N Triple Crown Winner
SOL KUMIN
Congressional Candidates
RUFUS GIFFORD, NANCY SODERBERG & PETER TEDESCHI THE JFK BUNKER A Door to History
Remembering
TIM RUSSERT
RYNN CARTELLI
WINNER
NBC’S THE VOICE
Nantucket Magazine August 2018
WATERFRONT
QUIDNET | $13,500,000 8 Bedrooms 9+ Bathrooms
DIONIS | $11,950,000 4 Bedrooms 4.5 Bathrooms
WATERFRONT
CLIFF | $9,875,000 6 Bedrooms 7+ Bathrooms
DIONIS | $8,950,000 3 Bedrooms 3 Bathrooms
WAUWINET | $4,995,000 6 Bedrooms 5.5 Bathrooms
CISCO | $4,695,000 4 Bedrooms 3.5 Bathrooms
SCONSET | $2,250,000 4 Bedrooms 5 Bathrooms
WAUWINET | $1,675,000 4 Bedrooms 2 Bathrooms
BRANT POINT | $1,595,000 3 Bedrooms 2 Bathrooms
Gary Winn, Broker gary@maurypeople.com | 508.330.3069 37 Main Street, Nantucket MA, 02554
Each Office is Independently Owned and Operated. Equal Housing Opportunity.
“First Republic provides stability and clarity in an unpredictable world — trusted relationships matter.” IAN BREMMER
Founder and President, Eurasia Group and GZERO Media
MEMBER FDIC AND EQUAL HOUSING LENDER
N magazine
Opening Summer 2018 at 47 Brattle Street, Cambridge 772 Boylston Street, Boston (617) 859-8888 160 Federal Street, Boston (617) 478-5300 1 Post Office Square, Boston (617) 423-2888 284 Washington Street, Wellesley (781) 239-9881 (855) 886-4824 | firstrepublic.com | New York Stock Exchange symbol: FRC
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Celebrating 20 Years as Nantucket’s Best Resource for Outdoor Living 9 Wampanoag Way | 508.228.1961 | arrowheadnursery.com
photo by Jane Beiles
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o
orange you glad nantucket
•
boston
•
beyond
T 508.228.1219
www.kathleenhaydesigns.com Follow us
@kathleenhaydesigns
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photo by Jane Beiles
K at h l e e n H ay D e s i g n s award-winning interior design firm
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CHIP WEBSTER
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A R C H I T E C T U R E
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508.228.3600 CHIPWEBSTER.COM
0 M
NANTUCKET 47 MAIN STREET 508.325.5806
SEAMANSCHEPPS.COM
NEW YORK
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PA L M B E A C H
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Success in September Begins this
Summer
PRIVATE K-12 TUTORING, SAT & ACT PREP, ISEE & SSAT PREP COLLEGE ESSAY COACHING, PRIVATE SCHOOL ADMISSIONS
The Most Comprehensive Educational Programs on Nantucket
Keeping students one step ahead.
508.228.3015 | 12 Main St. | Nantucket | NantucketLearning.com
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Nantucket Learning Group
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MICHAEL PARTENIO
MICHAEL PARTENIO
LAVISHLY
laid back N magazine
Trudy Dujardin, FASID, LEED Accredited Professional +ID + C
Eco-Elegant interiors by award-winning Dujardin Design. Creating rooms where function and ease come together beautifully.
11 508.228.1120 Nantucket, MA. | 203.838.8100 Westport, CT. | dujardindesign.com
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POLLACKS
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CURATORS OF STYLE PollacksNantucket.com 5 South Water Street
Nantucket, MA
508.228.9940
Dress & Python Vest ~ Simona Tagliaferri * exclusively at POLLACKS
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Photographer: David Scharfenberg * Hair & Make-up Artist: Luna Elisa Federowicz * Concept & Model: ChristinĂŠ
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11 COLUMBUS AVENUE | $3,495,000 | MADAKET
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1 HARBORVIEW DRIVE | SHIMMO | $4,695,000
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17 NORTH PASTURE | $3,795,999 | POLPIS
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New Listing Surfside
New Price
Okorwaw Avenue 7 BR, 6.5 BA
$5,295,000 John Arena
New Listing Surfside
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Seven Mile Lane 3 BR, 4 BA
$2,695,000 Melanie Gowen
Return to Market
Weweeder Road 1.38 Acres Land
$2,250,000 Roberta White / Lee Gaw
New Listing Town
Sconset
Monomoy
Brewster Road 5 BR, 5.5 BA
$3,750,000 John Arena
Rhode Island Ave 2 BR, 1 BA
$845,000 John McGarr
New Price
West Dover Street (House & Studio) 3 BR, 2 BA
$1,495,000 John Arena / Jenny Gifford
Madaket
WINDWALKERREALESTATE.COM 508-228-9117 | 12 OAK STREET | NANTUCKET | MA 02554
Jean-Michel Basquiat Mark Bradford Alexander Calder John Chamberlain Christo George Condo Willem de Kooning Jim Dine Sam Francis Adolph Gottlieb Keith Haring Damien Hirst Robert Indiana
,000 owen
Alex Katz Jeff Koons Yayoi Kusama Roy Lichtenstein John McCracken Joan Mitchell Takashi Murakami Yoshitomo Nara Kenneth Noland Robert Rauschenberg Gerhard Richter
,000 Arena
Ed Ruscha Sean Scully Richard Serra Frank Stella Andy Warhol
CASTERLINE GOODMAN
Damien HIRST Isoxazole
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a
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2010 Household gloss on canvas 27 x 21 inches
40 Centre Street Nantucket, MA 02554 508.680.1367 info@casterlinegoodman.com www.casterlinegoodman.com
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,000 cGarr
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Through the generous support of the members of Nantucket Golf Club, their guests and others, the Nantucket Golf Club Foundation has raised almost $24 million over the last 16 years for the benefit of Nantucket youth. Thank you!
N magazine
The Grant Program distributes funds to Island nonprofits that share in the Foundation’s mission to promote the positive development and enrichment of Nantucket’s children. The following are the 78 organizations supported:
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A Safe Place Access Nantucket Alliance for Substance Abuse Prevention, Inc Artists’ Association of Nantucket Autism Speaks Camp Richard Campers Association Children’s Montessori House of Nantucket Children’s Theatre of Nantucket Community Network for Children Fund Distinguished Young Women of Nantucket Dreamland Foundation Egan Maritime Foundation Fairwinds - Family and Children’s Services of Nantucket Faraway Stars First Congregational Church Friends of Nantucket Public Schools Grossman Scholarship Fund Habitat for Humanity Nantucket Harvey Foundation Leukemia and Lymphoma Society Lexi Fund Linda Loring Nature Foundation Maria Mitchell Association Masonic Angel Fund MSPCA/Angel-Nantucket Museum of Afro-American History MY Nantucket (Big Brothers Big Sisters of Nantucket) Nantucket Arts Council Nantucket Babe Ruth Baseball Nantucket Book Foundation Nantucket Booster Club Nantucket Boys and Girls Club Nantucket Comedy Festival Nantucket Community Sailing Nantucket Community Television Nantucket Conservation Foundation Nantucket Dolphin Swim Team Nantucket Emergency Food Pantry Nantucket Film Foundation
Nantucket Flying Association Nantucket Girl Scouts Nantucket High School Ice Hockey Club Nantucket High School MMSI Grant Nantucket Historical Association Nantucket Ice Nantucket Interfaith CouncilNantucket Rental Assistance Program Nantucket Island Little League, Inc. Nantucket Island School of Design Nantucket Lighthouse School Nantucket Lightship Basket Museum Nantucket Music Center Nantucket New School Nantucket Police Association Nantucket Preservation Trust Nantucket S.T.A.R. Program Nantucket Safe Harbor for Animals Nantucket Skating Club Nantucket Student Lacrosse Nantucket Student Soccer Association Nantucket Youth Hockey New England Life Flight / Boston Med Flight NHS Culinary Arts Fund One Book One Island Palliative and Supportive Care of Nantucket Sconset Playground & Park Fund Sherburne Commons, Inc. Small Friends on Nantucket, Inc. Special Needs Advisory Council St. Paul’s Cooperative Nursery School Strong Wings Sustainable Nantucket Swim Across America The Nantucket Project
Thank you for the opportunities and services you provide to children living on Nantucket.
Originating in 2006, the Nantucket Scholar Program provides full four-year scholarships for two Nantucket High School seniors each year. We are proud of our Scholars: 2018 Scholars: Carter Snell, University of Vermont Deana Weatherly, Wellesley College
“ o f
2017 Scholars: Evan Borzilleri, University of California at Berkeley Sophie Kuhl, Brown University 2016 Scholars: Claire MacKay, Bates College Frances Steadman, Villanova University 2015 Scholars: Lisa Genthner, Dartmouth College Mia Silverio, Georgetown University 2014 Scholars: Isabella Day, Georgetown University James Roggeveen, Massachusetts Institute of Technology 2013 Scholars: Joseph Zieff, Middlebury College Wisima Nipatnantaporn, Emerson College 2012 Scholars: Eve Manghis, Harvard University Codie Perry, Boston College
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2011 Scholars: Ashleigh Inglis, Harvard University Will Horyn, Villanova University 2010 Scholars: Ashley Clinger, Sacred Heart University Caroline Stanton, Vassar College 2009 Scholars: Samantha Reis, University of Richmond River Bennett, University of Virginia 2008 Scholars: Anita Elahi Small, George Washington University Tomas Smaliorius, Bucknell University 2007 Scholars: Anna Burnham, DePaul University Samantha Pillion, Wellesley College 2006 Scholars: Kelsey Fredericks Perkins, Connecticut College Rachel Schneider Shepard, Sarah Lawrence College
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Quidnet
$2,395,00
“Quintessential Nantucket” This charming three-bedroom, three and a half-bath home is nestled in a private and cozy setting minutes from the village of Quidnet and Sesachacha Pond. The first-floor master bedroom, living room with fireplace and ample built-ins, spacious and bright sun room, full basement and detached garage are a sampling of this special home’s many features.
town
$2,895,000
Cliff
$3,250,000
Your brand new home in the old historic district awaits. Thoughtfully designed, this 6-bedroom, 5 ½-bath home offers three completed floors of finished space and is ready for occupancy this season. Light, bright and located at the end of a quiet one-way street. Sip your morning coffee on the covered side porch or take some sun on the open deck. The open floor plan is perfect for entertaining year round.
8 Federal Street • Nantucket, MA 02554 • Sales & Rentals • 508.228.4449
jordanre.com | raveis.com jordanre.com
N magazine
Large sprawling home nestled on a private shelled lane located off of Cliff Road. Soaring ceilings along with the abundance of windows allow the natural light to shine throughout the house. The spacious kitchen with two refrigerators and double ovens will make any “chef ” happy to prepare large meals for family and guests. Multiple covered porches and decks provide wonderful private spaces in which to escape. Four bedrooms, four and one half baths, full basement, attic with roof deck and plenty of parking for all. A short distance to Steps Beach and Town.
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CISCO & HUMMOCK POND ————————————————
Golfers, sun-worshipers, cyclists, and conservation enthusiasts— the Cisco & Hummock Pond neighborhood is the place for you. From Town, take the bike path to this South Shore destination, or its slightly more subdued neighbor— Hummock Pond, and you won’t be disappointed. Known as a surfer’s paradise and home to the famous Cisco Brewery, Miacomet Golf Course and Bartlett’s Farm, this area of the island has something for everyone.
#15CLARADRIVE
#5DOCRYDERDRIVE
$3,295,000
$1,995,000
#189HUMMOCKPONDROAD $2,695,000
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BRIAN SULLIVAN
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Mobile: (508) 414–1878 sully@fishernantucket.com
ca
INTERIORS
,
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carolynthayerinteriors.com
508.901.5819
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LIVE TIMELESS 9 CA BOT L A N E | CLI FF $ 10,9 9 5,000 Without a doubt, the best view on the Cliff. This fabulous 5 bedroom home, perched high upon the Cliff, was beautifully renovated in 2005, retaining it’s original character with high ceilings, wood floors, four fireplaces, and an abundance of Nantucket charm. A spacious and sun filled home, sited on a quiet corner of Cabot Lane and within walking distance of Steps Beach, Jetties Beach and Town. The house was built in 1880 by Housewright James H. Gibbs for Reverend William H. Fish and Helen Case Fish of Troy, NY. It is one of the earliest houses on the bluff built for simplistic summer living and sea views.
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Lisa Winn, Broker lisa@maurypeople.com Cell: 617-281-1500 Office: 508-228-1881 ext. 126 37 Main Street, Nantucket MA, 02554 www.maurypeople.com
22 Each Office is Independently Owned and Operated. Equal Housing Opportunity.
S LIVE TIMELESS
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FURNITURE. DECOR. LIFESTYLE.
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, -ROUND R A E Y E L AVAILAB S P I H S R EEKLY EMBE W M & B Y U L L H C NT LLY, MO A N O S A SE
Nantucket’s Only Downtown Club
★ Two outdoor heated pools (family/kiddie and adult lap)
★ Fitness and yoga classes
★ ★ Drop-in Day & Evening Kids’ Club Programs (ages 3 to pre-teen) ★ ★ Outdoor hot tub
Breeze Restaurant; poolside dining and bar service
★ Massage treatment rooms, locker rooms, saunas
4,500-square foot fitness facility
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Weekly, old-fashioned New England Clambakes with entertainment
We welcome renters staying in homes of Full Family Members
To join, or for more information contact Deb Lawrence, Club Manager; clubmanager@thenantuckethotel.com • 508-901-1295
24 AT THE NANTUCKET HOTEL • 77 EASTON STREET, NANTUCKET, MA 02554 • thenantucketclub.com N Magazine ad 2-21-18.indd 1
4/3/18 7:38 PM
josepholsoninteriors.com | 508.257.0384
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MODERN. SOPHISTICATED. NANTUCKET
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nantucketarchitecture.com
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508 228 5631
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PHOTO BY TOM OL COTT
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5 0 8 . 22 1 .0 7 8 1 • N I N A @NINAL IDDL EDESIGN.COM • W W W.NIN A L I D D L ED ES I GN . C O M
POCOMO WATERFRONT P O CO MO WATE R FRO NT COMPOUND $ 32 ,750,0 00 | 7 BE DS | 9 BATHS Entirely unique waterfront compound with 300 degree dramatic views, privacy, direct access to a gorgeous sandy beach, boat moorings and multiple dwellings. Includes a 4 bedroom house, pool house, 2 bedroom cottage, 6-car garage, 4 bedroom guest house, pool, hot tub, tennis court, and an entertainment pavilion with a commercial kitchen, world class 3,500 bottle wine cellar and tasting room and 1 bedroom and 1 bathroom. Private beach stairs complete this elevated, waterfront compound with first floor water views of Nantucket Harbor, Medouie Creek, Town, Coatue, and Great Point Light House situated on almost 7 acres.
gary@maurypeople.com 508.330.3069
Craig Hawkins, Broker craig@maurypeople.com 508.228.1881 x119
Bernadette Meyer, Broker
37 Main Street, Nantucket MA, 02554 www.maurypeople.com
bernadette@maurypeople.com 508.680.4748
Each Office is Independently Owned and Operated. Equal Housing Opportunity.
N magazine
PHOTO BY TOM OL COTT
Gary Winn, Broker
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63 Boulevard • Surfside
$7,995,000 l Carolyn Durand & Jane King
14 North Road • Shimmo Waterfront l Liza Ottani
25 Pocomo Road / 6 Lauretta Lane • Pocomo $14,500,000 l Bruce Beni
13 Easton Street • Brant Point
$8,800,000 l Carolyn Durand
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$13,000,000 l Jeanne Hicks
22 Nonantum Avenue • Surfside
Jeff Lee • Bruce Beni • Chloe Bruning • Dan Dunlap • Shellie Dunlap • Carolyn Durand • Peter Engen Hal Herrick • Sam Herrick • Jeanne Hicks • Mimi Huber • Maya Kearns • Jane King • Denise LaBombard Bob Lang • Joe Lloyd • Lindsley Matthews • Liza Ottani • Jonathan Raith
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10 South Beach Street, Nantucket, MA • 508-325-5800 • leerealestate.com
48 Orange Street • Town
2 Lincoln Avenue • Cliff
$7,495,000 l Bruce Beni
$9,995,000 l Carolyn Durand & Jeff Lee
41 Jefferson Avenue • Cliff
41jeffersonave.com l Denise LaBombard, Liza Ottani & Jeff Lee
25 Hussey Street • Town
$5,625,000 l Shellie & Dan Dunlap
2 Quaise Pastures Road • Polpis $6,950,000 l Jeanne Hicks
10 South Beach Street, Nantucket, MA • 508-325-5800 • leerealestate.com
N magazine
Jeff Lee • Bruce Beni • Chloe Bruning • Dan Dunlap • Shellie Dunlap • Carolyn Durand • Peter Engen Hal Herrick • Sam Herrick • Jeanne Hicks • Mimi Huber • Maya Kearns • Jane King • Denise LaBombard Bob Lang • Joe Lloyd • Lindsley Matthews • Liza Ottani • Jonathan Raith
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13 CENTRE STREET, NANTUCKET GREENVALE • GREENWICH • NEW YORK CITY • PALM BEACH • ASPEN • SOUTHAMPTON SHARISPLACE.COM
Beacon Hill in a New Light
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Sales Center Now Open Schedule Your Tour Today TheArcherResidences.com 33 888.543.9456
NANTUCKET BY AIR DISCOVER THE TRADEWIND SHUTTLE CONVENIENCE FROM TETERBORO AND WHITE PLAINS
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Commuter schedules | Private terminals | Two pilots and turbine safety | Ticket book discounts
TRADEWIND AVIATION
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P R I VAT E C H A RT E R | T R A D E W I N D S H U T T L E | G O O D S P E E D C A R D | O W N E R S H I P S O L U T I O N S
A N G U I L L A | A N T I G U A | N E V I S | P U E RT O R I C O | S T B A RT H | S T T H O M A S M A RT H A’ S V I N E YA R D | N A N T U C K E T | N E W Y O R K | S T O W E CONTACT
800.376.7922
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203.267.3305
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charter@flytradewind.com
|
www.flytradewind.com
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6/4/18 10:31 AM
Make Harborview Nantucket your next in-town, on the water vacation destination; a captivating collection of full-service cottages, ranging from one to four bedrooms.
508.228.4423 | 24 Washington Street, Nantucket, MA 02554 HARBORVIEWNANTUCKET.COM | @ACKHARBORVIEW
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A L U X U R I O U S H I D E AWAY I N T H E H E A R T O F N A N T U C K E T
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photo: Tom Olcott
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13 Old South Road
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ACKEye.com
(508) 228-0844
photo: Tom Olcott
BPC Architecture
2 Broad Street
Nantucket, MA 02554
p 508.228.2722
bpc-architecture.com
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Let There Be Light
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P R I VAT E C L I F F R O A D E S TAT E
Six Bedroom Main House, Two Bedroom Cottage, Garage, Pool, Spa, Finished Lower Level Quintessential Haven nestled off of Cliff Road, on the Bike Path, and Walk to Beach at Hinckley Lane Minutes to Town, Lincoln Circle, Westmoor Club, and Nantucket Sound Beaches. $7,995,000
E XC LU SI V E LY
SHOWC ASE D
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MAURY PEOPLE SOTHEBY’S INTERNATIONAL REALTY | 37 MAIN STREET, NANTUCKET, MA 02554 | 508.228.1881 | MAURYPEOPLE.COM Each Office is Independently Owned and Operated. Equal Housing Opportunity.
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DONNA BARNETT, BROKER 508.221.8995 donna@maurypeople.com
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Our new hospital is almost finished. Our capital campaign isn’t. Yet. Nantucket’s new hospital has taken shape, but the capital campaign to build this state-of-the-art facility and complete new staff housing is not yet done. We are in the home stretch, but need your help to cross the finish line. Everyone who contributes a donation to this historic campaign – no matter the size – will have their name inscribed on the donor wall inside the new hospital when it opens. To the thousands of Nantucket residents who have already contributed, we thank you. To those who have not yet given but are considering a donation, don’t miss your chance to be part of island history. Please join your friends and neighbors in giving to secure the future of our community hospital.
Mail Checks Payable to: Nantucket Cottage Hospital 57 Prospect Street Nantucket, MA 02554
W
Or Stop By the Foundation Office: Nantucket Cottage Hospital Founders Building 10 Vesper Lane
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Donate Online: NantucketHospital.org/NewBuilding
Call Us: (508) 825-8250
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Luxury Lives
BEHIND THE HEDGES GULF STREAM | DELRAY BEACH | VILLAGE OF GOLF | OCEAN RIDGE | PALM BEACH
Winter is coming . . . Retreat to the Palm Beaches
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D O U G L A S
E L L I M A N
R E A L
E S T A T E
CARON DOCKERTY
Director of Luxury Sales
Realtor Associate
M: 561.271.5900 O: 561.278.5570
O: 508.228.1428 M: 561.573.0562
mary.windle@elliman.com
caron.dockerty@elliman.com
N magazine
MARY WINDLE
elliman.com/florida
1111 LINCOLN RD, MIAMI BEACH, FL 33139. 305.695.6300 © 2018 DOUGLAS ELLIMAN REAL ESTATE. ALL MATERIAL PRESENTED HEREIN IS INTENDED FOR INFORMATION PURPOSES ONLY. WHILE, THIS INFORMATION IS BELIEVED TO BE CORRECT, IT IS REPRESENTED SUBJECT TO ERRORS, OMISSIONS, CHANGES OR WITHDRAWAL WITHOUT NOTICE. ALL PROPERTY INFORMATION, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO SQUARE FOOTAGE, ROOM COUNT, NUMBER OF BEDROOMS AND THE SCHOOL DISTRICT IN PROPERTY LISTINGS SHOULD BE VERIFIED BY YOUR OWN ATTORNEY, ARCHITECT OR ZONING EXPERT. EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY.
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Distinctive Homes Unique Interiors Seasonal Property Care
Limited Only by Your Imagination. One-of-a-kind homes and custom interiors—from chic city remodels and mountain retreats—to the perfect island escape.
N magazine
We love what we do!
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WOODMEISTER MASTER BUILDERS BOSTON | NEW YORK | NANTUCKET | STOWE
508.228.6611
www.woodmeister.com
LIVE SUMMER POLPIS ESTATE
PERFECTION ON THE CLIFF
Privacy & Views-Main House & Cottage built to play both indoors & out! Over 7,000 sf of living space, extensive decking and roof walk large enough to observe the stars with champagne in hand and guests in tow! $5,750,000
TOWN
What’s better than a stylish retreat on Nantucket Island-perfect for you & select house guests-near shopping, dining & beaches? Immaculate & well appointed 2 Bedroom pied-a-terre situated on a quiet shell lane servicing only a few select vacation homes. $2,395,000
SHIMMO
Cobblestone path leads to Antique home downtown -ready for buyer to restore to their specifications. Sale will include HDC Approved Plans by Thornewill Design for 5 Bedroom Main House with Kitchen Greatroom & 1 Bedroom Cottage with outdoor yard and patio area plus Off Street Parking. $2,295,000
SURFSIDE
Oversized lot in exclusive Shimmo neighborhood with 1.89 acres of extensive grounds with mature trees & plantings including Norway Maple, Ash, Beach and Birch trees, daffodils & lily of the valley. Create your very own dream estate compound to include a Main House, Guest House, Pool & Cabana for entertaining and enjoying life on the island-HDC Approved Plans for Main House & Pool by Botticelli & Pohl to be included in the sale. $5,150,000
ESCAPE TO TUCKERNUCK ISLAND
Great opportunity to create a Compound in Surfside near Surfside Beaches. Large & level lot with 2.7 acres of land covered with Native Bayberry, Pines and Blueberry bushes - a perfect setting for a vacation home that has it all; privacy, easy access to beaches and town! Two Acre zoning allows for 4,539 sf of ground cover including Main House, Guest House, Pool, Cabana & Garage. Chip Webster Design Concept Plans help create the vision. $1,995,000
Relax & unwind time your day to the tide - excellent fishing off the south shore & dinner by candle light-this island is entirely off the grid! Rest assured this well maintained main house, studio & barn is powered via sunlight & generator. $2,750,000
N magazine
Mary Taaffe, Broker mary@maurypeople.com 508.228.1881 office | 508.325.1526 cell 37 Main Street, Nantucket MA, 02554 Each Office is Independently Owned and Operated. Equal Housing Opportunity.
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DESIGN | BUILD
N magazine
Enhancing life through thoughtful design and quality construction.
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www.shelter7.com
Nantucket
6 STRAIGHT WHARF I 508.228.2448 I WWW.JEWELINTHESEA.COM
N magazine
Hand-made nautical jewelry crafted on island, custom diamond rings, Nantucket themed watches and more.
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NANTUCKET PROPERTY WATCH
TUC
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Statu s Rep or t s
Ho n e y we l l Wi fi
R TY
Onl in e Ho m e
PR
PE
Mai n ten a n ce,
ET
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Pre ven t ive
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Leveraging Technology and Local Staff to Watch Over Your Nantucket Home
Mo n i to r i n g 2 4 / 7
WATCH
Prof essio na l Caretaking To Give You Peace of Mind a nd E nhance The Value of Your Home
T
For a f ree con s ult at i on ca l l
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917- 825- 4155
Mov
Co-Founders, John Kitchener and Zoki Milovski
w w w . N a n t u c k e t P r o p e r t y Wa t c h . c o m
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NantucketPropWatch_AugustIssue.indd 1
Your Home
Property offered for sale by Joyce Montalbano / Congdon & Coleman Real Estate
7/2/18 3:13 PM
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Nantucket legacy living at its best! 6-bdrms, 4.5-baths
Washing Pond Road $7,995,000
Shimmo - Pippens Way $6,250,000
Eel Point Road $4,195,000
Brewster Road $3,750,000
Grand Pondfront home in desirable Cliff neighborhood! 7-bdrms, 5.5-baths
Eel Point Road $4,395,000
Set in the dunes with private beach access. 5-bdrms, 3.5-baths
Exceptional new construction - the complete package! 5-bdrms, 5.5-bathss
Beachfront living with breathtaking views. 3-bdrms, 2-baths
Town - Cherry Street $1,449,000
Move-in ready, new construction moments to downtown. 2-bdrms, 1.5-baths
Pond View Drive $2,375,000
Union Street $2,095,000
Peaceful and private oasis in a great location close to the beach! 4-bdrms, 3-baths
L A N D Cliff $3,695,000
Main House & Guest House with Pool! 5-bdrms, 5.5-baths
Perched high on Pilgrim Road, this prized .43-acre lot abuts Land Bank property and is a great spot for a Nantucket dream home!
Charming home in great Town location. 3-bdrms, 2.5 baths
L I S T I N G S Sconset $1,395,000
Great oversized building lot on Sankaty Road with easy access to Sconset Village, the bike path and golf clubs; .37-acres!
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8 3:13 PM
Lincoln Ave $10,995,000
35A Old South Road, Nantucket, MA 02554 • 508.228.6999 • info@islandpropertiesre.com • islandpropertiesre.com © 2017 BHH Affiliates LLC. An independently owned and operated franchisee of BHH Affiliates. Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices and the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices symbol are registered trademarks of HomeServices of America, Inc.* Equal Housing Opportunity.
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2018
HAT: CURRENT VINTAGE EARRINGS: THE VAULT SHIRT: PERCH BATHING SUIT: PERCH
N NUMBERS 58
A numerical snapshot of Nantucket in August.
TRENDING N 60
What’s going viral on #Nantucket this summer?
NTOPTEN 62
The best events for you to strut your stuff this month.
HEALTHNWELLNESS N 64
Local tennis pro Castine Szwajkowski serves up her top tips for hitting the courts.
NDULGE
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Six of Nantucket’s favorite watering holes mix it up in an Absolut Elyx Vodka cocktail challenge.
N magazine
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N NEED TO READ
NSPIRE
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84 WAVE MACHINE
Nantucket’s beloved bookworm Tim Ehrenberg gives his favorite reads for August.
NTERIORS 74
J. Pepper Frazier Real Estate brings us inside a stunning property on Jefferson Avenue.
NBUZZ 76
All the news, tidbits and scuttlebutt that’s fit to print.
NOSH NEWS 80
Island lover Charlie Larner has perfected the Nantucket-style restaurant in Boston.
Local surf prodigy Robbie Goodwin gets the nod from the pro surfing circuit.
90 A STAR WAS BORN
Celebrating the life and legacy of Maria Mitchell on her 200th birthday.
96 REMEMBERING RUSSERT
On the tenth anniversary of his father’s passing, Luke Russert remembers one of Nantucket’s most beloved members.
NVESTIGATE 102 PORTAL TO THE PAST
Could the JFK bunker in Tom Nevers become Nantucket’s next museum?
108 ESCAPE ARTIST
N magazine
A local artist’s unbelievable journey to freedom from Eastern Europe.
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N magazine
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NDEPTH
NQUIRY
116 FINDING HER VOICE
152 A DIPLOMATIC APPROACH
126 THE PRODUCERS
158 RIDING THE BLUE WAVE
How fifteen-year-old Brynn Cartelli went from singing at Jetties Beach to winning The Voice. Meet the colorful cast of characters who make the Theatre Workshop possible.
132 BRED FOR SUCCESS
How Sol Kumin’s wild ride to the Triple Crown began on Nantucket.
NVOGUE 138 AUGUST IN THE AIR
N magazine
Behold breathtaking fashion on Nantucket’s favorite beaches.
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Longtime Nantucket summer resident and former US Ambassador to Denmark, Rufus Gifford, is running for congress in Massachusetts’ third district.
Nancy Soderberg is running for Congress in Florida’s sixth district.
164 IN THE MARKET FOR CHANGE
Peter Tedeschi is running against longtime ninth district congressman Bill Keating.
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INTERIORS
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WWW.KRISTINPATONINTERIORS.COM
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August 2018
NHA Take a dip into the NHA’s image archives and check out the swimsuits of the past.
N Triple Crown Winner
SOL KUMIN
NUPTIALS Megan Kelly & James Cochran tied the knot on Nantucket.
NOT SO FAST A quick chat with event-planning power couple David Handy and Donald Dallaire.
RUFUS GIFFORD, NANCY SODERBERG & PETER TEDESCHI THE JFK BUNKER A Door to History
Remembering
TIM RUSSERT
VINEYARD VINES 2 STRAIGHT WHARF 508-325-9600 MURRAY'S TOGGERY SHOP 62 MAIN STREET 508-228-0437
Nantucket Magazine
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The Local Magazine Read Worldwide
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Congressional Candidates
RYNN CARTELLI
WINNER
NBC’S THE VOICE
Nantucket Magazine August 2018
Winner of NBC’s The Voice, Brynn Cartelli appears on the cover of this August issue in a photo taken on Brant Point by Chief Photographer Brian Sager. Hair and makeup were by Emily Denny of Emily Nantucket, while styling was by Sarah Fraunfelder. Cartelli wore earrings and a bracelet from The Vault, and a jacket and top from Perch.
New
Poco
New
Surf
New N magazine
Mad
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TOP, JEANS, SHOES, BRACELETS & EARRINGS: GYPSY
New Listing Pocomo
Pocomo Road 6 BR, 7 Full 3 Half BA
New Price $9,450,000 Susan Lister Locke / John McGarr
New Listing Surfside
Daffodil Lane 7 BR, 6 Full 2 Half BA
Cliff Road 5 BR, 5.5 BA
$4,895,000 John Arena
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Town
West Chester Street 3 BR, 2 BA
$2,195,000 Sue Jemison
New Listing D Street 3 BR, 3 BA
$3,750,000 Roberta White
Town
Still Dock 2 BR, 1 BA
WINDWALKERREALESTATE.COM 508-228-9117 | 12 OAK STREET | NANTUCKET | MA 02554
$1,450,000 Melanie Gowen
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Madaket
Cliff
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Publisher & Editor-in-Chief Bruce A. Percelay Editor Robert Cocuzzo Art Director Paulette Chevalier Managing Editor Emme Duncan Chief Photographer Brian Sager Photographer-At-Large Kit Noble
John’s Island
Assistant Editor Leise Trueblood Contributors Patrick Berger Susan Browne Emily Denny of Emily Nantucket Sarah Fraunfelder Deborah Halber Paula Maloney Rebecca Nimerfroh Sinead Yelle Zornitsa Yovcheva Photographers Barbara Clarke Topher Cox Rachel Elizabeth Robert Krivicich Leise Trueblood Advertising Director Fifi Greenberg Advertising Sales Emme Duncan
F L O R I D A’ S N A N T U C K E T
Three Championship Golf Courses : 17 Har-Tru Tennis Courts : Pickleball : Squash Oceanfront Beach Club : Watersports : Equity Membership : Renovated Clubhouses 772.231.0900 : JohnsIslandFL.com
Exclusively John’s Island XXXX-XX-NMag_JIREadOPTIONS_NewSizeREV.indd 9
6/5/18 2:32 PM
By Land By Sea &
Discover Nantucket with Egan Maritime Nantucket Nantucket Shipwreck & Lifesaving Museum Shipwreck & Lifesaving Museum
Publisher N. LLC Chairman: Bruce A. Percelay
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Nantucket Times 17 North Beach Street Nantucket, MA 02554 508-228-1515
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©Copyright 2011 Nantucket Times. Nantucket Times (N Magazine) is published seven times annually from April through December. Reproduction of any part of this publication is prohibited without written permission from the publisher. Editorial submissions may be sent to Editor, Nantucket Times, 17 North Beach Street, Nantucket, MA 02554. We are not responsible for unsolicited editorial or graphic material. Office (508) 228-1515 or fax (508) 228-8012. Signature Printing and Consulting 800 West Cummings Park Suite 2900 Woburn
To learn more and purchase tickets visit www.eganmaritime.org
Day sails Day sails aboard aboard the Tall Shipthe Lynx Tall Ship Lynx
Leigh Ernst Friestedt © Equity IX – SportsOgram
7521 Topp BPG NMag July.pdf
ummer
tars
At every level, Nantucket’s got talent. The people who live
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5/2/18
11:14 AM
DRINK IN THE VIEW JOIN THE SCENE drinks | dining | indoors | outdoors day | night
and visit this island possess unique and often unparalleled skills. That’s especially the case for our August cover star, Brynn Cartelli. Discovered while performing on Jetties Beach two summers ago, Cartelli wowed the celebrity judges in the most recent season of The Voice on NBC. At just fifteen years old, this summer resident became the youngest contestant to win the show, earning herself $100,000 and a recording contract. Last month, Cartelli returned to Nantucket, where her family has a summer home, for her first major cover shoot. For years, Nantucket has also drawn political talent, ranging from presidential candidates to US senators to local selectmen. In this issue, we feature Rufus Gifford, Nancy Soderberg and Peter Tedeschi, three candidates running for Congress in the upcoming midterm elections. Having served as US Ambassador to Denmark, Rufus Gifford has unique qualifications in his quest for the third congressional seat in Massachusetts. Nancy Soderberg also possesses an impressive resume, which includes serving an Ambas-
Overlooking the magnificent harbor
sador to the United Nations, and is in the strong position in her race for Congress
Serving daily until 11pm
in the sixth district in Florida. Lastly, Peter Tedeschi is a name familiar to those
At White Elephant
in Massachusetts, as his family runs a well-known convenience store chain of the
508.325.1320 BrantPointGrill.com OpenTable.com
same name. Now, Tedeschi is looking to apply his business acumen to his quest for Congressman Bill Keating’s congressional seat, which includes representation of the Cape and the Islands. On the scale of unique talents seen on this island, businessman and now famous horseman Sol Kumin is one-of-a-kind. A former Division I lacrosse player, Kumin has applied his winning instincts to the horseracing world, and he recently saw his horse Justify win the coveted Triple Crown. Kumin’s talent for picking winners defies statistical norms in the horseracing world. He was named Horseman of Year in 2016 after just years in the business. The most difficult part of having great talent on Nantucket is when we lose a
Five-star views. Five-diamond cuisine. TOPPER’S AT THE WAUWINET AAA FIVE DIAMOND AWARD WINNER
person whose skills cannot be replicated. The sudden passing of beloved television political commentator Tim Russert sent shock waves around Nantucket and well beyond. Now, on the tenth anniversary of his death, Russert’s son, Luke, shares personal insights into his father’s love of the island and the legacy he left behind. Speaking of stars, N Magazine gazes upon the many talents and contributions of America’s first female astronomer, Maria Mitchell, in celebration of the 200th anniversary of her birth. A woman who gained prominence in this otherwise maledominated discipline, Mitchell’s roots run deep in Nantucket. As we soak in the August sun, those visiting Nantucket quickly learn that the brightest lights here do not come from the sky, but rather from those who make up one of the most fascinating talent pools anywhere in this country. Sincerely,
Bruce A. Percelay Editor-in-Chief & Publisher
508.228.8768 • ToppersRestaurant.com Breakfast • Lunch • Cocktails Dinner • Saturday & Sunday Brunch
N magazine
AT T H E WAU W I N E T
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NUMBERS
NUMBERS NANTUCKET BY THE
Properties are on the ‘Sconset Bluff Walk.
Great white sharks will pass through the Cape and islands’ waters this summer.
Weight of the blue lobster named “Blooper” that has taken residency at the Nantucket Maria Mitchell Aquarium this summer.
$381,000
142ft
Amount of money the Hospital Thrift Shop raised for the Nantucket Cottage Hospital last year.
Pounds of oyster and quahog shells have been recycled through the Shell Recycling Program since 2014.
40
300
7 lbs.
65,000
3,755
Beach permits have been issued so far for this summer.
$35,000
Length of the Big Zip yacht docked in Nantucket harbor during the summer.
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Savings generated through the wind turbine at Nantucket High School annually.
~3,000
Students graduated from Nantucket High School this year, making it the largest graduating class in island history.
Wampanoag Indians lived on Nantucket when the English first arrived.
$20 The sale price of the Old Mill in 1828.
1,030
Kids are members of the Nantucket Boys and Girls Club.
30,000
N magazine
Barrels of beer are brewed by Cisco Brewers each year.
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30¢
The original cost of docking per foot at the Boat Basin when it was established in 1968.
G
g 3
ve
CLIFF | $10,975,000
ntucket
TOWN | $7,495,000 N magazine
Gary Winn, Broker gary@maurypeople.com | 508.330.3069 37 Main Street, Nantucket MA, 02554
59 Each Office is Independently Owned and Operated. Equal Housing Opportunity.
TRENDING N
WHAT’S HAPPENING ON
N magazine
#NANTUCKET?
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GRACING NANTUCKET
OUT FOR A VLOG
TOTALLY SCHUCKED
Will & Grace star Deborah Messing took Nantucket by storm last month, kicking off her Fourth of July vacation at the “Families Belong Together” march on the island, followed by fishing off the coast of Coatue. She supported close friend Ali Wentworth at a Mitchell’s Book Corner book signing, shopped at The Vault, and took in one of the island’s picture-perfect sunsets.
YouTube sensation Casey Neistat spent Fourth of July on the island with his family last month and took in the Nantucket scenery with a long beach run that he posted out to his 3.1 million followers on Instagram. This wasn’t Neistat’s first time on the island; the filmmaker has attended the Nantucket Project as a presenter in recent years.
When local bartender Tyler McDade won a thirty-minute, allyou-can-eat oyster buffet from The Raw Bar Yoho, he sucked up the opportunity to the fullest. In twenty-two minutes, McDade downed one hundred oysters. The gut-busting feat was all captured by his friends, who live streamed the slurp fest on Instagram.
— Patrick Berger
— Zornitsa Yovcheva
— Sinead Yelle
Nantucket to New York From Nantucket to New York, luxury service at every price. Providing a level of service unique in today’s world, Lydia Sussek can help you navigate any sized transaction with personal care that extends way beyond the closing.
• Full-service real estate advisory sales, foreign investment, rentals, commercial and residential property purchasing and negotiation. • Relocation expertise - Cartus certified broker qualified to work with Fortune-500 executives and top relocation firms from around the world • Winner 2011 REBNY Deal of the Year
• Market expertise - with experience and referrals, Lydia ranks in the top 1% out of 48,000 NRT brokers nationwide • Member of Corcoran Cares – Lydia supports communities in New York, Nantucket & worldwide • Recognized for top achievement – active member of the Real Estate Board of New York, member of corcoran’s Multi-Million Dollar Club & Platinum Council
Lydia Sussek Associati Team at the Corcoran Group
Equal Housing Opportunity. The Corcoran Group is a licensed real estate broker located at 660 Madison Ave, NY, NY 10065. Real estate agents affiliated with The Corcoran Group are independent contractor sales associates and are not employees of The Corcoran Group. Photo courtesy of Barbara Clarke photography.
N magazine
L i c e n s e d Re a l E s t a te S a l e s p e r s o n m 917.721.78 5 3 l yd . s u s s e k @ c o rc o r a n.c o m
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NANTUCKET BY DESIGN AUGUST 1ST – 4TH
NHA PROPERTIES
Presented by the Nantucket Historical Association, Nantucket by Design is the annual four-day long fundraiser offering an array of engaging lectures, panel discussions and intimate gatherings. New this year, the closing event will take place at the Nantucket Whaling Museum on August 4th. Tickets are available at nha.org.
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3RD ANNUAL DRAGONFLY FUNDRAISER
TRUSTEES GREAT POINT CELEBRATION
GREAT HARBOR YACHT CLUB
COSKATA-COATUE WILDLIFE REFUGE
FRIDAY, AUGUST 10TH @ 5:30 P.M.
One in five adults struggle with mental illness in the United States today. Supporting organizations that serve those individuals and their families is more important than ever. The Dragonfly Fundraiser will be donating all net proceeds to the National Alliance on Mental Illness. There will be complimentary drinks and hors d’oeuvres, music by Jeff Ross, and a silent auction. Learn more at namicapecod. org/Dragonfly-on-Nantucket.
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AN EVENING WITH DAVID SEDARIS
TUESDAY, AUGUST 7TH @ 8 P.M. MARY P. WALKER AUDITORIUM
Bestselling author David Sedaris returns to Nantucket this August in the wake of releasing his latest, smash-hit book, Calypso. Famous for his dark comedic style and world-weary cynicism, Sedaris is bound to have audiences in stiches as he reads through some of his new material. For more information and tickets, visit Davidsedaristour.net.
N magazine
Grab your beach chairs and join the Trustees of Reservations for the ultimate beach barbecue in celebration of the preservation of Nantucket’s beautiful northwest peninsula. In addition to bites and beverages, the Trustees will be guiding tours of Great Point Lighthouse and educating guests about this fragile wildlife haven. For tickets and more information, visit thetrustees.org.
SWIM ACROSS AMERICA
BOSTON POPS ON NANTUCKET
SATURDAY, AUGUST 11TH @ 7 P.M. JETTIES BEACH
OLD SCHOOLMASTER’S HOUSE AT 3 CHARTER STREET
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Nantucket Preservation Trust’s August Fete is heading back to school as they celebrate the School Street neighborhood. Guests will tour this historic neighborhood and bid on one-ofa-kind items at the tented reception taking place in the Old Schoolmaster’s House. Accompanied by hearty hors d’oeuvres prepared by Nantucket Catering Company, raw bar from Spanky’s and live music performed by the Shep Cats, this night will transform your view on Nantucket’s past. For more information, visit nantucketpreservation.org.
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NANTUCKET PRESERVATION TRUST AUGUST FETE THURSDAY, AUGUST 9TH
THURSDAY, AUGUST 23RD @ 5:00 PM
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Unlike in summer’s past, crowds will be cheering for the Rain at this year’s Pops concert on Jetties Beach—just not the rain you might expect. Joining conductor Keith Lockhart and his Boston Pops orchestra will be Beatle’s tribute band, RAIN. Ranking as Nantucket’s premier summer event, the annual concert is the largest fundraiser for the Nantucket Cottage Hospital. For tickets, visit nantuckethospital.org.
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SATURDAY, AUGUST 25TH @ 6:30 A.M. JETTIES BEACH
Suit up and come make a splash at the annual Swim Across America Nantucket Open Water Swim event. Swimmers of all ages are encouraged to come out to Jetties Beach to help support cancer treatment and patient care on the island. For registration and more information, visit Swimacrossamerica.org.
9 ABOUT ALICE OPENING NIGHT
THURSDAY, AUGUST 23 @ 7 P.M. WHITE HERON THEATRE
17TH ANNUAL TIM RUSSERT SUMMER GROOVE SATURDAY, AUGUST 18TH @ 6:00 P.M. 61 SPARKS AVENUE
Honoring the late Tim Russert, the 17th annual Summer Groove benefits the Nantucket Boys and Girls Club. Thought by many as the hottest party of the season, there will be dancing, drinking, eating and celebrating the tremendous work taking place at the Club. For more information and tickets, visit www. nantucketboysandgirlsclub.org.
“About Alice” is the new play by renowned humorist and New Yorker writer, Calvin Trillin. Based on his best-selling book of the same name, Trillin’s inspiration comes from his late wife, Alice. The opening night will feature an interview between Trillin and MSNBC journalist Mike Barnicle. For more info, visit whiteherontheatre.org.
10 LATTER DAY CABARET THURSDAY, AUGUST 23RD @ 7 P.M. BENNETT HALL
The Theatre Workshop will transform Bennett Hall into a New York cabaret as part of the cast from The Book of Mormon drops in to perform selections from classical and contemporary musical theatre. If you are lucky enough to get a seat at the VIP table, you will receive a special gift and a pass to the exclusive after party. For tickets and more information, visit theatrenantucket.org.
DO YOU HAVE AN EVENT FOR THE N TOP TEN? CONTACT US AT EDITOR@N-MAGAZINE.COM
N magazine
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HEALTHNWELLNESS N
IN FULL SWING CASTINE SZWAJKOWSKI SERVES UP HER TOP FIVE REASONS FOR TAKING UP TENNIS THIS SUMMER
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COORDINATION Tennis will have you running in different directions while hitting the ball at the same time. You need to be vigilant to react to bounces as well as the other player’s movement. With time, tennis will help you synchronize these movements and greatly improve your coordination. Having good coordination helps prevent injury and reduces strain on muscles.
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AGILITY With the constant deceleration, acceleration and change in direction, tennis is ranked as one of the top sports to increase your agility. Many have argued that agility is the most important factor in succeeding in a sport across the board. Conditioning your agility will help you in the athletic world and in your everyday life. As you begin to age, having strong agility will help prevent falls by speeding up your reaction time.
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LOW IMPACT
been an instructor for youth and adult tennis at the Jetties Tennis courts. She played tennis competitively for fifteen years and is currently the captain of the women’s lacrosse team at Skidmore College. Newly resurfaced, the Jetties Tennis courts have
options for people of every age and ability. With this, you can play at whatever speed and
been open to the public
competitiveness you would like without harsh impact on your muscles and bones.
since the 1980s. Jetties
MENTAL HEALTH creative, strategic and competitive. No match will ever be the same, so you will always need to be thinking of a new strategy, constantly stimulating your brain and improving your concentration. Tennis has also been found to increase serotonin output, which has been linked to improving your mood and decreasing anxiety and depression levels.
N magazine
Castine Szwajkowski has
Tennis allows you to play at your own pace. From “hit-arounds” to tournaments, there are
Tennis constantly has you thinking about your next move, providing opportunities to be
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For the past two summers,
5 IT’S SOCIAL
Whether it’s cardio tennis, doubles, tournaments or teams—tennis can be extremely social. Playing with others has been shown to increase the likelihood of continuing the sport and managing stress. On top of that, tennis allows you to meet new people and therefore expand your social interactions.
Tennis has dramatically expanded its programming this season, including becoming a provider of Net Generation youth tennis. For more information, visit Jettiestennis.com or call 508-332-9057.
N magazine
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NDULGE SPONSORED CONTENT
HANDCRAFTED LUXURY SIX TOP NANTUCKET RESTAURANTS ARE MIXING IT UP IN AN ABSOLUT ELYX COCKTAIL CONTEST THIS AUGUST
N magazine
A
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bsolut Elyx Vodka is giving Nantuck-
Magazine and Absolut Elyx Vodka.
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et lovers plenty to toast to this sum-
Distilled from winter wheat that’s
water to over 100,000 people worldwide.
mer with their Absolut Elyx Vodka cocktail
been grown on a single estate in the
Every bottle of Elyx sold in the U.S. pro-
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region of Ahus, Sweden, Absolut Elyx
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this luxury vodka will be the main ingredi-
Vodka has a luscious, smooth mouth feel
ing water (140 Liters). Meanwhile, every
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Elyx cocktail sold provides about three
restaurants where you are the judge. Head
unique, handcrafted distillation process
gallons of clean drinking water. So order
over to Galley Beach, Greydon House,
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Station 21, Club Car, Cru and Island Kitch-
is the perfect vodka for a crisp, smooth
spread the awareness of the global water
en, try their Absolut Elyx Vodka drinks,
martini on Nantucket.
crisis. Doing good
and then log on to N-Magazine.com/abso-
Best of all, you’ll be drinking for
lut to vote for your favorite. The winning
a good cause. Absolut Elyx Vodka has
good! Please enjoy
restaurant will receive a party thrown by N
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CLUB CAR NAME: ABSOLUT-ELY BASIC Absolut Elyx Vodka Lillet Blanc Blackberry Citrus Mint
CRU NAME: ELYX WELL WITH OTHERS Absolut Elyx Vodka Persimmon-Kumquat Shrub Ginger Sage
GREYDON HOUSE NAME: EL CORAZON Absolut Elyx Vodka Fresh Lemon Agave Pomegranate, Blood Orange and Passion Fruit Juice Orange Bitters
ISLAND KITCHEN NAME: LULO Absolut Elyx Vodka Lulo Juice Lemon Juice Dash of Salt Topped with Soda Water
STATION 21 NAME: STATION ELYXER Absolut Elyx Vodka Pomegranate Juice Lemon Mint Splash of Soda Water
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COCKTAIL VISIT N-MAGAZINE.COM/ABSOLUT TO VOTE FOR YOUR FAVORITE ABSOLUT ELYX VODKA COCKTAIL, N-MAGAZINE.COM/ABSOLUT.
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REVEL IN THE BREATHTAKING
rilliance bOF THE
PARAIBA SUSAN LISTER LOCKE G A L L E RY
N magazine
28 Easy Street, Nantucket ON THE WATERFRONT 508.228.2132 1stdibs.com SUSANLISTERLOCKE.COM
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16 Old South Wharf, Nantucket
WWW.REMYCREATIONS.COM
HISTORIC on ORANGE LO NG H I L L , S I T UAT E D AT THE C REST OF HISTORIC OR A NGE STREET $ 15,9 5 0,0 0 0 30 Orange Street is in the heart of town. Dating back to 1823, this estate combines Federal, Georgian and period architectural styles throughout its 7,200 square feet. 8 bedrooms, 8.5 baths, and 8 fireplaces with sweeping views of the Harbor, Brant Point and Monomoy from two 90’ verandas on the 1st and 2nd floors. Includes a 2-car garage on a separate buildable lot. The central entry hall with 14’ ceilings leads to reception, drawing rooms and a generously proportioned living room. French doors lead onto the first 90’ veranda facing the harbor. A paneled library, formal dining room, windowed butler’s pantry and renovated kitchen complete the first floor layout. All major rooms have fireplaces. The second floor features a large central hall off of which are 5 en suite bedrooms. The second 90’ veranda adjoins 3 of the bedrooms. 4 of the 5 bedrooms have fireplaces. A 3rd floor offers 3 charming bedrooms and baths. Stairs lead to a widow’s walk with 360 degree views of Nantucket.
Gary Winn, Broker
Each Office is Independently Owned and Operated. Equal Housing Opportunity.
N magazine
gary@maurypeople.com | 508.330.3069 37 Main Street, Nantucket MA, 02554
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NTERTAINMENT
NEED TO READ NANTUCKET’S BELOVED BOOKWORM TIM EHRENBERG GIVES HIS FAVORITE READS FOR AUGUST
MR. FLOOD’S LAST RESORT BY JESS KIDD I have a soft spot for Irish literature ever since I read The Heart’s Invisible Furies by John Boyne, and Jess Kidd’s newest novel does not disappoint. Quirky and eccentric characters that seem larger than life, a great plot with a mysterious undertone, and twisted comedy make Mr. Flood’s Last Resort my FIRST recommendation for a hot August day! Kidd’s first novel Himself was one of my favorite books of 2016.
THE GREAT BELIEVERS BY REBECCA MAKKAI If the bright colored cover doesn’t catch your attention, the story inside sure will. At once devastating and funny, hopeless and hopeful, The Great Believers brings to life a cast of men and women who lived through the early AIDS crisis. Two intertwining stories take us through the heartbreak of the eighties and the chaos of the contemporary world, as the characters struggle to find goodness in the midst of disaster. It’s important, moving fiction of a very real time in our history.
PROVIDENCE BY CAROLINE KEPNES I have had a literary crush on author Caroline Kepnes ever since her debut novel YOU graced my bookshelf. I feel the same with her newest, Providence. Think Stranger Things meets your favorite love story, and you’ll get this beautifully written account N magazine
of a boy who loves a girl, is kidnapped and then returns with an uncontrollable power
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that endangers anyone he has intense feelings for. It explores the complex relationship between love and identity and is surprising and suspenseful with every sentence.
SPYING ON WHALES: THE PAST, PRESENT, AND FUTURE OF EARTH’S MOST AWESOME CREATURES BY NICK PYENSON Whales. We see them on everything around Nantucket from key chains to wooden sculptures to coffee mugs to souvenir t-shirts. But what do we really know about one of the Earth’s most intelligent and largest animals? Pyenson’s research gives us answers in a highly entertaining and informative story to better understand these enigmatic creatures and the scientists who study them. I love books about animals (The Soul of an Octopus and H is for Hawk being two favorites), and Spying on Whales was a great new literary discovery this month.
WHEN LIFE GIVES YOU LULULEMONS BY LAUREN WEISBERGER When life gives you lemons…read this book! A guilty pleasure read here that I don’t feel that guilty about. Remember Miranda Priestly’s first assistant, Emily, from The Devil Wears Prada? Well now she is a hugely successful image consultant who just landed a client of a lifetime. It’s as dishy as a gossip magazine, but with a whole lot of heart, funny dialogue and potato-chip page turning (just one more page!) Make sure a copy of this book is in your beach bag this month.
OCEAN MEETS SKY BY THE FAN BROTHERS This may just be one of the most beautifully illustrated books I have ever seen. It’s the story of Finn. Finn lives by the sea and the sea lives by him. Every time he looks out his window it’s a constant reminder of the stories his grandfather told him about the place where the ocean meets the sky. Where whales and jellyfish soar, and birds and will activate anyone’s imagination with its stunning details.
All books available at Mitchell’s Book Corner or Nantucket Bookworks. Photography by Tim Ehrenberg
N magazine
castles float. What follows is a magical fairy tale about sailing, books and family that
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Cashmere Knitwear & Accessories for Men and Women
FINEST CASHMERE MADE IN SCOTLAND
4 FEDERAL STREET, NANTUCKET T: 508 228 5450 JOHNSTONS OF ELGIN.COM
The Vault Nantucket is a fine jewelry store featuring world-renowned Couture Jewelry Designers curated by designer, Katherine Jetter.
N magazine
5 Chestnut Street (Center and Chestnut at Hotel Pippa) 10 a.m. - 6 p.m. Daily Inquiries: 646.651.3233 or katherine@katherinejetter.com Instagram: @thevaultnantucket
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Katherine Jetter
Stephen Webster
Victor Velyan
Alex Sepkus
Katherine Jetter • Stephen Webster • William Goldberg Diamonds • Victor Velyan • Federica Rettore • Pamela Huizenga • Mattia Cielo Gumuchian • Jade Trau • Alex Sepkus • Arunashi • Will Hanigan Pearls • Margot McKinney • Dana Rebecca • Tony Duquette • Feral • Paige Gamble
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NTERIORS SPONSORED CONTENT
WOOD & WONDER A PROPERTY REPRESENTED BY J. PEPPER FRAZIER REAL ESTATE 38 JEFFERSON AVENUE While the exterior of this 1900’s Victorian beach house received a complete historic restoration, the inside was given a bright, clean aesthetic and modern, hip vibe. The open spaces flow into each other and the rooms are defined by alternating white and natural wood wall and ceiling treatments. This would be a lovely summer home for laying low with family or hosting the best party on the block.
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INTERIOR DESIGN BY ELISA H. ALLEN DESIGN ARCHITECTURE BY EMERITUS /MATTHEW R. MACEACHERN
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FURNITURE
Furnished with plush mid-century low-profile furniture lines.
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TABLE
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WOODWORK
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LIGHT FIXTURES
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FLOORS
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FIREPLACE
Custom bleached oak dining table has a soft silver hand-worked metal base. Hand-cut, oak herringbone pattern is used on the dining room walls, the ceiling and the bar with a warm, zero-sheen finish. Dining Room light fixtures are made from paper-thin ribbons of wood showing the natural grain that illuminates a room with warmth. Floors are bleached oak with a matte finish to give a beachy windswept smooth feel underfoot. Fireplace surround is a gray/white Venetian plaster-like large scale tile set in the running bond pattern.
7 CABINETS
Raw leather pulls with polished nickel fittings on the bar cabinetry feels bespoke yet unpretentious.
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75
NBUZZ FIT FOR A PRESIDENT? Dr. Rocco Monto’s new health and wellness book
of the president. When asked how he inscribed
has been flying off the shelves at local book stores,
the book, Dr. Monto took a politically correct ap-
but apparently his advice has legs well beyond the
proach and jokingly said he would invoke doctor
island. Dr. Monto, who is the resident orthopedic
patient privilege, even though he has never met
surgeon at the Nantucket Cottage Hospital, was
the POTUS. If we see Donald Trump looking un-
approached by a senior Trump advisor and con-
usually fit and trim over the next six months, he
fidant who wanted to get his book in the hands
might have Rocco to thank.
STAR POWER GOOD SPORT This month, the Perseid meteor shower will dominate the night sky over Nantucket. Peaking on August 12th, experience one of the brightest showers of the year, and expect to see up to sixty meteors per hour that night. Come out to Surfside Beach to spend the evening with the star staff of Maria Mitchell and relish in the expansive nightscape.
PRIVATE VIEWING
On August 10th, folks will gather
at Sankaty Head to celebrate and support the vital work of Good Sports. Based off-island, Good Sports is a nonprofit that equips youngsters around the country, including on Nantucket, with sneakers, cleats and other sports equipment to pursue their dreams on the field. With youth sports on the decline across the country due to budget cuts, Good Sports seeks to keep kids literally up and running. To help the cause or purchase tickets to the August 10th event, visit Goodsports.org.
Passion, laughter, romance, anger and love will set the stage for the White Heron’s newest play Private Lives, featuring three Tony-nominated actors. “We are so pleased to have these actors in our summer company,”
said Lynne Bolton, White Heron’s artistic director. “Private Lives will be a first for Nantucket audiences in terms of the caliber of performances and the set, lighting and sound design. We have a very intimate N magazine
house. To have the chance to see these actors working in an intimate space is a very unique opportu-
76
nity.” Written by Noel Coward, the rollicking, funny play about love and marriage opened last month and will run in repertory through August 18th. For more information about the season or for tickets, contact White Heron Theatre Company, 508-228-2156 or online at www.whiteherontheatre.org.
SHORT
October marks the fifth annual Nantucket Shorts Film Fes-
SHORTS
tival. The festival features short films that are inspired by or created on Nantucket. Open to first-time filmmakers and veteran videographers alike, the festival will spotlight a collection of ten short films. The finalists will watch their creations
come alive on the big screen at the Dreamland Theater on October 6th. Submissions are now being accepted, so get rolling! For more information and to submit projects, visit www.nantucketshorts.com.
CRACKIN’ A Earlier this summer, Nantucket’s
COLD ONE
favorite local brewery revealed plans for opening a satellite location just across the border in Portsmouth, New Hampshire. Taking over the brewpub previously occupied by Redhook, Cisco will gradually transform the
space in Portsmouth, upgrading the outdoor and indoor areas, recreating a little slice of island paradise up north. But not to worry: Cisco is still firing on all cylinders here on Nantucket. In fact, in August, the brewery will be
JOE
hosting the band Bearstronaut, who is making its triumphant return to the island after performing at N Magazine’s Flower Power Party at the Whaling Museum this spring.
SPROUTING The Old Sprouter Gallery celebrates
its twentieth anniversary this summer. Celebrated as one of the most
SUCCESS
T H E SHOW
N Magazine’s July cover story on Joe Kennedy III grabbed headlines in The Boston Globe, Boston.com, Politico, CNN and a number of other news out-
eclectic art galleries on the island, Old
lets last month. Beyond the striking
Sprouter has emerged over the years
cover photo of the congressman from
as a quintessential venue for new, mid-
Massachusetts, writers were especially
career and established artists, show-
intrigued by Kennedy’s reflections on
casing a diverse selection of paintings,
the current leadership of the Democratic
photography, sculpture and folk art.
Party and his disinterest in running for
The gallery will celebrate its birthday
presidential office in 2020. Read the ex-
on August 17th.
clusive interview at N-Magazine.com.
POWER PLAY
This August, the Dreamland Theater will host two power-
ful women in performing arts, Ingrid Michaelson and Megan Hilty. On August 5th, Michaelson will perform songs from her latest album, Alter Egos, as well as her record, Snowfall on the singles in just a decade, most of which have hit the charts. Three days later, Megan Hilty will take the stage. Hilty is most readily recognizable for playing the role of Ivy Lynn in the musical drama Smash and was recently nominated for a Tony for her role in Wicked.
N magazine
Dreamland stage as part of her nationwide tour. Michaelson has released seven albums and ten
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NOSH NEWS SPONSORED CONTENT
THE REEL DEAL WRITTEN BY ROBERT COCUZZO
PHOTOGRAPHY BY ROBERT KRIVICICH
Charlie Larner’s Nantucket-style dining destinations are booming in Boston
W
hen longtime Nantucket-lover Charlie Larner told his mother that he was going to quit his job in finance to open a restaurant, she begged him to reconsider. “What about your health insurance?” he remembers her asking. Before
he quit, she insisted that he meet with her friend Tom Kershaw, the owner of Cheers, whom she had given explicit instructions to convince her son not to enter the restaurant industry. Larner followed his mother’s request and met with Kershaw in the cavernous Cheers barroom. The wise, old restaurateur berated him with questions, hoping to reveal the folly of his plans. But by the end of their meeting, Tom
N magazine
Kershaw was so impressed by
80
Larner’s restaurant acumen that he offered to sell him one of his own locations. Two weeks later, Charlie Larner had his first restaurant, Mija Cantina in Faneuil Hall.
Since then, Larner has been on a tear, opening up Nantucket-style restaurants on Boston’s waterfront that are changing the dynamic of their neighborhoods. First came Pier 6 in Charlestown’s Navy Yard. Before diving into the restaurant industry, Larner had bellied up to the bar at what was then Tavern on the Water. With a staggering view of Boston Harbor and the city skyline, he knew this restaurant could be something more than just a watering hole. Larner
bought Tavern on the Water and transformed it to an upscale restaurant that still retained its fun-loving local appeal. As business at Pier 6 began to boom, Larner was just getting started. Directly across the harbor he spotted a new target in the up-and-coming neighborhood of East Boston. Last year, he opened The Reel House on the ground floor of The Eddy luxury apartment complex. This new development provided a fresh canvas, and Larner and his team created a nautically-inspired restaurant that smacks of Nantucket. Above the bar, the frame of a hull makes up the ceiling, while portal windows are repurposed as hanging light fixtures. The comfy booths feel plucked from a luxury yacht, with navy blue leather and glossy wood counters. Bringing the outside in, there are two faux olive trees rising from the hardwood floors. All of this has a view of Boston Harbor through a wall of glass, providing one of the most dramatic views of the city. To helm the cuisine, Larner brought in executive chef Mark Orfaly, the James Beard winner formerly of the Beehive in the South End. From a slew of fresh oysters to half-lobster cocktail to tuna poke to a New England-style clambake, the Reel House menu brings island flavors to the city. Biting into a buttery lobster tail on the expansive back patio with a light breeze coming off the harbor you feel transported to the docks of Straight Wharf. “I didn’t get into this business to open one restaurant,” Larner says, boarding the water taxi that he charters each day to bring guests back and forth between Pier 6 and the Reel House. “I want to open a bunch.” True to his word, Larner is in the process of opening a second Mija Cantina location in the Jet Blue terminal at Logan Airport, as well as another Reel House in Marina Bay. “I’m also avidly looking for my location on Nantucket,” he says. “However, I need to find the land, because what history has shown, nobody is going to talk Charlie Larner out of his grand plans—not even his dear mother.
N magazine
I’m going to build isn’t there and will be very special.” And as
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N magazine
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R
RIDING
HIGH WRITTEN BY PAULA MALONEY
LOCAL SURF PRODIGY ROBBIE GOODWIN DROPS IN ON THE PRO-SURFING SCENE
F
ourteen-year-old summer resident Robbie Goodwin caught the biggest wave of his young career recently when he was selected to join the US Surfing National Junior team. At 5’3”
and a hundred pounds soaking wet, this East Coast ripper grabbed his lineup of surfers at the close of the USA Junior Championships at Lower Trestles, a famous surf spot in California, this past June.
N magazine
the eye of Olympic coach Joey Buran, who handpicked Goodwin for
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A
Cape Cod native, Goodwin’s surf odyssey began on Nantucket at the tender age of five when his father began pushing him
into waves at Cisco Beach. By the age of seven, Robbie Goodwin was paddling into the lineup on his own. He broke into the pro-surfing scene in 2016 when he won the U-12 nationals in Salt Creek, California, scoring a perfect ten on one of his rides. Rip Curl and J7 surfboards quickly took notice and offered him sponsorships. A wave of success began to build. More recently, Goodwin competed in a three-day training event in Cocoa Beach, Florida held by Coach Buran. Offshore winds and barreling waves gave him perfect conditions to put his surfing prowess on full display. “His smooth style and power rail game surfing looked years beyond his age,” Buran gushed about the youngster. “Out of the forty-two surfers I viewed at training sessions, Robbie was tops.” Beyond flaunting his skills on the West Coast, Goodwin might now be able to compete on the world stage. According to Greg Cruse, the CEO of USA Surfing, Goodwin and his fellow teammates show “great promise not just for the 2020 Olympic Summer Games in Tokyo but also 2024 Games in Paris and the 2028 Games in Los Angeles.” In the meantime, when he’s not traveling to exotic surf spots, Goodwin can still be found paddling into the lineup at Cisco. No doubt Goodwin will be dropping in on some seriously sized waves in the years come, delivering perfect ten rides and leaving competitors quivering in his wake. But no matter how far he goes, when asked where his favorite place to surf is, this unassuming kid will say: “Where
N magazine
else? Nantucket.”
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N magazine
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NSPIRE
A
STAR WAS
BORN WRITTEN BY REBECCA NIMERFROH PHOTOGRAPHY BY BRIAN SAGER & KIT NOBLE
THIS AUGUST MARKS MARIA MITCHELL’S BICENTENNIAL BIRTHDAY
O
n a cool October night in 1847, Maria Mitchell sat on the roof of the Pacific National Bank looking up at the stars.
The twenty-nine-year-old often took to this perch at the head of Main Street, where her father served as the bank’s president, to study the night sky through her family’s two-inch reflecting telescope. Suddenly, a streak of blurry light ripped overhead. She’d never seen anything like it and ran to get her father.
N magazine
Joining her on the rooftop, he confirmed young Ma-
90
ria’s discovery: a comet.
“
N magazine
David Gagnon, the executive director of the Maria Mitchell Association
91
“M
iss Mitchell’s Comet,” as it became
mathematician and a naturalist,
known, launched Maria Mitchell
too,” says David Gagnon, the
to stardom. She was awarded the
executive director of the Ma-
gold medal of honor from the King of Denmark,
ria Mitchell Association. “She
became the first woman elected to the Ameri-
really exemplified so much of
can Academy of Arts and Sciences and earned
what Nantucketers are—not
the title of America’s first female astronomer.
only Nantucketers of the 1800s,
Mitchell would go on to become a professor of
but Nantucketers of today.”
astronomy at Vassar College, inspiring legions
Gagnon is standing outside the
of women and men to quite literally reach for
newly rehabbed Maria Mitchell
the stars.
Research Center on Vestal Street with Jascin Finger, the deputy director and curator of the
“Maria was not just an astronomer; she was a mathematician and a naturalist too... She really exemplified so much of what Nantucketers are, not only Nantucketers of the 1800s, but Nantucketers of today.” — David Gagnon, Executive Director of the Maria Mitchell Association
Maria Mitchell House. Gagnon explains that this new research center received additional classrooms, meeting spaces and humidity-controlled display cases to house thousands of specimens and artifacts collected by Maria Mitchell and many other scientists over the past 150 years. “It’s critical that we maintain those collections, because they re-
“I feel so incredibly honored to now lead the
ally capture the natural history of the island,” he
very program that was so influential on my own
says. “It’s an honor for us to be holders of that
development as a young astrophysicist,” say Dr.
diversity and history of Nantucket.”
Jorgenson. “The MMA is unique in its simultane-
In keeping with Maria Mitchell’s belief in
ous leadership in cutting-edge, scientific research
learning by doing, the MMA has an active in-
and in creating a supportive and nurturing envi-
ternship program. It draws students from across
ronment for scientists and students alike. Maria
the country to live on the island and gain firstWhile discovering a comet put her on the
hand experience working alongside scientists
map, Maria Mitchell’s remarkable story began
and astronomers, performing experiments and
exactly two hundred years ago this August. She
collecting and analyzing data. “This association
was born on the first of the month in 1818. To
not only inspires our interns, but teaches them
celebrate this bicentennial anniversary, the Ma-
to be better stewards of this unique environment
ria Mitchell Association (MMA) has planned a
we live in, whether it be the earth we walk across
summer full of celebratory events, including a
or the heavens above,” says Finger, who is the
beachside Perseid Meteor Shower party on Au-
resident expert on all things Maria Mitchell.
N magazine
“This association not only inspires our interns, but teaches them to be better stewards of this unique environment we live in...whether it be the earth we walk across or the heavens above.”
gust 12th. Mitchell’s actual birthday on August
Just as Finger says this, a girl runs through
1st was marked by a children’s parade to the
the grass, her rubber muck boots suctioning
MMA’s aquarium on Washington Street, where
each footfall until she reaches the Hinchman
students learned the hands-on science that Maria
House Natural Science Museum, where several
Mitchell’s strong belief in the power of learning
Mitchell championed over the course of her life.
other students wait with nets. “I think Maria
by doing and her unwavering support for the pro-
“Maria was not just an astronomer; she was a
would love seeing things like that,” Finger says
motion of equality for women’s opportunities in
with a smile. “We’re teaching people to love and
science are still alive and well here at the MMA.”
respect the environment around them.”
92
and now serves as the director of astronomy.
— Jascin Finger, the deputy director and curator of the Maria Mitchell House
So while Maria Mitchell herself may be
A majority of Maria Mitchell’s employees
long gone, her impact on the island still shines
started as interns or volunteers. “My mother
bright today at the organization that carries on her
always says she saw me walk in that door and
legacy exactly two hundred years since her birth.
never saw me come out,” jokes Finger, who
Mitchell’s remarkable life story is a reminder
began volunteering here at the age of twelve.
that when you look to the heavens from the top
Likewise, her colleague Dr. Regina Jorgenson
of Main Street, you never know when a new star
first came to Nantucket as an intern in 1997
might be born.
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REMEMBERING
RUSSERT TEN YEARS SINCE TIM RUSSERT’S PASSING, HIS SON LUKE REMEMBERS ONE OF THE ISLAND’S MOST BELOVED RESIDENTS
E
very August, the legacy of the late, great Tim Russert is remembered on Nantucket at the Boys & Girls Club Summer Groove cel-
ebration. A former member and lifelong supporter of the Club, Russert served as the Summer Groove’s host until his untimely passing in 2008. With this summer marking a decade since Russert’s death, N Magazine spoke to his son Luke about what his father loved about Nantucket, the Boys & Girls Club, and living on island time.
N MAGAZINE: What were the things about Nantucket that your father connected to most?
RUSSERT: He first visited the island as a college student in the early seventies. Back then his summer rental was the bench outside The Hub ‘til he got a living room floor after some smooth talking at a beach party. He was attracted not only to the natural beauty and the people, but the vibe. Everyone thinks of my dad as this hard hitting journalist, but he went to Woodstock and was part of that generation. The relaxed pace of the island appealed to him in the seventies and for the rest of his life. As life got more hectic, Nantucket became the place where he could hold onto that vibe from the seventies, that time when he was just a kid crashing on a living room floor and taking in everything the island had to offer. N magazine
97
N MAGAZINE: Was he able to disconnect from the news of the day when he was on-island?
RUSSERT: He’d disconnect to the best of his abilities. Remember, he passed away before WIFI became what it is today. It was a struggle for him, even in the nineties. At our house in Madaket, he’d carry what was roughly a satellite phone in case anything happened. However, there were days when he totally tuned out and those were a thrill to see and experience. One thing he was adamant about was never doing TV hits from Nantucket. He thought it was disrespectful to the island and to the audience at home, too.
N MAGAZINE: Of the
T
“My dad’s favorite saying was that there is no better exercise for the human heart than lifting up another person. That was his core belief. He knew he was blessed with a beautiful home on a beautiful island and that it was his responsibility to give back for that blessing.”
many contributions
— Luke Russert
your father made to the Nantucket community, he hosted the Boys & Girls Club
N MAGAZINE: Why do you think Nantucket resonated with him? RUSSERT: The core of Nantucket is and will always be the
Summer Groove.
local people and their community spirit. People look out
he was willing to
for one another, and everyone knows everybody. There is
“work” during the
a lot of South Buffalo in Nantucket in that respect. My
time that was des-
father liked how there was a “guy for this, a guy to do
ignated for relaxing
that” on Nantucket. You weren’t put through some corpo-
here on Nantucket?
rate switchboard. That small town village feel was a real
RUSSERT: My dad’s
reason he and my mom decided to plant roots on-island.
favorite saying was
Why do you think
that there is no better exercise
N MAGAZINE: What were some of his favorite pastimes here? RUSSERT: Fishing, nine holes at the old Miacomet golf club,
for the human heart than lift-
buying papers at The Hub, Saturday afternoon mass at St.
his core belief. He knew he was
Mary’s, beers at the Angler’s Club, cover bands at The
blessed with a beautiful home
ing up another person. That was
on a beautiful island and that it
“Everyone thinks of my dad as this hard hitting journalist, but he went to Woodstock and was part of that generation. The relaxed pace of the island appealed to him in the seventies and for the rest of his life.”
N magazine
— Luke Russert
98
was his responsibility to give back for that blessing. He also liked to help people, he was really
into
providing
chances.
The chance to succeed was very important to him and he saw the Boys and Girls Club as the perfect venue for that on-island.
Box, grilling in our backyard and then pool basketball with
N MAGAZINE: Your father had a long history with the Boys and Girls
my buddies when we got back from Nobadeer.
Club. How did supporting the club on Nantucket fit in his life?
”He was drawn to the idea that you came to Nantucket not to show off your wealth but to get away from the outside world and relax. The deepest bonds he had on island were with those crusty old summer residents who had holes in their khakis, fish guts on their shirt and drove an old beat up Wagoneer.”
RUSSERT: His dad was a member of the club in South Buffalo, as was he. I was a member in DC. It gets to the idea of giving kids a chance. My father was well aware of the struggles faced by folks working long hours on-island and knew that parents couldn’t always be there. Kids don’t do well with idle time. My father wanted to give them a chance to succeed, and the club did and continues to do
— Luke Russert
that. All about giving kids a chance.
N MAGAZINE: What do you think your
There’s now an arms race of the elite on Nantucket, and it
father would think of how the island
has changed the character of the place. The island needs
has changed in the last decade?
more places like the late Starlight Theatre as opposed to
RUSSERT: Personally I think it would
another trendy $50 entrée locale. There’s nothing wrong
upset him. He was drawn to the
with wealth, but Nantucket isn’t for flashy Porsche SUVs,
idea that you came to Nantucket
there’s the Hamptons for that.
not to show off your wealth but to
N MAGAZINE: For you personally, do you view Nantucket as a
get away from the
place where you can connect with his memory?
outside world and
RUSSERT: Yes. Our house on Nantucket was his “making it”
relax. The deepest
moment. I remember how he treated the first time my grand-
bonds he had on
pa came for a visit. Sort of a “we’re a long way from South
island were with
Buffalo” moment. His ghost is around Shimmo for sure.
those crusty old
summer residents
N MAGAZINE: Is there any advice you would give someone
who had holes in
when it comes to grieving the loss of a parent?
their khakis, fish
RUSSERT: Remember the good times, don’t become con-
guts on their shirt
sumed by grief because the situation isn’t changing. And
and drove an old
in the immediate aftermath, do what makes you and your
beat up Wagoneer.
family comfortable, because in that moment you’re there
They had plenty of money
for yourself and your family—that’s it.
but never flashed it or spoke of it. I remember a few years ago I saw a door person with an earpiece at a restaurant on Nantucket, my father would have shed a tear over that.
Tim Russert passed away on June 13, 2008. On August 18th, his life will be honored at the annual Tim Russert Summer Groove benefitting the Nantucket Boys and Girls Club. To purchase tickets or to make a donation to the Club, visit Nantucketboysandgirlsclub.org. N magazine
99
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B R A N D E D CO N T E N T
ENDLESS SUMMER
A DAY I N THE LIFE Kerry describes a perfect day on Nantucket
C L OT H E S TO L I V E I N
7AM
Wake up to crying kiddos and head to Handlebar Cafe for an iced coffee
MIKE
Creative Director 8AM
Drive to Cisco Beach to check out the surf, and if it’s good, catch some waves for an hour 10AM
Co-founders Alex (left) & Mike Faherty
Faherty Nantucket is open for the season — and they’ve got all your summer styles.
Eat brunch at Downyflake — best donuts on the island
"My summer uniform: our boardshorts made from sustainable fabric and a classic vintage surf stripe tee."
12PM
Women's - Faherty Nantucket
B AC K O N THE ISLAND
Swing by Faherty Nantucket to say hi to the team and the regulars passing through
KERRY
Brand President
3PM
with the Fahertys
Take the fam to Ladies Beach for some R&R
Known for crafting the highest quality casual clothes, Faherty perfectly outfits your time on the island, from days on the beach to nights on the town. Co-founders Mike, Alex and Kerry Faherty will be escaping to ACK after a long cold winter (with Alex and Kerry’s kids, Ava and Riggs, in tow). Here’s where they’ll be soaking up the sun and enjoying life’s great moments.
6PM
Sit at the bar for dinner at Straight Wharf, where our childhood friend Tim Farley mans the bar
"I'm obsessed with my reversible cactus one-piece and live in my Key Largo Sweater Poncho on chilly nights. "
8PM
Scoop up some ice cream from Juice Bar
ALEX
9PM
CEO
Call it a night SWING BY THE SHOP F O R A N AC K M A P
N magazine
Men's - Faherty Nantucket
"I wear my All Day Shorts well, all day — to the beach, to the bar, to the store. Our linen shirts are also a go-to, super airy and comfortable."
101 FAHERTY NANTUCKET - 0 CANDLE STREET
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PORTAL
PAST WRITTEN BY DEBORAH HALBER
PHOTOGRAPHY BY KIT NOBLE
N magazine
Could the JFK Bunker in Tom Nevers become Nantucket’s next museum?
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NVESTIGATE
I
n the middle of a windswept field at Tom Nevers’ southernmost edge, a semicircular, ruststreaked portal emerges from a grassy hillock
like the hatch of a landlocked submarine or a steampunk hobbit hole. Locals know it simply as the bunker. Five decades ago, this makeshift structure embodied the doomsday fears of a nation in the grip of the Cold War. Shortly before President John F. Kennedy took office in 1961, the Soviets announced they had longrange missiles capable of carrying nuclear warheads anywhere in the world. The following year, Navy Seabees on Nantucket cobbled together a subterra-
nean structure from sections of Quonset huts. If the Russians acted on their threat to launch a first-strike missile attack against the US, Kennedy and his family would be secreted from Hyannis Port to the Nantucket bunker. Now, nearly thirty years since the fall of the Berlin Wall, the JFK bunker is reemerging as a possible portal to this Cold War history. Spearheading the effort is Cheryl Emery, chair of the town’s Parks and Recreation Commission. Emery hopes that if restored to its original look and feel, the bunker could recreate a critical moment in history and help revitalize a neglected corner of the island. N magazine
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R
ecently, Emery and Mark Voigt,
graffiti-covered former gatehouse, a rusting
facilities manager for the Depart-
playground and an unused roller hockey rink.
ment of Public Works, pried open
Remains of houses that succumbed to beach
the bunker’s rusty door for visitors, revealing a tubular corrugated steel tunnel. It smells
Now, Emery, on the board of a re-
musty; the air is cool and damp. Moving
cently formed citizen’s group hoping to bol-
through the tunnel is like walking along the
ster Nantucket’s recreational open spaces,
undulating entrance to a funhouse. The inte-
is pressing for a new lease on life for Tom
rior is a huge half-cylinder, a larger version
Nevers Field. She gestures at the wide-open
of the entryway. A metal ladder in a dank al-
expanse, water twinkling just over the bluff.
cove leads to an escape hatch.
“Why not bring it back? We’ve got twenty-
The bunker was never used as a presiden-
two acres overlooking the Atlantic Ocean,”
tial fallout shelter. It’s been a storage facility for
she says. “This park could be just so fantas-
the county fair and a clubhouse for deer hunters,
tic.” Fixing up the bunker, she says, is a logi-
who installed a bar inside. Outside the bunker,
cal first step. Later that day, as archivist Ma-
kids climbed on top of its scrub-covered hump
rie Henke digs out articles on the bunker’s
to watch the demolition derbies once held in
history at the Nantucket Historical Associa-
late summer. “This has always been the thing
tion research library, she says, “Anything to
that’s here, and everyone does stuff around it,”
do with the Kennedys is going to be a draw.”
Voigt says. “If you’re lucky, and you’re here when we open it up to take stuff out for the fair, you get to go inside.” In the 1950s, Tom Nevers Field was the site of a thirty-acre naval facility, one of several along the eastern seaboard charting offshore conditions to help detect enemy submarines. Today the field is largely underused. Surrounding the bunker are grassy fields, baseball and softball diamonds, a rock inscribed “Nantucket Island Fairgrounds,” a
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d
104
erosion are buried along the shore.
“Why not bring it back? We’ve got twenty-two acres overlooking the Atlantic Ocean... This park could be just so fantastic.” — Cheryl Emery
Cheryl Emery, chair of the Nantucket’s Parks and Recreation Commission
Last year, Emery learned of the
was a fun venture.” Guests could board
existence of a sister bunker on a man-
the Kennedy family’s ninety-two-foot
made island close to the Kennedys’
yacht, the Honey Fitz, sail to dinner on
oceanfront winter home on million-
Peanut Island and peruse the bunker. In
aire’s row in Palm Beach. She called
2012, Miller picked up Ethel Kennedy,
the Palm Beach Maritime Museum.
Bobby Jr. and more than a dozen mem-
Anthony Miller answered the phone.
bers of the extended family in his private
Miller, a British ex-pat and former na-
boat at the tony Sailfish Club on Palm
val architect, is passionate about all
Beach and ferried them to Peanut Island.
things seaworthy, historical and related
The excursion became an annual event.
to the Kennedys. He describes him-
“They’d go through the little museum,”
self as owner of a “management com-
he says. “They love what we’re doing.”
pany that manages a lot of nonprofits,
The bunker closed in October 2017
a lot of problem businesses.” He says
when Miller lost an ugly, years-long
he opened Australia’s first five-star re-
battle with Palm Beach County over the
sort and claims ties to Ethel and Bobby
six acres on Peanut Island that houses
Kennedy’s son, Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
the bunker, a boathouse and dock, and a
Kennedy’s Palm Beach bunker
Coast Guard station museum. The coun-
upkeep of the museum and bunker. “The
Palm Beach Maritime Museum, which
ty claimed the bunker had fallen into dis-
county’s going to take it all over, and
included the bunker on nearby Peanut
repair and violated safety codes. Miller
they’re going to do what we tried to do,”
Island. The museum provided 40-min-
says the county reneged on an agreement
Miller says. “The [Palm Beach Mari-
ute guided tours. “We take people
that would have allowed him to build a
time] Museum’s agreed to walk away
through the bunker, tell them the histo-
restaurant and hold 30 weddings a year
from that property, and, unfortunately,
ry,” he says. “We had all the artifacts. It
on the island to generate income for the
we lose the bunker in that deal.”
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In the 1990s, Miller established the
105
M
iller says he’s long had an eye on the Nantucket bun-
At the same time, the town recently committed $100,000 to
ker. After hearing from Emery, Miller traveled to
develop a master plan for all the island’s parks and recreational
Nantucket in March. He drove out to Tom Nevers
spaces, which many feel are sorely neglected. Bridges hopes to
with members of the town’s licensing division, fire department and
see the master plan on his desk by the end of the year. Bridges
town manager’s office. The bunker has electricity, but no plumb-
calls Tom Nevers Field “one of their most beautiful, underused
ing and no ventilation. Renovating it could be costly, but Miller seems undeterred. “I love projects, so any time a project comes across my desk, if it’s something that looks like it’s interesting, not necessarily about the money but something fun, I take it on.” About the bunker, he says, “I’ve offered to bring it back to where it was. Everyone seems keen about the project.” With Emery’s support, Miller hopes the town will agree to allow Miller’s management company, Maritime Business, to renovate the bunker in exchange for a multi-year lease for public tours and collaborations with schools. He would furnish it with 1950s-era bunk beds, vintage communications devices, Geiger counters, portable bathrooms, K-rations and other actual ar-
“Tom Nevers Field is one of the most beautiful, underused parks on the island... But the bunker will likely be one piece of a major overhaul...We need to look at the entire project— erosion, bathrooms, etc.... We have to do our due diligence and be really sure we’re doing this right.”
N magazine
— Jason Bridges, chair of the Select Board
106
tifacts from both the Nantucket and Palm Beach bunkers that were
parks on the island.” But the bunker will likely be one piece of a
decommissioned after Kennedy’s death. Miller is confident he can
major overhaul. “We need to look at the entire project—erosion,
make the bunker worth the trek to Tom Nevers. How would he do
bathrooms, etc.,” he says. “We have to do our due diligence and
that? “Well, that’s the magic,” he laughs. “I couldn’t give you all
be really sure we’re doing this right.” The future of the bunker
my secrets. You got to look at it long enough to be able to figure
could be in limbo for a year or more.
out what would make it interesting, because there’s lots of history
Like many growing up in the 1950s and 1960s, Emery and
where a lot of people go, ‘So what.’ It has to be developed into
Voigt recall duck-and-cover drills, films of mushroom clouds
something worth seeing.”
and fallout shelters flagged with signs depicting three yellow tri-
Jason Bridges, chair of the Select Board, is enthusiastic about
angles inside a black circle. Soon after he was elected, President
the potential benefits a revitalized bunker could bring to Tom Nev-
Kennedy advised American families to build bomb shelters in
ers—he lives there himself—and the island as a whole. He especial-
their back yards. Within a year, the Nantucket and Palm Beach
ly likes the fact that the bunker’s claim to fame is relatively recent.
bunkers were built, and Soviet missile sites were discovered on
“We do a great job preserving the 19th and 18th centuries,” he says.
Cuba, only ninety miles from the US mainland. “The kids don’t
“I’d like to see more done about 20th century preservation.” And he
know that bit of our country’s history,” Emery says. “We have to
thinks Miller’s offer is enticing. Bridges would hate to lose out on it.
preserve our past.”
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107
NVESTIGATE
ESCAPE ARTIST WRITTEN BY ROBERT COCUZZO
PHOTOGRAPHY BY BRIAN SAGER
ONE LOCAL ARTIST’S UNBELIEVABLE JOURNEY TO FREEDOM
E
ighteen years ago, Nantucket resident Paul Galschneider was sitting in a maximumsecurity prison cell giving Steve “The Rifle-
man” Flemmi a foot massage. He was befriended by the legendary mobster of Whitey Bulger’s Winter Hill Gang on his very first day on H3-Block in Plymouth County Correctional Facility. All the bigtime gangsters like “Cadillac” Frank Salemme and Bobby DeLuca were on that block. But Galschneider had no idea who these convicted murderers were, so when Stephen Flemmi asked him to be his cellmate, Galschneider agreed.
For the better part of eighteen months, Galschneider lived in an eight-by-fourteen-foot cell with one of the most notorious gangsters in American history. Although they had little in common, the two became inseparable friends. “It’s hard for me to believe all the horrible things they say he did,” Galschneider says. “Stevie was a good friend to me.”
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So what landed this Nantucket resident behind
108
bars with drug dealers, convicted murderers and mob bosses? It’s an immigrant story that begins a world away, in a country that no longer exists.
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109
P
aul Galschneider was born in Czechoslovakia during the Cold War. At the age of ten, his parents decided to move to Austria where his mother was born and still had family. In 1967, they applied for a permit that would legally allow the
family to go back and forth between the two neighboring countries. A year later, the Prague Spring broke out, prompting the
Soviet Union to invade Czechoslovakia and seize control. While many Czechoslovakians fled into Austria amidst the tumult, Galschneider said his family stayed behind, determined to obtain a permit from the government to legally leave the country, which they received a year later. Living in his mother’s native Austria, Galschneider taught himself to speak German and became a plumber. He eventually married and had a child. He was still legally a citizen of Czechoslovakia and often returned to see friends and family, but with each visit home,
“IT’S HARD FOR ME TO BELIEVE ALL THE HORRIBLE THINGS THEY SAY HE DID… STEVIE WAS A GOOD FRIEND TO ME.”
he saw how the grips of communism were getting tighter and tighter.
— Paul Galschneider
“There was no freedom there,” he remembers. “It was a police state. They were arresting people at will.” After he was detained under suspicion of smuggling people out of Czechoslovakia and into Austria—which today he admits to doing—Galschneider realized his native country was no longer his home. With that, he turned his sights to the West. “America was always a dream for me,” he says. “Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn, cowboys and Indians—I watched everything about America on television.” In 1985, Galschneider arrived in Boston with his wife and young daughter on a ninety-day vacation visa. He checked into a hotel and called one of the only other Czechoslovakians he knew living in the United States, Robert Hutyura. Hutyura was arguably the most famous Czechoslovakian in the world at the time. He had become an international news sensation after escaping Czechoslovakia with his wife and two children in a hot air balloon that he created out of rubber raincoats. After landing safely in Austria, Hutyura had been interviewed by Germany’s biggest magazine, and Paul Galschneider was his translator. Hutyura was now living in Boulder, Colorado and told Galschneider to bring his family west. Within weeks of moving to Boulder, Galschneider said he hired a lawyer and applied for political asylum from the communist police state that was now Czechoslovakia. He loved the United States and wanted to stay. But his application befuddled N magazine
American immigration officers. His passport indicated that
110
he was a legal citizen of Czechoslovakia, but he also had that permit to live in Austria. Why wouldn’t he just live in Austria? The confusion landed Galschneider’s asylum application in limbo.
Over the next six years while his application lingered, Galschneider pin-balled around the United States, from Boulder to New Jersey to New Bedford to eventually Nantucket. He registered as a documented foreigner, received a social security card and began paying taxes. On Nantucket, he bought a home just outside of town and built an art studio in his backyard. During his time in the United States, Galschneider not only taught himself how to speak English, but also how to paint. Despite having no formal training, his impressionist works sold for hundreds and then thousands of dollars. But over those years, Galschneider’s personal
(Top) Paul Galschneider in Czechoslovakia with his brother, sister and father, who was a fisherman;
life also hit some rough patches. He and his first wife divorced, and Galschneider remarried two other times. When his third marriage began to fall apart, he moved
(Bottom) Galschneider in Austria on the motorcycle he used to go back and forth to Czechoslovakia, often smuggling people out of the Sovietcontrolled country.
“THERE WAS NO FREEDOM THERE… CZECHOSLOVAKIA WAS A POLICE STATE. THEY WERE ARRESTING PEOPLE AT WILL.” — Paul Galschneider
out of his house and into the attic space in his art studio. His wife filed a restraining order against him. According
—
to the Cape Cod Times, she said he had a “violent temper” and the two became embroiled in an ugly divorce proceeding. The situation got progressively worse when
News of Galschneider’s imprisonment sent shock
Galschneider sought to buy their house on Nantucket from
waves through the Nantucket community, of which he
her. Instead of negotiating a price with him, Galschneider
had become a beloved member. Letters from residents,
says his wife called immigration on him. She denied these
including from the sheriff, were sent to the judge
claims in the Cape Cod Times.
pleading for his release. Galschneider’s story landed
In April of 1999, Galschneider was swarmed
on the front page of the Inquirer & Mirror, the Boston
by immigration officers on Nantucket. They cuffed him
Globe’s Metro section and a number of other publica-
and sent him to Boston for deportation. He insisted that
tions. Despite this public outcry, he remained in prison.
his application for asylum was pending, but INS informed him that his application had been denied years earlier. He never received the notification because he had moved around the country so often. When he got married, he also failed to file for a Green Card. Deportation would be his fate, the INS officials said.
“AMERICA WAS ALWAYS A DREAM FOR ME… TOM SAWYER AND HUCKLEBERRY FINN, COWBOYS AND INDIANS — I WATCHED EVERYTHING ABOUT AMERICA ON TELEVISION.” — Paul Galschneider
There was just one big problem with deporting Galschneider back to his homeland of Czechoslova-
“There is nothing worse than being an innocent
Cold War, Czechoslovakia dissolved, splitting into the
man in prison,” he says. Although he hadn’t com-
Czech Republic and Slovakia. This left the US Immi-
mitted a violent crime, Galschneider was locked up
gration office with nowhere to deport Galschneider. In-
amongst the worst of the worst. “I think they do that
stead, he was held in a maximum-security prison with-
intentionally,” he says. “Like they’re saying, if you
out trial until the immigration court could decide what
don’t want to go to your own country, you have to
to do with him.
live with these people.”
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kia—the country no longer existed. At the end of the
111
S
o it was that Galschneider became friends and cellmates with Steve “The Rifleman” Flemmi. They spent every day together, doing hundreds of pushups and reading the Bible
to one another. When Galschneider noticed that Flemmi was suffering from a foot ailment, he offered to try and fix it with reflexology. “After a few treatments working on his feet, the problem went away,” Galschneider says. “I remember Stevie looking up from his bottom bunk and saying, ‘Pavel, you’re a genius.’” Months dropped off the calendar and Galschneider’s hope began to wane. Unbeknownst to him, his immigration case had fallen through the cracks. He was now one of the many illegal aliens waiting years in prison for deportation—without ever going before a judge. After eighteen months in prison, Galschneider’s then-girlfriend on Nantucket hired a top im-
(Top left) Galschneider showing off one of his paintings inspired by the Prague Spring in Czechoslovakia; (top right) a prison cell in Plymouth Country Correctional Facility, where Galschneider spent eighteen months; (bottom) a mug shot of Steve “The Rifleman” Flemmi, a convicted murderer of Whitey Bulger’s Winter Hill Gang who shared a cell with Galschneider.
migration lawyer in Boston named Howard Silverman. Silverman took one look at the case and realized that Galschneider had been forgotten by the system. Within two weeks, Silverman had Galschneider out a free man. For the past eighteen years, Paul Galschneider has lived a quiet life on Nantucket. He eventually returned to his home on the island where he continues to paint in his studio. Now sixty-one years old, he has been in the United States for more than half his life and hopes to remain on Nantucket for the rest of his days. But recently his deportation case was reopened. Despite checking in with immigration every year, “sometimes twice a year,” Galschneider says President Trump’s new emphasis of deporting immigrants living in the country illegally has put him in INS’s crosshairs. When he learned about
“THERE IS NOTHING WORSE THAN BEING AN INNOCENT MAN IN PRISON.” N magazine
— Paul Galschneider
112
this, Galschneider started writing a letter each week to the White House pleading for President Trump to grant him asylum. A month ago, the White House responded with a letter indicating that they will review his case. Until he gets the final verdict, however, Paul Galschneider continues to live in fear as a man without a country.
Rafael Osona Auctions
Schedule
August 4
✴ Americana ✴ ✴ Fine Art ✴ ✴ Marine ✴
✴ Illustrated Catalog ✴
August 11 Decorative Arts
August 18 ✴ 25 Sept. 1 ✴ Oct. 6 Dec. 1 2-Day Advance Previews 10-5pm
RafaelOsonaAuctions.com Lic.366
508-228-3942
N magazine
Auctions begin 9:30am at the American Legion Hall 21 Washington St.
113
114
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115
NDEPTH
FINDING HER
VOICE
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WRITTEN BY ROBERT COCUZZO
116
T-SHIRT: GYPSY JEANS: GYPSY RING: GYPSY BRACELET: GYPSY EARRINGS: GYPSY STYLING BY SARAH FRAUNFELDER
HAIR & MAKE-UP BY EMILY DENNY
PHOTOGRAPHY BY BRIAN SAGER
HOW FIFTEEN-YEAR-OLD BRYNN CARTELLI WENT FROM SINGING ON THE STREETS OF NANTUCKET TO BEING CROWNED THE WINNER OF THE VOICE Simply put, Brynn Cartelli is a phenomenon. The newly minted winner of NBC’s The Voice has ascended to stardom in a way that most musicians would never dare dream of—and it all began on Nantucket. Two summers ago, Cartelli was performing on Jetties Beach with islander Billy Voss when a bartender at the then Jetties restaurant posted a from the producers of The Voice, who contacted the then thirteen-year-old and asked her if she would come to New York for a private audition.
N magazine
video of her playing to Facebook. The clip garnered tens of thousands of views, including
117
I
“
thought it was fake,” Cartelli laughs.
expected to be at the top of your game,
has officially arrived, and we haven’t
“My parents and I thought it was a
singing your song seven times.” She took
seen anything yet. With striking beauty,
scam.” But after the producers in-
it all in stride, enjoying the friendship
an electric stage presence and a giant
sisted repeatedly that they were the
of her fellow contestants, and gradually
voice well beyond her years, Cartelli has
real deal, Cartelli went to the audi-
emerging as one of the show’s cen-
been dubbed a “unicorn” in the musical
tion. She got through the first cut, and
tral stars. Her breathtaking
then flew to Los Angeles to audition in
performances
front of the show’s producers. There she
judges and millions
beat out over a hundred other contestants
of viewers around
same way after win-
to earn herself a blind audition in front
the country. Then
ning American Idol in
of the four celebrity judges. But things
on
show’s
its first season more
didn’t go quite as she planned.
season
finale,
than
Judges on The Voice listen to audi-
standing shoulder
ago.
tions with their backs turned towards the
to shoulder with
the
world by Clarkson. And Clark-
wowed
son would know, having launched to fame in the
fifteen
years
While Cartelli’s skyrocketing career is indeed an outlier, those who first witnessed her playing on Nantucket knew that she was something special. Her earliest performances took place on the streets of downtown. “Outside of the Juice Bar was a great place to play,” she says. “I played there a lot. That’s really where I started.” Jetties, Cisco, the Boat Basin, private parties around the island—wherever she was asked to play,
N magazine
she played.
118
singers, so they can judge them strictly on
her chief com-
their voices. If they like what they hear,
petition, Cartelli
they slam a button and turn their chairs
was crowned the
to the singer. “I didn’t get one chair to
winner. She is the
turn,” Cartelli says. “I’ve had other audi-
youngest person
tions where I got a ‘no,’ but this was defi-
to ever win The
nitely a bigger ‘no’ for me.” Yet, a week
Voice,
later, the producers called her back and
herself $100,000
said they wanted her to try out for the fol-
and a recording
lowing season. This time, Cartelli turned
contract.
earning
two chairs and ended up choosing Kelly
While many
Clarkson as her celebrity coach for the
other winners of
rest of the season.
shows like Amer-
“It’s crazy behind the scenes of the
ican Idol have
show,” Cartelli says. “You are filming
fizzled out after
almost every single day. You’re doing
takeoff,
interviews—talking and talking and talk-
people agree that
ing—and then the very next day you’re
Brynn
most Cartelli
(Clockwise from the top) Cartelli with Kelly Clarkson; a photo of Cartelli’s grandfather, which she carries in her guitar case; Cartelli performing on The Voice.
BRACELET: GYPSY EARRING: GYPSY
“It’s hard for me to personally let go of who I was before The Voice. As much as I’d hate to admit it, I’m really not that person anymore. I’m a fifteen-year-old girl, but I don’t live a fifteen-year-old life.” — Brynn Cartelli
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119
“
T
he first time I heard
Brynn sing, I knew I had to figure out a way to meet her,” says Holly
Finigan of Nantucket blACKbook, who, after connecting with her over Instagram, eventually had the young musician play at her Happy Place boutique last August. “I have this video of her singing The Indigo Girls “Galileo” and that line ‘How long ‘til my soul gets it right/ Can any human being ever reach the highest light’ really stuck with me…’ It’s been a true joy to watch her highest light continue to come forth from the cobblestone streets of Nan-
tucket to the stage of The Voice.” Born and raised in Longmeadow, Massachusetts, Cartelli began playing piano at the age of five. “My parents never had to make me practice,” she laughs. “They would actually have to try and get me off the piano.” Her parents introduced her to classical, country and soul. From the piano, she began taking voice lessons and picked up the guitar in middle school. “Then all of a sudden my music career started happening very fast,” she says. Now a bona fide celebrity, Cartelli’s life has changed dramatically. She’s now writing her first album while working with a private tutor to try and get her caught up in the schoolwork that
N magazine
she missed while she was on the
120
show. “It’s hard for me to personally let go of who I was before The Voice,” she says. “As much as I’d hate to admit it, I’m really not that person anymore. I’m a
“I was sitting in my living room after I won The Voice, writing a song for Nantucket...It all hit me that everything that happened on Nantucket led me to where I am now.”
fifteen-year-old girl, but I don’t live a fifteen-year-old life.” One thing that hasn’t changed is Cartelli’s love for Nantucket. She and her family have been vacationing here since 2009, and bought a summer home in town last Stroll. They were on Nantucket last month and will be here again in August. As has been the case for many artists before her, the Grey Lady still serves as a muse for the young musician. “I was sitting in my living room after I won The Voice, writing a song for Nantucket,” she says. “It all hit me that everything that happened on Nantucket led me to where I am now.” When asked if the song would appear on her album, Cartelli said no—it’s too personal. Instead, she wants to perform it live on the island for all those people who made her career possible and helped her find her voice.
N magazine
JACKET: PERCH JEANS: PERCH TOP: PERCH EARRINGS: THE VAULT BRACELET: THE VAULT
121
Ret
Scon
Retu
Tom
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Retu
122
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Return to Market Tom Nevers
Devon Street 3.7 Acres Land
Return to Market Washington Avenue 3 BR, 1.5 BA
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Madaket
Lincoln Street 4 BR, 2 BA
$5,750,000 Roberta White / Jenny Paradis
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508-228-9117 | 12 OAK STREET | NANTUCKET | MA 02554
56 Monomoy Road • Monomoy $22,500,000 l Carolyn Durand
43 Ocean Avenue • Sconset
41 Ocean Avenue • Sconset $13,850,000 l Jeanne Hicks
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$6,250,000 l Joe Lloyd
Jeff Lee • Bruce Beni • Chloe Bruning • Dan Dunlap • Shellie Dunlap • Carolyn Durand • Peter Engen Hal Herrick • Sam Herrick • Jeanne Hicks • Mimi Huber • Maya Kearns • Jane King • Denise LaBombard Bob Lang • Joe Lloyd • Lindsley Matthews • Liza Ottani • Jonathan Raith
124
10 South Beach Street, Nantucket, MA • 508-325-5800 • leerealestate.com
14 Easy Street • Town
27 Monomoy Road • Monomoy $10,895,000 l Carolyn Durand
$4,375,000 l Denise LaBombard & Jonathan Raith
24 North Cambridge Street • Eel Point $5,995,000 l Bruce Beni
16 Cliff Road • Cliff
$5,900,000 • Bruce Beni, Joe Lloyd & Jeff Lee
85 Millbrook Road • West of Town $5,600,000 l Bruce Beni
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N magazine
Jeff Lee • Bruce Beni • Chloe Bruning • Dan Dunlap • Shellie Dunlap • Carolyn Durand • Peter Engen Hal Herrick • Sam Herrick • Jeanne Hicks • Mimi Huber • Maya Kearns • Jane King • Denise LaBombard Bob Lang • Joe Lloyd • Lindsley Matthews • Liza Ottani • Jonathan Raith
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WRITTEN BY ROBERT COCUZZO PHOTOGRAPHY BY KIT NOBLE
A selection of the Theatre Workshop’s producers: Jane Condon; Anna-Karin and David Dillar; Pam and Max Berry; Ellie Gottwald; TWN’s artistic director Justin Cerne; Susan and Jeff Lucier; Judy Seinfeld; Annie Bissinger; and George and Maria Roach. 126
NDEP NDEPTH
MEET THE CAST OF CHARACTERS WHO MAKE THE THEATRE WORKSHOP OF NANTUCKET POSSIBLE
W
hen it comes to pulling off a performance at the Theatre Workshop of Nantucket
(TWN), there’s a whole lot happening behind the scenes. Stage hands jockey props on and off the set. Makeup artists feverishly give actors touch ups while costume designers fine tune their wardrobes. There are lighting technicians, sound engineers, choreographers and a director orchestrating the actors’ every move. But behind this talented troupe, there’s another cast of characters who have helped make the Theatre Workshop the longest running theater on Nantucket. Meet the producers.
“Everything we do depends on these people who are willing to take a creative journey with us.” — Justin Cerne, TWN’s artistic director
Each show at the Theatre Workshop depends on the generosity of a group of around twenty devoted producers who champion the performances through financial support. “Everything we do depends on these people who are willing to take a creative journey with us,” says TWN’s artistic director Justin Cerne. “Along with the incredible importance of financial support, our producers are also some of our biggest advocates and truly believe in what we are able to breathe life into on the stage.” Thanks to this group of passionate producers, the Theatre Workshop continues to thrive sixtytwo years after its first show.
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(Upper left) Judy Seinfeld; (lower right) George and Maria Roach.
“T
he early days were more different than today,” says Judy Seinfeld, who has sup-
ported TWN since back when rehearsals occasionally took place on her home stage on Orange Street. “TWN was small, intimate
and brilliant at times. There was a marvelous sense of commitment.” Seinfeld has seen TWN grow from those humble beginnings to showing world-class performances with the same intimacy she remembers from the early days. “It has taken all kinds of people to keep the glass half full,” she says. “We have celebrated, kept growing, refused to knock things and yes, sometimes we flipped out!” she laughs. “But, we continue to dream on and have passionate desire to build on the sixty-two years of effort from a multitude of caring people.” One of these people is Max Berry, a high-powered law-
struggled to survive,” says Berry, who attributes the financial chal-
yer from Washington, DC who started coming to Nantucket
lenge in part to the large number of nonprofits TWN competes with
in 1967 and began supporting TWN shortly thereafter. Ev-
for funding on the island. “I thought it was important to the island’s quality of life to not let this theater die.” Joining Berry in this com-
“…we continue to dream on and have passionate desire to build on the sixty plus years of effort from a multitude of caring people.” — Judy Seinfeld
mitment is fellow producer Annie Bissinger, who has been a longtime advocate of children’s theater on the island. “TWN is among the myriad of threads that are woven to create our community and enhance its creativity,” Bissinger says. “It is a vital artistic organization that provides the island with cultural exposure and experiences that engage, inspire, entertain, challenge and educate.” While producers like Berry and Bissinger have witnessed the
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tremendous value of TWN from their seats in the audience, others
128
ery Friday, Berry holds court on a bench on Main Street,
like Jane Condon and Ellie Gottwald have experienced it from the
where he reads the newspaper and occasionally gives out
stage. “I support TWN because they supported me,” says Condon,
free legal advice. One of his frequent visitors over the years
a working comedian who has performed her act on TWN’s stage
was actor John Shea, who served as TWN’s artistic direc-
over the years. “Theater is my favorite way to relax. When I’m not
tor before Justin Cerne took over five years ago. Through
on stage, I like watching others—and there are so many talented ac-
his conversations with Shea, Berry came to realize how reli-
tors on the island.” One of whom is fellow producer Ellie Gottwald,
ant Theatre Workshop is on financial support.
who got her start as an actress in Hollywood horror films, most
“To the best of my knowledge, TWN has always
famously Halloween 4 and 5.
“Theatre Workshop is a lynchpin of the island arts community…The company has been a creative inspiration to generations of Nantucketers.” — Susan Lucier, TWN president
“I’ve done five productions with TWN, and I’m always blown away by the caliber of the actors, whether they’re Equity actors from New York or islanders,” says Gottwald. “The strength of the actors ultimately comes down to our artistic director Justin Cerne’s incomparable leadership. He has an uncanny ability to cast well. The quality of the productions raises my game, allows me to take risks and grow as an actor, which carries into my artistic life off-island.” Justin Cerne has been manning the helm of TWN as artistic director for five years and has succeeded in reinvigorating TWN by bringing thirty crowd-pleasing
(Top) Annie Bissinger, Jane Condon and Anna-Karin and David Dillard; ( upper middle) Outfitted with gowns by Style Paris, Susan Lucier and Ellie Gottwald adjust Justin Cerne’s tux from the Nobby Shop; (lower middle) Ellie Gottwald; (bottom) Susan and Jeff Lucier.
productions
to the island, including The Sound of Music, Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? and Footloose, which is the centerpiece production this summer. “What these people support with their time and treasure are truly Nantucket productions,” says Cerne of TWN’s producers. “We are a regional theater that brings together local talent with off island talent, to create incredible theatrical experiences for audiences to enjoy.” Sharing the leadership role with Cerne is Susan Lucier, TWN’s current president. An accomplished Equity actress in her own right, she has many performances under her belt. As president, Lucier takes a hands-on approach. Yet, beyond her immediate role at the theater, she, like her fellow producers, views TWN as a vital stitch in the cultural fabric of Nantucket, one that they’re committed to continuing. “Theatre Workshop is a lynchpin of the island arts community,” Lucier says. “The company has been a creative inspiration to generations of Nantucketers by providing a place to learn, to think, to make friends, to laugh and cry and to express their views of the world around them.” And if the past sixty-two years are tinue to unfold thanks to this group of producers who know that, above all, the show must go on.
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any indication, the drama will con-
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BRED WRITTEN BY ROBERT COCUZZO INTERVIEW BY BRUCE A. PERCELAY PORTRAITS BY KIT NOBLE
SUCCESS
N magazine
SOL KUMIN’S WILD RIDE TO THE TRIPLE CROWN WINNER’S CIRCLE
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NDEPTH
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133
S
ol Kumin loves to win. Whether he was ripping goals for Johns Hopkins in the NCAA Lacrosse Tournament or later launching a billion-dollar hedge fund named after one of his favorite spots on Nantucket, Kumin thrives on beating the field. But this spring,
this forty-three-year-old Madaket summer resident set a new bar for victory that might just be impossible for him to replicate. Winning the Triple Crown is widely regarded as the most coveted achievement in all of sports. In its 143-year history, only thirteen have ever taken home this holy grail of horse racing by winning the Kentucky Derby, the Preakness Stakes and the Belmont Stakes in a single season. This spring, Sol Kumin’s horse Justify became that lucky number thirteen. Making the feat all the more improbable was that Kumin won the Triple Crown after only a handful of years since entering the competitive world of horseracing. What’s more, his race for the Triple Crown actually began on Nantucket. After several seasons renting on the island, Kumin and his wife Elizabeth bought a small beach shack out in Madaket in 2004. “We knew that in five or fifteen years, it was going to end up in the ocean [due to erosion],” he says. “So we moved it three or four times to where it is now.” With each move and subsequent renovation, Kumin became better and better friends with N magazine
Jay Hanley of Hanley Construction. When he wasn’t
134
building houses on Nantucket, Hanley was launching
another career owning race horses. He thought Kumin would enjoy the competition of the track. The two eventually teamed up and created Sheep Pond Partners with Nantucket summer residents Jim Carey and Jim Pallotta. They bought four horses, one of which became arguably the greatest filly in the world at the time. “I didn’t know anything about horse racing,” Kumin says. “I’d been to a racetrack twice while I was in college.” Kumin attended Johns Hopkins where he was a star lacrosse player. Whenever his team was rated in the top four in the country heading into the NCAA tournament, Kumin and his teammates would spend their bye-week at the Preakness. “That was really my first foray at the track,” he said. “It was a little bit of a different experience than how we’ve been experiencing it in the last couple years.”
“HE’S A ONCE IN A LIFETIME HORSE... BUT I DIDN’T THINK HE WAS GOING TO WIN.” — Sol Kumin
Kumin’s first breakout horse was Lady Eli, a filly named after his wife, Elizabeth. As a two-yearold, the thoroughbred won the Breeder’s Cup and then strung together six straight wins. She was being heralded as the greatest filly in the world when she stepped on a nail walking out of a drug test after her sixth victory. The wound morphed into a life-threatening disease called laminitis. “When you get laminitis, the chances of living are low,” Kumin says. “The chances of racing again are even lower. And the chances of racing at a high level are even lower than that.” Defying all odds, Lady Eli made a miraculous comeback a year later, winning a slew of races and reclaiming her champion status in the winner’s circle. Today, Kumin is part owner of around hundred horses. In addition to his Nantucket-based Sheep Pond team, he also owns horses with former Patriots players Vince Wilfork and Wes Welker. His approach to horse racing is similar to that of his career as a hedge fund manager. “Our business has always been a talent business, finding young smart people and putting them in the right situations,” he says. “That’s what we do with horseracing. We’re trying to find young talented N magazine
horses and put them with young talented trainers.”
135
“WE’RE TRYING TO DO EVERYTHING DIFFERENTLY… AND THAT HAS YIELDED US MUCH HIGHER RESULTS THAN REALLY ANYONE HAS EVER SEEN.” — Sol Kumin
I
nstead of taking the traditional approach of buying unraced horses at public auctions that they will name,
raise and train, Kumin and his partners buy proven horses that are already racing.
They study
these horses, do due diligence, look at their racing patterns and gauge their potential ROI. He and his partners will then purchase a stake in the horse. Kumin doesn’t own any horses outright. “We’re trying to do everything differently,” he says. “And that has yielded us much higher results than really anyone has ever seen.” This year’s results have been exceptional. At the Kentucky Der-
N magazine
by, Kumin’s horses placed first,
136
third and fifth. The Friday before
the track, the other horses almost stop and look at him…he’s a freak.” Justify is an American thoroughbred with blood
the Derby, his filly Monomoy Girl
ties to legendary steeds Secretariat and War Admiral. He literally ran the gauntlet, winning the Kentucky Derby, the
won the fabled Kentucky Oaks.
Preakness Stakes and the Belmont Stakes by racing against fresh horses on short rest, at different distances and in varied
Capping it all off, of course, was
conditions. “He’s a once in a lifetime horse,” Kumin says, “but I didn’t think he was going to win.”
taking the Preakness Stakes and
The look of shock in Kumin’s face after winning at Belmont is unmistakable. In an iPhone video taken by his friend
the Belmont Stakes by way of a
PGA golfer Matt Kuchar, Kumin is seen pulling his wife and children into a teary-eyed embrace after Justify beat out
thoroughbred named Justify.
the field. After taking a moment to reflect, he was swept up in the media frenzy. “It’s one thing to win the Derby—you
“You ever hear the expression ‘a man amongst boys’?” Kumin says.
get ESPN and Sports Illustrated—but when you win the Triple Crown, it goes mainstream,” he says. “The last nine or ten weeks have been a whirlwind.”
“That’s Justify. He’s bigger, stronger,
Settling back on Nantucket, at the same cottage where this wild chase for the Triple Crown started, Kumin has
more athletic, intimidating. He’s the
finally had a chance to catch his breath. He’s not sure how long his career will last in the world of competitive horserac-
alpha male. When he’s going around
ing, but until some other conquest catches his attention, Sol Kumin will continue to enjoy the ride.
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NVOGUE
Photography by Brian Sager Production by Emme Duncan Hair & Makeup by Emily Denny of Emily Nantucket Styling by Sarah Fraunfelder Assisting by Sinead Yelle, Zornitsa Yovcheva & Patrick Berger 138 Management by Leise Trueblood
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伀 唀 刀 ㈀ 㠀 䈀 刀 䄀 一 䐀 匀 䤀 一 䌀 䰀 唀 䐀 䔀 䈀 䔀 䄀 唀 ☀ 刀 伀 䈀 䄀 䜀 䌀 伀 䴀 倀䄀 一 夀Ⰰ 䔀 䰀 䰀 匀 圀 伀 刀吀 䠀 ☀ 䤀 嘀 䔀 夀Ⰰ 䰀 伀 刀 䔀 一 䠀 伀 倀 䔀 Ⰰ 䈀 唀 刀唀 Ⰰ 䰀 䔀 䴀 䰀 䔀 䴀 Ⰰ 匀 伀 䰀 䤀 䐀 ☀ 匀 吀 刀 䤀 倀 䔀 Ⰰ 匀 吀 刀 伀 一 䜀 䈀 伀 䄀 䰀 吀Ⰰ 䴀 䤀 娀 娀 䔀 一 ⬀ 䴀 䄀 䤀 一 Ⰰ 伀 刀 䰀 䔀 䈀 䄀 刀 䈀 刀 伀 圀 一 Ⰰ 䴀 䤀 䄀 一 匀 䄀 䤀 Ⰰ 伀 䰀 䤀 倀 䠀 䄀 一 吀Ⰰ 匀 唀 一 匀 䬀 䤀 Ⰰ 䬀 ⸀ 䬀 䄀 一 䔀 Ⰰ 䄀 刀吀 䔀 䴀 䤀 匀 䐀 䔀 匀 䤀 䜀 一 䌀 伀 ⸀ Ⰰ 䬀 䄀吀 䤀 䔀 䈀 䄀 刀吀 䔀 䰀 匀 Ⰰ 䌀 伀 刀 䄀 䰀 䌀 伀 䄀 匀 吀 䌀 䰀 伀 吀 䠀 䤀 一 䜀 Ⰰ 䠀 䄀 刀 䐀 䤀 一 䜀 䰀 䄀 一 䔀 Ⰰ 匀 䴀 䤀 䰀 䤀 一 䜀 䈀 唀 吀 吀 伀 一 Ⰰ 䴀 䄀 䤀 一 匀 吀䄀夀Ⰰ 䠀 䄀 刀吀 匀 吀 唀 䐀 䤀 伀 Ⰰ 䌀 䄀 一 䐀 夀 匀 䠀 伀 倀 嘀 䤀 一 吀䄀 䜀 䔀 Ⰰ 䰀 伀 匀 吀 ☀ 䘀 伀 唀 一 䐀 䈀 夀 䨀 䘀 刀 䤀 䔀 䐀 䴀 䄀 一 Ⰰ 䬀 䔀 一 一 夀 䘀 䰀 伀 圀 䔀 刀匀 Ⰰ 匀 䈀 䨀 䄀 唀 匀 吀 䤀 一 Ⰰ 匀 䄀夀 䰀 伀 刀 Ⰰ 䴀 䄀吀 䌀 䠀 䈀 伀 伀 䬀 䐀 䤀 䄀 刀 䤀 䔀 匀 Ⰰ 䈀 伀 一 嘀 䤀 嘀䄀 一 吀 匀 Ⰰ 䴀 伀 吀 吀 㔀 Ⰰ 䄀 䌀 䬀 嘀 䠀 䄀 䴀 倀 匀 Ⰰ 䠀 䄀 娀 䔀 一 ☀ 䌀 伀 ⸀ Ⰰ 䨀 唀 匀 吀 䴀 䄀 䐀 刀 䄀 匀 Ⰰ 䄀 唀 䜀 唀 匀 吀 䴀 伀 刀 䜀 䄀 一 Ⰰ 䈀 唀 䌀 䬀 䰀 䔀 夀 䬀 Ⰰ 吀䄀 䤀 䰀 伀 刀 嘀 䤀 一 吀䄀 䜀 䔀 Ⰰ 唀 一 䔀 䴀 倀 䰀 伀 夀 䔀 䐀 䐀 䔀 一 䤀 䴀 Ⰰ 䌀 刀 䄀 䈀 ☀ 䌀 䰀 䔀 䔀 䬀 Ⰰ 䠀 伀 䰀 匀 吀 ☀ 䰀 䔀 䔀 䄀 一 䐀 䴀 䄀 一 夀 䴀 伀 刀 䔀 ℀
㈀ ㌀ 漀 氀 搀 猀 漀 甀 琀 栀 眀 栀 愀 爀 昀 猀 栀 漀 瀀 琀 栀 攀 搀 椀 瀀 ⸀ 挀 漀 洀 䀀 猀 欀 椀 渀 渀 礀 搀 椀 瀀 渀 愀 渀 琀 甀 挀 欀 攀 琀149
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NQUIRY
ELECTING TO RUN
Heading into this fall’s midterm elections, there are at least three candidates in the running who have deep Nantucket ties. N Magazine interviewed Democratic candidates Rufus Gifford and Nancy Soderberg as well as Republican candidate Peter Tedeschi.
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NQUIRY
A Diplomatic
APPROACH INTERVIEW BY BRUCE A. PERCELAY
PHOTOGRAPHY BY TOPHER COX
Longtime Nantucket summer resident and former US Ambassador to Denmark RUFUS GIFFORD is running for Congress in Massachusetts’ third district.
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152
ith his patrician good
service as an openly gay man. Gif-
N MAGAZINE: What is your motivation
looks, an impressive re-
ford is the son of Chad and Anne
for running for Congress?
sume in public service and back-
Gifford, whose family has been
GIFFORD: I met Barack Obama in
ing from a highly respected New
February 2007 and worked for
England family, Ambassador Ru-
him for ten years. I’m so incred-
fus Gifford would appear to be
ibly proud of the legacy that I
a made-to-order congressional
and so many others have been
candidate. But the Massachusetts
fighting for over that ten years
third congressional district he is
of work, from climate change
seeking to represent is mostly
to health care to LGBT equal-
made up of working-class cit-
ity. On the morning of Novem-
ies including Lowell, Brockton
ber 9th, 2016, when I woke up, I
and Haverhill. On the surface,
was still in Copenhagen serving
the lives of Brown University
as the Ambassador to Denmark,
educated Rufus Gifford and that
and Donald Trump was President
of the third district would hardly
of the United States, I realized
seem to intersect.
that so much of what I had been
But despite his privileged
fighting for was fundamentally at
background, Gifford defies many
risk. I knew I had to come home
of the stereotypes normally associ-
coming to Nantucket for years. Gif-
and step up my level of service.
ated with someone of his pedigree.
ford sat down with N Magazine and
That’s why I decided to run. In
He is a liberal Democrat, an Obama
discussed why he believes he is the
November, I launched my cam-
acolyte, and has eschewed the pur-
best candidate in what has shaped
paign for Congress in the third
suit of money in favor of public
up to be a very competitive race.
district of Massachusetts.
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153
that understand the system, believe in the system, but also fundamentally want to improve it.
N MAGAZINE: You come from a family of privilege, and the dichotomy between your upbringing and the people of Lowell and Fitchburg and Haverhill is fairly significant. How do you reconcile that and connect with your constituents?
GIFFORD: I walk into any room and without a doubt there will be times that people view my resume and my background with a degree of skepticism. That’s happened over the course of my career. But I go in and (Clockwise from top) Gifford marching through Boston with husband Steven DeVincent; Gifford with President Obama; Gifford & DeVincent on Nantucket; Gifford with his parents Chad and Anne on Nantucket.
N MAGAZINE: Are there particular is-
I am the only candidate in this race
throw my heart on the table right
sues in the third district that are
that has both top level national po-
away. I want to present my values
your focus? It’s a working-class
litical experience and international
first and foremost. I will never lie
part of the state; what do you feel
experience. I have seen this from
about who I am. I am who I am. I
you can do for them?
the inside, and I have seen this from
will never lie about my background
GIFFORD: When I launched my campaign, I put tens of thousands of miles on my car and went from coffee shop to coffee shop, diner to diner, living room to living room,
My campaign is a campaign of optimism... we’ve got to present a vision that’s the opposite of Donald Trump.” — Rufus Gifford
asking questions, listening and tak-
N magazine
ing notes in every single corner of
154
this district. What I’ve learned is
the outside. I actually believe in our
or pretend that I am someone who I
that there is tremendous frustration.
system—as wounded as it seems to
am not. But I will explain to people
There is frustration at the Trump
be right now—because I’ve seen it
why these issues matter so much to
Administration. There is frustra-
work. I was at Grant Park in Chicago
me. I will explain to people that this
tion over issues like a lack of rising
the night we elected Barack Obama.
job is something that I desperately
wages, the cost of health care, the
I was serving overseas as ambassa-
want because I desperately think
cost of education and the cost of
dor when we did big things like pass
that we are at a critical moment in
housing. Why do I believe that I am
the Paris Climate Agreement and the
American political history. We need
uniquely qualified to deal with that?
Iran Deal. You need people in there
to remind people that politicians are
“I want to fight for racial justice, economic justice, social justice because I have experienced that sort of discrimination over the course of my life and that makes me want to fight for equality for every single person.” — Rufus Gifford
public servants first and foremost,
ample of hardship that you have
el of discrimination that you face, the
and somehow, we’ve lost the public
experienced, what would you say?
taunts and the name calling and the
trust. We’ve got to build that trust
GIFFORD: One of the reasons why I’m
belief that you would never amount to
back. When I walk into any room, I
working in politics is because I’m a
anything in this world made me want
try to be the first one to show up and
gay man. Growing up as a young gay
to fight harder and prove the doubters
the last one to leave. I ask questions
man within the climate in which I
wrong in my life. And, oh my, were
and listen. I lead with authenticity
grew up made me feel like an outsid-
there doubters—that a gay kid could
and sincerity. I know that I have to
er from day one. From the time I was
be an ambassador when no one be-
earn it. I have earned every single en-
fifteen or sixteen years old, all I want-
lieved that that would happen. Those
dorsement that I have gotten in this
ed to do was escape my life over and
stories are real, and they have made
race, and I have gotten a lot.
over again. One of the reasons why I
me appreciate struggle. I want to fight
moved to California after I graduated
for racial justice, economic justice,
N MAGAZINE: Not to belabor the point,
from Brown was that my dad was a
social justice, because I have experi-
but if someone stood up in Fitch-
banker in Boston, and I wanted to be
enced that sort of discrimination over
burg who is underprivileged and
anything but a banker in Boston. I
the course of my life and that makes
who comes from a difficult path,
needed to be comfortable in my own
me want to fight for equality for every
and they said to you give us an ex-
skin. My years of coming out, the lev-
single person.
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Gifford and his husband Steven DeVincent in their home.
155
N MAGAZINE: On the subject of gay marriage, what is your reaction to the
N MAGAZINE: What would you prescribe to the Democratic Party? What
developments on the Supreme Court in which Trump has appointed a
should Democrats be doing differently?
right-leaning justice who could overturn the federal protection of mar-
GIFFORD: When you do go to the western part of the third district of
riage equality?
Massachusetts—Fitchburg, Gardner, Haverhill—you listen to peo-
GIFFORD: This was our greatest fear. The problem is that we have very little
ple’s stories. You listen to how the opioid epidemic has ravaged their
control because the Democrats lost the Senate, the White House and the
community. You listen to how student loan debt is preventing their
House. All we can do right now is keep our heads down, try to win hearts
kids from standing on their own two feet because they are so saddled
and minds back and fight for the country that we want to see. We have to
in debt by the time they are twenty-five. You listen to people who
put a lot of pressure on senators like Claire McCaskill, Bob Corker and
can’t afford houses. And you get a sense that society is failing certain
Jeff Flake, because the court hangs in the balance right now. As a gay man
people. We have not done a good enough job making people feel
who is married, knowing that we are losing one of the five votes that voted
like we have their back, that we are fighting for them. Part of that is
our way just three years ago, knowing that the court could turn five-four
just going to these communities and listening. Politicians live in their
the other way, knowing that conservatives are going to try and overturn
bubble in Washington, and man do we have to pop those bubbles. We
the marriage equality ruling and my marriage could be stripped from me is
have to win people’s hearts, and I think you do that by listening and
unacceptable. We’ve got to fight for it.
learning about their experiences.
“People are hurting, and we need unifying messages, not divisive ones.”
N magazine
— Rufus Gifford
N MAGAZINE: The political climate in this country has never been as polar-
N MAGAZINE: : If you had the opportunity to go to the White House and
ized as it is now, certainly in modern times. How would you relate to
have a one-on-one conversation with President Trump, what would
Republicans in Congress, because right now we appear to be going in
you say to him?
polar opposite directions and the middle ground is disappearing?
GIFFORD: I think I would look him straight in the eye and say, “Sir, I have an
GIFFORD: My campaign is a campaign of optimism. I believe that if we are
enormous respect for this office, but understand that your presidency only
going to reclaim the heart and soul of the Democratic Party and the coun-
speaks to part of this country. Your presidency is speaking to your base and
try, we’ve got to present a vision that’s the opposite of Donald Trump. One
your base only. Please do everything you can to unify us once again. Please
which is hopeful and unified. One where there is a legitimate sense that
do everything you can. You’ve got to use your words as well as actions.”
the government has the people’s back. That’s the kind of campaign that
I’m not optimistic that it will be successful, but I just feel like beyond any-
I want to run. Secondly, as a former diplomat, as a former ambassador, I
thing else that’s what we are missing right now. People are hurting, and we
desperately think we need more diplomacy in politics. It was my job for
need unifying messages, not divisive ones.
four years to sit around the table with nine Danish political parties and try to get those political parties to agree on something that would move the
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world forward. That’s what we need more of in congress.
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NQUIRY
Riding the
BLUE WAVE INTERVIEW BY ROBERT COCUZZO
PHOTOGRAPHY COURTESY OF NANCY SODERBERG
Longtime summer resident NANCY SODERBERG is running for Congress in Florida’s sixth congressional district Whether serving on the National Security Council at the White House under President Clinton, or as an Ambassador to the United Nations, or as senior foreign policy advisor to the late Ted Kennedy in the Senate, Nancy Soderberg has had a storied career in public service. Now after serving in a number of subsequent roles in the nonprofit and public sector, Soderberg is running for Congress in Florida’s sixth congressional district with hopes of helping flip the power to the Democrats. N Magazine spoke with Soderberg about how she’s paddling into the Blue Wave in these upcoming midterm elections.
N MAGAZINE: You are hoping to be part of this Trump card, using his divisive, hardline tacso-called Blue Wave, trying to flip the seat in
tics going into this midterm election?
the sixth district of Florida from red to blue
SODERBERG: The president has made a decision to
in the midterm elections. What’s at the root
double down on his base, not trying to reach
of that wave?
out and get things done from the center. That’s
SODERBERG: I like to call it a “common sense going to drive the Republican primaries across wave,” which is very rare in Washington.
the country. The Republicans have to run to
Across the country you see people standing
the right of Donald Trump and “out-Trump”
up, not for party, but for common sense, for
each other to pass through the gauntlet of the
doing what’s right. That’s the message that
Republican primary. These candidates are
I’m hearing when I campaign day in and day
becoming more and more extreme. The can-
out in schools, or hospitals, or people’s homes
didates that have emerged from Republican
or just in average stores. They just want the
primaries are much farther to the right than
vitriol to end on the left and the right and have
where the American people are. That’s why
some decent decision-making. That’s why I
I think you are seeing so many seats in play
think you’re seeing women and national se-
because with the president doubling down on
curity candidates splitting across the country
the base, the candidates have to double down
because we’re different. We are politicians;
on their base. There is no room for compro-
we bring a perspective of experience and how
mise or moderation because they are afraid to
we get things done.
lose. So, all across the country you are seeing
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these very extreme candidates emerge on Re-
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N MAGAZINE: To oppose this “common sense” publican primaries and losing because Ameriapproach, will Republicans be playing the
can people are not that extreme.
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N MAGAZINE: You have a tremendous amount of experience on the world stage, especially through your work as the ambassador to the UN under the Clinton administration. Where does US leadership stand on the world stage today?
SODERBERG: When the US leads, countries follow. Until the US plants a flag on where it’s going, people kind of wait and see. Then once we decide where we are going, some of these countries will oppose us, but largely the democracies around the world will follow us. I am concerned about the US not leading on a variety of issues. I don’t think a tariff war is going to help the American public. We need to be a leader on climate change, trying to stand up to Iran and Russia, trying to make sure China doesn’t take advantage of some of the void we are leaving in some of these Asian negotiations. We need strong leadership to stand up to that across the globe. Without that, the American people will not have a strong shot at the prosperity and stability that we need.
N magazine
(Top) Soderberg working with President Clinton in the White House; (Bottom) Soderberg with her nieces and nephews on Nantucket in a photo by Cary Hazlegrove.
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“We need strong leadership to stand up to that across the globe. Without that, the American people will not have a strong shot at the prosperity and stability that we need.” — Nancy Soderberg
N MAGAZINE: Do you think that President Trump’s summit with North Korea laid the groundwork in creating a peaceful solution?
SODERBERG: We don’t know yet, is the short answer. The North Koreans figured out under the first President Bush that their only international currency was their nuclear program. They’ve used it to blackmail the international community for forty years. They’ll make an agreement and cheat. They’ll
make another agreement and cheat. The agreements take
N MAGAZINE: This is certainly one of the more contentious
a long time to negotiate. They are very difficult to make
times to be entering Congress. What motivates you to want
sure you have inspections and verifications. Ronald Reagan
to take on this gargantuan challenge?
always said, “Trust, but verify.” I think we don’t trust them and verify because they have a record of cheating.
SODERBERG: I’ve been teaching students for a dozen years and
President Trump flipped the process on its head by hav-
watching them come out of school not being able to live the
ing the summit first then negotiating. Normally the summit
American dream that I did, my parents did and my grandfa-
is the capstone. Once you have an agreement that’s verifi-
ther did. They are worried about their retirement. They’re
“I believe that I can make a difference and help put our democracy back on track and make sure that the next generation of youths can take advantage of the opportunities that I’ve have, my parents have had, and my grandparents have had.” — Nancy Soderberg
able and tough, then you have the summit to sign it. But
worried about their health care. They don’t expect to live
the North Koreans did not commit to anything that they
the American dream. That’s just wrong.
hadn’t already committed to doing. So the proof will be
I’ve spent my career promoting democracy around
in the pudding of what comes out of these very difficult
the world, and right now I am concerned about things
negotiations that can take years. But it seems to have dif-
here at home. I was raised to believe in giving something
fused tension for now, and that’s a good thing. And I hope it
back to your country. I believe that I can make a differ-
works. Nothing else has worked, so maybe this will work.
ence and help put our democracy back on track and make
We need to make sure the Koreans are lockstep with us as these negotiations move forward, but I hope he moves forward. President Trump is changing our politics on this, and if it works, I think all Americans should support it.
N MAGAZINE: Like Nantucket, Florida is ground zero for climate change. What role to do you think you can play to bring us back in to a place of leadership when it comes to climate change?
SODERBERG: Withdrawing from the Paris Climate Agreement was a mistake. We need to be pushing other countries to join us to combat this threat. This is a global threat that the United States cannot solve on its own. We need to lead and try and move it. The good thing is that across the country, mayors and governors are stepping up and
sure that the next generation of youths can take advantage
there is a good chance that we will voluntarily meet our
of the opportunities that I’ve had, my parents have had and
Paris Agreement commitments because of the strong
my grandparents have had. That’s why I’m running.
leadership from mayors and governors across the states. In Florida alone, there are twenty-six mayors who have committed to having 100 percent green energy in their cities by the year 2050. That movement is happening N magazine
across the country, so the American people get it.
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Mary Taaffe, Broker
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NQUIRY
In the Market
FOR CHANGE INTERVIEW BY BRUCE A. PERCELAY
PHOTOGRAPHY BY KIT NOBLE
PETER TEDESCHI is running against Congressman Bill Keating in the 9th District of Massachusetts
P
eter Tedeschi and his family have been longtime summer residents of Nantucket. Tedeschi’s name is best associated with a sprawling chain of convenience stores that
his grandfather founded after immigrating to the United States from Italy. This fall, Tedeschi is running as a Republican for the ninth congressional district. He’s seeking to unseat longtime Democratic congressman Bill Keating based on a platform of fiscal conservatism and social pragmatism. As a first-time candidate, Tedeschi views his lack of political experience as an asset, having worked in senior management at Putnam Investments and as CEO of the company that bears his name. Tedeschi walks a fine line between supporting some of President Trump’s policies, while also showing a willingness to disagree on others. Candid, concise and affable, Tedeschi demonstrated an understanding of the complexity of Nantucket’s various issues during an expansive interview with N Magazine.
N MAGAZINE: There are many issues on Nan-
permanent residency so long as they can
tucket that mirror the issues elsewhere in the
pay their own way and obey our laws.
country. Certainly, immigration has become
For the potential DACA recipients, I
a big problem here. The president’s policy on
have no problem offering them a path-
immigration has been problematical here. As
way to citizenship. For an area like the
a Republican, how would you balance your
Cape and Islands, where tourism is a one
party ties with a policy that is not easy on the
billion dollar a year industry, we need
Cape and the Islands?
to be smart and sensible about how we
TEDESCHI: I’m a Republican, but I have no
handle H1B, H2B visas.
problem going against my party when I feel like I’m doing the right thing. When it comes to immigration, we’ve kicked this can down the road for so long. We need to be sensible about it. First of all, we’re going to need to figure out what N magazine
to do with folks who have been here il-
164
legally. And for folks who are here illegally—adults that came here illegally—I am open to offering them a pathway to
N MAGAZINE: So what would you do about
need that help, particularly in a big part
needs to be done to help the service sector
the H1B and H2B Visa issue?
of this area.
in the Cape and Islands area. Where we differ is in ensuring that we do things to
TEDESCHI: First of all, if you’ve been comN MAGAZINE: You’re running against a long-
secure our borders moving forward, par-
Visa], there’s no reason why you should
standing congressman, Bill Keating. This
ticularly our southern border. I am going
be caught up in the red tape. We need to
is one of his signature issues. How do you
to be more focused on ensuring that we ad-
open it up so that will then allow more of
think you could perform better than he?
dress the issue and fix the problem of immi-
them to come in on a three- or six-month
TEDESCHI: I suspect that we are both phil-
gration, so that we don’t continue allowing
basis to service our service industries. We
osophically very sympathetic to what
folks to flow into the country illegally.
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ing here for years [on an H1B or H2B
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N MAGAZINE: The opioid epidemic has plagued Nantucket in ways that a lot of people are not aware of. What would you do to help Nantucket in this regard?
TEDESCHI: The opioid epidemic has hit the Cape, Islands and South Coast particularly hard. There’s a few things we need to do. It starts with education and involving the medical community to ensure that they’re not overprescribing medications. Then on top of that, it’s allowing law enforcement to do their job and stem the flow of these illicit drugs coming in, particularly ones like Alfentanil and fentanyl, which are killing people. I personally know folks who have overdosed. It’s tragic. It’s nondiscriminatory. It goes after everyone. But I think we need to stem the flow. Governor Baker’s done a great job on this front. It started with allowing people to come out of the shadows and to be able to ac-
When making folks accountable for various
knowledge, without
catches, we need to take things like Nan-
shame or retribu-
tucket squid population into account to en-
tion, that they’ve
sure that we are able to maintain the liveli-
got
hood of the folks that are on the island who
an
addiction
issue and they need to get help. That’s
the East Coast. How do we prevent large
rely on that. At the end of the day, we’re not
where it started. Where it goes from here
fleets from coming in here and overfishing
just talking about industry, we’re talking
is stopping the flow of drugs coming in
our waters?
about people trying to put food on the table.
and helping those that need the help.
TEDESCHI: We have a number of industries
N MAGAZINE: Switching to an entirely differ-
that are sort of on their knees on Nan-
N MAGAZINE: As a prospective politician in
tucket as well as the South Coast, and
Massachusetts, how do you walk that fine
the fishing indus-
line with the Trump factor? On one hand,
try happens to be
you want the White House to be support-
one of them. We
ive of Massachusetts, but on the other,
need to work more
you know that you have an extremely lib-
closely with NOAA
eral electoral base that you need to sway
to ensure that we’re
if you want to get elected. How does that
properly managing
play out?
fleets and resources.
TEDESCHI: I was interviewed recently for a
There’s
certainly
TV show. The first question they asked
ent local topic, the fishing industry here has been impacted by the lack of protection that Nantucket’s waters have received from drag-
N magazine
gers and overfish-
166
“I’m a Republican, but I have no problem going against my party when I feel like I’m doing the right thing.” — Peter Tedeschi
ing. For reasons
more that can be
me was are you a Charlie Baker Repub-
that are not very clear, we do not get the
done to protect the squid resources here
lican or a Donald Trump Republican?
same protection as some other places on
on Nantucket, but you can’t do that alone.
I’m more of a Charlie Baker Republican.
“I personally know folks who have overdosed. It’s tragic. It’s nondiscriminatory. It goes after everyone.” — Peter Tedeschi
Charlie has a great saying: “Be tough on the issues, soft on the people.” That’s the way it’s supposed to be. What makes me a Republican is I’m fiscally very conservative. When it comes to social issues, I’m more moderate. I care about people. That’s one of the things that differentiates me. It is a fine
Tedeschi that will be more effective in terms of our representation than Bill Keating?
TEDESCHI: Congressman Keating has been serving in office since the late seventies. He is a lawyer by trade and a career politician. I am a pragmatic businessperson. I am a problem solver. We have to make difficult decisions, and I am willing to do that. We’re piling debt on future generations—it’s just not fair, and it’s not right. We need to be sensible about it. At a twenty-thousand-foot level, my view of the world is that we have a moral responsibility to help those who can’t help themselves. We have no moral responsibility to help those
line you have to walk. Too many elected officials in DC are the problem. On Capitol Hill, the 16 percent approval rating stems from the fact that we have too many officials doing the bidding of the party instead of the work of the people. I want to change that. I will work with members on either side of the House. I really don’t care what party you’re from. If you’re going to help me do the work of the people that I represent, I will work with you. We need to get away from this polarity and partisan bickering we have in DC today. I’ve got a his-
“I will work with members on either side of the House. I really don’t care what party you’re from. If you’re going to help me do the work of the people that I represent, I will work with you.” — Peter Tedeschi
tory in that as a businessperson, working with competitors for the betterment of the entire industry. I’ll bring that collaborative spirit to DC.
N MAGAZINE: We talked earlier that you are running against an incumbent that has been in office for a long time. Does the fact that he’s been in office for a long time mean that it’s time for him to go, or is there something about Peter
who won’t help themselves. I think our government needs to start trying a little bit harder to figure out who is who. Congressman Keating considers partisan politics as part of the problem, but he’s ranked as the most partisan member of our Massachusetts delegation. He ranks 364 in the partisan index on Capitol Hill. That’s not encouraging. We need folks who are willing to do the work of the people instead of the bidding of the party. That’s the type of change that I can bring. I am more than willing and happy to work with members of either party to get the work of the people done. Congressman Keating is very visible when it’s leading up to the election and he needs people’s votes. That’s not how this is supposed to work. Being a representative means you’re supposed to be there when your people need you, and not just when you need their votes.
“Being a representative means you’re supposed to be there when your people need you, and not just when you need their votes.”
Peter Tedeschi and his wife Katherine at the Great Harbor Yacht Club.
N magazine
— Peter Tedeschi
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Nantucket Yoga Festival Opening Night
FOGGYSHEET
BEARFIGHT LIVE
M
JIM & SHERI PERELMAN
FRIEND, AMY ZIELINSKI & FRIEND
FR
CAROLINE EARLE, PAT MORAN, JOANN BURNHAM, TED BURNHAM & SARA DIVELLO
KA
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nantucket
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JAMES & ANN MILLER
BRANDON WARD & DAVID VENDETTI
DOROTHY STOVER & LINDEL HART
M
MARY JANE, FRIEND, JOANN BURNHAM & PAT MORAN
FRIEND, NATALY KOGAN, DOROTHY STOVER, LARISA FORMAN & FRIEND
MELISSA BOMEISLER, FRIEND & TAYLOR BLOCK
MARISSA KOTALAC, STEPHANIE FORD & KATHY GRIEDER
FRIENDS OF THE NANTUCKET YOGA FESTIVAL
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KATE O’CONNELL, CLAIRE ESTE MCDONALD, LAURINDA LECAIN & ANGELICA EMERY
IMAGES BY RACHEL ELIZABETH PHOTOGRAPHY
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William Raveis is proud to be the official RealtorÂŽ of The Boston Red Sox. Good Luck in 2018! N magazine
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Artists Association of Nantucket Gala
FOGGYSHEET nantucket
DAVE FROUHEISER & WILLIAM WELCH
TOM & HOLLY HARTY
JO
SHELLIE DUNLAP & JEANNE HICKS
BRIAN SAGER & MARCUS FOLEY
WIL
JULIE GIFFORD, JOHN LOCHTEFELD, CHRISTINE SANFORD & JULIJA MOSTYKANOVA FEENEY
JOAN ALBAUGH
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TRACY DAILY
G.S. HILL
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CECIL BARRON JENSEN
LAURA GRAY, MAGGIE LENGYEL & BOBBY FRAZIER
GAY HELD
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CHUCK & NAN GESCHKE
MADELEINE & KATHLEEN HAY
E
JOAN BENI & BROOKE HARTY
WILLIAM BAINBRIDGE STEELE & ANNE MARIE BRATTON
PETER STEINGRABER & MARY KATE HERRON
ANDREW VORCE & NANCY WHEATLEY
NELLIE O’GARA
GERRY KENEALLY
AMY ORMOND
DAVID LAZARUS
PATIENCE KILLEN & PHIL NARDONE
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ELLE FOLEY
JAN PAWLOWSKI & ANNA-KARIN DILLARD
173 PHOTOGRAPHY BY BARBARA CLARKE
4TH OF JULY
FOGGYSHEET N magazine
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175 PHOTOGRAPHY BY LEISE TRUEBLOOD
FROM ONE ISLAND TO ANOTHER,
WE NEED YOUR HELP.
The fabric of Puerto Rico’s community was literally torn apart by Hurricane Maria and now desperately needs Nantucket’s help. As islanders, we are all vulnerable to the forces of nature. Nantucket has an opportunity to help rebuild both Puerto Rico as well N magazine
as the lives of the children and families who were so impacted by this devastating event.
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TO HELP REBUILD PUERTO RICO, PLEASE VISIT WWW.NANTUCKETCARES.ORG.
Roberta White Broker Associate Roberta White Cell: 508.325.2019 Broker Associate Roberta.White@raveis.com Cell: 508.325.2019 Roberta.White@raveis.com
New Listing New Listing
Wauwinet Estate
Medouie Creek 6 BR, 6.5 BA Medouie Creek 6 BR, 6.5 BA
$5,750,000 Roberta White / Jenny Paradis $5,750,000 Roberta White / Jenny Paradis
Jenny Paradis Broker Associate Jenny Paradis Cell: 508.325.3131 Broker Associate Jenny.Paradis@raveis.com Cell: 508.325.3131 508-228-9117 | 12 OAK STREET | NANTUCKET | MA 02554 | WINDWALKERREALESTATE.COM Jenny.Paradis@raveis.com
Wauwinet Estate
508-228-9117 | 12 OAK STREET | NANTUCKET | MA 02554 | WINDWALKERREALESTATE.COM
John McGarr Chairman’s Elite Club John McGarr Cell: 508.577.5450 Chairman’s Elite Club John.McGarr@raveis.com Cell: 508.577.5450 John.McGarr@raveis.com
New Listing
Pocomo
Pocomo Road 6 BR, 7 Full & 3 Half BA Pocomo Road 6 BR, 7 Full & 3 Half BA
$9,450,000 John McGarr / Susan Lister Locke $9,450,000 John McGarr / Susan Lister Locke
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New Listing
Pocomo
Susan Lister Locke Broker Associate Susan Lister Locke Cell: 508.221.0531 Broker Associate Susan.Locke@raveis.com Cell: 508.221.0531 177 508-228-9117 | 12 OAK STREET | NANTUCKET | MA 02554 | WINDWALKERREALESTATE.COM Susan.Locke@raveis.com 508-228-9117 | 12 OAK STREET | NANTUCKET | MA 02554 | WINDWALKERREALESTATE.COM
Nantucket Book Festival
FOGGYSHEET nantucket
ELIN HILDERBRAND
NANCY THAYER
MARY SCHIEVE LOUISE PENNY, ELIZABETH GIGLIOTTI, MADDIE HJULSTROM & RICH HJULSTROM
JAMES WOOD
C
MALCOLM MITCHELL & THARON DUNN
IMBOLO MBUE, ANDREW SOLOMON & MIN JIN LEE
N
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MARY HAFT
JOHN BOYNE & TIM EHERNBERG
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MARY BERGMAN, JOE HAGAN & CHARLEY WALTERS
MARTHA JOHNSON, WENDY HUDSON & GENE MAHON PHOTOGRAPHY BY TIM EHERNBERG & JOSH GRAY
K
RACHEL POWERS
LINDSAY FELLER
CISCO TRASHION SHOW TEAM
NICOLE DUPONT DAVE PORTNOY
HOLLY FINIGAN & RICK GIFFORD
MARISA AHOLA
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Y
Cisco Trashion Show
KATHERINE JETTER
KATHERINE TUNAGE
DEVIN WALKER
ELIN HILDERBRAND
PHOTOGRAPHY BY LEISE TRUEBLOOD, EMME DUNCAN, AND ZORNITSA YOVCHEVA
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NSPIRE NHA
SWIMSUIT
EDITION
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IMAGES COURTESY OF THE NHA
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FROM BIKINIS TO BOARD SHORTS, sun hats to sundresses, there’s no shortage of swimwear to choose from. And while bringing out old favorites is fun, some looks have been retired for good, but not forever. Dive into some of the swimsuits of yesteryear courtesy of the Nantucket Historical Association.
Photographic portrait of a child from the Treadwell family, made in August of 1889. She is wearing a handmade striped bathing suit and standing on a faux rock with her hands above her head.
Photo of woman in bathing suit in the surf
Woman on Sconset beach wearing a dark bathing suit with white belt and white lace-up shoes. George Ulichen watering plants, wearing a bathing suit.
ait he in 9. dng a ds d.
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Connie Haroldson, in a bathing suit holding Jackie Haroldson as baby, at the Kilroy house in Codfish Park.
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Photo of woman in bathing suit in the surf.
Young man in a bathing suit wading at Sconset beach.
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Nick Finole in bathing suit smoking a pipe. Label: second cook 1915.
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A group of people at Jetties Beach, some in bathing suits in 1906. Label on photo states: “Mother in the black suit with white collar, and her sister, Aunt Fan, in all white dress. Fat Aunt Fan never appeared in a bathing suit.”
Young Mr. Starbuck in a bathing suit at Jetties Beach.
A young girl called “Pagie” wearing a bathing suit. This photo was probably taken at Jetties Beach.
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“Den Scudder” in Cliff Side Guard bathing suit.
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NUPTIALS Featured Wedding
BRIDE & GROOM: MEGAN KELLY & JAMES COCHRAN WEDDING COORDINATOR: NANTUCKET ISLAND EVENTS WEDDING CEREMONY: ST. MARY’S CATHOLIC CHURCH OFFICIANT: FATHER MARCEL BOUCHARD RECEPTION: NANTUCKET GOLF CLUB WEDDING BAND: THE SULTANS FLOWERS: WINSTON FLOWERS HAIR & MAKE UP: LYNDSAY SIMON BEAUTY PHOTOGRAPHER: KATIE KAIZER PHOTOGRAPHY VIDEOGRAPHER: YELLOW PRODUCTIONS STATIONARY & DESIGN: LARK + RAVEN BRIDE’S GOWN: AMSALE BRIDESMAID GOWNS: JENNY YO GROOM’S ATTIRE: MICHAEL ANDREWS BESPOKE RINGS: ZWIKKER AND ZACHER
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PHOTO BOOTH: NANTUCKET SNAP BOOTH
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NOT SO FAST
Power Planners
INTERVIEW BY ROBERT COCUZZO
PHOTO BY CHERYL RICHARDS
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A QUICK CHAT WITH EVENT PLANNERS DAVID HANDY & DONALD DALLAIRE
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N MAGAZINE: What’s one thing most people
N MAGAZINE: What’s the biggest challenge in
N MAGAZINE: Working with your spouse must be
would be surprised to learn about you two?
planning an event on Nantucket?
challenging at times. How do you guys keep a
HANDY & DALLAIRE: A lot of people think that we
HANDY & DALLAIRE: Weather. Unfortunately, this is
strong marriage when times get tough at work?
have been working as a team in the wedding
one thing we cannot control. However, that’s
HANDY & DALLAIRE: No, not at all…[Laughter] It
and event planning business forever. How-
why we always have a Plan B and not even a
helps that we have separate and unique roles.
ever, Donald joined the company three years
hurricane can stop us from throwing a beauti-
We respect that both of us have different con-
ago coming from a theater performance and
ful wedding. And yes, that did happen!
tributions in not only our work life, but our home life. We try hard each week to make
design background. He used to be a custome
N MAGAZINE: Any funny stories? HANDY & DALLAIRE: Every once in a while we
sure we have a balance of professional time
N MAGAZINE: What’s the most unusual request
have a bride and groom who want to incor-
time to be in “work mode” versus when it’s
you’ve received from a bride?
porate their dog into the wedding. Most will
time to turn it off and adjust into “home life.”
HANDY & DALLAIRE: One bride asked us to be on
just want their furry friend to be included in
“grandma patrol” during the wedding recep-
photos, and that will be the extent of their
N MAGAZINE: You two are one of the sharpest
tion. Apparently her grandmother was known
involvement. However, this particular bride
dressed couples on the island. What are the
to try to grab a microphone at family events
and groom wanted their dog to walk down
critical parts of a good outfit?
and sing. We kept a close eye on her and rest
the aisle before them. They had Flowers
HANDY & DALLAIRE: We are flattered. When it
assured no karaoke came out that night.
on Chestnut create a beautiful flower collar
comes to a great outfit, you must start with
that was to be worn as he walked down the
your staples and build from there. Our closet
N MAGAZINE: What’s the biggest piece of advice
aisle. They had practiced before and assured
consists of a streamlined selection of suits
you give couples when they sit down to start
us the dog could do it no problem. The cer-
we are comfortable in and know pair well
planning their wedding?
emony started, the bridal party walked down
with just about anything. From there, we are
HANDY & DALLAIRE: Communication is key.
and now it was time for the dog. Three steps
able to choose a statement piece to really
While this is not only important advice to
in, the dog started wrestling with himself to
finalize our look. We like to have fun with
carry throughout a marriage, it is especially
get the flower crown off. While at the time,
this, whether it’s a great pair of shoes from
important during the planning process. Always
it was not so funny, we now laugh about him
Artemis Design Co. or Stubbs and Wootton,
be open and honest when discussing all of the
rolling down the aisle to get free from the
a Daniel Wellington watch or a Peter Millar
important details for the day of your wedding.
flower collar.
pocket square.
designer, actor, singer and dancer.
and personal time together. We know when it’s
N MAGAZINE: If you could live anywhere in the world where would it be and why?
HANDY & DALLAIRE: While Nantucket is home for us and our favorite spot to be in the summer, we wouldn’t mind a second home in St. Barths for the cold winter months. Yeah, we think an office on Nikki Beach could work.
N MAGAZINE: What’s the greatest event you two have ever attended together?
HANDY & DALLAIRE: Besides our wedding? [Laughter] One of our favorite events we attend every year is the Breast Cancer Research Foundation’s Hot Pink Party. Every year upstages the last, with incredible themes and exquisite decor. The best of the best are alpink ensembles. It really is one of our favorite nights for such an amazing cause. Photo by Zofia & Co.
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ways in attendance, with the most fashionable
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Reimagine a Maine tradition.
BY LEAH FISHER PHOTOGRAPHY N PHOTO magazine
Discover a hotel that fully embraces the natural beauty of Camden—the town where “the mountains meet the sea.” Whitehall is an ideal spring, summer, and early fall destination for those in search of an artisanal, authentic Maine experience with a modern aesthetic.
188 whitehallmaine.com | 207-236-3391 | 52 High Street, Camden, Maine | @whitehallmaine
Whale Ecology
Historic Sites
Nantucket Art Colony
Hadwen House Rights & Race Exhibition
Celebrating Maria Mitchell
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Begin your adventure at the Whaling Museum, 13 Broad Street
Nantucketers & Their Boats
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N Magazine ADVERTISING DIRECTORY
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4 EASY STREET I 508.228.5073 WWW.CURRENTVINTAGE.COM
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WEDDENDORF Available at
Erica Wilson • The Artists Association heidiweddendorf.com
THE 64th ANNUAL HOUSE & GARDEN TOUR “A Sconset Experience” Wednesday, August 8, 2018 11 am to 4 pm
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Rain or Shine
The Nantucket Garden Club Inc. Member of the Garden Club of America
Tickets: $60.00 Tickets available online at www.nantucketgardenclub.org ADVANCE TICKET SALES BEGIN AUGUST 3RD TO 8TH AT G S Hill Gallery on Straight Wharf Sconset Rotary (11 am to 2 pm) Bartlett's Farm (10 am to 2 pm) Main Street (10 am to 2 pm) (Credit Cards Accepted) And at All Houses on Day of Tour
774-236-9064
Heidiweddendorf@yahoo.com Follow me on
All proceeds support Nantucket scholarships, conservation & community projects
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Round-trip shuttle service from Federal Street to Sconset beginning at 10:30 am
Spring, Summer, Fall
It’s all at The Beachside A short walk to Downtown and Jetties Beach
Outdoor heated pool • 90 comfortable and spacious rooms Free WiFi • Canine Guests Welcome* * Additional fee applies
30 North Beach Street • Nantucket, MA 02554 • Reservations & Information:1-800-322-4433 www.thebeachside.com • email: info@thebeachside.com
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LIVE LUXURY
TOWN | $3,495,000
TOWN | $6,995,000
CLIFF | $4,000,000
5 Bedrooms 3 Bathrooms
5 Bedrooms 4+ Bathrooms
5 Bedrooms 4+ Bathrooms
POLPIS | $2,150,000
TOWN | $5,995,000
TOWN | $4,495,000
QUIDNET | $13,500,000
3 Bedrooms 2 Bathrooms
5 Bedrooms 5+ Bathrooms
4 Bedrooms 3+ Bathrooms
8 Bedrooms 9+ Bathrooms
SHAWKEMO | $7,995,000
MONOMOY | $1,695,000
TOWN | $2,695,000
MID-ISLAND | $825,000
5 Bedrooms 6+ Bathrooms
3 Bedrooms 1+ Bathrooms
4 Bedrooms 2+ Bathrooms
4 Bedrooms 4 Bathrooms
TOWN | $3,495,000
WAUWINET | $5,975,000
TOWN | $3,695,000
TOWN | $1,749,000
5 Bedrooms 4+ Bathrooms
5 Bedrooms 5+ Bathrooms
5 Bedrooms 5+ Baths
3 Bedrooms 2+ Bathrooms
Craig Hawkins, Broker
Bernadette Meyer, Broker
508-228-1881, ext. 119 craig@maurypeople.com
37 Main Street, Nantucket MA 02554
C: 508-680-4748 bernadette@maurypeople.com
Each Office is Independently Owned and Operated. Equal Housing Opportunity.
VINEYARD VINES 2 STRAIGHT WHARF 508-325-9600 MURRAY'S TOGGERY SHOP 62 MAIN STREET 508-228-0437