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News

County needs professional help moving courts

We don’t have the capacity to do any of this without some help,” County Executive Tom Foley said at a December 14 Board of Supervisors work session in which he recommended Albemarle County staff hire an adviser for development, financial analysis, valuation and other aspects of moving the circuit and general district courts out of Court Square.

While some supervisors agreed, they said the county has more pressing staffing issues it should solve before hiring a consultant to assist with moving the courts: Namely, Foley will not be around to see the project through. After six years as county exec, he recently announced his resignation, effective February 1, to be top administrator in Stafford County, and the county’s first full-time economic development director, Faith McClintic, resigned in October to take a job with the Virginia Economic Development Partnership.

“We don’t have an economic director,” Norman Dill, who represents the Rivanna District, said to Foley. “You’re leaving. We have a new planning director.” Questioning the timing of the court relocation, he said, “It seems kind of silly, actually.”

It was noted that the BOS is working on a tight schedule: The referendum vote on where to move the courts will take place in November 2017.

But Ann Mallek, the supervisor representing the White Hall District, disagrees. “If we don’t start, I don’t see us ever getting any answers,” she said. Supervisors can’t hold a public discussion on moving the courts until they have the information that the expert could provide, she added.

And the supervisor representing the Rio District, Brad Sheffield, said further delaying the project could result in the public thinking they’re “stalling” because of unsound leadership.

Sheffield, Mallek and Scottsville District representative Rick Randolph voted to approve the hiring of an expert, while Dill and BOS chair Liz Palmer, who represents the Samuel Miller District, voted not to. Diantha McKeel, representative of the Jack Jouett District, was not present.

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Arts

ARTS Pick: The Country Christmas Show

Gather around the Christmas tree (or plastic Santa Claus) with some of Charlottesville’s favorite singer-songwriters during The Country Christmas Show, hosted by songstress Sarah White. Decked out in party dresses as The (All New) Acorn Sisters, White and Siân Richards perform a set of down-home tunes, with appearances by Luke Wilson, Carleigh Nesbit, Jim Waive and The Ample Family Band with Ian Gilliam for a gently rockin’, oh-so-cozy night.

Thursday, December 22. $12-15, 8pm. The Southern Café and Music Hall, 103 First St. S. 977-5590.

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Arts

ARTS Pick: Indecision

More than 30 years after making its debut at the Mineshaft Cellar, Charlottesville musical mainstay Indecision is still fostering a happening scene with its accomplished, jazzy jams. Covers and originals honed through extensive touring with heavyweights such as Phish, The Neville Brothers, Widespread Panic and Dave Matthews Band are the foundation for this rare musical bond that began with a group of friends in high school. Despite the name, these guys know exactly what they’re doing onstage.

Tuesday, December 27. $12-14, 8:30pm. The Jefferson Theater, 110 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. 245-4980.

Categories
Arts

Movie review: Collateral Beauty falls short of its full potential

Normally when a film comes out in mid-December with a cast full of movie stars and a vaguely philosophical name, it’s either a Christmas movie or an Oscar bid. Collateral Beauty makes a play for both, a move that could have been bold had it been the first holiday film to have genuine pedigree in decades. Instead, director David Frankel falls back on the most tired tropes of both holiday flicks and award bait, dragging down a promising premise and an impossibly talented cast.

Collateral Beauty
PG-13, 97 minutes
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX, Violet Crown Cinema

Collateral Beauty tells the story of Howard (Will Smith), founder and CEO of a successful marketing startup who becomes a shell of his former self following the death of his young daughter. Two years into his descent, he spends his time making elaborate domino designs in his office while writing letters to love, death and time—the three “abstractions” on which he once based his marketing philosophy and by which he now feels betrayed. He never manages to do any work in the meantime, a fact that concerns the other executives of the company (Edward Norton, Kate Winslet, Michael Peña), who hire actors to embody Love (Keira Knightley), Death (Helen Mirren) and Time (Jacob Latimore) in order to reach Howard, to both save the company and ease his suffering.

Where this goes from here might be a surprise if you’ve never seen a movie before; it turns out that the three executives have problems in their own lives that require solutions rooted in a deeper appreciation of love (reconnecting with an estranged daughter), death (accepting a terminal illness) and time (something about a biological clock, this one doesn’t add up to much). When Collateral Beauty does occasionally work, it’s thanks to the spectacular cast adding depth to the broad-yet-shallow emotions in the script, leading the viewer to believe that this all might arrive somewhere worthwhile.

Interestingly, the least involved plot thread in Collateral Beauty is Howard’s, primarily because his entire journey leads to a twist instead of the resolution it so desperately needs. A fitting resolution would have been the consequence of the actions made by the characters during the audience’s journey with them, while a twist reduces all sophistication and complexity so the filmmakers can avoid confronting the difficult moral questions they raise. All of the heady dialogue and weighty themes boil down to a good cry and a hug after an infuriatingly simple wrap-up.

Collateral Beauty is the sort of movie where you can see the gears turning in the heads of the producers in real time—big star with a dead kid, lots of crying, pop philosophy and a twist ending. The subplots are the star of the show—they should have been more prominent and needed the most attention. The whole thing would have benefited by exploring the idea that the actors may themselves be supernatural instead of outright broadcasting it as soon as possible (if you consider that a spoiler, you need to get out more). That Collateral Beauty is not very good may not be a surprise to most, but its wasted potential makes it all the more disappointing than your average bad movie.


Playing this week

Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX
The Shops at Stonefield, 244-3213
Arrival, Assassin’s Creed, Doctor Strange, Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them, Manchester by the Sea, Moana, Nocturnal Animals, Office Christmas Party, Rogue One: A Star Wars Story

Violet Crown Cinema
200 W. Main St., Downtown Mall, 529-3000
Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them, Manchester by the Sea, Moana, Office Christmas Party, Rogue One: A Star Wars Story

Categories
News

Change of heart: ACAC reverses concealed-carry policy

One day after C-VILLE Weekly’s December 14 story about ACAC’s quiet change in policy that allowed concealed-carry of guns—and social media blowing up with outraged members threatening to leave the club if guns were allowed on premises—the fitness center changed its policy again.

“Our primary objective is to create a safe and welcoming environment in the clubs, and the safety of our members and team members will always be our priority,” says an unsigned post December 15 on the club’s Facebook page. “We have made the decision to prohibit guns on ACAC property with the exception of law enforcement and ACAC security officers.”

Erik Braun is an ACAC member who started a petition late December 14 and by the next day had nearly 300 signatures of members who vowed to end their memberships if firearms weren’t banned by December 26. “We believe this is a bad policy that only increases the chance that ACAC members, including children, could be harmed or killed,” it said.

Braun’s reaction to finding out guns were allowed at ACAC was one of “dismay and profound concern,” he says. “Concealed-carry is not a way to make a place safer. It produces inadvertent danger and the chances for an accident increase.”

He says his family has always enjoyed ACAC, but knowing guns were allowed “is a deal-breaker for me.”

Even Braun was surprised by the rapidity of the change in policy and that by December 15, ACAC was thanking members for their feedback and stepping back from allowing them to pack heat while exercising.

Braun had called the club December 14, and says the person he talked to was “courteous” and “quite responsive” but “quite clear that was the policy.” He was put in touch with security director Jason Perry and got a voicemail that left “the accurate perception they weren’t going to change their policy,” he says.

He also wonders why members weren’t notified of the change in policy when it happened over the summer. “It was a fait accompli,” he says.

ACAC member Paula Fallon also was surprised at the speed of ACAC’s response once the story came out. She’d first asked the club about the policy change in November, when another member jokingly asked if she had stepped on a bullet during class, and she learned that a member had open-carried a gun to a meditation class and had dropped it.

“The gun falling out in meditation class probably sealed the deal,” she says.

“I heard it was just crazy Wednesday,” she says. “A busy, busy day answering the phone calls from irate people.”

And while she’s glad the club made the change, she challenges ACAC’s statement that it “appreciated the opportunity to engage deeply in conversation with our members and the community.”

Says Fallon, “It’s not a conversation when it was not publicized when it first came out.” She believes the decision was more money driven. “They’re very bottom line,” she says.

ACAC founder Phil Wendel and Perry did not return phone calls from C-VILLE. In an e-mail, Perry directed a reporter to spokesperson Christine Thalwitz, who declined to comment.

In its Facebook post, ACAC says it will send the revised written policy to its members.

“If they’d been forthcoming,” Fallon adds, “it would have felt very different.”

Categories
Living

Seasonal drinks to keep you jolly

Watering holes all over town are getting into the Christmas spirits—er, spirit—this week, decking the halls and pouring festive drinks galore.

The Whiskey Jar’s Christmas pop-up bar will feature an all-Christmas cocktail list created by bar director Leah Peeks and assistant bar manager Reid Dougherty. “We’re going to tacky the place up, play Christmas music, have Christmas food and go nuts,” Peeks says. Look for the Dancin’ In Your Head (moonshine punch, starfruit and sugar plum); I Don’t Give A Fig About All This (fig jelly, scotch, lemon and ginger); Cotton-Headed Ninny Muggins (butter, bourbon and salted caramel whipped cream); All I Want for Christmas is Booze (Tröegs Mad Elf Belgian-style strong dark ale and a shot of Angel’s Envy bourbon); and plenty of other heart- and belly-warmers.

Lost Saint, the bar below Tavern & Grocery on West Main, is also serving winter warmers such as an old-fashioned garnished with a cinnamon stick, homemade eggnog and mulled wine amidst snowflake and icicle lights hanging from the low ceiling.

The Alley Light will serve Micah Le-Mon’s homemade eggnog (sometimes with Virginia apple brandy); Tavola’s winter menu includes drinks such as the Pompeii, a savory/smoky sipper that includes single-malt whiskey, Oloroso sherry, tayberry and vegetable ash; and Three Notch’d Brewing Company has its Stocking Stuffer peppermint stout on tap.

If you need a bit of a caffeine kick to make it through last-minute shopping trips, Shenandoah Joe’s We 3 Beans holiday blend is back, this time with Costa Rica El Cidral, Guatemala Altos del Volcan and Ethiopia Sidamo ARDI, creating notes of chocolate, nougat, citrus and berry.

Bye, bye, Brookville

Brookville Restaurant served its final meal—brunch—last Sunday, December 18.

“Every restaurant has a lifetime and Brookville has come to the end of its,” chef Harrison Keevil wrote in an e-mail shortly after making the announcement. He and his wife, Jennifer Keevil, opened Brookville, known for its farm-to-table comfort food—egg dishes, biscuits, chicken and waffles, chocolate chip cookies, bacon, bacon and more bacon—on the Downtown Mall in July 2010.

The Keevils will continue to serve local food at Keevil & Keevil Grocery and Kitchen at 703 Hinton Ave. in Belmont. They opened the shop in July of this year.

Going forward, Keevil says they’ll expand sandwich offerings at the shop and offer take-away hot dinners beginning in January.

A return to Duner’s

Laura Fonner is back in the kitchen at Duner’s Restaurant on Ivy Road. Fonner worked there for eight years—four as executive chef—before leaving after the birth of her second child in 2012. During that time, she did some catering and occasionally worked the front of the house at Duner’s. About a month ago, she accepted an offer to return to the kitchen after chef Doug McLeod’s departure.

Fonner enjoys the flexibility of Duner’s menu and the creative control it affords her. “I’m not restricted to one ethnicity or one cut of meat,” she says, noting that on Duner’s menu, Korean barbecued grilled tuna with handmade local mushroom and bok choy dumplings can be found right next to a classic gnocchi dish. “There’s no boundary!” she says.

Categories
Living

Bakeries share their holiday treats

’Tis the season to gather around a table piled high with foods galore. And, thankfully, Charlottesville artisans are preparing plenty of specialty items for the holidays. Here is a sampling of seasonal treats you can find around town.

Albemarle Baking Company

Panettone, the much more popular Italian cousin of fruitcake, is available at Albemarle Baking Company from November through January. ABC makes a traditional panettone with raisins and candied oranges, and uses naturally fermented dough, farm fresh eggs and butter with no preservatives, which give it a rich texture. For many, holiday baking can bring back memories of simpler times, and for Gerry and Millie Newman, owners of Albemarle Baking Company, the panettone does just that. “We like to bake holiday favorites from around the world (including panettone from Italy and stollen from Germany) and share the histories and folklore behind those treats with our customers,” Gerry says.

For the Newmans, one of the best parts of holiday baking is hearing how customers have made panettone part of their own traditions: Some make French toast out of it or hollow it out and fill it with ice cream for a decadent treat.

MarieBette Café & Bakery

Stollen is a type of fruit bread made with candied and/or dried fruits that originated in Germany. At MarieBette, this holiday treat is a departure from tradition with a buttery and dense fruit bread rather than a dry and preserved loaf. They use brioche dough and dried fruit soaked in golden rum then sprinkle the loaf with powdered sugar.

Head baker Hilary Salmon adds a unique rich twist by filling the stollen with crystallized ginger, apricots, raisins, almonds and pockets of housemade marzipan. The hints of crystallized ginger and orange zest come through upon first bite and complement the creamy texture of the marzipan. “I love that it’s a childhood memory [Salmon’s mother is German],” Salmon says. “The spiciness of the crystallized ginger and the sweetness of the bread make for a sweet and spicy combination.”

Pearl’s Bake Shoppe

Buche de noels (also known as yule logs) are a holiday tradition for many, usually made from sponge cake and layered with icing. At Pearl’s Bake Shoppe, they create custom buche de noels for the holiday season. You can choose from a vanilla or chocolate base (the chocolate base is naturally gluten-free, but the vanilla can be made gluten-free as well), and from unique designs that include a birch tree or a vertical log. “We love making them because not only is it a great dessert, but it can also serve as a centerpiece for your holiday celebration,” says Laurie Blakely, co-owner and operator of Pearl’s. With the holidays around the corner, demand is high for this seasonal specialty, she says.

Arley Cakes

In celebration of her first year in business, Arley Arrington, owner of Arley Cakes, is making unique pies for the holiday season. Her spiked eggnog is a custard pie filled with holiday spices and booze—what could be better? Arrington also prides herself on adding unique visual elements to her pies. “This one has a decorative edge made of little pie-crust ‘gingerbread’ people. Spicy, cute and boozy,” she says. Her inspiration for the pie comes from her limitless childhood desire for eggnog. “Each year when I was a kid, once the temperatures dropped and the days got shorter, I’d always start searching for it in the grocery store—it was never too early for eggnog season,” she says.

The Pie Chest

The Pie Chest is known for its seasonal flavors, and this time of year is no exception. The peppermint crunch pie is a play on a truffle, with Callebaut dark chocolate, natural peppermint oil and crushed-up candy canes for layers of crunch. The filling is placed in a chocolate cookie crust and topped with a mint-infused whipped cream. “Nothing says winter quite like this pie,” says Rachel Pennington, owner of The Pie Chest. “The contrast of colors (white, red and black) and textures (fluffy, crunchy and smooth) make for the perfect slice of holiday pie.”

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Sons of Bill & Friends

Coming home for the holidays can be hectic, but Sam, Abe and James Wilson et al make a party of it every year with the annual Sons of Bill & Friends show. Expect raucous covers, heartfelt traditionals, original faves and lots of laughs between the seriously good musical collaborations in what’s become a who’s who gathering of C’ville musicians.

Friday, December 23. $20-35, 9pm. The Jefferson Theater, 110 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. 245-4980.

Categories
Arts

Observations on privilege and amnesia at Second Street Gallery

Despite living 2,100 miles apart, Charlottesville artist Matthew P. Shelton and Trinidadian artist Nikolai M. Noel are close friends.

They met in Virginia Commonwealth University’s MFA program, where they studied painting and printmaking, and were interested in the influence of colonialism and its aftermath on the creation of human identity.

“We were both making work about where we came from and where we come from,” Shelton says. “Noel quoted Heraclitus, ‘Geography is destiny.’ We’re focused on how the place you come from informs the possibilities and outcomes and ways you see the world.”

Noel, who currently lives in Port of Spain, describes himself as a multiracial artist who enjoys working conceptually, mashing up drawing, printmaking, painting and sculpture as the object requires.

Shelton, who lives in Charlottesville, prefers using collage, bricolage and found objects. “I’m descended from a lot people, but [my Confederate ancestry] is one strain I’ve been in dialogue with,” he says. “Particularly because my middle name is after my great-great-great-grandfather, who, according to historical documents, was a Confederate soldier and slaveholder.”

Unlike some friends, these two dive directly into topics that would otherwise divide them, consciously examining their identities in a holistic context.

“If you’re privileged, then it’s coming at the expense of someone else,” Shelton says. “You’re a member of the oppressor group. It doesn’t matter if you’re conscious of it or not. You’re receiving the benefit.”

Their latest exhibition is “contested bodies,” now on display at Second Street Gallery. Through drawings, prints, text, sculpture, film, audio and other media, the artists examine how our present realities—especially our day-to-day observations, opportunities and feelings—are shaped by race, privilege and historical and contemporary oppression.

As an example of identity-as-experience, Noel points to his “Disaster Series.” “These are about how I receive images of police shootings of young black men in the United States when I’m in the Caribbean,” he says. “They were images on the screen, so these are screen-sized. The dread and torment and sadness of those images made me think of Goya’s ‘The Disasters of War,’ which are also around that size.”

Noel “co-opted the language of Goya’s prints” to create his black-on-black images, which he intentionally made difficult to see and photograph.

“This is part of the conversation that Matthew and I have been having for a long time on race and nationality, about what is visible and what is invisible,” says Noel. “Being a white male in America—”

“And straight and able-bodied,” Shelton adds.

“—Matthew is probably in the category of one of the most visible human beings,” Noel says. “Me, being a multi-ethnic person from the southern Caribbean, living on an island most people don’t know exists, I live in a more invisible, obscure context.”

Shelton and Noel use “contested bodies” to translate the distance between them into an experience. Some subjects are easy to grasp. Smudged illustrations of palm trees; a massive black-on-black painting of Trayvon Martin’s sweatshirt. Others are difficult—a net made of chain, padlocks and steel hangs from the ceiling. A projector streams video of blood being drawn from both men and collected in two separate jars.

Curiosity, reflection and thoughtful conversation—the tools required to decipher “contested bodies”—is one treatment for what Shelton calls the “specific historical amnesia” of the American South.

“There’s a superficial memory about slavery and Jim Crowe and Civil Rights, but there’s not a personal memory that’s being cultivated,” he says.

Noel and Shelton say the purpose of their collaboration is “to bind our fates, further forge our friendship, to ward off depression and perhaps to inoculate ourselves from the fruits of the seemingly inexorable state of apartness characteristic of life today: anxiety, dread, exploitation, alienation from self and other, shame, lost futures.”

It is not, Shelton says, about racial reconciliation. “While that’s a project that is important in the world, we’re more focused on taking the temperature of what this moment feels like.”

“We talk a lot about justice,” Noel says, “and our sense of despair comes from understanding that in order to make things right and equitable, there is the whole weight of history to deal with. “

So how do these two men communicate clearly through the weight of despair?

“It’s a willingness to listen. The person might be saying something that’s difficult to hear, but once you express a willingness to listen, the other person has a willingness to be honest,” Noel says.

“Does listening come first or does trust come first? I would say that the onus is on white people to come to the table and listen,” Shelton says. “Stepping in and caring about these things—for me, it’s optional, but it has to become not optional.”

“contested bodies” challenges viewers to practice grappling with indistinct concepts. To challenge the assumption that powerful truths can be easily consumed and to experience the worthiness of people, ideas, emotions and experiences that are, at first glance, clouded by obscurity.

“Sometimes you have a map, and sometimes you’re dropped in the middle of nowhere,” Shelton says. “It’s like where you get born. Why did I get born where I was and to whom I was? Our collaboration is just having two people have that conversation, that expression of bewilderment, together at the same time.”

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Saturday Night Lights Christmas Eve Bash

If roasting chestnuts on an open fire, listening to carols and waiting for ol’ St. Nick to arrive is not your thing, then the Saturday Night Lights Christmas Eve Bash may be the bright spot you’re looking for. Hip-hop, trap and club cuts by DJ Double-U keep things moving into the early Christmas hours and assures all a good night.

Saturday, December 24. $5-15, 10pm. The Ante Room, 219 W. Water St. 284-8561.