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Hungry Memphis

Front St. Deli Slated to Reopen by November

The Tandem Restaurant Partners — Tony and Stephanie Westmoreland in collaboration with Ryan Marsh — are the new owners of Front St. Deli, the iconic restaurant at 77 South Front and Union.

 The eatery, which was featured in the 1993 film, The Firm, is slated to re-open by November.  “Hopefully, in three months we’ll get her back open if not sooner,” Westmoreland says.

Tandem Restaurant Partners operates several Memphis restaurants, including Carolina Watershed, Side Car Cafe, and Ben Yay’s. “You’ll see us partnering with other restaurateurs to open up new concepts.”

Marsh, Westmoreland adds, will be involved with “what we do as a whole and getting this [Front St. Deli] up and going for us.”

Marsh, 31, the newest member of Tandem Partners, moved from Pennsylvania to Memphis when he was 14. He previously was operations manager for MOXY Memphis Downtown hotel across from Court Square.

Why did he want to get involved with Front St. Deli? “It’s the oldest deli in Memphis — over 45 years old,” he says.

And, he adds, “I’m a big fan of Memphis, a big believer in Downtown and the history we have down here.”

It’s important for him to help bring the Front St. Deli project to life and “bring it back to its former glories.”

Tom Cruise plays Harvard educated tax lawyer Mitch McDeere in the movie, which was filmed  in Memphis. All  the sandwiches were named after Cruise movies.

Those sandwiches will remain, Marsh says. “Tony and I put our heads together,” Marsh says. “Number one, I want to keep the Deli as close to what it was before. And Tony had a great idea to include some hot food, too. And we want to start bringing in gourmet hot dogs.”

Marsh also has a side goal: “I would like to bring authentic Philly cheesesteaks as well, But that’s still in limbo.”

And maybe open later using “third party delivery service like Uber for sandwiches and hot dogs for the Downtown community,” 

And, Westmoreland says, “We have all the recipes. All the intellectual property came with the business.”

They will be “tweaking the menu, perfecting it, and making sure what we’re doing makes sense,” Marsh says. “The way the menu was structured before, it was all over the place. We want to simplify everything and eventually turn it over to where we’ll have a few cooks and I’ll be heading the day-to-day.”

Look for more room at Front St. Deli. “We’ll be going through negotiations over the next two and a half months to do an update,” Westmoreland says. “Not only update the building itself, but the outside facade.”

They’re working with the building owner to add two garage doors in front.  “So, you can open up Front St. Deli  to the public on the street side and enjoy Front Street not just from the inside, but outside as well,” Westmoreland says. “We’ll be reorganizing the inside to facilitate more people so you’ll have more seating. The goal is to have 10 to 15 people fit inside as well as outside.”

They want to “keep it as authentic as possible. Not change much. Keep the history of it. Keep it as close to the original as possible with just size changes and some rearrangement to get the capacity as full as we can.”

Front St. Deli “falls in tandem” with some of the other properties they have partnered with, including Hernando’s Hide-a-way, “one of the oldest music venues,” and Growlers, “being one of the nostalgic music venues in Memphis,” Westmoreland says. “Trying to preserve that nostalgia. And I think Front St. Deli is the same motive. Trying to keep Memphis the Memphis we remember growing up.”

Front St. Deli (Credit: Eric Bourgeois)
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News Blog News Feature

FEMA Safe Space Gym Will Protect in Tornadoes

Ground broke last week on a nearly $5 million school gym that will also serve as a safe place during tornadoes. 

The new gym at Belle Forest Elementary School in southeast Memphis will also serve as a safe room certified by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). The school will get the 11,000-square-foot, $5 million facility thanks, in part, to a $1.8 million FEMA grant announced for Shelby County Schools in December.  

Construction on the tornado-safe room began last week and is expected to be complete next year, according to Schevonda Hunt, the former guidance counselor who spearheaded the Safe Space project for the school.

The gym will be the first of its kind in West Tennessee, Hunt said. While it will serve as a gym for the school, it will be open to community members in emergencies.    

Categories
Film Features Film/TV

Indie Memphis Announces Plans for 2021 Festival

After a pandemic year-plus of uncertainty that saw major changes in the film festival world, Indie Memphis will return to Overton Square for its 2021 edition, which will take place October 20th to 25th. After last year’s COVID hiatus, the outdoor block party will return, which takes place in a giant tent on Cooper Street between Union and Madison, hosting in-person events and musical performances.

The annual festival, which dates back to 1998, will kick off with the fourth installment of the Black Creator’s Forum. The program, which is free with required pre-registration, will consist of two days of online seminars and programs October 16th and 17th, and an in-person gathering on October 22nd. The main festival will begin with a premiere event on Wednesday, October 20th. In addition to in-person screenings at Overton Square venues, Indie Memphis films will also be returning to the Malco Summer Drive-In, which was employed in 2020 as a social distancing measure and ended up being popular with members. Also returning will be virtual screenings of Indie Memphis offerings through the Memphis-based Eventive cinema services platform.

Festival passes are now available at the early bird price of $85, which includes ten in-person film tickets and access to special events, both IRL and virtual. The early bird pricing will expire on August 23, when pass prices will rise to $100. VIP passes will include virtual screen tickets and other perks. For those whose health status or travel situations preclude in person attendance, full virtual passes will be available for $25. In-person screenings will be sold at limited capacity to allow for social distancing, and masks will be required for all screenings.

The first round of films will be announced at the preview party, which will take place in September.

Categories
Film Features Film/TV

Music Video Monday: “Some 1 2 Love” by Robert Allen Parker

Music Video Monday just wants to love you.

Robert Allen Parker’s new album The River’s Invitation has already spawned one great music video, for his psychedelicized cover of the Chubby Checker deep cut “My Mind Comes From A High Place.” Director Kim Bledsoe Lloyd says the second clip “Some 1 2 Love,” which she directed, is not a cover. “The song is stellar — one of Rob’s original classics. I hope the video does it justice.”

Yubu Kazungu and Candice Ivory provide the vocals for this heartfelt rocker, and the video features appearances by keyboardist Kennard Farmer and drummer Donnon Johnson. Lloyd says the video was “shot both at Easley-Faust studio and on the streets of Memphis during COVID shutdown. It was super eerie, plus one of the windiest nights. We couldn’t have asked for a better vibe.”

Take a look, then head over to Bandcamp for your copy of the record.

If you would like to see your music video featured on Music Video Monday, email cmccoy@memphisflyer.com.

Categories
News Blog News Feature

Council Wants Halt on TVA Coal Ash Plan

Memphis City Council members want a permanent halt to Tennessee Valley Authority’s (TVA) plan to dump coal ash here. 

Council members will review a resolution Tuesday that would stop TVA from dumping toxic coal ash from the now-retired Allen Fossil Plant on Presidents Island to two landfill sites — one in Whitehaven and the other in Tunica County, Mississippi. 

Both sites, according to the resolution, “are located within the Mississippi Embayment area as well as the New Madrid seismic impact zone.” Both of these factors increase the possibility for the pollution of the Memphis Sand Aquifer, the resolution says. 

“… in light of the many possible events that may occur, whether failure of manmade structures, or catastrophic natural events, the threat to the Memphis Sand Aquifer and this city’s drinking water is too grave for [coal ash] to be moved to a landfill in the city of Memphis, Shelby County, or any location within the Mississippi Embayment,” reads the resolution. 

The resolution “strongly opposes” the coal ash move. It says if TVA goes through with the plan “without approval of this body” that it conduct and publish another study (called a location restriction demonstrations review) before it does. 

TVA paused the plan to bury coal ash here last month, according to a story in The Commercial Appeal. The newspaper described confusion and consternation by council members at the time as TVA announced it would begin its coal ash dumping plan. 

TVA identified the plan to remove the toxic coal ash from the Allen plant in March 2020. 

In 2017, TVA found high levels of arsenic and other toxins in ground water close to ponds storing the coal ash. Arsenic levels were more than 300 times higher than federal drinking water standards. The discovery kicked off a years-long, sometimes-contentious series of events that TVA officials hope will end in 10 years. That’s how long they say it will take to finally remove the ash now sitting on nearly 120 acres.

The 500-acre site is about five miles southwest of Downtown Memphis, on the Southern bank of McKellar Lake. The plant had three units producing a max of 741 megawatts of power, enough to power 500,000 homes, according to a figure from Duke Energy.

While in use, the plant consumed 7,200 tons of coal per day. After it was burned to make electricity, that coal left behind about 85,000 tons of ash every year. TVA funneled that ash into two huge ponds — the East Ash Pond and West Ash Pond — on the site. It closed the massive East Pond in 2018.

But the Allen coal plant was replaced with the Allen Combined Cycle Natural Gas Plant, which went into operation May 2018. TVA wants to raze the old coal plant and return the land to its three owners — the city of Memphis, Shelby County, and Memphis Light, Gas & Water — for future development. Before it can do that, however, it has to deal with the ash.

Categories
From My Seat Sports

Q&A: Harris English

Harris English will be a familiar face when fans return to TPC Southwind this week for the World Golf Championships — FedEx St. Jude Invitational. The 32-year-old PGA veteran has risen to 14th in the World Golf Rankings and finished third in this year’s U.S. Open. His very first Tour win came in Memphis (in 2013).

Memphis Flyer: Welcome back. What do you recall about your first visit to TPC Southwind eight years ago? 

Harris English: A lot of good memories there. I rented a house off the first tee with some good friends. We had a fun week. One of my best friends from high school in Chattanooga was in med school there. It felt like I had a big crowd cheering me on. Closing it out with a birdie on 17 and a solid par on 18 will always make special memories. You never want to have a tournament given to you, and I felt like I had to earn it. It makes you believe in yourself, and it couldn’t have happened at a better place than Memphis.

You have found a groove in 2021, doubling your career victories (now four). What’s been the difference in your game?

I’ve found more consistency. I don’t like missing putts. My putting and short game have always been the backbone of my game. And tee to green, I’ve gotten better, given myself more chances to win golf tournaments.

You finished third in the U.S. Open (at Torrey Pines in San Diego), the closest you’ve come to winning your first major. What was that final round like, knowing you were in the mix for that trophy?

That’s why you put all the hours in, both in the gym and on the course. I love how the U.S. Open is set up. You have to play smart and be good, all-around, and disciplined. It’s nice to showcase that. I really enjoyed it. I’m getting closer and closer.

Memphis is getting used to World Golf Championships status (third year for the FedEx St. Jude Invitational). Could you share some perspective on the significance of the WGC events?

I’m really happy for Memphis. FedEx has been the biggest sponsor on the PGA Tour for years. It’s great that they have a tournament where they’re guaranteed many of the biggest names in the sport, right in their backyard. [The WGC status] has given me even more of spark to get back there. I love the people that run the tournament. It made it even sweeter. You have to earn your spot there. It’s not easy to make the field.

Crowds are back. They’ll be cheering a familiar face when you arrive. Did the lack of fans in 2020 impact your game at all?

You get used to crowds lining the fairway, and lining the greens. You feel their energy, especially on Saturday and Sunday. It was weird [without fans]. Almost like you’re playing a practice round. You had to really psyche yourself up, have your caddy pump you up. A lot of people struggled with it. I don’t usually have a ton of people following me, not like Tiger [Woods]. It had to be really weird for him. We love having fans on the course.

When you plan a round at Southwind, are there certain holes you give extra focus?

Southwind is sneaky. Holes can seem pretty benign, but they can get you. It’s one of the more underrated courses we play. Number three can be an eagle hole, or it can be a bogey hole if you don’t put the ball in the fairway. Same for number nine. Fifteen, that short par four. You’ve got to put the ball in the fairway.

The PGA Tour is entering what amounts to a post-Tiger era. Do you feel like the sport is in good hands with new headliners, including yourself?

There are so many good young golfers. It shows where college programs have been the last twenty years. Players are ready for action on the PGA Tour. They have experience and they’re not scared. They can play under pressure. In our sport, you can have a 22-year-old win a tournament or a 52-year-old win a tournament. It’s unique to our sport. The game’s in great hands. Like everyone else, I want Tiger to come back healthy and win more tournaments. But we have some other big names playing well, and carrying what Tiger and Phil Mickelson are leaving behind.

The tournament remains deeply connected to St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital. Any thoughts on this relationship?

It’s incredible. It puts things in perspective. Here I am, playing golf, doing what I love to do. And a few miles away, there are kids struggling with something they didn’t deserve. As much money as we can raise, it’s amazing. I donate to St. Jude every year. It’s one of the charities I hold dear to my heart. I love helping kids get healthy, so they can grow up and be whatever they want to be. It’s cool how the Tour gets behind the cause.