Ace Magazine - August 2022 - Lexington, KY

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Lexington’s original citywide magazine great writing for the best readers, since 1989

table of contents

AUGUST 2022 Volume 33, Issue 8 www.acemagazinelex.com

AUGUST 2022 | VOLUME 33, ISSUE 8 | ACEMAGAZINELEX.COM

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in every issue

EDITRIX

P6

Rhonda Reeves

BUSINESS NEWS

CONTRIBUTORS

Evan Albert, Rob Brezny, Erin Chandler, Walter Cornett, Kevin Elliot, Atanas Golev, Trish Hatler, Austin Johnson, Bridget Johnson, Johnny Lackey, Paul Martin, Megan McCardwell, Michael Jansen Miller, Kevin Nance, Claire Ramsay, Kristina Rosen, Tom Yates, Kakie Urch ––––––––––––––––––

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CALENDAR August pull-out centerfold

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HEALTH

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Ace has been the Voice of Lexington — offering Lexington’s best literary journalism — in print and online, for over 32 years.

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ANTIQUES & FINE FURNISHINGS

P8

ARCHIVE Sharing 33 years of archives in our 2022 print editions FEATURED: A blast from the 90s

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acemagazinelex.com | August 2022 | 5


BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT Bend it

According to a recent report in the Thoroughbred Daily News, “In response to the approval for a soccer complex in an agriculturalrural zone, once home to Ashwood Training Center on Russell Cave Road just outside of Lexington, Ky., members of the equine and agriculture communities in Fayette County came together for a meeting, hosted by the Fayette Alliance at Greg Goodman’s Mt. Brilliant Farm [in July] to discuss the implications and potential next steps.

More Parking

Parking in the Distillery District will soon get a little easier with the addition of a 25-space public parking lot near the intersection of Manchester Street and Forbes Road. “We originally purchased this property as part of Town Branch Trail. When the original alignment of the trail changed we had this property left over,” Gorton said. “The public frequently asks for more parking in the Distillery District. This is a step in the right direction.”

6 | August 2022 | acemagazinelex.com

Paving the lot will cost about $195,000 including paving and a connection to Town Branch Trail. The cost will be covered by federal funds.

Bond agencies again affirm the city’s bond rating Once again, the nation’s two bond rating agencies, Standard & Poor’s Global Ratings, and Moody’s Investors Service have affirmed Lexington’s AA bond rating with a stable outlook, reflecting no change from the city’s previous rating.


In reaffirming a stable outlook, Moody’s noted Lexington’s “diverse and growing tax base.” “Reserves and liquidity will remain sound given formal policies and conservative budgeting practice,” the rating states. Standard & Poor’s cited Lexington’s “strong management, with good financial policies and practices.” The announcements mean that Lexington will be able to continue to borrow money at a low rate. The City is planning to borrow $45.5 million to make investments in much-needed improvements in public safety, infrastructure, roads, and other areas. A downgrade in the city’s bond rating would have meant higher interest rates. Last month, Lexington was OUR READERS named the 5th bestmanaged city in the country when compared to ads@aceweekly.com the nation’s 859.225.4889 150 largest cities.

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AUG 2

Commerce Lexington kicks off this year’s SPOTLIGHT Series Breakfast at Kentucky Proud Park featuring Mitch Barnhart, Athletics Director for the University of Kentucky.

AUG 10

Women Leading Kentucky will host Networking After Hours at the Mane on Main, 4:30 pm.

AUG 26

The Salute to Small Business Awards Luncheon is Friday, August 26, 2022. During the Salute to Small Business Awards Luncheon at The Campbell House, Commerce Lexington will recognize our small business community in a variety of categories and help celebrate the naming of a new Commerce Lexington Inc. Small Business of the Year.

AUG 29

The Catch the Wave Regional Conference provides networking, training, and access to women business owners in Kentucky, Ohio, & West Virginia and WBEC ORV corporate members across the region, 9 am, Griffin Gate Marriott.

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acemagazinelex.com | August 2022 | 7


FROM THE ACE ARCHIVES

Every Picture Tells a Story Don’t It?

W

hile Ace celebrates our 33-year relationship with the best readers in town all year long, we’ve been sharing archives in every print edition throughout 2022. Throughout the 80s and 90s, Ace’s most popular features included What Lexington Needs, and a photo page called Outtakes, which was later renamed Out and About. In this issue, we’re sharing a little nostalgia from the early 90s — a few memories, photos, and even vintage ads. Stay tuned for info about an upcoming Exhibit of Ace’s decades of archives!

8 | August 2022 | acemagazinelex.com


acemagazinelex.com | August 2022 | 9


On with the Show Overture, Curtain, Lights in Hampton Court BY KEVIN NANCE

I

f you weren’t aware that Lexington’s Kevin Lane Dearinger has spent his entire adult life immersed in the theater, a visit to his light-filled condo in a historic complex on Hampton Court clears things up nicely. The singer-actor, drama teacher, playwright and memoirist from Versailles has feathered his top- floor aerie with theater mementos and memorabilia, including enlarged cabinet posters, photographs, statuary, books and other items. A smattering are from his own 25-year career as a New York-based performer in Broadway musicals and national touring

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productions, including My Fair Lady, Hello, Dolly!, A Little Night Music and The Secret Garden. Others intersect with his work as a theater historian with emphasis on prominent classical actors of the 19th and early 20th centuries with strong Kentucky connections. “The wall in my office used to be covered with a memento of almost every show I ever did, but it’s much more subdued now,” Dearinger says one recent morning, sitting on his living room sofa beneath images of famous actors, most of whom made tour stops in Lexington in the 19th and early 20th centuries. “My career in the theater was lovely, it was fulfilling, but I can’t live in a museum of my past. I don’t mind living in the past of these folks.”

“This is the happiest place I have ever been.” Kevin Lane Dearinger The folks in question include the great French actress Sarah Bernhardt, whose American farewell tour stopped in Lexington — by then

“one of the most important arts centers west of the Alleghenys,” as Dearinger puts it — in 1903. Next to The Divine Sarah, as she was known, are Julia Marlowe, a noted Shakespearean, as Viola in Twelfth Night; the Kentucky-born Marie Prescott (whose biography Dearinger published in 2009) as Lady Macbeth; and Creston Clarke, a nephew of John Wilkes and Edwin Booth, as Hamlet. Above the mantelpiece in the condo, which Dearinger bought in 1995, is a portrait of the tragedian Thomas W. Keene, who inspired his first book, The Bard in the Bluegrass: Two Centuries of Shakespearean Performance in Lexington, Kentucky (McFarland and Company, 2007). (Keene was reviled by New York critics as a “ranter,” Dearinger says, “but Lord, they loved him on the road.”) In the hallway is Rose Coghlan, an English actress who toured extensively in America beginning in the 1870s. And in Dearinger’s bedroom is a virtual shrine to Mrs. Leslie Carter (born in Lexington in 1857 as Caroline Louise Dudley), a red-haired beauty who married a wealthy Chicagoan, endured a scandalous divorce and went on


ALL ABOUT KEVIN Retired from acting and teaching, Dearinger remains highly productive as a published writer and poet. Most recently, Dearinger has been serving as a blogger for the Lexington Theatre Company’s productions of The Little Mermaid and Chicago. The script for Dearinger’s one-woman show Regarding Mrs. Carter has been receiving renewed attention, with a well-known New York actress considering it, and a separate reading recently on Zoom featuring Lexington actress Penny Fuller. “Kevin writes beautifully about strong, passionate women,” says Julianne Pogue, who performed the role of Mrs. Carter back in 2013. “He has some of that same kind of passion himself.” Dearinger admits that “I’d pretty much kill” to get Regarding Mrs. Carter produced.

Dearinger loves his life on Hampton Court. He remembers one morning in 1995, lying on the floor of his newly acquired apartment in a pool of light, thinking, ‘This is the happiest place I have ever been.’” to become a great stage star as “the American Bernhardt” around the turn of the century under her ex-husband’s name, vowing to make it “infamous.” “His apartment is a repository of theater history and absolutely an extension of Kevin, who is himself a repository of all things theatrical,” says Bo List, who directed a staged reading of Regarding Mrs. Carter, Dearinger’s play about the actress’s tumultuous life, in 2013, and worked with the playwright on other projects at the recently closed AthensWest Theatre Company. “Nobody knows the history of theater, in Lexington particularly, quite like Kevin.” Dearinger loves his life on Hampton Court, where he has lived full-time since moving back to Lexington. He remembers one morning in 1995, lying on the floor of his newly acquired apartment in a pool of light, thinking, ‘This is the happiest place I have ever been.’” It still is.

D

earinger’s latest contribution to theater history is his new book featuring another American diva, On Stage with

Bette Davis: Inside the Famous Flop of Miss Moffat, published this spring by McFarland. In this entertaining, beautifully written memoir, Dearinger revisits the splashy yet sobering dawn of his career as a fresh-faced New York actor, when in 1974 he was cast in Miss Moffat, a new Broadway musical adaptation of Emlyn Williams’s 1938 play The Corn Is Green, about a teacher who mentors a young Welsh miner. In the musical, the action was transposed to the American South, with Bette Davis playing a Yankee schoolmarm who sees the potential in a young black student. The Oscar-winning film star’s association with the show, directed by Broadway veteran Josh Logan with a cast that also featured Dody Goodman and Nell Carter, seemed to guarantee its success, but it wasn’t to be. Drawing on his notes from a journal written during the show, Dearinger gives a riveting, detailed account of the ill-fated production, which closed during its tryout run in Philadelphia after a barrage of negative reviews. Dearinger expertly describes Davis’s singing voice as “somewhere below a rusty hinge.” Though she’d had moments of brilliance, by age

66 she was experiencing stamina and memory problems. In the first preview, she forgot the lyrics to one of her songs, then snapped onstage at a young man who tried to feed her a line. Looking back now at the age of 70, Dearinger has considerable sympathy for the woman he always calls Miss Davis. “These days I couldn’t learn ‘Yankee Doodle’ if it was a new tune,” he says. “If I was in the lead of a big show and the weight was on me and I suddenly was faltering, I wouldn’t have lasted as long as she did.” Worst of all was Davis’s profound insecurity; always on guard against flattery, she was all but incapable of accepting moral support from her castmates. “If I’d given her a hug and said ‘You’re wonderful, this is going to be really good,’ she would have flattened me,” Dearinger says now. “It was impossible to make her feel better.” The sole exception was one night when, standing in the wings right before Dearinger’s entrance, she told him in her famously clipped Yankee accent that he was ‘guht’ in the show. “So are you, old girl,” he responded without thinking, and stepped onstage.

acemagazinelex.com | August 2022 | 11


sun

mon

1

OUR READERS

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7

SPORTS

The Lexington Challenger is a USTA Pro Circuit event, through Aug 7, UK’s Hilary J. Boone Tennis Complex

8

tue

wed

3

2

JAZZ The Jazz Lounge 6:30 pm Base 249 BIG BAND/JAZZ

Uncle Sam’s Bait Shop 7 pm Ecton Park

MOVIES Summer Classics

Series Stand by Me 1:30 and 7:15 pm Kentucky Theatre Wellington Dog Park

BIG BAND/JAZZ

Osland/Dailey Jazztet 7 pm Ecton Park

MOVIES

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Summer Classics Series The Man Who Knew Too Much 1:30 and 7:15 pm Kentucky Theatre

TNL The Big Maracas 5 pm MUSIC Southland Jamboree Old Towne Project 7 pm Moondance STAGE Lexington Theatre

presents Chicago, Lexington Opera House (through the weekend)

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TNL Tim Talbert Project 5 pm, the Pavilion

RIDE Enjoy a mountain

bike ride on the trails of Veteran’s Park. Meet at the trailhead (shelter #3) with the first groups rolling just after 6 pm with food to follow.

READ Natalie Lloyd signs ARTS Shaker Village Craft Fair wraps up today

4

the Pavilion

PETS Yappy Hour 6 pm

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thu

Hummingbird 7 pm Joseph Beth

PETS Yappy Hour 6 pm Veterans Park

MUSIC Southland Jamboree Don Rigsby 7 pm Moondance

sat

fri

5

6

MUSIC Northside Nights, One Sound 7 pm Castlewood

EAT Tacos on Two Wheels,

READ Colleen Cambridge

MUSIC LEX Smooth Jazz Concert Series, 7 pm, Embassy Suites

signs Murder at Mallowan Hall 11 am Joseph Beth

Gardenside Neighborhood Association

SHOP Back to School Block Party 5 pm Greyline Station

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13

MUSIC Summer Nights in Suburbia, DeeOhGee 7 pm Moondance

SHOP “Shop” the Really Really Free Market 1 pm Duncan Park

SHOP Sip and Shop the

RUN The Midsummer

Distillery District 5 pm Manchester Street

COMEDY Chris Kattan and Friends, 8 pm Rock House Brewing

Night’s Run begins at 7:30 pm downtown.

MUSIC Lexington Philharmonic presents Picnic with the Pops, dusk, Keeneland


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15

CONCERT John Hiatt,

16 MUSIC One Night of

Lexington Opera House, 8 pm

Queen, Lexington Opera House

COMEDY Heather Land 2:30 pm Comedy Off Broadway

17 MOVIES Summer Classics Series West Side Story 1:30 and 7:15 pm Kentucky Theatre

TNL The

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Twiggenburys 5 pm the Pavilion

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20

25

TNL Kenny Owens 5 pm The Pavilion

MUSIC Southland Jamboree New Coon Creek Girls Reunion 7 pm Moondance

Waveland Car Cruise, 2 pm, Waveland Museum

MOVIES Summer Classics Series Shakespeare in Love 1:30 and 7:15 pm Kentucky Theatre

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RUN DV8K Life-Changing Run, 8:30 am, Keeneland

Jamboree Ida Clare 7 pm Moondance

CARS Karl Shannon

Southern Momma Comedy Tour with Darren Knight Live, 7 pm, Lexington Opera House

Fab Four – The Ultimate Beatles Tribute, 8pm, Lexington Opera House

MUSIC Southland

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ARTS Celebrate the Final Funnelcake of the Season at the Woodland Art Fair, Woodland Park

COMEDY The New

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PETS

Yappy Hour 6 pm Coldstream Park

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MUSIC The

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READ Laurien Berenson

AROUND THE CORNER SEP 6 Backstreet Boys,

Rupp Arena

SEP 9 Alan Jackson, Rupp Arena

signs Peg and Rose Solve a Murder 7 pm Joseph Beth

OCT 6 Keith Urban, Rupp Arena OCT 20 Seinfeld, EKU Center for the Arts

MOVIES Summer Classics

Series The Godfather 1:30 and 7:15 pm Kentucky Theatre

NOV 8 Election Day (The deadline to register online to vote in the 2022 general election is Oct. 11)

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MUSIC Summer Nights in Suburbia, NVRMND 7 pm Moondance

EAT Tacos N’ Tequila, 6 pm, 215 W. Main Street

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SHOP Soak Up The Summer Farmer’s Market, 10 am, 803 N. Limestone


HEALTH AND OUTDOORS

Lexington’s Julia Hall, Leslie Smart, and John Smart.

Evening of Hope

On Saturday, June 18, 2022, the CHI Saint Joseph Health Foundations’ statewide “Evening of Hope” fundraising event raised more than $260,000, with additional gifts and contributions continuing. For the second consecutive year, the event featured Kentuckians across the state hosting individual dinner party fundraisers. Leslie Smart, president, CHI Saint Joseph Health Foundations, said, “The funds raised from Evening of Hope will help relieve some of the financial burdens of families battling cancer.

14 | August 2022 | acemagazinelex.com

Barbara and Gary Ermers of Lexington KY. This mission would not be possible without our hosts, generous sponsors and charitable community members who donated or bid on our silent auction items.” In 2021, there were approximately 30,000 new cancer cases and more than 10,000 cancer deaths in Kentucky, which is the highest rate of cancer deaths in the nation. Support from Evening of Hope is designed to directly benefit patients treated for cancer across all the CHI Saint Joseph Health facilities, providing them with resources and assistance as they undergo treatment.


Suicide prevention lifeline now accessible via #988

988 has been designated as the new three-digit dialing code that will route callers to the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline. While some areas may be currently able to connect to the Lifeline by dialing 988, this dialing code is now available to everyone across the United States as of July 16, 2022. When people call, text, or chat 988, they will be connected to trained counselors that are part of the existing National Suicide Prevention Lifeline network. These trained counselors will listen, understand how their problems are affecting them, provide support, and connect them to resources if necessary. The current Lifeline phone number (1-800-273-8255) will always remain available to people

in emotional distress or suicidal crisis, even after 988 is launched nationally.

CALENDAR THU AUG 11 Do you like riding trails maintained by KYMBA? Do you like to meet awesome people? Hang out with your fellow riders, enjoy a mountain bike ride on the trails of Veteran’s Park in Lexington and eat a tasty hot dog (or veggie dog) at the end. KYMBA will provide the food and hydrating beverages ride. Bring your friend, bring your kids, bring your spouse. There will be several casual, no-drop riding groups. Meet at the trailhead (shelter #3) with the first groups rolling just after 6 pm with food to follow.

SAT AUG 13 The 2022 A Midsummer Night’s Run is a live, in-person race in

downtown Lexington scheduled for Saturday, August 13th, at 7:30pm. We are providing a virtual participant option for those who can’t (or choose not to) join us in person. Additionally the Fastest Kid In Town Kids Races (Ages 2-12) will be held at 6pm.

All race donations made by A Midsummer Night’s Run participants will support the Saint Joseph Hospital Foundation’s Yes, Mamm! program which provides free mammography screening, diagnostics services, and program support to uninsured or underinsured women and men.

E THE DATE! SAVE THE SAVE DATE! THETickets! DATE! Get Your

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acemagazinelex.com | August 2022 | 15


ACE EATS IN

Heartaches and Heartbreaks

I

t isn’t especially unusual in Lexington for restaurants to close abruptly and with little notice to the public, or sometimes even staff. Hastily scrawled notes on the door are a time-(dis)honored tradition for notifying employees and prospective patrons that they’ve arrived at a permanently closed destination. On Tuesday evening, June 28, the Richmond Register reported that a 70-year Lexington stalwart, the Parkette, was closed — setting off a firestorm of denial and recriminations across social media. When the dust settled on Wednesday morning, the story held up as accurate. A little closer attention paid to syntax (“is closing” would’ve worked) and a 24-hour embargo might’ve soothed some of the heartache and hurt feelings, at least allowing the staff to be fully notified prior to showing up to find locked doors.

O

n Wednesday November 12, 1952, the Parkette announced their entry to Lexington’s culinary history in an ad that Berea_AceMag_Aug2022_4.25x5.1_FinalHR.pdf included their hours (11 am to 2 am), and their status as the “largest Drive-Inn in

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Kentucky” with “parking for 100 cars.” In addition to fried chicken and seafood boxes and “giant size milk shakes,” a wide variety of sandwiches would be offered, including a few surprising entries, like goose liver. The restaurant would be “under the personal supervision of Joseph and Katherine Smiley.” The Menu suggested at the top, “In the privacy of your car, come as you are.” Over the ensuing decades, the Smileys retired; many drive-ins and carhops faded from the landscape; staff and management and investors for the business came and went. It closed briefly, and was re-opened, and underwent a major renovation and expansion a decade or so ago. Like many Lexington restaurants, it was bruised and battered by the pandemic, including supply chain issues. And like many Lexington institutions and icons, in recent years, it suffered the cruelest cut from customers: indifference. Known as The Wrocklage Effect — when the buzz is worshipful 7/20/22 3:18but PM attendance is non-existent — it’s a cruel

FOLK ARTS & CRAFTS CAPITAL OF KENTUCKY

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16 | August 2022 | acemagazinelex.com

business model. (If everyone who’d lamented the loss of the Wrocklage actually went to the Wrocklage, it would not have closed.) A large crowd did turn out on Saturday July 23 to purchase the remaining pieces of memorabilia, and take home a piece of history, from menus to booths to Pepsi chandeliers.


ACE EATS OUT bicycle ride through s ome of the Greater Gardenside neighborhoods followed by tacos from neighborhood taco trucks. FRI AUG 12 Sip and Shop at the Distillery District. Enjoy local artists, crafters, and small business owners, 5 pm Manchester Street.

T

he dog days of summer wind down in August as everyone returns to town for Back to School and resumes culinary life as we know it. Patios are still open and will be til Fall, and farm-to-table still offers abundant fresh options while the season lasts.

BIRTHS California-based Dave’s Hot Chicken is opening on Richmond Road. Jimmy John’s has opened a new location at 3636 Boston Road. La Folie is now open at the Woodlands, offering French classics. Local Taco opened a new location in Hamburg in the former TGI Friday’s spot. Two new Indian Restaurants now call the bluegrass home. Taj Bistro is now open in Winchester. Mehak Indian Cuisine has opened in the campus area and has pedigree ties to the former Indian Palace on Maxwell.

OBITS Parkette closed abruptly on June 28 as reported initially, and then confirmed, in the Richmond Register. A memorabilia sale was hosted on Saturday July 23. Pour Decisions, in the former Parlay Social location on Short, has closed.

TRANSITIONS Josie’s in Chevy Chase has added back dinner service. Lexington Seafood is now under new management in Chevy Chase. The Rickhouse Pub space is for sale in Lexington’s Distillery District.

COMING SOON Buffalo Trace has announced plans for a new tourism and dining destination at their Frankfort campus, expected to open in 2023.

After closing its Summit location last year, Whiskey Bear has re-opened in its new location in Beaumont, alongside a new sister concept, Addie’s Pizza.

EAT/DRINK CALENDAR SAT AUG 6 Join the Greater Gardenside Association for Tacos on Two Wheels — a fun, family

acemagazinelex.com | August 2022 | 17


ARTS AND ENTERTAINMENT

California native and current Kentuckian, writer Ada Limón has been named the nation’s next poet laureate. PBS reports, “While the job is officially based in Washington, D.C., the poets are not required to live there — Limón will mostly work from her home in Lexington, Kentucky — and are generally free to shape the position around their passions. ‘The Slowdown’ podcast grew out of a project launched by Tracy K. Smith when she served as laureate from 20172019.”

The Lexington Philharmonic has announced the appointment of Mélisse Brunet as their next Music Director following a national three-year search, interrupted by the Covid-19 pandemic. Brunet is the orchestra’s fifth Music Director and the first woman to hold the position. Silas House awarded the Duggins Prize for Outstanding Mid-Career Novelist. The national award is given each year as part of the Lambda Literary Awards to an outstanding LGBTQ writer.

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A favorite Lexington couple, Steve Zahn and Robyn Peterman Zahn recently celebrated their 28th anniversary, with top-of-the-line presents: a new July book release for her, As the Underworld Turns, and an Emmy-nomination for him for HBO’s White Lotus.


ROB BREZSNY’S FREE WILL ASTROLOGY ARIES (March 21-April 19): Fictionwriter John Banville tells us, “There are moments when the past has a force so strong it seems one might be annihilated by it.” I suspect that’s sometimes true for many of us. But it won’t apply to you Aries anytime soon. In fact, just the opposite situation will be in effect during the coming months: You will have more power to render the past irrelevant than maybe you’ve ever had. You will wield an almost indomitable capacity to launch new trends without having to answer to history. Take full advantage, please!

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Researchers have proved that lullabies enhance the health of premature babies being cared for in hospitals. The soft, emotionally rich songs also promote the well-being of the babies’ families. I bring this to your attention because I believe you should call on lullaby therapy yourself in the coming weeks. Listening to and singing those tunes will soothe and heal your inner child. And that, in my astrological opinion, is one of your top needs right now. For extra boosts, read fairy tales, eat food with your hands, make mud pies, and play on swings, seesaws, and merry-go-rounds. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Dancer and singer-songwriter FKA Twigs has taken dance lessons since she was a child. In 2017, she added a new form of physical training, the Chinese martial art of wushu. Doing so made her realize a key truth about herself: She loves to learn and practice new skills. Of all life’s activities, they give her the most pleasure and activate her most vibrant energy. She feels at home in the world when she does them. I suspect you may have similar inclinations in the coming months. Your appetite for mastering new skills will be at an all-time high. You will find it natural and even exhilarating to undertake disciplined practice. Gathering knowledge will be even more exciting than it usually is.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Cancerian author Laurie Sheck writes, “So much of life is invisible, inscrutable: layers of thoughts, feelings, and outward events entwined with secrecies, ambiguities, ambivalences, obscurities, darknesses.” While that’s an experience we all have, especially you Cancerians, it will be far less pressing for you in the coming weeks. I foresee you embarking on a phase when clarity will be the rule, not the exception. Hidden parts of the world will reveal themselves to you. The mood will be brighter and lighter than usual. The chronic fuzziness of life will give way to a delightful acuity. I suspect you will see things that you have never or rarely seen.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): It’s always advisable for you Leos to carry on a close personal relationship with mirrors. I’m speaking both literally and metaphorically. For the sake of your mental health, you need to be knowledgeable about your image and monitor its evershifting nuances. And according to my analysis of the astrological omens, you are now authorized to deepen your intimate connection with mirrors. I believe you will thrive by undertaking an intense phase of introspective explorations and creative self-inquiry. Please keep it all tender and kind, though. You’re not allowed to bad-mouth yourself. Put a special emphasis on identifying aspects of your beauty that have been obscured or neglected. By the way, Leo, I also recommend you seek compassionate feedback from people you trust. Now is an excellent time to get reflections about your quest to become an even more amazing human. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): At your best, you are a flexible purist, an adaptable stickler for detail, and a disciplined yet supple thinker. Maybe more than any other sign of the zodiac, you can be focused and resilient, intense and agile, attentive and graceful. And all of us non-Virgos will greatly appreciate it if you provide these talents in abundance during the coming weeks. We need you to be our humble, understated leader. Please be a role model who demonstrates the finely crafted, well-balanced approach to being healthy.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): In my Astrological Book of Life, your life purposes as a Libra may include the following: 1. to be beautiful in the smartest ways you can imagine and smart in the most beautiful ways you can imagine; 2. to always see at least two sides of the story, and preferably more; 3. to serve as an intermediary between disparate elements; 4. to lubricate and facilitate conversations between people who might not otherwise understand each other; 5. to find common ground between apparent contradictions; 6. to weave confusing paradoxes into invigorating amalgamations; 7. to never give up on finding the most elegant way to understand a problem. PS: In the coming weeks, I hope you will make extra efforts to call on the capacities I just named. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Author Clive James loved the Latin term gazofilacium, meaning “treasure chamber.” He said that the related Italian word, gazofilacio, referred to the stash of beloved poems that he memorized and kept in a special place in his mind. In accordance with astrological omens, Scorpio, now would be an excellent time to begin creating your own personal gazofilacium: a storehouse of

wonderful images and thoughts and memories that will serve as a beacon of joy and vitality for the rest of your long life. Here’s your homework: Identify ten items you will store in your gazofilacium.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Tips to get the most out of the next three weeks: 1. Keep your interesting options open. Let your mediocre options shrivel and expire. 2. Have no regrets and make no apologies about doing what you love. 3. Keep in mind that every action you perform reverberates far beyond your immediate sphere. 4. Give your fears ridiculous names like “Gaffe” and “Wheezy” and “Lumpy.” 5. Be honest to the point of frankness but not to the point of rudeness. 6. Don’t just run. Gallop.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Capricorn poet Richard Hugo wrote, “It doesn’t bother me that the word ‘stone’ appears more than 30 times in my third book, or that ‘wind’ and ‘gray’ appear over and over in my poems to the disdain of some reviewers.” Hugo celebrated his obsessions. He treated them as riches because focusing on them enabled him to identify his deepest feelings and discover who he really was. In accordance with astrological omens, I recommend a similar approach to you in the coming weeks. Cultivate and honor and love the specific fascinations at the core of your destiny.

Chief Technology Officer. Thoroughbred Solutions, LLC seeks Chief Technology Officer for its Lexington, KY office to build, drive and enable organization technology policies, strategies, and roadmap. Must have Bachelor’s degree in Engg, Comp. Sci., Info Syst, or rltd, plus 8 yrs of exp. in any rltd occupation. Must have 8 yrs of exp. in the Information Technology Domain. Email resume to pparker@ thoroughbredsolutions.com. EOE. No Calls. Healthcare: Critical Care Unit RN sought by CHI Saint Joseph Health, to provide svcs at Saint Joseph London. Req. Bach’s deg in Nursing, Passage of NCLEX-RN, Eligible for KY Nursing License. CVs to Sandy Turqueza, HR Director, 1001 Saint Joseph Lane, London, KY 40741.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Author Violet Trefusis (18941972) and author Vita Sackville-West (18921962) loved each other. In one letter, Violet told Vita, “I want you hungrily, frenziedly, passionately. I am starving for you. Not only the physical you, but your fellowship, your sympathy, the innumerable points of view we share. I can’t exist without you; you are my affinity.” In the coming weeks, dear Aquarius, I invite you to use florid language like that in addressing your beloved allies. I also invite you to request such messages. According to my reading of the planetary omens, you are due for eruptions of articulate passion.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): I’d like to honor and pay homage to a past disappointment that helped transform you into a beautiful soul. I know it didn’t feel good for you when it happened, but it has generated results that have blessed you and the people whose lives you’ve touched. Would you consider performing a ritual of gratitude for all it taught you? Now is an excellent time to express your appreciation because doing so will lead to even further redemption.

acemagazinelex.com | August 1, 2022 | 19


HOME AND GARDEN Art by Nature showcases local native landscapes as represented by local artists. In 2022, front yards take center stage. The topic was selected to bring attention to new Plant by Numbers plans for front yards. These plans make it easy for novices to design beautiful, low-maintenance, Earthfriendly landscapes. The plans were created by EARTHeim Landscape Design, and are available for free from the City, lexingtonky. gov/PlantByNumbers. The exhibit opens Friday, August 26 and continues through Saturday, September 24, at the Loudoun House. Works are for sale, though an artist may choose to opt-out of that aspect of the program. Ten percent of proceeds will benefit Celebrate Lexington, formerly known as America in Bloom Lexington. Artists keep the remainder. The artist’s intent to participate form, map of featured locations and other information can be found at lexingtonky.gov/ArtByNature.

Front Yards take Center Stage

“Front yards can be one of the most underappreciated spaces in urban environments, yet they provide a number of benefits,” says Nancy Albright, the Commissioner of the Department of Environmental Quality and Public Works. “The Art by Nature series always results in an amazing array of art, and I’m looking forward to seeing this year’s exhibit.”

KU Vegetation Management Plan Proposed

Thanks to the hard work of community members, LFUCG negotiators, the Mayor’s administration, and Kentucky Utilities, a

proposed agreement regarding KU’s vegetation management plan has formally been presented to the Council and the public. This process has taken many months and, by all accounts, has been a good-faith effort by all involved. One of the most crucial aspects of this agreement is that it will not only be implemented here in Lexington, but across KU’s service area, meaning that tree canopies across Kentucky will be positively impacted. Our community has helped localities across the Commonwealth; that’s something to be very proud of. The key aspects of this plan will result in 50% of the trees previously slated for removal being saved! KU has committed to: • releasing their full vegetation management plan on their website • adding a map of upcoming projects online • giving more advanced notice to affected properties before work begins • increasing the amount for financial reimbursement to property owners for lost trees • taking a more nuanced approach to determining which trees do and do not pose a risk to our infrastructure.

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Tours of Remodeled Homes

Are you ready to remodel? Are you looking for ideas, advice, and inspiration? See quality craftsmanship firsthand and meet the professionals. Louisville’s Tour of Remodeled Homes is back on the weekend of August 13-14, 2022. Tour 10 homes August 13 and 14 for expert remodeling advice and insights from Louisville-area remodelers. Lexington’s Tour of Remodeled Homes is scheduled for August 27 and August 28 and offers an opportunity to explore the latest trends and remodel possibilities to turn your home

into your Dream Home. The Tour will feature kitchen, bath & whole-house remodels, and outdoor living space updates.

Follow the #9PM Routine

The #9PM routine is a nightly reminder to residents to: • Take valuables out of vehicles • Cash, checkbooks, credit cards • Laptops and electronics • Jewelry • Guns • Lock car doors • Turn on exterior lights • Activate all alarms and security systems.

• Close garage doors • Lock the doors to their residences Criminals look for easy targets. You can make it more difficult for them by following the #9PMRoutine! Many vehicle burglaries, and to a lesser degree, stolen vehicles, occur as a result of vehicles being left unlocked. Criminals walk through neighborhoods, trying vehicle door handles, hoping to find an unlocked vehicle. The best way to prevent vehicle burglaries is to remove all of your valuables, lock your vehicle’s doors upon exiting and take the keys to the vehicle inside your residence.

acemagazinelex.com | August 2022 | 21


Sold In Lexington 40502

1445 Lakewood Dr...............................................$1,200,000 3201 Hobcaw Ln...................................................$1,100,000 2361 The Woods Ln..............................................$1,050,000 418 Andover Dr........................................................ $995,000 635 Cooper Dr ......................................................... $775,000 111 Woodland Ave #601........................................ $725,000 111 Woodland Ave #602........................................ $725,000 1065 Turkey Foot Rd................................................ $675,000 221 Sycamore Road................................................. $670,000 223 Sycamore Road................................................. $670,000 1204 Fontaine Rd.................................................... $660,000 1201 Trumpeter Row............................................... $567,000 316-318 Hanover Ct ............................................... $561,000 1219 Kastle Rd......................................................... $558,000 737 Berry Lane......................................................... $548,400 2028 Blairmore Rd.................................................. $510,000 719 Melrose Ave...................................................... $505,000 3533 Coltneck Ln .................................................... $495,000 3086 Clair Rd .......................................................... $485,000 820 Raven Rd........................................................... $459,000

147 Sherman Ave.................................................... $453,000 838 Euclid Ave Unit 510.......................................... $450,000 35 Richmond Ave.................................................... $450,000 368 Park Ave............................................................ $420,770 614 Central Ave #2 .................................................. $418,000 315 Hanover Ct........................................................ $405,000 3413 Farmington Rd.............................................. $390,000 824 Aurora Ave ........................................................ $350,000 301 Bassett Ave........................................................ $270,000 3313 Pepperhill Ct................................................... $265,000 835 Malabu Dr ........................................................ $240,000 837 Malabu Dr #3002............................................. $156,000 2414 Lake Park Rd #3102 ...................................... $152,200 340 Lincoln Ave ....................................................... $122,500 1167 Turkey Foot Rd # 3.......................................... $115,000

40503

2225 Eastway Dr...................................................... $519,000 2049 Rebel Rd......................................................... $469,000 105 Southport Dr..................................................... $440,000 676 Shasta Cir.......................................................... $421,000

350 Glendover Rd.................................................... $412,000 209 Lackawanna Rd................................................. $393,900 2916 Jason Ct.......................................................... $380,000 3156 Arrowhead Dr................................................. $346,000 713 Pasadena Dr...................................................... $342,000 604 Cecil Way........................................................... $320,000 302 Zandale Dr........................................................ $320,000 653 Monticello Blvd................................................ $310,000 2869 Ark Royal Way................................................. $309,000 2348 Harrodsburg Rd............................................. $305,000 479 Bob O Link Dr.................................................... $302,000 601 Springridge Dr.................................................. $300,000 3417 Boston Rd....................................................... $279,000 528 Monticello Blvd................................................ $255,000 1567 Heron Ln......................................................... $248,000 3141 Chatham Dr.................................................... $235,000 3433 Clays Mill Rd................................................... $230,000 639 Worcester Rd.................................................... $212,000 469 Bob O Link Dr.................................................... $200,000 1869 Pensacola Dr................................................... $130,000 825 Tomahawk Trl.......................................................$94,800

Property sales info source: Fayette County Property Valuation office (www.fayettepva.com)

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438 Osprey Cir............................................................$70,000

1916 Spring Station Dr........................................... $220,000 1540 Lindy Ln.......................................................... $216,000 945 Meadow Ln....................................................... $215,000 1829 Old Paris Rd.................................................... $200,000 729 Lakeview Dr...................................................... $200,000 1457 Valdosta Ct...................................................... $190,000 631 Marshall Ln ...................................................... $188,000 336 Northwood Dr................................................... $160,000 110 Bermuda Ave.................................................... $130,000 1502 Ft. Sumter Ct................................................... $128,000 1421 Highlawn Ave................................................. $125,000 1964 Augusta Dr...................................................... $100,000 121 Avon Ave........................................................... $100,000 142 Ashton Dr.............................................................$98,500 708 E. Loudon Ave......................................................$87,000 502 Shelby St..............................................................$63,500

40504

1409 Saddle Club Way............................................ $427,000 1935 Williamsburg Rd............................................ $350,000 761 Lynn Rd............................................................. $290,000 2232 Jasmine Dr..................................................... $255,100 1808 Gettysburg Rd................................................ $223,000 750 Shaker Dr #202................................................. $216,000 2225 Azalea Dr......................................................... $211,000 2406 Seine Rd......................................................... $194,000 1241 Monaco Ct...................................................... $194,000 827 Spring Meadows Dr......................................... $183,000 2040 Tamarack Ct.................................................... $175,000 430 Gibson Ave........................................................ $136,273 1150 Horsemans Ln #12......................................... $109,000 1281 Village Dr #A7....................................................$66,000 1281 Village Dr B13...................................................$62,000

40507 THE 248 Market St........................................................... $769,000 40505 INNOVATION 525 W. Main #416................................................... $345,000 816 Oak Hill Dr........................................................ $268,500 121 N Mlk Blvd........................................................ $305,000 TE 1988REBA Brynell Dr........................................................ $244,900 499 E. High # 302.................................................... $261,000 1610This Ft. Sumter Dr.................................................. $230,500 cooking. is smarter 205 W. Second St..................................................... $175,000 668 Warrington Dr................................................... $225,500 258 E. High #102........................................................$86,500

$2,000

40508

415 S. Upper St.....................................................$1,100,000 611 E. Main St.......................................................... $640,000 726 Hambrick Ave................................................... $436,500 512 Maryland Av #102............................................ $420,000 512 Maryland Av #105............................................ $400,000 627 Columbia Ave................................................... $400,000 331 Linden Walk...................................................... $380,000 841 W. High St......................................................... $365,750 535 S. Upper #221................................................... $295,000 343 Aylesford Pl....................................................... $295,000 343 Aylesford Pl....................................................... $275,000 202 Clyde St............................................................. $256,000 535 S. Upper St #315.............................................. $215,000 127 Clyde St............................................................. $215,000 417 E. Third St........................................................... $210,000 123 Thompson Rd................................................... $140,000 1102 Liggett St......................................................... $130,000 366 Ohio St.............................................................. $129,000 326 Wilgus Ave........................................................ $110,000 861 Georgetown St.....................................................$82,000 861 Georgetown St.....................................................$74,000 423 Ash St...................................................................$40,000 907 Charles Ave..........................................................$16,000

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Property sales info source: Fayette County Property Valuation office (www.fayettepva.com)

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