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Politics Politics Beat Blog

Mackler Out of Senate Race, Yields to Bredesen

Mackler (l), Bredesen

James Mackler, the Nashville attorney and Iraq War vet who, months ago, declared as a Democratic candidate for the Tennessee U.S. Senate seat being vacated by Republican Bob Corker, has faced the reality that last week’s declaration of candidacy by former Governor Phil Bredesen had closed off his available routes to financial support.

Accordingly, Macler issued a press release on Thursday announcing his withdrawal from the Senate race. “The political environment has changed … and we cannot risk any distractions in our fight to defeat Marsha Blackburn’s extreme agenda,” Mackler’s statement read in part. “It is in this spirit of unity, not further division, that I am making the choice to step back as a candidate at this time to put us all on the path to victory.”

Mackler said he would continue to maintain his “Believe in Service” political action committee, which Bredesen made a point of commending, along with Mackler himself.

Although he had not yet achieved full statewide name recognition, Mackler, who had mounted his candidacy well before Corker’s withdrawal from the race, had raised some $1 million and had begun developing a viable profile, especially among millenials.

But Bredesen, who served two terms as Tennessee Governor from 2003 to 2011 had been assiduously courted to run by establishment Democrats, both in-state and out, who felt that, as the last Democrat to be elected statewide, he had the best chance of contesting for the now open Senate seat against either of the two name Republicans now seeking it — 7th District U.S. Rep. Marsha Blackburn o former 8th District congressman Stephen Fincher.

Despite a cost-conscious tenure as Governor which was widely regarded as centrist enough to have enacted significant portions of the then Republican platform, Bredesen has become a virtual daily target of official Republican broadsides attempting to portray him as a “big spender” Democrat and a liberal — neither of which things he ever came close to being.

In fact, the former Governor’s penchant, both in office and in his gubernatorial campaigns, for proposing relatively conservative compromise solutions was one of the major factors that won him significant crossover support.

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Beyond the Arc Sports

The Hustle Dispatch: Week 6

A promising start to the week gives way to defeats

The Hustle’s game week started out strong, showing off a dominance that we’re unaccustomed to en route to a 19 point victory. The unfortunate victim? The now 5-10 Greensboro Swarm, who were swept away by the Hustle’s 1st quarter offense and never looked like threatening a comeback. On a bittersweet note, Natch the Bear saw out the last game of his 10-day contract, so we’ll see if his mascot performances merited an extension. Once attention swapped back to the floor, fans were treated to an opening two minutes with no baskets. Then, Ivan Rabb made a layup and the Hustle kicked it up a gear.

After their first two points, the Hustle ferociously swarmed the paint, and Greensboro simply wasn’t able to contain them. With seven minutes left in the quarter, the Hustle had a 15-2 lead. Whenever the Swarm had possession of the ball, the Hustle defense forced them into taking bad shots. Meanwhile, Memphis continued to attack the paint with impunity, capped by a Vince Hunter alley-oop and Jordan Crawford burning defenders en route to the basket. At the end of the quarter, the Hustle led 32-18, and that lead would hold for the rest of the game.

With the lead growing as big as 25 points, this game was over before the fourth quarter buzzer signaled the end of regulation. The Hustle never allowed Greensboro to find any sort of rhythm, all the while maintaining their own efficiency on offense. A large part of that effort is credited to Omari Johnson, who led scoring for the Hustle with 18 points. Plus, the Hustle hit a season-high 52.4 percent from the three-point line. While that’s a great percentage, Dusty Hannahs took a look at that number and decided he could do better in the next game against the Oklahoma City Blue.

Unfortunately, that game turned out to be a loss. Memphis couldn’t contain the Blue’s Bryce Alford, who dominated off the bench with 35 points. The Blue got out to a 30-20 lead at the end of the first quarter and never found themselves trailing. Their lead increased to as much as 25 over the course of the game, but the Hustle found an extra gear in the fourth quarter, putting up a whopping 49 points. An excellent performer during the Hustle’s three-game home stretch, Omari Johnson put up 20 points; Dusty Hannahs, in 15 less minutes of play time, shot lights out from beyond the arc. 11 of his 23 points came in the fourth quarter comeback attempt, which he spearheaded alongside Kobi Simmons’ 13 fourth quarter points.

Despite the momentum, the comeback was thwarted when the Hustle’s nemesis on the night, Alford, banked in a three pointer. Beyond Alford’s contribution, the Hustle struggled to maintain the defensive intensity they displayed against Greensboro. OKC outshot us 62-42 in the paint and also shot at their highest percentage of the season at 56.1 percent. While it’s thrilling to see a comeback, we shouldn’t be forced to make up so much ground. Next time, it’d be nice to savor Hannah’s stellar shooting record with a win.

Instead, the Hustle were accommodating enough to hand the Iowa Wolves their first road win of the season. The Wolves somehow all found hot hands and shot 65 percent from the field in the first half, ending with a 65-49 lead. Each starter for Iowa scored at least 13 points, making it tough to pinpoint an easy defensive target. Sometimes, though, you have to chalk it up to a bad night. None of the Hustle players really shot well; Hannahs wasn’t able to keep up his heroics, while Omari Johnson, despite a respectable 18 points, missed 8 of his 12 three point attempts. Not a great return, Johnson still turned in one of the better performances for Memphis and continued his solid sequence of games.

The Hustle’s record now stands at 6-9. While it’s not the best end to this series of home games, reinforcements will hopefully be coming to the team. Austin Nichols and Jeremy Morgan, with an ankle and knee problem, respectively, should provide a welcome boost when they return to action. For now, the Hustle head to California for their next two games against Santa Cruz Warriors and South Bay Lakers. The latter holds an 11-3 record, so it would be an excellent time to bounce back and get a statement win over one of the better teams of the season so far.

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News News Blog

Cooper-Young Nears Historical Landmark Status

Cooper-Young is a step closer to becoming a historic overlay district, as Thursday the joint Memphis and Shelby County Land Use Control Board (LUCB) voted in favor of the neighborhood’s historical designation.

The board voted unanimously, supporting the neighborhood’s landmark status, but historical status will ultimately be decided by the Memphis City Council early next year.

Before the board voted, residents from the neighborhood both for and against the designation spoke on the record.

Those in support said that historic protection would preserve the historical housing stock in Cooper-Young, increase property values, strengthen the neighborhood, and eliminate infill houses that don’t “match Cooper-Young.”

One speaker pointed out that compared to other Memphis historical districts’ guidelines, the ones proposed for Cooper-Young are “minimal in nature and therefore shouldn’t be a huge burden to the residents.”

However, a few residents spoke in opposition, saying that the neighborhood includes a lot of working-class people who “really can’t afford to make it through another whole layer of bureaucracy.”

“Not everyone can afford to maintain their properties to the standards set forth by a third party,” one speaker said.

But, chair of the board, Jon McCreery said the mission of the LUCB and Cooper-Young’s application for landmark status “are in lockstep” from a land-use perspective. 

In October, the Memphis Landmark Commission voted six to one, approving the Cooper-Young Community Association’s (CYCA) application for historic protection.

Historical protection would put a set of guidelines in place that would regulate residential demolition, new construction, and add-ons in the neighborhood.

New construction guidelines touch on height, size, roof shape, and building material requirements.

Kristen Schebler, former executive director of CYCA, said all of the guidelines are meant to maintain the neighborhood’s historical characteristics, and avoid new houses built with features that “don’t “fit the feeling of Cooper-Young,” like garages that face the street.

Schebler said these take up much of the house’s front facade and limit interaction among residents.

Roughly bounded by Central on the north, East Parkway on the east, Southern on the south, and Mclean on the west, the new historic overlay district would span 335 acres and include about 1,600 households.

The Memphis City Council will take three votes on the landmark designation, with the third taking placing in late February.

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Intermission Impossible Theater

Bad Santa: Tennessee Shakespeare turns Godot into a Holiday Hellscape

Joey Miller.

Paul Kiernan and Dave Demke as Estragon and Vladimir in the Tennessee Shakespeare Company’s production of Waiting for Godot at the Dixon Gallery and Gardens.

“That’s what we’ve got to do – wait on God and let this process play out. … Let’s go home and sleep on it.” Roy Moore, Good Christian, apparent pedophile, awkward cowboy, sore loser.

Was I sleeping, while the others suffered? Am I sleeping now? Tomorrow, when I wake, or think I do, what shall I say of today? That with Estragon my friend, at this place, until the fall of night, I waited for Godot?” — Vladimir, Waiting for Godot.

I awoke yesterday morning to the news of Roy Moore’s narrow defeat in the Alabama Senate race and of the disgraced politician’s threat of voter recount. “That’s what we’ve got to do,” Moore said, turning to the never-present Authority-on-high. “Wait on God and let this process play out. … Let’s go home and sleep on it.” Of course, for Moore, the process had already played itself out, but like Samuel Beckett’s authoritarian character Pozzo, he was unable to see it. Stumbling across such familiar-sounding words so early in the morning reminded me that I had a Waiting for Godot review to write. So I suppose it’s time to begin.

Pause.

There was a terrific audience out this past Saturday night at the Dixon Gallery & Gardens. They’d come out to see a Beckett play.

Pause.

I didn’t know what city I was in. Or whose life I was living. Because this is something that never happens in Memphis. I do know this though: Tennessee Shakespeare is doing something very right — even if that something isn’t Waiting for Godot.

Pause.

I love this material. And appreciate a thoughtful holiday present like Godot during the bleakest  time of year for theater-lovers, when every other playhouse in town is engaged in the age-old ritual of re-gifting. But the ensemble brought together for this well-meaning production never quite gels. Concept intrudes. Comic opportunities are missed and meaning gets steamrolled on the regular. And, to come right out and say it, turning Beckett’s boggy wasteland into Narnia is a strange choice. It may appeal to others, but it’s never going to sit right with me. Now, having made my complaints this must also be said: If you can  fill the house on a Saturday night for any Beckett play, I’m going to stand up at the end of the show and clap my fool hands off. But maybe instead of “Bravo” I’ll borrow a line from one of the playwright’s lesser-known works, Worstward Ho: “Try Again. Fail again. Fail better.”

That’s not mean spirited, it’s love in action.

Pause.

I could have forgiven jingle bells on Lucky even though he’s a man not a reindeer. I could have gotten over Christmas lights on the tree and other questionable design choices. I might have even overlooked a tacked-on, post-blackout  tableaux at the end of the play — a deal-breaking heresy for purists who wouldn’t be wrong identifying this last brief gasp before curtain call as a short wholly invented third act. Some will regard it as an affront, but I could have  let every bit of it go if only this Godot had more real life in its bones — If it leaned less on sentimental signifiers, and wrestled with the absurd comedy’s fragile, flatulent humanity. I gave up hope near the end of act one when Vladimir (Didi) affirms his existence, turning to the nameless boy who visits the hobos on behalf of Mr. Godot who won’t be showing up (again).

“Tell him,” Didi says, hesitating. “Tell him you saw us… You did see us, didn’t you?”

There are a million ways to play that scene, but all of them  are desperate, needy and crushing to observe. Otherwise the whole play’s pretty pointless.  It wasn’t at all, and was.
Joey Miller.

Paul Kiernan as Estragon, Phil Darius Wallace as Pozzo, and Dave Demke as Vladimir in the Tennessee Shakespeare Company’s production of Waiting for Godot at the Dixon Gallery and Gardens.

Godot is an austere clown show, generous in its foolery. It’s the story of two bums waiting for an expected benefactor who never shows up. Over the course of two hours the baggy-pants duo ponders philosophy, discuss one another’s body odor, consider suicide, dodge beatings, have adventures, observe inhumanities, and lean on one another when it’s all too much. And they wait. Penned in the wake of WWII, at the dawn of a frightening atomic age, Godot is the 20th-century “bounded in a nutshell,” as Shakespeare might say — a slapstick hymn to eternity in all its terrifying glory. TSC’s production finds a lot of little laughs but misses the big ones. In the end (literally) this production has to expressly tell us there’s howling terror and deep uncertainty about that final blackout because it’s failed to show us along the way.

There are moments when Godot actor Paul Kiernan could pass for a Lou Costello clone on stage, and I mean that in the best possible way. Costello was a walking appetite — the kind of over-feeling, over-responding Harlequin-style clown that makes for a deeply satisfying Estragon (Gogo). Gogo is certainly the play’s stomach, if not its heart and Kiernan connects with his appetites and audiences and his generosity elevates the performances of those around him. Moment to moment he’s more emotionally invested than anybody else on stage and that pays dividends in laughter and clarity. The entire production winds up riding on his dusty coattails and when everything else breaks down he carries it like Jesus in the Footprints poem.

Pause.

Michael Khanlarian also makes informed, interesting choices as Pozzo’s bound man Lucky but everything about his performance seems to have been air-dropped in from another, stylistically different production. Lucky is a slave to authority, always ready to serve, dance, recite, or think on his master’s command. He’s mistreated and kept on the brink of exhaustion, unable to act of his own accord unless it’s to kick or bite anybody who gets too close.

When he’s not serving Pozzo, Khanlarian’s heavy breathing becomes soundtrack, punctuating action. It calls to mind Beckett’s 35-second play Breath, which features no actors on stage, only garbage and which also has a composed text made up of nothing but birth cries and breathing. It’s the existence of short, wordless plays like Breath that makes this Godot‘s final, post blackout tableaux so problematic. Beckett approached his work like a composer. He put codas where he wanted them. Fin means fin. And Godot‘s first and second act endings aren’t symmetrical by accident.

VLADIMIR:
Well? Shall we go?
ESTRAGON:
Yes, let’s go.
They do not move.

Actors Dave Demke (Vladimir/Didi) and Phil Darius Wallace (Pozzo) have given birth to vaguer creations, emotionally detached and not very successful.

Pause.

I should apologize. I should never have begun this post with such a specific reference to contemporary politics. That was wrong of me, though it’s true I may have had an ulterior motive. Even though the the quote is relevant  and title Waiting for Godot is nearly quoted in Moore’s Vladimir-like commentary, this kind of reference to current events will certainly polarize readers and color all the rest — a bit like this Godot’s vague and not so vague allusions to the Christmas holiday. Granted, the play is supposed to make audiences ask a lot of questions but, “Is Pozzo really Santa?”  isn’t one of them.

I’m sorry. Let me walk that back a little.

Hats off to TSC’s founding director Dan McCleary and all directors willing to take big, bold risks with precious material. To give McCleary’s Godot its due, it might have achieved a more favorable result had the creative team taken a different route to the North pole and costumed Didi and Gogo in dirty Santa suits. That’s more of a translation than an imposition or an explanation. Audiences would instantly and effortlessly recognize a modern trope of transience, instability etc.  I’m sure there are other ways to give the show a seasonal spin without raising additional, never-intended questions like “Where did they plug in the tree?”

Pause.

I don’t recommend any of that, mind you. But I appreciate the experimental urge. And also the urge to identify this production as a gift and welcome alternative for both Christmas lovers and those among us who’ve lost all interest in holiday spirits and “God bless us, every one.”

This is an exciting time for Tennessee Shakespeare whose days of performing regularly at the Dixon may be numbered. With the purchase of Ballet Memphis’ former east Memphis headquarters  the 10-year-old theater company has become the only professional, classically-oriented troupe in Tennessee with this kind of permanent facility at its disposal.  As everybody settles into the new space, I suspect a unique set of traditions will emerge.

Something meaty and special at the holidays would be welcome. Even better if it’s difficult and risky. 

Bad Santa: Tennessee Shakespeare turns Godot into a Holiday Hellscape

For those who’ve never experienced Godot this clip of Patrick Stewart and Ian McKellen on Broadway is a good starting place.

On the odd chance my meaning’s been missed, let me be clear: I did not love this show. Lighting was flat, scenic design was lacking, and the concept was intrusive. And, even though it  lasts for a few seconds only, I regard this Godot‘s last, tacked-on scene as one of the most questionable alterations of a text since Circuit Playhouse’s creative team rewrote passages of Equus in 1998. But for some, even an off Godot may be preferable to the usual set of holiday retreads. Even as I type one of the most unfavorable reviews I’ve written in ages, I find myself wanting to see it again.

For reference, most of the row seated in front of me left at intermission, grumbling about their dissatisfaction on the way out. Others leapt to their feet end of show to applaud. So clearly, milage may vary. Widely.

Pause.  

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News News Blog

US Attorney: Memphis Arrests Fulfill Trump Priorities

Homeland Security Investigations

Federal agents conducted their own investigation of the matter.

Indictments were handed down Wednesday for 20 undocumented workers arrested late last month, a move that advances the priorities of the Trump Adminstration, a local leader said.

The workers were assigned to Expeditors International by Provide Staffing, a local employment agency. However, Transportation Security Adminstration inspectors found irregularities in their paperwork and then notified Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the Tennessee Department of Safety and Homeland Security.

An investigation determined that the men presented false documents between March 2016 and January 2017 to certify their identity and eligibility to work in the U.S.

The indictments remain only allegations and the men are presumed innocent until proven guilty in court.

On Tuesday, Nov. 28, the Tennessee Highway Patrol arrested 20 men at the warehouse. Thirteen of the men were from Mexico, three were from Guatemala, and four were from Honduras.

They are:

Jamie Ramundo Martinez, a/k/a/ Angel Martinez, 36, Guatemala

Pedro Garcia-Guaneros, a/k/a/ Pedro Garcia, 34, Mexico

Oscar Tepole-Sanchez, a/k/a/ Oscar Tepole, 36, Mexico

Hilda Hernandez-Garduno, a/k/a/ Hilda Hernandez, 37, Mexico

Angel Calmo-Aguilar, a/k/a/ Angel Calmo, 24, Guatemala

Edgar Lopez-Marin, a/k/a/ Edgar Lopez, 37, Mexico

Fernando Ramos-Jacobo, a/k/a/ Fernando Ramos, 27, Mexico

Willivaldo Arenales-Soriano, a/k/a/ Wilibaldo Arenales, 35, Mexico

Fernando Alexi Duran-Reyes, a/k/a/ Eduardo Duran, 43, Honduras

Ramon Paz-Peredes, a/k/a/ Ramon Paz, 47, Honduras

Josue Vaca-Alvarodo, a/k/a/Pedro Cordero, 41, Honduras

Arturo Robles-Larios, 36, Mexico

Sixto Landaverde-Rodriguez, a/k/a/ Sixto Rodruguez, 42, Mexico

Rodolfo Hernandez-Sanchez, a/k/a/ Leonel Sanchez, 37, Mexico

Henry Calmo-Aguilar, a/k/a/ Henry Calmo, 22, Guatemala

Eligio Lopez-Acevedo, 34, Mexico

Artemio Moreno-Gordillo, a/k/a/ Artemio Moreno, 44, Mexico

Jose Moreno-Martinez, 25, Mexico

Marlon Martinez-Martinez, a/k/a/ Marlon Martinez, 36, Honduras

Raquel Delin-Ramos, a/k/a/ Raquel Delin, 32, Mexico

Each man faces federal charges and a sentence of up to five years in prison, a $250,000 fine, and three years of supervised release.

Dunavant

The news came Wednesday from the office of Michael Dunavant, the United States Attorney for the Western District of Tennessee. Dunavant was nominated by President Donald Trump in June and he was confirmed by the Senate in September.

Dunavant in a news release that the arrests were in line with new priorities from the Trump Adminstration, especially those of his boss, U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions.

“”In April, the Attorney General announced a renewed commitment by the Department of Justice to consistently and vigorously pursue criminal immigration enforcement, in order to disrupt organizations and deter unlawful conduct,” said Dunavant in a news release. “This priority includes the aggressive prosecution of aggravated identity theft, document fraud, and misuse of visas and permits in the immigration context.

“These indictments fulfill that priority, protect critical infrastructure sites, and promote lawfulness in our immigration system.”

[pullquote-1]U.S. Immigrations and Customs Enforcement (ICE) Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) conducted a parallel investigation of the matter.

“Individuals that utilize fraudulent identification to obtain restricted access to our nation’s transportation network, whether air, sea, or rail, create a vulnerability to our national supply chain,” said Assistant Special Agent in Charge Robert Hammer, who oversees HSI’s efforts in Tennessee. “HSI will continue to partner with our federal and state law enforcement partners to protect our critical infrastructure from exploitation.”

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Letter From The Editor Opinion

Waiting for the Test to Come

If you watched only Fox News and listened only to President Donald Trump, you would probably be convinced by now that special counsel Robert Mueller and his team of federal investigators are crooked partisans, hellbent on maliciously destroying the president and his administration. You would believe that the FBI itself is corrupt, “in tatters.”

Never mind that Mueller, a lifelong Republican appointed to his position by another Republican, served his country in combat in Vietnam and has served several presidents with unquestioned integrity. And never mind that Russian interference in the 2016 election is an established fact, one attested to and confirmed by all major U.S. intelligence agencies. And never mind that several Trump campaign officials have already made plea deals, admitting to contacts with Russian agents, and that many more campaign and administration officials have been outed as having had contacts with the Russians.

These are facts. These are not fake news stories.

And yet, day after day, Trump and his minions — and the official state mouthpiece, Fox News — push the trope that every other media voice in the country is fake: The New York Times, The Washington Post, the Wall Street Journal, NBC, CBS, CNN, ABC — they’re all FAKE! They are all purposely publishing and broadcasting false stories about the president.

Trump and Fox relentlessly sell the line that the Russian investigation is political, that there is no there there.

So for the sake of argument, let’s grant that they are correct, that all the evidence we’ve learned about so far is just coincidence, that all those who’ve admitted guilt already are just peripheral pawns, that the president and his closest advisors had no knowledge of any of it. If that is indeed true, why wouldn’t they just ignore the investigation and let it play out, secure in the knowledge that Mueller’s team will find nothing, because there is simply nothing to find?

I think the answer to that is obvious: There is a lot of there there that’s yet to come out, and Trump knows it. His only play at this point is to convince the American people that everyone in the media is lying, that only he — the Great Trump — is telling the truth.

Trump has built up a cult-like base that will believe anything he tells them. If he trashes Al Franken for being a sexual predator but tells people to believe Roy Moore is innocent and that his own accusers are all liars, his cult buys in. They support him when he denounces mistakes made by mainstream media and demands reporters be fired; they support him when he refuses to acknowledge or correct his own false statements. They are the true believers, Trump’s only real hope for staying in office. Unless he’s innocent.

We are fast approaching a crossroads, one where Americans and their leaders will have to choose between doing the right and just thing or allowing a lust for power and greed and a warped cult of personality to replace American values and decency for a generation or more.

The choice may come soon, if Trump decides to fire Mueller. Or it may come later, when Mueller completes his investigation and releases findings that show collaboration with a hostile foreign state at the highest levels of our democracy. If that happens, we’ll learn with quick and sober clarity what it is our leaders in Congress truly value. We’ll find out who among them will stand up for America’s core foundational principles and who among them will continue to prop up this shady, scary clown show.

We’ve been teetering on the point of a sword for nearly a year now, lurching from one manufactured crisis to another as Trump plays at president like a cat knocking objects off a table — seeking attention, seeking to distract us from the inevitable moment of decision to come. And when that moment arrives, I pray my country rises to the occasion. I pray we reject swagger and bluster and propaganda masquerading as the truth. I pray we rediscover our true American heart.

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We Recommend We Recommend

Holiday Concerts at Graceland

In its early days as a tourist destination, tour guides would welcome visitors on the steps of Graceland with the line, “This was all farm country when Elvis moved to the neighborhood, but before long the city grew out to meet him.” But times change, people seldom play tourist in their own hometown, and it’s hard to say just how many locals drop by to pay their respects these days. That dynamic could shift again this week when a Memphis cultural artifact — and one of the Presley estate’s most historically significant pieces — returns to Graceland after a 40-year hiatus. Elvis’ white baby grand piano — once the house piano for Ellis Auditorium — will soon be installed in the mansion’s fully restored music room. Also, a series of three holiday concerts marks Graceland’s first baby steps as a regular music venue.

Elvis had long admired the white 1912-vintage Knabe & Co piano. As a teenager he saw it in use often whenever his gospel heroes (and neighborhood record store owners) the Blackwood Brothers put on a show. Cab Calloway and Count Basie had both sat down to its keyboard, and it had been featured in musical performances led by W.C. Handy. The piano was re-sold in 1971 and changed hands many times over the years before it turned up on eBay earlier this year. It’s being described as the focal point of a music room that’s being returned to its 1960s-era look.

Holiday King

Graceland’s first-ever holiday concert events kick off Friday December 15th at the Sound Stage, Graceland’s new entertainment complex, where concertgoers can take in an orchestral performance with Elvis on the big screen. A pair of concerts follow on Saturday December 16th. An Elvis Gospel Christmas show will be followed with what’s being described as “an Elvis star-studded Rock-and-Roll show.”

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We Recommend We Recommend

Yellow Fever Rock & Roll Ghost Tour

“I see Memphis as a haunted house,” Mike McCarthy says, sitting in his den, in the shadow of an enormous Johnny Cash statue he’s been sculpting from gray clay. This month McCarthy, an artist, preservationist, and activist best known for work as an independent filmmaker, is planning a one-of-a-kind spook tour that may appeal to Christmas revelers who appreciate the spirits.

“Memphis is the kind of haunted house where you look through the boards in the window and you see the cobwebs over the empty bottles,” he continues. “And you see the old radio, and the dusty record collection. You see that this was once a place where people had a really great time. But then you also see signs of struggle. And maybe a murder or two. And you come to realize why this haunted house has been abandoned. And why people don’t really go there anymore. And why it’s in danger of being torn down. That’s the Memphis I know. It’s the Memphis I’ve shot on film for decades. It’s the Memphis I’ve talked about to friends who’ve visited. That’s the haunted house I know Memphis to be.”

Skeletons in Memphis’ closet

McCarthy has located a purple hearse for his tours, but says it won’t be rehabilitated and ready to go in time for holiday ghost stories that will take listeners from “No man’s land” to the graves of stolen Georgia Tann babies and beyond.

“If my tour can shine a little light on that haunted house,” McCarthy says. “If it can clean out the cobwebs and open up the doors, then the people who come and visit the house will have an understanding of why it’s important to save it. To preserve it.”

In the spirit of the now-defunct Holly Springs tourist attraction Graceland Too, McCarthy claims to be open 24 hours. “Customers can call, discuss how long they want their tour to be. I customize accordingly,” he says.

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Cover Feature News

The Thomas Sisters: We Are Family

In February, the Memphis Housing Authority took steps to remove the last dwellers from the city’s oldest public housing project, Foote Homes. Though many had left already, and though carcinogens stained the surrounding soil, some longtime residents were reluctant to go. Perhaps they still had vivid memories of a time when Foote Homes was at the center of a thriving neighborhood culture in South Memphis.

Some may have even known the place soon after it was built in 1941, when a young couple, Rufus and Lorene Thomas, moved in to start a family with their young son, Marvell. When daughter Carla was born a year later, they had little inkling that the Thomas family was just beginning, or that the father, son, daughter, and daughter-to-come would one day become stars on a global scale.

Rufus was a natural showman, having proven himself on the road with the Rabbit Foot Minstrels and the Royal American troupe, tap dancing, scat singing, and learning how to work a crowd. Perhaps it seemed he was leaving that life behind for good when he and Lorene settled at Foote Homes, but the call of the stage still rang in his ears.

Before long, he was back in touch with his old history teacher from Booker T. Washington High School, Nat D. Williams, a learned writer and entertainer — and a pillar of the community. Williams had been hosting a popular Amateur Show on Beale Street, and when he left, Rufus stepped in to replace him.

He would end up staying for over a decade, helping to launch the careers of B.B. King, Bobby “Blue” Bland, and local jazz stalwart Herman Green, among others. From there he would become a renowned deejay and recording artist, of course, but this track record can obscure the fact that he was also, first and foremost, a family man.

Courtesy of Stax Museum of American Soul Music

Back: Mr. & Mrs. Marvell Thomas, Vaneese Thomas; Front: Carla, Lorene, and Rufus Thomas

To learn a bit more about the spirit of the Thomas family, which would ultimately nurture the talents of siblings Marvell, Carla, and Vaneese, I made my way to that hub of African-American culture in South Memphis, the Four Way Grill. Established in 1946, just a few blocks from the Capitol Theater, the eatery fed the Thomas kids and thousands of other Memphians for generations. When the Capitol was sold and became Satellite, and then Stax Records, the Four Way was a natural hang-out for performers as they dreamed of stardom. Community leaders of all kinds flocked there, and many of their photographs grace the walls. It’s the embodiment of the community of South Memphis and a reminder that to raise families full of potential, it may not take a village. Sometimes the neighborhood will do.

When Carla and Vaneese join me, I have to pinch myself. “Gee whiz, it’s Christmas!” I think. Of course, as soon as we sit down, talk gravitates to their legendary father who, even 16 years after his death, somehow still commands the room.

Vaneese, the “youngster” of the family, wants to emphasize the musicianship of her father. “If you ever see album credits listing so and so as the arranger of a Rufus Thomas session, don’t believe it. Daddy was always right there, going to each musician, telling them their parts.” She and Carla speak a little wistfully of their parents, and of their brother Marvell, who passed away earlier this year.

And yet it’s like they’re all there with us, as Carla relives her childhood days when Rufus first began working at “The Mother Station of Negroes,” WDIA. It was the first station in the nation to feature African-American deejays, and, as with the Amateur Hour on Beale, the road there was paved by Nat D. Williams, who helped Rufus step into B.B. King’s on-air slot after King’s music took him on the road.

Despite the progressive moves the station made at the time, Rufus found himself in a bizarre, half-segregated world where the deejays of color were not allowed to actually play the records: That was left to the white “engineers.” Announcers like Rufus would pull their record selections from the shelf, log them in, and step back as the engineers spun the platters. In any case, it wasn’t the magic of the records that captivated Carla so much as the live chorus, masterminded by deejay A.C. Williams. His “Teen Town Singers,” dreamt up as a promotional foray into local high schools, became an inspiration to many an aspiring vocalist.

Courtesy of Stax Museum of American Soul Music

Carla Thomas

“When daddy started at WDIA, we’d listen every day,” Carla recalls. “And that’s when I started listening to the Teen-Towners. I must have been 9 or 10. And I’d be, ‘Am I gonna be in there?'” Rufus would reply, “You’re too young. You can’t be in there.” Still, she persisted. “I wanna be in the Teen Town Singers!”

“She begged for a year,” says Vaneese.

“And then one day, he was nice to me,” says Carla. “He had no idea I could sing or even carry a note. I didn’t either! I just knew I wanted to be in it. One day he said, ‘I tell you what. You’re about to get on my nerves. Okay, I gotta go pull my show.’ They still had engineers in those days. ‘Now, you sit there with Martha Jean [Steinberg], and you just sit there til I finish.’ He goes in the back and he sits me with Martha Jean. And she was so gorgeous. She was just so beautiful. And she said, ‘Hey, you’re Rufus’ little girl.’

“I’m thinking ‘Oh God, I’m at WDIA!'” But something appeared to be wrong, the show’s producer was in a mild panic. After the main chorus sang, they were to broadcast the Teen Town Talent Time, where other high schoolers could join the chorus, often winning prizes. They were short one singer. Someone said, “Can you sing, little girl?”

“She didn’t know me from a hole in the ground,” says Carla, still excited at the memory. “And I said, ‘No, ma’am, I can’t sing,’ because my daddy had already told me I couldn’t sing. And then I thought, ‘Oh my God, the Teen Towners are still in there!’ And I said, ‘Mm-hmm, I sing!’ I didn’t know I could sing a note. I just knew I wanted to tell daddy I could actually sing with the Teen Towners. Anyway, I went in, and they had a little riser she found and stood me on it. And they had the little mic come down right in front of me. That’s how I won, because it picked up my voice. People called and said, ‘Who is that little girl? We wanna vote for her.’ I kid you not!”

Her talents thus revealed, rules were bent and Carla was allowed to join the regular Teen Town chorus. “Every Wednesday, every Friday, every Saturday. I never missed one rehearsal. From 11 years old to 17,” she remembers.

Courtesy of Stax Museum of American Soul Music

Carla Thomas

“And that was the case for all of them,” recalls Vaneese, who later won the talent contest herself but never joined as a regular member. “Which is why so many of them became professional singers. Percy Wiggins. He was one. His brother Spencer. Tyrone Smith. Ed Townsend.” And perhaps the most renowned Teen Towner of them all, Isaac Hayes.

As the Teen Towners made their appearances, Rufus began cutting records that were released on Chess, Meteor, and other labels, including Sun Records’ first hit, “Bear Cat.” Even then, he continued to deejay at WDIA, working days at a textile mill to make ends meet. Meanwhile, the other Thomas kids began their forays into music as well.

Marvell began studying music at LeMoyne College. His professor was known as “Doc Whitaker” — it wasn’t until later that the Thomas kids learned of his importance to American music history, having served as part of James Reese Europe’s military band during World War I, widely recognized for having pioneered orchestral jazz both at home and abroad.

Vaneese also learned from her brother’s music professor. “I took lessons there for 10 years,” she says. “He was a very, very cultured man. A very brilliant guy. A classical pianist. He spoke in French to me, and I wound up majoring in French in college as a result. I just love the language.”

Whitaker clearly made an impression on Marvell as well, as marked by the trajectory he traced in the music industry before, during, and after Stax. “Marvell — he carved a niche for himself in Memphis, in the early days of traveling bands, and by working with different arrangers and band leaders,” says Vaneese. This was apparent when Rufus showed up unannounced at the fledgling Satellite Records’ studio in 1960, proposing to cut a record. When Rufus and Carla sang what would become Satellite’s first hit, it featured Marvell on piano and a young multi-instrumentalist on baritone sax by the name of Booker T. Jones. Both would figure heavily in crafting the Satellite/Stax sound.

Vaneese Thomas

Carla, for her part, had gained enough confidence from her Teen Towner work to begin writing songs, which Rufus diligently captured on a home recorder. His tape of “Gee Whiz,” a song Carla had written at the age of 15 or 16, earned her her own session at Satellite and proved to be an even bigger hit than their previous duet. It remains a career-defining song for her to this day. She laughs at the song’s longevity, and the many ways she’s performed it. “I used to play with this little combo, we would go all over Tennessee. It was a jazz combo, and there they were playing ‘Gee Whiz,'” she chuckles.

The Stax tale is ultimately a tragic one, ending with the label’s bankruptcy in 1976. For Carla, moreso than most Stax artists, it proved to be the de facto end of her recording career, but not of her performances. Ironically, one of her fondest memories was the time she was called on to fill in for a Motown artist. When Tammi Terrell, partner in many hit duets with Marvin Gaye, was forced to quit performing due to a brain tumor, Carla somewhat reluctantly agreed to fill her shoes when Gaye played the Apollo Theater. For the confirmed fan of the duo, it was a watershed moment and foreshadowed a future career based more on performance than recording.

After the Stax collapse, Carla performed tirelessly in television appearances and concerts throughout the world. As Vaneese reflects, “It’s so precious that it doesn’t matter, the time frame since you had your last record. It’s timeless, classic stuff.” For her part, Carla seems content with her track record, noting, “Isn’t it amazing how people make you realize how important Stax was — more important to them sometimes than Stax was to itself.”

As the 1970s wore on, the time was ripe for the third Thomas sibling to step up to bat. But Vaneese was determined to explore music on her own terms, without relying on the Thomas family legend. “The Thomas legend, yes,” she muses. “And you know it took a long time for me to want to embrace it. And when I did, it was okay then. And it was because I had worked very hard on my own, and by then I appreciated the legacy.”

The story of her career begins with leaving Memphis. “I went to Swarthmore, outside of Philadelphia,” she recalls. “And I really didn’t know for sure what I was going to do. I was avoiding music, sort of. Every time it would chase me I would turn. But eventually I started doing it. I sang in recording studios in Philadelphia. Me and a friend were the B singers of the Sweethearts of Soul. I don’t know if you know the Sigma Sweethearts, but they sang on all the Spinners records and all those people like that. We didn’t get that high on the ladder; we sang on the lesser lights. But it didn’t matter, we were getting great studio experience.”

A brief time courting success as half of a duet led to some minor record deals, but it wasn’t until she tried her hand as a solo act that she broke out. “My first solo record was on Geffen Records. And I had a top 10 R&B record, called ‘Let’s Talk It Over.’ I’ve been doing this a long time,” she laughs. That first hit was in 1987, followed by another, “(I Wanna Get) Close to You.” Subsequent records failed to chart as well, but “then I moved to New York and did a lot of commercials.”

That last comment underplays Vaneese’s varied career since her Geffen days. Her work can be heard on countless voice-overs and as a background singer for the likes of Aretha Franklin. And with her ongoing work as a singer, writer, and producer, even as she remains planted in New York, she has launched a new phase of her career — exploring the rootsier sounds of her hometown.

“When I put out Blues for My Father in 2014, that was my first foray into the blues. So I did that really in honor of Daddy, obviously. And because people don’t know that he sang blues all through his career, from the beginning to the end. So I wanted to dab my toe in that, and I’ve grown to love it. And I want to sing more earthy stuff.” Last year’s The Long Journey Home continues in that vein, and she shows no sign of letting up.

Meanwhile, all records aside, there is the call of the stage. In recent years, it has brought the two sisters closer together. Aside from one or two performances in the 1970s featuring Rufus and all three siblings, Carla and Vaneese had not performed together until recently. It began with an appearance at the Montreux Jazz Festival in 2002, and it seems to be accelerating. “Carla and I did one in the Canary Islands this summer,” notes Vaneese, and that was fast on the heels of performing at the famed Poretta Soul Festival in Italy. This fall, they were scheduled to sing at the Ponderosa Stomp Festival, but Hurricane Nate nixed that. Nonetheless, they show no signs of slowing. As we sit in the Four Way Grill sipping our tea, they’ve come to terms with each other, with the neighborhood that nurtured them, and where fate may yet take them — together.

Categories
Politics Politics Feature

Good Tidings for Strickland

In keeping with the season, Steven Reid, the consultant who has helped guide two local political campaigns to victory in recent years — those of 8th District Congressman David Kustoff and Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland — has sent out some would-be Christmas cheer to supporters of the latter.

In a one-sheet document forwarded to the current mayor’s supporters, Reid says, “Over the past few months, I have seen some exciting poll numbers. It is a standard poll technique to test several well-known local and national figures (even names that might not be on an upcoming ballot) to gauge voter attitudes and opinions. I am fortunate to have been able to review several recent polls that included Mayor Strickland.”

Reid, who began his consulting career in 1992 by overseeing the upset victory of Blanche Lambert (later Blanche Lambert Lincoln) over her former employer, then U.S. Representative Bill Alexander, in Arkansas’ First Congressional District, quotes a finding from Otis Sanford’s book, Boss Crump to King Willie: “Strickland … made history by receiving more of a percentage of the black vote than any winning white candidate since William B. Ingram in 1963.”

Then, citing what he says is “an average based on some notable numbers,” Reid makes the following claims: 

• “The mood of Memphis voters has improved dramatically since 2015. (38-47 from 31-58);

• Mayor Strickland is popular with 60 percent favorable — 19 percent unfavorable with a positive rating that cuts across every subgroup in the polls including white (68-13) and African American (58-18).

• It’s interesting to compare those numbers to mayors in peer cities: New Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu — 57/36; New York Mayor Bill de Blasio — 50/42; Cincinnati Mayor John Cranley — 48/31.”

Reid concludes his missive with this sentiment: “If you think the last campaign was something, take a minute and think of what we can accomplish now. I can’t wait to celebrate in October 2019.”

With that next mayoral election nearly two years off, it is still a bit early to predict possible opponents for Strickland, but it seems almost certain, especially if the city’s fluctuating crime situation starts to fester or if the legal standoff over Confederate memorials is not resolved, that there will be one or two serious challengers willing to test Reid’s optimism. Watch this space.
• The biggest ballots in Shelby County, size-wise, occur in eight-year intervals, when the numerous elected judgeships come up for election. That won’t happen again until 2020, but next year’s August ballot will feature three judicial races — all special elections. 

Two of them are Circuit Court positions, with Judge Mary Wagner in Division 7 and Judge David Rudolph in Division 9, both appointed to fill vacancies during the last year, having to run for the right to serve out terms that will be contested again in 2020. A third race will determine who will serve in the Criminal Court, Division 10, now held by Judge James Beasley, who intends to retire at the end of this year. 

Both Wagner and Rudolph have been visibly campaigning to maintain their judgeships, and Rudoph also has an opponent busily making the political rounds: Yolanda Kight, a judicial commissioner who has run previously for Shelby County Clerk.

While the judicial positions are nonpartisan, these three races may, appropriately or not, be affected by the predominant partisan flavor of next year’s voting, with their outcomes determined by turnout factors having to do with the contested nature of Democratic and Republican primaries for other positions. More about that anon.

Jackson Baker

Candidates in next year’s elections are making the rounds of holiday gatherings. Here Lee Harris, candidate for County Mayor, pitches Mary and Myron Lowery at the annual party of the Shelby County Democratic women.