Fresh Air

0

Theatergoers hankering for a classic or the desire to see something new have two productions running now that fit the bill.

Cinnabar Theater presents the 50-year-old classic Cabaret. The Kander and Ebb musical, which has gone through significant changes via numerous revivals since its 1966 debut, is the tale of two couples whose lives intersect via the Kit Kat Klub, a seedy pre-WWII Berlin cabaret.

Cliff Bradshaw (Lucas Brandt) is an American traveling through Europe as he attempts to write the great American novel. His train mate Ernst Ludwig (Mark Robinson) sets him up at the boarding house of Fräulein Schneider (Mary Gannon Graham), whose other boarders include members of the chorus of the Kit Kat Klub. Cliff meets Sally Bowles (Alia Beeton), the “headliner” at the club, with whom he’s soon sharing his room. Fräulein Schneider, who’s becoming adept at looking the other way at certain situations, finds herself being courted by Herr Schultz (Michael Van Why), the local grocer. The future of these relationships grows gloomier as the cloud of National Socialism forms over Germany.

One of the darkest American musicals ever written, director Elly Lichenstein proves that Cabaret still has the ability to stun, evidenced by the opening night audience’s hesitation at applauding the end of act one. Michael McGurk makes the iconic role of the cabaret Emcee his own, but it’s the delicate and devastating performances of Gannon Graham and Van Why that will haunt you. Mary Chun does her usual fine
job of musical direction, though
a balance between vocals and accompaniment was occasionally elusive.

Rating (out of 5): ★★★½

For audiences looking for something a lot lighter, there’s Main Stage West’s production of Savage Wealth, a world premiere comedy by local playwright Bob Duxbury. John Shillington directs Peter Downey and Matt Cadigan as siblings dealing with the disposal of their late father’s Lake Tahoe home. Complications are provided by their New Age neighbor and friend (Ilana Niernberger).

It’s a very amusing script that only occasionally belies the pedigree of its retired English professor author. Timing is everything in comedy, and the three performers have it down to a tee. It’s well worth checking out, particularly for those who decry the cyclical and repetitive nature of local theater. ★★★★

Local Knowledge: Sebastopol

0

Describe your perfect day in Sebastopol.

I would say a walk downtown, visiting People’s Music, Copperfield’s Books and Milk & Honey on Main Street, and then a stroll over to the Barlow for Village Bakery’s bread or food from Barrio, mingling with the locals. I like that there’s a strong sense of community, people interested in progressive issues. There’s a lot of politics going on, and you’re able to connect to others and work on issues. There are a lot of progressive values about Sebastopol that I like.

Where is your favorite place to see live music in Sebastopol and why?

I’ve been very much enjoying Jim Corbett’s (Mr. Music) Peacetown Concert series every Wednesday. It’s amazing because of the variety of musicians they get there, both local and national acts. They’re doing a very good job, and it’s in Ives Park and the afternoons are really nice. There are a lot of local vendors, and it’s again a great example of community.

Where do you take first-time visitors in Sebastopol?

That’s a good question—probably the Sebastopol Plaza on Sunday for the farmers market. There is a lot of good stuff available—local arts and crafts, music—and excellent produce and local organic farmers that show up every Sunday. That’s the place to be.

What do you know about Sebastopol that others don’t?

For me, it’s the fact that we still have the Gravenstein apple, even with all the vintners, because there’s still a whole collection of people who are keeping the Gravenstein apple alive, grafting and trying to breed more of these heirloom trees. I’ve got about 20 Gravenstein apples on my property, and we open up the studio and give our apples away a few times a year.

The other special thing about Sebastopol is the number of talented musicians living within 20 miles. [Studio E] has been called the Muscle Shoals of Sonoma County by various artists because I’ve got this roster of session musicians I can call to come in per the artist’s need.

If you could change one thing about Sebastopol, what would it be?

It would probably be impossible, but it would be incredible if the downtown Sebastopol Main Street and even the Barlow was foot traffic only. The traffic is the problem—I got hit by a car in the crosswalk right in front of Whole Foods because the guy was on his cell phone. It’s a constant issue. If it was just foot traffic on Main Street and around the plaza, it would quiet everything down.

Lucky Seven

If good things come in threes, the number seven is even better. That’s how many restaurants and bars have opened or are about to open in Sebastopol’s increasingly interesting food and drink scene.

Mother’s Ruin opened last month in the space formerly occupied by the Lucky Star bar. Mother’s Ruin is a bar, too, that specializes in gin—mother’s ruin. The term comes from England’s late 1700s, when gin consumption was rampant thanks to tax-free booze and a depressed economy. Too much gin left men impotent and women infertile, i.e. ruined.

There’s a great mural on the wall of the bar featuring a reproduction of English artist William Hogarth’s Gin Lane from 1751. The print features a scene of gin-soaked depravity. At the center is a nursing mother who appears to be letting her child fall off her lap into a stairwell as she boozily reaches for a tin of snuff. Hogarth also produced Beer Street at the same time, which depicts a happy scene of upstanding beer drinkers. The images were created to be shown side-by-side as an early public service announcement—or as beer propaganda, depending on your view.

You can contemplate all that while sipping one of the bar’s excellent gin cocktails (try an Alley Cat). While the top-shelf gin shines here, the bar is exceedingly well stocked with other artisanal, premium spirits.

The space was thoroughly remodeled and feels more SOMA than Sebastopol with its high ceilings and spare, modern furnishings. If plans for a yet-to-be finalized restaurant next door materialize, patrons will be able to order food as they enjoy their ruination in high style.

Across the way at the Barlow, there are five developments in the works. Fern Bar, the latest endeavor from the Lowell’s and Handline clan, is taking shape and aiming for a late November opening. It will be a bar and lounge that features a small plates menu from Lowell’s chef Joe Zobel and nonalcoholic concoctions and decoctions from Gia Baiocchi, owner of the nearby Nectary. The two businesses will share a kitchen space that will also include a small brewery.

That means the Barlow will be home to four breweries once Santa Rosa’s Seismic Brewing Co. opens its taproom there. Seismic is pioneering brewing with water- and energy-saving technology. The company was founded by Christopher Jackson, scion of the Sonoma County winemaking family. He’s going it alone on his beer business.

What about cider? Sebastopol’s Golden State Cider is also planning to open a taproom by year’s end.

With all that booze, you need to eat something. Kosho has taken over the space that once housed Vignette. No word on when it will open, but chef Jake Rand, formerly of St. Helena’s Two Birds/One Stone, will offer a menu of modern and traditional Japanese food.
The Farmer’s Wife, beloved farmers market purveyor of gooey sandwiches, recently signed a lease for a space in the Barlow as well.

Looming in the background of the food and drink tsunami is the Hotel Sebastopol, an upscale hotel and restaurant project from the folks behind Healdsburg’s Hotel Healdsburg and h2hotel, Spoonbar and Pizzando that will be sure to raise the city’s profile. Construction is supposed to begin in “late 2018,” but so far there are only weeds on the lot now.

For good or ill, Sebastopol looks to be hurtling toward Healdsburgification, and the opening of the hotel may seal the deal.

[page]

What to Do in Sebastopol

Word Temple Poetry Series San Francisco native, acclaimed author and Sonoma County poet laureate emerita (2014–2016) Katherine Hastings regularly showcases the best North Bay and Northern California writers with her Word Temple publishing company, radio show and live reading events. This week, Hastings welcomes three prolific poets to share their work at the Word Temple Poetry Series, taking place at the Sebastopol Center for the Arts. Brenda Hillman has served on the faculty at Napa Valley College and currently teaches at St. Mary’s College in Moraga. Her latest poetry collection is titled Extra Hidden Life, Among the Days. Stephen Kessler was the editor of The Redwood Coast Review for over a decade. His most recent collection of poems is titled Garage Elegies. David Beckman is a poet and playwright whose works have been produced locally by 6th Street Playhouse, Shakespeare at the Cannery and Pegasus Theatre. Hear all three read on Saturday, Sept. 8, at 282 S. High St., Sebastopol. 7pm. Free. wordtemple.com.

Peacetown Sebastopol musician, producer and educator Jim Corbett proudly wears the mantle of Mr. Music when he organizes and hosts the annual summer concert series Peacetown in Sebastopol’s Ives Park. This summer’s lineup has been the biggest and best yet, and this month the series concludes with a grand finale featuring boot-stomping bluegrass band Poor Man’s Whiskey. Get in on the positive vibes when Peacetown closes out summer 2018 with Poor Man’s Whiskey on Wednesday, Sept. 12, at Ives Park, 7400 Willow St., Sebastopol. 5pm. Free; donations welcome. peacetown.org.

Tawai On the island of Borneo, there still exists a nomadic tribe of hunter-gatherers known as the Penan, who still rely on the forests for survival. In the Penan language, the word “tawai” refers to their connection to the land, which is explored in a new immersive documentary by British filmmaker Bruce Parry. Tawai: A Voice from the Forest chronicles the tribe’s experiences and explores the different ways that humans relate to nature. Praised as visually stunning and emotionally ethereal, Tawai screens in Sebastopol with Parry on hand to speak about his work as an indigenous rights activist and discuss several of the social and environmental issues brought up in the film. Tawai shows one time only on Sunday, Sept. 16, at Rialto Cinemas, 6868 McKinley St., Sebastopol. 7pm. 707.525.4840.

Maker Music Festival Chimera Arts Makerspace is Sonoma County’s hub for all things DIY, offering shop space, classes and equipment for the local community of artists, engineers and creatives of all types. This fall, the nonprofit space makes room for the Maker Music Festival, which will feature several DIY music and instrument makers from the area. Whether you craft traditional instruments or experiment with new melodic inventions, you’re invited to sign up to present your idea or product to the public—and a lineup of exhibits, lectures, demonstrations and performances are sure to spark new concepts on Oct. 13, at Chimera Arts facility, 6791 Sebastopol Ave., Ste. 180, Sebastopol. Sign up to show off your musical creation
now at chimeraarts.org/mmf.
—Charlie Swanson

Stitching Dignity

0

Cleve Jones is a veteran HIV-AIDS activist perhaps best known for launching the AIDS quilt project in the 1980s, but he’s also been a major player in the regional organized-labor scene through his work with UNITE HERE.

Jones will give the keynote speech at an upcoming fundraiser for North Bay Jobs with Justice on Sept. 7 at the Veterans Memorial Building in Santa Rosa.

Jones came into his own as an activist in 1978 over the Briggs Initiative, which would have banned gays and lesbians from teaching in California public schools. “We thought it would pass,” he recalls, “and Harvey Milk was one of the leaders of that campaign [to defeat it].”

Milk, the late San Francisco supervisor, was murdered along with Mayor George Moscone in 1978 by Dan White—who’d resigned as a San Francisco supervisor 16 days earlier. Jones recalls that there was an openly gay teacher in Sonoma County, Lawrence Berner, who taught second grade in the Healdsburg Union Elementary School and was caught up in the anti-gay fervor that came with the Briggs Initiative, sponsored by Orange County state legislator John Briggs. “He was targeted,” recalls Jones of Berner.

The Briggs Initiative failed, but not without a fight and not without a union push from Local 2 of UNITE HERE. Berner went on to sue Briggs for defamation and prevailed in a 1982 ruling. Berner died in 1995.

“We were one of the first unions to embrace LGBT people,” Jones now says. “It’s kind of a ‘duh’ because so many gay people work in the hospitality industry.” Jones has been the community and political coordinator with UNITE HERE since 2005.

Since then he’s watched as public-sector unions have been hammered by right-wing governors, and most recently through the Supreme Court’s union-busting Janus decision. That’s the bad news. The good news is that even in so-called right-to-work states such as Nevada, private sector unions are on the march.

“Everyone is bemoaning the death of the union, but we are growing and we’re growing in the private sector,” Jones says. “UNITE HERE offers a real model for the people who want to fight the Trump regime. This union is doing that. We are black and brown and Native American and LGBT. And we’re winning.”

The unionized Graton Casino in Rohnert Park, he adds, is “a good example” of how UNITE HERE has made big inroads in the gaming industry and strengthened labor’s hand at the bargaining table, at least when it comes to the private sector.

“Our strongest base of support in the United States is Las Vegas,” Jones says. “The strip is union. We are the reason there is a middle class in Las Vegas and why Nevada is blue, even as Nevada has been a right-to-work state since the 1950s.”

The 1950s also represented the last of a “before Stonewall” period in American gay life—a time of rampant and legally encoded homophobia. The country has come a long way since then; Vermont’s Democratic party recently endorsed Christine Hallquist as the first transgender gubernatorial candidate in American history, even as “religious liberty” advocates have sued gay people so they don’t have to bake a cake in the service of marriage equality.

Thanks to Donald Trump and his congressional enablers in both major parties—talking to you, Chuck Schumer—American federal courts are currently undergoing a fundamental rightward shift, putting at risk hard-won marriage-equality rights. Trump has also tried to ban trans people from the military, and his Justice Department has filed friend-of-the-court papers with the Supreme Court in defense of suits that seek to make anti-gay discrimination legal again.

Organized labor is also taking it on the chin under Trump and the conservative Supreme Court, which ruled earlier this year, in Janus v. American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees, Council 31, that public sector unions can’t charge union dues to non-union members (even as those non-union workers enjoy all the benefits of collective bargaining).

Can a robust union push in the private sector serve to undo the damage done to public sector employees, including teachers?

“Well, our union offers some really important information for people who are concerned in light of the Janus decision,” says Jones as he highlights the UNITE HERE successes in Vegas. “When the workers understand that they own the union—you can grow and thrive even in right-to-work states,” he says.

Jones says he’s spent lots of time in Sonoma County and especially along the Russian River as a youth. He got sick himself in 1992, he recalls, and received HIV-AIDS treatment at Kaiser in Santa Rosa for many years.

“I went up there to die, but I didn’t,” he says. “I have really wonderful memories of the people, the land and the river.”

Jones has made a career of knitting his gay-rights activism with union activism. Like many gay men of his generation, Jones watched with growing horror as his friends and fellow gay men died after contracting HIV, beginning in the early 1980s. Following the assassination of Harvey Milk, he was hired by Lt. Gov. Leo McCarthy and was assigned to his healthcare committee. “I started to learn about HIV-AIDS in the first week of June 1981,” he recalls. “By 1985, almost everyone I knew was either dead or dying, and I wanted them to be remembered. I wanted to break through the silence and the bigotry.”

In 1983, he co-founded the San Francisco AIDS Foundation and soon thereafter founded the NAMES Project AIDS Memorial Quilt. By 1985, the AIDS death toll in in San Francisco had hit 1,000. “I was very struck by that figure,” he says. “I asked people to carry signs of the people who had died, to the Federal Building [in San Francisco]. I looked at all the hanging signs—and it looked like a strange quilt.” From there, the AIDS Memorial Quilt grew to become the world’s largest community arts project.


Small Wonder

0

I should call this Barlow-to-Barlow bike loop a small ride to Small Vines: it’s an easy, 7.5-mile ride, mostly over an off-street paved path and through quiet country lanes, that passes points of interest to viticulture geeks and heritage apple fans alike.

The Barlow center in Sebastopol, where the namesake family operated an applesauce cannery, is a fitting starting point for this ride. Today, it’s a post-industrial haven for post-ride nosh and a brew. Find Morris Street at the east end of the Barlow and take a left. Morris curves west toward the entrance to the West County Regional Trail. Follow the signs at High School Road to pick up the trail. This is a former railroad grade, so it’s not steep, but if a pick-me-up is required after the arduous climb, stop for coffee at Andy’s Produce Market.

Turn west at Occidental Road. Just before the next leg of the West County Trail, make a left on little Barlow Lane. It’s a slow, pothole-laced but picturesque climb past Taft Street Winery, and vineyards and apple orchards in just about equal measure. Where the road doglegs, there’s a vineyard that’s not quite like the others.

At the former Barlow family homestead, once a blackberry farm and apple orchard and now Paul and Kathyrn Sloan’s Small Vines Wines, the Pinot Noir vines are truly pint-sized, planted in rows just four feet wide. Very Burgundian, but also a winning strategy in this Goldridge soil, says Paul Sloan.

It’s expensive to farm this way—they imported a French tractor that looms above the rows—and it’s a financial commitment to visit (three-bottle purchase, or $100 per person, by appointment only), so today let’s roll on down the lane, past a side-by-side comparison with a conventionally farmed vineyard, and some amusing sculptural sights as well.

The road ends at Mill Station Road: right to choose your own adventure in the Sebastopol Hills; left to reconnect with the West County Trail at Highway 116.

Small Vines 2014 Sonoma Coast Chardonnay ($55) Grown on the other side of the winery and tasting room, which is fashioned from the Barlow’s original apple storage barn, the Chardonnay wows me with its exotic juxtaposition of caramel, toasty butter cookie and spicy, hazelnut liqueur aromas with lean, lively citrus flavor. The Pinot Noir here, too, has fresh intensity, and far from being a vintage on the way out, has plenty of time to age. Good thing the Sloans saved a pallet of 2014, as 2015 is already sold-out—naturally, it was a small crop.

Hammer Time?

Trump is ramping up his unwieldy war on weed.

Earlier this month, it was revealed that President Donald Trump created a Marijuana Policy Coordination Committee, one in which various federal agencies that oversee marijuana policy work together to find ways to prevent Americans from having access to the drug. According to a summary of a meeting held between the White House and nine government departments in July, “the prevailing marijuana narrative in the U.S. is partial, one-sided, and inaccurate,” and needs to be countered with “the most significant data demonstrating negative trends with a statement describing the implications of such trends.”

“It’s a big step towards the prohibitionist status quo that we were in prior to the Obama years,” says Justin Strekal, political director of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws. “It’s not a step back [in the sense that] we’re not behind where we were in the 1930s, but we’re moving closer to where we were in the 1930s.”

Strekal contrasts Trump’s policies on marijuana with those of his predecessor. Obama’s policy was largely driven by the now revoked “Cole memo.” The Cole memorandum was a policy drafted by Deputy Attorney General James M. Cole under Obama that effectively told states which had legalized marijuana that they could do so without federal interference as long as they abided by certain rules, such as making sure the drug stayed out of the hands of children and keeping it out of states where it is still illegal. By revoking the Cole memorandum, Attorney General Jeff Sessions gave federal prosecutors carte blanche to decide for themselves whether they would respect the wishes of states that had decided to legalize the substance.

What steps might we expect the Department of Justice to take to curb marijuana use?

“It could be a wide range of things,” Strekal explains. “In my view, it is unlikely that the DOJ, or DEA specifically, commits to a widespread ‘crackdown,’ but it would be much more like what the Heritage Foundation called for in 2017 . . . a 12-point plan for how the Trump Department of Justice can shut down marijuana in America. And largely the DOJ has followed many of those steps, and the biggest enforcement action component of that would be targeted RICO suits against some of the largest companies in the industry.”

The Trump administration’s attitude toward marijuana legalization stands in contrast with national Democrats, who have indicated they plan to take up federal decriminalization if they take back the Senate this fall.

This article appeared on Alternet and was originally published by Salon.com.

Songs of Resistance

I spent Sunday sick on the couch resting and listening to music when I came across the fantastic new album from England’s IDLES, Joy as an Act of Resistance. Blimey, it’s great stuff.

IDLES are a powerful, socially conscious post-punk band who have arrived at just the right time in post-Brexit England and the rising nationalism in Europe. Frontman Joe Talbot rages, yells and growls in a gravel-toned but well articulated voice that’s made for the stage. “Danny Nedelko” is written for Talbot’s musician friend, a Ukrainian immigrant. It’s a refreshing embrace of our shared humanity and a pithy analysis of the roots of racism:

My blood brother is an immigrant

A beautiful immigrant . . .

He’s made of bones, he’s made of blood

He’s made of flesh, he’s made of love

He’s made of you, he’s made of me

Unity!

Fear leads to panic, panic leads to pain

Pain leads to anger, anger leads to hate . . .

Take that Nigel Farange. Take that Marine Le Pen.

As I tapped my toes to the song, I got to wondering: where are the great post-Trump anthems? I say post-Trump because being anti-Trump isn’t enough. What we need are songs that reject Trump and transcend the stain he’s smeared on America. Like a gangrenous limb, Trump’s supporters and the president himself are symptomatic of a greater sickness. Eminem is a vocal Trump critic, but he mainly lets loose on his Trump-loving fans. That’s not what we need. YG and Nipsey Hussle’s “FDT (Fuck Donald Trump)” is catchy and direct, but doesn’t call us to something better. Loudon Wainwright III makes a clever effort with “I Had a Dream,” but it’s lightweight.

I’d like to see the great post-Trump anthem come from the North Bay, a redoubt of staunch Trump opposition and a deep musical talent pool. So how about it North Bay songwriters, who’s got the musical antidote to Trump’s poison? Give us a song to sing as we head to polls Nov. 8. And send it to the Bohemian—we’ll help spread the word.

Stett Holbrook is the editor of the ‘Bohemian’ and the ‘Pacific Sun.’

Open Mic is a weekly feature in the ‘Bohemian.’ We welcome your contribution. To have your topical essay of 350 words considered for publication, write op*****@******an.com.

Letters to the Editor: September 5, 2018

Thanks, Milkman

I was delighted to see your article about Straus Creamery in your latest issue of Bohemian (“Cream Dreams,” Aug. 29). I love to bike the backroads of Sonoma and Marin counties, often on the same roads that milk trucks and other large farm trucks travel on. I have noticed that the drivers of the large Straus milk trucks are always courteous and patient with bikers. This is certainly not true of all drivers on these local roads. As a member of the Petaluma Wheelman bike club and Bike Petaluma, I am grateful that Straus shows the way in sharing the road. We appreciate having them as neighbors and part of the community. I go out of my way to buy their products.

Via Bohemian.com

Racists Are Sick

According to Psychology Today, racism and xenophobia of any kind is a symptom of psychological ill health. People with a stable sense of self and strong inner security are not racist, because they have no need to strengthen their sense of self through group identity. Older adults, however, have a tendency to be more prejudiced than their younger counterparts. This is due to the fact that older people grew up in less egalitarian times. There is evidence that normal changes to the brain in late adulthood can lead to greater prejudice. They are more likely than younger adults to rely on stereotypes, and they have more difficulty than younger adults suppressing their stereotypical thoughts. They are also more likely to be socially insensitive in a variety of ways. All of these effects only emerge among older adults who show signs of poor frontal lobe functioning. The U.S. Census Bureau says that 85.6 percent of Marin County is white and the majority of those are 65 years and older. Hopefully that majority embraces diversity and inclusion. If not, race relations will automatically improve with the passage of time.

Sausalito

Foggy Notions

For decades Sir Francis Drake researchers have lamented his failure to discover the great and all-weather harbor he’d been looking for, regardless of where he may, or may not have landed in California.

Duane Van Dieman (“Drake Detective,” Aug. 15) asserts Drake’s landing was at Strawberry Cove. So how is it Drake failed to see the entire great bay directly in front of him while here? A few fickle fingers of fog days might explain the error, but not the extended stay Drake supposedly made. Further, a current map superimposed over a centuries-old drawing is interesting, but nowhere near conclusive.

As for Laura Goldenerg’s decrying the word “discovery” as an insult (Letters, Aug. 22), that’s an insult to logic. A culture halfway around the world with no knowledge of inhabitants here obviously discovered new land never before known to them. Since no known inhabitants were contacted, how can this not be a discovery, much less be an offense? To whom? How? This is typical leftist PC derangement that discovers “racism” under every rock, as it undiscovers and devalues history.

San Rafael

Editor’s note: Drake’s party did contact native Miwok Indians during their stay.

Write to us at le*****@******an.com.

Full House

0

September marks the opening of the new artistic season for many North Bay theater companies. Here’s some of what they have in store for local audiences:

Petaluma’s Cinnabar Theater (cinnabartheater.org) transforms itself into Berlin’s Kit Kat Club and bids you willkommen, bienvenue, and welcome to the classic John Kander and Fred Ebb musical Cabaret. Broadway veteran Michael McGurk and Petaluma native Alia Beeton take on the roles that won Joel Grey and Liza Minnelli their Oscars.

The Spreckels Theatre Company of Rohnert Park (spreckelsonline.com) opens its season with the multiple Tony Award–winning Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time. Fans of the Mark Haddon novel about a young boy on the autism spectrum investigating the death of a neighborhood dog will find that it’s been somewhat reworked for the stage, but Tony voters liked it enough to name it 2015’s Best Play.

Sebastopol’s Main Stage West (mainstagewest.com) opens its season with the world premiere of an original comedy by local playwright Bob Duxbury. Savage Wealth examines the impact of the sale of a Lake Tahoe home and the vacant lot next to it on a pair of brothers and their childhood friend. John Shillington directs.

Dancing and singing New York “wiseguys” take over Santa Rosa’s 6th Street Playhouse (6thstreetplayhouse.com) as it presents Guys and Dolls. Summer Repertory Theatre artistic director James Newman moves to Railroad Square to helm what has been called “the greatest of all American musicals.”

Santa Rosa’s Left Edge Theatre (leftedgetheatre.com) continues to provide North Bay audiences with recently written plays never before seen in the area with the U.S. premiere of a hit British comedy. Dave Simpson’s The Naked Truth involves charity fundraising, female empowerment and pole dancing. Argo Thompson directs a cast that includes former Bohemian theater critic David Templeton.

In Guerneville, the Pegasus Theatre Company (pegasustheater.com) presents its 12th annual Tapas: New Short Play Festival. The seven short plays by Northern California playwrights will be the first production overseen by new artistic director Rich Rubin.

Healdsburg’s Raven Players (raventheater.org) open with two contemporary dramas that deal with a host of complex issues including war, PTSD, gun violence, politics and religion. Time Stands Still and Church & State will run in repertory.

Napa’s Lucky Penny Productions (luckypennynapa.com) invites you Into the Woods, where director James Sasser has apparently added another layer of fun to the musical fairy tale mashup.

Plenty of options for the avid theatregoer.

Joy of Singing

0

Internationally known singer-songwriter, producer and teacher Terry Garthwaite has lived a life of music that dates back to the late 1960s, when she co-formed and fronted Berkeley rock group Joy of Cooking.

With an inspiring musical spirit, Garthwaite has recorded dozens of albums over the years, delving into jazz, blues and folk along the way. Garthwaite recently turned 80, and is throwing a massive birthday concert on Sept. 16 at the Sebastopol Community Center that will also act as an official record-release party for her most recent album,

Shine On.

“The album came out last year, but I never did a release party,” Garthwaite says. “And I just turned 80, so I decided, OK, I’m going to celebrate the fact that I’m still making music.”

Garthwaite’s first release in over a decade, Shine On features 19 tracks that span her songwriting career, including tunes originally written in the 1970s as well as brand-new compositions. “I just don’t stop writing songs, so I had a lot of new stuff to put down,” says Garthwaite, who recorded the album at Sebastopol’s Studio E.

Garthwaite’s 45 years living in West Marin is reflected in many of the songs, and all of her tracks feature positive messages, a staple of her songwriting since the beginning.

Dating back to her time in Joy of Cooking, who regularly opened for headliners like Van Morrison, the Band and the Grateful Dead at venues like the Winterland Ballroom in San Francisco, Garthwaite says music was always a joyous experience, “with people dancing because the rhythm was compelling and the lyrics were uplifting—that’s where I like to go with my music,” she says.

Garthwaite also uses her music as a teaching tool, leading songwriting workshops such as her annual Women Singing in Circle retreat, where she joins singers like Threshold Choir founder Kate Munger for a weeklong outing in the mountains of New Mexico. “It’s a perfect environment for my songs, a lot of people who come to the retreat need songs of comfort and joy,” she says.

This month’s birthday concert will be another joyous experience, as Joy of Cooking bassist David Garthwaite (Terry’s brother) and drummer Fritz Kasten join Garthwaite, along with her favorite guitarist Nina Gerber, Studio E owner Jeff Martin, vocalist Chris Webster and others.

“I wanted to have a mix of musicians on the show,” Garthwaite says. “There’s going to be a real feeling of community onstage.”

Fresh Air

Theatergoers hankering for a classic or the desire to see something new have two productions running now that fit the bill. Cinnabar Theater presents the 50-year-old classic Cabaret. The Kander and Ebb musical, which has gone through significant changes via numerous revivals since its 1966 debut, is the tale of two couples whose lives intersect via the Kit Kat Klub,...

Local Knowledge: Sebastopol

Describe your perfect day in Sebastopol. I would say a walk downtown, visiting People's Music, Copperfield's Books and Milk & Honey on Main Street, and then a stroll over to the Barlow for Village Bakery's bread or food from Barrio, mingling with the locals. I like that there's a strong sense of community, people interested in progressive issues. There's a...

Lucky Seven

If good things come in threes, the number seven is even better. That's how many restaurants and bars have opened or are about to open in Sebastopol's increasingly interesting food and drink scene. Mother's Ruin opened last month in the space formerly occupied by the Lucky Star bar. Mother's Ruin is a bar, too, that specializes in gin—mother's ruin. The...

Stitching Dignity

Cleve Jones is a veteran HIV-AIDS activist perhaps best known for launching the AIDS quilt project in the 1980s, but he's also been a major player in the regional organized-labor scene through his work with UNITE HERE. Jones will give the keynote speech at an upcoming fundraiser for North Bay Jobs with Justice on Sept. 7 at the Veterans Memorial...

Small Wonder

I should call this Barlow-to-Barlow bike loop a small ride to Small Vines: it's an easy, 7.5-mile ride, mostly over an off-street paved path and through quiet country lanes, that passes points of interest to viticulture geeks and heritage apple fans alike. The Barlow center in Sebastopol, where the namesake family operated an applesauce cannery, is a fitting starting point...

Hammer Time?

Trump is ramping up his unwieldy war on weed. Earlier this month, it was revealed that President Donald Trump created a Marijuana Policy Coordination Committee, one in which various federal agencies that oversee marijuana policy work together to find ways to prevent Americans from having access to the drug. According to a summary of a meeting held between the White...

Songs of Resistance

I spent Sunday sick on the couch resting and listening to music when I came across the fantastic new album from England's IDLES, Joy as an Act of Resistance. Blimey, it's great stuff. IDLES are a powerful, socially conscious post-punk band who have arrived at just the right time in post-Brexit England and the rising nationalism in Europe. Frontman Joe...

Letters to the Editor: September 5, 2018

Thanks, Milkman I was delighted to see your article about Straus Creamery in your latest issue of Bohemian ("Cream Dreams," Aug. 29). I love to bike the backroads of Sonoma and Marin counties, often on the same roads that milk trucks and other large farm trucks travel on. I have noticed that the drivers of the large Straus milk trucks...

Full House

September marks the opening of the new artistic season for many North Bay theater companies. Here's some of what they have in store for local audiences: Petaluma's Cinnabar Theater (cinnabartheater.org) transforms itself into Berlin's Kit Kat Club and bids you willkommen, bienvenue, and welcome to the classic John Kander and Fred Ebb musical Cabaret. Broadway veteran Michael McGurk and Petaluma...

Joy of Singing

Internationally known singer-songwriter, producer and teacher Terry Garthwaite has lived a life of music that dates back to the late 1960s, when she co-formed and fronted Berkeley rock group Joy of Cooking. With an inspiring musical spirit, Garthwaite has recorded dozens of albums over the years, delving into jazz, blues and folk along the way. Garthwaite recently turned 80, and...
11,084FansLike
4,446FollowersFollow
6,928FollowersFollow