Articles for October, 2009

More Scenes From the Arts District

Okay, any sore feelings over the food situation down here were just erased by that great fireworks show, a call-and-response number with the pyrotechnics launched from the roofs of the Wyly and Winspear. Splendid.

Scenes From the Arts District

Left to right: 1. The monks finished their mandala today. A week of arranging all that sand — and then they dump it in Turtle Creek. Let’s hope the prayer works. 2. These guys were called Zero Gravity, I think. Some very serious trampoline work. 3. My daughter was more impressed with the ballet. 4. As predicted, the reflecting pond in front of the Winspear is VERY popular with the kiddos. 5. I’ve got one gripe: they didn’t think through the food thing. There’s one place to buy it. The line is long. The food is expensive. I wound up instead getting a cup o’ corn from one of the street vendors by the Cathedral. And guess what store decided to stay closed today? Yup, the 7-Eleven at One Arts. Oh, and one more thing: If you’re going to have 30,000 or so people down to the Arts District, they might need to pee. Or worse. Portable bathrooms were not in abundance, and the one I did find was a disaster. 6. People who need to pee. 7. The line to tour the Wyly is about 500 people deep. They will all be assimilated.

Kristin Chenoweth Wows Em at the Winspear

Last night was the culmination of Act III, the three nights of performances that opened the AT&T Performing Arts Center. The finale was billed as “an evening of Broadway,” and it was topped off with a rocking party. First, the singing and dancing, then we’ll get to some pictures, including one of a celebrity who is my new best friend.

(more…)

Dallas Tea Partier Phillip Dennis Takes On MSNBC’s Chris Matthews

Dennis does more than a credible job. Matthews has gotten too accustomed to out-debating standard-issue Republican apologists. He seems a little bit at a loss with a conservative who bashes the big spending of Democrats and Republicans. To roll the tape, go to MSNBC here.

Texas Has 12th Highest Sales Tax in the Nation

Here are the results of a study by the Tax Foundation. (The map  says we are #11 but it also says Nevada is #11; Nevada wins, we’re 12.)

tax foundation map

DART Makes Being a Good Fan Difficult

I’ll leave the analyzing of the game to others. However, let’s talk about the Green Line. It didn’t go so well.

We knew it was going to be a long day when we were dropped off at Pearl Station. We saw several very full Green Line trains arrive and open their doors to those waiting on the platform. Two, maybe three people were able to get on. However, the other trains kept appearing and dropping off more and more people. We finally gave up and shared a taxi with some very nice UT fans.

The situation leaving the fair was very much the same. One look at the line waiting on the trains, and we were off on a walk. When we got home two hours later, I saw this article about the problems. I have a problem with this quote:

[Morgan Lyons] said DART officials would review the events of the day, but the system would get better when residents got used to using the rail.

“Customers will learn the tricks of riding,” he said.

I’m pretty sure I know how to use DART. The problem wasn’t the customers.

Soon To Be the Most Photographed Tourist Spot in Dallas

The reflecting pond in front of the Winspear is a joy. In the summer? Kids will go nuts for this thing.

David Sanborn Does the AT&T PAC

Blowhard David Sanborn is right now tearing up the PAC. Great crowd. Multiple-ethnic. Multi-age. Good times.

Simmons: Rush Had Right to Bid for NFL’s Rams

RSW-2Russell Simmons, the businessman, philanthropist and hip-hop impresario, has done a lot in his time to bridge America’s white/black racial divide. Now Simmons (pictured) is defending conservative commentator Rush Limbaugh, who was just forced out of a bid to buy the NFL’s St. Louis Rams for allegedly making racist remarks on his popular radio show. “I don’t know, he should be able to buy” into the team, Simmons said in Dallas today. “Yeah–why not? I think it’s up to the players to play for him or not! I don’t think he was really making policy. Americans have a right to their own opinions.”

Simmons’ take was somewhat surprising, since it came just days after a piece he wrote for the Huffington Post ripped people like Limbaugh for their “nasty” and “hateful” views on things in general. “One thing I think I did wrong in that article, I said ‘fearful and angry people like Rush Limbaugh and Glenn Beck.’ I wish I hadn’t done that,” Simmons said today. “Because I’m friends with [FOX honchos] Rupert Murdoch and Roger Ailes, too. I think they’re wonderful guys and they have an opinion. I think some of it–their choices–are based a little more on fear; that’s my opinion. Some of what they believe is important and useful, and it’s different from what I believe, and more important and useful than my views on certain subjects.”

Simmons was in town for a pre-event reception tonight for Dallas Rocks, a Nov. 14 fundraiser here for his Diamond Empowerment Fund nonprofit, which benefits African communities where diamonds are a natural resource.

Notes From the the Norman Foster Talk at the Nasher

Krista and I just returned from the luncheon and talk given by Norman Foster at the Nasher. He said a few things of note about his Winspear Opera House, but the real action was at our table, whereat were seated Marion and Nash Flores and Kevin Moriarty. We discussed fashion, drinking in downtown, and rock and roll. Notes after the jump.

(more…)

Forbes: “Recession-Proof” Dallas-Fort Worth a Good Place to Retire In?

Listmania seems to have finally gotten to Forbes.  According to this one, Dallas-Fort Worth is the second best “recession-proof” city to retire in. Atlanta is first, Tampa is third, Houston is fourth, and Austin and St. Louis (St. Louis?) are tied for fifth.

First, I question the use of the term “recession-proof.” Dallas may have been hit less dramatically than some other metro areas, but that hardly means we haven’t been hit at all. 

Secondly, and more confoundingly, if I’m retired, why do I care whether my city is suffering a recession?  I mean, I’m retired, right? The national recession may affect my stocks, bonds, and real estate assets, but what has that got to do with where I live? If anything, doesn’t it mean there are more people are available to mow my lawn?  Wouldn’t it drive labor and other costs down? In other words, wouldn’t a retired person rather live in a city that is experiencing a recession?

Morphoses Dazzles at Winspear Opera House Opening

Morphoses' Christopher  Wheeldon Willard Spiegelman already mentioned the performances of opera superstars Thomas Hampson and Denyse Graves at the AT&T Performing Arts Center ACT III Gala last night, but I wanted to praise the ballet element of the event. Christopher Wheeldon’s Morphoses ballet company blew me away. I’ve heard the dancing described as “dreamlike” before, and that’s exactly what the sequences seemed like, to me. The first act, a dance with just a male and female dancer, was so lovely and intimate and definitely different from any ballet I’d seen before (though admittedly, I haven’t seen much more than the Nutcracker). I loved the second (or third?) act with the men and women in tutus, which was whimsical, pretty, and a little bit funny. Overall, the dancing was the highlight of my evening.

I’ve also got a tip for people heading to ACT III tonight: have dinner or a drink at One Arts Plaza beforehand and valet your car there. It’s just a short walk and a much shorter valet line.

D Magazine Lands Widower in Court for Necking

Apparently our humble publication is responsible for getting a man crosswise with the law. And it involves making out in a public park. After the jump, one of the best e-mails I’ve gotten in a while (name withheld to protect the relatively innocent):

(more…)

Willard Spiegelman on Denyse Graves at the Winspear

D Magazine contributor and SMU professor Willard Spiegelman went to his first performance at the Winspear last night. Thomas Hampson and Denyse Graves performed. The good professor sends us this report:

The audience was all smiles and eagerness as its filed into the Winspear Opera House last night. Margaret McDermott was on the arm of Olivier Meslay of the DMA. Other local dignitaries and philanthropists were joined by ordinary people. A whole battalion of lanky women in spaghetti-strapped black dresses and headsets acted as ushers and crowd controllers.

The event was the kind of mixed bag that one often gets at fundraisers and celebrations. There were glitches. The streets were blocked off. The entrance to the theater is small and creates something of a bottleneck. Intimacy (a good thing) can blend into claustrophobia (a bad thing).

In the McDermott Hall itself, the new chandelier looked fabulous, the seats were comfortable, the sight lines excellent. Best of all, the acoustics made you realize as if for the first time how awful the Music Hall at Fair Park has been for the natural transmission of the human voice. Still, there were times when the orchestra (still getting used to the hall) overwhelmed Thomas Hampson and Denyse Graves; and poor Lord Foster, who tried to make his gracious remarks with a hand-held microphone, was less than audible and his words were garbled. He might have done better had he simply spoken with no amplification, in his street voice. Street voices are perfectly audible from the stage.

The stage proved itself capable of quick changes in backdrop and lighting, and equally hospitable to ballet (Christopher Wheeldon’s troupe, in various combinations), vocal solos and duets, and larger choral pieces.

The audience was delighted. The real test will be next week’s opening of Verdi’s Otello.

Allen Hockey Team Begins Play Saturday

Allen has a minor league hockey team? And they have ice angels all their own?

They’re called the Allen Americans, the Central Hockey League affiliate of the Dallas Stars. Once upon a time I was the editor of the Allen American. I wonder if the newspaper’s parent company, Star Community Newspapers, is happy to have their name co-opted. I’m guessing they are.