhancing songs performed by a pianist Thursdays through Saturdays.) 2900 Bayport Drive, Tampa, 813-874-1234, hyatt.com/en-US/hotel/ florida/grand-hyatt-tampa-bay/tparw/dining. —MLJ
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DINING & HOSPITALITY
Reborn
How The Fenway Hotel went from eyesore to showplace. STORY BY DAVID WARNER
The Fenway at dawn
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radio station, WGHB (precursor to today’s WFLA). he view from the rooftop bar was a revelaIn the 1950s it became an exclusive private club and tion. Though it seemed as if all of Dunedin was later purchased by Trinity College before being had decided to scope out the Fenway Hotel taken over by Schiller, which kept it until 2005. that weekend evening, the crowd couldn’t obscure Various proposals to redevelop or even demolish the glories of sunset over the Intracoastal, or the the Fenway came to naught until an unlikely savior feeling that this once-doomed landmark had been came to the rescue: the Taoist Tai Chi Society brought brilliantly back to life. of the United States. The society purchased Jo Golson was one of those enjoying Visiting the 6.4 acre parcel in 2014 and partnered the view. A next-door neighbor to the the Fenway’s with Mainsail Lodging and Development Fenway, she used to work as a consulting reincarnation is to renovate the hotel as part of Marriott’s school psychologist there when it housed like entering upscale Autograph Collection. It opened Schiller International University. The to the public in November of last year, facility, she remembers, was “horrible.” a time warp. aglow in shades of coral and beige. She’d go back to her home rather than use For anyone who remembers the Fenway as the ladies’ rooms at the school, and didn’t a sad-looking old pile behind a chain-link fence, dare go to the top floor. “I thought it would fall apart.” visiting its reincarnation is like entering a time warp. The decline of the property was a sad fate for The vintage aura is palpable; “1927” is emblazoned what had begun life in 1927 as a glamorous Jazz on the front desk, and a few steps away there’s a Age hotel, host to politicians, musicians and even an shady-looking portal that once led to a ProhibitionArctic explorer, and the site of Pinellas County’s first era speakeasy. Period menus and photos adorn the
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DINING & HOSPITALITY
The front desk.
Sunset at the Hi-Fi Rooftop Bar.
lobby walls. The 83 guest rooms combine up-to-the-minute amenities like Alexa with witty allusions to the hotel’s musical roots, like a Do Not Disturb sign that says “Off Air.” The HEW Parlor & Chophouse maintains the balance between old and new, the charm of an old-fashioned resort dining room sparked by an of-the-moment open kitchen. The cuisine includes some traditional touches, like sauces poured à table by the server, but it’s otherwise deliciously up to date. HEW refers to the initials of the original hotel architect, Herman Everett Wendell, but
the word also means “chop” — to wit, the menu offers stellar steaks like the Bison Coulotte, a succulent preparation with Scotch au poivre sauce and crispy shiitake mushrooms. But on the evening my husband and I dined there, the star was a melt-in-your-mouth swordfish special. I would return just for the roasted corn, coated in spicy miso butter and herbs, that came with the bison. With breakfast, brunch and lunch also available, HEW looks like a go-to spot for locals as well as hotel guests. And what about the neighbors? “The neighbors,” says Jo Golson, “are thrilled.”
Winter on the Beach
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2019 SANDPEARL RESORT, CLEARWATER BEACH
CLEARWATER MARINE AQUARIUM’S 7 TH ANNUAL SIGNATURE DINNER, DANCE & AUCTION Please join us for all the excitement as we honor two outstanding community leaders. The Richard O. Jacobson Foundation will receive the Frank Chivas Positive Impact Award and Ms. Carol Martin will accept the Winter’s Hope Award.
Sponsorships Available – for more information visit seewinter.com/WOTB or contact Kelly Jordan, Chief Development Officer at 727-441-1790 x233 www.duPontREGISTRYtampabay.com
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DINING
The Final Straw
Fed up with plastic straws polluting our waters, St. Pete has issued an embargo and Clearwater Beach is hoping to ride the same wave. STORY & PHOTOS BY HEIDI KURPIELA
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rdering an iced coffee to go? If you live in St. Heilman, who also owns a 60-acre vineyard in Oregon, Petersburg, you might want to throw a reus- is not surprised straws were nixed in St. Pete. The restauable straw in your bag. Residents of the ’Burg rateur has been leading a similar charge on Clearwater will have to rethink the way they sip this year now that Beach with her Ocean Allies program, which launched in a straw ban has taken effect across the city. On Dec. 13, October at Clearwater Marine Aquarium with the intencity council members voted 5-2 to ban the use of single-use tion of getting all Clearwater Beach businesses to switch plastic straws. The law partially went into effect Jan. 1, from single-use plastics to biodegradable materials. mandating businesses in the city to offer straws by request Heilman, whose Beachcomber received recognition only. Come 2020, all plastic straws will be prohibited, ex- by the Suncoast Rise Above Plastics Coalition for being cept at drive-thru windows, hospitals, supermarkets and Clearwater’s first Ocean Friendly Business, says most of convenience stores. Also outlawed: polystyrene, otherwise her colleagues in the hospitality industry are cool with the known as Styrofoam. coming sea change. Whether you can’t imagine pulling out a “The Sandpearl got its Ocean Friendly cer$12 stainless steel straw to suck down your tification,” Heilman says. “The fact is once Big Gulp, or you’ve already invested in the “I think once you make the commitment to go plastic-free, latest silicone designs, the rage against plastic everyone realizes you start generating more business because of is on. the magnitude of it. People come from all over the world to walk The new St. Pete ordinance has given more our plastic on our beaches. They live like this in their real oomph to the straws-suck movement sweeping consumption, stuff lives and they want that to carry over into their across coastal communities. When St. Petersburg like this won’t even vacations.” City Council member Gina Driscoll — together be a big deal,” says Two-and-a-half years ago, Heilman did with ilovetheburg.com and Bank of the Ozarks — Sheri Heilman. something considered drastic for the owner rolled out the “No Straws St. Pete” campaign last of a 70-year-old Clearwater Beach mainstay. April, more than 100 local establishments jumped Disgusted by the amount of plastic washing up on board. Even major race events pledged to go on our shores, Heilman pulled all the Styrofoam straw-free, along with franchises such as Hooters and cups, plastic containers and single-use plastic bags and Crabby Bills. straws out of her restaurants. The transition took some In the last year alone, Seattle, Malibu and Fort Myers time and effort, but it wasn’t a Sisyphean undertaking. Beach have laid down straw laws. In 2012, Miami Beach She tracked down a local distributor of biodegradable made national headlines when it became the first U.S. city to yank straws from hotels and restaurants. Now New York City is considering passing a similar ban. The driving force behind the straw shun? This statistic: Americans use 500 million straws a day, a fact that some critics claim is an unverified guesstimate. Nonetheless, discarded sip sticks are turning up by the truckload in our oceans. While scientists say these seemingly innocuous utensils account for only 4 percent of plastic ocean debris, they’re nonetheless polluting our waters and choking our marine life. “I think once everyone realizes the magnitude of our plastic consumption, stuff like this won’t even be a big deal,” says Sheri Heilman, owner of Beachcomber and Bobby’s Bistro & Wine Bar on Clearwater Beach. “My St. Pete resident Katie Hale (pictured at Kahwa Coffee in downtown St. Pete) was daughter and son-in-law live in Oregon. It’s not even a an early adopter of reusable straws. “It has never been inconvenient, even with conversation over there. It’s just a way of life.” little kids,” says the mother of three.
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DINING
products and formed a local coop of like-minded business owners to help offset the cost of purchasing supplies. Next, she co-chaired a task force — Protect Clearwater Beach — and signed on as co-founder of the Ocean Allies project. In December, the organization hosted Feast on the
David
St. Pete’s ban on single-use plastic straws partially went into effect Jan. 1.
Beach at the Wyndham Grand, the first zero-waste event on Clearwater Beach. “We had Suncoast Compost there recycling and composting everything everybody used,” Heilman says. “Not a single person complained that they couldn’t get a straw.”
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WINE
The Matchmaker
Explore West Coast wines without ever leaving Tampa Bay via Brian Seel’s Vineration wine club. STORY BY ERIC KENNEDY
Worldwide wine travelers Brian and Lindsay Seel.
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he love of wine is at an all-time high, with over 36 that many incredible California wines from small boutique billion bottles produced each year. That’s a stagger- wineries that produce 12,000 bottles or less each year never ing number of labels to choose from. And what to make it to Florida because they are just “too far away.” choose? Just watch the dazed and confused customFlorida follows a three-tier system of distribution, which ers standing next to you next time you’re in the wine aisle. mandates that wine must be sold from wineries to distribuLike them, you probably end up just grabbing something tors and then to retailers before it reaches consumers. But with a pretty label, or if you can afford it, something over 30 there’s a loophole, as Seel’s site explains: “The only excepbucks that you hope will measure up to the expectations of tions to the Three Tier System are Direct-to-Consumer your dinner guests. (DtC) sales, which means you can purchase directly from This is where Brian Seel comes to the rescue. the winery. However, because most small wineries Seel The Pinellas County native is the founder of a don’t have a marketing rep in Florida, the only discovered that business that offers a new way to explore the way you’d discover them is by tracking them many wines from down in person. Vineration emerged to fill that world of wine. His company, Vineration, offers California’s small a subscription-based wine club that gives oenovoid.” Through the club, Seel has become a philes an edge in finding wines that would othboutique wineries kind of matchmaker — scouting, vetting and erwise be unavailable to Florida consumers. creating an opportunity for Floridians to learn never make it to Seel, a certified sommelier, has traveled to about wines they might never have discovered. Florida. over 230 wineries around the world and written So how can Tampa Bay wine lovers take advancountless articles on wine and wine travel for magatage of what Vineration offers? zines like the Tampa Bay Fine Wine Guide. Pursuing a whirlWhen you become a member of Vineration, you will rewind bucket-list tasting adventure, he and his wife Lindsay ceive two bottles per month, all from California, Oregon or traveled to 27 different countries and famous wine destinaWashington boutique wineries. Included with your delivery tions in just one year, places like South Africa, New Zealand are the stories of each bottle’s origin and a tasting guide. and Argentina. Members also receive benefits like invitation-only tastings Following their world tour, Brian and Lindsay put down and winemaker dinners, wine travel concierge services, distheir luggage for a longer stay in the Sonoma Valley, counts on wines, sommelier services, events and wine educaNorthern California’s most beautiful wine region. While in tional resources. The cost of membership is $77 per month, Sonoma, Brian gained a whole new understanding of what which includes a $10 flat shipping fee. winemakers are up against when it comes to getting their For more information or to join the club, visit vineration.com. products into the various distribution chains. He discovered
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AUTO
Art That Moves
The time-honored tradition of truck art, Pakistani-style. STORY BY MITZI GORDON
HE PAINTS CARS, TOO: Haider Ali’s transformation of the author’s 2009 Toyota Prius.
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2002, he was invited to the Smithsonian to paint the first or three days, I happily sat and watched paint authentic Pakistani truck in North America. That vehicle dry. Artist Haider Ali wielded the brush. Posted be- is part of the museum’s permanent collection, and Ali, now 38, has since exhibited worldwide. side the Museum of Fine Arts on St. Petersburg’s He travels as much as six months out of the year Beach Drive, he spent a long weekend transformto share his work at events in Europe and the ing my humble Toyota Prius into a mobile masterpiece as I looked on in awe, joined by There’s close to a States. Ali discovered the CARMADA program while traveling in the U.S. this year, a gathering crowd. century of and we quickly connected to arrange his A native of Karachi, Pakistan, Ali has tradition behind October visit as a preview event for the been lauded worldwide for his work in the Pakistan’s colorful mural festival. As founder and manager of distinctive “jingle truck” art style, a popular “jingle trucks.” CARMADA, I’ve been pairing car owners form of decoration in South Asia featuring elaborate floral patterns and calligraphy on with street artists since 2013, putting all kinds vehicles. He visited St. Pete for the first time this of colorful and surprising art on the road. I knew fall through a partnership between the SHINE Mural Ali’s work would be special, and by choosing to paint my Festival and my CARMADA art car program. own car I could exhibit and promote this art at its fullest Using a handful of oil-based sign paint and a single potential. brush, Ali deftly swirled birds and roses, mountains and Further traditional truck art motifs such as the peafiligree onto the surface of the once-white Prius. No cock and K2 Mountain depicted along the passenger sketch was created. All his work came straight from the side represent Ali’s home country. On the driver’s side, brain. And it’s no wonder — the artist received rigorous Florida is represented by depictions of a sandhill crane, training as a child apprentice, beginning study at age 7 the Everglades, and sailboats. Calligraphy along the under his father, also a master truck artist. front bumper reads, “Don’t get too close, or you’ll fall There is close to a century of tradition behind the in love” — a traditional jest often found on Pakistani art colorful Pakistani “jingle trucks,” nicknamed because of trucks. the jingling bells often attached to their front bumpers. Too late — I’m already there. I renamed my vibrant Image motifs like the eagle and partridge can be seen on vehicle Nadira, meaning “one who is rare,” and am already planning for school exhibits and art tours. Give a those painted vehicles going back to the 1920s. wave if you see us on the streets of St. Pete, and check Ali started painting his first truck, under supervision, at 16. He went on to create ornate murals and vehicles out CarmadaFL.com to learn more about our projects as a traveling artist, gaining widespread acclaim. In and tours.
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Thank You
for helping us care for families like Braylon Steinke’s.
There’s No Place Like Home Storybook Ball 2019
The Wizard of Oz Saturday, May 18 6pm-Midnight Tampa Marriott Waterside RmhcTampaBay.org/ Storybook-Ball
OPEN DOORS OPEN HEARTS
We rely on community support to care for 2,000 families each year while their children receive medical treatment. Please support us in your volunteer and charitable giving. www.RmhcTampaBay.org www.duPontREGISTRYtampabay.com
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HEALTH
The Gift of Life
Other hospitals said she was too sick for a heart transplant – but Tampa General disagreed.
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TONYA’S CONDITION WAS CRITICAL.
SO WAS HER CHOICE OF HOSPITAL. Tonya Cajuste needed a new heart. And kidney. After emergency surgery at her local Palm Beach hospital, doctors knew she needed a double transplant to save her life. But no hospital would take her. Except TGH. As one of the busiest and best transplant centers in the nation, TGH has performed over 10,000 transplants—with shorter wait times and world-class outcomes. Like Tonya’s.
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FASHION
Chic Heat
Chilly? Here’s how to warm up and still look cool.
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oan about the cold to your friends in Chicago or Buffalo (OMG, the temp’s going down to 50!) and they will snort at you disdainfully. But even in Tampa Bay we need to cover up now and then. In the interests of helping you brave the chill winds of winter Florida-style, our design maven Tracy Negoshian has unearthed a trove of cozy wardrobe musts that’ll keep you warm when the weather’s not cooperating. l — The Editors
KEEP IT TIGHT: Caress the skin and warm the senses: these completely opaque tights with a matte look also give a hint of glamour on cooler days. ($61; wolfordshop.com)
WELL-ARMED: Unlike traditional layering shirts, these non-shaping arm tights from Spanx have no seam up the arms for 360° of flawless coverage. A wardrobe game-changer. ($30; spanx.com)
CITY TO CHALET: The Tundra faux fur headband from J.McLaughlin ensures warmth without the woes of pesky hat-head. ($58; jmclaughlin.com) GUCCI MAIN: The grosgrain-trimmed dress from Gucci — a timeless silhouette in the brand’s signature checked tweed. A true classic. ($3,980; net-a-porter.com)
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RED LEATHER DAY: A round toe and low-cut shaft shape Christian Louboutin’s calfskin leather ankle boot with season-spanning comfort and versatility. The soles? Red, of course. ($895; bergdorfgoodman.com)
2018 Defending Champion Paul Casey
PGA TOUR® by day. LIVE country by night.
Players subject to appear.
Tampa Bay’s Must-See March Golf & Entertainment Event! The PGA TOUR® rolls into Tampa Bay March 18–24, 2019! Come see the best PGA TOUR golfers in the world right here in Tampa Bay! Enjoy premium, on-course food and drink experiences, and fun the whole family can enjoy, like: • Valspar LIVE Concert Presented by Chick-fil-A Featuring Brad Paisley (Included with Saturday ticket)
• Hooters Owl’s Nest • Michelob ULTRA 19th Hole • Josh Cellars Grape & Grain
• Publix® Chillounge
• Valspar Block Party
• Frenchy’s Pool Party
• Valspar Chameleon Cove
• Tampa Bay Times Autograph Alley • Pinch A Penny Patriots’ Outpost • Northwestern Mutual Family Fun Zone
• Sensible Micro Fortnite Zone
For tickets, visit ValsparChampionship.com Facebook
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SPORTS
Golf, Sure, But So Much More Ten reasons you have to go to the Valspar Championship. STORY BY DAVID WARNER
The 2018 tournament with Tiger Woods in red; Brad Paisley.
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f you’d never heard of the Valspar Championship before 5. It’s great for families — and a lot cheaper than last year, you probably know about it now. Disney World. “There’s a big family fun zone,” says Why? Tiger Woods. Though he’d played a mixed West, “with rock climbing, putt putt, hula hoops, free popteam tournament at Innisbrook Resort’s Copperhead Course sicles — and kids 15 and under get in free!” And speaking in 1996, he’d never played Valspar, so the crowds last year at of tweens (and the tween-at-heart), this year there’s the Copperhead were, in a word, crazy. Sensible Micro Fortnite Zone, with eight PlayStation con“Crazy in a great way,” says Valspar Tournament Director soles available for players of the mega-popular online video Tracy West. “Our Tampa Bay region responded in droves.” game Fortnite. But Woods wasn’t the only draw, she adds. “We had Jordan 6. You can chill out at the Publix® Chillounge. Spieth back, Rory McIlroy for the first time. Our One of Rainer Scheer’s chic white outdoor living crowds have been building and building over the rooms comes to Valspar for the first time, and Paisley is arguably on Thursday and Friday nights after play it will years.” Valspar’s biggest Woods is not yet confirmed for the 2019 morph into a Silent Disco, 300 headsets at the Tournament, which takes place at Innisbrook musical act so far. ready. March 18-24, but there are plenty of other rea7. You can see Brad Paisley! The tournasons you should attend — at least 10, by our ment has featured some big-name musical acts in count: the past, but Paisley is arguably the biggest. The Saturday 1. It’s for charity. All the proceeds after expenses go to night concert is free with a tournament ticket and takes local charities, administered through the tournament’s place on a huge stage built specially for the concert on the non-profit arm, Copperhead Charities. The tournament Osprey Driving Range adjacent to the 14th fairway. has raised more than $41 million since its beginnings as a 8. You could be on TV! The tournament is covered by mixed PGA/LPGA event in 1977. NBC and the Golf Channel and broadcast in over 200 2. It’s good for Tampa Bay’s pocketbook. According to countries. a study by USF’s Muma College of Business, the tourna9. You can volunteer. Over 2,000 volunteers are needed in ment pumps $51 million into the local economy each year. every aspect of the tournament from scoring to ticket-tak3. You can actually see the golfers. “It’s not the same as ing. sitting in the third deck of a stadium,” says West. “Those 10. Girl Power! Tracy West is one of the few female golfers are walking right past you!” tournament directors on the PGA Tour, and her sister, 4. You can meet them, too. “Players are great about signJennifer Hines, is an assistant tournament director on the ing autographs after they come out of the scoring area,” PGA Tour. says the tournament director. For more info on tickets, volunteering and more, go to valsparchampionship.com.
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ARTS
Setting the Stage
Rich & Mimi Rice take the long view of Tampa Bay’s theater scene. STORY BY MITZI GORDON PHOTOGRAPH BY TOM KRAMER
Rich and Mimi Rice at home in St. Petersburg (with a photo of Tennessee Williams peering over their shoulders).
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hey deliver stories with all the flair you would expect “We had some incredible storytellers who would take whatever from lifelong theater people. Sitting on their screened the playwright was working on and retell it in mythic terms,” back patio in Lakewood Estates, surrounded by wide Rich said. oak wilderness sloping down toward a neighborhood lake, Rich Roughly a dozen alumni from the program’s 10-year run are and Mimi Rice sip coffee and recall their early days in then-quiet now well-known playwrights with Broadway credits, including St. Petersburg. Pulitzer finalist Lisa D’Amour (Detroit) and Lauren Gunderson, “People used to say about St. Pete that it was ‘Wrinkle City,’” the most produced living U.S. playwright in 2018, whose Miss Mimi laughed. “Central Avenue had some beautiful old buildBennet: Christmas at Pemberley was just seen at American Stage. ings, and that was about it.” As Mimi recalled, each participant would walk away inspired. Now moving vibrantly into their 80s, she and Rich maintain “For an actor it was an incredible experience, because we got to a deep-rooted connection to the arts. But when they first moved create a character — and then it would get changed, it would to St. Pete in 1980 from New Hampshire, where they’d been move, it would enliven,” she said. active in academic and summer theater, the city’s cultural landAbout 70 dramatists from across the nation moved through the scape was nowhere near as vibrant as it is now. The original Dalì WordBRIDGE lab. For its first public event, a notable playwright Museum was just being built in a former marine warehouse, and actor from Los Angeles was invited to come perform his latest the Vinoy was an empty shell, and while the local theater scene work. The play was Uncle Bends: A Home-Cooked Negro Narrative, and wasn’t exactly a wasteland, said Rich, it was “spotty.” The its author was Bob Devin Jones, who eventually settled in St. Pete USF theater program was bringing in British directors, and the and founded The Studio@620, the popular community art space Showboat Dinner Theatre was a draw. But American Stage was on 1st Avenue South. still in its infancy — and for a performer, the workplace could be WordBRIDGE relocated to Clemson University in South downright dangerous. Carolina, then to Taos, New Mexico, and on to “You went into rehearsal and the theater had Towson University in Maryland before funding dried dressing rooms in the back, but we couldn’t use them up. Rich credits institutions like Eckerd, USF, and because they were rat-infested!” Mimi said of one Rich and Mimi track St. Petersburg Junior College (SPC) with providing the changing local scene crucial backing for projects. Over time, SPC gave early experience. with mingled awe and homes to American Stage, the Florida Orchestra and Despite these unpromising conditions, both Rich excitement. and Mimi found the ’Burg a welcoming place. The Palladium Theatre. couple started working together at Eckerd College, “They’ve been the patron angels the arts have where Rich — who received his Ph.D. in Theater needed in many ways,” he said. from University of Utah in 1970 — served as direcAs local spaces like American Stage and free Fall tor of theater for more than two decades. Mimi became Equity Theatre took root, they challenged the art form — and each liaison coordinator for South Florida in the mid-1980s, repreother — by not playing down to audiences. Theatergoers and pasenting 300 actors, chorus members and stage managers across trons responded with increasing attendance and support. Tampa, Orlando, Sarasota, and St. Petersburg. “Good theater grows good people,” Mimi said. She’s proven One of Rich’s Eckerd classes performed a Lorca play for the that axiom with a project of her own. Working alongside local Dalì Museum opening in 1982. Other students in his directing writers Matt and Sheila Cowley, with help from Bob Devin Jones, class were assigned to produce a one-act play and find someplace, she founded the Radio Theatre Project (RTP) in 2008, bringing any place, to perform it in town. They took to street corners and full-cast theater productions (complete with live sound effects) storefronts, and eventually to Williams Park, where these live hap- to Bay area radio and performance venues. RTP now attracts penings often drew memorable audiences. capacity crowds to its monthly performances at The Studio@620 “A drunk came in and sat down next to the theater students … and streams on SoundCloud, attracting worldwide listeners from and it was great!” Rich said. Russia to Brazil. While mentoring students, Rich himself found a mentor in Rich and Mimi continue to track the changing local scene with David Kranes, who served on Rich’s PhD committee back in mingled awe and excitement. A few years ago, they wandered Utah. Kranes was bringing in top-ranked directors and actors downtown for dinner to celebrate the sale of their boat. Sitting at from both coasts to develop new plays at Sundance, and Rich The Moon Under Water on Beach Drive, with the Birchwood wanted to emulate this concept at the academic level. Thus the rooftop lounge just opening up for the evening nearby, they WordBRIDGE Playwright’s Lab was conceived, and pitched to looked around at the bustling crowds and thought, as Mimi put it: the country’s best college playwrights. “What has happened to this town?” This lab brought together a team of resource artists to support A dRTB series: How Did We Get Here? playwrights in need of encouragement. Each writer was housed Photographer Tom Kramer and writer Mitzi Gordon want to know. and fed in residency for at least two weeks, all the while working Together, they are charting the Bay area’s creative renaissance by intently with actors and directors — and often with architects, meeting with transformative and inspiring arts leaders. Their stories share perspective on how the region shifted from sleepy suburbs historians, psychologists or musicians — on developing a new to thriving cultural hub in just a few decades. dramatic work. www.duPontREGISTRYtampabay.com
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ARTS
Flower Power
The generous vision of painter Jane Bunker.
Mason Morfitt
STORY BY DAVID WARNER
Jane Bunker at her Gulfport home studio with paintings for the scholarship auction.
I
’ve never been much of a fan of lilies — their scent’s too invasive, and the funeral association is hard to ignore. But I may have to reconsider now that I’ve seen Jane Bunker’s paintings. A nationally recognized artist who works wonders with light and color, she makes lilies seem at once voluptuous and evanescent. From Feb. 4-28, Bunker’s gorgeous blooms will be on display at the Mahaffey Theater in the second-floor gallery space curated by Galleria Misto. But that’s just the opening act. On March 9 at the Dr. Carter C. Woodson African American History Museum in St. Petersburg, the paintings will be sold in a silent auction, the proceeds from which will go toward the new Woodson Warrior Scholarship for college-bound youth with at least one parent of African American heritage.
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“When you only have two pennies left in the world,” says a Chinese proverb quoted on the cover of the auction catalogue, “buy a loaf of bread with one and a lily with the other.” Buy a painting from the Bunker Scholarship Auction and you will, in essence, be doing both: providing nourishment and embracing beauty. Bunker, a sparkling, youthful 73, began painting at the age of 10 alongside adult students at the Farnsworth School of Art in North Truro, Mass., where her family summered and where she met her husband, photographer Mason Morfitt. (Married 50-plus years, they both remember what the other was wearing the day they met.) The couple splits their time between homes in Gulfport and Cape Cod. Bunker earned a degree in art at Stanford but, worried that she
ARTS
Mise en Place
wouldn’t be able to support herself by painting, got a master’s in So you’ve been able to recapture the way you saw the health education and a Ph.D. in psychology. She only returned to world when… painting after retiring from psychology 20 years ago, and since that …when I was little, yes. This art, the flowers are more defined time has been represented by galleries in Santa Fe, NYC, Aspen than a lot of my landscapes. There is still a softness to them, but and Boise, and had a major one-woman show in 2013 at the New they’re less out of focus than a lot of the landscapes. Britain Museum of American Art in Connecticut. She’s particuTell me more about the auction. larly known for her haunting, seductively blurred landscapes. When I first was thinking about this idea, I was kind of feeling in I’d gotten to know Bunker and Morfitt through mutual friends, a place of “lack” — and I don’t like living from a place of lack, I but until one Sunday afternoon last December I’d never had the like living from a place of abundance. And it occurred to me that chance to sit and talk with her at length. She’d been on her feet if I gave everything away, that’s what people who feel abundant all day, having welcomed a stream of visitors to her home studio do, they give stuff away — because there’s always more. And it during Art Jones, Gulfport’s annual studio tour. She was as reworked. In no time I just felt happier and more at peace, and it’s laxed and candid as ever; excerpts from our conversation follow: kind of like the paintings have painted themselves. That expresDW: Talk about the intersection between being a psychologist sion of getting out of your own way and just letting this creative and being an artist. force in the universe come through — that’s kind of how it felt. Jane Bunker: I would say they’re both based in love. And they Why flowers? definitely feed each other, in inspiring me to connect beyond my That’s a good question. I think that flowers have a special spiriown human patterns so that I can be in that place of oneness tual place in my heart. In the history of art, particularly Christian and truth and love that did allow me to be a better art, the Madonnas, there are often lilies. I’m not a therapist, and also it’s what I want my paintings to religious person, but I care deeply about the spiritual be about. And another way they’re connected is way that we all connect with each other. And I think “That’s what that when I was a therapist, I worked in East Palo people who feel that lilies are very sensuous — they’re almost like a Alto in the black community doing empowering woman’s naked body, the curves, the softness, the luabundant do, they minousness. When I take pictures that I work from, I work for women. And I got connected with the give stuff away.” set up a lot of lights so that I can get the light coming children of these women. That inspired me to want to come and connect with the African American through the petal. I like the drama of the lilies… I’ve museum here — it’s sort of in my blood. So that got always thought the main thing I liked to paint was me thinking, how could I do what I love, which is the light, but if I go even deeper than that, I want painting, and also be in service? And that’s how the auction idea to communicate the experience of falling in love with the image. came about. And if somebody else can look at it and feel the connection — How did your subject matter evolve when you returned that’s what really makes me happy. to painting after so many years? When I knew that I was finally going to be able to paint again, I thought about Vincent Van Gogh and how he just painted his shoes — and I thought, you know, this doesn’t have to be anything amazing, just paint anything in the house. So I started out painting pots and pans — little still lifes — and went from pots and pans to landscapes. But the flowers are all that I’ve been focusing on for the last three years. There’s mystery in your work — the landscapes dissolving before your eyes, the glow in the flowers. How do you do that? I use a scumbling technique with the brush. Instead of painting Alisha Canner big strokes, the paint goes on quite thinly, and then I build up multiple layers. The very fine texture of the paint catches the light, and the multiple layers create a sort of depth and a luminescence. Bunker Scholarship Auction: Sat. March 9, 5-8 p.m., It reminds me of the way a myopic person sees the Dr. Carter G. Woodson African American History Museum, world. 2240 9th Ave. S., St. Petersburg, BunkerScholarshipAuction.com. That is exactly what it was like when I first started to paint. Galleria Misto Preview: Feb. 4-28, Mahaffey Theater, Because nobody knew that I needed glasses. I am severely myopic, 400 1st St. S., St. Petersburg, galleriamisto.com. and I thought the world was gorgeous… I mean, spiritually there For additional info, go to Jane BunkerArtist.com or woodsonmuseum.org are no boundaries, there are no borders, there is no separation, so everything kind of flows into everything else, and that was how I saw the world. www.duPontREGISTRYtampabay.com
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T H E F LO R I D A O R C H E S T R A
Raymond James Pops
Dreams of Spain
In Latin-inspired gems from Bizet to Bernstein, star soprano Camille Zamora takes audiences on a musical journey into the Spanish soul, with a voice like a “brilliant torch, bringing light and magic to everything she sings.” Jeff Tyzik conducts.
Feb 1 & 2
Gala Concert
An Intimate Evening with Seal
The four-time Grammy winner joins the orchestra for classics like Luck Be A Lady and I’ve Got you Under My Skin, along with his hit Kiss From a Rose. Conducted by Michael Francis. All in support of your Florida Orchestra.
Feb 9, Mahaffey Theater - One Night Only Special Concert
Tampa Bay Times Masterworks
Sing Out! Tampa Bay Feb 7
The Planets Feb 15 - 17 Free Tickets for Kids in Advance
Mahaffey Theater - One Night Only
With NASA Video
Tampa Bay Times Masterworks
Raymond James Pops
A Midsummer Night’s Dream Feb 22 -24
Women Rock Mar 2 & 3
Free Tickets for Kids in Advance
LISTEN LOCAL | Concerts in Tampa, St. Pete & Clearwater FloridaOrchestra.org | 727.892.3337 or 1.800.662.7286 80
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A&E GUIDE
JANUARY-FEBRUARY
HIS NAME IS ALEXANDER HAMILTON: Joseph Morales plays the title role in the Broadway touring company of Hamilton, coming to the Straz Feb. 12-Mar. 10. Photo by ©Joan Marcus www.duPontREGISTRYtampabay.com
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THEATER
MUSIC CLASSICAL/CHORAL
A Bronx Tale
Set in the Bronx in the 1960s, this musical adapation of the play by actor Chazz Palminteri (also the basis of a popular film) finds a young man caught between the father he loves and the mob boss he’d love to be. 1/29-2/3, Broadway Series at the Straz, strazcenter.org.
Florida Orchestra
Columbinus It’s been 20 years since the shootings at Columbine High School in Colorado. Back then, school shootings were a horrible anomaly; now, even more horribly, they’re commonplace. Innovocative Theater is devoting its entire season to the subject of school violence, beginning with Columbinus, a mix of fact and fiction that addresses “the fatal consequences that result when a culture succeeds in weaponizing the alienation and angst of its own children.” Through 1/20, Innovocative Theatre Company at Stageworks Theatre, Tampa, innovocativetheatre.org.
The Complete Works of Shakespeare [Abridged] [Revised]
Copenhagen
The Odd Couple (Female Version)
Why did two of the world’s most renowned nuclear physicists, Niels Bohr and Werner Heisenberg, meet in Copenhagen in 1941? That’s what Mrs. Bohr wants to know, and Michael Frayn (of Noises Off fame) speculates on the answer by conjuring up a posthumous meeting between the three in this Tony-winning drama. Through 1/20, Tampa Repertory Theatre, tamparep.org.
Hamilton Yes, it’s as good as everyone says it is. And yes, it’s the hottest ticket in town. But if you haven’t gotten yours yet, don’t despair. The Straz encourages people to continue to check with them for availability of late-release tickets. And make sure you’re dealing with the Straz, not some ticket-scalper: The only official avenues for purchasing tickets to Hamilton’s Straz Center engagement are via phone at 813-229-STAR (7827) or 800-955-1045; in person at the Straz Center Ticket Office (1010 N. W.C. MacInnes Place); or at www.strazcenter.org. And stay tuned: There will be a lottery for forty (40) $10 seats for all performances. Details will be announced closer to the engagement. 2/12-3/10, Straz Center, strazcenter.org.
Hundred Days In this critically acclaimed and appealingly raucous musical memoir, creators and stars Abigail and Shaun Bengson explore a fundamental question: What if you lived as if you only had 100 days left? 1/15-3/24, Jaeb Theatre at the Straz, strazcenter.org
Kiss Me Kate Cole Porter’s backstage musical about a troupe staging The Taming of the Shrew amidst romantic and other entanglements features such signature Porter tunes as “So In Love,” “Too Darn Hot” and “Brush Up Your Shakespeare.” 2/2-5, The Palladium, stpeteopera.org. 82
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Nick Hoop and Ryan Fisher star in Columbinus.
For its 20th anniversary season, Jobsite brings back one of its biggest hits, in which all of the Bard’s 37 plays plus a few sonnets are squished into 90 minutes. 3/13-4/7, Jobsite Theater at the Straz, jobsitetheater.org
Schubert’s Symphony No. 9: Joshua Weilerstein conducts; Joshua Roman plays Bates’s Cello Concerto. 1/18, 8 p.m., Straz; 1/19, 8 p.m., and 1/20, 2 p.m., Mahaffey. Dreams of Spain: Soprano Camille Zamora, Jeff Tyzik conducting. 2/1, 8 p.m., Straz; 2/2, Mahaffey. The Planets: The 100th anniversary of Holst’s sonic trip through the galaxy. 2/15, 8 p.m., Straz; 2/16, 8 p.m., Mahaffey; 2/17, 7:30 p.m., Ruth Eckerd. A Midsummer Night’s Dream: A rare performance of the full work, proving it’s so much more than the famous “Wedding March.” Also, Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 27 with Anne-Marie McDermott. 2/22, 8 p.m., Straz; 2/23, 7 p.m., The Palladium; 2/24, 7:30 p.m., Ruth Eckerd.
One City Chorus
Neil Simon’s classic comedy with a fussy Florence instead of Felix and a slovenly Olive instead of Oscar. Trust Hat Trick Theatre Productions to find the laughs, whatever the genders. 2/14-24, Murray Theatre at Ruth Eckerd Hall, rutheckerd.com.
A St. Pete institution in only its third year of existence, the community chorus led with wit and precision by Jon Arterton welcomes special guest Roy Zimmerman, the singing satirist who’s been called “a latter-day Tom Lehrer.” 2/29, 8 p.m., The Palladium.
Othello
Opera Tampa: The Pearl Fishers
See the spotlight on p. 83. Through 2/3, jobsitetheater.org.
Perfect Arrangement A gay man and a lesbian working for the U.S. State Department in the 1950s have married each other’s partners to escape suspicion — and then they’re tasked with identifying “sexual deviants” within their ranks. 1/26-2/24, freeFall Theatre Company, freefalltheatre.com.
Pipeline A timely play by MacArthur “Genius Grant” recipient Dominique Morisseau in which a single mother teaching in an inner-city school wants to transfer her son to a private school — until an explosive classroom incident upends everything. 1/23-2/24, American Stage, americanstage.com.
Radio Theatre Project Live RTP’s hardy crew of radio players ring in the new year with another live radio play, sound effects and all. 1/28, 7 p.m., The Studio@620, studio620.org.
Ready Steady Yeti Go In the aftermath of a hate crime, a white student befriends the only black girl in his school, leading to bad parental advice, passive-aggressive acts and ill-formed gestures of kindness that create a “White Guilt Perfect Storm.” The play is presented in partnership with Tampa’s Blake High School of the Performing Arts, from which all of the cast is drawn. 2/8-24, Stageworks Theatre, stageworkstheatre.org.
Lifelong friends in a Far East seaside village find themselves in an impossible love triangle in Georges Bizet’s 1863 opera, which makes its Straz Center debut. 3/15-17, Straz.
Palladium Chamber Players World-class chamber players grace the Palladium’s Hough Hall stage in this monthly, Wednesday-night series. Beethoven/Korngold/Beethoven (2/13, 7:30 p.m.). Mozart/Dohnányi/Fauré (3/6, 7:30 p.m.). The Palladium.
Tampa Bay Symphony: Brush Up Your Shakespeare . Described as “one of Tampa Bay’s hidden jewels,” the Symphony plays a Bard-inspired program of works by Tchaikovsky, MacDowell, Ben Goldberg and Vaughn-Williams. 2/17, 4 p.m., Hough Hall at The Palladium.
Sing Out! Tampa Bay People from all corners of Tampa Bay unite as one voice with The Florida Orchestra. 2/7, 7 p.m., The Mahaffey.
Woodson Chamber Concerts Spend a sublime Sunday afternoon listening to Florida Orchestra members play chamber music in the artful surroundings of the Dr. Carter G. Woodson African American Museum. Afternoon with a String Quartet (2/10, 3 p.m.); Women in Music (3/10, 3 p.m). Woodson Museum, 2240 9th Ave. S., St. Petersburg. Continued
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SHAKE IT UP
OK, maybe it’s a little too on-thenose to say that a production of Othello has a killer cast. But Jobsite certainly seems to have assembled just that for Shakespeare’s tragedy of race, jealousy and male ego. UK- and USF-trained Robert Richards Jr. stars in the title role; Tatiana Baccari, so good in Jobsite’s Cloud 9, is Desdemona; and the dream team of Giles Davies and Katrina Stevenson play the scheming Iago and his wife, the savvy Emilia. Add director David Jenkins’s tantalizing promise of a “ripped-from-the-headlines” contemporary spin, and you’ve got an Othello we’re dying to see. And after that, it’s going to be fun to watch Othello and everything else in Shakespeare’s oeuvre get spoofed in Jobsite’s second spring production, The Complete Works of William Shakespeare [Abridged] [Revised], a reprise of one of the company’s greatest hits. Othello, through 2/3; Complete Works, 3/15-4/7, Jobsite Theater, Shimberg Playhouse at the Straz Center, Tampa, 813-229-STAR, jobsitetheater.org. —DW www.duPontREGISTRYtampabay.com
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A&E GUIDE JAZZ/EXPERIMENTAL/ CABARET
Chuchito Valdés Trio Following in the footsteps of his father and grandfather, Chuchito continues the legacy of great piano players from Cuba. 2/22, 8 p.m., Side Door at the Palladium.
Chris Botti The golden-haired Grammy-winning trumpeter returns for his sixth visit to the Capitola. 3/13, 7:30 p.m., Capitol Theatre.
Diego Figueiredo & O Som Do Jazz Brazilian guitar master Diego Figueiredo and sextet O Som Do Jazz in a fusion of bossa nova, jazz and classical. 1/18, 8 p.m., Side Door at The Palladium.
EMIT-a-thon A scholarship benefit program of adventurous music for students in St. Petersburg College’s MIRA (Music Industry/Recording Arts) program. Special guests: inventive electric noisemaker Mark Hosler; dance and electroacoustic research trio Anoikis; and improvising duo Kersey/Stewart. 1/22, 7:30 p.m., Side Door at The Palladium.
An Evening of Percussive Resonance Dynamic percussive chamber music featuring Andrea Tafelski and Washington Squared (W² Percussion) 1/24, 7 p.m., Studio@620.
LaChanze A Tony winner for The Color Purple, she’s gone on to Broadway diva status in shows like Once On This Island, Company, and If/ Then. 2/28, 8 p.m., Straz Center. Mayumana: Currents A high-voltage mixed-media performance inspired by the struggles over power (electric power, that is) between Edison and Tesla. 2/21, 8 p.m., Ferguson Hall at the Straz.
Nicki Parrott, Rossano Sportiello, and Ed Metz w/James Suggs Arbors recording artists return to the Palladium following a sold-out show last February. James Suggs joins them on trumpet. 1/12, 8 p.m., The Palladium.
JANUARY-FEBRUARY Grammy-winning flutist Nestor Torres and his quartet (3/1, 7:30 p.m.); vocalist Alexis Coles, who’s been compared to Sarah Vaughan and Anita O’Day, backed up by the 17-piece Helios Jazz Orchestra (3/2, 7:30 p.m.); and pianist Martin Bejerano and his trio (3/3, 7:30 p.m.). Five-show package available as well as individual tickets. The Palladium.
ROCK/POP Air Supply
They’re not all out of love yet just yet. 1/26, 8 p.m., Capitol.
America
Fair) and a music school, she’s written songs like “Adia” and “Building a Mystery” that have forever earwormed their way into our hearts and minds. 2/27, 8 p.m., Ruth Eckerd.
Glenn Miller Orchestra The world-famous ensemble brings timeless classics like “In the Mood” and “Chattanooga Choo Choo” back to the stage. 1/22, 7:30 p.m., Mahaffey.
P!nk The international pop icon brings her Beautiful Trauma World Tour to Tampa. So don’t go asking, “What about us?” 3/3, 7:30 p.m., Amalie Arena.
The pop-rock wonders bring their 50th anniversary tour to Clearwater. No word on whether they’ll arrive on a horse with no name. 1/27, 8 p.m., Ruth Eckerd.
Michael Bublé The satin-voiced crooner kicks off his tour in Tampa for a special Valentine’s Day show. 2/13, 8 p.m., Amalie Arena.
Celtic Woman Get prepped for St. Paddy’s Day with this Grammy-nominated all-female ensemble. 3/13, 7:30 pm., Mahaffey.
Shawn Colvin Acoustic The Grammy-winning singer/songwriter returns. Will Sunny come home, too? 1/23, 7:30 p.m., Capitol.
Fleetwood Mac Mick Fleetwood, John McVie, Stevie Nicks, and Christine McVie — together again! 2/18, 8 p.m., Amalie Arena.
Art Garfunkel Most of us know the ethereal voice that bridged troubled water lo these many years ago. But did you know Art Garfunkel walked across the U.S. and Japan on foot? 2/23, 8 p.m., Capitol.
Havana Cuba All Stars Cuba’s greatest musicians assemble for a program celebrating the music of the Cuban people. 2/27, 8 p.m., Straz.
Pink Floyd Laser Spectacular at the Mahaffey 1/17.
Pink Floyd Laser Spectacular As one wag recently tweeted, “Dark Side of the Moon” and “The Wall” have been trending of late, yet Pink Floyd had nothing to do with either. Nevertheless, the band’s music remains indelible, and this show promises to showcase it in eyepopping fashion. 1/17, 7:30, Mahaffey.
Wayne Newton Clearwater gets a touch of Vegas as “Mr. Entertainment” makes his Capitol Theatre debut. Danke Schoen, Wayne! 3/3, 7 p.m., Capitol.
Nile Rodgers & CHIC Aaaahhh... freak out! Mega-hit producer Rodgers and his disco-riffic band CHIC take a break from touring with Cher to promote their critically acclaimed new album. 1/18, 8 p.m., Mahaffey.
Blake Shelton
That guy from The Voice who keeps losing to Kelly Clarkson. 3/8, 7 p.m., Amalie Arena.
Whitney James’ Jazz Valentine A night of music for lovers and jazz lovers, with smooth-as-silk vocalist James, acclaimed local trio La Lucha, and jazz guitarist LaRue Nicholson. 2/14, 8 p.m., Side Door at the Palladium.
TFO Rock Concert: The Music of Tom Petty The Florida Orchestra pays tribute to one of Florida’s own. 1/25, 8 p.m., Mahaffey.
Pink Martini The multi-lingual, multi-talented 12-member ensemble brings its suave, eclectic sounds to St. Pete. 1/27, 7 p.m., The Mahaffey.
TFO Pops: Women Rock
St. Petersburg Jazz Festival
We Shall Overcome: A Celebration of Martin Luther King, Jr
The 11th annual festival brings five days of top-flight jazz to the Palladium, beginning with multi-instrumentalist and singer Valerie Gillespie and ensemble (2/27, 7:30 p.m.), followed by a a tribute to legendary jazz saxophonist Sam Rivers (2/28, 7:30 p.m.); Latin 84
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A tribute to the women who changed rock ‘n’ roll forever. 3/2, 8 p.m., The Mahaffey.
Sarah McLachlan comes to Ruth Eckerd 2/27.
Sarah McLachlan The founder of a fabled music festival (Lilith
Inspired by the words of Dr. King, Damien Sneed showcases repertoire from across the African-American music traditions, all interwoven with King’s impassioned oratory. 1/31, 8 p.m., Straz. Continued
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A&E GUIDE
MEET THE MUSES
Each year the St. Petersburg Arts Alliance throws one of the best parties (or pARTies) of the year: MUSE, billed as “a night to revel in our creative spirits!” Held in the Museum of Fine Arts’ two-story glass conservatory, the shindig is never stuffy and always full of surprises — this year including interactive digital art, pop-up performances and artful by-the-bite dinner courses. But the main event is the MUSE Awards, a tribute to the people making a difference in the city’s booming arts scene. This year’s awardees include Mark Aeling (pictured) and MGA Sculpture Studio in visual arts (his stunning mega-sized sculptures are everywhere); legendary jazz bassist John Lamb in performance arts; and Sterling Watson, author and co-founder of Eckerd’s Writers in Paradise conference, in literary arts. Two couples will be recognized for their generosity: Lisa and Perry Everett, Patron of the Arts award, and Jennifer and Jeff Lovelady, Arts Ambassador Award. And photographer Edel Mohr, who created a book documenting SHINE, will be recognized as an extraordinary volunteer. Fri., Feb. 8, 7 p.m., Museum of Fine Arts, 255 Beach Drive NE. St. Petersburg, stpeteartsalliance.org. —DW www.duPontREGISTRYtampabay.com
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COMEDY
seasoned writers and book industry professionals from throughout Florida share their expertise. 2/22-24, Creative Pinellas campus, Largo, wordierthanthou.com.
Carol Burnett The queen of TV comedy in “an evening of laughter and reflection where the audience asks the questions.” 2/12, 7:30 p.m., Ruth Eckerd.
Valspar Championship Golf, Brad Paisley, and — turn to p. 74 to learn more. 3/18-24, Innisbrook, 36750 US Hwy 19 N., Palm Harbor, valsparchampionship. com.
Ronny Chieng The correspondent for Comedy Central’s The Daily Show is fresh from a starring role in Crazy Rich Asians. 12/23, 7:30 p.m., Straz.
FUNDRAISERS
Penn & Teller
Battle of the Minds Challenge your cranial capacity and support a vital non-profit organization, the St. Petersburg Free Clinic. 3/2, 6-11 p.m., Tradewinds Island Grand Resort, 5500 Gulf Blvd., St. Pete Beach, stpetersburgfreeclinic.org/Battle.
Rescheduled from their original date of Aug. 9, the masters of comic magic finally arrive in St. Pete. 2/1, 8 p.m., Mahaffey.
Ward Smith & Friends One of the Bay’s top comics (and an excellent actor to boot) returns to the Side Door with funny friends in tow. 1/19, 8 p.m., Palladium.
DANCE
Farruquito “The greatest flamenco dancer of the century” (according to the New York Times), Farruquito takes furious footwork to new heights in a solo flamenco performance. 2/13, 8 p.m., Straz.
iLuminate
As seen on TV (particularly AGT), the troupe fuses technology and dance with glow-in-thedark suits and specialized dances designed to be performed on a fully darkened stage. 1/31, 7:30 p.m., Mahaffey.
Bravura Brunch Carol Burnett
The 25th anniversary brunch to benefit The Florida Orchestra. 3/9, 11 a.m., Innisbrook in Palm Harbor, 727-584-4542.
an unfulfilled desire. 2/16, 7 p.m., Studio@620.
Fire & Light Gala: Illumination
Voices: The Encore An evening-length interactive solo by the brilliant dancer/choreographer Alex Jones. 1/19, 7:30 p.m., Studio@620.
SPECIAL EVENTS Firestone Grand Prix
The vroom-vrooms take over the streets of downtown St. Pete, much to the delight of racing fans and much to the chagrin of Beach Drive apartment dwellers. 3/8-10, St. Petersburg, gpstpete.com.
Florida State Fair Thrill rides, racing pigs, demolition derby and the part everyone cares about the most: fair food! Chicken and waffles pizza, anyone? 2/7-18, Florida State Fairgrounds, Tampa, floridastatefair.com.
Gasparilla Parade of Pirates iLuminate
Moving Current Dance Collective 2019 Winter Concert The company celebrates its 21st season of producing and supporting the contemporary dance community of Tampa Bay and beyond. 1/18-19 at 7:30 p.m., 1/20 at 2 p.m., USF Theater 2 TAR, 3829 W. Holly Dr., Tampa.
If you’ve been, you’ve likely had one of two reactions: I. wil. never. do. this. again. or ARGGHHHThatwasashiploadofbeerybead edfunhiccup! Whichever is you, Gasparilla is, for better or worse, Tampa. And you do have to go at least once. 1/26, 2-5:30 p.m. Parade begins at Bay to Bay and Bayshore boulevards in South Tampa, continues down Bayshore to Brorein Street, then east on Brorein and north to Cass Street & Ashley Drive. gasparillapiratefest.com.
HamilFest
A celebration of the American studio glass movement and the world-class collection of the Imagine Museum. 1/26, 6:30-9:30 p.m., Imagine Museum, 1901 Central Ave., St. Petersburg, imaginemuseum.com.
TFO Gala Concert: An Intimate Evening with the Florida Orchestra & Seal Four-time Grammy Award winner Seal will perform with The Florida Orchestra at its annual gala concert to benefit the orchestra’s community and artistic initiatives. 2/9, 7 p.m., Mahaffey, floridaorchestra.org.
The MUSE Awards
See p. 85. 2/8, 7 p.m., Museum of Fine Arts, 255 Beach Dr. NE, St. Petersburg, stpeteartsalliance.org.
Whiskey and War Stories Scott Neil will tell war stories and talk about his collaboration with other Special Operations veterans to open a distillery in St. Petersburg. All proceeds to benefit the Warehouse Arts District Association. 1/26, Tully~Levine Gallery at The ArtsXchange, 515 22nd Street S., St. Petersburg (6 p.m., Whiskey Experience; 7 p.m., Dinner; After Dinner, Scott Neil’s War Stories). warehouseartsdistrictstpete.org.
MUSEUMS/GALLERIES ArtsXchange Gallery
Off the Wall: Meet the real people and hear the real stories behind Off The Wall: A Curated Series of Storytelling, the photographic exhibit. 1/22 & 2/26, 6:30 p.m., yourrealstories.blog.
Tied
Hamilton fans, don’t throw away your shot! A free day-long celebration of all things Alexander. 2/9, 9 a.m.-6 p.m., 6605 5th Ave. N., St. Petersburg, sites.google.com/view/hamilfest/ home.
An avant garde dance work by Black Horse Theatre and Alice Ferrulo Stampfle telling the tale of a Victorian Englishwoman tormented by
Tampa Bay Publishing Conference
Magritte & Dali: Two preeminent surrealists who opened minds to an alternative view of the world, constantly challenging reality. Through 5/19, thedali.org.
A weekend of useful information and engaging conversations, as dozens of
Laura Waller: Rockland, Tampa, NYC, through
Shen Yun Classical Chinese dance and spectacular stagecraft bring 5,000 years of folktales and legends to life. 2/20-24, Mahaffey.
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Dali Museum
Dunedin Fine Art Center
A&E GUIDE
JANUARY-FEBRUARY Saint Helices Series, through 3/1. Jack Ellis: Intricate large-scale watercolors by a local arts legend, through 2/24. One Day Tampa Bay: A 24-hour community photography project intended to capture the lives and light of the Tampa Bay area, through 2/24. dfac.org.
Florida CraftArt
QUEST: Celebration of Glass: In honor of the Glass Art Society (GAS) Conference, a threeday conference in St. Pete with more than 5,000 attendees from the glass world, Duncan McClellan and Mary Childs will curate an exhibition of glass masters who draw on mythological, cultural, and personal imagery. Through 5/19, thedali.org.
Museum of Fine Arts
Jewels of the Imagination: Radiant Masterworks by Jean Schlumberger from the Mellon Collection: Extraordinary works by the master midcentury Tiffany & Co. jeweler whose innovative designs graced the likes of Jackie Kennedy and Audrey Hepburn, through 3/31. Drawn to Beauty: The Art and Atelier of Jean Schlumberger: A complementary exhibit through 3/10. mfastpete.org.
Florida Museum of Photographic Arts
Modus Operandi: Contemporary Photography from the Collection of BNY Mellon: An adventurous group of contemporary image-makers. Through 4/15, fmopa.org.
Galleria Misto @ The Mahaffey See story p. 78. galleriamisto.com.
James Museum of Western and Wildlife Art
James Michaels: An American Pop Life: A special exhibition devoted to the vibrant pop expressionism of the unique Palm Harborbased artist. Through 3/3, thejamesmuseum.org.
life skills that serve them no matter what their future career and college paths. Through 1/28, thestudioat620.org.
Syd Entel Galleries/Susan Benjamin Glass
Peter Max The Retrospective 1960-2019: Collected works from the studio of America’s Iconic pop artist, through 1/20. Gallery receptions 1/19, 5-8 p.m., and 1/20, 1-3 p.m. Alex Sepkus Jewelry Trunk Show: A rare opportunity to view the work of a true original and a master of design. 3/8, 11-6 p.m. and 3/9, 12-2 p.m. RSVP to Linda at 727-7251808 or Linda@sydentelgalleries.com. 247 Main St, Safety Harbor, sydentelgalleries.com.
Tampa Museum of Art
Jewelry designer Alex Sepkus, Syd Entel Galleries 3/8-9
Studio@620
Midtown Through Our Eyes: Come experience Midtown and beyond through the eyes of Journeys in Journalism scholars in grades K-12. The three-school magnet and career academy track immerses students in multimedia journalism, equipping them with
Through 2/14: Yayoi Kusama: LOVE IS CALLING. You’ll only have a few moments inside Kusama’s mind-blowing Infinity Mirror Room installation, but you likely won’t forget it. Through 3/17: Robert Indiana: A Sculpture Retrospective. He’s most famous, of course, for his bold, graphic LOVE sculptures, but this retrospective reveals much more about this seminal artist’s wideranging oeuvre over his five-decade career. tampamuseum.org
Join us at the Bravura Brunch FEATURING
STUART MALINA TFO’S PRINCIPAL GUEST CONDUCTOR
AND CONDUCTOR OF THE ORCHESTRA’S POPULAR COFFEE SERIES, IN A SPECIAL MUSICAL PIANO PERFORMANCE
SATURDAY, MARCH 9, 2019 | 11:00 A.M. INNISBROOK GOLF AND SPA RESORT TO BENEFIT THE FLORIDA ORCHESTRA ENJOY LUNCH, A SPIRITED PROGRAM AND SILENT AND LIVE AUCTIONS WITH FRIENDS
FOR TICKET INFORMATION: CALL 727-584-4542 PRESENTED BY
VALET SPONSOR NORTH SUNCOAST ASSOCIATES www.duPontREGISTRYtampabay.com
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HUG CELEBRITY EVENT
1 On November 3, Help Us Gather (HUG) recognized and celebrated six local celebrities with disabilities for their contributions. It was a very special evening, as the community came together to support inclusion and socialize with guests of all abilities. Photos courtesy of HUG; guests are identified from left to right.
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1 Melissa Caulfield, Andrea Spenciero, Kaylee Gagnon, Heidi Fenton, Dirk Howard and Lauren Chouinard. 2 Maxine Simeone and Robin Lally. 3 Mike Lally and Kaylee Gagnon. 4 Dana McPherson, Douglas McPherson, Donna Malloy, Jeff Lopatin, Dr. Keith Waldrep, Stacie Guy and Richard Riggs. 5 Chelsea Heavenridge, Mais Tarrab, Julie Weintraub, Elif Fitzgerald, Ola Tarrab and Melissa Dohme.
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PHIL DOGANIERO 3 BRIDGE RACE
1 Nearly 1,200 registrants supported the 3 Bridge Race on November 10. Through the VIP Pre-Race Party and the Half Marathon, 5K & 1 mile races, hundreds of thousands of dollars have been raised to further Clearwater For Youth’s mission of ensuring no child is turned away from a sports program due to financial concerns. Photos courtesy Clearwater for Youth. Race participants are identified from left to right.
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2 1 Dawn Daugherty, Tempe Frank, Jennifer Barry and Chris Fredrick. 2 John and Kaley Connelly. 3 Jim Bankston. 4 Stephanie and Bronx Doganiero. 5 JC Daugherty, Blake Doganiero and Peter Dimmitt. 6 General Joe Oder and JC Daugherty.
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BOOT SCOOTIN BARN DANCE
1 Inspire Equine Therapy Program’s 2nd annual signature dinner and auction was held at Creek Under the Son Stables in Clearwater on October 20. This fundraising event benefits Inspire’s mission of improving the lives of individuals with disabilities and disabled veterans through therapeutic riding and other equine-related programs. Photos by Leo Mayrinck Photography. Guests identified left to right.
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1 The Barn Dance live auction in full swing. 2 Lauren St. Germain, ABC Action News anchor and special guest MC, with Scout Yarbrough and Melissa Yarbrough, executive director of Inspire Equine Therapy. 3 Junior Volunteer of the Year Delaney Renner with Volunteer Coordinator Beth Travers. 4 Leo, one of the program’s therapy horses, awaits visitors.
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FESTIVAL OF TREES
1 The Arc Tampa Bay Foundation decked the halls of The Long Center in Clearwater Nov. 16-18 for the 34th Annual Festival of Trees, presented by AmeriLife. Over 300 masterfully decorated trees and wreaths made up this winter wonderland visited by nearly 10,000 guests over the three-day-long festival. Festival of Trees raised over $160,000 for The Arc Tampa Bay and the people they serve with intellectual and developmental disabilities.
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1 Friends of The Arc Tampa Bay. 2 The Arc Tampa Bay Foundation Board Secretary Ricky Bouchard and wife Liz Bouchard. 3 Suzan Decker Ross and Ellen Pope. 4 Nate Freeman, Emily Freeman, Kelly Freeman and Karen Crown. 5 Megan Brannigan, Abby Morgan, Crystal Cushing, Becky Lofgren and Tara Giroux of presenting sponsors AmeriLife.
5 www.duPontREGISTRYtampabay.com
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GALLERIA MISTO AT THE MAHAFFEY
1 On December 5, Galleria Misto hosted an opening event for their new gallery on the second floor of Duke Energy Center for the Arts — Mahaffey Theater. The Belleair Bluffs-based Galleria, established in 1994, showcases the works of regionally and internationally acclaimed artists, and its inaugural Mahaffey exhibit, “Inception of Creation,” features a variety of artistic styles. Owners Luigi and Louise Del Basso (also an acclaimed painter) are corporate donors to the Bill Edwards Foundation for the Arts; a portion of the proceeds from art sales will benefit the Foundation. Photos courtesy Mahaffey Theater/Bill Edwards Foundation.
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1 Bill Edwards Foundation for the Arts’ Lori Belvedere, Christine Feller, Louise del Basso, Melissa Hughey (former president of the foundation) and Jeanne Bytell (current president). 2 A view of the gallery at the Mahaffey, including portraits of David Bowie and Yayoi Kusama by Carrie Smith Kilgore. 3 Louise Del Basso welcomes attendees and participating artists to the opening reception.
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JUNIOR LEAGUE OF TAMPA HOLIDAY GIFT MARKET PREVIEW PARTY
1 The Junior League of Tampa Holiday Gift Market was held November 8-11 at the Florida State Fairgrounds, raising over $587,000 for programs in the areas of child welfare and literacy. The record-breaking event kicked off with the Preview Party, sponsored by Kendra Scott, on Thursday, November 8th. Photos courtesy Junior League of Tampa. Guests pictured left to right.
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1 The 13 Ugly Men Foundation and the Seminole Hard Rock present The Junior League with a $10,000 check. From the League (l to r): Katie Cappy, immediate past president; Jenny Spencer, immediate past community director; and Isabel Dewey, president. 2 Chalette Davis, Genet Stewart, Meaza Stewart-Morrison, Kat DeBree and Missy Kearns. 3 Ginny McGucken, Betsy Chamber, Betty Wood and Beth Garcia. 4 Stephanie Marsan, Emily Monahan and Melissa Winner. www.duPontREGISTRYtampabay.com
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7TH ANNUAL CLEARWATER BEACH UNCORKED
1 On November 3 and 4, Clearwater Beach turned into a foodie paradise with the 7th Annual Clearwater Beach Uncorked Food & Wine Festival. Attendees enjoyed 180-degree views of the Gulf of Mexico while nibbling bite-sized morsels from the area’s most interesting restaurants, coupled with specially selected wines and craft beers. Presented by Publix, Spectrum, Wyndham Grand Clearwater Beach, and the City of Clearwater in partnership with duPont REGISTRY Tampa Bay, Uncorked benefited the St. Petersburg College Foundation. Photos courtesy of Uncorked; guests are identified from left to right.
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1 Scott & Debby Thomas, Tammy Gil, Holly Long, David Wilson and Jeff Wernli. 2 Gil and Mary Ann Macarthur with Thomas L. duPont. 3 Carolyn McNulty and Suzan Decker Ross.
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WINE, WOMEN AND SHOES
1 Presented by Nu Image Medical at the Armature Works in Tampa on Nov. 8, Wine, Women and Shoes benefited the Children’s Cancer Center, raising $320,000 for kids and their families. Images courtesy Children’s Cancer Center. Guests listed left to right.
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3 1 Anahita Azharian, Karla Dettlaff and Erica Mallon during the reveal of the Key to the Closet, a chance drawing to win a closet full of $30,000 worth of items. 2 Pamela Girardi, Kaylee McDonagh, Sandra Stamkos, Kyla Callahan and Stephanie Tongue. 3 Mark O’Brien, Matt Hatfield, Victoria Hatfield, Haley Miller, Katie O’Brian and Brian Miller. 4 Mandy Drew and Jacqueline Karel.
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BACK PAGE
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BY THOMAS L. duPONT
STERLING GREY
MONACO
ICON GREY
GREY BLEND
Signature Media Blasted Materials with a Slip Resistance Twice That of Textured Traverrne and Other Marbles Extreme Density for Stain Resistance and Zero Piing 4mm Beveled Edge For a Flawless Fit, No Gaps Consistent, Vibrant Colors That Prevent Heat Retennon Exclusively Available From Paramount Stoneworks
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