Book Club & Other Happenings

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Last Thursday the Book Thieves (our ‘chill-coed-young-professionals-who-love-books-friends-food-drinks-and-smart/funny-conversation’ book club) met to determine our books for next year. We read one book every two months and meet for two months in a row (we discuss the first half of the book the first month and the full book the second month), followed by one month off. This schedule allows us to keep up with our busy careers, families, and social lives and still have time to read other non-book-club books that we have a hankering to read. After much suggestion, discussion, and voting, we decided on:
  • The Book Thief by Markus Zusak (currently reading until December)
  • The Snow Child by Eowyn Ivey
  • Little Women by Luisa May Alcott and March by Geraldine Brooks (for our classic…with a twist)
  • The Fault in Our Stars by John Green
  • The Bookman’s Tale by Charlie Lovett
Also high contenders on our list (and therefore possibilities for the year after next) were The Mercy of Thin Air by Ronlyn Domingue, NW by Zadie Smith, The Professor and the Madman by Simon Winchester, some Sherlock Holmes, Leviathan by Scott Westerfeld, and Winter Garden by Kristin Hannah.
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Then on Sunday night we all met for a special Midnight Dinner in honor of The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern (if you haven’t read it, you’re missing out!). It was all kinds of fun and delicious. We ate our fill of awesome food and desserts, drank butterschnaps apple cider martinis from hollowed out apples, explored a tarot card reading, read fortunes from the book, and enjoyed surprise goodies.
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On Tuesday we had an autumn-themed potluck lunch at work – we all brought a homemade fall dish, beverage, or dessert to share, served it up buffet style in the kitchen, and dined together in the library/conference room at one big table. So fun to enjoy a long and relaxing lunch with great co-workers…and so delicious! Fall foods are the BEST. I brought my traditional pumpkin mac n’ cheese. Not pictured were all the tasty pumpkin cookies or breads, pumpkin curry soup, and apple cider. Also, double stuffed Halloween oreos with a peanut butter cup in the center and the whole shebang dipped in chocolate is just about the most phenomenal dessert…ever.
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And on Tuesday night Ted and I used a gift card a kind soul had given us to Open Face for dinner (try this sweet and quirky little place in the Southwedge…it’s so fresh and delish!!) and then we had a fun time seeing Pump Boys & Dinettes at Geva.
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What fall fun have you been up to lately?
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Long Overdue

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After the insanity of the past two weekends of non-stop walking from Fringe Fest show to Fringe Fest show, which were wonderful but far from relaxing, this past weekend was awesome. It looked something like this:

Friday: Pizza, pajamas, and a TV night at home (Last Man Standing, Big Bang Theory, and The Neighbors).

Saturday: Since Ted’s knee is torn and will require surgery soon, we chose not to run in the Photo Finish Philanthropy 5k this year, but we woke up early to stand on a pretty little street corner near mile marker 3 to cheer on my Geva friends and co-workers (and everyone else) who was running. Way to go team Geva for running and raising over $3,400! After the race we lazily ran some errands to pick up pears, concord grapes, autumn corn, and Amish pumpkin bread at the public market, did our grocery shopping, got our flu shots, and went to church. Then we enjoyed the wonderful opening night of The Last Five Years – the show Ted is stage managing and audio engineering, and went out for some late-night dinner and drinks on the patio by the toasty firepit at The Distillery with the cast and their families and friends.

Sunday: Our Artistic Director decided to host the Sunday Salon post-show talk-back for Pump Boys & Dinettes that I usually host, so I had the whole day off – a nice little surprise! We slept in, worked on a few autumn crafty things, did a little calendar and organizational housekeeping, kept tabs on the Packers/Lions game, made a homemade mushroom-Parmesan lasagna and arugula-candied walnut-Boursin-shallot-pear salad, joined Ted, cast and crew for an opening-weekend cast party at the director’s home in the afternoon, and then headed to a fun, fancy, and delicious themed Midnight Dinner in honor of The Night Circus with my book club friends in the evening.

We also finally got around to making some serious progress on my new blog design (it’s looking good!) washing, drying, and setting up our new sheets, comforter, and towels (it was time), cleaning Ace’s tank, spending some quality time together (always wonderful), and socializing with others (which it’s felt like it’s been forever since we’ve done that and suddenly 3 events in one weekend with at least 3 more coming up in the next week).

I’ll be back in a few days to share more. Hope you’re enjoying this beautiful October!

photo {It’s beginning to look wonderfully autumny around our house! Ted surprised me on October 1, when I got home from work, with that beautiful white pumpkin, a “just because/happy October!” card and the little round orange pumpkin in front of the card…just because he knows how much I love October. He’s the best!}

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Unplug October

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I’ve decided to unplug a bit this month.

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October is my favorite month and I’d like to live this month to its fullest. We’ve got a handful of fun social engagements on the books, family in town for a week, a trip out of town for a few days, our anniversary, a bunch of exciting but busy theatrical pursuits at work, and a fall to-do list of goodness to enjoy. I’ve also got a long-overdue and very exciting complete revamp of this blog in the works and I’d like to have some free time to spend on perfecting it (coming soon!), as well as a few other projects I’ve been procrastinating on for quite some time that I’d like to make time for. And I want to relax and bake and read and go for walks and watch Gilmore Girls and be present with my family and friends and do nothing but enjoy the cool, crisp autumn air and soak it all in.

In truth, I’ve also been feeling a bit bogged down lately too. And I have a sneak suspicion social media – blogs, facebook, pinterest – might be the culprit. Unfortunately, social media also has a tendency of sucking up time and energy that could be used more positively and constructively elsewhere. I think unplugging from these things will help me to focus better on my work, my passions, and my play this month. I think it’ll help me enjoy October more because I won’t be inundated with words and pictures of all the things I cannot afford or do not have time or resources to do and yet look so appealing that I am overwhelmed by the thought of them. I think unplugging will help me appreciate and enjoy the simple yet wonderful things in my life more, and also help me to be more productive and successful in my own way, on projects and down time that matter to me.

I’m not gone for good, by any means. Over the course of this next month, I might stop in once or twice a week for a post if I have something particularly exciting to share. I certainly don’t want to lose my readers, and I really do hope you’ll stick around. I’m more unplugging from facebook, pinterest, and the reading of other people’s blogs than the writing of my own – which I consider to be a fun, healthy, and creative outlet for myself, but also something that can take up a lot of time. So I’ll still be posting this month, just more sporadically than usual. When I return to 5-days-a-week blogging in November I’m sure I’ll have a ton of fun stuff to report…and a brand new, totally redesigned look for the blog!

Enjoy your October. Take some time for yourself this month. I’ll see you soon.

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Links to get you through the day

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Planning a roadtrip? Check out this fun website.

Putting time in perspective

Maps that will change the way you see the world

From screen to stage: what films are headed to Broadway

This is the sound of my heart breaking because it’s just not fair out there and it shouldn’t be this hard for anybody to make a life for themselves

Game night anyone?

Texts from my cat – just in case anyone who knows me hasn’t seen this yet (which is incredibly unlikely because I talk about it constantly and Ted is sick of hearing me repeat the “needles” joke at least three times a day)

Along those same lines, enjoy 22 totally ludicrous products for cat owners

If you’re attending any autumn event (potluck, party, etc.) that I am attending this season, I will be making this (dibs!). This epic dish combines two of the things I love the most – mac n’ cheese and Woodchuck hard cider. Culinary victory!

Thank you convenient New York state fall foliage forecast map, for letting me know when I can look forward to peak color in my area!

You’re welcome. Happy hump day!

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My October

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“October is crisp days and cool nights, a time to curl up around the dancing flames and sink into a good book.”

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Welcome, most prized and glorious month of the year!

Today I’ll not dwell on our government’s inability to get it together (thus affecting the lives of thousands of Americans), or the thousands of dollars in medical bills we’re bound to start receiving  from our insurance company over the next several months due, in part, to America’s wildly outrageous and absolutely un-affordable health care costs. But there’s really not a lot I can do about either of those things.

So, instead I’ll be grateful and enjoy some of my most favorite October blessings:

Pumpkins

Corn mazes

Fall farms

Hayrides

Fall foliage

Crisp weather

Hard cider

Apple harvests

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Potlucks

Warm drinks

Delicious seasonal eats (of which there are too many to list)

Wonderful scents

Good books

Sweaters, scarves, boots, tights, and other fall fashions

Halloween

Get togethers with family and friends

Our anniversary

More pumpkins.

This month brings us one fun fall farm day with friends, an autumn potluck at work, an autumn potluck/bonfire/pumpking carving party/movie and game night with friends, a Midnight Dinner with the book club, my parents visit to Rochester, a few fall foliage tours and other autumny outings, our visit to see my brother and his family in Virginia, our third wedding anniversary (which we will celebrate at the circus!), Halloween, and the openings of The Last Five Years and The 39 Steps at our theatres.

All on an extremely strict budget. It can be done!

Happy October!

I’m so excited you’re here!

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Roc City Fringe Fest: Week Two

Here’s what I saw during the second week of the Rochester Fringe Festival! Check below for my thoughts and recommendations! 

Merged at the Geva Nextstage – “MERGED is a mix of premiere and repertory work by national/international dance artists James Hansen and Heather Roffe. This choreographic concert showcases a merging of visual art, theatre and text, melded with rich, visceral and physically exciting dance.” This performance was absolutely intoxicating. I loved everything about it. I loved the fun and distinct collection of music choices that visited a variety of genres and styles. I loved the simple yet elegant costumes that all worked so well on the dancers bodies and with the stories each dance told. I loved that each piece was strong and emotionally evocative and featured characters that really told a story that I could interpret in my own way, but all done through great dances. The pieces were beautiful and fun and original and sometimes funny (I love dance that surprises you by using humor well) and cutting-edge and thought-provoking. I was also really pleased with the quality of the choreography (something different in every piece) and style, and with the precision in the technique. All fabulous and beautiful dancers, but each dancer and dance also had a lot of personality. Definitely one of the most engaging dance concerts I have ever seen. Don’t miss this show. A+. 

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TriviaCity: An Arts and Culture Quiz at the Spiegelgarten – “Join host CITY NEWSPAPER for an arts, culture, and all-things-Rochester trivia night!” This was so much fun! I saw it the same evening I saw Merged – what a great night! My friend Shawnda and I teamed up for this event in the spiegelgarten, a parking lot downtown that was comfortably and lavishly decked out with relaxing outdoor lounge sofas, cocktail tables and bar stools, strings of romantic cafe lights, flame heaters set up throughout and, of course – the wood, mirror, velvet and stained glass spiegeltent from Europe. There was also beer, hot chocolate, and hot mulled wine available, which smelled heavenly. The atmosphere was great, and the trivia was a lot of fun as well. 6 rounds all about arts (theatre, Fringe, visual art), culture (media, news, music, movies, artists, etc.), and Rochester (famous Rochestarians, scandals, our arts and culture scene, Fringe Fest, etc.). We each got a free cozy t-shirt for participating, learned a lot of cool things about Rochester and the arts, and had a blast answering questions (we absolutely dominated the competition on the Rochester people round, but failed miserably at the Broadway and pop songs with a shared title round). Grab some mulled wine, a seat by the fire, a group of pals for a fun evening (and make sure Shawnda is on your team because she is a trivia goddess), and don’t miss this event next year either. A. 

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Sand Mandalas at the Geva Cafe – “Prepare to be mesmerized as Katie Jo Suddaby “paints” with thousands of tiny grains of sand. Katie Jo is the only Westerner using this ancient Tibetan technique to create delicate works of art from brightly colored sands.” She does beautiful work. Katie Jo was working on a gorgeous peacock when I stopped by. She explained how she got into it and told me about her week learning about sand painting technique from the monks, showed me the unique instruments from Tibet that she uses to do her sand paintings, and demonstrated on an “unpainted” section of glass how she can manipulate the instruments and the sand to make thin lines, heavy lines, soft images, etc. And I think it’s great that she recognizes and embraces that there’s beauty in impermanence – in art and in life. A. 

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Garth Fagan Dance at Garth Fagan Dance Studio – “Witness a performance by world-renowned Garth Fagan Dance up close and personal in the company’s downtown Rochester studios. Now in its 43rd season, Garth Fagan Dance is “unfailingly original,” deems the The New York Times. The dancers communicate with unbridled energy the depth, precision and grace of Tony-award-winning choreographer Garth Fagan’s work.” This company, its dancers, and choreography are like a celebration of strength, the beauty of the human body, and all the amazing things it can do. This was the most sculpted, in-shape, and strong group of dancers I have ever seen. They made everything look effortless. Garth Fagan did the choreography for The Lion King on Broadway, so the style of this company is a very specific style. I do have to say, these dancers can spin better than any other group I’ve ever seen. To me, this dance concert was more about body, self, and community than story, character, or personality. I enjoyed it and I think everyone should see them at least once, simply to be in awe of their strength and all the awesome things the body can do. A.

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The Joe Showers Show at Xerox Auditorium – “Join Joe Showers for an hour of things you’ve never seen before and won’t see ever again (unless you see his show twice!) Juggling is only the beginning of this ping-ponging, finger-tricking, hula-hooping, volleyballing show, filled with amazing tricks and hilarious jokes by one of Rochester’s most uniquely-talented individuals.” So, on the night I saw this show I learned that there’s about 300 more things I cannot do than I had previously thought. This guy has talent and he kept me entertained for the full hour his show lasted. I laughed at his jokes (cheesy jokes are wonderful) and was impressed with his tricks. He comes from a history of doing shows for kids and is branching out to perform for adult audiences now, so he’s in transition. He needs a little more practice but he’s definitely good and it was definitely enjoyable. B.

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Dupre on Krol at Gibbs Street Stage – “Dupre on Krol is a piano trio comprised of students from the Eastman School of Music. As a group, they strive to re-imagine songs from the American songbook in unconventional and compelling ways.” I only caught about 30 minutes of these guys’ show, but it was relaxing. I sat outside in the pretty, cool fall weather on a Friday afternoon beneath a tree, and I liked their sound. They didn’t jump out at me in any particularly special way, but they sounded very nice and I enjoyed their music. B.

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Swingin’ on a Star at Gibbs Street Stage – “Casey Jones Costello is back by popular demand, and he’ll power his way through Bing Crosby classics, transporting the audience to the golden era of song, and leaving the street swingin’ on a star.” Let’s start with the bad news and work our way up to the good news. I was really looking forward to this act because I love the Bing Crosby style of music, but the performance started 35 minutes late, so instead of 1 hour of music, we only got 25 minutes of music. I was sitting outside in the pretty, cool fall weather and was totally relaxed and enjoying myself in a great atmosphere – so a little annoying but not the end of the world. Turns out, Casey forgot his sheet music for his accompanist. But he owned up to it, let the audience know what was going on, apologized profusely, and kept a great sense of humor and great personality the whole time. And, honestly, who hasn’t done something dumb like that? We all have. No big deal because he kept us in the loop and handled it really well. I can totally deal with that. What was more frustrating was that the lighting and sound dudes assigned to this stage by the Fringe Fest, unfortunately, were clueless. The pianist and Casey both asked multiple times for the piano volume and monitor volume to be lowered….and nothing happened. The stage lights kept popping on and off at really awkward times…and nobody did anything about it. And some tech dude for the space kept pulling Casey offstage between songs to tell him timing stuff that, I’m sure, could have waited. All of which, sadly, detracted to his excellent performance (through no fault of his own). He is a wonderful singer and does a simply awesome job of singing Bing Crosby’s songs. I could have listened to him all night. Really, really wonderful voice and wonderful personality and, of course, fabulous music. A.

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The Turtle Play (The Play About the Turtle) at The Space – “Soon after Cedar’s husband prematurely passes, two tenants descend upon her home. One is her mother-in-law, whose memory troubles never erase her feelings toward Cedar. The second is new in town, bringing with him more than just physical baggage. The three spend the summer on the screen porch, learning which loves are worth holding on to. A new play written and directed by Rochester inhabitants.” I wasn’t sure what to expect, but I was intrigued by the description (plus I know the director of the piece and two of the actors in it – and I always like to support both new plays and young women in theatre). I liked this play because I never knew what was coming next. At intermission I was like “Where is this going to go!? I want to see more!” I had theories and they were totally wrong. I loved that there were unexpected plot twists. It absolutely kept my interest and kept me on my toes. I think all the actors put forth a good effort (though I really enjoyed the performance of two of the actors in particular). Plain and simple, I also just really liked the story. It was funny and smart, but also emotional and (mostly) genuine. I laughed and (almost) cried. I think the play could still use a little bit of shaping and a bit of reworking in the writing here and there, but overall, I totally enjoyed it and think it has nice potential. A. 

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Mikaela Davis at the Gibbs Street Stage – “This Indie harpist/singer-songwriter rocks major clubs all over the country.  Her 2012 CD was voted City Newspapers “Best Local Album”, and she just released her third.” I really like the unique combination of the harp and the voice – especially when it’s a little more indie-inspired in sound. Mikaela had two other band members that played instruments to fill out the songs, which was nice at time, but I often felt like the harp just got lost in the percussion and other sounds sometimes rather than it being the highlight. She had two songs in particular that I really, really enjoyed because of their unique sound and the way in which she used the harp. B.

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Get Cut Off at Xerox Auditorium – “Cut Off is an eight-member vocal band founded in the summer of 2010 by a group of young professionals based in Rochester, NY. Using only their voices, Cut Off gets audiences dancing to past and present hits from multiple musical genres.” Ted ran sound and live-mixed all eight performers’ levels for their performances at Xerox. He encouraged me not to miss this show because they’re really good. And they totally are. I had a great time listening to them. I love that their songs sound so full when only the human voice is used. They picked great songs to a cappella to, they sound great together (the percussion guy in particular does a fantastic job), and they’re just a fun group of passionate young professionals who sing really rockin’ a cappella in their spare time. What’s not to love? A.

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Total dollars spent: $10 (I paid the Fringe participant price of $5 for two of the shows I saw this week. Most of the other shows were free, but it pays to volunteer because A) it’s a nice thing to do, and B) there are occasional perks when you volunteer)

Next year don’t miss: Merged and TriviaCity and Get Cut Off plus my top picks from last week. Also, if you get a chance to see Casey Costello’s Swingin’ on a Star or The Turtle Play somewhere, I’d recommend them as well. 

Favorite venue so far: The George Eastman House and Xerox Auditorium are still great. Geva’s Nextstage is another wonderful, comfortable venue and Gibbs Street Stage is really lovely as long as the weather is nice.

Well, that wraps up my two weeks at the second annual Rochester Fringe Festival! The blessing and the curse of Fringe is that there’s so many wonderful performances out there to enjoy, but you just cannot possibly make it to everything. But still, 20 shows in 8 days for $10 is pretty darn good! What a beautiful celebration of the arts in our community! 

*Most photos via the Rochester Fringe Fest website. Also, I was not paid to share these thoughts and all opinions are my own. 

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Why Theatre Is Awesome

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Have I mentioned how much I adore my job? This theatre? Our mission? All the unbelievably cool stuff we do?

Oh.

I have?

Well, there’s not enough positivity floating around in this world, so you get to hear it again!

We do some pretty awesome stuff here. For real.

This season we’re on the front lines of developing and producing a whole lot of rockin’ regional and world premieres of fabulous new plays by excellent playwrights that already are, or are going to be, important pieces of theatre all across the nation within a year or two (keep your eyes peeled), and we’re also on the front lines of some pretty magnificent audience engagement programs for our patrons that really invite them into our creative process here at Geva and encourage them to take ownership of this theatre and all the artistry and other neat things that happen here. Theatre is connection. Theatre is community.

And to do both of these things, that means we need to get to know and work with these playwrights. Welcome them to Geva. Welcome them to Rochester. Show them all the great things about our city (of which there are many), do readings and workshops of their works for our patrons, get them out and about, invite them to be involved with the community, our staff, our patrons (including students), and make them honorary fellow Rochestarians. They get to know Rochester; Rochester gets to know them. Involve the playwright and patron directly in the creative process. Develop stellar new theatre. Produce stellar new theatre. Invite everyone along for the ride so they can see and be a part of and understand what we do from the inside out. Send stellar new theatre out into the world. Theatre is community.

So over the past few months we’ve had several of our playwrights visit us to do some readings and hang out with our staff and patrons at some of our favorite spots around Rochester. Last year we hosted Karen Zacarias (The Book Club Play). And this year we’re hosting Eric Coble (Stranded on Earth, The Velocity of Autumn), Mat Smart (13th of Paris, Tinker to Evers to Chance), Greg Kotis (Urinetown, All Your Questions Answered), John Cariani (Almost Maine, Last Gas, Love/Sick), and Deb Zoe Laufer (Sirens, End Days, Leveling Up, Informed Consent).

Aside from all the brilliant reasons why I love this (education, connection, community, creating powerful art, etc. etc.), I also love this because it means that I also get to hang out and engage with our patrons and our playwrights. Which is rad. Really.

Last spring I went to lunch with Karen Zacarias and a patron and we all had a wonderful time over delicious Italian food and enjoyed awesome conversation about books and theatre and our hobbies and why we love them. I feel a deeper connection to Karen as a playwright and to her plays, and I still see that patron at the theatre every now and then, who I really enjoyed getting to know, and it’s great to catch up with her and say hello. It’s nice to know our patrons by name.

Last week I went to Deb Laufer’s Author’s Voice reading event at the theatre, where she read scenes from three of her plays – SirensEnd Days, and Informed Consent – between a series of informal questions designed for us to get to know her, her works, her process, and her inspirations a little better.

The next day I went to lunch with both Greg Kotis and Deb Laufer, along with a fellow new staff member and two patrons. And we all had a ball. Seriously. We dined on delicious Mexican food (um, stuffed avocados are pure heaven, btw, and you should add them to your dinner menu immediately), and talked about animals, food, world travel, and theatre…four things I adore and could talk about for days. It was awesome and I learned so many interesting and fun things about both of our playwrights – as people and playwrights – and I learned a lot of neat things about our patrons as well. It was so wonderful! Really, one should never miss out on an opportunity to get to know someone (anyone! even a stranger) a little better. It’s makes the world a smaller place. Never stop learning. Never stop growing.

After lunch we stopped in at the Rochester Museum and Science Center to take a look around since science plays such a pivotal role in some of Deb’s plays, including Informed Consent – which we are premiering in the spring. We took turns on the earthquake simulator and hovercraft, goofed around in the beaver den and glacial cave, and played with some weather and energy related interactive exhibits. Also a ton of fun.

And now I feel like I know these guys just a little bit better. I’ve seen a few small glimpses of what makes them tick. I understand their sense of humor, see how some of the things they enjoy and their life experiences have influenced their plays, and I understand better than I did before what their process is like and what a playwright does, before, during and after their plays are written. The same with our patrons. I see them as open-hearted world travelers and passionate marathon lovers and intelligent, funny people who also happen to love the arts, coming to the theatre, and want to be a part of what we do here. And hopefully they all see me as a unique individual who is passionate about the theatre and all the many things I do as well. And we can all see and think of each other in a way that we never thought to before, and we can use that knowledge as we go forward.

And, together, when the playwright knows the patrons they’re writing for, and the patrons appreciate their playwright’s inspirations, and the staff understands both the patron and playwright, and the patron and playwright know the staffs’ personalities and passions for the work we do, beautiful things can happen. We’re all a part of this together. So why not get to know each other and be a part of this process together? Theatre is connection.

So, have I mentioned how much I adore my job? This theatre? Our mission? All the unbelievably cool stuff we do?

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It Doesn’t Take Much

Homemade popcorn, a game of marbles, the Packer game, a Packer win, family, Chili Johns, Pizza Ranch, a day to sleep in, a quick trip to Bay Beach for a snowcone and a ride on the the Zippin’ Pippin’ coaster = a successful trip to Green Bay.

It doesn’t take much :)

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Wasting Away the Day on Washington Island

Somehow, despite five years of annual Door County getaways, we’ve never left the mainland of the peninsula to venture out to Washington Island – though we always wanted to. So we made Washington Island our top priority this year. We took ourselves and the Cutlass across on the ferry and spent the day in island paradise.

This island. Oh my goodness. One small grocery store, one gas station, a performing arts center (obvs. they have their priorities in order), a post office, one k-12 school with 62 kids, lots of farmland, a farm museum, a gorgeous hand-built Scandinavian church, a maritime museum, an ice cream parlor, a handful of restaurants with Door County cherry pie and fish boils, a bowling alley, a pizza restaurant, two bars (one of which was still allowed to operate during prohibition because it specialized in bitters – medicinal in addition to alcoholic – making it the longest operating bar in the U.S.), a few B&Bs, a tiny nature and science center, a stunning limestone beach, sand dunes, moped rentals, a lookout tower, cows, turkeys, Iceland horses, cherry trees, and lavender fields. And that’s about it.

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{lavender gelato!? be still my heart!}

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Lavender-590x320{the lav fields on Washington Island…except not in September}

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{view from the top of the tower}

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{feeding turkeys! life = complete}

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{stunning church interior – I adore the stained glass and sailboat}

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{hard cherry apple cider and a hot freshly baked pretzel with Door County honey mustard}

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{fresh lawyers, lol}

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{where else is the Death’s Door gin gonna come from?}

Bliss!

We can’t wait to return in the future, and perhaps spend a whole weekend in paradise.

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Door County 2013

For most of you, this is old hat, but for anyone new(er) to my blog, Ted and I were married three Octobers ago up in Door County, Wisconsin. In a town with a sweet chapel and a population of 201, surrounded by water and absolutely zero chain stores, restaurants, anything. A destination wedding of sorts. We try to make it back to Door County once a year in September (timed around the Packers home opener game in Green Bay, of course) to celebrate our anniversary early, since we love this place so and it plays such a special role in our relationship.

There’s a pretty hefty handful of places we adore and always try to hit up every visit, but we obviously cannot make it to everything every year (because, duh, time and money). We were solely on a strict budget of birthday money for this trip – everything we spent in the Door was given to us for our birthdays with the instructions of “use this to have a wonderful time in Door County.”

So we have to prioritize and do some things some years and add others to our list for the next year. This year we chose to take the ferry over to Washington Island for the first time as our big Door County event (check the blog tomorrow for pics) and then spend the rest of the time strolling around on the mainland.

On the mainland, we scooped up bags of Door County chocolate covered cherries, cherry and lavender caramels, pecan brittle, cherry salsa, raspberry salsa, and Door County mustard at a few of our favorite farm markets (we were sure to send on some of the goodies to family back in Texas as well). And we drove with the convertible top down on the Cutlass, taking in the fresh lake air, start of the fall color, farmland, and other gorgeous sights along the way.

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Friday night Ted’s parents joined us in the Door for dinner at Summertime in Fish Creek (I had a baked potato, fresh green beans, and pan seared pork chops with apples, cinnamon, butter and bourbon!) and then we saw Miracle on South Division Street, directed by our good friend Kristine Thatcher, at Peninsula Player’s – Door County’s premiere professional Theatre. The show was excellent, relaxing, enjoyable and very funny. Lots of unexpected twists in the plot, loveable characters, and tons to laugh at. We loved the story and, as always, enjoyed seeing Kristine’s wonderful directing work. And the icing on the cake is that Peninsula Players has the world’s most epic location for a theatre – in a forest and right on the shores of a lake, so you can enjoy thick wooded walking trails, brilliant sunset views of the lake and waves crashing onto the shore, a huge nightly bonfire in their wooded lakeside fire pit, and beer in their forest beer garden before heading into their indoor/outdoor theatre with for some high quality entertainment. So wonderful.

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We breakfasted on Swedish meatballs, crepes, lingonberries, and whipped cream with a side of hot chocolate (I mean, really, look at that cup) at Al Johnson’s “Goats on the Roof” – our favorite Swedish Restaurant and Butik with a grass roof where goats live and graze. This place also has lake views, in addition to the fab food and goats, so it’s pretty much the best.

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We browsed our favorite shops in Fish Creek and indulged in fresh cherry gelato too.

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And, of course, we HAD to do a fish boil. Our usual fish boil place – Square Rigger in Jacksonport – was, unfortunately, closed for the season, so we tried Pellitiers instead, which was tasty and spectacular too. You just can’t beat buttery salted freshly caught whitefish, potatoes and onions boiled over an open fire with coleslaw and a slice of Seaquist Orchard fresh Door County cherry pie. Picking the bones out of those suckers is a pain in the butt, but they’re so delicious that it’s totally worth it.

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Then, there’s always the gorgeous Door County sunsets over the pier and, this time (for a rare treat), inexplicably friendly hummingbirds that allowed us to put our hands up under their feet and hold them while they fed and their wings zoomed. It was so cool.

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Til next time sweet Door!

Up next: Washington Island!

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