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Arts & Entertainment 7-9-14
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REAL ESTATEIN THE NEWS B-1 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT July 9, 2014THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman
July 9, 2014Arts & EntErtAinmEnt
"Legs"Bonnie Englebardt Lautenberg
AT ARTHAmpTonS pAgE B-5
The IndependenT
CALL FOR A FREE ESTIMATE OR STOP BY OUR DESIGN CENTER AT1668 SAG HARBOR TURNPIKE
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Independent / Courtesy Jean Albano Gallery
REAL ESTATE IN THE NEWSJuly 9, 2014 THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler WatchmanB-2 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
HONORING BETSEY JOHNSON & PAUL RIDLEY
SAVE THE DATE JULY 26, 2014, 6:30 - 9:30PMAt the home of
Maria & Kenneth FishelBridgehampton, New York
Music By
To Benefi tSAMUEL WAXMAN CANCER RESEARCH FOUNDATION
Tickets & Information
www.waxmancancer.org
Bridget Stein 212 867 4502 [email protected] Coordinator
Linda B. Shapiro LBS Productions 631 725 2023 [email protected]
Betsey Johnson Fashion Designer
Paul Ridley Co-founder of Row for Hope
Music by
To Benefit
ThE SAmuEl wAxmAn cAncEr rESEArch FoundATionTickets & Information
Bridget Stein x 212 867 4502 x [email protected]
Event Coordinatorlinda B. Shapiro x lBS productions x 631 329 5480 x [email protected]
www.waxmancancer.org
At the home ofmAriA & KEnnETh FiShEl Bridgehampton, New York
SAvE ThE dATE x July 27, 2013, 6:30 - 9:30pmHonoring Ruth Finley & Todd English
Samuel Waxman Cancer Research Foundation420 Lexington Avenue, Suite 825New York, NY 10170FEAST!
Todd EngliSh (And FriEndS)
A “hAmpTonS hAppEning”
Event MCChris Wragge, WCBS TV Channel 2 Anchorman
Journal Chairperson
Erica FinebergEvent Founding Co-Chairpersons
Laurie Schaffran and Marion Waxman
2014 Event Co-Chairpersons
Jennifer Keil and Jill & Bobby Zarin
“A HAMPTONS HAPPENING” FEAST!
CHEF DAVID BURKE (AND FRIENDS)
SAVE THE DATE JULY 26, 2014
10 Year Anniversary!
SAMUEL WAXMAN CANCER RESEARCH FOUNDATION
Raffl e Chair
Jennifer Myles
INCLUDESHAMPTONS HAPPENING
MILLENNIAL AFTER PARTY AT
REAL ESTATEIN THE NEWS B-3 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT July 9, 2014THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman
SAVE THE DATE
southampton animal shelter foundation
Unconditional Love5th Annual Dinner Dance
Honoring georgina BloomBerg
southampton animal shelter foundation
July 19, 2014
Upon purchase of tickets you will be notified of secret location
by Special Agents
Info: BarBara rIegger [email protected]
631.728.PeTs; exT. 240www.southamptonanimalshelter.com
REAL ESTATE IN THE NEWSJuly 9, 2014 THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler WatchmanB-4 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
HAMPTON DAZEBy Jessica Mackin
Hampton DazeBy Jessica Mackin
www.hamptondaze.com
Milly Pool Party
Michelle Smith, founder and designer of Milly hosted a poolside party with Chelsea Leyland at Topping Rose House on Saturday evening.
Hampton Daze Magazine hosted a party at Finale in East Hampton on Thursday night with music by DJ Adam Lipson, DJ Biggie and DJ Julian Cavin.
Finale East Hampton
REAL ESTATEIN THE NEWS B-5 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT July 9, 2014THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman
200 PANTIGO PLACE, SUITE K EAST HAMPTON, NY11937
Now Located in the EAST HAMPTON HEALTHCARE CENTER
PARK PLACE CHEMIST
631 324.6660HOURS:Mon - Fri 8:30 AM - 6 PMSat 9 AM - 1 PM
By Miles X. Logan
From Lady Gaga to former First Lady Hillary Clinton, Bonnie Englebardt Lautenberg has had the opportunity to photograph history.
Jules Feiffer, an internationally acclaimed cartoonist, playwright, screenwri ter and author, has influenced generations with his satirical outlook and probing wit.
Both artists are Hamptons icons, and both are among the featured talent at the annual ArtHamptons show, which begins Friday and runs through Sunday (there is a VIP-only opening party at Guild Hall Thursday evening).
The event, at the Sculpture Fields of Nova’s Ark on 60 Millstone Road in Bridgehampton, will feature hundreds of the most influential artists in the country.
The Jean Albano Gallery, a Chicago-based contemporary art gallery specializing in painting, sculpture and mixed media, represents both artists.
Lautenberg, who has adopted the
Hamptons as her second home, is an esteemed photographer, writer, philanthropist, and businesswoman. She has successfully sold and exhibited her photography for a number of years and has received critical praise, beginning with her first solo show in 2005. As the wife of the late Senator Frank Lautenberg, she had the opportunity t o pho tograph h i s to r y and entertainment as it was unfolding. She is known for portraits of political figures, including a photograph of Barack Obama which has hung in the Oval Office, as well as portraits of 113 U.S. Senators.
“Bonnie’s photographs speak vo lumes about our cur ren t society. They are both beautiful and interesting. With her talent, connections, and tremendous contributions, she is the consummate Hamptons artist,” Albano said.
Feiffer’s syndicated cartoon strip ran for 40 years in The Village Voice and earned him a Pulitzer
Prize. He has written more than 35 books, plays, and film scripts. Feiffer has received numerous awards and honors including an Academy Award for his short animated film Munro. Among his most recent books are his memoir, Backing into Forward, and the children’s book My Side of the Car with Kate Feiffer. The Phantom Tollbooth, for which he did the illustrations, is celebrating 50 years in publication. He lives and works in East Hampton. Now
entering its seventh successful year, ArtHamptons 2014 has proven to be a popular destination for Hamptonites to buy art. As the first major art event of the summer season, it is eagerly awaited by devotees. In 2013, 14,000 visitors poured through the aisles, setting a new attendance record. Tickets can be purchased online at arthamptons.com and PayPal is accepted. The Jean Albano Gallery can be reached at 312-440-0770.
Local Favorites Highlight ArtHamptons Event
Independent / Courtesy The Jean Albano Gallery
From top left clockwise: Bonnie Englebardt Lautenberg, Jules Feiffer, Lady Gaga by Lautenberg and three illustration by Feiffer: Blue Tango, Fred Astaire, and Phantom Tollbooth.
REAL ESTATE IN THE NEWSJuly 9, 2014 THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler WatchmanB-6 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
INDY SNAPSINDY SNAPS
The Nature Conservancy’s “Nature Inspires!” Beaches & Bays Gala took place on June 28, honoring renowned landscape artist Bobbie Braun and The Neuwirth Foundation, and celebrating 20 years of support by The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts.
Among the many points of inspiration at the annual gala was a special en plein air art show curated by Silas Marder.
The premiere of “My Favorite Island” featuring Jimmy Buffett, dancing to superstar Nashville band “The Super T Revue,” and a locally-inspired dinner by Glorious Food were all part of the fun on the grounds of The Nature Conservancy’s Center for Conservation in East Hampton.
Independent / Rob Rich
Beaches & Bays Gala
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REAL ESTATEIN THE NEWS B-7 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT July 9, 2014THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman
SOLDIER RIDETHE HAMPTONSJULY 19, 2014
FOUNDING PARTNER
©2014 Wounded Warrior Project, Inc. All rights reserved.
Soldier Ride The HamptonsSaturday, July 19, 2014Ocean View Farm30-mile cycling route (rain or shine)Registration Fee: $60
Amagansett 5K Walk: $25 – Ocean View FarmSag Harbor 5K Walk: $25 – Marine Park
Soldier Ride is a Wounded Warrior Project® (WWP)
initiative that provides adaptive cycling opportunities
across the country to help wounded service members
restore their physical and emotional well-being.
#SoldierRideNY
FOR MORE INFORMATIONSOLDIERRIDE.ORG/THE HAMPTONS
Come out and ride or cheer on these brave men and women as they cycle through your community!
LET THEM FEEL OUR GRATITUDE.
*Please note: There is a $75 fundraising requirement for riders. All funds benefit Wounded Warrior Project®
In honor of LCpl Jordan C. Haerter
WWP 143(8.75x11.25).indd 1 6/18/14 2:49 PM
REAL ESTATE IN THE NEWSJuly 9, 2014 THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler WatchmanB-8 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
INDY SNAPSINDY SNAPS
For the first time ever a sold out crowd of 750 enjoyed dinner on June 28 as the American Heart Association celebrated their 18th Annual Hamptons Heart Ball at the Hayground School in Bridgehampton.
This year, the Heart Ball honored Dr. Leonard Girardi, Professor of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Attending Cardiothoracic Surgeon, New York Presbyterian-Weill Cornell Medical Center with the Distinguished Service Award. The Distinguished Leadership award was presented to Samuel L. Stanley Jr., MD, President, Stony Brook University. This year’s event co-chairs were Dr. Karl and Krista Krieger and Rita Cosby, Emmy-Winning TV and radio host served as master of ceremonies. The evening got started with Open Your Heart Chair, Paola Bacchini Rosenshein welcoming the crowd.
Artists Against Abuse, the region’s largest annual fundraising event aimed at ending violence against women, was held on the evening of Saturday, June 21, at the Ross School Lower Campus Field House in Bridgehampton.
Independent / Courtesy Heart Ball, Artists Against Abuse
Heart Ball
Artists Against Abuse
REAL ESTATEIN THE NEWS B-9 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT July 9, 2014THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman
EVENT CHAIRS
SATURDAY, JULY 19, 2014, 6:30PM - 9:30PMSouth Fork Natural History Museum (SoFo)
377 Bridgehampton Sag Harbor TurnpikeBridgehampton, New York
Music By
To Benefi tSouth Fork Natural History Museum (SoFo)
Tickets & Information
WWW.SOFO.ORG
631.537.9735 • WWW.SOFO.ORGEvent Coordinator
Linda B. Shapiro • LBS Productions • 631.725.2023 • [email protected]
Gina Bradley Paddle Diva
Susan RockefellerEnvironmentalist
HONOREES
Eric GoodeConservationist
Peter Matthiessen (posthumously)Author/Naturalist
Michael GerrardEnvironmentalist
Drinks • Sumptuous Food By Peter Ambrose CateringAuction By Grandstand
April GornikArtist
Linda B. Shapiro • LBS Productions • 631.725.2023 • [email protected] By
REAL ESTATE IN THE NEWSJuly 9, 2014 THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler WatchmanB-10 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
INDY SNAPSINDY SNAPS
Stadiumred Pool Party
The Stadiumred Estate hosted a “White & Blue” party on Saturday. The event featured music by Rick Wonder and BBQ from Bravo’s “Top Chef” Cynthia Sestito.
Independent/Jessica Mackin, Tom Fitzgerald and Pam Deutchman / http://www.society-in-focus.com
The Southampton Fresh Air Home celebrated the Fourth of July with its 27th Annual American Picnic with Fireworks By Grucci on Sunday.
Fresh Air Home
REAL ESTATEIN THE NEWS B-11 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT July 9, 2014THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman
FORDE’S CARTING CO.
SINCE 1979
(631) 324-8924Self Load Dumpster Service
Household CleanoutsAttic • Basement
Garage • Cleanups
The Peconic Land Trust conserves Long Island’s working farms, natural lands, and heritage for our communities now and in the future.
Since 1983, the Trust has worked with landowners, communities, partner
organizations, and local government to protect over 11,000 acres, including more
than 6,000 acres of farmland, miles of hiking trails, and over 4,000 acres of preserves
and natural lands that protect watersheds, ocean fronts, wildlife habitats, and scenic vistas.
The Peconic Land Trust, a non-profit charitable organization, raises funds for its
conservation efforts primarily through donations from the public. The Trust does NOT
collect or distribute the CPF 2% real estate transfer tax.
To learn more about the Peconic Land Trust, please call us at 631.283.3195 or visit our website at www.PeconicLandTrust.org.
296 Hampton Road | PO Box 1776Southampton, NY 11969
By Rick Murphy
“What a long strange trip it’s been.”
Robert Hunter is about the only person in the world who can say that without it sounding like a cliché, because he wrote it. Besides, it really has been a long, strange trip for the poet and lyricist for the Grateful Dead.
Hunter was a poet in Northern California who gravitated toward the bluegrass music scene, learning the guitar, stand up bass, and mandolin, making the acquaintance of Jerry Garcia in the process.
Hunter was a volunteer subject in Stanford University’s psychedelic research program in 1962, which was partially sponsored by the CIA. He ingested LSD, psilocybin, and mescaline. The writing process intensified accordingly.
“The words j umped f rom subconscious to the page,” he remembered . Hun te r began strumming guitar to the words because “It was better than the clicking of the typewriter keys.” He mailed off an early effort to Garcia, who was playing with his newly-formed band, the Grateful Dead.
The next thing Hunter knew, the pair had their first Garcia-Hunter collaboration:
“Look for awhile at the China Cat Sunflower
proud-walking jingle in the midnight sun
Copper-dome Bodhi drip a silver kimono
like a crazy-quilt star gown
Suffolk Theater Gig
Robert Hunter, Rock’s Hall Of Fame Poet
Independent / Courtesy Robert Hunter
through a dream night wind.”“China Cat” didn’t just become a
staple of the Dead’s live shows – it’s still performed by the band members over 40 years later and is a favorite of Deadheads. There are hundreds more.
“Each song has its own story. I don’t write about A, B or C. I find different interpretations over the years,” Hunter said.
Hunter still writes his own music to his songs but defers to Garcia’s version when he plays the songs live nowadays.
“I mean, I use Jerry’s music. With a composer like Garcia . . .”
In fact, “Uncle John’s Band” was written for and about Garcia. “Of course it was about Jerry and The Dead. I was euphoric. I was a part of this magical thing.”
The partnership blossomed. Hunter wrote words to the music of Garcia and the other band members for decades, and is still collaborating with some of them.
Hunter’s words are an endless source of fascination for Deadheads, who have made a closet industry of interpreting them. “I love the fact so many people write their own lives into the songs,” he said. “It’s not about what it means, but what sparked it.”
Hunter has also written songs with Bob Dylan, Bruce Hornsby, and many other performers. Box of Rain, published in 1990, is one of several books of his collected works. Hunter also wrote the foreword to The Complete Annotated Grateful Dead Lyrics (2005); he has published
several albums of his own songs.Hunter, 73, born Robert Burns,
was inducted with the Grateful Dead into the Rock & Roll Hall Of Fame, treated as a full band member.
Now he’s hitting the road again, noting many of his songs have been pirated off the Internet. ”You can’t stop it. It motivated me to get my ass out there again. You don’t make any money on records anymore. It makes no financial sense to record and promote a record, so you have a tour.”
Make no mistake about it, though, Hunter isn’t hurting financially. The Dead maintained publishing rights to the band’s music and sold tens of millions of records.
Still, the road beckons, and it doesn’t hurt to have a legion of fans wherever he goes -- the Deadheads motto is “We are everywhere” and it certainly seems that way. “When I’m up there [on stage] it feels like the right thing to do,” Hunter said about performing.
Things might have turned out differently. Hunter was forced to spend his senior year in Roslyn after his father was relocated to Long Island suddenly. When apprised
that he might have ended up writing lyrics for Billy Joel he replied, “that wouldn’t have been a bad thing!”
Robert Hunter performs at the Suffolk Theater in Riverhead Sunday, July 27, at 7:30 PM. Tickets are available on the theater's website or by calling 631-727-4343.
REAL ESTATE IN THE NEWSJuly 9, 2014 THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler WatchmanB-12 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
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10% OFFAny PurchaseNot valid on delivery
can not be combined with any other coupon. Coupon exp
sterlingNAPA MERLOT 750
$1599
FREE HOME DELIVERY2799 ROUTE 112, MEDFORDWE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES • NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL ERRORS • WHILE SUPPLIES LAST • NO LIMITS ON ANY ITEMS
BOTTLES ARE FOR ILLUSTRATION PURPOSES ONLY
Minimum Order For Delivery $150.00NOW OPEN UNTIL 6PM ON SUNDAY’S • Our East End Customers - jump off 64 on your way back west to see our full selection.
All items are w/coupon only and must be presented at the time of purchase. Coupon expires COUPON EXP. 7/22/14
631-289-1660FAX 363-5950
www.PopeWinesandLiquors.comMust present Ad for Sale Prices • No Limit
Please visit www.lastmainstreetstore.com to help keep our children safe by keeping wine out of grocery stores.
POPEW i n e s & L i q u o r s
POPEW i n e s & L i q u o r s
REAL ESTATEIN THE NEWS B-13 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT July 9, 2014THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman
fetzerALL TYPES 1.5
$1199
sutterhome
ALL TYPES
$999WHITE ZIN
$899
woodbridgeCAB, CHARD, MER, SB 1.5
$1199
glenellen
ALL TYPES 1.5
$749
yellowtail
ALL TYPES 1.5
$1099
cavitALL FLAVORS 1.5
$1199
mezzacorona
PINOT GRIGIO 1.5
$1199
la marca
PROSS 750
$1299
korbelBRUT 750
$1199
columbiacrest
GR EST CAB, CHARD &
MERLOT 750
$999
johnniewalker
red1.75
$3399
johnniewalker
black1.75
$6799
cuttysark
1.75
$2999
tanquerayGIN 1.75
$3799
ketel one
1.75
$4199
finlandia1.75
$2699
ruskova1.75
$1599
absolut1.75
$3299
russianstandard
1.75
$2799
pinnacleVODKA 1.75
$1799
new amsterdam
GIN 1.75
$2199
new amsterdam
VODKA 1.75
$2099
tito’sVODKA 1.75
$2899
georgiVODKA 1.75
$1299
bartonsVODKA 1.75
$1199
wild turkey
BOURBON WHISKEY
1.75
$3899
gordonsGIN 1.75
$2099VODKA 1.75
$1699
white horse
1.75
$2499
burnettsVODKA 1.75
$1499GIN 1.75
$1799
smirnoffVODKA 1.75
$2099
vendangeALL TYPES 1.5
$699
frisVODKA 1.75
$1799
skinny girl
MARGARITA 750
$999
337CAB
667P. NOIR
750
$1099
j&bSCOTCH
1.75
$3699
kahlua1.75
$3499
jagermeisterSPICE
750
$1899LIMITED EDITION
jameson1.75
$5099
bombayGIN 1.75
$3299
christianbros
BRANDY 1.75
$1999
molly’s1.75
$2299LT
$1399
bombaysapphire
1.75
$4599
vesicaVODKA 1.75
$1999
patronSILVER 1.75
$9599SILVER 750
$4799
platinumVODKA 1.75
$1599
luksusowaVODKA 1.75
$2099
southerncomfort
1.75
$3099
maker’smark
1.75
$5199LT
$3399
caribayaLIGHT RUM 1.75
$1699
seagrams7
1.75
$2299
seagramsgin
1.75
$1999
jimbeam
1.75
$2799
bacardiSILVERGOLD1.75
$2099
canadianclub
1.75
$2099
evanwilliams
1.75
$2299
fleischmannsGIN 1.75
$1399VODKA 1.75
$1299
clanmacgregor
1.75
$1999
gilbeysGIN 1.75
$1699
jackdaniels
1.75
$4399
bailey’s1.75
$3899
malibu1.75
$2899
bushmills1.75
$4499
skyy vodka
1.75
$2099
captainmorgan
1.75
$3299
cuervogold
1.75
$3699
old smuggler
1.75
$2099
sobieski1.75
$1999
svedka1.75
$2199
kahluaIRISH CREAM 750
$1899LITER
$2499
doublecross
VODKA750
$3399
j. barrred
1.75
$2499
j. barrblack
1.75
$3499
j. barrgold
1.75
$2999
beefeaterGIN 1.75
$3399
vikingfjord1.75
$1999
chivas1.75
$6199
wildturkey
1011.75
$3899
threeolives
1.75
$2299
stoli1.75
$3199
181MERLOT 750
446CHARD 750
$899
gasconMALBEC 750
$1099
ch minutyROSE 750
$1699
louis m.martini
CAB 750
$1299
santamargheriha
PG 750
$2199
bvNAPA CAB 750
$1499
mirassouALL TYPES 750
$899
louis martini
ALEX CAB750
$2199
kendalljackson
CHARD 750
$1299
eccodomoni
ALL TYPES 750
$899
alamosMALBEC 750
$899
los vascos
CAB 750
$799
jacobscreek
ALL TYPES 750
$599
banficlassico
CHIANTI 750
$1199
giovelloPINOT GRIGIO 1.5
$1399
zoninPINOT GRIGIO 1.5
$999
rexgoliath
ALL TYPES 1.5
$899
bollaALL TYPES 1.5
$1199
veevORGANIC
VITA FRUIT750
$1299
dewarswhitelabel
1.75
$3499
wildhorse
PINOT NOIR750
$1699
gatonegro
ALL TYPES 1.5
$699
ruffinoCHIANTI, PG 1.5
$1299
st. francis
CHARD 750
$1299
sterlingMERITAGE
SAUV BLANC 750
$799
cabo waboblanco
TEQUILA750 ML
$2699
san guiseppepinot grigio
1.5 ML
$1799san guiseppe
pinot noir750 ML
$899
markwest
PINOT NOIR 1.5
$1799PINOT NOIR 750
$899
stone cellars
CAB, CHARD, PINOT GRIGIO
1.5
$799
sterlingNAPA CHARD,
750
$1199
rosemontSHIRAZ 750
$899
pindarWINTER WHITE 1.5
$1199WINTER WHITE 750
$549
blackstoneMERLOT 750
$899CAB 750
$899
closdu bois
CHARD 750
$1099CAB 750
$1399
andreBRUT/XD
ALL TYPES 750
$549
folonari SOAVE
PINOT GRIGIO1.5
$1099
chandonBRUT 750
$1499
cupcake wines
ALL TYPES 750
$999
coppolaCLARET 750
$1499
kim crawford
SB 750
$1399
nobiloSB 750
$999
hessSEL CHARD 750
$999
rodneystrong
MERLOT 750
$1299CAB 750
$1499
walnutcrest
CHARD, CAB, MER 1.5
$899
forestglen
CHARD 1.5
$1299
moet imperial
BRUT 750
$3999
clicquotBRUT 750
$4199
sterlingNAPA
SAUV BLANC 750
$1099
fronteraALL TYPES 1.5
$899
beringerF. CHARD, CAB,
MER 1.5
$1499
barefootcellars
CAB, MER, CHARD 1.5
$1199
sterlingNAPA CAB 750
$1699
flipflop
ALL TYPES 1.5
$999
beringerPINOT GRIGIO 750
$599
dreamfishdreambird
ALL TYPES 1.5
$899
beringerWHITE ZIN 1.5
$999
gnarleyhead
ALL TYPES 750
$899
new harbor
SAUV BLANC750
$899
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10% OFFAny PurchaseNot valid on delivery
can not be combined with any other coupon. Coupon exp
sterlingNAPA MERLOT 750
$1599
FREE HOME DELIVERY2799 ROUTE 112, MEDFORDWE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES • NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL ERRORS • WHILE SUPPLIES LAST • NO LIMITS ON ANY ITEMS
BOTTLES ARE FOR ILLUSTRATION PURPOSES ONLY
Minimum Order For Delivery $150.00NOW OPEN UNTIL 6PM ON SUNDAY’S • Our East End Customers - jump off 64 on your way back west to see our full selection.
All items are w/coupon only and must be presented at the time of purchase. Coupon expires COUPON EXP. 7/22/14
631-289-1660FAX 363-5950
www.PopeWinesandLiquors.comMust present Ad for Sale Prices • No Limit
Please visit www.lastmainstreetstore.com to help keep our children safe by keeping wine out of grocery stores.
POPEW i n e s & L i q u o r s
POPEW i n e s & L i q u o r s
REAL ESTATE IN THE NEWSJuly 9, 2014 THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler WatchmanB-14 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
Piano Sales & Rentals Since 1976Visit Our Showroom in WatermillYamaha • Steinway and More!
Pianos starting at $995 • Live Entertainment
Piano Barnwww.pianobarn.com
Call Mike 631-726-4640We Buy, Sell, Rent, Restore, Move and Tune
Piano Rental/Sales • Guitars Too!
Sweet CharitiesBy Jessica Mackin
Deadline for submissions is Thursday at noon. Email to [email protected].
Summer GalaThe Southold Historical Society will
hold its 11th annual Summer Gala from 5 to 8 PM on Saturday at Brecknock Hall in Greenport. The party will include music, a wine and beer bar, finger foods, and a buffet dinner, in addition to a silent auction. This year’s event will honor Peggy Murphy, the former Vice President of the Historical Society and the long time chair of the Society’s Education of Youth Committee. Tickets for the 11th annual fundraiser are $75 per person, and can be purchased at the Southold Historical Society Office, 54325 Main Road, Southold, opposite Rothman’s department store.
Bay StreetBay Street Theater presents its 23rd
Bay Street Annual Summer Gala in Sag Harbor at the Long Wharf on Saturday to benefit Bay Street’s educational and theatrical programs. Included in the program are actor, author, producer, and director Bob Balaban, who will introduce honoree April Gornik during the honors presentation at the pre-gala VIP cocktail reception at the theater.
The Nancy Atlas Band will perform after dinner in the tent. The gala will also honor arts visionaries Kate Burton and Sheldon Harnick. For more info visit www.baystreet.org.
Parrish ArtFor the second year, the Parrish
Art Museum’s annual Midsummer Party will take place in its new home in Water Mill on Saturday. A summer highlight, the Midsummer Party is a festive social gathering of art collectors, artists, entertainers, philanthropists, and business leaders from The Hamptons and beyond.
This year, the Parrish honors philanthropist Inga Maren Otto and award-winning author and filmmaker Katharina Otto-Bernstein for their contributions to both the Parrish and arts and culture around the world.
For more info visit www.parrishart.org.
Legacy of HopeLegacy of Hope, the inaugural
sunset cocktail reception celebrating the tradition of the ancient order of the
Knights of Malta and its relief agency, Malteser International’s commitment to providing health and dignity to the needy around the globe, will be held at the Rogers Mansion in Southampton on July 18 from 6 to 8 PM. The event includes a photo exhibition and display of historic Maltese memorabilia, cocktails, hors d’oeuvres, silent auction and special Folkloric performance. Tickets are $125. Visit www.malteser-international.org.
EH Antiques ShowThe East Hampton Historical Society
presents the return of the highly anticipated East Hampton Antiques Show to the historic grounds of Mulford Farm on Saturday, July 19, through Sunday, July 20. Now in its eighth year, the East Hampton Antiques Show is widely recognized as the premier antiques event on the East End.
Interior designer Celerie Kemble is the Honorary Chairwoman of the Friday, July 18, Preview Cocktail Party, which offers patrons an early buying opportunity of the extraordinary array of antiques, art, jewelry and collectibles. Ticket proceeds benefit the East Hampton Historical Society.
Admission to the Antiques Show is $10, with early buying at $20. Tickets for the Friday night Opening Preview Cocktail Party start at $150 per person and enable return visits the following days.
Visit www.easthamptonhistory.org for more details.
LongHouse ReserveOn Saturday, July 19, starting
at 6 PM, LongHouse Reserve in East Hampton is hosting its 2014 Summer Benefit, WHITE HOT+Blue 2. The gala, which will take place on LongHouse Reserve’s beautiful 16-acre East Hampton grounds, will celebrate the Reserve’s 23rd season and honor internationally acclaimed photographer, filmmaker and social commentator, Cindy Sherman with the LongHouse Award, and Agnes Gund, philanthropist, patron, collector, President Emerita of MoMA, and founder of Studio in a School with the LongHouse Art Leadership Award. Tickets can be purchased through the website www.longhouse.org/white-hot-blue-2.
SoFo Goes SilverThe South Fork Natural History
Museum (SoFo) will celebrate its 25th Anniversary of its summer event, on Saturday, July 19, from 6:30 to 9:30 PM. SoFo Goes Silver has three extraordinary female chairpersons, Susan Rockefeller/Environmentalist, Gina Bradley/Paddle Diva and April Gornik/Artist. The evening’s honorees are Peter Mattheissen, (posthumously), Author/Naturalist, Eric Goode, Conservationist, and Michael Gerrard, Environmentalist.
The evening will begin with open bars, light bites, a silent auction and the awards ceremony all while hundreds of guests take in the magnificence of the museum and its surroundings. Adam Alpert’s 4AM DJs will pack the dance floor with DJ Phresh. Peter Ambrose Catering & Special Events will create a sumptuous menu, once people enter the tent.
For tickets call SoFo 631-537-9735, Linda B. Shapiro 631-725-2023 or visit www.sofo.org.
Designer ShowhouseThe 2014 Hampton Designer
Showhouse will open with a Gala Preview Cocktail Party on Saturday, July 19, from 6 to 8 PM and will run until Labor Day, Monday, September 1, in Bridgehampton. Proceeds will benefit Southampton Hospital. Mario Buatta is the Honorary Showhouse Chairman. Jamie Drake and Alexa Hampton are the Honorary Design Co-Chairmen.
The Hampton Designer Showhouse, now in its fourteenth year, is a showcase for America’s premier design talent. Over 25 top interior designers and decorative artists will turn a magnificent shingle style home into a decorating masterpiece. This year’s Showhouse located at 408 Pauls Lane in Bridgehampton has been provided by Paramount Homes of the Hamptons, Inc.
Admission to the Showhouse is $35 and includes the Showhouse Journal. Gala tickets are $225 each.
Unconditional Love DinnerThe fifth annual Unconditional
Love Dinner Dance to benef i t the Southampton Animal Shelter Foundation will take place on July 19 from 7 to 11 PM. The event will be filled with James Bond intrigue and will take place at a secret oceanfront hideaway. For more visit www.southamptonanimalshelter.com.
CMEE Family FairChildren’s Museum of the East End
(CMEE) in Bridgehampton will host its annual Family Fair on Saturday, July 19, from 10:30 AM to 1:30 PM at the Museum.
The Annual Family Fair is CMEE’s largest fundraiser of the year, and raises money to support the Museum’s annual operations. This year’s fair will have a magic theme, and will feature magically-inspired arts and crafts, water slides, entertainment, games, music, food and more. Guests will also be invited to play CMEE’s brand
new, nine-hole miniature golf course, which is designed to teach children the principles of physics.
Expec ted a t tendees inc lude A l i We n t w o r t h a n d G e o r g e Stephanopoulos, Christa Miller and Bill Lawrence, Jane Krakowski, Julie Bowen and Scott Phillips, Kelly Klein and Nick Manifold, Mark Feuerstein and Dana Klein, Tiffani Thiessen and Brady Smith, among other CMEE supporters.
To learn more visit www.cmee.org.
Save A Dog A DaySave A Dog A Day will host a two
hour open bar cocktail party followed by comedy show MCed by Ken Perlstein at 230 Elm in Southampton on July 20. The show will feature Carmen Lynch and Andy Pitz (check them out on “The Late Show” with David Letterman), and will have a cash bar. Tickets are $50 in advance $75 at the door. Contact Colleen Fennell 631-235-8764 or Liz Miller 631-702-3188.
All proceeds will go to the Save A Dog A Day organization, a non-profit group that rescues and finds homes for dogs in danger of euthanasia.
Arts Against AddictionThe Ar t s Agains t Addic t ion
Fundraiser will take place on Thursday, July 24, at Ashawagh Hall in Springs. Proceeds from the show will benefit the QTherapy Institute, an online counseling center. The fundraiser was created as a way to provide treatment scholarships to individuals suffering from substance addiction who need highly personalized counseling, but can’t afford it. The counseling is done online through Skype or over the phone. Additional funds will be allocated for a new East Hampton non-profit that provides young artists with materials and supplies.
The show costs $32 per ticket, and includes food, beverages, live performances, a silent art auction with pieces by over 40 featured artists and a raffle of various “curious” items. For more visit www.qtherapy.co.
Ride for KidsThe “4th Annual Ride for Kids,”
on July 24 at 6 PM at SoulCycle Bridgehampton, hosted by celebrity trainer Stacey Griffith and real estate broker extraordinaire Louise Phillips Forbes along with a group of 72 celebrities, athletes, fans and friends will pedal and party to raise funds for NYC education nonprofit Change for Kids, and its partner school, Brooklyn Landmark. The support from the riders will translate into the funding of essential literacy, fitness, and music programs for children from disadvantaged backgrounds.
Reserve bikes starting at $300 in the first row, second row for $250 and third and following rows for $200. Riders will also have the chance to bid on auction items as well as receive a gift bag.
To purchase a bike please contact Alex Robinson 212-213-8061 or email [email protected].
Continued on Page B-13
REAL ESTATEIN THE NEWS B-15 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT July 9, 2014THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman
Help is Just a Phone Call
AwayFrom building
a deck to fixing a leaky roof, no job is too large or small. Our handymen are
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emergency.
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Palm Trees & Windmill PalmsAvailable for Sale or Rent
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Sweet Charities Continued From Page B-12
Continued on Page B-13
Super Saturday 17Kelly Ripa and Donna Karan will
host Ovarian Cancer Research Fund’s (OCRF) 17th annual Super Saturday, presented by QVC on Saturday, July 26 from noon to 6 PM at Nova’s Ark Project in Water Mill.
Super Saturday is OCRF’s fun-filled daylong fundraiser, complete with a one-of-a-kind designer garage sale, kids’ carnival and activities, a luxury raffle and gourmet treats.
Once dubbed “the Rolls Royce of garage sales,” the most anticipated element of Super Saturday is the fashion garage sale, which includes merchandise from over 200 prominent designers including: Donna Karan, Theory, alice + olivia, Diane von Furstenberg, Helmut Lang and Ralph Lauren. For the seventh consecutive year, Rachel Zoe will be curating a luxury designer booth, “Designers A to Zoe.”
Ticket prices for Super Saturday 17 are $450 (regular), $650 (preview) or $850 (VIP preview) for adults, and $150 for children ages 5-16. Children under the age of 5 will be admitted free of charge. VIP preview tickets include access to an exclusive pre-shopping hour from noon to 1 PM, VIP tent access and a goodie bag. Preview tickets include access to an exclusive pre-shopping hour from noon to 1 PM and a goodie bag. Tables and sponsor packages are available beginning at $2500. For tickets visit www.ocrf.org/supersaturday.
Art For Life Gala15th Annual Art For Life Gala will
take place on July 26 at 6 PM to benefit Rush Philanthropic Arts Foundation, which is dedicated to providing inner city youth across New York City with
significant exposure to the arts, as well as to supporting emerging artists with exhibition opportunities.
This years event will honor Michael R. Bloomberg, Valentino D. Carlotti and Kimora Lee Simmons and feature artist Carrie Mae Weems. The evening is hosted by Soledad O’Brien. Tickets start at $1500. Contact Inez Weinstein Special Events at 212-254-6677 or [email protected].
A Hamptons HappeningThe Samuel Waxman Cancer
Research Foundation will honor luminaries from the worlds of cuisine, fashion, and philanthropy at its July 26 “A Hamptons Happening” cancer research fundraiser. The event will feature celebrity chef David Burke, iconic fashion designer Betsey Johnson and philanthropist Paul Ridley, co-founder of the cancer research nonprofit Row For Hope. WCBS-TV Channel 2 News anchor Chris Wragge will emcee the event for the
third consecutive year.“A Hamptons Happening” will
take place on July 26 from 6:30 to 9:30 PM at the Bridgehampton home of Maria and Kenneth Fishel. Chaired by co-founders Marion Waxman and Laurie Schaffran, and Raffle Chairperson Jennifer Myles, co-chairpersons Jennifer Gould Keil and Jill and Bobby Zarin, the event supports the SWCRF’s funding of research projects by leading cancer scientists collaborating to identify and correct abnormal gene function that causes cancer and develop minimally toxic treatments for patients.
Individual t ickets are $300. Millennial tickets (attendees 30 years old and under) are $175. To order
tickets visit www.waxmancancer.org/Events/Hamptons-Happening.
Project MOST DinnerAn exclusive dinner to benefit
Project MOST will be held at the studio of renowned East End painter, Roy Nicholson on July 27 at 6:30 PM. Joe Realmuto will co-host the dinner with Kyle Lynch, and Nick & Toni’s is donating the food and staff. The dinner will be prepared with only local, organic ingredients derived from the waters and land of the East End. Three of our area’s top chefs will be cooking for a very small crowd; Joe Realmuto, Jim Batsacos and John DeLucie. For further details call Susan Gentile Hackett, 631-604-2777.
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REAL ESTATE IN THE NEWSJuly 9, 2014 THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler WatchmanB-16 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
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Gallery WalkBy Jessica Mackin
Deadline for submissions is Thursday at noon. Email to [email protected] Burton
The Si las Marder Gal ler y in Bridgehampton presents artist Richard Burton. An opening reception will take place on Saturday from 5 to 8 PM. The show runs through August 11. ArtHamptons
ArtHamptons, the fine art fair of the Hamptons, takes place Thursday through Sunday with an opening night preview to benefit Guild Hall on
Thursday. For more info visit www.arthamptons.com.
Art Market Art Market Hamptons takes place
this week at the Bridgehampton Historical Society from Thursday through Sunday. For more info visit www.artmarkethamptons.com.Mash - Up Society
Mixed media artist Ben Moon and the renowned artist William Quigley join forces to bring the Hamptons their second annual soiree, “Mash-Up Society,” taking place in the midst of ArtHamptons weekend. The opening night party is now being held on Friday from 7 to 11 PM at the Alley of Schenck Fuels in East Hampton. A portion of sales from SkrapperStyle Tshirts, Ben Moon merchandise, Quigley prints and Casamigos Cocktails will be donated to Soldier Ride, a Wounded Warriors charity event in Amagansett on July 19.Dodds & Eder
A group show featuring the artwork of Scott Bluedorn, Darlene Charneco, Casey Dalene, Alexis Duque, Paul Farinacci, and Rafael Fuchs is on display at Dodds & Eder Home Gallery & Sculpture Garden in Sag Harbor through July 28. An opening reception will take place on Saturday from 6:30 to 8:30 PM.
Gallery TalkGuild Hall in East Hampton presents
a gallery talk with Nina Yankowitz , in conversation with Museum Director Christina Strassfield on Sunday at noon. Visit www.guildhall.org.
ONGOINGArt On The Edge
Vered Gallery presents Art on the Edge 2014. Art on the Edge, the only exhibition of its kind in The Hamptons, is an annual survey of New Contemporary Art featuring the most provocative new painters, sculptors, and photographers working in their respective mediums today. The exhibit continues through Monday, August 4.
WaterscapesOn view through August 14, at
Quogue Gallery is “Waterscapes,” showcasing photographs by Barbara Vaughn.Artists Alliance
The Artists Alliance of East Hampton, founded in 1984 in honor of Jimmy Ernst, internationally acclaimed abstract artist, will be showing art of more than 80 of its members at an upcoming 20th Annual Summer Member Art Exhibit. The exhibit is on view at Ashawagh Hall in Springs through Sunday. Being There
Art Gallery at the Quogue Library presents Susan Cushing’s “Being There.” The show runs through July 30.
A r t w o r k b y S c o t t Bluedorn is featured in a group show at Dodds & Eder in Sag Harbor.
Independent/CB Grubb
Meteorologist Richard Hendrickson, who will celebrate his 102nd birthday this coming Labor Day, sits before images of his old Hillview Farm on Lumber Lane in Bridgehampton taken by C.B. Grubb and currently hanging at the Chase Edwards Gallery at 2462 Main Street, Bridgehampton. Visit www.chaseedwardsgallery.com.
The Silas Marder Gallery in Bridgehampton presents artist Richard Burton.
REAL ESTATEIN THE NEWS B-17 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT July 9, 2014THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman
Night MovesBy Jessica Mackin
Deadline for submissions is Thursday at noon. Email to [email protected].
Bobby CollinsThe Comedy Club at Bay Street Theatre presents Bobby Collins on Monday at 8 PM. Visit www.baystreet.org.
230 ElmComedy Inc takes place at 230 Elm in Southampton on Friday at 8 PM. On Saturday Dick Johnasson performs
at 9 PM.
Ashley MonroeCountry Superstar: Ashley Monroe of the Pistol Annies
will perform at the Suffolk Theater in Riverhead on Saturday at 8 PM. Visit www.suffolktheater.com.
Raphael VineyardRaphael Vineyard in Peconic presents Late Night
Thursdays with NOIZ from 7 to 10 PM. Visit www.raphaelwine.com.
Shinn Estate VineyardsShinn Estate Vineyards in Mattituck presents Latenight
this week on Friday and Saturday starting at 8 PM. Enjoy wines, cheeses and the sunset.
SiennaSienna in East Hampton presents #BadBehaviorMondays from 6:30 to 11:30 PM with DJ Chile. There are $20
dinner specials and half off cocktails.
Firefly FridaysFirefly Fridays take place at Leib Cellars in Mattituck
from 5 to 8 PM with live music by Bryce Larsen and food by The Roaming Fork Food Truck. Visit www.leibcellars.
com.
Concerts On The GreenMontauk Chamber Concerts on the Green take place
each week. Monday, Nancy Atlas at 6:30 PM
Bingo NightTownline BBQ in Sagaponack celebrates the summer
season with a new weekly Bingo Night every Wednesday at 7 PM.
The Beach HutsThe Beach Huts are open for the summer offering
great food, drinks and music. Every Wednesday, Mambo Loco’s in the house at Meschutt Beach Hut in Hampton Bays. On Thursdays, it’s the long, long-awaited return
of perennial faves That 70s Band at Cupsogue Beach in Westhampton. Check the Beach Hut website for times as
well as other acts performing each week.
One Love SundaysNavy Beach in Montauk hosts One Love Sundays every
week this summer. 5 PM through sunset. For a full schedule visit www.navybeach.com.
Meeting House Creek InnMeeting House Creek Inn in Aquebogue’s waterfront tiki bar is open Friday, Saturday, and Sunday with live music
on Sundays from 4 to 8 PM. Happy hour is Monday through Friday from 3 to 6 PM.
FinaleThursday nights at Finale in East Hampton feature open bar from 10 to 11 PM and half priced bottles. Music by
DJ Biggie and DJ Adam Lipson.
Georgica MondaysGeorgica Mondays returns this summer in Wainscott.
Dinner prix fixe and drink specials available.
M.J. Dowling’sM.J. Dowling’s on Noyac Road in Sag Harbor presents an open mic hosted by Ray Red and Mike Rusinsky
8 to 11 PM each Wednesday. Also, on Friday nights, there’s karaoke from 10:30 PM to 1:30 AM.
Swallow EastSwallow East Restaurant in Montauk hosts Reggae
Sundays at 6 PM each week.
The Jam SessionThe Jam Session takes place on Thursdays from 7 to 9 PM at Bay Burger in Sag Harbor. Visit www.
thejamsession.org.
WolfferTwilight Thursdays take place at Wolffer Estate
Vineyards in Sagaponack. Enjoy live music on the lawn of the main winery from 5 to 8 PM. Enjoy live music and wine. Sunset Saturdays take place on the lawn at the wine stand at 5 PM. Visit www.wolffer.
com.
Southampton Publick HouseStop by for Monday Night Madness in the taproom featuring $5 pints, $5 burger platters, and more
specials. Weekday happy hour runs from 4 to 7 PM. Wednesday is Ladies Night with drink specials and DJ Tony. Friday happy hour lasts all night and local legend DJ Dory spins at 10 PM. Saturday night,
dance to Hamptons Classics served up by DJ Brian at 10 PM.
Buckley’s Inn BetweenHappy hour weekdays in Hampton Bays run from 4 to 8 PM, with $3 pints of everything on tap, well drinks,
and pouring wine. DJ Phil at 10 PM on Fridays and Saturdays. Sundays see two for one appetizers at the bar all day. On Thursdays, it’s Buckley’s famous wing night with $15 all you can eat wings and all you can drink Miller Lite from 10 PM to 1 AM. Music by DJ
Pauly and beer pong.
Outerbanks RestaurantReggae Fridays is at Outerbanks in Riverhead on Friday at 8 PM. Happy hour is Monday to
Friday from 3 to 6 PM. For more info visit www.theouterbanksrestaurant.com.
Indian Wells TavernIndian Wells Tavern in Amagansett will have a live DJ along with drink specials every Friday and Saturday night from 11 PM to 2 AM. Each night a signature shot will be offered for $6 at the bar. The cover is
$5. For further information call Indian Wells Tavern at 631-267-0400.
Hotel FishHotel Fish & Lounge in Hampton Bays presents daily happenings. On Sunday, live music from 4 to 8 PM.
Monday is open jam from 7 to 11 PM. Tuesday, music of Jamesoid from 7 to 11 PM. Thursday, live music with F.L and Friends from 7 to 11 PM. Friday,
live bands from 7 to 11 PM. Saturday, live music with Frank Latorre and the Honey Bees from 7 to 11 PM.
Daily happy hour with $3 burgers.
Gurney’sGurney’s in Montauk presents Tuesday night concerts
at The Beach Club this summer starting at 6 PM.
The Surf LodgeThe Surf Lodge in Montauk presents live music
throughout the weekend. On Saturday, San Fermin. Sunday, Gary Clark Jr. Doors open at 5 PM. For more
info visit www.thesurflodge.com.
INDY SNAPSINDY SNAPSIndependent/Jessica Mackin
DASH Southampton
DASH Southampton hosted a Summer Kick-Off Party on July 2. Guests enjoyed 20 percent off everything in the store, light food and wine from The Driver's Seat and recieved hair refreshers from Blow Hampton.
Coming AttractionsBy Jessica Mackin
Deadline for submissions is Thursday at noon. Email to [email protected] at Five
Fridays at Five begins its 31st year at the Hampton Library in Bridghampton. This week presents Tom Clavin and Bob Drury at 5 PM. This is the First of a series of book discussions on eight successive Fridays. Clavin and Drury’s latest collaboration is The Heart
of Everything That Is: The Untold Story of Red Cloud, An American Legend.Ghostbusters
Guild Hall Films at the Farm In Partnership with the East Hampton Historical Society presents a screening of Ghostbusters on Friday at 8:30 PM at Mulford Farm. For more info visit www.guildhall.org.Melissa Martin
Author Melissa Martin’s book signing for Harvest Road takes place at Claudio’s Restaurant in Greenport on Saturday from 1 to 5 PM and North Fork Tasting Room in Riverhead from noon to 3 PM on Sunday.
Authors After Hours
Authors After Hours series begins at the Amagansett Library on Saturday at 6 PM with Steven Gaines at 6 PM.Travesties
Bay Street Theatre presents Travesties by Tom Stoppard and directed by Gregory Boyd through July 20. For more info visit www.baystreet.org.
Steven Gaines
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REAL ESTATE IN THE NEWSJuly 9, 2014 THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler WatchmanB-18 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
East End CalendarBy Kitty Merrill
EAST HAMpToN
SouTHAMpToN
Deadline for submissions is Thursday at noon. Fax them to 631-324-6496 or email to [email protected].
NoRTH FoRK
State Farm, Bloomington, IL1211009
Friends. Family.Community.
We’re all in this together.Dermot PJ Dolan, Agent2228 Montauk HwyBridgehampton, NY 11932Bus: 631-537-2622 Bus: [email protected]
State Farm® has a long tradition of being there. That’s one reason why I’m proud to support Local After School Programs like Project MOST. Get to a better State®.
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WEDNESDAY 7•9•14• The Montauk Observatory, a non-profit educational
group, presents a free lecture, “Exploding Stars: Beacons at the Edge of the Universe,” at the Ross School Tennis Center, at 20 Goodfriend Drive in East Hampton. Dr. Thomas Madigan, NASA/JPL Solar System Ambassador, an Associate member of the American Astronomical Society, and a Fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society, will give the lecture. Following the talk, weather permitting, Montauk Observatory telescopes will be available for guided celestial observation. Visit montaukobservatory.com for more details.
• It’s integral yoga, open gym, and pickleball at the Montauk Playhouse on Wednesdays. Other activities offered throughout the week include toddler exploration, and co-ed volleyball. Visit www.ehamptonny.gov for their complete schedule.
• The movie night at Amagansett Square feature this week is Willy Wonka. Bring your beach chairs and family to enjoy a film under the stars outdoors. THURSDAY 7•10•14
• The Montauk Chamber of Commerce summer farmers market is held each Thursday from 9 AM to 2 PM on the green. FRIDAY 7•11•14
• Have you ever wondered why some birders seem to know who is lurking in the neighborhood even when there’s nothing to be seen? One good reason is that they’ve trained themselves to bird by ear, not just by sight. On this unique bird walk offered by the South Fork Natural History Museum in East Hampton, composer, accomplished birder, and bird song connoisseur Eric Salzman will teach you about the nuances of bird vocalization and share tips on how to train your auditory memory. Call SoFo at 631-537-9735 for meeting location, registration and admission information. SATURDAY 7•12•14
• Walk the Walking Dunes with Lee Dion of the East Hampton Trails Preservation Society at 9 AM. Meet at the very end of Napeague Harbor Road in Amagansett. Phone 631-375-2339 to learn more.
• Sound Meditation for beginners is offered on the main lawn at LongHouse Reserve in East Hampton at 8 AM. $20 suggested donation.
• Montauk Community Church runs its rummage sale every Saturday through Labor Day from 9 AM till noon.
• The Springs Farmers Market at Ashawagh Hall runs from 9 AM to 1 PM. SUNDAY 7•13•14
• The annual poetry marathons at the Marine Museum on Bluff Road in Amagansett begin this week. Fran Castan and Scott Chaskey are in the spotlight this week. The marathons are held each Sunday at 5 PM. Free admission. MONDAY 7•14•14
• Concerts on the green sponsored by the Montauk Chamber of Commerce are underway. Bring your lawn chair and picnic and enjoy music in the early evening. 6:30 PM.
WEDNESDAY 7•9•14• Wolffer Estate Vineyards in Sagaponack presents
Wine Education Wednesdays from 6 to 7 PM. $15. Call 631-537-5106.
• Country Line Dancing for seniors is offered free every Wednesday in Hampton Bays and every Monday in Flanders. Call 631-725-1235 to learn more.
• A bereavement support group is held each week at Southampton Hospital from 5:30 to 7 PM. Call 631-283-6729 for additional information. THURSDAY 7•10•14
• AA meetings are held at Joshua’s Place in Southampton each Thursday morning at 7:30 AM.
• Duplicate Bridge Games are held at the Bridgehampton Senior Center every Thursday from 1:30 to 4:30 PM. Prior experience and partner required.
• Hampton Yoga Healing Arts in Westhampton
Beach hosts a donation-based yoga class every Thursday from 11:30 AM to 12:30 PM. The class is for those battling or surviving from an illness, as well as their caregivers. Reservations recommended. Call 631-355-1855.
• The Hamptons Greek Festival at the Orthodox Church on St. Andrews Road in Southampton starting tonight and running through Saturday from 4 to 11 PM; Sunday 3 to 9 PM. Yummy Greek cuisine, Hellenic dances, great shopping, plus carnival rides and games for kids. SATURDAY 7•12•14
• Meet on Pond Lane in Southampton, on the northwest side of the lake right off Jobs Lane at 9 AM for a Lake Agawam Adventure. The hike, led by Liz Karpin of the Southampton Trails Preservation Society, takes you right past the home of Pyrrhus Concer, the freed slave who ran the Lake Agawam ferry. Call 516-320-0761 to learn more.
• Zvi Gitelman, Professor of Political Science and Preston R. Tisch Professor of Judaic Studies at the University of Michigan, will discuss “Jews in Ukraine: Turmoil and Prospects” at the Conservative Synagogue of the Hamptons at 11 AM, preceded by Sabbath services. CSH Saturday morning services take place at the Unitarian Universalist Meetinghouse, 977 Bridge-Sagg Turnpike, Bridgehampton. Services will begin earlier than usual, at 9 AM. Prof. Gitelman will speak after services. A Kiddush/light lunch will follow. All are welcome; RSVPs for this event to [email protected] are appreciated.
• Time for summer gardening and Bridgehampton biking. Join the folks from East Hampton Trails Preservation Society for a leisurely 20-mile ride through Bridgehampton and Water Mill. But first, a discussion about midsummer gardening. It all starts at Marder’s Nursery at 9 AM. 917-747-0885.
• Get your downward dog on amidst nature’s beauty. Wolffer Estate Vineyard in Sagaponack presents “Yoga in the vines” Saturday mornings from 10 to 11 AM. $25, BYO mat and water. Visit their website for a full schedule of classes.
• The Sag Harbor Farmers Market is open each Saturday from 9 AM to 1 PM.
• The farmers market in Westhampton Beach runs every Saturday through November from 9 AM to 1 PM on Mill Road in Westhampton Beach.
• This SoFo program and walk, will focus on Long Island’s most unique carnivorous plant – the Thread-leaf Sundew (Drosera filiformis) which, in all of New York State, is only found in Suffolk County. First there will be a slide presentation at the museum describing the Suffolk locations and habitats where Drosera filiformis can be found. This will be followed by a chance to see a display of specimens of live, cultivated, carnivorous plants along with feeding demonstrations. After the demonstrations, it’s off to a nearby bog to observe and learn about our local Drosera filiformis as well as the Spoon-leaf Sundew (Drosera intermedia) and various species of the carnivorous plant genus Uticularia, or bladderworts, as well as the many other interesting plants and animals that make the bog habitat home.1 PM. Call the South Fork Natural History Museum at 631-537-9735 for meeting location, registration and admission information. And be sure to visit their website to learn about other programs this week.
• The Hampton Bays Fire Department hosts its 4th Annual Memorial Fluke Tournament from 7 AM to 3 PM. Call 631-728-9191 to learn more. SUNDAY 7•13•14
• STPS presents a two event Sunday. There’s a Red Creek/ Sears Pond ramble with Jim Crawford (631-369-2341) at 9 AM and Marilyn Kirkbright (631-726-7503) invites you to kayak Scallop Pond in North Sea at 10 AM. Call for additional information and meeting places.
• The Southampton Farmer’s Market is open for the summer. 9 AM to 2 PM at the Southampton Center
on Jobs Lane in Southampton Village.• Ruth Joseph is the discussion leader for a new
book group, “Talking About Books: A Short Story Sampler.” Two Sundays, July 13, and August 24, 11 AM at Temple Adas Israel, Atlantic Avenue and Elizabeth Street, Sag Harbor. Refreshments will be served. Participants are asked to read the stories before the group meets. Materials can be picked up at the Temple office and should be brought to the July 13 meeting.MONDAY 7•14•14
• The League of Women Voters of the Hamptons invites the public to a presentation and discussion of two statewide voting issues at a meeting at 7 PM at the Hampton Library, 2478 Main Street, Bridgehampton. Term limits and ballot access are on the agenda.
• Kids in grades K to four from the David Crohan Community Center can travel to SYS in Southampton via the youth bureau bus to swim in the outdoor pool, play games or enjoy arts and crafts as part of the town-sponsored “Neighborhood Nights.” 5 to 8:30 PM. Call 631-702-2432. WEDNESDAY 7•16•14
• Southampton Town hosts teen night at Ludlam Park in Flanders every Wednesday from 7:30 to 11 PM. For seventh to 12th-graders. Basketball, tennis, flag football, dodge ball, even pizza and a dj some evenings. Call 631-702-2432 to learn more.
• Take a trip back in time and meet Mary Rogers, the daughter of Captain Albert Rogers, who lived in the Rogers Mansion in the 1840s. Mary Rogers will give you an exclusive tour of her house and she will teach a craft and allow her visitors to explore the grounds. Lemonade and cookies will be served. $5 for children at the mansion on Meeting House Lane in Southampton. 3 to 4 PM. Call 631-283-2494 to RSVP. $5 admission for kids.
THURSDAY 7•10•14• La Leche League meets at Riverhead Library
from 7 to 8:30 PM. FRIDAY 7•11•14
• The North Fork Audubon Society presents “Porchlight Wonders” with Jeff Petracca. Learn about the misunderstood moth. 8 PM. Red House Nature Center, Inlet Pond County Park, Greenport. SATURDAY 7•12•14
• Every Saturday from 11 AM to 3 PM the Riverhead Farmers Market is open outdoors along the Riverfront in Riverhead.
• Every Saturday from 11 AM to 12:30 PM, tour Sang Lee Farms in Peconic. Call 631-734-7001 to reserve your spot.
• Join Group for the East End at Downs Farm Preserve in Cutchogue for a fun night of Nature Bingo. Students will play numerous rounds of nature bingo while learning a bit about some common Long Island residents. Bring your family and your friends because all ages are welcome! Small prizes will be awarded. This program is appropriate for children ages six and up who are accompanied by an adult. A family donation is suggested. 6 to 8 PM. For more information or to register your family, please contact Missy Weiss at [email protected] .SUNDAY 7•13•14
• Every day through Labor Day experience the magic of tropical snorkeling, right here on Long Island, with a “Pirate Snorkel Adventure” at the Long Island Aquarium & Exhibition Center in Riverhead. Search for missing treasure as you swim with a slew of species of fish. Call 631-208-9200 ext. H20 for details. TUESDAY 7•15•14
• Dr. George Dempsey from the Tick Borne Disease Resource Center at Southampton Hospital discusses what you need to know about tick-borne diseases at the Cutchogue New Suffolk Library at 6:30 PM. Call 631-734-6360 to register.
REAL ESTATEIN THE NEWS B-19 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT July 9, 2014THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman
Reel DealBy Miles X. Logan
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o.J. SimpsonThe sight of O.J. ripping down the field, football in hand, was, indeed,
one to behold.With the exception of Jim Brown, Orenthal James Simpson was the greatest
running back who ever played the game, and that should have been his legacy. But it’s not.
Instead, he will be forever tied to the bizarre, grisly murder of his estranged wife and her male friend. Today O.J. Simpson, instead of enjoying his Florida estate in retirement, sits in prison.
Simpson, a breathtaking combination of size, power, and speed was a star at Southern Cal and was the top overall pick in the 1969 draft, the first that combined the two professional leagues, the AFL and NFL.
Simpson was chosen by the Buffalo Bills and at one time held the NFL record for most yards gained in a game, and was named to the All-Pro team six times. After he retired, the affable and handsome San Francisco native found work in commercials, most notably his memorable Hertz spot, filmed at the airport. Hollywood beckoned, and he landed key roles in The Naked Gun and The Towering Inferno among many others, as well as a role in “Roots,” one of the most popular TV miniseries of all time.
His marriage to Nicole Brown, a stunning California blonde, began to unravel, and the couple bickered, sometimes in public. On June 12, 1994 Brown and a friend, Ronald Goldman, were stabbed to death outside her Brentwood condominium. Simpson was the prime suspect from the beginning of the investigation, and detectives staked out his house nearby and allegedly found blood in his infamous Ford Bronco.
Simpson was acquitted after a prolonged trial that captured the imagination of the world. But Simpson subsequently was found liable for Brown’s death in a civil trial initiated by Goldman’s family.
Simpson, though legally liable, could not be criminally charged again, and he still had a healthy NFL pension and was making money selling off the vast collection of sports memorabilia he owned. Once again, though O.J. had a brush with the law.
Simpson was accused of robbing a memorabilia dealer at gunpoint in a Las Vegas hotel. Simpson was eventually incarcerated after being found guilty of 12 charges related to the robbery. He faced the prospect of spending the rest of his life in jail, but won parole on some of the charges last year. As it stands now O.J. Simpson will spend at least three more years in prison before his next parole hearing.
today’s birthdayby Miles X. Logan
Coming SoonHercules (NR) Dwayne “The Rock”
Johnson is a natural for the title role in this big budget retro-fantasy. The director Brett Ratner (Rush Hour 2,3) sticks to the traditional plot and has wisely employed a slew of Hollywood’s best actors to bring the story to live. This is a probable summer smash. Co-starring Ian McShane, Joseph Fiennes, John Hurt, and featuring a cast of thousands.
New To TheatersBoyhood (R) Richard Linklater’s
(Before Midnight) lenses focus on a boy growing up — literally. Young Ellar Coltrane ages before our eyes, providing an intimate look at the childhood experience. Linklater’s muse Ethan Hawke plays the father and Patricia Arquette is the mother. It’s an ambitious miss. The film, nearly three hours long, rambles and the audience ultimately wishes the kid would grow up already.
New On DVDThe Lego Movie Chris Pratt is the
voice of a perfectly ordinary – well, piece of plastic – that gets drafted into an improbable journey to stop an evil tyrant from destroying the
Independent / Courtesy warnerbros.com
world. Yes, think Lord Of The Rings. It’s a magical ride, though, and kids and the young at heart will love it. If they haven’t seen it yet, by all means crank up the popcorn maker and enjoy a family night at home. Now Playing
Earth To Echo (PG-13) A group of friends whose neighborhood is being torn down is about to be separated forever when they start receiving strange signals on their mobile devices. Further investigation reveals – ta da — a cute little alien who needs help. Anyone thinking ET? Get the little weird looking thing a freaking bicycle and let’s move on.
Snowpiercer (R) Joon-ho Bong has fashioned an inventive and relevant science fiction film about a project to halt global warming that goes terribly wrong. Chris Evans (The Avengers) and Jamie Bell (King Kong) get the meatiest rolls, but veterans Tilda Swinton, John Hurt, Ed Harris, and Octavia Spencer add gravitas and keep it somewhat believable. It’s a bit messy, but there is enough here to merit a viewing.
Yves Saint Laurent (R ) Jalil Lespert’s biopic about the legendary clothing designer Yves Saint Laurent (Pierre Niney) suffers from a bland script that somehow manages to miss the excitement generated by Saint Laurent’s groundbreaking designs. As one critic smirked in Variety, “Clothes make the man, but can’t save this film.” Amen to that.
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Horoscopeby Kate Plumb
East End LibrariesBy Kitty Merrill
Week July 9-15Read your rising sign, too,
if you know it . . .
Aries (March 21-April 22) – The week starts with your ruler Mars making an awkward aspect to the planet of nebulous ideas, confusion, and self-sacrifice, leading to a general dissipation of energy and intention. The Full Moon is early Saturday morning and carries some “oomph” with it. Be extra careful over the weekend in the car or when you are working with machinery. The weekend also has a strong social component. Have fun.
Taurus (Apri l 22-May 21) – Loving relationships, attracting what you want and generally being contented is the atmosphere as the week starts. This leads to lots of socializing and stimulating conversation over the weekend. If you have your eye on someone let him/her know it. Full Moons bring situations to a head and there is one early Saturday morning affecting all weekend. You could make a new intimate or platonic friend with whom the conversation just flows.
Gemini (May 21-June 21) – You will be making some mental adjustments this week as Mercury is meeting three other planets as it leaves Gemini to move into Cancer late Saturday night. You will be releasing old mental constructs that have had you in a rut this retrograde period. Don’t be discouraged or depressed on Monday, but turn to your summer reading list. Although Mercury went forward last week, you are not quite finished; it will take through this week before the fleet- footed messenger and you will move into new territory. Be optimistic.
Cancer (June 21-July 22) – Full Moon early Saturday morning in your sign puts you at odds with everybody, so much so that you might not know where to turn. Balancing your masculine and feminine sides, your personal and professional life, will be important. You need both to nurture yourself and take responsibility for your life. Full Moons bring something to light that began two weeks prior at the New Moon on Friday the 27th; the new personal projects and interests you began then have been noticed. Do not be upset if a partner feels threatened with your new identity.
Leo (July 22-Aug. 21) – The Full Moon Saturday morning puts the Sun and Moon in opposite houses, pulling you in two different directions. One concern has you wanting to hide and feel sorry for yourself, versus the other how you are managing your everyday routine and health. Monthly Full Moons are always times when we see any imbalance in our lives; we can no longer dismiss or ignore it. It becomes obvious what your own demons are doing to distract you from being in the present moment and focusing completely on the job at hand. If you have something to reveal or disclose, Full Moons are good times to do it. You are preparing for the near future (the 16th) when the greater benefic, Jupiter is in your sign and you return to the spotlight.
Virgo (Aug. 21-Sept. 19) – Mercury is your ruler and so noticing what the messenger is doing will help you organize your life better, something you enjoy doing. Go slow when he is moving slowly, like during the just past retrograde passage and more quickly when moving forward and direct. Understanding this relatively simple concept will avoid lots of headaches. The entire time from the 23rd of May until the 21st of July, Mercury and therefore you, went back and forth three times over the same area of your chart,
the place that governs the direction of your life, your reputation, the goals in your career or where you want to put your energy. The Full Moon on Saturday should finally resolve these matters so you can slowly proceed satisfactorily.
Libra (Sept. 19-Oct. 22) – Your ruler Venus is active this week. Social and business contacts prosper especially over the weekend. People in your environment are happy with you and respond accordingly. Ask for what you want from an authority figure, especially in the beginning of the week. There is a deep commitment to growth in intimate relationships in general. The Full Moon on Saturday might increase the intensity of those feelings, despite the pressure you feel from all sides. This can be accompanied with a sense of fatedness, that the gods want it to happen, too.
Scorpio (Oct 22-Nov. 21) – Your sense of fairness and justice is peaked this week as your ruler Mars connects with Vesta which augur for you having the ability to focus 100 percent. Being centered in your own activity, you will feel a keen sense of being able to direct your own energy and assert yourself even in partnerships. Your ruler Mars is getting ready to leave Libra where it is all about pleasantries and fairness coupled with an inability to make up your mind, and move into its own sign Scorpio. The five-month long passage of Mars in Libra and in your house of self undoing has been most unpleasant but hopefully you have gained some wisdom and courage and will leave this chapter of your life without any regrets.
Sagittarius (Nov. 21-Dec. 21) – The week begins with the Moon in your sign, so you are feeling empowered and looking for adventure. Seeking is a good word for you. Whether it be a new philosophy, new course of study, exotic date, or wild country to explore, you are ready to go. However, you might get thwarted in your mission on Thursday as a lack of motivation precedes the Full Moon on Saturday which finds you short on funds. Throw it over your shoulder and have social evening Saturday night.
Capricorn (Dec. 21 –Jan. 21) – With your ruler Saturn in the doldrums this week you might expect the momentum to subside but as the Moon moves into your sign Thursday night, in preparation for the Full Moon on Saturday morning, this will not be the case. There is a more public role or visibility brewing and the Full Moon will bring it out. You are one of the signs going through the wringer these days, having to remake your identity, relationships, home and career. This might have been a slow evolution up to this point but at this Full Moon, your transformation will not go unnoticed.
Aquarius (Jan. 21-Feb. 20) – Your rulers are still in an awkward angle to each other this week. Making adjustments is called for. If you are completely in the dark, you will not see it coming and it will be harder. Some of your sign have to be dragged into the new century. For sure, change is hard for everybody but most especially the fixed signs, as you are. The Moon, after the exhausting Full Moon, moves into your sign Saturday night. You might meet a new friend who helps you gain a new perspective.
Pisces Feb. 20-March 21) – Your ruler Jupiter is in his last days of a yearlong passage in your 5th house of pleasure, children, games, theater, speculation, love affairs, and creative activities. He is leaving the water element where feelings and sentiment is strong. Being a water sign yourself, this feels like home base. You
will be jumping into the fire next week, so enjoy these last days of fun in your emotional life. The Full Moon on Saturday has you coming to terms with what, if anything, you are gaining for yourself in the four major areas of life: identity, home, partnerships and career. If you feel boxed in, you are. Schedule a massage.
Kate Plumb, “cycles scientist,” is a certified NCGR
counseling astrologer who teaches monthly at Joshua’s Place in Southampton and sees clients in her home office. She is also certified in Astro*Carto*Graphy-finding beneficial locations to live. website..www.kateplumbastrology.com,blog www.offtheplumbtree.com Kate can be reached at [email protected] or 631-725-9133.
Here’s a list of new programs at local libraries. Check in with your local branch for ongoing programs. Advance registration is required for most of the listed programs. Call for details.
East Hampton Library 631-324-0222
THURSDAY 7•10•14• Kids in grades six to 12 create a compost pail
at 4 PM. SATURDAY 7•12•14
• Alice Harris discusses Blow Me A Kiss, her collection of photographs and works of art that celebrates lips at 3 PM.
Rogers Memorial Library 631-283-0774
SUNDAY 7•13•14• It’s an “ice cream Sunday” for kids from 2 to
3 PM.
Hampton Bays Library 631-728-6241
THURSDAY 7•10•14• Central Station, an award winning Brazilian-French
drama, will be shown at 6 PM. At 6:30 PM, kids can make volcano cake.FRIDAY 7•11•14
• The theme is survival for this week’s Friday matinee. The selection? The super scary Anthony Hopkins/Alec Baldwin vehicle, The Edge. That ain’t Yogi Bear that’s chasing the two stars. 2 PM.
Quogue Library 631-653-4224
SUNDAY 7•13•14• Bob Mankoff, author of How About Never – Is
Never Good for You?: My Life in Cartoons, is the special guest in this week’s Conversations with the Author series. 5 PM. Advance ticket purchase suggested. $20.
Westhampton Library 631-288-3335
THURSDAY 7•10•14• It’s “Tales to Tails” as kids read to special four-
legged guests at 4:30 PM. It’s “rrrr-uff” work, but the dogs love it.
Montauk Library 631-668-3377
SATURDAY 7•12•14• At 7:30 PM, there’s a screening of Villa Diodati.
WEDNESDAY 7•16•14• True North plays Near East-inspired music at
7:30 PM.
Mattituck Laurel Library 631-298-4134
THURSDAY 7•10•14• A “Great Books” discussion focuses on
Shakespeare’s sonnets. 6 PM. FRIDAY 7•11•14
• Inside Llewyn Davis will be shown at 1:30 PM.
John Jermain Memorial Library 631-725-0049
WEDNESAY 7•9•14• An introduction to Stand-Up Paddle Boarding is
offered from 5:30 to 6:30 PM. THURSDAY 7•10•14
• It’s “awesome eruptions.” Kids discover amazing volcanoes on an imaginary trip around the world. 3:30 PM.
Amagansett Library 631-267-3810
WEDNESDAY 7•9•14• Cornell brings the beach to the library with a
“Seashore See & Touch Safari” at 3:30 PM. THURSDAY 7•10•14
• Despicable Me 2 shows at 3:30 PMSATURDAY 7•12•14
• Celebrate firefighters at 3:30 PM with a story and craft time.
Hampton Library in Bridgehampton 631-537-0015
SATURDAY 7•12•14• Youth aged 12 and older create and paint an
initial-shaped corkboard. 2 PM.
REAL ESTATEIN THE NEWS B-21 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT July 9, 2014THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman
Prime Meats • GroceriesProduce • Take-Out
Fried Chicken • BBQ RibsSandwiches • Salads
Party Plattersand 6ft. HeroesBeer, Ice, Soda
Open 7 Days a WeekWholesale 725-9087Retail 725-9004
OPEN DA ILY FOR LUNCH & D INNER
HAPPY HOUR SPEC IALS 4 -7 DA ILY
WEEKEND LATENIGHT PAT IO SERV ICE
126 MAIN STREETSAG HARBOR
631.808.3444WWW.DOPP IORESTAURANTS.COM
Independent Dining
By Jessica MackinLast week we did a dining feature
on Georgica Restaurant in East Hampton. This week we follow it up with an interview with Georgica's Executive Chef Greg Grossman. To read last week's feature visit www.indyeastend.com.
Tell us how you came to be the new chef at Georgica:
The owner Antonio and I were
Georgica Chef Greg Grossman
working together on a project in Manhattan leading into this summer season. Several weeks before opening, Antonio approached me on becoming involved in the sixth season at Georgica Restaurant & Lounge. Due to our previous experience together, we knew it would be a great match.
Tell us about the direction of the new menu at Georgica:
This summer we wanted to focus on showcasing seafood from the South Fork of Long Island. Our menu stays true to this with fresh seafood in our raw bar, sushi by Kazuo Yoshida of MYUMI and our small and large plates from the kitchen. In addition we are utilizing fantastic local vegetables and fruits. We are looking forward to the amazing produce in the peak season in the Hamptons.
Favorite person you have cooked for this summer:
We love showing all of our guests a fantastic experience, but I really loved having my parents in for dinner opening weekend. They have been my biggest supporters throughout my early career and it was really nice to have them in to see what we have accomplished thus far.
If you could cook dinner for anyone in the world who would it be:
Frank Sinatra and Dean Martin.
What are you looking forward to most this summer at the restaurant?
To be able to look back at the culmination of all our hardwork, dedication of our team, and to make a lasting impact on the culinary landscape of the Hamptons.
What has been the most exciting night at Georgica so far this summer?
The Memorial Day Weekend fundraiser for Ovarian Cancer Research Fund hosted by Hannah Bronfman and DKNY. It was a great event and very exciting to be part of such an important cause.
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REAL ESTATE IN THE NEWSJuly 9, 2014 THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler WatchmanB-22 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
Located on the Atlantic Ocean in Westhampton Beach, Saltwater Grill offers delicious food, fantastic drinks and
unparalleled views of the ocean’s surf.
Lunch * Dinner * CocktailsOpen Memorial Day Weekend & weekends only til
June 27ththen Open 7 Days til Labor Day
(631) 288-1485(In the Dune Deck Hotel)
www.SaltwaterGrillwhb.comDune Road’s Only Oceanfront Restaurant
324-1999 • 324-190866 Newtown Lane, East Hampton, NY 11937
www.chinatowneasthampton.comSUSHI AVAILABLE
Delicious Chinese Food Take-OutChinatown Restaurant
DELIVERY ($15 Minimum)
OPEN DAILY
www.publick.com Open Year Round
40 Bowden Square631-283-2800
Brewery Grill TaproomOpen Year Round
Personal Lunch Combos 2-4-1 Tuesdays: Two for one entrees, 5-10pm
Weekend Brunch
Special Events Private Taproom Take-Away Menu & Party Trays
Now ServingCompiled By Jessica Mackin
Deadline for submissions is Thursday at noon. Email to [email protected].
The Bell & Anchor The Bell & Anchor in Sag Harbor
will host lobster night every Wednesday beginning at 5:30 PM. Lobster night will offer a three-course menu at varying
prices. Call 631-724-3400.
Harbor GrillHarbor Grill in East Hampton
is now serving bar bites Monday through Saturday from 5 to 6:30 PM and on Sunday beginning at noon. The special menu is offered at the bar only. A beer list, composed of 40-
plus brews, is also available including choices of: Montauk Summer Ale, Dogfish Head and Stella Artois. Call 631-604-5290.
Harbor BistroHarbor Bistro in East Hampton is
a prime location to see the annual Three Mile Harbor firework show on Saturday, July 19 at approximately
9:15 PM weather permitting. Mamalee Rose and Friends will perform on the outdoor patio beginning at 6 PM. The backyard will also feature a beer and wine bar with a seating section for viewing. Dinner seatings are available at 6, 6:30, 8 and 8:30 PM. Additional seatings will be added upon demand. Call 631-324-7300.
The Coolest Place to Be Seen This Summer . . .
. . . is in The Independent and On Our Website www.indyeastend.com
THE INDEPENDENTEast Hampton • Southampton • Riverhead • Southold • Shelter Island
NOW, FOR THE NORTH FORK, THE Traveler Watchman TRUTH WITHOUT FEAR SINCE 1826
Call us for AD Rates and Information:
324-2500
REAL ESTATEIN THE NEWS B-23 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT July 9, 2014THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman
524 Montauk Highway, East QuogueTake-out 653-4042 Delivery
NEW MOON CAFEwww.nmcafe.com Established 1978
Dig out and meet us at The Moon!
• Dinner served Tuesday to Sunday at 5:00 pm
• Saturday Lunch at Noon• Sunday Brunch at Noon• Happy Hours 5:00-7:00pm
Check our Night lyBlackboard Specia ls
DELI & RESTAURANT
EAST HAMPTON 100 Pantigo Place (Hwy 27) • (631)329.8300
AMAgANSETT 2101 Montauk Highway • (631)267.5552
SOUTHAMPTON 801 County Road 39 (Hwy 27) • (631)204.1046
MONTAUk
28 South Etna Ave • (631) 238.5976
“The Best Bagels, Flagels, Appetizers,
and Delicatessen Around”
SINCE 1949www.goldbergs famous .com/
Goldberg’s Famous
Open 7 days a week 6-4 monday thru sat, sunday 6-3
18 Park PlaceEast Hampton324-5400
Breakfast - Lunch - DinnerTake Out Orders
fi nd the right place to eat inT he Independent’s Dining Section!
SIZE Open 15x’s 26x’s 52x’sFull $2035 $1545 $1245 $9951/2 $980 $775 $650 $5501/4 $585 $480 $350 $2901/8 $295 $240 $175 $1451/16 $160 $140 $105 $851/32 $95 $80 $70 $45
SIZE Open 15x’s 26x’s 52x’sAd Rates
THE INDEPENDENTEast Hampton • Southampton • Riverhead • Southold • Shelter Island
NOW, FOR THE NORTH FORK, THE Traveler Watchman TRUTH WITHOUT FEAR SINCE 1826
East HamptonEast Hampton SouthamptonSouthampton RiverheadRiverhead SoutholdSouthold Shelter IslandShelter Island
fi nd the right place to eat inHungry People
To advertise your fine dining
establishmentcall
631.324.2500for more information!
Independent Dining Ads GET RESULTSYour ad also appears on our website in our
www.indyeastend.com
Ingredients (serves 4)8 ears of corn (shucked)
4 tbs butter at room temperature2tbsp crème fraiche
2 tbsp olive oil1 tbsp mayonnaise
¼ c grated parmesan cheese1 tbsp lemon zest
1 tbsp salt1 tbsp black pepper¼ c chopped cilantro1 tsp cayenne pepper
1 tsp cumin1 tsp curry powder
MethodBegin by heating the grill to
medium heat. A gas grill should be set around 350 to 375 degrees.
Place the shucked corn on the top roasting rack of the grill. Mix all other ingredients together in a bowl until
grilled Corn With Cilantro Butter
thoroughly incorporated.Brush the buttery mixture over the
corn and shut the grill cover. Rotate and brush corn with cilantro butter every 3 to 4 minutes for 30 minutes. Enjoy.
REAL ESTATE IN THE NEWSJuly 9, 2014 THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler WatchmanB-24 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
cken
No MSG
CHEN’S GARDENCHINESE RESTAURANT
Take-out & Free Delivery (Min. $15)
SZECHUAN & CANTONESE SPECIALTIES
PURCHASE OVER:$15.00 FREE Egg Roll$25.00 FREE Quart of Soup$35.00 FREE Order of Dumplings$50.00 FREE Order of Sesame Chicken
329-0333 • 329-3232478 Montauk Hwy. (Next To Dutch Motel) East Hampton
ASTPORT LIQUORSEETastings Every Sat.
3-7 pm
All Major Credit Cards& Debit Cards Accepted
Senior DiscountTuesday
Gift Wrapping
$1.00 Off$10.00 Purchase
$2.00 Off$20.00 Purchase
Not to be combined with other offers. Not to be combined with other offers.
15 Eastport Manor Road•Eastport • 325-1388• Open 9am(In the Eastport Shopping Center, next to King Kullen)
Open Sunday 12pm - 6pm • Closed on MondayOpen Sunday 12pm - 6pm • Monday 12-7pmMonday 9-6, Tuesday-Thursday 9-8, Friday & Saturday 9-9, Sunday 12-6
LOTTO IN STOREAll Major Credit Cards
Accepted
47 Montauk Highway, East Hampton, NY(631) 604-5585
Featuring all your favoritedishes & items as our sisterrestaurant
Open 7 Days for DinnerNow Serving Lunch Wednesday thru Saturday 12 Noon ‘til 3pm
Zokkon Sushi available atHampton Market Place
Weekday
4-7pm at the ba
r
Cliff’s Elbow Room1549 Main Road,
Jamesport722-3292
Cliff’s Elbow Too!1085 Franklinville Road,
Laurel298-3262
Cliff’s Rendezvous313 E. Main Street
Riverhead727-6880
LIKE US ON FACEBOOKfacebook.com/cliffselbowroom
www.elbowroomli.com www.cliffsrendezvous.com
$3 pints
of ice cold
Coors Light
Miller Light
Giant braided Soft Pretzels $2.95Beef Sliders $2ea.Quesadillas $3ea.Nachos $2.95
Loaded Fries $2.95
All regular menu appetizers 1/2 priceHappy Hour Food Specials are only available at the bar
Happy Hour Food Specials
are only available at the bar
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FREE local delivery
Open 7 Days
FREE Gift Wrapping
www.domainefraney.com
ORDER ONLINE!