Arts & Entertainment 1-4-17

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IN THE NEWS

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

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rts

To Kill

THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman

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January 4, 2017

The Independent

ntertainment January 4, 2017

A Mockingbird See Page 19

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January 4, 2017

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THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman

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IN THE NEWS

Hampton

Company

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January 4, 2017

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THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman

INDY SNAPS Indy Snaps

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IN THE NEWS

Independent/Richard Lewin

The East Hampton community had the opportunity to share in a public Menorah lighting in Herrick Park, hosted by the Chabad of the Hamptons of Woods Lane with a special six foot Menorah. East Hampton Village Mayor Paul Rickenbach, Jr. joined Rabbi Leibel Baumgarten in lighting the second candle for the holiday. Goldie, the wife of the Rabbi, shared doughnuts, hot cocoa, and, best of all, her famous homemade latkes with the attendees.

Independent/Richard Lewin

The 18th annual By Hand Artisan’s Holiday Gift Show was held at Ashawagh Hall in Springs, featuring unique, hand made creations of fused glass, knits and felted wool, carved wood, specialty yarn, decoupage, wooden toys, original jewelry, and more. Showing and selling their work included: Moonstones, Dragonleaf Jewels, Sag Harbor Seashells, Wildfowl Carvings by Matthew DiBernardo, Hampton Crafts by Helen, P&L Wooden Toys, Grain Surfboards, Sag Harbor Glass, Livestock & Company, Bonac Bees, EROS Design, Felt Fantastic!, and Fred Brandes Artist & Craftsman.

Independent/Richard Lewin

The Amagansett Free Library presented actor and filmmaker Christian Scheider with an annual reading of Truman Capote’s “A Christmas Story.” Christian, son of Brenda Siemer and Roy Scheider, mesmerized the audience in the Community Room with his passionate delivery.


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Gallery Walk

By Jessica Mackin-Cipro

Deadline for submissions is Thursday at noon. Email to jessica@indyeastend. com.

The Body Clothed

Hampton Bays library presents “The Body Clothed: Figures & Faces,” an exhibit of works by a combination of amateur and professional artists who enjoy drawing and painting figures and faces. An opening reception takes place on Sunday from 3 to 5 PM.

Aubrey Grainger

Aubrey Grainger’s “Farms, Water and East End Scenes” is on display at the Art Gallery at Quogue Library. Grainger is a Sagaponack based artist. She is a passionate plein air painter whose subjects include the East End of Long Island and the Adirondacks. An opening reception will be held on Saturday, January 14, from 3 to 4:30 PM. The show runs through January 29.

ONGOING Thanksgiving Collective

Tripoli Gallery in Southampton presents its 12th Annual “Thanksgiving Collective: Year-Round.” Curated by Tripoli Patterson, “Year-Round” features works by Alice Aycock, Max Blagg, Jennifer Cross, Robert Dash, Sabra Moon Elliot, Eric Freeman, Saskia Friedrich, Jeremy Grosvenor, Judith Hudson, Keith Sonnier, Susan Tepper, and Lucy Winton. The exhibition will be

on view through January 30.

The Wednesday Group

Ten artists from The Wednesday Group have over 20 pear paintings on display at The Golden Pear in East Hampton. Stop in, have a snack, and look at some deliciously wonderful pear art. Participating artists are Anna Franklin, Cynthia Loewen, Jean Mahoney, Alyce Peifer, Gene Samuelson, Frank Sofo, Bob Sullivan, Aurelio Torres, Pam Vossen, and Dan Weidmann. The show runs through January.

November’s Bone

The Halsey McKay Gallery in East Hampton presents the group exhibit, “November’s Bone.” The show runs through January 16.

East End Arts

East End Arts presents an art show at the Rosalie Dimon Gallery at the Jamesport Manor Inn featuring East End Arts members. The show includes oil paintings by Roxanne Panero of Sagaponack, and photographs by Sara Cedar Miller of Hampton Bays. It will be on display until February 1.

Artists Choose Artists

The Parrish Art Museum presents the third iteration of “Artists Choose Artists,” on view through January 16. Featuring painting, sculpture, photography, and mixed media, the exhibition comprises the work of seven

Independent/Gary Mamay

“Osborn Farm Snow (Wainscott)” by Aubrey Grainger.

jurors and fourteen artists, includes Tina Barney with Dinah Maxwell Smith and RJT Haynes, Lynda Benglis with Garrett Chingery and Saskia Friedrich, Tony Oursler with Jackie Black and Marianne Weil, Donald

Lipski with Suzanne Anker and Ben Butler, Jorge Pardo with Anne Bae and Monica Banks, Cindy Sherman with Bill Komoski and Toni Ross, and Leo Villareal with Karin Waisman and Almond Zigmund.

Sweet Charities

By Jessica Mackin-Cipro

Deadline for submissions is Thursday at noon. Email to jessica@indyeastend.com.

Love Bites

The Annual “Love Bites” benefit will be held on Saturday, January 21,

from 6:30 to 10 PM at The Muses in Southampton. The event will benefit The Scarlett Fund and Katy’s Courage and honor lead chef Rocco DiSpirito. For more information and tickets call Linda Shapiro at 631-725-2023.

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ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

Zigmund’s Bar By Kitty Merrill & Jessica Mackin-Cipro Deadline for submissions is Thursday at noon. Email to jessica@indyeastend. com.

Music

Fireside Sessions

Nancy Atlas and friends heat up the night every Saturday in January at Bay Street Theater in Sag Harbor. Her special guest this week is Clark Gayton bringing monster trombone magic to the stage. Showtime is 8 PM. Purchase tickets through Bay Street’s website or call 631-725-9500.

Wednesday Night Live

Ray Red and Mike Rusinsky host

“Wednesday Night Live,” a weekly open mic at MJ Dowling’s in Sag Harbor from 8 to 11 PM. Performers include musicians, poets, comedians, and singers. Sign up starts at 7 PM. Performers get a free soft drink or tap beverage. Every Friday, it’s karaoke beginning at 10 PM.

Townline BBQ

Come for free pool and pub quiz night at 7 PM every Thursday evening, and Saturday and Sunday football special pricings. Check out “smokin’ hot tunes” alongside a happy hour menu every Friday. This week Junkyard Farmer plays from 5 to 8 PM. Townline is open regularly by 11:30 AM until 9 or 10 PM Thursday through Monday. For more info call 631-537-2271 or visit the Townline BBQ Facebook page.

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There will be live music tonight at Zigmund’s Bar in Bridgehampton from 7 to 11 PM with Klyph Black and Fred Raimondo, Glenn Feit Sr., Black & Sparrow, Robert Florio, and an open mic. Thursday is Karaoke from 8 PM to 1 AM. There will be more live music Friday with Haines Goodale & Co at 9 PM and on Saturday party it up with Retro Sounds from 9 PM to 1 AM. Call 631-919-5340 for more info.

Suffolk Theater

At Riverhead’s Suffolk Theater on Saturday the Zac Brown Tribute Band plays at 8 PM and the dance floor is open. Admission is $32. For seating options and ticket purchasing call 631727-4343 or visit SuffolkTheater.com.

Words

Artists On Art

The Artist’s View: Artists Choose Artists series of talks at the Parrish Art Museum in Watermill takes place Friday night at 6 PM. This intimate and informative gallery talk will be led by several of the artists whose work is in the exhibition, including Monica Banks, Garrett Chingery, and Saskia Friedrich. Admission is $12 for nonmembers; members, children, and students admitted free.

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IN THE NEWS

Theater Variety Is The Spice

The North Fork Community Theatre presents its 13th annual variety show this weekend. Performances include song, dance, magic, classical music, and comedy. Proceeds benefit the NFCT scholarships for local high school students. Showtime is 8 PM Friday and Saturday, with a 2:30 PM matinee on Sunday. Tickets are $10 at the door. Find NFCT on Old Sound Avenue in Mattituck. Call 631-298-6328 or 631298-4500.

Film

The Met: Live in HD

The legendary Plácido Domingo brings another new baritone role to the Met under the baton of his longtime collaborator James Levine in Verdi’s Nabucco. Screened in HD at Guild Hall in East Hampton at 1 PM on Saturday. Tickets at GuildHall.org or the Box Office two hours prior to curtain. Call 631-324-4050. $22 ($20 Members); $15 Students.

Atticus & Alec

Alec Baldwin hosts a screening of the classic To Kill A Mockingbird on Saturday at 7 PM at Guild Hall in East Hampton. Tickets at GuildHall.org or the Box Office two hours prior to curtain. Call 631-324-4050. $22 ($20 Members); $15 Students.

Those Famous Legs

Director Beatrice Alda will be on hand for a screening of her documentary Legs: A Big Issue in a Small Town. It’s about the fracas surrounding the giant sculpture in Sag Harbor. 4 PM Sunday at the Quogue Library. Call 631-6534224 to reserve your seat.

Dance Contra Dance

A traditional New England Contra Dance will be held on Saturday at the Water Mill Community House from 8 to 11 PM. For more info visit www. LITMA.org.

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HIFF Presents To Kill A Mockingbird Finch, and masterfully captured Lee’s deft exploration of race and class

January 4, 2017

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relations, gender roles, and a child’s loss of innocence. Tickets to the screening are $22 and $20 for Guild Hall members. For tickets and more info visit www. guildhall.org.

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To Kill A Mockingbird will screen at Guild Hall in East Hampton on Saturday at 7 PM. The event is presented by the Hamptons International Film Festival and is the eighth year the festival has shown a classic film during the winter season. The film will be presented by HIFF’s Co-Chair Alec Baldwin, and the festival's Artistic Director, David Nugent, who will host an extended conversation following the screening. In 1960, unknown airline reservation agent Harper Lee published To Kill A Mockingbird as her first novel. The book went on to win the Pulitzer Prize and become one of the most beloved works of fiction in modern American literature as well as become a staple in American schools. The novel is renowned for its warmth and humor, despite dealing with the serious issues of rape and racial inequality. Two years later, Pulitzer Prize-

Lifeguard Courses The YMCA of East Hampton will be holding Conditioning and Stillwater lifeguard courses at their RECenter Pool from Januar y 8 through March 19. The course will include a practical test (in March) and two full CPR classes will also need to be completed (in June) in Amagansett. The course fee is $165 and the CPR fee is $35. Sign up is during the first day of training. There is a minimum age of 15 years and if below age 18 a course member must have guardian approval to sign up. Course members do not need to be a “good” swimmer beforehand, the course will take you to the needed level of swimming performance, however, you must have and pass a doctor’s physical before taking the practical test. For specific dates and times or any other questions you can reach the program coordinator John J. Ryan Sr. at 631-324-2787 or visit ymcali.org. A.M.

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THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman

East End Calendar Highlights Compiled By Kitty Merrill

Each week we’ll highlight local community events and library offerings presented by area institutions and organizations. It’s on you to send ‘em in, kids. Deadline for submissions is Thursday at noon. Email news@ indyeastend.com.

East Hampton THURSDAY 1•5•17 • See Monsters University at 4 PM at the East Hampton Library. SATURDAY 1•7•17 • It’s the 2nd Annual Polar Paddle benefiting The Surfrider Foundation Eastern LI Chapter and the East End Foundation. Gather at Louse Point Beach in East Hampton at 9 AM. Paddles wet at 9:45 AM. Experience the fun and adventure of winter paddling with a fun three- mile paddle. This year’s theme is “Your

best Malibu Style.” The idea is to add some fun over your wetsuit/winter paddling gear. The paddler with the best outfit will win a prize. Leashes, PFDs and booties are required. • Meet Carol Andrews of the East Hampton Trails Preservation Society at Camp Hero Road, about a mile east of Deep Hollow Ranch in Montauk for a five mile hike boasting lighthouse views, ocean vistas, tranquil woods, windswept bluffs and maybe even seals. Bring water and snacks for a break at the lighthouse refreshment stand. Call 631-725-3367 with questions. • Meet some of the animals from the Quogue Wildlife Refuge at Montauk Library at 2 PM. Children will learn about and touch a variety of animals including a snake, turtle, chinchilla, bird of prey, and some creepy crawlies. Registration is required. Sign up with Miss Jackie in the children’s department or call 631-668-

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3377 to reserve your spot. • Everybody loves Denzel, but East Hampton Library is playing the original starring Yul Brynner, Eli Wallach, Steve McQueen and James Coburn. The Magnificent Seven screens at 1 PM. It’s free, but you should register by calling 631-324-0222 ext. 3. MONDAY 1•9•17 • The East Hampton / Sag Harbor Citizen’s Advisory Committee is seeking community members to participate in committee activities. The CAC is a body of volunteer members who meet monthly to hear community concerns and to advise the East Hampton Town Board on matters of interest. The committee meets the first (non-holiday) Monday of every month at 6 PM at East Hampton Town Hall. WEDNESDAY 1•11•17 • The East Hampton Clericus hosts a free community soup dinner at Most Holy Trinity parish hall on Buell Lane in East Hampton from 5 to 7 PM. All are welcome.

Southampton THURSDAY 1•5•17 • Rogers Library in Southampton presents “The Year 2017: An Astrologer’s Perspective” with Kate Plumb at 5:30 PM. Register by calling 631-283-0774 ext 523 to see what’s ahead in the new year. • Children ages three and up are invited to the Quogue Library to celebrate National Bird Day. Make bird feeders and learn about our feathered friends. Register by calling the Library at 631-653-4224 ext. 101. FRIDAY 1•6•17 • It’s a senior ping pong meet-up at John Jermain Library in Sag Harbor from 10 AM till noon. Every Friday morning. Free.

IN THE NEWS

SATURDAY 1•7•17 • Explore the winter beach in Hampton Bays with Crystal Oakes, South Fork Natural History Museum (SoFo) Nature Educator at 10 AM. Join Crystal as she walks along Hampton Bay’s Ponquogue beaches looking for moon snail, basket snail, scallop, surf clam, and mussel shells as well as any other treasures. Learn about tides, the different types of sand, how to read the beach, how to tell the age of the animal that made a shell, and possible evidence of shell predation. Bundle up, since the winter winds create the waves that present us with our shelling treasures. Call SoFo at 631-537-9735 for registration, admission and location information. SUNDAY 1•8•17 • Join the Unitarian Universalist Meetinghouse for Sunday Service at 10:30 AM located at 977 Bridgehampton-Sag Harbor Turnpike at Scuttlehole Road. • Pianist and composer Lim Kaplan performs a free concert at Rogers Library in Southampton at 3 PM. Call the library to register. 631-283-0774 ext. 5223. MONDAY 1•9•17 • Classes focused on the topic “Hume’s Dialogues On Natural Religion: Does the natural world give us evidence of a divine creator?” will be held Mondays from 1 to 3 PM at the Hampton Library in Bridgehampton. Hume’s three characters represent three different views and all will be discussed. WEDNESDAY 1•11•17 • The Rogers Memorial Library in Southampton will offer “Bilingual Nutrition: Be Healthy, Be Active” on January 11, 18, 25 and February 1, at 6:30 PM. Marta Blanco, BSC. DTR, a bilingual nutritionist from Cornell Cooperative Extension, will discuss the USDA My Plate Dietary Guidelines, and share. There is no fee. Registration is not required.


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THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman

Broadway

www.indyeastend.com

January 4, 2017

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Reporting From

By Isa Goldberg

Edward Albee (1928 – 2016), the author of Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf, and other groundbreaking plays, passed away at his home in Montauk on September 16. His life and work were remembered last month at The August Wilson Theatre on Broadway, where he was eulogized by colleagues and friends. Among them were Jack Lenore Larsen of Long House Reserve, actors Brian Murray, Mercedes Ruehl, and Bill Irwin, as well as playwrights, Terrence McNally, Will Eno, John Guare and directors Emily Mann and David Esbjornson, to mention a few. The playwright was also remembered for his irreverent and brash behaviors. Describing his arrival, late and inebriated, to a party Noel Coward held in his honor, Murray remarked, that he “looked like an irritable Jesus Christ . . . bouncing around the room and insulting everyone.” Such reports are part of the outrageous Edward Albee lore. However, McNally cited their first encounter more empathically. When they met at a party at The Metropolitan Opera, he said Albee “looked about as ill at ease I did.” Regardless, Albee was, at the time, on the road to fame with the New York premiere of The Zoo Story. Naturally, McNally addressed their famous love affair, “the off off Broadway version of the Burtons,” as he put it. In addition to McNally, several friends spoke lovingly of Albee’s partner of many years, Jonathan Thomas, who predeceased him in 2005. In September of 2010, when I met Albee at his Montauk home, he said he was working on two plays: one about a very evil man, and another about a very good man. The latter character was based on Jonathan Thomas. Albee’s historic exile from Broadway following a series of critical and commercial failures was also recalled at his memorial. In the words of the playwright Arthur Kopit, “He withstood the critical onslaught and kept writing the plays he wanted to write.” With his later works, the Pulitzer prize-winning drama Three Tall Women and The Goat, Albee renewed his place in the New York theater. A thirst for truth and self-discovery that riddled his personal life also dominated his plays. “Who am I?” “Who are you?” These are the questions that boldly appear in Albee’s plays, most directly perhaps in A Delicate Balance, in which the late Marian Seldes’ portrayal of a distraught divorcee who runs home to her parents, garnered her a Tony Award. Indeed, her voice was heard on this occasion in audio recordings, reminiscing about their endearing relationship and the professional esteem they held for one another. His favorite word, she remarked, was “onward.”

(& Sometimes Off)

The Babylon Line “Smash everything.” “Be ruthless,” opines the central character in Richard Greenberg’s new play, set in an adult creative writing class. It’s of no great surprise to find that The Babylon Line, currently at The Mitzi E. Newhouse Theater, is all about writing. Metatheater being Greenberg’s forte, his works thrive on esoteric wordplay, windy narratives, and literary metaphor. Josh Radnor plays Aaron Port, the novelist/teacher who is hurdling his way through writer’s block while teaching creative writing to adults. When the play opens it’s 1967 in Levittown, Long Island, and his students, primarily women, are novices at self-expression. This was, after all, an era of conformity, and not one that prided itself in individuation. As Frieda Cohen, the neighbor with a scrutinizing nose in everyone else’s business, and the dominant social force in the community, Randy Graff is as comic as she is tragic. Regardless of the outcome, Frieda is narcissistically attached to the privileges of marriage and motherhood, although clearly underperforming at both. Typically outré, Julie Halston shows us the good, bad, and the ugly of the bored suburban wife, Midge Braverman. Evolving into a firecracker of a character, Midge undergoes an eye opening transformation. The whiny wife, Anna Cantor played by Maddie Corman, writes a story about her peak experience. “Venice is a city of opposites,” she writes, a truly banal takeoff on Dickens’ famous contrasts in A Tale of Two Cities. Rebellion festers throughout the first act, most significantly in Elizabeth Reaser’s Joan Dellamond (Joan of the world). Played as a Southern girl turned New York bohemian, she is portrayed with the classic despair of a Tennessee Williams character. Greenberg’s Joan is only free when she can discover herself in the world of literature, or in the arms of a man who, unlike her husband, radiates the air of danger, intellect, and drive, to which she is drawn. Tony Award-winning Frank Wood, characteristically, appears to be “on the spectrum” in a variety of roles, including that of Joan’s husband. Marc Adams, on the other hand, portrays a series of characters, each of whom blusters with fame. While Act I is a lengthy prologue, setting the stage for some kind of liberation, Act II takes a delirious route from literature to life, from fiction to reality, from repression to freedom, that is deliciously Greenberg. That his play comes to such a positive outcome, demonstrates the enduring fragility of those who remain faithful to themselves.

The Babylon Line Directed by Terry Kinney with a firm, but generous, hand, The Bablyon Line, literally the train ride from Greenwich Village to Levittown on the Long Island Railroad, takes us on an adventure with these women, who are drawn with insight and sensitivity. The Front Page The giddy revival of Ben Hecht and Charles Macarthur’s The Front Page on Broadway at the Broadhurst Theatre is sheer entertainment, especially when Nathan Lane, the tabloid publisher Walter Burns, arrives. A sheer force of nature, Lane drives each scene with relentless energy and vigor, with the cast of actors tightly on his heels. And what a cast it is!

With John Slattery of “Mad Men” fame as Burns’ muckraking reporter, John Goodman as the inept police chief, Jefferson Mays as the germ phobic and misplaced intellect, along with such legends as Robert Morse, Holland Taylor, and Sherie Rene Scott, the show is a riot. Douglas W. Schmidt sets the stage beautifully with his design of the pressroom at criminal court -- seedy in spite of the dark wood, original moldings, and large picture windows, which look onto the surrounding Chicago buildings. Within this one setting, lighting designer Brian MacDevitt creates a variety of terse emotional environments. Directed by the masterful Jack O’Brien, it’s worth catching.

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Independent Dining Baiting Hollow Farm Baiting Hollow Farm Vineyard presents Jon & Krista from Miles to Dayton from 2 to 6 PM on Saturday. The vineyard hosts Acoustic Soul from 2 to 6 PM on Sunday. www. baitinghollowfarmvineyard.com. Lieb Cellars There’s Friday night music with John Divello from 6 to 9 PM. On Saturday from 3 to 6 PM, it’s Jeff LeBlanc performing. www.liebcellars.com.

Raphael Chris Hurley & Friends perform from 1 to 4 PM on Saturday. On Sunday, it’s Marty Attridge solo acoustic from 1 to 4 PM. www.raphaelwine.com. Clovis Point Vineyard And Winery Clovis Point hosts live music this weekend at its Jamesport local. Saturday see Tom & Lisa from 1:30 to 5:30 PM. Sunday, it’s Firefly starting at 1 PM. www.clovispointwines.com.

To Advertise in The Independent’s Dining Section

Call us at 631.324.2500!

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THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman

Food & Beverage

Compiled By Jessica Mackin-Cipro

Submit your specials! Deadline for submissions is Thursday at noon. Email to jessica@indyeastend.com.

Artists & Writers Night

Almond in Bridgehampton announces the next “Artists & Writers Night” night of the season will be hosted by Laurie Lambrecht on Tuesday beginning at 7 PM. The evening will feature a family style three-course menu created by executive chef Jason Weiner. Cost for the night is $45, which includes a glass of local wine or craft beer and gratuity, tax is not included. Reservations are required. For reservations call 631-537-5665.

ONGOING SPECIALS Southampton Publick House

Southampton Publick House presents Monday Night Madness specials for Monday Night Football. Starting at 5 PM every Monday enjoy $5 pints, $6 burgers, and 50 cent wings. Don't miss Sunday Brunch from 11:30 AM to 3 PM. The menu is a prix fixe for $16 per person, which includes a brunch entree along with coffee or tea. Southampton Publick House is open seven days for lunch and dinner. For further information visit www.publick. com or call 631-283-2800.

Sen Happy Hour

Sen in Sag Harbor presents Happy Hour Monday through Thursday from 5:30 to 7 PM. Enjoy $8 cocktails and $6 red and white wine.

1770 House

Tavern Thursdays are each Thursday at The 1770 House. From 5:30 PM, in the casual downstairs Tavern of the 18th century colonial home, the signature burger, meatloaf, and Korean BBQ Berkshire ribs are $17.70; with

house wine, red or white, by the glass at $9; and a house beer selection at $5. Chef Michael Rozzi's nightly fine dining menu may be enjoyed upstairs or down too. For more info call 631-324-1770 or visit www.1770house.com.

Phil's Waterfront

Phil's Waterfront Bar and Grill in Aquebogue presents Happy Hour Monday through Friday from 4 to 7 PM. They also feature live entertainment on Saturdays. Call for details.

Almond Specials

Almond Restaurant in Bridgehampton presents daily specials for the fall. Meatless Mondays will continue offering a three course meatless menu for $35 all night. Tuesdays are steak frites night with a featured steak frites for $19.95. Thursday nights enjoy ½ dozen Montauk pearl oysters or ½ dozen shrimp cocktail for $10 at the bar or at tables. On Sundays grab a burger and a beer at the bar for $15. A $29 three-course prix fixe will be offered from 5:30 to 7 PM every night. For reservations contact Almond at 631-537-5665.

Monday Night Paint

The Salty Canvas presents Monday Night Paint Parties at Townline BBQ in Sagaponack happening ever y Monday from 6:30 to 8:30 PM. Every Monday, Nikki Payne of the Salty Canvas will host a paint party complete with step-by-step instructions and all painting materials. Cost for the evening is $45 and includes one complimentary happy hour drink. The Happy Hour menu will be available for guests as well as the full Townline menu, so get there early to enjoy dinner before you paint. To participate guests must register at www.saltycanvashamptons. com within 24 hours of the event.

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Living Room

c/o The Maidstone in East Hampton offers a prix fixe that includes three courses for just $35 at the cozy Living Room Restaurant, Sunday through Thursday, from 5:30 to 7 PM. Happy hour is Sunday to Thursday from 4 to 6 PM. Enjoy drinks and appetizers at 50 percent off.

Free Soup Days

Tuesday and Thursday are "Free Soup Days" at Clamman on North Sea Road in Southampton from 11 AM to 3 PM, with the purchase of a sandwich or entree. For more info call 631-283-6669.

Football Specials

Townline BBQ in Sagaponack presents happy hour and football specials available Thursday and Friday from 4 to 7 PM and Saturday, Sunday, and Monday all day. These specials are only available at the bar. Also, free pool is offered during happy hour.

Zigmund's Bar

Zigmund's Bar in Bridgehampton, a new bar inspired by the location's popular 90's bar The Wild Rose, will offer Happy Hour Thursday through Saturday evenings until sunset with $5 rose, beer, and lamb chops.

Nick & Toni's

Nick & Toni's in East Hampton offers their famous woodburning oven pizzas. The pizzas are available Sunday through Thursday all night. The Choice prix fixe has also returned. The menu is available Sunday through Friday (restaurant is closed Tuesday) beginning at 6 PM. Nick & Toni's hosts happy hour every Monday through Friday from 5:30 to 6:30 PM and Sundays from 2:30 through 6:30 PM. During Happy Hour a sommelier selected glass of wine will be offered for $8, select cocktails

23

are half price including the Meyer Lemon Cosmo, Seasonal 'Rita, and the Spanish G&T, and a rotating bottled brew is available for $6. A select bar menu of small plates are available including meatball sliders for $6, pizza margherita for $10, formaggi plate for $10, and seasonal bruschetta for $5. Call Nick & Toni's at 631-3243550.

Buckley's Inn Between

Happy Hour weekdays at Buckley's Inn Between in Hampton Bays runs from 4 to 7 PM. On Thursdays, it's Buckley's famous wing night with $15 all you can eat wings and all you can drink Miller Lite from 10 PM to 1 AM and music by DJ Pauly.

Indian Wells Tavern

Indian Wells Tavern in Amagansett presents football specials. A special snacks menu will be offered on Sundays and Thursdays in the bar area along with a special drink menu. The special drink menu will be offered during the Monday night football games, along with the Burger Night promotion, which includes a burger of your choice, half-dozen wings, and draft beer – all for $25. There will also be prizes and giveaways during the games. The menus include Tavern wings, nachos, quesadillas, Asian potstickers, homemade beef chili, New England clam chowder, and more. For further information call Indian Wells Tavern at 631-267-0400.

Prime Time

Prime Time at The Palm in East Hampton takes place Sunday through Friday from 5 to 7 PM with half off "Prime Bites" at the Palm Bar.

HUNGRY? Find Somewhere to Eat in one of The Independent’s Dining Columns!

Read The Independent

. . .or on our website

Onlin

www.indyeastend.com

www.indyeastend.com

Now

Serving

t’s

penden The Inde

Wholesale 725-9087 Retail 725-9004

Prime Meats • Groceries Produce • Take-Out Fried Chicken • BBQ Ribs Sandwiches • Salads Party Platters and 6ft. Heroes Beer, Ice, Soda

Open 7 Days a Week

D

18 Park Place East Hampton 324-5400 Breakfast - Lunch - Dinner Take Out Orders

g inin

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For Advertising Information Call Our Office at

631.324.2500


24

January 4, 2017

www.indyeastend.com

THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman

REAL ESTATE

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

IN THE NEWS

Vegetable Tart Ingredients

1 12” puff pastry (rolled out on a sheet tray lined with parchment paper) 1 butternut squash (cut into cubes) 2 onions (sliced) 1 pint cherry tomatoes

10 oz bag of spinach (chopped) 1/4 lb Gouda cheese (grated) 2 oz olive oil 2 tbs tomato paste 1/2 head of radicchio (sliced thin) Salt and pepper to taste

E

ASTPORT LIQUORS Monday 9-6, Tuesday-Thursday Friday• &•Closed Saturday 9-9, 12-6 Open 12pm 6pm onSunday Monday OpenSunday Sunday 12pm-9-8, - 6pm Monday 12-7pm

Tastings Every Sat. 3-7 pm

Senior Discount Tuesday

All Cards AllMajor Major Credit Credit Cards & DebitAccepted Cards Accepted

Gift Wrapping LOTTO IN STORE

$

1.00 Off 10.00 Purchase

$

2.00 Off 20.00 Purchase $

$

Not to be combined with other offers.

Not to be combined with other offers.

15 Eastport Manor Road • Eastport • 325-1388 • Open 9 am (In the Eastport Shopping Center, next to King Kullen)

Weekly Specials at Cliffs Elbow Too!

Method

Start by setting the oven to 375. In a sauté pan heat the oil and then caramelize the sliced onions. Roast the cherry tomatoes in the oven for 10 minutes. Add them and the tomato paste to the caramelized onions and lower the heat. Continue stirring the mixture on low heat for another 10 minutes. Roast the butternut squash in the oven for 10 minutes. Spread the caramelized onion and tomato mixture over the top of your chilled puff pastry dough. Sprinkle on the rest of the ingredients then bake at 350 for 20 minutes.

Japanese RestauRant and sushi BaR

Tuesday-Steak Night

$19.99

16oz. Steak • Soup or Salad Choice of Potato • Special Dessert

Friday ur Happy fHiceocold o $3 cans Light Coors ht g Miller Li er plus oth als ci e sp drink

Wing Wednesday’s $9.99 All you can Eat $12.99

Wings All Day • Large Selection of Sauces & Rubs

Thursday-Date Night Free Glass of Wine, Beer

or Soft Drink with the purchase of an entree

Saturday Spe Happy cHiaol ur 4-7p

Burger Sunday $6.00

Fine Dining Specializing in Japanese Cuisine & Sushi Offering Lunch & Dinner Menus and Exotic Cocktails We also have a Tatami Room

m

Open 7 Days for Lunch & Dinner

All Day

Cliff’s Elbow Too!

1085 Franklinville Road, Laurel

298-3262

LIKE US ON FACEBOOK

facebook.com/cliffselbowroom

www.elbowroomli.com

631-267-7600 40 Montauk Highway Amagansett, NY


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