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G A M B I T > V O L U M E 31 > N U M B E R 2 4 > J U N E 15 > 2 010
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City of characters Real New Orleanians speak out about their fictional TREME counterparts.
SEAFOOD SAFETY
9
CHRIS ROSE ON ZAPP’S
13
FATHER’S DAY GIFTS
27
By Stephen Faure
A SUMMER OF MUSICALS
31
BULLETIN BOARD CLASSIFIEDS A GREAT PLACE TO DO YOGA WILD LOTUS YOGA - Named “Best Place to Take a Yoga Class” 7 yrs in a row by Gambit Readers”. www.wildlotusyoga.com 899-0047
CLAY CLASSES
Children’s, teen and adult clay classes. Adult evening classes available. Call 897-0675 for info.
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LOUISIANA’S COMMERCIAL FISHING COMMUNITY
I
t’s no coincidence that America’s freshest, wild-caught seafood comes from the waters of Louisiana. Harvested by men and women who are as one with the coast as the fish, crabs, shrimp and oysters they’ve brought to seafood lovers for generations.
L
ouisiana’s hard-working 17,000 commercial fishermen are still doing what they do best. Meeting America’s demand for healthy, fresh, wild-caught Louisiana seafood. Fishing feeds their families and yours.
“Fishing, crabbing and oystering are in our blood. It’s not just what we do. It’s our culture, our point of pride and our way of life. And it’s who we are and what our families have stood for longer than there’s been a Louisiana. One thing’s for sure, we’re as tough and tested as the environment we work in. We’ll get through this latest challenge and keep feeding America like no one else.”
—Peter Gerica Lifelong Louisiana commercial fisherman
Gambit > bestofneworleans.com > JUNE 15 > 2010
A SPECIAL MESSAGE FROM
For more information about fresh Louisiana seafood and news regarding the Louisiana seafood community visit www.louisianaseafoodnews.com
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JUNE 15, 2010 ยท VOLUME 31 ยท NUMBER 24
> > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > >ADMINISTRATIVE > > > > > > > > DIRECTOR > > > > > >MARK > > >KARCHER > <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<< >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > NEWS > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > >EDITORIAL >FAX: > > 483-3116 > > > > |>response@gambitweekly.com >>>>>>>>>> < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < Cover < < < < Story < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < 19 <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<< EDITOR KEVIN ALLMAN > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > As > >Treme > > > >prepares > > > > >to > >wind > > >up > >its> first > > >season, > > > > > > > > > > >MANAGING > > > > > >EDITOR > > > >KANDACE > POWER GRAVES 3320 TRANSCONTINENTAL DR., METAIRIE the locals on whom the characters are (loosely) POLITICAL EDITOR CLANCY DUBOS based talk about their fictional counterparts ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT EDITOR WILL COVIELLO
Commentary
7
Blake Pontchartrain
8
News
9
Bouquets & Brickbats
9
Kicking ass over the Gulf oil catastrophe New Orleans know-it-all
Attempting to repair the damage done to the reputation of Louisiana seafood This weekโ s heroes and zeroes
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Cโ est What?
9
Scuttlebutt
9
Gambitโ s Web poll From their lips to your ears
Fatherโ s Day Gift Guide
25
Shop Talk
29
Hop on these gifts for Pop Nordic Kitchens & Baths
VIEWS Chris Rose / Rose-Colored Glasses 13 The legacy of Zappโ s potato chip king Ron Zappe Jeremy Alford / The State of the State
15
Clancy DuBos / Politics
17
The Great Wall of Louisiana gamble
summer sale
GAMBIT > BESTOFNEWORLEANS.COM > JUNE 15 > 2010
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SALE
A&E News 31 The Tulane Summer Lyric season gets underway with Jerry Hermanโ s Mame Gambit Picks
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Noah Bonaparte Pais / On the Record
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Cuisine
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The Puzzle Page
62
Little Big Horns drop a new album
10am-5pm
SUMMER
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Best bets for your busy week
june 17- june 20
Ian McNulty tours the threatened oyster beds 5 in Five: 5 places for liver lovers Brenda Maitlandโ s Wine of the Week
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Bobbyโ s BP boondoggle
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COVER PHOTO OF DAVIS ROGAN BY CHERYL GERBER COVER PHOTO OF STEVE ZAHN BY SKIP BOLEN, ยฉ HBO COVER DESIGN BY DORA SISON
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HEALTHY EYES ARE PART OF A HEALTHY BODY. When it comes to eye exams, nobody is more thorough than the doctors at St. Charles Vision. Our comprehensive exam helps you maintain your best vision, keeps your eyes healthy, and aids in the detection of some diseases. So, call the St. Charles Vision location nearest you and set up an appointment today. We can’t wait to see you see better.
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The hisToric New orleaNs collecTioN PreseNTs
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Gambit > bestofneworleans.com > JUNE 15 > 2010
Come On Get HOPPY!
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The Inn On Bourbon’s NOLA Brew Experience Every third Thursday of the month, come to the IOB’s Puccini Bar for The Inn On Bourbon’s NOLA Brew Experience, a special beer tasting event. This barley blast features favorites from NOLA Brewing Company such as NOLA Blonde Ale, NOLA Brown Ale, and Hopitoulas IPA.
Next Beer Tasting is this Thursday, June 17
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commentary
thinking out loud
Defining a President
I
rium on deep-water drilling will play well in a state dependent on oil revenues, but he still has to prove his mettle by leading a substantive — and successful — state response to the catastrophe. So far, he has proved himself adept at photo ops. And then there are our Congressional representatives. U.S. Sen. David Vitter and Rep. Charlie Melancon, who’s seeking Vitter’s seat in November, have been quick to say how much they’ve been looking out for Louisiana — while sniping at each other. Rep. Anh “Joseph” Cao has an election of his own coming up, and U.S. Sen. Mary Landrieu, one of the Senate’s major beneficiaries of oil industry contributions, has a particularly thin tightrope to walk when it comes to calling for sanctions against BP.
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Obama isn’t the only politician whose career is at stake here. Gov. Bobby Jindal also has a tricky needle to thread.
Meanwhile, BP’s Hayward is scheduled to appear this Thursday, June 17, before an investigative House Energy and Commerce subcommittee chaired by Rep. Bart Stupak (D-Mich.), where he’ll have to defend BP’s actions in the continuing disaster. Hayward has already proven he cannot be believed or trusted on anything related to the spill — but citizens shouldn’t just be listening to him that day. They also should be listening to what their lawmakers intend to do about all this. Obviously stung by criticism that he wasn’t showing sufficient outrage, Obama went on the Today show June 8 and said his trips to the Gulf Coast were, in part, so he could “know whose ass to kick.” It was a calculated move by “No-Drama Obama,” but he and others should remember: The people of the Gulf Coast don’t want drama. They want action — because, come November and beyond, they already know whose asses to kick.
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Gambit > bestofneworleans.com > JUNE 15 > 2010
t’s not the triumphs of their administrations that define modern presidents; it’s their responses, or lack thereof, to crises. Jimmy Carter’s presidency is synonymous with stagflation, a recession, and the Iran hostage crisis. George W. Bush will be remembered for his rush to war in Iraq and his pitiful response to Hurricane Katrina. Now, 19 months into his presidency, Barack Obama is faced with the greatest environmental catastrophe in American history. How well — or how poorly — he responds is how he’ll be remembered. It also may determine whether voters give him a second term, as they did Bush, or whether he’ll be oneand-done like Carter. Critics say Obama was slow to react to the crisis, and he certainly has flip-flopped on the issue of offshore drilling. Just weeks before the Deepwater Horizon blew, he expanded deep-water exploration in the Gulf of Mexico. In late May, however, he announced a six-month moratorium on all current and future drilling in waters deeper than 500 feet, a move that canceled some lease sales in the western Gulf and off the East Coast. The move also threatens to send more major deep-water drilling rigs to foreign waters, and there’s no telling when they’ll return. The president says he wants to see the conclusions of his study commission on the tragedy before lifting the moratorium. This didn’t play well in south Louisiana. With fishing, shrimping and oyster harvesting jobs gone, oil jobs were all that were left. Now they’re about to go as well. Terrebonne Parish President Michel Claudet said the economic effect of banning deep-water drilling would be “catastrophic.” Billy Nungesser and Charlotte Randolph, the presidents of Plaquemines and Lafourche parishes, told Obama the same thing on his most recent visit to the Gulf Coast. Unfortunately, the White House didn’t seem open to compromise. Ironically, Obama had an unlikely early champion on the Gulf Coast: Nungesser, who has emerged as the anguished, angry, public face of Louisianans affected by the disaster. Nungesser, a Republican, has publicly lashed out at BP and its CEO Tony Hayward, as well as Adm. Thad Allen, the Coast Guard’s commander on the scene — but when he butted heads with Obama, he came away with praise for the federal response. “I think he cares and he’s a hands-on guy,” Nungesser said of the president. “I was real impressed.” Obama isn’t the only politician whose career is at stake here. Gov. Bobby Jindal also has a tricky needle to thread. Jindal’s famous rejection of “big government” has already been mocked by those who noted how quickly he demanded help from the feds. His objection to Obama’s morato-
07
blake
PONTCHARTRAIN™
NEW ORLEANS KNOW-IT-ALL
Questions for Blake: askblake@gambitweekly.com
BEFORE
HEY BLAKE, I RECENTLY SAW A PHOTO IN NEW ORLEANS’ “OTHER” NEWSPAPER OF A NEW CROSS ATOP ST. STEPHEN’S CHURCH ON NAPOLEON AVENUE. THERE WAS NO STORY WITH THE PHOTO AND ONLY MINIMAL INFORMATION ABOUT THE NEW CROSS. CAN YOU GIVE ME MORE INFO? I HAVE AN OLD FAMILY CONNECTION TO THAT CHURCH, SO I LIKE TO KEEP UP.
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inscription, also in Latin, indicates that the cross was originally blessed on the Solemnity of Christ the King: In sollemnitate D.N.I. C. Universorum Regis A.D. MMIX. The last inscription is the names of Archbishop Gregory Aymond and Monsignor Nalty, since they were the bishop and parish priest at the time of the blessing. And because the church is in New Orleans, a fleur de lis also is engraved on the cross.
CURIOUS IN CARROLLTON
DEAR CURIOUS, After a year of hard work, the parishioners of Good Shepherd Parish have a beautiful new cross on St. Stephen’s Church, a 12-foothigh bronze cross gilded in 23-karat gold leaf. The design of the cross is of Irish or Celtic origin. The old cross was a victim of Hurricane Gustav, which caused it to lose an arm. The cross was discovered to be copper flashing over steel piping and cypress wood — nothing especially valuable or beautiful. An insurance estimate revealed that the cross could be repaired or replaced for $30,000 — $500 for the cross itself and the rest for labor and the crane. The new pastor, Monsignor Christopher Nalty, appointed on Nov. 1, 2008, made a decision after asking himself, “Why would we spend $30,000 to replace a simple $500 cross? Can’t we put something more beautiful on top of our church?” Monsignor Nalty contacted local artist Thomas Bruno. Bruno was given the original drawings by architects Favrot & Livaudais, and he offered the parish a proposal. Announcements went out about the new project. Parishioners were promised that their names would be engraved on the new cross for a donation of $1,000. The “Spirit Givers,” as they were called, were more than generous. As a result, it was decided to have the cross covered completely with gold leaf. Thomas Bruno cast the entire cross of bronze, which will last a very long time, and the names of all the “Spirit Givers” were hand-engraved into the upright beam. After a primer was applied, gold “sizing” came next. Then followed 4-inchsquare sheets of 23-karat gold leaf applied by hand. Finally, the cross was inscribed in Latin. The English translation is this: “And just as Moses lifted up the serpent in the desert, so must the Son of Man be lifted up, so that everyone who believes in Him may have eternal life.” (John 3:14-15). Another
The new 12-foot bronze cross on top of St. Stephen’s Church is covered in 23-karat gold leaf applied by hand. It replaces a cross damaged during Hurricane Gustav in 2008. HEY BLAKE, I WAS JUST HOPING YOU COULD TELL ME IF THE BELLS IN THE ST. LOUIS CATHEDRAL ARE RUNG BY HAND OR IF THEY ARE ON A MACHINE. I WAS ALSO WONDERING IF ALL THE BELLS ARE USED.
CHRIS
DEAR CHRIS, Until about 20 years ago, the sexton rung the bells by pulling the ropes that ran down a shaft from the bells to the vestibule. Now the bells are on an automatic timer, and they are set to ring every quarter hour. There are seven bells in our magnificent cathedral. One of the big ones was installed in 1819 and is named Victoire. One of the smaller bells has a nick in it; during the Civil War, someone fired a gun from Algiers and hit the bell.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<< > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > >CHRIS > ROSE JEREMY ALFORD CLANCY DUBOS < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < KNOWLEDGE < < < < < < < < < < <IS < <POWER < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < 13 15 17 >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<< >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<< <<<<<<<>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
scuttle Butt
QUOTES OF THE WEEK
“BP notes the fall in its share price in U.S. trading last night. The company is not aware of any reason which justifies this share price movement.” — BP press release issued June 10, one day after the company’s stock dropped 16 percent, leaving BP worth half of what it was before the Deepwater Horizon disaster
Fins Across America
“Please, please send us some help. I make $513 a week as mayor.” — Grand Isle mayor David Camardelle, pleading before the U.S. Senate June 10
SKEPTICAL BUYERS, CHEFS AND DINERS WORRY GULF SEAFOOD IS TAINTED BY THE OIL DISASTER. LOCAL AND FEDERAL AGENCIES ASSURE IT’S AS SAFE AS EVER.
“I have spent more time fighting the officials of BP and the Coast Guard than I have spent fighting the oil.” — Plaquemines Parish president Billy Nungesser, at the same Senate session
BY ALE X WOODWARD
L
According to the Louisiana Seafood Promotion and Marketing Board, 90 percent of the country’s domestic crawfish, 69 percent of its shrimp, and 70 percent of its oysters, come from the Gulf. Louisiana is also the largest
“If there are no oysters, what am I going to do with a loan?” — John Tesvich of AmeriPure Oysters, explaining to The New York Times why he and other oyster harvesters have not bothered to apply to the Small Business Administration for an emergency disaster loan.
FELONS NEED NOT APPLY
Crystal Mugnier, a chemical analyst at Eurofins Central Analytical Laboratories in Metairie, testing for hydrocarbons in samples of Louisiana seafood June 10. PHOTO BY CHERYL GERBER
provider of live male No. 1 crabs to the East Coast. It’s a multi-billion dollar industry, one the LRA and the board (and now BP, with its $40 million bump to Louisiana seafood and tourism campaigns) aim to protect. The National Restaurant Association convened in Chicago last month for its annual show, and LRA was there to get out its message. The board even launched a website (www.louisianaseafoodnews.com) to ensure accurate coverage of Louisiana seafood. But in Chicago, getting that seafood isn’t as simple. In a New York Times profile of Chicago restaurants bracing for drops in Gulf seafood supplies, executive chef Cary Taylor of The Southern was quoted as saying he stopped using Gulf brown shrimp in his popular shrimp and grits because of “supply concerns and cus-
State lawmakers gave final unanimous approval last week to a bill that would permanently bar contractors convicted of public bribery, extortion, money laundering and corrupt influencing from bidding on public contracts in the state. House Bill 1292 by Rep. Walker Hines, D-New Orleans, had 32 co-authors and no opposition. In addition to the felony convictions enumerated above, the bill also would bar contractors convicted of nine other, PAGE 12
c'est what? WHAT DO YOU THINK OF BP’S CLEANUP EFFORT IN THE GULF SO FAR?
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THIS WEEK’S HEROES AND ZEROES
has been cleaning oiled seabirds in Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Florida. The group, founded in 1976 in the wake of an oil spill in the Delaware River, is a first responder and one of the world’s leading experts on the protocols necessary to save oiled wildlife. The bird rescue has rehabilitated herons, terns, pelicans and sea turtles and is releasing them in safe areas where they’re expected to recover fully.
Olivia Bouler,
an artist from Islip, N.Y., contacted the Audubon Society about selling some of her drawings to benefit rescue efforts to help wildlife affected by the Gulf oil catastrophe. AOL heard of her generosity and offered free promotion and space on the AOL news website, raising $20,000 in three days and more than $60,000 total. Impressive — and all the more so because Olivia is 11 years old.
The National World War II Museum
launched a campaign called “$10 For Them” earlier this year, ensuring WWII veterans would always be able to enter the museum for no charge. According to museum president and CEO Dr. Nick Mueller, the drive received donations from all 50 states, and by Memorial Day weekend Americans had contributed enough money to underwrite admission for 3,417 vets.
Matthew Lynn,
a columnist for Bloomberg, wrote a June 7 opinion column in which he advised BP: “Your job is to look after the owners of the company, not make yourself acceptable to a country that doesn’t want you any more.” Lynn offered this advice on how to deal with “whining Americans” — “Just say: ‘Thanks for everything, guys. It was good while it lasted. Sorry about the oil spill, but so it goes. Goodbye and good night.’” After an outcry, the column was removed from Bloomberg’s website.
Gambit > bestofneworleans.com > JUNE 15 > 2010
ouisiana needs a slogan. Jim Funk has one: “If it’s on the menu, it’s safe.” Funk, president and chief executive officer of the Louisiana Restaurant Association (LRA), stands by his statement, and it’s one he’s willing to spread across the country to restaurants, chefs and diners. “The last thing restaurants want to do is serve anything that might make a customer sick — that could destroy your reputation, lose your business,” he says. “Everyone is being very careful. Restaurants are getting plenty of seafood, and it’s safe. There’s no question about it.” Importing foreign, frozen seafood is and presumably will remain blasphemy to finer local restaurants. But Funk worries diners are scrutinizing not the seafood quality, nor taste, nor prices, but its safety. He and other LRA members fear restaurants, from the Great Lakes to the East and West coasts, will abandon Gulf seafood altogether as the BP oil disaster’s volatile slicks penetrate the coast. And Funk says tainted food is a problem of perception more than reality. “We’re afraid people still have a fear,” Funk says. “People out of state might read something in the paper, that some restaurant in Baltimore is not going to buy any more Louisiana seafood — why in the world would they say that? It’s beyond me.”
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tomer fears.” But that’s not the case, Taylor tells Gambit. Though some customers are concerned about the quality, it’s the quantity they worry about, and so does Taylor. “There’s not really been any concerns from our customers,” Taylor says about safety fears. “And we certainly assure them it’s not that big of a deal.” Taylor says supply and demand is the problem — and so are the costs, which would have to be relayed to the customers. “I grew up in Georgia with the adage ‘Only eat oysters in the months that end in R,’” he says. “I would not be serving, in Chicago, Gulf oysters in June or July anyway. But as far as shrimp — it’s funny, after that article came out it was Memorial Day weekend, and we had a boil with a bunch of Gulf brown shrimp. But lately we’ve just been getting a really great sustainable shrimp product from somewhere else other than the Gulf.” Taylor says The Southern’s Gulf Coast-inspired menu still features Louisiana crawfish, but fresh, sustainably harvested Gulf seafood is on an as-available basis. “The big problem is whether Chicago restaurants get the supplies,” he says. “The guys harvesting oysters for four generations in your neck of the woods, they’re going to lose everything they know. That’s a big problem here.” Tommy Cvitanovich represents a Croatian legacy in south Louisiana — his father Drago opened Drago’s in 1969, establishing a family institution and Metairie (and now a downtown) seafood destination. The menu features Drago’s popular signature charbroiled oysters. The Louisiana Office of Public Health and Department of Health and Hospitals (DHH) closed 11 oyster harvest areas as a precautionary measure — oil hasn’t breached the beds, but it lingers near the oysters’ fragile waterways. For years, the Cvitanovich family has enjoyed its family-owned oyster beds supplying the restaurants, but now those beds are an oil target. Cvitanovich stands by the safety of his product. “Everybody up and down the food chain understands the last thing we need is tainted or contaminated seafood to be in the marketplace,” he says. “I mean, look at the oyster closures. They’re all precautionary. … They are erring on the side of caution and I’m OK with that.” His customers question the availability of seafood on the menu more than its safety, he says. “Everybody asks about availability. I get some, but very little questions about quality and safety of the seafood,” he says. “Very,
very little.” Drago’s still has oysters on its menu, but Cvitanovich is supplementing them with mussels imported from the Northeast. During a healthy year, Drago’s would not have any problem getting oysters, but now it has two obstacles: BP’s oil disaster, and a yearold rule requiring raw oysters be refrigerated no more than an hour after harvest — what used to be an eight-hour time limit. “We ran out of oysters for raw consumption a couple times last week,” Cvitanovich says, “but we always have oysters available for cooking.” Funk is positive Louisiana restaurants and diners will stand behind local products. “If some restaurants say ‘We don’t have it available,’ it may just mean the prices have gone up and they’re concerned about raising prices. Everybody’s being very careful,” he says. “Our people in Louisiana know their food. They know their restaurants. I don’t think there’s going to be any slowing down of eating out because of (safety) concerns in Louisiana.” Funk says continuing to promote local seafood could “help us continue to turn the tide about what people think out there,” despite signs in restaurants across the country meant to ease customers’ minds: “Not serving Gulf seafood.” “I don’t agree with it, and I don’t like it, but if they choose to put up a sign, they think that helps them, so be it,” Cvitanovich says. “In business today, there’s not much you can do. Just educate, educate, educate.”
“The industry has no interest in serving oysters that have been tainted, and they’re on heightened vigilance.” — Clayton Williams, assistant secretary of the Louisiana Office of Public Health “sniffers” to check for the presence of oil by smelling seafood. NOAA and the Department of Wildlife and Fisheries continue to monitor the coast as they open and close portions of its waters to fishing, oil permitting. About 37 percent of the Gulf is now closed — but about half the production is shut down, with oyster beds locked up and fishermen taking jobs as BP cleanup workers. The disaster claimed one New Orleans institution last week. Sal Sunseri of the 134-year-old P&J Oysters, which has long reigned as the city’s premier oyster provider, laid off his oyster shuckers. The company will purchase pre-shucked Alabama oysters, but it’s only a matter of time before those oyster beds will close, too. “The mother lode of all seafood in Louisiana is Barataria Bay, and that’s completely closed,” Cvitanovich says. “Probably won’t be reopened in the near future.”
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Gambit > bestofneworleans.com > JUNE 15 > 2010
“I had a couple dozen last weekend,” says Clayton Williams, assistant secretary of the Office of Public Health. “The oysters that make it into the market are not tainted with oil. We can assure that. The industry has no interest in serving oysters that have been tainted, and they’re on heightened vigilance.” The Office of Public Health, DHH, the Department of Environmental Quality and Department of Wildlife and Fisheries, with help from fishermen, overlook oyster harvest area closures and safety. The agencies opened and closed several beds — 17 of 30 areas are open while two others are only partially opened. (The partial closures are in areas 2 and 3 near Lake Borgne close to the Chandeleur Islands. The other closed areas are 9 through 15 and 17, all west of the Mississippi River, and 28, south of Vermillion Bay.) Williams says agency staff members visit oyster beds and perform sensory tests — staff members handle, smell and taste oysters, before they send samples to laboratories for chemical tests. The oysters are sent to Eurofins Central
Analytical Laboratory in Metairie, where they undergo tests for the presence of hydrocarbons. The tests, however, aren’t looking for chemical dispersants — yet. “It’s not clear yet from the federal agencies involved and from the producers of the dispersants what to test for yet,” he says. “If this disaster continues, we’re going to be enhancing our testing — the numbers of the things we’re testing for and the frequencies.” Williams says apart from the normal risks diners should keep in mind when eating raw seafood, the public doesn’t need any additional precautions. “We want to protect the industry, and we want to protect the consumers,” he says. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) is now training
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lesser charges from bidding on public contracts for five years after their convictions. Hines’ bill came in response to former Mayor Ray Nagin’s defense of giving city contracts to a company owned by Burnell Moliere, who pleaded guilty to a federal “structuring” charge for his role in facilitating bribes paid by political operative Mose Jefferson to former Orleans School Board president Ellenese Brooks-Simms. Nagin said he saw nothing wrong with giving city contracts to felons after they have served their sentences or probations. In fact, before he left office Nagin gave one of Moliere’s companies a $2.6 million contract to build a “cultural sculpture garden” in Armstrong Park — which had to be redone several times because of shoddy workmanship and is currently in ruins. — Clancy DuBos
Chief Meets the Press
New Orleans Police Superintendent Ronal Serpas met at NOPD headquarters June 9 with editors from a dozen New Orleans media outlets to push an improved transparency message. Serpas, a native of the city whose family has served in the NOPD for decades, said he read the New Orleans newspapers every day for the nine years he was away, first as chief of the Washington State Patrol and then as police chief of Nashville, Tenn. Serpas saw coverage that portrayed the department as “balkanized,” he says. “And I want to be different.” Serpas, who became the city’s top cop in May, has already made two obvious changes to the department to improve transparency: Opening weekly COMSTAT meetings to the public, and giving his commanders permission to speak to the press. “It didn’t make sense to me that the department would shut COMSTAT off from their own department,” says Serpas. “That’s when people start walking around saying, ‘They must be up to some kind of voodoo in there.’” The chief also asked for the media’s help in urging citizens to call police when a crime occurs in their neighborhood and said attention to livability crimes as well as maintaining a focus on reducing violent crime would be a good way to rebuild public confidence in NOPD. Representatives from Hispanic print and radio outlets said many in the Latino community are reluctant to report crimes because they’re afraid their immigration status will be questioned. “I’m not interested in immigration status,” Serpas says. “I spent a lot of time at odds with congressional leadership on this issue in Nashville. How people find themselves in this nation is beyond my control.” — Matt Davis
fLAP OVer fLYOVer
When state Rep. Neil Abramson, D-New Orleans, told WWL-TV last week he didn’t see a “whole lot of oil” on the southwestern coastline during a guided tour by the U.S. Coast Guard — and that berms might not be necessary to fight the gushing oil — Plaquemines Parish President Billy Nungesser shot back sharply. “I hope in the future, legislators will refrain from giving their opinion without first-hand information or the whole truth,” Nungesser said in a press release. “Maybe Neil Abramson should go to work with Tony Hayward of BP with stupid comments like that.” Nungesser added that Plaquemines Parish has more than 3,000 acres “where marine life as we know it is dead,” but Abramson’s tour included only whitewashed areas. That was June 7. Two days later, during the regular meeting of the Jefferson Parish Council, interim president Steve Theriot jumped on the bandwagon and suggested that the representative take a more thorough tour next time. “Oil on the beach is one thing,” Theriot said. “Oil in our estuaries is another.” By June 11, Abramson had been put through the wringer about his comment, which he says was taken out of context by WWL-TV. He released a transcript of his full statement, which said, “I can tell you, from what we saw today, it didn’t look like berms were necessary, because it wasn’t a whole lot of oil out there that we saw and they were taking the necessary measures to clean it up. But I believe the situation is a whole lot worse, so we need to get to the bottom of that and what we need to do in response.” Abramson added that he likewise was upset at the way he was portrayed in the TV coverage. He was still explaining himself by week’s end. His colleague to the west, Rep. Joe Harrison, R-Napoleonville, says he received calls from his local media outlets wanting a comment on Abramson’s statement. “I told them he must have been looking out the wrong window,” Harrison says. “My full comments questioned what we were shown versus the true extent of the damage,” Abramson said later. “I have been a vocal advocate for our parishes in their cleanup efforts. … I look forward to meeting with Mr. Nungesser and to working together on this tragic event which impacts our state.” — Jeremy Alford
MOre sCUttLeBUtt ONLiNe
To read more “Scuttlebutt” and keep up with daily political news from Gambit, visit our websites: www. bestofneworleans.com and www.blogofneworleans.com.
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mend the Creole tomato-flavored chip for this indulgence.) And then there is your basic, traditional, no-frills tuna sandwich on Bunny Bread, transformed into a culinary amuse bouche by placing a layer of Zapp’s jalapeno-flavored chips between the tuna and the bread. For this latter epicuriosity, one is advised to peruse the contents of the bag to find the largest, flattest samples of chip — and therein lies another of the wonders and delights of a bag of Zapp’s: No longer need young people descend into violence over who gets the most bent, bubbled or fold-over chips in a bag. Hell, half the production samples coming off the assembly line at the Zapp chippery in Gramercy came out bent, bubbled and folded over; this was no less an astonishing advancement and innovation in 20th-century dining than the development of the seedless watermelon. Ron Zappe: This guy, he mattered. And he was to potato chips what the Brennan family is to restaurants; there are very few failures attributed to the brand. Few, I said — not none. There have been so many stunning taste sensations to roll off the line at the chippery, from the subtle cracked pepper to the savory mesquite, that it’s easy (and probably best) to forget the Caribbean Key Lime flavor, a truly dark footnote to the Zapp’s legacy. “People actually took the time to call us at the factory and tell us how much they hated it,” Zapp’s purchasing agent Jeff Bain recalled to me this week. “That chip was a lightning rod!” Funny; talking to Bain this week, he professed to have never heard of the freelance recipes I have been employing for years with my Zapp’s. He said he’d never progressed any further than using dip as an accompaniment to his chips — but even that accessory often seems moot, given the strong, distinctive flavors of the Zapp’s brand. And that got me thinking: I’m sure I’m not the only guy who fussed around with Zapp’s with the goal of creating an even higher order of flavor than the chip already proffers. So I thought it might be fun to solicit from you, the readers, your own recipes and rituals concerning Zapp’s potato chips and next week we can pay further tribute to the great Ron Zappe and his little potato chip that could. Send your notions and potions my way to chrisrose504@gmail.com, and we’ll see what new windows of flavor we can open on the world.
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he physical world is so crammed with stuff, things, items, commodities and objects; it is self-evident that every member of the human species takes for granted more than 99.9 percent of what occurs, evolves and proliferates around him or herself. Why in God’s name I feel compelled to begin a tribute to a guy who made potato chips for a living with such a grandiose contemplation is beyond me, other than: a) I’ve written so many obituaries in the short time I’ve been at this newspaper that I’m desperately looking for something — anything — to put a fresh spin on the genre or, b) I can’t freakin’ remember the first time I ever ate a Zapp’s chip — and it’s really, really bothering me. This is not to suggest that one’s first bite into one of those abundant, crunchy chunks of spiced nirvana is an experience that rivals remembering where you were, say, when Neil Armstrong stepped out of the lunar module onto the surface of the Moon, or when O.J. Simpson led his surrealistic motorcade down an L.A. freeway. Nor is it to suggest it’s not. Whereas I do not remember the precise time nor the place — nor sadly, the accompaniment — to my first Zapp’s potato chip, I do remember that, in some small way, my life was changed from that moment on. We all have our own great moments of personal chippery, of course. That first Dorito! I was 10 years old, at the Sycamore Store in Bethesda, Md. Again, I would never be the same. There is the first Chee Wee; a rite of passage for a New Orleanian every bit as significant as one’s first Lucky Dog or confession (often oddly and tangentially, related to one another). And, of course, there is one’s first encounter with a Pringle, a universally pleasing though puzzling episode. I cull these memories and anecdotes together to, in some small — and hopefully meaningful — way of paying respect to Ron Zappe, the founder of Zapp’s Potato Chips, who passed on to that Great Kettle in the Sky earlier this month at age 69. For me, he completely altered the landscape of casual dining. I cannot imagine grazing on a Napoleon House muffuletta without first spreading a half-inch-high bedding of Zapp’s across my plate, the better to catch and later savor the bits and chunks of olive salad debris that tumble out of this delicacy during its consumption. (The same goes for the shrimp and cheese po-boy with roast beef gravy at Domilise’s, though I recom-
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IN JUNE off other projects. “This is going to be a very complex situation,” says Scott Kirkpatrick, president of the Coastal Builders Coalition. This much seems certain: Jindal has tied his political future to the Great Wall of Louisiana. For its part, BP is shelling out $360 million — about $200 million less than what the U.S. Department of the Interior estimated the project will cost. In return, Louisiana gets portions of its coastal restoration and protection blueprint funded privately in the name of fighting pollution. BP has already wired the first $60 million installment to the state. He’ll get credit for staring down BP, but there’s great risk for Jindal. As this project goes, so goes his political fate — and that’s as it should be. Jeremy Alford can be reached at jeremy@ jeremyalford.com.
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Gambit > bestofneworleans.com > JUNE 15 > 2010
e might be opposed to gaming, but Gov. Bobby Jindal is rolling the political dice on the proposed sand berm project to keep BP’s oil out of Louisiana marshes. There’s a growing tide of opposition to the plan, which calls for massive rows of sand to be placed along Louisiana’s historic barrier island chain. It took some jockeying to get the project going, but Thad Allen, the Coast Guard admiral overseeing the Gulf oil crisis, held an emergency, closed-door meeting on June 1 to gather information about the permit application from state and federal response agencies. Jindal and several parish presidents attended. Afterward, Allen ordered BP to pay for the berm. Sources involved with the briefing say Jindal and some parish officials became “agitated” when presented with concerns about the project — including data from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. The governor reportedly pressed the group for an up or down vote and said academic theories weren’t needed. But the science was there for review. Col. Al Lee, head of the Corps’ New Orleans office, described the project as “a lot of effort over a relatively long construction period for a limited benefit.” The U.S. Geological Survey reached a similar conclusion, adding that storm waves carrying oil could overtop the berms. Windell Curole, president of the Louisiana Association of Levee Boards and general manger of the South Lafourche Levee District, says he has had some success with smaller berm projects in his area, but he doesn’t know what to expect from Jindal’s plan. Still, he supports the initiative. “It’s better than nothing and it’s not better than nothing,” he says. “Look, nobody wants to sit on their hands. You have to search for every possible idea.” While lawmakers have been curious about the berm program, few if any worry about the scientific concerns. “I want to see as many berms as possible,” says Rep. Jerry “Truck” Gisclair, D-Larose. “We can always blow the sand away. There’s just no sense of urgency on this oil spill.” Grand Isle, among other coastal hamlets, is in Gisclair’s legislative district. Garret Graves, chairman of the Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority and Jindal’s top coastal advisor, says the berms will be six feet high and are based on the designs of a Dutch water resources firm. It will take three to four months to complete, he says, even though other estimates have put it at twice that. Graves says the berms eventually will
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clancy dubos
politics
bobby's Focus
I
n the face of the worst environmental disaster in American history lapping at Louisiana’s fragile coastline, Gov. Bobby Jindal’s administration has been working feverishly — trying to hire expensive, outof-state lawyers to represent the state against BP in court. Sources familiar with the administration’s efforts say that Team Jindal at one point proposed hiring a pair of non-Louisiana law firms, one of which typically represents large corporate clients, to sue BP on behalf of the state. That, even though many of the nation’s top environmental plaintiff lawyers live right here in Louisiana. Our sources say state Attorney General Buddy Caldwell’s office has opposed Team Jindal’s efforts, and so far the AG has at least been able to hold up the administration’s plan. Caldwell instead has retained a team of Louisiana plaintiff attorneys with much more experience suing polluters. But Team Jindal has persisted in its efforts to hire additional, non-Louisiana law firms. Advisers to Jindal and Caldwell have been meeting regularly trying to resolve the impasse, but as of late last
week there was little progress to report. There are several things wrong with the administration’s approach: First, Jindal is the governor, not the AG. The Louisiana constitution makes Caldwell, not Jindal, the state’s top legal officer. The authority to hire outside counsel to represent of the people of Louisiana thus is vested in Caldwell, and the AG already has signed up some of the best legal talent available. New Orleans lawyer Allan Kanner, who has a national reputation as an environmental plaintiff attorney, is Caldwell’s choice to lead the state’s effort — provided Jindal frees up enough money to let Kanner et al. do the job. Ah, there’s the rub. Second, local plaintiff attorneys have much more experience and expertise at suing people like BP than your typical out-of-state firm. Kanner’s environmental litigation experience, for example, goes all the way back to Three Mile Island. Other local attorneys Caldwell has hired have decades of experience each. This is not a close call. Third, how can Jindal justify hiring outof-state law firms to represent Louisiana
citizens in this matter, knowing that those firms ultimately will take millions of dollars in fees back home and spend that money elsewhere, at a time when he’s cutting millions himself from state colleges, universities, hospitals and other programs and services? What is this administration thinking?
The Louisiana Constitution makes Caldwell, not Jindal, the state’s top legal officer.
MI
Fourth, if the governor wants to hire his own legal counsel to keep him in the loop, he has every right to do that. But, he should pay those lawyers out of his executive budget and not try to make his lawyers part of the state’s legal front line. Finally, hiring an out-of-state firm, particularly a large firm, incurs the risk that the firm will have corporate clients whose interests are diametrically opposed to those of the state in this matter. What would happen when (not if) the state advances a legal theory that could set an “anti-business” precedent? Does anybody think those corporate clients would sit idly by? The potential conflicts of interest are numerous — and entirely foreseeable. With so much stacked against the Team Jindal approach, why would the governor even think about trying to get involved in the selection of outside legal counsel — particularly non-Louisiana legal counsel? The governor likes to pride himself on his laser-like focus. Going forward, his administration should focus more on doing the job Jindal was elected to do — and less on trying to do Caldwell’s job.
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“IT’S HELPING SO MANY MUSICIANS IN THE CITY, AND THE CITY IN GENERAL. PEOPLE ALL OVER THE WORLD CAN SEE THAT WE’RE STILL SWINGIN’ OUT HERE, THAT NEW ORLEANS IS ALIVE AND KICKING.”
— KERMIT RUFFINS
The
of As Treme’s first season comes to an end this week, ThE localS who INSpIREd MaNy oF ThE TV chaRacTERS
discuss the journeys of their fictional counterparts. By Stephen Faure phOtOS By CheryL GerBer • STILLS BY HBO
O
n June 20, HBO’s Treme will wind up its first season, 10-episode run with an episode titled “I’ll Fly Away,” and from both local and national reviews, it seems creator David Simon’s vision of post-Katrina New Orleans life has proved — at last — that it’s possible to capture the city accurately on film. We’ve all cringed at New Orleans-set shows with depictions of “gumbo parties” and characters with accents that alternate between fake-Carolina and fake-Cajun with not a Y’at in earshot. Not that there aren’t liberties taken in Treme to move the story forward, but overall the events, settings and characters ring true, and for the most part, have been well-received by local viewers. For many characters, development on Treme started in an obvious place: reality. DJ/musician Davis McAlary, writer Creighton Bernette, defense attorney Toni Bernette, Mardi Gras Indian chief
Gambit > bestofneworleans.com > JUNE 15 > 2010
CHARACTERS
19
Albert Lambreaux and his son Delmond, and chef Janette Desautel have, to a certain extent, real-life counterparts in locals Davis Rogan, Ashley Morris, Mary Howell, Donald Harrison Sr. and Jr., and Susan Spicer. Rogan, Howell, Harrison, Jr., Spicer and trumpeter Kermit Ruffins (who plays himself) also serve as consultants, But, as Treme staff writer Lolis Eric Elie warns, “you have to be careful about the use of the word ‘based.’ The show really is contemporary historical fiction. These people become starting points for the construction of our characters.” Elie, a writer and filmmaker whose work includes the 2008 documentary Faubourg Treme: The Untold Story of Black New Orleans, and fellow writer Tom Piazza (City of Refuge, Why New Orleans Matters and others) help Simon keep the action and the characters true to life. “(Just) as important as fictional characters based on real folks,” Elie says, “we have these real folks who make consistent appearances.” Musicians figure prominently in Treme — Allen Toussaint, Deacon John, Dr. John, John Boutte, Elvis Costello, Paul Sanchez, Tom McDermott, the Andrews musical family, Coco Robicheaux, the Pfister Sisters and Bob french have all appeared, playing themselves or characters much like themselves. Other New Orleanians, including Jacques Morial and John Besh, have played themselves, while familiar faces from the New Orleans theater scene (Becky Allen, Carl Walker, Bob Edes Jr., Maureen Brennan) have been cast as well, turning Treme-viewing into a trainspotting exercise of a
spot-the-local variety. Rogan wears several hats. “I’m a consultant in terms of the music scene, the music business and community radio,” he says. “The character is named after me. I co-wrote episode seven, songs I’ve recorded and performed have been used in the show, I’ve written songs for the show, I have a recurring cameo part and I’m the piano coach.” Davis McAlary and Davis Rogan part ways in several aspects: “He comes from money, he’s politically naive, and he certainly can’t dance or play piano as well as I can. But, I mean, it’s Steve Zahn,” Rogan says of his counterpart. “He’s a great actor with amazing comedic timing.” Of the show’s hitting its marks as a realistic depiction of the city, Rogan says, “Consider where the bar is in accurately portraying New Orleans, which falls somewhere around 25 percent. Treme’s not perfect, and perfection is impossible. But no one’s ever reached 85 to 95 percent, which is where I would put it. In my opinion, the last really good, accurate portrayal of New Orleans was (Elia) Kazan’s Panic in the Streets from 1950.”
“IN MY OPINION, THE LAST REALLY GOOD, ACCURATE PORTRAYAL OF NEW ORLEANS WAS (ELIA) KAZAN’S PANIC IN THE STREETS FROM 1950.”
Gambit > bestofneworleans.com > JUNE 15 > 2010
— DAVIS ROGAN
20
KERMIT RuffINS SAyS THE fictional Kermit doesn’t stray too far from the real one: “When I read the script, I looked over my shoulder,” Ruffins says. “See if somebody been followin’ me.” He met Simon about five years ago and Ruffins says they had been talking about doing the show for at least three or four years. “When he called me and said it was going to happen, it was so exciting. I never had so much fun in my life.” Ruffins loves Treme and believes it’s having an impact on the city, particularly the music community. “People were always asking me, when are you going to get this old jazz back in the mainstream?” he says. “I always answered with, ‘Put it on TV every day.’ Now it’s happening. It’s helping so many musicians in the city, and the city in general. People all over the world can see that we’re still swingin’ out here, that New Orleans is alive and kicking.” Spicer, the chef/owner of the restaurants Bayona and Mondo, reviewed Treme scripts with an eye for the restaurant and food business, but she says she also looked at “Janette’s scenes with other people, how she interacted with them. I was trying to remember how things were after the storm. Every single thing you did in your personal life was a hassle. Trying to find a grocery store, trying to find a laundromat — the challenges of things we took so much for granted. Every conversation you had involved your contractor or your insurance company, and they’ve reflected that, talking about her house.” (On the show, Janette responds to a query about her house with a weary smile and the statement “Don’t ask me about my f—ing house.”) Spicer thinks the show has been great so far, though Janette’s character and Spicer’s life part ways more often than they meet. “My personal life is extremely different and I’ve been a lot luckier in the restaurant business than poor chef Janette,” she says. “(Actor) Kim Dickens is doing a great job; she was a really good choice. She’s got the edginess of a young, hungry chef.” As far as her family and friends’ reaction to the show, Spicer says, “Most people say ‘I didn’t know you cursed that much. you really have a sailor mouth.’” page 22
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Looming Large over the cast of characters is John goodman’s portrayal of creighton Bernette, a professor of english at tulane University, whose first appearance was standing by the industrial canal, ranting at a British journalist who didn’t get that the flood was a man-made disaster. viewers in the know immediately recognized the influence of real-life blogger ashley morris. morris, who died suddenly in 2008, was the strongest voice among a chorus of new orleans activists who took to the internet following hurricane Katrina. a computer science professor and member of the satirical Krewe du vieux, morris loved new orleans so much he commuted to his job at depaul University in chicago while raising his family in Uptown new orleans. morris’ friend and fellow blogger mark folse says he likes how the writers used morris’ anger and developed a narrative around it. “someone had to say this was an engineering disaster,” folse says. “Using creighton’s anger to install that was brilliant.” “i’ve seen people say how [goodman’s portrayal] was all over the top, but it’s not,” says ray shea, another close friend and fellow blogger. “if he got spun up about something, he would almost be frothing-at-the-mouth mad, and then he’d stop and he’d stare at you with these wide eyes. if you didn’t know him, you’d think, ‘oh my god, he’s gonna cut me or something.’” the rant that made Bernette a local celebrity on the show was a profanity-laced, epic video blog post. for the most part, it was taken from a reallife blog post morris made on nov. 27, 2005, which became known as “fYYff” (google it) and even inspired a line of t-shirts. (morris’ blog is still available at ashleymorris.typepad.com.) morris’ wife, hana, still lives Uptown with their three children, rey d’orleans, annabel and Katerina. “david simon asked me in the spring of last year if he could use the blog,” she says. “i told him ‘of course. ashley would probably consider it the biggest achievement of his life.’” she called back simon close to the date of the show’s premiere, concerned at exactly how much this character was to be her late husband: “he told me it was based partially on ashley and partially on a film archivist who lost all of his footage in Katrina.”
street musicians for over 30 years now. i’ve spent more time in municipal court representing musicians and getting their instruments back and trying to make sure they can continue to play.” “this is not JUst teLLing our storY to us,” howeLL says. for non-natives, “i think it’s hard to convey the trauma of a whole community while attempting to show our resiliency. people may think, ‘they can’t really be all that traumatized if they’re still laughing and having fun and playing music.’ well, that’s the way we deal with trauma. it’s literally people laughing through their tears.” of the lessons to be learned through the show, howell says, “whatever your sorrows, your loss and your grief are, somebody’s got it worse than you do. and it’s not going to be this way forever.”
Gambit > bestofneworleans.com > JUNE 15 > 2010
“MOST PEOPLE SAY ‘I DIDN’T KNOW YOU CURSED THAT MUCH. YOU REALLY HAVE A SAILOR MOUTH.’” — SUSAN SPICER
22
it’s that reaLism in the characters that drives the story in a realistic way, piazza says. “as far as characters located in a recognizable social, economic, historical or geographical situation, part of the rules of the game is that you want all of the details to be true. otherwise, what’s the point?” he says. piazza also notes the importance of conveying a sense of place: “in new orleans, the way the city is put together is part of the culture,” he says. “You can’t have viable second lines in a city where people live in skyscrapers.” melissa Leo plays creighton Burnette’s wife toni, an attorney, who is based loosely on new orleans attorney mary howell — who happens to be piazza’s real-life wife. toni’s storylines parallel howell’s practice to a certain extent, but howell says the character’s quest to find an orleans parish prisoner lost in the system is a composite. “the criminal justice system had collapsed,” howell says of post-Katrina new orleans. “thousands of people, literally, were spread out over the state. no one could locate them; families couldn’t find their loved ones. there were some amazing lawyers post-Katrina, mainly criminal defense lawyers, from all around the state, who really stepped up.” on the show, jailed musicians depend on toni’s legal assistance. “there are parts that are very familiar, pre-and post-Katrina,” howell says. “i’ve represented
Treme’s season finale airs at 9 p.m. Jun. 20 on HBO.
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PR PS T P PS
A WELL-CHOSEN FATHER’S DAY GIFT LETS DAD KNOW YOU CARE (and that you turned out all right). BY MARY CROSS AND MISSY WILKINSON
Raise a glass of California claret to Dad. Its muscular palate is an appropriate tribute to the original macho man, $34.99 at MARTIN WINE CELLAR (714 Elmeer Ave., Metairie, 896-7300; 2895 Hwy. 190, Mandeville, 985-951-8081; 3500 Magazine St., 899-7411; www.martinwine.com).
Gambit > bestofneworleans.com > JUNE 15 > 2010
Look out, Dad’s got a hot new grillfriend: The PC-15 grill’s stainless steel construction and side burner mean you can cook entire meals outdoors for generations to come. Available starting at $1,200 from ADGAS OUTDOOR COOKING PRODUCTS (2626 Music St., 9430853; www.adgasneworleans.com).
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father’s day gift guide 2010 Known as the premier place to grab an old-school shave, AIDAN GILL provides a shaving kit that treats Dad to the same luxurious experience at home. Complete with a tortoise shell razor, matching badger bristle shaving brush and metal stand, this set will have Dad looking and feeling sharp, $185 at Aidan Gill (550 Fulton St., 566-4903; 2026 Magazine St., 587-9090; www.aidangillformen.com).
Whether serving up something mild, spicy or hot, Dad can now avoid mix-ups on the grill with this handy set of six stainless steel grill charms. Serrated to stay in place on meat, these charms guarantee the grill master will never sweat it out again, $25 at GENTRY (6047 Magazine St., 899-4223).
Gambit > bestofneworleans.com > JUNE 15 > 2010
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Gambit > bestofneworleans.com > JUNE 15 > 2010
Redfish or Speckled Trout Pin Sterling Silver $85 each On black ribbon, in the tradition of mourning jewelry
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father’s day gift guide 2010 Fit for a king, Royall Vetiver cologne combines a rich blend of fresh citrus, warm Indian spices and notes of vetiver, $40.95 at EARTHSAVERS (Lakeside Shopping Center, 3301 Veterans Memorial Blvd., Suite 140, 835-0225; 3414 Hwy. 190, Mandeville, 985-674-1133; 5501 Magazine St., 899-8555).
The gray lenses and striated brown acetate frames on these SALT sunglasses give Dad GQ-worthy style, even when he’s only cruising the carpool lane, $375 at ST. CHARLES VISION (citywide; www.stcharlesvision.com).
Durable and lightweight, these rubber shrimp boots make a timely gift that helps Dad tackle even the dirtiest of jobs with style, $30 at PORTER STEVENS (3301 Veterans Memorial Blvd., Lakeside Shopping Center, Metairie, 834-3771; www.porterstevens.com).
New
BEST
Gambit > bestofneworleans.com > JUNE 15 > 2010
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Bitchin' Kitchens ordic Kitchens & Baths’ (4437 Veterans Memorial Blvd., Metairie, 888-2300; www.nordickitchens.com) showroom depicts the stuff of dreams, and owner Randall Shaw says anything can become reality. “We like to stay current and on top of the cutting-edge market, and if somebody has seen it, we can do it,” Shaw says. Shaw credits his team of designers with bringing customers’ visions to life. Designers see projects through from conception to birth, making sure every detail meets their customers’ specific needs. One such unique creation is an outdoor kitchen complete with a grill and matching outdoor decor. These factors put Nordic Kitchens & Baths outside the realms of “cookie cutter” designs. “We’re not afraid to go to the extreme when it comes to engineering. We … have been known to work with metal fabrication shops in order to construct things you wouldn’t find (at) other places. We can create anything that anyone can imagine,” Shaw says. At Nordic Kitchens & Baths, dream Nordic Kitchens & Baths has long outgrown its original kitchens and posh bathrooms name and vision. The 15-year-old company was first located become reality. on Metairie Road and known as Nordic Cabinets. It embarked upon a new journey when it moved to Veterans Memorial Boulevard and became Nordic Kitchens & Baths. Along with these innovations, a defined profile of both the client and the product was beginning to form. “We realized we needed to focus more on who our client was and cater more toward them. This led us into the area of mid- to upper-end products. We decided to … become a little more unique in the type of merchandise we offered,” says Shaw as he stands in a showroom full of cutting-edge, contemporary designs that also feature unique and detailed craftsmanship. Nordic Kitchens & Baths offers open houses for architects, designers and builders to test the capabilities of its appliances. The company guarantees a state-of-the art product and an experience to match. “When we’re done, we want [customers] to enjoy what we’ve helped them create and be just as excited as we are. We want them to say ‘I love my Nordic Kitchen,’” Shaw says.
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shoppiNg News by missY WiLkiNsoN Selected home furnishings, accessories and art at Cameron Jones For Your Home (2127 Magazine St., 524-3119) are reduced in price to make room for new summer merchandise. From Thursday, June 17, to Saturday, June 20, books, postcards, posters and T-shirts at the ogden museum oF soutHern art’s (925 Camp St., 5399600; www.ogdenmuseum.org) store will be on sale. Posters depict work by Frederick Brown, Will Henry Stevens, Vincencia Blount and others. BaBa Blankets & Crafts (1330 Prytania St., 599-4520; www.babablanket.com) celebrates its one-year anniversary on Saturday, June 19, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. with the Sista Summer Jam, a free event featuring musical acts Tanya & Dorise, Michaela Harrison and Zion Trinity. All proceeds benefit the Stay In School Tuition Assistance Program, and all store items will be 15 percent off during the event. the OCCasiOnal Wife (4306 Magazine St., 302-9893; www.theoccasionalwife.com) hosts a “Cocktails and Closet Therapy” bash on Tuesday, June 15, from 5:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. to benefit Dress fOr suCCess neW Orleans. Guests can enjoy cocktails and closet consultations, and 10 percent from all sales will benefit Dress for Success. The Occasional Wife is now a permanent drop-off spot for the organization.
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Gambit > bestofneworleans.com > JUNE 15 > 2010
1934 – 2010
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NEW ORLEANS
PREMIER JAZZ VENUE
No Cover • 7 nights a week Showtime:
JUNE 2010 Mon. 14, 21, 28
BOB FRENCH AND THE ORIGINAL TUXEDO JAZZ BAND
8PM MON. - SAT. | 7PM SUN. Tues. 15, 22, 29
SATURDAY, JUNE 19
JASON MARSALIS Wed. 16, 23, 30
IRVIN MAYFIELD AND THE NOJO JAM Thurs. 17, 24
BRASS BAND JAM
JOHNAYE KENDRICK featuring
KINFOLK BRASS BAND EVERY FRIDAY AT MIDNIGHT
Fri. 18, 25
LEON “KID CHOCOLATE” BROWN Sat. 19, 26
SHANNON POWELL *Sun. 13, 20, 27 (7PM)
GERMAINE BAZZLE, DAVID TORKANOWSKY & JUNE GARDNER
featuring
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BRASS BAND JAM EVERY SATURDAY AT MIDNIGHT
5PM - 8PM DRINK SPECIALS WEDS., THURS. & FRIDAYS
Gambit > bestofneworleans.com > JUNE 15 > 2010
IMJazzPlayhouse irvinmayfield.com 300 BOURBON STREET • NEW ORLEANS • 504.553.2299 • WWW.SONESTA.COM
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we li z e c e sP ia uP o r in g eVents
regular classes:
Thursday, June 17th & 24th, 7 p.m. Saturday, June 19th, 2 p.m. & 7 p.m.
Pop art saturday:
Saturday, June 26th, 2 p.m.-5 p.m.
Mom's day out, kids Paint Free: Saturday, June 26th, 2 p.m.
Pre-sketched canVases no drawing required!
5200 Veterans BlVd Metairie, La • 70006 (near transcontinental)
CaLL Now for reservatioNs: (504) 455-4413 or (504) 274-0811
www.PaintitParty.com
>> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> >> << <<<<<<<<<<<<<<< <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<< << Music filM art stage >> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> >> what to know before you go << <<<<<<<<<< << 33 37 39 42 >> >>>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> >> << <<<<<<< <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<< << THE >> >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>> >> << <<<< <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<< >> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>> << <<<<<<<<<<<<< <<<<<<<<<<<< >> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>>> > << <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<< <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<< < J U N Passion Pit 8 p.m. Wednesday >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
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cuisine
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16 House of Blues, 225 Decatur St., 310-4999; www.hob.com
Throughout Passion Pit’s first LP Manners (Frenchkiss), an itchy pastiche of intimate devotionals and sonic-assault dance pop, you can all but hear the Boston band’s growth lines etched on the wall: Emerson College dorm-room valentine (2008); toast of music tastemakers, ad reps and John Mayer (2009); fall arena tourmate with U.K. stroke-inducer Muse (2010). Tokyo Police Club and Brahms open. Tickets $18.50 advance purchase, $21.50 day of show.
RebiRth bRass band CheekY blakk 17 with 6 p.m.-8 p.m. Thursday Ogden Museum, 925 Camp St., 5399600; www.ogdenmuseum.org JUN
Cheeky Blakk made quite a splash at her last Ogden performance, crashing DJ Jubilee’s set at the opening of Where They At: New Orleans Bounce and Hip-Hop in Words and Pictures. She handed off an oversized purse, grabbed the mic, and over an aggressive beat let the “F” and “N” words ring out through the Ogden’s atrium. Here she teams up with the Rebirth Brass Band (pictured) in the Taylor Library. Admission $10, free for Ogden Members.
Grande Dame Summer Lyric TheaTre aT TuLane OpenS iTS SeaSOn wiTh mame. by Jennifer J. Kilbourne
A
summer’s audience. “It’s pretty relevant today. I could have set it in New Orleans,” where, he says, “everybody allows everybody to be themselves, and that’s what Mame does. The only thing she won’t put up with is hypocrisy.” Argus agrees that Mame and her joie de vivre would fit right in with many New Orleans families. “We’re all open to different people and different points of view and different ways of life,” Argus says, adding that Mame also knows how to throw a great party. But Mame’s contagious enthusiasm is not just about good times. “She changes people’s lives,” Howard says. Argus, who is a music educator at Cabrini High School, says, “I use the same analogy from the show with my students.” In the opening, Mame tells the wide-eyed Patrick, “Life is a banquet, and most poor suckers are starving to death!” Argus also tries to open her students’ eyes. “We just said all these great things about New Orleans, but it can also be very insular,” she says. “There’s so much out there, and these kids have been living off of oatmeal! There’s so much more to life, and I’m going to help you discover what you don’t know.” Tulane Summer Lyric’s season also features A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum (July 8-11) and The Music Man (July 29 – Aug. 1).
JUN
Young MaMMals 10 p.m. Thursday Saturn Bar, 3067 St. Claude Ave., 949-7532
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“Confetti,” the opening track on Young Mammals’ June debut Carrots, shows up on the doorstep crashing rattles like Caddywhompus’ long-lost twin. This Houston group proves an equally unpredictable relative, building relentless momentum out of bell-ringing guitars, hill-climbing bass lines, sawed-off hooks and swerving left turns. Useless Eaters and Superdestroyers share the bill. Call for ticket information.
FatteR than albeRt 6:30 p.m. Sunday 3 Ring Circus’ The Big Top Gallery, 1638 Clio St., 569-2700; www.3rcp.com JUN
SUMMER LYRIC THEATRE AT TULANE UNIVERSITY 865-5269; summerlyric.tulane.edu individual ticKets $26-$35, season ticKets $68-$95
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With light-speed lyrics and signature screams, Michael Volpi has performed vocal aerobics on the microphone for the long-standing ska and punk rock powerhouse Fatter Than Albert. Volpi performs for the last time with the band at this farewell show. Caddywhompus and Houston’s BLACKIE and Limb also perform. Admission $6.
MAME 8 p.m. thu.-sat.; 2 p.m. sun. tulane university, dixon hall
A FUNNY THING HAPPENED ON THE WAY TO THE FORUM July 8-11 THE MUSIC MAN July 29 - aug. 1
Take the booze and the stripping off Bourbon Street and it becomes classy, even artsy. The annual Bourbon & Burlesque By wiLL cOvieLLO fundraiser (8 p.m.-11 p.m. Saturday) for the Contemporary Arts Center (900 Camp St.; www.cacno.org) features performances by local burlesque troupes (Bustout Burlesque, Fleur de Tease and others) plus Buffalo Trace, Wild Turkey and Jack Daniels cocktails and refined cuisine from Dickie Brennan’s Bourbon House. Advance tickets $50 general admission, $25 CAC members; at the door, $70 general admission, $45 CAC members.
Bourbon Treat
Gambit > bestofneworleans.com > JUNE 15 > 2010
t a rehearsal for Summer Lyric Theatre at Tulane University’s season opener Mame, leading actress Elizabeth Argus entertained the cast with stories about her grandmother, who threw raucous parties and even blew a bugle to wake up revelers the next morning. “There is a lot in Mame that resonates with me,” says Argus about the free-spirited socialite at the center of the musical. Based on Patrick Dennis’ 1955 novel Auntie Mame, the musical, featuring songs by Jerry Herman, originally opened on Broadway in 1966 with stars Angela Lansbury and Beatrice Arthur. Mame is a wealthy and eccentric woman who’s ahead of her times and enjoying the roaring 1920s. When she is entrusted with the care of her young nephew Patrick, she introduces him to her world of flappers, nudists and bohemians. As Patrick grows up, the pair rides out one calamity after another from the Depression to his disastrous engagement. They receive much help along the way from Mame’s eclectic and ever-expanding group of friends. In the face of each catastrophe, the cast belts out numbers such as “We Need a Little Christmas,” “Bosom Buddies” and the title song. “She’s just the type of person who, no matter what happens, is able to pick herself back up,” says director Michael Howard. He expects Mame to resonate well with this
Beverly Trask (Vera) and Elizabeth Argus (Mame) star in Mame.
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anniversarY ParTY SATURDAY JUNE 19TH
coMe celeBraTe THe liFe oF
coacH nicK revon
PARTY STARTS @9PM drink specials free food w/drink purchase
LIVE MUSIC BY
BLACK MAGNOLIA
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TransconTinenTal drive
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check out www.myspace.com/coachscornermetairie for future events and band info
INVITE YOU AND A GUEST TO AN ADVANCE SCREENING OF
Gambit > bestofneworleans.com > JUNE 15 > 2010
JONAH HEX
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THURSDAY JUNE 17TH AMC Palace 20 Elmwood 7:30 pm
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Great Lake MESCHIYA LAKE AND THE LITTLE BIG HORNS’ LUCKY DEVIL.
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and two originals, the swinging “Do For Myself” and Spanish-tinged “Slowburn,” that hardly feel out of place. “Singing those songs for a living the last few years, you get to know the form of it,” she says.
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what lies behind you and what lies in front of you, pales in comparison to what lies inside of you. “Once you know the form, you can Meschiya Lake apply it.” has reanimated Lake, whose classics from Jelly first weekly gig Roll Morton to came at age 9, Patsy Cline. covering Patsy Cline and Tanya Tucker for country fans at the Elk Creek Steakhouse & Lounge in Piedmont, S.D., says it wasn’t luck that led her to Jelly Roll Morton’s childhood home at the corner of Frenchmen and North Robertson streets, where she’s lived since February. Morton’s “Sweet Substitute” is a Little Big Horns live staple and the ninth track on the LP. “I would call it fate,” she says. “My landlord is a man named Jack Stewart, who also plays in the New Leviathan Oriental Foxtrot Orchestra. “He’s excited that jazz musicians and dancers are in there,” Lake adds. “He was super stoked that we even knew who Jelly Roll Morton was.”
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MIMI’S IN THE MARIGNY, 2601 ROYAL ST., 872-9868; WWW.MIMISINTHEMARIGNY.COM FREE ADMISSION
JUNE
16
Lucky Devil CD release 10 P.M. WEDNESDAY ONE EYED JACKS, 615 TOULOUSE ST., 569-8361; WWW.ONEEYEDJACKS.NET TICKETS $10
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Gambit > bestofneworleans.com > JUNE 15 > 2010
DESIGN • BUILD • NEW ORLEANS COURTYARDS • POOLS • LANDSCAPES & MORE Meschiya Lake and the Little Big Horns 10 P.M. TUESDAY, JUNE 15
www . M IKIMOTOS U S
or the past few years, on any given day, tourists and residents walking on Frenchmen or Royal streets would have been treated to the throaty warble of Meschiya Lake floating atop a cornet, trombone or sousaphone. This year? “I can’t even get a spot on the street anymore,” Lake says, laughing. Not that she’s complaining. “I don’t want to wake up at three in the morning to get a spot. I have.” As the gigantic voice of the ubiquitous New York City/ New Orleans jazz collective Loose Marbles, Lake, 30, was as much a downtown fixture as Grandpa Elliott or Mr. Okra — a distinctive star belting out Depression-era standards, surrounded by a crescent of ratchet-tight string, brass and rhythm players. Writer Dan Baum profiled the group in a glowing New Yorker piece in May 2007, but a potentially greater honor came that summer, on its annual pilgrimage to Manhattan’s Washington Square Park. “That was our office,” Lake says. “We got voted by the drug dealers as the best band in the park. That was a very momentous occasion for us. They’re listening to it all the time.” Now, with her spin-off band the Little Big Horns, Lake is stoking the embers of another extinguished tradition: the social dance and floor show. Every Monday at Mimi’s in the Marigny, the Little Big Horns turn back the clock, reanimating Jelly Roll Morton, Bessie Smith and Duke Ellington as some of the city’s best swing dancers instruct left-footed locals on the twists and twirls of the Charleston and Lindy Hop. “We’re all friends,” Lake says. “They come to the Spotted Cat (on Tuesdays), too — pretty much every gig we have. Which makes the energy of it incredible. When they’re not there, I miss them.” For the release of the Little Big Horns’ self-issued debut, Lucky Devil, Lake and a clutch of dancers (including NOLA Jitterbugs’ Chance Bushman and Amy Johnson and Fleur de Tease’s Trixie Minx and Alley Oops) are transforming the pit at One Eyed Jacks into their own personal ballroom. “Old-timey entertainment,” Lake says. “Three sets, four performers. The last one’s going to have two, for the grand finale. Between the performances people are going to strut their stuff on the dance floor. One Eyed Jacks is the perfect place for it.” Captured during two sessions in December and January at Tatiana Clay’s historic 511 Royal St. residence, Lucky Devil contains a mix of Lake’s treasured classics
SUSHI BAR
noah
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MuSic
LiSTingS
Listings editor: Lauren LaBorde listingsedit@gambitweekly. com; FAX:483-3116 Deadline: noon Monday Submissions edited for space
All show times p.m. unless otherwise noted. All show times p.m. unless otherwise noted.
tuesday 15 BAcchAnAl — Mark Weliky, 7:30 BAnks street BAr — Andrew Duhon, 9 the BAr — Media Blitz, 9
BeAch house — Candy Riedl-Lowe, 7
Bmc — Fun in the Pocket feat. Mayumi Shara & Reinaldo, 6:30; Bo Dollis Jr. & the Wild Magnolias, 10
cAfe negril — Glen David Andrews, 9:30 chickie wAh wAh — Anders Osborne, John Fohl & Johnny Sansone, 8
circle BAr — The Tom Paines, 6; Todd Voltz, Joe Adragna, 10
columns hotel — John Rankin & Friends, 8
d.B.A. — New Orleans Cottonmouth Kings, 9
preview Spring Fling
It was the one-off that wasn’t. Thao Nguyen (pictured) and Mirah Yom Tov Zeitlyn’s blind date at San Francisco’s Noise Pop music festival in February began as a gift addressed only to the sold-out crowd that night at Swedish American Hall. Chemistry intervened, and by summertime the Bay Area singer/songwriters had assembled a backing band (the Most of All) and booked a monthlong national tour. There’s more than a passing resemblance between the pair: both gifted string-pickers and girlish singers, as crushable as they are crushing, whose seemingly innocuous folk/pop incantations come rigged with emotional explosives. The hybridized set consists of select duets and swapped covers culled from each other’s catalogs, as well as the debut of unreleased tracks like Nguyen’s “How Dare You,” on which dovetailing guitar arpeggios and heartrending, harmonized calls and responses give off all the flickering familial warmth of a sisterly campfire sing-along. Lexington, Ky./ Washington, D.C. country rockers These United States and Silent Cinema open. Tickets $10. — Noah Bonaparte Pais
JUNE
15
Thao and Mirah with the Most of All 10 p.m. Tuesday One Eyed Jacks, 615 Toulouse St., 569-8361; www.oneeyedjacks.net
hostel new orleAns — Soul School feat. Elliot Luv & the Abney Effect, 8
BAnks street BAr — Bionica, 10
house of Blues (pArish) — Carolina Chocolate Drops, 8 howlin’ wolf (the den) — American Aquarium, 9
irvin mAyfield’s JAzz plAyhouse — Jason Marsalis, 8 mAple leAf BAr — 3 Piece Spicy; Rebirth Brass Band, 10 my BAr — Danny T, 8
old point BAr — West Bank Mike, 6:30 one eyed JAcks — Thao & Mirah, Most of All, These United States, Silent Cinema, 10
preservAtion hAll — Preservation Hall-Stars feat. Shannon Powell, 8 rock ’n’ Bowl — John Lisi & the Delta Funk, 8:30
snug hArBor JAzz Bistro — Jonathan Freilich and the Naked Orchestra, 8 & 10
spotted cAt — Brett Richardson, 4; Jerry Jumonville, 6; Meschiya Lake & the Little Big Horns
windsor court hotel (polo cluB lounge) — Zaza, 7 yuki izAkAyA — Norbert Slama Trio, 80
wednesday 16
cAfe prytAniA — New Orleans Hip Hop Showcase feat. TNC Boys, Lost Souls, Symmatree and others, 10 circle BAr — Sam and Boone, 6; Dertybird, 10 clever wine BAr — Johnny Sansone’s Mid-City Fill-In & Harmonica Orchestra, 6
columns hotel — Dr. Guitar, 8 dAvenport lounge — Jeremy Davenport, 5:30
d.B.A. — Paul Sanchez, 7; Happy Talk Band, 10 dos Jefes uptown cigAr BAr — Todd Duke Trio, 9:30 french QuArter pizzeriA — Big Joe Kennedy, 9 hi-ho lounge — Stooges Brass Band, 9:30
hostel new orleAns — Uniquity feat. Slangston Hughes and Elliot Luv, 11 howlin’ wolf northshore — Black Magnolia, 10
irvin mAyfield’s JAzz plAyhouse — Roman Skakun, 5; Johnaye Kendrick, 8 Jimmy Buffett’s mArgAritAville cAfe — Eddie Parrino, 7 kerry irish puB — Dave James & Tim Robertson, 9
le Bon temps roule — Soul Rebels Brass Band, 10 mAple leAf BAr — The Trio, 10
61 Blues highwAy — Chris Polacek & the Blues Highway Band, 8
house of Blues — Talib Kweli, Hi-Tek, 9
Gambit > bestofneworleans.com > JUNE 15 > 2010
Bmc — Low-Stress Quintet, 7; Marlon Jordan, 10
dos Jefes uptown cigAr BAr — Tom Hook, 9:30
gennAro’s — Harvey Jesus & Fire, 8
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stick this iN yoUr Ear
BAcchAnAl — Jazz Lab feat. Jesse Morrow, 7:30 the BAr — Reciprocal, Suspended Obscurity, Dazein, 9 BAyou pArk BAr — Lynn Drury & Friends, 10 BeAch house — Poppa Stoppa Oldies Band, 8
Big Al’s sAloon — Jumpin’ Johnny Sansone Blues Party, 7 Blue nile — Khris Royal & Dark Matter, 10
Bmc — Domenic, 7; Benny Turner & Real Blues, 9:30 cAfe negril — World Jazz Project, 9:30 cAndlelight lounge — Treme Brass Band, 9 chickie wAh wAh — Iguanas
circle BAr — Jim O. & the No Shows feat. Mama Go-Go, 6; Big Tree, Wild Complete, Jessie Torrisi, 10
columns hotel — Ricardo Crespo, 8
d.B.A. — Washboard Chaz Blues Trio, 7; Walter “Wolfman” Washington & the Roadmasters, 10 deckBAr & grille — Gypsy Elise & the Royal Blues, 7:30; John Lisi & Delta Funk, 8; Dr. Porkchop Blues Band, 10 dos Jefes uptown cigAr BAr — Bob Andrews, 9:30 gennAro’s — Funagles, 8
house of Blues — Passion Pit feat. Tokyo Police Club, Brahms, 8 huddle sports BAr — Band of Brothers, 9
irvin mAyfield’s JAzz plAyhouse — Sasha Masakowski, 5; Irvin Mayfield’s NOJO Jam, 8 kerry irish puB — Chip Wilson, 9 mAple leAf BAr — Luther Dickinson, 10
moJo stAtion — Ed Wills, Blues for Sale, 8
old firemen’s hAll — Two Piece & a Biscuit feat. Brandon Foret, Allan Maxwell & Brian Melancon, 7:30 one eyed JAcks — Meschiya Lake CD release, 9 pAlm court JAzz cAfe — Lars Edegran, Topsy Chapman, Palm Court Jazz Band, 8 rock ’n’ Bowl — Johnny Angel, 8:30 rusty nAil — Jenn Howard, 8
snug hArBor JAzz Bistro — Delfeayo Marsalis & Uptown Jazz Orchestra, 8 & 10
neutrAl ground coffeehouse — Frans Schuman, 9 old point BAr — Kim Carson, 9
pAlm court JAzz cAfe — Tim Laughlin, Crescent City Joymakers, 8 preservAtion hAll — Tornado Brass Band, 8
repuBlic new orleAns — Concrete Blonde feat. Ven Pa Ca, 7:30 rock ’n’ Bowl — Brian Jack, 8:30
sAturn BAr — Useless Eaters, Young Mammals, Superdestroyers, 10 snug hArBor JAzz Bistro — Rex Gregory, 8 & 10
spotted cAt — Brett Richardson, 4; Miss Sophie Lee, 6; New Orleans Moonshiners tello’s Bistro — Jerry Nuccio, 5 vAughAn’s — Kermit Ruffins & Barbecue Swingers, 8:30
windsor court hotel (polo cluB lounge) — Michael Pellera, 7 yuki izAkAyA — Wazozo, 8
spotted cAt — Brett Richardson, 4; Loose Marbles, 6; St. Louis Slim & the Frenchmen St. Jug Band, 10
friday 18
thursday 17
Austin’s restAurAnt — Scott Kyser, 6:30
yuki izAkAyA — By and By, 8
BAcchAnAl — Courtyard Kings, 7; Vincent Marini, 9:30
BAyou pArk BAr — Ron Hotstream, 9 Big Al’s sAloon — Danny Alexander’s Blues Jam, 8
61 Blues highwAy — Jack Yoder & Li’l’ “G”, 8
BAnks street BAr — Big Fat & Delicious, Local Skank, 10
BAyou pArk BAr — Crystal Rivers, 10
BeAch house — Bobby Cure & the Summertime Blues, 9
bestofneworleans.com
music
Big Al’s sAloon — Austin Sicard & the Medics, 8
BMC — Sasha Masakowski, 7; Fredy Omar Con Su Banda, 10:30; We Are 1 Brass Band, 1 a.m.
$
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Music Movies Tv shows
BoMBAy CluB — Alex Peters, 9:30
CAfe negril — John Lisi & the Delta Funk, 9:30 CArousel PiAno BAr & lounge — John Autin, 9
eXpecT MoRe
CArrollton stAtion — Alexandra Scott, Caleb Guillote & Sam Craft, 9; A Fragile Tomorrow, 10:30
becAuse we give You MoRe.
Tunes videos
ChiCkie WAh WAh — Paul Sanchez & Friends, 8; Stephanie Nilles & Louis Ledford, 10:30
Audiobooks
CirCle BAr — Jim O. & Sporadic Fanatics, 6; Unnaturals, 10
podcAsTs
Clever Wine BAr — Courtyard Kings, 8 ColuMns hotel — Alex Bachari, 5
gAMes
DAvenPort lounge — Jeremy Davenport, 9
D.B.A. — Hot Club of New Orleans, 6; Dead Kenny G’s, 10
Apps
Dos Jefes uPtoWn CigAr BAr — Blutos feat. Bob Andrews, 10 eMeril’s DelMoniCo — Bob Andrews, 7 frenCh QuArter PizzeriA — Big Joe Kennedy, 9
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green rooM — Sick Like Sinatra, 10
herMes BAr — Shannon Powell Trio, 11
hi-ho lounge — Poots, A Hanging, Blood of the Sun, Charlie Hurtin’ & the Heckles, 10 house of Blues — J Cole, Juvenile, California Swag District, Kourtney Heart, DJ Bomshell Boogie, DJ Chicken, 9 hoWlin’ Wolf — Charlie Mars, Matt Lionett, 10
irvin MAyfielD’s JAzz PlAyhouse — Tom Worrell, 5; Leon “Kid Chocolate” Brown, 8 JiMMy Buffett’s MArgAritAville CAfe — Eddie Parrino, 7 kerry irish PuB — Buddy Francioni & Home Grown, 5; Hurricane Refugees, 9 le Bon teMPs roule — C.R. Gruver, 7; Dertybird, 10
MAison 508 — Some Like it Hot!, 7:30
MAPle leAf BAr — George Porter Jr. & the Runnin’ Pardners, 10 olD Point BAr — J the Savage Band, 9:30 PAlM Court JAzz CAfe — Clive Wilson, Palm Court Jazz Band, Gerald Adams, 8 PreservAtion hAll — Preservation Hall Jazz Masters feat. Leroy Jones, 8
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rePuBliC neW orleAns — Jean-Eric, 10 roCk ’n’ BoWl — Mixed Nuts, 9:30
sAturn BAr — This Will Destroy You, Chiaroscuro, Hat Talk, Au Ras Au Ras, 10
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snug hArBor JAzz Bistro — Germaine Bazzle feat. Larry Sieberth Ensemble, 8 & 10
sPotteD CAt — Brett Richardson, 4; Washboard Chaz Blues Trio, 6:30; New Orleans Cottonmouth Kings, 10 st. roCh tAvern — The Way, 9
the steAk knife restAurAnt & BAr — Luther Kent & the Trick Bag Trio, 9
tiPitinA’s — Gypsyphonic, Good Enough for Good Times feat. Robert Mercurio & Jeff Raines, Joe Ashlar & Simon Lott, 10 toMMy’s Wine BAr — Tommy’s Latin Jazz Quartet feat. Matthew Shilling, 10 page 36
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music
Listings hi-ho lounge â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Bastard Noise, World Burns to Death, Slang, 10
page 35
Saturday 19
houSe of BlueS â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Zoso, 9
Apple BArrel â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Peter Orr, 7
BAcchAnAl â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Gypsy Swing Club, 8
BAnkS Street BAr â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Deleved, 7; Gypsie Elise, John Lisi, 10 BAyou pArk BAr â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Parishioners, 7
Big Alâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S SAloon â&#x20AC;&#x201D; J.J. Muggler Band, 8
BMc â&#x20AC;&#x201D; New Orleans Jazz Series, 3; Jayna Morgan & the Sazerac Sunrise Jazz Band, 6:30; Mia Borders, 9:30; One Mind Brass Band, 12:30 a.m. BoMBAy cluB â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Legendary Luther Kent, 9:30
cAfe AtchAfAlAyA â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Atchafalaya All Stars, 11 a.m. cAfe roSe nicAud â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Troy Sawyer, 8
cArrollton StAtion â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Mary Lasseigne CD listening party, 8; Susan Cowsill & Spencer Bohren, 9:30
circle BAr â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Jazzholes, 6; Debauche, G-String Orchestra, 10 clever Wine BAr â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Scott Sanders Quartet feat. Olivier Bou, 8 coAchâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S corner â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Black Magnolia, 10
coluMnS hotel â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Andy Rogers & guest, 8 dAvenport lounge â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Jeremy Davenport, 9 d.B.A. â&#x20AC;&#x201D; John Boutte, 8; Good Enough for Good Times, 11 deckBAr & grille â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Miche & MixMavens, 8
36
doS JefeS uptoWn cigAr BAr â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Sunpie & the Louisiana Sunspots, 10 french QuArter pizzeriA â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Big Joe Kennedy, 9
green rooM â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Silent Cinema, Glasgow, 10 herMeS BAr â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Glen David Andrews, 9:30 & 11
irvin MAyfieldâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S JAzz plAyhouSe â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Shannon Powell, 8; Kinfolk Brass Band, midnight
JASMineâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S french reStAurAnt â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Darren and Diana, 9 JiMMy Buffettâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S MArgAritAville cAfe â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Irving Bannisterâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s All-Stars, 4
Sunday 20 3 ring circuSâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; the Big top gAllery â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Fatter Than Albert, Caddywhompus, BLACKIE, Limb, 6:30
BAyou pArk BAr â&#x20AC;&#x201D; SoulSect, 7 Big Alâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S SAloon â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Rocky Denney Band, 3
BMc â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Ras Chemash Lamed, 6; Gal Holiday, 9
BuffAâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S lounge â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Some Like it Hot, 11 a.m. cAfe AtchAfAlAyA â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Sam and Boone, 11 a.m.
MON
WED
THU
JUN
MArket cAfe â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Andy K. and Bobby Love, 4:30
MArleneâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S plAce â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Summer Slam feat. Mug, Infamous Los, All Black Goons and others, 10 old point BAr â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Gal Holiday & the Honky Tonk Revue, 9:30
FRI
JUN
the SAint â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Bastardwolf, Sloâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Poke, Toxic Rott, 10
court of tWo SiSterS â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Mary Flynn, 9:30 a.m.
Spotted cAt â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Rights of Swing, 3; Loose Marbles, 6; Pat Casey, 10
donnAâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S BAr & grill â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Jesse McBride & the Next Generation Jazz Band
finnegAnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S eASy â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Laissez Faire, 2
JUN
W/
19
DRAG â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;N DANCE THE PARISHIONERS EARLY SATURDAYS
542 S. JEFF DAVIS PKWY
St. chArleS tAvern â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Maryflynn Thomas, 10 a.m.
tipitinAâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Bruce Daigrepont, 5:30 voilĂ â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Mario Abney Quartet, 9 a.m.
preServAtion hAll â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Preservation Hall Jazz Band feat. William Smith, 8
irvin MAyfieldâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S JAzz plAyhouSe â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Masonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s VIP Revisited feat. Germaine Bazzle & guests, 7
Monday 21
pAlM court JAzz cAfe â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Lionel Ferbos, Palm Court Jazz Band, 8
rock â&#x20AC;&#x2122;nâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; BoWl â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Kermit Ruffins, 9:30
Snug hArBor JAzz BiStro â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Astral Project, 8 & 10
Spotted cAt â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Luke WinslowKing, 3; Panorama Jazz Band, 6; Meschiya Lake & the Little Big Horns, 10 tipitinAâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Five Star Fiasco, Gethsemani, 10
WindSor court hotel (polo cluB lounge) â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Michael Pellera, 7; Anais St. John & the
CLASSIC COUNTRY THURSDAYS
18
neW orleAnS JAzz nAtionAl hiStoricAl pArk â&#x20AC;&#x201D; 916 N.
WhiSkey dix â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Gypsy Elise & the Royal Blues, 7
LYNN DRURY
W/ CRYSTAL RIVERS FRIDAY NIGHTS
irvin MAyfieldâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S JAzz plAyhouSe â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Bob French & the Original Tuxedo Jazz Band, 8
ritz-cArlton â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Armand St. Martin, 10:30 a.m; Catherine Anderson, 2
houSe of BlueS â&#x20AC;&#x201D; The Unstoppable Gospel Creators, 10 a.m.
16
RON HOTSTREAM
iSidore neWMAn School â&#x20AC;&#x201D;
one eyed JAckS â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Dax Riggs, Bellys, 9
9PM
WITH
hi-ho lounge â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Blue Grass Pickinâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Party, 8
circle BAr â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Micah McKee & friends, 6; Dirty Lungs, Bones, Dummy Dumpster, 10
d.B.A. â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Palmetto Bug Stompers, 6; Ingrid Lucia, 10
hoWlinâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Wolf (the den) â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Hot 8 Brass Band, 9
JiMMy Buffettâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S MArgAritAville cAfe â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Irving Bannisterâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s All-Stars, 4
kerry iriSh puB â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Lynn Drury & Pete Bradish, 8:30 le pAvillon hotel â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Philip Melancon, 8:30 a.m.
MAdigAnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Anderson/Easley Project, 9 MAple leAf BAr â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Joe Krown Trio feat. Russell Batiste & Walter â&#x20AC;&#x153;Wolfmanâ&#x20AC;? Washington, Jake Eckert, 10
9PM 10PM 7PM
yuki izAkAyA â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Luke Winslow King, 7
Apple BArrel â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Sam Cammarata, 8
BAcchAnAl â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Jonathan Freilich, 7:30 BAnkS Street BAr â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Nâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;awlins Johnnys, 9 BMc â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Smoky Greenwellâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Mondays Blues Jam, 9:30
cAfe AtchAfAlAyA â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Burke Ingraffia, Dr. Danny Acosta, 7 chickie WAh WAh â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Spencer Bohren, 7
circle BAr â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Starring, Dongles, 10
hoWlinâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Wolf (the den) â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Micah McKeeâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Favorite Records, 9
kerry iriSh puB â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Mark Hessler, 9
MAple leAf BAr â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Papa Grows Funk, 10 MAt & nAddieâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S reStAurAnt â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Courtyard Kings, 7 My BAr â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Danny T, 8
old point BAr â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Brent Walsh Trio, 8 preServAtion hAll â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Preservation Hall Jazz Band feat. Rickie Monie, 8
rock â&#x20AC;&#x2122;nâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; BoWl â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Second Harvest Food Bank Strike Out Hunger feat. Chris August, 6 Snug hArBor JAzz BiStro â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Charmaine Neville Band, 8 & 10
Spotted cAt â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Brett Richardson, 4; Dominic Grillo & the Frenchmen St. Allstars, 6; Jazz Vipers, 10
zeitgeiSt Multi-diSciplinAry ArtS center â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Trio Tarana, 8
classical/ concerts AlgierS ferry terMinAl â&#x20AC;&#x201D;
Mississippi River Levee, Algiers Point â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Wed: Wednesdays at the Point presents Big Samâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Funky Nation, 6
doWntoWn covington â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Columbia Street, (985) 892-1873 â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Fri: Sunset at the
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5401 Claiborne Ave., (800) 6138713 â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Fri: Florida Boychoir, 7:30
preServAtion hAll â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Preservation Hall-Stars feat. Shannon Powell, 8
Snug hArBor JAzz BiStro â&#x20AC;&#x201D; James Singleton & Illuminasti Trio, 8 & 10
MAple leAf BAr â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Alvin Youngblood Hartâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Muscle Theory, 10
firSt preSByteriAn church â&#x20AC;&#x201D;
doS JefeS uptoWn cigAr BAr â&#x20AC;&#x201D; John Fohl, 9:30
coluMnS hotel â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Chip Wilson, 11 a.m.
9PM
17
the precinct â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Funk Express, 7:30
green rooM â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Alexis Marceaux, 10; Generation Way, 10
d.B.A. â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Glen David Andrews, 9
Landing Concerts presents Kevin Oâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Day Band, Ramblinâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Letters, 6
pAlM court JAzz cAfe â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Lucien Barbarin, Sunday Night Swingsters, 8
louiSiAnA MuSic fActory â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Mary Lasseigne, 2; Gal Holiday, 3; Coco Robicheaux, 4
le Bon teMpS roule â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Lynn Drury, 10
PERFORMERS INVITED OPEN MIC ALL & FRIENDS EVERY WED.
donnAâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S BAr & grill â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Les Getrex & the Blues All-Star Band, 9
kerry iriSh puB â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Paul Tobin & Kevin Specht, 5; Rites Of Passage, 9
MUSIC LINE-UP
JUN
old point BAr â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Wilson & Moore, 3:30; John Autin, 7
rooSevelt hotel (Blue rooM) â&#x20AC;&#x201D; James Rivers Movement, 11 a.m.
MusiC bAr
14
coluMnS hotel â&#x20AC;&#x201D; David Doucet, 8
cAfe negril â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Smoky Greenwell & the Blues Gnus, 10
Neighborhood
JUN
MArket cAfe â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Andy K. and Bobby Love, 4:30
MulAteâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S cAJun reStAurAnt â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Bayou DeVille, 7
A True Mid-City
SAT
Gambit > bestofneworleans.com > JUNE 15 > 2010
donnAâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S BAr & grill â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Leroy Jones Quintet, 9:30
hoWlinâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Wolf â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Gorilla Productions Showcase feat. Meta the Man, Liquid Peace Revolution, Strangers and others, 9
Harry Mayronne Trio, 9
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COCKTAIL PATIO 504.302.9357 326 N. JEFFERSON DAVIS PKWY
hiStoric neW orleAnS collection â&#x20AC;&#x201D; 533 Royal St.,
523-4662; www.hnoc.org â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Fri: Concerts in the Courtyard presents Wanda Rouzan, 6
1903 Jefferson Ave., 899-5641; www.newmanschool.org â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Fri: NewJazzSchool & Donald Harrison Concert, 7 Peters Street, 589-4841; www. nps.gov/jazz/index.htm â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Tue: Jazz a la Creole, 3; Wed: Lawrence Cotton, noon; Thu: Indigenous Music of Louisiana feat. Bruce Barnes and Matt Hampsey, 3; Sat: Larry Ankrum Quartet, 2
ogden MuSeuM of Southern Art â&#x20AC;&#x201D; 925 Camp St., 539-
9600; www.ogdenmuseum. org â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Thu: Ogden After Hours presents Rebirth Brass Band & Cheeky Blakk, 6
pAvilion of the tWo SiSterS â&#x20AC;&#x201D; City Park, 1 Palm Drive, 4824888 â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Thu: Twilight Garden Concert Series presents Lars Edegran & the New Orleans Ragtime Orchestra, 6 St. AnnAâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S epiScopAl church â&#x20AC;&#x201D; 1313 Esplanade Ave., 9472121 â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Wed: Mission to Musicians Concert Series feat. Louis Ledford & Gina Phillips, 7:30 trinity epiScopAl church â&#x20AC;&#x201D;
1329 Jackson Ave., 522-0276; www.trinitynola.com â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Thu: Trinity Artist Series presents Evensong Choir, 6:30; Sun: Robert Jonathan Seigel, 5; Mon: Taize, 6
WAShington SQuAre â&#x20AC;&#x201D;
between Elysian Fields Avenue and Frenchmen Street, (888) 312-0812; www.faubourgmarigny.org â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Sun: 106.7 Old School in the Park presents New Orleans String Project, Voices Of Thunder, Bamboula 2000 and others, 2
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CHARMAINE NEVILLE BAND
TUE
JONATHAN FREILICH & the Naked Orchestra DELFEAYO MARSALIS & Uptown Jazz Orchestra REX GREGORY CD Release Party GERMAINE BAZZLE w/ the Larry Sieberth Ensemble ASTRAL PROJECT JAMES SINGLETON & the Illuminasti Trio
- "7/ -\ nĂ&#x160;EĂ&#x160;£äĂ&#x160;*
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filM
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A Room wiTH A ViEw
Listings editor: Lauren LaBorde listingsedit@gambitweekly.com FAX:483-3116 Deadline: noon Monday Submissions edited for space
film about Louisiana’s eroding wetlands and the natural protection they provide against hurricanes. Includes performances by Tab Benoit, Amanda Shaw, Allen Toussaint, Chubby Carrier and Marva Wright. Narrated by Meryl Streep. Entergy IMAX IRON MAN 2 (PG-13) — Robert
Now ShowiNg THE A-TEAM (PG-13) — Liam
Neeson stars in the big-screen adaption of the 1980s action TV show. AMC Palace 10, AMC Palace 12, AMC Palace 16, AMC Palace 20, Grand, Hollywood 9, Hollywood 14
BEYOND ALL BOUNDARIES (NR) — The museum screens a 4-D
film, bringing audiences into battle using archival footage and special effects. National World War II Museum Solomon Victory Theater
CITY ISLAND (PG-13) — A prison guard takes his long-lost son home to his family, which is already filled with secrets. Canal Place DATE NIGHT (PG-13) — Tina
Fey and Steve Carell star as a couple whose rare night out turns into a case of mistaken identity. Hollywood 14
GET HIM TO THE GREEK (R) — An ambitious record company intern (Jonah Hill) is on a mission to get an oversexed British rock star (Russell Brand) to L.A.’s Greek Theatre. AMC Palace 10, AMC Palace 12, AMC Palace 16, AMC Palace 20, Grand, Hollywood 9, Hollywood 14 THE GIRL WITH THE DRAGON TATTOO (R) — The Swedish film
GRAND CANYON: RIVER AT RISK (NR) — Robert Redford narrates
a 15-day river-rafting trip that highlights the beauty of the Colorado River. Entergy IMAX
HURRICANE ON THE BAYOU (NR) — Greg MacGillivray directs a
JUST WRIGHT (PG) — A physi-
cal therapist (Queen Latifah) falls for her NBA client. AMC Palace 16
THE KARATE KID (PG) — A 12
year old who moves to China with his family seeks the mentorship of a kung fu master after becoming the target of bullying. AMC Palace 10, AMC Palace 12, AMC Palace 16, AMC Palace 20, Grand, Hollywood 9, Hollywood 14
KILLERS (PG-13) — A woman (Katherine Heigl) meets the man of her dreams (Ashton Kutcher), only to find out he’s an international assassin. AMC Palace 10, AMC Palace 12, AMC Palace 16, AMC Palace 20, Canal Place, Grand, Hollywood 9, Hollywood 14 LETTERS TO JULIET (PG) — An
American in Verona responds to a letter to Juliet Capulet seeking advice about love, leading her and the letter’s author on a journey through Italy. AMC Palace 20, Grand, Hollywood 14
MARMADUKE (PG) — The giant dog from the one-panel comic strip gets a movie. AMC Palace 10, AMC Palace 12, AMC Palace 16, AMC Palace 20, Grand, Hollywood 9, Hollywood 14 PRINCE OF PERSIA: SANDS OF TIME (PG-13) — Based on the
video game, a Persian prince must form unlikely alliances to protect a magical dagger. AMC Palace 10, AMC Palace 12, AMC Palace 16, AMC Palace 20, Grand, Hollywood 9, Hollywood 14
Notion of islam Early in the documentary New Muslim Cool, a New York radio DJ calls Hamza and Suliman Perez, the brothers performing as the rap duo the M-Team, “America’s worst nightmare.” He’s joking about the sound and image presented by a couple of Puerto Rican rappers who have converted to Islam. Director Jennifer Maytorena Taylor follows Hamza, born Jason Perez. At the age of 21, he underwent a spiritual rebirth, converted to Islam and renounced drug dealing and other aspects of his life that he felt were holding him back. The film catches up with him years later as he moves to Pittsburgh, opens a mosque, gets married, works as a drug rehabilitation counselor and continues to record and perform with his brother. He takes it all in stride, cooking a halal meal and explaining “We know Arabic Spanglish ebonics.” It’s a complicated multicultural intersection, as Perez explains his faith and introduces his Catholic Puerto Rican family to his wife and her African-American Muslim family. Perez goes into housing projects and discusses the societal oppression of minorities, and he goes into jails to counsel prisoners about addiction, crime and finding a spiritual path — addressing both Christians and Muslims. And he and Suliman hand out CDs, proselytizing as they go, and perform in alcohol-free venues, preaching a socially conscious message while eschewing the swagger and materialism of much rap music. But in the wake of 9/11 and passage of the Patriot Act, his profile becomes too noticeable. A surveillance camera is mounted across the street from the mosque. Police later raid it for unexplained reasons. In spite of the approval of immediate supervisors, his clearance to work in prisons is revoked without any given reason. His quest for an explanation probes whether people are presumed innocent or guilty based on the law, ethnicity or religion. Perez defies classification into any single stereotype, and yet seems to accrue the worst suspicions of all of them — as a rapper, a Muslim or a former drug dealer. It’s an intriguing look at how richly complicated a person or community can be, versus the political rhetoric used to describe ethnic groups or aspects of a culture as isolated entities. Tickets $7 general admission, $6 students/seniors, $5 Zeitgeist members. — Will Coviello
THRU JUN
20
New Muslim cool 6 p.m. Tue.-Sun. Zeitgeist Multi-Disciplinary Arts Center, 1618 Oretha Castle Haley Blvd., 827-5858; www.zeitgeistinc.net
THE SECRET IN THEIR EYES (R) —
The winner of the 2009 Best Foreign Film Oscar follows a retired police detective who decides to write a novel, but then becomes the central character of a dangerous drama. Canal Place
SEX AND THE CITY 2 (R) —
Carrie, Charlotte, Miranda and Samantha leave the Big Apple for an Abu Dhabi adventure. AMC Palace 10, AMC Palace 12, AMC Palace 16, AMC Palace 20, Canal Place, Hollywood 14, Grand
SHREK FOREVER AFTER (PG) —
The titular ogre makes a deal with Rumplestiltskin to get his old life back. AMC Palace 10, AMC Palace 12, AMC Palace 16, AMC Palace 20, Grand, Hollywood 9, Hollywood 14, Prytania
SPLICE (R) — The human hybrid
creation of a pair of genetic engineers becomes their worst nightmare. AMC Palace 10, AMC Palace 12, AMC Palace 16, AMC Palace 20, Grand, Hollywood 9, Hollywood 14
opeNiNg friday JONAH HEX (PG-13) — The life of a haunted bounty hunter changes when the U.S. military makes him an offer he can’t refuse. TOY STORY 3 (G) — Woody, Buzz and the rest of the toys return to the big screen when Andy prepares to go to college.
Special ScreeNiNgS AMC SUMMER MOVIE CAMP — AMC theaters screen kid-
friendly movies every week, with proceeds benefiting charities. Films vary. Visit www. amcentertainment.com/smc
Gambit > bestofneworleans.com > JUNE 15 > 2010
based on the first book in Stieg Larsson’s Millenium trilogy follows a computer hacker drawn into a murder mystery by an embattled journalist. Canal Place
Downey Jr. stars as the Marvel Comics character in the sequel to the 2008 blockbuster. AMC Palace 10, AMC Palace 12, AMC Palace 16, AMC Palace 20, Grand, Hollywood 9, Hollywood 14
review
ROBIN HOOD (PG-13) — The film uncovers the origins of the hero-outlaw, from his stint as an archer to his exile in Sherwood Forest. AMC Palace 12, AMC Palace 20, Grand, Hollywood 14
37
fiLM
“★★★★. EXHILARATING.”
LiSTingS
Jeff Craig, Sixty Second Preview
for details. Tickets $1. 10 a.m. Tuesday. CHILDREN OF INVENTION (NR) — Two children fend
for themselves when their mother becomes embroiled in a pyramid scheme. Tickets $7 general admission, $6 students, $5 members. 7:30 p.m. Tuesday-Sunday, Zeitgeist Multi-Disciplinary Arts Center, 1618 Oretha Castle Haley Blvd., 827-5858; www.zeitgeistinc.net
GUYS AND DOLLS (NR) —
Marlon Brando and Frank Sinatra star as gamblers in the late 1940s. Tickets $5.50. Noon Wednesday, Prytania Theatre, 5339 Prytania St., 8912787; www.theprytania.com LA STRADA: SPECIAL EDITION (NR) — The cafe shows the
restored edition of Federico Fellini’s 1956 Oscar winner. 8 p.m. Monday, La Divina Cafe e Gelateria, 621 St. Peter St., 3022692; www.ladivinagelateria. com
MEDICINE FOR MELANCHOLY (NR) — Two African-American
twentysomethings meet in rapidly gentrifying San Francisco. 7:30 p.m. Saturday, The Porch 7th Ward Neighborhood Center, 1943 Pauger St.
CHECK LOCAL LISTINGS FOR THEATERS AND SHOWTIMES
Gambit > bestofneworleans.com > JUNE 15 > 2010
4.729" X 5.333" (1/4 PG SQ) TUE 6/15 NEW ORLEANS GAMBIT WEEKLY
38
DANCE RECITAL GIFTS
THE MISFORTUNATES (NR) — A 13 year old struggles to cope with his drunken family. Tickets $7 general admission, $6 students, $5 members. 7:30 p.m. Tuesday-Friday and Sunday, 4 p.m. Saturday, Zeitgeist Multi-Disciplinary Arts Center, 1618 Oretha Castle Haley Blvd., 827-5858; www. zeitgeistinc.net NEW MUSLIM COOL (NR) — A Puerto Rican Muslim
confronts realities of the post-9/11 world after the FBI raids his mosque. Tickets $7 general admission, $6 students, $5 members. 6 p.m. Tuesday-Sunday, Zeitgeist Multi-Disciplinary Arts Center, 1618 Oretha Castle Haley Blvd., 827-5858; www.zeitgeistinc.net
VIEUX CARRE MATINEES —
The Historic New Orleans Collection screens short films on Louisiana culture. Visit www.hnoc.org for details. Free admission. 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Tuesday-Saturday, Le Petit Théâtre du Vieux Carré, 616 St. Peter St., 522-2081; www.lepetittheatre.com
STERLING BALLERINA CHARM
$13.95
“WHERE THE UNUSUAL IS COMMONPLACE.” 5101 W. ESPLANADE AVENUE METAIRIE, LA 70006
504-885-4956 • 800-222-4956
AMC Palace 10 (Hammond), 429-9090; AMC Palace 12 (Clearview), 734-2020; AMC Palace 16 (Westbank), 734-2020; AMC Palace 20 (Elmwood), 734-2020; Entergy IMAX, 581-IMAX; Grand (Slidell), (985) 6411889; Hollywood 9 (Kenner), 464-0990; Hollywood 14 (Covington), (985) 893-3044; Kenner MegaDome, 468-7231; Prytania, 891-2787; Solomon Victory Theater, National World War II Museum, 5276012 Compiled by Lauren LaBorde
review Slouching Towards Belgium The family that drinks together stays together. Or perhaps that’s a more positive way of saying they’re stuck together. That’s the predicament of the Strobbe family in The Misfortunates, Beligiun’s ultra rowdy and often funny answer to Jackass, COPS and Barfly all rolled into one. It’s a rambunctiously vulgar and emotionally bleak binge of dysfunction and sloth that manages to find surprising moments of clarity and redemption amid the ruins. Before he blossoms into a Flemish Charles Bukowski, 13-year-old Gunther Strobbe watches his marginally employed and suicidally drunken father and three brothers commit themselves to little more than downing beer, cavorting in naked bicycle races and distinguishing themselves in other competitions thrown by their preferred village pub. In one of the more inspired scenes, uncle “Beefcake” Strobbe guzzles booze in a simulated Tour de France that translates pints into kilometers, and takes place over the course of a month. The Strobbe brothers are serially in and out of minor trouble with the law, the bar and Gunther’s school. They are a public laughing stock, and some combination of resentment and shame makes them fiercely loyal to one another and belligerent towards all others, including their own mother when she tries to intervene to save them from harming one another. She attempts to steer Gunther toward a better or at least sober life, but his father would rather initiate his son into their brotherhood, a darkly abusive gauntlet of humiliation. But mockery and contempt from teachers and schoolmates make his family a sort of refuge. Director Felix Van Groeningen’s gritty film focuses tightly on the Strobbe’s suffocating world. Gunther sleeps in a bedroom where one of his uncles drunkenly copulates with whomever he brings home from the bar. Family members pick at each other incessantly, especially Gunther when he does anything productive or independent. The abyss seems to worsen as we learn how many of the characters where unplanned children and/or from unidentified fathers. In one stunningly wretched and comic scene in a bar, a man who has drunk himself into dialysis realizes he is looking at his young teenage daughter for the first time — and buys her a drink, partially because he’s amazed he fathered such a beautiful child. None of this phases the Strobbe brothers, even though she is their niece, and they teach her a filthy drinking song. The debauchery goes from funny to dark to disturbing, and it can be both hilarious and hard to watch. But underneath the chaos, Groeningen crafts a compassionate and sobering story about coping with a world of disadvantages and dysfunction. It’s a 2009 Cannes award winner and entertaining for both the party and the morning after. The film is in Flemish with English subtitles. Tickets $7 general admission, $6 students/seniors, $5 Zeitgeist members. — Will Coviello
THRU JUN
20
The Misfortunates 9:30 p.m. Tue.-Fri. & Sun.; 4 p.m. Sat. Zeitgeist Multi-Disciplinary Arts Center, 1618 Oretha Castle Haley Blvd., 8275858; www.zeitgeistinc.net
listings
What you see is What you get
Listings editor: Lauren LaBorde listingsedit@gambitweekly.com FAX:483-3116 Deadline: noon Monday Submissions edited for space
Opening COUP D’OEIL ART CONSORTIUM. 2033 Magazine St., 722-0876; www.coupdoeilartconsortium.com — “Dew
Point,” a group show featuring 12 artists, through July 24. Opening reception 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. Saturday.
galleries
art ART BY CHRISTY. 733 Royal St., 586-3886; www.artbychristy.com — Large-scale oil paintings and other works by Christy Works-Boutte, ongoing. ART GALLERY 811. 811 Royal St., 524-6918 — Paint-
ings, sculpture and jewelry by local artists Noel Rockmore, Michael Fedor, Xavier de Callatay, Charles Bazzell, Bambi deVille and Ritchie Fitzgerald, ongoing.
ARTHUR ROGER GALLERY. 432 Julia St., 522-1999; www.arthurrogergallery.com — Recent sculptures by James Surls, through June 27. “The Gulf: Works Completed Before the BP Oil Spill,” a group exhibition of gallery artists, through July 17.
1022 GALLERY. 1022 Lowerline St., 301-0679; www.1022gallery. blogspot.com — “James
ARTICHOKE GALLERY. 912 Decatur St., 636-2004 — Artists work on site in all media; watercolors and limitededition prints by Peter Briant, ongoing.
2001 MAGAZINE STREET GALLERY. 2001 Magazine St., 522-3341 — Works by Eugenia
BARRISTER’S GALLERY. 2331 St. Claude Ave., 525-2767; www. barristersgallery.com — “Hur-
Booker: An Intimate Portrait,” photographs by Jim Scheurich, through June.
Cameron Foster, Les Lyden, Stephen Richardson, Will Crocker and Stewart Harvey, ongoing.
3 RING CIRCUS’ THE BIG TOP GALLERY. 1638 Clio St., 569-2700; www.3rcp.com — “B-
Movie Double Feature,” video and photographs by Heather Weathers, through June 26.
A GALLERY FOR FINE PHOTOGRAPHY. 241 Chartres St., 568-1313; www.agallery.com —
“Rock and Roll,” photographs by Lynn Goldsmith, through July 5.
AG WAGNER STUDIO & GALLERY. 813 Royal St., 561-7440 —
ALL IN THE FRAME GALLERY. 2596 Front St., Slidell, (985) 2901395 — “Serene Waters, Clear Horizons,” paintings by Annie Strack, ongoing. AMMO. 938 Royal St., 2209077; www.ammoarts.com — Emerging and established
contemporary artists.
ANTENNA GALLERY. 3161 Burgundy St., 957-4255; www. antennagallery.org — “Junk-
fish Caviar,” a multi-media installation by Susan Gisleson, through July 5. ANTON HAARDT FOLK GALLERY. 2858 Magazine St., 891-9080; www.antonart.com — Works
by Anton Haardt, Christopher Moses and others. AORTA PROJECTS. Poland Avenue and North Miro Street; www.aortaprojects.blogspot. com — “Blue Fence,” instal-
lation by Jennifer Odem, through December.
ARIODANTE GALLERY. 535 Julia St., 524-3233 — Group exhibi-
tion of gallery artists, through July.
BECA ICAD. 527 St. Joseph St., 566-8999; www.becaicad. org — “Sublime Affliction,”
works by Jenn Parnell, through June 25. BERGERON STUDIO & GALLERY. 406 Magazine St., 522-7503; www.bergeronstudio.com —
Photographs by Michael P. Smith, Jack Beech, Harriet Blum, Kevin Roberts and others, ongoing.
BERTA’S AND MINA’S ANTIQUITIES GALLERY. 4138 Magazine St., 895-6201 — “Second Line:
Lifting Our Souls Up Into Heaven,” works by Nilo and Mina Lanzas; works by Clementine Hunter, Noel Rockmore and others; all ongoing. BRYANT GALLERIES. 316 Royal St., 525-5584; www.bryantgalleries.com — Paintings by Dean Mitchell, ongoing. BYRDIE’S GALLERY. 2422-A St. Claude Ave., www.byrdiesgallery.com — “For a Canvas
of Skin,” tattoo sketches on paper by local tattoo artists, through July 6.
CALICHE & PAO GALLERY. 312 Royal St., 588-2846 — Oil paintings by Caliche and Pao, ongoing. CALLAN FINE ART. 240 Chartres St., 524-0025; www. callanfineart.com — Works
by Eugene de Blass, Louis Valtat and other artists of the Barbizon, Impressionist and Post-Impressionist schools, ongoing.
CANARY GALLERY. 329 Julia St., 388-7746; www.thecanarycollective.com — “Images
from the End of the Earth,” photographs of Grand Isle by Zack Smith.
of Italian artists featuring works by Bruno Paoli and Andrea Stella, ongoing.
CARIBBEAN ARTS LTD. 720 Franklin Ave., 943-3858 — The gallery showcases contemporary Haitian and Jamaican art. CAROL ROBINSON GALLERY. 840 Napoleon Ave., 895-6130; www.carolrobinsongallery. com — “30 Year Anniversary Exhibition,” works by David Goodman, John Oles, Christina Goodman and Jere Allen, through July. CASELL GALLERY. 818 Royal St., 524-0671; www.casellartgallery. com — Pastels by Joaquim
Casell; etchings by Sage; oils by Charles Ward; all ongoing.
COLE PRATT GALLERY. 3800 Magazine St., 891-6789; www. coleprattgallery.com — “About
Face,” paintings by Andrew Bucci from 1950 to 1962, through June.
COLLECTIVE WORLD ART COMMUNITY. Poydras Center, 650 Poydras St., 339-5237 — Paint-
ings from the Blue Series by Joseph Pearson, ongoing.
D.O.C.S. 709 Camp St., 524-3936 — Annual group exhibition
featuring sculptures, paintings and mixed-media works by gallery artists, through Aug. 3.
DU MOIS GALLERY. 4921 Freret St., 818-6032 — “Cold Drink,” a printmaking invitational featuring 31 regional and national printmakers, through July 17. DUTCH ALLEY ARTIST’S CO-OP GALLERY. 912 N. Peters St., 4129220; www.dutchalleyonline. com — Works by New Orleans
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artists, ongoing.
ELLIOTT GALLERY. 540 Royal St., 523-3554; www.elliottgallery. com — Works by gallery artists
Coignard, Engel, Papart, Petra, Tobiasse, Schneuer and Yrondi, ongoing.
FRAMIN’ PLACE & GALLERY. 3535 Severn Ave., Metairie, 885-3311; www.nolaframing.com —
Prints by Tommy Thompson, Phillip Sage, James Michalopoulos and others, ongoing.
FREDRICK GUESS STUDIO. 910 Royal St., 581-4596; www. fredrickguessstudio.com —
Paintings by Fredrick Guess, ongoing. THE FRONT. 4100 St. Claude Ave.; www.nolafront.org —
“The Achilles Cycle,” works by Clay Blancett in response to the film God’s Architects; works by Wendy Babcox and April Childers; both through July 3.
GALERIE DALRAY. 713 Royal St., 681-0880; www.galeriedalray. com — Works by Tim Jaeger, Brian Tull, Carlos Cadavid and others, ongoing. GALERIE D’ART FRANCAIS. 541 Royal St., 581-6925 — Works by
Todd White, ongoing.
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Gambit > bestofneworleans.com > JUNE 15 > 2010
Works by gallery artists; 504 Toys, locally handcrafted toys; both ongoing.
ricanes, Hand Grenades and Other Delightful Things,” oil on canvas by Scott Guion, through July 17.
CARDINAL GALLERY. 541 Bourbon St., 522-3227 — Exhibition
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Entertainment Series
ART
LiSTingS
GALERIE PORCHE WEST. 3201 Burgundy St., 947-3880 — Photography by Christopher Porche West, ongoing. GALERIE ROYALE. 3648 Magazine St., 894-1588; www.galerieroyale.com —
“Brothers in Arts,” contemporary oils on canvas by Quincy Verdun and Leon Verdun, through June. GALLERIA BELLA. 319 Royal St., 5815881 — Works by gallery artists, ongoing.
Wednesday Night Comedy Brian Scolaro
June 16 • 7:30pm & 9:30pm Coming soon: The Cowboy Comedian (6/23)
GALLERY 421. 421 N. Columbia St., Covington, (985) 898-5858 — More than 500 pieces of art by more than 50 artists, ongoing. GALLERY BIENVENU. 518 Julia St., 525-0518; www.gallerybienvenu.com — “Transfer,” prints by Teresa Cole,
through July 22.
THE GARDEN DISTRICT GALLERY. 1332 Washington Ave., 891-3032; www. gardendistrictgallery.com — “Trea-
sures of the Gulf,” a group exhibition featuring more than 12 artists, through July.
Thursdays - Karaoke, Live Band & Ladies Night Budweiser specials throughout the night. Ladies enjoy 2-for-1 mixed drink specials.
Karaoke • 8:30pm-9:30pm No Idea • June 17 • 9:30pm-1:30am Coming soon: Groovy 7 (6/24)
GEORGE SCHMIDT GALLERY. 626 Julia St., 592-0206; www.georgeschmidt.com — Paintings by George Schmidt, ongoing. GRAPHITE GALLERIES. 936 Royal St., 565-3739 — “Sinners and Saints,”
works by Joe Hobbs, ongoing.
GRIS GRIS LAB. 2245 Brainard St., 872-0577; www.grisgrislab.com —
“L’Espirit d’Haiti,” photographs by Christopher L. Mitchell, through July 9. GUTHRIE CONTEMPORARY. 3815 Magazine St., 897-2688; www.guthriecontemporary.com — “Schemata,” works by Susan Dory, ongoing. HAROUNI GALLERY. 829 Royal St., 299-8900 — Paintings by David
Harouni, ongoing.
Local Favorite Fridays Junior & Sumtin Sneaky Gambit > bestofneworleans.com > JUNE 15 > 2010
June 18 & 25 • 9:30pm-1:30am
40
HERIARD-CIMINO GALLERY. 440 Julia St., 525-7300; www.heriardcimino. com — “Field Recordings,” videos by
Courtney Egan, through July 5.
ISABELLA’S GALLERY. 3331 Severn Ave., Suite 105, Metairie, 779-3202; www. isabellasgallery.com — Hand-blown
works by Marc Rosenbaum; raku by Kate Tonguis and John Davis; all ongoing.
JEAN BRAGG GALLERY OF SOUTHERN ART. 600 Julia St., 895-7375; www. jeanbragg.com — “Let’s Go to the
Louisiana Saturday Nights Deacon John & His Jump Blues Orchestra June 19 • 9:30pm-1:30am Coming soon: Louisiana’s LeRoux (6/26)
Park,” a group exhibition featuring paintings in oil and acrylic by local artists, through June.
boomtownneworleans.com/boomers-nightclub Must be 21. Entertainment start times may vary. Shows are subject to change. ©2010 Pinnacle Entertainment, Inc. All rights reserved.
GAMBLING PROBLEM? C A L L 8 7 7. 7 7 0 . S T O P
KKPROJECTS. 2448 N. Villere St., 415-9880; www.kkprojects.org —
“Knead,” works by Kristian Hansen, Tora Lopez, John Oles and William Murphy, ongoing.
KURT E SCHON. 510-520 St. Louis St., 524-5462 — The gallery specializes
in 18th and 19th century European oil paintings by a select group of artists from the French Salon and Royal Academy as well as French Impressionists, ongoing. L9 CENTER FOR THE ARTS. 539 Caffin Ave., 948-0056 — “Faces of Treme,”
works by Chandra McCormick and Keith Calhoun, ongoing.
LE PETIT SALON DE NEW ORLEANS. 906 Royal St., 524-5700 — New
paintings by Holly Sarré, ongoing. LEMIEUX GALLERIES. 332 Julia St., 5225988; www.lemieuxgalleries.com —
“Growing Pains,” a group exhibition curated by Christy Wood; “Our Gulf Coast,” a group exhibition featuring works inspired by the Gulf Coast; both through July 24.
LIVE ART STUDIO. 4207 Dumaine St., 484-7245 — “Festival Players,”
photographs by Randy Sanders; “Loteria Mosaico,” Venetian glass mosaics by Randy Sanders; “Makin’ Music,” giclee prints by Sarah Stiehl; all through June. LOUISIANA CRAFTS GUILD. 608 Julia St., 558-6198; www.louisianacrafts. org — Group show featuring works from guild members, ongoing. METAIRIE PARK COUNTRY DAY SCHOOL. 300 Park Road, Metairie, 837-5204; www.mpcds.com — “The
Unconventional Portrait,” works by Mark Bercier, David Halliday, Gina Phillips and Alexander Stolin, ongoing.
MICHALOPOULOS GALLERY. 617 Bienville St., 558-0505; www.michalopoulos.com — Paintings by James Michalopoulos, ongoing. MICHELLE Y WILLIAMS GALLERY. 835 Julia St., 585-1945; www.michelleywilliams.com — Works by Michelle Y. NEW ORLEANS ACADEMY OF FINE ARTS. 5256 Magazine St., 899-8111; www.noafa.com — Student art
exhibition, through July 24.
Jon Schooler, ongoing.
JONATHAN FERRARA GALLERY. 400A Julia St., 522-5471; www.jonathanferraragallery.com — “reconsidered,”
OCTAVIA ART GALLERY. 4532 Magazine St., 309-4249; www.octaviaartgallery.com — “The Colors of
JON SCHOOLER GALLERY. 8526 Oak St., 865-7032; www.jonschooler.com — “Subliminal WOWs,” paintings by
JULIE NEILL DESIGNS. 3908 Magazine St., 899-4201; www.julieneill.com —
“Facade,” photographs by Lesley Wells, ongoing.
JUSTIN ROBINSON SMITH GALLERY. 927 Royal St., 528-2588 — Works by
Justin Robinson Smith; photography by Sidney Smith; both ongoing. KAKO GALLERY. 536 Royal St., 5655445; www.kakogallery.com — New
paintings by Don Picou and Stan Fontaine; “Raku” by Joy Gauss;
review Texas Roots Rugged, blue jean clad and with a speaking style somewhere between Joseph Campbell and Johnny Cash, James Surls may be the most famous Texas artist. A native of the prairie bayou country extending from Houston to Lafayette, he’s known for sculpture that looks as if it grew out of that very soil, and while fellow Texans Robert Rauschenberg and Julian Schnabel are better known, they both became New Yorkers somewhere along the way. When Surls moved north to Colorado a decade ago, it caused no change in his vision, a heady mix of the earthly and the cosmic. Those traits characterize his abstract graphite line drawings, which in turn explicate his iconic sculptures, hybrid wood and metal concoctions with an ethereal monumentality that causes them to linger in the imagination. Standing Knife, Pinon, and Morning Glory is a 10-foot-tall bronze, mahogany and stainless steel piece that suggests a skeletal flower atop a huge wooden blade. Here Surls alludes to the symbolism of male and female, but its inner meaning suggests a kind of prairie alchemy involving his notion of “conjuring — from the land, the wind and the bayous.” The sheer heft of his materials can make some of these works seem earthbound even as similar concepts make his drawings sparkle with magical intent. But Head and Hoof — a long pine tree root topped with flower-petal or propeller-like forms — eludes gravity’s pull, partly because it hangs suspended, and partly because its radial forms atop the spindly armature of the root evoke an eerie energy not unlike magnetic levitation. Walking Eye Flower (pictured), a bronze pedestal sculpture, melds the ethereal abstraction of the drawings with a hint of the heft of the others in a snaky pinwheel with many eyes, a tumbleweed prairie demon dancing like Shiva in the convection currents. Here Surls mines the earthy expanses for their hidden meanings, which he distills into poetic wood and metal manifestos that speak the language of the land. — D. Eric Bookhardt
THRU JUN
27
James Surls: Recent Sculpture Arthur Roger Gallery, 432 Julia St., 522-1999; www.arthurrogergallery.com
Williams, ongoing.
OAK STREET GALLERY. 111 N. Oak St., Hammond, (985) 345-0521 — “Random Order,” mixed media by James Henderson; “Deep Horizon,” new works with acrylic and latex house paint by Pat Macaluso; both through June.
new paintings by Stephen Hoskins, through July 28.
Where the Locals Party, Play... and Win! 504.366.7711 4132 Peters Road • Harvey
3-D wood sculpture by Joe Derr; all ongoing.
Summer,” a group show of gallery and invited artists featuring mixedmedia paintings, drawings and photographs, through July. ONE SUN GALLERY. 616 Royal St., (800) 501-1151 — Works by local and national artists, ongoing. PEARL ART GALLERY. 4421 Magazine St., 228-5840 — Works by Cindy and
Drue Hardegree, Erica Dewey, John Womack, Sontina, Lorraine Jones and S. Lee, ongoing.
PHOTO WORKS NEW ORLEANS. 521 St. Ann St., 593-9090; www.photowork-
sneworleans.com — Photography by Louis Sahuc, ongoing. REINA GALLERY. 4132 Magazine St., 895-0022; www.reinaart.com —
“Vintage New Orleans Artists,” watercolors, etchings and folk art; “Patrons Saints,” works by Shelley Barberot; both ongoing.
RHINO CONTEMPORARY CRAFTS COMPANY. The Shops at Canal Place, 333 Canal St., third floor, 523-7945; www.rhinocrafts.com — Works by
Teri Walker, Chad Ridgeway, Tamra Carboni, Caren Nowak and others, ongoing
RIVERSTONE GALLERIES. 719 Royal St., 412-9882; 729 Royal St., 581-3688; Riverwalk, 1 Poydras St., Suite 36, 5660588; 733 Royal St., 525-9988; www. riverstonegalleries.net — Works
by Ricardo Lozano, Michael Flohr, Henry Ascencio, Jaline Pol, ongoing. RODRIGUE STUDIO. 721 Royal St., 581-4244; www.georgerodrigue. com — Works by George Rodrigue,
ongoing.
ROSETREE GLASS STUDIO & GALLERY. 446 Vallette St., Algiers Point, 366-3602; www.rosetreeglass.com —
Hand-blown glasswork, ongoing.
RUSTY PELICAN ART. 4031 St. Claude Ave., 218-5727; www.rustypelicanart. com — Works by Travis and Lexi
Linde, ongoing.
SALONE DELL’ARTES ARTEMISIA. 3000 Royal St., 481-5113 — “I Genti H2O,”
works by Shmuela Padnos, ongoing. SHEILA’S FINE ART STUDIO. 1427 N. Johnson St., 473-3363; www.sheilaart. com — Works by Sheila Phipps,
ongoing.
SOREN CHRISTENSEN GALLERY. 400 Julia St., 569-9501; www.sorengallery.com — “Long Story Short,”
mixed-media works on canvas and paper by Karen Laborde, through June.
SOUTHERN LIGHTS STUDIO. 901 Carondelet St., 524-0200; www. southernlights.com — “2 Dreams: The Secret of Life,” photography by Jackson Hill, ongoing.
Expanded listings at bestofneworleans.com
STELLA JONES GALLERY. Place St. Charles, 201 St. Charles Ave., Suite 132, 568-9050 — “The Tal-
ented Tenth: African American Artists and Musicians of the Harlem Renaissance, the W.P.A and Beyond,” through July.
STEVE MARTIN STUDIO. 624 Julia St., 566-1390; www.stevemartinfineart.com — Contem-
porary sculpture and paintings by Steve Martin and other Louisiana artists, ongoing. STUDIO 525. 525 E. Boston St., Covington; www.studio525covington.com — Rare rock ’n’ roll
photographs by Sidney Smith; tribal painting and mixed media by Justin Smith; works by Sarah Freeman Carey, Christopher Morrison Slave and Richard Lee; all through June. STUDIO 527. 527 Julia St., 218-4807 — “Design Within
Breach: A Case Study for How Crisis Influences Design,” drawings, photographs and models of post-Katrina projects by Frank Gehry, Robert Tannen, Tina Freeman, Futureproof, Abe Geasland, Chrestia, Staub & Pierce and others, ongoing.
STUDIO BFG. 2627 Desoto St., 942-0200; www.studiobfg. com — “Peel Sessions: First
Installment,” works by Tina Stanley, ongoing.
STUDIO GALLERY. 338 Baronne St., third floor, 529-3306 — Works by YA/YA artists, ongoing. TAYLOR/BERCIER FINE ART. 233 Chartres St., 527-0072 —
“Vessels,” paintings by Gary Komarin; “Small Works,” paintings by John Randall Nelson; both through June 28.
“Where’s the Money?” group exhibit interpreting the economy, ongoing.
VENUSIAN GARDENS ART GALLERY. 2601 Chartres St., 9437446; www.venusiangardens. com — “Luminous Sculpture,”
works by Eric Ehlenberger, ongoing.
WMSJR. 1061 Camp St., 299-9455; www.wmsjr.com — Works by Will Smith, ongoing. A WORK OF ART GALLERY. 8212 Oak St., 862-5244 — Glass
works by Juli Juneau; works from the New Orleans Photo Alliance; both ongoing.
Call for artists MIDDLE EAST FILM FESTIVAL. Zeitgeist Multi-Disciplinary Arts Center, 1618 Oretha Castle Haley Blvd., 827-5858; www. zeitgeistinc.net — The festival
seeks film submissions, as well as Arab, Persian or Middle Eastern musicians, multi-media installations and performance pieces, for the November event. Visit www. nolamideastfilmfest.blogspot.
MY NEW ORLEANS: PERSONAL IMPRESSIONS OF A CITY IN TRANSITION. Rhino Contemporary Crafts Company, The Shops at Canal Place, 333 Canal St., third floor, 523-7945; www.rhinocrafts.com — Artists of any
medium are invited to submit works expanding on impressions of New Orleans life, culture, food, art and music for the November exhibition. Email rhinocrafts@yahoo. com for details. Submission deadline is July 15.
museums AMISTAD RESEARCH CENTER. Tilton Hall, Tulane University, 6823 St. Charles Ave., 865-5535 — “Creative Circles:
Exploring Community Within African Art,” an exhibition of manuscripts and artwork in conjunction with NOMA’s “Beyond the Blues,” through June.
ASHÉ CULTURAL ARTS CENTER. 1712 Oretha Castle Haley Blvd., 569-9070; www.ashecac.org — “Ashe in Retrospect: 19982008,” photographs by Morris Jones Jr., Eric Waters, Jeffrey Cook and others, ongoing. CONTEMPORARY ARTS CENTER. 900 Camp St., 528-3800; www. cacno.org — “Prints,” paintings by Joan Mitchell, through June. “As We See It: Youth Vision Quilt,” student-created quilt with more than 400 patches, ongoing. HISTORIC NEW ORLEANS COLLECTION. 533 Royal St., 523-4662; www.hnoc.org — “Katrina +
5: Documenting Disaster,” an oral history and photography project with historical maps, documents and a multimedia presentation, through Sept. 12.
LONGUE VUE HOUSE AND GARDENS. 7 Bamboo Road, 4885488; www.longuevue.com —
“Untitled No. 6029,” sculpture by Eric Dallimore, through December. “Serigraphs from the Toussaint L’Ouverture Series, 1986-1997,” by Jacob Lawrence, through July 15.
LOUISIANA STATE MUSEUM. Old U.S. Mint, 400 Esplanade Ave., 568-6968 — “Target America: Opening Eyes to the Damage Drugs Cause,” an interactive exhibit exploring the damaging effects of illegal drugs, through Nov. 24. LOUISIANA STATE MUSEUM CABILDO. 701 Chartres St., 5686968; www.lsm.crt.state.la.us — “Unsung Heroes: The Secret
History of Louisiana Rock & Roll,” through May. “The Cabildo: 200 Years of Louisiana History,” ongoing.
LOUISIANA STATE MUSEUM PRESBYTERE. 751 Chartres St., 568-6968; www.lsm.crt.state. la.us — “Living With Hur-
ricanes: Katrina and Beyond,” ongoing.
MAIN LIBRARY. 219 Loyola Ave., 529-7323; www.nutrias. org — “Hidden from History: Unknown New Orleanians,” photographs of the city’s working poor, ongoing. NEW ORLEANS AFRICAN AMERICAN MUSEUM. 1418 Gov. Nicholls St., 566-1136; www. noaam.com — “Sumpt’n
to See, Native Son Comes Home,” paintings by Ted Ellis; “Drapetomania: A Disease Called Freedom,” a collection of artifacts by Derrick Joshua Beard; both through November.
NEW ORLEANS ARTWORKS. 727 Magazine St., 529-7279 — “Summer Daydreams,” floral watercolors by Carol Greel, through June. NEW ORLEANS MUSEUM OF ART. City Park, 1 Collins Diboll Circle, 658-4100; www.noma. org — Oil paintings by Joan
Mitchell, through June 27. “Patti Smith: A Donation to NOMA,” photographs by the musician, through July 3. “SWEET Suite Louisiana,” color intaglio prints by Warrington Colescott; “The Therapist,” photographs by Donald Woodman; “Beyond the Blues: Reflections on African America from the Fine Arts Collection of the Amistad Research Center,” a selection of works from African-American artists; photographs by William Greiner; all through July 11. “Swamp Tours,” a group exhibition featuring contemporary Louisiana artists, through Aug. 29. OGDEN MUSEUM OF SOUTHERN ART. 925 Camp St., 539-9600; www.ogdenmuseum.org — “Brooching the Subject:
One-of-a-Kind,” jewelry by 22 artists, through July 15. “Give My Poor Heart Ease: Voices of the Mississippi Blues,” photographs by William Ferris; William Ferris Folk Art Collection; both through July 25. “Where They At: New Orleans Bounce and Hip-Hop in Words and Pictures,” by Aubrey Edwards and Alison Fensterstock, through Aug. 1. Works from 1956 exhibited at Tenth Street Galleries in New York and new works by Robert Tannen, ongoing.
SOUTHERN FOOD & BEVERAGE MUSEUM. Riverwalk Marketplace, 1 Poydras St., Suite 169, 569-0405; www.southernfood. org — “The Birth of Coffee,”
black-and-white photographs documenting coffee works; “Laissez Faire — Savoir Fare,” the cuisine of Louisiana and New Orleans; “Eating in the White House — America’s Food”; “Wish You Were Here,” private collection of postcards depicting African-Americans and food; “Acadian to Cajun: Forced Migration to Commercialization,” a multimedia exhibit; all ongoing.
Sun-ThurS 11am-9pm, Fri-SaT 11am-11pm
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NOCCA|Riverfront Lupin Hall, 2800 Chartres St., 940-2787; www.nocca.com — The stage musical adaptation of the 1988 film centers on two swindlers living in the French Riviera. Tickets $30. 8 p.m. Friday-Saturday, 2 p.m. Sunday. THE EVERLASTING BONFIRE.
Lupin Theatre, Tulane University, 865-5105 ext. 2 — Part of the New Orleans Shakespeare Festival at Tulane, the play follows a playwright penning a gothic horror production about Edwin Forrest. Tickets $30. 8:30 p.m. Thursday-Saturday, 2:30 p.m. Sunday.
THE GIN GAME. Luke’s Brisket
and Broadway Dinner Theatre, 1540 Lindberg Drive, Slidell, (985) 781-6565; www.brisketandbroadway.com — Two nursing home residents engage in a series of gin rummy games that lead to increasingly difficult conversations. Tickets $40 (includes dinner). 7 p.m. Friday-Saturday through June 26.
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Chat Noir, 715 St. Charles Ave., 581-5812; www.cabaretlechatnoir.com — Sean Patterson and Gary Rucker tell the story of the inventor of the printing press. Tickets $15. 8 p.m. Monday and June 28.
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Community Theater, 1333 S. Carrollton Ave., 862-7529; www.anthonybeantheater. com — Bean’s spin on the Thorton Wilder classic takes place in a racially diverse Grover’s Corners, N.H. in the mid-20th century. Tickets $20 general admission, $18 students and seniors. 8 p.m. Saturday, 3 p.m. Sunday through June 27.
THE REALLY DESPERATE HOUSEWIVES OF STEPFORD PARISH. Le Chat Noir, 715 St.
Charles Ave., 581-5812; www. cabaretlechatnoir.com — Something is amiss among the housewives of Stepford Parish in the Running With Scissors farce. Tickets $26 Friday-Saturday, $21 Sunday
Get in on the Act
(both include $5 drink credit). 8 p.m. Friday-Saturday, 6 p.m. Sunday through June 27. THANKS FOR THE MEMORIES.
Stage Door Canteen at The National World War II Museum, 945 Magazine St., 528-1944 — Bob Hope, Groucho Marx and George Burns impersonators are featured in this rousing tribute show. Tickets start at $30. 8 p.m. Friday-Saturday, 11 a.m. Sunday.
TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD.
NOCCA|Riverfront, Nims Blackbox Theatre, 2800 Chartres St. — NOCCA’s Stage Company performs the theatrical adaptation of Harper Lee’s novel. Tickets $20. 7:30 p.m. Thursday-Saturday, 2 p.m. Sunday. VERBATIM VERBOTEN. AllWays
Lounge, 2240 St. Claude Ave., 218-5778; www.marignytheatre.org — Actors perform staged transcripts of verbal gaffes of notable people. Tickets $7 (includes one drink). 10 p.m. Sunday.
CabaReT BOURBON & BURLESQUE. Con-
temporary Arts Center, 900 Camp St., 528-3800; www. cacno.org — The fundraiser features performances by Bustout Burlesque, Fleur de Tease, Reverend Spooky and her Billion Dollar Baby Dolls, Slow Burn Burlesque and Storyville Starlettes. Tickets $50 general admission, $25 CAC members in advance; $70 general admission, $45 CAC members at the door. 8 p.m. to 11 p.m. Saturday.
BURLESQUE BALLROOM. Irvin
Mayfield’s Jazz Playhouse, 300 Bourbon St., 553-2270; www. sonesta.com — Trixie Minx stars in the weekly burlesque show featuring the music of Leon “Kid Chocolate” Brown. Call 553-2331 for details. 11:50 p.m. Friday.
CHRIS CHAMPAGNE’S CIRQUE DE DOSGRIS. Le Chat Noir,
715 St. Charles Ave., 581-5812; www.cabaretlechatnoir.com — A panel featuring Walt Handelsman, Mark Shlefstein and Gambit political editor Clancy DuBos discusses life in New Orleans. Tickets $15. 8 p.m. Tuesday.
CIRCUS MAXIMUS. Shadowbox
Theatre, 2400 St Claude Ave., 523-7469; www.theshadowboxtheatre.com — The Storyville Starlettes’ show features circus-themed burlesque and variety acts. Tickets $10. 10 p.m. Thursday. CORDELIA WAS THE FOOL.
AllWays Lounge, 2240 St. Claude Ave., 218-5778; www. marignytheatre.org — The cabaret revue features a rotating slate of women performing poetry, comedy, dance, music and storytelling. Tickets $10. 7 p.m. Tuesday through June 29.
THE MIDNIGHT REVUE.
Starlight by the Park, 834 N. Rampart St., 561-8939; www. starlightbythepark.com — Marcy Marcell directs a weekly female-impersonation jazz cabaret. Call for ticket information. Midnight Friday.
REVEREND SPOOKY LESTRANGE & HER BILLION DOLLAR BABY DOLLS. Dragon’s
Den, 435 Esplanade Ave. — The burlesque troupe’s Church of Burlesque performs with the Swaggers featuring DJ J. Song. 10:30 p.m. Friday.
audiTions BARBERSHOP HARMONY SOCIETY. Christ the King Lutheran
Church, 1001 W. Esplanade Ave., Kenner, 469-4740; www. ctk-nola.org — The Greater New Orleans Chapter holds new member auditions for its Mardi Gras Chorus. Call 3639001 or visit www.mardigraschorus.org for details. 7:15 p.m. Tuesday.
CRESCENT CITY SOUND CHORUS. Delgado Community
College, City Park campus, Orleans Avenue, between City Park Avenue and Navarre Street; www.dcc.edu — The chorus holds weekly auditions for women ages 16 and older for its original show A Streetcar Named Who Dat to be performed in October. Call 453-0858 or visit www. crescentcitysound.com for details. 7 p.m. Monday. THE FANTASTICKS. Te-
atro Wego, 177 Sala Ave., Westwego, 885-2000; www. jpas.org — The theater holds auditions for its August production of the musical. Auditions are by appointment only. Call 885-2000 ext. 202 for details. Noon Saturday.
NEW ORLEANS FRINGE. New Orleans Fringe seeks works in a variety of mediums that are between 30 and 60 minutes long for its November festival. Visit www.nofringe. org for details. Application deadline is July 1.
opeRa OPERA RETURNS TO BOURBON STREET. The Inn on Bourbon
Hotel, 541 Bourbon St., 5247611; www.innonbourbon.com — The hotel and the New Orleans Opera Association present the free performance by Bon Operatit. 7 p.m. Friday.
Comedy BLUE MONDAY STAND-UP COMEDY. Bullets Sports Bar,
2441 A.P. Tureaud Ave., 9484003 — The weekly open mic is hosted by Tony Frederick. 9 p.m. Monday.
BROWN! IMPROV COMEDY.
Zeitgeist Multi-Disciplinary Arts Center, 1618 Oretha Castle
Expanded listings at bestofneworleans.com STage
review Skirt Circuited
Haley Blvd., 827-5858; www. zeitgeistinc.net — The comedy troupe stars Johnathan Christiansen, Gant Laborde, Ken Lafrance, Bob Murrell and Kelli Rosher. Visit www.brownimprovcomedy.com for details. 10 p.m. Saturday. COMEDY CATASTROPHE. Lost
Love Lounge, 2529 Dauphine St., 400-6145 — The bar hosts a free weekly stand-up comedy show. 9 p.m. Tuesday.
COMEDY GUMBEAUX. Howlin’
Wolf (The Den), 828 S. Peters St., 522-9653; www.howlin-wolf. com — Local comedians perform, and amateurs take the stage in the open mic portion. Tickets $5. 8 p.m. Thursday.
COMEDY LIVES. La Nuit Comedy Theater, 5039 Freret St., 6444300; www.nolacomedy.com — Comedy teams Dr. Awkward and Men Not Mars perform weekly improvisational comedy. Admission $10. 9 p.m. to 10 p.m. Thursday.
THRU JUN
27
The Really Desperate Housewives of Stepford Parish 8 p.m. Fri.-Sat.; 6 p.m. Sun. Le Chat Noir, 715 St. Charles Ave., 581-5812; www.cabaretlechatnoir.com
COMEDY OPEN-MIC. La Nuit
Comedy Theater, 5039 Freret St., 644-4300; www.nolacomedy. com — The theater hosts a weekly open-mic comedy night. (Sign-up time is 10:45 p.m.) Tickets $8. 11 p.m. Friday.
COMEDY SPORTZ NOLA. La Nuit
Comedy Theater, 5039 Freret St., 644-4300; www.nolacomedy. com — The theater hosts a safe-for-all-ages comedy competition between two teams. Tickets $10. 8 p.m. FridaySaturday.
DYKES OF HAZARD. Rubyfruit Jungle, 1135 Decatur St., 5711863; www.rubyfruit-jungle. com — Kristen Becker hosts a weekly comedy show with live music, sketch comedy, burlesque and more. Admission $5. 9 p.m. Friday. AN EVENING WITH CHRIS ROSE.
Howlin’ Wolf Northshore, 1623 Montgomery St., Mandeville, (985) 626-1626; www.howlinwolf.com — The Gambit columnist performs new material. Tickets $10. 8 p.m. Friday. Rose also appears at Howlin’ Wolf New Orleans (The Den, 828 S. Peters St., 522-9653; www.howlin-wolf.com) 8 p.m. Saturday.
GOD’S BEEN DRINKING. La Nuit Comedy Theater, 5039 Freret St., 644-4300; www.nolacomedy. com — Actors improvise a comedy based on audience suggestions. Tickets $10. 10 p.m. Friday. GROUND ZERO COMEDY. Maison 508, 508 Frenchmen St., 3097137 — The show features local stand-up comedians. Sign-up is 7:30 p.m. Show is 8 p.m. IVAN’S OPEN MIC NIGHT. Rusty Nail, 1100 Constance St., 5255515 — The Rusty Nail hosts a weekly open-mic comedy and music night. 9 p.m. Tuesday. JONAH BASCLE SHOW. 3 Ring
Circus’ The Big Top Gallery, 1638 Clio St., 569-2700; www.3rcp. com — The comedian presents
LAUGH OUT LOUD. Tarantula Arms, 209 Decatur St., 525-5525 — Simple Play presents a weekly comedy show. 10 p.m. Thursday.
review Q Tips
THE MUSICAL! Shadowbox
Theatre, 2400 St Claude Ave., 523-7469; www.theshadowboxtheatre.com — The National Comedy Company creates a complete one-act musical on the spot based on audience suggestions. Tickets $8. 9 p.m. Friday.
NATIONAL COMEDY COMPANY.
Shadowbox Theatre, 2400 St Claude Ave., 523-7469; www. theshadowboxtheatre.com — The troupe performs interactive improv comedy. Tickets $5. 7 p.m. Saturday.
NATIONAL COMEDY COMPANY DINNER SHOW. Memeworks In-
tegrated Creative Arts, 527 Julia St., 523-SHOW — The improv group features a comedy show with a dinner option. Tickets $10 for show only. 8 p.m. Friday.
O, VENGEANCE! La Nuit Comedy Theater, 5039 Freret St., 6444300; www.nolacomedy.com — Actors improvise Shakespeare based on audience suggestions. Tickets $8. 10 p.m. Saturday. ROSEMARY ALEXANDER EDUCATION TRUST COMEDY BENEFIT.
Carrollton Station, 8140 Willow St., 865-9190; www.carrolltonstation.com — The comedy show featuring Joseph Tolpi, Shawn Dugas, Scotland Green, Andrew Healan and Dane Faucheux benefits the daughter of Jeremy Alexander, a comedian who was murdered in May. Tickets $10. 9 p.m. Thursday SKETCHY CHARACTERS. One Eyed Jacks, 615 Toulouse St., 569-8361; www.oneeyedjacks. net — The sketch comedy show also features breakdance and burlesque. 8 p.m. Thursday. STAND UP NOLA. Boomtown Casino, Boomers Saloon, 4132 Peters Road, Harvey, 366-7711; www.boomtownneworleans. com — The casino hosts free, weekly stand-up performances with a changing lineup of comedians. 7:30 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. Wednesday. STAND-UP OPEN MIC. Sidney’s,
1674 Barataria Blvd., Marrero, 341-0103 — The show features professional, amateur and first-time comics. Free admission. Sign-up is 8 p.m. Show starts at 9 p.m. Thursday. STUPID TIME MACHINE. Avenue Pub, 1732 St. Charles Ave., 586-9243 — The improv group performs a weekly comedy show. Tickets $1-$6. 8:30 p.m. Tuesday. THINK YOU’RE FUNNY? Carrollton Station, 8140 Willow St., 8659190; www.carrolltonstation. com — The weekly open-mic comedy showcase is open to all comics. Free admission. Sign-up is 8:30 p.m. Show starts at 9 p.m. Wednesday.
To a bouncy, childlike tune reminiscent of Sesame Street, the cheerful, colorful multicultural humans and puppets bound around the stage of Avenue Q singing the show’s theme: “You live on Avenue Q; your friends do too,” they warble cheerfully — and then, more pointedly: “Yo-ou are twenty-two … and you live on Avenue Q.” The setting for the show (which closed a six-day run at the Mahalia Jackson Theater June 13) is a tenement in a way-way-outer borough of New York, in a neighborhood that hasn’t been hipsterized, and its residents aren’t quite the Muppets. Trekkie Monster is reminiscent of Cookie Monster, except he spends his days obsessed with Internet porn instead of Oreos. Bert and Ernie’s counterparts are Rod and Nicky, a closeted stockbroker and his cheerful, slovenly roommate. Also in residence are Brian, an unemployed slacker and failed comedian on the wrong side of 30; his fiancee Christmas Eve, a Japanese social worker with two degrees and no clients; Kate Monster, an assistant kindergarten teacher who dreams of opening a school for monsters; and actor Gary Coleman, who has hit rock bottom, selling his possessions on eBay and working as the building superintendent. Into the mix comes Princeton, a recent college graduate who’s broke, overeducated, looking for a purpose in life and full of hope for the future. That doesn’t last long. The show’s first two numbers — “What Do You Do With a B.A. In English?” and “It Sucks to Be Me” — sum up the show’s own purpose: teaching valuable young-adult life lessons through songs like “Everyone’s a Little Bit Racist” and “Schadenfreude.” And when things are (temporarily) going well on Avenue Q, there are always two puppets called the Bad Idea Bears who pop up to whisper hilarious suggestions: “You have that money your parents sent you — why don’t you buy some beer?” and “Judge Judy is your friend!” All of this is a good deal more charming and less cynical than it sounds, with some talented puppeteer/actor/singers: Brent Michael DiRoma as Rod and Princeton and Jacqueline Grabois as Kate Monster and a tramp puppet named Lucy the Slut. Among the human characters, the only one who got consistent laughs on opening night was Lisa Helmi Johanson as Christmas Eve, though none of them were served by a sludgy sound system that made many of the lyrics indecipherable in the group numbers. No such problems, fortunately, marred Christmas Eve’s big torch song, “The More You Ruv Someone (The More You Want to Kill Them).” That’s as valuable a life lesson as anything Jim Henson ever dreamed up. — Kevin Allman
Gambit > bestofneworleans.com > JUNE 15 > 2010
The classic 1975 film The Stepford Wives had an of-its-time statement about “women’s lib” and the lengths to which men would go to squelch it — but Running With Scissors’ latest production, The Really Desperate Housewives of Stepford Parish, trades social satire for camp and pure laughs. Joanna (Dorian Rush) is a 1970s New Orleans wife with her own “liberated” interests (macaroni art) until her husband (Michael Sullivan) convinces her to move to Stepford Parish, home of “the first Chinese restaurant on the Northshore!” In Stepford Parish, the gals turn out to be Windex-wielding fembots more concerned with waxy yellow buildup than women’s lib — a mysterious transformation that always seems to occur after they return from a romantic weekend alone with their husbands in LaPlace. Whatever’s afoot seems to center on the sinister, secretive Stepford Men’s Club, an establishment that puts the “gay” in “gated community,” where Village People albums can be heard late at night and the hubbies are the town florists, antique dealers “and the Archbishop.” Soon, Joanna is plotting to leave Stepford Parish and move to Bush (“You’re not enthusiastic about Bush?” asks one character, poker-faced), but it may be too late to save Joanna’s macrame soul. Brian Peterson is a stitch as Joanna’s friend Bobbi, who transforms from blousy pot-smoking 1970s housewife to a buxom Robot Monster gargoyle in an Old Glory apron, and Bob Edes Jr. and Kyle Daigrepont get plenty of laughs in a variety of quick-change roles of every possible gender. Richard Read’s direction includes reality show-style video interludes, as well as a couple of pieces of wicker furniture straight out of the S&H Green Stamps catalog. While not as epic as some of Running With Scissors’ other sendup productions like Valley of the Dolls and The Titanic Adventures of the Love Boat Poseidon, Housewives is a Captain and Tennille-powered gas. When these Northshore hausfraus say “I’ll just die if I don’t get this recipe,” they ain’t kidding. — Kevin Allman
his monthly comedy show. Tickets $5. 9 p.m. Thursday.
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Children’s Museum, 420 Julia St., 523-1357; www.lcm. org — The museum hosts special Tuesday and Thursday activities for children ages 3-under and their parents or caregivers. Admission $7.50, free for members. 10 a.m. to 10:30 a.m.
Sunday PiCk-uPS available
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$5.00 Mojitos & $5.00 Margaritas Gambit > bestofneworleans.com > JUNE 15 > 2010
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Children’s Museum, 420 Julia St., 523-1357; www.lcm.org — The event includes giveaways and a performance by the titular book series character. 10:30 a.m.
Thursday 17 ART ACTIVITIES DURING AFTER HOURS. Ogden Museum of
Southern Art, 925 Camp St., 539-9600; www.ogdenmuseum.org — The Ogden offers art activities for kids during the weekly After Hours concerts. 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.
Saturday 19 CULU CHILDREN’S TRADITIONAL AFRICAN DANCE COMPANY. Ashé Cultural Arts
Center, 1712 Oretha Castle Haley Blvd., 569-9070; www. ashecac.org — The group performs its “A Visit to Africa” concert. Admission $15. 7 p.m.
SUMMERTIME MAGIC . Children’s Castle, 501 Williams Blvd., Kenner, 468-7231 — Irwin Royes, the “World’s Smallest Magician,” performs. Admission $5, $4 for fathers. 11:30 a.m.
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The annual Louisiana Bicycle Festival in Abita Springs is a haven for alternative bikes and cycling enthusiasts. Riders bring antique and custom bikes, including oddly reconfigured bikes that need to be mounted with ladders, motorized bikes and Dr. Seuss-like contraptions, and some bikers don costumes and ride in style. The event was created 10 years ago by John Preble, proprietor of Abita’s UCM Museum, home to such oddities as Buford the Bassigator and Darrell the Dogigator. The festival features a bicycle parade through town, wheeling and dealing among attendees who wish to sell or swap bicycles and gear, and bicycle competitions. There are prizes for period restorations, novelty bikes, art made from bikes or bike parts and other categories. The day also features music from DJ Professor Possum. The free-form rally has never required registration, but roughly 500 people attend the event every year. “It’s like an old car club but for bike enthusiasts,” Preble says. Free admission. — Sarah Eddington
JUN
19
louisiana Bicycle festival 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Saturday 22275 Hwy. 36, Abita Springs, (985) 8922624; www.labicyclefestival.com
MARKET. Broadway Street Market, 200 Broadway St., 861-5898; www.marketumbrella.org — The weekly market features fresh produce, kettle corn, Green Plate specials and flowers. 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. DEALING WITH LOSS. West Jefferson Behavioral Medicine Center, 229 Bellemeade Blvd., Gretna, 391-2440 — The center offers a weekly support group. Call Doreen Fowler for details. 6 p.m. DEPRESSION AND BIPOLAR SUPPORT ALLIANCE . Tulane-
Lakeside Hospital, 4700 South I-10 Service Road West, Metairie — The peer support group meets on the first and third Tuesdays of every month. Visit www. dbsaneworleans.org for details. 7:30 p.m. DIVORCE AND BEYOND.
Counseling Solutions of Catholic Charities, 921 Aris Ave., Metairie, 835-5007 — A licensed clinical social worker helps group participants going through the process of divorce. Call 835-5007 for details. MAKE THE CALL SEMINAR . Northshore Harbor Center, 100 Harbor Center Blvd., Slidell, (985) 781-3650 — The St. Tammany SALT council
hosts a discussion about abuse, neglect and exploitation of elders. Call (985) 8095450 for details. Admission $40, $65 professionals. 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m..
Wednesday 16 COVINGTON FARMERS MARKET. Covington City
Hall, 609 N. Columbia St., Covington, (985) 892-1873 — The market offers fresh local goods every week. 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Wednesday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday. FIESTA DEL RINOCERONTE .
Audubon Zoo, 6500 Magazine St., (800) ITS-A-ZOO; www. auduboninstitute.org — The local chapter of the American Association of Zoo Keepers’ picnic benefits rhinoceros conservation efforts and features music, food and lawn games. Email nolaaazk@live.com for details. Admission $30. 5 p.m to 10 p.m.
FRENCH MARKET FARMERS MARKET. French Market,
French Market Place, between Decatur and N. Peters streets, 522-2621; www.frenchmarket. org — The weekly market offers seasonal produce, seafood, prepared foods, smoothies and more. 3 p.m. to 7 p.m.
Expanded listings at bestofneworleans.com EvEntS GET TO KNOW GOD. Lost & Found Center, 901 Independence St., 3441234; www.lostandfoundcenter. org — The group meets every week to discuss Bible scripture. 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. GRIEF SUPPORT GROUP. East
Jefferson General Hospital, 4200 Houma Blvd., Metairie, 454-4000; www.ejgh.org — The American Cancer Society sponsors a group for those who have experienced the death of a loved one. Call 456-5000 for details. 6:30 p.m. to 8 p.m.
HEALTH BENEFITS OF TEA . English
Tea Room, 734 Rutland St., Covington, (985) 898-3988; www. englishtearoom.com — A tea and health expert leads a tasting of five different blends. Email info@ englishtearoom.com for details. Admission $15.95. 3:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. INFANCY TO INDEPENDENCE . St.
Matthew/Central United Church of Christ, 1333 S. Carrollton Ave., 861-8196; www.stmatthew-nola. org — The parent-child education and support group uses enriching activities in music, art and play. Visit www.infancytoindependence. org for details. 9:30 a.m. to noon Wednesday-Thursday.
LGBT YOUNG ADULT PEER SUPPORT GROUP. LGBT Community Center
of New Orleans, 2114 Decatur St.; www.lgbtccno.org — The group supports 18 to 24-year-olds dealing with the struggles of coming out, sexuality, family and relationships. 7 p.m.
LUNCHBOX LECTURE . National
World War II Museum, 945 Magazine St., 527-6012; www. nationalww2museum.org — The semi-monthly lecture series focuses on an array of World War II related topics. Call 528-1944 ext. 229 for details. 12 p.m.
MODEL GREEN HOUSE . 409 Andry
NONPAC MEETING . Seventh District
Station, 10555 Lake Forest Blvd. — The New Orleans Neighborhood Policing Anti-Crime Council holds its monthly meeting. 7 p.m.
WEDNESDAY NIGHTS AT JW MARRIOTT. JW Marriott New
Orleans, 614 Canal St., No. 4, 5256500; www.marriott.com — The hotel showcases local music and art with spirit tastings and hors d’oeuvres. 5:30 p.m. to 8 p.m.
WESTWEGO FARMERS & FISHERIES MARKET. 484 Sala Ave., Sala Avenue
and Fourth Street, Westwego — The market offers organic produce, baked goods, jewelry, art and more, with live music and pony rides. 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Wednesday and Saturday. WOMEN & WINE ON WEDNESDAYS.
American Sector, 945 Magazine St., (504)528-1940; www.nationalww2museum.org — The networking event features wine specials and tastings. Visit www.womenwinewednesday.com for details. 5:30 p.m. to 7 p.m. come. Admission $5. 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.
Thursday 17 30 DOLLA MAKE YOU HOLLA PRINT SALE . 3 Ring Circus’ The Big Top
Gallery, 1638 Clio St., 569-2700; www.3rcp.com — The sale features unframed prints from local artists. 6 p.m. to 9 p.m.
BUILD NOW TALKS. Build Now Model Home, 5713 Elysian Fields Ave., 324-3964; www.buildnownola.com — The monthly session educates about Road Home policies and new funding sources for potential homeowners. Preregistration required. Call 324-3964 or email mail@buildnownola.com for details. 6 p.m. CHAMBER AFTER 5. Country Inn
& Suites Hotel, 315 Magazine St. — The Chamber of Commerce’s networking event features hors d’oeuvres and drink specials. Visit www.neworleanschamber.org/ events for details. Admission $20, free for members. 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. CHANGES. Hey! Cafe, 4332
Magazine St., 891-8682; www.heycafe.biz — The weekly meetings teach focusing, a method of directing attention outside one’s body to effect change. Call 232-9787 for details. 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.
COOL CLOTHES FOR HOT DAYS.
SAVE OUR CEMETERIES CEMETERY TOURS. The group conducts tours
Encore Shop, 7814 Maple St., 8619028 — The sale of summer dresses and casual clothes benefits the Louisiana Philharmonic Orchestra. 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Thursday - Saturday
START THE ADVENTURE IN READING WORKDAY. St. Paul’s United
EPILEPSY & SEIZURE EDUCATIONAL SUPPORT GROUP. East Jefferson
of New Orleans cemeteries. Call 525-3377 for details.
Methodist Church, 6500 Jefferson Hwy., Harahan, 899-0820; www. stairnola.org — Participants prepare materials needed for the next school year, and also learn more about STAIR and exchange ideas about tutoring. Call 899-0820 for details. 1 p.m. to 3 p.m.
TALENT SHOWCASE . Le Roux, 1700 Louisiana Ave. — Masse Media Consulting, KMP and Men of Business host a weekly “You’ve Got Talent” showcase open to all poets, singers, dancers and others. Call
General Hospital, 4200 Houma Blvd., Metairie, 454-4000; www.ejgh.org — The Epilepsy Foundation of Louisiana holds a monthly support group for adults who have or are impacted by epilepsy or seizure disorders. The group meets in the Foundation Board Room. Call 800-960-0587 or email kelly@epilepsylouisiana.org for details. 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. FRESH MARKET. Circle Food Store,
1522 St. Bernard Ave. — The Downtown Neighborhood Market
Consortium market features fresh produce, dairy, seafood, baked goods and more. EBT and WIC accepted. 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. THE INN ON BOURBON’S NOLA BREW EXPERIENCE . The Inn on
Bourbon Hotel, 541 Bourbon St., 524-7611; www.innonbourbon.com — The beer tasting features brews from NOLA Brewery and food from the hotel’s Cafe de l’Opera. 6 p.m.
IRON RAIL LADIES’ NIGHT. The Iron Rail, 511 Marigny St., 948-0963; www. ironrail.org — Iron Rail offers a weekly creative space for women. Email ladiesnight.ironrail@gmail.com for details. 7:30 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. KNIT AND SIP. Castine Center,
Pelican Park, 63350 Pelican Drive, Mandeville, (985) 626-7997 — Knitters of all levels meet to knit, talk and drink coffee. Call (985) 626-7997 for details. 10 a.m. to noon.
NOCCA FILMMAKING & AUDIO PRODUCTION OPEN HOUSE .
NOCCA|Riverfront, 2800 Chartres St., 940-2787; www.nocca.com — The center offers a tour of its facilities to prospective students and their families. 3 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.
OXBOW SCHOOL INFORMATION SESSION . NOCCA|Riverfront
Senator John Breaux Library, 2800 Chartres St. — Representatives from the California-based fine arts program answer admissions questions. Visit www.oxbowschool.org for details. 3 p.m. PAUSE FOR DINNER . Various locations, visit website for details — Several local restaurants dedicate 20 percent of their sales to LA/ SPCA during regular dining hours. Visit www.la-spca.org for details. SISTAHS MAKING A CHANGE . Ashé Cultural Arts Center, 1712 Oretha Castle Haley Blvd., 569-9070; www.ashecac.org — The group offers lessons in African dance and more, with nutrition, health and wellness seminars. 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Thursday and Monday.
Friday 18 SPOTLIGHT ON SUCCESS.
Generations Hall, 310 Andrew Higgins Drive, 581-4367; www. generationshall.net — The Animal Krackers perform at the annual dinner honoring local business professionals. Contact 836-2087 for details. Admission starts at $60. 7:30 p.m. to midnight.
ART & ODDITIES DOUBLE VISION GEMINI PARTY. 3 Ring Circus’ The
Big Top Gallery, 1638 Clio St., 5692700; www.3rcp.com — The fundraiser benefiting the arts education center features live music, an art auction, food and karaoke. 6 p.m. FRAPPE FRIDAYS. Arnaud’s
Restaurant, 813 Bienville St., 5235433; www.arnauds.com — The series of luncheons delves into the history of Herbsaint liquor with demonstrations, memorabilia on display, an opportunity to make an Herbsaint frappe and a FrenchCreole meal. Call 523-5433 or email katy@arnauds.com for details. Admission $35. 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.
SUMMER OF BEER . Martin Wine Cellar, 2895 Highway 190, Mandeville, (985) 951-8081 — The tasting event features samples of more than 70 beers along with food. Admission $20. 6:30 p.m. TREE HUGGER HAPPY HOUR . Bridge
Lounge, 1201 Magazine St., 2991888 — The Louisiana Green Corps hosts a happy hour event to kick off Solar Day. Email suzy@lagreencorps.org for details. 5 p.m. to 7:30 p.m.
A WEEKEND WITH IMMACULEE . Pontchartrain Center, 4545 Williams Blvd., Kenner, 465-9985; www.pontchartraincenter.com — Rwandan genocide survivor and author Immaculee Ilibagiza leads a program focusing on the power of forgiveness and prayer. Visit www.immaculee,com for details. Admission $150 for three days. 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. Friday, 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. Saturday, 8 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. Sunday.
Saturday 19 BOURBON & BURLESQUE .
Contemporary Arts Center, 900 Camp St., 528-3800; www.cacno. org — The fundraiser features performances by local burlesque troupes, plus cuisine and cocktails from Bourbon House. Tickets $50, $25 members in advance; $70, $45 members at the door. 8 p.m. to 11 p.m.
CRESCENT CITY FARMERS MARKET. Magazine Street Market, Magazine and Girod streets, 861-5898; www. marketumbrella.org — The weekly market features fresh produce, flowers and food. 8 a.m. to noon. EAGLE WATCH . Fontainebleau State
Park, 67825 Hwy. 190, (888) 6773668 — A park ranger leads a viewing of the park’s eagle nest. 3 p.m.
ERACE NEW ORLEANS MEETING . J.
Singleton School, 1924 Philip St., 581-2388 — ERACE meets for its weekly discussion group. Call 8661163 for details. 10 a.m. to 11:30 a.m.
EXPERIENCE LATINOLA . Lakeside
Shopping Center, 3301 Veterans Memorial Blvd., Metairie, 8358000 — Puentes New Orleans and LatiNola hosts a community event featuring Latin performances, entertainment for children, free health screenings and giveaways. Call 821-7228 for details. 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Thursdays at Twilight Garden Concert Series
THIS WEEK’S PERFORMANCE
Lars Edegrain and the New Orleans Ragtime Orchesta Ragtime Music
JUNE 17
FATHER’S DAY CELEBRATION . Whole
Foods Market Arabella Station, 5600 Magazine St., 899-9119 — Dads (and everyone else) can enjoy special grilling demonstrations and samples. Noon to 2 p.m.
GERMAN COAST FARMERS MARKET. Ormond Plantation, 13786 River Road, Destrehan — The market features a wide range of fresh vegetables, fruits, flowers and other items. Visit www.germancoastfarmersmarket.org for details. 8 a.m. to noon. GREAT WHITES OF THE WORLD.
Martin Wine Cellar, 3500 Magazine St., 894-7420 — The walk-about tasting features 17 chilled wines and food. $30 per person. 6:30 p.m.
Adults = $8 / Children 5-12 = $4 Children 4 & Under = FREE Mint Juleps and other refreshments available for purchase For more information call
(504) 483-9488
Gambit > bestofneworleans.com > JUNE 15 > 2010
St., between Douglass Street and the levee; www.globalgreen. org/neworleans — Global Green provides tours of its model green house, which uses renewable energy from solar panels and other sources. Call 525-2121 or visit the website for details. 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday and Friday, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday.
899-4512 for details. General admission $10, performers $5. 9 p.m. to midnight.
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GRETNA FARMERS MARKET.
Gretna Farmers Market, Huey P. Long Avenue, between Third and Fourth streets, Gretna, 362-8661 — The market features more than 30 vendors offering a wide range of fruits, vegetables, meats and flowers. Free admission. 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
HOMEBUYER TRAINING CLASSES. Lower 9th Ward
NENA, 1120 Lamanche St., 3736483; www.9thwardnena. org — The weekly class provides assistance to New Orleans-area residents interested in purchasing a home. Pre-registration required. Call 373-6483 or email info@9thwardnena.org for details. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. JUNETEENTH: A CELEBRATION OF FREEDOM . Angela King
BEFORE
Gallery, 241 Royal St., 524-8211; www.angelakinggallery.com — Author Jed Horne speaks at the fundraiser for Resurrection After Exoneration, which also features food, drink and live music. Visit www.r-a-e.org for details. Admission $50. 5 p.m. to 7 p.m.
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Gambit > bestofneworleans.com > JUNE 15 > 2010
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MADISONVILLE ART MARKET. Madisonville Art Market, Tchefuncte River Front at Water St., Madisonville, (985) 871-4918; www.artformadisonville.org — The monthly market features fine art from local artists including painting, mixed media, photography, jewelry, wood carving, sculpture, stained glass and more. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
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Fontainebleau State Park, 67825 Hwy. 190, (888) 6773668 — Park rangers lead a weekly nature hike. 9 a.m. to 10:30 a.m.
NEW ORLEANS MONTESSORI SCHOOL 45TH ANNIVERSARY PARTY. Bayou Beer Garden,
326 N. Jefferson Davis Parkway, 302-9357; bayoubeergarden.com — The fundraiser features a live auction, music, food and a raffle for Sugar Bowl tickets. Call 2833633 for details. Admission $20 in advance, $25 at the door. 8 p.m. to 11 p.m. NEW ORLEANS SECULAR HUMANIST ASSOCIATION MEETING . Audubon Zoo,
Dominion Auditorium, 6500 Magazine St. — Michael Cavanaugh presents his lecture “Toward a Consilient Approach to Ethics.” Call 2825459 for details. 2 p.m. RESEARCHING THE HISTORY OF YOUR NEW ORLEANS PROPERTY. Old U.S. Mint,
400 Esplanade Ave., 5686990; lsm.crt.state.la.us/site/ mintex.htm — Friends of the Cabildo and the Preservation Resource Center host a lecture by architect and author Robert Cangelosi, Jr. Call 6363399 or visit www.prcno.org for details. Admission $35, $25 for FOC and PRC members. 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
SOLA NOLA . ArtEgg Building,
1001 S. Broad St. — The session provides information on solar energy tax credits, financing and jobs to celebrate national Solar Day. 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.
A SPEAKEASY AFFAIR . New
Orleans Athletic Club, 222 N. Rampart St., 525-2375; www. neworleansathleticclub.com — North Rampart Main Street hosts a fundraiser with food, drinks and live music. Call 2564848 for details. Admission $50. 8 p.m. to 11 p.m.
SURVIVOR SERIES. Fontainebleau State Park, 67825 Hwy. 190, (888) 6773668 — The program covers basic survival skills including foraging for food, starting fires and constructing shelters. 11 a.m. TREME UNDER THE BRIDGE MARKET. North Claiborne
Expressway, between Ursulines Avenue and Gov. Nicholls Street — The new monthly market highlights local artwork and features live music; community services like health and legal aid; and educational services and exhibits. 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. UPPER NINTH WARD MARKET. Frederick Douglass Senior High School, 3820 St. Claude Ave. — The weekly market offers fresh local produce, seafood, bread, cheese and plants. Sponsored by the Downtown Neighborhood Market Consortium. Call 482-5722 or email ggladney@ therenaissanceproject.la for details. 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. VISITING PET SUMMER VOLUNTEER ORIENTATION .
Harahan Senior Center, 100 Elodie St., 737-3810 — The animal-assisted therapy program hosts an information session for potential volunteers. Preregistration required. Email paws4visits@gmail.com for details. Admission $10. 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. WEST HARRISON BLOCK PARTY. West Harrison Avenue,
between Pontchartrain Boulevard and Fleur De Lis Drive — The annual event features a performance by Benny Grunch and the Bunch, a car show and space walk. Noon to 6 p.m.
a.m. to 10:30 a.m. DRINK ‘N’ DRAW. Circle Bar,
1032 St. Charles Ave., 588-2616 — The weekly event features a live model, happy hour drink specials and art instruction upon request. Call 299-9455 for details. Admission $20. 3 p.m. to 5 p.m.
LOUISIANA BOOKS 2 PRISONERS WORKNIGHT.
Nowe Miasto, 223 Jane Place; www.myspace.com/nowemiasto — The group sends books and letters to prisoners. 4 p.m. to 7 p.m.
NEEDLE JUNKIES. 3 Ring Circus’
The Big Top Gallery, 1638 Clio St., 569-2700; www.3rcp.com — The knitting group meets every Sunday. 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.
PRIMITIVE WOODWORKING . Fontainebleau State Park, 67825 Hwy. 190, (888) 6773668 — Park rangers host a weekly demonstration of woodworking techniques. 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Monday 21 CBT GROUP. Counseling Solutions of Catholic Charities, 921 Aris Ave., Metairie, 835-5007 — A licensed clinical social worker facilitates a 12-week Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) group for depression. Call for details. UNITED NONPROFITS OF GREATER NEW ORLEANS.
Nonprofit Central, 1824 Oretha Castle Haley Blvd., 895-2361; www.nonprofitcentral.org — Nonprofit Central hosts a weekly meeting for all leaders of nonprofit groups. 9:30 a.m. to 11 a.m.
CaLL for appLiCations CENTER FOR CULTURAL INTERCHANGE . The center
seeks families to host foreign exchange students during the upcoming school year. Email ayp@cci-exchange.com or visit www.cci-exchange. com/host.htm for details. Application deadline is Aug. 31.
FLO WOODARD MEMORIAL BARTENDING SCHOLARSHIP.
ABITA ARTISTS. Berkeley
The New Orleans Culinary and Cultural Preservation Society and Crescent City School of Bartending select a professional bartender to attend a training course valued at $3,000. Email flowoodardbarscholarship@crescentschools.com for details.
DIMENSIONS OF LIFE DIALOGUE . New Orleans
LOUISIANA COMPOSERS FORUM . Composers can
Sunday 20 Gallery, 72066 Maple St., Abita Springs — Artists hold a monthly meeting. Call Lana at 898-3071 for details. 3 p.m.
Lyceum, 618 City Park Ave., 460-9049; www.lyceumproject.com — The nonreligious, holistic discussion group focuses on human behavior with the goal of finding fulfillment and enlightenment. Call 368-9770 for details. Free. 9
submit original compositions for possible inclusion in a Sept. 29 performance by a 20-piece orchestra. Call 831-7145 or email LouisianaComposersForum@ gmail.com for details. Deadline is July 3.
bestofneworleans.com EvEnts LOUISIANA YEAR OF THE SONG 2010 SONG CONTEST. The contest winner wins a two-
day writing session with songwriter Jim McCormick. Visit www.nosongfest.com/ song+contest for details. Application deadline is Oct. 15.
NEW ORLEANS TRADITIONAL JAZZ CAMP.
The summer music camp for adults accepts applications for professional and amateur musicians and vocalists. Visit www.neworleanstradjazzcamp.com for details.
PROJECT HOMECOMING . The faith-based
nonprofit seeks homes still damaged (50 percent or more) by Hurricane Katrina to be rebuilt. Call 942-0444 ext. 244 for details.
words BRYAN BATT. Garden District Book Shop,
The Rink, 2727 Prytania St., 895-2266 — The author signs She Ain’t Heavy, She’s My Mother. 1 p.m. Saturday.
CARLA NEGGERS. Garden District Book Shop, The Rink, 2727 Prytania St., 895-2266 — The author signs Whisperer. 5:30 p.m. Saturday. EARL HAMPTON . Hubbell Library, 725
Pelican Ave., Algiers Point, 596-2640; www.nutrias.org — The author signs Streetcars of New Orleans: 1964-Present. 6:30 p.m. Tuesday.
HAROLD BATTISTE JR. & KAREN CELSTAN.
Octavia Books, 513 Octavia St., 899-7323 — The authors sign Unfinished Blues: Memories of a New Orleans Music Man. 6 p.m. Tuesday. HERMANN-GRIMA/GALLIER HISTORIC HOUSES BOOK CLUB. Gallier House
Museum, 1132 Royal St., 525-5661; www. hgghh.org — The group discusses Louisa May Alcott’s Little Women. Noon to 2 p.m. Saturday. INTERNATIONAL FICTION BOOK CLUB. Blue
MID-CITY WRITERS GROUP. Prose writers
meet to read and critique original work. Email midcity.writers@gmail.com for details. Tuesday.
MINROSE GWIN . Octavia Books, 513 Octavia St., 899-7323 — The author signs and reads from The Queen of Palmyra. 6 p.m. Friday. NICOLE & PETER COOLEY. Octavia Books, 513 Octavia St., 899-7323 — The poets read from their various books. 6 pm. Wednesday. NOLDE ALEXIUS & JUDY KAHN . Maple Street Book Shop, 7523 Maple St., 866-4916; www.maplestreetbookshop.com — The authors sign Best of LSU Fiction. 1 p.m. Saturday. OCTAVIA BOOKS BOOK CLUB. Octavia Books, 513 Octavia St., 899-7323 — The group discusses Elizabeth Strout’s Olive Kitteridge. 10:30 a.m. Saturday. SOLA-RWA WRITERS GROUP. East Bank
Regional Library, 4747 W. Napoleon Ave., Metairie, 838-1190 — Karen Rose discusses “Letting the ’Fraidy Cat Out Of The Bag: How to Deal with Irrational Writers’ Fears.” 10 a.m. Saturday.
UPTOWN FREE READERS BOOK CLUB. Maple
Street Book Shop, 7523 Maple St., 8664916; www.maplestreetbookshop.com — The group discusses Anne Frank’s Diary of a Young Girl. 6:30 p.m. Wednesday.
Gambit > bestofneworleans.com > JUNE 15 > 2010
Cypress Books, 8126 Oak St., 352-0096 — The group discusses Orhan Pamuk’s My Name is Red. 5:30 p.m. Wednesday.
47
FuNDRAISER
ALuMS, FAMILy
and
FRIENDS
Gambit > bestofneworleans.com > JUNE 15 > 2010
NEW ORLEANS MONTESSORI SChOOL
48
45th Anniversary Celebration N AuCTIuOSIC LIVE M FOODkS & DRIN
Saturday, June 19, 2010 ~ 8pm-11pm at The Beer Garden 326 N. Jefferson Davis Pkwy.
FREE PARkING DIRECTLy BEhIND BuILDING
$20 Advance Tickets | $25 At Door $10 Raffle Tickets
helpsupport
OuR SChOOL
FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL MARIJKE ALBERS 504.957.7201 or email nomsteachers@netzero.com
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<< Email Ian McNulty at imcnulty@cox.net. >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<< >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < <YOU’RE GOLDEN, UPTOWN > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > >Jung’s Golden Dragon (3009 Magazine St., 891-8280; www. jungsgoldendragon2.com), a longtime fixture in Metairie, < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < < <PUTTING < < < < < < <EVERYTHING < < < < < < < < < <ON < < <THE < < < TABLE < < < < < < < < < < < < < <has moved to Uptown, taking over an ornate space that has housed a succession of short-lived Asian restaurants. Jung’s serves a menu of American-Chinese standards and traditional Chinese dishes. On weekend mornings, ask for the “Chinese breakfast” menu for a special lineup of authentic soups, dumplings and noodle dishes.
am
B
NEW CULINARY AVENUES
The casual Cafe on the Avenue (4600 Washington Ave., 482-6565) opened in May in a sharply renovated space in Gert Town near Xavier University, featuring a large patio and banks of flat-screen TVs. The morning menu features pancakes, eggs, fried steak and pork chops, and at lunch there are wings, poboys, burgers, gumbo, jambalaya and red beans.
five 5 IN
FIVE PLACES FOR LIVER
RALPH’S ON THE PARK
900 CITY PARK AVE., 488-1000 www.ralphsonthepark.com
Pan-fried chicken livers are wrapped in serrano ham and served atop grits.
COCHON
930 TCHOUPITOULAS ST., 588-2123 ww.cochonrestaurant.com
Oil and Water
CLEAN WETLANDS ARE THE KEY TO FUTURE SEAFOOD HARVESTS. BY IAN MCNULTY
I
PHOTO BY CHERYL GERBER
“The wetlands are where everything is produced, and it’s all there in its most vulnerable state: young fish, young shrimp, young oysters, young birds,” says Kerry St. Pe, a fisheries biologist and director of the Barataria-Terrebone National Estuary Program, a local conservation group. “The main thing is to do no harm to the wetlands. If you can save the wetlands, you have a nursery to replace all the animals you lost from the spill.” A recent boat tour of this wildly productive environment served as a chilling preview of what could be if we allow it to be poisoned by the oil disaster. Local seafood industry leaders organized the trip, which was led by Wilbert Collins’ family over their oyster leases in Caminada Bay, just off Grand Isle, an area that appeared clean at the time but had been closed by the state because an oil sheen had been sighted there days earlier. The oyster boat chugged around submerged oyster reefs while our hosts discussed the peril to a way of life in the largely family-based fishing business, where one generation often teaches the ropes to the next. BP may cut checks to cover losses, but if estuaries are befouled and future harvests are compromised — if the reputation of Gulf seafood is lastingly tainted and people can’t or won’t eat it, and if the next generation can’t earn a living fishing — then those early, frightened runs to stock the freezer may well prove prophetic. Caminada Bay should have been swarming with commercial and recreational fishing boats on the day of our tour. But little was astir. The fins of porpoises arched out of the water occasionally and helicopters rumbled above, headed toward the rigs offshore. But no one was fishing except the pelicans.
Fried rabbit livers are served with fresh herbs on toast.
PRALINE CONNECTION
542 FRENCHMEN ST., 943-3934 www.pralineconnection.com
Fried chicken livers in gravy come with crowder peas, okra and rice.
FLAMING TORCH
737 OCTAVIA ST., 895-0900 www.flamingtorchnola.com
Veal liver Lyonnaise is sauteed and served with caramelized onions.
LA PENICHE
1940 DAUPHINE ST., 943-1460
Fried chicken livers are smothered in brown gravy and onions.
Questions? Email winediva1@earthlink.net.
2005 Lan Crianza RIOJA, SPAIN / $15-$18 RETAIL
A pleasant, easy-drinking wine, this bottling was produced primarily in the Old World style from 100 percent Tempranillo, Rioja’s major grape. The medium-bodied wine aged for a year in a combination of American and French oak, and rested in the bottle for several more months before release. In the glass, subtle aromas of red and dark fruit, earth and leathery notes, cedar and vanilla precede soft flavors of black cherry and plum, nuances of black tea, spice and a touch of gravelly minerality. Smooth tannins are balanced by good acidity. Decant before serving. Enjoy it with tapas, olives, pizza, manchego cheese, roasted meats, poultry, sausage and spicy foods. Buy it at: Dorignac’s and Acquistapace’s Covington Supermarket. Drink it at: Herbsaint, Palace Cafe and The Delachaise. — Brenda Maitland
Gambit > bestofneworleans.com > JUNE 15 > 2010
mmediately after Hurricane Katrina, as many of us searched for information about our city from afar, rumors of worst-case scenarios spread much faster than facts. One friend tearfully assured me that every oak lining Esplanade Avenue had been blown down, news supposedly transmitted to her by an eyewitness. The ridiculous notion that sharks were prowling Canal Street was actually told and retold, and for some out-of-towners the idea of a submersed New Orleans lingered in the imagination for years. For home cooks and restaurant patrons, the true impact on Louisiana seafood from the BP oil disaster is similarly difficult to reckon. Early in the crisis, many people rushed to load freezers with local seafood, shopping sprees driven by fears that each purchase could be the last for some time. More recently, seafood buyers around the country have begun refusing Gulf product, fearing contamination, and some restaurants now prominently assure patrons they use nothing from our region. (See Alex Woodward’s story, “Fins Across America,” p. 9.) But nearly two months into this crisis, though oysters are now scarce, local markets remain well stocked with Louisiana shrimp, crab and fin fish at fairly stable prices. Like news of the worst in the Katrina aftermath, the anxiety and confusion over our seafood comes from the dread state of not knowing what will happen and how bad things will get. But while the focus has been on the immediate supply and who can get what tomorrow, others worry how things will be next year and beyond if more is not done to keep oil from penetrating deep into Louisiana’s coastal wetlands.
Al Sunseri, co-owner of P&J Oyster Co., laid off the company’s shuckers June 10, making national news. P&J, the country’s oldest oyster purveyor, has been in the trade since 1876.
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You are what You eat <<<<<<<<<<<<<<< >>>>>>>>>
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k In 1986 k CAFE DU MONDE
, was voted ,
best PLACe FOR COFFee
Dollar signs represent the average cost of a dinner entree: $ — under $10; $$ — $11 to $20; $$$ — $21 or more. To update information in the Out 2 Eat listings, email willc@gambitweekly.com, fax 483-3116 or call Will Coviello at 483-3106. Deadline is 10 a.m. Monday.
AMERICAN CON� TEMPORARY 5 Fifty 5 — 555 Canal St., 553-5638;
www.555canal.com — New Orleans dishes and Americana favorites take an elegant turn in dishes such as the lobster mac and cheese, combining lobster meat, elbow macaroni and mascarpone, boursin and white cheddar cheeses. Reservations recommended. Breakfast, lunch and dinner daily. Credit cards. $$$
BAYONA — 430 Dauphine St., 5254455; www.bayona.com — House favorites on Chef Susan Spicer’s menu include sauteed Pacific salmon with choucroute and Gewurztraminer sauce and the appetizer of grilled shrimp with black-bean cake and coriander sauce. Reservations recommended. Lunch Wed.-Sat., dinner Mon.Sat. Credit cards. $$$ THE GREEN GODDESS — 307 Ex-
Gambit > bestofneworleans.com > JUNE 15 > 2010
Which coffeehouse will win in 2010?
50
Gambit’s Best of New Orleans® Reader’s Poll
t h e OR igi Na l
si Nc e 1986
change Alley, 301-3347; www. greengoddessnola.com — Chef Chris DeBarr’s contemporary cooking combines classic techniques, exotic ingredients and culinary wit. At lunch, Big Cactus Chilaquiles feature poached eggs on homemade tortillas with salsa verde, queso fresca and nopalitos. No reservations. Lunch daily, dinner Thu.-Sun. Credit cards. $$ ONE RESTAURANT & LOUNGE —
8132 Hampson St., 301-9061; www.one-sl.com — Chef Scott Snodgrass prepares refined dishes like char-grilled oysters topped with Roquefort cheese and a red wine vinaigrette, seared scallops with roasted garlic and shiitake polenta cakes and a memorable cochon de lait. Reservations recommended. Lunch Thu.-Fri., dinner Mon.-Sat. Credit cards. $$
BAR & GRILL THE CLUBHOUSE BAR & GRILL —
4617 Sanford St., Metairie, 8835905 — Clubhouse offers burgers and sandwiches. The black and blue burger is stuffed with blue cheese and blackened on the grill. Or try the blackened chicken Caesar wrap. No reservations. Lunch and dinner daily. Credit cards. $
DINO’S BAR & GRILL — 1128 Tchoupitoulas St., 558-0900 — Dino’s kitchen serves burgers, chicken tenders, salads and wraps. Happy hour is from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. weekdays. No reservations. Lunch, dinner and latenight daily. Credit cards and checks. $
Voting starts July 6
in Gambit and on bestofneworleans.com
JIGGERS — 1645 Veterans Memorial Blvd., Metaire, 828-3555 — Enjoy daily specials like red and beans rice with a pork chop on Mondays or order burgers, salads and wraps from the regular menu. No reservations. Lunch and dinner daily. Credit cards. $
RENDON INN BAR & GRILL — 4501 Eve St., 826-5605 — Try appetizers such as spinach and artichoke dip, hot wings or fried pickles. Off the grill there are burgers, chicken sandwiches or cheese quesadillas. Other options include salads. No reservations. Lunch and dinner daily. Credit cards. $
THE RIVERSHACK TAVERN — 3449
River Road, 834-4938; www. therivershacktavern.com — This bar and music spot offers a menu of burgers, sandwiches overflowing with deli meats and changing lunch specials. No reservations. Lunch and dinner daily. Credit cards. $
ZACHARY’S BY THE LAKE — 7224 Pontchartrain Blvd., 872-9832; www.zacharysbythelake.com — Zachary’s serves seafood platters, po-boys, salads, barbecue shrimp and more. Jumbo Gulf shrimp with cane syrup are wrapped in bacon, fried crispy and served with pickled okra salad. No reservations. Lunch and dinner daily. Credit cards. $$
BARBECUE ABITA BAR-B-Q — 69399 Hwy.
59, Abita Springs, (985) 892-0205 — Fresh Louisiana boudin made with pork, rice and seasonings is a specialty at this Northshore smokehouse. Also try pulled pork with sides like baked beans and potato salad. No reservations. Lunch Mon.-Sat., dinner Tue.-Sat. Credit cards. $
WALKER’S BAR-B-QUE — 10828 Hayne Blvd., 281-8227; www.cochondelaitpoboys.com — The makers of the Jazz Fest cochon de lait po-boy serve pork, ribs, chicken and more. The family feast includes a half-slab of ribs, half a chicken, half a pound of brisket, pork and sausage, two side orders, bread and sauce. No reservations. Lunch Tue.-Fri., dinner Saturday. Cash only. $
CRESCENT CITY BREWHOUSE —
527 Decatur St., 522-0571; www. crescentcitybrewhouse.com — This French Quarter brewhouse serves baked oysters, salads and crabcakes stand alongside grilled strip steaks, crispy duck and tender brewhouse ribs. Beers change seasonally. Reservations recommended. Lunch and dinner daily. Credit cards. $$
CAFE RESTAURANT
LAFITTE’S CAFE — 6325 Elysian Fields Ave., 284-7878; www.lafittescafe.com — Lafitte’s serves wraps with a wide selection of fillings, burgers and patty melts, salads, sandwiches and baked potatoes. No reservations. Breakfast, lunch and dinner daily. Credit cards. $ LAKEVIEW BREW COFFEE CAFE —
5606 Canal Blvd., 483-7001 — This casual cafe offers gourmet coffees and a wide range of pastries and desserts baked in house, plus a menu of specialty sandwiches and salads. Breakfast is available all day on weekends. No reservations. Breakfast and lunch daily, dinner Mon.-Sat. Credit cards. $
PARKVIEW CAFE AT CITY PARK —
City Park, 1 Palm Drive, 483-9474 — Located in the old Casino Building, the cafe serves gourmet coffee, sandwiches, salads and ice cream till early evening. No reservations. Lunch and early dinner daily. Credit cards. $
RICCOBONO’S PANOLA STREET CAFE — 7801 Panola St., 314-1810
— Specialties include crabcakes Benedict — two crabcakes and poached eggs topped with hollandaise sauce and potatoes — and the Sausalito omelet with spinach, mushrooms, shallots and mozzarella. No reservations. Breakfast and lunch daily. Credit cards. $
THE RUBY SLIPPER CAFE — 139
N. Cortez St., 309-5531; www. therubyslippercafe.net — This casual cafe offers breakfast options such as two eggs with sausage or applewood-smoke bacon or barbecued shrimp and grits. Lunch options include burgers, sandwiches, salads and changing specials. No reservations. Breakfast and lunch Tue.-Fri., brunch Sat.-Sun. Credit cards. $
ST. JAMES CHEESE — 5004 Pryta-
BREWPUB
ELIZABETH’S
homemade desserts. No reservations. Lunch Tue.-Fri., dinner Tue.-Sat., brunch Sat.-Sun. Credit cards. $$
—
601 Gallier St., 944-9272; www. elizabeths-restaurant.com — Signature praline bacon sweetens brunch at this Bywater spot. Dinner brings options like fish and scallop specials. Also enjoy
nia St., 899-4737; www.stjamescheese.com — The cheese shop offers more than 100 varieties of cheese from around the world. A small menu includes creative sandwiches, salads and specials. The Radette cheese sandwich includes house-made pastrami and spicy pickles on rye. No reservations. Lunch daily, dinner Fri.-Sat. Credit cards. $
TED’S FROSTOP — 3100 Calhoun St., 861-3615 — The signature Loto-Burger is as good as ever, or try the castle burgers. Fried seafood and plate lunches provide square meals, as do the sandwiches and salads. No reservations. Breakfast, lunch and dinner daily. Credit cards. $ TERRAZU — 201 St. Charles Ave.,
287-0877 — Located in Place
L/S:4.5”
Expanded listings at bestofneworleans.com
St. Charles, Terrazu serves coffee drinks and a menu of soups, salads and sandwiches. The Terrazu salad is topped with boiled shrimp, hearts of palm and avocado. No reservations. Breakfast, lunch and dinner Mon.-Fri. Credit cards. $
CHINESE CHINA ORCHID — 702 S. Car-
rollton Ave., 865-1428; wwww. chinaorchidneworleans.com — China Orchid serves a wide array of dishes including soups, fried rice, egg foo young, lo mein and more. Empress chow mein, mango shrimp or chicken, and triple dragon with shrimp, chicken and beef are specialties. Delivery available. Reservations accepted. Lunch and dinner daily. Credit cards. $
CHINA ROSE — 3501 N. Arnoult Road., Metairie, 887-3295 — China Rose offers many Chinese seafood specialties. The Lomi Lomi combines jumbo shrimp, pineapple and water chestnuts wrapped in bacon, fries them golden brown and serves them on a bed of sautéed vegetables. Reservations accepted. Lunch and dinner daily. Credit cards. $
FIVE HAPPINESS — 3511 S. Carroll-
ton Ave., 482-3935 — The large menu at Five Happiness offers a range of dishes from wonton soup to sizzling seafood combinations served on a hot plate to sizzling Go-Ba to lo mein dishes. Delivery and banquest facilities available. Reservations accepted. Lunch and dinner daily. Credit cards. $$
THREE HAPPINESS — 1900 Lafay-
ette St., Suite 4, Gretna, 368-1355; www.threehappiness.com — Three Happiness serves Chinese and Vietnames dishes and dim sum specials on weekends. Westlake duck features tender duck with snow peas, corn, straw mushrooms and napa cabbage. Vietnamese crepes are served with pork and shrimp. Reservations accepted. Lunch and dinner Tue.-Sun. Credit cards. $$
TREY YUEN CUISINE OF CHINA — 600 N. Causeway Approach.,
Mandeville, (985) 626-4476; 2100 N. Morrison Blvd., Hammond, (985) 345-6789; www.tryyuen. com — House specialties include fried soft-shell crab topped with Tong Cho sauce, and Cantonese-style stir-fried alligator and mushrooms in oyster sauce. Reservations accepted for large parties. Lunch and dinner daily. Credit cards. $$
BEN ’N JERRY’S — 3500 Veterans
Memorial Blvd., Metairie, 8875656 — Ben ’n Jerry’s offers rich ice creams in signature flavors, ice cream cakes, frozen drinks, fruit smoothies and sundaes. No reservations. Lunch and dinner daily. Credit cards. $
CREOLE ANTOINE’S RESTAURANT — 713 St.
Louis St., 581-4422; www.antoines. com — The city’s oldest restaurant offers a glimpse of what 19th century French Creole dining might have been like, with a labyrinthine series of dining rooms. Signature dishes include oysters Rockefeller, crawfish Cardinal and baked Alaska. Reservations recommended. Lunch and dinner Mon-Sat., brunch Sun. Credit cards. $$$ AUSTIN’S RESTAURANT — 5101 W. Esplanade Ave., Metairie, 888-5533; www.austinsno.com — Austin’s cooks hearty Creole and Italian dishes like stuffed soft-shell crab and veal Austin, which is crowned with crabmeat. No reservations. Dinner Mon.-Sat. Credit cards. $$
GUMBO SHOP — 640 St. Peter St.,
DINER DOT’S DINER — 2239 Willliams
Blvd., Kenner, 441-5600; 4150 Jefferson Hwy., Jefferson, 833-9349; 6633 Airline Drive, Metairie, 7340301; 10701 Jefferson Hwy., River Ridge, 738-9678; 12179 Hwy. 90, Luling, (985) 785-6836 — Burgers, eggs with bacon, grits and biscuits, fruit pies and daily specials are the pillars of Dot’s menu. Breakfast, lunch and dinner are served all day long. No reservations. Hours vary by location. Credit cards. $
WHO put the sizzle in Ruth’s Chris Steak House? Ruth Fertel. The woman who mortgaged her home on a hunch and bought a neighborhood steak house, which eventually grew into a family of local steak houses. Using an 1800° broiler and 500° plates, steaks are still cooked and presented just the way Ruth would insist: sizzling.
STEVE’S DINER — 201 St. Charles Ave., 522-8198 — Located in the Place St. Charles food court, Steve’s serves hot breakfasts until 10 a.m. Lunch features sandwiches, salads and hot plate lunches such as fried catfish and baked chicken Parmesan. No reservations. Breakfast and lunch Mon.-Fri. Credit cards. $
FRENCH
Metairie • New Orleans • Biloxi
MARTINIQUE BISTRO — 5908 Mag-
azine St., 891-8495; www.martiniquebistro.com — This French bistro has both a cozy dining room and a pretty courtyard. Try dishes such as Steen’s-cured duck breast with satsuma and ginger demi-glace and stone-ground goat cheese grits. Reservations recommended. Lunch Fri., dinner Tue.-Sun., brunch Sat.-Sun. Credit cards. $$$
525-1486; www.gumboshop.com — “Since 1969” Gumbo and New Orleans classics 200 Varick St. New York, NY 10014 : Phone 212-805-7500 such as crawfish etouffee dominate the menu. Their spicy flavors Client: Ruth’s Chris Steak House WO: 45th Anniversary Print - Gambit Weekly meld into a dish that represents the city’s best and redefines com-PATH: M.P_MECHANICALS:Volumes:M.P_MECHANICALS:Ruths_Chris:RCS:COR:P08422:RCS_COR_P08422_B14_14D_14F_20A fort food. No reservations. Lunch GOURMET TO GO TEAM MEDIA / PRINT INFO COLORS and dinner daily. Credit cards. $ SPECS CATERING available BREAUX MART — 315 E. Judge Cyan Creative: Pubs: Jean Batthany None Gambit Weekly LE CITRON BISTRO — 1539 ReligiousL/S: None Perez, Chalmette, 262-0750; 605 Magenta COUPON St., 566-9051; www.le-citronbistro.DOC Lapalco Media: Newsprint SIZE: 4.5” x 4.625” FONTS Blvd., Gretna, 433-0333;Acct: Jackie Ferrer Yellow com — Located in a historic build2904 Severn Ave., Metairie, 885any Mrs Eaves Italic Prod/Traf: Janice Thor Klodet Torosian Line Screen: 100 lpi B: None Black ing, the quaint bistro serves start5565; 9647 Jefferson Hwy., River Helvetica Medium color Lunch5:11 PM @ 100% Studio: Kevin Tinsley Printed: 5-3-2010 ers like chicken and andouille gum-G: None Mrs Eaves All Petite Caps Ridge, 737-8146; www.breauxstarti Specials ng at bo and fried frogs legs. EntreesIMAGES Mrs Eaves Petite Caps mart.com — Breaux Mart prides $6.99 include choices like fried chicken, Mrs Eaves Roman Lining ! itself on its “Deli to Geaux” as RCS_VintageRestaurant_Kn_300.tif (Gray; 21.46%; 1397 ppi; SuperStudio:ART:MNH:Ruthschris:Vintage Restaurant Shot:RCS_VintageRestaurant_Kn_300.tif) News Gothic BT Gulf fish and burgers. Reservawell as weekday specials. No restions accepted. Dinner Wed.-Sat.,RCS_Bkgnd_5x10_notexture_Cn_300.tif (CMYK; 92.5%, 29.13%; 324 ppi, 1029 ppi; SuperStudio:ART:MNH:Ruthschris:Filet_Solo:RCS_Bkgnd_5x10_notexture_Cn_300.tif) ervations. Lunch and dinner daily. brunch Sun. Credit cards. $$ Credit cards. $ (100%; SuperStudio:Logos:Ruths_Chris:_Official_Logos:SmallSpace:With_Stamp:RCSH_USP_4CP_1.ai) RCSH_USP_4CP_1.ai years_logo_news.ai) Come visit usanniversary:45 soon, only MR. ED’S CREOLE GRILLE— 524145 years_logo_news.ai (104.6%; SuperStudio:Logos:Ruths_Chris:45th 15/10 EXPIRES 07/ 2 miles north of I-12 on the left ONLY Veterans Memorial Blvd., Metairie, CASH & CARRY PONS. COUPON ANY OTHER COU INDIAN 889-7992; www.mredsno.com — NOT VALID W/ ENT AT TIME OF PURCHASE. MUST BE PRES Tues-Thurs 11-8, | Fri-Sat 11-8:30 COUPON Mr. Ed’s offers seafood dishes JULIE’S LITTLE INDIA KITCHEN AT and some Italian accents. Try SCHIRO’S — 2483 Royal St., 94469399 Highway 59 | Abita Springs, LA shrimp beignets with sweet chili 6666; www.schiroscafe.com any glaze or creamy blue crab dip. — The cafe offers homemade type Eggplant Vincent is a fried eggIndian dishes prepared with plant cup filled with crawfish and freshly ground herbs and spices. shrimp and served with pasta. Selections include chicken, lamb No reservations. Lunch and dinWAREHOUSE or shrimp curry or vegetarian ner Mon.-Sat. Credit cards. $$ saag paneer. Schiro’s also serves IN STOCK ONLY New Orleans cuisine. ReservaMONTREL’S BISTRO — 1000 N. F U R N I T U R E EXPIRES tions accepted. Lunch and din07/15/10 Peters St., 524-4747 — This casual TO THE PUBLIC ner Mon.-Sat., brunch Sat.-Sun. NOT VALID CASH & CARRY ONLY restaurant serves Creole favorW/ ANY OTH ER COU MUST BE PRE Credit cards. $ SENT AT TIM PONS. COUPON ites. The menu includes crawfish E OF PURCHA SE. etouffee, boiled crawfish, red NIRVANA INDIAN CUISINE — 4308 beans and rice and bread pudMagazine St., 894-9797 — Serving ding for dessert. Outdoor seating mostly northern Indian cuisine, is adjacent to Dutch Alley and the restaurant’s extensive menu the French Market. Reservations ranges from chicken to vegetable accepted. Breakfast, lunch and dishes. Reservations accepted for dinner daily. Credit cards. $$ five or more. Lunch and dinner Tue.-Sun. Credit cards. $$
RCS_COR_P08422_B14_14D_14F_20A
COLD BE ER !
985-892-0205
PRICES
599
$
DELI MARTIN WINE CELLAR — 714
Elmeer Ave., Metairie , 896-7350; www.martinwine.com — Sand-
TAJ MAHAL INDIAN CUISINE — 923C Metairie Road, Metairie, 8366859 — The traditional menu features lamb, chicken and seafood served in a variety of ways, including curries and tandoori. Vegetarian options are available. Reser-
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COVINGTON 1027 VILLAGE WALK (985) 809-9101
504.305.4247
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comes in five different colors
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Gambit > bestofneworleans.com > JUNE 15 > 2010
JUNG’S GOLDEN DRAGON — 3009 Magazine St., 891-8280; www. jungsgoldendragon2.com — Jung’s offers a mix of Chinese, Thai and Korean cuisine. Chinese specialties include Mandarin, Szechuan and Hunan dishes. Grand Marnier shrimp are lightly battered and served with Grand Marnier sauce, broccoli and pecans. Reservations accepted. Lunch and dinner daily. Credit cards. $
ANTOINE’S ANNEX — 513 Royal St., 581-4422; www.antoines.com — The Annex is a coffee shop serving pastries, sandwiches, soups, salads and gelato. The Royal Street salad features baby spinach and mixed lettuces with carrots, red onion, red peppers, grapes, olives, walnuts and raspberry vinaigrette. No reservations. Breakfast, lunch and dinner daily. Credit cards. $
Original Ruth’s Chris Steak House, New Orleans, 1965
wiches piled high with cold cuts, salads, hot sandwiches, soups and lunch specials are available at the deli counter. The Cedric features chicken breast, spinach, Swiss, tomatoes and red onions on seven-grain bread. No reservations. Lunch daily. Credit cards. $
L/S:4.625”
VINE & DINE — 141 Delaronde St., 361-1402; www.vine-dine.com — The cafe serves cheese boards and charcuterie plates with pate and cured meats. There also is a menu of sandwiches, quesadillas, bruschettas, salads and dips. No reservations. Lunch Tue.-Sat., dinner Mon.-Sat. Credit cards. $$
COFFEE/ DESSERT
51
Regula Regula Regula Bold
OUT2EAT vations recommended. Lunch and dinner Tue.-Sun. Credit cards. $$
ITALIAN ANDREA’S NORTHERN ITALIAN SEAFOOD RESTAURANT — 3100 N.
19th St., Metairie, 834-8583; www. andreasrestaurant.com — Chefowner Andrea Apuzzo’s specialties of the house include Trota Bayou la Fourche — speckled trout served with lump crabmeat in a lemoncream sauce. Reservations recommended. Lunch Mon.-Fri., dinner daily, brunch Sun. Credit cards. $$$
BACCO — 310 Chartres St., 522-2426; www.bacco.com — Bacco blends Italian and contemporary Creole cuisine. Chef Chris Montero artfully prepares homemade pastas and fresh seafood, including lobster and shrimp ravioli. Reservations recommended. Lunch and dinner daily. Credit cards. $$$
CAFE DIBLASI — 1801 Stumpf Blvd., Gretna, 361-3106; www.cafediblasi. com — For casual Italian dining, head to Cafe DiBlasi for pan-fried veal topped with lump crabmeat and lemon cream sauce or a traditional veal shank osso buco served with rich brown sauce. Reservations accepted. Lunch Tue.-Fri., dinner Tue.-Sat. Credit cards. $$
RICCOBONO’S PEPPERMILL RESTAURANT — 3524 Severn Ave., Metairie,
455-2266 — This Italian-style eatery serves New Orleans favorites like stuffed crabs with jumbo lump crabmeat with spaghetti bordelaise and trout meuniere with brabant potatoes. No reservations. Breakfast and lunch daily, dinner Wed.-Sun. Credit cards. $$
TONY MANDINA’S RESTAURANT — 1915 Pratt St., Gretna, 362-2010;
Gambit > bestofneworleans.com > JUNE 15 > 2010
www.tonymandinas.com — Tony Mandina’s serves Italian and Creole cuisine. Dishes include pasta, veal parmigiana, veal Bordelasie and specialties like shrimp Mandina and battered eggplant topped with shrimp and crabmeat in cream sauce. Reservations accepted. Lunch Tue.-Fri., dinner Fri.-Sat. Credit cards. $$
52
JAPANESE KYOTO — 4920 Prytania St., 8913644 — Kyoto’s sushi chefs prepare rolls, sashimi and salads. “Box” sushi is a favorite, with more than 25 rolls. Reservations recommended for parties of six or more. Lunch and dinner Mon.-Sat. Credit cards. $$
LATIN AMERICAN LA MACARENA PUPSERIA & LATIN CAFE — 8120 Hampson St., 862-
5252 — Enjoy Latin home cooking in a quaint and festive cafe. Try the namesake Salvadoran pupusas, stuffed cornmeal disks, or Mexican favorites. Latin-style brunch is served on weekends. Reservations accepted. Lunch and dinner daily, brunch Sat.-Sun. Cash only. $$
LOUISIANA CONTEMPORARY ATCHAFALAYA
RESTAURANT
—
901 Louisiana Ave., 891-9626; www.cafeatchafalaya.com — Atchafalaya serves creative contemporary Creole cooking. Shrimp and grits feature head-on Gulf shrimp in a smoked tomato and andouille broth over creamy grits. There’s a Bloody Mary bar at brunch. Reservations recommended. Lunch Tue.-Fri., dinner daily, brunch Sat.-Sun. Credit cards. $$$ BOMBAY CLUB — 830 Conti St., 586-
0972; www.thebombayclub.com — Mull the menu at this French Quarter hideaway while sipping a well made martini. The duck duet pairs confit leg with pepper-seared breast with black currant reduction. Reservations recommended. Dinner daily, late-night Fri.-Sat. Credit cards. $$$ MILA — 817 Common St., 412-2580;
www.milaneworleans.com — MiLA takes a fresh approach to Southern and New Orleans cooking, focusing on local produce and refined techniques. Try New Orleans barbecue lobster with lemon confit and fresh thyme. Reservations recommended. Lunch Mon.-Fri. dinner Mon.-Sat. $$$ RALPH’S ON THE PARK — 900
City Park Ave., 488-1000; www. ralphsonthepark.com — Popular dishes include baked oysters Ralph, turtle soup and the Niman Ranch New York strip. There also are brunch specials. Reservations recommended. Lunch Fri., dinner daily, brunch Sun. Credit cards. $$$
TOMMY’S WINE BAR — 752 Tchoupi-
toulas St., 525-4790 — Tommy’s Wine Bar offers cheese and charcuterie plates as well as a menu of appetizers and salads from the neighboring kitchen of Tommy’s Cuisine. No reservations. Lite dinner daily. Credit cards. $$
MIKIMOTO — 3301 S. Carrollton Ave.,
488-1881; www.mikimotosushi.com — Sushi choices include new and old favorites, both raw and cooked. The South Carrollton roll includes tuna tataki, avocado and snow crab. Reservations accepted for large parties. Lunch Sun.-Fri., dinner daily. Delivery available. Credit cards. $$ MIYAKO JAPANESE SEAFOOD & STEAKHOUSE — 1403 St. Charles
Ave., 410-9997; www.japanesebistro.com — Miyako offers a full range of Japanese cuisine, with specialties from the sushi or hibachi menus, chicken, beef or seafood teriyaki, and tempura. Reservations accepted. Lunch Sun.-Fri., dinner daily. Credit cards. $$
ROCK-N-SAKE — 823 Fulton St., 5817253; www.rocknsake.com — Rockn-Sake serves traditional Japanese cuisine with some creative twists. There’s a wide selection of sushi, sashimi and rolls or spicy gyoza soup, pan-fried soba noodles with chicken or seafood and teriyaki dishes. Reservations accepted for large parties. Lunch Fri., dinner Tue.-Sun. Credit cards. $$
MEDITERRA� NEAN/MIDDLE EASTERN ATTIKI BAR & GRILL — 230 Decatur
St., 587-3756; www.attikineworleans.com — Attiki features a range of Mediterranean cuisine including entrees of beef kebabs and chicken shawarma. Reservations recommended. Lunch, dinner and latenight daily. Credit cards. $$
PYRAMIDS CAFE — 3151 Calhoun St., 861-9602 — Diners will find authentic, healthy and fresh Mediterranean cuisine featuring such favorites as sharwarma prepared on a rotisserie. No reservations. Lunch and dinner daily. Credit cards. $$
MEXICAN & SOUTHWESTERN CARLOS MENCIA’S MAGGIE RITAS MEXICAN BAR & GRILL — 200 Maga-
zine St., 595-3211; www.maggieritas.
com — Mexican favorites include sizzling fajita platters, quesdillas, enchiladas and a menu of margaritas. There also are Latin American dishes, paella and fried ice cream for dessert. Reservations accepted. Lunch and dinner daily. Credit cards. $
COUNTRY FLAME — 620 Iberville St.,
522-1138 — Country Flame serves a mix of popular Mexican and Cuban dishes. Come in for fajitas, pressed Cuban sandwiches made with hickory-smoked pork and char-broiled steaks or pork chops. Reservations accepted. Lunch and dinner daily. Credit cards. $
JUAN’S FLYING BURRITO — 2018 Magazine St., 569-0000; 4724 S.Carrollton Ave. 486-9550; www.juansflyingburrito.com — This wallet-friendly restaurant offers new takes on Mexican-inspired cooking. It’s known for its meal-and-a-half-size signature burritos. No reservations. Lunch and dinner daily. Credit cards. $
NACHO MAMA’S MEXICAN GRILL —
3242 Magazine St., 899-0031; 1000 S. Clearview Pkwy., Harahan, 736-1188; www.nachomamasmexicangrill. com — These taquerias serve Mexican favorites such as portobello mushroom fajitas and chile rellenos. There are happy hour margaritas on weekdays and daily drink specials. No reservations. Lunch and dinner daily. Credit cards. $$ SANTE FE — 3201 Esplanade Ave.,
948-0077 — Dine indoors or out at this comfortable Southwestern cafe. Chicken Maximilian is a baked chicken breast roulade with Anaheim peppers, chorizo and Asiago cheese. No reservations. Lunch and dinner daily. Credit cards. $$ TOMATILLO’S — 437 Esplanade
Ave., 945-9997 — Enjoy combinations like Tomatillo’s Fiesta, which includes a taco, tamale and enchilada served with rice and beans. There are many margarita options. No reservations. Lunch Tue.-Sun., dinner daily. Credit cards. $$
MUSIC AND FOOD GAZEBO CAFE — 1018 Decatur St., 525-
8899; www.gazebocafenola.com — The Gazebo features a mix of Cajun and Creole dishes and ice cream daquiris. The New Orleans sampler rounds up jambalaya, red beans and rice and gumbo. Other options include salads, seafood po-boys and burgers. No reservations. Lunch and early dinner daily. Credit cards. $$
HOUSE OF BLUES — 225 Decatur St., 310-4999; www.hob.com/neworleans — Try the pan-seared Voodoo Shrimp with rosemary cornbread. The buffet-style gospel brunch features local and regional groups. Reservations accepted. Lunch and dinner Mon.-Sat., brunch Sun. Credit cards. $$ THE MARKET CAFE — 1000 Decatur
St., 527-5000; www.marketcafenola.com — Dine indoors or out on seafood either fried for platters or po-boys or highlighted in dishes such as crawfish pie, crawfish etouffee or shrimp Creole. Sandwich options include muffulettas, Philly steaks on po-boy bread and gyros in pita bread. No reservations. Breakfast, lunch and dinner daily. Credit cards. $$
SNUG HARBOR JAZZ BISTRO — 626 Frenchmen St., 949-0696; www. snugjazz.com — Traditional Creole and Cajun fare pepper the menu along with newer creations such as the fish Marigny, topped with Gulf shrimp in a Creole cream sauce. Reservations recommended. Lunch Mon.-Fri., dinner daily. Credit cards. $$
NEIGHBORHOOD GOTT GOURMET CAFE — 3100
Magazine St., 373-6579; www.gottgourmetcafe.com — Gott Gourmet’s menu of creative dishes and sandwiches includes a cochon de lait po-boy made with pulled pork, homecooked Dr. Pepper-honeybaked ham, pickles, Gruyere cheese, ancho-honey coleslaw and honey mustard-chile mayo. No reservations. Breakfast Sat.-Sun., lunch Tue.Sun., dinner Tue.-Fri. Credit cards. $ LIUZZA’S RESTAURANT 7 BAR — 3636 Bienville St., 482-9120; www.liuzzas. com — This neighborhood favorite serves casual Creole and Italian fare. The Frenchuletta is a muffuletta on French bread served hot. No reservations. Lunch and dinner Tue.-Sat. Cash only. $$ MR. ED’S RESTAURANT — 910 W.
Esplanade Ave., Kenner, 463-3030; 1001 Live Oak St., Metairie, 838-0022 — Popular dishes include seafoodstuffed bell peppers loaded with shrimp, crawfish and crabmeat, topped with buttered breadcrumbs. No reservations. Lunch and dinner Mon.-Sat. Credit cards. $$
PIZZA MARKS TWAIN’S PIZZA LANDING —
2035 Metairie Road, Metairie, 8328032; www.marktwainspizza.com — Disembark at Mark Twain’s for salads, po-boys and pies like the Italian pizza with salami, tomato, artichoke, sausage and basil. No reservations. Lunch Tue.-Sat., dinner Tue.-Sun. Credit cards. $
NONNA MIA CAFE & PIZZERIA — 3125 Esplanade Ave., 948-1717 — Nonna Mia uses homemade dough for pizza served by the slice or whole pie and offers salads, pasta dishes and panini. Gourmet pies are topped with ingredients like pancetta, roasted eggplant, portobello mushrooms and prosciutto. No reservations. Lunch and dinner daily. Credit cards. $ POMPEII PIZZERIA — 1068 Magazine St., 708-4213; www.pompeiipizzeria.com — The barbecue bacon cheeseburger features ground beef, applewood-smoked bacon, onions and smoky barbecue sauce. The Beaurantula is a Philly cheese steak loaded with vegetables and ranch dressing. Delivery available. No reservations. Lunch and dinner Wed.-Mon. Credit cards. $ REGINELLI’S — 741 State St., 899-
1414; 817 W. Esplanade Ave., Kenner, 712-6868; 874 Harrison Ave., 4880133; 3244 Magazine St. 895-7272; 5608 Citrus Blvd., Harahan, 818-0111; www.reginellis.com — This New Orleans original offers a range of pizzas, sandwiches and salads. No reservations. Lunch and dinner daily. Credit cards. $
R&O’S RESTAURANT — 216 Old Hammond Hwy., 831-1248 — R&O’s offers a mix of pizza and Creole and Italian seafood dishes. There’s everything from seafood gumbo and stuffed artichokes to po-boys and muffulettas. Reservations accepted. Lunch daily, dinner Wed.Sun. Credit cards. $ SLICE RESTAURANT — 1513 St. Charles
Ave., 525-7437 — Neapolitan-style pizza rules, but you can buy pizza by the slice and add or subtract toppings as you choose. There are also a full coffee bar, Italian sodas and organic teas. No reservations. Lunch and dinner daily. Credit cards. $
THEO’S NEIGHBORHOOD PIZZA —
4218 Magazine St., 894-8554; 4024 Canal St., 302-1133; www.theospizza.com — There is a wide variety
of specialty pies or build your own from the selection of more than two-dozen toppings. Also serving salads and sandwiches. No reservations. Lunch and dinner daily. Credit cards. $
WIT’S INN — 141 N. Carrollton Ave., 486-1600 — This Mid-City bar and restaurant features pizzas, calzones, toasted subs, salads and appetizers for snacking. No reservations. Lunch and dinner daily. Credit cards. $
SANDWICHES & PO-BOYS MAGAZINE PO-BOY SHOP — 2368
Magazine St., 522-3107 — Choose from a long list of po-boys filled with everything from fried seafood to corned beef to hot sausage to veal. There are breakfast burritos in the morning and daily lunch specials. No reservations. Breakfast and lunch Mon.-Sat. Credit cards. $
MAHONY’S PO-BOY SHOP — 3454 Magazine St., 899-3374; www.mahonyspoboys.com — Mahoney’s serves traditional favorites and original po-boys like the Peacemaker, which is filled with fried oysters, bacon and cheddar cheese. There are daily lunch specials as well. No reservations. Lunch and dinner Mon.-Sat. Credit cards. $
PARKWAY BAKERY AND TAVERN
— 538 N. Hagen Ave., 482-3047 — Parkway serves juicy roast beef po-boys, hot sausage po-boys, fried seafood and more. No reservations. Kitchen open from 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Wed.-Mon. Credit cards. $ SAMMY’S PO-BOYS & CATERING — 901 Veterans Memorial Blvd.,
Metairie, 835-0916; www.sammyspoboys.com — Sammy’s offers a wide array of po-boys and wraps. The house-cooked bottom round beef in gravy is a specialty. The menu also includes salads, seafood platters, a few Italian dishes and daily lunch specials. No reservations. Lunch Mon.-Sat., dinner daily. Credit cards. $
SEAFOOD JACK DEMPSEY’S — 738 Poland Ave., 943-9914 — The Jack Dempsey seafood platter serves a trainingtable feast of gumbo, shrimp, oysters, catfish, redfish and crawfish pies, plus two side items. Other dishes include broiled redfish and fried soft-shell crab. No reservations. Lunch Tue.-Sat. and dinner Wed.-Sat. Credit cards. $$ COTE BRASSERIE — 700 Tchoupitoulas St., 613-2350; www. lacotebrasserie.com — This stylish restaurant in the Renaissance New Orleans Arts Hotel serves an array of raw and cooked seafood. Tobasco and Steen’s Cane Syrup glazed salmon is served with shrimp mirliton ragout. Reservations recommended. Breakfast, lunch and dinner daily, brunch Sun. Credit cards. $$$ LA
MARIGNY BRASSERIE — 640 Frenchmen St., 945-4472; www. marignybrasserie.com — Marigny Brasserie serves breakfast items like Cajun eggs Bendict. The lunch and dinner menus include fried seafood po-boys and a host of Italian dishes. Reservations accepted. Breakfast, lunch and dinner daily, brunch Sun. Credit cards. $$
RED FISH GRILL — 115 Bourbon St.,
598-1200; www.redfishgrill.com — Seafood creations by Execu-
tive Chef Gregg Collier dominate a menu peppered with favorites like hickory-grilled redfish, pecancrusted catfish, alligator sausage and seafood gumbo. Reservations accepted. Lunch and dinner daily. Credit cards. $$
SOUL WILLIE MAE’S SCOTCH HOUSE —
2401 St. Ann St., 822-9503 — Willie Mae Seaton’s landmark restaurant is run by her granddaughter and serves her renowned fried chicken. There are also changing daily specials. No reservations. Lunch Mon.Sat. Cash only. $$
STEAKHOUSE RUTH’S CHRIS STEAKHOUSE — 3633
Veterans Memorial Blvd., Metairie, 888-3600; www.ruthschris.com — Ruth’s top-quality steaks are broiled in 1,800-degree ovens and arrive at the table sizzling. Reservations recommended. Lunch Fri., dinner daily. Credit cards. $$$
TAPAS/SPANISH GALVEZ RESTAURANT — 914 N. Pe-
ters St., 595-3400; www.galvezrestaurant.com — Located at the former site of Bella Luna, Galvez offers tapas, paella and a Spanish-accented bouillabaisse. Besides seafood, entrees include grilled Black Angus sirloin and roasted chicken. Reservations accepted. Lunch and dinner Tue.-Sun. Credit cards. $$$ MIMI’S IN THE MARIGNY — 2601
Royal St., 872-9868 — The decadant Mushroom Manchego Toast is a favorite here. Or enjoy hot and cold tapas dishes ranging from grilled marinated artichokes to calamari. Reservations accepted for large parties. Dinner and latenight Tue.-Sun. Credit cards. $
VIETNAMESE AUGUST MOON — 3635 Prytania
St., 899-5129; www.moonnola.com — August Moon serves a mix of Vietnamese and Chinese cuisine. There are spring rolls and pho soup as well as many popular Chinese dishes and vegetarian options. Delivery available. No reservations. Lunch Mon.-Fri., dinner Mon.-Sat. Credit cards. $
PHO HOA RESTAURANT — 1308 Manhattan Blvd., 302-2094 — Pho Hoa serves staple Vietnamese dishes including beef broth soups, vermicelli bowls, rice dishes and banh mi sandwiches. Bo kho is a popular beef stew. Appetizers include fried egg rols, crab rangoons and rice paper spring rolls. No reservations. Breakfast, lunch and early dinner daily. Credit cards. $ PHO NOLA — 3320 Transcontinental
Drive, Metairie, 941-7690; www. pho-nola.com — Pho NOLA serves spring rolls and egg rolls, noodle soups, rice and vermicelli dishes and po-boys. Beverages include boba teas, milk teas, coffee drinks and smoothies. No reservations. Lunch Tue.-Sun., dinner Tue.-Sat. Credit cards. $
PHO TAU BAY RESTAURANT — 113 Westbank Expwy., Suite C, Gretna, 368-9846 — You’ll find classic Vietnamese beef broth and noodle soups, vermicelli dishes, seafood soups, shrimp spring rolls with peanut sauce and more. No reservations. Breakfast, lunch and dinner Mon.-Wed. & Fri.-Sat. Credit cards. $
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dise for sale valued under $100 (price must be in ad) or ads for pets found/lost. No phone calls. Please fax or email.
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• For all Line Ads - Thursday @ 5 p.m. • For all Display Ads - Wednesday @ 5 p.m. NOTE: Ad cancellations and charges for all display ads must be made by Wednesday at 5pm prior to the coming weeks insertion. Ad cancellations and changes for all line ads must be made by Thursday at noon prior to the coming weeks insertion. Please proof you first as insertion that appears for errors. The Gambit only takes responsibility for the first incorrect insertion.
A leader in guaranteed renewal insurance, is
NON-PROFIT
Major Gifts Officer
Prior exp. required. Knowledge of N.O. philanthr. community. Comp. literacy, exp. in fundraising databases essential. Superior oral, written, interpers., organizational and presentation skills. Must have a strong interest in/passion for WWOZ’s mission. Mail resume to WWOZ Hire, PO Box 51840, Nola, 70151. No calls.
RESTAURANT/HOTEL/BAR
EXPANDING ITS SALES FORCE in the Greater New Orleans area. We need YOU to join our team to help us grow.
To learn more about a career with Aflac, please fax a resume to 504-889-9571 or call Erin at 504-508-5050 to schedule an interview. BEAUTY SALONS/SPAS BOOTH RENTAL W/FOLLOWING
Available for NO Salon East. Also Sew in Special $175 + save 5% on hair. 504-909-4753
GLENN MICHAEL SALON & BEAUTY ACADEMY No Hiring All Positions: • Front Desk, Customer Service & Retail Manager • Teacher & School Administrators • Stylists (Exp. & AppREnTiCES) • nail Techs Salary, benefits, bonuses, discounts & more. A Great Place to Work, Learn & Grow! E-mail resume with contact name & phone # to: glennmichaelsalonacademy@yahoo.com or call now 504-250-3969 to leave name, ph # & desired position.
Your Future Starts NOW! DRIVERS/DELIVERY
DRIVERS
Regional & Long Haul Runs! Great Pay, Bonuses & Benefits incl. Free Health Ins. CDL-A w/Hazmat, Tanker End. TWIC Card & 1 yr. TT Exp. Required. 985-479-7002
MARINE TANKERMAN
Ingram Barge Company has an opening in their Harahan, La location. Candidates must possess a current Tankerman’s license and a solid safety record., Also must possess a valid Driver’s license and a High School diploma/GED. This position will be responsible for loading and discharging of diesel fuel and other liquids. Work schedule will be on a rotating schedule (i.e. 14/7). Generous daily wage and excellent benefit package. Interested candidates must apply online at www. ingrambarge.com. EOE, M/F/V
SEEKING NEW ORLEANS FINEST SERVICE PROFESSIONALS
NOW HIRING:
• Housekeeping • Food & Beverage • Gift Shop Retail Manager • Floor Supervisor • Bartender • Houseperson • Server’s Assistant • Room Attendant • Sazerac Server • Guest Request Runner • Barista Supervisor • Uniform Room Attendant • Host/Hostess • Room Service Server Professionals must apply online: www.hiltonfamily.jobs EOE/AA Drug Free Workplace
WIT’S INN Bar & Pizza Kitchen Pizza Maker & Bartender w/ food experience
Apply in person Mon-Fri,1-5pm 141 N. Carrollton Ave. PETS
PET ADOPTIONS ANGEL - Beautiful sweet Calico,if you want love ,shes the one.Spayed, shots 504 462-1968 BOURBON- Siamese malevery sweet, handsome and personable,neutered,shots 504 462-1968 Bubbles and Bacardi- 2 precious 8 wk old grey and white kittens ,504 462-1968. COATS & HUNTER, BORDER COLLIE MIXES, young, Vetck/ Vacs/Neut/ Microchip/Rescue (504) 460-0136. EBONY, Black kitten, Vck, Vacs, Neut, Litter Train, Rescue. 504-451-2822 ELIJAH-Gorgeous med long hair solid white angora cat,super sweet and smart,neutered ,shots 504 462-1968 JAZZIE, Blk Dom, Short Hair, Very Sweet, Vck, Vacs, Spay, Litter Train, Rescue. Call (504) 451-2822 LEILA- Beautiful solid white F kitty Very talkative and loving ,perfect companion. spayed,shots 504 462-1968
COCKTAIL SERVERS
We offer competitive wages and benefits. Apply in person at 700 Conti Street Mon - Fri 9am to 4pm Email: employment@royalsonestano.com Fax: 553.2337 EOE/Drug Free Workplace SEASONAL TEMPORARY FARM LABOR
Corn & cotton, 3 positions; Bruce & Devon white, La Ward, TX; 3 mths exp req w/references; clean driver’s license; tools, equipment & housing provided free. Trans & subsistence expenses reimb; $9.78/hr; 3/4 work period guarantee from 7/1/1012/1/10. Apply for this job at the nearest State Workforce Agency with a copy of this ad.
TEMPORARY FARM LABOR
Corn & Cotton, 3 positions; S&S Farms, Bay city, TX; 3 mths exp req w/ references; clean driver’s license; tools, equipment & housing provided free. Trans & subsistence expenses reimb; $9.78/hr; 3/4 work period guarantee from 7/10/10-12/20/10 Apply for this job at the nearest State Workforce Agency with Job Order TX8113192.
TEMPORARY FARM LABOR
Cotton, 14 positions; Verstraeten & Longoria harvesting, San Antonio, TX; 3 mths exp req w/references; clean driver’s license; tools, equipment & housing provided free. Trans & subsistence expenses reimb; $9.78/ hr; 3/4 work period guarantee from 6/20/10-4/20/11. Apply for this job at the nearest State Workforce Agency with Job Order TX6770000 MAXINE, Terrier Mix, 16#s, Hsbkn, Vck, vacs, spay, rescue, super sweet, Please Call (504)512-0858 NICK, PIT/BEAGLE MIX, 50# Sweetheart. Young, VetCk/Vacs/Neut./ Microchip/Rescue. (504) 460-0136 RASCAL, BEAGLE, Super Sweet, Vck/ Vacs/Spay/Microchip/Rescue (504) 451-2822 SMOKEY, RUSSIAN BLUE. Vck, Vacs, Spay, Litter Trained, Rescue. 504-4512822 ST JUDE, CHIHUAHUA, Vet ck/neut/ vacs/microchip/rescue Please call (504) 451-2822 TIGER MIKE, PLOTT HOUND, 1 yr old, Beautiful Brindle Male. Vck, Vacs, Neut, Rescue, Micro-chip Please call (504) 451-2822 TIGER MIKEE, 1 year old, Plott Hound, Brindle Female, Vck, Vacs, Spay, Rescue, Micro-chip Call (504) 451-2822
PETS FOR SALE ACE, BASENJI/WHIPPET MIX. PUPPY, Vet Ck/Vacs/Neut/Microchip/Rescue/ Hsbkn/Crate Trained (504_460-0136) ALLEY, LAB/ROTTIE MX. , PUPPY, Vetck/Vacs/Neut./ Microchip/Rescue (504 451-2822
TEMPORARY FARM LABOR
Soybeans & oilseed crops, 1 position; Ralph Jones Farms, Coy, AR ; 3 mths exp req w/references; clean driver’s license; tools, equipment & housing provided free. Trans & subsistence expenses reimb; $9.78/hr; 3/4 work period guarantee from 8/1/10-6/1/11. Apply for this job at the nearest State Workforce Agency with Job Order 166127.
TEMPORARY FARM LABOR
Vegetables, 3 positions; Fiddlesticks Farms, Midkiff, TX; 3 mths exp req w/ references; clean driver’s license; tools, equipment & housing provided free. Trans & subsistence expenses reimb; $9.78/hr; 3/4 work period guarantee from 7/1/10-4/30/11. Apply for this job at the nearest State Workforce Agency with Job Order 6126315.
NEED HELP? Advertise in
EMPLOYMENT Call 483-3100 ECA, SHEPHERD MIX Vetck/Vacs/ Spay//Rescue/Microchip/Rescue (504) 451-2822
MERCHANDISE FURNITURE/ACCESSORIES $295 Brand New Iron Bed with mattress set, all new. Can deliver. (504) 952-8403 3 Hur.mintz Cherry Tables $99 for all. 504-780-2200 $95 Full/Double Size Mattress Set, still in original plastic, unopened. We can deliver. (504) 846-5122 NEW Pub Height Table Set all wood, still boxed. Delivery available.) 846-5122 Queen Mattress Set $115 Still in wrapper. Will deliver. (504) 846-5122 Queen Pillowtop Mattress, NEW!!! ONLY $129. Can deliver. (504) 8465122
HOUSEHOLD ITEMS Small GE Microwave. Very Clean. $20. 780-2200
CLASSIFIEDS AUTOMOTIVE DOMESTIC AUTOS
MIND, BODY, SPIRIT
A BODY BLISS MASSAGE
ABOUT MASSAGE
RELAX RELAX RELAX
BODYWERKS MASSAGE
Jeannie LMT #3783-01. Flexible appointments. Uptown Studio or Hotel out calls. 504.894.8856 (uptown)
LICENSED MASSAGE
Swedish massage by strong hands. Call Jack at 453-9161. La lic #0076.
HONDA ACCORD 2 DR SPT COUPE 2000 Fully loaded, sun roof, low miles (75k). Exc cond. $200 down, take over notes of $145/mo with warranty. Call 667-7810, 24 hours.
Alicia Whittington
Welcome Back All Clients!
IMPORTED AUTOS 2004 MB CLK500. All factory options. Silver with blk leather interior. 456 HP. 33K mi. garage kept, new tires & brakes. $19,500 OBO. 504231-0656.
1 HOUR 90/120 min avail Swedish & Deep Tissue
$50 BYWATER BODYWORKS
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LA Lic# 520
Swedish, deep tissue, therapeutic. Flex appts, in/out calls, OHP/student discounts, gift cert. $65/hr, $75/ 1 1/2hr. LA Lic# 1763 Mark. 259-7278
CLASSIFIEDS Call (504) 483-3100
Appts 8:30am-9:00pm
call
601.303.7979
Tired of just a rub down? Get beyond that w/ a massage exp. by Matteo, Lic #0022. Met area. 504-832-0945 Bodywerks Massage by Marilyn Tapper La. License #2771. Uptown Studio. 504-782-1452.
YOGA/MEDITATION/PILATES TRANSFORM
A yoga & personal training studio, 8422 Oak St., NOLA. Beginner’s Series, classes, 1-on-1 & group training. More info, class schedule & helpful blogs: www.TransformNOLA.com ANNOUNCEMENTS
GAIN NATIONAL EXPOSURE. Reach over 5 million young, educated readers for only $995 by advertising in 110 weekly newspapers like this one. Call Jason at 202-289-8484. This is not a job offer.
ADOPTIONS
Adopting your newborn would be my life’s greatest joy.
Will give a child a life of security and endless love. A great family, education, and wonderful home awaits. Expenses paid.
Please call Ria at 1-888-851-4935 To Advertise in
REAL ESTATE Call (504) 483-3100
marKeT PLaCe Embroidery, Screen Printing, Uniforms, Windows Signs, Vehicle Wrap, Magnetic Signs, Car Signs Banners, Aluminium Signs
WE BEAT ALL COMPETITORS!
Se Habla Español
Residential • Commercial
FAST SERVICE • NO JOB TOO SMALL 504 885-8000 • EMBROIDERYEMPIRENOLA.COM 7005 MAGNOLIA CT. SUITE H METAIRIE LA 70003
Susana Palma
AFTER CONSTRUCTION CLEANING
Light/General Housekeeping • Heavy Duty Cleaning Summer Cleaning • Supplies Provided
504-250-0884 • 504-286-5868 Fully Insured & Bonded Locally owned & serving New Orleans area for 19 years
CRISTINA’S SERVICE
CLEANING
Let me help you with your cleaning needs including
Empowerment from Rosemary Donnelly's Kitchen Cookbook
www.cougarinstincts.com your body. your mind. your life.
After Construction Cleaning
Yoga & Personal Training
Residential & Commercial
8422 Oak St. NOLA 985-640-2648
Licensed & Bonded
232-5554 or 831-0606
For more info, schedule and helpful blogs go to: www.TransformNOLA.com
Gambit > bestofneworleans.com > JUNE 15 > 2010
LAKEVIEW CLEANING SERVICE
55
reaL esTaTe
SHOWCaSe RIVERBEND
DOWNTOWN
SLIDELL
EASTOVER
NEW ORLEANS
FANTASTIC LOCATION Riverbend Victorian Camelback 1028 Joliet, close to river & Oak St., 3br, 2 ba, many original architectural details, off st parking, new roof, wood floors, high ceilings. $269,000 STO Louis Lederman • Prudential Gardner 504-874-3195
1730 Tchoupitoulas St. • RIVER VIEW 34K sq. ft. of land. 20K sq. ft. of building. Prkg on St. James. Bounded by Celeste, St. James, Tchoupitoulas & S. Peters Streets. Asking Price:$1,200,000 Call Cassandra Sharpe/Broker Cassandra Sharpe Real Estate, Inc. 504-568-1252 • c: 460-7829
57345 Oak Ave • $125,000 Reduced, 2085 sq ft 3 bedroom home New Carpet, Refreshed kitchen Large rooms, Exposed wood beams Lisa B Simms-Hayles Broker MaRioN B REaL EStatE iNC www.marionb.com • 985-643-4452
170 E. Greenbrier
931-35 Dauphine $935K 1850’S Creole cottage. Updated kit & ba, patio, ctyd w/pond. Back unit has 4 studio apts-7 apts total. $6500/mo rent income.
GENTILLY
MISSISSIPPI
LAKEVIEW
559 Hibiscus St., Bay St. Louis, MS Just 5 mins by water to river. Dock, boat lift, & RV pad w/hookups. Home feats an elevator, gas fp, open liv. plan, huge master BR & BA, off, kit w/pantry, granite & all apps. $320,000. MLS#207969. Call Helene at 228-493-4275. Latter & Blum Coastal Living
For Sale By Owner: Reduced Lake Vista 4 BR 3 BA tri-level, 2985 sq ft., $385k Call 504.723.2840
Priced at 205K, Huge 90x200 lot gated community, ready to renovate. Keisha Washington SOUTHERN SPIRIT REALTY, LLC (504) 319-2693
922-24 Dauphine $900K 4 unit French Quarter multifamily. 3457 sqft total. Great Quarter location!
4526 St. Ann $239K Great views of City Park & perfect deck in rear to view Endymion Parade. Spacious 1 br/1.5 ba totally renov. postKatrina. Wd flrs, hi ceils, stainless steel apps. 1089 square feet.
Paula Bowler • French Quarter Realty o:504-949-5400 • c:504-952-3131 • www.frenchquarterrealty.com
5542 CHARLOTTE DR $99,500
SLAB RANCH 3 BR, 2 BA PARTIALLY RENOVATED + GUEST COTTAGE
504-568-1359
VALLON REAL ESTATE "Property Management Specialists"
3900 NORTH HULLEN • METAIRIE, LA 70002 WWW.3900NHULLEN.COM
Gambit > bestofneworleans.com > JUNE 15 > 2010
88 yrs in New Orleans Real Estate and Property Management
56
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504.486.5437 • www.vallonrealestate.info AJ Vallon III, Broker
Three story, beautiful 6-bedroom. 5.5 baths Chateau-like home, 5,214 sq.ft. The best of everything. Main 1st floor Kitchen, all professional lines Sub-Zero/Viking/, granite counter tops. Second floor kitchen/designer appliances, second floor great den. Master bedroom on first floor w/Jacuzzi tub. Salt water pool with outside Jacuzzi, outside bathrooms. Just minutes from the Causeway and Lakeside Shopping Center.
Offered At: $695,000 Priced under current appraisal Polly Eagan gri, crs - Agent broker licensed in state of la
Colleen Mooney, Agent
504-862-0100 • pollyeagan@aol.com KELLER WILLIAMS REALTY New Orleans 8601 Leake Ave. New Orleans, LA 70118-USA
Each OfficE indEpEndEntly OwnEd and OpEratEd
REAL ESTATE CLASSIFIEDS REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
Delpit House ConDominiums
515-517 St Louis St • NOLA 70130 Prime location on premier blk in the heart of the French Quarter. Upscale 1BR condos newly renov. Old character mixed w/ modern luxury. Nr rest., shopping & attractions. 2 blks to Jackson Square. Starting at $132K.
BYWATER ELEGANCE IN THE BYWATER
Stunning juxtiposition of architectural integrity & soignee panache. 2000’ 2- 3 bdrms, 2 ba, garden room, steps to river. Offers staring at $299,000. 626 Pauline St. 504-914-5606.
COMMERCIAL PROPERTIES RIVER VIEW - DOWNTOWN
1730 Tchoupitoulas St. 34K sq.ft of land, 20K sq.ft of bldg. Pkng on St. James, Tchoupitoulas & S. Peters. Asking $1,200,000. Call Cassandra Sharpe Real Estate, Inc. 504-5681252, cell 460-7829. See our ad in todays RE showcase!
REAL ESTATE FOR RENT
Brandi amedee
Shelnutt real eState enterpriSeS office: 504-524-1111
GENERAL REAL ESTATE
COMMERCIAL RENTALS
605 9th St, New Orleans Ofc/Warehouse space. 18500sf total/3,000sf ofc. 20 ft ceils, elec Roll-up drs. Entire prop gated. 1 blk off Tchoupitoulas. Great price! $529K. Nolan Peters, 504-427-8889
$1500
1214 Peniston 2/1 "Touro Bouligny"
$1200
1406 Magazine
$1100
2/1 Magazine Gallery Apt.
Cool Pool Condo
BEvErly Katz | lanDscapE DEsignEr 866-0276 www.exteriordesignsbev.com Mark Johnson: 985-249-7145
Joshua Bruno downtown deVeloPMent groUP Sustainable Property development
525-9763
UrBan deVeloPMent • real eState ConSUlting
$650
504.274.1930 www.JCHdevelopment.com
$39,900 - $79,900
PartNersHiP & ProtectioN Commercial Services
CONDOS!
137 Canvasback drive, St. rose, la 70087
(504) 486-5846
NDc reaL estate MaNageMeNt iNc. 804 Sherry lane westwego, la 70094 Managed by ndC real estate Management
contact Jodie Luther @ 504-782-0746
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888-207-1711
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2321 north arnoult rd., Metairie, la 70001 www.southlandplumbingsupply.com
Branch Consulting & Assoc. Max r. Johnson 404-401-9680
504-779-0800
To join: contact Multifamily Council Director, Kathy Barthelemy (504) 837-2700 or kathy@home-builders.org www.mfcno.com
Interest rate quoted assumes a minimum loan amount of $200,000.
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Gambit > bestofneworleans.com > JUNE 15 > 2010
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Exterior Designs
REAL ESTATE Call Bert: 504-581-2804 3/2 "Lake Vista Sanctuary"
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HOWARD SCHMALZ & ASSOCIATES 103 Egret
owner/agent
504-481-1028 Bramedee@yahoo.com
We are looking for Multifamily Professionals
Rates as of 5/19/2010 and subject to change without notice.
57
REAL ESTATE CLASSIFIEDS
GARDEN DISTRICT
1, 2 & 3 ROOM OFFICES STARTING AT $500 INCLUDING UTILITIES
Call 899-RENT
UPTOWN WAREHOUSE SPACE STARTING AT
$750 Call
899-RENT HARAHAN/RIVER RIDGE 1324 HICKORY
2 BR, 1 BA townhouse, furn kit, w/d hkps, patio, O/A, $700/mo. Call 650-8778
FABULOUS RENOV 4BR/2BA
Quiet cul-de-sac, walk to levee, new hdwd/cer flrs, recess lighting, srnd snd, sec sys, grt bkyd. Never flooded. Zone X, roof 4 yrs. $1600/ mo or $194,900 For Sale. Call Sylvia 415-6501
RIVER RIDGE NR LEVEE
Newly renov 4 plx. 2 br, 1 & 1/2 ba, w/d hkps, cen a/h, off st pkg, wtr pd. No pets. Quiet area suits retired person. $725/mo, refs & dep. 504737-2089.
SINGLE BRICK HOME
3BR/1BA, , New floors, new paint, open flr plan, Carport, yard 1,100 sq. ft. $900. 504-508-2377.
KENNER
OLD METAIRIE $300 OFF 1ST MONTH’S RENT OLD METAIRIE SECRET
1 or 2 BR, Sparkling Pool, Bike Path, 12’ x 24’ liv rm sep Din, King Master, no Pets, no Sect 8, $699 & $824 • 504-236-5777
METAIRIE TOWERS
Rent or Lease or Lease to Buy, 1BR, 1-1/2 BA, jacuzzi, Elec & TV incld, prkg. 24 hr Concierge Service. $1150/ mo - 914-882-1212
QUIET NEIGHBORHOOD
Totally Renovated. LR, Furn Kitchen, Cen A/C, w/d hkps, 3BR/1BA $900/ mo. 504-782-3133.
NEAR WMS & W. NAPOLEON
Private rm w/bath & kit. Utilities paid, $500/mo. & 3 brm/1 bath house, $900. 504-737-2068
METAIRIE 1 BR CONDO - $675
w/d inside condo, kit, LR, dinette, lrg ba, lrge w/in clst, pool, sm blcny, no pets. 504/885-4304, 914-1705, 473-4304
ALL ELECTRIC - 2 BR
Townhouse. Washer/dryer hookups. 3009 15th Street. Call (504) 8346318.
A HIDDEN GEM
Chic seclusion in the heart of Metairie. All new 1 br fr $660 & 1 br + study fr $785. Furn corp avail. 780-1706 or 388-9972. www.orrislaneapts.com To Advertise in
REAL ESTATE Call (504) 483-3100
ALGIERS POINT HISTORIC ALGIERS POINT
High end 1-4BR. Near ferry, clean, many x-tras, hrdwd flrs, cen a/h, no dogs, no sec 8, some O/S prkng $750$1200/mo. 504-362-7487
BYWATER BYWATER EFFICIENCY
Great for One Person - Seeking Nice Tenant w/ Positive Energy. Available June 1 - no utility dep.Furn (incl linens, pots pans dishes), all utils pd, wi-fi & digital cable w/ all premium movie channels, laundry on site $840 inclusive w/ $420 dep. Short term rentals $900/mo or $300/wk. Must be compatible w/ owner, upper apt, off lush patio shared w/ two dogs & cats. Bicycle to Fr Qtr, bus at Royal St, walk on the levee. Nice place, nice people, seeking nice tenant. 483-3130
FURNISHED CORPORATE UPSCALE SPACIOUS 2 & 3 BEDROOM CONDOS. SECURED PARKING, GYM, POOL, INTERNET. ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED. New Orleans-Algiers Point river front! Convenient to everything. The longer the stay, the better the deal. Multiple rental discounts. Minimum term is one month. W/D, alarm syst, high ceils, exp. brick, balcs & priv rooftop decks.
Large storage closets, Direct tv. Wide screen tv! King size master bed bedroom, 2.5 bathrooms. Extra queen sofa bed in living room. All you need is your bag! Completely corporate furnished! Friendly active neighborhood. 3 minute walk to free Algiers Point ferry which takes 8 scenic minutes landing at Canal St. At Harrah's casino/ French Quarter and Central Business District.
FROM $2500/MO! A DEAL FOR 1700 SQ. FT!
Call owner 504-366-7374 or 781-608-6115 cell for best deal! 323 Morgan St., New Orleans, LA 70114 1023 PIETY ST
DBL ON HARDING
3009 ROYAL ST
NEW CONSTRUCTION!
Freshly remodeled 2 br, 2 full ba, w/d hkps, cen a/h, c-fans, fncd yd, avail now. 888-239-6566 or mrsmell@ comcast.net Newly renov’d, 2br/1ba, LR, kit w/ appls, washer/dryer, $975/mo + $975 dep. 504-945-7829 or 817-681-0194.
3br/1.5ba, CA&H, wtr pd, w/d hkps, cov’d off st prkg, no smokers. 1 blk to bayou/park. Nice n’hood. $1200 485-0133 516 David St, 3BR, 2BA, 12” ceils, ca/h, 1467 sf, new appls incl w/d, granite. 1 blk to bus/st car, walk to City Pk. $1500-$1800. 504-669-7049
FRENCH QUARTER/ FAUBOURG MARIGNY
Remodeled 2 BR, w/cherry wd flrs & deck, LR, DR, Lndry on site, off st prkng, $1000/mo. 251-2188 or 813-7782
514 MADISON ST/ $1000
8026 COHN STREET
1 br upper w/deck, 1 house off S Carrollton, w/d, gas & wtr pd. $575/mo. Avail 7/1. 504-861-7553
4704 - A ST. PETER St.
Nr Delgado, all new 1 BR, kit, lr, backrm, w/d/fridge, o/s pkng. $875/ mo includes wtr & elec. pd. 504-3829477, Mark.
1st flr off Decatur. Two 1 br, 1 ba, liv, din area, kit, wd flrs, coin w/d. Eddie 861-4561. Grady Harper Inc
941 ROYAL ST
Fully furn, 1 br, 1 ba, shared pool & balc, w/d on site. $1200/mo/dep. No Pets. 504-236-5757. FQRental.com
FRENCH QUARTER APTS
Next to Rouses Grocery Store, furn/ unfurn, studio/1 BR, $650-$1200. Call 504-919-3426 or 504-581-6350.
Gambit > bestofneworleans.com > JUNE 15 > 2010
French Quarter Realty Wayne • Nicole • Sam • Josh • Jennifer • Brett • Robert • George • Baxter
817 Esplanade #1
2/2 Hi Ceils, hdwd flrs, lge kit,
$1290
829 Ursulines #1
1/1 furnished w/wifi, tile floors
$1050
829 Ursulines #5
1/1 Lots of windows,new carpet,crtyrd $1150
833 Ursulines #4
1/1 tile floors,courtyard,525 sqft
$850
833 Ursulines #6
1/1 Upperrearunit,newcarpet,600sqft$1100
448 Julia Unit #219
1/1 furn,Utils Cable/WiFi included $1950
814 Lafayette “A”
1/1 CBD Furnished Utils included
528 Gov Nicholls
1/1 carriage house w/ crtyrd
739 ½ Gov Nicholls
1/1 Util included, furn., great loc! $1000
1625 Harmony
1/1 priv crtyd&balcy,town house
3607 Magazine 1704 Napoleon
Commerical, 750 sqft
$950 $1025 $1000 $2000
1/1 spacious, hi ceils, 2 small side balcs $800
814 Orleans
1/1 new kitch&bath,great location $1500
210 Chartres “3E”
2/1 Fully furnished apt.w/d on site $1500
921 Chartres #9
2340 Dauphine Street
(504) 944-3605
RESIDENTIAL RENTALS 1201 CHARTRES #16 - 3bd/2.5ba $3000 930 ORLEANS - 2 bd/ 2 ba $2000 3935 MAGAZINE - Comm. $1500 1139 BURGUNDY - 1 bd/ 1 ba $1500 2625 ST. CHARLES - 1 bd/ 1 ba $1200 1224 BOURBON - Furn. Studio $1000 539 DUMAINE - 1 bd/ 1 ba $900 720 ½ PORT - 1 bd/ 1 ba $600
CALL FOR MORE LISTINGS! LAKEVIEW/LAKESHORE 6029 BELLAIRE - $1100
Renov, cute 3 br, 2 ba, liv, eat-in kit,w/ gas appls & granite, alarm, drive. Grady Harper Inc, 861-4551.
504-949-5400
2/1.5 condoindesirableblock,HUGEcrtyrd!$1700
519 Iberville #2
1/1 renov apt w/high end touches.
1233 Esplanade #16
2/1 2 level apt,ss appls,pool&prkng $1000
1028 Kelerec #1
1/1 nicelayout,greatloc,waterpaid $1000
$1100
1028 Kelerec #2
1/1 wd flrs,central air,water paid
$1000
1028 Kelerec #3
1/1 d/w, great loc, water paid
$1000
2/1.5 street balc,prkng,prime loc
$1800
1229 Royal
58
1226 Chartres. Newly renov 1 br apt, $1000/mo. Carpet, pool, laundry rm, sec gate. No pets. Mike, 919-4583.
CARROLLTON 7818 NELSON
CITY PARK/BAYOU ST. JOHN
1-888-521-8729
FRENCH QUARTER CHARM
LAKEFRONT LRG ATTRACTIVE APT
2BR, 2BA w/ appls, beaut crtyd setting w/swimming pool, quiet nb’hood. $975/mo. 504/495-6044
MID CITY 1 BDR/BA - CENTRAL A/C
Cozy and bright 1 BDR/BA apartment near Canal St. Central A/C, Ceiling fans, Washer & Dryer. $650 per month plus deposit. 209 S. St. Patrick St. Call (504)913-5669. 1 Bedroom Cottage 2-story, 1 bedroom cottage near Bayou St. John. Gas & Water paid by Owner. Hardwood floors. Wash/Dry hookup. Yard. Pets Negotiable. $760/mo. Available July 1st
TREME 1300 GOV NICHOLS
2 blocks to French Quarter, 1 Bedroom, Parking. $700/month + deposit. Call 504-525-6520 & 504390-4362
NICE 1 BEDROOM UNIT
1315 ST PHILIP ST, lr, kitchen w/appls & bath, hdwd flrs, near Fr Qtr, park, wtr pd, $575 • 504-909-5150
REAL ESTATE CLASSIFIEDS UPTOWN/GARDEN DISTRICT 1 BDRM - NEAR TULANE
7120 Willow Street, living room, tile bath, furnished kitchen. No pets. $700month+deposit. Call 504/2837569
1 BDRM CLOSE TO UNIV
Clara St nr Nashvl. Renov Lg upr, 1 br, dr, lr, furn kit, uti rm w/hkps, cen a/h, wd flrs, ceil fans, w/d avl on site. $900/mo. Avl now. 895-0016.
1 BEDROOM APT
3129 COSTANCE
1/2 double, living room, bedroom, kitchen, bath, a/c unit. $675/mo. Call 895-6394 or 289-9977.
3216 PRYTANIA - Upper
1000 sf, 1 BR, liv rm, lrg furn kitchen, cen a/h, hkps, balc, off st prkng, no pets, $950/mo • 504-838-0065
3943 LA AVE PKWY
Upper 3 br, 2 ba, furn kit, carpet, fans, a/c, w/d hkps, off st pkg. No pets. Call Joe at 400-7273.
2511 S Carrollton Ave. Furn kit, cen a/h, off st pkg. $700/mo, wtr pd. Background ck required. 504-4507450.
4106 STATE ST DR•$1000
1/2 BLOCK ST CHARLES
4917 S MIRO ST
1629 2nd. Upper rear bright 1 br apt, hdwd flrs, ceil fans, pvt balc, w/d facil. $800/mo, lse, refs. 895-4726 or 261-7908.
1042 SONIAT ST
2 br, 1 ba, lr, dr, furn kit, c-a/h, w/d, c-fans, wd flr, drv, stor shed. Grady Harper, Inc. Eddie 861-4551. 2 bedrooms, washer/dryer, cen a/h, pool, closet space, water included. $885/mo. Call 452-2319 or 821-5567
5300 FRERET
899-RENT 7535 JEANNETTE ST
1BR, bath, appls, elec, wtr, int/cbl, incld. Nr Lutcher schl, yr lse, dep rqd. No smkr/pet. $850/mo. 219-1422
7614 COHN STREET
1106 BOURDEAUX ST
5327 PRYTANIA ST
802 FERN ST
1205 ST CHARLES AVE
Furn lux 1 br condo in conv location. Fully equip kit, gated pkg, fitness ctr. Call Mike for price, 281-798-5318.
1417 JOSEPH
GREAT LOCATION! Upper lg 3 br, 3 ba, furn kit, d/w, cen a/h, ceil fans, w/d on site. $1800/mo. 899-7657.
143 CHEROKEE
7323 COHN - UNIV AREA
GREAT EFFICIENCY!
5419 STORY ST
MARENGO NEAR PRYTANIA
2 bedroom, 1 bath apt. Furn kit, cen a/h, tile & carpet, w/d, water/trash/ sewer paid. $750/mo. 430-8313. 3 br, 2 ba duplex. Cen a/h, unfurn w/ all appl inc m’wave & w/d. Close to univ & hosp. On bus line. Lg fncd bkyd, off st pkg. Safe n’hood, sec sys all units. $1350/mo. 289-5110.
1508 CARONDELET, 2 Avail
7522 BENJAMIN - NR UNIV
1702 DANTE ST
2 BR, liv, kit, bath. CH&A, Stove & fridge included. Access to pool & utility room. $800 per mo. Call 504-4273284
Corner Maple. 2 or 3 br in hist, renov bldg, cen a/h, all appls, w/d, 12’ ceil. $1450-$1850/mo. 723-0001.
A UNIVERSITY AREA
Lux 1 br, 1 ba, hi ceilings, ceil fans, wd flrs, exp brick fplc, cedar lined closets. $800/mo. Call Steve w/ Latter & Blum, 650-6770. 1 BR, $800 & Studio, $750. Totally remodeled, cen a/h, hi ceils, hdwd flrs. 510-677-5855 or 1-888-239-6566
1BR/1BA, half a double, nice backyard, university area. $625/mo. 504-782-4848
6319 S. PRIEUR
2 bedroom, living room, dining room, furn kitchen, tile bath. No pets. Off Calhoun. $850/mo, Call Gary 861-4958
1 br condo w/ pool, prkg, laundry, gated community. $650/mo w/ wtr pd. No pets. 453-8996.
8226 WILLOW
Walk to rests or bike to Univ, 2bdrms, Kit w/brfkst area. appl Hi ceils, wd flrs, fncd patio area, $1200 + $1200 sec dep. 225-620-5302
4539 S Roman, 2000sf, 1/2 dbl, 2BR, 2BA, f-kit, w/d, c-a/h, off st pkg, wtr pd, $1100. 504-467-7052, 259-0043 One person studio. Near TU Univ. $590/mo net + dep. All utilities pd. 866-7837 2 story, 1 bedroom, 1 bath cottage in rear of main house. Great area. No pets. $795/mo. Call 895-8289.
VICTORIAN SHOTGUN
502 Washington, 2BR, 1BA, w/d, c-fans, wd flrs, c-a/h, sec, drvwy, pool, FREE Direct TV, $1150. 813-5822
RENTALS TO SHARE AD COPY: ALL AREAS - ROOMMATES. COM. Browse hundreds of online listings with photos and maps. Findyour roommate with a click of the mouse! Visit: http://www.Roommates.com.
1750 ST CHARLES #424
Weekly Tails
2 BR, 1 BA - $1200/mo
Napoleon nr St Charles, one of the best apts you will see! 1,500 sq ft living space, c-a/h, hdwd flrs, no pets, near universities. 2011 Gen Pershing, Avail 6/1, water paid. Paula 952-3131
2023 BROADWAY
Cls to univ/hosp/Lusher, beaut lrg 3 independent BR w/ cntr hall, lr, dr, furn kit, d/w, w/d, 1BA, wd flrs, scrnd prch. $1350 • 504-895-2683
2105 FERN ST
2 br, 1 ba, cen a/h, w/d, d/w, wd flrs, hi ceil, sec sys, patio. No dogs. Great n’hood. $900. 504-236-7575
2902 CAMP - $1500/MO
Lg Garden Dist camelback. Liv, din, furn kit, study, den, 2 br, 2 ba. Charm! Grady Harper, Inc, 861-4551.
SWeeTie BABY Kennel #A10389894
2BR, 2011 GEN PERSHING Best apt you’ll see! $1200/mo. Near the univs, beaut nb’hood, 1500 sq ft living space, 1 BA, cen a/h, hdwd flrs, No pets. Avail Jun 1. Paula 952-3131
4308 CONSTANCE ST
Renov apts, 1/2 blk from Napoleon, 2 br, 1.5 ba, wd flrs, vaulted ceils, mstr suite, sun porch, 2nd br loft, w/d, sec sys, deck, yard & shed. $1500/mo. 804-304-9864
4610 CARONDELET
1 blk St Charles. Renov upr 1700 sf, 2 br, solarium, cov’d prch, cen a/h, Italian tile kit & ba, hdwd flrs, frplcs. $1500/mo. 723-0001.
MAC
(SniCkerS)
Kennel #A10370421
readers need
Sweetie Baby is a 1 1/2-year-old, spayed, DMH with dazzling amber-colored eyes. She’s petite, a bit shy, enjoys having her ears rubbed and has a luxurious white/orange coat. To meet Sweetie Baby or any of the other wonderful pets at the LA/SPCA, come to 1700 Mardi Gras Blvd. (Algiers), 10-4, Mon.-Sat. & 12-4 Sun. or call 368-5191. Mac (Snickers) is a 3-yearold, neutered, Border Collie mix. He sits for treats, walks nicely on a leash and prefers to be the only dog in the home. To meet Mac or any of the other wonderful pets at the LA/SPCA, come to 1700 Mardi Gras Blvd. (Algiers), 10-4, Mon.-Sat. & 12-4 Sun. or call 368-5191. To look for a lost pet come to the Louisiana SPCA, 1700 Mardi Gras Blvd. (Algiers), Mon-Sat. 9-5, Sun. 12-5 or call 368-5191 or visit www.la-spca.org.
A NEW HOME
You can help them find one.
To advertise in Gambit Classifieds’ “Real Estate” Section call 504.483.3100.
Gambit > bestofneworleans.com > JUNE 15 > 2010
Totally renov 1 br plus study, SS appls, wd flrs. 24 hr security. $1650/mo. Call Debbie w /L & B, 952-0959.
TOD AY
BEDROOMS AVAILABLE CALL
By Jefferson. Raised cottage, upper. Deluxe 2br, lux bath/jacuzzi. Furn, W&D, hrdwd flrs, 1400sf, $1300/mo includes gas. 899-3668. 2BR, 1.5BA, Great loc! lux apt, furn kit, w/d, cen a/h, wd flrs, 12ft ceils, fans, $1500/mo 504-444-1030
E IN
1, 2 & 3
3 bedrooms, 1.5 ba, lr, dr, furn kit, hdwd flrs, cen a/h, w/d, 1500 sf, 12’ ceils, $1400/mo. 504-952-5102 Spac 2 BR, 1 BA, frplc, cen a/h, porch, $1000/month w/ sec dep. 4 blks off St Charles. 504-891-7584 lv msg
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Gambit > bestofneworleans.com > JUNE 15 > 2010
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Gambit > bestofneworleans.com > JUNE 15 > 2010
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Gambit > bestofneworleans.com > JUNE 15 > 2010
Mind • Body • Spirit
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mail@sipandpaint.com • www.sipandpaint.com
63
2800 Magazine Street | (504)265-0421 New orleaNs | louisiaNa | 70115 coquette-nola.com
1st course
2ND course
3rD course
local lettuce salad candied pecans, red wine vinaigrette, goat cheese
scrambled yard eggs Benton’s bacon, grits, homefries
chocolate brownie, semifreddo, cherry anglaise
burrata and smoked salmon crostini capers, red onions, roasted tomato grilled asparagus crawfish tail and country ham dressing fried Gulf shrimp grapefruit, niçoise olives, sambal vinaigrette summer squash soup piquillo peppers, pickled chanterelle mushrooms fried Gulf oysters fennel, aioli, celery sweet crepes strawberries, ricotta, marcona almonds
fried green tomatoes breakfast sausage, poached eggs, hollandaise
beignets chocolate pot de créme, cream
egg and rice frittata arugula, cherry tomatoes, shiitake mushrooms
goat cheese mousse blueberries, marcona almond honey, mint
steak and eggs filet of beef, sunny side egg, homefries
$25
chicken breast potato salad, collard green marmalade, black garlic bbq sauce cochon de lait collard greens, Anson Mill’s grits, pork jus shrimp and grits Anson Mills grits, Gulf shrimp, red pepper speckled trout green beans, brown butter, marcona almonds
per persoN
nOW OPen FOr
SUnDaY BrUnCH
3 COURSE MENU
~ Menu Changes Weekly ~
Dinner: Mon-Sat 5:30-10:00 • Lunc h: WeD-Sat 11:30-3:00 Brunc h: SunDay 11:00-3:00