Daughtry to play Paramount

Guess who’s set to play a special acoustic performance at the Paramount Theater July 21. It’s Chris Daughtry, some guy who lost on some TV show that now sings in some band that’s sold a shitload of CDs.

Can you tell I’m a fan?

Daughtry is a big deal around here since he attended Fluvanna High School. Tickets go on sale this Friday.

The press release calls Daughtry "rock’s new standard bearer" and says that he has "almost single-handedly given the genre back its heart." So both those things must be true.

So there you go, Daughtry fans. Now I can go back to my Daughtry-free world and you can go back to doing whatever it is you do. Don’t get me wrong—our time here together was special.

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News

Budget efficiency studies all the rage

Last summer, the Albemarle County School Board contracted with the Commonwealth Educational Institute at Virginia Commonwealth University to conduct a “Resource Utilization Study” to make sure that the school division practices an efficient use of its resources.

“In hindsight, it was brilliant,” says at-large School Board member Brian Wheeler of that decision. Five months later, the Institute returned with its recommendations and county school Superintendent Pam Moran acted on them almost immediately.


"In hindsight, it was brilliant," says county School Board member Brian Wheeler of the decision to commission an efficiency study for county schools.

“It helped us so much in going through the budget process,” says Wheeler. Among the recommendations was a cut in the school’s central office expenditures for staffing that amounted to $400,000. (The School Board ended up with a $151 million budget for the 2008-2009 year, a 2.8 percent increase over the previous year.)

According to Wheeler, the immediate savings produced by the study will likely be overshadowed by its long-term benefits. For instance, the Institute recommended a more efficient routing of school buses and found that the school’s existing buildings have a capacity for up to 1,600 more students.

“A year from now, we will have a number that is lower than it is today,” he says of the budget.

The perceived success of the county schools with the study, which cost $100,000, has spurred the city schools to undertake a similar strategy. Earlier this month, they signed up with the Virginia Department of Planning and Budget for a top-to-bottom evaluation of how they use their resources, which will cost them less than it did the county. Charlottesville schools will likely only have to pay around $30,000. Under their arrangement, the state will pay three-fourths of the cost—as long as 50 percent of the state’s recommendations are implemented. The county schools had no such prescription with their study.

The trend is catching on at the larger locality level as well. On May 7, a beleaguered Board of Supervisors—in the face of lower than expected revenues and harsh citizen criticism—directed county staff to prepare a scope of work (due in early July) for a similar outside study of its $334 million budget.

“We’re always looking for ways to cut waste,” explains Supervisor Lindsay Dorrier. “Everything has to be conserved because these are tough times.” He likens the eventual study to “preventative maintenance for an automobile.” Four county departments are already undergoing an internal assessment under the Baldridge National Quality Program, another means of assessing efficiency.

With the rest of the area pursuing such studies, the city seems close behind. At its next meeting, City Council will decide whether to commission an efficiency study. “It’s good to see whether we are using resources fairly or not,” says Councilor Satyendra Huja. “Are we getting our money’s worth?”

C-VILLE welcomes news tips from readers. Send them to news@c-ville.com.

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News

Hurt fill-ings


Earlier this month, the county issued Dr. Charles Hurt’s company a stop work order because potentially environmentally damaging fill was being dumped at this site off Barracks Road. The debris, which contained metals that could rust and contaminate the soil, came from a UVA parking garage demolished to make room for the Emily Couric Cancer Center. “This is an ongoing issue and we’re continuing to work with Dr. Hurt,” says Lee Catlin, county spokesperson. Hurt has since instituted a screening process to sort the fill, according to Catlin.
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News

Correction from June 17 issue

Due to a reporting error, in “Changing the face of war” [“Bodies at work,” 2008 C-VILLE 20, June 17, 2008], it was stated that the United States Army Institute of Surgical Research is located in San Diego. It is, in fact, located in San Antonio.

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News

City of Angels

Gentlemen and ladies, open your programs: The 34-year tradition of summer theater at UVA is back after a hiatus last year due to construction of the Arts Grounds Parking Garage. One thing has changed: The somewhat stuffy name “Heritage Repertory Theatre” is now the more festive “Heritage Theatre Festival.” And another thing hasn’t: The audience still largely consists of senior citizens. The middle-agers and variations thereof, and the handful of college students, stand out like clichés in otherwise original sentences.

Which is a way to jump to City of Angels, the first musical offering of the Festival season. Larry Gelbart, of “M*A*S*H” fame, who wrote the book, asks theatergoers to indulge in the overdone trope of a film noir spoof, with all its attendant devices: sultry interior monologues in the form of voiceovers, characters changing their lines as a writer revises them on his typewriter, glaringly sexist witty banter, etc. 

His protagonist is Stine (Garen McRoberts), a young novelist in 1940s Hollywood writing a screenplay about a Sam Spade-like private detective (Rob Marnell) on the hunt for a missing heiress (Holly Williams). There are two parallel stories: the screenplay as it unfolds, and Stine’s many struggles with pea-brained movie mogul, Buddy Fidler (Geno Carr). The tension between illusion and reality mounts as the musical proceeds.

Sounds fun, doesn’t it? It is. Despite the more serviceable than electrifying music by Cy Coleman and lyrics by David Zippel, it all essentially works, thanks to Gelbart’s bad (i.e. good) ear for purposely bad one-liners, and the clever way he presents the competing stories, slicing, dicing and reassembling them. After a while, adding one more time to “I’ve seen this a thousand times” doesn’t seem like a big deal.

Heritage artistic director Robert Chapel has often been in the director’s chair for musicals over the years, and he’s in it again for City of Angels. His style, in tandem with whoever his choreographer is—in this case, Perry Medlin—is essentially not to take chances. Given his always rich resources—this time out, McRoberts, Marnell and company, some playing two or more characters, are fine singers and competent actors, and the lighting design by Ryan Bauer and scenic design by Shawn Paul Evans, featuring shafts of smoky light, swathes of shadow, seedy rooms, a sparkling mansion and more, is close to impeccable—Chapel is like a sports team with a big lead playing not to lose. The resulting blocking and pacing has a kind of chiseled stateliness. There’s a distinct pleasure in that, especially in Charlottesville, where musicals over the course of the academic year are often pretty ragged. Some, however, might find Chapel’s approach plodding, or even dull.

But “dull” is certainly not the word to go out with. It’s nice to have Heritage productions of musicals back, whether you’re looking to relax after a tough day or week at the office, or retired and itching for a fun night on the town—though the latter, apparently, don’t need anyone to tell them that.

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News

Hunt is on for longer Mall bricks [with video]

The city has long been planning to rebrick the Mall—a $7.5 million exercise it says is necessary to keep it attractive to shoppers who otherwise might be lured to new shopping centers like the ever-in-the-works Albemarle Place. Mostly, it involves getting rid of the mortar method of joining the bricks with a side-by-side sand method. MMM Design Group had cooked up an elaborate master plan with additional fountains, a children’s play area and a sister city plaza. But City Council wasn’t game for the changes (and their potential costs), saying keep it simple.

The bigger issue now is whether size matters where Mall bricks are concerned. Lawrence Halprin’s original 1970s design has 4"x12" bricks, but newer sections, such as those on Third Street and at the Pavilion, have 4"x8" bricks. City staff has argued for bricks with that 2:1 ratio rather than the original 3:1 ratio because of stability and availability, saying they would have to come from Nebraska. But after the Board of Architectural Review and City Council balked at the change in Halprin’s design, consultants and city staff are talking with Virginia brickmakers to see if making the 4"x12" bricks is possible and affordable.


Not just another brick on the Mall: The $7.5 million rebricking will involve sand technique instead of mortar, but whether the new bricks will be 4"x8" or 4"x12" is still up in the air.

Regardless, the city has decided to do the rebricking all in one four-month swoop, starting in January 2009. Tolbert told Council last week, “[Construction manager] Barton Marlow has told us that they are confident that we can start this on January 2 and finish it on the end of April. They built the JPJ ahead of schedule and under budget.” Businesses, Mall aficionados and taxpayers sure hope that will be the case this time as well.

Anyone interested in adding 2 cents to the discussion can attend a June 30 “Design Reveal” at 6:30pm at 100 Fifth St. NE.

C-VILLE’s Jessie Abrams gives a summary of possible Downtown Mall renovations.

C-VILLE welcomes news tips from readers. Send them to news@c-ville.com.

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Living

Pigging out for the people

As a departure from our usual round-up of current events, Restaurantarama is going to take this opportunity to rave about a restaurant event that occurred in the recent past. Last Tuesday, we had the opportunity to taste the signature dishes of close to 20 of our best local restaurants. The occasion was the second annual Taste This! fundraising event held at UVA’s Alumni Hall to benefit the Salvation Army Food Pantry program. The admission cost of $35 in advance ($40 at the door) gave Restaurantarama and fellow attendees the ticket to a food tasting frenzy, and you’d be wise to mark this event on your calendar for next year. From samosas from the Shebeen Pub and Braai to steak tartare from Cassis, there was a smorgasbord of small plates to be sampled, and all of the gorging was for a good cause.


Display of talent: Executive Chef Angelo Vangelopoulos represented The Ivy Inn in the Taste This! fundraising event held at UVA’s Alumni Hall to benefit the Salvation Army Food Pantry program.

Restaurantarama began the evening of eating debauchery with a shot-glass-sized tasting of flavorful avocado gazpacho soup from Wild Greens, then proceeded to little lobster pancakes drizzled with a reduction of Barboursville Vineyards’ Chardonnay combined with vanilla bean and butter direct from the hands of Chef Dean Maupin of the Clifton Inn. We then consumed several morsels of down-home Southern dishes from the likes of Maya and Zydeco before heading in for a heady slice of melt-in-your-mouth New York strip, personally carved by the Downtown Grille’s Chef Gary Glaser. Believing ourselves full at that point, we ventured over to the Gearhart’s Fine Chocolates table for a wee morsel to end the meal, but then couldn’t resist walking the two extra feet over to The Ivy Inn’s table for a tasting of cherry cobbler scooped onto our paper plate by The Ivy Inn’s own Executive Chef Angelo Vangelopoulos.

Then, feeling satiated but defeated by the inability of our tiny stomach to devour more dishes, we longingly scanned the room for all the tables we’d missed. Places such as Sticks, Brix, Fossett’s, Palladio, Blue Light Grill and the Bonefish Grill definitely called out to us, but it wasn’t until we spotted a welcome surprise—a table from OXO—that we knew we had it in us to power through at least one more savory snack. OXO’s owners, John Haywood and Alice Kim, had just recently announced the restaurant’s closing, so we enjoyed a last sampling of OXO’s creative, French-inspired fare—a deconstructed take on steak and eggs—as a sort of swan song to that establishment. Then, of course, we needed another Gearhart’s chocolate to top that off, and short story long, our digestive system is still recovering from the entire evening.

But it was worth all the Tums to taste such a diverse array of dishes in one place. Plus, we always knew the local restaurant industry was fairly fraternal and often incestuous (what with all the staff poaching and bartender hopping that is known to occur), but it was highly entertaining to see such networking in action. Whether it was observing the Fossett’s team cheekily offering up some of their crab cakes to Downtown Grille’s chef Glaser in exchange for a few slices of his New York strip, or overhearing Palladio Executive Chef Melissa Close chatting it up with one of the OXO crewmates about his future plans, we were witness to the incredibly small and close-knit world that is the Charlottesville restaurant scene. And that was a treat.

Kudos to event chairperson Victor Millner for pulling off such a successful celebration of local food, which, judging by the crowd, raised a boatload for the Salvation Army, and to all the restaurants and chefs who participated in the event. Next year, we are totally going on a liquid diet for a full 24 hours in advance to take better advantage of the spread. 

Quick bites

If you missed Taste This!, you can still take advantage of another good dining deal through the summer—l’etoile is running a special three-course menu for $36 on Wednesdays and Thursdays. We’ll probably be there every week just for the truffled potato pierogies.

Got some restaurant scoop? Send tips to restaurantarama@c-ville.com or call 817- 2749, Ext. 48.

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News

Your tax dollars, at work

Worked for the county for: 30 years

Resides in:
Albemarle County


Robert Crickenberger

Job title: Deputy director, Albemarle County Parks and Recreation. Assists the director and takes his role in his absence. Albemarle County Parks and Recreation is responsible for parks, playing fields, and other recreational areas throughout the county.

Best of times:
Seeing projects go from paper to reality.
Worst of times: Keeping up with county growth. “With the size of the programs that we currently have we don’t have enough—lack of field space. But, again, we make it do what it do.”

Strangest moment on the job:
“We currently have one project now that we’ve been working on for four years, and just at the point we think we’re ready for closure, then something else pops up.”

If he were a superhero, he’d be: Indiana Jones. “He’s a more adventurous type, just like me.”

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News

Connective tissue

In last week’s issue, we identified 19 locals who impress and intrigue with their body work (and their body of work), but there’s one profile missing.

That’s where you come in. We want to hear from you. Who’s working with or on the human form that you think we should know about? Who do you think rounds out this series of portraits?

Send your nominations, over the next couple of weeks, to editor@c-ville.com. Tell us the name of your local nominee and make the case for that person. Include his or her contact information. Don’t forget to include your name, phone number and e-mail address, too, so we can reach out to you to learn more, if we need to. Be sure your nominee is working with or on the human form. Then, check C-VILLE in the coming weeks for the final figure.

If you’ve got an idea, put your body in motion and send it our way. 

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Quote, unquote

Well, here we are, drifting into the inevitable, boring halftime show of this never-ending political season: The primaries are over (thank God), the second-half players are finally set, but it’s still way too early to get worked up about the outcome of the chaotic electoral scrimmage to come. But hey, we’re not complaining—it provides us political dipsomaniacs with a welcome breather, and allows us to take a moment and savor our favorite unguarded quips of campaigns past. And so, without further ado, we invite you to join us for a fond look back, while also testing your intimate knowledge of Virginia’s most loquacious (and entertaining) politicos and prognosticators. And remember: No cheating! (Unless you’re Eliot Spitzer or Kwame Kilpatrick, of course.)


Brand-aid: Tom Davis laments the shaggy Republican label.

1) After (barely) securing a victory in the Republican senatorial primary, former governor Jim Gilmore compared his Democratic opponent Mark Warner to what voracious beast?

    a) “A bloodthirsty black bear.”
    b) “A rabid woodchuck.”
    c) “A hungry piranha.”
    d) “A fat, waxy white tick.”

2) U.S. Representative Tom Davis, who had once hoped to run for retiring Senator John Warner’s seat his own self, groused to The Washington Post in March that “the House Republican brand is so bad right now that…”

    a) “we couldn’t sell beef jerky to the Donner Party.”
    b) “if it were a dog food, they’d take it off the shelf.”
    c) “Larry Craig is threatening to switch to the Green Party.”
    d) “we’re making New Coke look like a masterstroke.”

3) In his new book, A Time to Fight, Senator Jim Webb boldly claims to be “the only person in the history of Virginia elected to statewide office with…”

    a) “a Union card, two Purple Hearts, and three tattoos.”
    b) “a concealed carry permit, two ex-wives, and three illegitimate children.”
    c) “a National Book Award, two unremoved sniper bullets, and three missing toes.”
    d) “a Class B trucker’s license, two gold teeth, and three drifters stacked like cordwood in my basement.”

4) When asked by a local Colorado paper to describe the difference between his current Senate candidate, Bob Schaffer, and former employer George Allen, campaign manager Dick Wadhams had what to say?

    a) “Well, at least Bob knows what a video camera looks like.”
    b) “I just told him, ‘No cowboy boots, no comedy, and if you see someone with a healthy     tan, keep your mouth shut.’”
    c) “Look, macaca happens, O.K.?”
    d) “There’s only one idiot named George Allen.”

5) Speaking to reporters about the electoral prospects of Barack Obama, Virginia’s first lady Anne Holton promised that, if elected, the Democratic presidential nominee would be what?

    a) “The first mulatto president.”
    b) “The first Hawaiian president.”
    c) “The first woman president.”
    d) “The first drop-dead-gorgeous president.”

6) Upon being informed that the Virginia representative he wanted to interview, the Honorable Jo Ann Davis, had succumbed to breast cancer nearly a month earlier, what was the dim-witted Congressional Quarterly reporter’s reply?

    a) “Is that a no?”
    b) “Did she leave a forwarding number?”
    c) “Oh. Could you take a message, just in case?”
    d) “Hmm. Guess I’ll have to go with my second choice, Strom Thurmond.”

Answers: 1. c; 2. b; 3. a; 4. d; 5. c; 6. a