Arts & Entertainment 9-30-15

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THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman

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September 30, 2015

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The Independent

ntertainment

September 30, 2015

Keith Mantell - Summer Sound Avenue On Display At "Contact." Gallery Walk - page b-6

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It’s That Time Again! For all things scary and squeamish! Grades 1-3 • Grades 4-6 • Grades 7-8 All Students are invited to enter their Halloween themed artwork and spooky stories in The Indy’s Annual Boo SHorT AnD SCAry ConTEST Send us your scary drawings and stories by

monday, October 19, 5pm to win prizes and have your work printed in The Independent!

Send or Drop off Entries to: The Independent, 74 Montauk Highway, Suite 16, East Hampton, NY 11937 631-324-2500

THE INDEPENDENT NOW, FOR THE NORTH FORK, THE

Traveler Watchman TRUTH WITHOUT FEAR SINCE 1826

D o n ’ t F o r g e t To E n t e r B o o ! S h o r t & S c a r y S t o r y C o n t e s t !

D o n ’ t F o r g e t To E n t e r B o o ! S h o r t & S c a r y S t o r y C o n t e s t !

attEntiOn kiDS!


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September 30, 2015

THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman

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www.hamptondaze.com

Laverne Cox

Vered's Birthday

Ed Sheeran

Joe Biden

Global Citizen Festival Coldplay's Chris Martin

Leonardo DiCaprio

Aaron Paul

Susan Sarandon and Salma Hayek Pinault

Jay-Z and Usher

Sting

Photos by Barry Gordin

The 1844 church on Madison Street in Sag Harbor belonging to Vered was rocking on Saturday as she celebrated her 75th birthday with over 100 guests at a sit down dinner catered by Chef Peter Ambrose. Michal Shapira flew in from Israel to entertain the guests with her magical Amy Winehouse rendition and DJ Karin Ward kept the dance floor full. Linda B. Shapiro coordinated the event.

Kerry Washington

Beyonce Knowles

Stephen Colbert and Hugh Jackman

Photos by Kevin Mazur, Theo Wargo, Noam Galai, Craig Barritt/Getty Images for Global Citizen

The 2015 Global Citizen Festival to end extreme poverty by 2030 took place in Central Park on Saturday.


B-4 September 30, 2015

THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman

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The 10th Annual African American Film Festival By Jessica Mackin

“Sing Your Song” is the theme of the 10th Annual African American Film Festival, taking place Thursday through Sunday at the Southampton Arts Center on Jobs Lane. Presented by the Southampton African American Museum, this is a seminal year for an event that has brought the richness of diversity to the cultural landscape of the East End. The AAFF will kick-off tomorrow at 6 :30 PM w i th th e E as t E nd premiere of the stage play Martin, Malcolm and Me by writer/director J.D. Lawrence, followed by a Q&A. Friday will embody this year’s t h e m e o f “ S i n g Yo u r S o n g ” with spoken word/live jazz performances by R&B singer Cheryl Pepsii Riley, HBO Def and Grammy

Award Poet J Ivy, Dynamic Grammy Award singer/songwriter Tarrey Torae, the jazz quar tet Charles Certain and Certain Moves. Saturday will feature four remarkable films celebrating iconic artists that help change both the artistic and political landscape of America including Soundtrack For A Revolution, Marvin Gaye: What’s Goin On, Half Past Autumn: The Life and Work of Gordon Parks, and All Me: The Life and Times of Winfred Rembert. Sunday continues this year’s theme with two films about two legendary performers, Marley a film about reggae innovator Bob Marley and Bessie, a film about blues queen Bessie Smith. However, the day’s screening opens with a tribute to civil rights activist Julian Bond who passed away in August of this year, with Julian Bond: Reflections from the Frontlines of the Civil Rights Movement. All films at the festival are $12 in advance and $15 at the door, however the final film Bessie is open to the public and payable by only a donation to the Southampton African American Museum at the door. Packages are also available. Donate $150 to the Southampton African American Museum and get an exclusive invite to the VIP Wine and Cheese Reception on Saturday plus enjoy guaranteed admission to all film screenings and the Spoken Word and Live Jazz performance on Friday. Donate $100 to the Museum for guaranteed admission to all film screenings plus the Spoken Word and Live Jazz performance on Friday. For tickets please call Nancy Stevens-Smith 631-428-1857 or Joann Humble 631- 764-4792. F o r m o r e i n f o r m a t i o n v i s i t w w w. southamptonafricanamericanmuseum.org.

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Sweet Charities

THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman

By Jessica Mackin

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

Hats With Heart

East End Cares has launched a donation collection called “Hats With Heart” in partnership with volunteers on the ground in Jordan who are helping in Zaatari Refugee Camp to deliver warm hats, scarves and gloves to the people living there. Zaatari, which originated as an emergency response three years ago, now has a population of over 80,000 refugees. The winters get cold in the desert location and these items go a long way to add warmth and let the people know that others around the world care. Donations of new or like new hats, scarves and gloves and new only socks for men, women and children are being collected through October 10. Drop off locations are Gurney’s Montauk Resort and Seawater Spa, Buddha Berry in Sag Harbor, and Rosehip Partners Real Estate in East Hampton. Donors are invited to include a heart shape note of support and hope with their items.

Montauk Surf Classic

The 19th Annual Montauk Surf Classic, presented by Eastern Surfing Association and Atlantic Terrace Beach Resort, will be held at Ditch Plains on Saturday and Sunday and feature the surrounding area’s best surfers. The event is all ages and genders and includes surfing, stand up paddle boarding and bodyboarding. The Eastern Surfing Association is dedicated to the sport of amateur surfing, to the operation of a program of amateur competition for surfers of all ages and abilities, and to the establishment and preservation of free access to a clean shoreline and ocean environment. It was founded in 1967 by East Coast surfers to promote, preserve, and protect the sport of surfing on the East Coast. Atlantic Terrace Beach Resort will host the Awards Dinner on Saturday at 6 PM. For more info visit ny.surfesa.org.

Race for a Reason

“Race for a Reason,” a 5K run/walk sponsored by Margaritaville supporting Backpacks For Fellow Students, will take place on Sunday at Cupsogue Beach in Westhampton. This fun-filled family event helps local elementary school students achieve academic excellence. The race runs along Dune Road. The event will include race medals, prizes, raffles and food. 9 AM start time. Backpacks For Fellow Students, a not for profit created by Westhampton Beach 10th grader Ariana DeMattei, provides East End elementary school students in need a brand new backpack filled with all their required school supplies to start off the school year. Blessings in a Backpack, a 501(c)(3) run by Alex Kravitz, a senior at WHBHS, provides 100 plus Westhampton Beach

elementary school students who are on the federally free and Reduced Lunch Program a backpack of food to take home for 38 weekends during the school year. Registration is $30. Visit www. itsyourrace.com.

Stroll to the Sea Dog Walk

ARF’s 22nd Annual Stroll to the Sea Dog Walk is set for Saturday, October 10, in East Hampton. To register visit www.arfhamptons.org.

Bridgehampton Child Care

The Bridgehampton Child Care & Recreational Center presents Songs Of

Solomon on Saturday, October 10, at 4 PM. The gospel concert is hosted by Bridgehampton Presbyterian Church. A reception will follow with beer, wine and raw bar. Tickets start at $30. For tickets contact Bonnie Michelle Cannon at 631-537-0616 or michelle@bhccrc.org.

Alternatives For Children

Alternatives For Children’s 19th Annual Classic & Sports Car Road Rally, sponsored by Competition Automotive Group, will be held Saturday, October 17, at 168 Hill Street in Southampton. The event directly benefits the programs and services for the children with disabilities that they serve. Visit www. alternatives4children.org/road-rally. html.

Bold And Bald

Lucia’s Angels, the Coalition for

September 30, 2015

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Women’s Cancers at Southampton Hospital, Ellen’s Run, The Ellen Hermanson Breast Center, Fighting Chance and The Leukemia and Lymphoma Society are participating in the national “Be Bold. Be Bald” event on Friday, October 16, in which participants shave their heads or wear a bald cap to show their support for people going through cancer. The enthusiastic volunteers will also be taking “Bold and Bald” to new levels by showing up bald at many events in the next month that benefit our local cancer organizations. Look for the enthusiastic baldies at the kickoff parade to the San Gennaro Festival of the Hamptons on Saturday and at the Shelter Island 5K on Saturday, October 17. For more info visit www. beboldbebald.org.

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THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman

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

OPENING Art Conversation

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IN THE NEWS

By Jessica Mackin

hypnotic, Moczarski’s recent series explores a natural inclination towards an imperfect symmetry, as organic and curvilinear lines and overlapping forms create compositions that seem to breathe and move.

The Amagansett Free Librar y presents Art Conversation Series: What We Talk About When We Talk About Art. On Saturday at 6 PM, “Beyond the East End: Artist John Alexander.” Working from his studio on Main Street in Amagansett, renowned artist John Alexander draws inspiration from his natural surroundings. Alexander discusses his process and work with Ruth Appelhof, Executive Director of Guild Hall.

Roy Lichtenstein Discussion

Melanie J. Moczarski

Contact.

Tripoli Gallery in East Hampton presents Melanie J. Moczarski: Lingua Franca. Marking her first solo show at Tripoli Gallery, the exhibition of new works will be on view from Saturday through November 16, with an opening reception on Saturday from 6 to 8 PM. Mesmerizing and

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Guild Hall in East Hampton presents a panel discussion on Roy Lichtenstein: Between Sea and Sky on Sunday at 3 PM. Clare Bell, Exhibition Support Manager/Reference at Roy Lichtenstein Foundation, will moderate a panel on Roy Lichtenstein’s film with Joel L. Freedman, Filmmaker/ Producer, and Chrissie Iles, Curator, Whitney Museum of American Art. Visit www.guildhall.org. “Contact.,” a curated exhibition of 40 artists presenting their version of contact is on display this weekend at Ashawagh Hall in Springs. An opening reception will be held on Saturday from 5 to 7 PM. Works include contemporary painting, sculpture, photography and mixed media.

Malu Tan's Dreamland at Monika Olko Gallery.

Monik a Olko Gallery

Save The Date for the first annual

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A Benefit for Narcolepsy Network Sunday, November 8, 2015 1 to 4 pm

Edgewater Restaurant, Hampton Bays EARLY BIRD TICKETS : $30, INCLUDES OPEN BAR AND HORS D’OEUVRES For tickets visit www.HamptonDaze.com For more information contact Michele A. McDonald : MicheleAMcdonald@gmail.com

The Monika Olko Gallery presents three new talents at the gallery in Sag Harbor, Brett Loving, Malu Tan and Tara Bach, as well as new works by Dean Johnson. An opening reception will be held on Saturday from 6 to 8 PM. The exhibit will run through October 31.

ONGOING Barns Of The North Fork

The Southold Historical Society is hosting “Barns of the North Fork,” an exhibition of original paintings by the North Fork artists group, which studies with Diane Alec-Smith. The exhibit will be held at the Society’s Reichert Family Center’s Cosden-Price Gallery. The group is known for its landscape and seascape works, which document the beauty and personality of the North Fork. The group consists of well-known local artists, including Diane Alec Smith, Ginny Blank, Beverly Cierach, Lee Cleary, Mary Epperlein, Chrisiti Ferrera, Tracy Flynn, Pat Foley, Janine Harrigan, Diane Parkin, Karen Rich, Evelyn Turchiano, Don Wilson, Marion Wipf, and Heather Worthington. The show runs through Saturday.

Mica Marder

Artwork by Mica Marder is on display at Silas Marder Gallery in Bridgehampton. The show runs through October 17. Mica Marder is known for the remarkable ability to render the essentials of his subjects with an honest, intuitive hand. His drawings, paintings and sculpture are a truly visceral experience, offering an alternative to the cool remoteness of much of today’s contemporary art.


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

The Fast Lane

The Fast Lane, an Eagles Tribute Band, will perform at The Suffolk Theater in Riverhead on Saturday at 8 PM. Visit www.suffolktheater.com.

Contra Dance

A traditional New England Contra Dance will be held on Saturday at 8 PM at the Water Mill Community House. Visit www.LITMA.org.

Fresh Hamptons

Fresh in Bridgehampton hosts Happy Hour daily from 4 to 6 PM. Guests may enjoy half-priced bar food, house pours, tap beer and house wine at the bar. Jim Turner performs live music at Fresh in Bridgehampton on Friday nights at 6 PM. Turner plays an assortment of rock, blues, swing, reggae, jazz and folk. No Cover.

Southampton Publick House

Stop by for Monday Night Madness in the taproom featuring $5 pints, $5 burger platters, and $.50 wings.

THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman

September 30, 2015

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By Jessica Mackin

Weekday happy hour runs from 4 to 7 PM. Wednesday is Ladies Night with drink specials at 9:30. Friday is all night happy hour with taproom specials and DJ Dory at 10 PM. Saturday night, dance to Hamptons classics served up by DJ Brian at 10 PM.

Indian Wells Tavern

Indian Wells Tavern in Amagansett has announced new fall football specials. A special snacks menu will be offered on Sundays in the bar area along with a special drink menu. The special drink menu will be offered during the Monday night football games. Indian Wells Tavern in Amagansett offers Happy Hour Monday through Friday from 4 to 6 PM at the bar only. For further information call Indian Wells Tavern at 631-2670400.

Buckley’s Inn Between

Happy Hour weekdays in Hampton Bays run 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. Music by DJ Pauly and beer pong. Independent/Phil Lehans

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Artists Alliance of East Hampton presents

28th Annual Artists Studio Tour October 10 and 11, 2015 10 am to 5 pm

• Sixteen studios. See where the work you admire is created Buy direct from the artist • New this year: Download our map, free, from aaeh.org/artists-tour

• Special added attraction: Free talk by Helen Harrison: A brief history of the Springs art community Pollock-Krasner House 830 Springs Fireplace Rd. Springs Saturday, October 10 at 6 pm • No need to sign up or buy map Just show up ready to view and to purchase! Visit our website:

www.aaeh.org


B-8 September 30, 2015

THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman

ARIES (Mar. 20 - Apr. 20) Have an open and sympathetic heart and your wishes will be provided for. Be aware of your contact -- mental, emotional and physical -- with the ever-new beauty, sensuality, fertility, and peace of our earthly garden paradise. TAURUS (Apr. 20 - May 21) You need to be disciplined. The strength of your will, character and body may soon be tested. Gather and preserve your resources now so you may confidently defend your position later. Stay faithful to your purpose.

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don’t have to resort to deceit.

sacrifice. You need to heal.

LEO (July 23 - Aug. 23) Prepare to defend your position, even if it is unpopular with those you respect. You may have to bide your time but stay faithful to your purpose. Apply techniques of strict military-like discipline to the development of your strength of willpower.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23 - Nov. 22) Action is called for if the things you wish for are to be attained. Initiate communication first and the answering messages will come back to you. Make that call. Act on that new idea. The time is right to respond in the most direct way possible.

GEMINI (May 21 - June 22) For now, it might be better to keep two or more things going at once rather than focus on one. You must stay centered while you stay flexible and keep informed. You must remain flexible and see change as opportunity.

VIRGO (Aug. 23 - Sept. 23) You need to make your intentions perfectly clear before taking action. Plans, directions, and messages of love, romance and appreciation must be communicated and understood. Do it and do it now. Do not waste time.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 - Dec. 21) If you need too many material objects in order to feel good about yourself, then you must feel empty and afraid that you will be recognized as such. You must shift your emphasis from physical concerns to those of the spirit.

CANCER (June 22 - July 23) You want something so much that you are willing to go against what you know to be right and true to obtain it. Trickery will backfire. You have within you the power to change your beliefs. You

LIBRA (Sept. 23 - Oct. 23) You need to be more aware of the physical, mental or emotional sacrifices that are or will become involved in the present situation. You may need to seek a cause more worthy of your efforts and

CAPRICORN (Dec. 21 - Jan. 20) With change comes the growth that runs throughout one’s life. The growth from child to young adult and from young adult to old age is meaningless without the accompaniment of the wisdom accumulated with the changing seasons of our lives. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 - Feb. 19) You need to give birth to something that has never been. To do so, tap your creative potential. Be as gentle to yourself and your new creation as you would be to an infant. Enjoy the riches of nature and the natural world. PISCES (Feb. 19 - Mar. 20) Excessive concentration on pursuits that primarily benefit others has left you unfulfilled. You have given away too much of yourself. You may have to abandon that which you once sought, to seek something that is more worthy of your efforts. NOTE: If you were born at the end or beginning of a sign, also read the sign before or after your birthday. Monte Farber is the author of 40 bestselling metaphysical books including “Karma Cards” and “Sun Sign Secrets” with over two million copies in print in 14 languages. His wife and co-author Amy Zerner’s couture creations, jewelry and awardwinning artworks exude her profound intuition and connection with spiritual symbolism. Call 631-324-7695 for Enchanted World Store hours, class schedules or to make an appointment for an astrological consultation or psychic reading. Websites: www. TheEnchantedWorld.com, www. AmyZerner.com. www.MonteFarber. com.

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IN THE NEWS

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

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Coming Attractions

By Jessica Mackin

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

The Fantasticks

Southampton Cultural Center will present The Fantasticks for three weekends, Thursday through October 18. Thursday performances are at 7:30 PM, Fridays and Saturdays performances are at 8 PM and Sunday matinees are at 2:30 PM. Music by Harvey Schmidt, lyrics by Tom Jones, directed by Michael Disher, and musical direction by Karen Hochstedler. Visit www.scc-arts.org.

Air Rites

John Drew Theater Lab at Guild Hall

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presents Air Rites by Richard Brockman on Tuesday at 7:30 PM. Music by Heather Christian. Directed by Mirra Bank. Visit www.guildhall.org.

Verdi’s Il Travatore

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Head to Guild Hall before the screening of The Met: Live in HD – Verdi’s Il Travatore for a reception and special presentation about writing contemporary opera by composer Victoria Bond on Saturday at noon followed by the screening at 1 PM. Visit www.guildhall.org.

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B-10 September 30, 2015

THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman

East End Calendar Deadline for submissions is Thursday at noon. Fax them to 631-324-2544 or email to kmerrill@ indyeastend.com.

East Hampton WEDNESDAY 9•30•15 • Integral yoga ($5), open gym, and pickleball are all offered every week at the Montauk Playhouse starting at 9:30 AM. For more events check www. ehamptonny.gov or call 631-668-1612. THURSDAY 10•1•15 • Increase strength, flexibility, and core power with one-of-a-kind music mixes at the Springs Presbyterian Church. Starts at 4:30 PM. Most levels are welcome. $15 per class. Call 631-604-1462 or visit www. jamielerner.com for more info. FRIDAY 10•2•15 • Join in for a free health fair at Most Holy Trinity School (77 Buell Lane in East Hampton) at 11 AM. There’ll be cholesterol screenings, flu shots, blood pressure screenings, stress relief circle, and much more. Sponsored by East Hampton Healthcare Foundation and Southampton Hospital. For more information contact 631-329-2425. SATURDAY 10•3•15 • Suffolk County Executive Steve Bellone will join Southampton Town Supervisor Anna Throne-Holst and East Hampton Town Supervisor Larry Cantwell from 3 to 5 PM at the Montauk Firehouse for a guided panel discussion on wastewater management and coastal resiliency. This event, hosted by Concerned Citizens of Montauk, is free and open to the public and will include a Q&A with the guest speakers. • Join a park naturalist on a scavenger hunt hike through Camp Hero State Park in Montauk. While hiking, “seek” items from a list that includes plants, animals and buildings located within the park. Wear comfortable shoes and appropriate clothing. Starts at 1 PM. Call 631-668-2554. Park is located at 1898 Montauk Highway. SUNDAY 10•4•15 • The East Hampton Historical Farm Museum is

By Emily Toy

celebrating Fire Prevention Week with the EH Town Fire Department. See an antique fire truck on the lawn of the museum from 10 AM to 2 PM. Free firehouse tours and historic house tours and antique fire fighting gear displays. Call Sharon Wolf at 917-705-5252 with questions. MONDAY 10•5•15 • Enjoy Monday Night Football at Momi Ramen starting at 8:30 PM. Enjoy the 80-inch projection TV, plus food and drink specials. Located at 221 Pantigo Road. Call 631-324-1678. TUESDAY 10•6•15 • The Montauk Playhouse hosts men’s basketball for free from 7 to 9 PM. All men ages 18 and over are welcome. WEDNESDAY 10•7•15 • Enjoy an open day at LongHouse Reserve in East Hampton from 2 to 5 PM. Admission is $10 per person. Located at 133 Hands Creek Road in East Hampton. Call 631-329-3568.

Southampton WEDNESDAY 9•30•15 • Harrison Hunt and Bill Bleyer discuss the Civil War and what was happening on Long Island during the war between the states. Noon, Rogers Library in Southampton. Call the library to reserve a seat. THURSDAY 10•1•15 • Make a harvest wreath at the Rogers Mansion on Meeting House Lane in Southampton at 6 PM. Call 631-283-2494 to sign up. $35 for members of the Southampton Historical Museums and Research Center; $45 for non-members. BYO dried flowers, glue gun, scissors, ribbon, seed pods, and more. • How dense are you? Learn what bone density means and what you can do to prevent osteoporosis at 11 AM at the Hampton Bays Library. Call to reserve your seat. SATURDAY 10•3•15 • Help the folks from the South Fork Natural History Museum and the Cornell Cooperative Extension

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Marine Program restore vital habitat during a marine meadows workshop at 10 AM. Call 631-727-7850 ext.329 to learn more and sign up. • It’s Fiesta Latina! At the Rogers Mansion in Southampton. From 1 to 3 PM enjoy family fun, games, food, and music – all with a Latin theme. • Meet author Rose Nigro at the Quogue Wildlife Refuge. This program is suitable for school-age children and parents or grandparents. The author reads from A Duck’s Tail, subtitled “The story of a Big Duck and the Small Town who loves her.” From 2 to 3 PM at the Nature Center, 3 Old Country Road. A portion of the book sales will be donated to QWR. Register at 631-653-4771, info@quoguewildliferefuge.org or organization’s Facebook page. • Join the Southampton Trails Preservation Society and SoFo for a Trout Pond Perambulation in Noyac. Starts at 10 AM. Meet at the Trout Pond parking lot on Noyac Road across from Mill Road. Call 631-5379735 for details. SUNDAY 10•4•15 • The Southampton Farmer’s Market is today from 9 AM to 2 PM at the Southampton Arts Center, 25 Jobs Lane. Continues every Sunday until October 11. • Marders in Bridgehampton hosts a lecture series every Sunday. Today, it’s on fall color and cleanup. Starts at 10 AM. Lectures are free of charge and all are welcome. 631-537-3700. • There’s a wetlands to beach walk at Clam Island Preserve for families. Sponsored by SoFo. Starts at 10:30 AM. For more information, reservations and directions to meeting place call 631-537-9735. MONDAY 10•5•15 • High school sophomores, juniors and seniors can have SAT math prep beginning at 4:45 PM at the John Jermain Library in Sag Harbor. Each session will include practice test, problem solving technique and test taking strategies. Participants should bring two #2 pencils with erasers, a notebook and a calculator. Call 631-725-0049 for more details.

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TUESDAY 10•6•15 • Paint your nails with friends at the Westhampton Free Library starting at 3 PM. Call 631-288-3335. WEDNESDAY 10•7•15 • The Hampton Bays Library hosts a “Do Your Own Thing” bus trip to NYC. The bus leaves St. Rosalie’s parking lot at 9:30 AM sharp and departs from Bryant Park at 6 PM. $25 for the trip. Call the library to sign up.

North Fork THURSDAY 10•1•15 • Come to Mashomack Preserve on Shelter Island for a half-mile walk and read a story as you go. Pages of Wild Child by Lynn Plourde are mounted along the trail for all to enjoy. A perfect family nature adventure. Call 877-893-2290 for time and more information. SATURDAY 10•3•15 • There’s a drumming circle at the Riverhead Library from 2 to 3 PM. Register by calling 631-727-3228. • Grape Gallop, the Northeast’s premier event that pairs exercise and wine tasting, arrives to Long Island’s North Fork for its next stop in the series. Grab friends and family for a refreshing early-autumn fun run though the Sparking Pointe Winery in Southold. After crossing the finish line, participants will be rewarded with a sampling of the winery’s award-winning wines. Run starts at 7:30 AM. $75. Call 973-305-8326, email katied@barwickgroup.com or visit www.grapegallopli. com for more information. SUNDAY 10•4•15 • The Friends of the Riverhead Library present an outdoor concert starring Mambo Loco. 2 to 4 PM. • Check out photos of Mattituck and Laurel on the big screen and see how many you can identify. At the Mattituck-Laurel Library at 2 PM. TUESDAY 10•6•15 • This week’s entry in the Art of Film series is On The Waterfront. Don’t be a palooka, go see it. 10 AM at the Mattituck-Laurel Library.

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Broadway

Reel Deal

Rachel Chavkin enwraps the audience in myriad delightful elements that engage us fully in the drama of the moment. A Mysterious Isolde The triangulation that emerges in Richard Maxwell’s Isolde, is no more transparent than the layers of metaphor that surround it. Here, Isolde (Tory Vazquez), a gifted actress, finds that she can no longer remember her lines. Although one can readily see she’s “not all there,” it would be too flip to blame it all on dementia. As her husband, Patrick (Jim Fletcher) describes her, she is simply “my short circuit little actress.” Indeed, Isolde stars in this play about her, speaking directly to the audience, narrating her tale and some insights about how it works out, and later delivering lines from a play in which she’s been cast. It’s clearly Patrick who is her anchor, imparting a sense of reason and security into her world. The owner of a successful construction company, he funds Isolde’s desire for a vacation house.To build their dream home, she engages an award-winning architect, played with outré masculinity by Gary Wilmes. Predictably narcissistic, Wilmes’ Massimo is someone who just can’t be denied, or pinned down. As an artist, he is something of a stereotype. And while the two display their sexual relationship openly on stage, it is obviously an enactment. You’ll find steamier sex on prime time than you do on the stage of Isolde. Directed by Richard Maxwell with Ingmar Bergman-like pacing, the drama hangs in the air between quasi realism and the world of dream, myth and invention - an amusement of the mind, more than the heart.

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The Buzz About The Gods Fabulously modern and uncomplicated, Anne Washburn’s “transadaptation” of Iphigenia In Aulis at Classic Stage Company renders the classical Greek drama as a contemporary myth. In keeping with the original, Iphigenia, sent to her death by her father Agamemnon, becomes a political sacrifice to inspire the Greek army, as they set sail to destroy Troy. That Iphigenia embraces her sacrifice at the altar with such patriotic zeal, as though it were a freeing of the soul, is the play’s tragic twist. In our contemporary world it may (or may not) hold parallels to the conviction of modern day fundamentalists and suicide bombers, or even worse, the ongoing practice of female mutilation. Regardless of the joyous nature of this production, there is a tragic irony that can’t be dismissed. As Iphigenia, Kristen Sieh is as protean as the Greek gods and goddesses of classical mythology, transforming into her titular role through a series of character portrayals that include an old man, and a couple of different messengers. In the role of Agamemnon, Rob Campbell delivers the introductory exposit ion wit h a pl o m b, w hi l e creating a physical appearance that invites comparison to some Marvel Comics characters. Later, he portrays Iphigenia’s betrothed, Achilles, as a wise ass, with the wings of an eagle (Costumes by Normandy Sherwood). It’s a comic visage for this character, cast in gangster idiom. Instead of a classical Greek chorus, men in drag and women in colorful Carmen Miranda-like flavors sing and dance. In fact, the music by The Bengsons, with its echoes of American folk music and spirituals, is awesome. More important, director

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Independent / 20th Century FOX

An asterisk (*) denotes an Indy Best Movie pick.

New To Theaters

The Martian (PG-13) The latest from Ridley Scott (Black Hawk Down) is a tour-de-force for Matt Damon, who plays as astronaut given up for dead on Mars. It’s more than a rescue movie – it’s about survival, science, and technology. A Best Picture Oscar contender.

Coming Soon

He Named Me Malala (NR) A documentary about the much publicized shooting of a 15-year old girl on a school bus in Pakistan by the Taliban. Malala Yousafzai, shot in the head and left for dead, survived to become an outspoken advocate for children’s rights and became a Nobel Peace Prize Laureate in 2014. It’s inspring – some will argue it’s propaganda; it is what it is.

New On DVD

Love and Mercy: The fact that

Brian Wilson stands as perhaps the most influential rock figure in history is somehow obscured by this bio of him. Instead, Paul Dano as a young Brian and John Cusack as an older Brian attempt to portray the myriad of mental probems Wilson dealt with over the course of 50 years in the music business. It is well meant but feels like two completely different movies. Still, there is the music, the timeless, majestic melodies that stand above any other popular artist’s body of work. Wilson was a tortured artist to be sure and that makes for a muddled interpretation of his life.

Now Playing

Black Mass * (R) In the 1970s the FBI convinced Irish mobster James “Whitey” Bulger (Johnny Depp) to collaborate in an effort to eliminate a common enemy: the Italian mob. It’s been done before, most notably in The Departed but the director Scott Cooper (Crazy Heart) has himself another hit. Johnny Depp’s best peformance in years may well result in an Oscar nod.


B-12 September 30, 2015

THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman

INDY SNAPS

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today’s birthday by Miles X. Logan

Wines & Canines

The 2015 Wines & Canines Run/Walk for Homeless Pets at the Baiting Hollow Farm Vineyard on Saturday, September 20, drew a large crowd of people and pets and raised $15,000 for the Kent Animal Shelter.The funds will be used to help provide medical care to rescue animals. Steven and Pamela Green (left) with Baiting Hollow Farm Vineyard owners Steve and Sharon Levine.

SINCE 1979

S CARTING ’ E D CO R . FO

Trey Anastasio, 1954

When the remaining members of the Grateful Dead agreed to reassemble one last time for their 50th anniversary, they had one pesky little problem: The driving force behind the band was dead. Jerry Garcia, co-founder, singer, songwriter and lead guitarist, died back in 1998. Surviving band members more or less went their own ways, with occasional attempts to reassemble stymied by the fact that Garcia, a unique talent, was irreplaceable. Not quite. With six concerts, a DVD, and a movie of the event the band was set to gross $100 million for two weeks of work, and there was one man out there who could fill Jerry’s shoes: Trey Anastasio. Trey’s band, Phish, was, like The Dead, a legendary jam band known for its improvisational noodlings and oft-kilter forays into jazz and electronic music. Anastasio had the chops to replicate Garcia’s sounds but possessed something more: the nerve not to. It didn’t take the millions of Dead fans who witnessed the concerts either live or on PPV to realize Trey, a Garcia disciple, had come to play. Anastasio, an extremely intelligent child, was raised in Princeton, NJ. His parents were writers and educators. He met the future members of Phish at the University of Vermont and as legend has it their newly formed band was so bad they at one point got paid not to perform. Phish, though, were destined for greatness, their long concerts drawing legions of fans who traveled from gig to gig – much like the Deadheads did. The band finally broke up in 2004, but appeared together several times afterwards. Trey, meanwhile, gravitated towards the remaining members of the Grateful Dead, touring with the bassist Phil Lesh and with a trio featuring Dead drummer Bill Kreutzmann. He also found time to cowrite a Broadway play, Hands on a Hardbody, and earned a Tony nomination for his score. Nevertheless, there was some trepidation leading into the opening night of the “Fare Thee Well” tour – whether Anastasio could do the job – there were 90 different songs he had to master – and whether the historically picky Deadheads could embrace a false god. The answer came quickly, as reported in Classic Rock by Ben Djarum: “Trey Anastasio came alive during the first solo break . . . throughout the night, he stepped out front, leading the band through some amazing jams with his ferocious playing. His guitar playing was simply incendiary, drawing smiles and approving nods . . .”

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September 30, 2015

THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman

B-13

Independent Dining Cranberry And White Chocolate Crumb Cake Ingredients

Topping

(makes 20 cupcakes)

3/4 c light brown sugar 1 tbsp all purpose flour 1 tsp ground cinnamon 1 tsp ground nutmeg 1tsp ground all spice 3 tbsp cold butter (cut into small pieces) 1/2 c chopped pecans 1/2 c almond flour

Cake

1/2 lb butter (room temperature) 1 c granulated sugar 3 eggs 2 c cake flour 1 tsp baking soda 1 tsp baking powder 1/4 tsp salt 1/2 c sour cream 1/2 c plain greek yogurt 2 tbs mayonnaise 1/2 c dried cranberries 1/2 c white chocolate chips

Method

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Line the muffin tin with paper liners. Use the paddle attachment on your stand mixer and cream the butter and sugar

the dry ingredients except the nuts in a bowl. Slowly, without working the mixture too much, press the cold butter into the dry ingredients until it becomes a crumbly mixture. Fold in the chopped nuts and sprinkle on top of the muffin batter. Bake until browned for about 20 to 25 minutes.

together until smooth. Add the eggs one at a time and mix until light and fluffy. Sift the dry ingredients together: flour, baking powder, salt, and baking soda. Mix the wet ingredients together as well: mayonnaise, sour cream, and yogurt. To finish the batter, turn the mixer back on and add the dry and wet ingredients a little at a time, alternating dry and wet until a smooth consistency is achieved. Add the cranberries and white chocolate chips and distribute evenly through out the cup cake tin. To make the topping, combine all

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B-14 September 30, 2015

THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman

Now Serving

Compiled by Jessica Mackin

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

James Beard House, as with his menu at The 1770 House, Rozzi will bring to life his philosophy that distinguished cuisine begins with appreciation and balance of the freshest local ingredients, blending exceptional flavors and finishing with flawless presentation. “I’ve been working for months to capture several seasons and display a range of cooking techniques,” said Rozzi about preparing for his special October dinner. “In addition to preserving peaches and cherries, pickling summer squash and making extra visits to local farmers, I’ve even had a hand in the raising of the local pork that will be used working with Art Ludlow at Mecox Dairy Farm. Of course, his cheese will be on my menu too as are Holly Browder’s chickens and eggs, Jenn Halsey’s Milk Pail fruits and Alex Balsam’s farm produce.” Rozzi’s menu will also showcase bounty from East End waters. Montauk scallops, striped bass and lobster will be straight from Gosman’s Dock and Cornell Oysters from the North Fork’s Hog Neck Bay. Wine pairings, by The 1770 House sommelier Michael Cohen, will be chosen to enhance the meal. Selections will be from Long Island, California, France, Italy and Spain reflecting the restaurant’s award-

Chef Michael Rozzi

Chef Michael Rozzi of The 1770 House Restaurant & Inn in East Hampton will present his signature cuisine, in a sold-out sixcourse tasting menu, themed “East End Land and Sea,” on Thursday, October 29, at the historic James Beard House in Manhattan. The renowned Hamptons chef is known for his New American cuisine or what he calls “Hamptons cuisine” — reflecting local customs at the root of slow food practice in which Rozzi is an expert. The third generation East Ender grew up shucking oysters on Shinnecock Bay, watching wildlife in the fields of Bridgehampton and visiting the Halsey family’s Milk Pail Country Store in Water Mill for local apples and cider. At the

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winning wine list under his aegis. The James Beard House, one of New York’s best-kept gastronomic secrets, is located in the former Greenwich Village townhouse of the late and celebrated cookbook author and television personality James Beard. Dubbed the “Dean of American cookery” by The New York Times, the mission of his eponymous Foundation is to celebrate, nurture, and preserve America’s culinary heritage and future. Culinary masters from across America and the world are invited to “perform” at the Beard House by presenting a dining experience to Foundation members and the public in a dinner for up to 74 guests. Upon arrival, guests will be invited to walk through the Beard House kitchen to meet and see Rozzi and his team at work. The evening opens with a canapé reception in the greenhouse or, weather permitting, in the outdoor garden. In the upstairs dining room, guests will experience

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Rozzi’s remaining five-course tasting menu with Cohen’s wine pairings. The evening concludes with a Chef Q&A session. The invitation to cook at the James Beard House, a sell-out six weeks in advance, tops a season of accolades for Chef Rozzi and The 1770 House. Rozzi was also invited to cook a private dinner at the historic PollockKrasner House. This was after testing scores of handwritten recipes by abstract artists Jackson Pollock and Lee Krasner as featured in Dinner with Jackson Pollock: Recipes, Art & Nature written and photographed by Robyn Lea and published by Assouline. Again in East Hampton, Rozzi joined a Guild Hall panel discussion exploring the relationship between art and food and tapping his experience about cooking with local ingredients and traditions. Also this year, The 1770 House received a new Zagat rating as one of the top five restaurants in the Hamptons and top-rated in East Hampton.

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

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September 30, 2015

THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman

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Villa Italian Specialties Big Game Specials

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B-16 September 30, 2015

THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman

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The Independent proudly presents our 23rd Annual survival guide to .....

The Hamptons 2015

FILM FESTIVAL A Very Special Publication with Distribution to Hundreds of EAST END LOCATIONS

Featuring Everything you need to know to smile and enjoy the film festival! AD RATES - ALL ADS IN COLOR! SIZE Double Truck.............Call your Sales Rep for info Back Page..............................750.00 Inside Cover .........................675.00 Full Page ................................550.00 1/2 Page.................................390.00 1/4 Page.................................195.00 ADVERTISING DEADLINE: OCTOBER 3

Call The Independent for Space Reservation and Additional Information 631-324-2500 - www.indyeastend.com

Appearing on our Website and in our October 7th issue


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