Georgetowner's April 6, 2016

Page 1

Volume 62 Number 13

April 6 - April 19, 2016


NE WS

F OO D & W I N E

4 Calendar 5 Town Topics 8 Editorial/Opinion

F E AT U RE 9 Baseball

BUSI N E S S 10

How Will New Plans for RFK Stadium Affect Downtown? BY PERCY METCALFE

A quick look at the future of the forlorn sports complex.

Town Topics Business Ins & Outs

RE A L E S TAT E 13 14 15 20

The Auction Block March Sales Featured Property Le Decor

C OV E R 18

Primary Voting by Hamburgers — R or D — at GTown Bites

Super Hero Real Estate Agents

FIND US ON FACEBOOK

The Georgetowner

Cocktail of the Month Latest Dish

I N C OU N T R Y & G E TAWAY S 24

The (Hip?) Upper East Side

BO DY & SOU L 27 27

Ins & Outs

D OW N T OW N E R DC 11 12

21 22

Murphy’s Love Weight Loss Myths

V ISUA L A R T S 28

Seeing Nature at the Phillips

PE RF ORM A NC E 29

Year of the Bard

SOC I A L SC E N E 30

Gala Guide, Night of Vision, The Foundation 31 Educate Afghan Women, Blue Hope Bash

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Thegeorgetownr

BY ROBERT DEVANEY

O Street eatery shows Republicans beating Democrats — with burger meals costing the same price but Dems getting less.

2801 M Street, NW Washington, DC 20007 Phone: (202) 338-4833 Fax: (202) 338-4834 www.georgetowner.com

Republican Primary Final Three 2016 Caricatures by DonkeyHotey

Wisconsin: The Big Political Cheese

ON THE COVER

BY GARY TISCHLER

The real estate business may be part of the corporate world, but it is still a person-to-person business. Our cover story by Michele Lerner tells some of the tales of real estate agents, who went above and beyond to seal the deal. Illustration by Ari Post.

What might the Wisconsin Primaries mean for Donald, Ted, Hillary, Bernie and any lurking presidential wannabes (oh, and you, too, John)?

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April 6, 2016 GMG, INC.

The Georgetowner is published every other Wednesday. The opinions of our writers and columnists do not necessarily reflect the editorial and corporate opinions of The Georgetowner newspaper. The Georgetowner accepts no responsibility for unsolicited manuscripts or photographs and assumes no liability for products or services advertised herein. The Georgetowner reserves the right to edit, rewrite or refuse material and is not responsible for errors or omissions. Copyright 2016.


S e l l i ng Picturesque Gem

Wesley Heights. Fabulous flow & light in this charming home on quiet cul de sac. Ideal for entertaining. 6 BRs, 4.5 BAs. Family & sun rms, gourmet kit & brkfst rm. Private terrace & garden. $2,695,000

Lynn Bulmer

202-257-2410

LivinG in Luxury

Landon Woods. Stunning new home w/ all the bells & whistles. 4 finished levels w/ 7 BR, 5.5 BA, chef’s kit, FR, office, LL w/ sep entrance, 2 car garage. $1,789,000

Ted Beverley Patricia Lore

301-728-4338 301-908-1242

shoW stoPPer

Potomac, MD. Custom home on private cul de sac. Stunning great rm w/soaring ceiling, two story foyer. Dramatic MBR suite. 5 BRs, 4.5 BAs. Convenient to the Village & Falls Rd golf course. $1,369,000

Eric Murtagh

301-652-8971

distinctive styLe

Arlington, VA. The height of luxury at the Turnberry Tower. 1 BR + den, 1.5 BA upgraded unit w/waterside balcony view. Top of the line kitchen & baths. Deluxe amenities just 1 block from Metro. Pkg included. $835,000

John Coplen

410-591-0911

t h e a r e a ’ s f i n e st p r o p e rt i e s

soPhisticated LifestyLe

Chevy Chase, MD. Storybook residence meticulously restored & expanded. Impressive open spaces inside & out. Gourmet kit, stunning family rm, amazing game rm. 5 BRs, 4.5 BAs. Terraces. Walk to Bethesda & Metro. $1,995,000

Eric Murtagh

Worth WaitinG for

Town of Ch Ch, MD. Expanded & renovated 4 BR, 2.5 BA gem. Chef’s kit & family rm addition. 10,000 sf lot. Large rear yard, patio w/blt in grill. Less than a mile from dwntwn Bethesda & Metro. $1,795,000

Eric Murtagh

Chevy Chase, MD. Traditional expanded Colonial w/45 BRs, 3.5 BAs. Light filled kit & brkfst rms. Family rm addition opens to beautiful rear yard w/inground pool & gazebo. Near to Metro. $1,295,000

Susan Berger Ellen Sandler

202-255-5006 202-255-5007

GracefuL sPaces

Bethesda. Prime location at The Crest II only blocks to Metro. Spacious end unit condo TH w/detailed finishes. Remodeled open kit, renov. baths. 2 BRs, 3.5 BAs. Study & LL bonus rm. $799,000

Mary Lynn White

BLUEMONT

DUPONT

BETHESDA

202.464.8400

301-652-8971

cLassic charm

CHEVY CHASE 202.364.1700

301-652-8971

540.554.8600 301.656.1800

202-309-1100

Grand traditions

Town of Chevy Chase. Impressive 1920s manor w/ dramatic spaces has been renovated from top to bottom. Formal LR & DR, 5 BR, 6.5 BA, dazzling Kit, 3-car garage, and inviting deck. $2,499,000

Eric Murtagh Karen Kuchins

301-652-8971 301-275-2255

a Perfect 10!

Bannockburn Estates. Exquisite 5 BR, 4.5 BA home on almost 1/2 acre lot. Fabulous kit, breakfast & family rooms. Gracious LR, DR & library. Fin. LL. Heated 2 car garage. $1,789,000

Ellen Sandler Susan Berger

202-255-5007 202-255-5006

The Foxhall. Rare duplex apt in this sought after bldg. Bright formal rooms on main level open to large terrace. Curved staircase to 3 BRs each w/bath & balcony. Amenities include pool & tennis courts. $1,115,000

301-654-7902

Green comfort

Kensington, MD. Eco friendly 4 BR, 3.5 BA renovated home. Inviting front porch, solar panels, bamboo flrs & organic garden. Country kit, 1st flr family rm. Chic baths. Fin. LL, 2 decks. $739,000

Linda Chaletzky

Bethesda, MD. Beautiful light filled home in popular Greenwich Forest. 4 fin. levels, grand proportions. Gourmet kit, office, MBR w/ sitting rm. Lge lot w/ sweeping views. $1,899,000

Eric Murtagh

301-652-8971

styLe & fLair

Bethesda. Stunning kitchen/family rm addition. Exciting Rambler w/contemporary flr plan. 4 BRS, 4 BAs. Large lower level. Walk to downtown Bethesda & Metro. $1,500,000

Eric Murtagh

301-652-8971

this is the one

eLeGance & fLair

Penny Mallory

hiGh styLe

301-938-2630

Chevy Chase, MD. Prime location for this 4 BR, 3BA home. Glorious sunroom w/garden views. Main level bedroom. Expansive lot. 2 car garage. Walk to downtown Bethesda & Metro. Walk score 85! $950,000

Eric Murtagh

301-652-8971

rare oPPortunity

Glover Park. Fabulous sun filled 2 bedroom unit w/ balcony. Newer kitchen. Parking conveys. Full service bldg. w/in ground pool, roof deck & many fine amenities $442,000

John Nemeyer Susan Morcone

202-276-6351 202-437-2153

EVERS IS EVERYWHERE! VISIT US AT WWW.EVERSCO.COM GMG, INC. April 6, 2016

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up & coming April 8 Caravan Beirut

April 10 Sunset for Dancers

A handpicked selection of Lebanese designers will showcase their talent and collections at an event hosted by digital retail platform Bucolik and Mariana Wehbe Public Relations, in partnership with the American Lebanese Chamber of Commerce. On display will be fashion, accessories, jewelry, homeware and photography. For details, email isobel@taapr.com. Georgetown Park, 3222 M St. NW.

Kizz Me DC and Kizomba City DC have teamed up to offer a series of sunset dance parties at Georgetown Waterfront Park. Music for popular partner dances, such as salsa, bachata, zouk and kizomba, will be played. There will also be a 30-minute basic dance lesson. The event will take place every second and last Sunday. Admission is $5 to pay for the public gathering permit. Georgetown Waterfront Park, Water Street NW.

Calendar

April 9 Newspaper Fort Challenge at the Building Museum At this free Newspaper Fort Challenge for all ages, families will collaboratively construct awe-inspiring forts made entirely of newspapers and tape in the National Building Museum’s Great Hall. Participants will learn about the triangle — the strongest geometric shape — and create tetrahedral caverns small enough for one or big enough for the whole clan. For details, visit nbm.org. 401 K St. NW.

Reception with the Artists at Studio Gallery Studio Gallery hosts an evening of artistic discussion featuring the artists in the gallery’s current exhibition: Harriet Lesser, Thierry Guillemin, Eleanor Kortlarik Wang and Julie Koehler. For details, visit studiogallerydc.com. 2108 R St. NW.

April 14 to 16 Eileen Fisher’s Spring Shop Local Event

April 13 Charmed by Charity Soiree Alex and Ani Georgetown hosts this refreshments and shopping event for those with a passion for giving back. Fifteen percent of all proceeds will be donated to support the Colon Cancer Alliance. For details, email maurisa@spottedmp.com. Alex and Ani Georgetown, 3068 M St. NW.

Smithsonian Craft Show

Widely regarded as the country’s most prestigious juried show and sale of fine craft, the Smithsonian Craft Show, April 21 through 24, will hold a preview night benefit with Champagne, hors d’oeuvres, an awards ceremony, a dinner buffet and an auction. Tickets are $250. For details, visit smithsonianassociates.org. National Building Museum, 401 F St. NW. At Eileen Fisher’s Spring 2016 Shop Local event at the Phoenix, shoppers will receive 10 percent off purchases from Eileen Fisher’s new spring collection and enter to win one of 12 gift bags filled with goodies from local neighborhood businesses. Ten percent of all Eileen Fisher sales will benefit Women for Women International. 1515 Wisconsin Ave. NW.

April 15 Bernard Herrmann Festival Post-Classical Ensemble kicks off a weekend celebrating the music of Bernard Herrmann (1911–1975), the Academy Award-winning composer of classic film scores, including those of “Citizen Kane,” “Psycho,” “North by Northwest” and “Taxi Driver.” The speakers at this afternoon and evening of discussion and live performances at Georgetown University include the composer’s daughter. Concerts and screenings will follow on Saturday and Sunday at the National Gallery of Art. For details, visit postclassical.com. McNeir Auditorium, Georgetown University, 37th and O Streets NW.

April 16 USA Science & Engineering Festival Expo

National Building Museum, Washington, DC

APRIL 21–APRIL 24, 2016

Lockheed Martin hosts the fourth USA Science & Engineering Festival Expo, a free event with thousands of hands-on activities in fields such as robotics, genomics, advanced manufacturing, 3D printing, cryogenics and space exploration. Other highlights include more than 100 stage shows featuring performers such as They Might Be Giants, actor Will Wheaton, Sick Science’s Steve Spangler, the Science Cheerleaders and Dr. Kaboom. For details, visit USAScienceFestival.org. Walter E. Washington Convention Center, 801 Mt. Vernon Place NW.

SmithsonianCraftShow.org

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Elaine Hyde / Glass

April 19 VisionArt Pop Up Gallery

Smithsonian Women’s n’ Committee n’s

3/14/16 3:04 PM

Johns Hopkins Medicine presents an exclusive briefing about advances in women’s health. This year’s program offers intriguing insights into the role of our own bodies in preventing, defending against and succumbing to diseases. Tickets are $25. For details, visit hopkinsmedicine.org. Bethesda Hyatt, 1 Bethesda Metro Center, Bethesda, Maryland.

April 20 Smithsonian Craft Show Preview Night

Artist and Entomologist at the Renwick Artist Jennifer Angus will discuss her Renwick installation, “In the Midnight Garden,” with Seán Brady, chair of the entomology department at the National Museum of Natural History. Attendees will learn about the brilliantly colored insects in Angus’s piece and the importance of insects to the natural world. For details, visit americanart.si.edu. 1661 Pennsylvania Ave. NW.

Health Briefing: A Woman’s Journey

At this group exhibition, “Spring Into Art,” Georgetown-based VisionArt Consulting will showcase the work of six artists through May 9 at its Pop Up Gallery of Contemporary Art. An opening reception will be held Friday, April 22, from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. For details, visit visionartconsulting.com. 3222 M St. NW.

11th Annual Women & Wine Women & Wine, which benefits Georgetown Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center’s Nina Hyde Center for Breast Cancer Research, is a women-only dinner featuring a cocktail reception, silent auction and awards presentation to recognize outstanding individuals for their contributions to breast cancer research. Tickets start at $250. For details, visit lombardi.georgetown.edu. The Ritz-Carlton, Tysons Corner. 1700 Tysons Boulevard, McLean, Virginia.

ENOversity Wine Tasting with Chocotenango Chocolates ENO Wine Bar hosts an ENOversity wine and chocolate tasting with Chocotenango Chocolates. Attendees will meet the chocolate maker and try a flight of chocolates, including a cherry-flavored chocolate in honor of the National Cherry Blossom Festival. 2810 Pennsylvania Ave. NW.

April 23 Georgetown House Tour 2016 The Georgetown House Tour, providing funding for St. John’s Episcopal Church’s ministries supporting the needy, is celebrating its 85th year. This year’s tour, under the direction of Georgetown residents Jill and Scott Altman, will feature some of the most interesting and beautiful historic homes in Georgetown. Captain Altman, a veteran of four NASA space flights, spent more than 50 days in space and flew F-14s in the movie “Top Gun.” Tickets, which include admission to tea at the church, are $50 per person. For details, visit georgetownhousetour.com. 3240 O St. NW.

April 24 Mother’s Day Photo Shoot at Little Birdies Little Birdies Boutique will have photographer Claire Harvey in the store for a Mother’s Day photo shoot. Email claire@claireharveyphotography.com or shanlee@shoplittlebirdies.com to secure a spot. The cost is $250 for a 15-minute photo shoot, which includes 15 jpeg images. 1526 Wisconsin Ave. NW. Want to get your event listed? Visit Georgetowner.com and list your event on our calendar.


town topics

NEWS

By Chuck Baldwin and Juliana Zovak

Anne Louise Bayly Berman: 1975 to 2016

Potomac River and District Get Environmental Praise The Potomac River got its best report card yet, a B minus, as it continued to improve its grade in the Potomac Conservancy’s biennial State of the Nation’s River reports. In 2013, it got a C, and in 2011, a D. After decades of decline, shad, white perch and other common game fish are on the rebound; more people are spending their outdoor activities on or near the river by fishing, using water access trails and taking advantage of state parks on the river; and the top three pollutants are on the decline. According to the report, the Potomac River is on its way to recovery. “But the Potomac is not in the clear yet,” says Potomac Conservancy President Hedrick Belin. Pollution from urban runoff into the river is rising, blue catfish and snakeheads are invading the waters and underwater grasses, habitat and water clarity are recovering slowly, according to the report. Washington, D.C., also received accolades, coming in for the second year in a row at the top of the Environment Protection Agency’s 2016 Top Cities list, which ranks metropolitan areas according to the number of buildings earning Energy Star certification. An Energy Star building must outperform 75 percent of similar buildings nationwide, according to a statement by the D.C. Department of Energy and Environment.

Metro Rail May Shut Down Entire Lines for Up to Six Months Following the lack of District-wide chaos during a daylong shutdown of the entire Metro rail system March 16, Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority CEO and General Manager Paul Wiedefeld and Metro Board Chair Jack Evans said they may need to shut down entire rail lines for as long as six

Canoeists paddle on the B-minus waters of the Potomac River. Courtesy Potomac Conservancy.

months to perform maintenance. “The system right now, in order to do the maintenance that needs to be done, cannot be done on three hours a night and on weekends. It just can’t,” the Washington Post quoted Evans as saying. “So in order to do repairs that are necessary, it may come to the point where we have to close the entire Blue Line for six months. People will go crazy. But there are going to be hard decisions that have to be made in order to get this fixed.” Wiedefeld is expected to make his decision on what he will do in the next six weeks.

Exelon Approved to Absorb Pepco With Pepco’s now-approved merger with Exelon, Chicago-based Exelon becomes the largest energy utility in the country. In a protracted two-year negotiation that saw an initial rejection of the merger by the District’s Public Service Commission, following massive protests by a coalition of activists called Power DC, a team led by Mayor Muriel Bowser negotiated a settlement agreement that increased investment in the District by the utility from $14 million to $78 million. Though approval by the PSC was expected, the settlement was rejected in a 2-1 vote. The explanation was that it was not in the public interest, primarily because the four-year rate relief the mayor’s team negotiated applied only to residential customers and not to commercial or governmental customers. Another deal was made changing four of about 140 terms in the proposal, including the terms of the rate relief, specifically by putting off the allocation until the next rate case. The new proposal lost the support of the mayor and many other officials involved in the process, but was approved nonetheless by the PSC on March 23.

Anne Louise Bayly Berman, known as Annie Lou, died of cancer Easter Sunday, March 27, at her home in upper Northwest. She had also lived in Georgetown. She leaves behind her husband MJ Berman and her children Charles (Charlie), Theodore (Teddy), Louisa (Scottie) and Helene (Nell). She was born on Christmas Day in 1975. A third-generation Washingtonian, the endlessly energetic and positive Berman attended Blessed Sacrament School, Georgetown Visitation Prep and James Madison University and got engaged at the ruins of Georgetown’s Aqueduct Bridge on the Potomac, followed by a lunch at Cafe Milano. She was the founding editor of Daily Candy D.C., a blog on shopping and style that shut down, and a co-founder of BabyLove D.C., a non-profit that provides baby supplies to those in need. She served on the board of directors of the D.C. Public Library Foundation and Blue Igloo Playgroup. She was active in the PTA of Horace Mann Elementary School and was a teacher for Roots of Empathy.

Annie Lou Berman. Photo by Robert Devaney. Berman also volunteered for the Citizens Association of Georgetown, which said of her: “Annie Lou was an important founding member of the Oral History Project at CAG in 2010 — giving expertise and guidance based on her experience heading the oral history division for the Smithsonian’s Archives of American Art. She conducted some of our first interviews, trained volunteers and moderated the first Oral History Panel evenings that have become so popular. We will miss her cheerful, personal attention to young and old alike at Georgetown events.”

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TOWN TOPICS

‘Ransomware’ Attack Takes Out MedStar Computers

Comments Sought on Kennedy Center–Rock Creek Trail Connection

Last week, a cyberattack crippled several local hospitals and outpatient medical centers when a virus disabled a number of MedStar Health’s networks and systems, including their email and patient-record databases, for at least two days. The healthcare provider, which operates 10 hospitals in the D.C. metro area, may

The National Park Service is seeking comments from the public on its proposal to build a pedestrian-bicycle connection between the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts and the Rock Creek Paved Recreation Trail. The link would improve access, as there is currently no direct access to and from the Kennedy Center to the east or southeastward to the recreation trail. The only pedestrian or bicycle access is via a series of crosswalks across F Street NW a quarter of a mile north of one of the Center’s parking garages. Comments can be made online at go.nps.gov/ConnectionEA.

Bringing Properties to Life at Night! For Over 40 Years

Georgetown University Hospital, one of those affected by the cyberattacks on MedStar Health. Photo by Tara Beth Olson.

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have been victim of a “ransomware” attack, in which the company’s computers are held ransom for payment in digital Bitcoin currency. According to a report in the Washington Post, several employees reported seeing a message on their screens demanding payment of 45 Bitcoin, equivalent to about $19,000, though MedStar officials would not confirm this. Many patients reported that their appointments were cancelled due to the network outage, though some were asked to bring a list of their current medications and allergies. Staff

reverted to using paper to track what work they were able to do. Allegedly, when some blocked systems could be accessed, they were read-only, so that no information could be input or updated. Last month, a medical center in Los Angeles resorted to paying $17,000 in Bitcoin to re-access their system. Attacks followed in Kentucky, West Virginia, California and Canada — suggesting a rising and unnerving trend.

Season Passes for Potomac Boathouses Will Be Honored According to a spokesperson at NCR Guest Services, which took over operations of the three boathouses on the Potomac River owned by the National Park Service, season passes for 2016 that were purchased from the previous vendor will be honored. There was some concern among passholders that they would only be able to use their benefits at the two

EVERYTHING YOU’RE LOOKING FOR . . . NOTHING YOU’RE NOT Bobby Ladson

Rob Green

When it comes to auto repair, auto service, finding a new mechanic, or simply getting an oil change in Georgetown, Washington DC, you are looking for honest, fair, friendly, clean, and professional . . . with great customer communication. Right? That is what we are all about at Georgetown Shell. We won’t be adding on a bunch of extra and unnecessary items to your work request. If we see something else that we think needs attention we’ll tell you about it, how serious we think it is and give you an idea of how long we think you can–or should–wait to address it. Fair enough? RIGHT THE FIRST TIME OR WE’LL MAKE IT RIGHT.

The Key Bridge Boathouse, one of three boathouses on the Potomac River now operated by NCR Guest Services on behalf of the National Park Service. Photo by Percy Metcalfe.

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TOWN TOPICS

Northeast Triangle Dorm to Be Ready in the Fall

about 75 percent complete. The exterior of the building is finished save for some masonry work. Many fixtures such as toilets, showers and tiles are already in place. The university expects the construction to be completed in late June or early July, resulting in on-campus housing for an additional 225 students starting with the 2016-17 school year. The construction of the eight-story building — angled next to Reiss Science Building, White-Gravenor Hall and the Bunn Intercultural Center — began last year. There has been considerable impact on the main campus, with walkways blocked off and foot traffic redirected. The LEED-certified building will have a green roof and green terraces on the east side, bordering the Georgetown Visitation Prep property.

Construction on the Northeast Triangle, Georgetown University’s newest dorm, is

THURSDAY, APRIL 7 DC Water Public Meeting

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20 GBA Board of Directors Meeting

The D.C. Water and Sewer Authority will hold a Ward 2 public meeting at Georgetown Public Library from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. 3260 R St. NW.

The Georgetown Business Association will hold its monthly board of directors meeting at 5:30 p.m. at Carr Workplaces, 1050 30th St. NW. A networking reception follows at 6:30 p.m. with vegan tacos at Chaia. 3207 Grace St. NW.

THURSDAY, APRIL 14 Concerts in the Parks Kickoff Party

Community Calendar

remaining boathouses operated by Boating in DC: the Ballpark Boathouse on the Anacostia River and the location at National Harbor in Oxon Hill, Maryland. NCR Guest Services won the bid for a 10-year contract to operate the Boathouse at Fletcher’s Cove, Key Bridge Boathouse and Thompson Boat Center, which will allow boat and bike rentals from any of the boathouses they operate to be dropped off at any other.

Concerts in the Parks is having a Kickoff Party at the Vinyl Lounge. Tickets are $85 for the public or $75 for Citizens Association of Georgetown members. All proceeds go to support the Concerts in the Parks program. For more information, visit cagtown.org/concerts. 3401 Water St. NW (K Street).

SUNDAY, APRIL 17 Earth Day Plant Sale Kickoff & Picnic at Tudor Place Bring your own picnic and enjoy the grounds while browsing a range of flowering native perennials. Admission is free, but registration is recommended. For more information, visit tudorplace.org/ programs.

TUESDAY, APRIL 19 ‘What’s Happening at the Canal?’ The Citizens Association of Georgetown will hold a meeting about the C&O Canal at 7 p.m. at Pinstripes, 1064 Wisconsin Ave. NW. Visit cagtown.org for more information.

S e l l i ng

The Patrons’ Party for the 2016 Georgetown House Tour will be at Bill Dean’s residence from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Visit GeorgetownHouseTour.com for more information. 2819 P St. NW.

FRIDAY TO SUNDAY, APRIL 29 – MAY 1 Georgetown French Market The springtime open-air market expands to a three-day festival, featuring sidewalk sales, French fare and live music. Wisconsin Avenue between P Street and Reservoir Road; 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Friday and Saturday; noon to 5 p.m., Sunday. Free.

MONDAY, MAY 2 ANC2E The Advisory Neighborhood Committee2E May meeting will be held at Georgetown Visitation Prep at 6:30 p.m., in the main building. Visit anc2e.com/ meetings for more information. 35th Street at Volta Place NW.

t h e a r e a ’ s f i n e st p r o p e rt i e s

Picturesque Gem An architect’s rendering of Georgetown University’s Northeast Triangle dorm, set to open in the fall. Courtesy Sasaki.

Georgetown House Tour Patrons’ Party

Wesley Heights. Fabulous flow & light in this charming home on quiet cul de sac. Ideal for entertaining. 6 BRs, 4.5 BAs. Family & sun rms, gourmet kit & brkfst rm. Private terrace & garden. $2,695,000

Lynn Bulmer

classic charm

Chevy Chase, MD. Traditional expanded Colonial w/45 BRs, 3.5 BAs. Light filled kit & brkfst rms. Family rm addition opens to beautiful rear yard w/inground pool & gazebo. Near to Metro. $1,295,000

202-257-2410 Susan Berger Ellen Sandler

202-255-5006 202-255-5007

Kathleen Battista

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Graceful sPaces

Bethesda. Prime location at The Crest II only blocks to Metro. Spacious end unit condo TH w/detailed finishes. Remodeled open kit, renov. baths. 2 BRs, 3.5 BAs. Study & LL bonus rm. $799,000

Mary Lynn White

rare OPPOrtunity

Glover Park. Fabulous sun filled 2 bedroom unit w/ balcony. Newer kitchen. Parking conveys. Full service bldg. w/in ground pool, roof deck & many fine amenities $442,000

202-309-1100 John Nemeyer Susan Morcone

CHEVY CHASE 202.364.1700

BLUEMONT 540.554.8600

DUPONT 202.464.8400

BETHESDA 301.656.1800

202-276-6351 202-437-2153

EVERS IS EVERYWHERE! VISIT US AT WWW.EVERSCO.COM

GMG, INC. April 6, 2016

7


Editorial/opinion

A New Boathouse Operator: Who Got Played? Guest Services, Inc., which took over operations this year at Georgetown’s Key Bridge Boathouse (the former Jack’s Boathouse) from Boating in D.C., will honor the previous owner’s season passes. Good to know that there will be some gesture of continuity regarding this Potomac River facility next to Key Bridge. The Boston-based Boating in D.C. took over Jack’s Boathouse in 2013 after owner Paul Simkin was forced out in 2013, following a public battle with the National Park Service. Having the support of Council member Jack Evans and many others, Simkin did not leave quietly. He still questions the Park Service decision. In December 2012, Simkin, a former Georgetown Media Group employee, told The Georgetowner: “The Jack’s Boathouse family is heartbroken that after 70 years on the same location, we are told in a form letter that we must be out by 30 days. … Last summer was the best summer we ever had in D.C. at the boathouse with our business booming and our customers happy. We were brought into the National Park Service offices and assured a minimum of a three-year contract — and then to be told this now is just devastating.” At it turns out, the Fairfax-based Guest Services is a longtime favorite vendor to the NPS. It started in 1917 as a private company, “originally founded to provide dining services to government agencies in Washington, D.C.” It sure looks like the company was itching to take over the Jack’s space for years — and it still doesn’t seem fair to Simkin or Boating in D.C. We have a funny feeling that somebody got played.

Help Jose Antonio Salinas Stay in Georgetown Jose Antonio Salinas is the owner of the stand at the corner of Wisconsin Avenue and Dumbarton Street. He has been a fixture in Georgetown for the past 16 years. Salinas not only sells sunglasses, hats, scarves, umbrellas and other items, but keeps an eye on the street and knows all the Jose Antonio Salinas and neighbors. He has stopped several his stand at the corner crimes and supplies some of the of Wisconsin Avenue and Dumbarton Street. charm and character of our town. With the departure of Five Guys Hamburgers at Wisconsin Avenue and arrival of &Pizza, Salinas has been told to leave by April 25. Georgetown neighbors: Let’s help Jose Antonio Salinas stay at the corner or get a new place nearby. We’re looking for a few good ideas. To lend a hand, email The Georgetowner at editorial@georgetowner.com.

Jack Evans Report

Strengthening Our Fiscal Footing By Jack Evans

It’s of f icially budget season again in the District. Mayor Bowser released her budget proposal two weeks ago and I’ve had the opportunity to review this initial draft. It is a good budget. I want to commend the mayor, CFO Jeff Dewitt and their hardworking teams that have put this budget together. First, I appreciate that this budget contains only a 2.7-percent spending increase over this year’s budget. In the past, the District’s spending has increased 4, 5, even 12 percent from one year to the next. This is important because it means that, while the District’s economy is expected to grow, an even larger share of the District’s growth will be enjoyed by individuals and small businesses rather than paid in taxes. That’s especially true as we continue to enact parts of the major tax overhaul that was proposed by a blue-ribbon Tax Revision Commission led by former Mayor Anthony Williams and approved by the Council in

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Jack Evans is the District Council member for Ward 2, representing Georgetown and other neighborhoods since 1991.

By Mark Plotkin

Barack Obama has lived in the District of Columbia for some time. He first came here in 2005, when he was elected to the U.S. Senate. He became our most famous and visible resident when he was inaugurated as president of the United States in January 2009. If you go by election results, he is extremely popular. Every time his name appears on the ballot, he gets an astonishing 90-plus percent of the vote. But there is no other way to say it: Obama continues to go out of his way not only to ignore the people of Washington, D.C., but to insult them. You may recall that it took Obama more than four years to place the “Taxation Without Representation” license plates on his cars. He has never mentioned our thirdclass, voteless status in any of his seven State of the Union addresses. Also, there was the “I’ll give you D.C. abortion” remark during the tense, contentious budget negotiations with then House Speaker John Boehner. To say Obama has not been our advocate is the

ultimate understatement. This president is not one bit interested in being D.C.’s champion. His recent Supreme Court nomination demonstrated the degree to which he will go to belittle and diminish us. Judge Merrick Garland has an impressive educational and professional background. He went to the right schools, clerked for the right judges and worked for the right law firm. But as a federal judge, he made a very wrong decision when it came to D.C.’s existence and our efforts to become true citizens of this nation. The case was Alexander v. Daley. It was an attempt to grant 650,000 citizens of D.C. full voting representation in Congress. The brilliant, eloquent Jamie Raskin and a battery of lawyers from Covington & Burling made our case. Garland wrote the decision that denied us the right to have a vote in our national legislature. Garland’s justification for this decision was that we are not residents of a “state.” To me, this decision in March 2000 was a classic case of voter suppression. Garland did what he did because the very last thing he ever wanted to be called was a liberal. A decision in favor of fairness and

democracy would be too controversial and too risky to his career path. Garland did not want a “controversial” decision to stain his paper trail. So when it came to choosing a person to be nominated for the Supreme Court, Obama continued his pattern of saying to us, “You don’t count.” To make matters worse, Mayor Muriel Bowser attended the announcement of the Garland pick at the White House, proudly tweeting a picture of herself. And, if that was not enough, she issued a statement giving absolutely no indication that she was even aware of Garland’s decisive role in injuring the District. On another matter, but related to officials making bad choices, former D.C. Mayor Anthony Williams — who was never very visible on the question of D.C. voting rights during his eight years as mayor — seemed to be everywhere, performing the role of corporate shill for out-of-state Exelon in its takeover of Pepco. How sad and pitiful. Political analyst Mark Plotkin is a contributor to the BBC on American politics and a contributor to TheHill.com. Reach him at markplotkindc@gmail.com.

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was anticipated in last year’s budget. We need to focus more energy in ensuring that our roadways are safe and secure for all users. While the budget is strong, we continue to underperform in delivering results on many projects. The Hyde-Addison Elementary renovations continue to be delayed by DC Public Schools planning. In other parts of the ward, we have seen delays in the modernization of Garrison and Francis-Stevens schools and the proposed park over the Connecticut Avenue overpass. In the coming weeks, the Council will hold hearings to question how agencies plan to fully utilize their budgets for the upcoming year. While this is a good budget, we have to continue to push forward to make our fiscal footing stronger, our government more efficient and our city more affordable and equitable for all residents.

Obama, Garland and D.C.’s Voting Status

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2013. This year, the business franchise tax will drop to 9.0 percent and the estate tax threshold will increase to $2 million from $1 million — a critical increase for the many District families who have seen their home values increase dramatically. Beyond the overall size of the budget, the mayor’s proposal includes much that I agree is important. For example, the mayor endorsed my position to fully commit the District’s contribution to WMATA’s budget to prevent any fare increases; fund the Housing Production Trust Fund at $100 million; continue to provide much needed upgrades and modernizations to our schools; and, of particular importance to me, fund the Fillmore Arts program for the five elementary schools that lack necessary space for their own arts education. As good as these moves are, however, there are some areas that continue to be underfunded. Our local infrastructure — sidewalks, streets, alleys — is in disrepair and needs an increased level of attention. Despite this, the capital budget for Fiscal Year 2017 went down by $6,000 in every ward from what

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FEATURE

Another Anything-Can-Happen Season BY GARY T IS CHL ER

A

ll the harbingers of the season — cherry blossoms, the city of trees alive with fresh buds, Easter and the end of March Madness — have already come and gone. But the coming of spring really means nothing until the baseball season has begun. More than any contemporary sport, baseball still relishes its association with hope and the season. The traditional retort “Wait until next year” follows the failure to make the playoffs or win a division flag or the World Series — not an NBA title, a gold medal, the Super Bowl or the Stanley Cup. It ignores not only a losing season but insane salaries, drug tests and bad behavior, instead savoring the spirit of Ernie Banks, who said: “Let’s play two.” Ernie never complained (and never won a World Series). Baseball fans — old and young, past, present and future — go against the modern grain because they trail with them, more than fans of any other sport, the baggage of yesteryear. It’s not just statistics, though baseball fans and sports writers are probably more obsessed with data than hedge fund managers, inventing new categories (see Wins Above Replacement) of achievement or failure every year. It’s a kind of tribal memory that blankets every city worthy of having a team. For years, for instance, the Boston Red Sox

lived not only in the shadow of the New York Yankees, but also of the Curse of the Bambino, whereby Babe Ruth, arguably the greatest power hitter in the history of the game, was traded by the Red Sox to the Yankees. For decades, the Sox remained without a World Series title. To collector of mementos of good fortune and misery alike, whisper the name Bill Buckner and see what happens. The Red Sox finally won a World Series in 2004 (in improbable fashion, trailing the Yankees 3-0 in the playoffs, winning four in a row, then sweeping the St. Louis Cardinals). But the Chicago Cubs haves not been so fortunate, having failed to win a World Series since the first decade of the last century. Guess who’s favored by many to win the World Series this year? The Chicago Cubs. This is not necessarily a good sign. Guess which team was favored by many last year? The Washington Nationals — who suffered a strange, inexplicable collapse after the All-Star game and failed to make the playoffs. But baseball hope springs eternal. At least one Sports Illustrated writer has the Nats winning the World Series, and a number of others have brash outfielder Bryce Harper, who sports a millennial beard and haircut, repeating as NL MVP. (If those initials mean nothing

to you, you should perhaps stop reading.) The Nationals, who brought baseball back to Washington, have already built up enough history to create a tribal memory of sorts, one of per-usual expansion-team defeats, but also of never-fulfilled expectations. That is the way of baseball. These things hurt in a way that knowing Dan Snyder still owns the Redskins does not. The Nats already have a history of two playoff losses that defy explanation, wound the heart and survive as bar talk. In today’s world, there are as many explanations of how the Nats lost those games as there are regional beer brands, which is a lot. Like no other game, baseball has the beauty of endless hope. It has no clock, and therefore anything can happen and quite often does. Time is not an enemy and not a friend; it barely exists except as a backdrop where things like a 22-inning game can occur deep into the morning, where a kid brings a glove to the game in hopes of being the one — out of 30,000 people — to catch a home-run ball. If it’s one hit by Bryce Harper, it will be a treasure. Harper, who will be playing on a team that also includes relief pitcher Jonathan

Washington Nationals line up at last year’s home opener. Photo by Patrick G. Ryan.

Papelbon, who very nearly strangled him in the dugout last year, is one of the game’s superior two young naturals (the other being the much more well behaved but equally lethal Mike Trout of the Los Angeles Angels). Anything can happen at a baseball game. Two years ago, I was present at an opening-day game in which often wounded pitching ace Stephen Strasburg pitched a shutout and Harper hit two homes runs — the kind of game which, if it had been the seventh game of a World Series, would have made many fans feel that they could die and go to heaven right then and there. Hope springs eternal. Come next Thursday — the exhibition game doesn’t count — it starts all over again.

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Business

Business Ins and Outs By Chu c k Bal dw i n a nd J ulia na Zova k

Out & In: Ubiq to Occupy Bistro Français Space Sacré bleu! Thanks, Michael Jordan and sneakerheads. A Ubiq sneaker store will be taking over the space which has held Bistro Français. The premium footwear joint sells fancy sneakers for hundreds of dollars. Look for the line outside.

Bistro Français’s, Tanya and Gerard Cabrol. The restaurant will close after 40 years in Georgetown. Photo by Robert Devaney.

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As for owner Gerard Cabrol and his Bistro Français, they will depart after more than 40 years. One of D.C.’s top chefs, beloved in the neighborhood, Cabrol has been featured in The Georgetowner over the decades, most recently in an October 2015 profile.

Brian Yu, both of whom will graduate in May. Kim’s family owns a chain of restaurants in South Korea.

In: ‘Church’ Coming to In: Bangkok Joe’s Georgetown Park Taking a space on Georgetown Park’s canal level, Church will be a coffee shop in the morning, an eatery by day and a cocktail bar with food service by night. It’s set to open in late summer to early fall. Building on the sense of community that churches create, rather than the religions they serve, the Church concept from D.C.-based development group Tin Shop — which also operates Iron Horse, Jackpot, Penn Social and Rocket Bar — will feature communal tables and an ever-changing menu. “It just seems like Georgetown could really use a hangout space that has a coffee program that wasn’t Starbucks and holds more than 15 people,” said Peter Bayne, a Tin Shop cofounder. In collaboration with Union Kitchen, the local “food incubator” will test menus from the start-ups they work with, changing them out every six months to a year at the 7,000-square-foot Church.

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圀攀 挀愀渀 洀愀渀愀最攀 礀漀甀爀 䠀䤀倀䄀䄀 愀渀搀 匀伀堀  挀漀洀瀀氀椀愀渀挀攀 愀渀搀 琀攀猀琀椀渀最⸀ 䜀攀渀攀爀愀琀椀渀最 愀氀氀     瀀爀漀挀攀搀甀爀攀猀 爀攀焀甀椀爀攀搀Ⰰ 愀渀搀 琀栀攀 洀漀渀琀栀氀礀     甀瀀搀愀琀攀 爀攀瀀漀爀琀猀 戀愀猀攀搀 漀渀 爀攀愀氀ⴀ琀椀洀攀 氀漀最  椀渀昀漀爀洀 椀渀昀漀爀洀愀琀椀漀渀Ⰰ 琀漀 洀愀欀攀 礀漀甀爀 渀攀砀琀 愀甀搀椀琀 愀  戀爀攀攀稀攀 眀椀琀栀 渀漀 瀀攀渀愀氀琀椀攀猀⸀

Mama Rouge is set to turn back into Bangkok Joe’s, dubbed D.C.’s first dumpling bar, April 7. The waterfront Thai spot at 3000 K St. NW changed menus and name in mid-2014 to begin offering Southeast Asian and French food. Owner Mel Oursinsini and chef-owner Aulie Bunyarataphan will now return to more traditional Thai flavors and ingredients.

In: Korean Eatery Zannchi Opens Zannchi, a new Korean restaurant, opened in Georgetown March 29. Located on Wisconsin Avenue between Volta Place and Q Street, the eatery specializes in Korean dishes like bibimbap, a rice bowl topped with vegetables and often meat or eggs, and tapas-style Korean banchan. The restaurant was started by two Georgetown MBA students, Eunjung Kim and

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April 6, 2016 GMG, INC.

CORRECTION: The photo that accompanied a story in the March 23 issue about the new Mykita eyewear shop in Georgetown showed a frame that was not a Mykita frame. The Georgetowner regrets the error. The shop, at 3001 M St. NW, is the first Mykita location in D.C. and only the second in the United States.

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挀眀椀琀⸀挀漀洀

1789 Restaurant and the Tombs will be closed for about eight weeks this summer, mainly for repair of the roof. The work will most likely begin in early July and finish by the end of August. Additional renovations will take place over the course of the year. Following a permit process, F. Scott’s, now a restaurant specifically for receptions and private parties, will merge with 1789 to add additional dining and bar space. This will alleviate the loss of some seating as the restaurant adds first-floor restrooms. That project will take place later in the year. (Dates are still tentative as the projects move forward.) The three restaurants are part of Clyde’s Restaurant Group.

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1789, Tombs to Close for Renovations

Bangkok Joe’s dumplings. Photo by Laura Hayes.

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Town Topics BY BRI AN ST RACK

Also during the Easter Egg Roll, the event shut down temporarily when a shooting occurred at the Capitol. Unfortunately for a visiting guest, she was seen moving a temporary barricade at the same time the Capitol reports were coming in. Secret Service arrested her. A report from the Secret Service revealed that upon investigation, she was identified as a ticket-holding guest who had passed through security with the 30,000 guests that day. She was released when it was concluded she had no link to the shooting at the Capitol.

Eaglets Need Names Last month, two baby eagles were born at the U.S. National Arboretum, and now they need to be named. At the moment, the two fuzzy newborns hold the temporary names DC2 and DC3. The American Eagle Foundation is asking the people of the internet to help give the two eaglets names that are suitable for either a male or female. You can submit your suggestion for a name on Twitter, Facebook or Instagram by using the hashtags #dceaglecam and #namethenestlings. The names will be announced on April 26.

Blossom balloons at last year’s D.C. parade. Courtesy National Cherry Blossom Festival.

Easter Egg Roll: Cherry Blossom Parade Will Annual D.C. Mosquito Infestation Be PETA Ignored, on April 16 a Government Concern? Woman Arrested The Cherry Blossom Festival will conclude its month-long festivities with the annual parade on April 16. This 10-block, bright pink parade is free to the public. The parade will be between 9th and 15th Streets NW along Constitution Avenue. It all starts at 10 a.m. and ends at noon, but you should get there earlier if you expect a good spot. The parade will consist of elaborate floats, huge helium balloons, vocal performers and 15 marching bands from around the country. If you can’t make the parade you can still get a chance to see it all — from noon to 2 p.m. the parade will be broadcast locally.

National Gallery: 3 Centuries of Prints To celebrate the 75th anniversary of the National Gallery of Art, a special exhibition will be on display from April 3 to July 24. The gallery first opened in 1941, and since then has collected thousands of historical prints that range from America’s early stages to the present. Chosen to encompass the last three centuries of American history were 160 works. The exhibition begins with John Simon’s “Four Indian Kings,” 1710, and caps it all off with Kara Walker’s piece “no world,” 2010. The exhibition travels next to the National Gallery in Prague in October.

As temperatures rise in D.C., so do the number of mosquitoes. With the usual hot and humid conditions upon the city, a wave of mosquitos is a no-brainer, but the recent cases of the Zika virus have raised the concern of many public officials. Around the country there are already plenty of politicians trying to get funding for insect control — and are consistently failing. Washington, D.C. has a long history of mosquito-related illness outbreaks, including yellow fever, malaria, dengue and West Nile virus. The District’s budget for the 2016 fiscal year was approved in Dec. 2015, and the neither the word “mosquito,” nor any other insect control related issues, are included in the 902-page council-approved budget.

“Flags I,” 1973. Jasper Johns. Courtesy National Gallery of Art.

A couple of interesting stories came from this year’s Easter Egg Roll on March 28. Every year, PETA pleads to the White House to stop the tradition of using real hardboiled eggs during their Easter festivities, and instead use ceramic eggs. This year, the White House announced they were using 19,000 hardboiled eggs for the 14-hour event. PETA brought up how an average chicken only lays an egg every one and a half days, and they are all just being rolled around and tossed away. In the spirit of tradition, the White House ignored the request like they do every year.

Rito Loco Wins Best New Restaurant From food truck to restaurant, Rito Loco has been getting both awards and a following for their one-of-a-kind food. Rito Loco has a menu with a wide range of flavors, from Cuban to Spanish and Southern Soul cuisine. The company started in 2011 when founders Daniel Diaz and Louie Hankins invented their signature “hangover cure” breakfast burrito at a barbecue. The burrito joint earned itself the Best New Shaw Business of 2015 award for outstanding success in the area. If you want to see what all the commotion is about and try their famous burritos, you can find Rito Loco at 606 Florida Ave. NW.

Fish tacos from Rito Loco. Courtesy Rito Loco.

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downtownerdc.com

Business Ins and Outs B y Lexi R o denca l

OUT: Iconic Bar Millie & Al’s Closing on April 7 Popular Adams Morgan bar Millie & Al’s, known for their revered $1 Jell-O shots, will be locking up its 18th Street location one last time on April 7. To commemorate its final day, the bar will be opening early, at 4 p.m. on April 7, to celebrate its business and have one “final hoorah,” said owner Barbara Shapiro. To stop by before closure, visit the bar at 2440 18th St. NW and enjoy a drink or two.

A selection of seasonal house-made juices and teas. Courtesy Cava Grill.

IN: Cava Grill Opening IN: Jo Malone in Dupont Circle London Coming to CityCenterDC Popular fast casual Mediterranean restaurant, Cava Grill, has opened the doors at its newest location, in Dupont Circle. The long-requested eatery will feature a dedicated space for online order pick-ups, an interior green installation and the exclusive new Green Harissa dressing, which features flavors of jalapeños, lemon and herbs. The new location will be at 1222 Connecticut Ave. NW, near the south side of the circle.

IN: New Nordstrom Rack in Penn Quarter by Fall 2016 Between a thriving political and business scene, it looks like the District is making more room for its fashion scene as well. This fall, Nordstrom Rack will open in a new Penn Quarter location. The new location will be two stories and approximately 37,000 square feet of discount shopping. The much-anticipated new Nordstrom Rack store will be located at 555 12th St. NW.

British boutique Jo Malone London, known for their classic ivory and black aesthetics, is slated to open at CityCenterDC on May 31. This will be the first of the brand’s stand-alone store in the D.C. metro area. Jo Malone London is known for their fragrances, candles and other beauty and home products. The new address for Jo Malone London will be 875 10th St. NW.

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After 14 years, French restaurant Poste Moderne Brasserie will close the doors to its Penn Quarter location on May 31 for construction. Poste will discontinue its lunch service on May 25 before full closure the following week.

Chef Kyoo Eom inside the Poste Moderne Brasserie kitchen. Courtesy Poste Brasserie.

Mayor Bowser Ranks Second Among Tweeting Mayors B y B r ia n S tr a c k

IN: EatBar Returns to the District Despite originally closing in October 2014, EatBar is back and better than over in their new Barracks Row location. The restaurant features unique decor made from gathered cassette tapes that which spell out the word “EAT” across an entire wall. New menu choices are grouped as “snacky things,” “bready things,” “meat + cheesy things,” “beastly things” and “green things,” which range from stuffed olives to flatbread to salads (and so much more). EatBar also has over 100 bottles of wine, 18 beers on tap and a 30-bottle list. EatBar can be visited at 415 8th St. SE.

Jo Malone Sweet Lime & Cedar Cologne. Courtesy Little Luxury Stories.

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OUT: Poste Closing in Penn Quarter

L

ast month “U.S. News & World Report” ranked Washington, D.C., the eighth best place to live in America, but now a more prestigious title gives the District even more recognition. In a list made by Development Counsellors International that looked at the Twitter accounts of 250 mayors from the largest U.S. cities, Mayor Bowser is the second most tweeting mayor. The top 10 mayors on the list include notable names like Baltimore Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake at number one, Atlanta Mayor and Howard University alum Kasim Reed at number six and Boston Mayor Martin Walsh at number eight. DCI analyzed the Twitter activity of the 250 mayor accounts over a 60-day period and took into account factors such as audience size, frequency of tweets, responsiveness to tweets written to the mayor, the engagement of the mayor’s followers and

the number of other mayors that follow a mayor’s account. Mayor Bowser tweets all the time. If you visit her Twitter feed @MayorBowser you can see updates on the city’s conditions, the events she attends, cool things happening around the city —she even tweeted about March Madness once. If you ever feel like asking her a question, the account is usually quick to respond. President and chief creative officer of DCI, Andy Levine, was quoted in a press release saying, “Our aim was to highlight the ‘Jedi’ masters of this important communication tool.” This makes the mayor of D.C. the second most powerful U.S. mayor on Twitter in the galaxy. I don’t know about you, but being called a Jedi master in any context should be an occasion worthy of the grandest of celebrations.


real Estate

The Auction Block By Ar i P os t

Doyle New York Platinum and Diamond Ring Signed Gumbiner Estimate: $175,000 – $225,000 Auction Date: April 18

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Handwritten Sherlock Holmes Manuscript Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (1859–1930) Estimate: $380,000 – $420,000 Auction Date: April 11

diamond ring was originally purchased by the child star’s father, George Temple, in 1940 as the film “The Blue Bird” was completed.

Doyle New York’s auction of Important Jewelry showcases jewelry by the world’s most prestigious makers, including Cartier, Van Cleef & Arpels, David Webb and Tiffany & Co., with offerings spanning the Antique, Victorian, Edwardian, Art Nouveau, Art Deco and Modern eras. This platinum and diamond ring, size 6, centers an emerald-cut diamond, flanked by two kite-shaped diamonds.

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States in more than 25 years. Until the middle of the 19th century, only the sovereign of Burma, or an individual deemed worthy by him, would have been allowed to possess such a magnificent gemstone.

Christie’s

Ruby Ring by Verdura Estimate: $12 million – $15 million Auction Date: April 20 Featured in the Magnificent Jewels & The Jubilee Ruby auction at Christie’s, the Jubilee Ruby — set in a distinctive gold and diamond mounting by the legendary firm Verdura — is the most important ruby of its caliber to be offered for sale at auction in the United

A handwritten draft by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle of his 1893 Sherlock Holmes mystery “The Case of the Greek Interpreter” is a highlight of the Fine Literature sale at Bonhams. The work is best known for the first appearance of Holmes’s older brother Mycroft. Other Sherlock Holmes material will be offered, notably a handwritten page from “The Hound of the Baskervilles,” probably the most famous Sherlock Holmes story.

Freeman’s

Embroidered Plan of the City of Washington, 1807 Susanna Wilkinson Atkinson (aged 14 years)

 Estimate: $15,000 – $25,000 Auction Date: April 19 This rare and charming bit of folkloric antiquity — worked with silk threads, watercolor and ink on a silk ground, the needles inserted below the inscription — was made after a plan of the city drawn by Pierre Charles L’Enfant and Andrew Ellicott. Part of Freeman’s auction of American Furniture, Decorative and Folk Art, the embroidery has remained in the family since it was made. It is only the fourth known Plan of the City of Washington embroidery.

The Shirley Temple Blue Diamond Estimate: $25 million – $35 million Auction Date: April 19 Sotheby’s Magnificent Jewels sale is led by the rare Shirley Temple Blue Diamond. Weighing 9.54 carats, the charming cushion-cut fancy blue

Bringing the Hammer Down

Final selling prices for last month’s featured Auction Block items

Bonhams

Freeman’s

“Old Friends” John Frederick Herring, Sr. (1795–1865) Auction Date: March 2 Final Selling Price: $132,364

Frenchman’s Cove Dining Table, 1981 George Nakashima (1905–1990) Auction Date: March 20 Estimate: $100,000 – $150,000 Final Selling Price: $125,000

Christie’s

Doyle New York

Hanging Scroll Xu Beihong (1895–1953) Auction Date: March 14 Estimate: $15,000 – 20,000 Final Selling Price: $25,000

Swann

“Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass” Auction Date: March 31 Estimate: $18,000 – $22,000 Final Selling Price: $11,875

“Untitled,” c. 1960–66 Richard Diebenkorn (1922–1993) Auction Date: March 29–30 Estimate: $18,000 – $25,000 Final Selling Price: $43,750

Sotheby’s

“Untitled,” 1960 Vasudeo S. Gaitonde (1924–2001) Auction Date: March 15 Estimate: $2,500,000 – $3,500,000 Final Selling Price: $2,770,000

R E A L I Z E T H E VA L U E O F

YOUR COLLECTION GEORGETOWN

THURS, APRIL 28

Doyle Specialists will evaluate

your Art, Jewelry, Modern Furniture

& Design for auction consignment

or outright purchase. We invite you

to schedule a private appointment. Samira Farmer, VP 202-342-6100

DoyleDC@Doyle.com

Harry Bertoia

Willow, circa 1975 Stainless steel

52 1/2 x 30 x 30 inches Est: $30,000-50,000

Offered May 10

DOYLE.COM

GMG, INC. April 6, 2016

13


Real Estate

Provided by Washington Fine Properties

march 2016 sales

Address

Advertised Subdivision

Style

Bedrooms

Baths Half

DOMM

List Price

close Price

2838 CHAIN BRIDGE RD NW

Kent

Contemporary

6

4

5

$3,750,000

$3,600,000

3400 MASSACHUSETTS AVE NW

Massachusetts Avenue Heights

Spanish

5

5

671

$3,500,000

$3,500,000

1533 28TH ST NW

Georgetown

Federal

4

3

206

$3,595,000

$3,125,000

4522 WESTHALL DR NW

Palisades

Contemporary

6

5

61

$2,995,000

$2,925,000

2501 PENNSYLVANIA AVE NW #5C

West End

Beaux Arts

2

2

174

$2,495,000

$2,300,000

3520 OVERLOOK LN NW

Spring Valley

Cape Cod

7

6

43

$1,995,000

$1,995,000

1516 KINGMAN PL NW

Logan Circle

Contemporary

3

3

6

$1,895,000

$1,900,000

700 NEW HAMPSHIRE AVE NW #1218

Foggy Bottom

Contemporary

2

2

9

$1,975,000

$1,880,000

4008 EDMUNDS ST NW

Glover Park

Federal

8

4

85

$3,000,000

$1,850,000

2500 VIRGINIA AVE NW #1403-S

Foggy Bottom

Other

4

4

706

$2,000,000

$1,825,000

3009 DUMBARTON ST NW

Georgetown

Federal

3

2

79

$1,795,000

$1,795,000

5121 YUMA ST NW

Spring Valley

Colonial

5

5

0

$1,795,000

$1,760,000

5039 OVERLOOK RD NW

Spring Valley

Rambler

6

5

22

$1,795,000

$1,700,000

1406 30TH ST NW

Georgetown

Federal

3

3

22

$1,750,000

$1,699,000

1177 22ND ST NW #4M

West End

Contemporary

2

2

101

$1,675,000

$1,675,000

2606 36TH ST NW

Observatory Circle

Colonial

6

4

14

$1,675,000

$1,630,000

3303 WATER ST NW #6C

Georgetown

Contemporary

2

2

113

$1,695,000

$1,600,000

925 H ST NW #810

Residences At Citycenter

Contemporary

2

2

536

$1,634,000

$1,485,000

3725 ALTON PL NW

North Cleveland Park

Craftsman

6

4

133

$1,475,000

$1,425,000

4022 HIGHWOOD CT NW

Burleith

Traditional

3

3

68

$1,495,000

$1,405,000

4000 CATHEDRAL AVE NW #717B

Observatory Circle

Art Deco

3

2

5

$1,395,000

$1,395,000

2718 N ST NW

Georgetown

Federal

3

2

79

$1,395,000

$1,395,000

1508 34TH ST NW

Georgetown

Federal

3

3

188

$1,399,000

$1,385,000

2425 L ST NW #704

Central

Spanish

2

2

3

$1,369,000

$1,379,000

3720 YUMA ST NW

North Cleveland Park

Colonial

5

3

9

$1,295,000

$1,375,000

3920 HIGHWOOD CT NW

Burleith

Traditional

3

3

120

$1,375,000

$1,350,000

A remarkable heritage.

An exceptional future.

Artist’s rendering. Projected opening 2019-2020

With Creekside, Ingleside at Rock Creek’s upcoming addition, we continue the tradition of excellence. Classic architecture, open and elegant floor plans, remarkable services and amenities, together with the added security of a full continuum of quality on-site health services, make Creekside the perfect place to call home. An Ingleside Community

Be among the first to take advantage of your choice of floor plan and location selection—then just relax and start planning to enjoy your Creekside lifestyle.

Call us today at (202) 407-9676 to schedule a personal visit. Ingleside at Rock Creek is a CARF accredited, not-for-profit, continuing care retirement community. 3050 Military Road, NW Washington, DC (202) 407-9676 • www.ircdc.org 14

April 6, 2016 GMG, INC.


Real ESTATe

Featured Property 2823 N Street NW This stately Greek Revival home, with six bedrooms and six baths, is situated in Georgetown’s coveted East Village. Previously owned by Admiral Aaron Weaver, the corner home, built c. 1850, boasts a historic façade only slightly modified from the original architectural design. The inside has been thoroughly updated by architect Dale Overmyer to provide a luxurious atmosphere while maintaining its original character. Along with an awardwinning gourmet kitchen, the features include high ceilings, elegant trim, hardwood floors, recessed lighting and a home intercom and speaker system throughout. There is also parking for two cars and a large, fenced-in yard with a heated pool.

Offered at $6,850,000 TTR Sotheby’s International Realty Michael Rankin 202-271-3344 michael.rankin@sothebysrealty.com

Townhouse in Georgetown, Washington, DC, 20007

4048 Chancery Court NW 4 BR | 3.5 BA | $1,575,000 | 2895 SQ FT NEW PRICE! Stunningly renovated 4 level townhouse in posh gated community. Chef’s kitchen, spa-like master bath with steam shower and heated flooring, elevator to all floors, garage parking for 2 autos. Community includes swimming pool, tennis courts, tot lot and 24/7 manned front gate attendant.

Chris Johnson Realtor chris.johnson@compass.com M: 202.306.0020 Compass is a licensed real estate broker and abides by Equal Housing Opportunity laws. All material presented herein is intended for informational purposes only. Information is compiled from sources deemed reliable but is subject to errors, omissions, changes in price, condition, sale, or withdraw without notice. No statement is made as to accuracy of any description. All measurements and square footages are approximate. Exact dimensions can be obtained by retaining the services of an architect or engineer. This is not intended to solicit property already listed.

ELEGANTLY DESIGNED BY WORLD -RENOWNED DUTCH ARCHITECT PIET BOON LINE K ® – THE ESTATES AT LEIGH MILL

DISCOVER THE STUNNING HOMES OF LINE K ®, PRICED FROM $2.5 MILLION * We’ve seen it done in cars. We’ve seen it done in jewelry. But never before has an international icon created a line of homes. Until now. For more information, visit KHov.com/LeighMill or call Becky Thorpe at 571.233.9979

E S TAT E S AT L E I G H M I L L *Prices, terms, features, incentives and savings subject to change without notice, seller contribution limits apply, see Sales Consultant for community specific details. Permission to use Piet Boon was given by Dominique Borggreve (1511 HV Oostzaan, Amsterdam Area, The Netherlands, 31.0.20.722.00.20).

GMG, INC. April 6, 2016

15


The world’s most desired homes — brought to you by Long & Foster and Christie’s.

Kent, Washington, DC

$4,999,000

Wesley Heights, Washington, DC

$2,875,000

Berkley, Washington, DC

$1,850,000

Stunning mansion with unparalleled craftsmanship. 5BR, 7FB, 2HB home features Brazilian hardwood throughout, gourmet kitchen/family room, pool, and sauna. 8-zone heating/cooling. Beli Nasseri 202-277-0677 Foxhall Office 202-363-1800

Exquisite home partially renov by Chryssa Wolfe. Master bedroom w/separate marble bath and dressing room. Lower level w/bedroom, bath and rec room. Landscaped garden. 2-car parking behind home. Patrice Angle/Wendy Gowdey 202-360-8087/202-258-3618 Foxhall Office 202-363-1800

Stunning monument views & minutes to Georgetown! Watch the fireworks from your own deck! Colonial w/dramatic light-filled spaces. 2-story LR, formal DR, library, renov kitchen w/granite tops & SS appliances. Spacious family room, 2 large decks & fenced garden. Rima Tannous/Chevy Chase Uptown Office 202-439-7878/202-364-1300

Bethesda, Maryland

Cathedral Heights, Washington, DC

Cleveland Park, Washington, DC

$1,579,000

$1,195,000

$739,000

6BR, 4.5BA, Center Hall Colonial in Sumner w/18,614 SF lot backing to wooded parkland. Features kitchen-family room combo, sep DR, grand LR, & laundry/mud rm. Finished walk-out LL w/new carpet, FBA, & au-pair suite. HUGE deck w/wooded views & basketball court. Friendship Heights Office 301-652-2777

Living at its Best! 4BR, 3BA, 3 beautifully finished levels + attic. Original architectural details, large deck, 4-5 car parking, and in-law suite. Cathedral views, 2 blocks to shops + restaurants in Cathedral Commons. Kornelia Stuphan 202-669-5555 Georgetown Office 202-944-8400

YOU CAN HAVE IT ALL! Gorgeously renovated, sun-filled 2BR, 2BA plus DEN. Poggenpohl kitchen. Stretched closets. Washer/Dryer. 250+ SF private terrace plus GARAGE parking and extra storage. Nathan Carnes 202-321-9132 Miller Chevy Chase Office 202-966-1400

Kalorama, Washington, DC

Cathedral Heights, Washington, DC

Observatory Circle, Washington, DC

$599,000

Tasteful, sophisticated, large 1BR located in an 8-unit historic building. Topfloor-unit, completely renovated. Does not share any walls with neighbors. W/D, central A/C. Exceptional location. Exclusive Kalorama address. Lydia Benson 202-365-3222 Miller Bethesda Office 301-229-4000

$565,000

Top floor 2BR, 2BA with spectacular, huge balcony. Classic in-town residence offers timeless style that is both elegant and comfortable. Renovated kitchen features granite counters, Sub-Zero fridge and new LG laundry unit. Pet friendly. Deborah Hrouda/Georgetown Office 202-527-1314/202-944-8400

$539,000

Your oasis in the city – Elegant spacious 1BR, 1.5BA in the luxury Colonnade – Perfect for entertaining! Formal dining room, large balcony, and hardwood floors. Garage parking, gym, pool, pets, double storage, utilities included. Great location! Woodley Park Office 202-483-6300

RESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATE • COMMERCIAL REAL ESTATE • MORTGAGE • TITLE • INSURANCE • PROPERTY MANAGEMENT • RELOCATION SERVICES

LongandFoster.com 866-677-6937 16

April 6, 2016 GMG, INC.


Find your agent at — www.LongandFoster.com/LuxuryHomes

Terri Robinson

2015 TOP AWARD RECIPIENTS IN THE GEORGETOWN OFFICE

Potomac, Maryland

$1,699,000

Resort living in heart of Potomac! 5BR, 5.5BA brick Colonial w/6,100 SF of stunningly finished living space on a 2-acre lot. Lux MBR. Gourmet Kitchen. Walk-out LL. High-end finishes, desirable amenities. New deck w/views of pool. Private pond w/paddle boat. Mehrnoosh Neyzari/Georgetown Office 202-421-8979/202-944-8400

Terri Robinson #1 in Individual Production #1 in Individual Volume Sold Roberta Theis

Roberta Theis #1 in Individual Units Sold

Judi Cochran & Edina Morse

West End, Washington, DC

$675,000

The Szabo Group

Perfect two bedroom, two and a half bath condo featuring sparkling new gourmet kitchen with new cabinets, granite counters and stainless steel appliances. New carpeting in bedrooms and updated baths. Miller Spring Valley Office 202-362-1300

Sarah Howard

Denise Warner

Penn Quarter, Washington, DC

Adrienne Szabo & The Szabo Group # 1 Group in Production # 1 Group in Volume Sold # 1 Group in Units Sold Sarah Howard # 2 in Individual Production # 2 in Individual Volume Sold # 2 in Individual Units Sold Denise Warner # 3 in Individual Production # 3 in Individual Volume Sold # 3 in Individual Units Sold Kornelia Stuphan Top Transfer Agent

$449,000

Jr. one bedroom with spectacular views from walk-out private terrace. Full-Service building, hardwood floors, upgraded kitchen with stainless steel appliances, bath with marble counter. Pool on roof top. Miller Spring Valley Office 202-362-1300

Judi Cochran & Edina Morse # 1 Team in Production # 1 Team in Volume Sold # 1 Team in Units Sold

Kornelia Stuphan

Georgetown Office 202.944.8400 1680 Wisconsin Ave NW

RESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATE • COMMERCIAL REAL ESTATE • MORTGAGE • TITLE • INSURANCE • PROPERTY MANAGEMENT • RELOCATION SERVICES

LongandFoster.com 866-677-6937 GMG, INC. April 6, 2016

17


sealing the deal: super hero agents BY M I C H E L E L ER N ER

R

egardless of the advent of online shopping for a home, real estate remains a people business. Real estate agents who understand this do crazy things for their clients, going beyond expectations to make sure their buyers and sellers have the best possible experience. Eric Murtagh, a real estate agent with Evers & Co., literally went the extra mile and gained a decades-long partnership with Jim Gibson, founder of Gibson Builders. Back in 1990, before everyone had cell phones, Gibson was looking for fixer-upper projects in close-in neighborhoods. Gibson mentioned to Murtagh (who was hoping to win him as a client) that he was going to Rehoboth Beach for the weekend on a Friday. “A beat-up carriage house came up for sale in Palisades that Friday night,” says

Murtagh. “I didn’t think it would last through the weekend and I didn’t have a way to reach Jim. So I left for Rehoboth Beach at 4 a.m. on Saturday in the pouring rain with my thermal paper MLS listing page and a blank contract and drove down without knowing where he was staying. I only knew what his car looked like. I made it in about three hours and I finally found his car just as he was walking outside. He saw me and thought I was crazy for making the ride down to the beach to find him. He took me out to breakfast, liked the house and wrote an offer.”

Sometimes, agents can do something over the top without ever leaving D.C. “I was working with a very earthy, spiritual couple from Colorado who called me in to take

over their listing that wasn’t selling,” says Daniel Heider, vice president at TTR Sotheby’s International Realty. “As a part of my pitch I brought them a bundle of white sage and we ‘saged’ the property to cleanse the former agent’s energy, right after they signed the exclusive.”

Marriage, babies, death and divorce move houses A Washington Fine Properties agent says one of his oddest experiences was when a seller client said, “Oops, I forgot Dad!” The agent kindly went back into the home to retrieve the urn that had been left on the mantel, which contained the client’s father’s ashes.

The fast-paced current market leads to some almost comically quick sales. “My husband’s friend came in from out of town for dinner on a Sunday evening and casually mentioned that mutual acquaintances were getting a divorce,” says Nancy Taylor-Bubes, an agent with Washington Fine Properties. “He said the husband would be selling the house and I realized that I had a perfect buyer for it. I got right on the phone and mentioned to my broker the next day that I was tracking down the listing agent. Another agent overheard me. Within one day we both had offers on the house, which was in the upper brackets, but thankfully I got it for my buyer.” A more pleasant scenario than divorce led Jim Bell, executive vice president and global advisor at TTR Sotheby’s International Realty,

“I sent them off for a lunch break. I got my three-year-old daughter and put her in the backyard to play, and when they came back and saw her their whole attitude changed and they made an offer.”

“As a part of my pitch I brought them a bundle of white sage and we ‘saged’ the property to cleanse the former agent’s energy, right after they signed the exclusive.”

18

April 6, 2016 GMG, INC.


“A wealthy buyer wanted to propose to his girlfriend at settlement. I had to sign for the engagement ring, which was delivered from New York City in an armored car, and then personally deliver it to the closing.”

“I’ve even folded laundry that people have accidently left in the dryer”

“Before her clients’ walk-through, she called and asked if I could make sure any police tape or fingerprint dust was not on the property.”

into an “exciting yet terrifying” settlement. “A wealthy buyer wanted to propose to his girlfriend at settlement,” says Bell. “I had to sign for the engagement ring, which was delivered from New York City in an armored car, and then personally deliver it to the closing.” Jamie Peva, an agent with Washington Fine Properties, was showing a Georgetown home that he thought would be a great fit for a young couple expecting their first baby. “The house just didn’t resonate with them and they couldn’t picture having a family there,” says Peva. “I sent them off for a lunch break. I got my three-year-old daughter and put her in the backyard to play, and when they came back and saw her their whole attitude changed and they made an offer.”

Transactions that you might think would fail Living on the edge is a common experience for real estate agents, who know that many transactions hang by a thread that could easily be snapped. Andrea Evers, an agent with Evers & Co. in Dupont Circle, had a wild story about her listing near U Street. Her clients decided to remove a broken fence door rather than repair it. A crime occurred while the property was in escrow. “A chase ensued and the ‘chasee’ ran through the alley behind my listing, noticed an opening into a backyard where my clients had removed the door and ran in,” says Evers. “He was stuck

and tried to scale a fence, but the man chasing him caught up and shot and killed the trapped man, who died in the backyard of my listing. I got a call very early the next morning from my scared and shaken seller clients. I never heard a word from the buyer agent until the day before closing. Before her clients’ walk-through, she called and asked if I could make sure any police tape or fingerprint dust was not on the property. ‘So, they know?’ I asked. ‘Yes,’ she replied. ‘No problem, we’ll make sure the house is clean,’ I said. The closing went smoothly.” Hans Wydler, who recently opened Wydler Brothers Real Estate, says his brother Steve Wydler almost didn’t make it through his first year in the business. “He had a listing where a guest clogged an upstairs bathroom and flooded it without telling anyone,” says Hans. “Water started dripping down the dining room chandelier and I got a call from Steve saying: ‘Help. 911. Emergency.’ He sold the house with multiple offers but lost about a year of his life to stress.” Skip and Debbie Singleton, owners of DC Living Real Estate, worked with a buyer of a newly renovated home who fell in love with the dog that had been on site during construction and wanted the dog written into the contract. “It turned out that the contractor-owner of the house loved the dog too, and wouldn’t part with him,” says Skip. “Our buyers got the home without the dog, but they rescued another dog soon after they moved.”

Over-the-top service Margaret Heimbold, a Long & Foster agent, recalls: “A few years ago on a gorgeous sunny day in Georgetown, I was summoned by my out-of-town developer-purchaser to present Evangeline Bruce’s former home on 34th Street. It was listed for about $5,000,000. Of course, I was happy to do so and parked my Lexus SUV in the driveway. As I was presenting the house and ballroom, I patted my empty pocket and realized that I had left my car keys in the car. I excused myself and walked outside to the driveway only to find the car was gone. The car was ultimately recovered (with some damage because the person who took it was using it as a taxi service). I never did sell the house, but the developer listed one of his properties for sale with me.” Nashwa Beach, an agent with Evers & Co., jumped right in with stellar service for her first listing. The family was moving overseas quickly and facing financial problems. “The matriarch was a hoarder and I had to clean the entire house,” says Beach. “Movers took out several truckloads of trash and there were a few dead rodents too. I had to store and ship items via freight to their new location and even lend them a few thousand dollars.” Fortunately for Beach, the home sold quickly for $65,000 over the list price. Real estate agents are well known for recommending contractors and moving companies, but Taylor-Bubes and her staff step

in to obtain emergency No Parking signs to help customers get a moving truck into Georgetown’s notoriously tight streets. “One time, a new assistant had forgotten to get the signs, so she raced to the police station on a Sunday night and then the whole office moved our cars around and knocked on the neighbors’ doors to see if they could move their cars to create space for the truck,” says Taylor-Bubes. “Everyone hung around waiting for a car to move and then we’d race to put one of ours in the spot to reserve it.” Nancy Itteilag, an agent with WFP, has taken delivery of cars shipped from overseas for clients who weren’t in town, driven clients to the airport and finished packing for clients who were too overwhelmed at the last minute. “I’ve even folded laundry that people have accidently left in the dryer,” says Itteilag, who also delivers lunch to buyers and to their moving crews to keep people happy on a stressful day. Catherine Charbonneau, another Evers & Co. agent, had to get a big bat out of one of her listings in Chevy Chase. “I’ve chased cats, crated dogs and walked dogs for customers, climbed onto the roof, crawled under a home, landscaped, caulked and even sat with sellers to sort their ‘trash, donate or keep’ piles,” says Charbonneau. In other words, customer satisfaction means a lot more than paperwork for most real estate agents.

GMG, INC. April 6, 2016

19


LE DECOR

Everything’s Coming Up Lilac & Lavender By Charlene Louis

Shades of lavender and lilac can breathe life into an otherwise dull or bland décor. A dash of purple can alter your home’s vibe, giving it a chic, modern, exquisite, elegant, sophisticated — or even cozy — feel.

1 2

RETRO VASE

Crafted from island-sourced raw clay, skilled potters form the vase on a traditional wheel. CB2 $39.95

3

BERG PILLOW

A ghostly forest of spindly birch trees is rendered in complementary hues. Anthropologie $198

5 6

MERCURY TEALIGHT HOLDER SET

Create a custom design, or leave it up to the creativity of one of our designers for a beautiful surprise. Ultra Violet Flowers $150

These petite bowl-shaped tealight holders, touched with aged gold and copper, decorate with ease. Calypso St. Barth $35

LIVE IN YOUR HAIR

This piece of glass art will get your guests talking. Bo Concept $269

7

This soothing grayish purple, capturing the beautiful color of lilacs, never fails to deliver a dose of calming relaxation. Benjamin Moore $37.99 to $69.99

LAVENDER POP DECANTER Each one is crafted from two layers of hand-blown glass. Jonathan Adler $228

20

April 6, 2016 GMG, INC.

SPRING LILAC

4

WOOD WALLPAPER

DESIGNERS CHOICE

This pillow is made of 100-percent Norwegian lamb’s wool with duckfeather filling. Design Within Reach $195

5

“I think it pisses God off if you walk by the color purple in a field somewhere and don’t notice it.” ― Alice Walker, “The Color Purple”

9 8

REORIENTED – LAVENDER

This style features a random Oriental rug patterning in bold pastels and sophisticated neutrals. FLOR $200 each

LOUNGE MODULAR DESIGN SOFA

The appearance of this easy sectional sofa, with a rigorous design, is softened by the use of comfortable materials and coverings. Calligaris Custom pricing


Food & wine Gordy’s Pickle Jar makes the first pickle brine sold in a can. Courtesy Gordy’s Pickle Jar.

Cocktail of the Month

Canning the Fine Brine By Kat e Ocz y pok

I

f you’re a barfly in the D.C. area, you may be on to a bartender’s best-kept secret. Just in case you aren’t, local pickle company Gordy’s Pickle Jar is letting us in on it — and canned it for home bartenders here and nationwide. Gordy’s Fine Brine is the first pickle brine for cocktails to be sold in a can. Drink connoisseurs were pouring pickle brine from refrigerator jars — not the cleanest of options. Gordy’s founders, Sarah Gordon and Sheila Fain, were doing the same thing and realized there had to be (and needed to be) a better way. The cocktail pickle-brine can was born. Gordon and Fain founded Gordy’s five years ago after deciding to go into the pickling business. Fain was in the hospitality industry and Gordon had her own consulting firm that focused on branding. The two met through mutual friends and created Gordy’s, named after Gordon’s father, whom everyone called Gordy. “Gordy’s just seemed like a really strong pickle name,” Gordon said. A Chicago native, Gordon has lived in D.C. for 10 years, while Fain grew up in Columbia, Maryland, and later attended the University of Maryland. Fain had been living in San Francisco, but since the pickle market there was already oversaturated with small batch produc-

ers, back to D.C. she came to start up Gordy’s. The partners decided to set up shop in the Petworth neighborhood at 2nd and Upshur streets NW. “We love the neighborhood,” Gordon said. “It’s great. Upshur is getting a makeover and there are a lot of new businesses and young families.” Gordon added that while it’s not an ideal place to manufacture pickles, they rented 1,500 square feet because of their immediate need for space. “Right now it’s working for us, but we always have our eyes open for the next potential space,” Gordon said. The duo focuses on craftsmanship and sustainability, working with local farmers and farmers markets like Fresh Farm Markets (freshfarmmarkets.org). They’re also at Whole Foods stores in D.C., Maryland and Virginia, as well as Harris Teeters and a number of small retailers. They also sell their products at local restaurants. For pickle-obsessed family members not in the D.C. area, Gordy’s ships nationwide. Gordon and Fain also have a deal with Nordstrom as part of their “Pop-In” series. Until April 17, “Pop-In: Eats” is going on at Nordstrom Tysons Corner. Gordy’s and other foods will be available. Additional Nordstrom “Pop-In” series cities include Chicago, Seattle and Dallas.

If you visit Gordon and Fain’s website, there are delicious recipes created by the two, as well as some they collaborated on with other recipe magicians like Julia Turshen, who co-wrote “It’s All Good: Delicious, Easy Recipes That Will Make You Look and Feel Great” with Gwyneth Paltrow. Turshen created the “Kinda Korean Chicken” dish on their site (gordyspicklejar.com/recipe/kindakoreangrilledchicken). As far as plans for their own book, Gordon seemed to have a “never say never” attitude. “We really love pickles!” said Gordon, talking about her love of having a warm-weather vegetable all year round. “We love the idea of preserving the season.” The back of Gordon and Fain’s cocktailbrine can has a unique drink recipe concocted by Adam Bernbach of U Street cocktail bar, 2 Birds 1 Stone. We’ve included the recipe here.

One Block Street 1 ½ ounces gin 1 ounce Gordy’s Fine Brine ½ ounce lime juice ¼ ounce rich simple syrup 2 dashes orange bitters Shake. Strain into a coupe. Garnish with a lime wheel.

Proudly Serving The Georgetown Community for 24 years PRE-FIXED MENU Three Courses Each Lunch $26.95 Monday thru Friday Nightly Dinner $36.95

Photo by Steven Rattinger

GMG, INC. April 6, 2016

21


FOOD & WINE

The Latest Dish BY LI NDA RO T H

I

vy City Tavern, is for now, a 45-seat tavern, serving tavern food above Ivy City Smokehouse and retail fish market at 1356 Okie St. NE in the Ivy City neighborhood. It’s owned by Greg Casten and Ronnie Goodman. Greg is better known for his company just around the corner for the past 25 years, ProFish. It’s an emerging neighborhood, so the plan is for it to become a full-service restaurant at the right time. Its huge rooftop lends itself as an ideal spot to eat steamed crabs and drink beer on warm summer evenings. There is also an indoor private dining room adjoining the patio. It’s a seafood market and a tavern, soon to become a restaurant and a private dining venue with a potential 225-person capacity. PN Hoffman and Madison Marquette’s Southwest waterfront development, The Wharf, will also have a very large Spanish seafood restaurant called Del Mar by Fabio and Maria Trabocchi (Fiola, Fiola Mare and Casa Luca). Maria’s Spanish heritage and influence will take front and center here. The 11,500-square-foot two-level restaurant will include a significant outdoor patio space with waterside cabanas. Included is a private dining room, wine cellar and bar. Opening is targeted for the fourth quarter of 2017. Just Opened: Tim Ma and Joey Hernandez recently opened Kyirisan, serving AsianFrench food at 1924 8th St. NW in Shaw. It has

Volume 62 Number 13

catchy menu categories: “in the ground,” “on the ground” and “under the water.” Michael Schlow’s Alta Strada also just opened at City Vista at 465 K St. NW under the culinary supervision of Chef Michael Zentner, who relocated from Boston. Plans call for Conosci, a crudo bar to open later in the season, along with a patio. Andrew Evans of The BBQ Joint, joins Ian and Eric Hilton to open a summer-camp themed bar in the old Maurice Electric Building at 500 Penn St. NE, an area made cool by Union Market. The casual restaurant will serve summer camp staples as well as “better” summer camp staples, such as grilled (better) cheese on bread baked at Lyon Bakery. Chef Update: Angel Franco, formerly of minibar and Maketto, is the new executive chef at Compass Rose. Dennis Fieldman will be the chef at Flavio Italian restaurant, which replaces Paper Moon at 1073 31st St. NW in Georgetown. It will continue with the same ownership. CCChanges: The Majestic will reopen in May under the direction of Chef Gaby Hakman, most recently of Miami. Alexandria Restaurant Partners is renovating and will relaunch as a new concept. Mason & Rook replaces Hotel Helix by Kimpton. Chef Jonathan Dearden, formerly of Ardeo & Bardeo, heads up the kitchen at Mason & Rook’s new restaurant, Radiator. The adjoining bar will feature craft cocktails. An April opening is

Below: Spaghetti aglio e olio con pomodoro from Alta Strada. Courtesy Alta Strada. Right: Brisket and pulled pork from The BBQ Joint. Courtesy The BBQ Joint.

planned. Kimpton is renovating the rooftop to offer cocktails and light fare, poolside. Quick Hits: Kapnos Kouzina opens in 4900 Hampden Lane in Bethesda Row in partnership with chef George Pagonis. George Kennedy, formerly of Rhino Bar in Georgetown, plans to open The Spirits of 76 in Clarendon where Taste of Morocco used to be on Washington Blvd. His partner is Patrick Doody formerly of O’Sullivan’s Irish Pub (next door). Chuy’s plans to open its fourth location in the metro area (they have locations in Fairfax, Springfield and Woodbridge), in Sterling at the beginning of May. Social Restaurant Group plans to open Bonfire this month at the two-level building at 1132 19th St. NW where Famous Luigi’s used to be. Fire appears to be a prevailing theme as

their light fixtures are fire hydrants, matchstick art adorns the walls, and with fire hoses for décor. Fire inspires the menu too, with charred hangar steak and s’mores. The chef is R.L. Boyd and the pastry chef is Ellen Diekemper. Kudos: Congratulations to Jacques Haeringer and the Haeringer family on the 40th anniversary of renowned L’Auberge Chez Francois. Linda Roth is president of Linda Roth Associates, a public relations and marketing firm that specializes in the hospitality industry, providing creative connections through media relations, marketing initiatives, community outreach and special events. Reach her at: Linda@LindaRothPR.com or lindarothpr.com or #LindaRothPR.

April 6 - April 19, 2016

Visit Chaia “Farm To Taco” at our newly opened location in Georgetown! Rated one of the Top 20 best restaurants in DC by Time Out Magazine. Bring in or mention this ad to receive a FREE SEASONAL SIDE with any purchase. Offer valid through 4/18/2016.

3207 Grace St NW, Washington, DC 20007 202-333-5222

22 April 6, 2016 GMG, INC.


Your Dining Guide to Washington DC’s Finest Restaurants

1789 RESTAURANT

1226 36th St., NW 202–965–1789 1789restaurant.com

With the ambiance of an elegant country inn, 1789 features classically-based American cuisine – the finest regional game, fish and produce available. Open seven nights a week. Jackets suggested. Complimentary valet parking.

DAS Ethiopian 1201 28TH ST., NW

202–333–4710 dasethiopian.com DAS Ethiopian offers you a cozy twostory setting, with rare outside dining views and al fresco patio dining. DAS is located at the eclectically brilliant historic corner of the internationally renowned shopping district of Georgetown. A tent under which all come to feast is the very Amharic definition of DAS. From neighborhood diners, nearby students and journalists to international visitors and performers, all enjoy the casual but refined atmosphere that serves up the freshest Ethiopian dishes from local and sustainable food sources.

Bistro Francais 3124-28 M St., NW 202–338–3830 bistrofrancaisdc.com

A friendly French bistro in the heart of historic Georgetown since 1975. Executive chef and owner Gerard Cabrol came to Washington, D.C., 32 years ago, bringing with him home recipes from southwestern France. In addition to daily specials, our specialties include our famous Poulet Bistro (tarragon rotisserie chicken), Minute Steak Maitre d’Hotel (steak and pomme frites), Steak Tartare, freshly prepared seafood, veal, lamb and duck dishes and the best Eggs Benedict in town.

THE GRILL ROOM 1050 31ST ST., NW 202-617-2424 thegrillroomdc.com

Tucked up along the historic C&O Canal, a national park that threads through the Georgetown neighborhood, The Grill Room at Capella Washington, D.C., specializes in hand-cut, bone-in, artisan meats, bracingly fresh seafood and tableside preparations. Framed with a wall of floor-to-ceiling windows and fluid geometric lines, the ambiance is one of relaxed refinement. Breakfast, lunch and dinner daily. Brunch Sat.-Sun. 11:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m.

ENO Wine Bar

Filomena Ristorante

Visit ENO Wine Bar and enjoy wine flights, charcuterie, cheese, chocolate & seasonal small plates. ENO offers 100 bottles under $50 & 45 wines by the glass starting at $9. The Cellar is an intimate lounge perfect for a date night or private events. Monthly ENOversity: Sunday Wine Classes $50 & Wednesday meet local producers for free tastings. Happy Hours: Sun-Thur from 5pm7pm with a extended hour on Sunday starting at 4 pm along with nibbles and select wines on tap for $5 Mon-Thursday 5pm-11pm , Fri-Sat4pm-12 am, Sunday 4pm-11pm

Filomena is a Georgetown landmark that has endured the test of time for over 30 years. Our old-world cooking styles and recipes brought to America by the early Italian immigrants alongside the culinary cutting-edge creations of Italy’s foods of today executed by our Executive Chef and his team. Open 7 days a week 11:30am11:00pm. Free salad bar with any lunch entrée Mon-Sat and try our spectacular Sunday Brunch Buffet complete with carving stations, pasta stations!

2810 Pennsylvania Ave., NW 202–295–2826 enowinerooms.com

1063 Wisconsin Ave., NW 202–338–8800 filomena.com

CAFE BONAPARTE

1522 Wisconsin Ave., NW 202–333–8830 cafebonaparte.com Captivating customers since 2003, Cafe Bonaparte has been dubbed the “quintessential” European café, featuring award-winning crepes and arguably the “best” coffee in D.C.! Other can't-miss attractions are the famous weekend brunch every Saturday and Sunday until 3 p.m. and our late-night weekend hours serving sweet and savory crepes until 1 a.m. We look forward to calling you a “regular” soon!

Clyde's of Georgetown 3236 M St., NW 202–333–9180 clydes.com

This animated tavern, in the heart of Georgetown, popularized saloon food and practically invented Sunday brunch. Clyde’s is the People’s Choice for bacon cheeseburgers, steaks, fresh seafood, grilled chicken salads, fresh pastas and desserts.

Grill from Ipanema

Malmaison

Family-owned restaurant serving authentic Brazilian food in Washington, D.C., for more than 23 years. Our Executive Chef, Alcy de Souza, cooks with the heart and soul. Live music on Thursday nights is a romantic blend of bossa nova, jazz, samba, choro and forró.

Malmaison opened in June 2013 and features elegant French dining in Washington D.C’s historic Georgetown waterfront. Housed in a majestically refurbished industrial warehouse reminiscent of NYC’s Meatpacking District, the modern restaurant, pastry shop and event lounge features the culinary talents of legendary 2 Michelin Starred French Chef Gerard Pangaud and Pastry Chef Serge Torres (Le Cirque NYC).

1858 Columbia Road, NW 202-986-0757 thegrillfromipanema.com

Monday – Thursday 4:30 to 10:30 pm Friday 4:30 to 11:30 pm Saturday noon to 11:30 pm (brunch until 4 pm) Sunday noon to 10 pm (brunch until 4 pm) Parking validation available for breakfast, lunch and brunch.

3401 K ST.,NW 202–817–3340 malmaisondc.com

Advertise your dining MARTIN’S TAVERN

1264 WISCONSIN AVE., NW 202-333-7370 martinstavern.com Fifth generation Lauren Martin learns about the family business from her dad, Billy Martin, Jr. Since 1933, the warm atmosphere of Martin’s Tavern has welcomed neighbors and world travelers looking for great food, service and years of history within it’s walls. Fourth generation owner Billy Martin. Jr. continues the tradition of Washington’s oldest family owned restaurant. Serving Brunch until 4pm 7 days a week!

SEA CATCH Restaurant

THE OCEANAIRE

Overlooking the historic C&O Canal, we offer fresh seafood simply prepared in a relaxed atmosphere. Outdoor dining available.

Ranked one of the most popular seafood restaurants in D.C., “this cosmopolitan” send-up of a vintage supper club that’s styled after a '40’s-era ocean liner is appointed with cherry wood and red leather booths, infused with a “clubby, old money” atmosphere. The menu showcases “intelligently” prepared fish dishes that “recall an earlier time of elegant” dining.

1054 31st St., NW 202–337–8855 seacatchrestaurant.com

The Sea Catch will be open on Sundays, serving Brunch and dinner. Sunday Brunch 11:30 - 3:00 Sunday Dinner 5:00 - 8:00 Lunch / Monday- Saturday 11:30 - 3:00 Dinner/ Monday- Saturday 5:30 - 10:00 Happy Hour Monday- Friday 5:00 - 7:00 3 Hours FREE Parking

1201 F St., NW 202–347–2277 theoceanaire.com

Lunch Mon.–Fri. 11:30 a.m.–5 p.m. Dinner Mon.–Thu. 5–10 p.m., Fri.-Sat. 5–11 p.m., Sun. 5–9 p.m.

TOWN HALL

2340 Wisconsin Ave., NW 202-333-5640 townhalldc.com Situated just north of Georgetown on Wisconsin Ave, Town Hall has been a neighborhood mainstay in Glover Park since 2005. Whether you’re popping in for dinner, drinks, or weekend brunch, Town Hall is the spot you’ll want to call home to Gulp, Gather & Grub. Free parking is available nightly after 7PM, and during warmer months, our outdoor courtyard is one of DC’s best kept secrets.

specials in our dining guide. Contact: advertising @ georgetowner.com GMG, INC. April 6, 2016

23


IN COUNTRY & GETAWAYS

Books and Art on the (Hip?) Upper East Side

By R i c h a r d S e l d e n

The new Met Breuer. Courtesy The Metropolitan Museum of Art.

A

National Historic Landmark, the Seventh Regiment Armory on Manhattan’s Upper East Side made an about-face in 2007. The one-time drill hall for New York’s aristocracy — with interiors by Tiffany, Stanford

MOUNT GORDON FARM

The Plains, Virginia • $11,750,000

128 acres and immaculate 3 level, 13,000+ sq ft stone & shingle main house • 5 BR • 8 FP • Exceptional finishes on every floor • Caterer’s kitchen • Elevator • Spa • Separate guest cottage • Pool • Farm manager residence • 3 additional tenant houses • 12 stall center-aisle stable • Pond • Extraordinary land w/incomparable views extending beyond the Blue Ridge Mts • Orange County Hunt. Helen MacMahon (540) 454-1930

WILLOW WAY FARM

Middleburg, Virginia • $1,625,000

Prime Middleburg location • House completely redone in 2004 • Hill top setting with panoramic mountain views • 3 BR • 3.5 BA • Main level master suite • Pine floors • Beautiful millwork • 2 FP • Attached 2-car garage • Beautiful windows • Gracious room sizes • 4-stall barn • In-ground pool • Lovely gardens • 31.05 acres recorded in 3 parcels. Paul MacMahon (703) 609-1905

White and the Herter Brothers, among others — had become best known as a cavernous venue for high-end antiques shows. That year, the massive brick castle became the home of Park Avenue Armory, a nonprofit that undertook the building’s restoration

FAIRVIEW

Boyce, Virginia • $2,300,000

Hilltop setting with mountain views • circa 1904 Colonial home with 3 BR, 3 1/2 BA, high ceilings, note room dimensions • gourmet kitchen and 5 fireplaces • 90 x 200 covered arena • 12 total stalls • main barn redesigned by John Blackburn • 4 bay garage with apartment • 12 paddocks, asphalt drive, security gate and heated pool • 2DUR’s • Whole house generator. Paul MacMahon (703) 609-1905

ECHO HILL

The Plains, Virginia • $1,500,000

Stone English country home in top location between Middleburg & The Plains on 13 acres • Large boxwoods & classically planted gardens • 4 BR home with new kitchen & main level master suite • Hardwood floors, built-in book cases, fireplaces & bright open family room • Bluestone terrace overlooks new pool & entertaining area • Separate guest cottage/ pool house & garage • Whole-house generator. Helen MacMahon (540) 454-1930

info@sheridanmacmahon.com | www.sheridanmacmahon. com

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April 6, 2016 GMG, INC.

and began to program performances and contemporary art installations. The Royal Shakespeare Company came for six weeks one summer and the Merce Cunningham Company danced its last there. Visitors listened in the dark to “The Murder of Crows,” a sound piece by Janet Cardiff and George Bures Miller; swung on giant swings amid dangling sheets at Ann Hamilton’s “The Event of a Thread”; and marveled at Paul McCarthy’s pornographic take on Snow White, “WS.” Almost singlehandedly, the Armory has made the Upper East Side hip. (The next major installation, “Martin Creed: The Back Door,” opens June 8.) Its avant-garde events have been so successful that last year the New York Art, Antique & Jewelry Show, an annual rental of $300,000 or so, was evicted; the 2016 show will be at Pier 94 in November. But two of the most prestigious shows of their kind in the world are still Armory tenants. The Winter Antiques Show will return in January 2017. This weekend, April 7 to 10, more than 200 of the top U.S. and international vendors of rare books, maps, manuscripts and ephemera will be at the New York Antiquarian Book Fair. A short walk up Park Avenue from the Armory is the Asia Society Museum, between 70th and 71st streets, where “Kamakura: Realism and Spirituality in the Sculpture of Japan” is on view through May 8. The exhibition focuses on sculpture from the politically turbulent Kamakura period (1185 to 1333), when artists and their workshops were

WESTWIND FARM

The Plains, Virginia • $1,900,000

Classic Middleburg colonial, completely redone in 2009 • 5 BR • 4 full BA, 2 half BA • 2 FP • Gourmet kitchen • Top of the line finishes throughout • 2-car attached garage • Beautifully landscaped • Sweeping unobstructed mountain views • 21.08 gently rolling acres • Fenced & cross fenced • 3 stall barn, tack & hay storage. Paul MacMahon (703) 609-1905

Circa 1807 • 33 acres ideally located between Middleburg & The Plains • Rare quarried stone exterior, 10foot ceilings • Period mantels, original wood floors, two-story front porch • 3 bedrooms/3 baths, each a private suite • Historic stone barn includes one bedroom/ bath apt, heated tack room, 6 stalls • Carriage barn • 3 paddocks, large turnout field, run-in sheds, auto waterers • Whole farm generator • Pond • Orange County Hunt Helen MacMahon (540) 454-1930

JAY STREET

CHIPMUNK

Prime location • Piedmont Hunt • 10 acres • 2 bedroom, 2 bath, 1 fireplace stucco residence • Open floor plan • Treed setting with mature landscaping • Center courtyard off living area • Separate studio with half bath can serve as guest room or studio • Large 3 bay garage • 2 stalls for horses & 5 paddocks • Great views. Paul MacMahon (703) 609-1905

110 East Washington Street

commissioned by the warrior class to create Buddhist icons of exceptional realism, power and technical excellence. Meanwhile, the big news on the Upper East Side is the opening, last month, of the Met Breuer. With the Whitney Museum of Art in a new Renzo Piano building in the Meatpacking District (at the southern terminus of the High Line), the Metropolitan Museum of Art has

GREYSTONE

Middleburg, Virginia • $1,950,000

Upperville, Virginia • $899,000

“Puberty,” 1914-16. Edvard Munch. The Munch Museum, Oslo. © 2016 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York. Courtesy Neue Galerie.

Middleburg, Virginia • $530,000

Quiet village living • 2 blocks from the center of town • 3 level fieldstone townhome • Garage • Hardwood floors • Granite counters and bright open floor plan • Back yard is fenced for dogs and privacy • Blue stone terrace is great for grilling and entertaining • Easy maintenance and great conveniences. Helen MacMahon (540) 454-1930

Middleburg, Virginia 20117 (540) 687-5588


IN COUNTRY & GETAWAYS taken over the old Whitney, at Madison April 12 Avenue and 75th Street, a Brutalist icon 53rd Annual Daffodil Show designed by Marcel Breuer. At this American Daffodil SocietyThe inaugural exhibition at what this accredited horticultural competition, writer calls the Metney (until I hear from visitors will view thousands of daffodils both museums’ lawyers) is “Unfinished: of all sizes, colors, and forms, submitted Thoughts Left Visible,” running through by amateur daffodil growers. All amateur Sept. 4. Under the direction of Sheena growers are invited to exhibit. For details, Wagstaff, named the Met’s chair of modern visit uppervillegardenclub.org. Buchanan and contemporary art, a new department, Hall, 8549 John Mosby Highway, in 2012, the show’s curators selected nearly Upperville, Virginia. 200 works — by contemporary artists and by big names from Rembrandt to April 16 and 17 Rauschenberg — that were never completed or “partake of a non finito … aesBudbreak Celebration at Cana thetic that embraces the unresolved and Budbreak — when hibernating grapevines open-ended.” awaken — will be celebrated at Cana About eight blocks away, at what is Vineyards with special tastings of rosés now identified as the Met Fifth Avenue, from around the world. Paella by Gloria the top-billed special exhibition is “Vigée will be featured on April 16 and German Le Brun: Woman Artist in Revolutionary Gourmet on April 17. For details, visit France.” Closing May 15, the display of 80 canavineyards.com. 38600 John Mosby paintings and pastels is said to be the paintHighway, Middleburg, Virginia. er’s first retrospective “in modern times.” Finally, across Fifth Avenue from the Leesburg Flower and Garden Festival “Big Met,” the exquisite Neue Galerie on At the 26th annual festival, more than the corner of 86th Street is the sole U.S. 120 vendors will offer landscape designs, venue for “Munch and Expressionism,” gardening supplies, outdoor living items, through June 13. Organized with the plants, flowers and herbs. Visitors can Munch Museum in Oslo, the exhibigather outdoor patio ideas, stock up tion will explore the mutual influences on gardening supplies and search for among Edvard Munch and his German and the perfect gift for an avid gardener. Austrian contemporaries, including Max For details, visit flowerandgarden.org. Beckmann, Ernst Ludwig Kirchner, Oskar Downtown T & T_Georgetowner_4.2016_Layout 1 3/31/16 2:09 PM Page 1 Leesburg, Virginia. Kokoschka and Egon Schiele.

MOUNT AIRY, UPPERVILLE - Extraordinary brick colonial on 50+ gorgeous acres in prestigious Greystone. Over 9,000 sq. ft. of spectacular living space featuring three beautifully finished levels. Heated pool, tennis court and brilliant gardens overlook a picturesque pond with fabulous mountain views, in a private & secluded location. $3,500,000 Peter Pejacsevich 540-270-3835 • Scott Buzzelli 540-454-1399

ELLERSLIE, BERRYVILLE - A rare opportunity to own 249+/- acres of waterfront property in the countryside. With a combination of tall vistas, panoramic views & the Shenandoah river you can have your pick of home sites. Just minutes from the village of Millwood & stretching along nearly 1/2 mile of shore line. Just 60 minutes from DC! See video on website. $2,900,000 Peter Pejacsevich 540-270-3835 • Scott Buzzelli 540-454-1399

In Country Calendar

YATTON RD, ROUND HILL - Runnymede: 1777 Stone manor rich with history; beautifully appointed for your family & friends with gourmet kitchen, Viking range & island with prep sink. Stone terrace overlooks rolling fenced fields, original springhouse and barn. Exposed stone in MBR, original wide plank floors. $1,170,000

Carole Taylor 703-577-4680 • George Roll 703-606-6358 • Paul Kakol 703-303-2733

HUNT CT, MIDDLEBURG - Ultimate quality! Immaculate all brick townhouse with high end upgrades & finishes. Recently refinished HW floors, built-in bookcases, beautiful crown molding, Wi-fi thermostats & Ralph Lauren lighting fixtures throughout. 3 fireplaces, 4 levels, beautiful light-filled kitchen. Minutes from downtown historic Middleburg! Must see! $499,000 Peter Pejacsevich 540-270-3835 • Scott Buzzelli 540-454-1399

WWW.MIDDLEBURGREALESTATE.COM Middleburg 540-687-6321 | Purcellville 540-338-7770 | Leesburg 703-777-1170

P r o P e rt i e s i n V i r G i n i A H u n t C o u n t ry STOnEHAvEn fARM

fOxLAIR

wHITEHALL

wESTwOOD

A picturesque and tranquil retreat nestled on 158+ acres in pristine Rappahannock County. At the end of the private drive is the historic Stone residence, c. 1745 with additional stone cottage for guests or office and tucked into the woods, beyond the home, is a charming and beautifully restored 2 bedroom log cabin. Gardens, lawn, barns, paddocks and tremendous ride out potential provide an outdoor haven. $1,845,000

Middleburg~Charming 4 Bedroom 3.5 Bath, stone & stucco residence on 12+ acres, completely remodeled with the finest craftmanship, in a secluded storybook setting. Surrounded by hundreds of acres in easement, with towering trees and gorgeous landscaping, Dependencies include a beautiful guest house, a carriage house with studio apartment above, a green house, spa, and run in shed in lush paddocks. $1,795,000

The stately mansion is sited on 8½ acres within the town limits of The Plains, VA. The size of the home and its room sizes lends itself beautifully for hosting large events. The foyer measures 48’ x 11’. The zoning allows for potential division rights or potential tax credits. Convenient to Exit 31 of I-66. $1,495,000

Completely remodeled, expanded and exquisitely decorated. 10  beautifully  landscaped  private acres in prestigious "Atoka Chase." It features Decks and Porches, Terraces and Brilliant Perennial Gardens. A Gated Entrance and Board Fenced Paddocks, plus a Run-In Shed for the equestrian, with trails for ride-out. $1,395,000

THOMAS -TALBOT.com

Please see over 100 of our fine estates and exclusive country properties on the world wide web by visiting www.

OAk HILL

105 wALnUT STREET

JOHn MARSHALL Hwy

Thomas Talbot t

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Ar

Nestled on a quiet country lane, Oak Hill encompasses 10+ lovely acres of beautifully landscaped lawns and woodlands. The drive meanders past a delightful pond and leads to this charming 4 Bedroom and 3.5 Bath Colonial home in a private and picturesque setting. Includes Family room off of Gourmet Kitchen, separate Dining Room, Living Room, & Library. Lower level Recreation room. 2 car attached garage and 2 car detached garage with workshop. $900,000

TO BE BUILT. Rare in-town parcel on quiet street. High quality, custom home by well-known local builder. 1st Level features a Foyer, Den, LR, DR, Gourmet Kitchen that opens to Family Room with fireplace, French doors to rear deck. 9' ceilings & hardwood floors. 2nd Level has Master Bedroom Suite with sitting area & luxury Bath. 3 more Bedrooms & full Bath. Lower Level has walk-out stairs, large Rec. Room and/or BR with Bath. Plans available. $799,000

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Investment Opportunity! The fully equipped commercial kitchen includes: upright freezer, refrigerator, 2 undercounter refrigerators, stove with 2 ovens, stainless steel kitchen hood, exhaust fan in kitchen, deep fryer, refrigerated beverage unit, ice machine, 3 compartment stainless steel sink, mop sink and 3 stainless steel tables. The popular Restaurant is adjacent to a 1-bedroom apartment which is included in the lease.Sold subject to current lease. $490,000

This classic 2 story brick Condo located at 266 Fairfield Drive, Warrenton, VA and offers 2 Bedrooms and 1½ Baths, Family room and includes a basement. Approximately 1,116 square feet. Beautiful hardwood floors, updated kitchen, freshly painted. Wonderful location. Close to schools, restaurants and stores. $215,000

Offers subject to errors, omissions, change of price or withdraw without notice. Information contained herein is deemed reliable, but is not so warranted nor is it otherwise guaranteed.

THOMAS AND TALBOT REAL ESTATE LAND AND ESTATE AGENTS SINCE 1967 A STAUNCH ADVOCATE OF LAND EASEMENTS

Telephone (540) 687-6500

P. O. Box 500 s No.2 South Madison Street Middleburg sVirginia 20118

GMG, INC. April 6, 2016

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CLASSIFIEDS/SERVICE DIRECTORY EMPLOYMENT

ADVISORY NEIGHBORHOOD COMMISSION 2C MONTHLY MEETING MONDAY, APRIL 11, 2016 AT 6:30 P.M. AT MLK MEMORIAL LIBRARY DREAM LAB 901 G STREET WASHINGTON, DC ANC 2C P.O.BOX 51181 WASHINGTON, DC 20091

PERSONAL ASSISTANT WANTED We are looking for a personal assistant to act as a liaison, provide product/ services information and resolve any emerging problems that our clients might face with accuracy and efficiency. He/She will support our manager and employees through a variety of tasks related to organization and communication ensuring that all administration tasks are completed accurately and delivered with high quality in a timely manner.

G-Land Uniforms, Inc.

EMBROIDERY & SCREEN PRINTING

1516 Wisconsin Ave NW. 1516 Wisconsin Ave NW. Washington, Washington, D.C. 20007 D.C. 20007 Tel:202-333-3583 Fax:202-333-3173 Tel:202-333-3583 Fax:202-333-3173

The target is to ensure excellent service standards and maintain high customer satisfaction. For more info contact: www.g-landuniform.com www.g-landuniform.com g-landinc@hotmail.com humfrey209@hotmail.com G-Land Uniforms, Inc.

g-landinc@hotmail.com EMBROIDERY & SCREEN PRINTING

LEASE/RENT

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CARR WORK PLACES

LANDSCAPE INSTALLATION & GARDEN DESIGN

Coworking for professionals – directly above the Farragut North metro! Promo code GEORGETOWNER for 1 month free with 12 month contract. 866-436-9214 or FarragutNorthTeam@carrworkplaces.com.

FOR SALE Ideal vineyard development opportunity on historic river front property in Charlottesville. VA Mountain views and equestrian facilities. 434-249-4667

Georgetown 1 bedroom apartment. Available for $1,540 per month. Please call 202-333-5943

Tel:202-333-3583 Fax:202-333-3173 Your Garments are welcome For

Welcome the Your Garments are welcome your LOGO or LETTERS, Welcome the small oFr or lsmall arge quantity or large quantity

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We1997 are since 1997 in cross P st We are since in Georgetown We are since 1997 in Georgetown cross P st

Local Federal Emp. Opportunity! $31k-33k. Federal Benefits Pkg! 3yrs Mgmt. Exp. Send Resume to: canteenrecruiter@gmail.com

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GEORGETOWN PRINCESS PARTIES Magical memories that last a lifetime Call 321-ENCHANT www.KingdomofAzuria.com

APARTMENT FOR RENT

1516 Wisconsin Ave NW. Washington, D.C. 20007

Your Garments are welcome For your LOGO or LETTERS, www.g-landuniform.com COFFEE SHOP MANAGER your LOGO org-landinc@hotmail.com LETTERS,

Mulching, yard cleanups, flower, shrub and tree installation. Shrub pruning, lawn renovation. Landscape Consultations, Quality Work and Craftsmanship Contact Landscapesplus@hotmail.com Landscapesplus.com or call 301-593-0577

HOME CARE MANAGERS Declutter ~ Clean Repair ~ Move ~ Sell . . . we do it all! 202-965-4369

FOXHALL VILLAGE HOUSE FOR RENT 4 bedroom house for rent (Volta and 44th St.) $3,950 per month. Call 609-430-8404 for more information.

LESSONS TENNIS LESSONS

LUCAS CUSTOM TAILOR

$25 for a private 1-hour lesson (DC/MD/ VA) or willing to meet you at your closest metro station for an extra $5.00. Excellent with beginners, intermediate and children. Mark 202-333-3484

VOICE AND PIANO LESSONS Home studio near Georgetown Farmer’s Market Call Jennifer at 540-422-2104

YOGA TUTOR 40+ years experience. All levels welcome. Contact: jmenmo@yahoo.com

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April 6, 2016 GMG, INC.


BODY & SOUL

More Weight-Loss Myths BY J OS E F B RANDE NB U R G

More exercise = more ice cream. Research indicates that there is actually an upper limit to the number of calories that the human body will expend. Everyone is a little different, but adding more and more exercise doesn’t push that number up forever. Driving your metabolism, strength and endurance with smart exercise is very important for weight loss, health, etc., but it’s only half the equation. You can’t starve yourself to avoid exercise, nor can you work out twice a day to avoid eating better. High intensity is all you need. The fitness industry has recently become obsessed with “high-intensity” fill-in-the-blank. People are looking for ways to make everything — including yoga — feel harder because “harder must be better.” One of the biggest problems with this fad? The injuries it’s causing. Injured people don’t train, and they move less all day long. That’s going to make losing weight much harder. (But please don’t take this too far in the other direction. Intensity does matter; a higher level, when appropriate, will help you get better results.) Eating after 6 p.m. will make you fat. This is complete nonsense. If anything, intervention research shows exactly the opposite

effect: waiting to eat until later in the day and eating the bulk of your calories with your evening meal gives you a slight boost in weight loss. The real problem with late-night eating is mindless snacking while watching TV. Devouring a bag of chips in front of the tube is bad for you at 6 a.m. and 6 p.m. (and every other time). There is a magic diet. The best diet is the one you can stick to long term. In other words, the best diet is not a diet. Diets are shortterm periods of deprivation from which your weight will eventually recover (either quickly or slowly). The most important part of weight loss is keeping it off. Start small. Start with the fundamentals: eat vegetables, eat protein, drink water, don’t snack. Most people don’t need a shiny new nutrition program, they just need to get better at the basics. Chasing the “perfect” diet will keep you on the diet roller coaster. Instead, spend that time and energy on building a lifestyle that will keep you lean for life. Arm exercises. For weight loss, “arm exercises” like bicep curls are a complete waste of time. Fat and large quantities of calories are burned in your muscles. The more muscles you

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work, the more you burn and lose. Arm exercises and other isolation exercises (leg extensions, crunches, etc.) work small muscles and small numbers of muscles. This means that they do very, very little to help you lose weight. You want to train all the muscles in your body during a single workout as often as you can.

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Yes, talk to Roommate. If you are “spiraling” trying to make sense of her choice, it will be good for you to name that hurt, then find a way for both of you to move forward as friends. It also will be an opportunity to get some feedback about why she’s leaving. Perhaps it’s not about you. Perhaps it is. Maybe there’s something to learn about being a better roommate next time. The bottom line is that you don’t want to avoid her for the rest of your life (or the rest of college, at least). She made the decision to move out, but you have some control over how things go after that point. You can take care of your disappointed self while healing the relationship, preserving the chance to be friends in the future. Stacy Notaras Murphy is a licensed professional counselor in Georgetown. Visit her on the web at stacymurphyLPC.com. This column is meant for entertainment only and should not be considered a substitute for professional counseling. Send your confidential question to stacymurphyLPC@gmail.com.

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VISUAL ARTS

‘Seeing Nature’ at the Phillips BY A R I P O ST

“The Grand Canyon,” 1998. David Hockney. Paul G. Allen Family Collection. © David Hockney. Courtesy The Phillips Collection.

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or a long time I’ve harbored a shameful secret: I adore landscape paintings. As revelations go, that was probably an underwhelming spectacle, but the cultural climate around art today is a strange affair. As prevalent as the landscape is through art history, it feels as if the subject has been slowly relegated to the overstock aisles. This is not to say that landscapes get no attention. Should a museum be so blessed to own a Monet, a Cezanne, a Turner or anything of the ilk, those are sure to be among their prized holdings, installed indefinitely. But for every theme-driven exhibition I've seen focusing on portraiture, abstraction or the still life, I cannot think of a single one in recent memory that dealt directly with the art of landscape. In fact, “Seeing Nature: Landscape Masterworks from the Paul G. Allen Family Collection,” at the Phillips Collection through May 8, might be this city’s first major exhibition devoted to landscape painting in the six years I’ve covered arts for this paper. (If my memory is failing, I blame my editor entirely.) Why is this? It is impossible to really know, but as a thought experiment I might say it’s because there is relatively less historical or cultural marrow to sap from a landscape than from any other subject. A cypress tree in 19th-century France is more or less the same sight now as it was then. An artist can handle the subject differently, but a tree is always a tree. By contrast, the content of a portrait or still life is hardwired with information relevant to cultural shifts and social evolution — fashion and hairstyles, furniture and man-made objects — which offer distinctions as to what, when and sometimes who we are seeing. And abstraction by its very nature is the deconstruction of a given cultural mood. Any Abstract Expressionist exhibition may as well be a show about American postwar bravura and the riveting detonation of artistic preconceptions. By this interpretation, landscapes offer comparatively less opportunity for a museum to present new and interesting content. And so they simply break up these lovely works by period, assign them to the appropriate galleries (see the Impressionist galleries at the National Gallery of Art) and leave them to be passingly

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admired by their audience on their way to the major loan exhibitions. What “Seeing Nature” demonstrates (or perhaps simply reminds us of) is the billowing richness of landscape painting through history. While it does not always provide the same cultural clues as other subjects, it is probably the ultimate vessel through which history’s greatest artists have experimented with paint and honed the very matter of their medium. The other remarkable aspect of this show is that the works all come from one collector, Paul Allen, cofounder of Microsoft and an evidently wicked connoisseur with a sharp eye for paintings. The works are all pretty much jaw-dropping, obscure masterpieces by some of the greatest artists in history, as well as works by a scrupulous selection of secondary artists who, for my dollar, have always deserved to be among this pantheon. To see Maxfield Parrish, Thomas Hart Benton and Arthur Wesley Dow taking their place with Edward Hopper and Georgia O'Keeffe feels like a small but momentous vindication. Similarly, to exhibit Milton Avery, a hugely important American artist who was all but left out of the major art historical literature, as a contemporary of Max Ernst evinces a deep understanding of 20th-century art, well beyond the history playbooks. All this still omits a broad swath of works in the show that offer new insights into many of our most beloved painters. Gustav Klimt's “Birch Forest (Birkenwald)” shows a different side to the artist’s process that is worlds apart from the hyper-stylized human jewelry of his portraits of Austrian high society. Aggressively naturalistic, “Birch Forest” shows a compulsive, almost scientific observer at work; the tree’s bark and the crunchy forest floor are rendered to a fault. Monet’s “The Fisherman’s House, Overcast Weather” is stunning even by Monet’s standards. Its panoply of colors and flickering brushstrokes serve to create an inversely subdued and intimate portrait of brittle, windswept brush and a raw gray sky. It is the kind of painting you want to wake up to (if, like me, you’re slightly fond of your own melancholy). A suite of five paintings by Pieter Bruegel the Elder depicts “The Five Senses.” What a

richness of sensory allusion, an ode to that which makes up our experience with the world and the functions we employ to perceive it. The final gallery is reserved for contemporary works, which actually do give us a glimpse of the future of landscapes. Ed Ruscha’s untitled painting is like a post-apocalyptic interpretation of Edward Hopper’s “Nighthawks,” all blackness and hard angles, and the radioactive hot-pink glow of David Hockney’s “The Grand Canyon” manages to give a strangely similar feeling. The show ends on two paintings by Gerhard Richter, “Apple Tree” and “Vesuvius,” which offer a meditation on the nature of observation today as much as any denouncement of

the modern landscape. (I'll leave it to you to make the none-too-subtle connections between the paintings’ titles and his prognosis of our human fate.) Concisely rendered paintings of analog photographs of their subjects, they begin to border on abstraction when you consider their odd extrication from the natural environments they depict. The paintings are at once an affirmation of art’s power and a warning not to trust that the world is so flattering or beautiful as it is romanticized through art. Nevertheless, once you experience “Seeing Nature,” the world certainly becomes a far more beautiful place.

"Birch Forest," 1903. Gustav Klimt. Paul G. Allen Family Collection. Courtesy The Phillips Collection.


PERFORMANCE

Year of the Bard BY G A RY T I S C H L E R

Copies of the 1623 First Folio in the Folger’s Paster Reading Room. Courtesy Folger Shakespeare Library.

T

his is William Shakespeare’s year, and April is William Shakespeare’s month. In April, we celebrate both the Bard’s birth and his death. There is no official birth date for Shakespeare, the world’s most celebrated playwright and writer, but he was baptized April 26, 1564, and he died April 23, 1616, at the age of 52. All of which makes the Folger Shakespeare Library a great place to be this month. Throughout 2016, the venerable American institution of all things Shakespearean is celebrating 400 years of Shakespeare with exhibitions, performances and other special programming under the umbrella of “The Wonder of Will.” The whole country will be able to see the touring exhibition “First Folio! The Book That Gave Us Shakespeare.” Copies of the 1623 book — of which the Folger owns 82 of the surviving 233 in the world — will tour all 50 states, Washington, D.C., and Puerto Rico, landing at 23 museums, 20 universities, five public libraries, three historical societies and a theater. At selected sites, a touring production of “The Gravedigger’s Tale” will also be seen. At the Folger, on Capitol Hill just past the Supreme Court and the Library of Congress, the big birthday party will be Sunday, April 24, with face painting, wandering minstrels, clowns, jugglers, a cake and the presence of Queen Elizabeth (the first, not the second) herself. The day before, Saturday, April 23, the Folger will host a day of international live streaming, in which actors, scholars, artists and community leaders will share their

connections to Shakespeare. On April 7, the Folger will open “America’s Shakespeare,” which will focus on how Shakespeare has become America’s Bard through letters, costumes, books, photographs and film. It closes July 24, to be followed by “Will & Jane: Shakespeare, Austen and the Cult of Celebrity,” beginning Aug. 6. On April 8, 9 and 10, the Folger Consort will be performing “Shakespeare and Purcell: Music of The Fairy Queen and Other Works." The Folger gala will be Monday, April 18. A few days later, the wacky Reduced Shakespeare Company will return for the world premiere of “William Shakespeare’s Long Lost First Play (abridged),” running April 21 to May 8. In May, the Folger will wrap up its theater season with Aaron Posner’s “District Merchants,” a contemporary version of “The Merchant of Venice,” directed by Michael John Garcés. “We still pay attention to Shakespeare because, no matter how networked our world becomes, he remains one of the ultimate connectors,” said Michael Witmore, director of the Folger. “In a sense, Shakespeare wrote the preamble to modern life.” Shakespeare remains, is, was and will always be the most contemporary of authors. Directors, adapters and performers try to find ways to contemporize Shakespeare’s plays, sometimes successfully, sometimes not, although — forsooth and in truth — they don’t need it. I may be irritated to hear the word “prithee” time and again in the plays, because it sounds like a forced anachronism, but then again we may yet

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feel the same way about David Mamet’s fourletter explosions someday. Some people still doubt that the Bard was the Bard. Personally, I have no doubt that William Shakespeare wrote the plays — for money, for esteem, for profit and prosperity and perhaps for posterity. Someone once said that a man who doesn’t know he’s a genius probably isn’t. I think Shakespeare may have guessed that he was special in his talent but probably didn’t think of himself as a genius. I think he thought of himself as a man of the theater, the modern version of which he practically invented. The words certainly were the point of it all — the stories he purloined from readymade sources — but there are musical, operatic, and vaudeville versions of Hamlet (not to mention a wordless one recently at the Washington Ballet). Shakespeare to this day does what show business does: entertains us and makes us laugh, saddens us and makes us cry buckets and, most of all, without trying, makes us think of our own humanity. In his plays, we are not just at the theater, but on stage ourselves. In every play, there is something for someone: a pratfall, a joke, a fairy queen, a monster, a magician losing his magic, a king losing his kingdom, the outsider trying to find his way in an alien society and a parade of hypnotic, strong, beautiful female characters, which their swains and male contemporaries never quite understand. That is the wonder of Will, just like today.

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C O M PI L E D BY R I C H A R D S E L D E N The annual meeting of the American Alliance of Museums, the world’s largest gathering of museum professionals, will be held in D.C. May 26 to 29. Featured speakers include Dr. Mae Jemison, the first woman of color to go into space; Dr. David Skorton, secretary of the Smithsonian Institution; and the five-time presidential candidate who founded the American Museum of Tort Law in his hometown of Winsted, Connecticut. Advance registration closes April 29. Levine Music will begin offering classes this fall at the Silver Spring Library, which opened last year in a new $70 million downtown building. In addition to its main campus in Van Ness, Levine has locations at THEARC in Southeast, Strathmore in North Bethesda and Westover Baptist Church in Arlington. The school was founded in 1976 in memory of D.C. attorney Selma Levine. Chase Maggiano, executive director of the Gay Men’s Chorus of Washington, D.C., has been named executive director of The Washington Chorus, succeeding Dianne Peterson, chief administrator of the chorus since 1986. Maggiano, a violinist, McLean native and George Washington University alum, will start in July. Founded in 1961, the Grammy Award-winning Washington Chorus frequently performs with the National Symphony Orchestra.

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SOCIAL SCENE

GALA GUIDE 2016

Upcoming Events and a Peek at Spring

APRIL 9

Luke’s Wings 5th Annual Heroes Gala Luke’s Wings is an organization dedicated to the support of service members who have been wounded in battle. The Gala will include a cocktail reception, seated dinner, entertainment and a “Fashion Takes Flight” fashion show featuring men and women of the military. The Ritz-Carlton, Washington D.C. Please contact lindsaygill@lukeswings.org

Night of Vision: 30 Years with Beyond the See BY M ARY BIR D , PH OTOS BY N ESH AN H . N ALTC H AYAN

The Prevention of Blindness Society of Metropolitan Washington held its annual gala at the Four Seasons Hotel on March 19. Sally Ann Pilkerton was the event chair and Doug Kammerer, NBC4 Chief Meteorologist, the master of ceremonies. The black tie evening honored Andrew Adelson, M.D. with the Professional Service

Award, Janet and Hal Morrison with the Community Service Award and Amy L. Bess & Sadina Montani of Vedder Price with the Appreciation Award. Founded in 1936, POB is the largest local prevention of blindness agency in the United States, screening 8,000 children and 5,000 adults for vision problems annually.

APRIL 13

6th Annual Great Ladies Luncheon & Fashion Show Alzheimer’s Drug Discovery Foundation and Neiman Marcus Mazza Gallerie will honor Trish and George Vrandenburg for their contributions to the fight against Alzheimer’s disease at a luncheon and fashion show featuring a special presentation of Oscar de la Renta’s Fall 2016 Collection. The Ritz-Carlton, Washington D.C. Please contact Jessica Cavanaugh at jcavanaugh@alzdiscovery.org or 212-901-8011.

14th Annual For the Love of Sight Visionary Awards Dinner The Foundation Fighting Blindness will hold the “For the Love of Sight” and Northern Virginia Visionary Awards Dinner to raise funds to support research assisting people affected by retinal degenerative diseases. The Ritz-Carlton, Washington D.C. Please contact Dina Beamont at 202-407-8325.

Mohamad S. Jaafar and Arthur L. Schwartz present the 2016 Professional Service Award to Andrew J. Adelson at the 2016 Night of Vision Gala, Beyond the See.

POB board member and Night of Vision committee member Heather Denchfield (right) dances with her husband, Kurt Denchfield, of Denchfield Landscaping and Nursery, Inc., a “Treasure Chest” sponsor of the event.

APRIL 19

Innocents at Risk 10th Anniversary Gala Under the patronage of the Ambassador of the Dominican Republic and Mrs. Caridad de Pérez and the Ambassador of the American States, the nonprofit will recognize Members of Congress who enabled the passage of the Justice for Victim of Trafficking Act and others who have supported the fight to end child trafficking. Organization of the American States. Please call 202-625-7338.

APRIL 20

Georgetown House Tour Patrons’ Party This year’s Patron’s Party will honor House Tour Chair Emerita Frida Burling. Proceeds benefit the ministry and outreach programs of St. John’s Episcopal Church, Georgetown Parish, such as Jubilee Jobs, Georgetown Ministry Center, Hyde-Addision Elementary. Home of Bill Dean. Please visit georgetownhouse.tour.com.

APRIL 29

National Museum of Women in the Arts Spring Gala The Spring Gala is the museum’s major fundraising event for patrons, members and friends. Proceeds support the exhibitions and programs dedicated to celebrating the achievements of women in the visual, performing and literary arts. The evening highlights “She Who Tells a Story: Women Photographers from Iran and the Arab World.” Please contact Gabrielle Kaufman at gkaufman@nmwa.org or call 202-266-2815.

The Bowie Ball A benefit for the Washington Ballet, the Bowie Ball includes an evening of unique experiences inspired by two rock legends: David Bowie and Freddie Mercury of Queen. Reception, dinner, dance performances and afterdinner dance party at the Andrew Mellon Auditorium, Friday, April 29, 7 p.m. — 202-362-3606 or info@ washingtonballet.org.

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April 6, 2016 GMG, INC.

“American Girl” author Valerie Tripp and her husband Michael Petty enjoy music from Retrospect on the dance floor of the 2016 Night of Vision Gala.

POB board member and Night of Vision committee member Heather Denchfield (right) dances with her husband, Kurt Denchfield, of Denchfield Landscaping and Nursery, Inc., a “Treasure Chest” sponsor of the event.

Community Foundation Celebrates Philanthropy

BY M ARY BIR D , PH OTOS BY D IGITAL PX The Community Foundation, which is the largest funder of nonprofits in the Washington region, held its 2016 Celebration of Philanthropy at Arena Stage on March 14. The Foundation’s new President and CEO Bruce McNamer said “from the arts to education, the Horning family has lifted this community,” as he presented Lynne and Joe Horning with the Foundation’s Civic Spirit Award. The evening was highlighted by a variety of performances and artwork.

Bebe Jones, Carol Thompson Cole, Ellen Short, foundation board member Wendy Goldberg, and Bo Jones, former publisher and CEO of The Washington Post.


SOCIAL SCENE

Denmark Hosts the Initiative to Educate Afghan Women BY M ARY B IRD, P HOTO S B Y N E S H A N H . N A LT C H AYA N

On March 18, Ambassador of Denmark Lars Gert Lose and his wife Ulla Rønberg hosted a reception at their residence to celebrate the Initiative to Educate Afghan Women in conjunction with International Women’s History Month. Christine Warnke and John McCarthy co-chaired the host committee. Keynote addresses were delivered by Mrs. Lael Mohib, wife of the Afghan Ambassador and Founder of the Enabled Children Initiative, and Lyric Winik, author of “We Are Afghan Women: Voices of Hope,” among others.

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h o u s e to u r 2016 presented by st . john ’ s episcopal church , georgetown

Our Doors Are Open Ambassador of Denmark Lars Gert Lose with his wife, Ulla Rønberg, executive director of the Initiative to educate Afghan women, Christian Wistehuf, Lael Mohib and Ambassador Hamdullah Mohib of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan.

A Kickoff for the Blue Hope Bash BY M ARY B IRD

The Sixth Annual Blue Hope Bash will be the first since the recent merger of the Chris4LifeColon Cancer Foundation and the Colon Cancer Alliance. Marsha and Rafik Muawwad hosted a kickoff event on March 30. Joan McCarty and Lynn Ferriero spoke of sponsorship opportunities and auction items to meet the goal of raising $750,000 to knock out colon cancer. Colon cancer survivor Janet Waxman told of her successful battle through the support of her husband, good friends and positive attitude. The Bash will be held at the Fairmont Hotel on Oct. 20.

This annual event graciously opens historic 18th and 19th century homes in Georgetown to Tour attendees. Tickets are $50 per person online in advance, or $55 per person on the day of the Tour. Ticket includes a Parish Tea at St. John’s from 2-5 pm. Group prices are available. For more information and to purchase tickets online, please visit www.georgetownhousetour.com.

Saturday, April 23, 2016 11 am - 5 pm 3240 O Street, NW We appreciate the generous support of our sponsors. Host Rafik Muawwad and Linda Awkard.

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