Georgetown Current · Tudor Place combines old and new for holidays
Transcription
Georgetown Current · Tudor Place combines old and new for holidays
18 Wednesday, december 11, 2013 The currenT Holidays inWashington Party, Play & Shop... Tudor Place combines old and new for holidays By KAT LUCERO Current Staff Writer I f Thomas and Martha Custis Peter were immortal and still lived in their early 19th-century estate in Georgetown, they would adorn the mantels and staircases with evergreen at Christmastime. To spruce up that traditional decor for the present day, they would probably add scintillating colors and electrical lights. In “Red, Green & Gold, The New and the Old: Tudor Place Sparkles for Christmas,” Tudor Place Historic House and Garden decorated the main floor of the Peters’ grand home around this theme of reimagining how the prominent Washingtonians — son of the first mayor of Georgetown and granddaughter of former first lady Martha Washington — might have decorated their residence in 2013. “We’ve done historical period Christmas installations in the past, but we thought we’d go outside the box and try to imagine what the family could’ve done during the present day,” said curator Erin Kuykendall. This year, the museum worked with local interior designer John Peters Irelan, a longtime Washingtonian who has embellished several rooms inside the U.S. Supreme Court building with holiday decor. At Tudor Place, he offered guidance on how to brighten up the otherwise plain-looking decorations of the Kat Lucero/The Current Tudor Place brightened the 19th-century parlor (left) and drawing room (above) by adding scintillating colors and a Christmas tree with electric lights. Peters’ day. “If you go back to 19th-century decorations, they didn’t do much,” said Irelan, also a patron of the museum. “When they do period decorations, they’re kind of dull for the 21st-century eye. Let’s pretend that the family is still living in the house. Let’s puff it up and make it sparkle and brighter using reflective 06WUHHW1:_ Your Neighborhood Destination Restaurant Winner OpenTable.com “Diners Choice” Award Tis’ The Season For Serious Brunching! 9RWHG$PRQJWKH7RS7HQ%UXQFKHV,Q'&%\2SHQ7DEOH 6XEVFULEHUV Unlimited Champagne 6DWXUGD\V&KDPSDJQH%UXQFK 6XQGD\V´-D]]%UXQFKµ .H\ERDUGDQG9RFDOV<YRQQH-RKQVRQ &HOHEUDWLRQ3DUWLHV:HOFRPH$GYDQFH5HVHUYDWLRQV5HTXLUHG 6HUYHG$0WR30 All-Night Happy Hour Menu 3UHPLXP'ULQNV6PDOO3ODWHV³)DEXORXVO\3ULFHG³ (YHU\'D\30WR30 ajZ1l6iah Xl_N_ai6&N6ljV 7Xbc^aXR3d\QPac^]D]XcTS<TcW^SXbc2WdaRW " ""3d\QPac^]Bc=F New Years Eve %HIRUH7KH´%LJ3DUW\µ (QMR\$Q,QWLPDWH'LQLQJ([SHULHQFH 7KUHH&RXUVH'LQQHU$&KDPSDJQH7RDVW 0XOWLSOH$SSHWL]HUDQG(QWUpH&KRLFHV )URPSHUSHUVRQ 6HUYHG30WR30³6R<RX&DQ*HW7R<RXU3DUW\2Q7LPH 5HVHUYDWLRQV6XJJHVWHG:DON,QV:HOFRPH Daily Dining Deals '$,/</XQFK6SHFLDOV0RQGD\)ULGD\ '$,/<3OXV3UHÀ[H'LQQHU <RXU&KRLFHRI$SSHWL]HU(QWUpHDQG'HVVHUWZLWK$*ODVV2I +RXVH:LQH :HGQHVGD\6DWXUGD\1LJKWV2II2XU(QWLUH:LQH/LVW August 19-25 21 $3HUIHFW(YHQW9HQXH 9LVLW2XU:HEVLWH2U&DOO'LUHFW)RU$YDLODELOLW\ 06WUHHW1:_:::06WUHHW'&FRP colors to bring more of the Christmas atmosphere.” Kuykendall said the idea for modernizing Tudor Place for the holidays was Irelan’s, and that he also came up with the installation’s name. “He approached us over the summer. That’s when the staff started brainstorming with him on how to freshen up the Christmas installation,” she said. This year, adding contemporary pep to the golden yellow-clad parlor and drawing rooms are the sequined Christmas ball trees on the mantel. And next to the drawing room window is a brightly lit Christmas tree — a German-inspired custom not common in America before England’s Queen Victoria popularized it in the late 1800s. On the main floor, traditional Colonial Revival holiday decorations on tables include fruit topiaries, status symbols for wealthy households in the early 19th See Decor/Page 19 3TR ') 1[dT2WaXbc\PbBTaeXRT&)"_\U^acW^bT U^afW^\cWTW^[XSPhbPaTPSXUUXRd[ccX\T 3TR!!) >_T]7^dbT!#_\BTTcWTRWdaRWbX]V RPa^[bWPeTaTUaTbW\T]cbBX\_[T\PZT P]ScPZTRaPUcbU^aRWX[SaT]CWT P\bTaeXRT fX[[WPeTPRWX[SaT]zb2WaXbc\Pb_PVTP]c 3TR!#) 2WaXbc\Pb4eTBTaeXRT$_\fXcW 2WaXbc\Pb_PVTP]c (_\fXcW 2^\\d]X^] 3TR!() BTaeXRT)2WaXbc\Pb RT[TQaPcX^]^U[Tbb^]b P]SRPa^[b fffSd\QPac^]d\R^aV !!"""&! ! '&·V2QO\)XOO 6HUYLFH0XVLF6WRUH (_alhaJ6&N6ljI aN_NaXlX hh(_ajZaD /HVVRQV ,QVWUXPHQW5HQWDOV6DOHV 5HSDLUV &LW\·VODUJHVWSULQWPXVLF VHOHFWLRQDFFHVVRULHV XQLTXHPXVLFDOJLIWV 0217+85DPSP )UL6DWDPSP 681SP :LVFRQVLQ$YHQXH1: ZZZPLGGOHFPXVLFFRP The currenT Party, Play & Shop... Wednesday, december 11, 2013 19 Holidays inWashington EVENTS From Page 17 active video projections, and Chloe Yaiche will present “Zodiac,” an artistic display of constellations inspired by NASA satellite imagery, on Dec. 13 and 14. Other events will take place throughout the week; visit georgetowndc.com and click on “Events,” then “Holiday Happenings” for details. The festival will coincide with the second annual Georgetown Holiday Window Competition, in which neighborhood merchants create holiday-themed window displays using only four different materials. The festival is sponsored by the Georgetown Business Improvement District, Alliance Française de Washington, Art Soiree Productions, SPAIN Arts & Culture, The JBG Cos., Wallonie-Bruxelles International and Electricite de France. ■ The Duke Ellington School of the Arts will stage Langston Hughes’ “Black Nativity” through Dec. 15. The show retells the Nativity story and celebrates the AfricanAmerican experience through gospel music, song and dance. The production features the choreography of the late Mike Malone, the school’s co-founder and director of the regional holiday favorite during a seven-year run at the Kennedy Center. Malone’s protégés Katherine Smith and Tracie Jade Jenkins are co-directors of this year’s show, which draws on every arts discipline taught at Ellington. Before each show, the Ellington Theatre’s lobby will feature a Nativity Village with costumed singers, dancers and musicians. Performance times vary. Tickets cost $25 to $40. The Duke Ellington School of the Arts is located at 3500 R St. NW. 202-337-4825; ellingtonschool.org. ■ BUILD Metro DC will present a Holiday Sales Bazaar from 6 to 8 p.m. Dec. 17 at start-up incubator 1776, located on the 12th floor at 1133 15th St. NW. Students involved in BUILD’s college-readiness program will present their own businesses and sell products as they compete for prizes from Microsoft. For details visit build.org/dc/bazaar. ■ Fahrney’s Pens is holding a “Letter to Santa” contest for children through Dec. 18, with the winner slated to receive a new Pelikan Twist Fountain Pen, Workbook and Practice Pad. Entrants are asked to show off their cursive penmanship. An entry will be selected at random on Dec. 20, and the prize will be mailed in time to arrive before Christmas. Entries may be placed in a mailbox at the store, located at 1317 F St. NW. They may also be mailed to Letter to Santa Contest, 8329 Old Marlboro Pike B13, Upper Marlboro, MD 20772. DECOR From Page 18 century. Evergreen kissing balls loom over the entryways of the parlor and drawing room. Pulled from the museum collection, period stockings hang over the parlor’s fireplace, a custom that started after the poem “A Visit From St. Nicholas” (best known for its first line “’Twas the night before Christmas”) was published in 1823. In the dining room, Tudor Place showcases parts of its extensive collections of 2,000 pieces of silverware and 59 sets of China porcelain, many more than two centuries old. To add more to the glittery theme, Irelan followed the Christmas custom of placing a single lighted candle on each of the northside windows, similar to the traditions of Colonial Williamsburg during the holidays, he said. He donated battery-operated candles with flameless wicks that flicker like real fire when they’re on. Tudor Place, located at 1644 31st St., unveiled the Christmas decor last Thursday at its quarterly themed-evening event that invites the public to view various aspects of the museum’s collection. The installation will also be a part of “Holidays Through History,” a multi-house tour taking place Saturday from 4 to 8 p.m. The ticketed event includes viewings at the Anderson House, 2118 Massachusetts Ave.; the Woodrow Wilson House, 2340 S St.; and Dumbarton House, 2715 Q St. For more information, visit tudorplace.org. “SIMPLY GORGEOUS!” ~The Washington Post DECEMBER 5–29 at the historic Warner Theatre Tickets now on sale! washingtonballet.org or 202.397.SEAT 3VHIV =SYV &GLI(I2}IP 2S[JSV =SYV,SPMHE] +EXLIVMRKW Tickets start at $32* &KRRVHIURPD :LGH$UUD\RI +ROLGD\&DNHVDQG )UHQFK3DVWULHV “A beloved Washington holiday tradition.” -- The Washington Post 'HFHPEHUDWSPSP'HFHPEHUDWSP 'HFHPEHUDWSP'HFHPEHUDWSP $GXOWV6HQLRUV<RXWKVDJHV ;MWGSRWMR%ZI2; +ISVKIXS[R&SSO,MPP;EWLMRKXSR(' '80%$5721&21&(576 &+(&.86287$7 3$7,66(5,(3283211(7 ZZZGXPEDUWRQFRQFHUWVRUJ +LVWRULF'XPEDUWRQ&KXUFK 'XPEDUWRQ6WUHHW1: *Includes $2 preservation fee. Francesca Dugarte by Tony Brown, imijphoto.com