AMY ADAMS LEADS PACK OF HOLIDAY MOVIES
THE ACTRESS PLAYS A PAINTER IN TIM BURTON’S “BIG EYES.”
PAGE 07
BOSTON Holiday, December 24-28, 2014 www.metro.us | t: MetroBOS | f: MetroBoston
Holiday movies. “Into the Woods” hits theaters tomorrow, with Anna Kendrick as a very unhappy Cinderella. The star dishes on why dark movies — maybe even “Pulp Fiction” — are good for your kids. PAGE 06
Christmas with nothing for homeless family PAGE 02
Fuel aid need persists as prices drop PAGE 04
What to serve your gluten-free guests PAGE 08
Let’s scare the kids Anna Kendrick takes on the role of Cinderella in «Into the Woods,» the splashy movie of Stephen Sondheim’s fairy tale mash-up musical. / GETTY IMAGES
Tom Brady’s play has cooled off in December PAGE 14
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www.metro.us Holiday, December 24-28, 2014
BOSTON
‘It’s his first Christmas and I have nothing’ Quoted
NEWS
“Hope for a new beginning is probably the best way to put it. This year has been difficult and very trying but it’s also been encouraging because I’ve found so many people who have a big enough heart to want to help.” Lang
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Jennifer Lang and her 5-month-old son Terrence at Project Bread on Dudley Street. / NICOLAUS CZARNECKI/METRO
Project Hope. One homeless mother has hope for a new beginning this holiday
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Jennifer Lang is searching for the words to describe what Christmas is like when you’re the mother of two children, and you’re homeless. We are in a conference room at Roxbury’s Project Hope, a non-profit that provides low- income women with children access to education, jobs and housing. Lang, a 31-year-old who lives in temporary housing in Dorchester with her husband, 8-year-old daughter and 5-month-old son, recently completed a Project Hope training course. She is op-
timistic she’ll find a job as an office administrator in some sort of medical field. Still, she can’t buck a pervasive feeling of disappointment. “You want it to be something special, you didn’t want it to be ‘Well we’re homeless and we can’t afford anything. Merry Christmas.’” Lang is hardly alone. There are currently 3,000 families in the state looking for a place to live, said Elizabeth Zarrella Maglio, the director of sustainability and outcomes for Project Hope. “There’s people in hotels, it’s rough,” said Zarrella Maglio. “It’s because of the housing. There just aren’t affordable places to live anymore.” Lang described last holiday season as a “socks-for-Christmas” year.
Lang was newly unemployed. Shortly after moving here from Sacramento, California last year, she was working as an administrator for a company she won’t name. She was laid off shortly after Thanksgiving 2013. “It was really rough and it’s kind of been an uphill battle ever since.” She and her family, husband
Visit Metro.us for more coverage of poverty in Boston.
Adri, daughter Yasmin and five-month old son Terrence, moved around. They lived in Wrentham but couldn’t afford the rent. They then moved into a friend’s place in Randolph, but had to move out because of mold in the basement. They wound up at a homeless shelter in Chicopee. Starting in October, Lang would make the 90-mile drive from western Massachusetts in a beat-up Buick LeSabre to Project Hope in Roxbury, where she was enrolled in a multi-week career-training course. Depending on traffic, the trip could take three hours, one way. She moved to Dorchester in mid-November and recently finished the course. She said she has since landed some job interviews. Her husband, whom she met at a Hyde Park
church, works in construction but the work is sporadic. Like last year, there is little money for a traditional Christmas, said Lang. Her eyes well up with tears and her voice cracks when she tries to talk about Terrence’s first Christmas. “I have this little guy and it’s his first Christmas and I have nothing,” she said, cradling the boy in her arms. “Not a tree, not a bow, not wrapping paper. Nothing. You want to be able to take pictures and have a memory, but there will be no memory for this year.” She looks for a silver lining. “Hope for a new beginning is probably the best way to put it,” she said. “This year has been difficult and very trying, but it’s also been encouraging because I’ve found so many people who have a big enough heart to want to help.” She adds, “This Christmas is about knowing that this city isn’t just filled with people who only care about themselves.” DANNY McDONALD @METROBOS letters@metro.us
Terror trial. Tsarnaev lawyers want to rein in groupies
Dzhokhar Tsarnaev supporters hold signs outside the Moakley Federal Courthouse on Thursday after his pretrial hearing. NICOLAUS CZARNECKI/METRO
Lawyers for accused Boston bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, whose trial is set to begin on Jan. 5, have asked a federal judge to take “reasonable measures” to control demonstrations by people, mostly women, who claim to support the 21-year-old terror suspect. In a motion filed Monday,
defense attorneys said the demonstrations, in which Tsarnaev supporters blame the bombing on a government conspiracy, could threaten his right to a fair trial. The demonstrators have also suggested that the bombing deaths and injuries were faked by so-called “crisis actors.”
Defense attorneys said in the motion that Tsarnaev does not agree with these notions. Also on Monday, his lawyers asked again, that the high-profile trial be moved out of the city. They say Tsarnaev won’t get a fair trial. “The crimes charged inflicted actual injury on the
entire local population,” attorneys wrote in court papers. “Greater Boston, was itself, a victim.” Prosecutors have argued that impartial juries have been selected before for highprofile trials. It was unknown whether a hearing will be held to discuss the matter. MORGAN ROUSSEAU
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Winter. Heating oil costs are down, but need for fuel assistance remains The price of heating oil plummeted to $3.20 a gallon this week, down from $3.96 last winter, but the demand for government assistance to help state residents warm their homes is still great. Even so, Kathy Tobin, the energy programs director for Action for Boston Community Development said her organization, which covers Brookline, Newton and Boston, received about the same number of applicants for fuel heating assistance as last year — around 20,000. Her organization approves around 18,000 to 19,000 applicants a year. “It’s still a challenge,” said Tobin. “Electric rates are going up, food costs are going up and rents aren’t going down. It’s hard, especially for single-parent families. It’s New England, after all, and it’s cold.” Matthew Sheaff, a spokesman for the state’s Executive Office of Housing and Economic Development, concurred. “Families are still taking advantage of the programs, so
A fuel truck makes deliveries in Boston. / GETTY IMAGES
there’s definitely still a need,” he said. “We’ll be able to help anyone who qualifies and walks through the door; the problem [is that] we can’t sustain them,” said Tobin. About 200,000 Massachusetts families will share in $135 million in federal aid to pay their heating bills this winter, according to the state. DANNY McDONALD @MetroBOS
Avg. winter heating fuel costs in Massachusetts •
2014-2015: $3.34 (per gallon)
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2013-2014: $3.96
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2012-2013: $3.97
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2011-2012: $3.90
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2010-2011: $3.22
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Pardon
Former gang member may run for city council Saying he has reformed his life, a Boston man convicted of abetting a 1989 shooting has won the support of law enforcement officials for a pardon that would let him run for a Boston City Council seat. True-See Allah, formerly known as Troy Christopher Watson, was not the gunman, but he was convicted of armed assault with intent to murder in the 1989 shooting of Macarthur Williams. Allah still needs a pardon for convictions on charges of marijuana possession and receiving a stolen motor vehicle. “I am profusely sorry about that night in question,” he told the Governor’s Council, which votes on pardons and commutations. Allah said he didn’t know the name of the shooter, who he said was never charged. SHNS
Slushing around at the pond The Frog Pond in Boston Common hinted at this holiday’s unusually high temperatures, which are expected to peak in the high 40s by Wednesday afternoon. Skaters on Tuesday slushed through puddles. NICOLAUS CZARNECKI, METRO
SEE WHAT AARP CHAPTER MEMBERS ARE DOING IN DOWNTOWN BOSTON.
From health fairs to food drives, taking trips to giving back, what we do right here in your neighborhood might surprise you. We’re bringing people together while doing good in our community. Get involved with AARP Boston Chapter 88. It’s a great way for you to meet new people, give back and just have fun. Learn more and get to know us by calling 617-350-7032.
2 CULTURE
Visit Metro.us to hear wicked stepmother Christine Baranski talking about her drag queen aspirations.
www.metro.us Holiday, December 24-28, 2014
FILM
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Anna Kendrick: Why kids need to embrace the darker side of life Exclusive. The “Into the Woods” star thinks kids can handle a lot more than we assume. In “Into the Woods,” Anna Kendrick plays Cinderella, though it might not exactly be the Cinderella you're familiar with. Stephen Sondheim’s hit musical takes the much darker original versions of popular fairy tales and adds a post-modern twist, leaving the Disney versions spinning in its wake — which is surprising, since Disney produced the movie adaptation. So, this darker, more irony-fueled take on things: totally not for kids, right? Kendrick would beg to differ. It seems funny that Disney would be handling this musical, considering its take on fairy tales. I know. It's cool that they did this. I think it's smart because for another studio to do it, it would've felt like some kind of attack or something. As this film shows, the fairy tales used to be much, much darker.
Anna Kendrick stars as a different sort of Cinderella in “Into the Woods.” / PETER MOUNTAIN, UNIT
I think that children are intrigued by the dark side of fairy tales. They always want to peer through their fingers and see the ugly bits, and I think that's something very smart that happens in this movie. Some of it is shiny and fun, and then there's little twists on things that kind of excite you. I think we all have movies that we saw when we were young, like “Watership Down” or “Flight of the Navigator” or “Labyrinth” — all these weird movies that left such an impression on us because it was challenging to us, because it was engaging our little brains in a way we weren’t used to. I remember being terrified of “The Ewok Adventure” when I was very little. I never saw “The Ewok Adventure,” but let me tell you, when that Ewok died in “Return of the Jedi,” I was inconsolable for about a week. It just f---ed me up. But kids need that, and adults tend to develop an unrealistic idea of what kids can and can’t handle. Yeah, completely. I mean, my brother showed me “Pulp Fiction” when I was about 10 and I turned out all right, for the most part. What was your favorite part of “Pulp Fiction” when you first saw it? Um, the dancing, probably. And I did like when they stabbed Uma Thurman with
the adrenaline needle. That part was exciting. And even at that age, I remember that the smash cut to her in the car looking all f---ed up was sort of funny and rewarding. I didn't understand why, but I was like, “That makes me laugh. Something terrible happened, and now something funny is happening.” So there is that part of kids’ brains that are really compelled by darkness. And we should obviously encourage that. Yeah. No heroin use in this film, though. Just for the record, in case there are any parents reading. There are a few notable changes from the original “Into the Woods,” and Sondheim has some diehard fans. How do you gird yourself for their reactions? That's a tough one because all you can ever do is hope that the attitude that they take is, “Well, you should see the show because the show is different and exciting as well.” I don't think that anybody who saw the Harry Potter films was discouraged from reading the books, so hopefully this just exposes people to the piece and gets them excited about more live theater. The worst version is people being protective just to be elitist about it. With this, “The Last Five Years” and the “Pitch Perfect” films, do you find it bizarre
that some e people still seemed surprised that you sing?? Yeah, sometimes, metimes, but I'm actually sort ort of charmed by that att this point. A lot of people have been saying, “Oh, but you already knew how to sing ng because we saw you in ‘Pitch itch Perfect,’ and I'm like, “Yeah, but this is nott exactly the same thing.” This his kept me up at night, and “Pitch Perfect” rfect” is pop songs. ngs. I actually find it kind nd of charming ing when people ople are pleasantantly surprised, ed, because when something ng kicks your ur ass and you claw your way to competence, there’s a little resentntment when en people are re like, “Oh,, but this must’ve been a walk alk in the park rk for you.” NED EHRBAR @Nedrick ned.ehrbar@metro.us
ANNA KENDRICK GETTY IMAGES
FILM
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Spend Christmas at the movies Review
Christoph Waltz lords over Amy Adams in Tim Burton’s comedic docudrama “Big Eyes.” / THE WEINSTEIN COMPANY
‘Big Eyes’ ••••• “Big Eyes” tells the crazy story of Margaret Keane (Amy Adams), a painter whose husband, Walter (Christoph Waltz), took credit for her immensely popular works, which featured sad children with giant eyes. The film spins a tale of suffering at the hands of a monster who traded in
mental abuse. But the tone is somehow broad even at its most serious. As directed by Tim Burton — reuniting with his “Ed Wood” writers — it’s a loud-colored and sometimes just plain loud drama with the camp that some modern audiences see in the hyper-stylized melodramas of Douglas Sirk. Adams is her usual withdrawn self, deflating quietly as she lets a swaggering man walk all over her. Everyone else is a cartoon
playing to the rafters. The mass-market quality of Margaret’s paintings obscures to the cognoscenti the artistry that went into them. Meanwhile, here’s a film by one of the world’s most popular filmmakers, who himself has turned a special kind of gloom into a commodity. Much of “Big Eyes” is broad to a fault — if anchored by Adams’ delicate turn — but underneath the angst is another level of equal turmoil. MATT PRIGGE
Review
‘Unbroken’ •••••
There are three movies in Angelina Jolie’s “Unbroken,” and you’re bound to like at least one of them. One is a sappy elegy to youth and America on the brink of World War II. The second is a nifty life raft picture. The third is a POW camp grinder, dragging us through the 2 ½ years its hero — real-life Olympianturned-soldier-turnedlifeboat-dweller-turned-prisoner Louie Zamperini (Jack O’Connell) — was beaten down until the war ended. Spotty and fragmented but never boring, it’s a film that, thanks to a likable but hardly dynamic lead, lacks a center of gravity. MATT PRIGGE
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On site Engraving Jack O’Connell plays Olympian-turned-POW Louie Zamperini in “Unbroken.” / UNIVERSAL PICTURES
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HOME
What to serve your picky dinner guests Hosting. Special diets don’t have to make pparties frustrating. g
How many of your friends and family have special dietary requirements? These days the answer is, probably many of them. Dairy-free, egg-free, nut-free, gluten-free and soyfree are just a handful of restrictions you might encounter trying to accommodate guests as you plan your menu. Whether your guests are keeping allergic reactions at bay, clinging to the latest fad diets or adhering to personal or religious beliefs, hosting a dinner party can turn out to be a major pain. So the question is,
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Tip
Add some color Short says to use dierent colored cherry tomatoes for the best presentation.
how do you cook a meal that is practically free of almost everything imaginable yet still wows the crowd? “Everyone deserves good food and dessert,� says Jenna Short, owner of Shortbreadnyc.com and the author of “Cooking Allergy-Free: Simple Inspired Meals for Everyone.� The recipe for her favorite crowd-pleasing appetizer, “The Bloody Mary Salad,� is below. MOLLY CONGDON @MetroPhilly letters@metro.us
Everyone — trust us, everyone — can eat this.
/ HELEN NORMAN
Ingredients
Recipe. Bloody Mary Salad Directions Put the onions in a large bowl and pour 1 tablespoon of the sherry vinegar on top; let the onions sit for about 10 minutes, then add the tomatoes and celery.
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Whisk the remaining sherry vinegar, horseradish, Worcestershire
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sauce and celery seeds in a medium bowl. Drizzle in the olive oil and whisk until emulsified. Pour the dressing on top of the tomato salad and toss to coat. Season to taste with salt and pepper. Set aside to marinate (the longer it sits, the more intense the flavor will be). Serve cold or at room temperature.
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ž cup ďŹ nely chopped red onion
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2 tablespoons prepared horseradish (See ingredients note.)
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3 tablespoons sherry vinegar, divided
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½ teaspoon celery seeds
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3 pints cherry tomatoes, halved
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Âź cup olive oil
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1 cup ďŹ nely chopped celery hearts
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Kosher salt and freshly ground pepper
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1 tablespoon gluten-free Worcestershire sauce (See ingredients note.)
* Not all brands of horseradish and Worcestershire sauce are gluten-free, so check the label.
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Interview. The Scottish duo is doing much better as a band the second time around.
Legacies
About that ‘Unplugged’ cover Kelly says he has nothing but positive feelings about the legacy of the Nirvana “Unplugged” album. “It’s not a burden or anything. We really embrace it and are always grateful to Nirvana for giving us a leg up. We would have just come along and disappeared like many bands from Glasgow in that period, but their patronage meant that we got a second life. We’ve been going now for over five years in this incarnation, and it wouldn’t have happened if they hadn’t covered the song,” says Kelly.
MTV’s “Unplugged” might have gone the way of the rest of the network’s music programming, but it did gift the world with some classic performances. Chief among them was Nirvana’s massively popular set, which included a cover of the song “Jesus Don’t Want Me for a Sunbeam,” by a little-known Scottish band called The Vaselines. There was just one problem. The Vaselines weren’t really a band anymore when the show aired. In fact, Frances McKee and Eugene Kelly stopped being a band before their first album, “Dum Dum,” was released. In 2008, the duo reunited, then released “Sex with an X” in 2010, followed by “V for Vaselines” in 2014. The album draws inspiration from an unlikely source. “I saw a Ramones tribute band play, and it just reminded me that the Ramones have written lots of great songs, and how short they were, and how melodic and how they got everything they wanted to say in in such a short space of time,” says Kelly of the types of songs on “V for Vaselines.” He praises the Ramones for being able to “say everything you want to say in three minutes.” “I think it just makes [the song] a meteor and it doesn’t hang,” says Kelly. Reuniting after a long absence might be some cause for difficulty, but Kelly says that’s not the case. “I think Frances just really cracks the whip and gets things moving. I tend to procrastinate and muse and wonder and just wait for inspi-
HOT TICKETS
THE VASELINES
RETURN ONCE MORE
The Vaselines play Brighton Music Hall (158 Brighton Ave.) Jan. 17 at 6 p.m. Visit Ticketmaster.com for more information. / NIALL WEBSTER Musician life
Changing times Kelly has seen a lot changes since the first incarnation of The Vaselines: “From the ’80s to now is completely different. The kind of music we made was much more underground and independent.” He points to social media as a positive improvement since then. “You
can tell now when people like you,” he says. Overall, the band seems in a better place now than its first go-round. “It’s more fun now than it was in the ’80s. It was a struggle and it didn’t feel like it was going anywhere, [but] now it really feels like we’ve got fans and an audience and music that we’re happy to play,” says Kelly.
ration, and Frances just says, ‘Come on, let’s get writing’ and knuckles down and gets on with the job. Kicks me up the bum.” The same holds true for their live shows. “We just naturally get into the way we are onstage with each other. Frances just really takes the piss, as we say over here, and I take the piss back. We try to embarrass each other in front of the audience,” says Kelly. One plus to the band break-
Also onstage
ing up before their first album came out? They never had a chance to get tired of playing anything off of it. “A lot of the songs we didn’t play live because we broke up when the album ‘Dum Dum’ was released. When we got back together a few years ago, it felt like we were just picking new songs and playing them,” Kelly says. LISA WEIDENFELD @LisaWeidenfeld
lisa.weidenfeld@metro.us
Also onstage
The Mighty Mighty Bosstones Hometown Throwdown
Friday through Sunday House of Blues 15 Lansdowne St. $25-$40, 800-745-3000 www.ticketmaster.com The Mighty Mighty Bosstones play three nights this weekend with an awesome bunch of opening acts. Friday, they’re joined by Big D and the Kids’ Table and Fishbone, Saturday by the Interrupters and the Warning Shots, Sunday by Andrew W.K. and Lost City Angels. Start practicing your skank now!
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A Sunny Day in Glasgow
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Sunday, 9 p.m. Great Scott 1222 Comm. Ave., Allston $12, 18+; 800-745-3000 www.ticketmaster.com This band’s music really does sound like the sun coming out after 10 days of rain. In an indie scene dominated by dream pop, they’re among the dreamiest. Their lyrics are pretty indecipherable, but the euphoria’s so high that it doesn’t make much difference. One of their songs, “In Love with Useless Lyrics,” has intentionally nonsensical words. MATTHEW DINARO
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MUSIC
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THEATER
Stephen Kellogg Sunday, 7 p.m. Arts at the Armory 191 Highland Ave., Somerville $25, 800-745-3000 www.ticketmaster.com With his lyric-focused alt-country tunes, you might think Stephen Kellogg hailed from some southern locale, but he’s actually from Pennsylvania and based in Northampton. From 2003 to 2012, he had a band called the Sixers, with whom he spent a couple of years on a major label, but now he’s back to being both solo and indie, and it suits him fine. THEATER
‘Once’ Through Saturday Citi Shubert Theater, 265 Tremont St., $48-$98, 866-348-9738, www.citicenter.org This musical, which tells the story of an Irish singer-songwriter who’s given up music and the unnamed Girl who inspires him to give it another shot, was developed right here in Boston at the American Repertory Theater. Despite its minimalist staging and accompaniment (the actors play their own instruments), it went on to conquer Broadway, winning several 2012 Tony awards. JOAN MARCUS
BILL BLUMENREICH PRESENTS
Jewmongous
‘Midsummer’
Wednesday, 6 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. Club Passim 47 Palmer St., Cambridge $20, 617-492-7679 www.passim.org The comedic alter-ego of Sean Altman, founder and former frontman of the group Rockapella, Jewmongous provides decidedly unorthodox satirical songs on being Jewish (and being hated for being Jewish), with titles like “What The Hell Is Simchas Torah?,” “They Tried To Kill Us (We Survived, Let’s Eat),” “Taller Than Jesus” and — well, they’re all pretty great, but you get the idea.
Friday through Jan. 11 Chelsea Theater Works, 189 Winnisimmet St., Chelsea; $15-$25, 617-887-2236, www.apollinairetheatre.com Apollinaire Theater Company presents this romantic comedy by David Greig and Gordon MacIntyre, described not as a musical but rather a “play with songs.” Set in Scotland, it tells of an unlikely but wild romance between Helena, a well-off divorce lawyer with a hobby for extramarital affairs, and Bob, a struggling car salesman from the wrong side of the tracks.
MOVIES
DL HUGHLEY DECEMBER 26
ARTIE LANGE
PROVIDED
Family FUNdraiser: MGM’s ‘The Wizard of Oz’
Friday and Saturday Wheelock Family Theater 200 The Riverway Donation $20, 617-879-2300 www.wheelockfamilytheatre.org Wondering what the heck you’re going do with your not-in-school and very much underfoot kids over this pesky winter break? We hear ya. How about taking them to a singalong screening of “The Wizard of Oz”? This fundraising event for Wheelock Family Theater also includes costumed characters, kids’ games and more. Note: Technically, it’s free, but they suggest a $20 donation.
Thursday through Dec. 31 Brattle Theater 40 Brattle St., Cambridge $8-$12, 617-876-6837 www.brattlefilm.org Few actors get to have as long and varied a career as Bill Murray, from his screwball role in “Caddyshack” to the wild comic fantasies of “Ghostbusters” and Scrooged,” to later dramatic material like “Lost in Translation” and his tragicomic roles in “Rushmore” and “The Life Aquatic.” All those films and more show up in this series.
COMEDY
Jen Kirkman Friday and Saturday Laugh Boston 425 Summer St. $25, 617-725-2844 www.laughboston.com If you’re looking for a family values comedian, Kirkman’s not it. In her set, she says sometimes people ask her why she’s never had kids. Her reply: “I’ve just never had that instinct to ruin my life.” MATTHEW DINARO
ART
DECEMBER 27
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Not Just a Nut: The Essential Bill Murray
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Through January Cooper Gallery, 102 Mt. Auburn St., Cambridge; Free, coopergalleryhc@gmail.com, www.coopergalleryhc.org This exhibition, the first at Harvard’s new Ethelbert Cooper Gallery of African and African-American Art, gathers 98 examples of contemporary African art selected from the Contemporary Art Collection in Geneva, Switzerland. The private collection of Italian businessman Jean Pigozzi includes several thousand artworks, but does not have a permanent exhibition venue.
LETTERS & GAMES Best of 2014
Horoscope
Capricorn | Dec. 22-Jan. 20. Romance is highlighted and will brighten your day. Find an inventive way to show your partner you care. A social event will provide an interesting encounter. Aquarius | Jan. 21-Feb. 18. Enjoy the sense of camaraderie that develops during this festive season. Reflect on happy memories as you put the past behind you. Pisces | Feb. 19-March 20. Don’t contribute to negative rumors or gossip. If you keep a positive outlook and look for the good in others, you will enjoy popularity and long-lasting friendships. Sharing will bring you happiness. Aries | March 21-April 20. Partnerships will be difficult if you aren’t tolerant, patient and willing to give others the benefit of the doubt. Stick close to home, and avoid potentially hazardous situations. Taurus | April 21-May 21. It’s the time of year to forgive and forget. If you show kindness toward relatives you don’t see eye to eye with, you will discover a reason to reassess the way you feel. Gemini | May 22-June 20. Needy or disgruntled people will get on your nerves. Don’t try to please everyone. Instead, do something relaxing that will ease your mind.
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Cancer | June 21-July 22. You can be the center of attention today. Make sure you don’t exclude anyone from the activities you are planning. People younger and older will crave the companionship you offer. Leo | July 23-Aug. 22. Your efforts will be rewarded if you brighten someone’s life with love, laughter and good memories. Affection, romance and happiness are your ticket to a better personal life. Virgo | Aug. 23-Sept. 22. Don’t get caught in the middle of a family feud. Consider getting out of the house and spending time with friends who share your interests. An unexpected incident will influence you.
Through the holidays, Metro takes a look at the issues important to letter writers in 2014. Whether it was gun violence, domestic violence or world conflicts — or cyclists! — Metro readers had a lot to say. Here are some excerpts:
Sagittarius | Nov. 22Dec. 21. Please pay close attention if you are traveling in unfamiliar places. Losing possessions will cause you difficulties, not to mention the cost involved. Be aware of your surroundings at all times. EUGENIA LAST
Kaci Hickox, like many selfless health care workers, put her own life on the line in order to help the victims of a massive tragedy halfway around the world, only to be rewarded by being treated like a cross between a barnyard animal and Typhoid Mary when she returned here. I am amazed by the mindless cowardice on display across the media landscape, especially in the light of real threats to our safety — like the inexcusable and preventable gun violence that no doubt has killed a couple of random Americans today — while our death toll from Ebola remains
DIRK G. (OCT. 17)
If Kaci Hickox feels her human rights were violated, then she is evidently ignorant and needs to read the Constitution. The good nurse’s right to the pursuit of happiness does not apply to threatening the health and safety of others, even if unintentionally or inadvertently, as her fellow citizens in Maine are letting her know. Ebola fears are new to the U.S. and we need to learn as we go.
Ebola I am curious what this widespread Ebola panic is that’s referred to. Here, the only time I hear about it is lighthearted comments among friends. Oh, yes, and the constant news
ROBERT SIEGER (OCT. 30)
at one. ROBERT TROMBETTA (NOV. 3)
Forced quarantine does have precedence going back to the 19th century, so yes, national health trumps the nurse’s temporary discomfort. I should also note it’s been suggested that someone can be contagious without displaying symptoms. SEAN ROOK (NOV. 3)
letters@metro.us Keep them as brief as possible, preferably under 100 words. Metro reserves the right to edit all letters. Please include your name and contact info.
Sudoku: Easy and hard
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Libra | Sept. 23-Oct. 22. Travel will spark your creativity and stimulate your imagination. Don’t let unanticipated delays ruin your festive spirit. Scorpio|Oct. 23-Nov. 21. Your hard work will go to waste if someone else takes the credit. Maintain a close rapport with your superiors and make sure your contribution is noted.
reports about how hard it is to get and that preventive measures will make it spread faster.
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How to play Fill in the grid so that every row, every column and every 3x3 box contains the digits 1-9. There is no math involved. You solve the puzzle with reasoning and logic.
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Crossword
Across 1 Persist 5 Rain-delay rollout 9 Knock for a loop 14 Como — usted? 15 He directed Marlon 16 Condor’s abode 17 — — foot pole 18 Barely beats 19 -- and desist 20 Frisky pets 22 Fished with a net 24 “Nick of Time” singer 26 Oklahoma town 27 Ski run 30 Win a business contract 35 Leitmotif 36 Two-piece cookie 37 Art — 38 Louis XIV, e.g. 39 Renting out 42 Chainsaw target 43 Opera by Verdi 45 Volition 46 For — — (cheap) 48 Yellow wildflower
50 Lethargic 51 Response to a rodent 52 Cousteau invention 54 Like some investors 58 Honor 62 Illinois town 63 Goddess’s statue 65 S&L offerings 66 Hollandaise 67 Glassmaker -- Lalique 68 Adamson’s lioness 69 Links champ Sam -70 Watched carefully 71 Raise, as kids
Down 1 Drip 2 — spumante 3 Proofer’s word
4 Hissy fit 5 Kind of racket 6 Elite (2 wds.) 7 Pants problem 8 Memoir topic 9 False front 10 Away from the wind 11 Ph.D. exam 12 Belgian river 13 Tall stalk 21 Painter’s device 23 Hazardous gas 25 Pond denizens 27 Subway hanger 28 Cantata performers 29 Alpine moppet 31 Simon or Armstrong 32 Further down 33 PC symbols 34 Kind of bag 36 Singer — Redding 40 Jedi allies 41 Getups 44 It was named for Vespucci 47 More lathered up
Visit us online at Metro.us. Use your smartphone to find today’s crossword answers! Download and open the Blippar app on your smartphone and hold the screen over the puzzle.
Yesterday’s answer
49 Curbed, with “in” 50 Fenced 53 Hag 54 She preceded Mamie 55 High spirits 56 Flu symptom 57 Charter 59 Gardner of mystery 60 Hombre’s home 61 Autocrat of yore 64 Susan of “L.A. Law”
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www.metro.us Holiday, December 24-28, 2014
SPORTS
Brady’s recent play lackluster NFL. Tom Brady began the season cold and has finished the year in a mini-slump.
SPORTS
Patriots fans who earlier this season were clamoring to see Jimmy Garoppolo take regular season snaps may finally get their wish Sunday. No, Garoppolo is not going to pull a Rob Johnson and steal
Tom Brady hasn’t played up to his sky-high standard in the month of December. / GETTY IMAGES
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up and down as of late. We’ve got to start really putting some great football together here in [this] next [game].� Last year, Brady also had a relatively sub-par closing stretch to the regular season. Brady and the Pats went 3-1 against the Browns, Dolphins, Ravens and Bills, but Brady had an average quarterback rating of 83.2 in those last four games. Whether this trend carried over to the postseason is up for debate, as the Patriots torched the Colts in the divisional round, 43-22, but Brady put up blah numbers (13-of-25 for 198 yards, 0 TDs, 0 INTs, 78.4 QB rating). In the 26-16 AFC Championship game loss to the Broncos, Brady was better – hitting on 24-of-38 passes for 277 yards with one TD pass and zero interceptions while owning a 93.9 QB rating. MATT BURKE @BurkeMetroBos
matthew.burke@metro.us
Quoted
“After the last few weeks of football, I’d love to go out there and see if our oense can put together the best 60 minutes of football we’ve put together in a long time. We’ve been up and down as of late.â€? Brady
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