APRIL 2018 The Ballet Ball honors Johnny and June Carter Cash
Icing on the Cake
Exploring the sweetest spots on Nashville’s dining scene
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Tennessee’s First SMILE New and Minimally-invasive Surgery for Myopia (Nearsightedness) is First Major Advance in LASIK Technology in 25 Years, Reducing Dependence on Glasses and Contacts short pulses is used to make small incision in the cornea to create a disc-shaped piece of tissue. This tissue is then removed by the surgeon though the opening which causes the corneal shape to change, permanently changing the prescription. SMILE has a proven track record of success. It has been used internationally since 2011 and more than 750,000 procedures have been performed worldwide. Dr. Wang noted that currently, the procedure has not been approved to treat large amounts of astigmatism and cannot treat farsightedness and that LASIK is still a better option for a majority of the patients seeking laser vision correction.
The first major advance in LASIK technology in 25 years, the SMILE procedure, was performed in Nashville recently at Wang Vision 3D Cataract & LASIK Center by its director, internationally renowned ophthalmologist Dr. Ming Wang, Harvard & MIYT (MD, magna cum laude); PhD (laser physics). “We are extremely very excited to be the first again to introduce the next generation laser correction procedure to the state, helping out patients with this new and minimally invasive procedure,” said Dr. Wang. Myopia is a common eye condition in which close objects can be seen clearly but distant objects are blurry without correction. LASIK and PRK have been the main stay treatments for myopia for over two decades. But SMILE, which stands for SMall Incision Lenticule Extraction, has unique advantages over LASIK. The SMILE surgery is minimally invasive as the surgeon needs only to create a small, precise opening to correct vision. No flap is needed. The laser incision is smaller than 5 millimeters for SMILE, compared to approximately 20 millimeters for LASIK. This
helps the cornea to retain more of its natural strength and reduces the risk of rare flap complications. Dry eye after SMILE is also reduced compared with LASIK, as nerves responsible for tear production during the cornea remain more intact in SMILE. One of the state’s first SMILE patients was Margaret Coleman, 34, a manager of the world-famous Bluebird Café, in Nashville, which was prominently featured in the ABC TV drama “Nashville”, among others. Ms. Coleman has had poor eyesight all of her life, legal blind in both eyes without correction. Ms. Coleman’s 3D Laser SMILE procedure went beautifully and she is thrilled to have her crystal clear new vision and newly gained independence on glasses or contacts and being one of the first patients in the state to receive SMILE!
Dr. Ming Wang, a Harvard & MIT graduate (MD, magna cum laude), is the CEO of Aier-USA, Director of Wang Vision 3D Cataract & LASIK Center and one of the few laser eye surgeons in the world today who holds a doctorate degree in laser physics. He has performed over 55,000 procedures, including on over 4,000 doctors. Dr. Wang published 8 textbooks and a paper in the world-renowned journal Nature, holds several US patents and performed the world’s first laser-assisted artificial cornea implantation. He established a 501c(3) non-profit charity, Wang Foundation for Sight Restoration, which to date has helped patients from more than 40 states in the U.S. and 55 countries, with all sight restoration surgeries performed free-of-charge. Dr. Wang is the Kiwanis Nashvillian of the Year.
“I am so happy!!!”, exclaimed Margaret at her postop visit. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved the VisuMax Femtosecond Laser for SMILE procedure for -1 to -8 D myopia with up to 0.5D astigmatism. During a SMILE procedure, a femtosecond laser with precise
Dr. Ming Wang can be reached at: Wang Vision 3D Cataract & LASIK Center 1801 West End Ave, Suite 1150 Nashville, TN, 37203 615-321-8881 drwang@wangvisioninstitute.com www.wangcataractLASIK.com
AdvertoriAl by WAng vision 3d CAtArACt & lAsiK Center 92 >> April 2018 | nfocusnashville.com
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Service you deserve from people you trust
Congrats to our Award Winners!
Gold Award and New Gold Life Member Award Winner
Diamond Award and New Diamond Life Member Award winner
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216 Cherokee $649,500
tr Con r e Und
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2802 Valley Brook Place $1,599,000
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For More Listings Go To nealclayton.com 20 Burton Hills Blvd. #450 Nashville, TN 37215 | 615.297.8543 | info@Nealclayton.com | nealclayton.com nfocusnashville.com | Arpil 2018 <<
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(615) 953-7722
2926 West End Ave. Nashville, TN 37203
www.duetgirl.com
4 >> April 2018 | nfocusnashville.com NF_4-18_01-31.indd 4
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Spring Into Home Ownership Find the listings you love & the agents who can help at: lipmanhomesandestates.com
NASHVILLE • URBAN LIVING IN WEST END Downtown View | Two Private Decks 2 BR, 2 Full BA | 2,034 SF 110 31st Avenue Nor th, Unit 205 | $650,000 Matt Kir kegaard, 615.905.6873
FRANKLIN • 99 ACRES OF LAND • INVESTMENT 900 Feet of Road Frontage Minutes from Historic Leipers Fork 5950 Pinewood Road | $999,900 Kristin Hood, 615.428.6386
NASHVILLE • WEST END CONDO LIVING Hardwoods | Juliet Balconies | Secured Building 2 BR, 2 Full BA | Garage Parking for 2 | 1,852 SF 4000 West End Avenue, Apt 302 | $625,000 Jackie Roth Karr, 615.330.9779
BRENTWOOD • exclusive ANNANDALE Luxur y Living | 2 Bonus Rooms | 4 Car Garage 5 BR, 5 Full BA , 3 Half BA | 9,062 SF 367 Jones Par kway | $2,200,000 Larr y Lipman, 615.364.3333
coming soon! COLLEGE GROVE • COMMUNITY AMENITIES Gorgeous Backyard | Light-filled, Open Spaces 5 BR, 4 Full BA , 1 Half BA | 4,900 SF 6876 Manor Drive | $670,000 Kristin Hood, 615.428.6386
2002 Richard Jones Road Suite C-104 Nashville, TN 37215 615.463.3333
NASHVILLE • BELLE MEADE Estate Speaks Luxur y with Privacy & Serenity 6 BR, 5 Full BA, 3 Half BA | 8,105 SF 624 Westview Avenue | $2,900,000 Larr y Lipman, 615.364.3333
NASHVILLE • HILLWOOD ESTATES Brick Ranch Home | Gorgeous Backyard | Private 4 BR, 5 Full BA, 1 Half BA | 1.4 Acres | 4,140 SF 6002 Hickor y Valley Road | $1,100,000 Jackie Roth Karr, 615.330.9779
THOMPSON STATION • UNPARALLELED EQUESTRIAN LIVING Simply an amazing property. Nearly 5,000 square feet in this beautiful log home. In addition there is a 1800’s guest home with 1,000 square feet. You will want to take notice of the 14 stall barn, an indoor 16 stall riding arena, an outdoor riding arena and paddocks fenced and cross fenced throughout. 4 BR, 2 Full BA , 1 Half BA • 4,896 SF •1721 Dean Road • $1,495,000 • Chris Mannino, 615.299.7995
Each Office is Independently Owned and Operated.
KRISTIN HOOD
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NASHVILLE • GREEN HILLS Master on Main | Fireplace | 2 Car Garage 4 BR, 3 Full BA , 1 Half BA | 3,057 SF 3704 B Estes Road | $575,000 Larr y Lipman, 615.364.3333
MATT KIRKGAARD
LARRY LIPMAN
CHRIS MANNINO
JACKIE ROTH KARR
lipmanhomesandestates.com 2002 Richard Jones Road Suite C-104 | Nashville, TN 615.463.3333 Each RE/MAX office is independently owned and operated.
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Contents April 2018 | Vol. xxv, No. 4
parties 27
Party Animals
28
A Unanimous Verdict
30
Animal House
32
Strike a Pose
34
Easy Come, Easy Go
38
A Soup-erb Afternoon
Nashville Humane Association thanks the Top Tails Donor Society
Park Center honors Bill Young at How About Dinner and a Movie
Partying with a porcupine, rabbit and two-toed sloth at Claws, Paws and Jaws
The Nashville Predators do a little turn on the catwalk
The Big Easy comes to Nashville for Pairings
40
Sing a Song
42
And the Oscar Goes To ...
47
Living on the Edge
54
Leading Purpose-Filled Lives
Writers take the stage for Music Health Alliance
Film lovers convene at the Belcourt Theatre for A Red Carpet Evening
A tribute to Johnny Cash at the Ballet Ball
Honoring community leaders at Winter Lights
features 57
Icing on the Cake Exploring the sweetest spots on Nashvilleâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s dining scene
17
Nsider
departments
70
Nuptials
8
72
Taking Vows
74
Step Inside
76
Arts and Galleries
78
Nstyle
80
Best Behavior
82
Discerning Reader
84
Pencil In
88
Nretrospect
Celebrating 25 years of Soup Sunday
47
In Our Words Plenty of sweet surprises in store
12
Behind the Scenes Kristen Winston
57 ON THE COVER
42
74
The Tennessee Waltz cake at City House. Photographed by Daniel Meigs. For more of Nashvilleâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s best pastries and desserts and the chefs behind them, check out our Icing on the Cake feature on page 57.
Broadway Brunch Kick-Off, Outside the Box, Casino Royale Gala and more
Latest Nashville weddings
Lovell-McCullough vows
Christie Cookie
Upcoming visual and performing arts
The Frist Gala co-chairs on Rome: City and Empire
Expert etiquette advice from John Bridges
In search of something a little spicier
Calendar of April events
Behind cover at Masked Balls of the past
6 >> april 2018 | nfocusnashville.com Contents.indd 6
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Nfocus Ad 55.qxp_NFocus Ad 11 NEW 3/20/18 3:06 PM Page 1
1577 MORAN RD $9,500,000 1577moran.com Rick French 615.604.2323
21 NORTHUMBERLAND $4,799,000 21northumberland.com
1641 WHISPERING HILLS $3,490,000 1641whisperinghills.com Rick French 615.604.2323
2032 OLD HILLSBORO RD $3,450,000 2032oldhillsboro.com Rick French 615.604.2323
2046 FRANSWORTH $3,250,000 2046fransworth.com Rick French 615.604.2323
2021 FRANSWORTH $2,999,950 2021fransworth.com Rick French 615.604.2323
320 VAUGHN RD $2,499,000 320vaughn.com Rick French 615.604.2323 Co-Listed with Alison Douglas 615.305.6978
715 BELLE MEADE BLVD PENTHOUSE $1,750,000 Rick French 615.604.2323 Co-Listed with Steve Fridrich 615.300.5900
Rick French 615.604.2323
1154 TRAVELERS RIDGE $2,250,000 1154travelersridge.com 1154 Rick French 615.604.2323
2030 CASTLEMAN $1,250,000 2030castleman.com Rick French 615.604.2323 Tim King 615.482.5953
3821 WEST END AVE #301 $1,949,000 3821westend301.com Tim King 615.482.5953
805 FOSTER HILL $1,067,500 805fosterhill.com Rick French 615.604.2323 Tim King 615.482.5953
308 WALNUT DR $1,750,000 30 308walnut.com 30 Rick Ri French 615.604.2323
408 WILSONIA AVE $990,000 408wilsonia.com Rick French 615.604.2323
RICK FRENCH TIM KING
615.604.2323 615.482.5953
FRENCHKING.COM 615.292.2622
1409 BEDDINGTON PARK $899,000 1409beddingtonpark.com Tim King 615.482.5953
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1515 CLAIRMONT PL $875,000 1515clairmontplace.com Rick French 615.604.2323
917 YEARLING WAY $799,000 917yearlingway.com Rick French 615.604.2323 Tim King 615.482.5953
239 5th AVE N UNIT 503 $444,500
nfocusnashville.com | Arpil 2018 Tim King 615.482.5953
<<
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Editorial
Herbert Fox, Jr. Nancy Floyd managing editor Lauren Langston Stewart staff writer Holly Hoffman social correspondent Gloria Houghland contributors Beth Alexander, John Bridges, Hallie Caddy, Whitney Clay, Melissa Corbin, Carrington Fox, Leigh Hendry, Sandy Nelson, Ellen Pryor, Jennifer Puryear, Hunter Claire Rogers, Megan Seling, Abby White, Varina Willse founding editor editor
Art
Heather Pierce Eric England staff photographer Daniel Meigs contributing photographers Michael W. Bunch, Steve Lowry, Jen McDonald, Brooke Rainey art director
senior photographer
Production
graphic designers
Abbie Leali, Melanie Mays Matt Bach
production coordinator
Marketing
marketing director
Lynsie Shackelford Olivia Moye
marketing promotions manager
Advertising
Amy Mularski Maggie Bond advertising director Rachel Dean senior account executives Carla Mathis, Hillary Parsons, Mike Smith, Stevan Steinhart, Jennifer Trsinar account executives Michael Jezewski, Keith Wright sponsorship specialist Heather Mullins sales operations manager Chelon Hasty account coordinator Rachel Hellewell publisher
associate publisher
Circulation
APRIL 20 & 21 TH
circulation manager
Casey Sanders
Nfocus is published monthly by SOUTHCOMM. Advertising deadline for the next issue is Wed., April 18, 2018. A limited number of free copies, one per reader, are available at select retail establishments, listed on the website: nfocusnashville.com. First-class subscriptions are available for $99 per year. Send your name and address along with a check or American Express credit card number and expiration date to: GAry MINNIS, SOUTHCOMM. 210 12th Ave. S., Suite 100, Nashville, TN 37203 or call Gary at 615-844-9307. For advertising information, call MAGGIE BOND at 615-244-7989, ext. 233. Copyright ©2018 SouthComm, LLC.
ST
SouthComm
chief financial officer Bob Mahoney chief operating officer Blair Johnson vice president of production operations creative director Heather Pierce
Curt Pordes
iN o ur wo rd s
Sugar and Spice Plenty of sweet surprises in store
Join King Jewelers to explore the finest collections of diamond bridal jewelry. Browse an unparalleled selection of ethically sourced certified diamonds and diamond jewelry. Enjoy champagne while taking advantage of our incredible selection, special spring savings, and financing options!
4121 HILLSBORO PIKE, NASHVILLE KINGS1912.COM | 615.724.5464
There’s no shortage of people and places to write about when it comes to Nashville’s dining scene. There’s always a new restaurant to check out, a food trend to try or a chef to get to know, which makes it really difficult to decide the direction for our annual epicurean issue. This year, we decided to skip dinner in favor of dessert and chat with the pastry chefs sweetening up Nashville’s culinary scene. From cookies to croissants, bundt cakes to baguettes, we explored the beautiful, buttery, beckoning world of baked goods and the six women behind the city’s most tantalizing treats. Turn to page 57 to learn their stories and to get a sneak peek of what they can do in the kitchen. (And speaking of women who do remarkable things in the kitchen,
check out our Behind the Scenes profile on caterer Kristen Winston on page 12.) We also packed coverage of nearly 20 parties into this issue. If you’re an animal lover, check out the Nashville Humane Association’s Top Tails event (page 27) or the Nashville Zoo’s Claws, Paws and Jaws party (page 30). All of you oenophiles can catch up on the Nashville Wine Auction’s three-day food and wine weekend at Pairings (page 34). And if you’re a Preds fan, don’t miss our coverage of the inaugural Preds & Threads fashion show (page 32). And it wouldn’t be the April issue without the Ballet Ball, which honored the legacy of Johnny Cash with performances from seven country artists and dancers from the Nashville Ballet. Don’t miss it on page 47. BY NaNcY FloYd
Nancy is a reader of books, rider of bikes and lover of all things local. She lives in East Nashville with her husband, Kyle, and beagle, Gus. Email her at nfloyd@nfocusmagazine.com.
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TRUNK SHOW INTRODUCING THE GOLD COLLECTION
APRIL 27TH & 28TH
King Jewelers is proud to introduce the gold collection by John Hardy to Nashville! Enjoy champagne while taking advantage of our extended John Hardy selection and special financing options!
nfocusnashville.com
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We would like to congratulate our Greater Nashville RealtorsÂŽ Awards of Excellence winners and extend gratitude to all of our agents for everything that you do to make our company great. We are looking forward to another successful year!
DIAMOND
Janet Denton Gatewood
PLATINUM
Clay Kelton
Barbara Keith Payne
SAPPHIRE
GOLD Jennifer Claxton
Vivian Brandon
Denise Creswell
Chuck Curran
Jamie Granbery
Sarah Kilgore
Allison Klausner
Leigh Ann Emerson
Sherri Smith Hoskins
Marcie Nash
Betsy Peebles
Laura Scott
Donnie Stanley
Andrew Terrell
Mandy Wachtler
SILVER
Theo Antoniadis
Becky Leppert
Shannon Barton
Jeanie Barrier
Amy Martin
Laura Patterson
D.J. Farris
Sara Gooch
Ashley Payne
Dana Griscom
Thomas Rassas
Brett Sheriff
Emily Iverson
Linda Johnston
Regina Smith
Cole Kilgore
Greta Springer
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320 VAUGHN RD. $2,499,000 Alison Douglas | 615.305.6978 Suzanne Snyder | 615.513.4033
304 MAYBELLE LN. $1,900,000 Dana Griscom | 615.485.5360 Sissy Rogers | 615.496.1700
1208 TYNE BLVD. $1,745,000 Barbara Keith Payne | 615.300.7337
4036 SNEED RD. $1,450,000 Janet Denton Gatewood | 615.319.9725
5700 BUZZARD CREEK RD. $1,350,000 Jeanie Barrier | 615.423.8311
1516A FERGUSON AVE. $1,299,000 Brett Sheriff | 615.349.6266 Theo Antoniadis | 615.838.5701
805 SHADOWSTONE PL. $1,224,900 Mandy Wachtler | 615.714.0864
3737 WEST END AVE. #302 $1,090,000 Sissy Rogers | 615.496.1700
142 39TH AVE. N $1,036,000 Heather Jenkins | 615.456.3340
2228 GREY CLIFF DR. $899,000 Jeanie Barrier | 615.423.8311
4119 DORMAN DR. $849,500 Suzanne Snyder | 615.513.4033
217 KENSINGTON PARK $829,900 Kim Anderson | 615.479.2146
2411 CRESTMOOR RD. | PH4 $795,000 Barbara Keith Payne | 615.300.7337
5209 MEADOWLAKE RD. $765,000 Sissy Rogers | 615.496.1700
1810A ELLIOTT AVE. $749,000 Dana Griscom | 615.485.5360 Laura Patterson | 615.513.7730 Karen Pilkerton | 615.668.1578
217 BURLINGTON PL. $735,000 Jim Terrell | 615.300.5401
202 KENSINGTON PARK $725,000 Kim Anderson | 615.479.2146
5013 TRACEWAY DR. $499,000 Dana Griscom | 615.485.5360 Laura Patterson | 615.513.7730 Karen Pilkerton | 615.668.1578
4017 ELKINS ALLEY $465,000 Jamie Granbery | 615.300.8763 Shannon Barton | 615.838.3193
2906 WINGATE AVE. $279,000 Sissy Rogers | 615.496.1700
Alison Douglas
Barbara Keith Payne
Janet Denton Gatewood
Dana Griscom
Laura Patterson
NASHVILLE OFFICE 615.383.7914 2021 RICHARD JONES RD STE. 210 NASHVILLE, TN 37215
Karen Pilkerton
Sissy Rogers
Jeanie Barrier
Brett Sheriff
Theo Antoniadis
WILLIAMSON COUNTY OFFICE 615.371.2474 2 CADILLAC DR BRENTWOOD, TN 37027
Mandy Wachtler
Heather Jenkins
Suzanne Snyder
Kim Anderson
Shannon Barton
INTOWN OFFICE 615.942.5830 1909 12TH AVE SOUTH NASHVILLE, TN 37203 nfocusnashville.com
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Jamie Granbery
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b e hi n d t h e scenes
Kristen Winston If you have attended a fundraising event, wedding, retail opening or birthday party in the past 20 years, chances are overwhelming that you’ve enjoyed food prepared by Kristen Winston. The little girl who made mini buffets for her Barbies grew up to become Nashville’s in-demand caterer as well-known for her bite-sized appetizers as she is for creating scrumptious meals. Since branching out on her own as Kristen Winston Catering in 2002, she has delighted everyone from intimate groups at dinner to 2,000 guests at Nordstrom’s grand-opening gala. Today, she works with a full-time staff of 10, an army of impeccably trained servers and her husband, John, who used his welding skills to craft a mini taco maker for those delectable treats. Over a platter of her signature BLTs, we sat down with Kristen to learn more about this indefatigable mother of two. by Holly Hoffman photograph by Daniel Meigs
What was your first catering job? Unofficially, it was an engagement party for a friend. I planned and prepared the menu. Some of those items are still on our menu today! That was the night a guest asked if I had ever thought about catering, which was an aha moment for me.
The Basics
Name: Kristen Winston Profession/Title: President, Kristen Winston Catering Hometown: Nashville Zip code: 37205 Years in Nashville: 37 Most people served at an event: 2,000
What is the most rewarding thing about being a caterer? Successfully executing an event — seeing our team work together like a well-oiled machine to give our guests an exceptional experience. I love making our clients happy. What are your most requested items? Mini BLTs and mini grilled cheese What is your favorite food to make for yourself? Mexican Is there anything you wish you never had to make again? Baked Alaska. Way too stressful! What’s your favorite restaurant? May I choose a few? Etch, Rolf and Daughters, Barcelona — I could go on and on. I like different restaurants for different occasions, but most important to me is consistently good food and service, and these all deliver! What’s your favorite coffee shop? My new fave is Frothy Monkey in The Nations. Beautiful open space, great coffee.
What’s the best place for cocktails? Union Common. They have a fabulous bar, delicious small plates and great service — another one of my favorite restaurants! What’s the best place for brunch? I am sad to say I never brunch on the weekends! I am usually working on Saturdays and catching up on Sundays. What’s the best shop to buy a gift? Epergne, Color, Magpies (for kids) What’s your favorite locally made product? Grab the Gold bars. They get me through some long days. For a quiet getaway, where do you like to go? Monteagle What’s your favorite local event? Symphony holiday concerts What is one thing you hope never changes about Nashville? The particularly warm, sweet and welcoming nature of Nashvillians. I remember my cousin, who was born and raised in Connecticut, coming to visit and always being charmed by Southerners’ polite “pleases” and “thank-you’s.”
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2017 BY THE NUMBERS
$307.5
MILLION TOTAL SALES
AVERAGE SALES PRICE:
$715
$6.5 MILLION HIGHEST SALE:
430 PROPERTIES SOLD
THOUSAND
1704 OLD HILLSBORO ROAD
65 EXCEPTIONAL AGENTS & STAFF
It has been our pleasure to serve the Nashville community for over 14 years! We sincerely appreciate all of our agents, clients, and friends for making 2017 a wonderful year at Worth Properties, LLC and we look forward to many more!
Janet Jones,Managing Broker 40 Burton Hills Boulevard, Suite 230, Nashville, Tennessee 37215 | 615.250.7880 | www.worthproperties.com nfocusnashville.com | Arpil 2018 <<
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Greater Nashville Realtors
2017 Awards of Excellence Recipients Diamond Elite
Diamond
Diamond
Award Recipient
Award Recipient
Award Recipient
LAURA BAUGH
WHITNEY MUSSER
FIONA KING
Sapphire
Sapphire
Award Recipient
Award Recipient
AMY B. WYATT
NANCY BROCK
40 Bur ton Hills Boulevard, Suite 230, Nashville, Tennessee 37215 | 615.250.7880 | www.worthproperties.com >> April 2018 | nfocusnashville.com
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Silver Award Recipients
SHELLY BEARDEN
ERIN BIRDEN
AMY JACKSON SMITH
ELAINE REED
STEVE TOWNES
BROOKS SPELLINGS
40 Burton Hills Boulevard, Suite 230, Nashville, Tennessee 37215 | 615.250.7880 | www.worthproperties.com nfocusnashville.com | Arpil 2018 <<
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nsider
Elizabeth Colley, Dotty Sutter, Beth Scruggs, Megan Kelly
Suzanne Stiles, Lexi Tutor, Sarah Troy
Roochita and Abhishek Mathur
Maggie Stephenson, Nancy Thomas, Julia King
Soundwaves & Sweethearts 2.16.18
The Junior board of the Nashville Dolphins hosted the second annual Soundwaves & Sweethearts. More than 275 people trekked to Skyville Live, the Melrose performance venue, for an evening with the always crowd-pleasing Boy Named Banjo. Between sets, guests relished Deep Eddy cocktails and hot dogs from Ronnie’s Tasty Dogs. The successful night of music raised valuable funds to provide aquatics programming — from blowing bubbles to swim team — free of charge to more than 200 children and adults with special needs. by Holly Hoffman photographs by Daniel Meigs
Charlee Caroland, Meghan Huffman
Alyson Woods, Doug Alexander
Ed and Stephani Ryan
Nick Maynard, Phillipe Chadwick
Avant Garde 2.17.18
more than 400 guests showed up to Nashville Cares’ Avant Garde in pirate costumes, fairy wings and glitter to match the Neverland theme. A Lost Boys Lounge provided bites and top-shelf cocktails for VIPs, Guilty Pleasures delighted the crowd with live entertainment and artist Kelsey Schoff created a live painting of Neverland that had revelers oohing and aahing. Avant Garde, which raises funds to end the HIV/AIDS epidemic, is so eagerly anticipated that guests were overheard already discussing next year’s fundraiser. by lauren langsTon sTewarT photographs by eric englanD continued on page 18
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nsider
FOLLOW THE ISLAND
DRESS CODE
Amos Glass, Sarah Zanotti
Marjean Coddon, Bonnie Dow, Stephanie Silverman, Kay West
Rob Turner, Enrico Lopez-Yañez, Jess Slais, Bob Olsen
Kim Hewell, Norm Scarborough
Broadway Brunch Kick-Off 2.25.18
It’s all about the ladies at this year’s Broadway Brunch, the lively spring fundraiser for Nashville Rep. At the recent Kick-Off Party at Salt & Vine, the theater company revealed that the event would be inspired by five musicals that celebrate strong females: Annie Get Your Gun, The Color Purple, Legally Blonde, Dreamgirls and Wicked. Rep stars Megan Murphy Chambers and Jennifer Whitcomb-Oliva performed a medley of hits from the musicals, whetting everyone’s appetite for the world-class entertainment to come at the main event in May. by NaNcy Floyd photographs by Eric England
Agenia Clark, Rebecca Vest, Vicki Smith
Amy Manuel, Ashley Kirby
Shelley Moeller, Deborah Faulkner
Casey Enright, Deb Enright, Elizabeth McCreary, Lauren Kissinger
Outside the Box 2.27.18
NASHVILLE NASHVILLE HILL GREEN HILLS 4015 HILLSBORO PIKE, SUITE 105 HILL CENTER CENTER GREEN GREEN HILLS HILLS ||| 4015 4015HILLSBORO HILLSBOROPIKE, PIKE,SUITE SUITE105 105 NASHVILLE, TN | P: 615-292-9700 NASHVILLE, TN | P: 615-292-9700 NASHVILLE, TN | P: 615-292-9700 MONDAY-SATURDAY 10AM MONDAY-SATURDAY 10AM---7PM 7PM| ||SUNDAY SUNDAY12AM 12AM- --5PM 5PM MONDAY-SATURDAY 10AM 7PM SUNDAY 12AM 5PM
the girl scouts of Middle Tennessee returned to Franklin for Outside the Box, a delicious event where local chefs use Girl Scout cookies as ingredients in inventive desserts. The favorite of the night was the lemon white chocolate blueberry pie (made by Ryan Duke of Cork & Cow), which used Savannah Smiles in the crust. Deborah Faulkner, Franklin’s chief of police, was honored for her accomplishments that “embody a strong sense of self and confidence to challenge the norm.” She quipped that she, too, earns badges and has a troop of her own. by laureN laNgstoN stewart photographs by daniEl MEigs continued on page 20
18 >> April 2018 | nfocusnashville.com Nsider.indd 18 NF_4-18_01-31.indd 18
3/22/18 11:03 9:45 AM 3/22/18
Fridrich & Clark Realty proudly salutes our 2017 award recipients Greater Nashville Realtors Awards of Excellence DI A MOND E L I T E AWA R D
Richard Bryan
DI A M O N D AWA RD
Tim Bennett
Starling Davis
Betty Finucane
P L AT I NUM AWA R D
Courtney Jenrath
Beth Molteni
Tom Repass
S A P P H I R E AWA RD
Trish Woolwine
Jodie Barringer
Marilyn Blankenship
Keri Kidd Cannon
Sam Coleman
Cindy Cook
Mary Elcan May
Anne McGugin
Lucy Smith
Tom Fussell
GOLD AWARD
SA P P H I R E AWA R D
Eric Grasman
Mara Thompson
Jennifer Stadler
Margaret Taylor
Daniel Hope
S I LV ER AWA R D
Frances Andrews
Teresa Beard
Mary Brooke Bonadies
Ruby Elshafei
Patricia Rappa
Anne Marie Strickmaker
Valerie Roberts
Babs White
Williamson County Association of Realtors Celebration of Excellence PL ATI NUM AWA R D
GO LD AWA R D Mary Kocina
B RO N ZE AWA RD Nancy Tice
Suzie DeYoung
Tina Pierret
50 Years of Guiding You Home Nashville 615-327-4800 NF_4-18_01-31.indd 19
FridrichandClark.com
Williamson Co. 615-263-4800 nfocusnashville.com | Arpil 2018 19 <<
3/22/18 11:04 AM
nsider
Angie Adams, Christie Laird, Karen Gooch
Bob Kucher, Sheila Calloway
Anne McKinney, Karen Kaiser, Heather Maki
Jim Johnson, Jeff Gregg, Steve Sirls, Jim Kelley
A Little Night of Music Patrons Party 2.28.18
MAY 3.4.5
Jim Kelley hosted Pencil Foundation’s Patrons Party for the ever-so-popular A Little Night of Music in his historic home. The crowd mixed and mingled, chatting away about the much-anticipated upcoming event that would feature Grammy Award-winning songwriters Shane McAnally and Josh Osborne. Pencil’s signature annual fundraiser connects the music industry with Nashville’s Metro schools, raising funds in support of public education and making a difference one child at a time. by lauren langston stewart photographs by tommy lawson
3 DAYS 73 ARTISTS 12 STATES THEHARDINGARTSHOW.COM @THEHARDINGARTSHOW
Tom Wiseman, Troy Smiley
Amy Murphy, Jean Ferguson, Kim Purcell, Tom Bain
Jimmy Purcell, Jeannine Briley
Palmer Harrell, Laura Hart, Sarah Cottrell
Food for Thought 3.2.18
Mr. & Mrs. James F. Turner, Jr. & Family
Parents, friends and supporters of Benton Hall Academy headed to the Nashville Farmers’ Market for the sixth annual Food for Thought. While some partygoers chose to take their chances at the wine pull, others began by sampling dishes from popular eateries including City House, Martin’s Bar-B-Que Joint and Jeni’s Splendid Ice Creams. Troy Smiley, who has participated every year, convinced Tom Wiseman to hang up his judge’s robes and get behind the grill with him to prepare a special dish. by Holly Hoffman photographs by Eric England continued on page 22
20 >> April 2018 | nfocusnashville.com Nsider.indd 20 NF_4-18_01-31.indd 20
3/22/18 11:08 9:46 AM 3/22/18
Christianson Patterson Courtney & Associates Congratulates our 2017 GNR Award Winners
Richard Courtney GNR Diamond Elite Award of Excellence Winner and Life Member
Tommy Patterson Stephanie Tipton Dana Battaglia Christy Reed GNR Diamond Award of GNR Diamond Award of GNR Sapphire Award of GNR Sapphire Award of Excellence Winner and Excellence Winner and Excellence Winner and Excellence Winner and Life Member Life Member Life Member Life Member
4535 Harding Pk. - Suite 110 Nashville, TN 37205 (615) 202-7777
Shauna Brooks GNR Silver Award of Excellence Winner
125 Woodward Hills Place
4408 B Hunt Place
Ellen Christianson 615-300-7190
Shauna Brooks 615-347-2550
$1,899,990
$1,295,000
cpcanashville.com
New Price!
uNder coNtract
1963 Old Estill Springs $1,175,000
Brady Smith 615-202-9019 Christy Reed 615-504-2833
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102 B Gilman Avenue
Ellen Christianson 615-300-7190
Shauna Brooks 615-347-2550
$850,000
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comiNg sooN!
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110 31st Avenue North #406
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Doug Lesky 615-243-1064
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$539,000
611 Georgetown Drive
5113 Sq.Ft. â&#x20AC;&#x201C; New Construction Shawn Binkley 615-414-8176 Shauna Brooks 615-347-2550
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3/22/18 11:09 AM
nsider
Patti Smallwood, Co-chairs Lyndsey Rollins and Amy Greathouse, Beth Alexander
Charles Webb, Hays and Houston Estes
Maggie Tucker, Tayler Webb
Sara Garner, Hilson and Katherine Merrill
Swan Ball Late Party Kick-Off 3.7.18
The Swan ball is drawing near, and the events are ramping up! Cheekwood’s young supporters came together to officially kick off the Late Party, chaired this year by Amy Greathouse and Lyndsey Rollins. Lyndsey and her husband, Clark, opened the doors of their lovely home for a casual cocktail party for the Late Party Committee and table hosts. Swan Ball co-chairs Beth Alexander and Patti Smallwood joined in on the festivities — not that this very capable group needs any supervision. by NaNcy Floyd photographs by Eric England
Kristen Starcher, Mike Maguire, Missy Naff
Tom and Angie Atema
Rachel Rogers, Audrey Wade, Emily Wade
Jono and Amy Huddleston, Heather and Dan MacDonald
Casino Royale Gala 3.9.18
More than 500 guests came together for the Casino Royale Gala to benefit Best Buddies. In addition to many people rolling the dice, the evening included an irresistible live auction with exclusive Predators packages — such as lunch with Pekka Rinne or Roman Josi and a road trip with the whole team — which were auctioned off by none other than the official voice of the Preds himself, Paul McCann. By far the most adorable part of the night was when the elementary school participants modeled in a fashion show, and more than $340,000 was raised for an all-around evening of success for Best Buddies! by laureN laNgSToN STewarT photographs by Eric England
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3/22/18 11:11 9:46 AM 3/22/18
nfocusnashville.com
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| Arpil 2018 <<
23 3/22/18 11:13 AM
“I want to live in a city that’s serious about protecting our planet.” We heard you.
Thanks to the voice of our customers, what once was a landfill off I-65 is now the site of Nashville’s first solar park. Music City Solar offers clean, efficient, maintenance-free energy and is the first step toward a more sustainable Nashville. Together, we can bring about powerful change. For information on how to purchase or donate solar panels, please visit our website. g o s o l a r m u s i c c i t y. c o m
24 >> April 2018 | nfocusnashville.com NF_4-18_01-31.indd 24 NES-28556-18-Music City Solar Ad Campaign_nFocus_FINAL-rev.indd 1
3/22/18 11:13 AM 3/8/18 7:45 AM
Belle Meade • Green Hills • Oak Hill • Forest Hills • Brentwood • Leipers Fork
Brandon Jenkins (615)642-9992 NF_4-18_01-31.indd 25
<< 25 nfocusnashville.com | Arpil 2018OFFice www.GrOveparkcOnstructiOn.cOM (615) 678-7963
3/22/18 11:14 AM
PLEASE DRINK REYKA RESPONSIBLY. TAKK! (THAT’S ‘THANK YOU’ IN ICELANDIC.) REYKA VODKA, 40% ALC/VOL. (80 PROOF) DISTILLED FROM GRAIN. ©2018 WILLIAM GRANT & SONS. NEW YORK, NY.
26 >> April 2018 | nfocusnashville.com
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3/22/18 11:14 AM
pa r t I E S
Kathy Ogles, Scott Peterson and Loren Chumley
Mary Ann Lipshie, Gary Crigger, Robin Patton
Steven and Brenna Simmons, Richard Horton Amy Gargus, Megan Anderson, Laura Chavarria, Staci Trimm
Randy and Janice LaGasse
Party Animals Nashville Humane Association thanks the Top Tails Donor Society
N
Cindee and Michael Gold
Becca Morris, Marcia Masulla
Jennifer Holt, John Colton
o matter what type of event the Nashville Humane Association throws, rest assured it will be entertaining. The cocktail party held in honor of the Top Tails Donor Society is a fine example. The evening brings together this group of benefactors as a thank you for their generous and continuing support of the organization’s programs and services and the impact the NHA makes in the lives of homeless animals, which included placing more than 4,000 animals in new homes last year. Cindee and Michael Gold hosted the February tradition in their Northumberland home. The night was a prelude to a busy weekend of festivities for the couple. The following night, they hosted a Private Vintner Dinner for Nashville Wine Auction’s Pairings and then welcomed a throng of cousins and other family members to celebrate the 90th birthday of Michael’s father. In addition to talking about furry friends, guests had the pleasure of chatting with some new faces at NHA. Laura Chavarria was named executive director in late November. Becca Morris, director of development and community outreach, and Megan Anderson, chief medical officer, began their positions in January. They also met the hosts’ goldendoodle, who came bounding into the dining room unexpectedly. Irresistible cheese straws and Tabasco nuts at the bar were more than enough to pique interest in the delicious bites to come. The crowd savored a never-ending supply of hearty hors d’œuvres including artichoke Parmesan puffs and beef tenderloin crostini with artichoke, spinach and roasted peppers. One group lingered in the kitchen to watch the staff from Kristen Winston Catering prepare those signature mini grilled cheese sandwiches. The night came to an end, but support for the Nashville Humane Association did not. Everyone was already making plans for April 25 when they would attend Cause for Paws, another lively event to benefit animals and their well-being. by Holly Hoffman photographs by Daniel Meigs
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3/22/18 1:12 PM
pa r t I E S
Peter Erickson, Lindsey Walker, Carolyn and Charles Ermey
Clare Armistead, Sara Nelson
Judy Simmons, Bill Forrester, Sharon Vaughn
Heather Scott, Weaver Barksdale, Barbara Daane
Quincy Bryant, Brittany Towns
A Unanimous Verdict Park Center honors Bill Young at How About Dinner and a Movie
A
steady flow of people moved past regular moviegoers in the lobby of the Belcourt Theatre heading for the 1925 Hall. There, members of the legal community joined supporters of Park Center to recognize a man who is well-respected in both circles. Chancellor Bill Young, a longtime board member and former board chair of the nonprofit, was being honored at How About Dinner and a Movie. Emily Griffin and Margaret Rolfsen returned as co-chairs and recruited Joanna Hall to serve with them. Continuing the traditions established 21 years ago, they included artwork by Pepe Presley, dinner from d.Kates Catering and, of course, the screening of a special movie. Passed beverages in lieu of a bar and teens offering boxes of popcorn were well-received additions to the event. Bidding on unique items — such as goat yoga classes and a dog birthday party — in the silent auction continued at a hectic pace until everyone stopped to dine on Dani Kates’ scrumptious chicken croquettes. The program began with Melissa Blackburn, the judge in Metro’s Mental Health Court, reciting a long list of Bill’s professional accomplishments and philanthropic deeds. The honoree’s legal background and knowledge of state government has been invaluable to Park Center and the population it serves. When telling how he came to be the honoree, Bill explained, “You don’t ever say ‘no’ to Barbara Daane.” Laughter followed and heads nodded in agreement. The program closed with Barbara, the honorary chair and longtime chair and founder of the event, presenting him with a painting of the courthouse. Once the auction closed, the lights dimmed, and the final tradition of the night began. Guests sat back to watch Pecking Order, a delightfully quirky documentary about the world of competitive chicken breeding. (Who knew there was such a thing!) The dinner was delicious and the movie entertaining, but more importantly, the night provided Park Center with significant funds to continue empowering people with mental illness and substance abuse disorders.
Co-chairs Emily Griffin, Joanna Hall and Margaret Rolfsen
Jane and Bill Young, Beth Young
by Holly Hoffman photographs by Eric England
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nfocusnashville.com Paul Ney, Micki Yearwood
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Ken and Bethany Underwood 3/22/18 1:14 PM
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pa r t I E S
Betty and Marty Dickens, Mimi Vaughn Andre
Brenda Oslin, Shelley Logan
Nora and Kent Kirby, Barbara and Greg Hagood
Rick Schwartz, Robin and Richard Patton
Animal House Partying with a porcupine, rabbit and twotoed sloth at Claws, Paws and Jaws
A
nytime you walk into a party and a Flemish giant rabbit is waiting in the foyer to greet you, you know you’re in the right place. You can also be certain that you’re surrounded by supporters of the Nashville Zoo. Mimi and Charlie Vaughn opened their Belle Meade home to members of the Claws, Paws and Jaws Donor Society for their annual cocktail party. Andre, the Flemish giant rabbit, wasn’t the only animal ambassador on duty delighting the crowd. Charlie the porcupine — a prehensile-tailed porcupine to be exact — attracted a large following as he ate snacks on a nearby table, and Mala the kinkajou coaxed laughs from the crowd as she crawled around on the shoulders of her keeper. All the while, Mimi and Charlie’s precious daughters, Dalton and Kate, had a front-row seat for the action. Nashville Zoo board chair Julie Walker successfully shushed the crowd after only two attempts for some brief remarks from President Rick Schwartz. Rick pointed out the large photographs on easels around the room, representing the various projects currently underway at the zoo. “We’ve never seen such a growth rate,” he relayed as he ticked off some of the most impressive recent accomplishments. On Presidents Day, the zoo welcomed 13,688 guests — the second highest attendance ever, and in a February, no less — and the zoo is on track to hit one million visitors for 2018. This year also marks some major milestones, including the opening of the Andean bear exhibit this spring. The exhibit is the largest project in history — or at least it will be until this fall when the new veterinarian hospital opens. Rick also took a moment to praise the zoo’s international conservation efforts, reminding all that the zoo devoted $500,000 to this important matter last year. Guests enjoyed a few more cocktails before departing to the valet line — but not before they were bid adieu by Fern, a two-toed sloth hanging from a branch in the Vaughns’ dining room.
Susan and Bill Joy, Julie Walker
Dalton Vaughn, Kate Vaughn, Kelsey Smith with Mala, Alison Day
Fern
by Nancy Floyd photographs by Daniel Meigs
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nfocusnashville.com Sally and Jim Hunt, Charlie Vaughn
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3/22/18 9:48 AM
4108 Trinity Road, Franklin Available june 2018 | $1,555,000
Modern Farmhouse designed by P Shea. Newly fenced 5.35 acres with 4 board black horse fencing. This home has over 6,100 square feet, main level master suite with four additional bedroom suites upstairs. High end features throughout the home including custom cabinets, large walk-in closets, over-sized laundry room down plus additional laundry room upstairs, bonus, media, office and craft rooms. Abundance of closet space, 10’ ceilings up and down, formal and informal dining space and no HOA. Main level 3-car garage, covered back patio with outdoor living space / fireplace. Covered terrace with built-in grilling station. High speed internet available and quick easy access to major roads. This is a perfect house for horses, barn and/or a pool.
Nashville / Green Hills Available July 2018 | Offered at $1,375,000 each
These two contemporary homes are under construction now and will be unlike anything available in the area. Walk to nearby park and short drive to the mall. Over 4,000 square feet with 4 bedrooms, 3.5 baths. Open design with large pivot entry doors leading to the two-story foyer with floating stairs. The great room features Milgard pocket door system along the entire back wall opening up to the large back patio. Other design elements include a two-story Dining room with wall of windows, polished concrete foyer, wired for electric car charging, Door Bell Cameras, high end windows/doors and an upstairs office opening to a large front terrace. Call Bruce for your private showing. We have not listed these yet.
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Bruce Jones, Broker/Team Leader
RE/MAX Fine Homes
ABR, CLHMS, CRS, GRI, License# 260577 Office: 615-371-3232 Cell: 615-429-0153
1624 Westgate Circle #125 | Brentwood, TN 37027 www.FranklinElite.com www.ExceptionalLivingGroup.com nfocusnashville.com
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3/22/18 11:15 AM
pa r t I E S
Glen Linthicum, Gnash, Karen McMahon
Erika Parkko, Caleb Daniel, Pekka Rinne
Trish and Chris Henson
Ellie Ottaway, Lily Atema, Roman Josi
Deborah Reynolds, Dave Delage, Ben and Marlene Vanderklok, Valerie Poile
Strike a Pose The Nashville Predators do a little turn on the catwalk
T
he Nashville Predators are making front page news these days. The team broke the franchise’s winning streak record in March; goaltender Pekka Rinne snagged his 300th win and 50th shutout, and general manager David Poile became the winningest GM in the history of the league. But the players, despite usually being able to perform under pressure, were all aflutter with nerves just minutes before Preds & Threads, the team’s inaugural fashion show and benefit dinner at Bridgestone Arena. “It’s totally different,” said goalie Pekka Rinne with a laugh, just minutes before making his fashion debut. “[Usually] I get to hide underneath my mask and don’t have to show my face and showcase the clothes I’m wearing. We’ll see how it goes.” Modeling clothes and accessories from the evening’s sponsors, Dillard’s at The Mall at Green Hills and King Jewelers, the players and their dates all looked great, but it was the kids who stole the show. Every player — including team captain Roman Josi, alternate captain Ryan Ellis and the fresh-out-of-retirement Mike Fisher — was partnered up with a child from Best Buddies, Cottage Cove, Nashville Inner City Ministry or Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt, and once those kids hit the stage, their personalities shined brighter than the goal lamp. Some kids did the splits or cartwheels, while others did choreographed dances with Ryan Johansen, Filip Forsberg and P.K. Subban. A few even posed for selfies, which the players excitedly posted on Instagram after the show. The night may have started with Pekka and his crew wondering how well they’d do as runway models, but it turned out to be an evening of playful and positive energy and a creative way to raise money for the Nashville Predators Foundation, which supports over 100 local organizations through the year. Here’s hoping the event becomes an annual tradition because we can’t wait to see what those kids come up with next year. We can see it now — T-shirt cannons and confetti poppers for everyone.
Anneliese Barron, Co-chair Kristen and Peter Laviolette, Dan MacDonald
Kurt and Beth Winstead, David Bradley
by Megan Seling photographs by Daniel Meigs
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Quentin and Samantha Voglund
Madison Bell, Bryan Link, Ryan Johansen 3/22/18 9:49 AM
D SOL
NEW
NG I T LIS
1608 CHICKERING ROAD | 30 ACRES IN FOREST HILLS
105 DERBY GLEN LANE
$10,900,000
$998,000
114 CLARENDON AVENUE | BELLE MEADE
107 ADAMS PARK | SUGARTREE
$2,995,000
CT A R T ON C DER N U
225 LONE OAK VILLAGE WAY GREEN HILLS
$735,000
HAL ROSSON
615-271-2705 halrosson@freemanwebb.com www.halrosson.com NF_4-18_32-65.indd 33
$775,000
E RIC P NEW
505 GEORGETOWN DR. BROOK MEADE
$699,500
Representing Real Estate Buyers and Sellers Since 1971 Freeman Webb Companies 3810 Bedford Avenue, Nashville, TN 37215 | april 2018 << 33 615.271-2700: Office
nfocusnashville.com
3/22/18 11:17 AM
pa r t I E S
Elise and Harvey Crouch, Mark Whaley
Melissa and Rob Beckham
Scott Peterson and Loren Chumley
Hal Stallwood, Kip Summers Jeff Hopmayer, Suzanne Phifer Pavitt, Melanie Ball, Shane Foshee, Denise Cummins
Easy Come, Easy Go The Big Easy comes to Nashville for Pairings
I
n addition to raising millions of dollars for the fight against cancer, Nashville Wine Auction knows how to satisfy the gourmands of Music City through their annual roster of world-class food and wine events. Pairings is no exception, and the weekend of festivities kicked off with a series of vintners’ dinners across the city on Thursday night. On Friday night, guests packed into City Winery to sip and sample close to 70 wines from 24 wineries at Wined Up. Small bites were available from three guest chefs visiting from New Orleans, including Brian Landry, chef and owner of QED Hospitality, who Nashville Wine Auction President Holly Whaley credited with making the entire New Orleans-Nashville partnership happen. The evening was the perfect precursor to Saturday’s Pairings dinner, an indulgent six-course meal prepared by the Nashville and New Orleans chefs and paired with wines from top-notch vintners. The final night’s festivities began with guests sampling wine, hobnobbing with vintners and noshing on chef Garrett Pittler’s twist on chicken and waffles. As if perfectly timed, the wine ran out right before dinner was announced. Once the last reveler found their seat, the team of co-chairs — Virginia and Stan Kweller, Melinda and Eddie Wayland, and Mary Fetsch and Dan Burchfield — welcomed everyone before handing things over to auctioneer Charles Antin. He chastised one audience member, reminding them that “just waving at a charity auction can be very confusing.” With that understood, furious bidding ensued, the auctioneer and bidders pausing only for introductions of chefs and vintners as their respective courses were served. Pairings is about much more than three days of food, wine and friends. This year, 875 generous people attended the events and raised nearly $400,000 to benefit local cancer-related programs and to further Nashville Wine Auction’s fight against cancer.
Holly Whaley, Brian Landry
Amos Gott, Vince Dreffs
Angela Humphreys, Lisa Maki
by Nancy Floyd and Holly Hoffman photographs by Daniel Meigs continued on page 36
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nfocusnashville.com Sylvia Tomlinson, Marion Kraft, Miles Adcox, Troy Tomlinson
Parings.indd 34
3/22/18 9:50 AM
SAPPHIRE AWARD
PLATINUM AWARD
Rising Star 2017
SILVER AWARD
nfocusnashville.com
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TO OUR GNR AWARD WINNERS
GOLD AWARD
Congratulations
DIAMOND AWARD
| april 2018 <<
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pa r t I E S
Gary Rzucidlo, Pam and Steve Taylor
Co-chairs Mary Fetsch and Dan Burchfield, Virginia and Stan Kweller, and Melinda and Eddie Wayland
Amanda Andrews, Brad and Kim Shepard
Carol Scott, David and Rhonda Kemp, Lisa Maki
Laura and Vic McConnell, Brent and Kristen Patrick, Beth and Greg Cashion Kristen Koon, Caroline Jenkins, Lauren Becker
Mike and Summer Combs
Bill and Sharon Piper
Tom Gamble, Stephanie Baldwin, Jim Sloan
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Susie and Tom Campion, Rozanne Jackson and Glen Oxford 3/22/18 9:50 AM
Dreamy. Buttery soft, washable bed linens with a classic vintage look and feel by
Just part of our curated collection of artistic designs. V I N TA G E L I V I N G • G I F T S • F A S H I O N S • B E D D I N G & M O R E
2825 Bransford Ave in Berry Hill 615-385-2122 • Monday – Saturday 10-4
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| april 2018 <<
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pa r t I E S
Rick Stockstill, Nick Beres, Wells Adams
Jenni and Austin Thigpen with Olivia and Charlotte
Samori Cummings with Sanai
Maggie DeVier with Quinn, Emily Fay Randy Rayburn
Emily Frith, Scott Nelms
A Soup-erb Afternoon Celebrating 25 years of Soup Sunday
N
othing beats a bowl of hearty soup on a dreary day. On a gloomy February weekend, more than 1,500 people escaped the doldrums at Soup Sunday. Our Kids Center celebrated the 25th anniversary of its enduringly popular event with another crowd that came to taste culinary creations from almost 50 area restaurants and to support the nonprofit’s work to provide help and healing to children and families affected by child sexual abuse. Seasoned attendees arrived early at Nissan Stadium, and hundreds of grownups and children queued up to be among the first to sample this year’s offerings. While they waited patiently for the doors to open, the panel of judges were inside tasting chowders, curries and chilis to decide this year’s winners. The talented and diverse group included James Beard semifinalists Andrew Little of Josephine and Julia Sullivan of Henrietta Red, Moon Taxi frontman Trevor Terndrup and Lightning 100’s Lt. Dan. Once inside, people loaded trays to overflowing before sitting down to do a little tasting and judging of their own. By the end of the afternoon, almost 500 gallons of soup had been consumed. The Judges’ Choice Award went to the feijoada, a Portuguese bean and pork stew, from Levon Wallace of Gray & Dudley. Steaming Goat Food Truck took Most Creative for its Cubano Sur. Attendees voted Yucatan shrimp chowder from Broadway Brewhouse Midtown winner of the People’s Choice Award. And Trattoria Il Mulino deserves mentioning because its beer cheese soup with pretzel croutons was runner-up in both the People’s Choice and Most Creative categories! There’s much to be said about the healing power of soup. Nowhere is it more obvious than at Soup Sunday, which has raised more than $1.3 million since its inception so that the Our Kids staff can provide expert medical evaluations and crisis counseling to address concerns of child sexual abuse 24 hours a day, 365 days a year.
Andrew Little, Julia Sullivan
Dan Buckley, Sue Fort White, Trevor Terndrup
by Holly Hoffman photographs by Eric England
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nfocusnashville.com Sarah White, Michael Bristol
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Sarah Ashley Rohe, Camille Cohen 3/22/18 9:50 AM
Explore the Worth website and experience luxury real estate with one click
worthproperties.com
40 Burton Hills Boulevard, Suite 230, Nashville, Tennessee 37215 | 615.250.7880 | www.worthproperties.com
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pa r t I E S
Will and Katelyn Powell
Coors and Shelley Arthur, Jeffrey and Kemp Buntin
Tatum Hauck Allsep, Mari Kate Hopper
Connie Schimmel, Melissa Hauck, Noel and Heather Glasgow
Sing a Song Writers take the stage for Music Health Alliance
F
ans quickly snapped up tickets to the fourth annual The First and the Worst, an entertaining evening that’s in a class by itself. The night of “really bad songs by really good writers” benefits Music Health Alliance, the nonprofit that helps those in the music industry find health care solutions. This year, Brothers Osborne, Kelly Archer, Natalie Hemby and legendary Mac Davis shared the very first and worst lyrics they have ever written to the crowd at the sold-out event at City Winery. Guests began the night vying for silent auction items such as hard-to-get tickets to a Billy Joel concert at Madison Square Garden and one-of-a-kind handwritten lyrics from this year’s performers. They hurried to their tables when Music Health Alliance Founder and CEO Tatum Hauck Allsep appeared onstage. While welcoming everyone, she noted, “There is nowhere else to see legendary songwriters fighting over who penned the absolute worst song.” The music kicked off with event founder and co-chair Sandy Knox singing one of her first ditties, “Mr. Flirt.” Peter Cooper, reprising his role as emcee, cajoled the musicians into telling the stories behind the tunes before they bravely shared songs that were more hilarious than hideous. In the end, the audience voted Natalie’s “Inbreeding” as worst of the worst and named her winner of the coveted Crappy Award. After laughing and cheering through the promised numbers, the audience was treated to the hit-makers performing some of their more familiar singles, including Mac’s “In The Ghetto.” Since 2013, Music Health Alliance has created access to health care when there was none. It has saved more than $31 million in medical costs and reduced premiums for over 8,000 people. This year’s performers never made money from their first and worst songs, but they used their talent to raise more than $127,000 that will provide access to invaluable support and services at no cost to members of the music industry.
Gary and Terri Cooper
Todd and Leslie Cayce
Co-chairs LeAnn Bennett and Sandy Knox
by Holly Hoffman photographs by Daniel Meigs
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nfocusnashville.com Sarah Masse, Christie Hauck, Eric Masse, Brittany Hauck
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Brenda Lee & friends are ready for
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Arash Gholizadeh, Deborah Hodges, Eme Short
Brian and Maia Sims
Alex and Becky Curnow
Matt and Kates Potempa
Co-chairs Amos Gott and Holly Hoffman
And the Oscar Goes To ... Film lovers convene at the Belcourt Theatre for A Red Carpet Evening
I
f there were an Academy Award for Best Oscars Viewing Party, the Belcourt Theatre’s A Red Carpet Evening would undoubtedly take home the trophy. The biggest — and best — Oscars party in town brings passionate cinephiles together at the beloved art house theater to cheer on their favorite films of the year. Holly Hoffman and Amos Gott returned to co-chair, looking bright-eyed and ready to party despite a late night at the Ballet Ball the evening prior. The VIP Party kicked off early, giving revelers the chance to browse the elaborate silent auction and stake their claim on seats in the two theaters. The Diamond Lounge, a behind-the-screen party in the 1925 Hall, was a sparkly affair thanks to glittery chandeliers, giant reflective planters and gold Chiavari chairs around bistro tables. Two buffets from Sharon Johnson Catering provided Mediterraneaninspired bites before the show, and everyone was sure to make a stop at the concessions stand to stock up on popcorn, candy and another drink before the broadcast began. Watching the Oscars at the Belcourt feels a lot like how you imagine it would be inside Dolby Theater, where the show takes place. The crowd cheers when their favorite films win; they stand to applaud during particularly emotional points in the show, and they even boo over an upset. And with so many of the nominated films having been shown (sometimes exclusively) at the Belcourt, this crowd was passionate about their picks. Many in the audience stood up and clapped along to Mary J. Blige’s performance of “Mighty River” from Mudbound; there were whoops of praise for Get Out’s Best Screenplay win, and rapturous applause filled the room when The Shape of Water took home Best Picture. Fortunately, this year’s Oscars didn’t end with a gaffe like last year, and A Red Carpet Evening ended on a high note, as usual.
Stephanie Silverman, Krystal Clark
Zack Hall, Elle Long, H.G. Webb
by Nancy Floyd photographs by Daniel Meigs continued on page 44
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Gary Schott, Nan Flynn 3/22/18 9:52 AM
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Amy Brown, Lou Ann Brown
Heather and Dean Masullo
Milton White, Monica Holmes, Kay West, Marcia Masulla, Co-chair Amos Gott
Monica Mackie, Jordan Harris
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Neil Krugman and Lee Pratt
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pa r t I E S
Lance and Brittany Bloom, Olivia Walker and Richmond Chaffin
Emily Ireland
David Ewing and Alice Randall
Anderson and Caylan Jarman, Brooke and Josh Trusley
Margie and Bert Dale
Living on the Edge A tribute to Johnny Cash at the Ballet Ball
Suann Davis, Nancy Cheadle, Nancy Abbott
Co-chair Adrienne McRae, Paul Vasterling, Co-chair Suzanne Smothers
E
very year at the Ballet Ball, the Nashville Ballet promises a unique, onenight-only artistic collaboration, and they certainly delivered at the 2018 black-tie gala. A celebration of all things Johnny Cash, the evening brought together seven musical acts — including Johnny and June Carter Cash’s son, John Carter Cash, and his wife, Ana Cristina — to pay tribute to the Man in Black while accompanied by dancers from the Nashville Ballet. It’s the kind of thing that could only happen in Nashville, and this crowd was thrilled to have a front-row seat to all of the artistry and magic of the night. The evening began well before the musicians took the stage with cocktails in the lobby of Schermerhorn Symphony Center. Co-chairs Adrienne McRae and Suzanne Smothers — the former in a sleek black and white gown and the latter in a frilly pink number — represented the harmonious balance between the edginess of outlaw country and the elegance of the ballet that they sought to strike. Throughout the lobby, ballerinas — outfitted by the brilliant Billy Ditty — modeled elaborate costumes in soft, feminine, pink fabrics paired with dark makeup and pink-streaked pompadours. In the Laura Turner Concert Hall, event planner Bruce Pittman stuck to the blush and rose gold color scheme in towering centerpieces and a hanging floral wreath and incorporated small touches — guitar picks on place cards, a redesigned Ballet Ball logo shaped like a guitar and menus that looked like sheets of music — to pay tribute to Johnny Cash. After a three-course dinner from Kristen Winston, the program began with the presentation of the Synergy Award to John Carter Cash, who greeted the crowd saying, “My mother would be smiling right now.” A string of performers, including Sheryl Crow, Ronnie Dunn and Jamey Johnson, took turns performing some of Johnny’s biggest hits, such as “Ring of Fire,” “Jackson” and “Folsom Prison Blues” while dancers lit up the stage with choreographed pieces by Christopher Stuart. No doubt that Johnny and June Carter Cash would’ve been smiling down on the performance, as was every guest in the audience. by Nancy Floyd photographs by Eric England and Daniel Meigs continued on page 48
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David and Lisa Manning, Sylvia and Doug Bradbury
Trey Lipman, Jim and Trish Munro, Lance Gruner, Allen DeCuyper
Jon Upleger, Keenan McLaren Hartman Daffy Wammack, Edna and Pepe Presley, Tommy Wammack, Barbara Turner
Jane and Tom Corcoran
Paul Vasterling and Jason Facio
Robert and Caroline West, Julianne and Jeff Williams
Jay Joyner, Peter Depp
Brian Jackson and Roger Moore continued on page 50
Cecilia Hoffmann
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Mary Lauren Teague, Martha Ivester, Kindy Hensler
3/22/18 9:54 AM
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John Paul Horstmann, Alexa Lipman, Sandra and Larry Lipman
Co-chair Suzanne and Grant Smothers with Murphy and Mann
Heather and Curt Thorne
Victor Evans, Crystal Churchwell Emily and Mark Humphreys
Co-chair Adrienne and Richard McRae with Duncan and Kaylee
Lance Gruner, Shawn Wilson, Bob Deal and Jason Bradshaw
Krystal Clark, Sarah Patton, Brittany Irby continued on page 52
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52 >> april 2018 | nfocusnashville.com BalletBall.indd 52 NF_4-18_32-65.indd 52
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pa r t I E S
Al and Sylvia Ganier, Mary Louise and Lee Barfield Betty and Marty Dickens
Kookie Liles, William Liles
Jeremy Burchard, Earle and Mary Katherine Simmons, Judy Simmons, Jason Burchard
Julie and Roy Garcia, Meg Rush
Leading PurposeFilled Lives Honoring community leaders at Winter Lights
T
he powers that be at Family and Children’s Service certainly know how to honor Nashville’s spectacular community leaders. At the recent Winter Lights benefit held at Vanderbilt Student Life Center, they did everything but roll out a red carpet, and it was still Oscar swoon-worthy. After convivial cocktails with the ultra-groovy Sam Levine & City Lights playing in the wings, guests were treated to a scrumptious seated dinner by Johnny Haffner. Round tables, cloaked in aquamarine cloths, were centered by tall glass vases cradling stems of lavender. Gobo lights projected the Nashville skyline on the walls further illustrating the theme. Community leaders Betty and Marty Dickens were presented the Jane Eskind Leadership Award, while Sarah Ann Ezell received the Mary Jane Werthan Founders Award. All FCS award recipients exemplified Jane Eskind’s belief that “everyone should lead a purpose-filled life.” Many members of the Eskind family were present to honor her legacy. In fact, the entire party felt like a warm family reunion. To continue the celebration, the 300-plus patrons of all ages took to the dance floor where they danced the night away to the tunes of the Erik Blue Band, dubbed by many as the best live band in Nashville. FCS has been helping Nashville-area families in need since 1943. This popular winter fundraiser serves to further their all-important goals of “filling in the gaps” in social services for some 60,000 Tennesseans each year. “We represent the future of the city and are so grateful to be its safety net,” said FCS Development Director Beth Hall with pride. It was clear she spoke for all in attendance.
Cathy Sullivan, Hunter McDonald
Kamaal Malak, Kayleigh Butterfield
Todd and Lori Carter, Sarah Ann Ezzell
by Gloria Houghland photographs by Eric England
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Walker and Marees Choppin 3/22/18 9:55 AM
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.WHISKEY FEST PREVIEW .BIERGARTEN .COOKING DEMONSTRATIONS 56 >> april 2018 | nfocusnashville.com NF_4-18_32-65.indd 56
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icing on the cake In recent years, Nashville’s ever-growing dining scene has garnered national praise, tantalized foodies from near and far and made household names of local chefs. And while the city now boasts standout restaurants in nearly every type of cuisine, we’re more concerned with what comes after dinner. In search of the city’s most delectable desserts, we chatted with six pastry chefs responsible for making Nashville a whole lot sweeter. by nancy floyd, Holly hoffman and Lauren Langston Stewart photographs by daniel meigs
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ebekah Turshen stands in the kitchen at City House laterally dividing surprisingly thin cake layers into even thinner thirds. She glances up every so often to engage in conversation, as if it requires no effort or concentration at all to evenly slice the delicate layers. She’s making a Tennessee Waltz cake, a City House classic with espresso and pecans. “It’s nice for people to see something familiar on the menu when they come in,” she says. In 1993, while she was in school at The University of Mississippi, Rebekah started her first job as an assistant baker, and she knew this was it: She could see herself being truly happy doing this work. She had always liked poking around her mom’s cookbooks, and she loved to make chocolate crinkle cookies from an issue of Better Homes & Gardens, but this came as a surprise to her. Her first job was in a photo developing shop; in the third grade she wanted to be a famous painter whose works hung in a museum, and she was studying graphic design at Ole Miss. After discovering this previously unexplored passion, she got as much on-the-job training as she could, read through countless recipes and made an effort to eat as much of other people’s cooking as humanly possible. Rebekah returned to Nashville in 1996 and baked all across the city. In 2009, based on the recommendation of a friend, Tandy Wilson hired her as the pastry chef at City House. Rebekah’s cookie plate, almond ricotta skillet cake and the Tennessee Waltz cake have become City House staples, but she also likes to switch it up, to think about what’s in season and what they have on hand from their farmers, and to peruse cookbooks old and new as well as magazines, the internet and Instagram for inspiration. “I love the tactile nature of baking,” she says. “I might go crazy if I didn’t work with my hands, and I love this crazy process of combining elements and transforming them into some delicious thing that makes people feel spoiled and nostalgic. It’s magic.” by Lauren Langston Stewart
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rebekah Turshen ciTy house
Photo Credit: Kristyn Hogan Photography
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laire Meneely can’t remember a time before baking and cooking were an integral part of her life. She had a lemonade stand as a child, and once when she was 8, she made a full dinner while her parents were out of town. And because the passion started when she was so young — or maybe because it’s always been a part of her — all of her work experience and education pertains to food. Her first job was with a local catering company, and she attended culinary school in San Francisco right out of high school. In October 2009, Claire started a pop-up cookie shop at the downtown Farmers’ Market. It was supposed to last for three months, but it’s been more than eight years and it hasn’t shown signs of slowing down. That tiny pop-up shop is now known as Dozen Bakery, and it offers a lot more than just cookies — and in a lot more places than just the Farmers’ Market. More than 25 Nashville restaurants and coffee shops carry Claire’s breads and sweets — Crema, Pinewood Social, Bastion, Henrietta Red and Josephine to name but a few. And then, of course, there’s the actual Wedgewood-Houston brick-and-mortar shop, which boasts 24 employees, seven or eight full-time bakers and a couple savory cooks. Each day, they make around 500 cookies and 200 muffins alone, and the sourdough bread is a threeday process from start to finish, each loaf hand-divided and shaped. “I love the idea that everything made today is enjoyed today — and all over the city,” said Claire. To say that baking is a job for early risers is an understatement. Dozen’s ovens start going at 3 a.m. and are packed daily with everything from loaves of breads and baguettes to croissants, muffins and galettes. And then there are the seasonal pies and madeleines, which are Claire’s personal favorite. And the work doesn’t wrap up after the morning rush. The ovens aren’t turned off until 4 or 5 p.m. each evening. It’s a long and exhausting labor of love, but Claire can’t imagine doing anything else. by Lauren Langston Stewart
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Claire meneely dozen bakery
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epicurean
mignon francois the cupcake collection
M
ignon Francois’ mission in life is to spread joy, and she does that with her contagious smile, sparkling eyes and effervescent spirit. In the 10 years since opening The Cupcake Collection, she has also brightened people’s days with her made-from-scratch confections. Mignon opened her gourmet shop in the family’s home weeks before it was to be sold in foreclosure. It was the result of two years of work perfecting recipes, testing samples on real estate agents and new neighbors and ignoring naysayers who said no one would come to thenundesirable Germantown for her sweets. Almost immediately, people from every part of the city were waiting in line for her delicious cupcakes. Mignon did not grow up a baker — even box mixes had been a challenge — but her grandmother passed along recipes over many long-distance calls. The measurements were imprecise, and the results varied. In what she calls an “aha moment,” the chemistry lessons she learned in premed classes suddenly made sense and enabled her to build original recipes like the sweet potato cupcake, the reigning favorite. Today, The Cupcake Collection sells more than 1,800 cupcakes each day and is repeatedly named “Best Cupcake” in polls and on best-of lists. “Our cupcakes are made with love, and our wedding cakes are made because of it,” Mignon says about the desserts that were not part of her plan. When customers started asking for favorite flavors at their weddings, she enlisted her daughter Druscilla Brittany, who bakes the Celebration Cakes using a recipe of her own. In collaboration with Hattie Jane’s Creamery, she will debut ice-cream cupcakes this summer, available at the Germantown shop and in Murfreesboro. The Cupcake Collection was the primary ingredient in the revitalization of Germantown, and Mignon is excited when she talks about the destination neighborhood it has become. She found her joy through her business and consistently inspires female business owners, entrepreneurs and her community. As for Mignon’s long-term aspirations? “My goal right now is legacy building. I want to leave something for my granddaughters.” The two little girls may not understand the impact Mignon is making, but they are already learning the family business. One of them already ices cupcakes like a pro. by holly hoffman
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Aly Greer with Wildcotton Photography Florist: Big Events
850 Hillwood Blvd. Ste. 1 • 615-354-9555
nfocusnashville.com
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fashion
W
hen Lisa Marie White first came to Nashville, it was only supposed to be a temporary visit. The New Orleans-based pastry chef arrived in the fall of 2016 to help open the three eateries — Killebrew, Marsh House and L.A. Jackson — in the Thompson Nashville. But it didn’t take long for Nashville to win her over, and now, 18 months later, she’s here to stay, sharing her gift for whimsical and tasty desserts with the city she now calls home. Lisa Marie’s road to becoming a pastry chef wasn’t a straight course. Like many little girls, her earliest baking concoctions were prepared in an Easy-Bake Oven, but her career in restaurants began as a line cook in Long Island, New York, when she was a teenager. She tried her hand as a pastry chef for a short time before switching careers, spending much of her 20s and 30s working in purchasing and inventory, as a ramper for the airlines and as a massage therapist. Desperate for a change, Lisa Marie decided to walk the Camino de Santiago, an ancient pilgrimage between France and Spain. “I didn’t practice,” she says. “I just left my desk job, put an 80-pound pack on my back and went to France.” She walked 300 miles before breaking her foot and returning home. It was while she was recovering that she decided to apply to pastry school. She attended an accelerated program at the Culinary Institute of America in Napa Valley and landed a job at Della Fattoria in Petaluma, California. At the age of 38, she had rediscovered an old passion and had found a new career. She eventually relocated to New Orleans where she began working with Besh Restaurant Group, which was originally behind the Thompson Nashville projects. These days, she oversees the desserts at the three very different concepts at the hotel. Killebrew, the in-hotel coffee shop, serves fresh breads and pastries; Marsh House offers fancier plated desserts, and L.A. Jackson’s sweet options include homemade ice-cream sandwiches. “I don’t think anything I do is unique,” Lisa Marie says when asked what sets her sweets apart from others. “I don’t know what makes it special. I just love doing it.” It’s a love that’s evident in the way her face lights up as she talks about her work, and it’s a love that shines through in every decadent bite. by Nancy Floyd
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lisa marie white Killebrew coffee, marsh house, L.A. Jackson
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uanita Lane of Dulce Desserts has been baking since childhood, but she didn’t decide to make it her career until she was nearly 40 years old. After an Ivy League education, post-graduate studies in Moscow and a career as the national sales manager for a Fortune 100 company, Juanita wanted a change. When an ad for training with The French Culinary Institute brought tears to her eyes, she knew a career in pastries was one that would excite her daily. A single mom, she mortgaged her home and opened Dulce Desserts in Edgehill Village in 2005. Growing up in the hospitality industry — her family owned restaurants and motels across the Southeast — Juanita spent much of her childhood surrounded by chefs, but she never had any formal training. After seeking out a local pastry class to no avail, she headed to Orlando for a three-day intensive at the Notter School of Pastry Arts. The course was filled with pastry chefs from Ritz-Carlton resorts across the country, but it was Juanita who was singled out by the teacher as one of the best in the class. “I knew I could do the delicious, but I didn’t know I could do the pretty, so it was kind of a surprise for me,” she says. These days, her reputation for creating delicious and pretty desserts and cakes is well known across the city among event planners, brides, restaurants and fellow chefs. And although she offers a variety of desserts by special order or in the retail space of her bakery (now located on Craighead Street), the bulk of her focus is wedding and specialty cakes. During peak wedding season, she and her team are preparing upward of 2,500 servings per week. “We have done up to 20 weddings over a three-day weekend,” she says. One glimpse of her cakes and it’s no wonder her services are in such high demand. Focused on traditional European recipes with three layers of fillings that are completely customizable based on the client’s style and tastes, the cakes are as beautiful as they are delicious. by Nancy Floyd
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PARK PLACE: 2817 West End Ave., Ste 120 | 327-8712 BELLE MEADE: 6049 Hwy 100, Westgate Center | 352-9296
WWW.FRENCHSHOPPE.COM M-F 10-6 | SAT 10-5 nfocusnashville.com
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From Maple Glazed Hams to Coconut Cakes, Chef’s Market has your spring celebrations covered. Relax. Your family and friends will say you Take the Cake! 900 CONFERENCE DRIVE | GOODLET TSVILLE | 615.851.2433 | CHEFSMARKET.COM
2018 GREAT FUTURES GALA Presented By 2015
2016
SATURDAY, MAY 5, 2018 OMNI NASHVILLE HOTEL
Our 2018 Gala promises to be another unforgettable evening with a super star celebrity! We can’t tell you who it is yet, but you can guess for a chance to win two tickets. 2017
2018
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leland riggan dessert designs
F
or recently engaged couples, getting on Leland Riggan’s calendar can be as important as reserving a site for the ceremony and reception. The founder of Dessert Designs is renowned for creating the dream wedding cakes of Middle Tennessee brides for nearly 40 years. During the first half of her career, Leland made cakes from a kitchen that her husband, Steve, built in the basement so she could be at home with their five children. They grew up, and she moved the bakery to its current location in West Nashville. Every family member has participated in the business in one way or another. Steve is particularly adept at drawing on cakes, and her son Kelly brings his talent to the kitchen. “It’s really an old-fashioned sort of story,” says the Nashville native. Leland is self-taught, and she comes from a long line of women with excellent culinary skills. She learned to bake by watching her mother and started by making breads and rolls. Her grandmother told her, “You’ll never make any money baking bread one loaf at a time,” and she connected Leland with a cousin, Mary Lyles Wilson, who was a cookbook author and one of the best-known cooks in the city, to teach her more. Leland shifted from casseroles to cakes after helping a caterer friend with a few weddings. Her reputation for artistic design, attention to detail and delicious flavors steadily grew, and she became a significant factor in the wedding industry. In addition to brides and grooms, families consider Dessert Designs the go-to source when it comes to ordering the perfect cake for christenings, birthdays and other important events. People needing a sugar fix or last-minute dessert frequent the shop, often leaving with a caramel cake, her best-selling flavor. When not baking for others, Leland is active in the Nashville chapter of Les Dames d’Escoffier and will be contributing her sweets to Tour de Farm on April 15. After almost four decades of designing, baking and decorating, there’s still nothing Leland likes more than cake, and when asked, she cannot think of anything else she would rather be doing. That makes life a lot sweeter for us. by holly hoffman
nfocusnashville.com
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nuptials
• Over 40,000 Designs Since 1984 • Featured in Traditional Homes, Nashville Tennessean, Parade of Homes & Talk of the Town • References in your own neighborhood • Local reputation you can count on
www.tnclosets.com
Virginia Salisbury Smith and Jeff Shapland married on Sept. 9 at the home of Sylvia Roberts. Their parents are Frank Smith and Anne Whitaker of Nashville and Richard and Carol Shapland of Nekoosa, Wisconsin. The couple lives in San Diego, California. PhotograPh by orman and orman
K. McCarthy 4121 Hillsboro Pike
next to king Jewelers in Green Hills
Hannah Weber and Wesley William Hall married on Dec. 30 at The Hermitage and took a wedding trip to Cabo San Lucas. Their parents are Alice and Stan Weber and Wendy and Charles Hall, all of Nashville. PhotograPh by orman and orman
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Your Story Begins Here
Main hall seats 300 guests, 2 lounges, covered verandas, heat & air conditioning, audio-video capabilities
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ta k i n g v o w s
Andrew
Photographs by Shots by Cheyenne
Reid L ov ell marries Allison Renee M cCulloug h
Drew Lovell and Allison McCullough met in 2014 while in a training class at HCA. He proposed on July 4, 2016, at Warren’s Point at Monteagle Sunday School Assembly and presented Allison with his grandmother’s ring. They married Oct. 28, 2017, in a garden wedding at Riverwood Mansion in Nashville with Todd B. Jones officiating. A string trio played Pachelbel, Bach and Mendelssohn. Allison wore a mermaid gown designed by Pronovias Barcelona. She carried a hand-tied bouquet created by Enchanted Florist of mixed roses, thistles, berries and trailing greens. The couple’s beloved Labrador retriever, Abby, walked down the
aisle wearing a floral collar and watched the ceremony patiently from the front row. As garden weddings come with a certain risk, the day was dry, but the temperature dropped to 50 degrees with a brisk breeze. The wedding party shivered; guests huddled together; the trio played from inside to protect their instruments, and Allison’s grandmother watched through a parlor window. A Southern supper followed in Riverwood Mansion, where tall rose topiaries decorated round tables and Super T Revue played for dancing. The four-tiered wedding cake was by 8 Lavender Lane. The groom’s cake by Dessert Designs was half cream
cheese, half chocolate truffle with caramel icing and was topped with a sculpture of Abby in a Predators jersey. After a wedding trip to Hope Town in the Bahamas, the newlyweds returned to their home in Sylvan Park, where Allison is an IT&S project manager for HCA, and Drew is a staff sergeant for the U.S. Army. She is a graduate of Middle Tennessee State University, and he is an alumnus of University of Mississippi. Their parents are Mary Ellen Lovell of Nashville, Gene Lovell of Franklin, and Jerry and Claudette McCullough of Union City, Tennessee.
by Sandy Nelson
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step inside
Have Cookies, Will Travel The company has just added a catering department geared toward downtown Nashville businesses. They will offer an assortment of muffins, brownies and, of course, cookies, which could include chocolate chip, white chocolate macadamia nut and oatmeal raisin — all served with hot coffee and ice-cold milk. “It’s just an effort to extend the brand, extend the Nashville Christie Cookie love and experience,” says Coco Kyriopoulos, vice president of the Direct to Consumer division. “What could be more fun than saying, ‘At this meeting, we’re having Christie cookies’?”
Christie Cookie
photographs by daniel meigs
On a recent visit to Christie Cookie Co. in Germantown, it was impossible to resist breathing in deep as the sweet smell of chocolate and toffee wafted into the retail bakery every time a door to the back swung open. The 41,000-square-foot facility houses a small retail area in the lobby as well as administration offices and conference rooms with long roughly hewn tables and walls artfully scattered with storyboards, and in the back sits the massive commercial kitchen where employees churn out 100 million cookies a year. Yes, you read that correctly: 100 million cookies. At the rear of the enormous kitchen, where conveyor belts and scales make it nearly impossible to hear without shouting, there are containers of cookie tins and tubs of ingredients including Wilbur chocolate chips, walnuts, Domino sugar, and blocks and blocks of real butter. “If you’re going to the grocery store tonight because you’re going to bake cookies,” says Christie Cookie President Fleming Wilt, “the same sort of ingredients you’d pick up at the grocery store is what you’re going to find here. You’re not going to see any margarine in the whole building, no shortening. We don’t carry it. We don’t use it.” In fact, the company uses the same formulas it did when Christie Hauck founded the company in 1983, after taste-testing recipes in the kitchen of his Nashville home. Fleming’s father, who played football with Christie at Vanderbilt, was an early investor. Over the years, the senior Wilt sold his interest to Fleming. Christie still retained some ownership in the company, and his stock was used to set up a separate retail business. Fleming has always preferred the bakery and the wholesale side of things. by Whitney Clay
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Commercial Grade
In the Kitchen
A New Look
While the cookies taste like they could have come right out of Grandma’s oven, they can often be found at a hotel, restaurant or even on a plane. Clients include California Pizza Kitchen, Kroger and Hilton hotels — including the DoubleTree, which has a signature walnut and chocolate chip cookie that bears its name. Even United and American airlines serve Christie Cookies. The food service side comprises 70 percent of the business. The other 30 percent comes from corporate gifts tins, online orders, the retail bakery and catering.
For some of us, juggling a few baking sheets for a holiday cookie swap proves a challenge. And then there’s Christie Cookie. A kitchen staffer pours ingredients into a gigantic mixing bowl that holds 1,200 pounds of dough. The dough travels by conveyor belt to a machine that divides and shapes it into cookies. The cookies then go into a freeze tunnel and are weighed and dropped into signature red Christie Cookie cardboard boxes. They are either baked on-site or customers can bake them in their own ovens.
In 2014, the company underwent a major rebranding, updating everything from cookie tins to promotional materials. The company also renovated its Germantown home of 18 years and added the retail bakery. But ultimately, it’s the same Christie Cookie that customers have embraced for decades. “We haven’t changed anything over the years,” says Fleming. “We’ve just kept doing the same thing, and I think that’s what has been so endearing to customers. We don’t have a line of hams and turkeys; we just focus on the cookies … ”
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3/22/18 9:58 AM
Luxury Homes. Historic Location.
Brownstones: $900s to $1.5 million Richland Avenue Estate Homes: $1.5 to $2 million Located in the historic Richland-West End neighborhood, these luxury homes provide modern living in the heart of historic Nashville. The neighborhood features classic architecture, tree-lined streets, and paved sidewalks. Located in a premier spot, Richland Hall is just minutes from Elmington Park, the Parthenon at Centennial Park, Vanderbilt University, 21st Avenue, and an •••••••••••
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statue of Mithras slaying a bull © the trustees of the british MuseuM
ArtS AND GAllerieS
Event Photos
Purchase your event photos at nfocusnashville.com
DON’T MISS NASHVILLE’S BEST MUSICAL BRUNCH OF THE YEAR!
Rome: City and Empire With over 200 pieces on loan from the British Museum, this compelling exhibit (and inspiration for this year’s Frist Gala) explores the empire that once was, granting viewers a glimpse into the lives and experiences of the Romans of centuries past. Through May 28. Tickets $7-12. The Frist Center for the Visual Arts, 919 Broadway, 615-244-3340, fristcenter.org.
Wicked: The Untold Story of the Witches of Oz In Oz, long before Dorothy’s on the scene, a fiery, misunderstood woman with emerald-green skin forms an unlikely friendship with a bubbly, wellloved blonde — that is before society decides one is “good” and the other “wicked.” Through April 22. Tickets $31.50-156.50. TPAC Andrew Jackson
SUNDAY, MAY 6, 2018 AT 11 AM
Hall, 505 Deaderick St., 615-782-4040, tpac.org.
TICKETS AVAILABLE NOW AT
BROADWAYBRUNCH.ORG
Polk Theater, 505 Deaderick St., 615782-4040, nashvilleopera.org. Family Day at the Ballet With ballet performances of Aesop’s Fables, Family Day at the Ballet
provides an opportunity for families to expose their children to an afternoon that cultivates imagination and a love for the arts. April 15. Tickets $12-18. Nashville Ballet Studio A,
3630 Redmon St., 615-782-4040, nashvilleballet.com. PhotograPh by Joan Marcus
CITY WINERY 609 LAFAYETTE ST. FEATURING A FABULOUS BRUNCH AN INCREDIBLE AUCTION A PERFORMANCE CELEBRATING BROADWAY’S FIERCEST FEMALES
and the music that originated there, touching on paranoia and the repercussions that come from it. April 6-8. Tickets $26-99. TPAC James K.
Seeing Now This multi-media exhibit explores the disparity between things we know to be true and how visible and invisible forces shape how we actually experience the modern world around us. Through Dec. 31. Gratis. 21c
Museum Hotel, 221 Second Ave. N., 615-610-6400, 21cmuseumhotels.com/ nashville. Susannah
Set in rural Tennessee, this opera draws inspiration from the hills of Appalachia
Art on the West Side More than 45 local artists — including featured artist Harold Kraus, a selfdescribed colorist — will come together for a show featuring mediums such as paint, wood, glass, clay and more, with pieces available for purchase in support of the Gordon Jewish Community Center. April 21-22. Gratis. Gordon Jewish Community
Center, 801 Percy Warner Blvd., 615481-8300, artonthewestside.org.
An Evening With David Sedaris The well-known sardonic author — of works such as Naked, Me Talk Pretty One Day, and Dress Your Family in Corduroy and Denim — esteemed for his wit, social commentary and spoton satire comes to TPAC for one night only. April 25. Tickets $32.50-52.50.
TPAC Andrew Jackson Hall, 505 Deaderick St., 615-782-4040, tpac.org.
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ART ON THE WEST SIDE
5th Annual Fine Art & Craft Show
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MUSICALS IN THE KEY OF FUN!
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2018 Featured Artist
Harold Kraus NASHVILLE CHILDREN’S THEATRE
DRAGONS LOVE TACOS APRIL 12-MAY 13, 2018
Opening Cocktail Reception & Sale Saturday, April 21 6–9pm
$15 suggested donation
Exhibit & Sale Sunday, April 22 10am–4pm
Jazz Brunch 10am–1pm (no charge)
Grand Day Carnival: Sunday, April 22 By Ernie Nolan Based on the book by Adam Rubin and illustrations by Daniel Salmieri
FREE PARKING ONSITE
NASHVILLECT.ORG artonthewestside.org
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nstyle
An Era Gone By The Frist Gala co-chairs on Rome: City and Empire For this year’s Frist Gala, co-chairs Dara Russell and Mary Jo Shankle are drawing inspiration from Rome: City and Empire in hopes of sweeping guests off their feet and into a Roman triclinium, a banquet awaiting with an emperor of ages past. The exhibit, which is open through May 28 and is a partnership with the British Museum, features more than 200 pieces and artifacts from the ancient civilization. We chatted with the co-chairs about a few pieces that shouldn’t be missed. The casket, which is displayed in a room alongside marble statues, provides an eye-catching pop of color. Despite its name, this piece was used to store cosmetics and toiletries. Dara and Mary Jo love the Etruscan and Greek influences seen in the piece and can’t get over the intricacies of the metalwork. And if you’re looking for hair inspiration for the gala, the co-chairs recommend checking out the line-up of five female portrait heads, each displaying a different hairdo. And an insider tip from Mary Jo? Don’t just look at their faces and walk away; make sure you check out the back of each to get the full effect.
by Lauren Langston Stewart
Clockwise, from top left: Statue of the nymph Cyrene fighting a lion, circa 120–50 CE, marble; Casket, 300–250 BCE, bronze; Funerary relief of a woman, 200–273 CE, limestone; Gilded statuette of Hercules, second century CE, copper alloy; Armlet, circa 50–200 CE, copper alloy and enamel; Female portrait head, circa 100 CE, marble; Parade helmet with a woman’s face, second century CE, bronze. Images copyright of The Trustees of the British Museum.
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3/22/18 9:59 AM
Hats & Dresses for the Steeplechase, Derby or any Occasion!
Just arrived: a fresh collection of lockets and charms in both 18kt gold and silver by Monica Rich Kosann. Silver lockets and charms from $195 to $995. Gold lockets and charms shown, all under $3,000. Photo by Adrian Morales
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A few weeks back, my husband and I went to a black-tie 50th birthday party for a lawyer who’s a partner in my husband’s firm. I like the honoree just fine, but he is not particularly a good friend. I expected to see “no gifts, please,” but the invitation said nothing about gifts, so we brought a card. But when we got there, there was a table set aside for gifts. And there they were lots of picture frames and bottles of wine. Since he’s 50, and successful, how many gifts did he need? The party was lovely, but I felt small. My husband said we were right, but I felt wrong. Should I have? —Anonymous, Brentwood
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Join us for the 29th annual Crown Affair celebrating the outstanding achievements of community leaders and benefiting the programs and services of FiftyForward.
Thursday, April 26
Reception and silent auction at 6 p.m. Dinner and awards presentation to follow; tickets: $250 per person
Do you feel wrong or wronged? You didn’t get much presence at the presents table, amid all the reds and whites and silver. The guest of honor is no close friend, so a card was perfectly sufficient. You might have made a contribution to a cause in his honor, but who would have noticed? The display of gifts, I fear, sometimes turns out to be a chance to show off for everyone involved. You don’t mention a spouse, so he may have thrown the party for himself. Or maybe his true friends were involved. Perhaps he forgot about “no gifts, please,” so somebody set up the table. Yes, 50 is getting on, but people were likely to show up with a bottle in a bag. He was busy, I’m sure, receiving what he really wanted from his guests — a handshake, a hug or a kiss. (Right?) It sounds as if you were there pretty much as a business obligation. You won’t have to invite him to your next birthday party. Don’t forget “no gifts, please.” But put up a table just in case.
Picky, Picky My friend is driving me crazy. I go out to dinner with him on a regular basis, but he won’t ever say where he wants to go. Instead, he always leaves the decision up to me as if I know the restaurant scene. But when I offer a suggestion, he always starts picking it apart. He’s trying to manipulate my suggestion into where he wanted to go in the first place. I’ve tried saying, “Let’s just have it your way,” but he won’t give in. To make matters worse, he’s a mental health care professional, so I figure I’m out of my depth in dealing with him. Can you help? —Anonymous, Green Hills I’m no counselor. Maybe he’s using you for research. (Have you noticed a notepad?) Or maybe he’s having a good time just watching you squirm. This dinner deadlock seems to have been going on for a while, and you’re understandably fed up. Does he control the conversation during dinner too? Is he at least manipulating you into good places? You might come back at him with, “Where do you want to go?” Or, “It’s your pick this time.” Or, “Text me when you get an idea.” But the simplest answer would be, “I have no earthly idea.” He could take that one to the couch.
The Crown Affair honoring
Jana Lisle Parham | D. Billye Sanders Eleanor Lawson Willis
2018 Corporate Crowning Achievement Honoree:
by John bridges
For more information, call (615) 743-3409 www.fiftyforward.org
John is the author of How To Be a Gentleman and the co-author, with Bryan Curtis, of other books in the GentlemannersTM series. Send your Best Behavior questions to jbridges@nfocusmagazine.com, and check out his up-to-theminute advice on life’s puzzling problems every Friday at nfocusnashville.com.
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discerning reader
1708 21st Avenue S Hillsboro Village
Hot Chicken and Forbidden Fruit In search of something a little spicier
Shop new Spring arrivals in time for the
Iroquois Steeplechase & Kentucky Derby
nashville’s supposed to be reading The Potlikker Papers: A Food History of the Modern South for its annual community-wide “Nashville Read.” I started it and put it down. Started it again and put it down. After the third time, I gave up. How can a history of food and cooking in the South read so much like a school textbook? One could fairly describe it in the words of Pulitzer Prize-winning author Diane McWhorter: “a wonderful narrative of the region’s evolution on race, gender and justice.” But I was hoping for something more like hot chicken. I need something spicier — juicier — in my leisure reading. You too? Try Fire Sermon by Tennessee author Jamie Quatro. Jamie imagines the story of Maggie and Thomas, married young, living in nearby Franklin. Twenty-three years into their marriage, their children grown, Maggie finds herself in the arms of a poet she’s been corresponding with. She still loves her husband, deeply, and agonizes over the spiritual consequences of her actions. Literary fiction that takes Christian faith seriously is hard to find; literary fiction that puts God and sex in the same paragraph? A unicorn. This
slim book is wrenchingly beautiful and agonizing as it considers the yearnings of the heart. I’m rethinking desire. The other book I’d commend to you this April is Mrs. Fletcher, Tom Perrotta’s new novel about an empty nester’s sexual adventures and self-discovery (and, on the sidelines, her son’s). If Fire Sermon breaks your heart, Mrs. Fletcher feels more like a darkly humorous call to action. Eve Fletcher, divorced, has just packed her only son off to college. She must confront the “fact that her life had turned into this: this lifeless hush, this faint but elusive whiff of decay. This absolutely-nothing-tocomplain-about.” She finds herself spending a bit too much quality time with — take a deep breath — internet porn and her classmates at a community college class on gender and sexuality, taught by a woman who used to be a man. Mrs. Fletcher and her son have different lessons to learn about what it means to be brave, to take the right chances and to deal with huge mistakes. They grow in wisdom and courage, knowledge, sorrow. Kind of like — you know — the woman who took that first bite.
Jennifer Puryear
Jennifer writes book columns for Nfocus and blogs about current savory reads at bacononthebookshelf.com. She can often be found with a book or BLT in hand.
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April 2018 03 What: Nashville Fashion Week
For: Fashion Forward Fund When: April 3-7 Where: Oz Arts Nashville Tariff: $30-250 per person Info: nashvillefashionweek.com
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What: Stradivarius
03 Society Dinner
For: Nashville Symphony When: Tues., April 3, 7 p.m. Where: Schermerhorn Symphony Center Info: nashvillesymphony.org
06 What: Spring Fling for
TennGreen For: TennGreen When: Fri., April 6, 6 p.m. Where: Music City Center Tariff: $150 per person Info: tenngreen.org/spring-fling
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What: Susannah Premiere Dinner For: Nashville Opera Guild When: Sat., April 7, 5:30 p.m. Where: Waller Penthouse Tariff: $85 per person Info: nashvilleopera.org What: Dancing for Safe Haven For: Safe Haven When: Sat., April 7, 6 p.m. Where: Hilton Nashville Downtown Co-chairs: Kyle Allen, Karen Hingtgen and Ken Williamson Tariff: $275 per person Info: safehaven.org
What: The Prohibition Ball 07 For: Tennessee Kidney Foundation When: Sat., April 7, 6 p.m. Where: Omni Hotel Tariff: $300 per person Info: tnkidneyfoundation.org
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What: Change the Tune For: The Family Center When: Sat., April 7, 6:30 p.m. Where: Marathon Music Works Tariff: $150 per person Info: familycentertn.org What: Friends & Fashion For: Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital When: Mon., April 9, 10 a.m. Where: Music City Center Co-chairs: Allison Fowler, Mary Morgan Ketchel and
Party note: Featuring a performance by Laura Osnes Info: nashvillechildrenstheatre.org
Carissa Pereira Tariff: $130 per person Info: childrenshospital. vanderbilt.org
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What: Reaching New Heights Women’s Luncheon For: Cumberland Heights When: Wed., April 11, 11:30 a.m. Where: Hillwood Country Club Co-chairs: Monica McDougall and Sally Nesbitt Tariff: $150 per person Party note: Special guest speaker Laura Baugh Info: cumberlandheights.org What: Go Red for Women Wellness Expo & Luncheon For: American Heart Association When: Thurs., April 12, 10 a.m. Where: Marathon Music Works Co-chairs: Saletta Holloway and Tracey Power Tariff: $175 per person Info: heart.org
12 What: A Tennessee Waltz Ladies’ and Gentlemen’s Committee For: Tennessee State Museum When: Thurs., April 12, 6 p.m. Where: Belle Meade Country Club Co-chairs: Andrea Cropper and Austin Pennington Tariff: $250 per person Info: tnmuseum.org
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14 What: Top 30 Under 30
For: Cystic Fibrosis Foundation When: Sat., April 14, 6 p.m. Where: Sheraton Grand Nashville Downtown Tariff: $85 per person Info: top30.finestcff.org
14 What: Grand Night
For: Nashville Children’s Theatre When: Sat., April 14, 6 p.m. Where: Nashville Children’s Theatre Chair: Jamie Eskind Tariff: $250 per person
What: Family Day at the Ballet For: Nashville Ballet When: Sun., April 15, 12 p.m. Where: Nashville Ballet Studio A Tariff: $18 per adult, $12 per child Info: nashvilleballet.com
15 What: Crown Affair
Patrons Party For: FiftyForward When: Sun., April 15, 6 p.m. Where: Home of Teresa Corlew and Wes Allen Tariff: $1,000 per benefactor couple, $500 per patron couple Info: fiftyforward.org
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13 What: Cafecito
For: Conexión Américas When: Fri., April 13, 7:30 a.m. Where: Music City Center Tariff: $150 per person Info: conexionamericas.org/ cafecito
What: Tour de Farm For: Les Dames d’Escoffier Nashville When: Sun., April 15, 9:30 a.m. Where: Deer Valley Farm Co-chairs: Erin Byers Murray and Tallu Quinn Tariff: $195 per VIP, $95 per person Info: lesdamesnashville.org
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What: Symphony Fashion Show Patrons Party For: Nashville Symphony When: Mon., April 16, 6 p.m. Where: Home of Mary Catherine and David McClellan Info: nashvillesymphony.org What: Dining Out for Life For: Nashville Cares When: Tues., April 17, all day Where: Various restaurants Tariff: Cost of a meal Info: diningoutforlife.com/ nashville
17 What: Powerhouse Luncheon
For: You Have the Power When: Tues., April 17, 11 a.m. Where: City Winery Tariff: $200 per person Party note: Honoring Demetria Kalodimos Info: yhtp.org
18 What: Swan Ball Auction
Committee Celebration Dinner For: Cheekwood When: Wed., April 18, 6 p.m. Where: Home of Ellen Martin Info: swanball.com
19 What: Reclaiming Lives
Luncheon For: Centerstone When: Thurs., April 19, 11:30 a.m. Where: Hillwood Country Club Tariff: $150 per person Party note: Keynote speaker Jenna Bush Hager Info: centerstone.org
19 What: Warner Parks Art Show and Sale For: Friends of Warner Parks and The Chestnut Group When: April 19-22 Where: Warner Parks Nature Center Tariff: Gratis Info: warnerparks.org
19 What: Spring Gathering
For: Tiffany Circle When: Thurs., April 19, 6 p.m. Where: Home of Katie and Kevin Crumbo Info: redcross.org
19 What: Rally on the Runway
For: Rally Foundation When: Thurs., April 19, 6:30 p.m. Where: Oz Arts Nashville Tariff: $250 per patron, $150 per person Info: rallyfoundation.org
What: Symphony Fashion Show For: Nashville Symphony When: Tues., April 17, 6 p.m. Where: Schermerhorn Symphony Center Co-chairs: Lorie Duke and Birgitta Williamson Tariff: $250 per person Party note: Runway show from Jason Wu; performance by Little Big Town Info: nashvillesymphony.org
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21
What: Frist Gala For: The Frist Center for the Visual Arts When: Sat., April 21, 7 p.m. Where: The Frist Co-chairs: Dara Russell and Mary Jo Shankle Party note: Invite only Info: fristcenter.org
Tariff: $150 per person Info: jfsnashville.org
28 What: Main Street Festival
For: Heritage Foundation When: April 28-29 Where: Downtown Franklin Info: williamsonheritage.org
28 20 What: Rock the House
For: Hospital Hospitality House When: Fri., April 20, 6:30 p.m. Where: Houston Station Tariff: $150 per person Info: hhhnashville.org
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What: Art on the West Side For: Gordon Jewish Community Center When: April 21-22 Where: GJCC Party note: Opening reception Sat., April 21, 6 p.m.; jazz brunch Sun., April 22, 10 a.m. Info: artonthewestside.org
21 What: Promise Gala
For: JDRF When: Sat., April 21, 6 p.m. Where: Nissan Stadium Tariff: $350 per person Party note: Black tie Info: jdrf.org/midtennessee
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What: Big Yellow Bird Bash For: Nashville Public Television When: Sat., April 21, 7 p.m. Where: Houston Station Tariff: $60 per person Info: wnpt.org
22 What: Grand Day Carnival
For: Nashville Children’s Theatre When: Sun., April 22, 2 p.m. Where: Nashville Children’s Theatre Tariff: $25 per person Info: nashvillechildrenstheatre.org
24 What: Spring Breakfast For: YWCA When: Tues., April 24, 7:30 a.m. Where: Music City Center Info: ywcanashville.com 24 What: Waiting for Wishes
For: The Kevin Carter Foundation and Make-A-Wish When: Tues., April 24, 5:45 p.m. Where: The Palm Tariff: $550 per person, $3,600-
5,000 per table Info: waitingforwishes.com
25 What: Cause for Paws For: Nashville Humane When: Wed., April 25, 11 a.m. Where: Belle Meade Country Club Chair: Robin Patton Tariff: $200 per patron, $135 per person Info: nashvillehumane.org
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25 What: Mary Catherine Strobel
Volunteer Awards For: Hands On Nashville When: Wed., April 25, 11:30 a.m. Where: Music City Center Tariff: $50 per person Info: hon.org
25 What: Swan Ball Dance Committee Kick-Off For: Cheekwood When: Wed., April 25, 6 p.m. Where: Home of Julia and Franklin Jarman Info: swanball.com 26 What: Power of the Purse
For: The Women’s Fund When: Thurs., April 26, 11 a.m. Where: Music City Center Tariff: $200 per person Party note: Special guest speaker Mia Hamm Info: cfmt.org/events
26 What: Crown Affair
For: FiftyForward When: Thurs., April 26, 6 p.m. Where: FiftyForward Tariff: $250 per person Info: fiftyforward.org
26 What: Chesed Dinner
For: Jewish Family Service When: Thurs., April 26, 6:15 p.m. Where: Gordon Jewish Community Center Co-chairs: Heidi Hassenfeld and Patty Marks
What: Boots & Bubbles Crawfish Boil For: Nashville Dolphins When: Sat., April 28, 2 p.m. Where: Home of Julia and John Morris Tariff: $50 per person in advance, $75 at door Info: nashvilledolphins.org What: Only in Nashville For: Oasis Center When: Sat., April 28, 6 p.m. Where: Oz Arts Nashville Co-chairs: Holly Merrell, Kelly Mitchell and Lechelle Moore Tariff: $325 per person, $3,0003,600 per table Info: oasiscenter.org What: Glimpse
28 For: Watkins
When: Sat., April 28, 6 p.m. Where: Watkins College of Art Tariff: $150 per person, $50 per alumnus Info: watkins.edu
28 What: Red Shoe Party For: CASA When: Sat., April 28, 6:30 p.m. Where: Vanderbilt Student Life Center Tariff: $250 per person Info: casanashville.org/events 28
What: Anything Goes For: Faith Family Medical Center When: Sat., April 28, 6:30 p.m. Where: Cheekwood Co-chairs: Karly Hart and Whitney Schickling
What: A Tennessee Waltz For: Tennessee State Museum When: Sat., April 28, 6 p.m. Where: Tennessee State Capitol Co-chairs: Angel and Steve Cropper Tariff: $500 per person Info: tnmuseum.org
Tariff: $175 per person Info: faithmedical.org
28 What: A Tennessee Waltz Late
Party For: Tennessee State Museum When: Sat., April 28, 9:30 p.m. Where: Tennessee State Capitol Co-chairs: Reen and Jamie Baskin Tariff: $85 per person Info: tnmuseum.org What: Salute to Outstanding
29 Leadership Awards
For: Girl Scouts of Middle Tennessee When: Sun., April 29, 12 p.m. Where: Lipscomb University Allen Arena Party note: Program begins at 2 p.m. Info: gsmidtn.org/sola What: Picnic With the Library
29 For: Nashville Public Library
When: Sun., April 29, 4 p.m. Where: Nashville Public Library Downtown Co-chairs: Cassidy Bentley and Ashley Frist Tariff: $500-2,500 per person, $250 per picnic basket package Info: nplf.org What: Porch Party
29 For: Learning Matters When: Sun., April 29, 5:30 p.m. Where: Home of Johnny Haffner Co-chairs: Christie Andrews, Meredith Hiester and Heather Sisemore Tariff: $300 per person Info: learningmatters.org
30 What: Generous Helpings
Chefs’ Dinner For: Second Harvest Food Bank When: Mon., April 30, 6 p.m. Where: Henrietta Red Tariff: $195 per dining room seat, $125 per bar seat Info: secondharvestmidtn.org
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Celebrating 25 Years 08.29.18
Save the Date nfocusnashville.com
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nretrospect
Under Cover 1994-1996
In 1989, Clare Armistead and Elizabeth Nichols envisioned an evening of elegance, sophistication and glamour for the Nashville Balletâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s first fundraiser. To distinguish it from other black-tie events, the co-chairs asked guests to cover their faces for the inaugural Masked Ball. The theme varied from year to year, but one aspect remained constant: masks. Attendees went so far as to enlist designers Manuel and Alfred Fiandaca to craft showy feathered, sequined and beribboned disguises. In 2005, the gala was renamed the Ballet Ball. Although the masks are gone, an important element endures: Guests continue to enjoy an enchanting night highlighted by superb choreography and performances from the Nashville Ballet.
Clockwise from top: Luke and Susan Simons, 1994; Elizabeth Nichols, 1995; Teenie Buchtel, 1996
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