INSIDE: real estate, p. 12 • lodging, p. 18 • coupons, p. 6 • plus dining, p. 9-11
oregon coast
FREE! May 29, 2015 • ISSUE 51, VOL. 10
Tides • Dining • Theater Events Calendar • Live Music
LIGHT
MY
FIRE Burn a little daylight on the Central Coast lighthouse trail
See page 20
$100,000 up for grabs! Daily prizes all June. ""It's It's B Better et at the Beach!"
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t
Directed by Nancy Mittleman Narrated by Khloella Brateng & Mary Eastman
An original adaptation of “The Jungle Book� by Rudyard Kipling Presented by
Pacific Dance Ensemble Fridays & Saturdays at 7pm
May 22, 23, 29, 30 Sundays Matinees at 2 pm:
May 24, 31 at the Newport Performing Arts Center for more information and tickets call 541-265-ARTS
oregon coast
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MHJLIVVR JVT VYLNVUJVHZ[[VKH` 2 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • may 29, 2015
from the editor
Feeling tenth? In the run up to Memorial Day, something was nagging us here at TODAY Towers. A niggling thought lurking the back of our minds gave us the vague but unshakable feeling that we were about to forget something rather important. Then, from out of the Facebook ether, came the answer. A post from former TODAY publisher Dave Price marking the 10th birthday of the paper he founded with his wife, Niki, in 2005. That first edition hit the streets on May 27, with Depoe Bay’s Fleet of Flowers in pride of place on the front cover, heading up 16 pages of everything to see and do on the Central Oregon Coast. Copies of that first edition are now pretty thin on the ground, due largely to the TODAY’s uncanny ability to attract floodwater wherever it goes. A copy stored in the Prices’ basement fell victim to the Great Otis Flood of 2006, while a framed edition that followed Niki to the Lincoln City Cultural Center was ruined when a water main break inundated that basement earlier this year. Storing a copy in my own crawlspace has led me to study closely the fine print on my home insurance policy. After that first edition, the couple continued to crank out a paper every week for more than seven years, regardless of obstacles ranging from prolonged power cuts and simultaneous bouts of the flu to a little thing called the Great Recession. Now, 10 years and two days later, the TODAY is part of EO Media Group but still published right here on the Oregon Coast and still (much to the regret of many) packed with puns of the most groan-inducing quality. Thank you Dave, and thank you Niki for your dream of the TODAY and the hard work you did to make it a reality.
KennysIGA.com A slightly soggy copy of the first ever TODAY
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oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • may 29, 2015 • 3
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C O M M E N TA R Y • B Y L O R I T O B I A S
Tall ships and high hopes This is a story about tall ships. Sort of. It’s also a story about a tribe of people in a far away land that very few of us have ever heard of. It’s one of those stories you walk into thinking ‘here we have a nice simple, feel-good tale,’ and instead find yourself walking away kind of dazed. And so it was I left my meeting with Matthew McDaniel about the Oregon Tall Ship Project, LLC. My notepad swelled with notes that bounced through a worldwide journey, stopped in Thailand, skittered off to
The Iron Eagle
Laos, back to Oregon, then lingered for a spell on a cross-country trip on horseback. That particular journey, rideforfreedom, saw McDaniel ride his horse “Hampton” 30 or so miles, hide it, hitchhike back to the bus where his family waited, then catch up with the horse. All the way from Lincoln City to New York City. And all to raise awareness and support for the Ahka Hill Tribe in Thailand. It was on that trip that McDaniel got the idea for the tall ship. A ship is wider and longer than a bus,
and as with horses, there’s a certain fascination with tall ships — as anyone who spent time in Newport last week will attest. Plus, Oregon is one of only two coastal states — Mississippi is the other — that doesn’t have its own tall ship. McDaniel has put the money down on the 63-foot, two-masted ketch called Iron Eagle, but still needs to raise about $20,000 (gofundme.com/ oregontallship). He’s set to join Tall Ships America and has started the conversation about docking the vessel at the Port of Newport. McDaniel hopes to offer programs on the ship to help the young build confidence and leadership skills, and of course, to learn to sail. There’ll be scholarships to fund those who can not otherwise afford it. But what McDaniel really wants to do is one day buy a much bigger tall ship and sail to Asia. Because while this is about tall ships, it’s really not. Like the rideforfreedom, it’s about raising awareness of the plight of the Ahka. “Ahka are at the bottom of the totem pole, getting stepped on all the time,” said McDaniel, whose wife, Michu, is a member of the tribe. “There is no connection or reference
point to the outside world to let them know they don’t have to be treated that way.” McDaniel, it turns out, is one formidable human rights advocate, so formidable, he got himself kicked out of Thailand for documenting the atrocities against the local people. He wound up in the Asian country in 1990, where he met Michu. They lived simply in a hut like everyone else. But unlike most everyone else, McDaniel was not willing to let the daily atrocities he witnessed pass without note. The killings and abuses happened to all ages, men and women alike. There was the day on a bridge connecting Burma and Thailand when McDaniel watched as a police officer on a motorbike came up behind a little girl who was begging. The officer grabbed her by the back of the head and slammed her face into the concrete. Another time, a boy crossing the bridge was beaten by police. Later, too terrified to cross the bridge, he tried to swim the river. He drowned. “My last year there, there were a lot of killings,” said McDaniel “I found a reporter. The stories went on the front page of the Bangkok Post for days. All these widows talking about dead
NOW PLAYING LINCOLN COUNTY AREA EVENTS
t Newport Performing Arts Center: PACIFIC DANCE ENSEMBLE – “THE JUNGLE BOOK” t Yachats Commons: OREGON COAST CHAMBER ORCHESTRA – “A SPRING POTPOURRI,” 18TH ANNUAL CRAFTS ON THE COAST t Theatre West, Lincoln City: “LOVE, LOSS & WHAT I WORE” COMEDY BY NORA & DELIA EPHRON t Private Home (360-606-7136): INHOUSE JAZZ – HOT CLUB DU JOUR t Lincoln City Cultural Center: NAOMI GREENE, THE MISTY MAMAS t Lodge at Otter Crest, Otter Rock: JAZZ ON THE CREST – KEN PEPLOWSKI & FRIENDS
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husbands. The paramilitary started shadowing me. I told my wife, ‘We are on the end run here. One of these days I’m going down the mountain and I’m not coming back.’” And sure enough, not long after, McDaniel was sent to an immigration prison for nine days, then flown out of the country. Meanwhile, his wife and kids were trapped in Thailand. He eventually managed to get them out. Today, the couple live with their six children on a farm near Salem. But banned from Thailand, he can’t go back to help. And that weighs on him. That’s where the nonprofit side of the Tall Ship Project, Sailforfreedom. org, comes in. “The space between the Ahka and Oregon is the seawater. Our bridge is our ship,” he said. “What if we could get Ahka here to crew? People all over the world sail. It’s a whole new way to meet people and get the Ahka story out there.” Lori Tobias covered the coast for The Oregonian for nine years. She lives in Newport, where she freelances for a number of regional and national publications. Follow her at loritobias.com.
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oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • may 29, 2015 • 5
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Sit down for a Standing
potpourri
A painter with an art-terrier motive There is still time to see the works of Josephine Allen and Cody Cha in the Spotlight Show that wraps up this Friday, May 29, at Newport’s Yaquina Art Association Gallery. “Art seems to be a human need,” said Allen, who grew up in a creative family in San Antonio,
Texas, but never started painting until she retired. Having lived in Newport for more than 30 years, Allen now considers herself an Oregonian and counts landscapes among her favorite painting subjects.
The Hoffman Center for the Arts’ Manzanita Film Series will screen the 2014 award-winning feature film “A Standing Still” on Friday, May 29. Directed by Scott Ballard of Portland, the film tells the story of a young recluse who works as a fire lookout in the forest and struggles with the future in the midst of loss and displacement. When she is called down early for a medical emergency with her father, she is forced to face both the present and the past that has led her there. Ballard will be in attendance to discuss the film, which was shot on location in the Willamette National Forest, Portland, Cannon Beach and Bellingham. The 75-minute screening will begin at 7:30 pm at 594 Laneda Avenue. Admission is $5 and refreshments will be available.
Join the jet-set Tickets are now on sale for the Greater Newport Chamber of Commerce’s annual awards banquet and meeting, to be held on Friday, June 19, with the theme “The Sky’s the Limit.” The energetic celebration will recognize the 2014-2015 Board of Directors, introduce the 2015-2016 Board and will announce a number of other awards, including Business of the Year and Business Person of the Year. The event will also feature a Dessert Dash, silent auction and entertainment. Tickets are $30 per person and include complimentary beverages, appetizers and buffet dinner. Tables of eight are also available for $275, which includes sponsor recognition. The June 19 event will begin at 6 pm at the Best Western Plus Agate Beach Inn. Guests should RSVP by June 15 to the chamber office at 541-265-8801 or sheena@ newportchamber.org.
By Josephine Allen
Working mostly in acrylic, she also enjoys painting portraits — both of people and of their dogs. “My art is to make people laugh and not take life so seriously,” she said. “The other part is to enjoy the beauty of life. We are given a gift and we should enjoy it every day.” Allen will also feature as a pedestal artisan, with her jewelry and ceramics on show in the center of the gallery, from May 23 through June 5. Cody Cha is an Oregon Coast-based photographer and cinematographer specializing in nature and landscape photography. Driven by love for exploring the great outdoors, his work captures unique and emotional natural beauty of the coast. Cha first discovered the charm of Oregon on a brief visit many years ago. Having lived on the East Coast all his life, he found the Oregon Coast to be a place of captivating landscape and great adventures. Ever since, he knew he wanted to relocate to the Pacific Northwest. He made the move to the Oregon Coast three years ago and now spends most of his time just discovering new places, with or without the fancy camera. Who knows, you might bump into him while you’re out tide pooling or sunset-gazing. The Yaquina Art Association Gallery, located at 789 NW Beach Drive, is open from 11 am to 4 pm daily. For more information, call 541-2655133.
“The Foreigner” prepares for departure Time is running out to catch “The Foreigner,” which wraps up its run in Nehalem this weekend, offering hilarity, romance, action, intrigue — and even a dose of social commentary. The play, presented by the Riverbend Players Theater Company, opens with painfully shy Englishman Charlie Baker taking a vacation at a Georgia fishing lodge. In order to avoid interaction with his fellow guests, Charlie adopts the persona of a “foreigner” who doesn’t understand English. When others begin to speak freely around him, he becomes privy to secrets both dangerous and frivolous; the locals reveal all sorts of secret information — some of it downright shocking. A charming yet zany comedy,
“The Foreigner” has become a theater staple, having earned two Obie Awards and two Outer Critics Circle Awards. The Nehalem production is directed by Sedona K.M. Torres and the cast includes Mike Sims as Charlie, Rosa Erlebach as Ella, Judy Holmes as Betty, Jeff Slamal as Sgt. Froggy, Michael P. Dinan as Rev. David, Betsy McMahon as Catherine and Brian McMahon as Owen. The play will conclude its run with 7 pm performances on Friday and Saturday, May 29 and 30, and a 2 pm matinée on Sunday, May 31, at the NCRD Theatre, 36155 9th Street, Nehalem. Tickets are $15. For tickets or information, email theriverbendplayers@gmail.com.
oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • may 29, 2015 • 7
potpourri Hang out, in Lincoln City
Not to be mist The Weekender Concert Series will go out with a twang on Saturday, May 30, when the Misty Mamas take to the Lincoln City Cultural Center stage for a family-friendly, home-style bluegrass concert. The old-time, folk and gospel quartet have been playing together since 2005 and have made a name for themselves in the Vancouver/ Portland acoustic music scene, with both traditional and original songs combining the all-American genres of bluegrass, folk, gospel and country music. The group have played bluegrass and folk festivals all over the Northwest, from NW Folklife to McMenamins Edgefield and have released a full-length bluegrass album, “Wild Rose of the Mountain.” The Misty Mamas’ normal line up is Katherin Nitsch on guitar, Eileen Rocci on upright bass, April Parker on mandolin and accordion, and Carol Harley on guitar, banjo and mandolin. With Harley out on medical leave, Saturday’s concert will see Rocci’s husband, Tony, fill in — bringing clean, tasteful flatpicking guitar solos and strong rhythm playing. “We call him the Misty Papa,” Parker said. The concert will begin at 7 pm in the auditorium of the cultural center at 540 NE Hwy. 101; doors open at 6:30 pm. Tickets, $18 in advance or $20 at the door, are on sale at the box office, by calling 541-994-9994 or online at lincolncityculturalcenter.org. A selection of Northwest beers and wines, My Petite Sweet cookies and bars, and Mountain Man savory snacks will be sold before the show, and during intermission.
Works of art created by students will hang alongside those of their instructors as the Spring Members’ Art Show gets underway at the Artists’ Studio Association in Lincoln City. The show, which opens with a public reception on Saturday, May 30, showcases work completed during the past year by beginner, intermediate and advanced artists. The pieces are juried in four categories – Watercolor, Oil/ Acrylic, Mosaics and Other, a category that includes mediums such as mixed media, pastel, pen and ink, block printing and photography. The judging panel consists of artists Katia Kyte, Susie Henderson and Marilyn Burkhardt. The reception will run from 1 to 3 pm at 620 NE Hwy. 101, the same building as the Co-op Gallery. The show will remain on display until June 13. In addition to the Spring Art Show, the ASA offers many affordable and fun art classes. For details, go to www.AsaArt.net. For more information, call 541994-7519 or 541-996-4442.
The Misty Mamas...
...and a Misty Papa
Dealing with a Perpetua problem In the Cummins Creek Wilderness near Cape Perpetua, patches of tansy ragwort are soaking up the sunshine, blissfully unaware that their days are numbered. That’s because the Siuslaw National Forest and City of Yachats are organizing a weedpulling expedition to deal with the invasive plant Saturday, June 6, as part of National Trails Day. Volunteers should meet at 9 am at the Cape Perpetua Visitor Center, 2400 S. Hwy. 101, where they will then carpool or be shuttled to the wilderness area. The group will hike 2.5 miles along the Cummins Ridge Trail, removing any tansy ragwort plants they encounter. Tansy ragwort (Senecio jacabaea) is a yellow
flowering plant from Europe that is poisonous to livestock when ingested. Honey and milk derived from animals exposed to the plant contain the toxin as well. Volunteers will be treated to a brief Native American flute performance before the expedition, and then a free lunch afterwards. Tools and water will be available during the hike, but participants are encouraged to bring their own gloves, water bottles and gardening tools. The Siuslaw National Forest will be waiving all day-use fees during National Trails Day. To participate in the event and RSVP for lunch, contact Cape Perpetua Volunteer Coordinator Susan Fox at 541-547-3289.
8 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • may 29, 2015
Trail work day The Nature Conservancy is looking for volunteers interested in helping maintain trails at the Cascade Head Preserve just north of Lincoln City on Saturday, June 6. The outing will involve a fourto five-mile round-trip hike with elevation gain and could require volunteers to hike off trail and stand on uneven ground while working. Participants should bring hiking shoes, a day pack, lunch and snacks, a full water bottle, layers of clothing including rain gear and a hat, sunscreen and gloves, if available. To register, call 503-802-8100, email orvolunteers@tnc.org or call the alternate contact, Debbie Pickering at 541-994-5564.
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Tide Tables | The TODAY’s Dining Guide
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Throw yourself in The Clay Studio at Manzanita’s Hoffman Center for the Arts will present another wheel-throwing workshop on Friday, June 5, with potter J S Hauer at the helm. This workshop will cover an introduction to basic clay-throwing principles and
the effective use of studio’s throwing equipment. There will be plenty of hands-on practice time with real-time coaching. The class will run from 10 am to 1 pm at the center, located at the corner of Laneda Avenue and Division Street. The cost is $30, which
includes three pounds of clay and three hours of instruction, use of studio tools, kiln firing and glazing. The cost for follow-up work time at the studio is $2 per hour. Register online at hoffmanblog.org, or email hoffmanclaystudio@gmail. com.
Reflections of an advocate
A firsthand account of some of the nation’s landmark civil rights battles will be on offer at the coast on Saturday, May 30, as the Rev. Dr. Max Glenn visits the Yachats Academy of Arts and Sciences. In “Reflections of an Advocate,” Glenn will share his thoughts on three decades of civil and human rights struggles. Among his many accomplishments and various leadership roles, Glenn was intimately involved in the Appalachian struggles for human and civil rights in the early 1960s, the desegregation of public schools in the
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1970s and the Family Farm Crisis of the ’80s. He will share firsthand experiences of organizing grassroots folks to participate in decision making as well as developing economic alternatives and lobbying in Washington, DC and state legislatures. The presentation will begin at 6:30 pm at the Yachats Commons, 441 Hwy. 101 N. There is no charge but a donation of $5 will help cover publicity expenses. For more information, go to yachatsacademy. org or call 541-961-6695.
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Manzanita’s Hoffman Center for the Arts will host a class on pencil and charcoal drawing techniques on Saturday, June 27, led by Wes Cropper. The workshop, designed for students age 13 and up, will show how to draw objects in perspective and apply texture, lighting and shading to create complete composition. Students will take home their drawing kits and three finished pieces of art. Tuition is $50, with an additional $20 materials fee. The workshop will run from 9:30 am to 3 pm at 594 Laneda Avenue. Based in Newberg,
oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • may 29, 2015 • 9
on stage
A theatrical duo-over A
Karen Downs as Catherine and Karen Martin as Lily
sparkling partnership has returned to the Tillamook stage as Karen Martin and Karen Downs reunite in “The Orphans,” a touching and funny play about reclusive sisters forced to confront the outside world. The pair, who last starred together in 2012’s “A Fine Monster You Are,” play the wealthy Spangler sisters, Lily and Catherine, who, in the wake of a family tragedy, retreat within the walls of the grand Chalfont Hotel. Throughout their quarter-century stay, the hotel and its guests have steadily declined in stature. With an energetic floozy next door and a gossipy operator constantly on the phone, there is seldom any peace. As the play opens, Mr. Ervin, who has handled the sisters’ affairs for years, comes to visit and warns of a claim to their family fortunes. Distrustful and afraid of the outside world, Lily must cope with 25 years of history, while Catherine yearns to break free and explore life. This latest production from the Tillamook Association for the Performing Arts is directed by Chris Chiola. “This play is a colorful story of the love of two sisters who have faced
tragedy and who now must stare down the reality of the world,” he said. “I hope audiences will appreciate the humor and antics of these ladies.” This is Chiola’s fifth time directing for TAPA, having previously directed comedies like “Never Kiss A Naughty Nanny,” “Inspecting Carol,” the compilation play “You Know I Can’t Hear You When The Water’s Running,” and “Sex Please, We’re Sixty.” The cast includes several veteran actors, as well as some first-timers. Karen Martin plays Lily, with Karen Downs as Catherine, Jackson Morris as the Bellboy, Martin Cherry as Mr. Ervin, Val Braun as Florette and Diane Cross as Maxine. The run will continue through Sunday, June 7, with performances at 7 pm on Fridays and Saturdays, and 2 pm matinées on Sundays. Doors open 30 minutes prior to curtain. The Barn Community Playhouse is located at 12th and Ivy. Tickets $15 for adults, $10 for seniors and students or $40 for a family of four, can be purchased by contacting Diamond Art Jewelers at 503-842-7940. For more information, email info@tillamooktheater. com or go to www. tillamooktheater.com.
Lily (Karen Martin) places a call from the sisters’ room in the once-grand Chalfont Hotel
Pic a theme
Tickets are now on sale for TAPA’s 35th Birthday Party, “Picnic Under the Stars,” which will be held on July 25 in the Officer’s Mess Hall at Port of Tillamook Bay. Grab your friends, reserve your table and come out to celebrate 35 years of community theater with a perfect picnic. Tickets are $20 apiece or $200 for a table of 10. Each table decides on a picnic theme, decorations and what food items to bring along. Funds raised from the event will got toward adding new, ADA-compliant restrooms to the theater. Tickets are available at Diamond Art Jewelers, 503-842-7940. Lily (Karen Martin) admires the getup of the floozy Florette, plated by Val Braun
10 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • may 29, 2015
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oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • may 29, 2015 • 11
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12 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • may 29, 2015
541- 994- 3577 800- 357- 7653
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36 9 1 N W Hw y 101, L in co ln City, OR
on stage Don’t Baloo your last chance
Robin Kirsch
Wear will you be this weekend? This weekend is the last chance for theater fans interested in seeing Nora and Delia Ephron’s “Love, Loss and What I Wore” brought to life in Lincoln City. The play is based on a book by Ilene Beckerman about outfits she’d worn throughout her life and the memories associated with them. The Ephron sisters added their own stories and those of some of their friends, creating a piece that has resonated with audiences around the world. The stories range from humorous; each cast member shares a story about going through a Madonna phase, to the poignant; a character describing her bout with breast cancer. The cast is made up of seven Theatre West veterans: Idaliise Putansu, Elizabeth Black, Mary Bea Sakraida, Susanna Hiltmann-Rich, Robin Kirsch, Linda Jackson and Patti Siberz. “The show is very personal for a lot of people and is very
thought provoking,” Director Danielle Ryan said. “After rehearsal for the first few weeks we would sit around for another half hour or 45 minutes just telling stories that the show brought up, which is really cool.” “Love, Loss, and What I Wore” will be performed at 8 pm
Mary Bea Sakraida
Thursdays through Saturdays until May 30, at Theatre West, 3536 SE Hwy. 101, Lincoln City. Tickets are $14 for adults or $12 for seniors and students. The show contains some strong language. For information or to purchase tickets, call 541994-5663, or go to www. theatrewest.com.
The Newport Performing Arts Center will be filled with cunning wolves, sly tigers and a rather famous man cub as the Pacific Dance Ensemble concludes its run of “The Jungle Book” this weekend. Directed by Nancy Mitttleman, the show is based on Rudyard Kipling’s classic novels “The Jungle Book,” first published in 1894, and “The Second Jungle Book,” which followed in 1895. The show features guest narrators Mary Eastman and Khlo Brateng, who have given voice to numerous shows for the ensemble. As narrators, they view themselves as a linguistic bridge between the audience and the dance. “We help make the visual more accessible to all kinds of audiences, no matter what age,” Brateng said, “whether they know the story of ‘The Jungle Book’ or not.” Mittleman said the trick for these two veteran actors is to project only their voices onto
Zephyr Kreis-Stokes as Shere Khan
the stage and otherwise to remain invisible. “Barely lit to the left of the stage, they stand quietly, taking their queues from the dancers and the music, performing an eloquent disappearing act,” she said. “At first, the audience is torn between watching the narrators and watching the stage but as the performance continues, more and more Eastman and Brateng’s
fantastic array of voices are just there and one feels like the voices emanate from the dancers themselves.” Sets for “The Jungle Book” were originally designed by Mark McConnell. Costumes draw from original designs by Alice Haga who worked on Mittleman’s 2000 production of “The Jungle Book,” while the dancers’ masks owe a debt to the work Lynn Getner did for the original show. Ernest Brown and Marc Maislen have teamed up to put the Performing Arts Center’s new lighting system to the test with their lighting design for the production. The show’s two-week run will conclude this weekend, with performances at 7 pm on Friday and Saturday, and a 2 pm matinée on Sunday. Tickets, $15 for adults or $10 for students and children, are available from the box office, by calling 541-265ARTS or online at www. coastarts.org.
Sophia Goodwin-Rice as wolf pack leader Akela
oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • may 29, 2015 • 13
Friday, May 29
Coast Calendar
Naomi Greene
“Illusionary”
“Love, Loss and What I Wore”
Waldport Farmers Market
Lincoln City Cultural Center The young Franco-American songwriter brings her brand of alternative folk and rock to Lincoln City, playing songs tinged with jazz, experimental sounds and operatic fantasy on electric harp and guitar. 7 pm, 540 NE Hwy. 101. Tickets, $10 in advance or $12 on the door, available by calling 541-994-9994 or online at lincolncity-culturalcenter.org.
Newport Visual Arts Center Prepare to have your mind blown by this collection of works from Lincoln City artist Kristan Bendixen, featuring acrylic and mixed-media paintings, including new pieces from her Seascape Series. Free. Show runs through July 3, noon to 4 pm, Tuesday to Saturday. 777 NW Beach Drive.
Theatre West • Lincoln City A collection of powerful stories told by women from all walks of life — each of which relates to a specific garment. Funny, compelling and thought provoking. Contains strong language. 7:30 pm, 3536 SE Hwy. 101. $14 for adults, $12 for seniors and students. For tickets, call 541-994-5663.
Waldport Community Center The place to shop for flowers, potted plants, jewelry, tie dyes, glass art and more. 10 am-4:30 pm, 265 Alsea Hwy.
“A Standing Still”
“Love, Loss and What I Wore”
The Cape Meares Light
Theatre West • Lincoln City A collection of powerful stories told by women from all walks of life — each of which relates to a specific garment. Funny, compelling and thought provoking. Contains strong language. 7:30 pm, 3536 SE Hwy. 101. $14 for adults, $12 for seniors and students. For tickets, call 541-994-5663.
The Hoffman Center for the Arts • Manzanita The Manzanita Film Series continues with this 2014 award-winning feature film from Portland’s Scott Ballard, telling the story of a young recluse who works as a fire lookout in the forest and struggles with the future in the midst of loss and displacement. $5. Refreshments available. 7:30 pm, 594 Laneda Avenue.
“The Jungle Book”
“The Foreigner”
Newport Performing Arts Center The Pacific Dance Ensemble brings Mowgli, Shere Kahn and the rest of Rudyard Kipling’s characters to life in this dance spectacular, directed by Nancy Mittleman and narrated by Mary Eastman and Khloella Brateng. $15 for adults, $10 for kids. 7 pm, 777 W. Olive Street. FMI or to buy tickets, call 541-265-ARTS.
NCRD Theatre • Nehalem In this comedy from the Riverbend Players Theater Company, painfully shy Englishman Charlie Baker avoids interacting with his fellow lodge guests by pretending he can’t speak English. By keeping his ears open he becomes privy to all sorts of secret information — some of it downright shocking. $15. 7 pm, 36155 9th Street. FMI, email theriverbendplayers@gmail.com.
“Fluid Connections”
Learn to Excel
Newport Visual Arts Center An exhibit of works of Robin Longerbeam, which combine up to 20 layers of paint to create fascinating texture, color and form. Free. Show runs through July 3, noon to 4 pm, Tuesday through Saturday, 777 NW Beach Drive.
Newport Public Library The library’s free computer classes continue with, at 9 am, “Beginning Excel,” followed at 10 am by “Intermediate Excel.” 35 NW Nye Street. Registration required. FMI, call 541-265-2153 or go to www.newportlibrary.org.
Saturday, May 30 cont. “The Orphans” Barn Community Playhouse • Tillamook A touching and funny story of two sisters who, in the wake of a family tragedy, retreat within the walls of a grand hotel, only to find the world creeping in a quarter century later. Tickets, $15 for adults, $10 for seniors and students or $40 for a family of four, available by calling 503-8427940. 7 pm, 12th and Ivy. FMI, go to www.tillamooktheater.com.
Barn Community Playhouse • Tillamook A touching and funny story of two sisters who, in the wake of a family tragedy, retreat within the walls of a grand hotel, only to find the world creeping in a quarter century later. Tickets, $15 for adults, $10 for seniors and students or $40 for a family of four, available by calling 503-8427940. 7 pm, 12th and Ivy. FMI, go to www.tillamooktheater.com.
Yachats Commons Rev. Dr. Max Glenn visits the Yachats Academy of Arts and Sciences to share his reflections on three decades of civil and human rights struggles. $5 suggested donation. 6:30 pm, 441 Hwy. 101 N. FMI, go to yachatsacademy.org or call 541-961-6695.
Spotlight Show Yaquina Art Association Gallery • Newport See photography and colored pencil works from Seal Rock couple Richard and Alice LaFond as well as pencil work from local graphic designer Jane Westhusing. Show runs through June 13, available to view 11 am to 5 pm daily, 777 NW Beach Drive. FMI, call 541-265-5133.
Newport Performing Arts Center The Pacific Dance Ensemble brings Mowgli, Shere Kahn and the rest of Rudyard Kipling’s characters to life in this dance spectacular, directed by Nancy Mittleman and narrated by Mary Eastman and Khloella Brateng. $15 for adults, $10 for kids. 2 pm, 777 W. Olive Street. FMI or to buy tickets, call 541-265-ARTS.
Lincoln City Farmers Market Lincoln City Cultural Center Set up on the center’s front lawn, the market’s vendors offer homegrown, home-baked and handcrafted treats. 9 am-3 pm, 540 NE Hwy. 101. FMI, call 541-994-9994 or go to www.lincolncityfarmersmarket.org.
Embracing Self Love
“The Foreigner”
Marine Drive • Yachats Ongoing gatherings for women and girls to liberate, nourish and celebrate the spirit, led by Diana Kekule. $10-20 suggested donation. 1-3:30 pm, 436 Marine Drive. FMI, email luvsea33@gmail.com or call 541-614-0924.
NCRD Theatre • Nehalem In this comedy from the Riverbend Players Theater Company, painfully shy Englishman Charlie Baker avoids interacting with his fellow lodge guests by pretending he can’t speak English. By keeping his ears open he
Max Glenn
Boomer Sunrise Slot Tournament
June 2nd, 2015, 8:30am
Yachats Commons Try out for a role in the upcoming production of Dan Goggin’s “Nunsensations! The Nunsense Vegas Revue,” a musical comedy requiring five women. Come prepared with a song (accompaniment available). 2 pm and 7 pm, 441 Hwy. 101 N. FMI, call Director Robbie Schoonover at 541-547-3786 or facebook.com/One.of.Us.Productions.
Lodge at Otter Crest • Otter Rock Help raise funds for the Oregon Coast Jazz Party with this evening of music from four jazz pros, featuring Peplowski on saxophone and clarinet, Tom Wakeling on bass, Randy Porter on piano and Todd Strait on drums. 7 pm, 301 Otter Rock Road. Tickets, $25 in advance or $30 on the day, available at www.jazzottercrest.com.
Monday, June 1
Wednesday, June 3
“Walk with a Ranger”
Gospel Hootenanny
Cape Perpetua Scenic Area • Yachats Join retired chief park ranger Michael Noack for a guided, 30- to 60-minute hike along easy-to-moderate trails. Free, but a day-use fee or recreation pass is required. Noon, three miles south of Yachats on Highway 101. FMI, call 541-547-3289.
St. Peter the Fisherman Lutheran Church • Lincoln City Sing and play gospel songs with Casey, Rod and the pastor. If you have an instrument, bring it along. Noon, Hwy. 101 at SW 14th Street. FMI, call 541-994-8793.
Waldport Wednesday Market Waldport Community Center The place to shop for flowers, potted plants, jewelry, tie dyes, glass art and more. 10 am-4:30 pm, 265 Alsea Hwy.
Pole Athletics Lincoln City Cultural Center Join New Moon Yoga for this free demonstration of a workout that is making its way out of bars and into the gym. Led by Internet sensation Soren High, who will teach a pole athletics class starting June 8. All ages and genders are welcome. 3 pm, 540 NE Hwy. 101. FMI, call 971-303-9646.
“The Orphans” Barn Community Playhouse • Tillamook A touching and funny story of two sisters who, in the wake of a family tragedy, retreat within the walls of a grand hotel, only to find the world creeping in a quarter century later. Tickets, $15 for adults, $10 for seniors and students or $40 for a family of four, available by calling 503-842-7940. 2 pm, 12th and Ivy. FMI, go to www.tillamooktheater.com.
Boomer Nooner Slot Tournament
June 2nd, 2015, 12:30pm
Complete rules are available at Winners Circle. Management reserves the right to change the offer at any time.
• Lincoln City, Oregon • 1-888-CHINOOK • chinookwindscasino.com
14 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • may 29, 2015
Auditions
Ken Peplowski & Friends
Newport Performing Arts Center The Pacific Dance Ensemble brings Mowgli, Shere Kahn and the rest of Rudyard Kipling’s characters to life in this dance spectacular, directed by Nancy Mittleman and narrated by Mary Eastman and Khloella Brateng. $15 for adults, $10 for kids. 7 pm, 777 W. Olive Street. FMI or to buy tickets, call 541-265-ARTS.
Driftwood Public Library • Lincoln City Tucked away at the library’s south end, this book lover’s paradise offers a huge selection and unbelievably low prices. Hosted by Friends of Driftwood Library, with all proceeds benefiting library programs and needs. 10 am to 2 pm, second floor, 801 SW Hwy. 101. FMI, call 541-557-9400.
becomes privy to all sorts of secret information — some of it downright shocking. $15. 2 pm, 36155 9th Street. FMI, email theriverbendplayers@ gmail.com.
Register for 250 player points, receive $7 restaurant voucher, and DOUBLE POINTS. Win up to 2000 $and Dollars! Guest may play in one tournament per day.
"It's Better at the Beach!"
Highway 101 & Angle Buy local at this outdoor market, featuring locally made handcrafts, art, specialty foods and fresh fruits, vegetables and farm products from Lincoln County farms and growers from surrounding areas. 9 am to 1 pm, across from Newport City Hall. Look for the Red Rooster signs pointing the way.
Book Sale
Car Wash Tillamook Farmers Co-op • Tillamook Get your ride good and spotless while helping send the Powered by Teen 4-H club to a Washington DC Leadership and Citizenship Conference. An adjacent bake sale means you get to drive away with something more substantial than just good karma. 10 am to 3 pm, 1920 Main Avenue N. FMI, call 503-842-3433.
Newport Farmers Market
“The Jungle Book”
Sunday, May 31
Lincoln City Cultural Center The Weekender Concert series goes out with a twang as this home-style quartet serve up helpings of all-American bluegrass, folk, gospel and country music. 7 pm, 540 NE Hwy. 101. Tickets, $18 in advance or $20 at the door, available at the box office, by calling 541994-9994 or online at lincolncity-culturalcenter.org.
Artists’ Studio Association • Lincoln City An opening reception for this show, which sees works from association students hanging alongside those of their instructors; featuring watercolors, oils, acrylics, mosaics and more. 1 to 3 pm, 620 NE Hwy. 101. Show runs through June 13. FMI, call 541-994-7519 or 541-996-4442.
NCRD Theatre • Nehalem In this comedy from the Riverbend Players Theater Company, painfully shy Englishman Charlie Baker avoids interacting with his fellow lodge guests by pretending he can’t speak English. By keeping his ears open he becomes privy to all sorts of secret information — some of it downright shocking. $15. 7 pm, 36155 9th Street. FMI, email theriverbendplayers@gmail.com.
“The Orphans”
The Misty Mamas
Spring Members’ Art Show
“The Foreigner”
“The Jungle Book” “Reflections of an Advocate”
Saturday, May 30
Join
BOO M Club ER
in th
e Fun
!
Tuesday, June 2
Yachats Farmers Market Yachats Commons Find locally grown produce, fresh-cut flowers and plants, great food and amazing art and crafts at this buzzing market. 9 am-2 pm, 441 Hwy. 101 N.
Community Drum Circle Don Davis Park • Newport This family friendly, group offers fun for all ages and skill levels on the first and third Tuesdays. 6-8
Save some green, play Twilight Golf! "It's Better at the Beach!"
pm in the glass-enclosed gazebo across from the Performing Arts Center. FMI, call Chandler Davis at 541-272-4615 or email chandler@chandlerdavis. com.
Thursday, June 4 Mingle and Muse Sitka Center for Art and Ecology • Otis The center’s summer lecture series kicks off with a talk from Jerry Franklin, one of the pioneers of forest ecosystem research. He is a past president of the Ecological Society of America, was a panelist on the White House Forest Conference in 1993, and has served on the Board of Governors of the Nature Conservancy. Free. Mingling starts at 4:30 pm and the talk begins at 5 pm, 56605 Sitka Drive. Take Three
9 Holes
Mon-Thurs
Fri-Sun
Cart Seat
Twilight (after 3pm)
$22
$24
Add $10
Super Twilight (After 6pm)
$15
$15
Add $10
Rocks Road from Highway 101 and follow the signs. Light refreshments will be provided. FMI, call 541-994-5485.
Yachats Big Band Dance Yachats Commons Bring your dance shoes, or just sit and listen to Big Band and Swing era classics, played by a 17-piece orchestra. $5 suggested donation. Kids under 12 swing for free. 7-9 pm on the first Thursday of the month, 441 Hwy. 101. N.
Summer Golf Rates: May 16 - September 15
• 3245 NE 50th Street • Lincoln City, OR • (541) 994-8442 • chinookwindscasino.com
oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • may 29, 2015 • 15
urchins
Make a New ToDo DiscoverNewport.com
THERE’S NO PLACE LIKE ZONE Registration is now open for the Kids Zone Summer Camp in Depoe Bay, which offers nine weeks of fun activities and creative learning opportunities for school-aged children. Organized by Neighbors For Kids, the camp runs from June 22 through August 21, with sessions from 8 am to 5:30 pm Monday through Thursday and from 8 am to noon on Fridays. This summer, the camp will offer new activities for all age groups, as well as some of the favorites children have enjoyed during past camps, such as visits to the beach, kayaking on the lake and the annual Jr. Iron Chef Challenge and end-ofsummer camp out. Some of the new exciting one- and two-week themed activities include “Olympic Team Building,” with obstacle courses, challenges and Olympic history; “Lighten Up,” which will see students studying the sun, light refraction, prisms, electricity and all things bright; “I Believe I Can Fly,” which takes fun to the skies with airplanes, kites, bubbles and an awesome field trip; and “On the Hunt” with archaeological digs, scavenger hunts, mapping and more. Camp begins each day with
16 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • may 29, 2015
the Sunshine Club, running from 8 am to noon. Open to children under 12 years old, it includes a continental breakfast served at 9 am. The Sunshine Club costs $7 per day, and volunteer opportunities are available for older youth. The afternoon sessions, which run from noon to 5:30 pm Monday through Thursday, are aimed at older kids, with classes in art, science, technology, music and nutrition. Fees are $10 or $5 for the session, depending on family income, and include an afternoon snack. Limited partial scholarships are available for children
willing to take on volunteer commitments. As a sponsor of the USDA Summer Food Service Program, Neighbors For Kids will serve a healthy lunch from 12:15 to 1 pm daily, Monday through Friday, free to all children aged 1 to 18. Parents must provide appropriate supervision for any unregistered children under 12 years old. Throughout camp season, the Kids Zone bus will be doing morning pickups from Newport to Gleneden Beach at $3 per pickup. For more information, go to www.neighborsforkids.org or call 541-765-8990.
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540 NE Hwy. 101
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10445 Neahkahnie Creek Road, d, on Hwy. 101 in Manzanita (503) 368-2292
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Thurs., May 28 Fri., May29 Sat., May 30 Sun., May 31 Mon., June 1 Tues., June 2 Wed., June 3 Thurs., June 4
3:54 am 4:42 am 5:25 am 6:06 am 6:08 am 7:25 am 8:04 am 8:45 am
Tillamook Medical Plaza
Siletz Bay, Lincoln City
1100 Third Street, next to the hospital in Tillamook ok (503) 815-2292
Thurs., May 28 Fri., May29 Sat., May 30 Sun., May 31 Mon., June 1 Tues., June 2 Wed., June 3 Thurs., June 4
Bayshore Medical Lincoln City
Date
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1105 SE Jetty Avenue, on Hwy 101 across from Tanger Mall in Lincoln City ty (541) 614-0482
4:21 am 5:06 am 5:46 am 6:23 am 7:00 am 7:38 am 8:16 am 8:56 am
Yaquina Bay, Newport Date
ϮϮ
Thurs., May 28 Fri., May29 Sat., May 30 Sun., May 31 Mon., June 1 Tues., June 2 Wed., June 3 Thurs., June 4
3:43 am 4:28 am 5:08 am 5:45 am 6:22 am 7:00 am 7:38 am 8:18 am
Alsea Bay, Waldport Date
TillamookRegionalMC.org
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For significant pain, injury or difficulty breathing, always dial 9-1-1 for emergency care.
/LQFROQ &LW\
Thurs., May 28 Fri., May29 Sat., May 30 Sun., May 31 Mon., June 1 Tues., June 2 Wed., June 3 Thurs., June 4
3:57 am 4:50 am 5:38 am 6:22 am 7:04 am 7:45 am 8:26 am 9:08 am
Low Tides
1.8 1.1 0.5 -0.1 -0.7 -1.1 -1.4 -1.5
High Tides
3:36 pm 4:25 pm 5:10 pm 5:53 pm 6:35 pm 7:17 pm 7:59 pm 8:42 pm
2.0 2.2 2.3 2.5 2.5 2.6 2.6 2.7
9:50 am 10:51 am 11:46 am 12:36 pm 12:09 am 12:48 am 1:27 am 2:07 am
5.6 5.8 6.0 6.7 8.3 8.5 8.6 8.6
3:49 pm 4:34 pm 5:16 pm 5:57 pm 6:37 pm 7:18 pm 8:00 pm 8:45 pm
1.3 1.5 1.6 1.7 1.8 1.8 1.9 1.9
9:48 am 10:47 am 11:37 am 12:23 pm 1:06 pm 12:12 am 12:49 am 1:28 am
4.1 4.3 4.5 4.8 5.0 6.6 6.8 6.8
3:11 pm 3:56 pm 4:38 pm 5:19 pm 5:59 pm 6:40 pm 7:22 pm 8:07 pm
2.0 2.2 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 2.8 2.8
9:39 am 10:38 am 11:28 am 12:14 pm 12:57 am 12:03 am 12:40 am 1:19 am
5.4 5.6 5.9 6.2 6.4 8.6 8.8 8.8
3:46 pm 4:35 pm 5:22 pm 6:08 pm 6:52 pm 7:36 pm 8:20 pm 9:05 pm
1.8 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.2 2.3 2.3 2.3
9:46 am 10:47 am 11:42 am 12:32 pm 12:04 am 12:42 am 1:20 am 2:00 am
5.0 5.1 5.3 5.5 7.4 7.6 7.7 7.7
Low Tides
1.1 0.7 0.2 -0.1 -0.5 -0.7 -0.9 -1.0
9:54 pm 10:28 pm 11:02 pm 11:37 pm --1:47 pm 2:30 pm 3:13 pm
5.8 6.0 6.2 6.5 -5.1 5.2 5.3
High Tides
Low Tides
1.6 1.0 0.4 0.0 -0.5 -0.8 -1.0 -1.1
7.4 7.8 8.1 -6.6 6.9 7.0 7.1
High Tides
Low Tides
1.6 1.0 0.4 -0.2 -0.7 -1.1 -1.4 -1.5
10:10 pm 10:51 pm 11:30 pm --1:23 pm 2:08 pm 2:53 pm 3:37 pm
9:45 pm 10:19 pm 10:53 pm 11:28 pm --1:38 pm 2:21 pm 3:04 pm
7.5 7.8 8.1 8.4 -6.6 6.8 6.9
High Tides
10:06 pm 10:46 pm 11:25 pm --1:19 pm 2:03 pm 2:47 pm 3:31 pm
6.7 7.0 7.2 -5.7 5.9 6.0 6.1
Bold = Minus Tides. Tide tables are for recreational use. If you’re piloting the “Costa Concordia II” in front of your college roommate’s oceanfront bungalow at Otter Crest or Cape Lookout, talk to a harbormaster. Tide info courtesy tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov. If you discover a seal pup or other stranded marine animal on the beach, do not approach, touch, or pour water on the animal. Instead, call 800-452-7888. Keep dogs leashed and far from all marine mammals. Japanese Tsunami Debris Info: Information on significant marine debris sightings on the coast can be reported to the NOAA Marine Debris Program at DisasterDebris@noaa.gov.
oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • may 29, 2015 • 17
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18 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • may 29, 2015
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in concert
You’d be in-Seine to miss this Transatlantic singersongwriter Naomi Greene will bring her brand of alternative folk and rock to the Lincoln City Cultural Center on Friday, May 29, playing songs tinged with jazz, experimental sounds and operatic fantasy on electric harp and guitar. Versatility is the trademark for this young Franco-American songwriter, whose works are difficult to classify. Perched on the edge of rock, but with mesmerizing melodic richness, her songs are unusual and sometimes experimental, but always with a catchy hook. Growing up in the artistic circles of Paris, Greene has been immersed in music for as long as she can remember, starting with classical training in the harp. She drew away from the conservatory as a teenager to start her first rock band, Cat King, when she was only 14. She taught herself how to play guitar, and her band played numerous concerts in Paris, including shows at the Gibus, the notorious New Morning and at
the Elysee Montmartre. When the band split up, she started playing solo shows and soon got cast by director Christopher Thompson in 2010’s “Bus Palladium” as Rizzo. Impressed by her mature songwriting, Thompson asked her to perform her own composition “Iron House” in the movie and it was chosen as one of the film’s main theme songs. Shortly after, German director Lars Knorrn hired Greene to help score his film “Silhouettes.” As her career in music and cinema began to flourish in Paris, Greene had a growing desire to study music in the USA. She left Paris at the age of 18 and studied at Bard College for two years. It was an important period of growth in her songwriting, and she performed with a band under her name in New York City and upstate. In 2012, she started attending the California Institute of the Arts, where her collaborations brought her into new artistic territory, exploring multi-
disciplinary performances with sound, movement and theater. Greene currently resides in Los Angeles, where she performs regularly in various formations: as a solo artist, with her band, and with her new electric harp and synth-ambient pop duo, Veda. Friday’s two-set concert will begin at 7 pm in the auditorium of the center, 540 NE Hwy. 101. Tickets, $10 in advance or $12 on the door, are available by calling 541-994-9994 or online at lincolncity-culturalcenter.org.
A family affair
Greene’s concert ties together with a month-long exhibit in the center’s Chessman Gallery entitled “Dreams and Dwellings,” which features paintings by her mother, Leslie Greene, and sculptures by her grandmother, Alicia Newman. The exhibit is up through June 6, available to view from 10 am to 4 pm, Wednesday through Monday at 540 NE Hwy. 101.
A jazz party favor Ken Peplowski & Friends will take to the stage at the Lodge at Otter Crest this Saturday, May 30, for an evening of jazz to raise funds for the upcoming Oregon Coast Jazz Party. Funds raised from the concert will go toward the jazz clinics that accompany the October festival, allowing coastal music students to learn from world-class musicians. Peplowski himself was an early starter in the jazz field. By his early teens, he was playing in the school bands as well as jamming with many of the local jazz musicians. “By the time I hit high school, I was teaching at the local music store, playing in our family band, and playing jazz gigs around town while still getting up early every day for school,” he said. Since then, Peplowski has collaborated with a litany of musicians, including Mel Tormé, Madonna, Rosemary Clooney, Woody Allen and Erich Kunzel. Peplowski will be playing saxophone and clarinet, accompanied on bass by Tom Wakeling, a musician who has played for more than 40 years in concert halls, jazz nightclubs, recording studios and at music festivals throughout North America and Europe. Joining them on piano is Randy Porter, a Steinway artist who has a refined understanding of improvisation and the spontaneous communication between musicians. He draws from a rich palette of sonorities found within his imagination and the depths of the piano. Rounding out the quartet is drummer Todd Strait, a native of Topeka,
Ken Peplowski
Kansas, who started playing trumpet and drums while still at elementary school. Eventually, braces pushed the trumpet out of the picture and it’s been drums ever since. The concert, hosted by Oregon Coast Council for the Arts and Just Jazz Inc,
will run from 7 to 10 pm at the lodge, located at 301 Otter Rock Road, Otter Rock Advance tickets are $25, rising to $30 on the day of the show. For tickets or more information, go to www. jazzottercrest.com.
oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • may 29, 2015 • 19
LIGHT MY
on the cover
T
Although the shortest of Oregon’s lighthouses, the Cape Meares Light boasts the largest lens
The Yaquina Bay Lighthouse came close to demolition but now thrives as a historical attraction
he Taj Mahal has a deserved reputation as a romantic building. Commissioned by Mughal emperor Shah Jahan to house the tomb of his third wife, the vast palace took 20,000 artisans some 19 years to complete and is widely recognized as one of the world’s finest architectural wonders. But as far as sheer romance goes, Oregon Coast lighthouses have got Jahan beat. Maybe it’s the sound of the crashing surf, maybe it’s the breathtaking beauty of their natural surroundings, maybe it’s just all those negative ions messing with our brains but the result is clear — lighthouses set our souls alight. To be most useful, a lighthouse must be built in the most dangerous and visible location. Thus, a tour of Oregon Coast beacons will take you to some of most rugged outcroppings that pioneering mapmakers could find. Standing on Yaquina Head or Cape Meares, you can begin to appreciate the engineering and labor that was required to erect these structures, and the patience and loneliness of those who lived there. Of the eight sentinels still standing on the coast of Oregon, from Tillamook Rock in the north to Cape
Location: On the Three Capes Scenic Route, 10 miles west of Tillamook and Hwy. 101 Height: 38 feet tall, 217 feet above sea level Illuminated in: 1890 Named for Captain John Meares, who was the first to sail into Tillamook Bay around 1788, this cape offers views of the bay to the north and the Three Arch Rocks National Wildlife Refuge to the south. The lighthouse was constructed from bricks, which were made on site, and iron plates, made in Portland and shipped by horse and wagon. Its first-order Fresnel lens was made in Paris and shipped around Cape Horn and up the West Coast. Crews built a wooden crane with native timber to hoist the fragile lens 217 feet up the cliff. After its commission in 1890, the beacon’s signature (30 seconds of fixed white light, followed by a 5-second red flash) could be seen 21 miles out to sea. It was powered by lamp oil until 1934, when it was modified to run on electricity, via an onsite generator. The Cape Meares Lighthouse was decommissioned in 1963, when the U.S. Coast Guard installed a
The view from Cape Meares, one of the few lighthouses that visitors approach from above
The Queen Anne-style keeper’s house at Heceta Head
20 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • may 29, 2015
Blanco in the south, the Central Coast boasts four — each of which is perfect for a day trip or as part of a soulstirring lighthouse tour.
Cape Meares
fully automated beacon. Since then, it has been maintained by Oregon State Parks, local volunteers and the non-profit Friends of Cape Meares Lighthouse and Wildlife Refuge Inc. The lighthouse is open from 11 am to 4 pm daily from April through October, and the park, trails and overlook are open from 7 am to dusk each day. There is no day-use fee. For details, call the managing ranger’s station at nearby Cape Lookout, 503-842-3182, or go to capemeareslighthouse.org.
Yaquina Head Location: Off Hwy. 101, three miles north of Newport Height: 93 feet tall, 162 feet above sea level Illuminated in: 1873 Having emerged from its protective scaffold earlier this year, Oregon’s tallest lighthouse is again open to the public, resplendent in a fine new coat of paint. The tower was built with 370,000 bricks and a first-order Fresnel lens on a narrow point of basalt just south of Cape Foulweather. continued on page 21
A shot of the Yaquina Bay Lighthouse in harder times
FIRE continued from page 20
The light has been automated since 1966, flashing its signature (2 seconds on, 2 seconds off, 2 seconds on, 14 seconds off ) up to 19 miles out to sea. The tower is open for tours from noon to 3 pm, Thursday through Tuesday, with guests who stand more 42 inches tall invited to climb the 110 steps to the top. The Yaquina Head Outstanding Natural Area, managed by the Bureau of Land Management, also has an interpretive center on site, with exhibits on lighthouse history and the native wildlife (open 10 am to 4 pm). The grounds, complete with hiking trails, scenic overlooks and tide pools, are open daily from sunrise to sunset. Be prepared to use your Oregon Coast Passport or pay a $7-per-vehicle entry fee. For details, call 541-5743100 during business hours or go to yaquinalights.org.
Yaquina Bay
Location: At the north end of Newport’s Yaquina Bay Bridge Height: 42 feet tall, 161 feet above sea level Illuminated in: 1871 This is the second-oldest lighthouse in Oregon, but the one that had the shortest lifespan. The Yaquina Bay Lighthouse saw only three years of service before it was decommissioned in 1874, after the construction of the taller, stronger Yaquina Head beacon. On the National Register of Historic Places, it’s the oldest structure in Newport and the oldest wooden lighthouse in the state. After being decommissioned, it was abandoned for many years, falling into disrepair and becoming the subject of persistent ghost stories. The lighthouse was restored by the Oregon Parks and Recreation Department, with help from the Friends of Yaquina Lighthouse and
on the cover other groups, and was officially relighted on Dec. 7, 1996. Part of Yaquina Bay State Park, the lighthouse, keepers’ quarters and gift shop are open from noon to 4 pm daily. There is no fee to use this park but donations to the Friends are accepted. For more information, call 800-5516949 or go to yaquinalights.org.
Heceta Head Location: Just off Hwy. 101, 15 miles south of Yachats Height: 56 feet tall, 205 feet above sea level Illuminated in: 1894 Google Maps will tell you its in Florence but here at TODAY Towers we feel that Yachats has an equal claim to this architectural gem, which ranks as one of the most photographed lighthouses on the Oregon Coast. The tower is reached via a short trail from the Heceta Head Lighthouse State Scenic Viewpoint, nestled in a cove at the mouth of Cape Creek. For those who don’t fancy the climb, the viewpoint is kitted out with picnic tables and benches — ideal for catching a glimpse of everything from common murres and bald eagles to sea lions and migrating gray whales. But those who do tackle the trail will be rewarded not only with spectacular southerly views, but also an up-close look at the tower itself — restored in 2013 to its original glory. Tours are available from 11 am to 3
pm seven days a week, weather and staff permitting, giving guests the chance to climb the tower and admire the beacon. Group tours can be reserved by emailing heceta.h.lighthouse@oregon. gov. During summer, visitors can also tour the historic assistant lighthouse keeper’s house, which now operates as a bed and breakfast. For details, call 1-866-5473696 or go to http://hecetalighthouse. com. Admission to the park is $5 per vehicle, or free for folks with an Oregon Coast Passport.
The Yaquina Head Light shows off its crisp new coat of white paint
THIS ONE’S A KEEPER And visitors who find themselves enchanted by the Heceta Head Lightstation have the opportunity to share the building’s history with others by signing up as a volunteer tour guide this summer. Volunteers share the history of the beautiful Queen Anne style Keeper’s House, from its construction in 1892 to the present day, helping guests discover what life was like for its occupants at the turn of the century. The tour season begins Memorial Day weekend and lasts through Labor Day, with tours given from 11 am until 4 pm, Thursday through Monday. Guides who volunteer 35 hours during the tour season receive a free night’s stay in the bed and breakfast during the winter months. For more information, contact Steven Bursey at 866-5473696 or email keepers@hecetalighthouse.com.
The Yaquina Head Light commands a spectacular view just north of Newport
oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • may 29, 2015 • 21
s o u n dwave s Friday, May 29
eclectic mix of favorites. 6:30-9 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.
DANIEL CECIL — Acoustic folk and pop. 4-6 pm, Stimulus Café, 33105 Cape Kiwanda Drive, Pacific City, 503-965-4661. TY CURTIS — Everything from soulful ballads to roadhouse rockers to reggae and blues. 9 pm, Roadhouse 101, 4649 SW Hwy 101, Lincoln City, 541-994-7729. BRET LUCICH SHOW — An experience to remember from this singer-songwriter, entertainer and musician, with a wide variety of music for listening and dancing. 8-11 pm in the “Cedar Tree Lounge,” Salishan Spa & Golf Resort, 7760 Hwy. 101, Gleneden Beach, 541764-2371. MICHAEL DANE — The famous Michael on piano and guitar, playing modern classics with Hawaiian style. 6-10 pm. Gracie’s Sea Hag, 58 SE Hwy. 101, Depoe Bay, 541-765-2734. ROB CONNELL AND EVANS LONGSHORE — Rob and Evans play great tunes from the early days of rock and roll on acoustic guitars, with innovative improvisations to make it all new. 7 to 10 pm, Café Mundo, 209 NW Coast Street, Newport, 541-574-8134. THE REDFIELD CLIPPER BAND — Check out this eclectic hip-hop jam band, fresh from Reno, Nevada. 6:30 pm, Alder Bistro & The Dispensary Lounge, 160 W 2nd St, Yachats, 541-547-3420. GENNA AND JESSE — Duo alchemy at its finest. Sweet and savory, raspy and smooth; together they create heartfelt, unique acoustic-soul music, featuring tight and soaring harmonies and energetic guitar and piano accompaniment. 6:30-9 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.
Tuesday, June 2 OPEN JAM — Hosted by One Way Out. 8:30 pm, Snug Harbor Bar
& Grill, 5001 SW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-996-4976.
ROCK’N TACOS OPEN JAM — JRC and Friends host this
weekly jam, paired with 50-cent tacos for one fine evening. 7-10 pm, Uptown Pub, 636 SW Hurbert Street, Newport, 541-265-3369. IAN SMITH — Folk, originals and covers. 6:30-9 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.
Wednesday, June 3 DENNIS KOCH — Folk and rock on acoustic guitar. 6:30-9 pm,
The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.
Thursday, June 4
Saturday, May 30 TWANGSHIFTERS — Described as “The love child of Carl Perkins
and Patsy Cline,” this Portland group plays everything from rock n’ roll, roots and rockabilly to soul and blues. $5. 9 pm, The San Dune Pub, 127 Laneda Avenue, Manzanita, 503-368-5080. BETH WILLIS ROCK BAND — Beth and the boys are back to get a little crazy. Come see what unfolds. Let’s rock the Roadhouse! 9 pm, Roadhouse 101, 4649 SW Hwy 101, Lincoln City, 541-994-7729. STEVE SLOAN BAND — Acoustic. 9 pm, Snug Harbor Bar & Grill, 5001 SW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-996-4976. BRET LUCICH SHOW — An experience to remember from this singer-songwriter, entertainer and musician, with a wide variety of music for listening and dancing. 8-11 pm in the “Cedar Tree Lounge,” Salishan Spa & Golf Resort, 7760 Hwy. 101, Gleneden Beach, 541764-2371. MICHAEL DANE — The famous Michael on piano and guitar, playing modern classics with Hawaiian style. 6-10 pm, Gracie’s Sea Hag, 58 SE Hwy. 101, Depoe Bay, 541-765-2734. RICK BARTOW AND THE BACKSEAT DRIVERS — Local legend Rick and his band shares his down home roots music most Saturdays. 7 to 10 pm, Café Mundo, 209 NW Coast Street, Newport, 541-574-8134.
Twangshifters • Saturday, May 30, in Manzanita HIGH FIDELITY — Blues. 9-11:30 pm, Nana’s Irish Pub, 613 NW 3rd Street, Newport, 541-574-8787. TIM TRAUTMAN — Singer-songwriter piano player. 6:30-9 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.
Sunday, May 31 OREGON COAST JAM SOCIETY — 4 pm, Old Oregon Tavern, 1604 Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-994-8515. RONNIE JAY DUO — Acoustic American music on guitar and harmonica. 9 pm, Snug Harbor Bar & Grill, 5001 SW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-996-4976. MICHAEL DANE — The famous Michael on piano and guitar, playing modern classics with Hawaiian style. 6-10 pm, Gracie’s Sea Hag, 58 SE Hwy. 101, Depoe Bay, 541-765-2734.
SUNDAY JAM — Hosted by Guilty Tendencies. Open to all styles. 3-6 pm, Bay Haven Inn, 608 SW Bay Blvd, Newport, 541-265-7271. LOZELLE JENNINGS —Hallelujah! The Pentacoastal Blues Jam is back, with the crew trying out a trial period at this recently revamped venue. Let them know what you think. 4-7 pm, Moby Dick’s Seafood and Spirits, 448 SW Coast Hwy., Newport, 541-265-7847. RICHARD SILEN & DEAN BRISTOW — Well-known local singer and guitarist Silen plays an eclectic and engaging mix of everything from American songbook standards to blues to originals; accompanied by Bristow on harmonica. 6:30-9 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.
Monday, June 1
BRET LUCICH SHOW — An experience to remember from this singer-songwriter, entertainer and musician, with a wide variety of music for listening and dancing. 7-10 pm in the “Cedar Tree Lounge,” Salishan Spa & Golf Resort, 7760 Hwy. 101, Gleneden Beach, 541764-2371. RIC DIBLASI — Another show from the crooner piano man. 6 pm to close, The Lodge at Otter Crest, 310 Otter Crest Drive, Otter Rock, 541-765-2111. OPEN MIKE NIGHT — Hosted by Amy Pattison. All welcome. 7 to 10 pm, Café Mundo, 209 NW Coast Street, Newport, 541-5748134. RUSS & RON — With Ron on guitar and Russ on fiddle, this pair play a little of everything: classic country, pop, swing, folk, bluegrass, standards, fifties and hoedowns. 6:30-9 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.
Friday, June 5 KEVIN SELFE & THE TORNADOES — Selfe’s songwriting style bridges the gap between joy and angst, using piercing irony, humorous metaphors and daring autobiographical subject matter from his own occasional walks with the blues. 9 pm, Roadhouse 101, 4649 SW Hwy 101, Lincoln City, 541994-7729. MICHAEL DANE — The famous Michael on piano and guitar, playing modern classics with Hawaiian style. 6-10 pm. Gracie’s Sea Hag, 58 SE Hwy. 101, Depoe Bay, 541-7652734.
RICHARD SHARPLESS — “Retired” from his days playing
in Nashville, Richard plays guitar and sings his own tunes plus an
continued on page 23
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22 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • may 29, 2015
in sp ired d in in g o n siletz b a y •sm a ll-p la te m en u in the lo u n g e a n o reg o n la n d m a rk sin ce 1978 Ju stn a m ed o n e o f o n ly 2 AAA 4-D ia m o n d resta u ra n ts in O reg o n ! w ed n esd a y thro u g h su n d a y •lo u n g e o p en sa t5 p .m .•d in n er service b eg in sa t5:30 p .m . reserva tio n s reco m m en d ed
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s o u n dwave s continued from page 22 ORIGINAL FACE — featuring Joe Armenio with the best of
acoustic originals. 7 to 10 pm, Café Mundo, 209 NW Coast Street, Newport, 541-574-8134. THE BAD WEEDS — Americana string band. 6:30-9 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.
Saturday, June 6 WILL WEST & THE FRIENDLY STRANGERS — Modern
folk, roots, pop, jazz, bluegrass and more. $5. 9 pm, The San Dune Pub, 127 Laneda Avenue, Manzanita, 503-368-5080. NORMAN SYLVESTER — aka “The Boogie Cat,” Sylvester will lay down a blues performance that will leave you feeling the cat that got the cream. 9 pm, Roadhouse 101, 4649 SW Hwy 101, Lincoln City, 541-994-7729. BLUE EVOLUTION — This Salem trio brings blues with a Capitol B. 9 pm, Snug Harbor Bar & Grill, 5001 SW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-996-4976. MICHAEL DANE — The famous Michael on piano and guitar, playing modern classics with Hawaiian style. 6-10 pm, Gracie’s Sea Hag, 58 SE Hwy. 101, Depoe Bay, 541-765-2734. RICK BARTOW AND THE BACKSEAT DRIVERS — Rick and friends always please the crowd, with originals roots classics. 7 to 10 pm, Café Mundo, 209 NW Coast Street, Newport, 541-5748134. HENRY COOPER & LEONARD MAXSON — Blues, slide guitar and drums. 9-11:30 pm, Nana’s Irish Pub, 613 NW 3rd Street, Newport, 541-574-8787.
N O W O P EN !
SHY SHY & GARY — American folk and blues. 6:30-9 pm, The
Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.
Auntie’s Vape Shop
Sunday, June 7 OREGON COAST JAM SOCIETY — 4 pm, Old Oregon
Tavern, 1604 Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-994-8515. MOORE BUSH PROJECT — Blues. 9 pm, Snug Harbor Bar & Grill, 5001 SW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-996-4976. MICHAEL DANE — The famous Michael on piano and guitar, playing modern classics with Hawaiian style. 6-10 pm, Gracie’s Sea Hag, 58 SE Hwy. 101, Depoe Bay, 541-765-2734. SUNDAY JAM — Hosted by Guilty Tendencies. Open to all styles. 3-6 pm, Bay Haven Inn, 608 SW Bay Blvd, Newport, 541-265-7271. LOZELLE JENNINGS —Hallelujah! The Pentacoastal Blues Jam is back, with the crew trying out a trial period at this recently revamped venue. Let them know what you think. 4-7 pm, Moby Dick’s Seafood and Spirits, 448 SW Coast Hwy., Newport, 541-265-7847. RONNIE JAY — Singin’ swingin’ tunes by Frank, Hank, Duke and Willie, accompanied by guitar and harmonica as well as percussion from Richard Robitaille. 6:30-9 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.
(formerly known as Juiced Up Vapors Lincoln City)
Nothing has changed except the name!! Open daily 11 am - 6 pm Closed Wednesdays 2850 NE HWY 101 (across from Gallucci’s Pizza & Game Over Arcade Bar and Grill) 541-953-8483
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6/30/15
Norman Sylvester • Saturday, June 6, in Lincoln City
oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • may 29, 2015 • 23
By Dave Green
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ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE S A G E Y A K O V E F I L E S ECO N D N S O A B S U C L A P T T I R E S P I N Y T O D A D ECO U ECO L E S R I F T U V E A M E R L
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SUPER QUIZ
Take this Super Quiz to a Ph.D. Score 1 point for each correct answer on the Freshman Level, 2 points on the Graduate Level and 3 points on the Ph.D. Level. Subject: EUROPE (e.g., What is the most commonly used currency in Europe? Answer: Euro.)
GRADUATE LEVEL 4. For what is “EU” an acronym? 5. Which river is considered to be Europe’s longest?
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PUZZLE BY IAN LIVENGOOD
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6. Which European country is ¿rst alphabetically?
Super Quiz is a registered trademark of K. Fisher Enterprises Ltd. (c) 2015 Ken Fisher North America Syndicate Inc.
24 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • may 29, 2015
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SUDOKU is a number-placing puzzle based on a 9x9 grid with several given numbers. The object is to place the numbers 1 to 9 in the empty squares so that each row, each column and each 3x3 box contains the same number only once. King Features Syndicate, 2014.
Onlineanswers, subscriptions:call Today’s puzzle and more than pastor, with For 1-900-285-5656, $1.20 per7,000 minute; puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 credit card, 1-800-814-5554. (Or, just wait aforyear). next week’s TODAY.) Read about and comment on each puzzle: nytimes.com/wordplay. Share tips: nytimes.com/puzzleforum. Crosswords for young. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/studentcrosswords solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.
PH.D. LEVEL 7. In which city is the European Central Bank? 8. Which country, totally within Europe, is the largest? 9. What claim is made by Russia’s Lake Ladoga? ANSWERS: 1. World War I and World War II. 2. Christianity. 3. Greece. 4. European Union. 5. Volga River. 6. Albania. 7. Frankfurt, Germany. 8. Ukraine. 9. Largest lake within Europe. SCORING: 18 points -- congratulations, doctor; 15 to 17 points -- honors graduate; 10 to 14 points -- you’re plenty smart, but no grind; 4 to 9 points -- you really should hit the books harder; 1 point to 3 points -- enroll in remedial courses immediately; 0 points -- who reads the questions to you?
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2015 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
FRESHMAN LEVEL 1. Which two wars dominated the ¿rst half of the 20th century in Europe? 2. What is the largest religion in Europe? 3. Which country claims the southernmost point of the European mainland?
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2015 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
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ACROSS
Edited by Will Shortz
Difficulty Level
Crossword
Last Week’s Answers:
artsy
A very fluid situation While there are liquids aplenty, there’s nothing drippy about the art of Lincoln County painter Robin Longerbeam, currently on display at the Newport Visual Arts Center. “Fluid Connections” is an exhibit of paintings and mixedmedia works that are made up of as many as 20 layers each, giving them a range of suffused textures and subtle gradations of color and form. The show will be on display through July 3, with a public reception scheduled for Friday, June 5, from 5 to 7 pm, including a talk from the artist at 5:30 pm. Longerbeam, a perioperative nurse at Newport’s Samaritan Pacific Communities Hospital, expresses her process in scientific terms. “I see my art as the creation of a biological environment or entity,” she said. “Each creation, like the birth of a child, starts out simple, requiring a great deal of time and invested energy to assist its growth to the next level.” “Each layer contains different cellular structure, each struggling to survive,” she added. “Some live symbiotically, some survive through predation. We
“Nest” by Robin Longerbeam
live in a community that only flourishes if we stay interconnected.” Longerbeam likes to work on a small scale, with her pieces typically measuring 4 by 6 inches — a size that fits perfectly in the center’s compact Coastal Oregon Visual Artists Showcase. Born and raised in New York, Longerbeam recently relocated with her son and two cats from Eugene to Newport. She considers herself to be a primarily self-taught artist, though she attended the Arts Students League of New York in Manhattan and has participated in classes and workshops in oil painting, watercolors, jewelry making and welding. Her work has appeared in The New Zone Gallery in Eugene, Bend Your Imagination in Bend, Fragment Gallery in Tucson, and the Infusion Gallery in Los Angeles and was recently featured in NW Creative Magazine and the New Art International 15th Edition. The show, hosted by the Oregon Coast Council for the Arts, can be viewed from noon to 4 pm, Tuesday through Saturday at 777 NW Beach Drive.
“Emerald” by Kristan Bendixen
A truly unbelievable show Visitors to the Newport Visual Arts Center might be forgiven for not believing their eyes this summer, as Kristan Bendixen’s “Illusionary” exhibit takes over the Upstairs Gallery. The show, presented by the Oregon Coast Council for the Arts, features acrylic and mixed-media paintings, including new works from Bendixen’s Seascape Series. And Bendixen will be on hand to discuss her work in person at a Friday, June 5, public reception scheduled to run from 5 to 7 pm, with the talk starting at 6 pm. A Seattle-born artist, Bendixen creates her work with everyday materials including stone, wood and paper. Starting with a base of acrylic, she builds up layers of these elements to create three-dimensional illusions. She rarely
leaves any of her materials unaltered and viewers often discover hidden details in her work. “My art can get kinda crazy sometimes,” she said. Bendixen also creates illusions in her two-dimensional work with the use of palette knives, heavily textured acrylics and course artist paste on canvas and wood. In the recent past she has worked on heavily textured paintings for the blind and limited-sight community, but her current focus is on highly textured, large abstracts using vibrant acrylic paints. Bendixen lived in Washington and Hawaii before moving to Lincoln City, where she finds inspiration from the natural elements along the Oregon Coast. Outside of a few art classes in high school and college, Bendixen has honed
her own visions and talents over the past 19 years. She comes from a long line of artists, dating as far back as the 1800s. Her father, Ross Bendixen, was a well-known Seattle-area sculptor, and Bendixen’s talents stem from watching her father sketch and create over the course of 30 years. She has participated in the Seattle and Oregon Coast arts scenes as a featured artist in exhibitions and short running shows such as the RAW Artist Showcase in Seattle and Portland and the renowned Kirkland Art Walk as well as Tasty Gallery and Avanti Art & Design in Seattle. “Illusionary” will remain on display through July 3, available to view from noon to 4 pm, Tuesday to Saturday at 777 NW Beach Drive.
oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • may 29, 2015 • 25
My Perfect Day on the Coast.
SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE! Come celebrate Lincoln City’s 50th Anniversary as we kick-off a summer of events, festivals, and fun. Just don’t forget to save some energy for shopping at Lincoln City Outlets next time you’re nearby! With huge savings and big discounts on all of your favorite brands — you’ll find something for everyone at Lincoln City Outlets.
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artsy THREE’S COMPANY, IN NEWPORT Coastal artists Richard LaFond, Alice LaFond and Jane Westhusing will be exhibiting their work in a two-week Spotlight Show at Newport’s Yaquina Art Association Gallery. The show, which runs from Saturday, May 30, through Friday, June 13, features photography as well as works in colored pencil. A photographer for more than 50 years, Richard LaFond spent the ’60s taking photographs of celebrities who appeared on the Steve Allen Variety Show, Delia Reese and Queen for a Day as well as working as a staff photographer for KHJ-TV Studios in Hollywood. He also spent 30 years in the San Francisco Bay Area, shooting commercial and architectural photos as well as weddings, special events and personal portraits. Since retiring 13 years ago and moving to Seal Rock, Richard has found that, although portraiture is still his favorite, he enjoys shooting ocean and beach scenes, boats and lighthouses and flowers. Richard’s wife, Alice LaFond, has been taking colored pencil classes and workshops for six years, painting all subjects but especially carousel horses. She never loses enthusiasm for her pencil art and finds it exciting when a finished piece comes out looking like a watercolor or oil painting. Also exhibiting her colored pencil art is Jana Weshusing, a local graphic designer and artist. Jana has been painting with colored pencils and using her own photographs as subjects for more than six years. The show will be available to view from 11 am to 5 pm daily at 777 NW Beach Drive. For more information, call 541-2655133.
26 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • may 29, 2015
“Tantalizing Tulips” by Robert LaFond
“Little Creek Crossing” by Jana Weshusing
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