october 17, 2012

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VOL. 29 / PUB 16 / FREE OCTOBER 17-23, 2012 WWW.ENOREPUB.COM

. . . y d a e r t ! e G O G

encoreHAPPENINGS | october 17-23, 2012 | www.encorepub.com MASQUERADE PARADE p14 | LIGHTHOUSE BEER FESTIVAL p36 | HALLOWEEN pgs38-40 1


Is marriage in your plans? ...

Cape Fear WeddingShow

Don’t miss Wilmington’s biggest, most inclusive bridal event. Over 100 vendors under one roof!

Exhibitors include:

Kuzma Advanced Dentistry L & L Tent & Party Rentals LM Restaurants Mad Boar Restaurant Mary Kay - Anita Henderson Middle of the Island Catering Musser’s Catering MW Tux NC Aquarium Ft. Fisher NHCounty Arboretum Oceanfront Weddings of NC Perry’s Emporium Pottery Barn Reeds Jewelers Residence Inn River Landing Clubhouse Riverwalk Landing Ryan Howard Photography Saint Thomas Preservation Hal Sandpiper Limo Services, Inc. Scentsy Consultant Julia Tulloch Sea Trail Golf Resort & Convention Ctr ShutterBooth Simplicity Gourmet Sweet Bay Catering Tanglez Salon & Spa Tarascio Custom Designs The Beam Room at Front St. Brewery The Fuzzy Peach The Oceanic The Pilot House The Upper Room 1871 The Wedding Dress Shoppe Timeless Fotographie Trey Hamlin Unforgettable Events by Tamara Wade Designs Uprising Bakery VIP Limo of Wilmington Vixen Makeup Artistry Watermark Marina Weddings By Wittman Whole Foods Market Wilmington Aesthetic Wilmington Convention & Visitors Bureau Wilmington Convention Center

101 Stone Chimney Place 3 Cheers Party Rentals Absolute Best DJ Service Babs McDance Social Dance Studio Bax Photography Beautiful Flowers by June BeautifulSkinIsIn.com Belk at Independence Bluewater Waterfront Grill Brunswick Town/ Ft Anderson State Historic Site Cape Fear Bride Magazine Cape Fear Images Capt’n Bill’s Backyard Grill Christine Kennedy Photography Coastal Catering & Events Costco Warehouse Courtyard by Marriott, Carolina Beach Courtyard by Marriott, Wilmington Creative Cake Design by Tammy Hodg Cynthia Rose Photography David’s Bridal Delovely Desserts Dillard’s Elijah’s Elite Chiropractic Events! On Front First Command Financial Planning Fort Fisher State Historic Site Fountaine Bridals & Formals Four Seasons Travel Hampton Inn & Suites Hampton Inn/University/Smith Creek Hampton Inn Medical Park He and Me Heirloom Vintage China Hire Hilton Garden Inn Holiday Inn of Wilmington Homewood Suites by Hilton Mayfaire Ice Sensations Improv Caterers Katharyn Barker Jewelry Keepsake Memories Photography Kissable Cakes

...and more!

October 28, 2012 Noon to 4 pm

Wilmington Convention Center CapeFearWedding.com/Shows

Register online and save 50% off your admission ticket! 2 encore | october 17-23, 2012 | www.encorepub.com


“Live Well Love Often Laugh Much” Empress Nam Phuong

A FAR EAST CAFE Thai • Vietnamese VOTED BEST ATMOSPHERE

for 10 years by encore Magazine readers Tues. - Sat.: Lunch 11am - 2pm NOW OPEN MONDAY EVENINGS! Mon. - Sun.: Dinner 5pm - 10pm

7 Wayne Drive

(Market Street at Forest Hills)

251-9229 www.indochinewilmington.com encore | october 17-23, 2012 | www.encorepub.com 3


hodgepodge| WHAT’S INSIDE THIS WEEK

ENCORE RESTAURANT WEEK PGS. 28-29 Over 30 eateries will offer worldly cuisine, from Jamaican to Thai, Oct. 17th-24th It’s the most delicious time of year! Encore Restaurant Week returns for its fall run, offering eight full days of culinary bliss! That means at participating eateries all over town, folks will be able to enjoy some of the finest cuisine our city offers at deals that can’t be beat. Want Indian? Try dinner for two with a bottle of wine for only $45! Or crave a piled-high pastrami sandwich? Well, check out the new gourmet deli, Jax! They’ve actually changed their price since the restaurant week books (inserted into this week’s paper) went to press; so you and a special someone can enjoy a meal for two with a brew or glass of wine for only $35 a couple. There are tons of more offerings, too, from fine dining to casual lunch spots. Eat, drink, indulge! Photo of curry courtesy of Thai Spice

WIN AWESOME TICKETS!

is published weekly, on Wednesday, by Wilmington Media. Opinions of contributing writers are not necessarily the opinions of encore.

Thalian Hall, Brooklyn Arts Center, Durham Performing Arts Center and more! We made it easy for you to see our upcoming contests, too. Just scan the QR code you see on this page! It’ll take you to our ticket information site, giving you a list of available tickets—and the dates when we’ll be running contests.

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news & views...................6-9 Swearingen who is running for the NC House of Representatives, District 19.

LATE-NIGHT FUNNIES “The Obama campaign is planning to open up its 120th field office in Ohio. Even Starbucks is like, ‘That’s too many locations, man.’” —Jimmy Fallon “In an interview promoting his new tell-all, Arnold Schwarzenegger said his marriage to Maria Shriver fell apart because of him and that he hopes to one day win her back. And what better way to win back her love back than to write a book about all the times you tricked her?” —Seth Meyers “Here comes the vice-presidential debate. My favorite part of a debate is when a candidate will tell a heartfelt anecdote about a struggling American who lives in a swing state.” —David Letterman “Today the Secret Service caught a woman trying to sneak into the White House with a mysterious package. Turns out it was just Ann Romney with some carpet samples.” —Jay Leno “A new survey found that atheists are the fastest-growing religious group in the U.S. And if you find that hard to believe—well, you’re probably one of them.” —Jimmy Fallon “Democrats are accusing Mitt Romney of cheating during the debate. I don’t know who he cheated off of, but I think we can rule out President Obama.” —Jay Leno “During Wednesday’s debate Mitt Romney said that even though he likes Big Bird, if elected he would stop the subsidy to PBS. It’s a surprising threat considering that ‘Mitt’ is such an excellent Muppet name.” —Seth Meyers

WORD OF THE WEEK toothsome, tooth-suhm; adjective 1. Pleasing to the taste; delicious; as, “a toothsome pie.” 2. Agreeable; attractive; as, “a toothsome offer.”

8 views: Mark Basquill rants about the rooster. 9 news of the weird: Chuck Shepherd shares the latest odd stories.

artsy smartsy................ 10-25 10-12 theatre: Shea Carver reviews TheatreNOW’s latest dinner theatre show; John Wolfe sits down with the director and actors of Browncoat’s ‘Little Shop of Horrors’; Shea Carver previews City Stage’s latest opening, ‘Day Drinkers.’

14 art: Bethany Turner peers into the latest exhibit from Artful Living Group, ‘The Art of the Mask.’

15 gallery listings: Check out what’s hanging in area art galleries.

16-19 music: Jordan DuBreuil gets to know Charlie Mars, playing Soapbox this weekend; Alex Pompliano chats with Mike Cross who takes over the Thalian stage.

20-23 soundboard: See what bands and performers are playing in venues across town.

25 film: Anghus gets bored during ‘Trouble with the Curve.’

grub & guzzle...............28-36 28-29 cover story: We’re kicking off our semiannual Encore Restaurant Week, October 17th through 24th! Check out a run-down of some of the offerings, but more importantly keep the Encore Restaurant Week Guide inserted into this week’s paper!

30-33 dining guide: Need a few suggestions on where to eat? Flip through our dining guide!

36 guzzle: Christina Dore talks about this weekend’s Lighthouse Beer Festival.

extra! extra!.................38-55 38-40 extra: Halloween events abound this

Editor-in-Chief:

General Manager:

Shea Carver // shea@encorepub.com

John Hitt // john@encorepub.com

month; here are a few to keep you wickedly

Editorial Assistant: Bethany Turner // music@encorepub.com

Art Director: Sue Cothran // ads@encorepub.com

41 crossword: Brain game by Stanley Newman.

Intern: Jordan DuBreuil, John Wolfe

Advertising Sales: John Hitt // Downtown // john@encorepub.com

42-63 calendar/‘toons/horoscopes/

Kris Beasley // Wrightsville Beach, N. Wilmington // kris@encorepub.com

our calendar; check out Tom Tomorrow and the

Chief Contributors: Gwenyfar Rohler, Anghus Houvouras, Jay Schiller, Tiffanie Gabrielse, Tom Tomorrow, Chuck Shepherd, Christina Dore, Justin Emery, Alex Pompliano, Rob Brezsny, Kim Henry, Sarah Richter P.O. Box 12430, Wilmington, N.C. 28405 email@encorepub.com • www.encorepub.com Phone: (910) 791-0688 • Fax: (910) 791-9534

vol. 29 / pub. 16 / October 17th-24th, 2012

6 live local: Gwenyfar Rohler talks with Emilie

on the cover

If you’re not already an encore fan on Facebook, you should be! We have ongoing contests on encore ’s Facebook page, as well as on our home page, www.encorepub. com. You can win a pair of tickets to music concerts, comedy sketches and theatre presentations all over the area, such as from House of Blues, Soapbox Laundro-Lounge,

contents

entertained.

corkboard: Find out what to do in town with annual ‘toons winner, Jay Schiller; read your

Shea Carver // Midtown, Monkey Junction //shea@encorepub.com

horoscope; and check out the latest saucy

Office Manager: Susie Riddle // susie@adpakweekly.com

Bethany Turner // bethany@encorepub.com

corkboard ads.

Distribution Manager: Boykin Wright

Jennifer Barnett // jennifer@encorepub.com

4 encore | october 17-23, 2012 | www.encorepub.com


RETURNING FALL 2012 8 DAYS OF DEALS OCTOBER 17th - 24th

encore

OCTOBER 17-24, 2012

EncoreRestaurantWeek.com PARTICIPATING RESTAURANTS NORTH WILMINGTON/ WRIGHTSVILLE BEACH South Beach Grill Fox and Hound Roko Italian Cuisine Melting Pot Shuckers Oyster Bar & Grill Nikki’s Japanese Steak House Catch

MIDTOWN

Jax 5th Avenue Deli and Ale House Siena Trattoria Pizzetta’s Pizzeria A Taste of Italy Tandoori Bites

Jamaica’s Comfort Zone Hieronymus Carolina Ale House Casey’s Buffet

Ruth’s Chris Steak House Mixto Yo Sake The Little Dipper

DOWNTOWN

SOUTH WILMINGTON

Riverboat Landing Fat Tony’s Italian Pub Nick’s Diner The Fortunate Glass Aubrianas The Basics Caprice Bistro The Eat Spot Pilot House Elijah’s The George on the Riverwalk

Pine Valley Market Thai Spice Tamashii Henry’s C Street Mexican Grill

LELAND

Eddie Romanellis Pizzetta’s Pizzeria (opening soon)

www.EncoreRestaurantWeek.com encore | october 17-23, 2012 | www.encorepub.com 5


news&views|

6 LIVE LOCAL 8 OP-ED 9 NEWS OF THE WEIRD

live local. live small.

Candidates answer questions about platforms and hopes for the future hler

by Gwenyfar Ro

uts,’ with Promise of Pean Project Author of ‘The lly ing The Full Be proceeds benefit

J

ust as we do every election season,

encore sends out questionnaires to all candidates running for office in hopes of getting their thoughts on matters that affect our lives foremost. As promised, we will run these questionnaires so voters will be informed and educated on every candidate’s platform. Election coverage continues this week with 43-year resident Emilie Swearingen, candidate for NC House of Representatives, District 19.

encore (e): Have you ever worked for a small business? If yes, which one and in what capacity? Emilie Swearingen (ES): I owned my own small business when I first moved to Wilmington called the Eden Alternative. I consulted with long-term care facilities in five states, training over 500 staff on turning their facilities into human habitats where elders would want to live. e: How does your platform support small business? ES: Studies show that expansion of small businesses is one of the best ways to improve the economy. The legislature can help to make this happen through tax incentives and supporting small-business programs for entrepreneurs like the one at UNC Wilmington. e: What is your position on the collection and remittance of sales tax from online retailers? ES: I believe North Carolina should collect sales tax from online retailers. To do otherwise would hurt local small businesses. e: What is your position on local purchasing preferences? ES: As a member of the Kure Beach Town Council, I insist on the town purchasing or working with local businesses whenever possible, that includes contrac-

6 encore | october 17-23, 2012 | www.encorepub.com

tors, builders, small businesses, etc. I have tried to do the same with my campaign. e: Where do you stand on incentives, such as for the film industry and NC manufacturing? ES: I completely support incentives for the film industry, which in turn will bring over $200,000 to North Carolina this year. I support incentives for clean business and industry, if they can show a large increase in jobs for local residents, a good rate of return on our investment, and the industries will not pollute our water or air. We should not have to sacrifice our quality of life for jobs. e: What is your position on offshore drilling and fracking? ES: I am opposed to offshore oil drilling, and I am totally opposed to fracking anywhere in North Carolina and offshore. e: Share your thoughts on NC’s role in energy production in the next 10 years. ES: North Carolina should enhance its incentives to develop alternative energy sources, including wind power. One of the best ways to achieve that goal is to create a stable market for wind-generated electricity. Current measures, including the Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act (PURPA) and the NC Renewable Energy Portfolio Standard (under the guidance of the NC Utilities Commission), work to that end by helping to assure that utilities will buy wind-generated electricity, which in turn provides stability and should be supported. e: What is your vision for the future of Main Street in North Carolina’s economy? ES: The question is unclear. If this is “Main Street” vs. shopping centers and malls, I wish every town in North Carolina could have a “Main Street” that incorporates history, small businesses and a family atmosphere. If the question involves the national “Main Street” program, many municipalities have benefitted greatly from this, but the initial cost to be part of the program

is tremendous. The long-term benefit must outweigh the investment. Whether the question involves the former or the later, these are both local decisions in which the legislature should not be involved. e: What role do you see for agriculture in our state’s future and how does your platform support small agricultural producers? ES: The history of agriculture obviously goes back to our Native-American heritage. Without our agriculture for food, wood and fiber, both then and now, everyone would be hungry, homeless and naked. Today, agriculture is a $70 billion per year business, making it the largest industry in North Carolina. About 20 percent of the workers in the state are employed by agribusiness. As long as we fight to preserve our farm land, agriculture will continue to have a great future. Small farms are disappearing too fast and are being replaced with residential developments and large industries. The NC Legislature needs to make it easier for small farmers to exist by continuing to implement programs such as reduced property taxes, and continue to work with the federal government to guarantee federal assistance. e: When was the last time you visited a farmers’ market and how often do you purchase locally produced food? ES: I visit local farmers’ markets, local food stands and Carolina Farmin’ regularly. e: What role do you see for fishing in North Carolina’s future? ES: Seafood is a huge industry in New Hanover County, but we need to do whatever is possible to see that our shallow-draft inlets remain dredged and open for our charter boats, shrimp and fishing vessels and our pleasure boats. e: Tell us about your thoughts on multiuse (cycling, walking, paddling) infrastructure? ES: I am a member of the New Hanover County Greenway Advisory Committee and strongly support the development of the New Hanover County Greenway (and Blueways) Plan, which is now in draft form and will be completed in December 2012.


encore | october 17-23, 2012 | www.encorepub.com 7


Dalí

Quartet

Thursday, October 25 7 P.M. - Kenan Auditorium

Dalí Quartet embraces the spirit of Salvador Dalí to fuse Latin flavor and classical technique to create a fresh, lush sound. Co-sponsored by UNCW Centro Hispano

Tickets: $22 General Public $18 Senior Citizens, Groups $5 UNCW Students Kenan Box Office 910.962.3500 or www.uncw.edu/presents

Free residency programs! For details visit www.uncw.edu/presents

2012-2013 Arts in Action Performance Series

University of North Carolina Wilmington • Division of Student Affairs • Campus Life Arts & Programs Creating Experiences for Life An EEO/AA institution. Accommodations for disabilities may be requested by contacting 910.962.3285 three days prior to the event. The performance and residency by Dalí Quartet is supported by the N.C. Arts Council, a division of the Department of Cultural Resources, with funding from the National Endowment for the Arts.

8 encore | october 17-23, 2012 | www.encorepub.com

how the rooster crows:

//VIEWS

If you’re so smart, why aren’t you...Mitt?

I

was driving my son to school,

when he asked, “If you’re so smart, why aren’t you rich?” Kids can be better than coffee at waking you up. “Rooster, from baseball, was crowing about Romney and Ryan being so great. He asked me that when I corrected him about something Romney said that wasn’t true.” Talk about a hot-button issue for an overeducated intellectual. Sometimes I forget that in America we measure a person’s IQ by the size of their bank account. I forget that we’ve been indoctrinated to fear the “Intellectual Elite.” “Did you hit him?” “He’s an idiot, Dad. He let me drive his new Beamer, but he’s still an idiot.” “He let you drive? Not the brightest bulb in the box.” Then it hit me. “He bought a Beamer?” “Yeah right. He’s not Justin Bieber. His Dad’s got more money than God.” “Remember Rooster’s Beamer next time you hear, ‘I built this.’ Pharoah said, ‘I built this’ when the slaves finished his pyramid.” My son shrugged. (Less like Ayn Rand’s “Atlas,” more like a kid half-asleep on his way to classes.) “I don’t want to be ruled by the intellectual elite any more than Rooster,” he said. “No one wants to be ruled by the intellectual elite,” I scoffed. “When’s the last time, outside of Hollywood, a brilliant but twisted, evil genius actually plotted to take over the world? It’s the “financial elite” that define themselves by conquest. They raid pension funds, engage in hostile takeovers to expand their market, eliminate the competition, and burn down companies in order to save them. Do you know Einstein’s salary? Checked Linus Pauling’s portolio? Hawking’s offshore holdings?” “Seriously,” he sighed. “Why do you hate Romney? Hate success. Hate money?” “If you liked Gordon Geko, you’ll love Romney.” And then I admitted it. “I like Mitt, too. The way I like Gordon Geko—clear, two-dimensional characters. A couple barnyard roosters, smart, though ‘cunning’ is more accurate, and as strong, flexible and cocksure as a used car salesman.” “Still not voting for him, are you?” “I don’t have amnesia,” I responded. “I remember both Bushes and the real Reagan. I know some folks believe FDR’s New Deal and Lincoln’s Civil War were unnecessary in-

ll by Mark Basqui r to bu ri nt co encore trusions of federal power that did more harm than good. The market would have produced Prozac for the Great Depression without biggummit side effects. The market would have ended slavery when it became economically disadvantageous. But I know whether you call it ‘trickle down’ or ‘supply side,’ it’s been the same ‘horse and sparrow’ theory since Moses said to Pharoah, ‘Let my people go!’” “Horse and sparrow?” “The few horses (rich) eat all they want and millions of us sparrows feast on their dung,” I sighed. “I don’t envy excellence. I oppose exploitation.” “My history teacher said nobody’s exploited in America—equal opportunity for all.” “Not surprised,” I rebutted. “Last week, Congressman Paul Broun (R) said evolution and the Big Bang theory are ‘lies straight from the pit of hell.’ He’s a doctor on the House Science and Technology Committee.” “Your neck veins, Dad!” “I’m not going to stroke out because your history teacher doesn’t know history any more than Paul Broun knows science,” I inhaled. “Equal opportunity? According to our very progressive and worth-keeping schoolboard member Elizabeth Redenbaugh, of Snipes’ 490 students, 100-percent qualify for free and reduced lunch (below poverty line) and only 28 are white. Of Ogden’s 692 students 15.4 percent qualify for free and reduced lunch (below poverty line) and only 14 are black. Achievement scores do ‘trickle down’ with poverty.” “Sad Social Darwinism,” he sighed. “But it’s the way the world really is.” “Jesus loves you! Fascinating isn’t it?” I retorted. “How powerful politicians deny evolution yet dress racist and Social Darwinist social policies in Christian robes and sell them to the faithful.” I opened the door. “Learn! Excel! Remember: No matter how proud the rooster crows, he doesn’t make the sun rise.” “A rooster is just another word for…” “Don’t! You’re smarter than that.” I took a deep breath. “By the way, son, FYI: I live at the beach, like my work, love you, love my family, friends, even my flaws. I’m as rich as any person ever gets.”


NewsoftheWeird with Chuck Shepherd LEAD STORY Modern Warfare: China, Japan and Taiwan each claim ownership of the uninhabited South China Sea islands of Senkaku or Diaoyu, and the controversy heightened in September when Japan announced that it had formally “purchased” the islands from a private company that reputedly owned them. China countered by “launching” its first-ever aircraft carrier (a vessel junked in 1998 by Ukraine), which it hopes will intimidate its neighbors even though it is useless to planes. Days later, patrol boats from Taiwan and Japan had a confrontation near the islands drenching each other in a military-grade squirt-gun fight. (Japan won.) Compelling Explanations A 14-year-old boy was hospitalized in critical condition in Churchill, Pa., in August after allegedly swiping a Jeep Grand Cherokee and leading the owner’s boyfriend on a brief highspeed chase before rolling the Cherokee over on Interstate 376. The boy’s mother, according to WTAE-TV, blamed the Cherokee’s owner: A vehicle with the keys in it, she said, “was an opportunity that, in a 14-year-old’s eyes, was ... the perfect moment.” Also, she said, the boyfriend “had no right to chase my son.” The boy “could have just (wanted) a joyride down the street. Maybe he (merely) wanted to go farther than he felt like walking.” Irresistible: David Thompson, 27, was arrested in August and charged with stealing a bag of marijuana from the Charleroi (Pa.) Regional police station. While talking to an officer about an unrelated case, Thompson noticed an evidence bag on a counter and swiped it. Caught moments later, Thompson profusely apologized, telling the officer, “I just couldn’t help myself. That bud smelled so good.” Aaron Morris was charged in August with battery in North Lauderdale, Fla., for groping the buttocks of a woman at a Walmart. According to the arresting officer, Morris explained, “Her booty looked so good, I just couldn’t resist touching it.” Perspective First-World Problems: Ohio death-row inmate Ronald Post, 53, asked a federal court in September to cancel his January date with destiny on the grounds that, despite almost 30 years of prison food, he’s still too fat to execute. At 480 pounds, “vein access” and other issues would cause his lethal injection to be “torturous.” British murderer-sadist Graham Fisher, 39, is locked up in a highsecurity hospital in Berkshire, England, but he, too, has been eating well (at about 325 pounds). In August, he was approved for gastric-band surgery paid for by Britain’s National Health Service at an estimated cost, including a private room for post-op recuperation, of about $25,000).

Ironies Iranian cleric Hojatoleslam Ali Beheshti was hospitalized in the town of Shahmirzad in September, allegedly after being roughed up by a woman. According to Iran’s Mehr news agency, the cleric was merely performing his “duty,” warning an allegedly immodestly dressed woman to cover herself better. She suggested, instead, that he should “cover (his) eyes,” and when he continued admonishing her, she, unladylike, pushed him away and kicked him. Arrested in September and charged with aggravated indecent exposure (making continued obscene gestures to female kayakers on Michigan’s Pinnebog River while nude): 60-year-old TV producer William H. Masters III the son of pioneer 1960s sex researcher William Masters (who, with Virginia Johnson, wrote the landmark books “Human Sexual Response” and “Human Sexual Inadequacy”). In August, the Consumer Product Safety Commission and the Gerber Legendary Blades company of Portland, Ore., announced a recall of Gerber machetes. According to CPSC, the machetes might have a defect that could cause the handle to break, making the machete, said CPSC, a “laceration hazard.” Democracy in Action! Challenging Races: Richard Wagner Jones, running for a school board seat in Granite, Utah, told reporters in June that since the job is mainly about taxes and budgets, he would not have to make site visits to schools. That is fortunate, for Jones is barred from schools as a registered sex offender based on a 1990 conviction. Mike Rios, a former school board member in Moreno Valley, Calif., said in August that he was still considering running for the town’s council despite his March arrest for attempted murder and April arrest for pimping (allegedly caught with several underage recruits). Verna Jackson Hammons said in August that her candidacy for mayor of Cullman, Ala., should not suffer by her having appeared 10 years earlier as “the other woman” in a love triangle on an episode of “The Jerry Springer Show.” Brazil has a robust democracy but with very few controls on what candidates may call themselves on ballots. Among those running for offices this election season, according to a September New York Times dispatch from Rio de Janeiro: “John Kennedy Abreu Sousa,” “Jimmi Carter Santarem Barroso,” “Ladi Gaga,” “Christ of Jerusalem,” a “Macgaiver,” five “Batmans,” two “James Bonds,” and 16 people whose name contains “Obama.” “It’s a marketing strategy,” said city council candidate Geraldo Custodio, who apparently likes his chances better as “Geraldo Wolverine.”

The Litigious Society The City Council of Jersey City, N.J., voted in September to settle a lawsuit filed by Joshua Lopez, who had driven his car directly at a police officer during a 2009 traffic stop, trapping the officer against his own squad car, and thus forcing the officer to fire at him. Lopez suffered only an injured hand, but the city has now agreed to give him $26,500 out of fear of “litigation risk.” Fungus in the News Yak herders in Tibet and farmers in the Indian Himalayas are becoming relatively prosperous, according to recent reports by National Geographic and London’s The Guardian, by harvesting rare caterpillar fungi. In Tibet, “yartsa gunbu” supposedly cures ailments ranging from back pain to HIV, from hair loss to asthma and more, and often sells in local markets for twice its weight in gold. In India, “kira jari” is believed to be an aphrodisiac and energy booster, but the government is trying to control the market because insufficient new larvae means the land might soon be picked clean. Swiss researcher Francis W.M.R. Schwarze announced in September that he will manufacture 30 violins out of wood treated with certain fungi that, in music-appreciation tests, made a lesser-grade violin sound like a Stradivarius. Creme de la Weird Arrests were made in July of two men who had openly chatted on the Internet about torturing, cooking and eating children, but investiga-

tors have searched in vain for evidence of any such crimes by the men. Jason Scarcello, 42, who wrote, “(A)ctually (seeing) a child cooking would be a dream come true,” is under arrest in Anderson, Calif., and Ronald Brown, 57, who suggested carving and cooking body parts for an “Easter meal,” in Largo, Fla., was detained for possessing child pornography, but, regarding the Internet chats, both claimed a First Amendment right to their un-acted-upon imaginations, however disgusting.

The Classic Middle Name (all-new!) Arrested recently and awaiting trial for murder: Jarrod Wayne Rudder, Elkville, Ill. (April); Dustin Wayne Kimrey, Albemarle, N.C. (October); Jeffrey Wayne Finney, Jr., Riverside, Ala. (October); Garrette Wayne Bunch, Clemmons, N.C. (September). Indicted for murder: Daniel Wayne Harmon-Wright (aka Daniel Wayne Sullivan), Gainesville, Va. (May). Conviction for murder upheld by Texas Court of Appeals: Phillip Wayne Harris, Houston (March). Arrest warrant for murder issued: Jeffrey Wayne Powell II, Lakewood, Wash. (October). On trial for murder at press time: Curtis Wayne Bonnell, Miramichi, New Brunswick (September). Trial for murder postponed: David Wayne Laws, Manassas, Va. (October). On the other hand, Michael Wayne Hash, Culpeper, Va., was exonerated of his murder conviction in March after serving 12 years in prison.

Get swept away in a tide of exceptional cuisine.

Lots of Outdoor Dining Great ic us Live Mr y Eve ! nd Weeke

Located in the Holiday Inn Resort, Wrightsville Beach with outdoor dining and ocean views wrightsville.holidayinnresorts.com • 910-256-2231 encore | october 17-23, 2012 | www.encorepub.com 9


10-13 THEATRE 14-15 ART 16-23 MUSIC 25 FILM

tales from ILM: Ghost stories and Halloween-inspired cuisine for ‘Fright Night’ by Shea Carver Fright Night Friday Food and

★★★

★★

TheatreNOW OW • (910) 399-3N 19 S. 10th Street • 6:30 p.m. 10/19, 26, 11/2 on.com .theatrewilmingt $32-$38 • www

I

’ll

Auten and Jacob Anthony Corvino, Susan admit—dinner theatre carries many

stereotypical expectations: Cheesy tales told by overacting thespians with mediocre food served to a rather mature crowd, all of whom inevitably fall asleep in their lamb and mint jelly before Act II ends. OK, OK—maybe I watched “Soapdish” a bit too much as a kid! While dinner theatre has never been my bag of chips—mainly because I like to relish every morsel of a fine meal over good conversation and company, just as I prefer to take in every local performance with unabashed attention and care, not interrupted by glass refills—since TheatreNOW opened, I have to say they’re swaying me to their acting-and-eatingsimultaneously side of the fence. What’s wrong with having your ghost stories over Pumpkinhead crème brûlée and eating it, too? Nothing, I tell you—nothing! Having just opened their October show, written and directed by local thespian Anthony David Lawson, who also happens to be acting in the play, “Friday Food and Fright Night” dinner theatre revolves around everything haunting, from Chef Denise Gordon’s inventive menu, to the script of the play, to the lighting and mien of the beautiful TheatreNOW space. It all welcomes folks comfortably and not just into an entertaining evening but one tackling our city’s and region’s lore quite chillfully, too. The show involves a group of college students, Charles (Anthony Corvino), Mary (Susan Auten) and Jason (Jacob Keohane), who ascend on what they think is a deserted house in the middle of nowhere to stay the night. Their psychology professor has challenged them to remain turned off from the world—no cell phones, computers, newspapers, books or techy thingamajigs—for extra credit. Once entering, they stumble upon an old book of ghost stories. As they begin flipping through it, they come to “Phantom Hitchhiker,” a story that Charles says is the oldest in the book. When challenged to tell his own ghost story since he knows so much, he bumbles and stumbles, making the eeriness of it all fall completely flat. Nary a chill is raised on the arms of his cohorts—until “Creepy Guy” appears out of nowhere. Played by Lawson, Creepy Guy lives in this worn-down house, speckled by cobwebs, skulls, ever-so-ripped old furniture, and a couch with a missing leg, which is held up by vintage books. To the students’ shock, Creepy Guy manages to grasp their attention over 10 encore | october 17-23, 2012 | www.encorepub.com

artsysartsy|

1/2

to by Shea Carver

d and Fright Night.’ Pho

Keohane in ‘Friday Foo

the makings of a great ghost story, which he says lie in its historical appeal and in the performance of its raconteur. Lawson is the heart of the show. He carries it through and through on every front. And what a great raconteur he is! Every time he takes the stage, he commands each story with vast knowledge, ease, and a slight baritone perfect for eerily driving home the main points. He goes through local myths as if he wrote them, but the fact is he’s comfortable with the material thanks to experience leading the Ghost Walk of Wilmington, where many of the stories are told. Folks will hear all about the hidden souls which lurk on the streets, from Samuel Jocelyn getting buried alive to the decapitation of train conductor Joe Baldwin, who continues roaming the tracks in “Maco Light.” Yet, Lawson also peppers the show with his own creative liberty, adding a story he grew up hearing about a wayward soul named Lydia who died on prom night, and continues lurking an old NC bypass to try and find her way back home. Folks will find themselves questioning the streets they live on as they hear about Wilmington’s foundation in the 1500s, yet learn the first cemetery wasn’t built until the 1700s. That means quite a lot of properties could sit atop the resting place of the dead. Though Lawson admits not everything in the show is historically proven, the speculation alone (and the numerous people in town who can confirm ongoing, unexplained phenomena) will keep the mystery of it all rather engaging. Lawson’s co-stars do a good-enough job as the posts of the show; they hold up the movement in all the right places. Honestly, though, none compare in verbosity to Lawson. Auten comes closest in having a haunting vocal pitch. Her seriousness as an actor also makes her storytelling more intense; it serves her well in “Fright Night.” Jacob Keohane plays the easy-going jokester Jason. He’s the guy who doesn’t take anything seriously and assigns nicknames, like good ol’ Charlie Boy, which teeter on deprecation. His body language proves more than anything his character’s demeanor, as he props his feet up on the couch and starts snooping. Anthony Corvino is doing his second run for TheatreNOW. In last month’s “The Miracle Workers” he was wildly entertaining as the overzealous intern Leo. In “Fright Night” his “good-ol’ Charlie Boy” runs parallel to

the same descriptors: quirky, over-the-top, only a bit more goofy and nerdy this go ‘round. I’d like to see more of his range during his next show. The special effects TheatreNOW hold in its holster remain impressive. The show opens with thunder and lightning illuminating the stage in a staccato manner. The drop screen shows a fireplace when the students are situated in the living area; it moves through spooky pictures to mirror the stories being told. It works best when the photos are of actual historical reference to Wilmington and not just from a pulled file which could go with any story. The music playing upon entrance is gorgeously moving: huge crescendos and diminuendos of classical pieces. The only way it could be better is if it were performed live. However, “Fright Night” is not a musical, which makes it odd that some songs streamed over the stories the actors told, often drowning them out during the show. It’s a tech issue I am sure will be fixed next weekend. The food at TheatreNOW throws a wrench in expectation of dinner theatre. It’s a really nice addition to our culinary scene. Folks should get out to try some of Gordon’s comfort cuisine. It’s not necessarily fine dining, but it takes chances and remains tasteful, which is what matters most. I love her Bat’s Blood Beet Soup—admittedly one of my favorite vegetables (beets, not bats). Its tastes are rich, as the earthy roots pair with a crème fraîche cobweb swirl, and the warm purée surprises in an afterbite of spicy, peppery heat. Mrs. Lovett’s Meat Pie remains a filling of ground beef, even with the more fatty and grisly bites that leave me questioning it rather gloriously (would love to see this made with offal meat!). Paired with chunks of garlic and parsnips/rutabagas in a flaky pastry dough, along with a truffle pea purée atop (although the truffle did not come through), its a reminder why meat pie is great cool-weather food. The Pumpkinhead crème brûlée makes for a sweet ending with a perfectly burnt crisp and a cool, creamy center; though, the pumpkin flavor could be more pronounced. More impressive is how the show works in the timing of each course, so folks know what’s coming yet aren’t bothered by forks hitting plates as additional sound effects. All combine for a lovely evening, though not so much frightful as fun. And without mint jelly.


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encore | october 17-23, 2012 | www.encorepub.com 11


barflying:

//THEATRE

James Tanner’s new show premieres at City Stage by Shea Carver Day Drinkers . 8, 11/2-4, 8 p.m 10/18-21, 26-2 Front St. City Stage • 21 N. tagenc.com .citys $10-$16 • www

C

ity stage will open their

2012 season yet again by pushing the boundaries of modern theatre. Having already showcased gritty productions like “Pot Mom” and “Zombie Attack” during previous seasons, artistic director Justin Smith has chosen another James Tanner script to continue introducing audiences to edgier yet relatable shows which often tackle the underbelly of society. Tanner’s latest, “Day Drinkers,” punctures the vein of bar patrons through their humorous and hostile interactions, which often parallel the behindthe-scenes of their lives. Coming off a residency at the Odyssey Theatre in L.A., “Day Drinkers” takes onlookers through each barfly’s backstory: the husband-and-wife bar owners on the verge of

a divorce; the strung-out patron and her next quest for marriage; a lesbian couple dealing with a coming-out to homophobic parents; and a couple odd-men-out trying to vie for a reasonable place in their loved one’s lives. Told with cutting dialog, their stories intertwine for a voyeuristic look into humanity’s often treacherous life-capades. “Tanner’s past shows struck a chord with City Stage audiences,” Smith notes. “‘Day Drinkers’ just recently completed a successful and award-winning run. It’s set in a bar, and of all the shows we’ve done in the past, I can’t think of a more appropriate setting.” Though Tanner’s known for his quippy style of writing (he also wrote for popular TV programs like “Gilmore Girls” and “My So-Called Life”), while “Day Drinkers” certainly hones in situational comedy, the circumstances of each character also makes it dark. “You’d be hard-pressed not to know these characters or their stories,” Smith notes. Graphically appealing, the show illuminates the lives of Mick (Jon Stafford), his son, Brad-

12 encore | october 17-23, 2012 | www.encorepub.com

COUPLE ON THE ROCKS: Jon Stafford and Barbara Weetman star in James Tanner’s newest satire, ‘Day Drinkers.’ Courtesy photo, City Stage.

ley (Richard Davis), and his fiancée Val (Barbara Weetman); couple Kate (Sandy Vaughn) and Sharon (Kate McCallum); and bartenders Daniel (Taylor Kowalski), Jenny (Aerlie Johnston) and Daniel’s brother Caleb (Charles Johnston). Smith and the show’s director, Gil Johnson, chose a strong group of local heavyweights to carry the script’s depth. “I have always liked watching actors work,” Johnson says of directing. “I do have favorites but it’s kinda like having children: You can’t say it out loud. It is a tough thing to go onstage; it takes guts. So I greatly admire all those who enter the plaza to fight the bull.” Johnson leads with a hand of ease, allowing the actors to serve the play as naturally and organically as possible. Yet, his guid-

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ance always reaches outside the box. “I try to push people to make bold, imaginative choices—toward excellence,” he says. “I don’t like reality onstage. It bores me; but I don’t like to be bullshitted either. I like truthful impressionism or surrealism. As long as it is honest and serves the play, there are no limits.” Johnson’s ex-wife, Barbara Weetman, will be playing Val, a “screw-up that’s really fun to behold,” according to the actress. “There’s a fine line of making her real and not a cartoon of a person.” With a flamboyant personalit, which eats up her surroundings, audiences will find reason to love her despite her despair. “We all know someone like her,” Weetman assures. Her lines bring a lot of color to the show, too, such as, “I’m like that lady with the snakes on her head—I’ll turn you to stone.” “But Val’s biggest downfall is that she can’t tell the truth to save her life,” Weetman admits. Still, she’s not the only one with demons. “All of the people in this show are deeply flawed human beings—as are we all.” “Day Drinkers” takes place in one 90-minute scene, which begins at a bar at 9 a.m. Unlike most City Stage shows, this local premiere is not a musical. Instead,”Day Drinkers” remains a gripping character study. The show opens the 18th and runs through the 21st, with weekend runs continuing the 26th through the 28th and November 2nd through 4th. Show times are 8 p.m. and tickets are only $10-$16.


don’t feed the plants: Browncoat opens ‘Little Shop’ this week by John Wolfe rrors Little Shop of Ho and Theatre Browncoat Pub • $15-$25 111 Grace Street 9, 8, 31, 11/2-4, 710/19-21, 26-2 s 5 p.m., Sunday 16-17, 8 p.m. or tickets.com www.wilmington

T

he show has everything one

could ever want from a musical: maneating plants, toe-tapping tunes and puppets galore. The classic 1986 film adaptation of “Little Shop of Horrors”—featuring Rick Moranis and Steve Martin—gets underway live just in time for Halloween. The Browncoat Pub and Theatre (111 Grace Street) will open their debut of this production Friday, October 19th for a fiveweek run, including a special Wednesdaynight Halloween show. The folks at Browncoat have been bursting in anticipation of its opening. encore sat down with director Nick Smith and thespians Beau Mumford (Seymour Krelborn) and Amy Smith (Audrey) after rehearsal last week to chat about the show. encore (e): Tell us about your past theatrical experiences. Nick Smith (NS): This is my ninth show at the Browncoat. I started three years ago with an adaptation of “Night of the Living Dead” and had never thought about directing theatre before. But I guess [Browncoat’s artistic director] Richard [Davis] figured since I was a film director, doing a film adaptation onstage would work. Beau Mumford (BM): This is my second show in Wilmington, but I’ve done over 20 productions. I’ve been doing theatre since I was 7. Amy Smith (AS): I grew up doing theatre. My dad does musical directing in my hometown, and I think this is my 20th show. I also went to performing arts school. e: Why was this play chosen? NS: I’ve been a fan of the film version ever since I saw it I was a kid. [It] actually spiraled out of “Night of the Living Dead.” When we closed, several of my cast members got up onstage for karaoke and started singing “Little Shop.” I sat and thought, ‘Why aren’t we doing this now?’ e: What differences can we expect between the film and the Browncoat version? NS: I don’t want to say too much, because the stage version is markedly different from the film. But there are twice as many songs and craziness at the end.

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CONJOINED AT THE WRIST: Beau Mumford as hapless florist Seymour, and Beau’s hand as the bloodthirsty Audrey II. Photo by John Wolfe.

e: How has the rehearsal process been? NS: I’ve sort of been learning the process over again. This is my first musical, so that adds a whole other element to it. I realized that so much of it is the music; we hadn’t really run some of the basic dialogue scenes that I’m used to doing, so I’ve been having to adjust to that and find the right balance between [the two parts.] e: Can you talk a little about the musical challenges? NS: Honestly, [the challenge] has been in learning how to incorporate what they’re doing in terms of a vocal performance while keeping the characters coming through. It’s one thing to have a bunch of people up there singing well; it’s another thing entirely to have the characters being able to tell the story while they’re singing. AS: There’s some difficult stuff—like the doowop girls. It’s in three parts, and it’s usually under a soloist. Additionally, we have some lyricheavy songs that are difficult because they’re so wordy. It’s a lot to remember. BM: It’s kind of a blessing and a curse, because Alan Menken has composed these wonderful pieces of music for this show, but some of it’s really hard to sing and get just right, especially with some of the really tricky lyrics we have. e: Have there been any technical challenges with the show? NS: The Browncoat is a very unique space in which to perform a musical. There isn’t a traditional location to have a band of any sort. We had planned on going the canned music route, but MTI for some reason doesn’t have canned music for “Little Shop.” So, we’ve taken the sheet music, and we’re using a program that we found which allows us to input the music; it will play it back with orchestral sounds. The main technical issue has been learning the program

from scratch and the time it takes to punch in all those notes. e: Talk to me a little about set design. NS: Aaron Willings, our technical director, has really outdone himself on this one. I don’t think I’m speaking with hyperbole when I say that this is probably the most complex set we’ve ever tried here. It’s got a lot of surprises to it. We’ve come up with some ingenious ways to make use of the space that’s here; we’re making use of both levels. It’s not a set like anyone’s seen here before. It’s pretty special. BM: It’s a very interesting set. I’ve never seen anything like it before. But I think you get used to [performing on] it, like any musical. AS: I’ll be walking up those stairs in stilettos, so Beau can speak for himself; I don’t think I’ll be getting used to it. But I have nimble feet. e: What actors really stand out? NS: This is, without question, the most talented, committed, and dedicated cast I’ve ever worked with, top to bottom. Everyone’s been pitching in everywhere they could. They’ve all been working hard to get everything ready. I think they know how special the play is to me, and that makes the whole experience so much more worth it. This hasn’t felt like work the entire time; it’s tremendous fun. e: What would you like for people to walk away from the show feeling? NS: I want the audience to have fun. As crazy and weird as this show is, it’s just such a fun show. I want people to get involved and get excited, to be singing and clapping along. I’m going to be Russell Crowe walking onstage, screaming, ‘Are you not entertained?’ I want every night to be a party. AS: I hope people have half as much fun watching as I’ve had getting to be silly. BM: I think the audience should have fun and laugh, but there’s also a lesson at the end: Don’t feed the plants.

Sunday, Oct. 21st

Brunch: 11 a.m. - 5 p.m. only Biscuits & Butter -Homemade Southern biscuits, goat butter

First (Choose one)

Short Ribs & Bread -Cheddar biscuits, braised short ribs and red-eye gravy.

Champagne & Prosciutto -A bite of champagne sphere, prosciutto, cantalope and sage

Second (Choose one)

Quail Eggs & Toast -Quail eggs, homemade French toast, sweet potato hash, eggs and chorizo or house-cured bacon

Chicken & Hemp -Hemp-seed-encrusted chicken cutlets, aged cheddar, homemade mustard, eggs, yucca purée and house-cured bacon.

Eggs & Bread -Farm-fresh eggs baked in homemade herbciabatta bowl, house-cured bacon or chorizo, fresh fruit.

Third

Sweets & Treats -Homemade danishes, fruit pate, pinon coffee, lemon balm or cirtus mint tea Guest chefs: Ryan Meggison (The Kitchen) and Jayson Williams (Delovely Desserts).

$22.50 prix fixe * No a la carte RSVP: 910-274-2012, ilmpop@yahoo.com. Twitter/Facebook: CanapeILM. Limited to 60.

3314 Wrightsville Ave.

encore | october 17-23, 2012 | www.encorepub.com 13


masquerade parade:

//ART

Artful Living Group reveals the creative beauty within masks

E

very

year ,

october

is

cel -

e brated with fervent reverie, as citizens whose lives are normally full of stuffy 9-to-5’s or stale school lunches can metamorphose into characters from the depths of their imaginations. Our lawns, formerly decorated with gnomes and daylilies, are hijacked by skeletons, Jack-o-lanterns and spiderwebs. It’s an opportunity to be anyone but ourselves, and we rollick in it. Though the cover of masks fits naturally into our Halloween escapades, the veils once played a crucial role outside of the holiday. In ancient Greek theatre, male actors wore masks to aid in the audience’s belief that they were women characters (there were no female thespians at this time). Sometimes they were forced to play more than one character, so they would don more than one mask. Egyptians placed jeweled covers over the faces of deceased loved ones during burial ceremonies. Spells upon the masks were believed to protect the spirits in afterlife. Africans used masks in religious ceremonies to

er by Bethany Turn ask The Ar t of the M 23rd Through October oup Ar tful Living Gr ach vd., Carolina Be 112 Cape Fear Bl . m. to 5 p.m Tues.-Sat., 10 a. p.m. Sun., noon to 5 group.com www.artfulliving represent the spirits of either ancestors or local deities. In medieval times, shame masks were used as punishment, like a scarlet letter. Criminals were forced to wear certain masks depending on their deed, publicizing the crime to the entire community. The use for these cloaks goes far beyond the realm we now know, but the inherent beauty of masks lies within their global accessibility: Anyone can mold a mask in their hands, decorating it in any way they see fit. Through their usefulness, masks are also an age-old art form.

Saturday, October 27 at Halyburton Park 4099 S. 17th St. Registration: 9 a.m. | Event: 10 a.m.

Participants will walk, run, bike, roller skate or rollerblade along the Cross-City Trail. Participants will meet at Halyburton Park and ride the Cross-City Trail to Empie Park and back to Halyburton Park.

Activities include:

• Cross-City Trail scavenger hunt • Trick-or-healthy treating THIS EVENT • Trick-your-bike competition IS FREE. Free t-shirts • Bicycle safety for those wh • Live music o p r e -register wh • Health screenings, ile supplies last. • Vendors and other activities. Registration forms are available at

www.runrideroll.com

For more information, call 343-3614 14 encore | october 17-23, 2012 | www.encorepub.com

UNDER COVER: Masks from artists Janet Knott (top left), Chris Higgins (middle), Renato Abbate (clay) and Sharon Marie Lawson (bottom right), as well as from Sara Markley and Debra Daniels, currently show at Artful Living Group in Carolina Beach. Courtesy photo

In proof of this, Artful Living Group (ALG) will host an exhibit showcasing 35 masks from artists Chris Higgins, Janet Knott, Renato Abbate, Sharon Marie Lawson, Sara Markley and Deborah Daniels. The show will hang through October 23rd. “Many people think of masks as strictly Halloween items, so an exhibit in October of masks seemed appropriate,” Knott, a coowner of ALG, explains. “However, there is little or nothing spooky about these masks. The possible styles and materials are infinite, and it’s been very enjoyable seeing what different artists visualize and create.” Knott’s mask “The Sound of Silence” features a Medusa-like element in which the mask’s unruly “hair” is made of various keys, and there’s a key which seems to unlock her lips. On top of the base is sheet music for Simon and Garfunkel’s “Sounds of Silence.” “In my mind it represents how way too often women keep so many thoughts

and words inside in order to not offend, to not rock the boat, and to keep the peace,” the artist shares. Clay artist Renato Abbate’s masks are all stoneware which were fired to 2,150 degrees Fahrenheit. “I love clay—turning mud into rocks makes me feel powerful,” he describes. “I started making masks a few years ago as an African History Month project, and I became interested in exploring masks from world cultures. I really like samurai masks created to instill fear in their opponents and African masks with lots of eyes. I feel like we are all overstimulated and need more eyes and ears to absorb everything that is constantly coming at us.” Abbate says humans wear figurative covers every day, whether to project power or to disguise their true self. “When I made these masks, I was feeling pulled in different directions, trying to fit into different social groups with different values—like I was living a triple life. Everything was going by too fast and nothing had meaning. Making masks made me more aware of the figurative masks I was wearing in my life. [I was] able to put on a mask and see through different eyes. You change your perspective, and the world changes its perception of you.” Chris Higgins, another owner of ALG, is a jewelry designer, so she wanted her art to look and feel like a piece of jewelry. “I fabricated it from sheets of brass and copper,” she notes. “I merged the two sheets together then cut, textured and forged it into a yin-yang shape. I set precious gems that represent the seven chakras: amethyst, peridot, citrine, tourmaline, topaz, garnet, sapphire.” She also made a setting for a large brown topaz as the eye of the mask, and formed a silver tube for the stick. “It represents how we can be happy with both our yin and yang that we face in life,” Higgins says. The public may vote for their favorite masks through October 23rd as a fund-raiser for the Beach Bound Project by placing money in each work’s individual jar. All proceeds will benefit the charity. “Pleasure Island has only two beach accessible wheelchairs for all of our visitors to use, so there are hundreds of needs that are not met,” Knott details. “The Beach Bound Project was established to raise monies to purchase more wheelchairs. We at ALG want our beach to be available to all, so we are helping to support this project.”


galleryguide| ARTFUEL.INC

2165 Wrightsville Ave. • (910) 343 5233 Mon.-Sat., noon-7 p.m. www.artfuelinc.com Artfuel.inc is a multimedia studio and art gallery, now located at the intersection of Wrightsville Avenue and Dawson Street. Celebrating one year at their new location, Artfuel Inc. host Vol. 32, featuring Luke Worley, Eddie Oakes, Sam Guin, Matt Hoyme and Sarah Peacock.

ARTEXPOSURE!

22527 Highway 17N, Hampstead, NC 910-803-0302/910-330-4077 Tues.-Sat. 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. (or by appt.) artexposure50.com Look for the big red barn for a unique visit in the Hampstead area, just four miles from beautiful Topsail Island. We represent over 40 local and regional fine artists in our member’s gallery and offer local arts and crafts in our gift shop. ArtExposure presently has studio space rented to seven working artists. In addition, there is a frame shop and small art supply store. ArtExposure is available for receptions, weddings, meetings and the like. Along with its large open space downstairs, there is a loft area upstairs suitable for smaller gatherings. Check out our website to see the latest in new classes as well as our regular art classes and studio time. Yoga classes meet Wednesdays at 6 p.m. and Saturday at 9 a.m. in the loft. Walk-ins are welcome to this gentle yoga class. A large open space hosts 2nd Friday Opening Receptions each month at 6 p.m. The October 12th opening will feature Jason Clark, a local Jacksonville artist with a unique style!

CAPE FEAR NATIVE

114 Princess St. • (910) 465-8811 Tues.-Sat. 11 a.m. - 6 p.m. www.capefearnative.com Cape Fear Native features the works of local artists and craftspeople inspired by nature. Here you’ll find original paintings on canvas and reclaimed river wood, handmade jewelry, local photography, sail bags, pottery, wood products, tiles, note cards, historic maps, books and our exclusive Wilmington city map tees/totes/prints. Our featured artist this month is fine art photographer Libby Cullen. Her “Coastal Views” collection will inspire in you a new appreciation for the stunning beauty of our landscape. Cullen’s photography will be featured through October 24th.

FIGMENTS GALLERY

1319 Military Cutoff Rd. Ste. II Landfall Shopping Center 910-509-4289 • htt[://figmentsgallery.com Tues.-Fri.: 11 a.m.-7 p.m. Figments gallery represents fantastic local and international artists. We feature an eclectic

mix of work in a salon style gallery. From funky outsider art to soothing traditional pieces, it’s truly a feast for your eyes! The second Friday of each month features a new exhibit and open house. Friday, October 12th from 5–8 we will present talented rising artists from Coastal Christian High School. All proceeds from the event will go to the art department at their new school due to open in November. So come by for refreshments, a chance to win some great raffle prizes and meet the artists. We look forward to seeing you!

historic fishing village of Calabash, NC, features fine arts and crafts by some of North and South Carolina’s most creative, successful artists. Almost every genre is represented here—oil, pastel and watercolor, clay and glass art, fiber art, turned wood, metal works, artisan-crafted jewelry and more. Classes, workshops, pottery studio, custom framing, Creative Exchange lecture series and Coffee with the Author series are also offered onsite.

WILMINGTON ART ASSOC.

HANOVER GALLERY

200 Hanover St., CFCC parking deck, first level • (919) 343-8997 Tues. and Thurs., 1 p.m. - 5 p.m. Wed., 2 p.m. - 5 p.m. Cape Fear Community College’s Hanover Gallery opens “Speak, Memory,” an exhibition of mixed media artwork by Leslie Pearson. Peason’s work can be viewed at www.lesliekpearson.com.

NEW ELEMENTS GALLERY

WATER WORKS: Bob Rankin exhibit closes Oct. 20th at New Elements, featuring new works including “High Tide.” Courtesy photo

120. S. Second St. Mon.-Sun., 10 a.m.-5:30 p.m. www.wilmington-art.org The Wilmington Art Association (W.A.A.) proudly announces the opening of their new permanent exhibit gallery space at the historic Hannah Block USO building at 120 South Second Street in downtown Wilmington. Come down and check out the terrific art and the new space in the Hannah Block building. It has great north light! The Community Art Center is open daily from 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.—and sometimes later. The art will be changed out monthly so there will be new work for view and purchase at the desk in the USO museum on an ongoing basis.

201 Princess St. • (919) 343-8997 Tues.-Sat.: 11 a.m.-6p.m. (or by appt.) newelementsgallery.com “Water Works” showcases Raleigh artist Bob Rankin showcases his love of the sea and his energetic interpretations of our coastal landscap. Combining strong brush strokes and strategic use of the palette knife, Rankin is able to succinctly share his vision of sky and sea. His technique is tactile and spontaneous, and he enjoys moving between realism and abstraction with equal ease. Water Works will remain on display through October 20th.

RIVER TO SEA GALLERY

225 S. Water St., Chandler’s Wharf (Free parking) • (910)-763-3380 Tues.–Sat. 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Sun. 1 - 4 p.m. River to Sea Gallery showcases the work of husband and wife Tim and Rebecca Duffy Bush. In addition, the gallery represents several local artists. The current show is sure to enthrall visitors with its eclectic collection of original paintings, photography, sculpture, glass, pottery and jewelry. Our current exhibit “Morning Has Broken” features works by Janet Parker. Come see Janet’s bold use of color and texture to reveal local marsh creeks and structures. Experience Wilmington through the eyes of a local!

SUNSET RIVER MARKETPLACE

10283 Beach Dr., SW (NC 179) (910) 575-5999 Tues.- Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. sunsetrivermarketplace.com This eclectic, spacious gallery, located in the encore | october 17-23, 2012 | www.encorepub.com 15


relating to mars:

//MUSIC

Folksy, soulful Charlie Mars tours to Soapbox uil by Jordan DeBre Charlie Mars 8 p.m. Fri., Oct. 19th • .etix.com $12-$17, www N. Front St. Soapbox • 255 ane Kelly Opening act: Sh ars.com http://charliem

A

sultry voice that hints at

his Southern heritage, combined with lyrics that paint a picture of experience, give Charlie Mars’ brand of folksy rock and soul a beautifully genuine sound. In typical Southern fashion, Mississippi-based Mars’ words can start out sweet but cut deeply. “My previous record, ‘Like a Bird, Like a Plane,’ was kind of a departure from what I had done before, honestly,” Mars explains. “I liked it a lot and really wanted to build on that with this record, ‘Blackberry Light.’ And we did; we recorded it in the same stu-

dio [as the last record] in Austin, Texas, and used mostly the same players with the same producers. Clearly, I loved my previous experience; I wanted to take that and build on it. I feel like those two records really go well together.” “Blackberry Light” is the sixth album Mars has put out over 17 years of making music professionally. Though he certainly has a lot of experience, it was country legend Steve Earle who put Mars’ work into perspective. “He was talking about what his songs were about,” Mars reflects, “and I said, ‘Well, what are my songs about?’ and he said, ‘They’re about you.’ That’s pretty much true; I just write about my life.” Initially, Mars’ became influenced by singer-songwriters Simon and Garfunkel, Neil Young and Jackson Browne, along with college rockers of the ‘90s like R.E.M., The Smiths and Pixies. “I’d like to think I’m just continuing in the footsteps of those guys,” he notes. “Those are the people that I’m trying to draw from.” Fitting from this influence, Mars’ mu-

10th Annual

Wilmington Holiday Parade Sunday December 2, 2012 - 6:10 pm Historic Downtown Wilmington Entry deadline is Wednesday November 14th at 5:00 pm

Questions? 910.341.7855

Join the Parade! Presented by the City of Wilmington, WECT, Encore Magazine and Cumulus Broadcasting

Community groups, school organizations, bands and businesses are encouraged to enter!

Entry forms online: www.wilmingtonrecreation.com 16 encore | october 17-23, 2012 | www.encorepub.com

MAN OF MANY FACES: Charlie Mars’s music moves effortlessly from edgy to yearning to angst; catch him live this week. Courtesy photo

sic emotes memories of romantic trysts, smoke-hazed days and youthful restlessness. “Mostly I write about places in my life where I have conflict or difficulty, sadness or regret,” he says. He focuses his music on relatability: what he’s going through. How it parallels a listener’s experience makes it all the more appealing. “I wouldn’t say there’s one general overriding theme,” he admits, “or one thing from which the themes of the album grew.” His point is to produce music that is deeply emotive, striking something inside. The first notes of “Blackberry Light” embrace the listener with the simplicity of just an acoustic guitar and Mars’ soulful voice. Then the jazzy interjection of keyboard, backed up by drums, reinforce the steady beat. “Let the Meter Run,” the first track on the record, is a warm reminder of how important it is to absorb tiny moments—especially when it comes to love. Many of the songs on “Blackberry Light” have a sense of delicate intimacy, almost

sounding like the song is for a specific person’s ears only. In particular, “I Do I Do” is a bit mushy and romantic. Mars is reaching out to the masses, too, expanding into TV land, as “I Do I Do” aired on last week’s “How I Met Your Mother” on CBS. He also has a song from “Blackberry Light” featured during the roll of credits from a season 8 episode of Showtime’s “Weeds.” “How I Roll,” a more rock-oriented tune, is not so much about a sense of attitude as much as literally twisting paper and herb. Charlie Mars maintains a steadfast ability to go from edgy to youth’s painful lessons learned to yearning for home without fail. In fact, home for the first 18 years of Mars’ life was Tennessee, where he made his foray into professional music during college. Though a career as a singer didn’t make up his original plan, it turned out to be the right move. “I was in college in Texas,” he recounts, “and went to college with this guy named Jack Ingram, who is a pretty well-known country singer now. He made his own CD with his own songs when we were in college. He seemed to be selling a lot of them and doing well, so I thought I would just use the same people he did and make a CD with the songs I had written.” Though Mars’ little expectations of his debut release were outweighed, he was thrilled to end up gaining momentum throughout the Southeast. College listeners certainly found its appeal. “That’s when I really started taking it seriously to do it for a living,” he notes. Despite rocky ups and downs, moving from label to label over the years, Mars now establishes himself firmly within his genre and with his fans. In coming months, he will tour nationally, stopping by many of his favorite places, including Austin and his birth state of Tennessee—where he hasn’t played in nearly 10 years. On October 19th, he’ll be playing at the Soapbox in Wilmington. Opening for Charlie Mars will be Durham native Shane Kelly. Tickets can be purchased through etix.com for $12 in advance and $14 on the day of the show (also available at the door); there is a $3 surcharge for folks under 21. Doors are at 8 p.m. and the show starts at 9 p.m.


Wilmington’s g Historic

Friday Oct.19 • 8pm www.ThalianHall.org

Photo by:

Brownie Harris

(910) 632-2285

Guitar & Fiddle Player Extraordinaire

Reserved Seats: $28, $25, $18 Plus a $2.00 Facility and Restoration fee.

SINGER, SONGWRITER, STORYTELLER & HUMORIST

Photos: Tim Smith, Wilmington, NC

www.MikeCross.com

Crossin’ Carolina Productions encore | october 17-23, 2012 | www.encorepub.com 17


18 encore | october 17-23, 2012 | www.encorepub.com

Introducing... www.mycapefearlife.com

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carolina trekkin’:

//MUSIC

Mike Cross tours North Carolina theatres, stops at Thalian Hall by Alex Pompliano Mike Cross Fri., 10/19 • 8 p.m. Thalian Hall • 310 Chestnut St. Tickets: $18-28 www.mikecross.com

sound bites shows of the week Groove Fetish The Whiskey 1 S. Front St. 10/18, 9 p.m. • $5

A

lmost exactly a year after

North Carolina’s own Mike Cross performed a sold-out show at Thalian Hall, the part-musician, part-storyteller returns to the venue’s main stage. Cross’ energetic one-man show specializes in serving up a collection of foot-stompin’ songs, touching ballads, humorous tales, and catchy Appalachian guitar and fiddle tunes. His music and stories seems to embody the Carolina spirit—gentle, laid-back, engaging—and full of appreciation for the history, people and wildlife throughout the state. This concert coincides with the release of Cross’ 14th album, “Crossin’ Carolina,” produced by his son Patrick, guitarist for the acclaimed Michael Jackson tribute band Who’s Bad. Cross says that back in college before he picked up his first guitar, he “would’ve guessed that eating gravel in a carnival sideshow would’ve come before learning to play music, let alone making music as a way of life for all these years.” However, with now over 40 years in the business, Cross has cemented his reputation as a respected artist, gifted storyteller and must-see performer by his continuous touring of North America, playing folk festivals and still, to this day, entertaining audiences with his warm and passionate personality. encore spoke with Cross about his new album, working with his son, and the tick bite that almost got the better of him. encore (e): You have quite the history with Thalian Hall; how does it feel to return? Mike Cross (MC): It’s a beautiful place; I always look forward to playing it. It feels like a place you can settle into. The first time you walk into it, you feel like you’re walking into a giant jewel box. I actually did a live recording there back in 1981 for an album called “Live & Kickin’.” e: Tell me about your new album, “Crossin’ Carolina.” MC: It was an album I recorded this past December and January. I had been laid up, sick for a year-and-a-half, so I hadn’t been able to play any music at all—not even around the house. So in the course of that time, I would sometimes write songs and dig through my desk drawer to find older songs that had been

A KID ON CHRISTMAS: Mike Cross feels that

performing his folk act is like opening a present on Christmas morning. Courtesy photo

tucked away and forgotten. So my son, Patrick, said, “Now that you’re feeling better, why don’t you do another recording because you’ve got so many songs piled up?” Around this time, Tom Carter, producer of this show at Thalian, asked if there was a chance I could do a recording so we could do a tour of theatres in NC. So, we went into the studio, Patrick produced it, and we actually recorded it all in three days. It was great fun because no matter how close you are growing up, there comes a time when your kids go off on their own and you only see each other occasionally. Doing this recording with Patrick gave me a chance to be around my son—who is now an adult—and experience these things with him. That’s probably the most comfortable I’ve been in a studio because I had the sense that I was just hanging out with my old buddy. e: You mentioned you were out of commission for a while. MC: Well, what happened was that I contracted a tick-borne infection that some would consider a form of Lyme disease. Growing up in rural NC, in the Western part of the state, I probably had a tick bite every day of my life and thought nothing of it. All my life doctors

told me that you couldn’t get Lyme disease in NC, and that always comforted me—up until I got it. For about a year-and-a-half, I experienced numbness in my hands, face and feet, fogginess of brain, and also tremors in my arm, so that’s what prevented me from playing the guitar and fiddle. There was a period where I really thought I’d never be able to play music again. e: You’ve been performing for decades; do you still get nervous before debuting new songs live? MC: The hardest thing about introducing a new song is that, since there’s a time frame [for concerts], there’s only a certain amount of time people can stay in their seats and not feel the need to scream and run out of the auditorium. Any time I [premiere] a new song, an old favorite probably won’t be heard that night. I’ve got enough songs now I don’t think it would be possible to do a show where I play all of them. I think because I’ve played so many shows through the years, I notice after my first few months on the road that it actually feels more comfortable to go on stage and play for a crowd of people than it does to order a cheeseburger and fries. It’s just as routine as drinkin’ a glass of water. It matters, but even if [a new song] doesn’t go over well, I’ll give it another shot tomorrow. So I don’t feel anxiety; I always feel excited. For me, performing is like opening a present on Christmas morning.

A local four-piece jam-rock band, Groove Fetish makes original, eclectic and upbeat music. The foundation for this act lies in Clay Crotts (singer, rhythm guitar), Ethan Schilf (bass), Shane Hall (lead guitar), and Drew Massey (drums). Together, the four possess the same musical interests and similar personalities to form this up-and-coming band.

Wilmington Symphony Orchestra

Kenan Auditorium 601 S. College Rd., UNCW Campus 10/20, 8 p.m. • $6-25 Featuring clarinetist Mike Waddell, this Wilmington Symphony Orchestra performance will take audiences across the ocean for a ‘Rendezvous in Paris.’ They’ll showcase French music from two centuries within Baroque composer Phillipee Rameau’s ‘Les Indes Galantes’ and Claude Debussy’s ‘Premiere Rhapsodie.’ It will conclude with Maurice Ravel’s ‘Boléro.’

All weekly music is listed on the soundboard pages.

encore | october 17-23, 2012 | www.encorepub.com 19


BLACKBOARD SPECIALS

soundboard

a preview of tunes all over town this week

WEDNESDAYS

8PM-10PM &

PINT NIGHT

ALL PINTS $

2.75

MONDAYS

B-Dub’s

BINGO

Play for FREE during Monday Night Football! TUESDAYS

LIVE

TEAM TRIVIA with MUD

8pm

Thursdays in October

Thursdays in October

10% of Food Sales 10% of Food Sales 5pm-9pm Donated to Pretty In Pink Foundation

5pm-9pm

Donated to Pretty In Pink Foundation

206 Old Eastwood Rd.

Monkey Junction 910.392.7224

(by Home Depot)

910.798.9464

STRAIGHT FROM THE HEART: Erick Baker of Knoxville, Tennessee blends heartfelt songwriting with audial elements of pop, rock, soul, blues, country and folk. He’s shared stages with Grace Potter, Brandi Carlile, Heart, John Legend and more. He’ll open for Ben Taylor at Soapbox Laundro-Lounge on Tuesday, October 23rd. Courtesy photo

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 17 DJ JAY —Sharp Shooters, 2109 N. Marine Blvd., Jacksonville; (910) 346-2677

1423 S. 3rd St. • 763-1607

New Outdoor Patio Seating!

MONDAY $ 2.50 Budweiser Draft $ 4 Wells 65¢ wings, 4-7 p. m.

TUE: djBe KARAOKE 8:30 p.m. 1/2 off Wine Botles & $4 Magner’s Irish Cider

TUESDAY Sky Blue $3.00 $ 4.50 Absolute lemonade 65¢ wings, 4-7 p. m.

WED: BLUEGRASS OPEN JAM 8 p.m. $ 4 20 oz. Guinness Pints

WEDNESDAY 2.50 Yuengling Draft $ 2.50 Domestic Bottles 65¢ wings, 4-7 p. m. $

THUR: TRIVIA w/Steve 8:30 p.m. • PRIZES! $ 2.50 Yuengling Drafts

THURSDAY 3.00 Samuel Adams $ 4.00 Margaritas

$

FRI: LIVE IRISH MUSIC Inquire for details

FRIDAY 3 Pint of the Day

SAT: JAMES JARVIS Acoustic Jazz Piano 7 p.m. SAT: djBe KARAOKE 9 p.m. $ 2 PBR Longnecks SUN: IRISH BRUNCH 10 a.m. - 3 p.m. $ 4 Bloody Mary’s and Mimosa’s SUN, SEPT. 2nd: OPEN MIC 8 p.m. - 12 a.m.

$

SATURDAY $ 5 Sangria & Mimosa’s SUNDAY 5 Bloody Mary’s & Mimosa’s *Drink specials run all day

$

N. Water Street & Walnut Street Downtown Wilmington 910-762-4354

20 encore | october 17-23, 2012 | www.encorepub.com

KARAOKE WITH HELLZ BELLE —Marina Cafe, 110 S. Marine Blvd., Jacksonville; (910) 938-2002

LIVE TEAM TRIVIA —Buffalo Wild Wings, 206 Old Eastwood Rd.; 798-9464 DJ —Charley Brownz, 21 S Front St.; 254-9499 FORMER CHAMPIONS —The Whiskey, 1 S. Front St.; 763-3088

BENNY HILL —Sweet & Savory Cafe; 1611 Pavilion Plc.,256-0115

10 YEARS, RED JUMPSUIT APPARATUS —Hooligans Pub & Music Hall; 2620 Onslow Dr., Jacksonville, (910) 346-2086

DJ SIR NICK BLAND —Red Dogs, 5 N. Lumina Ave., Wrightsville Beach; 256-2776

ANIMAL PARTS —Satellite Bar & Lounge, 120 Greenfield St.; 399-2796

KARAOKE —Browncoat Pub and Theatre, 111 Grace St.; 341-0001

ALLEN GLASER PROJECT —Juggling Gypsy Cafe, 1612 Castle St.; 763-2223

BAR PONG WITH SHANNON PARK —Locals Tavern, 6213 -D Market Street; 523-5621

SUSAN SAVIA (6-9PM) —P.T.’s Olde Fashioned Grille, 1035 Grandiflora Dr., Leland; 399-6808

DJ KEYBO —SideBar; 18 S. Front St., 763-1401

DYLAN LINEHAN —Costello’s Piano Bar, 211 Princess Street; 362-9666

KARAOKE WITH DJ BREWTAL —Liquid Room, 23 Market St.;910-343-3341 BLUEGRASS OPEN JAM NIGHT (8PM) —The Harp; 1423 South 3rd St.,763-1607

DYLAN HOLTON —Goat and Compass, 710 N. 4th St.; 772-1400

RANDY MCQUAY —Reel Cafe, 100 S. Front St.; 251-1832

DJBE EXTREME KARAOKE —Wild Wing Cafe, 1331 Military Cutoff;

256-3838 CHRIS BELLAMY —The Pub at Sweet and Savory, 2012 Eastwood Rd.; 679-8101 LANGHORNE SLIM & THE LAW, THE KERNAL, JKUTCHMA (RED COLLAR/ JKUTCHMA & THE 5 FIFTHS) —Soapbox Upstairs, 255 N. Front St.; 251-8500 THEM BOYS (ROCK) —Firebelly Lounge, 265 N. Front St.; 763-0141

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 18 COLLEGE NIGHT WITH DJ BATTLE —Brikhouse, 208 Market St.; 523-5833 LIVE ACOUSTIC —Wild Wing Cafe, 1331 Military Cutoff; 256-3838 DJ LORD WALRUS —Red Dogs, 5 N. Lumina Ave., Wrightsville Beach; 256-2776 TEAM TRIVIA WITH DUTCH HAWK —Orton’s Underground, 133 North Front St.; 343-8878 DJ SWEAT —Sharp Shooters, 2109 N. Marine Blvd., Jacksonville; (910) 346-2677

MIKE O’DONNELL —Reel Cafe, 100 S. Front St.; 251-1832 DJ KEYBO —SideBar; 18 S. Front St., 763-1401 KARAOKE —Browncoat Pub and Theatre, 111 Grace St.; 341-0001 FRIED LOT —Sweet & Savory Cafe; 1611 Pavilion Plc.,256-0115 OPEN MIC NIGHT WITH TOMMY HUTCHINSON (8PM) —Locals Tavern, 6213 -D Market Street; 523-5621 TRIVIA WITH STEVE (8:30PM) —The Harp; 1423 South 3rd St.,763-1607 KYLE LINDLEY —Wilmington Water Tours Catamaran, 212 S. Water St.; 338-3134 KOOLEY HIGH, CLEAR SOUL FORCES, THE AWAY TEAM —Soapbox Lounge, 255 N. Front St.; 2518500 GROOVE FETISH —The Whiskey, 1 S. Front St.; 763-3088 EDDIE ELLIOT —The Pub at Sweet and Savory, 2012 East-


wood Rd.; 679-8101

—Pravda; 23 N. Front St., Wilmington

MURRAY MIDDLE SCHOOL JAZZ BAND —Rucker John’s, 5564 Carolina Beach Rd.; 452-1212

KARAOKE —Sharp Shooters, 2109 N. Marine Blvd., Jacksonville; (910) 346-2677

TOM NOONAN —Costello’s Piano Bar, 211 Princess Street; 362-9666

MIGHTY MCFLY —Wild Wing Cafe, 1331 Military Cutoff; 256-3838

LIVE MUSIC —Halligan’s Public House, 3317 Masonboro Loop Rd.; 791-1019

ACOUSTIC JAZZ PIANO WITH JAMES JARVIS —Calico Room, 107 S. Front St. Wilmington, 762-2091

KARAOKE —Banks Channel Bar & Grille, 530 Causeway Drive; 256-2269 ROCKIN’ TRIVIA WITH PARTY GRAS DJ (9 P.M.) —Fox and Hound Pub & Grille, 920 Town Center Dr.; 509-0805 OPEN MIC WITH JEREMY NORRIS —Katy’s, 1054 S. College Rd.; 395-6204 DJ —Charley Brownz, 21 S Front St.; 254-9499 KARAOKE WITH DJ DAMON —Yosake Sushi Lounge, 31 S. Front St.; 763-3172 TOP 40 DJ —Ibiza, 118 Market St.; 251-1301 DAYLIGHT CIRCUS (8PM) —Projekte, 523 South 3rd St., 352-0236

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 19 HOUSE/TECHNO DJ —Ibiza, 118 Market St.; 251-1301 DJ BATTLE —Dirty Martini, 1904 Eastwood Rd, Suite 109 DJ —Charley Brownz, 21 S Front St.; 254-9499 DJ DR. JONES —Red Dogs, 5 N. Lumina Ave., Wrightsville Beach; 256-2776 SUSAN SAVIA —The Coastal Roaster, 5954 Carolina Beach Rd.; 399-4701 TOMMY HUTCHINS —Wilmington Water Tours Catamaran, 212 S. Water St.; 338-3134 KARAOKE —Browncoat Pub and Theatre, 111 Grace St.; 341-0001 PLAN B —The Dive, 6 N. Lake Park Blvd.; 458-8282 DJ SHANNON —Locals Tavern, 6213 -D Market Street; 523-5621 DJ KEYBO —SideBar; 18 S. Front St., 763-1401 KERSTEN CAPRA —Projekte, 523 South 3rd St., 352-0236 KARAOKE WITH MIKE NORRIS —Katy’s, 1054 S. College Rd.; 395-6204 DJ MILK

CHASING EDISON W/ NAUTILUS —The Whiskey, 1 S. Front St.; 763-3088 DHIM —Brooklyn Arts Center, 516 N. 4th St.; 538-2939

HEY ROCCO! & GUESTS —Juggling Gypsy Cafe, 1612 Castle St.; 763-2223 UNCW BIG BAND AND COMBOS (7:30PM) —Kenan Auditorium UNCW Campus; 3132584

DJ BATTLE —Dirty Martini, 1904 Eastwood Rd, Suite 109 DJ —Charley Brownz, 21 S Front St.; 254-9499

THE HATCH BROTHERS —Costello’s Piano Bar, 211 Princess Street; 362-9666

HOUSE/TECHNO DJ —Ibiza, 118 Market St.; 251-1301

TEDESCHI TRUCKS BAND W/ SCRAPOMATIC —Greenfield Lake Amphitheater MIKE CROSS (COUNTRY/FOLK, 8PM) —Thalian Hall, 310 Chestnut St.; 632-2241 MASSIVE GRASS —Trolly Stop, downtown, 121 N. Front St.; 251-7799 UPSTARTS AND ROGUES (8PM) —Ted’s Fun on the River, 2 Castle St. VELVET JANE —Goat and Compass, 710 N. 4th St.; 772-1400 FRED FLYNN & FRIENDS —Hell’s Kitchen, 118 Princess St.; 763-4133 CHARLIE MARS, SHANE KELLY —Soapbox Upstairs, 255 N. Front St.; 251-8500 DJ —Tangerine’s Caribbean Grill, 300 N. Lake Park Blvd., Carolina Beach; 707-0202

KARAOKE —Browncoat Pub and Theatre, 111 Grace St.; 341-0001 ROLLING TRIVIA —Five Star Tavern, 106 N. 2nd St.; 762-1533 DJ TIME —Hell’s Kitchen, 118 Princess St.; 763-4133 DJ KEYBO —SideBar; 18 S. Front St., 763-1401

Pub & Grille

Wrightsville Beach

Tuesday

$3 Imports ∙ $4 Guinness $1.50 High Life ∙ $3 Bouron

Wednesdays

Ping Pong Tourney

Thursdays KARAOKE

$2 Red Stripe ∙ $4 Margaritas $4 Dude Bombs ∙ $4 Captain

Fridays

$2 Coors Light • $2 Mich Ultras $5 Martinis • $4 Flavored Bombs

Saturdays

Breakfast 10am-3pm $2 Miller Lite • $2 Budweiser $4 Rum & Coke • $4 Bellinis

Sundays

Breakfast 10am-3pm $2 Yuenglings • $2 Bud Lights $4 Bloody Marys • $3 Mimosas Free Pool & Shuffleboard after 9 pm 1/2 Off Late Night Menu @ 10 pm

BanksChannelPub.Com

SONGWRITER OPEN MIC WITH JEFF ECKER (10PM-2AM) —Lazy Pirate Sports Bar and Grill, 701 N. Lake Park Blvd., Carolina Beach; 458-5414 GUITARIST MARK LYNCH (10:30AM1:30PM) —Saltworks II, 4001 Wrightsville Ave.; 392-1241 DJ SWEAT —Sharp Shooters, 2109 N. Marine Blvd., Jacksonville; (910) 346-2677 AMANDA LAWRENCE —Nikki’s Gourmet Sushi Bar, 6 S. Lake Blvd., Carolina Beach, 707-0802

MIKE CROSS —Thalian Hall, 310 Chestnut St.; 632-2241 BLAIR CRIMMINS AND THE HOOKERS —Satellite Bar & Lounge, 120 Greenfield St.; 399-2796

KIM DISCO —Wilmington Water Tours Catamaran, 212 S. Water St.; 338-3134

SHINE —Rusty Nail, 1310 S. 5th Ave.; 251-1888

THE DROWNING MEN, MADD HATTERS, D&D SLUGGERS, RICTUS GRIM, PROTEGE, BLACKMOOR SAINTS —Soapbox Upstairs, 255 N. Front St.; 251-8500

L SHAPE LOT —Holiday Inn Resort (Oceanfront Terrace), 1706 N. Lumina Ave.; 256-2231

5564 Carolina Beach Road, (910) 452-1212

KENNY REEVES & TRAINWRECK —Locals Tavern, 6213 -D Market Street; 523-5621

SENECA GUNS —Wild Wing Cafe, 1331 Military Cutoff; 256-3838

LIVE MUSIC —Henry’s, 2806 Independence Blvd.; 7932929

MONDAY 22oz. Domestic Draft ALL DAY $5 Pizzas TUESDAY LIVE JAzz IN THE BAR Half Price Bottles of Wine Absolut Dream $5 • Pacifico $250 WEDNESDAY Miller Light Pints $150 Coronoa/ Corona Lite Bottles $250 Margaritas/Peach Margaritas $4 THURSDAY Appletinis $4, RJ’s Painkiller $5 Red Stripe Bottles $250 Fat Tire Bottles $250 FRIDAY Cosmos $4, 007 $350 Guinness Cans $3 Island Sunsets $5 SATURDAY Baybreeze/Seabreeze $4 22oz. Blue Moon Draft $3 Select Domestic Bottles $2 SUNDAY Bloody Marys $4, Domestic Pints $150 Hurricanes $5

ACOUSTIC JAZZ PIANO WITH JAMES JARVIS (7-9PM); DJBE EXTREME KARAOKE (9PM) —The Harp; 1423 South 3rd St.,763-1607

DJ SIR NICK BLAND —Red Dogs, 5 N. Lumina Ave., Wrightsville Beach; 256-2776

BLIVET —Beach House Bar ‘n’ Grill, 7219 Market St.; 689-7219

VISIT WWW.RUCKERJOHNS.COM FOR DAILY SPECIALS, MUSIC & EVENTS

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 20

JAMES JARVIS —Calico Room, 107 S. Front St. Wilmington, 762-2091

THE FUSTICS —Duck & Dive, 114 Dock Street, 399-2866

BLACKBOARD SPECIALS

THE BIBIS ELLISON BAND —The Whiskey, 1 S. Front St.; 763-3088 LOOSE WHEEL BLUEGRASS JAM

NOW ON TAP

10.17 WEDNESDAY

karaoke night with dj be!

10.18 THURSDAY

trivia night 10.19 FRIDAY

mighty mcfly 10.20 SATURDAY

live music with

seneca guns

Wrightsville Beach, NC

SOUTHERN TIER PUMPKING

SEA PANS STEEL DRUMS

Every Tuesday

ACOUSTIC MIX

36 Drafts

Saturday, October 20

ALL 2

$ 50

All day long

Every Thursday from 7 p.m. - 10 p.m.

LIVE MUSIC Oceanfront Terrace 7-10pm

Friday, October 19

L SHAPE LOT KERSTEN CAPRA CLASSIC

Friday, October 26

OVERTYME ECLECTIC MIX

Saturday, October 27

Landfall Center • 1331 Military Cutoff Rd

910-256-3838 wildwingcafe.com

920 Town Center Dr. Mayfaire Town Center (910) 509-0805

RANDY MCQUAY POP & CLASSIC

1706 North Lumina Ave. (910) 256-2231 877-330-5050 •• 910-256-2231 877-330-5050 910-256-2231

encore | october 17-23, 2012 | www.encorepub.com 21


BLACKBOARD SPECIALS OCTOBER 19

TRASHCAN TACOS REGGAE-ROCK

OCTOBER 20

AL’S PLACE ROCK/COUNTRY/ BLUEGRASS

NO COVER! Join us for MLB Extra Innings all summer long!

Monday 2 Bud Light • $3 Fat Tire

$ 50

$ 3 Harpoon IPA Pints 5 Redbull Vodka • Wings on Special

$

Tuesday 2 Yuengling • $3 Blue Moon Pints $ 3 New Holland Pumpkin Ale $ 5 Jameson • $7 Burgers

$ 50

Wednesday “South of the Border Hump Day” $ 3 Dos Equis • $4 Margaritas $ 4 shots of Jose • $7 Nachos $ 7 Chicken Quesadilla Thirsty Thursday $ 50 2 PBR 16oz cans • $350 All Drafts $ 50 3 Magners Cider 50¢ Steamed Oysters & Shrimp

Friday $ 75 2 Miller Lite • $325 Stella • $4 Fireball Saturday 2 Coors Lite • $325 Sierra Nevada $ 5 Baby Guinness

$ 75

Sunday 3 Corona/Corona Light $ 10 Domestic Buckets $ 4 Mimosas • $4 Bloody Marys Steamed Platters $18/$35 $

Friday and Saturday Live music in the courtyard Rooftop opens at 6 p.m.

NFL SUNDAY TICKET $3 Domestic Schooners $2 Domestic Drafts $9.99 All You Can Eat Wings at the Bar 1/2 Priced Select Appetizers at the Bar

MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL $3 Domestic Schooners $3.50 Margaritas TUESDAY-KIDS EAT FREE NIGHT $3.50 LIT’s • $2.00 Domestic Drafts WEDNESDAY $3 Domestic Schooners $3.50 Margaritas THURSDAY $3.50 LIT’s • $2.00 Domestic Drafts FRIDAY-TGIF $3.50 Cosmos $2.00 Domestic Drafts SATURDAY-COLLEGE FOOTBALL $3 Domestic Schooners MONDAY- FRIDAY 1/2 Priced Appetizers from 4-7 pm & 9 pm -close at the bar Free Appetizer of the Day with purchase of a non-refillable beverage from 5-7 at the bar. 4126 Oleander Dr. (910) 792-9700

WEDNESDAY Ladies Night $3 Skinny Girl Martinis OPEN 8 p.m. - 2 a.m. NO COVER

THURSDAY College Night DJ DST & DJ Matt Evans $1 Shots $2 Bud Pounders $3 Three Olive Vodka Flavors

FRIDAY DJ Pruitt and DJ SBz $2 Shots $3 Infused Vodkas $3 Draft Beers

SATURDAY DJ Milk and DJ SBz DJ DST & DJ Matt Evans $2 Shots $3 Infused Vodkas $3 Draft Beer

FRIDAY DJ Milk & DJ Matt Evans $3 Shots $3 Drafts VIP BOttle & Cocktail Service

Every Wednesday Bottomless Cheese and Chocolate

$20

per person

W h at e cou ld br ? bett e

LIVE MUSIC Friday, 10/19 DHIM & FRIENDS GREAT DRINK SPECIALS FREE GAMES FREE PARKING Thursday, 11/08 SONGWRITER SHOWCASE 516 North 4th Street Wilmington, NC 28401

SATURDAY DJ Matt Evans $3 Shots $3 Drafts VIP Bottle & Cocktail Service

885 Town Center Drive MAYFAIRE TOWN CENTER (910) 256-1187

22 encore | october 17-23, 2012 | www.encorepub.com

341-0001

FAYE LANE (COMEDY) —Thalian Hall, 310 Chestnut St.; 632-2241

DJ JAY —Sharp Shooters, 2109 N. Marine Blvd., Jacksonville; (910) 346-2677

DJ —Tangerine’s Caribbean Grill, 300 N. Lake Park Blvd., Carolina Beach; 707-0202

100 S. FRONT ST. DOWNTOWN WILMINGTON 251-1832

Live Music

—Ted’s Fun on the River, 2 Castle St.

910.538.2939

brooklynartsnc.com

MONDAY $3 Sweetwater, $10 Domestic Buckets, $4 Captain, Jack, and Evan Williams, Trivia from Hell @ 7:30 TUESDAY $3 Dos XX Amber, $3.50 Mexican Bottles, $4 Cuervo, 1800, Lunazul, Jim Beam, Jack, and Bacardi $1 Tacos (4pm-close) WEDNESDAY $3 Drafts, 1/2 Price Wine, $5 Martinis, $4 Bombs THURSDAY LIVE Music $2 Bud Lt and Yuengling Draft, $4 Jim, Jack, Jager, and Jameson $5 Bombs, $3.50 Micro Bottles, 1/2 Price Wings (7pm-close) FRIDAY & SATURDAY Midnight-1:30am NO Cover & 1/2 Price Wings SUNDAY $2.50 Bud Lt and Yuengling Drafts, $4 Crown, Jager, Jack, Jameson, Lunazul, Bloody Mary’s, $5 Mimosas 1/2 Price Select Apps M-TH 4pm-7pm & Sun 9pm-close LIVE MUSIC 10/19 FRED FLYNN AND FRIENDS 10/20 KRIS ABE

FEATURE YOUR LIVE MUSIC FOOD & DRINK SPECIALS CALL 791-0688

NO DOLLAR SHOES —The Pub at Sweet and Savory, 2012 Eastwood Rd.; 679-8101

KARAOKE WITH HELLZ BELLE —Marina Cafe, 110 S. Marine Blvd., Jacksonville; (910) 938-2002 PERRY SMITH (BRUNCH 12-2) —Aubriana’s; 115 S. Front St., 763-7773

JENNY PEARSON —Costello’s Piano Bar, 211 Princess Street; 362-9666

KARAOKE KONG —Black Sheep Tavern, 21 N. Front St. (basement); 399-3056

DYLAN HOLTON —Duck & Dive, 114 Dock Street, 399-2866

TRAVIS SHALLOW —Calico Room, 107 S. Front St. Wilmington, 762-2091

DANICA & 40 EAST —Beach House Bar ‘n’ Grill, 7219 Market St.; 689-7219 DONNA MERRITT —Circa 1922, 8 N. Front St.; 762-1922 ED SOMECH —Hoplite Pub and Beer Garden, 720 North Lake Park Blvd; 458-4745 WILMINGTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA —Kenan Auditorium UNCW Campus; 3132584

DJ TIMBO —Beach House Bar ‘n’ Grill, 7219 Market St.; 689-7219

MONDAY, OCTOBER 22 B-DUB’S BINGO DURING MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL —Buffalo Wild Wings, 5533 Carolina Beach Rd., Monkey Junction; 392-7224

TRAGIC MAGIC —Juggling Gypsy Cafe, 1612 Castle St.; 763-2223

B-DUB’S BINGO DURING MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL —Buffalo Wild Wings, 206 Old Eastwood Rd.; 798-9464

BLARNEY BROGUES IRISH BAND —Goat and Compass, 710 N. 4th St.; 772-1400

KARAOKE —Sharp Shooters, 2109 N. Marine Blvd., Jacksonville; (910) 346-2677

KRIS ABE —Hell’s Kitchen, 118 Princess St.; 763-4133

DJ RICHTERMEISTER —Wild Wing Cafe, 1331 Military Cutoff; 256-3838

KERSTEN CAPRA —Holiday Inn Resort (Oceanfront Terrace), 1706 N. Lumina Ave.; 256-2231 KYLE LINDLEY —Riverfront Farmers’ Market; Water St. Wilmington

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 21 L-SHAPE LOT (3PM); CLAY CROTTS (8PM) —Reel Cafe, 100 S. Front St.; 251-1832 CHRIS LUTHER (JAZZ) —Rusty Nail, 1310 S. 5th Ave.; 251-1888 MARK LYNCH (ACOUSTIC GUITAR, 11AM2PM) —Deluxe, 114 Market St., 251-0333 REGGAE —Lazy Pirate Sports Bar and Grill, 701 N. Lake Park Blvd., Carolina Beach; 458-5414 SATELLITE BLUEGRASS BAND —Satellite Bar & Lounge, 120 Greenfield St.; 399-2796 DJ BATTLE —Fibber McGee’s, 1610 Pavilion Pl; 509-1551

DONNA MERRITT —Costello’s Piano Bar, 211 Princess Street; 362-9666 CLAUD BOURBON —Playhouse 211, 4320 Southport Supply Rd. Ste 1, St. James; 200-7785 PENGO WITH BEAU GUNN —Mellow Mushroom, 4311 Oleander Drive; 452-3773 JOSH SOLOMON AND FRIENDS —Liquid Room, 23 Market St.;910-343-3341 KARAOKE —Browncoat Pub and Theatre, 111 Grace St.; 341-0001 KARAOKE WITH DJ @-HOLE —Level 5/City Stage, 21 N. Front St.; 342-0872 ELECTRIC MONDAYS W/ PRUITT AND CHRIS EDWARDS —The Whiskey, 1 S. Front St.; 763-3088

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 23

MASSIVE GRASS —Locals Tavern, 6213 -D Market Street; 523-5621

TEAM TRIVIA

KARAOKE

—Costello’s Piano Bar, 211 Princess Street; 362-9666

—Browncoat Pub and Theatre, 111 Grace St.;

—Reel Cafe, 100 S. Front St.; 251-1832 COLLEGE NIGHT KARAOKE


COMEDY OPEN MIC WITH SEAN WEBB (9PM) —Locals Tavern, 6213 -D Market Street; 523-5621 DJ KEYBO —SideBar; 18 S. Front St., 763-1401 WORLD TAVERN TRIVIA HOSTED BY MUD —Buffalo Wild Wings, 5533 Carolina Beach Rd., Monkey Junction; 392-7224 DJBE KARAOKE AND OPEN MIC: MUSICIANS AND COMICS WITH ONSITE PIANO —The Harp; 1423 South 3rd St.,763-1607 OPEN MIC —The Whiskey, 1 S. Front St.; 763-3088 BEN TAYLOR, ERICK BAKER —Soapbox Upstairs, 255 N. Front St.; 251-8500 CONOR MULROY —Juggling Gypsy Cafe, 1612 Castle St.; 763-2223 BENNY HILL (JAZZ) —Rucker John’s, 5564 Carolina Beach Rd.; 452-1212 LIVE ACOUSTIC —Wild Wing Cafe, 1331 Military Cutoff; 256-3838 TRIVIA WITH DUTCH FROM 94.5 THE HAWK —The Coastal Roaster, 5954 Carolina Beach Rd.; 399-4701 “IT TAKES TUESDAYS TO TANGO” LESSONS 7-9 P.M. —Orton’s Underground, 133 North Front St.; 343-8878 KARAOKE WITH DJ PARTY GRAS —Fox and Hound Pub & Grille, 920 Town Center Dr.; 509-0805 KARAOKE —Browncoat Pub and Theatre, 111 Grace St.; 341-0001 KARAOKE WITH MIKE NORRIS —Katy’s, 1054 S. College Rd.; 395-6204 HOME OF EASY CREDIT (JAZZ, 8PM) —Squidco, 1003 North 4th St., 910-399-4847

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 24 BLUEGRASS OPEN JAM NIGHT (8PM) —The Harp; 1423 South 3rd St.,763-1607 RANDY MCQUAY —Reel Cafe, 100 S. Front St.; 251-1832 LIVE TEAM TRIVIA —Buffalo Wild Wings, 206 Old Eastwood Rd.; 798-9464 BAR PONG WITH SHANNON PARK —Locals Tavern, 6213 -D Market Street; 523-5621 DJ KEYBO —SideBar; 18 S. Front St., 763-1401

MODE: A NEW OPEN MIC WITH BENJAMIN BAKER —Projekte, 523 South 3rd St., 352-0236 DJ SIR NICK BLAND —Red Dogs, 5 N. Lumina Ave., Wrightsville Beach; 256-2776

ShowStoppers:

Concerts outside of Southeastern NC

DJ JAY —Sharp Shooters, 2109 N. Marine Blvd., Jacksonville; (910) 346-2677 LIZ UHLMAN —Firebelly Lounge, 265 N. Front St.; 763-0141 SOUTHBOUND AND DOWN: MADD HATTERS, VILLAIN, ELWAY, CAPTAIN, WE’RE SINKING, THE HOLY MESS, VIRGIN LUNG, LET ME RUN, REVERSE THE CURSE —Soapbox Upstairs, 255 N. Front St.; 251-8500 MARK HERBERT —Juggling Gypsy Cafe, 1612 Castle St.; 763-2223 TRAVIS SHALLOW —Goat and Compass, 710 N. 4th St.; 772-1400 ALL THAT REMAINS, PSYCHOSTICK, SAINT DIABLO, ENGAGE YOUR ENEMY —Hooligans Pub & Music Hall; 2620 Onslow Dr., Jacksonville, (910) 346-2086 JUDAH MOORE —Costello’s Piano Bar, 211 Princess Street; 362-9666 SOUTHBOUND AND DOWN: RESTORATIONS, RED COLLAR, ARLISS NANCY, JAKE OF COFFEE PROJECT + SPECIAL GUEST PJ BOND, BRIAN MCGEE, A BOTTLE VOLCANIC, SHORES, MUSEUM MOUTH —Soapbox Lounge, 255 N. Front St.; 2518500 DJBE EXTREME KARAOKE —Wild Wing Cafe, 1331 Military Cutoff; 256-3838 KARAOKE —Browncoat Pub and Theatre, 111 Grace St.; 341-0001 KARAOKE WITH HELLZ BELLE —Marina Cafe, 110 S. Marine Blvd., Jacksonville; (910) 938-2002 BENNY HILL —Sweet & Savory Cafe; 1611 Pavilion Plc.,256-0115 KARAOKE WITH DJ BREWTAL —Liquid Room, 23 Market St.;910-343-3341 DJ —Charley Brownz, 21 S Front St.; 254-9499 SEAN MILLS & FRIENDS —The Whiskey, 1 S. Front St.; 763-3088 All entertainment must be sent to music@encorepub.com by Wednesday for consideration in the weekly entertainment calendar. Venues are responsible for notifying encore of any changes, removals or additions to their weekly schedules.

BEARDS OF COUNTRY: Zac Brown Band will perform at Verizon Wireless Amphitheatre in Charlotte on October 25th. Courtesy photo.

AMOS’ SOUTHEND 1423 SOUTH TRYON STREET, CHARLOTTE, NC (704) 377-6874 10/19: Badfish, Of Good Nature, Sundried Vibes 10/20: Kashmir, Blanco Diablo 10/22: GWAR, Devil Driver, Cancer Bats 10/24: Miss May I, The Ghost Inside 10/26: Final Curse, Avalon Steel, Souldera, The Last Great Escape Artist, Some Kind of Monster 10/27: Sequoyah Prep School, Black Cadillacs CAT’S CRADLE 300 E. MAIN STREET, CARRBORO, NC (919) 967-9053 10/19: Father John Misty, La Sera, Jeffertitti’s Nile 10/20: Langhorne Slim and The Law, The Last Bison, Wylie Hunter and the Cazadores 10/21: Afghan Whigs, Wussy 10/23: State Radio, Zap and the Naturals 10/24: Lagwagon, Dead to Me, Flatliners 10/25: The Sea and Cake, Matthew Friedberger NORTH CHARLESTON COLISEUM 5001 COLISEUM DR., N. CHARLESTON, SC (843) 529-5000 10/27: Mary Mary, Isacc Caree

HOUSE OF BLUES 4640 HWY. 17 SOUTH, MYRTLE BEACH, SC (843) 272-3000 10/19: Dave Matthews Tribute Band 10/20: Rebelution, Passafire, Through the Roots 10/26: Mac Powell 10/27: Three Days Grace ALABAMA THEATRE 4750 HWY. 17 S., N. MYRTLE BEACH, SC (843) 272-1111 10/27: Randy Travis THE ORANGE PEEL 101 BILTMORE AVENUE, ASHEVILLE, NC (828) 225-5851 10/17: Punch Brothers, Tom Brosseau 10/20: Xavier Rudd, Yeshe 10/21: Andrew Bird 10/22: Streetlight Manifesto, Lionize 10/24: The Psychedelic Furs, The Lemonheads 10/25: Jerry Douglas, Logan Brill 10/26: GZA, Black Moth Super Rainbow, Killer Mike 10/27: Carl Craig, Death Grips, Cold Cave, Actress

MOTORCO MUSIC HALL 723 RIGSBEE AVE., DURHAM, NC DURHAM PERFORMING ARTS CENTER (919) 901-0875 10/19: Turquoise Jeep 123 VIVIAN ST., DURHAM, NC 10/20: Meshell Ndegeocello (919) 680-2727 10/19: Indigo Girls, The Shadowboxers THE FILLMORE 1000 SEABOARD STREET, CHARLOTTE, NC GREENSBORO COLISEUM (704) 549-5555 1921 W. LEE ST., GREENSBORO, NC 10/20: The Weeknd (336) 373-7400 10/25: Sound Tribe Sector 9 10/26: Jill Scott VERIZON WIRELESS AMPHITHEATRE 707 PAVILION BLVD., CHARLOTTE, NC (704) 549-5555 10/25: Zac Brown Band

ZIGGY’S 170 W. 9TH ST., WINSTON-SALEM, NC (336) 722-5000 10/20: Corey Smith

LINCOLN THEATRE 126 E. CABARRUS STREET, RALEIGH, NC (919) 821-4111 10/17: Iration, The Expendables, Cisco Adler 10/18: Badfish, Scotty Don’t 10/20: Henry Rollins 10/23: Streetlight Manifesto, Lionize, Chicharones 10/24: Blackberry Smoke, House of Fools 10/25: GZA, Killer Mike, Professor Toon 10/26: Edwin McCain, Crowfield 10/27: Big Something, Indecision, Pseudo Blue OVENS AUDITORIUM 2700 E. INDEPENDENCE BLVD., CHARLOTTE (704) 372-3600 10/20: Erykah Badu, Rickey Smiley THE ARTSCENTER 300-G E. MAIN ST., CARRBORO, NC (919) 929-2787 10/17: Los Lonely Boys, The Onyx Club Boys 10/19: John Jorgensen Quintet 10/24: Ben Taylor KOKA BOOTH AMPHITHEATRE 8003 REGENCY PKWY., CARY, NC (919) 462-2052 10/19: Grace Potter and the Nocturnals NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRE 511 E. 36TH STREET, CHARLOTTE, NC (704) 358-9298 10/18: Rich Medina, The Marksmen 10/20: Chatham County Line, Underhill Rose 10/24: Papadosio, Brother’s Past 10/26: Sam Bush Band PNC ARENA 1400 EDWARDS MILL RD., RALEIGH, NC (919) 861-2300 10/20: Michael Franti

encore | october 17-23, 2012 | www.encorepub.com 23


JOY GREGORY (Sophia) Winner of the 2011 wilmington theatre award for best supporting actress

KIM PACHECO (Celie) Wilmington native and renowned jazz singer

October 24-28 and November 2-4

$20 Oct. 24-25

$25

Oct. 26-28 and Nov 2-4 Senior and student discounts available

24 encore | october 17-23, 2012 | www.encorepub.com

DEIDRA BROOKS (Shug) From the broadway cast of the color purple


//FILM

eternal reel: ‘Trouble With the Curve’ feels as long as a boring baseball game

this week in film

by Anghus e Curve Trouble With th

Searching for Sugar Man, 2 Days in New York

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ wood, Amy Adams, arring Clint East St e Justin Timberlak

B

aseball movies are far more

interesting than the sport which inspires them. It’s a tired, labored game by the hundreds, with a heavy focus on statistics. While going to a live baseball game can be a fun distraction, the entire enterprise of professional baseball is boring. In baseball, the “perfect” game is one where no one gets a hit or even on base. In order for baseball to achieve perfection, nothing must happen. Snore. I don’t know why they still refer to it as our “national pastime” when the game hasn’t been relevant since the homerun derby of the mid ‘90s when ‘roided-up supermen were trying to figure out who could break a 40-year-old record while dramatically reducing their life expectancy. Sure, baseball as a sport sucks; however, cinematically speaking, baseball is king of the sports movie. While football is far superior, it doesn’t translate to the big screen with the same kind of nostalgic fervor (maybe because people still watch football). Every so often an excellent football movie, like “Rudy” or “Invincible,” gets released. They’re either inspirational crowd-pleasers or good comedic romps, like “The Replacements.” Yet, most football movies are pretty lackluster. By the time someone ponders five good football movies, he could name a dozen baseball films considered classics by just about anyone: “Bull Durham,” “Pride of the Yankees,” “The Natural,” “Field of Dreams,” “A League of Their Own,” “The Bad News Bears,” “Bang the Drum Slowly” … hell, even “Major League.” We might prefer football as a sport, but we prefer our sports movies to be about baseball. “Trouble With the Curve” is one of these harmless little larfs that feels more like a television pilot than a movie. Gus (Clint Eastwood) is a grizzled, old baseball scout for the Atlanta Braves, drifting into the twilight of his life. He’s considered a relic by the organization, a valuable asset well past his prime. While out scouting a hot, young prospect, he begins to have trouble with his vision. His daughter Mickey (Amy Adams) is talked into taking a few days off from her busy life of being a frigid corporate lawyer to check in on her old man. They’re not exactly estranged, but they lack any kind of emotional cohesion.

reel reel

FIELDING EMOTION: Amy Adams and Clint Eastwood play a father and daughter in the outs in ‘Trouble With the Curve.’ Courtesy photo

Shockingly, they are able to grow closer and put behind a lifetime of past aggression in just a matter of days. Who saw that coming? Oh wait, everyone. On their travels they run into a young scout from Boston, Johnny (Justin Timberlake). Gus and Johnny have a history, and—surprise again!—Johnny finds himself attracted to Gus’ daughter. Mickey tries to help her dad with his one final scouting job while slowly warming up to Johnny. The plot follows the kind of by-the-innings predictability of any typical baseball game. There’s a lot of talk about how the old days are better, and that experience and instinct fare better than technology and computer programs. It’s kind of like the inverse opposite of last year’s “Moneyball” of abandoning the logic of numbers and percentages in favor of what feels right. It’s sentimental, it’s schmaltzy; occasionally, it works. The trouble with “Curve” is the kind of heavy-handed nonsense that kills any movie—syrupy, corny nonsense that should require the movie to be rated “Type 2 Diabetes.” It’s forced sentimentality; the romantic subplot feels ridiculously preordained. Wooden characters utter the kind of goofy dialogue that made me cringe in my seat. There are so many “of courses” in this movie. “Of course” the young guys in the corporate office are know-nothing buffoons. “Of course” the young major league prospect is a jerk who berates the peanut guy

at the ball park. “Of course” the peanut guy turns out to be a Sandy Koufax-esque pitcher who gets his dream to try out for the Braves. “Of course” audiences will be pounding their heads into the seats to only hear ringing in their heads, which will thankfully drown out some truly labored writing. The only thing that saves “Trouble With the Curve” are its actors. God bless Clint Eastwood’s crusty, 1,000-year-old face. Sure, he’s a loon who talks to empty chairs, but he’s still a lovable bastard capable of making audiences give a damn. And if anyone is too good for this material, it’s Amy Adams who feels so out of place with trite crap like this. Even Justin Timberlake manages to do a good job playing a likable scallywag. “Trouble With the Curve” isn’t a bad movie, it’s just a predictable one. Like most baseball games, it feels like an eternity.

Planned Parenthood of Wilmington

Health Care That Respects & Protects Your Personal Choices!

Family Planning...Birth Control...Pregnancy Testing... GYN Exams...Testing and Treatment of Sexually Transmitted Infections...Emergency Contraception Present this coupon on your first visit to:

Cinematique • Thalian Hall, 310 Chestnut St. 7:30 p.m. $8 • Monday through Wednesday 10/17: “Searching for Sugar Man” tells the incredible true story of Rodriguez, the greatest ‘70s rock icon who never was. Discovered in a Detroit bar in the late ‘60s by two celebrated producers struck by his soulful melodies and prophetic lyrics, they recorded an album which they believed would secure his reputation as the greatest recording artist of his generation. In fact, the album bombed and the singer disappeared into obscurity amid rumors of a gruesome on-stage suicide. A bootleg recording found its way into apartheid South Africa and, over the next two decades, unbeknownst to Rodriguez, he became a phenomenon. PG-13, 1 hr. 25 min. 10/22-26: “2 Days in New York” follows hiphop talk-radio host and journalist Mingus (Chris Rock) and his French photographer girlfriend, Marion (Julie Delpy reprising her “2 Days in Paris” role), who live cozily in a New York apartment with their cat and two young children from previous relationships. But when Marion’s jolly father (played by Delpy’s real-life dad, Albert Delpy), her oversexed sister, and her outrageous ex-boyfriend unceremoniously descend upon them for an overseas visit, it initiates two unforgettable days of family mayhem. The visitors push every button in the couple’s relationship, truly putting it to the test. R, 1 hr. 31 min.

Friday Night Movies

TheatreNOW • 10th and Dock streets 9 p.m. • $4 Movie Night, Fridays take place through October at 9 p.m. featuring a slew of fright-night flicks to kick off the spookiest time of year. Here’s the schedule: 10/19, The Warriors; 10/26, Cabin in the Woods; 11/2: Labyrinth. Tickets: www.theatrewilmington.com.

NC Black Film Festival

Calling filmmaker s and fashion designers! Deadline: Oct. 31st and Jan. 31st, 2013 NC Black Film Festival will celebrate its 12th year with the inaugural Fashion in Film designer showcase in March 2013. Produced by SEWFLI Designs, the fashion show will be inspired by classic African American films: “Sparkle,” “Dream Girls,” “Anna Lucasta,” “Cabin in the Sky,” “Carwash,” and more! Fashion designers will create a mini-collection of two to three garments by choosing one of the selected films above. Film selections must be made by October 31st, 2012 and all garments must be complete and ready to show by January 31st, 2013. The entry fee is $25. For more information on submissions and designs, contact Ashika Payne of SEWFLI Designs 910409-4172 or by email at Sewfli@gmail.com.

Planned Parenthood

10 off

$

New Patients Only 1925 Tradd Court • (910) 762-5566 Expires 1/31/11

All area movie listings and paragraph synopses can be found at encorepub.com.

encore | october 17-23, 2012 | www.encorepub.com 25


Pipeline Event Management and Wilmington Downtown, Inc. are proud to present

Wilmington's BEST BBQ

TRUCK-a-ROO Food truck cook-off

Featuring regional foods and regional brews November 3, 2012 4:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. at Riverfront Park

FREIOEN S

ADMIS

BALLOT CARDS TO VOTE

Regional craft brews and wine for sale

BEST IN SHOW AWARDED!

$10

Competitors:

purchase

Catch

With the

Specializing in Pork BBQ, Ribs, & Beef Brisket Open Tues - Sat 11 to 3 CHECK OUT OUR DAILY SPECIALS! 5740 Market St [ just down from Toyota ] www.poorpiggys.com • 910-632-4229

Specialty Burgers & Sandwiches

of a Ballot Card, you will have the opportunity to sample a savory selection from each of the trucks and cast your

The Cheesy Banker Flaming Amy’s Burrito Barn The Patty Wagon Poor Piggy’s BBQ and Catering

vote for the

‘Best in Show.’

SERVING: • Classic 1/3 lb. burgers • Chicken & Meatloaf Sandwiches • Texas BBQ Brisket

Webo’s Down Home Cooking

26 encore | october 17-23, 2012 | www.encorepub.com

TOWN

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Next to

Duck’n Dive

Friday and Saturday nights at 11:00 p.m.

(910-297-5735) (www.facebook.com/ ThePattyWagonILM)

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Blockbuster @Home (1 disc at a time): Only available with new qualifying DISH service. For the first 3 months of your subscription, you will receive Blockbuster @Home free (regularly $10/mo). After 3 months, then-current regular price applies Requires online DISH account for discs by mail; broadband Internet to stream content; HD DVR to stream to TV. Exchange online rentals for free in-store movie rentals at participating Blockbuster stores. Offer not available in Puerto Rico or U.S. Virgin Islands. Streaming to TV and some channels not available with select packages. Digital Home Advantage plan requires 24-month agreement and credit qualification. Cancellation fee of $17.50/month remaining applies if service is terminated before end of agreement. Online Bonus credit requires online redemption no later than 45 days from service activation. After applicable promotional period, then-current price will apply. $10/mo HD add-on fee waived for life of current account; requires 24-month agreement, continuous enrollment in AutoPay with Paperless Billing. 3-month premium movie offer value is up to $132; after 3 months then-current price applies unless you downgrade. Free Standard Professional Installation only. All equipment is leased and must be returned to DISH upon cancellation or unreturned equipment fees apply. Upfront fee, monthly fees, and limits on number and type of receivers will apply. You must initially enable PrimeTime Anytime feature; requires local channels broadcast in HD (not available in all markets). HD programming requires HD television. All prices, packages, programming, features, functionality and offers subject to change without notice. Offer available for new and qualified former customers, and subject to terms of applicable Promotional and Residential Customer agreements. Additional restrictions may apply. Offer ends 1/31/13. HBO®, Cinemax® and related channels and service marks are the property of Home Box Office, Inc. SHOWTIME is a registered trademark of Showtime Networks Inc., a CBS Company. STARZ and related channels and service marks are property of Starz Entertainment, LLC. Netflix is a registered trademark of Netflix. Inc. Redbox is a registered trademark of Redbox Automated Retail, LLC. All new customers are subject to a one-time, non-refundable processing fee.

encore | october 17-23, 2012 | www.encorepub.com 27


C

S C A F C c p in S S A S C P c a le D t

what’s for dinner? 45 DINING FEATURE

grub&guzzle|

28-31 DINING GUIDE

Find it in the premier dining guide for the Port City

1

■ ■

B

K’S CAFE ad 420 Eastwood Ro 910-791-6995 www.ks-cafe.net

I f A s a it s o 2 d w t

M

AMERICAN BLUEWATER

Enjoy spectacular panoramic views of sailing ships and the Intracoastal Waterway while dining at this popular casual American restaurant in Wrightsville Beach. Lunch and dinner are served daily. Favorites include jumbo lump crab cakes, succulent seafood lasagna, crispy coconut shrimp and an incredible Caribbean fudge pie. Dine inside or at their award-winning outdoor patio and bar, which is the location for their lively Waterfront Music Series every Sun. during the summer months. Large parties welcome. Private event space available. BluewaterDining.com. 4 Marina Street, Wrightsville Beach, NC. (910) 256.8500. ■ SERVING LUNCH & DINNER: Mon-Fri 11a.m. - 11 p.m.; Sat & Sun 11 a.m. – 11 p.m. ■ NEIGHBORHOOD: Wrightsville Beach ■ FEATURING: Waterfront dining ■ MUSIC: Music every Sunday in Summer ■ WEBSITE: www.bluewaterdining.com

CATCH

Serving the Best Seafood in South Eastern North Carolina. Wilmington’s Native Son, 2011 James Beard Award Nominee Chef Keith Rhodes explores the Cape Fear Coast for the best it has to offer. We feature Wild Caught & Sustainably raised Seafood. Organic and locally sourced produce & herbs provide the perfect compliment to our fresh Catch. Consecutively Voted Wilmington’s Best Chef 2008, 09 & 2010. Dubbed “Modern Seafood Cuisine” we offer an array Fresh Seafood & Steaks, including our Signature NC Sweet Potato Salad. Appetizers include our Mouth watering “Fire Cracker” Shrimp, Crispy Cajun Fried NC Oysters & Blue Crab Claw Scampi, & Seafood Ceviche to name a few. Larger Plates include, Charleston Crab Cakes, Flounder Escovitch & Miso Salmon. Custom Entree request gladly accommodated for our Guest. (Vegetarian, Vegan & Allergies) Hand Crafted seasonal desserts from DeLovely Desserts. Full ABC Permits. 6623 Market Street, Wilmington, NC 28405. ■ SERVING LUNCH & DINNER: Monday-Friday 11:30 a.m.-2 p.m. and Monday-Saturday 5:30 p.m.-9 p.m. ■ NEIGHBORHOOD: North Wilmington ■ FEATURING: Acclaimed Wine List

BUFFALO WILD WINGS

If you’re looking for good food and an atmosphere that’s fun for the whole family, Buffalo Wild Wings is the place! Award winning wings and 20 signature sauces and seasonings. Plus…salads, wraps, flatbreads, burgers, and more. Tons of Big screen TVs and all your favorite sports. We have daily drink specials, a HUGE draft selection, and Free

28 encore | october 17-23, 2012 | www.encorepub.com

K’s Cafe offers home-style breakfast and lunch Monday through Sunday. Open: Mon - Sat: 6AM - 3PM and Sun:7AM-2PM■ 9 Trivia all day every day. Come in for our Weekday Lunch Specials, only today, “When you’re at Halligan’s....you’re at home.” With 12 beers ■

$5.99 from 11am-2pm. Visit us for Wing Tuesdays with 50 cent wings all day long, or Boneless Thursdays with 60 cent boneless wings all day long. Buffalo Wild Wings is a great place to dine in or take out. ■ SERVING LUNCH, DINNER & LATE NIGHT: Monday-Saturday 11 a.m.-2 a.m. ■ NEIGHBORHOOD: 2 locations-Midtown (910-798-9464) and Monkey Junction (910-392-7224) ■ MUSIC: Live music Friday and Saturday in the Summer ■ WEBSITE: www.buffalowildwings.com

THE GEORGE ON THE RIVERWALK

Drop your anchor at The George on the RiverWalk, your destination for dock ‘n’ dine. Watch the historic Cape Fear River unfold before you while you enjoy the best in Southern Coastal Cuisine. The menu combines elegance, creativity and diverse selection of steak, pasta, salad and fresh seafood, including the best Shrimp n’ Grits in town. Warm in the sun on the expansive outdoor deck sipping an exotic, colorful martini, or unwind at the spacious bar inside boasting extensive wine and martini lists along with weekday appetizer specials from 4:00 p.m.-6:30 p.m. Don’t forget to try downtown’s most expansive menu for Saturday and Sunday Brunch from 10 a.m.-3 p.m. You are welcome to dock your boat at the only dock’n’dine restaurant downtown, grab a trolley, or enjoy our free, front door parking (ask for pass!) Why satisfy when you can indulge? Find the George on the Riverwalk at 128 South Water Street, 910-763-2052. ■ SERVING: Lunch: Tues. - Fri. 11 a.m. - 4 p.m.; Dinner: Tues. Thurs. 5 p.m. - 9 p.m., Fri. and Sat. 5 p.m. - 10 p.m., Sun. 5 p.m. - 9 p.m.; Brunch: Sat. and Sun. 10 a.m. - 3 p.m. ■ NEIGHBORHOOD: Downtown ■ FEATURING: Saturday and Sunday Brunch / Wilmington’s only dock’n’dine restaurant. ■ WEBSITE: www.thegeorgerestaurant.com

HALLIGAN’S PUBLIC HOUSE

“Failte,” is the Gaelic word for “Welcome,” and at Halligan’s Public House it’s our “Motto.” Step into Halligan’s and enter a world of Irish hospitality where delicious food warms the heart and generous drink lift the spirit. Be sure to try Halligan’s house specialty, “The Reuben,” number one with critics and of course our customers. One bite and you’ll understand why. Of course, we also serve a full selection of other delicious entrees including seafood, steak and pasta, as well as a wide assortment of burgers, sandwiches(Halligan’s Cheese Steak), and salads. And if you are looking for a friendly watering hole where you can raise a glass or two with friends, new and old, Halligan’s Public House boasts a comfortable bar where fun-loving bartenders hold court daily and blarney fills the air. Stop by Halligan’s Public House

on tap and 16 flat screen TVs, you can watch your favorite game and m ■ enjoy your favorite drink. ■ SERVING LUNCH & DINNER:

7 Days a Week Monday-Wednesday 11:30 a.m. - 2:00 a.m. ■ NEIGHBORHOOD: Masonboro Loop ■ FEATURING: The Best Reuben in Town!, $5.99 lunch specials, Outdoor Patio ■ WEBSITE: www.halligansnc.com

T

D d F in e s JAX 5TH AVE. DELI AND ALE HOUSE “A gourmet sports saloon” best describes Jax. Family-owned and G operated, Jax has been a local favorite for over 25 years in Orlando, d a Florida. They offer the best ingredients and have teamed with Great m Harvest Bread to take “deli” to a whole new level. Jax serves over 4 20 NY-style stacked sandwiches and fresh pita pizzas, huge salads, e wraps, along with over 200 bottled beers, 24 drafts, wine and a full bar 1 of spirits. They feature wall-to-wall TVs for any sports event. Bringing t local flair to their establishment, all tables and their bar are custom-built o from old growth wood excavated from the Cape Fear River. A “flank” s off the NC Battleship greets customers as they enter the ‘50s silver R diner at 5046 New Centre Drive. But, let’s make one thing clear: This ■ isn’t a diner! 910-859-7374. n ■ SERVING: Lunch/Dinner/Late-night Mon.-Sun., 11a.m. to 2 a.m.. ■ NEIGHBORHOOD: Midtown Wilmington, near university 1 ■ FEATURING: Great Harvest Bread, huge deli sandwiches, flat■ bread pizzas, salads, full bar, daily specials and free pickles! ■

in

AMERICAN

BLUEWATER

H

Enjoy spectacular panoramic views of sailing ships and the Intracoastal “ Waterway while dining at this popular casual American restaurant in g Wrightsville Beach. Lunch and dinner are served daily. Favorites in- a clude jumbo lump crab cakes, succulent seafood lasagna, crispy co- w conut shrimp and an incredible Caribbean fudge pie. Dine inside or at s their award-winning outdoor patio and bar, which is the location for their n lively Waterfront Music Series every Sun. during the summer months. O Large parties welcome. Private event space available. BluewaterDin- s ing.com. 4 Marina Street, Wrightsville Beach, NC. (910) 256.8500. s ■ SERVING LUNCH & DINNER: Mon-Fri o 11a.m. - 11 p.m.; Sat & Sun 11 a.m. – 11 p.m. s ■ NEIGHBORHOOD: Wrightsville Beach h ■ FEATURING: Waterfront dining a ■ MUSIC: Music every Sunday in Summer b n ■ WEBSITE: www.bluewaterdining.com


CATCH

Serving the Best Seafood in South Eastern North Carolina. Wilmington’s Native Son, 2011 James Beard Award Nominee Chef Keith Rhodes explores the Cape Fear Coast for the best it has to offer. We feature Wild Caught & Sustainably raised Seafood. Organic and locally sourced produce & herbs provide the perfect compliment to our fresh Catch. Consecutively Voted Wilmngton’s Best Chef 2008, 09 & 2010. Dubbed “Modern Seafood Cuisine” we offer an array Fresh Seafood & Steaks, including our Signature NC Sweet Potato Salad. Appetizers include our Mouth watering “Fire Cracker” Shrimp, Crispy Cajun Fried NC Oysters & Blue Crab Claw Scampi, & Seafood Ceviche to name a few. Larger Plates include, Charleston Crab Cakes, Flounder Escovitch & Miso Salmon. Custom Entree request gladly accommodated for our Guest. (Vegetarian, Vegan & Alergies) Hand Crafted seasonal desserts from DeLovely Desserts. Full ABC Permits. 6623 Market Street, Wilmington, NC 28405. ■ SERVING LUNCH & DINNER: Monday-Friday 11:30 a.m.-2 p.m. and Monday-Saturday 5:30 p.m.-9 p.m. ■ NEIGHBORHOOD: North Wilmington ■ FEATURING: Acclaimed Wine List

BUFFALO WILD WINGS

If you’re looking for good food and an atmosphere that’s fun for the whole family, Buffalo Wild Wings is the place! Award winning wings and 20 signature sauces and seasonings. Plus…salads, wraps, flatbreads, burgers, and more. Tons of Big screen TVs and all your favorte sports. We have daily drink specials, a HUGE draft selection, and Free Trivia all day every day. Come in for our Weekday Lunch Specials, only $5.99 from 11am2pm. Visit us for Wing Tuesdays with 50 cent wings all day long, or Boneless Thursdays with 60 cent boneless wings all day long. Buffalo Wild Wings is a great place to dine in or take out.

■ SERVING LUNCH, DINNER & LATE NIGHT:

Monday-Saturday 11 a.m.-2 a.m.

■ NEIGHBORHOOD: 2 locations-Midtown (910-7989464) and Monkey Junction (910-392-7224) ■ MUSIC: Live music Friday and Saturday in the Sum-

mer

■ WEBSITE: www.buffalowildwings.com

THE GEORGE ON THE RIVERWALK

Drop your anchor at The George on the RiverWalk, your destination for dock ‘n’ dine. Watch the historic Cape Fear River unfold before you while you enjoy the best n Southern Coastal Cuisine. The menu combines elegance, creativity and diverse selection of steak, pasta, salad and fresh seafood, including the best Shrimp n’ Grits in town. Warm in the sun on the expansive outdoor deck sipping an exotic, colorful martini, or unwind at the spacious bar inside boasting extensive wine and martini lists along with weekday appetizer specials from 4:00 p.m.-6:30 p.m. Don’t forget to try downtown’s most expansive menu for Saturday and Sunday Brunch from 10 a.m.-3 p.m. You are welcome to dock your boat at the only dock’n’dine restaurant downtown, grab a trolley, or enjoy our free, front door parking (ask for pass!) Why satisfy when you can indulge? Find the George on the Riverwalk at 128 South Water Street, 910-763-2052. ■ SERVING: Lunch: Tues. - Fri. 11 a.m. - 4 p.m.; Dinner: Tues. - Thurs. 5 p.m. - 9 p.m., Fri. and Sat. 5 p.m. - 10 p.m., Sun. 5 p.m. - 9 p.m.; Brunch: Sat. and Sun. 10 a.m. - 3 p.m. ■ NEIGHBORHOOD: Downtown ■ FEATURING: Saturday and Sunday Brunch / Wilmngton’s only dock’n’dine restaurant. ■ WEBSITE: www.thegeorgerestaurant.com

HALLIGAN’S PUBLIC HOUSE

“Failte,” is the Gaelic word for “Welcome,” and at Halligan’s Public House it’s our “Motto.” Step into Halligan’s and enter a world of Irish hospitality where delicious food warms the heart and generous drink lift the spirit. Be sure to try Halligan’s house specialty, “The Reuben,” number one with critics and of course our customers. One bite and you’ll understand why. Of course, we also serve a full selection of other delicious entrees including seafood, steak and pasta, as well as a wide assortment of burgers, sandwiches(Halligan’s Cheese Steak), and salads. And if you are looking for a friendly watering hole where you can raise a glass or two with friends, new and old, Halligan’s Public House boasts a comfortable bar where fun-loving bartenders hold court daily and blarney fills the air. Stop by Halligan’s Public House today,

“When you’re at Halligan’s....you’re at home.” With 12 beers on tap and 16 flat screen TVs, you can watch your favorite game and enjoy your favorite drink. ■ SERVING LUNCH & DINNER: 7 Days a Week Monday-Wednesday 11:30 a.m. - 2:00 a.m. ■ NEIGHBORHOOD: Masonboro Loop ■ FEATURING: The Best Reuben in Town!, $5.99 lunch specials, Outdoor Patio ■ WEBSITE: www.halligansnc.com

HENRY’S

A local favorite, Henry’s is the ‘place to be’ for great food, a lively bar and awesome patio dining. Henry’s serves up American cuisine at its finest that include entrees with fresh, local ingredients. Come early for lunch, because its going to be packed. Dinner too! Henry’s Pine Room is ideal for private functions up to 30 people. Henry’s is home to live music, wine & beer dinners and other special events. Check out their calendar of events at HenrysRestaurant.com for details. 2508 Independence Boulevard, Wilmington, NC. (910) 793.2929. ■ SERVING LUNCH & DINNER: Sun. - Mon. 11 a.m.10 p.m.; Tues.- Fri.: 11 a.m. – 11 p.m.; Sat.: 10 a.m. – 11 p.m. ■ NEIGHBORHOOD: Midtown ■ FEATURING: Daily blackboard specials. ■ MUSIC: Live Music beginning at 5:30 p.m. ■ WEBSITE: www.henrysrestaurant.com.

pizzetta: a little pizza (Italian)

Serving homey, authentic, Italian cuisine! Gourmet and traditional pizzas, calzones and stromboli

HOLIDAY INN RESORT

Oceans Restaurant located in this oceanfront resort is a wonderful find. This is the perfect place to enjoy a fresh Seafood & Steak dinner while dinning outside overlooking the Atlantic Ocean. Chef Eric invites you to experience his daily specials in this magnificent setting. (910) 256-2231. 1706 N Lumina Ave, Wrightsville Beach. ■ BREAKFAST, LUNCH & DINNER: Sun.-Sat.. ■ NEIGHBORHOOD: Wrightsville Beach ■ FEATURING: Waterfront dining ■ WEBSITE: www.holidayinn.com

K’S CAFE

Visit us in our new location on the corner of Eastwood and Racine - 420 Eastwood Rd, Unit 109. “Where the people make the place” If you’re looking for a warm and friendly atmosphere with awesome home-cooked, freshly prepared meals, you can’t beat K’s Cafe. Serving Breakfast (from $3.50) and Lunch (including daily entreeand-two side specials for $6.95). K’s Cafe is the best deal in Wilmington. They offer chargrilled burgers, including their most popular Hot Hamburger Platter smothered in gravy! They also offer great choices such as fresh chicken salad, crabcake sandwich, soups, and even a delicious Monte Cristo served on French toast bread. K’s also offers soup, sandwich and salad combos and a great variety of homemade desserts. On Sundays they offer a great brunch menu which changes every week. A variety of choices will be on the menu such as Shrimp and Grits and Eggs Benedict. Visa and Mastercard accepted. Give K’s Cafe a try...you won’t be sorry. 420 Eastwood Rd., Unit 109, 791-6995. Find us on Facebook. ■ SERVING BREAKFAST & LUNCH: 7 DAYS A WEEK. Monday - Friday. 6 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday 7 a.m. to 2 p.m. And Sunday 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. ■ NEIGHBORHOOD: Midtown ■ FEATURING: Ever-changing brunch ■ WEBSITE: www.ks-cafe.net

Homemade soups, pasta and entrees from family recipes

Specialty desserts all made in-house

THE LITTLE DIPPER

Wilmington’s favorite fondue restaurant! The Little Dipper specializes in unique fondue dishes with a global variety of cheeses, meats, seafood, vegetables, chocolates and fine wines. The warm and intimate dining room is a great place to enjoy a four-course meal, or indulge in appetizers and desserts outside on the back deck or in the bar while watching luminescent jellyfish. Reservations are appreciated for parties of any size. Located at the corner of Front and Orange in Downtown Wilmington. 138 South Front Street. (910) 251-0433. ■ SERVING DINNER: Open every day at 5 p.m. Memorial Day - Labor Day. ■ NEIGHBORHOOD: Downtown ■ FEATURING: 70’s menu every Tues.; Special prix fixe menu on Thurs.; 25% off a’ la cart menu on Fri. from 5-7 p.m. and half price bottles of wine on Sun. ■ MUSIC: Fri. & Sat. in summer ■ WEBSITE: www.littledipperfondue.com

ANDERSON SQUARE PLAZA 4107 Oleander Drive, Unit F 910-799-4300

COMING SOON TO 1144 East Cutler Crossing, # 104 Leland In Brunswick Forest next to Lowes

Now selling whole cakes and quarts of homemade sauce BOOK YOUR CATERING ORDERS NOW! WWW.PIZZETTAS.NET encore | october 17-23, 2012 | www.encorepub.com 29


PINE VALLEY MARKET

Pine Valley Market has reigned supreme in servicing the Wilmington community for years, securing encore’s Best-Of awards in catering, gourmet shop and butcher. Now, Kathy Webb and Christi Ferretti are expanding their talents into serving lunch in-house, so folks can enjoy their hearty, homemade meals in the quaint and cozy ambience of the market. Using the freshest ingredients of highest quality, diners can enjoy the best Philly Cheesesteak in Wilmington, along with numerous other sandwich varieties, from their Angus burger to classic Reuben, Italian sub to a grown-up banana and peanut butter sandwich that will take all diners back to childhood. Served among a soup du jour and salads, there is something for all palates. Take advantage of their takehome frozen meals for nights that are too hectic to cook, and don’t forget to pick up a great bottle of wine to go with it. 3520 S. College Road, (910) 350-FOOD. ■ SERVING LUNCH & DINNER:

Mon.-Fri.10 a.m.-7 p.m.; Sat. 9 a.m.-6 p.m. Closed Sun. ■ NEIGHBORHOOD: Wilmington South ■ FEATURING: Daily specials and take-home frozen meals ■ WEBSITE: www.pinevalleymarket.com

TROLLY STOP

Trolly Stop Hot Dogs is a family owned franchise with six locations. Since 1976 they specialize in storemade chili, slaw and sauces, and as of more recent – a variety of gourmet sausages and burgers (at participating locations). The types of hot dogs include Beef & Pork, All Beef, Smoked Sausage, Fat-free Turkey (at participating locations), and Soy. Sausages include Bratwurst, Mild Italian, Spicy Beef and Polish Kielbasi. Locations are: 121 N. Front Street open Monday thru Saturday 11 a.m. ‘til 4:30 p.m. CLOSED SUNDAYS; (910).251.7799. 94 S. Lumina Ave, Wrightsville Beach open Wednesday thru Friday 11 a.m. until 3 p.m., Saturday and Sunday 11 a.m. until 4 p.m. CLOSED MON. AND TUES. (910) 2561421. 4502 Fountain Drive, (910) 452-3952. Open 11 a.m.-7 p.m. Monday-Sunday; South Howe St. in Southport, open Tuesday thru Fri. 11 until 3, Sat. 11 until 4 CLOSED SUNDAYS AND MONDAYS (910) 457-7017. Catering cart available all year from $350. Call Steve at (910) 520-5994. ■ SERVING LUNCH & DINNER ■ NEIGHBORHOOD: Throughout the Port City ■ FEATURING: Dog friendly locations

at Wrightsville Beach and Downtown Wilmington. Buy a hot dog, we’ll throw in an extra for your pooch. (Without bun.) ■ WEBSITE: www.trollystophotdogs.com

ASIAN SZECHUAN 132

Craving expertly prepared Chinese food in an elegant atmosphere? Szechuan 132 Chinese Restaurant is your destination! Szechuan 132 has earned the reputation as one of the finest contemporary Chinese restaurants in the Port City. Tastefully decorated with an elegant atmosphere, with an exceptional ingenious menu has deemed Szechuan 132 the best Chinese restaurant for years, hands down. 419 South College Road (in University Landing), (910) 799-1426. ■ SERVING LUNCH & DINNER ■ NEIGHBORHOOD: Midtown ■ FEATURING: Lunch Specials

HIRO JAPANESE STEAKHOUSE

What better way to celebrate a special occasion or liven up a dinner out than to dine in a place where every meal is an exciting presentation. Knowing that a meal should be more than just great food, Hiro adds a taste of theatre and a amazing atmosphere to everyone’s dinning experience. Also serving sushi, Hiro surprises its guests with a new special roll every week and nightly drink specials to complement it. From 4-7 p.m. enjoy half-priced nigiri and half-priced regular makimono. Nigiri makimono combos are only $7.50, while early-bird specials last from 4-6 p.m., where diners can choose two: shrimp, chicken or steak. Located at 222 Old Eastwood Road (910) 7941570. ■ SERVING DINNER: Open Mon. thru Thursday 4 p.m.-10 p.m.; Fri. and Sat. 4 p.m.-10:30 p.m. and Sun. 11 a.m.-10 p.m. ■ NEIGHBORHOOD: Midtown ■ FEATURING: Hibachi style dining. ■ WEBSITE: hirojapanesesteakhouse.com/hibachi

INDOCHINE RESTAURANT & LOUNGE

If you’re ready to experience the wonders of the Orient without having to leave Wilmington, join us at Indochine for a truly unique experience. Indochine brings the flavors of the Far East to the Port City, combining the best of Thai and Vietnamese cuisine in an atmosphere that will transport you and your taste buds. Relax in our elegantly decorated dining room, complete with antique Asian decor as well as contemporary artwork and music. Our diverse, friendly and efficient staff will serve you beautifully presented dishes full of enticing aromas and flavors. Be sure to try such signature items as the spicy and savory Roasted Duck with Red Curry, or the beautifully presented and delicious Shrimp and Scallops in a Nest. Be sure to save room for our world famous desert, the banana egg roll! We take pride in using only the freshest ingredients, and our extensive menu suits any taste. After dinner, enjoy specialty drinks by the koi pond in our Asian garden. Located at 7 Wayne Drive (beside the Ivy Cottage), (910) 251-9229. ■ SERVING LUNCH & DINNER:

Tues.- Fri. 11 a.m.- 2 p.m.; Sat. 12 p.m. – 3 p.m. for lunch. Mon.- Sun. 5 p.m. – 10 p.m. for dinner. ■ NEIGHBORHOOD: Midtown ■ WEBSITE: www.indochinewilmington.com

TAMASHII SUSHI AND SPOONS

The area’s first sustainably-sourced Sushi and Asian Fusion restaurant features sushi and tasting spoons which offer portions of poke, tartare, and ceviche styles from around the world. Our chef uses locally sourced and line-caught offerings of only the highest quality to create a fresh flavor like no other. Come sample his traditional sushi, as well as signature fusion rolls like the Aloha Roll, made with tempura shrimp, toasted coconut, crispy bacon, charred pineapple and macadamia nut brittle. Our contemporary atmosphere also showcases dishes from our full kitchen such as Miso-Mustard Sterling Silver Pork and small plate offerings. Try a Wasabi or Thai Basil martini or a wine, craft beer, or sake from our unique full-bar list. Tuesdays you can get a half-carafe for the price of a glass! We are located at 4039 Masonboro Loop Road, suite 1A at the junction of Navajo Road in Masonboro Commons. Open from 4:30 to 10:00 Monday through Thursday, and until 11:00 on Friday and Saturday. Just drop in or call 910-703-SAKE for a reservation. ■ SERVING DINNER: Mon.-Th.: 4:30 p.m. – 10:30 p.m.; Fri.-Sat: 4:30 p.m. – 11:00 p.m. ■ NEIGHBORHOOD: Wilmington South ■ FEATURING: “Green Fish” sustainable menu plus a $5 bar menu Monday - Friday 4:30 - 6:30 p.m. ■ WEBSITE: www.sushiandspoons.com

THAI SPICE

From the flavorfully mild to the fiery spiced, Thai Spice customers are wooed by the dish that’s made to their specifications. Featuring a tasteful menu of traditional Thai standards to numerous delectable house specials, it’s quickly becoming the local favorite for Thai cuisine. This family-run restaurant is sure to win you over. If you haven’t discovered this gem, come in and be charmed. Whether it be a daytime delight, or an evening indulgence, your visit will make you look forward to your return. Located in Monkey Junction at 5552 Carolina Beach Rd., Ste. G. (910) 791-0044 ■ SERVING LUNCH & DINNER: Tue.-Th.: 11:30 a.m. – 9:30 p.m.; Fri.-Sat.: 11:30 a.m. – 10:00 p.m.; Sun.: 11:30 a.m. – 9:00 p.m. ■ NEIGHBORHOOD: Wilmington South ■ WEBSITE: www.ThaiSpiceWilmington.com

FRENCH CAPRICE BISTRO

Wilmington’s finest French cuisine can be found at Caprice Bistro, a small informal neighborhood restaurant, serving hearty food in generous portions at affordable prices. Simple is the atmosphere in the bistro, as plain white plates and tables dressed in white paper make up the decor. However, the food is far from simple, as a combination of fresh ingredients and innovative preparation delight the taste buds with a plethora of unique appetizers, entrées and desserts. The service is fast, efficient and non-intrusive, and the ambience is friendly and unpretentious. After dinner, be sure to venture upstairs into their cozy and relaxing sofa bar for an after-dinner martini, or enjoy your meal there, as a light-fare and full menus are served. Art is always on display in the sofa bar, so be sure

30 encore | october 17-23, 2012 | www.encorepub.com

to inquire frequently about their artist show receptions. Voted “Best French Restaurant”seven years in a row! 10 Market Street, downtown Wilmington, (910) 815-0810. ■ SERVING DINNER: Sun.- Thurs. 5:00 – 10 p.m.; Fri. and Sat., 5 p.m. – Midnight. ■ NEIGHBORHOOD: Downtown ■ FEATURING: Upstairs sofa bar serving cocktails and lighter fare. ■ WEBSITE: www.capricebistro.com

INDIAN

influences include tasty burgers, the U.S.A. Salad and a 16 oz. Marinated Rib Eye Steak. Romanelli’s offers patio dining and flat screen TVs in its bar area. Dine in or take out, Romanelli’s is always a crowd favorite. Large parties welcome. 503 Olde Waterford Way, Leland. (910) 383.1885. ■ SERVING LUNCH & DINNER: Sun.- Thurs. 11 a.m. – 10 p.m.; Fri. & Sat. 11 a.m. – 11 p.m. ■ NEIGHBORHOOD: Wilmington South. ■ FEATURING: Weekly Specials ■ WEBSITE: www.RomanellisRestaurant.com.

TANDOORI BITES

ELIZABETH’S PIZZA

Located on College Road, just opposite Hugh MacRae Park, Tandoori Bites offers fine Indian cuisine at affordable prices. Try one of 74 dishes on their lengthy menu, featuring a large range of side dishes and breads. They have specialties, such as lamb korma with nuts, spices and herbs in a mild creamy sauce, as well as seafood, like shrimp biryani with saffron-flavored rice, topped with the shellfish and nuts. They also have many vegetarian dishes, including mutter paneer, with garden peas and homemade paneer, or baingan bharta with baked eggplant, flamed and sautéed with onions, garlic and ginger. Join their cozy eatery, where a far east escape awaits all diners, among a staff of friendly and helpful servers, as well as chefs who bring full-flavored tastes straight from their homeland. Located at 1620 South College Road, (910) 794-4540. ■ SERVING LUNCH & DINNER: Tuesday-Thursday 11 a.m.-2 p.m., 5 p.m.-10 p.m.; Fri 11 a.m.-2 p.m., 5-11 p.m.; Sat 11:30 a.m.-2 p.m., 5-11 p.m.; Sun 11:30 a.m.-2 p.m., 5 p.m.-9 p.m. ■ NEIGHBORHOOD: Midtown. ■ FEATURING: Lunch buffet, which now serves South Indian cuisine ($7.95 daily) ■ WEBSITE: www.tandooribites.net.

IRISH THE HARP

The Harp offers the finest in traditional Irish family recipes served in a casual yet elegant traditional pub atmosphere. We are proud to use the freshest, locally sourced ingredients whenever possible to bring you and yours the best of traditional Irish fare! We also offer a fully stocked bar featuring your favorite Irish beer and spirits. Located just beside Greenfield Lake Park in downtown Wilmington is a lovely Irish pub committed to bringing traditional Irish food and music to the Cape Fear area. ■ SERVING LUNCH & DINNER Monday-Friday 11 a.m. – 10 p.m., Sat 11 a.m. – 11 p.m., Sun 10 a.m. – 10 p.m. ■ NEIGHBORHOOD Greenfield Park ■ FEATURING Home-made desserts, ½ priced bottles of wine on Tuesday and the best pint of Guinness in town. ■ MUSIC Live music every Fri.; Live Irish music 1st Fri. of each month. ■ WEBSITE www.harpwilmington.com

ITALIAN A TASTE OF ITALY

The authentic Italian cuisine served at Taste of Italy has scored them Best Deli in the Port City for years running now. The Guarino family recipes have been passed down from generation to generation to brothers Tommy and Chris, who serve breakfast, lunch and dinner to hungry diners. They also cater all events, from holiday parties to corporate lunches, including hot meals, cold trays, handmade desserts and an array of platters, from antipasto to cold cuts. In addition, Taste of Italy sells Scalfani products, Sabrett hot dogs and Polly-O cheeses in their market, all the while serving top-notch hot and cold items from their delicatessen. Located at 1101 South College Rd., P. 910-392-7529, F. 910-392-9745 www.ncatasteofitaly. com Open M-F 8:00 a.m. – 8:00 p.m., Sat. 8:30 a.m.7:00 p.m., Sun. 11:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m. ■ SERVING LUNCH, DINNER: M-F 8:00 a.m. – 8:00 p.m., Sat. 8:30 a.m.-7:00 p.m., Sun. 11:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m. ■ NEIGHBORHOOD: Midtown ■ FEATURING: Ponatone, Pandora, Torrone and gift baskets of all sizes! ■ WEBSITE: www.ncatasteofitaly.com

EDDIE ROMANELLI’S

is a family-friendly, casual Italian American restaurant that’s been a favorite of Wilmington locals for over 16 years. Its diverse menu includes Italian favorites such as Mama Romanelli’s Lasagna, Baked Ziti, Rigatoni a la Vodka and, of course, made-from-scratch pizzas. Its American

A Wilmington favorite since 1987! At Elizabeth’s you’ll find authentic Italian cuisine, as well as some of your American favorites. Offering delicious pizza, salads, sandwiches, entrees, desserts, beer, and wine. Elizabeth’s is known for their fresh ingredients, where even the bread is baked fresh daily. A great place for lunch, dinner, a late night meal, or take out. Elizabeth’s can also cater your event and now has a party room available. Visit us 4304 ½ Market St or call 910-251-1005 for take out. ■ SERVING LUNCH & DINNER:

Open 10am-Midnight every day ■ NEIGHBORHOOD: Midtown (Corner of Market St and Kerr Avenue). ■ WEBSITE: www.epwilmington.com ■ NEIGHBORHOOD: Wilmington South ■ FEATURING: Daily specials, kids menu and online coupons. ■ WEBSITE: www.elizabethspizzawilmington.com.

PIZZETTA’S PIZZERIA

Family-owned and operated by Sicilian cousins Sal and Vito, Pizzetta’s Pizzeria has become Wilmington’s favorite place for homey, authentic Italian fare served with precision and flavor like none other. Made daily from family recipes, folks will enjoy hand-tossed pizzas——gourmet to traditional——specialty heroes and pastas, homemade soups and desserts, and even daily blackboard specials. Something remains tempting for every palate, whether craving one of their many pies or a heaping of eggplant parm, strombolis and calzones, or the famed Casa Mia (penne with sautéed mushrooms, ham, peas in a famous meat sauce with cream). Just save room for their buttery, melt-in-yourmouth garlic knots! Ending the meal with their pastry chef’s carefully crafted cannolis, Tiramisu or gourmet cheesecake, alongside a cup of freshly made espresso or cappuccino, literally makes a perfect end to one unforgett able and desirable meal. Located in Anderson Square at 4107 Oleander Dr., Unit F, Wilmington (910-799-4300) or coming soon Pizzetta’s II, 1144 Cutler’s Crossing, Leland (in Brunswick Forest next to Lowe’s). ■ SERVING LUNCH, DINNER: ILM location: Mon.-Sat., 11 a.m., and Sun., noon. • Leland location: Mon.-Wed., 11 a.m.-10 p.m.; Thurs.-Sat., 11 a.m. -11 p.m.; Sun., noon 9:30 p.m. ■ NEIGHBORHOOD: Midtown Wilmington and coming soon, Brunswick Forest in Leland ■ FEATURING: Homemade pizzas, pastas, soups and desserts, all made from family recipes! ■ WEBSITE: www.pizzettas.net

SLICE OF LIFE

“Slice” has become a home away from home for tourists and locals alike. Our menu includes salads, tacos, burritos, quesadillas, nachos, homemade soups, subs and, of course, pizza. We only serve the freshest and highestquality ingredients in all of our food, and our dough is made daily with purified water. Voted “Best Pizza” and “Best Late Night Eatery.”All ABC permits. Visit us downtown at 122 Market Street, (910) 251-9444, in Wrightsville Beach at 1437 Military Cutoff Road, Suite 101, (910) 256-2229 and our newest location in Pine Valley on the corner of 17th and College Road, (910) 799-1399. ■ SERVING LUNCH, DINNER & LATE NIGHT: 11:30 a.m.3 a.m., 7 days a week, 365 days a year. ■ NEIGHBORHOOD: Midtown, Downtown and Wilmington South. ■ FEATURING: The largest tequila selection in Wilmington ■ WEBSITE: www.grabslice.com

JAMAICAN JAMAICA’S COMFORT ZONE

Tucked in the corner of University Landing, a block from UNCW is the hidden gem of Wilmington’s international cuisine scene - Jamaica’s Comfort Zone. This family owned restaurant provides a relaxing blend of Caribbean delights


, LATIN n

AMERICAN

SAN JUAN CAFE

t Offering the most authentic, gourmet Latin American cuisine in Wilmington. With dishes from countries such as - Puerto Rico, Colombia, Venezuela, the Dominican Republic and Cuba you’ll be able to savor a variety of flavors from all over Latin America. Located at 3314 Wrightsville Avenue. 910.790.8661 Follow us on Facebook/Twitter for live music d updates! ■ SERVING LUNCH & DINNER: Mon Sat. 11 a.m.-2:30 p.m. and from 5-10 p.m. Closed Sunday. ■ NEIGHBORHOOD: Midtown ■ FEATURING: Nightly specials ■ WEBSITE: www.sanjuancafenc.com

ORGANIC

SEAFOOD DOCK STREET OYSTER BAR

Voted Best Oysters for over 10 years by encore readers, you know what you can find at Dock Street Oyster Bar. But we have a lot more than oysters! Featuring a full menu of seafood, pasta, and chicken dishes from $4.95-$25.95, there’s something for everyone at Dock Street. You’ll have a great time eating in our “Bohemian-Chic” atmosphere, where you’ll feel just as comfort able in flip flops as you would in a business suit. Located at 12 Dock St in downtown Wilmington. Open for lunch and dinner, 7 days a week. (910) 762-2827. ■ SERVING LUNCH & DINNER: 7 days a week. ■ NEIGHBORHOOD: Downtown ■ FEATURING: Fresh daily steamed oysters. ■ WEBSITE: www.dockstreetoysterbar.net

EAST

The Blockade Runner offers an array of seasonal seafood specials, certified Angus beef, lobster menu on Fri. evening plus a spectacular Sun. brunch. Romantic al fresco dining is available on our dinner deck located in the center of a lush garden overlooking the ocean far away from the traffic and noise. Our lounge is eco-friendly and offers light fare nightly. 275 Waynick Blvd. Wrightsville Beach. (910) 256-2251. ■ SERVING LUNCH, DINNER & SUNDAY BRUNCH ■ NEIGHBORHOOD: Wrightsville Beach. ■ FEATURING: Lobster menu on Fri. ■ MUSIC: Live music on Sat. evening and Sun.brunch. ■ WEBSITE: www.blockade-runner.com

d LOVEY’S MARKET Lovey’s Market is a true blessing for shoppers looking for Organic and Natural groceries and supplements, or a great place to meet friends for a quick, delicious and to- tally fresh meal or snack. Whether you are in the mood for a Veggie Burger, Hamburger or a Chicken Caesar g Wrap, shoppers will find a large selection of nutritious e meals on the a la carte Lovey’s Cafe’ menu. The Food - Bar-which has cold salads and hot selections can be h eaten in the newly expanded Lovey’s Cafe’ or boxed for take-out. The Juice Bar offers a wide variety of juices - and smoothies made with Organic fruits and vegetables. s Specializing in bulk sales of grains, flours, beans and spices at affordable prices. Lovey’s has a great selection of Local produce and receives several weekly deliv- eries to ensure freshness. Lovey’s also carries Organic Grass-Fed and Free-Range meats and poultry. Wheat- Free and Gluten-Free products are in stock regularly, as - are Vegan and Vegetarian groceries. Lovey’s also carries Wholesome Pet Foods. Stop by Lovey’s Market Monday through Friday 9 a.m. to 7 p.m.; Saturday 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. and Sunday 10 am to 6 p.m.. Located at 1319 Military Cutoff Rd in the Landfall Shopping Center; (910) 509-0331. “You’ll Love it at Lovey’s!” ■ SERVING LUNCH & DINNER: Café open: Mon.-Fri., 11 a.m.–6 p.m.; Sat. & Sun., 11 a.m.-6 p.m.(salad bar open all the time). Market hours: Mon.-Fri., 9 a.m.-7 p.m.; Sat., 9 a.m.-6 p.m.; Sun., 10 a.m.-6 p.m. ■ NEIGHBORHOOD: Midtown ■ FEATURING: Organic Salad Bar/Hot Bar, New Bakery with fresh, organic pies and cakes. Newly s expanded. - ■ WEBSITE: www.loveysmarket.com. ,

HIERONYMUS

Come dine-in or take-out from the newly renovated e Co-op Kitchen at Tidal Creek Cooperative Food Mar2 ket. You can fill your plate or box with hot bar and salad t bar items that are prepared fresh daily in our kitchen. d Made-to-order sandwiches, like the Tempeh Reuben, d are served hot off the Panini grill. The Co-op Café offers organic smoothies and fresh juices; local wheatgrass - shots; fair trade organic coffee, lattes, and chai tea; and our newest addition of Lenny Boy kombucha tea on tap. Don’t forget our baked-from-scratch baked goods! The Co-op Kitchen provides menu items that appeal to everyone, regardless of dietary demands. ■ SERVING LUNCH & DINNER: Mon. - Fri. 11 a.m. - 3 p.m., 5 p.m. - 7:30 p.m. ■ WEEKEND BRUNCH: Sat & Sun, 9 a.m. - 4 p.m. ■ SALAD BAR: Mon. - Sun, 9 a.m. - 7:30 p.m. ■ SANDWICHES: Mon. - Sun, 11 a.m. - 6 p.m. m ■ BAKERY & CAFE: Mon. - Sun, 8 a.m. - 7:30 p.m. - ■ NEIGHBORHOOD: Midtown ■ FEATURING: indoor/outdoor seating, free Wi-Fi s ■ WEBSITE: www.tidalcreek.coop

The Fortunate Glass Wine Bar is the perfect place to explore the beauty of wine while tasting a variety of tapas in an intimate environment. The wine menu focuses on wines from all regions, with 50 wines by the glass and approximately 350 wines available by the bottle, including some of the best boutique and cult wines, to everyday values that work with any budget. There are over 30 beers available featuring some of the best craft selections. The serene ambiance of The Fortunate Glass, created by the beautiful wall murals, the elegant copper and glass tile bar, castle-rocked walls and intimate booths enhances the experience of any selection you choose. The Fortunate Glass Wine Bar also presents a small menu of creative tapas, global cheeses, cured meats and decadent desserts to accompany and compliment any wine selection. ■ SERVING EVENINGS: Tues.-Thurs. 4 p.m.-12 a.m. Fri. 4 p.m.-2 a.m.; Sat. 2 p.m.-2.a.m.; Sun. 2 p.m.-12 a.m. ■ NEIGHBORHOOD: Downtown ■ FEATURING: Free Wine Tasting: Tues. 6-8pm. Bubble and wine specials: Wed. & Thurs. Monthly food & wine pairing events.

TIDAL CREEK CO-OP KITCHEN

Hieronymus Seafood is the midtown stop for seafood lovers. In business for over 30 years, Hieronymus has made a name for itself by constantly providing excellent service and the freshest of the fresh in local seafood. It’s the place to be if you are seeking top quality attributes in atmosphere, presentations, flavor and ingenuity. Signature dishes include Oysteronymus and daily fresh catch specials. Hieronymus has all ABC permits and also provides catering services. Voted “Best Seafood” in 2011. 5035 Market Street; 910-392-6313; hieronymusseafood.com

■ WEBSITE www.fortunateglasswinebar.com

SOUTHERN CASEY’S BUFFET

In Wilmington, everyone knows where to go for solid country cooking. That place is Casey’s Buffet, winner of encore’s Best Country Cookin’/Soul Food and Buffet categories. “Every day we are open, somebody tells us it tastes just like their grandma’s or mama’s cooking,” co-owner Gena Casey says. Gena and her husband Larry run the show at the Oleander Drive restaurant where people are urged to enjoy all food indigenous to the South: fried chicken, barbecue, catfish, mac‘n’cheese, mashed potatoes, green beans, chicken‘n’dumplings, biscuits and homemade banana puddin’ are among a few of many other delectable items. 5559 Oleander Drive. (910) 798-2913. ■ SERVING LUNCH & DINNER: Open Wednesdays through Saturdays from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. and on Sundays from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Closed Monday and Tuesdays. ■ NEIGHBORHOOD: Midtown ■ FEATURING: Pig’s feet and chitterlings.

SPORTS BAR

Cinema 16, it’s no question that Fox is a great place to go on date night, or to watch the big game on one of the restaurant’s six large projection screens and 19 plasma televisions. Guests can also play pool, darts or video games in this casual-theme restaurant. For starters, Fox offers delicious appetizers like ultimate nachos, giant Bavarian pretzels and spinach artichoke dip. In the mood for something more? Try the hand-battered Newcastle fish ‘n’ chips or chicken tenders, or the grilled Mahi-Mahi served atop a bed of spicy rice. From cheeseburgers and sirloins to salads and wood oven-inspired pizzas, Fox has plenty to choose from for lunch or dinner. Finish the meal with a 6-inch Great Cookie Blitz, a chocolate chip cookie baked fresh to order and served warm with a scoop of vanilla ice cream and Hershey’s syrup. 920 Town Center Drive, (910) 509-0805. ■ SERVING LUNCH & DINNER: 11am– 2am, daily ■ NEIGHBORHOOD: Midtown ■ FEATURING: $5.99 lunch specials and free pool until 2p.m. and $5 cheese pizzas after 10 p.m., both Mon.-Fri. ■ MUSIC: Trivia with Party Gras Entertainment DJ every Thursday at 9pm ■ WEBSITE: www.foxandhound.com

HELL’S KITCHEN

CAROLINA ALE HOUSE

Voted best new restaurant AND best sports bar of 2010 in Wilmington, Carolina Ale House is the place to be for award-winning food, sports and fun. Located on College Rd. near UNCW, this lively sports-themed restaurant. Covered and open outdoor seating is available. Lunch and dinner specials are offered daily, as well as the coldest $2 and $3 drafts in town. 317 South College Road, Wilmington, NC. (910) 791.9393. ■ SERVING LUNCH, DINNER & LATE NIGHT: 11am-2am daily. ■ NEIGHBORHOOD: Midtown ■ FEATURING: 40 HD TVs and the biggest HD projector

TVs in Wilmington. ■ WEBSITE: www.CarolinaAleHouse.com

FOX & HOUND PUB & GRILLE

Serving up the best bar food for any local sports fan, Fox & Hound has appetites covered. Located next to Mayfaire

This is downtown Wilmington’s Sports Pub! With every major sporting package on ten HDTVs and our huge HD projection screen, there is no better place to catch every game in every sport. Our extensive menu ranges from classics, like thick Angus burgers or NY-style Reuben, to lighter fare, such as homemade soups, fresh salads and vegetarian options. Whether meeting for a business lunch, lingering over dinner and drinks, or watching the game, the atmosphere and friendly service will turn you into a regular. Open late 7 days a week, with free WiFi, darts, and did we mention sports? Free lunchtime delivery on weekdays; we can accommodate large parties. (910) 763-4133. ■ SERVING LUNCH, DINNER & LATE NIGHT: 11 a.m.-2 a.m. daily ■ NEIGHBORHOOD: Downtown ■ FEATURING: Dueling pianos Thurs., Fri., and Saturday

nights and 1/2 priced select appetizers Monday - Thursday 4-7 p.m. ■ WEBSITE: www.hellskitchenbar.com

■ SERVING LUNCH & DINNER ■ NEIGHBORHOOD: Midtown ■ FEATURING: Fireside oyster bar. ■ WEBSITE: www.hieronymusseafood.net

OCEANIC

Voted best seafood restaurant in Wilmington, Oceanic provides oceanfront dining at its best. Located in Wrightsville Beach, Oceanic is one of the most visited restaurants on the beach. Choose from a selection of seafood platters, combination plates and daily fresh fish. For land lovers, try their steaks, chicken or pasta dishes. Relax on the pier or dine inside. Oceanic is also the perfect location for memorable wedding receptions, birthday gatherings, anniversary parties and more. Large groups welcome. Private event space available. Family-style to go menu available. 703 S. Lumina Avenue, Wrightsville Beach. (910) 256.5551. ■ SERVING LUNCH & DINNER ■ NEIGHBORHOOD: Wrightsville Beach ■ FEATURING: Dining on the Crystal Pier. ■ WEBSITE: www.OceanicRestaurant.com

SMALL PLATES THE FORTUNATE GLASS

LIVE MUSIC

10/19 TRASHCAN TACOS

FIREBELLY

RELIEF COME ONG L E W A AL AFTER TO

9 5

AFTER WORK

WEDNESDAY HAPPY HOUR

LIVE MUSIC ON THE PATIO FROM 5 p.m. - 7 p.m. Home of $1 Tacos & $1 Draft Beer Mondays

10/20 AL’S PLACE

MONDAY 1.00 Bud Light Draft • $1.00 Tacos • $5.25 Grilled Shrimp Faddi TUESDAY 1/2 Price Tequila with over 50 choices $ 2.00 Import Bottles • $5.00 Nachos • $6.00 Chicken Tender Faddi WEDNESDAY $ 2.00 Sweetwater Pints - 420 & Blue • $2.00 Bud & Bud Light Bottle 35¢ Wings • $4.00 Grilled Vegetable Faddi THURSDAY $ 2.00 Lions Head Pilsner 16oz. cans $ 3.00 Carolina Brews bottles w/ 6 choices $ 2.00 PBR 16oz. cns • $5.00 Quesadillas $ 6.00 Taco Salads • 75¢ Frog Legs FRIDAY $ 3.50 Tall Boys 23oz. all Draft beer with 12 plus choices $ 5.25 Beer Man Tacos • $6.50 Philly Cheese Steak Faddi SATURDAY $ 2.50 16oz. M.L. Screw Tops $ 2.50 Natty Greene Buckshot Amber Pints $ 6.25 Original Faddi’s w/ Fries • $10.00 Fajitas SUNDAY $ 10.00 Buckets - Bud & Bud Light $ 2.00 Stegmaier Amber with $6.00 Pitchers 20 Wings for $7.00 • $6.50 Burger Faddi’s with Fries $

W E E K LY S P E C I A L S

a – along with reggae music – served up with irrepressible - smiles for miles. From traditional Jamaican breakfast to mouth-watering classic dishes such as curry goat, oxtail, jerk and curry chicken, to our specialty 4-course meals ($12.00). Cook Dana Keels, from Clarendon prepares flavors to please every palate. ■ SERVING LUNCH, DINNER: Tuesday - Saturday 11:45am - 9:00pm and Sunday 1:30pm - 8:00pm Sunday. Monday - Closed ■ NEIGHBORHOOD: Midtown – University Landing 417 S. College Road, Wilmington ■ FEATURING: Weekly Specials updated daily on Facebook ■ WEBSITE: www.jamaicascomfortzone.net

265 North Front Street • Downtown Wilmington • 910-763-0141 encore | october 17-23, 2012 | www.encorepub.com 31


celebrating our local cuisine Encore Restauarnt Week kicks off with 8 days of deals!

The most delicious week of fall has arrived! Encore Restaurant Week 2012 returns with over 30 participating eateries offering the best deals for lunch and dinner around the port city. From Indian to French, classic American to Italian, low-country to Japanese, Thai to Jamaican and beyond, all palates will be sated from October 17th through the 24th. Participating restaurants have devised prix-fixe menus for as little as $10 for lunch, $25 a person for dinner or even $55 per couple; some menus even include wine and beer. Encore Restaurant Week provides diners a new experience at a local eatery they’ve yet to try, or welcomes them to return to their favorites and taste a variety of specials. For one week only, all of Wilmington will become foodie heaven. Check out a concise run-down of the offers here or grab that handy Encore Restaurant Week Guide inserted into this paper for all the details that will leave your mother watering! And if you want to access us online, head over to our website for all the details at www.encorerestaurantweek.com. 32 october 17-23, 17-23,2012 2012||www.encorepub.com www.encorepub.com 32 encore encore|| october

Eat, drink, indulge!


american

asian

Downtown 2 Market Street, (910) 763-7227

South Wilmington 5552 Carolina Beach Road, (910) 791-0044

RIVERBOAT LANDING

THAI SPICE

Restaurant week lunch special: $9 per person 3-course dinner: $26 per person

4-course lunch: $12 per person 4-course dinner: $30 per couple NIKKI’S JAPANESE STEAK HOUSE

THE EAT SPOT

Downtown 34 North Front Street, (910) 763-5379

Lunch or dinner $25 or $35 per person PILOT HOUSE Downtown

2 Ann St # 3, (910) 343-0200 2-course lunch: $14.95 per person 3-course dinner: $28.95 per person ELIJAH’S

Downtown 2 Ann Street, (910) 343-1448

2-course lunch: $15.95 per person 3-course dinner: $28 per person THE GEORGE ON THE RIVERWALK

Downtown 128 South Water Street, (910) 763-2052

2-course lunch: $17 per person 3-course dinner: $27 per person RUTH’S CHRIS STEAK HOUSE

Downtown 301 North Water Street, (910) 343-1818

3-course dinner: $35 per person AUBRIANA’S

Downtown 115 South Front Street, (910) 763-7773

3-course dinner: $30 per person NICK’S DINER

Downtown 127 North Front Street, (910) 341-7655

3-course lunch or dinner: $19.50 per person HENRY’S South Wilmington 2508 Independence Boulevard, (910) 793-2929

3-course dinner: $21 per couple CAROLINA ALE HOUSE

Midtown 317-C College Road, 910-791-9393

Restaurant Week Lunch Special: $11 per couple

t i t e p p Bon A

North Wilmington 1055 Military Cutoff Rd. Suite 100, (910) 509-8998

3-course dinner: $49.95 per couple

caribbean

JAMAICA’S COMFORT ZONE

Midtown 417 College Acres Drive, (910) 399-2867

3-course lunch or dinner: $15 per person

deli

JAX 5TH AVENUE DELI

$35 per Midtown 5046 New Centre Drive, 910-859-7374 couple

indian

seafood

Midtown 1620 South College Road, (910) 794-4540

Wrightsville Beach 100 South Lumina Avenue, (910) 256-4646

TANDOORI BITES

SOUTH BEACH GRILL

3-course dinner: $45 per couple

3-course dinner: $28.95 per person

italian

SHUCKERS OYSTER BAR & GRILL North Wilmington 6828 Market Street, (910) 859-8195

ROKO ITALIAN CUISINE North Wilmington 6801 Parker Farm Drive, Suite 105, (910) 679-4783

3-course dinner: $25.95 per person South Wilmington 3315 Masonboro Loop Road • (910) 794-3002

4-course dinner: $25 per person

PIZZETTA’S PIZZERIA

southern

3-course dinner: $25 per person

Downtown 319 N. Front St., (910) 343-1050

4-course dinner: $50 per couple

THE BASICS

Midtown 4701 Oleander Drive, Unit F, (910) 799-4300

3-course dinner: $55 per couple

A TASTE OF ITALY

CATCH

Midtown 1101 South College Road • (910) 392-7529

fondue

Restaurant week breakfast special $4.99 per person / Restaurant week lunch special $8.99 per person / $15.99 per couple

Downtown 138 South Front Street, (910) 251-0433

EDDIE ROMANELLI’S

4-course dinner: $25 per person MELTING POT

North Wilmington 885 Town Center Drive, (910) 256-1187

3-course special: $17 per person 4-course special: $28 per person

french

CAPRICE BISTRO Downtown 10 Market Street, (910) 815-0810

3-course dinner: $25 per person

gastropub FOX AND HOUND

North Wilmington 920 Town Center Drive, (910) 509-0805

2-course lunch or dinner: $30 per couple

gourmet market PINE VALLEY MARKET

South Wilmington 3520 South College Road, (910) 350-3663

Restaurant week lunch special: $10 per person

HIERONYMUS SEAFOOD

Midtown 5035 Market Street, (910) 392-6313

SIENA TRATTORIA

3-course lunch or dinner: $19 per person

THE LITTLE DIPPER

2-course lunch: $9.95 per person 3-course dinner: $34.95 per couple

North Wilmington 6623 Market Street, (910)-799-3847

3-course dinner: $35 per person CASEY’S BUFFET

Midtown 5559 Oleander Drive, (910) 798-2913

Leland 503 Olde Waterford Way, (910) 383-1885

Restaurant Week Buffet: Adult: $10.89 Seniors (62+) $9.89, Kids (4-12) $5.19

3-course dinner: $20 per couple

sushi

FAT TONY’S ITALIAN PUB

Downtown 131 North Front Street, 910- 343-8881

TAMASHII SUSHI AND SPOONS

4-course dinner: $19 per person

South Wilmington 4039 Masonboro Loop Road, (910) 703-7253

latin american

5-course dinner: $30 per person $55 per couple

MIXTO

YO SAKE

Downtown 5 South Water Street, (910) 399-4501

Downtown 31 South Front Street, (910) 763-3172

3-course lunch or dinner: $25 per person

4-course dinner: $25 per person

mexican

tapas

C-STREET MEXICAN GRILL

THE FORTUNATE GLASS

South Wilmington 4410-A Shipyard Blvd., 910-399-4838

RESTAURANT WEEK SPECIAL – Buy any entree and two drinks, and get the 2nd entree half price

Downtown 29 South Front Street, (910) 399-4292

4-course dinner: $35 per person

the most delicious week of fall starts wednesday!

encore || october encore october17-23, 17-23,2012 2012||www.encorepub.com www.encorepub.com 33 33


Cape Fear Riverkeeper & Local Dad Responds to Titan Cement Titan America’s recent blog “More Straight Talk” on their proposed plant on the Northeast Cape Fear River near Castle failed to address the issues that have been raised by the community and disparages the efforts by the Stop Titan coalition to educate the public about their project. Kemp Burdette, the Cape Fear Riverkeeper and partner in the Stop Titan coalition, crafted an excellent response. Here’s an excerpt: Titan: “Goodness sake, [Stop Titan has] taken their crusade into the region’s public schools.” Riverkeeper: Titan put our schools in the center of this debate by choosing to expose an estimated 28,000 students within 15 miles to toxic emissions such as mercury, arsenic, benzene, sulfur dioxide, hydrogen sulfide, and particulate matter. Think of the 28,000 school children within 15 miles of the proposed Titan plant. Whom do you trust to protect their air? Get involved: Join thousands of parents and over 200 local doctors in voicing your concern. Take action: Visit StopTitan.org to sign the petition, and volunteer your time. Kemp Burdette and his girls pose by the Cape Fear River. 34 encore | october 17-23, 2012 | www.encorepub.com

sTopTiTan.oRG


TM

Shades of Autumn 12 noon - 2 p.m.

Come leaf peeping up the NW Cape Fear River Octoberfest Lunch catered by Front Street Brewery $30 Bring your cameras!

TM

Howl at the Moon

Back by popular demand

3

ADULT HALLOWEEN COSTUME PARTY

Black River Cruise

WAYS TO HELP

Sunday Oct 28th • 10-2 p.m. $45 Looking for an adventure? You found it!

ALL OCTOBER LONG

Travel up the main branch of the Cape Fear where it meets The Black River. You will see an ambrosia of wildlife, flora and fauna as the leaves change colors. Be sure to bring your binoculars and cameras. LUNCH IS ALSO INCLUDED

Limited Edition T’s

UNDER A FULL MOON Saturday Oct. 27th 6:30 - 8:30 p.m. $27

Made Possible In Part By

Cruise the mysterious Cape Fear River. Witches Brew will be available, along with a full bar & heavy apps Best Costume will receive a cruise for 4.

®

10

$

100% of Profits donated to the Pretty In Pink Foundation.

Thursdays from 5pm-9pm

10% to the Pretty In Pink Foundation. of Food Sales will be donated

PINK

BUFFALO

Wilmington

206 Old Eastwood Rd 910.798.9464

Monkey Junction 5533 Carolina Beach Rd 910.392.7224

Our refreshing spin on spiked pink lemonade.

BACK for this October only!

A portion of proceeds will be donated.

RESIDENTS OF OLD WILMINGTON

UNDERWATER ARCHEOLOGY SERIES OCTOBER 18 & 25 AND NOVEMBER 1 & 8 UNDERWATER ARCHEOLOGY EXPLORATION An exciting new 5 part series, “History and Mysteries beneath the Cape Fear River”, that focuses on the history of the ship wrecks that lie beneath the dark waters of the Cape Fear. While on board passengers will see relics as they exist today, while learning the history of the wreck as well as how they were discovered. Thursdays @10 a.m. 2 hour $30

7th Annual Back Door Kitchen Tour Tour 9 kitchens in Historic Downtown Wilmington! Saturday, October 20, 2012 Purchase your ticket at our shop and get our Eagles Island Cruise 1/2 off

Forget a boring , fixed venue for your Holiday gatherings or special event....enjoy a cruise while you party on the majestic Cape Fear River...call for more info

A Relaxing Recipe

For a complete list of scheduled Tours, Excursions, and Fees, visit

wilmingtonwatertours.com HANDICAP ACCESSIBLE

JUST ADD WATER! Visit us on the Riverwalk! 212 S. Water Street

910-338-3134 Follow us

BAR ON BOARD WITH ALL ABC PERMITS

encore | october 17-23, 2012 | www.encorepub.com 35


//GUZZLE

the glorious grail: Lighthouse Beer Festival features over 90 breweries in its 11th year

W

ell , here we are again :

that glorious season where beer is joyfully celebrated and imbibed by many. It’s easy to believe I am talking about Oktoberfest, which is a crucial holiday for beer drinkers all around— especially those with German lineage. However, from a local standpoint, I am speaking specifically of the annual Lighthouse Beer Festival, one of the first and most successful beer fests in town. As I write about this upcoming fest, I realize that I’ve been writing for encore about craft beer for over a year. I know how spoiled Wilmington drinkers are overall— from the Atlantic shore to the Cape Fear riverfront, locals and tourists are bound to find a plentiful assortment of artisan craft beers and microbrews. On Front Street, most of Wilmington’s bars are striving to expand and colorize their brew selection; Cape Fear Wine and Beer take the downtown lead. On US-74, crossing the bridge and heading toward Wrightsville Beach,

e by Christina Dor stival Fe er Lighthouse Be er 20th Saturday, Octob tickets .; noon for VIP 1 p.m. to 5 p.m rkway 3400 Randall Pa IP drivers)-$45/V d $13 (designate m co l. eerfestiva www.lighthouseb the hot spot for craft beer connoisseurs is, of course, Lighthouse Beer and Wine. Around this same time last year I previewed the festival, emphasizing its 10th year and the brilliant selection of craft brews—local, national, international, rare, etc. The inclusion of domestics, glutenfree options, and inspiring wine/mead choices was notable, showing that the festival directors were open to reaching everyone’s palate. Owner of the Lighthouse Beer and Wine shop and beer garden, Jason Adams, understood that while the event concentrated more on smaller breweries and the beers, there was no reason to start excluding people and their drinking choices. North Carolina breweries like Highland or Duck-Rabbit are present at the festival, yet Pabst also was welcomed to set up and hand out samples. A large portion, almost more than 50 percent, of the festival attendees come from outside of Wilmington. Some travel from famously sud-soaked countries like Germany or Belgium. Some come home after battling through a long tour in Afghanistan. “With all the breweries we get in, it draws a national and international crowd to the festival,” Adams said back in 2011. This year is certainly no different—all around the world, tickets have been sold and travelers consistently make their way to our quaint, coastal city for this specific event. This year’s entertainment, Wisconsinbased Americana folk duo Cory Chisel and the Wandering Sons, will take the stage after a summer tour with Norah Jones, and after an exciting performance on David Letterman. The band’s last album, “Death Won’t Send a Letter,” received accolades from Rolling Stone which described it as “filled with woozy gospel organs and broadly strummed acoustic guitars.” This Saturday, October 20th, the Lighthouse Beer Festival is marking its 11th year. The Lighthouse Beer and Wine store came to life 14 years ago, and to this day it carries over 700 different beers, including kegs. Putting aside obvious smart business moves, Jason Adams and the

36 encore | october 17-23, 2012 | www.encorepub.com

BOTTOMS UP: The Lighthouse Beer Festival, now in its 11th year, will feature over 300 craft beers and other alcoholic beverages. Photo by Carly Yansak

Lighthouse crew since the beginning have played a major role in strengthening the craft beer movement in Wilmington, especially in Wrightsville Beach. Typing about the greatness of the Lighthouse Beer Festival and raving about the over 90 participating breweries and 300 plus beers, I am compelled to confess something: I still have not been to any of the Lighthouse Beer Festivals in the past, and due to a business trip, I am not going to make it this year either. It’s the sad truth, my fellow beer aficionados, and I do not know if this may invalidate a lot of what I have to say about this event. Perhaps a little, but it cannot be denied how important Lighthouse is to our craft beer culture. They have supplied our town with a hearty selection of beers, and when the temperature drops and the leaves start changing, the Lighthouse Beer Festival gathers Wilmingtonians and those from around the world together for a day of brews and entertainment. Every time I have missed this festival, I hear the aftermath from other citizens and beer drinkers: It’s one of, if not the best,

beer events our city offers. While I will miss it this year again, I can take comfort in knowing that there will be more beer enthusiasts there this year, and it will only continue to grow and spread the beauty of craft beer and community. Tickets for the Lighthouse Beer Festival are $35 for regular entry at 1 p.m., or folks can enjoy $45 VIP entry early at noon to beat the lines and get a head start on the indulgences. Designated driver tickets are $13 and are available for those that are 21+ non-drinking volunteers. All money raised from the festival will, per usual, be donated to The Carousel Center, a nonprofit organization committed to aiding abused and neglected children. The center provides critical care in 15 counties in southeastern North Carolina. Tickets can be purchased in the store at 220 Causeway Boulevard on Wrightsville Beach, or on the website, www.lighthousebeerfestival.com. With entry, attendees receive a glass that will be used to sample as many beers as they can handle throughout the event. Food vendors will be available, selling snacks and water. As always, Lighthouse ensures safety first with a free shuttle service available to the greater Wilmington area starting at 3 p.m. and running through the festival’s close. Last, but not least, don’t forget those ID’s!


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extraextra!|

38-40 HALLOWEEN EVENTS 41 CROSSWORD 42-64 CALENDAR,TOONS,HOROSCOPES, PET OF THE WEEK ETC.

creepy fun time! Halloween events abound across the area Have your palm read or your tarot cards done as part of the annual Poplar Grove Halloween Festival, taking place this the 19th-21st. Courtesy photo, Poplar Grove.

C

arving pumpkins and making

costumes certainly are indicative of the cool temps of October. Likewise, it means the ghosts and ghouls prepare to jump from every nook and cranny along our haunted cobblestone streets, forests, plantations, warehouses and whatnot, as festivals, tours, haunted attractions and so much more get underway this month! All Hallow’s Eve lurks near and so many events will take place throughout the month to celebrate its frightful pleasure.

Ghost Walk of Old Wilmington

Though the tour is open year-round, the haunted history into Wilmington’s past certainly hits closer to home during October. Tours take place at 6:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. nightly and are led by costumed guides who trek among back alleyways and side streets to share the chilling tales of places like Gallow’s Hill, St. James Graveyard, the Harper House and more! Folks meet at Water and Market streets, but must make reservations first by dialing 910-794-1866; www.hauntedwilmington.com. Tickets are $10-$12.

Panic Attack

Open Thursdays through Saturdays and Tuesday and Wednesday, the 30th-31st at 6 p.m., Panic Attack Haunted Attraction is the scariest romp across the Port City. Boasting to be North Carolina’s largest and most intense haunted attraction—20,000 square feet to be exact— Panic Attack features a variety of live actors as ghouls, ghosts, clowns, robots, yetis and demons—all who promise to terrify and exhilarate visitors. Every year the sets grow grander with Hollywood-quality special effects, not to mention 38 encore | october 17-23, 2012 | www.encorepub.com

elaborate decor. The video preview on the attraction’s website is deeply unsettling, as a large blinking banner above it declares it may be too intense for children under the age of 13. From what we hear at encore: It’s true. Wussies need not even come in the parking lot. The box office opens at 6 p.m., and the attraction begins when the sun sets and continues until midnight. Tickets are $20 plus tax, with discounts for military and groups.

will have a Halloween Festival from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., with another trail tour taking place that night at 7:30 p.m. There will be games, candy for trick-or-treaters, and of course the hike—trail may not be appropriate for young children. Advance registration required for tour during the festival; however all events are free! Fort Fisher State Recreation Area parking lot, 1000 Loggerhead Road. 910-458-5798; www.ncparks.gov/ Visit/parks/fofi/main.php

Aqua Camp

Ghost Ship

For the youngsters looking to make the fearsome holiday a bit more tolerable and even educational, the NC Aquarium is offering “AquaCamp: Spooky Critters.” For ages 5 to 12 years, the Halloween day camp will cover all that’s slippery and slimy in aquatic life. Live animal presentations, fun crafts and more will take place! Interested participants must pre-register by calling 910-458-8257; cost is $36-$40, depending on membership. The camp lasts six and a half hours and begins at 8:30 a.m. on October 18th.

Ghost Hike/Halloween Festival

If you’re looking for thrills off the mainland, then head over to the Ghost Hike held at the Fort Fisher State Recreation Area on Pleasure Island. A park ranger will happily guide you through the exploration of trails usually closed at night to the public. Learn about an old confederate guard who watches over the dunes, among other unexplained phenomena. Bring a flashlight and make a reservation for the free soirée at 8 p.m. by calling 910-458-5798; hikes take place the 18th through the 20th and October 30th. But on the 27th, along with a trail tour, Fort Fisher

The Battleship NC is one of the best spots in town to feel the fright! Starting the 19th through 20th and running through the 26th and 27th, visitors will climb aboard the ship and learn all about the ghosts which linger among its bow, boiler room, barracks, etc. The original haunted attraction opens at 6:30 p.m. Must be in line at 9:30 p.m. to get the last ticket sold; $10. www.battleship.com.

Poplar Grove Halloween Festival

It’s become the official kickoff to Wilmington’s Halloween celebrations. The annual Poplar Grove Halloween Festival welcomes families and friends to their most popular fund-raiser of the year. Though the admission is free onto the grounds, the individual attractions and rides are priced accordingly, with proceeds going to the Poplar Grove Foundation, Hampstead Fire Department, Topsail High School (THS), Hoggard HS Latin Club and Drama Department and other local non-profits. Slated for the 19th through the 21st—Friday, 6 p.m. and Saturday through Sunday at 2 p.m.— Topsail High School will host the all new Terror Town, offering a spirited hayride and ghostly


encore | october 17-23, 2012 | www.encorepub.com 39


barn. Also slated for enjoyment: inflatable, camel and pony rides, a petting zoo, games, pumpkins, a non-scary Kiddie Funhouse, palm and tarot-card readers and so much more! A costume contest will take place on the 20th at 6 p.m., so come dressed to impress. www.poplargrove.com.

gardens (only umbrella strollers permitted). Admission is $8, but children 2 and under are admitted for free. Call 910-458-8257 or visit www. ncaquariums.com/fort-fisher for more information.

In Memoriam—Victoria Mourning

Trick or Treat Tennis

What? Yes, it’s true! Tennis and trick-or-treating will pair up for a charity tournament to benefit Friends of Empie Park on the 19th (5:30 p.m.) and 20th (9 a.m.). Taking place at the Althea Gibson Tennis Complex at “Eerie” Park, teams can make up four players, two men and two women, ages 14 and up. There will be women’s and men’s doubles matches, as well as mixed doubles. Come dressed up in the best costume for a chance to score the Best Dressed Team prize on Friday the 19th. There will also be music and fun Friday evening. Call 341-4631 to register.

Evil in the Port City

Students man the haunted house every year as a major fund-raiser for New Hanover High School’s Lyceum Academy. These studious kids have gone literary in their 2012 theme: “Evil in the Port City.” Based on the hotel in Erik Larson’s best-selling novel “Devil in the White City,” soon to be a movie starring Leonardo DiCaprio, find out how the World Fair of 1893 turned dangerous for society as a serial killer lurked among its attractions. Lyceum students have devised several frightening rooms, including one with live snakes. The show gets underway at the old Marine Reserve Barracks at 2150 Burnett Boulevard—all 14,000 square feet of it. Tickets are $10; the event begins at 7 p.m. nightly and ends at 10 p.m. on Thursdays, and midnight on Fridays and Saturdays; 19th-21st, 25th28th and 31st.

Science Spooktacular

10/20: It’s not spooky, it’s science! Cape Fear Museum wants to UNfrighten you by uncovering the science behind the creepy and mysterious. Create concoctions that bubble, glow, or even smoke in the Mad Lab and discover the secrets of magic in the Little Shop of Physics. Explore skeletons, spiders, bats, and more. Admission charge. Cape Fear Museum, 6 p.m. 910-798-4350; www. capefearmuseum.com

Halloween Haunted Trail

Also happening off the mainland and 45 minutes away from Wilmington is the Grissettown Longwood Fire and Rescue’s fourth annual Halloween Haunted Trail fund-raiser.

GORE AND HORROR: Panic Attack uses Hollywood-caliber props, special effects and lots of local actors to make their experience one of the most frightening in Wilmington. Photo by Kris Beasley

Expect this to be a hanuted attraction with ghouls and ghost perfectly situated to scare the pants off you! The event takes place at 758 Longwood Road in Ocean Isle on the 19th and 20th, 26th and 27th, and 30th and 31st. Tickets are $8 a person with kids 5 and under entering for free. If you wanna skip the line, purchase a $15 fast pass; all proceeds benefit the Grissettown Longwood Fire and Rescue. www.grissettownfire.com.

Murder Mystery Dinner Cruise

Though another year-long event aboard the Henrietta III in downtown Wilmington, any Murder Mystery becomes all the more intriguing when situated around Halloween. Taking place on the 23rd and 30th at 6 p.m., folks can board the Henrietta at Water and Dock streets for an exciting “Whodunnit?” kind of evening. Clues are given throughout the evening for diners to solve the mysterious storyline acted out by local talent. The two-hour event takes place on the Cape Fear River and even gives prizes away for audience participation. Reservations are required: 910-343-1611 or www.cfrboats. com. Tickets are $47.

Trick or Treat Under the Sea

The NC Aquarium has been bringing families out to Fort Fisher for a safe, engaging evening of trick-or-treating every Halloween for 11 years now. Taking place the 24th and 25th, dress up the tots and bring them out from 5 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. for free candy, offered up by local business vendors. Not only is there indoor trick-or-treating, kids will enjoy a carnival of fun, from face painting to story-telling, magic shows to spooky divers and even haunted

40 encore | october 17-23, 2012 | www.encorepub.com

With the plethora of historic homes, mansions and museums all over town, it’s no wonder visitors revel in stories of their past—some perfectly creepy, captivating and educational for Halloween celebrations. Come the 26th and 27th, 6 p.m. to 9 p.m., the Latimer House Museum, a Victorian Italianate house from 1852, will provide an experience which showcases the customs and rituals of death in Victorian America. Expect the digs to be decorated in full mourning, with all five rooms displaying authentic funerary objects. There will be guides in period costume, samples of food served at Victorian funerals and ghost stories will be told! Why go fake when you can go authentic? The program only costs $7; 126 S. Third St. 910-762-0492 or www.hslcf.org.

Kooky Spooky Jam-Boo Read

10/26: Kids’ literacy event disguised as a street festival with scary stories and non-scary fall-theme activities. Kids dress in costume or as a book character. Other Halloween/ fall activities throughout October. Admission charge. Children’s Museum. 4:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. 910-254-3534; www.playwilmington.org

Halloween Ghost Trolley

Every year Springbrook Farms decks out their horses and guides to take kids through fascinating tales of historic Wilmington. From the 26th through the 31st, the Halloween Ghost Trolley takes place from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m., offering kid-friendly, 30-minute, horse-drawn trolley rides. They’ll even venture into the fun and frolicky “ghost barn.” Families can expect Halloween-themed stories, songs and lots of yummy treats. Tickets are $12 for adults and $5 for children under 12. The tour departs at Market and Water streets. Make a reservation by calling 910-251-8889 or visiting www. horsedrawntours.com.

Halyburton Halloween

The gorgeous public park and trails will be open during the spookfest of October with lots of great events taking place, including the Halloween Spooktacular on the 26th, from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. First of all: It’s free! Secondly, they’ll have hayrides, trick-or-treating, a costume contest, food, music and more! On the 27th, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. they’ll beckon all athletes to participate in “Run, Ride & Roll”—a free bike-, run-, walk- or skate-athon on the Gary Shell Cross-City Trail. There will be a scavenger hunt, trick-or-healthy-

treating, trick-your-bike competition, live music vendors and more. On the 27th, the darkened depths of Halyburton can be explored on their Haunted Hayride, from 6 p.m. to 10 p.m. Folks will hear about the ghosts, culture and folklore which lurk in its past.

Luminary Tour of Oakdale Cemetery Is there a more appropriate way to celebrate All Hallow’s Eve than one involving a cemetery? On the 28th, the Friends of Oakdale will put on a Luminary Tour of Oakdale Cemetery from 6:30 p.m. to 7 p.m. The evening stroll will feature the stories of graves of Dr. James H. Dickson and the Rev. John Lamb Pritchard, each of whom lie in the yellow fever section, where more than 400 victims are thought to be interred. Around 600 luminaries light the way to five grave sites. At each stop there will be a speaker telling the stories of those who are buried there. Refreshments and light snacks will be offered but the event is limited to 100 tickets sold for only $10; first come, first serve. 910-762-5682; www.oakdalecemetery.org

Batty Battleship If you miss the Ghost Ship, then there is still time to celebrate aboard the Battleship NC as their annual Batty Battleship Halloween Bash takes place on the 30th from 5:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. Kids will be able to trick-or-treat aboard the ship and then enjoy the various vendors set up on the lot and enjoy the bouncy house, petting zoo and carnival-esque attractions. Located at the junction of Highways 17/74/76/421 on the Cape Fear River; admission is $5 a person. www.battleshipnc.com.

Trick or Treat at the Mall On Halloween day, Wednesday the 31st, from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. the Independence Mall off Oleander Drive will transform into candy fest! Trick-or- treaters are allowed to stroll through participating retailers to enjoy a safe Halloween indoors. Dress up! www.independencemall.com

Pumpkin Party Fit for Fun Center at 302 S. 10th Street will throw a Pumpkin Party, on the 31st from 9 a.m. to noon. For only $5 a child (adults enter free), kids can come in their costumes to enjoy donut-biting, fly-swat painting, a spaghetti toss, duck pond and so much more! A special snack will be served!

Great Pumpkin Hunt On November 3rd, Halyburton will take those leftover Jack-o-Lanterns and turn them into a Great Pumpkin Hunt. For ages 3 to 9, the cost is only $3 a child and lasts from 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. at Maides Park, located at 1101 Manly Avenue. There will be face-painting, pumpkin-hunting, horse rides, arts and crafts, cookie decorating, hayrides and more. Preregistration is recommended: (910) 341-7867. www.halyburtonpark.com


creators sYNDIcate © 2012 staNleY NeWmaN

WWW.staNXWorDs.com

10/21/12

the NeWsDaY crossWorD Edited by Stanley Newman (www.StanXwords.com)

teN-laNe hIGhWaY: the clues drive the theme by Fred Piscop across 1 river painted by cézanne 6 blacken, as a steak 10 The __ of the Ancient Mariner 14 Unnecessary extra 19 self-evident truth 20 luau dance 21 Wide-screen film format 22 Variety show 23 actor who’s married to Diane laNe 25 hoV laNe users 27 “Diana” singer 28 make angry 29 GI hangout 31 type of camera, for short 32 Pops a question 33 rescues 35 Poker prize 36 reminiscent of san Francisco 38 Do some grapplin’ 41 coup d’__ 42 Near the shore 46 telescope eyepieces 48 Words on a fire-laNe sign 51 Palette selection 52 chowderheads 53 tV journalist Dobbs 55 Granola morsel 56 Prefix for physics 57 before, in verse 58 Drury laNe resident of rhyme 62 Dizzy Gillespie’s music 63 awaiting punishment 66 had in mind 67 strummer of yore 68 Drops in a box 69 Young deer 70 madrid mister

71 Went easy on 73 With 24 Down, Show Boat tune 74 sitcom viewings 77 throws with force 78 memory laNe wistfulness 80 actor’s prompt 81 metaphorical refuges 82 __ cit. (footnote notation) 83 historical period 84 Fossil holder 86 “that’s amazing!” 87 lois laNe coworker 92 overwhelmed with work 94 Parlor pieces 96 self-images 97 campus social events 98 shakespearean dueler 100 Polish off 101 take under one’s wing 103 angry 106 hosp. scan 107 handheld organizer: abbr. 108 remain unused 109 tailless primates 113 “Penny laNe” performers 116 sport with a free throw laNe 119 Deeply felt 120 sleek, to car buffs 121 boulogne brainstorm 122 story in a whodunit 123 chess pieces 124 __ canaria Island 125 Preschoolers 126 brazilian port DoWN 1 Goya subject 2 Nerve cell appendage 3 take a chance

4 simple and convenient 5 Diplomatic bldg. 6 bit of house work 7 Unwieldy ships 8 three-time heavyweight champ 9 approached rapidly 10 cannoli filling 11 “__ little teapot . . .” 12 heron’s hangout 13 clearly stated 14 half a pendulum’s path 15 Passes along 16 currier’s partner 17 hide in the shadows 18 minus 24 see 73 across 26 sweater fabric 30 hotel freebie 34 “sad to say . . .” 37 hang back 38 state sport of Wyoming 39 Deer snack 40 store with an express laNe 41 sufficient, informally 43 1996 Nathan laNe film 44 road runners 45 left the ground for a moment 47 says indistinctly 49 chestnut horses 50 German philosopher 54 Frequently, in verse 56 “Ditto!” 58 Gelatin shaper 59 mosque officials 60 Unschooled in 61 Divine food 62 Picnic supplies 64 countesses’ spouses 65 crusty desserts

67 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 79

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82 Game like paintball 84 minor mistake 85 Cosby Show surname 87 top dog, for short 88 math proposition 89 continues 90 old-time oath 91 In no way 93 overplay onstage 95 Jeopardy! host 99 ship of fuels

101 102 103 104 105 110 111 112 114 115 117 118

Useful quality Flood blockers begin to awaken “Yikes!” city near lake tahoe It may hold water hamburg’s river lanky hosp. areas historical period commotion bistro bill

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halloween events AQUA CAMP: SPOOKY CRITTERS 10/18: AquaCamp: Spooky Critters. Halloween day camp (age 5-12) features slippery, slimy animal programs. Admission; pre-register. NC Aquarium at Fort Fisher, Kure Beach; 910-458-8257; www.ncaquariums.com/fortfisher HAUNTED TOURS Haunted Pub Crawl. Wed.-Sat. 7:30pm. Ages 21+. Admission charge. Meet at Fat Tony’s, 131 N. Front St., Wilmington. Reservations required: 910-794-1866; www.hauntedwilmington.com • Haunted Cotton Exchange Tours. Daily tours; call for hours. Admission charge. Cotton Exchange parking lot entrance. 910-409-4300; www.hauntedcottonexchange.blogspot.com.

10/18: HAUNTED WILMINGTON Just in case you didn’t receive enough suggestions on how to enjoy the most creep-tastic holiday of the year (pages 38-40), make sure to schedule one of two spooktacular events this week. The Haunted Pub Crawl and the Haunted Cotton Exchange tours are taking place, which allow visitors an extraordinarily chilling look into the unexplained phenomena of our historical haunts. The pub crawl scours local watering holes where guides tell stories about the souls that lurk around (bring cash for drinks), while the Cotton Exchange shares stories of its historical past. cruise along the Cape Fear River. Audience participation; prizes. Boards at 6pm; departs 6:30pm at dock (Water & Dock sts). Admission charge. Reservations required: 910-343-1611; 800-676-0162; www.cfrboats.com

SCIENCE SPOOKTACULAR 10/20: Science Spooktacular. 6pm. It’s not spooky, it’s science! Cape Fear Museum wants to UNfrighten you by uncovering the science behind the creepy and mysterious. Create concoctions that bubble, glow, or even smoke in the Mad Lab and discover the secrets of magic in the Little Shop of Physics. Explore skeletons, spiders, bats, and more. Admission charge. Cape Fear Museum, Wilmington. 910-798-4350; www. capefearmuseum.com

KOOKY-SPOOKY JAM-BOO-READ 10/26: Spooky Jam-Boo-Read! 4:30-7:30pm. Kids’ literacy event disguised as a street festival with scary stories and non-scary fall-theme activities. Kids dress in costume or as book character. Other Halloween/fall activities throughout October. Admission charge. Children’s Museum, 910254-3534; www.playwilmington.org

MURDER MYSTERY DINNER CRUISE Murder Mystery Dinner Cruises, 10/16, 23,30. Solve an exciting who-dunnit on a 2-hr. dinner

TRICK OR TREAT TROT 10/28: Trick or Treat Trot 5K/10K Run & 1 mile Fun Run/Walk. 9am. Registration fee for adult

42 encore encore ||october 42 october17-23, 17-23,2012| 2012 |www.encorepub.com www.encorepub.com

5K/10K race. Halloween costumes encouraged. Jo Ann Harrelson Center, 20 N. 4th St., Wilmington; www.its-go-time.com COSTUME CONTEST Tuesday October 30th Carolina Lounge at the Ramada Inn off Market will be having a Halloween Party and Costume Contest. Dress to impress and win the contest prizes! Usual Tuesday fun with line dancing at 7pm, too. Beginner shag lessons at 7:30pm; intermediate lessons at 8:30. carolinalounge@gmail.com BATTY BATTLESHIP’S HALLOWEEN BASH Batty Battleship’s Halloween Bash, 10/30, 5:30-8pm. Trick or Treat aboard the Battleship NC with Batty Battleship, brother Buggy and their friends as they come back to the Battleship for a spooktacular trick or treating time. A lot of fun and no scares it is the best location for the family to share. Now accepting Battly Battleship vendors/businesses to set up Trick or Treat stations. Danielle Wallace: 910-251-5797, ext. 3024. Located at the junction of Highways 17/74/76/421 on the Cape Fear River. www. battleshipnc.com. Open Tues-Thurs, 8am-5pm except Christmas Day, when Battleship opens at noon. www.battleshipnc.com

HAUNTED KIDDIE MANSION 10/31, 5pm: Haunted Kiddy Mansion with the hilarious fun for the whole family! Includes a special treat at end of the tour! $3; Donna Green, 910-341-7860 TRICK OR TREAT AT THE MALL 10/31: Trick-or-Treat at the Mall. 4-6pm. Kids arrive in costume and retailers provide candy. Independence Mall, 3500 Oleander Dr. 910-3921776. www.shopindependencemall.com HARVEST FEST AND TRUNK SHOW The Well CDC & The Well WOW Church Harvest Fest & Trunk or Treat Car Show, 10/27. Judging begins at 6pm and drive in movie at 7:30pm. Parking lot of The Wellness Center: Home of The Well CDC, 14840 US Hwy. 17 North Hampstead. Car show, trunk or treat, and a community harvest festival. Best decorated trunk to hold the winning trophy and bragging rights for the entire year! Entry fee is $20 for judged contest participants, and $10 for non-judged participants. Rent someone else’s car for $15 and they will promote your business and/or organization in your absence. Face painting, arts and crafts, moon bounce, live music, entertainment, and drive in style movie! Costumes welcome,j ust not scary. Free with a suggested canned food donation foradmission to go toward Thanksgiving baskets we are preparing for the Eat Well Food Center families we serve in Hampstead Community. 910-270-0911. thewellcdc@gmail.com CANDY BUY BACK Candy Buy Back (C.B.B.) is an outreach program that is a part of Operation Gratitude. C.B.B. collects non-perishable, individually wrapped Halloween candy and sends it to our active U.S. troops. Coastal Cosmetic Family Dentistry hosts 3rd annual event, so participants 18 and younger can bring their Halloween candy to either Coastal Cosmetic Family Dentistry location the week of Halloween and the week after Halloween, 10/2911/9, Mon-Thurs, 9am-5pm; Fri, 9am-1pm. (Hwy

211 office only). Each participant will receive a $1 for each pound of Halloween candy they donate and be entered into a raffle for a 16GB iPod Touch!

See more Halloween activities on pages 38-40.

events WHQR CANDIDATE FORUMS 10/18, NC House District 19, Ted Davis Jr. (NHC Commission Chair) and Emilie Swearingen (Kure Beach Councilwoman). NC House District 20, Rick Catlin (Current NHC Commissioner) (R) and Tom Gale (D). WHQR News Director Rachel Lewis Hilburn moderates. Questions will come from Tricia Vance, editorial page editor at the StarNews, and Vicky Janowski, editor of the Greater Wilmington Business Journal. The public is invited to attend and participate. A recording of the forum will be posted online the following day. NEW TO YOU YARD SALE Assistance League of Greater Wilmington will be holding its fourth annual New To You indoor yard sale on Sat., 10/20, at St. James Episcopal Parish Gym on Dock street between 3rd and 4th streets. With a $5 donation, you can shop from 7:30-8:30am for the best merchandise selection. Regular sale hours are 8:30am-1pm (no admission fee). Cash, MasterCard and Visa accepted, no checks. FASHION FUSION SHOW Fashion Fusion Show, 10/18, 7-9pm. $5 in advance at the Trash to Treasure flea market, Castle Hayne. 100% of the ticket sales go to benefit Open Gate which supports victims of Domestic violence. A ticket entitles you to a private shopping extravaganza in which you can negotiate directly with vendors and save on sales tax. Food and beverages are included and you are automatically entered into a drawing to win one of many door prizes including a grand prize of a weekend stay at the Hampton Inn & Suites at Landfall. 602-6400 UNITE 2012 UNITE 2012, Silver Lake Baptist Church, Sat, 10/27, 10am-6pm. Bringing local services together as well as a chance to help those in need. Estimated 2000 visitors to attend! Featured live performances from the best local, inspirational talent in contemporary and traditional Christian music; kids’ zone area dedicated to youth and small child activities; food court, w/traditional festival foods; big toy box for children of all ages to see and touch, fire trucks, police cars, construction equipment, ambulances etc and interact with all of the community helpers that assist us everyday; outside vendor area feat. entrepreneurs, businesses, and non profit organizations. To sponsor/participate, rates $100-$250: slbcu-

Calendar entries are due every Thursday by noon for consideration in the following week’s encore. Entries are published for free two weeks out from event date according to space.


Wilmington Art & Craft Show Juried art and ďƒžne craft

November 24 & 25 10am~5pm

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encore | october 17-23, 2012 | www.encorepub.com 43


nite@gmail.com MOORE’S CREEK FALL FEST 10/27, 10am: Moore’s Creek Fall Fest: moorescreekconservation@gmail.com. Moore’s Creek Conservation Alliance presents Fall Fest at Moore’s Creek National Battlefield! Enjoy live music, food, nature tours, speakers and exhibits, Kids activities, and meet Emily the Mundt jack Deer! Free! moorescreekconservation@ gmail.com

OPEN OPEN DAILY 7 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Breakfast • Bloody Mary Bar Full Coffee Bar • WiFi...

Where else would you go?

HAPPY TAILS DOG EXPO 10/28, noon-4pm: Happy TailsDog Expo. The Azalea Dog Training Club will show off agility and obedience skills at 1pm; live-action demonstration by one of New Hanover County’s finest, from the Canine Unit, of course; Netop the Painting Dog creates a master-piece; Hampstead’s Trulie Dogs hosts a Fido-Fashion Show with the latest in seasonal styles and casual wear—Dandiest Dog Costume Contest, prizes courtesy of Pups Play’n Stay, Do-You-Look-Like-Your-Dog Contest, jowls and curly-tops welcomed! Poplar Grove Plantation, $5/person, furry friends and ages five & under are free. Proceeds benefit Poplar Grove a non-profit organization. 10200 US 17, www.poplargrove.com WEDDING SHOW The biggest, most comprehensive wedding show in Southeastern NorthCarolina returns to the Wilmington Convention Center at noon Sun. 10/28. Featuring more than 100 vendors, continuing fashion show,dance demonstrations, vehicle corner, Bride & Groom’s Lounge. Brides:save 20% on tickets for yourself and all your guests by registeringonline: CapeFearWedding.com/shows

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charity/fund-raisers BRA DAY USA Bra Day USA takes place 10/17, 10am-6pm, 1404 Commonwealth Dr., for Breast Reconstruction Awareness Day. Along w/donation, bring a bra to be colored pink and added to an original pink ribbon sculpture designed by Michael Van Hout. Wilmington Plastic Surgery and Skin Care MedSpa. FOURTH ANNUAL SALTY PAWS 10/20: 4th annual Salty Paws Festival, w/proceeds helping care and medical assistance for so many neglected and abused animals. Hosted by Saving Animals During Disasters, a 501c3 non-profit organization whose goal is to aid in the rescue and support of disaster affected animals, past events have welcomed up to 2,500 people, 75 vendors and more pets than we could count. Music, food, pet contests and adoptions, lots of activities for adults, children and pets, and many prizes will be given out all afternoon. Corporate sponsors welcome at all levels, $40-$1500. Linda: 910-471-7270 SNEADS FERRY SHRIMP FESTIVAL 5K 10/20: This unique 5k will start/end at the Sneads Ferry Shrimp Festival grounds with fun activities including bounce houses, face painting and more for the whole family. Subway is our presenting sponsor with a lot of give-a-ways for all our contestants! Our goal is to expose the children and adults of our community to the healthy choices in life and to promote education in health and nutrition. Money raised will benefit scholarships in nutrition and education.Register NOW at active.com. http://sneadsferryshrimpfestival. org/shrimpscamper.html

It’s that time of year again so come enjoy our open-air courtyard. $3 Mimosas • $6 Select Appetizers Tuesday, April 3rd - Saturday, April 7th.

44encore encore||october 44 october 17-23, 17-23, 2012| 2012 |www.encorepub.com www.encorepub.com

CORN HOLE TOURNEY 10/20, noon: Corn Hole Tournament for Multiple Sclerosis, $40/two team, w/32 team limit. Halligan’s Public House, 3317 Masonboro Loop Rd. Check-in and practice:11am, tourney starts at noon. Lunch and drink specials! Shirts and goodies bags for players. Double elimination . Boards provided by Visions Hardwoods, Prize Cash provided by CloudWyze. Pre-reg: www. facebook.com/wilmingtonms or go to Halligan’s Public House.1st Place - $400 Cash and set

of “2012 Cornapalooza Winner” Corn Hole Boards* 2nd and 3rdPlace - Cash and Prizes. To benefit The Greater Carolinas Chapter of the National MS Society GOVERNOR’S AWARD FOR VOLUNTEERS Governor’s Award for Volunteer Service is accepting nominations through 10/26, noon. Each county selects five individuals, businesses, groups/teams and one Director of Volunteers to be recognized for their efforts and contributions. Ooen of five will be nominated to receive the Governor’s Medallion Award for volunteer service. Local committee evaluates nominations. CF Volunteer Center, 3534 S. College Rd., Suite F. www.capefearvolunteercenter.org. Noms myst be typed with 5 hard copies. Winners honored during National Volunteer Week, April 2012 locally and in Raleigh. CHORD FOR A CAUSE Presenting Vanessa Carlton and Edwin McCain with Wilmington Symphony Orchestra, 10/27, 7pm. Specials guests: Hoggard High Voyagers Choir. E-ticket presale taking place now! Proceeds will benefit Betty H. Cameron Women and Children’s Hopsital Wishbook Campaign and Canines for Service. $40 floor seast/$20 balcony seats. www.chordsforacause.com or etix.com. CF LITERACY COUNCIL Cape Fear Literacy Council (CFLC) is offering two free orientations in October: Wed., 10/31, 10am-noon. 1012 S. 17th St. in Wilmington. The “CFLC 101” orientation is open to anyone who is interested in volunteering at CFLC in any capacity: volunteer as tutors or instructors, assist with fundraising events, serve on the Board of Directors, or provide administrative assistance. • Tutor Training Workshops are held at the CFLC offices at 1012 S. 17th St. Pre-reg. recommended for two training sessions remaining in 2012: Adult Basic Literacy: Volunteers attend 12 hours of instruction, Wed., 11/5,7,12 and 14, 10am-1pm. $20 or $50 if seeking certification for another organization. Volunteers must attend all sessions to be certified. ESOL (English for Speakers of Other Languages): Volunteers attend 9 hours of instruction, Tues/Wed/Thurs., 10/9, 10 and 11, 6:30-9:30pm. Volunteers must attend all three sessions to be certified. $30 or $50 if seeking certification for another organiza-


“Main Attractions”

Thalian Hall

Center for the Performing Arts

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The spooky garden will have treats, games, face painting and prizes! There will be bobbing for apples and find the most (plastic) bugs. our “little Please have y g a pumpkin, monster” brin the paints! we will supply P.S. Parents are encouraged to dress up!!!!

One of America’s most celebrated Story Tellers shares the comedic and uplifting experience of growing up in a Texas Beauty Parlor” RESERVE YOUR TICKETS NOW! Thalian Hall Box Office (910) 632.2285 or visit www.thalianhall.org

Since 1858 • One of America’s Most Historic Theatres Media Partners

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Owner/Operator maria@nailstherightway.com 21 South 2nd Street Downtown Wilmington (910) 399-4880 (910) 338-6981 Take advantage of our garden and book your special event nowBridal Showers, Birthdays, Baby Showers, Girls Day, etc.

www.nailstherightway.com encore | october 17-23, 2012 | www.encorepub.com 45


tion.910) 251-0911 or info@cfliteracy.org. ECOMAIDS OF ILM Ecomaids of Wilmington provides free housecleaning services to female cancer patients in the Wilmington area. We are currently accepting new patients for this service, in accordance with our partnership with the Cleaning for a Reason organization. 910-338-0908. Wilmington@ecomaids.biz. NC PACKS FOR PATRIOTS The organization known as NC Branch Give2thetroops has separated from the national organization and formed a new nonprofit organization, NCPacks4Patriots. The mission is to provide support for deployed troops with care packages and messages of support, and to also provide support to military families with comfort items. The organization continues to invite community members to support our troops through volunteer service, donations of care package items, and financial support for postage. The NC team of volunteers have mailed over 400 care packages during the past two months. Barbara Whitehead, director; ncp4p@yahoo,com TEACHER’S FUND RAFFLE Intracoastal Realty has launched its 2nd annual holiday iPad Holiday Raffle to raise funds for its Teacher’s Fund, a program that provides grants to area kindergarten through 5th-grade teachers to assist them in purchasing much-needed supplies for their classrooms. Intracoastal Realty has given away more than $223,000 and distributed more than 1,075 grants since launching the program in 2005. Last year’s iPad raffle raised $6,000.Tickets for the iPad raffle are $10 each and can be purchased from any Intracoastal Realty agent or online at IntracoastalRealty.com/ TeachersFund. Five iPads will be given away. In-

tracoastal Realty will donate the winning iPads to the raffle to ensure that 100% of all money raised will go directly to the Teacher’s Fund. CANDY BUY BACK Candy Buy Back (C.B.B.) is an outreach program that is a part of Operation Gratitude. C.B.B. collects non-perishable, individually wrapped Halloween candy and sends it to our active U.S. troops. Coastal Cosmetic Family Dentistry hosts 3rd annual event, so participants 18 and younger can bring their Halloween candy to either Coastal Cosmetic Family Dentistry location the week of Halloween and the week after Halloween, 10/2911/9, Mon-Thurs, 9am-5pm; Fri, 9am-1pm. (Hwy 211 office only). Each participant will receive a $1 for each pound of Halloween candy they donate and be entered into raffle for a 16GB iPod Touch! MILITARY HOLIDAY CARDS While military deployments and hospital stays may keep many of our nation’s heroes away from their families this holiday season, the American Red Cross is collecting and distributing cards that send words of encouragement, gratitude and cheer. Through 12/7, Americans can give something that means something by sending a card of thanks and support to members of the Armed Forces, veterans and their families. Mail cards to : Holiday Mail for Heroes P.O. Box 5456 Capitol Heights, MD 20791-5456. Pitney Bowes Inc. screens cards for hazardous materials and Red Cross volunteers across the United States and on military installations overseas then sort and deliver the cards throughout the holiday season. Nine chapters throughout the Eastern NC Region will be holding a number of card signing events throughout October, November and the first week in December. The chapters are also recruiting volunteers to help distribute cards to military mem-

115 S. Front St. Downtown Wilmington (910) 763-7773 www.aubrianas.com facebook.com/Aubrianas

bers and veterans in the community around the holidays. www.redcross.org/holidaymail

theatre/auditions BROWNCOAT PUB AND THEATRE See page 12.

BIG DAWG PRODUCTIONS 10/18-21, “The Lion In Winter.” Written by James Goldman, directed by Robb Mann. Uneasy is the head on which the crown lies, and uneasy the truce between a matchless king and queen. King Henry II of England has three sons by Eleanor of Aquitaine. He wants the kingdom to stay united after his death, but all three sons want to rule and it is likely the country will be torn apart by revolution. Henry favors the youngest John, while Eleanor favors the eldest, Richard. Middle son Geoffrey hopes to play both ends against each other and come out on top. Show will run at 8pm, Thurs. -Sat. with a Sun. matinee, 3pm. $18-$20. Opening night will be Pay-WhatYou-Can with just a $5 minimum! Cash only and sold on a first come, first serve basis at the door only. bAny payment over $5 will help obtain items on Big Dawg’s wishlist and funding for future shows. If you would still like to reserve tickets early to ensure a seat for Opening Night, Early Reservation Tickets are $15 online or by phone. Cape Fear Playhouse, 613 Castle St. www.bigdawgproductions.org.

a choir of women’s voices, and a set installation including 15,000 origami shapes that will transform the stage in Building D at the Pine Valley United Methodist Church into a glittering cave of possibility. Narrated by a comical duo of accidental catalysts, it weaves together the stories of the dancers exploring ways of expressing and connecting in contemporary times. The show reminds us that creating the world we want is not an illusion, but completely possible. Tickets 303-449-5720 or www.turningthewheel.org/cities, and at Pomegranate Books, 4418 Park Ave. Adults $15; students with ID, seniors and youth ages 2-10 $1; youth under 2 free.

ZOMBIO AND JULIET Performance Club at Wrightsville Beach—be in a show, no auditions. “Zombio and Juliet” is a tuition based theater-program led by LJ Woodard. Performance Club meets on Thursdays, Through 10/25, 4-5pm (ages 5 – 8yrs) and 5-6pm (ages 9 – 13yrs). Max. of 15 students per class. Wrightsville Beach Parks and Recreation Office, 256-7925 or www.townofwrightsvillebeach.com.

A PLOT OF MURDER Sneads Ferry Community Theatre invites you to a Murder Mystery Dessert Theatre production of A Plot of Murder by Lee Mueller. Come to the HOA meeting of Fleur Estates Manor! This homeowners meeting gets so heated that someone ends up dead! Calling all super sleuths, gumshoes and detectives to help solve this mystery. Tickets: $10; Reservations are required for all show dates-call 910-327-2798. 10/27-28, 11/3-4; Sat, 7pm or Sun., 3pm. Reservations for the first weekend must be made before 6pm Thursday 10/25 and for the second weekend before 6pm, 11/1. Opening night includes a wine and cheese reception! Sneads Ferry Community Center; 126 Park Lane, Sneads Ferry. 910-327-2798.

EL ZORRO Theatre professor and stage combat expert Scott Nice brings the legendary figure of El Zorro to the UNCW Stage. Mayhem and swordfights are the order of the day in this production that is full of audience participation and perfect for the whole family. In the pueblo of Los Angeles in 1835, the evil politician Señor Rodriguez is oppressing all the peasants. Only their masked hero El Zorro is brave enough to stand up to Rodriguez. Will Zorro best Rodriguez in a battle of good versus THE COLOR PURPLE Techmoja Dance and Theater Co. proudly presevil? Tickets are Available at the Kenan Box Office: (910) 962-3500 or visit the Kenan Box Office: www.uncw.edu/arts/ boxoffice.html. $5-$12. Runs Oct. 18The UNCW Theatre Department is continuing their fall 21, 7pm nightly with 2pm Sunday matirun with professor Scott Nice’s direction of the legendary nees.

10/18-21: EL ZORRO

I KNEW THAT ONCE 10/19-20, 7:30pm; 21, 2:30pm: Cocreated by eight artists and a cast of 45, ages 7-77, I That Once is an amazing show of movement and theatre, feat. video footage, eccentric costumes with wild hats, live improvisational music with Jesse Manno, humorous poetic prose and rhyme, the beautiful, healing, surround sound from

“El Zorro.” The production is set in the pueblos of LA, 1835, featuring Senor Rodriguez’s control over the peasants which leads to lots of sword-fighting and general chaos. And no one other than the masked victor himself, Zorro, can save the day. Classic tale of good versus evil will come to life at the Cultural Arts Building on UNCW’s campus. Tickets are $5-$12 and are available at the Kenan Box Office (910) 962-3500; show starts at 7 p.m. or on Sundays at 2 p.m. 716 N. Lake Park Blvd. Carolina Beach (Next to Subway) 910-458-4224

It’s that time of year again so come enjoy our open-air courtyard. $3 Mimosas • $6 Select Appetizers Tuesday, April 3rd - Saturday, April 7th.

|october 46 encore | october17-23, 17-23,2012| 2012 |www.encorepub.com www.encorepub.com

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Listen to ghost stories tailored for young children, and experience the “Haunted Barn”! Let your little ones enjoy Halloween the way it used to be.

October 26 - 31, 2012 6:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. Market & Water Streets, Downtown Wilmington $12.00 per adult, $5.00 per child under 12. Free treats for children. No reservations! encore | october 17-23, 2012 | www.encorepub.com 47


ents “The Color Purple.” 10/27, 7:30pm; 10/28, 3pm. Performances will be held at Odell Williamson Auditorium. 150 College Rd. NE Bolivia. Tickets are on sale now.(910)-755-7416 or www.bccowa.com/. Soul-stirring and inspiring family saga based on the classic Pulitzer Prizewinning novel by Alice Walker and the popular Oscar-nominated 1985 Steven Spielberg film. Nominated for 11 Tony awards, including Best Musical, Book, and Original Score, “The Color Purlpe” tells the unforgettable story of a downtrodden young woman named, Celie, whose personal awakening over the course of 40 years forms the arc of this epic story. Through love, she finds the strength to triumph over adversity and discover her unique voice in the world. With a joyous Grammy-nominated score featuring: jazz, ragtime, gospel, and blues , “The Color Purple” is capturing the hearts of young and old, and is a testament to the healing power of love and a celebration of life, making this show a landmark theatrical event. THEATRE NOW See page 13. • “Super Saturday Fun Time, Saturdays, 11am.: Interactive kids adventure show with lunch! Join DOCK the dog and his twolegged friends as they uncover mysteries and discover artifacts based on local history. • Murder at the Bellamy Mansion, Sat., 6pm: Guests are invited to this year’s Wilmington Historical Attractions and Tours (WHAT) awards banquet at the stately Bellamy Mansion and find that history can be dangerous. Audience chooses a detective to help unwrap the mystery. • Space available for meeting and special event rentals during nonperformance times. Home to the nonprofit organization, Theatre Network of Wilmington, Inc., whose mission includes theatre arts

education to school aged children. Tickets: www. theatrewilmington.com. 10th and Dock streets.

comedy NUTT ST. COMEDY ROOM Nutt St. Comedy Room features weekly standup shows. Tickets: $8-$10. Schedule: 10/19-20: Adam Cayton-Holland • 26-27 Erin Foley. 255 N. Front St. 910-520-5520 www.nuttstreet.com MRSOE 10/25, 8:30pm: The Most RACES Show on Earth! Funny, edgy, comedy tour coming to Wilmington! MRSOE! is a multicultural comedy showcase, featuring the funniest and edgiest stand-up comedians. Since 2005, MRSOE! has performed in front of sold out audiences in both Canada and the U.S. and now we’re bringing our brand of funny, edgy comedy to the Southeast! A portion of the proceeds from each show will go towards the YWCA Stand Against Racism initiative. Brooklyn Arts Center, 516 N. 4th St. $10. 910-538-2939. http://mrsoe.com/ticket-reservation-form/

music/concerts OLLI: THE MET The Met: Live in HD feat. by The Osher Lifelong Learning Institute (OLLI) at UNCW; all shows Sat., 12;55pm. Schedule: 10/27: Otello is Verdi’s Shakespearean masterpiece with Johan Botha in the title role opposite the acclaimed Desdemona of star soprano Renée Fleming. Semyon Bychkov conducts.Season: $235 or indv. $30/ea; $20 for OLLI members. www.uncw.edu/metopera or

48 encore encore ||october 48 october17-23, 17-23,2012| 2012 |www.encorepub.com www.encorepub.com

910-962-3195 ROCK FOR THE CURE Rock for the Cure is a breast cancer benefit concert put on by UNCW’s Communication Studies Society. This is the 6th annual Rock for the Cure which raises money for local women fighting breast cancer. The event will be held on the rooftop of The Reel Cafe in downtown Wilmington and will include live music, a raffle, and a silent auction. All of the proceeds from the event go to the New Hanover Regional Medical Center Foundation’s Pink Ribbon Project. http://student. uncw.edu/rockforthecure or Victoria Humphrey, vch7874@uncw.edu MIKE CROSS Mike Cross will be returning to Thalian Hall on Friday, October 19, at 8pm. Cross’s one-man turbocharged stage shows have become legendary, serving up a collection of humorous songs, sensitive ballads, Will Rogers-like tales, twelvestring Delta blues, and fiery Celtic and Appalachian fiddle tunes. Mike’s music is a unique blend of folk, blues, rock, country, and Irish, spiced with a good dose of wonderfully warped wit, which “crosses” all musical boundaries and defies categorization. Tickets: $18-$28. www.thalianhall. org. www.mikecross.com. JUBILATE 10/19, 7:30pm: Jubilate! Sacred Singers’ a cappella sacred choral music, playing at Wrightsville Beach’s Little Chapel on the Boardwalk for free; donations accepted for financial support of the choir and their tour expenses. CD recordings available for purchase. C. Justin Smith, Director of Music and Organist at the Little Chapel on the Boardwalk, 256-2819, ext. 106 or jsmith@ littlechapel.org.

Learn from an award-winning winery!

CHAMBER MUSIC ILM Chamber Music Wilmington’s 18th season offers four classical subscription concerts and two classical house concerts. Subscribe and save to receive: program notes in advance, first priority to thesalon concerts and special notifications to “Meet the Artist” opportunities and pre-concert conversations, www.chambermusicwilmington.org. Single tickets, $25. Student & Military discounts available. Kenan Box Office: 910-962-3500. • 10/21: The Cavani Quartet has become famous for its dynamic, irresistible presence on stage since winning the nation’s highest chamber music award, the Naumburg, and attaining residency in one of America’s top music schools, the Cleveland Institute. They’ll present music of Joaquin Turina, TheBullfighters’ Prayer, Bela Bartok’s String Quartet No.1 and Robert Schumann’s String Quartet in A Minor Opus 41 No. 7:30pm, Beckwith Recital Hall. etix.com PEACE THROUGH MUSIC 10/21, 5pm: Peace Through Music Concert at St. Mary Church. Free; donations accepted. Sister Cities Association of Wilmington invites you to a special evening of dance, music,song and words featuring: New Beginning Dance in Motion, B’nai Israel Kavanotes, Suzuki Talent Education of Wilmington, Wilmington Symphony Youth Orchestra, Girls’ Choir of Wilmington, Pedro Esparza, Carolina Vocal Arts Ensemble, and the GLOW Hand Mime Ministry. www.scawilmington.org. TALLIS CHAMBER ORCHESTRA The Tallis Chamber Orchestra will present a concert Sun., 10/28, 5pm, First Presbyterian Church as part of the Music At First Concert Series. Feature all English String Music. Music by

Weekly Events for Noni Bacca Winery:

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Tuesday Night – BFF Night

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Come hang out at the winery with your best friend(s) itithh wspecials. ew after work. Great music, wine and ppllebeer uu o o OPEN 7 DAYS c c / / 5 5 3 3 $ White wine Enjoy Red $ and sssseerrtt dd ddeestarting e e r r a a h h s s at $4.00 per glass and 20% off bottles! 420 Eastwood Rd., Suite 108 of selected choice from 20 draft FruitorStyle Wine at $3.00 perbeers glass or $9.00 per bottle! Daily Wine TastingIncludes • Winea glass by the Glass wine Craft Beer starting ONE—CHOOSE ONE: at $2.50 per bottle! Great Craft Beers • WineCOURSE Tasting Parties Soup or Salad (Specials are for Bar Service Only) Call 910-397-7617

ThursdayONE: Night at the Winery COURSE TWO—CHOOSE

Thursday Night Nonimustard Bacca Winery, NY Pastrami Sandwich – 10oz pastrami onEvery rye w/ coleslaw and at spicy ATTENTION Fulton Street – Fresh shrimp or tuna stuffed a fresh avocado or tomato, theinto lights go down and the music goes up! served with tomato wedges Enjoy the awesome Wine and Beer Specials! NY Reuben Sandwich – Corned Beef piled high withRed sauerkraut andwine cheese! Enjoy and White starting Greek Wrap - Mixed greens, feta cheese, Greek olives, Greek andbottles! potato at $4.00 perpeppers,tomato glass and 20% off salad wrapped with ourStyle house dressing Fruit Wine at $3.00 per glass or $9.00 per bottle Fig Gorgonzola Pizza – Figs, Gorgonzola, Craft smoked fresh tomato, BeerGouda, starting at $2.50 per bottle sun dried tomatoes and sliced(Specials red onions are for Bar Service Only) Shrimp Roll – Large fresh shrimp mixed with our own special dressing, Saturday Night – Date Night a mixture of chopped onion, bell pepper, All couples are welcome to stop and enjoy a wine tasting cucumber, mayo, worchestershire at Wilmington’s on our fresh baked toasted rollInternational Award-Winning Winery.

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FrIdAy nOVEMBEr 2 WEdnESdAy OCTOBEr 17 LAngHOrnE SLIM/THE KErnAL / JASOn KUTCHMA ABAndOn ALL SHIPS / FOr ALL THOSE SLEEPIng / SKIP THE FOrEPLAy THUrSdAy OCTOBEr 18 KOOLEy HIgH / CLEAr SOUL FOrCES / SATUrdAy nOVEMBEr 3 dTMd / T. JOnES BOMBAdIL / MECHAnICAL rIVEr FrIdAy OCTOBEr 19 THUrSdAy nOVEMBEr 8-11 CHArLIE MArS / SHAnE KELLy CUCALOrUS FILM FESTVAL SATUrdAy OCTOBEr 20 MOndAy nOVEMBEr 12 THE drOWnIng MEn / ALL OF THE UnKnOWn THE rEVIVALISTS / VAn gHOST 2012 dOWnTOWn WILMIngTOn ZOMBIE WALK TUESdAy nOVEMBEr 13 TUESdAy OCTOBEr 23 MArCO BEnEVEnTO BEn TAyLOr / ErICK BAKEr WEdnESdAy nOVEMBEr 14 OCTOBEr 24 & 25 SOUTHBOUnd & dOWn 2 WITH VALIEnT THOrr & SCrAPOMATIC THUrSdAy nOVEMBEr 15 30+ MOrE BAndS JIMKATA FrIdAy OCTOBEr 26 JUSTIn LACy & THE SWIMMIng MACHInE (Cd FrIdAy nOVEMBEr 16 rELEASE) / OnWArd, SOLdIErS / SEqUOyAH / THE THE LOVE LAngUAgE / grOSS gHOST / TOddLErS KICKS / THE BLACK CAdILLACS SATUrdAy nOVEMBEr 17 SATUrdAy OCTOBEr 27 nO TUrnIng BACK FESTIVAL - dISABLE / In rUInS / WEEdEATEr / gOLLUM / PrEdECESSOr / LOInCLOTH / T0W3rS / JEnny BESETZT / THE LOLLIPOPS InTEr ArMA / SALVACIOn +MOrE MOndAy nOVEMBEr 19 WEdnESdAy OCTOBEr 31 THE SWELLErS / dIAMOnd yOUTH / PEnTAMOnTO JPEELAndEr-Z / ELECTrIC EEL SHOCK

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Fall Classic Early Bird Special

Option 1 Includes General Admission season tickets for the 2013 Baseball season, plus a 5-game men’s basketball mini-plan for $120.00. - or Option 2 Includes Reserve Seating season tickets for the 2013 Baseball season, plus a 5-game men’s basketball mini-plan for $150.00

UNCW Basketball Season Tickets

Now on sale Season Tickets begin at $100* 15 home games 1-800-808-UNCW www.uncwsports.com

(requires Seahawk Club membership at $100 level).

*(based on seat location)

Offer good until November 2

UPCOMING EVENTS Wednesday, October 17

MEN’S SOCCER VS GEORGIA STATE 7 P.M. Tuesday, October 23

VOLLEYBALL VS NC CENTRAL 6 P.M. encore | october 17-23, 2012 | www.encorepub.com 51


Vaughan Williams, Elgar, Handel and more. The Tallis Chamber Orchestra is a local Wilmington ensemble. Free/donations accepted. 910-6207207.

Step into health and wellness for the fall!

WILMINGTON SYMPHONY 10/20, 8pm: Rendezvous in Paris, UNCW Kenan Auditoriums. Mike Waddell, Clarinet. Make the acquaintance of French music from two centuries, Baroque composer Jean-Phillippe Rameau’s Les Indes Galantes and Claude Debussy’s Premiere Rhapsodie, oneof the most beautiful works in the clarinet repertoire. This perfect “10” of a concert concludes with Maurice Ravel’s sensational Bolero! 910-962-3500 or www.wilmingtonsymphony.org.

dance BALLROOM DANCE Beginner Ballroom starts Wed, 10/17, 7pm. No partner needed. Also Swing, Shag, Wedding Prep. Group private, singles/couples, UNCW,High School Students. www.BallrooomDanceSportNC. com 4523 Franklin Ave. Less than 1 mile from UNCW, Across from Cinema Dr. Kerr & Franklin. 799-2001

Schedule a therapeutic massage with reflexology OPEN OPEN DAILY 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. session. Soothing Touch Therapeutic Massage

Tina Lee, LMBT#3337 Breakfast • Bloody Mary Bar Thurs 9:30-6:30 Full Coffee BarMon., • WiFi... Tues., Wed., Fri. 9:30-3:00

Where else would Sat. Everyyou othergo? 9:00-100

225 S. Drive Water Suite St. in 3 Chandlers Wharf 4018 Oleander • 910-233-5615 FREE (910) 399-3108

PARKINGwww.tinaleemassage.com www.thebaristacafebakery.com

Learn from an award-winning winery! OPEN 7 DAYS 420 Eastwood Rd., Suite 108 Daily Wine Tasting • Wine by the Glass Great Craft Beers • Wine Tasting Parties Call 910-397-7617

Tuesday Night – BFF Night

Come hang out at the winery with your best friend(s) after work. Great music, wine and beer specials. Enjoy Red and White wine starting at $4.00 per glass and 20% off bottles! Fruit Style Wine at $3.00 per glass or $9.00 per bottle! Craft Beer starting at $2.50 per bottle! (Specials are for Bar Service Only)

Thursday at the Winery From the moment you walk in,Night you’ll know Every Thursday Night at Noni Bacca Winery, ATTENTION you’re in for an authentic, the lights go downexotic and the music goes up! HOMEBREWERS! Enjoy the awesome Wine and Beer Specials! culinary adventure!

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Enjoy Red and White wine starting at $4.00 per glass and 20% off bottles! Fruit Style Wine at $3.00 per glass or $9.00 per bottle Craft Beer starting at $2.50 per bottle (Specials for Bar Service Only) DINNER: $45 perarecouple

Includes bottle of house red/white wine, basket of naan, Saturday Night – Dateone Night appetizer to share, two entrées and one dessert to share. All couples are welcome to stop and enjoy a wine tasting

encore

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at Wilmington’s International Award-Winning Winery. Got dinner plans? Stopyears in before orrunning! after dinner! Best Indian cuisine two Great way to start or end your evening. Serving the homemade Bringbest, your special someone in for a special treat!

Hops Indian cuisine in Wilmington, as voted Medals by encore readers 57 twoInternational years running! This year we were awarded 21 international medals in the largest competition in North America and one of Beer Ingredient Kits Mon-Fri 11 a.m. - 2:30 p.m. and 5-10 p.m. • Sat & Sun 11:30 a.m. -.3 p.m. and 5-10 p.m.

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the top 3 in the world. Look for our wines in the movie Greg Kinnear. 1620 South College Rd • (910) 794-4545“Writers”starring • www.tandooribites.net

52 encore encore | |october 52 october17-23, 17-23,2012| 2012 |www.encorepub.com www.encorepub.com

WILMINGTON SCHOOL OF BALLET Offering Zumba classes Mon. 9:15am, 5:30pm,

NOW! SEVEN BILLION PLUS The Art Gallery at the Cultural Arts Building at UNCW will be featuring an exhibit of many artists, including locals Dan Brawley and Geoff Calabrese, along with Eileen Doktorski, Jasper James, Richard and Judith Lang, and Nii Narku and Zhang Xiao. The focus is on the growth of world population, and urbanization and globalization, expressed through numerous photos, installations, ceramics, mixed-media and more! The show will be on exhibit through November 11th.

COMPAGNIE DE DANSE JEAN-RENE DELSOIN Dancers and drummers of Compagnie de Danse Jean-René Delsoin will depart from their home in Petionville, Haiti for an unprecedented month long tour of the U.S., which includes a premiere at the Kennedy Center’s Millennium Stage and a weeklong residency at UNCW (10/28-11/2). The residency at UNCW is part of the Office of Cultural Arts Art-

Weekly Events for Noni Bacca Winery:

ist in Residence Program, and features a week of workshops, performances and special events providing audiences of all ages an opportunity to directly engage with Delsoin and his extraordinary ensemble. It culminates with a performance at 8 p.m. on Fri., 11/2 in UNCW’s Kenan Auditorium. The performance features three recent works by Compagnie de Danse Jean-René Delsoin—works that, much like the company’s passionate and charismatic leader, capture the spirit and traditions of Haiti through vibrant colors, powerful yet graceful dances and earthy, rhythmic beats. Followed by a reception with the artists. Tickets: $20 (General Public); $8 (Student/ Youth). 910-962-3500. www.uncw.edu/arts.

6:30pm; Tues 5:45pm, 6:45pm; Wed., 915am, 5:45pm, 6:30pm; Th., 10:30am, 5:45pm; Fri, 9:15am; Sat., 10:30am. • Yoga, Mon., 6:30am, 8:30am, 3:30pm, for kids 5:30pm; Tues, same as Mon. but w/kids at 7:15pm; Wed., 6:30am, 8:30am; Thurs., 6:30am, 6:30pm; Fri., 8am, 330pm, 5:45 pm; Sat., 9:30am. All classes are $3 drop-ins. zfitnesswilmington.com. • Also offering ballet for various levels and pre-K classes daily. Call for complete schedule. 3834 Oleander Dr. www.wilmingtonschoolofballet.com 76’ERS SQUARE DANCE CLUB Modern Western Style Square Dance. Club meets Thurs. nights at 7pm at the Senior Center for a new workshop on square dancing. Info: 270-1639 CAROLINA SHAG CLUB DJs play favorite beach music and shag tunes every Sat, 8pm to close. $4/members; $6/guests. Carolina Shag Club, 103 N. Lake Park Blvd. Carolina Beach, NC 620-4025 SURFER TANGO Salsa on 2 NYC style, Thurs, 8pm, $5/person at Orton’s Pool Hall. Lesson at 7pm; all welcome and no partner needed. • Couple class, 5-wk series, one class a week, $35/couple for series or $10 drop in. Tuesday nights at 7:00-8:15pm, 10/2, the aerobics room at the Magnolia Rec Center..Guaranteed fun! Pre-register. www.surfertango.com CONTRA DANCE Tues. night dances, 5th Ave United Methodist Church on South 5th Ave at Nun, 7:30-9:30pm. Social dance for all levels; singles and couples, families, college and high school students and folks of all dancing abilities are invited to come. $4. (910) 538-9711. TANGO WILMINGTON Tango classes and social dancing, Fridays, Carolina Lounge of Ramada Inn. 5001 Market Street (between College and Kerr). 8-9:45pm. $5 lounge entrance includes beginners’ lesson, 7:30.

art POETRY OFF PAGE “Poetry off the Page,” a four-day arts integration residency with award-winning poet, performer and teaching artist Glenis Redmond, 10/17-20. Part of RTworks educational outreach initiative. Schedule: In-School Workshop, Virgo Preparatory Academy (10/17-19). Acclaimed poet and Kennedy Center Teaching Artist Glenis Redmond conducts poetry writing workshops with sixth graders at Virgo Preparatory (2012/13 ARTworks School Partner). Her workshops use clear and easy poetic structures and formats, empowering students to expand their imaginations and to cross creative boundaries. • Professional Development Workshop for Teachers (Grades 5 - 8), 10/17, 4-7pm, Virgo Preparatory Academy. The “Poetry Off the Page” professional development workshop prepares teachers to help students use brainstorming, imagery, and layering to write powerful and effective poems; and examines ways to involve students in memorizing and performing poems with appropriate voice projection, physical stance, and gesture. Registration required. • Performance & Community Arts Day, 10/20, 2-4pm, with arts programs for family/youth and performance at 4pm by Glenis Redmond. Featuring arts activities by Dreams teaching artists (2 to 4 p.m.) and a free public performance by Glenis Redmond and. All ages are invited to participate. http://uncw.edu/ arts/GlenisRedmond.html. SEVEN BILLION PLUS Seven Billion Plus will be on view in the Art Gallery at the Cultural Arts Building on the UNC Wilmington campus through Nov. 9. The exhibit features the work of Dan Brawley, Geoff Calabrese, Eileen Doktorski, Jasper James, Richard and Judith Lang, Nii Narku and Zhang Xiao. Even with a declining world population growth rate of just over one percent, world population is projected to surpass nine billion by 2050. Wilmington, a city of 106,476 as of the 2010 census, is currently experiencing a 10-year population growth rate of 40.4 percent. Seven Billion Plus is an invitational group exhibition, which will examine population growth, urbanization and globalization through photographs, ceramics, installation, mixed-media and sculpture. Feat. two local artists Geoff Calabrese, ceramicist and instructor at CFCC and Dan Brawley, interdisciplinary artist and director of the Cucalorus Film Festival. Also feat. artists from one of the largest and most rapidly growing countries in the world. Zhang Xiao is a Chinese photographer and 2010 Photography Talent, 2010 MIO Photo and 2011 Prix HSBC pour la Photographie award winner, and Jasper James is a Beijing-based, UK-born photographer who captures reflections of silhouettes overlooking an expansive metropolis. http://uncw.edu/map ARTISTS WANTED Call to artists Projekte Gallery & Lounge is now accepting submissions that depict FEAR, exploring our fears and the role fears play in our lives and in our society. Are you plagued by fear, do you embrace it to help keep safe, is it a source of entertainment for you, or maybe fear is used to manipulate certain situations? Artists are encouraged to submit 1-5 jpeg images of 2D in any medium for consideration. Deadline for submissions: 10/21, 5pm. Kraig Bienias, 910-763-1197. NKURUNZIZA: RWANDA SHARES UNCW Ann Flack Boseman Gallery presents Innocent Nkurunziza: Rwanda Shares, through 10/25, 2nd floor of the Fisher University Union.


23 N.Front st. www.wilmingtonnightclubs.com

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Fresh from the Farm

The Riverfront Riverfront Farmers’ Farmers’ The Market is is aa curbside curbside market market Market featuring local local farmers, farmers, featuring producers, artists artists && crafters. crafters. producers,

Saturday, Oct. Oct. 20 20thth -- 11 Day Day Only Only Saturday, The market will take place in The market will take place in the 00 block of S. Front St. to the 00 block of S. Front St. to accommodate the the accommodate

PPD Beach2Battleship Beach2Battleship PPD Triathlon Triathlon The market market will will return return to to its its The normal location on normal location on

Saturday, October October 27th 27th Saturday, Every Sat. Sat. through through Dec. Dec. 22 22 Every 8 a.m. 1 p.m. 8 a.m. - 1 p.m.

LIVE MUSIC MUSIC Sponsored Sponsored by by LIVE Tidal Creek Creek Co-op Co-op Tidal

OCTOBER 17 17 OCTOBER

RAFEL NAME

Through his choices of mixed media, Nkurunziza uses vibrant colors and an abstract impressionist style to explore “Mother Rwanda,” the country as both place and parent. His experience with blending colors and shading creates a sense of movement while capturing symbolic moments from what he observes on his journey as an artist. 910-962-7722 or ace@uncw.edu. Gallery hours are 10am-8pm Monday through Saturday, closed Sunday. www.uncw.edu/ba/campus_map.htm FOURTH FRIDAY GALLERY NIGHT Fourth Friday Gallery Nights 2012 are free monthly events where local galleries, studios and art spaces open their doors to the public in an after-hours celebration of art and culture. Self-guided tours feature exhibitions of various artistic genres, as well as opening receptions, artist discussions, demonstrations, live music, wine, food and other traditional and nontraditional art-related activities. Dates: 10/26. ww.wilmingtonfourthfridays.com. IRONING BOARDS Ironing Boards by Sandra Ihly, ACME Art Studios, 10/26, 6-9pm. 711 N 5th Ave. as part of Fourth Friday Gallery Walk, downtown Wilmington. www.acme-artstudios.com. CHECKER CAB GALLERY Checker Cab Gallery is moving to a new permanent venue at 20 Wrights Alley (located between Front Street and Water Street just off of Princess Street, in the Dennis Hopper Building.) The gallery will expand the space in addition to offering a unique environment for special events as well as a forthcoming wine-bar featuring local jazz and blues talent. Reception will be held as part of Fourth Friday Gallery Walk. (910) 338-3711. checkercabproductions.com.

Looking for some historical perspective on home? Or the whereabouts of it? Head down to Southport on the 18th for a symposium and living history of “Lower Cape Fear in the War of 1812.” The event for commemorate the second war for independence in the U.S. State and local scholars will be on hand to present informtaion through five seminars, covering topics like Fort Johnston in the War of 1812, NC Gunboats, Home Front, Uniforms and Clothing and more. Fee is $10 and seminars take place at the Southport Community Building.

COASTAL CAROLINA CLAY GUILD In celebration of its 6th year, the Coastal Carolina Clay Guild’s annual Holiday Show and Sale will open with a reception, 5-8pm, 11/9. The Show

538-6223 encore encore

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54 54 encore encore |october | october17-23, 17-23,2012| 2012 |www.encorepub.com www.encorepub.com

WILMINGTON ART ASSOCIATION The Wilmington Art Association (W.A.A.) proudly announces the opening of their new permanent exhibit gallery space at the historic USO building at 120 South Second Street in downtown Wilmington, showcasing WAA artists. The public is invited to come down and check out the new space and join in the celebration. The art will be changed out monthly so there will be new work

10/18: WAR OF 1812

ART OF THE MASK Join us at Artful Living Group for “The Art of the Mask.” With a variety of masks created by different artists using an assortment of materials, this exhibit showcases masks of many types. Vote for your favorites by placing $$ in the individual containers. The monies collected will go to benefit the Beach Bound Project sponsored by the Island Women organization to purchase beach accessible wheelchairs for public use. The exhibit will be on display throughout October with most available to purchase. Artful Living Group, 112 Cape Fear Blvd., Carolina Beach, NC 28428 910-458-7822 www.ArtfulLivingGroup.com

For more more information information call call For or visit visit or www.wilmingtonfarmers.com www.wilmingtonfarmers.com

and Sale will continue on Sat/Sun, 11/10-11, 10am-4pm, at the Hannah Block Community Arts Center, 120 South 2nd St. Free. Members from all over Southeastern NC, including wellknown potter Hiroshi Sueyoshi will be exhibiting and selling their work at the show. The raffle will be held on Sunday again this year. Each artist represented in the show will donate a piece for the raffle. Those attending may purchase chances to win the artwork of their choice. All proceeds from the raffle will benefit Empty Bowls and other community projects. www.coastalcarolinaclayguild.org

for view and purchase at the desk in the USO museum on an ongoing basis A FRAME OF MIND GALLERY A Frame of Mind Galley is honored to show the work of local artists, author and world traveler David D. Hume and Italian-American artist Marina Baldo. Baldo’s miniature landscapes through Dec. 2012. Stop by during gallery hours to view these works as well as works by other local artists. 1903 Princess St. Mon-Fri, 10am-6pm; Sat., 10am-3pm. (910) 251-8854 PROJEKTE Through 11/3: “SCAPES: land and sea” by Bonnie England and Danielle Couture, with opening reception 10/6, 6-9pm, and closing recep. on 10/26 as part of Fourth Friday Gallery Walk. Introduces new bodies of work that features the predominant subjects of each artist’s artwork;

landscapes, seascapes and figurescapes. • 10/18: Free wine tasting. • Weekly events: 2nd and 4th Wed, open mic; 1st and 3rd Wed, Projektion Theater Film Series, feat. subversive and foreign films and documentaries, 8-10pm; Thurs., “Just A Taste,” free weekly wIne tasting and live music; 1st & 3rd Fri., Kersten Capra 9:30pm; 4th Fri., Brazilian Bossa Nova with Rafael Name & guests, 9pm-12pm.. 523 South 3rd St. 910-5088982. www.theprojekte.com

museum

LOWER CAPE FEAR IN WAR OF 1812 Lower Cape Fear in the War of 1812 Commemoration, Symposium & Living History, 10/18-20, 9am-4pm. “Second War for Independence,” the War of 1812 was a pivotal moment in the history of the United States. On Sat. state and local scholars will present information about North Carolina’s lower Cape Fear region in the War of 1812. Relevant to academics, historians, archaeologists, re-enactors, genealogists and the general public w/five seminars: Fort Johnston in the War of 1812; North Carolina Gunboats; Home Front/Uniforms & Clothing; Captain Johnston Blakely; N.C. Soldiers in the War of 1812. All seminars will take place at the Southport Community Building. $10 and pre-reg is encouraged: http://nc1812.files.wordpress. com/2011/03/lower-cape-fear-in-the-war-of1812-registration-form-2.pdf. Living history demonstrations will take place throughout the day on the grounds of historic Fort Johnston. 10/18, 3pm: Commemoration/re-dedication of the 1812 marker at Fort Johnston with the Daughters of the War of 1812; 10/19, 11am: The dedication of a new highway marker at Deep Water Point in Southport (near the Bald Head Island Ferry terminal) and the Mystery Dinner Theater at the Community Building in Southport with the Friends of the Maritime Museum from 6-8pm.

BELLAMY MANSION One of NC’s most spectacular examples of antebellum architecture, built on the eve of the Civil War by free and enslaved black artisans, for John Dillard Bellamy (1817-1896) physician, planter and business leader; and his wife, Eliza McIlhenny Harriss (1821-1907) and their nine children. After the fall of Fort Fisher in 1865, Federal troops commandeered the house as their headquarters during the occupation of Wilmington. Now a museum, itfocuses on history and the design arts and offers tours, changing exhibitions and an informative look at historic preservation in action. 910-251-3700. www.bellamymansion. org. 503 Market St

CAPE FEAR MUSEUM EXHIBITS: Fragments of War , feat. scraps of fabric, torn paper, tattered flags, a uniform patch, which tell us about people’s Civil War experiences. Closes May 5, 2013. • Cape Fear Treasures: Campaigning through 1/13/2012: Feart. Rutherford B. Hayes’ 1876 presidential campaign button, 1884 Cleveland campaign ribbon, 1976 Jimmy Carter political button, editorial cartoon on toilet paper commenting on North Carolina’s U.S. Senator Jesse Helms’ tenure and more. Shopping Around Wilmington: In an era before mega-malls, online ordering and big-box stores, shopping in Wilmington centered around downtown. Museum will explore ways in which increasing suburbanization changed people’s retail experiences. EVENTS: Volunteer Open House held first Wed. of mo. Opportunities are available in museum store, working with the historic collection, and as an education docent. • New


Hanover County Resident’s Day: Residents admitted free first Sun. ea. mo. • Learning Center: stronomy Adventures, 10/20, 27, 1-4pm. Free w/dmission. Blast off on a journey through the universe and explore planets, stars, the moon and other celestial bodies. Create your own constellation, build and use a star map, and discover the reason for the seasons! • Mythical Monsters, 10/21, 1:30pm, 2:30pm, 3:30pm. Free w/admission. See the night sky and find out about the mythological creatures ancient peoples saw in the stars. • Museum Carts—Explore artifacts, conduct experiments, and play fun games at facilitated carts stationed throughout the Museum. Activities and locations vary, 10/7, 1-3pm. Free w/admission. • Fragments of War, 10/18, 7-8:30pm. $5 for members; $7 nonmem. Cape Fear Museum Curator Barbara Rowe and Historian Jan Davidson will discuss rarelyseen Civil War artifacts, including flags, uniforms, documents and the stories they can tell. Space is limited to 30 people, so register early. • Science Spooktacular, 10/20, 6-10pm. $3 for members, $6 for non-members. Unleash your inner mad scientist as you create concoctions that bubble, glow, or even smoke! Take a spooky tour to explore skeletons, weird weather, and more! Sponsored by Connect A Million Minds.• Hours: 9am-5pm through 9/10; Tues-Sat; 1-5pm, Sun. $7 for adults; $6 for students with valid ID and senior citizens; $6 special military rate with valid military ID; $4 for children 3-17; and free for children under 3. Museum members admitted free. 814 Market St. 910-798-4367. www.capefearmuseum.com. CAMERON ART MUSEUM EXHIBITS: “The Transformative Power of Friendship: 3 Collectors, 3 Friends, 3 Gifts—From Gatehouse to Winehouse: Inside the Artist’s Workplace: Minnie Evans, Elisabeth Chant and Claude Howell” • Exhibition tours every Wed. at 12:30pm Sun. at 2:30pm. Tours led by staff and docents. Museum adm. • 1st North Carolina Company E Civil War Living History, Sat., 10/20, 10am-2pm. Free and open to the public. Monthly activities on the museum’s grounds, come and watch drills, rifle firings and more. • Kids @ CAM, 10/20, noon-3pm. $3/child; $5/non-members. Adults free. Guest dancers from the Wilmington School of Ballet will perform “Sharing is Caring”, a dance inspired by our new exhibition, The Transformative Power of Friendship – 3 Collectors, 3 Friends, 3 Gifts.(Performances will take place at 12:15 and 1:30) • CLASSES: Life Drawing every Tues., 6-9pm. Group meets in Reception Hall. Participants provide own dry drawing materials and watercolors. $70/6-wks. • Museum School classes, www.cameronartmuseum.com/adult. php or call 910-395-5999 (ext. 1008 or 1024). • Tai Chi and Yoga! Beginners are always welcome. Corner of South 17th St. and Independence Blvd. Tues-Sun,11am-5pm; Thurs: 11am9pm. Museum members free, $8 non-members, $5 students with valid ID, $3 children age 2 -12. www.cameronartmuseum.com or 910-395-5999. LATIMER HOUSE Victorian Italiante style home built in 1852, the restored home features period furnishings, artwork and family portraits. Tours offered Mon-Fri, 10am-4pm, and Sat, 12-5pm. Walking tours are Wed and Sat. at 10am. 126 S. Third St. Adults $8, children $4. 762-0492. latimerhouse.org CAPE FEAR SERPENTARIUM Cool down in front of “Anaconda Splash” exhibit in the indoor tropical jungle. See, photograph and even touch rare animals assembled from all over the planet in beautiful simulations of their natural environments. Meet colorful jungle birds,

crocodiles, king cobras, black mambas and many more. Open from 11am-5pm, Sat. from 11am6pm. 20 Orange Street at Front Street on historic downtown riverwalk. (910) 762-1669 or www.capefearserpentarium.com. BURGWIN WRIGHT HOUSE 18th century Burgwin-Wright House Museum in the heart of Wilmington’s Historic District, is the oldest museum house in NC, restored with 18th and 19th century decor and gardens. Colonial life is experienced through historical interpretations in kitchen-building and courtyard. 3rd and Market St. Tues-Sat, 10am-4pm. Last tour, 3pm. Admission rqd. (910) 762-0570. www.burgwinwrighthouse.com.

10/19-21: SURF FISHING

WILMINGTON WATER TOURS 2 hour Eco/History Cruise Tues-Sat, 10am. Eagle’s Island Cruises 50 minute narrated cruises on the hour at 12, 1, 2, 3 & 4 pm daily Mon- Sat. • See the beauty of the Cape Fear River, Sunset Cruise on Tues & Wed w/light narration. Departs 6pm for 2 hours. • Acoustic Spotlight on our Sunset Cruise is on Thurs-Sat., 6-8pm, w/different local musician. • Starlight Cruise on ThursSat, 8:30pm for an hour. See the unique lights of Wilmington after dark from the river. Wilmington Water Tours, 212 S. Water St. RSVP: 910-3383134 and WWW.Wilmingtonwatertours.com

WRIGHTSVILLE BEACH PARKS AND REC Tennis lessons for youth and adults, Cape Fear cotillion, youth cooking classes, youth hip-hop dance, performance club, line dancing, bridge workshops, hatha yoga, power yoga, pilates, boot camp, tone strengthen & stretch, low impact aerobic classes, zumba, and extreme cross training! 910-256-7925. www.townofthis wrightsvillebeach.com.

With over 300 anglers heading to Pleasure Island weekend, it means only one thing: The annual surf fishing challenge will get under way! Categories abound in ladies, junior and senior angler prizes, whether catching Red Drum, flounder, speckled trout, sea mullet and more! In fact there is 35 ways for folks to win over $12,000 from Friday night to noon Sunday. Awards follow on Sunday with registration on Friday from 2 p.m. to 10 p.m. $65 entry fee; www.fishermanpost.com

sports/recreation WRIGHTSVILLE BEACH SCENIC TOURS Wrightsville Beach Scenic Tours and The Cape Fear Naturalist, Joseph Abbate, will be conducting daily and weekly birding tours in New Hanover, Brunswick, and Pender Counties in search of migrating and resident avian species. Come join the renowned birder, as he guides you on an open water exploration of the Intracoastal Waterway, inlet passages, and sandy barrier islands of Wrightsville Beach, Masonboro Island, and Hutaff Island. Come relax on the catamaran style boat while observing the diverse flora and fauna that coastal North Carolina has to offer. Topics will include a strong emphasis on shorebird identification and ecology, as well as coastal salt marsh function. The bird species of Interest include: Caspian Tern, Red-breasted Merganser, Bufflehead, Lesser Yellowlegs, Common Loon, and Black-bellied Plover.Hutaff Island Exploration, 10/27, 10am-3pm, $75; Photography Sunset Cruise. 10/19, 4-6pm, $35. www.capefearnaturalist.com GARY SHELL CROSS-CITY TRAIL 10/27: 2nd Annual Gary Shell Cross-City Trail Run, Ride & Roll event. Registration, 9am; event at 10am. Halyburton Park, 4099 S. 17th St. Participants will meet at Halyburton Park and take the Gary Shell Cross-City Trail to Empie Park and back to Halyburton Park. Families, friends and neighbors are invited to walk, run, bike, roller skate or rollerblade along the trail. The total distance is 8 miles. Activities include a Cross-City Trail scavenger hunt, trick-or-healthy treating, a trick-your-bike competition, bicycle safety, live music, health screening, vendors and other activities. There will be a drawing for prizes and prizes will be given to winners of the scavenger hunt and the trick-your-bike competition. Free, with free t-shirts given to those who pre-register (while supplies last).

EXTREME CROSS TRAINING Need to take your fitness experience to the next level? Extreme Cross Training, 8-wk program, 9-10am, Mon/Wed/Fri, through 11/2. Pre-registration is required. (910) 256-7925 or www.townofwrightsvillebeach.com. PLEASURE ISLAND SURF FISHING 10/19-21: Attracting over 300 anglers annually, the Pleasure Island Surf Fishing Challenge. Walking and four-wheel drive access to the beaches. Surf fishing, fine eating over a 36-hour marathon in categories like speckled trout, sea mullet, pompano, black drum, bluefish, flounder, an optional Red Drum Calcutta; Lady, Junior, and Senior Angler prizes. There are over 35 different ways for anglers to get in on the over $12,000 in prize money awarded annually. Registration is from 2-10pm, on Friday, October 19, with fishing hours running from midnight Friday to noon on Sunday; awards shortly after close of competition. Three 24-hour weigh stations will be manned for the duration of the competition hours—one centrally located at Island Tackle & Hardware, one on the Freeman Park four-wheel drive access at the north end of the Island, and one on the drive-on beach at the Fort Fisher State Recreation area. Public parking area between the Sea Witch Café and the Carolina Beach Yacht Basin, on the 19th. Fee for the Pleasure Island Surf Fishing Challenge $65. www.fishermanspost.com, emailing surf@fishermanspost.com. Max Gaspeny (910) 409-8379. BRIDGE LESSONS Through 11/8: The Wrightsville Beach Parks & Rec’S Bridge Lessons with Marie Killoran. 5 weeks, Thurs., 10am-noon. Pre-registration required. All sessions will consist of discussion and practice hands. Register Mon-Fri, 8am-5pm. (910) 256-7925

ca na pe

Step into health and wellness for the fall!

Schedule a therapeutic massage with reflexology op-up restaurant session.

Sunday, Oct. 21st Touch Soothing

Therapeutic Massage Brunch: 11 a.m. - 5 p.m. only

Tina Lee, LMBT#3337 Biscuits & Butter Mon., Thurs 9:30-6:30 -Homemade Southern biscuits, goat Tues., Wed., Fri.butter 9:30-3:00 Sat. Every other 9:00-100

First (Choose one)

4018 Oleander Suite 3 • 910-233-5615 Short Ribs &Drive Bread -Cheddar biscuits, braised short ribs and www.tinaleemassage.com red-eye gravy.

Champagne & Prosciutto -A bite of champagne sphere, prosciutto, cantalope and sage

Second (Choose one)

house ad

Quail Eggs & Toast

-Quail eggs, homemade French toast, sweet potato hash, eggs and chorizo or house-cured bacon

Chicken & Hemp -Hemp-seed-encrusted chicken cutlets, aged cheddar, homemade mustard, eggs, yucca purée and house-cured bacon.

Eggs & Bread -Farm-fresh eggs baked in homemade herbciabatta bowl, house-cured bacon or chorizo, fresh fruit.

Third

Sweets & Treats -Homemade danishes, fruit pate, pinon coffee, lemon balm or cirtus mint tea

film FASHION IN FILM NC Black Film Festival will celebrate its 12th year with the inaugural Fashion in Film designer showcase in March 2013. Produced by SEWFLI Designs, the fashion show will be inspired by classic African American films: Sparkle, Dream Girls, Anna Lucasta, Cabin in the Sky, Carwash, Carmen Jones, Cleopatra Jones, Lady Sings the Blues, Uptown Saturday Night, Josephine Baker, Mo Betta Blues, For Love of Ivy, Coffy, and Foxy Brown. Fashion designers will create a mini-collection of two to three garments by choosing one of the selected films above. Film selections must

Guest chefs: Ryan Meggison (The Kitchen) and Jayson Williams (Delovely Desserts).

$22.50 prix fixe * No a la carte RSVP: 910-274-2012, ilmpop@yahoo.com. Twitter/Facebook: CanapeILM. Limited to 60.

3314 Wrightsville Ave.

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be made by October 31, 2012 and all garments must be complete and ready to show by January 31, 2013. The entry fee is $25. For more information on submissions and designs, contact Ashika Payne of SEWFLI Designs 910-409-4172 or by email at Sewfli@gmail.com. CARRBORO FILM FESTIVAL Professional, amateur and K-12 filmmakers are invited to submit short films for the seventh annual Carrboro Film Festival (November 18, 2012; Carrboro Century Center), one of the largest festivals of its kind in the Southeast. Submissions are open to any filmmaker who has “breathed the good air of North Carolina” sometime in their lives. Works must be under 20 minutes run time, including titles and end credits. Films received by August 20 carry a $10 entry fee; after that, the fee goes to $15 per film. Online and DVD submissions close 9/30. Details: www.carrborofilmfestival.com.filmfest@ carrboro.com. THEATRE NOW MOVIE NIGHTS Movie Night, Sundays at 6:30pm (check website for weekly listings): Big screen movies, w/ kitchen open for some tasty treats, feat. fresh food options. Home to the non-profit organization, Theatre Network of Wilmington, Inc., whose mission includes theatre arts education to school aged children. Theatre NOW: 10th and Dock streets. Tickets: www.theatrewilmington. com.

kids stuff COMMUNITY TODDLER/PRE-SCHOOL FEST 10/19, 5:30-7:30pm: Community Toddler/PreSchool Fall Festival at The Learning Tree, 4306 Lake Avenue (next to Roland-Grise). Ages: In-

RESTAURANT WEEK MENU 3-COURSE LUNCH OR DINNER:ppllee wwitithh ccoouu $19 per person $$3s3s5h5h//aarreedd ddeesssseerrtt Includes a glass of selected wine or choice from 20 draft beers OURSE ONE—CHOOSE ONE: C Soup or Salad

COURSE TWO—CHOOSE ONE:

NY Pastrami Sandwich – 10oz pastrami on rye w/ coleslaw and spicy mustard Fulton Street – Fresh shrimp or tuna stuffed into a fresh avocado or tomato, served with tomato wedges NY Reuben Sandwich – Corned Beef piled high with sauerkraut and cheese! Greek Wrap - Mixed greens, feta cheese, Greek olives, Greek peppers,tomato and potato salad wrapped with our house dressing Fig Gorgonzola Pizza – Figs, Gorgonzola, smoked Gouda, fresh tomato, sun dried tomatoes and sliced red onions Shrimp Roll – Large fresh shrimp mixed with our own special dressing, a mixture of chopped onion, bell pepper, cucumber, mayo, worchestershire on our fresh baked toasted roll

COURSE THREE: Chocolate S’mores Pizza

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fant to Pre-School. Games, food, pie-throwing, pirate bouncy house, face-painting, pumpkin painting, raffles and more! $5 wristbands for fames and $5 wristbands for unlimited bouncing fun. Parents and Kids under 18mons FreePrizes for every Child. Dora and Diego will come, too, 6-6:30pm. 910-777-4341 KIDS’ COOKING CLASS Fun hands-on youth cooking class held in the Fran Russ Recreation Center, Wrightsville beach, 4:30-6pm, on Mondays with the following upcoming sessions: Through 10/29 (no class on Oct. 22), and 11/5-12/17 (no class on Nov. 12). Participants will have fun learning a new recipe each week! Pre-registration is required. 2567925 or www.townofwrightsvillebeach.com. HAPPY LITTLE SINGERS New class added! Sing, dance and play instruments with your little one. Early Childhood Music and Movement for ages 6 months to 5 years. Tuesday, 9:30 a.m. and NOW 4:00 p.m. classes available too Downtown at Community Arts Center. Drop ins welcome. $10 per family. 910-7778889 www.happylittlesingers.com

lectures/readings CAMERON SCHOOL OF BUSINESS 10/23, 7am: UNCW Cameron School of Business Alumni are invited to attend a networking breakfast and presentation. “The Power of Ideas and Entrepreneurship” will be given by keynote speakers Corey Heim ’06 & Dr. Roy Archambault, cofounders of DryCASE. Madeline Suite, UNCW Campus; $5 ticket includes networking session, breakfast and presentation. Register online prior to 10/18: https://tswww.uncw.edu/ events/signup.aspx?event=272 LISA BURRIS 10/25, 5:30pm: Watson College of Education alumni are invited to the UNCW Education Building, rm 162, for a complementary light supper and evening with friends. Guest speaker Lisa Burriss, Lead School Counselor and Social Workeror New Hanover County Schools, will be speaking about dropout prevention initiatives. Free. RSVP by 10/22, Kim Gargiulo at alumni@ uncw.edu. http://uncw.edu/alumni/watson.html

classes/workshops CFCC MINI SESSION Cape Fear Community College is beefing up course offerings for the fall semester by holding a special mini-session to help students get more classes needed for graduation—includes dozens

of day and evening courses at both the downtown Wilmington Campus and at the North Campus in Castle Hayne. Additional online courses are also available.According to Dr. Amanda Lee, CFCC vice president of instruction, these additional classes were added to help students who were not able to register by the fall semester deadline. Classes in the mini-session offer the full amount of college credit, but are offered over an accelerated period of time. Classes start on Oct. 17. The last day to register is Oct. 16. CFCC Admissions Office: (910) 362-7557 or admissions@cfcc.edu.

COASTAL ATHLETICS Sat., 10/20, Pitching/Catching Clinic, Ages 9-12, 9am-noon. Price: $50. Year-round school break • 10/15-19: Baseball Camp, ages 7-12 , 9am-noon.$50; extend stay extra $20. pppbcarroll@aol.com

NATURE PROGRAM Halyburton Park, 4099 S. 17th |341.0075www. halyburtonpark.com. Pre-reg rqd. Schedule Scampering Squirrels (ages 2-5), $3, 10/2223, 10-11am. Come learn all about squirrels and what they do when the seasons change by taking a hike and playing some games.

WILD BIRD AND GARDEN 10/27, 11:30am: Join Wild Bird & Garden to see live birds of prey from OWLS, Outer Banks Wildlife Shelter. This free program will allow you to learn about owls and hawks. Bring your friends and cameras! • Join Wilmington locally owned businesses Wild Bird & Garden and Mahanaim Adventures on a birding kayak winter tour to Florida’s bird watching paradise, 2/5-8, 2013. Visit some of Florida’s diverse habitats, its location on migration routes, and its wild lands. Tour destinations on the Great Florida Birding Trail as well as Florida State Parks. Wild Bird & Garden, 3501 Oleander Drive: 910 343 6001 or www.wildbirdgardeninc.com

clubs/notices

HUMANISTS AND FREETHINKERS 10/18, 6-8:30pm, The Bridge Center, 127-40 S. College Rd. RSVP www.meetup.com/humanism-182. Potluck dinner to follow, please bring a dish to share. Welcoming Katherine Stewart to talk about her experience and journey writing her book, “The Good News Club, The Christian Right’s Stealth Assault on America’s Children.” In January, 2009, Katherine Stewart learned that the Santa Barbara public elementary school her children attended had added a Bible study class called the “Good News Club” to its after school program.Stewart’s curiosity turned to concern as she discovered that the unstated purpose of the

716 N. Lake Park Blvd. Carolina Beach (Next to Subway) 910-458-4224 • Designer Clothing • Shoes & Purses • Brand New Accessories • Monogrammed Items • Brand New Gifts & More

inar y Not your ord store consignment

www.IslandChicCB.com


s , o r e d t . -

Global Focus

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HAITI

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university of north carolina wilmington

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Compagnie de Danse Jean-Réne Delsoin International Artists in Residence from Haiti on tour as part of Center Stage SM

UPCOMING EVENTS

. g t g n ” t r s l s e

Film Festival: Haiti on Film Friday, Oct. 26 (5 & 8pm) | UNCW King Hall Auditorium Community Drum Circle & Demonstration with Compagnie de Danse Jean-Réne Delsoin Wednesday, Oct. 31 (Noon) | UNCW Amphitheater Compagnie de Danse Jean-Réne Delsoin International Artists in Residence from Haiti Friday, Nov. 2 (8pm) | UNCW Kenan Auditorium

Finale performance followed by a reception with the artists

uncw.edu/arts

UNCW is an EEO/AA Institution. Accommodations for disabilities may be requested by contacting the box office at least 3 days prior to the event.

encore | october 17-23, 2012 | www.encorepub.com 57


Dentistry That’s Something to Smile About!

! n w o t n Best i

Comprehensive Dentistry in a relaxed, comfortable environment

Special Offers $65 New Patient Dental Exam New patients save $151 on a comprehnsive exam by the doctor, including needed x-rays.

$45 New Patient Dental Cleaning New patients save $46 on a professional dental cleaning. A new patient dental exam is required. Periodontal therapy requires an additional fee.

Open for Lunch and Dinner steaks

wings

ribs

58 encore | october 17-23, 2012 | www.encorepub.com

salads

Care for the whole family! Mary Lynn King, DDS 3317 Masonboro Loop Road, Suite 140

$65 New Children’s Cleaning & Exam In the Cotton Exchange Downtown Wilmington

762-4354 FREE PARKING www.paddyshollow.com

New patients age 12 and under save $184 on a professional dental cleaning, fluoride treatment, needed x-rays, and a doctor’s exam.

Join us for a lifetime of great smiles. Call

910.791.7911

www.CrownMySmile.com


in PERSON

SATURDAY, OCT. 27 • 5 p.m.

A Sweeter View 6213 - C Market Street

Enter to win a free trip to the 30th AVN Awards in Las Vegas January 19, 2013!

Open Monday-Thursday 8am - Midnight • Friday and Saturday 8am - 4am • Sunday 10am - Midnight • 6213 Market Street • 910-399-7369

encore | october 17-23, 2012 | www.encorepub.com 59


club, which is sponsored by the Child Evangelism Fellowship, is to convey the impression to its young members and their schoolmates that their school favors a particular form of the Christian religion. RSVP www.meetup.com/humanism-182 CAPE FEAR PARROT CLUB Cape Fear Parrot Club meets monthly. Schedule: 10/20, Treat exchange • 11/11: TBD • 12/TBD, Christmas party. Ces Erdman: 910-386-6507 or cesnc1978@hotmail.com COASTAL CAROLINA CURLING CLUB 10/20, 5pm: The Coastal Carolina Curling Club, a North Carolina non-profitcorporation, is hosting a Learn-To-Curl event, open to the public, at Wilmington Ice House on Saturday October 20 at starting at 5pm. Participants will learn more about the winter Olympic sport of curling, game strategy, stone delivery, sweeping, etiquette, and some of the time honored traditions of this grand old game. Cost is $20 per person. Pre-registration is required via email to info@coastalcurling.com or 910-520-2670. CAPE FEAR AREA DOULAS 10/22, 4pm: Gather with Cape Fear Area Doulas for the monthly Wilmington and Cape Fear area Birth Circle on October 20th. This is a wonderful opportunity to share your birth story/stories in a safe and supportive environment, learn more about birth, or simply listen to others. Mothers of all ages, new moms, and moms-to-be and their partners are welcome to attend. Come be inspired and strengthened by the women in our community. The birth circle is free and open to all. Childcare is not provided, but nursing babies are welcome to come. Tmuffin, 2133 Wrightsville Ave. contact@capefearareadoulas.org .

SEXUAL ABUSE SUPPORT GROUP A support group to share and receive help from other survivors of childhood sexual abuse. Learn how to reconstruct a healthy life while working through trauma. Mon., through 10/22, 5:306:30pm, free! The Rape Crisis Center of Coastal Horizons Center, 615 Shipyard Blvd. RSVP Lauren Slusher: 910-392-7460 WWII GROUP “Rosie the Riveter: American Women in World War II” Presentation during WWII Remembered Group Meeting. Nationally known, award-winning World War II author and historian Wilbur Jones will deliver a Power Point presentation on “Rosie

10/18: STEER AND BEER The final dinner of Front Street Brewery’s trifecta beer series takes place Thursday! First came Pork and Beer, than Bird and Beer and now Steer and Beer, wherein Chef Chuck Archer and Brewmaster Kevin Kozak will serve a five-course meal featuring beef. Each course will be paired with FSB’s fine selection of brews. Tickets are only $35 and can be ordered by phone by calling 910-251-1935. Or head to the brewery downtown at 9 North Front Street to buy tickets! the Riveter: American Women in World War II,” to Southeastern North Carolina’s WWII Remembered Group on 10/26, 9:30am, at the New Hanover County Senior Resource Center, 2222 South College Road. John Nelson: fjn39@ec.rr.

com or 399-7020. LUNG CANCER SUPPPORT GROUP 10/30, 6pm at the Northeast Library Oak Room. April Morey: aprilmorey@gmail.com FLU CLINIC OPEN The New Hanover County Health Department (NHCHD) has started its annual flu clinic. We are now taking appointments, so please call 910798-6646 to schedule. Appointments are available from 8:15 a.m. until 5:30 p.m., Monday thru Thursday, and from 8:15am-4:15pm on Fridays. Patients can also walk in during flu clinic hours. Efficient service for each customer in 20 minutes or less; also provide the vaccine to persons with mobility issues in the comfort of their automobile.

culinary STEER AND BEER 10/18, 6:30pm: Front St. Brewery concludes their beer-pairing series (already feat. Pork and Beer and Bird and Beer) with a 5-course meal featuring beef, hosted by Brewmaster Kevin Kozak and Executive Chef Chuck Archer. Tickets are $35 each and are available at the Front Street Brewery bar. You can order tickets over the phone by calling 910-251-1935. For more information about the menu: Front Street Brewery, 9 N. Front St. OKTOBERFEST 11th Annual Oktoberfest of Wilmington will benefit the Pretty in Pink Foundation. 10/19-20, New Hanover County Government Center (the Break Time and Ten Pin Alley parking lot). Gates will open for the festivities Friday at 5pm and Saturday at 10am. Admission: $5 at the gate to benefit Pretty in Pink Foundation. Tent event; rain or shine w/authentic German food and beer, a kids’ zone including huge inflatables and face paintings, wiener dog races, and entertainment by the always enthusiastic full sized authentic Harbour Towne Fest Band. 2012 Wiener Dog Races will begin at 4pm on 10/20. No fee to enter your dachshund in the races; you will however have to register your pup by 3pm to be eligible to compete in the races at 4pm. The event goes on rain or shine! LIGHTHOUSE BEER AND WINE FESTIVAL See page 36.

From the moment you walk in, you’ll know you’re in for an authentic, exotic culinary adventure!

Try us for Restaurant Week 3-COURSE DINNER: $45 per couple

Includes bottle of house red/white wine, basket of naan, one appetizer to share, two entrées and one dessert to share. encore

BE2S0T12OF

TON WILMING

Voted Best Indian cuisine two years running! Serving the best, homemade Indian cuisine in Wilmington, as voted by encore readers two years running!

Mon-Fri 11 a.m. - 2:30 p.m. and 5-10 p.m. • Sat & Sun 11:30 a.m. -.3 p.m. and 5-10 p.m.

1620 South College Rd • (910) 794-4545 • www.tandooribites.net |october 2012| 60 encore | october3-9, 17-23, 2012www.encorepub.com | www.encorepub.com

CANAPE POP-UP BRUNCH 10/21, 11am-5pm only at San Juan Cafe, serving short rib sliders, prosciutto-champgane bites, hemp-crusted chicken, homemade French toast, homemade danishes and fruit pates, pinon coffee, lemon balm tea and so much more! $22.50 prix-

Capeside

Upholstery 6245 Market St. 6245 Market St.

(behind Pleasant Pleasant Motor Motor Co.) Co.) (behind

395-5859 395-5859 30 Years Experience

30 Years Experience Randy Johnson, Johnson, Owner Owner Randy

s, in RReeppaairirs, ingg in ialilizzin c e n p o S ti ia c ra e n toratio Sp lete RReessto mpplete mizatitioonn CCoom to s u m C to /or us iza aanndd/or C

Motorcycles •• Motorcycles • Cars • Cars • Boats • Boats • Furniture • Furniture

fixe; reservations, 910-274-2012. 3314 Wrightsville Avenue

CHEF’S TABLE Award-Winning Executive Chef Mark Lawson meet you at the tablefor a fabulous formal affair— a meal as entertaining as it is delicious. Join us at the Chef’s Tasting Table featuring a special presentation by the chef and decadent fare prepared just for your party. Reservations required; limit 10 people: (910) 256-2251. $85/person. East Oceanfront Dining (located inside Blockade Runner Beach Resort). 275 Waynick Blvd.

TASTE OF WRIGHSTVILLE 10/27-28: Inaugural Taste of Wrightsville Beach, a collaborative effort between the Wrightsville Beach Foundation, the Wrightsville Beach Merchants Association and the Wrightsville Beach Chamber of Commerce. Proceeds from ticket sales will benefit a joint venture to beautify Wrightsville Beach. 10/27, 4-7pm: Savor awardwinning culinary fare prepared by Wrightsville’s favorite restaurants:South Beach Grill, Tower 7, King Neptune, Vito’s Pizzeria, 22 North, Rita’s Italian Ice, Holiday Inn Resort, Shell Island Resort, East at the Blockade Runner Beach Resort, Banks Channel Pub & Grille, Bluewater Grill, Mellow Mushroom, Surfberry, Bridge Tender, Fish House and Dockside. Best in Show award will be decided by local celebrity judges A People’s Choice Award will be named by popular vote. The Harbor Island Garden Club will be selling its cookbook and the Wrightsville Beach Foundation will sell Wrightsville Beach Farmers’ Market T-shirts. Hali Esinhart will entertain. Samples available; 500 event tickets sold: $40 per person, and VIP passes, $75—comes with the choice of a half-peck of steamed oysters or a Low Country seafood boil. Heart of downtown WB. • 10/28: Tribute to Masonboro Island during the 3rd annual FOR Masonboro benefit at the Blockade Runner Beach Resort. Friends of the Reserve (FOR) gather from 4-8pm for fellowship and fundraising to preserve the pristine Masonboro Island habitat — a destination shared by two-and-four legged friends. Abundant seafood prepped by the award-winning BRBR culinary team will be served. Brazilian guitarist, Rafael, Daniel Prrish and the Dylan Holton Band entertain. Kids events include a touch tank compliments of the North Carolina Aquarium at Fort Fisher, T-shirt painting with local artist and Wrightsville Beach School marine science instructor Cissie Brooks and a Halloween costume contest, 4-6pm. Proceeds from ticket sales, $25 per person, auction bids and raffle chances are donated to the North Carolina Coastal Reserve, the island’s steward, for education, conservation and research. Lisa Weeks 910-262-5998.

FOOD BANK OF CENTRAL/EASTERN NC 10/30: Support the mission of the Food Bank of Central and Eastern NC at Iron Skillet. 5 local Chefs battle for your tax-deductible donations to prove which chef is worth to win the “Iron Skillet.” You’ll taste culinary concoctions from the likes of: Keith Rhodes of Catch, Kirstin Mitchell of Cameo 1900, James Doss of Hall’s Rx and more! Every dollar donated to the Food Bank helps them to provide 5 meals to help feed our neighbors in need. jrose@foodbankcenc.org

CULINARY ADVENTURES TOUR Eat your way through Wilmington’s food history and delights! Culinary Adventures Tour with food writer/chef Liz Biro; under a mile, wear comfortable shoes. Top Chef Farmers Market Tour and Cooking Class, Heart of Downtown, Drinks Downtown, Downtown Brunch Stroll, Foodie Shopping Tour, Custom and Special Group Tours and more! $25 and up! www.lizbiro.com. 910-545-8055 CF LITERACY


Cape Fear Literacy Council (CFLC) launches its annual Readers Roast coffee blitz, which will run the month of October. Readers Roast is CFLC’s exclusive blend, private label coffee, which was successfully introduced last year.100% Arabica coffee available in ground and whole bean, medium, dark, decaf and Organic Fair Trade, as well as French Vanilla and Hazelnut flavored coffee. CFLC will accept Readers Roast orders through 10/31. Orders will arrive on 11/15-16, in time for the start of the holiday season. • Through the month of October, treat yourself to a Wed. dinner at one of these fine restaurants and you can help CFLC just for dining out. Let your waitstaff know that CFLC is where you would like 10% of your bill to be donated, note it at the bottom of your tab, and it’s just that easy. Here’s when and where: October 17, Boca Bay (2025 Eastwood); and October 24, Osteria Ciocchetti (The Forum).(910) 251-0911 or e-mail tosullivan@ cfliteracy.org. www.cfliteracy.org.

TRUCK-A-ROO Truck-a-Roo: Sat., 11/3, 4-8pm., Riverfront Park. Local food trucks at the Inaugural TRUCKa-ROO cook off! With the purchase of a Ballot Card for $10, you will have the opportunity to sample a savory selection from each of the trucks and cast your vote for the ‘Best in Show.’ Admission to the event will be free of charge. Regional craft brews and wine will be available for purchase, and a great lineup of local bands will provide entertainment throughout the evening. www.truck-a-roo.com

TASTING HISTORY TOURS Tasting History Tours of Pleasure Island; guided walking tours. $25 at www.tastinghistorytours. com. Afternoon of delicious food and education. 910-622-6046.

SUNDAY GOSPEL JAZZ BRUNCH Sunday Jazz Gospel Brunch, Sun, 10am-2pm: Local jazz and gospel musicians, Marc Siegel and Friends entertain while families and friends enjoy a traditional Southern brunch buffet. TheatreNOW, 10th and Dock Streets. Tickets: www.theatrewilmington.com.

WEEKLY FARMERS’ MARKETS Riverfront Farmer’s Market Saturdays, Downtown Wilmington (Through Dec.; www.wilmingtonfarmers.com); Poplar Grove Plantation Farmer’s Market Wednesdays, 10200 US 17 N., Wilmington (Through 11/22; www.poplargrove.com). Feat. over three dozen food, arts and crafts vendors. Music feat. every week with Cindy Rhodes on hammered dulcimer. Cooking classes: 10/31 and 11/7. • Leland Farmers’ Market, w/addition of handmade local crafts to the lineup of fresh vegetables and locally-produced farm products. Held in conjunction with the Leland Friends of the Library Book Sale.

ARIES (21 Mar. – 20 April) When Spanish conquistador Francisco Pizarro laid waste to Peru in 1532, his soldiers found green stones on the land. Were they emeralds? A priest who was traveling with them gave them bad advice. He said that the way to determine whether they were merely colored glass or else precious gems was to test their hardness by pounding them with hammers. In this manner, many actual emeralds were shattered into fragments. Learn from this mistake, Aries. Make sure you recognize treasures for what they are. And don’t force them to submit to unwise tests that misconstrue their true nature. TAURUS (21 April – 20 May) Someone at Reddit.com posted a question to the community: Could anyone help him recreate the aroma of the Pirates of the Caribbean ride at Disneyland? He said he loved that smell. It was a blend of damp earth, rotting wood and gunpowder. It had musty overtones, a hint of chlorine and a tantalizing freshness. If only he could get that fragrance to permeate his house, he testified, he’d always be able to work at peak efficiency. You might want to follow his lead, Taurus. It’s a good time to identify and gather all the ingredients you would need to make sure your environment inspires you to the max. GEMINI (21 May – 20 June) If you asked me to be your personal advisor, I would prescribe supplements and herbs to build up your immune system. I’d insist that you eat nothing but healthy food and get at least eight hours of sleep every night. I’d suggest that you meditate daily on images that symbolize your most inspiring desires. For fun, I might even advise you to do a ritual in which you create a big circle around yourself using violet yarn and then do a series of playful acts to pump up your freedom, like dancing as wildly as you know how and chanting “love is my creator.” Finally, Gemini, if you sought my counsel, I’d urge you to use your exuberant imagination in concert with your disciplined intellect as you design a long-term plan to charge up your well-being. “Only those who attempt the absurd will achieve the impossible.”

tors syndiCate

CANCER (21 June – 21 July) “Dear Free Will Astrologer: I found your website by accident today and was drawn in fast and hard. No matter what I did I could not escape and get back to my work. Your messages were too interesting for my own good. You gave me too many answers to questions I’ve had for too many years. I felt like I was being cured of problems I didn’t even know I had. Many hours went by until, finally, I was able to pull myself out of the vortex. How did this happen?—Freaked

The IMAX film format (21 Across)

Out.” Dear Freaked: I was born under the sign of Cancer the Crab, and it so happens that the people of my tribe are currently emanating an intriguing and inscrutable aura. We’re at the peak of our ability to attract and seduce. Many of us are using our power benevolently, but our mysterious mojo could still be a bit unsettling. LEO (22 July – 22 Aug.) The past is headed your way bearing gifts, Leo. I recommend that you make yourself available for its blessings, which may be delivered to you in unexpected ways. For example: The spirit of a dead loved one could impart an enigmatic but useful tip in the middle of the night. An abandoned dream you assumed was gone forever might return from limbo to grant you a wish. A favor you did for someone long ago could finally be repaid. Are you ready to let history reward you in its own unique style? VIRGO (23 Aug. – 22 Sept.) Just for you, it is Shark Week. During this dicey holiday, you should be wary of all sharks, especially the kind that look like human beings. Don’t get in their way, and don’t underestimate them. On the other hand, I’m not opposed to you getting to know some sharks better. They could teach you some valuable lessons on how to get what you want—not that you would ever be as cold-blooded and predatory as they are, of course. But it might be energizing to your ambitions if you add just a bit of shark-like thinking to your repertoire. LIBRA (23 Sept. – 23 Oct.) Visualize yourself heading out on a high adventure with interesting people, but all the while being distracted by the memory of a trivial insult you experienced earlier that day. Picture yourself getting intimate with a lover who inspires you to lose your self-consciousness— up until the point when you decide to interrupt your fun by answering a phone call from some random person. Imagine toning yourself down and holding yourself back because of misplaced politeness or unnecessary guilt or delusional fear—even though you’re feeling a rushing instinct to surge and soar and overflow. Finally, Libra, understand that in getting you to envision these parodies of your current inclinations, I’m hoping to shock you into making sure that nothing like them happens. SCORPIO (23 Oct. – 21 Nov.) Sometime soon you may dream of being naked at a public event like a class at school or a committee meeting. I think this would be an excellent omen, so I hope it comes to pass. It would signify that you’re ready to shed the disguises that have been making it problematical for you to reinvent yourself. Who is the New You? Stripping down to the bare essentials in your dreams will

help you see raw truths about your waking life. SAGITTARIUS (22 Nov. – 21 Dec.) As you cross the great water in search of the unknown treasure, navigate by the light of the clouds. That’s your dreamy oracle, Sagittarius. What does it mean? Well, the work you do to figure it out is essential to activating its potential, so I don’t want to give away too much. But, here are three further hints to inspire you on your quest. 1. Be willing to go a long way to find a secret you don’t even know you’re looking for. 2. Consider the possibility of cultivating faith in a goal that you don’t quite yet grasp in its entirety. 3. Rely on shadows and reflections to give you accurate information you can’t get directly from the thing that’s casting shadows and being reflected. CAPRICORN (22 Dec. – 20 Jan.) Everyone has some kind of power. What’s yours? In the coming days, I suspect there will be some crisis and opportunity regarding how you use it. Maybe you will be invited to assume more authority or exercise greater influence. Maybe your ability to wield your particular clout will be questioned or doubted, and you will be challenged to either stand up and express it with more integrity and purpose, or else relinquish it. For best results, take a moment right now to visualize the precise power you would love to command. AQUARIUS (21 Jan. – 19 Feb.) “Dear Rob: I really enjoy reading your horoscopes. You feel like a friend I’ve never met. When I try to picture what you’re like, I keep getting a vision of you as being fat, short, and bald with a strawberry blond moustache. Am I right? Curious Aquarius.” Dear Curious: It’s great that you’ve decided to do a reality check. This is an excellent time for all you Aquarians to see if what you imagine to be true is a match for the world as it actually is. To answer your question, I am in fact tall and thin, don’t wear a moustache, and have an abundance of long, silver hair. PISCES (19 Feb. – 20 Mar.) I’ve got just the right message to set the tone for you in the weeks ahead. It comes from writer H.P. Lovecraft and captures the essence of your astrological omens: “Pleasure to me is wonder,” Lovecraft said. “It’s the unexplored, the unexpected, the thing that is hidden and the changeless thing that lurks behind superficial mutability. To trace the remote in the immediate; the eternal in the ephemeral; the past in the present; the infinite in the finite; these are to me the springs of delight and beauty.” Now get out there, Pisces, and gather up all the mysterious marvels you have coming to you—all the bracing encounters with uncanny grace.

encore | october 17-23, 2012 | www.encorepub.com 61


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