On Snow and Shopping and Lights and a Show

Snow, snow, snow.

Really, that’s pretty much all that we’ve got.  Lots and lots of it. Friday, Saturday, Sunday, Monday, Tuesday…

It’s beautiful and peaceful…when you’re inside. But, what a mess! So, we basically spent the entire weekend brushing off our vehicles every hour and trying to avoid a lifetime’s worth of accidents on the roads.

Saturday morning we hit up the outdoor public market, which was pretty desolate and blustery – sadly, our lovely market just isn’t as fresh or abundant in the depths of the winter as it is during the rest of the year. So we walked around for twenty minutes then piled back into the truck and crawled on over to the Rochester Brainery’s holiday bazaar where lots of local artists and business owners were showcasing their wares. Oh man, I love shopping local. If we had the money, I’d love to support local business all year long! They had tons of neat things to share. We strolled past Get Caked, which makes the most divine cupcakes. Breze Teas is owned by a really nice lady who makes all her wonderful black and green teas in small, fresh batches and hand-delivers them right to your door herself. Shop Peppermint had an awesome colorful cardigan and fox scarf I completely fell in love with, Thred has an amazing blue lace dress with a pretty v-back that I adore, and Little Grey Gils had several cool throw pillows and a clever mug that Ted and I liked right away. Also, the Rochester Brainey itself is awesome. They are impeccably decorated and offer all these really fun, affordable, neat, single-session classes on just about anything you can imagine! What a way to explore the world and learn new skills. I really hope I can scrape together the money to take a few classes there in 2014. I also think they’d make a great girls night activity! Check out their January calendar here.

After I fell in love with absolutely everything at the bazaar, we grabbed a big, warm and filling pancake and omelet lunch with a gift card we had to Ihop then headed off to the mall because I had a gift certificate to a particular store that I needed to use by the 20th. Of course, the mall was a terrible idea a week and half before Christmas, but because we don’t really do any Christmas shopping, I completely forgot that others do partake in Christmas shopping (with a vengeance and a fury) and I didn’t realize how awful and mobbed it would be until we got there. I found what I wanted with my gift card (yay for adorable free things!), we waited for 15 minutes in a line that snaked around the store, and we got out of there ASAP. And that will be our last mall trip until February. The older I get, the less tolerance I have for anywhere shopping related around the holidays – with, of course, the exception of online shopping and local businesses, which don’t tend to be nearly as busy and far more awesome anyway.

Following the mall was more treacherous snow driving, a stop at Dairy Queen for ‘buy one get one free’ blizzards (you should definitely try the Peppermint Oreo right away!), mass at a new church, and a drive around a few nearby neighborhoods to enjoy the Christmas lights, and finally, an evening at the Blackfriar’s Theatre to see my lovely friend Mary in a performance of It’s A Wonderful Life: A Live Radio Play – which was a sweet, fun show and, as always, a great classic holiday story that I’m so very happy we were able to see this year. And who doesn’t love a good radio play?

How was your weekend? What fun and festive Christmastime activities did you enjoy this weekend?

 

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Bouncing Away the Blues

Oh my goodness this has been such an eventful weekend – trampolining, white elephant party, a Christmas show, the Geva holiday party…plus a million little things in between.

Really, the entire past week was just completely crazy and busy and exhausting with really wonderful (but slightly overwhelming) work events like a packed Magic in the Making, three very exciting – for many reasons – student matinee performances of A Christmas Carol, an actor visit to Lima in a snowstorm, and a huge hunk of time spent planning the staff holiday party in addition to all my normal work and home responsibilities. By the time Thursday night rolled around I was beat, but my friend Kristin and I had scheduled a long-standing and way overdue date to do…something. Tapas at the art museum? The wine bar? Grub at the English pub? And I wasn’t going to pass up girl time no matter how drained or overwhelmed or “blah” I was feeling…or how hard it was snowing.

By some stroke of excellent luck, on Thursday morning as we were putting together our evening plans, I logged on to Facebook and saw that the brand new Sky Zone Indoor Trampoline Park in Greece (that I had been Facebook stalking the building progress on for the past three months) was due to open for the first time the next day and was offering a sneak peek event on this very Thursday night for its social media fans where you could be among the first to flip to your heart’s delight – for a whole hour – in a brand new and toally pee (and other bolidy fluids) free foam pit and bounce yourself silly on highly buoyant new trampolines, all for free, between 3 and 8 p.m.

Free trampolining!?

Yessss.

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And I am so glad we braved the snow and went. It was an absolute blast and the exact pick-me-up I needed. It was awesome fun, instantly boosted my steadily waning energy levels, was an incredible work out (bouncing, flipping, and crawling out of that foam pit for an hour is not for the weak of mind or body), and had us laughing in no time. This was far more wonderful, fun, and beneficial than tapas and wine ever could have been.

I would suggest you try this place with friends or family immediately and then unwind with a warm and frothy beverage on a snowy night Starbucks date, like we did, to discuss our favorite books and authors. Between this awesome date with Kristin and my wonderful Vietnamese pho and “Call the Midwife” date with Shawnda a few weeks ago (a show you should totally be watching, by the way), I’m feeling lucky to have such incredible friends who are so willing to try new, fun adventurous things with me (also see: the time I dragged my Rochester friends to an aerial arts circus class).

****Normal admission is around $14 for 1-hour of play (or $15 for 2 hours on Saturday nights) plus $2 for the super grippy no-skid socks (which you really want on those slippery trampolines – they’re worth it!)…so if you can score a free deal like we did, don’t hesitate to jump right in! Also, bring a hair tie, chilled water bottle and wear flexible layers – like stretchy leggings or yoga pants and a cami or short-sleeved tee. It may be 7 degrees outside, but it definitely was much toastier inside and we wished we had more layers to shed! Other helpful hints:  leave all jewelry at home, and bring a bag you can store your shoes, coat, and other personal items in. They will have lockers you can pay to rent, but they hadn’t arrived when we went. In addition to the foam pit and trampoline court, they also offer trampoline basketball, trampoline dodgeball, and trampoline group workout classes! Bounce, bounce baby!

 

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The Last of Fall

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Leafin’

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Crisp and tart (a.k.a. the best) Crimson Crisp NY apples & incredible homemade pumpkin donuts from Herman’s Farm Market

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Soupin’ – chicken tortilla, broccoli cheese, creamy tomato, cauliflower, black bean and pumpkin, lentil, and a soup potluck at work with soups, soupy lava cakes, and grilled cheeses

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Fall at the park

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And then comes winter…and snow in November

What a beautiful final weekend of fall to usher in our chilly winter!

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To Cut Our Tree

How to cut a tree…in six easy steps.

1. Select a cold, snowy weekend shortly after Thanksgiving, find a sweet, hidden family-run tree farm out in the country that grows Balsam Firs (in our case, Windy Meadows Tree Farm in Brockport), down some hot oatmeal that sticks to your bones, pile on layers of your finest and warmest winter clothing, and drive for 45 minutes listening to Christmas music all the way.

2. At the farm, gather your tree cart, saw, and kneeling pad, and take off over the bridge-covered-stream into the snowy foresty abyss. Search aisle by aisle to find the perfect Balsam (obviously feeling and smelling each tree for freshness and marking favorite contenders with your…gloves).

3. Gloveless, retreat back into snowy foresty abyss from whence you came to try to track down your favorite trees and all said lost gloves (that are, coincidentally, the color of snow) in a farm of 8,000 snow-covered trees that all look the same. Deliberate between “this tree” or “that tree” and then claim “the one”!

4. Saw that sucker down making sure to get enough sap on you that you smell heavenly for the next 48 hours, instigate a game of dodge ball/snowball fight with husband, haul tree back to farm shed be shaken and baled, enjoy a cup of the matron of the farm’s hot apple cider and a hot soft pretzel homemade by the family’s adorable young son, and be a hoss and carry the prize beauty to the truck. Drive home listening to Christmas music all the way.

5. At home, promptly break tree stand. Drive to Home Depot and spend the remainder of your life savings to buy the last real, sturdy, metal tree stand (not made of crappy, cheap plastic) that apparently exists in this world. Pick up wine, pizza, and peppermint ice cream on the way home.

6. Put tree in stand, put stand inside, eat pizza, drink wine, enjoy peppermint ice cream, watch animated Christmas movie, and admire that beauty of a tree while reflecting on a really great day. 

Yessir! And that, my friends, is how it’s done.

 

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As I put on my outfit for the day, I realized that the only reason I actually have warm clothes to wear when it’s 8 degrees outside is because my family loves me. Those cozy wool socks above (and the awesome L mug!) were recent ‘just because’ gifts from Ted, and the remainder of my outfit was given to me by loving family members after I begged for winter clothes to keep me warm last year.

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My gloves and amazing snow boots that are rated for up to -25 degrees (Sorel – many seasons old) were the only pieces of my outfit that I purchased on my own. My socks (soft yet sturdy and warm wool stockings from Duluth – current season) were a gift from Ted, my matchstick jeans (J.Crew – many seasons old) were from my sister, my thin black/gray under-layer long johns (CuddlDuds – last season), green and striped thermal shirt (Columbia – last season), and teal knitted cap (Columbia – last season) were all purchased with Christmas money from my in-laws, and my down-filled teal vest and down-filled plum jacket (both Eddie Bauer – last season) were off-season sale gifts from my parents. Thank you everyone for clothing me and keeping me warm! Seriously, the only reason I have warm clothes is because of you guys. So, much love! For any other Texans looking for warm and cozy cold-climate clothing that is high quality, practical, attractive, and really stands up to the elements and frigid temperatures our thin skins are unaccustomed to, I highly recommend to you the brands I named above. Happy hunting snow bunnies!

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On a Lovely Thanksgiving Thursday

Thanksgiving has always been one of my most favorite holidays – fall, food, family, friends, football, relaxation, and the fact that it’s a day of celebration and reflection for a very worthy, uplifting cause.

I woke up and started the day off at mass. I absolutely love going to church on Thanksgiving morning – taking that one hour to simply sit and reflect, to appreciate all the wonderful blessings we have been given over our lifetime and the past year in particular, and to say a few prayers in gratitude for the people and things that mean the most to us. I really, really love starting Thanksgiving in such a peaceful, beautiful, positive, community-driven, appreciative way.

The rest of the day consisted of tuning into the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade for an hour or so while baking single-serving cranberry apple and strawberry rhubarb pies in mini mason jars (which we can freeze then cook – all in the jars – whenever a pie craving hits), watching our Green Bay Packers get slaughtered in the annual Thanksgiving Day football game against the Detroit Lions (which was just awful, although not unexpected, unfortunately), a magnificent Thanksgiving meal at Mario’s Restaurant in Pittsford (they do an absolutely phenomenal Thanksgiving spread, and spending all that time and money to cook a huge Thanksgiving meal really doesn’t make much sense when it’s just the two of us – all that great food plus no prep and no dishes sounds like a relaxing, winning plan to me!), calling to chat with all our far-away family to send our love, watching a Charlie Brown Thanksgiving and a Garfield Thanksgiving, and playing a round of Wheel of Fortune on the Wii.

It was a beautiful, relaxing, delicious, and romantic day of gratitude. We always miss spending time with our families during the holidays, and we look forward to future holidays when we can be with them in person to celebrate (and eat my mom’s amazing broccoli cheese casserole), but sometimes it’s really nice to spend our holidays as a couple, just the two of us, relaxing and creating our own traditions.

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** For the pies, simply purchase a pack of one dozen short mini mason jars, mix up a batch of your favorite pie dough and a few different batches of your favorite pie fillings, roll out your dough, press a small amount of dough into the bottom and sides of each jar, fill to the top with pie filling, add more dough at the top to cover the filling (lattice, full coverage, cookie cutter shapes, or, alternatively, a crumble topping), and seal each jar with a lid. You can pop the jars right into the freezer. Whenever you are ready to bake a few pies, take the lids off, place the jars on a baking sheet with a lip to prevent any sugary spill-over from junking up your oven, place pies and baking sheet in the oven, then preheat the oven to 375. Once at temperature, bake for 50-60 minutes. If baking fresh, keep the lid off, place jars on a lipped baking sheet, preheat oven to 375, then put pies and baking sheet in the oven and bake for 45-50 minutes.

** Check out the menu for Mario’s Thanksgiving spread here. Also, I was so excited for dessert that, in a rare moment, I completely forgot to take a picture of my dessert plate! My favorites dishes of the evening were the lamb, candied yams served in an orange half, spinach artichoke dip, sour cream and leek mashed potatoes, brussel sprouts with garlic and pancetta, cranberry sauce, seared salmon, stuffed mushroom caps, deviled eggs, butternut squash ravioli with sweet cream sauce, mussels and clams, cheesecake, chocolate fountain, and endless champagne. It sounds like I just named 3/4 of the menu, but I assure you, I did not. But really, everything was delicious.

I hope you all were able to enjoy a lovely Thanksgiving, celebrating what you are grateful for with those who mean the most to you!

 

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And Sometimes Life Throws You a Surprise Date Night

A few weekends ago, on a Friday night after a long, busy week at work, Ted surprised me with a sweet, fun, and wonderful date night – reservations for a leisurely dinner at Good Luck, one of our most favorite restaurants in Rochester (the atmosphere and decorating are impeccable, and their gourmet burger and fries, alcoholic mixed drinks, and desserts served family style are absolutely amaaazing – a must try), and 6th row tickets to see War Horse at the Auditorium Theatre, which is just an incredible show. I know the pictures are really terrible (dim lighting all around) but it was such a relaxing, delicious, fun (and totally emotional because, let’s face it, I cried through 3/4 of the show) evening together. I’m going to get all sappy on you here for a minute and just say that Ted is awesome – truly, the best husband. I’m lucky to be his.

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If you’re in Rochester, you need to hit up Good Luck with some pals to split their burger and fries, a round of drinks to pass around and try, and a dish of whatever desserts they’re offering (with a scoop, or pint, of their homemade ice cream!), and when War Horse tours to a city near you, I’d highly recommend getting tickets – it’s a beautiful story, certainly, but the horses are awesome. They move and breath and twitch their ears and make noise and do all sorts of really, really incredible things – you completely forget you are watching puppets and not real horses. There’s an 18 or so minute Ted Talk video out there with the puppeteers/actors/designers who bring the horses to life that tells you all about how they created them and how they work and move. I’d highly recommend tracking it down and watching it. That, too, is worth your time.

Thank you, Ted, for being you.

 

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On Train Rides, Torch Light Tours, and Anniversary Dinners

(Check out Part I of this post here)

With my parents still in town for another few days before our flight out to visit my brother and his family in Virginia, we decided on a few more Rochester and autumn essentials to add to our agenda.

On Sunday we took a leisurely mid-afternoon fall foliage train ride through upstate New York’s Niagara County. While the trip was fun, there was more vivid color to be seen on our hour-long car ride to and from the Medina Railroad Museum (where the train departed the station) then there actually was to be seen on the fall foliage train ride. The train’s route wasn’t all that scenic (with the exception of a few lovely views of the Erie Canal, pictured below) and many of the leaves hadn’t changed color yet in that part of New York at the end of October, so I would hesitate to call it a “bright fall foliage” ride, which was unfortunate. Nevertheless, we had a nice time and really enjoyed each other’s company and the opportunity to take a train ride. The Medina Railroad Museum also does a fall wine train, a Halloween story train, and Polar Express trip, which all sounded interesting.

Over the next few nights we ate up that delicious concord grape pie from Monica’s Pies in Naples (which my dad LOVED), and we made some nice family dinners and bright salads using lots of fresh local veggies from the farmers at the public market and also from the Peacework Organic Farm weekly CSA share I’m a part of. Those family nights of homemade dinners we all pitched in on, bottles of wine, good conversations, and card games were so nice. I love them. Memories I will definitely cherish. I wish we could have them more often. Alas, with 1,750 miles between us, I’ll take ’em when I can get ’em.

Our three-year wedding anniversary was on Tuesday, October 22nd, and because mom and dad just so happened to be in town, they took us out for a really nice celebration. We did the scenic and historic Mt. Hope cometary Grand Torch Light Tour just as the sun was setting. It was beautiful. The cemetery is absolutely huge, gorgeous, and has a really neat history with some very interesting folks buried there. The tours they do of it at various times of the year are fantastic and so informative. This one was just in time for Halloween. Torches were lit all over the cemetery, which gave it this beautiful, eerie glow, a few actors were positioned near particular gravestones to mourn their lost loved ones whose stories we had just heard (which was a lot of fun), our guide was great and had some really nice, juicy stories to share (not scary, more historical – but interesting), they had organ music playing from one of the old churches/crematoriums, and it was extra chilly outside so the cider and donuts were greatly appreciated at the end of the tour. Because of this city’s rich history and all the cool things about Rochester, this tour is definitely something all Rochestarians should do at least once. Go for one of the earlier tours (before/around sunset) so you can enjoy some of the things you won’t be able to see by torchlight alone, like the actors.

After the tour, mom and dad treated us to a spectacular anniversary dinner at Rooney’s – a bit of a hidden gem restaurant in Rochester. Kind of like a quaint NYC steakhouse. The food, the wine, the service, the atmosphere – it was all incredible. We shared a great bottle of Shiraz, a wonderful appetizer of seafood ravioli with dill oil, caesar salads, and our entrees – which were all perfectly seasoned, perfectly cooked, and perfectly flavored. I really noticed, and appreciated, all the small details in the taste and quality of the food, the ingredients, and the service. It was a really nice dinner – a great celebration – and it was so wonderful that we were able to share it with my parents. A truly outstanding evening.

The next night before leaving for Virginia, we took my parents to see The 39 Steps at Geva, which was very funny and very enjoyable – another great evening. Speaking of, the show closes this weekend. If you have’t seen it yet, you better get on that stat. You’ll be sorry you missed it!

A warning: I know some of these photos are pretty dark (it was nighttime, I’m not a professional photographer, using flash would have ruined the effect, and editing them also makes them look super fake – so there you have it), but if you take the time to click on the pictures and enlarge the dark ones, they’re actually pretty neat.

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Foliage & Fall Fun in the Finger Lakes

In mid-October my mom and dad came to visit us from Texas – to spend time with us of course, but also to enjoy the plentiful apple orchards of upstate New York, tour & taste at wineries around Keuka Lake in the gorgeous Finger Lakes region, catch a breath of cool autumn air, and glimpse some pretty, colorful fall foliage.

When they arrived on Friday night we dined at a quaint and cozy pub in Fairport called the Argyle Grill – steak salads, pecan-crusted chicken with cranberry chutney, sun-dried tomato risotto, and slow-cooked ribs. This place was great and we’d highly recommend it to any visitors in the future!

On Saturday morning we hit up the public market to ogle the pumpkins, gourds, and Indian corn. We took home some fresh flowers, a stalk of Brussel sprouts, baskets of fresh-picked apples and pears, and shared one the world’s absolute best and totally irresistible fresh, hot apple cider donuts, made right at the market. They’re unbelievable. If you ever visit Rochester, you must give them a try! Then we drove south to the Bristol Mountain Ski Resort for a fall foliage sky ride on the ski lift, which was chilly, but also very beautiful and a lot of fun. Realizing we were only 15 minutes from the awesome little village of Naples, we decided to stop for lunch at Roots Cafe, an incredible restaurant with excellent fresh, local fare, only a handful of tables inside, and a cozy little porch overlooking a stunning vineyard – located on the main drag in the village next to the Inspire Moore winery and across the street from a stand selling homemade concord grape pies (which are also a completely delicious local treat worth indulging in). With extra time on our hands after lunch and Inspire Moore, we stopped in at the Hazlitt Red Cat Cellars and Winery in Naples for a tasting. We each took home a couple bottles of our favorite wines just as the cold rain began to fall. We headed back to Rochester and straight to a cozy bookstore in Pittsford for some book-browsing and pumpkin spice lattes before enjoying a wonderful production of The Last Five Years that Ted was stage managing and audio engineering.

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Oh, man I adored those flowers sitting on our coffee table for the rest of the week, and doesn’t that vineyard have the most breathtaking view for lunch?

If you find yourself in upstate New York, don’t pass on Naples! You’ll want to make sure you visit Roots Cafe and Hazlitt Winery, get a grape pie at Monica’s Pies, and stay at the Mountain Horse Farm B&B where we spent Christmas last year. The Rochester Public Market is always one of our favorite hang-outs, and Bristol Mountain is lovely in the fall (and I’m sure the winter too, if you’re a skier).

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Fall Fun Fest 2013

A day at Stokoe Farms!

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And an excellent potluck (I made hard apple cider mac n’ cheese!), wine and cider, games, adorable cats, roasted marshmallows, and bonfire on the shores of the Erie canal:

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(A ladies picture – sorry Ted, Ian, and Matt)

Hope you’re enjoying your fall as well!

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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.

dupre

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.

mikaela

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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