Irish Hooley
Transcription
Irish Hooley
on the cover: 8 • irish hooley 16 • dubuque symphony orchestra 2013/14 season 24 • unsigned galena music festival 25 • i am love campaign issue #193 • August 15 - 28, 2013 4 9 11 18 19 20 23 26 28 30 31 31 community events urban art exhibit mentoring ars calendar budweiser nightlife local live music mississippi moon bar beauty & the beef arts pennies from heaven humane society fundraiser gentlemen of dubuque rugby 365ink production staff 31 32 33 34 34 35 35 36 37 37 38 39 city life program movies pam kress-dunn leisure services carnegie-stout public library do it yourself advice from sara eating healthy with hy-vee crossword bob’s book review mattitude trixie kitsch’s bad advice dr. mccracken’s horrorscopes 365ink contributing writers { bryce parks } [email protected] Publisher, Everything Else { matt booth } Mattitude [email protected] { mike ironside } [email protected] Feature Writer, Photography { pam kress-dunn } Feature Writer [email protected] { kristina nesteby } [email protected] Ad Designer { bob gelms } Bob’s Book Reviews [email protected] 365ink advertising staff { lisa stevenson } 563-580-1691 [email protected] { kelli kerrigan } 563-581-7014 [email protected] { rich belmont } Argosy’s Food For Thought [email protected] { l.a. hammer } Trixie Kitsch: Bad Advice For The Stupid { sara carpenter } Do it Yourself Advice [email protected] { ryan werner } Dr. McCracken special thanks to: Brad Parks, Margie Blair, Chris Wand, Neil Stockel, Ron Kirchhoff, Fran Parks, Christy Monk, Julie Steffen, Kay Kluseman, Ralph Kluseman, Ron & Jennifer Tigges, bacon, Steven Schleuning , Mark Dierker, Julie Griffin, Dave Haas, Tim Brechlin, Julien’s Journal, Roy & Deb Buol, Gen. Bob Felderman and all of our 365 friends and advertisers. { dubuque365 / 365ink } 432 Bluff Street, Dubuque, IA, 52001 dubuque365.com | 563-588-4365 All contents © 2013, Community, Incorporated. All rights reserved. All bacon served crispy. 2 { august 15 - 28, 2013 } 365ink Magazine | issue #193 Where’s Wando We’ve hidden Wando somewhere in this issue of 365ink. Can you find him? www.Dubuque365.com { bryce’s inkubator } Let’s go golfing! It’s kind of pathetic that I have not been out at all this year. This probably explains why the greens are in such good shape. But I’m a monster off the tee, I swear. I just can’t swear that the ball is necessarily going to go in the straight-ish direction. But for me, like most of you, golf is not about the perfect shot, but more so the perfect excuse to leave work early on a Thursday, drink beer and say you’re doing it for a good cause. The approach of fall, for me, also means that Toys For Tots season is starting to simmer. And with that comes the second annual Toys For Tots “Marine Bob the Toy Man Best Shot Golf Tournament.” Or as I like to put it, stress free time out of the office and a nice juicy steak at the end. Now, just because the event also happens to be taking place on my birthday, Thursday, September 19th, is just a happy accident (tee times between noon and 1 p.m.) I really didn’t want to take my birthday off of work, really. But I’ll sacrifice for the team. We had a blast our first year and many golfers said they were bringing more people in this year. That sounds like a great idea to me. www.Dubuque365.com hey wang... it’s a parking lot! Golf outings are like weddings for me. So many have stretches of boringness, bad gifts and forgettable food. Not this time, man. We’re cutting out the clutter and getting down to the important stuff. Golf, beer, great steaks, hole-in-one and raffle prizes that don’t suck (nobody’s going home with just a koozie and a bad hat from this outing), and fun people. And we’ll have you home in time to arguably have dinner again! The Toys For Tots outing is in memory of my dad who ran the program before me and made it the thriving toy machine that it is today. Doug Warthan and the cool cats at Dubuque Auto Plaza are again generously sponsoring to make the event great. So if you like what I’m doing, liked my dad, or think that kids deserve a little hope at Christmas, please get three of your friends together and join us for some fun for a great cause. Golf is $75 per player and includes the round, the cart and the meal. See the ad below for details and watch for some live auction items on Facebook a week before the outing. If you can’t come out that day but would like to support the Marine Corps Toys For Tots Program in 2013 with a $100 hole sponsorship, that’d be great, too. E-mail me at [email protected] or give me a call to reserve your foursome or to sponsor a hole at 563-590-3840. 365ink Magazine | issue #193 { august 15 - 28, 2013 } 3 { community events } i’m being featured in the deadbeats on the porch series. with visitors. This month’s artists include: Diane Bruce, pastel landscapes and abstracts on paper (August 17); Gary Carstens, wheel thrown and/or hand-built pottery (August 24); and Stephanie O’Shaughnessey, wheel thrown and/or hand-built pottery (August 31). Visit www.otlag.com. Music in the Gardens 365 Lunchtime Jams Fridays in August, 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m. Town Clock Plaza The mild weather of the Summer made us decide to go ahead and keep the Lunchtime Jams, jamming through August. Yeah! Get out of the office or the house and joint your friends from 365ink for simple fun lunchtime concerts featuring some of the tri-states most talented musicians. The event is sponsored by Prudential Financial and great food is always available from our friends at Carlos O’Kelly’s. Watch Facebook.com/Dubuque365 for updates on each week’s performer and/or potential cancelation due to weather. Artists on the Porch Saturdays in August, 11 a.m. - 3 p.m. Outside the Lines Gallery Every summer Saturday a different artist will set up a mini-studio on the gallery’s grand front porch, demonstrate their artistry, and spend some low-key quality time chatting 4 { august 15 - 28, 2013 } 365ink Magazine | issue #193 The Dubuque Arboretum’s summer concert series at the Dubuque Arboretum & Botanical Gardens, 3800 Arboretum Dr., Dubuque, runs Sundays at 6:30 p.m. in the Packard Pavilion. Bring lawn chairs or blankets and your own picnic and refreshments. Scheduled performers include: Sun Aug 18, 6:30 p.m., Diplomats of Solid Sound Sun Aug 25, 6:30 p.m., Just Voices Motherhood: The Musical Through August 25 Bell Tower Theatre Having a baby is just the beginning. Motherhood is forever... Motherhood: the Musical takes you on a sidesplitting roller coaster ride through the universal stresses and every-day exhilarations of being a mom. It’s about laughing and crying, craziness and calm, smiles and tears...and all before breakfast. This funny yet touching new musical is a must see for anyone who is, has or knows a mom. The production runs through 26 and with performances Thursdays at 7:30 pm, Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m., and Sundays at 3 p.m.. Take advantage of early bird special dates, August 9 & 10 when tickets are just $9.50 and a special added performance on Wednesday, August 21 at 7:30 p.m. Bell Tower www.Dubuque365.com { community events } never brawl with girls with more tattoos than you. Theater is located at 2728 Asbury Rd. in Dubuque. Tickets are $19 online at www.belltowertheater.net. Gary’s Grafitti Nights George and Dale’s, Dubuque Thursday’s, 6 p.m. East Summer is the season for classic cars and the place to be on Thursday nights is Gary’s Grafitti Nights at George and Dale’s in Downtown East Dubuque, IL. We say George and Dale’s but the truth is that this show takes up just about the whole Sinsinawa Ave. Strip, some side streets and a big parking lot to boot. It’s a big show for a weekly event. Every Thursday Night, May 17th - Sept 13, classic cruise into East Dubuque for, now the 30th year of Grafitti Nights! The event is free to spectators and George and Dales outdoor garden is open serving great food including some killer homemade brats. For those who wish to participate, Registration is at 6 p.m. for cars and trucks from 1972 and before. For more information contact Gary at 563-557-9440. the festival features a wide variety of foods, cold beverages served up by the Dubuque Jaycees, and a few thousand of your closest friends with which to enjoy it all. For more on Dubuque… And All That Jazz!, visit www.dubuquemainstreet.org. Bellevie Waterski Team Bellevue south riverbank Saturday August 17, 4 p.m. The ski team invites you to their any of their free ski shows in Bellevue along the south riverbank. For more information visit their website at skibellevue.com. Bomb Squad Roller Derby Back To School Brawl box, of what Nashville defines as ‘marketable material’. Amazingly, without a major hit on mainstream radio or even a record label, Church has millions of fans all over the world. Church has been featured on RFDTV’s popular show, “Midwest Country” for over five years. His popularity throughout the US, Canada, and now Europe continues to soar as he makes regular appearances on the show and tours throughout the world. David has been featured in numerous major country music magazines including, Country Weekly, Country Music Report, Nashville, Music Guide, Dreamwest, The Tub, Indie Islands, and many others. You can see what all the praise is about when he brings the show to the Grand Opera House on Saturday, August 17th at 7:3 p.m. Tickets are $25 and available online at www.thegrandoperahouse.com. Saturday, August 17, 6 p.m. Courtside Sports Bar Dubuque... And All That Jazz! Fridays, August 16, 5 - 9:30 p.m. Town Clock Plaza Dubuque biggest free festival series is back for the August installment featuring music by Viva Brazil Viva Brazil, a Minneapolis-based band bringing a blend Brazilian jazz, samba, funk, and world beats. In addition to music, www.Dubuque365.com Dubuque Bomb Squad Roller Derby Presents Back to School Brawl on Saturday, August 17 at 6 p.m at Courtside Sports Bar. The Bomb Squad takes on the Quad City Rollers. Bring in back to school supplies for area kids and receive $1.00 off door admission! Tix are $5 in advance (at Courtside, brownpapertickets.com or your favorite derby girl) or $8 at the door. Kids 12 and under are free. Limited seating, carry-in chairs welcome. Visit www. dubuquerollerderby.com. David Church Saturday, August 17, 7:30 p.m. The Grand Opera House David Church has found success despite all odds. He is outside the Resurrections Parish Festival Sunday Aug. 18, 11 a.m. -6 p.m. Resurrection Catholic Church The Resurrection Parish Festival is one of the biggest in the area. This fantastic family event is open to everyone, not just Resurrection parishioners and it is free. Enjoy Kiddieland, paddle wheels, a huge silent auction, bingo, inflatables, a country store, petting zoo and more! A ham and Kalmes chicken dinner with Fincel’s corn will be served 11 a.m.- 6 p.m. This year’s raffle grand prize is a 2013 Hyundai Elantra. 365ink Magazine | issue #193 { august 15 - 28, 2013 } 5 { community events } did i hear someone say brewfest? wineries, meat and cheese makers and more will feature the best of the best for the limited ticket event. Tickets are on sale now for $45 or $50 for VIP admission one hour early. Must be 21 to attend. Admission includes a ticket to the National Brewery Museum across the street. Get your tickets today and find more information online at www. potosibrewery.com. Summer’s Last Blast 14 Fri-Sat, August 23-24, 5 - 11 p.m. Town Clock Plaza The fall installment of Music & More Production’s two-part salute to Summer (Part 1 is the Kickoff to Summer in May), Summer’s Last Blast is a weekend of live music from top local bands to touring national acts. Friday night’s line-up includes JabberBox, Crystal Leather, Menace and is capped off with the LoveMonkeys while Saturday night welcomes Missbehavin’, Johnny Trash and the always entertaining Spazmatics. This is an all-ages event and admission is free as always. A portion of the proceeds benefit the Sertoma Club, The Boy Scouts, DBQ Main Street, Team Angels, Tour Dubuque and Hospice of Dubuque. Be Made Whole Book Signing Friday, August 30, 5:30-6:30 p.m. River Lights Bookstore Be Made Whole is the story of a man whose abusive childhood caused his mind to split into nine different personalities. After many years of torment and searching for answers, Dan received Jesus into his heart and life. He was made whole and knew that God wanted to use everything he had been through to share the healing message of the Gospel to the world. Meet Dubuque author Daniel Levi. For more information, visit www.riverlights.com. Galena Studio Tour Saturday-Sunday, August 31-September 1 Downtown Galena Potosi Brewfest Saturday August 24, 1-5 p.m. Holiday Gardens Event Center Potosi, Wisconsin The Potosi Brewfest returns to the Holiday Gardens Event Center in Potosi, WI on Saturday, August 24 from 1-5 p.m. Nearly 40 breweries, plus a handful of 6 { august 15 - 28, 2013 } 365ink Magazine | issue #193 Join a self-guided studio tour through historic Galena, IL. Six downtown locations host a unique opportunity to not only meet the artists and view their art work, but to learn something about the creative process that the artist undertakes and the story behind their artwork. Participating artists include: Charles Fach, pottery and sculpture; Carl Johnson, watercolors and etchings; Jan Ketza, jewelry and www.Dubuque365.com www.Dubuque365.com 365ink Magazine | issue #193 { august 15 - 28, 2013 } 7 { community events } now that’s making lemonade from lemons. painting; Jane Einsweiler, jewelry; Janet Checker, painting; and Joe Pinder, pottery. Maps to the artists’ locations and Studio Tour Events are available at the CVB (Train Depot), Visit Galena, downtown businesses, lodgings, and at each of the artists’ studios. Tour rums from 10:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. Saturday and 10:00 a.m.2:00 p.m. Sunday. Maps and additional information are also available at www. galenastudiotour.com. Grape Stomp Saturday, August 31 Park Farm Winery Park Farm Winery in Bankston celebrates the fall harvest with Grape Stomp, an afternoon festival of well, grapes, stomping, wine, and live music including Bob Door & The Blue Band, who apparently plays every winebased live music event in eastern Iowa. The Salon Opening Reception Saturday, August 31, 6-11 p.m. Eronel Art + Music Venue Eronel hosts an offsite exhibition of “rejected” artists. Named after the Salon Des Refusés, an exhibition of works rejected by the jury of the Official Paris Salon, The Salon seeks to promote artists who have applied to and were not accepted by the annual Voices from the Warehouse District Exhibition and the Dubuque Museum of Art’s Biannual Exhibition. All artists who were rejected within the past five years who apply will be accepted. The reception will feature live music by Kristina Casteneda & Shawn Healy, Feast of Mutton, and Venereal Crush. Admission is free. For more information, visit www. facebook.com/SalonDesRefusesDbq. the Bill Delaney Annual Labor Day Parade sponsored by the Dubuque Area LaborManagement Council. The parade will begin at Jackson Park and end at Washington Park. UW-P Welcome Weekend Concert Monday, September 2, 7 p.m. William’s Feildhouse, U.W. Platteville This year’s Welcome Weekend concert will feature country music performers Chris Cagle, Jason Michael Carroll, and Scarletta. Scarletta will open the event at 7:00 p.m., Carroll will perform at 8:00 p.m., and Cagle will headline, taking the stage at 9:15 p.m. A limited number of tickets for the concert are available. Admission is $20 (plus taxes and handling). Tickets can be purchased at the University Box Office or by calling (608) 3421298 or toll-free at 1-877-727-1CFA. Human Rights Celebration Friday, September 6, 9:30 a.m. Dubuque Arboretum The 2013 Human Rights Celebration, “Breaking Down the Doors of Injustice,” sponsored by Dubuque Church Women United will meet at the Dubuque Arboretum and Botanical Gardens, 3800 Arboretum Dr., Dubuque. A celebration service and program will be at 10:00 a.m. Guest speaker Judy Nemmers, board member of NAMI Dubuque and a Licensed Independent Social Worker providing patient mental health therapy, will present “Faith & Mental Health – Building Bridges of Hope.” Ann E. Michalski, former Dubuque City Councilwoman, will be honored with the Church Women United Human Rights Award. She will be recognized for her tireless efforts towards positive changes in human rights within the Dubuque community. All interested are welcome. Galena Food & Wine Festival Dubuque Labor Day Parade Monday, September 2, 9:30 a.m. Downtown Dubuque parade Route The annual celebration of working men and women of our community and country at 8 { august 15 - 28, 2013 } 365ink Magazine | issue #193 Galena Convention Center September 6, 7 - 10 p.m. The Galena Food and Wine Festival aspires to be a culinary dream featuring the talents of Galena area restaurants as well wine tasting—showcasing approximately 150 varieties—sponsored by www.Dubuque365.com { nash gallery urban art exhibit } I have a nice black t-shirt display. are accepted. Regular gallery hours are 12:00-4:00 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays. “Urban Art” will be on display through Friday, October 4. Urban Art Exhibit & Fundraiser Festival Saturday, August 17, 1 - 9 p.m. Nash Gallery, 371 Bluff St. (above Monk’s Kaffee Pub) Nash Gallery, the Dubuque County Fine Arts Society’s grassroots art gallery encouraging, promoting, and presenting local and regional artists, announces the opening reception of it’s latest exhibit, “Urban Art,” Saturday, August 17 at Nash Gallery, 371 Bluff St. (above Monk’s Kaffee Pub) from 1:00-9:00 p.m. The exhibit features a variety of mediums related to street art, street punk, comic books, and graffiti by Dubuque and regional artists. The opening reception is also the volunteer-driven gallery’s annual fundraiser festival. The festival will take place in the gallery parking lot (behind Monk’s Kaffee Pub) and will feature free hot dogs and sides, live graffiti demonstrations, and live music throughout the day. Musical entertainment includes Eddie Burke, Nate Jenkins, Glimmer Blinkken, and more to be announced. Beer and drinks will be available for purchase from Monk’s Kaffee Pub, the festival’s sponsor. All ages are welcome. There is a $10 suggested donation. www.Dubuque365.com In the gallery space, featured artists and works include: Bjorn Bjornstad: digital prints; custom skateboard decks Victor Cayro: video installation; sculpture; original t-shirts John Forbes: comic book art Becca Kacanda: acrylic paintings; sculptures Jon Little: acrylic paintings (series of superheroes expressed via Chinese opera makeup) Ali Lynch: acrylic paintings; Prisma colored pencil on black paper Nicole McCarthy: hanging and glassed black and white photographs Rich Rossignol: street punk coat Ashley Voss: graffiti art Post-festival, installations from the live graffiti demos will also be on display in the exhibit Most pieces on display are available for purchase. Artists receive 90% of profits for artwork sold; Nash Gallery receives a 10% commission to fund operating expenses. Regular admission to Nash Gallery is free; donations Nash Gallery is a core program of the Dubuque County Fine Arts Society (DCFAS), a volunteer-driven 501(c)(3) not-for profit arts organization serving the Dubuque, Iowa community with low or no cost arts experiences. For more information about Nash Gallery and their upcoming exhibits and artist calls, visit the DCFAS website at www.dcfas.org or visit the Nash Gallery Facebook page at www.facebook.com/nashdbq. 365ink Magazine | issue #193 { august 15 - 28, 2013 } 9 { community events } Family Beer & Liquor. The event—with a portion of the proceeds to benefit the Galena Art and Recreation Center—will also include live music, a raffle and silent auction. The event also kicks off Go Galena Getaway Weekend, organized by the Galena Area Chamber of Commerce. Additional events are planned throughout the weekend, including the Chamber’s famed “Quartermania” to be held on Saturday. For more information, visit www.galenachamber.com. Cost is $50.00 per person. Mounds campus at 3900 Peru Road on Thursday, September 5, at 5:30 p.m. Enjoy fall & winter fashions and visiting with boutique owners including DBQ Fashions, Gotta Have It, Graham’s Gal and HJ’s Fashion Emporium. Picnic baskets with sangria will be served on the lawn or in the Grey House following the fashion show. You can also try your chance at door prizes. Thickets are $30 each and proceeds from the event will benefit Four Mounds’ mission of preservation, educations and service. To reserve your limited seats, call 563-556-1908, e-mail chris@fourmounds. org to visit fourmounds.org for a downloadable registration form by August 26th. Four Bitchin Babes Saturday, September 7th, 7 p.m. Ohnward Fine Arts Center Four Mounds Fashion Soireé and Sangria Picnic Thursday, September 5, 5:30 p.m. Four Mounds, 4900 Peru Road Four Mounds Women’s Fellowship annual dinner returns in the form of a Fashion Soireé and Sangria Picnic at the Four Start with four richly gifted singer-songwriters, add 3/4 cup married life, four kids, four part harmony vocals, one piano, four guitars, one Rockin’ Purple Bass, a dollop of sharp social commentary, cheerleading pom poms, a pinch of pms, a wardrobe of blingbling, and you’ve got an Estrogen fueled hilarious new show that celebrates the best of Babes, Boys, and Botox. After 17 years as a traveling pajama party, seven recordings, who can resist sangria? event will include face painting and balloon animals for kids, a raffle, and silent auction. Food will be available for purchase. All proceeds benefit the Dubuque Community YWCA’s New Beginnings program. and one full length concert DVD, this Fabulous Female Folkestra of indestructible Divas are hotter than ever. Literally! Always evolving, witty and charming, the Babes® welcome in a new era with a new cast, and a new musical revue that is one part comedy road show, one part celebration of hearth and home. Spend an entertaining evening with these outrageously funny and multitalented musician gal pals as they examine and ultimately celebrate the lives of today’s men and women as we all search for balance. Tickets are $22 in advance or $25 at the door. Airport Open House/EAA Breakfast Sunday, September 8, 8 a.m. - Noon Dubuque Regional Airport The airport and the local Chapter of EAA will be hosting an Open House/Fly-in/Drive-in breakfast in the Blue Skies over Dubuque hangar. Funds raised by the breakfast go to support aviation promotion activities to include the Young Eagles program. Multiple aircraft and equipment will be on display on the airport ramp along with several aircraft in the Dubuque Jet Center Hangar. Airplane rides will be available for $25 per person through Iowa Flight Training. Party at the Park Saturday, September 8, 3-8 p.m. Park Farm Winery Park Farm Winery, at 15159 Thielen Rd, Bankston, IA, hosts a special edition of Toast & Jam as a fundraiser for Domestic Violence Awareness. For $10 admission, enjoy a glass of wine (you get to keep the glass) or beer and entertainment by McGraw-Hill’s One Night Strand and Finger Lickin’ Good featuring Johnnie Walker and Kevin Beck. The 10 { august 15 - 28, 2013 } 365ink Magazine | issue #193 City of Dubuque Expo Tuesday, September 10, 4-7 p.m. Five Flags Center The City of Dubuque’s annual City Expo will be held from 4 – 7 p.m. at the Five Flags Civic Center on Tuesday, Sept. 10. Residents of all ages are encouraged to attend this free event to learn more about city services, programs, and projects. This year’s event is being held in a new season and at a new time as part of an effort to “overhaul” City Expo and make it a more accessible and engaging experience for attendees. It will again offer booths and displays featuring all City departments and divisions as well as many partner organizations but the displays and activities provided are being redesigned to be more informative and engaging for residents. Plans also call for a new arrangement of displays in the Five Flags arena as well as the addition of an outdoor display area on West Fifth Street between Locust and Main streets. City staff also plan to offer a series of presentations/seminars on a variety of topics on two stages in the arena throughout the event. Topics and a schedule of presentations will be announced in advance of the event and posted at www.cityofdubuque.org/cityexpo. Attendees are encouraged to BYOB (bring your own bag) to collect materials of interest to them. Free refreshments will also be provided for attendees. Visit www. cityofdubuque.org/ cityexpo or call the Public Information Office at 563.589.4151. www.Dubuque365.com { special events / mentoring } Music in the Gardens Diplomats of Solid Sound Sunday, August 18, 6:30 p.m. Dubuque Arboretum The Diplomats of Solid Sound are a funk and soul group from Iowa City, IA that perform with a modern garage band twist. Since the release of their first 7-inch single, “Bullfrog Boogaloo” in 2001, The Diplomats have been mining America’s vast deposits of soul music to create a sound all their own -- a spare but-spicy groove sired equally by progenitors such as Booker T., James Brown and The Funk Brothers. After 3 full-length albums as an instrumental outfit; “Instrumental Action Soul” (2001) on their own Prescription “Team of Dreams’ coming to Island Fest at Mystique Casino September 13-14 Mystique Casino in Dubuque has announced that thirteen of baseball’s most celebrated and accomplished players will come together in Dubuque, Iowa as part of the casino’s first annual Island Fest event on September 13 & 14, presented by American Trust & Savings Bank. This historical game featuring the major league legends will be played on Saturday, September 14, 2013 at the storied Field of Dreams Movie Site, located in Dyersville, www.Dubuque365.com dig it, daddy-o! Records, and both “Let´s Cool One” (2003) and “Destination Get Down!” (2005) on the mighty Estrus Records, The Diplomats expand the family with a new set of soul stunners they call The Diplomettes, for the self-titled “The Diplomats Of Solid Sound feat. The Diplomettes” (2008) out on Record Kicks / Pravda and produced by Lack Of Afro from Freestyle Records. Their latest full-length and fifth album, “What Goes Around Comes Around” came out in October 2010, confirming their standing as one of the more prolific funk and soul groups of the contemporary scene. Prepare for a supercharged new set of prime cuts for the dancefloor guaranteed to groove its way into your head and your ass -- and get both moving fast! Music in the Gardens is a FREE concert series at the Dubuque Arboretum and Botanical Gardens. The concerts take place outdoors and it’s suggested that you bring your own lawn chairs or blankets for enjoying the show. Iowa. Get a load of this lineup: Reggie Jackson, Pete Rose, Jim Rice, Johnny Bench, Wade Boggs, Frank Thomas, Jim Palmer, Rod Carew, Bruce Sutter, Carlton Fisk, Ozzie Smith, Doc Gooden, Paul Molitor, and just added, Ricky Henderson. But that’s only one part of a massive weekend of fun including a concert by Randy Owen, the voice of Alabama, a car show, BBQ competition, and Battle of the bands. Much more information and tickets are on sale now at www.IslandFestDBQ.com. Become a Mentor. Become a HERO. Children in Dubuque County are in need of mentors. These children come from all walks of life and have needs unique to each of them. One thing they have in common is a need for a stable, caring adult who will offer guidance, friendship, support, and encouragement aimed at developing their competence and character. “I never had any luck at all until I had my mentor,” states a 4th grade student. The Dubuque Mentoring Partnership (DMP) is a coalition of organizations who strive to improve lives, strengthen the community and foster civic engagement by supporting quality mentoring programs. During the “Become a Mentor. Become a Hero.” recruitment campaign, the goal is to match 250 children, adults and families in Dubuque County with a mentor or ally. Mentoring relationships can be community based, school based or site based. Community based means meeting in the community and provides the mentor with flexibility to decide where and what types of activities to participate in together. School based mentors meet with a child during school hours and do a variety of activities with the mentee on the school campus. Site based mentors meet at a specific site, usually during non-school hours, where activities and resources as well as additional supervision are generally available onsite. The Dubuque Mentoring Partnership includes members from the following organizations: AmeriCorps Partners in Learning, Big Brothers Big Sisters of Eastern Iowa, Circles Initiative, Dubuque Community Schools, Every Child Every Promise, Foster Grandparent Program, Helping Services for Northeast Iowa, Hillcrest Family Services Y-Club, Multicultural Family Center, Resources Unite, Riverview Center and St. Mark Youth Enrichment. All partners of the DMP are currently accepting new mentors and allies. To find the program that is right for you, please visit www.resourcesunite.com/mentoring/ or email [email protected]. 365ink Magazine | issue #193 { august 15 - 28, 2013 } 11 { irish hooley } everything’s going green! ... with touches of purple. sing-along favorites. Following The Lads is an Irish Dance Exhibition and then a new group from Milwaukee called Tallymoore. “Tallymoore was started by the son of one of the founders of the (Milwaukee) Irish Festival so it’s great to see that musical tradition continue,” explained Lange. “They’re a new band. They take old, classic songs and really remake them in a very different way.” Irish Hooley A Celebration of Irish Music, Dance & Culture Saturday, August 24 Alliant Amphitheater By Mike Ironside “There’s a Hooley on in Hannigan’s House Tonight,” says the old song. “Hooley” is, of course, a term for an Irish celebration and that’s exactly what you will find at the Alliant Amphitheater on Saturday, August 24. The Irish Hooley, Dubuque’s own festival celebrating all things Irish (and Celtic, really) returns in its ninth season to the gathering spot in front of the historic Star Brewery at the Port of Dubuque, with a variety of food, beer, Irish dancers, Irish cultural exhibits and a full day of Celtic music. While the Hooley’s popularity spiked when the event moved to the Alliant Amphitheater in 2007, attendance has grown each year, in part because of the great music the festival offers. It seems that regardless of family heritage, Dubuque has developed a taste for Celtic music and for true fans of the genre, this year’s event promises to be one of the best ever with two relatively new bands making their Dubuque debut and the return of two of the Hooley’s favorites, the Red Hot Chilli Pipers and Gaelic Storm. 12 { august 15 - 28, 2013 } Tallymoore features Sean Ward, the son of Milwaukee Irish Festival Chuck Ward. “So they’ve had famous Irish musicians from around the world in their home, playing in their kitchen and whatnot and they’ve grown up with Irish music,” explained Lange. “Again, they’re just starting out and I met them and I thought it would be really wonderful to bring them over here and kind of share them with our crowd.” To learn more about this year’s event, especially the music lineup, we got together for a beer (or two) with Hooley lead organizer Michael Lange to find out how this year’s festival has attracted not just one but two headline acts. “The Hooley has really grown into an international music festival,” admits Lange. “There are other wonderful festivals in town, many of them free. I think what Keith Rahe and the America’s River Festival are doing is amazing but we have grown into an Irish and Celtic music festival that is attracting some really tremendous bands from around the world and we’re really pleased to be able to do that. That’s a big part of the reason we charge admission and I think it’s one of the things that really sets our festival apart.” With what has already become tradition, the Hooley starts at noon with an opening ceremony by the Dubuque Fire Pipes & Drums bagpipe and drum brigade. Then the party truly starts with The Lads, a popular group of local musicians who play all the Irish pub 365ink Magazine | issue #193 In the late afternoon, following a 3:30 cultural demonstration, the music veers in a decidedly Scottish direction, starting with a relatively new band called Skerryvore, also making their Dubuque debut. “Skerryvore started in 2005,” notes Lange. “It’s a group of six young Scotsmen. They’re very good musicians. They play traditional stuff, both Scottish and Irish, but they’ve also written a lot of their own music – I think they have four CDs out now. They come out on stage in kilts and bagpipes and accordions and all sorts of different things and they’ve got some really good stuff that’s their own and they do a really good job with kind of classic stuff too. So, it’s our first time having them and we’re really pleased that we were able to get them. I’ve seen them in Milwaukee and I just think they’re terrific and the crowd’s really going to like them. Last year, midafternoon we hit the crowd with a couple of really loud Irish rock bands and this year we’re going kind of different – we’ve got two Scottish bands and it’s a different sort of music.” Following Skerryvore is a popular tradion in the salute to out Armed Forces at 5:30 p.m. before another band of Scots, the Red Hot Chilli Pipers, who with their 2010 Hooley headline performance won over a rabid local fan base, takes the stage. “I think most folks didn’t know them before that and I had a friend of mine after the show say something like, ‘you know they were a half hour into their set before I realized that no one was singing.’ They’re just so unique and so fun,” notes Lange. “Their ability to take songs that everybody knows and convert them into something that works great with bagpipes… They’re doing a lot of medleys now. We saw them last weekend in Waterloo and they had 10,000 people on Saturday night and another 10 (thousand) we think on Sunday so they absolutely wowed the crowd there and to have them back is just a really fun and wonderful turn of events.” The return of the Chilli Pipers this year truly was a “turn of events” as Lange explains that they had already booked the Hooley’s headline act. “The surprise was we had already booked Gaelic Storm for this year when the Red Hot Chilli Pipers, who we had three years ago, called me and asked if they could come back,” relates Lange. “They’d had such a great experience here in Dubuque that they decided at the last minute to come back to the states and they wanted to come play here. So we worked it out and we’re really excited to have them back. They’re not only great guys but they do a type of music that nobody else does. I think a lot of people have seen them, they played in the opening ceremony for the Olympics last year and they were kind of the party band in the Olympic Village for the ten days of the Olympics. So to have them come here is really great. They have a brand new CD out and not only are they playing for us on Saturday, but they’re doing a little show on Thursday before the Hooley for our volunteers as a way to thank our volunteers and have some fun before the actual fest starts.” It was not just the Chilli Pipers experience at the Hooley that made Dubuque stand out in their memories. Lange and Hooley volunteers made sure the young Scots felt welcome by showing them a good time during their stay, including a boat excursion on the river. “When they were here last time, they had a videographer following them,” explained Lange. “I met him www.Dubuque365.com { irish hooley } you might say its the premier irish event in the area! we’ve run out of room at the amphitheater and we’re thinking about what that means for our future,” explained Lange. “We want to be able to expand our ability to have cultural demonstrations, whether it be Gaelic lessons, information about travel to Ireland, Irish history, Irish culture, that sort of thing. We want to be able to bring back and expand our whiskey tasting next year.” in Waterloo and he said the day after the Hooley last time, when we took the band out on the Mississippi River was the highlight of their trip three years ago. They put pictures of it up on Facebook and they were really hoping to get back and be able to do something like that again. In fact, it looks like they may be bringing the videographer back with them and some Irish dancers as part of a film they’re creating that is planned for PBS. So I’m hoping a little bit of the Dubuque Festival shows up on national television in the not-toodistant future.” And finally, as if that all weren’t enough Celtic music, the band that is arguably Dubuque’s favorite Hooley band, Gaelic Storm, takes the stage in the evening. “We’re bringing Gaelic Storm back,” states Lange, “obviously a crowd favorite and maybe the hardest-working Irish band in the country. We’re excited because they have a brand new CD coming out called The Boathouse. It’s just coming out on August 20 so we think we will be the first festival in the country to be able to offer their new CD. They have a new fiddle player named Kiana and she’s really great. She sings, she dances and she plays a mean fiddle and she’s going to bring a new element to their music.” With a CD of brand new material, the Gaelic Storm performance promises to be the grand finale of a full day of great music. “With all the bands, the two Scottish bands and whatnot, we’ve got this ‘unofficial’ theme, ‘Celts and Kilts,’” said Lange. “Anyone who wants to show up in a traditional Celtic kilt will receive a free beer. They can come to the Hooley headquarters and we’ll give them a ticket to get a good beer. We really want to have some fun with that this year. Again, in Waterloo www.Dubuque365.com there was a huge contingent of people dressed in kilts and the various accoutrements that go with it and it was a lot of fun to see the crowd show up, especially the men. It’s usually the women dressing up but the men were really decked out and it was kind of fun.” Since there is free beer involved, we wondered how organizers would qualify a “true” kilt as opposed to some dude just borrowing his girlfriend’s skirt. “Our two volunteer coordinators, Susan Guinn and Terri Windsor, will be serving as ‘kilt inspectors’ at the Hooley headquarters and it will be their determination – male or female – whether the kilt is appropriate for our audience,” explained Lange. We think that there might be some women who would jump at the chance to volunteer for that role. Despite the challenges, organizers are working to provide the best experience to their guests. “The one thing we are doing again this year is we have a traveling exhibit from the Ward Irish music archives in Milwaukee, and this one is on Irish rockn-roll,” said Lange. “It features information about some of the biggest bands that have come out of Ireland like U2, but also people like Rory Gallagher and a lot of folks that maybe our crowd doesn’t know all that well. So we’re going to set that up in the Star Brewery. It will give people a chance to kind of get out of the sun during the day and learn something about Irish music and we’re really thankful to be able to work with the Milwaukee Irish Fest to again to bring that to our fest. We want to do more of that. We’re going to figure out how to expand our emphasis on culture. We’d love to be able to bring highland games to the festival in the future and things like that. We’re thinking about how we can do that and what that means for the future of our festival.” One promising note on the future of not only the Hooley but a broader celebration ... continued on page 15 With what might be the best musical lineup the Hooley has ever hosted, Lange expects a big turnout for this year’s festival. To maximize the space at the amphitheater, organizers are working to create more space for music fans. “We’ve got these wonderful bands and honestly, I wish I could push the whole Star building back about 100 yards to the west because we’re just out of space,” admitted Lange. “We’ve got this killer lineup, the two best bands we’ve ever had and so we’re doing things to clear more room on the amphitheater floor. We took out the tables. We’re moving stuff out of the two corners by the building and we’re just basically creating as much room as possible for people to come in and enjoy the music.” While arguably a good problem to have, the popularity of the Hooley has become a challenge for organizers. “Our desire is to keep growing the festival. To be honest, 365ink Magazine | issue #193 { august 15 - 28, 2013 } 13 { irish hooley } what are the odds that some of these songs are going to be about beer? Irish Hooley Live Music The Lads (12:15 p.m.) “Hooley” is an Irish term for party and The Lads, a collection of local talent who enjoy celebrating their Irish and American roots know how to get one started. Featuring great vocal harmonies and a blend of folk instruments, The Lads play favorite Irish pub melodies, ballads and rebel songs. Be prepared to sing along with this group of party-loving Irish-Americans because they believe the real joy of a Hooley is best realized when the audience joins in. So bring your thirst for fun and song and be prepared to raise your voices and your jar to all that is great about being Irish and American. The Lads include members Kevin Walsh, Rob McCullough, Jim Mueller, Bill Thurm, Laura Hess and Patrick Reidy. Martin (bagpipes, whistles & accordion) who bonded with holidaymaker Fraser West (drums & vocals) and friend Alec Dalglish (lead vocals & guitar) over a shared love of music: everything from traditional to rock and jazz. It was this mix of musical styles and sounds that set the path for the band’s 2005 debut album, ‘West Coast Life.’ The more the fledgling band experimented with fusing together this mix of musical styles, the more their signature sound evolved, aided by the arrival of Barry Caulfield (bass & vocals) and Craig Espie (fiddle) in time for their second album, ‘On The Road’, in 2007. rocked up Bagpipes and clever covers of popular songs from all genres. With three highly successful albums already under their belts, the band has just released their fourth entitled ‘Music For The Kilted Generation’ on REL Records. Their previous live album and DVD ‘BLAST Live!’ (REL Records, 2009) has already gone triple platinum in Scotland plus their second album ‘Bagrock To The Masses’ (REL Records, 2008) received platinum in Scotland and silver status in the UK. But it was with the release of self-titled third album, ‘Skerryvore’, that the band found themselves catapulted into the musical limelight winning a string of prestigious awards, including SNMA (Scottish New Music Awards) Record of the Year 2011 and STMA (Scots Trad Music Awards) Live Act of the Year 2011, and garnering much critical acclaim. Tallymoore (2 p.m.) Tallymoore began with band leader Matt Voell and longtime friend Sean Ward’s passion for Irish music. Comprised of five members, each one brings something different to the band’s performances. With backgrounds in rock, musical theater and classical violin, the members of Tallymoore bring their own interpretation to Irish folk music. This melding of techniques has given birth to a fresh modern sound emphasizing vocal harmonies and rousing musicianship. Performing traditional favorites, pub songs and new music, Tallymoore will be bringing “the craic” from Milwaukee’s Irish Fest to Dubuque’s Irish Hooley. www.tallymoore.com Skerryvore (4 p.m.) Skerryvore first formed on the tiny lsle of Tiree off Scotland’s west coast in 2005. Back then, the band consisted of Tiree-born Gillespie brothers Daniel (accordion) and 14 { august 15 - 28, 2013 } In June 2012 the band released what is undeniably their most polished and radio-ready album to date. ‘World of Chances’ weaves together the band’s musical talents with the award winning songwriting abilities of frontman Alec Dalglish (Frankie Miller Songwriter of the Year 2011). At times uplifting, at times reflective, the result is a brighter, breezier, feel good sound that looks set to broaden the band’s appeal even further. www. skerryvore.com Red Hot Chilli Pipers (6:15 p.m.) Since they walked away with the top prize on UK primetime TV talent show, ‘When Will I Be Famous’ in 2007, the Red Hot Chilli Pipers haven’t stopped for a breath, other than to inflate their bagpipes! Formed in 2002, The Chillis have fast become a global phenomenon, taking their signature ‘Bagrock’ sound to the masses and rocking farflung shores from New York to Beijing and everywhere in between with their unique fusion of 365ink Magazine | issue #193 www.Dubuque365.com { irish hooley } what are the odds that some of these beers are going to be about song. Continued from page 13 The Red Hot Chilli Pipers put on a show guaranteed to amaze any audience. They are a genuinely unique experience! www. redhotchillipipers.co.uk Gaelic Storm (8:30 p.m.) Headlining the festival will be returning Hooley favorites Gaelic Storm. Through the course of nine albums, the core of Celtic-rock group Gaelic Storm – frontman Patrick Murphy and guitarist-vocalist Steve Twigger – have lived, written and recorded in the United States, far from the overseas environs of Patrick’s native Ireland and Steve’s birthplace of England. So when it came time to find inspiration for Gaelic Storm’s last album, the group’s chief songwriters decided a trip back across the pond was in order. The result is the dazzling #1 Billboard World Album Chicken Boxer, a heavyweight record that comes out swinging with a mix of empowering anthems and traditional ballads, and the fifth to be released on the band’s own label, Lost Again Records. “Twigger and I returned to Ireland, driving around the entire coastline in search of Irish music,” says Patrick. “Going back was great and we got some good stories and ideas for songs.” Rounded out by drummer Ryan, piper Pete Purvis and fiddle player Kiana Weber, Gaelic Storm has earned a reputation as one of the world-music scene’s preeminent Celtic bands. With catalog sales of more than 1 million, the group has now had three albums debut at #1 on the Billboard World Albums Chart, 2008’s What’s the Rumpus?, 2010’s Cabbage, which remained parked in the top slot for three consecutive weeks, and 2012’s Chicken Boxer. The band follows up with new album The www.Dubuque365.com Boathouse, set to be released just in time for Dubuque’s Irish Hooley. The idea for The Boathouse was distilled in early June 2013 after Twigger found a small pearl in an oyster he was about to eat at a restaurant. It was a one in ten-thousand chance occurrence and, of course, it was a sign; a true rarity. He thought, “We’ll do a seafaring album in three weeks somewhere on water. Somehow we’ll create a studio from scratch, and we’ll record it all within one week.” It only took a few phone calls to arrange the whole thing. The band was on board instantly, and the location couldn’t have been any better: a friend’s converted boathouse in Annapolis, Maryland which looked out over the Chesapeake Bay. of Irish culture and heritage is a new collaboration with the recently established Dubuque chapter of the Ancient Order of Hibernians. “The Irish Hooley sprung out of work by the Dubuqueland Irish and we’re going to continue to work with them on our Hooley,” elaborates Lange. “They lead the way in terms of the silent auction and this year we’re going to have a live auction again for a week in a cabin in Colorado. But we’re also joining forces with the new Dubuque chapter of the Ancient Order of Hibernians. Rob McCullough, who plays with The Lads, is their new president. There is a chapter in Dyersville that’s responsible for the St. Patrick’s Day Parade, which has grown and become such a wonderful thing and they’ve now developed a chapter here in Dubuque and it’s just getting off the ground but we want to work with them in terms of the Hooley, but also in terms of bringing a series of Irish and Celtic events to the area throughout the year.” The partners are planning an “Irish Day on the Mississippi” with Irish entertainment on the American Lady this fall to see the autumn colors. “We’re also involved in bringing a woman named Liz Knowles and her trio to play here on Saturday, October 12,” noted Lange. “They’re going to do a concert at Mindframe. Liz has played with both Riverdance and Cherish the Ladies and we’re really excited that she is going to be able to come to Dubuque. We’re working on plans for St. Patrick’s Day 2014 in terms of that weekend and plan to cap it off by bringing the international Irish music group Cherish the Ladies here to play on Monday, March 17, St. Patrick’s Day, at the Five Flags Theater. They were here a number of years ago and played with the Symphony Orchestra, but we’re going to bring them to do their own show at the Five Flags Theater on St. Patrick’s Day. Basically, the success we’ve had with the Hooley has led us to want to branch out, to bring things of Irish culture and music throughout the year and we hope this will continue to grow. We have some other ideas percolating but we just want to expand our ability to promote and develop Irish cultural activities in Dubuque.” “When we all arrived on a Sunday, it was all hands on deck,” the band shares on their blog. “We created a studio from the ground up, recording fourteen-hour days until our voices were hoarse and fingers were sore. Then, on the following Friday, we sailed away with a gem of an album. The Boathouse was created with sheer determination, a bucket load of whiskey, and some undeniably raucous songs. This album truly showcases a tight-knit band in our musical prime. You can hear the utter joy we feel when playing music together.” “With The Boathouse, we have created a new and refreshing way of making music,” the blog continues. “We are referring to this idea of traveling to a remote location in order to record for one week as the ‘Small Batch Sessions.’ We want to make this album a true exclusive, and the band is limiting the amount of copies to be pressed at one time. The album will only be available on our website and at live concerts.” Be the first (in the world!) to get this new limited CD at Dubuque’s Irish Hooley! www.gaelicstorm.com 365ink Magazine | issue #193 { august 15 - 28, 2013 } 15 { dubuque symphony orchestra } more cowbell! dreamy melodies and ragtime energy. Copland’s Appalachian Spring follows - loved for its simple power and beauty. An American in Paris, another Gershwin favorite, closes the program. Named after the Austrian town, “Linz” was composed in just four days - a testament to Mozart’s genius. Worldclass violinist Miriam Fried makes a welcome return to the DSO to perform Beethoven’s Violin Concerto, one of the most graceful and challenging concertos in the violin repertoire. Dubuque Symphony Orchestra 2013-2014 Season The 2013-2014 Season for the Dubuque Symphony Orchestra is just around the corner and season tickets are now available now from the Dubuque Symphony Orchestra Office oy by calling 563-557-1677. Individual Performance Tickets will go on sale Monday August 19, 2013. True to form, it’s another huge year of diverse and exciting selections with a few curve balls thrown in to keep you on your toes. The season includes five Classics Series shows, four non-classics special performance opportunies, and one Mad Party to kick it all off. We’ll do our best to summarize the for you here, but you’ll want to visit http:// www.dubuquesymphony.org to get full details of every show this year. Additional ticket information will also follow at the end of this feature. Heaven and Earth November 9, 7:30 p.m. November 10, 2 p.m. Five Flags Theater Jesu, Joy is one of Bach’s most enduring works. The origins of O Lord, I Long remian a mystery, but its beauty goes without question. A lovely showcase for the Dubuque Chorale, the piece featured four soloists adn prominent chorus. Two of Brahms’ greatest and most popular choral works inspire us to look to the heavens. The “Pastoral” is one of the most beloved of Beethoven’s nine symphonies. It captures the composer’s deep love for nature and all of humanity. Pictures at an Exhibition April 12, 7:30 p.m. April 13, 2 p.m. Heritage Center, University of Dubuque The Festive Overture is a short and rousing concert opener. Famously called the Mt. Everest of the repertoire, Rachmaninoff’s third is one of the most technically demanding and musically rewarding concertos for piano. Jon Nakamatsu returns to Dubuque as the featured soloist. Few works can match the orchestral color and sheer excitement of Mussorgsky’s Pictures at an Exhibition. Dance & Romance February 15, 7:30 p.m. February 16, 2 p.m. Five Flags Theater A program of love and passion in the spirit of Valentine’s Day. From the regal blast of Mendelssohn’s Wedding March to slow romantic dances by Gluck, Ravel and Faure; from Vaughan Williams’ playful Tuba Concerto to the soaring lyricism and drama of Schubert’s “Unfinished” symphony, this concert is one orchestral bon-bon after another - sweeter and more delicious with every note! Rite of Spring An American in Paris Saturday, October 5, 7:30 p.m. Sunday, October 6, 2 p.m. Heritage Center, University of Dubuque The 2013 - 2014 classics season opens at the amazing new Heritage Center theater on the campus of the University of Dubuque with a crowd pleasing program of iconic American masterpieces. Pulitzer Prize winner Jennifer Higdon is currently one of American’s most performed composers. Her Fanfare Ritmico is a celebration of the rhythm and speed of life. Pianist Thomas Pandolfi as the featured soloist in Gershwin’s Piano Concertoi n F, a traditional concerto infused with Charleston rhythms, 16 { august 15 - 28, 2013 } Mozart & Beethoven March 15, 7:30 p.m. March 16, 2 p.m. Five Flags Theater Mozart’s bright and sparkling Overture to Cosi Fan Tutte sets the tone for the light-hearted symphony to follow. 365ink Magazine | issue #193 Voices from the Warehouse Opening Reception September 7, 7 - 11 p.m. 10th & Jackson, Downtown Dubuque In an exciting and creative collaboration, the DSO is featured as a performing ensemble and an art installation at the Voices from the Warehouse exhibit. This annual art opening event is an absolute arts highlight on the calendar. Do not miss it! Holiday Pops Family Concert December 7, 1 p.m. Five Flags Theater A wonderful Holiday experience for the whole family, www.Dubuque365.com { dubuque symphony orchesta } our third annual Holiday Family Concert features the full symphony orchestra, members of the Heartland Ballet, and a special visit from Santa. don’t forget to get it in your calendar for next month. Break out the fedoras, suits, pearls and pencil skirts, it’s time to Party Like a Mad Man (or Woman)! The Dubuque Symphony Orchestra and Julien Dubuque International Film Festival are throwing a swanky bash, inspired by the hit TV show, Mad Men. Enjoy live music by Hunter Fuerste and his American Vintage Orchestra, and classic 1960’s cocktails and hors d’oeuvres with a contemporary twist. All proceeds will help sponsor an orchestra performance at the Julien Film Fest in April 2014. As Betty Draper says, “Only boring people are bored.” Mad Men-retro attire encouraged! Holiday Celebration Concerts Season Tickets December 7, 7:30 p.m. December 8, 2 p.m. Five Flags Theater This annual Christmas concert features the Dubuque Symphony Orchestra, the Dubuque Chorale, members of Dubuque’s Heartland Ballet and guest soprano Sarah Ellis. It’s a magical night of music and an annual favorite of hundreds of Dubuquers. Season tickets don’t just get you great prices on shows, it also comes with some sweet perks like preferred seating and the change to purchase tickets to non-classical performances before the general public,ticket insurance, exchanges and more. Ultimate Rock Hits of the 70’s and 80’s January 17, 8 p.m. Mississippi Moon Bar, Diamond Jo Casino The DSO joins forces with local rock musicians to present a one-of-a-kind rock experience featuring ultimate rock hits from the 70’s and 80’s by AC/DC, Guns N’ Roses, Eagles, Heart, Police, Bon Jovi, Led Zeppelin and more! they did it last year and it was a riot! We at 365 loved it! Party Like a Mad Man Thursday, Sept. 26 (2013), 5 - 9 p.m. Voices from the Warehouse 10th & Jackson, Dubuque, IA Rememeber when we said there was a killer party? Well, here it is… It’s actually early in the season despite be last in the article, so www.Dubuque365.com no one rocks like the symphony! You can choose a 5, 4 or 3 Classics Concert series ticket pack. The cost of season tickets depends on which package you choose, as well as what zone you sit in: red box seats ($370), blue ($205-$215), yellow ($125-$140) or green ($65-80). If you’ve never been a season ticket holder, or not in the past 3 years and purchase the Full Series Package you receive the first time buyer 50% discount off the cost of 5 single tickets, from $195 all the way down to just $35 for tickets to every show in the Classics series. Second year full series buyers also get 25% off! To order season tickets, call the Dubuque Symphony office at (563) 557-1677. We accept VISA, Mastercard and Discover, or you may write a check and mail it to 2728 Asbury Road, Suite 900, Dubuque, IA 52001. Regular single show tickets will also be available soom with prices range from $14 - $78 per performance. 365ink Magazine | issue #193 { august 15 - 28, 2013 } 17 Be Made Whole Book Signing Friday, August 30, 5:30-6:30 p.m. River Lights Bookstore (See Page 6) Gallery C Debut Exhibition “Perception” Grand Opening Reception Friday, August 30, 6-9 p.m. Schmid Innovation Center (See Page 28) Galena Studio Tour Saturday-Sunday, August 31-September 1 Downtown Galena (See Page 6) The Salon Opening Reception Artists on the Porch Saturdays in August, 11 a.m. - 3 p.m. Outside the Lines Gallery (See Page 4) Urban Art Exhibit & Fundraiser Festival Saturday, August 17, 1 - 9 p.m. (See Page 9) Nash Gallery, 371 Bluff St. (above Monk’s Kaffee Pub) David Church in Concert Saturday, August 17, 7:30 p.m. The Grand Opera House (See Page 5) Music in the Gardens Diplomats of Solid Sound Sunday, August 18, 6:30 p.m. Dubuque Arboretum (See Page 11) Dubuque Fine Arts Players One Act Play Festival August 22, 23, 24, 7:30 pm Mindframe Theaters (See Page 28) Balancing Progress/Progressing Balance Exhibit Opening Reception Friday, August 23, 6-8 p.m. Quigley Gallery on the Clarke University Exhibit by Carla Heathcote uses Carl Sagan’s “Golden Record” as a point of departure. Unsigned Galena Music Festival Saturday, August 24, 11 a.m. - 10 p.m. (See Page 24) Depot Park/Various Venues, Downtown Galena Irish Hooley Saturday, August 24 Alliant Amphitheater (See Page 12) Motherhood: The Musical Through August 25 Bell Tower Theatre (See Page 4) 18 { august 15 - 28, 2013 } Saturday, August 31, 6-11 p.m. Eronel Art + Music Venue (See Page 8) Contrast Community: Jim Bailey Author Signing Sunday, September 22, 1-2 p.m. River Lights Bookstore Jim’s new book explores Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount. Ring of Fire Monday, September 2, 7 p.m. William’s Feildhouse, U.W. Platteville (See Page 8) Sunday, Sept. 22 U.W. Platteville, Center for the Arts The Music of Johnny Cash.” Tix $38, $29/Seniors, $19/Students. www.uwplatt.edu/arts/cfa/ I AM Love Campaign Cantus UW-P Welcome Weekend Concert September 2-8, Various Locations A play, a documentary film and an awards gala celebrating diversity. (See Page 25) Visit www.corpuschristi-themovie.com Four Mounds Fashion Soireé and Sangria Picnic Thursday, September 5, 5:30 p.m. Four Mounds, 4900 Peru Road (See Page 10) Four Bitchin Babes Saturday, September 7th, 7 p.m. Ohnward Fine Arts Center (See Page 10) Friday, Oct. 4. U.W. Platteville, Center for the Arts Acclaimed by Fanfare magazine as “the premier men’s vocal ensemble in the United States,” Tix $38, $29/ Seniors, $19/Students. www.uwplatt.edu/arts/cfa/ Dubuque Symphony Orchestra: An American in Paris Saturday, October 5, 7:30 p.m. Sunday, October 6, 2 p.m. (See Page 16) Heritage Center, University of Dubuque Jim Witter’s “The Piano Men” Art Gumbo Friday, October 11, 7:30 p.m. Heritage Center, University of Dubuque featuring the music of Billy Joel & Elton John Art Gumbo Soup Dinner Maggie May Call For Submissions from Arts Orgs. or Groups (through Sept 12) (See Page 29) Thursday, September 19, 6-8 p.m. Voices Warehouse Gallery, 275 East 10th Street Men are From Mars, Women Are From Venus LIVE! Saturday September 21, 7:30 p.m. Five Flags Theater (See Page 29) Doc Severinsen & His Big Band: “Once More With Feeling!” Saturday, Sept 21, 7:30 p.m. Heritage Center, University of Dubuque The opening event for the inagural season of music at the new performing rts center. 365ink Magazine | issue #193 Saturday, October 12th, 7 p.m. Ohnward Fine Arts Center (See Ad on Page 6) Dubuque Symphony Orchestra: Heaven and Earth November 9, 7:30 p.m. November 10, 2 p.m. Five Flags Theater (See page 16) See the full arts calendar with all event details @ dubuque365.com or use the QR code at right from your smart phone. www.Dubuque365.com { budweiser live music listings • august 15 - 31 } Johnnie Walker, Offshore, 1 PM The Swing Crew Whitetail Bluff Camp & Resort, 1 PM Justin Morrisey Grape Escape, 2 PM 2nd Generation Shark’s Roadhouse, 2 PM T R I-ST ATE L I V E MU S I C Thursday, August 15 Friday, August 16 Nik Stika, Grape Escape, 8 PM Upper Main Street Jazz Band Alliant Amphitheater, 5:30 PM Switchback Rockin’ the River, Cascade, 5 PM Northwest Passage The Cornerstone, 8 PM Viva Brazil! All That Jazz, Town Clock, 6 PM BlackWater Gin New Diggings General Store, 8 PM Laura McDonald & Jeff Weydert Spirits, 8 PM Roy Schroedl Woodlands Lng., Eagle Ridge, 8 PM Snek Peek Platteville Music in the Park, 6 PM Garrett Hillary Woodbine Bend, 6 PM Overman, eronel, 9 PM The Corey Booth Project Galena Brewing Co., 7 PM Calvin Coohey T.J.’s Bent Prop, 7 PM Dueling Pianos Mississippi Moon Bar, 8 PM Corey Jenny & Mojo Busted Steve’s Pizza, 7 PM Jazz Night with ‘Round Midnight Trio Monk’s Kaffee Pub, 8 PM The Wundoes Galena Brewing Co., 7:30 PM Saturday, August 17 Don Felder of The Eagles Mississippi Moon Bar, 8 PM Garrett Hillary The Cornerstone, 12:30 PM Johnnie Walker , The Yardarm, 8 PM Eddie Burke, Nate Jenkins, Glimmer Blinken @ Urban Art Exhibit & Fundraiser Nash Gallery / Monk’s, 1-9 PM Massey Road Tony Roma’s, 6 PM Fever River String Band Leadmine Tavern, 6 PM Thriftones, Grape Escape, 8 PM River Glen The Cornerstone, 8:30 PM Jon Conover Frank O’Dowd’s Pub, 8 PM www.Dubuque365.com Classical Blast Iron Horse Social Club, 3 PM Brown Bottle Bandits Spirits, 9 PM Crude But Effective George & Dale’s, 3:30 PM Taste Like Chicken Northside Bar, 9 PM Wheelhouse New Diggings Gen. Store, 3:30 PM 8 Balls, The View, 9 PM Laura McDonald & Jeff Weydert Sunset Ridge Winery, 4 PM CarMa, Woodbine Bend 6 PM Hard Salami, Dagwood’s, 9 PM Denny Garcia with Driftwood Blues, Veterans Freedom Center Benefit, Catfish Charlie’s, 7 PM Boys Night Out, Bronco Inn, 9 PM Americana Band River’s Edge Plaza, 5 PM Sunshine The Depot, Cuba City 9 PM Broken Strings Stone Cliff Wine & Beer Bar, 5 PM Crude But Effective Jimi B’s, Leisure Lake, 9 PM Kevin Beck & Johnnie Walker Toast & Jam, Park Farm Winery, 5 PM Bad Habits, Dirty Ernie’s, 9:30 PM Tuesday, August 20 Pinnacle Ring Girl Competition Sandy Hook Tavern, 10 PM Ralph Kluseman, Tony Roma’s, 6 PM Sunday, August 18 New Voices: Open Mic Rendezvous Coffee & Tea, 6:30 PM Open Mic with Scott Rische Grape Escape, 12 PM Brianna Hardyman Grape Escape, 7 PM Hot Mess, Offshore, 1 PM Wednesday, August 21 Open Mic with Matt Meyer The Cornerstone, 1 PM Acoustic Jam, Cornerstone, 6:30 PM Gregory James Stone Cliff Wine & Beer Bar, 7 PM Classical Blast Galena Brewing Co., 7:30 PM Midnight Swinger, 7 PM Club 84: Risky Business Baby! 8 PM Mississippi Moon Bar David Zollo & The Body Electric The Lift, 9 PM The Odd Couple, The Surf, 8 PM Hard Salami, Dirty Ernie’s, 9 PM Jon Conover Frank O’Dowd’s Pub, 8 PM Matt McPherson Keil’s Tavern, 9 PM Rockstar Battle of the Bands Final Round, Mystique Casino, 9 PM Michael Breitbach The Cornerstone, 8 PM Overman, Grape Escape, 8 PM Playground of Sound New Diggings General Store, 8 PM Roy Schroedl Woodlands Lounge, Eagle Ridge, 8 PM Nutsy & Lori Crimson Sunset Winery, 2 PM Gregory James, The View, 2 PM Fever River String Band Council Hill Station, 2 PM 365ink Magazine | issue #193 Johnnie Walker Riverboat Lounge, 7 PM Laughing Moon Comedy John Bush Mississippi Moon Bar, 8 PM ...continued on page 22 { august 15 - 28, 2013 } 19 { budweiser live music • august 15 - 31 } 2nd Generation Council Hill Station, 3 PM Awesome Sauce, Trackside, 5 PM T R I- ST ATE L I V E MU S I C ...continued from page 19 Thursday, August 22 Just Cuz, Tony Roma’s, 6 PM Positively 4th Street Galena Brewing Co., 7:30 PM Hard Salami Mississippi Moon Bar, 8 PM Half-Fast, The Yardarm, 8 PM Hard Salami Potosi Brewery, 5:30 PM Missbehavin’, Johnny Trash The Spazmatics Summers Last Blast, 6 PM BlackWater Gin Dickeyville/Kieler Lions Club End of Summer Fireworks, 6 PM The Resistors, Perxactly, 9 PM Chug Monkey, Northside Bar, 9 PM Mostly Water Galena Brewing Co., 7 PM Boys Night Out, Spirits, 8 PM Garrett Hillary, Wodbine Bend, 6 PM Sunday, August 25 Dueling Pianos Mississippi Moon Bar, 8 PM Andreas Transo Frank O’Dowd’s Pub, 8 PM Two Ugly People Stone Cliff Wine & Beer Bar, 7 PM Open Mic with Scott Rische Grape Escape, 12 PM Jazz Night with ‘Round Midnight Trio, Monk’s Kaffee Pub, 8 PM Fever River String Band Grape Escape, 8 PM Country Tradition Mooney Hollow Barn, 7 PM Johnnie Walker, Offshore, 1 PM Briana Lynn Hardyman Grape Escape, 8 PM Enemies of Confusion, The Dead Pigeons , The Lift, 9 PM Tweed Funk Galena Brewing Co., 7:30 PM Friday, August 23 Saturday, August 24 Club 84: Miami Vice Night Mississippi Moon Bar, 8 PM Broken Strings, The Yardarm, 3 PM Unsigned Galena Music Festival Kick-Off Party, Galena Ramada, 5 PM Unsigned Galena Music Festival Band Battle Galena Depot Park, 11 AM Mississippi Duo Mystique Casino, 8 PM Lojo Russo Tabor Home Winery, 3 PM Taste Like Chicken The Yardarm, 8 PM Lonely Goats New Diggings Gen. Store, 3:30 PM Kruzer, Georgie’s Skyline, 8 PM Boots Hefel Sunset Ridge Winery, 4 PM Jabberbox, Crystal Leather Menace, LoveMonkeys Summers Last Blast, 6 PM Roy Schroedl Park Farm Winery, 6 PM The Lads, 12:15 PM, Tallymoore, 2 PM, Skerryvore, 4 PM The Red Hot Chili Pipers, 6:15 PM, Gaelic Storm, 8:30 PM Irish Hooley, Alliant Amphitheater The Matriarchs Galena Public Library, 6 PM Roy Schroedl The Cornerstone, 12:30 PM Michael Breitbach Stone Cliff Wine & Beer Bar, 7 PM Fever River String Band Potosi Brewfest, 12:30 PM Jason Ray Brown, Offshore, 7 PM Massey Road, T.J.’s Bent Prop, 2 PM Johnnie Walker, Timmerman’s, 7 PM Justin Morrisey, Grape Escape, 2 PM Boots Hefel, The Surf, 7 PM Larry Michael Shark’s Roadhouse, 2 PM 22 { august 15 - 28, 2013 } Buzz Berries, Dirty Ernie’s, 8 PM Open Mic, Cornerstone, 1:30 PM 2nd Generation Shark’s Roadhouse, 2 PM Ignighter, The Surf, East Dbq., 8 PM Americana Band River’s Edge Plaza, 5 PM Andreas Transo Frank O’Dowd’s Pub, 8 PM Mississippi Band @ Toast & Jam Park Farm Winery, 5 PM Uniphonics, Grape Escape, 8 PM Tuesday, August 27 Gadema feat. DJ Richie Daggers, Casethejoint, Opt Rhyme, J-Remy, eronel, 9 PM Patchy Fog, Spirits, 9 PM 365ink Magazine | issue #193 Laura McDonald, Tony Roma’s, 6 PM New Voices: Open Mic Rendezvous Coffee & Tea, 6:30 PM Wednesday, August 28 Katie & Brownie Frank O’Dowd’s Pub, 8 PM Acoustic Jam The Cornerstone, 6:30 PM Johnny Rocker, Grape Escape, 8 PM Garrett Hillary Riverboat Lounge, 7 PM TKO Whitetail Bluff Camp & Resort, 8 PM Laughing Moon Comedy Scott Novotny Mississippi Moon Bar, 8 PM The Mascot Theory, Corey Hart eronel, 9 PM Open Mic with Dave, Cricket, & Tim, The Lift, 9 PM Hot Mess, Northside Bar, 9 PM Matt McPherson, Keil’s Tavern, 9 PM Thursday, August 29 Saturday, August 31 Full Code, Tony Roma’s, 6 PM Crude But Effective, 1 PM Laura & The Longhairs, 7 PM Offshore, 1 PM Andy Wilberding Park Farm Winery, 7 PM Dueling Pianos Mississippi Moon Bar, 8 PM Castaneda/Healy, Feast of Mutton, Venereal Crush The Salon Opening, 902 Main, 6 PM Jazz Night with ‘Round Midnight Trio, Monk’s Kaffee Pub, 8 PM Blue Willow Stone Cliff Wine & Beer Bar, 7 PM Friday, August 30 The Odd Couple Dubuque Driving Range, 7 PM Outta Control Galena Brewing Co., 7:30 PM Larry Michael, Potosi Inn, 7 PM The Fast Clydes Galena Brewing Co., 7:30 PM Fizgig Mississippi Moon Bar, 8 PM Kevin Beck & Johnnie Walker Mystique Casino, 8 PM Club 84: Back to School Mississippi Moon Bar, 8 PM Danny Whitson, Spirits, 8 PM Zero 2 Sixty, The Yardarm, 8 PM Ben Castaneda, The Lift, 9 PM Kruzer, The Yardarm, 8 PM Ignighter, Northside Bar, 9 PM www.Dubuque365.com { potosi brewfest } a festivus for the restLAUGHING of us, almost one for each of us. - WEDNESDAYS! DUELING PIANOS - THURSDAYS! MOON COMEDY i better just have one... at a time. CLUB 84 - SATURDAYS! All shows at the Mississippi Moon Bar are 21+ only and tickets for all performances are available at the Diamond Club inside the Diamond Jo Casino or online at DiamondJo.com. Gregg Allman October 18, 2013, 8 p.m. ($43 - $78) The Eagles’ Don Felder: An Evening at the Hotel California Friday, August 16, 8 p.m. / $35-$65 Don Felder is renowned as the former lead guitarist of the Eagles, one of the most popular and influential rock groups of our time, and a member of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Don Felder is renowned as the former lead guitarist of the Eagles, one of the most popular and influential rock groups of our time. The band’s record-setting compilation Their Greatest Hits sold over 29 million copies in the U.S. alone and was awarded by the RIAA the top-selling album of the 20th Century. A member of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame since 1998, Felder served as a key member of the Eagles for 27 years. Felder originated and co-wrote the Eagles’ biggest hit – the iconic, Grammy-studded smash “Hotel California.” Midnight Swinger Comedy Gregg Allman is an American rock and blues singer-songwriter, keyboardist, guitarist and a founding member of The Allman Brothers Band. The Allman Brothers Band enjoyed huge success in the early 1970s and a number of their most characteristic songs were written by Gregg Allman. Allman was inducted with the band into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1995 and received a lifetime Achievement Award from the Georgia Music Hall of Fame in 2006. Drive-By Truckers with Special Guest the Fast Clydes October 30, 8 p.m. An alternative country/Southern rock band, thier 2008 album, Brighter Than Creation’s Dark, went to number 37 on the Billboard 200 album chart and was billed a gothic masterpiece. August 17, 7 p.m. $10 - $15 Local fun-loving party rockers. Local fun-loving party rockers. John Bush Comedy August 21, 8 p.m. $10 - $15 Club 84: Miami Vice Night Pat Benetar & Neil Geraldo August 31, 8 p.m. Sean Costanza Band Friday, September 13, 8 p.m. www.Dubuque365.com Separate Ways: Journey Tribute Band September 7, 8 p.m. Experience all of the subtle nuances, inflections, harmonies and visual gratifications of seeing the original Journey show. Tix $10-$15 Amazing look-alike and sound-alike image brings to life the star appeal and excitement of this rock legend. The queen of 80’s angst filled female rock and roll returns to the Mississippi Moon Bar with her huge roster of hits and her husband and collaborator Neil Geraldo. ONE focuses on the audio and visual aspects of live Metallica. 55+ song catalog! Some members of have worked for and played on stage with Metallica! October 11, 8 p.m. - NO COVER! American Icon: A Tribute to Johnny Cash October 12, 4 & 7 p.m. The characters of Johnny Cash and June Carter Cash are portrayed by Doug Allen and Nicole Evans in this multimedia theatrical show. Tix $15-$35 August 28, 8 p.m. $10 - $15 Club 84: Back to School Killer Tributes coming this fall to the Moon Bar! ONE: Metallica Tribute Scott Novotney Comedy August 30, 8 p.m. Kattan has also appeared in a supporting role in The Middle, an episode of How I Met Your Mother, and a Diet Pepsi MAX commercial during Super Bowl XLII that featured “What Is Love” and had many actors in the commercial performing the Butabi head bob. Kattan made a guest appearance on Saturday Night Live’s Christmas show in 2011. Kattan was also a member of several improv/sketch comedy troupes including The Groundlings in Los Angeles. Comedians Josh Arnold and Tim Sullivan will also perform. November 1, 8 p.m. August 24, 8 p.m. Fizgig Chris Kattan is a comedian and actor best known for his work on Saturday Night Live. Kattan’s recurring characters included Mr. Peepers, Mango, Azrael Abyss, Kyle DeMarco from The DeMarco Brothers, Suel Forresters, and most notably, one half of the Butabi Brothers with fellow SNL cast member Will Ferrell, known for their trademark head-bobbing. Kattan and Ferrell continued the characters in the movie A Night at the Roxbury. September 20, 8 p.m. - NO COVER August 17, 8 p.m. August 23, 8 p.m. (No Cover) September 6, 7 p.m. $25 $35 Young Turks: Tribute to Rod Stewart Club 84: Risky Business Hard Salami Chris Kattan John Tesh - Big Band Christmas December 15, 7 p.m. $25 - $35 Much more than a TV host, John Tesh has penned some of the most recognizable jingles and theme songs on Television is now a bandleader with a devoted following. Tix on sale August 17. Project Pink - Pink Floyd Tribute October 25, 8 p.m. North America’s premier Pink Floyd tribute band. Project Pink faithfully recreates the complete Floyd experience with sights, sounds and intangible vibe. $7-$25. 365ink Magazine | issue #193 { august 15 - 28, 2013 } 23 { unsigned galena music festival } Unsigned Galena Music Festival Saturday, August 24, 11 a.m. - 10 p.m. Depot Park/Various Venues, Downtown Galena Additionally, the winner from the local Battle of Bands, which has been underway in Galena throughout the month of August, will also be featured on the main stage. • Live music continues indoors at various venues after 10 p.m. • Kickoff Party on Friday, August 23, 9-Midnight, Ramada Inn • Additional performances on Sunday night throughout downtown Galena. Great food will be available from Chef Ivo’s Place and the Galena Canning Company, with libations (that’s cold beer to me and you) provided by the Galena Brewing Company. Galena, Illinois is hosting the first ever Unsigned Galena Music Festival in Depot Park along Galena’s riverfront. Partnering with Sunset Island Music Radio and the local businesses across Galena, the festival will be the first in an annual series designed to shine a light on the most amazing live music acts in America who you are not hearing on traditional radio. This inaugural season welcomes over 25 amazing unsigned bands from Sunset Island Music Radio’s Top 25 music charts, including The Reserve, Hello Ramona, The Buzzhounds, Zaramela, Regulation Nine, Blue and Evol, The Giving Moon, Bloodline Riot, Petibone, Synphormi, Autumn Zero, and Ockam’s Razor. Their performances will fill two stages for hours of continuous live entertainment. 24 { august 15 - 28, 2013 } Admission is only $10 per person and can be purchased in advance at downtown Galena sponsor locations or at the festival gate. No carry-ins allowed, but be sure to bring a blanket and get comfy as the amazing slate of artists do their thing! i asked who was in charge but no one woud sign the contract? And since they just can’t seem to get enough, various downtown Galena live music venues will play host to many of the headlining national acts again on Sunday night, August 25th from noon - 8 p.m. So you might just want to look at making a weekend of it and getting a hotel room in Galena for a couple of nights. They just happen to have a great selection to choose from. Winter Games, Galena ARC, and The Unsigned Galena Music Scholarship fund which will offer a scholarship for Local Students pursuing a degree in Music. The festival is hosted by The Galena Downtown Business Association and major sponsors include the Galena Brewing Company, The Belvedere Man- sion, The DeSoto House Hotel, Chef Ivo’s Place, The Galena Canning Company, Galena Brewing Company, the Buzzhounds and 365ink. A portion of the proceeds will be used to raise funds for The Special Olympics Visit www.unsignedgalena.com for more information or keep up with current announcements at facebook.com/ UnsignedGalenaMusicFestival. The festivities actually start a night early with a big kickoff party featuring The Buzzhounds, fresh off their national tour, at the Ramada Inn, 5-9 p.m. 365ink Magazine | issue #193 www.Dubuque365.com { the I AM Love Campaign } bacon is also love. directed by Nic Arnzen and was lauded by critics, continued to sell out for months at Los Angeles’ Zephyr Theatre, and went on to tour across America. In Europe, the play was an Amnesty International Freedom of Expression nominee at the 2007 Edinburgh Fringe Festival, and was awarded the Intercultural Dialogue Award at the International Dublin Gay Theatre Festival in 2008. After, the company celebrated the show’s 10th anniversary Off-Broadway at the Rattlestick Theatre, benefiting the Matthew Shepard Foundation and New York’s Gay Community Center. The show continued to tour through 2011 nationally and internationally, while a documentary crew followed their travels to less tolerant communities. The current production has received glowing praise from the The L.A. Times, L.A. Weekly and the New York Times said, “Without the noise of controversy, the play can finally be heard. Staged with admirable delicacy, this 108 Productions revival has moments of hard-won sentiment that will win over the biggest skeptic.” I AM Love Campaign September 2-8, Various Locations Visit www.corpuschristi-themovie.com Corpus Christi: Playing With Redemption Mindframe Theaters (Showtimes vary) I AM Love VIP Reception& Awards Gala Thursday, September 5 VIP Reception, 7 p.m. I Am Love Awards Gala, 8 p.m. Eronel, Art + Music Venue the conversation that my play continues to provoke, and I look forward to CORPUS CHRISTI starting many more conversations around the country.” “Our tour aims to bridge the gap between faiths, ages, races, genders and orientations knowing that through connection, we can learn to become more tolerant of that which we may not understand. As the voices of intolerance around the world continue preaching ignorance and hate, we will keep raising our voices from a place of love,” says Nic Arnzen, Co-Founders of 108 Productions and the I AM Love Campaign (w/ James Brandon). Corpus Christi Play Performances Friday, Sept 6 | 8 p.m., Five Flags Theater Sunday, September 8, 1 p.m., Five Flags Theater followed by Open Forum at 3:30 p.m. Better Together Dubuque, Sustainable Dubuque, and 108 Productions present the premiere launch of the I AM Love Campaign’s National Tour at Five Flags Theater and Mindframe Theatres Sept 2-8, 2013. The week-long Campaign events include performances of 108 Productions’ internationally acclaimed production of Terrence McNally’s CORPUS CHRISTI, screenings of their new documentary CORPUS CHRISTI: PLAYING WITH REDEMPTION, Dubuque Diversity Dialogue openforum with local leaders, and the I AM Love Awards. The Campaign The I AM Love Campaign’s mission is to ignite dialogue on religious bullying and homophobia, in all ages and walks of Life, by teaching self-empowerment through artistic endeavors, community collaboration, and educational outreach. Said McNally: “Fifteen years after CORPUS CHRISTI premiered in New York, I am thrilled that 108 Productions continues to perform the piece all over the world. PLAYING WITH REDEMPTION and the I AM Love Campaign add a new dimension to www.Dubuque365.com Live performances of Corpus Christi will take place at Five Flags Theater on Friday, September 6, at 8 p.m. as well as Sunday, September 8, at 1 p.m. A free diversity dialogue open forum will follow the 1 p.m. Sunday performance. Suggested Donation for play performances is $20 or $10 for Students and Seniors. The Awards The I AM Love Awards, on Thursday, September 5 at 7 p.m. at Eronel, Art + Music venue in the lower level of 285 Main Street, honors notable advocates who have helped shape the positive dialogue in the LGBT and allied community. The I AM Love Awards shine a light on local individuals and organizations who use their own love and light to help the community find a clearer path of respectful dialogue and understanding in the face of diversity and fear. Suggested Donation: $20. The official announcement of recipients will be August 19. The Play The staged production, CORPUS CHRISTI, was conceived as a modern passion play by McNally (Kiss of the Spider Woman, Master Class, Ragtime), which imagines Jesus as a gay man living in modern-day Texas, ignited a firestorm of controversy upon its debut in 1998. Beginning in 2006, 108 Productions launched a resoundingly successful revival production Dubuque Diversity Dialogue on Sunday, September 8 at 3:30, will follow the 1 p.m. play performance at the Five Flags Theater. Facilitated by Better Together Dubuque and 108 Productions, is our community symposium which will give voice to diverse viewpoints and explore peaceful solutions. This dialogue explores issues affecting the community, filtered through themes addressed in the play such as bullying, marriage equality, racial discourse and civil rights. These leaders, who serve as resources and mentors, are catalysts in assuring the dialogue continues after the Campaign leaves. The community dialogues are filmed and shared on website and social media forums to strengthen local and national outreach. The Documentary Now, seven years after the original production, the film, CORPUS CHRISTI: PLAYING WITH REDEMPTION will begin a tour across the country. The Religious Right meets the ‘gay Jesus play’ in this documentary film inspired by the play, which continues to face censorship, protests, bomb threats and religious condemnation. Mirroring the reflections of change in society today in regards to freedom of speech, civil rights, marriage equality and separation of church and state, this production has become a vehicle for a community struggling to find its voice. Meanwhile, the company of actors finds itself on a journey that would forever change their lives. 365ink Magazine | issue #193 { august 15 - 28, 2013 } 25 { 365 dining: benvenuto’s italian grill } Benvenuto’s Italian Grill why yes, I would like extra chese grated on top! for Chef Bob. In those establishments he sharpened his skills he now uses in running the kitchen of an Italian Grill and Steakhouse! He and his Sous Chef, Tim Stohlmeyer, control a large kitchen crew responsible for a rather extensive menu. A wide variety of Italian specialties, pizzas, steaks and seafood are all made from scratch with fresh ingredients. by Rich Belmont Benvenuto is Italian for Welcome! This is a very appropriate name for Benvenuto’s Italian Grill because as soon as you walk in the door you are made to feel very welcome. The hostesses, bartenders and servers are all so friendly and accommodating they make you feel right at home. Benvenuto’s Italian Grill is a Wisconsin restaurant chain. It was started by Brian Dominick who opened his first store in Beaver Dam in 1996. There are now 4 company stores and 2 franchise operations. The first franchise is in Middleton and now, lucky for us, the second franchise opened in Platteville on June 18, 2013. Benvenuto’s serves lunch and dinner and has something for everyone including burgers, salads, pasta, calzones, wood-fired pizzas, entrée salads, steaks and seafood. The food is plentiful and reasonably priced in keeping with their philosophy of offering great food for a great value! Benvenuto’s Platteville is owned by a group of local private investors. Two of those investors are Al and Julie Klein. Julie is the owner/operator and runs the restaurant. She is experienced in customer service and hospitality management from her years at the Governor Dodge Hotel and Convention Center. She obviously knows what she is doing since her restaurant is already serving consistently good meals and her staff of 77 employees are all functioning as if they have been there for years. OK, this is a chain restaurant but this store has only been open for two months! Compliments go out to the Head Chef as well. Chef Bob Slater (Pictued above with Julie Klein) has been cooking for 35 years. He was a chef for Schwartz Brothers Restaurants in Seattle, WA. Two of those restaurants: Daniel’s Broiler in Bellevue, WA, a prime steakhouse, and Spazzo Italian Grill & Wine Bar in Redmond, WA were tremendous learning centers 26 { august 15 - 28, 2013 } Many of the appetizers are impressive. The Sampler Platter is a huge plate filled with cheese bread, fried mozzarella sticks, crispy chicken tenders and an onion haystack served with a variety of dipping sauces. The Scallop Benvenuto’s Italian Grill 1621 Progressive Parkway, Platteville, WI 53818 608-348-5000 www.Benvenutos.com www.Facebook.com/PlattevilleBenvenutos HOURS: Lunch: 7 days, 11 a.m. – 10 p.m. (Dinner 4 p.m.) Bar: Fri & Sat, 11 a.m. – 11 p.m. DINING STYLE: Casual NOISE LEVEL: Conversational RECOMMENDATIONS: French Dip, Meatball Sub, Shrimp Tetrazzini, Scallop Stuffed Mushrooms, Italian Nachos, Wood-Fired Pizza, Chicken Piccata, Veal Parmigiana, Grilled Salmon, Steak Flight, Pasta Trio, Roasted Garlic Shrimp Fettuccine, Ribeye, Prime Rib LIQUOR SERVICE: Full Bar, 23 oz. Domestic Tap Beers Half price appetizers 3 to 6 pm PRICE RANGE: Lunch: $7.59 - $12.59, Dinner: $8.29 - $21.99 PAYMENT: Cash, Debit, All Credit Cards, NO Checks ACCESSIBILITY: Front Door & Restrooms KIDS POLICY: Menu: Little Kids 10 & under, Big Kids 13 & under High Chairs, Boosters, Infant Carrier Stands RESERVATIONS: Call ahead to be next on waiting list CATERING: Yes TAKE OUT: Yes DELIVERY: Yes to businesses in Platteville PARKING: Large private lot Stuffed Mushrooms are simply wonderful (right). White mushrooms caps are stuffed with fresh scallops and garlic butter then wrapped in bacon and topped with a baked parmesan crust. Bryce Parks, the 365ink publisher, just loves these. But in the spirit of full disclosure I must say I’m pretty sure he loves anything wrapped in bacon! 365ink Magazine | issue #193 I, myself cannot stop eating the Italian Nachos appetizer. Lasagna pasta sheets are cut into nacho chips and deep fried (above). Then they are topped with a 5 cheese Alfredo sauce, plus mozzarella, pepperoni, Italian sausage, tomatoes and banana peppers. This combination of ingredients sounds peculiar but the resulting flavor is spectacular. During a couple of recent visits our talented and knowledgeable server, Chelsea Stratton, helped us pick out some of the popular entrées. She explained we could choose to order from the regular menu or the separate Features Menu that changes about every 3 months. I had a Meatball Sandwich (left) as good as my Aunt Anna’s. The meatballs are made fresh from a mixture of veal, beef, pork sausage, bread crumbs, egg, onions, roasted garlic, fresh basil and parsley. Margie chose the Chicken Piccata from the Features Menu (below). A lightly floured chicken breast is sautéed in lemon butter, white wine and capers and served on a bed of Capellini (angel hair) pasta. I asked her for a bite and I must admit I ate half of her whole dinner! I’m going back next week to get a full serving for myself! Another feature is Caprese Chicken Pasta. Caprese means in the style of Capri, an Italian island off the coast of Naples, and usually signals your dinner will include fresh tomato, basil and mozzarella. True enough, this dish came with grape tomatoes, olive oil, basil, mozzarella and a balsamic vinegar reduction over penne pasta. www.Dubuque365.com { 365 dining: benvenuto’s italian grill } I’d better just have two of those. person to identify the menu item and call it in gets a gift card for the price of the mystery item. I recommend you join Benvenuto’s E-Club to receive specials in your e-mail. For example, this week there is a free beverage with any sandwich deal. Since you will be going to this place often you should also join Benvenuto’s Customer Rewards Club to earn points towards appetizers, drinks and desserts. There is an outdoor dining area, a private party dining section for up to 50 people, a Gluten- Free menu and a Group Pricing To- Go menu. Another splendid dish is the Shrimp (or chicken) Tetrazzini. (above) There are many versions of Tetrazzini and Benvenuto’s includes a generous portion of large size shrimp tossed with spaghetti in a white wine butter cream and parmesan sauce (Alfredo) then baked with a five cheese blend and an herb crust topping. By the way, I’ll bet you didn’t know Tetrazzini is an American specialty originating around the early 1900’s in either New York City or San Francisco. It was named after Luisa Tetrazzini a famous Italian opera singer who lived in San Francisco. New York Strip or Pork Ribeye. A splendid Prime Rib is served on Friday and Saturday nights. If you would like to try some unusual flavors on your steak order the Steak Flight (above). This dish has 3 sirloin strips each served with a different topping: truffle béarnaise, mushroom demi-glace and Jack Daniel’s BBQ sauce. It you read my columns regularly you know I am Italian and no self-respecting Italian would go to an Italian restaurant without sampling the pizza. Here they hand stretch the crust and bake them in a stone hearth gas oven, enhanced with burning wood in order to impart terrific smoky flavor. I have had two pizzas so far: the Margherita made with fresh mozzarella, basil, sliced tomatoes and roasted garlic on an olive oil brushed crust. The other one was a scrumptious Benvenuto loaded with pepperoni, ham, Italian sausage, mushrooms, onions, black olives, bell peppers and five cheeses. You can order a specialty pizza or build your own from a staggering list of 31 toppings. When you are studying the menu you might notice many of the entrées contain five cheeses or a five cheese blend. Just so you know these 5 cheeses are mozzarella, provolone, Asiago, parmesan and Romano. Since Platteville does not have a proper steakhouse Benvenuto’s menu includes many steak options. All these steaks are hand trimmed and aged and charred on an open flame grill. Enjoy a savory Sirloin, Ribeye, Tenderloin, www.Dubuque365.com Of course a great dinner requires a great dessert! There are nine decadent choices including Peanut Butter Pie, Salted Caramel Cheesecake (above), Flourless Chocolate Cake and my two all-time favorites: Tiramisù (above), espresso soaked lady fingers covered with creamy mascarpone cheese and Mocha Cannoli, two chocolate dipped cannoli shells filled with mocha cappuccino infused ricotta cream and chocolate chips. If you live around Platteville I’m sure you already know where Benvenuto’s Italian Grill is. If you are coming from Dubuque the route is simple. From the Dubuque Wisconsin Bridge take Route 151 North 21 miles to exit 21. Go left on route 151 Business and turn right at WalMart and left onto Progressive Parkway. Buon Appetito! That’s Italian for Good Appetite! Benvenuto’s has you covered when you feel like seafood too. Fried Haddock, Fried Jumbo Shrimp, Smothered Haddock and fresh-never-frozen Salmon are on the menu. A recent fish dish was a Norwegian Salmon Filet covered with a coffee flavored rub (above). There is always something going on at Benvenuto’s. Visit between 3 and 6 pm for half price appetizers in the bar. On Wednesdays you can play What-Am-I-Wednesday. A menu description is posted on Facebook and the 1st Do you have a favorite restaurant you would like to see reviewed? Please send your requests, suggestions and comments to Argosy at [email protected]. Find all of Argosy’s past food reviews online at restaurantmarketingdbq.com. 365ink Magazine | issue #193 { august 15 - 28, 2013 } 27 { arts } i giggle every time i read dfap. “explores our perceptions; beauty versus ugly, feminine versus masculine, power versus weakness, real versus imaginary”. Gallery C Debut Exhibition “Perception” Grand Opening Reception Dubuque Fine Arts Players One Act Play Festival August 22, 23, 24, 7:30 pm Mindframe Theaters Enjoy world premiere performances of three winners of the nation’s oldest one-act play writing contest! Since 1977, the Dubuque Fine Arts Players (the theater wing of the Dubuque County Fine Arts Society) have sponsored a national one-act playwriting contest and have offered productions of the winning scripts. Each night includes all three plays. Performances will take place Thursday - Saturday on August 22, 23 and 24, 7:30 p.m. at Mindframe Theaters. Performances Include: Like Music by Eleanor Kennedy of Chatham, NJ. This is a thoughtful play about missed connections, and making choices when everything on the menu looks good. Directed by Danny 28 { august 15 - 28, 2013 } Fairchild, the cast includes Valerie Heitzman, Nicholas Johnson, and Aaron Pozdol. Last Days of Wonder by Tess Light of Los Alamos, NM. Near the end of her counter-cultural life, a mother finds ways to connect with both of her daughters. This drama directed by Jill Heitzman features Michele McKinlay, Maggie Pickering, and Mary Schreiber. Friday, August 30, 6-9 p.m. Schmid Innovation Center Gallery C, Dubuque’s newest contemporary fine art gallery, announces its grand opening and inaugural exhibit entitled Perception on Friday, August 30, 2013, from 6-9pm. Located in the newly renovated Schmid Innovation Center in the historic Millwork District, Gallery C showcases both established and emerging artists. The Favor by D.C. Savadge of New York, NY. In this insightful drama directed by Matt Zanger, two women at the beach realize their time has come. The cast includes Lisa Anderson and Marion Roberts Lubinski. All are invited and welcome to attend this show, and to participate in the expanding art scene in the Millwork District. There is no charge and refreshments will be served. Live music will be provided by Dylan Sires and Neighbors, a high-energy, pop-infused rock band. Tickets are $15.00 at the door, $10 for college students with ID and younger. Mindframe refreshments, including gourmet coffee, beer and wine will be available for purchase. Come and enjoy a memorable evening of prize-winning live theatre! More at www.dbqoneacts.org. Artists featured in the gallery’s debut group show include Janet Checker and Harold Martin of Galena, IL, Stephanie Funke of Manchester, IA, and Adam Eikamp, Wendy S. Rolfe, and Tom Metcalf of Dubuque, IA. According to Holly Flood, Gallery Director, this body of work 365ink Magazine | issue #193 Gallery C, is a contemporary art gallery specializing in innovative art by emerging and established artists from around the globe. Showcasing artwork and featuring events that create dialog, engage the community, and enrich the experience of the arts, the gallery also emphasizes a collaborative effort among artists and arts organizations to most fully impact the community. Gallery C, Carolyn M, is located at 900 Jackson Street in Dubuque, IA. Main entrance doors are on Jackson St near 10th Ave. Be a part of the gallery’s monthly exhibitions that create dialog, engage the community, and enrich the experience of the arts in Dubuque. Perception will remain on view through Sunday, Oct. 6. Gallery hours: Wed-Fri. 10-4, Sat-Sun. 1-4 or by appointment. www.Dubuque365.com { arts } where are hermaphrodites from? Art Gumbo Call For Submissions from Arts Organizations or Groups (through Sept 12) Art Gumbo Soup Dinner Thursday, September 19, 6-8 p.m. Voices Warehouse Gallery, 275 East 10th Street Art Gumbo, a quarterly soup dinner that supports local art projects with community-supported micro-funding, is now accepting applications from arts organizations or creative groups for the spring funding cycle. Applications for Art Gumbo mini grants are available now through Thursday, September 12, 2013. Applications are available at artgumbodubuque.blogspot.com Fall funding cycle is open to creative groups or organizations. Individual artists are not eligible to apply during this cycle. The first seven eligible applications received by 11:59 p.m. on September 12 will qualify to compete for funding. $10 donation at the door entitles the attendee to a locally prepared soup dinner and the opportunity to review all submitted proposals and to vote for Men are From Mars, Women Are From Venus LIVE! United States in February 2013 in Raleigh, North Carolina and will be playing to audiences around the United States and Canada throughout the year. The one-man fusion of theatre and standup starring Peter Story and based on the New York Times #1 best-selling book of the last decade by John Gray, will play Five Flags Theater, one night only, on Saturday September 21, at 7:30 p.m. Moving swiftly through a series of vignettes, the show covers everything from dating and marriage to the bedroom. This hysterical show will have couples elbowing each other all evening as they see themselves on stage. Sexy and fast paced, this show is definitely for adults, but will leave audiences laughing and giggling like little kids! Saturday September 21, 7:30 p.m. Five Flags Theater their favorite. The Art Gumbo fund’s nightly proceeds will be awarded to the two proposals that receive the most votes. The next Art Gumbo Soup Dinner is scheduled for Thursday, September 19, 6-8 p.m. at Voices Warehouse Gallery, 275 East 10th Street in Dubuque and is open to anyone interested in attending the event. The September 19, soup dinner will feature up to seven proposals submitted by local arts organizations or creative groups whose project demonstrates an impact on the Dubuque community. The proceeds from the door will fund two proposals, first and second place, splitting the funding in a 70/30 fashion. Since being published in 1992, John Gray’s “Men Are From Mars, Women Are From Venus,” exploring the differences between the sexes, has sold in excess of 50 million copies, been translated into 40 different languages and is one of the most recognizable titles in the world. When Mars and Venus collide, the adventures are earth-shatteringly hysterical. After beginning in Paris in 2007, Men are From Mars–Women are From Venus LIVE! has been seen by more than one million people around Europe. It debuted in the Art Gumbo is an independent community-based initiative that funds local arts projects using money collected at quarterly soup dinners. During each Art Gumbo funding cycle, artists or arts organizations are invited to submit a brief project proposal that demonstrates an impact on the Dubuque community. The public is invited to attend and vote for their favorite proposal. A www.Dubuque365.com Starring in this theatrical comedy is PETER STORY. Peter has appeared in primetime on all major networks from CSI to Ugly Betty and recurring roles on The Tonight Show. Commenting on the show, Peter said, “It’s a great recipe for a night out: a little storytelling blended with some comedy and a dash of sage wisdom from the book. A delicious evening of entertainment.” Tickets are on sale now at the Five Flags Box Office, all Ticketmaster outlets, 1-800745-3000, and Ticketmaster.com. For this Sneak Preview show, regularly priced $40 tickets will be half price! That’s right, only $20 (plus fees) - use passcode MARS to receive half price tickets. Art Gumbo dinners and microfunding program are an independent effort initiated by local arts activists Paula Neuhaus and Megan Starr. The project’s mission is to bring artists together with art patrons to explore and fund projects, create working relationships, and to build an all-arts network. Download the application and find more information by visiting artgumbodubuque. blogspot.com or contact Paula Neuhaus at [email protected]. 365ink Magazine | issue #193 { august 15 - 28, 2013 } 29 { dubuque in the movies... or not } Pennies from Heaven Was Not Filmed in Dubuque by Michael May In a recent discussion on the Facebook nostalgia page “You know you grew up in Dubuque, Iowa if you remember,” several people mentioned that the movie Pennies from Heaven was made in Dubuque, and as proof they cited IMDb.com, aka the Internet Movie Database. of Chicago, not west to Galena. The road in the movie was actually filmed outside of Bakersfield, California. It is the same road made famous in the crop-duster scene with Cary Grant from Alfred Hitchcock’s 1959 thriller, North by Northwest. Pennies from Heaven (1981) is an R-rated musical set in Depression-era Chicago. Steve Martin stars as a financially and sexually frustrated sheet-music salesman who seduces a seemingly naïve school teacher played by Bernadette Peters. The movie also stars Jessica Harper, Christopher Walken, Vernel Bagneris, and John McMartin. It is directed by Herbert Ross. IMDb includes Dubuque as one of the filming locations for Pennies from Heaven, but if you watch the movie carefully, Dubuque does not appear on screen. Outdoor scenes which look vaguely like Dubuque’s Historic Millwork District were actually filmed around the 4th Street Bridge in Los Angeles. According to Telegraph Herald articles from when the movie was made, a second unit film crew from Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer did come to Dubuque in April 1981. The MGM crew spent “into six figures” in Dubuque on 50 hotel rooms plus food, gas, and phone bills. Out of 350 tristate residents who answered the call for extras, about 50 were chosen and paid $40 a day, given 1930s haircuts, and fitted for costumes. But unlike the Sylvester Stallone drama F.I.S.T. (1978) or the beer comedy Take This Job and Shove It (1981), Dubuque did not make the final cut of Pennies from Heaven. The single scene planned for Dubuque, of vintage cars crossing the Dubuque-Wisconsin toll bridge, was canceled because of overcast, rainy weather. Filming did take place in nearby Galena, Illinois, on Main Street and at a farmhouse outside of town, but those scenes are very difficult to spot in the movie. The TH reported that because of the overcast weather, much of the footage was used by MGM only as “inspiration for building sets back in Hollywood.” A couple of scenes in Pennies from Heaven supposedly show Steve Martin’s character driving on Illinois Route 1 from Chicago to Galena. In reality, Illinois Route 1 runs south 30 { august 15 - 28, 2013 } Steve Martin and Bernadette Peters were not at Galena during the filming of Pennies from Heaven. Their characters were played by standin actors from Chicago, which probably was a good thing. Around this time Steve Martin referred to Terre Haute, Indiana as “No Place, USA” and “The Armpit of America.” There’s no telling what he might have said about Galena. In the bonus features on the out-of-print Pennies from Heaven DVD, MGM art director Bernie Cutler tells a funny story about filming in Galena. The curbs on Galena’s Main Street were red, and there were no red curbs in the 1930s, so the film crew hired a painter to paint out the curbs. After the crew left for the day, they got an urgent call from the painter who said he had been arrested and taken to jail. The film crew had forgotten to tell the Galena Police Department about the curb painting. Economic boosterism might explain why people believe that Pennies from Heaven was filmed in Dubuque. In the 2001 TH article “Area Reels in Cash from Film Projects,” Steve Horman, then president of the Dubuque Area Chamber of Commerce, said, “It’s safe to assume that anytime a company is filming we’re talking tens of thousands of dollars from the smallest commercials on up.” According to the article, the Chamber’s Film Bureau published a pamphlet for “prospective film industry clients” called “Discover 365ink Magazine | issue #193 my credo... if you have to have a credo. Variety in Dubuque” which included Pennies from Heaven on a list of films “produced” in Dubuque. And more than a decade later, in 2013, the new non-profit Dubuque Film Office still lists Pennies from Heaven under “Productions Shot In Dubuque” on its “Made in Dubuque” webpage. Other examples of this appear online. A 2009 post on the Des Moines Register blog includes the entry “1981 – Pennies from Heaven, Dubuque” on its list of “Movies filmed in Iowa.” Also from 2009, when Iowa House Speaker Pat Murphy of Dubuque was asked about the Iowa Film Office scandal, Radio Iowa reported that “the 1981 movie Pennies from Heaven starring Steve Martin includes scenes from Dubuque.” The Iowa Film Office eventually closed over misused tax credits, but has since reopened under a new name, Produce Iowa, not to be confused with the Iowa State University Extension website, Iowa Produce. The words “filmed,” “made,” “produced,” and “shot” may contribute to the confusion. If a film crew came to town, hired extras, and spent a lot of money on hotel rooms and gas, maybe the local film bureau could be excused for including the movie on its website, even if the local scene was canceled due to bad weather. IMDb, however, has specific guidelines about “filming locations.” Their guidelines say that “filming locations” are “where the filming took place.” While Galena meets this criteria, Dubuque should not be listed at IMDb as a filming location for Pennies from Heaven. This is not to say that Dubuquers should skip Pennies from Heaven. It is strange and elegant and all the more wonderful for almost having been made in Dubuque. Pennies from Heaven was adapted by screenwriter Dennis Potter from his 1978 BBC television series of the same name. The American version features disillusioned and depraved characters in elaborately staged dance scenes who lipsync popular songs from the 1920s and 1930s like “Love Is Good For Anything That Ails You” by Ida Sue McCune, “I Want To Be Bad” by Helen Kane, and “Let’s Misbehave” by Irving Aaronson & His Commanders. This was Steve Martin’s first dramatic role in a film, and his first movie after his breakout appearance in The Jerk (1979). But because so many people expected another comedy instead of an oddly moving, dark musical, Pennies from Heaven flopped, costing $22 million to make while only earning $9 million at the box office. When asked about the film’s box-office failure, Steve Martin said, “I’m disappointed that it didn’t open as a blockbuster and I don’t know what’s to blame, other than it’s me and not a comedy. I must say that the people who get the movie, in general, have been wise and intelligent; the people who don’t get it are ignorant scum.” Fred Astaire was one person who “didn’t get it.” A clip of Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers dancing to “Let’s Face the Music and Dance” from the 1936 musical Follow the Fleet appears in Pennies from Heaven, but Astaire was not impressed. He complained, “I have never spent two more miserable hours in my life. Every scene was cheap and vulgar. They don’t realize that the thirties were a very innocent age, and that Pennies from Heaven should have been set in the eighties – it was just froth; it makes you cry it’s so distasteful.” Even so, Astaire is said to have complemented Christopher Walken on his bartop striptease in Pennies from Heaven. Walken plays the tapdancing pimp who will “cut your face.” The rest of the cast deserves high praise, too, especially Vernel Bagneris for his eerie interpretation of the title song. As The New Yorker film critic Pauline Kael said, “The dance numbers are funny, amazing, and beautiful all at once; several of them are just about perfection.” Besides the Busby Berkeley-style musical numbers, Pennies from Heaven includes a series of tableaux vivants, surprising scenes which replicate famous works of art, such as the 1942 painting Nighthawks by Edward Hopper and the 1936 photograph Houses in Atlanta by Walker Evans (which in turn features the iconic billboard for Carole Lombard’s movie Love Before Breakfast from 1936). You won’t spot Dubuque in Pennies from Heaven, but there are a lot of other remarkable things to see in this movie while you try. Michael May is a librarian at Carnegie-Stout Public Library where he shows free movies and selects titles for the Blu-ray and DVD collections. e-mail: [email protected]. www.Dubuque365.com { beasts and gentlemen } where scrum is not a bad word. The Gentlemen will also have a new face on the sidelines leading the team as Hiram Heysinger takes over as head coach. Hiram had played for the Gentlemen for 6 seasons and has 15 years of rugby experience including being a part of the Clinton Muddy River National Championship team. Hiram brings an aggressive, attacking style to the game and plans to feature the strengths of the club. the Beast” to help make it the most successful gala event yet. The DRHS challenges you to share your passion for animals and bring a new person or couple with you as your guest(s)! Dinner features bacon-wrapped pork loin encrusted with maple syrup, brown sugar and mustard, served with little Italy salad, potatoes, seasonal vegetables, and dinner rolls. Dessert is Tiramisu. Attendance is just $75 per person and you can RSVP online at www.dbqhumane.org. Prepare to bid on silent and live auction items as well. Proceeds will benefit the nearly 5000 abandoned, lost and unwanted animals the DRHS provides care for each year. Beauty and the Beast A Gala for the Good of Tri-State Area Animals September 12, 5:30 p.m. Diamond Jo Casino The Dubuque Regional Humane Society (DRHS) is having its annual fall gala on Sept. 12, 2013, at the Diamond Jo Casino; this year’s theme is “Beauty and the Beast.” Cocktails begin at 5:30 with dinner following at 6:30 p.m. The evening includes dinner, silent and live auctions, a vacation raffle drawing, and more! Plus, special guest emcee “Voice of the Hawkeyes” Gary Dolphin! Change the fate of animals in the tristate area by attending “Beauty and Live auction items include a customdesigned ring from McCoy Jewelers, a luxury leather recliner from Flexsteel Furniture, an Ultimate Party Package, a Holiday Season Entertainment Package, and more! Silent auction items come from many fine area businesses and restaurants including Accessorize Me, Body & Soul Wellness Center, Creative Touch Gallery, Dubuque Mining Company, TOMY International, Tour Dubuque, Woodfire Grille, and many more! The Dubuque Regional Humane Society (DRHS) is a private 501(c)3 non-profit organization committed to building life-long bonds between people and animals through adoptions, humane education, community outreach programs, and animal cruelty prevention. Gentlemen of Dubuque Rugby’s New Season The Gentlemen of Dubuque Rugby Football Club, founded in 1997, gears Up For Another Playoff Run with a New Head Coach in a Realigned Division. On August 31 The Gentlemen of Dubuque RFC will kick-off their fall schedule with an away match against the Des Moines Rugby Club. This season will be Dubuque’s first in the realigned Iowa-Minnesota division and will give Dubuque an opportunity to test its mettle against new teams from Iowa and Minnesota. “It is always exciting to get to measure yourself against new clubs and better competition. The realignment will feature two teams from the great state of Minnesota as well as three teams that have recently been added to Division III. We will have the opportunity to play in some brilliant matches this fall,” said club president Dave Schlueter. City Welcomes Applications for City Life Program The City of Dubuque is ready to welcome 25 Dubuque residents for City Life, a free “citizen academy” program designed to provide residents a hands-on connection with their local government. Applications to participate are due Friday, Aug. 23. City Life is a new program developed by the City of Dubuque Human Rights Department that gives residents the opportunity to interact with City staff and other community members, discover the roles of departments and their services, participate in tours of City facilities and current project sites, and learn about different opportunities for civic engagement with their city government. The City Life program consists of one www.Dubuque365.com When asked what he sees as the future of the club he said, “We had a bit of a down year last year but we got to see some substantial growth and development from young players. I think we’re going to surprise some folks this year. We’ve got a group of powerful workhorses in our forward pack and the kind of quick-step shifty guys you’re looking for in the backline. We’ve got a good core of veterans and are looking to get some new people in the fold this year. I’m excited about our chances.” The Gentlemen are looking to fill several roles and are holding open try-outs at their first week of practice Tuesday August 13 and Thursday August 15 at Comiskey Park on Jackson Street from 6-8 PM. Anyone who is interested in learning about or playing rugby is encouraged to attend. For a full-schedule and additional information about the club visit: www.gentlemenofdubuque.com. confirmed our belief that residents want to be informed about their city government. City staff were encouraged by the level of resident contribution throughout the program,” said City of Dubuque Community Engagement Coordinator Nikola Pavelic. session per week for 10 weeks. The next session runs September 5 through November 7. Weekly sessions will be held on Thursdays from 6-9 p.m. The Human Rights Department plans to offer City Life twice a year, each fall and spring. “The level of resident participation in the pilot version of this program earlier this year For more information and to apply for City Life, visit www.cityofdubuque.org/citylife, contact Community Engagement Coordinator Nikola Pavelic at 563589-4182 or [email protected], or stop by the Human Rights Department office at 1300 Main St. in Dubuque. Accommodations may be arranged for those who wish to participate but are deterred by transportation or childcare needs or language barriers. 365ink Magazine | issue #193 { august 15 - 28, 2013 } 31 { movies } some good movies this time around. 555 JFK Road, Behind Kennedy Mall www.mindframetheaters.com coming to theaters : Movie Hotline: 563-582-4971 NOW IN DIGITAL! Now Showing @ MINDFRAME Friday, August 15 - Thursday, August 21 The Mortal Instruments: City of Bones (PG-13) Wed-Thu: (11:00 AM), (1:45), (4:30), 7:20, 9:55, No Passes Kick-Ass 2 (R) No Passes Allowed Fri - Thu: (11:50 AM), (2:15), (4:40), 7:35, 9:55 Lee Daniels’ The Butler (PG-13) No Passes Fri - Thu: (11:00 AM), (1:40), (4:25), 7:15, 9:50 Elysium (R) No Passes Allowed Fri - Tue: (11:30 AM), (1:55), (4:20), 7:20, 9:40 Planes (PG) No Passes Allowed Fri - Sun: (11:00 AM), (1:00), (3:00), (5:00), 7:10, 9:05 Mon - Thu: (11:00 AM), (1:00), (3:00) Percy Jackson: Sea of Monsters (PG) No Passes Allowed Fri - Thu: (11:15 AM), (1:35), (4:10), 7:00, 9:20 We’re the Millers (R) No Passes Allowed Fri - Thu: (12:00), (2:30), (4:55), 7:30, 9:50 JOBS (AUG 16) (PG-13) Ashton Kutcher’s Steve Jobs bio-pic. Kick-Ass 2 (AUG 16) (R) After Kick-Ass’ insane bravery inspires a new wave of self-made masked crusaders, our hero joins them on patrol, but only Hit-Girl can prevent their annihilation. The story of a White House butler who served eight American presidents over three decades. Paranoia (AUG 16) (PG-13) The two most powerful tech billionaires (Harrison Ford and Gary Oldman) are bitter rivals who will stop at nothing to destroy each other with a young superstar (Liam Hemsworth) trapped in the middle. You’re Next (AUG 23) (R) When a gang of masked, ax-wielding murderers descend upon the Davison family reunion, the hapless victims seem trapped...until an unlikely guest of the family proves to be the most talented killer of all. Mwahh-ha-haaa! MOVIE BUZZ Every actor ever now to appear in Expendables 3, except Bruce Willis in an effort to make the six degrees of Kevin Bacon game way too easy. Look at this roster…Sly, Mel Gibson, Harrison Ford, Antonio Banderas, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Milla Jovovich, Jackie Chan, Mickey Rourke, Wesley Snipes, Dolph Lundgren, Jet Li, Steven Segal and more, I’m sure. Joel Edgerton has been cast as Ramses in Ridley Scott’s Exodus, joining Christian Bale, who’s already attached to play Moses. Kirsten Dunst is attached to co-star in Midnight Special for Mud director Jeff Nichols, joining Shannon and Joel Edgerton in the sci-fi project, which sees a father on the run with his 8-year-old son when he discovers the child has special powers. Sam Rockwell will be the Craig T. Nelson of the Poltergeist reboot being produced by Sam Raimi and also starring Rosemarie DeWitt. { august 15 - 28, 2013 } 365ink Magazine | issue #193 ordinary teenager discovers she is the descendant of a line of Shadowhunters, a secret cadre of young half-angel warriors locked in an ancient battle to protect our world from demons. You know, usual stuff. The World’s End (AUG 23) (R) Five childhood friends reunite after 20 years to re-attempt the ultimate pub crawl... and maybe the world ends. From the makers of “Shaun of the Dead” and “Hot Fuzz”. Lee Daniels’ The Butler (AUG 16) (PG-13) 32 The Mortal Instruments: City of Bones (AUG 21) (PG-13) A seemingly Hugh Grant has signed on to give Guy Ritchie’s The Man from U.N.C.L.E. the posh, winsome cad it needed all along working with agents Napoleon Solo (Man of Steel star Henry Cavill) and Illya Kuryakin (The Lone Ranger’s Armie Hammer). With Lionsgate-Summit at work on a Men Are from Mars, Reese Witherspoons Are From Venus film, Alcon Entertainment is dusting off Chicken Soup for the Soul for a major motion picture a decade past it’s prime. The baldist ideology that recently led to Vin Diesel’s casting as Kojak is apparently being used to generate superhero casting rumors, too, as sinister bald brothers Bryan Cranston and Mark Strong are now being thrown around as possible Lex Luthors in the Man of Steel sequel. Speaking of Vin Diesel, he’s working on another sci-fi franchise, Soldiers of the Sun, where we would lead of a squad of soldiers liberating Mexico from an alien race known as Orcs and looking for a city of gold. www.Dubuque365.com { pam kress dunn } you’re getting verrrrry sleepy. Goodbye to All That? by pam kress-dunn When Joan Didion, one of my all-time favorite writers, wrote her essay “Goodbye to All That,” she was talking about something altogether different from my current concern. She was speaking of Manhattan, where she lived in her 20s, first in love with the place, later in despair. It’s a great essay, and its title has been repurposed by countless other writers. She was, in fact, borrowing it herself, from Robert Grave’s autobiography about leaving England following the first World War. How did I know about Graves and his book? I looked it up online. As a librarian, I cringe when I hear anyone say, “It’s all on the Web,” because 1) that isn’t true, and 2) even if you find whatever it is you’re looking for, it won’t necessarily be free of charge. I hear from physicians who have done their own research online, only to run smack into the brick wall: “For only $58, you can access this article,” helpfully providing a place to type a credit card number. Don’t do it, I tell them; I can get it for you. It’s not that I know some secret way to knock down that brick wall, it’s just that I belong to a network of libraries that share whatever they’ve got with each other. It’s what libraries do. But there’s another kind of cost to finding things online, one I have not been able to work around no matter what I try. I call it . . . a headache. This headache used to be called “Chronic Migraine,” then “Transformed Migraine,” and, most recently, “New Daily Persistent Headache.” I have a problem with the word “new,” since I’ve had this thing for going on seven years, but I understand that it means, in this case, “sudden onset.” I like to call it “Old Daily Persistent Headache.” It’s my pain; I can call it whatever I want to. a few lines long), and even, yes, my poems. My first encounter with a computer was love at first sight, much as Didion describes her instant infatuation with New York. Here was a machine infinitely better than even the best electric typewriter – and believe me, I’d had my share. (A manual typewriter is a beautiful thing, but pounding on one requires, well, pounding, which leads to finger pain; and even if one does manage to use a manual at a decent clip, the keys have an annoying way of getting crossed up with each other. Another kind of pain.) My parents The college saved student theses in their library, after sending them out for binding. But binding required a larger left margin than usual, and no one had thought to tell me. So I spent a week retyping it, all 136 pages. Unbelievable, I know, for anyone raised once computers became common; you can change a margin with the touch of a key these days. As Shakespeare might have said, O brave new world, that has such creatures in it! (He did say that, but not about laptops.) With a computer keyboard, I can type like the wind. I’ve often said that typing is my Olympic sport. I don’t even make many mistakes. My typing is one thing I can safely brag about. I can type just about as fast as I think of what I want to say, which seems magical, miraculous. I have sometimes thought that my brainwaves change when I sit down at a keyboard, clicking instantly into Writing Mode. I’ve learned to change my monitor’s page color from bright white to a soothing grey when I compose. It helps. But when I’m working, or at home looking up the name of the singer from Mumford and Sons, I can’t do that. I can dim the monitor, but it’s still mostly white. I can slip a glare guard over the screen, but it only helps a little. The fact is, if I stare at a monitor long enough, Mr. Headache is going to pay a call. gave me my first electric typewriter when I left for college, and I thought I had it made. But it’s hard to make corrections on a typewriter. And it’s a huge production to add something you forgot a few lines back. An even bigger production is required for changing margins, something I had to do after turning in my undergraduate honors thesis. I love my job, and I love to write. I’m not giving up either one. All I need is to be smarter about using my computer, a machine that brings me equal shares of joy and pain. I may have to do some research . . . on the Internet. Goodbye to all that? Sure; I want to feel better. But hello to – what? - [email protected] What I can’t do, though, is keep using technology the way I have been without triggering yet another headache. After six years under the care of a motley crew of neurologists, including three stays in a Michigan hospital unit devoted to treating head pain, and a seemingly endless list of medicines and treatments, both conventional and a little bit woowoo, I know my triggers, and I know that number one on the list is that wonder of the digital age, the computer. On one of which I am writing this very essay. I can’t write by hand; I have the worst case of writer’s cramp you’ve ever seen. It has its own fancy neurological name, dystonia, which always makes me think of some obscure Eastern European country: Hail, Dystonia. This debility forces me to use another way to write my columns, my letters, my notes (if more than www.Dubuque365.com 365ink Magazine | issue #193 { august 15 - 28, 2013 } 33 { wellness } notify me... when my lunch is ready. Fall Resistration Online and in-person registration starts August 26, 2013 for Fall Programs. Visit www.cityofdubuque.org/recreation to see what we are offering this fall and sign up! Brochures will be sent to Families with children in the Dubuque Community Schools. Otherwise you may view our complete brochure online or pick one up at the Leisure Service Office, 2200 Bunker Hill Road, City Hall or the Library. 2013 Doggie Dip at Flora Pool Monday, August 19 Following the final day of public swimming, the family dog is invited to take a dip in Flora Pool on Monday evening, August 19th from 5:30-7:30 PM. $5 admission fee per dog which includes access for immediate family members. Multicultural Family Center Golf Outing September 6, 11:30 a.m. , 7 p.m. Bunker Hill Golf Course The Multicultural Family Center (MFC) will host the first annual MFC Golf Outing.The Golf Outing format will be 18-hole best shot with the opportunity to win prizes, skins contest, and a 50/50 raffle. Admission includes a light dinner and drinks. Title sponsors as well as hole sponsors are also being accepted. Proceeds from the event will benefit the Multicultural Family Center’s Future Talk. In 2013, the MFC received 42 applications for the program, however, funds only allotted for 22 participants. The goal of the Golf Outing is to raise enough funds to increase capacity for an additional 10 youth. Registration and sponsorship forms for the event can be found on the MFC website at www. mfcdbq.org or register online at http:// mfcgolf.eventbrite.com by August 30. 2013 City Expo Tuesday, September 10, 4-7 p.m. Mark your calendar for the 2013 City Expo which is scheduled for Tuesday, September 10th from 4:00 to 7:00 p.m. at the Five Flags Center. See the ad on page 2. NOTIFY ME - ARE YOU REGISTERED? Are you interested in receiving City of Dubuque up-to-date communication regarding news releases, cancelations, upcoming registrations, agendas and minutes, newsletters, et cetera? If the answer is YES, we encourage you to register for NOTIFY ME. NOTIFY ME is a great tool if you’re interested in receiving news regarding City of Dubuque departments. Within the Leisure Services Department, you may select to receive information regarding our Adult Athletic Programs, the Leisure Services Brochure Availability, Miller Riverview Camping Reservation Updates, Port of Dubuque Marina Updates and Youth Recreation Program News. To register for NOTIFY ME, please go to the City of Dubuque website at www. cityofdubuque.org. At the home page, see the blue boxes located on the lefthand side. Click on the blue box entitled NOTIFY ME and follow the four easy steps listed inside the Notify Me green box. Sugar Free Allstars Outdoor Concert National Library Card Sign-up Month Sunday, September 8 at 2:00 to 3:00 p.m. Join us in front of the library for an outdoor concert featuring Grammy awardwinning Sugar Free Allstars. This groovy duo puts on a concert full of fun and funky tunes with so much interaction that everyone gets to be a part of the act. With their diverse musical influences and unusual instrumentation, this family friendly organ/drum duo from Oklahoma City doesn’t quite fit into any given pigeonhole. The music blends New Orleans funk, Memphis soul and Hammond organ-drenched gospel, wrapped in a colorful rock and roll package. Add to the mix a touch of pop songwriting sensibilities, humor and a high-energy live show, and you’ve got the Sugar Free Allstars. Rock ‘n’ Roll for all ages at the CarnegieStout Public Library! Don’t forget to bring your lawn chairs and blankets. If it rains, we will move to the 3rd Floor Aigler Auditorium. For further information, please call our office at 563-589-4263 or email us at [email protected]. Shrinky Dink Fun Saturday, September 7 at 1:00 to 2:30 pm Your parents might remember the days when Shrinky Dinks were popular. Using plastic, permanent markers, and a heat gun, we’ll have fun recreating this classic activity. You can use Shrinky Dinks to make jewelry, buttons, tags, and so much more! For ages 8 and up. Please register at the Children’s Help Desk or by calling 563-589-4225 ext. 2228. 34 { august 15 - 28, 2013 } 365ink Magazine | issue #193 www.Dubuque365.com { hy-vee health market } poor yogurt. it’s apparently strained. enjoy. The whole family will go crazy for this delicious, summertime bite! 3. Plant. Some of my favorite cool season crops include: Beet, Broccoli, Cabbage, Carrots Cauliflower, Kohlrabi, Lettuce Radish, Spinach, Kale and Swiss Chard Cool down... The recently cool weather has provided me lots of motivation to spend some quality time in my veggie garden. Since the peas, beans and kohlrabies are harvested creating some space, now is the perfect time to plant my fall crops. Here are some pointers on how you too can have a productive garden this fall… 1. Prepare. Since many of the veggies previously grown in the garden likely have depleted the nutrients, add compost and other organic fertilizers into the soil prior to planting. Rip out any varieties that are no longer performing well or you have already harvested. Remove any existing weed so they don’t compete with your new seedlings. Tip: If you live in a hot-summer climate, you might need to start seeds of your favorite cool-season vegetables indoors; many do better in air-conditioning than they do in the heat. If you start your seeds directly outdoors, plant them a little deeper than you would in spring; the soil is typically moister and cooler and extra inch or two down. Source: Better Homes & Garden 2. Water and Mulch. With some hot days still ahead, be sure to add some mulch, like non pesticide ridden grass clippings or straw, and be sure to provide adequate water. In general established veggies appreciate about 1” of water per week. They prefer a deep thorough watering vs. frequent shallow doses. www.Dubuque365.com Steve’s Ace Home & Garden is expecting some veggie seedlings to arrive later this week, just in time for fall planting. We also have plenty of seeds still available for direct sowing into the soil. 4. Protect. Summer pests can be a frustrating challenge this time of year. Monitor for pest issues and use an organic pesticide if a problem is detected. I really like the Dr. Earth Vegetable sprays for dealing with pest problems. When cold weather threatens extend your growing season by protecting your smaller plants using a cloche or for larger areas, cover the garden with an old sheet, blanket, tarp, or row cover. Siggi’s - The Perfect Back to School Treat with nutritionists Megan Horstman & Amber Jaeger Siggi’s is a thick and creamy, skim-milk yogurt, referred to as skyr, which is based on a traditional recipe used in Iceland for over 1,000 years. Siggi’s skyr yogurt is a strained version of non-fat yogurt, but packs more of a nutritional punch with 14 to 15 grams per serving – two to three times the amount of protein compared to regular yogurt. It has 30% less sugar than most yogurts and uses no artificial sweeteners. Only all-natural, minimal ingredients – milk, fruit and sugar – are used. This special treat is lusciously thick and creamy, making it seem like a total indulgence. Siggi’s yogurt is also available in easy-tosqueeze tubes or drinkable form, making it a perfect on-the-go snack. Try pouring the drinkable form over a bowl of crunchy granola for a satisfying start to your day. Use in dip: Move over, chip dip – yogurtbased dip is the new dive. Make a sweeter dip with Siggi’s fruit-flavored yogurt of choice, or a more traditional flavor with the plain variety. Pair with fun dippers, such as graham crackers, mini whole grain waffles, pita chips, vegetables, animal crackers, baked chips or breadsticks, fresh fruit, and granola bites. Your kids will be ready to dip right in and start snacking! Parfaits: You can still put on the layers, even in the summer! Parfaits are a great way to get the whole family in the kitchen together. All you do is layer granola or whole grain cereal, fresh fruit and Siggi’s delicious yogurt in a container. Bon appetit! Smoothies: The summer season means hot weather. Cool the kids down after playing outside with a cold and creamy smoothie in minutes. Choose one of Siggi’s flavored yogurts, low-fat milk, and fresh or frozen fruit. Add all the ingredients into a blender and blend until smooth. Pour into a fun cup and get sipping! 5. Harvest! Whether you choose to eat your fall veggies fresh or preserve them for winter meals plan to harvest them just before a killing freeze. Have any questions about the harvesting process? Email your questions to me at sara. [email protected] and I would be happy to help! Do you need to excite the kids about going back to school? Try Siggi’s non-fat yogurt as an after-school snack or as the perfect side to pack in their lunch boxes. They will look forward to this delicious treat! Here are five easy ways to incorporate Siggi’s yogurt in the kids’ back-to-school routine: Five Simple Ways to Use Siggi’s Yogurt: Want more fun-filled yogurt facts? Go to Hy-VeeHealth.com. Get delicious recipes, nutrition tips and look for the closest HyVee dietitian near you. Toss in lunches: Include a Siggi’s yogurt in your family’s lunch boxes for a bonebuilding, calcium boost! The live and active cultures along with three probiotics will help with digestion and strengthen immunity. Also, the higher protein will keep the kids full and focused while working hard at school. Freeze it: Have a picky eater at your house? As a parent, you may sometimes find it difficult to incorporate healthier snack options into your child’s diet. Simply blend fresh fruit and Siggi’s non-fat yogurt together, place in ice cube trays or popsicle molds, freeze and 365ink Magazine | issue #193 { august 15 - 28, 2013 } 35 { carnegie stout public library / crossword } i’d like to win me some of that... i’m non-profit, basically. McCoy’s 40K for 40 Years July Giveaway! The August ‘$40k for 40 Years’ event is focused around non-profits with a passion for the outdoors and the piece up for the donation follows suit! The August competitors are Four Mounds, the Mines of Spain, and the Dubuque Arboretum and Botanical Gardens! A model of volunteerism and community partnering at its best, Four Mounds is a non-profit organization with a mission to preserve and educate. They make the historic Four Mounds estate available in a variety of exciting ways. The Mines of Spain is organized to inform and educate the public in nature, ecology, conservation, greenbelt concept, natural history, archeology and current events pertaining to those topics. entirely by volunteers. Over 300 dedicated individuals maintain the trees, plants and shrubs, and seed-gifts which are all labeled throughout the garden. For this month’s $40k for 40 Years event piece has an organic look to go with our more outdoor themed non-profits. This piece is a 14k yellow gold bamboo style ring set with a 9x7mm oval peridot. This piece is accompanied by a pair of matching 14k yellow gold bamboo earrings for a total amount of $2,445.00. The scenery is wonderful at these non-profit locations and is open all summer long so go take a hike… so to speak. Vote online Aug 16-23 @ www.mccoyjeweler.com or facebook.com/McCoyJeweler. The Dubuque Arboretum and Botanical Gardens is the only arboretum and botanical garden in the USA staffed 36 { august 15 - 28, 2013 } Answer on page 39 365ink Magazine | issue #193 www.Dubuque365.com { bob’s book reviews / mattitude } Obsession By Bob Gelms The Orchid Thief by Susan Orlean could just as well have been about Heroin or Crack or Meth. As it is, it’s about Orchids: a flower that, in a lot people in the book, engenders a kind of addiction reminiscent of some type of twisted drug dependency. The subtitle of The Orchid Thief is A True Story of Beauty and Obsession. I’d say so. The story centers on an odd man by the name of John Laroche who was once convicted of stealing rare Orchids from the Fakahatchee Swamp, a state preserve, with the help of a few Seminole Indians. It is apropos to let John Laroche tell you about his addiction in his own words, “I really have to watch myself, especially around plants. Even now, just being here, I still get that collector feeling. You know what I mean. I’ll see something and then suddenly I get that feeling. It’s like I can’t just have something--I have to have it and learn about it and grow it and sell it and master it and have a million of it.” Yep, I’d say he has, what’s called, Orchid Fever times ten. I’m a little bit of a flower guy. I like to have them in my backyard or on the dinner table. Orchids are pleasant, they are pretty to look at and some of them smell wonderful. Well, OK, that’s nice. I’m not obsessive about Orchids so I don’t understand the appeal. I am, however, obsessive or, at least, have been in my life about a few things like books and music especially acoustic guitar instrumentals. That helped me to understand Laroche’s peculiar compulsion. By Orlean’s account Laroche is a thoroughly unpleasant man to be around. To call him a narcissist would be an understatement. He picks fights with people he considers his inferior; no one can correct him where plants in general or Orchids in particular are concerned. By all reports he is a bad friend to have because he is a user. When you are used up you are discarded like a soiled Kleenex. Yet there is something oddly appealing about him; something of the lovable rogue; the irresistible con man. I sat there reading about this guy being amazed at what he was able to accomplish www.Dubuque365.com because in spite of it all he is a gifted Plant Man; need I say botanist, hopping from one plant obsession to another like a stone skipping across the water. He is kind of a Mr. Know-It-All. He not only will correct you but also shove the information down your ignorant mouth and it turns out he is rarely wrong. It’s a wonder nobody has taken a shot at him. Collecting Orchids in their natural habitat instead of your local hothouse is about as dangerous as running drugs. Collectors in the tropical rain forest of South America, the swamps of Florida and the jungles of Southeast Asia run the very real risk of being murdered. This obsession goes to the very heart of life and death itself, and an all encompassing jealousy of the collector who has more than you. There are a few chapters on this in the book that are absolutely riveting. Here is an interesting fact I’d like to drop in here. Under the right circumstances Orchids can live forever. They have no natural enemies to kill them off, they have become very adept, may I say creative, in how they propagate themselves in the cleverest of ways and they are the largest genus of plant on the Earth with over 60,000 species and over 100,000 hybrids currently in existence. They live so long people leave them to their heirs. There are some documented plants that have been alive since 1898. This obsession cuts across all boundaries. In The Orchid Thief you will meet ordinary folks, hucksters like Laroche, English peers, movie stars, and dirt poor collectors tramping around the swamps of the world. If you recognize any of this you might remember the movie Adaptation. Adaptation is a movie about a screen writer trying to adapt The Orchid Thief for a movie; sort of a movie within a movie. As is the way with Hollywood there are things in the movie that are not in the book. So, if you saw the movie I think the book will surprise you a bit. But, as Yoda says, read it first you should. It is an entertaining, offbeat, fascinating way to spend a few hours reading about something you might have never figured would be this interesting. my hero! Implementation by matt booth “Ideas are a dime a dozen. People who implement them are priceless.” - Mary Kay Ash It is so true, the world is full of incredible ideas that are useless unless someone implements them. The unimplementation of simple ideas is a huge weakness. Success comes from what you do, not the ideas you have. The more you focus on implementing an idea, the more momentum you’ll get. Having an idea isn’t the same as implementing an idea. Few people have ever become successful just by having ideas. Many people have become successful by implementing ideas. Does this sound familiar? You attend a fantastic seminar or workshop and get dozens of great ideas. You return to work all fired up and eager to start implementing all those ideas. A month later, not even one idea has been implemented. So, you attend another seminar, right? More great ideas are the last thing you need right now. You are not short on ideas; you are short on implementing the good ideas you have. A person or company can have too many new ideas. New ideas are sexy, exciting and energizing. The problem with next new ideas is that they are easy to fall in love with and they take our focus off of the current new idea which has yet to be implemented. Implementation of an idea involves a lot of work. Sometimes it is extremely difficult. Our world is fiercely competitive and success requires you to convert ideas into a reality. Concentrate on implementing a few good ideas, rather than chasing the excitement of the next great idea. Success is built on the implementation and effort required to bring an idea to fruition. Think of the old iceberg metaphor when it comes to ideas. Ideas are like icebergs in that 90 per cent of the effort involved lies below the surface. The 10 per cent is the creation of the idea. The implementation phase accounts for a whopping 90 per cent or more of the total effort. The people who can implement ideas will often be more successful than the genius who create good ideas, but can’t implement them. How many times in the last month have you thought, “That’s a great idea!” What typically happens when you come up with a great idea? Most of the time, nothing. Most good ideas remain dormant because people don’t take action. Don’t focus on finding more great ideas, you probably already have a pocket full of them. Instead, turn your focus to implementing one of those ideas in the next 2 weeks. Mattitude Quote . “Want to improve your attitude and your bottom line? Set down the freaking remote, turn off the TV, get off your ass and do something!” - Matt Booth Engaging keynote speaker, Matt Booth, is the attitude expert. He is an Award-winning speaker and author. Through his keynote speeches and training programs, he educates and entertains audiences with his unique abilities and talents. To find out how Matt can help you improve your attitude, call 563-590-9693 or email [email protected]. 365ink Magazine | issue #193 { august 15 - 28, 2013 } 37 { trixie kitsch / puzzle answers } trixie likes to wear disguises in public. Dear Trixie: I am hoping you will be able to decipher a disturbing dream I keep experiencing. This same dream crops up nearly every night or at least 6 times a week. There is a dark man on horseback in a black cloak which flies around him in a menacing way. He is galloping towards my house like some menacing English Highwayman and I am terrified he will kick in my door and do something horrible to me. Then I wake up sweating and shaking. I should also mention I have just moved into a house alone in the country and I am single. -- Girl With Bad Dreams Dear Trixie: Dear Girl: I have lost quite a bit of weight after many months of denying myself pizza and milkshakes. I can now fit into some of my dresses from the 1980s. They are pretty classic in the form and lines--long bell shaped sleeves with a ballet neckline and it falls to an A line just above my knees. It skims my body without showing any of the bulges and I think it looks quite acceptable. Unfortunately it has giant should pads and my neck is not as long or as well toned as it was in 1985. Should I keep them or remove them? --Perennial 80’s Chick It means you feel a man is lying in wait for you who will destroy or rob you. It means you are afraid to date and be single. It means your subconscious is telling you that you are an idiot. After all. it is just a dream. Buy a gun and put baseball bats behind every door. If you still don’t feel safe in your dream state start drinking whiskey before bed. Dear Trixie: Dear 80’s Chick: I am pretty solitary and don’t have a lot of money. I find that going to the bars and having a few cocktails and chatting with a pretty bartender can really lift me out of my doldrums. Fashion has changed so much in the last twenty five years. Semetricality is out. Only remove one pad. Vague insinuations of genetic deformities are all the rage. You’ll be the first on your block to sport the look. My problem is that I can’t always afford it. When I do have money I tip well and I think on those times when I am really blue and low on funds they should give me a free drink for 38 { august 15 - 28, 2013 } 365ink Magazine | issue #193 my patronage. I have tried every excuse I can think off like: *It’s the night before my bachelor party * It’s my birthday * and today is the anniversary of my second cousin’s death. What does it take to get a bartender to give me ONE free drink? --Thirsty Depressive Dear Thirsty: Weeping and sobbing. Dear Trixie: My new boyfriend has these buddies that lurk around our apartment and won’t make eye contact with me. They talk in whispers--I know because I can hear them in the kitchen which is next to the living room where they congregate. The minute I step into the room all talk ceases. He takes strange phone calls where he’ll go into another room ---like the bathroom and then come out and, “oh it’s nothing” when I ask what’s up. I don’t know what to think about all of this. He seems like a great catch---warm, sexy and a good listener. My problem is these guys. They seem OFF somehow. Should I be worried about his friends? --Janice on Jackson Dear Janice: He has no friends. Only co-conspirators. Be very worried. www.Dubuque365.com { dr. mccracken } Gemini 5/21-6/21 Sharing is caring! When your boss singles you out while investigating the recent disappearance of bulk supplies like toilet paper and sugar packets, be sure to spread the blame amongst the whole office evenly. Not just because it’s true, but because they can’t fire all of you or they’d be screwed. Cancer 6/22-7/22 The devil is in the details. Cement is an ingredient in concrete. Sidewalks are made of concrete. If they were made of cement, they’d be powder. The next time someone uses the word incorrectly, kick them to the sidewalk and half them taste the difference. Leo 7/23-8/22 Life is a game in inches. When your star-spangled spandex blows out on stage in the middle of a series of rock squat triplets, rejoice in the fact that the strap on your bass will allow for another 4 inches of slack to cover your sack. Cold weather may also play a factor. Virgo 8/23-9/22 Spread your seed. If the sunflower seeds in your golf bag expired in 2008, you are justified in www.Dubuque365.com Libra 9/23-10/22 Contemplate. You know you’re going to need those two days after you throw them away. Scorpio 10/23-11/21 You’re fairly sure that 80% of the movies that come out of Hollywood would be far better if they’d just let you see the script for five minutes in advance with a red pen. But then again, there would suddenly be a whole lot of extra unnecessary nude scenes. Sagittarius 11/22-12/21 No one seems to know how to fix the machine at work. When asked for ideas, you’ll find it much easier to blame Obama than to offer a better solution. It seems to work pretty universally. Capricorn 12/22-1/19 Football season is here, so you can stop trying to find things to talk about with your spouse. Aquarius 1/20-2/18 Your therapists says you should try get get more in touch with your softer side, so you’ll take to rubbing your belly a lot in public from now on. He did not say you should include accompanying commentary. Pisces 2/19-3/20 Sometimes you feel like you are the only person in the room who still loves a big ol’ juicy double quarter pounder with cheese from McDonalds. This is because you are in yoga class. Crossword Answers Taurus 4/20-5/20 Patience is a virtue. People always say that that grass ain’t going to mow itself, but have they really ever just had the patience to wait and see? I think not. hanging the bag up higher in the garage during this year’s purge. Not to protect your seeds, you just won’t been needing to reach it ever again. Sudoku Answers Aries 3/21-4/19 Boldness prevails in August. When your server asks you if you’d like bacon on your sandwich, punch them in the groin and say, “This is America, son,” even if it’s a girl. See what happens. the doctor has some fancy pants. 365ink Magazine | issue #193 { august 15 - 28, 2013 } 39 40 { august 15 - 28, 2013 } 365ink Magazine | issue #193 www.Dubuque365.com