REAL ESTATE IN THE NEWS B-1 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT December 10, 2014 THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman A RTS & E NTERTAINMENT THE INDEPENDENT DECEMBER 10, 2014 www.hamptondaze.com BETH STERN & FRIENDS BASH FOR THE BULLDOGS PAGE B-10 Independent/Rob Rich (www.societyallure.com)
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REAL ESTATEIN THE NEWS B-1 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT December 10, 2014THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman
Arts & EntErtAinmEntThe IndependenT
DEcEmbEr 10, 2014
www.hamptondaze.com
Beth Stern & FriendS BaSh For the BulldogSPage B-10
Independent/Rob Rich (www.societyallure.com)
REAL ESTATE IN THE NEWSDecember 10, 2014 THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler WatchmanB-2 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
Independent/Jessica Mackin, Josann Jeffrey
REAL ESTATEIN THE NEWS B-3 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT December 10, 2014THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman
www.hamptondaze.com The Waxman
The Samuel Waxman Cancer Research Foundation celebrated its 17th annual benefit dinner and auction “Collaborating For A Cure” on Thursday at Cipriani Wall Street. In recent years, “The Waxman” has raised millions of dollars to support the Foundation’s research efforts to produce a cure for cancer.
This year’s event honored fashion designers Carley Cushnie and Michelle Ochs of Cushnie et Ochs and included a special musical performance by Ziggy Marley. The evening was hosted by Chris Wragge, co-anchor of “CBS 2 News This Morning,” as master of ceremony. The much-anticipated live and silent auctions offered guests the opportunity to bid on an exciting selection of exclusive items.
For more information visit www.waxmancancer.org.
Independent/Jessica Mackin, Josann Jeffrey
REAL ESTATE IN THE NEWSDecember 10, 2014 THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler WatchmanB-4 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
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Deadl ine for submiss ions is Thursday at noon. Email to [email protected].
Revel In Your SpiritsThe Revel In Your Spirits Christmas
Show with Sarah Conway and The Playful Souls, plus special guests on sax and fiddle, takes place on Friday at 8 PM at the Stephen Talkhouse in Amagansett.
PechaKucha NightOn Friday at 6 PM, the Parrish
Art Museum is presenting Vol. 10 of its popular PechaKucha Night Hamptons, with a diverse roster of speakers delivering rapid-fire presentations on the theme of living creatively on the East End. Each speaker shows 20 slides for 20 seconds, resulting in a dynamic, six minute, 40 second long presentation.
Pechakucha Night Hamptons, Vol. 10 presenters include Mike Bottini, wildlife biologist; Margaret Braun, Alex DiJulio, and Alex Larsen, artists and founders of Sound Avenue Meeting House; Chloë Dirksen, actress; Margaret Garrett, artist; Chris Gentile, surfer, artist, founder Pilgrim Surf + Supply; Steve Miller, artist; Minerva Perez, actress and domestic violence shelter
director; Stefanie Sacks, culinary nutritionist, MS, CNS, CDN; Victoria Smith, Dock to Dish; and Lena Yaremenko, artist/photographer.
Southampton Publick HouseStop by for Monday Night
Madness in the taproom featuring $5 pints, $5 burger platters, and $.50 wings. Weekday happy hour runs from 4 to 7 PM. Wednesday is Ladies Night with drink specials at 9:30. Friday is all night happy hour with taproom specials and DJ Dory at 10 PM. Saturday night, dance to Hamptons Classics served up by DJ Brian at 10 PM.
ZokkonZokkon in East Hampton hosts
free sushi at the bar 5 to 8 PM tomorrow evening. Sunday through Thursday the restaurant offers a three course prix fixe for $25.95.
The Jam SessionThe Jam Session takes place on
Thursdays from 7 to 9 PM at Bay Burger in Sag Harbor. Visit www.thejamsession.org.
Buckley’s Inn BetweenHappy hour weekdays in
Hampton Bays run from 4 to 8
Deadline for submissions is Thursday at noon. Email to [email protected].
The NutcrackerThe Hampton Ballet Theatre School
presents The Nutcracker at Guild Hall in East Hampton at 7 PM on Friday, Saturday at 1 and 7 PM ,and Sunday at 2 PM. Advance tickets are $25 for adults, $20 for children under 12. Call 631-237-4810 for information about the range of additional ticket prices.
Stages Holiday Fairy TaleStages, A Children’s Theatre
Wo r k s h o p , I n c . , p r e s e n t s S t a g e s H o l i d a y F a i r y Ta l e Spectacu lar on Saturday and Sunday at 2 PM at the Bay Street Theater in Sag Harbor. The celebration also marks Stages’ 20th Birthday, and 20 years of producing live theater for families on the East End of Long Island. Visit or call the Bay Street Theater box office at 631-725-9500 to reserve a place for you and your royal family. For information visit www.stagesworkshop.org.
It’s a Wonderful LifeMike Hipp, Rusty Kransky, Kimet
Speed, Peggy Ashton Straub and Phil Wilcox under the direction of Marilee Scheer will bring Bedford Falls and the story of George Bailey to life in It’s a Wonderful Life - A Radio Play
at the North Fork Community Theater. Saturday at 8 PM and Sunday at 2:30 PM. Tickets are $15. Visit www.nfct.com. Underneath the Lintel
John Drew Theater Lab at Guild Hall in East Hampton presents Underneath the Lintel by Glen Berger, performed by John Shuman on Tuesday at 7:30 PM. Visit www.guildhall.org.
PM, with $3 pints of everything on tap, well drinks, and pouring wine. DJ Phil at 10 PM on Fridays and Saturdays. Sundays see two for one appetizers at the bar all day. On Thursdays, it’s Buckley’s famous wing night with $15 all you can eat wings and all you can drink Miller Lite from 10 PM to 1 AM. Music by DJ Pauly and beer pong.
Michael PourMichael Pour will be performing
at the Harbor Grill in East Hampton on Saturday at 7 PM on acoustic 12-string guitar and vocals. No cover charge.
Quiz NightTownline BBQ in Sagaponack
presents Quiz Night. Every Thursday at 7 PM trivia nerds near and far are invited to participate and test their knowledge. Each participant pays a $10 participation fee, which will be put in the pot for the grand prize.All quiz participants will receive a 10 percent discount on non-promotional food during the quiz. For more information call Townline BBQ at 631-537-2271.
WolfferCandlelight Fridays take place
at Wolffer Estate Vineyards in Sagaponack every Friday evening from 5 to 8 PM. Enjoy live music and wines by the glass or bottle. Visit www.wolffer.com.
Snowfl ake Ice Cream Shoppe, Riverhead
Member FDIC23 Branches in Suff olk County I 631.537.1000 I www.bridgenb.com
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REAL ESTATEIN THE NEWS B-5 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT December 10, 2014THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman
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Deadline for submissions is Thursday at noon. Email to [email protected].
OPENING
Awkward Family PhotosA holiday gathering featuring
“Awkward Family Photos: The Exhibition” will take place at the Southampton Arts Center on Saturday from 4:30 to 6:30 PM. The show runs through January 4. Visit www.southamptoncenter.org.
ONGOING
Patrice CasanovaArt Gallery at the Quogue Library
presents its December 2014 exhibit, Patrice Casanova’s “Scooters: Ice-Boating in the Great South Bay.” The show runs through January 4.
Home SpunS i l a s Marde r Ga l l e r y i n
Bridgehampton presents the group exhibition “Home Spun,” and on view through Sunday, December 21.
Home Spun explores various ways in which artists use traditionally craft-based materials and techniques to communicate contemporary ideals. The exhibit features artwork by Sydney Albertini, Josh Blackwell, Susie Brandt, Elizabeth Duffy, Louise Eastman, Saskia Friedrich, Field Kallop, Aaron Mcintosh, and Sheila Pepe.
The Edge of The WorldPaton Miller: The Edge of The
World takes place at Glenn Horowitz Bookseller in East Hampton through December 31.
Exhibit” at the Suffolk County Historical Society in Riverhead will run to March 7. The show features over 100 vintage dolls from the private collection of Betty Ann Richardson and the Suffolk County Historical Society.
Guild HallGuild Hall in East Hampton
presents Mary Ellen Bartley: Leaning Above the Page. The show features 19 photographic meditat ions selected from five different ongoing series: Standing Open, Paperbacks, Sea Change, Blue Books, and Push 2 Stops.
This solo exhibition is the result of Bartley receiving Top Honors in the 2012 Artists Members Exhibition f rom L i l ly Wei, independent curator, essayist and critic for Art in America, who was the juror for Guild Hall’s 74th Artist Members Exhibition that included entries from more than 450 artists. The show runs through January 4.
Also on view at Guild Hall, New
Additions to the Guild Hall Museum Permanent Collection 2010-2014. New Additions features works by Eric Fischl, April Gornik, Bryan Hunt, Barbara Kruger and David Salle. Visit www.guildhall.org.
No Peeking“No Peeking,” an exhibit on
prostitution is being presented by The Southold Historical Society. The show documents a small portion of the history of prostitution in Southold Town. The exhibit will be held in the Society’s Reichert Family Center’s Cosden Price Gallery. It will be on display through Saturday.
REAL ESTATE IN THE NEWSDecember 10, 2014 THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler WatchmanB-6 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
Reel DealBy Miles X. Logan
The
An asterisk (*) denotes an Indy Best Movie pick.
Coming Soon Unbroken (PG-13) Angelina Jolie
directs the film version of Laura Hillenbrand’s bestseller, and there are caution flags everywhere.
The film has the potential to be one of the year’s best: the story of Louis “Louie” Zamperini’s life is so remarkable it is unbelievable, though true – and that may be part of a problem. Zamperini goes from a young hood to a collegiate Olympic star, becomes a pilot during World War II, gets shot down, survives a harrowing three weeks adrift in the Pacific Ocean, gets rescued and confined to a Japanese prisoner of war camp where he is beaten and humiliated and eventually makes
his way back home, starts running again, and even entertains getting revenge on his cruel captors.
Jolie has made a beautiful film visually, but the studio has reportedly ordered a rewrite -- the subject matter is so dense that it seems nearly impossible to adequately capture on film. This is an important story: perhaps read the book first to better understand exactly how remarkable Zamperini, with all his imperfections, really was.
New To TheatersExodus: Gods and Kings ( R )It’s been a long time since we
had a biblical epic – well, not really (think Noah)-- but a long time between good ones. Ridley Scott brings us Exodus: Gods and Kings in breathtaking 3-D, and it looks to be a good one or at the very least grandiose in the style of The Ten Commandments. Christian Bale plays some important biblical figure – oh wait, he plays Moses. And he goes up against duh – a pharaoh in Egypt. Did we mention the film reminds us of The Ten Commandments?
New On DVD22 Jump Street * The boys are
back in school, this time in college. Jonah Hill and Channing Tatum are
Broadway(& Sometimes Off)
Reporting From
By Isa Goldberg
Come take a spin through the mid-14th century reign of “Tamburlaine” with John Douglas Thompson as the titular demigod, hurling himself through the action like a juggernaut. Rarely produced, Christopher Marlowe’s 16th century action- packed drama famously depicts the religious differences between Christians and Muslims that fueled Tamburlaine’s ruthless rise to power two centuries earlier.
Helmed by Michael Boyd, this production makes Pulp Fiction look tame. Here, repeated murders and blood-splashing violence are simply routine.
Paul Lazar, astonishingly silly in a series of monarchical roles, (one more clueless than the next), makes ferocious action look ludicrous. With outstanding per formances from Chukwudi Iwuji (Bajezeth) and Patrice Johnson Chevannes as his empress, this Tamburlaine sounds as contemporary as its message. Indeed, one is prompted to wonder whether the warfare between religions, then and now, serves only to obfuscate the motives that drive men to plunder, decimate, and tyrannize.
It’s well worth the trek to Brooklyn’s Theater for a new audience to watch Thompson in a dynamo performance. Grabbing Marlowe’s speech with contemporary grit, and tearing through the iambic pentameter with a vengeance, this actor truly commands the stage.
Close As AgnesCall it bitchy, but that is the
playwright’s style, or at least it’s what we expect it to be. In Edward Albee’s A Delicate Balance, his 1967 Pulitzer Prize winning play now in a revival directed by Pam McKinnon, we see those daggers drawn inwardly in a more muted fashion than in Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?.
even more hilarious this time around, if that is possible. Easily the best buddy movie since the original.
As portrayed by Glenn Close, Agnes is a mistress of restraint, willfully suppressing the underlying threat of sadness, and the all-encompassing darkness that affects not only herself, but also her husband Tobias (sensitively portrayed by John Lithgow). For this suburban couple living with opulence all around them (sets by Santo Loquasto), their interior lives are comparatively empty and painfully isolated.
Enter their friends, Harry, a brilliantly understated Bob Balaban, and his wife Edna, an annoyingly opinionated Clare Higgins, and the delicate balance turns to chaos. We don’t have to look far to see how obviously they all hate each other, or how unfortunately dependent they are on one another. A wry dexterous Lindsay Duncan as Agnes’ alcoholic sister Claire, makes sure to tell us about that, quite colorfully! She finds a close match in her niece Julia (Martha Plimpton), a sharp-tongued sniper who threatens to kill all of them. Regardless, the action is inward, the style reflective, and the mood despairing.
Can’t Take ItFor a more comedic evening, you
can still catch Scott Ellis’ revival of Kaufman and Hart’s You Can’t Take It With You with its original cast, through the end of this year. Written in 1936, it’s an old chestnut with a sophisticated stab at America’s obsession with wealth and its acquisition.
This production currently stars James Earl Jones as the wise and clever grandfather, Mark Linn-Baker as a whacky inventor, Kristine Nielsen as his incorrigibly quirky wife, Annaleigh Ashford as their daughter, a fatuous ballerina, along with their cats Groucho and Harpo, a nest of snakes, and a drunken actress (Julie Halston).
It’s definitely worth the laughs. After all, you can’t take it with you.
Here’s a list of new programs at local libraries. Check in with your local branch for ongoing programs. Advance registration is required for most of the listed programs. Call for details.
East Hampton Library 631-324-0222
FRIDAY 12•12•14• Tots enjoy music with Miss Lori at
10:30 AM.
Rogers Memorial Library 631-283-0774
SATURDAY 12•13•14• The Friends of the Library host a book sale every Saturday from
10 AM to 4 PM.
Hampton Bays Library 631-728-6241
THURSDAY 12•11•14• It’s a holiday cookie swap at 4 PM.
FRIDAY 12•12•14• There’s teen karaoke at 3 PM.
Quogue Library 631-653-4224
SATURDAY 12•13•14• Polar Express will be shown at 2 PM.
SUNDAY 12•14•14• Andrew Botsford and members of
the Hampton Theatre Company offer holiday readings at 2 PM.
Westhampton Library 631-288-3335
FRIDAY 12•12•14• Explore Google Docs for Chromebooks at noon.
SATURDAY 12•13•14• It’s a holiday high tea at 1:30 PMSUNDAY 12•14•14• The Marantha Chorus performs
at 3 PM.
Montauk Library 631-668-3377
SATURDAY 12•13•14• Enjoy holiday family time at 2 PM.
WEDNESDAY 12•17•14• Frank will be shown at 7 PM.
Mattituck Laurel Library 631-298-4134
FRIDAY 12•12•14• Gabrielle will be shown at 1:30 PM.
TUESDAY 12•16•14• The Friends of the Library have a
potluck holiday luncheon at 11 AM.
Amagansett Library 631-267-3810
SATURDAY 12•13•14• Mad scientists, aka your kids, get their chemistry on at 3:30 PM.
East End LibrariesBy Kitty Merrill
REAL ESTATEIN THE NEWS B-7 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT December 10, 2014THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman
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East Hampton House & Garden TourA kick-off cocktail party for the East Hampton House & Garden Tour benefiting the
East Hampton Historical Society took place on November 28 at the Maidstone Club. The tour, which took place the following day, showcased some of the finest examples of architecture in the Hamptons. Visit www.easthamptonhistory.org.
Independent/Richard Lewin
REAL ESTATE IN THE NEWSDecember 10, 2014 THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler WatchmanB-8 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
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minimum of $20 purchase before taxNot valid on delivery
can not be combined with any other coupon. Coupon exp.12/23/14
sterlingNAPA MERLOT 750
$1599
FREE HOME DELIVERY2799 ROUTE 112, MEDFORD
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES • NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL ERRORS • WHILE SUPPLIES LAST • NO LIMITS ON ANY ITEMSBOTTLES ARE FOR ILLUSTRATION PURPOSES ONLY
Minimum Order For Delivery $150.00NOW OPEN UNTIL 6PM ON SUNDAY’S • Our East End Customers - jump off 64 on your way back west to see our full selection.
All items are w/coupon only and must be presented at the time of purchase. Coupon expires COUPON EXP. 12/23/14
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REAL ESTATE IN THE NEWSDecember 10, 2014 THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler WatchmanB-10 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
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The 15th Anniversary “Bash for the Bulldogs” took place on December 2 at Rosenthal Pavilion, New York University Kimmel Center. The event is held to benefit The Long Island Bulldog Rescue.
Beth Stern, animal advocate, actress and wife of radio personality Howard Stern served as the event host. Emmy award winner Cat Green-leaf of USA Network was emcee. Ice-T and Coco Austin were also on hand with their dogs Spartacus and Maximus.
Bash For The Bulldogs
Independent/Rob Rich (www.societyallure.com)
REAL ESTATEIN THE NEWS B-11 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT December 10, 2014THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman
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Today’s Birthday: Emily Dickinson 1830“She’s a strange bird, that one”
neighbors used to say of the frail, sometimes sickly woman in the mansion on Main Street.
That is, the rare times they saw her. On those occasions, she was almost always dressed in white.
Her grandfather, Samuel Dickinson, the founder of Amherst College, built the house in 1813, and his family went to live in it for the next century.
Samuel’s son Edward, a U.S. Congressman, raised three children there. He expected the best from them, and was insistent that they receive topnotch educations. They didn’t disappoint. The middle child, Emily Elizabeth, was particularly adroit at studying, especially literature. She also learned to play piano and sing.
At the Amherst Academy she studied all the classics plus developed a special fondness for botany and philosophy. But her thoughts turned darker after her best friend died of typhus, and Emily Dickinson became preoccupied with death – and immortality.
After a brief stint at a nearby female seminary she returned home – for good. Emily took up baking and attended local functions, but neighbors notice a gradual transformation --- she became less social over time, and spent more and more time alone in her bedroom.
A friend suggested she read the
works of Ralph Waldo Emerson, and she did so with gusto, fascinated by the fact that he used his own style confidently and wasn’t afraid to break the mold. Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre was another influence.
Death traumatized her. Her friend, her pastor, her dog, and finally her father and mother passed. “The Dyings have been too deep for me, and before I could raise my Heart from one, another has come,“ she wrote, in despair and filled with a foreboding sense of doom.
Dickinson took solace in her garden, growing exotic flowers on the family property. She also continued to bake, though she most often stayed in her room, shunning visitors and friends.
She made her younger sister Lavinia promise to burn all her papers and letters when she died. Increasingly frail and ill, Emily Dickinson died on May 15, 1886.
Her sister, true to her word, went about the task of burning Emily’s letters. But she found something else totally unexpected – volume upon volume of poetry, bound manuscripts carefully archived.
Lavinia, with the aid of her brother, his wife, and others, decided to publish
a small collection, and the first volume was published in 1890.
T he r ea c t i o n wa s one o f astonishment. Scholars rushed to acquire and interpret the works. One critic wrote “The world will not rest satisfied till every scrap of her writings, letters as well as literature, has been published.” Dickinson has been in print ever since.
A family feud over the work slowed publication, but once released, her works flew off the shelves. Four volumes released during World War II, one at a time, sold out in rapid succession. Finally in 1955 Thomas H. Johnson released what was billed as her complete works.
In 1981 her manuscripts, replete with blurred ink stains, were released.
The extensive use of dashes and unconventional capitalization in Dickinson’s manuscripts, and the idiosyncratic vocabulary and imagery, combine to create a body of work that is “far more various in its styles and forms than is commonly supposed,” one historian wrote. Furthermore, the Women’s Liberation Movement found a new champion, her poems re-interpreted to reveal even more depth and complexity.
REAL ESTATE IN THE NEWSDecember 10, 2014 THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler WatchmanB-12 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
East End CalendarBy Kitty Merrill
EAST HAMpToN
Deadline for submissions is Thursday at noon. Fax them to 631-324-2544 or email to [email protected].
NoRTH FoRK
State Farm, Bloomington, IL1211009
Friends. Family.Community.
We’re all in this together.Dermot PJ Dolan, Agent2228 Montauk HwyBridgehampton, NY 11932Bus: 631-537-2622 Bus: [email protected]
State Farm® has a long tradition of being there. That’s one reason why I’m proud to support Local After School Programs like Project MOST. Get to a better State®.
SouTHAMpToNWEDNESDAY 12•10•14
• The East Hampton Town Republican Committee hosts a Holiday Victory Party from 6 to 8 PM at Bostwick’s restaurant on Pantigo Road. $30 gets you food, wine and beer, and a chance to see the Singing Republicans. Call 631-875-8652 for tickets.
SATURDAY 12•13•14• Guild Hall in East Hampton invites one and all
to a free holiday open house, noon to 4 PM. At 12:30 decorate a gingerbread house in a family-friendly workshop. $20/$15 members.
• The Annual “Holiday Tour of Inns, B & B’s, and Special Places” will be hosted by the East Hampton Chamber of Commerce. Check in at 11 AM at the Huntting Inn in East Hampton. Properties for the East Hampton Chamber of Commerce hosted tour will be open from noon to 4 PM. $25 per person, call to register 631-324-0362.
• Carolers, and yummy refreshments make your shopping season bright during the East Hampton Village holiday stroll from noon to 5 PM. The Jolly Old Elf himself will be at Rowdy Hall from 10 AM till noon.
• Springs Presbyterian Church on Old Stone Highway presents a holiday craft fair. Everything is handmade. 9:30 AM to 3 PM.
• Tina Guglielmo of the East Hampton Trails Preservation Society (631-329-2681) leads a hike to Hedges Banks. Meet at the log cabin Cedar Point
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WEDNESDAY 12•10•14• Every Wednesday at 6 PM Hampton Coffee
Company in Southampton on CR 39 hosts movie night. Film discussion after the flick.
THURSDAY 12•11•14• The Southampton Historical Museum hosts its
annual cookie exchange from 4 to 5 PM at the Rogers Mansion on Meeting House Lane. $5. Call to reserve a spot and get the details. 631-283-2494.
SATURDAY 12•13•14• Decorate a holiday tree for the birds during a
family workshop hosted by the South Fork Natural History Museum in Bridgehampton at 10 AM. $3. Call SoFo at 631-537-9735 to sign up.
• Southampton Arts Center will hold a holiday gathering from 4:30 to 6:30 PM. Celebrate the season with an exhibit of awkward family photos.
• The Madoo Conservancy, located in Sagaponack, will host its third annual Holiday Market. Featuring gifts galore for the gardener and music by the Bridgehampton High School Band. 10 AM to 3 PM.
• The Polar Bear Plunge for Hunger celebrates a decade of jumping into the ocean for a good cause. 10 AM Cooper’s Beach in Southampton. The plunge benefits the food pantry and outreach programs sponsored by Human Resources of the Hamptons. Call 631-283-3969 for details.
• The Shinnecock Nation Cultural Center and Museum will hold its 13th Annual Winter Festival from 11 AM to 5 PM. This year’s event will feature live dance and musical performances, art market and demonstrations, food and children’s activities. This is a free event and donations welcome. Located on Montauk Highway (Route 27A) and West Gate Road in Southampton.
• Hike Whiskey Hill with Jean Dodds of the Southampton Trails Preservation Society at 10 AM. Meet on Mill Path off Lopers Path in Bridgehampton. Call 631-599-2391 with questions.
SUNDAY 12•14 •14• Community Bible Church on Noyac Road in Sag
Harbor hosts a Christmas sing-along concert at 7 PM. All are welcome.
THURSDAY 12•11•14• The Wonder of Christmas, presented by Living
Water Church in Riverhead, features an amazing cast of singers, dancers and actors. Performances are tonight, Friday and Saturday at 7:30 PM; Sunday at 3 PM. Tickets are $24 for adults, $19 for seniors and kids in advance. $27 at the door. Call 631-722-4969 ext. 204.
SATURDAY 12•13•14• First Parish Church and Spiritual Renewal Center
hosts The Gift of Forgiveness Retreat from 1:30 to 4:30 PM. The suggested offering is $15, which can be paid in cash or check on the retreat day. If you have questions, contact Pastor Dianne at [email protected] or Vivian Eyre at [email protected].
SUNDAY 12•14•14• Temple Israel of Riverhead holds its annual
pancake brunch and Hanukkah Gelt raffle from 10 AM to 1 PM.
Park Office off Alewive Brook Road in East Hampton at 10 AM.
SUNDAY 12•14•14• See Santa at the Montauk Firehouse from 11
AM to 1 PM.
View our Pic Paper edition atwww.indyeastend.comwww.indyeastend.comwww.indyeastend.comwww.indyeastend.com
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10% OFFAny Repair or Installation
Offer applies to service calls or installations under $1000. Not to be combined with any other offers. Coupon must be
presented at time of service. Offer expires Dec. 31, 201 .
FREE Estimates
• Winterization Specialists
• Air Conditioning• Outdoor Showers• Pool Heaters• Bathrooms• Air Purification• Gas & Oil Furnaces
• Summer Openings• Boiler Replacement• Dehumidification• Hot Water Heaters• Additions & Alterations• Water Treatment Systems• Solar Installations
12 Years Experience
REAL ESTATEIN THE NEWS B-13 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT December 10, 2014THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman
Independent Dining
Prime Meats • GroceriesProduce • Take-Out
Fried Chicken • BBQ RibsSandwiches • Salads
Party Plattersand 6ft. HeroesBeer, Ice, Soda
Open 7 Days a WeekWholesale 725-9087Retail 725-9004
18 Park PlaceEast Hampton324-5400
Breakfast - Lunch - DinnerTake Out Orders
524 Montauk Highway, East QuogueTake-out 653-4042 Delivery
NEW MOON CAFEwww.nmcafe.com Established 1978
Dig out and meet us at The Moon!
• Dinner served Tuesday to Sunday at 5:00 pm
• Saturday Lunch at Noon• Sunday Brunch at Noon• Happy Hours 5:00-7:00pm
Check our Night lyBlackboard Specia ls
Table TalkGuild Hall in East Hampton presents Table Talk: First Growth
on Long Island with Michael Cinque – a primer and tasting of local wines on Sunday at 11 AM. Visit www.guildhall.com.
Ingredients (serves 4)2 mangos
(peeled & cut off the pit)3 peaches (cut off the pit)
½ lemon (juiced)1 c almond milk
6 ice cubes
Peach & Mango SmoothieMethod
Once the ingredients have been prepared, place them all in a blender cup and blend on high until smooth.
REAL ESTATE IN THE NEWSDecember 10, 2014 THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler WatchmanB-14 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
Sweet CharitiesBy Jessica Mackin
What Are You Doing
New Year’s Eve?
Attention East End restaurants, organizations, and clubs! Please be sure to tell us about your special plans for ringing in the New Year. Send press releases to [email protected] or [email protected] by December 17 and we’ll be sure to include them in our round up of NYE celebrations. As always, there is no charge for inclusion in our community calendars.
Deadline for submissions is Thursday at noon. Email to [email protected].
NaturopathicaNaturopathica is offering 20
percent off treatments if you donate a non-perishable food item when you visit the spa Monday through Friday,
Cinderella Cleaning
A Service that puts a glass touch fi nish on every job!
YEAR ROUND LOCAL HOUSE CARE
Weekly- Biweekly Cleanings
OPENINGS / CLOSINGS
House visits on monthly basis during winter months
Please call or leave message
631-702-3711
through December 31. To book, call 631-329-2525.
Ugly Christmas SweaterIn honor of National Ugly
Christmas Sweater Day (www.nationalunglychristmassweaterday.org), Harbor Pet in Greenport is hosting Long Island’s very first Ugly
Christmas Sweater party for dogs (and their owners) on Saturday from 1 to 5 PM.
This funny and festive event encourages pet owners to bring their dogs in their own ugly Christmas sweaters. Prizes will be awarded for the ugliest sweater, most creative, best owner and dog ugly sweater combo, and more.
In addition to the ugly sweaters prancing around, there is a pet food collection for North Fork Animal
Welfare League. Participants can purchase a pet food donation at Harbor Pet and a 10 percent discount will be given for pet food purchases made for the food drive. Each pup wearing an ugly holiday sweater will receive a special treat from Life is Grruff and refreshments for humans and dogs alike for added holiday cheer.
A photographer will be on hand to capture pet parents and their pups in all their ugly Christmas sweater glory.
For more information about this event or Harbor Pet, call 631-477-1518 or visit to learn more go to www.Harbor-Pet.com.
REAL ESTATEIN THE NEWS B-15 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT December 10, 2014THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman
ASTPORT LIQUORSEETastings Every Sat.
3-7 pm
All Major Credit Cards& Debit Cards Accepted
Senior DiscountTuesday
Gift Wrapping
$1.00 Off$10.00 Purchase
$2.00 Off$20.00 Purchase
Not to be combined with other offers. Not to be combined with other offers.
15 Eastport Manor Road•Eastport • 325-1388• Open 9am(In the Eastport Shopping Center, next to King Kullen)
MAY6 ..........Mother’s Day Issue13 ........Camps & Recreation #4 / On The Water Begins20 ........Memorial Day Issue / Hampton’s Home & Garden Guide27 ........Camps #5 / Boating & Fishing
JULY1 ..........4th of July / Summer Magazine8 ..........Family Fun15 ........Camps & Recreation #822 ........Pet Issue29 ........Sports & Recreation
AUGUST5 ..........Boating & Fishing12 ........Back To School19 ........Boating & Fishing 26 ........Dining Out
SEPTEMBER2 ..........Labor Day Issue9 ..........Auto Section16 ........NY Fashion Week Speical23 ........Special Sale Days30 ........Special Sale Days
OCTOBER7 ..........Columbus Day Issue / Hamptons Film Festival Guide14 ........Fall Dining Special21 ........Fall Dining Special28 ........BOO! Short & Scary Story Contest / Halloween Issue
NOVEMBER4 ..........Veterans Day Issue11 ........Holiday Gift Guide18 ........Specials Galore25 ........Thanksgiving Issue / Holidays On The East End
DECEMBER2 ..........Winter Travel / Spa9 ..........Holiday Gift Guide16 ........Holiday Gift Guide23&30. The Best of 2015 / New Year’s Issue