Weekend Round Up March 12, 2015

March 26, 2015

CAG Concerts Kick-off Party?

March 12th, 2015 at 06:30 PM | $60 | Event Website

The kick-off party will be at The George Town Club on March 12 from 6:30 to 8:30 PM.

Concerts in the Parks is Georgetown’s favorite summer concerts series that is free and open to the public in beautiful Volt and Rose parks. Proceeds from this event help underwrite the cost of putting on the concerts. 2015 Concerts will take place Sunday evenings from 5:30 to 7:00 PM on May 17th, June 14th and July 12th.

Address

The George Town Club; 1530 Wisconsin Ave NW

Opening Reception: Full Spectrum

March 13th, 2015 at 06:00 PM | FREE | gallery@callowayart.com | Tel: 202-965-4601 | Event Website

Full spectrum, will explore six DC local and rooted artists’approach to color and abstraction. Participating artists include: Matthew Langley, Shahin Shikhaliyev, John Sandy, Chris Baer, Shaun Rabah and David Bell.

Address

Susan Calloway Fine Arts; 1643 Wisconsin Ave NW

Rock and Roll For Children Annual Bash

March 14th, 2015 at 07:00 PM | $75.00-$400.00 | mary@lindarothpr.com | Tel: 301-938-4505 | Event Website

The Rock and Roll for Children Foundation is proud to support the Children’s Inn at NIH at their Annual Bash. The party will kick off at 7:00 pm, uniting music icons and fans at the Bethesda Blues and Jazz Club for a night of incomparable rock n’roll, dancing and amazing auction items from rock legends.Memorable performances will include the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame’s newest inductee, Ricky Byrd, of Joan Jett, among many more.

Address

Bethesda Blues and Jazz Club; 7719 Wisconsin Ave, Bethesda, MD 20814

Cloverfest presented by Drink the District

March 14th, 2015 at 01:30 PM | $39-$50 | ilovebeer@drinkthedistrict.com | Tel: 202-618-3663 | Event Website

Channel your inner leprechaun and join us at Cloverfest presented by Drink the District! There will be 75+ beers to sample at the end of this rainbow so get your tickets fast before they disappear!

Address

The Yards Park; 1300 1st St SE

Free Chamber Concert

March 17th, 2015 at 12:00 PM | 0 | info@dumbartonhouse.org | Tel: 2023372288 | Event Website

Friday Morning Music Club performs a free chamber concert at Dumbarton House on the 3rd Tuesday of each month at noon.

Address

Dumbarton House; 2715 Q Street NW

Building in the 21st Century: Small and Sustainable

March 17th, 2015 at 12:30 PM | Free Member | $10 Non-member. | Tel: 202-272-2448 | Event Website

Brian Levy commissioned the first Minim House in 2013. Working closely with Foundry Architects on the design and Element Design+Build on the construction of the tiny house, Levy went on to found Minim Homes LLC to make the plans for and completed versions of micro homes with cutting-edge sustainable technologies widely available. Levy speaks about off-grid electric and water, cooling, heating, and air quality systems appropriate for small dwellings. 1.0 LU HSW (AIA). Pre-registration required

Address

National Building Museum; 401 F Street NW

Landmark Society Lecture: The American Plate: A Culinary History in 100 Bites

March 18th, 2015 at 06:30 PM | Member, $15 | Non-Member, $20 | mwachur@tudorplace.org | Tel: 202.580.7323 | Event Website

6:30, wine + light appetizers | 7 – 8:30 p.m., lecture

What is American about “American” food? Join author Libby H. O’Connell, chief historian for the History Channel, for a rich chronicle of the evolution of American cuisine and culture from before Columbus until today. Dr. O’Connell’s book, The American Plate: A Culinary History in 100 Bites, explores how cultures and individuals have shaped our national diet and continue to influence how and what we cook and eat.

Address

1670 31st St NW
Washington D.C. 20007

Wollesen of the Clarice Touts Bringing Arts to Younger Audiences


Outside, it looked as if the long, baleful tide of winter storms and stress seemed to have abated. If spring had not entirely sprung, the temperatures and the air, if not the pot holes, were entirely welcome.

It seemed that the presence of Martin Wollesen, the executive director of the Clarice Smith Performing Arts Center at the University of Maryland as the speaker of the Georgetown Media Group’s monthly Cultural Leadership Breakfast at the George Town Club, fit the new spirit of spring-like optimism and energy on March 12.

Wollesen, who came to Maryland in 2013 to head the Clarice after a provocative and exhilarating stint as the artistic director for ArtPower! at the University of California, San Diego, in attitude, spirit and energy, presented as nothing less than a cultural and performing arts pied piper, charging ahead into a changed arts ecology, dropping ideas like from flowers from a bouquet, some of which could also pass for bombshells.

The Clarice on the University of Maryland’s main campus in College Park, a place usually known for its embrace of its Terrapin football and basketball program especially with the approach of March Madness, is something of a hidden treasure for Washington arts enthusiasts, who tend not to venture too far afield from a city, rich with an abundance of big, medium-sized and small performance arts offerings.

Yet, the Clarice Smith Performing Arts Center should not be ignored, and neither should Wollesen, a nervy, intriguing spokesman not only for the Clarice, but for the arts in general. This is a man who’s lived a life rooted in diversity—born in Northern California, raised in Singapore and the Philippines, often in his youth running to the sounds of crisis in lands far away from our comfort zone. He lived in the Philippines when it was ruled by President Ferdinand Marcos, he lived on a kibbutz near trouble zone borders. “I wanted to go where bombings were happening,” he admitted. “But at the kibbutz, all I did was to end up painting toys for children. When you’re young, you think you’re invincible,” he told us.

That range of experience may account for his willingness to listen to, be more than tolerant of, and try out new ideas about the performance arts, how they’re presented, their audience and artists. “We’re living in a rapidly changing society, and the arts I think will have to change, too,” he said. “You can see it happening. There’s a whole new audience out there, and a whole new world of technology. We need to draw these tech-savvy audiences to us, and we need to come to them, too.”

Wollesen is all about collaboration, about recognizing the new arts environment and the likely audiences. He appeared to be delighted in the examples he unloaded from his diverse bouquet of ideas. “In San Diego, we had this young, very talented and well known string quartet, and there were a lot of students in the audience and they loved it and so after every movement they jumped up and applauded, which, in the world of classical music is a no-no, it just isn’t done. So some regular patrons were very upset, and suggested I tell people not to applaud. But I also talked to the artists, and they said, no, we loved what they did.”

Stressing that new audiences are linked to technology and that presenters should embrace the technology and understand it, Wollesen said, “When you see people texting or tweating, I know a lot of people find that annoying. But it’s part of the way today’s audiences receive performance art. I saw a program, a classical music program, where a young woman had her pad open throughout—she looked things up, the composer, the performers, the piece, and then she texted her friends about the performance.”

He’s about cooperation or bringing the art to the audiences: “We brought performers to the dorms, or the schools. It’s not every day you have that kind of thing in a dormitory.”

One of the ideas that he offered was the use of Twitter during the course of a performance in which audience response is measured and comments copied and then thrown on a giant screen during intermission.

“We’re used to being at a performance and being quiet,” he said. “The new audiences are not. They want to participate.”

At the Clarice, Wollesen has quite a playground to operate in. It includes the Cafritz Foundation Theatre (a black box space with 86 seats); a dance theatre, with 207 seats; the Dekelboum Concert Hall, with 970 seats and a 126-set choir loft; the Gildenhorn Recital Hall with 297 sets; the Kay Theatre with 626 seats and the Kogod Theatre with 156 seats. The Clarice is also the site of the DeVos Institute of Arts Management at the University of Maryland, headed by Michael Kaiser, the former president of the Kennedy Center.

Wolleson is an arts enthusiast, a futurist and an arts optimist. “I believe in new spaces and new work,” he said. “I think performance arts centers must connect with the community, to find new artists and bring new arts to the community. [gallery ids="102014,135078,135081,135080" nav="thumbs"]

Jury Finds Rahul Gupta Guilty of Killing Georgetown Law Student


After several hours of deliberations in the murder trial of a graduate student charged with stabbing his friend to death, the jury reached a verdict late Monday afternoon. Rahul Gupta was found guilty of first-degree murder in the death of Mark Waugh amid a love triangle that involved Gupta’s girlfriend.

Montgomery County Police were called to Gupta’s apartment in Silver Spring around 3:25 a.m. on Sunday, Oct. 13 for a report of ”unknown trouble.” Officers found Gupta ”covered in blood” and an ”unresponsive Waugh” with a number of stab and ”defensive-type” injuries. Gupta said he had walked in on his girlfriend cheating on him, according to the arrest report.

Gupta’s girlfriend Taylor Gould told police that she couldn’t remember anything after drinking shots of liquor at the apartment but was woken up by Gupta’s orders to call 911. The girlfriend has not been charged in the crime.

Gupta and Waugh became friends whilst attending Langley High School in McLean, Va. Waugh, 23, was a first-year law student at Georgetown University at the time of the incident. Gupta, on the other hand, was enrolled in a master’s biomedical engineering program at George Washington University.

Closing arguments in the two-week trial concluded Friday. Prosecutors assert that Gould had nothing to do with the killing of Mark Waugh.

Gould testified that she had no reason to hurt anyone but said she has no memory of what happened. Gupta began testifying on Thursday and was insistent he didn’t kill Waugh. However, he noted that he had limited memory of the incident because he tripped and hit his head during the attack.

He also said it was soon clear Waugh’s injuries were crucial and Gupta gave him chest compressions and yelled at Gould to call the police, Gupta testified. Under cross-examination from prosecutor Patrick Mays, though, Gupta offered no details about how Gould could have stabbed and slashed Waugh so many times.

The prosecutor pressed Gupta on why — after the police officers arrived — he would confess to a murder he didn’t commit. “In a sense, it was almost instinctual,” Gupta said emphasizing his desire to shield Gould.

Overnight Delivery Pilot Program Coming to D.C.


This spring, the D.C. Department of Transportation will start testing methods of persuading delivery companies and businesses to hook up between 7 p.m. and 6 a.m. for deliveries, The Washington Post reports. The circling delivery trucks, blamed for clogging Washington streets by double-parking, will be encouraged to make deliveries overnight, when the roads are relatively clear.

The program will provide financial incentives to businesses who adopt the practice, and then presumably use extra cash to pay higher wages to workers receiving shipments overnight or to upgrade off-street loading docks to allow unmanned deliveries.

The test program will start in Georgetown, downtown, Adams Morgan, Capitol Hill, NoMa and the business district known as the Golden Triangle. Laura Richards, a transportation planner for the District Department of Transportation (DDOT) told the Washington Business Journal that more overnight deliveries will reduce traffic congestion, improve the flow of freight into and out of the city, and reduce truck emissions.

“People can look forward to fewer trucks on the road during peak hours,” Richards said. The biggest challenge will be to convince businesses to try something new, she continues.

DDOT estimates the annual cost of truck-related traffic congestion at $650 million with projections to get even worse. Between 2011 and 2040, truck volumes in the city are expected to grow by 70 percent for inbound traffic and an astounding 137 percent for outbound traffic.

Overnight deliveries would make businesses’ shipments more reliable and could allow some to reduce the inventory they keep on hand to cover for late or missed deliveries. The 3,5 year long program will be funded through a $150,000 grant from the Federal Highway Administration and a $150,000 grant from DDOT, Richards said.

A similar project started in 2010 in New York City led to a successful off-hours delivery program. The test project is the District’s latest attempt to reduce traffic congestion from delivery trucks.

Parents Who Left Kids in Car for Wine Tasting Enter Plea Deal


The local parents accused of leaving their two young children in a car while they attended a wine tasting on a January night have accepted a plea deal. Christophe Lucas, 41, and Jennie Chang, 45, pleaded guilty to attempted second-degree cruelty to children in D.C. Superior Court on March 19. The couple admitted to leaving their children, who are both under the age of three, in the car while they attended a wine tasting at the Ris restaurant in January. Temperatures hovered in the low 30s that night. Prosecutors said the children were wearing coats but not hats or gloves. One child was also not wearing socks or shoes.

The plea deal allows for the charges to be dismissed in nine months if the couple maintains good behavior and attends a parenting class. Lucas and Chang have already completed the court-mandated parenting course.

The children, who were in the custody of Child Protective Services following the incident, have been released back into the custody of the parents.

Lucas and Chang were originally charged with two counts each of second-degree cruelty to children. These charges could have put the parents in jail for up to six months.

The couple did not make a statement in court. Their lawyer Danny Onorato did release a statement to WTOP. It is included in full below.

“Jennie Chang and Christophe Lucas are caring, dedicated parents who had an unfortunate lapse of judgment a month ago. Ms. Chang and Mr. Lucas were monitoring and watching their children from about 50 feet away, and the parents are adamant that the children were not in any danger. They realize that their actions were wrong and they are eager to place this matter behind them. They’re pleased that the matter is now resolved and they can focus on raising their children. As you know, this case will be dismissed in December.”

Weekend Round Up March 19, 2015

March 23, 2015

Meet the Artists Reception

March 20th, 2015 at 05:00 PM | Free | pdubroof@iona.org | Tel: 202- 895-9407 | Event Website

Join us in celebrating our Artist in Residence Helga Thomson (print maker) and Special Guest Artist Norma Schwartz (sculptor) and their vibrant works on display at the Gallery. Featuring live music and delicious refreshments. You will have the opportunity to chat with the artists and enjoy their poignant works on display.

Address

The Gallery at Iona; 4125 Albemarle Street NW

Thos. Moser Grand Opening

March 21st, 2015 at 10:00 AM | dcshowroom@thosmoser.com | Tel: 202-793-2606 | Event Website

Come by & receive a copy of our new commemorative catalog. Tom will be in the showroom to sign it between 10am-2pm. Master craftsman Warren Shaw will be demonstrating how our iconic Thos. Moser Continuous Arm Chair is made. We also invite you to enter to win a spot in our Customer-in-Residence program. With the guidance of a master craftsman, the winner will spend a week in our Maine workshop making a Thos. Moser Continuous Arm Chair while staying at a historic Inn.

Event from 10:00 am – 6:00 pm

Address

Thos. Moser Washington, DC Showroom; 1028 33rd Street, NW

Exhibition Opening: Scaling Washington: Photographs by Colin Winterbottom

March 21st, 2015 at 10:00 AM | Tel: 202-272-2448 | Event Website](http://www.nbm.org/exhibitions-collections/exhibitions/scaling-washington.html)

Opens March 21, runs through January 3, 2016.
This exhibition features breathtaking, one-of-a-kind imagery captured from the dizzying scaffolds at the Washington Monument and the Washington National Cathedral. The architectural sensibility of fine art photographer Colin Winterbottom transformed the recent, earthquake-driven repairs at both landmarks into an opportunity to redefine how we perceive and understand these two fragile and enduring national symbols.?

Address

National Building Museum; 401 F Street NW

The 6th Annual Move Me Festival

March 21st, 2015 at 01:00 PM | free | jessica@bmdc.org | Tel: 703-910-5175 | [Event Website](http://www.bmdc.org/outreach/move-me-festival)

The Move Me Festival, hosted by Bowen McCauley Dance, is a FREE, family-friendly celebration of the arts and culture, promoting healthy lifestyles through movement and the arts. The event features twenty performances on two stages and fifteen interactive activity sessions by local arts partners, including offerings in dance fitness, acapella, physical theater, storytelling, arts and crafts, theatre games, and world dance styles, as well as two food trucks.

Address

Kenmore Middle School; 200 South Carlin Springs Road; Arlington VA, 22204

Cupcakes of Georgetown-Cherry Blossom

March 21st, 2015 at 01:00 PM | $25 | education@dumbartonhouse.org | Tel: 2023372288 | [Event Website](https://www.eventbrite.com/e/cupcakes-of-georgetown-walking-tours-tickets-15929706180)

Join us for a delightful walking tour of Georgetown- with history and cupcakes! The tour will begin at Dumbarton House and make stops at Baked & Wired, Sprinkles, and Georgetown Cupcake to pick up pre-ordered cupcakes (we skip the long lines!) Enjoy your treats as you learn about the historic Georgetown neighborhood. Ticket price includes 3 cupcakes per registrant, one from each shop. This month we will celebrate the Cherry Blossom Festival by tasting each bakery’s Cherry blossom treat.

Address

2715 Q Street, NW

Illusions of Georgetown’s Grand Opening

March 21st, 2015 at 04:00 PM | Event Website](http://www.punchbowl.com/parties/b08b760ecbc101bafb71/view)

Illusions of Shirlington wants to invite everyone to the Grand Opening of Illusions of Georgetown! Saturday.March 21st 2015!
Click the link for more details & to RSVP!

Address

1629 Wisconsin Ave. NW

Passport to Europe

March 21st, 2015 at 04:30 PM | $20-$30 | info@blacknightevents.com | Tel: (202) 681-9560 | Event Website](http://blacknightevents.electrostub.com/event.cfm?id=143726&cart)

Taking you to Europe at this event you will find yourself immersed into Fashion, Music, Culture and Art of Europe. Come into refresh your senses with a “PASSPORT TO EUROPE” at The Manor on March 21st, 2015

The Show:

MC: Miss DE World 2015 Taylor DeMario

6:30pm VIP Reception: The Passport Toast.

Mix & Mingle w/designers & artist.

Exclusive Art Exhibit by Amelia ST

7:30pm General

Performance: Zahra & Jason Barnes

Fashion Presentation

Live Visuals by Masrae snd+vsn

Music: Dj Cesar Sanchez

Address

The Manor DC; 1327 Connecticut Ave NW

Sanctuary Music by Candlelight

March 21st, 2015 at 08:00 PM | $35-$30 | office@dumbartonconcerts.org | Tel: 202-965-2000 | Event Website](http://www.dumbartonconcerts.org/)

The hushed, candlelit beauty of Dumbarton United Methodist Church’s sanctuary is the perfect setting to discover the other-worldly beauty of The Tiffany Consort. This five-voice ensemble, with cello, sings sacred works of J.S. Bach, Allegri, Tallis, and the world premiere of a new work by conductor and composer Nicholas White. Allegri’s “Miserere mei” will soar through the sanctuary. Join us for this evening of magnificent choral music.

Address

Dumbarton Concerts; 3133 Dumbarton St. NW

Opera on Tap DC Metro

March 22nd, 2015 at 04:00 PM | $5 | kristina@operaontap.org | Tel: 8434377251 | [Event Website](http://www.operaontap.org/dcmetro/)

Opera on Tap DC Metro returns to The Pinch for an afternoon of opera and musical theatre. Join us for a pint or two and yummy eats (Pretzel Crusted Fried Pickles anyone?…) and revel with some of DC’s most exciting opera singers!

Sunday, March 22nd from 4-6pm (doors open at 3:30pm)

$5 cash cover charge at door

Artists: David E. Chavez, Wesley Gentle, Annie Gill, Becky Henry, Melissa Mino, Kristina Riegle, Carla Rountree, Molly Pinson Simoneau, Gregory Stuart, and Dane Suarez
Address

The Pinch – 3548 14th St. NW, Washington DC 20010

Murder Mystery at 868 Estate

March 22nd, 2015 at 06:30 PM | $65 | Tel: 540-668-7008 | [Event Website](http://868estatevineyards.com/)

Disco is “King” once more in this interactive, leisure suit murder mystery in the Tasting Room at 868 Estate Vineyards. Sleuth out the answers and enjoy a delicious dinner served at intermission. Theater performance provided by Stage Coach Theater Company.

Address

14001 Harpers Ferry Rd., Purcellville, Va.

Empty Bowls

March 24th, 2015 at 06:00 PM | $25 | rpotts-dupre@some.or | Tel: 202.797.8806, ext. 1131 | [Event Website](http://some.org/empty-bowls/)

Guests select and take home a beautiful handmade bowl crafted by local artists, and enjoy a supper of soup, bread and dessert donated by local restaurants. The proceeds from the event help SOME continue to provide more than 1,000 meals each day to hungry and homeless District residents. Our partner, The Corcoran School of Art, enlists faculty, students and alumni to produce 500 of the 1,000 bowls needed for the events.

Address

March 25th: The Shrine of the Most Blessed Sacrament; 3630 Quesada Street, NW

March 25th: St. Ann Roman Catholic Church; 5300 North 10th Street; Arlington, VA

The Gentle Art of Verbal Self-Defense

March 24th, 2015 at 07:00 PM | megan.mcnitt@dc.gov | Tel: (202) 727-0232

Susan Lowell will teach participants new strategies for dealing with difficult conversations.

Address

Georgetown Neighborhood Library; 3260 R St., NW

West End Cinema To Close at End of March

March 19, 2015

Beloved indie movie theatre West End Cinema will close in the end of March, co-founder and general manager Josh Levin announced on March 3. After opening in 2010, West End Cinema became known for showing independent films unsuited for large theaters and even for E Street Cinema downtown.

Levin has made the West End a haven for small, independent movies that otherwise could only be seen on demand or not at all. During the past five years, it’s provided D.C. residents an important venue for independent cinema, documentaries, awards contenders, foreign flicks and controversial movies such as “The Interview” last December.

West End Cinema said the following on their website: “For the past few years, we’ve enjoyed serving the ?D.C. community of cinephiles and movie-lovers, but the time has come. We are incredibly grateful for all your support and would love to share our thanks with you for one last month…and D.C.’s best popcorn!”

“We have loved doing what we’ve been doing, but we’re facing increased occupancy cost and increased competition for (movie) titles, so we decided to leave with our heads held high, declare victory and depart the field,” Levin told WTOP.

The theater will show its last film on Thursday, March 26. Stay tuned to West End Cinema’s website www.westendcinema.com, newsletter, and social media accounts for news about a to-be-announced final celebration to occur before the official closing on Tuesday, March 31.
[gallery ids="102003,135205" nav="thumbs"]

Georgetown Takes a March Snow Day


Georgetown and Washington, D.C., got hit with a morning snow storm March 5, and it shut down the entire region. The sleety, snowy mix ranged from Texas to New York with D.C. right around the snowy band. Restaurants were open at lunchtime, although some were shutting for dinner. Martin’s Tavern, Clyde’s, J.Paul’s and Paulo’s and others were humming along with their snow-show regulars stopping by. A pretty white adorned the homes of the town, as neighbors said hello and found themselves shoveling a couple of times during the day — all right, at least a few of them.

We are guessing that climate change means things shift around — like a late winter snow — i.e., “March comes in like a lion and goes out like a lamb.” The cherry blossoms cannot come soon enough — they will be late, too. [gallery ids="102004,135191,135196,135186,135181,135170,135176,135200,135165,135203" nav="thumbs"]

Historic Neams’ Property Gets N.Y. Owner


“Selling was an emotional decision,” said George Neam of his family’s choice to let go of its building and property at Wisconsin Avenue and P Street, where Neams Market — beginning in 1909 — served Georgetown and became a local market legend. “It seemed like the right time.”

Sivan Properties, Inc., purchased the property last month, as first reported by Carol Joynt. A deal with Roadside Development, reported by the Georgetowner in November, did not work out, Neam said.

At first, “we did not want to sell but wanted to lease,” Neam told the Georgetowner, but the family’s elders ultimately made the call.

Neams Market grew upscale as Georgetown grew upscale in the 1960s and beyond, Neam recalled. It is one of the first places to offer Beluga caviar and the first place in D.C. — among its many premieres, as it were — to sell Haagen-Dazs ice cream when it made its debut. It is the one market — and there were many in town — that ranks high on the nostalgia index and stirs positive memories of Georgetown.

“We could have put together a great retail environment there,” Neam said. “But it would not have lived up to what was there. You can’t go home again.”

Around 1990, the Neam family let Capital Restaurant Concepts run the market until 2000. Then, the place was occupied by Marvelous Market, which closed in April 2014.

The new owner of the property — Sivan Properties of Port Washington, N.Y. (Long Island) — is looking to expand into D.C. It already owns a restaurant and a condo complex on 14th Street NW as well as the Comfort One shoe store at 1329 Wisconsin Ave. NW.

“I am hopeful that the new owners will take the history of the location to heart and put something in that will please the residents, however that will be their choice,” Neam told Joynt last week.