Gloucester Stage Company

From its unassuming home in the Gorton Theatre, Gloucester Stage Company this summer continues a legacy of successful community productions with support from some of the best-known names in the business. By Julie Batten – photographs by Dana Smith

Driving through its mostly residential neighborhood, you might never imagine that the Gorton Theatre, an unremarkable-looking one-story brick building, has for the past three decades been debuting plays that go on to critical and popular acclaim on Broadway, off-Broadway, and stages throughout the world. Despite the slab floor left over from the building’s brief stint as a car dealership and the cinder block walls that hearken back to its original days as a fish storage warehouse, this theater at 267 East Main Street, abutting Rocky Neck Cove, is home to the renowned Gloucester Stage.

Center Stage

Founded in 1979, Gloucester Stage originally made its home at the Blackburn Tavern under the artistic direction of internationally known playwright Israel Horovitz. A summer resident of Gloucester, Horovitz is largely responsible for challenging the Gloucester Stage audience throughout his 25-year reign with 33 world premieres and 40 American premieres, 25 of which took place in New England.

“Israel used this as his proving ground,” says Andrew Burgreen, general manager of Gloucester Stage, pointing to plays such as The Indian Wants the Bronx, Line, and Sins of the Mother to highlight Horovitz’s special brand of brilliance.

It is no wonder, then, that by 1986, this theater with such critical acclaim had outgrown its birth place. That same year, the Gorton Seafood building became the next venue in which Gloucester Stage would further make its own mark on Cape Ann’s cultural scene. Over time, extensive renovations have slowly turned the space from fish locker into a full working theater, albeit one that carries its share of visual reminders of the cost of running a non-profit arts organization in 2012. The seats—all 190 of them—are haphazardly upholstered and tatty, though still endearing.

Not surprisingly, Eric Engle, Gloucester Stage’s artistic director since Horovitz retired from the position half a dozen years ago, has the same sort of charm that his favorite summer enterprise displays. As director of Harvard University’s Memorial Hall/Sanders Theatre and College Theater Venues in the Office for the Arts at Harvard, and having directed over 85 productions at various theaters throughout the Boston area in the past 25 years, he is quick to deflect the spotlight and attribute Gloucester Stage’s reputation for innovation to its audience. “Our audience is smart,” says Engle. “[So] we try to do creative interpretations of underrepresented musicals, because they insist on that…[they’re] open to being told each story in a fresh way.” A man of his word, Engle is bringing the rarely performed Carnival to Gloucester Stage this season. Last year, his pick was Frank Loesser’s The Most Happy Fella.

That Engle is hitting the mark as successfully as ever, albeit uniquely—musicals have only been cropping up on the play list since his reign as artistic director began—has recently been validated by the seven Independent Reviewers of New England nominations that Gloucester Stage has received for last year’s production of The Most Happy Fella, in addition to three more for Living Together and three for Nine Circles.)

Hillary Dallin, Publicity Director for Gloucester Stage

Although Lindsay Crouse was not among those nominated this time, the Academy Award-nominated actress (Places of the Heart) and a regular at Gloucester Stage since 2006, when she starred in the The Belle of Amherst under Engle’s direction, seconds that there is no better proving ground for a play than putting it before a Gloucester audience. “Gloucester is real; it’s the weather, the rocks, the multiplicity of the people,” says Crouse. “The austerities of this area make for a hard-bitten discipline in the residents.” Crouse should know. As the daughter of Hollywood legend Russell Crouse, whose many successes along with partner Howard Lindsay include the production of The Sound of Music, she has been summering in Annisquam her entire life. “It’s a magical place. My mother still lives there; she is always in the audience [at Gloucester Stage]. In that way, my life has come full circle.”

This season, Crouse will star in Round and Round the Garden at Gloucester Stage under Engle’s direction, June 14 thru July 1. As the third and final installment of Alan Ayckbourn’s The Norman Conquests trilogy, it is one of two plays in the upcoming season to be precast. The other, Nine Circles, a play that Engle launched in 2011 at Boston’s Publick Theatre to much acclaim, will reunite the award-winning Boston cast this summer in Gloucester. Besides Carnival, the 2012 season will be rounded out by two dramas—Athol Fugard’s Master Harold…and the Boys and Beth Henley’s Crimes of the Heart.

In addition to Crouse, regulars like Paula Plum, Nancy Carroll, Sandra Shipley, and Paula Bryan have become favorites of the Gloucester Stage audience over the years. With Horovitz and Engle’s connections being what they are, there has also been a cadre of young playwrights ushered up from Boston and New York over the years whose work, first presented at Gloucester Stage, has opened the door to future success in the industry. Richard Vitteri, now a Hollywood name, and more recently Joanna Rush, whose work was read during the Monday night reading series held throughout the summer, are two such recent finds. “It’s about keeping it in the family,” says Heidi Dallin, publicity director for Gloucester Stage, when asked about the advantage of reusing talent year after year.

Like Crouse, Dallin should know. Having haunted the place since high school in the ’80s, Dallin wears many hats there these days, not the least of which is Director of the Youth Acting Workshop (YAW), which runs weekend classes year round and longer sessions throughout the summer. Last December, YAW staged a Christmas production, Holiday Delights, conceived and directed by Dallin, that included a cast of 35 actors, age six through 16. Making theatre accessible to children on Cape Ann, especially to those that might not otherwise be able to afford it, is Dallin’s main mission. “One of the great things is that some kid who lives down the street from here, just around the corner, can perform on the same professional stage where the Paula Plums and the Lindsay Crouses were performing just a few months prior,” says Dallin.

“We’d like to make it so big that we’re ultimately able to call it a conservatory,” says Burgreen, whose job since he came on board two years ago has been to position the theater for a capitol campaign that will take it to the next level within five years. To that end, Epstein & Jocelyn, the same architectural firm that designed the Shalin Liu Music Center at Rockport Music, has already been busy drawing up plans for the next flurry of renovations to the theater.  “We’ll go public with the campaign in September 2012,” says Burgreen, who is only willing to say at this point that the intimacy that is Gloucester Stage will not be lost. “We’re not looking to go bigger—just better.”

Burgreen himself has an impressive background on both the administrative and the performance side of the stage lights. With Broadway credits for shows like You Can’t Take it With You, Oh, Coward!, and A Few Good Men, plus Off-Broadway credits for A Mom’s Life, Forever Plaid, and Queens Boulevard, among others, his acting career constitutes star billing. His administrative work includes time spent at Lincoln Center in New York and the Orpheum Theater in Hannibal, Missouri, as well as having established The 5th Street Acting Studio & Arts Space in Hannibal. This sort of professional versatility seems to be typical of the Gloucester Stage folk—without exception, everyone there has just a little bit of pixie dust settled about them that manifests itself in an uncanny ability to create something from nothing and make it look effortless.

 

As for Burgreen, “what he knows is amazing,” says Chairman of the Board Bea Waring, who not surprisingly can stake her own claim to either side of the lights. Like Lee Meriwether, another regular at Gloucester Stage, Waring is herself a former Miss America, and is married to Bayard Waring of the North Shore’s own Waring School, a private school known for its excellence in the arts. “My responsibility is to keep everyone engaged and to get our neighbors on Cape Ann to realize what we have here.” To that end, Waring, using her showbiz name, Bebe Shopp, will be performing a song called Miss America Sisters with both Meriweather and Susan Powell (Miss America ’81) at the 2012 annual Spring Gloucester Stage fundraiser at Bass Rocks Golf Club in Gloucester on June 1. The song, composed by Bernie Wayne, who also composed Here She Comes, Miss America, was shared for purposes of fundraising with special permission from Wayne’s widow.

How is it that an artistic director can draw such talent to his organization on such a myriad of levels? “What catches my eye in an actor—or anyone—is [his or her] innate ability to connect,” says Engle. “Their honesty. That, and whether they are energy givers or energy takers. [Whether they are] Bette Midlers or Barbra Streisands.”

From the outside looking in, it appears Engle is up to his middle in Midlers—a fact that just might help Gloucester Stage blow the roof off that old building on East Main in the next season or two.

Matt Steinberg: The Bat Man for the Lowell Spinners

Bat Man Matt Steinberg

Dishing on dugouts, ballpark franks, and Scooby Doo with Matt Steinberg, director of gameday entertainment for the Lowell Spinners.

On June 18, the Lowell Spinners will kick off another season at LeLacheur Park. And while thousands will pour into the park to cheer for their favorite players, Matt Steinberg, the team’s director of game day entertainment, is nearly as popular among some fans as are the guys on the diamond. In his 15th year with the Spinners, Steinberg’s many responsibilities include making sure that fans are engaged and entertained even when there’s a pause in play. Here, Steinberg, who in the offseason is the social studies department head at Methuen High School, talks to Northshore about his fun-filled role.

What exactly do you do? My job is akin to a stage manager at a theatre. Essentially, I am the person making sure all the entertainment at the ballpark, including PA, video, music, on-field promotions, “Spinner”-tainment, and other assorted events that are not baseball or food related are running when they should be and without issue. This also includes the pre-game ceremonies, which can be a lot of controlled chaos, especially during theme nights. I like to tell my staff at the beginning of the season that, like a radio station, I don’t want any dead air, so when the ball is not in play during the game, we need to make sure that there is some sort of stimulation for the fans, whether its video, musical, or visual.

What’s the silliest thing you’ve had to do at a game? We take pride in the fact that we are all willing to embarrass ourselves every night, whether that means competing in a mascot race wearing a donut costume with a Sumo helmet (that’s my favorite) or dancing in front of our Scooby Doo Mystery Machine after tossing t-shirts into the stands. This job isn’t a job to me because every night we are having fun.

Do your students know about your other life on the baseball field? My students do know—I see them at the park often during the summer. They are stunned to see me in that light, because it’s a lot more casual than standing in front of a classroom.

What’s your ballpark food of choice? You can’t go wrong with a Ballpark Frank.

Are your kids big baseball fans because of what you do? My boys love baseball. In fact, last summer, they were old enough to come into the dugout and the clubhouse and meet a few of the guys, and they each have their own favorite Spinner now. They are at most games during the summer. —L.L.

Northeastern’s Marine Science Center is Becoming a Leader in Urban Coastal Sustainability

By Jeanne O’Brien Coffey

Jutting into the Atlantic at the northern edge of Boston Harbor, Nahant has long been a natural spot for marine research. More than 150 years ago, the science of American marine biology was founded at East Point by Louis Agassiz, a Harvard professor who maintained his summer cottage and laboratory in the seaside village. More recently, Dr. Jane Lubchenco, the Obama administration’s undersecretary of commerce for oceans and atmosphere, as well as administrator of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, did groundbreaking  research in experimental marine ecology in Nahant in the 1970s.

It should come as no surprise, then, that Nahant, which marine scientists lovingly refer to as “The Rock,” is once again becoming a home for cutting-edge oceanic research. This time, it’s Northeastern University’s Marine Science Center taking the helm; by 2017, Northeastern expects the MSC to be a global leader in the field of urban coastal sustainability.

Ph.D. student Steve Smith conducts research in a lab

From the outside, the science center is certainly unique. The facility is housed partly in a bunker built during World War II for defense of Boston Harbor and partly in barracks that are remnants of the Cold War Nike missile squadron. Inside, MSC is assembling a team of professors and researchers with diverse backgrounds and expertise in everything from climate change to sustainable fisheries. In the next three to five years, the center expects to hire 12 new faculty members, investing some $20 million in salaries and more than doubling the department, while spending $2.6 million on upgraded infrastructure.

“We’re trying to position the Marine Science Center to address the most pressing environmental challenges facing coastal ecosystems,” says Geoffrey C. Trussell, director of the
MSC. “There’s a lot happening politically, environmentally, socially, and legislatively that all involves the coast,” he adds. Northeastern’s large investment suggests the importance of the subject: Over 70 percent of the world’s population lives along the coast, and a third of the world’s megacities—places like New York, Tokyo, and Shanghai—are located near the sea.

“We all know that these coastal environments are essential to human health and human economies; fisheries and tourism are highly dependent on these areas,” Trussell says, adding that a fisheries expert was one of his first new hires. “This will put Northeastern on the map in terms of addressing critical fisheries issues,” he says. “Fisheries are so vital to our economy, but they are clearly a very contentious resource.”

Balancing Science and Policy Trussell notes that policymakers and stakeholders take a very different view than scientists when it comes to the issue of fishery management. “One of the fundamental problems is that none of those people are talking to one another effectively. So one of the big, overarching goals of our enterprise is to make it so the scientists and policymakers work together—so the science can actually inform the policy.”

In fact, much of the big-picture hiring that the center is doing is focused on that space between science and the realities of what is happening in the environment. “We’re not interested in creating a bunch of scientists who just work in their ivory towers on arcane issues that don’t really have any relevance to most people,” Trussell says. “In fact, we are doing just the opposite; we’re really trying to get at that interface between basic research and applied research that has immediate, tangible benefits to society.”

That’s not to say the center doesn’t encompass more fantastical elements. Chief among them: a squadron of robotic lobsters. Scientists at MSC studying neurology of lobsters and lamprey eels are working with robotics experts to invent mechanical creatures that may one day be used in homeland security, or to deliver information on subtle changes in underwater ecosystems. Rather than a remote-controlled apparatus, these lobsters will first be programmed to perform specific tasks, then be able to react to obstacles that may get in the way of performing those tasks—in essence, to think like lobsters.

A Decade of Planning Trussell has been laying the groundwork since he took over as director in 2002, but with the new founding dean of the College of Science, J. Murray Gibson, who shares his vision, things are moving fast—perhaps faster than even Trussell was expecting. “We have a dean, a provost, and a president now who all ‘get it,’” Trussell says. “We’re moving at light speed, which presents its own set of challenges.”

Among these challenges is to conduct negotiations simultaneously with three candidates for three different positions while also ensuring the facility has the resources to fund its big vision. “The bottom line is we’re going to grow,” Trussell says, “and that is going to take some new resources. The university is doing its part, but we really need to work hard on the philanthropic side as well as the grant-making side to make this vision a reality.”

Thus, in the meantime, Trussell’s own research, using sophisticated technology to study the effects of predators and rising sea temperatures on the genetic structure of sea snails, has taken a back seat to managing a program that is experiencing explosive growth. In addition to the new hires and a recent merger with Department of Earth and Environmental Science, a new marine biology major was launched last fall. The center projected that just four students would sign up for the major the first year, but it got 20 instead, testifying to the engagement of the next generation in these issues.

Connecting to the Local Community It’s not just college kids who are interested in MSC’s message. The center conducts monthly guest lecture and film series that are open to the public, focusing on topics as diverse as the geology of Boston Harbor and the health and fate of the world’s coral reefs. Carole McCauley, MSC’s outreach program coordinator, says the programs draw anywhere from 30 to more than a hundred people out to the center each month. MSC also works with homeschoolers, visits local schools with a touch tank of sea creatures, and hosts a number of programs onsite, all geared toward awakening an early interest in marine science close to home.

“The MSC’s outreach program is critical to the identity and mission of the lab,” McCauley says. “It aims not only to communicate the research that goes on here, but also to interpret the significant values of the site’s pristine rocky shore, marine life, unique geography, and varied cultural history.”

Filling a need for science exploration for preschoolers, the center launched the wildly popular Sea Tots in 2010. This program for three- to five-year-olds is offered in the spring and fall, focusing each week on a particular animal or topic, with opportunities for kids to get up close and personal with live critters, listen to stories, play games, or make crafts based on the day’s topic.

Community Outreach Director Carole McCauley

“We piloted the Sea Tots program without being sure if there would be a robust audience,” McCauley says. “Within three weeks, we were full to capacity.”

Another success story is the center’s two-week summer Coastal Ocean Science Academy program, involving about 24 high school students who have a strong interest in science and the marine environment. The Academy, in its sixth year, offers two sessions: an introductory program for first-time attendees and a more advanced, student-directed research curricula for returning students. Tuition for the program is $900, but the center sets aside some money for scholarships. It’s money well spent, too; one of the COSA scholarship students was so inspired by the program that she applied for—and was granted—a $17,000 scholarship to study at a residential marine science program in Maine for a semester.

While the windswept East Point may seem a world away, MSC faculty and administration are very much aware of the underserved communities at their doorstep; just across the water lies Lynn, where local beaches are often closed due to pollution. Engaging that population is an important part of their outreach mission, McCauley says, adding that despite the proximity of these communities to the shore, a surprising number of kids have never touched salt water. She recalls one group in particular who, after spending some time on the beach, were restless and asking to go back inside. McCauley was surprised—she thought things were going well. But their teacher explained that many of the kids were just not used to being outside. “This … made me really appreciate what we are able to offer to particular audiences, especially those who may never get to experience the shore, despite living within a few miles of it,” McCauley says.

Engaging Young Girls To that end, the MSC launched an ambitious partnership with Girls, Inc. of Lynn last year, including nearly 200 girls from elementary school through high school in its Beach Sisters program.

Beach Sisters runs 10-week after-school sessions for elementary school girls, studying things like local habitats and sea creatures. “It’s about generally stimulating interest and teaching them cool topics, so they don’t see science as daunting or scary,” McCauley says. The middle school program is offered during the summer and includes hands-on research and community involvement. For example, last summer, participants interviewed Lynn’s chief of police about beach pollution and researched causes of Lynn’s frequent beach closures.

Beach Sisters is an important program, explains McCauley, as the middle school years are when a lot of young people lose interest in science. “We’re trying to connect them to their local resources, as well as to connect with community and public officials,” she says. “There’s something to be said for this kind of hands-on thing that will hopefully encourage them to choose science study and perhaps four-year universities over two-year schools.” The Beach Sisters high school program is just getting off the ground; right now, it involves four girls spending five or six hours a week on a variety of topics with the goal of eventually participating in educating the younger kids.

As McCauley explains, “Place-based education, which is what we offer at the MSC, is not just about teaching kids about the marine environment. It’s also about making connections between individuals and their communities by helping them to understand the natural boundaries and resources within their area and to inspire them to become more active stewards of the local environment.”

Making connections is the overarching goal when it comes to everything going on at MSC, Trussell adds. Everything in the coastal environment is interconnected, and humans are having a large impact. By bringing together scientists from a wide variety of disciplines, Trussell hopes the MSC will be well positioned to tackle climate change—what he sees as the most pressing problem facing our coastal ecosystems.

“There was a time when this lab’s future was uncertain,” Trussell says. “My one goal is to make sure that when I’m done being director and I’ve moved on to something else,  I leave this place in a position that is unassailable. It is definitely personal.”  ●n

Plum Island Soap Company

Mixed Bag: Some of Michele Diodati's products

Michele Diodati turned her love of natural soaps into a successful shop full of products that are anything but typical.

As a girl, Michele Diodati saved up to buy fragrant, wholesome soaps at the local natural health store. So when she made her first batch of soap on a whim in 1999, she was only trying to make something that she would like. But when her friends asked for more, Diodati thought she might be on to something.

Thirteen years later, Diodati’s Plum Island Soap Company sells dozens of body products in her home-based Northern Boulevard shop and online. The larger-than-life pots on her stove attest to the enormous amounts of soap produced right in her kitchen.

Plum Island Soap’s beginning was inspired by the area’s natural beauty. While walking her dog, Diodati imagined shipwrecks off the coast as she found odd items strewn on the beach. One day, she imagined a crate of soap, fashioned a display from that vision, and her company took hold. “Plum Island is raw in its beauty,” she says. “No one has tried to carve it out or put up arcades.”

Diodati experiments with ingredients like coconut oil and beeswax to make all-natural products that came from necessity, she says. She wanted pure baby products after her son’s birth, so the baby line started. The dog had fleas, so she made a chemical-free bug repellant. She wanted an Origins salt glow and couldn’t afford the price tag, so all kinds of face products hit her shelves.

Diodati says small batches keep her products fresh. Even after years of making everything from body sprays to face moisturizers, she still compiles pages of information when making something new, like her latest line of face scrubs and masks.

The Man Can is Plum Island Soap’s best-selling product, with women buying the skincare gift set for the men in their lives. Women tend to favor anything lavender, although citrus and patchouli are popular as well. But Diodati is not afraid to experiment either; her black licorice lip balm and body butter isn’t something you find in many places.

Diodati especially loves using her orange ginger line when she’s feeling stressed. “I come out feeling like Wonder Woman,” she says. “I swear it is good for your soul.” plumislandsoap.com

The Zoo-Keepers

Brandi Baitchman and Dan Mclaughlin

Brandi Baitchman and Dan Mclaughlin, senior zookeepers, Franklin Park Zoo’s tropical forest. By Lindsay Lambert

Where they’re from: Rockport. What they do: Take care of many different animals, ranging from Panamanian golden frogs to gorillas. Why gorillas? “Gorillas are incredible animals. They’re smart, kind, and caring,” Baitchman says. “Gorillas have many human-like qualities, like laughter and a strong sense of family. They are really amazing to work with.” Adds McLaughlin, “After studying evolution in college, I had the most interest in working with primates.” Best part of the job: For Baitchman, it’s greeting the gorillas in the morning. “The gorillas are always happy to see us, she says. “They let out a loud ‘gorilla purr.’” For McLaughlin, it’s “getting to watch the baby animals, especially Kimani and Kambiri (both western lowland gorillas), grow up.” A surprising fact about gorillas: Gorilla nose prints are unique to each gorilla. Just like a human’s fingerprints, one can identify a gorilla by his nose print. zoonew-
england.org
.

Don Glass Proves Mind Over Matter

Don Glass

At Just Imagine Hypnosis Center, hypnotist Don Glass helps clients change unproductive behaviors—overeating, smoking, phobias, and more—just by altering the way they think. By Debbie Strong

Linda Ready had been struggling for years with her weight when, last spring, her husband came home from his Lowell Lions Club meeting and described a presentation given that night by an area hypnotist, Don Glass, who used hypnotherapy to help clients lose weight—and keep it off.

Ready was fascinated by the remarkable success rate Glass reported, so she contacted him and quickly signed on to a four-session round of his newest treatment option, the Virtual Gastric Band (VGB) program, during which the client is convinced through hypnosis to believe that she has undergone gastric band surgery. While hypnotized, clients are guided through all aspects of surgery: entering the hospital, meeting with the surgeon and anesthetist, and experiencing the actual surgery—operating room smells, machines beeping, etc.—and post-op care. When they emerge, patients truly believe they’ve had the surgery and automatically begin to eat less, dropping pounds naturally and without feeling hungry.

Sound a little far-fetched? It works, Glass says, because a person’s subconscious mind—the part of the mind used when you’re daydreaming—is trained to accept new suggestions or to retrain old bad habits that may have become ingrained behaviors in early childhood. “The subconscious mind cannot tell the difference between what is real and what is imagined,” he says. Glass doesn’t put clients to sleep or use the clichéd swinging pendulum, either; he simply guides clients to an ultra-relaxed, hyper-focused state and suggests new, healthier habits. “When a client is in a relaxed state of hypnosis, they become acutely aware—you could be 300 to 400 times more aware than normal—and are very receptive to positive suggestions.”

About 75 percent of his clients come for help with smoking (a two-session, $269 experience with a 90 percent success rate) or weight loss (either an eight-session program for $2,200 or a four-session program for $800), but people also come to him for help reducing stress, battling addictions or depression, alleviating phobias, memory or sports performance enhancement, and more. Glass has seen such positive results with his work that all prices include a 100 percent lifetime guarantee; clients can return for a free session if their problems ever return. He stresses that the one crucial ingredient for success is that the person truly wants to change and is not held back by fears or apprehensions. That’s why every client’s hypnosis experience begins with an initial, rapport-building “intake” session, during which Glass and the client get to know each other, discuss the client’s goals and fears, and determine together if hypnosis is the right option.

As for Ready, she began the VGB program in May, and after four sessions with Glass, about one month later, had dropped 25 pounds from her frame. Now, almost a year later, she has kept the weight off. “I felt the band right away,” says Ready, who says her doctor was “blown away” when she went for an appointment and revealed her new body. “I began to feel full after half a sandwich or hamburger; I truthfully did not want to eat any more.” Since dropping the weight, Ready’s health has improved and she enjoys a more energized, active lifestyle. “It was the best thing I ever did for myself.”

Just who is this miracle worker who helped a perfectly sane adult believe she had undergone bariatric surgery with just the power of his voice? Glass is an affable, energetic man who found his way to hypnosis after losing his wife—a selfless woman whose life was all about helping others–to cancer in 2010. “But self-hypnosis, or meditation, is something I had been using my whole life,” to cope with stressful situations and the attention deficit disorder he dealt with as a young man, Glass says. Since 2010, he’s been treating clients from all over the Merrimack Valley at offices in both Dracut and Andover. He received his official training from the National Guild of Hypnotists, a 62-year-old organization that trains and certifies hypnotists from around the world and has about 10,000 members to date. Glass also volunteers his hypnotherapy services to help at-risk children from broken homes or in other challenging situations, and he plans to start a hypnosis-based ADD or ADHD support group down the line.

Glass recently began meeting with clients at a third location in Billerica, renting office space from Sandy Chapnick and Honi Kawut, who run Billerica Chiropractic Office. “Don has a very calming presence,” says Chapnick, “and such an impressive, great grasp of his profession.” Beyond their cheerful personalities, he and Glass share a passion for their respective crafts and an overwhelming desire to help others. They’ve even begun referring patients to one another, finding that hypnotherapy and chiropractic therapy are “the perfect marriage,” says Chapnick. “We have a common goal of helping people feel better and lead healthier, more fulfilling lives.”

If hypnosis works so well and is so relatively affordable and low-risk, then why aren’t clients all over the country lining up to try it? “Younger people are more inclined to accept hypnosis, because they’re seeing the results” says Glass, who, when he’s not helping clients, enjoys an active lifestyle of road cycling, indoor rowing, and healthy cooking. “That’s opposed to older folks, who have allowed themselves to be conditioned by Hollywood and TV versions [of hypnosis].”

As resistant as society has been in the past, Glass says he’s noticed that the tide is beginning to change toward hypnosis. “I think the masses are beginning to line up.  Not at the rate I’d like to see, but it’s happening—and more importantly, the rate of acceptance is growing.”  ●n

Jodi R. R. Smith Talks Etiquette

Jodi R.R. Smith

Oh, Behave! Author Jodi R. R. Smith’s latest book rolls out a new roadmap for good manners.

With the internet and social networking creating new privacy conundrums almost daily, good manners sometimes seem like a quaint—and rare—commodity. But to Jodi R. R. Smith, they’re still very serious business.
Author of The Etiquette Book: A Complete Guide to Modern Manners, the Marblehead resident (and owner of Mannersmith Etiquette Consulting) had a lot to wrestle with when she sat down to write her third book. “It took about four years to finish,” she says with a sigh. “My first two books were more of a gateway for people who wanted just quick tips on etiquette. This one deals with all of its finer points.” The resulting 406 pages (Smith and her editors whittled it down from its original 800-plus pages) take on everything from dining habits and same-sex marriage to the changing landscape of etiquette in business.

“I always say that etiquette evolves to keep pace with society and technology,” she explains. For example, if you read an etiquette book from just 10 to 15 years ago, it would say that a man must always wait for a woman to extend her hand to him before reaching out to shake it. “That’s completely changed,” Smith observes. “Especially in the workforce, where manners have become gender-neutral. These days it’s all about rank; the highest ranking person holds out a hand first.”

Smith’s obsession with etiquette reaches back to her high school days, when she became fascinated with what kind of behavior made some people likeable. (“Not just popular,” she clarifies. “That’s very different. I mean what makes some people want to be around someone.”) She started researching everything written on the topic, from as far back as 1885 to new studies on psychology and perception. “All of it got boiled down into my brain and found its way into the book,” she says.

That includes, of course, the Internet. When she first started writing, there was no Twitter in existence yet. But by the time her tome was finished, it was a brave new world of confidentiality (or lack thereof) out there. “Privacy really doesn’t exist anymore on the Web,” she says. To that end, she added an entire chapter dedicated to electronic etiquette. “People need to actively guard their privacy and think twice or even three times before hitting ‘send’ or ‘post.’” mannersmith.com. —Alexandra Hall

Tim Thomas is Helping Patients Heal Faster

Bruins goalie Tim Thomas and his new ARP Clinic seek to help patients heal faster with innovative treatments. By Terri Ogan

Boston Bruins goalie Tim Thomas recently opened his ARP Clinic in Danvers to share the success of an innovative treatment that healed his 2010 hip injury.

The clinic’s CEO, Anthony Bevilaqua, says the unique advanced recovery performance (ARP) treatment reduces any type of pain, from tendonitis to carpal tunnel.

“It’s really offering a service that is revolutionary and groundbreaking in a smaller, tight-knit community,” Bevilaqua says. “If I were a member of this community and this clinic was opened, I’d be pretty excited about it, just because there aren’t many other clinics out there like this where you can get this type of service.”

ARP technology is made for men, women, and kids of any age and in any physical shape. The treatment helps end pain and improve quality of life, whether or not the patient is an athlete. The clinic currently has two therapists and intends on utilizing other ARP therapists to conduct treatments via Skype.

Bevilaqua recalls a 16-year-old boy in the community who suffered from a double concussion during a football game and reaped extraordinary benefits from the ARP Clinic. The patient had been unable to get out of bed and missed six weeks of school. He had severe head pain and migraines and was commuting to Boston’s Children Hospital for treatment and therapy for pain relief to no avail. After hearing about the ARPwave Clinic from a family friend, the young boy went to the clinic, where his pain level decreased from a 10 to a two on a pain scale after just one treatment. He returned to school three days later.

“We can prevent up to 90 percent of most surgeries,” Bevilaqua said. “It can really change the quality of your life and help avoid the use of drugs and invasive surgery.”

Newcomers receive a free evaluation and a free treatment upon their first visit.  Most of them, Bevilaqua said, will walk out of the clinic pain free. Each time the patient comes back, the ARP treatment could potentially reduce their pain by 25 percent.

Thomas chose the North Shore to open up his first clinic because he loves the area and thought it would enhance the community. He hopes to open up more clinics in the Boston metro area in the near future, but right now is focusing on establishing a presence for the Danvers clinic and spreading his passion for this groundbreaking technology. timthomas arpclinic.com.

Brainfox

Brainfox, a new North Shore-based web comedy collaborative, finds humor in the daily grind of local life. By Emma Haak

The Masters of Laugh: Brainfox Team

It’s a typical afternoon inside the Gulu Gulu Café in Salem. Locals and tourists come in for lunch, hot drinks, and to catch up. But at one particular table, a lively story is being told about, of all things, chewing gum. Specifically, a game involving chewing gum, a car ride, and the old Nintendo game Star Fox. For the members of Brainfox, a North Shore-based web comedy collaborative, conversations like this are all in a day’s work.

Officially launched in September, Brainfox is the comedic brainchild of Audrey Claire Johnson, Brett Johnson, and Tim Lewis (who is no longer with the group). It started as a way for the trio, who worked together sporadically on previous projects, to collaborate creatively on a regular basis. With several well-received web videos under their belt, the group, now led by the husband-and-wife team of Brett and Audrey Claire, has big plans to bring the funny to the North Shore.

Though Brainfox is relatively new, Brett and Audrey Claire have a long history. They met as undergrads at Gordon College, each involved in their own performing niches: Audrey Claire as a dramatic actor and Brett as a member of an improv troupe. In fact, it was theatre that first brought the couple, now married for four years, together. “I worked as a [teaching assistant] for the theatre department, and I was whipping out of a professor’s office and ran almost smack into him in a hallway,” she says. “Later that semester, we crossed paths again, involved in separate shows but always curious about the other. He also wooed my affection with card tricks, which is embarrassing to admit.”

After graduating—Audrey Claire in 2005, Brett in 2007—they continued to work in performing arts, occasionally working with In the Car Media, a production company started by fellow Gordon grads. The group collaborated on many projects, including Song and Dance, a short about two couples going to great (comedic) pains to disguise their broken relationships, which took home numerous prizes at the 2011 Boston 48 Hour Film Project, including Best Cast, Best Script, and runner-up for Best Film. “When we got together, it would be really fun and really productive, and we’d make something we’d be really proud of,” says Brett, “but it was sporadic.”

Audrey Claire Johnson as Debbie and Jill Rogati as Nina

Enter Brainfox, a way to work together continuously. The trio started the group last June and named it after the childhood car game that Brett, who grew up outside of Albany, New York, played with his brother. They spent the summer brainstorming before beginning their video releases in the fall. First up: “Nina and Debbie,” the first in a planned series about the misadventures of two North Shore moms. In the first installment, the heavily accented Nina and Debbie (played by actress and frequent Brainfox collaborator Jill Rogati and Audrey Claire, respectively) break a sweat by walking around a local track at a glacial pace while discussing their latest annoyances and having a crucial debate: whether to stop at Dunkin’ Donuts or Honeydew Donuts after their so-called workout.

It’s obvious from watching “Nina and Debbie” that Brainfox finds plenty of inspiration in their surroundings. “The people around me inspire me to write female characters that I want to impersonate,” says Audrey Claire. Plus, the Delaware native says, “There are things about Massachusetts that just strike me as really different and strange.” And apparently ripe for parody, like Santa landing via lobster boat in Marblehead and the amusement park horror ride that is Route 128. It’s in these small oddities that Brainfox finds its best material. “Ideas come from seeing things in everyday life that are sort of off and then pointing that out and heightening it,” says Brett.

But the group doesn’t limit its sources of inspiration to what’s immediately around them. Take Slavoj Zizek Shoreside, Brainfox’s imagining of the obscure and eccentric Slovenian philosopher and theorist. The video, shot at Salem Willows, features Brett as Slavoj Zizek, dressed in tattered clothes and gesticulating wildly as he discusses the sexual undertones of yachting, chatters nonsensically about Avatar, and explains why recycling cans signal the end of Communism, all while questioning the cameraman’s cinematographic choices. “I wanted to recreate this specific individual who’s very gestural and accented,” says Brett. Mastering Zizek’s unique speaking style required quite a bit of prep work on Brett’s part. In the end the practice paid off: The video has reached more than 1,000 views on Brainfox’s YouTube channel. Their videos can also be found on the group’s website, itsbrainfox.com.

Brainfox’s videos appear effortless. They’re well written, acted, directed, and, most important, achingly funny. And while comedy comes naturally to the couple, a lot of work goes into making a short video. On average, it takes about a month from inception to completion for a medium-length video like “Nina and Debbie” or Zizek. During this time, a script is written, passed along to friends and collaborators for suggestions, and rewritten until it’s perfect. Then the actors rehearse the skit while the team scouts locations, perfects costumes, and decides how best to film it. For a video that calls for high production value, they’ll call in friends from In the Car to help them out behind the scenes and bring in more actors to fill the roles. It all depends on the story they’re trying to tell. “When we sit down and have our artistic meetings, we talk about the full range of mediums you can use in online video. We have stuff that would be really funny if we shot it on an iPhone, all the way to the other spectrum, because the characters or the story are best represented like that,” says Audrey Claire.

This production process is highly collaborative and draws on the strengths of both Audrey Claire and Brett. Each is involved in many aspects of a video, as they take turns writing, directing, and acting in the shorts. Audrey Claire says that Brett’s “Mary Poppins’ carpet bag of comedic tools” makes him an asset in any kind of video they shoot. Citing the small fraction of independent comedy teams that feature female actors and writers, she says her female presence is her draw. And while they’re both irreplaceable for different reasons, it’s the combination of the two that helps Brainfox come up with unique and innovative comedic content.

Dan Stevens and Dave Ells

Brainstorming these ideas can happen at any time for the Beverly-based couple. “I wake up in the morning saying, ‘So, about that one line…’ and, ‘Do you think it would be funnier if we did this instead?’” says Audrey Claire. But since Brainfox is not a 9-to-5 time commitment yet, they have to work around busy schedules at their respective jobs. Brett works as an IT administrator at the Montserrat College of Art in Beverly and does regular standup comedy gigs around the North Shore. Audrey Claire is a full-time actress, shooting movies in the area and recently scoring a leading role on the upcoming web series, “617 The Series.” But the two make sure to keep Brainfox a top priority, and they take any available opportunity to discuss the next video shoot, the production order, and any new ideas coming down the pipeline.

At the moment, Brainfox’s pipeline is very full. A second installment of “Nina and Debbie” was shot in early November, in which the ladies are invited to participate in a 5K run for breast cancer research, but would rather sit or shop for a cure instead. December also marked the official premiere of Albionic, a high-concept, highly stylized story about a man whose legs are replaced with those of an albino person—and the fact that everyone around him thinks that’s totally normal. Both Audrey Claire and Brett cite the piece as their favorite Brainfox creation thus far. “It’s unique in tone compared to the rest of our videos,” says Brett, while Audrey Claire loves the “campy, soap opera-style” humor.

The Brainfox leaders are equally excited about branching out into new areas, as they plan to do with two upcoming projects. One is their mockumentary-style take on a woman (to be played by Rogati) who lives and breathes rainstick playing. “She’s been rejected from every music festival in Connecticut because they don’t take her seriously,” says Audrey Claire, “so she decides to throw her own concert at a local dive bar.” The other will mark their first foray into a multi-episode series: a comedic look at political intrigue and small-town gossip in the fictional New England town of Whatsboro.

From their first video about two North Shore moms discussing their daily minutia to a mini-saga about one man’s journey to come to grips with his incredibly pale legs, Brainfox has come a long way in a just a few months. While their own ambition and work ethic have certainly helped, they say being based on the North Shore has also been a factor in their success. “Being in this area, we have an amazing community full of people who work with us and appreciate what we do,” says Audrey Claire. “The North Shore is a really good place to be an artist—not speaking just to comedy—because it’s a community that’s really aware and supportive of the arts.”

And just as Brainfox has no plans to change locale, they also have no plans to slow down. “Who knows what we’ll have done a year from now?” says Brett. “There’s still so much we want to try. So much room for discovery.”

Running Buff Pat O’Connor

Marathon Man: Pat O'Connor

Pounding the pavement with North Shore running buff Pat O’Connor

For residents of the Boston Metro area, April means one thing: Boston Marathon madness, which culminates this year on April 16. In honor of the event, Northshore talked with running enthusiast and sometime marathoner Pat O’Connor—head coach/proprietor of LunchTime Runner and  the Outreach Marketing and Promotions Coordinator for the Greater Boston Running Co. stores in Newburyport, Lexington, and Hingham—about his beloved sport.

What’s the toughest marathon you’ve ever run? My first marathon in Boston.  For an experienced runner, I had a rough last six miles. I did not respect the distance enough and set my goals too high.

Any marathon mishaps? During my second Boston experience, as I was cruising through Kenmore Square, I noticed some faces in the crowd wincing at me. I had felt that my toes were going numb for a few miles at that point. When I looked down at my feet and turned back to look behind me, I realized that my white shoes were red with blood and I was leaving bloody footprints.  I had lost all but two toenails. My shoes, as it turned out, were an entire size too small.

Where is your favorite place to run non-competitively? Middlesex Fells Reservation that encompasses the Medford/Winchester/Stoneham/Melrose area around Route 93. [It has] wooded rolling trails that go on for miles. I can run more than 15 miles without running the same path twice.

What makes ours such an attractive region for runners? …Regionally, with the change of seasons, there is a unique challenge to racing and training, especially in the fall. It is beautiful—especially for cross-country. The North Shore has great country-like roads and peaceful parks for running.

What is LunchTimeRunner?  …The philosophy is not only to help busy adults train for their goals in a comprehensive way with high quality and low-to-moderate quantity, but runners of all ages…Working with athletes of all abilities, I focus on individual fitness training levels, efficient technique, and flexibility and strength. The actual running in the program complements all the other aspects of running. Running can be a beneficial means of exercise, stress reduction, and mind and energy enhancement if it is approached the right way with some guidance.

North Shore Closet Co.’s Gary Fraser

Closet King, Gary Fraser

Gary J. Fraser owner North Shore Closet Co., Salem

What he does: Designs, fabricates, and installs custom closet systems.

Biggest problems that plague his clients’ closets: (1) Wire shelving falling off the wall, “often times in the middle of the night”; (2) Space: “Whether it’s an old home or new construction, there never seems to be enough closet space, especially if the closet has those funky roof lines running through it.”

Easiest fix for a cluttered closet: Make the closet more user friendly. Double hanging (rod over rod) helps increase hanging space and makes room for more shelving, which can be used for sweaters, shoes, etc.

His pet peeve: Light switches inside the closet. “They sometimes have a tendency to limit closet designs.”

How he organizes his own closet: The few things that I hang are not organized at all. All the rest goes in drawers or shelves. Jeans with jeans, shorts with shorts, t-shirts with t-shirts. I’m a guy…it’s simple.

How he got into the field: I used to do a lot of interior house painting. Some of the homes were high-end new construction. The carpenters were told to build it out with shelves and hanging space. I was told to ‘make it look good.’ I knew there had to be a better way. I started my research and the rest, as they say, is history. northshorecloset.com

Zimman’s of Lynn

Michael Zimman hand selects all of his store's textiles

For more than a century, Zimman’s has given discerning decorators and in-the-know homeowners stylish options in textiles and home furnishings.

It’s an unusual location for a high-end design shop, situated next to a 99-cents store in downtown Lynn. But Zimman’s is an unusual store, with a strong sense of community, an old-world ambience, and a desire to cater to everyone from locals looking for high-quality bargains to clients with six-figure budgets looking to fill an entire home.

“It’s an unlikely spot for this type of business to evolve,” agrees owner Michael Zimman, grandson of the store’s founder, Morris Zimman. “But it works for us. You need a lot of space, which we have, and we’ve been doing it for 103 years, so we’ve developed a broad reputation.” With arguably the largest selection of textiles on the East Coast, if not in the country, and a carefully curated array of furniture and decorative items, Zimman’s has become a destination business, surviving the changing landscape of retail by smart specialization and unbeatable prices.

Stepping into Zimman’s can be a daunting proposition. With about 40,000 square feet—nearly an acre—of shopping spread over three floors, some customers, especially those seeking textiles, may not know where to start. After all, Zimman’s has at least 25,000 bolts of fabric in house—but who’s counting? “It might be 50,000. It might be 100,000. We don’t stop to count,” Michael Zimman says. “But that’s part of what makes us unique. We’re for people who want to step back into the way things were and have an experience of shopping in an emporium, putting their hands on textiles and furniture… It’s a throwback, and people really love it.”

Aside from the décor, another blast from the past is the store’s continuing focus on customer service. Zimman’s staff is trained to help every customer—from the local needing some new drapes to the chauffer-driven client outfitting a whole house—find exactly what he or she is looking for in the sea of fabrics. This one constant focus on customer service, no matter the budget, has helped the century-old store stay in business while evolving from a little-bit-of-everything department store to a textile and home furnishing specialist. If anything, as the overarching retail trend toward self-service continues, Zimman’s has gone the other way, encouraging employees to specialize in specific areas while emphasizing a high-touch experience.

“We try to provide more service than we ever have,” Zimman says. “We know that people are looking for quality services at reasonable prices. So, in recent years, we’ve gotten into providing more full service, where we make draperies, bedding, upholstery, pillows, slipcovers…all that sort of thing. People don’t have to run around and get that done someplace else.”

Zimman’s dedication to the old ways has deep roots; Michael learned the business at his grandfather Morris Zimman’s knee. Morris opened the store in 1909, and Michael says he cannot remember a time when he wasn’t involved in the business. In fact, if he wanted to see his father, who worked from 10 a.m. until 10 p.m. six days a week, he had to go to the store. While in the second grade, Michael would take the bus from the family’s home in Marblehead to swim at the Boys’ Club on Lynn Commons. After swimming, Zimman would wend his way through back alleys and residential neighborhoods in the waning afternoon light to get to his father’s store for a ride home.

Michael’s official start in the business was at age 13, when his father bought out a factory that sold lawn furniture and then put the young lad in charge of sales. “It was great. I was running the department,” Michael recalls. There was only one problem—he wasn’t legally allowed to work until age 14. So, his father kept track of his hours, and on his 14th birthday, he presented him with a check for his accumulated wages—at a whopping 65 cents an hour.

Zimman’s retail acumen, on display from a young age, is likely responsible for the store’s existence today. “The advent of shopping centers off the highways made for difficult times to compete in an urban setting,” he recalls. “It became apparent to me that we had to specialize in something. We always had fabrics and always did well.” So, Zimman closed the other departments and honed in on textiles, an area that Michael personally oversees to this day. He alone is responsible for purchasing the fabric, displayed on towering rollers that stretch in a seemingly endless array on the main floor. There, shoppers will find anything from a $29.99/yard cotton print to $149/yard exquisitely hand-embroidered fabric.

That seems like a lot of money for a textile, but Zimman insists that it’s a fair price, and much less than what competing design studios charge for the same fabric.

“While that seems like a crazy amount of money, when you go to a design showroom and start looking at things, it’s staggering how much they charge,” Zimman says, noting that his prices can be as little as a sixth of the price at a high-end design showroom. “We work on a smaller markup [than do design showrooms],” Zimman says, “so it becomes a more appealing price point. We have a lot less flash-and-dash and people walking around in silk ties.”

Certainly, there is very little flashiness on display when you enter the store. With a sign above the door that looks retro—because it is—and original tin in need of a paint job covering the ceiling and walls, it is clear that Zimman is more interested in letting the merchandise speak for itself than spending on interior upgrades. Worn blow-ups of historic black-and-white photos hang from 18-foot ceilings, showing the history of the business. Zimman and his staff work from a cramped pod of desks in a corner of the first floor, piled with papers and surrounded by people bustling about.

The environment may be less than luxurious, but that doesn’t stop well-heeled clients from arriving on a regular basis to shop. Staffers are working right now on a ski house in Maine. “We’re doing the entire interior of it, [including] the furniture, the window treatments—almost everything about the house,” says Operations Manager Patty Forster, adding that the cost of that project is definitely into five figures, bordering on six. But those figures aren’t unusual. One customer moved from the North Shore to Sonoma, California, and had furnishings for the new home shipped from Zimman’s. Another North Shore denizen outfitted a second home—in Greece—with  Zimman’s help.

 

Why such a devoted following? “I’d like to think we have a certain taste level. Whether it’s someone else’s taste level or not, it reflects who we are,” Michael says.

Hollywood has certainly found Zimman’s to its taste—since Massachusetts enacted tax credits to lure Hollywood productions to the state, Zimman’s has become the go-to place for set decoration. Stroll through the furniture showroom and you will see items used in films including 2009’s The Proposal, starring Sandra Bullock and Ryan Reynolds. And film production keeps the upholstery department busy as well, from a next-day upholstery job for Shutter Island (starring Leonard DiCaprio and directed by Martin Scorsese), which involved a red-eyed courier carrying the leather from California, to preparing 900 seats for The Fighter, which stars Mark Wahlberg. It’s all in a day’s work.

“Any movie that was filmed in Boston, [production crews] made their way here,” Michael says. “They look at us as a real repository of textiles and furnishings that can fit many settings. So that’s been a fun thing. It’s a lot more work than the regular customers—you have to do things really fast. But it’s kind of fun, too, and all the employees get a kick out of it.” The bigger kick is sometimes had on the set, though; producers of the recent Pink Panther movie bought a unique $10,000 piece from the store, only to blow it up on screen.

Hunting down special items—even those slated for destruction—doesn’t actually require much travel, as purveyors selling furniture and textiles that will fit in Zimman’s oeuvre always make their way to Lynn. As Zimman himself says, “They will find us.”

While Zimman’s prides itself on an eclectic mix, Michael says customers are particularly drawn right now to an “ethnic casual” look—people are seeking comfort, clean lines, and a more contemporary look. That trend is very different from a few years ago, however.

“When people were putting up all these grand homes, everyone wanted to look at themselves as being in a very grand situation,” he says. “We were selling a lot of silks. Now, people are saying they are more comfortable with a nice plain linen drape.”

That’s not the only change. “When I started [working at Zimman’s in 2001], people would buy $10,000 and $15,000 armoires without batting an eye,” Forster recalls. “That’s not happening anymore.” Michael Zimman says the shop is weathering the current economic downturn well, but that isn’t giving him any confidence. “When the economy was [better], I pretty much knew what was going to happen from year to year,” he says. “Now, I have no idea. Not that your future is ever certain, but you could kind of project the next week, the next month, the next year.”

Zimman has ridden out recessions in the past, but he says this one feels different. “In previous recessionary times, honestly, I never noticed them. This is much closer to the Depression… The middle class is evaporating.” He admits it could be his age. “Perhaps some of the optimism of youth has faded. But the fact of the matter is there are fewer and fewer people with disposable income.”

It could be because of this economic uncertainty that Zimman isn’t pressing his own children to become the fourth generation in the family business. “I want them to feel like they are doing something that’s really secure,” he says. “If one of them came to me and said, ‘I’ll do whatever it takes,’ we’d have a conversation. But if it’s just for a paycheck, what’s the point? You have to have a certain amount of passion.”

In the short term, Zimman plans to keep evolving with the times, in a balancing act between keeping prices reasonable and offering a high degree of service. “It’s a great sense of pride for us to be really keeping it going,” he says. “We don’t sell anything that people need, but people don’t live by bread alone. There’s a lot to be said for having beauty in your life.”

The Portfolio

Headquarters: Lynn. Number of Employees: 20. Year Founded: 1903. Products: Textiles, furniture, and decorative items from around the world. Owner: Michael Zimman. Operations Manager: Patty Forster. Contact: 80 Market Street, Lynn, 781-598-9432, zimmans.com.

Amesbury’s Turner Motorsport

Will Turner, the face behind Turner Motorsport

Amesbury BMW parts specialist Will Turner has turned his passion for cars into a championship-winning dream.

When Turner Motorsport driver Paul Dalla Lana was awarded the 2011 BMW Sports Trophy, Will Turner’s smile could have lit up Daytona International Speedway.

“One of our team had been named the world’s most successful BMW race driver of the year,” he says, recalling the celebrations in Munich, Germany last November. “That’s a really cool honor.”

“Cool” could well be Turner’s middle name. At 43, he owns the leading BMW parts, accessories, and performance tuner in North America, as well as a highly successful race team that has won six major professional championships. He travels almost constantly from one turbo-charged race venue to the next, and when he’s home in Newburyport with wife, Sue, and two young daughters, Sydney and Kate, he gets to go to work and—as he puts it—“play around with BMWs all day.”

But life for Turner wasn’t always so racy. In fact, the first BMW he bought in college nearly broke him. “I got in a bit over my head,” he says. “I couldn’t afford to fix it and thought, ‘I’ve got to do this for myself.’ That’s when I started learning about cars, learning about the brand, and it has been my passion ever since.”

What started as a car parts catalog business in Connecticut in 1993 grew rapidly after Turner moved to Newburyport in 1995, where he began combining the BMW parts component with performance tuning and racing. Almost two decades later, Turner Motorsport is a state-of-the-art, 40,000-square-foot repair and service facility in Amesbury, employing 40 staff working alongside a separate but complementary race team comprising four drivers, four BMW M3s, an annual budget of $2 million, and a schedule of 23 races each year from Daytona to Indianapolis.

Each arm of the business learns from the other, giving Turner Motorsport a sharp competitive edge. “We offer regular maintenance service to everything a BMW dealer would do,” he says, “but what gets us smiling and excited is when someone brings in a BMW for an oil change and wants to put on bigger wheels or a sports exhaust. That’s where we really shine.”

The race team helps put Turner Motorsport in top gear, winning the Grand Am Continental Sports Car Challenge in 2011—which Turner himself won as a driver in 2006—along with Dalla Lana’s prestigious BMW Sports Trophy award.

“What the guys do in the business and race team, I’ve done myself,” Turner says. “This is definitely a story of one guy with an entrepreneurial spirit and a passion for BMWs who’s living his dream. I still love coming to work every day.”.

Jordan Castro Turns Concrete into Contemporary Items

Spice Set

Newburyport craftsman Jordan Castro turns concrete and recycled marble into contemporary kitchenware.

A decade of “flipping” houses and doing kitchen renovations taught Jordan Castro that the building industry was not for him. But it also gave him an idea: What if he could mix concrete with recycled stone dust from marble countertops, plus a little sand and water, and create something distinctive and desirable?

“It took a lot of trial and error,” Castro says of his search for the ideal formula. “It’s not rocket science, but it takes…time to find the right balance.”

Concrete and marble weren’t the only things he threw into the mix. In a perfect alignment of experience, talent, and passion, Castro combined his building expertise with his inner artist and chef to create Culinarium, a collection of unique and stylish kitchenware. “It has an austere beauty and appeals to people with both rustic and contemporary sensibilities,” he says of his line of salt cellars, pepper mills, spice sets, coasters, and fruit trays.

“It’s a novel application,” says Castro, who runs his small family business, Port Living Co., with his wife, Annastasia, from their Plum Island home. “People are not used to seeing concrete used in kitchenware, but it has a wonderful aesthetic value and is very smooth and tactile,” he adds. “I also work with aluminum, cork, and wood, but our concrete products sell the best.”

The recycled marble dust comes in “cakes” from a factory in Burlington. Castro does all the mixing, molding, sanding, and waxing at his workshop in The Distillery in South Boston and the products are shipped directly to customers.

While loath to play the “green” card (“Everybody’s doing it—that whole label has been hijacked by everyone,” he says), Castro is happy his products are recycled, sustainable, and free of chemicals, but that’s not his primary motivation.

“The reason I use recycled product is because it has the qualities I need. This sounds corny, but every product we make, I fashion it, I touch it, a lot of quality control goes into it. I love to cook, and these are the things I like to use.”

As for the future? “I don’t want to expand too quickly,” he says. “I want to keep [Culinarium] a specialty item, and there are so many things I want to explore with this.” portlivingco.com. —Andrew Conway

Her Office: Kathy Bechtel

Kathy Bechtel, owner/culinary director, italiaoutdoors usa

What Italiaoutdoors offers: “Unique, active (biking, skiing, hiking, walking) adventures in Northeastern Italy. Our tours combine expert recreational programming with an unmatched food and wine program.”

Where she works: “My HQ in my home in Newburyport, on the road in Italy, and the Northeast regions of the Veneto, Trentino-Alto Adige, Fruili-Venezia Giulia, and Emelia Romagna.”

Her role: “I create and lead the culinary side of our programming, including selecting wines and the wineries we visit, leading cooking classes or selecting restaurants, and educating our clients on the regional cuisines.”

Favorite moment on tour with clients: “When they climb a hill they didn’t think they could, or ski a slope that perhaps made them a bit nervous at the top. With a bit of coaching, they can really rise to meet challenges they didn’t think they could handle a few days before.”

Best part of the job: “Italy is an incredibly diverse country. As we explore by bike, foot, or skis, each day we see different foods, wines, and traditions, all reflecting the unique culture, history, and geography of the regions we visit. It’s almost like visiting a different country every day.” italiaoutdoorsfoodandwine.com; chefbikeski.com.

Shift Your Style With Aricia Symes-Elmer

Stylist and personal shopper Aricia Symes-Elmer helps fashion-frustrated clients achieve the perfect look.

As the fast-paced world of fashion grows more complex, some people have a tough time keeping up. Trends may come and go, but, as stylist and personal shopper Aricia Symes-Elmer tells us, it’s not always about the trend—it’s about a combination of feeling good and looking great.

Since 2008, Symes-Elmer, owner of the personal shopping and styling company Shift Your Style in Andover, has helped clients of all ages, shapes, and sizes revamp their closets to build practical, stylish wardrobes. The aim, she says, is to leave her customers feeling confident by wearing what looks great on their bodies.

To determine what fits and feels the best, Symes-Elmer always starts a new project by getting to know the client, his or her closet, lifestyle, body type, and the clothes he or she likes. Then, it’s time to get shopping. If necessary, Symes-Elmer will shop for a client and find the best-fitting styles out there. Depending on a client’s budget, she can integrate different clothing items without breaking the bank or even setting foot in a store.

“I don’t care what size or shape you are, how tall or old you are; you can look fantastic,” she says. “When I see women who haven’t bothered for a while, and I put them in a blouse, a dress, or a pair of jeans that looks great and I see their faces light up…[I think] ‘Explain to me why you wouldn’t just wear these jeans every day.’”

Symes-Elmer also works with shoppers at Northshore Mall in Peabody. In an initial briefing, she and her clients work together to determine a budget and shopping list. They then take to the mall to tackle the racks while keeping smart spending in mind.

Although Symes-Elmer started her fashion career in shoes and spent years traveling to Asia and Europe for her work in operations and manufacturing, fashion is where she knew she’d end up. It’s in her current line of work that the sartorial wonder woman and mom of three boys has been helping people realize that, no matter what, they can look and feel great.

“There are so many people who struggle with getting dressed,” she says. “For me, it’s creative, fun, and easy. I wanted to share that ability with people, but to also teach them how to do it themselves.” timetoshiftyourstyle.com.

Packing Pointers: Symes-Elmer’s ten essentials for a mid-season getaway.

1. A scarf to use as a pillow on the plane, tie your hair, add pop to an outfit, and wear as a wrap. 2. An extra top in your carry-on in case of spills. 3. Simple dresses: with bling and heels for night, or flats for a stroll. 4. A patent leather oversized bag that looks great and cleans with a quick wipe. 5. Layers! They give you lots of options. 6. Pack neutrals and complementary colors with pieces that pop. 7. Accessories that go from day to night. 8. A pair of flats and heels. 9. A metallic belt. 10. Go with your favorites. It’s fun to think you’ll wear those  “special” items that have been dormant in your closet, but stick with what you know best.

The Rink Master

Rink Master, Larry Abbott

Whether temperatures outside are brisk or balmy, Larry Abbott can almost always be found on the ice. Abbott operates Hockeytown USA in Saugus all year long, a job he’s enjoyed for nearly four decades. The rink is a common gathering space among area youth and adult groups, whether for figure skating or ice hockey, but even Abbott himself will join in the action, competing weekly in hockey matches. Here, Abbott talks to Northshore about life on the ice.

How did you get into hockey? I started when I was eight or nine years old, and just because the kids in the neighborhood were doing it. We played on the ponds. I grew up in Melrose. We played hockey on the local teams, and then progressed to the high school level, and then I went to college and played at Boston University.

What do you love most about playing? It is something I have done all my life, and I have been in the ice business all my life. So I just enjoy the game. I enjoy the people. They are very classic people, hockey players. They seem to be very genuine. I like the team aspect of it. Everyone has to pull together. It’s good exercise, and we have a lot of fun and meet a lot of nice people along the way.

How do you create an adult ice hockey team? A team captain could come in and build his own team. We have some leagues that just take individuals. We place them according to their abilities, set their schedules up, give them shirts, and away we go.

How does younger players’ style compare to the older ones’? If you’re talking the 18- to 30-year-olds, they play a little different game than the guys in their 50s and 60s. The older guys grew up when there were no face masks, so they have a little more control over their sticks. The younger guys are products of an era where they had face masks, and the game became a little faster, a little more reckless, and a little more physical. The kids that have the face masks play with a little different style than the older guys that used to play without the masks and have a little more respect for what you do with your stick.

As a Bruins fan, how was it for you witnessing their Stanley Cup win last season? Oh, it was terrific. It was a great game to watch. They played with a lot of intensity and a lot of heart. After all these years of watching other teams do it, we finally got to watch the local team win. Hockeytownsaugus.com.

Bridal Bliss

Andover’s new Bridal Center is a one-stop destination where brides and their wedding parties can say yes to the dress—and a whole lot more.

Like any bride-to-be, Drew Duford’s to-do list is as long as a wedding train. It’s eight months until the 28-year-old, who lives in Haverhill, ties the knot with fiancé Richard Dupre at The Crane Estate in Ipswich, and pressure is mounting.

Unlike many anxious brides, whose inner Bridezillas come out somewhere between choosing the invitations and walking down the aisle, Duford is calm, cool, and collected. She has already chosen a dress, the photographer is booked, and the groom is shopping for tuxedos. If she needs help with any of the 101 other things to check off her list, from the DJ to her bridal bouquet, she knows it’s just a phone call away.

Dresses in a row at the Bridal Center

Instead of racing around to 15 different wedding services, Duford has found the ultimate support network at The Bridal Center at One Main Street in Andover, a new and unique wedding “destination,” with nine highly experienced specialists who can smooth every step of a bride’s journey, from getting hitched to choosing her honeymoon outfits.

“It’s a fabulous idea,” Duford says of the Bridal Center concept, “and it’s making my life so much easier. Everyone is so pleasant and professional and welcoming, and to have all these services under the same roof is so convenient. It’s really a one-stop shop.”

Filling four floors of a beautifully restored building overlooking Elm Square, The Bridal Center offers designer wedding gowns, bridesmaids dresses, mother-of-the-bride ensembles, shoes, jewelry, accessories, cocktail dresses, intimate apparel, tuxedos, and car services. There’s a first-class photographer, the top-rated entertainment and uplighting specialist in New England, an event planner and wedding decorator, and even a personal trainer to get couples in shape for their big day. An invitations boutique is next door, and there’s a florist across the road, but if you still can’t find what you need, the nine specialists at The Bridal Center have Rolodexes stuffed with personal contacts who can also assist in your wedding planning with military (and stress-free) precision.

Thought to be the only bridal center of its kind in America, this clever concept is the brainchild of 63-year-old Andover businessman Tom Belhumeur, who owned a chain of Athlete’s Corner stores in Massachusetts during a 30-year retail career and now owns several commercial properties in Andover. A casual conversation two years ago with long-time tenants Steve and Christine Kalman—the owners of Cristina’s, one of the most successful and respected bridal boutiques in New England—quickly turned into a major business proposition.

“Cristina’s was a tenant across the street for 20 years, and they were really busting at the seams,” recalls Belhumeur. “We got to chatting and thought, ‘If we’re going to create a new building with Cristina’s taking up much of the space, how about bringing in other people in the bridal business and doing the whole thing as a wedding destination?’”

With no experience in the bridal industry, Belhumeur started to research, bringing home glossy weddings magazines and watching TV shows like Say Yes to the Dress. “My wife thought I was really losing it,” he chuckles. “She’d always known me to be a cut-and-dry commercial guy, but this took a whole different turn because I was personally involved.”

Belhumeur identified a prime location at the corner of Main and Central streets in the heart of downtown Andover: a run-down two-story building once home to Kaps men’s clothing store. He purchased the building for $1.2 million in December 2009, won local planning approval, and set about restoring it. “We pretty much tore the building down and rebuilt it, adding a third story,” he says.

The additional floor increased the commercial space from 10,000 to almost 16,000 square feet, enough room to accommodate Cristina’s and eight other tenants. Belhumeur won’t say how much he invested in the building, but it’s plain to see that he spared no expense, having incorporated an elevator, marble floors, a mahogany staircase, chandeliers, and large windows to capture the town views and natural light.

For the color scheme—a crisp white and tan on the exterior, a cool blue-gray for the interior—Belhumeur chose colors that would appeal to women and men alike. His choice of wallpaper delivered a pleasant surprise. “When the interior designer turned over the sample, it was called ‘Wedding Rings,’ and I thought, ‘There’s an omen right there,’” he says.

“I wanted the building to look confident, successful, and upscale, and for people to identify with it in how they wanted their wedding to be,” Belhumeur says. “It’s very special to me. We started with nothing and created something wonderful.”

Christine Kalman, owner of Cristina's, helping a bride-to-be

By the time the building was completed in April 2011 and renamed The Bridal Center at One Main Street, Belhumeur had taken calls from scores of florists, caterers, boutiques, and wedding planners. “People would drive by, see the building, and want to be part of it,” he says. “I could have done a 100,000-square-foot building and filled every space.”

Belhumeur took a careful approach and handpicked all nine prospective tenants based on their industry track records. With Cristina’s confirmed as the “anchor” tenant, other top wedding specialists with more than 100 years of combined experience came on board.

Russo Tux and Limousine, a family business with stores in Chelsea, Stoneham, and Andover, was in the basement of the original Kaps building and took over a new space on the first floor with a separate entrance for flexible opening hours.

Michael Edwards, who launched AllStar Entertainment and Uplighting in 1990 and had been running it from his home office in Andover since 2004, booked a third-floor space after driving past the building. “What better address?” he says. “Ninety-five percent of our business is weddings, so it was a perfect match for us.”

Neighboring tenant and photographer Linda Jennings, owner of Photography by Linda, adds another 20 years’ experience to the center. She had a studio in North Main Street for eight years, knew Michael Edwards through their respective businesses, and signed when she found out he’d taken a spot. “The space was perfect for a photographer and made it easy for me to move in,” she says.

Keri Barrett, owner of First Date Boutique on the second floor, was already a tenant of Belhumeur’s on Chestnut Street and jumped at the chance to move into The Bridal Center: “It’s a genius idea,” she says. “Everyone in the building complements each other perfectly, and clients get personal service they won’t find anywhere else.”

With a 27-year history in Andover, the most experienced and biggest tenant is Cristina’s, which moved in last May after a major design process resulting in an elegant second-floor bridal salon. The main formal gowns are displayed in a boutique on the first floor with streetfront exposure. A lower level houses bridesmaids dresses, pressing, and alterations.

“Having us all under the same roof is a big asset not only for all of us, but also for our clients to have experienced, reputable, and trustworthy people for the most important day of their lives,” says Christine Kalman, Cristina’s owner.

Clara Tompkins owns The New England Bridal Affair, specializing in wedding expos and event planning, and is thrilled to have a space on the third floor. “We all needed to come together, and the timing was wonderful,” she says. “I wish I could have done it years ago.”

The final three tenants—Laura Hardiman, owner of The Ivory Corset; Sylvia Sasso, owner of Shaperella; and Yasiris Matias, owner of Festejos Decorations—moved in to their third-floor spaces in November, adding intimate apparel, personal training, decorations, and event planning to the mix. Apart from the new Bridal Center website, which brands and connects all nine businesses, each owner operates autonomously but benefits greatly from being under the same roof.

For brides with time restraints, the center is a convenient one-stop shop to which they can bring mothers, fiancés, and bridal parties for a relaxed day of planning and shopping. Clients can also make significant savings via incentives and special offers if they book with more than one specialist.

Menswear and accessories at Russo Tux Shop & Limousine

Aside from the obvious commercial benefits of client referrals, cross-promotions, and group marketing, each business owner can also enjoy the support and encouragement of people who are now friends as much as colleagues. “The enthusiasm and positive energy running through the building is just extraordinary,” says Belhumeur.

“…We’re all busy at the same time, and we help each other whenever we can,” says Clara Tompkins. “When a bride sits on my couch, my goal is not only to promote myself but also everyone else in the building when possible.”

There’s no formal tenants’ association, but the shopowners all meet twice a month to resolve any issues. Tom Belhumeur’s financial interest is solely that of building owner and landlord, although he helped establish the new website and attends occasional meetings. The center is now at full capacity with no room for expansion, but Belhumeur believes the website will be a source of new business and revenue streams through affiliate links, advertising, and promotions.

Success is hard to quantify after only eight months, but many owners are reporting increases in bookings since joining The Bridal Center. Linda Jennings says business is up 20 percent; AllStar Entertainment is up 30 percent. Cristina’s is now getting brides from New England and 17 other states.

Is another Bridal Center on the horizon? “Not in Massachusetts, but we are looking at venues in Connecticut,” says Belhumeur. “I would love to replicate this. It’s very much a possibility.”

Clearly it’s a marriage made in heaven—and not a Bridezilla in sight.

The Portfolio

Headquarters: Andover. Year Founded: 2011. Number of Businesses: 9. Services: A one-stop wedding “destination” offering gowns, tuxedos, jewelry, accessories, intimate apparel, photography, decorations, entertainment and lighting, personal training, and event planning. Building Owner: Tom Belhumeur. Contact: One Main Street, Andover, MA 01810, thebridalcenter.com.

Sean Fitzpatrick is the Ice Man

Transforming snow and ice into artwork with master sculptor  Sean Fitzpatrick of Fitzy Snowman Sculpting in Gloucester.

Except for ski trips and visits to the skating rink, snow and ice are often nothing less than a nuisance for many of us, requiring constant shoveling and scraping. But for Sean Fitzpatrick, master sculptor and proprietor of Fitzy Snowman Sculpting, the winter elements are pure and simple supplies from which he fashions stunning snow and ice sculptures. Fitzpatrick talks to Northshore about his unique craft and how he keeps frostbite at bay.
How did you get into sculpting? [I] fell in love with impermanent art after making my first snow sculpture…over 20 years ago. My passion took over, and I developed a very successful business plan as a result.

What was that first sculpture? Santa Claus, at the request of my then three-year-old daughter, Shannon.

Where do you work now? My work takes me all over the Unites States and around the world. Locally, a majority of my ice sculptures are created at my ice studio at Cape Pond Ice in Gloucester.

What tools do you use? Chain saws, blow torches, hand saws, and chisels.

How do you keep warm at work? With ice and snow, there’s a lot of Kevlar protection gear. I dress in layers but heat up quickly. It’s always 28 degrees in my ice studio in Gloucester, but with no wind, it’s fairly comfortable.

Ever have any mishaps or, because of the weather, meltdowns? Occasionally, weather can be a problem, which is why I always suggest tenting outdoor events.

What’s been your most challenging sculpture so far? Last winter, I created a 200-ton snow/ice village at the Derby Street Shoppes in Hingham.

Do you ever get any outrageous requests? I was asked to carve a 10-ton snow bust of Rachael Ray for her daytime show. I had less than six hours to create it. A typical project like that would take over 20 hours to create.

What’s the best part of your job? Performing in front of large crowds. It’s the best ego boost any artist can ever get.

What will you be working on next? I have several projects involving ice, pumpkins, sand, and team building, but not necessarily in that order. fitzysnowman.com. —Rebecca Kensil

The Trustees of Reservation Have A Mission…

The Trustees of Reservations are on a mission to make you care about the environment.

The Great House on Castle Hill

Wandering the manicured lawns surrounding the Crane Estate in Ipswich, the Trustees of Reservations’ most-visited property, visitors would never guess what’s just beneath the surface: a cavernous brick-lined chamber holding up to 135,000 gallons of water.

When Chicago industrialist Richard T. Crane, Jr. built his palatial summer home in 1928, he planned carefully for the estate’s water needs, using state-of-the-art technology—after all, the Cranes made their fortunes manufacturing plumbing supplies. As part of a plan that included wells throughout the estate, he arranged to harvest rainwater from the roof of the Great House and store it in an underground cistern next door.

Over the years, that cistern was forgotten, says Robert Murray, superintendent of the Crane Estate, as water lines easily brought potable water up Castle Hill. The echoing chamber stood empty, just below the surface, for perhaps 60 years, until plans got underway for a major replanting on the Allée—the storied tree-lined lawn that rolls from the Great House down to the sea.

“As we were planning for the Allée restoration, we knew that we had to make provisions for irrigation … in the event of a mandatory town-wide water ban,” Murray says. A drought would be the undoing of the substantial investment in new trees along the half-mile landscape. The organization estimates they could collect 180,000 gallons of rainwater a year from the roof—enough to take care of those young trees until they can stand on their own.

The cistern revival is symbolic of a rethinking of the mission and goals of the Trustees of Reservations, a 120-year-old organization dedicated to preserving and protecting more than 100 special places in Massachusetts—some 20 of which are found on the North Shore. It was one of the first land trust organizations in the country, so shifting its time-honed methods wasn’t a natural move. But in response to changing times that demand more agile environmental action, the Trustees launched its 2017 Strategic Plan to make the organization more relevant in an age of eco-upheaval. The emphasis on the environment is not just a feel-good plan—the Trustees have 75 miles of coastline property that they are the first to admit could very well be radically altered by global warming.

The organization is now halfway through this ambitious four-part plan, adopted in 2007 and which involves accelerating the rate at which land is protected throughout the state, engaging more people in the organization’s mission and becoming leaders in conservation and sustainability.

While the Trustees have been using the plan as a blueprint for the past five years, a lot has changed since it was put forth. Its aggressive membership and volunteerism goals—and its stated aim of making Massachusetts the nation’s leader in environmentalism—appear out of reach. As Trustees President Andy Kendall wryly notes, “The 10-year plan was adopted right before the recession, at a point in time when we thought the world was going to continue to expand forever.”  “Things have changed dramatically,” he adds, admitting that the plan was considered bold even by 2007 standards. While Kendall says they still enjoy the backing of a lot of very supportive donors, the current economic climate is a far cry from those heady years.

The organization is still very much devoted to the 2017 Strategic Plan, but these unanticipated challenges have caused the Trustees to consider extending timelines and putting focus on locations where they can have the most impact. “If we can demonstrate success in those places, we can use them as lever points to excite [visitors] about our overall vision. Then, people can be inspired to help us replicate and expand beyond those places.”

Fortunately for denizens of the North Shore, several places in the area represent just that kind of opportunity for the Trustees. About a year ago, the organization combined its properties—Crane Estate, Appleton Farms, Hamlin Reservation, and Greenwood Farm, all in Ipswich, and Pine & Hemlock Knoll in Wenham—into the Center for Enterprise and Engagement. These places together account for about 60 percent of the Trustees’ earned income each year and are among the non-profits’ most visited properties—accounting for well over 300,000 visits each year. By emphasizing this collection of lands, the Trustees hope to broaden enthusiasm from visitors there into interest in their statewide efforts—and make a difference in their own communities.

“These properties feature, in a relatively small geographic area, a range of natural, cultural, and historic resources that are representative of the Trustees’ broader network of properties: historic structures like the Great House on Castle Hill, the Paine House on Greenwood Farms, and the Old House at Appleton Farms; important historical collections; significant natural and planned landscapes; coastal habitats, grasslands, marshlands, and agricultural lands,” notes David Beardsley, director of the new center, who is tasked with encouraging visitors to reflect on the Trustees of Reservations’ efforts after they leave for the day.

Throughout the state, a number of high-visibility projects are specifically geared toward engaging the public while driving sustainability goals, Kendall says. In Cohasset, they are planning to erect a wind turbine, which will help establish the Trustees as carbon neutral. They are also planning six to 10 solar installations at properties around the state—both to act as good environmental stewards and to attract attention to alternative energy sources.

Specifically at Crane Beach, a new “carry-in, carry-out” trash policy has been very successful, cutting the number of trash cans from 24 to six, and other environmental initiatives, including a composting toilet, are on the drawing board. New signage will explain the estate’s renewal of the old cistern and why it’s important. Beardsley says the Trustees hope to eventually make Crane Beach a model for environmentally responsible beach management and a site for educating the public about coastal ecology, climate change, and sustainability. It’s a big stage; Crane often tops lists of best beaches not only in the state, but in the country.

“All our efforts are with an eye toward engaging our neighbors and our members,” Kendall says. “We want to provoke and provide an example of what can be done.”

There are some pretty steep goals for measuring how well the organization is getting the attention of its visitors. By 2017, the original strategic plan calls for 50 percent of visitors at high-engagement properties (like the Crane Estate, which attracts 250,000 visitors a year) to be members, and a total across the board of 80,000 household members. As of 2010, membership stood at 45,500 households. This year, a family membership costs $67 a year.  The plan also calls for volunteers to provide 300,000 hours of work per year. In 2010, volunteers contributed 59,000 hours of work—more than double the amount in 2006, but still a long way from their goals.

While Crane is certainly the crowning jewel, the Trustees also shepherd a number of other North Shore properties, including the Cape Ann Discovery Center at Ravenswood Park in Gloucester, which opened two years ago and holds year-round programs for adults and children. The park recently opened a new hiking trail specifically designed for young families. The Trustees also operate Long Hill in Beverly, a former estate of the Atlantic editor Evelyn Sedgwick, where the Trustees are aiming to generate more hands-on interest through efforts like pick-your-own flower fields, newly opened public gardens and sustainable gardening demonstration beds.

Because of its popularity, the North Shore is also attracting a good amount of the Trustees’ limited resources. The restoration of Appleton Farms, from the planned implementation of a dairy farm to its groundbreaking high level of energy efficiency, has garnered a lot of press lately, including from Northshore (see our August/September issue).

Crane Estate is the property that the Trustees have the most riding on, however. For one, it is the most visited property that the Trustees own, and the $2 million Allée Restoration project is one of the most expansive restoration efforts ever undertaken at the property. The most visible effect of the project is the removal of the towering pines lining the lawn. Originally intended as a hedge that was trimmed to a height of about 12 feet, superintendent Murray says the trees were likely “released” in the 1940s, perhaps because labor was hard to come by during the war. Since then, these “wild” trees have grown to 50 feet tall in some cases. While they looked grand, they caused many headaches, among them being susceptible to the violent weather of the past few years, as well as blocking some of landscape architect Arthur Shurcliff’s original site lines and casting a pall over the delicate statues that line the lawn.
Now the overgrown trees will be replaced by six-foot-tall spruce. In another nod to sustainability, several of the hulking trees were cut up to make a new lifeguard station at Crane Beach and used by Essex master boat builder Harold Burnham for schooner spar rigging.

What do all these efforts have in common? “We want to make sure people are inspired by our properties,” says Kendall. “Historically, we’ve been … thinking of our work as basically being done at the point that the place is acquired and that green sign is put up so people can come and visit. That was the end point, not the beginning.” Now the goal is to create places that encourage people to become more active in their own communities. “The real power for us is helping people be concerned about their own special places, too,” Kendall adds.

Achieving that difficult balance between engaging the public and protecting special places is not easy, Kendall notes, and it’s rather unusual in land trusts. “We are unique in that we preserve special places while ensuring the public has access. Many organizations seek to protect but don’t focus on the public engagement.”

If you’ve ever stood on Crane’s Beach or enjoyed farm-fresh veggies from Appleton Farms or brought your kids to hike the new nature trail in Ravenswood Park, you’ll feel very glad the Trustees are dedicated to maintaining that balance.

 

Holiday Happenings Several of the Trustees of Reservations properties run special events over the holidays. Here’s the rundown:

Greening of the Great House, Castle Hill on the Crane Estate, Ipswich Celebrate the holidays at the Great House on Castle Hill, festively decorated by area florists and designers. Enjoy live music, a dance performance, a children’s Eye Spy, refreshments, and more throughout the weekend. On Friday evening, stop in for live jazz music and a drink at the cash bar. On Saturday and Sunday, visit the Gift Gallery for distinctive holiday gifts. December 4-6, Noon-6 p.m. Members: Adult $8; Child $5. Nonmembers: Adult $12; Child $8. Ipswich residents: $5 with proof of residency. Ravenswood Solstice Stroll, Ravenswood Park, Gloucester Celebrate the Winter Solstice with a candlelight stroll at twilight in Ravenswood Park, followed by a cozy fire, s’mores, and hot chocolate. December 18, 4-6 p.m. Members: free; non-members: adult, $5. Free for children. Pre-registration required. capeann@ttor.org. New England Sled Dog Races, Appleton Farms, Ipswich If the snow flies, it could attract close to 10,000 people. Also depending on snow, the farm is hosting a number of guided cross-country ski programs, using the Old House as the meeting location/warming area. The property will also be offering winter kids’ programs, as well as maple sugaring programs. January 14-15.

Haverhill Native, Stuart Weitzman

Stuart Weitzman is head over heels

Shoe designer Stuart Weitzman is at the helm of a global empire spanning 70 countries, turning Hollywood’s biggest stars into fashion icons and creating to-die-for shoes worn by millions of women—and it all started in a humble factory in Haverhill. Photograph by Teru Onishi

Next time you’re in downtown Haverhill, look up at the new Essex Street Gateway Mural and you’ll see a wonderful example of art imitating life. At the center of the four-story mural—honoring the city’s highest achievers—is an image of the legendary movie mogul Louis B. Mayer, who once owned all five theaters in town before conquering Hollywood as the head of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.

The mural depicts Mayer with an audience of other Haverhill heroes watching a movie, and on the flickering screen is a man working at a shoe-making machine. That man is Stuart Weitzman—America’s shoe designer to the stars—who took over his late father’s Haverhill shoe factory in 1965 at the young age of 24 and turned the business into a multi-million-dollar global empire spanning 70 countries.

The Haverill-to-Hollywood connection doesn’t stop at the mural. Just as Mayer was the toast of Tinseltown as head of MGM, Weitzman’s super-glamorous shoes adorn the feet of a galaxy of movie stars and entertainers, from Angelina Jolie to Beyoncé, gracing red carpets from the Oscars to the Emmys and from the Grammys to MTV’s Video Music Awards.
Weitzman can barely contain his pride at being included in such esteemed company along with Mayer, John Quincy Adams, comic book hero Archie Andrews (created in 1941 by Haverhill illustrator Bob Montana), and many other local luminaries.

“You could say I’m the protagonist because I got the whole wall in the movie screen shot,” Weitzman says with a chuckle. “I’m honored to be the representative of an industry that basically no longer exists in America but had its birth and much success for almost 200 years in Haverhill.”

It’s been almost 40 years since the once-booming shoe industry died out in Haverhill and Weitzman moved his operations to Europe, but he was excited to return last August for a community painting session of the mural, to visit his father’s factory, and catch up with old friends and colleagues.

“I met women who are the children of people who worked with my father, and they brought shoes from his time,” he says. “They gave me eight or nine pairs. It was quite thrilling for me to see those shoes. Some of them are absolutely beautiful.”

Raised in Long Island, New York, Stuart Weitzman was set for a career on Wall Street after graduating from the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania. However, his father, Seymour, who in the 1950s had established a successful shoe factory and business in Haverhill called Mr. Seymour, had other ideas, and so the young Weitzman began an apprenticeship that would change the course of his life.

“As kids, we always think we know everything, and the experience of our parents is lost on us, until we grow up and realize just how wise they were,” Weitzman says. “I remember working with him in the factory and saying, ‘I’d like to go to California and be our salesman.’ All I could see was the surf and beautiful girls in bikinis. What did I want to be in a factory for? I’m gonna learn the shoe business by selling [shoes]. And my father said, ‘No, you’re not, you’re going to sit right here and work with our last makers [a shoemaker’s mold for shaping a shoe or boot] and pattern makers. My father would not let me go out into the world selling footwear without knowing the elements of how to make it, and that was the best lesson he could have ever forced upon me.”

It was that nuts-and-bolts apprenticeship that gave Weitzman the experience and confidence to take over the business when his father died unexpectedly and to move the operations to Europe. He launched his own company in 1986 and partnered with a capital investment firm in 2005, paving the way for major international expansion.

Today, Weitzman employs 350 people in the U.S. and 2,000 at his factories in Elda, Spain and has nearly 40 retail stores in America (including Copley Place Boston, Natick, and a new Chestnut Hill boutique) and more than 40 stores worldwide. Each year, he sells two million pairs of shoes in 70 countries.

Weitzman is still the company’s principal designer, combining everything his father taught him with his own creative vision, plus cutting-edge technology employed by a team of top designers, pattern makers, and technicians to create stunning heels and handbags.

A U.S. patent and sketch by Seymour Weitzman that the younger Weitzman found in his attic and re-created

“We’re always listening to women,” he says. “They’re independent, they’re in the workplace and the best universities, they’re their own thinkers. We can’t tell them how to look. The era of the girdle has gone and with it the mental attitude of being told what to look like. They want choice, they want to make their own decisions, and they want variety.”

That’s exactly what Weitzman offers, with 600 fashion, casual, sport, dress, and evening styles in 50 sizes each season, stitching together engineering, design, comfort, and trend-setting looks at a price that works in today’s challenging economy.

So what’s trending this season? “Gorgeous-looking shoes on lower, wearable heels as opposed to everything being at skyscraper height,” he says. “A low-cut, beautiful pump is the silhouette of the season. It looks so good and fresh…”

Weitzman says a flat boot also hits the mark, worn with dark tights or jeans tucked in (or out) of the boot, and an elegant high-heel sexy boot “is about as beautiful a way a woman can show herself off,” he adds.

Exotic reptile and animal skins—python, crocodile, alligator, lizard, leopard, tiger, hyena—are in vogue, but Weitzman stresses they’re not the real thing. “Women don’t want to be part of destroying nature, but they want the look, feel, and attitude it offers,” he says. “With modern technology, we can take lambskin and cowhide and recreate the look of an exotic skin, so the naked eye can’t tell the difference.” He’s not exaggerating, either. “I’m always very proud when the U.S. Department of Agriculture asks for an inspection of our shoes, and they need to call in Fish and Wildlife scientists to determine if they’re real reptile skins,” he says. “That’s how good technology has gotten.”

Weitzman, who is married with two daughters and lives in Connecticut, no longer makes the headline-grabbing, jewel-encrusted “Million Dollar Shoes” for a leading actress to wear to the Oscars each year, but his fabulous heels will no doubt grace the red carpet at the 2012 ceremony.

Hollywood and Haverhill may be worlds apart, but Weitzman has only good memories and will be back for the unveiling of the mural next year.

“It’s amazing what this town has done,” Weitzman says. “It was a dilapidated city when the shoe industry ended and now it’s thriving again with fantastic lofts and apartments that grew out of factories and a young, active, cultural community.”

What would his father make of his success? “He loved footwear; he would be as proud as hell, I’m sure, and would be telling me how to correct a design,” says Weitzman, laughing.

No pun intended, but this story has a wonderful footnote. Just last summer, Weitzman was clearing his attic and found a box marked ‘Dad’s Things.’ Inside was a document, sealed with red wax and a ribbon, with a beautiful shoe design sketched by his father when he was 21, and an official 1936 United States patent.

“The shoe is gorgeous, so I remade it,” he says. “I modernized it a bit; we’re selling the heck out of it and using it in a campaign called ‘Heritage.’ Dad would love that.”

Andover’s Todd Berberian

Berberian at Andover Eye Care

Todd Berberian, the optician-turned-designer and owner of Andover Eye Care, sets himself up for stardom in the eyewear industry.

What does an optician do on his day off? How about design a line of eyewear so popular that his sunglasses will soon be featured in a movie? Such is the case of Todd Berberian, owner of Andover Eye Care, who created his line of Todd Rogers eyeglass frames in 2010.

In a way, Berberian’s story is a modern-day version of The Little Engine That Could. After all, breaking into an industry dominated by famous designers during an economic recession takes—no pun intended—vision. And, as Berberian points out, who understands vision more than an optician?

“I’m a bad artist, but I’ve always liked fashion,” says Berberian, who has been an optician for 20 years. But while his store sold some of the biggest brands in eyewear, he said he was often disappointed in the quality and style of the products. “One of the reasons I did this is that I was tired of buying super-expensive products that, when they arrived, weren’t perfect. They were crooked, or the plastic was of an inferior quality. And keep in mind that these are selling for big bucks.”

He soon found himself working after hours, creating his own designs and teaching himself more advanced techniques in cutting lenses. He learned to customize frames not only to fit his customers better, but also to be more flattering and more fashion forward. Eventually, he began to dream of starting his own fashion line, but was told from the outset by everyone that without money and connections, his chances were slim.

Again, he stuck to his vision. Often, the big-name designers who lend their names to eyewear don’t actually have any direct knowledge or connection to the industry. Berberian, on the other hand, knew his business, knew what customers liked, and knew what looked and felt good on them.

In his mind, the question was not “Why should an optician create designer eyewear?” but “Who else could do it better?” An important step in the process was to find a manufacturer who could not only turn his designs into reality, but do so at an affordable price. The process took four or five years, or as he puts it: “I had to kiss a lot of frogs.”

Berberian took several disappointing trips overseas to meet with potential manufacturers, during which time, he says, “I burned some bridges, and it’s a small industry.” Still, he persevered and finally found a few manufacturers who understood his goals. When his first box of frames arrived at his home, he said he got goose bumps, but even then, he took his time.

“I finally had my samples, and I went through each frame, one by one, for quality control. I showed them to friends. I took pictures of them, and studied them afterward before choosing the ones I wanted.” When the product arrived at his store, Berberian instructed his staff not to direct customers toward the frames or to let on that he was the designer. To his delight, the frames took off. The next step was to create brand awareness.

“Often, when people create a product, they just slap a name on the product,” Berberian says. “I knew I didn’t want to do it like that.” He created the name Todd Rogers—Rogers is his middle name and his mother’s maiden name—and put energy into creating catchy tag lines. The idea was to invest his fledgling line with “a feeling” that felt true to his personality and vision.

The next big test arrived when Berberian took his wares to the New York Vision Expo East, where they were assigned a booth at the bottom of an escalator that attendees had to use to reach some of the most popular exhibits.
“We designed the booth to look like what you’d see at a concert, with T-shirts stuck to the wall,” he says. One of them read: “I know you’re admiring my glasses,” with the “gl” and the “es” in tiny letters. Needless to say, the booth drew a lot of positive buzz. “We brought a new kind of vibe, and even though we’re a small company, the whole show was talking about us,” he says.

Berberian understood that creating that vibe was as important as creating the eyewear itself, and marketing played a key role in this part of the process. “We were looking to promote our indie name with viral marketing,” he says. One example of his creative marketing approach is an ad he shot that depicts Berberian with his back to the camera with his beloved dog, Prana. There are no eyeglasses in the picture, although there is a Todd Rogers logo on a T-shirt hanging out of his jeans pocket.

“On the way to the photo shoot, my PR manager told me that the camera does not like someone’s back, but people now tell me that it is their favorite picture.”

Sure enough, it wasn’t long before the word got out. Berberian was written about in a trade magazine called Eyecare Business, in which he was included in a piece on designers who are also optometrists and opticians. Another writeup, in which he was named among Andover’s “Hottest Bachelors” in The Andovers magazine, proved to be more embarrassing, although Berberian is a good sport about it.

“That article is going to follow me around forever,” he says, laughing. He was nominated by a customer and was under the impression that his appearance in the magazine would be a small, forgettable item. “Instead, I found myself on the cover,” he says, a fact he didn’t discover until he noticed a few people staring at him at Butcher Boy market, where the magazine was on display. “There I was, in sweats, a hoodie, and flip-flops, thinking, ‘get me out of this market— now.’” Nowadays, Berberian is off the bachelor market and is the doting father of a six-month-old son, Jackson.

If more proof were needed that Todd Rogers Eyewear has caught on with the cool set, a character in an upcoming film being shot in Toronto, called And Now a Word from our Sponsor… will wear a pair of Todd Rogers sunglasses in the movie. So with all this success, why is the designer still in Andover?

“I love Andover,” says Berberian, who moved there from his native Somerville—or “the ‘Ville,” as he calls it (the abbreviation is lasered onto a pair of white Converse sneakers that Berberian sometimes wears at work, a tribute to his hometown). He especially likes downtown Andover’s classic New England beauty and its inhabitants, a mix of locals and transplants. He also credits the great local schools, interesting companies, and beautiful houses for giving the town its character. “Andover is fashionable. It’s preppy, but, guess what? Preppy is a huge fashion influence, especially now.” That aesthetic is part of what influenced his designs, he notes, calling his eyewear style “Classic New England with a twist.”

Berberian also wanted to ensure that his eyewear sold at a reasonable price, noting that his line in his shop sells in the $200 range. That said, he admits that the optician in him sometimes gets in his way when selling his own eyewear.

“There have been times when someone comes in and wants a pair of Todd Rogers and there’s been another brand that fits better,” he said. “In that case, I steer them toward the other pair.”

When asked if he has advice for other entrepreneurs starting out in this difficult economy, he modestly replies: “If I can do it, anyone can.” On the other hand, given the dogged perseverance it took to get his line up and running, he can’t resist adding: “You also need to see between the lines.”

 

Andover Eye Care, 777 Main St., Andover, 978-749-7300

Local Product Founders Unite at Start-Up Stories

Physical products aren’t as sexy as the latest web app, but they are definitely tasty.  On October 27, 6-8pm, Perfect Fuel Chocolate hosted Start-Up Stories, a networking gathering for product entrepreneurs, at Space with a Soul. Company founders displayed items ranging from a healthy dessert bar to bow ties and shared their experiences overcoming business hurdles.

The guys behind OoOtie

Start-up Stories featured a product showcase, followed by a speaker series where five founders shared how they overcame challenges in launching their product. The audience sampled different products and the participants exchanged business ideas and stories.

“In a town full of technology start-ups, we created a space for local product people to network and learn from each other,” said Nicolas Warren, founder of Perfect Fuel Chocolate.

Founders from five companies spoke at the event:

-    Taza Chocolate, local maker of stone-ground, organic chocolate, talked about the importance of finding mutually valuable arrangements with distributors.
-    90+ Cellar sells high quality, highly rated finished wines at a discount, pointed out how patience and persistence helped convince vendors to accept new products.
-    Budi Bars, the anytime superfood bar, stressed the importance of creating a product you are in the market for yourself.
-    Biba Beverages, a healthy, sparkling hydration beverage, shared, that using real feedback from future customers helps determine the success of a product.
-    CustomBuds allows users to design their earbuds exactly how they like, highlighted how taking risks shows a commitment to the company and pays off in the end.

“Good people, good products, good discussions,” said John Forsythe, founder of StayPuts!,

Additional product companies participating in the event:

-    OoOTie, provides a unique assortment of bow ties.
-    Stay Puts allows you to display cards without tape or a frame.
-    Arch Angels provides insoles for children.
-    Miriam’s Cookware creates all natural clay cooking pots.

Founders of product companies shared their stories and lessons learned with the audience. They presented their hurdles and answered audience questions. “Some really great conversations,” remarked Larry Slotnick, of Taza Chocolate.

The event is supported by PitchPub and Space with a Soul

Perfect Fuel Chocolate is a startup working hard to produce the perfect healthy snack for healthy, active life. Our first chocolate product ,with ginseng, is due out late 2011. Our mission is to promote a healthy lifestyle by offering a all-natural snack made from dark chocolate. Learn more at www.prefectfuelchocolate.com

The Ladies Behind Rae Francis

Two designers—one a North Shore native—live out their passion for fashion.

It all started in 2005 at the Savannah College of Art and Design, where fashion-forward freshmen Ariel Lilly and Christina Coniglio met and bonded over a shared dream: to start a women’s clothing line. Soon after, the pair began brainstorming ideas to make that dream a reality.

Although launching their own line was always the ultimate goal, Lilly and Coniglio agreed that some work experience first would be a solid foundation. “Going out and working for other people [would give] us that extra push with the business side of things,” says Coniglio.

After graduating, both women worked in New York City—Lilly, an Andover native, in fashion showrooms, and Coniglio, from Florida, in design and production. Satisfied with their professional pursuits, the designers then developed the blueprints for a contemporary women’s line, choosing to blend “uptown and downtown New York City style.” And so, Rae Francis —Rae is Lilly’s middle name; Francis is Coniglio’s father—was born.

Today, to stay ahead of the trends, Lilly and Coniglio take to the streets of New York to hear from consumers themselves:  what they like, dislike, what they want more of, and what they could use less of. The designers have successfully struck a balance, as is evidenced by the attention that Rae Francis has garnered from magazines like Lucky and Elle Mexico, and from celebrity stylists. Locally, pieces from the label are available at Dresscode in Andover, while the Fall 2011 collection was scheduled to launch on the website Imilla Road in late summer.

Next, calling on Coniglio’s Florida influence, the duo will introduce swimwear to the North Shore and later to the West Coast. In the meantime, all eyes are on the longtime friends and fashion trailblazers.

Window Display Extraordianaire Robert Ventola

Robert Ventola

What he does: West Newbury-based Ventola heads up the visual design and consultation company Display Concepts, Inc., which specializes in window displays.

His clients: For 30 years, Ventola has created themes for numerous retail windows, including displays for John Farley Clothiers in Newburyport and Giblees Fine Clothing in Danvers. Ventola also designs for companies nationally and internationally and has done numerous runway shows.

His approach: “I want to know what [clients] like, where they go to dinner; I want to know about their lifestyle. It helps to formulate a direction for them, so when we do a presentation, we’re probably 90 percent [correct] with the first presentation. That is what has given us the reputation that we have.”

His favorite project: While designing a theme for a New York show based on faux fur, Ventola came up with the idea to use an all-white background with a white stage and to have every model walk down the runway with a St. Bernard—show dogs, of course.

Future projects: This year alone, Ventola has 31 projects for the holiday season. Come November, he will have his displays set, but until then, he will be spending every day in his shop designing and creating.

The Eco-Friendly Side of Mariposa

After a humble beginning in her parents’ garage, Livia Cowan has developed a multi-million-dollar gift business, Mariposa, firmly rooted in the North Shore.

It’s a beautiful summer day in Manchester, but inside the big yellow barn just off Route 127, it looks more like Christmas. Silvery ornaments, ranging from delicate snowflakes and sand dollars to tiny picture frames decorated with dog bones, hang from display racks in the conference room, while elegant platters subtly decorated with toy trains and Christmas trees adorn the walls.

Livia Cowan and pup Lola at Mariposa's headquarters

These items, and many others from Mariposa, a gift and tableware company with deep roots in the North Shore, are destined for more than 400 upscale stores and boutiques like Saks and Neiman Marcus this holiday season. For store buyers, summertime is when thoughts turn to the holidays, and so Mariposa’s decor takes a wintery turn as well. The playfulness of the dog bone frame, juxtaposed with the elegance of those snowflakes, is a hallmark of Mariposa, says Livia Cowan, president and creative director. “Both sides are very important to us—the whimsical and the contemporary, from chic to playful,” she says.

The casual charm of the company’s designs is reflected in its headquarters, a converted barn that served as the stable for the Manchester Livery in the 1800s. Much care was put into preserving the barn feel while crafting a comfortable, airy environment. When Mariposa bought the space, it housed a tree removal service and took a fair amount of vision to remake it as a functional modern workspace. These days, the “stalls” are cubicles for the company’s 25 employees. Dogs find the offices a comfortable space, too, as they are welcome at work. Lola, a Portuguese Water Dog, greets visitors with a friendly nuzzle in the hopes of getting treats.

Another renovation was needed when Mariposa added a new CEO to its roster last spring. Stanley Reeve, who joined the company after stints with Merida Meridian, a luxury sustainable floor covering company, and Rare, a nonprofit biodiversity protection organization in Arlington, Virginia, had been Cowan’s mentor and business confidant for many years prior. Reeve was looking to move back to the North Shore, and Cowan was starting to realize that her business had grown so much that it was becoming difficult to handle solo.

“We talked about business the way other people talk about sports,” Cowan says. While they are both very involved in all aspects of the business, Reeve is focused more on deepening and strengthening their distribution and the bottom line numbers, while Cowan can hone in on design and marketing.

“It’s a classic entrepreneurial thing,” Cowan says. “The reason I started the business was the love of the craft and dedication to design. Then you start building inventory and having all these different products, and you have to grow up and turn into a manager… There are so many different challenges that you start to get watered down and can’t pursue all aspects of it.” To make room for Reeve, Cowan’s open office was divided by a partial wall with a window. In keeping with the collegial, casual environment, neither office has a door.

One of the things Reeve found very attractive is Mariposa’s commitment to sustainability. With the exception of some imported Italian glassware, everything in the company’s line is made from recycled materials—primarily glass and aluminum.  “I’m very interested in the environment,” Reeve says. “In a world of diminished resources, it’s nice to sell products you feel good about.”

Mariposa’s commitment to sustainability is shared by its manufacturing partners. The main plant in Mexico recycles everything from water to metal and is aiming to be the country’s first green industrial park that also focuses on worker well-being. “It’s very satisfying and rewarding to know that our manufacturing partners are committed not only to good environmental stewardship, but also to providing meaningful employment,” Reeve says.

Recycling has been a hallmark since the company started in 1991. One of Mariposa’s early finds—and still a popular item—is glassware made from recycled Coke bottles. Cowan still marvels at the process, which she has now seen many times in the past 20 years at Mariposa’s production facilities: It starts out with a wheelbarrow full of bottles that get melted down into beautiful glassware.

While recycling has always been part of the Mariposa story, it wasn’t until recently that the company started to emphasize it in its marketing. “I was afraid to share it for a while, because before people were thinking sustainability was a good thing, I think they were a little freaked out,” Cowan says. But when Mariposa started sharing the manufacturing story, it only added to the brand’s allure. “It gave people one more reason to buy,” she says.

Cowan started in the business at 19, traveling to Mexico in a van with her sister, looking for unique products to sell in her sister’s store. When her sibling moved on, Cowan gladly took over, placing orders for recycled glasses and other items and fulfilling orders by stores like Neiman Marcus out of her parents’ garage.

“Semi-trucks couldn’t get to my parents’ house, so we’d borrow friends’ pick-up trucks, load them up, and meet the semis at Gloucester High School, sending $50,000 of merchandise to Neiman’s and places like that,” Cowan says, adding that she doesn’t think the retailers had any idea. “It was always referred to as ‘the warehouse,’” she says with a smile.

Nautical inspired items are a constant for Mariposa

Eventually, she took over her parents’ basement, then the guest room. “Finally, my mother said, ‘Enough,’” Cowan recalls, adding that her mother then brokered a deal for her to share space with then Gloucester-based clothing company Mighty Mac. “At a certain point, everyone in the community sort of felt sorry for my mother and tried to help out,” Cowan laughs.

Mariposa’s fulfillment is still handled out of Gloucester, but at its own facility, from which more than 95 percent of customer orders are shipped within one to three days of receipt. All the photography for the company’s catalogs and marketing is done locally, as well. Crane Beach, as well as favorite restaurants, like The Market in Annisquam, serve as backdrops for photo shoots, and everyone from waiters to Lola the dog are featured in the photos. Many of Mariposa’s staffers are also local;  designer Michael Updike is a former classmate at Pingree in South Hamilton, and artist-in-residence Shelly Bradbury is a jogging partner.

That “North Shore-ness” is a good thing, but it can also be an affliction, Cowan says. “Some of our retailers complain that we have too many sea things,” she says, referring to the boats, starfish, and other nautical notes in their collections. “It’s such a natural reference for us—every time you look, there’s something new.” For example, the dory boats that adorn some pieces are a nod to designer Updike’s wedding. He and his bride departed their wedding with seaside flair by rowing off in a dory.

Cowan keeps a ring-bound notebook full of items that strike her fancy—anything from the edging on some antique jewelry to the design of a napkin can serve as a spark for a piece. “It can be a doorknob or something at a flea market or a dress,” she says. “It’s really the little details that inspire.” Using these bits of inspiration, Cowan works with the company’s two designers, Bradbury and Updike, to create the finished pieces. “I never know how it’s going to go,” Bradbury says. “It’s a dance between design and function.”

Bradbury adds that she is enjoying the challenges of creating pieces that can be mass produced.  As a sculptor, whose works include the Sea Bench for the Maritime Heritage Museum in Gloucester and reconstructing an experience of the Old Man of the Mountain in New Hampshire, Bradbury is still learning what can be assembled in a factory. “I can create anything, but it needs to be able to be manufactured,” she says. “Our designs really push them in processes and directions they haven’t gone before.”

Lately, the company has turned to social media for inspiration. A recent Facebook request for ideas for the company’s “statement trays”—small silver trays engraved with phrases like “Live, laugh, love” and “Change is good”—yielded several ideas that are now bestsellers.

From that Facebook contest, Mariposa took just six weeks to get the social network-inspired goods onto customer shelves, something that the company prides itself on, though it also credits its relationship with their manufacturers in Mexico. While management explored having designs manufactured in India and in China, they found that the turnaround times and quality controls were much better in Mexico.

The statement trays and other gift items are relatively new to Mariposa. Until three or four years ago, the company’s focus was exclusively tableware—much of it from Europe. “We imported very high-end ceramics and glass from Italy…and flatware that we couldn’t afford ourselves from France,” Cowan says.

But as the dollar declined, identifying value and maintaining reasonable price points became more difficult. First, the company shifted its focus to the Far East, but didn’t find quite the right match. “We tried to transition to China on the ceramics, but the artists couldn’t capture our love of the craft enough to bring the subtlety to the pieces,” she says. “Since it didn’t reflect our commitment, we had to abandon [the partnership].”

Looking around for something to fill the void, the company turned to bottle stoppers, ornaments, and other small decorative items. “Metal has always been a core of our business, so we started playing with giftware, and it was really lucky [that we did],” Cowan says. These items cost less, and with the economic downturn, the timing was serendipitous.
“Our brand was loved, but the price points were challenging,” Cowan Says. “With the giftware, we could provide retailers with something safe under our brand name. It’s really brought us through a difficult period very well.”

Reeve notes that they now have a good balance between small giftable items—like a $17 spreader for a hostess gift—and the tabletop Sueno and Reveillon lines, featuring service trays and decorative bowls that top out around $300, perfect for a wedding present.

Both Cowan and Reeve feel that by focusing on unique handmade items crafted with passion, the business can continue to thrive in tough times. “It’s not frivolous anymore,” Reeve says. “You’ve got to really grab that customer with something they feel is worth it.”

 

The Portfolio

Headquarters: Manchester-by-the-Sea. Number of Employees: 25. Year Founded: 1991. Products: Tabletop and giftware items made from recycled aluminum and glass, Italian glassware. President/Creative Director: Livia Anne Cowan. CEO: Stanley Reeve. Contact: 5 Elm Street, Manchester, MA, 01944, 800/788-1304.

Salem’s Mahi Mahi Cruises

Making waves with Will Cole of Mahi Mahi Cruises and Charters in Salem.

It’s nearly impossible to miss the 55-foot festively colored boat cruising around Salem Sound in the cool October breeze. Sharing the harbor with lobstermen and migrating birds is quite different than the busy boating atmosphere of the popular summer cruises, and the costumed crew and passengers are no exception. Mahi Mahi Cruises and Charters is in its sixth season, and owner Will Cole is gearing up for Halloween aboard the Finback—gorillas, chickens, and Claymation characters welcome.

Will Cole prepares for another Halloween season

What was your inspiration for Mahi Mahi Cruises and Charters? I just knew I wasn’t going to work in a conventional setting for the rest of my life. I grew up on the water in Gloucester, so it just feels right to get on a boat and have a beer and a burger and interact with new people every day.

What should customers expect on one of the fall cruises? The fall schedule is made up of the lighthouse cruises and the Haunted Happenings cruises, so the focus is on the haunted aspects of Salem Sound. The weather is cooler and we get to turn the heaters on and enclose the boat and serve weather-appropriate drinks like “Grandma’s Spiked Hot Apple Cider.” It’s fun to be in that atmosphere out on the water without a single soul around.

Where do you get all of the Halloween facts for the narrated cruises? We mostly take our information from accounts of pirates or haunted tales of Salem’s past and the five historic lighthouses in the area. But we try to focus more on the maritime aspect of Halloween to keep our cruises different from all of the land tours around the city. In general, we get a lot of tales from the old timers who come on the cruises and share their stories with us, so the narration is always evolving.

Do people usually dress up for the Haunted Happenings cruises? Absolutely! We all dress up for the last few weeks of the season in anything from gorilla suits to chicken suits to keep the mood festive and lighthearted. We have a woman who is always in costume come out and narrate our Haunted Happenings cruises. Our customers also get into the spirit and dress up closer to the end of October.

What’s the craziest costume you’ve seen? We get a lot of fun costumes on board, but my favorite one was when someone showed up in a head-to-toe Gumby suit. That was awesome.

Tom Bergeron, Hollywood’s Humble Man

With hosting gigs on the wildly popular reality hit Dancing With the Stars and America’s Funniest Home Videos, plus—ahem—a host of other Tinseltown gigs, Tom Bergeron has become America’s latest household name. Despite his swelling celebrity status, however, the Haverhill native remains one of Hollywood’s most normal guys.

If you lived in Haverhill in the early 1970s or in southern New Hampshire in the late ‘70s/early ‘80s, you might remember Tom Bergeron from his radio stints at WHAV and WHEB. Most of us, however, became acquainted with Bergeron when he was a popular Boston media personality at WBZ-AM and WBZ-TV, and then for a short time as the morning show host at Magic 106.7. Bergeron then headed off for the bright lights of New York and, later, Los Angeles.

While his life is now anchored on the West Coast, Bergeron’s North Shore roots run deep. He fondly remembers growing up in Haverhill, where he attended St. Joseph’s School for eight years, and spending Monday afternoons working at the local fruit store simply to get a first look at its new comic books when they came in.

It was meeting Ed Johnson, his public speaking teacher at Haverhill High School, however, that would set in motion Bergeron’s career in radio and TV. Johnson introduced Bergeron to Ed Cetlin, owner of WHAV, a then 1,000-watt radio station in Haverhill, which can still be heard on the radio, online, and on select cable channels in some Merrimac Valley and New Hampshire Seacoast communities.

According to Bergeron’s book, I’m Hosting as Fast as I Can! Zen and the Art of Staying Sane in Hollywood, from Harper Collins Publishing, Cetlin told him, “You’ll never make a living in radio. It’s not a career. I’ll prove it to you. I’ll give you a job.” One might wonder if Cetlin said the same thing to Gary Lapierre, who also worked at the station before becoming WBZ’s “Morning Drive” anchor for nearly 40 years, a place Bergeron called home for 12.

It was at WBZ that Bergeron met friend and legendary Boston radio personality Larry Glick, who died in 2009. Bergeron said for all of the TV he did while at WBZ—and there was a lot of it, hosting People Are Talking, Super Kids, and 4Today, among others—it was his time hanging out with Glick in the ‘BZ radio studios that he recalls as being the most fun. “I grew up listening to Larry, and there I was working with him,” Bergeron says. “It was incredible. He was a very special guy.”

In 1994, Bergeron was released from his contract with Magic 106.7 (see sidebar) for a shot at national television. He was hired as the co-host of Breakfast Time, the new flagship morning show on the brand-new fX network (now FX) in New York. While the show was a critical success, it was not a ratings blockbuster. After undergoing several format changes, Breakfast Time was moved to the Fox network and renamed Fox After Breakfast in mid-1996. Bergeron was unhappy with the changes, and the show was canceled less than a year later.

Soon after, Bergeron was set to take over for Charlie Gibson on Good Morning America, a gig that never came to fruition (Bergeron explains why in his book). Instead, he was off to Hollywood—first commuting from Connecticut, where his family had settled when he was working in New York—to host Hollywood Squares, for which he won an Emmy as Outstanding Game Show Host.

Bergeron eventually relocated to the West Coast as he assumed hosting duties of ABC’s America’s Funniest Home Videos (AFV) and the mega-hit Dancing With The Stars. The latter began as a six-week summer series in 2005 and has since turned to ratings gold. Dancing now airs two seasons each year, the most recent of which began filming September 19. Dancing fans will be happy to know that Bergeron is under contract for another two years and that he is very happy with the show’s current production team. This year, he says, viewers can look forward to an enhanced set with eye-popping new aspects.

Of the show’s 12 seasons, Bergeron says Season 2 has been his favorite. It was then that he partnered with dance pro Ashley DelGrosso, an idea he pitched to show executives because he wanted to know what it would feel like to train and to dance on live TV. Bergeron says it turned out to be significant, not because it taught him to dance, but because it taught him how to be a better host. “From that point on, I started jettisoning the scripted material and reacting in the moment,” he says. “Doing that dance helped me to become more honest and genuine.”

Other standout moments from Bergeron’s tenure on Dancing include Marie Osmond’s fainting on the ballroom floor after a 2007 performance while waiting for her scores. This was proof that anything can happen on live TV, Bergeron says.  “At first, I thought she was kidding, but once I realized she wasn’t, I did what anyone would do when faced with an emergency—I threw to a commercial.”

Another is what Bergeron calls “Boo-Gate.” In disapproval of scores given by the judges to her friend and contestant Jennifer Grey—who went on to win the mirror ball trophy—actress Jamie Lee Curtis incited booing from the studio audience. Viewers mistakenly thought the audience was booing former presidential candidate Sarah Palin, who sat in the audience in support of daughter Bristol, another contestant.

Bergeron also acknowledges moments that were lighter on drama but heavy on cheese. He cites an episode in which eliminated contestant and reality star Kate Gosselin returned to reprise her dance to Lady Gaga’s song Paparazzi, and, more specifically, Gosselin stepping off a mechanized lift, enveloped by machine-made fog. “I’m sure the look on my face let the audience in on what I was thinking,” he says.

“It’s a big variety show,” Bergeron says. “I love the fact that we not only acknowledge the cheesier aspects, we embrace them. Almost everything can be made fun of, with the exception of the integrity of the effort put forth by the stars.”

Though the years on Dancing, Bergeron has befriended many of the celebrity contestants and professional dancers. Of them all, though, Bergeron confesses to having a soft spot in his heart for dancer and fan favorite Cheryl Burke, to whom he feels “like a surrogate father.” Bergeron even wrote the foreward for Burke’s book, which was published last February.

Bergeron hosting America's Funniest Home Videos

To cope with his frenetic schedule, Bergeron, a self-described liberal, relies on Starbucks and meditation, but he says that he has learned to say “no,” and that he’s “very content” with Dancing and AFV. He calls the latter the “annuity,” because “it just seems to go on and on.” It’s also why he took himself out of the running as a possible replacement for Regis Philbin on Live! With Regis & Kelly after Philbin’s planned departure in November. With Dancing and AFV filming in California and Live! taping in New York, Bergeron says that beyond being too heavy of a workload, logistically it just wouldn’t work. (It may be a moot point if Bergeron’s prediction—that Philbin reconsiders and stays with the show—comes true.)

While he doesn’t get back East as often as he’d like, Bergeron did in June make the trip to Haverhill, where his parents and sister still live. On that visit, Bergeron took his family to Skip’s Snack Bar in Merrimac, a favorite since childhood. If he were in the area for a longer stay, Bergeron says, he would go to the Seacoast area of New Hampshire, or “perhaps just hang out in Newburyport,” home to The Grog, where Bergeron claims to have “lost many brain cells.” It’s an unlikely truth, considering his sharp wit.

Though Bergeron’s life is now in L.A., his loyalty is to Boston. And while he’s admittedly a fair-weather sports fan, Bergeron is always pleased when the Sox sweep the Yankees, and he celebrated the Bruins’ Stanley Cup win earlier this year. “During that last playoff game, I claimed Patrice Bergeron as a cousin,” he says. It’s a safe bet that the Bruins star would welcome the TV host into his family, as millions of us have done throughout his prolific career.

Appleton Farms Produces Sustainability

Under the guidance of The Trustees of Reservations, Appleton Farms—one of the oldest continually run farms in the U.S.—overhauls its operations to achieve new levels of sustainability and, ultimately, a LEED Platinum certification. By, Andrea Fox

In 1998, appleton farms, the oldest continually run farm in the U.S., was bequeathed to The Trustees of Reservations. Today, Col.Francis R. Appleton, Jr. and his wife, Joan, would be happy to see their restored original porch furniture arranged so that one can overlook the farm and its 17th-century roots.

What might please the couple more than period details and displays of family heirlooms, however, is that Appleton Farms is today’s model for New England commercial-scale farming, as well as a marvel of land preservation. The Appletons’ incredible gift was for the purpose of restoring farming and preserving land as open space—The Trustees management has made this vision a reality.

“They are bringing back a working farm,” says Susanna Colloredo-Mansfield, a cousin of Joan Appleton. “She always wished it could be a place for families, like it was for me.” As a child, Colloredo-Mansfield would often go with her mother on calls to see Aunt Fanny Appleton, and then she visited with her adult cousins, Frank and Joan, “which was like heaven to me,” she says.

The Trustees’ organization-wide, carbon-neutrality goal, along with development efforts, has lead to Appleton Farms’ centuries-old operations, such as the dairy, to undergo a complete sustainability lift. The strategy has put the largest farm in the Greater Boston region on track to eliminate emissions—earning Appleton the gilded title Net Zero—in August 2011. The crowning achievement of this incredible undertaking came in August when the Green Business Council awarded the Old House rebuild LEED Platinum certification.

Agriculture is one of the most resource-consumptive industries and largest emitters of greenhouse gases, and scant farms can make Net Zero claims about their carbon footprints. The Old House, now The Trustees’ offices and Appleton Farms Center for Agriculture and the Environment, is also the first renovated building on the East Coast to boast the green building movement’s platinum achievement.

Underneath all of the old farm charm is a set of systems befitting the center of what Trustees Statewide Agriculture Director and former long-time Appleton Farms Manager Wayne Castonguay calls a “real working farm.” “We define real as economically viable…It needs to support itself, and we’re doing that,” Castonguay says.

Solar-thermal and photovoltaic arrays produce renewable energy, the former heating water and the latter creating energy that runs the agricultural operations and even feeds the grid on the brightest days. Within the Old House, drastic energy cuts have been made, most without historic consequence, through a “deep energy retrofit.” Many original windows have undergone an energy rehab—making them 85 percent as efficient as new windows. Innovative strategies abound, like the addition of a solar tube running from the roof through the attic to cast sunlight on the office copy room and its hearth pine floor. Befitting a North Shore jewel, The Trustees restored Old House’s nostalgic bits, such as a newly uncovered section of the original 1794 wood clapboard exterior, with care for art and educational display.

From State-of-the-Art to All-Access

Moving with a tempo of historic richness in harmony with our green-inspired times, Appleton Farms runs on biodiesel-fueled equipment. There is an electric ATV to get around from one operation to another, and a firewood burner powers the commercial farm-to-table demonstration kitchen that opened in June without smoke or particulates. One of the best energy retrofits, according to Castonguay, is a $1,200 heat exchanger system that captures natural waste heat from cow milking and reuses it later. “It’s a double payback,” he says, noting that all of the energy retrofits and upgrades have been cost-competitive—an essential attribute of successful farming. “We have 22 buildings to power,” he noted.

At 1,000 acres, Appleton is the largest farm in the Boston area. Its beautiful walking trails and suite of public programs make it a popular destination for locals and travelers taken by Essex County. The grass rides are legendary as well; Oliver Wolcott of Hamilton, whose mother was an Appleton, is a regular visitor and wants to make sure everyone knows about the rides. “The fields are in great shape; it’s a very attractive place to visit,” he says.

Wolcott’s son maintains the fields and the equipment, so he has watched the transformation of Appleton Farms under The Trustees. He is impressed by Castonguay’s work and says, “Wayne knows everything, from the family genealogy to physics.

“The Trustees have made it accessible to the public,” Wolcott continues, insisting that the organization has not changed anything. “There have been cattle there from the beginning.” He summarizes his thoughts on Appleton Farms: “The property hasn’t been transformed, and that’s what’s nice about it.”

On a Sustainable Path

Perhaps this soul stems from the farm’s 1636 roots. Thanks to The Trustees strategic plan for the property, it will also continue onward through time as an everlasting monument to North Shore land and our rural heritage. “It has a real soul, that farm—a peacefulness about the land you feel when you are there,” said Colloredo-Mansfield. At Appleton Farms, cows still graze the land, organic remains the everyday way to do business, and connecting people to land and animals is the everlasting mission.

The Appletons entrusted the farm after Joan’s passing, which was at a time when most farmers in the region were selling. Instead, they foresaw a better vision: returning the largest farm in the Greater Boston region to greatness, says Colloredo-Mansfield. “[Cousin Joan] had everything—monkeys, rabbits, sheep, and dogs…it was unbelievable as a child,” she says.

Today, Appleton Farms’ dairy houses 40 cows, which produce 50,000 gallons of milk per year, the same number processed annually for its grass-fed beef service. The farm grows a vegetable bounty for community-supported agriculture (CSA) and for the new farm-to-table program.

To ensure agriculture remains part of the North Shore’s future, Appleton Farms’ dairy operations are solar-powered, and the cattle enjoy life free from hormones and with a range of fields to explore. The Massachusetts Department of Agricultural Resources is even pilot testing a plant- and soil-based milk house wastewater treatment system to address Title V regulations.

The farm produces for the second largest organic CSA in New England, with upwards of 600 shares. Farm-to-table workshops at Appleton Farms’ kitchens—there is a commercial kitchen inside and a second, open-air kitchen out the back door of the dining room—bring people closer to food and closer to farming, all under a plan that brings farming back to nature. The Center’s library, with its lifetime subscription to Ebscohost, a customizable research tool that accesses more than 300 databases, connects Appleton Farms to the world.

Annual sled dog races and farm animal discovery programs for children connect people to animals and their original place in land preservation. “They were here first,” says Colloredo-Mansfield, who credits her cousins Frank and Joan and their legacy of preserving agriculture and open lands as an influence since childhood. Mansfield’s own Hamilton property features a conservation restriction through Essex County Greenbelt.

Ensuring A Legacy

“We raised a lot of money to get the farm back on its feet…the donors are wonderful—it’s almost there,” Colloredo-Mansfield says. More than $1.25 million and a $500,000 endowment have been committed. Support has continued. A “Farmhouse Formal” in mid June raised the remaining funds needed for the project. The event, a formal “green tie” affair, included dancing and an auction. Thanks to an individual anonymous supporter enthusiastic about the Old House Project’s potential for LEED Platinum status, an additional $100,000 donation is funding additional photovoltaic (solar) arrays—scheduled to be constructed in Fall 2011—which will offset operations, including the new Dairy Processing Facility to be built this year, and earn the points needed for the prized designation.

Sustainability touches all aspects of Appleton Farms’ landscape, from renewable energy to the new cattle barn and hay loft built with 90 percent recycled materials. These efforts will not end with The Trustees’ current strategic plan, according to Castonguay. “A wind turbine will be down the road,” he says.

Many credit Castonguay’s leadership for Appleton Farms’ resurrection. While he demonstrates little need for excessive praise, with respect to the gift and vision of Frank and Joan Appleton, he may be the enterprising son they never had. You can hear such romantic notions and more on the air at an everlasting farm.

Author Anita Diamant Returns to Rockport

After achieving international renown for her work of historical fiction set in ancient Israel, the New York Times best-selling novel The Red Tent, Rockport resident and author Anita Diamant brings her latest set of characters back home to the North Shore. By, Tamsin Venn – Photographs by Dana Smith

In the novel that author Anita Diamant is currently writing, a group of young women in 1915 journey from Boston to Rockport by train to escape their office and department store jobs and the pressures of urban life. Over the course of a week or two in this North Shore town, they hike, sail, swim, and play tennis—activities the Jewish, Italian, and Irish immigrant girls have never experienced before.

Diamant, a Rockport resident and author of the New York Times bestseller The Red Tent, has set part of her new novel at Rockport Lodge, a 1750s farmhouse on Route 127 that’s now a private home. On a walk with Diamant from her home to the property, she explains that her newest characters spent their summer at the lodge, opened in 1906, as a kind of Fresh Air Fund-arrangement at the start of the whole settlement movement. Diamant was inspired by the place upon learning about its history as a guest house for women and girls of limited means.

Early 20th-century Boston was abuzz with the rise of novel concepts like department stores, movies, and women’s magazines. The era also saw the invention of the typewriter and the founding of Simmons College, says Diamant, who loves historical research. Boston’s North End, she says, was dense and unhealthy. For the heroines of her latest book, having their own beds and towels and going to the beach and sailing were “things that were completely alien to them, like going from Kansas to Oz,” she says. “I find that completely fascinating.”

The North Shore setting is not new for this richly imaginative writer; Diamant has set two previous novels on Cape Ann. The Last Days of Dogtown recreates the daily lives of castoffs—widows, orphans, spinsters, scoundrels, whores, free Africans, and “witches”—living in a lonely hamlet outside Gloucester in the early 1800s. Good Harbor tells the tale of a nurturing friendship between two women, one a cancer patient, as it develops during restorative beach walks. In Good Harbor, Diamant explores the modern woman’s balancing act of marriage and career, motherhood and friendship. “No matter what the setting, my characters always lead the action,” says Diamant.

But Diamant is best known for ancient settings found in The Red Tent, an imaginary telling of the biblical story of Dinah, daughter of Leah and Jacob. Dinah is barely mentioned in the Bible (her 12 brothers get a lot more attention), but Diamant weaves an entire drama around the girl, her mother, and her aunts. This memorable work of fiction gives voice to the silent women—their passions, traditions, and turmoil—in The Old Testament.

Published by St. Martin’s Press in 1997, the book sold modestly at first. It had no advertising budget and few reviews in major periodicals. “When it came out,  it came out to thunderous silence,” says Diamant. “It almost didn’t get published in paperback. You have this fantasy that your life is going to change forever when your novel comes out, but it doesn’t.” As independent book stores, reading groups, and trailblazing women’s rabbi associations adopted it, The Red Tent became a “word-of-mouth” success and is now published in 20 languages.

The Newburyport Choral Society invited Diamant to narrate Arthur Honegger’s choral masterpiece King David. The organization had asked her as a Bible scholar, though she vehemently contests her reputation as such. She explains that the story of Dinah was based strictly on her imagination.

“The Red Tent retells the story of Dinah, which is found in the Biblical book of Genesis, Chapter 34. This episode, usually known as the ‘Rape of Dinah,’ has been a difficult passage for Bible readers for centuries because of the murderous behavior of Jacob’s sons. In Genesis, Dinah does not say a single word; what happens to her is recounted and characterized as rape by her brothers. In my retelling of the story, Dinah finds her voice. The Red Tent is told entirely from her perspective and the point of view of the women around her,” writes Diamant on her website.

Diamant once received an email from one man who said he was praying for her because of the liberties she took with the Old Testament story. “It’s not a novelization of the text. It’s a riff. It takes off. I feel it’s an honor when people bring me in as a Bible scholar, but it’s something I can’t take credit for,” Diamant says.

So how did Diamant come to set her subsequent novels on Cape Ann as opposed to ancient Israel? She found inspiration in local lore. While walking around Gloucester finishing The Red Tent, she found a pamphlet on Dogtown in the Bookstore of Gloucester. That led her to a slim volume titled In the Heart of Cape Ann, or the Story of Dogtown. The author, Charles Mann, claimed he gleaned the information from “sweet-faced old ladies” and noble old men who sat gossiping around the fire. The illustrator, Catherine M. Follansbee, had a field day sketching broom-riding witches.

“The thumbnail sketches of the people were so fabulous,” says Diamant. Everything that had ever been written about Dogtown was in that pamphlet. There’s no real history, only gossip and hearsay, and Diamant thought it was fine for writing a novel. “I didn’t feel like I was hurting anyone’s memory,” she says. She was also interested in the compelling history of early Africans in New England, represented by two characters.

Diamant’s most recently published novel, Day After Night, a work of historical fiction, is set in 1945 Palestine in a British prison camp for Jewish immigrants who fled Nazi Germany. Diamant had visited the detention camp, Atlit, now a museum near Haifa, during her daughter’s Hebrew school’s semester in Israel. She was struck by the escape of 200 detainees, a story better known in Israel than in the U.S. in which Israeli leader Yitzhak Rabin played a role. She soon began research for the new novel and made several trips there.

The story follows four young women who live through very different war experiences. Diamant was drawn to the powerful concept of surviving such a crushing experience, as both of her parents are Holocaust survivors. Diamant feels the book demonstrates the importance Israel had as a place for millions of displaced Jews after World War II and still has today in the volatile Middle East. And while the book was difficult to write, the fact that these young women were eventually able to share their suffering with each other and create new beginnings for themselves helped make the process bearable, Diamant says. “I thought it was an amazing story and wanted to tell it from the rearview mirror,” she says.

Diamant moved to Boston in the 1970s after earning a degree in comparative literature from Washington University in St. Louis, and a master’s in literature from SUNY Binghamton. Before trying her hand at fiction, she published six non-fiction books about contemporary Jewish practice. She wrote columns for the Boston Phoenix and the Boston Globe Magazine and compiled them into the highly inspiring and entertaining Pitching My Tent: On Marriage, Motherhood, Friendship, and Other Leaps of Faith. Some of her gems include: “No matter how loving your mate, no matter how huggy-kissy your kid, doglessness spells tactile deprivation.” Also: “There must have been raspberries in the Garden of Eden, which convinces me that Adam and Eve were, developmentally at least, nothing but babies. Because given the choice between an apple and an unlimited supply of raspberries, only a small child would go for the Red Delicious.”

Today, Diamant is moving in other directions, which include writing song lyrics. Her new CD, “Requited,” is full of fabulous jazz riffs for which she wrote the lyrics with her friend Bert Seager. It is the most fun she’s ever had as a writer, she says.

Diamant’s writing space in her Rockport home is next to the dining room table, under a painting of Good Harbor Beach, a gift from her husband. The painting is poignant, as Diamant finds inspiration on Good Harbor Beach, as well as at Rocky Neck, Gloucester Harbor, and Rockport’s Headlands, where she walks her dog. “It’s the place I go to in my head when I need to calm down,” she says.

Later, on a stroll with the author down a quiet lane from Rockport Lodge back to her house, it’s striking just how close to home Diamant found inspiration for her new work of historical fiction—more specifically, how far it is from the ancient biblical setting that propelled her into international fame. For this famous author, regardless how wide-reaching her works become and how well-known her name is, there’s no place like home.

Barbara Landis Chase

Making the grade with Phillips Academy Head of School Barbara Landis Chase. By, Lindsay Lambert

It’s back-to-school time again, but this academic year will be especially momentous for one local administrator in particular. After 18 years, the 2011-2012 school year will serve as Barbara Landis Chase’s last as Head of School at Andover’s prestigious Phillips Academy. Here, Chase talks to Northshore about her approaching retirement, the school’s elite alumni, and requisite (but harmless) student pranks.

How do you feel heading into your final year at the academy? My feelings are complicated—sadness at leaving a place where I have found such fulfilling and important work, and where my husband and I have lived happily for so many years, but also a sense of exhilaration as I contemplate the next chapter.

Phillips Academy boasts some powerful and influential alumni. What makes the school’s alumni so successful? Andover is a place that honors the life of the mind; it stretches students with the rigor of its academic program and the breadth of extracurricular activities. The school does its best to articulate and live its values, especially the motto Non Sibi (not for self) on the Academy’s seal and the directive from our 1778 Constitution to combine goodness with knowledge.

Have you ever been on the receiving end of students’ pranks? Most pranks are gentle and amusing, thank goodness. I do know they call me “Babs” when I am out of earshot. It is not a name I love or have ever been called, except by a few close friends who were teasing me, so I choose to think the nickname is in that spirit.

Were there any pranks that had to be punished that you actually found amusing? A few of our students once released blue mice (blue is the Andover color) in the library of a rival school. Not a good thing, for the mice or the other school’s library, but it was clever in concept. There was a penalty for that, not a terribly harsh one, but a penalty nonetheless.

What has been the highlight of the now 17 years you’ve spent as Head of School at Phillips Academy? I can’t possibly pick one; there are too many—fascinating classes, great performances and games, celebrations and conversations, periods of mourning when the whole school pulled together, getting to know amazing alumni. What ties all the high points together is the people—the students, faculty, staff, alumni, parents. They’re just the best.

Spotlight: Gail Boucher

Gail Boucher co-owner/artist at Atlantis Charter Art Cruises. By, Felicity Long

What she does: Boucher, or “Captain Gail,” as she’s known, leads art cruises on the Merrimack River aboard the Atlantis, a 37-foot motorboat.

A typical outing: Classes are unstructured and can be customized. “Sometimes an artist will bring a group of students, or a group will come without a formal teacher. We also get a lot of photographers.”

Best views: Artists especially love the views of Plum Island, the Old Coast Guard Station, and the lighthouse. “The boat’s tower offers wonderful views for photography, although passengers have to be physically able to climb it.”

Best part of the job: “I love talking to artists, but I’m also a fisherman, so the passengers are a nice mix. We have been doing this for 16 years, and we have a lot of repeaters. We don’t have to advertise very hard.”

The season: Cruises typically run from mid-May to mid-October. Because routes are affected by the weather, tide, and wind, a typical cruise involves anchoring off multiple scenic spots for quick studies. Trips are usually three to four hours, but longer excursions are available.

The crew: Boucher, her husband Norm, and their beagle, Winslow, named for the artist Winslow Homer, accompany passengers on every cruise.

atlantis-charter.com; glbfineart.com.

The Mushroom Men

Newburyport’s Shady Oaks Organics brings gourmet spores to the best eateries in Boston and beyond. By, Felicity Long

Before hitting it big, some famous outfits got their start working out of their garages—think Bill Gates or punk rockers The Ramones. But in the case of Shady Oaks Organics, their former garage location made perfect sense. The company, owned by Devin Stehlin, Nate Seyler, and Leif Johnson, is a purveyor of mushrooms for some of the top chefs in Boston and on the North Shore, and—as the three young entrepreneurs found out—mushrooms don’t need fancy showrooms to thrive. That said, Shady Oaks Organics has become so successful since it opened a year ago that its owners are opening a new facility with a 700-square-foot indoor greenhouse in Newburyport to accommodate the growing demand for their products.

The idea initially took root with Stehlin, who became fascinated with mushrooms and local foods while working in a Newburyport restaurant during his high school and college summers. After graduation, Stehlin, an avid hiker, pursued his hobby of foraging for wild mushrooms, eventually taking samples to local restaurants.

“Chefs were eager to buy them, but you can only find wild mushrooms at certain times of the year,” Stehlin says. “I started experimenting with cultivating them, and that’s when Nate came into the picture.”

Seyler had just graduated with a degree in business management when his friend showed him his first crop of cultivated mushrooms. “We decided to take them to restaurants in Newburyport, and everyone who saw them gave us an incredibly strong response,” Seyler says.

The chefs at those restaurants wanted all the mushrooms that the fledgling company could grow, so the duo rented and renovated a garage and started producing 30 to 35 pounds of mushrooms a week. They then turned their attention to learning about operations, marketing, and funding.

College friend Leif Johnson invested in the company and joined the partnership, which currently supplies mushrooms to Barbara Lynch’s Menton in Boston, Ristorante Molise in Wakefield and Amesbury, and Ceia in Newburyport.

Although the facility does not include a retail space, the mushrooms are available at a variety of local farmers’ markets.

The partners are especially proud of the sustainability of their products, which comprise multiple varieties of oyster and shiitake mushrooms. “Mushrooms can grow on used coffee grounds and sawdust, so we set up small partnerships with local coffee shops and the lumberyard across the street to do weekly pickups and integrate them into our growing,” Johnson says.

Though the mushroom-growing trio is excited about the popularity of its wares with high-end restaurants, Johnson says that the best recipes are pretty simple: “Personally, the best way to enjoy them for the first time is simply sautéed in a tablespoon of butter with a pinch or two of salt and pepper,” he says.

18 Henry Graf Road, unit 26, Newburyport, 703-608-6739, shadyoaksorganics.com.

Sole Amour

Amy Finegold loves great shoes as much as the next fashionista, but she thought she’d only ever be on the purchasing end of footwear. As fate would have it, Finegold is now the owner of  Sole Amour, a new “shoetique” for women in Andover. By, Felicity Long

“I knew practically at birth that I wanted to be in fashion, and I knew I wanted to learn the business from small boutique owners,” she says. In 2004, Finegold opened Dresscode, a high-end clothing boutique in Andover where “everyone who was buying clothing wanted shoes.” Unable to find great styles at local shops, she started to carry a small selection of shoes. Her clients loved the shoes, but budget and space constraints prevented Finegold from making a big investment in footwear.

“The only way I could open another store would be if I had a partner with the same degree of passion,” she says.

Enter co-owner Stephanie Sipley.  Sipley went straight from college to retail in Boston, then to the corporate level at J. Crew and Oilily, a Dutch clothing company.

“I always wanted to open my own store,” she says, “but if you asked me five or six years ago, I wouldn’t have said ‘shoe store.’ But when you come to a town, you see what the need is.”

Sipley handles most of the daily operations of Sole Amour, which offers a style they describe as “affordable luxury.”

“We have a wide range of prices, from more expensive shoes to sandals for under $100 and flats starting at $55,” Sipley says, admitting that they battle the public perception that boutiques only sell pricier products.

“Steph and I have tried hard to scour New York vendors to find shoes that are well priced but look luxurious,” says Finegold. “For some customers, price is not an issue, but others might see a great shoe, not buy it, then come back for it for a special occasion.”

The women also have an eye on the younger market, who they call “aspirational customers.” Teens who come in for the prom or graduation, for example, might not be able to afford Sole Amour shoes for every day, but they might in the future. The new store also carries women’s handbags and a selection of jewelry.  The grand opening was March 10, and Sole Amour is already getting clients from towns around the North Shore and from as far away as California and Hong Kong.

“This is our first season—we are learning from our customers,” Sipley says. “Our buying is a combination of what we like and what they tell us they need and want.” 10 Post Office Ave., Andover, 978-409-1541, soleamour.com.

Gloucester Lobstermen Mark and Matt Ring

For Gloucester lobstermen Mark and Matt Ring, long stretches at sea mean days’ worth of grueling work, at times with little result. But with generations of fishing in their blood and the lure of the catch in their conscience, this uncle-nephew team continues to take to the high seas in one of Gloucester’s longest-lived and most celebrated traditions. By Alexandra PecciBy, Alexandra Pecci – Photo Essay by, Jared Charney

“That’s Kettle Island,” Mark Ring says, pointing to a little green dot on the black radar screen. The island is feet away from Mark’s lobster boat, the Stanley Thomas, but appears ghostly through the early morning fog that envelops Gloucester Harbor. “What do we call this kind of fog?” Mark calls out to his nephew, Matt. “Dungeon-thick,” Matt replies, with a small smile and a voice that’s quieter than that of his boisterous uncle. The water is calm, but the fog is heavy, disorienting. “It’s a nuisance,” Mark says. “There’s only one thing worse: catching nothing.” Fishing is an iconic profession, especially in Gloucester. There’s something romantic and Odyssean about it, something that captures people’s imaginations. But for lobstermen Mark and Matt Ring, it’s just another day at the office. Northshore tagged along with the Rings to capture life—in pictures—aboard the Stanley Thomas.

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North Shore’s Favorite Teddie

Everett-based Teddie Peanut Butter focuses on quality to beat the big players in the nut industry. By, Jeanne O’Brien Coffey

Mark Hintlian, president of The Leavitt Corp., eats a peanut butter sandwich at his desk just about every day. Straight up—no jelly. It’s just one trademark of this modest man, who is proud to inhabit the office once occupied by his father, a space that is little changed since the elder Hintlian moved the company from Boston to Everett in 1960. Right down to the wood paneling that is evident in a photograph Hintlian proudly displays of the office when it belonged to his father, you wouldn’t guess these unassuming surroundings were home of the makers of Teddie Peanut Butter and River Queen mixed nuts—one of the 10 largest processors of nuts and peanut butter in the United States.

You might say Hintlian, who personally consumes a 16-ounce jar of Teddie Super Chunky every week, has peanut butter in his blood. His grandfather, Michael Hintlian, founded Leavitt Corp. in 1924. An Armenian immigrant, Michael started out working in his cousin’s candy business. Candy led to nuts, which led to peanut butter. It was a good business during the Great Depression, and it is a great business during the current economic downturn as well, Hintlian notes. “It is an inexpensive source of healthy, high-quality protein,” he says. While Hintlian doesn’t reveal sales figures, he says growth for the Teddie All-Natural brand is off the chart. It outsells Smucker’s Natural, the company’s biggest competitor, in the Northeast by a factor of five to one.

Hintlian credits his father, James Hintlian, with the company’s absolute dedication to modern manufacturing practices and strict quality controls. James, who graduated from Cornell with a degree in engineering, moved the business a bit to the north of Boston, settling in Everett in a brand-new factory in 1960. “In the post-[World War II] economy, he expected customers would demand quality,” Hintlian recalls, explaining the strict standards instituted by his dad.

James Hintlian’s focus on quality assurance and testing set the standard for Teddie and is perhaps a reason that the company has never experienced a recall. “He really set the tone,” Hintlian says of his father. “He was a visionary.” James still comes into the office one day a week, and he serves as chairman of the board. “He’s had his share of sleepless nights,” Hintlian says.

To ensure the highest food safety standards, the company participates in the Safe Quality Food (SQF) certification program. Recognized by the Global Food Safety Initiative, SQF is a comprehensive audit of processes from start to finish, ensuring the highest level of attention to safety and quality in food production. Leavitt consistently achieves the organization’s highest rating, and it’s not easy, notes Frederic Ricci, vice president of manufacturing compliance and HR. He gestures to a bookshelf full of binders tracking every step of their quality control process. “You have to live it and breathe it every hour,” he says.  “You can’t just get ready a week before the audit begins.”

Because of Leavitt’s high food safety and quality ratings, some much larger manufacturers have flown in teams of executives to tour the Everett plant to pick up pointers. Ricci won’t name names, but he is clearly proud of that fact. “Little old Teddie is very progressive,” he says. “New food safety laws [that are being implemented in other companies] are what we already have in place.” The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is also impressed with Teddie. After the salmonella scare a few years back, the FDA sent five agents to scour the plant for seven days—taking swabs of every surface and peeking in every corner—and couldn’t find a single problem, Ricci recalls.

Ricci has been with the company for 35 years, but he’s no anomaly. Of the company’s 60 employees, more than half have been with the organization for 20-plus years. Ricci started out in the warehouse when he was in high school, putting peanut butter on pallets. “I’m lucky I enjoy coming to work,” he says. “A positive environment produces positive results.”

It’s clearly a positive environment at Teddie. As Hintlian walks the manufacturing floor, he greets every employee by name, and all of them are smiling as they oversee a process that starts with massive 2,200-pound bags of raw peanuts and ends with 4 million jars of Teddie Natural alone every year. Every jar consists of 850 peanuts, give or take a few.

One of seven children, Hintlian is the only one of his siblings involved in the business, and he knew from about age 11 that it was where he wanted to be. He started out loading and unloading trucks in the warehouse as a teenager. “There was no spring break for me,” he says, adding that his father told him to do well in math and English and to get a degree in business administration, which he did. After a stint at a leading food brokerage company, where he  learned sales and marketing, he joined Teddie as a sales manager.

“My father told me, ‘People are counting on you to make the plant busy.’” Hintlian took that charge very seriously, and he is proud of the fact that Teddie is now the leading brand of natural peanut butter in the Northeast—without a dime spent on marketing.

In fact, the last time Teddie spent money on marketing was more than 30 years ago, when they were an official sponsor of “Boomtown,” a children’s TV show starring Rex Trailer that was produced in Boston from 1956 through 1974. These days, the company relies on word-of-mouth promotion. In fact, they were even late to the game on the Internet. It was only earlier this year that the company started beefing up its online presence and launched online ordering. That service has grown quite popular, and Teddie has already been shipped to places as far afield as Hawaii and Turkey.

Troops in Iraq and Afghanistan also enjoy Teddie. Leavitt donates product to local groups that ship to soldiers stationed overseas. Leavitt’s community involvement also encompasses the Greater Boston Food Bank, through which the company donates product and cash to support the organization’s work in feeding the hungry in the local area.

Of course, support of the community extends to employees. The company ensures good benefits and a fair wage for employees, Hintlian says, adding that “Everyone deserves to make a good living.” Those deep roots in the local community come with great responsibility, Ricci adds. “We’re committed to this area,” he says. “We’re proud of that local personal touch.”

Teddie is also proud of its devotion to using only U.S.-grown peanuts, primarily from Georgia, while other brands may import nuts from China and other places for their peanut butter. “There is nothing like the quality of the domestic USA crops, so why not support our local farmers?” Hintlian says. “They represent the best quality in the world market.” To that end, every jar of Teddie sports a red-white-and-blue logo from the American Peanut Council.

Hintlian is so committed to his product that his wife won’t visit the peanut butter aisle in the grocery store with him. She hides in another section as he peeks into people’s shopping carts and points out the pitfalls of other “natural” brands, including Skippy Natural, which, Hintlian explains, has so many ingredients it can’t be called peanut butter at all, but must instead be called peanut butter spread. While Teddie does produce a homogenized product, the real growth is in its natural peanut butter—the kind that needs to be stirred. The market for peanut butter in general is flat, but natural brands are seeing growth of 10 percent a year.

There’s no secret recipe to what goes inside every jar of Teddie Natural. It’s Hintlian’s grandfather’s original old-fashioned recipe—just peanuts and salt (there’s also an unsalted variety). The quality controls at each step of the way are what contribute to a taste that garners peanut butter devotees across the country and a high-quality product that was named best smooth peanut butter by Men’s Health magazine.

For starters, the company insists on only the best grades of nuts. “Distributors know we’re tough,” Hintlian says, adding that they will not bring anything less than top-quality nuts to the factory. “There are no compromises. It’s my family business.” Very little inventory is kept in the warehouse. Nuts are roasted and processed on the same day, mere steps apart, and the finished product is often on supermarket shelves in a matter of days. That yields a much fresher and safer product than some other brands, where the nuts may be roasted one day, then trucked to a different facility for processing. As Ricci notes, all that extra handling can lead to contamination of the product, because the roasting is the only step in making peanut butter that will kill salmonella.

Teddie Natural is also unusual in that it is one of the few peanut butters still sold in glass jars. Hintlian says the glass packaging appeals to the health-conscious consumer that is the company’s target audience, but more importantly, natural peanut butter is packaged at a pretty high temperature. “We have some concerns about the fill temperature and its effect on plastic,” Hintlian says.

Currently, Teddie distribution is concentrated in the Northeast, with New England, New York, and Pennsylvania making up the bulk of sales, but the brand is expanding into New Jersey and looking at other markets as well. While Hintlian says it would be nice to be a national brand one day, he’s in no hurry to get there. “It’s like taking steps up the stairs. Steps will allow us to maintain our commitment to quality. If we start running too fast and too hard, we could slip.”

THE PORTFOLIO

Chairman of the Board: James Hintlian. President: Mark Hintlian. Headquarters: Everett. Number of Employees: 60. Year Founded: 1924. Products: Teddie Old Fashioned Peanut Butter, available in smooth, super chunky, unsalted, unsalted super chunky, and with flax seed; Teddie All Natural Organic Peanut Butter, available in smooth and crunchy; Teddie Homogenized Peanut Butter; River Queen cashews, cashew halves, peanuts, pistachios, almonds, and mixed-nut items, available in salted, lightly salted, unsalted, and honey roast. Contact: 100 Santilli Highway, Everett; 617-389-2600; teddie.com.

Catching Up With Kerry Healey

After facing defeat in 2006 in a battle for Beacon Hill, Beverly resident and former Lt. Governer Kerry Healey opts for a fast-paced career as a television personality, global political activist, and human rights champion. By Andrea Fox

Kerry Healey

Kerry Healey may have exited public office four years ago after an unsuccessful race against Democratic opponent Governor Deval Patrick, but she’s hardly left the game. Northshore caught up with Healey in her hometown of Beverly to discuss her work as part of the Mitt Romney Presidential exploratory committee; “Shining City,” a local television show she created and co-hosts; and a life in the global politics fast lane.

Catching up with Kerry Healey wasn’t an easy task, what with her trips to Afghanistan, the Middle East, and a family vacation to Florida; balancing a new television deal as co-host and co-creator; her responsibilities as a mother of two high school-aged children; a working role in a high-profile public partnership; women’s advocacy and philanthropy projects; and a role in a potential Mitt Romney Presidential campaign.

Healey is supporting the “Romney: Believe in America” campaign as part of his foreign policy team. Her purpose is “to formulate a more coherent strategy abroad…and help Mitt run the best campaign he can,” Healey says, adding that she wants people to “discover who Mitt is, this time around,” that he is someone different than the dashing businessman we met when he first ran and became governor in 2002. Healey has worked with Romney in various capacities over the last nine years, which has only increased her respect for him, she says. “I don’t even recognize some of the caricatures I see of him in the press. My guess is that this time around, the American people will get to see more of the relaxed, self-deprecating, sincere, and deeply principled person I know and less of the plastic caricature they see in spliced clips on ‘The Daily Show,’” Healey says.

Speaking of television, Healey has carved a new career for herself. Following a 2007 fellowship at Harvard University Kennedy School of Government Institute of Politics and The Center for Public Leadership, where she led discussion groups and classes on “Beyond the Rhetoric of Reform: Creating Real Change,” which drew from examples of health care, Melanie’s Law, domestic law, and homelessness policy under the Romney-Healey Administration, she developed a television show not about politics, but science and society. The program, called “Shining City” gives voice to local innovators.

The idea for the show came from Healey’s life as Lt. Governor—a role with “a lot of ribbon cuttings and awards,” she says. Healey was impressed by the number of entrepreneurs “solving the greatest challenges” of humanity, “whether we are ready for them or not.”

On “Shining City,” which originally appeared on NESN in 2010 and in June moves to WGBH for its second season, Healey and co-host Tracy Palandjian offer Barbara Walters-style interviews that introduce the creative processes and minds behind New England’s technology leaders. From robotic insects that could be used as spies by the U.S. Department of Defense or to pollinate crops in the event of a widespread honey bee colony collapse to the most enhanced technologies and incredible tools for social advancement, the show’s first season allowed viewers to go one-on-one with leaders of private business, the non-profit sector, and academic research.

The show’s name was derived in part from a speech delivered by Governor John Winthrop as he and his Puritan pilgrims arrived at the Arbella to build a city, which he said would be judged by future generations. Later, in his own address referring to Winthrop’s speech, Ronald Regan coined the actual term, calling it the “Shining City,” Healey says.

“I want to encourage people to think about these enormously provocative technologies,” and about the ethics of the world we are creating, says Healey. Some of the segments were indeed provocative, such as that of transcranial magnetic stimulation by Harvard Medical School neurologist Alvaro Pascual-Leone, who works with its application in cognitive neuroscience. Healey explains that the non-invasive technology can shut off parts of the human brain and can be used when surgery is not possible or as behavior modification, which possesses “society-altering possibilities.” In the future, such technology could be used by the judicial system, she notes.

Brain alteration as part of criminal sentencing elicits sharp reactions. “Republicans will be using it on Democrats,” one liberal quipped when presented with the idea. Healey describes the dance of science and politics as “intimate… it’s critical to the advancement of our economy.” Government funds science, she points out. Healey also says that creating public support for such research is essential in order “to make good choices about the future.” When asked if humans can create flawless political and judicial systems, she responds, “You create them. I don’t think you can execute them…but there’s nothing wrong with trying to reach them.”

While “Shining City” requires a considerable quantity of Healey’s time and attention, it’s certainly not the only project with which she’s currently involved. In addition to television, Healey is working to create an improved, if not perfect, foreign judicial system. Her work with the non-profit Public-Private Partnership for Justice Reform in Afghanistan (PPP), a program created by Condoleeza Rice in December 2007, intends to foster a judicial system similar to our own in this land still ruled by Shirea Law. In 2008, Healey joined the PPP as an executive committee member. She writes grants, oversees teams that considers applicants, and is involved in planning and executing training sessions that “advance the rule of Afghan law.”

This year, there were 100 Afghani applicants for 12 full boat scholarships for LLM degrees—master’s degrees in law, focused on human rights or commercial law—at prestigious American universities like Harvard, Stanford, Washington & Lee, and Boston University. The program’s Afghani lawyers, who are both male and female and heavily screened by top security, Healey says, are expected to return to their country upon graduation to implement what Healey describes as basic human rights, like Miranda rights, social justice, and women’s rights, and to address corruption.

When she accompanied Romney to Afghanistan, the UAE, Jordan, and Israel earlier this year as part of a fact-finding mission sponsored by the International Republican Institute, Healey coordinated PPP applicant interviews at the same time. She checked in with the team daily between meetings and dinners with President Hamid Karzai, General David Petraeus (commanding officer of U.S. armed forces), and Ambassador and former Lt. Gen. Karl Eikenberry, as well as members of the Afghani Parliament.

 

Although Healey’s work has brought her within the company of some high-profile personalities, the job isn’t always glamorous. In fact, on that visit to the Middle East, Healey stayed three days in accommodations called “hooches”—stainless-steel rooms with sandbags on top. “There is always a calculated risk whenever you enter these areas…you get in, you get out,” she says.

Passionate about her role with the PPP, the plan is to create a “predictable, transparent law system,” Healey says. After the fall of the Taliban, “they had no laws to endure,” she says. The PPP connects American law to Afghanistan “by providing greater contact with American law schools and students,” she continues. The goal is “to try and determine what we could best contribute to the fractured and complex legal system.”

While in Afghanistan, Healey joined Romney on talks with leaders in volatile, tribal Pashtun areas—areas in southeastern Afghanistan and northwestern Pakistan inhabited by Pashto-speaking people—and led a training session with female members of Parliament to discuss great social challenges America has faced. She told them about Rosa Parks and Ruby Bridges and how they worked “through non-violence to achieve so much,” she says. “They found these examples very moving,” says Healey. “It was very comforting for them to know our nation had similar problems,” wherein law and practice do not align.

Supporting women in public office is another priority for Healey, both here and overseas. As part of Political Parity, a group led by former ambassador to Austria Swanee Hunt and composed of influential women across political ideologies, Healey assisted with putting the concept and funding together for NameItChangeIt.org, a website and blog that addresses “media misogyny”—how women are portrayed in the media. In Afghanistan, Healey is helping to establish the American University of Afghanistan in Kabul because mixed-gender classes are problematic in a culture that more often than not separates the sexes. It’s an “impediment toward women’s investment,” she says. “It’s this odd little barrier…you need these single-gender environments.”

In the future, Healey might suspend her roles as international judicial progress facilitator, television host, and foreign policy advisor from her base in Beverly and run for office, but not until her two children, aged 16 and 18, complete high school, she says. Family has been the first priority in this woman’s world, and being there to drive her children to school at Milton Academy is very important, she says, noting that if she does opt to seek public office, she doesn’t intend to leave the North Shore. Healey, raised in Daytona, Florida, fell in love with the region and Beverly after studies at Harvard University. At 27, she worked for ABT Consulting in Cambridge and took work excursions to Joan Mullen’s Samuel Morse House in Pride’s Crossing. She and her husband were captivated by Garden City’s beauty, she says. Despite where her work, projects, and passions take her in the world, one thing is certain, says Healey. “I love Beverly and am not going anywhere.”

Faces Behind New England Cranberry

The husband-and-wife team behind New England Cranberry.

Often in life, work dictates where we go. Not so, however, for Allison Goldberg and her husband, Ted Stux, co-owners of Lynn-based New England Cranberry.

In 2003, Goldberg and Stux were living in Chicago, but with an eye toward moving to the North Shore, where Goldberg grew up, to raise a family. Contrary to conventional thinking, instead of searching for work that would warrant the major move, Goldberg and Stux set their move in motion, planning to then buy an existing local business. The couple happened upon the online sale listing for New England Cranberry, and the rest fell quickly into place. In a matter of days, Stux made the trip to Boston alone—his wife was nine months pregnant at the time—and bought the company and a historic house in Lynn’s Diamond District.

“It was like, ‘surprise!’” Goldberg laughs. “All of a sudden, we had had a baby, a house, and a business.”

The couple carefully plotted their next steps based on the company’s best-selling products: cranberry-pepper jelly and cranberry chutney. They’ve since expanded their line to 30 jarred products, from cranberry-mango-pepper jelly to cranberry maple syrup. “When we bought the company, it was jellies and jams,” Goldberg says. “We’re much more of a condiment company now,” with offerings like dried cranberries and cranberry-studded chocolates. Most recently, organic lemonade and iced tea-lemonade drinks joined the mix and, like the company’s other products, are available nationally, online, at Whole Foods, and at North Shore specialty shops like Shubies and Tender Crop Farms.

Goldberg and Stux hadn’t worked together before, but the division of labor came naturally. “Ted is the operations and numbers guy. He does a lot of the heavy lifting,” says Goldberg. She handles marketing and development, which means testing recipes on family and friends. “By some small miracle, it’s worked out very well.”

Most of their business is holiday-driven, but the couple, along with their two children, ages 4 and 7, will take a brief break from work to enjoy Thanksgiving with family in Swampscott. “With all the tumult and insanity of work, it’s a nice time to settle back and breathe a sigh of relief,” Goldberg says. “We take stock of everything and realize we’re very lucky.” —Margaret Loftu

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