Parlee Cycles in Peabody

January 15, 2010 by Northshore  
Filed under Business, Profile

nsfm10_bikes_2Bob Parlee takes an idea for a bicycle and turns it into an international phenomenon. By Alexandra Pecci. Photography by Joel Laino.

Bicycle designer bob Parlee might tell you that he never really went to school; that he just enjoys building things and figuring them out. But then his wife Isabel is likely to interject.
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Tupelo Music Hall in Salisbury

January 15, 2010 by Northshore  
Filed under Business, Profile

nsfm10_tupelo_1Tupelo Music Hall in Salisbury welcomes music fans back to the beach. By Jack Morris.

Driving to salisbury beach in the middle of the winter used to be something only dog walkers and nature lovers might do. These days, add fans of rock and roll to that list. The Tupelo Music Hall Salisbury, located on Salisbury Beach in the New Pavilion building (also home to Seaglass Restaurant), opened in the fall of 2009 and has given music lovers on the North Shore a new reason to get out of the house and see live bands once again.
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Coco Chanel’s Makeup Artist, Guy Lento

January 8, 2010 by Northshore  
Filed under Business, Fashion, Profile

nsfm10_guylento_1Makeup Artist Guy Lento trades supermodels for super moms. By Leslie Martini. Photographs by Sadie Dayton.

Coco Chanel once said, “I don’t understand how a woman can leave the house without fixing herself up a little—if only out of politeness. Maybe that’s the day she has a date with destiny. And it’s best to be as pretty as possible for destiny.” Read more

Plow Driver Anthony Laconte

January 7, 2010 by Northshore  
Filed under Profile

nsfm10_duenorth_1If a few inches are in the forecast, plow driver Anthony Laconte is ready to work. By Jillian Ducharme. Photograph by Christopher Churchill.

Anthony Laconte knows a thing or two about snow storms. As a plow driver for the town of Georgetown and owner of construction firm J. Derenzo and Co., he hasn’t missed a storm since 1982. He’s seen almost every type of snow fall from the sky, plenty of dumb driving maneuvers, and one orangutan. Read more

Without Pause–J. Hilary Rockett

January 7, 2010 by Northshore  
Filed under Featured, Profile

nsfm10_rockett_1aLooking back on J. Hilary Rockett’s tireless work and unwavering dedication to the people and future of Salem, Marblehead, and the entire region. By Bryan McGonigle Read more

Lawrence Mayor William Lantigua

January 7, 2010 by Northshore  
Filed under News, Profile

nsfm10_mayors_1Lawrence Mayor William Lantigua ushers in new era for local government. By Brian McGonigle. Photograph by Robert Boyd.

On January 2, state representative William Lantigua was sworn in as mayor of Lawrence and became the city’s—as well as the state’s—first Latino mayor. Lantigua’s victory in November marked a milestone for the Massachusetts Latino community as well as a big step in the emergence of Latinos in the political arena. Read more

Cedar’s Mediterranean Foods in Haverhill

November 13, 2009 by Northshore  
Filed under Business, Profile

Walking through the manufacturing facility at Cedar’s Mediterranean Foods is a little like visiting Willy Wonka’s hummus factory, if he had ever built one. Read more

Old Saint Rick

November 13, 2009 by Northshore  
Filed under Arts/Entertainment, Profile

He’s known around andover as Santa, but Rick Pruneau, 66, is also the owner of Park Street Pub, the local hangout a couple of blocks behind Main Street. Read more

Newburyport’s Rising Tide

November 13, 2009 by Northshore  
Filed under Business, Profile

Written by Bryan McGonigle

Photographs by Christopher Churchill

nsdj09_newburyport_3As Ann Lagasse walks along Green Street in Newburyport, talking to residents and noting the new businesses she’s helped bring to town in the past decade, she stops here and there to admire the flower beds that New England Development supplies to its tenants. “We’re definitely a downtown, but we’re looking to attract staple stores, too,” she says. “That way, we’re not all coffee shops and banks.”

Yet much of the waterfront remains undeveloped. And across town, a petition at a local market gathered thousands of signatures aimed at saving that market from being replaced by a CVS, the latest phase of frustration for some Newburyport residents.

“The face of Newburyport has changed to an almost faceless town, with a few people in control sporting dollar signs in their eyes,” says local resident Lisa Hayford. “Newburyport’s soul was sold to a commercial devil, and now the residents are paying the price.”

An evolving makeover of the downtown area, combined with a dismal economy that has stalled long-awaited major renovation of the waterfront and a caused a visionary tug-of-war, define the ambitious and often exhausting course of progress in Newburyport.

Newburyport has a long history of financial advantage. Born in 1764 after Newbury’s port community prospered so greatly that it broke away from the rest of the town (and later annexed parts of Newbury to incorporate itself into city status in 1851), Newburyport became an epicenter of shipbuilding and trade during and following the American Revolution. The United States Revenue Cutter service—the predecessor to the US Coast Guard, which was established to fight smuggling—opened its first station in Newburyport in 1791, and lighthouses built by the Coast Guard still stand on Water Street and Plum Island. Newburyport was also a base for the privateer ships that attacked enemy ships that captured hundreds of British ships during the American Revolution and War of 1812.

nsdj09_newburyport_1Ships from all over the world registered their foreign goods at Newburyport’s Custom House. In turn, those built in Newburyport carried American goods around the world. The Currier yard built 97 vessels totaling more than 80,000 tons. Famous shipbuilder Donald McKay set up his operation in Newburyport and introduced clipper ships—famous for their grandeur, grace, and speed—in the mid-19th century. The shipbuilding district was overlooked by Federal-style mansions of the region’s famous shipbuilding families, including the Greenleaf, Cushing, and Bartlett clans.

Newburyport native and merchant Francis Cabot Lowell helped bring the Industrial Revolution to America in the early 1800s, and the innovations that gave birth to steam-powered mills served as more wind for Newburyport’s financial sails. Many of the large brick mill buildings around the city were built at this time.

In the 20th century, however, the decline of localized industry and the growth of suburbs and strip malls caused Newburyport to sink economically, leaving the city awash in stagnation. By the 1970s, Newburyport’s downtown commercial core was in disarray; many of the local shops were closed, and much of downtown was slated for demolition. The Newburyport Redevelopment Authority, established in 1960 to address revitalization of the downtown central business district, renovated some of the area, including the waterfront park it built with the Newburyport Waterfront Trust. But the more ambitious plan for a grand hotel on the waterfront was fought by community activist groups for years, because the hotel was planned for public land, and it slowly sunk into wishful thinking.

Then came the Lagasses. In the 1990s, Chuck and Ann Lagasse moved to Newburyport from Haverhill and bought several buildings, setting out for renewal and charting a new course toward preservation and restoration of downtown and the waterfront.

“We moved here, and we liked old buildings,” Ann Lagasse says. “We saw some opportunities. This town has the best collection of Federalist-style buildings in the nation, and we wanted to preserve that.”

Before long, the Lagasses were the city’s biggest commercial landowners, with about 25 percent of the downtown area in their hands. Their work inspired other renovation efforts, and property values in the city went up. Newburyport witnessed a commercial rebirth under the Lagasses, who invested in condominiums, renovated Michael’s Harborside restaurant, converted another old restaurant into the Black Cow, and renovated the Atkinson Building downtown into office space and residences, among many other projects.

The Lagasses enlisted the guidance of Walter Beinecke Jr., heir to the S&H Green Stamp fortune, who had revitalized much of Nantucket by buying waterfront buildings and renovating them with appealing 18th-century architecture. Impressed with the renovations he’d made with Nantucket, the Lagasses met with him in the early 1990s and asked for his advice in preserving and revitalizing Newburyport’s downtown and waterfront. Beinecke agreed to help and went a step further: he moved to Newburyport.

“It was great,” Lagasse says of having Beinecke as a mentor. “He was a visionary, concerned about the big picture, but also concerned with the details.”

Beinecke left Newburyport a few years later to be closer to his family in Texas and passed away in 2004. Around that time, the Lagasses met with Beinecke’s Nantucket protégé, Stephen Karp, and began discussions about investing in Newburyport. The Lagasses were millions of dollars in debt and couldn’t materialize their goals for Newburyport on their own.

“We knew we needed a strong partner to develop the waterfront property,” Lagasse says. “We had mortgages on the properties, and the sale price included that debt. We wanted to find an entity that had the expertise and experience to develop the waterfront.”

Karp is chairman and CEO of New England Development, a company he started in the early 1970s, specializing in commercial real estate that developed more retail space in its first 30 years than any other developer in the Northeast. The company’s portfolio included the CambridgeSide Galleria in Boston and the massive Pinehills residential community in Plymouth, and NED had purchased and renovated properties on Nantucket, where Karp kept his work in line with Beinecke’s vision of preservation on the island.

“Frankly, we talked to many companies at that time, including companies that were interested in particular parcels,” Lagasse says. “We liked NED’s proposal because they had an interest in the entire portfolio, and we believed we could continue to work with them.”

nsdj09_newburyport_6Karp had reportedly declined to invest in Newburyport the first time he was approached, but later changed his mind and was drawn to the city. “Walter introduced me to Newburyport, and we discussed the similarities and differences with Nantucket,” Karp says. “I had great appreciation for the character of Newburyport, the preservation of older buildings, the unique shops and restaurants, the location on the Merrimack, and the close proximity to Plum Island.”

Karp began buying several of the Lagasses’ properties in 2005, starting with 31 properties and adding on from there. He had a vision for the town, one that was estimated at more than $100 million that included long-term development of the waterfront. Ann Lagasse stayed on with NED and now helps manage its Newburyport properties.

“The Lagasses created value in their preservation of building character, land purchases, and appreciation of the location on the water,” Karp says. “Ann continues her work in finding new tenants who serve a year-round population.”

Lagasse says she and others at NED have been canvassing in other towns, talking with business owners to attract new businesses to fill up Newburyport’s downtown. Today, Newburyport is home to more than 17,000 residents and hundreds of businesses, and NED is the largest property owner in the city, with 50 retail stores in town as well as a couple of schools, some office space, marina space, and executive office suites.

The development in Newburyport has involved mixed-use buildings, properties that serve as businesses, office space, and schools, as well as residences. Neighboring Salisbury is in the midst of a revitalization effort with proposed mixed-use buildings as well, and Newburyport may serve as a loose example of what to expect there, since many renovated buildings in Newburyport have been that way for some time.

“We’re focusing on making the buildings work on every level,” NED spokesman Tony Green says of Newburyport. “It already is a mixed-use downtown; it’s already here, and we’re a part of it. The new development we do will be consistent with that.”

New England Development’s ambitions have met with some local backlash, however. Some say they are concerned about their town being turned into a Nantucket imitation—“Nantucketization” is a common term around town—and some are concerned about the influx of new, often high-end stores coming in from out of town and replacing Newburyport’s familiar character. Although the Nantucket revitalization was a loose model for NED’s plans, Lagasse and Karp insist they have always planned to maintain Newburyport’s character. Karp has met with Newburyport residents a few times since purchasing the Lagasses’ properties and has had Lagasse talking with residents and insists that feedback does not fall on deaf ears.

“We try to listen to what people have to say,” Karp says. “We can’t always agree with everyone. The community will have input into any major development that will change downtown.”

Recently, it was announced that the White Hen Pantry on Pond Street would not have its lease renewed. Instead, the nearby CVS would be expanding and taking up the entire plaza space. This has led to outrage in that neighborhood from people who have frequented that White Hen for many years.

“Maybe CVS offered more rent, but I’m not really sure,” says Robin Munroe, whose husband has owned that White Hen franchise for about 12 years. Although the Munroes own that franchise, the actual tenant is White Hen, so deals are made through the corporate office. “Nobody’s talking to us. All we know is our lease ends in April, and that’s it.”

The Newburyport White Hen has many loyal customers; Munroe said they get an average of 1,500 customers a day. Since news of the White Hen’s imminent closing became known this past spring, there has been a petition posted at the market that has gathered more than 5,000 signatures. In September, there was a protest outside the White Hen held by Liz Frame, a local business owner outraged by the decision to replace the market.

Frame, who owns the Fancy Schmancy store near downtown and sings in a local band, has been a supporter of the White Hen effort for a while, but her concern is for the whole town, and she has long been outspoken with her concern about NED. Frame says she and others in town will be watching to see how the development progresses. The White Hen situation has put many on alert and has ignited fears of the NED renovation efforts.

“I don’t begrudge Mr. Karp his vision to develop the downtown,” Frame says. “It’s ultimately going to be good for everybody. But from a more altruistic, community-minded viewpoint, there are potential landmines that need to get navigated, and this whole White Hen-CVS thing speaks to that issue.”

Neither White Hen’s nor CVS’s corporate offices responded to requests for comments for this article. Lagasse acknowledges the frustration over the decision not to renew White Hen’s lease, but said the decision was one based on the location of the plaza in which White Hen operates and the company having to make a choice between White Hen and CVS due to the limit of space there.

“Both White Hen and CVS have been great tenants which served the community well,” Lagasse says. “Unfortunately, we could not expand this property—it’s a residential neighborhood—to accommodate both their future needs to grow.”

Some properties owned by NED have seen their rents go up. NED also requires a percentage of stores’ profits, which has alarmed some business owners around town. But taking a percentage of a store’s profits isn’t a practice reserved just for shopping malls, and it comes in exchange for helping the store make those profits, Green says.

“Percentage rate is common and has been a part of many leases in Newburyport that predate us,” he says. “The location, amenities, service, marketing, and support, as well as base rent level, can make such an arrangement attractive to both parties. Some leases have it, others don’t.”

With the economy in a slump, the development of the waterfront area, the major project to be undertaken by NED, has been delayed. The company had planned to tear down Oldies Marketplace along the waterfront near the Atkinson Building and build an inn, but in 2007, that plan was scrapped when the economy turned downward. Green and Lagasse say they may decide to go ahead with that waterfront inn once the economy picks back up again, but right now they aren’t sure. The company is working with the city on a walking pathway from Cashman Park to the waterfront, but the company’s eight-acre waterfront property remains undeveloped.

nsdj09_newburyport_2“In today’s economy, we’re focused on our businesses that are already there,” Green says. The company insists it remains committed to the change Ann and Chuck Lagasse envisioned for Newburyport more than a decade ago, and despite some outcry and concern from many in town, it has a lot of support from the community.

“I think people now know New England Development is a very reputable company that is here for the long haul,” Lagasse says. As she walks along the pedestrian Inn Street area and surrounding block, noting all the renovations that have been done over the years, people wave and say hello to her, even stopping their cars for small talk.

On Pleasant Street, where three new tenants of NED opened businesses last year, a new shop recently opened. Bobbles and Lace is a clothing and jewelry store based in Boston and Marblehead that has added Newburyport as its third location. The store, recently featured on WCVB’s “Chronicle” in a special bargain-hunting segment, specializes in high-end boutique looks with reasonable prices. All jewelry is under $45, and all clothing is under $80. The expansion to Newburyport was ideal, according to Co-owner Lindsay Rose Rando, a former Los Angeles boutique owner and model who co-owns Bobbles and Lace with her aunt Valerie White Russo.

“We wanted a town with a real downtown feeling where people spend the day,” Rando says, excited because the shop had been open for just about 20 minutes and she‘d already made her first sale. “There’s such great shopping here. And every person who has come in has been such a pleasure and so welcoming.”

Regarding animosity from some local residents toward NED, Rando doesn’t understand it. “There are a lot of negative feelings, but I couldn’t tell you how much of a joy it’s been,” she says, adding that she finds her rent to be reasonable, and the people at NED have been nice and professional in working with her. “One day we wanted to change the color of our awning, and [Ann Lagasse] was down here later that day with colors to pick from. It was great. I’m not used to that.”

Getting people to come to Newburyport is one thing; getting them out of their cars may be another. Along the waterfront is a large parking lot with hundreds of parking spaces, used by people who work in and visit the town. But as Newburyport Planning Director Sean Sullivan points out, it’s just not enough.

“During peak hours, it’s challenging to find parking,” Sullivan says. “I just walked outside, and the spaces are 99 percent full.” Parking in Newburyport has long been griped about, and with more development comes an increased demand for parking. To make the matter more critical, the Newburyport Redevelopment Authority is considering turning a portion of that area into a park, a move that would eliminate about 350 parking spaces.

The town recently hired an engineering consulting firm to conduct a parking study to determine the best place for a new parking garage, based on proximity to downtown, visual and environmental impact, and parking capacity. This was the ninth such study in recent history, causing many in town to question the credibility of such studies. This parking study was made possible by grant money from the federal and state governments, totaling about $500,000. With a price tag like that, Sullivan says the town is taking this parking study very seriously. The town has been working with NED on the parking situation, and there has been discussion between the town and NED about possibly using a parcel of land owned by the company near the waterfront as a parking area if need be.

While the economy might be bad, boating business is going well, according to Newburyport Marinas Manager Butch Frangipane. Frangipane recently celebrated his 35th year working at the marinas and has watched the marina life in Newburyport expand with the development. Since the Lagasses took over the marina properties, the number of boat slips has doubled to almost 500.

“Business has been reasonable for us; we hold our own,” he says. Boaters cruising up to Maine used to skip Newburyport and stop in Boston and Gloucester, and Frangipane says it was likely because boaters were forced to use the municipal docks with very little privacy. With the increase in boat slips and upgrades on amenities such as cable and electricity—and soon wireless Internet—transient traffic has seen a resurgence in Newburyport. “We’re building that business every year, and every year it gets better.”

Despite the rough economy and echoes of local dissent, Karp’s goal and vision for Newburyport remains the same as it was when he first started buying property in town four years ago. “Downtown Newburyport will be a bustling year-round destination that serves both residents and visitors,” Karp says. “I believe the work we have done has been consistent with the character of Newburyport. It is a wonderful city with room to grow while still respecting the past, yet continuing as the commercial center for the area.”

North Shore’s Roller Derby Girls

November 13, 2009 by Northshore  
Filed under Arts/Entertainment, Profile

Written by Bryon Rivers

Photographs by Tanit Sakakini

Tattoos, bruises, and big attitudes go with the territory but for these rollergirls, skating hard and staying off the concrete is only part of the game. This is roller derby like you’ve never seen before.

nsdj09_rollerderby_xIt’s a crisp fall Saturday night in Wilmington, and the parking outside Shriners Auditorium is beyond capacity, with vehicles spilling from designated lots onto both sides of Fordham Road. At the entrance, a handful of late arrivals form a line at the ticket window, while others talk on cell phones or grab a quick smoke before heading back inside.  Once through the doors, a cursory look around is enough to inform newcomers that this is not a fair, antiques show, or any of the more pedestrian events for which the venue is known. As The Clash’s “London Calling” emanates loudly from the PA system, two groups of women (one in blue, the other red) wearing ‘70s-style running shorts, matching baby-doll T-shirts and tanks, fishnet stockings, and roller skates, circle an oval track carefully fashioned from strips of neon pink duct tape.  As alluring as they may look, the ladies (or “rollergirls,” as they prefer to be called) aren’t here to show off their outfits or flaunt their figures—they have come to do battle. A battle that will leave them bruised, battered, sweaty, exhausted, and smiling from ear to ear. Welcome to roller derby.

“For me, it’s one big adrenaline rush,” says Jenna Catanzano, a 25-year-old Haverhill resident who plays for the blue team—the Cosmonaughties—which, according to the team’s website, are “Soviet cyborgs” from outer space. “It’s like the best thing that’s ever happened to me. From the second I’m up on a bout [game] day, it’s like Christmas morning.”

Back on the rink, where Catanzano is better known by her derby name, Jennasaurus Wrecks, a referee’s whistle blows and skate wheels click and hiss across the track. The jam is on. Skaters in the front (pivots and blockers) form a pack, a moving wall of sorts, while those in the back (jammers) do their best to skate around, through, under, or over opponents and teammates in an effort to score points. It’s no easy task, as blockers take it upon themselves to thwart scoring passes by checking and corralling opposing jammers off course, out of bounds, or directly onto the cold, hard concrete.

Bodies collide, and knee and elbow pads are employed to soften the impact, as three skaters in the middle of the crowd get tangled up and hit the deck. Ten rows from the action is Dan MacDonald, a native Methuenite with a four-inch Mohawk, who cheers as a skater known as Ivanna Shankabitch  offers her shoulder to an opponent, who winds up flat her back.

nsdj09_rollerderby_5“I like the brutality,” says MacDonald, 24. “It’s a fun night out.” And he’s far from alone. More than 1,000 fans fill the stands, cheering on their favorite team or player as they streak past.

For those who haven’t experienced roller derby, this down-and-dirty little tale (or one much like it) is played out at least once a month from February to October, right here in our own backyard. Individuals old enough to recall teams such as the LA Thunderbirds, which terrorized TV screens on the 1960s program “Roller Games,” will find absent the theatrics and pummeling of yesteryear. Today’s game is far more about athleticism, strategy, and teamwork than sending opponents to the emergency room. But just like its predecessor, it’s hard-hitting, irreverent, fun, fast, and entertaining as only a sport played on roller skates and set to a punk rock soundtrack could be, especially when you factor in the colorful tattoos, color commentators, teams with names like The Wicked Pissahs, and players who go by Miss Mary Smack, Floral Derangement, and Killary Clinton.

Quirky nicknames, still as ingrained in the sport as hip checks, are carefully chosen. Each potential handle must be cleared via national registry (found online at twoevils.org/rollergirls), which contains thousands of already-spoken-for alter egos. No two names can be alike, or even overtly similar, according to the rules of the registry, in order to ensure that skaters do not “appropriate the names of (other) hard-working skaters who are trying their best to make roller derby a success.” Creativity is the name of the “name game,” and players go for everything from cute (Quick Sandy) to menacing (Assault n’ Flattery) to slightly naughty (Holly Nass) to R-rated (look it up yourself).

Carol Cunningham, 31, of Essex, who answers to Shellby Shattered when her skates are laced, pilfered her rollergirl name from the “Garbage Pail Kids” trading cards she collected as a grade school student. “Her name was Shattered Shelby and I just swapped it around. It’s supposed to be somewhat of a play on ‘she’ll be shattered,’” Cunningham says.

Collectively, Shellby and the rest of her amusingly-monikered skatemates are known as the Boston Derby Dames, an official member-league of the Women’s Flat Track Derby Association (the WFTDA is the official governing body for roller derby in the United States). The Dames’ 50-plus skaters make up five teams: The Nutcrackers, Cosmonaughties, and Wicked Pissahs, which compete for interleague titles, and the Boston B Party and the nationally ranked Boston Massacre, which are traveling teams.

Although the league is technically headquartered in Boston, Dames hail from towns all over eastern Massachusetts (with many calling the North Shore home) and hold practices and bouts in places like Saugus, Bradford, and Wilmington. And while you won’t find them on ESPN, NESN, or any other network, they sure can draw a crowd.

In 2008, an early-season bout broke a Shriners Auditorium attendance record, with 1,600-plus fans filling the stands, and in 2009, crowds of 1,400 or more were consistent throughout the season. For those who just can’t miss a match but also can’t afford to follow teams when they travel out of state, bouts are broadcast live on derbynewsnetwork.com.

Cunningham describes roller derby fans as “crazy in an awesome way,” and says they have fans who come to the bouts because they’ve worn thin on watching the Red Sox, Patriots, and Bruins. “It feels like any other Boston sports event when you come to our bouts. People get into it.”

“I’d rather watch this than go to a football game,” says Bob Bartlett, 51, of Haverhill, who met a couple of Derby Dames at a car show and decided to bring his family to a bout. “The girls who come in here are tough. I like to see that. It’s great to see women who are independent and tough. I raised my daughters to be like that.” Nick Ceruolo, 20, of North Andover, first discovered the Dames when he found a flyer while riding the bus, and he became an instant fan after his first bout. “Anyone can enjoy it,” says Ceruolo. “The girls are attractive, and it’s a lot of fun to watch. It seems like they get the crowd really involved in the sport.”

When it comes to shapes and sizes, derby girls truly run the gamut, according to Carroll Cunningham, a 31-year-old member of the Boston Massacre from Essex. “It’s a sport any woman, any age, any size can do, and I think that’s really appealing to women,” says Cunningham. Revere resident Shannon Baz-Casper, 30 (who plays for both the Nutcrackers and Massacre under the name Kitty Twister), agrees. “You don’t have to be an athlete to play derby, but derby will definitely turn you into one!”

Although it’s her first time attending a bout, Erin Joyce, 25, of Saugus, is ready to roll. “I want to try out,” she says. “It’s kind of hard core, and it looks like a lot of fun.” Joyce’s excitement represents a wave of popularity that has seen derby rise from the ashes in nearly every state in the country, as well as internationally. The Derby Dames is but one of more than 400 leagues—that’s leagues, not teams—that have formed around the globe since 2001. That number includes organizations as large and established as the Gotham Girls of New York and as small as the fledgling Skate Free or Die, which calls Manchester, New Hampshire, home.

nsdj09_rollerderby_16Cunningham has been with the Dames almost since day one, when it was one of just 20 or so teams in the WFTDA, and is incredulous at the growth. “At the end of the day, you’re like, ‘Look how far we’ve come with this sport!’” she says.

Credited with firing the initial shot (or blowing the first whistle, if you will) of the derby revolution is a small group of women in Austin, Texas, which in 2001 formed the first-of-its-kind DIY organization—Bad Girl, Good Woman (BGGW) Productions (now known as Texas Rollergirls)—and revived a sport that had all but hung up its helmet in the mid ‘70s. Hell On Wheels, a documentary about BGGW, was released in 2007 and garnered nods and awards from independent film festivals across the globe.

Not to be outdone, Hollywood (more specifically, Drew Barrymore) brought rollergirls to the big screen in October with Whip It, the story of a young woman (played by Ellen Page of Juno fame) from Bodeen, Texas, who rejects a life of smalltime beauty pageants and the admonishments of her overbearing mother to join a derby team from Austin known as the Hurl Scouts. (Sound familiar?) While the film depicts a cartoonish level of violence that hasn’t been prevalent since the “Roller Games” days, when bouts were staged in the manner befitting “professional” wrestling, what it seems to get right is the level of camaraderie and acceptance that is prevalent in the roller derby of 2009.

One example of this is the “after-party.” Following every home bout, the Dames host a gathering for families, friends, fans, and yes, the competition, in the Fez Room at Shriners. So while two girls may be putting the hurt on each other when the game clock is running, odds are they’ll be clinking glasses and celebrating together in the hours that follow.

And just as Page’s character in Whip It is welcomed into the fold of the tattooed and tough-as-nails Hurl Scouts, women from all backgrounds and walks of life are encouraged to strap wheels on their heels here in New England. The Dames boast teachers, project managers, moms, and students.

“Even people who come in and are really timid or shy, their derby persona can take them out of that,” says Cunningham. “They can be whoever they want to be. You almost have to tap into a different personality. It’s such an aggressive sport. You get to be a little crazy. One of the great things is we will take anyone. That’s the unwritten open-arms policy of derby.” Baz-Casper says it’s also a great outlet for stress and agression. “Especially where it’s still often considered inexcusable or unfeminine for women to show such aggression,” she says. “It is extremely empowering to maintain a strong sense of femininity while playing a sport that requires such competitiveness and strength.”

nsdj09_rollerderby_14But while “open arms” are good, “broken arms” are not, so to limit the tally of wrecked rollergirls, all new recruits must go through a “Fresh Meat” training if they wish to become a Derby Dame. One of the most important skills to learn? Falling.

“No matter how good you are you’re going to fall a lot,” says Sarah Murray (a.k.a. the aforementioned Ivanna Shankabitch, Shank for short). “As a league, we need to be careful because girls need to realize what they are getting into.” Murray, a rookie and the youngest of the Dames at 24, recalled that her mother, now one of Shank’s biggest fans, wasn’t initially thrilled with the idea of her daughter becoming a rollergirl. “She thought I was going to get my faced bashed in and my teeth knocked out,” says Murray. “She was used to the derby of the ‘60s and ‘70s. Now it’s more of a sport. I assured her that no one was going to deck me in the face, at least not on purpose.”

Murray has managed to avoid anything worse than a sore shoulder, but that doesn’t mean something more serious is out of the question. Contact and impact, both with opponents and the track, are part of the game, and it does result in the occasional trip to the hospital or physical therapy.

“At times it can be really tough on your body,” says Catanzano. “I have two bad knees, broke my tailbone; my body is kind of achy all the time. It’s a very physical sport. They train you how to fall and how to take a hit, but you still get hurt.”

As taxing as it can be on the body, Catanzano says the biggest demand is time.  Modern day derby is a do-it-yourself operation—typically owned, operated, driven, and supported by players. Besides bouts and 10-plus hours a week of practice, there are social engagements, appearances, and “derby jobs.” Every player is required to perform an administrative task to promote the team, the league, and the sport as a whole. Some post flyers or handle PR, while others man merchandise tables at events, book bands for the “halftime show,” or coordinate with one of several charities the Dames support. All told, it’s a 20- to 30-hour per week commitment. Much more than a sport, it’s a lifestyle.

As to whether her derby dedication is worth the sacrifice, Cunningham says that while the competition in the game itself is enough to keep it exciting, it’s the relationships that keep her coming back.

“There’s always going to be this thing that keeps us together,” she explains. “It’s like a family at this point.”

Catanzano agrees. “It’s really empowering to know that you’re all there for the same reason, for the love of the sport and hitting.  Don’t get me wrong—I like that too.”

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