June 2015
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The Local Magazine Read Worldwide
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The 20th Anniversary of the Nantucket Film Festival
The Nantucket Book Festival’s
Ishmael BEAh Theatre Workshop Season Preview
Bill Blount
Nantucket Magazine
& the Ruthie B Abroad on an
African Adventure Nantucket Magazine June 2015
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2015 Trending N
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What’s going viral on the #NANTUCKET hash tag?
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Nosh news
A numerical snapshot of the month of June on Nantucket.
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Neat stuff 40
A gentleman’s guide to the summer wardrobe.
Need to know 42
Get the rundown of N’s Top Ten events for the month of June.
58 WRITE TO freedom
Bartending beauty Anna Worgess shows us what cocktail she’s shaking up at Proprietors this June.
June 2015 The Local Magazine Read Worldwide
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sTiller 20th Anniversary of the Nantucket Film Festival
The Nantucket Book Festival’s
ishmael Beah TheaTre Workshop Season Preview
Bill BlounT
Nantucket Magazine
& the Ruthie B Abroad on an
african advenTure
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Nantucket Magazine June 2015
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One of this year’s headlining authors at the Nantucket Book Festival, bestselling author Ishmael Beah shares his dramatic story of survival and redemption through writing.
With bathing suit season nearly upon us, N’s fitness expert Isaiah Truyman gives us a routine to jumpstart your June.
N &
Nspire Nantucket resident Maria Partidas is helping bridge the growing language gap on the island.
Nutrition & Fitness 46
After opening two locations in Manhattan and Aspen, the owners of The Grey Lady are bringing their Nantucket-inspired restaurant back to its namesake this Figawi.
54 FOUND IN TRANSLATION
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What’s the word on Nantucket’s cobblestone streets?
Lifelong summer resident and original Nantucket Film Festival board member, Ben Stiller, appears on the cover of our June Issue in a photograph by Matthias Vriens-Mcgrath.
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Ndepth
N vogue
Nscene
64 BEN STILLER
76 MULTIPLE PERSONALITIES
Nantucket blACKbook gives 110 Miss us the skinny on what’s hip, hot,
In celebration of the Nantucket Film Festival’s 20th anniversary, lifelong summer resident and original NFF board member Ben Stiller grants N Magazine an exclusive interview.
70 THE OLDest SALT
How the Nantucket community rallied behind Bill Blount and his Ruthie B to keep commercial fishing afloat on the island.
As a preview to its summer season, the Theatre Workshop of Nantucket takes us backstage to meet some of its characters decked out in their beautiful costumes.
Nventure 86 into AFRICA
Journey to Africa with longtime summer resident Stephanie Capuano and Tin Truck Safari.
NHA been at least two films 103 There’s shot on Nantucket in recent years,
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but Hollywood and Nantucket go back much further than that.
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and happening this June.
Not so fast... 112
A quick chat with legendary news anchor and longtime summer resident Natalie Jacobson.
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Publisher & Editor-in-Chief Bruce A. Percelay Editor Robert Cocuzzo Art Director Paulette Chevalier Chief Photographer Kit Noble Web Editor Emme Duncan Operations Consultant Adrian Wilkins Staff Photographer Brian Sager Contributors Anne Breeding Susan Browne Justin Cerne Holly Finigan Josh Gray Jason Graziadei Mary Haft Isaiah Truyman Photographers Maria Carey Barbara Clarke Matthias Vriens-Mcgrath Joshua Simpson Advertising Director Fifi Greenberg Advertising Sales Audrey Wagner 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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ŠCopyright 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
SUMMER
PREVIEWS What makes Nantucket more than just a beautiful beach community is the arts and culture, which are an integral part of the island. As the local media sponsor of the Nantucket
Book Festival, which runs from June 19th through the 21st, and a fan of the Nantucket Film Festival, N Magazine celebrates these events with both our cover feature on Ben Stiller and a profile of Book Festival headliner, Ishmael Beah, who will be speaking on the island.
Rob Cocuzzo’s interview with Ben Stiller, not surpris-
ingly, reveals the humorous side of one of America’s leading comedic actors, but also sheds light on some of his memories of Nantucket. Summer resident, writer Mary Haft, presents a more serious take on a former child soldier from Sierra Leone named Ishmael Beah, who through the written word has not only become a top selling author, but one whose writings saved his life. On the theme of arts and entertainment, we get a sneak peek at the Theatre
Workshop’s upcoming season under the new leadership of managing director, Jonathan Jensen, and artistic director, Justin Cerne. N Magazine’s chief photog-
rapher, Kit Noble, has produced a stunning series of shots depicting TWN actors at work. As Nantucket’s population continues to evolve, new types of leaders emerge in this community. N contributor Josh Gray profiles Maria Partida, who serves as an advocate to the island’s growing Hispanic population, and who, as a translator, has helped bridge the growing language gap on Nantucket. Lastly, in a story that returns to Nantucket’s roots, we catch up with Captain
Bill Blount of the Ruthie B in a story about how the Nantucket community rallied
around him to keep the last of Nantucket’s commercial fishing boats afloat. Blount is a true old salt, whose hard work and spirit of innovation has kept this fading industry alive on the island. There is nothing that better combines all aspects of Nantucket than going to the beach and reading a good book (or magazine), and we hope you take advantage of the terrific festivals on the island this month. Sincerely,
N magazine
Bruce A. Percelay
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S JASON GRAZIADEI Jason Graziadei has lived on Nantucket for the past 11 years, writing about the island’s people, politics, economy, and crime. As an investigative journalist for The Inquirer and Mirror, Graziadei’s reporting launched a state Ethics Commission investigation of the Nantucket County Sheriff’s Office, uncovered procurement violations at Nantucket Memorial Airport, and exposed the island’s drug connection to Rosedale, a small town in Mississippi. Graziadei is currently contributing stories to WCAI-FM, the Cape & Island’s NPR station, and is the social media editor for Mahon About Town. He and his wife Alicia are raising their first child, Emmett, who was born last July at Nantucket Cottage Hospital.
MARY HAFT Mary Haft is a writer, producer, and founder of HAFT PRODUCTIONS, LLC, specializing in documentaries for nonprofits. A vice-president of the PEN/Faulkner Foundation, and co-founder of the Nantucket Book Festival, she is the author of Nantucket: Portrait of an American Town, and a recently completed memoir: Staying the Course: The Making of a Marine Mom. For this June issue, Mary profiled bestselling author, Ishmael Beah, who will be a luminary at this year’s Nantucket Book Festival (pg. 58).
ISAIAH TRUYMAN Isaiah Truyman is a respected athlete, an accredited coach and trainer, and a businessman. A lifelong student of human motivation, Truyman learned the importance of strength and selfreliance through sports. From a young age, he cultivated a desire to help others by giving them the tools to help themselves. Isaiah holds professional certifications from USA Weightlifting, National Strength and Conditioning Association, National Academy of Sports Medicine, N magazine
Kettle Bell Concepts and is a certified ESP Per-
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formance Coach. This summer, Isaiah is serving as N Magazine’s in-house health and fitness expert. Get his tips on staying fit this summer in each issue and on N-Magazine.com.
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trending N
Never leave the Island without it. N en
StillEr
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20th Anniversary of the Nantucket Film Festival
The Nantucket Book Festival’s
Ishmael BEAh Theatre Workshop Season Preview
Bill Blount
& the Ruthie B Abroad on an
African Adventure Nantucket Magazine June 2015
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Stay on island time at N-Magazine.com
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N
What’s happening on #Nantucket? GETTING ON THE M-TRAIN When Nantucket pop sensation Meghan Trainor caught her first glimpse of N Magazine’s May cover in all its pink and pastry-powered glory, she tweeted it out to her 1.2 million fans. In a matter of minutes, N-Magazine.com was barraged with web traffic from around the globe.
APRIL FOOLS! If you didn’t hear the news: the President is not coming to Nantucket for his summer vacation as many believed when N Mag posted a photoshopped shot of POTUS playing a round of golf at Sankaty on its Facebook this April Fools Day. The post was seen by over 10,000 people and was shared and liked by hundreds of others. Even three weeks later, the N Magazine office was getting calls from people interested in renting out their homes to secret service.
NBLAST OFF & RUNNING N Magazine’s brand-spanking new enewsletter took inboxes by storm this past month with breaking news, the hottest island events, fun photos, and exclusive Nantucket stories. To stay on island time when you’re away, subscribe to the NBLAST at N-Magazine.com
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NUmbers
Nantucket by the
Numbers 6,074
Miles traveled by bestselling author Ishmael Beah to reach the 2015 Book Festival—furthest distance of all participants.
2.7%
Nantucket’s population increase between July 2013 and July 2014, fastest growing county in Massachusetts.
$5.75 Cost of a milk shake at the Nantucket Pharmacy.
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Authors have signed Wendy Hudson’s Penguin Car
2,300
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(pounds) weight of the Great White shark “Katherine” off coast of Nantucket earlier this year.
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206,052 Words in Herman Melville’s Moby-Dick
$15Million Approved by last Town Meeting vote to build a new Fire Station.
6
Hours to take the new Seastreak Ferry from New York City to Nantucket.
17,700
2
Boats crash into the jetties each summer on average
1,800 (Feet) amount of visibility there needs to be on the runway for a commercial aircraft to take off and land at Nantucket Memorial Airport.
2:47:01 Winning time in last June’s Iron Team Relay set by Beau Garufi.
$ 20.00 Cost of a men’s haircut at Joe’s Barber Shop
Atheneum library cardholders on Nantucket
0
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NEAT STUFF
MANLY U S T S FLIPPING OUT
Sandal season is upon us. How are your little piggies planning on going to the market? New this season, Hari Mari’s Scout and
Dune sandals are the perfect set of kicks to rock at the beach by day
and at the BoHo by night. Along with trendy summer colors, Hari Mari’s “Memory Foam Toe” molds to your feet, ensuring you won’t get any blis-
ters from a night of cutting
rug at the BOX. And if that wasn’t reason enough to buy a pair, Hari Mari also donates $3 of every set of sandals sold to fight pediatric cancer. Available at the Haulover and Murray’s Toggery.
IT’S HIP TO BE SQUARE
Looking to upgrade your summer duds without making over your entire wardrobe? Boston-based designer Aruña Chong-Quiroga might just have the perfect pocket square to add a dash of flair to your summer wear, now available at the Sail Loft. Made from traditional Japanese Kimono fabrics, Aruña’s Faburiq line is hand-sewn. Ladies, don’t feel left out; Aruña also offers scarves that will be nice to wear on any brisk summer night.
OFF THE CUFF
You’re on vacation! There’s no need to roll up your sleeves and get to work. In fact, pop in a couple of these Nantucket-inspired cufflinks from Murray’s Toggery and show off your Nantucket pride when you’re out on the town.
BELTING ONE
All fashionably minded men know that a good belt really ties an outfit togeth-
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er. And speaking of ties, have you been hooked by one of the Vineyard Vines
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belts yet? Along with a full lineup of men’s and women’s attire, the Vineyard Vines guys have long since branched from ties to belts. Drop anchor with
this nautically inspired 100% leather belt with 100% brass buckle available at Vineyard Vines.
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Need to know
N TOP TEN The Ultimate Activities Guide for the Month of June
1 food Nantucket Restaurant Week June 1-7 What better way to spend the first week of June than by sampling plates at all your favorite Nantucket restaurants? Three course dinners will range from $25 to $45 per person. Visit NantucketRestaurantWeek.com for more information.
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sports
Access Nantucket’s 1st Annual Bike Nantucket June 13 Time to get outside and get those pedals cranking! Access Nantucket is promoting health and wellness with this fun and family-friendly event. Open to cyclists of all ages and skill levels! For more information, visit BikeNantucket.org.
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Fashion
3rd Annual Beauty & the Beach Fashion Show at Galley Beach June 14
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Sun, sand, models and cocktails. Need we say more? The 3rd Annual Beauty & the Beach Fashion Show presented by Galley Beach, Nantucket blACKbook, David M. Handy Events, and RJ Miller Salon benefits the Nantucket New School. Reserve your seat today by calling Galley Beach.
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BONUS: FIGAWI May 23-25
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4 education
Nantucket Book Festival June 19-21 More than thirty authors will congregate on island for a weekend of talks, signings, and brunches, and will wrap up with the Sunday Cisco Brewers Pig Roast. Tickets are available now at NantucketBookFestival.org.
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comedy Daniel Tosh: The Great Nor’easter Tour of 2015 June 21 Dreamland Main Theater 7:00pm and 9:30pm After the rough winter we had, it seems only fitting that comedian Daniel Tosh blows through the island with his Great Nor’easter Tour of 2015. This one-nightonly event is for mature audiences only, but is sure to have you laughing! Visit NantucketDreamland.org for more information.
ENTERTAINMENT Nantucket Film Festival June 24-29 The Nantucket Film Festival celebrates 20 years on island with a week of the top feature-length films, documentaries and short films making the festival circuit this year. Our advice? Get your ticket package early and don’t miss Late Night Storytelling or the Screenwriters Tribute. Visit NantucketFilmFestival.org for more information.
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Family
Strawberry Festival at Bartlett’s Farm June 27 9am-4pm Join Nantucket’s oldest and largest family-owned farm for their first ever Strawberry Festival, complete with pony rides, contests, and cooking demonstrations. No registration needed, just an appetite for all things strawberry!
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art Artists Association of Nantucket’s 4th Annual Plein Air Festival Exhibition June 21 5pm Keep an eye out for local Nantucket painters working along the shore and harbor from Steps Beach all the way to Great Point from June 18-21. The festival will culminate in an exhibition of the week’s work at the Cecelia Joyce & Seward Johnson Gallery on the 21st. Visit NantucketArts.org for more information.
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CHARITY IRON TEAM RELAY June 21 Break a sweat for a good cause with the 35th annual Nantucket Iron Team Relay. Go solo or join a team to run, swim, paddle and bike to raise money for the Mentoring Youth Nantucket. Visit Mentoringyouthnantucket.org to sign up.
Although Figawi falls in the month of May, we’d be remiss not to mention the Memorial Day weekend boat race extravaganza that kicks off the summer! I mean, who the Figawi to leave that out?
Do you have an event for the N Top Ten? Contact us at Editor@N-Magazine.com
C Y N T H I A H AY E S INTERIOR DESIGN
w w w. c y n t h i a h ay e s i d . c o m
PROVIDENCE
NANTUCKET
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401.480.5512
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NDulge
FIGAWIWOWWEE Anna Worgess’s #2 cocktaiL at Proprietors will kick your Memorial Day into gear and then some!
Ingredients: — 2 ½ oz. fennel-infused Beefeater Gin — ½ oz. Strega Liqueur — 2 dashes Fee Brothers’ Lemon Bitters — Fever Tree Tonic
Directions: 1 Infuse 1 bottle of Beefeater with 1 fennel bulb, including fronds
2 Add 1 tsp. toasted fennel seed 3 Let sit for 24-48 hours, depending on taste
4 Strain out solids 5 Add 2 ½ oz gin to iced Collins glass 6 Pour in Strega 7 Top with tonic and 2 dashes of bitters
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8 Garnish with a lemon twist
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How can we make a gift that benefits all of Nantucket? Introducing
The Nantucket Fund
TM
The Community Foundation’s Nantucket Fund™ was specifically designed to enable donors to help the most vulnerable segments of the Nantucket population with one single gift. Your donations to the Nantucket Fund™ can make a life altering difference to those in need who live on an island of plenty. As shocking as it may sound, over 12% of Nantucketers live below the poverty level. Nearly 10% of the Island’s year-round community rely on the Nantucket Food Pantry to avoid hunger. An estimated 750 people have no place to live, and often call a car their home. An increasing number of Island residents also experience mental illness and substance abuse disorders – invisible brain diseases that cause immeasurable suffering if left untreated. Beneath Nantucket’s affluent exterior is a population that truly needs your help. To make our island a place where everyone can live in dignity, your contribution is critical. Please give generously to The Nantucket Fund™.
N magazine
508-825-9993
.
info@cfnan.org
.
PO Box 204, Nantucket, MA 02554
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healthnfitness N
BEACH BOD CHEATSHEET Written & Demonstrated by Isaiah Truyman Photography by Kit Noble
Bathing suit season is almost upon us. If you skipped out on the gym this winter, not to worry, here’s a foolproof plan to get beach-ready in a month or less—no equipment required. Each of these exercises will take approximately one minute, with one minute of rest after completing all four. Do 2-3 circuits for a 10-15 minute workout and get ready to strut your stuff in the sun come July.
SKIPPING Trains your entire body, burning calories and targeting your hips, shoulders and core. Skip as many times as you can in 60 seconds and keep count so you can improve over time.
Be light on your feet, almost silent.
Punch your knees to the sky and swing your elbows back behind you, while standing as tall as possible (don’t look at your feet).
VERTICAL JUMP or LONG JUMP
PUSHUP with ROTATION
PLANK WITH OPPOSITE ARM & LEG REACH
Trains your entire body from fingertips to toes, with a focus on hips, legs, shoulders and core while also improving your overall power and ability to absorb forces.
Another full-body exercise with a focus on upper body and core including chest, shoulders, arms and deep abdominal stabilizers.
Focuses on your core stabilizers and rotational obliques - once again this will challenge your entire body but help to firm and strengthen that hard to tone mid section.
Stand in an athletic position, swing your arms down as you squat and quickly explode up and forward as far as you can.
Stretch out in the air, reach your arms forward and extend your legs fully at the hip, knee and ankle (this is called triple extension).
Perform a traditional pushup, which you can modify and do on your knees if needed.
After each repetition, reach one hand to the sky and look up. Hold this position for “one-Mississippi” and feel it deep in your core.
N magazine
Alternate sides each repetition and perform 10-12 repetitions or as many as you can in one minute.
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Try skipping forwards, backwards, and side to side for a more challenging variation.
Land as softly as possible, bending at the hip and knee into a squat. Avoid loud thuds or jarring landings. Pretend you are a panther and stealth is your mission. Limit the repetitions as they are high impact, 6-10 is plenty.
Start on your elbows and toes, making sure to keep the hips elevated at the shoulder height (don’t sag in the middle).
Holding for one minute or longer is challenge enough for most of us, but adding a reach of the opposite arm and leg will allow you to take it to the next level.
The key is to keep your hips from moving side to side (stable in the middle) as your alternate limbs, move slow and smooth. Perform controlled repetitions for one minute or longer if possible.
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NBUZZ
NEXT STOP: NEW YORK Starting this June, a high-speed ferry service will be testing the wa- ing passengers. From Manhattan, the three-deck, fast ferry motors
ters from New Jersey and New York to Nantucket. The Seastreak to Martha’s Vineyard, before continuing on to Nantucket for a 9 typically travels to Martha’s Vineyard, but now with more New P.M. arrival. The voyage will take approximately six hours and cost Yorkers boarding Jet Blue flights bound for Nantucket, the 140- $260 round-trip. This service will only be offered for two weekfoot, high-speed passenger ferry is getting in on the ACKtion. The ends: June 5-7 and June 12-14. If supply meets demand, the service Seastreak will launch from High-
could become more regular dur-
land Bluffs, New Jersey at 1:30
ing the summer months. Whether
in the afternoon on Friday then
the Seastreak will increase the
continue on to East 35th Street in
number of Yankees fans on the
Manhattan to pick up all remain-
island is yet to be seen.
FEELING Gassy While prices at the pump
have plummeted on the mainEvery summer brings a batch of new restaurants on Nantucket, but this year takes the cake. Doors are scheduled to swing open at a number of hotly anticipated restaurants this late May and June. On Figawi weekend, The Grey Lady marks its Nantucket launch mid-island (read more about the Grey Lady in the Nosh News, page 52). Just next door to The Grey Lady, Brandt and Gabrielle Gould are slated to open Atlas in the former space of Marco Coelho’s Pazzo. Meanwhile, Marco has had a crew working furiously to open his new restaurant Station 21 downtown in the old space of Angela and
land, dropping to as low as $2.24 a gallon at some stations, the cost of a tank of gas on Nantucket has remained bloated to say the least. According to Motor Trend, the lowest price for a gallon of regular on Nantucket was $3.529 so far this year. Meanwhile the rest of Massachusetts has enjoyed a steady decline in prices since last June, when the cost of a gallon of unleaded peaked at $3.70. According to AAA, the price continued to drop week after week, until most recently when it jumped up by 12 cents to $2.46. At press time, the cost of a gallon of regular unleaded on Nantucket was a dollar and change more expensive: $3.59. Alas, much like expensive cocktails and ice cream cones, the highcost of gas is just another pretty price for living in paradise.
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Seth Raynor’s Corazon del Mar. Sticking to the
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downtown dining scene, Darya Afshari is opening
Many believed it was only a matter of
Lemon Press, which will offer cold-pressed juices
time until Uber, the mobile app-based car
and healthy eating options in the former space of
service that’s taken the country by storm,
the Bean, which moved down
arrived on Nantucket. At press time, the
the street to the former space
first Uber sighting was confirmed and the
of Nantucket Gourmet on
company was just beginning to take applications for potential drivers
India Street. The Bean also
on the island. There is obvious concern amongst local cab companies
opened another location
about how Uber will impact their businesses. Meanwhile many Nan-
inside that palatial new
tucketers believe the added com-
Stop & Shop mid-
petition is a good development
island. For the latest
and will help cut down on DUIs.
restaurant news, vis-
We’ll just have to wait and see
it N-Magazine.com.
how Uber will fare on the island.
2of0MOVIE YEARS MAGIC Starting on June 24th, the Nantucket Film Festival celebrates its 20th anniversary with yet another star-studded program. Highlights include the opening night’s showing of The End of the Tour, an outdoor showing of Pixar’s Inside Out, and Magnolia Pictures’ Best of Enemies, which will close out the festival on the evening of June 29th. “This year’s 20th anniversary is a celebration of what the Nantucket Film Festival has accomplished over the past two decades as well as what we will be doing twenty years from now,” said the Film Festival’s executive director Mystelle Brabbée. “We look forward to showcasing the works of those who have made a distinct impact on cinema as well as the works of breakthrough talents.” Of these works, many Nantucketers are most excited to see Peter and John, which was written and directed by Jay Craven and filmed on Nantucket last spring. Learn more about the Nantucket Film Festival by reading N’s cover story on original NFF board member Ben Stiller in this issue and by logging on to N-Magazine.com to read a web-exclusive interview with the festival’s founder, Jonathan Burkhart.
VACATION
RENTALS ROCKET UP This spring, The Boston Globe reported
that rental bookings have skyrocketed by 10% throughout the Cape and the Islands. The article explained that New England’s abominable winter inspired many families to surf vacation websites while they were shut-in during the snowy months. Spurred by lower gas prices, more disposable income, and the continual improvement of the economy, many of these folks clicked
Bookworms won’t go hungry this June as the Nantucket Book Festival marks its fourth anniversary by rolling out an impressive lineup of bestselling authors. In addition to such returning headliners as Jodi Picoult and Nat Philbrick, this year’s festival welcomes bestsellers Ishmael Beah, Scott Turow and Azar Nafisi. All told, the Book Festival has brought over a hundred authors to the island in its four-year history. Read more about one of these bestsellers, Ishmael Beah, in this issue (page 58), and then check out N-Magazine.com for a web exclusive interview with Scott Turow. The Book Festival runs from June 19th to 21st. Visit NantucketBookFestival.org for more information.
“BOOK IT!” before the snow even began to melt. As a result, Cape Cod saw an 8% increase in bookings, while the Vineyard shot up by 11%. As for Nantucket, bookings exploded up by 18%. “It’s been an exceptionally strong year for the Nantucket rental market,” indicated Jen Shalley of Windwalker Real Estate. “We saw a significant boost in rental bookings during February and March, adding to what had already been robust demand for Nantucket vacation homes.” Shalley added, “Not only is the overall number of bookings up from
GREY LADY COCKTAIL PROMOTION
last year, but we’re finding that vacationers
Back by popular demand, Grey Goose’s signature Nantucket cock-
ditures by summer renters are surpassing
tail will be returning to drink menus at eight of the island’s hottest
this increase. People seemed to be desper-
bars and restaurants this summer. Using Grey Goose as their main
ately looking for a summer escape and they
ingredient, a selection of Nantucket’s top mixologists will be com-
were willing to pay big bucks this winter to
ing up with creative cocktails called Grey Goose Summer Soiree.
ensure that happened.” If these bookings
Keep an eye out for The Grey Goose Summer Soiree and
are any indication, this summer should be
please drink responsibly.
one for the record books.
are spending quite a bit more than in years past. Though weekly rental rates have gone up by 5-10 percent over the past year (and in some cases much more), the total expen-
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tasty
Nosh news
homecoming Written by Josh Gray
Photography by Kit Noble
One of Manhattan’s hottest spots, The Grey Lady, makes its way back to its Nantucket namesake this Figawi. the old Bamboo. Three bars (one in the main dining room, one on the second floor, and one on the rear patio) will anchor a seating plan for more than seventy-five guests. Antique tin ceilings have been installed along with custom sconces, with new banquettes highlighting the space. Doing the majority of the work themselves, the owners are putting their signature mark on the business. “We hire tradesmen when we have to, but we are building the tables, doing the tile and grout all ourselves,” said Ryan. “That way if something goes wrong, as things often do, we know how to fix it.” The co-owners, who recently opened another Grey Lady location
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in Aspen, Colorado, have brought
52
alk down the right block in
inspired restaurant back to its island
in Boston-based executive chef Da-
the Lower East Side of Man-
namesake by opening in the space
vid Nevins for their Nantucket op-
hattan and you might stumble upon a
of the long-defunct Bamboo Supper
eration, a graduate of the Culinary
portal to Nantucket. Opened by three
Club.
Institute of America (CIA) who has
island summer residents, The Grey
“The New York location is cer-
worked extensively with another
Lady on 77 Delancey Street has en-
tainly more a bar focus as we tend to
well-known chef on Nantucket, Todd
joyed wide acclaim as a slice of is-
get busiest at night,” said co-owner
English. Formerly the chef de cuisine
land living in the Big Apple. As one
Ryan Chadwick, “but Nantucket will
at English’s “Olives” in Charlestown,
New York Times review put it, “With
be an equal balance of dining and
David has held an array of top posi-
this atmosphere, the food doesn’t
bar.” Although there are plans to give
tions in restaurants around New Eng-
have to be good, but it is.” This Me-
the Grey Lady’s interior a complete
land, garnering high Zagat ratings
morial Day weekend, the Grey Lady
renovation, this season the restaurant
and three star reviews from both the
gang is bringing their Nantucket-
will retain much the same layout as
Boston Globe and Boston Herald.
On Nantucket, Nevins’s menu will largely focus on fresh, local seafood with a price point for entrees in the mid-twenty dollar range. “We focused on the things we enjoyed from all those years here on Nantucket like lobster and Cisco beer,” said co-owner Callum McLaughlin. In addition to special touches like fresh baked lobster rolls from Wicked Island Bakery and local oysters from the new Grey Lady oyster farm (owned by Nantucket fisherman Chuck Connors), the menu will feature an array of succulent appetizers including “big belly” Maine clams, short ribs and tuna carpaccio. Entrees will include selections such as pan roasted native flounder, grilled swordfish kabobs, a tuna tartare sandwich, custom burgers and a hearty fisherman’s stew.
A rare commodity on Nantucket, the restaurant will feature an array of cocktails on tap, including a signature Moscow mule. The partners even plan to have former Bamboo proprietor Shannon Haddon guest bartend during this inaugural season. Chadwick said he and his friends believe their brand will speak for itself at the mid-island locale. “New York City isn’t an easy place to do business, so we feel like we got our feet wet in the right place,” said Ryan Chadwick. “We’ve all spent a lot of time here on Nantucket and really hope that this restaurant ends up being our flagship location.” N magazine
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NSpire
54
Found in
Translation Written by Josh Gray
Photography by Kit Noble
How island resident Maria Partida is helping bridge the growing LANGUAGE GAP ON NANTUCKET
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55
hen Maria Partida was
initiatives and state and federally man-
asked to attend a gathering of
dated programming. That population now
island non-profits at the Westmoor Club
represents over 14 percent of the students
this spring, she had no idea that she was
in the local school system. They are a seg-
going to end up as a featured speaker.
ment of a larger number of ethnic minori-
Having become a well-known advocate
ties that now make up nearly 45 percent of
for Nantucket’s ever-growing Hispanic
NPS, according to data collected by Splaine
population in recent years, Maria was an
over the past twenty-plus years.
obvious choice for the organizers of the
With the revival of the economy in re-
Camp Safety Summit, a collective of more
cent years, there has been a renewed influx
than forty island organizations that host
of immigrant families coming to Nantucket
summer camps and programming for chil-
from all corners of the globe for work. There
dren. They gather each spring to discuss
are currently eleven identified languages
best practices, safety, and new ways of im-
spoken in the halls of NPS besides English,
proving the lives of children on Nantucket.
and the ELL program, which had ninety-six
When Maria left the stage after telling her
students participating at some level in 2013,
story, the audience of more than seventy-
now has over 230. Splaine said that number
five nonprofit workers was in tears.
does not reflect the seventy to eighty stu-
A mother and homemaker who emi-
dents that have exited the program and now
grated from Mexico to Nantucket by
are considered mainstream. All told, more
way of Washington State in 2000, Maria
than ninety of these students have gradu-
unexpectedly found herself becoming a
ated from Nantucket High School after
community advocate. It all started when
completing the ELL program.
friends and family began asking her to
Maria explained that many of the families
serve as their translator when they needed
she assists come to Nantucket because they
to go to Nantucket Cottage Hospital or
hear of good jobs, but at first often struggle
communicate with any number of island
to understand the culture and fit into the
institutions. Soon strangers as well as ma-
American landscape. Although seeking a
jor island institutions such as the Nantuck-
better quality of life is the primary reason
et Public Schools (NPS) started calling.
why people come here, it is not the only rea-
“We couldn’t have enough Maria Par-
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tidas,” said Jeremiah Splaine, the NPS
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son. Some come to Nantucket because their lives literally depend on it.
director of English Language Learners
“A lot of these people have had it re-
Services (ELL). “We need people like her
ally tough,” she explained. “The gangsters
with the inclination and energy to improve
[in Mexico] are terrible and many have to
the schools and the community. She is
live on as little as $5 a day. That is all they
someone we really value in terms of advo-
have to buy food. Hunger is another real is-
cacy and giving us good input.”
sue that they’ve faced. So there are people
Since the early 2000s, the island’s
running away from the violence, but they
public school system has held classes and
are all here to work and help their families.”
programs aimed at integrating and assimi-
One of the refugees Maria referenced
lating the ELL community through local
when speaking to the Camp Safety gath-
ering was a woman she now considers a close friend, who originally came from a war-torn El Salvador, where as a child of less than ten years old, she was raped and beaten. The woman also witnessed dozens of hangings and other killings by military factions. Years later, in an effort to escape the horrid violence, she decided to make the dangerous journey to America in order to give her family a future. This took her through Guatemala and Mexico by foot and hidden in vehicles—only to end up nearly starved to death and abandoned just over the Texas border by human traffickers. In a desperate attempt to save herself, she called one of the smugglers who had abandoned her. The woman she spoke to on the phone took pity on her and she eventually made her way to Nantucket where some family members had already established themselves, receiving asylum from them and eventually the U.S. government. With tears running down her cheeks while recounting this story, Maria said it is for people like her that she does this work. Maria currently sits on several advisory boards in the school system as well as elsewhere in the Nantucket community. She was even asked to run for the school committee, but Maria said she’s not ready to take that on just yet. “I feel like people know me and I’ve always enjoyed volunteering,” she explained. “They just need someone who is willing to help, and because I have the language, I am able to give them what they want to say, but can’t. I know the island and the people. A lot of people have given me so much, I just want to give back.” The island’s spirit of generosity Maria spoke of at the Camp Safety Summit this spring manifests itself in a variety of ways. For the Hispanic community, with which she is so involved, that spirit of generosity is one of inclusion. “There are many places where the Hispanic, immigrant commuNantucket is different.” With the selfless help of Maria Partida, the community only stands to improve.
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nity is not doing well,” she explained, “but
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Ishmael Beah
58
Central African Republic UNICEF Camp for children of war. Š UNICEF/Brian Soko
NSpire
WRITE TO
freedom Written by Mary Haft
How the written word transformed the life of Ishmael Beah — a journey that continues with a visit to the Nantucket Book Festival this June.
Having fled the killing fields of war in Sierra Leone, running for a new life in a new world, Ishmael Beah discovered the importance of words—words on a page. A former child soldier in Sierra Leone, Beah was brought to America, where schools were unwilling to accept this teenage boy because he had no report card and no records. “My words were not sufficient,” Beah says. “Do you really think when someone is running from war, running for your life, you are thinking about your report card?” This became the topic of his first essay, entitled “Why I Do Not Have a Report Card.” That essay—those words— propelled him into a scholarship at the United Nations International School, where he completed his high school years. “I began to realize words could become something that I could use to bring things to life,” he says. “Proof that I had existed.”
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59
s a student at Oberlin
is pulling you back. “I wanted to show the struggle,”
College, scrambling for
Beah explains. “When people return they are no longer
a different kind of sur-
the same; they view the world differently.” Paraphras-
vival, Beah submitted
ing an influential writer Albert Camus he says, “The
a short story to a writ-
role of a writer is not to represent those who make his-
ing competition for a
tory but rather those that suffer history.” He continues,
chance to win a cash
“Over the years I have thought
prize. Win it he did,
about it quite a lot. What gives one
gaining not only cash but also the attention of his pro-
person the ability to survive? One
fessor, writer Dan Chaon, who took him under his wing
thing that I had in common with
and nurtured this burgeoning talent.
others who had survived is that I
“We eventually became close,” Beah says. “I told
had a memory of what it meant to
him about my background, told him that I had a very
be loved, to have a family, to have
difficult story to write. Very heavy, I have to warn you.”
a community. I had that founda-
This was a story Beah hadn’t shared before. There was
tion.” Beah also had an adoptive mother, Laura Simms,
never enough time to explain his former life as a child
who built on that foundation of family.
soldier conscripted into service at age thirteen, having
Radiance of Tomorrow is a lyrical evocation of a re-
lost his mother and father and most of his family in the
turn to a village life in which language is a way to return
war. He’d been trained to do unspeakable acts, and was
back home, a poetic parable of post-war life. “Mende,
drugged on a daily basis to be able to perform them. For
my mother tongue, the first language I spoke, was the
a child of war, life as a child soldier was the only safe
way in which I invite the reader into this world, this
spot, death the only alternative.
landscape, using the oral traditions of how things are
His writing became an ex-
said.” Imagery becomes language, used to capture the
ploration of how one survives such
imagination of the reader, and to make the characters
horrors. From those beginnings,
come alive with words.
his first book, entitled A Long Way
Ishmael Beah is proof that how you tell your story,
Gone: Memoirs of a Boy Soldier
how you shape your narrative, can change the way you
was borne. With it came the re-
live in the world. In refusing
alization that he had a voice that
to be freighted by the weight
could reflect humanity and alter the
of war and of memory, Beah
way one looked at the reverberations of war. He wrote
illuminates the shadows of
of the commonality of humanity, of what it is to be hu-
life and brings us with him
man and what it is to survive. Beah cautions against the
in his radiance of tomorrow.
idea of a metric of suffering, pitting one’s pain against another’s. “When the human spirit is in pain, it is the
Join Ishmael Beah at
same, whatever the grief,” he explains. “There are so
the Nantucket Book
many ways in which humanity suffers that there is equal
Festival this June as
value for all. Once we begin to belittle another’s suffer-
he shares his expe-
ing, we are digging a grave for everybody.”
riences with a Nan-
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Beah’s second book, Radiance of Tomorrow, became
60
an exploration of how you move forward while the past
tucket audience.
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Central African Republic UNICEF Camp for children of war. Š UNICEF/Brian Soko
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63
Ben Stiller
FUNNY YOU Interview by Robert Cocuzzo
SHOULD ASK Interview by Robert Cocuzzo
Portrait by Matthias Vriens-Mcgrath
On the twentieth anniversary of the Nantucket Film Festival, lifelong island summer resident Ben Stiller gives N Magazine an exclusive interview about his life on Nantucket, his love for the Film Festival, and how he’s kept people laughing after all these years. N MAGAZINE: Can you tell us about your history on
participated in lots of different ways. It feels very organic.
the island and how it relates to you getting involved with the Nantucket Film Festival?
N MAGAZINE: You are one of the only original board
BEN STILLER: Nantucket played a significant role in
members of the Film Festival, why have you remained so com-
my adolescence, since my parents have owned a house there
mitted to the festival for all these years?
since I was a kid. In fact, I would say my parents are respon-
BEN STILLER: Two reasons. They have some very
sible for me being a part of the festival, since they are the most
damaging photos of me making out with my third cousin
powerful show business couple on the Island—after Chris and
behind the Chicken Box back in 1980. Long story. And as a
Kathleen Matthews. Also I went through all of my awkward
writer-director myself, I deeply believe in the mission of sup-
teen experiences there—and the great ones, too. So I knew a
porting up-and-coming screenwriters.
lot of the people who formed the festival.
It’s also been exciting for me to see the festival develop
In 1995, when the festival first started, they asked if I’d be
over the years, and I continue to meet great people, and see
interested in joining the Board of Directors, and I said yes im-
some excellent films. In 1995, my film The Cable Guy opened
mediately. Right after I made sure it was okay with my mom and
NFF, and during the festival, I met a young writer-director named
dad. It was the first time anyone asked me
John Hamburg, who was attending NFF
to be on a board of anything. I am still fig-
with a short named Tick. John and I have
uring out what that means exactly.
become great collaborators since then, working on movies like Meet the Parents,
a part of the festival in many ways. My
and Zoolander. If a festival is able to foster
sister, Amy, has done readings and Late
those sorts of relationships, that’s some-
Night Storytelling there and we all have
thing I want to be involved in.
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Our whole family has always been
From left, Peter Farrelly, John Hamburg, Ben Stiller and Harold Ramis. 2009 Nantucket Film Festival’s Comedy Roundtable
64
ND Nquiry
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65
N MAGAZINE: Everyone knows you as
an actor, but can you talk about your work as a writer and a director and how it relates to your passion for the Nantucket Film Festival? BEN STILLER: Great films all begin with a great script. I know that’s a tired expression, but it’s true. Seeing new artists emerge from the festival is always inspiring. I have so many lasting relationships that have come out of this festival, both creatively and personally. It is a vibrant, creative space and it is about new talent and emerging filmmakers. Hard not to get inspired by that. N MAGAZINE: Can you talk about how
your parents have been committed to Nantucket and the festival over the years? BEN STILLER: My parents have been
involved with the festival for as long as I have. They have both had several films that screened at the festival, including The Daytrippers in 1996 and A Fish in a Bathtub in 1998. They’ve both participated in numerous Staged Readings, including one that I directed called Spectacle: Part One of the Mark Rosen Chronicle. For several years, my mom was the host of Late Night Storytelling, which is one of NFF’s most popular programs. And my dad loves collecting all the free T-shirts, which my mom and I love returning the next day to the wonderful and understanding festival workers who were actually selling them.
N MAGAZINE: One of your biggest influences on the festival is the
Comedy Roundtable. Why do you think there needs to be greater attention paid to comedy writers and the craft of screen writing in general? BEN STILLER: I saw the festival as an opportunity to gather a bunch
of great comedians, who could come to the island and talk about not just performing, but also writing their material, their processes, and their inspirations. I love how this has become a way for folks to put a face to all
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the craft that goes into their work. Also it is always a different experience
66
depending on who is there. But what is great is that people get a sense of the type of commitment that goes into doing any sort of writing, especially comedy, where the idea is you shouldn’t ever be thinking about that.
N MAGAZINE: How were those early
As I mentioned, I feel strongly about the
N MAGAZINE: There’s been a couple
Film Festivals different than what we have
fact that the festival exists to celebrate writing
movies shot on Nantucket in recent years.
today? What makes the Nantucket Film Festival
and storytelling. We’ve been fortunate enough
Would you ever shoot a movie here, and if so,
unique?
to show some really incredible films over the
do any movie ideas come to mind that the is-
BEN STILLER: In the early days, it was
years as well. I saw Richard Linklater’s Boyhood
land would lend itself to?
run on good will and a few circus tickets. Now,
for the first time at last year’s Closing Night
BEN STILLER: Something about the
it’s evolved into a substantial machine run on
screening, and was really blown away.
Sunken Ship and the legendary “old salt” who runs it, Phil Osley. Actually I am the old salt who
a real thing here now, and the history of the
used to work there in my teens. And the sto-
festival speaks for itself. It has become a part
ries I have about Phil would definitely make for a
of the culture of Nantucket Island, and a part
great movie. Probably not family fare, but a great
of the economy too. It has been really cool to
coming of age story for sure, with exciting scuba
see it grow.
diving scenes.
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good will and still some circus tickets. We have
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20 years of Nantucket Film Festival
N MAGAZINE: What’s your favorite Nantucket memory?
2014
Screenwriters Tribute Aaron Sorkin
2013
Screenwriters Tribute David O. Russell
2012
Screenwriters Tribute Nancy Meyers
2010
NFF Partners with PIXAR
2009
First Annual All-Star Comedy Roundtable Presented by Ben Stiller
2008
First Compass Rose Acting Award Meg Ryan
2007
Feature Film Evening Claire Danes
2006
Feature Film the illusionist Edward Norton
2005
Screenwriters Tribute Steve Martin
2004
Feature Film Garden State Zach Braff
2003
First Female Screenwriters Tribute Ruth Prawer Jhabvala
BEN STILLER: Probably one of the first times I fell for a girl when I was about fifteen. And she actually liked me and was a little older. It was a pretty amazing summer. I think she was like seventeen. That’s another movie. Actually I think they already made it. One Crazy Summer, with John Cusack as me, or who I wanted to be. N MAGAZINE: What’s your favorite beach? BEN STILLER: I’ve loved Children’s since I was a kid, and love
taking my kids there. And it has always been good for Jerry Stiller sightings in the colder months, doing his Polar Bear thing. And then there’s Cisco, and Madaket, and Surfside and Nobadeer, and if you have the four-wheel permit, Great Point. All so beautiful. N MAGAZINE: You can spend your vacations anywhere in the
world. What is it about Nantucket that brings you back year after year? BEN STILLER: The cheap real estate. Actually, I think it is just
2002
Launch of Late Night Story Telling Brian Williams
2001
Feature Film Hedwig & the angry inch
2000
Screenwriters Tribute Paul Schrader
1999
Feature Film Run Lola Run
1998
Screenwriters Tribute Ring Lardner Jr.
the place itself is so special, and small, and unique. I think anyone who comes again and again comes for that feeling. Anytime of year is different and beautiful in its own way. I love it and have so many
N magazine
great memories.
68
1997
Feature Film the full monty
1996
The First Annual NFF Opens with The Cable Guy
There Is No Better Measure Of Success Than Client Satisfaction.
“ “
Michael was a tremendous help when my family and I relocted from Denmark to Boston, swiftly addressing every issie that arose along the way.
”
— Dr. Ulrik Juul Christensen Chief Executive Officer of Area 9 and Senior Fellow at McGraw Hill
Michael Carucci’s knowledge, advice, and guidance of the Boston market is extraordinary. The result was a dream house at a perfect price. To put it simply, he is a master of his craft.
“ “ “
— Mark Cattini Chief Executive Officer Autotask Corporation
” ”
Michael has an exceptional ability to uncover opportunities in an otherwise very competitive market. His follow through and execution make all the difference. — Bruce A. Percelay Chairman of The Mount Vernon Company
Michael is a star broker. By that, I mean he brings buyers and sellers together and makes deals happen. — Larry Curtis President of Winn Companies
Michael Carucci brings a high level of enthusiasm and professionalism to his transactions, instilling a strong sense of confidence in his client. — Glen Kelley Publisher of Boston Common Magazine
”
”
Michael L. Carucci
Executive Vice President Gibson Sotherby’s International Realty 617.901.7600 GibsonSotherbysRealty.com
N magazine
Each office independently operated.
69
epth
Oldest the
Salt Written by Jason Graziadei
Photography by Kit Noble
How the Nantucket community kept its last commercial fisherman staying afloat.
The ten thousand-pound basking shark came out of the water headfirst into Bill Blount’s net, thrashing in the stern ramp of his commercial dragger, the Ruthie B. Though they are the second largest fish in the world, basking sharks eat plankton, so they pose no threat to humans—at least when they’re still in the water. But this one, the size of a small bus, was now on Blount’s boat and big enough to injure him or worse as he worked to free it from his net. Blount, the captain of the last offshore commercial dragger out of Nantucket, was about sixty miles east of the island in the legendary fishing grounds of Georges Bank. As he attempted to cut the massive shark out of his net, Blount started to slip underneath it and got pinned. “I didn’t want to go under it,” he remembered. “The thing weighed 10,000 pounds!” Blount’s crew managed to grab him, and slowly pulled him out of the ramp and away from danger. Minutes later, they successfully freed the enormous fish, too. Two years after his run-in with the basking shark, Blount sat in the safety of the living room of his mid-island home on Vesper Lane on a chilly morning in March, recalling for me one of the countless stories from his decades spent plying the offshore waters of New England. Over the course of our conversation, Blount twice reminds me that his trade is “the most dangerous job in North America.” About once a year out on the water, he says, “there’s been a case when I should have lost my life.” Yet these days, it isn’t the inherent dangers of offshore fishing that have him worried. Blount is essentially trying to survive as a momand-pop venture in a consolidating industry that is in the throes of a painful collapse.
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“We’re a broken industry
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now,” he says. “And we just don’t have any money.”
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lount gives a Cliffs-Notes ver-
tucket’s long legacy of launching fisher-
the water. “I had no clue what Kick-
sion of the misfortunes that have
men out into the Atlantic and beyond.
starter was,” Blount said. “I figured,
befallen the commercial fishing busi-
Last spring, however, his ride almost
let’s give it a try. I didn’t know what I
ness of the Northeast: the declining fish
came to an end. Blount’s insurance com-
was doing, but I said ‘sure, let’s try it.’”
stocks, the ever-tightening regulations
pany said that he couldn’t leave the dock
The Kickstarter campaign featured vid-
and restrictions, as well as the rising
until the Ruthie B had been hauled out,
eos of Blount and his wife describing
costs of keeping his 36-year-old boat
had its hull cleaned and repainted, and had
their dilemma, along with island restau-
up and running. But this old salt has
an audio gauge to determine the thickness
rateurs and others singing the praises
learned some new tricks along the way.
of its steel. Blount simply didn’t have
of Blount, the Ruthie B and the fish
With a little help from some friends,
the money to make the repairs or cover
he brings back to the island. A goal of
Blount is now using the Internet to capi-
a down payment. And yet he needed to
$27,000 was set.
talize on the crowd funding and direct-
fish to get money. It was a catch-22 that
As the campaign got underway, the
to-consumer trends that have launched
Blount couldn’t see his way out of. “There
question lingered: would the communi-
projects, preserved challenged business-
was consideration of this being the end,
ty answer the call and really come to the
es, and upended entire industries. And it
and I can’t probably go anymore,” Blount
rescue of a for-profit fisherman? “I had
just might keep him afloat.
said. “I had to consider that.”
no idea,” Blount said. “I was amazed on
At 69, Willis “Bill” Blount cuts
Word of his predicament leaked out
an unassuming figure, at least when
in the community, and Blount was soon
he’s on land. Blue-eyed, bearded and
connected with the island non-profit Sus-
It started as a trickle. With the help
bespectacled, he speaks thoughtfully
tainable Nantucket, an organization that
of social media, it became a torrent.
with a soft and measured voice about
saw value and something meaningful in
By the end, 143 people had committed
the challenges of captaining the last
keeping the Ruthie B operating. A plan
$34,170, far exceeding Blount’s goal
dragger out of Nantucket. Even as the
was hatched to utilize Kickstarter—the
with time to spare. With the money in
island’s commercial fishing bona fides
crowd funding company that allows us-
hand to haul the boat, pay for fuel, and
have faded in recent decades, Blount
ers to make online donations to projects
make all the necessary repairs and in-
remains a living connection to Nan-
seeking funding—to get Blount back on
spections, Blount was able to return to
the first day when some money started coming in.”
the water last summer.
in they can,” he said. “If you’re reason-
For Blount’s wife, Ruth, for whom the
ably able to filet fish, it’s probably the
Ruthie B is named, the experience elicited a
best deal, money-wise, you’re going to
range of emotions. “It was a very humbling
get. And you also get to try all different
experience, and also very heartwarming,
species.” Blount recently expanded the
and it was also extremely stressful,” she
CSF to New Bedford, where the Ruthie
said. “Just wanting to do it with integrity,
B is currently docked due to the extensive
hating to ask, and we didn’t really get Kick-
damage done to the Nantucket town pier
starter yet…For us, it was the only way to
during this past winter’s storms.
get over this hurdle.”
Back on Vesper Lane, Blount swipes
Featured throughout the Kickstarter
a gnarled finger across the screen of his
campaign was the Ruthie B itself. Blount,
iPhone, quickly scanning through the re-
who holds a degree in mechanical engineer-
sults of a Google image search for “bask-
ing from the University of Maine, designed
ing sharks” to show me the true size of
and built the Ruthie B in his father’s ship-
the fish he encountered in Georges Bank.
yard in Warren, Rhode Island over the span
Whether it’s Kickstarter, Facebook, or
of a little more than a year in the late 1970s.
an Apple smartphone, Blount is clearly
On most days, Blount was the foreman of
unfazed by the technology. He becomes
the construction crew as the seventy-seven-
most animated, however, when I asked
foot steel-hulled boat came together.
him why, despite all the hardships and
The Kickstarter campaign also provided
difficulties of plying one of the most reg-
Blount with a way to showcase another new
ulated fisheries in the world, does he con-
innovation he had adopted from others: a
tinue to fish even as he approaches sev-
Community Supported Fishery program,
enty? “Fishing,” he says, “is fascinating.”
or CSF, modeled after the community-sup-
The troubles he described earlier
ported agriculture movement that is help-
fade away, and Blount speaks of his
ing many small farms. Instead of selling his
trade with a certain joy and romanti-
catch solely to fishmongers and restaurants,
cism that might make a person question
the CSF allows Blount to sell shares of fish
their own chosen profession. “When
to individual consumers before each of his
you leave the dock and you start going
offshore trips, so they absorb both the risks
and all of a sudden it’s like going into
and rewards of his business. Each share
another world, like going into Narnia,”
costs $50, and is worth about ten pounds or
he says. “You go through a curtain and
more of whole fish.
you come into a whole new world, a to-
“When I leave the dock I give them
tally different world that a person on the
an e-mail or call them and tell them I’m
shore would never be aware of. There’s
going fishing, if they want to cash a share
beauty like you can’t believe.”
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Multiple Personalities
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Photography by Kit Noble
Technical Assistance by Brian Sager
Production Designer by Anne Breeding
Art Direction by Justin Cerne
NVogue
THEATRE WORKSHOP As a preview to its 2015 season, the Theatre Workshop of Nantucket takes N behind the scenes to see its leading stars before they take the stage.
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(Top row, left to right) Megan Cowher, Ben Rudd, Jessica Jensen, and Vince Veilleux. (Bottom row, left to right) Sarah Fraunfelder, Caleb Kardell, Laurie Richards, Sarah Nabulsi, Steve Axelrod and Susan McGinnis. (Cynthia Cassaby not shown. See page 81).
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umors
May 29-June 20 By Neil Simon
umors: tall tales of explanations that often mix truth and untruth; gossip; hearsay. You’ll find more than one “rumor” in Neil Simon’s classic farce. From the moment the host shoots himself in the head (a flesh wound) to the arrival of the police searching for his missing wife, this anniversary party engages its eight guests in a relentless game of truths
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and side-splitting hilarity.
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etrayal spins a complex web of lies and deceit over a seven-year extramarital affair. Emma is enmeshed in a love triangle with her husband Robert and his best friend Jerry. But who is betraying whom? Pinter’s use of reverse chronology shakes up conventional dramatic form. Winner of the Olivier Award for Best New Play in 1979, and the New York Drama Critics’ Circle Award, Betrayal probes the corrosive nature of disloyalty and obliviousness to the feelings of others.
July 1-August 1 By Harold Pinter
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etrayal
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nto the
woods July 15-August 29
Book by James Lapine Music & Lyrics by Stephen Sondheim N magazine
wish”—two words that have inspired some of the greatest fairy tales of our time—comprise
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the theme in Stephen Sondheim’s and James Lapine’s musical, Into the Woods. A baker and his wife, a girl in a red cape, a boy with magic beans and a maiden longing to escape her life of servitude, all seek to make their dreams come true. A Broadway smash and now a major Disney motion picture, Into The Woods proves that reality may not be far from the fairy tales we all love.
ther desert
Cities
August 19- September 19 By Jon Robin Baitz n this riveting drama, by award-winning playwright Jon Robin Baitz, Brooke Wyeth returns home to Palm Springs after a six-year absence to celebrate Christmas with her parents, her brother, and her aunt. Announcing that she is about to publish a memoir dredging up a pivotal and tragic event in the family’s history, Brooke draws a line in the sand and dares them to cross it. Nominated for the Pulitzer Prize in 2012, this biting, razor sharp play will keep you on the edge of your seat.
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teel magnolias September 9 - October 10
By Robert Harling
obert Harling’s first play was met with immediate critical and popular acceptance in its premier production by New York’s WPA Theatre and went on to become a major film success. A group of gossipy southern ladies in a small-town beauty parlor set the scene for a play that is hilarious and touching—and ulti-
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mately deeply revealing of the strength and purposefulness which underlies the antic banter of its characters.
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oseph amazing November 20 - December 13 Music by Andrew Lloyd Webber Book and Lyrics by Tim Rice seph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat is an irresistible family musical about the trials and triumphs of Joseph, Israel’s favorite son. It’s a magical musical, full of unforgettable songs, including “Those Canaan Days,” “Any Dream Will Do” and “Close Every Door.”
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ne of the most enduring shows of all time, Tim Rice’s and Andrew Lloyd Webber’s Jo-
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INTO AFRICA
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Written by Robert Cocuzzo
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Photography by Catherine Porter
Adventure N Summer resident Stephanie Capuano is taking Nantucketers on mind-blowing African adventures. hen Stephanie Capuano drives down Milestone Road headed to Sconset, where her husband’s family has summered for four generations, she always makes sure to gaze out the window at the Serengeti. For her, the sight of Nantucket’s sprawling Middle Moors conjures vivid memories of her recent adventures in Africa, where she organizes luxurious, high-end safaris for a company called Tin Trunk Safari. During summer cocktail parties on Nantucket, it’s hard for Capuano not to gush over what a remarkable continent Africa is, but she inevitably gets asked the same question: Is it safe? “I wish I could shake everyone and say, ‘It’s not a scary place at all,’” Stephanie said. “Once you get there your mind is just blown. It’s the most humbling experience in the world because of its vastness and its beauty. You look out at all the land and the animals and you realize you’re this tiny speck in the world.” Stephanie became involved with Tin Trunk Safari through a longtime friend, Nella Nencini. Twelve years ago, Nella, a half Italian, half American academic went on a safari in Africa. The experience changed her life dramatically. Nella ended up moving to Kenya where she became a bush pilot and started a safari company offering high-end luxury tours. Three years ago, Nella asked Stephanie to join her. “We put together totally bespoke safaris,” explained Stephanie. “It’s based on what you want to do, how many people you are traveling with, what your travel style is, and how adventurous you are. We put together a perfect trip based on what your desires are.” You can trek in search of gorillas in Rwanda or go on a classic bush game drive in Kenya or Tanzania. If you want a seaside adventure go to Mozambique. Looking for a walking tour? Then total luxury, South Africa is the way to go.
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Zambia is your place. Or if you’re just looking for
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hat makes Tin Truck Safari differ-
prised her with an overnight helicopter camp
witnessed a crocodile eat a zebra. “‘Amaz-
ent from other high-end tour opera-
out,” says Stephanie. “She and her husband
ing’ doesn’t cut it,” Virginia said. “I could
tors in Africa is that Nella and Stephanie do
woke up to get ready for a game drive at six in
hit the thesaurus button all day and never
not own the camps where they operate. This
the morning, watching the sunrise, having their
find the words to adequately describe what
allows them complete flexibility to create
coffee when two helicopters came, and hovered
it is like to sit three feet from a Silverback
experiences in practically any corner of the
in front of the camp. Nobody knew what was
Gorilla—or 15 or so as was the case.” And
continent. And Nella Nencini is there every
going on.” The pilots told Stephanie’s sister and
that was just scratching the surface. Nella
step of the way.
her husband to grab their bags, and whisked
planned surprise breakfasts, dinners, and
them off to an uninhabited island in Kenya
massages. Despite often being in the middle
where a luxurious camp awaited them.
of nowhere, Virginia and her husband always
“She’s considered an African specialist and what she does is travel with you as a co-guide in support of the local
This VIP treatment wasn’t just reserved
found themselves in the lap of luxury. “My
African guide in whatever country we’re in,”
for Stephanie’s own family. Every guest
husband and I have traveled extensively
explained Stephanie. “She micromanages
who books with Tin Truck gets the com-
the world over and this experience was the
your safari. She is almost like your personal
plete star treatment. Just ask lifelong sum-
one that stands out above all else,” she said.
assistant, babysitter, nanny, whatever you
mer resident, Virginia Robinson Mahre,
“Like everyone we tell about our trip, we
need. She makes sure you have your favor-
who booked Tin Truck for her honeymoon
think everyone should go and experience
ite drink at sundown, that you have enough
in 2011. “Nella planned every detail of the
Africa. You will never be the same. Africa
pillows, whatever it is, she plans each day
honeymoon that followed our Nantucket
stays with you. If you have the means to be
perfectly.” Being based in Kenya, Nella
wedding in September of 2011,” said Vir-
introduced to Africa, the way Tin Truck does
incorporates a local element into each trip
ginia. “It was truly the trip of a lifetime, cus-
it, then you will have an experience which
that Stephanie says you could not experi-
tom tailored to our every wish, and unique
will surpass your wildest imagination.”
ence if you booked through a travel agent.
in every detail.”
The only thing Stephanie asks of her cli-
Over the course of eleven days, Vir-
ents is to come with an open mind: “Africa is
way for her clients who may be celebrating
ginia and her husband trekked with sil-
a magical continent of awe-inspiring land-
honeymoons or anniversaries.
verback gorillas in Rwanda, visited an
scape, incredible wildlife and the warmest
elephant orphanage in Kenya, and even
people you’ll find outside of Nantucket.”
“It was my sister’s fiftieth and we sur-
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Moreover, Nella plans surprises along the
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THE TRIP ADVISER HOW MUCH? Prices ranges from $500 to $1,500 per day per person depending on the location, the activities, and the style of tour.
WHERE TO GO? Tin Truck offers safaris in East and South Africa, namely Zambia, Mozambique, Tanzania, Kenya, Botswana, Rwanda and South Africa.
WHEN TO GO? Ideally, book a year in advance so that you can stay at Tin Trunk’s top camps. As for weather, because of Africa’s location near the equator the weather is always warm.
NEED A VISA? Valid passports are required everywhere. Visa requirements vary country-to-country. American citizens generally have easy access to most African countries. For those countries where visas are required, they are easy to come by and many can be purchased upon arrival.
NEED ANY VACCINATIONS? It’s best to check with a travel doctor and the embassy of the countries to which you will travel to determine what is required. Tin Trunk will advise you on this based on where you are travelling. Tin Trunk will send you an extensive list of requirements and a packing list before travel.
HOW TO BOOK?
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Contact Stephanie Capuano at TinTruckSafari.com.
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Daffodil Festival
FoggysheeT nantucket
Brian Glowacki
B Jason Bridges & Holly Finigan
Peep Car
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Tina Kreibich & Charlotte Hess
George Reithof, Anjali and Sonia Dhar
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Br
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Brett Apthorp & Dondi Stojak
Bruce, Elisabeth, William & Charlie Percelay
La
Barbara Vrooman
Colleen & Andrew Bixby
Mary and Peter Barret
Mike Chase, Pinewood Morris Men
Leah Hull
Bridget Rudner & Patti Schram
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Laura Fletcher, Alex Snyder, Mary & Floyd Kelly
Gwen & Mark Snider
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Daffy Bike Parade
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PAN Small Works Big Cause Exhibit
FoggysheeT nantucket
To Jason & Courtney Bridges
David Callahan & Cary Hazlegrove
Joe Olsen & Clay Twombly
Emme Duncan, Tim Ehrenberg, & Santi Scheurell
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Maria Carey & Jean Grimmer
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Sonia Dhar, David Dhouty & Anjali Dhar
Zofia & Mark Crosby
C
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Mary Taaffe & Jen Shalley
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Tom McCann & Mary Jo
Keely Smith & Lisa Paone
Caitlin Marcoux & son Griffin
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXx Amanda Amavel & Cassandra Latawiec The Kelly Family
Michelle Perkins & Scott Leonard
Alicia Kelly & Cary Hazlegrove
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Courtney Bridges, Neil & Lauren Marttilo
Allyson Mitchell & Courtney Bridges
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Fundraiser for Robert Souza at The Box
FoggysheeT nantucket
Katie, Pete & Thea Kaizer
Teka & Jake Toy
Mandy
Jo
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Adrian Rodriguez, Johnathan Rodriguez, Jared Henderson & Friends
Sally Anne Austin, Lynn Tucker & Susan Carey
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Dorthy Hertz, Phil Proch, Judith Salter, Sydney Vonn Lanpes, Rob Souza & Pam Joslin
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Mandy Shannon, Jane Oberg, Tamara Grenier & Caren Oberg Gomes
Johnathan Rodriguez, Dorthy Hertz & Rocky Fox
Jeanie Hobson Dupont & Johnathan Rodriguez
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Noami Harnishfeger & Katia Prado
Chip Webster & Carol Trefethern Photography by Brian Sager
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Ranked among the top new hotels in the world. – Conde Nast Traveler
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A Mount Vernon Company Property
2 1 B R O A D H OT E L .C O M 1-800-NANTUCKET or (508) 228-4749
Nha
Motion
Pictures ou might think that Nantucket is about as far away from the Hollywood lifestyle as you could get. With nary a neon light, billboard, or studio in sight, many visitors flock to this island for an escape from the busy streets of New York or L.A. to the cobblestones of downtown. In fact, Nantucket has long harbored a storied past of thriving arts and entertainment, which seems only fitting for a town that nowadays looks like it’s straight out of a movie. At the turn of the twentieth century, Nantucket (and ‘Sconset specifically) was known for its summer actors colony that attracted major stars of Broadway and film, many of whom spent the entire season on the island and brought their talents to these charming stages by the sea. Take a look at some of the colorful characters of Nantucket’s entertainment history past.
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Bikers checking out Nantucket’s Dreamland Theatre, 1944
Images courtesy of the Nantucket Historical Assocation
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Scene from the Theatre Workshop production of The Fantastics, 1962
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1930s Making a movie on the South Shore, ca. 1936
Local thespians performing in ‘Sconset Heyday, at the Straight Wharf Theatre, 1947
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Scene fromfrom the Theatre Workshop production Scene the Theatre Workshop productionofofBrigadoon, Brigadoon, 1961
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Watching the Alice Brady movie The Sinners being filmed on a set near the ’Sconset Casino, 1920
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Posters advertising the films Vengeance and Sky Hawk showing at the Dreamland Theatre in 1930.
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A o P Broadway actor Harry Woodruff in a spoof on Hamlet, with other members of the ’Sconset Actors Colony, 1910
Scene from the Theatre Workshop production of The Diary of Anne Frank, 1963
Scene from the Straight Wharf Theatre production of Moby-Dick, 1947
.
Costumed members of the ’Sconset Actors Colony, 1910
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Actress and ‘Sconset summer resident Mary Shaw in one of her theatrical roles. Member of ‘Sconset Actors Colony. Prominent comedic actress & feminist, circa 1900s.
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Nuptials Featured Wedding
Bride & Groom: Lauren & Cory lewis Photography: Brea McDonald Photography Catering: Nantucket Catering Company Wedding Planner: Nantucket Island Events Flowers: Flowers on Chestnut Hair & Make-up: RJ Miller Salon Bride’s Dress: Jim Hjelm Bridal Bridesmaids’ Dresses: Coren Moore Groom’s Attire: Blank Label
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Cake: Jodi’s Cakes
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THE GOLDEN RULES OF JUNE Written by Holly Finigan
Photography by Charlotte Carey Photography
A page out of the blACKbook
Every year, right after Figawi until the Summer Solstice, the island of
island hotspots open with $25 lunch specials and $45 three-course din-
Nantucket goes through a little lull. During the first few weeks of June,
ners, it’s the perfect time to dine with a date while getting a deal.
we’re like an arrow slowly being pulled back and ready to hit the beach.
Even though you may not be working on that tan quite yet, work up
We’re infatuated with warm weather and busy nights, and we’re ever so
a sweat with a bike ride all the way down Milestone Road. Bring some
disappointed when they don’t show up.
cash and enjoy a Claudette’s sandwich in Cod Fish Park as you soak in
The local banter is that “summer is coming,” and for many, it can’t
the serenity of ‘Sconset. If you don’t feel like riding back, don’t worry
come fast enough. Throughout those first twenty-one days, we often
about it. Put that cycle on the front of the NRDA and rest your eyes on
become the Goldilocks of ACK. It’s too cold. Where are the beach days?
the seven-mile bus ride to town.
It’s too slow. When do all the people show up? We are constantly in a
Take the downtime in June to read something great, like In The
state of seasonal panic. Is it summer yet? Will it ever come? When can I
Heart of The Sea by Nat Philbrick. Savor the pages of this story on the
stop sporting sweatshirts and start wearing bathing suits?
whaleship Essex as you read it in the peaceful garden at the Atheneum.
See, we are all so worried about where this summer is taking us
By the time the fourth annual Nantucket Book Festival comes around,
that we don’t appreciate the beauty of the present. We wait ten months
your copy will be returned to the library and you can secure your seat to
for a two-month season and spend the better half of an already short
hear Nat speak at the Nantucket Historical Association on the first day
month, anxiously awaiting July and August like a kid at Christmas. But if
of summer (yes!).
there’s one thing I’ve learned over a decade’s worth of Junes, it’s this…
After we turn the page on the Book Fest, the next week is the Nan-
don’t wish it away. Don’t spend your days dreaming of the Fourth when
tucket Film Festival, followed by the Fourth of July the week after…and
there’s still so much to take advantage of during this month that gives
then poof! All of a sudden that arrow has been launched, and we’re flying
us the longest daylight hours of the year.
into full-blown summer mode. That’s the funny thing about the Nantucket
Take some of that hard earned Memorial Day money and treat yourself to Restaurant Week during the first week of June. With so many
season: As soon as it finally hits, all you want it to do is have it slow down. So get off that summer countdown and make every day in June count.
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NOT SO FAST
anchors aweigh
Photo by Joshua Simpson
A quick chat with Surfside resident & legendary newswoman Natalie Jacobson N MAG: What did you love most about being Guild and the Anglers Club, and never NATALIE: Protecting and preserving our island a news anchor?
stopped coming back.
Nantucket was
environmentally and learning how to grow
NATALIE: What I loved most was work- paradise in our own backyard, the ulti- as a community with the greater influx of ing with caring and talented people who mate respite from a very hectic schedule.
immigrants, especially families with chil-
wanted to bring information to those who
dren and the demands that places on our
watched that would make their lives bet-
N MAG: What do you love about living in schools and the people who pay for them.
ter. An anchor wears two hats: one rep- Surfside? resenting her station and colleagues, an-
NATALIE: Surfside remains the Nantucket we N MAG: If you were asked to create a time
other representing those who trusted us fell in love with in 1974. Surfside people
capsule for Nantucket so that people could
enough to watch. I loved the interaction help each other and rely on one another.
understand the island 200 years from now,
with our viewers.
Life centers on the beach where someone
what would you put in it?
will say, “My place for dinner” and every-
NATALIE: Nat Philbrick’s books; A jar of sand;
N MAG: You covered so many stories over one shouts, “What can I bring?”
A video including interviews and profiles
the course of your career. Any favorites?
of people who live here; aerial photos of
NATALIE: My favorite story was the one I N MAG: If you could change anything about the island, the town and the beaches; a copy was covering that day.
Nantucket, what would it be?
of the Inquirer and Mirror, and, of course,
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NATALIE: I wish we would create more hous- N Magazine.
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N MAG: What first brought you to Nantucket? ing for the people who work here but canNATALIE: My former husband and I, each not afford to live here anymore. See more from our chat with Natalie Jacobpilots, used to rent single engine planes at Norwood airport and fly around New
son at N-Magazine.com.
N MAG: What do you think is the biggest
England. We flew to Nantucket, met Pete news story on the island today?
clothing & accessories wine & cheese home & gifts
Open Daily
4 Easy Street 508.228.5073 www.currentVintage.com www.facebook.com/currentVintage photo by Zelda Hessler
photo by Nik Krankl
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N Magazine Advertising Directory
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21 Broad Street 102 ACK Eye 63 Angel Frazier 51 Arrowhead Home & Garden 4 Artists Association of Nantucket 47 Atlantic Landscaping 39 Berkshire Bank 74 Cape Air 114 Christopher’s Home Furnishings 22 Cold Noses 113 Community Foundation 45 Corcoran 37 Cru 31 Current Vintage 113 Cynthia Hayes Interior Design 43 Dujardin Design 27 Emeritus 41 First Republic Bank 3 Four Winds Painting 74 Geronimo’s 113 Gibson Sotheby’s - Mike Carucci 69 Glyn’s Marine 41 Great Point Properties 6,7 Grey Goose 9 Heidi Weddendorf 113 J. Pepper Frazier Co. 8,19,29 Jordan Real Estate 15 Kathleen Hay Designs 5 Lee Real Estate 12,75 Magellan Jets 30 Marine Home Center 16 Maury People - Brian Sullivan 21 Maury People - Craig Hawkins 115 Maury People - Gary Winn 2,23 Michael Humphrey 14 Nantucket Airlines 114 Nantucket Architecture Group 39 Nantucket Boating Club 32 Nantucket Book Festival 20 Nantucket Clambake 84 Nantucket Cottage Hospital 18 Nantucket Historical Assoc. 62 Nantucket Hotel 17 Nantucket Insurance 50 Nantucket Marine 63 Nantucket Media Systems 63 Nantucket Project 93 Nantucket Restaurant Week 92 Nantucket Yoga Festival 84 National Grid 24 Nicole Bousquet Real Estate 50 Nobby Shop 33 North River Outfitters 75 Ocean Reef Club 43 Peter Beaton 31 Peter England 51 RJ Miller - Robert Miller 51 Samuel Owen Gallery 51 Seaman Schepps 13 Sentient Jet 11 Susan Warner Catering 84 Tonkin of Nantucket 35 Victoria Greenhood 35 Vineyard Vines 116 Water Jewels 32 Weatherly Design 101 Windwalker Real Estate 25 WNCK 85 Woodmeister Master Builders 10 Zero Main 33
June 2015
The Local Magazine Read Worldwide
Nantucket Magazine