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Volume 61 Number 17
JUNE 3 - JUNE 16, 2015
Retail Oracle
Iraklis Karabassis
Biggest Budget Ever Le DĂŠcor: 50 Shades of Gray DC Jazz Festival Tudor Place Garden Party
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Town Topics 10 Editorial/Opinion
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Latest Dish 27 Rammys
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Rustic Nuptials 31 Upcoming Events
Ins & Outs
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Making the Kids Feel Safe 33 Staying Fit on Vacation
In the News
R e al EsTATE
DC Jazz Festival 35 Storm Large 36 Photos, Then & Now
S oci al S c e n e
C ov e r S t or y
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Retail Oracle: Iraklis Karabassis
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VOLUME 61 NUMBER 17
Tudor Place Garden Party, S&R Gala, Ford’s Theatre Honors and more.
JUNE 3 - JUNE 16, 2015
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A veritable powerhouse in the fashion retail world, Iraklis Karabassis brought the Colors of Benetton to all parts of the U.S., opening more than 100 Benetton stores. His IK Retail Group is now one of the most successful developers of premier European fashion retailers for the U.S. market. And he loves Georgetown — he owned the Wisconsin & M Benetton location and opened restaurants here as well: Cafe Milano, Sette Osteria and a secomd Sette on 14th Street. Photo by Erin Schaff.
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 2015.
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Take Metrobus and Metrorail to the...
DCJAZZFESTIVAL JUNE 10 –16, 2015 Events DC Presents:
DC JAZZFESTAT THE YARDS 355 Water Street, SE
Visit Ticketmaster.com
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friday
The Soul Rebels
5:30 PM gates oPen
DC JAZZFESTATTHE HAMILTONLIVE Co-presented by The Washington Post
600 14th Street, NW
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John Scofield Überjam Band feat. Andy Hess, Avi Bortnick 7:30 PM & Tony Mason doors oPen
wednesday
6:30 PM
5:00 PM
Cubano Groove
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thursday
7:30 PM
Paquito D’Rivera w/Edmar Castañeda
doors oPen
6:30 PM
Sharón Clark
13
saturday
3:00 PM
Femi Kuti & The Positive Force
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The Bad Plus Joshua Redman and Underwater Ghost feat. 8:30 PM Allison Miller doors oPen
friday
7:00 PM
13
saturday
gates oPen
2:00 PM
Esperanza Spalding Presents: Emily’s D+Evolution
Jack DeJohnette Trio
7:30 PM feat. Ravi Coltrane & 10:30 PM doors oPen
& Matthew Garrison
6:30 & 9:30 PM
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Stanton Moore Trio & Charlie Hunter Trio 7:30 PM feat. Bobby Previte doors oPen 6:30 PM & Curtis Fowlkes
sunday
COMMON
Monday/tuesday
Marshall Keys
15–16 8:00 PM
Snarky Puppy
doors oPen
6:30 PM
For tickets, artists, and complete schedule visit DCJAZZFEST.ORG Renaissance Hotels, official hotel of the DC Jazz Festival. Rates start at $159. Check out our website for travel offers.
PLATINUM, GOLD & SILVER SPONSORS
The DC Jazz Festival®, a 501(c)(3) non-profit service organization, is sponsored in part with major grants from the Government of the District of Columbia, Muriel Bowser, Mayor; and, in part, by major grants the National Endowment for the Arts and the DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities, an agency supported in part by the National Endowment for the Arts. ©2015 DC Jazz Festival. All rights reserved.
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UP & Coming June 5 Volta Park Cocktail Party
This cocktails-and-auction event, run by the Friends of Volta Park, will include food and drink from 1789 Restaurant. Tickets are $100. For details, visit voltapark.org. Georgetown Visitation School, 1524 35th St. NW.
Opening Reception: “Departure”
This reception will celebrate the opening of a special exhibition at Susan Calloway Fine Arts of works by SCFA employee Caroline Adams before her four-year stint in Europe. For details, visit callowayart. com. 1643 Wisconsin Ave. NW.
Calendar
Our City Festival
PR and marketing firm KRPR presents this weekend-long event in partnership with the D.C. Public Library Foundation. Our City Festival will showcase films about D.C. and feature live performances by Kokayi, Feedel Band, Easy Hand Dance Institute, DJ Sam the Man Burns, the Bumper Jacksons’ Chris Ousley, Free Minds Book Club, members of the Chuck Brown Band and others. For details, visit ourcityfestival. org. D.C. Public Library, 901 G St. NW.
June 6 Glover Park Day 2015
Now in its 26th year, this annual festival, co-sponsored by the Glover Park Citizens Association and the D.C. Parks
Department, celebrates the best of Glover Park with food, music, crafters and kids’ activities. For details, visit gloverparkday. org. Guy Mason Recreation Center, 3600 Calvert St. NW.
Harbour Nights at Washington Harbour
The Washington Harbour is presenting its live music series for summer, Harbour Nights, every Wednesday evening, 6:30 p.m. until 8:30 p.m., from June 3 through September 30. All are welcome to relax on the plaza and enjoy free performances by local bands each week at the Washington Harbour. Ewabo Duo will performing on June 10. For details, visit www.thewashingtonharbour.com. 3050 K St., NW.
Dupont Kalorama Museum Walk Weekend
During the 32nd annual Dupont Kalorama Museum Walk Weekend, seven diverse museums in one of D.C.’s most beautiful neighborhoods will open their doors free of charge. For details, visit dupontkaloramamc. com. 2118 Massachusetts Ave. NW.
June 17 How to Use “DC by the Book”
June 9 Free Chamber Concert
The Friday Morning Music Club, Inc., a community of classical music lovers and musicians, presents the 2015 season finale of its series of outdoor concerts on Tuesdays at noon at Dumbarton House. For details, email info@dumbartonhouse.org. 2715 Q St. NW.
Opening Night of “The Madwoman of Chaillot”
In this 1940s French satire by Jean Giraudoux, newly translated, four eccentric women and their outrageous street friends conspire to save the world from rapacious capitalists. Vive la résistance! Tickets are $50. For details, visit avantbard.ticketleap. com/madwoman. Gunston Arts Center, 2700 South Lang St., Arlington, Virginia.
Cam Magee as Aurélie in “The Madwoman of Chaillot.”
June 10 Opening Reception: “James Crable: Streets and Sidewalks”
Boston Properties hosts the opening reception at the Heurich Gallery of “James Crable: Streets and Sidewalks,” an exhibition of color photographs by the artist, who is based in Harrisonburg, Virginia. The large-scale composite photographs are part of an ongoing series demonstrating Crable’s fascination with the urban landscape. For details, call 202-223-1626. 505 9th St. NW.
This class at the Georgetown Neighborhood Library covers the use of “DC by the Book,” a DC Public Library resource that connects users with literature set in Washington. This session will focus on the website. A followup session, on June 24, will focus on the related app. 3260 R St. NW.
June 18 D.C. Builds: Restoring our Rivers
To address the contamination by raw sewage of the Potomac and Anacostia Rivers, the city is constructing the first of two underground tunnels. This panel on the tunnel projects will include Carlton Ray, director, Clean Rivers Project, D.C. Water, and Tommy Wells, director, District Department of the Environment. Tickets are $12 for museum members and students and $20 for nonmembers. National Building Museum, 401 F St. NW.
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town topics
NEWS By R o b e rt Deva ney
Hyde-Addison, Canal and Barge, Bridge Lighting, Gondola Study in $13-Billion Budget
Sea Catch Restaurant, next to the C&O Canal on 31st Street. In fact, the canal did well by the budget: $3 million is slated from D.C. for general reconstruction and a new canal barge, with matching funds from private sources. Included in the budget was $35,000 to the District Department of Transportation for a The fiscal 2016 D.C. budget, totaling $12.96 study looking at running an aerial gondola over billion, has “something for everyone,” noted the Potomac River from Georgetown to Roslyn, Mayor Muriel Bowser and Jack Evans, Ward 2 Virginia. This colorful alternative mode of Council member, during the annual meeting of transportation grabbed headlines immediately the Citizens Association of Georgetown. with local news outlets. Additional money for Just hours after the District Council approved the gondola option is required from Arlington its biggest budget, Bowser, Evans and CAG County. officials and awardees gathered May 27 at the More important for Georgetown, however, the Hyde-Addison Elementary School construction is now scheduled for June 2016 — $9 million, to start, for a cafeteria and gymnasium. More money will be available in the next budget, as the school project will take two years. The total price tag is expected to be $21 million. This change from a delayed start date of 2017, lamented by Hyde parents, was largely due to persuasion from Council members Evans A rendering of the proposed gondola linking Georgetown with Rosslyn. and David Grosso.
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Bowser, Evans Cheer Progress at CAG Annual Meeting
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of tax-raising — he was there to receive an award from CAG. Mayor Bowser was also pleased with the passing of the budget, and lauded Evans for “as you know, being my best friend on the council. We went up to New York to present our financial status, and we came back with our bond rating being upped. And I’ve put a lot of pressure on Jack by tasking him to be the Council’s representative on the Metro board.” “I think after six months in office, I can say, we can be proud in making progress,” Bowser said. “We have great people doing important jobs. In education, we’re trying to find the proper balance between our public schools and The annual meeting of the Citizens charter schools. We have the best police chief Association of Georgetown — presided over in the country, as far as I’m concerned. We’re for the last time by President Pamla Moore at getting the basics done and going beyond that the Sea Catch Restaurant this week — was toward our goal of becoming not only the best many things for many people: a way to catch national city but a world-class city.” up with old acquaintances, the passing of Evans received the Charles Atherton Award leadership batons and appearances by Mayor for Exceptional Service by a Dedicated PublicMuriel Bowser and Ward 2 Councilman Jack Sector Professional for Outstanding Work Evans, both feeling chipper after the District Preserving and Protecting Historic Georgetown. Council approved a $13 billion budget. Another awardee, Barbara Downs, has quietly It was an evening to honor Georgetowners served, with grace and class, on an impressive who contributed to maintaining the health, the number of organizational boards in Georgetown practical get-things-done spirit and the citizen for years, including several CAG boards (she is values of Georgetown. a former CAG president) and committees, the Evans showed up for several reasons himself. Friends of the Waterfront Park and the Jackson Besides giving a reprise of the budget — which Art Center, and as a volunteer for numerous includes lots of money for affordable housing, village projects. Downs was awarded the help for transit and schools and little in the way Peter Belin Award for Distinguished Service to the Georgetown Community, presented to her by Harry Belin, Peter Belin’s grandson. The William A. Cochran Community Service Award (named after the late architect, CAG president and preservation leader) was given to Dr. Sachiko Kuno, president and CEO of the S&R Foundation, Richard Riley, Corey Peterson, Lauralyn Lee, Mayor Muriel Bowser, Barbara Downs which has in short and Pamla Moore. Also in the budget is funding for lighting projects that will illuminate the undersides of the Key Bridge and the Whitehurst Freeway, both part of beatification programs advocated by the Georgetown Business Improvement District, same with the gondola concept. Meanwhile, the Council turned down Bowser’s budget proposal to raise sales taxes and parking garage taxes. Tickets for an expired parking meter will increase from $25 to $30.
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town topics
now on
georgetowner.c m
order become a prominent intellectual, cultural and educational presence in Georgetown with the purchase of two iconic Georgetown properties, Halcyon House and Evermay. The Martin-Davidson Award for an Outstanding Business Serving the Community and Enhancing the Historic Character of Georgetown was given to the law firm of Foley & Lardner LLP. Special Appreciation Awards were given to Lauralyn Beattie Lee, who was associate vice president of community engagement and strategic initiatives at Georgetown University for the past 13 years; Diane Colasanto, who was on the CAG Board of Directors for seven years and effectively co-chaired CAG’s public safety program, and Cory Peterson, who is director of neighborhood life at Georgetown University. The membership unanimously voted to elect a new leadership slate consisting of Bob vom Eigen, president, Jennifer Altemus, vice president, Barbara Downs, secretary, Bob Laycock, treasurer, and directors Karen Cruse, Hazel Denton, Hannah Isles and John Rentzepis.
Residents Must Leave Water Street Condos for Repairs
shafts ‘fail to meet the requirements of the applicable building code and industry standard, and creates substantial risk to the health and safety of unit owners and residents, as well as risk of and actual damage to property.’” “It is one of the most beautiful condos in Washington, D.C.,” attorney for the condo association S. Scott Morrison, a partner at Katten Muchin Rosenman LLP, told the Journal. “The interior finishes are first rate. The views out over either Georgetown or the river are spectacular. The problem in this building stems from poor management of the construction process by Lanier and a refusal to take appropriate steps to remedy those deficiencies. The association was left with absolutely no choice but to sue Lanier and the defendants.” Morrison told the newspaper the issues were discovered after a sprinkler head burst, damaging six units. Contractors discovered “serious deficiencies” during the ensuing repairs, which required drywall removal. The condominiums were built by EastBanc in 2004. The lawsuit, which includes money for the construction job and moving costs, was settled in November 2014. One source familiar with the address said that residents would be moving in stages, not all at once.
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‘Caine Mutiny’ Author, Former Georgetowner Herman Wouk Turns 100
By R ic h ar d S el d en Herman Wouk and his wife Betty lived at N and Potomac Streets for decades. His memoir will be published in December.
Herman Wouk in 1987 in Jerusalem. Photo by David Kennerly.
‘Zombie: The American’ at Woolly Mammoth
Residents of a high-end, 72-unit building on the Georgetown waterfront will be moving out temporarily for repairs to a structure just over ten years old. With a lawsuit settled between owners of units in the condominium building at 3303 Water St. NW and its builder and seller EastBanc and its CEO Anthony Lanier, construction work is set to begin this month. The Washington Business Journal first reported: “Details of the mass exodus from 3303 Water St. NW are scarce. We’re told that residents will be leaving as soon as the second week in June and were offered the opportunity to relocate to a D.C. Ritz-Carlton at a cost of $12,000 for a month.” The Journal continued: “In 2011, the 3303 Water Street Condominium Association sued EastBanc, its president Anthony Lanier, and EastBanc’s contractors, alleging the design, construction and installation of drywall, bathtubs, and ventilation
Costumes Galore: Awesome Con Is Out of This World
By Gary Tisc h l er Gary Tischler takes a look at “Zombie: The American,” the outrageous new play by Robert O’Hara (“Bootycall,” “Antebellum”), running through June 21 at Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company.
Pho to s By Jeff Malet Awesome Con’s famous guests included William Shatner and George Takei from “Star Trek” and Sean Astin of “Lord of the Rings.”
Tim Getman, Sean Meehan and Dawn Ursula. Courtesy Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company.
Melissa and Ashley of Annapolis do a number from the Me!me!me! music video.
The condos overlooking the Georgetown waterfront at 3303 Water Street, from which residents are moving to allow repairs to be made, following the settlement of their lawsuit.
Savopoulos Funeral Held June 1; Murder Suspect in Custody
The noontime funeral of Savvas, Amy and Philip Savopoulos was held June 1 at St. Sophia’s Greek Orthodox Cathedral, as three hearses parked in front and three flower-topped caskets were brought into the church along Massachusetts Avenue. Accompanied by tolling bells, the sad scene, not far from the Savopoulos home, was the result of a May 14 quadruple murder. Savvas Savopoulos, 46; his wife, Amy Town Topics, continued on page 8
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town topics Savopoulos, 47; their 10-year-old son Philip; and a housekeeper, Veralicia Figueroa, 57, were brutally killed at their Woodley Park mansion, which was then set on fire. The Savopoulus home, in the 3200 block of Woodland Drive NW, is valued at $4.5 million. Figueroa’s remains were sent to her native El Salvador. The couple’s two teenage daughters, 19-yearold Abigail and 17-year-old Katerina — who were at boarding school at the time of the murder — “showed incredible poise and grace today as hundreds gathered for the family funeral,” according to Rebecca Cooper of ABC7 News. The crime attracted local, national and international attention. The following is an update on the investigation: On May 21, a massive manhunt ended when U.S. marshals and officers from the Metropolitan Police Department arrested prime suspect Daron Dylon Wint, 34. Wint was arraigned May 22 on a charge of first-degree murder while armed. He is due in court June 23. An ex-convict, Wint is reported to have worked as a welder for American Iron Works in Hyattsville, Maryland, where Savvas Savopoulos was the CEO. He went through Marine Corps boot camp in 2000 but left after five weeks. The pursuit of Wint began when DNA matching his was found at the crime scene on a crust of pizza. After tracking Wint to New York and back to D.C., the fugitive task force detected him near a Howard Johnson hotel in College Park, Maryland, and followed a sedan and box truck into the District. Police also found at least
$10,000 in one of the vehicles. About 25 vehicles descended on the 1000 block of Rhode Island Avenue NE. “A police helicopter joined the pursuit from above, and officers eventually got between the two vehicles in northeast Washington. Wint surrendered without a fight and showed little emotion as he, three other men and two women were taken into custody,” according to the Associated Press. One of those arrested was Wint’s brother. According to the New York Post, Wint took a taxicab from Brooklyn to D.C. to escape
police: “He’d been staying in his gal pal’s Canarsie apartment since Sunday” — but wasn’t concerned about getting caught until he was named as a suspect Wednesday night, a law enforcement source said. Wint was ‘shocked’ by the warrant for his arrest, the source added. He called his parents in Maryland, then hopped in a livery cab, forking over hundreds of dollars to get back to D.C., the source said.” Former prosecutor Deborah Hines told WUSA9 News: “Well, there had to be some connection between when Wint worked there, like, 10 years ago. So, there has to be some connection to someone that Wint knows that’s working there now that was able to give the details to know about the money and that they could get the money delivered to the house.” Prosecutors maintain that others may have been involved in the murders and Metropolitan Police continue to look for evidence at the Woodland Drive mansion. In lieu of flowers, donations in the names of Savvas, Amy and Philip Savopoulos may be made to St. Sophia Greek Orthodox Cathedral (to benefit the Girls Orphanage of Lamia, Greece), 2815 36th St. NW, Washington, D.C. 20007 — or the National Child Research Center, 3209 Highland Place NW, Washington, D.C. 20008.
Peabody Room Gets Bust of Namesake Savvas and Amy Savopoulos.
The Peabody Room, repository of Georgetown history, unveiled a portrait bust of its namesake and benefactor May 23. About
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Jerry McCoy, curator of the Peabody Room, with artist Jeannette Murphy at the unveiling of George Peabody bust.
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town topics
City Tavern Gets Plaque from Colonial Dames
The Colonial Dames XVII Century dedicated a plaque May 9 to commemorate the historical significance of the building that houses the City Tavern Club, at 3206 M St. NW. The historic 1796 inn and tavern, saved from destruction in 1960 by concerned citizens of Georgetown, was “restored to its original American Federalperiod style, and in use today for its original purpose,” the D.C. society said.
Evelyn Deluca-Widner, Sandra Wenzy and Susan Adams Fannoney of the Colonial Dames XVII Century, D.C. Society, at the City Tavern Club May 9.
Community Meetings June 10, 8:30 a.m. Georgetown BID Annual Meeting
The Georgetown Business Improvement District will hold its annual meeting June 10 at Tony and Joe’s Seafood Place, 3000 K St. NW, at Washington Harbour, 8:30 a.m. Visit georgetowndc.com/content/about-bid.
June 24, noon GBA Leadership Awards Luncheon
The Georgetown Business Association will honor Wes Foster, co-founder of Long and Foster Real Estate, the largest privately owned real estate company in the country, at this year’s Leadership Awards Luncheon. Join the GBA as it salutes real estate legend Wes Foster for his years of service to the Washington region and
the nation. Tickets are $50 for GBA members and $75 for nonmembers. For details, visit www.georgetownbusiness.org. Tony and Joe’s Seafood Place, 3000 K St. NW, at Washington Harbour.
June 25, 6 p.m. Bill Plante of CBS News on Selma
Georgetown Village will host Bill Plante of CBS News for a free talk on “Selma 50 Years Later” at St. John’s Church, 3240 O St. NW. Light hors d’oeuvres, wine and soft drinks will be served. RSVP (requested, but not required) to 202-999-8988 or lynn@georgetown-village. org.
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Editorial/ opinion
Enough Pride for All of Us
W
e are now on the verge of the 40th anniversary of what has become one of the District’s major annual celebrations:
Capital Pride. From its beginnings in the 1970s, the event has expanded, reflecting the growth and increasing acceptance of Washington’s lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) community. It has become an essential part of the larger community that is the District of Columbia. Last year, Capital Pride-related galas, concerts, ceremonies and parties attracted some 350,000 visitors to D.C. This year, the two-week schedule of events centers on the June 13 parade and the June 14 festival. It’s a long way from the first Pride event, and an even longer way from the conditions Washington’s gay community faced in the 1940s, when Congress passed a sodomy law for the District of Columbia, introduced by Rep. Arthur Miller (R-Neb.). That law, establishing a penalty of up to 10 years in prison or a fine up to $1,000, remained in effect and unaltered until it was repealed in 1995. In spite of the heavy hand of Congress, Washington seemed, in its Home Rule incarnation, more hospitable and welcoming to the gay community than some other jurisdictions. The
gay community has had strong support from D.C. mayors and District Council members, including David Catania, the Council’s first openly gay member; Jim Graham from Ward 1; and Jack Evans from Ward 2, who was recognized this year by the Washington Blade newspaper as a “straight ally making a difference.” The city and the LBGT community have both undergone great changes. We are living in the age when the Supreme Court is about to consider the issue of gay marriage, reportedly sometime this month, an event that was (along with Ireland’s legalization of gay marriage) unimaginable 40 years ago or even more recently. The Capital Pride celebrations today are more than just the expressions — political, social and cultural — of a particular neighborhood and community. They are an affirmation by voices, gay and straight, from throughout the metropolitan area. That’s something for everyone to take pride in.
Fiscal 2016: What Matters Most Is Results By Jack Evans
Last week, the D.C. Council gave initial approval to a $12.9 billion budget for fiscal 2016. This is, perhaps unsurprisingly, the largest budget in the history of the District of Columbia and more than double the size of our budget from just a decade ago. I’m pleased with the budget that the Council approved. In a time of growing economic prosperity in D.C., it’s important that we continue to build and preserve affordable housing through the Housing Production Trust Fund; strengthen our social safety net for our low-income and homeless residents; and invest in our transportation infrastructure, including the WMATA system, streets, alleys, sidewalks, crosswalks and bike lanes. I am also glad that we were able to meet these goals without increasing taxes on District residents. While I believe the budget we passed is a step in the right direction for the District, the most important part is the execution and follow-up on the programs we are funding. We have spent huge sums of money over the past decade on affordable housing and homeless services and yet the problems are worse than ever. We need to ensure this money is creating results, not just riches for contractors and providers. With this budget, the District will once again have the distinction of spending more money per person than any city, county or state in the country. One-third of the budget is spent in the human services cluster, another quarter in the education cluster and roughly 20 percent on public safety.
The Terrific 20: You Can’t Tell the Players Without a Program By M ar k P l ot k in If you are a registered Republican, I sincerely suggest you run for president of the United States. The qualifications are minimal. You must be 35 years old and a U.S. citizen. There is a further requirement about your place of birth, but let’s not get into that right now. If you choose to run, your party will have to nominate you as its candidate. The nominating convention is next summer in Cleveland, Ohio. (Cleveland is lovely that time of year.) You will not be alone. By my expert calculations, there are presently 20 potential nominees. Before I list them, I should notify you that one aspirant has already withdrawn before announcing. That would be John Bolton, a self-proclaimed foreign policy specialist, whose goal was to go to war with almost every nation on the globe.
But let’s get down to business. Since there are so many candidates, I want to make it as easy as possible to remember who is who. I believe that putting the contenders in separate, distinct categories would be helpful. First are those individuals who, in my humble opinion, stand Absolutely No Chance of Being Selected: At the very top of this group is Donald Trump. His candidacy borders on buffoonery. Next is Carly Fiorina, the deposed head of Hewlett-Packard. She deeply dislikes Hillary Clinton. That is the core of her campaign. Ben Carson, the brilliant neurosurgeon who makes outrageous and outlandish statements. Jim Gilmore, the former governor of Virginia who phased out the Virginia car tax (that won’t help him in the Iowa caucus). Bob Ehrlich, the former governor of Maryland, attempting to pull a Nixon: lose the governorship, then come back and try to be president. Peter King is a tough-talking House of
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Representatives member from Long Island, New York. Oh, I almost forgot George Pataki, the former three-term governor of New York. You remember him. He beat Mario Cuomo. He will remind you. That brings us to the category, Current U.S. Senators: Rand Paul — libertarian ophthalmologist who will protect your telephone privacy. Ted Cruz — born in Canada (will that be a problem?), by far the most bellicose interventionist. Lindsay Graham — first bachelor president since James Buchanan? Marco Rubio — at 43, the youngest candidate, speaks Spanish and is from Florida (29 electoral votes, third-highest in the nation). Now, let’s quickly move to Former and Present Governors Who Have a Chance: Scott Walker — badgers with a poor boy, common-man rap.
Paul Simkin
Richard Selden
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Michael Corrigan Evelyn Keyes Joe Russo Kelly Sullivan Richard Selden
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I don’t mind spending money, if we get results. But the idea of spending money — of paying contractors — to have the same systemic problems year after year, is just spending money for the sake of spending money. We need to come back next year and see that residents who are homeless have received services and moved into supportive housing. With the $100 million we are committing to the Housing Production Trust Fund, we need to come back next year and see thousands — not hundreds, but thousands — of affordable housing units built. The District partners with (and pays this money to) contractors, providers and organizations to run many of these programs — and we need to see specific, tangible results of this funding. I appreciate the work Mayor Muriel Bowser and her team did to put this budget together so quickly. Also, I want to thank Council Chair Phil Mendelson and my colleagues on the Council for their debate, input and willingness to work together to achieve our shared goals. As I said from the beginning, I think this is a good budget that meets our priorities as a city, while capitalizing on the continued growth we are experiencing in the District, without having to increase taxes and ask residents for more money. And while the Council was debating the budget last week, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia offered support of the legality of the District’s Budget Autonomy Act. As a result, the Council will undertake a second and final vote on the budget on June 16. Jack Evans is the District Council member for Ward 2, representing Georgetown and other neighborhoods since 1991.
John Kasich — key state (Ohio) governor, billing himself as a “compassionate conservative.” Bobby Jindal — unpopular governor of Louisiana, a Rhodes scholar and not your average white guy. Rick Perry — 14 years as governor of Texas. You are supposed to forget his 2012 try. Mike Pence — Hoosier, hiding from public view after recent controversy. Mike Huckabee — universally described as avuncular. Chris Christie — governor of New Jersey, victim or co-conspirator in Bridgegate. And the front-runner, Jeb Bush — will raise megabucks and is definitely smarter than his older brother. Finally, Rick Santorum — if you like sleeveless sweaters, he’s your guy. Political analyst Mark Plotkin is a contributor to the BBC on American politics and a contributor to TheHill.com.
Contributors
Mary Bird Pamela Burns Jack Evans Donna Evers John Fenzel Amos Gelb Wally Greeves Jody Kurash
Sallie Lewis Stacy Notaras Murphy Mark Plotkin David Post Linda Roth Alison Schafer Bill Starrels
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Education
Hyde-Addison Principal Wraps Up First Year School construction plan back on track
A
By Richard Selden fter a year on the job, Elizabeth Namba, principal of Hyde-Addison Elementary School, reports, “I am awed by the students, parents and the greater Hyde-Addison community and appreciate their warm welcome.” The school, between O Street and P Street, a half-block west of Wisconsin Avenue, has been part of the neighborhood for more than a century. On its brick façade is “Under-Water World,” a colorful ceramic-tile mosaic of fish, seahorses and crustaceans created in 1992, 85 years after the Hyde School was constructed. Next door is a large, modern playground, the site of future construction. This section of O and P streets, which retains its tall trees, Belgian blocks and trolley tracks, is also home to shops: the English Rose Garden, Ella Rue, Just Paper & Tea, Wedding Creations and others. But it hasn’t been easy to operate a school split up between two buildings. And Hyde-Addison is the only District school without a gym. Neither does it have dedicated spaces for music and art — “Under-Water World” was created at the Fillmore Arts Center. Modernization work completed last summer included the installation of an elevator to make the school ADA-compliant. The larger redevelopment project — to connect the buildings; add
a gym, a stage, rooms for music, art and more classrooms; and enlarge the library, media center and cafeteria — was supposed to start in 2013. Mayor Muriel Bowser’s fiscal 2016 budget would have delayed the start of the yearlong project yet again, from the summer of 2016 to 2017. Commissioner Jeff Jones offered a motion to restore the original timing at the May 4 Georgetown-Burleith advisory neighborhood commission meeting, which was attended by many Hyde-Addison parents. After requests to the mayor by councilmembers Jack Evans and David Grosso, and to the relief of those repeatedly frustrated by the delay, $9 million of the funding was restored to the District’s fiscal 2016 budget, passed by the D.C. Council May 27. The estimated construction cost is $21 million — with $12 million coming in fiscal 2017. Says Namba, “I look forward to working with the staff and community to create a joyous and rigorous learning environment for all students, which will be greatly aided by the completion of the Hyde-Addison addition.” Namba’s first experience working in the public schools was volunteering at Scott Montgomery Elementary School in Shaw. She holds a bachelor's degree in environmental science and geography from George Washington Uni-
Left: Elizabeth Namba, principal of Hyde-Addison Elementary School. Above: O Street facade of Hyde School. Photography by Robert Devaney.
versity and a master's degree in education from the University of Pennsylvania. Her husband is in the Foreign Service, so, she has taught abroad as well — in Russia, Ethiopia and India, for example — while returning regularly to D.C. Namba took over in July 2014. Her predecessor, Dana Nerenberg, was at the school for eight
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years before relocating to Portland, Oregon, to join her fiancé. Namba’s immediate past position was vice principal at Mount Vernon Community School in the Del Ray section of Alexandria, Virginia — with 800 students, much larger than Hyde-Addison. The 15-classroom school has classes from pre-K to fifth grade. A third pre-K class will be added next year, when enrollment is expected to grow from 305 to about 330. About 40 percent of the students are in-boundary, meaning they live on blocks for which Hyde-Addison is the designated neighborhood school, as opposed to elsewhere in D.C. The growth indicates both the school’s increasing popularity and the rising number of families with young children in Georgetown. Hyde-Addison has the third-highest percentage of wait-listed, in-boundary students among D.C. public elementary schools, after Oyster Adams in Woodley Park and Stoddert in Glover Park. Those looking for a family-oriented activity this weekend, or a chance to visit the school, are invited to attend Springfest, Hyde-Addison’s annual year-end event — complete with a rockclimbing wall and a water slide — on Saturday, June 6, from 2 to 6 p.m.
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This charming studio filled with natural light and treed views is over 620 sq ft with a completely renovated kitchen. This freshly painted co-op has newly refinished hardwood parquet floors and 9’ ceilings throughout. Located in the B Building off the Main Lobby, this cheerful co-op has low monthly fees and great space including a separate sleeping area and dining room. This would be the perfect Pied-a-Terre! Close to transportation, restaurants, shops and more.
business
Business Ins & Outs In: Cat Cafe, Crumbs & Whiskers, to Open This Month
For Georgetown's very own cat café at 3211 O St. NW, the time is meow. (Yes, we just wrote that.) “Hey, cool cats: After what has been the most intense eight months of my life, I’m super excited to tell you guys that Crumbs & Whiskers is opening in June. . . . So excited and terrified and everything else,” wrote founder Kanchan Singh. “Thank you for going on this
adventure with me. Thank you for signing petitions in support of the cat cafe. Thank you for backing the Kickstarter.” Crumbs & Whiskers will be a café and coffeehouse with a controlled entrance and a number of cats moseying around. Partnering with the café, the Washington Humane Society will provide vaccinated and vetted cats to Crumbs and Whiskers, which will act as a foster home for the felines until they are adopted. It will be the city’s first cat café.
Restaurant Liquor Licenses Available in Georgetown
Crumbs & Whiskers founder Kanchan Singh.
Four alcoholic beverage licenses will become available this summer for restaurants in Georgetown, according to D.C.’s Alcoholic Beverage Regulation Administration. ABRA will begin accepting applications 8:30 a.m., Thursday, June 25. Because of the liquor license cap and restrictions within the Georgetown Moratorium Zone, a maximum of 68 restaurants with licenses are permitted in the area, according to ABRA, which added, “Establishments exempt from the moratorium include all hotels and those in or to be located in Georgetown Park, Georgetown Park II, Prospect Place Mall, Georgetown Court and Washington Harbour.”
Other D.C. neighborhoods with a liquor license moratorium are Adams Morgan, East Dupont, West Dupont and Glover Park. The four licenses in Georgetown will be available because of license cancellations or expirations. The former licensees are M Cafe on Prospect Street, Puro Cafe on Wisconsin Avenue, Pizzeria Uno on M Street and Zenobia Lounge on 31st Street. Per ABRA: Applications for the licenses are available online but must be submitted in person. Any applicant must be the actual owner of the business. ABRA’s office is at the Reeves Municipal Center, 2000 14th St. NW, Suite 400 South. Completed license applications will be reviewed on a first-come, first-served basis and are subject to the consideration of the Alcoholic Beverage Control Board. Members of the public who have questions can contact ABRA by emailing abra@DC.gov or calling 202-4424423.
Georgetown BID's Free Classes for ‘Healthy Days of Summer’
With Washington recently named the most fit city in America, and Georgetown at the convergence of some of the District’s best national parks and public recreation areas, the Georgetown Business Improvement District kicks off “Healthy Days of Summer in Georgetown.”
A highlight of the program is a free series of classes, Sunset Fitness in the Park. The onehour classes, hosted by CrossFit Key Bridge, barre3 Georgetown, CorePower Yoga, Down Dog Yoga, Georgetown Yoga, Yoga Del Sol, Fitness Together Georgetown and Key Bridge Boathouse, will take place at the Georgetown Waterfront Park, near Potomac Street and K Street, from June 8 through Sept. 2, at 6 p.m., usually on Mondays and Wednesdays. Registration is required and classes are typically capped at 50 participants. Sign up at georgetowndc. com/healthydays. There are plenty of other healthy options in the program with more than 40 studios and stores offering yoga, running, barre, cycling, Crossfit, fitness apparel and athletic gear — there’s more than enough here to keep you at your healthiest and most fit. Restaurants Fiola Marie, Seasons and Luke’s Lobster are offering “fit food” menus as well.
Out: Archer Showroom Closes
Archer's showroom at 1027 33rd St. NW has closed. While the business has moved, Archer continues to present “a tailored collection of home furnishings to complement a world-class collection of design and fine art.”
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All Things Media
In the News: Loss of Perspective By Gary Tischler
Left: The cover of the April 28 edition of the Baltimore Sun. Featured photo by Algerina Perna. Below: The cover of the June 2015 issue of Vanity Fair. Photo of Caitlyn Jenner by Annie Leibovitz.
S e l l i ng
t h e a r e a ’ s f i n e st p r o p e rt i e s
OPEN SUNDAY
T
here is used to be sayings popular in the newspaper business — popular in the good old days when not a single email had been sent anywhere in the world — in which certain papers claimed to print all the news that was important to their readers, or that they were the paper of record, or that they would print “all the news that’s fit to print” (or maybe all the news that fits). The idea was that daily newspapers provided readers with all the news they needed. The local papers got you weddings and funerals and babies and robberies and missing dogs and elections for dogcatchers; the big city papers got all that and all the rest: news from the wars, the death of kings, national elections and disasters, both impending and suddenly and tragically happening. These days — the days in which theoretically we’re entitled to know everything because we can — we still manage to lose things, one of which is perspective. We watched and read avidly for about ten days about the news in Baltimore, remembered the burning cars, the crowds in the streets, the palatable anger of demonstrators and the opportunism of looters. It was too much, some Baltimore residents told us, and out of whack. Especially after it was learned that in the time since then, Baltimore had experienced a dramatic uptick in homicides that on a daily basis received little if any attention from the media.
Something similar happened in Washington with the horrible murders of members of a much respected, well-to-do family, whose funeral was held in a somber and moving air at St. Sophia’s Greek Orthodox Church on June 1. We should be shocked by the crimes — for which one suspect is in custody — but other crimes and alarms go by the wayside. It’s those daily things that nag at us, but of which the media remains unaware, or at least enough so as not to bother us with the details. There was a reward offered for information on a road-rage shooting on I-295 in which one man was killed. A young aide to a congressman was arrested after bringing a gun to the Capitol. There were three shootings in the District on June 1. Thunderstorms storms came through and around the nation's capital, causing some municipalities to be “hammered,” as one excitable weatherman said. The storms caused a tree to fall on a bus. None of these things are likely to get a lot of play, but Caitlyn Jenner will. That would be the no-longer-secret identity of Bruce Jenner, whose journey to becoming a woman has been more thoroughly reported than, well, the loss of George Clooney’s bachelorhood. Lost in this story — which hit the internet like a flood and nearly crashed it — was that old media bugaboo: perspective.
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Provided by Washington Fine Properties
May 2015 sales
Real Estate Address
Subdivision
Bedrooms
Baths Full
Baths Half
Days on the Market
List Price
Close Price
3331 N ST NW
GEORGETOWN
7
5
3
820
$6,980,000
$5,700,000
3317 PROSPECT ST NW
GEORGETOWN
5
4
2
1979
$4,375,000
$4,100,000
4416 EDMUNDS ST NW
BERKLEY
7
6
2
108
$4,295,000
$3,940,000
1525 29TH ST NW
GEORGETOWN
6
5
1
2
$3,795,000
$3,800,000
2962 CHAIN BRIDGE RD NW
KENT
6
7
1
370
$3,995,000
$3,450,000
3106 P ST NW
GEORGETOWN
4
4
1
20
$2,995,000
$2,900,000
3303 WATER ST NW #4A
GEORGETOWN
2
2
1
58
$2,895,000
$2,800,000
3264 S ST NW
GEORGETOWN
7
4
2
163
$2,999,000
$2,775,000
5021 GLENBROOK RD NW
KENT
6
6
2
35
$2,575,000
$2,450,000
2003 48TH ST NW
BERKLEY
5
4
2
686
$2,395,000
$2,379,270
2709 OLIVE ST NW
GEORGETOWN
5
4
1
112
$2,350,000
$2,275,000
1687 32ND ST NW
GEORGETOWN
3
4
1
25
$2,200,000
$2,140,000
3249 O ST NW
GEORGETOWN
2
2
0
7
$2,195,000
$2,025,000
4808 HUTCHINS PL NW
PALISADES
5
4
1
80
$2,100,000
$1,990,000
3247 P ST NW
GEORGETOWN
4
2
0
5
$1,725,000
$1,777,000
3201 44TH ST NW
WESLEY HEIGHTS
5
4
1
0
$1,795,000
$1,750,000
4200 MASSACHUSETTS AVE NW #1011
WESLEY HEIGHTS
2
3
0
29
$1,795,000
$1,725,000
1155 23RD ST NW #4D
WEST END
2
2
1
25
$1,567,500
$1,600,000
5401 POTOMAC AVE NW
PALISADES
4
2
1
85
$1,595,000
$1,562,500
4070 MANSION DR NW
GEORGETOWN
5
3
1
21
$1,599,000
$1,550,000
3200 NEW MEXICO AVE NW
WESLEY HEIGHTS
5
3
2
3
$1,450,000
$1,525,000
811 4TH ST NW #1011
OLD CITY #2
3
4
0
2
$1,475,000
$1,475,000
3032 DENT PL NW
GEORGETOWN
4
2
0
17
$1,475,000
$1,470,000
4636 RESERVOIR RD NW
BERKLEY
3
3
1
6
$1,399,000
$1,465,000
1601 5TH ST NW #D
SHAW
4
4
1
51
$1,475,000
$1,450,000
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Le décor
50 Shades
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By Charlene L ouis
While you may not be picking up the wildly popular trilogy, the title, “Fifty Shades of Grey,” does provide inspiration in decorating one’s home. Gray, being the perfect cross between black and white, is popular because it's easy on the eyes and offers undertones of sophistication. It can help make a room appear to be warm and/or cool which makes it ideal for bedrooms, kitchens and living rooms. Gray is not just one color. Creating a space with multiple shades of gray allows for versatility and flexibility in every room … not just the bedroom.
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8. Salvaged Wood Kitchen Island $1,195 to $2,235 www.restorationhardware.com 9. Nook Glass Vessel Table Lamp (gray) $99 www.westelm.com
1. Mezzo sofa $10,897 www.boconcept.com 2. Velvet Tillie Armchair $1,098.00 www.anthropologie.com 3. Ombre Bath Mat 24.95 www.cb2.com 4. 802-Gram Turkish Towel Collection (pewter) $9 to $59 www.restorationhardware. com
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5. Draped Garland Bed by Tracey Boyd $2,498 to $2,798 www.anthropologie.com 6. Perennials Corsica Outdoor Pillow Covers (graphite) $44 to $66 www.restorationhardware.com
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Retail Oracle Iraklis Karabassis on the Future of Retail and Georgetown’s Retail Future
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n a sunny, spring afternoon, Iraklis Karabassis sits in his office at 3238 Prospect Street. Light floods in through an open window. Faint, soothing sounds of a cocktail shaker emanate from Peacock Café across the street. Fittingly, the fashion-focused Karabassis is well dressed, polished-yet-effortless in dark jeans and a striped buttondown. His outward sophistication reflects the sharp mind and business savvy for which he is known. “Georgetown has stolen my heart,” said the former owner of the Benetton at Wisconsin Avenue and M Street, among many other Benetton stores, including the first-ever U.S. store in the former White Flint Mall. Karabassis has traveled the United States and the globe extensively as head of IK Retail Group, a premier fashion retailer. But it’s his place in Georgetown that he returns to time after time. “Thirty-two years after being here, don’t ask me why, but I love Georgetown,” he said of its village-like atmosphere. “I still find this uniqueness and mystique. If you live it, then you get it.” Although his fondness for Georgetown is undeniable, Karabassis has concerns for its future. On any walk down M Street, residents and visitors alike can witness the burgeoning presence of large monobrands, such as H&M and Forever 21. For Karabassis, this raises the question of whether Georgetown is at risk of losing its homegrown charm and entrepreneurial spirit. “We lost our momentum,” he said of Georgetown. “We became old and not innovative anymore.” He attributes this to the restrictions of the neighborhood, including high rents, limited parking and the difficulty in attaining a liquor license, all of which detract people from investing in local businesses. “Everything starts, and ends, with the level of the investment,” he said, saying that Georgetown needs to attract the attention of innovative minds again and bring novelty back to the neighborhood. “We have to raise the bar.” With their massive production, the mono-brands and their large, glitzy stores are certainly putting pressure on the market, while displacing more and more of the small boutiques run by creative, self-driven individuals. These small boutiques are what Karabassis believes keep the market interesting. The neighborhood’s high rents may be one reason for this shift, but it’s also the fault of the consumer, he said. Many people today are looking for fast, disposable fashion — that is, stylish, trendy clothes at low prices. It’s about quickness of production and affordable price points — at the cost of creative quality and attention to detail. But, “the customer likes it, and we have to respect that,” says Karabassis. Furthermore, the age of e-commerce has revolutionized the shopping experience, making it more convenient than ever for people to purchase their favorite clothes and accessories. Brick-and-mortar shops are suffering because educated, fashion-forward customers know they can shop their favorite brands online at a range of competitive price points, he said.
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By Sallie Lewis Even in the malls, Karabassis claims that the fashion factor has faded considerably, replaced by shops filled with teenager clothing, ice cream, cosmetics and Starbucks coffee. “Today, buying clothes is the last thing you think of when you go to the mall,” he said. He recalled how the mall on M Street, Shops at Georgetown Park, was once “the jewel of Georgetown.” Now, lamentably, he added, it’s been “converted into big boxes.” As president and CEO of IK Retail Group, Karabassis focuses on international brand management and development in the American marketplace. Over the past three decades, he has grown an impressive, far-reaching business with roots in Georgetown. Yet his familial roots reach far eastward. Karabassis was born in the picturesque port city of Volos, Greece. After studying and majoring in geology in Italy, he moved to Paris for post-graduate work, where he became involved with the clothing brand United Colors of Benetton. It was there that he was tasked with bringing the brand to the United States. By 2008, Karabassis had opened more than 100 Benetton stores in the U.S. and Canada. In March 2008, before the last recession, he sold his Benetton operation to the Benetton Group in Italy — an example of both his lifelong relationship with luck, and his ability to grab an opportunity when it presents itself. Over the years, Karabassis also expanded the luxury Italian brand MaxMara, adding a number of American stores to its portfolio before selling his stake in May 2008. As these two major sales went through, Karabassis made IK Retail Group the center of his business. He became increasingly focused on consulting for European retailers in the United States, representing different brands while helping to boost sales, control costs and strategically increase exposure nationwide. “America is very difficult for Europeans to succeed,” said Karabassis with a trace of his Greek accent. “It’s very competitive, and everyone wants to be here.” The entrepreneur, who speaks four languages — Greek, French, Italian and English — is smart and sought after. He has built his career on proven results. If one is looking to enter the U.S. market, he is the man to call. Karabassis helps clients of all backgrounds looking to penetrate the American market, and he is selective because he can be. With three decades of industry experience and expertise, he has created a reputation among Europe’s fashion community, gaining their trust by proving he’s adept at scouting trends, finding smart locations and making strong contacts that will help them succeed. With the help of his team at IK Retail Group, including his wife and vice president of retail, Yasmine Karabassis, he is able to select clients with strong potential who need help entering or expanding in the United States. The team strategizes with clients on short- and long-term goals while managing myriad logistics: branding, personnel, store design, marketing, accounting and advertising, plus warehousing and distribution. It’s a complete package. From 2008 to today, IK Retail Group’s portfolio has been filled with unique brands, from Piazza Sempione to K16, Leghilà, Freddy, Andrew’s Ties and Billionaire Ital-
ian Couture. The latter label, the work of two talented businessmen named Angelo Galasso and Flavio Briatore, features handmade, luxury menswear. Though not for everyone, everything in the brand is meticulously made, the aesthetic of which is a mix of Versace, Dolce & Gabbana and Tom Ford, according to Karabassis. Most recently, Karabassis partnered with Kiko Milano, an Italian cosmetics company expanding aggressively here in the U.S. The Greek entrepreneur has been tasked with finding all of their new locations and properly guiding the brand in America; for 2015 alone, Kiko Milano is set to open 30 new stores, totaling 150 by 2017, including one in Tysons Corner. Though IK Retail Group works mostly through partnerships, it also owns retail concepts outright. One of these is called Emporium DNA, a multi-branded fashion retailer for men and women that has been a successful tool for market testing, with both domestic and international brands. It has three store locations: the Yale University campus in New Haven, the Cosmopolitan Hotel in Las Vegas and 1666 Connecticut Ave. NW, near Dupont Circle. In a career that has seen much success, two of the entrepreneur’s greatest accomplishments came with the development of the Collection at Chevy Chase and the Miami-based project, 1111 Lincoln Road. The Chevy Chase endeavor was one of the premier luxury retail developments in the nation, and Karabassis had a central role, as both a consultant, and in developing and leasing out the shops. In Florida, Karabassis worked with the internationally renowned Swiss architecture firm Herzog & de Meuron to transform and reimagine a mixed-use development project adjacent to the Lincoln Road Mall in Miami. “It was one of the most exciting moments for me,” Karabassis said of the job. “It’s really one of the top projects in America.” Another arena in which Karabassis’s entrepreneurial spirit can still be strongly felt and seen is the restaurant industry. In November 1992, he and Franco Nuschese opened Café Milano on Prospect Street. The celebrity-frequented Italian restaurant is one of the most famous in Washington — to see and be seen. While Karabassis sold his share of Café Milano to Nuschese in 2012, he continues to flavor D.C.’s fast-growing culinary scene with Sette Osteria, his Italian restaurant located at 1666 Connecticut Ave. NW. This April, Karabassis opened the second Sette restaurant — the former Café M, at 1634 14th St. NW — under the same name, but with a slightly different look. At a recent tasting dinner at the new location, guests dined on a sampling of creative dishes: creamy burrata with tricolor tomatoes, homemade pastas like spinach gnocchi with gorgonzola cream sauce, a saffron risotto with juicy beef short ribs and homemade tiramisu — bellissima! In Italian, Sette translates to the number seven, which is often regarded as the world’s lucky number. Perhaps Karabassis can attribute a small bit of luck and timing to his success, but it’s the methodical, strategic approach to his work that drives his good fortune. His commitment to unique, expressive brands has never wavered, and he’s proven his success in a time of change.
Iraklis and Yasmine Karabassis at Sette Osteria on Connecticut Avenue. Photo by Erin Schaff.
GMG, INC. June 3, 2015
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The world’s most desired homes — brought to you by Long & Foster and Christie’s.
Kent, DC
$5,750,000
Cleveland Park, DC
$4,650,000
McLean, Virginia
$1,950,000
McLean, Virginia
$1,625,000
Foxhall, DC
$1,600,000
Chevy Chase, DC
$1,450,000
Bethesda, Maryland
$1,249,000
Spring Valley, DC
$1,095,000
Columbia Heights, DC
Stunning Italianate mansion w/5BR, 7FB, 2HB & custom details throughout. Lower level w/theater, 2BRs, kitchen. 1st level w/enormous kitchen/family room combination w/FP, paneled library, dining room. Superb craftsmanship throughout. Owner/Agent. Beli Nasseri/Foxhall Office 202-277-0677/202-363-1800
This elegant abode is part of an enclave built with an appreciation for the finer things in life with 5,000+ sqft in sought after Merryhill. Perfect for entertaining with a banquet size living room with 2 FP & 33ft. rec room. Lilian Jorgenson 703-407-0766 McLean Office 703-790-1990
Elegantly sited on a prime lot in desirable Cohasset, this 4BR, 4.5BA Colonial boasts many fine appointments & offers entertaining spaces indoors & out! Solid workmanship, brick construction & exquisite architectural details make this a perfect place to call home. Miller Bethesda Office 301- 229-4000
Rare offering! Exquisite 1898 restored Victorian on 1/3 acre lot in the most coveted location! This home features a stately portico, grand entry hall, 7 bedrooms, library, and 3 fireplaces. It is located near the National Cathedral, Metro and shops. Terri Robinson/Georgetown Office 202-607-7737/202-944-8400
Iconic International Style Hilltop Villa designed by Arthur Cotton Moore, renowned architect, on the grounds of the original Rockefeller Estate! 4BR, 3.5BA brick residence with high ceilings, Neo-Classical architectural features, 3 FP & garage. Janet Whitman/Georgetown Office 202-321-0110/202-944-8400
New Price! Beautifully expanded & extensively renovated 3BR, 3.5BA home transformed with new bathrooms, kitchen, 2 large family rooms, fabulous millwork, loads of windows & beautiful wooded views. Open living room, dining room & kitchen with large 1st floor family room. Miller Spring Valley Office 202-362-1300
This magnificent European Colonial has long been admired as one of McLean’s most elegant homes. Inside you will find a world of refined elegance, incomparable “Old-World” quality and ultimate luxury. Lilian Jorgenson 703-407-0766 McLean Office 703-790-1990
4 finished levels. Foyer, TS Chef’s kit, DR, LR w/FP, new PR. 3BR, 2 new BA up. Fin attic w/skylights. LL au-pair/in-law suite w/sep entr, rec room / FP, living area, BR w/FB. Rear deck, patio, fenced garden & 2-car offstreet parking. Close to Metro, shops, dining. Nathan Carnes/Miller Chevy Chase Office 202-321-9132
$725,000
3BR condo with wonderful layout and finishes – gleaming hardwood floors, wonderful light, gourmet kitchen with island and marble counters, custom tile baths, large private terrace, and parking available! Roby Thompson 202-255-2986 Woodley Park Office 202-483-6300
RESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATE • COMMERCIAL REAL ESTATE • MORTGAGE • TITLE • INSURANCE • PROPERTY MANAGEMENT • RELOCATION SERVICES
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June 3, 2015 GMG, INC.
Find your agent at — www.LongandFoster.com/LuxuryHomes
Spring Valley, DC
$1,885,000
Forest Hills, DC
$1,745,000
Bethesda, Maryland
$1,399,000
Bethesda, Maryland
$1,380,000
New Price! Incredible custom renovation. Total of 5/6BR, 5FBA & 2HBA, center island kitchen, opens to breakfast area and family room, terrific lower level recreation/media room and second kitchen, spectacular third floor suite. Terrific wooded views. Miller Spring Valley Office 202-362-1300
Classic, contemporary sun-filled home in sought-after Palisades adjacent to the C&O Canal offers 5BR, 5.5BA, beautiful custom finishes, gourmet kitchen, spacious living areas, 2+ car garage, breathtaking lot & aweinspiring pool – California dreaming made real! EZ commute to DC & VA. Chevy Chase Uptown Office 202-364-1300
6BR, 4.5BA 4-level home renovated and updated. Large rooms and bonus sunroom opens to patio. Basement with family room and full kitchen. Sited on a large, level lot with lush landscaping and a garage. Tasia Pappas 202-494-0470 Foxhall Office 202-363-1800
Elegant 5BR, 4.5BA home with over 5,000 square feet. Master bedroom suite with fireplace and library. Family room, piano room, and lower level entertaining area with bar, family room and in-law suite. Large back patio and beautiful garden. Angela Eliopoulos/Georgetown Office 703-989-5989/202-944-8400
Georgetown, DC
$1,650,000
Stunning 2BR, 2.5BA renovated Federal TH in Georgetown’s East Village. Lower level den could be 3rd BR. Granite and SS kitchen, separate dining room. Spectacular view of gorgeous rear garden from large, light-infused living room. Helen Lyons/Georgetown Office 202-439-3696/202-944-8400
Long & Foster Georgetown is proud to support the 2015 Summer Series
Concerts in the Parks June 21st, 2015 – Father’s Day 5:30 to 7:00 PM – Volta Park July 12th, 2015 5:30 to 7:00 PM – Rose Park
Columbia Heights, DC
$699,900
Only 1 left! Stunning all new condo with incredible floor plan and finishes! Grand living space flooded with light, hardwood floors, gourmet kitchen, custom tile bath, recessed lighting. Close to Metro, shops, restaurants, bars, & more. Roby Thompson/Woodley Park Office 202-255-2986/202-483-6300
Penn Quarter, DC
$679,000
One bedroom, plus large den and two full baths in the heart of Penn Quarter! Unique wider layout with south & east exposures. Granite kitchen, wood floors, crown molding, separate laundry room, 10ft+ ceilings, and great closet space! Call for further details. Friendship Heights Office 202-364-5200
Georgetown Office 202.944.8400 1680 Wisconsin Avenue NW Washington, DC 20008
RESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATE • COMMERCIAL REAL ESTATE • MORTGAGE • TITLE • INSURANCE • PROPERTY MANAGEMENT • RELOCATION SERVICES
LongandFoster.com 866-677-6937 GMG, INC. June 3, 2015
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real Estate
The Auction Block
Sotheby’s
Singing Bird Scent Flask, c. 1790 Estimate: $800,000 – $1,200,000 Auction Date: June 11
By Ari Pos t
Unseen for generations, many of the timepieces in the Swiss Mechanical Marvels collection were created by preeminent artists of the late 18th and early 19th century, such as JacquetDroz and Piguet & Meylan. The highlight of the collection is the Singing Bird Scent Flask, a gold-enameled, pearl-and-gem-set piece, made specifically for the Chinese market. Music plays from the bird through a miniature six-pipe organ. The bird’s beak moves realistically, the body swivels and the tail goes up and down
Freeman’s
Laurence Stephen Lowry (1887–1976) “Peel Park, Salford” Estimate: $250,000 – $350,000 Auction Date: June 16 Lowry's paintings, featuring factories and textile mills in northern England populated by his iconic “matchstick” men and women, are by no means as naive or simplistic as they appear on first look. The throngs that haunt the canvases were, according to the artist, “part of a private beauty that haunted (me).” Peel Park, Salford, was one of his best-loved subjects. This work will be offered as part of the European Art & Old Masters auction.
Christie’s
The Potomack Company
Grand and Petite Sonnerie Desk Clock, c. 1925 Cartier, Paris Estimate: $30,000 – $50,000 Auction Date: June 17
“Indian Capturing an Eagle, No 5” John Joseph Boyle (1852 – 1917) Estimate: $15,000 – $25,000 Auction Date: June 13 “Indian Capturing an Eagle, No. 5,” by renowned American artist John Joseph Boyle, depicts a young Native American man kneeling over an eagle and plucking a feather pensively from his catch. The sculpture was cast by New York's Roman Bronze Works and presented in 1908 as a gift from Boyle to his friend, the industrial artist and art educator Leslie W. Miller
Bringing the Hammer Down Final selling prices for last month’s
The dial and case of the clock are signed Cartier, Paris, and the movement and case are numbered. Part of Christie’s Auction of Important Watches, this superb piece has several exquisite features, including a white enamel dial, Roman numerals, an outer minute track with Arabic five-minute divisions, diamond-set hands, and a green guilloché case with white enamel border, the top with diamond-set initials.
Sotheby’s
San Ildefonso Polychrome Lidded Jar Tony Da (1940 – 2008) Auction Date: May 21 Estimate: $25,000 – $35,000 Final Selling Price: $68,750
featured Auction Block items.
Freeman’s
Napoleon III Twin-Handled Urn Auction Date: May 19 Estimate: $30,000 – $50,000 Final Selling Price: $131,000
Christie’s
“Benefits Supervisor Resting” Lucian Freud (1922 – 2011) Auction Date: May 13 Estimate: $30 million – $50 million Final Selling Price: $56.2 million
The world’s mosT desired homes — broughT To you by long & FosTer and ChrisTie’s. LongandFoster.com/LuxuryHomes
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June 3, 2015 GMG, INC.
Bonhams
“...Emerging into an opening that appeared to have been formed partly by the ravages of the wind, and partly by those of fire” N. C. Wyeth (1882 – 1945) Auction Date: May 20 Estimate: $400,000 – $600,000 Final Selling Price: $1,325,000
real Estate
Doyle New York
Gold and White Enamel Bangle Bracelet Tiffany & Co., Schlumberger, France Estimate: $8,000 – $12,000 Auction Date: June 11 This 18-kt. gold bracelet, signed Tiffany & Co., is part of Doyle New York’s Auction of Fine Jewelry. Including over 650 lots with more moderate estimates than in the Important Jewelry sales, the showcase includes glittering creations set with diamonds, colored stones and pearls, as well as gold, jewelry, fine watches and gentlemen’s accessories. Among the selection of fine watches for ladies and gentlemen are examples by Patek Philippe, Rolex, Boucheron, Graff, Cartier, Bulgari, Piaget, Blancpain and Tiffany & Co.
Christie’s
Diamond Rivière Necklace Estimate: $ 1.4 million – $1.8 million Auction Date: June 22 Part of Bonham New York’s Fine Jewelry Sale, this spectacular rivière comprises a graduated line of 51 round brilliant-cut diamonds weighing more than 70 carats, joined by a heart-shaped clasp weighing 2.04 carats and mounted in platinum. Each of the round diamonds in the necklace have ‘excellent’ grades from the Gemological Institute of America for polish, symmetry and cut — known in the industry as ‘Triple X’ (needless to say, this is extremely rare).
Sell Your Fine Musical Instruments with Us As America’s oldest auctioneer, Freeman’s has been a constant within the art market for more than 200 years. Built on the expertise of our specialists and our traditions of excellence, generations of collectors have benefited from buying and selling fine art, antiques, and jewelry with our firm. We are pleased to introduce a new auction to the 2015 autumn season. Curated by specialist Frederick Oster, an internationally recognized authority on the violin family and American fretted instruments, this new sale will include violins, violas, violoncellos, basses, cellos, and guitars. For a complimentary auction estimate with a view to sell in the upcoming sale, please contact Mr. Oster. He will be in the area on these dates: Baltimore/Washington, DC June 8-9 Frederick Oster | 215.940.9830 foster@freemansauction.com
AUCTIONS ~ APPRAISALS ~ ESTATE SALES 1120 N. FAIRFAX STREET, OLD TOWN ALEXANDRIA, VA 22314 703.684.4550 ~ VA#0704
Musical Instruments Auction 11/20/15
To be offered November 20
Set of Eight George Nakashima Black Walnut and Grass-Seated Chairs June 13th Live Auction
A Fine Italian Violoncello by Joannes Tononi of Bologna c.1700 $150,000-250,000
www.freemansauction.com GMG, INC. June 3, 2015
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FEATURE
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1. Gay pride protesters in New York City in 1976. Photo by Warren K. Leffler. 2. A float in the 1992 Gay Pride Parade. Photo by Bob Dardano. 3, 4, 5 and 7. Photos of the 2014 Pride celebrations in Washington. Photos courtesy of Capital Pride Alliance. 6. Gay Pride celebrations in D.C. in 1976. Courtesy of Rainbow History Project. 8. The 2003 Gay Pride Festival. Photo by Bob Dardano.
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‘Flashback’: 40 Years of D.C. Pride By peter murray
P
ride in Washington has come a long way since local gay activists put together a one-time event to promote and celebrate lesbian-gay-bisexualtransgender identity in 1972. Those organizers pushed the boundaries in an age when gay sex was illegal and gay federal employees were fired for being gay — based on rationale that they were “perverts,” and therefore, security risks. They likely couldn’t have imagined the strides our country, or the world, would make with gay rights over the next 40 years. But the purpose of the event hasn’t changed. “Every Pride is someone’s first Pride. When it’s your first Pride and you’re just coming out, you really need that mix of the political and celebratory,” says Chip Lewis, Capital Pride’s communications director. Over the decades, however, a small demonstration has evolved into a spectacular slew of events drawing hundreds of thousands of visitors — not to mention hefty corporate sponsorships from mainstream companies and participation by traditionally conservative groups like the Boy Scouts of America.
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June 3, 2015 GMG, INC.
Pride became an annual event in Washington starting in 1975, first led by community leaders like Deacon Maccubbin. For several years, LGBT-centric organizations like Whitman-Walker organized the event. In 2008, volunteers formed the Capital Pride Alliance to keep Pride traditions alive, as WhitmanWalker struggled financially. Since its founding, Capital Pride has done more than just continue Washington’s lesbiangay-bisexual-transgender traditions. The organization and its volunteers have ushered in a new era of Pride in the District marked by broader attendance, new sponsors, more floats, parties, festival themes and a gala celebrating prominent supporters of gay rights, like this year’s honoree, former U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder. “For me what’s exciting is the continuing growth of excitement and energy around the event and what our community produces for Pride,” says Capital Pride Executive Director Ryan Bos. Chatting about this year’s celebration, his eyes light up, his fingers tap and he twirls the piece of candy in his mouth. (Bos keeps a jar full of Laffy Taffy,
Dum Dums and other treats in his office at all times, FYI.) Bos is particularly pumped for this year’s theme of “Flashback,” laughing as he describes how eager he is to see how the theme “manifests itself at the parade and opening party at Arena Stage.” Capital Pride is planning for attendance in the hundreds of thousands for this June’s festivities. Parade highlights include color guards from the U.S. military and the Boy Scouts, and floats put on by several local schools and faith-based educational groups. Bos says, “We try to create a place for anyone who wants to participate.” Lewis, a holdover from Whitman-Walker and the organization’s gay-history buff, notes the changing face of Pride sponsors. Lewis says, “A few years ago, our primary sponsors were beer and vodka companies like Budweiser and Absolut. Now there are a lot more banks.” In addition, Bos points out that Northrup Grumman, a major security and defense company, is sponsoring this year’s events in honor of the repeal of “Don’t Ask Don’t Tell.” Some have come to think Pride is just an excuse for massive partying, but Lewis disputes
this, “Every time you bring the community together, you want to remind them that even though we’ve made progress, there’s still a lot that needs to be done.” He and Bos mention that transgender issues, LGBT homelessness, bullying, HIV and elderly people returning to the closet in assisted living are issues that still encumber the gay community. “‘Don’t Ask Don’t Tell’ is the only LGBT issue that has been completely resolved nationwide,” states Lewis. That said, “When you bring people together who live every day under fear of discrimination, and bring them into a safe space, they’re going to want to have fun.” Both Bos and Lewis see D.C.’s Pride celebrations reaching a larger audience than just the gay community. Bos says Pride in the District has become more than a celebration of gayness. “It’s not ‘I’m gay and I’m proud.’ It’s that ‘I’m happy for whoever you are and whatever you are,’ and there’s no need to label it.” As for those who haven’t experienced Pride yet, for any number of reasons, Bos says, “Just come watch and you’ll be amazed by the sheer diversity of people in the community who are just excited to be who they are.”
Your Dining Guide to Washington DC’s Finest Restaurants
1789 RESTAURANT
Bistro Francais 3124-28 M St., NW 202–338–3830 bistrofrancaisdc.com
BISTROT LEPIC & WINE BAR
THE GRILL ROOM
CAFE BONAPARTE
1226 36th St., NW 202–965–1789 1789restaurant.com
With the ambiance of an elegant country inn, 1789 features classicallybased American cuisine – the finest regional game, fish and produce available. Open seven nights a week. Jackets suggested. Complimentary valet parking.
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.
Come and see for yourself why Bistrot Lepic, with its classical, regional and contemporary cuisine, has been voted best bistro in D.C. by the Zagat Guide. And now, with its Wine Bar, you can enjoy “appeteasers,” full bar service, complimentary wine tasting every Tuesday and a new private room. The regular menu is always available. Open every day for lunch and dinner. Now serving brunch Saturday and Sunday from 11 a.m.–3 p.m. Reservations suggested.
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.
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!
DAS Ethiopian
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 ENO Experience is perfect for a pre-theater meal or try our dessert wine & chocolate flights after.
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!
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.
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.
1736 Wisconsin Ave., NW 202–333–0111 bistrotlepic.com
2810 Pennsylvania Ave., NW 202–295–2826 enowinerooms.com
Monthly Sunday Wine Classes & ENOversity’s with local producers Wine down Sun –Thurs from 5 pm -7 pm. Select wine on tap $5 Mon 5pm -11 pm; Tues- Thurs 5 pm 12 am; Fri & Sat 4 pm – 1 am Sun 4 pm - 11pm
1050 31ST ST., NW 202-617-2424 thegrillroomdc.com
Breakfast, lunch and dinner daily. Brunch Sat.-Sun. 11:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m.
1063 Wisconsin Ave., NW 202–338–8800 filomena.com
1522 Wisconsin Ave., NW 202–333–8830 cafebonaparte.com
Malmaison
3401 K ST.,NW 202–817–3340 malmaisondc.com 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).
Advertise your dining Martins Tavern
1264 Wisconsin Ave., NW 202–333–7370 martinstavern.com Don't let the beer fool you, it's a compliment to your dining experience. 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 its walls. Fourth generation owner Billy Martin, Jr., continues the tradition of Washington’s oldest familyowned restaurant. Serving Brunch until 4 p .m. 7 days a week!
SEA CATCH Restaurant
1054 31st St., NW 202–337–8855 seacatchrestaurant.com Overlooking the historic C&O Canal, we offer fresh seafood simply prepared in a relaxed atmosphere. Outdoor dining available.
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
THE OCEANAIRE 1201 F St., NW 202–347–2277 theoceanaire.com
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. 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. June 3, 2015
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Food & wine
TheLatest Dish
F
by linda rot h
rom those wonderful folks who brought you Ripple and Roofers Union comes Jug & Table. Drawing on the best of both, it expounds on Ripple’s mission of making quality wine approachable while offering Marjorie Meek-Bradley’s new menu. That menu includes lux snacks served in très chic jars, as well as an international array of grilled cheese sandwiches, created upstairs in the beer-centric Roofers Union kitchen. This
new addition to Adams Morgan (across the street from my new office) offers 20 wines by the glass as well as sharable jug options. Sommelier Theo Rutherford started as Ripple’s sommelier before going on to helm wine programs at Rogue 24, Fiola and Café Dupont. Now he’s back. Chef Update: Executive chef Brian Sonoskus takes the reins at Tupelo Honey Café, slated to open in the Clarendon/Court-
house section of Arlington as this issue goes to press. Tyler Alford will be chief mixologist at this Southern-food inspired restaurant, which showcases craft sparkling sangria and 23 craft beers. Lisa Odom has been tapped as executive chef at Succotash, slated to open mid-summer at National Harbor. She hails from Miami, where she worked at Oolite Restaurant & Bar and Tongue & Cheek. There is an additional connection to Succotash culinary director Edward Lee, of Louisville, Kentucky: they are both Korean Americans who developed their culinary reputations in the South. Cathal Armstrong will open One Loudoun in early 2016, next to Uncle Julio’s and across from Matchbox in the central artery of the project's downtown section. Concept TBD. Nick Stefanelli, formerly of Bibiana, plans to open Masseria in the Union Market district. The name derives from a farm in Italy’s Puglia region. Slated to open this summer, it will seat 60 in a setting evocative of an Italian country estate. His team includes David Kurka, general manager and advanced sommelier, formerly of Brabo and CityZen; and Julien-Pierre Bourgon, head bartender of cocktail lounge PX. DC-based Matchbox Food Group announced plans to open three more locations in Northern Virginia in the next year — in Pentagon City in Arlington, Potomac Mills in
CE
Interior of Rogue 24. Photo courtesy Rogue 24.
BAKING A DIFFER E N
Making it deliciously simple for you to empower the lives of our veterans and military families
All proceeds support our veterans programs Mention this and receive a free cookie or brownie with your first in-store purchase not valid for online orders
Located in the heart of Georgetown, at the corner of Wisconsin and Grace Street www.dogtagbakery.com
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June 3, 2015 GMG, INC.
3206 Grace Street, NW
(202) 527-9388
Woodbridge and One Loudoun in Ashburn. The company used a “friends and family” fundraising model to start off, but will soon offer opportunities to accredited investors. Wood Ranch BBQ & Grill, which features Texas-style brisket, St. Louis smoked ribs and Carolina pulled pork, plans to open in Springfield Town Center in Virginia on June 8. This will be the California-based chain's 16th location and the first outside of the Sunshine State. The company plans to eventually open 25 East Coast locations, including several in the D.C. area. The RAMMYs were born one year before David Letterman began “The Late Show.” The 33rd annual RAMMY Awards Gala takes place Sunday, June 7, at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center. Pavilion sponsors include the Embassy of Argentina, with Argentine chef Diego Biondi; Wines of Chile; Foods from Chile; Meat and Livestock Australia; and the Embassy of Peru, which will have a full pisco bar.
Linda Roth is president of Linda Roth Associates, a public relations and marketing firm that specializes in the hospitality industry. Reach her at Linda@LindaRothPR.com.
Food & wine
Who Is Taking Home a Rammy This Year?
T
By C ar oly n L a nde s
he 33rd RAMMYs are going down this Sunday to honor the best of the metro area’s restaurant industry. Of the 21 categories up for grub — er, uh, grab — four of them will be selected by the voting public. The rest will be selected by a panel of judges from the Restaurant Association of Metropolitan Washington, the presenter of the awards.
Program of the Year; LaGina Lewis, of Farmers Fishers Bakers — for Employee of the Year; Agnes Chin, of the Grill Room at the Capella Hotel — for Pastry Chef of the Year; and Fiola Mare — for New Restaurant of the Year. Rather than attempt to poll the public in advance, and because I’m a big fan of brunch anyway, “upscale” or “everyday casual,” I thought I’d give you my own choices for the categories the public gets to pick. Drum roll, please …
Liberty Tavern is a favorite of mine for many reasons — excellent food and great service, with a tavern ambiance. Try meeting some friends for brunch and order the house-smoked salmon or the thick-sliced French toast with banana and pecan maple syrup, then stick around awhile for a fresh-fruit Bellini or a manmosa or two … or three … You’ll come back.
While it requires a trip across the river to visit this Alexandria neighborhood gem, the friendly service staff and cozy, small-towndiner ambiance make it worth the trip. Evening Star’s two separate bars stocked with craft beers make it an excellent spot to meet friends and enjoy a brew.
Featuring area artisans, Food Vendors, informative hayrides throughout the vineyards. A family friendly venue, perfect for Fathers Day weekend. Enjoy wine while listening to the region’s finest Jazz performers, including:
VINEYARDS & WINERY
Upscale Casual Brunch: Seasons at the Four Seasons When a waffle just won’t cut it, or I’m feeling a little “upscale” for brunch, Seasons at the Four Seasons delivers the best Ropa Vieja Shredded Flank Steak Chachapas (translation: Venezuelan Corn Pancakes) this side of the Potomac. And let’s be fair, the “upscale” category belongs to Georgetown …
It’s a short trip up Wisconsin Avenue to Friendship Heights, and Pete’s is my favorite spot for a fast and delicious bite of New Haven Style Apizza. It’s served cafeteria-style: order at the register, wait to be served on a tray, then select a seat. In addition to New England-style pizza, Pete’s offers antipasti, pastas and brews.
SPRING JAZZ FESTIVAL - June 20 & 21, noon to 6pm
Favorite Gathering Place of the Year: Evening Star Café
As one might expect, there are a number of contenders from Georgetown, including: Seasons at the Four Seasons — for Upscale Casual Brunch; Bourbon Steak — for both Cocktail Program of the Year and Service Program of the Year; Pizza Paradiso — Beer
Favorite Fast Bites: Pete’s New Haven Style Apizza
Everyday Casual Brunch: Liberty Tavern
ELKRUN.COM
Howard Burns Trio
Josh Bayer Trio
Eric Byrd Trio
Time Squared
Slick Hampton Band
Ronny Smith & Friends
$15 online, $20 at the gate
MOUNT AIRY, MD
410-775-2513
Lunch Special
Monday– Friday 11:30am - 2:30pm 3 Lunch Tapas for $12
Wine & Tapas Chef Driss Zahidi offers an assortment of authentic Mediterranean-style tapas and entrées. Celebrate with us for all types of occasions including luncheons, dinners, wine tastings, receptions and catered events. Our wine list includes high-quality wines from around the world. We offer wines by the glass or bottle at prices to fit any budget, in addition to a retail wine selection.
Happy Hour
Monday– Friday 3:30 - 6:30pm Tapas & Drink Specials
Evo Bistro Hours Monday–Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday
11:30am -10pm 11:30am -11pm 4pm -11pm 4pm -9pm
Spanish Night
Tuesdays 4 -9pm Paella & Drink Specials
1313 Old Chain Bridge Road | McLean, VA 703.288.4422 | www.evobistro.com GMG, INC. June 3, 2015
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IN COUNTRY
CLOVERLAND, MARSHALL - 149
acres
in
Orange County Hunt. Exquisite stone home of the highest quality & finishes. Grand foyer, mahogany library, conservatory, chefs kitchen, 5 ensuite bedrooms. Caretaker apartment, indoor pool, tennis court & views of mtns!
$6,500,000
Peter Pejascevich 540-270-3835 • Scott Buzzelli 540-454-1399
HAMILTON, VA - Historic, GORGEOUS 6300 SF Manor House. Guest & Tenant Hses provide 5 more bdrms & EXCELLENT INCOME . Main hse features impressive great room; stunning kitchen; heated pool w/fountains; elegant columned portico; enchanting 1st fl. master bdrm. w/ barrel-vault ceiling, steam shower, custom everything! PRIVATE & convenient .$1,990,000
Rustic Nuptials in the Virginia Countryside By Carolyn Landes
As every bride knows, once the excitement following the bending of the knee wanes, the reality of actually planning a wedding sets in — and one of the first and foremost decisions is figuring out where to do it. With swamp air settling over the District, a potentially much cooler option lies nearby — in the pastoral beauty of the mountains of Virginia. Fortunately, the Commonwealth offers a
number of options, particularly rustic venues that frame the pastoral setting so well. Besides mountain views, Virginia’s countryside offers lush vineyards and bucolic meadows, all of which offer a natural alternative to incense-choking, high-arched cathedrals for the rustic wedding of your dreams. We’ve picked four of the best, within just a couple hours or so from D.C.
Peter Pejascevich 540-270-3835 • Scott Buzzelli 540-454-1399
LEESBURG, VA Custom-built stone, brick, and cedar estate on 3.54 acres w/ amenities ideal for life style full of entertaining, leisure, & enjoyment. Features include heated indoor pool, a sports pub, a reg. racquetball court w/ hoop, audio/video system w/ 2 home theaters, rooftop deck, picnic pavilion w/ gas barbecue, potting shed, 2+ 2-car garages, & caretaker apartment. $1,665,000 Peter Pejascevich 540-270-3835 • Scott Buzzelli 540-454-1399
DELAPLANE, VA Stunning custom colonial on approx. 25 acres in a gorgeous setting. Beautifully decorated and landscaped. High ceilings, sun-filled rooms - wood floors & fabulous windows capture magnificent views from every room. Ideal for horses or a gracious country lifestyle. Located in Piedmont Hunt. $1,525,000 Peter Pejascevich 540-270-3835 • Scott Buzzelli 540-454-1399
PURCELLVILLE, VA Stunning custom home in the heart of Loudoun County's Wine Country next-door to Hillsborough Vineyards. Beautiful sunset views! The grand foyer with hardwood floors opens into the living room and formal dining room. Enjoy the views from the gourmet kitchen! $1,299,000 Peter Pejascevich 540-270-3835 • Scott Buzzelli 540-454-1399
MELMORE, MIDDLEBURG, VA - 4 BR, 3+ bath, 4100SQ FT, custom kitchen cabinets, 3 FPs, finished basement, Pine Floors, 2 car carriage house w/ 2nd floor, 2 car garage, pond, pool, gazeebo, full trex deck, orchard, professional landscaping.
$1,175,000
Peter Pejascevich 540-270-3835 • Scott Buzzelli 540-454-1399
PURCELLVILLE, VA- With sweeping views of lush lawn, gardens and rushing Catoctin Creek, this stone home with original wood floors, deep window sills and wood burning fireplaces will steal your heart. Newer custom built detached post and bean 2 story studio above the creek is the ideal spot to write your novel or paint you next masterpiece. Unparalleled! $615,000 On the Market...with Sam Rees 703-408-4261
PURCELLVILLE, VA- Charming & enchanting historic stone home with welcoming front porch, stone fireplace in large living room, beautiful hardwood floors. Renovated country kitchen with views to the garden outside, appliances and exposed stone walls. French doors open to private deck and yard. Close to vineyards. $199,000 Leslie Woods-Hulse 703-728-7370
WWW.MIDDLEBURGREALESTATE.COM
Middleburg 540-687-6321 | Purcellville 540-338-7770 | Leesburg 703-777-1170
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June 3, 2015 GMG, INC.
The farm at Goodstone Inn, in Middleburg, Virginia. Photo by Sallie Lewis.
IN COUNTRY
Castle Hill Cider Keswick, Virginia
This historic, award-winning indoor/outdoor venue offers couples endless possibilities to create a wedding pulled right from their imagination — from the intimate to the incredible. The property’s 11,000-square-foot, classically built post-andbeam barn provides an expansive year-round party spot. Terraced lawns with exquisite 360-degree views of Virginia’s countryside and the Blue Ridge Mountains create an idyllic backdrop for wedding receptions and photography. Castle Hill Cider received the 2014 Borrowed & Blue Honorable Mention Award for Most Desirable Wedding Venue in the Charlottesville, Virginia, area.
Castle Hill Cider in Keswick, Virginia. Photo courtesy Castle Hill Cider. Located in the heart of Virginia wine and hunt country, the inn combines an unhurried and intimate atmosphere with breathtaking views of the countryside and the Blue Ridge Mountains. Middleburg’s Goodstone Inn offers a perfect With its historic guest residences restored in balance of plush luxury and country coziness English and French country décor, an ivyT_Georgetowner_6.2015_Layout 1 5/27/15 10:31 AM Page 1 —T a& delightful setting for your rustic nuptials.
Goodstone Inn Middleburg, Virginia
covered façade, an elegant pool and a restaurant serving farm-to-table gourmet cuisine, you and your guests will enjoy the finest of Southern hospitality and gracious service in a luxury retreat atmosphere. Wines from Trump Winery, Charlottesville, Virginia. Photo courtesy Trump Winery.
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 HIcKORY tREE
bIRcHWOOD
tRILLIuM
gREEN gARDEN
One of the finest horse properties in one of the most exquisite areas of Virginia's Hunt Country. The beautifully groomed 325 acres includes: manor home, guest and tenant homes, barns, fenced paddocks and a 6 furlong training track. The historic Confederate Hall, an elegant entertaining venue, was moved to this Estate in 1972. Property is protected by Conservation Easement. $11,250,000
The extraordinary Birchwood Estate boasts 180 acres with the most beautiful private arboretum in Virginia! The English Country manor is a masterpiece of the finest quality & design, elegant & charming with incredible mountain views, brilliant gardens & a simply "magical setting". Exquisite stone, slate roofing, fieldstone terraces, a luxurious pool & spa, wine cellar; plus 6 separate parcels! $5,975,000
LIVE, WORK and PLAY!!! Extraordinary 50 acre private estate. Stunning residence + 4 additional structures.Stone terraces. Offices with fiber optic. 12 stall barn w/8 acres of fenced paddocks. Recreation building w/gathering room & theatre.Resistance pool, stocked lake, orchard. Experience the easy flow of outdoor to indoor spaces. $4,474,000
c.1833, Listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Offers one of the grand manor homes on 34+ acres in the famed horse country of Upperville. Recently renovated, the home offers wonderful indoor and outdoor living areas. Porches, gardens, barns, paddocks, riding arena, pond, pool and magnificent views from the Bull Run to Blue Ridge Mountains. $4,200,000
Please see over 100 of our fine estates and exclusive country properties on the world wide web by visiting www.
THOMAS -TALBOT.com
WINDOVER
WOODLAND fARM
cREst HILL
HIcKORY WOODs
A stunning Middleburg equestrian estate boasting 35+ gorgeous acres and a absolutely charming 4 bedroom historic residence. Beautifully updated and in pristine condition, property also includes 2 stables, guest house, barn apartment, indoor arena, pool, utility building, and brilliant gardens. $2,600,000
Wonderful custom built 4 Bedroom residence on 15.7 acres beautifully landscaped acres. Superior quality and elegant decor grace this charming home. Terraces and gardens surround the pool, media room, library, gourmet country kitchen. Guest house with 2 apartments, 5 stall stable, lush paddocks and board fencing and riding ring all in an idyllic setting in Middleburg. $2,500,000
Elegant 4.000 square foot home, standing seam metal roofs, 3 stone fireplaces, heart pine floors, Geo Thermal heat, custom center island kitchen with granite counters & 5 burner gas cooktop, built-ins & walk-in china closet. 2400+ of sq.ft. stone walks & patios. Cedar sided house & garage. Wonderfully private. Stables & pasture. 10 minute drive to I-66 or shopping. Quality architectural construction.$875,000
MOVE-IN READY. Private, open and light-filled, this is an inviting home. 2014 Professionally designed kitchen: new cherry cabinetry with pantry wall, granite counters & stainless steel appliances. Updated baths. 2015 Newly finished large & open lower level offers excellent livability & walks out to a natural forested area. Much desired Melmore Community adjacent to the Town of Middleburg $835,000
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 20117 GMG, INC. June 3, 2015
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IN COUNTRY
Trump Winery Charlottesville, Virginia
keswick, virginia 202.390.2323 www.castlehillcider.com events@castlehillcider.com
While Trump Winery is relatively new, having opened in 2011, it has quickly established itself as one of the most sought-after wedding venues in gorgeous Charlottesville. The barn at Trump Winery is Virginia rustic elegance at its finest: high ceilings, expansive windows and French doors opening to a terrace with sweeping views of the vineyard, lake and lush countryside — make it the perfect backdrop for an unforgettable rustic wedding in high style. It is Trump, after all. And now the largest vineyard in Virginia, the winery offers a fine selection of sparkling, red and white wines to toast the new bride and groom.
King Family Vineyards Crozet, Virginia
Another award-winning option, King Family Vineyards is tucked into the base of the Blue Ridge Mountains and offers the rustic wedding planner the popular Carriage House: a warm, sophisticated room decked out with chandeliers, exposed beams, rough-cut oak floors and a large stone fireplace to keep the festivities going during the cooler months. The rural farm setting has panoramic mountain views that guarantee your wedding album will not disappoint. Nor will the wines, which helped the King Family win Borrowed and Blue’s 2014 Best Vineyard Wedding Venue for the Charlottesville area.
A King Family Vineyards wine barrel, Crozet, Virginia. Photo courtesy Stelsie’s Wine Blog.
703.296.2347 colleengustavson.com
www.atokaproperties.com
ROCK HILL HOUSE – LINCOLN, VA Amazing all Stucco Hunt Country Chic home set high on rock hill. 5+ acres but surrounded by large parcels in open space easement, bucolic views to ponds and mountains, Stunning interior with dream kitchen and Wolf Range. Palladian Windows, 10 sets of French doors, patios, gardens, expansive lawn. Perfect for entertaining. Main floor and upper floor bedrooms- 4/5 Bedrooms and 4 Baths. Located in Historic Preservation Area, walk to two Equestrian facilities. Once in a lifetime opportunity for one lucky buyer $749,000 Colleen Gustavson Real Estate
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June 3, 2015 GMG, INC.
@iloveloco
colleen@middleburgrealestate.com
BALD HILL RETREAT, BAILEYWYCK FARM - MIDDLEBURG LEESBURG – The perfect week- Stately all brick manor home set on 12+/- acres. Invitender! 2 houses for the price of one. 3 Bedroom completely renovated historic farmhouse with stylish pickled interior log walls, deck, patio, gardens, large shade trees. VIEWS! Easy to manage .54 acres. Detached guest house currently used as office – would be a lovely studio, shop, guest house. Additional green house barn, chicken- friendly. Magical setting - $505,000
ing pool, outdoor kitchen, 4 board fencing, 5 stall barn with grass pen and round ring, 2 additional barns, including one that is 4000 sq ft insulated and open – perfect for hobby or business. Residence boasts 3 finished levels, updated baths, gourmet kitchen, separate prep area for caterer. Perfec for entertaining. Full in-law/ au pair suite in lower level, luxuriously appointed. $1,349,000
Colleen@middleburgrealestate.com
colleengustavson.com
IN COUNTRY
In Country Calendar June 6 Twilight Polo at Great Meadow
Gates open at 6:30 p.m. for Twilight Polo, with the first match beginning at 7. Great Meadow hosts Twilight Polo every Saturday night through Sept. 19, except June 20 and July 4. 5089 Old Tavern Rd., The Plains, Virginia.
June 9 June Biz Buzz
At the June mixer of the Middleburg Business and Professional Association there will be a 10-minute Biz Buzz to bring attendees up to date. RSVP by emailing info@ visitmiddleburgva.com. Nonmember admission is $5. Goodstone Inn, 36205 Snake Hill Rd., Middleburg, Virginia.
June 12 Sips and Snacks
Middleburg’s Home Farm Store invites visitors to a showcase of local artisan foods, at which they may taste and comment on wine, ciders or beer. There will be samples and recipe cards to take home. 1 East Washington St., Middleburg, Virginia.
OAKFIELD Upperville, Virginia • $4,795,000
Stone manor house in spectacular setting • 86.81 acres • Highly protected area in prime Piedmont Hunt • Gourmet kitchen • Wonderful detail throughout • 5 BR • 5 BA • 3 half BA • 3 fireplaces, classic pine paneled library • Tenant house • Stable • Riding ring • Heated saltwater pool • Pergola • Full house generator.
Paul MacMahon
(703) 609-1905
STONEWOOD Middleburg, Virginia • $930,000
Charming stucco, log and frame home • 10 acres • 3-4 bedrooms • 3 1/2 baths • 2 fireplaces (one in the kitchen with antique brick floor) • Beautiful reclaimed pine flooring • Bright and sunny family room opens to bluestone terrace • Master bedroom opens to private balcony • 2 car garage • 4 stall barn with tack room with 2 paddocks • 2 recorded lots.
Paul MacMahon
(703) 609-1905
info@sheridanmacmahon.com
June 13 Birding Banshee
On the second Saturday of each month, Loudoun Wildlife Conservancy and Friends of Banshee Reeks run a bird walk at the Banshee Reeks Nature Preserve, a birding hot spot. Participants are asked to bring binoculars if they have them. For details, contact Joe Coleman at 540-554-2542 or jcoleman@loudounwildlife. org. 17263 Southern Plantation La., Leesburg, Virginia.
“LIKE NOTHING YOU’VE EVER EXPERIENCED” - GARY PLAYER
June 14 Middleburg Summer Concert
Soprano Medea Namoradez-Ruhadze, a professor of voice at Shenandoah University, will be one of several featured performers at the second concert in the Middleburg Chamber Music Concert Series at Middleburg United Methodist Church. Refreshments will follow the concert. Admission is by free will offering. 15 W. Washington St. (across from the Safeway), Middleburg, Virginia. Virginia’s only Gary Player Signature Design, and one of the closest premiere golf courses to your business, specializes in first rate, full-service corporate outings.
· Bull Run Golf Club (VA)
· The Legacy Golf Resort
FARAWAY FARM
LIBERTY HILL Boyce, Virginia • $1,775,000
Solid stone home with copper roof on 70 acres • Original portions dating from the 1700’s • First floor bedroom & 3 additional suites • Original floors • 8 fireplaces • Formal living room • Gourmet kitchen • 2 ponds • Mountain views • Stone walls • Mature gardens • Pool • Log cabin • Piedmont Hunt. Helen MacMahon (540) 454-1930 Paul MacMahon (703) 609-1905 Ann MacMahon (540) 687-5588
Mountain top retreat with 60 mile panoramic views of the Shenandoah Valley • 215 acres • 1/3 pasture • Main house circa 1787 • 3 BR, 1 BA • 2 fireplaces • Random width pine floors • 2 BR, 1 BA guest cottage • Stone & frame barn circa 1787 • Remnants of formal garden • Old cemetery • Spring fed pond • Gazebo.
DOG WOOD
WASHINGTON STREET
The Plains, Virginia • $890,000
Private 10 acres between Middleburg and The Plains • 4 bedroom home • open floor plan • large front porch with views to the west • Traditional materials such as stucco exterior and metal roof • wood floors • fireplaces • built in book shelves • Beautiful plantings and fenced yard • Great location and easy maintenance. Helen MacMahon (540) 454-1930
www.sheridanmacmahon.com
(540) 687-5588
(703) 609-1905 (540) 454-1930
Middleburg, Virginia • $785,000
Classic Virginia colonial • Circa 1926 • Stone and frame construction • 3 bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths • Hardwood floors • High ceilings • Screened side porch on .65 acre in town • 2-car garage with apartment • Beautiful gardens and rear terrace.
Paul MacMahon
Call 703-779-2555 or
· Old Hickory Golf Club (VA) · Royal Manchester Golf Links (PA)
Middleburg Area • $2,975,000
Paul MacMahon Helen MacMahon
For Tee Times:
· Augustine Golf Club (VA)
visit Raspberryfalls.com Leesburg, Va
SIGNAL MOUNTAIN The Plains, Virginia • $1,675,000
160 acres terracing the Bull Run Mtns. • Stone walls through property • Views across the entire region • Stone & cedar carriage house with 3 bay garage and top of the line finishes • 1/2 acre pond • Gated entrance • Complete privacy • Rare find- great escape.
Helen MacMahon
(540) 454-1930
COBBLER LANE Delaplane, Virginia • $545,000
Own your own valley • 25.21 acres recorded in 3 parcels, private • Small cottage in excellent condition, ability to add on or use as a guest house • Approximately 7 acres open, balance wooded • Stream.
Paul MacMahon
(703) 609-1905
(703) 609-1905
110 East Washington Street, Middleburg, Virginia 20117
GMG, INC. June 3, 2015
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Classifieds /Service directory
Advisory Neighborhood Commission 2C MonthLY Meeting Monday, June 8, 2015 at 6:30 p.m. at MLK Memorial Library 900 G St NW Aud 3 (Basement) Washington, DC ANC 2C P.O.Box 51181 Washington, DC 20091
Employment
cleaning service
Private Nurse care available
Berta’s Spring cleaning special
I have been a nurse for over 25yrs, I do errands, dr’s appt, grocery shopping, manage personnel care, over site prescriptions, cleaning, cooking and so forth. I have great references! My phone number is 240-277-2452 or email is 1olivia@live.com!!
Personal Assistant Available
I am a personal /family and nursing assistant with over 11 years of experience with the elderly and families in running errands in their homes! I can be reached at 571-332-1991 anytime of the day.
LUCAS CUSTOM TAILOR
Quality Service! Expert residential cleaning service with more than 20 years of experience. Excellent references on request. Free Estimates. 571-501-1312 or 571-298-7860 reyes_berta@ymail.com
tutor/Lessons French Language Private Instruction Beginner, intermediate, advanced level and conversation classes offered. Emphasis on composing a customized curriculum and structure of classes to best accommodate students achieve their individual goals. Over 7 years of teaching experience. Washington DC. Contact: getfrench@gmail.com, website: www.getfrench.net. 202-270-2098
Tennis Lessons $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
1520 W�������� A��. N.W. - W���������, DC 20007 T�������� 202-625-7108 - F�� 202-333-3173
A Cleaning Service Inc Since 1985
Residential & Commercial Insured, Bonded, Licenced - Serving DC, VA, MD
703.892.8648 - www.acleaningserviceinc.com
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June 3, 2015 GMG, INC.
Sale/lease/Rent COMMERCIAL OFFICE BUILDING American University Area. Across from Wagshal’s Parking and Elevator Buy and Occupy! Tour By Appointment Only Now Accepting Bids Jconnelly@summitcre.com 202-491-5300
Carr Work Places
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 Rent
Studio apartment for rent. Great Kalorama location (2012 Wyoming Ave.,NW) one block from Washington Hilton. First floor, includes washer/dryer, galley kitchen. 450 sq.ft., floor to ceiling windows. $1475.00 mo. Contact Guy Rohling, 202-494-2476.
Ravenswyck
historic log house / designer details for sale by owner, 1 hour from Dulles unique, secluded 12+ acres near Winchester www.ravenswyck.com (magic conveys)
Body & soul
Murphy’s Love: Making the Kids Feel Safe By Stacy notara s M u r p h y
Dear Stacy, I am planning to leave my wife of 10 years. We have been in and out of therapy for the last three years, but we just don’t get along anymore and I have lost interest in making things better. I am very concerned about the impact on our son (age 7), who tends to be very tentative about new things and worries a lot. I want to do this with minimal impact on his life and need to know how to go about this. Please advise. – Concerned Dad Dear Dad: I am so sorry that things are so difficult in your marriage and I understand that you have lost interest in working it out — sometimes we get to that point and just let ourselves walk away. If you truly feel you have done everything you can do (and I mean you, not your wife —more on that later), then I agree that focusing on your son is what comes next. I asked Chevy Chase psychotherapist Maribeth Hilliard Hager, LICSW, for her opinion about how to broach this subject. Her advice is that you be completely solid in your separation plan (e.g., location, plan for visitation, how school events will be handled, etc.) before you tell Son a single detail. “We can’t predict the magical things kids are going to come up with to make sense of this big life change, but we can control the plan and show that the adults are in charge of the situation,” she explains. “The parents’ role is to make the kids feel safe in this unsafe situation.”
Specifically, Hager says parents ought to outline how they will support one another and what can be done when problems arise. “This is just really the beginning of many more conversations, so both parents need to give the message that they are available for more in the future,” she says, adding that parents must be careful not to offer more information than the child asks for. Always be respectful of the child’s relationship with the other parent, she emphasizes. You and Son will have conversations about this for the rest of your life. That may not sound fun, but that’s reality. Never blame Wife or make negative comments in any of these conversations. If you are comfortable that you did all you could to save the marriage, there’s no need to be derogatory. Hager explains that we never know what parts of us our children identify with most. If you criticize Wife’s “indecision,” you may be criticizing a piece of Son you don’t even recognize. Stacy Notaras Murphy (www.stacymurphyLPC. com) is a licensed professional counselor and certified Imago Relationship therapist practicing in Georgetown. 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.
Five Strategies for Staying Fit on Vacation
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By J o s ef Brande n b u r g eak vacation season for Washingtonians is upon us. While these trips are essential, they can also jeopardize all the work of the past winter and spring. These five strategies can help you have a great vacation while maintaining your recent progress. Strategy #1: The early bird gets the burn. Vacations are spontaneous, and opportunities for fun tend to pop up with little warning. The simplest way to have fun without sacrificing fitness is to make your workout the first thing you do each day. Get it out of the way and nothing else can get in the way. Strategy #2. Pack a portable gym. You can fit an entire gym in your carry-on bag without going overweight, if you pack smart. Pack Valslides for upper body, core and leg workouts; a lacrosse ball to roll stress knots out of your hips and shoulders from too-long sitting; a resistance band for additional arm, leg and core exercises; and a jump rope for great conditioning work anywhere. Strategy #3. Stick to a few simple rules. Keep a short list of simple, but realistic rules to keep your nutrition on track. A simple rule might be: one-or-none for alcohol (either have one drink or no drinks). A realistic rule could be limiting yourself to one small treat at dinner, or only having dessert every other day (a “treat” being defined as something you wouldn’t normally eat).
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GET YOUR LIFE BACK IN BALANCE. Strategy #4. Initiate something active. There are obvious activities, like walking or biking, but there are plenty of fun active things to do, too, like bodysurfing, going to a water park or playing beach volleyball. Whatever you do, if you really get into it you’ll get a much better workout — and have a blast. Strategy #5. Remember your priorities. The main thing on vacation is spending quality time with friends and family — not seeing how much weight you can lose in a week, which isn’t going to be much anyway. As far as fitness goes, success is maintaining (or not losing much) ground. A week is plenty of time to do a lot of damage if you don’t practice a little bit of discipline. A best-selling author and fitness expert with 16 years of experience, Josef Brandenburg owns The Body You Want club in Georgetown. Information about his 14-Day Personal Training Experience may be found at TheBodyYouWant. com.
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Performance
Seeding the Landscape with Jazz A World-Class Festival Runs Through D.C. By Gary Tischler
Bad Plus Joshua Redman. Photo by David Jacobs.
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hat makes for a world-class jazz festival? The obvious answer is worldclass performers. The DC Jazz Festival, now in its 11th season — running June 10 to 16, with a special preview night June 5 — has plenty of those. But that’s just for starters. It’s become a national and international festival, to be sure, but it is truly rooted in Washington — and spreading to every nook and cranny of it. The festival is a sublime testament to the multifaceted city that hosts it: capital of the nation, gathering place of world leaders, but also fundamentally a city of neighborhoods, with a rich jazz history of home-grown stars and venues of its own. Certainly, everyone has their eyes on two venues that have recently become a major part of the festival: Jazz at the Yards, presented by the DCJF and Events DC at the Capitol Riverfront;
and Jazz at the Hamilton Live, presented by the DCJF and the Washington Post at one of the city’s top nightlife and dining spots. With jazz-flavored programs of all sorts, the festival seeds a very receptive city landscape, 125 performances in all, across 40 venues. The hugely popular and effective Jazz in the ’Hoods, which includes the Capital/Bop DC Jazz Loft Series and the East River Jazz Series; Jazz ’N Families Fun Days at the Phillips Collection;
Left: Stanton Moore of the Stanton Moore Trio. Photo by Jerry Moran. Above: Femi Kuti. Photo courtesy DC Jazz Festival. and new jazz artists presented in conjunction with the Kennedy Center’s Millennium Stage are just but a few examples. The Yards will welcome a host of big, and rising, stars. On June 12, the New Orleans brassfunk band the Soul Rebels will perform along with vocalist Sharon Clark in a free concert. On June 13, the line-up includes the hip hop, rap star and composer Common, who won an Oscar for “Selma”; the amazingly original young bassist-
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singer-composer Esperanza Spalding, who will be presenting her new project, “Emily D+ Evolution”; Nigerian Afrobeat star Femi Kuti and the Positive Force; and one of D.C.’s finest jazz stars, the brilliant saxophonist Marshall Keys. The Yards is a total, full-flavored jazz experience, set in a beautiful, green urban park overlooking the Anacostia River, with beverage tastings, chef demonstrations, cabanas, a marketplace and family friendly activities. The Live at the Hamilton series, June 10 to 16, includes such stars as the Bad Plus Joshua Redman, the scintillating edgy group Snarky Puppy, the Jack DeJohnette Trio, featuring Ravi Coltrane and Matthew Garrison, the John Scofield Überjam Band, the Stanton Moore Trio and the Charlie Hunter Trio. Latin jazz pioneer and superstar Paquito D’Rivera and his Quintet will open the series with Edmar Castaneda. In terms of the city, the gem of the festival may turn out to be the all-pervasive Jazz in the ’Hoods series. Varying in size and style as well as in location, the venues include restaurants, straightup jazz clubs, libraries, museums and galleries. The shows will range from the jazzy, classy Bohemian Caverns club off of U Street, where you can also find the atmospheric Twins, the Rumba Café in Adams Morgan, the Atlas Performing Arts Center along the bustling H Street Corridor, the Anacostia Arts Center, the Kennedy Center Millennium Stage, the Sixth and I Historic Synagogue in the bustling downtown areas, Bistro Lepic on Wisconsin Avenue in Georgetown, the Dorothy I. Height/Benning Neighborhood Library, Dukem Jazz on U Street, the Phillips Collection, the UDC Recital Hall, Tudor Place in Georgetown, the Honfleur Gallery, to the Kenilworth Aquatic Gardens. At a special annual awards reception at the residence of the Japanese ambassador on June 4, the DC Jazz Festival Board of Directors will present its annual awards: the 2015 Lifetime Achievement Award to jazz drummer and educator Billy Hart; and the 2015 John Conyers Advocacy Award to Amy Austin, former publisher of the Washington City Paper. If you don’t know where to start, given the sheer volume of quality programming, DC Jazz Festival Artistic Director Willard Jenkins has some suggestions:
June 8, 10, 12, 13 and 14 Emerging artists on the Kennedy Center’s Millennium Stage. Saxman Elijah Jamal Balbed, vocalist “Sweet Lu” Olutosin, vocalist Alison Crockett, the worldly ensemble Sine Qua Non and the groove active brass band Crush Funk Brass. June 13 AACM@50 at the Hecht Warehouse. To celebrate the AACM’s 50th birthday, CapitalBop presents the Ernest Khabeer Dawkins Orchestra, performing Dawkins’s new Nelson Mandela Afro opera and the Organix Trio with flutist Nicole Mitchell, cellist Tomeka Reid and drummer Mike Reed. Honorable mention: Thundercat at the Hecht Warehouse June 12. June 12 The Bad Plus Joshua Redman at Hamilton Live. The genre-defying acoustic trio the Bad Plus welcomes into its laboratory one of the great tenor saxophonists of our time, Joshua Redman. June 14 The Cookers at Sixth and I Historic Synagogue. The Cookers is one of the most spiritually soulful, most explosive acoustic units in all of jazz. The band consists of seven bona fide bandleaders, including saxophonists Billy Harper and Donald Harrison, trumpeters Eddie Henderson and David Weiss, pianist George Cables, bassist Cecil McBee and drummer Billy Hart, a 2015 Lifetime Achievement Award recipient. June 15 JazzAlive at UDC. One of the surefire artists on this program is D.C. native and fiery alto saxophonist Bruce Williams, backed by a UDC Jazztet led by the director of the UDC jazz program Allyn Johnson.
June 5 The DCJF Preview Night at Westminster Presbyterian Church. Lenny Robinson and Friends, including saxophonist Elijah Jamal Balbed, pianist Mark Meadows, bassist Herman Burney and vocalist Alison Crockett, perform at the church, known for its weekly Southwest Jazz Nights. June 10 The James King Duo at Tudor Place. D.C.’s own first-call bassist and international touring artist perform in the beautiful setting of Georgetown’s Tudor Place. June 11 Gretchen Parlato and Lionel Loueke at Bohemian Caverns. The thoroughly idiosyncratic, unprecedented voice-guitar duo performs at the legendary U Street club.
GRAMMY award-winning singer-composer-bassist Esperanza (Emily) Spalding presents her newest project, Emily’s D+Evolution. Photo courtesy DC Jazz Festival.
Performance
Storm Large: Like Sinatra, An American Original By Gary Tischler
Storm Large will perform at the Kennedy Center Concert Hall, part of “Let’s Be Frank: The Songs of Frank Sinatra.” Photo by Laura Domela.
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he singer-songwriter-memoiristperformer-author-rocker Storm Large is a sort of gaudy cruise ship that has sailed exotic, dangerous and, naturally, stormy musical (and probably personal) waters for a number of years. Large — her given name is Susan Storm Large — is a star to anybody who’s encountered her, and a legend in places like San Francisco and Portland, Oregon, where she lives and performs. But Storm Large and Frank Sinatra? The combination hardly seems likely for someone who quite successfully fronted a rockishpunkish-and-beyond band called The Balls (as well as other bands including “Storm and Her
Storm Large’s “Le Bonheur,” last year’s release with “I’ve Got You Under My Skin.”
Dirty Mouth”), who was a contestant on “Rock Star Supernova,” who blogs on her website in blunt and honest terms and has written and performed her harrowing, affecting memoir “Crazy Enough.” She is an American original. But then, so was Sinatra. Large will be part of “Let’s Be Frank: The Songs of Frank Sinatra,” organized by NSO Pops director Steve Reineke. The tribute will feature Reineke and piano man Tony DeSare conducting — and what Reineke terms his own “rat pack” of swell singers, including Ryan Silverman and Frankie Moreno, in addition to Large. The show will be presented in the Kennedy Center Concert Hall June 5 and 6 at 8 p.m. “I always liked the whole idea of the Rat Pack and Frank Sinatra, all those kinds of very cool atmospherics,” Large said in a telephone interview. “I have an enormous amount of respect for him as a singer. I think he was the kind of guy who was always prepared. He trusted the lyrics, he made sure that he got the emotional truth of the songs. That way, his approach was blue-collar, which is where he came from.” It’s not the first time Large has been at the Kennedy Center, a huge venue when compared to places like the popular Joe’s Pub in New York and clubs in Portland and San Francisco. She was here in 2012 with the eclectic pop group Pink Martini and the NSO Pops, performing to sold-out audiences.
She’ll be singing duets, songs like “Come Rain or Come Shine,” as well as solo numbers, notably “My Way” and “I’ve Got You Under My Skin.” “I’ve Got You Under My Skin,” by Cole Porter song is about obsessive love. “I don’t do it like most people. It’s usually upbeat, confident, buoyant. Mine is a little different — it’s more like you have this big love that you can’t get rid of. It’s like you can’t stop thinking about it. It’s like a woman who sits in her car in the rain watching her lover. She’s a little like a stalker.” “I’ve Got You Under My Skin” is also part of “Le Bonheur,” a remarkable album which she produced last year with Robert Taylor and musicians James Beaton, Scott Weddle, Greg Eklund and Matt Brown. It’s almost a natural flow from her rocker days to Pink Martini to this album, which astonishes with its selection of songs, from Cole Porter and Rodgers and Hart tunes to “Unchained Melody,” a longing song which the Righteous Brothers turned into a megahit, “Saving All My Love for You” by the iconoclastic Tom Waits and the charming, puffy-go-lightly “Satellite of Love” by Lou Reed. There are also two songs written by Large herself, “Stand Up For Me,” a straight-up inspirational anthem, and the moving “A Woman’s Heart,” somewhere between a love song and a rueful lament.
Songwriting is yet another aspect of this queen of creative multitasking. She’s a great storyteller, intelligent and cogent in her opinions, awfully funny and often profane. Large comes from Southborough, Massachusetts, attended a famous private school, where her father Henry was a history teacher and football coach, and went to the American Academy of Dramatic Arts. “I think sometimes my parents weren’t sure when I went out the door where I was going — to school or running away with the circus.” You can track her career and persona erratically on the Internet. On YouTube, watch her in a club in Mill Valley doing not just the song but the lead-up to “Total Eclipse of the Heart,” a 1983 super-hit which shows off Large’s playful, rocker side, as she tells the story of a song written on a napkin. She’s a naturalborn clown; she loves making faces. And she’s hard to ignore as a presence, a dazzling, sixfoot, hard-striding blond woman whose voice is as big as her shadow. “I think you grow up a little as you go along, the things you can do, what you want to explore,” she said. “You go deeper into the music. You live your life more. I’m 46 now. You can’t do 300 shows a year all of the time.” Listening to her talk, reading hair-raising parts of her memoir, seeing her on YouTube and listening to that voice, you get how she relates to and is at home in the deepest part of Frank Sinatra’s songs. Her voice — like her walk and talk — is rangy, and in its push to put emotional truth out there is marked by her persona, her experience of the sex, drugs and rock-and-roll life, as well as the highs and lows of vocalizing. Her voice really gets up there, but it’s hard to say whether it can break a wine glass. For sure, when Susan Storm Large sings, she can break your heart.
“I always liked the whole idea of the Rat Pack and Frank Sinatra, all those kinds of very cool atmospherics,” says Large. Photo by Laura Domela.
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VISUAL
Photography as Fine Art, Then and Now
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By Ari Pos t
e live in a time when photographs are not sacred. And that’s okay. In a lot of ways, it’s actually incredible. If by some mechanism of science-fiction fantasy we could go back in time and suggest to the late 19th century that photography, one of the most recent and game-changing inventions in history, would become so commonplace over the next 150 years that each citizen personally carries the technology in his or her back pocket, I’m sure it would raise a few eyebrows. The proliferation and convenience of digital photography has changed the way we interact with the world. There is no longer the requirement to develop the photographs, there is basically unlimited storage space and an endless supply of “film.” We can take as many pictures as we want whenever we want. It’s an instantaneous and expendable medium in a way that it never was. I don’t believe it is inaccurate or controversial to say that — in a broad-stroke sort of way — as a society we no longer really consider the value of a single photograph. Or perhaps it is that a single photograph (with occasional and obvious exceptions) simply does not carry much value. Instead, we want lots of them, all the time. This presents a real challenge to actual photographers, particularly artists who deal with photography as a visual medium and a history
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in itself. How can one make the experience of a photograph unique and singular again? Another strange dilemma of our generation’s gluttonous relationship to photography is how it effects the way we see older photographs. Considering history inevitably requires understanding of and empathy with the knowledge, values and beliefs of a time period. So when looking at a photograph from the turn of the 20th century, it requires an act of willful distortion; we must try to imagine what it felt like to see a single beautiful image in a time when a photograph was comparatively rare — when people did not look at hundreds a day — when we were still learning about how to look at them and what they could teach us. The National Gallery of Art is confronting these ideas with two complementary exhibitions that offer a provocative, multifaceted exploration of the history and present state of
AngieMyers.com
Vera Lutter, “Ca’ Del Duca Sforza, Venice II: January 13-14, 2008,” 2008. photography as art. Through Sept. 13, “The Memory of Time: Contemporary Photographs at the National Gallery of Art” presents work by contemporary artists who investigate the richness and complexity of photography’s relationship to time, memory and history. In the neighboring gallery, through July 26, “In Light of the Past: Twenty-Five Years of Photography at the National Gallery of Art” showcases some 175 masterpieces from the Gallery’s photography collection (initiated 25 years ago), highlighting exquisite 19th century works and turn-of-the-century pictorialist photographs, exceptional examples of international modernism from the 1920s and 1930s and seminal mid20th-century American photography, as well as photographs exploring new directions in color and conceptual art from the 1960s and 1970s. An interesting aspect of the “The Memory of Time” shows us how contemporary fine-art photographers are exploring the science and history of their medium. Part chemists, part anthropologists, photographers like Sally Mann, Myra Greene, Adam Fuss, Idris Khan and many others are producing gelatin silver prints, daguerreotypes, salted paper prints, ambrotypes; they are using camera obscuras, experimenting with long and primitive exposures. These artists are pointing historical lenses at a modern world, and the results are quite simply breathtaking. This exhibition is a spoil of austere, tonal beauty. It would be remiss not to mention Moyra Davey’s “Copperhead” series, a wall of nearly a dozen near-microscopic views of Lincoln’s face on the US penny — part of a series of 100 photographs
— exhibiting the deterioration, gouges and discolored, molding and mottled surfaces of the coins. It is Lincoln defaced, ravaged by time and relegated to the least valuable unit of currency. The exhibition text suggests that this points toward the devaluation of history in contemporary culture, but that strikes me as dramatically curmudgeonly. I would offer that, as concepts go, this is merely the fate of all history, as it gets rolled, spat about and distorted through time and distance. It is a sad and beautiful image. As I walked through the next exhibition, “In Light of the Past,” this notion stuck with me. I saw the iconic series of a running man by Eadweard Muybridge, the Photo Secessionists Steichen and Stieglitz, the breathtaking Depression-era subway portraits of Walker Evans. Beyond that, there was the glamour and thump of carnivals, the hazy bars and urban development of the post-war era and the unraveling of that ecstatic era into Richard Misrach’s 1983 photograph of a flooded marina in the Salton Sea — where the defunct remains of a ’50s-era gas station sit submerged in a shallow ocean.
Roger Fenton, “Fruit and Flowers,” 1860.
Social Scene
Ford’s Theatre Honors Diane Nash
The Ford’s Theatre Society hosted its annual gala May 31. The gala performances at Ford’s Theatre included a toe-tapping “Little Jazz Bird,” performed by Tommy Tune, a winning version of Michael Jackson’s “Smooth Criminal” by 2CELLOS, Van Morrison’s “Wild Night” by Martina McBride, Joss Stone and the full ensemble performing “Glory” from the film, “Selma,” and Boyz II Men singing “End of the Road.” During the performance, theater director Paul Tetreault recounted Ford’s 150 events that commemorated 150 years since the assassination of Abraham Lincoln at the historic theater on 10th Street NW.
Joseph P. Kennedy III and Lauren Kennedy pictured with Lincoln Medalist Diane Nash. Photo James R. Brantley.
Rachel Collins and Rickey Minor. Photo by Margot Schulman.
Boyz II Men. Photo by Margot Schulman.
The Lincoln Medal was presented to civil rights advocate Diane Nash by former Attorney General Eric Holder. Photo by James R. Brantley.
Joss Stone. Photo by Margot Schulman.
Tommy Tune. Photo by Margot Schulman.
Martina McBride. Photo by Margot Schulman.
Irish Embassy Hosts ‘Hope’ Authors
By Mary Bird Irish Ambassador Anne Anderson welcomed Founding Friends members for a literary luncheon May 20 and hailed the Irish roots of Washington Post journalists Mary Jordan and Kevin Sullivan, who collaborated with Amanda Berry and Gina DeJesus on the current New York Times bestseller, “Hope: A Memoir of Survival in Cleveland.” The women, and Michelle Knight, who has already written of the ordeal, were held captive for ten years in Cleveland by school bus driver Ariel Castro, who committed suicide in prison. The book details their amazing strength and resilience amid horrific abuse and Berry’s birth to a daughter Jocelyn.
The ensemble cast of the 2015 Ford’s Theatre Gala. Photo by James R. Brantley.
Irish Ambassador Anne Anderson with writers Mary Jordan and Kevin Sullivan.
Luka Sulic and Stjepan Hauser of 2CELLOS. Photo by Margot Schulman.
Joss Stone. Photo by James R. Brantley.
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Social Scene
Kreeger Museum: ‘Neighbor and Jewel’ on Foxhall Road
Venezuela Wins Embassy Chef Challenge
Bob and Phyllis Greenberger, Larry Greenberg and Kreeger Director Judy A. Greenberg, Peter and Florence Hart.
Ambassador Capricia Marshall with Tim Cox, board chair of Cultural Tourism D.C.
by m ary b irD P h o to s c o u rtesy of th e Kr eeger M u seu m Guests enjoyed cocktails in the Kreeger Museum’s lower galleries, a seated dinner in the Great Hall and Monet Gallery and dessert on the Sculpture Terrace May 16. Belgian Ambassador Johan Verbeke, the gala’s honorary patron, spoke about the recent Flemish Expressionism exhibition and introduced the jazz quartet which performed a number of works by Django Reinhardt. He called the Kreeger “a neighbor and jewel in Washington.” Contributions enable the museum to provide innovative arts education workshops and programs for schools throughout the Washington area, focusing on underserved communities.
by m ary bir d Pho to s by Neshan H. Naltchayan Cultural Tourism D.C. presented the Seventh Annual Gala Embassy Chef Challenge May 20 at the Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center. A dozen embassy chefs presented their signature delicacies before a panel of celebrity chefs and food critics for Judge’s and People’s Choice Awards. Chef Manuel Rodrigues of Venezuela garnered top votes for his crowd-pleasing rendition of ceviche. Cultural Tourism D.C. board chair Tim Cox acknowledged former Chief of Protocol Capricia Marshall and the many other dignitaries in attendance before urging, “Dine like a diplomat, and let the international tasting begin.”
First place Winner /Chef Benjamin Velasquez of the Embassy of El Salvador (center) with his fellow chefs from the challenge.
GALA Theatre Shines the Lights
by m ary bir d Pho to s by MARY BIRD GALA Theatre’s Noche de Estrellas or Night of the Stars honored José Andrés for Arts Business and Philanthropy and Marta Casals Isthmian for Service in the Arts May 19. The evening began on the theater’s rooftop with a Latino buffet and segued downstairs to performances by the Flamenco Aparicio Dance Company and Paseo Nuevo video presentation, interspersed with a live auction and more. The evening concluded with a champagne toast and dessert, all in support of GALA’s outreach to our community’s at-risk Latino teens. Annette and Walter Vandaele, Carol Kreeger Ingal
Craig and Helen Chason, Matthew and Antonia Dapena-Tretter and Robert Brown.
Lobsters to Benefit Life with Cancer Pho to by Nes han H . N a lt c h ayan
The Lobster Extravaganza on May 2 in Fairfax enhanced the fun and friendship of those giving to Life with Cancer, part of Northern Virginia’s Inova Health System. Sponsors included Robert Hisaoka, the Peterson Companies, Paul and Linda Saville and Virginia Run Turkey Trot.
Spanish Ambassador Ramón Gil-Casares, Ambassador of the Dominican Republic José Thomás Pérez, Caridad de Pérez and GALA co-founder and producing artistic director Hugo Medrano.
Former Sen. John Warner of Virginia, developer Milton Peterson and Rep. Barbara Comstock (R-Va.).
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Carol Schwartz and Richard de Sonier.
Former GALA honorees Fernando and Stephanie van Reigersberg flank Ambassador of Haiti Paul Altidor.
Social Scene
S&R’s Washington Awards Transfix at Halcyon House
By D ominque S tone P h o to s b y N es h an H. Naltc h ayan Celebrating S&R Foundation’s 15th anniversary and its Washington Awards, co-founders Sachiko Kuno and Ryuji Ueno reflected on past accomplishments and looked to the future. S&R’s May 30 gala performances at Halcyon House included soprano Huanhuan Ma, dancer and choreographer Tamas Krizsa (with Maki Onuki), Erzhan Kulibaev on violin (with pianist Ryo Yanagitani), solo pianist Michael Mizrahi and grand prize winner Nabil Shehata, double bass and conductor (with his brother, pianist Karim Shehata). Menu and music were paired by chef Eric Ziebold. Karl Green of Bonhams led the live auction, which included such items as dinner at Evermay Estate, “Best of D.C.” package and a trip to Japan for two.
Dancers Maki Onuki and Tamas Krizsa flank grand prize winner Nabil Shehata.
S&R Foundation co-founder Sachiko Kuno and Japanese Ambassador Kenichiro Sasae.
Soprano Huanhuan Ma and S&R Foundation COO Kate Goodall.
Grand pize winner Nabil Shehata plays the double bass, as his brother Karim Shehata plays the piano.
Tudor Place Garden Party Wow Again
By CA ROLYN LAN DE S P HOTO S B Y R OBERT D EVANEY Around 500 of the city’s most philanthropic glitterati gathered May 20 at Tudor Place in Georgetown for its 23rd annual spring garden party, chaired by Elizabeth Powell. Under an expansive, luminous, white tent surrounded by pristine gardens and an immaculately manicured lawn, guests gathered to celebrate and honor longtime leader and supporter of Tudor Place, Ellen MacNeille Charles, who was given a surprise horse-drawn carriage ride. The garden party helped to raise more than $300,000 for one of Georgetown’s crown jewels, as Tudor Place itself was bathed in artful lighting. Party patrons mingled, sipping mint juleps, wine and tasting light bites, including lamb chops and salmon.
Shellie Ross Larson, Marjorie Miller and hat designer Melissa Vap.
Austin Kiplinger and Bonnie Nicholson.
Tudor Place executive director Leslie Buhler and advisory neighborhood commissioner Ed Solomon.
Honoree Ellen Charles, Tudor Place benefactor, and her granddaughter Ellie Iverson in a horse-drawn carriage that took them along 31st Street from home to Tudor Place.
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PALISADES, WASHINGTON, DC Impressive new construction Arts and Crafts home offers over 5,700 square feet. Highlights include an elevator, rooftop terrace, custom builtins and high ceilings. 5 bedroom, 5.5 bath with oversized 2-car garage. $2,599,000 Matt Cheney 202-465-0707
POTOMAC, MARYLAND Potomac Falls at its best! Hardwood floors, gourmet kitchen, 1st floor bedroom suite, MBR with sitting room, finish lower level, wine cellar, 4-car garage. Flat lot, pool, cabana and more. $2,450,000 Marsha Schuman 301-299-9598 Betsy Schuman Dodek 301-996-8700
WEST END, WASHINGTON, DC Expansive 2BR/2.5BA corner condo located in vibrant transit-friendly neighborhood. Open floor plan, hardwood floors, recessed lighting, crown molding. Large MBR suite with custom closets. 2-car garage parking and storage. $1,998,000 Nancy Taylor Bubes 202-256-2164
POTOMAC, MARYLAND Custom home on 1.35 acre, close-in Potomac. High ceilings, user-friendly floor plan, 5BR/5.5BA, green features, Geothermal HVAC, state of the art home theater, & electric car charger. $1,798,000 Marsha Schuman 301-299-9598 Betsy Schuman Dodek 301-996-8700
BERKLEY, WASHINGTON, DC Renovated! Elegant formal rooms, family room, chef’s kitchen, sun room, library, master bedroom suite, 4 plus bedrooms, garden and pool, catering kitchen, plus 2-car garage! $1,775,000 Joanne Pinover 301-404-7011 Liz Lavette Shorb 301-785-6300
GEORGETOWN, WASHINGTON, DC Tremendous value! Beautiful 1,860 +/- square feet floor plan with 2BR/2BA in sought-after building with high-end amenities. High ceilings. Western exposure. 2 garage spaces. $1,595,000 William F. X. Moody Robert Hryniewicki 202-243-1620
MERRYHILL, MCLEAN, VIRGINIA Handsome Emerson Model Townhome features high ceilings, hardwood floors, formal LR & DR, large MBR suite with sitting room. Finished LL, rec room and walk-out level terrace. $1,580,000 William F. X. Moody Robert Hryniewicki 202-243-1620
ARLINGTON, VIRGINIA NEW PRICE! Chain Bridge Forest. Easy Commute to DC! Spacious colonial featuring custom molding and built-ins with 5 bedrooms, 4.5 baths and side loading 2-car garage. $1,229,000
MCLEAN, VIRGINIA Gorgeous brick colonial in Woodside Estates! Over ¾ acre lot with expansive decking that backs to trees. 4 bedroom, 3.5 bath, hardwood floors, spacious family room and study with custom built-ins. $1,090,000 Anne DiBenedetto 703-615-1897
BERRYVILLE, VIRGINIA Clover Hill Farm, vintage log cabin is surrounded by renovated and expanded main farm house with 4BR/3BA/1HBA. Approx 3,500 SF with guest house on 20 acres of pasture. Blue Ridge views. 1/4 miles to Shenandoah River. 1 hr to DC. $975,000 Gloria Rose Ott 540-454-4394
CITY CENTER, WASHINGTON, DC Premier building in prime location. Sought-after 1 bedroom, 1.5 bath unit at City Center. Open floor plan with incredible finish and style. Endless amenities and courtyard views. $799,000 Matthew McCormick Ben Roth 202-728-9500
Linda Rogers
703-627-6776
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June 3, 2015 GMG, INC.