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Fly On The Wall Blog Opinion

Commercial Appeal’s Tree Service Reporting, a Cut Above

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According to a report from The Commercial Appeal, a recent storm left at least one Elm down in a private driveway near Forest Hill-Irene Road in Germantown. The situation was so dire Howard Klink, a 48-year-old “landscapist” with Woodland Tree Service was called in to clear the debris.

“I’ve worked outside all my life, so it’s just second nature,” Klink was quoted as saying.

“Tree service responds to fallen elm,” by an uncredited reporter, is tree service reporting at its finest, you’ll want to read every word. And there aren’t that many, really.

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News

The Shell and Overton Park: Big Stuff

John Branston reports on the unprecedented success of the Levitt Shell concert series and its impact on Overton Park and the surrounding neighborhood.

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We Recommend We Recommend

Lesbians, Quiche, etc.

It’s been a good year for Memphis theater artist Liz Sharpe. She was tough as nails as Jackie in Hot L Baltimore and vibrantly delusional as the Valium-addicted Harper in Tony Kushner’s Angels in America. Now she’s making her directorial debut with 5 Lesbians Eating a Quiche, a new comedy by Memphian and former Playhouse on the Square intern Evan Linder, who has been making waves in Chicago’s theater scene as co-artistic director of the New Colony theater company.

“I’ve got a dream cast,” Sharpe says, name-checking performers like Gail Black, Erin Shelton, and Ann Marie Hall, who Sharpe says helped her through her first time at the helm.

The play takes place in 1956 at a meeting of a widows club. The group hosts an annual breakfast where the best quiche is shared among the members. “It’s the most important thing in the world to these women,” Sharpe says, “because it’s the one time of year when they are important.”

Something sinister is lurking beneath the veneer of 1950s civility. “This is during the red scare,” Sharpe says, explaining how one of the more forward-thinking members has turned the meeting into a bomb shelter. And just in time for the big one, too. “When the bomb goes off, they all go a little crazy,” Sharpe says.

5 Lesbians Eating a Quiche fully immerses the audience in the world of the play. Everyone who attends will be given a name tag, and for that night, at least, everyone is treated like a housewife. And a lesbian. The humor is pointed and often absurd. New York Times critic Ben Brantley said the show was a guilty joy and warned that audiences might wake up the following day feeling like they’d been dancing naked with a lampshade on their heads.“That’s perfect,” Sharpe says.

“5 Lesbians Eating a Quiche” at TheatreWorks July 5th-28th.
playhouseonthesquare.org

Categories
Opinion

“A Perfect Little Bowl”

An hour or two before sunset, the cooler caravan heads to the early-bird special in Overton Park. They tote blankets, folding chairs, and small children. Their destination is one of the summer concerts at the Levitt Shell.

In its fifth post-renovation season, the Shell is on course to set an attendance record, with 30 free summer concerts. There are six of them in July, concluding with the Recording Academy Memphis Chapter’s 40th anniversary concert on July 13th — the same night Robert Plant will play the Memphis Botanic Garden, where lawn tickets are $45, and the St. Jude Benefit Show, “Stage Dive To Save Lives,” is at Minglewood Hall. More than 63,000 people have come to Shell concerts this year, compared to 46,275 at this time last year, said executive director Anne Pitts.

“It’s word of mouth over the last couple of years,” she said. “People are coming to the Shell not even knowing who is playing, just for the experience and time spent with family and friends. It’s become more of a lifestyle as opposed to a music venue.”

The numbers are a calculated guess. Volunteers divide the field into quadrants and count their area several times. The all-time record was set this year when 5,800 people came to see the season opener with the North Mississippi Allstars.

Pitts says that could be broken at the season-ender, when the Allstars return with Bobby Rush, Al Kapone, the Hi Rhythm Section, and several other groups. After that, Indie Memphis will present six concert films from July 18th to August 24th featuring the Rolling Stones, Paul McCartney, the Doors, Queen, and the first public showing of a new film about Big Star.

“We have built up a reputation for the kind of production we have,” Pitts said. “Artists are familiar with the show and venue, and a lot of them are calling us now. We are not able to pay as much as another venue they might play at and tend get a little bit of a deal, or grab an artist when they’re between other cities.”

Last Saturday, the Memphis Dawls performed a nostalgic USO-style show with the Memphis Doctors Band before more than 4,000 people. It was the biggest Memphis crowd ever for the three 2001 Cordova High School graduates who regularly play for “the door” before 50 to 100 people at Otherlands and other small venues.
“We go for it no matter how big the crowd is, but that huge crowd on the lawn was really exciting. That was our record-breaker,” said Jana Misener, cellist and part-time barista.
The next day, the Dawls had 100 more “likes” on Facebook.
Built in 1936 and threatened with destruction the 1960s and 1970s, the Shell, like the park, now has an embarrassment of riches — a marketing machine, dozens of corporate sponsors plus event-night donations, the namesake Levitt Foundation that supplies 16 percent of the operating budget, and a 2008 renovation that, among other things, replaced concrete benches with grass.

“Our Levitt Shell has become the flagship because it worked so well,” said Lee Askew of Askew Nixon Ferguson Architects. “It’s a perfect little bowl. The dark side, if there is one, is that it becomes so successful that it gridlocks the park when there are two or more blockbuster events in the park at the same time.”
Pitts said it’s a nice problem to have but still a problem that will require cooperation between the Overton Park Conservancy, Brooks Museum, the zoo, the Memphis College of Art, and the neighbors.

“The concerts have been great for neighbors being able to walk to them,” said Rob Clark, president of the Evergreen Historic District Association, west of the park. He said complaints involve parking, the lack of crosswalks, and litter — mainly on Tuesdays, which is free day at the zoo. There has been talk for years of building a parking garage, but “I don’t know where they would put it,” said Clark, who met with zoo officials this week.
“With growth and popularity, you have to manage the negative that comes with it,” he said. “If Sears Crosstown is developed, we would see a whole bunch more traffic.”

Askew, whose house borders the west side of the park, is confident the various interests will get it right eventually.
“When I moved here in 1985, people were changing their oil in the park,” he said. “The park is at an all-time high-water mark.”

Categories
News

The Chicken and the Egg

Louis Goggans reports on a nonprofit foundation that’s teaching the art of chicken farming.

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Memphis Gaydar News

Raising the Rainbow Flag

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After last week’s major scores for LGBT equality — the repeals of the Defense of Marriage Act and California’s Prop 8 ban on same-sex marriage — it seems fitting that the Memphis Gay & Lesbian Community will be hoisting a larger rainbow flag up its flagpole.

The community center at 892 S. Cooper will host a flag-raising ceremony on Wednesday, July 3rd at 6:30 p.m. as they replace the older, small flag with a 10-foot flag. The money for the new flag was raised by the center’s men’s potluck group.

From a MGLCC newsletter:
“We’ve been aware that the small rainbow flag we have flying does not adequately represent the spirit of our community, so we have purchased a considerably larger one. At 10 feet, the flag will be the largest flag we have used on our flagpole. With the repeal of DOMA and Prop 8, it seems only right that the rising tide of LGBT equality should be matched by a new flag!”

Categories
Fly On The Wall Blog Opinion

Area Man Can’t Believe Bike Lanes Didn’t Ruin Business

Its a sign

  • It’s a sign

Jed Blisterwig hates bike lanes.

“These are modern times,” He says. “And I’m a modern person. I didn’t hit my wife in the head with a club and drag her back to my cave, did I? No. I asked her to marry me. And just like other modern people, who don’t go around hitting women with clubs, I drive in a car with air conditioning and cup holders.”

Blisterwig, who owns and operates Jed’s Clamp-It, a Madison Ave shop specializing in clamps of all shapes and sizes, has vocally opposed bike lanes since the controversy over shared roadways began, regularly describing the dedicated strips as, “drug dealer lanes,” “and, “a clear gateway to Collectivism.”

“And I’m still against them,” Blisterwig says, although he admits his business hasn’t suffered as much as he predicted since the lanes were installed in 2011.

“I had a real good month last month,” Blisterwig says, allowing that many of the clamps he sold were, in fact, purchased by cyclists.

“It’s true,” he says. “Those people, they do use a mess of clamps. They know how important it is to have the right clamp for the right job too, and, given a choice, they will pick quality over value almost every time.

“But that don’t mean nothing,” Blisterwig continues, insisting that the end, while not imminent, is still near. “They’re always zipping up and down the street in front of my business in those tight lycra suits, all yellow, and baby blue, and fuchsia, and wearing those hard helmets. And, I really don’t think I need to spell the rest of this out, do I?

“Look,” Blisterwig says, explaining his position. “That billboard preacher has been wrong about the end of the world three times now. But you and I both know this world is going to end, right? And if there was ever a clearer sign than these two-wheeled terrorists tearing around like they own the the damn place, I don’t know it.”

Categories
Sports Tiger Blue

Tiger Trivia Tuesday

There were some disappointed Memphis basketball fans last Thursday when Adonis Thomas and D.J. Stephens were not selected in the NBA draft. Which spurred a two-part question for this week.

Adonis Thomas

* How many players from Josh Pastner’s four Tiger teams have been selected in the NBA draft?

* How many players from John Calipari’s first four Tiger teams were selected in the NBA draft?

Categories
News

Dylan and Friends at AutoZone Park

It’s a big night at the ol’ ballpark in Memphis, as the legendary Bob Dylan performs, with three great opening acts: Wilco, My Morning Jacket, and Richard Thompson.

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

The Office@Uptown Cafe

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It was John Branston who suggested we check out the Office@Uptown Cafe, and since Branston knows best, we did.

Part of the business offers “office” resources — a meeting space, access to computers, scanners, copiers, etc. The cafe kitchen is in the back, with seating among those using the office services, with some tables outside. The setup is a little awkward, but nothing that should dissuade those looking for a fine lunch.

The menu is compact, offering 10 or so sandwiches or paninis, four salads, and a soup of the day. (Soup/salad or soup/sandwich combos available.) The emphasis here is on ingredients and execution.

Many of the sandwiches are named after the neighborhood, such as the Uptown Classic ($6.25), a panini with turkey breast, smoked cheddar cheese, fresh spinach, tomatoes, with chipotle mayo. It was declared to be exactly how a turkey sandwich should be.

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The Bearwater roast beef ($6.95) was much loved. What specifically?, I inquired. The bread, the meat, the cheese went the answer. That pretty much covers that. Paired with the sandwich was a cup of chicken tortilla soup ($2.95).

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I ordered the Smokey City Melt ($5.25), a grilled cheese with smoked cheddar and choice of bread. It was very good, and I liked large slice of tomato tucked within the slice of cheese. I saved half for later, not always optimal for this sort of sandwich, but this one held up fine.

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Other sandwiches include the North Memphis BLTA (the “a” is for avocado), the Bluff City Class club, pimento cheese, chicken and tuna salad. They also offer a veggie wrap and a veggie pizza.

The Office@Uptown Cafe is open 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., Monday through Friday.