The Georgetowner May 5, 2010

Page 1

THE

GEORGETOWNER A Day

Since 1954

Volume 57 Number 16

The Jockey Club,

Redefined

at the Races

Food & Wine

Haute & Cool

1

Antiques Georgetown’s

Taste of History

off:

Face

Georgetown's

town vs. gown

Real Estate Special Agent Spotlight: Jennie Mann Featured Property Real Estate Sales

Elizabeth Wulff Wine

May 5 - 18 2010


Available in select areas Washington, DC $1,500,000

Washington, City, State DC

$1,325,000 $0,000,000

Charming, spacious, and perfect 1937 Cleveland Park Descriptive text willstunning go here.updates. The textOver should be six brick Colonial with $400,000 in updates since out 2006. WarmThehardwood floors. lines and dropped in white. font is Helvetica Gourmet Sumptuous master two LT Std Boldkitchen. Condensed at 7.232 point sizesuite, and 8.968 fireplaces. Private two-car parking. point leading. The garden, font hasand a Character Style sheet Woodley Park Sales 202.483.6300(O) set up called “TEXT.” The text is justified. Agent Name 000.000.0000/ 000.000.0000 (O).

Oakton, VA $1,090,000 City, State Classic 6BR contemporary nestled on 6$0,000,000 private acres. Completely top-of-the-line everything. Descriptive updated text will with go here. The text should be six Two suites,out gorgeous with linesmaster and dropped in white.gourmet The fontkitchen is Helvetica heated limestone floor and stunning Amazing LT Std Bold Condensed at 7.232 pointviews. size and 8.968 architectural details throughout. www.lilian.com point Jorgenson leading. The703.407.0766/ font has a Character Style sheet Lilian 703.390.1990(O) set up called “TEXT.” The text is justified. Agent Name 000.000.0000/ 000.000.0000 (O).

City, State DC Washington,

$0,000,000 $950,000

VERY UNUSUAL! Gracious Victorian AMAZING Descriptive text will go here. The textplus should be six Carriage House offers fabulous and lines and dropped out in white. Theopportunity font is Helvetica flexibility. or convert condos or 8.968 B&B, LT Std BoldRestore Condensed at 7.232 to point size and with bedrooms and has 3 baths. Beautiful point 11 leading. The font a Character Styleoriginal sheet staircase. Currently zoned commercial. Park 6 or set up called “TEXT.” The text is justified. more cars. Agent Chase Name 000.000.0000/ 000.000.0000 (O). Chevy Sales 202.363.9700(O)

Washington, City, State DC

$1,525,000 $0,000,000

Large, elegant 1927 Center Hall Colonial near Descriptive Beautiful text will go here. The text should be six Cathedral. proportions. 6 Bedrooms, 4.5 lines and white.big TheLower font isLevel Helvetica Baths, Sundropped Room, out SideinPorch, with Au PairBold SuiteCondensed and Kitchenette. fireplace, LT Std at 7.232Hardwoods, point size and 8.968 crown moldings. Walk to everything! point leading. TheGarage. font has a Character Style sheet Cheryl Kurss “TEXT.” 301.346.6615/ set up called The text202.363.9700(O) is justified. Agent Name 000.000.0000/ 000.000.0000 (O).

$300k Price Reduction. This stunning detached Victorian home epitomizes elegance. Thoughtfully restored, this home boasts intricate details, soaring ceilings, elegant proportions, exquisite millwork, multiple fireplaces with original mantles and a grand staircase. Steps City, State $0,000,000 to Logan Circle with ample Descriptive text will go here. The text should be six parking. lines and dropped out in white. The font is Helvetica LT Std Bold Condensed Judith at 7.232Levin point& size and 8.968 point leading. The font Peggy has a Ferris Character Style sheet 202.438.1524/ set up called “TEXT.” The text is justified. 202.364.1300(O) Agent Name 000.000.0000/ 000.000.0000 (O).

We invite you to tour all of our luxury listings at www.extraordinaryproperties.com.

City, State DC Washington,

$0,000,000 $1,895,000

Washington text Harbour withshould river beview. Descriptive will goPenthouse here. The text six Magnificent 2 bedroom bath duplex with fireplace. lines and dropped out in2.5white. The font is Helvetica Dazzling renovation. sq.ft.point of luxurious LT Std Bold Condensed2400 at 7.232 size and living. 8.968 Two balconies, House technology, point leading. TheSmart font has a Character Styleunique sheet space, Incredible storage. Pool, parking & concierge. set up called “TEXT.” The text is justified. Georgetown Sales 202.944.8400(O) Agent Name 000.000.0000/ 000.000.0000 (O).

City, State DC Washington,

$0,000,000 $1,995,000

Made for parties! Charm, comfort, space andbe great Descriptive text will go here. The text should six flow finished 7 Bedrooms, Baths, lines on andfour dropped outlevels. in white. The font is4.5 Helvetica Sunroom and grand main Room. Pair LT Std Bold Condensed at level 7.232Family point size andAu8.968 Suite/Office. totally private sunken Patio point leading.Enchanting, The font has a Character Style sheet and Garden with pond. Ideal location. set up called “TEXT.” The text is justified. Chevy Chase Sales202.363.9700(O) Agent Name 000.000.0000/ 000.000.0000 (O).

City, State

Terri Robinson 202.607.7737$0,000,000

Descriptive text will go here. The text should be six Charlie Hein lines and dropped out in202.244.5957/ white. The font is Helvetica LT Std Bold Condensed at 7.232 point size and 8.968 202.944.8400(O) point leading. The font has a Character Style sheet set up called “TEXT.” The text is justified. Agent Name 000.000.0000/ 000.000.0000 (O).

Vienna, VA City, State

$1,350,000 $0,000,000

City, State Chevy Chase, DC

$0,000,000 $785,000

Sunny and bright Colonial withThe Spacious 3 Bedrooms Descriptive text will go here. text should be six plus aand large finished bedroom and is 3 full baths. lines dropped outattic in white. The font Helvetica Entrance to Living roompoint with size wood LT Std BoldFoyer Condensed at 7.232 andburning 8.968 fireplace and two doors to Den. Large point leading. The French font has a Character Style square sheet Dining room with table space for 8-12. set up called “TEXT.” The text is justified. Spring Valley Miller Sales 202-362-1300(O) Agent Name 000.000.0000/ 000.000.0000 (O).

Washington, DC $1,579,000

City, State DC Washington,

$0,000,000 $1,100,000

Descriptive text go here. The text Overlooking the will Kennedy Center, this should 2500+ be sq.six ft. custom 3BR/2.5BA lines andrenovated dropped out in white. luxury The fontcondominium is Helvetica offers everyCondensed amenity. atLocated in size a full-service LT Std Bold 7.232 point and 8.968 building with on-site desk,Style and sheet 2-car point leading. The fontstaff, has 24-hour a Character parking plus storage. set up called “TEXT.” The text is justified. Judi Peggy Ferris 000.000.0000 (O). AgentLevin Name& 000.000.0000/ 202.438.1524/ 202.346.1300(O)

City, StateVA McLean,

$0,000,000 $1,025,000

Descriptive textyet willspacious go here.and Thevery textlite should be six Charming cozy and bright! Colonial minutes to Tyson’s/DC/ lines and nestled dropped in outtrees in white. The font is Helvetica Capitol Hill/Airports. 4-5atbdrms 4.5 baths. Updated LT Std Bold Condensed 7.232 –point size and 8.968 stylishleading. kitchen,Thehardwoods, rm, 2-car point font has a sun Character Stylegarage, sheet w/oup lower level. Don’tThe miss! set called “TEXT.” text is justified. McLean Sales 703.790.1990(O) Agent Name 000.000.0000/ 000.000.0000 (O).

All Properties Offered Internationally

www.extraordinaryproperties.com www.extraordinaryproperties.com 2 May 5, 2010 gmg, Inc.

Spectacular 3 year old detached TH. In Foggy Bottom secluded court. 3 bedroom, 2.5 baths, Au Pair suite, with roof-top views. European cabinets, steam shower, unique architect’s residence.

Gorgeous 5BR custon Colonial with 3 finished levels. Descriptive text will go here. The text should be six Dream kitchen, 2-story family room, formal living & lines dropped out indivine white.master The fontsuite is Helvetica diningandrooms, library, and the LT Std level Bold Condensed at 7.232 size and ower features a rec area,point bedroom, full8.968 bath, point leading. has a www.lilian.com Character Style sheet exercise roomThe and font flex suite. set up Jorgenson called “TEXT.” The text is justifi ed. Lilian 703.407.0766/ 703.790.1990(O) Agent Name 000.000.0000/ 000.000.0000 (O).

Washington, DC $765,000 Mint condition, freshly painted, beautifully renovated, inside and out! Light, airy, open Federal-style home in sought-after Georgetown. Fully-walled, completely private brick garden area. Gourmet kitchen with stainless steel appliances, granite countertops and City, State gorgeous wood$0,000,000 cabinetry. with marble Descriptive text will goBaths here. remodeled The text should be six travertine. Two of lines and dropped out inand white. The font is sets Helvetica French doors, plantation LT Std Bold Condensed at 7.232 point size and 8.968 shutters throughout! point leading. The font has a Character Style sheet Gorgeous! set up called “TEXT.” The text is justified. Agent Name 000.000.0000/ 000.000.0000 Spring Valley Miller(O). Sales 202-362-1300(O)

Washington, DC $1,895,000

Photo Credit Here

® ®

Victorian splendor and modern updates in this 5 bedroom bay front with great open floor plan! Grand rooms, six fireplaces, gourmet kitchen, sumptuous master suite, in-law suite, private rear patio and garden, and 2-car City, State parking. A rare$0,000,000 offering. Descriptive text will go here. The text should be six Park Sales lines and dropped out inWoodley white. The font is Helvetica 202.483.6300(O) LT Std Bold Condensed at 7.232 point size and 8.968 point leading. The font has a Character Style sheet set up called “TEXT.” The text is justified. Agent Name 000.000.0000/ 000.000.0000 (O).


Serving Washington, DC Since 1954

“The Newspaper Whose Influence Far Exceeds Its Size”

Vol. 57, No. 16

GM G georgetown media group

Publisher Sonya Bernhardt Editor at Large David Roffman Feature Editors Garrett Faulkner Gary Tischler Publisher’s Assistant Siobhan Catanzaro Contributors Alexis Miller Andrew O’Neill Amanda Gokee Jack Evans Jody Kurash Bill Starrels Linda Roth Jordan Wright Mary Bird Kathy Corrigall Claire Swift Ari Post Pam Burns John Blee Michelle Galler Jennifer Gray Lauretta McCoy Donna Evers Photographers Yvonne Taylor Tom Wolff Neshan Naltchayan Jeff Malet Malek Naz Freidouni Robert Devaney

contents

About the Cover: Elizabeth Wulff Wine, Scandinavian Antiques Photo by Tom Wolff

4-5 — GT Observer 6-7 — All Things Media State of the Media

About our

contributors

8-9 — Editorial/Opinion

Elizabeth Saverino is a freelance writer for The Georgetowner’s Body and Soul Column. Originally from western New York, she has a degree in biomedical sciences and currently consults at the National Institutes of Health. Her previous experiences focused on obesity research while working closely with patients on dietary and behavioral modification in an obesity clinic. She has also spent time working in health policy. She is a fitness and health enthusiast and has special interests in health promotion through social media, nutrition, and obesity/diabetes prevention.

10 — Real Estate Sales 11 — Historic D.C. Cleveland Park and the beautiful Frances Folsom 12-13 — Real Estate Agent Spotlight Featured Property

Gary Tischler has written for the Georgetowner for 30 years, covering the arts and entertainment community, museums, politics and writing profiles of notable — and regular — folks during that time. He lives in Adams Morgan, where he is wellknown for being a companion to his Bichon Frise, Bailey. He was awarded two Associated Press feature writing prizes for his work with two daily newspapers in the San Francisco Bay area prior to coming to Washington. Tischler is a native of Munich, Germany.

14-15 — Performance/Museum 16-17 — Cover Story Antiques of Georgetown 18-19 — In Country

Advertising Director Charlie Louis

22-23 — Food & Wine

Graphic Design Alyssa Loope Jennifer Merino Counsel Juan Chardiet, Attorney Published by Georgetown Media Group, Inc. 1054 Potomac St., N.W. Washington, DC 20007 Phone: (202) 338-4833 Fax: (202) 338-3292 editorial@georgetowner.com www.georgetowner.com Find us on Twitter (SonyaBernhardt) or Facebook (I Love The Georgetowner) The Georgetowner is published every other Wednesday. The opinions of our writers and columnists do not necessarily reflect the editorial and corporate opinions of The Georgetowner newspaper. The Georgetowner accepts no responsibility for unsolicited manuscripts or photographs and assumes no liability for products or services advertised herein. The Georgetowner reserves the right to edit, re-write, or refuse material and is not responsible for errors or omissions. Copyright, 2009.

24 — Body & Soul 25 — Calendar 28 —Haute & Cool A Day at the Races 29-31— Social Scene Stars Align for White House Correspondents’ Dinner Georgetown House Tour Patron’s Party N St. Village Gala We also want to thank Talia Ran, Chris Klug, Amelia Knight and Jennifer Swift, our spring 2010 interns. While taking an intensive journalism curriculum at GWU’s Semester in Washington Journalism program, they managed to learn the ins and outs of our publication and provide us with a comprehensive strategy to enhance our Web-based content. We appreciate their input and wish them the best of luck!

Follow us on

Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage is Today’s solution to selling your home. The key to selling properly priced residential real estate is

EXPOSURE Spending over $40 million annually & reaching over 20 million viewers per month with multiple photos

202.333.6100

Get the Pictures & the Facts gmg, Inc. May 5, 2010 3


GT

Observer

Compiled by Garrett Faulkner and Amanda Gokee

heated words fly in campus battle

G

eorgetown is simmering, change is in the air, and University’s 10-year plan is a polished 2.0 version, new and improved, or so some would say. Last Monday, residents gathered for a meeting with the University, represented by Linda Greenan, Assistant Vice President of External Relations, Alan Brangman, University architect, Todd Olson, Vice President of Student Affairs and Provost James O’Donnell.   To say the meeting was business, cut and dried, simply would not be true.   Residents were indignant. One went so far to exclaim, “My quality of life is terrible … I don’t know when a toga party is going to erupt on my block!”   Toga parties excepted, the 10-year campus plan is taking a definite form as it approaches the final stages of planning. Greenan was clear from the get-go that, “We don’t intend that there will be changes,” which means that the plan presented Monday will be the same plan that will come before the zoning board in late May or early June.   As of the Monday meeting, there are several changes included in the updated plan, such as the removal of the Campus Convocation Center. For those concerned about toga parties, the plan promises to double the SNAP car patrol, a University program employing a security officer and car to patrol the neighborhood, addressing noise complaints and other behavior issues. Moreover, there will be two community advisers, explained as “live-in educational and disciplinary advisers for off-campus students and

liaisons to the local community.” They are expected to start in August 2010. Another addition will be three MPD reimbursable detail officers for the academic year as a pilot program. If the program succeeds in the first year, officers will remain during the summer months.   One of the bigger points of contention is the proposed enrollment increases. The University is protective of its flexibility in projecting growth, as they look forward to creating “innovative programs that appeal to professionals.” Estimates have been made however, with a projected graduate increase of approximately 2,475 students, while non-traditional undergraduate enrollment is expected to grow by 104 students, based on 2010 data.   This growth means that the campus itself will be expanding, and one contentious location for growth is the 1789 block. Alan Brangman discussed several key changes regarding this historic area. Brangman was emphatic that all building on the block will take place on University land; no renovation will take place outside campus boundaries. Moreover, the number of graduate beds proposed was reduced from 300 to 120 beds. The building plans themselves also were reduced from five stories to two or three. Parking will be available under this structure, with 10 percent allotted to residents. A ZipCar presence is also a possibility, although nothing has been confirmed yet.   Brangman was insistent that although the plan will be presented to the zoning commission, “this doesn’t close out the process” and neighborhood input will still be considered. In

DR. TIRDAD FATTAHI & ASSOCIATES FAMILY & COSMETIC DENTISTRY Gentle dentistry in the most relaxed and caring environment. Invisalign (wire-free braces) Digital Xray Veneers & Porcelain restorations Digital Charts Implant Restorations One Hour Whitening Computer designed 1 hour Crowns General/ Child dentistry We also speak Farsi, Armenian & Spanish

“Top Dentist of Washington, D.C. 2005, 2006, 2007, & 2008” (Consumer Checkbook Magazine)

“America’s Top Dentists 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, & 2008” (Consumer’s Research Council of America)

The Global Directory of Who’s Who 2007

Visit us at www.drfattahi.com

State of the Art New Location 4840 MacArthur Blvd. NW Suite 101 Washington DC 20007 New Patient Adult: $75.00 ($287.00 value) Children under 14: $60.00 ($250.00 value) Includes Comprehensive Exam, X-rays, Cleaning and Fluoride. Limited time offer - (Not valid with other offers, discounts, or third party billing)

or call our office at 202.338.7499 Tirdad Fattahi, D.D.S. 4840 MacArthur Blvd. NW. Suite 101 Washington, DC 20007

4 May 5, 2010 gmg, Inc.

fact, the University is emphasizing the spirit of collaboration, repeating their commitment that “the dialogue doesn’t stop,” as Greenan stated. In a later meeting with The Georgetowner, she cited changes made in 2006 and 2008 as clear evidence of the University’s commitment to working with the community to better implement the changes. So far, she said, the University has received its share of positive, albeit quiet feedback from less vociferous neighbors.   “People appreciate Georgetown University,” she said. “They see us as part of the community.” She pointed out that the students had done a lot in the community, both with the University and as individuals: “They are dogwalkers, babysitters … A lot of people like our students.”   Olson, who also talked with us after the forum, recounted a recent Community Clean Up day, with students and residents working side by side to clean up Georgetown. They also pointed out that the University has continually supported Trees for Georgetown and the Georgetown Senior Center. “The large majority of our students deserve and earn our respect,” he said at the forum, advocating minimal police involvement in student conduct issues. He later outlined an “ambitious, evolutionary way” of improving discipline through In fact, data collected by the University even shows that as high as 75 percent of houses that called the University to report problems have never been heard from again. These statistics raise hopes that an additional SNAP car will be effective in resolving neighborhood issues. Olson makes the point that calling 911 can take MPD officers off of the streets where they are most needed, drawing

them into a situation better suited for a SNAP officer, who can alert the University on the issue and address it appropriately.   Despite what the statistics may be, there is clearly a pervasive neighborhood belief that “it is not enough.” Some residents are angry, feeling that their voices are not being heard, or that they are simply being ignored by the University, which, they claim, is simply pushing the plans through, disregarding many complaints and issues. ANC Chairman Ron Lewis, for one, was vocal, warning the University against disregarding the community’s input as they go forward to the zoning commission.   For its part, the University has expressed its commitment to stay engaged with the community. “We are constantly out in the community,” Greenan explained. “We are constantly meeting with people.” And while residents have raised “fair issues” in the past, she said recent efforts at civil, one-on-one talks with the community “didn’t get off the ground.”   But in spite these efforts, many residents are still crying foul. “I feel like we’re here just so you can check a box off with the city,” one neighbor said at the forum, referring to what he perceived was the University’s cursory probing of community input. Clearly, the town and gown tensions are far from settled as the 10year plan approaches its ultimate review by the zoning commission. If the plan is approved, it will be unclear what role the community will play in planning the joint future of the neighborhood and the campus. — A.G.


ANC Update: More Liquor Licenses for Georgetown?

T

he Advisory Neighborhood Commission 2E’s May meeting began on a sobering note, with the Metro Police Department’s John Hedgecock admitting that Georgetown — and the District at large — has experienced what he called a “spike in violent crime.” The already laconic lieutenant brusquely cited 21 robberies occurring in Georgetown this year, in addition to 22 burglaries (though the latter figure has declined since last year). Hedgecock said that incidents have begun a noticeable shift from business corridors on M Street and Wisconsin Avenue to residential areas, likely due to the BID-sponsored reimbursable detail program keeping watch over the commercial sector. He advised residents to be on high alert after dark or in isolated sections of the neighborhood, to remove valuables from cars and to use 911 for any suspicious activity.   Burleith resident Steve Brown, who raised eyebrows last month after posting photos of partying University students on his none-toosubtly titled blog drunkengeorgetownstudents. com, interjected to report threats made against him by individuals he presumed were students. Brown’s original incarnation of the site, which identified the offending party houses and showed the faces of their residents, drew the ire of the student community and a recommendation from police that he blur any identifying information in his photos. The commission hesitated at Brown’s request for a formal condemnation of the threats, desiring to look into the matter more closely first, but Chairman Ron Lewis piped up with a de facto statement.   “We abhor threats against our residents,” Lewis said emphatically. “[Threats] will be taken very seriously. We urge MPD to do everything in their power … where there is an unlawful threat, to investigate it.” Hedgecock agreed, encouraging residents to call authorities if they ever feel in danger.   A lively and, at times, heated discussion over the upcoming liquor moratorium renewal occupied most of the evening. The restriction on liquor licenses in central Georgetown, last renewed in 2005, expired last month and has been extended until early June, when a meeting of the District’s Alcoholic Beverage Regulation Administration will meet to outline the neighborhood’s next round of liquor regulations. While the moratorium was originally instituted to cur-

tail the establishment of restaurants in Georgetown in favor of retail stores, the policy has taken flak in recent years for its inflexibility and the detrimental effect it has on fledgling eateries looking to set up shop. While the total number of licenses has been capped, incoming restaurateurs have decried the fact that 18 licenses are currently in safekeeping (read: sitting unused). The moratorium law allows restaurant owners to hold their license in safekeeping indefinitely until they can find a buyer, even if they no longer operate a food establishment. Defunct licenses in safekeeping, then, have become a finite resource and a valuable commodity in Georgetown, with recent sale prices for licenses stretching into the tens of thousands.   In response, the ANC, under Commissioner Bill Starrels’ leadership, plans to petition ABRA for an increase in the moratorium cap by seven licenses (up from their previous request of two), which Chairman Lewis hoped would ballast the current shortage. The resolution also imposes expiration dates on any licenses in limbo, which would likely drive their value down and encourage licensees to sell faster. Commissioner Charles Eason disagreed with the motion, arguing that existing licenses should be tapped immediately.   “It doesn’t make sense to add two, seven or 50 licenses when there are licenses in safekeeping,” Eason said. He advocated exclusively instituting time limits to shake loose any permits hoarded by former restaurant owners. CAG President Jennifer Altemus nodded in agreement, saying legislation to that end is already being discussed in the city council. Starrels’ resolution, however, was passed by the commission, with only Eason opposed.   Crepe Amour, the owner-rebranded creperie that once housed Amma’s Vegetarian Kitchen, stood up afterward to petition for a 24-hour food service permit and a half-hour extension to their liquor service hours. Representatives for the sleek café, which also houses a wing bar and 40 seats on its upper level, said “there is ample seating upstairs … We are still a sit-down restaurant.”   But commissioners were leery of a phrase used by the company at last month’s meeting: “grab-and-go.” The board of seven — with the possible exception of University commissioner Aaron Golds — shifted uncomfortably at what

seemed a specter of Philly Pizza, once located less than a block around the corner.   “I’m very skeptical of the request we have here,” said 2E06 Tom Birch. “I don’t think it’s fair to the community for us to go forward with this,” given the precedent set by the Philly debacle.

Supporting his student constituency (he’s a student himself), Golds defended the restaurant, saying “there are many more seats than [Philly].” He added that he opposed punitive action against an establishment with no ties to earlier troublemakers.   The commission voted to protest the petition until further notice. — G.F.

(FPSHFUPXO 6OJWFSTJUZ

46..&3 %": $".1 "5 :"5&4 '*&-% )064&

gmg, Inc. May 5, 2010 5


all

things

media

STATE OF THE MEDIA: OPRAH, WHITE HOUSE CORRESPONDENTS AND THE GEORGETOWN PUBLIC LIBRARY By Claire Sanders Swift

M

ay 3, 2010 — Georgetown — Last Saturday, while every White House correspondent in town was dusting off their tuxedo or getting a blow dry, there was Kitty Kelley, famed author of “Oprah: A Biography,” in the heart of Georgetown selling and signing her books for the benefit of the Georgetown/D.C. Public Library. We had interviewed her through the years when I was at ABC news and NBC News, and she was always considered controversial. Her ‘unauthorized’ biographies on the famous icons of our time — Jackie O, Frank Sinatra, Nancy Reagan, the Bushes — dished the dirt and then some (when it wasn’t necessarily as accepted), and sold millions and millions of copies. She has been interviewed by almost every major media outlet out there, including Larry King, Barbara Walters, GMA, The Today Show and 20/20 (when you meet her in person you understand why, she’s quite charming and gorgeous). When I asked her how the book was doing this time around, she kindly whispered, “It will be on the best-

6 May 5, 2010 gmg, Inc.

seller list tomorrow.” What does this have to do with the state of the media? Keep reading.   That evening, another icon, our President Barack Obama, showed NBC and the world who had the better writing team as he wowed the socks off of the 3,000 or so journalists, White

House correspondents and their star-studded friends with self-deprecating jokes fit for, well, a President and for national broadcast. The guest comedian, Jay Leno, was having a bad hair day, totally scripted and clearly just off of the plane from Los Angeles. Can you say red-eye? He missed a beat or two. I’ve met him in person and he’s just one of the great performers of our time. It wasn’t his job to upstage the President. Obama quipped he was glad he was not following Jay Leno because we all know what happens to the act that follows Jay Leno. There was great laughter and it went on and on to great network fanfare.   What’s the official state of the media in 2010? Ad revenues are shrinking, news audiences are morphing, and people aren’t loyal to one news source any longer, according to Amy Mitchell of the Pew Research Center’s Project for Excellence in Journalism, but a good joke or a steamy celebrity biography can still win an audience. Pew’s sobering report confirmed the inevitable: that 1) The notion of a primary news source is obsolete. 92 percent get news from multiple platforms, let alone news sources. 2) Old media still dominate online but that is changing. 3) Revenues are way, way down. Funding for real reporters has decreased dramatically with this loss. 4) Nobody knows where to go until we figure this all out. Basically in the news business it’s a free-for-all, especially now that news users are getting their news content from friends and

social media sites. It’s a brave new world out there. Guess who dominated in revenues last year? Fox News!   Back to my chance meeting with Kitty. “How many interviews do you have lined up, Kitty?” I asked. (the book was released week before last) “We’ll see,” she said. The book was released on April 13, and though she has already been interviewed by the Today Show and Fox News,


many other outlets, including ABC, Larry King, David Letterman and a host of others declined, due to their allegiance with Oprah. When you dis probably the most famous and enterprising black woman of our time, you are sure to make enemies and friends at the same time. And when you are exposing the ugly secrets of that specific media mogul, who, Kelley reports, is also one of the most controlling forces of our time and has some ugly secrets. According to Kelley, some of the major news media aren’t going to touch the subject. This is Oprah. “Did you know there are 23,000 websites on how to get on the Oprah show?� said Kelley. I bought the book. And the next day, there she was, just like she said, #2 on the New York Times bestseller list in the first two weeks of being released — regardless of network fanfare.   How does this relate to our current state of the media? Information and news are going to continue to be dispersed and where that news is coming from and going is an open field. And no matter how low you go, or how high you fly, if you play your cards right and the stars align you can hit pay dirt, make it on the bestseller list or, like President Obama’s White House correspondents speech, get 455,000 hits in one day on C-Span.

Is your mortgage safe and sound? Entrusting the long-term mortgage financing of your home, your largest and most precious asset, is a decision which shouldn’t be made lightly. For more than 120 years, The National Capital Bank of Washington has adhered to the principles of strength, integrity and unparalleled customer care. We are rated among the “20 Strongest Banks in America,� yet we are small enough to address our customers’ personal concerns. Let us give you the same peace of mind that we have provided to generations of homeowners in more than a century of serving their needs.

For more information on the Pew Center’s report, visit www.stateofthemedia.org/2010/ 316 Pennsylvania Avenue, SE, Washington, DC 20003 • 202-546-8000

Claire Sanders Swift is a broadcast journalist turned national media consultant. All Things Media is a monthly column. Contact claire@clairemedia.com with comments.

Let us teach you

HOW TO BE SUCCESSFUL In the Marketing and Sales of Residential Property in Georgetown and Environs. Contact me to ďŹ nd out how to get started with the leading real estate ďŹ rm in the mid-Atlantic area.

Darrell Parsons darrell@lnf.com

202.944.8400 Long & Foster Real Estate

Christie’s Great Estates Georgetown - 1680 Wisconsin Ave, NW

SARAH GORMAN, INC. REAL ESTATE

5228 44th Street, NW, Washington, DC 20015 • 202-966-2688 www.NationalCapitalBank.com

Place your trust in the largest private lender in the Washington Metro Area.

WASHINGTON, D.C.

Renovation Loans

202.333.1650

Bridge Financing Refinance and lower your monthly payments Low Closing Costs Free Pre-approvals

202.256.7777 / www.GreggBusch.com

gmg, Inc. May 5, 2010 7


Editorial/opinion

The blame game, again

Jack

R

Report

emember that big, rollout announcement that the Washington Teachers’ Union and Chancellor Michelle Rhee had finally reached an agreement on the teacher’s contract?   The pact announcement was a big feather in the caps of both Rhee and D.C. Mayor Adrian Fenty, who are joined at the political hip in their quest for reforming District schools.   So what’s happened?   Well, nothing, sort of.   The pact, which would need to have the approval of CFO Natwar Gandhi and the city council, as well as ratification by the teacher’s union membership, remains in limbo. The problem — actually, make that problems, are:   Among other things, the pact calls for 20 percent pay increases over 5 years for the teachers. Part of that money was supposed to come from private funding, the rest from DCPS.   Except it appears — and appears is the

operating word — the money isn’t there. Not according to Gandhi, who’s also objecting to the private funding. Initially, Rhee had stunned everyone by announcing that there was a surplus in the budget, which led to a lot of acrimonious revisiting of the firing of nearly 300 teachers last fall.   But Gandhi says there is no surplus, and that there is, in fact, a deficit. Both Rhee and Gandhi testified last week, but could only offer uncertainties. Councilmembers complained that no one seemed to have a handle on the numbers.   Gandhi complained that the private funding comes with unacceptable conditions and allows the funders too much control.   Rhee and some council members blamed the CFO’s office for not providing accurate numbers. Union leaders fretted over the confusion, which holds up a contract vote.   All parties are searching for ways to cut the DCPS budget, and to find additional moneys.   Meantime, there’s recrimination — again — blame gaming and confusion. That’s certainly not a healthy way to conduct either contract negotiations or budget planning.

Evans

The anticipation at the Verizon Center last Wednesday night could not have been greater. The Washington Capitals, our great hockey team with the best record in the National Hockey League, was playing in Game 7 of the first round of the playoffs against the Montreal Canadiens.   The Caps, after losing the first game at home, ran off three straight wins and led the series 3-1. They then lost one at home and one in Montreal. We all knew the Caps were the better team and looked forward to a great victory at home. It was not to be and we lost 2-1. Thus another disappointing end for a

Washington team, a city that hasn’t had a championship in the big four since the Redskins won the Super Bowl in 1992.   Washington has now gone longer than any other city without a championship in a major sport. (As an aside, kudos to Mark Ein of the Kastles and D.C. United — both teams have brought championships home to the District.)   So where is the future of Washington sports headed? Actually, to a very promising place.   The Capitals will be back next year just as good and hopefully advance to the finals. The Redskins appear to have a good coach, a new quarterback, and a new outlook. We will all have our fingers crossed come September. The Wizards franchise may have a future. Ted Leonsis (of Caps fame) now owns them and we hope he can bring his winning ways to our lackluster basketball team. Good luck, Ted.   Finally, have you been to a Nats baseball game this year? Go. The team has a winning record and is off to its best start since their first season in 2005. It’s probably too early to tell but we may be in for an exciting summer.   Here’s to the future of Washington professional sports. The day will come when we again bring home a championship. The author is a city councilmember representing District Ward 2.

Point/Counterpoint: Georgetown’s campus plan Town and Gown. Where do the two sides stand?

S

ince November 2008, Georgetown University has met with community leaders and residents more than 10 times to discuss ideas and share information relative to the University’s proposed 20102020 campus plan. Unfortunately, and to the disappointment of everyone engaged in this process, the proposals discussed at the latest meeting on April 26 yielded little agreement on two primary points: graduate enrollment proposals, and on-campus housing for fulltime traditional undergraduates.   The University’s 10-year plan does not propose any enrollment growth for full-time traditional undergraduates or medical students — the two student groups most likely to live near campus. It does propose modest growth of 104 nontraditional undergraduates — a group that includes students not likely to live near campus, such as commuters, veterans, students over 25years old, and second-degree nursing students who have returned to school.   The plan also includes targeted growth of 2,475 graduate and professional students. Critics of the plan have predicted dire consequences if this growth is approved. They claim this will lead to a new market for graduate group housing. We believe these concerns are unwarranted.   1370 of the new graduate students would come from the School of Continuing Studies which attracts professionals with full-time jobs, families and homes outside the surrounding area. The average age is 31 and, in 2009, only 77 SCS students lived in ZIP code 20007.   The other graduate programs are projected to grow by 1095 over the 10-year period of the plan. The total number of graduate students living in ZIP code 20007 has remained relatively constant since 2000, even as enrollment increased. In West Georgetown, the number went from 75 in 2000 to 58 in 2009.

8 May 5, 2010 gmg, Inc.

Again, in 2009, only a fraction of the graduate students in these programs reported living in ZIP code 20007. Their average age is 28, and many live alone or with one other person.   Our decision not to build additional on-campus undergraduate housing came after serious study and consideration. Because we can currently house 84 percent of the traditional full-time undergraduate population on our campus, and we aren’t proposing to increase this population, we felt that our resources are better focused on athletic, library and student activity facilities. Moreover, the last few 10-year plans have focused largely on additional student housing, adding nearly 3,000 beds to campus.   In relation to these proposals, our plan acknowledges and includes proposals to address traffic caused in the area by graduate students arriving after 4 p.m. It also includes proposals to strengthen off-campus programs to enhance the University’s ability to manage the impacts of students who live near campus.   Georgetown University’s campus plan is an honest and informed assessment of the institution’s needs and objectives that reflects a genuine interest in collaborating with our neighbors toward the betterment of our community. Over more than two centuries, the University has made significant contributions to the economic, cultural, intellectual and social fabric of both local neighborhoods and the larger Washington, D.C. region. These relationships are an important part of our identity and tradition and we take our role as good citizen seriously. It is with this in mind that we have developed our 2010-2020 campus plan. We invite everyone to read it and contact us with questions or concerns.   For more information, visit community.georgetown.edu/campusplan.html. Linda Greenan Associate Vice President Relations Georgetown University

for

External

O

n Monday, April 26, Georgetown University presented their final campus plan for 2010-2020. Without substantive changes, the plan is bad for the community and the District of Columbia.   GU’s 2010-2020 campus plan doesn’t resolve existing objectionable conditions and will continue to negatively impact the surrounding communities. Specifically, GU states it plans to add 3,205 additional graduate students from 2009 to 2020, reaching a total graduate enrollment of 8,750. Currently, approximately 1,130 graduate students rent in ZIP code 20007 and, using GU’s numbers, we can reasonably project that at least 465 more students will seek housing in the nearby communities. This enrollment increase is likely to result in an increase of rental group homes and further compromise the housing stock and character of Georgetown and Burleith. We also have significant concerns about the University’s enrollment projections, since GU has greatly exceeded the enrollment numbers that it presented to the community and to the D.C. Office of Planning back in 2000, when it predicted a graduate student total of 3,873 in 2010 versus 6,275 actual students today. Nothing in the plan addresses the impacts of the wrong projections set forth by GU in the 20002010 campus plan submissions.   Community improvements and neighborhood conservation are nowhere to be seen in the plan. Instead, GU is planning to build 80 apartments and demolish townhomes on the 1789 block. This block was added to the campus in 1973. Finally, most issues raised by the community have been ignored or addressed by palliative solutions.   The D.C. city council adopted a new Comprehensive Plan in December 2006; it became effective in March 2007. According to the Comprehensive Plan, D.C. encourages the growth of universities in a manner that 1) supports community improvement and neighborhood conservation, 2) discourages university actions that

would adversely affect the character or quality of life in surrounding residential areas, 3) requires campus plans to address issues raised by the surrounding communities, 4) encourages on-campus housing in order to reduce impacts on the housing stock in adjacent communities, 5) promotes the development of satellite campuses to relieve growth pressure on neighborhoods.   Georgetown University has been an integral part of Georgetown for many years. It’s an important and reputable academic institution. They plan for longer than just 10 years. The question for all to consider is how we, as residents and voters, GU, the city council and mayor envision the future of our neighborhoods.   GU cannot grow to the west or south and they are left with only two options: comply with the Comprehensive Plan and help improve our neighborhoods, or keep increasing growth pressure on adjacent communities, which could ultimately turn Burleith and Georgetown into college towns.   GU should reduce the number of students in the residential areas (starting from GU-owned homes outside of campus), re-adopt their goal of housing 100 percent of undergraduates on campus, desist from demolishing houses on the 1789 block, limit new construction to administrative offices, commit not to increase emissions from their smokestack, limit the traffic and parking impact on the neighborhood and link all enrollment increases to housing availability on campus.   Visit www.cagtown.org to learn how you can help ensure responsible growth for our neighborhood. GU Relations Committee Citizens Association of Georgetown


Opinion

A letter to the editor To the editor: I generally look forward to useful and interesting information regarding local real estate in your publication, but was surprised at the similarly dismissive responses from Darrell Parsons to consecutive readers’ questions, published in the 24 March 2010 “Ask the Realtor” column.   Responding to a reasonable question from Tenleytown’s Norma T. regarding recommended areas to focus her house improvement investment, Mr. Parsons seemed to go out of his way to avoid the question, while instead offering a rebuke to the reader, basing his negative remarks upon his own assumptions. Mr. Parson then added a bit of unsolicited interior design advice.   Maureen C. of Cleveland Park provided another chance for Mr. Parsons to make assumptions, while he again ignored the reader’s central question, which in this instance was about house design. Sight unseen, Mr. Parsons first assumed the price range of Maureen’s home, then suggested (twice) that she reduce her asking price!   Although I can certainly appreciate Mr. Parsons personal experience-based point of view, I can’t help but empathize with the readers, as they might have hoped for a more sensitive ear and positive direction.   My suggestions might seem novel to the

realtor: First, respect your readers, and if making any assumptions, assume that the readers are taking the time to ask because they really seek advice, and not because they wish to be made an example of Mr. Darrell’s assumptions and following conclusions, or that wish to be entertained rather than informed.   Second, when tempted to provide advice outside one’s area of expertise, refrain, and instead provide the reader with a referral to a knowledgeable professional who might better address the reader’s concerns. If a question requests facts regarding return on investment, answer that, and leave the interior design advice to interior designers.   If a question is about house design, perhaps a referral to an architect or residential designer would be more appropriate.   Just as realtors hope to enjoy referrals from other professionals, realtors should know that sometimes, the best way to serve is through a wise referral to, or consultation with, someone who can directly address an issue.   In summary to Ms. T., Mr. Parsons promises future answers, if the readers can just “hang in there”, and signs off: “Good Luck”! I can’t wait. Shawn Glen Pierson Georgetown The author is the founder of Architétc, a D.C.based architecture and design firm.

to a great height By Gary Tischler

I

t was a turbulent week in the world, the country and Washington. We saw a spreading oil spill and the sight of birds covered in oil. We saw grossly wealthy bankers raising their hands to testify blankly on Capitol Hill. Grief continued for a murdered teacher, the storms of heated political battles built locally over disputed school funds and nationally over immigration and financial reform.   Through all that week, the life-affirming passage of Dr. Dorothy Height, a kind of coming-out and going-up processional celebrated all over the city, steadied this community and shone the light on the best of humankind and the best kind of human being.   The life of Dr. Height, the renowned leader and champion of civil and women’s rights who passed away the previous week at the age of 98, was remembered, memorialized, and finally enshrined all week, not with great grief and sorrow, but with stories, music and warm, fond memories.   The passage took place among the gatherings of her Delta Sigma Theta sorority sisters at Howard University. It took place on a day full of people who stood in long lines for a long time at the headquarters of the National Council of Negro Women on Pennsylvania Avenue, the organization which Height had led with ever-increasing effectiveness and influence for decades.   The journey continued at Shiloh Baptist Church in Shaw of a Wednesday evening, where over a thousand people gathered, many of them aging figures from the civil rights movement of which Height was a critical, if often unacknowledged, member.   That night, the spirit was as big as the sound

Dear Mr. Pierson: My answers to readers are subjective, of course, but they are offered with the utmost respect and sensitivity to the situation of those asking the questions. Of necessity, the length of the answers is limited by the amount of space which can be devoted to these written answers. As a result, the answers are not as thorough as I would like them to be, and a certain amount of generalization is required. I can see that this might come across as making assumptions and/ or being insensitive, so I will be more tuned into that as I answer future questions.   One of the downsides of writing rather than speaking face-to-face is that voice inflection and facial expression are left out. In answering Norma T., I was attempting to inject a little humor in the response. I can see that the “humor” came out like a bit of a smart-aleck. Not my intent, of course. Despite those things, my basic underlying advice is sound, and is very clear that it is important to have the work done by appropriate professionals. I disagree that suggesting neutral colors is straying into the area of “interior design advice.”   As I re-read my answer to Maureen S., I can see that she might have received my comments as dismissive. What I intended was to give her reassurance that though her house hadn’t sold yet, she shouldn’t despair, because it is taking longer for properties to sell in this market. Unfortunately, I had to guess at what she meant

If many Americans did not know her fully or enough, every one in the pews, front back and made by a huge choir, and it was proud with center, knew her, many with real memories of memories and with the presence dignitaries, her. from the Clintons to the King family, to local   Reverend Willie T. Barrow, chairman of luminaries. the Board of the Rainbow Push Coalition in   And finally, people filled the pillared depths Chicago, called her “my mentor, a pioneer, she of the National Cathedral for her funeral, with led the way for all of us. She led the way for President Barack Obama, the brisk-walking, civil rights, and women’s rights, our rights. All living fulfillment of her dreams, the first black of us are forevpresident of the er in her debt, United States, because she delivering a was there long eulogy, calling before there her “Queen was such a Esther to this thing as a civil Moses generarights movetion.” ment. Yes, she   All these was.” places com  Vi rg i n i a prised the Williams, herworld she self something lived in, prodof a pioneer in ded with her many fields, insistent courincluding age, made bet- The Obamas, Vice President Biden and Speaker Pelosi at Height’s music and being funeral. Photo by Donovan Marks. ter for African an unofficial Americans, for women, for all of us, with a mother for the District while her son Anthony dignified, moving-forward persistence of will, Williams served two terms as mayor, said “she and unchallengeable moral vision and embractowered over everybody. She was the guiding ing, graceful warmth. These places were signispirit of the fight for justice.” fiers of sisterhood, of calling and profession,   A woman at least two or three generations of duty and accomplishment, and, here in removed from Height who had worked with Washington, of community and the home that her said that “we all learned from her: never she made here. stop, keep on moving forward, fight hard,   If the Shaw church celebration rocked don’t quit. She had that fighting spirit and she with music the final stop had a more stately had grace.” cadence.   President Obama said she was always wel  The National Cathedral is the church of the come at the White House. “And she would nation, where, by ceremony, service and prayer, come over. She came over twenty times.” “She a person is certified as belonging to the ages. was born when slavery was a living memory, Not that Dorothy Height needed verification. and she fought for justice when nobody else

by “unusual design.” That required either a generalized answer or making more assumptions than I had already made. However, my attempt at relating her situation to music still raises a valid point. The more “unusual” a house is, the narrower the field of potential buyers. I did not suggest that she redesign her property, or that one design is better than other. My answer had to do with getting her house sold, and it is a common observation that a larger percentage of buyers are not looking for houses with unusual designs. Regardless of the state of the real estate market, when the potential buyer pool is smaller for a given property, it takes longer for that property to sell. This could be related to floor plan, exterior appearance, paint colors, amenities, or any number of other possibilities. My comments are not, for example, about the relative value of one color paint over another, but rather that there is a much larger field of potential buyers for a house painted in a “neutral” color than for one painted in bright orange. Skilled realtors know this sort of thing, and part of their job is to communicate it in a sensitive way to sellers.   I welcome any further comments or suggestions. Darrell Parsons The author is a Georgetown-based realtor and is the author of our biweekly “Ask the Realtor” column. He blogs at georgetownrealestatenews.blogspot.com.

did. She was humble. She didn’t care about credit. She belonged in the pantheon. ”   “She was a righteous woman,” he said.   Poet Maya Angelou recited a psalm, opera great Denyce Graves sang and the Clintons were there, as were the Cosbys, boxing promoter Don King, a portrait in flags and bling, senators, congressmen, mayors and movie stars. Her nephew, Dr. Bernard Randolph, remembered meeting her in New York where she had come to stay with their family. He recalled a stirringly gifted young girl and was admonished to be “at our best behavior” for Miss Dorothy.   It was a bright sunlight, stately morning, and it was as if Dorothy Height, with all her long life done, had come into the light of glory for all of us, revealed for all the things she had done in her life, for all to see. The moment might have been when gospel legend BeBe Winans moved through “Jacob’s Ladder” as if it was lament and salve, all at once:   “After you’ve done all you can … you plant your feet, and square your shoulders, hold your head up and wait on him,” he sang. “After you’ve done all you can, you just stand.”   It’s what Dorothy Height did all her life, squared her shoulders, stood up.   At the end, everybody stood, and there was this sea of hats. Glorious hats.   Dorothy’s hats.   Purple, black, large and round, imposing or flirtatious. There was a movement of sisters in hats of all colors, feathery and strong all the same at once, exiting down the stairs, some to touch the funeral car, walking past a prophetlike Dick Gregory, out into the sunlight. You could hear women’s voices, girl’s voices and hats, standing on the street corner and at bus stops, young and old, talking about Dorothy Height come to glory, looking forward.

gmg, Inc. May 5, 2010 9


Address

Georgetown

Real Estate

Sales Provided by

Washington Fine Properties. LLC

BR FB

Close Price

Close date

5

4

Federal

$2,295,000

$2,225,000

23-Apr-10

1221 28TH ST NW GEORGETOWN

3

3

Federal

$1,995,000

$1,950,000

13-Apr-10

1319 34TH ST NW GEORGETOWN

3

3

Federal

$1,575,000

$1,400,000

30-Apr-10

1685 32ND ST NW GEORGETOWN

3

1

Colonial

$1,295,000

$1,045,000

27-Apr-10

1342 27TH ST NW GEORGETOWN

2

1

Federal

$835,000

$820,000

16-Apr-10

3333 N ST NW #1 GEORGETOWN

1

1

Traditional

$589,000

$575,000

13-Apr-10

1077 30TH ST NW #403 GEORGETOWN

2

2

Contemporary

$575,000

$550,000

30-Apr-10

2111 WISCONSIN AVE NW #723 GEORGETOWN

2

1

Contemporary

$399,000

$409,000

12-Apr-10

2500 Q ST NW #322 GEORGETOWN

1

1

Colonial

$350,000

$345,000

12-Apr-10

Auction - Saturday, May 15, 10am European & American Furniture and Decorations including 20th Century Design & Asian Works of Art

Start Making Every Day as Merry as May May Open House

(Come Get Your Fill from Our Grill)

Auction Exhibit: Sunday, May 9 through Thursday, May 13

/ ÕÀÃ`>Þ]Ê >ÞÊ£Î]ÊÓä£ä 3:00 to 5:00 p.m.

RSVP: 202.609.8958

Start summer right with juicy burgers, beer and wine, a personal tour and more

Continental Carved Giltwood Floral Wall Applique, Circa 1900

WESCHLER’S Auctioneers & Appraisers Since 1890 909 E Street, NW � 202.628.1281 � online catalogue - www.weschlers.com �

10 May 5, 2010 gmg, Inc.

List Price

3106 Q ST NW GEORGETOWN

Find a Bouquet of Antiques this Mother’s Day at Weschler’s!

Contact Weschler’s at 202.628.1281 or email info@weschlers.com

Style

The Residences at Thomas Circle, downtown DC’s only continuing care retirement community, combines resortlike amenities with the comforts of home — for a single monthly rental rate. `i«i `i ÌÊEÊ Ãà ÃÌi`Ê Û }ÊUÊ i ÀÞÊ >ÀiÊUÊ ÕÀà }ÊEÊ,i >L Ì>Ì £ÎÎäÊ >ÃÃ>V ÕÃiÌÌÃÊ Ûi Õi]Ê 7ÊÊÊÊ7>à }Ì ]Ê

ÊÊÓäääxÊÊÊÊ ÜÜÜ°Ì >ÃV ÀV i°V


historic

dc

Cleveland Park

and the beautiful Frances Folsom

Frances Folsom Cleveland

By Donna Evers

I

t’s hard to believe, but true. When Grover Cleveland was president, his young wife used to pick him up at the White House in a horse-drawn carriage and drive him home to their summer getaway in the leafy rural area that is now Cleveland Park. No Secret Service for President Cleveland, no bulletproof glass, no escort carriages leading or trailing the “presidential carriage.” As they drove home, they would pause to watch the girls at the National Cathedral School playing tennis.   Theirs was the only presidential wedding to ever take place in the White House, and even more unusual, the beautiful bride was 28 years younger than the bachelor president. When asked why he waited so long to marry, Cleveland said he had to wait for Frances Folsom to grow up.   As young as she was, Frances was the perfect first lady. She thrilled Washington society by observing the social season with exquisite parties and receptions. Besides, she was an accomplished pianist and photographer, and she read Latin and spoke German and French. Best of all, her political instincts were first rate. Aware that many women were entering the workforce, Frances instituted Saturday open houses at the executive mansion, so the working women could drop by on their day off and shake hands with the wife of the president.   Like a lot of other people, the president and his wife felt they needed a place to escape the

heat of Washington summers. They found respite in a 27-acre stone colonial in what is now the 3500 block of Newark Street. They transformed the home into a fairy-tale Victorian with double-decker porches and a roofline full of turrets, towers and gables. Frances named the home “Oakview” but the reporters called it “Red Top,” because they kept at a distance from the house and all they could spot through the trees were the fanciful red roofs. The house is gone now, but the neighborhood that kept the Clevelands’ name still sports an enviable supply of elaborate Victorian houses.   It’s not unusual that a first lady as pretty as Frances Folsom Cleveland was the darling of the press, whether she wanted the attention or not. Reporters referred to her as “Frankie,” a name she disliked as much as Jacqueline Kennedy was said to dislike “Jackie.” Worse yet, her photogenic face appeared on soap and cosmetic products. A political opponent of Cleveland’s once said, “I detest him so much, I don’t even think his wife is beautiful.” But he was in the minority.   While we know that Grover Cleveland was the only president to serve two non-consecutive terms, history books don’t tell us about the prescience of the president’s wife. When they were leaving the White House after Cleveland lost his bid for a second term, Frances said her goodbyes to the servants, but told them to take good care of everything, because they would be back in four years. And they were.

CARLISLE-GEORGETOWNER - MAY.indd 1

gmg, Inc.4/23/10 May 5,10:08:57 2010 AM 11


Agent

Miss May: Jennie Mann Interviewed by John Blee

J

ennie Mann is a rising star in real estate sales and works for McWilliams/Ballard. She is the sales manager for Yale Steam Laundry, an up-and-comer in the condo world located in the exciting tip of Penn Quarter, right next to the new Urban Safeway. What is the most memorable property you have closed yet? My most memorable property was an amazing 1200-square-foot open space loft in the Yale Historic Building with 16-foot-high ceilings, exposed brick, big arching window — the works. It was beautiful! How do you like to celebrate with your clients after you have closed a sale? A: For general brokerage clients you can’t go wrong with a nice bottle of Champagne and a gift card to their favorite furniture store. Have you sold to or worked with any local celebrities on a deal? And if so whom might we know? I have, but I never kiss and tell. What was the first thing you bought with your commission money besides paying bills? The first thing I purchased with my commission was a quality handbag — a big quality handbag! I needed one that would fit my laptop and files.

spotlight

Jennie Mann. Photo by Jeff Malet

and 20 decorative pillows? For example, someone once gave me a teddy bear for Valentine’s Day and I kept thinking to myself, “where the hell am I going to put this?” I sent it to Goodwill the next day.

Are you single or married? If single, do you date other agents ever or have you? If married, what does your spouse do? I’m engaged to a wonderful man who is the co-founder and creative director of a branding agency located in Georgetown.

What is your favorite thing about being an agent in the business? The best thing about my job is that every day is different. I learn something new every day. I meet people from all different walks of life and having a flexible schedule doesn’t hurt. . How do you get your face out there? Do you use advertising, marketing, charities, or community involvement? I used to attend a lot of networking parties and events, however these days I find that the best way to generate business is through referrals from friends and family.

What is your dream home in the District to live in (on or off the market)? In the District I would love to live in my good friends’ condo. They own a super modern penthouse unit [near Thomas Circle]. I admire their great taste, from their choice of artwork to their well-designed terrace. However, thanks to my Estonian fiancé’s influence, my ultimate dream home would have to be a pre-fab home. Pre-fab homes can be custom-designed to fit the homeowners’ lifestyle, plus they reduce waste and save on energy. I value function over wasted space. Less is definitely more. I think people add clutter and spend too much money on unnecessary decorations for their home. Who needs 15 vases

Great times.

Good friends.

What are some trends you see in the market? Being environmentally responsible is a big trend. We have a more conscious buyer these days. People are actively seeking out green buildings with LEED certification and using sustainable materials for their homes. It’s a trend that I hope will stay around for good.

People who care.

Distinctive retirement living

1SJWBUF 4VJUFT t 'JOF %JOJOH Social & Cultural Activities Chauffeured Sedan Assisted Living Services /P &OUSBODF 'FF 12 May 5, 2010 gmg, Inc.

Call us for a tour 202-338-6111

ASSISTED LIVING FOR INDEPENDENT PEOPLE

Publication: The Georgetowner | Ad size: 10.25 in x 6.125 in (1/2 page horizontal)

2512 Q Street, NW, Washington, DC 20007 www.thegeorgetown.com


featured

property

EVERS & CO. REAL ESTATE

1229 29th Street

Chevy Chase Village

S

ophisticated semi-detached two-bedroom, 2.5-bath residence in Georgetown’s desirable East Village. Recently renovated eat-in kitchen, master bedroom with en-suite sitting area suitable for office. Separate living and dining rooms. Woodburning fireplace. High ceilings. Beautiful private walled patio. Basement for storage. Close to shops and restaurants of Georgetown.

Listed for $1,100,100 Contact Marc Bertinelli, Michael Sullivan or Jamie Peva

This magnificent Georgian colonial features grand spaces refurbished by designer Carleton Varney, including an elegant through center hall, living room, dining room, family room, stae-of-the-art kitchen, library, exercise room, billiards room, 6 bedrooms, 7 full and 2 half baths. On a beautiful quiet street, the home has landscaped grounds, pool and patios, and a 2-car garage. $3,699,000 Pat Lore- 301-908-1242; Ted Beverley- 301-728-4338; 202-364-1700 www.EversCo.com

(Washington Fine Properties) 202-333-3320

HELPING BUSINESSES GROW

Discount

When it rains success, it pours success. We’ve always got you covered.

R AT E S

without discount

SERVICE. It’s no accident more people trust State Farm to insure their cars. Call today.

Michele Conley

Agent Name 4701 Wisconsin NW Street Address Washington, DC 20016 City, State Zip 202.966.6677 x10 Phone www.micheleconley.com E-mail

State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company (Not in NJ), Bloomington, IL P040034 12/04

GEORGETOWN s 1044 WISCONSIN AVE., NW MARYLAND s WASHINGTON, DC s VIRGINIA WWW.EAGLEBANKCORP.COM s 202-481-7025

gmg, Inc. May 5, 2010 13


KOREAN WAR 60 ANNIVERSARY MEMORIAL COMMITTEE

performance

TH

Little Angels Children’s Folk Ballet of Korea

To Honor

American Veterans

“A phenomenal company.” — The New York Times

June 11 & 12,

7:30 pm

The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts Tickets $30–70. Available at the Kennedy Center Box Office or call (202) 467-4600. Online at www.kennedy-center.org/tickets TTY (202) 416-8524. 14 May 5, 2010 gmg, Inc.

theater shorts By Gary Tischler

I

f you know about and love the loosely bordered Great American Songbook, you probably know about her.   If you like women who are smart, witty, and talk your ears off in a good way, you should know her.   If you miss the lost art of scat singing, you’ve heard her.   If you’ve ever watched “The Nanny” originally or in reruns, and can’t get that theme song out of your head, you know a tiny sliver of her work.   If you like jazz, even if you call it blues, if you remember running across an old Nina Simone song on a jukebox that’s never there any more, or remember Ella Fitzgerald racing like a piano player on a keyboard through a Cole Porter tune, you need to know about her.   We’re talking about Ann Hampton Callaway — chestnut hair, Chicago dynamo, versatilityplus, singer, songwriter, living the hectic life of both a performing singer and a recording star, traveling this way and that way, from San Diego to Moscow to Spain to D.C., not to mention her heart-felt home in New York.   Callaway, who did indeed write the theme song of “The Nanny,” will be at the Warner Theater May 15, in a great jazz double bill with legendary jazz pianist Ramsey Lewis. It’s a good time to find out about her if you haven’t.   We talked to Callaway on the phone recently while she was riding in a car driven by her sister Liz, herself a Broadway star and singer in San Diego, where they were doing a concert.   “It’s hectic being on the road, the different kinds of venues, the traveling,” says Callaway, whose latest album “At Last” includes the Etta James classic as its title track. “But I’ve settled too. New York is where I live, where my life is.”   But she’s also a Chicago lady, a singer from the town of blues. For the best introduction to Callaway, check out her album “Blues in the Night.” “It’s about the blues, not necessarily blues songs,” she said. That’s why it’s hard to categorize her, to label her as a kind of singer although she’s richly known for her interpretation of the Great American Songbook, those songs that come from Porter by way of Rodgers and Hammerstein, Gershwin and so forth. She’s also in the world of cabaret, jazz and pop.   “I don’t like labels,” she says. “I know I’m a jazz singer, but I have no problem singing pop. “She gets a kick out of the Nanny theme thing. “We were in Berlin during a concert,” she says. “I called out to see if anybody knew the Nanny song. And you wouldn’t believe it. Everybody did, they hollered in unison.”   The singers you remember, of course, are the originals. Never mind for a moment her monumental output of songwriting — some 250 or so. Callaway seems to know, having made her way from Chicago, to college wanting initially to be an actress and discovering her true self and packing up for New York, that no two good, let alone great, singers are alike. And she appreciates the long list of originals.   She wrote as fine an appreciation of one singer by another this year in a jazz magazine, a tribute to Blossom Dearie, the whispery-voiced break-your-heart jazz singer who passed away this year. “There was nobody like her, nobody at all,” she said.   The bet is that there’s nobody like Callaway either. Just check out her scat-fueled numbers on “Blues in the Night,” the lively, anthem-like, breezy “I’m-Too-White-To-Sing-the-Blues Blues”, or “It’s All Right With Me.”   She’s a Tony Award winner, songwriter and been-around-a-while force of musical nature. Check her out.

Zinoman’s Successor

D

avid Muse, the young gifted director who has also been associate director of Washington’s Shakespeare Theater Company since 2005, has been chosen to succeed founder Joy Zinoman at the Studio Theatre beginning with the 2010-2011 season. He’ll direct the season opener, Annie Baker’s offBroadway hit “Circle Mirror Transformation.”

David Muse

Muse called his new job “the dream of a lifetime.” He’s no stranger to the Studio either, having started his directing career here in 2005, and directing a successful production of Neil LaBute’s “Reasons to Be Pretty” here most recently, as well as David Harrower’s “Blackbird,” which won the Helen Hayes Award for Outstanding Production in 2008. At Shakespeare Theatre, he directed the recent highly acclaimed production of “Henry V.”

A Very Special Festival Very Special Arts, the international organization on arts and disability, will host the 2010 International VSA Festival, featuring more than 600 artists, performers and educators from all over the world June 6 through 12. The festival will feature theater, literary readings, film screenings, sculptures and paintings, all by eminent and emerging artists with disabilities, as well as educators who will shares innovative instruction strategies. For more details and information, go to www. vsartsfestival.org.

Knuffle Bunny

“Knuffle Bunny: A Cautionary Musical,” is now at the Kennedy Center’s Family Theater, with Tony Award nominee Stephanie D’Abruzzo and music by composer Michael Silversher. The production is based on the prize winning children’s book “Knuffle Bunny,” adapted by author Mo Williams.

Stephanie D’Abruzzo

“Knuffle Bunny” is about a toddler named Trixie who misplaces her beloved stuffed bunny, and goes on a journey to find him. The musical runs through May 23. See Vera Tilson’s review of “The Marraige of Figaro” on our Web site, www.georgetowner. com.


Museum/art

wrap

Beat Memories:

The Photographs of Allen tially, weren’t intended to be. The initial batch Ginsberg of photos were made with a quick-and-easy By Gary Tischler

C

onsider “Beat Memories: The Photographs of Allen Ginsberg,” the new photographic exhibition at the National Gallery of Art.   Of course, Ginsberg, the renowned, iconographic, legendary poet laureate of the beat generation and maybe the rock generation that followed, took the photos. Give him credit.   But let’s also give a serious shout-out to Sarah Greenough, the senior curator and head of the department of photography at the National Gallery.   Something about these photos — a mix of snapshots writ large, and later more formal photographs — inspired Greenough. In the end she constructed a work of art out of the 80 photographs on display, a work that’s part biography, part social and literary history and for some viewers, part nostalgic road trip. In an exhibition about poets, full of portraits of poets, she’s managed to come up with a photographic poem very much resembling some of the works of the poets and writers on the wall.   It’s fair to say that the photographs that Ginsberg made aren’t necessarily self-conscious examples of photography as art, and, at least ini-

Kodak, and they allowed the great mad-as-afox poet to record a generation of his literary pals, boon companions, rivals, and sometimes lovers who collectively came to be known as the Beats, a word and description that escaped their loose grasp and jumped right out into the American culture at large.   The bulk of the photos are at heart snapshots, quite often made large and dramatic through print, but with all the impetuousness of the moment intact, every one of the mostly men portrayed seem as alive as the moment they were captured, notably Ginsberg himself, not shy about cavorting, doing a naked cartwheel.   The best of the photos are about the Beat arrivals, the moments in time when they became a group, jostling against each other in their travels, exchanging words, sharing their poems, their books, their bodies, their nights and days on the road or on the coasts in New York and San Francisco.   You know who we’re talking about here: Ginsberg, whose masterpiece “Howl” was a spit into the ozone, a regular angry lament against American conformity; Jack Kerouac, the handsome, sullen prince of the road, restless, nervous, who burst on the scene with these words: “I first met Dean not long after my wife and I split up,” the first line of “On the Road”;

Angela Iovino at the Parish Gallery

By Ari Post

W

atercolors are an often overlooked medium, their subtleties and patiently layered depths seemingly run off by the raw energy of so much popular expressionism and abstraction. Angela Iovino’s series of landscapes at the Parish Gallery, open through May 18, is a kernel of cool mint, cleansing the palette between the explosive, bright flavors being offered around the city. Even with such tangible titles as “Eastport Maine Morning” and “Hot Spring I,” to call these studies “landscapes” is more of a projection than a precise definition. Iovino’s paintings are the geography of dreams that pull the viewer in only to stand beyond a world that cannot

completely be entered. Iovino lets the water do a lot of the work in her paintings, allowing the colors to dissipate, diffuse and coagulate in their wet state. I am inclined to believe that puddles of water may well have been spread carefully around the paper. The atmospheric effect created by this technique is thick and simultaneously transparent, recalling the feeling of intense humidity. Like looking into a marsh, or staring fixedly at something and then closing your eyes — what is seen in Iovino’s work is more of a feeling of brevity, a weightlessness that cannot last. But in the meantime, it is a beautiful sight.

Allen Ginsberg, “Myself seen by William Burroughs…our apartment roof Lower East Side between Avenues B & C…Fall 1953” National Gallery of Art, Gift of Gary S. Davis. Copyright (c) 2010 The Allen Ginsberg LLC.

William Burroughs, the dangerous, lean, mean gun-toting author of “The Naked Lunch”; Neal Cassady, everybody’s favorite daydream and catnip of inspiration.   All of them are here on the wall in a visual flashback to the immediate underbelly of the 1950s, Eisenhower’s decade of normalcy, suburban and small-town morality, a state of the nation which the Beats crashed like escapees from a lunatic asylum. The status quo responded with scorn and fear, but their offspring smelled a whiff of undeniably appealing strange music and noise. They were reflected to some degree in the wild improvisational riffs of Charley Parker, black blues, James Dean and Marlon Brando.   Those photographs from the 1950s are so kinetic — especially in their original snapshot form — that they have a quality that is both holy and holographic: look at Cassidy standing with his girlfriend in front of a Times Square movie marquee, advertising “The Wild One,” “Stranger with a Gun” and “Tarzan the Ape Man.”   These 1950s pictures are a passing parade, and Greenough, in the arrangement of the exhibition and in the descriptive words of her essay in the accompanying catalogue, has set the parade in motion. Fittingly, she quotes Walt Whitman: “Unscrew the locks from the doors!/ Unscrew the doors themselves from their jambs!” Ginsberg used the line as an epigraph for “Howl” in 1956.   At heart, Ginsberg, as well as the others, were poets and prose writers of personal experience and reaction, they were every bit as embracing or reactive as everything in “Leaves of Grass.”   While some of the Beats died young or faded, Ginsberg found his way, like a prophet, into the next generation, where he became a sage to Bob Dylan’s followers. It was then that he rediscovered his pictures like an old aunt in the attic, it was then he protested the war in Vietnam, chanted “ohm” at every turn and gave poetry readings the likes of which no one had heard before — very much like a scruffy, scatological Pan. It was meeting Robert Frank, another roadie of the visual sort, that made him started taking photographs again, although photos that are closer to art, less joyful, but more studied: Dylan, Frank and his son Paul, his dying uncle Abe, the pop artist Larry Rivers, Corso and dangerous photos of Burroughs.   For anyone who’s had any contact with that

world in their youth, this is like a whiff of dry, non-medicinal marijuana, none more than the picture of the poets in their mid-youth standing arms linked in front of the City of Lights bookshop in San Francisco, five guys hanging out — including the owner Lawrence (“Coney Island of the Mind”) Ferlinghetti, a poet still railing. “Beat Memories: The Photos of Allen Ginsberg” runs through Sept. 6 at the National Gallery of Art.

Jackson Art Center Spring Open Studios www.jacksonartcenter.com

SUNDAY, MAY 16, 2010 112 NOON -- 5 PM

3048 ! R Street NW Washington (on R between 30th & 31st Streets)

Free to the public Supported by Whole Foods Music: Matthew Hemerlein

gmg, Inc. May 5, 2010 15


Cover

Story

Antiques Georgetown’s

A Taste of History

By John Blee and Robert Sacheli Photos by Tom Wolff

A

bigail Adams remarked upon Georgetown for its muddy roads in the 18th century. It has come a long way since then. But the history stays with it, and antiques are part of the heritage of Georgetown. In our neighborhood there is an ample selection of shops selling high-quality curios, relics and treasures that will become part of the personal history of the person acquiring them. The people who own and work in these shops have an extraordinary knowledge of antiques. They are more than willing to share their bounty, and enjoy educating potential customers. Along with antiques come interior designers who will help weed through what is available to find the right pieces that make up interior ensembles. What better than a great architect to help make your home breathe not just its history, but move into the present and as the future? Come meet our favorite Georgetowners with a knack for classic décor.

Reinventing the Georgetown Townhouse: Christian Zapatka

T

he greatest antiques in Georgetown are the amazing townhouses and homes that climb the hill. A New Yorker once said to me that Georgetown is more beautiful than Greenwich Village, and indeed it is. The caretaking of Georgetown’s homes that are mostly built in the 18th, 19th, and early 20th centuries is best left to architects who respect the building, and without violating them, give them new life. Christian Zapatka, winner of the Rome Prize, is the architect today who makes the most out of reinventing the Georgetown townhouse.   One of Zapatka’s newest re-inventions is for sale on Q and 30th Streets. This is a part of Cooke’s Row, made up of four pairs of semi-detached houses built in 1868. Cooke’s Row has Italianate and Second Empire features, including mansard roofs. D.C.’s first governor, Henry D. Cooke, commissioned these houses. Cooke had been appointed by President Grant and belonged to the Republican political machine during the post-Civil War era.   This house had been neglected for a good while and was in need of drastic repair. What is interesting is what Zapatka left intact and what he created out of the traditional maze of bedrooms and few bathrooms. The single most amazing thing about the interior is the circular staircase that goes all the way to the third floor. It has been reinforced using its original balustrade, but with a newly invented round skylight at the top. Some of the original flooring has been retained and doors, including pocket doors, have been refinished and reused. All windows were removed and reinstalled, faking some of the original glazing when pieces were missing. An unusual feature is the slate fireplaces that were found under several layers of paint. They are polished to a dark luster.   With Zapatka in charge of the renovation everything flows; the traditional features ebb into the modern. There is never a disjunction. Because Zapatka works closely with contractors on site, he adjusts the design details on the spot. Therefore they attain certain perfection. He also employs one of the rarest of artisans: a great plasterer. Bathrooms and the kitchen are modern, created with a mastery of refined understatement.   Studying architecture with Michael Graves at Princeton and later working for him formed Zapatka’s vision. Zapatka says that Graves frequently referred to a building as a piece of furniture, or furniture as a building. Recently he attended a symposium where Graves spoke on the antiques in his house. Perhaps this is why Christian Zapatka can cull the best of an old house, at the same time renewing it. — J.B.

16 May 5, 2010 gmg, Inc.

Frank Randolph, Interior Designer Extraordinaire

W

alking into Frank Randolph’s house makes you aware of what a great interior designer can do. Randolph lives in a house once occupied by Secretary of State Henry Kissinger. What he managed to do with it (not to it) is to create marvelous spaces with impeccably designed interiors. This is the hallmark of his work. All is classical, spare without being minimal and luminous.   Frank Randolph’s living room is one of the most beautiful spaces in Georgetown. It is high ceilinged, and during remodeling Randolph dropped the windows to the floor, creating real French windows. They look out onto a lovely garden below. Graced by arches, the living room contains some of the furniture Randolph has designed himself as well as a pair of 18th-century painted French screens. Small porcelain Chinese bowls and other objects are placed on tables and the mantle. He describes them all as inexpensive pieces. Randolph likes to change the arrangement every few months.   A real Washingtonian who grew up near Georgetown and attended Western High (now Duke Ellington), Randolph is the rarest of decorators, a selftaught man. The antiques that Randolph works with are mostly Swedish and Danish pieces from the 18th and 19th century. “People want to walk into a house with less of the darkness associated with antiques,” Randolph says. “They want a home to have lightness and happiness.” In his own home you can see he practices and lives with what he preaches.   “Clients don’t come to me for a strictly contemporary or modern look,” he says. “My passions are evenly divided. As an interior designer one must include things that are practical but still wonderful and beautiful. You cannot sell 19th-century chairs anymore because they break.” Randolph’s own dining room chairs are modeled on antique pieces, but in light wood and are extremely sturdy. He says that if you cannot find a piece, you can often have it reproduced.   Instinctually generous, Randolph even has a few good words to say about Martha Stewart: “I admire her way of getting the general public involved in presentation of food and of things you have in your home.”   It is rare for an architect to speak of lessons learned from a decorator. However, Georgetown architect Christian Zapatka speaks of learning from Frank Randolph and how sometimes covering a window rather than merely exposing it can create more. It is a lesson Zapatka is carrying out in his own newly designed home.   “Making people happy is rewarding,” Randolph says. “But you have to get the architecture right. Thomas Jefferson was the first American interior designer, he went to bed thinking about it and he woke up and rearranged the furniture!” — J.B.

John Rosselli, Georgetown’s Antique Aficionado he venerable firm of John Rosselli & Associates opened its first shop in New York City 50 years ago. Its Wisconsin Avenue Georgetown branch has been in business for 10 years. According to Jonathan Gargiulo, who commutes between New York and Washington, the shop is a designer resource. Clients often visit the shop with decorators. When you look at the website of John Rosselli, it’s fabrics that dominate. And that seems to be a bellwether of where the antique trade is going.

T

What has happened is that buyers are less interested in what is called “smalls,” the smaller objects one would find dotting the interior of every antique store. Those footstools, end tables, and bibelots were the bread and butter of the antique business, with clients coming in periodically adding to their collections. Garguilo says, “It used to be I would spend all day wrapping and putting in bags for clients’ silver, vases and small pictures. Now people decorate with less, they are more interested in an important piece of furniture, and reproductions as well.” The economy has not helped the antique business and several dealers did not survive the downturn. But the economy is coming back and there is a different kind of client: one made much more savvy due to the popularity of the television “Road Show” series. That, and eBay has made his customers more discerning about prices as related by Garguilo. It also makes it harder for antique stores to pick up bargains the way they used to. Peter Quinn, who helped start the John Rosselli store in D.C., has what you find in the best antique dealers: a passion for history. That is what is lacking in many of the younger buyers today who are much more part of the information age and do not take the time to learn, for instance, about the hallmarks on silver. That is what motivates the insider in the antique business, the unfolding narrative of where a piece was made and when. He also says Washington can be a tough market, a bit fickle and not too adventurous. Quality is the underlying value in the best antique stores and John Rosselli & Associates is cited by everyone I have spoken with as one of the best places in D.C. to stop by, with or without your decorator. — J.B.


Cover

Marston Luce: In Search of Elegance’s ‘Humble Soul’

Scandinavian Antiques & Living: International Accents

he lure of history and architecture has led Marston Luce into some less-thanattractive places — with some beautiful results.   In the early 1980s, he would “prowl D.C. in areas where buildings were being torn down” and he vividly recalls the rats that often scurried around as he was on the lookout for the decorative brickwork and architectural ornaments that his excursions would unearth. (“I was recycling before it was fashionable,” he chuckles. “I’m an environmentalist.”) His finds were sold from the trunk of a red MG at the Georgetown Flea Market.   Today, the stock of his eponymous upper Wisconsin Avenue shop, which opened in 2001, comes from far more congenial spots. “I do my buying in France, where I have a house in the Dordogne, and some in England and in Sweden.”   His eye, though, still is trained on the beautiful, no matter the source. He describes his aesthetic as “humble elegance.”   “I deal with very elegant things, but they have a humble soul. I like the tension between the two.” He points to an early-19th-century English bulls-eye mirror as a perfect example of that outlook. The elaborately carved frame is not gilded, the way a grander piece might be. Instead, it gets its character from a warm white finish that gives it a welcoming lightness.   Look around Luce’s airy, light-filled shop (which he shares with Dink, a Jack Russell terrier, and Penny, a schnauzer) and you’ll find tabletop arrangements that mix refined objects, folk art and furniture ranging from a Swedish comb-painted armoire to an iron table fashioned from industrial salvage from Belgium. You’ll also see charming juxtapositions, such as a 19th-century French tin weathervane in the shape of a rooster and a cement version of the same animal that sports an equally extravagant curving tail.   That sense of combination is part of a trend that Luce sees among his customers: “People are buying fewer things, but better quality, and they are mixing styles more.”   On a recent visit, a shop associate was unfolding a circa-1800 painted French screen that depicts a hunting expedition in a tropical landscape. Who knows what those long-ago gentlemen may be stalking? It might be fun to imagine that they, like Marston Luce, are on the trail of something beautiful. — R.S.

nter Georgetown’s newest antiques shop, Scandinavian Antiques & Living, and you’re struck by the colorfully eclectic selection of merchandise and the warm welcome of its owner, Elisabeth Wulff Wine.   Wine, who opened her store a month ago, is a native of Denmark who spent a number of years in Milan as an art and antiques dealer and decorator before moving to Washington a year and a half ago.   Her distinctive eye is reflected in tablescapes whose elements cross the boundaries of countries and centuries. For example, one desktop display combines an 1810 bronze ormolu clock and a pair of Swedish empire candlesticks with a 1950s toilet set and a 1960s Murano glass platter in swirling pastels.   The shop’s walls, too, are home to an array of art that ranges from mid-century modern abstracts to 19th-century portraits and flower paintings.   That sense of aesthetic freedom is at the heart of Wine’s shop: “Today we mix antiques with other objects,” she says. “A home today does not have to be the same — there are so many possibilities.”   Swedish furniture forms the centerpiece of the store’s collection, and Wine is understandably fond of its distinctive style. “I love the Swedish look. It’s so simple and so elegant. And it looks nice to mix it.”   One of her favorite pieces is a Gustavian clock cabinet, a drop-front secretary topped with a clock framed in soft curves. (The Gustavian style takes its name from a late 18th-century Swedish monarch.) More graceful curves characterize a standing clock, whose case has been weathered to a beautiful pale turquoise since it was made in 1750, and Wine has chosen it for her shop’s logo.   There’s an elegant sense of femininity to much of the shop’s stock, such as a fanciful Italian crystal-beaded chandelier in the shape of a pagoda (perfect for a fabric-tented boudoir, perhaps) and sensuously shaped Murano glass torchieres. Along with objects such as vivid Murano glass vases from the middle of the last century, these play off the pastel tones and neoclassical lines of the Scandinavian furniture to create a lively, unexpected harmony.   It’s exactly that sense of personal expression that Wine emphasizes as she sums up her outlook on décor: “People’s own taste is very important, even when working with a decorator. That’s what makes a home very personal.”

T

Marston Luce 1651 Wisconsin Ave. 202-333-6800 www.marstonluce.com

E

— R.S. Scandinavian Antiques & Living 3231 P Street, NW 202-450-5894

Sixteen Fifty Nine: A Mid-Century Renaissance

Susquehanna Antique Company: Defining Tradition

“T

raditional” is a word David Friedman admits is a good description of both himself, an antiques dealer, and his shop, the Susquehanna Antique Company. But he’s quick to add that in a modern marketplace exactly how tradition is defined is often subject to different interpretations.   One thing that’s clear is that antiques are a tradition in Friedman’s family. His grandfather started the business in Port Deposit, MD, and his father worked as an auctioneer and used furniture salesman. “I was close to my dad, and was brought into the business at a young age. He could buy something for $10 and sell it for $15. Not everyone can do that. I inherited that from him.”   Friedman has been a dealer since the late ’70s, with the Washington incarnation of the family firm established in 1980. He’s seen Georgetown’s prominence as an antiques district wax and wane over the years, but his own O Street shop has become something of a landmark.   To enter Susquehanna Antiques is almost to go back in time, to an era when antiques dealers were neither interior designers nor merchants in home décor. Baronial-sized dining tables and Philadelphia highboys jostle for space with Continental chests and Chinese porcelains. Centuries of portraits and landscapes fill the walls and are stacked in the aisles. Up the narrow stairs is a warren of rooms with more furniture and art, as well as Friedman’s collection of more than 600 period frames. It’s exactly what an old-fashioned antiques shop should look like — a place where discoveries wait in every corner.   But old-fashioned antiques are often a harder sell in an era when a mahogany sideboard and silver tea service aren’t always part of everyone’s lifestyle. “Traditional furniture, Old Masters, and 19th-century paintings are less of a broad-based focus for people,” says Friedman. “The market is more and more diverse.”   He’s weathered that changing market by virtue of business acumen (“You need a commercial sense of things”), high standards, and a having “a knack for buying what your customers want.”   He’s also an educator for customers for whom a familiarity with antiques may not come naturally. Friedman deals in history and passion, not just objects. He emphasizes that “people want to buy something that’s been selected,” vetted not only for its beauty or utility but also for its meaning and significance.   “Standards stay the same. That’s what collecting is about,” he says. And that just may be one definition of tradition on which everyone can agree. — R.S.

Story

D

on Draper and his fellow “Mad Men” have been very good for Mike Johnson. The hit series has kicked off a renaissance of interest in mid-century modern furnishings and the swanky decorative accessories of the 60s — exactly the focus of Johnson’s Wisconsin Avenue shop, Sixteen Fifty Nine.   Antiques run in Johnson’s family — his grandmother owned a shop in Michigan — and he recalls “going to auctions since I was a little kid.” It wasn’t until he left a long career in corporate sales, though, that his passion for collecting turned into a full-time business. Sixteen Fifty Nine has just hit the seven-year mark.   He started the shop because “I had been collecting mid-century modern, but felt the lines I was looking for were not as accessible as they could be” in existing outlets. Johnson specializes in iconic designers like Dorothy Draper, T. H. Robsjohn-Gibbings, Paul Frankl, and Donald Deskey, creators whose work is not being commercially reproduced today.   Draper (Dorothy, not Don) is currently represented at Sixteen Fifty Nine by a striking jadegreen lacquered dresser with white accents and nine-ringed drawer pulls. (A similar pair in a black-and-gold color scheme made an appearance in Candice Bergen’s fictional Vogue office in the “Sex and the City” movie.)   You also can’t miss a pair of Bernhardt loveseats, produced in the 1950s by the company’s Flair division, upholstered in an eye-popping lime-blue and green (which had, in true ’50s style, been preserved under plastic slipcovers). The pieces would not look out of place in a contemporary showroom.   “I like to do things that are very clean-lined, that come across as a current piece of furniture,” Johnson says of his collector’s eye. “I always try to throw odds and ends into the mix” as well — such as his array of mid-century pottery, paintings and photos.   As more buyers and dealers climb on the sleek mid-century modern bandwagon, Johnson finds that locating top-quality merchandise is becoming more difficult. “I get excited when I find a big-name piece of furniture.”   Johnson points to a massive buffet in Sixteen Fifty Nine’s window as a current favorite among his pieces, describing in detail its provenance from Michigan’s Mastercraft Furniture Company. With four doors elaborately paneled in Carpathian burled elm and a travertine marble inset top, it is indeed a beauty.   And it’s exactly the type of piece you could imagine Don Draper lounging beside. — R.S.

Susquehanna Antique Company 3216 O St. 202-333-1511 www.susquehannaantiques.com

Sixteen Fifty Nine 1659 Wisconsin Ave. 202-333-1480 www.sixteenfiftynine.com

gmg, Inc. May 5, 2010 17


in

country

THE WHITE ELEPHANT By Patricia Daly-Lipe

E

very trip to the town of Middleburg, VA warrants a visit to a special place: The White Elephant. Since my church always had an annual white elephant sale, I immediately understood the significance of the name. It was 22 years ago that two sisters and their mother began what has become a must-visit, mustpurchase-something store. Sisters Leslie and Cynthia Broockman, with their late mother Gloria, began in 1988 with what they considered a brief indoor garage sale. It was winter and too cold to sell on the sidewalk some of the furniture and other excess items they no longer needed after moving up from Florida. So, as fate would have it, they were offered an empty room, which happened to be an unused storefront in Middleburg, to conduct a sale. It was only meant to last two days. Instead, the idea of “consignments” flew into the picture and the “sale” continues to this day.

“Follow your dreams,” their mother advised her daughters. The dream became a reality as chance encounters led to the creation of what are now two consignment shops, one in Middleburg and one in nearby Warrenton. Cynthia says, “If you have the courage to dream and wait patiently with complete faith, they’ll come true.” Despite all the odds, and there were many, the story behind this family not only creating a consignment business (quite by accident) but allowing the venture to help others serves as an inspiration to anyone wishing to follow their dream. On a recent visit to Middleburg, I walked into The White Elephant and, not needing anything in particular, but always curious, headed down the aisle of antiquities. There are two sides to

the store plus a basement divided into two sides. On the left, you will find a collection of apparel and accessories. Many of these are new. None are over two years old. Everything from jeans to evening gowns, jewelry to shoes. On the right are “decorative accents and furniture.” All incoming consignments are carefully screened for quality. You will not have to search through “junk” to find valuable items. This particular day, I observed a man looking closely at certain items, making notes, and walking on to carefully study another object. I had to ask, “Are you an antique collector?” Yes, he was. Not only a collector but, I believe, although he would not tell me as much, he had a business selling antiques. I was not surprised.   In our home are signs of The White Elephant

Country Living in Virginia

POPLAR GRANGE Spectacular 21st century iteration of the centuries-old Hunt Country ideal. Set on 103 rolling acres of preserved land, the 12,000 square foot, artisan-crafted home and its attendant stables, carriage house, fountains and riding arena create a unique blend of forward thinking and timeless traditions. The home includes only the finest materials and finishes - including some elements reclaimed from historic homes. The estate lies between Upperville and Middleburg, the towns that define the Virginia Piedmont Hunt Country. Just 50 miles from the U.S. Capitol and 30 minutes from Dulles International Airport. Poplar Grange is perfect as an equestrian farm or simply as a country getaway. Price Upon Request

Please contact Justin H. Wiley (434) 981-5528 PIEDMONT OFFICE 132A East Main Street, Orange, VA 22960 (540) 672-3903 Fax: (540) 672-3906 www.farmandestate.net Equal Housing Opportunity 18 May 5, 2010 gmg, Inc.


everywhere. I won’t tell. Okay, maybe I will, just to entice you. But you must keep our secret!   One day, we brought home an art nouveau side table for the living room. On another occasion, we came home with a three piece encollections, it is hard to resist a purchase at the tertainment console for downstairs. And a few White Elephant. There are always lovely, helpyears ago, we could not resist a beautiful Orienful ladies working at the shop should you have tal rug. Many items at The White Elephant are any questions. Plus I always meet fascinating one of a kind, including paintings, jewelry, and people many of whom, like me, make it a prichina. The choices change constantly, so you ority to poke around the hidden treasures and must make a habit of snooping. rarely leave empty-handed. Reasonably priced, many items are one of a kind and many are collectable. Their collecVisit The White Elephant at 103 West Fedtions, which change almost daily (since the ineral Street in Middleburg or www.whiteleventory and sales are continuous, seven days a phant.com. week), are incredible. For wedding gifts, graduation gifts, birthdays, and for your personal Georgetowner.05.05.10:Layout 1 4/29/10 10:40 AM Page 1

P R O P E RT I E S I N V I R G I N I A H U N T C O U N T RY OLD WATERFORD

PARADISE FARM

SPRINGLEDGE

HASTENING FARM

Spectacular 175 acre farm features lush pastures, gorgeous woodlands, vineyard, picturesque pond and mountain views �Main Residence is beautifully updated �4 Bedrooms, 3 Fireplaces, and sun-filled rooms with beamed ceilings �Ideal for entertaining �Gated stone entrance and long drive provide privacy �Stable with Apartment �Utility Building �Not in Easement �Great potential for tax credits! $3,900,000

Rare opportunity to own 120+ mostly open acres in Delaplane, VA �Breathtaking views, established pastures, mature trees and Goose Creek frontage �Classic 2 story Virginia Farmhouse and 2 large Barns await your renovation efforts �Property is surrounded by other large farms �Orange County Hunt Territory �Offers significant conservation donation and tax benefits. $3,750,000

Middleburg, Virginia �60 +/- acres �Orange County Hunt Territory �Exceptional 4 Bedroom, 4.5 Bath stucco home �Exquisite details throughout �3 Fireplaces �Old Heart Pine Floors �4 Stall Bank Barn with Apartment above �Board Fencing �Riding Ring �Machine Shed �3 Paddocks �Stream �Great Views �Miles of Trails �Protected land surrounding property. $3,250,000

Enchanting stone and brick circa 1750 VA Farmhouse on 42+ acres in Piedmont Hunt �4 Bedrooms, 3.5 Baths, 3 Fireplaces, Hardwood Floors, antique barn beams and mantels, built-in bookcases, deep-set windows and original woodwork �Guest cottage, 3-Story Dutch Bank Barn with 6 Stalls and massive Workshop �10 Paddocks �Riding Ring �1 Bedroom Apartment �1 Car Garage. $3,200,000

Please see over 100 of our fine estates and exclusive country properties on the world wide web by visiting

PAXSON ROAD

Privacy and seclusion on 25 acres of rolling meadows and lush woodlands �Spectacular 4 Bedroom custom Colonial overlooks a stocked pond and features high ceilings, gleaming wood floors, and sun-filled rooms �Extraordinary quality with Marvin windows, gourmet Kitchen, 3 Fireplaces, Library, and Terraces bordered by gardens with fabulous views �Additional 25 acre parcel available. $1,950,000

www.

THOMAS -TALBOT.com

FROG HOLLOW

WATERFORD HEIGHTS

MAGNOLIA HILL

1st time Offering �7 Stall Center Aisle Stable with spacious 1 Bedroom Apartment �5 Paddocks �2 Run-In Sheds �Large Ring �Charming Stone Residence �5 Bedrooms, 4 Baths, 2 Half Baths, 2 Fireplaces �Huge Unfinished Basement with additional Fireplace �25 Acres �Mountain Views �Orange County Hunt �Turnkey Horse Property �Located between Middleburg and The Plains. $1,899,000

Waterford �Elegant and extraordinary McCarthy custom built home �ALL NEW interior completed 3/31/10 �This 7,700 sq ft home with 5 Bedrooms, 4.5 Baths has been gracefully updated �Enjoy the professionally landscaped 4.5 acres with magnificent mountain and sunset views �Spectacular home at an unbelievable price! $998,500

Circa 1880, delightful stucco VA Farmhouse on 1+ acre in historic Rectortown �3 Bedrooms, 2.5 Baths, formal Dining Room, Living Room with Fireplace, Paneled Den with Fireplace, Large Kitchen, Front Porch and Terrace �Extensive landscaping, sweeping lawns, stone walls, fenced backyard and small stream �Ideal country living �Great commuter access to Route 50 and I-66. $845,000

Offers subject to errors, omissions, change of price or withdraw without notice. Information contained herein is deemed reliable, but is not so warranted nor is it otherwise guaranteed.

THOMAS AND TALBOT REAL ESTATE LAND AND ESTATE AGENTS SINCE 1967 A STAUNCH ADVOCATE OF LAND EASEMENTS

Telephone (540) 687-6500 � Metro (703) 478-8180 P.O. Box 500 � 2 South Madison Street Middleburg �Virginia 20117

gmg, Inc. May 5, 2010 19


Your Dining Guide to Washington DC’s Finest

1789 RESTAURANT 1226 36th St, NW With the ambiance of an elegant country inn, 1789 features classically based American cuisine – the finest regional game, fish and produce available. Open seven nights a week. Jackets required. Complimentary valet parking. www.1789restaurant.com

BANGKOK JOE’S

Bistro Francais

3251Prospect St, NW

3000 K St NW

3124-28 M St NW

Come and enjoy contemporary Thai cuisine & Sushi bar deliciously prepared at Bangkok Bistro. The restaurant’s decor matches its peppery cuisine, vibrant in both color and flavor. Enthusiasts say we offer professional, prompt and friendly service. Experience outdoor sidewalk dining in the heart of Georgetown.

(One block from Georgetown Lowe’s theatres)

A friendly French Bistro in the heart of historic Georgetown since 1975. Executive chef and owner Gerard Cabrol came to Washington, D.C. 32 years ago, bringing with him home recipes from southwestern France. Our specialties include our famous Poulet Bistro (tarragon rotisserie chicken); Minute steak Maitre d’Hotel (steak and pomme frit¬es); Steak Tartare, freshly pre¬pared seafood, veal, lamb and duck dishes; and the best Eggs Benedict in town. In addition to varying daily specials, www.bistrofrancaisdc.com

BANGKOK BISTRO

Open for lunch and dinner. Sun.-Thurs.11:30am - 10:30pm Fri.-Sat. 11:30am - 11:30pm

Georgetown introduces Washington’s first “Dumpling Bar” featuring more than 12 varieties. Come and enjoy the new exotic Thai cuisine inspired by French cooking techniques. Bangkok Joe’s is upscale, colorful and refined. Absolutely the perfect place for lunch or dinner or just a private gathering. www.bangkokjoes.com

www.bangkokbistrodc.com (202) 965-1789

(202) 337-2424

(202) 333-4422

CAFE BONAPARTE

Café La Ruche

CAFE MILANO

1522 Wisconsin Ave

(202) 333-8830

CIRCLE BISTRO One Washington Circle, NW Washington, DC 22037 Circle Bistro presents artful favorites that reflect our adventurous and sophisticated kitchen. Featuring Happy Hour weekdays from 5pm-7pm, live music every Saturday from 8pm-12midnight, and an a la carte Sunday Brunch from 11:30am-2:30pm. Open dailyfor breakfast, lunch and dinner.

Come and see for yourself why Bistrot Lepic, with its classical, regional and contemporary cuisine, has been voted best bistro in D.C. by the Zagat Guide. And now with its Wine bar, you can enjoy “appeteasers”, full bar service, complimentary wine tasting every Tuesday and a new Private Room. The regular menu is always available. Open everyday. Lunch & dinner. Reservations suggested. www.bistrotlepic.com (202) 333-0111

CHADWICKS

HASHI RESTAURANT

3205 K St, NW (est.1967)

1073 Wisconsin Ave., NW Hashi Sushi Bar

Cafe Milano specializes in setting up your private party in our exclusive dining rooms. Our detail-oriented staff also will cater your corporate meetings & special events at your office, home or other locations. Check out our website for booking information or call 202-965-8990, ext. 135. Cafe Milano is high on the restaurant critics’ charts with excellent Italian cuisine & attention to service. Fresh pastas, steaks, fish dishes, & authentic Italian specialties. Lunch & dinner. Late night dining & bar service.

A Georgetown tradition for over 40 years, this friendly neighborhood restaurant/saloon features fresh seafood, burgers, award-winning ribs, & specialty salads & sandwiches. Casual dining & a lively bar. Daily lunch & dinner specials. Late night dining (until midnight Sun.Thu., 1A.M. Fri-Sat) Champagne brunch served Sat. & Sun. until 4P.M. Open Mon-Thu 11:30A.M.-2A.M. Fri-Sat 11:30A.M.-3A.M.Sun 11A.M.-2A.M.Kids’ Menu Available. Located ½ block from the Georgetown movie theatres, overlooking the new Georgetown Waterfront Park

(Georgetown Chopsticks)

www.CafeMilano.net

ChadwicksRestaurants.com

(202) 965-2684

(202) 333-6183

(202) 333.2565

CITRONELLE

CLYDE’S OF GEORGETOWN

“Outdoor Dining Available” www.cafelaruche.com

(The Latham Hotel) 3000 M St, NW Internationally renowned chef and restaurateur Michel Richard creates magic with fresh and innovative American-French Cuisine, an exceptional wine list and stylish ambiance.

3236 M St, NW This animated tavern, in the heart of Georgetown, popularized saloon food and practically invented Sunday brunch.

Open for Dinner.

Clyde’s is the People’s Choice for bacon cheeseburgers, steaks, fresh seafood, grilled chicken salads, fresh pastas and desserts.

Valet parking.

www.clydes.com

www.circlebistro.com

www.citronelledc.com

(202) 293-5390

(202) 625-2150

20 May 5, 2010 gmg, Inc.

1736 Wisconsin Ave., NW

3251 Prospect St. NW

1039 31st Street, NW

Captivating customers since 2003 Café Take a stroll down memory lane. Bonaparte has been dubbed the “quintes- Serving Georgetown for more than 35 years - Since 1974 sential” European café featuring award winning crepes & arguably the “best” Chef Jean-Claude Cauderlier coffee in D.C! Located in sophisticated A bit of Paris on the Potomac. Georgetown, our café brings a touch Great Selection of Fine Wines Fresh of Paris “je ne sais quoi” to the neighMeat, Seafood & Poultry Chicken borhood making it an ideal romantic destination. Other can’t miss attributes Cordon-Bleu *Duck Salmon, & Steaks Voted Best Dessert-Pastry in are; the famous weekend brunch every Sat and Sun until 3pm, our late night town, The Washingtonian Magazine weekend hours serving sweet & savory FULL BAR crepes until 1 am Fri-Sat evenings & the alluring sounds of the Syssi & Marc jazz Open Daily from 11:30 a.m. Open Late ‘til 1 am on Friday & duo every other Wed. at 7:30. We look Saturday night forward to calling you a “regular” soon!

www.cafebonaparte.com

(202) 338-3830

BISTROT LEPIC & WINE BAR

(202) 333-9180

DAILY GRILL

1310 Wisconsin Ave., NW Reminiscent of the classic American Grills, Daily Grill is best known for its large portions of fresh seasonal fare including Steaks & Chops, Cobb Salad, Meatloaf and Warm Berry Cobbler. Open for Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner.Visit our other locations at 18th & M Sts NW and Tysons Corner. www.dailygrill.com

(202) 337-4900

Our Special 3 Rolls $10.95 Monday- Friday 12-5PM All rolls are seaweed outside! (any kind of combienation) Tuna Roll Salmon Roll Shrimp Roll Avocado Roll Cucumber Roll Asparagus Roll White Tuna Roll Kanikama Roll Spicy Tuna Roll Spicy Salmon Roll (No Substitution, togo, or extra sauce)

Mon-Thur & Sun noon-10:30PM Fri & Sat Noon-11:00PM (202) 338-6161

FILOMENA RISTORANTE 1063 Wisconsin Ave., NW One of Washington’s most celebrated restaurants, Filomena is a Georgetown landmark that has endured the test of time for almost a quarter of a century. Our oldworld cooking styles & recipes brought to America by the early Italian immigrants, alongside the culinary cutting edge creations of Italy’s foods of today, executed by our award winning Italian Chef. Try our spectacular Lunch buffet on Fri. & Saturdays or our Sunday Brunch, Open 7 days a week for lunch & dinner. www.filomena.com (202) 338-8800


FAHRENHEIT Georgetown 3100 South St, NW Restaurant & Degrees Bar & Lounge The Ritz-Carlton, As featured on the cover of December 2007’s Washingtonian magazine, Degrees Bar and Lounge is Georgetown’s hidden hot spot. Warm up by the wood burning fireplace with our signature “Fahrenheit 5” cocktail, ignite your business lunch with a $25.00 four-course express lunch, or make your special occasion memorable with an epicurean delight with the fire inspired American regional cuisine. www.fahrenheitdc.com 202.912.4110

M | STREET BAR & GRILL & the 21 M Lounge 2033 M Street, NW, Washington, DC 20036-3305 M Street Bar & Grill, in the St. Gregory Hotel has a new Brunch menu by Chef Christopher Williams Featuring Live Jazz, Champagne, Mimosas and Bellini’s. For Entertaining, small groups of 12 to 25 people wishing a dining room experience we are featuring Prix Fixe Menus: $27.00 Lunch and $34.00 Dinner. Lunch and dinner specials daily.

www.mstreetbarandgrill.com

(202) 530-3621

Garrett’s Georgetown 3003 M Street N.W., Washington, DC 20007

JETTIES

1609 Foxhall Road, Intersection Foxhall & Reservoir

Celebrating over 31 years of keeping bellies full with good food and thirsts quenched with tasty beverages.

Jetties serves freshly-made sandwiches, and houses a salad bar. Indoor & outdoor seating. Open every day of the week, Jetties is a great for lunch and dinner.

· Fantastic Happy Hour · Free WiFi Internet · Buck Hunter · Trivia Night Tuesdays

Jetties serves 25 flavors of ice cream. Freshly made coffee is served, too.

Including: Terrace Dining Upstairs

Parking Available on Foxhall Mon.-Fri. 11am-9pm. Sat & Sun 9am-9pm.

www.garretsdc.com

www.jettiesdc.com

(202) 333-1033

Panache Restaurant 1725 DeSales St NW Tapas – Specialty Drinks Martini’s Citrus - Cosmopolitan - Sour Apple - Blue Berry Summer Patio – Open Now! Coming Soon. “New” Tyson’s Corner Location Open NOW! Dining Room Monday - Friday: 11:30am-11:00pm Saturday: 5:00pm-11:00pm Bar Hours Mon.-Thursday: 11:30am-11:00pm Friday: 11:30am- 2:00am Saturday: 5:00pm- 2:00am (202) 293-7760

(202) 965-FOOD 965-3663

La Chaumiere 2813 M St. Northwest, Washington, DC 20007 Whether it’s a romantic dinner or a business lunch, enjoy wonderful Boudin Blanc, Fresh Dover Sole Meunière, Cassoulet or Pike Quenelles by the fireplace in this unique “Country Inn”. Chef Patrick Orange serves his Award Winning Cuisine in a rustic atmosphere, where locals and celebrities alike gather. La Chaumiere also offers 2 private dining rooms with a prix-fixe menu and an affordable wine list. Washingtonian’s Best 100 restaurant 28 years in a row. www.lachaumieredc.com

SEA CATCH

Established in 1991, Peacock Cafe is a tradition in Georgetown life.

Lovers of history and seafood can always find something to tempt the palette at the Sea Catch Restaurant & Raw Bar. Sea Catch offers fresh seafood “simply prepared” in a relaxed atmosphere. Overlooking the historic C&O Canal, we offer seasonal fireside and outdoor dining. Private party space available for 15 - 300 Complimentary parking Lunch Monday - Saturday 11:30am - 3:00pm Dinner Monday - Saturday 5:30pm - 10:00pm Closed on Sunday Happy Hour Specials at the Bar Monday - Friday 5:00pm -7:00pm www.seacatchrestaurant.com

The tremendous popularity of The Peacock Happy Day Brunch in Washington DC is legendary. The breakfast and brunch selections offer wonderful variety and there is a new selection of fresh, spectacular desserts everyday. The Peacock Café in Georgetown, DC - a fabulous menu for the entire family. Monday - Thursday: 11:30am - 10:30pm Friday: 11:30am - 12:00am Saturday: 9:00am - 12:00am Sunday: 9:00am - 10:30pm (202) 625-2740

1054 31st St, NW

(202) 337-8855

Sequoia

SMITH POINT

THE OCEANAIRE

TOWN HALL

3000 K St NW, Suite 100 Washington, DC 20007

1338 Wisconsin Ave., NW (corner of Wisconsin & O St.)

1201 F St, NW

2218 Wisconsin Ave NW

Eclectic American cuisine, Coupled with enchanting views of the Potomac River make Sequoia a one of a kind dining experience.

Smith Point has quickly become a favorite of Georgetowners. The Washington Post Magazine calls Smith Point “an underground success” with “unusually good cooking at fair prices.” Chef Francis Kane’s Nantucket style fare changes weekly, featuring fresh combinations of seafood, meats, and farmers market produce.

Ranked one of the most popular seafood restaurants in , DC, “this cosmopolitan”send-up of a vintage supper club that’s styled after a ‘40’s-era ocean liner is appointed with cherry wood and red leather booths, infused with a “clubby, old money” atmosphere. The menu showcases “intelligently” prepared fish dishes that “recall an earlier time of elegant” dining. What’s more, “nothing” is snobbish here.

Town Hall is a neighborhood favorite in the heart of Glover Park, offering a classic neighborhood restaurant and bar with contemporary charm. Whether its your 1st, 2nd or 99th time in the door, we’re committed to serving you a great meal and making you feel at home each and every time. Come try one of our seasonal offerings and find out for yourself what the Washington Post dubbed the “Talk of Glover Park”Make a reservation online today at www.townhalldc.com

Offering a dynamic atmosphere featuring a mesquite wood fire grill, sensational drinks, and renowned River Bar. No matter the occasion, Sequoia will provide an unforgettable dining experience. www.arkrestaurants.com /sequoia_dc.html (202) 944-4200

Open for dinner Thurs- Sat from 6:30 pm-11pm. www.smithpointdc.com (202) 333-9003

Lunch: Mon-Fri- 11:30am -5:00pm Dinner: Mon-Thur 5-10pm. Fri & Sat 5-11pm. Sun-5-9pm. www.theoceanaire.com (202) 347-2277

TO PLACE AN AD IN OUR DINING GUIDE. siobhan@georgetowner.com

202.338.4833

(202) 338-1784

Peacock Cafe 3251 Prospect St. NW

CONTACT Siobhan

Serving Dinner Daily5PM-10:30pm Brunch Sat & Sun 11:30AM-5PM Free Parking available (202) 333-5640

SETTE OSTERIA 1666 Conn. Ave at R St. NW (Dupont Circle) Edgy. Witty. Casual. THE patio near Dupont Circle for peoplewatching. Pizza masters bake delicious Neapolitan thincrust pizzas in a wood-fire oven. Menu favorites include pastas, salads, lasagnas, Italian specialty meats and cheeses, and lowcarb choices. Daily specials, Lunch & dinner. Late night dining & bar service. www.SetteOsteria.com

(202)483-3070

Zed’s 1201 28TH St, N.W. ETHIOPIAN IN GEORGETOWN Award Winning Seafood | Poultry | Beef Vegetarian Dishes also available 100 Very Best Restaurants Award 100 Very Best Bargains Award Also, visit Zed’s “New” Gainesville, Virginia location (571) 261-5993 At the Corner of M & 28th Streets 1201 28th Street, N.W. Email: zeds@zeds.net (202) 333-4710

gmg, Inc. May 5, 2010 21


Food & wine

The Jockey Club, Redefined By Jordan Wright

W NoW Open Pistachio Lamb Kebab Wrap $8 Chicken Pide$8 Turkish Coban Salad$7 Salads, wraps, flatbread, and Meze

Organic, natural, fresh & locally bought

Hours Sun-Wed 11am-12am Thurs 11am-2am Fri-Sat 11am-4am

hen I heard they had revamped The Jockey Club, Washington’s bastion of the old guard and sanctuary for the well-heeled, my heart sank. The power dining spot in its heyday, it was a place where gentlemen’s chauffeurs waited, purposeful young men, hoping to impress, brought their dates and fashionable ladies lunched in suits and jewels. It stood alone in cataloguing the comings and goings of elite Washington society. And though the menu rarely changed, there was comfort in the veal paillard avec foie gras and the delicate Dover sole meuniere. No culinary acrobatics here. On a perfect spring afternoon we drove up to the porte-cochere at The Fairfax at Embassy Row. The original Jockey Club lantern stood beside the black-booted jockey, still sporting his red and white racing silks, and the etched brass plaque were in situ as we strode into the newly decorated dining room. Gone were the red and white-checked tablecloths and the dark-stained wooden booths (how they had held such charm

is now inexplicable). In their place is an elegant, understated room flooded with sunlight, soft colors, suede banquettes and equine portraiture. But the food, my dears, after all, that is why I have come. Levi Mezick is a young chef whose modern French cuisine has thrown down the gauntlet to every French chef in this city as he displays a new dynamic for Washingtonian gastrophiles. Mezick trained under Edouard Loubet, the Provencal chef whose Domaine de Capelongue restaurant in Luberon sports two Michelin stars. He cut his teeth in the New York kitchens of Daniel Boulud at Daniel and CafÊ Boulud, and later at Thomas Keller’s Per Se. All revel in three Michelin-starred restaurants and all are in

$BGĂ? #POBQBSUF CPVUJRVF CFFS XJOF GSPNBHF IBQQZ IPVS NPO GSJ QN

Exceptional taste for a fast-paced world. “Create your own� kabobs, fresh salads, innovative mezes & pide 202.333.1032 3277B M Street, NW, DC

www.MORSOEXPRESS.com @morsoexp 22 May 5, 2010 gmg, Inc.

Morso Express

#PVUJRVF #FFST 'SPNBHF 4FMFDUJPOT

'FBUVSJOH TFMFDU BMFT GSPN &VSPQFBO EJTUJMMFSJFT BOE UIF GJOFTU DIFFTFT GSPN 'SBODF 4QBJO *UBMZ BOE 4XJU[FSMBOE 0VS TUBGG JT QMFBTFE UP "TTJTU XJUI QBJSJOH PQUJPOT

XJTDPOTJO BWF OX DBGFCPOBQBSUF DPN


Photos by Jordan Wright ences with trails of coriander, tamarind and kaffir lime oil, highlighted by tender baby bok choy aswirl in an airy coconut foam. A duo of Pineland Farms local beef — red wine-braised short rib and seared strip loin — struck a lovely chord among sunchokes and pommes dauphine, accented by a rich Bordelaise sauce fragrant with marrow bone, wine and herbs. Sadly, desserts don’t measure up to Meznick’s triumphs. Pastry Chef Lisa Hood, who was at the Inn at Little Washington and Westend Bistro, will hopefully have more to offer on my next visit. For the present, a serviceable but plebeian chocolate-crusted Key lime cheesecake with raspberry coulis, and a Valrhona chocolate crème brulee with fresh berries will have to suffice. It was too early in the day to tipple, but rest assured the wine list is breathtaking. Cellaring over 450 labels and vintages, it is certainly

Dixie Liquor sales

specials

liquors

&Available

Bacardi Rum 1.75 - $18.99

NOW

Three Olives Vodka Liter $22.99  Speyburn 10-year Single Malt $27.99  MacAllen 12-year $52.99  Pappy Van Winkle Bourbon 23-year $226.99  Don Julio 1942 $118.99  Quinta de La Quietud  Svedka Vodka 2003 $31.99 1.75 $22.99 92-points - Robert Parker  Sobieski Vodka Francois Diligent 1.75 $19.99 Champagne $34.99  UV Vodka 750 ml  Domaine a Cavignet $11.99 Sancerre $22.99  Lamarca Prosecco $13.99  Marques de Zenete Grand Reserve $13.99  Fluery Cote Du Rhone $12.99  Chocovine $12.99  Yellowglen Sparkling Buy 3 bottles Wine $5.99 

the forefront of progressive French cuisine. We started with a simple butternut squash soup with cinnamon croutons and cranberry coulis, nicely executed though a bit behind the season. But it was the next dish, a snapper carpaccio exquisitely articulated with rings of blood orange segments and red radishes swirling around the thinly-sliced raw fish, that foretold the glories that lay ahead. We swooned and chirped over a glorious crab salad, a destination dish, mounted atop green apple gelee and celery root remoulade, an old French classic reinvented with a lively balance of creamy and tart. A delicious bread-crusted sea bass on basmati rice showed Indian-Asian influ-

wines

one to explore over many occasions. Mostly weighted on the French side, it ranges from Nuits-St. Georges, Pommards and Chambertins to Meursaults and Puligny-Montrachets. Yet there are also stunning brunellos and barolos and nine Chateaux d’Yquem to quibble over.   This “new” Jockey Club is as alluring as a first kiss. Just as impressive as ever, it has returned with a fresh cachet, a winning new chef and a dining room to match the restrained elegance of its cuisine. For questions or comments, contact jordan@ whiskandquill.com.

Dixie’s Everyday

WINE SALE -Take 5% off Buy 5 bottles

-Take 10% off Buy 12 bottles

-Take 15% off

Dixie Liquor 3429 M Street NW Washington DC 20007 202.3374412 www.dixieliquordc.com gmg, Inc. May 5, 2010 23


body & soul

In Good Company By Elizabeth Saverino

W

hen we were little, our friends and social network influenced our choices, thoughts and behaviors. If Dave played basketball then so did Colin. If Marie wore her hair in pigtails, Andrea thought it was cool. When we grow up, we look at our friends and those who construct our social network much differently. We are led to believe who you know can lead you to opportunity and success. The number of names and phone numbers in our Blackberries are supposed to grow, especially in our nation’s capital, where building one’s social network is not only an event, pastime or lecture topic, but a way of life. We’ve all been told that “who you know” can get you in the door to a job, inside information or get you into a sold-out event. But studies say who you know and how well you know them can make a much more remarkable impact on one’s life than having an “in” with backstage security.   In recent years, sociologists, psychologists, scientists and physicians alike have shifted their attention and broadened their focus of study subjects by examining the relationships and characteristics of those closely connected to them. While an individual’s social networks have not unveiled connections resulting in lucrative jobs or insider information, they have instead revealed a profound influence and vital effect over many facets of one’s health and wellness. The characteristics of those who run in a person’s so-

24 May 5, 2010 gmg, Inc.

cial circle and how closely connected they are to that person have proven to play a factoring role in matters diverse as belt size to coping ability.   So just how much are we influenced by our relationships? Let’s start with behaviors. It may sound rudimentary to assume that if the people you associate with are drinkers, you’ll likely follow suit. After assessing the social networks of 12,000 people from 1971 to 2003 — the subjects of the famous Framingham Heart Study — researchers from Harvard and the University of California, San Diego concluded in the Annals of Internal Medicine last month that not only do those in your social network affect your alcohol consumption, so do those in your social network’s network — this relationship held through three degrees of separation. If the people you surround yourself are heavy drinkers, it is 50 percent more likely that you will also drink heavily. If a friend of a friend is a heavy drinker, you would be 36 percent as likely to be one as well. And if that friend’s friend — the third degree of separation — is a heavy drinker, your chances of drinking heavily increases 15 percent.   It may be easy to enjoy another cocktail among your friends or share ideas of social acceptance when it comes to alcohol consumption, but what about body size? Could obesity spread from one to another just like the tendency to drink within a social circle? Take the people in your life, your friends, significant other, colleagues and family. Look at your body size in comparison to theirs, taking extra note of your closest friends. Do you find any parallels? Researchers from the Harvard/UCSD study found that it may not just be about diet and exercise, but that obesity is spread through relationships. The most statistically significant (and shocking) relationship influences were with close friendships of the same sex. A person’s chances of becoming obese increased by 57 percent if he or she had a close friend who became obese throughout the study. In pairs of people who each named one another as a close friend, the likeliness that both would gain weight if one became obese jumped to 171 percent. It didn’t matter how near or far the friends were from one another geographically, as long as the person being named was a close friend. This correlation has proved to be stronger than genetics and marriage. Between adult siblings, the likeliness that one would become obese after their brother or sister had increased by 40 percent; for spouses they found a 37 percent increased risk.   Don’t get upset just yet, not all relationships increase negative outcome. But if you are unhappy, perhaps you should find a new group of happy friends, hopefully ones with their own happy friends. Analyzing over 50,000 social ties of nearly 5,000 Framingham participants from 1983-2003, researchers concluded a key determinant of a person’s happiness lies in the happiness with whom they are connected. The degree of closeness to one’s friends and family also ascertained the likeliness of happiness in

the future. In the study, happiness was found to be dependent on a person’s social connections extending (again) to three degrees of separation. What this means is that your close friends, siblings, spouse and neighbors all can impact your happiness, and if they are happy (and their friends, and their friends’ friends), there is a greater probability that you will also be happy. Luckily, happiness seems to spread much more consistently through a social web then does unhappiness. By mapping out a network of social connections, it was found that happy people are found in clusters, and the more central one is in the network of relationships, the more likely they are to be happy and stay happy in the future.   Need more reasons to embrace friendships? Want to live longer? Keep your friends, make new ones and continue your relationships in your old age. While having a spouse had little impact on survival, a study of 3,000 nurses with breast cancer published in the Journal of Oncology found that women without close friendships were four times as likely to die then women with 10 or more friends. Another study, this time focused on longevity, found that when people aged 70 and above maintained close friendships and social ties, they had a 22 percent higher survival time. Australian researchers in this study also found no correlation between relationships with their children and relatives, just the friendships the subjects maintained.   Maybe it is all about who you know in life that makes a difference when it comes to attaining health and happiness. It’s not just a mind and body connection we need to be aware of. There is a third component, a person’s social ties, which can play a major role in one’s wellness, thus unveiling the mind-body-social network connection. It turns out, in one way or another, we are all influencing one another, spreading cheer or weight gain, and not only is it important to choose friends wisely and rekindle old friendships, it’s never too late to make new friends. It’s also important to remember you are part of larger phenomenon, influencing and leaving your mark in others’ lives.


calendar

May 7-9 In My Life: The Drawings of John Lennon   The largest exhibition of Lennon artwork ever assembled, ‘In My Life’ is more than 100 pieces of Lennon’s personal drawings. Presented by Yoko Ono, Legacy Fine Art and the Georgetown BID, the works in the touring exhibition features personally signed editions of Lennon’s ‘Bag One’ Lithographs and various drawings in his signature free hand style, culled from a collection of sketches produced from 1968 through his final years at the Dakota. Select pieces will be available for sale. Proceeds from the show will go towards the Washington Animal Rescue League and $2 donation is suggested for entry. 3307 M Street. Free admission.For more information call: 888-278-1969 or visit www.johnlennonartwork.com.

Courtesy John Lennon Artwork

May 6 Santiago Sierra Presents: ‘A Monument to NO’ at the American University Museum at the Katzen   No one in Washington will be able to avoid the word “No,� as it will be emblazoned in black, Arial font outside the American University Museum at the Katzen Arts Center. It is the work of Santiago Sierra, arguably one of Spain’s most significant contemporary artists. Sierra conceived his monument to “No� and all of its nuances as an international touring work. Through the ‘NO’ global tour, the sculpture has traveled on truck bed throughout Europe, New York City, and Miami before coming to Washington, acting as a prop against different landscapes exercising its right to dissent.   In addition to Santiago Sierra’s ‘NO’ global tour, three other exhibitions will inaugurate the unofficial start of summer at the American University Museum.   American University, Museum at the Katzen. For more information email: barrett@american. edu or call: 202-885-5951

gmcw.org. May 8 Georgetown Garden Tour   Nine beautiful gardens will be on view on this year’s garden tour, six designed by prominent garden designers. Six include water features, one of which is a geothermal swimming pool. Plant lists will be available at some of the gardens and docents will be on hand in each. Every year the Georgetown Garden Club, the tour’s sponsor, donates all profits to benefit local organizations, with emphasis on the preservation of gardens, parks and green spaces. Past beneficiaries have included the Georgetown Public Library, Book Hill, Georgetown Waterfront Park, and the Student Conservation Association at Dumbarton Oaks Park, Trees for Georgetown, Montrose Park, Rose Park and the Volta Park Habitat Garden. There will be tea and refreshments available for ticket holders from 2 to 4 p.m. at Keith Hall. Locations vary. For more information, visit: www.georgetowngardentour. com or call 202-965-1950.

May 7 Noon-Time Organ Recital and Demonstration Series: ‘Magical, Mystical, Musical Machine’   National City Christian Church is offering free pipe organ recitals and deomonstrations every Friday throughout the month of May, with a fun and interactive approach which will open people’s eyes to the amazing world of the pipe organ. The recital series allows people to hear the church’s 7,000-pipe, five-keyboard MĂśller organ in 30-minute recitals performed by Washington, D.C.’s finest concert organists, Charles Miller. The event is free and open to the public.   National City Christian Church, 5 Thomas Circle. Fridays in May at 12:15 p.m. Contact cmiller@nationalcitycc.org or call 202-7970103.

May 15 The Gay Men’s Chorus of Washington’s Annual Spring Gala This year’s event, titled A Night in Venice, features live and silent auctions, dinner, live entertainment from members of the Gay Men’s Chorus of Washington, a presentation to 2010 Harmony Award Honorees, and is followed by an after-party Carnevale and dessert, reflecting this year’s Venetian theme. A Night in Venice begins with an exclusive sponsor reception at 5:30 pm.   The Grand Hyatt Washington, 1000 H Street. Sponsor ticket costs $300, sponsor table of ten: costs $3,000. Individual table of ten costs $1,500, individual ticket costs $150 For tickets call: 202.293.1548 or visit: www.

May 16 Jackson Art Center’s 25th Anniversary Celebrate 25 years of creativity at the Jackson Art Center, providing space for over 45 artists. Come by for some birthday cake, refreshments and a chance to see the work of some of Georgetown’s finest artists. 12 to 5 p.m., Jackson Art Center, 3048 1/2 R St. May 19 Cultural Study Abroad is dedicated to supporting local artists and photographers as well as promoting learning among the underprivileged high school students of Washington. Each year, CSA funds international travel/ study for high school students. This year, 13 students visited Rome, Italy. Please support your community’s young people by attending our bi-Annual benefit concert at Dumbarton Church, featuring soprano Rosa Lamoreaux and pianist Steve Silverman. 7 p.m. 3133 Dumbarton St. Tickets $40 and $50. Contact Dr. Angela Iovino at info@culturalstudyabroad.com or 202-669-1562. Sponsored by Georgetown’s own Il Canale, For Your Home and Leonidas Chocolates. May 26 Sex and the City 2 sneak preview Fresh Boutique of Georgetown will present a pre-screening of the much anticipated Sex and the City 2 movie at the Georgetown Loews to benefit Labels for Love. Local style writers and bloggers will co-host the event with Red Carpet Packages including pre receptions at Mate and VIP Haute Suite at the Ritz Carlton Georgetown. 3101 K St. 6:30 p.m. General admission tickets $55. Visit www.freshofgeorgetown.com to purchase tickets.

ROOFING & HISTORIC RESTORATION SPECIALISTS

Is Your Roof History? Whether it's U.S. Treasury Building in Washington, DC, The Maryland State House in Annapolis, or even YOUR home, Wagner Roofing has an 90-year-long history of quality service. ďż˝ Copper & Tin ďż˝ Slate & Tile ďż˝ Ornamental Metal ďż˝ Modified Bitumen

1&5 $&5&3" *O )PNF 1FU $BSF

l-POH 4IPSU 5FSN

1FU 4JUUJOH l.JE %BZ 8BMLT

Hyattsville (301) 927-9030 Bethesda (301) 913-9030 Alexandria (703) 683-2123 Washington DC (202) 965-3175 www.wagnerroofing.com WAGNER ROOFING "Between Washington and the Weather"

Since 1914

Chapel Hall, restored 1999

Gallaudet University

A Cleaning Service Inc Since 1985

l5-$

8PPEMFZ 3E /8 8BTIJOHUPO %$

*OTVSFE l #POEFE Residential & Commercial Insured, Bonded, Licenced - Serving DC, VA, MD

703.892.8648 - www.acleaningserviceinc.com

gmg, Inc. May 5, 2010 25


WWW.GEORGETOWNER.COM

CLASSIFIEDS

202-338-4833

cleaning services

for lease

health & beauty

moving

REMEMBER CLEAN?

OFFICES & SUITES WITH POTOMAC RIVER VIEWS!

INVISALIGN

GULLIVER’S MOVING & STORAGE

Maid to Clean® does. We get on our hands and knees, roll up our sleeves, and scrub until it sparkles. Everywhere. Every time. Call 202-270-2967 or visit www.maidtoclean.com today!

Large suite with balcony overlooking C&O canal also available. Conference rooms, telephone answering, garage parking & more. Emma Dingle: 202-625-8300 www.dccenters.com

Wireless braces! Have the great smile you always wanted without the painful and unsightly metal. Very affordable - Financing available. Call NOW for FREE Consultation. Dr. Tirdad Fattahi: 202-338-7499 MacArthur Blvd., NW, 1st Floor Washington, DC 20007

FOR LEASE IN GEORGETOWN

Advanced Acupuncture of MacArthur

3210 Grace Street Retail Suites ranging from 1,000 to 2,000sf. Office Suites from 3,600 to 9,500sf. Call Jamie Connelly, Lincoln Property 210-491-5300

Got Pain? Get Acupuncture. It Works! Arthritis/joint pain, Headache/insomnia, Low-back pain, Neck pain, and other chronic symptoms. Call 202-669-8566. 5100 MacArthur Blvd 2ndFL, NW, Washington DC 20016

Enjoy teaching children and adults, beginners or those returning to the piano. Parking at NW DC Studio for students. Near Metro. 202-234-1837

ORIENTAL PERFECT TOUCH

CHERYL’S ORGANIZING CONCEPTS LLC.

CLEANING SERVICE Twentieth Anniversary European Style family owned and operated. Specializing in cleaning your prized antiques and your private residence. Best rates. Excellent referances and insurance. Call for free estimate. 703-869-5629

education/tutor

SHARED OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE!

LEARN THE “LANGUAGE OF MATH”

3307 M St, NW 2 offices, 4 cubicles for lease. LPC Commercial Services Adam Biberaj: 202-513-6736

Get OUTSTANDING Mathematic Tutoring from a well-respected coach with M.ed and over 20+ years of experience as a classroom teacher and tutor. Contact BG-7 MATHEMATICS TUTORING, LLC: 240-601-6677 or BG-7@live.com.

LANGUAGEONE 202-328-0099 Free Language Evaluation Class Offering onversatonal English and foreign language instruction and speacializing in Advanced Discussion Groups, Private, Semi-Private and Small Group Language instruction Including: English, Spanish, French, Italian, Chinese. No Registration Fee. Classes forming all of the time. Email us at classes@languageone.com

FRENCH LANGUAGE TEACHER Beginners to advance-level classes, and conversation classes. Enthusiastic and very patient. Years of teaching, Washington, DC. Contact: 202-270-2098 or getfrench@gmail.com

TOPS IN TUTORING Supportive Language Arts Tutoring Tailored to your Child’s Needs, Grades K-9 Aileen M. Solomon, M.Ed. Reading Specialist for over 25 years in public/ independent schools reading (decoding, comprehension, literature study, note-taking, phonics, fluency), enrichment reading, writing (early writing through essays), word study (spelling), vocabulary, study/organizational skills, homework support. Excellant references Amsolomo@gmail.com 202-368-7670

26 May 5, 2010 gmg, Inc.

for sale Rare Signed and Remarqued!

JOHN STOBART’s First Georgetown Lithograph (1976) “Water Street in 1845” (17 x 28) Edition of only 750, 200 remarqued. Museum-quality framing by The Atlantic Gallery $2,000 email interest to: cv02cv@aol.com

CUBAN SILKSCREEN MOVIE POSTER SALE! 10-7 Saturday/Sunday April 24-25 3319 “O” Street NW 100+ posters! Fabulous gifts, $59-$129. Prefer private showing? Contact Bill brubakerDC@msn.com

2009 FORD MUSTANG Torch Red Clearcoat exterior, with a light graphite interior color. Priced to sell at: $16,999.00 ONLY 23K Miles-WOW! Automatic Transmission VIN: 1ZVHT80N095103078- And the best news of all- STILL COVERED UNDER FORD NEW CAR WARRANTY!! One owner CLEAN carfax. NON-SMOKER car. Call: Daniel at 703-362-0165

MT. PLEASANT/ QUIET RETREAT Yet close to everything. 1/1, small building, courtyard view, wood floors, great closets, storage, low fee, pets ok. $299K 1615 Kenyon St, NW; Apt. 22 Bill Panici 202-277-4675 Weichert, Realtors 202-326-1300

Licensed & Insured Local/Long distance, packing, pianos, & antiques. Swift and gentle relocations. 202-483-9579 or 703-838-7645 www.gulliversmovers.com

MUSIC

GRAND OPENING at 1624 Wisconsin Ave, NW in Georgetown. Professional Massage Therapy. Full Body Acupressure, Relaxation, and Relief of Your Stress and Tension. Incall/Outcall 703-237-6666

home improvement Creighton’s Kitchen, Bathroom, Basement, Attic Remodeling, Deck Building and Preservation, Special Project Requests. www.creightonshomeimprovements.com 202-363-0502 Licensed, Bonded, Insured - Serving N.W. DC Government secured background clearance

JHI CONTRACTING Renovations, Remodeling, Painting, Concrete, Masonry, Waterproofing, Excavation, Demolition. All work guaranteed. Licensed, bonded and insured. Member BBB and Member of Angie’s List. DC License #3044. John Himchak 202-528-2877.

insurance CAR INSURANCE WITH PERSONAL SERVICE NO EXTRA CHARGE State Farm Insurance Michele A. Conely, Agent, 4401 Connecticut Ave. NW Washington, DC 20008 Please Call for a quote 24/7: 202-966-6677

limousine

Patient Piano Teacher

organization

Home and Small Business Organizing Including Senior Move Management and Paperwork Assistance. Serving Washington Metro Area since 2002. Member NAPO, NSGCD, AADMM. www.cherylsorganizing.com 301-916-9022

ENERGY WORK-SPACE CLEARING Release and clear attachments, blockages, negative energies both metaphysical and physical in homes, work enviroment, land and personal. Contact Juliette at JulietteTahar@earthlink.net or 202-337-0362

OFFICE ORGANIZATION What does disorganization cost you? Time? Energy? Hundreds or thousands of dollars? Take back control today with Profound Impact, LLC, THE home and small business resource for your productivity and organizing needs. Call Julie at 703-517-2449 and visit www.profound-impact.com

personal shopper STYLE CONSULTANT/ PERSONAL SHOPPER Now back from Manhattan, Sarah Pauley is here to help you develop the image you’ve always desired. Contact Sarah Pauley for a complimentary consultation at 646-382-0116 or visit www.sarahpauley.com

professional SUNRISE LIMOUSINE SERVICE Luxury Limo / Sedan Service. Serving Washington DC, Maryland and Virginia. Airport Transportation, Business Meeting, Weddings and other Occasions. Get 10% Discount on all Online Reservations. www.sunriselimousines.com Phone: 301-260-1069 email: info@sunriselimousines.com

PRESERVE YOUR LIFE STORY (Or that of a loved one) as an attractive hardcover book - without writing a word! All you have to do is talk! Call Vitagraph®, 410-666-8632 or go to www.myvitagraph.com Vitagraph® Quality preservation of priceless memories.


SERVICE DIRECTORY Your

When you go out of town, Send Your Dog to Camp!

Adventure Begins Here

Wouldn’t you rather have your dog running outside while you’re away?

Quality Sport & Trail Horses For Sale Open Year-Round

Lessons

Competitive with standard kennel rates but our Country Dogs spend lots of time outdoors in safe, monitored social time with other dogs. Plus we pickup and deliver right to your door! We’re also open year-round.

Training

Mention this ad and get a FREE Country Dogs mug with your boarding. Serving Metropolitan DC since 2004. www.country-dogs.net

Call Mark @ 888.711.7833 x1

Trail Rides

*5)064&

Special Events

Computer Service and Consulting

www.therockingsranch.com 540.678.8501

"/%3&8 )"-0#

A. Schopenhauer

General Manager

3712 Columbia Pike Arlington VA 22204 703-946-2032 ahalob@ithouse.us

Brigitte Ziebell Ceritified and Trained by Romana Kryzanowska

“To neglect ones body for any other advantage in life is the greatest folly”

Pilates One on One

202.338.4676 3140 Wisconsin Ave. NW Washington, DC 20016

Lucas Custom Tailors Expert Alteration (Master Tailor, Lucas, Kim, Clara)

-Tuxedo Rental/Sales

Dependable Business Systems ax

,F ers

nt pri

ser

La

s ale

S

l

d an

Pri

ice

rv Se

a

tro

ng rvi

nd

es

k Ma

Al

-Quality Dry Cleaning

rs nte

d an

ea Ar

-We Alter Leather & Fur. Monogram & Reweaving -We Accept Major Credit Cards

ls

e od

M

er

v ro

ars

1520 Wisconsin Ave. N.W. - Washington, DC 20007 M-F 7:30-7 - Sat 8:30-6:00 pm Telephone 202-625-7108 - Fax 202-333-3173

e 5y

2

fo

e eM

th

The 9th Green Landscaping

9

Se

Ted Hill Technical Specialist 202-640-9768

Lawnmowing Gutter Cleaning Leaf Removal Call Marty Touhy 703-538-5869 Licensed & Insured

If you want to place an ad in the service directory or classifieds please call Jen @ 202-338-4833 or email jen@georgetowner.com gmg, Inc. May 5, 2010 27


Dashing!

Triple Crown

Jake Lieberman knows how to wear a bowtie and still keep his look chic and modern. The orange Carrot & Gibbs bowtie was a perfect pairing for the orange check Astor shirt and Brooks Brothers khakis. GQ will be calling.

Phil and Janine Dodge were picture perfect! Phil in his handsome white Armani jacket and Janine in her white feminine and whimsical BCBG dress were headturners. Tommy Carroll’s light green ’62 Rolls Royce completed this classic picture.

A Winner!

Try Again

Four Wheeling

The ever-so-fashionable Maryann Forward did not disappoint. She was glamorous in her eye-catching orange Kay Unger belted dress and ladylike Louise Green cream hat. Plus, the cool vintage sports car in the background only added to the glamour.

Gold Cup fashion is known for subtlety and sophistication. I am not sure tie-dye fits into that category. The hat was fine, but next time I recommend keeping the dress to one or two colors.

What is so wonderful about the Virginia Gold Cup is that the men take pride in their appearance. A sloppy tucked-out shirt, cargo pants and a tie half-done is inappropriate. Please leave this outfit for the truck races, not the horse races.

Hats Off to Her

A Day at the Races By Stylist Pam Burns of Pamshops4you Photos by Jennifer Gray

A True Gentlemen

Matthew Schneider had his Virginia Gold Cup look down to a tee. He looked dazzling in his Jos. A. Bank seersucker suit, pink express shirt and pink-striped tie. Men, take lessons from Matthew.

28 May 5, 2010 gmg, Inc.

Katie Preece looked impeccable Saturday at the Gold Cup. Her black hat with a white trim complemented her black-ruffled Betsey Johnson dress and pearl jewelry. What time is the hat contest?


social

Kitty Kelley Supports DC Public Library Foundation

Kitty Kelley was clearly delighted “after four years in lockdown” writing “Oprah” to be among neighbors and some surprise guests, including author Erica Jong, as she discussed her latest tome in Blake Hall at St. John’s Episcopal Church on April 25. Library Foundation Exec. Dir. Anna Velasco reported that all proceeds from the event’s book sale will benefit the restoration of three centuries of historical documents from the Georgetown Library’s Peabody Room, which almost vanished in the devastating fire. Kitty shared that the motto over her desk reads “Tell the truth but ride a fast horse.” She fielded questions and felt that an unauthorized biography was fully justified, as “I believe we are entitled to all points of view.”

scene

Sitar Arts Center Gala

Photos by John Woo

Sitar’s founder, sponsors, partners and students came together on April 22 at the Carnegie Institution for a celebration and benefit to commemorate a decade of high-quality arts education for D.C. youth. NBC4’s Barbara Harrison emceed the event, which featured live music by the Center’s Saints Band and Percussion Ensemble, a fashion show highlighting Sitar’s student designers, a performance by its “Wild Swan” Washington Ballet class and a presentation of the Center’s Vision Awards. The evening raised essential funds to enable Sitar to offer after-school, weekend and summer classes to over 700 students a year, 80 percent from low-income households.

Vision Award Honoree Don de Laski, Sitar Dep. Dir. Maureen Dwyer, Sitar Exec. Dir. Ed Spitzberg, emcee Barbara Harrison, Sitar Founder Rhonda Buckley

Mike Walter, Stephen Ziobro

Sitar Founder Rhonda Buckley, Wash. Ballet Artistic Dir. Septime Webre

Wyatt and Tandy Dickerson

Smithsonian Craft Show

The 28th Annual Smithsonian Craft Show held a preview night benefit on April 21 at the National Building Museum. The event provided first choice shopping from 120 exhibitors offering the finest contemporary crafts in categories that included basketry, decorative fiber and wearable art. The Smithsonian Jazz Trio entertained and guests enjoyed a cocktail buffet. The Craft Show is produced by the Smithsonian Women’s Committee, which through its grant process has raised over $8.5 million to benefit Smithsonian education, outreach and research programs. — Mary Bird

The Georgetowner and Cultural Study Abroad cordially invite you and a friend to attend the First Seasonal Salon on The Insiders View of Tuscany June 8, 2010 6:00-8:00 Over Tuscan wines and light Tuscan cuisine, Angela Iovino will engage you in a conversation about the history and culture of one of the most talked about regions of the world. View original art inspired by Tuscany, chat about your experiences traveling through this fundamental area of Western civilization, and know that your donation will assist a group of underprivileged DC high school

Heidi Austreng, Smithsonian Women’s Committee program coordinator

Domenic Cardella

students travel to Italy.

Professor Angela Iovino Cultural Study Abroad Sarah Gorman, Carole Segal

Jane Milosch, Sarah Cash

3526 S Street NW Washington DC 20007 202-669-1562

www.culturalstudyabroad.com/ YOUR NEXT TRIP gmg, Inc. May 5, 2010 29


Social

Scene

Stars Align for WHCD and DC’s Prom Weekend Whatever your opinion of the hype, hoopla, fun, running around to the parties, photographing and more surrounding the White House Correspondents’ Dinner at the Washington Hilton, May 1, you know takes over the town. And whoever your favorite is, whether it’s Ashley, Kim, Scarlett, Jessica or Arianna, Peggy, Maria or, of course, Michelle, you know you could have been in the same room. Herewith, a few photo selections. — Robert Devaney

Glee’s Matthew Morrison with fans outside the St. Regis after the Time/ People party.

Jessica Simpson stops to pose with a young fan at the Washington Hilton lobby.

Actor Ewan McGregor and wife Eve Mavrakis.

Ashley Judd at the Mayflower.

Wendie Malick in front of the St. Regis.

Gossip Girl’s Chace Crawford poses with fans on 16th Street in front of the St. Regis.

30 May 5, 2010 gmg, Inc.

Designer Tory Burch with Jason Binn, Niche Media founder and publisher of Capitol File.

CNBC’s Maria Bartiromo and Marjorie Martin.

Actor Dennis Quaid with Johanna Schneider and Joe Crea.

Kim Kardashian at the Mayflower for the Capitol File bash.

Jessica Alba with husband Cash Warren.

World Corp. CEO Rupert Murdoch and wife Wendi Deng with Obama advisor Valerie Jarrett.


Social

Scene

Patrons’ Party Brings Out the Neighbors The Patrons’ Party, headlining the 80th Georgetown House Tour, was held April 22 at the home of Debbie and Curtin Winsor on 34th Street. The Winsor house, once occupied by Ambassador David Bruce and his wife Evangeline Bruce, was built circa 1810. The crowd of house tour supporters and neighbors greeted tour champion 96-year-old Frida Burling and enjoyed themselves with wine in the garden. — R.D.

Ambassador Amy Bondurant and husband David Dunn, whose house was on the April 24th tour

The gentlemen of Washington Fine Properties

Photos by Mary Bird

House tour chair Martha Vicas, Frida Burling and Nancy Adler, party chair

N Street Village Gala Earns Capitol Hill Cred With the U.S. Capitol in sight of the Mandarin Oriental Hotel, the April 20 gala for N Street Village — a local charity which helps women who are homeless, addicted to alcohol or drugs reclaim and rebuild their lives — was filled with star power from members of Congress. The gala honored three women of N Street Village who turned their lives around: Barbara Parker, Carlita Walker and Elaine Webber. It also presented awards to D.C. developer Joe Horning, Rep. Patrick Kennedy (D-R.I.) and Dr. David Walls-Kaufman. Horning urged attendees to “dig deeper for contributions.” Rep. Kennedy, who spoke of his own ongoing recovery and his “little car accident,” wondered if Rep. Jim Moran (D-Va.) would “return my phone calls” when he retires from Congress at the end of this session. (According to Roll Call Newspaper, Kennedy was seen after the dinner in a restaurant near Capitol Hill, apparently drinking.) The gala evening surpassed its fundraising goal, topping $635,000. — R.D.

Hosts Curtin and Debbie Winsor

Honoree Joe Horning with wife Lynne

Julia Winsor with Elizabeth Mulhern

The Morning After John McLaughlin, host of the McLaughlin Group, and Devin Wenig, CEO of Thomson Reuters Markets, did their utmost to ease the pain for the somewhat worse for wear survivors of nonstop White House Correspondents’ Weekend events. Their Sunday brunch on the roof terrace of the Hay–Adams Hotel, arguably the most privileged perch in Washington, was replete with generous libations and exquisite buffet as breezes wafted on a warm day. The guest list was over the top. — Mary Bird

Mrs. Dawn Ferguson, New Zealand Ambassador Roy Neil Ferguson, White House correspondent Connie Lawn

Linda Daschle, co-chair of N Street Village’s honorary board, Rep. Patrick Kennedy and Ugo Arinzeh, chair of N Street Village’s board of directors

Honoree Carlita Walker, mistress of ceremones A’Lelia Bundles and Cornell Ford

Stephen Meeter, Kate Michael

Wendy Diamond, John Arundel

Kirk Monroe, Kelley McCormick

May 5, 2010 gmg, Inc. 31


WASHINGTON, DC GEORGETOWN BETHESDA/CHEVY CHASE POTOMAC NORTHERN VIRGINIA WFP.COM

INTERNATIONAL OFFERING

INTERNATIONAL OFFERING

INTERNATIONAL OFFERING

202.944.5000 202.333.3320 301.222.0050 301.983.6400 703.317.7000

INTERNATIONAL OFFERING

K ALORAMA, WASHINGTON, DC

CLEVELAND PARK, WASHINGTON, DC

FOXHALL, WASHINGTON, DC

MASS AVE HEIGHTS, WASHINGTON, DC

Margot Wilson

Eileen McGrath Nancy Taylor Bubes

W. Ted Gossett

W. Ted Gossett

Elegant Beaux Arts home with impressive brick and limestone facade. Former ambassadorial residence featuring spectacular entertaining spaces with grand rooms, double lot with tiered gardens, terrace and pool. Offers 6 bedrooms, 5 full and 2 half baths. $5,750,000

202-549-2100

NEW PRICE! Spectacular 1898 7 bedroom, 5 bath home on over 1/3 acre with sweeping front porches, beautiful architectural details throughout, lovely rear deck and pool, and garage parking. Near Metro, shops, and Zoo. $3,495,000

202-253-2226 202-256-2164

COLONY HILL - Handsome renovation and addition! Rebuilt Colonial on east side of Foxhall Road with flat back yard, 5 bedrooms & 5 baths up, 4 fireplaces, daylight lower level with 6th bedroom & bath. Chef ’s kitchen, 2-car garage, great light & handsome woodwork! $3,275,000

703-625-5656

INTERNATIONAL OFFERING

SHOREHAM WEST - Total renovation with great style! Foyer, gracious living room opening to walled garden and terrace, dining room, library, chef ’s kitchen, 2 bedrooms, 3.5 baths, study/office, hardwood floors, spacious closets, garage parking for 2 cars. $2,650,000

703-625-5656

INTERNATIONAL OFFERING

GEORGETOWN, WASHINGTON, DC

WESLEY HEIGHTS, WASHINGTON, DC

Margot Wilson

Sally Marshall

Spectacular duplex in most desirable building in Georgetown! Floor to ceiling windows overlooking private terrace, beautifully designed with fabulous kitchen and baths, rooftop pool and exercise facility. 2BR, 2.5BA. Condo fee includes utilities and 2-car garage parking. $2,300,000

202-549-2100

INTERNATIONAL OFFERING

FOREST HILLS, WASHINGTON, DC

Fabulous contemporary overlooking the gardens of Hillwood Museum. Sun-filled residence well suited for large scale entertaining, with spacious formal rooms positioned off a large central gallery. Verdant garden views from every window, and walk to Metro! 5BR, 6+ BA. $2,195,000

Margot Wilson

Washington Fine Properties is Proud to Announce the Opening of Our New McLean Office #FWFSMZ 3PBE 4VJUF t .D-FBO 7JSHJOJB 703-317-7000

202-549-2100

MCLEAN, VIRGINIA

NEW LISTING! 1890s farmhouse with wonderful 21st century addition and amenities on a private acre with tennis court, pool, pavilion, and barn. 4 bedrooms, 2.5 baths and only 1 mile from DC via Chain Bridge! Privacy, charm and location! $1,995,000

W. Ted Gossett

Exceptional property on 14,850 square foot corner lot. Living room with fireplace, exquisite vaulted ceiling library with oversized fireplace, 4 bedrooms and 2 baths on upper level + additional bedroom and bath on third level. Lovely architectural details. $2,295,000

703-625-5656

Washington’s finest new custom home neighborhood, moments to Georgetown and surrounded by 200 acres of parkland. Home shown designed by George Meyers. Homes from $3,000,000. Lots from $1,200,000.

Kim Gibson Susie Maguire

PALISADES, WASHINGTON, DC

ARLINGTON, VIRGINIA

Joe O’Hara

Matthew B. McCormick 202-728-9500 Ellen Morrell 202-728-9500 Bobbe Ward 202-243-1604

Jinny Wilkes

703-350-1234

NEW LISTING! Spectacular renovation of a charming 1921 bungalow with open floor plan. Wood floors, chef ’s kitchen, first floor family room and library, 2-car parking. $1,295,000

INTERNATIONAL NETWORKS • LOCAL AFFILIATE

32 May 5, 2010 gmg, Inc.

INTERNATIONAL OFFERING

PHILLIPS PARK, WASHINGTON, DC

MCLEAN, VIRGINIA

NEW PRICE! Spectacular home in sought-after neighborhood! 5 bedrooms, 5.5 baths, gourmet kitchen adjoining family room, walkout lower level and 2 car garage parking. $1,369,000

301-254-3020

202-333-4760

1921 original log home with spacious additions for entertaining. High ceilings, wide plank floors, cathedral ceiling in kitchen with Viking & Subzero. 15 skylights, 4BR, 3.5BA, screen porch & wrap-around deck, 29,533 SF privacy & natural beauty. 1/2 mile to Chain Bridge. $1,225,000

703-241-0635


Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.