this year’s winner
LN LIL’ ONE
class of 2017
WOMEN OF ACHIEVEMENT
crafty creations
PINNED IN THE LOU
Style. Society. Success. | May 12, 2017
The LUXURY COLLECTION of
Alliance Real Estate
501 South Warson | Ladue | $850,000
24 Overbrook Drive
508 Heron Court
9915 Litzsinger
30 Bellerive Country Club
Ladue | $2,850,000
Saint Albans | $2,750,000
Ladue | $2,500,000
Town & Country | $1,590,000
9890 Old Warson Road Ladue | $1,499,000
9 Washington Terrace
Wenwood Farm Winery
1700 Gratree Lane
1154 Greystone Manor Parkway
115 Pointer Lane
St Louis City | $1,450,000
Bland | $1,200,000
Wentzville | $1,170,000
Chesterfield | $1,149,000
Ladue | $947,000
Bommarito Estate Almond Tree Winery
803 South Warson Road
3473 Whitsetts Fork Road
1529 Lookout Mountain Drive
Ladue | $898,000
Wildwood | $855,000
Wildwood | $849,900
17669 Lasiandra Drive
12349 Borcherding
2634 Wynncrest Falls Drive
4545 Lindell Boulevard #7
1516 Shepard Road
2121 Quail Glen Drive
Des Peres | $799,000
Chesterfield | $799,000
St Louis City | $775,000
Wildwood | $749,900
Innsbrook | $630,000
New Haven | $920,000
Visit www.stlopens.com to view weekend open houses
Wildwood | $799,900
www.bhhsall.com 8077 Maryland Avenue | Clayton | 314-997-7600 17050 Baxter Road #200 | Chesterfield | 636-537-0300 Relocation | 636-733-5010
©2017 BHHS Affiliates, LLC. An independently owned and operated franchises of BHH Affiliates, LLC. Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices and the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices symbol are registered service marks of HomeServices of America, Inc.® Equal Housing Opportunity
NEW BEGINNINGS & NEW TRADITIONS START HERE
Features of Stonecrest of Town & Country • No Buy-in or Entrance Fee • Award-winning, Restaurant-style “Anytime Dining” • Complimentary Scheduled Transportation • Dedicated, Professional and Caring Staff Available 24 hours per day, 7 days a week • Walking paths and a variety of outdoor living spaces • Vibrant Life™ program fostering overall well-being • Maintenance-free living without the hassles of owning a home
Expect the Best in Senior Living
Don’t miss out, reserve your apartment TODAY!
Our Information Center is Located at
1020 Woods Mill Road Town & Country, MO 63017
(636) 733-6721 StonecrestOfTownAndCountry.com MO License number pending
GATHERINGS & GOODWILL 18
Today and Tomorrow Educational Foundation
38
Style:
GROOMING & GLAMOUR
LN stylin’ staff writer Amanda Dahl promotes workout wonder and Instagramagic for even the most hardcore hardbodies by recommending more than half a dozen cosmetics to keep a gym visit from turning into a muddle of sweaty fleece.
20 22 23 24
Paraquad Gateway180 Metro Theater Company Upcoming Gatherings
ABODE 26 27 28
40
2017 LN LIL’ ONE LN stalwart Denise Kruse, with photographer Sabrine Rhodes, introduces Devin Blattner, who topped the magazine’s online poll to become this year’s Lil’ One and who here shows what togs chic (soon-to-be) 3-year-olds are sporting this spring.
Arts & Culture Feature:
PULITZER ARTS FOUNDATION
Andres L. Hernandez and Amanda Williams’ astounding “A Way, Away (Listen While I Say),” now unfolding under the auspices of the Pulitzer Arts Foundation, earns a spotlight from LN copy editor and staff writer Bryan A. Hollerbach.
On the cover 14 Highly trained technicians from ULTIMA Disaster Restoration repair and restore properties and peace of mind. Find out how starting on page 14. Photo by John Fedele of Fedele Studios.
2
MAY 12, 2017 | LadueNews.com
Design Elements Feature: Pinned in the Lou
STYLE
Style Feature:
61
The Trio: Lunar Landing
38 39 40
Grooming & Glamour Make a Statement Feature: 2017 LN Lil’ One
THE DAILY 48 49 50 51
Healthy Appetite Happily Ever After Crossword Puzzle Feature: 2017 Women of Achievement
ARTS & CULTURE 56 58 59 61
Dinner & A Show Ready Readers Around Town Feature: Pulitzer Arts Foundation
Now accepting
reservations!
More of The Very Best We are expanding to serve you!
McKnight Place Assisted Living will offer more in the fall of 2017. For over 25 years, our residents have enjoyed active, healthy lifestyles coupled with impressive accommodations and uncompromised service. We are thrilled to add larger suites and apartments to our community. Learn more about McKnight Place Assisted Living. Call Kelley or Abby today at (314) 993-3333.
visitmcknight.com We are committed to equal housing opportunity that does not discriminate in housing and services because of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin.
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VICE PRESIDENT OF NICHE PUBLISHING
Catherine Neville
Andrea Griffith
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WINNING TEAM The Ladue News is seeking a Part Time Sales Assistant to support our staff of busy Media Advisors. The ideal candidate is a multi-tasker with strong organizational and communication skills and is able to devote 16-24 hours per week to contribute to the success of our advertising sales staff. Strong internal and external customer service skills are a must. Knowledge of Microsoft Office products required. Experience using Salesforce a plus. We are looking for a positive, team player to fuel the fire of our successful sales team.
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FOR CONSIDERATION Please apply online at: www.lee.net Select “CAREERS”, Go to “Entrance For Potential Employees” WE OFFER: • Choice of three medical plans • 401 (k) plan with company match • Dental Plan • Flexible spending account • Vision Coverage
4 May 12, 2017 | LadueNews.com
• Health savings account • Company paid live insurance • Generous vacation policy • Short-term and Long term disability plans and paid holidays • Sick days, personal days We are a drug free workplace • EOE
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CONTACT 8811 Ladue Road, Suite D, Ladue, Missouri 63124 314-863-3737 : LadueNews.com
SUBSCRIPTIONS Ladue News publishes 52 issues per year. Subscriptions cost $45 in the continental U.S. A SUBURBAN JOURNALS OF GREATER ST. LOUIS LLC PUBLICATION, A DIVISION OF LEE ENTERPRISES
29 tHe BOulevard · ClaYtOn · 314·725·5100
|
lauraMCCartHY.COM
|
2730 nOrtH Ballas rd · tOWn & COuntrY · 314·569·1177
Featured listings 1. 9854 Waterbury Drive · Ladue situated on over half an acre, this two-story executive home features a family room opening to a deck overlooking the pool, a gourmet kitchen, and a partially finished lower level. Five bedrooms include the grand master suite. $1,295,000 2. 2065 Willow Leaf Drive · Des Peres Meticulously rehabbed and maintained home with designer ambiance and exquisite taste. this sought-after ranch is 4. 7601 Stanford · University City completely updated with a separate living and dining room, three bedrooms, two baths, finished lower level and hardwood floors throughout. pristine. polished. perfect. $539,500 1. 9854 Waterbury Drive · Ladue
3. 524 High Hampton · Ladue enchanting one and a half story colonial! stunning garden room, overlooks the 1.8-acre lot. living and family rooms are enhanced by two fireplaces. sunny kitchen is adjacent to the dining room. a master suite, four bedrooms, two baths, and a partially finished lower level finish this home. $975,000
5. 10340 Conway Road · Frontenac
2. 2065 Willow Leaf Drive · Des Peres
4. 7601 Stanford Avenue · University City adorable and pristine cottage in a superb location. graced with an abundance of natural light, archways and hardwoods. this three bedroom home features sunrooms on both levels, updated kitchen and bath, plus a huge custom deck. $379,000 5. 10340 Conway Road · Frontenac Move right in this two story home with a delightful front porch! Hardwood floors on the main level with gas fireplace in the family room. updated kitchen with breakfast room allowing access to the patio, a vaulted master suite with luxury bath, and a two-car garage finished out home. $439,900
3. 524 High Hampton · Ladue sunday Open Houses u12-2
1-3
2-4
MOre neW listings 7387 Stratford Ave (University City).
$459,000
OPEN SUNDAY 1-3! Welcome to a fantastic home
6. 1508 Andrew Drive • Warson Woods 487 Chukker valley (ellisville).
$1,000,000 plus 35 Chesterfield lakes (Chesterfield).
$2,350,000
26 Countryside lane (Frontenac).
$2,295,000
18 Clermont lane (ladue).
$2,199,000
featuring charming wood floors, special millwork, a
19 danfield (ladue).
$1,999,999
gorgeous stained glass window, and much more.
29 glenview road (ladue).
$1,999,999
13 Overbrook drive (ladue).
$1,999,900
an expansive living room offers a fireplace and French doors. the dining room and family room are interchangeable. the kitchen has granite counters
3 Windsor terrace lane (Creve Coeur). $1,799,000
and a large pantry. upstairs is the ensuite master.
52 Huntleigh Woods (Huntleigh).
$1,599,000
538 Meadow Creek Ln (Warson Woods).$479,900
21 Clermont lane (ladue).
$1,585,000
OPEN SUNDAY 1-3! this updated two-story
1123 Bella vista drive (Frontenac).
$1,475,000
colonial features a kitchen opening to a family room
6333 ellenwood (Clayton).
$1,390,000
with gas fireplace. upstairs, the ensuite master has
9854 Waterbury drive (ladue).
$1,295,000
bedrooms and bath complete the second floor. the
1126 Bella vista drive (Frontenac).
$1,275,000
walk out lower level offers a wet bar and full bath.
701 Woods of ladue lane (ladue).
$1,225,000
a gas fireplace and walk-in closet. three additional
the newer azek deck is great for outside enjoyment. 7723 Country Club Court (Clayton).
$559,000
OPEN SUNDAY 2-4! the possibilities are unlimited! this five bedroom and two bath Clayton classic, is ready for you to design and improve to your specifications and lifestyle. the earnest Batchelder stone fireplace, original stain glass windows, hardwood floors, and the light-filled sunroom are some of the architectural features giving character to this home. 7777 Gissler Ave (Richmond Heights).
$284,900
darling brick bungalow, full of charm! Featuring hardwood floors, an updated kitchen, two bedrooms and two updated baths. terrific outside living with lovely yard and large deck, plus a two-car garage. Move-in ready! don’t miss this opportunity!
$750,000 - $1,000,000
1515 dietrich glen (unic st. louis).
477 twin Creek road (Creve Coeur).
6339 Waterman ave (university City).
327 luther lane (Kirkwood).
7723 Country Club Court (Clayton).
113 Wake Forest place (O’Fallon).
2065 Willow leaf drive (des peres).
913 twin pine drive (des peres).
$300,000 - $500,000
12001 Berkley Manor dr (des peres).
1508 andrew drive (Warson Woods).
$685,000
$684,900
$674,900
$629,900
$599,000
$559,000
$549,900
$539,500
$519,000
$499,000
$479,900
10340 Conway road (Frontenac).
1927 parkridge ave (Brentwood).
7119 Cambridge ave (university City).
1616 Carroll (st. louis).
2601 sun Meadow dr (Wildwood). 7827 Cornell ave (university City). under $300,000
7777 gissler ave (richmond Heights).
503 Wyncrest drive (Ballwin).
$384,500
$369,500
$284,900
$225,000
12917 topping estates drive (t&C).
29 dwyer place (ladue).
$899,000
COndOs and villas 8025 Maryland avenue #15C (Clayton). $3,495,000
$500,000 - $750,000 454 algonquin place (Webster groves).
$739,900
5 little lane (ladue).
$705,000
20 Overbrook (ladue).
$699,000
14005 Clairette lane (t&C).
$699,000
mobile http://mobile.lauramccarthy.com
$375,000
$920,000
$799,000
■ access all of our listings and all other Mls listings from your
$425,000
247 doulton place (t&C).
566 High Meadow (Frontenac).
area Mls listings and their OPEN HOUSES
$384,900
$949,000
$899,000
■ Find and map all of our weekly OPEN HOUSES, all st. louis
$442,000
656 Brookhaven Court (Kirkwood).
$849,000
MY LAURA MCCARTHY
$439,900
$975,000
10 Maryhill drive (ladue).
lauraMCCartHY.COM
■ save property searches and receive e-mail updates through
538 Meadow Creek ln (Warson Woods). $479,900
7387 stratford ave (university City).
524 High Hampton (ladue).
302 Oak stand Court (Chesterfield).
6. 1508 Andrew Drive · Warson Woods Charming home, with three bedrooms and three and a half baths. Floor plan includes a living room, dining room and den. newer addition offers an eat-in kitchen and hearth room. Finished walk out lower level offers additional space. $479,900
lOts and aCreage
45 trent drive (ladue).
200 south Brentwood #19a (Clayton).
14304 spyglass ridge (Chesterfield).
$1,095,000 $499,000
$600,000
$585,000
13343 Fairfield Circle (t&C).
$545,000
5 Little Lane · Ladue
1517 Washington ave #302 (st. louis).
$344,000
An architectural gem and verdant retreat minutes from downtown Clayton!
$249,000
the main core of the home features two bedrooms, two full baths, living room, dining room with built-ins, and a kitchen. in a separate wing, is an ideal in-law suite. every room is graced by views of the lush outdoors. $705,000
1507 dietrich Chase (Ballwin).
4540 lindell Boulevard #106 (CWe).
900 south Hanley #15d (Clayton).
816 south Hanley #6B (Clayton).
7747 Kingsbury #12 (Clayton).
$499,000
$259,000
$245,000
$195,000
letter
from the
EDITOR BECAUSE MY HUSBAND AND I LOVE SPENDING TIME TOGETHER in the kitchen, I’m always in search of new recipes for us to try out together. Although I have some favorite go-to websites for recipes, I somehow always end up on Pinterest – scrolling endlessly through delicious concoctions, pinning recipes that we would likely enjoy creating and consuming. Although we’re fairly good about attempting some of these Pinterest finds, there are many items that unfortunately get pinned and left behind. Ashley Obradovits and Carolyn Connolly, creators of Pinned in the Lou, saw a similar trend, but for DIY crafts. “We find out that most people put things on their Pinterest board, but never get around to making them because it takes all day to go buy supplies, and it’s also more expensive if you get everything in one place,” Obradovits shares in this week’s Abode feature. Starting on p. 28, LN contributing writer Brittany Nay delves into the inspiration behind Pinned in the Lou and also shares what a crafting night with the company entails. We hope that you not only enjoy this story but also enjoy a night with friends, creating, laughing and saving those left-behind pins. All the best,
Editor’s Corner The word around town
Join us at the Ladue News Charity Awards on June 16 at the Palladium Saint Louis to honor and celebrate nine local charities and nonprofits in St. Louis. Presented by Centene Charitable Foundation, the event also marks the announcement of our 2017 award winners. Only a limited number of tickets are available, and a portion of every ticket sold in advance will be donated to your choice of one of the honored charities. Visit laduenews.com to learn more and to purchase tickets.
Congrats to Nicole Salaber, a graduate of John Burroughs School, who was recently awarded a 2017 fellowship from FASPE Business, an innovative international program in leadership and business ethics. Salaber is currently studying at Harvard Business School.
6 May 12, 2017 | LadueNews.com
EDITOR’S PHOTO BY SARAH CONROY
Alecia Humphreys
High above Clayton with unparalleled city views, this luxurious penthouse offers spaces and finishes that are like no other.
150 Carondelet Plaza #2801 *Price Upon Request
29 The Boulevard | Clayton | 314.725.5100 2730 North Ballas Road | Town and Country | 314.569.1177 lauramccarthy.com
spring gallery auction • MAY 20 • 10am 450+ lots of American, European & Asian furniture and decorative arts 1
Counterclockwise from left: 1. Arts & Crafts furniture including Stickley 2. One of a pair of signed Hunzinger chairs 3. Important carved jade Ruyi scepter 4. Jewelry including amethyst gold bracelet 5. Sterling silver including a Tiffany bowl 6. Meissen figure of "Zemire", dog of Catherine II 7. Indian sandstone male torso from 12th/13th century 8. Works by legendary STL artist Siegfried Reinhardt 9. Tiffany stained glass “turtle” window 10. Important Russian Imperial Orloff Family portrait once belonging to Prince Nicholas Wladimirovich Orloff Painted By Cosroe Dusi (Italian, 1808-1859) 11. Cranberry cut to clear decanter set 12. Gilt onyx-top vitrine
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Gallery Preview Hours 7 MAY 1420
SELKIRK
1830
AUCTIONEERS & APPRAISERS POWERED BY GARTH’S
I read Ladue News... Ladue News is a great read of our many strengths and values in the St. Louis region. Gatherings and Goodwill, along with Arts and Culture, highlight our collective investments and commitment to charitable giving, community impact, causes we value and cultural happenings around town. For good measure, The Daily section teases our palates with culinary delights, while we read the amazing profiles of ‘St. Louis makers.’ Thank you, News,, ffor providing y Ladue N viding yyour readers eader with weekly balance, and a thirst for more! – Gwendolyn D. Packnett, PhD President of The Women’s Society of Washington University, Women of Achievement Vice President
8 May 12, 2017 | LadueNews.com
CWE • 4739 MCPHERSON AVENUE ST. LOUIS, MO 63108 314.696.9041 selkirkauctions.com We are not affiliated with the Selkirk family.
nEW LiSTinG | 43 Highgate Road Olivette $699,000
nEW LiSTinG | 5 Romany Park Olivette $675,000
nEW LiSTinG | 12925 Taunton Court Town & Country $1,250,000
nEW LiSTinG | 908 Pheasant Woods drive Manchester $436,900
nEW LiSTinG | 127 Peeke Avenue Kirkwood $399,000
LuxuryCollection
New LIstINgs 12925 TaunTon courT, Town & Country. Additions and renovations have created a masterpiece featuring all of today’s luxury amenities. Beautiful pool and covered patio. $1,250,000 3 WEndovEr drivE, Ladue. Stunning 4 bedroom home offers updated elegance. With a stunning 2-story addition, this gracious home boasts over 4,000 square feet of living space. $1,180,000 43 HigHgaTE road, Olivette. 4 bedroom, 2 and a half bath home is a spacious 3,383 feet of comfortable living and is situated on one of the largest square lots in Chevy Chase. $699,000 5 romany park, Olivette. Home has great curb appeal and is a real show stopper inside! Open feel with vaulted ceilings, pretty hardwood floors, some new carpet. $675,000 908 pHEasanT Woods drivE, Manchester. Gracious customized 2-story offers expanded customized floor plan on larger lot in Parkway South Schools! 4 bedrooms and 3.5 baths. $436,900 127 pEEkE avEnuE, Kirkwood. Architectural detailing thoughtfully mixed with updated design in this 3 bedroom and 2 bath home. Kirkwood charm at its best! $399,000 33 oak Hill drivE, Ellisville. Location, size and convenience! This beautiful 2-story home on a park-like, over 1/2 acres private lot welcomes you with crisp landscaping. $340,000 508 cannonbury drivE, Webster Groves. Gorgeous south Webster home with new roof, new windows, hardwood floors, and appliances. Kitchen is open and ready for entertaining. $239,900 7449 mElrosE, University City. Meticulous 2 bed and 1.5 bath home. Fresh, neutral paint, gleaming hardwood floors, and a delightful sun room. Move-in ready. $141,900 11709 casa grandE, uniT f, St. Louis. Cozy 2 bedroom condo with one updated full bath. Master bedrooms has walkin closet with shelving. Loaded with updates! $82,500
2271 Talon courT, St. Albans. 171 norTH bEmisTon avEnuE, Clayton. 11 brEnTmoor park, Clayton. 11 uppEr WHiTmoor drivE, Weldon Spring. 1042 Wings road, St. Albans. 8 fordycE lanE, Ladue. 21 uppEr laduE road, Ladue. 8956 moydalgan road, Ladue. 241 lindEn avEnuE, Clayton. 3784 doc sargEnT road, Pacific. bluffs of sT. albans, St. Albans. 111 grand mEridiEn forEsT cT., Wildwood. 2 fordycE lanE, Ladue. 20 fordycE lanE, Ladue. 25 randElay drivE, Ladue. 12 carrsWold drivE, Clayton. 10270 kinsElla, Ladue. 22 clErmonT lanE, Ladue. 801 South Skinker, 17-B, St. Louis. 6 applE TrEE lanE, Ladue. 37 fair oaks, Ladue. 10183 Winding ridgE road, Ladue. 5105 lindEll boulEvard, CWE. 32 WEsTmorEland placE, CWE. 44 porTland drivE, Frontenac. 555 dEEr vallEy courT, St. Albans. 8 kingsbury placE, cwe. 5 doWnEy lanE, Ladue Schools. 1328 liTzsingEr Woods, Ladue. 37 porTland placE, CWE. 12033 robyn park drivE, Westwood. 2 liTzsingEr lanE, Ladue. 213 Troon courT, St. Albans. 810 souTH Warson road, Ladue. 14790 sugarWood Trail, Chesterfield. 9052 clayTon road, Tbb, Richmond Heights.
nEW LiSTinG | 3 Wendover drive Ladue $1,180,000
RESidEnTiAL HOMES $4,750,000 $4,500,000 $3,775,000 $3,600,000 $3,599,000 $3,300,000 $2,995,000 $2,900,000 $2,695,000 $2,500,000 $2,295,000 $2,295,000 $2,195,000 $2,100,000 $1,990,000 $1,950,000 $1,950,000 $1,895,000 $1,850,000 $1,799,000 $1,599,000 $1,499,000 $1,495,000 $1,495,000 $1,465,000 $1,449,000 $1,425,000 $1,395,000 $1,360,000 $1,349,000 $1,299,000 $1,225,000 $1,199,000 $1,149,000 $1,145,000 $1,100,000
7039 pErsHing avEnuE, University City.
$374,900
8 WHippoorWill courT, defiance.
$365,000
8 glEn crEEk lanE, Ladue.
$999,900
255 fairWay grEEn, O’Fallon.
$329,750
16656 annas Way, chesterfield.
$999,000
8715 WasHingTon, University City.
$319,000
318 EasT sWon avEnuE, Webster Groves.
$998,000
7318 mElrosE, University City.
$139,000
1309 EaglEWinds courT, Chesterfield.
$974,900
1172 ursula avEnuE, University City.
$119,900
13517 WEsTon park drivE, Town & Country.
$972,000
1540 gErard park, Hazelwood.
$107,500
535 TrEgaron placE, Frontenac.
$969,900
1401 WindgaTE Way lanE, Chesterfield.
$949,000
4 Winding brook lanE, Ladue.
$949,000
COndOMiniUM/ViLLA HOMES
34 counTrysidE lanE, Frontenac.
$899,000
4218 WEsT pinE avEnuE, uniT a1, cwe.
362 mErloT lanE, St. Albans.
$875,000
6615 alamo avEnuE, uniT 1b, Clayton.
$483,900
12437 grandviEW lakE drivE, Sunset Hills.
$807,000
4950 lindEll boulEvard, uniT 5W, CWE.
$427,000
31 conWay closE, Ladue.
$799,000
1121 locusT sTrEET, #202, St. Louis.
$370,000
369 mErloT lanE, St. Albans.
$775,000
816 souTH HanlEy road, uniT 7c, Clayton.
$349,000
9 WilloW Hill, Ladue.
$749,000
710 souTH HanlEy road, uniT 9c, Clayton.
$299,000
4312 napa viEW lanE, St. Charles.
$749,000
815 WEsTWood, uniT 1n, Clayton.
$225,000
8693 WEsT kingsbury avEnuE, University City. $679,000 1 norTH covingTon mEadoW, Olivette.
$569,000
1136 WasHingTon avEnuE, uniT 210, St. Louis. $149,900
$675,000
LOTS/ACREAGE/FARMS
12692 sprucE pond drivE, Town & Country.
$650,000
736 sT. albans spring road, St. Albans.
$649,000
1654 gardEn vallEy drivE, Wildwood.
$629,000
63 TrEnT drivE, Ladue.
$1,765,000
48 HanlEy doWns, Richmond Heights.
$599,000
1055 Wings road, St. Albans.
$1,550,000 $1,250,000
346 pEbblE vallEy, Town and Country.
$560,000
121 norTH brEnTWood Tbb, Brentwood.
3609 bassETT Woods drivE, Pacific.
$549,000
1 Tbb campTon aT villagE viEW, St. Albans.
$479,900
40 algonquin Wood placE, Glendale.
$509,900
1 Tbb auburn aT villagE viEW, St. Albans.
$426,900
3926 bouquET road, Pacific.
$509,000
9052 clayTon road, Richmond Heights.
$425,000
4437 mcpHErson avEnuE, CWE.
$509,000
512 pHEasanT run, St. Albans.
$375,000
17415 privaTE vallEy lanE, Chesterfield.
$499,900
1133 Wings road, St. Albans.
$329,900
11540 sandHursT drivE, creve coeur.
$499,000
1138 Wings road, St. Albans.
$329,900
6187 rosEWood lanE, Byrnes Mill.
$489,900
41 loT #41 mErloT lanE road, St. Albans.
12 JacquElinE knoll courT, St. Louis.
$459,900
4 loT #4 sT. albans spring road, St. Albans.
$65,000
10104 conWay road, Ladue.
$395,000
9 loT #9 sT. albans spring road, St. Albans.
$60,000
$75,000
1157 souTH cHarlEmagnE drivE, Lake St. Louis. $394,975
30 loT #30 mErloT lanE road, St. Albans.
$55,000
9137 moriTz avEnuE, Brentwood.
38 loT #38 mErloT lanE road, St. Albans.
$45,000
$385,000
janet mcafee inc. i 9889 clayton road i saint louis, missouri 63124 l 314.997.4800 i www.janetmcafee.com
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WYMAN CENTER’S TOGETHER IN THE PURSUIT OF HAPPINESS GALA
EVERY CHILD’S HOPE EVANGELICAL CHILDREN’S HOME EVENING OF PEARLS AND POLKA DOTS 10
MAY 12, 2017 | LadueNews.com
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Visit our Facebook page on Mon., May 15, for additional photos from our feature on the 2017 LN Lil’ One, Devin (see the story on p. 40).
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LadueNews.com | May 12, 2017 11
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MISSOURI'S #1 INFINITI RETAILER
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BommaritoINFINITI.com 12 May 12, 2017 | LadueNews.com
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October 3-15, 2017
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Jose Llana and Laura Michelle Kelly in Rodgers & Hammerstein’s The King and I. Photo by Matthew Murphy.
Sterling rates, Sterling future Ana Villafañe and Original Broadway Company Photos: Matthew Murphy
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LadueNews.com | May 12, 2017 13
ON THE
Cover
ULTIMA DISASTER RESTORATION
Protecting Peace of Mind By Amanda Dahl Photos supplied
W
e make residences our own and build homes to create a sanctuary for ourselves and loved ones. Kitchen fires, leaks in the pipes, infestation from mold and other disasters damage not only properties but peace of mind. ULTIMA Disaster Restoration seeks to restore both our homes and our sense of comfort. “Our ultimate goal is customer satisfaction,” Shawn Khalil, VP of operations, says. “We understand there are others out there people could go to. So, we go above and beyond, bringing all of our experience and knowledge to the table to provide clients with the confidence [of knowing] they made the right choice.” The full-service restoration company deals with fire, water, mold and storm damage issues. Its experienced crew of multicertified experts is adept at surveying damage, determining the source and finding long-term solutions. “We have a strong work ethic and are dedicated to our customers,” Khalil states. “We do anything and everything to really make sure they are taken care of. Communication is key to ensuring customers understand our process.”
14
MAy 12, 2017 | LadueNews.com
Customers can trust they will be informed every step of the way as the company keeps them apprised of any developments throughout the process. ULTIMA also stays upfront about interactions with insurance companies. This kind of transparency from beginning to end elevates the service experience and makes the company stand apart from others. At the community’s beck and call, ULTIMA has situated itself in the most advantageous spot, with the aim of responding immediately when problems arise. “We have facilities on both sides of the river. We positioned ourselves that way, so we could respond quickly – typically, in 30 to 45 minutes,” Khalil shares. As the temperatures turn up this time of year and the onslaught of rain from spring ensues, ULTIMA encourages the community to take the first step in protecting properties. “Take advantage of our free mold
inspection,” Khalil encourages. “Mold is responsible for the majority of problems we encounter [this time of year]. Our visual inspections allow customers to get ahead as we try to locate the source of the problem, which can save them a lot of money in the long run. We can steer them in the right direction before [the issue] becomes a big problem.” ULTIMA strives to stay ahead of competitors in more ways than one. Researching the top gadgets out there to determine how best to combat serious property damage allows the team to repair and restore with pure confidence, knowing they have located and effectively negated the source of a problem. “We use the latest and greatest technologies [to repair homes]. Our moisture detecting and infrared imaging equipment allow us to pinpoint sources of damage that have occurred or may occur in the future,” Khalil says. By staying in the know with groundbreaking technology and effective training, ULTIMA restores customers’ peace of mind much in the same way it repairs homes. When disaster strikes, people have come to trust in the business to help them rebuild
Our moisture detecting and infrared imaging equipment allow us to pinpoint sources of damage that have occurred or may occur in the future. – ShAwN KhALIL the place that makes them feel safest. Thanks to attention to detail and a dedication to each job, this company is leading the way in restoration. For Khalil, though, he expects to see it achieve even more. “I see ULTIMA becoming a household name – the go-to company for any type of damage done to a home or property.” ULTIMA Disaster Restoration, 11124 S. Towne Square, St. Louis, 314-714-6363 (Missouri), 618-281-3200 (Illinois), 888-999-2610 (toll free), ultimarestoration.com LadueNews.com | MAy 12, 2017
15
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Bommarito
Audi West County
15736 Manchester at Clarkson Rd. • 1-877-756-8753 • audiwestcounty.com 16 May 12, 2017 | LadueNews.com
18
Gatherings & Goodwill
TODAY AND TOMORROW EDUCATIONAL FOUNDATION
20
23
PARAQUAD
METRO THEATER COMPANY
Entrapped PHOTO BY BRYAN SCHRAIER
but Enrapt
LadueNews.com | MAY 12, 2017
17
Today and Tomorrow Educational Foundation
ARCHBISHOP’S GALA
T
Photos and story by Diane Anderson
he eighth annual Archbishop’s Gala, which benefits the Today and Tomorrow Educational Foundation, recently took place at The Ritz-Carlton, St. Louis. The foundation puts scholarship dollars and families together to create the opportunity for St. Louis children in great need to attend the schools of their choice. Founded in 1991 by a group of concerned local corporate and civic leaders, it has grown into the nation’s fourth-largest scholarship foundation. Since its inception, the foundation has raised more than $70 million for tuition assistance in the form of grants and scholarships for children attending private and parochial elementary schools. Serving as keynote speaker at the event was Archbishop Robert J. Carlson. The honored guest speaker was David N. Farr, who received the Sister Mary Ann Eckhoff Award. Emceeing was KMOX radio broadcaster Debbie Monterrey.
Archbishop Robert J. Carlson
Dennis and Mary Gipson, Cathy and Mike Pressimone
18
MAY 12, 2017 | LadueNews.com
Jared and Emily Bryson
Visit LADUENEWS.COM
to see more fabulous photos from this event!
ln
Marilyn and Sam Fox
Russ and Carol Ann Isaak, Tim Reeves
Support of the youth through the mission of the Today and Tomorrow Educational Foundation is so important for today’s youth. We support this very important cause in St. Louis to have the opportunity, like my wife and I, to succeed in life and give back to the community. DAVID N. FARR, CHAIRMAN AND CEO OF EMERSON (PICTURED WITH LELIA FARR)
Joe and Joan Lipic, Shirley Drury, Darryl Ross, Pat Dino, Monsignor Vernon Gardin, Len Dino, Judy Anthon, Jack Pohrer Front: Nancy Werner, Charles Drury, Ellen Ross
John and Susan Gorman, Carrie and Bob Gleason
Ron and Peggy Henderson, Maureen and Brad DePriest
Patti and Vince Mannino
Jim and Karen Day
Barbara Fraser, Laura George
Stephanie Nigh, Tim and Nancy Tegeler, Dr. Fred Pestello
Adela and Norm Pezolt, Monsignor James Callahan, Soonie and Bill Cottle
Mary and Joseph Stieven
Kevin Short, Diane and Steve Brown LadueNews.com | MAY 12, 2017
19
Paraquad
SHINE THE LIGHT AWARDS
P Visit LADUENEWS.COM
to see more fabulous photos from this event!
Charles Stewart, Sarah Sims, Nicole Smith
Lindsey Hoffman, Sarah Faupel, Patsy Heavey
20
MAY 12, 2017 | LadueNews.com
ln
Photos and story by David Anderson
araquad presented the 2017 Shine the Light Awards on April 4 at The RitzCarlton, St. Louis. Attendees enjoyed a special cocktail hour followed by a dinner and awards ceremony. Billed as a “job creation machine for adults with intellectual disabilities,” SammySoap, a specialty store in Kirkwood, was recognized for its hiring practices and commitment to wage equality for people with disabilities. A dedication to creating accessible exhibits for people with disabilities earned the Missouri History Museum an award. This annual event “shines the light” on St. Louis-area businesses, organizations and individuals actively supporting disability rights, promoting equality and inclusion, and making our community more accessible for people with disabilities. Founded in 1970, Paraquad is the leading disability services provider in the St. Louis region. One of the oldest Centers for Independent Living in the country, Paraquad seeks to empower people with disabilities to increase their independence through choice and opportunity; among its key focuses numbers making St. Louis more accessible for all people by advocating, building awareness and delivering comprehensive services.
Margaret Gray, Terry Woodford-Thomas
Beth Jantz, Anna Corbitt, Sam Jantz
Billy Greenwood, Julie Tristan
It is a great honor to recognize this year’s awardees and their contributions. Our mission is to provide the tools and opportunities for people with disabilities to live independently in an integrated community with access to the same opportunities for personal and professional growth as people without disabilities. Our vision is made possible through partners and advocates like the Missouri History Museum, SammySoap and Gov. Nixon. AIMEE WEHMEIER, PRESIDENT AND CEO
Tony LaMartina, Claire Erker, Tracey and Mike Leyva
Geneen Von Kloha, Katie Saldana
Susan Menhard, Tina Vinson
Troy McClelland, Kristy Hess, John Meek
Wilma Saunders Schmitz, Stacey Easterling
Gladys Smith, Tracey Brenner
Melissa Kooman, Adam Majors, Michelle Keenan
Dave and Laura Parish, Terry and Clay MacDonald
Todd Bohnsack, Pearl Gibson, Heather and Steve Rich, Cindy Kamler LadueNews.com | MAY 12, 2017
21
Gateway180
OPEN YOUR HEART FOR THE HOMELESS GALA
Photos and story by Diane Anderson
G
ateway180 recently hosted its eighth annual Open Your Heart for the Homeless Gala, themed “Light Up the Night,” in The Grand Hall at Union Station. Guests “lit up the night” while enjoying fine dining, cocktails and bidding on unique auction items and live art. They also were dazzled by exciting live entertainment. Co-chairing the event were John and Margie Simon. Rene Knott, KSDK-TV sports anchor, served as the gala’s auctioneer, and emceeing the event was Alexandra Corey, co-anchor of KSDK’s Today in St. Louis.
Visit LADUENEWS.COM
to see more fabulous photos from this event!
ln
This gala celebrates and supports individuals who need help in the community. We provide shelter and housing and help families to get employed and lead productive lives. It is my honor to serve as executive director. KATHY CONNORS, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
Marylen Mann, Patrick and Elizabeth White, Melvin Blanchard
22
MAY 12, 2017 | LadueNews.com
Sally Rapp, Francis Slay
Ted and Theresa Ruzicka
Metro Theater Company
TOY FEST
A
Photos and story by Bryan Schraier
t The Pageant in the Delmar Loop, Metro Theater Company recently held Toy Fest, a unique family-friendly gala benefiting St. Louis theater for young audiences. Guests young and old were greeted by staff, actors and volunteers in playful costumes. Children enjoyed several play areas and activities for them, and Kinetic Tapestry and Circus Flora performed. Adults, meanwhile, enjoyed cocktails and game-themed hors d’oeuvres, and some even joined the fun in Etch A Sketch family photos and face-painting. The children also led a toy parade into the pit area, where young and old enjoyed the music of Vote for Pedro. Also at hand was a dancing dinosaur! Alex Murphy, Karalyne Nowak
Visit LADUENEWS.COM
to see more fabulous photos from this event!
ln
What this group does is bring positive creative exploration of world issues in a kid-friendly way, and they have done so much for theater for children in this community. And now they’re starting to get more involved in theater for younger children, which is a whole other opening to sensory awareness for our little ones. So it’s just an engaging, wonderful organization. DIANE DAVENPORT, COMMITTEE MEMBER
Nancy Garvey, Debbie Van Ryn, Suzie Nall, Traci O’Bryan
Susan and Keith Kronemer
Shonda Young, Shayana Jones, Saliyah Young, Doncella Carnes
LadueNews.com | MAY 12, 2017
23
Upcoming
GATHERINGS By Kaitlynn Martin
Sat., May 13
Opera Theatre of Saint Louis hosts its 2017 SPRING GALA at The Ritz-Carlton, St. Louis. 6:30 p.m. (opera-stl.org)
Tue., May 16
The 2017 WOMEN OF ACHIEVEMENT LUNCHEON will take place at The Ritz-Carlton, St. Louis. 11:15 a.m. (woastl.org)
Wed., May 17
Shakespeare Festival St. Louis presents its MOONBEAM BALL at Forest Park’s World’s Fair Pavilion to benefit Shakespeare in the schools, Shakespeare In the Streets and Shakespeare in the park. 6 p.m. (sfstl.com)
ACCESS Academies Ending the Cycle of Poverty through Education
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Most Holy Trinity School & Academy
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St. Louis the King School at the Cathedral
Est. 2006 • 1435 Mallinckrodt St. Louis, Mo. 63107
Est. 2004 • 906 Eichelberger St.Louis, Mo. 63111
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Join us at the
9th Annual ACCESS Academies Scholarship Dinner Wednesday JUNE 7, 6-9 pm • FOUR SEASONS HOTEL ST. LOUIS For ticket information visit www.accessacademies.org 24 May 12, 2017 | LadueNews.com
26 THE TRIO: LUNAR LANDING
Abode 27
28
DESIGN ELEMENTS
FEATURE: PINNED IN THE LOU
Colorful
PHOTO BY BLK PHOTOGRAPHY
Craftiness
LadueNews.com | MAY 12, 2017
25
In remembrance of Dan Esser, September 10, 1959 - April 17, 2017.
Dan was a wonderful person; thoughtful, principled and kind. He was a real pleasure to work with, and he will be sorely missed by his entire Acropolis family. Our thoughts and prayers are with his wife Linda, his daughter Rachel, and his family and friends.
THE TRIO
Landing
Lunar
By Nancy Robinson
ll this talk about civilian travel to the moon has us thinking about A furnishings for a lunar outpost. Here are a few out-of-this-world pieces that just might be appropriate.
Andrew Martin’s Neon Space Girl is a vintagestyle print on canvas highlighted with pink or two other neon colors. (resourcedecor.com)
Act now to receive a competitive rate on our Jumbo Home Loans from $424,100 to $2,500,000! “Val made me feel like her top priority. She was straight forward and always available when I needed her. She is by far the most knowledgeable, professional and honest mortgage lender I have ever worked with.” — Al MacInnis, Former Professional Hockey Player
This spunky Lunar chandelier by designer Tracey Boyd is made from bright yellow resin and strings of clear-glass crystals. It’s available in two sizes with a yellow or white shade option. (resourcedecor.com)
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The colorful and quirky limitededition Awaiting M bench designed by Giorgia Zanellato
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and Coralla Maiuri is made of brass and topped with a long plush cushion. Both the seat and back cushion are covered in an arty printed silk
26 May 12, 2017 | LadueNews.com
velvet. (artemest.com)
Design
ELEMENTS
KITCHEN CONVERSION By Robyn Dexter
W
hen C&M Interiors first came on this project, the Chesterfield clients weren’t sure exactly what they wanted. Channing Glover and Maria Lesko, co-owners of the design firm, helped the young family with a few renditions of a design plan, in which they decided to gut their kitchen, master bath and kids’ bathroom. With two kids and a third on the way, the clients wanted a kitchen that was bright and airy. They had purchased the house a few years ago and wanted to update the space and make it more functional. “Some of the appliances weren’t functional in the way they were placed,” Lesko says. “You want to be able to move from the sink to the oven to the fridge, and that triangle [of movement] wasn’t there before.” The duo’s design included taking out upper cabinets and switching to open shelving, allowing the space to feel larger. They also made the island bigger since the clients wanted a space for two stools under the overhang. “[The clients] were very open to any of our suggestions,” Glover says. “We were able to come up with creative ways to make it feel more open, and I think we were successful.”
ln
PHOTO BY COREY HOGREFE
C&M Interiors, 314-920-3020, candmstudio.com
LadueNews.com | MAY 12, 2017
27
Craft
Cr Crazy
PhOtO by brittany Kastner
ashley Obradovits and Carolyn Connolly
By Brittany Nay | Photos by Jon Saucier
St. Louis-based Pinned in the Lou hosts creative craft and wine workshops.
D
o-it-yourself doormats, monogrammed wreaths, handpainted wine glasses and bath bombs are just some of the crafts you’ll find posted on Pinterest and detailed in home and style blogs across the web these days. In the same vein, local company Pinned in the Lou is giving St. Louisans a chance to create their own unique, upscale crafts, all while enjoying wine and time with friends. Pinned in the Lou was founded last fall by Ashley Obradovits and Carolyn Connolly, who met while working together in the local fashion industry for Nordstrom. The creative co-workers bonded over their shared love of crafting and wanted to offer an alternative to the typical happy hour. “At our workshops, you spend less money and go home with a fun craft that you are proud to display in your home,” Obradovits says. The workshops, which are held for the public at Roar in Webster Groves or hosted as private parties
in crafters’ homes, offer socializing over wine and snacks while providing materials and guides to make a high-end home good or stylish accessory, such as decorative coasters; flower pots; and seasonal centerpieces, wreaths and doormats. “We keep the crafts trendy and current so you can put them in your home that season,” Connolly says. Obradovits and Connolly are self-described “creative hoarders,” obsessed with hosting happy hours and creating crafts found on social media sites and do-it-yourself blogs. The pair call the workshops the perfect marriage of these two hobbies, explaining that they take the idea-hunting, craft-shopping and mess out of crafters’ hands by providing a current craft theme, materials, wine and snacks in a venue outside their home. “We find out that most people put things on their Pinterest board but never get around to making them because it takes all day to go buy supplies, and it’s also more expensive if you get everything in one place,” Obradovits says. It’s a task they happily do for the crafters, Connolly adds. “We
love to shop at stores like Hobby Lobby and Jo-Ann – they know our names; we’re the crazy craft ladies,” she says, noting that the typical class fee of $45 per person covers the full cost of the craft, wine, snacks and venue. To design each workshop, Obradovits and Connolly research sites such as Pinterest and Instagram to identify a high-end craft, similar to an upscale item that can be found on a trendy Etsy webpage or at a luxury home goods store like Pottery Barn, and make it themselves. “We do a trial run because we need to have something everyone can do in a short period of time,” Obradovits explains, adding that the pair also is open to crafters’ ideas for themes. “For a bridal shower, they might say they want to create items that will be at their wedding, like centerpieces or wine glasses,” Connolly says. The crafty, after-hours social events are a huge hit for girls’ nights out, corporate groups, birthday parties, and bridal and baby showers, Obradovits says. The attendees get to enjoy spending quality
LadueNews.com | may 12, 2017
29
Pinned in the Lou
Workshops Mother’s Day DIy PaInteD Planters WorkshoP When: Where:
6 to 9 p.m., Thursday, May 18 Roar, 8150 Big Bend Blvd., Webster Groves Details: Paint, marble and decoupage three planters; open to the public – perfect to come with Mom as a Mother’s Day gift take Me out to the BallgaMe! When: Where:
11 a.m. to 1 p.m., June 11 Roar, 8150 Big Bend Blvd., Webster Groves Details: Craft a baseball-inspired doormat; open to the public MonograM Door Wreath When: Where:
6 to 8 p.m., July 20 Roar, 8150 Big Bend Blvd., Webster Groves Details: Create a personalized door wreath; open to the public
time with family, making new friends and becoming more creative, Connolly adds. “We have a lot of repeat crafters who bring a different person every time, [and] then that person will bring a new person the next time – so we’re spreading the craft juice across St. Louis,” she says. “And people tell us they’re doing more creative things in their everyday lives, from moving around their furniture to getting more craft ideas from Pinterest. A lot of people don’t realize they’re so creative.” Workshops at Roar can accommodate about 30
30
may 12, 2017 | LadueNews.com
guests, while in-home parties have no minimum requirement. Pinned in the Lou has hosted a range of groups, from a bachelorette party of 12 up to a 30-person corporate event. Upcoming workshops, which are all open to the public and slated to be held at Roar, include coastermaking with the Professional Women’s Alliance on May 18; a make-your-own monogrammed door wreath event on June 11; and a create-your-own baseballinspired doormat session on July 20. Pinned in the Lou also has summer workshops tentatively planned
for Aug. 3 and Sept. 7, with craft projects for those dates still in the works. Obradovits and Connolly love to see attendees connecting and learning at the workshops. “When people are crafting things, they’re so happy to be there, and they’re connecting,” Obradovits says, with Connolly adding: “We want people to learn something, and once they know how to do that craft, they can create it again at home.” Pinned in the Lou, 314-494-2122, pinnedinthelou.com
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Summer is around the corner... and the summer sun comes with it. We have options to help reverse the effects of sun exposure and aging, and now is the perfect time to treat and prevent. Learn which options are best for you. (314) 996-3880 facialplasticsurgery.wustl.edu
Washington University Facial Plastic Surgery Center on the Barnes-Jewish West County Hospital campus
LadueNews.com | May 12, 2017 31
home
PRODUCTS & SERVICES By Amanda Dahl
AESH DESIGN
ALEX WALDBART FLORIST
CHESTERFIELD VALLEY NURSERY
This modern planter box by Aesh Design features cedar
Stir imaginations with the simplest of touches. Fresh
Chesterfield Valley Nursery takes irrigation systems
side panels set inside a durable aluminum frame. The
flower arrangements bring the beauty of the season
to a whole new level, allowing for ease of use, water
powder-coated metal finish, balanced with the wood
into your home. With the expert guidance of Alex
conservation and optimal control. Call to learn more
texture, complements any landscape.
Waldbart, your place will be transformed.
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1328 Litzsinger Woods Lane By Amanda Dahl
esiding among eight houses of unique planned development in Ladue, this elegant brick estate bids you bonjour, with cut-up windows and imposing beauty. Wake up in the master suite, and allow the light to pour in through the wall of windows, which also allow you access to the deck through French doors, where you can listen to the birds sing. Prepping for the day is painless for you and your significant other, with an expansive master bath that offers a jet tub and separate shower, plus double vanities, and a walk-in closet. Connect with the family while preparing breakfast in the open kitchen area, with marble countertops and a bay window. Entertain inside the spacious formal dining room, which adjoins the great room. Boasting a cathedral ceiling, fireplace and built-ins, it’s the ideal place to relax and converse. Venture downstairs and discover the finished lower level, complete with a bar, family room, exercise area and more.
THIS 4-BEDROOM, 4 FULL-BATHROOM AND 1 HALF-BATHROOM HOME IN LADUE IS LISTED FOR $1.36 MILLION. MARCY BYRNE 9889 Clayton Road, 314-983-2227 (direct), 314-750-5800 (office), janetmcafee.com/marcybyrne From its humble beginning in the founder’s basement, the Janet McAfee Real Estate network is now four decades strong and a recognized local leader. Today, the firm enjoys a corporate office in Ladue, more than 100 active professional agents and a significant presence in the St. Louis central corridor. Through exclusive relocation and marketing affiliations, the syndication of listings to leading real estate portals and distinguished luxury partners, Janet McAfee Real Estate offers global reach.
34
MAY 12, 2017 | LadueNews.com | A LADUE NEWS SPECIAL PROMOTION
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36 May 12, 2017 | LadueNews.com
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38 GROOMING & GLAMOUR
Style 39
40
MAKE A STATEMENT
FEATURE: 2017 LN LIL’ ONE
Lil’
PHOTO BY SABRINE RHODES
Wonder! LadueNews.com | MAY 12, 2017
37
GROOMING & GLAMOUR
Beauty Queen of the Workout Scene
By Amanda Dahl
T
he digital age has transformed the way we operate in our daily activities, making it easier and more desirable to involve people in our routines. Going to the gym just isn’t the same when you can post how you stay fit and keep motivated. Before breaking into a sweat on your live feed at that next cardio class, stay snap-ready by hitting the gym with these beauty products in your bag: 1. Prep skin with a balancing solution that packs a one-two punch. Mally Beauty’s Perfect Prep Neutralizing Primer evens pigmentation while correcting redness and smoothing out fine lines. Available for $30 at QVC (qvc.com) and ULTA Beauty (ulta.com).
1
2. Stay polished and pretty throughout boot camp with Alima Pure Satin Matte Foundation. The award-winning mineral foundation is designed to feel weightless and last all day, with a shade to match every skin tone. Plus, the matte finish will keep perspiration at bay. Available for $28 at Alima Pure (alimapure.com). 3. Replenish skin with e.l.f. Cosmetics’ Prep & Hydrate Balm. This water-based primer soothes your face, as well as dry hands and elbows, with an easy one-step application. Available for $8 at e.l.f. Cosmetics (elfcosmetics.com).
5. Keep your pucker moisturized with a tinted balm, such as Truly Kissable Lip Crayon – Sheer by Honest Beauty. Both Chestnut Kiss and Coral Kiss add just enough dimension without overdoing your look. Available for $18 at Honest Beauty (honestbeauty.com). 6. After time spent at the gym, nullify any odor with this quick pick-me-up. Slide a Derek Lam 10 Crosby Parfum Stick (seen here in Drunk on Youth, with notes of honeysuckle and crisp apple) across your wrists and collarbone; then, use your fingertips to apply to the top of your ear lobes. These pulse points ensure the scent doesn’t dry out. Available for $38 at Nordstrom (nordstrom.com).
38 May 12, 2017 | LadueNews.com
6
4
PHOTO BY SARAH CONROY
4. Keep your lashes looking as strong as you feel with Swimmables Waterproof Mascara Top Coat from Cargo Cosmetics. Swipe this sweat-proof and waterproof formula over regular mascara, and voila! Instant impact. Want to doll up your peepers even more? Swimmables Longwear Eye Shadow Stick supplies a subtle shimmer able to withstand your next yoga class. Mascara available for $22 and Longwear Eye Shadow Stick for $20 at Cargo Cosmetics (cargocosmetics.com) and select Kohl’s (kohls.com).
5
2
3
MAKE A STATEMENT
Gifts for your Lilly-Loving Moms Complimentary wrapping
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9644 Clayton Rd. - 993-3599 14380 S. Outer 40 Rd. - 576-4141 LadueNews.com | MAY 12, 2017
39
2017 LN Lil’ One
Devin!
Meet this year’s winner,
By Denise Kruse | Photos by Sabrine Rhodes
S
oon to be 3 years old, Devin Blattner is this year’s Ladue News Lil’ One winner! Every year, we encourage proud parents to enter photos of their little cuties, ages 2 to 4, and then readers vote in our online poll. After that, the winner is determined at random among the top five vote-getters. This year’s winner, Devin, is a fiery redhead who loves to play outside any chance she gets – especially if bubbles are involved. She’s a huge St. Louis Blues fan and has gone to five games so far this year with her mom and dad, and she hopes to be able to make it to a playoff game this season. She’s even scored a puck thrown to her by goalie Carter Hutton after pregame warmups, which she plays with at home with her Blues hockey sticks. Devin is an affectionate kiddo – abundant in cuddles, hugs and kisses – and loves to tell her family she loves them. She’s a happy girl with a heart of gold who also loves sharing any chance she gets – peppered with the occasional “threenager” tantrum, her mom, Denise, tells us. She enjoys outings to The Magic House, St. Louis Children’s Museum and playgrounds on her days with Grandma and Papa; feeding Fishy, her pet fish; and sharing a Shakeology shake with Mommy. Her favorite food is mac ’n’ cheese. She loves the movies Moana and Trolls, often rocking out to both soundtracks with singalongs and dance parties. Devin will turn 3 at the end of this month and is excited about helping Mommy make her Elena of Avalor cake for her party.
40
May 12, 2017 | LadueNews.com
Yacht Rock Florence Eiseman dress, $74, The Woman’s Exchange (woexstl.org) Wee Ones monogram bow, $8, The Woman’s Exchange Naturino sandals, $70, Laurie’s Shoes (lauriesshoes.com)
LadueNews.com | May 12, 2017
41
Cool and Casual Pink Chicken tank, $36, City Sprouts (citysprouts.com) Pink Chicken leggings, $38, City Sprouts OoahOoah camera cross-body purse, $39, City Sprouts Naturino sandals, $70, Laurie’s Shoes (lauriesshoes.com)
42
may 12, 2017 | LadueNews.com
LadueNews.com | may 12, 2017
43
Party ChiC Toobydoo dress, $62, Dandelions (facebook.com/dandelions9757) Wee Ones bow, $8, The Woman’s Exchange (woexstl.org)
Mini Mod Anthem of the Ants dress, $72, City Sprouts (citysprouts.com) Wee Ones bow, $8, The Woman’s Exchange (woexstl.org) Naturino sandals, $70, Laurie’s Shoes (lauriesshoes.com)
LN Wishes to Thank: The Blattner Family Forest Park, forestparkforever.org Shot on location at the Emerson Grand Basin in Forest Park.
LadueNews.com | maY 12, 2017
45
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T he Daily
48 HEALTHY APPETITE
49
51
HAPPILY EVER AFTER
FEATURE: 2017 WOMEN OF ACHIEVEMENT
PHOTO BY SARAH CONROY
Cat’s-Eye
Fineness
LadueNews.com | MAY 12, 2017
47
HEALTHY APPETITE
Crispy Shoestring Fries With Lemon-Fennel Salt – and Bubbles
A
Story, recipe and photography by Sherrie Castellano
handful of foods are wonderful on their own, but become exceptional when paired with a liquid counterpart – tacos and margaritas, for example, or steak and red wine. You see where I’m going with this. For me, fries and bubbles top the list of such pairings. Sure, both can be – and often are – consumed alone, but when consumed together, they provide much greater comfort. There’s something special about pairing crispy, crunchy, salty savoriness with effervescence; fries and bubbles fuel a primal desire to consume fat and salt while embracing just the right amount of sophistication. I also find this pairing makes me feel less guilty about eating so many fries. Something about this pair makes everything balance. Of course, this notion isn’t based on science or anything, but I urge you to try the pairing. It’s at once basic and celebratory – familiar and fancy.
ln
Sherrie Castellano is a health coach, photographer and private chef based in St. Louis. She writes and photographs the seasonally inspired vegetarian and gluten-free blog With Food + Love. She has contributed work to Driftless Magazine, Vegetarian Times, Go Gluten-Free Magazine, Food52 and Urban Outfitters, among others. You can find her hanging with her aviationenthusiast husband, sipping Earl Grey tea, green juice and/or bourbon.
CRISPY SHOESTRING FRIES WITH LEMON-FENNEL SALT – AND BUBBLES Serves | 2 |
Takes: 30 minutes
Ingredients:
| Preparation | Preheat oven to 425 degrees, and line two baking sheets with parchment paper. Peel potatoes, then slice into shoestrings using mandolin.
2 russet potatoes
¼ cup fennel fronds, divided
2 Tbsp olive oil
2 glasses bubbling rosé,
2 Tbsp coarse sea salt
Champagne or prosecco
zest from 1 lemon
Toss shoestrings in olive oil, and spread evenly on baking sheets. Meanwhile, in a mortar and pestle, grind salt, lemon zest and half of fennel fronds. Bake for 20 minutes or until crispy and golden-brown, flipping halfway through. | To Serve | Sprinkle with lemon-fennel salt and remaining fennel fronds, and enjoy hot, right out of oven, with favorite bubbles.
laduenews.com/ realestate
More of what’s in print… Search area homes. Find more Distinctive Properties. Answer the question...“What did it sell for?” See what’s new on the market.
48 May 12, 2017 | LadueNews.com
online.
Happily Ever After
Sammy,Iris
AND THE EVANS FAMILY
By Robyn Dexter
ONCE UPON A TIME, A LITTER OF
five kittens suffering from severe viral eye infections was dropped off at Open Door Animal Sanctuary. Since viral infections can’t be cured, all but one of the kittens lost at least one eye. Iris, though, lost both of her eyes; her brother Sammy was the only one to retain full sight. Open Door Animal Sanctuary had a post on its Facebook page about the kittens, and they caught the attention of Gina Evans, who regularly peruses the facility’s adoptable animals. “I’ve always known about [Open Door],” she says. “They do great work, and when we were looking to adopt our puppy last summer, that’s where we went.” When Evans saw Iris on the page, she knew she wanted to bring the blind kitty home. She found out Iris was in a foster home with Sammy, who was “her seeing-eye buddy,” and knew her family needed to adopt them both. Gina’s husband, Frank, says they were initially a bit worried about Iris navigating the stairs in their twostory home. “Their main spot where they stay is upstairs, but Sammy manages to wiggle his way downstairs for most of the day,” Frank says. The stairs haven’t stopped Iris, though. Gina says the kitten will sit at the top of the stairs and listen to her surroundings. She navigates with ease, climbs couches and gets on top of the sink. “It’s really pretty incredible,” Gina says. “She sees beautifully without her sight.” The brother and sister are a tightknit pair and often get into trouble together. Gina says Iris is prone to toe-biting – her way of getting attention. The kitten has to be shut in another room while the litter box is being cleaned because she loves to play and will grab at the scooper. “Sometimes you can hear her up there flailing around [in the litter box],” Frank says. Sammy, on the other hand, loves hugs and “will ask
for them,” Gina says with a laugh. “If you don’t pet him, he’ll paw at you until you do.” The Evans family has only had the kittens for a few months and said they were only 2 months old when they adopted them from Open Door. The Evans’ two daughters, Gwen and Grace, love playing with the kittens, and Frank calls the girls “a big help” in taking care of the boisterous kittens. “I just love having animals in the house,” Gina says. “They make it feel like home.”
ln
For your own fairy-tail ending…
PROUDLY SPONSORED BY CAROL HOUSE FURNITURE With their belief that bigger things can come out of selling furniture, Carol House and the Dubmans proudly donate a portion of each sale to local charities. One of the organizations the company supports is its very own Carol House QUICK FIX Pet Clinic, which spays and neuters pets for low-income families. For more information, call 314-771-PETS or visit CarolHousePetClinic.org.
Open Door Animal Sanctuary 6065 Duda Road P.O. Box 870 House Springs, MO 63051 636-671-3643, odas.org
On the go? O
Take Ladue News with you! Download our LN iPad app. Available in the Apple App Store.
LadueNews.com | May 12, 2017 49
ACROSS
35. Feminine name 36. Submission 1. Mark for removal 37. End-of-week exclamation 5. Cummerbund 38. Prop 9. A flower or its color 39. Pilfered 14. Meanie 40. Fishgig 18. Profess 41. Lab compound 19. Electrum is one 43. Puget Sound city 20. Protozoan: Var. 44. Pointless 21. Snow, split and sweet 45. Glimpses 22. PC appendages 51. Throw with force 23. If looks — kill 52. Pie chart 24. Leaves 54. Polish 25. “— She Lovely” 55. More healthy, in a way 26. Sambar cousin 56. Land area 27. Start of a quip by 58. Green gemstone Ray Romano: 5 wds. 59. Self-improvement 30. Fencing items 60. Eyeball part 32. Too 62. Toodle-oo! 33. Ha’penny 63. Fits 34. Rocky debris 64. Intrigue 36. Lab gadget 65. Liturgical vestment 38. Sit astride 66. Fermented beverage 42. Part 2 of quip: 2 wds. 67. Beat 46. Gangster 68. Braid 47. Holds 69. Things apportioned 48. Surmounting 70. Ski resort town 1. — Edna Everage 49. Those voting no 71. Lawn tool 2. Villainous 50. Backhoe bucket 3. Facility for Olympians: 2 wds. 73. Jefferson’s veep 52. Chap 4. Sheep 74. Roman a — 53. Pi-Sigma link 77. Tough but pliable 54. Kind of woodworking joint 5. Blackthorn drupes 6. An astringent 78. Motivated 55. Set off 7. Han — of “Star Wars” 79. In — 56. Very short time 8. Fireplugs 81. Contemptuous cry 57. Concert hall offering 9. — lazuli 83. Stew pot 59. Levitate 10. Insect stage 84. Son of Ivan the Great 60. Caldera 11. Toy-bricks company 86. Hikes 61. “The — of the Ancient 12. Further 90. Grows quieter Mariner” 13. Plantation’s yield: 2 wds. 91. Unreactive 62. Belief 14. Narcotic 92. — a deux 63. Dispenser contents 15. Bless you! 93. Eye 64. Tentlike shelter 16. Sounded 94. Muscovy glass 67. Bistros 17. OT book: Abbr. 95. River in Belgium 68. Acquisition 19. Pine 96. Tahari or Wiesel 72. Entertain 27. Juvenile 97. Costa — 73. Ulan — 28. Valley of —, where 98. Church calendar 74. Ron Howard’s brother David fought Goliath 99. Hats 75. Abbr. in bus. 29. Path 101. Harvest 76. Piquancy 31. Look 102. Fish often pickled 77. Of a heavenly body 34. Supports for rigging 106. Parrot 78. Kind of glass 79. Toil 80. Behave 81. I am present! 82. Part 3 of quip: 5 wds. 85. Sailboat stabilizer 87. Upper floor 88. Complete 89. Dig with the snout 90. — noir 92. Meeting 94. End of the quip: 4 wds. 100. Word in a palindrome 103. Fertility goddess 104. Strike out 105. Vibrato 106. Genu 107. Welshman, e.g. 108. Utensil for cooks 109. Bauer or Izzard 110. Footnote abbr. 111. Boats 112. A leavening 113. Doctor’s order 114. Reptiles
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50 May 12, 2017 | LadueNews.com
Meet the
Women
2017
of
Achievement N By Connie Mitchell | Photos by Trotter Photography
Each yEar, 10 womEn arE rEcognizEd for thEir voluntEEr Efforts in thE st. louis-arEa community.
ext week, 10 inspiring women will be honored as the 2017 Women of Achievement. The awards “recognize and honor the achievement of women who, through their volunteer efforts, have demonstrated their dedication and commitment to improving the quality of life in the St. Louis community,” according to the organization’s website. The women will be recognized at an awards luncheon at 11:45 a.m., Tuesday, May 16, at The RitzCarlton, St. Louis. Details and tickets are available at woastl.org.
When Claire Applewhite volunteered in 2009 to judge “The Big Write,” a statewide creative writing competition for fourth- through sixth-grade students, she quickly became disillusioned. “So often, an entry with the strongest ‘voice’ was disqualified in the first round due to improper formatting, grammar or punctuation,” she says. Her frustration became the impetus for the program called Voices of Excellence. With a small budget and several enthusiastic volunteers, Applewhite launched Voices of Excellence in 2011. The two-part program improves oral and written literacy by teaching students how to write a short essay and develop public speaking skills. The program culminates in a student competition in which three winners are named at each grade level from Grades 6 through 8 and present their winning
Claire applewhite: Educational Enrichment
“We always say, ‘Children are our future,’ and, ‘Children are so resilient’ – those statements are true but have to be more than just phrases or sayings,” Christine Buck says. “Children have a better future when we help nurture them, and kids are resilient because they receive guidance and love.” Many local children also are more resilient because of the causes championed by Buck, who’s been volunteering to improve children’s lives since the mid-1980s. Buck may be best known in St. Louis for her almost fourdecade career as a news anchor, reporter and talk show host for KPLR-TV. Her work as host for the televised Children’s Miracle Network ignited her passion for helping children and led to a variety of volunteer roles over the years.
essays at an award ceremony at the Missouri Athletic Club. “One of the most cathartic experiences, on a personal level, was when I greeted the father of a first-place winner at the awards luncheon,” Applewhite says. “His eyes glowed with pride while he explained to me that he told his boss that he would need an extra hour for lunch because his son was receiving a trophy. It was kind of an epiphany for me, because in that moment, I realized the far-reaching implications of ‘winning.’ Once a person has known success, [he or she] will never again be content with giving anything less than their best.” Applewhite is a published author who continues her involvement in a number of organizations, including the Missouri Writers’ Guild, Mystery Writers of America, St. Louis Metropolitan Press Club and St. Louis Medical Society Alliance. She has received numerous awards and honors for her volunteer efforts.
“I did a story on Annie’s Hope (a local bereavement center for kids) and then volunteered to help with their fundraiser,” Buck recalls. “One little boy couldn’t let go of the quilt sewn together with photos and other memories of his dad. He tried to tell me how it helped him but realized, in that moment, how much he was suffering. He was getting in touch with his feelings, which was the goal. That little boy stays with me.” Buck helped develop the Girls’ Club at Mathews-Dickey Boys’ and Girls’ Club and has volunteered with Kids in the Middle, Lift for Life Academy and The BackStoppers. Her favorite current volunteer job is babysitting her 1-year-old granddaughter.
Christine BuCk: Youth Dedication
LadueNews.com | may 12, 2017
51
At her day job, Adrienne Davis is impressive. Serving as William M. Van Cleve Professor of Law and vice provost at Washington University in St. Louis, Davis is “renowned for her scholarship and teaching on gender and race relations; theories of justice and reparations; feminist legal theory; and law and popular culture,” according to the university’s website. Yet Davis was chosen as a 2017 Woman of Achievement for her volunteer work not in law, but in the arts. Davis mentors young artists and serves on a number of arts-related boards, including those of Laumeier Sculpture Park, Opera Theatre of Saint Louis and december, a literary magazine. For three years, she also acted as president of the Saint Louis Art Museum
board of trustees and is currently secretary to the board of commissioners. By convening and moderating panels and discussions on diversity and the arts and through mentoring young people of color about collecting, curating and administering arts institutions, Davis is helping develop a pipeline of diverse, powerful future artists and arts supporters. A founding member of the relaunched St. Louis Visionary Awards for Women in the Arts, Davis is also deeply committed to seeing women develop leadership roles within arts administration and beyond.
Adrienne dAvis: Arts Advocacy
Elected officials in Jefferson City and Washington know Marlene Hammerman. In her 35 years of volunteering for the National Council of Jewish Women-St. Louis Section, Hammerman has engaged legislators on issues relating to reproductive justice, domestic violence, gun violence protection, immigration reform, voting rights, trafficking, LGBT rights, health care and separation of religion and state. “We can’t take our rights for granted, we must never become complacent, and being involved in the political process is vital to keeping the rights we now enjoy,” Hammerman says. However, she does more than just advocate: She immerses herself in the issues she cares about, developing and assisting with issuesspecific programs. For example, three years ago, Hammerman established Project Renewal through the NCJW, which pairs volunteers with women who are recovering from domestic violence,
homelessness and addiction. The program teaches skills including financial literacy, résumé building, interviewing skills, meal planning on a budget and dressing for a job interview. Every participant also receives a voucher to shop for professional clothing at the NCJW’s Resale Shop. Hammerman is also ensuring that her advocacy efforts will continue by training new volunteers. “It can be quite intimidating to speak up to state and national legislators,” she says. “I hope to take some of the ‘scary’ out of it. I tell new advocates to speak from the heart, know their issues, know when to agree to disagree and to never burn bridges. I love to train advocates as we take the bus to Jefferson City and then listen to them on the way home after they’ve had their first experience of speaking up. Their feelings of empowerment are amazing!”
MArlene HAMMerMAn: Social Justice
It all started in 2001 with a little boy in an oversize, worn leather jacket. Rosemary Hanley, helping a friend with a community-service coat drive, was delivering 170 coats to Eliot School, a nowshuttered elementary school in the Hyde Park neighborhood of St. Louis with, at the time, 250 students. Hanley recalls standing in freezing weather, noticing the blight around the school and waiting to be allowed in when a small boy appeared in the tattered coat. He told her his father had given him his coat to wear that day. As Hanley helped distribute coats inside the school, the little boy came through the line. “I gave him a navy blue coat, zipped him up and put up the hood,” Hanley says. “He just smiled and said how happy his dad would be that he’d be warm now. I couldn’t get that out of my mind.”
roseMAry HAnley: Youth Services
Margaret Hopkins says that picking her favorite volunteer project over the years is “as difficult as asking me which one of my children is my favorite.” Since 2000, Hopkins has been dedicated to making Alton, Illinois, a better place to live, work and visit through numerous programs that she says “are driven by people, projects and ideas that inspire me, ones that stir my imagination, maybe something that will possibly make an impact or imprint – and hopefully the result will provide a lasting investment for that project and the community.” However, when pressed, Hopkins highlights her 11 years of participation in the national Wreaths Across America organization at the Alton National Cemetery. “I’m filled with joy and pride at the sight of young children and area veterans working together as they lay wreaths on the 560 headstones,” she says. “Two years ago, I was brought to tears as I witnessed my 90-year-old father participating and had the
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The teacher who had requested the coats for Eliot School told Hanley that her students had other needs, and Hanley began gathering items and delivering them on a regular basis. When the teacher moved to another city school and continued to request items for her students, Hanley’s volunteer service expanded as she enlisted friends to help. In 2006, Hanley’s efforts were formalized as The Little Bit Foundation, a nonprofit that coordinates delivery of goods and services for 27 St. Louis-area schools serving more than 7,000 students. “We’re part of the school community, making sure the children’s needs are met,” she says. Food, hygiene items, clothing, health care and behavioral health services are all provided. “We connect the dots with the child in the center,” Hanley notes. “The children of St. Louis have amazing potential, and they deserve the opportunity to reach that potential.”
honor of introducing him with all the other WWII veterans in attendance.” Another longtime project was the restoration of the Lucy Haskell Playhouse, a 131-year-old Queen Anne-style children’s playhouse in Alton, which is on the National Register of Historic Places. “In 2014, during a fundraiser to benefit the exterior restoration of the playhouse, KSDK-TV covered our efforts,” Hopkins says. “As a result, we were able to make connections with a descendent of the Haskell family [whom] we were unaware of.” Hopkins also helped initiate Vintage Voices, a living history tour that benefits the Alton Little Theater; organized a team of block captains to light 1,500 Christmas Eve luminaries along historic Henry Street; and has served on several boards, including the Alton YWCA and the Lynne F. Solon Foundation.
MArgAret HopKins: Community Betterment
Recently, on a bright January afternoon, Kathy Lambert beamed at the audience as she recounted her faith and life journey. Describing how she couldn’t ignore the cycle of poverty in her own city, leading her to establish Dress for Success Midwest in 1998, she spoke of how the growing awareness of clothing for job interviews was only the beginning, and much more was needed to address the gap between an entry-level job and a family living wage. In 1999, Kathy’s husband, Brad, joined her to create Wheels for Success, providing used, safe and reliable cars to women needing daily transportation. Two years later, the couple merged their enterprises under a single banner: Connections to Success. The organization provides “a comprehensive network of services and support to help people living in poverty become economically selfsufficient,” according to its website, breaking the cycle of poverty for the next generation.
KAtHy lAMbert: Social Enterprise When you know Elizabeth Mannen, you can’t imagine anything would slow her down. From pursuing three college degrees at two colleges simultaneously, to spending the first five years of her career in Japan, to growing a busy financial advisory practice, Mannen Financial Group of Wells Fargo Advisors, while raising twins and pursuing her passion for outdoor activities, she seems unstoppable. When you learn that Mannen is a five-time cancer survivor, she seems even fiercer. At age 26, she was diagnosed with stage IV ovarian cancer, and the prognosis was grim. But Mannen fought, enduring two years of treatment. The cancer returned at age 35 and again at 38. At 42, she learned she had breast cancer, which recurred at age 48. Now, at 52, Mannen uses the clarity she found through her own health struggles to help others.
Kathy paused as she scanned the crowd. Several Connections to Success clients were in attendance, participating in the daylong goalsetting workshop, and Kathy called one to the front of the room. As the woman stood beside her, Kathy told the audience of the struggles faced by this single mother who was striving to make a better life for her children. And then Kathy asked, “But you still don’t have a car, do you?” The women shook her head and looked down. At that moment Brad entered the room, keys jingling in his hand. As the audience cheered, the Lamberts presented the keys to the woman, who would drive away that day in a car that would make it easier for her to get to work on time and be there for her children. Through Connections to Success, which provides a life transformation coach and lifelong engagement through volunteer mentors to each participant, along with training in workforce readiness skills, job placement and retention, health and wellness, financial education, literacy, educational programs, occupational skills and transitional employment, Kathy continues to change lives.
“First survive, then thrive,” is the message she shares with newly diagnosed cancer patients. “First, just get through the treatment. Later comes the learning – the gifts. Cancer clearly defines what’s important to you and allows you to feel joy differently. The sky is bluer, the birds chirp louder and your twins’ laughs make your smile wider.” Mannen is a sought-after speaker on both financial literacy and women’s health at conferences and other events. Through her work with Wells Fargo, she has provided leadership for United Way campaigns, partnerships with Saint Louis Public Schools and the Susan G. Komen Race for the Cure. She also serves on the board for Lydia’s House, the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra and St. Louis Ovarian Cancer Awareness, and is the managing trustee for the Berges Family Foundation.
elizAbetH MAnnen: Volunteer Leadership
Colleen Starkloff never expected to find love when she began working as a physical therapist at the St. Joseph Hill Infirmary in Eureka. But on her second day there, Max Starkloff “decided to check out the new PT. He wheeled into my office, and it was love at first sight,” she says. And so on Oct. 2, 1973, the romance began. Yet Max and Colleen’s partnership went far beyond their personal commitment. The couple quickly began working together on Max’s concept of independent living for people with disabilities through their first venture, Paraquad. At the same time, Colleen became a vocal public advocate for accessibility, helping to shape national policy around access to transportation and housing. The couple married in 1975, and in 1977, Colleen quit her
job to dedicate her time to Paraquad and local activism. “We were forming new attitudes and ideas around life for people with disabilities – and we were living it,” she notes. The pair built a turn-of-the-century multistory home and made it accessible for Max, who had become quadriplegic after a 1959 car accident, and adopted three children. In 2003, Max and Colleen left Paraquad to establish the Starkloff Disability Institute, which empowers people with disabilities to achieve economic independence through employment. After 35 years of marriage, Max died in 2010, but Colleen continues their work and legacy. She regularly speaks to corporate and public groups about how people with disabilities can live and work as contributing members of the community.
Colleen Kelly stArKloff: Human Welfare Like many of her fellow Women of Achievement, Asha Zimmerman’s volunteer road began when she learned of an existing program that touched her heart. In 2001, Zimmerman read an article about The Wings Program, BJC HealthCare’s pediatric palliative care and hospice. A mother of two, Zimmerman felt the urge to help the program raise funds, but no fundraising arm existed – so she created one. Since then, Friends of Wings has raised approximately $10 million for services and awareness programs. Evidence of Friends of Wings is scattered throughout the St. Louis area in the 56 butterfly sculptures created by local artists through the Wings in the City program. Other programs funded by Friends of Wings include Daybreak, a grief retreat for parents who have experienced the death of a child; Labyrinth, a grief retreat for teens whose sibling or parent has died; Stepping Stones, a weekend bereavement camp for children; and Lumina, a program allowing people of all ages to share their stories and create legacy projects for loved ones. Through Friends of Wings, Zimmerman launched the Remember the Love campaign to celebrate what would have been
a child’s birthday. “We flock the family yard with more than 100 hearts or other shapes on sticks so that when the family wakes up, they see a yard full of beautiful symbols, along with a sign that says ‘we remember the love.’ It’s amazing – it’s my new favorite thing,” she says. Zimmerman also established Joyful Celebrations to recognize a birthday or significant event in the life of a Wings patient. And to help reach a terminally ill child’s entire community, she formed Wings on Wheels, a mobile expressive therapy program in a brightly painted vehicle that brings professionals and therapeutic services to a patient’s classmates, church groups and sports teams. “In less than five years, the vehicle has been to more than 800 family homes, more than 70 schools and more than 35 community groups, providing support for more than 6,000 people,” Zimmerman says. “A quote stays with me; a father of a child who had passed away said they ‘have just gone through the most horrible experience, but Wings made it just a bit better.’”
AsHA ziMMerMAn: Caring and Compassion
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56 DINNER & A SHOW
Arts & Culture 58
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READY READERS
FEATURE: PULITZER ARTS FOUNDATION
Chasing PHOTO BY MABEL SUEN
Greatness
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Dinner ...
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n early April, Chase Club held its grand opening at The Chase Park Plaza. The restaurant pays homage to the space’s former life as an iconic hotel bar of the same name from the Roaring ’20s. The revamp features a vintage-style vibe with modern touches, along with a casual food menu, an extensive beer program, craft cocktails and enhanced entertainment. Chase Club fills the 3,000-square-foot space previously occupied by Café Eau in the hotel’s lobby. The bar and dining room underwent a full remodel from Atlanta-based TUL Designs, with bold hues and patterns inspired by ’30s Art Deco. Inside seating totals 96, including 28 bar stools, with amenities including 75-inch TVs and two pool tables. In mid-April, the hotel reopened its Mediterraneanstyle terrace, which doubles as Chase Club’s patio, equipped with outdoor fireplace seating beside the
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property’s pool. Also, Chase Club sits directly across the hall from The Preston, which opened last year with a refined menu of modern American cuisine. “The Preston is more of an adventure – hopefully, you’re trying things there you’ve never tried before. Here, we want people to find familiar things with a different twist,” says the Chase’s chef de cuisine, Theron Pajares. “The Chase Club is more experiencedriven first. You’re coming for the entertainment and the atmosphere and staying for the snacks. It’s the same menu all day for people watching sports, playing pool or just relaxing.” Pajares works with executive chef Collin Smelser and executive pastry chef Eric Phillips in a fromscratch kitchen to roll out what he describes as highend, elevated bar food that’s fun, approachable and easy to eat.
By Mabel Suen Highlights include poutine étouffée with polenta fries, spicy crawfish étouffée and cheese curds; shrimp St. Paul sliders with house pickles, lettuce and spicy mayo; and the Chase Club burger with a 7-ounce certified Angus-beef patty, bacon-onion jam, boursin and bibb lettuce on a Vitale’s Bakery bun. Additional selections include flatbreads, salads, sandwiches and desserts such as Earl Grey crème brûlée. With such a wide selection, Chase Club certainly makes a great pre-event visiting place before making your way to the Tennessee Williams Festival. Behind the bar, beverage manager Joshua Johnson developed a beer-centric drink menu that includes both local craft beers and imports. Guests can choose from roughly a dozen and a half different beers on tap and a rotating list of almost two dozen bottles and cans. The variety includes everything from Urban Chestnut
PHOTO BY MABEL SUEN
Chase Club
&SmallACraft ShowWarnings
PHOTO BY RIDE HAMILTON
By Mark Bretz
Brewing Co.’s Fantasyland and Mark Twain Brewing Co.’s Rambler’s Red to Guinness and Hoegaarden. Fans of The Preston’s cocktail bar will find a few mixed drinks to choose from here as well, such as Johnson’s personal favorite: the Arch Rival, with Bulleit bourbon, The Big O Ginger Liqueur and grapefruit juice. According to Johnson, this autumn, the bar will also feature its own signature whiskey-barrel-aged beers in a partnership with Modern Brewery. “At the Chase Club, we’re trying to capture the classic feel of the great American hotel bar,” Johnson says. “It’s a step toward the Prohibition era with a great selection of drinks.”
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Chase Club, 212 N. Kingshighway Blvd., St. Louis, 314-633-3056, chaseparkplaza.com/dining/chase-club.aspx
Story: Monk opens his seaside bar in Southern California to another evening of revelry and reminiscence. He enjoys talking with the patrons of his modest but welcoming establishment, where regulars can feel at home and visitors can escape the outside world with their beverage of choice. Regulars include Leona, an exuberant beautician who’s been sharing her trailer for the last six months with a handsome, bigoted ne’erdo-well named Bill, who has worn out his welcome. Doc, meanwhile, has been stripped of his medical license but continues to practice on the sly, and Violet, a down-on-her-luck floozy who enjoys catering to young sailors visiting the port, benefits from the generosity of Steve, a short-order cook who keeps her fed with hot dogs and burgers. On this particular night – the anniversary of the death of Leona’s artistically talented and “different” younger brother – Monk’s is patronized as well by a pair of gay men: an older scriptwriter named Quentin and Bobby, a young man who has bicycled from Iowa across the country to see the Pacific Ocean. This collection of lost souls contemplates life over a drink or three, some songs from the jukebox and the conversations of their fellow refugees in Monk’s sanctuary from the indifference of the world. They get by as best they can. Highlights: First produced in 1972, Small Craft Warnings serves as the “marquee” production in the second annual Tennessee Williams Festival St. Louis in a handsomely staged presentation directed by Richard Corley, featuring a cast of capable players interpreting the St. Louis playwright’s dialogue in one of his later works. Other Info: The Tennessee Williams Festival St. Louis this year has expanded beyond the one weekend of performances in its inaugural season with plays – Small Craft Warnings and Will Mr. Merriwether Return From Memphis?, as well as Bertha in Paradise, a cabaretstyle show that ran from May 5 to 7 – which continue into subsequent weekends in May. Scenic designer Dunsi Dai makes shrewd use of the stage at the .ZACK Incubator venue in Grand Center to depict the innards of Monk’s tavern, which features a mounted sailfish courtesy of props provider Annina Christensen above the well-stocked bar to accentuate
the coastal environs. A jukebox in the back, a door to the restroom at stage right and an opening at stage left leading to Monk’s living quarters above the tavern provide the ambiance, along with a couple of tables and a smattering of chairs. Robin McGee dresses the players in costumes that match their characters, from the tacky polyester slacks favored by Bill to Steve’s grimy T-shirt, to the sailor cap that epitomizes Leona’s lusty and adventurous spirit. Sound designer Michael Perkins adds some classical tunes preferred by Leona on the jukebox, while Michael Sullivan’s lighting showcases each of the players in their monologues of varying lengths. Williams’ poetic language serves the soliloquies well, especially the haunting words of Leona and Quentin. Elizabeth Townsend brings out the humanity and collegial spirit of the former, impassioned in her pleading for others to recognize the achievements of her beloved late brother while also urging Bobby, Violet and the others to grab for the brass ring while they can. Small Craft Warnings is more of a moment in time and a series of monologues than a conventional play with a plot woven throughout its one act and 90 minutes. Its strength lies in Williams’ elegantly shaped language and his reflections on the human condition.
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Company: Tennessee Williams Festival St. Louis Venue: .ZACK Incubator, 3224 Locust St. Dates: May 12-14 Tickets: $35; contact twstl.org, metrotix.com or 314-534-1111 Rating: A 4 on a scale of 1-to-5 LadueNews.com | May 12, 2017 57
Ready Readers
Reading for Better Friendships
W
ith summer’s arrival, many preschool programs will soon end, and children will start camps, swimming lessons and other seasonal activities. As a result, they may feel anxiety about strange, different situations; transitions can really throw little ones for a loop and cause insecurity about reorienting themselves. Parents, because you don’t want to create needless doubt when explaining upcoming schedule alterations, reading a book about making new friends can open a conversation with children needing reassurance. In that respect, consider as two appealing photograph-based choices – both used with children ages 3 to 5 years old in the Ready Readers program, with almost 10,000 children recently receiving the latter to read at home – Making Friends by the late earlychildhood TV icon Fred Rogers (of PBS’s Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood) and Will You Be My Friend? by new author Susan Lurie with photos by Murray Head. Rogers’ nonfiction offering gives 2- and 3-year-olds guidance with the people, places and ways that friends find each other and engage in play. It also provides examples of normal discord between children and offers positive models for appropriate conflict resolution.
Adults might notice some dated clothing styles in Making Friends – it was first published in 1987 – but children should focus on the faces and situations of friends at play. As in all of Rogers’ books, he saw children as complex beings with deep emotions, and he never doubted their abilities to cope and succeed. Will You Be My Friend? introduces us to a meek mouse in need of a friend to accept him for himself. Mouse surveys his surroundings for potential pals, considering a myriad of animals. Without meeting them, though, Mouse anticipates their personalities as being far too different for a good match: “This peacock’s too fancy. The frog is too jumpy. This duck is too noisy. That bird looks too grumpy.” Grumpy Bird informs Mouse that he already has a friend – he needs only to look to find that
By Sheila Oliveri friend. The bird provides clues to help Mouse discover his mystery comrade, but Mouse can’t quite solve the mystery. With Grumpy Bird’s help, though, Mouse eventually does find a friend – and learns a lesson about not judging creatures by their outward appearances. Lurie’s story, told in flowing verse, should lend itself to discussion about feelings of shyness and the anxiety people, young and old alike, sometimes cultivate by imagining others to be different than they really are. It should serve as a good reminder for children ages 3 to 5 – and for the adults reading to them. Otherwise, thanks to Head, Will You Be My Friend? features vibrant photography, showing distinct close-ups of more than 20 animals in their natural environments. In conclusion, parents, with a little time spent in advance with a book and some conversation, you can equip children with the confidence and tools they need to welcome whatever adventures may come their way this summer!
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At Ready Readers, we know that “Kids Who Read Succeed!” If you enjoy reading and sharing the magic of books, please consider reading aloud to a classroom of preschool children in an underserved area of our community as a Ready Readers volunteer.
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Around Town
By Kaitlynn Martin
Fri., May 12, to Wed., May 31 Reliance Bank and Kodner Gallery Fine Art present original paintings by St. Louis artist JOHN M. HELLER. The exhibit showcases the neverbefore-seen paintings at the bank’s Frontenac branch. All artwork on display is also available for purchase. Most known for his large-scale mural works around the St. Louis area, Heller studied at Washington University, the Cincinnati Art Academy and the Pennsylvania Academy of Art. The exhibit reveals the great variety in Heller’s portfolio, including portraits, genre scenes and historical works. kodnergallery.com or reliancebankstl.com.
Fri., May 12
Lauren Marks, author of A Stitch of Time: The Year a Brain Injury Changed My Language and My Life, visits Left Bank Books for a BOOK DISCUSSION. The event is free, but proof of book purchase from Left Bank is required to enter the signing line. At 27, Marks was fighting for her life after an aneurysm ruptured in her brain. The aftermath was difficult, with Marks’ writing, speaking and reading abilities greatly damaged. During this time, Marks kept a journal with the goal of tracking her year following the aneurysm, which later became A Stitch of Time, her debut memoir. The memoir follows Marks as “the way she perceived her environment and herself had profoundly changed.” 7 p.m. 314-367-6731 or left-bank.com.
Sat., May 13
Fri., May 12, to Sun., May 14
The Fabulous Fox Theatre presents DIRTY DANCING. Christopher Tierney and Jillian Mueller star as Johnny Castle and Frances “Baby” Houseman. James Powell directs the production’s North American tour, with a book by Eleanor Bergstein and choreography by Michele Lynch. Dirty Dancing – The Classic Story on Stage is considered an “unprecedented live experience, exploding with heartpounding music, passionate romance and sensational dancing.” Showtimes vary. Tickets start at $45. 314-534-1111 or fabulousfox.com.
Sat., May 13 Fri., May 12, to Sun., May 14
Laumeier Sculpture Park’s three-day 30th annual ART FAIR, presented by Emerson, anticipates attendance in excess of 12,000 visitors. Attractions include local food and beverage vendors, hands-on activities for kids, live music and 150 artists from across the country, with work involving ceramics, fiber, textiles, glass, jewelry and more. Friday evening is set for Art of the Vine, a wine-tasting event from 6 to 9 p.m. The City of Sunset Hills Music Festival kicks off on Saturday afternoon from 2 to 8 p.m. Main-stage entertainment continues throughout the weekend, featuring performances by Funky Butt Brass Band, Trixie Delight, Boogie Chyld and others. $10 admission, but children 10 years old and younger are free. Other special-event prices vary. laumeier.org.
Left Bank Books hosts children’s author Doreen Cronin for a BOOK DISCUSSION of her debut middle-grade novel, Cyclone. The free event takes place at Left Bank. Proof of purchase of Cyclone from Left Bank is required to enter the signing line. Best-selling author Cronin is known for The Chicken Squad series and other picture books, including Dooby Dooby Moo; Thump, Quack, Moo: A Whacky Adventure; and others. In Cyclone, the main character, Nora, looks forward to riding Coney Island’s Cyclone roller coaster, but runs into trouble when her cousin, Riley, collapses after the ride. Upon waking up, Riley somehow isn’t the same, but Nora’s determined to get her back. 4 p.m. 314-367-6731 or left-bank.com.
The Foundry Art Centre hosts a MOTHER’S DAY WORKSHOP. Instead of heading to the mall for Mother’s Day shopping, the center suggests making a personalized bath bomb for the special mother, grandmother or other woman in your life. Each bath bomb has the potential to be unique with the use of customizable colors and scents. Admission price includes materials. 1 to 3 p.m. $40 per person. 636-255-0270 or foundryartcentre.org/adult-programming.
Sat., May 13, and Sun., May 14
The St. Louis Symphony presents SINGIN’ IN THE RAIN to celebrate the movie musical’s 65th anniversary. While audiences watch the film featuring Gene Kelly, Donald O’Connor and Debbie Reynolds, the St. Louis Symphony plays the score live. The two shows hope to “take audiences on a captivating journey and showcase the orchestra through musical storytelling.” Showtimes vary. Tickets start at $52. 314-534-1700 or stlsymphony.org.
Sun., May 14
To celebrate Mother’s Day and the fight against breast cancer, the St. Louis Cardinals host a POWER OF THE PINK DAY at Busch Stadium before taking on the Chicago Cubs. Power of the Pink provides 30,000 fans 16 years old and older with a Cardinals glass picture frame. A breast cancer survivor also takes the field to throw out the ceremonial first pitch. The game starts at 1:15 p.m. powerofthepink.com.
LadueNews.com | May 12, 2017 59
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LadueNews.com | may 12, 2017
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Marking
Andres L. HernAndez Photo by Joe mazza
AmAndA WiLLiAms Photo by ann Ryan
Subtracting
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A project sponsored by two heavy hitters in the arts and architecture spheres urges viewers to contemplate the beautiful mutability of urban streetscapes.
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n a central St. Louis neighborhood at the moment, a duo of distinguished Chicagoans are exploring the transformative and revitalizing power of art, in both space and time, in an intriguing and perhaps even sui generis fashion. As the focus of a joint commission collaboratively organized by the Pulitzer Arts Foundation and the Sam Fox School of Design & Visual Arts at Washington University in St. Louis, artists Andres L. Hernandez and Amanda Williams have launched a seasons-spanning design-build project titled “A Way, Away (Listen While I Say).” The project, which started in midspring and runs through autumn, is unfolding at 3721 Washington Ave., due north of the Pulitzer, in Grand Center. “We received the commission to explore the ways in which small-scale creative interventions might serve as meaningful catalysts for urban transformation,” state Hernandez and Williams, in tandem, by email. At a time when St. Louis, from day to day, teeters on the brink of becoming “the new Detroit” – that is, a municipality mired in long-term urban decay and other societal woes – Hernandez and Williams continue by confessing to being “interested in the restorative and redemptive potential of vacant urban sites.” In that regard, the two cite prior individual works of theirs that might rank as aesthetic precursors of “A Way, Away.” More specifically, Hernandez mentions a 2014 project titled “Benign Neglect (let rocks their silence break)” that used aerial images of Chicago’s Washington Park as “plans” for a Zen garden – establishing “a rite, a rhythm and a prompt for dialogue about a wealth of social and spatial possibilities” – subsequently constructed in the courtyard of the University of Chicago’s Logan Center. Williams, for her part, references an exuberant series, also from 2014, titled “Color(ed)Theory” designed to interpret potential sociopolitical underpinnings of this nation’s quotidian collective palette by asking questions like these: “What color is urban? What color is gentrification? What color is privilege? What color is poverty?” Given the scope of Hernandez and Williams’ present project, both physically and temporally, they also dwell, briefly, on the categorical pedigree of “A Way, Away.” “In general, the project falls into several contemporary threads in architectural discourse as the industry grapples with questions of vacancy, demolition, reuse, preservation [and] sustainability, also the overlap of art and architecture,” they state. “We’ve looked at a broad spectrum of projects as references for different segments.” In that regard, oddly enough, “A Way, Away” approximates a 3-D realization of a 1993 serigraph by über-underground cartoonist R. Crumb. In Crumb’s customarily exquisite stipple, the 15 panels of that serigraph, titled A Short History of America, track a single domestic parcel, decade after decade, from pastoral serenity through urban insanity, culminating in three prospective views. In addition to Pulitzer staff and Sam Fox School faculty, staff and students, Hernandez and Williams mention assistance in realizing “A Way, Away” from “several outside contractors to shape and deliver our proposed project phases, as well as document the project in full.” Such contractors include professionals in painting, demolition, the neophyte mini-industry of brick “harvesting” and landscaping. The physical and temporal scope of the project – whose open nature visitors can view both at their leisure and for free – explains the necessity for such assistance. “‘A Way, Away’ began in February by painting the condemned building at 3721 Washington Blvd. gold prior to demolition,” state Hernandez and Williams. “The project will continue to unfold in phases over the next several months through fall 2017.” The Chicagoans “have developed five major site interventions that parallel the cyclical phases of demolition and construction within the built environment and within the immediate Washington Boulevard corridor. Each intervention is guided by a related contemporary issue in urban planning and policy, architecture, art, the construction industry and related fields of practice and inquiry.” The first “intervention,” Marking, involved painting the 3721 Washington Blvd. building gold, as noted. In so doing, Hernandez and Williams sought to “ritualize the act of un/building” by preparing the structure for transition. For this intervention, they sought community participation by inviting neighbors of the building, students and others – including, puckishly, passersby – to take part in the painting. Subtracting, the second intervention, will comprise what Hernandez and Williams call “choreographed demolition”: deconstructing walls (in a physical sense, not in a philosophical or literary sense) and razing the remaining structure and foundation by using “construction equipment as tools for un-drawing the site.” The third intervention, Translating, will transform the architectural remains of the former building into a smaller sculptural object in what the pair call an “iterative and choreographed process in collaboration with contractors.” This intervention also will
involve harvesting the former building’s precious bricks for subsequent use and developing a temporary workspace to clean, sort, stack and deliver them. Shaping, the fourth intervention, will focus on redefining the site’s greensward through designed sod planting. The bricks harvested in the third intervention will be used in community design projects. Finally, in the fifth intervention, which Hernandez and Williams call Healing, they’ll “deinstall” the project and return the site to its preproject state. At this point, they’ll also gift the harvested bricks to preselected local partners and “ritualize” the closure of “A Way, Away.” Both for the nonce and for the future, as well as in pixel and in print, Hernandez and Williams note, “All five phases of the project are being documented … ” In pixel, documentation involves a stand-alone project website and other sites, including Instagram (@awayawaystl). In print, each intervention will be “posterized” in broadsides including new and reprinted essays available in the Pulitzer and free to visitors as they view “A Way, Away” or attend related programs. “Lastly, the two of us are working to capture the project in full through a book project in the near future,” Hernandez and Williams state. In addition to presenting “A Way, Away,” the two together served as visiting assistant professors at the Sam Fox School last fall; both also will serve on the exhibition design team for the museum at the future Barack Obama Presidential Center, tentatively scheduled for completion on Chicago’s South Side in 2020 or 2021. Those two bona fides, by the way, merely number among a plethora of credentials for the distinguished duo. Academically, Hernandez earned a Bachelor of Architecture degree from Ithaca, New York’s Cornell University and a Master of Arts degree in art education from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Similarly, Williams earned a Bachelor of Architecture degree with an emphasis in fine art from Cornell. Hernandez and Williams’ “A Way, Away,” it bears noting, already has earned praise from the highest levels of both entities backing their commission. “We are thrilled that they will bring their experience working in cities marked by vacancy – along with an approach that is at once deeply thoughtful, bold and practical – to the St. Louis community,” Pulitzer director Cara Starke remarked in an early-March press release. In the same release, Carmon Colangelo, dean of the Sam Fox School, noted that Hernandez and Williams “combine the roles of artist, architect, art educator and social activist,” before continuing, “I am confident that they will bring the same dynamic dialogue to this project, activating the space and spurring inclusive conversation about art and design in the public realm.” In the final analysis, “A Way, Away” recalls a haunting passage from “East Coker,” the second magisterial movement of St. Louis native T.S. Eliot’s Four Quartets: “In succession / Houses rise and fall, crumble, are extended, / Are removed, destroyed, restored, or in their place / Is an open field, or a factory, or a by-pass.” “A Way, Away (Listen While I Say),” awayaway.site
Translating
LadueNews.com | may 12 2017
63
Happy Mother’s Day to all the wonderful Moms!
LIVE AS YOU
CHOOSE
Choose from more than 40 apartment and villa floor plans of 890 to 2645 square feet at The Willows, offering some of the most light-filled and spacious homes in the country. You are free to personalize with options such as fireplaces and wood floors.
The Willows is an intimate community in a park-like setting with multiple restaurants, bar, large pool, gym, and a full-size theater for entertainment and parties.
Assisted Living at Brooking Park offers great value with all-inclusive, worry less pricing, as well as experienced long-term staff and individual around-the-clock care and personal assistance. The Memory Care Secure Household at Brooking Park offers an open floor plan with a spacious kitchen that creates wonderful aromas to stimulate appetite. Tour and see why Brooking Park Skilled Nursing earned a 5-Star rating by CMS and is listed as among the country’s best nursing homes by U.S. News & World Report.
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64 May 12, 2017 | LadueNews.com
A SPECIAL
Arts & Culture
PROMOTION
Dining & Entertainment
The No. 1 art show in the nation, according to Greg Lawler’s Art Fair SourceBook, is back for another award-winning weekend to celebrate art and community May 19th through May 21st in Belleville, Illinois. Taking over the town square in Belleville, Art on the Square lines the streets with art from all over the world, with artists near and far coming to take part. A café square and wine court deliver delectable choices, allowing you to enjoy everything from sushi to European pastries while listening to jazz and witnessing an artist demonstration. Art on the Square takes place in Belleville, Illinois. Call 618-233-6769 or 800-677-9255 (visitor information) or 618-444-3802 (general information), or visit artonthesquare.com to learn more.
LadueNews.com | May 12, 2017 65
DINING & ENTERTAINMENT: Feature Story
Art A
for the
rt on the Square continually is ranked the nation’s best juried art show for a reason. Not only does it unite artists from all different mediums and locations across the globe, it achieves what few can: It unites the community while creating a welcoming atmosphere where patrons can connect with artists. “Have you ever noticed how, when you go to a gallery or museum, you start whispering?” Patty Gregory, executive director of Art on the Square, asks. “Some people may feel a little intimidated [at venues like that], but at art shows in a city venue or on the street, people feel comfortable.” Local, national and global talents are on hand, thrilled to converse with passersby as they take in the beauty of each unique piece. The show makes art accessible – and even more so with the option to obtain Art Cash year-round. “If you are gifted $200 in Art Cash and you see a piece at the show that costs $400, to some people, it may now seem like it only costs $200. That’s the beauty of Art Cash,” Gregory explains. “We have a wide range of price points because we are a community show. We want people to come out, bring family and friends, and enjoy themselves!” With a huge showing of artists, both from the area and from around the world, many mediums
66
MAsses
are represented. (Find a full listing online.) “The highlight of everything, of course, is the artist – and we have artists coming from all over,” Gregory shares. “Estella Fransbergen from Pimento, Florida, was born in South Africa. She studied there, as well as in Italy and America. She’s in galleries in Florence, Italy, and the Daytona Museum of Art. She started in pottery but considers herself a sculptress now. [Fransbergen] starts with the torso of a woman’s body because she believes that is the soul. She then adds skirts. What’s really interesting is how she incorporates metals, and precious and semiprecious stones, like Swarovski crystals, into the dresses. Thousands and thousands of strands of silver, stones and beads. It’s ethereal. It’s an expression of the human form – that is the beauty of her work.” From city sculpture tours and artists demonstrations to the design stage and student involvement, there is much to enjoy. “Some people, after meeting at the fair, have reunions [each year],” Gregory says. “It’s like visiting old friends. This really is the kind of show for everyone. We’re really looking forward to another wonderful year.” Art on the Square, P.O. Box 23561, Belleville, Illinois, 618-233-6769 or 800-677-9255 (visitor information), 618-444-3802 (general information), artonthesquare.com
MAY 12, 2017 | LadueNews.com | A lAdue news speciAl proMotion
By Amanda Dahl | Art courtesy of Art on the Square
WHAT/WHEN/WHERE
Art on the Square May 19-21
Friday 5 p.m. - 10 p.m. Saturday 10 a.m. - 8 p.m. Sunday 11 a.m. - 5 p.m. Belleville Public Square, Belleville, Illinois For more information and to catch the free shuttle, visit artonthesquare.com.
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diningGuide
By Amanda Dahl
THE ART OF ENTERTAINING
8796 Big Bend Blvd., 314-963-9899, theaofe.com Still looking for a special Mother’s Day gift? Give her a night off from cooking with a gift certificate for ready-made, delicious cuisine from The Art of Entertaining.
GUIDO’S “ON THE HILL”
5046 Shaw Ave., 314-771-4900, guidosstl.com
BARRISTER’S
Uncover the best of both worlds in the heart of
7923 Forsyth Blvd., 314-726-5007, barristersinclayton.com
The Hill with Guido’s classic Italian fare, as well as
With the largest selection of craft beer in Clayton and 30-plus bloody mary
order dishes, Guido’s satisfies culinary cravings.
traditional Spanish entrées and tapas. With made-to-
options for brunch, you won’t want to miss out. Barrister’s – not your typical pub fare, not your typical sports bar!
HAVELI INDIAN RESTAURANT
9720 Page Ave., 314-423-7300, havelistl.com Indulge in authentic Indian cuisine, with temptations
CHASE CLUB AT THE CHASE PARK PLAZA
made of
212 N. Kingshighway Blvd., 314-633-3056, chaseparkplaza.com
curries from fresh, natural
The newly opened Chase Club invites you in to enjoy one of its 18 beers on
ingredients.
tap or a perfectly prepared cocktail.
With lunch and dinner buffets available daily, come see the hospitality traditions of India for yourself.
EVANGELINE’S BISTRO AND MUSIC HOUSE 512 N. Euclid Ave., 314-367-3644, e vangelinesstl.com
Experience a taste of New Orleans right here in the Central West End. Red beans and rice, gumbo, jambalaya, classic drinks and live music await. Laissez les bon temps rouler!
HERBIE’S FRAZER’S RESTAURANT & LOUNGE
1811 Pestalozzi St., 314-773-8646, frazersgoodeats.com
8100 Maryland Ave., 314-769-9595, h erbies.com The famed St. Louis fine dining spot has
Experience Frazer’s, an anchor in St. Louis’ historic Benton Park
become the perfect place for business lunches
since 1992. With its private dining packages and globally inspired
and late-night dinners. Stop in at our new
menu, all your future gatherings already are taken care of.
location, which opened in early November, and you’ll feel as if you’re already a regular!
68 May 12, 2017 | LadueNews.com |
A LADUE NEWS SPECIAL PROMOTION
ln
IL BEL LAGO
11631 Olive Blvd., 314-994-1080, bellagostl.com
2017
Uncover the delectable taste of The Hill within Creve Coeur. Frank and Carmelo of Giovanni’s brought their dining expertise to West County in 2004 – and the
Presented by
community still flocks to this delicious dining establishment.
LAMPERT’S RED SHACK 6401 W. Park Ave., 314-657-0702, theredshack.com Make Taco Tuesday a weeklong celebration at Lampert’s Red Shack in historic Dogtown. With everything cooked-to-order, load your tacos with the freshest toppings. A tempting salsa bar seals the deal.
REVEL KITCHEN
ThUrSDAY, JUNE 15, 2017 | 6-8pM palladium Saint Louis Join us as we honor these nine deserving local charities and non-profits and announce this year’s winners. alive, inc.
8388 Musick Memorial Drive, 314-647-2222, e atrevelkitchen.com
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Get tasty, nutritious meals delivered to your door. Revel Kitchen has comprehensive meal
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plans to help you lose weight, gain
cOncOrdance academy Of leadersHiP
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Don’t just eat food, Revel in it.
nurses fOr neWbOrns
THE TASTY TRAY COMPANY
rainbOW villaGe st. lOuis learninG disabilities assOciatiOn, inc.
314-422-0974, thetastytraycompany.com
Celebrate the end of this school year with a delectable gift. Serve up appetizing candy and nut trays – the perfect addition to your graduation
and, read all about these groups and their missions in ladue news. June 2 | June 9 | June 16
party or as teachers’ gifts.
TRUFFLES & BUTCHERY
9202 Clayton Road, 314-567-9100, todayattruffles.com Butchery, Truffles’ meat market, in addition to a full butcher service, offers fantastic takeout, fresh seafood and sandwiches, daily gluten-free breads, prepared meals, select wines and local brews,
Only a limited number Of tickets available.
A portion of every ticket purchased in advance will be donated to your choice of one of these charities.
TICKETS ON SALE AT WWW.LADUENEWS.COM TICKET prICE $30
catering and so much more. A LADUE NEWS SPECIAL PROMOTION | LadueNews.com | May 12, 2017 69
In accordance with the federal Fair Housing Act, we do not accept for publication any real estate listing that indicates any preference, limitation, or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, disability, family status, or national origin. If you believe a published listing states such a preference, limitation, or discrimination, please notify this publication at fairhousing@lee.net.
ACCOUNTING/TAXES ANNUAL RETURN Suneja Foundation 2016 Available to View with L. Schmidt CPA 314-842-1110
ANNOUNCEMENTS IMPORTANT INFORMATION ABOUT YOUR SPECTRUM CHANNEL LINEUP Communities Served: Creve Coeur & Maryland Heights, MO Effective on or after May 31, 2017, the following changes will be made to your channel lineup: RTL International will cease transmission on channels 420 & 867. German View will no longer be available, which includes One World Sports on channels 398 & 878. Monthly subscription charges for these services will be removed after German View is discontinued. For a complete lineup, visit spectrum.com/channels. To view this notice online, visit spectrum.net/programmingnotices
CLEANING SERVICES
ELECTRICAL Licensed Bonded Insured
Commercial Residential Industrial
314-773-4955 or 314-966-3388 www.fielderelectricalservices.com
Established in 1997 Call Linda 314-898-3524
Residential
CLEAN AS A WHISTLE Affordable cleaning for any budget. Weekly, Bi-weekly, Monthly, Move-in and Move Out. Satisfaction Guaranteed. Family Owned & Operated. Call 314-426-3838 $10.00 OFF New Customer SCRUBBY DUTCH CLEANING Family Owned and Operated Since 1983 Bonded • Insured • Supervised $10 OFF 1st Time Customers Free Estimates by Phone 314-849-4666 or 636-926-0555 www.scrubbydutch.com
Home Cleaning Professional 10+ Years Exp. Insured & Bonded Call Neide 314-974-2281
Detailed Cleaning by Polish woman. Plus: Laundry, Ironing and Organizing Closets. Weekly or Bi-weekly. Call 314-757-1881 Ed & Janes Cleaning Basements ï Garages Light Hauling 314-974-7423
Fielder is highly skilled in knob & tube wiring and aluminum wiring upgrades. We are specialists in older and existing structures.
CONTACT US TODAY FOR AN APPOINTMENT
If it can be wired, we can wire it.
Commercial Tenant finishes, churches, sporting complexes, restaurants, senior care facility, and parking lot lighting, etc.
Industrial Fielder has the skills, knowledge and equipment to handle industrial work including new industrial construction, warehouse lighting, large machinery, and data wiring.
CHAMBERMAIDS, LLC 314-724-1522 Excellent Cleaning at Affordable Rates Satisfaction Guaranted Licensed, Bonded and Insured
AccuCare needs Caregivers! AccuCare, RN-owned & managed home health care provider, has immediate openings for caregivers. Contact Jane Olsen at jolsen@accucare.com or 314-472-3393
HOME IMPROVEMENT Ken Singleton Building Repair, LLC General Contractor and Home Improvement Specialist
Need An Electrician?
$20.00 off FLOORING/TILE HARDWOODZ Specializing in Installation, Sanding and Refinishing of Hardwood Floors. Call for FREE Estimate
Any electrical job of $75.00 or more
HANDYMAN SERVICES JON'S AFFORDABLE HOME REPAIR Electrical, Carpentry, Floors, Windows, Plumbing, Painting, Tile and Lots More! Quality Guaranteed! Reasonable, Insured, Ref's NO JOB TOO SMALL!
Tuckpointing Brickwork ï Stonework Plaster ï Drywall Painting ï Carpentry Siding ï Gutters ï Roofing Chimney Leaks Stopped Guaranteed
Call Ken Today! 636-674-5013
Dave 314-267-1348 314-205-1555 www.jonshomerepair.com
GUTTERS
HEALTHCARE SERVICES Complete Home, Kitchen & Bath Remodeling, Finish Basements, Room Additions, Brick & Stone Work, Flooring, Gutters, Painting, Power washing, Decks, Windows
THE LIST GOES ON!
ESTATE SALES
24/7 Companion Care for Seniors. Personal Care, Meal Prep, Light Housekeeping, & Peace of Mind.
CLEANING SERVICES SPECIALIZED HOUSEKEEPING 1-2 Large Homes Caring professional will clean, organize, run errands, laundry, pet care & party services. Dependable, 27+yrs Exp., Ref. Call Barb 314-650-2966
HELP WANTED
ELECTRICAL
FREE ESTIMATES
(314) 359-0476
314-569-9890 Plaster Patching and Repair Interior & Exterior
Shawn Lipe M.S., CAGA 314-962-7666 shawn@therefindestate.com 2525 S. Brentwood Blvd Brentwood, MO, 63144
Direct Purchase Estate Sales • Appraisals N & M ESTATE SALES ESTATE/MOVING SALES INSURED • REFERENCES www.nmestatesales.com FREE CONSULTATIONS 314-434-4979
70 May 12, 2017 | LadueNews.com
New Installation, Cleaning & Repair Drainage Solutions, Screen Installation & Window Cleaning Professional, Reliable & Insured Q No Mess Left Behind Q FREE Estimates - Contact Tony 314-413-2888 thegutterguy-stl@hotmail.com
SINCE 1987 SENIORS HOME CARE 3 hr. - 24/7 in-home assistance. Experience the difference the moment we answer the phone. CALL ANYTIME 314.962.2666
Walls, ceilings & crown molding. (DRYVIT, EIFS SYSTEM repairs & new application) Also drywall, taping & repairs. 220th ENGINEER'S, LLC 314-220-3638
HELP FOR YOU Post Surgery, Overnight Care, Infant Care, Transportation to and from Surgical procedures. Senior Support. Call for an appointment, 314-496-8305
REMODEL & REPAIR Power Washing, Rotted Wood, Painting, Tile, Drywall, Floors, Electrical, Carpentry, Plumbing. Insured. Free Est. 40yrs Exp. Don Phillips 314-973-8511
HOME IMPROVEMENT PRECISION REMODELING Room Additions, Decks, Bathrooms, Kitchens & so much more. Interior & Exterior. Free Estimates! Fully Insured. Call Bob (314) 799-4633 or Jim (314) 799-4630
REPAIR IT BEFORE YOU REPLACE IT Carpet Repaired, Restretched, Installed, New Carpet Sales, Large Selection in 2 Showrooms. Over 30 Years Experience. For a Quote Call Nick 314-845-8049
LAWN & GARDEN Time for Some
Hard Work Yard Work SPRING LANDSCAPING Landscape Design • Spring Clean-Up Brush Clearing • Bed Preparation • Tilling Weeding & Mulching • Planting Tree/Shrub Fertilization,Trimming and Removal • Lawn Fertilization, Weed Control, De-Thatching, Sodding and Seeding • Gutter Cleaning • Power Washing • Stone Walls, Patios, Borders and Drainage Solution.
The Hard Work Yard Work Co. LLC For Free Estimates call Keith at 314-422-0241 or e-mail at
hwyardwork@aol.com Since 2001
LAWN & GARDEN
PAINTING ASTON - PARKER PAINTING Interior/Exterior Painting Wallpaper Removal Insured, 35 Years Experience Free Estimates Call 314-766-2952 or 314-766-2962 alstonparker@hotmail.com
"THE" Painting Contractor in St.Louis Professional Tradesman Exterior & Interior Painting Power Washing, Decks & Homes Paperhanging, Taping & Finishing Call Jess Today @ 314-570-1908 vanderbiltconstruction@yahoo.com Check us out on Facebook
O’BRIEN PAINTING & DECORATING, INC.
Complete Lawn Maintenance for Residential & Commercial
SPRING CLEANUP Fertilizing, Planting, Sodding, Seeding, Mowing, Mulching, Edging, Spraying, Weeding, Pruning, Trimming, Bed Maintenance, Dethatching, Brush Removal, Retaining Walls, Paver Patios and Drainage Work.
Grass Cutting • Fertilize Grass Complete Maintenance Bed Maintenance Brick & Stone Work • Irrigation Call George 314-567-6066 OUTDOOR CREATIVE DESIGN & LANDSCAPE, LLC For all of your landscape and hardscape needs. "Where dreams become design and design becomes reality" 314-325-5111 OutdoorCreativeDesign.com
40 Years Experience
SERVICES
Ladue #3 Bennington 3 Bdrm, 2 Bath, Full Bsmt and 2 Car Garage. AS IS - $2000/mo
Call 314-973-7688
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE FOR SALE - 80 ACRE FARM in Northern Lincoln County, 70 miles from I-64 at Innerbelt, with refurbished 3BR home, barn and plenty of farm implements. Prime Deer and Turkey hunting or perfect week-end retreat. $420,000. Shown by appointment only, call Bill at 314-440-7244.
CA$H 4 OLD STUFF —Light Hauling— We cleanup, haul away &/or purchase: garage, estate & moving sales! Also, warehouse, business & storage locker leftovers! FAY FURNITURE 618-271-8200 AM
BRIAN'S HAULING "U Name It & We Haul It" 7 Days a Week - Same Day Appliances, Brush, Clean Outs, Demo, Bsmts & Garage, Etc. Call Brian @ 314-740-1659
ROOFING US Army Engineers Take on any roof! Slate, Clay Tile & Shingles. Also Soffit, Fascia, Gutter Repairs and Gutter Cleaning. Over 30yrs Exp. Fully Insured. No house too tall & No job too small 220th ENGINEER'S, LLC 314-220-3638
ACCOUNTING/TAXES SENIOR SERVICES HVAC
Fully Insured • References
SPRING CLEANUP & MULCHING 314-243-6784 MCGREEVY PIANO "Get Tuned for Spring" Bill McGreevy, Piano Technician Guild Associate Member
314-335-9177 wrmcgreevy@gmail.com
J. KEVIN O'BRIEN, PRESIDENT
314-481-3500
John The Painter LLC Master Tradesman Fine Interior Painting Excellent Preparation Since 1984 314-966-6463
We are THE SHERIDAN
POWERWASHING WINDOW CLEANING ïExcellent Rates ïInsured ïImpeccable Ref's ïFree Est's. Diligent, LLC 314-803-3865 diligentllc.biz
AT CREVE COEUR
TREES
JC PAINTS Interior/Exterior Painting, Reliable, Clean, Reasonable & Insured. Call John for a Free Estimate!
Licensed Landscape Architect/Designer For a FREE estimate call
INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR Painting • Power Washing Wallpapering • Plastering
REAL ESTATE FOR RENT
Reliable Lawn Care Service 4th Cut FREE Call us today (314) 608-5588
314-703-2794 jcpaints@sbcglobal.net
314-426-8833 www.mplandscapingstl.com Weekly Lawn Mowing and Gardening.
INTERIOR PAINTING & REMODELING Finish carpentry, drywall, tile and floor work. 25yrs exp. Call Kent for free estimates 314-398-2898 kenthallowell@yahoo.com
CALL 314-930-2632 TODAY FOR MORE INFORMATION
314-243-6784
PET SERVICES
Complete Tree Service for Residential & Commercial Tree Pruning & Removal, Plant Healthcare Program, Deadwooding, Stump Grinding, Deep Root Fertilization, Cabling & Storm Cleanup
J-C Landscaping
Landscape Design, Installation & Maintenance NOW ADDING NEW CUSTOMERS FOR 2017 Complete Estate Management Maintenance: ï Mowing ï Mulching ï Plantings ï Bed Work ï Drainage Solutions ï Seed and Sod ï Annual Turf Care Packages Outdoor Living: ï Patios ï Fire Features ï Retaining Walls ï Water Features ï Native Landscapes ï Driveways and Walkways Call Today for Estimate
314-827-5664 www.TRCoutdoor.com
Garden Design, Planting, Mulching and Maintenance. Also Painting and Decks. Free Estiments.
Your Poop Scoop 'n Service Free Estimates - No Contracts
Jack 314-502-5776
314-770-1500 www.yuckos.com
Cut Right Lawn & Landscaping Bonded, insured, full service, free estimate. Weekly mowing, mulching & bed clean up, tree pruning, retaining walls. I can do it all! Call Martin 314-359-8327 Polo's Lawn & Landscape Inc Retaining Walls, Paver Patios, Leaf and Snow Removal, Backyard Cleanup, Trees & Sod. Staining Decks by brush. Free Estimates 314-280-2779
Cary Semsar ISA Board Certified Master Arborist OH-5130B Free Estimate, Fully Insured
Yucko's
PLASTERING BORRELLI PLASTERING Standard, Ornamental, Skim Coat & Venetian Plastering. Plaster Patches. Stucco, Stone, Tile, Outdoor Kitchens, Retaining Walls, Drywall & Design. Insured, 30+yrs Experience. Free Estimates. 636-696-7110
MASONRY/CONCRETE
REAL ESTATE FOR RENT
Atek | The Masonry Pros Brick-Block-Stone Repaired-Rebuilt-Restored Licensed - Insured | Free Estimates Online @: stlbrickrepair.com Call/Text: 314-629-2283
Office Space - U-City/Close to Clayton. 1,250 sqft. + Possible Storage Area. 7509 Delmar Blvd. 1st Floor. $1,500 Per Month. Move in Ready. For more info call 314-862-4410
Memory Care 450 N. Lindbergh Blvd. Creve Coeur, MO 63141 Seniorlifestyle.com
Call 314-426-2911 meyertreecare.com
SERVICES MIKE'S GARAGE DOOR Repair & Installation Quality Work! 20yrs Exp. References
Tree Service Professionals Trimming, Deadwooding, Reduction, Removals, Stump Grinding, Year Round Service and Fully Insured Call Michael Baumann for a Free Estimate & Property Inspection
636.375.2812
Mike 314-265-4568 Fully Insured ï Work Guaranteed
You'll be glad you called!
LadueNews.com | May 12, 2017 71
TREES
TUCKPOINTING
Trees Trimmed & Removed
• Stone Retaining Walls • Stump Grinding • Fully Insured
Tuckpointing, Chimney & Brick Repair, Caulking & Now Chimney Sweeping & Flue Re-lining. 2013 BBB Torch Award Winner
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masseytuckpointing.com
YOUR TREES DESERVE THE BEST CARE PRUNING F E R T I L I Z AT I O N PLANTING S P R AY I N G TRIMMING R E M O VA L
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Get'er Done Tree Service A+ with BBB and Angie's List Tree Trimming, Removal, Deadwooding and Stump Grinding. Certified Arborist. Fully Insured, Free Estimates. Serving the area since 2004.
CALL 314-971-6993
WANTED
Mirelli Tuckpointing LLC Solid Tuckpointing and Spotpointing w/Color Match. Chimney, Stone, Caulking, Brick Repair & Waterproofing. Q Q Free Estimates Q Q 314-645-1387
WINDOWS
M&P
MASSEY TUCKPOINTING & MASONRY
GILLS TREE SERVICE
WANTED
Bartel’s Estate Gallery Wh�les�l� Di�m�n�s & E�t�t� J�w��ry
We Buy & Sell • Diamonds • Estate Jewelry • Watches • Sterling • Antiques • Collectibles • Coins & Currency • Scrap cr Gold
Honesty • Integrity • Value Since 1980
We pay TOP DOLLAR and offer SAME DAY PAYMENTS... We also offer a huge selection of estate jewelry and loose diamonds at great prices. We offer FREE verbal appraisals..
Window Washing & Gutter Cleaning • Gutter Cleaning & Minor Repair • Window Cleaning • Reasonable • Free Estimate • Dependable • Insured • Ref's • 34yrs Exp. • Angie's List
Paul, 314-805-6102 Mark, 314-805-7367
10411 Clayton Road, Ste 101 • Le Chateau Village Frontenac, Missouri 63131 • 314-991-1999
Brooks Tuckpointing Inc. Chimney Repair, Glass Blocks, Brick Block, Stone & Stucco. Waterproofing. Insured. 40 Yrs Experience. Free Estimates. 314-910-3132 636-797-2947
VACATION RENTALS Spectacular Gulf Coast House Carillon Beach, FL, Destin Area 4BR, 4BA, 3 pools, tennis courts & so much more! Great Rates. Available NOW! Call Dave at 314-922-8344 For Pictures Please Visit www.vrbo.com/602232
TUCKPOINTING
M. Galati, LLC Tuckpointing Spot or Entire Home
Color Match Experts Power Washing Silicon Waterproofing Owner on site to insure CUSTOMER SATISFACTION No Job Too Small • 35yrs Exp. Senior Discount • Fully Insured
314-365-4241
WANTED QQQQQQQQQQQQQQ WANTED ANTIQUES & COLLECTIBLES Old Advertising, Records Sports Memorabilia, Old Toys STL History, Breweriana, Etc Call Ben at (314)518-5769
SERIOUS COLLECTOR & HISTORIAN Will Pay Top $ for WWII Military Relic's. Swords, Daggers, Metals, Badges, Hats, Helmets, Flags & Guns. 314-249-5369
Ladue News Classified... your trusted local source for merchandise, services and real estate for over 31 years.
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LADUE NEWS CLASSIFIEDS
To place an ad, call: 314-269-8810 email: classified@laduenews.com 72 May 12, 2017 | LadueNews.com
SINCE 1975
9 Wakefield Drive, Ladue $1,249,000
1 Cantor Hill Drive, Ladue 8 Acres $3,750,000
1751 Woodlawn Avenue, Ladue $3,925,000
525 Ticino Drive, Imperial 120 Acres $4,950,000
stephanie
OLIVER & associates
28 Fair Oaks Drive, Ladue $2,395,000
314.725.0009 DielmannSothebysRealty.com
314.322.6992 StephanieOliverSTL.com 8301 Maryland Avenue, Suite 100 St. Louis, MO 63105