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News

One Billion Rising

Bianca Phillips reports on a week of events geared to raising awareness about violence against women and girls.

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Southwind Wine & Spirits To Introduce Private Wine Label

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Southwind Wine & Spirits will introduce its new exclusive-to-the-store wine Page 52 at a dinner at Elfo’s on Monday, February 17th, at 6:30 p.m.

The Page 52 lineup includes a Chardonnay, a Cabernet Sauvignon, and a Pinot Noir. The wine line’s name is a mashup. The “Page” is for Southwind’s owners’ family name, and “52” is a nod at the store’s slogan of “Home of the 52-week sale.”

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According to Ryan Gill, general manager of Southwind Wine & Spirits, the idea for Page 52 came during a trip to California wine country. Gill, owner Mark Page and his wife, 3 Finger Wine Company sales manager Tom Doran, and winemaker Michael Loykasek were tasting wines, when an unlabeled bottle of Pinot Noir was brought out.

Per Gill, “They told us that they’d just taken it straight from the barrel and that they didn’t even know what they were going to do with it yet. Since it was a small production, we asked if we could buy it all on the spot. They agreed, and then we started really talking about the possibilities. They said they could find us a Chardonnay and a Cabernet for around the same price and production, and thus Page 52 was born.”

The wines are priced at $14.99 per bottle, $12.99 per bottle when two bottles are purchased.

The Chardonnay is described as featuring flavors of Bartlett pear, green apple, and Meyer lemon; the Cabernet Sauvignon as “chock full” of flavors of Bing cherry, black currant, baking spices, and sweet oak; the Pinot Noir with flavors of raspberry, cherry, and strawberry as well as savory spices and shaved truffle, with a finish of toasted coconut, vanilla, and “a dash of sassafras.”

Page 52’s debut dinner at Elfo’s features a four-course dinner. The cost is $30 per person, plus tax and gratuity. For reservations, call Elfo’s, 753-4017.

Southwind will also be holding in-store tastings of Page 52 on February 21st and 22nd, 4 to 6 p.m.

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Fly On The Wall Blog Opinion

TMI from the Travelocity Gnome

We’ve all been there.

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News

Oxford Film Festival is Back

Chris McCoy says a trip to the Oxford Film Fest this weekend will be well worth your time.

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Calling the Bluff Music

Campaign To Raise Money For HIV/AIDS Prevention

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More than one million people across the country aged 13 and older were living with HIV at the end of 2009, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Furthermore, it’s estimated that approximately 50,000 new infections of HIV are recorded each year.

African-Americans—primarily gay and bisexual men—are among the pool of people significantly impacted by the disease; black men and women are estimated to have an HIV incidence rate nearly eight times as high as the rate among whites, according to the CDC.

In 1999, National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day was established to educated people on the disease and how it affects the black race, and to also encourage people to get tested and/or treated. It’s recognized each year on February 7th.

For this year’s National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day, The MED Foundation is presenting “The Getting to Zero Campaign” to help raise money for hospital-based strategies that combat the prevalence of the disease in Memphis. The event will take place Friday, February 7th in the FedEXForum’s Fly Lounge and feature WMC-TV’s Konji Anthony and Memphis Grizzlies player Quincy Pondexter. It will last from 5:30-7:30pm.

According to the CDC, nationally, blacks account for an estimated 44 percent of the individuals 13 and older diagnosed with HIV. The statistics locally are also alarming. There were 7,922 people living with HIV in the Memphis Metropolitan Area at the end of 2012; 82 percent of those individuals were black.

The Ryan White Program, a local entity that provides financial support to individuals with HIV/AIDS who are uninsured or underinsured, is one of the campaign’s sponsors. Dorcas Young, the program’s administrator, said raising awareness of HIV/AIDS within Memphis is significant in seeing the amount of people affected by it lowered.

“As we’re more aware of the disease and more educated about the disease, we break down barriers and end the stigma of HIV,” Young said. “When people feel stigmatized and feel like people are in fear of them, they won’t go and get the help that they need. There are a lot of people out there who are HIV positive but won’t get care.”

To read more about HIV/AIDS in Memphis, check out my story in next week’s issue of The Memphis Flyer.

Follow me on Twitter: @Lou4President
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Check out my website: ahumblesoul.com

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Gelato Cafe

Admittedly it’s one of the first worldlier or first world problems, but the recent spate of burst pipes had me hoofing it to Bartlett for my little dog’s acupuncture appointment.

And that is how I came upon Gelato Cafe.

The restaurant offers a number of Italian sandwiches, including the Di Venezia with turkey and provoline with pesto sauce and the Napoletano with mortadella, salami, pastrami, and provolone.

Gelato Cafe offers gelatos (made exclusively for the store) ranging from coconut and pistachio to creme caramel and hazelnut. Sorbettos include mixed berry, mango, pineapple, and strawberry.

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I got the questionable combo of coconut and coffee gelatos ($2.95 for small), but both were excellent. The coffee wasn’t overly sweet, and I really liked the bits of coconut meat in the coconut gelato.

The gelatos and sorbettos are available for take-out in 1/2 liters for $8.99 and 1 liter for $17.99.

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Intermission Impossible Theater

Family Matters: “Other Desert Cities” and “Death of a Salesman” face the final curtain

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I’m at a loss to explain the tremendous critical acclaim that greeted Jon Robin Baitz Other Desert Cities . It’s not a bad play, and I’m willing to concede that I may have missed the point. Also, the dialogue is often fantastic, even if the characters and plot both seem a little “paint by numbers.”

The recipe for ODC is familiar enough. Start with a fractious family reunion (Christmas being the excuse this time), toss in some secrets, and one shocking revelation made in the play’s last act that changes everything in time for a tidy epilogue ringing with forgiveness and understanding.

In a more complex work this revelation might begin a messy final chapter, or even start a fist fight, but instead resolution comes around easy.

ODC is set in the well appointed desert digs of an aging movie star who turned in his SAG card to follow Ronnie Reagan. Although we think of Hollywood as being liberal, it’s had its share of New Deal-haters like Bob Hope, Jimmy Stewart, and John Wayne. Lyman and Polly Wyeth, the one time Hollywood power couple at the head of this dysfunctional family are cut from the same cloth. These aren’t Tea Partiers by any stretch, but a more enlightened set, and far more broadminded than the causes they wholeheartedly support. Lyman, strongly played by Jerry Chipman, was a mid-20th-Century leading man turned diplomat. His wife Polly, beautifully imagined by Irene Crist in the scenes where she comfortably knows her lines, was a successful screenwriter, and is now a Nancy Reagan clone.

This is a play where the Conservatives have their convictions (and a secret to support them), while the Liberals have substances, rehab, and an incomplete picture of what’s really happening. The problems have less to do with any overt politics than the degree to which shallow characters fit stereotypes, and then live up to expectations.

Ann Marie Hall is effective comic relief as Silda Grauman, Polly’s troubled free-spirit sister with an agenda of her own, and Christopher Joel Onken does solid character work as the more successful of Lyman and Polly’s two living siblings.

The always reliable Kim Justis takes on Brooke, a one hit wonder author struggling to write about a family tragedy that she doesn’t really know anything about. Her grief and struggles are the price paid to keep an inconvenient truth buried deep. Or not, as the case may be.

Other Desert Cities, nicely staged by Dave Landis, plays out like some half-baked answer to Arthur Miller’s All My Sons only this time daddy was apparently a secret hero. I guess sometimes you have to rise above the law and destroy your daughter to save your son— and the family’s good name. Or something.

I caught ODC early in the run, and assume that issues with lines have been cleared up in the time that’s passed. There was a lot of potential on stage at circuit, but I was often more worried for the performers than the characters, and that’s a problem. That said, it’s almost worth dropping in on this show for Douglas Gilpin’s pitch perfect scenic design. If you must live at the edge of nowhere, this would be the place to do it.

When it clicks Other Desert Cities is a lot of fun to watch. I’m just not sure it ever adds up to much.

Details HERE.

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  • “Eath of a Sales n” by Rrhur M l r

Speaking of Arthur Miller, Death of a Salesman closes this week at Theatre Memphis. I don’t have a lot to say about this production other than to repeat initial misgivings that it wasn’t a good idea for Theatre Memphis to stage Miller’s best known tragedy with the memory of New Moon’s standout production fresh in mind.

I have to admit to having a soft spot for TM’s old-school unit set, even if the lighting never effectively isolates the figures in space as they move from location to location and in and out of reality.

Director Tony Isbell assembled a first rate cast including Janie Paris who reprises her role as the matriarch of the Loman family. I’ll never be able to hear DOAS‘s closing scene without thinking of her voice, although it will be from the earlier production rather than this one.

James Dale Green is one of Memphis’ finest, but he seemed to be struggling under the weighty demands of WIlly Loman. I caught the show’s last preview, and always assume that performance become richer and deeper over time. But on opening night eve the audience never got to see the flashes of Willy the contender necessary to truly believe that “attention must be paid.”

As Bif, the goodhearted bad boy, Memphis actor John Moore proves once again that hard work pays off. Moore has been an ambitious fixture on Memphis stages for some time but being dreamy and comfortable on stage was enough for a lot of directors and given up for eye candy, bad habits calcified.

My first memory of Moore on stage is an indie production of David Mamet’s fantastic American Buffalo. The show was loose and everybody was too young and too indulgent. The same artists would collaborate on a respectable if never fully realized production of Mamet’s Speed the Plow at Theatre Memphis— and to be honest, I can’t remember which came first but I remember American Buffalo more because it was scrappy. First impressions linger and even though I didn’t love those early performances much, I gave Moore extra points for difficulty and that’s what’s kept me interested even when he’s been less interesting.

Now and again a show would come along like The Little Dog Laughed, and he’d nail it. By the time he returned to Mamet in Glengarry Glen Ross, he was ready, and it’s a shame that Ostrander judges failed to acknowledge his genuinely electrifying performance as a corrupt cop in A Steady Rain.

Moore’s Biff is busted but bouncing back, trying very hard not to be the victim of the past and his own worst instincts. Scenes with Greg Earnest, who plays brother Happy were the show’s most convincing on the night I sat in.

Salesman is Willy Loman’s story but it revolves around Biff, and in this production, where Moore is especially compelling and others struggle, maybe a little too much.

Click HERE for the particulars.

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Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Dirty Streets’ New Single

Like the Buzzo show, this is another thing from Scion A/V. It’s a metal onslaught from a car company. What? Sure. Whatever. The music’s good. Memphis’ Dirty Streets, ladies and gentlemen:

Dirty Streets’ New Single

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News News Blog

TVA: Energy Usage Records Broken in January

Tennessee Valley Authority customers broke records for energy use last month, the energy provider announced Tuesday.

TVA said five of the top 10 energy usage days in its history were recorded in January and said this winter’s “arctic cold” was the likely culprit. Energy use on Tuesday, January 7 was the highest in TVA history at nearly 703 gigawatt hours. The low temperature in Memphis that day was 1 degree and the high was 27 degrees, according to data from Weather Underground.

Other January dates in the TVA’s top 10 were January 6, 28, 29, and 24.

The energy used on the five days in January totaled 3,399 gigawatt hours. That’s enough energy to power the entire city of Nashville for 10 months, power a laptop computer for 5.9 million years, or send the “Back to the Future” Delorean through time 2,809 times.

Most of that power was generated at coal-fired energy plants (32 percent). Nuclear (24 percent) and gas power (21 percent) rounded out the top 3 TVA power sources for those days in January.

The power surge is good news for TVA as the company is coming off a soft season for energy use. Power use dips annually in October, November, and December, according to TVA’s last quarterly earnings report, which covered those last three months of 2013.

TVA reported a net loss of $67 million on revenues of $2.3 billion in October, November, and December. The loss was an improvement over the same period last year when TVA saw a $245 million loss.

TVA provides electric power to public utilities in seven states including Tennessee, Virginia, North Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, and Kentucky.

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Sing All Kinds We Recommend

20 Years of Memphis Rap from NPR

“Every 10th house has a studio in it.”  Hit play below:

Memphis Rap on NPR!