The Georgetowner: September 14, 2022 Issue

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PHOTO CIRCA 1922

SINCE 1954 GEORGETO WNER.COM VOLUME 68 NUMBER 12 SEPTEMBER 14 - OCTOBER 11, 2022 MonumentalCelebrations 100 YEARS Fall Arts Preview

ANC UPDATE: SCHOOLS, PARKING, BIKES GILLES L’AVANT-GARDEEPIÉ’S ARTHUR COTTON1935-2022MOORE, RENEWED CITIZENS GROUP RICHMOND GETAWAY KITTY KELLEY ON ‘SAVING FREUD’

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This reprint of a vintage photograph shows three bathing beauties dancing at the Tidal Basin in front of the Washington Monument in 1923. This photo was colorized using artificial intelligence by the Georgetowner Graphics Department. In the 1920s, swimsuit police were on the lookout during these years of female liberation. At the same time, the Miss America Pageant began, originating in 1921 as a “bathing beauty revue.” The very first Miss America was Margaret Gorman, who hailed from Georgetown. Gorman, a 16-yearold student at Western High School (now the Duke Ellington School of the Arts), lived on Dent Place. She won the Washington Herald photo contest and was named “Miss District of Columbia.”

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BIGGEST HIT ONLINE GEORGETOWN BID EMPLOYEE MURDERED 2,767 VIEWS Stephon Johns, who worked for the Georgetown BID, was fatally shot Aug 11 in a double-shooting from a “silver car” in the Dupont Circle area at 9:32 p.m. Courtesy GBID. TRANSFORMER'SLEADERSHIPCULTURALBREAKFASTSPEAKER:VICTORIAREISCLB THURSDAY SEPT 22 2022 8-9:301739TABARDINNNST.NWA.M.$30 Thank You Long & Foster - Balfour Palisades - Doyle Auctions Senior Living

NATIONAL BOOK FESTIVAL (PHOTOS)

The Wawa at the corner of Wisconsin Avenue and M Street in Georgetown on Aug. 30. Courtesy Darcy Spencer via Twitter.

BY ROBERT DEVANEY

BY JEFF MALET

David Maraniss discusses his new book “Path Lit by Lightning: The Life of Jim Thorpe” at the Library of Congress National Book Festival. Photo by Jeff Malet.

WAWA SHOOTING RATTLES GEORGETOWN

BY CHRISTOPHER JONES

President Ronald Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev at the Reykjavík summit in Iceland, October 1986. Courtesy Britannica.

OPPOSITION TO LAWYERS HAVE HEART 10K AND 5K RUNS

1819 35th St NW Sundays8-4 YEARS50

“We encourage Yellow to come to the neighborhood,” Chair Murphy told William Simons, the general manager of Albi and a spokesperson for Yellow – a popup cafe – opening soon at 1524 Wisconsin Ave. NW. Until a settlement agreement is reached, however, the ANC will protest the establishment’s application for a “Class C” license based on the potential “impact on peace, order and quiet in the neighborhood.”

ROSE PARK CAPITAL BIKESHARE STATION?

CRIME AND SAFETY

ANC Back-to-School,Update: Parking, Bikes

GEORGETOWN MINISTRY CENTER

Lynne Golub-Rofrano, founding executive director of Georgetown Village provided an update on the senior services center at 1680 Wisconsin Ave. NW. “We never closed our doors during the pandemic,” she said. The center maintains a loaning closet of durable medical equipment to lend on a short- or long-term basis, if needed. As a membership

Commissioner Lohse also proposed a request for a “joint clarification” from DDOT

and Rock Creek National Park Service (NPS) explaining the delay of over a “year and a-half” in installing a Capital Bikeshare Station at Rose Park after “all agencies” had supported the measure in 2019.

ANC HYDE-ADDISONRESOLUTIONS

Metropolitan Police Department Sgt. Philip Robinson of the Second District said that no violent crimes were reported in August. Motor vehicle thefts, however, rose from two in July to five in August (with two of the stolen autos recovered). Thefts-from-autos rose from eight in July to 12 in August. And property thefts rose from 31 in July to 54 in August. Robinson emphasized, however, that most of the vehicle thefts were due to owners leaving keys in cars and the majority of property thefts were targeted against particular clothing and cosmetics retailers for which MPD is formulating a tactical response with “two overtime units Commissionerdetailed.”Elizabeth Miller (2E07) raised the alarm about package thefts reported by her constituents. Robinson agreed to discuss reviewing Nextdoor Georgetown reportings with the department and Miller. Gwendolyn Lohse (2E06) inquired about thefts targeting outdoor diners. Snatching wallets and purses from diners “has not been a trend in the Georgetown community,” Robinson said.

Following a brief presentation from BellRinger executive director Chris Timco, the ANC voted unanimously to approve BellRinger’s Oct. 22 fundraising Bike Ride to support cancer research at Georgetown Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Care Center. Up to 1,000 riders are expected for the event, but once underway should be clear of Georgetown by 8:30 a.m. For more information, visit BellRinger.org.

6 SEPTEMBER 14, 2022 GMG, INC. TOWN TOPICS

organization serving those “55 and up,” Georgetown Village also offers transportation services, “light bulb changing” or other essential tasks – “just ask a volunteer!” GolubRofrano said. The nonprofit is looking for a new home. Please call 202-999-8988 with any suggestions

GEORGETOWN VILLAGE NEEDS NEW HOME

BY CHISTOPHER JONES

The ANC approved Commissioner Palmer’s proposal to urge the Department of Public Works (DPW) to more strictly enforce parking regulations – especially against double parking – on M Street between 28th and 34th Streets NW, on 20th Street between M and Olive Streets NW, and on 31st Street between M and South Streets NW.

Owing to “significant impacts in our community” and “disruptions in the neighborhood,” Commissioner Palmer proposed a resolution to withdraw ANC support for the Lawyers Have Heart 10K and 5K races in Georgetown. Year after year, she argued, organizers for the event have promised to reduce noise, traffic disturbances and other chaotic factors, such as poorly placed toilet facilities from the annual run/ walk fundraiser for the American Heart Association. “Residents have simply had enough,” Palmer said. Although he has run in the fundraiser for many years, Chair Murphy agreed. “I hate to see it go but Commissioner Palmer is right,” he said.

REPORT FROM MAYOR BOWSER’S OFFICE

Following a site visit with D.C. Council members Brooke Pinto (Ward 2) and Robert White (at-Large), Commissioner Putta offered a resolution urging that Hyde-Addison school receive from the city all needed repairs and maintenance. “We did see things with our own eyes that I thought were worth mentioning,” Putta said. Indoor stacks of poles from outdoor tents had not been moved for over a year, and the new projector for the auditorium/cafeteria has also gone a year without repair.

Recalling that “DC Chicken and Gyro terrorized the neighborhood,” with noisy and disruptive drivers “well into the wee hours of the morning,” the ANC voted unanimously to inform the DC Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs (DCRA) that it opposes allowing the landlord of the premises of 3147 Dumbarton St. NW to contemplate the establishment of another “food delivery service” at the location contrary to zoning regulations.

EATERY AT 3147 DUMBARTON ST.

Julius Terry of the Mayor’s Office of Community Relations (MOCRS) announced the mayor’s 2022 Back to School Guide. In response to complaints from Chair Murphy and Elizabeth Miller (2E07) about 311 requests reported as “resolved” prematurely, Terry stated that he will review how the city handles such requests. Commissioner Lohse suggested a stern ANC resolution should help support such a review. Kishan Putta (2E01) conveyed constituent complaints about swimming pools at Jelleff and Volta Park closing long before Labor Day despite the heat in August getting “worse and worse.”

The Georgetown-Burleith Advisory Neighborhood Commission (ANC 2E) held its September 2022 virtual meeting on Aug. 29. The following is an abbreviated report. A full version of this report is online at Georgetowner.com.

PARKING ENFORCEMENT

GMC’s executive director Kelly Andreae called to offer some helpful statistics on Georgetown’s homelessness problem. Of the 90 guests GMC recently matched with housing, Andreae reported one-third were placed in transitional housing, one-third in permanent housing and one-third were “choosing to remain outside.” Even if such

SETTLEMENT AGREEMENT NEEDED FOR YELLOW CAFE

individuals are assigned caseworkers, there are “a lot of barriers” to placing “chronically homeless individuals” in housing, she said. As homeless migrants — mostly single adults — are being bussed to Union Station, GMC has begun to discover through its street outreach programs that the immigrants are arriving in increasing numbers into Georgetown, though they have not yet begun to line up for GMC services. “In recent days, GMC has seen a substantial increase in those individuals,” Andreae said. “GMC is a very important resource in our community and they do great work,” Chair Rick Murphy proclaimed.

BELLRINGER BIKE RIDE EXPECTS 1,000

French chef Gilles Epié plans to open a restaurant on M Street in late September or October. It will be called L’Avant-Garde and be in the building — appropriately enough — which once housed the legendary restaurant, The Guards, at 2915 M St. NW. L’Annexe — part of the ownership of Epié’s restaurant — is next door. Epié has held the title of executive chef since May.

At the Aug. 29 Georgetown-Burleith Advisory Neighborhood Commission meeting, Nick Manos, director of construction and facilities for restaurateur Stephen Starr of Le Diplomate fame, provided a quick powerpoint update on the latest plans for Starr’s proposed mega-Italian, 312-seat restaurant and market at 3276 M St. NW, site of the old Dean & DeLuca. The plans to be presented to the Old Georgetown Board (OGB) call for sensitivity to the “historical significance of the building” and the “historical value of the signage” on the facade. There will be a center oval bar, along with a mozzarella and a prosciutto bar. The front entrance will house a grocery section. The side awning and tent space will be converted to a bright white windowed solarium. “We’ll be making existing structures even better,” Manos said. The ANC fully endorsed Starr’s proposals. “The second half of 2023 is way too late,” for the restaurant’s opening, ANC 2E Chair Rick Murphy quipped. No name has been announced yet for the eatery.

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D.C. SUES BITCOIN EVANGELIST MICHAEL SAYLOR FOR $25 MILLION IN UNPAID TAXES

MicroStrategy has not commented on the allegations.

Born in Kalorama in 1935, Moore was a sixth-generation Washingtonian, whose work can be seen all around the city, the region — and in Georgetown. He went to St. Albans School and then earned bachelor’s and master’s degrees in architecture from PrincetonMoore’sUniversity.firstproject was the Canal Square mixed-used complex on M Street which borders 31st Street as well as the C&O Canal and includes the building that housed Henry Hollerith’s company that became IBM. He also built the Foundry Building and renovated the Old Foundry Building that stand in front of the C&O Canal between 30th and Thomas Jefferson Streets. His other works include Harborside (next to Washington Harbour), the Cairo, the Goh Annex of the Phillis Collection, Foxhall Crescents, Portals, Rizik’s and private residences.

Moore will be laid to rest at Oak Hill Cemetery on R Street in Georgetown.

The Office of the Attorney General (OAG) alleges “that Saylor illegally avoided more than $25 million in D.C. taxes by pretending to be a resident of other jurisdictions with lower personal income taxes. OAG also alleges that MicroStrategy had detailed information confirming that Saylor was in fact a D.C. resident, but instead of accurately reporting his address to local and federal tax authorities and withholding D.C. taxes, collaborated with Saylor to facilitate his tax evasion.”

MORE ON STEPHEN STARR’S MEGAITALIAN RESTAURANT ON M STREET

In the 1980s and ’90s, Moore and his wife lived in the tall, light-bricked building that he designed, west of the Georgetown Exxon on Canal Road, before retiring to the Watergate. They had a home in Talbot County, Maryland.

ARCHITECT ARTHUR COTTON MOORE, 1935-2022

BYTESNEWS

Epié told The Georgetowner on Aug. 30 that the menu is not quite set, but that it would contain “the best of best ingredients,” adding, “the stars are the ingredients.” After all, he noted, “Simplicity is the hardest.” The menu will be a la carte. He expects the average meal to be under $100 — “$55 to $85.” “Everything is going to be classic,” Epié said. “Nothing fancy… Fine dining is over.”

The OAG continues: “Michael Saylor … has publicly called the District’s Georgetown neighborhood home since about 2005. He lives in a 7,000-square-foot penthouse on the Georgetown waterfront and has docked at least two of his luxury yachts in the District for long periods of time. Saylor’s net worth is estimated to be more than $1 billion, and he has earned hundreds of millions of dollars in ordinary income and capital gains since 2005.”

BY ROBERT DEVANEY

D.C. Attorney General Karl Racine announced on Aug. 31 a tax fraud lawsuit “against Michael J. Saylor, a billionaire technology executive who has resided in the District of Columbia for more than a decade but has never paid any D.C. income taxes — despite earning hundreds of millions of dollars. The lawsuit also names MicroStrategy — a publicly-traded data tracking company Saylor co-founded — as a defendant, alleging that it conspired to help him evade taxes he legally owes.”

A giant of Washington architecture has passed. Arthur Cotton Moore, who designed Georgetown’s Washington Harbour, bringing new life to the Potomac waterfront, and who led the stunning historic preservation and restorations of the Library of Congress and the Old Post Office building, died Sept. 4 at the age of 87 of pulmonary fibrosis.

Today, Restaurant L’Avant-Garde is quietly being assembled and sees itself, Epié said, as “a high-end French brasserie.” Yes, there will be scrambled eggs with caviar, he assured us. Some smile that Epié is setting up his new restaurant close to where Citronelle used to be, just across on 30th Street. A friend of Epié, the beloved chef Michel Richard, who died in 2016, held court there for years until it closed in 2012.

TOWN TOPICS

STAR CHEF GILLES EPIÉ TO OPEN L’AVANT-GARDE ON M ST.

MOMMY AND BABY FISH

PAINTING OF COLORADO RIVER

Art is Not About Right or Wrong

I chose a beginning, middle and end from a list by Ms. Hay. I choose mountains, Horseshoe Bend and put in farms, deer, a camper, a waterfall, and a kayaker. The end is the Delta, but it doesn’t have much water. Everyone needs to help to conserve.

ARTIST CARDS

Sept. 17, 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., Georgetown University’s Community Day in front of Healy Hall at 37th & O Streets NW. Neighborhood and university come together for picnic and games with tables for community groups.

Kids Korner CALENDARCOMMUNITY

Sept. 18, 5 to 7 p.m., Celebrate Fall Picnic Concert 2022, presented by the Citizens Association of Georgetown, featuring the Walkaways, at Rose Park, 26th & O Streets NW. Food trucks, lawn games and raffle.

Sept. 17, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., Smithsonian Museum Day at Dumbarton House, 2715 Q St. NW.

Here are some pictures of my Art:

Sept. 17, 10 a.m. to noon, Herring Hill and Georgetown’s African American Community, Dumbarton House, 2715 Q St. NW.

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BY ELEANOR ASSEY, 3RD GRADE

I go to Art class each week with Ms. Jennifer, who lives in Georgetown. She has a house with an Art studio. The studio has A LOT of Art supplies and a HUGE table to do Art on. Ms. Jennifer is a professional artist who knows SO much. My neighborhood girlfriends – Ellie, Jackie, Violet, and Maya – are in the class with me. Before class we usually get a treat at Dent Market. I also take Art at Beauvoir with Ms. Hay, who is AMAZING. Sometimes I also go to All Fired Up to make my Dad gifts. When I was younger, I went to Anna Banana and learned about modern Art. My neighbor, Martha, is an artist. She has a paint studio near Montrose Park. She is really GOOD!

These are clay. I made the fish by drawing the fish on paper and then cutting the clay.

Art is not about right or wrong; if you try your hardest, you will succeed… Art is not a competition, it is a matter of taking your time and going with the flow towards an idea… or just enjoying what you see.

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We make these cards at Ms. Jennifer’s and then we can trade cards. Each card is SO different.

I used a bunch of Ms. Jennifer’s objects like bottle caps to make the design. I LOVE the color blue.

Sept. 21, 3 p.m. to 7 p.m., Rose Park 100th Birthday Party at the Market, free to the Public, at 26th & O Streets NW. And Sept. 22, 6 p.m. to 9 p.m., Rose Park Fall Gala 2022 - Centennial Celebration, Dodge Mansion, 2819 P St. NW.

“The biggest struggle we face is awareness of our organization,” said CAG Executive Director Gloria Hausman Lindsey, who will be departing next month. “We want individuals to feel they have the ability to have their voice

Rededicated Citizens Association Seeks New Members

CAG Executive Director Gloria Hausman Lindsey and Board Member Karin Wheeler. Courtesy CAG.

Many member-focused organizations like CAG, during the time of social distancing, suffered due to lack of being able to gather and put on events. Now, they are in the process of working to rebuild membership.

Visit www.cagtown.org for more information. (CAG is interviewing for a new executive director.)

CAG President Tara Sakraida Parker and Vice President-Treasurer Larry Flanagan tell The Georgetowner: “CAG is almost 150 years old but we are constantly changing with the times. As we approach 2023, expect to see our new approach to public safety and a newly formed Public Health Committee, to name just a few initiatives. These topics, and others, are what matters most importantly to our neighbors but require funding to deliver programs that keep Georgetown a beautiful, safe and desirable place to live. We’re a membership organization and hope that all of our neighbors will join, volunteer and donate. Why? Because this is where we all live!”

CAG President Tara Sakraida Parker with Second District Commander Duncan Bedlion of the Metropolitan Police Department. Courtesy CAG.

The Citizens Association of Georgetown (CAG) is an organization focused on the beautification, public safety and historical preservation of the neighborhood. Founded in 1878, CAG is the oldest citizens association in the U.S. and continues to serve the community through lively fundraising events, civic engagement groups and other initiatives like Oral History Interviews and Public Safety Updates. CAG gives Georgetown residents a chance to have their voices heard and work in conjunction with other neighborhood groups.

Last year, CAG opened its new headquarters at 1058 30th St. NW, next to the C&O Canal, thanks to a million-dollar legacy gift from Beverly Sullivan and A. Michael Sullivan, Jr.

Georgetown is a very special neighborhood — with deep historic roots, charming brick sidewalks and quaint row houses – and is truly like no other. However, what makes Georgetown even more special are the warm, welcoming neighbors who fill these homes. Today, post-pandemic, people are looking to get back involved with the community and connect with old friends as well as new faces.

THE VILLAGE

After the Trees for Georgetown reception, the group will host the Celebrate Fall Picnic Concert 2022 at Rose Park on Sept. 18. Its annual Fall Party which will be held at the Ukraine House in Kalorama on Oct. 22. This event will pay

BY MADDIE RENNYSON

The Citizens Association is seeking new members and encourages all Georgetown residents to come out and experience some of the organization’s exciting upcoming events. This year, it is focusing on revitalizing membership and member benefits as well as reconnecting and revitalizing the neighborhood.

In addition, CAG works to improve public safety and historic preservation initiatives. The Block Captain Program is a committee that brings neighbors together to advocate for better safety measures. The Historic Preservation Committee stays up to date on community projects to ensure they are in line with federal and city laws and regulations.

GMG, INC. SEPTEMBER 14, 2022 9 Friends of Rose Park invite the community to come celebrate Rose Park 100th Birthday Party @ the Market (26th & O NW) Wednesday, September 21 3:00 – 7:00pm In addition to our fabulous vendors, we will have a few “guest” vendors as well as -Free birthday cupcakes • Balloons • Music • Pizza • Gifts for first 100 people including a unique kitchen tool • Tote bags • Special treats • Caricature drawings by local artists Rain or shine! Also don’t forget to buy your ticket to the annual Fall Gala on September 22. The Gala will be hosted by Sarah Leonard and Bill Dean. See roseparkdc.org to buy tickets and more information.

heard and make changes in the community.”

tribute to the neighboring Ukrainian Embassy, which is on M Street in Georgetown.

We agree with the Post: “The D.C. Council… must do its own soul-searching. The council has enacted measures — such as halting police hiring and abolishing school resource officers — and employed rhetoric that made police feel like they were the enemy, making law enforcement’s job harder and the city less safe. The council cannot, as it has so often done, brush aside the concerns that police and prosecutors express about these changes. No

Yes, all of this is complicated. There are age-old problems loose in the land. Still, we must be safe, laws must be enforced — and the people and our leaders must be in agreement on how to proceed. We and our children deserve nothing less. It is a matter of domestic tranquility, respect and justice.

the tragic loss of Stephon Johns, an employee of the Georgetown Business Improvement District, fatally shot Aug. 11 at the intersection of Florida and Connecticut Avenues NW. The online Georgetowner story on the death of Johns is the most-visited post on our website this week and last. Crime is on everyone’s mind.

times with a cough. On a summer road trip along the famed Route 66 trail, I had to drive through 115-degree heat. I thought that was bad. But then a few years later, my daughter took on a job in the U.S. Forest Service stationed in Oregon and she was immediately detailed to forest firefighting rather than trail maintenance. In her first days after arriving in Portland the temperature rose to nearly 120 degrees. While the Oregon locals – many of whom didn’t have air conditioning – were overwhelmed by the infernal temperatures, she didn’t find it as intolerable. It wasn’t as humid as the D.C. area so it didn’t feel like D.C. in Today’sAugust.Washington Post has a headline

Everywhere we look we see the effects of the climate crisis – whether we wish to or not. Here in the suburbs of northern Virginia just outside of D.C., it’s becoming more tropical. Our neighbors several years ago planted banana trees. I was convinced the tropical species would never survive. Certainly, the tiny trees would freeze in the winter. But that was then. Now, just a decade later, their broad-leafed green wonders have grown to provide a lush sun-shielding canopy, much needed with the pressing heat. Maybe we’ll plant some too.

Also coming to light, the hidden costs of the climate crisis: heat-related deaths (particularly in minority communities and among the elderly), the spread of infectious diseases, increased prices for crops and energy fueling inflation, invasive species, ticks, waterways choked with algae, coral reef bleaching, species extinction, infrastructure damage –recent flooding in Jackson Mississippi laid waste to the city’s entire water infrastructure and flooding a few weeks ago in Kentucky swept away whole communities.

Advisory Neighborhood Commissioner Kishan Putta. “We definitely will get out ahead of this situation next year and make sure the pools stay open even on weekends in September as they always used to be.”

D.C. Police Chief Robert Contee has said: “If you see a 13- or 14-year-old out at 2 o’clock in the morning, something is wrong with that picture.” And who knew that there is technically a curfew for D.C. children already on the books?

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A Sliver of Hope on the Climate Crisis

As the weather has warmed, I’ve stopped sheltering our fig trees from the winter cold – no need. Even our potted raspberries and strawberries sprout in the spring after being mistakenly left outside all winter. We used to quickly close our house doors to keep the bugs out, but these days with a mass die-off they aren’t in such great numbers to worry about. Keeping an eye on our butterfly garden I’m always thrilled to see a monarch since they’re also on the way to extinction and they don’t pay daily visits to our garden in the summer as they used to.

When it was colder, I used to put my motorcycle away for the winter, but now I keep it ready to ride when temperatures are so often spring-like in the winter months. The down jackets I used to wear in the winter haven’t been taken out of the closet in years.

As kids growing up in Arlington, Virginia we all had well-worn Flexible Flyer sleds and couldn’t wait to use them when the snows came and school was closed. We loved sledding with our friends down the steep snow-embanked streets. When my own kids were young, we gave them their own Flexible Flyers for Christmas. But these sleds with their metal rails for ice remained in the attic and we ended up using plastic discs for the ever slushier and less frequent snows.

It was an exceptionally hot August and early September this summer as families and residents tried to enjoy the last of the vacation and home days before heading back to work and school indoors the rest of the year. District residents are particularly blessed that the city has invested in numerous beautiful swimming pools in almost every neighborhood. They are well maintained and well staffed by District youths trained in the D.C. summer jobs programs and are free.

BY CHRISTOPHER JONES

“No September on record in the West has seen a heat wave like this.” In the past week “1000 heat records have been broken,” weather specialist Jason Samenow wrote. On the news we see that the Colorado River – a major water source for 7 states – is drying up, that bodies are being discovered on the drying bed of the largest reservoir in the U.S. at Lake Mead near the Hoover Dam, that two-thirds of Pakistan is submerged in record monsoon rains, that the heatwave in China is the “most severe ever recorded in the world,” that the Loire River of France is nearly completely dry, that the “world’s largest iceberg breaks off” in Antarctica’s Weddell Sea, and on and on.

Post columnist Colby King wrote in a Sept. 9 column of the need for curfews for children under 16 years of age. Some object, saying crimes happen after school lets out. King countered: “Regardless of whether it happened at 4 o’clock in the afternoon or 12 hours later, Isreal Akingbesote lost his life, allegedly at the hands of children.” (Akingbesote was running a gas station in Clinton and stabbed many times.) “That is where the focus belongs. It’s the heart of the problem.”

Are We Normalizing Crime?

The massive oak trees of our Poplar Heights, Falls Church neighborhood are quickly dying off, falling to years of extreme heat, high winds, drought, and record-breaking rains.

But this year it was more than disappointing, it was a shock to discover such popular and beautiful swimming pools as Volta Park and the Jelleff Recreation Center were closed weeks before Labor Day. Weeks! “Imagine having to tell kids that sweltered through invigorating activities at the popular summer camp program at Jelleff Recreation Center, that the beautiful pool they had used all summer and was filled and shimmering right next to the sports field was suddenly locked down,” said Georgetown-Burleith

one should want a return to the bad old days of draconian sentences and mass incarceration.

As we began to write this editorial, we noticed lots of commentary on the growing persistence of crime, close to home and across theWenation.noted

The Washington Post jumped in with its Sept. 11 editorial on the perceived crime wave and the need for a crime summit in the District and the region. It mentioned a 25-yearold killed on Aug. 10, while installing solar panels. On Aug. 24, Mundo Verde Bilingual Public Charter School went on lockdown with gunshots heard — result: two men dead; three others injured nearby.

The main reason given for the closures seems to be the dependence of the DC Parks and Recreation department on youth summer jobs program participants as pool staff. The programs end in mid-August as most of the young people have to get ready to return to school.Butthe pools are public pools for everyone of all ages – not just school kids. DCPR needs to find more diverse sources for life guards. The Georgetowner has a suggestion. T here are many energetic retirees and part time workers in D.C. and Georgetown who were former life guards. Why not reach out to them to build a flexible and diverse life guard corps that could help in the city’s beautiful pools during the summer.

Last year, the Director of the District’s Department of Energy and the Environment, Tommy Wells, told The Georgetowner that the meteorological lines determining growing seasons for plants, shrubs and trees in our region have shifted far to the south in recent years. “Our new growing band in the next 30 years or so will be Nashville, Tennessee. So, our climate will be similar.”

EDITORIAL & OPINIONS Send Your Feedback, Questions or Concerns, Tips and Suggestions to editorial@georgetowner.com or call 202-338-4833.

Where’s the sliver of hope? President Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act is intended to “decrease greenhouse gas emissions by about 40 percent below 2005 levels in 2030 –positioning America to meet… [the] climate goals of cutting [such emissions] at least in half in 2030 and reaching net zero by no later than 2050,” according to the White House. And in England, Charles III – a longtime and staunch advocate of wilderness conservation and climate action – has ascended the throne.

On my last three trips to the west coast, I’ve had to take into account where the wildfires are raging and the heat waves are dangerous. From the smokey winds, I’ve returned a few

Don’t Close Pools Early

But, in the interest of correcting past mistakes, the District must not swing too far in the other direction, creating a culture in which people engage in wrongdoing because they think there are few consequences.”

A sliver indeed. But maybe the global political climate is beginning to shift to address the mounting climate crisis before our eyes. In the meantime, I’m going to go check if there are any monarchs visiting our butterfly garden.

GMG, INC. SEPTEMBER 14, 2022 11 FALL PREVIEWARTS VisualArts PerformingArts 2022

Get Your Tickets Today NatGeoMuseum.org/tutat114517thSt.NWBLOR RD SV

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Generous support for the exhibition at the National Museum of the American Indian provided in part by Dr. Quincalee Brown and Dr. James. P. Simsarian, Uschi and William Butler, and Mary W. Hopkins americanindian.si.edu

between 1879 and 1912, he depicted stunning landscapes, detailed architectural studies, local peoples and traditions, dynamic scenes of flamenco dance and everyday moments of Spanish Roma life. He also copied paintings (especially by Velázquez) in museums and was intrigued by art in churches, which influenced his expansive murals for the Boston Public

The story climaxes with Raven releasing the sun. His human grandfather, fed up with his tricks, holds him over a smoke hole, turning him black. Gagaan Awutáawu Yéil (Raven Steals the Sun), 2008; blown, hot-sculpted and sand-carved glass. Collection of Museum of Glass (VA.2009.28). Photo by Russell Johnson, Courtesy of Museum of Glass

FALL ARTS PREVIEW

Visual Arts

Hiroshima” reveals the human side of warfare, the strength of the spirit and the possibilities of peace and reconciliation.

Sargent and Spain

Follow Raven on a multisensory journey from darkness into light. Preston Singletary (Tlingit American) tells this Northwest Coast origin story in stunning new glass works.

“Hiroshima: Boy with Kite,” 1983. Jacob Lawrence. Courtesy Phillips Collection.

Preston Singletary:

“Spanish Roma Dwelling,” 1912. John Singer Sargent. Addison Gallery of American Art. Courtesy National Gallery of Art.

Library. “Sargent and Spain” examines, for the first time, how Sargent artistically engaged with the diversity of people and places of that country. Presenting some

BY ARI POST

This exhibition provides a lens into the lived experience of the 1945 atomic bombing of Hiroshima through t wo unique bodies of work: a series of silkscreen prints by Jacob Lawrence and d rawings by students at Hiroshima’s Honkawa Elementary School. In 1983, Lawrence illustrated John Hersey’s “Hiroshima,” a vivid account of six survivors of the atomic bomb. His haunting illustrations depict figures with uniform, skull-like heads, cloaked in dissonant shades of pink, red, yellow and blue. Thirty-five years earlier, in 1947, the children of Honkowa sent a portfolio of drawings to the children of All Souls Church, Unitarian, in Washington, D.C., to thank them for supplies they had sent a s part of their peace ministry. The Honkowa children’s vibrant scenes of everyday life are an extraordinary testament to their resilience in the aftermath of the b ombing, which killed more than 400 students in their school alone. “Jacob Lawrence and the Children of

Raven and the Box of Daylight

Organized by the artist and Museum of Glass, Tacoma, Washington. Guest curated by Miranda Belarde-Lewis (Zuni/Tlingit), PhD, and the multisensory visitor experience was designed by zoe | juniper.

THE PHILLIPS COLLECTION THROUGH NOV. 27

John Singer Sargent’s decades-long captivation with Spain yielded a remarkable body of work. Over seven extended visits

Jacob Lawrence and the Children of Hiroshima

NATIONAL GALLERY OF ART OCT. 2, 2022 – JAN. 2, 2023

Now open at the National Mall

An e nveloping, hour-long symphony of image and sound, “Purple” — a major video work by London artist John Akomfrah — weaves together original film with archival footage against a hypnotic score, surveying a variety of disappearing landscapes, including parts of Alaska, Greenland, the Tahitian Peninsula and the South Pacific’s volcanic Marquesas Islands. Akomfrah’s striking images mingle with historical recordings of coal mines, polluted lakes and factory labor, set against a resonant soundtrack of original music, archival recordings and spoken word. The video will play across six large screens arranged in an arc, mirroring the Hirshhorn’s curved architecture. Carpet in a deep shade of purple — the color of mourning in Ghana, Akomfrah’s country of origin — will blanket the floors and walls, reminding viewers of the losses brought about by environmental devastation. In Akomfrah words: “I think there is a special significance of the Hirshhorn’s proximity to the major center of power on our planet — the spaces in which key decisions need to be made in environmental policy in the United States — and I hope the questions that ‘Purple’ raises about the environmental

Feathered Ink

NATIONAL MUSEUM OF ASIAN ART THROUGH JAN. 29, 2023

In Japan, paintings of birds and flowers appeared during the 8th to 12th centuries as a popular motif for portraying the seasons and depicting the majesty of the natural world. Opulent arrangements of bird species, vegetation and landscapes also presented perfect opportunities for Japanese artists — with their deep traditions of ink and brush — to showcase their virtuosic brushwork and techniques. Featuring hanging scroll paintings, folding screens, ceramics and printed books, this exhibition explores how Japanese artists experimented over several centuries with depictions of birds and their environs. The colors and contours of feathers, plumage, flowers and foliage mingle throughout the show in a kaleidoscope of natural wonder.

140 oils, watercolors, drawings and neverbefore published photographs — several almost certainly taken by Sargent himself — the exhibition will be a rich encounter with, arguably, the most virtuosic painter in American history.

OCT. 28, 2022 – SUMMER 2023

SEE MAYA LIN STORY ON PAGE 22

FALL 2022 SEASON

FALL ARTS PREVIEW

NATIONAL PORTRAIT GALLERY SEPT. 30, 2022 – APRIL 16, 2023

One Life: Maya Lin

14 SEPTEMBER 14, 2022 GMG, INC. Saturday, October 22, 2022 at 7:30pm ZOFO PIANO DUO Dynamic and show-stopping 20th-century repertoire for four-hand piano Saturday, November 12, 2022 at 7:30pm THE SWING SISTERS A tribute to Django Reinhardt and the Boswell Sisters Saturday, November 19, 2022 at 7:30pm ARIEL STRING QUARTET Classics for string quartet by Haydn, Bartok, and Schubert Friday, December 9, 2022 at 7:30pm MARK G. MEADOWS + TRIO Jazz fusion classics and originals for the Christmas season For tickets: www.dumbartonconcerts.org202.965.2000 Unless otherwise noted, all concerts are available both in-person and live-streamed.

“Auspicious Symbols: Crane, Rising Sun and Peach” (detail), c. 1850. Okamoto Shuki. Courtesy National Museum of Asian Art.

“One Life: Maya Lin” is the first biographical exhibition of the architect, sculptor and environmentalist who catapulted to global prominence at age 21 with her controversialat-the-time design of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in 1982. Lin, who has spent more than four decades making work that centers on history and human rights, describes her practice as “a systematic ordering of the land that is tied to history, time and language.” The exhibition traces Lin’s life from her childhood to today through a range of photographs, sculptures, personal ephemera, sketchbooks, architectural models and images of her completed works. An element of Lin’s project “What Is Missing?” — which invites viewers to share memories of natural elements that have vanished during their lifetimes — will also be on view.

John Akomfrah: Purple HIRSHHORN MUSEUM

Also of note and currently on view…

AMERICAN UNIVERSITY MUSEUM AT THE KATZEN CENTER THROUGH DEC. 11

THROUGH FEB. 6, 2023

Notre-Dame de Paris: The ExhibitionAugmented

NATIONAL BUILDING MUSEUM THROUGH OCT. 9

Immersive Experience

Clay” features eight artists building powerful ceramic sculptures using innovative feats of construction, transcending the structural limitations of clay and abandoning the material’s traditional association with function. The exhibition features a handful of the artists that Cross represented at her Wisconsin Avenue and Cady’s Alley gallery locations, such as Walter McConnell and Bean Finneran.

Fall openings and reopenings …

The Rubell Museum DC, located at 65 Eye St. SW in the former Randall School, will open on Oct. 29 with the exhibition “What’s Going On.” Referencing the seminal 1971 album by Marvin Gaye, who graduated from Randall Junior High in 1954, the exhibition will feature nearly 200 contemporary works from the collection of Don and Mera Rubell by artists including Maurizio Cattelan, Richard Prince, Hank Willis Thomas and Carrie Mae Weems.

crisis we are living through today are ones that can be understood and appreciated by all without partisanship.”

Still from “Purple,” 2017. John Akomfrah. Courtesy Hirshhorn Museum.

The Peacock Room, a London dining room designed and decorated by James McNeill Whistler, reopened at the National Museum of Asian Art on Sept. 3 after a major conservation project. The new ceramics display suggests how the room looked when it was part of Charles Lang Freer’s Detroit mansion, prior to its 1923 relocation to Washington, D.C., to become part of the Freer Gallery of Art (now theTheNMAA).firsteight galleries of the transformed National Air and Space Museum on the National Mall will reopen on Oct. 14 with free timed-entry passes. Additional galleries will reopen in phases.

More Clay: The Power of Repetition

FALL ARTS PREVIEW

NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC MUSEUM

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See it before it’s gone! Visually stunning, “Notre-Dame de Paris: The Augmented Exhibition” is an augmented reality immersion into the history and restoration of the revered cathedral. Visitors can relive the cathedral’s extraordinary saga, from its medieval construction through key historical events — such as the coronation of Napoleon and the marriage of Henri IV — up to the ongoing reconstruction following the 2019 fire. The exhibition features previously unpublished giant photographs of the cathedral, 3D models of a gargoyle and a cathedral statue, faux stone tile flooring and stained-glass windows replicating the cathedral’s décor, including a projection of the rose window that miraculously survived the fire, along with audio of NotreDame’s organs and tolling bells.

Beyond King Tut: The

Grace of Monaco: Princess in Dior HILLWOOD ESTATE, MUSEUM & GARDENS THROUGH JAN. 8, 2023

Curated by Rebecca Cross of Cross MacKenzie Gallery — a longtime fixture of the Georgetown community — “More

More of note in October: tenor Michael Spyres and pianist Mathieu Pordoy, presented by Vocal Arts DC in the Kennedy Center Terrace Theater (Oct. 10); also in the Terrace Theater, pianist Igor Levit (Oct. 20) and violinist Midori (Oct. 30), presented by Washington Performing Arts; and quintets from the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center at the Barns at Wolf Trap (Oct. 28).

Craving more orchestras? Strathmore’s got ’em: the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra with baritone Thomas Hampson singing Mahler (Sept. 24); another Bernstein bonanza, his “Kaddish,” with the BSO, the University of Maryland Concert Choir and the Maryland State Boychoir (Oct. 9); the São Paulo Symphony Orchestra conducted by BSO Music Director Laureate Marin Alsop (Oct. 12); the City of Birmingham [U.K.] Symphony Orchestra, presented by Washington Performing Arts (Oct. 21); and the National Philharmonic, featuring violinist Gil Shaham playing Saint-Saëns (Oct. 22).

Choral music at Washington National Cathedral: the Cathedral Choral Society, joined by Atlanta Ballet, will present Berlioz’s “Roméo et Juliette” (Oct. 22); and Choral Arts will perform works by composers with local ties at “O! What a Beautiful City” (Nov. 19).

CLASSICAL

Finally, coming up in November in the Kennedy Center Terrace Theater: PostClassical Ensemble, led by Angel GilOrdóñez, will present “Paris at Midnight: Jazz and Surrealism in the 1920s,”

The Children’s Chorus of Washington.

University in Norfolk (Oct. 16).

Folger Consort — having moved around the corner to St. Mark’s, Capitol Hill, during the Folger Library’s expansion project — will present Music for the Last Raj, intermingling Carnatic music from South India and baroque works brought there by British colonists (Sept. 23 to 25). Opening the Phillips Collection’s Sunday Concerts: Sirocco, a celebration of folk traditions by the U.K.’s Manchester Collective a nd South African cellist Abel Selaocoe (Oct. 9).

16 SEPTEMBER 14, 2022 GMG, INC. OCT 16 HOT CLUB OF COWTOWN OCT 6 REBIRTH BRASS BAND DEC 1 JOHN LLOYD YOUNG HEART OF CHRISTMAS OCT 23 MEOW MEOW MICHAEL CLEVELAND AND FLAMEKEEPER OCT 13 NASHVILLE EMERGING ARTISTS NIGHT OCT 15 BOB MOULD H.C. MCENTIRE OCT 19 KINAN AZMEH OCT 21 ALTAN OCT 27 AMERICAN VISITORS CHAMBER MUSIC SOCIETY OF LINCOLN CENTER CHAMBER MUSIC AT THE BARNS OCT 28 STEPHEN KELLOGG NOV 4 ELIANE ELIAS NOV 5 JD SOUTHER NOV 10 RUDRESH MAHANTHAPPA NOV 17 EILEEN IVERS NOV 27 HOLLY BOWLING NOV 30 AND MANY MORE!

BY RICHARD SELDEN

The D.C. United stadium will become a square in Seville when Washington National Opera brings “Carmen” to Audi Field for this fall’s free Opera on the Field (Sept. 25). WNO’s season in the Kennedy Center Opera House will begin with Verdi’s “Il trovatore” with Latonia Moore (Oct. 22 to Nov. 7), followed by Richard Strauss’s “Elektra” with Christine Goerke (Oct. 29 to Nov. 12).

In partnership with the Washington Chorus, Wolf Trap is hosting Joyfully Together, a new community choral festival. Also performing, and participating in a massive sing-along: the Children’s Chorus of Washington, the Alexandria Harmonizers, the Gay Men’s Chorus and its GenOUT Youth Chorus, the Duke Ellington School of the Arts Chorus, Towson University Singers and the Washington Performing Arts Women, Men and Children of the Gospel Choir (Sept. 18).

FALL ARTS PREVIEW

OPERA

Performing Arts

One more: Capital City Symphony will perform works by Brahms, Hindemith and African American composer Adolphus Hailstork at Atlas Performing Arts Center. Hailstork, 81, is professor emeritus and Eminent Scholar at Old Dominion

What’s a ZOFO? The “20-fingered orchestra” of piano duo Eva-Maria Zimmermann and Keisuke Nakagoshi. Dumbarton Concerts’ 45th season at Georgetown’s Dumbarton United Methodist Church will open with ZOFO’s Mind Meld program of works by Bernstein, Debussy, Harold Shapero and Stravinsky (Oct. 22).

Leonard Bernstein’s “Mass” will return to the Kennedy Center Concert Hall, the scene of its 1971 premiere, as the last splash of the center’s 50th anniversary celebration, with the National Symphony Orchestra joined by the Heritage Signature Chorale and the Children’s Chorus of Washington (Sept. 15, 17 and 18). The following Saturday, Gianandrea Noseda will conduct the NSO’s season-opening gala concert, featuring pianist Daniil Trifonov playing Rachmaninoff (Sept. 24).

Later on, Washington Concert Opera will present Donizetti’s “Roberto Devereux” in George Washington University’s Lisner Auditorium, with the Earl of Essex (René Barbera) and Queen Elizabeth (Roberta Mantegna) singing their hearts out in Italian (Dec. 4).

South African cellist Abel Selaocoe will perform with the Manchester [U.K.] Collective at the Phillips Collection on Oct. 9.

The Birchmere draws folks to the Alexandria outskirts by booking acts such as: Marshall Crenshaw (Sept. 28), Milton Nascimento (Oct. 4), Rufus Wainwright (Oct. 12), the Whispers (Oct. 21 and 22) and Steve Vai (Oct. 25), not to mention War, for the band’s 50th anniversary tour (Oct. 16).

Guided by its Hip Hop Culture Council, the Kennedy Center has made a Potomac-side home for hip hop. Upcoming events include: Making Beats, a beat battle hosted by 9th Wonder (Oct. 30); and a tenth-year celebration of Robert Glasper Black Radio (Nov. 13).

Duck into an alley — Georgetown’s legendary Blues Alley — for D.C.’s best jazz. Some of the big names: Eddie Palmieri (Oct. 6 to 9), Arturo Sandoval (Oct. 27 to 30) and Bob James (Nov. 4 to 6). Coming to the Kennedy Center’s KC Jazz Club are pianist Chucho Valdés with the Yoruban Orchestra (Oct. 16); trumpeter Terence Blanchard’s tribute to 89-year-old sax legend Wayne Shorter, “Absence” (Oct. 21); and Cécile McLorin Salvant, singing about a female ogre in “Ogresse” (Nov. 12).

As usual, Strathmore resists pigeonholing, for example: Sweet Honey in the Rock (Sept. 16), Sergio Mendes (Sept. 29) and Ray LaMontagne (Oct. 25). Notables coming to the Warner Theatre include Regina Spektor (Oct. 16) and Joe Satriani (Oct. 26). The Boyz II Men show at Wolf Trap’s Filene Center is sold out (Sept. 16), but you can still get tickets for Tom Jones (Sept. 17). The following month, Australian cabaret performer Meow Meow will be at the Barns (Oct. 23).

JAZZ, POP, ROCK AND HIP HOP

featuring a screening of the 1924 Surrealist film “Entr’acte” with a live performance of the Erik Satie score, plus a tribute to jazz clarinetist Sidney Bechet and a Ravel piano concerto (Nov. 9).

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THEATER

You know about the name-brand musicals at the Kennedy Center — “Hamilton” in the Opera House (through Oct. 9) and “Dear Evan Hansen” (through Sept. 25) and “Guys and Dolls” (Oct. 7 to 16) in the Eisenhower Theater, right? And you’ve probably heard that “Tina” (Oct. 4 to 23) and “Chicago” (Nov. 15 to 27) are coming to the National Theatre

FALL ARTS PREVIEW

The Atlas Performing Arts Center occupies a historic theater on H Street NE.

Wrapping up with the big commercial venues: Capital One Arena will host, among others: Mary J. Blige (Sept. 18), Lizzo (Sept. 27), Panic At The Disco (Oct. 1), Post Malone (Oct. 4), The Smashing Pumpkins (Oct. 18) and the Iron Maiden Legacy of the Beast World Tour ’22 (Oct. 23). Coming to the Anthem at the Wharf: Father John Misty (Sept. 20), Rosalía (Sept. 26), Death Cab for Cutie (Sept. 27), Demi Lovato (Oct. 10) and two double-bills, the B-52s’ farewell tour with KC & the Sunshine Band (Oct. 1) and Arcade Fire with Beck (Oct. 27, 28 and 29).

After that comes “Elegies: A Song Cycle” written by William Finn, composer and lyricist of “The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee,” in response to 9/11 (Oct. 22 to Nov. 20).

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Just announced: The last production Molly Smith will direct as Arena artistic director will be “My Body No Choice,” a collection of 10-minute monologues by eight playwrights in response to the overturning of Roe v. Wade (Oct. 20 to Nov. 6).

What’s a zarzuela? A light opera from Spain. GALA Hispanic Theatre is presenting “La Reveltosa (The Troublemaker),” with music by Ruperto Chapí, which premiered in Madrid in 1897 (through Oct. 2). GALA’s season will continue with “La llamada de Sylvia Méndez (Separate Is Never Equal),” set in 1940s California (Oct. 11 to 24).

April 14 - 30, 2023

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Remaining performances are at Dupont Underground (Sept. 16 to 18) and Baltimore Theatre Project (Sept. 23 to 25). The second production of the In Series season, “Requiem” — a weaving together of Mozart’s Requiem with “death musics” by two 20th-century composers — will be performed at Hand Chapel on George Washington University’s

At Shakespeare Theatre Company’s Klein Theatre (formerly the Lansburgh), the Goodman Theatre’s production of Mary Zimmerman’s “The Notebooks of Leonardo da Vinci” stars eight different Leonardos (Sept. 29 to Oct. 23). Brush up your Shakespeare at STC’s “Much Ado About Nothing” at Sidney Harman Hall, directed by Simon Godwin (Nov. 10 to Dec. 11), and at Folger Theatre’s “The Tempest,” adapted and directed by Aaron Posner and Teller, staged at Bethesda’s Round House Theatre due to the ongoing Folger construction (Nov. 23 to Jan. 1). Round House’s season begins with Natasha Gordon’s “Nine Night,” directed by Timothy Douglas, about a family taking part in a traditional Jamaican mourning ritual (Sept. 14 to Oct. 9).

CHUCK & EVA

40TH ANNIVERSARY SEASON 204-7763

The Nightsong of Orpheus is a magnificent spectacle that is not to be missed. It is magical, delightful, devotional, and — in line with IN Series’ mission — eminently hopeful. dctheaterarts.org

I WAS LOOKING AT THE CEILING AND THEN I SAW THE SKY Music by John Adams

A trip and a holiday: Ford’s Theatre will present Horton Foote’s 1953 “The Trip to Bountiful,” directed by Michael Wilson and starring D.C. favorite Nancy Robinette (Sept. 23 to Oct. 16); at Arena Stage, Anita Maynard-Losh is directing the 1920s Broadway play “Holiday” by Philip Barry, which became a 1938 film with Cary Grant

ZOFO, the piano duo of Maria Zimmermann and Keisuke Nakagoshi.

Theater J is bringing us “a hit new klezmer musical”: “Old Stock: A Refugee Love Story” by Hannah Moscovitch, Ben Caplan and Christian Barry, directed by Barry (Sept. 7 to 25). The show after that, not a musical, is Lynn Nottage’s “Intimate Apparel,” directed by Paige Hernandez, about a Black seamstress in the New York of 1905 (Oct. 19 to Nov. 13).

Meanwhile, at Signature Theatre, you can catch Marsha Norman’s musical adaptation of Alice Walker’s novel “The Color Purple,” with music and lyrics by Brenda Russell, Allee Willis and Stephen Bray, directed by Timothy Douglas (through Oct. 9). A cabaret show, “Both Sides Now: Joni Mitchell and Leonard Cohen,” will follow (Nov. 1 to 13).

A major undertaking for Mosaic Theater Company, based at the Atlas Performing Arts Center, is “The Till Trilogy” by Ifa Bayeza, directed by Talvin Wilks. The three components: “The Ballad of Emmett Till” (Oct. 4 to Nov. 19), “That Summer in Summer” (Oct.

WWW.INSERIES.ORG 202

WWW.INSERIES.ORG

June 2 - 25, 2023

IN Series’

Woolly Mammoth started its season with “Ain’t No Mo’,” a black comedy about Black America by Jordan E. Cooper, directed by Lili-Anne Brown (through Oct 9). At Studio Theatre, Will Arbery’s “Heroes of the Fourth Turning,” directed by Sivan Battat, peers into a corner of white America, a late-night gathering of Catholic college alumni (Sept. 21 to Oct. 23).

And now for something completely different: In Series is presenting “The Nightsong of Orpheus,” pairing two works by early 17th-century composer Claudio Monteverdi with… Japanese Noh drama.

Mount Vernon Campus in Foxhall (Nov. 4 and 13) and at three D.C. churches (Nov. 5, 6, 11 and 12) and a former church in Baltimore (Nov. 18 to 20).

REQUIEM Music by Mozart, Vivier & Boulanger November 4 - 21, 2022

The Great American Songbook after the album “The Other Side” by Chuck Brown and Eva Cassidy

THE ORDERING OF MOSES in collaboration with HERITAGE SIGNATURE CHORALE February 4 - 11, 2023

FALL ARTS PREVIEW

THE NIGHTSONG OF ORPHEUS in partnership with THEATRE NOHGAKU Music by C. Monteverdi through Sep 25, 2022

Now playing at Dupont’s Keegan Theatre is Paul Slade Smith’s “The Outsider,” directed by Ray Ficca, a comedy about an unlikely candidate for governor (through Sept. 24).

and Katharine Hepburn (Oct. 7 to Nov. 6).

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Cloud Gate Dance Theatre of Taiwan, presenting “13 Tongues” about Taipei’s Bangka district (Oct. 20, 21 and 22); Mark Morris Dance Group, presenting “The Look of Love,” set to Burt Bacharach hits (Oct. 26 to 29); and Les Ballets de Monte-Carlo, presenting “Cendrillon,” an adaptation of Prokofiev’s “Cinderella” by Jean-Christophe

FALL ARTS PREVIEW

Also at Sidney Harman Hall, the Washington Ballet will open its season with the latest edition of NEXTsteps, featuring works created for TWB by Silas Farley, Dana

Cloud Gate Dance Theatre of Taiwan.

DANCE

Genshaft and Andile Ndlovu (Oct. 12 to 16).

Visiting companies performing in the Kennedy Center’s Eisenhower Theater:

In conjunction with the National Portrait Gallery exhibition “One Life: Maya Lin,” the Dana Tai Soon Burgess Dance Company will premiere “Surroundings” in the gallery’s Kogod Courtyard (Oct. 16, 23 and 30).

Maillot (Nov. 17 to 20).

5 to Nov. 25) and “Benevolence” (Oct. 6 to Nov. 19). Atlas is brimming over with theater this fall, with the ExPats Theatre’s production of “Einstein’s Wife,” a play by Snežana Gnjidić, translated from the Serbian (Sept. 23 to Oct. 16); a weekend of (voice-interpreted) Deaf BIPOC Solo Shows by Natasha “Courage” Bacchus, Mervin Primeaux-O’Bryant and Stella Antonio (Sept. 23 to 25); and Charades Theatre Company’s “The Mold That Changed the World” about penicillin discoverer Alexander Fleming (Oct. 18 to 23).

The Library of Congress will host a Coolidge Auditorium event, Celebrating Hazel Scott: Pianist, Singer, Actress and Activist, including a panel discussion, a performance by the Janelle Gill Trio and an excerpt from a new Dance Theatre of Harlem work, “Sounds of Hazel” (Sept. 28). The Trinidad-born Scott was the focus of a Washington Performing Arts “centenary-plus-one” celebration last season. The full work will be performed by Dance Theatre of Harlem in Sidney Harman Hall (Oct. 7 and 8).

A few more steps: Mummenschanz, marking its 50th anniversary, will perform at Lisner Auditorium (Oct. 22); and Indian classical dance company Kalanidhi Dance will present “Sundari Kalapam,” a reimagining of “Beauty and the Beast,” at Atlas Performing Arts Center (Oct. 28 and 29).

ANNOUNCING OUR 2022–2023 SEASON Stories Through Sound Gala Wednesday, October 12, 2022 DONIZETTI Roberto Devereux Sunday, December 4, 2022 VERDI Nabucco Saturday, March 4, 2023 SUBSCRIPTIONS ON SALE NOW Single Tickets on Sale September 16 concertopera.org Tickets On Sale Now!2022PostClassical.com / 2023 SEASON Ángel Gil-Ordóñez MUSIC DIRECTOR THE KENNEDY CENTER TERRACE THEATER * AMAZING GRACE Music for the Spirit Jan. 11, 2023 • 7:30PM AMERICAN ROOTS PARIS AT MIDNIGHT Jazz & Surrealism in the 1920s Nov. 9, 2022 • 7:30PM FILM ENTWINED A Double Feature April 19, 2023 • 7:30PM CULTURAL DIPLOMACY with Special Guest Adolphus Hailstork World Premiere Rare Film Screening ENTR’ACTE * Performances are an external rental presented in coordination with the Kennedy Center Campus Rentals Office and are not produced by the Kennedy Center.

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At the time this was all happening, Lin was a 20-year-old undergraduate studying

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architecture at Yale. She is also of Asian descent, which drew obscene amounts of attention to the issue, even if it was rarely referenced directly. (Lin is Chinese, not Vietnamese, but as Korean American choreographer Dana Tai Soon Burgess says, “People don’t often understand the diversity and complexity of our Asian American community — especially back then.”)

FALL ARTS PREVIEW

Objectors called it “a black gash of shame and sorrow,” “a nihilistic slab of stone.” At one point the project’s building permit was delayed due to the political opposition. Issues were ultimately worked out — in part by the addition of a bronze sculpture by Frederick Hart featuring three young soldiers (which, as far as these things go, is not bad) — and Lin’s design was left more or less intact.

an understanding of how this influential artist, architect and environmental activist approaches her work, what shaped her vision as a young person and how she’s been able to hold onto that vision throughout her career.”

Today, the Vietnam Veterans Memorial wall is the most visited war memorial in Washington — and in many ways the most beloved. While some of that is the straightforward stuff of how many people touched by that war are still around today to visit the memorial (and to drag their families along with them), a lot of it also has to do with the quiet power and

starkly overwhelming beauty of the memorial experience in itself.

Opening on Sept. 30 at the National Portrait Gallery, “One Life: Maya Lin” is an intimate exhibition tracing Lin’s life from childhood to the present. In consultation with the artist herself, this latest edition of the museum’s “One Life” series will bring together an assortment of Lin’s sculptures, sketchbooks and creative material, as well as family photographs and personal ephemera, to offer insight into Lin’s artistic process and remarkable career.

“This is not a retrospective,” says exhibition curator Dorothy Moss. “It doesn’t represent the breadth of her work. But we hope that audiences will walk away with

As Lin’s career progressed, so did the alarm around climate change and the need for environmental activism. Last year, she created one of the most powerful art installations ever to address climate change. “Ghost Forest” was a towering stand of 49 dead cedar trees in Manhattan’s Madison Square Park, erected to raise awareness of ecosystem die-off.

“One Life: Maya Lin” will surely offer audiences a new way of understanding the artist herself.

There aren’t many artists in the last 50 years who will have more impact on the world than Maya Lin. I’m not talking about the “art world” — that ill-defined stratosphere increasingly controlled by jacked up billionaires and their dealers — but the real, lived-in world of regular people. People who go on hikes, who visit crowded cultural landmarks on vacation, who have children, who have lost loved ones, who are concerned about the future and who carry hope with them anyway.

BY ARI POST

VISIT GEORGETOWNER.COM FOR THE FULL ARTICLE

Portrait of a Visionary: Maya Lin

Maya Lin working on ‘Pin River - Hudson’ Artist: Chester Higgins Jr. Photograph: Chester Higgins Jr./The New York Times/Redux

The Bell Tower, Shantou University, Guangdong, China Artist: UnidentifiedPhotographArtist Shantou University, courtesy Maya Lin Studio

Lin was hurled into the public eye in 1981 when her design for the Vietnam Veterans Memorial was selected through a nationwide competition and became a subject of national controversy. The design was an unadorned wall of black stone, sunken below ground level in a V-shaped trench. There were no pictures, no sculptures, nothing physically representative of the war itself. Just the names, etched in the stone, of the 58,318 servicemen and women who lost their lives during the war.

That may seem hyperbolic, but I’m willing to bet time will bear me out.

SOON: HOBO BAGS

BUSINESS

ALO YOGA TO TAKE OVER BANANA REPUBLIC SPACE

GEORGETOWNFORWINE & SPIRITS

Pacers Running moved from 3273 M St. NW to 1079 Wisconsin Ave. NW, the former space of Lily Pulitzer and Sarah Flint.

Same Day Health is moving from 3227 M St. NW to the former Frye Boots location at 1066 Wisconsin Ave. NW.

IN: GALLERY ARTICLE 15

NEW OWNERS

Naadam will be arriving at 3003 M St. NW, in the former i-Thai restaurant space. The cashmere company was founded in 2013 by Matthew Scanlan and Diederik Rijsemus, who met local herders in Mongolia, and cut out the middlemen.

District Doughnut closed at 3327 Cady’s Alley NW and is looking for new digs in Georgetown. The company announced: “Relocating! Our Georgetown shop will be closed from 8/28/2022 until further notice as we relocate to a new retail space in Georgetown. Follow us on our social pages to stay up to date on the latest info.… Stay happy! #HappinessFound.”

BY ROBERT DEVANEY

INS & OUTS

COMING: WOLFORD, AUSTRIAN SKINWEAR

GMG, INC. SEPTEMBER 14, 2022 23

Gallery Article 15 — a unique gallery specializing in Congolese contemporary art — is opening at 1624 Wisconsin Ave. NW soon. Founded by Elizabeth Jaffee, a Georgetown resident, the Book Hill gallery is the first and only commercial art gallery in the U.S. focused exclusively on contemporary Congolese art. It works to support young Congolese artists through the Gallery Article 15 Young Artists Collective. Jaffee began collecting contemporary Congolese art in 2008, while serving at the U.S. Embassy in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo.

COMING: ALKOVA

As first reported by UrbanTurf, “Yoga clothing and accessory company Alo Yoga appears to be taking over the prime Georgetown retail space currently occupied by Banana Republic at the corner of Wisconsin Avenue and M Street NW. Plans filed with D.C.’s Historic Preservation Review Board outline a series of changes to the exterior of 3200 M Street NW to make way for the new tenant.” It is uncertain when Banana Republic will close.

OUT: DISTRICT DOUGHNUT IN CADY’S ALLEY

COMING: NAADAM

Church, the former beer hall at 1070 Wisconsin Ave. NW, has transitioned to a 23-and-up bar during the evening and operates a cafe, opening at 8 a.m. Still owned by hospitality group Tin Shop, the 9,000-squarefoot Clubhouse looks to be for real grownups after being tagged as a college hang-out. “We’ve had problems with ABRA [Alcoholic Beverage Regulation Administration], and fake IDs are crazy good these days,” Tin Shop co-founder Geoff Dawson told DC Eater. “We’re not fighting students. We want them to be of age and a little more grown up than ‘this is my first night out drinking.’ ” The more sophisticated menu will include wine, cocktails and fancy pizzas and burgers, along with parmesan truffle fries, burrata and caprese salads and oysters. As it is called Clubhouse, operator Tin Shop is offering a new Social Club for regular patrons to get free drinks or food.

Hobo Bags, founded in 1991 by motherdaughter duo Toni and Koren Ray, will be setting up shop at 1265 Wisconsin Ave. NW in the former John Fluevog space in October.

Tugooh Toys relocated a few doors north to 1440 Wisconsin Ave. NW., the former location of Wisey’s.

Coming soon to 1510 Wisconsin Ave. NW, the former spot of Luigi Parasmo Salon and Spa, will be Alkova yoga and co-working. “We’ve created a place where you can peacefully work, practice yoga, or both,” Alkova tells us. “This space, like an alcove in a city, is a respite from the disconnection present in the outside world….”

SOON: BOURBON CONCIERGE

IN: CLUBHOUSE, INSTEAD OF CHURCH

The Bourbon Concierge is setting up at 2816 Pennsylvania Ave. NW, in the former spot of Cafe Tu-O-Tu. The family-owned business was founded in 1995 and specializes in highend, collectible spirits. While not related, the shop is steps from Bourbon Steak, the restaurant at the Four Seasons Hotel.

MOVED: PACERS RUNNING, SOULIER, SAME DAY HEALTH, TUGOOH TOYS

New hotel: At the Sept. 12 launch of Salamander Washington DC, formerly the Mandarin Oriental, with Washington Commanders President Jason Wright, Sheila Johnson of Salamander and Mayor Muriel Bowser. Photo by Robert Devaney.

Georgetown Wine & Spirits at 2701 P St. NW — opened in 1934 as a neighborhood market and has been run as a liquor store since the 1950s — has a new owner. Nate Smith, a consultant whose family has been in the hospitality industries, purchased the business for about $400,000 from the Kapoor family. The property is owned by Bob Enzel, native Washingtonian and Georgetowner, who lives nearby, and also owns the former 7-Eleven building. Smith lives near the Navy Yard, while his wife, Sana Bokil, will continue to work as a cancer specialist at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York. Store manager Pascal Valadier will remain.

Founded more than 70 years ago, Wolford, the Austrian Apparel and Skinwear brand, will open its first Washington, D.C., boutique in Georgetown this fall. The brand signed a ten-year lease with EastBanc for nearly 1,000 square-feet within the redevelopment of 1238 Wisconsin Avenue NW, bringing sophisticated readyto-wear, athleisure, knits, legwear, lingerie, accessories and more to the neighborhood. It will be Wolford’s 23rd store in the U.S.

“Crafted for a long-term relationship and made better by use and wear,” as the company says, Hobo’s purses and wallets have achieved iconic status in the industry — and with millions of women.

Soulier shoes moved to 1434 Wisconsin Ave. NW. last month.

Rose Park in Georgetown between P St. and M St. NW bordering the Rock Creek parkway was acquired by the District in the summer of 1922 from the Ancient Order of the Sons and Daughters of Moses that had developed it to serve African American children, The segregation rules of the time, however, were ignored by racially integrated Georgetown residents. The park hosts baseball teams (the Rose Park Warriors were famous), summer camps, family picnics, two playgrounds, holiday events, a farmers market (every Wednesday), concerts and tennis tournaments on courts named in 2015 by the Friends of Rose Park to honor national tennis champions Margaret and Roumania Peters who had lived across the street in the 1930s, and returned in the 50s to teach tennis there. A 100th birthday party and a gala will be held Sept. 21 and 22.

BY THE GEORGETOWNER STAFF

The Lincoln Memorial.

If a specific place, school, business or group can hit the centennial mark, it’s an achievement in our all-too-quick and human world. Still, Georgetown boasts quite a few. It’s worth noting that W.T. Weaver & Sons, one of the country’s oldest decorative bath and hardware firms, has gone far beyond that mark. Owned by Bryce Weaver and Michael Weaver, it’s a fourth-generation, familyowned business that’s been serving the needs of its Georgetown and Washington clients sinceHerewith,1889.

a selection of others who mark a centennial in 2022 (or come close):

In 1921, American diplomat Robert Bliss and his wife Mildred bought the Dumbarton Oaks mansion and acreage. For the next 15 years, Mildred and landscape architect Beatrix Ferrand – the niece of Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist Edith Wharton with whom the Blisses had become close during the war years in Paris – developed multiple garden rooms with custom gates, benches, filials and sculptures on the various terraces of the estate. The gardens made Ferrand famous. “While she didn’t use the words ‘climate change,’ the garden plans left much flexibility for new species evolving because of changing conditions,” garden superintendent Jonathan Kavalier noted. The gardens and mansion museum filled with the Bliss’s special collections of Colombian art, was given to Harvard University in 1941 while the wooded wilderness was given to the U.S. National Parks service to develop a public park. In 1944, a series of important diplomatic meetings --The Dumbarton Oaks Conversations – also led to the establishment of the United Nations in 1945.

When Vanussa Mendes purchased Georgetown Hairstyling, the beyond centuryold barber shop business on 35th Street, in 2015, she knew she was also buying into local history. “It will be operated in the same way as before for our clients,” Mendes said of the men’s haircut spot. A favorite of Georgetown residents and students for decades — with the names of past barbers Rigo Landa and Ed Lara in their stories — the place is a classic. Today, most of the staffers are women, including Veronica Corado, who cuts men’s hair only.

This spring, Morgan Care Pharmacy, the 110-year-old business at the corner of 30th and P Streets NW, got a new owner — 33-year-old Sahar Kassem, who earned her doctorate of pharmacology at Howard University. Customers recall pharmacists Barry Deutschman and Dr. Mike Kim. “We treat people like family at Morgan’s,” Kassem said. “That’s what people love about this place. It feels familiar to them.” She told The Georgetowner that the details that make Morgan’s the “gem” that it is — such as Maurice Brown, attentive staffer at the register, who has been greeting customers with a smile for more than a decade — are not going anywhere.

Inspired by the Parthenon, the memorial centers on a statue of the seated 16th president of the United States, Abraham Lincoln. Inscriptions on the interior walls feature his Gettysburg Address and Second Inaugural Address. Nearby murals depict the reunification of the United States after the Civil War as well as the emancipation of

MORGAN’S PHARMACY, 1912

more than 4,000,000 enslaved persons. The sculpture is by Daniel Chester French; the building by Henry Bacon. The National Mall would be impossible without this symbolically powerful structure: Think of Marian Anderson in 1939, Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., in 1963, protestors against the Vietnam War, and so many other demonstrations since.

The large staircase lobby of the historic mansion on the corner of New Hampshire Ave. and Q St. NW is filled with ten immense framed collages. Created by WNDC members, each portrays a decade in the life of the club, founded in 1922 after the passage of the 19th A mendment that gave women the right to vote. For 100 years the WNDC has held biweekly meetings on current events, supported women candidates and hosted almost every Democratic president. Eleanor Roosevelt was an active member; her granddaughter was just recently president. At their Diamond Jubilee, Nancy Pelosi proclaimed “The WNDC is the heart of the Democratic Party.”

DUMBARTON OAKS MUSEUM AND GARDENS, 1921

LINCOLN MEMORIAL, 1922

WOMAN’S DEMOCRATICNATIONALCLUB,1922

GeorgetownCelebrating And Washington Centennials

DCAR original building.

24 SEPTEMBER 14, 2022 GMG, INC.

GEORGETOWN HAIRSTYLING, 1913

SCHOOL OF FOREIGN SERVICE, GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY, 1919

The Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service graduated its first students in 1921 and is the oldest continuously operating school for international affairs in the United States. The school was first headed by Father Walsh, a staunch anti-communist, who was involved in Russian famine relief in 1922 as well as church relations in Mexico and the Nurenberg Trials. Its notable alumni include Bill Clinton, King Abdullah of Jordan, King Felipe VI of Spain, George Tenet, Denis McDonough, Mick Mulvaney, Steven Bannon and Carl Reiner. Its famous professors include Jan Karski, Carroll Quigley and Madeleine Albright.

ROSE PARK, 1922

THE PHILLIPS COLLECTION, 1921

Samira Farmer & Reid DoyleDC@Doyle.comDunavant301-348-5282 PALM BEACH WASHINGTON DC CONNECTICUT NEW JERSEY NORTH CAROLINA DOYLE.COM

THE SMITHSONIAN’S FREER GALLERY OF ART, 1923

A ménage à trois of brick townhouses on the 1700 block of N Street NW, the Tabard Inn is marking 100 years since its launch in 1922 as a small hotel and tea room. Founder Marie Willoughby Rogers chose the name Tabard Inn to evoke the hostelry in Chaucer’s “Canterbury Tales.” The Queen Anne-style buildings to either side of Italian Renaissancestyle 1739 N St. NW were incorporated in the years that followed, creating a charmingly quirky interior of staircases, passageways and odd-sized rooms. During World War II, the Tabard provided officers’ quarters for

For information on buying or consigning, please contact our DC Regional Advisors.

Tabard Inn.

The “first museum of modern art” in the United States and one of D.C.’s hidden gallery treasures, The Phillips Collection opened to the public in 1921 in the Dupont circle Georgian mansion of the Phillips family, of steel and banking renown. Surviving founder Duncan Phillips (1866-1966) – author of The Enchantment of Art, 1914 -- gained a passion for modern art from his European travels, trips to N.Y.’s Metropolitan Museum of Art and D.C.’s Corcoran Gallery of Art. Creating a museum in the nation’s capital where “one could capture the art of the past and the present on equal terms,” served as one of his guiding objectives.

Jasper Francis Cropsey

Alfred Thompson Bricher George Inness

THE TABARD INN, 1922

Highlighting the fall season is a group of important Hudson River School paintings from a Distinguished New York Collection. This remarkable collection offers over 30 exceptional examples by prominent artists. To be offered November 3, 2022 in New York.

GMG, INC. SEPTEMBER 14, 2022 25

We Invite You to Auction!

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the WAVES, the women’s branch of the U.S. Naval Reserve. After Rogers died in 1970, Fritzi and Edward Cohen — a public-interest lawyer and Capitol Hill staffer, respectively — rescued the Tabard from proposed demolition, reopening it in 1974. Three years later, the inn’s restaurant was reborn under Margee Wright and Nora Pouillon (Pouillon proceeded to pioneer organic cuisine at Restaurant Nora nearby). The oldest hotel in the District continuously owned and operated by women, the Tabard Inn was added to the D.C. Inventory of Historic Sites and the National Register of Historic Places in 2020.

THE WASHINGTON D.C. ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS (DCAR), 1922

Before becoming DCAR, the association today representing more than 2800 realtors in D.C. was once known as the Washington, D.C. Association of Realtors. They then combined with the Montgomery County Association of Realtors to form the Greater Capital Area Association of Realtors or WDCAR. The NAR is one of the only associations in D.C. to afford a state status. 100 years ago, they became the District of Columbia Association of Realtors to reflect the emphasis of the state status. “We call ourselves the voice of real estate in D.C.,” DCAR says.

DOYLE AUCTIONEERS & APPRAISERS NEW YORK BEVERLY HILLS BOSTON CHARLESTON CHICAGO

GLEN ECHO PARK DENTZEL CAROUSEL, 1922

The Glen Echo Carousel celebrated 100 years from the spring of 2021 through spring 2022. The carousel was installed in 2021 by the Dentzel Carousel Company of Germantown, Pennsylvania. The carousel is one of only 135 functioning antique carousels in the U.S. and one of a few still standing in its original location. The carousel is known as a “menagerie style,” as it has a variety of animals to ride on (including rabbits, ostriches, a giraffe and more).

The “first museum on the National Mall campus,” The Freer Gallery – now the National Museum of Asian Art -- opened to the public close to 100 years ago in 1923. In addition to holding over 45,000 objects of Asian art from the Neolithic Era to the present, the Florentine Renaissance-style gallery holds a “significant group of American works of art largely dating to the late 19th century.” The gallery houses the “world’s largest collection of diverse works by James McNeill Whistler, including the famed Peacock Room.” In 1890 Charles Lang Freer paid an unannounced call to Whistler’s London studio and the two struck up a longtime friendship. Freer ultimately collected more than 1000 of Whistler’s works.

Sanford Robinson Gifford

Stellas, Shrimp Ouzo, fava purée, tomato-ouzo cream, in Richmond

26 SEPTEMBER 14, 2022 GMG, INC. IN COUNTRY

Avenue. Then cruise through Carytown, Richmond’s main drag, complete with a mixed bag of clothing stores, ice cream, and the famous French Can Can Brasserie. Stop at Roan, a luxury boutique, and Gearharts Fine Chocolates for Virginian scrumptious chocolate treats next door.

Richmond Getaway Guide

Drive down Monument Avenue and explore the changing history of the city from its Confederate past to its revitalized present. Admire the townhouses of Richmond’s most

historic and sought-after neighborhood. Stop for a smoothie at the North End Juice Co takeout window, set against colorful murals by local artists in the Museum District. Be sure to browse the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, one of the largest art museums in North America and now famous for its provocative original Kehinde Wiley statue, “Rumors of War.” Sit in the green garden for a picnic under

For your next getaway weekend, take an under two-hour drive down I-95 to explore a city where centuries of history meet up-andcoming art and buzzworthy food scene — the capital of the Commonwealth of Virginia.

201 W. BROAD STREET, RICHMOND, VA 23220 804-340-6040 | QUIRKHOTELS.COM/RICHMOND | @QUIRKHOTELRVA Experience the first Art Gallery Hotel located within the arts district of downtown Richmond. Our proximity to all of the city’s cultural attractions makes us your perfect hub for an authentic Richmond experience. Only a 2 hour drive (or a quick Amtrak ride!) from DC!

BY KATHERINE SCHWARTZ

Also, have a long lunch or dinner at Stella’s

a Spanish sculpture, “Chloe,” or perch by the pond with a coffee from the Jazz Cafe. If you go in the evening, get a drink or dinner at the rooftop restaurant, Amuse, which offers an optimal view of the sunset over the city.

For shopping, be sure to stop at Nellie & George, a high-end boutique at the epicenter of the West End, between Libbie and Grove

“I’ll Eat Anything at Sub Rosa Bakery.” Priya Krishna of Bon Appétit.

GMG, INC. SEPTEMBER 14, 2022 27 www.sheridanmacmahon.cominfo@sheridanmacmahon.com 110 East Washington Street Middleburg, Virginia 20117(540) 687-5588 Paul MacMahon (703) 609-1905 Brian MacMahon (703) 609-1868 A L L’ S W E L L FA R M Marshall, Virginia • $6,500,000 Prime Fauquier County location on the Atoka Road |88.34 acres w/ bold Blue Ridge views | Neoclassical brick home w/ state roof completely updated & expanded | 5 BR, 5 full, 2 half baths, 5 fireplaces, gourmet kitchen |10 stall barn with attached indoor arena | Pool, pool house, tenant house |Beautiful gardens | Superb condition. R U T L E D G E FA R M Middleburg, Virginia • $5,450,000 circa 1740 w/addition in 1820 | 6 BR, 5 fireplaces | 85 acres | 4 barns | Derby field | 218 x 80 indoor arena | 250 x 150 allweather outdoor arena 80’ lunging arena | Polo field (or 2 grand prix fields) | 4 board, double fencing | Guest house | Farm office /3 BR house | Machine shed | Carriage house w/ apartment | Stone spring house/office | 3 BR apartment | Pond | Also available w/113.59 acres, $6,685,000 Paul MacMahon (703) 609-1905 W I N D F I E L D S FA R M Middleburg, Virginia • $13,200,000 circa 1853 colonial | 8 BR, 9 BA & 3 half BA | 9 FP, pine floors, high ceilings, detailed millwork, gourmet kitchen | 466 rolling acres | Mountain views & frontage on Goose Creek | Guest house, office, 8 stall barn w/apt, 4 additional stalls, lighted sand ring, tenant houses, greenhouse, circa1800 cottage | Ponds, creeks, and woods w/trails Paul MacMahon (703) 609-1905 Brian MacMahon (703) 609-1868 O U T W E S T Warrenton, Virginia • $3,000,000 Gracious home w/ /renovated kitchen |Hardwood floors, substantial millwork & fine finishes & 4 fFP| Perfectly sited to enjoy the views | 5 BR, home office, large family room, newly resurfaced tennis court, pool w/ cabana and 4 BR guest house w/workshop/3 stall stable | Large field for turn out, 1 paddock & hay field | 32 acres in 2 recorded parcels Helen MacMahon (540) 454-1930 B E L L E V I E W FA R M Waterford, Virginia • $2,500,000 74.11 acres | Frontage on Catoctin Creek, sweeping views, pond | 3 homes, all updated in excellent condition | Historic stone Quaker barn completely restored, 12 stalls, 4 stalls adjacent, 4 mores stalls in pony shed | Board fencing, 8 paddocks, 6 run in sheds, water in every field | Property in Conservation Easement Paul MacMahon (703) 609-1905 Brian MacMahon (703) 609-1868 R U T L E D G E FA R M C O T TA G E Middleburg, Virginia • $2,150,000 First time available guest house and broodmare barn on 28.62 acres | House completely updated, stucco exterior, metal roof, 3 BR, 2 1/2 BA, fireplace, 2-car garage. Barn, center aisle, 8 stalls, Blackburn designed, updated in last 5 years| Pastures in prime condition. 5 paddocks all with new board fencing. Paul MacMahon (703) 609-1905 Sandra Bravo-Greenberg (202) 308-3813

Whether going for a dose of history or the avant-garde galleries and vegan cafes,

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Despite the police raids, drinking culture still managed to thrive and some of the most popular cocktails were invented in this era. Bartenders were required to get creative to cover up the harsh taste of illicit booze. If God gives you lemons, it’s time to make lemon cocktails.

However, it’s claimed that the bees’ knees was invented 100 years ago in 1921.

GMG, INC. SEPTEMBER 14, 2022 29 FOOD & WINE

Even though the three-ingredient recipe of gin, honey and lemon is quite basic, there’s plenty of room for creativity. Try using a floral forward gin such as Hendricks or something a little fruity like Bluecoat elderflower. The type of honey used can also alter the taste. Instead of the basic clover variety, add some wildflower or a buttery-nuanced Tupelo honey.

In the present day, thanks to a worldwide pandemic this decade of the twenties has been more “boring” than “roaring.” It’s time to get the party started. Luckily this time around we won’t have to fly to Paris or sneak in a hidden door to enjoy a cocktail.

Gin cocktails were common, largely because gin was relatively easy for amateur distillers to make. Their efforts yielded an elixir popularly known as “bathtub gin,” which

Logic would have it that the bees’ knees was invented in some American juice joint filled with flappers exhaling the virtuous name as they went on a hoot. “Hey daddy-O, this cocktail is the bees’ knees!”

0.5 oz. honey

On the surface, D.C. may have not appeared to be a party town due to Prohibition, but hidden speakeasies were lurking all around town. Possibly, the most famous was U-Street’s Club Caverns where jazz greats Duke Ellington and Cab Calloway played. Legend has it, the venue served up more than just great music. South of Dupont Circle, the Mayflower Club

2.0 oz. gin. Try “Tankqueray London Dry” from Reservebar.com.

Add ingredients to a cocktail shaker with ice. Shake vigorously for 15 seconds and strain into a coupe or martini glass.

0.75 oz. fresh lemon juice

Another story attributes it to Margaret Tobin Brown, also known as the “Unsinkable Molly Brown,” after surviving the Titanic. She lived in both Denver and France and was known to drink the Bee Knees in Paris’s women-only bars of the time.

IT’S THE BEES’ KNEES!Cocktail of the Month

BY JODY KURASH

Aside from being a jazzy idiom, the moniker also references the use of honey as a sweetener. Not only did the honey turn inferior gin into a sweet, aromatic concoction, but it also made it difficult for the police at the time to detect any trace of alcohol.

Frank Meier, the first head bartender at the Ritz Hotel’s Parisian café created it when they opened that year. At that time, many Americans, such was F. Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald, fled the U.S. for Paris in search of a more permissive party scene. Perhaps the idiomatic phrase made its way across the pond along with the thirsty expats.

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But one characteristic cocktail of this time also immortalized the slang of the day -- the bees’ knees. Back in flapper days, phrases like “the bee knees,” “the cat’s pajamas” and “ducky” were used to describe something splendid or stylish.

quickly garnered a reputation for its potency and its astringent flavor. Citrus flavors like lemon and lime were often used to mask the burn. Drinks like the Gin Rickey, the French 75 and the Southside all followed this formula.

boasted a 30-foot bar. Capitol Hill’s beloved dive Tune Inn was a candy store where patrons who knew the secret word could purchase adult treats. Things got so wild at the Krazy Kat Club that municipal authorities publicly identified the venue as a den of vice in 1922.

THE BEE’S KNEES

One hundred years ago, Washington was wrapped up in the “Roaring Twenties” of postwar prosperity, dazzling decadence and jazz. It was a time of culture milestones marked by the opening the Phillips collection, the founding of the Woman’s National Democratic Club and the dedication of the Lincoln Memorial.

Another member was William Bullitt, U.S. ambassador to Russia and France, who’d sought Freud’s counsel when his marriage was falling apart. During their sessions, they discovered they both despised Woodrow Wilson and later collaborated on a biography of the former president that was published in 1966 to “overwhelmingly negative” reviews.

Georgetown resident Kitty Kelley has written several number-one New York Times best-sellers, including “The Family: The Real Story Behind the Bush Dynasty.” Her most recent books include “Capturing Camelot: Stanley Tretick’s Iconic Images of the Kennedys” and “Let Freedom Ring: Stanley Tretick’s Iconic Images of the March on Washington.” She serves on the board of BIO (Biographers International Organization) and Washington Independent Review of Books, where this review originally appeared. French, MS, CRNP

admits that when it came to the Nazis, Herr Doktor Freud, a world-shaking intellect known for his revolutionary theories, was “naive… astonishingly naïve.” Others might say dumbfoundingly reckless given that he was determined to live out his days in Vienna even after the Anschluss in March 1938, when Germany annexed Austria.

The plot of Saving Freud centers on how a group of six loving friends of the worldfamous psychoanalyst finally convinced him to leave Austria in 1938 on the jack-boot heels of

The British press heralded his arrival with effusive coverage, and Freud’s new life of freedom gave him great pleasure. As he wrote to his brother in Switzerland: “Our reception was cordial beyond word. We were wafted up on wings of mass psychosis.” He was welcomed into the Royal Society of Medicine and visited by prominent guests like H.G. Wells and Salvador Dali.

rescuers had recreated his consulting room in faithful detail.

At that point, Freud’s adoring circle whirled into action, determined to seek asylum for him and his family in London so he could realize his life’s wish “to die in freedom.” The group included Maria Bonaparte, princess of Greece and Denmark, who lived in Paris as a practicing psychoanalyst after seeking Freud’s help to achieve orgasm. She provided Freud with the protection money he needed to bribe his way to safety.

Hitler’s storm troopers as they invaded Vienna.

Saving Freud seems to have been written for the silver screen, and one can only hope that someone like Steven Spielberg finds his way to this book.

Even as the Nazis banged down the doors of his office and home at Berggasse 19, Sigmund Freud, then 81, still believed he’d be spared the catastrophe that had befallen other Viennese Jews. Without saying a word, he glared at the intruders looting his apartment. Hitler’s minions seemed visibly intimidated. They addressed him as “Herr Professor” and backed out of the apartment, loot in hand, stating they would return at another time.

Andrew Nagorski’s “Saving Freud” ought to be coming to a theater near you. This nonfiction work crackles like a novel and sparks with the razzle-dazzle of a big-screen extravaganza: an unforgettable cast of characters (think “The Dirty Dozen”), spinetingling suspense (“The Day of the Jackal”), a death-defying savior (maybe “Mephisto”), and Nazis — the epitome of evil.

When the Nazis then burned his confiscated books in the public square, Freud seemed unperturbed. “What progress we are making,” he told a patient. “In the Middle Ages they would have burned me. Now they are content with burning my books.”

“I believe there is nothing worse than to see the people nearest to one lose the very qualities for which one loves them. I was spared that with my father, who was himself to the last minute.”

Freud’s life of freedom ended for good on September 23, 1939, when his pain became excruciating and, as he told his physician, “The torture makes no sense anymore.” Remembering his promise, Dr. Schur gave his patient an injection of morphine which led to Freud’s “peaceful sleep.” As his adored Anna later told a friend:

“This book is definitely not ‘The Sound of Music,’ but it’s part biography and part thriller,” Nagorski told an audience recently gathered at Politics and Prose in Washington, D.C., to discuss the publication of his eighth book. Having written “Hitlerland: American Eyewitnesses to the Nazi Rise to Power,” “The Nazi Hunters” and “1941: The Year Germany Lost the War,” the former Newsweek bureau chief has mastered the Nazi terrain.

and experienced A highlyNursetrainedPractitioner. Suzy

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Interestingly, while revolutionary in his thinking, Freud led a conventional life centered around hearth and home. “I’m all for sexual freedom,” he once remarked, “but not forNagorskimyself.”

being born a Jew. He also considered himself apolitical and therefore safe from the upheaval thrashing around him.

Freud could’ve escaped years before, but he refused to join the hordes of Jews fleeing Vienna in the early 1930s. Referring to himself as a “Godless Jew” and an atheist, he maintained he was immune from persecution because he was not religious. His sole allegiance to Judaism, he said, was to not deny BY KITTY KELLEY

Also part of the group was Dorothy Tiffany Burlingham, granddaughter of the renowned jeweler who founded Tiffany & Co., who became the lifelong partner of Freud’s beloved daughter Anna. Next was Ernest Jones, a onetime patient and close friend of Freud, and president of the International Psychoanalytical Association. Jones flew to Vienna in 1938 to insist that Freud leave the country. “This is my home,” the psychoanalyst said. “Your home is the Titanic,” retorted Jones.

Max Schur, who became Freud’s physician and treated him for the throat cancer he suffered as a result of refusing to give up cigars, played a role, too. When Schur’s family emigrated to the U.S. to escape the Nazis, the doctor remained in Vienna until Freud’s departure for England. Only then, after arranging for Freud’s medical care in London, did Schur join his own family in America.

Still, Freud missed Vienna. “The feeling of triumph on being liberated is too strongly mixed with sorrow,” he confided to a friend, “for in spite of everything I still greatly loved the prison from which I have been released.”

‘Saving Freud: The Rescuers Who Brought Him to Freedom’

Dr. Anton Sauerwald, a Nazi bureaucrat, is the shocking thunderbolt in this rescue saga and the team’s unlikeliest member. He was assigned by Nazi high command to rifle through Freud’s financial documents and destroy his historic library, but as an admirer of the pioneer of psychoanalysis, he did neither. Instead, Sauerwald removed evidence of Freud’s foreign bank accounts and arranged for his massive collection of books, papers, and journals to be secretly stored in the Austrian National Library, where they remained hidden until after the war.

Each figure was crucial to the rescue because it took all six working in concert to get Freud to leave his home and office for England, where he spent the remaining 15 months of his life at 20 Maresfield Gardens, Hampstead, in North London. There, his

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