A win by two or more challengers would give women their first-ever majority on the New Mexico Court of Appeals
P.12 by Jeff Proctor
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AUGUST 15-21, 2018
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SEPTEMBER 19-25, 2018 | Volume 45, Issue 38
NEWS OPINION 5 NEWS 7 DAYS, CLAYTOONZ AND THIS MODERN WORLD 6 NOW MORE THAN EVER 7 New initiatives aim to help permanent residents become citizens ALGORITHMS AND ETHICS 9 Do you want a computer deciding whether you get parole or not?
THEATRICAL CHARCUTERIE Following last year’s successful Santa Fe Theatre Walk, venues and shows expand and Santa Fe’s stages (and churches and dance studios) provide an affordable glimpse into their best and brightest work.
CRACKING THE CODE 10 Changes to county codes may make adding onto your house a little cheaper MAKING MEDICAID WORK 11 New Mexico towns and counties look into a Medicaid buy-in option COVER STORY 12 JUDGE GENDER Depending on how we vote in November, New Mexico could have a Court of Appeals with a female majority THE INTERFACE 21
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CULTURE
CULTURE EDITOR ALEX DE VORE
ACTING OUT 34 THEATRICAL CHARCUTERIE Santa Fe Theatre Walk gets bigger and better FOOD 39
THE CALENDAR 25 MUSIC 27 IN THE LOOP El Ten Eleven’s mathy empire A&C 31 SYMBOLIC REPRESENTATION AND THE THRILL OF THE CATCH The surrealism of John Tarahteeff hits Nüart Gallery
GUILT TIP Local bartenders tell the tales ¡POUR VIDA! 43 WINE IS ON MY SIDE Wine & Chile Fiesta rides again MOVIES 47 PICK OF THE LITTER REVIEW Plus space dreads and “science” in The Predator
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SFR PICKS 23 Nautical healthcare, the return of Anthonius Monk, Breakin’ 2: The Legend of Curly’s Gold and the community of museums
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WALK ABOUTS Poetry and art infiltrate public spaces
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SEPTEMBER 19-25, 2018
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JUNE 6-12, 2018
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SFREPORTER.COM
MATT GRUBS
LETTERS
renew skin : renew life
____________________________________________________
CORRECTIVE SKINCARE BY APPOINTMENT
NEWS, AUGUST 29: “COME FLY WITH ME”
COVER, SEPTEMBER 5: “WAS DEBBIE RIGHT?”
NO THANK YOU PLEASE This month’s “fly-in” at the Santa Fe Regional Airport caters mainly to private plane owners, yet ordinary residents and small business owners are the ones to bear the brunt of the extra noise and air pollution. The decision to host the event at our tiny airport is part of a pattern, one that prioritizes elite interests over the investments and quality of life of residents in the south half of town. If airport management and city council truly care about creating a sustainable model for our airport going forward, it’s time to address the divide between the wealthy pilots our airport serves and the ordinary homeowners who must endure the pollution produced by the one percent.
KATE McCAHILL SANTA FE
COVER, SEPTEMBER 12: “IT’S GOING DOWN”
NOT NECESSARY We never needed the “new” jail on Highway 14 or the juvenile facility. I and others tried hard to stop both, but the power of privatization was too $trong. We didn’t need 600 adult beds or a separate juvenile facility—now we are stuck with two white elephants.
MARK DONATELLI SFREPORTER.COM
LUV YA DEB I’m not from Santa Fe but I had family there so I tried to keep up with what went on there since I was there so often. I remember Debbie fondly because she spoke her mind and she had Santa Fe and its citizens first and foremost on her agenda. She had all the DWI people from jail out cleaning the streets wearing pink caps. They cleaned up, but also were shamed for drinking and driving. It was brilliant. I’m sorry she wants to move because we need more like her but at the same time I understand her feelings. Miss you Debbie!
SHEILA McCARTHY VIA FACEBOOK
CLARO QUE SI Debbie Jaramillo is my hero! Thank you for publishing the interview. Santa Fe is a tough place to live, especially for us natives. If anyone has inspired me with a “Si se puede!” attitude, it’s Debbie Jaramillo!
RHEA SERNA VIA FACEBOOK
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Social Security and Your Retirement Know the rules of the road to help make the most of your benefits
SFR will correct factual errors online and in print. Please let us know if we make a mistake: editor@sfreporter.com or 988-7530.
SANTA FE EAVESDROPPER “FATPOOPJAJA” —spelled out in light-up letters at Target Person 1: “Don’t get me started on American men.” Person 2: “But you can get me started on Italian men.” —Overheard at a doctor’s office Send your Overheard in Santa Fe tidbits to: eavesdropper@sfreporter.com
Los Alamos Location Del Norte Credit Union 1000 Trinity Drive Noon – 1:00 p.m. Tuesday, September 25, 2018
Santa Fe Location DNCU Midtown Financial Center 604 W. San Mateo Road 5:30 – 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, September 25, 2018
Space is limited. Call today! RSVP required to Adrienne Meyers, 505.455.5319 Light fare will be provided. Guests are welcome! Securities sold, advisory services offered through CUNA Brokerage Services, Inc. (CBSI) member FINRA/SIPC, a registered broker/dealer and investment advisor. CBSI is under contract with DNCU to make securities available to members. Not NCUA/ NCUSIF/FDIC insured, May Lose Value, No Financial Institution Guarantee. Not a deposit of any financial institution. CUNA Brokerage Services, Inc., is a registered broker/dealer in all 50 states of the United States of America. Representatives are not tax advisors or Social Security experts. For information regarding your specific tax situation, please consult a tax professional. To discuss your specific Social Security benefits, please contact the Social Security Administration office in your area. Guest speakers are not affiliated with CBSI or its representatives. Opinions expressed are those of the presenter and are not necessarily those of CBSI or its representatives. R-1913591.1-1017-1119 Social Security Seminar-4.75x5.625.indd 1
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9/18/182018 11:27 AM5 SEPTEMBER 19-25,
DAYS
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e, guess Hey Susithey’re what at the serving this tower ?! month
GOV. MARTINEZ CELEBRATES HISPANIC HERITAGE MONTH WITH TRUMP She swapped pizza for taco bowls.
PROPOSAL FOR TEACHER HOUSING ON SCHOOL PROPERTY SHOT DOWN These people already make, like, $30K—what the hell else can they possibly want?!
BLASEY FORD AND HER ACCUSED ASSAULTER BRETT KAVANAUGH TO TESTIFY The joke is that the one with a history of lying under oath might be a Supreme Court justice for life.
FUTURE DAY
PRESENT DAY
ALL OUR FRIENDS ARE PLAYING FANTASY FOOTBALL And we’re just over here like, “A pox upon thine artificial sports skulduggery! Aye, words! Words be the truth!”
REPUBS TRASH WILLIE NELSON AFTER HE STUMPS FOR BETO O’ROURKE IN TEXAS
Wha
aaat
It’s almost like Willie’s a song-slingin’, weed-smokin’, tax-hatin’ liberal or something.
ALBUQUERQUE, STATE APPROVE $3 MILLION INCENTIVE FOR TASKUS You get that this is just a different kind of call center, right?
PEARCE PROMISES TO RELEASE TAX RETURNS IN MID-OCTOBER Along with a bunch of Kavanaugh stuff we haven’t seen yet.
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Now More Than Ever BY AARON CANTÚ a a r o n @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m
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ocal groups led by the immigrant organizing nonprofit Somos Un Pueblo Unido are launching a campaign to naturalize some of Santa Fe County’s 4,000 lawful permanent residents. The effort, dubbed Citizenship Now!, happens in coordination with the city, and includes a public information offensive, community forums, workshops to prepare for citizenship exams and interviews, and other means by which permanent residents can learn how to jumpstart the naturalization process. Officials announed that the two-year, $50,000 grant to pay for the program will be awarded to Somos if the organization is able to collect matching donations. Mayor Alan Webber’s office submitted a joint application with the group for the America is Home award, an initiative of the Cities for Citizenship group chaired by the sitting mayors of New York City, Chicago and Los Angeles. Santa Fe was one of 14 award recipients across the country. The city of Albuquerque, which applied with the local organization El Centro de Igualdad y Derechos, was also awarded a grant. Neza Leal-Sánchez, a spokesperson for Somos, says the award comes at a time when legal permanent residents feel vulnerable to the Trump administration’s deportation policies. At the end of 2017, there was a 42 percent increase in foreigners arrested by Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and a recent NBC analysis found that federal arrests of undocumented people without criminal records has tripled under Trump. Lawful permanent residents have permission to live and work in the country, and can usually travel outside the US without problems. However, permanent residency status is not a shield against deportation, particularly if a person is convicted of an aggravated felony or certain drug offenses. “There’s nothing permanent about being a lawful permanent resident,” LealSánchez tells SFR. “The sense of vulnerability is very similar to that of undocumented immigrants.” At a Monday morning press conference in front of City Hall, several women who spoke at a podium said they and
NEWS
New campaign aims to boost citizenship for immigrants in Santa Fe their families had been lawful permanent residents for years and even decades, but would now apply for citizenship through Citizenship Now!. Yvonne Miranda, a customer service supervisor at Kohl’s in Santa Fe and a lawful permanent resident, says she’s had trouble finding time between work and family to pursue naturalization, including preparations for a citizenship test. “Every day I’m a little too tired to take the classes and to learn the materials; it’s going to take some time,” Miranda tells SFR. “I’m hoping more people will join [to become citizens].” Marshaling community resources into a citizenship drive was a “logical next step” for the immigrant community in Santa Fe, said Somos Executive Director Marcela Diaz. Webber said the plan takes the “offensive” against the federal government’s immigration policy. “We get a chance to do something constructive, where we take legal residents in a position to take the next step in our community and become citizens, full participants in our democracy with voting rights and the opportunity to have their voices heard in all the arenas,” Webber said. As part of the project, the city will make certain resources available, such as space at public libraries where people can pick up information about the naturalization process, and will also be at the ready to offer naturalizing citizens information on how to start businesses. This isn’t the first time Somos has launched a citizenship drive in New Mexico, where some 55,000 lawful permanent residents live. It started a similar effort in the state’s four southeastern-most counties in 2016, resulting in about 200 people “who have already gone through process of citizenship or are in the process of [attaining] citizenship,” according to Somos organizer Marina Piña. “They’ve become voters, [they’ve] been able to register family members who are US-born citizens or naturalized citizens to go out and vote,” Piña said. Citizenship forums are planned for Oct. 10 at Sweeney Elementary School; Nov. 13 at Guadalupe Credit Union on Airport Road; Dec. 4 at Santa Fe Area Homebuilders Association; and Jan. 9 at the Center for Progress and Justice. For information, call Somos at 424-7832.
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SEPTEMBER 19-25, 2018
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SEPTEMBER 12-18, 2018
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Santa Fe Institute lecture series examines the math and morality behind computers’ role in society BY JULIA GOLDBERG @votergirl
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omputers map our driving routes, buy our groceries and have even been known to write poetry. But as society increasingly depends on technological interfaces in more conflicted areas, ethical and legal concerns also grow. Cris Moore, a professor at the Santa Fe Institute whose work focuses on computer science, math and physics, will deliver two lectures on “The Limits of Computers in Science and Society” as part of an SFI series. Moore served two terms as a city councilor for District 2 starting in 1994. This interview was edited and condensed for style and length. SFR: The first lecture discusses why some problems are easy for computers to solve, and others are hard or impossible. What are some examples? CM: So when you ask Google Maps to find you the shortest path from A to B, there are a lot of possible paths, a huge number of possible paths—but it’s pretty easy for an algorithm to zero in on the shortest one. But there are other problems, like designing an airline schedule. Or there’s this classic thing, the traveling salesman problem, where finding the best solution is like looking for a needle in a haystack. Different problems have different structures: Some have the kind of structure that lets us zoom in quickly on the solution; some we can’t get a handle on. … There are questions that are deep inside logic and mathematics, like, for instance, Alan Turing, who was famous for breaking the Nazis’ Enigma code in England, proved there’s no program which can predict what other programs will do because you could ask it about itself and throw a twist in there and create a paradox. That’s the halting problem? Exactly. And this is close to [Kurt] Gödel’s incompleteness theorems that there are things
that are true but that we cannot prove— and I don’t mean things like sunsets are beautiful. Things even in math. … So, the two lectures are very separate, and you don’t have to come to them both. If you like the beauty of mathematics, come to the first. If you’re concerned about the rise of computers in society and the impact on us as humans, come to the second. And if you like both of those things, come to both. Was there a particular issue that prompted your second lecture on the rise of computers in society? The second lecture focuses on the use of algorithms in the justice system, and especially the algorithm that recommends to a judge whether you should be released or detained if you’re arrested. New Mexico, and to a greater extent Cali-
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Algorithms and Ethics
fornia, and some other states … are trying to move away from the money bail system where … whether you stay in jail or not is a matter of how much money you have. The justice system is historically extremely biased. I think everyone knows that African American and Hispanic people are much more likely to be arrested than white people and, when they’re arrested, more likely to be charged with a crime, given longer jail sentences and on and on. Our justice system is terribly biased, as well, against low-income people. … So a lot of people who care about reforming this system are enthusiastic about having an algorithm, a computer program, which looks at your criminal record, for instance, and comes up with a kind of score and based on that score makes a recommendation to the judge about whether you should be released or not. The hope is these algorithms are more objective and perhaps less biased than human judges. But there’s a controversy over this. Two years ago, ProPublica heavily criticized one of the algorithms that’s currently in use, COMPAS [Correctional Offender Management Profiling for Alternative Sanctions] and argued that it is, in fact, racially biased. There was pushback from some people, including independent analysts, saying it’s not really true, and it turns out even figuring what we mean by having an algorithm being fair is a thorny issue. This is the issue of algorithmic fairness? Yes. Algorithms are just as biased as the data we give them. If we give them historically biased data, they are going to produce biased results. There’s a danger that they’re going to take the biases of society and put them inside this gleaming new box and hide them behind this sheen of objectivity and math, which nobody can argue with. … Algorithms might play a good role, but we need to apply a lot of critical thinking to them and demand a lot of openness and, at every stage,
NEWS
COURTESY SFI
S FR E P O RTE R .CO M / N E WS
The Santa Fe Institute’s Cris Moore delivers two lectures on the math and morals behind computers and society.
think about whether they’re going to heal our biases or amplify them. My understanding is that a piece of this issue is that COMPAS is proprietary. That’s another huge issue. … The COMPAS formula is secret, so it’s not easy for independent analysts … [to] understand how it’s working internally. Now, in a bunch of states, and in Bernalillo, there’s another algorithm that’s in use, which comes from the [Laura and John] Arnold Foundation … [which] is really sincere about wanting to reform the criminal justice system. Unlike COMPAS, the Arnold formula is public. It’s a simple point system, and anybody can see how it works. Does your lecture have a call to action? I talk a lot about the need for transparency. I also think the results need to be presented in a way that embraces the uncertainty in them. … It’s important for judges and juries, defendants, parole boards, whomever is going to use these algorithms, to understand how much uncertainty they really have. Does this interest in criminal justice and fairness indicate you might be running for public office again in your lifetime? No. But I would love to work with people who want to figure out what New Mexico’s policy should be on these algorithms.
CRIS MOORE: THE LIMITS OF COMPUTERS IN SCIENCE AND SOCIETY 7:30 pm Monday and Tuesday Sept. 24 and 25. Free; registration recommended. Lensic Performing Arts Center, 211 W San Francisco St., 988-1234; ticketssantafe.org.
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Cracking the Code
NEWS
Have changes to the county’s Sustainable Land Development Code worked?
B Y M AT T G R U B S m a t t g r u b s @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m
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t least it’s fixed now, theorizes Santa Fe architect and general contractor Carlos Kinsey. “In the end, the [new] code helps in the future, but it hurt me and my client,” he tells SFR. “I lost that job. I was the architect and was also going to be the general contractor.” Last fall, Santa Fe County weathered a storm of criticism over its implementation and interpretation of a new Sustainable Land Development Code. It tied building permits to improvements that had to be made to what were sometimes rutted or narrow dirt roads that had been around for decades. The roads were private, but the county wanted access to the homes for fire trucks and ambulances. If those roads were lengthy, the cost of a project could jump by tens of thousands of dollars. That was the situation with Kinsey, where the price of his client’s $100,000 garage renovation and addition project jumped to $150,000 after the county rejected a building permit unless she added base course and 8 feet of width to a 1,000-foot-long gravel road in Arroyo Hondo. Neighbors couldn’t be required to pay in such instances, even if the building permit application came from the last house on the road and everyone else benefited from the road improvements. The county was getting deluged with variance applications. It was, ironically, unsustainable. SFR wrote a story about it (News, Oct. 4, 2017: “Take Me Home, County Code”).
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Private road owners were less than thrilled about a plan that tied building permits to road improvements.
In late November, the county made several changes to the code which ease the requirements for landowners who want to improve existing property or build on property they’ve owned prior to the new rules. They also allow much more flexibility when it comes to dealing with access for emergency vehicles. County staff wouldn’t tell SFR if it’s made a difference in the number of variances they’ve had to handle, but anecdotally, it seems to be working. “I guess no news is good news in that respect,” says Kim Shanahan, who heads the Santa Fe Area Home Builders Association. “I’ve not heard anyone complaining. But there were issues last year.” At the Board of County Commissioners meeting the week after SFR’s story ran, County Manager Katherine Miller said the county’s Land Use Department took the extraordinary step of closing its offices during the morning three days a week for training on procedures and how to better handle variance requests. Miller did not return a call from SFR. Filling in the blanks for the county, Shanahan says that month-long “navel-gazing review” appears to have been a worthwhile exercise in introspection.
SFREPORTER.COM
“I suspect that may have done just as much as the code change, if not more. It’s much more customer-friendly. It’s ‘How can I help?’ instead of ‘No, you can’t do that,’” he says. That attitude seems to be reflected in the changes to the code, which allow the county fire marshal to request different sorts of fire prevention measures. In theory, that lessens the likelihood that county emergency vehicles would need to use a legacy access road that hasn’t been improved by its private owners. “I deal with it on a daily basis,” says Fire Marshal Jaome Blay. “There’s so many areas in Santa Fe County that are existing that have already been built out. And some areas don’t even have the easement to impose a 20-foot-wide access road. So what do you do? I mean, do you start knocking down people’s walls and homes for somebody else down the road who wants to build? It’s just impossible.” While Blay handles requests on a case-by-case basis, he strives to make uniform requests of property owners that conform to all the other fire and construction codes. He’s working on a checklist of expectations to give to the Land Use Department for prospective builders.
“I would say 90, maybe even 95 percent of them understand the situation they’re in. And they always have the availability of an appeal of the decision,” he says. “But nobody has appealed, at least to my knowledge.” Kinsey, the local architect, says he got a call from Penny Ellis-Green, the county’s growth management administrator, in February saying that the code had been changed and his building permit was approved. Great news—except he applied in the previous September. The job was long since gone. Not only that, Kinsey says, but his client’s efforts to get the three other residents living on the private road to pitch in led to a bitter neighborhood divide. When none of them was willing to pay for an improvement they wouldn’t have otherwise needed to make, people who had lived together in harmony for a decade got angry at each other. “She was at odds with her neighbors and they had a huge falling-out,” Kinsey explains. His client ended up listing her home for sale. “I think when the county makes these rash moves, they sometimes do it without thinking of the consequences.”
MATT GRUBS
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s the federal government considers New Mexico’s requests to impose new premiums on some of the state’s 830,000 Medicaid recipients, a growing number of cities and counties across the state are pledging support for a Medicaid-based public insurance plan open to everybody, possibly the first of its kind in the nation. Beginning next July, the state anticipates that some of the 265,000 New Mexicans who enrolled in Medicaid as part of the federal government’s expansion since 2014, as well as enrollees receiving transitional medical assistance, will have to start paying a $10 monthly premium if their yearly income is 100 percent above the federal poverty level. That’s $24,280 for an individual and $50,200 for a four-person household. This will be the first time that Medicaid patients in New Mexico face the prospect of losing benefits if they’re unable to pay. The state plans to offer a grace period for people who fall behind, but a slide produced by the Human Services Department doesn’t say how long it would be. The department has also suggested premiums could rise to $20 in subsequent years, but a spokesperson for HSD did not respond to questions about the grace period or future increases. Last year, the department held several public hearings about new premiums and co-pays for Medicaid enrollees. After collecting feedback, it reduced the income bracket wherein people would be charged premiums. Enrollees who go to the emergency room for “non-emergent” reasons and who opt for brand name drugs instead of generic equivalents would also pay $8 co-pays. The proposed premiums and co-pays are contingent upon approval from the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. The agency has approved
waivers in at least four other states that would introduce work requirements (though a federal court blocked them for Kentucky). New Mexico hasn’t proposed work requirements for Medicaid, but it joins several other states with pending waivers that would allow them to kick people off Medicaid because of missed premium payments. Republican administrations in various states have justified things like work requirements and increased premiums as necessary to “encourage more personal responsibility,” as Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson put it. (That state has charged premiums for Medicaid patients since 2016.) Critics argue that these types of requirements are a means of removing people from public benefit rolls, part of a broader effort to undermine the Affordable Care Act (Obamacare) after it resulted in about 11 million people nationwide getting onto Medicaid since 2014. “This is just another insult to the Affordable Care Act, by the federal government allowing states to have more leeway in terms of how they use their Medicaid program,” says Dr. Lawrence Lazarus, a physician in Santa Fe who writes extensively about America’s health care system. At an Albuquerque gathering last week for health care professionals who help people determine their eligibility for public benefits, hosted by the New Mexico Primary Care Association, one Medicaid enrollment counselor told SFR he was surprised to learn about S-
BY AARON CANTÚ a a r o n @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m
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Making Medicaid Work
The state is making it harder to stay enrolled in Medicaid, but cities and counties are exploring a more inclusive option
the new premiums for Medicaid recipients, despite HSD’s public hearings last year. He says he wasn’t the only one who felt blindsided. “There were a number of questions about how this would work exactly, because how do you prove income when it changes month to month?” said the counselor, who asked SFR not to print his name. “A lot of people have either cognitive limitations or just difficulty because they don’t have checking accounts or lack stability” and could lose benefits during lifesaving procedures, he added. There are about 150 such enrollment counselors (labeled “presumptive eligibility determiners” by the state) in New Mexico, and 40 working in hospitals and clinics in Santa Fe County, according
The premium is still a new concept [and] we aren’t sure how that’s going to impact families in New Mexico. -Eileen Goode, CEO, New Mexico Primary Care Association
NEWS
to Eileen Goode, CEO of the New Mexico Primary Care Association. Goode says her organization attended HSD’s public hearings last year and questioned the premiums. “The premium is still a new concept [and] we aren’t sure how that’s going to impact families in New Mexico,” Goode tells SFR. HSD is holding a few public forums throughout New Mexico for the rest of the month to inform people about the changes to the state’s Medicaid program, known as Centennial Care 2.0, which goes into effect Jan. 1. In the meantime, health advocates in the state under the umbrella group NM Together for Healthcare have gone on a public relations offensive to garner support from cities and counties for a “Medicaid buy-in” program that would allow anybody to obtain health coverage offered through Medicaid, regardless of their eligibility. There isn’t a set design for how this program might look, says Abuko Estrada, a staff attorney at the New Mexico Center on Law and Poverty. In January, state Sen. Jerry Ortiz y Pino, D-Albuquerque, introduced a bill encouraging the legislature to explore the financial implications of a buy-in program. “It could be offered directly on the [state health care] exchange” as a state-backed public insurance plan, “or off the exchange,” Estrada says. “It could look sort of like a hybrid between what’s offered by the Affordable Care Act [exchange] plans now and a Medicaid benefits package. At the end of the day, it’s supposed to be an option to allow any New Mexican to buy into the Medicaid program.” So far, officials in Bernalillo and McKinley counties, as well as the cities of Anthony and Sunland Park, have passed resolutions supporting potential legislation to create a Medicaid buy-in program. Last week, the legislative liaison for Santa Fe, Jesse Guillén, sent a letter about the buy-in proposal to Bernalillo County to ask for information. Estrada says NM Together for Healthcare has contracted the research group Manatt Health to outline “several different options for New Mexico as to how the state can design a Medicaid buy-in option.” The results should be ready by the end of this month.
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BY J E F F P RO CTO R j e f f p r o c t o r @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m @NMInDepth
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A win by two or more challengers would give women their first-ever majority on the New Mexico Court of Appeals
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he notion struck Megan Duffy at an event she attended with several other women—and it struck her hard. It was Aug. 18. The gathering marked the anniversary of a seismic change to the US Constitution: Passage of the 19th Amendment, more commonly known as women’s suffrage. “Women have only been able to vote in this country for 98 years,” Duffy says in a recent interview with SFR and New Mexico In Depth. “And this is the first year in our history that we are getting to vote for women in the large numbers we’re seeing. That’s amazing to me.” Duffy is one of those women. She is 38 years old. Based in Albuquerque, Duffy began her legal career as a clerk for then-state Supreme Court Chief Justice Richard Bosson and has worked as a trial and appellate lawyer in private practice around the state since. Now, she’s running for a seat on the New Mexico Court of Appeals, one of the least-watched, least-understood, but busiest and most important cogs in the state’s justice system. Duffy’s opponent is Judge Daniel Gallegos, who was appointed to a vacant seat on the appeals court in January by Republican Gov. Susana Martinez. On the November ballot, three other partisan contests confront voters and line up identically: Democratic women like Duffy challenging Martinez-appointed Republican men for seats on the 10-member court. Jennifer Attrep, a fifth Democratic woman— appointed by Martinez earlier this year—is running unopposed. That means voters will decide the appeals court’s political makeup—five Democrats and five Republicans comprise it now—and whether a chunk of Martinez’ judicial legacy remains intact. But a deeper historic shift hangs in the balance. Four women sit on the Court of Appeals. That’s their largest share since the court was founded in 1966, save for a few months in the early 2000s when women also made up 40 percent of appeals court judges. A win by any of the four challengers this year would create the court’s first-ever even gender split. If two or more Democratic women oust incumbents, which one University of New Mexico political science professor says is quite possible, it could mean something even bigger. Forty states have appeals courts similar to New Mexico’s, and several people interviewed for this story said the majority
COURTESY NEW MEXICO COA
POSITION 2
POSITION 1
POSITION 3
POSITION 4
The current Court of Appeals. Top row: Judge Daniel Gallegos, Judge Hank Bohnhoff, Judge Stephen G French, Judge Emil J Kiehne, Judge Jennifer L Attrep. Bottom row: Judge J Miles Hanisee, Judge Michael Vigil, Chief Judge Linda M Vanzi, Judge M Monica Zamora, Judge Julie J Vargas. Judges outlined in white are facing challengers in the general election.
of those courts are male-dominated. That makes the state’s judicial races a microcosm of a national moment where, despite those male majorities, ballots feature historic numbers of women. “The movement across the country with women running for office is incredibly inspiring to me,” says Duffy, a past president of the state Women’s Bar Association. “It’s definitely part of the reason I decided to run.” Incumbents on the appeals court all say in interviews that a candidate’s experience and qualifications should guide voters’ choice at the ballot box; three said gender shouldn’t matter at all. While none of the four challengers has previously sat as a judge on the appeals court, they all have extensive experience with appellate law including, in most cases, years working in the Court of Appeals as attorneys. That said, none of the four believes a shakeup in the gender balance would necessarily have an impact on how in-
dividual cases are decided at the court, which weighs heavy questions about the state’s constitution and statutes. More often than not, it provides the final word when the government, a company or an individual believes a lower court has erred in a ruling. But a female majority could send a signal to the legal community, says Kristina Bogardus, a former medical technologist who switched careers in the late 1980s, went on to work as a Court of Appeals clerk, and is now a trial lawyer in Albuquerque. “If you are interested in appellate jurisprudence, this is an option for any attorney,” says Bogardus, who is running against two-time Martinez appointee Judge Stephen French. “And maybe [seeing more women elected] would make this seem more possible for women attorneys who are just starting out.” Rod Kennedy, a Republican who retired from the appeals court in 2016 after nearly 15 years on the bench, says it could
do more than that. “If things work right, there are things that a female supermajority could do to really change sensibilities,” Kennedy says, pointing to a recent publication by the American Bar Association that highlights senior female lawyers “who say female lawyers are still pushed around in the profession.” “Ways of thinking about things could improve on the court,” Kennedy continues. “Fundamentally, legal questions remain legal questions. But the importance of some legal questions might be lost on male judges that is not lost on female judges.” Beyond those questions, the Court of Appeals finds itself at a pivotal point, with a steadily high caseload and a handful of retirements in the past two years that already have created more judicial turnover than at any other time in the past two decades. Further, the eight candidates in the contested races are competing for jobs
that pay the least in the nation for appeals court judges: Roughly $125,000. Kennedy recalls a piece of political theater he used while campaigning in the early 2000s to emphasize how little attention most New Mexicans pay to the Court of Appeals. “I would frequently go to a place and give my speech and hold up a $20 bill and offer it to anybody who could name three Court of Appeals judges,” he says. “I never, ever, ever lost my money. Sometimes they couldn’t even name me.” The court’s low profile belies its importance. “The Court of Appeals is the first and often final appellate court for most types of cases,” reads the boilerplate language in the court’s annual reports. That means when a party to a case believes there’s been an improper ruling in a lower court, they implore the appeals court to recon-
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CANDIDATES at a glance POSITION 1
Kristina Bogardus: She had a first career as a medical technologist in Albuquerque and Santa Fe hospitals, then graduated from UNM law school in 1991. Bogardus clerked for appeals court Judge Pamela Minzner and has worked as a plaintiffs’ lawyer since 1992, specializing in negligence and personal injury cases. She also has served on the state Supreme Court’s Disciplinary Board.
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POSITION 2 Jacqueline R Medina: Born in Taos, Medina graduated from UNM law school and has been a practicing attorney for 27 years. She has worked as an assistant district attorney and spent 16 years in the Attorney General’s Office, where she handled more than 150 appellate cases. Medina also serves on the state Supreme Court’s Appellate Rules Committee.
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POSITION 3 Briana H Zamora: Born and raised in New Mexico, Zamora is a UNM law school graduate. She served four years on the Bernalillo County Metropolitan Court bench starting in 2008 and was then elected as a District Court judge in Albuquerque. She’s presided over more than 20,000 cases, most of them criminal, and has handled more than 50 appeals from Metro Court on prosecutors’ motions to hold defendants in jail pre-trial. Prior to working as a judge, Zamora worked in private practice for seven years.
VS
POSITION 4
Megan Duffy: She graduated from UNM law school and went to work as a clerk for then-state Supreme Court Chief Justice Richard Bosson. After that, in 2009, she went to work at the Roepke Law Firm, where she has worked on estate and consumer protection issues, including appellate cases. Duffy is a past president of the state Women’s Bar Association.
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On the ballot this year are four contested races for the New Mexico Court of Appeals. Each features a Republican man appointed to the court by Gov. Susana Martinez squaring off against a female Democratic challenger. Early voting runs from Oct. 20 through Nov. 3. Election Day is Nov. 6.
POSITION 1 Stephen G French: He’s been appointed to the appeals court twice by Gov. Susana Martinez, in 2015 and 2017, losing a competitive election in 2016. French graduated from California Western School of Law in 1980 and spent more than 35 years in private practice, representing clients in criminal and civil cases. As an attorney, he won numerous government contracts to represent cities, counties and the state and also has worked as a mediator.
POSITION 2 Hank Bohnhoff: He is an Albuquerque native who earned his law degree from Columbia University in 1982. Martinez appointed him to the appeals court in 2017. Before that, Bohnhoff clerked for a federal district judge in New Mexico, worked as a senior lawyer in the state Attorney General’s Office and spent more than two decades at the Rodey law firm in Albuquerque focusing on real estate and business litigation.
POSITION 3 Emil J Kiehne: Martinez appointed Kiehne to the appeals court in 2017. Raised in Valencia County, he graduated from Notre Dame Law School in 2000 and began his legal career with an exclusive focus on appellate cases. Kiehne has worked as an appellate prosecutor in Philadelphia, Pa., and for 13 years at the Modrall Sperling firm in Albuquerque as an appellate lawyer in private practice. He has served on the state Supreme Court’s Appellate Rules Committee and on the board of the New Mexico Foundation for Open Government.
POSITION 4 Daniel Gallegos: He took the appeals court bench when Martinez appointed him earlier this year. Gallegos is an Albuquerque native who graduated from Notre Dame Law School in 2005. He served five years in the US Navy Judge Advocate General’s Corps as a legal adviser aboard the USS Nimitz aircraft carrier, then worked for two years as a county prosecutor back in New Mexico. CONTINUED ON PAGE 17
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WHO’S BEHIND THE CANDIDATES? MARTINEZ CAMPAIGN BRAIN McCLESKEY BACKS FOUR REPUBLICAN JUDICIAL CONTENDERS BY MARJORIE CHILDRESS, NEW MEXICO IN DEPTH
The 2018 election will be pivotal for discerning the kind of imprint Gov. Susana Martinez—the first female governor of New Mexico and the first elected Latina governor in the United States—leaves on New Mexico policies and laws. There’s a good chance many of her priorities, if not her methods, will live on if her successor is Republican Steve Pearce. Not so much if Democrat Michelle Lujan Grisham moves into the Governor’s Mansion. How much she shapes New Mexico’s appellate court for the long term is another area worth watching. Six judges on the 10-member court are Martinez appointees. Four—all Republican—face Democratic challengers this November. The appellate court is an important judicial panel. Each year it hears about 900 cases on appeal from New Mexico’s trial courts. New Mexico’s election process for judges is an odd duck. Governors appoint them to vacant seats on the state’s various courts. In order to serve a full term, appointed judges must compete in a partisan campaign in the next election cycle. New Mexico is one of just seven states that require judges win a partisan election. If they win, judges are only required to stand for “retention” in elections thereafter—meaning they appear on the ballot unopposed and must garner 57 percent of the vote to keep their seats. The four Republican Martinez appointees who have drawn Democratic challengers for an eight-year term on the appeals court are running in partisan elections this year. Her lone Dem-
ocratic appointee is running unopposed. Judge Miles Hanisee is up for retention. All publicly financed, the Republican candidates each received $208,445 from the state’s public elections fund while their Democratic challengers have each received $222,504. The amounts are calculated based on the number of voters registered with each party. On the Democratic side, the four candidates are using three different consultants associated with the Democratic party— Traci Cadigan, Brian Morris and Heather Brewer—and contracting with several media firms. However, all four Republican campaigns are using Martinez’ longtime adviser and consultant Jay McCleskey. McCleskey Media Strategies is providing video and other media strategies for a total of almost $70,000, according to campaign finance reports filed last week. An additional $7,000 from each candidate for statewide surveys and media guidance was paid to Public Opinion Strategies, the firm where his wife, Nicole McCleskey, is a partner. Jay McCleskey is known for hard-hitting media campaigns, both for candidates and political action committees he’s been affiliated with over the years. These are the only four New Mexico candidates paying the McCleskey-affiliated companies as of last week’s campaign reports. All of the appellate court candidates— Republican and Democrat alike—have on hand the bulk of their campaign funds, leaving plenty for advertising as Election Day draws near. General wisdom is that judicial candidates don’t go for negative campaigning. But there’s plenty of independent PAC money in the mix this year, a good chunk of it connected to McCleskey. McCleskey Media Strategies has billed $810,791 so far this election cycle to four PACs: New Mexicans for Progress, Advance New Mexico Now, Susana PAC, and NM Prosperity.
CASH ON HAND
Position 1:
Position 2:
Position 3:
Position 4:
Kristina Bogardus (D)
Jacqueline Medina (D)
Briana Zamora (D)
Megan Duffy (D)
Stephen French (R)
Hank Bohnhoff (R)
Emil Kiehne (R)
Daniel Gallegos (R)
$179,877
$172,005
$178,334
$167,662
$157,365
$166,113
$180,429
$172,769
SOURCE: SECRETARY OF STATE, SEPT. 10
APPELLATE JUDGE CANDIDATES ARE HANGING ON TO PUBLIC CAMPAIGN MONEY
sider it—except in certain criminal be looking at such a milestone just cases and issues involving the Pubmakes me incredibly proud,” Wray lic Regulation Commission, which says. go straight to the state Supreme Indeed, women hold a 3-2 maCourt. jority on the New Mexico Supreme Here’s how that works: The Court—one of eight states with court’s clerk randomly assigns the female majorities on the highest case to a panel of three appeals courts, according to statistics comcourt judges. (Never do all 10 judgpiled by the National Center for es consider a case together.) Two State Courts. of the three must agree on a deciNearly everyone interviewed sion, and then they issue one of two for this story pointed to a growing types of opinions. Memorandum case backlog as one of the primary opinions are often unpublished, issues facing the court. It’s taking and they concern issues of well-setjudges longer to issue opinions, tled New Mexico law. The court’s which dredges up the old legal saw: rarer formal opinions are those in “Justice delayed is justice denied.” which judges believe they must provide guidance on unsettled issues to the rest of the state’s courts and lawyers. If a party remains unsatisfied with an appeals court decision, they can take it up to the state Supreme Court, which has the authority to decide whether it will hear the case in most instances. For the last five years, the appeals court—the judges and 51 employees— has handled on average about 900 cases a year. That’s compared to fewer than 600 cases heard by the state Supreme Court annually. Katherine Wray, an Albuquerque-based attorney -Roderick Kennedy, who has practiced regularretired Court of Appeals judge ly in the appeals court for the past seven years after clerking for one of its judges for two years, says the random assignment of cases generThe appeals court was created in ally accomplishes its goal: Avoiding the 1960s to deal with a backlog of judicial cliques on the court and appeals at the state Supreme Court. ensuring diversity of perspectives The incumbents chalk up the on each case. backlog on the appeals court, in “It gives judges incentives to large part, to massive turnover in follow the law and provides less oprecent years. Six judges have reportunity for personal opinions,” tired in the past two years, leaving Wray says. “That’s important for a Martinez to appoint their replacecourt like this one where all kinds ments. of cases are considered.” Those retirements have sapped She says a shift in the gender much of the institutional memory balance of the court isn’t likely to from the court, says Judge Daniel change the way the court functions. Gallegos, who is running against “But we have so many female Megan Duffy. In turn, newly apDistrict Court judges, a majority pointed judges receive less menof female judges on our Supreme toring and face a longer learning Court, and to have our Court of Apcurve as they work to become peals, which is my favorite court,
Fundamentally, legal questions remain legal questions. But the importance of some legal questions might be lost on male judges that is not lost on female judges.
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• SEPTEMBER 19-25, 2018
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familiar with the court’s practices and rhythms. Along with Judges Emil J Kiehne and Hank Bohnhoff, Gallegos says his time on the bench and his past experience with appellate law compose part of his pitch to voters: “Experience and qualifications” mean a better-functioning Court of Appeals, particularly given all the recent turnover. “I believe that since I’ve been on the court for more than a year and a half, I have acquired some of that institutional memory and that does give me an advantage over my opponent,” says Bohnhoff, who is facing longtime former prosecutor and appellate specialist Jacqueline R Medina. Kennedy, the former judge, says all the candidates are qualified—and there’s plenty of institutional memory on the court, no matter who wins in November, to dig out of the backlog and make the appeals court function more efficiently. “The last time there was massive turnover was when I first came on the court in ’99 and the early 2000s,” Kennedy says. “The more senior judges took it upon themselves to bring us along, and they did a good job.” The longest-serving judge on the appeals court, Michael Vigil, with 15 years, is running for a seat on the state Supreme Court, a potential loss of some of that institutional memory. If he wins, the next governor appoints his replacement. The incumbents acknowledged the value of diversity on the courts, including indicators such as background, experience and familiarity with the appellate system, along with gender representation. But Judge Stephen G French, who is running against Kristina Bogardus, says in an interview that he doesn’t believe judicial elections should be partisan. “That would include identity politics,” he says. Kiehne and Bohnhoff both say the voters they’ve spoken with don’t seem concerned with a candidate’s gender. “I’ve been campaigning since I took office last year,” Kiehne says. “I’ve talked with hundreds and hundreds of voters, and it isn’t an issue … and I don’t think it’s something that should matter to the voters.” Lonna Atkeson, professor of political science at the University of New Mexico, isn’t so sure about that. “There’s definitely some gender politics going on in New Mexico,” she says, pointing out that, save for one, women won every contested Democratic primary race in the state in the 2016 election cycle. “That’s really interesting,” she says. “We know that women have a greater preference for women. I really think
there’s something going on there, especially in down-ballot races like judicial races.” Atkeson also points to research that shows women are seen as less corruptible than men, which could factor heavily in a judicial contest. And then there’s an inescapable reality: For every registered Republican voter in New Mexico, there are one and a half Democrats. Voters often cast their ballots by party identification, Atkeson says. There’s also more than a fifth of registered voters who are not affiliated with a party. A decision by the New Mexico Supreme Court last week striking down the option of checking a box to vote for all candidates of a particular party could throw a wrench in the Democratic challengers’ chances. But Atkeson says there’s more to it. “There’s a lot of anti-Republican rhetoric out there at the moment, so enthu-
NEW MEXICO COURT OF APPEALS
10 judges hear cases in panels of three The court hears 900 cases a year Governors appoint judges to vacant seats. In order to serve a full term, appointed judges must compete in a partisan campaign in the next election cycle Four current Republican appointees are facing opposition in the General Election to stay on the bench Judges are paid about $125,000 per year
siasm might have an effect,” she says. “That’s separate from voting with your tribe, but either or both could get a candidate over the incumbency hump.” Finally, the prospect of a female majority on the Court of Appeals piqued Atkeson’s interest. She noted that the state Legislature has not been as quick to reach gender equality as other states—or as quick as with New Mexico’s judiciary. Figures compiled by the Center for American Women and Politics show New Mexico ranks 15th nationally for the number of female legislators; just over 30 percent of the state’s House and Senate members are women. Across all courts in the state, women have 77 seats on the bench. That’s 40 percent of New Mexico’s judiciary and compares to 116 male judges. Jacqueline Medina says she grew up in Taos, the daughter of a miner and a housewife. She didn’t know any attorneys. Later, she met a few. They were all men. “But I wanted to be an attorney, and I wanted to be a judge,” she tells SFR and NMID. Medina’s legal career has spanned 27 years. Twenty-four of those have been spent as a prosecutor, including more than a decade as an assistant attorney general. In that job, she was assigned more than 150 appellate cases. She spent most of her interview with SFR and NMID talking about her experience, including time inside the courtroom and out; she says she’s spent innumerable hours reviewing trial court records and writing briefs for appellate cases. But there’s something else. “I’m excited that women are now starting to not only become attorneys, but also judges,” Medina says. “I think that’s a good thing, and I think it’s about time. It’s very exciting to me as a woman and as a woman of color, and it makes me think my state is progressive.” Briana H Zamora also wanted to talk mostly about her experience. She’s never worked at the Court of Appeals, but as a 10-year veteran of the bench—first at the Bernalillo County Metropolitan Court and now as a criminal judge at the 2nd Judicial District Court in Albuquerque— she would have the most recent trial court experience on the appeals court if elected. Her current job has included authoring more than 50 decisions on appeals from the Metro Court. Many of those have been rulings on requests from prosecutors to hold criminal defendants in
We know that women have a greater preference for women. I really think there’s something going on there, especially in down-ballot races like judicial races. -Lonna Atkeson, UNM professor of political science
jail pending trial—a relatively new area of New Mexico law that came along after voters in 2016 overwhelmingly passed a constitutional amendment that fundamentally changed the way bail bonds work in the state. So-called “preventative detention” decisions by judges have dominated headlines in the state, which has been beset in recent years by spiking crime rates. It’s now an issue that, increasingly, is winding up in the lap of the Court of Appeals. Judge Kiehne, Zamora’s opponent, counters the experience argument by pointing out that his whole legal career, which dates to 2000, has been spent on appellate law. He says that separates him from Zamora and gives him the edge. There’s something else for Zamora, too: Her daughters are 7 and 11. She says her job and the rigors of campaigning have kept her away from them more than she’d like. “When I ask if they’re doing OK, they tell me: ‘Mom, we’re fine. We want you to keep going,’” Zamora says. “That’s pretty amazing.” It extends past family, too, she says, to young female lawyers around the state. “If they see other women and women of color in leadership roles, they’re going to say: ‘I can do it, too.’” This story was published in partnership with New Mexico In Depth.
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Community. Health. Impact.
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SFRE P O RTE R .CO M / N E WS / TH E I N TE R FAC E
Two installations integrate art, nature and technology into Santa Fe’s environment BY JULIA GOLDBERG @votergirl
I
n movies, not to mention the headlines, technology and nature don’t mix well. Plants join together to destroy humanity (M Night Shyamalan’s ridiculous The Happening) or agricultural pesticides destroy male honeybees’ already slim chance for reproduction (last month’s National Geographic). Others believe technology offers humans the chance to rectify some of the ills wrought on Earth, and the examples are myriad, from addressing climate change to food shortages— read “An Ecomodernist Manifesto” (ecomodernism.org) for more thoughts on ecopragmatism, and the pursuit of positive integration of people and environment. Two such integrative examples, both falling somewhat broadly into the category of land art, are available for Santa Feans to explore this month as the city has its prettiest and briefest season (autumn!).
1330 Rufina Circle 505.231.7775 Monday - Saturday | 10am - 6pm Southside Location | Easy Parking
JULIA GOLDBERG
Walk Abouts
Head to the Railyard Park, where mother-daughter team Miriam Sagan and Isabel Winson-Sagan, a poet and multimedia artist, respectively, have curated a show combining the Japanese art of suminagashi, haiku poetry and geocaching, a hide-and-seek game in which participants look for hidden objects using a global positioning system (more commonly, a GPS) via an app. Sagan and Winson-Sagan have worked together for years creating interactive art projects, and visited Japan together in January. This project grew out of a workshop they conducted in the Railyard community room in which approximately 30 participants wrote Haiku poems and learned suminagashi—“paper marbling or ink painting,” as Winson-Sagan describes it. After the workshop, the two teachers took all the work and “created a third thing,” Sagan says. Treasure hunters can just wander the park to explore the works, or can use the geocaching app to hunt for them. Sagan became interested in land art, doing site-specific text installations years ago. “I think it started from traveling around the Southwest and looking at land art, and traveling around the United States and looking at outsider art, like Vietnam vets who built a giant beer can castle dedicated to marijuana. For some reason, things that are in between, that have a quality of being liminal, like in between what you’re supposed to look at … like the park [versus] your inner life or the dream of the city or the shadow of what’s going on … was really exciting to
me,” Sagan says. “But I wasn’t that exposed to people making it, and then I had some sort of religious conversion experience where I felt the world should be covered in poetry.” In an earlier project, Haiku in the Hood, the two made fake street signs with haikus on them (translated by Winson-Sagan from the original Japanese) in their neighborhood and geocached them. “People would come from Albuquerque and stand outside my house,” Sagan says. “It’s fun. It’s audience in the old-fashioned art sense.” And the geocaching element, which Winson-Sagan describes as “treasure hunting for adults,” brings a new audience. “People who might not care about poetry or public art, they care about geocaching,” she says. “It’s our technological edge.” For a different sort of art hunting, head to Leonora Curtin Wetland Preserve, a Santa Fe Botanical Garden site in La Cienega. The preserve is open May through October for limited hours on Saturdays and Sundays. I’ve been visiting for years—it’s one of my favorite spots,
and a rare opportunity in Santa Fe to see mallards and bullfrogs. The parking lot was decidedly busier than usual on a recent visit, partially thanks to a current installation by Axle Contemporary mobile art gallery. Wilderness Acts 2018: Art-In-Nature integrates into the preserve 11 artists’ temporary installations using natural materials, which one discovers while wandering its trails. Many of these pieces speak to the tension between humanity and nature. For example, Munson Hunt’s “Reclamation’ (small)” marks the beginning of the trail into the preserve, as well as symbolizes humanity’s encroachment in nature. as the exhibition brochure states. The project began in 2014 to mark the 50th anniversary of the 1964 Wilderness Act, which protects federal land. “I’ve been coming out here for years and I thought it would be a beautiful place to do installations in nature,” Axle cofounder Jerry Wellman says as we talk in the mobile gallery in the preserve’s parking lot. The project dovetails with Axle’s mission of “expanding the definitions of art” and “expanding the definitions of exhibiting art and the experience of art.” And while the artists had complete freedom in their installations, Wellman acknowledges it’s “hard to avoid political thoughts now. Ecology, which is a science, is under siege by certain politicians. I don’t think making a direct statement was in our minds, but the indirect statement might be more long lasting and powerful anyway.” SUMINAGASHI AND POETRY Through Oct. 6. Free. Railyard Park, Cerrillos Road and Guadalupe St.; miriamswell.wordpress.com WILDERNESS ACTS 2018: ART IN NATURE
Isabel Winson-Sagan and Miriam Sagan curated a show of poetry, suminagashi and geocaching in the Railyard park.
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COMMUNITY DAY FUN, FOOD, AND FREE ADMISSION FOR ALL! SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 23 · 10:00 AM – 5:00 PM
International Folk Art Market
L L I H E N O NY STORIES! MA
Museum of Indian Arts and Culture
Museum of International Folk Art
Museum of Spanish Colonial Art
Santa Fe Botanical Garden
Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian 22
SEPTEMBER 5-11, 2018
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Join six Museum Hill partners for a traditional Matanza pig roast, Native dances, storytelling, bead sale and exchange, hands-on activities, artist demonstrations, refreshments, and more! Admission and all hands-on activities are FREE for New Mexico residents and guests alike. For more information, visit TinyURL.com/MuseumHill.
10:00 AM Sky City Buffalo Elk Dance Group (Acoma Pueblo) Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian (WMAI) 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM Tin Workshop Get a brief introduction to working with tin and make your own ornament Museum of Spanish Colonial Arts (MOSCA) 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM Nature Crafts in the garden Santa Fe Botanical Garden (SFBG) 10:00 AM – 1:00 PM Matanza Traditional Pig Roast $12 per person, $6 children under 7 years of age Join the Spanish Colonial Arts Society for this annual social ritual that celebrates the harvest of meat and the bonds of immediate and extended families MOSCA 10:00 AM – 4:00 PM Gerardo’s Andale Food Truck WMAI 10:00 AM – 4:00 PM Docent Tours Take a tour through the garden, ask questions and learn how to incorporate elements of the landscaping into your own backyard SFBG 10:00 AM – 5:00 PM Community Chalk Mural SFBG 10:00 AM – 5:00 PM Museum of Indian Arts and Culture Native Treasures Collectors’ Sale - FINAL DAY Laboratory of Anthropology 11:00 AM Children’s Crafts Session WMAI 12:00 PM Sky City Buffalo Elk Dance Group (Acoma Pueblo) WMAI 12:00 – 4:00 PM Hollis Chitto (Choctaw / Laguna / Isleta Pueblo), a rising star in the beading world, offers a Beading Demonstration Museum of Indian Arts and Culture (MIAC) 12:00 – 4:00 PM Bead It! Activity Design and create your own unique bead with polymer clay MIAC 12:00 – 4:00 PM Community Bead Exchange Have fun going through your collection, price the beads you want to exchange, and trade with others Museum of International Folk Art (MOIFA) 1:00 PM The Earth Turns: Autumnal Equinox with Flute by Glee Briggs Join the Labyrinth Resource Group of Santa Fe for a special labyrinth walk Milner Plaza 1:00 PM INNASTATE Santa Fe’s contemporary reggae band performs on Milner Plaza MIAC 1:00 – 2:00 PM Marie Romero Cash, author and a Master of Lifetime Achievement in the Spanish Market, reads from several of her books about the art and culture of the Southwest, including excerpts from her Jemimah Hodge Mystery Series MOSCA 1:00 – 3:00 PM Melanie Yazzie (Navajo) presents a Printmaking Demonstration WMAI 1:00 – 4:00 PM Community Seed Exchange Bring seeds you want to trade or share with others and learn about how seeds have moved around the world through trade SFBG 1:30 PM Storyteller Joe Hayes WMAI 2:00 PM Children’s Crafts Session WMAI 2:00 PM Acoma Rain Dance Group performs on Milner Plaza MIAC 3:00 PM INNASTATE Santa Fe’s contemporary reggae band performs on Milner Plaza MIAC 3:00 – 4:00 PM Salsa Dancing Presentation with Darrin Visarraga Beginners’ class of salsa dancers perform routines then invite audience participation MOSCA 3:30 PM Storyteller Joe Hayes WMAI 4:00 PM Acoma Rain Dance Group performs on Milner Plaza MIAC PHOTOS, FROM TOP: Baskets by Phez’kwemkhono Bomake-Ncheka Cooperative, Swaziland. Photo © Stephanie Mendez, courtesy IFAM. Hollis Chitto shows examples of his beading work. Photo courtesy MIAC. Strings of beads made from recycled glass. Photo courtesy MOIFA. The Matanza includes pork, cooked in various ways. Photo courtesy MOSCA. Two young boys try their hand at gardening. Photo courtesy SFBG. Melanie Yazzie, Crow, (detail), 2014. Photo courtesy of the artist.
HAIL, ANTHONY When we came across the music of 23-year-old rapper Anthony Gallardo, aka Anthonius Monk, in May, we called his sophomore full-length album Rhymes and Wisdom the best of the year. And now Gallardo is set to outdo himself with his new release, Uncontrollably Driven. It’s an apt title: It’s his second album in the same year, and if Gallardo’s previous material serves as a guide, we can expect a love letter to the hip-hop game and his hometown Santa Fe, delivered with one of the smoothest and quick-thinking flows we’ve heard locally or anywhere. Hip-hop fans, get on board—Anthonius Monk is the best of the best. (Alex De Vore)
COURTESY VESSELTHEFILM.COM
COURTESY RUFINA TAPROOM
MUSIC THU/20
Anthonius Monk Uncontrollably Driven Release Party: 8:30 pm Thursday Sept. 20. $5. Second Street Brewery (Rufina Taproom), 2920 Rufina St., 954-1068
PUBLIC DOMAIN
DANCE SAT/22 FOR ALL YOU B-BOYS AND B-GIRLS AND B-NBS With changes sweeping Warehouse 21 (or whatever they call it now), one vital program seemed in flux: the breakdancers. One of the more positive (and let’s face it, cool) programs run at the teen arts center, it seemed like breaking had gone by the wayside. Breathe easy, then, because classes are back now at Rockin’ Rollers, to commence on Wednesdays. Whew! See, instructors like Alejandra Avil have a love of breakin’, jukin’ and jivin’, and they’re passing it on patiently and passionately to a new generation. Just show up ready to dance and learn and Avil and crew will take care of the rest. (ADV) Youth Break Dance Class Registration Party: 5 pm Saturday Sept. 22. $5. Rockin’ Rollers, 2915 Agua Fría St.,795-6569.
COURTESY MUSEUM OF INTERNATIONAL FOLK ART
EVENT SUN/23 A DAY AT THE MUSEUM Santa Fe is known for a lot of things: Chile, art galleries and museums are especially integral to the Santa Fean society. Museum Hill is where a good portion of these museums live: the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture, International Folk Art and the Santa Fe Botanical Gardens are but a few of these prestigious and expansive institutions. Community Day is an annual event celebrating the community that gave them birth, offering activities, performances and free admission. If you’re visiting or just plain haven’t been to all of them, this is your best chance to do so. (Layne Radlauer) Museum Hill Community Day: 9 am-5 pm Sunday Sept. 23. Free. Museum Hill, 710 Camino Lejo, 982-6366
FILM TUE/25
Social Justice Pirates Film documents women’s health care in international waters For many activists, regarding the medical and emotional crises facing women who are denied contraceptives and abortions in their home countries, they work to change the laws. That’s all well and good. But in 1999, Dutch medical doctor Rebecca Gomperts took another tactic: She rigged up a boat as a medical clinic, started distributing birth control and performing abortions in international waters (about 12 miles off any given coast)— and made it all legal. Since the boat flies the Dutch flag, it follows the laws of the Netherlands, allowing imperiled women in conservative countries to come aboard and get the health care their own homelands won’t provide. Vessel, the 2014 documentary about Gomperts’ continuing work, is shown this week as part of the Women’s Film Series from the Santa Fe chapter of the National Organization for Women. Afterward, a discussion with women’s rights advocate Julianna Koob and retired Albuquerque physician Dr. Sandra Penn outlines the state of reproductive health in New Mexico—which is actually brighter than some might expect. “Despite the fact that many
people think of us as very Catholic and therefore against reproductive rights,” Penn tells SFR, “it turns out that our community really values women making decisions for themselves.” But now is not the time to rest. In New Mexico, “we still have a law on the books that criminalizes abortion,” Penn tells SFR. “It is a leftover from prior to Roe v Wade, and there will be an opportunity during the legislative session to get that law off the books. … Given concern about Kavanaugh, given concern about the Supreme Court and their continuing work at whittling away at Roe v Wade, we want to make sure there’s nothing in New Mexico that would prevent us from protecting women’s reproductive health and rights.” In closing, Penn says, “I’ve said to my patients in the past, and I still say it today: Pregnancy can be an accident. Parenthood should not be.” (Charlotte Jusinski)
SFREPORTER.COM
VESSEL 7 pm Tuesday Sept. 25. $10. Center for Contemporary Arts, 1050 Old Santa Fe Trail, 982-1338
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THIS SATURDAY
Plaza Dentistry Bringing Care back to dental Care.
Cosmetic & Family Dentistry Doctor ENgineer + arTIST = DENTIST
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Contact Charlotte: 395-2906
WED/19 BOOKS/LECTURES BILINGUAL BOOKS AND BABIES Santa Fe Public Library Main Branch 145 Washington Ave., 955-6780 In a program for babies 6 months to 2 years old (and their caregivers), join a play and language group to enjoy books, songs and finger games. 10:30 am, free BILINGUAL BOOKS AND BABIES Santa Fe Public Library Southside 6599 Jaguar Drive, 955-2820 Miss the earlier one? Here’s another. 4 pm, free DEMOCRATIC PARTY OF SANTA FE COUNTY: JOBS & ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT Center for Progress and Justice 1420 Cerrillos Road, 467-8514 A panel arranged by the Santa Fe County Democratic Party addresses our options for creating good jobs for Santa Fe, and how you can help bring them about. Discuss what we must do to ensure that young people have gainful jobs, instituting a living wage and supporting small businesses. 6-7:30 pm, free DHARMA TALK BY MATTHEW KOZAN PALEVSKY Upaya Zen Center 1404 Cerro Gordo Road, 986-8518 This week's talk is presented by Palevsky, president of Upaya Zen Center. The evening begins with a 15-minute meditation. 5:30 pm, free MIDDLE LENGTH LAM RIM Thubten Norbu Ling Tibetan Buddhist Center 1807 Second St., Ste. 3, 660-7056 In weekly classes taught by Geshe Thubten Sherab, learn about Lam Rim—it means "Stages of the Path" in Tibetan, and refers to the entire Buddhist path to enlightenment. 6:30 pm, free
It may take you a second to see—but Warren Keating’s paintings all depict folks as seen from above, like here in “Feast Day in Pecos.” Head over to ViVo Contemporary for artist talks from Keating and fellow gallery arists Patricia Pearce and Norma Alonzo on Friday. The full listing is on page 32. PEOPLE TO PEOPLE GALLERY CONVERSATIONS: ZOZOBRA New Mexico Museum of Art 107 W Palace Ave., 476-5072 Ray Sandoval, event organizer for the annual burning, discusses Zozo. Free with museum admission. 12:30 pm, $6-$12 PRESCHOOL STORY TIME Santa Fe Public Library Southside 6599 Jaguar Drive, 955-2820 No matter how smart you are, you should make sure your kids are smarter than you. 10:45 am, free RARE PLANT MANAGEMENT IN NEW MEXICO Christ Lutheran Church 1701 Arroyo Chamiso, 983-9461 The Native Plant Society of New Mexico presents Zoe Davidson’s "Rare Plant Management in New Mexico." and Ella Samuel’s "Native Plant Material Program at the BLM." 6:30 pm, free
DANCE ECSTATIC DANCE WITH DJ AHYU Madrid Railyard 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Ever been so ecstatic you want to dance? Or ever danced so hard it made you ecstatic? It's all kinds of fierce and joyous fun. 6-8:30 pm, $10
EVENTS A-I-R OPEN STUDIOS Institute of American Indian Arts 83 Avan Nu Po Road, 424-2351 Join IAIA's artists-in-residence Bobby Wilson (SissetonWahpeton Dakota), Lillian Pitt (Wasco/Warm Springs/ Yakama) and Maggie Thompson (Fond du Lac Ojibwe), and discover more about their processes, techniques, tools, ideas and cultural influences. 3-5 pm, free
CHILDREN’S CHESS CLUB Santa Fe Public Library Main Branch 145 Washington Ave., 955-6780 Join other kids to play against for a nice mix of quiet thought and roaring laughter, and play as many games as time allows. 5:45 pm, free GEEKS WHO DRINK Second Street Brewery (Railyard) 1607 Paseo de Peralta,989-3278 Do you basically know everything about everything? Put it to good use at a pub quiz. 8 pm, free LET'S TAKE A LOOK Museum of Indian Arts & Culture 710 Camino Lejo, 476-1250 Curators from the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture and The Laboratory of Anthropology gather in the lobby to look at your treasures and attempt to identify and explain any artifact or historic object presented to them. Noon-2 pm, free
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON MARKET Santa Fe Farmers Market 1607 Paseo de Peralta, 983-4098 Think of it as an extra produce-centric happy hour for the summer months. 3-6 pm, free WELLS PETROGLYPH PRESERVE PUBLIC TOUR Mesa Prieta Petroglyph Project 1431 Hwy. 68, Velarde, 852-1351 Docents lead visitors through an insightful two-hour tour of ancient rock art. Pre-register at mesaprietapetroglyphs.org. 9:30-11:30 am, $35
MUSIC GERRY & CHRIS La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 Traditional Irish sounds meld with Latin tunes. 7:30 pm, free
GREG SCHLOTTHAUER Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Pop, rock and contemporary favorites on piano. 6:30 pm, free JOAQUIN GALLEGOS El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 Soulful flamenco guitar. 7 pm, free LIV OROVICH Osteria D'Assisi 58 S Federal Place, 986-5858 Celtic, American folk, klezmer, Slavic folk, jazz and classical music on violin. 6:30 pm, free OPEN MIC NIGHT Tumbleroot Brewery & Distillery 2791 Agua Fría St. Singer-songwriter Jason Reed hosts his long-beloved open mic affair. Everyone gets a recording of their performance afterward. Dang! 7-10 pm, free CONTINUED ON PAGE 28
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SEPTEMBER 19-25, 2018
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MUSIC
In the Loop just two guys based in Los Angeles whose plaintive, bright take on instrumental rock music always draws a crowd. Using live-looping and bass, Dunn builds songs onstage from scratch while Fogarty’s drumming lays the framework. The music shifts seamlessly from shimmering, keyboard-mimicking melodic phrases to heavier passages of riffs that share as much in common with cerebral party-rockers Ratatat as they do with the deeper end of the post-rock pool. At the core is a celebratory tone, especially on tracks like “You Are Enough.” Even when the music gets heavier, it never turns dour. There are no rusted-out dystopias conjured, mostly clean Californian vistas with beams of light shining throughout. While certain touchstones of post-rock are present, it is a descriptor that does not capture the music’s unique identity. “I don’t think we sound like those [post-rock] bands,” Dunn says. “We share some similarities for sure, especially being instrumental.” He agrees that the music has a joyfulness all its own, however, and the band’s studio efforts consist mostly of overdubs rather than looping, lending more con-
El Ten Eleven continues to shine their light with instrumental rock that doesn’t weigh too heavy BY LUKE HENLEY a u t h o r @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m
T
here is a good chance you’ve heard El Ten Eleven’s music, even if the name does not immediately ping on your radar. For over 15 years, the duo—bassist and composer Kristian Dunn and drummer Tim Fogarty—has reliably churned out albums of quality self-produced instrumental music and smartly licensed to film and television projects, quietly building up a musical empire. Dunn and Fogarty’s workhorse attitude and solid bond as a two-piece has granted them a rare longevity in the industry, allowing El Ten Eleven to regularly tour and record new material. Their new album, Banker’s Hill, out just last month on the band’s own Fake Record Label, stands alongside the best in their discography at a time when there are no further pyrotechnics to the story, no drug freak-outs or rock star histrionics;
trol over mixing and experimentation with sound. “When we first started we were kind of obsessed with proving to the world that we could do it live,” Dunn explains. “Pretty much what you hear on the record was how we’d do it live with maybe some little differences here and there. Lately, we’ve been allowing ourselves to drift away from that a little and what is on the record doesn’t have to be exactly like it is live.” This difference seems important to Dunn. “When I go see artists live, if they do everything exactly as it is on the record, it’s kind of boring,” he says. “I could have just stayed home and listened to the record.” But El Ten Eleven’s live show has evolved into more than just a display of technique for Dunn and Fogarty, and such attempts to keep things vital are as much for audiences as they are for themselves. “Some of these songs we’ve been playing for 15 years—we’ve got to make it exciting for ourselves,” Dunn tells SFR. “I don’t want to be an actor up there pretending I’m into the music. I can’t do that; I have to actually be into the music.”
El Ten Eleven has also made another drastic change in its process with Banker’s Hill by using an outside producer for the first time ever. This means more focus when compared to previous releases, which may be credited in part to producer Sonny Diperri’s help in editing 22 songs composed by Dunn down to less than half that number. “He was hugely responsible for the end result,” Dunn posits. “When we first started off, I didn’t want to have a producer because I knew exactly what I wanted to do. All these years later I was desperate for one because I really wanted some help making decisions. We brought in Sonny and he was perfect.” The end result is tracks like album closer “This Morning With Her, Having Coffee,” which has a structured, sprawling atmosphere that builds like a calm storm, showcasing the sound of a band that has always known what it wanted to do and finally has all the tools it needs to make it happen. EL TEN ELEVEN WITH TENNIS SYSTEM 7 pm Saturday Sept. 22. $20-$23. Meow Wolf, 1352 Rufina Circle, 395-6369
SEPTEMBER FREE LIVE MUSIC 21
GREG BUTERA’S TRIO
Saturday
Friday
AT THE ORIGINAL
Country, 6 PM
Sunday
AT THE RAILYARD
23 LONE PIÑON Son Huasteco, 1-4 PM
22
BUSY Y LOS BIG DEALS Pop & Jazz, 6 PM
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A party where you are the guest of honor. Kids’ Activities like, tons
BOX LUNCH
Drawings for Prizes and Giveaways
FREE
flu shot
t rd irpor
a
Parking
capital high school
(284) rd
FOOD trucks
For every can of food donated to The Food Depot and every coat donated to Esperanza Shelter, we will donate $1 (up to $5,000 each).
rr ill os
dance if you wanna
FREE
ce
Music
DONATE A CAN OF FOOD OR A COAT WHEN YOU COME TO THE PARTY!
veterans memorial hwy (599)
live
i-25 i-25
Parking santa fe place mall
Party at the Park
Parking santa fe community college
A free community festival the new Presbyterian Health Park. all parking will be off-site at the locations indicated with complimentary front door shuttle service to and from the party.
phs.org/santafe
santa fe medical center opens october 2018. ob delivery services begin early 2019.
A party where you are the guest of honor. Kids’ Activities like, tons
BOX LUNCH
Drawings for Prizes and Giveaways
FREE
flu shot
t rd irpor
a
Parking
capital high school
(284) rd
FOOD trucks
For every can of food donated to The Food Depot and every coat donated to Esperanza Shelter, we will donate $1 (up to $5,000 each).
rr ill os
dance if you wanna
FREE
ce
Music
DONATE A CAN OF FOOD OR A COAT WHEN YOU COME TO THE PARTY!
veterans memorial hwy (599)
live
i-25 i-25
Parking santa fe place mall
Party at the Park
Parking santa fe community college
A free community festival the new Presbyterian Health Park. all parking will be off-site at the locations indicated with complimentary front door shuttle service to and from the party.
phs.org/santafe
santa fe medical center opens october 2018. ob delivery services begin early 2019.
NRITYAGRAM DANCE ENSEMBLE
THE CALENDAR SANTA FE CROONERS Palace Saloon 142 W Palace Ave., 428-0690 Golden Age standards. 6:30-9:30 pm, free SANTA FE MEGABAND REHEARSAL Odd Fellows Hall 1125 Cerrillos Road, 470-7077 Join an open community band in which musicians play acoustic string band music. 7 pm, free TINY'S ELECTRIC JAM Tiny's Restaurant & Lounge 1005 S St. Francis Drive, 983-9817 Hosted by Nick Wymette and Albert Diaz. 8:30 pm, free VINCENT RANDAZZO Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Folk-rock on tour from California. 8 pm, free
WORKSHOP THE ABCS OF NONPROFIT BOARDS Santa Fe Community Foundation 501 Halona St., 988-9715 Presenter Jean Block hosts a workshop geared toward organizations with budgets over $250,000 and with more than three to five staff members. Learn practical ways to enhance your nonprofit board. 1-4 pm, $25-$55 HOW TO MAKE YOUR OWN TINCTURES Santa Fe Botanical Garden 715 Camino Lejo, 471-9103 Talk through the science behind a tincture, taste infusions, learn the basics of various herbal material used to craft tinctures, and then start your own tinctures to finish extracting at home. Instructor Sascha Anderson (Choctaw) has been a food educator, gardener and wild forager for nearly a decade, so we trust her. 10 am-noon, $35-$40
THU/20
SEPTEMBER 27 8PM
THE LENSIC PERFORMING ARTS CENTER
aspensantafeballet.com ASFB BUSINESS PARTNER
ASFB MEDIA SPONSORS
ASFB GOVERNMENT / FOUNDATION SPONSORS Melville Hankins
Family Foundation
Partially funded by the City of Santa Fe Arts Commission and the 1% Lodgers Tax, and made possible in part by New Mexico Arts, a Division of the Department of Cultural Affairs, and the National Endowment for the Arts.
BOOKS/LECTURES CHRISTINA AGAPAKIS: THE REAL WORLD OF SYNTHETIC BIOLOGY James A Little Theatre 1060 Cerrillos Road, 476-6429 What is synthetic biology? How will it influence communities and cultures? Agapakis, Harvard-trained creative director at Ginkgo Bioworks, discusses the journey to create engineered living cells. 6:30 pm, $10 PRESCHOOL STORY TIME Santa Fe Public Library Main Branch 145 Washington Ave., 955-6780 Have you SEEN that viral video about The Wonky Donkey? See if the library has it. It looks awesome. 11 am, free
ENTER EVENTS AT SFREPORTER.COM/CAL
STEVEN RUDNICK: OCEANS AT RISK St. John's United Methodist Church 1200 Old Pecos Trail, 982-5397 Learn how human-generated excess carbon dioxide gas and excess heat created in global warming have been absorbed by the oceans, including what humans need to do to preserve the oceans and to deal with the consequences of extreme sea level rise. 1 pm, $15
EVENTS GEEKS WHO DRINK Santa Fe Brewing Company 35 Fire Place, 424-3333 Stellar quiz results can win you drink tickets for next time. 7 pm, free O2 OPEN MIC Santa Fe Oxygen & Healing Bar (Kaverns) 137 W San Francisco St., 986-5037 Calling all creatives! This one’s hosted by Noah Kass. 8 pm, $5 POEH NATIVE ART SHOWCASE Buffalo Thunder Resort and Casino 20 Buffalo Thunder Trail, 455-5555 Visit with local artists and purchase one-of-a-kind art pieces including pottery, jewelry and stone sculptures. 5-7 pm, free SOUND BATH WITH GOPAL DAS YogaSource 901 W San Mateo Road, 982-0990 Different than stress relief classes like yoga and meditation where you have to do stuff, in a sound bath you don't do anything. Simply lie down and relax while Gopal Das leads you on a sacred sound journey. 7:30 pm, $20 ¡VÁMONOS! SANTA FE: WALK WITH A DOC Villa Linda Park Wagon Wheel Road Head to the Arroyo Chamiso trail to go for a stroll with Dr. Luis Rigales of Christus St. Vincent. For more info, check out sfct.org/vamonos. 5:15 pm, free
MUSIC AMBER SWEENEY Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 An acoustic soul songstress from Washington state. 8 pm, free ANTHONIUS MONK: UNCONTROLLABLY DRIVEN RELEASE PARTY Second Street Brewery (Rufina Taproom) 2920 Rufina St., 954-1068 The Outstanding Citizens Collective drops beats in celebration of a new release (see SFR Picks, page 23). 8:30 pm, $5
CRASH KARAOKE Palace Saloon 142 W Palace Ave., 428-0690 The more you drink, the better you sound. #science 9 pm, free GERRY & CHRIS La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 Traditional Irish sounds from Gerry Carthy meld with Latin tunes by Chris Abeyta when these two longtime friends play together. 7:30 pm, free GREG SCHLOTTHAUER Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Pop, rock and contemporary favorites on piano with vocals too. 6:30 pm, free JONO MANSON Tumbleroot Brewery & Distillery 2791 Agua Fría St. Rootsy rock 'n' roll. 5-7 pm, free JOSEPH GENERAL Boxcar 530 S Guadalupe St., 988-7222 Original and classic reggae. 10 pm, free MARC SANDERS Osteria D'Assisi 58 S Federal Place, 986-5858 Piano standards. 6:30 pm, free OPEN MIC & JAM About the Music 2305 Fox Road, 603-4570 Get together with your old friends or make some new ones at this weekly mic. 5-9 pm, $5 PAT MALONE TerraCotta Wine Bistro 304 Johnson St., 989-1166 Solo jazz guitar. 6 pm, free RIO El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 Bossa nova and Brazilian jazz. 7 pm, free ROD WELLES Chili Line Brewing Company 204 N Guadalupe St., 982-8474 Rock 'n' blues. 7:30 pm, free RON ROUGEAU The Dragon Room 406 Old Santa Fe Trail, 983-7712 Acoustic songs from the '60s, '70s and beyond. 5:30 pm, free SEAN HEALEN La Boca (Taberna Location) 125 Lincoln Ave., 988-7102 Rock 'n' folk 'n' roll. 7 pm, free
THEATER ATACAMA Teatro Paraguas 3205 Calle Marie, 424-1601 A man and a woman meet in the northern Chilean desert while searching for bone fragments of loved ones disappeared by the Pinochet regime, and find a deep and unsettling connection that shakes their souls. 7:30 pm, $10-$20
PHOTO: SHALINI JAIN
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S FR E P O RTE R .CO M /A RTS
Symbolic Representation and the Thrill of the Catch COURTESY NÜART GALLERY
Like fish nibbling on a hook B Y L AY N E R A D L A U E R i n t e r n @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m
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John Tarahteeff’s “Spring (The Ruts)” asks more questions than it answers.
t’s hard to define the work of artist John Tarahteeff because his pieces often reject the vague categorical monikers we use to define such expressions of the self. He plays with light and realism, inviting the viewer to discern what his subjects are up to, but the scenes themselves tempt us to classify Tarahteeff’s work as surrealist. Still, when asked how he himself would describe his efforts, he hesitates. “I guess ‘symbolic representation,’” he tells SFR. “There’s a degree of realism there, but most of the stuff I do is made up. Some people classify it as surreal, but that’s kind of a broad category.” Tarahteeff paintings do indeed yield certain unusual and surrealistic circumstances—but they’re a far cry from the iconic works of Dali or Bosch. He paints clear, realistic figures doing realistic things; trees do not burst into lemons, elephants do not walk on stilts. In contrast, humans in Tarahteeff’s pieces fly kites
and go fishing; the symbolic representation present allows his subjects to tell their own stories and convey ways of looking at reality. They are perspectives on reality, not factual depictions. In one piece, “Spring (The Ruts),” a red-headed girl wearing a swimsuit rests her foot on a stump, while a scrappy-looking dog searches for three multicolor patterned eggs underneath the log, all the while a small bicyclist expresses victory in the background. Whose dog is that and what are those eggs doing there? Moreover, what’s up with that rainbow? The story, it seems, may be up to the viewer to extrapolate and, when compared to other storytelling art forms like film or photography, Tarahteeff only provides subtle nods to how he perceives his creations. “A lot of it comes from older paintings, a traditional way of seeing what paintings have to offer,” he muses. “Before there were movies and photographs, paintings were the way of representing visual realities. Reality doesn’t tell you, per se, that this is how you should see the world. It’s the artists that create these devices, this language that has become painting.” Symbolic representation is central to Tarahteeff’s artistic philosophy. In “The Undertow,” two fishermen are pushed off by a particularly strong wave with two half-naked women posing in the foreground. In this work, Tarahteeff may be showing the powerful nature of two forces—one in which two
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fishermen are punished by the sea and one in which two women brandish their natural elegance. Then again, it could simply be a depiction of the consequences of fishing. Strong images and mysterious stories are emblematic of what Tarahteeff is trying to express: that reality is subjective. “I like that some of those things are made up, because they have sort of a reality to them,” he says. “It conveys an archetypal reality, rather than a ‘this is how things look’ objective perception. It’s a symbolic representation, which is more interesting to me.” Take the role of fishing; Hooks, fish and fishermen are repeatedly present throughout Tarahteeff’s upcoming show Placeholder. “Fishing is rich with allegories and ideas,” he explains. “It’s part of our parlance of language: Several figures of speech come from fishing. … I think a big part of it is because it was part of my childhood. I tap into my childhood a lot in my work. That world, there’s something about it that is palpable and related to painting. It’s like you’re on the hunt, you’re looking for something and you throw down some paint and it looks really nice. It’s like fish nibbling on a hook.”
JOHN TARAHTEEFF: PLACEHOLDER 5 pm Friday Sept. 21. Free. Through Oct. 7. Nüart Gallery, 670 Canyon Road, 988-3888
2ND ANNUAL THEATRE WALKta Fe
SEE YOU ONS T THE STREEH AND IN T E! SEATS
Saturday • September 22 • 1:30 to 5:30
For schedule and a map:
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Stroll between performances by 20 theatre companies at 10 venues in the Rufina Arts District
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ART + YOGA: ART FOR MIND AND BODY Canyon Road Like yoga, art asks us to slow down and honor the present moment. During a two-hour tour, let discussions of art open your mind and gentle yoga poses open your body as you visit two or three galleries in a small group (limited to eight people). RSVP is required: santafearttours.com. 10 am, $55 EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR LEARNING CIRCLE Santa Fe Community Foundation 501 Halona St., 988-9715 If you're an active executive director in the New Mexico nonprofit sector, join your peers for discussions about the inner work, the nuts and bolts, and the people and places we all strive to support. Register at santafecf.org. 8:30-10:30 am, free PAINTING CLASS WITH ROBBI FIRESTONE Red Sage Buffalo Thunder Resort and Casino, 20 Buffalo Thunder Trail, 819-2056 The internationally renowned painter conducts a two-hour painting class. All materials provided. 6 pm, $45
FRI/21 ART OPENINGS GLOAMING: AUTUMN EQUINOX SHOW Dandelion Guild 1925 Rosina St., Ste. H, 820-0847 Celebrate the equinox with music, hot apple cider and a new installation. 6 pm, free JOHN TARAHTEEFF: PLACEHOLDER Nüart Gallery 670 Canyon Road, 988-3888 Tarahteeff is an acrylic painter. With a haunting but engaging atmosphere, he draws the viewer in, prompting them to comprehend the ambiguous, bizarre and surreal narrative. Through Oct. 7 (see AC, page 31). 5-7 pm, free WILKS \ COUSINEAU 5. Gallery 2351 Fox Road, Ste. 700, 87507 New works by Darrell Wilks and Eric Cousineau. Through Oct. 26. 5 pm, free
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CONVERSATIONS WITH COLLECTIONS New Mexico Museum of Art 107 W Palace Ave., 476-5072 Celebrate the life and work of Gustave Baumann with the Museum of Art’s Curator of 20th Century Art, Christian Waguespack, and Collections Manager Erica Prater. Free with museum admission. 1 pm, $6-$12 CONVERSATIONS WITH THE ARTISTS: PATRICIA PEARCE, NORMA ALONZO AND WARREN KEATING ViVO Contemporary 725 Canyon Road, 982-1320 Abstract painter Alonzo, figurative painter Keating and assemblage artist Pearce come together to discuss the origins of their style. 5-7 pm, free DEAN'S LECTURE SERIES: TEACHERS AND STUDENTS: MARTIN HEIDEGGER COMES TO AMERICA St. John's College 1160 Camino Cruz Blanca, 984-6000 Michael Gillespie of Duke University lectures in the Peterson Student Center's Great Hall. 7:30 pm, free JOHN TARRANT: BRING ME THE RHINOCEROS The Ark 133 Romero St., 988-3709 Tarrant offers an unusual guide to happiness and a can opener for your thinking. His book deftly retells more than a dozen traditional koans, which are partly paradoxical questions dangerous to your beliefs and partly treasure boxes of ancient wisdom. 6-8 pm, free WHAT IS GEOENGINEERING, REALLY? Santa Fe Woman's Club 1616 Old Pecos Trail, 983-9455 Based upon her new book, Under an Ionized Sky, Elana Freeland examines what is happening and what may well lie ahead in a world steeped in technocracy. This is a two-day event that continues tomorrow from 10 am-4 pm. 6 pm, free
DANCE PUEBLO OF POJOAQUE YOUTH HOOP DANCERS Buffalo Thunder Resort and Casino 20 Buffalo Thunder Trail, 455-5555 Young dancers from the Pueblo perform in the lobby. 6 pm, free
BOOKS/LECTURES
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ART CHATS New Mexico Museum of Art 107 W Palace Ave., 476-5072 The museum is free for New Mexico residents on Friday evenings, so no better time to pop in for a series of 15-minute talks about the museum's history and exhibitions. 5:30-6:30 pm, $6-$12
ARSENIO HALL Buffalo Thunder Resort and Casino 20 Buffalo Thunder Trail, 455-5555 The legendary comedian swings by Santa Fe. He also talked with SFR about what he’s up to, so see 3 Questions on page 33. 8 pm, $29-$49
DRINKING WITH THE ARTISTS Museum of Spanish Colonial Art 750 Camino Lejo, 982-2226 Get to know the edgy, genrebusting, art-history-(re) shaping GenNext artists over New Mexican-style hors d'oeuvres, cash bar and entertainment. 5:30-7:30 pm, $5 POEH NATIVE ART SHOWCASE Buffalo Thunder Resort and Casino 20 Buffalo Thunder Trail, 455-5555 Visit with local artists and purchase one-of-a-kind art. 5-7 pm, free ¡VÁMONOS! SANTA FE: ADA & SENIORS' WALK Bicentennial Alto Park 1121 Alto St. At the Mary Esther Gonzales Senior Center in the park, go for an accessible stroll with Victoria Buckingham, a Feldenkrais practitioner and movement educator. For more info: sfct.org/vamonos. 10-11 am, free
MUSIC BIRD THOMPSON The New Baking Company 504 W Cordova Road, 557-6435 Adult contemporary singer-songwriter tunes with a dab of dharma. 10 am, free THE BUS TAPES Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Alternative folk-rock with funk ‘n’ blues. 8 pm, free CHANGO Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Danceable cover tunes. 8:30 pm, free CHAT NOIR CABARET Los Magueyes Mexican Restaurant 31 Burro Alley, 992-0304 Modeled after 19th-century Parisian cabarets, enjoy first-rate piano and vocals from Charles Tichenor and friends—playful, interactive, family-friendly and eclectic. Vive la révolution! 6 pm, free CONTROLLED BURN El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Rock 'n' blues. 9 pm, $5 CUSTOM DELUX Turquoise Trail Bar at Buffalo Thunder 30 Buffalo Thunder Trail, 877-848-6337 A mix of old-school and newschool country and bona fide red-dirt music. 9:30 pm, free DEAR DOCTOR Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Folk 'n' Americana from Stephen Pitts and friends on the deck. 5 pm, free
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DOUG MONTGOMERY AND GREG SCHLOTTHAUER Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Piano standards: Doug starts, Greg takes over at 8 pm. 6 pm, free ELEANOR FRIEDBERGER Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle, 395-6369 Eat an indie rock sandwich. Supported by Pill. 8 pm, $18-$20 GREG BUTERA Second Street Brewery (Original) 1814 Second St., 982-3030 Country-Western and honkytonk. 6 pm, free HALF BROKE HORSES Tumbleroot Brewery & Distillery 2791 Agua Fría St. Acoustic-driven Americana and honky-tonk. 8 pm, free JESUS BAS La Boca (Taberna Location) 125 Lincoln Ave., 988-7102 Spanish and flamenco guitar. 7 pm, free MARC BLACK: LIFE ... ONE SONG AT A TIME Kitchen Sink Recording Studio 528 Jose St., 699-4323 Black's unique finger style guitar work is reminiscent of Tim Harding and Mississippi John Hurt. Get a load of his social justice-oriented storytelling music. 7:30 pm, $20 PAT MALONE Sunrise Springs 242 Los Pinos Road, 471-3600 Solo jazz guitar. 6 pm, free REGIONAL/LIQUID Shadeh Nightclub 30 Buffalo Thunder Trail, 819-2338 Get two clubs under one roof: Regional with VDJ Dany has your cumbia, huapangos, Norteñas and more; Liquid with DJ Poetics has hip-hop, top 40, dancehall, EDM, reggae, old-school, funk y más. 10 pm, free ROBIN HOLLOWAY Osteria D'Assisi 58 S Federal Place, 986-5858 Piano standards. 6:30 pm, $2 RONALD ROYBAL Hotel Santa Fe 1501 Paseo de Peralta, 982-1200 Native American flute and Spanish classical guitar by the six-time Native American Music Award nominee and two-time New Mexico Music Industry Award winner. 7 pm, free SAVOR La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 Cuban street music. 8 pm, free TGIF RECITAL: LIN RAYMOND First Presbyterian Church 208 Grant Ave., 982-8544 The pianist presents works by Gershwin, Ginastera and Debussy. 5:30 pm, free CONTINUED ON PAGE 36
THE CALENDAR with Arsenio Hall
COURTESY ARSENIO HALL
For some, the name Arsenio Hall is synonymous with his stint as a late-night talk show host. For others, it’s as a comic actor in movies like Coming to America. For others still, Hall is a stand-up comedian or Celebrity Apprentice winner—but no matter how you know him, it’s impossible to argue with how funny he is. We spoke with the legend ahead of his upcoming stand-up show (8 pm Friday Sept. 21. $29-$49. Buffalo Thunder Resort and Casino, 20 Buffalo Thunder Trail, 455-5555) about his return to the mic, sequel rumors and his favorite joke of all time. An extended version of this interview appears online at SFReporter.com. (Alex De Vore) Why come back to stand-up now? I had gotten away from stand-up, and there’s something strange about when you get away from it— there’s this wall of fear that seems to grow, and you forget what you used to do and forget how good you were at it. You think, ‘I could never do an hour like when I was a young man.’ But there was always this thing in me when I’d go into a comedy club; I missed stand-up, talking about your life, having the unbridled freedom and that cathartic thing that goes along with stand-up. I was going to come at you with something about Louis CK, but maybe we should stick to something lighter ... Everybody I know is in trouble. Like Kathy Griffin. The people have spoken and she does great in clubs, but she can’t get on TV. I’m one of these people who thinks one of the greatest things in America is that we forgive. And maybe she went a note too far, but our jobs are to push the envelope. I also think we treat women differently when they make mistakes. I was watching the other night, Sacha Baron Cohen, sodomize a Donald Trump dummy and taking dildos and stuffing them in the dummy’s mouth. And I’m saying, Kathy put ketchup on a head—she didn’t fuck the head. I’m not saying what’s right or wrong, but what are the rules? If Kathy is blackballed, then the people who sodomize these dummies should at least lose a couple hours’ pay. I don’t get what the rules are anymore. I understand when you’re dealing with Cosby or CK. ... When you abuse women, that’s always gonna be wrong, but when we’re talking about taste and what punchline is wrong or right, I have to say I feel bad for Kathy because I’ve seen men do worse. And by the way, I have to support her, because I want to be supported in my freedom of speech. OK, so here’s that light one: Do you have some favorite joke of all time? My fave joke of all time is a Jerry Seinfeld line. He says, ‘I have a canary and canaries are really stupid. I watch my canary fly directly into a mirror and fall to the ground almost unconscious, and you’d think if the canary thought it was a window, he’d try to avoid the other canary.’ That’s one of my favorites. I can appreciate other people’s witticisms.
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“It’s their stories of how they’ve embrace diverse American stories, so this overcome adversity and how they’ve is our first project in that vein,” founder had to forge their own path,” Scott Harrison tells SFR of Hidden Nieto tells SFR, “because Treasure, a new one-woman their parents and famishow by actress and writlies aren’t able to proer Ketevan Kharshilze vide them with the Ussery. “We’ve done same input and several [American guidance as some Classics], but I other families, don’t really want because they’re that to be the way all first-generathat we’re seen. tion.” All the exSo it’s a departure, periences and ocbut it’s one we’re recurrences are true. ally excited about.” “I added my own Ussery came from SY Almost Adult Productions: E flair,” Nieto says, “but the Republic of GeorT UR Late Reunion CO for the most part, it’s just gia to the Americas and their words and their stories.” Aaron Leventman, founder of Almost crossed illegally from Mexico Theatre Noting the bravery of the Adult, presents a shortened version of one into the US in 2000. She was deGrottesco teens she interviewed, Nieto of his original plays that has hit a few na- ported in 2007, but managed to enis working says, “These people don’t have with the Fay tional festivals, but has not yet been per- ter the country again—legally—in Glassman the power that we do as artists 2011. formed in Santa Fe. Duo on to speak to a wide audience “I’ve known Ketevan “It’s about two people that sumpin’ real about these problems.” To offer for about 12 years supposedly knew each othweird. their own life experiences to now,” Harrison er in high school, but strangers on some future stage says. “She was they may or may not was a bold and generous act, and one in a production of actually rememto which the NMSA students pay deep The Vagina Monober each other, respect. logues I did … and they’re tryback in 2004.” ing to reconnect Theatre Grottesco: Action at a Distance At that time, she using identities was working on a that may or may When something absurd happens on Santa one-woman show not be accurate,” Fe’s stages, you can generally guess that about her experiLeventman says Theatre Grottesco is behind it. Our very ences. Once she was of Late Reunion, own nationally renowned experimental back in the country a piece inspired by troupe tackles a theatrical style developed L TO to stay, she approached a news story about a by the Fay Glassman Duo (movementHN O J Harrison. person who went to a high based theatre ensemble Lisa Fay and Jeff “She said, ‘I’d love to find an school reunion for a school he Glassman), and it probably has to be seen The actress to do this.’ … I said, ‘I’d love didn’t attend, and how everyone to be understood. Well, no—you probably International to work on this, but only if you’ll ‘“recognized” him. “A lot of our Shakespeare won’t understand it even if you see it. perform it.’” Center relationships with people, be“The actors play various characters at presents a Take note: Harrison also percause of social media, various times in various plays or scenes,” scene from forms this weekend in Dale Dunn’s are based on false Glassman tells SFR. “And they are all King Lear, Gun Play, with Just Say It Theater. pretenses about currently onstage in a very small area, 10 feet by up at the who people 10 feet, and they’re all performing in Adobe Rose New Mexico School for the Arts: the context of their play, but they’re in actually are Theatre. Las Fronteras … and how different plays.” it’s led to a Given the recent closure of SFUAD When asked if this may be difficult lot of isolation.” and the high level of skill of the students for viewers to follow, Glassman responds Yikes. Sounds at Santa Fe’s arts high school, the role of instantly: “Yup.” heavy. But he quick- NMSA in supplying Santa Fe’s theater But then, he laughs. “It’s more like ly adds: “Oh, and it’s scene with talented young actors and tea composition of music than it is a a comedy!” chies will only increase. composition of drama,” he says. The
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ast year’s inaugural Santa Fe Theatre Walk, organized by the aptly named Theatre Santa Fe, featured 13 local theater companies doing short presentations at seven venues. Some companies reprised shows that had already closed; some previewed shows that were in the wings; others just had fun and played around. About 600 people came last year—and unless you’re Indian Market, getting that many Santa Feans in one place at one time is quite a feat. Theatre Santa Fe is set to do it again this year, but ever bigger. A whopping 20 theater companies present at 10 venues— everything from American classics to new solo acts from local writer-actors to a behavioral existence laboratory (read on to see what that even means). There’s collaboration, expansion, experimentation and a bunch of high school students running around in commedia dell’arte masks. If you’re an audience regular, you’ll see many familiar faces. If you’ve never seen local theater, this is a chance to learn what companies are like or preview what’s onstage in the next few months. And, if you’re a casual attendee who’s somewhere between a junkie and a noob, the day is going to be a fine mix of comedy, tragedy, weirdos and immense local talent from the most theater folks ever gathered together at one time around here. Did you miss New Mexico Here’s a preview of a few Actors Lab’s random offerings; it’s by no Gin Game in means intended to be a bestMay? It was hella sad, but of, though we do think they all we loved it. sound great. See the next page for a more complete list.
Ironweed Productions: N Hidden Treasure: A N LY Georgian Immigrant’s Story LA
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Ironweed, best known around town for its hearty, canonical American works by dead white men (recent performances include Arthur Miller and Sam Shepard), departs from that mode to get with the picture, in a way. “Ironweed’s looking to more fully
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This year, in addition to students bopping around the streets in masks and costumes, NMSA presents an original play by former student Domenica Nieto (who is now in her freshman year at UNM, focusing on Chicano studies). Nieto wrote Las Fronteras as her senior project at NMSA, basing the three-person show on the combined experiences of eight Santa Fean teenagers who are immigrants, or whose parents are immigrants.
audience “shouldn’t look for stories; they should look for what’s going on in the moment.” So just go with the flow, folks.
SANTA FE THEATRE WALK 1:30-5:30 pm Saturday Sept. 22. $5 wristband gets you into all events. Siler-Rufina neighborhood; visit theatresantafe.org for more info
S F REP ORT ER.COM /ARTS /ACT I NGOUT
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Who’s Presenting What: For a more detailed list of venues and times, visit theatresantafe.org— or just show up somewhere between 1:30 and 5:30 pm on Saturday Sept. 22
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Adobe Rose Theatre: The Ultimate Christmas Show (as seen at the Adobe Rose last December, and coming again this December at the same place)
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Almost Adult Productions: Late Reunion by Aaron Leventman (see previous page)
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Blue Raven Theatre: Strawberry Jam by Talia Pura
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For Giving Productions and Red Thread Santa Fe: The Sweetest Swing in Baseball by Rebecca Gilman (as seen at Studio Center of Santa Fe in July)
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International Shakespeare Center: King Lear by Shakespeare (currently running at the Adobe Rose Theatre through Sept. 30)
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Ironweed Productions: Hidden Treasure: A Georgian Immigrant’s Story by Ketevan Kharshilze Ussery (see previous page; upcoming at Teatro Paraguas in March)
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Julesworks: Julesworks Follies Microcosm of Santa Fe’s Live (Not Quite) Monthly Variety Show by the Julesworks ensemble
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Just Say It Theater: Gun Play by Dale Dunn
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Labinger Productions: Charming Billy by Jerry Labinger
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New Mexico Actors Lab: The Gin Game by DL Coburn (as seen at Teatro Paraguas in May) and A Doll’s House, Part 2 by Luca Hanft (upcoming at Teatro Paraguas in May 2019—and, coincidentally, also presented this weekend by Albuquerque’s Fusion Theatre Company at the James A Little Theatre; see fusionnm.org for info)
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New Mexico School for the Arts: Las Fronteras by Domenica Nieto (see previous page)
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Oasis Theatre Company: The Diaries of Adam and Eve by Mark Twain
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Ron Bloomberg Productions: Your Move by Ron Bloomberg
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Santa Fe Improv: Improv games with Ben Taxy
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Santa Fe Playhouse: “The Explaining Room,” a short play by Helen Rynaski from Benchwarmers (upcoming at the playhouse Sept. 27-Oct. 14)
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Teatro Paraguas: Atacama by Augusto Federico Amador (currently running at Teatro Paraguas through Sept. 23)
Where Things Happen: Head to the Rufina-Henry Lynch-Calle Marie neighborhood; you’ll see signs and crowds. But if you really want to GPS your directions, here are the venues (you can buy a $5 wristband anywhere, and it gets you in everywhere else): • Adobe Rose Theatre: 1213 Parkway Drive, Ste. B • Cacao Santa Fe: 3201 Richards Lane, Ste. B • Confetti Community Hall: 3205 Richards Lane, Ste. B • Dance Space: 3208 Richards Lane, Ste. A
Theatre Grottesco: Action at a Distance (see previous page; upcoming at the Santa Fe Playhouse Oct. 1-10)
• Iglesia Apostolica: 3233 Calle Marie, Ste. B
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Upstart Crows of Santa Fe: Scenes from Shakespeare
• Santa Fe Improv: 1213 Mercantile Road, Ste. D
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Z Productions: Lion’s Tale by Rosemary Zibart
• Santa Fe Playhouse Speakeasy & Workshop: 3218 Calle Marie
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• Teatro Paraguas and Annex A: 3205 Calle Marie
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THE CALENDAR THE THREE FACES OF JAZZ El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 A swinging jazz trio features a special guest. 7:30 pm, free TONIC JAZZ SHOWCASE Tonic 103 E Water St., 982-1189 Get some late-night stylings with host Loren Bienvenu (drums), featuring Alex Murzyn (sax) and Casey Andersen (bass). 9:30 pm, free VANILLA POP Palace Saloon 142 W Palace Ave., 428-0690 Dance the night away with the only cover band we'd pay double digits to see. 10 pm, $10
THEATER A CELEBRATION OF HAROLD PINTER Scottish Rite Center 463 Paseo de Peralta, 982-4414 Nobel Prize-winning playwright Harold Pinter left behind a lustrous career that spanned over 50 years. While Pinter is best remembered today as one of the most influential dramatists of his generation, his apprentice and longtime friend Julian Sands pays homage to the man behind the dark theatrical masterpieces in an intimate and exactingly assembled one-man show. 7:30 pm, $22-$75 A DOLL'S HOUSE, PART II James A Little Theatre 1060 Cerrillos Road, 476-6429 Fifteen years since Nora left the confines of her marriage, playwright Lucas Hnath picks up her story where Henrik Ibsen’s classic left off. In this timely sequel, presented here by Albuquerque's FUSION Theatre Company, Nora’s found her voice as she passionately and intelligently challenges the inequalities in the lives of women while revisiting the intimate relationships of her past. 7:30 pm, $20-$30 ATACAMA Teatro Paraguas 3205 Calle Marie, 424-1601 A man and a woman meet in the northern Chilean desert while searching for bone fragments of loved ones disappeared by the Pinochet regime, and find a deep and unsettling connection that shakes their souls. 7:30 pm, $10-$20 KING LEAR Adobe Rose Theatre 1213 Parkway Drive, 629-8688 Shakespeare’s profound and complex play explores the nature of power: in family, politics, and nature. The cast, assembled by the International Shakespeare Center and part of its Year of Lear, has been working on this puppy for a full year (fittingly). 7 pm, $25
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SILENT SKY Los Alamos Little Theatre 1670 Nectar St., Los Alamos, 662-5493 Based on the true story and science of early-20th century female “computers” at Harvard Observatory, the play by Lauren Gunderson explores science, history, family ties and fragile love, a passionate young woman must map her own passage through a society determined to keep a woman in her place. 7:30 pm, $13-$15
SAT/22 BOOKS/LECTURES DONALD LEVERING: PREVIOUS LIVES op.cit Books DeVargas Center, 157 Paseo de Peralta, 428-0321 Levering's new collection cherry-picks poems from his 40-year career. Tight, imagist gems nest beside Whitmanesque declamatory odes. Humorous moments lend levity to a text that witnesses estrangement and war. Ravens, plants and fungi are also featured in this former groundskeeper’s retrospective. Enjoy. 2 pm, free WHAT IS GEOENGINEERING, REALLY? Santa Fe Woman's Club 1616 Old Pecos Trail, 983-9455 Talks about transhumanism, technocracy, electromagnetic dominance and, via teleconference from Germany, Harald Katz-Vella’s "Health and Wellbeing in the Midst of Madness." 10 am-4 pm, free
DANCE CONTRA DANCE Odd Fellows Hall 1125 Cerrillos Road, 470-7077 A contra dance with tunes from the Santa Fe Megaband. If you need help, there's a lesson at 7 pm, and the dance begins at 7:30 pm. 7 pm, $8-$9 YOUTH BREAK DANCE CLASSES REGISTRATION PARTY Rockin' Rollers 2915 Agua Fría St., 473-7755 Enjoy breaking, skating, food, music and more! All proceeds go to funding of Beginners Breaking League, and classes for folks age 8 and up will be held every Wednesday at 5 pm at Rockin' Rollers. For more info, call 795-6569 (see SFR Picks, page 23). 5 pm, $5
EVENTS BIRD WALK Randall Davey Audubon Center 1800 Upper Canyon Road, 983-4609 Head to the hills for a guided birding hike. 8:30-10 am, free
NATIONAL POPULAR VOTE MEETING La Farge Public Library 1730 Llano St., 955-4860 Get to know your fellow activists, make a plan and deepen your understanding of the National Popular Vote. 2-4 pm, free NATIVE TREASURES COLLECTORS’ SALE Museum of Indian Arts & Culture 710 Camino Lejo, 476-1250 A unique sale of Native American jewelry and art from private collections benefits annual educational programs and exhibitions at the Museum of Indian Arts & Culture. Get in early bird-style at 9 am for $25; 10 am and on is free. 10 am-5 pm, free NEW MEXICO RAILROAD HISTORY CELEBRATION: RAILROAD HISTORY CRUISE El Museo Cultural de Santa Fe 555 Camino de la Familia, 992-0591 Join Urban Bicycle tours for an easy paved ride, including NMCRR and the Rail Trail. Meet at El Museo's west side loading dock (on the side facing away from the tracks). 10:30 am, free PRESBYTERIAN PARTY AT THE PARK Presbyterian Health Park 4801 Beckner Road A community festival celebrates the arrival of Presbyterian Santa Fe Medical Center. Prize drawings, live music, kids’ activities, available food trucks and much more. All parking is located at Capital High School, Santa Fe Community College and Santa Fe Place Mall with shuttles to and from the park. 11 am-3 pm, free SANTA FE ARTISTS MARKET Santa Fe Railyard Market Street at Alcaldesa Street, 310-8766 Find arts and crafts from a juried group of local artists. 8 am-2 pm, free SANTA FE RALLY FOR RECOVERY Railyard Park Cerrillos Road and Guadalupe Street, 982-3373 Down at the spacious performance green, make Santa Fe a recovery-friendly community with music by DJ Oona, a recovery-themed art show, speakers, healing demonstrations, kid's activities, free food, tons of exhibitors and performances by Wise Fool acrobats and clowns. Noon-4 pm, free SHINE BRIGHT KID'S YOGA WITH GRACE McWILLIAMS Madrid Railyard 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Get that kiddo out of bed and make 'em stretch and take deep breaths. Twenty percent of proceeds go to Madrid Medical/Dental Fund. 9:45-10:30 am, $10 CONTINUED ON PAGE 38
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RAILYARD URGENT CARE
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THE CALENDAR WELLS PETROGLYPH PRESERVE PUBLIC TOUR Mesa Prieta Petroglyph Project 1431 Hwy. 68, Velarde, 852-1351 Docents lead visitors through an insightful two-hour tour; pre-registration is required at mesaprietapetroglyphs.org. 9:30-11:30 am, $35 YOGA IN THE GARDEN Santa Fe Botanical Garden 715 Camino Lejo, 471-9103 Head to the garden for a vinyasa flow class that is open to all levels. Mats provided. 10-11 am, $7
MUSIC BUSY Y LOS BIG DEALS Second Street Brewery (Original) 1814 Second St., 982-3030 Pop 'n' jazz. 2-5 pm, free CHAT NOIR CABARET Los Magueyes Mexican Restaurant 31 Burro Alley, 992-0304 Modeled after 19th-century Parisian cabarets, enjoy first-rate piano and vocals from Charles Tichenor and friends—playful, interactive, family-friendly and eclectic. Vive la révolution! 6 pm, free CONNIE LONG AND FAST PATSY Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Country music with a twist of rockabilly and blues. 8:30 pm, free DIVAS OF R&B AND POP WITH SOUL EVOLUTION Palace Saloon 142 W Palace Ave., 428-0690 The name speaks for itself, we think. 10 pm, $10 DOUG MONTGOMERY AND GREG SCHLOTTHAUER Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Piano standards: Doug starts, Greg takes over at 8 pm. 6 pm, free EL TEN ELEVEN Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle, 395-6369 They say you have to see this instrumental post-rock indie pair to really “get it”: With just a double-neck bass/guitar, drums and a bunch of foot pedals, Kristian Dunn and Tim Fogarty create complex, deeply felt music from scratch. With help from looping pedals, they sound like at least six people (see Music, page 27). 7 pm, $20-$23 FALL ACTIVITIES CAR SHOW Ski Santa Fe 740 Hyde Park Road, 982-4429 In addition to the usual chairlift rides, disc golf, live music (today from Half Broke Horses), beer garden and gear sale, today you can gawk at some classic and exotic automobiles. The cars line up right next to the chairlift, so feel free to wander around and enjoy these unique machines. 10 am-3 pm, free
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FIRE SATURDAYS Shadeh Nightclub 30 Buffalo Thunder Trail, 819-2338 VDJ Dany spins cumbia, reggaeton, bachata, salsa y más, while in the other room DJ 12 Tribe has your hip-hop, top 40, EDM, R&B and more. 10 pm, free JJ AND THE HOOLIGANS Tumbleroot Brewery & Distillery 2791 Agua Fría St. Rock, blues and Americana. 8 pm, free JONO MANSON La Boca (Taberna Location) 125 Lincoln Ave., 988-7102 Funky rock 'n' roll originals. 7 pm, free KARAOKE Golden Cantina Lounge 10-B Cities of Gold Road, Pojoaque, 455-3313 Ask the bartenders for the "Karaoke Kourage" drink special to get you started. 9 pm, free KITTY JO CREEK Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Bluegrass. 1 pm, free LEAD PONY, FULL SPEED VERONICA AND GABE THOMAS Ghost 2899 Trades West Road Hop on a Lead Pony and feel yourself get rock 'n' rolled to high spirits by the San Diegobased band. Supported by local pop-rockers Full Speed Veronica and alternative screamo connoisseur Gabe Thomas. 8 pm, $5-$10 LITTLE LEROY AND HIS PACK OF LIES Social Kitchen & Bar 725 Cerrillos Road, 982-5952 Rock 'n' roll. 6 pm, free LOS PRIMOS MELØDICOS El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 Afro-Cuban, romantic and traditional Latin music trio recreates the authentic sound of Latin America, Cuba and Puerto Rico. 7:30 pm, free MADSTOCK Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Madrid was recently named the “Most Hippie Town in New Mexico," so celebrate its newest distinction with two days of celebrating cultural diversity, art, music and food. Today's entertainment closes with an 8 pm show from Rhythm Dragons in the Madrid Railyard. Noon-11 pm, $10-$25 MARC SANDERS Osteria D'Assisi 58 S Federal Place, 986-5858 Piano standards. 6:30 pm, free PAT MALONE Inn and Spa at Loretto 211 Old Santa Fe Trail, 984-7997 Solo jazz guitar. 7 pm, free
RONALD ROYBAL Hotel Santa Fe 1501 Paseo de Peralta, 982-1200 Native American flute and Spanish classical guitar. 7 pm, free SANTA FE MUSIC COLLECTIVE: CHRISTINE FAWSON Museum Hill Café 710 Camino Lejo, 984-8900 As a vocalist and trumpet player, Fawson specializes in classic standards from the American Songbook. For reservations, call 946-7934. 7 pm, $20-$25 SANTA FE PRO MUSICA SEASON OPENING: ESTEEMED REPUTATIONS Lensic Performing Arts Center 211 W San Francisco St., 988-1234 Celebrate the radiant, dramatic and transcendent music of Mozart, Haydn and Chris Cerrone. Featuring masterful pianist Anne-Marie McDermott and the Pro Musica Orchestra. 4-6 pm, $12-$80 SAVOR La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 Cuban street music. 8 pm, free TAOS CHAMBER MUSIC GROUP: COMMON GROUND Harwood Museum of Art 238 Ledoux St., Taos, 575-758-9826 Violinist and social advocate Vijay Gupta is one of the youngest musicians to ever join the Los Angeles Philharmonic. He’s co-founder of Street Symphony, an organization that brings music to homeless and incarcerated people in Los Angeles. Gupta plays violin and discusses the work he does to transform the world through music. 5:30-7:30 pm, $12-$25 TEQUILA RAIN Turquoise Trail Bar at Buffalo Thunder 30 Buffalo Thunder Trail, 877-848-6337 New-Mex, Tejano, cumbias, new 'n' classic country, classic rock, oldies, and perhaps a lil' old-school R&B. 9:30 pm, free ZOOGA MALAGA Sunrise Springs 242 Los Pinos Road, 471-3600 A blend of bossa nova, samba, hip-hop, funk and classical. 6-8 pm, free
THEATER A DOLL'S HOUSE, PART II James A Little Theatre 1060 Cerrillos Road, 476-6429 Fifteen years since Nora left the confines of her marriage, playwright Lucas Hnath picks up her story where Henrik Ibsen’s classic left off. In this sequel, presented by Albuquerque's FUSION Theatre Company, Nora’s found her voice as she challenges sexism. 2 pm, $20-$30 CONTINUED ON PAGE 40
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MAKE IT STRONG: THE OVERWHELMING TASTE OF BOOZE DOESN’T MEAN GOOD. “I think, in general, the request to ‘make it strong’ is always annoying. Next person who tells me to ‘make it strong’ is going to get shot out of a cannon into the sun. I can make a crazy-strong drink that doesn’t taste just like booze, and one of these ‘make it strong’ people is going to make a comment. A good cocktail shouldn’t taste like straight booze, people! I also had a guy ask to sample all my super top-shelf tequila ($20-$50 per 2-ounce shot), and it’s like, ‘There is nothing you can learn from a drop of liquor!’”
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quite some time before he angrily says, ‘Well, why the hell not, asshole?!’ and storms out.”
CUTOFFS: THEY AREN’T DOING IT TO MESS WITH YOU. “It’s pretty rare, all things considered, but every now and then you’ll have to cut someone off. This never goes well. I’ve had everything from screaming patrons, negative Yelp reviews and, once, a lady tried to take a swing at me. They never seem to realize that not only am I covering my own ass, I don’t want them to go out and hurt someone or themselves. Remember that we have to take classes to be licensed to serve alcohol, and we also can wind up paying huge fines if we don’t take it seriously.”
ANSON STEVENS-BOLLEN
OH, PUKE! WHO AMONG US HASN’T VOMITED NOW AND THEN? “This actually happened just tonight— gave a group of guys a shot and one of them chugged his, then threw up in his glass. The perfect, same amount as the glass. Threw that shit away.”
MAKE UP YOUR DAMN MIND! I’M BEGINNING TO THINK THIS WAS THE PLAN ALL ALONG! “I once had a woman order a pale ale and drink most of it before deciding she didn’t like it. That’s OK, that happens. So I let her switch to an IPA—even though I warned her that it would be far more bitter—without charging her for the first beer. She drank most of that one, but didn’t like it either. Being the nice guy I am, I wanted to make sure she enjoyed her experience, so I offered some less bitter suggestions, we settled on something light and she drank all of it before, big surprise, she decided she didn’t like that one, either. She didn’t want to pay for any of them, because the
The following stories come to you from local drink-slingers, some of whom you’ve probably even met and been served by (though all names and locations have been omitted to protect them from the general public—and management). Just remember these words the next time you’re out on the town—these people work hard and don’t deserve any of your crap. Find the original uncut piece in our 2017 Restaurant Guide.
THIS IS NOT A JOKE, SIR! HOW NOT TO DAD IT UP.
BY ALEX DE VORE
way beer tastes is obviously my fault, but after a tense exchange, she said she’d just grab her wallet out of the car. She never returned. I don’t think it’s crazy to assume people will pay for the drinks they drink, but she clearly did.”
DON’T MAKE THE LIST! BEHAVE YOURSELF WHILE ORDERING. “So far I’ve just thought about things that annoy me: -Making out at the bar while trying to make an order -Yelling for a bartender then ignoring them
FOOD
-Snapping, whistling, yelling, creeping -‘Keep the change, babe,’ when, in most occasions, there’s zero [change] or not enough to cover the bill.”
KNOW WHERE YOU ARE! ODDLY ENOUGH, THE BARTENDERS DON’T OFTEN DECIDE WHETHER OR NOT A PLACE SERVES FOOD. “This guy says, ‘What kind of food do you have?’ and I say, ‘We’re just a bar. No food.’ We stare at one another for
“I work in a restaurant, but we have a bar, too, and I remember this one guy who tried to order a margarita for his clearly underage daughter. But I figure that I’ll just ask for an ID, and when she doesn’t have it, that’ll be the end of it. So the dad says something like, ‘It’s OK, I’m her dad!’ as if that means it’s cool for me to break the law. Well, it’s not OK. I explained I could get fired, pay fines, go to jail, so they begrudgingly agreed to let it go. The dad still ordered a margarita for himself, and a few minutes later I notice he’s sneaking sips to the daughter, so I go to take it away from the table. And somehow I’m the jerk. At first he laughed it off like it was nothing, but when I told him I was serious and I couldn’t leave the drink … Well, I’ve never seen someone so full of rage over what was obviously their own fault, and I actually fear for that girl going through life with a dad like that. It shouldn’t be that difficult—if someone is underage, they aren’t drinking.”
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THE CALENDAR
Thomas Vigil, Immaculate Heart of Mary. Courtesy of Evoke Contemporary
ATACAMA Teatro Paraguas 3205 Calle Marie, 424-1601 A man and a woman meet in the northern Chilean desert while searching for bone fragments of loved ones disappeared by the Pinochet regime, and find a deep and unsettling connection that shakes their souls. 7:30 pm, $10-$20 CLASS CLOWNS 1.0 Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle, 395-6369 An evening of live improvised comedy performed by students from the Quinn Fontaine Studio. 7:30 pm, $12 KING LEAR Adobe Rose Theatre 1213 Parkway Drive, 629-8688 Shakespeare’s profound and complex play explores the nature of power: in family, politics, and nature. 7 pm, $25 SILENT SKY Los Alamos Little Theatre 1670 Nectar St., Los Alamos, 662-5493 Based on the true story and science of early-20th century female “computers” at Harvard Observatory, the play by Lauren Gunderson explores the life of astronomer Henrietta Leavitt as she attempts to balance family duties and her passions. 7:30 pm, $13-$15
Through November 25
Rooted in Tradition, Reaching for the Stars: 20 artists who stretch the boundaries of New Mexican art as we know it with new materials and twists on classic imagery.
MUSEUM OF SPANISH COLONIAL ART
THEATRE WALK SANTA FE Various locations Spearheaded by local nonprofit Theatre Santa Fe, 20 local theatre companies fill 10 neighboring venues in the Siler-Rufina district, with plays beginning every half hour perfect for the whole family (see Acting Out, page 34). 1:30-5:30 pm, $5
WORKSHOP HOMEBUYER EDUCATION Homewise 1301 Siler Road, Bldg. D, 983-9473 Homewise presents a free workshop to help you understand the home buying process and prepare you to make informed decisions. 9 am-4 pm, free
SUN/23 BOOKS/LECTURES ENLIGHTENED COURAGE Thubten Norbu Ling Tibetan Buddhist Center 1807 Second St., Ste. 35, 660-7056 With Geshe Thubten Sherab’s wisdom on how to be committed to the peaceful and courageous path of full awakening, explore the ideas in The Way of the Bodhisattva. 10 am-noon, free
JEFF KATZMAN AND DAN O'CONNOR: LIFE UNSCRIPTED Garcia Street Books 376 Garcia St., 986-0151 Psychiartist Katzman and actor O'Connor talk about their book Life Unscripted, which explains how improvisational theater can help one live a healthy, meaningful life. 4:30 pm, free JOURNEYSANTAFE: CHAD HANSON Collected Works Bookstore and Coffeehouse 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226 Hanson, a forest and fire ecologist and former board member at the Sierra Club, discusses our evolving understanding of the role of mixed-intensity fire in our forests, and the often seemingly counterintuitive lessons that are emerging from the current science. 11 am, free LOS ALAMOS REVISITED: A WORKERS' HISTORY New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Ave., 476-5100 Join Chimayó author Peter Malmgren in a discussion of his new book, incorporating collected oral histories from Hispanic families displaced from their lives on the Pajarito Plateau, and the hundreds of unsung workers who helped to build and staff the Manhattan Project. 2 pm, free
COURTESY DANDELION GUILD
On Museum Hill, Santa Fe 750 Camino Lejo | 505.982.2226 Open daily | spanishcolonial.org
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If you say “golden aspen leaves” three times in the mirror, the calendar editor will appear with mulled cider and tell you go to the Dandelion Guild’s Gloaming: Autumn Equinox Show on Friday and get some sweet little pieces by Corey Mansfield’s NM14. Info on page 32.
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MYSTERY WRITERS FROM CROAK AND DAGGER Santa Fe Public Library Main Branch 145 Washington Ave., 955-6780 Writing is mysterious, so unravel those mysteries by listening to some writers of all sorts of sub-genres (think historical, police procedural, thriller and forensic genres); then they'll answer your questions. 2 pm, free PUEBLO TEXTILES AND EMBROIDERIES St. Francis Auditorium 107 W Palace Ave., 476-5072 Brian Vallo, director of the Indian Arts Research Center at the School for Advanced Research, together with artists Ramona Sakiestewa, Louie Garcia and Isabel Gonzales, discusses the history and evolution of textile arts in the surrounding Pueblo communities, and how textiles not only provided Pueblo artists with income, but how some of them told stories of historical significance through the designs. 1 pm, $10
DANCE SUNDAY TANGO Second Street Brewery (Rufina Taproom) 2920 Rufina St., 954-1068 Santa Fe Tango presents a relaxed afternoon of dancing. Come at 1 pm for a class, then dancing starts at 2 pm. 1-5 pm, $4-$15
EVENTS COMMUNITY DAY BEAD EXCHANGE Museum of Int’l Folk Art 706 Camino Lejo, 476-1200 In conjunction with the museum’s show Beadwork Adorns the World, check out a bead exchange, giving bead collectors an opportunity to exchange and sell. From ancient to contemporary, find new pretties to string. Noon-4 pm, free DHARMA DISCUSSION GROUP Upaya Zen Center 1404 Cerro Gordo Road, 986-8518 Meet fellow Buddhist practitioners and share thoughts, feelings, and experiences related to Buddhist practice. 7 pm, free FALL ACTIVITIES AT SKI SANTA FE Ski Santa Fe 740 Hyde Park Road, 982-4429 Head up the hill for chairlift rides, disc golf, live music, a beer garden and a sports shop sale, plus discounts on advance lift tickets (because this winter can't possibly be worse than last, right?). Little Leroy and His Pack of Lies play some live rock 'n' roll. The chair lift is $12-$16, but the cost to just come hang out is zero dollars. skisantafe. com has all your info. 10 am-3 pm, free
THE CALENDAR
INTUITIVE HEALING WITH ELIZABETH ANGLIN Madrid Railyard 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Heal yo'self—but intuitively. 3-3:45 pm, $10 LABYRINTH WALK Museum of International Folk Art 706 Camino Lejo, 476-1200 Join the Labyrinth Resource Group for a special labyrinth walk for the autumnal equinox with flute music by Glee Briggs. 1 pm, free LOUIS MONTAÑO CITY PARK MURAL RESTORATION Louis Montaño Park 730 Alto Street Help restore the historic murals along the river located below the Boys and Girls Club on Alto Street. Bring your favorite paintbrush! Drinks and snacks will be provided. Park near the Boys and Girls Club at 730 Alto St. Noon-6 pm, free MEDITATION & MODERN BUDDHISM: BUDDHIST PSYCHOLOGY FOR MODERN LIVING Zoetic 230 St. Francis Drive, 292-5293 Train in meditation techniques that strengthen mindfulness and provide the power to guard our mind from distraction and negativity. 10:30 am-noon, $10 MUSEUM HILL COMMUNITY DAY Museum Hill 710 Camino Lejo, 984-8900 For the third annual event, enjoy free admission to the Museum of International Folk Art, the Wheelwright Museum, the Santa Fe Botanical Garden, the Museum of Spanish Colonial Arts and the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture all day, plus family-friendly activities, performances and more. All Day, free NATIVE TREASURES COLLECTORS’ SALE Museum of Indian Arts & Culture 710 Camino Lejo, 476-1250 A unique sale of Native American jewelry and art from private collections benefits annual educational programs and exhibitions at the Museum of Indian Arts & Culture. 10 am-5 pm, free YOGA WITH GRACE McWILLIAMS Madrid Railyard 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Get limber—plus, 20 percent of proceeds go to the Madrid Medical/Dental Fund. 10-10:45 am, $10 YOGA WITH RACHEL FREDELL Madrid Railyard 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 “Early-morning” yoga not for you? Here’s another chance to stretch out those tight joints and do some sun salutations. 1-1:45 pm, $10
FILM SANTA FE WINE & CHILE FILM FIESTA Violet Crown Cinema 1606 Alcaldesa St., 216-5678 A food and wine reception is followed by either A Year in Champagne or Cement Suitcase—get your tickets at santafewineandchile.org. 5 pm, $30
MUSIC BAILE DOMINGUERO Golden Cantina Lounge 10-B Cities of Gold Road, Pojoaque, 455-3313 Get dancing to the best cumbia, Norteña, pasito satevo and reggaeton tunes. 9 pm, free DAN LAVOIE Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Acoustic rock 'n' roll all the way from New York's Hudson Valley. 8 pm, free DOUG MONTGOMERY Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Piano standards, originals and pop with vocals too. 6:30 pm, free DRUM CIRCLE WITH TRAVIS STROOPE Madrid Railyard 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Bam bam bam, boom. Play some drums and meet some friends. Twenty percent of proceeds benefit the Madrid Medical/Dental Fund. 7-8 pm, $10 JARLATH HENDERSON GiG Performance Space 1808 Second St. The youngest-ever winner of the BBC Young Folk Award (that was in 2003, when he was 17), Henderson presents his unique assemblage of traditional folk songs from across the UK and Ireland on flutes, whistles and pipes. 7:30 pm, $20 KITTY JO CREEK Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Bluegrass on the deck. 3 pm, free LEFT BANK Jackalope 2820 Cerrillos Road, 471-8539 Ragtime jazz featuring Pat Longmire on guitar, Louis Levin on keys, Suzanne Birrell on bass and vocals and Bob Lennon on drums. 11 am-2 pm, free LIV OROVICH Osteria D'Assisi 58 S Federal Place, 986-5858 Celtic, American folk, klezmer, Slavic folk, jazz and classical music on violin. 6:30 pm, free LONE PIÑON Second Street Brewery (Railyard) 1607 Paseo de Peralta, 989-3278 Norteño, ranchera and huasteca jams. 1-4 pm, free
Volunteers Needed for Research Study
You may be eligible to participate if you: • Are 50 years of age or older • Are healthy
Study participation involves:
• Receiving an investigational vaccine for pneumonia and the FDA approved flu vaccine • 3 visits to our clinic with blood draws Compensation for time and travel is provided. For more information, contact: Southwest Care Center Research Department at 505-395-2003
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TACO
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TUESDAYS
$1.95 TACOS ALL DAY! Beef, Chicken or Veggie
Add a side of Rice, Beans, or Calabacitas 75¢
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all served with Beans, Rice, or Calabacitas, Cheese, Garnish & choice of Tortilla or Sopaipilla
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Expires 9/30/2018
with purchase of any menu drink (second plate at equal or lesser value)
Po s a ’ss
3538 Zafarano Dr. 473-3454
Mon-Sat 6 am to 9 pm • Sunday 7 am to 8 pm
1514 Rodeo Rd. 820-7672
Mon-Sat 6 am to 8 pm • Sunday 8 am to 2:30 pm
New Mexico’s #1 Tamale Makers Since 1955. Tamales Are Still Made The Original Way... By Hand.
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New Mexico’s #1 Tamale Makers Since 1955. Tamales Are Still Made The Original Way... By Hand.
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COME PLAY WITH US! 1050 Old Pecos Trail
www.santafechildrensmuseum.org
505.989.8359
Partially funded by the County of Santa Fe Lodgers’ Tax
MADSTOCK Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Madrid was recently named the “Most Hippie Town in New Mexico," so celebrate its newest distinction with two days of celebrating cultural diversity, art, music and food. Today's entertainment includes the Hollyhocks, Key Frances, Eric McFadden, Jim Almand and Kitty Jo Creek. Noon-7 pm, $10-$25 MATTHEW ANDRAE La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 Rhythmic covers and originals of a folky bent on guitalele. 6 pm, free NACHA MENDEZ La Boca (Taberna Location) 125 Lincoln Ave., 988-7102 Latin music from around the world. 7 pm, free NEW MEXICO PEACE CHOIR: ECHOES OF PEACE James A Little Theatre 1060 Cerrillos Road, 476-6429 The choir presents a concert of its repertoire of contemporary choral music, plus occasional pop and show tunes. 3 pm, $15-$20 PAT MALONE AND JON GAGAN El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 A jazzy duet. 7 pm, free SANTA FE PRO MUSICA SEASON OPENING: ESTEEMED REPUTATIONS Lensic Performing Arts Center 211 W San Francisco St., 988-1234 Celebrate the radiant, dramatic and transcendent music of Mozart, Haydn and Chris Cerrone, featuring masterful pianist Anne-Marie McDermott. 3 pm, $12-$80 SKIZZY MARS Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle, 395-6369 Some of the rapper's hit songs are called "Alcoholics" and "Douchebag" so we basically think he's dated the same dudes as the calendar editor. He's joined by Allday and Kid Quill on his Are You OK? Tour. 7 pm, $18-$79 SUGAR MOUNTAIN Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 A Neil Young tribute. Noon, free SUTTON JAMES PAPANIKOLAS The Dragon Room 406 Old Santa Fe Trail, 983-7712 Rock 'n' roll, indie folk and alt. country out of San Diego. 6 pm, free SWAY WILD Tumbleroot Brewery & Distillery 2791 Agua Fría St. Folk, rock, and roots, full of potent electric guitar playing, acoustic guitars, percussion, cello, banjo and piano. 6 pm, free
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TAOS CHAMBER MUSIC GROUP: COMMON GROUND Harwood Museum of Art 238 Ledoux St., Taos, 575-758-9826 Violinist Vijay Gupta presents works by Bach, Reena Esmail and Handel-Halvorsen, and discusses the work he does to transform the world with Street Symphony, an organization that brings music to homeless and incarcerated people. 5:30-7:30 pm, $12-$25 YOUNG HUNTER, JESSIE DELUXE AND THE TALKING HOURS Second Street Brewery (Rufina Taproom) 2920 Rufina St., 954-1068 Guitar-heavy psychedelic band weaves unusual thick tones together to make some rock, straight outta the Pacific Northwest. Joined by local rocker Deluxe and Albuquerque electronic rock band The Talking Hours. 8 pm, $5
THEATER ATACAMA Teatro Paraguas 3205 Calle Marie, 424-1601 A man and a woman meet in the northern Chilean desert while searching for bone fragments of loved ones disappeared by the Pinochet regime, and find a deep and unsettling connection that shakes their souls. 2 pm, $10-$20 JULESWORKS FOLLIES #55: BEATLES NUMBER 9 SALUTE, NOT MELODRAMA & REVISIONIST REAL HISTORY SPOOF EDITION Jean Cocteau Cinema 418 Montezuma Ave., 466-5528 Various performers offer a take on the Beatles and their impact on history. After an evening of dance, theater, music and all-around art, don't miss the Open Slot Slot, in which audience members can jump up at the end of the show to share a short performance piece. 7:30 pm, $7-$10 KING LEAR Adobe Rose Theatre 1213 Parkway Drive, 629-8688 Shakespeare’s profound and complex play explores the nature of power: in family, politics, and nature. 2 pm, $25 THE LEGACY OF DIETRICH BONHOEFFER First Presbyterian Church 208 Grant Ave., 982-8544 A one-person play adapted and performed by Al Staggs brings to the stage the life of Dietrich Bonhoeffer. Enter the prison cell where Bonhoeffer awaits execution; he expresses moral outrage against Nazis, and explains how that outrage led him to become involved in the German resistance movement. 3-5 pm, free
SILENT SKY Los Alamos Little Theatre 1670 Nectar St., Los Alamos, 662-5493 Based on the true story and science of early-20th century female “computers” at Harvard Observatory, the play by Lauren Gunderson explores the life of astronomer Henrietta Leavitt. 2 pm, $13-$15
WORKSHOP BEGINNING SHAMANIC JOURNEY WITH RUTH ABER Madrid Railyard 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Ever wanted to be a shaman? You gotta start somewhere. 11 am-12:45 pm, $10
MON/24 BOOKS/LECTURES RAY JOHN DE ARAGÓN: HAUNTED SANTA FE Garcia Street Books 376 Garcia St., 986-0151 Local historian and supernatural storyteller wants to spook you with scary tales of Santa Fean frights and mysteries. From arroyos to the basement of the PERA Building, take a frightening journey into the unknown and the forbidden world of phantasms and the beyond. 4:30 pm, free CRIS MOORE: THE LIMITS OF COMPUTERS IN SCIENCE AND SOCIETY Lensic Performing Arts Center 211 W San Francisco St., 988-1234 Moore, of the Santa Fe Institute, discusses the evolution of computation, the limits of computers and artificial intelligence. This is day one of two days about this subject, if you’re real jazzed (see News, page 9). 7:30 pm, free GARY NABHAN: FOOD FROM THE RADICAL CENTER: HEALING OUR LAND AND COMMUNITIES Collected Works Bookstore and Coffeehouse 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226 Nabhan tells the stories of communities who are getting their hands dirty and bringing back North America's unique fare: bison, sturgeon, camas lilies, ancient grains, turkeys and more. 6:30 pm, free SOUTHWEST SEMINARS: EARLY MAIZE: A TRIP THROUGH TIME AND SPACE Hotel Santa Fe 1501 Paseo de Peralta, 982-1200 Bradley J Vierra, the tribal historic preservation officer for the Pueblo of San Ildefonso and former staff archaeologist at Los Alamos National Laboratory, speaks as part of Southwest Seminars' Native Culture Matters lecture series. 6 pm, $15 CONTINUED ON PAGE 44
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T
is On My Side The Santa Fe Wine and Chile Fiesta is the biggest vino festival the City Different sees all year
BY MARY FRANCIS CHEESEMAN |
a u t h o r @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m
GABRIELLA MARKS
he interim between the end of summertime tourism and the winter holiday season inevitably brings gorgeous weather, blessedly quiet streets and a distinct lack of commerce in Santa Fe. Thankfully, then, the Santa Fe Wine & Chile Fiesta runs Sunday to Sunday, Sept. 23-30, providing one last week of bustling activity before the off-season sets in. The executive director of the fiesta, Greg O’Byrne, estimates that 4,000 guests will attend, with 50 percent from out of state, 25 percent from Santa Fe and 25 percent from the rest of New Mexico. Attendees can enjoy cooking demonstrations at the Santa Fe School of Cooking (125 N Guadalupe St, 983-4511), wine tasting events at the Santa Fe Community Convention Center (201 W Marcy St., 955-6590) and guest chef luncheons during the daytime. Tickets to each event are sold separately, and the costs are not for the faint of heart. For example, for $150 a pop, some will attend a sold-out al fresco luncheon cooked by Josh Gerwin of Dr. Field Goods set against the stunning mountain views of the Allan Houser Sculpture Garden. Transportation is provided from the Convention Center to the studio’s out-of-town location. But when the wines in question are simply entry-level prosecco from Bisol and Jeio, why the prohibitive price tag? It must be one hell of a view. Unquestionably, the fiesta caters to a high-end clientele. This is reflected in the nature and tone of its major events, which include a silent auction of 75 rare wine lots on Friday at 4 pm at the Convention Center. Tickets are available for $110 each. The culmination of the Wine & Chile Fiesta is the Grand Tasting at the Santa Fe Opera from 1-4 pm on Saturday Sept. 28. Tickets ran $175 a pop and are already sold out, but your mileage may vary on the virtues of the wines being poured and celebrated— some of which are rare and important, and others which are decidedly not.
You, too, can sample most of the wine and food of the upcoming Wine & Chile Fiesta.
It wasn’t always so glamorously exclusive. The Santa Fe Wine & Chile Fiesta began as a one-day event in a parking lot with 20 wineries and 20 restaurants in 1991. Conceived by Mark Miller of Coyote Café, Al Lucero of Maria’s and Gordon Heiss of La Casa Sena, the aim was to showcase the heights of both Santa Fe’s hospitality and local cuisine in the context of fine American wine. The former general manager of Coyote Café, O’Byrne was brought on in 1994 to become the Fiesta’s executive director. As the years went by, the fiesta’s scope
expanded, particularly when it came to the global wine community; 1994 featured 25 local restaurants partnered with 40 wineries, mostly from California. This year, nearly 90 wineries and importers and more than 40 local restaurants, plus a spate of sommeliers and chefs, fill the roster. O’Byrne credits the growing involvement of wine importers and wholesalers. “The importer involvement has boosted the quality and scope of the event,” he says. “And like the Santa Fe restaurant scene expanding, so have wines from other
!POUR VIDA¡
parts of North America, particularly Oregon, one of my favorite regions for quality people and wines.” Certainly, the presence of importers and their international portfolios provides much needed diversity to the fiesta’s focus on American wines, and are the only reason why German, Spanish and French wines make an appearance during its seminars and tastings. Nowhere is this American-centric focus more apparent than in the series of wine dinners taking place throughout the week at the restaurants participating in the Grand Tasting. These are not fiestasponsored events, and reservations are required. Standard bearers of American winemaking are included, such as the Ridge Vineyards Dinner at Terra at Four Seasons Rancho Encantado (6 pm Thursday Sept. 27. $250 per person. 198 Hwy. 592, 946-5800). There’s a Rombauer dinner at La Casa Sena (125 E Palace Ave., 988-1919) on the same night, for $125 a person. Or there’s the dinner showcasing the cuttingedge Spanish wine portfolio of Jose Pastor Selection at Joseph’s (6:30 pm Wednesday Sept. 26. 428 Agua Fría St., 982-1272). Tickets are $125 per person and the event features guest chef David Sellers of the Street Food Institute. Still, Wine & Chile Fiesta is an exciting and important time for the business it brings to Santa Fe during the painful descent into the winter season. It galvanizes the service industry, the people who work in wine retail, the wholesalers and distributers who belong to the local beverage and hospitality community. Hopefully it will continue to evolve, with an eye towards better serving the people local to Santa Fe who simply love wine, all while continuing to attract different demographics of wine drinkers by representing a more modern view of the contemporary world of vino. A complete schedule of events, including tickets and links to participating restaurants, is at santafewineandchile.org.
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O T O F FOOD Contest ENTER NOW!
Winning photos will be published in our new RESTAURANT GUIDE in October. One Grand Prize winner gets $200 worth of prizes from SFR and our local food and drink partners. #SFRfoodies ENTER HERE:
SFReporter.com/contests ENTRIES ACCEPTED THE WHOLE MONTH OF SEPTEMBER No limit on entries per photographer. $5 per photo.
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THE CALENDAR TECH TALK: LANGUAGE LEARNING AT THE LIBRARY Santa Fe Public Library Main Branch 145 Washington Ave., 955-6780 Explore all of the language-learning materials the Santa Fe Public Library has to offer—learn about apps, online programs and how to locate materials in the catalog. 10:30 am, free
EVENTS ARE YOU AN EXTROVERT OR AN INTROVERT? AND FORMING SPECIAL INTEREST GROUPS Montezuma Lodge 431 Paseo de Peralta, 670-3068 What makes extroverts and introverts tick? Learn from Transition Network founder Jean Palmer the key distinctions between the psychological preferences. For women aged 50 and up. 5:45-7:30 pm, $5 FULL MOON WATER WHEEL CEREMONY Frenchy's Field Osage Ave. and Agua Fría St. Pray for moisture, bless the waters and offer up items for blessings. 5 pm, free FUSATSU Upaya Zen Center 1404 Cerro Gordo Road, 986-8518 An ancient Zen Buddhist ceremony of atonement, purification and renewal of vows. 5:30 pm, free GEEKS WHO DRINK Draft Station Santa Fe Arcade, 60 E San Francisco St., 983-6443 Stellar quiz results can win you drink tickets for next time. 7 pm, free KIRTAN WITH LIA BELLO Madrid Railyard 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Sing, chant and feel at one with the universe. 6-7 pm, $10 SANTA FE INDIVISIBLE MEETING Center for Progress and Justice 1420 Cerrillos Road, 467-8514 Join the politically progressive group and fight the good fight. 7 pm, free TAI CHI IN THE GARDEN Santa Fe Botanical Garden 715 Camino Lejo, 471-9103 Practice gentle exercises that improve fitness through mind and body integration, fluid movements and controlled breathing. 5:30-6:30 pm, $7
FILM SANTA FE WINE & CHILE FILM FIESTA Violet Crown Cinema 1606 Alcaldesa St., 216-5678 A food and wine reception is followed by either A Year in Burgundy or Cement Suitcase— santafewineandchile.org has your tickets. 5 pm, $30
ENTER EVENTS AT SFREPORTER.COM/CAL
MUSIC
DANCE
BILL HEARNE TRIO La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 Honky-tonk and Americana from a Santa Fe legend. 7:30 pm, free COWGIRL KARAOKE Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Michèle Leidig hosts Santa Fe's most famous night of karaoke. 9 pm, free DOUG MONTGOMERY AND ELIZABETH YOUNG Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Montgomery provides the piano standards, and Young joins in on violin. 6:30 pm, free JAMIE RUSSELL Chili Line Brewing Company 204 N Guadalupe St., 982-8474 Americana, pop and rock. 7 pm, free RED MESA Tumbleroot Brewery & Distillery 2791 Agua Fría St. Desert rock outta ABQ. 8 pm, free
ARGENTINE TANGO MILONGA El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 Put on your best tango shoes and join in (or just watch). 7:30 pm, $5
TUE/25 BOOKS/LECTURES BILINGUAL BOOKS AND BABIES Santa Fe Public Library LaFarge Branch 1730 Llano St., 955-4860 In a program for babies 6 months to 2 years old (and their caregivers), join a play and language group to enjoy books, songs and finger games. 1 pm, free CRIS MOORE: THE LIMITS OF COMPUTERS IN SCIENCE AND SOCIETY Lensic Performing Arts Center 211 W San Francisco St., 988-1234 Moore, of the Santa Fe Institute, discusses the evolution of computation, the limits of computers (see News, page 9). 7:30 pm, free GENETIC GENEALOGY CONFIRMS NATIVE AMERICAN HISTORIES AMONG NUEVO MEXICANOS Northern Rio Grande National Heritage Center 848 NM-68, Ohkay Owingeh Miguel A Torrez, research technologist at LANL, presents findings from the New Mexico Genealogical Society DNA Project. Presented by the Mesa Prieta Petroglyph Project. 6:30 pm, $5 PRESCHOOL STORY TIME Santa Fe Public Library LaFarge Branch 1730 Llano St., 955-4860 Kids who are read to are generally smarter than kids who aren't. Get 'em learnt! 10:30 am, free
EVENTS METTA REFUGE COUNCIL Upaya Zen Center 1404 Cerro Gordo Road, 986-8518 A Buddhist support group for sharing life experiences of illness and loss in a variety of its forms. 10:30 am, free A SALUTE TO WHISTLEBLOWERS CCA Santa Fe 1050 Old Santa Fe Trail Nuclear Watch New Mexico hosts a fundraiser with Valerie Plame and Los Alamos whistleblowers Chuck Montano and Jim Doyle for an evening exploring brave acts that made a difference. 7 pm, $25 SANTA FE INDIVISIBLE MEETING Center for Progress and Justice 1420 Cerrillos Road, 467-8514 Join the politically progressive group to put into action the planning you did last night. Register new voters and fight the good fight. 8:30 am, free TAI CHI WITH BRIAN LEE Madrid Railyard 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Learn some tai chi, a martial art known for its health and defensive benefits. 6-7 pm, $10 YOGA IN THE GARDEN Santa Fe Botanical Garden 715 Camino Lejo, 471-9103 An all-levels yoga class. 8-9 am, $7 ¡VÁMONOS! SANTA FE: WALK WITH A NOTABLE LOCAL Plaza Contenta 6009 Jaguar Drive, 550-3728 Head to the Plaza Contenta to go for a stroll with SFR's very own Julie Ann Grimm. For more info, check out sfct.org/ vamonos. 5:30-6:30 pm, free
FILM WOMEN'S FILM SERIES: VESSEL CCA Santa Fe 1050 Old Santa Fe Trail Film follows Rebecca Gomperts as she works at the cutting edge of reproductive rights. Presented by the Santa Fe chapter of the National Organization for Women (see SFR Picks, page 23). 7 pm, $10
MUSIC BILL HEARNE TRIO La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 Honky-tonk and Americana. 7:30 pm, free
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BILL PALMER Tumbleroot Brewery & Distillery 2791 Agua Fría St. Rock 'n' roll ‘n’ dirty country. 5-8 pm, free BLUEGRASS JAM Social Kitchen & Bar 725 Cerrillos Road, 982-5952 Yup, it's a bluegrass jam. 6 pm, free CHUSCALES La Boca (Original Location) 72 W Marcy St., 982-3433 Exotic flamenco guitar from a dude whose family descended from the inventors of the genre. He knows his stuff. 7 pm, free
THE CALENDAR
DOUG MONTGOMERY AND DAVID WOOD Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 PIano standards: Doug starts, David takes over at 8 pm. 6 pm, free PAT MALONE TerraCotta Wine Bistro 304 Johnson St., 989-1166 Solo jazz guitar. 6 pm, free ROBERT KUHN Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Philosophical folk, blues and multilingual psych-rock. 8 pm, free
TONY BROWN Palace Saloon 142 W Palace Ave., 428-0690 R&B, soul, reggae, rock, blues, jazz, funk and Afro-Cuban tunes. 6:30 pm, free VICTOR MASON Blue Corn Cafe and Brewery Southside 4056 Cerrillos Road, 438-1800 Americana and classic tunes on his acoustic/electric guitar and his amazing eight-string baritone guitar, and hear the finest five-part a cappella harmonies this side of Austin. 6-8 pm, free
MUSEUMS
¡GLOBALQUERQUE! New Mexico’s 14th Annual Celebration of World Music & Culture
September 21 & 22, 2018
National Hispanic Cultural Center | Albuquerque, NM
Music. Dance. Culture. TICKETS ON SALE NOW
20 Performances 17 Acts 5 Continents 3 Stages 2 Nights 1 Unique Event Even
BLAIR CLARK
TIX | HOTEL PACKAGES | INFO
globalquerque.org
The New Mexico History Museum is one of the few places we trust to make old spoons and forks interesting. See the historic stuff people ate with, like this Navajomade silverware, in Setting the Standard: The Fred Harvey Company and Its Legacy. GEORGIA O’KEEFFE MUSEUM 217 Johnson St.,946-1000 The Black Place: Georgia O’Keeffe and Michael Namingha. Through Oct. 28. HARWOOD MUSEUM OF ART 238 Ledoux St., Taos, 575-758-9826 Larry Bell: Hocus, Focus and 12; Rafa Tarín: For Now. Both through Oct. 7. IAIA MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY NATIVE ARTS 108 Cathedral Place, 983-8900 CineDOOM: Narratives of Native Film and Beyond. Through Oct. 29. Holly Wilson: On Turtle’s Back; Rolande Souliere: Form and Content. Both through Jan. 27, 2019. Darren Vigil Gray: Expanding Horizons; Meeting the Clouds Halfway. Both Through Feb. 16, 2019. Action/Abstraction Redefined. Through July 7, 2019. MUSEUM OF ENCAUSTIC ART 632 Agua Fría St., 989-3283 Climate Change is REAL. MUSEUM OF INDIAN ARTS & CULTURE 710 Camino Lejo, 476-1250
Stepping Out: 10,000 Years of Walking the West. Through Dec. 30. Points Through Time. Through Oct. 1. Maria Samora: Master of Elegance. Through Feb. 28, 2019. What’s New in New: Selections from the Carol Warren Collection. Through April 7, 2019. Lifeways of the Southern Athabaskans. Through July 7, 2019. MUSEUM OF INT’L FOLK ART 706 Camino Lejo, 476-1200 No Idle Hands: The Myths & Meanings of Tramp Art. Through Sept. 16. Beadwork Adorns the World. Through Feb. 3, 2019. Crafting Memory: The Art of Community in Peru. Through March 10, 2019. MUSEUM OF SPANISH COLONIAL ART 750 Camino Lejo, 982-2226 GenNext: Future So Bright. Through Nov. 25. NM HISTORY MUSEUM 113 Lincoln Ave., 476-5019 The Land That Enchants Me So: Picturing Popular Songs of New Mexico. Through Feb. 28, 2019. Atomic Histories. Through May 26, 2019. NM MUSEUM OF ART 107 W Palace Ave., 476-5072 Shifting Light: Photographic
Perspectives. Through Nov. 4. Horizons: People & Place in New Mexican Art. Through Nov. 25. PALACE OF THE GOVERNORS 105 W Palace Ave., 476-5100 Closed for renovations. POEH CULTURAL CENTER AND MUSEUM 78 Cities of Gold Road, Pojoaque, 455-3334 In T’owa Vi Sae’we. EL RANCHO DE LAS GOLONDRINAS 334 Los Pinos Road, 471-2261 Living history. Renaissance Fair: 10 am-5 pm Saturday and Sunday Sept. 15 and 16. SANTA FE BOTANICAL GARDENS 715 Camino Lejo, 471-9103 Dan Ostermiller: Gardens Gone Wild! Through May 11, 2019. SITE SANTA FE 1606 Paseo de Peralta, 989-1199 Casa Tomada (House Taken Over). Through Jan. 6, 2019. WHEELWRIGHT MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAN INDIAN 704 Camino Lejo, 986-4636 Center for the Study of Southwestern Jewelry.
AYNUR (TURKEY) CANZONIERE GRECANICO SALENTINO (ITALY) COREYAH (KOREA) DELGRES (GUADELOUPE) IRIS DEMENT (ARKANSAS, USA) YOUSSRA EL HAWARY (EGYPT) JARLATH HENDERSON (IRELAND) JUPITER + OKWESS (DR CONGO) LOS DE ABAJO (MÉXICO) LADAMA (BRAZIL/COLOMBIA/VENEZUELA/USA) LA DAME BLANCHE (CUBA) LEMON BUCKET ORCHESTRA (CANADA) LLUVIA NEGRA (TAOS, NEW MEXICO, USA) MARTHA REDBONE (CHEROKEE/CHOCTAW/APPALACHIA) RIO MIRA (ECUADOR/COLOMBIA) TRIBUTE TO ANTONIA APODACA (LAS VEGAS, NEW MEXICO, USA)
The Global Village of Craft, Culture & Cuisine!
Open throughout the entire festival! Featuring a unique selection of arts, crafts, clothing, jewelry, homeopathics, more! Craft Beer! Artisan Wine! International Foods! Saturday, Sept. 22
FREE Global Fiesta! 10:30 AM - 4:00 PM
Free community day of interaction & exploration! Enjoy international dance classes, workshops, panels & discussions with visiting artists, film, hands-on inter-activities, and so much more!
SPECIAL RAILRUNNER / ROOM / TICKET PACKAGE Includes transportation to/from Railrunner in ABQ and Venue! Full hot breakfast, too!
Call Jennifer @ Best Western InnSuites for info & reservations 505.242.7022
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FREE
spirited
505 988-7393
REFLECTIVEJEWELRY.COM
October 5 - 8, 2018
• Gallery Receptions • Meet the Artists • Local Musicians
• Sunday Brunch Event • Live Theater • Fine Restaurants
Oct. 5-8, 2018 Silver City, New Mexico
ART www.southwestprintfiesta.org Silver City 46
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PROMOTION PAID IN PART BY SILVER CIT Y LODGER’S TAX
Your Fall Getaway To
MOVIES
RATINGS BEST MOVIE EVER
Pick of the Litter Review
10 9
Dogs with jobs!
8
9
BY JULIE ANN GRIMM e d i t o r @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m
7
We could really sum this movie up in two sentences: The world is hard. Watch these puppies. But there’s actually a lot more to the story of Pick of the Litter than puppy distraction. The documentary follows a litter of Labrador retrievers from birth through training as guide dogs, as well as the people along the way who teach them and kiss them on their irresistible little heads. Meet Patriot, Potomac, Poppet, Primrose and Phil. Guide Dogs for the Blind breeds roughly 800 puppies each year, but only about 300 pass the rigorous standards to become workers. Others get “career changed,” freed to have normal dog lives because some part of their demeanor isn’t suited for the important job. The training process starts right away, while puppies are still taking adorable naps. After two months, they go home with puppy raisers who
6 5 4 3 2 1 WORST MOVIE EVER
+ DOGS WITH JOBS!
- YOU WANT A PUPPY NOW (OR MAYBE THAT’S A +?)
live with them for up to a year and teach them expected obedience skills with tutelage and regular check-ins with the program. Then, the dogs have to buckle down for 10 weeks of intensive training with professionals. One of the most impressive segments features cars that hurtle toward blindfolded walkers to test the dogs’ ability to keep the pedestrian safe. They end up better at this than your average human with a cell phone. Way better. The dogs are also really good at going to the airport, using an escalator and an elevator, and watching for steep drop-offs. The narrative tension in the work is that, of course, of five puppies born at its start, not all make the cut. Cue tear-jerking moments
when trainers have to say goodbye or get hard news from the clinical precision under which the program operates. Yet, the real climax happens when successful dogs are matched with sight-impaired people who need their help. Some of them have been waiting for more than a year for the chance. How often do you know the very moment you’ve met your new best friend?
PICK OF THE LITTER Directed by Don Hardy Jr. and Dana Nachman Center for Contemporary Arts, The Screen, Violet Crown, NR, 81 min.
QUICKY REVIEWS
5
THE PREDATOR
6
THE PREDATOR
5
+ JUST REALLY DUMB BUT FUN - JARRING PACING; DID WE MENTION IT’S DUMB?
Director Shane Black jumps into the Predator franchise with yet another sequel or, like, entry in the universe. It’s a dumb sequel, too, but it’s dumb in all the ways you want an action movie to be, and given Black’s pedigree as director or writer for movies like Lethal Weapon, The Last Boy Scout and far too many more to list, we were kind of betting on overthe-top action as opposed to high cinema. It is the present, and one of those terrible, horrible, no-good, sometimes-invisible Predator aliens crash-lands on Earth with its dreadlocks in tow, and Army sniper Quinn McKenna (Narcos’ Boyd Holbrook) finds its stuff and mails it home. Why? Because, umm, he knows he’ll be detained by the shadowy alien hunter arm of the government and he wants to be able to prove he’s not crazy. Following us? Word. So anyway, McKenna totally does get detained, whereupon he winds up joining forces with a bunch of other reportedly crazy soldiers played by Thomas Jane and KeeganMichael Key and a few others who’ve also been classified as crazy. And then in turn they join up with a scientist who mostly just shoots guns
THE NUN
7
KIN
7
instead of doing science (Olivia Munn), and everyone sets about fighting the Predator. But, ruh-roh—an even crazier Predator shows up, and starts Predator-ing even harder; bullets, alien weapons, explosions and gore abound. The Predator mainly suffers from a lack of exposition. Perhaps Black thinks we’ve been
CRAZY RICH ASIANS
10
8
BLACKKKLANSMAN
following the movies and comics since the 1980s or something, but those who go in cold will probably feel lost. Beyond that, there are scenes that leap jarringly to or from others that make little sense, and the comic relief feels more like the result of focus testing than it does an organic addition to the mayhem.
MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE - FALLOUT
Holbrook is fine as the easily forgettable sniper caught between his bad luck and family, but we’re pretty ashamed for Munn, who has proven quite capable in other films and TV shows but here feels like a pointless addition. Ditto for McKenna’s kid, a negligible character who may as well have been named Motivation in the script. There are also space dogs; literal space dogs. Ugh. Still, spines get ripped and faces get shot and the bigger, crazier Predator does make for some enjoyable fight scenes. Hold off until you can watch this at home and tear it apart with your friends. We promise you’ll like that better. (Alex De Vore) Violet Crown, Regal, R, 107 min.
THE NUN
6
Predator’s one weakness: the sensual full-body massage.
+ THAT DEMON IS SPOOKY - WON’T HOLD UP TO SCRUTINY;
FRUSTRATING CHARACTER ACTIONS
It’s possible the people behind the Conjuring series had the prequel in mind from the start when the first movie dropped in 2013, but a more likely explanation is that horror has enjoyed a major resurgence in the last decade and there was money to be made. Enter The Nun, a prequel to four (!) other films and a fun, sometimes-scary late-sumCONTINUED ON PAGE 49
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WEDNESDAY, SEPT 19 12:30p American Chaos* 12:45p The Wife 2:30p Mystery of Picasso* 3:00p The Wife 4:15p Cielo* 5:15p The Wife 6:00p Mystery of Picasso* 7:30p The Wife 7:45p American Chaos* THURSDAY, SEPT 20 12:45p The Wife* 1:15p American Chaos 3:15p Mystery of Picasso 5:00p Cielo 5:30p The Wife* 7:00p Fahrenheit 11-9 7:45p The Wife* FRIDAY, SEPT 21 12:15p Fahrenheit 11/9 2:45p The Wife 3:15p Fahrenheit 11/9* 5:00p Fahrenheit 11/9 5:45p The Wife* 7:45p Fahrenheit 11/9 8:00p The Wife* SATURDAY - MONDAY, SEPT 22 - 24 11:45a The Wife 12:15p Fahrenheit 11/9* 2:00p Fahrenheit 11/9 3:00p The Wife* 4:45p Fahrenheit 11/9 5:15p The Wife* 7:15p Fahrenheit 11/9 7:45p The Wife* TUESDAY, SEPT 25 12:00p Fahrenheit 11/9* 1:30p Fahrenheit 11/9 2:45p The Wife* 4:15p Fahrenheit 11/9 4:45p The Wife* 7:00p N.O.W. presents VESSEL 7:00p Nuclear Watch NM presents Whistleblowers* *indicates in The Studio
PICK OF THE LITTER
WEDNESDAY, SEPT 19 2:00p The Bookshop 4:30p Woman Walks Ahead 7:00p Water Makes Us Wet with ANNIE SPRINKLE THURSDAY, SEPT 20 3:30p An American in Paris 6:30p An American in Paris FRIDAY, SEPT 21 1:30p Pick of the Litter 3:30p Pick of the Litter 5:30p Pick of the Litter 7:30p Pick of the Litter SATURDAY - SUNDAY, SEPT 22 - 23 10:30a An American in Paris 1:30p Pick of the Litter 3:30p Pick of the Litter 5:30p Pick of the Litter 7:30p Pick of the Litter MONDAY - TUESDAY, SEPT 24 - 25 1:15p Pick of the Litter 3:15p Pick of the Litter 5:15p Pick of the Litter 7:15p Pick of the Litter SPONSORED BY 48
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MOVIES mer popcorn flick starring what’s-her-face from American Horror Story (Taissa Farmiga, who of course is related to The Conjuring’s Vera Farmiga), some dude as a priest (Demián Bichir) and some other dude as the French Canadian version of deus ex machina (Jonas Bloquet). Spooky goings-on abound in an ancient convent in the hills of Romania, so when a nun from the cloister offs herself (the ultimate sin in Catholicism, we’re told), the Vatican sends their best evil and/or miracles investigator to see what’s up. Turns out an evil presence has been tearing it up out there and messing with the hundreds of years of perpetual adoration maintained by the nuns. Supernatural devil stuff ensues with minimal hints to the principal characters’ back stories, subtle nods to the property’s outlying universe and any number of “Did that actually just happen?!” jump scares. This makes The Nun feel exhilarating at times, even if it suffers from disjointed filler scenes that only seem to exist as setup to the run-ins with the demon, who appears as a sincerely frightening nun. It’s the eyes, y’know? The eyes. Actors’ performances, meanwhile, are serviceable, though they usually have more to do with wide-eyed heavy breathing than actual acting; we get minimal information about demonology and something about the Knights Templar. Whatevs. But we didn’t show up because we hoped for the contemporary horror equivalent of Citizen Kane—we showed up because the monster is scary, the jump scares are plenty and we need distractions from these waning warm days. Add another notch to your horror movie record for sure, and enjoy the spooks—just don’t think about anything too hard. (ADV) Regal, Violet Crown, R, 96 min.
KIN
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+ COOL PREMISE, CONSISTENT FEEL; TRUITT AND FRANCO - REYNOR AND THE FINALE
Before you go see KIN, know this: There’s going to be a sequel. There has to be. The feature film debut of directors and brothers Jonathan and Josh Baker walks a weird line between gritty reality and otherworldly sci-fi. The Baker brothers have only written and directed a handful of short films, and KIN is based on 2014’s Bag Man. It’s an admirable effort that hangs together well, despite some obvious shortcomings. As the film opens, we meet Eli Solinski (promising newcomer Myles Truitt), a smart but troubled kid who is the adopted son of Hal, a hardworking widower played by Dennis Quaid (Something to Talk About). When he’s not getting in trouble at school, Eli has a side hustle selling
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“If I wanna take a guy home with me tonight that’s nun-ya-business.”
wire from abandoned Detroit buildings. That’s where he finds a futuristic gun that is the film’s strongest tie to science fiction until the very end. Eli’s older brother is Hal’s biological son, Jimmy (Jack Reynor, Grassland), who just got out of jail. He’s in deep with local dirtbag Taylor (James Franco, Freaks and Geeks) for protecting him in prison. It’s the reason Jimmy and Eli (kin, get it?) have to hit the road, with Taylor close on their heels. Also on their heels are two soldiers from the future who seem pretty anxious to get that gun back from Eli. Everyone eventually catches up to Jimmy and Eli and the film comes together in very cool way, but with only minutes to wrap it up. Franco’s larger-than-life-gangster arc fizzles, and most of the plot questions are addressed with what feels like a line or two. That’s the beef most people seem to have with the film, anyway, and it’s legit. The Bakers hooked up with Stranger Things producers Shawn Levy and Dan Cohen, and the film has strong ties to the feel of that series, right down to Eli riding his bike everywhere in the beginning. Overall, it coalesces pretty well with respect to tempo and mood, but weak spots include Reynor’s performance, as well as a strong need for a few minutes more on the tail end to get the viewer more invested in the plot twist. KIN is getting panned big-time on metrics
sites like Rotten Tomatoes and MetaCritic, but those ratings feel a bit impatient. If this movie does stand alone, you’ll have reason to be disappointed, but if it’s the start of something innovative (or even just interesting), you’ll be rewarded. It plays pretty well on the big screen, so if you’re going to roll the dice, do it soon. (Matt Grubs) Regal, Violet Crown, PG-13, 108 min.
CRAZY RICH ASIANS
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+ VERY PRETTY; WU IS THE BEST - CHECKS OFF ALL THE STAID ROM-COM BOXES
It’s been well over 20 years since a mainstream American-produced film featured an entirely Asian cast (the last one was The Joy Luck Club in 1993, by the way, and Asians still remain the least-represented ethnicity in movies)—but with the release of the explosively popular Crazy Rich Asians from Now You See Me 2 director John M Chu, this alarming issue may change. Or at least be addressed better by Hollywood? Fingers crossed. Representation matters—even if the underlying plot of the Kevin Kwan book-turned-movie follows a relatively formulaic plotline. Constance Wu (Fresh Off the Boat) is Rachel Chu, a young NYU econ professor who has fallen for the uber-charming Nick Young, heir to bazillions of
family dollars, but who hasn’t told Rachel that he’s rich despite their year-long relationship—an interesting factoid she only discovers once the pair heads to Nick’s homeland of Singapore for a wedding. A seriously fancy-ass wedding. Cue mild drama (she forgives him for not mentioning the rich thing pretty quickly) and jokes about how things sure are different over there. Wu asserts her leading-lady position brilliantly, a comedic actor with a knack for sublime timing and who has proven her chops on television for years. Here she portrays a cool and up-for-anything type who bravely fields Young family drama from Nick’s mother (the talented and graceful Michelle Yeoh of Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon fame), vindictive, jealous exes and petty rich types; get this woman in more projects immediately, someone. Elsewhere, B-plot elements feel shoehorned in at best, particularly the crumbling marriage of Nick’s sister Astrid (Gemma Chan) and a wildly pointless role portrayed by Silicon Valley’s Jimmy O Yang. Henry Golding (who you probably don’t know yet) is serviceable as the handsome and apparently magnetic Nick (he hangs out at the YMCA and borrows Rachel’s Netflix password so, like, he’s not one of those rich people). As is the case with most characters, we get a primer in his deal within the film’s early minutes, though nobody outside of Rachel really develops beyond their baseball card stats. Community vet Ken Jeong is, as almost always, underused, even if his daughter (played by rapper Akwafina) does provide some of the most organically funny moments of the film. Nico Santos (of NBC’s Superstore) feels misused as well, a very funny actor who gets only a few lines that mostly just reaffirm that his character is gay. But it’s fun to see sweeping aerial shots of Singapore, especially when used in conjunction with the over-the-top lifestyle of the Young family. Fireworks happen, y’all. And then eventually we’re fed a rom-com trope about Rachel and Nick’s undying love having nothing to do with money or status or making overbearing family members happy. The sorta-kinda-twist, however, lies in the stark reality of drastically differing social stations. This feels perhaps more true-to-life than plenty of the genre’s other examples, but still—wouldn’t you know it—love conquers all. Thank goodness, then, for the fantastic music found throughout Crazy Rich Asians that generally comes in the form of hit American or British songs covered in Chinese. This really sets a tone that makes non-Asian viewers feel welcome but still out of our element, a seemingly small yet clever touch in a film that is definitely aiming for fun rather than high art. Hopefully, though, it won’t be another two decades before Asian filmmakers and CONTINUED ON PAGE 51
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Arroyo de Los Pinos is a delightful little arroyo that loves being a part of the Santa Fe Community. A bit temperamental when it rains, Arroyo de Los Pinos just needs some TLC from humans that love her.
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actors get another shot at the big screen of this scope. Frankly, it shouldn’t have to be a novelty— and if Hollywood’s concern is that (white) audiences won’t get it, let this be a lesson to them: If you make it, we will come. (ADV) Regal, Violet Crown, PG-13, 120 min.
BLACKKKLANSMAN
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+ IMPORTANT HISTORY LESSON; BRILLIANT PERFORMANCES
- LITERALLY NOTHING BAD TO SAY
Spike Lee’s newest is a film that should make you break down sobbing—dor the past, the present, and for the potential future, given this low point in human history. BlacKkKlansman so vividly and powerfully captures our attention, taking us right up to the brink of hope before abruptly pulling us back down to reality; where racism is very much alive and well, where former KKK grand wizard David Duke can appear publicly, without fear, where protesters are run down for daring to point out that Black Lives Matter and where non-white Americans struggle daily for their very humanity. America first? Fuck you. John David Washington (Ballers) is Ron Stallworth, the real-life Colorado Springs detective who, in 1979, infiltrated the ranks of a local KKK chapter by simply making phone calls to local white supremacists and even David Duke himself (Topher Grace). Jewish officer Phillip Zimmerman (played here by Girls and Star Wars alum Adam Driver) poses as Stallworth for in-person goings on, and the small investigative team uncovers and thwarts an assassination attempt on a black student activist (Laura Harrier of Spiderman: Homecoming). It’s a fascinating bit of American history and the actual Stallworth even penned a book about it (Black Klansman: A Memoir)—though Lee’s version is dramaticized. Before now, Stallworth’s story was ultimately relegated to the trivia pile for most Americans. Hopefully this film changes that. Washington is electric as Stallworth, his lifelong desire to be a cop at odds with his burgeoning radicalism. Can change occur from the inside? Maybe so. Harrier wows as well, a strong black woman with a penchant for subtle vulnerability and a streak of well-earned rage. Even the white guys (some of ’em, anyhow) start to get it as best they can, but the racism rampant on the streets of Colorado Springs and within Stallworth’s department itself is shockingly casual— conditioned, maybe, but no less ugly. That casual hate grows bolder throughout the film, starting at something about how the Klan “is non-violent” and culminating in cross-burning and explosives among intense, heartbreaking, powerfully delivered lessons in black history. Corey Hawkins as Kwame Ture alone is worth watching. But it’s not all heavy doom and gloom. There is pain, shock and awe, yes, but artfully chosen moments of levity punctuate the more challenging elements and the editing and pacing are damn near perfect. And we should never look away, even if BlacKkKlansman proves hard to watch—especially for white people, and rightly so. If the events of Charlottesville or the similar re-rise of no-longer-afraid white supremacists haven’t clued you in to how the fight must continue, perhaps pop culture will. Either way, there’s a lot to learn and a lot to consider here thanks to Lee’s masterful filmmaking and the real Stallworth’s incredible achievements. (ADV) Regal, Violet Crown, R, 135 min.
MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE - FALLOUT
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replacing these with palpable tension and absurd action pieces. Ghosts of Ethan Hunt’s (Tom Cruise) past come back to haunt him as a cache of plutonium is lost on his watch, and it’s up to the Impossible Missions Force (ugh) to combat a group of terrorists called The Apostles in retrieving it. Fans of the series will appreciate the gunplay, fistfights, mask-wearing and daredevil stunts provided by Cruise, anyone else will find a serviceable action flick that works OK for late summer. Cruise is loose—hydrated and unstoppable, remarkable for a 56-year-old actor. Henry Cavill (Man From UNCLE), meanwhile, looks as if he’s been sleeping in his car for the last few weeks. He’s so puffy, he can’t fully put his arms down. Ving Rhames is surprisingly soulful as Luther Stickell, however, and his long-standing relationship with Cruise’s Ethan Hunt takes the forefront, further strengthening their 23-year bond. Elsewhere, Rebecca Ferguson (Life) has the most spectacular character entrance in the film, and although she is underused, she is easily the biggest scene-stealer. Simon Pegg further proves he belongs in the series with some of the best scenes coming from his familiarity with every single recurring character. Alec Baldwin shows up, too, basically playing himself, but Angela Bassett capably counters his forgiving-father archetype with a stern mother character as head of the CIA. Sean Harris, the stereotypical villain, growls and makes threats. An honorable mention does go to True Detective alum Michelle Monaghan as it was particularly nice to see her come back to the series. Christopher McQuarrie returns as well as series writer/director, following up his success with the fifth installment, Rogue Nation. McQuarrie’s directing style is competent enough as far as action scenes go, but between the too-frequent double crosses and an excess of cheesy lines (21 by this author’s rough count), his writing skills feel weak. The sets and cinematography simultaneously scream “pretty” and “fake.” Still, as we approach late summer, there are far worse choices. Fallout is as silly as it comes, but at least it isn’t a disappointment. (Matthew K Gutierrez) Regal, Violet Crown, PG-13, 147 min.
2:00 SCARRED HEARTS 1:30 A PARIS EDUCATION 5:00 RUNNING FOR 4:20 THE SUN AT GRACE MIDNIGHT 5:00 GAME NIGHT 6:30 2018 SUNDANCE 7:30 BLUE IGUANA FILM FESTIVAL SHORTS FILM TOUR THURSDAY, SEPT. 20TH 8:45 THE SUN AT 1:00 RUNNING FOR MIDNIGHT GRACE SUNDAY, SEPT. 23RD 3:30 SCARRED HEARTS 12:00 A PARIS 8:00 HELLA BELLA EDUCATION CONCERT 3:00 2018 SUNDANCE FRIDAY, SEPT. 21ST FILM FESTIVAL SHORTS FILM TOUR 1:15 2018 SUNDANCE FILM FESTIVAL SHORTS 5:15 THE SUN AT MIDNIGHT FILM TOUR 3:30 A PARIS EDUCATION
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CALL FELINES & FRIENDS
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DOWN 1 The middle-sized bear 2 Love, in Latin 3 Border (on) 4 Text to an s.o. while away on a trip, maybe 5 Mischievous one 6 Pigeon sound 7 “Laugh-In” comedian Johnson 8 Hitchcock’s “___ Window” 9 Trumped-up 10 Great Lakes’ ___ Canals 11 One of South Africa’s official languages 12 The whole thing 13 “The Girl From Ipanema” saxophonist
18 Evil ___ 22 Frond-bearing plant 24 Devine of “Pitch Perfect” 25 Laundry container 27 Like a brow, at times 28 Talk show guest, often 29 November follower? 30 Was forced 32 Colin Dexter’s crosswordsolving inspector 33 “Excuse me, but ...” 34 Majorca’s neighbor 35 Fizzy drinks 36 Go all out 41 Couple, to tabloids 42 “Grey Cell Green” band ___ Atomic Dustbin 45 Furniture store to meander through 47 Sure 49 False accusation 53 Zener cards test for it 54 Up to it 55 Back out 56 Abbr. on meat packages 58 Coulrophobia, e.g. 59 Mazar of “Entourage” 61 ___ spumante (sparkling wine) 62 Obsessive fan 63 Xbox series since 2001 65 Network that’s now Lesless 66 “Wheel of Fortune” host Sajak 67 Nickname of a Red Sox Hall-of-Famer
PETCO: 1-4 pm Thursday, Friday, Saturday & Sunday TECA TU at DeVargas Center: 12 noon-3 pm, First Saturday of each month Please visit our cats at PETCO and TECA TU during regular store hours. FOSTER HOMES URGENTLY NEEDED FOR ADULT CATS OF VARIOUS AGES SANTA FE CATS not only supports the mission of FELINES & FRIENDS from revenue generated by providing premium boarding for cats, pocket pets and birds, but also serves as a mini-shelter for cats awaiting adoption. For more information, please visit www.santafecats.com
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This darling cat was rescued by one of our volunteers when she went to help a friend move and found DINAH had been abandoned by a housemate. TEMPERAMENT: DINAH is a very sweet cat who loves attention and is a cuddler. This is a common trait of the Cymric [Kim-rik] breed which is a long-haired Manx. She loves to play with a variety of toys. AGE: born approx. 4/17/14.
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ITI MOKA and her siblings were rescued by a kind person and were transferred to F&F to find forever homes. TEMPERAMENT: ITI MOKA means “little bit” in Filipino. She was the smallest, but that didn’t define her. Like all of her siblings she loves to play with the ball in the round and her favorite brother MUNCH. The kittens must go with a sibling or to a home with another playful kitten. ITI MOKA has a short brown tabby coat. AGE: born approx. 4/1/18.
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COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS JOHREI CENTER OF SANTA FE. JOHREI IS BASED ON THE FOCUS AND FLOW OF THE UNIVERSAL LIFE ENERGY. When clouds in the spiritual body and in consciousness are dissolved, there is a return to true health. This is according to the Divine Law of Order; after spiritual clearing, physical and mentalemotional healing follow. You are invited to experience the Divine Healing Energy of Johrei. All are Welcome! The Johrei Center of Santa Fe is located at Calle Cinco Plaza, 1500 Fifth St., Suite 10, 87505. Please call 820-0451 with any questions. Dropins welcome! Open Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, 2-5pm. Friday 2-4pm. Saturday, 10am-1pm. Closed Sunday and Monday. There is no fee for receiving Johrei. Donations are gratefully accepted. Please check us out at our new website santafejohreifellowship.com Saturday, September 29 at 10:30 we will hold our monthly gratitude service. All are welcome!
IS FOOD A PROBLEM FOR YOU? Do you eat when you’re not hungry? Do you go on eating binges or fasts without medical approval? Is your weight affecting your life? Contact Overeaters Anonymous! We offer support, no strings attached! No dues, no fees, no weigh-ins, no diets. We meet every day from 8-9 am at The Friendship Club, 1316 Apache Avenue, Santa Fe. www.nnmoa.com
UPAYA ZEN CENTER: MEDITATION, TALKS, RETREATS Upaya invites those who aspire to expand their awareness and compassionately engage in our world. Come for daily MEDITATION and DHARMA TALKS Wednesdays 5:306:30pm. 9/20-9/23 “INNER AND OUTER NATURE:” join Mark Coleman, author of “Awake in the Wild,” for this meditation retreat. 10/12-10/14 “STORIES AND VERSES OF THE PLATFORM SUTRA:” explore this pivotal ancient Zen Buddhist text. Learn more at upaya.org, registrar@upaya.org, 505-986-8518. 1404 Cerro Gordo, Santa Fe.
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LEGALS A FREE TALK & DEMO WITH CLAIRVOYANT HEALER LISA PELLETIER - Saturday, Sept. 22, 10:30 am - 11:30 am at Unity Santa Fe, 1212 Unity Way. Lisa will explore what it’s like to be a clairvoyant healer following a path of Spirit, and share how she heals and teaches people to take care of their energetic field, to clear and restore their chakras, to communicate with the God of their heart and their Guides, and to give clairvoyant readings. Specifically, why and how expanding one’s clairvoyance aligns one with her/his spiritual path. There will be either a short guided meditation or a demo reading. (505) 927-5407 • DeepRootsStudio.com
LEGAL NOTICE TO CREDITORS/NAME CHANGE
STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT IN THE MATTER OF A PETITION FOR CHANGE OF STATE OF NEW MEXICO NAME OF Guadalupe Pauline COUNTY OF SANTA FE Romero FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT Case No.: D-101-CV-2018-02628 COURT IN THE MATTER OF A PETITION FOR CHANGE OF NOTICE OF CHANGE OF NAME OF Lynn Ann Rose Miles NAME TAKE NOTICE that in accordance with the proviNo.: D-101-CV-2018-02560 sions of Sec. 40-8-1 through NOTICE OF CHANGE OF Sec. 40-8-3 NMSA 1978, et NAME TAKE NOTICE that in accordance with the provisions seq. the Petitioner Guadalupe Pauline Romero will apply to of Sec. 40-8-1 through Sec. 40-8-3 NMSA 1978, et seq. the the Honorable GREGORY S. GRIEF SUPPORT GROUP Petitioner Lynn Ann Rose Miles SHAFFER, District Judge of - for those experiencing the First Judicial District at the will apply to the Honorable grief in their lives age 18 Santa Fe Judicial Complex, 225 DAVID K. THOMSON, District and over. Tierra Nueva Montezuma Ave., in Santa Fe, Judge of the First Judicial Counseling Center, 3952 New Mexico, at 9:30 a.m. on District at the Santa Fe Judicial San Felipe Road (next door PRANIC HEALING TRAINING Complex, 225 Montezuma Ave., the 9th day of October, 2018 for to Southwestern College), an ORDER FOR CHANGE OF *******OPEN HOUSE AT LA IN SANTA FE in Santa Fe, New Mexico, at 471-8575, Saturdays 10:00NAME from Guadalupe Pauline CASITA PRESCHOOL******* Learn the Ancient Science and 9:00 a.m. on the 26th day of 11:30, ongoing, facilitated *STOP BY OUR OPEN HOUSE Art of MCKS Pranic Healing November, 2018 for an ORDER Romero to Pauline Guadalupe by student therapists from Romero. SEPTEMBER 23rd FROM 1-4pm* with KEI OKUBO at Thubten FOR CHANGE OF NAME Southwestern College. It is STEPHEN T. PACHECO, Norbu Ling 1807 2nd Street #35 from Lynn Ann Rose Miles to Find out what a parent offered by TNCC and Golden PRANIC HEALING LEVEL LynnAnnRose Mary Huntington. District Court Clerk coop is all about *Now Willow with sponsorship by ONE Friday, October 19. 5:00- STEPHEN T. PACHECO, By: Leah Martinez Enrolling*Community Based* Rivera Family Funeral Home. Deputy Court Clerk Nationally Accredited*Reggio- 9:30pm and Saturday, October District Court Clerk 20, 9:00am-9:00pm $325 Drop-ins welcome. No group Submitted by: Guadalupe By: Bernadette Hernandez Inspired*Both full time and PRANIC PSYCHOTHERAPY Pauline Romero on September 22 due to new Deputy Court Clerk part options available* Sunday October 21, Petitioner, Pro Se student orientation. Submitted by: *983-2803* www.lacasita.edu 9:00am-9:00pm $325 Lynn Ann Rose Miles On-line registration received Petitioner, Pro Se LEGAL NOTICES at pranichealing.com/events ALL OTHERS by Wed.Oct. 17. For more STATE OF NEW MEXICO information call 505 660- 7056. COUNTY OF SANTA FE STATE OF NEW MEXICO FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COUNTY OF SANTA FE ART OPENING: COURT IN THE MATTER OF FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT Enjoy art, snacks, coffee, A PETITION FOR CHANGE COURT and learn about art therapy! OF NAME OF Joanne Louise NO. D-0101-DM-2018-00501 Katie Hall of Open Sky Art Rodriguez CONNIE MORRISON, Therapy & Counseling will be No.: D-101-CV-2018-02593 Petitioner, vs. displaying a series that depicts NOTICE OF CHANGE OF GLORIA ORETEGA, her connection with the nonNAME TAKE NOTICE that Respondent. material world and includes in accordance with the proviNOTICE OF PENDENCY OF images from a series on sions of Sec. 40-8-1 through ACTION, indigenous women from Mexico. Sec. 40-8-3 NMSA 1978, et MaverSTATE OF NEW MEXICO TO The paintings process the ick is a seq. the Petitioner Joanne THE Respondent, greetings; universality of human emotions Louise Rodriguez will apply R E A D Y, You are Hereby notified that the and spiritual experiences in the to the Honorable FRANCIS J. S E T , above named Petitioner has filed material world. Where: Java P L A Y ! MATHEW, District Judge of a civil Action against you in the Joe’s on Rodeo When: Friday, kitten! the First Judicial District at the above entitled court and cause, September 21, 4pm-6pm. He loves Santa Fe Judicial Complex, 225 the General object thereof being www.katiehallarttherapy.com feather Montezuma Ave., in Santa Fe, Petition for Dissolution of a toys, chasNew Mexico, at 1:15 p.m. on Domestic Partnership. ARE NEGATIVE THOUGHTS ing mouse the 12th day of October, 2018 Unless you enter your appearAND EMOTIONS HOLDING toys, and for an ORDER FOR CHANGE ance before the 28th day of YOU BACK FROM LIVING A soft treats. September 2018, a judgment by HAPPY AND FULFILLING LIFE? OF NAME from Joanne Louise Adopter beware...Liza He is about Rodriguez to Joni Rodriguez default will be entered against It’s time to break out of your will headbutt you and 14 weeks you. WITNESS, the Honorable psychological ruts!! Learn about Davis. STEPHEN T. PACHECO, it’s super cute — she is old and District Court Clerk Matthew J. Wilson, District the alternative counseling work just trying to get you to love her. She adores came to By: Jorge Montes Judge of the First Judicial of Barry Cooney, Ph.D. Visit a good petting session. She is described as the shelter as Deputy Court Clerk District Court of the State of his website at barrycooney. a “sweet” and “curious” kitty, so she will a stray with other kittens. So he would do Submitted by: Joanne Louise New Mexico, and the seal com, sign up for his free make a good mouser. Liza came into the well with other kittens or even a adult cat. Rodriguez Of the District Court of Santa Insights, discover the power of shelter nursing her babies: they are all in a He has not been around dogs, but he is Petitioner, Pro Se Fe County, this 30th day of quartz crystal healing sound foster home. Now it’s time for her to find a young enough to learn how to love them August 2018. and register for his Oct. 13 th home of her own. She is 11 months old and too. Maverick would love a home that will Stephen T. Pacheco, workshop (“events” page), “A would love to rule the house. cherish and love him. Clerk of the District Court. Day of Sacred Sound and Soul SPONSORED BY Revitalization.” Questions? Barry invites you to contact him directly: 505-220-6657
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MIND BODY SPIRIT ACUPUNCTURE Rob Brezsny
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): As he stepped up to use an ATM in a supermarket, a Scottish man named Colin Banks found £30 (about $40 U.S.) that the person who used the machine before him had inadvertently neglected to take. But rather than pocketing it, Banks turned it in to a staff member, and eventually the cash was reunited with its proper owner. Shortly after performing his good deed, Bank won £50,000 (about $64,500 U.S.) in a game of chance. It was instant karma in dramatic action—the positive kind! My analysis of the astrological omens TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Budi Waseso, the former reveals that you’re more likely than usual to benefit from head of the Indonesian government’s anti-narcotics expeditious cosmic justice like that. That’s why I suggest division, had a radical plan to prevent escapes by peoyou intensify your commitment to doing good deeds. ple convicted of drug-related crimes. He sought to SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): As you dive down into build detention centers that would be surrounded by your soul’s depths in quest for renewal, remember this moats filled with crocodiles and piranhas. But his replacement, Heru Winarko, has a different approach. testimony from poet Scherezade Siobhan: “I want to dig He wants addicts and dealers to receive counseling in out what is ancient in me, the mistaken-for-monster . . . and let it teach me how to be unafraid again.” Are you comfortable rehabilitation centers. I hope that in the brave and brazen enough to do that yourself? It’s an coming weeks, as you deal with weaknesses, flaws, and sins—both your own and others’—you’ll opt for an excellent time to douse your fear by drawing wild power from the primal sources of your life. To earn the right to approach more like Winarko’s than Waseso’s. soar through the heights in November and December, GEMINI (May 21-June 20): In one sense, a “patron delve as deep as you can in the coming weeks. saint” is a Catholic saint who is a heavenly advocate for SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): According to author a person, group, activity, thing, or place. St. Jude is the Elizabeth Gilbert, here’s “the central question upon patron saint of lost causes, for instance. St. Francis of which all creative living hinges: do you have the courage Assisi is the guardian of animal welfare and St. to bring forth the treasures that are hidden within you?” Kentigern is the protector against verbal abusers. “Patron saint” may also be invoked poetically to refer to When I read that thought, my first response was, why a person who serves as a special guide or influence. For are the treasures hidden? Shouldn’t they be completely obvious? My second response was, why do you need example, in one of his short stories, Nathaniel Hawthorne refers to a veteran nurse as “the patron saint courage to bring forth the treasures? Shouldn’t that be of young physicians.” In accordance with current astro- the easiest and most enjoyable task imaginable? Everything you just read is a perfect riddle for you to logical omens, I invite you to fantasize about persons, groups, activities, things, or places for whom you might contemplate during the next 14 months, Sagittarius. be the patron saint. To spur your imagination, here are CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): A blogger named Sage some appropriate possibilities. You could be the patron Grace offers her readers a list of “cool things to call me saint of the breeze at dawn; of freshly picked figs; of besides cute.” They include dazzling, alluring, sublime, singing humorous love songs in the sunlight; of unpremagnificent, and exquisite. Is it OK if I apply those dictable romantic adventures; of life-changing epiphasame adjectives to you, Capricorn? I’d like to add a few nies while hiking in nature; of soul-stirring music. more, as well: resplendent, delightful, intriguing, magnetic, and incandescent. I hope that in response you CANCER (June 21-July 22): In August 1933, author don’t flinch with humility or protest that you’re not Virginia Woolf wrote a critical note to her friend, the composer Ethel Smyth, lamenting her lack of emotional worthy of such glorification. According to my astrologisubtlety. “For you,” Woolf told Smyth, “either things are cal analysis, now is one of those times when you deserve extra appreciation for your idiosyncratic appeal black, or they’re white; either they’re sobs or shouts— whereas, I always glide from semi-tone to semi-tone.” In and intelligence. Tell your allies and loved ones that I the coming weeks, fellow Cancerian, you may encounter said so. Inform them, too, that giving you this treatment could help mobilize one of your half-asleep potentials. people who act like Smyth. But it will be your sacred duty, both to yourself and to life, to remain loyal and faithful to the rich complexity of your feelings. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): “People think of education as something they can finish,” said writer and scientist Isaac Asimov, who wrote or edited over 500 books. His point was that we’re wise to be excited about learning new lessons as long as we’re on this earth. To cultivate maximum vitality, we should always be engaged in the processes of absorbing new knowledge and mastering new skills and deepening our understanding. Does that sound appealing to you, Leo? I hope so, especially in the coming weeks, when you will have an enhanced ability to see the big picture of your future needs for education. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Virgo businessman Warren Buffet is among the top five wealthiest people on the planet. In an average year, his company Berkshire Hathaway adds $36 billion to its already swollen coffers. But in 2017, thanks to the revision of the U.S. tax code by President Trump and his buddies, Buffet earned $65 billion—an increase of 83 percent over his usual haul. According to my analysis of the astrological omens, you’re entering a year-long phase when your financial chances could have a mild resemblance to Buffet’s 2017. I’m not predicting your earnings will increase by 83 percent. But 15 percent isn’t unreasonable. So start planning how you’ll do it!
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Amulets to maintain your focus insight and inspiration is our joint effort. Present your intention, theme, or circumstance. WE ARE ALL ONE! ALL ONE! CERTIFIED! 505-437-0507 for appointment www.talismanicportrait.com
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): “When the winds of change blow,” says a Chinese proverb, “some people build walls while others build windmills.” Since the light breezes of change may soon evolve into brisk gusts of change in your vicinity, I wanted to bring this thought to your attention. Will you be more inclined to respond by constructing walls or windmills? I don’t think it would be foolish for you to favor the walls, but in the long run I suspect that windmills would serve you better. Homework: Imagine you get three wishes on one condition: they can’t benefit you directly, but have to be wished on someone else’s behalf. Freewillastrology.com.
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LOVE. CAREER. HEALTH. Psychic readings and Spiritual counseling. For more information call 505-982-8327 or go to www.alexofavalon.com. Also serving the LGBT community.
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You are the most important person in the world: Explore the possibilities, Your potential, Embrace the World A life without pain. Come—GET RID OF THE PAIN 505.551.2345 Dr.LaLuz@azullaluz.org 1406 C, 3rd Street, Santa Fe
TAROT READINGS
AYURVEDIC ASTROLOGY
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Many educated Americans and Europeans think of reincarnation as a loony delusion, even though it’s a cornerstone of spiritual belief for over 1.5 billion earthlings. I myself regard it as a hypothesis worthy of intelligent consideration, although I’d need hundreds of pages to explain my version of it. However you imagine it, Aquarius, you now have extra access to knowledge and skills and proclivities you possessed in what we might refer to as your “past lives”—especially in those past lives in which you were an explorer, maverick, outlaw, or pioneer. I bet you’ll feel freer and more experimental than usual during the next four weeks.
Go to RealAstrology.com to check out Rob Brezsny’s Expanded Weekly Audio Horoscopes and Daily Text Message Horoscopes. The audio horoscopes are also available by phone © CO P Y R I G H T 2 0 1 8 R O B B R E Z S N Y at 1-877-873-4888 or 1-900-950-7700. SEPTEMBER 19-25, 2018
REFLEXOLOGY
Week of September 19th
ARIES (March 21-April 19): “The flower doesn’t dream of the bee. It blossoms and the bee comes.” So says poet and philosopher Mark Nepo in The Book of Awakening. Now I’m transmitting his observation to you. I hope it will motivate you to expend less energy fantasizing about what you want and devote more energy to becoming the beautiful, useful, irresistible presence that will attract what you want. The coming weeks will be an excellent time to make plans to produce very specific blossoms.
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Fall is great time for cleansing and weight management. Through Ayurvedic Astrology you can reach your weight goals easily. Please call/ text Bina Thompkins for appointments. 505 8197220 Fall Special 20 mins for $15.
Valuable information that’s not usually available. Intuitive and grounded. Hal has 30 years experience. skyhorse23@hotmail.com 505-310-5276
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Time to get real—YOUR LIFE IS UP TO YOU Feeling stuck, lost, depressed? Anxious about where you are in life? You don’t have to handle these tough times alone. Therapy is about having support while working to unblock what is keeping you from being your most vibrant, loving self. Amy Finlayson MA, LPCC (Licensed Professional Clinical Counselor) Amy.innernavigation@gmail.com 505-204-5288 $80/HOUR—NO INSURANCE ACCEPTED!!! SLIDING SCALE AVAILABLE
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GREENE FINE ARTS Cottage On The Pond Willard F. Clark Oil on canvas, 20” x 24” $9500 A resident in Santa Fe from 1928 to 1992, Clark addressed nearly every aspect of life in NM in his paintings, woodcuts and engravings. Friend and LANDSCAPING contemporary of such New Mexican notables as Gustave LANDSCAPES BY DENNIS Bauman, Eli Levin and Brian Landscape Design, Xeriscapes, Long, Clark was an integral part Drip Systems, Natural Ponds, of Santa Fe’s artistic tradition. Low Voltage Lighting & greenefinearts.com Maintenance. I create a custom lush garden w/ minimal use of precious H20. HOME 505-699-2900
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Make sure all the workers for your chimney service company are covered by worker’s comp insurance. (Hint: the cheapest chimney sweeps do not insure their workers.) Be safe! Baileyschimney.com. Call Bailey’s today 505-988-2771
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You are the most important person in the world: Explore the possibilities, Your potential, Embrace the World A life without pain. Come—GET RID OF THE PAIN 505.551.2345 Dr.LaLuz@azullaluz.org 1406 C, 3rd Street, Santa Fe
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WE BUY DIAMONDS GOLD & SILVER GRADUATE GEMOLOGIST THINGS FINER Inside La Fonda Hotel 983-5552
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7 days/wk EVENING HOURS BODYFIT MAT PILATES W/ JENNIFER LONG T&TH: 7:45-8:30am SAT: 10:15-11am HIIT WORKOUT W/DASHA MAYS Mon: 5:30-6:30pm FIRST CLASS FREE AKASHA STUDIO @ BODY OWNER/DIRECTOR ANTHE KELLEY LAUNCHES NEW FALL PROGRAM LOCAL SPECIAL: $30/UNLIMITED YOGA /2 wks BODY BOUTIQUE Men/Women/Children New FALL Arrivals! bodyofsantafe.com 505-986-0362 333 W. Cordova
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COLONICS BY A RN 699-9443 Tennis Lessons W/ A PRO WHO HAS 25 YRS. EXPERIENCE Kids of all ages & adults welcome! Racquets Included! Call Coach Jim 505.795.0543
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Why Do We As Women Put Up With ____? SF Public Library-Main Branch, Sept. 30, 3-4:30PM Betsy Keats, MA Counseling/ Psychology bkempower1@gmail.com
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