Casting Call:

From Michael O’Leary-

Hi Sharon,

Good to see you the other night. Could you get Joey to post this on GMG?  I think there’d be some locals interested in this.  If Jimmy T can’t get on Survivor, maybe he can get on this!

Click on the web link for all the info–and note that Gloucester is the first town mentioned!
Thanks,

Michael

Casting Call: Doron Ofir Casting along with Reveille, LLC is casting for a new show featuring Massachusetts natives who come from blue-collar, hard-working and hard partying backgrounds. Participants should be attractive and be interested in spending a summer involved in this reality show. Interested applicants need to check out the official casting website at www.wickedsummahcasting.com and apply online by following the site’s directions for home video submission.

This week’s MUSIC SCENE!

Great music around town! Also Capt Carlo’s, Madfish, and others are open for the season. Check out Joanne’s blueslvr’s blog for up-to-date info!

Last night’s Firefighters Relief Association Fundraiser

A few photos from last night’s comedy/dance fundraiser at the Elks. It was a sell-out. More photos to come!

From Poet Laureate John Ronan

I am honored to have my photography included in this poetry collection.    —Sharon

From the Gloucester Daily Times

My View
John Ronan

April is Poetry Month, and a great time for poets to shine.

Luckily, we have good poets in Gloucester who are willing and able to share their work and dower the world, as Emily Dickinson suggested.

Emily, not always the humble maiden she is pictured to be, wrote of her poems: “I put my pleasure all abroad/ I dealt a word of Gold/ To every Creature that I met/ And Dowered all the world.”

I am happy to announce some words of gold, a new book, “Salt and Light: An Anthology of Gloucester Poetry,” that features Gloucester’s best, most authentic poetry — by Gloucester’s residents writing in and about Gloucester.

“Salt and Light” is a real community effort, bringing poetry out of the self-reverence of the coffee house and into the neighborhoods of the wider city.

The new book is beautiful, thanks to Sharon Lowe’s photography, and features among others Pat Lowery Collins, Rufus Collinson, Joeseph Featherstone, myself, Stephen Scotti, Nancy Seidman, Peter Todd and Frances Wosmek. It also presents Pam Mansfield, winner of the Quarterdeck Poetry Contest, and finalists Amber Gailitis, Neal Kleindienst, and Lydia Priest.

Perhaps more importantly, “Salt and Light” features student poetry. The student poems continue a long tradition of civic poetry in Gloucester.

For many years the Ingalls Prize Poems from the high school were published annually. (I am grateful to Susan Richardson for providing a copy from the 1950s — good stuff!).

The high school tradition continues in “The Elicitor” under James Cook’s editorship. Sawyer Library, too, has published poetry, short stories and fiction over the years. Uniquely Gloucester celebrated our 375th anniversary in 1998 and the library continues to publish poetry, in both print and on line.

The students in “Salt and Light” are: Kathy Cusumano, Kate Bresnahan, Andrew Bergeron, Heather Boudrow, Emma Chandler, Alexandra McKay, Samantha Turner, Kaitlin Nicolosi, Billy O’Donnell, Britany Diamondt, Erin McManus, Phoebe Weissblum, Kazira Slocum, Alexandra Lees, Lydia Anderson, Aidan Breen, Jordan Gentile, Meghaen Favazza and Lucina Fox.

The proof that “Salt and Light” is a real community effort lies in one amazing fact: It is free. Distribution, beginning with a presentation to the City Council on April 13 and a reception April 23 at the Rose Baker Senior Center, will be through Mayor Kirk’s office, Sawyer Free Library, and the senior center. If you are housebound, send $2 for postage and packaging to Box 5524, Gloucester, MA 01930.

The city is indebted to the public spirit of all the sponsors of “Salt and Light,” those who make it both possible and free. At the top of the list is the Gloucester Cultural Council, which gave two separate grants toward publication.

The Friends of the Council on Aging were generous in both publication and in planning the book’s launch.

All the other sponsors deserve our gratitude, too. Thank them.

They are: Coco Berkman, Deo Braga and the Azorean Restaurant, the Rev. Lyn Brakeman, Cape Ann Savings, Chisholm and Hunt Printers, Gregg Sousa and The Crow’s Nest, Family Therapy Associates, Fred Cowan, Dr. Richard Gardner, Sharon Lowe, Michael McNamara and Precision Painting, Rockport National Bank, Arthur Ryan, Steve Dexter and Carroll Steele Insurance.

Come to the party! An official reception and book signing, and a chance to meet the authors, will be held Friday, April 23, from 10 a.m. to noon in the Baker Center. “All the world” is invited.

John Ronan is poet laureate for the city of Gloucester.

POETRY CONTESTS

Don’t forget the Fishermen’s Wives contest for Gloucester residents! Send entries to Box 5524, Gloucester, MA 01930.

For students, the Poetry Without Paper contest is running. Go to Sawyer Free Library’s Web site for details.

— John Ronan

Fred Dodge brings Down East stories to Heritage Center on April 9

Courtesy photo

Fred Dodge

By Anonymous
Posted Apr 06, 2010 @ 05:43 PM
Gloucester —

Fred Dodge will tell Down East stories in the “Bert and I” tradition at the Gloucester Maritime Heritage Center on Friday, April 9, at 7 p.m. The always dry, often vaguely familiar tales range from rambling stories to one liners, many of them punctuated by distinctive low tech sound effects. Admission is $10, $8 for Heritage Center members.

Fred’s November appearance was a sell out so advance purchase of tickets is suggested. The storytelling presentation will take place in the Heritage Center’s Gorton’s Seafoods Gallery, surrounded by the kind of artifacts that fill many coastal New England attics – compasses, foghorns, shipbuilding tools, old codfish boxes and the like. Free homemade cookies and soft drinks are included in the ticket price.

Fred is the brother of the late Marshall Dodge, who together with Yale classmate Robert Bryan originated the “Bert and I” stories over 50 years ago. Specializing in a distinctive Maine dialect, the pair created the roles of two down east fishermen whose boat sunk after being sliced in two by a steamer. Fred honors his brother’s memory by keeping the stories alive. He uses humor to explore the true character of crusty Yankee New Englanders.

For further information or to purchase tickets in advance, call the Center at 978-281-0470.

Art Haven Bird Houses at the Home and Garden Show

Ashley Muise with her grandma Vickie Morgan painted birdhouses at the Art Haven table this weekend. Good to see you both!

More storytelling at Magnolia inn

From the Times

The second in the “Tell Inn” storytelling series takes place this Sunday from 4 to 6 p.m. at Inn Magnolia at 18 Norman Ave. in Gloucester. The event features storytellers Tony Toledo, Alicia Quintano, Andrea Lovett, Laura Lovett and Leigh Calabrese on her singing saw.

Guests are invited to come share a story of their own (under 5 minutes) and participate in the “Magic Hat” open mic storytelling event.

Toledo has been paying the rent with his mouth since 1990. He adds sign language to some stories since his wife is deaf.

Quintano has traveled to 38 states telling stories in theaters, universities, coffeehouses, and on the radio.

Andrea Lovett has been telling professionally since 1992. She is the co-founder of MassMouth and the ever-growing series of story slams in downtown Boston and Cambridge.

Laura Lovett has two novels in progress, has had works published in magazines and read on radio. She is a student at University of Massachusetts Amherst.

With her singing saw in tow, Calabrese has performed with artists What Time Is It Mr. Fox?, The Sob Sisters, Sukey Tawdry, Beat Circus, The Burlesque Revival Association, and (of course) as part of the soundtrack to countless haunted houses. And yes, her saw does cut wood.

Fordetails contact Amanda Nash, NoTeaParty@yahoo.com, 978-525-3642. Suggested donation: $4

RECYCLING DAY – Electronics, Appliances & Small Engine items

From Rick Doucette

RECYCLING DAY – Electronics, Appliances & Small Engine items

Saturday, March 27 from 10:00am -4:00pm
Gloucester High School – outside Cape Ann Chamber of Commerce Home & Garden Show

CLEAN OUT YOUR CLUTTER – MAKE A DONATION – HELP TO ERADICATE POLIO & SUPPORT ROTARY INTERNATIONAL CAUSES

The following items will be accepted:
Televisions (up to 35″), Computer Monitors, Word Processors, Car Stereos, Projectors, Microwave Ovens, Video Machines, Coffee Makers, Space Heaters, Typewriters, Toasters/Toaster Ovens, Generators, Scanners, Floppy Drives, CB Radios, Disk Drives & CD ROMs, Copiers & Printers, Portable Radios, Cables, Cameras, Stereo Equipment, VCRs, Palm Pilots, Record Players, Vacuums, UPS/Battery Back Up, Safes (12″ – 24″), Cassette Players, Camcorders, Modems, Satellite Dish Receivers, Surveillance Equipment, Surge Protectors, Video Games, Circuit Boards, 8-Tracks (Reel to Reel Tape), Fax Machines, Humidifiers, Keyboards, Laptops, Cassette Players, Can Openers, Cell Phones, Test Equipment, Telephones, Personal/Home Shredders, Electrical Panels, Speakers (set), Keyboards & Mice, Oscilloscopes,
Lawn Mowers, Weed Whackers, Refrigerators, Stoves, Washer/Dryers, Dishwashers, Chain Saws, Leaf Blowers, Generators, Air Conditioners, Robots (evil or otherwise)

Fluids must be drained from small engine items – Freon OK for appliances

SORRY, but we cannot accept: Propane Tanks, Tires, Waste Oil, Hazardous Waste and/or other non-electric items

WHAT DO I NEED TO DO?
Drop off your items, with the following donation amounts:

Desk/Garage Clutter: $ 5 all that you can fit in a milk crate
Garage Clutter: $ 5 per item that doesn’t fit in a milk
crate (vacuums, etc)
Larger Appliances: $ 15 Fridge, freezer, dishwasher,
washer/dryer, etc
TVs and monitors: $ 20 per item
The Whole Shebang $ 30 Carload/Truckload (appliances, TVs
& Monitors excluded