The Happy Wanderer: Grass Valley/Nevada City

HILLS NEWSPAPERS  July 1, 2009

I’M NOT WEALTHY, by any means. But a trip with three girlfriends recently to retrieve the family jewels proved to be a rich experience.

It had been several years since my dear friend, Jillian, lost her mom. At the time, it was too difficult to look through her treasures, so they remained — undisturbed — in a safety deposit box in Grass Valley. Continue reading

Home town Fourth of July

MONTCLARION NEWSPAPER – July 3, 2009

THIS WEEKEND WE PAY homage to Old Glory. We gorge ourselves with burgers and dogs, chips and dips and red, white and blue desserts.

But America’s birthday, for many, means small town parades and band-shell concerts.

Here are some of my local favorites: Continue reading

Town Crier: Montclair’s not-so-picturesque car-lined streets

MONTCLARION NEWSPAPER – June 19, 2009

MY FOLKS LIVE IN MINNESOTA, on a picturesque tree-lined street between two lakes and a pond. Pretty much everyone lives between two lakes and a pond in Minnesota, but that’s not the reason for my rumination.

It’s my observation that my parents are missing out on something we enjoy here in the hills — navigating the barely passable streets of Montclair. Continue reading

The Happy Wanderer: Oakland’s horse history

HILLS NEWSPAPERS  June 19, 2009

A LONG TIME AGO, in a village not far away, the horseman ruled the land. Barns dotted the hillside and paints and Appaloosas grazed in pastures above the sparkling waters of the Bay.

This was the Oakland hills, circa 1938, when rodeo cowboys ran the ranches and the Mills College girls rode their steeds through the canyon and up the hill, past what’s now Merritt College, to Joaquin Miller Park. Continue reading

Hyperkinetic Preservationist: Phil Tagami

OAKLAND MAGAZINE MAY/JUNE 2009

George Bernard Shaw once wrote about the virtues of being “thoroughly Phil Tagamiworn out before you are thrown on the scrap heap.” Phil Tagami, the developer of the Fox Theater and the Rotunda Building, not only posts these words on his Web site, he lives them. In an animated interview in which we never sat down, Tagami wasted no time revealing what drives him.

What is your favorite piece of the Fox Theater renovation?

All the things that still aren’t done. Until it’s completed, until the endowment is fully raised—until everything on our checklist is handled and the building is really dialed in and we really have a good understanding of how to best provide an event space that meets  today’s standards, respects the preservation of the historic fabric and is also economically sustainable so the city doesn’t have to have any fear of supporting it, the job’s not done. Continue reading

Town Crier: Enjoy Oakland’s best artists at Open Studios

MONTCLARION NEWSPAPER – June 5, 2009

IT’S TIME once again for one of Oakland’s best parties, East Bay Open Studios. I’m reminded of a famous quote about art, which seems fitting: “There is no art without intoxication. Art is the most enrapturing orgy within man’s reach.”

That being said, we could all use a little giddy intoxication these days, couldn’t we? So why not take the party bus between studios this year? Continue reading

HAPPY WANDERER: Minneapolis is Midwest mecca for live theatre

CONTRACOSTATIMES.COM  May 29, 2009

FOIE GRAS AT A five-star restaurant: $27. Poolside umbrella drinks: $24.50. Lutefisk in a live theater presentation: priceless.

In a list of the world’s great stage cities, Minneapolis is one of my favorites. Maybe it’s the weather that spurs such a hearty helping of creativity. There are literally hundreds of live productions in the Twin Cities and surroundings (it’s the third largest theater market in the United States), and the offerings are eclectic, if not downright outrageous. Continue reading