Greenwich - November 2022

Page 57

49VINEYARD.COM | $5,995,000

Discreetly secluded, this modern sanctuary set high above the street easily integrates with its sylvan environment. Striking a balance between bold architectural design and warm, contemplative interiors, walls of glass bring in the light and open to the lush setting in a glade overlooking a pond. The dramatically scaled foyer and living room are perfect for fine art displays. A chef’s kitchen with sunny breakfast room adjoins the family room with stone fireplace, butler’s pantry and dining room. Sliding doors open to the backyard patio with pool and spa, barbecue and outdoor firepit. Sophisticated 1st floor owner’s suite also opens to the patio and features a stone fireplace and spa-like bathroom with sauna. Lower level with playroom, wine cellar, gym and golf simulator.

203.940.2025

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GREENWICH BROKERAGE ONE PICKWICK PLAZA, GREENWICH
49 Vineyard Lane Greenwich, Connecticut
Matt Bernard 203.273.2883 33 Byram Drive 33BYRAMDRIVE.COM | OFFERED AT $15,995,000 GREENWICH BROKERAGE | ONE PICKWICK PLAZA, GREENWICH 203.869.4343 | SOTHEBYSREALTY.COM Fred Danback 631.747.4583 The Stonehill STONEHILLGREENWICH.COM | OFFERED AT $9,175,000 Tracey Koorbusch 203.561.8266 9 Lake Drive 9LAKEDRIVE.COM | OFFERED AT $4,495,000 © 2022 Sotheby’s International Realty. All Rights Reserved. Sotheby’s International Realty® is a registered trademark and used with permission. Each Sotheby’s International Realty office is independently owned and operated, except those operated by Sotheby’s International Realty, Inc. The Sotheby’s International Realty network fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. Alice Duff 203.550.7337 150 Taconic Road 150TACONICRD.COM | OFFERED AT $3,500,000 Roxana Bowgen 203.550.2222 48 Lafrentz Road 48LAFRENTZ.COM | OFFERED AT $3,995,000 Lisa Weicker 203.249.3131 | Rachel Franco 203.249.3891 | Heather Platt 203.219.0775 The Elms - Four Distinct Residences 97EELMSTA.COM | OFFERED AT $3,895,000

NOVEMBER 2022

10 EDITOR’S LETTER

12 FOUNDER’S LETTER Of Tales From the Hair House

21 STATUS REPORT

BUZZ We take a look at how Abilis is fostering inclusion, independence and community for those with special needs. SHOP Our holiday gift guide will give you the inspo you need to let everyone know that they made the nice list. HOME Add interest to your interior design with these rich tones and cool shapes. GO Think Philadelphia is all about cheesesteaks, Rocky and a cracked bell? Think again. We’ve got a super-luxe trip planned for you. DO Experts offer advice on pediatric cardiac health and the key things every parent should know. EAT Don’t want to spend Thanksgiving slaving away in the kitchen but want a homey, comfortable vibe for the family? We check out some charming close-by inns that are ready to welcome you to their tables (and do the dishes).

50 MONEY MATTERS

Throughout the pandemic we saw the need in less-fortunate communities reach staggering levels. It has led many people to ask how they can use their wealth to improve the lives of others. Here are some suggestions.

52 G-MOM

Tennis anyone? Not this time. Grab your racquet, and let’s play some pickleball, squash and table tennis; Our friends at the Greenwich Moms Network roundup festive local events and activities.

57 PEOPLE & PLACES

68

LIGHT A FIRE

In this, the season of giving, our Light a Fire awards celebrate the unsung heroes among us who are affecting change in incredible ways. It is our honor to introduce them to you.

CT 06880.

PO BOX 9309, Big Sandy, TX 75755-9607.

THE GREAT DIVIDE

Reproductive rights are under fire around the country. In this in-depth look, we explore the history of those rights here in Connecticut. From puritanical to progressive, we’ve come a long way. But can we stop history from repeating itself?

CT,

Greenwich International Film Festival; Caramoor Gala; Whitby School; YWCA of Greenwich; Greenwich Emergency Medical Services; Harvard Business School Club of CT

67 VOWS

McElwreath—Garland

97 CALENDAR

103 INDEX OF ADVERTISERS

104 POSTSCRIPT Babies just horsing around

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on the cover: our 2022 light a fire honorees photographs: andrea carson
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LIGHTING THE WAY

For more than a decade we have presented our annual Light a Fire awards as a way to celebrate all that is right with the world. Here we give center stage to people who have given of their time, financial resources and hearts to bring about change.

But making a difference can be scary. The challenges can be daunting. Sometimes the darkness is so vast or the job that needs to be done seems so big that it’s easier to shut it all out. However, the passion of the men and women that we honor (page 68) shows us that it’s always possible to light up the darkness. Between them, they have spearheaded life-changing programs, rallied communities and raised millions of dollars for dozens of charitable causes.

For one of our honorees, her drive to shift the paradigm for those in need continued even after a life-altering stroke. Think about that: Instead of allowing fear or despair

consume her, she faced it head on and said, “You will not break me. I will use you to become stronger.”

For others, their passion was borne of empathy, compassion and the belief that it is our obligation to leave the world in a better place than when we found it. All of them work tirelessly for their causes. Whether it’s championing mental health, diversity, the arts and environment or helping refugees, the elderly and abused, they show us that every hand you hold, every smile you share, every dollar you raise can indeed change the world. We are lucky to count them among our friends and neighbors.

There is no better time than this, the season of gratitude, to meet these advocates of change. We hope that they will inspire you as much as they did us.

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OF TALES FROM THE HAIR HOUSE

If you need an excuse to get your hair done by a pro, November is a good time to head back to the beauty parlor. Covid is winding down, the nonprofits are squeezing in as many luncheons and galas as possible before Thanksgiving, then come the big-time holidays.

At twenty-six, when I was pregnant with Jonathan, I figured I’d reached “matron’s estate” and was entitled to regular do-s. I was, after all, my mother’s daughter. How well I remember her weekly visits to the beauty parlor, mostly because they gave Little Me a very grown-up job to keep me occupied. Her hairdresser, Betty LeFevre, would hand me a long stick with a magnet at the end and challenge me to lift every stray bobby-pin off the floor of the rather large salon. Boy, what a heavy-duty responsibility.

Mother thought that I needed permanents like she did for her extra-fine hair and talked me into having a nice tight one the day before my wedding in 1959. But when Jack and I hit the heat of Jamaica on our honeymoon, my new curls turned into a Brillo pad. She’d also loaded me up with Dramamine in case I got airsick; then I managed to get a coral infection in my leg from falling off a surfboard. Jack enjoyed telling the story about his zombie bride with the red Afro limping along behind him on crutches at the Plantation Inn.

I’ve found beauty parlors everywhere we’ve

traveled, but the classic was in Oaxaca, Mexico. They washed my hair with cold water and the equivalent of Lava soap, then sat me under a drier outside on the sidewalk for all the passersby to see. Plus, my ears stick out. It was total embarrassment.

You learn a lot at the hair house. Hairdressers like to cook, especially if they’re Italian; and they talk food all the time. But they’re generous about sharing recipes. You can find out what good movies are playing, who just came down with shingles, what’s going on at Edgehill and whose husbands are having flings with their nannies. You see gentlemen you know having their hair dyed, which is kind of poetic. They shouldn’t be there anyway. It’s like turning a guy loose in the ladies’ locker room. I mean, there you are with your hair in foils like a porcupine or your head covered with black goo. Ugh.

Kids are all right, though, sitting on booster seats like pint-sized princesses being fluffed and fussed over. Then they move on to the manicurist for polish topped with a tiny diamond on one pinky—the highlight of our granddaughters’ sleepovers.

Memorable things happen at the hairdressers. Elaine Leegstra was at Pierre Michel in Trump Tower in New York, where a young operator (good word for him) named Stuart was giving his client the de rigeur neck

greenwichmag.com 12
VENTURE PHOTOGRAPHY, GREENWICH, CT
“You see gentlemen you know having their hair dyed, which is kind of poetic.”

PAUL MORELLI

and shoulder massage. But it ended with him sliding his hands down the front of the lady’s blouse, and guess what? She didn’t bat an eye!

Cristin Marandino was at Warren Tricomi when a tippling socialite came in for a blow-dry minutes after hitting somebody’s dog. When the Greenwich police arrived to take her down to the station, she made a quiet exit but returned afterwards to finish having her hair done.

When Netty Schieferdecker went to Beaumont Salon for haircuts, her stylist, a gospel singer, would serenade her. “It was really quite lovely,” she recalls.

As for me, where to begin? I was at the hairdresser when we got the news that Kennedy was shot. It was a dismal scene, with stunned ladies milling around commiserating in flowing plastic capes, like a heavenly choir with their hair in rollers.

I’ve been there when peddlers passed through—a Korean from New York with counterfeit movies, a stoned truck driver

off I-95 with hot TVs. But the girls selling sandwiches are always welcome.

I was at the hairdressers when a crazed woman locked herself in the loo and wouldn’t come out. When someone was having a facial, and her water broke. And when an archrival threatened a newly-opened salon, and the police were called to come check for bombs under cars and in the big rubber plant that arrived with no gift card.

I was at Panache in Old Greenwich a while back when my house was trying to burn itself down, which I didn’t know until I got home. I just heard the hook and ladders roaring out of the Sound Beach Fire Department across the street and wondered what poor souls were in trouble. It turned out to be me (and Jack). Funny things happen at beauty parlors. Once when Panache lost power, my hairdresser, Gary Yovan, took me next door to the Sports Shop to finish my comb-out by candlelight. Then there was the morning we had to put our wonderful old golden retriever to sleep.

I was tearfully sharing the news with Gary when a grumpy woman in another chair shouted: “Stop talking about death!” That, of course, became one of our favorite lines. (Ironically, shortly thereafter, the lady and her husband were sitting in their apartment watching television when the ceiling fell down on their heads. But they survived.)

“It’s a sitcom in there,” says Libby Tracey, who livened things up one day by stepping outside onto Sound Beach Avenue in her smock and foils to ask people if they’d like to come in and have their hair done. Dora Faugno, the owner of the salon, almost fainted. We had an amazing neighbor who at 104 was still sharp as a tack, still enjoyed a Scotch and water in the evening and still got down to Panache every Tuesday to get her hair and nails done. So think of her for inspiration if you’re tired of getting an eyeful of shampoo in the shower and worrying about your old hair dryer blowing up. There’s help out there. And hey, it’s November! G

singular in design

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“Edgy incarnations of luxury”
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ONE OF THE OLDEST AND MOST ESTABLISHED FAMILY JEWELERS, SHREVE, CRUMP & LOW SPECIALIZES IN PREMIER GEMS OF ALL CARATS, COLORED DIAMONDS, AND FINE-QUALITY JEWELRY AND WATCHES.

THE BEST GOLD COAST RETAILER SPOTLIGHT
greenwichmag.com 16

SHREVE , CRUMP & LOW

Shreve, Crump & Low is a premier family jeweler with locations in Greenwich and Boston. In addition to having one of the best collections of fine jewelry and watches, the company shines in exceptional customer service and sourcing for its clients.

Founded in 1796 in downtown Boston—and set-up just across the street from Paul Revere— the jeweler has a rich history of taking part in distinguished commissions, while staying true to its New England roots as a family business. Run by the Walker Family—Brian, Bradford and Olivia Walker—the siblings are leading the company after their late father, David Walker, passed away in 2021. The Walkers, who come from a long line of jewelers, share the same passions and devotion as the generations before them.

JEWELRY BRANDS SHREVE CRUMP & LOW, CHOPARD, IKIGAI, OSCAR HEYMAN, PICCHIOTTI, DINH VAN, VINTAGE TIFFANY & CO., VINTAGE CARTIER AS WELL AS AN EXTENSIVE ESTATE COLLECTION

WATCH BRANDS AUTHORIZED RET AILER: BELL & ROSS, BREITLING, CHOPARD, TAG HEUER, BREMONT, OMEGA, ZENITH, IWC, NOMOS, BLANCPAIN, HUBLOT, PANERAI, JAEGERLECOULTRE, PIAGET, VACHERON-CONSTANTIN, GREUBEL FORSEY, H. MOSER & CIE, LAURENT FERRIER, GIRARD-PERREGAUX

The company recently launched the David G. Walker Collection of Magnificent Jewels—a one-of-a-kind collection featuring some of the world’s rarest and finest diamond and gemstone jewelry. Nearly all pieces were handpicked and curated by the late Mr. Walker himself. With his talent, skill and natural gifts, he graciously left behind one of the most impressive collections available today.

While Shreve, Crump & Low caters to several generations of families who have chosen them for life’s biggest milestones, the jeweler also acquires pieces for modern tastemakers like celebrities and professional athletes. No matter who the client is, the store is committed to serve those looking to follow traditions or begin their own.

This holiday, the jeweler features timeless pieces as well as must-haves like statement pearls and eternity rings with bright, colored gemstones. Other top sellers include stacking tennis bracelets, fine gold jewelry, and architecturally unique estate pieces—especially old European and antique-cut diamonds.

Shreve, Crump & Low offers the following tips when shopping this season:“Look to honor a recent milestone in the recipient’s life, pay attention to their personal style, and pick a piece that can easily transition between everyday wear and special occasions.”

To ensure that holiday gifts are a true surprise, the store recommends items that don’t require checking a size. Consider purchasing pieces like pendant necklaces, earrings, or diamond and gemstone tennis bracelets. This will help keep your gifts under wraps.

125 GREENWICH AVENUE, GREENWICH | 39 NEWBURY STREET, BOSTON, MA
SHREVECRUMPANDLOW.COM @SHREVECRUMPLOW
THE BEST GOLD COAST RETAILER SPOTLIGHT
NOVEMBER 2022 GREENWICH 17

VOCK AND VINTAGE

Vock and Vintage is a high-end jewelry salon and world leader in collectible, colored gemstones. They feature an assortment of timeless estate jewelry such as Bulgari, Cartier, Van Cleef & Arpels, and other luxury brands known for style, quality and value. Customers appreciate the level of personal attention and custom work, which includes design solutions, as well as restoration and repair services.

In 1990 Vock and Vintage opened its first location in New York City, and after much success, debuted the Greenwich design salon in early 2021. The salons are a spin-off of ProVockative Gems, a family-owned gem business based in Manhattan. Vock’s husband Alex is a world-renowned specialist in precious gems and natural pearls, and the couple’s son Elias joined the firm in 2021. The family lives in New Canaan.

“Our strength is in knowing the market,” says owner and designer Donna Vock.“We do this via extensive travel and participation in events worldwide, where we buy opportunistically and continually update our inventory to suit demand.”

Vock and Vintage’s wide-ranging fans share a love for

statement jewelry, an appreciation for Old World craftsmanship and a passion for collecting.

“A big percentage of our client base are successful women self-purchasing,” says Vock.“Another segment are men who not only love the giftgiving aspect of jewelry buying, but also appreciate the long-term benefits of having these hard assets.”

This season, Vock and Vintage sees clients gravitating toward color and dressing up more, with formal jewelry coming back strong. Some on-trend items include vintage chunky gold daywear jewelry, Baroque-shaped white pearls and pearl earrings, and precious colored gemstone rings like emeralds, rubies and sapphires.“Important diamond necklaces are back,”Vock says.“Nothing makes a woman feel more beautiful or stand up taller than wearing a serious diamond necklace that flatters her.”

When it comes to holiday gifts, Vock advises buyers,“Step up and purchase that one thing where your partner resisted temptation! If you’re not sure, ask us. We always know the one or two things she may be ‘secretly’ coveting.”

Vock and Vintage is open by appointment only, but the shop also schedules Open Houses.

VOCKANDVINTAGE.COM @VOCKANDVINTAGE 24 FIELD POINT ROAD, SUITE 3A, GREENWICH 28 WEST 44TH STREET, SUITE 910, NEW YORK CITY
COLLECTIONS BULGARI CARTIER VAN CLEEF & ARPELS AND OTHER WELL-KNOWN LUXURY BRANDS THE BEST GOLD COAST RETAILER SPOTLIGHT greenwichmag.com 18

MANFREDI JEWELS

Specializing in luxury watches, jewelry and wedding rings, Manfredi Jewels has been a purveyor of fine jewelry for more than 30 years. Owner Roberto Chiappelloni, who is an avid watch collector, recalls “turning my passion into my profession” when he partnered with Manfredi to open the Greenwich store in 1988.

“By working with a brand known for fine craftsmanship and innovative creativity,” he says, “I was inspired to pass that onto my clients. That credibility and excellence is still something that Manfredi is known for today.”

Clients come here not only for the most-wanted luxury watches and jewelry, but also to discover something new. The Greenwich flagship stocks over 30 watch brands and specializes in artisan independents, while the New Canaan location carries sought-after names like Rolex, Tudor and Hermès.

To keep up with the demand in New Canaan, Manfredi is doubling the size of its store. The expanded space will include a dedicated section for Pomellato, a Milan-based brand known for colorful gem combinations and an international following. There is a renovation un-

derway in the Greenwich shop as well, which will feature a new area for Vacheron Constantin, Breguet, Blancpain and Zenith.

Holiday trends are on point at Manfredi this season, with effortless jewelry that can be worn daily. Clients will find everything from watches with unique watch dial colors to multi-hued stackable bracelets, tennis bracelets/necklaces and bracelet watches. Color wise, green, orange and red are big, and pieces are available in different finishes.“Both men and women are seeing a resurgence of fantastic choices from many different brands, which are offering rose and even yellow gold on watches and bracelets,” says Chiappelloni.

When selecting a holiday gift, Chiappelloni recommends starting early, finding out the recipient’s style, and picking out something sentimental. Sharing special details about the person you are shopping for will enable the Manfredi experts to help choose the perfect present.

“We have over 100 years combined experience on our sales floor,” says Chiappelloni. “Our associates are good listeners who love to help clients find the perfect gift for that special occasion.”

121 GREENWICH AVENUE, GREENWICH 72 ELM STREET, NEW CANAAN
MANFREDIJEWELS.COM @MANFREDIJEWELS
WATCHES BLANCPAIN BREGUET BULGARI GIRARD-PERREGAUX GLASHUTTE GRAND SEIKO HERMÈS LONGINES OMEGA ROLEX TUDOR VACHERON CONSTANTIN ZENITH JEWELRY BRANDS BUCCELLATI CHOPARD ROBERTO COIN ESTATE JEWELRY MARCO BICEGO MESSIKA MIKIMOTO POMELLATO TACORI THE BEST GOLD COAST RETAILER SPOTLIGHT NOVEMBER 2022 GREENWICH 19

46 Carriglea Drive, Riverside, CT

4 Bedrooms | 3.1 Bathrooms | 3,334 SF

Updated contemporary with spectacular water views. West facing with beautiful sunsets. Just over an acre of land in a private setting. 150+ feet of water frontage, entertaining platform at water’s edge and private dock with boat lift. Ann Simpson | 203.940.0779 | $6,295,000

2 Vista Avenue, Old Greenwich, CT

5 Bedrooms | 4.1 Bathrooms | 5,921 SF

Incredible opportunity to live on one of the most desirable streets in Old Greenwich! This 5-bedroom, 4 and 1/2 bath home has nearly 6,000 square feet of living space and sits on a private oversized .70 acre lot with deeded water access in Greenwich Cove Park. Alison Leigh | 203.667.7832 | $5,395,000

3 Wahneta Road, Old Greenwich, CT

4 Bedrooms | 3.1 Bathrooms | 2,560 SF

South of Old Greenwich Village on a quiet, coveted road, this classic Colonial awaits a new owner ready to enjoy the Old Greenwich lifestyle. Oversized property-level, no flood zone - .44 acre in R-12 zone allows for expansion of multiple amenities. Helen Maher | 203.249.4489 | $2,595,000

GREENWICH | 136 East Putnam Ave.| 203-869-0500

OLD GREENWICH | 200 Sound Beach Ave. | 203-637-1713

BHHSNENYHVP

229 Cognewaugh Drive, Cos Cob, CT

4 Bedrooms | 4 Bathrooms | 3,520 SF

Lovingly expanded and updated Colonial set on a beautiful private acre presents a unique opportunity for the next owner to personalize the home and add their own distinctive finishing touches. Ten minutes to train and downtown. Robin Bartholomew | 203.253.3575 | $1,795,000

©2022 BHH Affiliates, LLC. An independently owned and operated franchisee of BHH Affiliates, LLC. Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices and the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices symbol are registered service marks of Columbia Insurance Company, a Berkshire Hathaway affiliate. Equal Housing Opportunity. Search all homes for sale at bhhsNEproperties.com

Building Blocks

HOW ONE EXCEPTIONAL ORGANIZATION IS HARNESSING THE ABILITIES AND DREAMS OF THOSE WITH SPECIAL NEEDS TO FOSTER INCLUSION AND COMMUNITY

top: Sophia Moubayed at The Café at Darien Library middle row: Mae Sanchez and Kristy Kasmarski at Abilis Gardens & Gifts; Travis Baskin at Home Depot in Norwalk bottom row: Christian Young, an Abilis Project SEARCH graduate and now an employee at the Darien YMCA; Nicole Cohade at Greenwich Dental Group; Melanie Luchetta at The Café at Greenwich Library

When you have special needs, life skills are often elusive and difficult to learn. What many take for granted—having a sense of purpose and a reason to get out of bed each morning, being part of a team, possessing the ability to earn a living—are the soft skills that need nurturing and support to achieve and maintain.

That’s where Abilis steps in, a nonprofit that provides services and assistance to more than 800 individuals with special needs and their families. Since its inception in 1951, Abilis’s goal has been integrating people with special needs into the community with programs that begin at birth and continue through retirement.

Here, we take a closer look at the Competitive Employment Program, which fills the gap between high school and retirement with training skills, encouragement and support in all aspects of life. For Abilis, it’s all about integration and access to resources: helping those with special needs live, work, thrive and enjoy the community they call home.

Amy Montimurro, president and CEO of Abilis, says that the organization is supporting close to 450 individuals in the program, some residing at one of the sixty-one Abilis residential locations throughout Fairfield County. “We help them build needed skills and customize career plans, so they can live more independent and fulfilling lives,” says Amy.

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STATUS REPORT

Luis Velazquez, vice president of Day and REACH services, which support those who are able to live independently, explains that many go through training at one of three places—Project SEARCH with Greenwich Hospital, Coffee for Good, and Abilis Gardens & Gifts with partner, Nielsen’s of Darien. For some, volunteer posts are a stepping stone for employment.

For others it is employment at more than 100 companies and organizations. For example, Abilis runs the coffee shop at Greenwich Library. It’s there that we met staffer Mary Weglowski. At forty-four, Mary, who has been with Abilis since she was two years old and lives in an Abilis-supported residential apartment, proudly says she works four jobs, including the Café at Greenwich Library, office filing at the Therapy Center at Abilis and working with the Abilis Cleaning Crew. She is also a trainee at Coffee for Good. “I love my work,” she says, smiling. “People appreciate that I am thorough and that I have initiative.”

You’ll also often see Abilis employees at Stop & Shop, Island Beach Concession, Gregory’s Coffee and Feinsod Ace Hardware, where Jay Feinsod took on his first Abilis employee, Tommy Toledo, more than ten years ago. Abilis supported Tommy through his transition from a student at Darien High School to internships and finally this job. “We need Tommy,” Feinsod says. “I wish he could work more. He’s our Weber grill master, putting them together. And if you’ve ever done one, you understand how many parts there are. Tommy is good at it, he’s quick, and he’s very self-sufficient.” In addition to his pay, Feinsod’s wife, Esta, rewards Tommy with her chocolate chip cookies.

Overseeing all the workers, including Mary and Tommy, is Abilis job coach Kristy Hickman. Although her hours can be long, her job is fulfilling. “At the end of each day, to hear their excitement on the phone or see their smiling faces, I know they are happy. Their lives have meaning and purpose and give them a reason to get up in the morning. I tell them to call me any time and I mean it. This is more than a job to me. I am their friend and a support to each of them.”

HAND-IN-HAND

These Greenwich organizations and businesses provide training, employment and volunteer opportunities. There are more than 100 throughout Fairfield County and Port Chester.

• ACME

• BEACH HOUSE

• BELLE HAVEN COUNTRY CLUB

• BEST PLUMBING

• BOARD OF EDUCATION

• BOXCAR CANTINA

• FRENCH FARM

• GRANOLA BAR

• GREENWICH DENTAL GROUP

• GREENWICH GREEN AND CLEAN

• GREENWICH HOSPITAL

• GREENWICH LIBRARY

• GREENWICH POINT CONSERVANCY

• GREENWICH TOWN HALL

• GREENWICH WOODS

• GREGORY’S COFFEE

• HAPPINESS IS…BACK COUNTRY MARKET

• JEWISH FAMILY SERVICES

• KING STREET NURSING

• LITTLE PUB

• MCARDLE’S FLORIST AND GARDEN CENTER

• NATHANIEL WITHERELL

• NEIGHBOR TO NEIGHBOR

• PAT-A-CAKE PLAYSCHOOL

• RIVERSIDE COMMONS

• ROUND HILL CLUB

• SMART KIDS

• SOMETHING NATURAL

• SPLASH

• SPLURGE

• STANWICH COUNTRY CLUB

• STAPLES

• STOP & SHOP

• THE CAFÉ AT GREENWICH LIBRARY

• WHOLE FOODS

• BOYS AND GIRLS CLUB

• BOY SCOUTS OF AMERICA/CAMP SETON

• COBS BREAD BAKERY

• COFFEE FOR GOOD

• FAMILY CENTERS

• FEINSOD ACE HARDWARE

• YMCA OF GREENWICH

• YWCA OF GREENWICH

greenwichmag.com 22 LAMONT AND YOON PHOTO: JENIFER HOWARD
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above: Michelle Yoon with Governor Ned Lamont at The Café at Greenwich Library below: Abilis employees at the Island Beach Concession stand. Abilis provided inclusive employment at the stand the past two summers.
An independent, college preparatory day school, providing character-based education for boys in Pre-Kindergarten through Grade 12. Preparing boys for life in a changing world. bwick.org/openhouse RSVP FOR OUR OPEN HOUSE NOV. 6
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TODD SNYDER Canadian Cardigan Sweater, $698 Greenwich; toddsnyder.com KAYNE Mens Fisherman Sweater, $295, Greenwich; jennikayne.com Leather Travel Bag, $1,795, Greenwich; eleventymilano.com BRUNELLO CUCINELLI Stripe Silk Necktie, $295, Westport, Greenwich; shop.mitchellstores.com Omega Speedmaster; $14,800, Greenwich, New Canaan; manfredijewels.com TODD SNYDER + NEW ERA NY Yankees Low Profile Chalkstripe Cap, $120, Greenwich; toddsnyder.com FRAME Modern Flannel Long Sleeve zip Shirt, $398; frame-store.com VINCE Lorimer Suede Chukka Boot, $275, Greenwich, Westport; vince.com
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ALL IMAGES COURTESY OF DESIGNERS/BRANDS
color or pattern is a great way to show that you celebrate someone’s personality 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 -
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MONICA RICH KOSANN The Catherine Staggered Diamond Locket, $5,170; monicarichkosann.com
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Experience Holiday Magic in Greenwich.

Jenny Allen is a proud sponsor of Santa’s Workshop at the 14th Annual Reindeer Festival in Greenwich. Come visit the North Pole on North Street.

The cherished town tradition continues for the 14th consecutive year at Sam Bridge Nursery where visitors can have their photo taken with Santa, meet the reindeer and enjoy Santa’s Workshop.

Jenny Allen

Lic.

jenny.allen@compass.com

M: 203.921.6327

O: 203.343.0141

compass.com

Photos with Santa November 25 – December 24, 2022

Sam Bridge Nursery + Greenhouses 437 North Street Greenwich, CT

Monday – Friday | 12pm – 6pm

Saturday | 9am – 6pm

Closed Sundays

Christmas Eve | 9am – 3pm

Jenny Allen is a real estate licensee affiliated with Compass Connecticut, LLC, a licensed real estate broker and abides by Equal Housing Opportunity laws. All material presented herein is intended for informational purposes only. Information is compiled from sources deemed reliable but is subject to errors, omissions, changes in price, condition, sale, or withdrawal without notice. Photos may be virtually staged or digitally enhanced and may not reflect actual property conditions. 200 Greenwich Avenue, Fl. 3, Greenwich, CT 06830
Learn more A portion of all photos with Santa benefit Kids in Crisis

Hi, Philly! Nice to Meet You

THE CITY OF BROTHERLY LOVE IS MORE THAN JUST A CRACKED BELL

Philadelphia is a lot like an overlooked middle child. Not as cosmopolitan as New York and not the center of government like D.C., the birthplace of democracy is more closely associated with cheesesteaks and Rocky Balboa. But Philadelphians know that it’s more than that. And with a new five-star Four Seasons and the Michelin Guide sniffing around, so will everyone else.

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ALEJANDRO
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LOTS TO THINK ABOUT

Philadelphia has the most extensive collection of sculpture work outside of Paris. Around the corner from the Rocky statue (where the huddled masses queue for snapshots) sits the stately Rodin Museum and Gardens. The first bronze cast of Auguste Rodin’s The Gates of Hell stands at the entrance. Admission is only $12, but you could see this and a cast of The Thinker without even walking through the doors. Philly’s Thinker is a cast of the 1902–1904 version. It was installed for the opening of the Rodin Museum in 1929 in front of a façade replicating his tomb at the Musée Rodin in Paris. Interesting fact: When his wife died, Rodin put a copy of The Thinker on her grave.

ALSO KNOWN AS

Philadelphia has a lot of nicknames: City of Brotherly Love, The Birthplace of America and now the City of Murals. There are more than 4,000 murals spread across the city. It's the largest public art program of its kind.

AT THE ART OF IT ALL

The Barnes Foundation is a boring name for one of the most exciting museums in the city, perhaps in the country. The Barnes, as it’s known, has the world’s largest collections of paintings by Renoir (179) and Cézanne (69), as well as significant works by Matisse, Picasso, Modigliani, Van Gogh, and other renowned artists. Unlike most museums, no placards explain the art or identify the artist. The art is hung precisely as it was in Dr. Barnes’ home before the city moved the collection to its current location ten years ago. Get a guide who will teach you the Barnes method of looking at art in a unique and approachable way. No need to be an art history major to enjoy this stunning collection. Entrance is $25 for adults.

NOVEMBER 2022 GREENWICH 33
© THE BARNES FOUNDATION, PHILADELPHIA. PHOTO BY MICHAEL PEREZ; RODIN MUSEUM AND GARDENS BY VALERIYAPSTOCK.ADOBE.COM COMMON THREADS MURAL PHOTO BY STEVE WEINIK;
© THE BARNES FOUNDATION, PHILADELPHIA. PHOTO BY SEAN MURRAY above: The Common Threads mural by Meg Saligman features contemporary people imitating postures of historical figurines. above: No trip to Philly is complete without a visit to the Rodin Museum and Gardens. below and bottom right: The Barnes offers a unique way to view masterpieces.

WHERE TO STAY— THERE’S ONE CHOICE

The hotel scene in Philly has been decidedly average until recently. The Ritz is in a lovely building, but it’s tired. Kimpton markets itself as luxury. It’s not. And although AKA University City Hotel is a surprise sleeper, offering apartment-sized guest rooms in the heart of town, until the new Four Seasons opened, nothing was true luxury.

The hotel didn’t just blow away the competition, it decimated it. The doors opened in August of 2019, but thanks to Covid we still consider it new. The hotel occupies the top dozen floors of what is now the tallest building in the city. From the ground floor, a glass elevator ascends more than one floor per second to deliver you to the sixtieth-floor lobby. There’s nothing to obstruct your view except the occasional cloud. It’s the only Forbes Travel Guide five-star hotel and spa in Philadelphia and the flagship property for all Four Seasons urban hotels in the U.S. That’s right, it’s so good it beat other Four Seasons.

The JG SkyHigh bar and restaurant are open to the public. The bar offers views you’d normally have to board a helicopter to take in. Descend

the stairs between the flanking waterfall walls to the Jean-Georges restaurant, which is currently only serving a prixe-fixe dinner three nights a week. Though Michelin has historically overlooked Philly, we hear from a good source they are sniffing around the restaurant perched on the fifty-ninth floor.

The spa on the fifty-seventh floor offers seven treatment rooms (each with their own crystals) and a spa menu with crystal-infused massages and amazing facials. If you feel calm just exiting the elevator, chalk it up to the 700 pounds of crystals embedded in the walls. Not sure if it was the QMS products, the crystals or aesthetician Jenny, but I looked fifteen years old when I left.

by nothing but glass and sky. You don't need to be a spa guest, but you do need to be a hotel guest to take a float. Hot tip: Order a boxed lunch delivered to your chaise lounge and use the hotel’s lightning-fast Wi-Fi to “work.”

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The real showstopper is the fever dream of a pool attached to the spa. The pool’s infinity edge spills seamlessly into the atmosphere and is surrounded

No guest room is lower than the forty-eighth floor, which is just shy of a mile in the air. A select number of rooms offer deepsoaking tubs, complete with neck rests. If unwinding in the tub and taking in the view through the floor-to-ceiling windows is on your wish list (which we think it should be), be sure to request one of these coveted accommodations.

BASIC PHILLY

UPGRADED PHILLY

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JG SKYHIGH BAR AND RESTAURANT BY NIGEL YOUNG / FOSTER + PARTNERS’; ROCKY BY MISSGRACESTOCK.ADOBE.COM; THE THINKER BY BUMBLE DEESTOCK.ADOBE.COM; ALL OTHERS CONTRIBUTED
1. The Thinker 2. 9th Street Italian Market 3. Zahav’s Lamb Shoulder 4. Seeing the Liberty Bell through a window 1. Rocky Statue 2. Reading Terminal Market 3. Pat’s Cheesesteak (controversial, we know) 4. Standing in line to get into Liberty Bell Center above left: The Four Seasons' lobby on the sixtieth floor features floral designs by in-house celebrity florist Jeff Leatham. above right: Few spas boast these views. bottom left: JG SkyHigh restaurant
1599 Post Road Eas t , Westport CT 0 68 80 | Office: 203 -259-3333 | Fax: 2 03 -255- 1199 | info@garrettwilsonbuilders.com GARRETTWILSONBUILDERS.COM

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RICH COPPER TONES TO WARM UP YOUR SPACE

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TRANSPARENT ATELIER

“whether it’s a textile, metal or as an accessory item, copper has the ability to ignite by accentuating the warm and cool color tones in any space.”

—terri ricci, terri ricci interiors

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AGUIRRE

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IMAGES COURTESY OF DESIGNERS/BRANDS
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CONSTANCE GUISSET Vertigo pendant lamp; $1,295. MoMA Design Store; store.moma.org DESIGN Kaimana desk; price upon request. carlylecollective.com LAWSON-FENNING Moreno sofa; starting at $4,200. lawsonfenning.com ROCHE BOBOIS Tapis Terre hand-tufted wool rug; starting at $3,250. Greenwich; roche-bobois.com Hand-hammered copper bowl; $349. The SoNo Collection, Norwalk; arhaus.com Collins sconce; $6,018. transparent atelier.com TERRAIN Antique copper decorative tray; $148. Westport; shopterrain.com
Real Estate agents affiliated with Coldwell banker Realty are independent contractor sales associates, not employees. ©2022 Coldwell Banker. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker and the Coldwell Banker logos are trademarks of Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. The Coldwell Banker® System is comprised of company owned offices which are owned by a subsidiary of Realogy Brokerage Group LLC and franchised offices which are independently owned and operated. The Coldwell Banker System fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. ANGELA.ALFANO@CBMOVES.COM ALFANO.REALESTATE 203.273.0496 LICENSED IN CT & NY ANGELA ALFANO F a new h e with new mem ies, call me. Let‘s st t h se hunting! THIS THANKSGIVING BE THANKFUL

ON THE BALL

THESE STATEMENT FEET ARE

“curved forms are very warm and inviting; roundness symbolizes unity, wholeness, karma, and completion. spherical feet elevate and give lightness and softness to what is otherwise heavy.”

greenwichmag.com

IMAGES COURTESY OF DESIGNERS/BRANDS
1 CARA WOODHOUSE × ABC STONE The Rock & Roll bathtub, in Grand Antique marble; price upon request. abcworldwidestone .com 2 LE BERRE VEVAUD Olbia commode; starting at $21,895. theinvisiblecollection .com 3 SARAH ELLISON Yoko bed; $5,995. Design Within Reach, Stamford; dwr.com 4 ROBERT M c KINLEY Sphere of Influence coffee table; price upon request. moneanewyork.com 5 KELLY WEARSTLER Morro ottoman; $3,690 kellywearstler.com 6 VISUAL COMFORT Cleo orb base desk lamp by Kelly Wearstler; $579. Greenwich; circalighting.com 7 NATHAN ANTHONY Alais daybed; to the trade nafurniture.com
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THE NEW SPHERES OF INFLUENCE
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A MY AIDINIS HIRSCH INTERIO R DESIG N amyhirsch.com n 203 661 1266

HEART OF THE MATTER

WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW ABOUT CARDIAC HEALTH AND YOUR KIDS

Constant exposure to media and the internet these days allows us access to a wealth of medical information that exceeds far beyond what was once available to the average person. However, more isn’t always better, particularly when we’re faced with an influx of scary information that we don’t truly understand. Between stories of long Covid–related heart problems in children, hearing about teenagers collapsing on sports fields and conflicting information regarding vaccine safety, it’s no wonder many of us feel confused.

We turned to expert doctors and assistant professor in pediatric cardiology at Columbia, Allison Levey, M.D. and Michael Monaco, M.D., of Pediatric Cardiology in Darien to help clear up some fallacies and provide advice we can trust.

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WHAT ARE THE BIGGEST TRENDING ISSUES WITH PEDIATRIC HEART HEALTH

THESE DAYS? “The long-term cardiac manifestations of Covid and vaccine-related concerns—specifically myocarditis—are definitely at the top of people’s lists. With that said, vaccine-related myocarditis is extremely rare; and the risk of having a cardiac issue from the virus itself, while also uncommon with the current strains, is significantly higher. We have also seen an increasing number of young patients post-Covid with complaints about endurance issues, slow returns to play for sports and faster than normal heart rates,” says Dr. Levey.

“Reassuring parents that myocarditis is extremely rare continues to be a frequent conversation. In doing so, we are trying to emphasize that part of the reason that myocarditis from Covid seemed so daunting was because so many people got sick at once, not because it was actually becoming more prevalent. In fact, myocarditis from the flu is far more common. But with the flu we have never seen as many people sick all at the same time the way we did with Covid. The rare evidence of myocarditis that was found related to the vaccine was mostly documented in young adult males. In our area, we do not know of a single case documented in children under twelve. And while still a very uncommon issue, the good news is that studies have shown that even those who did develop myocarditis from the vaccine have all recovered,” says Dr. Monaco.

HOW COMMON ARE PEDIATRIC HEART ISSUES? “Real congenital cardiac issues, where the heart forms abnormally, occur in roughly one percent of the population,” says Dr. Levey. “The vast majority of things that are found in utero that we end up monitoring will correct on their own,” says Dr. Monaco. “Other issues that bring patients in, like chest pain, are incredibly common, but chest pain from actual heart problems are incredibly uncommon,” says Dr. Levey.

HOW ARE THESE ISSUES GENERALLY DIAGNOSED? “The most severe issues are usually diagnosed during routine prenatal care and by prenatal ultrasound. The vast majority of congenital heart disease is picked up in utero, and some cases will require treatment or surgical intervention. Issues like heart murmurs and low oxygen levels are generally found during routine care in the well-baby nursery and routine pediatric visits after a baby is born,” says Dr. Monaco.

“One of the most important tools when assessing our pediatric patients is taking a family history, as well as getting an understanding of specific symptoms. Physical exams help us to check for any abnormal sounds or rhythms. In-office diagnostics like electrocardiograms—

EKGs and echocardiograms—allow us to monitor heart rhythms and look at the structure of the heart,” says Dr. Levey.

AS A PARENT, OTHER THAN KEEPING UP WITH WELL-CHILD APPOINTMENTS, WHAT CAN WE DO TO KEEP OUR KIDS’ HEARTS HEALTHY? Both doctors agree that focusing on exercise and modeling a balanced diet and healthy nutritional habits early on are the core components of setting our children up for optimal heart health.

ARE THERE ANY RED FLAGS FOR PARENTS THAT COULD INDICATE THAT THEIR CHILD’S HEART MIGHT NEED TO BE CHECKED OUT BY A DOCTOR? “Your child’s pediatrician for a general evaluation is always a good place to start. Exertional symptoms are always a concern to us. Chest pain, fainting, palpitations—especially with exertion, shortness of breath and a change in endurance are all things that we would want to see a patient for,” says Dr. Levey.

“In babies, trouble feeding can sometimes signal an issue. Because eating is the only exercise that they get, it’s something to pay

attention to, especially if they are sweating or having trouble breathing while feeding,” says Dr. Monaco.

WHAT’S A NORMAL HEART RATE FOR CHILDREN, AND HOW DOES IT CHANGE WITH AGE? Heart rate varies by age, and as children get older, it decreases. A typical school-aged child will have a heart rate of around sixty to 100, with peak exertion being 220 minus the child’s age.

ARE THERE CHILDREN WHO COULD BENEFIT FROM A CARDIOLOGY SCREENING BASED ON HEALTH HISTORY?

“The first line of defense is to be sure to tell your child’s pediatrician about any family history of cardiac events or heart disease,” says Dr. Levey. “Additionally, any new or worsening symptoms that come on with exercise and exertion shouldn’t be ignored. When we hear about these situations where young athletes have died suddenly during sports and look back at the cases, quite often the children had made complaints about symptoms long before the actual event occurred,” says Dr. Monaco.

BILLIONPHOTOS.COMSTOCK.ADOBE.COM greenwichmag.com 42
Connecticut Gold Coast 640 Sasco Hill Road | Fairfield, Connecticut | $17,900,000 | Rick Higgins 203.520.6778 Overlooking beautiful Southport Harbor and tranquil Long Island Sound, this 16-room majestic property sits on 2.5 acres that overlooks a golf course and has horizon views of the Manhattan skyline. Features include an additional guest house, indoor & outdoor pools, Squash Court, Ballet Studio, and an English Garden. Approximately 1 hour from Manhattan. 1499 Post Road | Fairfield, CT 06824 Higgins Group is licensed in CT and NY. Higgins Group Private Brokerage is an exclusive member of Forbes Global Properties for Fairfield and New Haven Counties in Connecticut. Forbes® is a registered trademark used under license An Equal Opportunity Company. Equal Housing Opportunity This is not intended to solicit a property already listed. REB 751137

Check Inn for Thanksgiving

One more thing to be grateful for? NOT HAVING TO COOK

IMAGES COURTESY OF GRAYBARNS
eat

There’s no place like home for Thanksgiving … or is there?

When you want to avoid all the prepping, cooking, cleaning and let the pros host, these inns serve up a beautiful feast for families large and small. Whether your group lives locally or includes out-of-towners, you have the option to spend the night, so you can enjoy an extra glass of wine and drift up to bed in a tryptophan daze, no worries about driving. Here, a few great places to celebrate the holiday in style.

GRAYBARNS, Norwalk

203-489-9000; graybarns.com

On the site that was once the Silvermine Tavern, a historic stagecoach stop, this inn was reimagined by The Glazer Group as a boutique luxury hotel and tavern with a modern sensibility. The property overlooking the Silvermine River includes a 100-seat tavern that features New American cuisine showcasing produce and ingredients from local farms and purveyors, as well as its own kitchen garden. The Tavern is a sought-after reservation any night of the week but particularly for this holiday dinner. Tables are available from 12 to 7 p.m.

Executive chef Ben Freemole prepares a special three-course prix-fixe meal. For the main, traditionalists can indulge in heritage turkey with cranberry, cornbread stuffing, gravy and greens; and there’s also a choice of braised short ribs, branzino and a roasted honey-nut squash with chestnuts for mains. The firstcourse options include a pear and gorgonzola salad, lobster bisque or a tuna tartare, plus supplements of oysters, shaved truffles and caviar service.

Sides of Brussels sprouts with lardons, cranberries and spiced maple; whipped potatoes with roasted garlic and parsley butter; sweet potatoes with honey butter and pecans; and smoked cauliflower with buttermilk dill and lemon are available for preorder at GrayBarn’s Mercantile, as are the seasonal pies and desserts.

If you dine in, only a lucky few will get to spend the night after dinner, as there are just six rooms.

CRABTREE’S KITTLE HOUSE, Chappaqua

914-666-8044

crabtreeskittlehouse.com

Dating to the late 1700s on a property that served as a working fruit farm and nursery, this restaurant and inn has been owned by the Crabtree family for nearly four decades. The farmto-table restaurant is known for its exceptional wine selection (noted in Wine Enthusiast’s “Restaurant Hall of Fame”) with a collection of 65,000 bottles in its cellar. The restaurant has strong ties to local farms, and the menus reveal the sources for produce, seafood and meats.

This year’s Thanksgiving menu begins with a choice of squash and apple bisque, lobster bisque, Scottish smoked salmon and pumpkin gnocchi among the starters. Sides are served familystyle to accompany the applecider brined Goffle Farm turkey. Salmon, striped bass, short ribs and cauliflower steak are alternate mains. For dessert, there’s a crown maple pumpkin pie with cinnamon crème anglaise, a pecan pie with caramel sauce, apple cobbler, gelatos and a chocolate “Kittle Kat” crunch torte.

The cost for dinner is $105 per person. A take-out menu is also available. There are twelve rooms at the inn for those who wish to stay.

THE GRISWOLD INN, Essex

860-767-1776; griswoldinn.com

Visit the picturesque New England village of Essex along the Connecticut River for a Thanksgiving feast and then spend the night at this historic inn. The “Gris” dates back nearly 250 years, first as a haven for shipbuilders and tradesmen and later as a destination for steamboats and sailors and even a source for “spirits” during Prohibition. Today the inn has multiple dining options and warm ambience—it’s been called the coziest restaurant in the state—with lots of dark wood, antiques and art and three fireplaces.

Thanksgiving is the most popular holiday at the inn, with seatings from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. After a couple of years’ hiatus, the much-loved buffet is back, featuring traditional carving stations of turkey with sage and sausage stuffing as well as cornbread and veggie stuffings for vegetarians. There’s an array of all the classic sides along with salads and fish and pasta options.

Classic pies and a chocolate dessert round out the meal. Go-to cocktail post dinner? The hot buttered rum. There’s a jazz piano player in the tap room and a live band for those who want to carry the festivities into the evening.

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© ROBERT BENSON PHOTOGRAPHY;

BEST SERVICE. BEST FOOD. BEST MEMORIES. For a delicious night out you won’t forget, come to Table 104! In addition to our spacious and cozy seating, our private dining room offers a warm, intimate setting and its own fully-equipped bar!

DON’T WAIT TO RESERVE YOUR EVENT SPACE. For all your holiday gatherings, let Table 104 make it memorable!

CATERING MENU AVAILABLE ON OUR WEBSITE. Order online for pick-up or use any third-party delivery service.

(203) 388-8898

A Delicious, award-winning dining experience
• 299 LONG RIDGE RD, STAMFORD,
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Osteria

greenwichmag.com

BEDFORD POST INN, Bedford

914-234-7800

bedfordpostinn.com

At this luxury Relais & Chateaux retreat set on fourteen lush acres—a circa-1860 farmhouse restored by actor Richard Gere in 2007—families can enjoy a holiday meal at one of several venues on property. The inn accepts Thanksgiving reservations for its wine cellar (up to twelve guests), the Barn Loft (up to twenty guests) The Barn dining room (up to thirty guests) and the private dining room, for up to forty people. Depending on the size of your party, you can savor a private Thanksgiving feast in a beautiful country setting.

On the menu from executive chef and co-owner Roxanne Spruance: a traditional roasted heirloom bronze turkey with classic sides served family style, including sausage stuffing, a harvest salad, butternut squash soup, mashed potatoes, roasted vegetables, mac and cheese and green bean casserole.

For dessert, there’s pumpkin pie with cinnamon whipped cream. You can also order ahead to purchase an entire Thanksgiving feast to go and serve at home.

The inn has eight suites available for those who want to stay for the night or the weekend.

THE INN AT POUND RIDGE, Pound Ridge

914-764-1400

theinnatpoundridge.com

At this renovated inn, renowned chef Jean-Georges brings seasonal, farm-to-table cuisine to a contemporary, country setting that envelops you in rustic warmth. Since opening in 2014, the Inn has become a local favorite that’s also an ideal spot for Thanksgiving with its four working fireplaces and special prix-fixe menu. At press-time that menu was still being finalized, but based on past years, guests can expect a stellar rendition of seasonal dishes and festive favorites. G

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IMAGES COURTESY OF BEDFORD POST INN AND INN AT POUND RIDGE

money matters

GIVING BACK

“Many of us said, ‘Thank you, God. I have a place to stay. I’m with my family and I’m good.’ ”

PHILANTHROPY IN THE AGE OF COVID

to using their money “to change the world for the better.”

While many folks here in lower Fairfield County hunkered at home during the peak of Covid-19, lamenting what was lost, others among us grieved the losses of others. “People lost their jobs. You saw the lines to get food. Food insecurity was a big theme. It wasn’t new, but it was much more potent,” says Michele McCallion, a private wealth adviser and senior vice president of wealth management at Polaris Wealth Management/UBS in Greenwich.

Although the focus on Covid-19 has waned, McCallion says that reframing—What do I need? versus What do I have? has served as a catalyst for change, especially for women. The new mindset? What can I do with my resources to improve the lives of others? “With many of our clients,” she says, “their resources are wealth.”

McCallion’s findings stem from the UBS report “Own Your Worth 2022,” which surveyed 1,400 female clients earlier this year. Eighty-two percent of respondents said that Covid led them to reassess what’s important. Ninety-four percent reported donating money or time to a charitable cause. Millennial women put their money most where their causes were: 83 percent of millennials, versus 38 percent of female baby boomers, committed

WOMEN AND MONEY

McCallion’s meetings with lower Fairfield County clients routinely include questions about “intentions” for wealth. Sure, clients hope to invest wisely and grow their riches. But what do they hope to accomplish with all that money? “It’s important to articulate not only the goals and objectives of your wealth, but also the values around your wealth,” she says.

Conversations about values are just as important in a financial plan, she adds, as conversations about liquidity (what are your needs in the next one to three years), longevity (how can you structure your wealth to last a lifetime), and legacy (how can you improve the lives of others, including those in future generations). Unfortunately, many advisers and families don’t mention values until a legacy conversation.

Pre-Covid, it wasn’t unusual for children to be in the dark about a family’s charitable involvement; while parents went about their business of working and/or donating money and time, kids were in school or activities. But when Covid kept everyone at home, many children witnessed how their family helped others.

That practice can continue, says McCallion. She urges parents to talk with each other and with their children about values around wealth, and to meet kids where they are. Maybe the family can stock backpacks with food for the weekends for hungry schoolchildren, for example, or maybe they can feed homeless pets.

“We see families say to their next generation, ‘If you want to give to a pet rescue, why is that important to you? If you give $10, we’ll match $10.’ There are so many resources to help those less fortunate. It’s not limited to the $10 million donations.” G

Only 26 percent of married women “lead on financial decisions,” according to the UBS report, and half of the married women surveyed “defer to their spouse” altogether when it comes to money matters. Regardless of who’s making the decisions, McCallion says, “Everyone should know how much money they have, where it is, how to access it and where it is invested. Set aside time to have this conversation.” Then, ask questions, get resources and gather and share findings with other smart and curious women who want to learn more about finances and investing. Your financial adviser isn’t there to just hand over your report card on your investment performance. A good adviser is also a good educator.

greenwichmag.com 50
CONTRIBUTED
Michele McCallion

g–mom

Take a Swing

PAGE: PICKLEBALLG.EDWARDSSTOCK.ADOBE.COM; SQUASH BALL

PING-PONG/TABLE TENNIS

Most people are familiar with the ping-pong of their youth, but these days table tennis is having a moment, with clubs popping up in New York City and even here in Greenwich for recreational play and sport. Whether you just want to rally for fun or take your ping-pong game up to the next level, area table tennis facilities allow all ages and skill levels to learn and have fun.

Where to Play CRUSH Table Tennis

is 6,000 square feet of space located just blocks from Greenwich Avenue. There are four separate playing areas across two floors. No membership is required to play, and rates are based on the time and day of the week. Adults can buy an annual membership allowing them to play more frequently at a discounted rate. table-tennis.com

This fast-growing sport combines aspects of a several racquet sports and can be played indoors or out. The rules are simple, and the equipment consists of a paddle and a small plastic ball that looks a little like a wiffle ball. It can be played with two to four players. Pickleball instruction and drop-in clinic information is available on the Greenwich Parks and Recreation website. greenwichct.gov

Where to Play

Town pickleball courts are for Greenwich residents only, and a Tennis Park Pass is required to book a court through the Parks and Recreation website.

OUTDOOR COURTS

Christiano Park in Byram: Two dedicated pickleball courts Loughlin Avenue Park in Cos Cob: Four pickleball courts on tennis courts (bring your own net) Western Middle School: Two pickleball courts on tennis courts (nets provided)

INDOOR COURTS

Bendheim Western Civic Center: Two pickleball courts in the gym

Players

If you’re looking for a game but need players, try the Greenwich Pickleball Player Roster & Network Registration is free, and the roster welcomes Greenwich and nearby residents looking to play with others on their level. The network is hosted on the Global Pickleball Network, the software of the USA Pickleball Association. greenwichpickleball.com

SQUASH

Invented in the 1920s, paddle tennis has long been a popular sport for those who want to keep swinging into the colder months, as it’s played on raised courts that can be heated.

Where to Play

Loughlin Avenue Park in Cos Cob: Membership is required to play paddle on these courts. Players can purchase a seasonal rental and will be given two one-hour time slots per week. A full-season membership, September through March, is $325; senior membership for those sixty-five and older is $25; three-month seasonal membership, September to December or December to March, is $180. greenwichct.gov

Played all over the world, squash has become very popular in town in recent years with a number of junior and college players coming from Greenwich. Squash and racquetball are similar in concept but different sports in a few key areas. A squash ball is smaller and slower than a racquetball. You can hit the ball off the ceiling of the court in racquetball and not in squash. A typical squash game lasts forty-five minutes, making it a quick energetic sport. Squash has been called the world’s healthiest sport, based on the amount of running done in a match. Players can burn 500 calories in just a half hour of game play.

Where to Play

Greenwich Water Club Squash House provides opportunities at all levels to learn and find matches. Adult squash programs are available as are lessons or drop-in clinics, with additional women’s, youth and beginners clinics. The Water Club has three single courts and one doubles court in its Squash House facility, which is across the road from the Greenwich Water Club main building on River Road. greenwichwaterclub.com

Sportsplex of Stamford offers squash lessons. sportsplex-ct.com

Chelsea Piers offers private instruction as well as Round Robins and Ladders on its eleven single and one doubles courts. chelseapiersct.com

NOVEMBER 2022 GREENWICH 53
PICKLEBALL
OPPOSITE
PADDLE TENNIS -
MEXRIXSTOCK.ADOBE.COM

BEING GRATEFALL

A CHILL IS THE AIR— AND WE LOVE IT. HERE ARE SOME FESTIVE, FUN AND PHILANTHROPIC WAYS TO ENJOY NOVEMBER

No. 3 EVERYBODY LOVES A PARADE

No. 1 EXPLORING CHARITY

Are you looking to make an impact and give back to our wonderful community this season? Be sure to check out the first local Charitable Organization Expo featuring nonprofits from the Greenwich and Stamford area. Learn about the need in lower Fairfield County, who the organizations help and find a purpose (or purposes) you are passionate about. The more we educate ourselves about philanthropy, grant giving and local nonprofits, the bigger our impact can be. The event is free and will be held at Townhouse Greenwich on Wednesday, November 16, from 5–7p.m. greenwichmoms.com

No. 2 PUT IT IN THE BOOKS

As the weather gets colder, we’re all looking for creative things to do with kids indoors. Enjoy story time at

Athena Books in Old Greenwich on Fridays at 9:30 a.m. and Saturdays at 10:30 a.m. While you’re there, peruse a wide selection of adult and children’s books, as well as a thoughtful selection of curated gifts. Afterwards, hop next door for a sweet treat at Sweet Pea’s or Cups ‘n’ Cones. It's also worth noting that for the adults, Athena hosts book clubs and author events in the evenings. athenabooksog.com

The Parade Spectacular will kick off on Sunday, November 20 with one of the largest helium balloon parades in the country, featuring everyone’s favorite giant balloon characters, awardwinning marching bands and fabulous floats. Fun for the whole family. Want more? On Saturday November 19, go behind the scenes and watch the stars of the show come to life. The Giant Balloon Inflation Party will also feature exciting performances, clowns, holiday characters and a visit from Santa.

Saturday, November 19, 3–6 p.m. (Hoyt Street and Summer Street)

Sunday, November 20, 12–3 p.m. (Stamford downtown) Stamforddowntown.com.

No. 4 GOBBLE, GOBBLE!

Get the whole family moving. Here’s a list of family-friendly Thanksgiving Turkey Trots in and around Greenwich. (Be sure to check websites for fees and registration times.)

Greenwich Alliance for Education Turkey Trot

When: Saturday, November 26

Time: One mile: 9:30 a.m.; 5K: 10:00 a.m. Where: Arch Street Teen Center greenwichalliance.org

Harbor Point Turkey Trot 5K

When: Thursday, November 24

Time: 8:30 a.m. Where: Harbor Point Stamford harborpoint.com

New Canaan Turkey Trot 5K

When: Sunday, November 20

Time: 10:30 a.m.

(Pre-race check-in at New Balance New Canaan beginning Friday,

November 18)

Where: Waveny Park runsignup.com

Rowayton Turkey Trot

When: Thursday, November 24

Time: 9:30 a.m.

Where: 33 Highland Avenue, Norwalk (5K and one-mile courses running through Rowayton) rowaytonturkeytrot.com

Rye Recreation’s Turkey Run & Paws Walk

When: Saturday, November 26

Start Times: Paws Walk: 9:00 a.m.

Fun Run (one mile): 9:30 a.m.

Race/Walk (3.1 and 5.2 miles): 10:00 a.m.

Where: Rye Recreation Center ryeny.gov G

g-mom greenwichmag.com 54 CONTRIBUTED OUT & ABOUT • A Greenwich magazine and Greenwich Moms partnership
Every month Layla Lisiewski, Greenwich mom of four and founder of Greenwich Moms and its parent company, The Local Moms Network, shares some of her favorite things to do—from seasonal activities to can’t-miss events. Follow @greenwich_moms on Instagram, sign up for the newsletter and check out the calendar at greenwichmoms.com.
THE ONLY NYC-LUXURY SKINCARE DESTINATION IN GREENWICH. CREATORS OF: • The Greenwich Secret • Dr. Nichols’ Stay Lifted Package • Dr. Nichols’ Non-Surgical Mommy Makeover LEARN MORE TODAY! (203) 862-4000 info@kimnicholsmd.com NicholsMD_Dermatology kimnicholsmd.com

people&PLACES

A Beautiful Mind

It was a picture-perfect day when the musical phenom Lin-Manuel Miranda graced Greenwich with his presence to receive the 2022 Changemaker Award with a reception at the home of Greenwich International Film Festival cofounder Wendy Stapleton. Miranda is an awardwinning composer, lyricist, writer, producer, actor and philanthropist who has impacted positive social change both through his career and through his work with The Miranda Family Fund at the Hispanic Federation. The Changemaker Award honors artists who have used their public platform and the power of film to further positive social change. Past honorees include Eva Longoria Baston, Ashley Judd, Renée Zellweger, Christy Turlington Burns, Gretchen Carlson, Freida Pinto, Trudie Styler, Abigail Breslin, Harry Belafonte and Mia Farrow. »

by alison nichols gray
Scan the code for more PARTY PHOTOS in our gallery!
NOVEMBER 2022 GREENWICH 57 PHOTOGRAPHS BY MARCO SAGGLIOCO 1 2 8 6
1 Riann Smith, Lin-Manuel Miranda 2 Mari Clark, Jim and Kate Clark, Murphy Watner 3 Sara Elisa Miller, Lin-Manuel Miranda 4 Nina Lindia, Sue Bodson 5 Andy Amill, Lin-Manuel Miranda 6 Blessing Offor, Lin-Manuel Miranda 7 Jamie Manirakiza, Jean Nangwala 8 Wendy Stapleton, Lin-Manuel Miranda, Ginger Stickel 9 Mia and Loulie Reyes
5 9 3 4 7
GREENWICH INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL / A Private Residence

Where Music Married Architecture

The Caramoor Center for Music and the Arts’ seventy-seventh Summer Season kicked off with a festive Opening Night Gala. Held in honor of Leslie Williams and Jim Attwood, Caramoor’s current chairmen, the gala celebrated the couple’s transformative philanthropy. Cocktails were held in the historic Sunken Garden, newly planted with native florals, followed by a beautiful performance by Yo-Yo Ma and The Knights in the Venetian Theater. Guests then enjoyed an elegant dinner under the tent on Caramoor’s beautifully renovated grounds. Proceeds from the event will benefit generations of artists and audiences to come. caramoor.org »

1
CARAMOOR / Katonah, NY 1 Martha Stewart, Ed Lewis 2 Leslie Williams and James A. Attwood, Jr., Chairman of Caramoor’s Board and gala honoree 3 Lisa and Paul Welch
9 10 8 4 6 7 2 5 3 11 12 greenwichmag.com 58
4 Pianist Inon Barnatan with husband Jason Feldman 5 Stephen and Nita Lowey 6 Jim and Aundrea Amine 7 Noel Wallace, chairman, president, and CEO of Colgate-Palmolive and Nancy Wallace 8 Maggie Grise, Tera Ho, Dr. David Ho, Adam Silver 9 Ed Lewis, Caramoor president and CEO, Peter Kend, Andrew Yu 10 Lars Klein, Andromeda Turre 11 Amy Parson, Paul Bird 12 Vickie Morris, Ginny Gold

LIFE

Strengthened.

Strength of mind, body, and spirit are the cornerstones of a life well lived. As we prepare our boys for life in a fast-changing world, we’re especially dedicated whole boy, to building in every student the habits-of-mind that will nourish and fortify him for the rest of his life.

bwick.org/openhouse RSVP FOR OUR OPEN HOUSE NOV. 6

4

Derby Ready

10

Everyone placed first at the Whitby School’s Kentucky Derby-themed fundraiser. The outfits were so on point that the Italian Center in Stamford could have been confused with the actual Derby. Whitby School has been a recognized leader in education since 1958. It is an innovative blend of Montessori and International Baccalaureate programs that provides students with the twenty-first century skills needed to thrive in today’s dynamic world. whitbyschool.org »

people greenwichmag.com 60 PHOTOGRPAHS BY MOFFLY MEDIA’S BIG PICTURE / JENNA BASCOM 1
WHITBY SCHOOL / The Italian Center in Stamford 1 Jen Garcia-Alonso, Irina Gomis, Eugenia Zalis, Leslie Cagnoni, Amanda Doheny, Amanda Parry, Meeta Thal 2 Tisha Brannon, Susan Taner 3 Andrea Douglas, Luis Rodriguez Phillip and Abby Wentworth, Amanda and Paul Walton 5 Dave Greenberg, Laurent and Eva Saltien, Katie Greenberg 6 Stephanie Leone-Kim, Silvia Cruz-Pierce 7 Anita and Tony Meconiates 8 Chris and Christina Riley 9 Tamzin Manning, Emma West, Rachel Rees, Joanna Benison Louise Doyle, Emilce Song 11 Yumi
2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 11 10
Yi, Dr. Jack Creeden, Terresa Cantlon
Connecticut 203.353.8000 marciaselden.com New York 212.921.4100

Y We Give

Everyone truly understood the assignment at the annual YWCA White Party gala. It was a sea of white ensembles cochaired by Sabrina Forsythe, Douglas Graneto, Andrea Sisca and Stacy Zarakiotis and hosted by Demetra Ganias. This year was extra special, because the event was held on the grounds of the YWCA Greenwich, where all the magic happens throughout the year. ywcagreenwich.org »

YWCA GREENWICH / On the Grounds
PHOTOGRAPHS BY MOFFLY MEDIA’S BIG PICTURE / BOB CAPAZZO greenwichmag.com 62 4 3 2 1 5 9 7 6 8 10 11
1 Sareeta Bjerke, Giselle Mangini, Nikki Glickman, Renee Jennings, Jennifer Negrin, Maria Merrill, Allison Kingsley, Sree Vaid 2 Sekou and Jennifer Kaalund, Barbara and Casey McKee 3 Christan Zaccagnino. Andrea Sisca 4 Sophia Scarpelli, Sabrina Forsythe 5 Connie Anne Harris, Dr. Stacy Zarakiotis, Demetra Soterakis 6 Holly Simms, Shelley Tretter Lynch 7 Debbie Hodys, Anne and David Juge 8 Cynthina Chang Scanlan, Brian Scanlan 9 Peggy and Ed Martino 10 Doug Carr, Cheryl Plummer 11 The pathway to party the night away
NOVEMBER 2022 GREENWICH 63 FINALBOOKINGS Interesting Facts About Westy… All 14 Westy Self Storage Centers are located in the suburbs of New York City. However, Westy has customers living in 46 states and 16 foreign countries. is is testimony of the peace of mind Westy gives to their customers. NURSERY & GREENHOUSES, LLC EST. 1930 437 North St. • Greenwich, CT 06830 • (203) 869-3418 www.sambridge.com Full Service Garden Center • Landscape Design & Installation Premier Garden Care • Delivery & Curbside Services Available

Help on Wheels

Just for GEMS, the tenth annual fundraiser held at Caren’s Cos Cobber, to benefit Greenwich Emergency Medical Service was once again, a great success. One day a year, the restaurant opens for special breakfast hours, as well as for lunch and dinner, and a generous portion of the day’s proceeds is donated by the Cobber’s owner, Caren St. Phillip. The mission of GEMS is to provide the highest level of pre-hospital emergency medical care to Greenwich residents. greenwichems.org G

9 Jim Higgins, Sophie and William Hood 10 Sydney Natale, Jillian Barnette, Tracy Schietinger, Patrick O’Connor, Colin Bassett

2 4 5 6 7 9 10
GREENWICH EMERGENCY MEDICAL SERVICE / Caren’s Cos Cobber 1 Jillian Barnette, Dennis Fogler, Sydney Natale 2 Beverly Hartley, Ann Hagmann, Carol Cram 3 Chuck Zoubek, Keating Hagmann 4 Mary Ellen LeBien, Sandy Herman, Donna Moffly 5 Caren Vizzo St. Phillip 6 Judy Higgins, Lucy Barrett 7 Ann Hagmann, Connie Anne Harris, Lauren Walsh, Jenny Baldock, Tim Schieffelin 8 Ben and Lynne Davenport
1 3 8 PHOTOGRAPHS CURTESY OF GEMS people
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greenwichmag.com

Not Last Call

The Harvard Business School Club of Connecticut, in conjunction with Porsche Greenwich, recently awarded its biennial Community Partners “Turbo” Award to Curtain Call Inc. of Stamford. The award, which promotes excellence and innovation in nonprofit organizations, was presented at Porsche Greenwich with the reception hosted by Jim Rulmyr, Chair of Community Partners’ Awards Committee, and Porsche Greenwich’s General Manager, Rui Moreira. The $20,000 “Turbo” award allows Curtain Call to hire a director, music director, set, lighting and costume designers and actors for their Children’s Theatre Initiative. The Theatre Initiative seeks to reach the underserved, young population of Stamford and nearby towns, with what will likely be their first exposure to live theater. In addition to traditional children’s theatre, the series will eventually be supplemented with issue-related programming that addresses race relations and bullying. curtaincallllc.org »

181 Westport Avenue Norwalk, CT (near Stew Leonard’s)

Thank you for 20 wonderful years in Westport. Please come visit our new showroom - in progress!

AUTUMN SHOWROOM SALES*

• Save $100 on a purchase of $500 or $500 on a purchase of $2,500 or more.

• 15% o purchase of solid cellular vinyl pergolas installed before 2023. Visit or call 203-275-0493

*Some restrictions apply

people NOVEMBER 2022 GREENWICH 65
HARVARD BUSINESS SCHOOL CLUB OF CT / Porsche Greenwich
PHOTOGRPAHS
6 3 4 5 1 2 7
1 Rui Moreira, Shaye Anne McCormick, Jim Rulmyr 2 Angela Piscitello, Jenifer Frazer 3 Patrizio Torregiani, Sharon Grant, Rui Moreira, Johnny Serpin 4 Andy Amill, Roger Cole 5 Pam and Tom Heckel 6 Rui Moreira, Ted Yudian, Lou Ursone 7 Jim Rulmyr, Mary Halloran, Jeff Krulwich
BY BOB CAPAZZO
Same Style NEW LOCATION

Natural beauty, Five-Star service and unforgettable experiences are the reasons why these Coastal resorts have been the destination of choice for couples, families and notable guests om around the world. Reserve now for a treasured and convenient getaway. Scan these codes for our very special offers this season.

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greenwichmag.com

66

MARGOT ANNA MCELWREATH & HENRY THOMAS GARLAND

Margot and Harry met at the Fairfield bar 55 Degrees during a trivia night, but neither could have known the question that would be asked down the road. Margot was having a night out with her nursing school friends, and Harry happen to be in town from the city visiting his parents who live in Westport. It didn’t take Harry long to realize her looks were complemented by her wit and smarts, as she dominated trivia night like a contestant on Jeopardy! Entranced, Harry asked her out, and they had their first date the next week at The Standard in Manhattan.

After dating for two and a half years, Harry proposed on Margot’s birthday. He lined up twenty-seven gifts going from her bedroom to the bottom of the stairs. Each gift represented something significant to their relationship. The final gift was the engagement ring that was tied to the neck of their Australian shepard, Sneakers.

The Rev. Dr. Cheryl McFaddden officiated at the ceremony at Christ Church in Greenwich, and a reception followed at Greenwich Country Club.

The bride, daughter of Edward and Leslie McElwreath of Greenwich, graduated from Cushing Academy, Rollins College and Fairfield University. Margot is a registered nurse at NYU Langone in New York.

The groom, son of Richard and Lorraine Garland of Westport, graduated from Greens Farms Academy, Northeastern University and Gabelli School of Business at Fordham University. Harry is an investment banker for Guggenheim Partners in New York.

The newlyweds honeymooned in Croatia. They call Manhattan home. G

NOVEMBER 2022 GREENWICH 67
vows
PHOTOGRAPHS
BY MELANI LUST 1 Mr. and Mrs. Garland 2 Harry with his groomsmen 3 William Ridgway, Margot, Carol Ridgway 4 Margot with her bridesmaids 5 Richard and Lorraine Garland with Harry 6 Leslie McElwreath, Harry, Margot and Ed McElwreath 7 Louise Gaumond, Ann Anthony, Anne Redd 8 Virginia Marzonie, Garrett Allen, Nancy and Lindsey Axilrod 9 The newlyweds
1 4 3 5 7 8 9 2 6

Fire a

by jill johnson mann photographs by andrea carson
Stephanie
Impactful Duo Outstanding Teen Volunteer Mike
Inspiring Leader Suzanne
Best Friend to Children Andrew
Supporter of the Arts Community Advocate Dedicated Committee Member Community Good Neighbor Lifetime Achievement 1 2 4 5 6 7 3 8 9 10
Nina Lindia Saskia Zimmerman Robert Doran Steven & Sandy Soule
Cowie Harry Day Marianne Pollak Grassroots Leader
Miller
Brown Koroshetz
Wilk

It’s our favorite time of year at Moffly Media— the time when a warm glow emanates from the pages of our Light a Fire issue. It comes from the Fairfield County residents who spend all year working tirelessly to help their neighbors, improve our towns and make the world a better place. They rarely have a chance to sit still and bask in the glow they have created. We, with the help of your passionate nomination letters, can give them this one moment to shine before they return to protecting children’s mental health, delivering food to the hungry, offering homework clubs and music lessons to immigrant children, making our towns easier to navigate for those with disabilities, buoying the spirits of breast cancer survivors, resettling refugees, preventing abuse, preserving the glorious land around us, championing the arts, building synagogues, bringing together our communities and saving lives. Take a moment and give them your full attention. They just may spark something in you that will land you in our Light a Fire issue one day.

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Nina Lindia

WORDS OF PRAISE

Grassroots Leader

INSPIRATION

“I started volunteering at twenty-two, when I moved to New York,” says Old Greenwich resident Nina Lindia. “For the first time in my life something broke my heart enough that I wanted to see what I could do about it.” All the vision-impaired residents astounded her. “I couldn’t imagine navigating the city without the power of sight,” she says. Nina began volunteering with a youth program, and then something magical happened. “Volunteering literally solved my own problem. I witnessed how powerful it can be,” recounts Nina, who joined every committee she could when she moved to Greenwich. “Each was another opportunity to learn something,” she says. “The first thing I ask people I meet is: ‘What breaks your heart about the world?’ I always have a recommendation for a great nonprofit that will unbreak their hearts. I’m not

“Nina is a force to be reckoned with. When she sees a need, she looks to fill it. As a lifetime resident of Greenwich, Pitch Your Peers supporter and close friend of Nina’s, it’s so inspiring to see how she harnessed the power of women to make a very real and hands-on impact. Starting a movement is never easy, but Nina has done it with intention, humor and grace. With the help of some good friends who believe in the vision of collaborative giving, informed philanthropy and volunteerism, Pitch Your Peers quickly went from an idea to reality. Since its inception, PYP has expanded from Greenwich to Chicago and Seattle Nina is heavily involved with both to ensure their success. She also passionately supports many other nonprofits. Her gratitude for life shines through in everything she does!”

necessarily someone people come to for advice, but in this category I am. It’s a wonderful feeling.”

COURAGE INTO ACTION

Nina is cofounder of the organization Pitch Your Peers, which grew out of a simple observation. “Donation requests usually start with: ‘sorry to ask’ and ‘no amount is too small,’” she says. “That’s a terrible pitch! I thought what if we create a forum in which we can pool resources, without a lot of red tape, one meeting a year, with the notion of giving where you live. Members each give $1,000 annually and in addition pitch their networks: ‘I’m going to ask you for $2,000 and give you really good reasons why.’” If she gets a no, Nina asks what the potential donor is passionate about, so she knows for the future. “I wanted to diversify the portfolio of how we ask for donations,” she explains. Pitch Your Peers raised $10,000 in one day for Ukraine. New chapters are sprouting up across America.

As a breast cancer survivor, Nina is also a champion of the Breast Cancer Alliance. She cochaired its 2019 luncheon, which shattered all records with a sold-out event of 1,100 people and $1.6 million raised.

HOPES AND DREAMS

“One way we can all give back is an intangible way. If you care about an organization and the community it supports, set a great example. I genuinely care about the population of global breast cancer survivors, and I try to set a great example for people who are newly diagnosed,” says Nina, who had a double mastectomy and numerous rounds of chemo and radiation. “I want to help them to not be terrified, to not give up on themselves. I’ve been through it all, and I’m full of joy.” She adds, “Friends are so important to me. I want to keep helping them unbreak their hearts.” »

ORGANIZATIONS Pitch Your Peers, Breast Cancer Alliance, B-Search.org
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Steven & Sandy Soule

Impactful Duo

ORGANIZATIONS

First Reform Synagogue, Jewish Family Services, Mill River Collaborative

INSPIRATION

“Steven and I grew up in families with a tradition of helping others,” says Sandy Soule. “My parents were refugees of the Holocaust and were founding members of Larchmont Temple. We’d been in Greenwich over forty-five years when the opportunity came up for me to help build a new synagogue. We dedicated the arch in the synagogue in memory of my parents, so I would say we were

WORDS OF PRAISE

continuing a family tradition.” Sandy is also involved in Jewish Family Services. “There is a saying: To those who much is given, much is expected,” she says. “Steven is still very busy running his business, but when I retired, it was our time to start giving back. It’s really important to us.” Steven concurs: “Watching what Sandy’s family went through and what they did, you have no choice but to do this.”

COURAGE INTO ACTION

Sandy serves on the board of Greenwich Reform Synagogue and is copresident. “We built a new synagogue on Orchard Street in Cos Cob. It’s amazing,” says Sandy, who also serves on the board of JFS of Greenwich. “Jewish Family Services has really stepped it up since the Afghan resettlement program started,” she says, “and now they’re working with Ukrainian refugees as well. Everyone is entitled to a safe place to live.”

During the pandemic, when indoor fundraisers weren’t feasible, the Soules graciously offered to host an outdoor event for JFS. “Since we live in paradise, we are very happy to share,” says Sandy. The first event was a success and attendance tripled at the next. First Presbyterian Church was one of JFS’s community partners in its resettlement efforts. “When Christians and Jews get together to help Muslims, that’s a very special moment,” says Sandy.

Steven became involved with the Mill River Collaborative through his company SB&W (a custom components manufacturer) and First County Bank’s philanthropic foundation. “They have made a commitment to the community that is wonderful to be a part of,” comments Steven. “Mill River is just becoming what it has potential to be.” Sandy adds, “It used to be full of rusting shopping carts and now it’s magnificent.”

At the Soule’s annual Fourth of July party, they request food donations for Neighbor to Neighbor, rather than hostess gifts. For bar mitzvahs, they give one check to the child and one for a charity of the child’s choice. “The kids feel empowered and engaged,” says Steven.

HOPES AND DREAMS

Steven quips: “To be alive and to be retired!” Sandy adds, “I would hope for a fact-based reality, recognizing women as human beings with minds of their own. Needless to say, I’m a very strong supporter of Planned Parenthood. I signed my first pro-choice petition when I was pregnant with our daughter, who is now forty-six.”

“For the past fifteen years Sandy has served on the JFS of Greenwich board of directors, including ten years on the executive committee as secretary. In both 2021 and 2022, Sandy and Steve graciously hosted our annual fundraisers at their Riverside home, with close to 200 people in attendance. Their dedication to our growing social services agency is unmatched.”

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INSPIRATION

“I was very lucky to go to a high school with so many resources,” says Darien resident Saskia Zimmerman, a firstgeneration American. “I know that when my parents immigrated [from El Salvador] to the United States, they worked very hard to provide me with the best possible education within their reach. I had the opportunity to take challenging classes [at Darien High School], to learn to play the violin, to fence, to participate in many extracurricular clubs and activities. Not everyone has that good fortune. That’s why I worked with immigrant children at Building One Community (B1C), because they should also have those same opportunities.” The kids served by B1C, an organization focused on the successful integration of immigrants and their families, attend schools that often don’t have the resources Saskia benefitted from, and knowing that inspired her to make a difference.

COURAGE INTO ACTION

During high school, Saskia volunteered by offering academic tutoring and violin lessons, and she also lead a Homework Club. Last summer, she developed a summer STEAM Club for elementaryschool-age children at B1C. “I created lesson plans, led hands-on activities,

and fundraised for all the materials,” she explains. “I also enlisted one of my older students to help me run the club, so she could give back to the community as well. The children weren’t the only ones who learned. I discovered what it feels like to create and pitch a program, along with how hard it is to be on the other side of the classroom breaking down complicated STEAM topics in a way that even Junior, the youngest student fresh out of kindergarten, could understand. I had never seen a class more eager to learn. I was constantly impressed by their small hands furiously scribbling notes and their engagement. The success of the camp was very rewarding and reinforced my belief that equal access to education is something every kid deserves.”

HOPES AND DREAMS

“I hope that the kids I help grow up to help other kids, and I hope B1C is able to continue to provide the means through which the bond is formed,” says Saskia. “I hope volunteers at B1C continue to help community members learn the skills that will give them the best chance at success in this country, while volunteers deepen their understanding and appreciation of other cultures.” »

Saskia Zimmerman

Outstanding Teen Volunteer

WORDS OF PRAISE

“Saskia’s commitment to B1C, and what she has accomplished in her 215 hours of volunteering since 2019, have exceeded our expectations for a youth volunteer. Saskia has volunteered to teach immigrant adults English and tutor youth immigrant students in math. She is also one of our most diligent Homework Club Leaders. Saskia volunteered to run the STEAM summer camp at B1C. She raised the money for the camp through a GoFundMe campaign she created and also used her own birthday money to make supplies available to the kids in her class. Undoubtedly, Saskia’s volunteer work has not only impacted our immigrant children’s lives but also B1C’ s success. ”

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ORGANIZATION B1C

Stephanie Cowie

Inspiring Leader

ORGANIZATIONS

Greenwich Public School PTAs, GPS Building Committees, Junior League of Greenwich, United Way of Greenwich, American Red Cross ( Metro NY North ) , League of Women Voters, First Selectman ' s Advisory Committee for People with Disabilities

INSPIRATION

“My parents instilled the importance of giving back,” says Steph Cowie. “Whether they were coaching teams, serving as volunteers for our town or various organizations, we grew up knowing volunteerism should be a part of our day-to-day.”

In January of 2018, Steph suffered a stroke to her spine, which caused paralysis from the waist down. “Faced with undoubtedly one of the most difficult personal challenges, my life and our family’s life changed dramatically,” says Steph. “Unable to continue my thirty-year professional career, I found that volunteer work became the outlet I needed and carried me through some of the difficult times. Through my volunteer commitments, I was able to adapt and continue to make a difference. Volunteering will always be a part of my life. I continue to volunteer, because I enjoy being with people and making even the slightest difference in a project or a person’s life.”

COURAGE INTO ACTION

“I have been so fortunate to work with so many wonderful organizations over the last twenty-one years,” says Steph, who was the recipient of the Greenwich PTA’s Lifetime Essence Award and served on the boards of the United Way and American Red Cross.

“My lens seems very different now than it was previous to my stroke. Like so many, I was unaware of the inadequate services, lack of accessibility and inclusivity in our community for those with disabilities,” she explains.

“Several years ago, I became the vice chair of the First Selectman’s Advisory Committee for People with Disabilities. I have learned so much and have put all that to good use.”

Steph now directs most of her volunteer time to infrastructure in Greenwich, advocating for the town to be Americans with Disabilities Act-compliant in all schools and public spaces. “We just celebrated the ADA’s thirty-second anniversary at the new— and now ADA-compliant—Greenwich High School Cardinal Stadium,” she says. “I couldn’t be more proud to have been a part of this improvement for all to use.”

HOPES AND DREAMS

“I hope that Greenwich continues to work together—all town departments and the public—to better the lives of those with disabilities by making public spaces and buildings inclusive and accessible. We are all only temporarily able.”

WORDS OF PRAISE

“Steph’s passion for philanthropy is infectious, and that has never been more apparent than it is today as she struggles with her own physical challenges and still finds ways to help others and offer them support and encouragement. Steph has a deep passion for life, which permeates all that she does, making her a great messenger of endless possibilities. While she has held many leadership positions, Steph pours as much energy into working behind the scenes as she does leading the way.”

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Robert Doran

Community Advocate

ORGANIZATIONS

Domestic Violence Crisis Center, Westport Country Playhouse, New Canaan Chamber Music, New Canaan Abuse Prevention Partnership

INSPIRATION

“As a community relentlessly working together with our nonprofits, we can break cycles of abuse, addiction, hunger and poverty,” says New Canaan resident Bob Doran.

“We can provide education, skills and tools for people to be in control of their own lives. The work of our local nonprofit organizations in the trenches, at their best, transforms lives. The people who are reached by those services and are better for it transform our communities. That is inspiring.”

COURAGE INTO ACTION

Doran is active in numerous nonprofit organizations in Fairfield County— Domestic Violence Crisis Center (advisory board), Westport Country Playhouse (trustee) and New Canaan Chamber Music (founding board member)—and also is the volunteer head of New Canaan’s Channel 79 and a founding member of New Canaan Abuse Prevention Partnership.

As host of the Talking About It podcast, Doran is dedicated to preventing abuse, promoting healthy relationships and reducing the stigma around behavioral health issues.

“We need to talk openly about the issues our neighbors face,” says Doran. “Our communities are neither their healthiest nor their strongest if one of us is in need. I made a conscious decision many years ago to not be a bystander. Instead, I try to move the needle as an advocate for change— actively and respectfully speaking out loud about issues affecting our communities. By being a visible advocate—writing op-eds, producing podcasts, speaking publicly and working with nonprofit leadership—I look to raise awareness of important issues, remove the stigma of being in need and give people a voice and a language to ‘talk about it.’”

Doran adds, “I work with many nonprofits on strategic planning and

engagement to define ‘Purpose’ and share their compelling stories.”

HOPES AND DREAMS

“I hope organizations find their Purpose—with a capital P,” says Doran. “I would like to see organizations do the unconventional and set aside their ‘Mission and Vision Statements.’ I find that most board members, staff, volunteers and clients don’t know them anyway. ‘Mission and Vision’ narrow our focus in ways that constrict peripheral vision; like putting blinders on a horse, you can only see what’s in front of you. Solutions are invariably found around corners. When we look through a Purpose-driven lens, our stories are more compelling, everyone is more engaged, difficult and divisive choices become constructive dialogue, the path to success is clearer, and we make a greater impact in the world.” »

WORDS OF PRAISE

“Bob Doran embodies the true essence of why one dedicates their time to volunteering. While many raise a hand from time to time in support of a cause that is near and dear to them, Bob raises both and jumps in, feet first. Bob has done so much to lift countless lives through his leadership and to provide a path forward for those who might not otherwise find one.”

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Koroshetz

Best Friend to Children

ORGANIZATION

Kids in Crisis

WORDS OF PRAISE

As an innovative educator and principal of Stamford High School and Brien McMahon High School, Suzanne demonstrated exceptional compassion, connection and leadership on behalf of students and families. She has been an impactful speaker advocating for Teen Talk programs throughout Fairfield County. Countless students have benefited from mental health services due to Suzanne’s commitment and prioritization of this service. It’s impossible to quantify how many children’s lives were saved due to her tireless effort to assure funding and program availability year to year. Since retiring, she continues to share her expertise and passion as a Kids in Crisis board member. As part of the Substance Misuse Prevention Task Force, Suzanne is helping to build a campaign to educate families and youth on the dangers of marijuana use. Her work has a direct impact on the health of today’s youth.”

INSPIRATION

“When I was the principal of Brien McMahon High School in Norwalk, my students were the recipients of a Kids in Crisis (KIC) donor-funded Teen Talk counselor,” recounts Suzanne Brown Koroshetz. “This masters’ level, compassionate counselor helped many students navigate difficult personal and school-related issues.” The Teen Talk counselor augmented the school staff by providing confidential individual, group and family counseling.

“She identified at-risk students and families flying under the radar and reached out to students experiencing depression, anxiety, substance-use struggles, and trauma- and conflictrelated stresses,” says Suzanne. “She was an angel who arrived to help my kids. I believe she saved lives.” Suzanne now has the time to support the wonderful organization that did so much for the students in her care. “While Teen Talk is a vital component of KIC, the organization does even more to support children and families,” she adds.

COURAGE INTO ACTION

Suzanne now serves on KIC’s board of directors. “What a gift to join a group of dedicated board members and remarkable staff. And to be able to ‘officially’ represent an organization that has meant so much to me for a long time,” she says. Suzanne is cochair of the program committee and works with staff, fellow board members and volunteers. “Our role is to support KIC programs and stay true to the vision and mission of KIC,” she explains. “The programs we directly support include Safe Haven, Light House, Helping Kids Thrive (KIC’s webinar), Outreach and Community Partners.”

HOPES AND DREAMS

“I wish for KIC’s incredible staff and amazing volunteers to continue to have the energy and compassion and all the funding needed to reach the KIC vision: a community where all children are happy and safe,” says Suzanne. “We are working to build healthy communities where children and families can thrive— with prevention, counseling and crisis services available twenty-four hours, every day.” Suzanne continues: “This work is so important. It’s hard to be a kid today, and many families are struggling. It is a privilege to support KIC values as the staff works to welcome all people with respect and kindness, by responding quickly and thoughtfully, while bringing strength and compassion for the benefit of children.”

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Suzanne Brown

Andrew Wilk

Supporter of the Arts

ORGANIZATIONS

INSPIRATION

Westport resident Andrew Wilk retired as executive producer of Live From Lincoln Center in 2019, but there is no valve to turn off the creative flow generated by this producer/director/ conductor/multi-Emmy-winning brain. “In a show biz career, you do it because you love it, and you want to keep doing it,” says Wilk. “It was my chance to do something with this artsy town that I’m really attached to. Westport has been a wonderful place for our sons to grow up. And part of it is selfish—I want to stay sharp, keep directing, keep conducting, and I don’t want to wake up and stare at the ceiling! Retiring with a unique skill set motivates me to keep at it regardless of any compensation.”

COURAGE INTO ACTION

In just a few (pandemic-riddled) years, Wilk has brought a slew of stars and Lincoln Center-quality concerts to Westport. He shared his talent conducting the Staples Pops Concert at the Levitt Pavilion, which led Bill Harmer to inquire if he’d do something for the library. “Something” in Wilkspeak translated to a Malloy Lecture with Broadway greats James Lapine, Stephanie Block and Bill Finn about their show Falsettos (which Wilk filmed for PBS); a riveting speaker series, Andrew Wilk Presents; another Malloy Lecture on Leonard Bernstein; and orchestrating the Booked for the Evening event with Itzhak Perlman. Harmer wisely asked Wilk to join the board. Andrew is now in his second term.

“Part of the reason I moved here was the Playhouse,” says Wilk, who suggested the venue for the Falsettos talk and subsequently brought the Playhouse into homes across America via PBS with his Stars in Concert Series in 2021, featuring Shoshana Bean, Gavin Creel and Brandon Victor Dixon. Wilk is currently brainstorming on a future large-scale production to galvanize support for the Playhouse and bring local performers and Broadway stars together on its stage.

HOPES AND DREAMS

“I would hope that the arts will continue to flourish here, and we revive the Playhouse with community support,” says Wilk. “Our library is beyond ground-breaking, and the community provided tremendous support and generosity for the renovation of the library and construction of its state-of-the-art recording studio, Verso Studios. I hope the Playhouse can benefit from the town’s generosity and enthusiasm like the Library has.” »

WORDS OF PRAISE

“Andrew has been on the Board of Trustees since 2017. During his tenure he has graciously shared his directorial and production talents, while freely opening up his Rolodex to bring in various personalities allowing for world-class programming at the Library, from Bob Ballard, discoverer of the Titanic, to Jay Schadler and Mick Davie, correspondents and journalists, to Itzhak Perlman, world-famous violinist and so many others. He is generous to a fault with his time and talent, and we at the Library are grateful and indebted to him for his immeasurable contributions.”

Westport Library, Westport Country Playhouse
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INSPIRATION

“Shortly after my family relocated to Riverside nearly three decades ago, we participated in what can accurately be described as a type of local barn raising,” explains Mike Miller. “Over six weeks during school break, several dozen neighbors—some with construction trade experience, many without—built from the ground up an entirely new playground for Riverside Elementary School. I enjoyed this experience immensely and knew that when other opportunities to serve our community presented themselves, I would again gladly volunteer and participate.”

COURAGE INTO ACTION

Miller began volunteering with neighborhood nonprofits after supporting public school programs for many years. He became very involved with Transportation Association of Greenwich (TAG), which offers specialized para-transit services for the Town of Greenwich, annually providing over 30,000 rides for seniors, the disabled, school-age youth and neighbors with limited resources.

Community Good Neighbor

ORGANIZATIONS

Transportation Association of Greenwich, Neighbor to Neighbor, Greenwich Department of Human Services, Art Society of Old Greenwich

WORDS OF PRAISE

“Mike has been on the board of directors at TAG for fourteen years, starting as a financial advisor, and is currently the board president and CFO of TAG all volunteer positions. Mike is more than a board member. He is a true friend of TAG, doing everything he can to help it grow and become more successful in its mission. He works as many hours as a full-time employee! Mike has been there every step of the way as a mentor, advisor, teacher and friend. His commitment to this organization is one of belief believing that TAG is a truly valuable asset to the Greenwich community. He does anything and everything to make it happen on a daily basis.”

“My career skills—team building, collaboration, organizational strategy, finance and management advisory— that were honed through supporting a variety of organizations experiencing periods of urgent transition, dovetailed well with TAG,” says Miller, who helped the organization recover from the Great Recession. He has served TAG as board member, treasurer and president, for over fourteen years.

During the pandemic, TAG pivoted to focus on its pre-pandemic food delivery program, Feed Greenwich, in conjunction with Neighbor to Neighbor and the Department of Human Services.

“Throughout the pandemic to date, TAG has surpassed 72,000 home deliveries, delivering a cumulative total of over 800,000 pounds of food,” says Miller.

“In June, following a competitive bid process, TAG was awarded a $3 million contract, which doubled its annual ridership to over 60,000 and expanded its operating footprint to seven additional communities. It has been a tremendously rewarding experience, working alongside the dedicated people here at TAG who help so many.”

HOPES AND DREAMS

“That our community-at-large maintains its commitment to the many organizations that make such a major difference day after day for our neighbors.”

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Mike
Miller

Marianne Pollak

Dedicated Committee Member

ORGANIZATIONS

Fairfield County Community Foundation, Soundwaters, CT Committee of Regional Plan Association, Bartlett Arboretum, Stamford Garden Club, League of Women Voters

INSPIRATION

Originally from Buffalo, Marianne Pollak attended a League of Women Voters meeting when she and her husband moved to New Haven. “The League is nonpartisan and is concerned with the functions of government for community,” explains Marianne, whose enthusiastic engagement in the organization continued to Westchester and then Stamford, where she became president. “The League exposed me to many nonprofits,” she says.

“Because my husband spent so much time working in Asia, we travelled a lot, and I became aware of other people and communities,” she adds. “This broadens one’s perspective. No matter what color, what ethnic background—we are all people, and our needs are the same.”

And Marianne’s parents, avid gardeners, inspired her green thumb and concern for the environment.

COURAGE INTO ACTION

Marianne has served on numerous committees in the past thirty years. “I was a founding member of the Fairfield County Community Foundation (FCCF),” she says. She also served on the steering committee of its Fund for Women and Girls. She currently serves on the boards of Soundwaters, FCCF, The Bartlett Arboretum, League of Women Voters and Stamford Garden Club. Previously, Marianne served on the boards of Inspirica, the Connecticut Commission of Landscape Architects and the Bruce Museum and was board chair for the Stamford Museum and Nature Center. She also served on the

“I think I bring an awareness of the importance of engaging the community and helping the community understand the needs of nonprofits,” she says.

“I hope I’ve helped these nonprofits become stronger organizations. The relationship between the board and staff is crucial. I’ve also encouraged other community members to be more engaged with nonprofits and the government.” Marianne adds, “I hope I have been effective in helping nonprofits who did excellent jobs of meeting their mission to communicate with the public, so that there is a greater understanding of how all of our lives are impacted when needs of the community are not met.”

HOPES AND DREAMS

“Covid has obviously changed our lives in many ways and perhaps even placed more emphasis on the needs of communities,” says Marianne. “As we go forward, how can we be more positive about engaging all peoples and all needs and having a vibrant, exciting community? I encourage people to be engaged in politics in the broadest sense: get out there, serve on a board, try to make a change. People talk about giving back; for me, it’s more about what I’ve gained being on boards. I hope going forward our government roles will be looked at in a more positive, broader way and that people will want to be engaged in their community—whether local, state or broader than that.” »

WORDS OF PRAISE

Marianne is consistently engaged and dedicated to every organization that she is involved with. She brings strategic insight, thoughtful ideas and questions, consistent attendance, and is an excellent ambassador and supporter for all of her causes.”

FOUNDATION (2010 Light a Fire Honoree with her late husband, Dudley Williams, Most Involved Couple)

Connecticut committee of the Regional Plan Association.
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WORDS OF PRAISE

Harry Day

Lifetime Achievement

ORGANIZATIONS

INSPIRATION

“Giving back came to me naturally,” says Harry Day. “I felt I should do anything I can to help organizations that help kids and our citizens in Stamford. I just felt compelled to do that. It made me feel better. I have been very fortunate in many respects—to have great parents, to get into Yale University and Cornell Law School— so I felt responsible to do my best in helping others.”

COURAGE INTO ACTION

Day’s service in Stamford and Fairfield County as a whole could fill pages. He served on Stamford’s Board of Representatives for nearly two decades. He has served on the boards of Mill River Park Collaborative, Stamford Emergency Medical Services, Old Town Hall Redevelopment Agency and Smith House Health Care Center. He has been involved with Kids in Crisis for fifteen

“Harry is a leader who is professional, effective, caring and generous. Ever self-effacing, Harry is not one to seek the spotlight. He is a listener. He is financially generous, but does so with the belief that quiet and anonymous giving is the best kind. I can think of no other individual who has contributed more to the city of Stamford and to Fairfield County just consider the sheer number of nonprofit and municipal organizations that he has been involved with over so many years. I have no doubt that he will continue his selfless quest to making the city of Stamford more livable, lively, interesting and beautiful with the enthusiasm, perseverance, dedication and graciousness that define Harry Day. ”

years, served as board chair for six years, and continues to be a generous contributor and fundraising organizer.

“I was very proud and inspired during my time at Kids in Crisis,” says Day. “I got involved by first being able to persuade the city of Stamford to contribute.”

Day is currently president of Stamford Museum and Nature Center. “We were able to complete the building of the new farmhouse, which has brought many hundreds of new people to the Center,” explains Day.

“Now we are working on getting the planetarium rebuilt, which will set the Center apart from anything like it in the metropolitan area.”

Day is also president of Stamford Land Conservation Trust, which owns and preserves over 450 acres of land across fifty-seven properties. (A tripling in the twenty years that Day has been involved.) “It’s a huge part of my life,” he says, “and of extreme importance to me. I love to save beautiful properties from development. I understand the need to build more homes, but it’s so important to have places people can escape to and enjoy the beauty of.”

HOPES AND DREAMS

“I hope for these organizations to bring people together and allow people to take advantage of their own abilities to learn things, enjoy life and make friends. That’s pretty much it!” says Day. “The Stamford Museum and Nature Center does all of those things and it’s an incredible organization. I’m very proud to be president.” G

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Stamford Museum and Nature Center, Stamford Land Conservation Trust COHEN , BOARD MEMBER, STAMFORD MUSEUM AND NATURE CENTER (2018 Light a Fire Honoree, Dedicated Supporter of the Arts)

The Summer of Love

Boys & Girls Club of Greenwich would like to thank our generous supporters:

Bloomberg Philanthropies

Brescome Barton

Décor and Lighting: Spectrum Event Lighting & Décor

Titan Advisors Kevin Sneddon, Compass

Catering: Marcia Selden Catering

Veronica Beard Ellis Brooklyn

Media Sponsor: Greenwich Magazine/Moffly Media

Follow us on social media: @BGCGkids

2022 ANNUAL BENEFIT

THE GREAT DIVIDE

Connecticut is arguably the cradle of reproductive rights in America. But we have a dark history that predates our progressiveness. History, it would seem, is repeating itself across the country
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by timothy dumas

Connecticut claims Anthony

Comstock, if it must, as a native son. Born on a farm in New Canaan in 1844, Comstock was the Gilded Age’s archprude, its pig-eyed morality czar, its obsessive porn hunter with a badge and gun. He viewed himself as “a weeder in God’ s garden.” Others viewed him as “a five-foot ass.” Rather than let his Union Army comrades enjoy his ration of whiskey, Comstock would dump it on the ground. “Seems to be a feeling of hatred by some of the boys,” he noted in his journal. The same journal repeatedly hints at one temptation Comstock himself could not resist: masturbation. “I debased myself. I deplore my sinful weak nature.”

After the war Comstock placed himself rather too eagerly in “the mouth of the sewer”—Manhattan—as a solo anti-smut crusader. He sniffed out erotica’s shadowy marketplaces, purchased hot little items like nude photos and racy playing cards, and marched them over to the nearest precinct house, demanding an arrest. Comstock’s zeal impressed certain influential New Yorkers. In 1872 these wealthy men, J.P. Morgan among them, helped him found the New York Society for the Suppression of Vice. From that perch Comstock swooped down not only upon bawdy novelties, but also upon belly dancing, nude paintings from Europe, classic literary works, contemporary plays (George Bernard Shaw was “an Irish smutdealer”), unclothed manikins, church bingo and “that which we call the love story.”

Comstock, a burly man with flowing muttonchop whiskers, relished bursting into book shops and private homes, a gaggle of reporters in tow. Near the end of his life (he died in 1915) he boasted of destroying 160 tons of obscene literature, collaring 3,697 “vile miscreants” and collecting $327,134.30 in fines. He also kept a morbid tally of the people he’d driven to suicide (at least sixteen). Had Comstock’s range extended no further than New York, history would have accounted him a mere footnote. Instead, in 1873, he went to Washington armed with dirty books and sex toys and, displaying these wares, convinced Congress to pass an anti-obscenity bill of breathtaking scope. The so-called Comstock Law made it illegal to mail “obscene, lewd or lascivious” publications and personal letters “containing any filthy, vile, or indecent thing.” But what was obscene? Postal inspectors confiscated everything from medical texts to Valentine’s Day cards, the latter by the thousand. (Not long after, the Supreme Court said that opening sealed mail required a warrant.)

The Comstock Law also banned selling, distributing and mailing all literature about contraception and abortion (not to mention mailing contraceptives and abortifacients themselves). These subjects now fell under the banner of “obscene.” Overnight a booming condom trade tailed off dramatically. Discreet ads for abortion providers—“Ladies’ Friend and Doctor”—vanished from city newspapers. Medical papers portraying the human body were plucked from the mails. Physicians ceased giving crucial advice about birth control to their patients. What yesterday was acceptable, today was criminal: violating the Comstock Law carried a maximum penalty of five years in prison and a $5,000 fine.

The most fervid enforcer of the Comstock Law was Comstock himself. The U.S. Postal Service granted him sweeping powers as a “special agent,” and he used them with special ardor against women’s rights advocates. He arrested physician and birth control lecturer Sara B. Chase for procuring a syringe that women used to douche after sex (“I am preventing poor families from being burdened with children they cannot support,” she protested to an unmoved Comstock during his raid). He arrested the wealthy society abortionist Madame Restell by posing as an impoverished husband with too many mouths to feed. (Rather than face trial, she cut her throat in the bathtub of her Fifth Avenue mansion.) He tried to arrest Margaret Sanger, the mother of Planned Parenthood, for selling the birth control pamphlet Family Limitation, but nabbed her husband instead. (William Sanger spent thirty days in jail after a judge declared that he’d engaged in a “scheme to prevent motherhood.”) Comstock pursued Ida Craddock, a writer of marriage manuals, with a crazed, Captain Ahab-like vengeance. It had been Craddock who defended belly dancing against Comstock’s efforts to shut it down at the 1893 Chicago World’s Fair. Years later, still smarting, Comstock arrested her in New York for circulating “The Wedding Night,” her 1900 pamphlet containing frank advice about sex.

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THE CASE THAT GOT US HERE

IN 2018

Mississippi passed a law that banned abortion at fifteen weeks of pregnancy. The state’s only abortion provider, Jackson Women’s Health Organization, sued, arguing the law violated constitutional rights established in the landmark 1973 Supreme Court case Roe v. Wade. By a vote of 7-2, the Roe Court held that abortion was legal up to “viability,” the roughly twenty-four-week mark at which fetuses can theoretically survive outside the womb. (Thereafter states could prohibit abortion, except when the health of the mother was at risk.)

Jackson won its suit in district court. It won again in the extremely conservative Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans, which wrote in 2019, “In an unbroken line dating to Roe v. Wade, the Supreme Court’s abortion cases have established (and affirmed, and re-affirmed) a woman’s right to choose an abortion before viability.”

Even so, last September Texas (which also falls under the Fifth Circuit’s purview) enacted an abortion law much stricter than Mississippi’s, banning the procedure at six weeks—before many women know they’re pregnant. To enforce the law, Texas devised a Wild West-style “bounty” system of citizen vigilantes, in which anyone learning of

your post six-week abortion can sue to collect at least $10,000 from your abettors: the sister who drove you, the friend who lent you money, the physician who attended you. If the Mississippi law was unconstitutional, the Texas law must have been doubly so. Why, then, did Texas enact it?

ANSWER

The U.S. Supreme Court’s rightward lurch. President Trump installed three social conservatives, Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, and Amy Coney Barrett, making for six conservative justices in all, a supermajority that some viewed as yearning to restore the moral climate of 1960, if not 1860. Worse, that supermajority seemed ill-gotten. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell had denied Obama nominee Merrick Garland a hearing a full eight months before the 2016 election—too close to Election Day, was McConnell’s fatuous claim—and then without blushing, hastened Coney Barrett onto the Court eight days before the 2020 election. Democrats regarded these events as nothing shy of “theft.”

The seating of this new Court converged with the arrival on its doorstep of Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, the Mississippi abortion case that had lost in two federal courts already. Granted a review before the Supreme Court, Mississippi decided to challenge Roe in

boldest fashion. The state’s solicitor general, Scott Stewart, asked the Court not merely to chip away at Roe by permitting the fifteenweek ban, but to scrap Roe v. Wade altogether. No matter that Roe had been affirmed and reaffirmed; no matter that it was woven deeply into American life. Both Roe and Casey, Stewart argued, were simply wrong. “They have no basis in the Constitution.”

On the evening of May 2 Politico published a leaked draft of the Dobbs opinion. Written by Justice Samuel Alito, the draft signaled the majority’s whole hearted agreement with Mississippi: Roe and Casey must indeed be overturned. Pro-choice Americans reacted to the draft with shock and grief, but also with a touch of magical thinking: surely this was a worst-case scenario; surely Chief Justice John Roberts would step in to forge a compromise whereby Mississippi’s fifteen weeks became the most restrictive allowable standard. (Actually, Roberts tried until the last moment.)

It was not to be. On the morning of June 24, the Supreme Court released its 5-4 decision, little changed from the draft, overruling Roe. For the first time in American history, a firmly established constitutional right had been revoked from the people. Now, as Roberts had feared, a state of chaos reigns in which abortion is essentially murder in some states and perfectly legal in others, and in which the Supreme Court is widely distrusted, and will be for years to come. »

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When Craddock was found guilty and sentenced to three months in a disease-ridden workhouse, Comstock “exulted with savage glee,” according to a spectator quoted in Amy Sohn’s book The Man Who Hated Women. No sooner was Craddock released than Comstock arrested her again, on the fraudulent charge of mailing the pamphlet to a minor girl. This time Craddock escaped a prison sentence by committing suicide. Just before she turned on the gas jet in her flat, she wrote a letter expressing the hope that her death would shock people into rethinking the “dreadful state of affairs which permits that unctuous sexual hypocrite, Anthony Comstock, to wax fat and arrogant, and to trample upon the liberties of the people.”

After Craddock’s suicide, people began to weary of Comstock. “Why don’t you suppress the Bible?” voices shouted, as he lectured in Brooklyn about obscene literature. Not long before Comstock’s own death, the socialist newspaper The Masses published a cartoon that neatly summed up the shifting attitude: A rotund Comstock has dragged a young woman by the collar of her nightgown into a courtroom. He tells the judge, “Your Honor, this woman gave birth to a naked child!”

Comstock may have been a relic, but the Comstock Law of 1873 lived ruthlessly on. Worse, twenty-four states, inspired by the federal law, passed “little Comstock laws” even stricter than the original. Connecticut’s was the strictest of all. Pushed through the state House in 1879 by P.T. Barnum, the showman and sometime politician, this “Act Concerning Offenses against Decency, Morality and Humanity” predictably forbade circulating information about contraceptives; but uniquely, it also forbade their use. Married couples could go to jail for employing condoms and diaphragms in the privacy of their bedrooms. And physicians could go to jail for counseling their use, even when pregnancy would have posed a grave danger to his patient.

None of this is ancient history. Our puritanical law of 1879 persisted until 1965, when the Supreme Court ruled, in Griswold v. Connecticut, the ban on contraceptives to be unconstitutional. “We deal with a right of privacy older than the Bill of Rights,” wrote William O. Douglas in his majority opinion. In other words, a “right of privacy” is a natural right, a bedrock principle of any free society. But it took Griswold to articulate privacy as a constitutional right in matters of sex and family life. Though the word “privacy” is nowhere mentioned in the Constitution, the concept of privacy—in the sense of being let alone to live as we choose, without unwarranted government intrusion—is threaded throughout. “Would we allow the police to search the sacred precincts of marital bedrooms for telltale signs of the use of contraceptives?” Douglas asked. “The very idea is repulsive to the notions of privacy surrounding the marriage relationship.”

Here is why Griswold matters so critically today: It laid the foundation for all privacy cases to come—most notably Roe v. Wade, the landmark 1973 decision that legalized abortion up to “viability,” the

Connecticut enacts the country’s first criminal abortion statute. Stemming from a sex scandal in the town of Griswold (see main story), the statute outlaws abortion by “poison” when a woman is “quick with child”—that is, after she has felt the first kick of the fetus in her womb. The abortionist can be punished by life in prison; the woman who undergoes the abortion is not culpable.

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Connecticut revises its abortion law, in keeping with a national trend. Now abortion at any stage by any means (herbal concoctions or “tools”) is illegal, unless to save the life of the mother. And now, too, the woman is guilty of a felony.

roughly twenty-four-week mark at which fetuses can theoretically survive outside the womb. (Thereafter states could prohibit abortion, except when the life or health of the mother was at risk.) All of that changed on June 24, when the Supreme Court handed down its decision in the case of Dobbs v. Jackson (Mississippi) Women’s Health Organization. The Court could have simply upheld Mississippi’s ban on abortion after fifteen weeks, as Chief Justice John Roberts had wished, but the five conservative justices decided to go big: They overturned Roe v. Wade and the twenty-odd cases that flowed from it. For the first time in American history, a constitutionally-established right had been snatched back from the people.

Samuel Alito’s majority opinion adopted a tone of barely suppressed hostility. He offered zero respect for a precedent deeply woven into American society—one that women relied upon for a half century to escape poverty, abusive relationships, troubled pregnancies, and difficult lives, not to mention to preserve their freedom. “Roe was egregiously wrong from the start,” he wrote. “Its reasoning was exceptionally weak.” (In fairness to Alito, legal scholars of all persuasions have picked at the Roe opinion; few of them, however, take issue with its bottom line.) Then Alito reached back to old, male-centric sources to buttress his opinion, including seventeenthcentury English jurist Matthew Hale, who described abortion as “a great crime” but also sent women to death for witchcraft and wrote that rape in marriage isn’t rape.

Supreme Court experts were aghast at Alito’s insensitivity. “The

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Anthony Comstock, New York’s chief vice cop, persuades Congress to pass a sweeping obscenity law. The Comstock Act makes it illegal to send “obscene” or “immoral” materials through the mail. The law makes no attempt to define “obscene,” but it explicitly includes anything to do with contraception and abortion. Violating the Comstock Act can land one in prison for five years. Comstock himself rents a post office box in Greenwich in order to entrap New Yorkers into sending material across the border, thus turning a state crime into a federal one, according to Amy Sohn in her book The Man Who Hated Women.

The Connecticut Birth Control League quietly— and illegally—opens a clinic in Hartford. Clinics in Greenwich, Stamford and Norwalk follow. But when a birth control clinic opens in Waterbury in 1938, Catholic authorities pressure police to enforce the 1879 statute. The clinic’s founder and two physicians are arrested, though ultimately not prosecuted. The state’s birth control clinics shut down. 1961

States pass “little Comstock laws” that often go further than the federal one. Connecticut’s is the strictest of all. Not only does it regard information about abortion or birth control obscene, but it forbids outright the use of contraceptives. And it punishes an abettor (say, a physician) “as if he were the principal offender.”

Estelle Griswold, executive director of the Planned Parent League of Connecticut, and C. Lee Buxton, a Yale School of Medicine professor and gynecologist, open a birth control clinic in New Haven, hoping to draw legal action. Local detectives promptly raid the clinic and arrest Griswold and Buxton. They are convicted of abetting a crime, and the state Supreme Court upholds both the convictions and the archaic 1879 statute.

opinion feels like it was written by arsonists,” noted Dahlia Lithwick, a lawyer who writes about the Supreme Court. Reva Siegel, a Yale law professor specializing in the Constitution, sent us an article in which she wrote, “The decision so dramatically limits women’s constitutional liberties that one can almost hear the chants of ‘lock her up!’ from Trump’s supporters.” (In Texas, performing an abortion is now punishable by up to life in prison.)

Then there was Clarence Thomas. In his concurring opinion he raised the specter of the Court “correct[ing] the error” of other celebrated privacy cases, including Lawrence v. Texas (2003), which legalized consensual gay sex, Obergefell v. Hodges (2015), which legalized same-sex marriage, and even Griswold, which was suddenly back in the news not as a venerable precursor to Roe, but as a threatened right.

Thus does a straight line run from 1879 to the present moment. Somewhere, the ghost of Anthony Comstock is smiling.

PAVING THE WAY

Today Connecticut is regarded as a moderately liberal state. But it overwhelmingly supports abortion rights, with 68 percent in favor in all—or most—cases. (Only Massachusetts, Hawaii and Vermont poll higher.) Ours was the first state in the nation, in 1990, to codify Roe into its own laws, and remains one of only sixteen states to have done so. And in May, before the fall of Roe, Connecticut was first

In the landmark Griswold v. Connecticut, the U.S. Supreme Court declares that Connecticut’s ban on contraception violates the Constitution’s implicit right to privacy, marking the first time the Court unequivocally asserts that right. The decision lays the groundwork for Roe v. Wade.

to pass a law protecting out-of-state women who receive abortions here, as well as those who provide or facilitate abortions.

State Rep. Matt Blumenthal of Stamford got the ball rolling late last year. Noting the bleak tenor of the oral arguments in Dobbs, Blumenthal understood that Roe was probably doomed. “And I wanted to make sure that we in Connecticut were protected,” he says. Working with Rep. Jillian Gilchrest of West Hartford, he consulted an all-star team of law professors and formulated legislation now known as the Reproductive Freedom Defense Act. (In addition to its protections, the act expands abortion access by permitting qualified nurses and physician assistants to perform suction abortions, the most common kind of clinical abortion.)

New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts and Delaware soon copied us—and then red states moved audaciously to counter these new protections. The conservative Thomas More Society drafted model legislation that would forbid people in abortion-ban states to get abortions in legal states such as ours, and it’s only a matter of time before legislatures enshrine the society’s handiwork into law. Blumenthal predicts a collision between the two sets of laws: It’s wholly conceivable that we’ll see a Texas prosecutor go after a Connecticut physician. “But we’re not going to shrink from defending our doctors, our nurses, our residents, and people who come here for care,” Blumenthal says. “We’re going to stand up and say, ‘Texas, don’t mess with Connecticut.’” (Zari Watkins, COO of Planned Parenthood of Southern New England, informs us that last year

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Connecticut legalizes abortion by order of the U.S. District Court in Hartford. This important but largely forgotten case, called Abele v. Markle, began with Yale law student Ann Hill’s anger at having to choose between an illegal abortion and bearing a child she didn’t want (she chose the abortion). The state reacts to the nullification of its 1860 abortion law by obtusely passing an even stricter law, requiring an Abele v. Markle II to strike it down. District Judge Jon O. Newman’s majority opinion establishes “viability” as the most reasonable line between the rights of the woman and the rights of the fetus, and his thinking will markedly influence the Supreme Court’s Roe opinion.

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Roe v. Wade establishes abortion as a constitutional right. After the first trimester, however, that right is not absolute: States may regulate abortion to protect women’s health in the second trimester, and prohibit it altogether after viability (which the Court locates at 24 to 28 weeks but is now 23 or 24 weeks) except when the life or health of the mother is at risk.

Texas women, in response to new restrictions, began traveling to Connecticut for abortion care.)

How did Connecticut become a beacon of reproductive rights, when we were once the most repressive state in the union? The story is instructive: Let it begin with Sarah Grosvenor. In 1742 the nineteen-year-old farmer’s daughter from Pomfret became pregnant by her lover, Amasa Sessions, twenty-seven, son of a local tavern keeper. At Sessions’ insistence, Grosvenor took an abortifacient to do away with the fetus, but the powder merely made her ill. So Sessions hired a “practitioner of physick” named John Hallowell to perform a surgical procedure. Two days later Grosvenor miscarried, and soon after that she contracted a uterine infection, grew feverish and sank away into death. After an unexplained gap of three years, authorities arrested Sessions and Hallowell—the first known abortion-related arrests in America. For unknown reasons Sessions was let off the hook, but Hallowell was found guilty and sentenced to twenty-nine lashes and two hours’ public humiliation at the gallows. Before he could be punished, he broke out of jail and fled to Rhode Island, never to return.

Abortion was not uncommon in Colonial America. It was tolerated so long as it occurred before “quickening,” the first kick of the fetus in the womb, at four to five months. In 1748 Ben Franklin published an abortifacient recipe—a mixture of mildly toxic herbs—in a widely circulated book of practical knowledge. Numerous popular

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The Supreme Court case Planned Parenthood v. Casey affirms Roe and clarifies its “viability” standard (dispensing with the somewhat muddy trimester scheme). But Casey also permits certain restrictions—waiting periods, parental consent—that make abortion access more difficult.

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Connecticut is the first state to codify the terms of Roe into its own laws, ensuring that abortion would remain legal, prior to viability of the fetus, even if Roe were overturned. Gov. William A. O’Neill, a Catholic who personally opposes abortion, signs the bill into law.

medical books of the era proffered similar advice. So when Samuel Alito argues in his Dobbs opinion that abortion can’t be a constitutional right, because the practice is “not deeply rooted in the nation’s history and tradition” (a dubious standard to begin with: was women’s suffrage deeply rooted?), he’s factually incorrect. Though there was ambivalence about abortion because it could be dangerous, the practice was accepted by custom and by common law.

The first criminal abortion statute was enacted in 1821—courtesy of Connecticut. Why us? The immediate reason concerned a religious sex scandal in the town of Griswold. In 1817 a middle-aged preacher named Ammi Rogers impregnated a twenty-one-year-old congregant, Asenath Smith, and pressured her to ingest an abortifacient concoction. The young woman fell violently ill but survived, delivering a stillborn baby. Authorities got wind of the minister’s outrageous behavior and took redemptive action: They convicted Rogers of assault and jailed him for two years. Then they passed the historic 1821 statute, which outlawed abortion by “poison” when a woman was quick with child. The law clearly aimed to protect women, not fetuses, since it left in place the understanding that abortion before quickening was legal. (Also, the law punished only the abortionist; the woman was viewed as a victim of schemers like Ammi Rogers.)

In 1860 Connecticut hardened its law to ban abortion at any stage of pregnancy and extended punishment to recipients. The moral

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The Supreme Court, in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, overturns Roe v. Wade by a 5-4 vote. No longer a constitutional right, abortion returns to each state to decide for itself. But as Connecticut’s history shows, the will of state officials does not always reflect the will of the people.

Anticipating the fall of Roe, Connecticut passes the Reproductive Freedom Defense Act, which protects patients who travel here for abortion care, as well as those who provide abortions or otherwise help patients. The act also expands access to abortion by permitting qualified advanced practice clinicians to perform aspiration, or suction, abortions.

climate around abortion in America had darkened considerably, but an evolving concern for the fetus was only part of the story. In 1857 physicians, led by Horatio Robinson Storer of Boston, embarked on a vigorous anti-abortion crusade that resulted in a virtual nationwide ban. On one hand, physicians worried about the danger of abortion practiced by numberless “irregulars,” midwives and homeopaths without formal training; newspapers were rife with stories of young women dying of abortions gone awry. On the other hand, the physicians, almost exclusively men, objected to the irregulars, who were mainly women, cutting into their business turf. (Women lacked the right to vote and so were powerless to counter the physicians’ crusade.)

Storer believed abortion was murder. Many who held this view, though, did so through a fog of racism. They obsessed about white Anglo-Saxon Protestants committing “race suicide,” as supposedly inferior stock—poor Blacks and immigrants—procreated with abandon (that is, without recourse to abortion and contraception).

Despite the new criminal statutes, abortion in America exploded between 1840 and 1880. An 1870 poll of Philadelphia physicians called it an “epidemic.” At the same time in New York, four hundred “abortoria” were hiding in plain sight, according to the Times

In 1905, as talk of race suicide peaked, Connecticut’s Waterbury Evening Democrat opined, “It would be interesting to know how many native-born American children there would be if native-born

American parents did not transgress the law of God and nature by abortion, infanticide and onanism.”

Though women of all classes, races and religions got abortions, the typical patient was Protestant, married and middle- to upperclass. Usually these women sought to escape an endless cycle of child-bearing and child-rearing, or they’d endured dangerous pregnancies and worried about losing their lives in a kind of pregnancy roulette. (The single young woman “in trouble” made the papers when she died of a botched abortion, but she was a less typical case.) Abortion among Catholics was comparatively rare, because they tended to be poor, and because the Church thunderously forbade both abortion and contraception. Curiously, when Roman Catholic leaders distinguished between the two modes of baby-prevention, contraception was often the greater evil: “To take a life after its inception is a horrible crime,” New York Archbishop Patrick Hayes said in 1921. “But to prevent life that the Creator is about to bring into being is satanic.”

TURNING THE TIDE

By the twentieth century Connecticut had shaken off some of its Puritan mud. One notable progressive mud-shaker was Katharine Hepburn of Hartford, mother of the actress, who in 1923 cofounded the Connecticut Birth Control League, or CBCL. This was a coura-

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geous undertaking. Our 1879 Comstock law was very much alive, and the topic of birth control still possessed an aura of transgression and sin. Then there were the Roman Catholic multitudes. Immigration in the late nineteenth century—from Ireland, Italy and Eastern Europe—had flooded the state with Catholics and austere Catholic officialdom, which exerted immense power over its largely Democratic flock, including a burgeoning number of Catholic politicians.

Birth controllers like Hepburn brought out the ogre in the Church. Hartford Bishop John G. Murray called contraception a “perversion” and observed that the northern European races, “the finest type of people,” were “doomed to extinction, unless each family produces at least four children.” Francis J. Sugrue, a priest from South Norwalk, assailed birth control’s “lecherous leaders.” Hartford priest Andrew J. Kelly charged Hepburn with “naked paganism.” But the birth controllers remained steadfast, if a little awed by the ferocity of their foes. A CBCL executive informed his colleagues, “Catholic opposition in the state is rising like a tidal wave.”

Republicans, who monopolized the state legislature and tended to be Protestant, had little stomach for social change; they were of the old stock that had won for Connecticut its reputation as “the land of steady habits.” One exception was Epaphroditus Peck, a lawyer from Bristol. He argued before the state House in 1929 that the old Comstock-Barnum statute was “essentially religious legislation,” a claim that seems eerily current, as today conservative Christians lead the charge in banning abortion even in cases of rape and incest. Countering the enlightened Peck were myriad voices like that of Rep. Caroline T. Platt of Milford, who claimed that permitting contraception would “open the way for every girl to become a prostitute.”

Connecticut’s birth control advocates succeeded in putting the issue before a shyly amenable public, but that was all—they could not budge the legislative needle. A lively faction from Greenwich, led by Nancy Carnegie Rockefeller and Florence Borden Darrach, responded to that intransigence by opening a clinic in Port Chester in 1932. “At long last Connecticut—almost—had a clinic,” wrote the Pulitzer Prize-winning historian David J. Garrow in his magisterial Liberty and Sexuality: The Right to Privacy and the Making of Roe v. Wade. As it happens, Garrow grew up in Old Greenwich and graduated from Greenwich High School in 1971. It is his book that first traced America’s battle for the right to privacy back to a succession of fierce Connecticut women.

In 1935 Hepburn’s friend Sallie Pease, president of the Connecticut Birth Control League, quietly opened the state’s actual first clinic, in Hartford. By 1936 Greenwich, Stamford and New Haven, too, had clinics. Then came Norwalk, Danbury, Bridgeport—and fatally, Waterbury, the state’s most Catholic city. The Church smoked with indignation. The clinic was raided. Police arrested its founder, Clara McTernan, along with two young doctors. “Then everything across the state shuts down,” Garrow tells us from his home in Pittsburgh. “Just like we saw in Texas with abortion twelve months ago.” (Garrow

is referring to the Texas law of last September that banned abortion at six weeks. After Dobbs, Texas established a near-total ban.)

As birth control clinics sprouted up around the country, Connecticut remained dark. Decades passed; finally our state alone banned the possession and use of contraceptives (Massachusetts banned their sale and distribution, but not their use). In 1961 a Connecticut couple and their physician managed to get their appeal before the U.S. Supreme Court, in Poe v. Ullman, but the Court effectively punted: Since there had been no arrest, there was no injury—a decision that curiously discounted the injury of denying medical care to a woman (“Pauline Poe”) who had given birth to three children with fatal defects. On November 1 of that year, Estelle Griswold, head of the Planned Parenthood League of Connecticut (as the CBCL was now called) opened a birth control clinic at 79 Trumbull Street in New Haven. On November 2 she invited reporters to the clinic and cheerfully explained that, in frank defiance of the law, PPLC had begun providing advice and contraceptives to married women. The provocation worked. Upon reading the news on November 3, James G. Morris, a Catholic father of five, worked himself into such a lather that he complained officially to New Haven police, demanding they shutter the clinic and arrest the outlaws. In comments to the press, Morris went full Comstock, comparing 79 Trumbull Street to a house of prostitution. “Marital

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relations,” he said, “are for procreation and not entertainment.”

That afternoon two police detectives “raided” the clinic. Estelle Griswold could not have been more delighted. She gave the detectives a leisurely tour, supplied them with illicit literature, and even directed them to clients who would happily brandish their diaphragms and birth control pills. On November 10 Griswold and Dr. C. Lee Buxton, the clinic’s medical director, were congenially arrested and released on $100 bond each. Thus began the most important privacy case in American history.

If Connecticut’s legislature was bizarrely out-of-step with the times in regard to birth control, its courts did not care to recognize it. The Sixth Circuit convicted Griswold and Buxton and fined them $100 each, having rejected their free speech and marital privacy arguments; the appellate court upheld the convictions, claiming, with unintentional humor, that the state could deter “practices that tend to negate its survival”; and the state Supreme Court blandly agreed with these rulings: the 1879 law had survived a lot of challenges, so why shouldn’t it survive this one?

Garrow notes a central irony in all of this: the Catholic control of the Democratic Party that had kept the antiquated law on the books also sealed our date with the U.S. Supreme Court. Connecticut’s repressiveness had ignited the forces of rebellion.

RALLYING CRY

It is among the saddest photographs ever taken. The black-andwhite image, from June of 1964, shows a lifeless woman lying facedown on the floor of a tatty room at the Norwich Motel—naked, knees folded under her, hind quarters bloodied from a botched abortion. The woman was Gerri Santoro, a twenty-eight-year-old mother of two from the town of Coventry. She was married to Sam Santoro, who had moved the family to California, and who beat Gerri and the girls until they fled back to Connecticut.

Gerri took up with a coworker named Clyde Dixon, by whom she became pregnant. Sam then announced his intention to come East. The thought of him finding her pregnant struck such fear into Gerri that she submitted to Clyde’s clueless doctoring, there at the Norwich Motel. And when she began to hemorrhage, Clyde bolted, leaving Gerri to die alone. A maid found her in the morning.

Mysteriously, the photograph, taken by Norwich police, surfaced in Ms. magazine in 1973 under the headline “Never Again.” Then the photo began appearing on placards at marches. Thus did the appalling death of Gerri Santoro, a farm girl from Coventry, Connecticut, become a galvanic symbol of the pro-choice movement, a symbol of the horrors that Roe v. Wade had vanquished forever. Or so it seemed. »

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Fairfield County residents hit the Women’s Marches in Washington, D.C. and New York City in 2021. (opposite)The First Amendment carved in stone in Washington D.C. (this page top row) Coline Jenkins with photo of her great-great-grandmother, suffragette Elizabeth Cady Stanton • Katharine Brydson and Sofia Giannuzzi (bottom row) Joshua Dorries, Ned Marks, John T. Creedon Jr., Jack Reynolds, Molly Checksfield • Riley Klotz • Mary and Congressman Jim Himes with daughters Linley and Emma

Nearly fifty years later Roe is gone. A few in Connecticut greeted the news warmly. Our Catholic bishops noted that “we have heard many voices cry out for the innocent lives of the unborn” and that America had reached “a most hopeful and encouraging moment.” Peter Wolfgang, who heads the Family Institute of Connecticut, said, “This is the liberation of the unborn child” and vowed to keep working toward a “Connecticut where every unborn child is protected in law and welcomed in life.”

Most, however, greeted Dobbs with intense dismay. “It stings—it stings,” says Zari Watkins of Planned Parenthood of Southern New England. “This is about the patients and their loss of access. Abortion is healthcare. We are denying folks access to basic healthcare— and, yes, it’s devastating.” Danielle Eason of Greenwich, an abortion rights advocate who has served as a “hand holder” to women getting abortions at the Planned Parenthood clinic in Stamford, says, “It’s a slap in the face to women who, for fifty years, had the right to bodily autonomy and agency over their lives.” Now she fears for the millions of girls and women in states like Texas, Missouri and Louisiana who lack the wherewithal to travel to states like Connecticut. “It’s an uphill battle they just won’t be able to climb.”

Eason herself had an abortion several years ago at Greenwich Hospital. “My husband and I are both Tay-Sachs carriers,” she says. Tay-Sachs disease manifests itself soon after a child is born, and results in catastrophic problems, including paralysis, as the nerves in the brain and spinal column disintegrate. It chills Eason to imagine being poor and living in Texas under the tyranny of that state’s ban.

“If I lived in Texas right now, I’d potentially have to carry that pregnancy to term—which has its own risks—and then give birth to a child who has an inevitable fatal outcome by the time they’re a toddler. And it’s a painful death.” Genetic testing let the Eason family avoid that fate. But the test itself would pose a problem elsewhere. Since it can’t

be done until the eleventh week of pregnancy, states that ban abortion (thirteen and counting) or restrict it to six weeks (Ohio and Georgia) would force upon the Easons a protracted family tragedy.

New abortion laws have already ushered in a period of medical chaos. In Louisiana, a thirty-six-year-old woman was denied an abortion after an ultrasound showed her fetus to be missing part of its skull. In South Carolina, a nineteen-year-old carrying a nonviable fetus risked death by sepsis—or merely losing her uterus—when physicians sent her home, because the law precluded extraction before the fetus died. In Texas, a woman whose water broke at eighteen weeks—rendering delivery of a live baby hopeless—opted for an abortion, but the law was so vague that no physician would perform it. She was sent home to get sicker—which she did.

“We read about women walking around with dead fetuses for two weeks, because practitioners don’t know how to maneuver in this new landscape,” Eason observes. She does not judge women who have abortions for less urgent reasons than these. “Abortion happens for all sorts of reasons. You can’t pick and choose which ones are valid or not valid. It’s a very private matter, unique to each person.”

THE HUMAN TOLL

Birth control is no longer contested territory in America, though we shouldn’t speak too soon. Efforts are afoot to reclassify certain contraceptives as abortifacients, lending real weight to Clarence Thomas’s threat to undo Griswold. Abortion is another story. The country is hopelessly divided, though a solid majority of Americans, about 61 percent, are pro-choice in all or most cases, according to the Pew Research Center. Surprisingly, given Church teaching, 58 percent of Catholics think abortion should be legal, and 68 percent were opposed to overturning Roe, believing abortion to be a matter of individual conscience, says the advocacy group Catholics for Choice. (Protestants, various as their denominations are, diverge sharply on abortion: 60 percent of “mainline” Protestants favor choice, including 79 percent of Episcopalians, while only 33 of evangelicals do. Jews are notably pro-choice, polling at 83 percent, according to Pew.)

About 37 percent of Americans are anti-choice in all or most cases. While a fraction of these would leave Roe in place anyway— in deference to the conscience—the majority of them liken abortion at any stage to the murder of a living human. Indeed, anti-abortion politicians like Ted Cruz speak of Roe as permitting “the deaths of 63 million American children” as if they’d been cut down on the playgrounds of suburbia. No wonder the debate is so poisonous.

“Both sides are controlled by purists,” David Garrow, the historian, contends. A self-described pro-choice moderate, Garrow thinks John Roberts offered a reasonable compromise in upholding Mississippi’s fifteen-week ban yet also wanting to preserve Roe. “It was crystal clear during oral arguments that the chief justice

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“EVEN THOUGH WE’VE BEEN VERY PROGRESSIVE AND TRAILBLAZING, THAT COULD SWITCH ON A DIME IF OUR LEADERSHIP CHANGES.”
—DANIELLE EASON, PLANNED PARENTHOOD ADVOCATE

wanted to find some middle ground,” he says. “And you know, John Roberts represents America.”

Polling does affirm that pro-choice Americans grow uneasier about abortion as pregnancy progresses. “For most everything up to ten to twelve weeks, an abortion can be done largely with vacuum aspiration,” Garrow explains. “You don’t have to do a D & E, using curettes and pulling things out, piece by piece. Once you get past about twelve or thirteen weeks, though, it’s unpleasant. There are a lot of pro-choice clinicians who won’t go past sixteen or eighteen or twenty weeks, because it increasingly looks like an actual baby.”

Most of the roughly 900,000 abortions in America annually are performed early. Ninety-three percent occur within fourteen weeks—the first trimester—and the majority of these are accomplished with pills. Only one percent of abortions are performed after twenty weeks. Yet as the ramifications of Dobbs play out, many are revising their willingness for “middle ground” compromise, as they learn, for instance, that fetal abnormalities often go undetected until a twenty-week ultrasound. There are other reasons why people wait to get abortions. Through no fault of their own, some women are slow to realize they’re pregnant, and when they do realize it, a combination of saving $500 (to say nothing of travel costs) for an abortion and booking an appointment at a typically backlogged provider pushes out the timeframe exasperatingly.

Meanwhile the anti-abortion movement is embracing ever more extreme tactics. Some Republican-led states, like Arizona and Georgia, now legally define “personhood” as beginning at fertilization. What do they make of the fact that, in the natural course of things,

as many as half of fertilized eggs fail to implant in the uterine wall? Are these millions of “persons” dead children? And what of the hundreds of thousands of human embryos—or should we say children—locked away in freezers? Where’s their child tax credit?

Most people do agree that abortion raises profound moral and philosophical questions. Dr. Paul Lakeland, an eminent Catholic writer and a professor of Catholic studies at Fairfield University, tells us the Church should drop its “nonsensical” argument against birth control. But abortion? It’s infinitely knottier. “Deep down I think most Catholics understand that sometimes there are competing values, and sometimes very hard decisions have to be taken,” Lakeland says by email. “All killing is objectively evil, but there are some circumstances where killing is justified: war, self-defense, and…” He leaves the sentence unfinished.

One thing seems indisputable: the Dobbs decision is increasing the store of human misery in America. As soon as the decision came down, clinics were beset with calls from sobbing women. Women and girls already in waiting rooms were told to their bewilderment that they had to go home. Protests erupted outside the Supreme Court building and in cities across the country. Days later, thousands of protesters converged on the White House, chanting “We won’t go back.”

But nothing could be done. Bans took hold in thirteen states, and ten more may follow. Other states (Ohio, Georgia) went in for restrictions so severe they are tantamount to bans. Then there was Kansas. The state has abortion protections in its constitution, but Republican lawmakers, who vastly outnumber Democrats, sought

IN MAY, BEFORE THE FALL OF ROE, CONNECTICUT WAS FIRST TO PASS A LAW PROTECTING OUT-OF-STATE WOMEN WHO RECEIVE ABORTIONS HERE…
PLANNED PARENTHOOD FEDERATION OF AMERICA NOVEMBER 2022 GREENWICH 93
U.S. Senator Richard Blumenthal speaking at Title X gag rule rally in Washington, D.C. in 2018

to revoke them the only way they could—through a public referendum. The people of Kansas, despite their relative conservatism, voted overwhelmingly to keep the protections in place, thus sending a shiver through the Republican body politic. Most states that lost abortion rights, though, did get to decide for themselves.

What, then, is the human cost of Dobbs? Women will have to forgo jobs and schooling. They’ll be trapped in poverty. They’ll have to scare up costly aid for children with disabilities. They’ll be tied to abusers and rapists. And they’ll attempt dangerous methods of abortion.

“A lot of women are going to die. It’s as simple as that,” says Kay Maxwell, past president of the League of Women Voters of the United States, former board chairman of Planned Parenthood of Southern New England and former executive director of the World Affairs Forum. “We know that a ban on abortions is not going to stop abortions from happening.”

Not all the deaths will happen via makeshift abortion. Imagine the desperation of the sixteen-year-old in Dallas or St. Louis or Baton Rouge who can neither get an abortion nor tell her parents she’s pregnant: Suicide will be an answer. In El Salvador, where abortion is outlawed, unwanted pregnancy is a leading cause of teen suicide. Maxwell sees forcing a person to bear a child as an act of cruelty.

This election season, certain conservative politicians have called pregnancy by rape “an opportunity” and God’s “silver lining.”

“How about this awful situation with the ten-year-old in Ohio?” Maxwell asks. “I mean, you can’t make this up.”

On July 1 an Ohio rape produced this horrific headline: “10-YearOld Girl Denied Abortion.” The girl got one in Indiana. But the story had a disturbing coda: Indiana’s attorney general, an anti-choice Catholic Republican named Todd Rokita, announced a seemingly unwarranted investigation into Caitlin Bernard, the ob/gyn who performed the abortion, hinting that her license hung in the balance. Why? Simply to intimidate her, thought Bernard. She had made the “mistake” of speaking out in favor of reproductive rights.

It seems there are many weeders in God’s garden. Abortion providers have bore witness to a particularly dark strain of them. Since 1977 the National Abortion Federation has recorded eleven murders, nearly 500 assaults, forty-two bombings, and 196 arsons perpetrated against abortion providers, volunteers and patients. Last year alone, the federation said, there were thirteen cases of stalking, 182 threats of harm or death, and thousands upon thousands of hate calls and hate emails.

What is really going on here? “In simplistic terms, power over women,” says Maxwell, who volunteers at Planned Parenthood in Stamford, shepherding patients past anti-choice protesters who routinely gather there. “Not very long ago we celebrated the 100th anniversary of women winning the right to vote. Women have struggled and fought for rights all along. I’m old enough to have lived through the time when women couldn’t get their own credit cards. And yet I never thought that a right gained would be taken away.”

Maxwell sees a broader pattern of individual rights under attack— healthcare, voting, LGBTQ—and laments, “Everything seems to be turning backwards. Everything I’ve worked for and cared about through my lifetime, seems to have…” she trails off. “I mean, the Fifties were fine in some respects but not so fine in a lot of others, and I feel like that’s right back where we are.”

She sees hope, however, in the generation of young women now waking to the shocking realization that rights they were born with aren’t necessarily here to stay. “They have gotten more engaged. I don’t think it occurred to 90 percent of them that any of this could happen.”

Danielle Eason prefers to think of our Connecticut “safe haven” as not entirely safe. Ten years ago, who thought Roe was truly endangered? “Even though we’ve been very progressive and trailblazing, that could switch on a dime if our leadership changes,” she says. “So, when local candidates are asked about their beliefs on this topic and they say, ‘It doesn’t matter what my beliefs are, nothing is going to change in Connecticut,’ that should be a red flag. It says that person does not think women’s reproductive healthcare is a priority. We need to be very careful with our local elections and our state makeup, because those people in Hartford are the ones who will have the power to make this decision in the end. Not me or you.” G

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ERIC KAYNE/CENTER FOR REPRODUCTIVE RIGHTS COURTESY OF PLANNED PARENTHOOD FEDERATION OF AMERICA
Alexis McGill Johnson, CEO of Planned Parenthood, speaks to abortion rights supporters at a rally organized by the Center for Reproductive Rights in 2020.
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Taylor | Graham

Taylor | Graham is back in town! The gallery first opened in 1989, then took a hiatus but is now once again gracing Greenwich Avenue. The collection offers a vast, dynamic and tasteful collection of American and European paintings, sculpture and works on paper raging from the nineteenth through the twenty-first centuries. 80 Greenwich Avenue, taylorandgraham.com.

ART & ANTIQUES

ALDRICH MUSEUM, 258 Main St., Ridgefield, 438-0198. Tues.–Sun. aldrichart.org

AMY SIMON FINE ART, 1869 Post Rd. East, Westport, 259-1500. amysimonfineart.com

BRUCE MUSEUM, 1 Museum Dr., 869-0376. brucemuseum.org

CANFIN GALLERY, 39 Main St., Tarrytown, NY, 914-332-4554. canfingallery.com

CARAMOOR CENTER FOR MUSIC AND THE ARTS, Girdle Ridge Rd., Katonah, NY, 914-232-1252. Caramoor is a destination for exceptional music, captivating programs, spectacular gardens and grounds, and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. caramoor.org

CAVALIER GALLERIES, 405 Greenwich Ave., 869-3664. cavaliergalleries .com

CENTER FOR CONTEMPORARY PRINTMAKING, 299 West Ave., Norwalk, 899-7999. contemprints.org

CLAY ART CENTER, 40 Beech St., Port Chester, NY, 914-937-2047. clayartcenter.org

DISCOVERY MUSEUM AND PLANETARIUM, 4450 Park Ave., Bridgeport, 372-3521. discoverymuseum.org

FAIRFIELD MUSEUM AND HISTORY CENTER, 370 Beach Rd., Fairfield, 259-1598. fairfieldhistory.org

FLINN GALLERY, 101 W. Putnam Ave., 622-7947. flinngallery.com

GERTRUDE G. WHITE GALLERY, YWCA, 259 E. Putnam Ave., 869-6501. ywcagreenwich.org

GREENWICH ARTS COUNCIL, 299 Greenwich Ave., 862-6750. greenwichartscouncil.org

GREENWICH ART SOCIETY, 299 Greenwich Ave. 2nd fl., 629-1533. A studio school that offers a visual arts education program for kids and adults. greenwichartsociety.org

GREENWICH

HISTORICAL SOCIETY, 47 Strickland Rd., 869-6899. greenwichhistory.org

KATONAH

MUSEUM OF ART, Rte. 22 at Jay St., Katonah, NY, 914-232-9555. katonahmuseum.org

KENISE BARNES FINE ART, 1947 Palmer Ave., Larchmont, NY, 914-834-8077. kbfa.com

LOCKWOOD-MATHEWS

MANSION MUSEUM, 295 West Ave., Norwalk, 838-9799. lockwoodmathewsmansion.com

LOFT ARTISTS ASSOCIATION, 575 Pacific St., Stamford, 247-2027. loftartists.org

MARITIME AQUARIUM, 10 N. Water St., S. Norwalk, 852-0700. maritimeaquarium.org

NEUBERGER MUSEUM OF ART, Purchase College, 735 Anderson Hill Rd., Purchase, NY, 914-251-6100. neuberger.org

PELHAM ART CENTER, 155 Fifth Ave., Pelham, NY, 914-738-2525 ext. 113. pelhamartcenter.org

ROWAYTON ARTS CENTER, 145 Rowayton Ave., Rowayton, 866-2744. rowaytonarts.org

SAMUEL OWEN GALLERY, 382 Greenwich Ave., 325-1924. samuelowen.org»

calendar ( for more events visit greenwichmag.com ) NOVEMBER 2022 GREENWICH 97 NOVEMBER 2022
L’angelo Custode by Vincenzo Irolli
VISIT LIVE REINDEER & PHOTOS WITH SANTA (Families & Pets)
12pm–6pm, Saturday, 9am–6pm Christmas Eve, 9am–3pm, Closed Sundays A Portion of All Photos with Santa Benefit Kids In Crisis GreenwichReindeerFestival. com NOVEMBER 25–DECEMBER 24 Sam Bridge Nursery & Greenhouses, 437 North Street, Greenwich, Mon–Sat 8:30am–6pm WE’RE BACK PARTY!
25, 12pm–6pm SANTA AND HIS REINDEER ARRIVE Photos with Santa begin! For more details visit GreenwichReindeerFestival.com NURSERY & GREENHOUSES, LLC EST. 1930 Reindeer Festival Hosted By Presenting Sponsor Reindeer Sponsors Santa’s Raffle Sponsor Doggy Gift Bag Sponsor Media Sponsors Created & Produced By Santa’s Workshop Sponsor Greenwich Pediatric Dental Group Premier Media Sponsor Official Bank Sponsor To Benefit Gift Bag Sponsor Community Sponsors
Monday–Friday,
November

Greenwich Symphony Orchestra

On Saturday, November 12 at 7:30 p.m. and Sunday, November 13 at 3 p.m., Greenwich Symphony Orchestra, with music director Stuart Malina conducting, will offer a program of classical music at the Performing Arts Center at Greenwich High School. The featured soloist will be Rachel Naomi Kudo playing Piano Concerto No. 23 by Mozart. Adult tickets are $40, students $10. Call 203-869-2664 or visit greenwichsymphony.org for more information.

SILVERMINE GUILD ARTS CENTER, 1037 Silvermine Rd., New Canaan, 966-9700. silvermineart.org

SANDRA MORGAN INTERIORS & ART PRIVÉ, 135 East Putnam Ave., 2nd flr., Greenwich, 629-8121. sandramorganinteriors.com

SOROKIN GALLERY, 96 Greenwich Avenue, Greenwich, 856-9048. sorokingallery.com

STAMFORD ART ASSOCIATION, 39 Franklin St., Stamford, 325-1139. stamfordartassociation.org

YALE UNIVERSITY ART GALLERY, 1111 Chapel St., New Haven, 432-0611. artgallery.yale.edu

CONCERTS, FILM & THEATER

ARENA AT HARBOR YARD, 600 Main St., Bridgeport, 3452300. websterbankarena.com

AVON THEATRE FILM CENTER, 272 Bedford St., Stamford, 661-0321. avontheatre.org

CURTAIN CALL, The Sterling Farms Theatre Complex, 1349 Newfield Ave., Stamford, 329-8207. curtaincallinc.com

DOWNTOWN CABARET THEATRE, 263 Golden Hill St.,Bridgeport, 576-1636. dtcab.com

LECTURES, TOURS & WORKSHOPS

FAIRFIELD THEATRE COMPANY, On StageOne, 70 Sanford St., Fairfield, 259-1036. fairfieldtheatre.org

GOODSPEED OPERA HOUSE, 6 Main St., East Haddam, 860-873-8668. goodspeed.org

RIDGEFIELD THEATER BARN, 37 Halpin Ln., Ridgefield, 431-9850. ridgefieldtheaterbarn.org

SHUBERT THEATER, 247 College St., New Haven, 800-228-6622. shubert.com

STAMFORD CENTER FOR THE ARTS, Palace Theatre, 61 Atlantic St., Stamford, 325-4466. stamfordcenterforthearts.org

WESTPORT COUNTRY PLAYHOUSE, 25 Powers Ct., Westport, 227-4177. westportplayhouse.org

ALDRICH MUSEUM, 258 Main St., Ridgefield, 438-0198. aldrichart.org

AUDUBON GREENWICH, 613 Riversville Rd., 869-5272. greenwich.audubon.org

AUX DÉLICES, 231 Acosta St., Stamford, 326-4540, ext. 108. auxdelicesfoods.com

BOWMAN OBSERVATORY PUBLIC NIGHT, NE of Milbank/East Elm St. rotary on the grounds of Julian Curtiss School, 869-6786, ext. 338

BRUCE MUSEUM, 1 Museum Dr., 869-0376. brucemuseum.org

CLAY ART CENTER, 40 Beech St., Port Chester, NY, 914-937-2047. clayartcenter.org

CONNECTICUT CERAMICS STUDY CIRCLE, Bruce Museum, 1 Museum Dr. ctcsc.org

STAMFORD MUSEUM & NATURE CENTER, 39 Scofieldtown Rd., Stamford, 977-6521. stamfordmuseum.org

UCONN STAMFORD ART GALLERY, One University Pl., Stamford, 251-8400. artgallery.stamford.uconn.edu

WESTPORT ARTS CENTER, 51 Riverside Ave., Westport, 226-7070. westportartscenter.org

YALE CENTER FOR BRITISH ART, 1080 Chapel St., New Haven, 432-2800. britishart.yale.edu

( for more events visit greenwichmag.com )

GREENWICH LIBRARY, 101 W. Putnam Ave., 622-7900. greenwichlibrary.org

JACOB BURNS FILM CENTER, 364 Manville Rd., Pleasantville, NY, 914-7737663. burnsfilmcenter.org

LONG WHARF THEATRE, 222 Sargent Dr., New Haven, 787-4282. longwharf.com

RIDGEFIELD PLAYHOUSE, 80 East Ridge, Ridgefield, 438-9269. ridgefieldplayhouse.org

Flinn Gallery

Forms of Nature, the Flinn Gallery’s second show of the season, illuminates nature with works by Joan Goldin and Leigh Taylor Mickelson. It is curated by Leslee Asch and Alexis Abram. An opening reception will be held on Thursday, October 27 from 6 to 8 p.m. and runs through Wednesday, December 7. Flinn Gallery is located on the second floor of Greenwich Library, 101 West Putnam Avenue. Monday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Thursday until 8 p.m., Sunday from 1 to 5 p.m. For more information visit flinngallery.com. »

calendar NOVEMBER 2022 GREENWICH 99
Rachel Naomi Kudo Untitled Landscape by Joan Goldin

FAIRFIELD MUSEUM AND HISTORY CENTER, 370 Beach Rd., Fairfield, 259-1598. fairfieldhistory.org

GREENWICH BOTANICAL CENTER, 130 Bible St., 869-9242. gecgreenwich.org

GREENWICH LIBRARY, 101 W. Putnam Ave., 622-7900. greenwichlibrary.org

KATONAH MUSEUM OF ART, 26 Bedford Rd., Chappaqua, NY, 914-232-9555. katonahmuseum.org

STAMFORD MUSEUM & NATURE CENTER, 39 Scofieldtown Rd., Stamford, 977-6521. stamfordmuseum.org

Greenwich Reindeer Festival

Santa and his live reindeer return to Greenwich for the fourteenth annual Greenwich Reindeer Festival & Santa’s Workshop, the North Pole on North Street, at Sam Bridge Nursery & Greenhouses. The fun won’t stop from Friday, November 25 through Saturday, December 24. The community is invited to Sam Bridge for a “We’re Back Party” on Friday, November 25 from noon to 6 p.m. and Saturday, November 26, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., when Santa’s Workshop officially opens for photos with Santa. The event is presented by Jenny Allen/Compass Real Estate. For more information visit greenwichreindeerfestival.com. »

Tickets: Bushnell.org or call 860-987-5900

Saturday, December 17 · 2:00 & 6:00pm Sunday, December 18 · 1:00 & 5:00pm

Tickets: PalaceStamford.org or call 203-325-4466

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calendar
Brett Raphael’s celebrated production with guest stars from New York City Ballet and American Ballet Theatre Meet-and-greet with the guest stars after each performance.
presents The Bushnell/Hartford Saturday, December 10 · 1:00 & 5:00pm Sunday, December 11 · 1:00 & 5:00pm The
Palace Theatre/Stamford
A
for the Whole
Holiday Tradition
Family!

KIDS’ STUFF

NOVEMBER 2022

ALDRICH MUSEUM, 258 Main St., Ridgefield, 438-4519. aldrichart.org

AUDUBON GREENWICH, 613 Riversville Rd., 869-5272. greenwich.audubon.org

AUX DÉLICES, (cooking classes), 23 Acosta St., Stamford, 326-4540 ext. 108. auxdelicesfoods.com

BEARDSLEY ZOO, 1875 Noble Ave., Bridgeport, 394-6565. beardsleyzoo.org

BOYS & GIRLS CLUB OF GREENWICH, 4 Horseneck Lane, 869-3224. bgcg.org

BRUCE MUSEUM, 1 Museum Dr., 869-0376. brucemuseum.org

DISCOVERY MUSEUM AND PLANETARIUM, 4450 Park Ave., Bridgeport, 372-3521. discoverymuseum.org

DOWNTOWN CABARET THEATRE, 263 Golden Hill St., Bridgeport, 576-1636. dtcab.com

EARTHPLACE, 10 Woodside Lane, Westport, 227-7253. earthplace.org

GREENWICH HISTORICAL SOCIETY, 39 Strickland St., 869-6899. hstg.org

GREENWICH LIBRARY, 101 W. Putnam Ave., 622-7900. greenwichlibrary.org

IMAX THEATER AT MARITIME AQUARIUM, 10 N. Water St., S. Norwalk, 852-0700. maritimeaquarium.org

KATONAH MUSEUM OF ART, Rte. 22 at Jay St., Katonah, NY, 914-232-9555. katonahmuseum.org

MARITIME AQUARIUM, 10 N. Water St., S. Norwalk, 852-0700. maritimeaquarium.org

NEW CANAAN NATURE CENTER, 144 Oenoke Ridge, New Canaan, 966-9577. newcanaannature.org

RIDGEFIELD PLAYHOUSE, 80 East Ridge, Ridgefield, 438-5795. ridgefieldplayhouse.org

STAMFORD CENTER FOR THE ARTS, Palace Theatre, 61 Atlantic St., Stamford, 325-4466. palacestamford.org

STAMFORD MUSEUM & NATURE CENTER, 39 Scofieldtown Rd., Stamford, 977-6521. stamfordmuseum.org

STEPPING STONES MUSEUM FOR CHILDREN, 303 West Ave., Mathews Park, Norwalk, 899-0606. steppingstonesmuseum.org

WESTPORT ARTS CENTER, 51 Riverside Ave., Westport, 222-7070. westportartscenter.org

WESTPORT COUNTRY PLAYHOUSE, 25 Powers Ct., Westport, 227-4177. westportplayhouse.org G

We are looking for fantastic photos of Greenwich and Greenwich people to feature every month on our new back page. If you would like a chance to be published in Greenwich magazine and win $100 here’s what you should know:

• Photos can be whimsical, historical, serene, funny or beautiful but they all must be taken in Greenwich.

• Photos must be submitted digitally to editor@mofflymedia.com and be 300 dpi and 7 inches high or larger.

• We will need:

1 Photographer’s name, address, phone number and e-mail

2 Subject of the photograph (identify people in the photo)

3 Location of the photograph

4 Inspiration behind the photograph

5 Any interesting anecdote about the photograph or featured subject

We can’t wait to see your view of Greenwich!

Editor, and Managing Editor: Andrew Amill, Publisher, 205 Main Street, Westport, CT 06880. Cristin Marandino, Editor, 205 Main Street, Westport, CT 06880. Cristin Marandino, Managing Editor, 205 Main Street, Westport, CT 06880. 10. Owner: Moffly Publications, Inc. 11. Known Bondholders, Mortgages, and Other Security Holders Owning or Holding 1 Percent or More of Total Amount of Bonds, Mortgages, or Other Securities: None. 12. For Completion by Nonprofit Organizations Authorized to Mail at Special Rates: Not applicable to Greenwich Magazine. 13. Publication Title: Greenwich. 14. Issue Date for Circulation Data Below: October 2022. 15. Extent and Nature of Circulation: a. Total Number of Copies (net press run): *10,461 **9,700; b(1). Paid/Requested Outside-County Mail Subscription Stated on Form 3541: *546 **486; b(2). Paid In-County Subscriptions: *1,797 **1,599; b(3). Sales Through Dealers and Carriers, Street Vendors, Counter Sales, and Other Non-USPS Paid Distribution: *507 **550; b(4). Other Classes Mailed Through the USPS: *83 **50; c. Total Paid and/or Requested Circulation (Sum of 15b (1), (2), (3), (4): *2,933 **2,685; d. Free Distribution by Mail (Samples, Complimentary, and Other Free): d(1). Outside-County as Stated on Form 3541: *0 **0; d(2). In-County as Stated on Form 3541: *5,067 **4,800; d(3). Other Classes Mailed Through the USPS *0 **0; d(4). Free Distribution Outside the Mail (Carriers or Other Means): *1,713 **1,815; e. Total Free or Nominal Rate Distribution (Sum of 15d (1), (2), (3), (4): *6,780 **6,615; f. Total Distribution (Sum of 15c and 15e): *9,713 **9,300; g. Copies Not Distributed: *748 **400; h. Total (Sum of 15f, 15g): *10,461 **9,700; i. Percent Paid and/or Requested Circulation (15c divided by 15f. times 100): *30.2 percent **28.9 percent. 17. This Statement of Ownership will be printed in the November 2022 issue of this Publication. 18. I certify that all information furnished on this form is true and complete. I understand that anyone who furnishes false or misleading information on this form or who omits material or information requested on this form may be subject to criminal sanctions (including multiple damages and civil penalties). Elena V. Moffly, Business Manager/ Treasurer, October 1, 2022. *Average No. Copies Each Issue During Proceeding 12 Months. **Actual No. Copies of Single Issue Published Nearest to Filing Date.

greenwichmag.com

102 calendar
Get Your Photo Published in Greenwich Magazine! Ownership Statement Greenwich Magazine U.S. Postal Service. Statement of Ownership, Management, and Circulation. (Required by 39 U.S.C. 3685)1. Publication Title: Greenwich. 2. Publication No.: 961-500. 3. Filing Date: October 1, 2022. 4. Issue Frequency: 10 times. 5. Number of Issues Published Annually: 10. 6. Annual Subscription Price: $29.00. 7. Complete Mailing Address of Known Office of Publication: 205 Main Street, Westport, CT 06880. 9. Full Names and Complete Mailing Addresses of Publisher,
NOVEMBER 2022 GREENWICH 103 advertisers index BUILDING & HOME IMPROVEMENT California Closets 7 Douglas VanderHorn Architects 11 Garrett Wilson Builders 35 Walpole Outdoors 65 BUSINESS & FINANCE First Republic Bank 51 Private Staff Group 8 DECORATING & HOME FURNISHING Amy Aidinis Hirsch 39 Cory Lloyd and Co. 63 EDUCATION Brunswick School 23, 59 EVENTS & ENTERTAINMENT Boys & Girls Club of Greenwich Benefit 81 Connecticut Ballet – The Nutcracker 100 Junior League of Greenwich – Enchanted Forest 96 TMK Sports & Entertainment, LLC – Reindeer Festival 98 YWCA of Greenwich – Women Who Inspire Award 101 FASHION & JEWELRY Betteridge Jewelers 13, Cover 4 Manfredi Jewels 3, 19 Shreve Crump and Low 5, 16, 17 Vock and Vintage 18 FOOD & LODGING Marcia Selden Catering 61 Table 104 Osteria Bar 47 Winvian 14 HEALTH & BEAUTY EPOCH Senior Living Cover 3 Nichols MD of Greenwich 56 The Reform School 8 Rye Vein Laser Center 6 LANDSCAPING, NURSERY & FLORISTS Sam Bridge Nursery 63 LEGAL Cummings & Lockwood LLC 6 REAL ESTATE Berkshire Hathaway Home Services 20 Coldwell Banker Global Luxury / Angela Alfano 37 Compass, Inc. 31 Higgins Group - Christie's Great Estates 43 Houlihan Lawrence 24 John's Island Real Estate Company 9 McLean Faulkoner Inc. 41 Ocean House - Ocean House Management LLC 66 Sotheby's International Realty Cover 2, 1, 15, 49, 55 MISCELLANEOUS A-List Awards 95 Kunjan Collective 66 Westy Self Storage 63 Download a wedding submission form greenwichmag.com or email our weddings editor Ali Gray at Ali.Gray@moffly.com Featured in SEE YOUR WEDDING

GIDDY UP!

When they say start ’em young, they mean it. Mom Mackenzie Brumberg snapped these two budding equestrians, Beatrice Brumberg and her bestie, Madison Murphy, taking in the annual Greenwich Riding and Trails Day in the Country. The adorable tikes even mounted horses—with a little assistance, of course—for their first ride. We can’t wait to see the girls out on the show circuit someday. G

greenwichmag.com 104 postscript Have a photo that captures a moment in Greenwich? Send it to us at editor@ greenwichmag.com for a chance to win $100. Please write photo submission in the subject line.
photograph by mackenzie brumberg

At Waterstone on High Ridge, we take senior living to the next level with a curated lifestyle designed to infuse freedom and new opportunities into daily life. Every detail of our community inspires style and sophistication with elegant rental apartments, luxurious amenities and high-touch services.

Moving to Waterstone gave us a freedom that we didn’t know existed. Instead of worrying about what to cook for dinner every night or the household tasks like changing the sheets every week, we get to enjoy the fitness center daily, attend vibrant programs, and make incredible new friendships.

– Theresa and Frank, Waterstone Residents

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