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Archives for October 2011

November Novel Writing

October 31, 2011 By Dayton Most Metro Leave a Comment

November is National Novel Writing Month. Put your leftover Halloween candy to use as midnight fuel for frantic writing sessions and gain an easy excuse out of an awkward family Thanksgiving dinner.

In the month of November, a few hundred thousand aspiring novelist attempt to write 50,000 words in a single month. But it’s not for the faint of art: over 200,000 WriMos attempted the Great American Novel last year but only 37,500 novels were completed.

Success Stories

The event has had its success stories though. New York bestseller Water for Elephants by Sara Gruen began as a NaNoWriMo novel, which transformed into a summer blockbuster featuring Reece Witherspoon and Robert Pattinson. And author Erin Morgenstern became an overnight sensation with her fantastical book, The Night Circus, which earned a six figure advance, starred reviews and a movie deal as well.

NaNoWriMo is free to join at the website. The site is notorious for crashing and running sluggishly during the first week of November due to massive traffic. But the staff at Office of Light and Letters, the creators of the NaNoWriMo project, recently converted to Ruby on Rails to prevent these problems. Registering early is key, as it is hard to play catch up once the month begins.

Dayton Events

Dayton has an active writing community and online forum board for its WriMos. There is an online meeting on October 31st at 11pm to countdown that last sane minutes before kickoff at midnight, where any questions can be answered.

The official launch party is on Saturday, November 5th from 1:00-5:30 pm at the Kettering-Moraine Library. The largest attended meeting, you can meet and greet your fellow Wrimos in person, brainstorm plot, snack on goodies and play Word Wars.

The rest of the month features coffee house meet-ups, word wars online, write-ins and TGIO (Thank God It’s Over) party in early December.

NaNoWriMo operates on an honor system where you log in your words online, to be verified at the end of the month. And whether you win or lose, any word count in the busy of month of November is an accomplishment to be celebrated.

You can join the NaNoWriMo adventure at www.nanowrimo.org. Log onto the Dayton forum to meet more aspiring and established local writers.

Filed Under: Dayton Literati

Jimmie’s Last Call

October 31, 2011 By Dayton937 3 Comments

The iconic ceiling at Jimmie's Cornerstone

Last call…

(And… Soon…Welcome HOME)

Last Call at Jimmie’s Cornerstone Bar and Grille… and all that history at Brown and Wyoming!

Last Call for Jimmie and sons, and the whole wonderful gang of friendly wait staff, cooks and… who knows… a coupla’ ghosts and goblins who show up ONLY at Hallowe’en… Las Call at Jimmie’s Cornerstone Bar and Grille is… well, Hallowe’en. October 31st. The “evening and “morning” before” All Saints Day.

Get your drinks and food one more time… before… silence falls at Brown and Wyoming.

That silence… that’s gonna be… Well, complicated.

For Jimmie and Sue Brandell and their sons Nick and Jason… Well. For them it’s been a sort of virtual second home: dad Jimmie shows up at 5:30 a.m. or so (that, of course, won’t change in the NEW home) and maybe leaving at… Gosh: a visitor to the “Bar and Grille” will find Jimmie still around at 5:00 or 6:00 or… whenever he can lead. And that ALSO won’t be changing. Wife Sue helps out with — well, handles, in lots of ways — things like radio/TV advertising, wine selections and… WeeElks football players, too. Oh: and the “real” home, too.

Plus saying “hello” to old friends while she walks to a meeting about… things like radio/TV advertising, wine selections. Oh: and let’s not forget making sure Jimmie, Jason and Nick are happy, too.

The “total family effort” is what it takes to keep me ‘n’ you and all the rest of his steady customers. In this “high tech” world we’re getting used to, there’s now “double click” to get a hamburger just right or get the “french” in the potato fries on the tables. For all of us folks waiting for the “just right” burger or the hot from the deep fryer…

Hmmm… If we’re on a tight schedule to get back to work, we might be just a “tad” annoyed. For Jimmie and company and for the whole rest of the “food industry” getting it out of the kitchen and on the tables in just… business as usual.

But last call. Last call: like we said: that’s complicated. All that silence that’ll never end, even as what was once the home of good food, good company, some music and that weird, weird ceiling that you had to know about to even look up at it… Well, the next noises that will come from that building after last call will be the sounds of workers taking that building apart so that all that wonderful activity… the good food, good company, loud music and all… That will gone.

Something will turn in to… Nothing. No patio. No pool tables or posters on the wall, no “band stand” doubling as an elevated eating area when the music ends.

And Jimmie’s Cornerstone Bar and Gille and all that history beginning in 1868 when liquor was first tipped and from the 1930’s when it was “Stoecklein Cafe and many other bar/restaurants) will be gone. (Oh: and if you’re reading this and remembering the “1001 Club” or any others, just add your memory to the “Comments section” of this website!)

So back to that “virtual home” concept. Jimmie lives at the “Bar and Grille” probably a bit more than he gets to relax at this “real” home. Oh: and another thing about that “virtual” home? Talk to Jimmie and Sue and you get to hear the stories of pratfalls involving hidden accesses to the basement for beer and such, stories of tiny couches that offered a night’s sleep to Jimmie… And on and on and on.

Again: it has been sort of the family’s virtual home. For the record, for the past seven years. Coming to an end on Hallowe’en…

So, finally: NEXT.

“First Call: In the Company of Heroes.”

Yep: Ladder 11. A whole new place… a place for new memories to begin… A place with old memories, by the way, and we will begin to learn about those. About those heroes, too. And if you can contribute a story or two… or THREE… about the days when it was “just” the firehouse at Brown and Wyoming: well, add those to the “Comments Section” as well.

So now we’re here at “Last Call” and soon…

First Call.

See you there.

Filed Under: Dayton Dining, The Featured Articles

Wonderland: It’s Larger Than You Realize

October 30, 2011 By Dayton Most Metro 1 Comment

DPO features multi-talented actress, pop icon, singer, and social advocate Lynda Carter in SuperPops season opener

Where were you in ‘72?

Trick question. Actually, a better one might be “Where were you when you were 21?” In the service? Still in school? Pursuing a career?

Lynda Carter was coming off of four years of uphill climbing chasing the dream of a career in music. She had started in high school singing with Just Us, a makeshift quartet. At 17, she joined The Relatives, an aptly named band consisting of two of her cousins and drummer-cum-actor Gary Burghoff (“Radar” O’Reilly in the television series M*A*S*H). The group performed at the Sahara Hotel and Casino lounge in Las Vegas for three months, during all of which time Lynda had to enter through the kitchen; after all, she wasn’t 21.

Yet.

After a short stint at Arizona State University, Lynda dropped out to sing with a group called The Garfin Gathering with Lynda Carter. Good news: for their first performance the group got booked into a brand new San Francisco hotel. Bad news: the place was so new it didn’t have a sidewalk entrance. Result: they became part of the underground music movement…literally. Their audience consisted mainly of janitors and hotel guests whose cars were parked in the underground garage. She returned to Arizona in 1972, the year she turned 21.

Then things started to happen quickly. Lynda entered a local beauty contest, won, and kept winning until she had become Miss World USA representing the U.S. and reaching the semi-finals of the 1972 Miss World pageant. That’s when most of us first became aware of Lynda Carter.

We started seeing Lynda again, this time on TV in Starsky and Hutch, Cos, and Nakia and in several B-movies. The next time we saw Lynda, 1975, she had become Diana Prince, the alter ego of the title character in the TV series The New Adventures of Wonder Woman, a role that many continue to identify her with. And while that’s a good thing, it presents a most incomplete picture of the depth of artistic talent Lynda actually possesses on so many levels.

Besides the hit TV show, her acting credits span 8 movie and 27 television roles. And that’s just Lynda the actress. There’s also Lynda the singer/musician.

And the body of work she has amassed in that field is equally as impressive.

In the late ‘70s, Lynda recorded Portrait, an album on which she shares credit as co-writer on several numbers. In her appearances on five CBS TV variety specials, she worked with such musical stars as Ray Charles, Merle Haggard, George Benson, Eddie Rabbit, and Kenny Rogers. In the ‘80s, she made singing appearances on the Las Vegas Strip and Atlantic City. In 2005, Lynda appeared as Mama Morton in the West End London production of the musical Chicago. The Chicago: 10th Anniversary Edition CD box set contains her rendition of the song When You’re Good to Mama. In 2007, Lynda began touring the country with An Evening with Lynda Carter, a one-woman musical cabaret show. In 2009, she released her second album At Last; it climbed to tenth on Billboard’s Jazz Album Chart.

Not bad for someone who began her musical career taking singing lessons from a practitioner of homeopathic medicine who lived on an Indian reservation. And therein lays a clue to how Lynda not only developed her musical talent, but also the strength to handle the physical demands of her career.

By her own admission, Wonder Woman “is not a one-note samba.”

In an interview in the April, 2011 issue of Energy Times, Lynda spelled out details of the personal, natural health regimen that has helped her keep her stomach flat, her voice clear, and her strength at optimal levels. It involves taking blood tests to determine a treatment starting point and boosting her immune system with fish oil, vitamin D3, bee pollen, wheatgrass, and herbal teas. Dietary measures include consuming organic berries, almonds, walnuts, pecans, and honey with almond milk for breakfast; noshing favorites include homemade soups, cucumber slices mixed with hummus, salmon, and grass-fed meat and chicken.

And weight-bearing exercise, rowing (on the Potomac River) in a scull, yoga, stretching, and walking comprise her exercise regimen.

She needs to do all this, to keep in shape for her musical career and to keep up a schedule that involves many hours devoted to promoting breast cancer awareness. A stout supporter of the Susan G. Komen Foundation, Lynda has testified before Congress to raise attention to the need for early detection of lung cancer. Her mother had suffered from the need for constant removal of cysts from her breasts, and a friend has died of lung cancer. To debunk the myth that you need to be a smoker to contract lung cancer, Lynda points to the fact that they very air we breathe can be a source of infection. We’ve all read of the dangers of secondary smoke, but Lynda believes that such things as aerosols and pesticides can also be dangerous. And she takes every opportunity she has to warn people of the dangers and enlist support for early detection.

Friday and Saturday, November 4 and 5 at 8pm in the Schuster Center, the Dayton Philharmonic Orchestra presents Lynda Carter: The Wonder of Song. There you can see and hear an artist of not only great beauty and talent, but also of great content and character.

Lynda Carter: The Wonder of Song

November 4 & 5, 2011 at 8 pm

Location: Mead Theatre – Schuster Center

Click for Tickets

Filed Under: On Stage Dayton, The Featured Articles

FoodAdventures Dives Into Papi’s by the Lake

October 28, 2011 By Dayton937 5 Comments

What do you get when you cross an abandoned school gymnasium in the Waynesville/Harveysburg area and a veteran of butcher of 40 years.  No, this is not the plot of a bad horror movie, but an incredibly unique restaurant called Papi’s by the Lake.  Located near Caesar’s Creek, as in salad, this “everything from scratch” restaurant is located in the antique, sauerkraut and Renaissance Festival mecca of the world.   Food Adventures will now think of good food when we hear the words Waynesville or Harveysburg.

For the past couple of months, our friend Kim has been telling us that we have to come to Papi’s by the Lake, and try their homemade food.  She would know, Kim works there as a waitress.  We finally decided to take the plunge and dive into the lake.   So, we got into our cars to find out where the heck Harveysburg is located.  Eventually, we found our way to the restaurant, which is near the Caesars Creek bridge.

Yes, This Restaurant is in a School Gymnasium !

When we pulled up to the restaurant we gasped.  This was not like any place we have ever seen.  The modest handmade sign, guarded the entry to an old abandoned high school gymnasium.  We noticed immediately that the parking lot was packed with customers.  We knew at this moment we were in for a seriously good Food Adventure!  As we walked in, to our surprise the restaurant and kitchen were inside the gym!  We strolled into the gym like the King and Queen of the prom (please post your comment on who you think the Queen would be).  We were greeted by an antique moonshine still, that to our dismay was not in operation.  Our friend Kim took us to our table, and introduced us to owner Mike “Papi” Hatfield, who promised us a great homecooked meal.  “Papi'” explained to us that he was a former butcher for 40 years, and after cooking at various festival booths, he decided to open his own place.  The city of Harveysburg welcomed the new restaurant with open arms.

Why the name Papi’s?  Because his grandchildren call him Papi, and let us tell you, this restaurant has a family feel to it.   Some of the friendly workers are family members, and the patrons are as jovial as the staff.  We interacted with various customers and staff alike, and not one person was offended by us, in fact they all participated in our Food Adventure.

First we were given a basket of hot, homemade dinner rolls drizzled with butter, that would have made Paula Deen proud.  As or food arrived Papi explained he likes to serve large salads since his homecooked meals can sometimes take a few extra minutes to prepare.   We enjoyed our salad under the basketball nets and scoreboard, and out came the parade of entrees.

Keep in mind we only ordered 2 dinners, salmon and a cheeseburger.  Those meals were followed by samples of fried shrimp, a pulled pork sandwich, and a grilled butterflied porkchop. The large piece of lemon pepper salmon was cooked to perfection, and would rival any restaurant.  Ragu went the more casual route and tried the cheeseburger, which Papi’s himself ground in the back from black angus top rounds.   Ragu was again for murdering the hamburger with condiments, and he even involved Papi in the argument.  If the school was still in function, Papi would have given Ragu detention for sauce violations.  Ragu also enjoyed the freshly cut fries that were sliced and cooked minutes earlier.

The couple of fried shrimp we had were good, but you will have to ask our waitress how they were, as she sat down at our table and ate most of them.   Papi’s also offers chilled shrimp cocktail with his own homemade cocktail sauce.  This was a great treat.

Their Burgers are Ground Fresh Daily From Black Angus Rounds

The “sample” porkchop we received compliments of Papi, was a huge butterflied chop, that carnivore we dug into. and left his baked potato unfinished.   Not only was this dish good, but Papi’s pulled pork sandwich was incredible and we would put it up against any BBQ in the Dayton area.

As we talked with Mr. Hatfield, we walked up to the kitchen carving area, which was located near the visitors bench.  They had incredible looking prime rib, large grilled steaks, carved whole turkeys, and whole roasted chickens coming out of the kitchen.  Their chicken is never frozen, they use a local bakery for their bread, and they buy local produce whenever they can.  The staff told us every Thursday is sausage gravy night with Papi’s own hand ground sausage gravy.

The front of the kitchen and cashier area is a table display of homemade desserts.  Papi’s wife, Lynne, makes the pies and cakes from scratch.  They had berry pies, pumpkin pies, carrot cake and our favorite, the peanut butter cake.  This peanut butter cake is one of the greatest creations known to man.  An already stuffed Food Adventure Crew still could not stop eating this rich cake, and it made Lynne smile.

This Peanu Butter Cake Made From Scratch is Legendary

For those penny pinchers, you will like Papi’s as well.  Every item on the menu is under $10 except the nightly specials which are around $15.  For homemade, fresh from scratch meals, it is a great deal.

Papi’s on the Lake is a perfect example of why we do Food Adventures.   People need to know about good places like this.  This is a mom and pop place in a friendly small town, that is a hidden secret.  Papi’s by the Lake is a one of a kind, home cooking restaurant.  Whether you are near Caesars Creek for  the day, or live a good 20 minutes away, this place is definitely worth a visit.  Do not be put off by the fact it is in a high school gym, in fact it give Papi’s its charm.  It has personality, and substance.  Papi promised us a great home cooked meal, and he delivered.  We would gladly go back to this eatery in a heartbeat.  As for the restaurant in a gymnasium, Papi scored a slam dunk on this one.  Light up the scoreboard!

Visit FOOD ADVENTURES on FACEBOOK by clicking here.  “Like” us to become an official fan !

Comment below, have you been to Papi’s on the Lake?  What did you think?

 

[album: http://www.daytonmostmetro.com/wp-content/plugins/dm-albums/dm-albums.php?currdir=/wp-content/uploads/dm-albums/Papis By The Lake/]

Filed Under: Food Adventures Tagged With: Caesars Creek, Food Adventures, Harveysburg, Lake, Papi's. Waynesville, Papis on the lake, Ragu

Halloween Spirits

October 28, 2011 By Brian Petro Leave a Comment

Happy Halloween!

On Monday, the kids will go out and bring home candy by the bucket full. They will run around all of Dayton, princesses and heroes, having a good time and asking us all for tricks and treats.

Adults are allowed to have a good time for this holiday as well. Some adults have already had a great time dressing up for Masquerage (Editor’s note:  Brian managed the bars there this year), and if they missed that grand soiree, they have the Hauntfest to look forward to this weekend. While you are bouncing around the Oregon District, or at home throwing a party of you own, try offering (or asking for) these more adult candy treats. Some of these candy-based cocktails have multiple recipes, so the simplest recipe was used whenever possible. Also, specific brands of liquor have been removed unless that particular liquor’s flavor is required for the drink. Let’s begin with the fact that it is fall, and this is the best time of year for caramel covered apples.

Caramel Apple Martini

1 oz. tequila
1/2 oz. butterscotch schnapps
1 oz. apple cider
1 tsp fresh lemon juice

Shake vigorously with ice and strain into martini glass. Garnish with Apple Slice

Fall also brings bags and bags of candy corn. Some people love it (that would be me), and some people who don’t. Either way, it makes a tasty little shot.

Candy Corn Shot

1 part Licor 43® liqueur
1 part orange curacao liqueur
1 part cream

Carefully layer on top of each other to resemble the halloween candy. Lay down a layer of Licor 43 on the bottom of a shot glass. Then, over the back of a spoon, add the layer of orange curacao. On top, add the layer of cream (not milk. Milk does not layer all that well.)

While you are in a layering-candy-shots mood, here is another one for you to try out.

Bailey’s Chocolate Cherry

1/2 oz grenadine
1/2 oz coffee liqueur
1/2 oz Irish cream
Pour a layer of grenadine at the bottom of a shot glass. Then, over the back of a spoon to disperse and control the pour, add a layer of coffee liqueur. Finally, layer the Irish cream on top.

It is apparent you can use Peeps for anything. Even as the basis for, and garnish of, a sweet martini.

Peeping Halloween Martini

Scary for so many reasons

1 oz. milk
1 oz. vanilla vodka
1/2 oz. white crème de cacao
1 Halloween Marshmallow Peep

Pour the milk, vodka, and crème de cocoa into a mixing glass with ice in it. Shake vigorously and pour into a chilled martini glass. Use the Peep as a garnish

There are plenty of delicious candy bars out there, and good bartenders across the country have been trying to recreate them in liquid form for many years. Fortunately, they have been very successful going about it.

Liquid Snickers

1 oz. dark crème de cacao
1/2 oz. Irish cream
1/2 oz. Frangelico
1/2 oz. light cream

Pour the crème de cacao, Irish cream, and Frangelico over ice in an old-fashioned or other taller glass. Top with the light cream, give it a stir, and enjoy.

Almond Joy

1/2 oz. coconut rum
1 oz. amaretto
1 oz. crème de cacao
2 oz. cream

Fill a mixing glass with ice, add all of the ingredients. Shake, then strain it into a highball glass filled with ice.

Candy is dandy, but liquor is quicker. -Ogden Nash

Butterfinger

1 1/2 oz. butterscotch schnapps
1 1/2 oz. Irish cream
2 parts milk

Fill glass with ice. Pour Butterscotch Schnapps and Bailey’s into the glass. Fill with Milk. Shake. Serve with sip straw.

Milky Way Martini

2 oz vanilla vodka
2 oz chocolate liqueur
1 oz Irish cream

Fill a mixing glass with ice, add all of the ingredients. Stir it up and serve in a chilled cocktail glass without ice.

Tootsie Roll

2 oz. coffee liqueur
2 oz. orange juice

I know how it reads. Pour the coffee liqueur over ice in a shorter glass. Fill the rest of the glass with the orange juice. Believe it or not, it will taste like a Tootsie Roll.

Peppermint Patty

1 oz. crème de menthe
1 oz. crème de cacao
Splash of vanilla vodka or vanilla schnapps

Fill a mixing glass with ice, add the ingredients. Shake it up, and pour it over ice in a short glass.

With an array of cocktails like that for your weekend, you should have no shortage of shots, martinis, and other liquid confections for your guests or your travels this holiday weekend. However, the phrase we hear is “TRICK or treat”. If you are feeling a little feisty, or are looking to play a trick on someone who has been particularly mischievous, here is a little something that is not sweet. Not a treat in the least.

The Graveyard

1 oz. hot sauce
1 oz. tequila
Lemon lime soda

Pour the hot sauce and tequila over ice. Fill the rest of the glass with lemon lime soda. Stir a little, and then serve to your unsuspecting victim.

Cheers!

Filed Under: Happy Hour

Family Matters

October 27, 2011 By Russell Florence, Jr. 1 Comment

The cast of Lost in Yonkers (Contributed photo)

In the midst of a busy, predominately impressive fall theater season, the Dayton Theatre Guild has effortlessly produced another hit. One month after the luminous local premiere of “Souvenir: A Fantasia on the Life of Florence Foster Jenkins,” the Guild offers an outstanding production of Neil Simon’s 1991 Tony Award and Pulitzer Prize-winning dramatic comedy “Lost in Yonkers.”

A delightfully authentic staging tenderly helmed by Fran Pesch, “Yonkers,” set in 1942-43, charms and captivates as the Kurnitz clan of Yonkers, New York lovingly squabbles with a domineering, opinionated matriarch known for ruling with an iron fist. The fiercely resolute Grandma (exquisitely portrayed with astute perception by Barbara Jorgensen) particularly failed to show a great deal of love for her children, who often describe her as being made of steel due to her harsh German upbringing. Although no one can erase the hurtful feelings  from years of emotional neglect, there is some sense that family wounds will continue to heal based on Grandma’s credo which values strength and survival. As she fittingly reminds her grandson, “It’s not so important that you hate me… It’s only important that you live.”

Jorgensen, as wonderful as she is, doesn’t have to carry the weight of this production on her shoulders. She is truly a key component within an ensemble, which allows her role to properly remain formidable and imposing without becoming overpowering. Philip Stock and Joel Daniel are equally and respectively terrific as Jay and Arty, whose coming-of-age journey under their grandmother’s guardianship frames the action. Perfectly cast as close-knit brothers trapped in a circumstance beyond their control for 10 months, Stock and Daniel endearingly embrace the bluntness, innocence and vulnerability within their colorful characters. Amy Diederich also shines as the incessantly chatty, childlike Bella, Jay and Arty’s doting aunt. Diederich’s superb delivery of Bella’s heartbreakingly poignant Act 2 monologue, in which she shares her desire to become a wife and have a family of her own, will bring tears to your eyes. Saverio Perugini, slick and shady, brings a cool, tough and intimidating edge to Louie, Jay and Arty’s gangster uncle. Rob Breving is nicely understated as Eddie, Jay and Arty’s father. Rachel Wilson delightfully portrays the audibly odd Gert, who prefers silence whenever possible.

In the Guild’s film hands, it’s a comfort to know “Lost in Yonkers” remains a splendid testament to the importance of legacy, unity and forgiveness as well as the invaluable maturity gained from lessons learned.

Lost in Yonkers continues through Nov. 6 at the Dayton Theatre Guild, 430 Wayne Ave. Performances are Friday at 8 p.m., Saturday at 5 p.m. and Sunday at 3 p.m. Act One: 60 minutes; Act Two: 60 minutes. Tickets are $11-$18. For tickets or more information, call (937) 278-5993 or visit www.daytontheatreguild.org

Filed Under: On Stage Dayton Reviews

Fright Farce

October 27, 2011 By Russell Florence, Jr. 1 Comment

(L to R) Dean Swann, Jonathan Berry and Darren Brown with Bethany Locklear in Evil Dead: The Musical (Contributed photo)

Just in time for Halloween, Beavercreek Community Theatre’s alternative Edge of the Creek Productions seeks to entertain rather than amaze with its local premiere of the mediocre “Evil Dead: The Musical,” a bloody, naughty, pop culture-friendly spoof based on Sam Raimi’s cult film classics.

Featuring book and lyrics by George Reinblatt and music by Frank Cipolla, Christopher Bond, Melissa Morris and Reinblatt, “Evil Dead” concerns a spring break getaway gone awry in an abandoned cabin in the woods. Hook-ups, dismemberment, killer trees and Candarian demons factor into the mayhem, but the incredibly silly, envelope-pushing material, hindered by a forgettable score chock full of hokey lyrics and melodies, just isn’t clever or hysterical enough to remain totally engaging. The one-liners are seriously hit and miss, and a lack of heart is particularly problematic. It’s entirely possible for an oddball, risqué show like “Evil Dead” to succeed on broad camp appeal and profane thrills, but an audience must ultimately care about the characters. Reinblatt and Co. should have found a way to humanize the humor and transform the story into a simultaneously outlandish and emotional product akin to “Bat Boy: The Musical,” a wonderful example of BCT’s Edge of the Creek programming in 2006.
Thankfully, director/scenic designer/costumer/co-properties master Chris Harmon, enjoyably aided by choreographer Annette Looper, keeps the thin action brisk and lively with a sufficient amount of sight gags to keep you awake. Harmon’s appropriately over-the-top ensemble particularly grasps the material’s tongue-in-cheek intentions with great skill. The versatile Jonathan Berry delivers another full-fledged performance as Ash, a heroic housewares employee. Berry is romantically linked with the lovely Bethany Locklear, who makes the most of the underwritten Linda. Darren Brown and Lindsay Sherman are equally compatible as Scott and Shelly. The infectiously goofy Angelé Price is a joy as Cheryl, Ash’s sister. As the rustic Jake, Michael Shannon humorously embodies the backwoods stereotype. The reliably comical Dean Swann tackles an assortment of featured roles including a talking moose. Lynn Kesson, sharp and precise, relishes her role as the overbearing Annie, who notably proclaims “All the Men in My Life Keep Getting Killed by Candarian Demons.”
If that song title made you giggle, “Evil Dead” might be your cup of tea.

Evil Dead: The Musical continues through Oct. 30 at the Lofino Center, 3868 Dayton-Xenia Rd., Beavercreek. Performances are Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 3 p.m. Act One: 52 minutes; Act Two: 40 minutes. The production contains adult language and themes. Tickets are $11-$13. For tickets or more information, call (937) 429-4737 or visit www.bctheatre.org

Filed Under: On Stage Dayton Reviews

The Human Race Presents “Caroline, Or Change”

October 27, 2011 By Dayton Most Metro 1 Comment

A STORY ABOUT AMERICA, WITH A WHOLE WORLD OF MUSIC

Cast members Malachi-Phree J. Pate, Yvette Williams, J. Miguel Conrado Rojas (photo credit: Scott J. Kimmins)

(Press Release from Human Race Theatre)

It’s 1963. Martin Luther King has just told the world of his dream. John F. Kennedy is about to be assassinated. And in the basement of a Jewish family’s home in Louisiana, their African-American maid spends her days doing laundry and being the only friend of a boy who has lost his mother.

That’s the setting for Caroline, or Change, a musical with its roots in the life of Tony Kushner (Angels in America), who wrote the book and lyrics, and a cornucopia of music styles used by composer Jeanine Tesori (Thoroughly Modern Millie). When it played on Broadway. Time Out New York called Caroline “daring, beautiful and profoundly moving.”

In the production at The Loft Theatre by The Human Race, Dayton’s own professional theatre company, Caroline is played by Tanesha Gary, who was in the Broadway cast as part of a singing radio, one of the show’s many whimsical anthropomorphic characters. She’s often visited in the basement laundry room by Noah, her employers’ young son, played by 11-year old Brendan Plate of Washington Township.

Cast members Tanesha Gary and Brendan Plate (photo credit: Scott J. Kimmins)

“The role of Noah is substantial,” says director Scott Stoney. “Brendan is really good about taking direction. It’s been interesting to watch the relationship of Caroline and Noah build.”

Brendan isn’t the only youngster in the show. Caroline has four children of her own, including two young boys played by 14-year old Malachi-Phree J. Pate of Dayton, a Stivers student, and 9-year old J. Miguel Conrado Rojas, a 4th grader at Cox Elementary in Xenia. “We’re really thrilled that we found these very talented local youngsters,” says Stoney.

Caroline’s oldest son is serving in Vietnam. Her only daughter is played by Julian’s real-life older sister, Yvette Williams, who was recently Homecoming Queen at Wright State. Her best friend, Dotty, is played by Taprena Augustine, a resident of Blacklick, outside Columbus.

Noah’s father is played by Bruce Sabath, who was in the Best Revival Tony-winning production of Company; his stepmother by Adrienne Gibbons Oehlers, who was Kitty in The Human Race production of The Drowsy Chaperone; his grandparents by Resident Artist Kay Bosse and Dayton-area stalwarts Saul Caplan and K.L. Storer.

The anthropomorphic characters include Brittany Campbell (who’s used to non-human parts, since she was once part of a Sesame Street bug choir) as The Washing Machine; Chicago-based Dwelvan David as both The Dryer and The Bus; New Yorker Tonya Thompson as The Moon; and Ashanti J’Aria and Kimberly Shay Hamby of New York and Shawn Storms (Trix in Drowsy Chaperone) as The Radio.

Cast - The Gellman family celebrates Chanukah (photo credit: Scott J. Kimmins)

Behind the scenes, Scot Woolley and Resident Artist Sean Michael Flowers are Music Director and Assistant Music Director/pianist, and Heather Jackson is Stage Manage., Choreographer Teressa Wylie and Scenic Designer Dan Gray are from the Ohio State theatre faculty. Lighting is by Resident Artist John Rensel, costumes by Kristine Kearney, and sound by Nathan D. Dean, with Heather Powell handling props.

Caroline, or Change is the second presentation of The Human Race’s 25th Anniversary Season. It will have a preview performance Thursday, November 3, and officially open November 4, with performances through November 20. Tickets are available via www.humanracetheatre.org, by calling Ticket Center Stage at (937) 228-3630, or at the Schuster Center box office.

Production sponsors for Caroline, or Change are the JPMorgan Chase Foundation, The Harry A. Toulmin, Jr., and Virginia B. Toulmin Fund of the Dayton Foundation, Muse Machine, Tim and Char Scroggins, DP&L Foundation, and Emerson Climate Technologies, with additional support from Mrs. Wallace E. Johnson, Richard and Marni Flagel, The Roberts Foundation, the National Conference of Community & Justice of Greater Dayton, Burhill Leasing, One Lincoln Park, and Bob Ross Buick-GMC & Mercedes-Benz.

Filed Under: On Stage Dayton Previews

Murder on The Menu every Monday

October 26, 2011 By Dayton937 Leave a Comment

Looking for a fun and mysterious way to spend your Halloween evening? Dress up in your best Halloween costume and head to Dayton’s Spaghetti Warehouse to enjoy Mayhem & Mystery’s hilarious and interactive dinner theater show.  Guests will enjoy a full meal while getting involved in a spooky yet humorous murder mystery that is sure to entertain family members of all ages.

Mayhem & Mystery is an Ohio-based acting company that was founded about 12 years ago. The actors perform an improv show while guests enjoy a salad, a main course, and dessert. It is a very interactive experience – actors never break character, even while having individual conversations with the audience members. The audience participates in games and contests throughout the show and are asked to solve the murder mystery at the end. Three winners are chosen and each receives a certificate and a prize. Each show is themed for the season and runs for two months, allowing time for six different productions each year. It is now operated by Tamra and Jerry Francis, who have been with the company since it began. Tamra and Jerry write all the scripts themselves while also participating in the shows, and rotate the rest of the cast between four or five actors.

“We’ve never repeated a script,” says Tamra.

I attended the Halloween-themed show entitled “Costume Carousing,” where guests were invited to Morana Toggery’s annual costume party and encouraged to wear their Halloween costumes. We were seated at long tables in a back room, giving a true party-like atmosphere to the experience.

Guests were enjoying their salad when a tall woman dressed entirely in black entered the room and welcomed all of us to her Halloween costume party. Morana Toggery, continued on to introduce herself and inform us about her dark family history and hidden family fortune. We were soon joined by her neighbor, Dolorous Peacock, who wasted no time in showing us her dark and dry sense of humor and love for all things eerie and weird. A loud, obnoxious woman entered the party, belting out country tunes and introducing herself to everyone as Ethel Mae Chatman. The actors bantered back and forth with each other and with the crowd, decorating each table and guest with cobwebs and dust in order to set the Halloween mood. Morana’s husband – a tall, Frankenstein look-alike named Frank – joined the party and provided endless comic relief with his corny jokes and loud, entertaining demeanor.

After introducing themselves to the audience, the actors exited while dinner was served. The cast returned later and wasted no time in making the guests feel right at home – guests were chosen at random to participate in games such as a costume contest, and were constantly interacting with the actors. The dark and witty humor entertained the audience and kept us laughing throughout our meal, while also introducing a mysterious storyline and prepping the audience for what was to come. The actors played off each other and the guests, bouncing back and forth from well-rehearsed lines to on-the-spot jokes and conversations. I do not want to give away the end of the show, but as is custom for Mayhem & Mystery, one of the actors was “murdered” and guests were asked to solve the crime. I was one of the three winners for the night! I received a Comedic Criminology certificate signed by the cast and a free ticket to attend another show later this year.

“It’s a part time fun job and hobby,” says Tamra. “It’s still a production, we still have a script, but it’s a different show every night.” All shows are written to be family friendly, and audience members of all ages are welcome.

The next Costume Carousing Halloween-themed show is on October 31st at 7 p.m., at the Spaghetti Warehouse in downtown Dayton. The cost of a ticket is $25.95 and covers the meal and the show. Mayhem & Mystery perform their shows in Dayton on Monday and Friday nights and perform in Columbus on Tuesdays. They perform these public shows and also at hotels, catering companies, and corporate events.

The holiday show, Forties Yuletide Frolics, will begin on November 7th and run through New Year’s Eve. Tamra says the holiday show is her favorite show of the year, and the cast puts in a little something special for the show on New Year’s Eve. Wednesday night performances at the Dayton Spaghetti Warehouse are added in December, but Tamra warned me that tickets sell out quickly during this time, so hurry and make your reservations while they’re still available!

If you’re interested in booking Mayhem & Mystery for an event, attending a show, or auditioning for the cast, contact Tamra Francis at [email protected] or check out the website at www.mayhemmystery.com.

Filed Under: Dayton Dining Tagged With: DaytonDining, Mayhem & Mystery, Spaghetti Warehouse

FilmDayton Announces New Executive Director

October 26, 2011 By Dayton Most Metro 2 Comments

The FilmDayton Board of Trustees voted on October 25 to hire Megan Cooper as the new Executive Director. Cooper takes the helm on November 1, 2011.

A two-time graduate of the University of Dayton, Cooper studied theater and communication before beginning a career as a development professional.  An active member of the Dayton community, she is a trustee at Culture Works, featured writer on DaytonMostMetro.com, Updayton board member, and project volunteer with Activated Spaces. As an actor, Cooper has performed on many local stages and for regional radio, film and television spots.

Ron Rollins, President of the FilmDayton Board of Trustees, says, “Many of the board members already knew Megan either through her film work or community involvement. As we consider what FilmDayton can be for the region, we know she has the drive and knowledge to help us grow and meet our goals. We’re looking forward to what the future holds for FilmDayton.”

As the new Executive Director, Cooper is challenged to further the FilmDayton mission to provide opportunities for filmmakers. She will work with a strong coalition of volunteers to plan the annual FilmDayton Festival, facilitate educational programming (such as the Boot Camps and Film Connections), and support economic development in hopes to bring more productions to the region.

Cooper says, “FilmDayton was a great fit. I believe in the future of Dayton, the arts, and economic development opportunities in our region; FilmDayton brings those aspects together. I look forward to serving the organization and sharing my skills to support film in the region.”

Next steps for FilmDayton include an internship collaboration with Wright State University and a renewed dedication to economic development. As reported previously, FilmDayton will continue talks with the Dayton Art Institute and Dayton Visual Arts Center to determine if a partnership could lead to greater sustainability and successful programming.

Filed Under: Visual Arts Tagged With: FilmDayton, Megan Cooper

Monty Python’s Spamalot – Complete with Beautiful Show Girls and Killer Rabbits

October 26, 2011 By Dayton Most Metro Leave a Comment

Nominated in 2005 for fourteen Tony Awards and winner of three (including Best Musical), Monty Python’s Spamalot is coming to Dayton for a one-night show this Sunday at the Schuster Performing Arts Center.  The popular musical was “lovingly ripped off from” the 1975 film Monty Python and the Holy Grail and follows King Arthur who travels England in search of Knights for his round table who go on a search for the Holy Grail.  While popular with hardcore Monty Python fans, this musical version doesn’t require you to be a “pythonite” to enjoy this crazy brand of British humor that often takes jabs at Broadway itself.

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MONTY PYTHON’S SPAMALOT

October 30, 2011

Location: Schuster Center

Showtime: Sunday – 7 p.m.

Click here for tickets

Win Tickets

We have FOUR PAIRS of tickets to give away for Sunday’s show!  Simply fill out the form below – we’ll draw winners this Friday morning.  GOOD LUCK!

Contest Closed

And congratulations to our winners – enjoy the show!

Tricia Reynolds

Jamie Werling

Daniel Pfister

Eli Alban

Filed Under: On Stage Dayton Previews

Jane’s Best Bets (10/26 – 10/30)

October 26, 2011 By Dayton937 Leave a Comment

Pumpkins Courtesy of My Mom

Halloween is right around the corner!  Hopefully you have your costume and are ready for some good scares this week…as well as some good fun!

On Wednesday, hang out in Oakwood for The Nights of the Arts.  Do all those political commercials have you confused on how to vote on election day?  If so, make your way to the Updayton Candidate Forum.  Or make your way to the Schuster Center for Tyler Perry’s ‘The Haves and the Have Nots’.

On Thursday, support a great cause by attending the Clothes That Work Fashioning Futures Modeling Success Luncheon at Sinclair’s Ponitz Center.  Get out that Halloween costume and join some great young professionals for the Generation Dayton Costume Party at The Moraine Embassy.  Enjoy Half-Price Wine Night at Coco’s Bistro…”wine not?”  At the Dayton Racquet Club, enjoy their Dinner & Goose Island Beer Tasting with New Chef Jack Skilliter.  And at the Victoria Theatre, you will be able to have An Evening with David Sedaris.

On Friday after work, participate in the Oregon Arts District Walking Tour.  There are plenty of spooky/Halloween-themed activities on Friday including the Halloween Party Wine Tasting at Emporium Wines/Underdog Cafe; Horrorama 2011 at Englewood Cinema; Ghosts, Cemeteries and Murders Walk at Courthouse Square; the Haunted Butcher House; Mayhem & Mystery Dinner Theatre: ‘Costume Carousing’ at the Spaghetti Warehouse; the Land Of Illusion Haunted Scream Park; and Slasher: A Horrifying Comedy at UD…I think I would need the comedy to put up with the horror.  And finally, in theater news, you will be able to see Lost in Yonkers (Dayton Theatre Guild) or Opera Theatre: Opera Scenes (Wright State).

On Saturday, if you’re a 5K runner with an extreme sense of adventure, then you will want to participate in the Swamp Stomp Mud Challenge Event.  You may not be able to afford a trip to Italy so instead, make your way to Jay’s Restaurant for their Italian Wine Luncheon.  Saturday is also all about Halloween, as it is the night for the famous Hauntfest in the Oregon District.  In addition to Hauntfest, there are many other Halloween-themed events/activities for Saturday including the  ‘PhilharMonster’ Halloween Concert at the Schuster Center; the 1st Annual Tailgate of Terror at the Yellow Cab Building; the 3rd Annual Boo & Bruise in the Oregon District; a Ghosts, Cemeteries and Murders Walk at Courthouse Square; Spooktacular at SideBar; the Dayton Philharmonic’s Bride of Frankenstein at the Schuster Center; and Howl-O-Ween at the Boonshoft Museum (a family friendly event).

On Sunday, make your back to the Oregon District (if you even left from Saturday night) for a Walking Tour.  Get a group together and enjoy a Segway Tour of Downtown Dayton.  (I was actually just talking to some people who went on one of these and said it was a fun experience!)  And if you enjoy theater, then check out Lost in Yonkers (Dayton Theatre Guild) or Monty Python’s Spamalot (Schuster Center).

And now it’s time for the Dumb Joke of the Week. Drum roll please…

What do you call a witch at the beach?  A sand-witch.

These are just a few best bets from the DMM Calendar.  There are plenty more events listed there, so if you haven’t, I encourage you to check it out today!  Also, if you have an event to share or promote, please submit it– it’s great marketing and better yet, it’s FREE!  And finally, if you have a dumb joke to share, I’m all ears!

Have a great week Dayton!

Filed Under: DMM's Best Bets Tagged With: clothes that work, Hauntfest, Oregon District, Schuster Performing Arts Center, Things to do in Dayton, UpDayton Candidate Forum, Victoria Theatre

MY AFTERNOONS WITH MARGUERITTE & Hot November Plans for THE NEON

October 26, 2011 By Jonathan McNeal Leave a Comment

Hello Everyone,

Professor Charles Derry told me that THE DEVIL’S DOUBLE is a combination of SCARFACE and a Bette David melodrama (FYI – that’s a compliment)…and my friend Maddi Breslin said that it was outstanding…and that she “could see it again.”  Unfortunately, the film did not perform well.  Thursday will be your last chance to see THE DEVIL’S DOUBLE at THE NEON.

Conversely, Martin Sheen’s THE WAY (directed by son Emilio Estevez) had a great weekend!  We were way above the national average for the film, and audiences are loving it.  THE WAY is set to stick around for another week.

On Friday, we will open a charming French film with Gerard Depardieu and Gisele Casadesus – MY AFTERNOONS WITH MARGUERITTE.  If you saw THE WAY this weekend, you saw a trailer for this film.  It is only slated to play for one week, so hurry down!

Synopsis for MY AFTERNOONS WITH MARGUERITTE:  “My Afternoon with Margueritte is the story of life’s random encounters. In a small French town, Germain, a nearly illiterate man in his 50’s and considered to be the village idiot by his friends at the local bistro, takes a walk to the park one day and happens to sit beside Margueritte, a little old lady who is reading excerpts from her novel aloud. She’s articulate, highly intelligent and frail…Afternoons spent reading aloud on their favorite bench transform their lives and start them both on a new journey — to literacy and respect for Germain, and to the deepest friendship for Margueritte.” (Cohen Media Group)

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Next Monday will be the 3rd film in Living City’s VAMPIRE retrospective.  (If you missed Monday’s screening of DRACULA, you missed an absolutely gorgeous 35mm print!)  Single tickets will be available at the door before each screening for $8 each.  Here are the remaining dates and films:

October 31 – THE LOST BOYS (digital video projection)

November 7 – INTERVIEW WITH THE VAMPIRE (35mm)

November 14 – BRAM STOKER’S DRACULA (1992 – 35mm).

Here’s the latest regarding our special opening of TAKE SHELTER!  TAKE SHELTER was one of my favorite films from this year’s Toronto International Film Festival.  It has been receiving much-deserved international acclaim, and I hope we hear a lot more about it come Oscar time.  The performances are incredible, the story is great, and the photography is wonderful.  On top of all that, the film was made in Ohio!  We’re so glad to announce that we will bring producer Tyler Davidson to town during opening weekend.  Mr. Davidson will do a Q&A after the following screenings:

Friday, Nov. 4 at 7:00

Saturday, Nov. 5 at 4:15

Saturday, Nov. 5 at 7:00

Advanced tickets (which are regular price!!) are available now at our box office.  To read more about the film, visit the film’s official site.

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The Ohio Liberty Film Festival is gearing up for its third year this November.  With numerous presenters and sponsors, the festival is able to make admission free to all of their screenings.  Click this LINK to see the entire line-up for various venues around town .  The following are movies that will play at THE NEON:

Friday, Nov. 11 at 3:00 – THE GREAT DICTATOR (The Charlie Chaplin classic)

Saturday, Nov. 12 at 1:30 – AS FAR AS MY FEET WILL CARRY ME

Sunday, Nov. 13 at 1:30 – PATTON

“Help support DATV and be inspired by short films that aim to make a difference in our lives. DATV presents the MEDIA THAT MATTERS SHORT FILM SHOWCASE on Thursday, November 17th at 7:30pm…The festival features 12 jury selected short films that tackle a broad range of social issues with humor, humanity and honesty in 12 minutes or less.  Special thanks to our sponsor Merrill Lynch Global Wealth Management OGDM Group – Centerville, Ohio…Proceeds from the event will benefit DATV.  DATV’s mission is to be a community forum that empowers all citizens to learn, create and express their ideas through electronic media…”  (taken from press notes)  Visit the official site for this event .  Tickets are already available at our box office for $10 each.

I’m very excited to announce that we have booked an incredible film to open in time for Thanksgiving.  Alexander Payne’s new film THE DESCENDANTS (starring George Clooney) is fantastic!  SIDEWAYS (also directed by Payne) was a huge hit for us, and I think THE DESCENDANTS is his best film yet.  (Payne also directed the final short film in PARIS, JE T’AIME – which was also fantastic!)  Thanksgiving weekend is a crucial movie-going weekend for cinemas…and we hope you’ll make plans to see this great film with us!  To find out more about the film, visit the official site.

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For remaining showtimes for this week visit our official site.

Hope to see you very soon,

Jonathan

SHOWTIMES for October 28 – November 3:

THE WAY (PG-13) 2 Hrs 1 Min

Friday, Saturday: 12:15, 2:40, 5:00, 7:30, 9:50

Sunday: 12:15, 2:40, 5:00, 7:30

Monday: 2:45, 5:10

Tuesday – Thursday: 2:45, 5:10, 7:40

MY AFTERNOONS WITH MARGUERITTE (NR) 1 Hr 22 Min

Friday, Saturday: 1:00, 3:00, 5:15, 7:15, 9:15

Sunday: 1:00, 3:00, 5:15, 7:15

Monday – Wednesday: 3:00, 5:30, 7:30

Thursday: 3:00, 5:30

THE LOST BOYS (R) 1 Hr 37 Min

Monday: 7:30

COMING SOON:

As always, all dates are tentative.  Some of these dates will change.

In some cases, titles may disappear.

Nov. 4  TAKE SHELTER

Nov. 4   MARGIN CALL

Nov. 18  MARTHA MARCY MAY MARLENE

Nov. 23  THE DESCENDANTS

TBD   THE SKIN I LIVE IN

TBD   MELANCHOLIA

TBD   WEEKENDTBD

THE HEDGEHOG

Filed Under: On Screen Dayton Tagged With: alexander payne, DATV, Dayton Ohio, emilio estevez, George Clooney, living city, martin sheen, Media That Matters, my afternoons with margueritte, Ohio LIberty Film Festival, take shelter, the descendants, The Neon, the way, tyler davidson, vampires

Specters Of The Past Revealed

October 25, 2011 By J.T. Ryder Leave a Comment

Paravizionz Locks Down Ohio’s “Sleepy Hollow”

The Joinery In Bellbrook

Illicit affairs, money, greed, envy…the deadliest of sins prove to be just that, extinguishing lives like a sudden gust of autumn wind douses the flickering light of a candle, creating a haunting lore that seemingly breathes with a murmuring life of its own. While every locale around the world has their own ghost stories and legends, Bellbrook, Ohio has their fair share as well, most of which reach back into the dim mists of a century gone by.

There is the story of a servant girl who involved herself with the town’s very influential Mayor and managed to get herself pregnant in the process. The Mayor refused to acknowledge her anymore and had her removed from the premises. The young lady took to a life of prostitution to get by, quickly becoming the subject of gossip and ridicule. When her baby was born, she would only take it outside with it’s face covered, as it was whispered that the child bore a striking resemblance to the father. It was thought that the young woman had fallen into a downward spiral of madness as she was often seen walking along with her baby safely bundled up from the prying eyes of the townsfolk, singing and talking to the bundle of tattered fabric that shrouded her little one. One night, the weight of her plight must have been too much to bear and she plunged herself and her baby into the cold, swirling depths of Possum Run Creek or, as it is known now, the Little Sugar Creek. A week later, her body was found by two local youths, washed up upon the creek’s bank. Her icy, lifeless arms still clasped the tattered rags that were once wrapped around her child, but the baby itself was never found. It is said that on certain nights, especially those peculiarly still nights in June when the mists rise up into the ebony darkness, you can see her glowing form stumble along the sides of the creek, a lilting singsong sigh being sung to the bundle of rags that she carries.

I grew up in Bellbrook, long before it became the lush suburb that it is today. When I lived there, it was still mostly a bucolically rural town. Carpenter Rd. still had a hair pin turn where, legend has it, that on certain nights, you could see the silhouette of a hanged man…just another person who had decided to end it all when they came to the end of their rope. Back when you would walk along Little Sugarcreek Rd., quickly succumbing to a whistling bravery as you passed Fallis Cemetery after dark. A time when, out of the corner of your eye, you would see skittering shadows and the out of tune tinkling of a piano coming from the music room of the Elementary School. You would hear whispered legends about the creaking madness held within the walls of several of the towns original homes. Stories of the strange behavior exhibited by the living as they face the heady unknown of death, like the undertaker who could not bear the loss of his wife and kept her embalmed body in the front window of his establishment for over a year before singing into the downward spiral of lunacy.

These memories came back to me in a rush as I met up with two gentlemen, Lee Allen and Davis Jones, the founder and co-founder, respectively, of ParaVizionz. ParaVizionz is a paranormal investigation and research team that has completed over 180 paranormal investigation since their inception in 2008. Lee and Jones met in early 2008 when TAPS (The Atlantic Paranormal Society) visited Wright-Patterson Air Force Base to investigate paranormal activity there for their wildly popular television show on SyFy called Ghost Hunters. Jones had managed to weasel his way into the event with little more than an ID on a lanyard and, after befriending the film crew and being allowed to jump to the front of the line, he ran into Lee, who was trying to assemble a team of local paranormal investigators. Since that time, a team of investigators, technicians and mediums have been assembled and the group has gelled into one incredibly in-tune entity who have compiled a list of completed investigations, an archive of EVPs (Electronic Voice Phenomena) and a slew of stories that would make most people cringe.

Paravizionz Investigates The Joinery

There are those that are dismissive of paranormal investigations and make light of others beliefs in otherworldly events…right up to the point when they are standing in the murmuring darkness and feel a cold finger trace the line of their spine. Jones came to believe in supernatural activities while still very young while living in Michigan. He had just moved into an old farmhouse in the woods with his sister, father and his new stepmom. It had been said that one of the previous owners had hung themselves from the apple tree outside the kitchen window, but this barely registered with the young Jones…until the noises began. Creaking footsteps and rocking chairs that were invisibly animated made he and his sister believers in very short order. Another memory he held of that time was his new stepmother’s use of a Ouija board, but he gave it little credence. It was just a Parker Brother’s game, after all.

Conversely, Lee’s induction into the world of the unknown came about through personal loss. He and his wife lost one son, Austin, in infancy and then another older child, a daughter named Caitlyn, some time later. Lee said that after these two incidents, he would hear voices in the children’s rooms and sense their presences from time to time. While I didn’t press Lee as to the association between these events and his sudden passion for the paranormal, one can infer that it would almost become a necessity for one who had suffered such a tragic loss. Even separated by a wall of sleep, a father needs to know that his children are alright and to know what kind of world that they exist in.

This past summer, ParaVizionz has been doing a series of investigations in Bellbrook, Ohio. They have investigated everything from private residences to my old Elementary School and have come away with many personal stories as well as EVPs, which they have posted on their website. Paravizionz has shared their stories online and created the Jonathan Winters Ghost Walk and Historical Tour that ran the weekend of September 30th through October 1st. All of their activities has even garnered them a proclamation from the Mayor of Bellbrook, Mary Graves. All of these goings-on will culminate with the Bellbrook On Lockdown event slated for Halloween weekend, starting at noon on Friday, October 28th and ending at 3:00pm on Sunday, October 30th.

The Bellbrook On Lockdown event will have lectures, celebrities, tours, information, vendors, activities and entertainment. The Master of Ceremonies, a Johnny Depp/Jack Sparrow look-alike, Captain “Larry” Sparrows, will kick off the festivities at noon on Friday at Sugarcreek Plaza, located at 6124 Wilmington Pike in Bellbrook. There are a ton of guest speakers, including Keith Age (a paranormal investigator who founded the Louisville Ghost Hunter’s Society and is the star of Spooked TV), Patrick Burns (star of TruTV’s Haunting Evidence), author Marley Harbuck-Gibson, international medium Robyn Marie, radio personality and comedian Scotty Rorek, paranormal mediums Deborah and Nicholas Lantz, John Brightman (founder of New England Paranormal Research), cryptozoologist Joedy Cook and paranormal filmmakers and stars of the SyFy, Chiller and Spooked TV networks, The Booth Brothers. Entertainment will come in the form of bagpiper Wulf, D.J. Tre and a special guest appearance by escape artist and magician Aron Houdini. A celebrity guided tour of all the haunted areas in Bellbrook is also on the itinerary, including the Dart Construction Building (formerly Penewit Hardware), The Shepherd House, Magee Park and others. The Joinery, which was one of the locations that Paravizionz investigated over the summer, was once a stop on the underground railroad. Their investigation revealed a slew of EVPs, which say things from a whispered voice decalring, “I’m right behind you” to the plaintive plea of a woman saying, “Hide me!”

One of the highlights of the tour has to do with one of the oldest legends of the area. Back in the 1800’s, there was an Englishman named James Buckley whose sawmill was located alongside what is now known as the Little Sugar Creek. He became very wealthy from this enterprise and, as is common as seen through the eyes of avarice, envied by many of the townspeople. One morning, his cabin was forced into and he was robbed and then brutally murdered…decapitated, in fact. His body was found, sans head, outside, covered in blood and mud, but the money…along with his head…were, by some accounts, never found. Other versions of this story state that his head was found some distance away and that the robbers never retrieved any of the money because Mr. Buckley had buried it somewhere near the creek. ParaVizionz is going to have a live, televised treasure hunt utilizing a medium to communicate with the long deceased entrepreneur to try and find the place in which the money was buried. Hopefully they find the money…and only the money. Priorities may change somewhat when a spirit is made to choose between earthly wealth and a part of themselves that was most cruelly taken from them…

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We all have had experiences. We have all had that unexplainable feeling of being watched as the hairs on the nape of neck stand up. We have all felt the trickling fear, absolutely feeling alone in the dark tide of one of eternity’s moments. We have all seen the spectral movements of light and shadow that we are unable to explain, but which we rationalize when dawn arises. Regardless of how stalwartly pragmatic we feel that we may be and how we may deride the beliefs of those who embrace the spirit world, there are moments in our lives when our depths of spirit are overtaken by the icy isolation of a nameless dread. We have all had experiences. This is a time to share those experiences and to hear those who have had similar occurrences happen within their lives. This is a time to ask the questions that cannot be answered by religions or sciences. This is a time to reflect on what is beyond this realm.

Paravizionz Bellbrook On Lockdown runs from Friday, October 28th through Sunday, October 30th. There are various tiers of payment for admission, ranging from $30 to $150 for the VIP/Ghost Hunt pass. For more information, check out their website for the event at http://bellbrookonlockdown.webs.com/ and make sure to check out the group’s main website at http://www.paravizionz.net to watch video and hear EVPs from their past investigations.

Filed Under: Arts & Entertainment, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Bellbrook, Booth Brothers, entity, ghost hunt, ghosts, haunted, Houdini, paranormal, Paravizionz, spirit, tour

David Sedaris – Funniest Writer Alive?

October 25, 2011 By Dayton Most Metro Leave a Comment

On Thursday October 27 at 7:30pm, NPR humorist and best-selling author David Sedaris will be sharing his wit and satire with his audience when he appears at the Victoria Theatre as part of Victoria Theatre Association’s Star Attractions Series.  The following is from his bio on his agency website:

With sardonic wit and incisive social critiques, David Sedaris has become one of America’s pre-eminent humor writers. The great skill with which he slices through cultural euphemisms and political correctness proves that Sedaris is a master of satire and one of the most observant writers addressing the human condition today.

David Sedaris is the author Barrel Fever and Holidays on Ice, as well as collections of personal essays, Naked, Me Talk Pretty One Day, Dress Your Family in Corduroy and Denim, and When You Are Engulfed in Flames, each of which became a bestseller. There are a total of seven million copies of his books in print and they have been translated into 25 languages. He was the editor ofChildren Playing Before a Statue of Hercules: An Anthology of Outstanding Stories. Sedaris’s pieces appear regularly in The New Yorker and have twice been included in “The Best American Essays.” His newest book, a collection of fables entitled Squirrel Seeks Chipmunk: A Modest Bestiary (with illustrations by Ian Falconer), was published in September 2010 and immediately hit the NYT Bestseller Fiction List.

He and his sister, Amy Sedaris, have collaborated under the name “The Talent Family” and have written half-a-dozen plays which have been produced at La Mama, Lincoln Center, and The Drama Department in New York City. These plays include Stump the Host, Stitches, One Woman Shoe, which received an Obie Award, Incident at Cobbler’s Knob, and The Book of Liz, which was published in book form by Dramatists Play Service. David Sedaris’s original radio pieces can often be heard on This American Life, distributed nationally by Public Radio International and produced by WBEZ. David Sedaris has been nominated for three Grammy Awards for Best Spoken Word and Best Comedy Album.  His most recent live album is David Sedaris: Live For Your Listening Pleasure (November 2009).

Tickets to the show can be purchased online here or by phone at 937-228-3630 through Ticket Center Stage.  Check out the video below of a piece that CBS did on Sedaris.

[yframe url=’http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_aVDExDwcpA&feature=fvsr’]

Filed Under: Arts & Entertainment

Dayton restuarnt declares Duck-A-Palooza Week!!

October 25, 2011 By Lisa Grigsby Leave a Comment

Chef Candice Rinke (read  more about her here in our 10 questions interview) of The Hawthorn Grill in Kettering loves autumn and duck so she has declared this week “> Duck-a-palooza” and she’ll be featuring duck in four different autumnal specials all week starting tonight!  The restaurant, located at 1222 East Stroop Road is open nightly at 5pm and serves til 9pm during the week and 10pm on Friday and Saturday.

Enjoy the following duck-centric menu items this week:

Charcuterie Platter Appetizer
Duck and Pistachio Terrine, Sherried Duck Liver Mousse,

Toast Points, Cumberland Sauce, 11

Duck & Sausage Cassoulet

Homemade White Bean Stew, Confit of Duck, Fresh Pork Sausage,

Herbed Bread Crumbs, 19

Duck with Pasta

Crispy House-cured Duck Confit, Homemade Butternut Squash Ravioli,

Sage Brown Butter, Broccoli Rabe, 20

Pan Roasted Duck Breast

Crispy Sautéed Duck Breast, Dried Cherry~Duck Reduction,

Lentil and Potato Ragoût, Braised Savoy Cabbage, 20

Filed Under: Dayton Dining Tagged With: Chef Candace Rinke, DatyonDining, Hawthorn Grill

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