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News

Shades of PVCC

When he returned home to Charlottesville after earning a bachelor’s degree in landscape architecture at the Rhode Island School of Design, Joshua Galloway wanted to keep up with his drawing, so he enrolled in an advanced drawing course in the evenings at Piedmont Virginia Community College for three years in a row. With the help of Elizabeth "Chica" Tenney, his drawing teacher and mentor at PVCC, Galloway went on to exhibit his work at places such as the McGuffey Art Center. Today he is pursuing a master’s degree in architecture at UVA. Galloway is not alone in utilizing the resources within PVCC’s art program as a stepping-stone for his career; his is but one example of how PVCC’s artsSure, PVCC is well regarded for its nursing program and as a stalwart source for workplace skills, but its standing as an arts source may not be as readily appreciated. That, however, has been changing, especially since the dedication of the V. Earl Dickinson Building in 1999–complete with music labs, composition studios, two galleries, five practice rooms, a ceramics studio equipped with three kilns, art studios, a black box, a 500-seat theater and a lakeside outdoor amphitheater. The structure has been nothing less than pivotal in allowing the arts to blossom at PVCC.

PVCC has gone "from nothing to a basket of riches," says S. Kathryn Bethea, a professor in theater and music. Indeed, promotional posters around town attest to the 2002/2003 bounty: artist workshops, master classes, faculty music recitals, ballet performances and children’s theater.

Carrington Ewell, the administrator for the PVCC Fine and Performing Arts Series, says the eclecticism is deliberate. "I try to find something for everyone," he says.

"PVCC is a crossroads in the community, one of the few places in the community where everyone comes together from six counties. There’s no one else in town doing music and dance and theater and films and visual arts and lectures and master classes. I consciously book and represent the widest possible mix of cultures," Ewell says, "the whole gamut of disciplines and artistic traditions." The combination of the Dickinson’s stellar facilities and Ewell’s programming has enabled PVCC to essentially quadruple performances, now up to nearly 150 per year.

As well as being a regional arts venue, the Dickinson building is a performing arts studio for a growing student body–more than 500 this year. Enrollment is up about 80 percent during the past five years. The college offers certificates in painting and drawing. The visual arts, theater, drama and music degrees are two-year programs for students planning to transfer to a university or seeking professional development in the arts. Those students who transfer do so most often to UVA, James Madison University, Virginia Commonwealth University, Maryland Institute College of Art or Mary Baldwin College.

The arts faculty, which too has grown during the past several years, is a richly diverse and well-plugged-in group. Tenney, for instance, has worked with the arts at PVCC since 1976, and she identifies PVCC’s "main mission" as "community connection." Tenney herself was among the founders of McGuffey Art Center. She serves on the board of Second Street Gallery and is involved with Art Reach, a non-profit organization affiliated with FOCUS that targets children who could benefit from having more art in their lives.

Tenney is one of 22 on the arts faculty, a number that has literally tripled since1997.

At $339,000 annually, total arts education funding, including salaries, supplies and personnel costs, accounts for about 3 percent of PVCC’s $11 million budget. Yet, measured by intangibles such as community outreach, rising public profile and growing popularity of class offerings, the small investment yields a large return. Still, PVCC, like other state educational institutions, faces the threat of severe budget cuts. Dr. Frank Friedman, PVCC president,

cannot go into details about possible pending budget cuts except to say that the impact would be felt "across the board."

Evidence of Tenney’s goal to get her art students immediately "connected with the Charlottesville arts community" is everywhere. She’s trying to create partnership events with local arts institutions such as the UVA Art Museum and Fayerweather Gallery, as well as Dot-2-Dot, a new gallery on Water Street. In November, PVCC’s Art Gallery will have a joint exhibition with Les Yeux du Monde gallery, featuring the paintings of John Borden Evans. There is a lot of "cross pollinating," Tenney says. "Carrington and I are working hard on that."

PVCC’s past few seasons are testament to such work. New Lyric Theater, Live Arts and Shenandoah Shakespeare have brought their productions to the Dickinson building. The arrangement worked out well for Live Arts when it brought its March production of The Wiz to PVCC, says Live Arts General Manager Ronda Hewitt. "We played to near capacity crowds the entire week," she says. "The facility was really state of the art." Indeed, PVCC has been a full-ranking member of what Tenney terms the "explosion of arts in Charlottesville" following the renovation of the Downtown Mall. Almost in concert, there were the births of the McGuffey Art Center, the PVCC art program, the UVA Art Museum, Second Street Gallery and Fayerweather Gallery, each supporting the other yet filling different niches within the community.

Over the past quarter-century, this network of arts institutions has only expanded. Downtown Charlottesville is seeing the opening of new galleries, such as Dot-2-Dot; Live Arts, Second Street Gallery and video documentary studio Light House are constructing a new building on Water Street; and the 1,000-seat Paramount Theater is in the midst of a City-supported restoration. It’s not just the love of the footlights or watercolors that’s driving this renaissance, either. As City Councilor Kevin Lynch notes, the local arts institutions are "economic engines," which help to support local restaurants and businesses and are integral to the livelihood of the community. Indeed, John Gibson, Live Arts Artistic Director, maintains, "Downtown Char-lottesville is becoming the arts destination for the region."

And while PVCC, located south of town on Route 20, is not exactly Downtown, "every theater is part of this network," Gibson says. "We have a common goal, which is bringing people together."

The community came together in turn to support PVCC when its art department (still the largest among its arts programs) was housed in the college’s main building, where inadequate space hindered its growth. Clifford Haury, the dean of humanities at the college, says that when the community saw PVCC’s need for a more functional space, given the quality of its teachers and the work being produced there, the response was simple: "How can we support you?"

The answer was the $7 million Dickinson building, which allowed Haury to instantly double course offerings. The demand was there; Haury discovered that, with a "loyal contingent of people," PVCC was able to quickly fill those courses.

Unlike Live Arts, which is entirely privately funded, or a venue like Starr Hill Music Hall, which runs off door receipts, PVCC is at the mercy of State funding. In fact, most of the money for the Dickinson building came from Richmond. These days, that relationship means potential trouble for the school–and its arts programming. Recently, Governor Warner required State-funded schools to submit proposals outlining 5 percent, 7 percent and 11 percent budget cuts. "We’re looking at having to live through severe cuts," says Robert Chapel, who chairs UVA’s drama department. "It will definitely affect our programs, especially during the academic year, and it will trickle down to affect production."

Over at PVCC, the irony isn’t lost on anyone involved in the arts. Just when PVCC’s class offerings and arts programming is catching on in the region, outside forces may hinder their growth. "If we have to cut at the highest level," Ewell says, "the college will be dramatically changed. It’s pretty frightening and, right now, it’s the not knowing that’s scary."

Regarding potential cuts, Haury says, "If our money were restricted, we might have to cut the number of course offerings in order to keep the program up. We’d see what’s essential and what’s not.

"Much of our money is in personnel," he continues. "Ninety-five to 96 percent of our money is in people, not in things." This could jeopardize the arts programs, as the "name identification is phenomenal" and this reputation for quality instruction is a big part of what draws students and community members to PVCC. However, there is a bright side: Haury says, "The community college system has one advantage." Just adopt an "entrepreneurial perspective"–make sure that classes have a sufficient number of students to pay the instructor. Such an attitude "may be a cushion for us in a budget cut," he says.

Councilor Lynch views potential budget cuts through the prism of all that PVCC has offered to the community in the past, namely its "role as a grassroots economic development." In terms of community colleges, PVCC "is certainly one of the most aggressive in the area.

"When you look at their relationship as an educational institution with the City," Lynch says, "it has really been nothing but a positive relationship. If their past performance is any indication, they have a consistent track record of delivering goods."

In fact, Lynch is sharply critical of cuts in educational budgets. "To cut investment in the work force in order for a short-term balance sheet gain is incredibly short-sighted," he says, "and I have faith that our legislature will be able to see that. It will be difficult for a respectable legislature to justify cutting it. These are the future tax payers of the Commonwealth."

Live Arts’ Gibson comes to a related conclusion: If budget cuts were to hinder PVCC’s capacity to deliver quality arts programming to the public, he says, "the community will be poorer. Charlottesville is hungry for theater and welcomes it in every possible venue."

Meanwhile, back at the Dickinson building, there’s no hint of budget-cut anxiety as the new season gets underway. Students of all ages, economic backgrounds and experience levels settle into their classes and the show goes on.

"We are letting people know what art can do in your life," Tenney says. "It is a positive force, a hopeful activity. In difficult times, people need art more than ever. It is such a key factor in the quality of your life, in the quality of a civilization. It bring richness to your life."

Categories
Arts

Inner portrait of the artist

Ah, life in the fast lane. You’ve got two choices–push ahead or get the hell out of the way. Well-known photographer Barnaby Draper knows the fast lane better than most. And recently, he made his choice: He got the hell out of the way.

Between 1995 and 2000, Draper poured himself into his career as an assistant photographer in New York City, serving such clients as Tiffany’s, Martha Stewart Living, French and German Vogue, Elle and Victoria’s Secret. He was also the personal photographer for Dave Matthews and Sean “P. Diddy/ “Puffy”/”Puff Daddy” Combs. He witnessed modern photography masters at work while hob-knobbing with the biggest and the sparkliest. But there came a point, Draper says, when he no longer craved making the perfect picture of the perfect person.

“After a while in the world of the beautiful people, you want to take pictures of something more than a person who’s been through five hours of make-up,” he says.

Further, Draper wanted to work on the unique photographic ideas growing inside him. He wanted time to have a life again, too. And most of all, he wanted to go home.

Although he was raised in Charlottesville and has been back for a full year, Draper, who is 32, is still readjusting to the slower pace of life he used to know. Even so, he declares that breaking out of the Gotham photography scene has opened up a whole new world of creative experiments for him. His most recent exhibit at Higher Grounds, which was on display last month, was a perfect example.

Draper worked with a collection of Tintypes, a once popular photographic format that had laid dormant for more than 100 years. He resurrected the process of suspending silver bromide emulsions in gelatin and then coating cardboard, wood or tin with the solutions.

Turning negatives into positives (that’s “slides” in photog lingo), Draper then enlarges his chosen images and makes photography sculptures by driving screws through each edge. As if that process were not labor-intensive enough, Draper, who swears off digital technology as too clear and sterile, makes all his plates by hand. “When prints are made by hand,” he says, “they are more imperfect. That’s what people connect to.”

Still, Draper hasn’t completely given up on photographing sexy people in the limelight. He recently returned from Birmingham, Alabama, for instance, where he was shooting the new CD for rising pop superstar John Mayer.

Mostly, however, Draper’s current interests run to shooting timeless and lyrical images. And for once he has the time to do just that. “There are moments when I miss the intensity of New York,” he says, “but I wouldn’t ever trade it for the balance I have in my life now.”

Draper’s next stop is daguerreotype, a rather unusual print process for medium- and large-format cameras. He’s also busy preparing for his November show at Feast in the Main Street Market.

Although Draper’s creative life is much healthier now, his opinions of the world of fashion will always remain the same. “Being fabulous becomes the norm instead of being decent,” he says, “I would rather live the norm and go to the fight than vice versa.”

Categories
Living

Out of the broom closet, sort of

When the words Paganism and Wicca come up, lots of folks picture sacrificial chickens and chanting nymphs frolicking in a forest. And many also give the Devil his due. But Beelzebub was nowhere to be found on Saturday, September 23, at the fourth annual Pagan Pride Day Festival.

With nary a dead chicken nor frolicking nymph in sight, musical performances, knighting ceremonies and about 15 stands with jolly craftsmen peddling stained glass sculptures, candles, soaps, herbs, incense and medieval weaponry attracted more than 300 people from all over Virginia to this year’s event at Walnut Creek Park.

“The whole idea of Pagan Pride Day is to bring people from the outside in,” says Branwenn WhiteRaven, local coordinator for the festival, “so they can see what we are really all about.” WhiteRaven (whose real name is Paula) sits in a wheelchair as she explains her religion’s mission. Four women gather around her and with their hands begin to perform the healing art known as Reiki on her body. “I twisted my hip last week,” says WhiteRaven, “they are healing me.”

Neither stock characters from Harry Potter nor “Bewitched,” the Wicca devotees attending the festival have no interest in turning people into toads. “We’re not here to convert you,” says WhiteRaven, “we just want people to come and meet us so we can break out of old prejudices.”

Not that all the Pagans in attendance at this vernal equinox celebration seem so proud of their chosen path. A man reading Tarot cards for a small donation to the Jefferson Area Food Bank and the Charlottesville SPCA hides his head as a newspaper photographer approaches him. “I cannot have my name or picture in the paper,” he says. “My employers would never understand.”

Heather Wood, selling her fabric, wood and clay crafts from one of the dozen booths lining the County park bike paths, says her Southern Baptist husband couldn’t believe she was making the trip to Charlottesville from Northern Virginia to attend this “crazy Pagan festival.”

“It’s just human nature,” she says. “People fear what they don’t understand.”

Derived from earth-based spiritual practices, Paganism celebrates nature, the sacredness of all life and the duality of creation. Humanity isn’t the center of the universe in this crowd, but nature is. Lord Dragon of Ember (aka Tony), co-director of safety and security for the celebration, believes Paganism saved him more than once. He’s an ex-firefighter from the James City Fire Department. After walking out of burning buildings time and time again, Tony adopted his Wicca name because it signifies the strength of triumph or “the phoenix from the flames,” he says.

Tony was raised in what he calls a non-observant Baptist family. At an early age, he says, he found Baptism simply wasn’t for him. “I was constantly outside,” he says, “and nature was always more real to me than going to church when it was convenient.”

As a large horn blows, people begin following a pack of “knights” into the woods for a “Warrior’s Guild Demonstration and Knighting Ceremony.” Lisa Starnes, who is pursuing a religious studies degree from James Madison University, leads the ceremony. Other knights raise swords and shields upon her command. One day she hopes to teach a class on Paganism and Wicca traditions, but on this day, her job as a spiritual warrior is to challenge the newly knighted member to be the best he can possibly be.

“When I was knighted I literally felt this transformation come over me,” she says, “and I became the upright person through personal growth that I always wanted to be.”

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Uncategorized

Make a Note

Better than most, Virginia Consort conductor Judith Gary understands that sometimes words aren’t enough. Wednesday, September 11 was one of those times.

Gary leads the Virginia Consort, a 35-member chamber chorus she helped to found in 1990. As a memorial to those lost in the 9/11 terrorist attacks, she conducted the Consort in a performance of Mozart’s “Requiem,” one of more than 200 worldwide performances of the piece on September 11. The Consort was joined by local musicians as well as some from Richmond, Staunton and Waynesboro. With an accompanying orchestra for the performance, there were 185 musicians gathered in total, she estimates. The 90-minute event was brought together with only one rehearsal.

“It was a total community effort,” Gary says. “It was very meaningful.”

Held at the First Presbyterian Church on Park Street, the concert drew an audience of more than 1,000.

And while the performance of the “Requiem” was a memorial, and billed as a commemorative performance, Gary says it was not one-dimensional.

“There was another side,” she says. “It’s recognizing and celebrating the fact that we are capable of extraordinary beauty. Mozart’s ‘Requiem’ is an example of this. You hear it, and you are moved by it. The piece itself has the depth required for the event, it’s big enough to contain it. Sadness. Heroism. It’s much bigger than any words.”

Of someone able to conduct such a large group, it is surprising to learn that Gary did not study music from childhood. She acknowledges that she began studying music later than most who become professionals and had to “make up lost time.” A student of music theory and composition at  Boston University, Gary fell in love with choral music.

She came to Charlottesville 25 years ago to earn her master’s degree in music history from UVA while her husband studied law at the University. As Gary became increasingly interested in the musical possibilities here, she put her plans for more advanced degrees aside. “There’s a lot to do here,” she says.

In 1990 a group of singers Gary had previously conducted approached her about starting a choral group. She agreed and became the founding conductor of the Virginia Consort, which is entering its 12th season and has grown “far more” than Gary ever anticipated. The Consort now also has three youth choruses: high school, treble and a training chorus.

Among the benefits of being a conductor, she says, is the ability to choose the music that the Consort performs. Always experimenting, Gary is not content to simply re-work the old masters. She looks to add variety to the repertoire, and includes arrangements of folk songs and contemporary pieces. “I enjoy studying the pieces, getting to know them, seeing what makes them tick,” she says. “I have a lot of fun watching the music come alive in rehearsal and performing.”

Next on Gary’s docket is planning for the upcoming holiday season. The Consort expands to 50 members for its annual Christmas performances, and rehearsals begin in a few weeks. Concerts at UVA’s Cabell Hall will follow soon after, starting the first weekend in March. Her schedule is packed.

It seems Judith Gary has more than made up for her “lost time.”

 

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Uncategorized

Crisis Management

"I  think we’re in a crisis,” City Manager Gary O’Connell deadpanned to City Council at its meeting on Monday, September 16. It was an uncharacteristically drastic statement for the understated O’Connell, reflecting the panic in City Hall as Charlottesville rapidly dries up.

Last week City Council approved a series of harsh water restrictions [See Extra!, page 11], motivated by sobering data. “We have between 80 and 100 days of water left,” public works director Judith Mueller told Council. “There’s no significant rain predicted in the long-term forecast.”

The local water supply, as measured by reservoir levels, is dropping by about 0.6 percent per day, down to about 55 percent last week. City Councilors spent the September 16 meeting avidly seeking ways to force residents to conserve water. They considered a series of restrictions that make repeated water violations a Class 1 misdemeanor, punishable by a $2,500 fine and up to one year in jail. At the public hearing that opened the meeting, some residents claimed the proposed ordinance wasn’t harsh enough.

“By the time these regulations take effect, it will be too late,” said John Wheeler. “We will have suffering and economic disaster. We need to have a rolling shut-off of residential water starting now.”

Council agreed, and during the meeting they added even more teeth to the proposed restrictions. They eventually passed an ordinance that, effective September 17, closed all commercial car washes, prohibited the watering of athletic fields, limited laundry at hotels, banned showering in health clubs without low-flow shower heads and ordered all water leaks be repaired within three days of notification.

Car wash business owners called the forced closings unfair. “A full-service car wash is very close to a sit-down restaurant in water use,” said Henry Weinschenk, who owns Express Car Wash on Route 29N. He and other car wash owners said the 15 car washes in the City and County account for only one-third of 1 percent of total water consumption.

Nevertheless, the Councilors’ reluctance to interfere with local business was trumped by the fact that Charlottesville may run out of fresh water as soon as December. Mueller told Council its main focus should be preserving water for fire protection and basic human health. She acknowledged that some of the City’s new conservation measures were “symbolic,” but such steps were necessary to convince people that the water shortage is a serious threat.

“The health and safety of our community is at stake,” said Councilor Blake Caravati. “Washing my car is not my priority.”

“It’s my livelihood,” retorted a car wash owner from the gallery.

Council’s new restrictions order all businesses to document water-saving techniques that will cut their usage by 20 percent, and Mueller said the City has sample plans to help businesses—especially restaurants—to conform.

Still, the most difficult challenge facing City leaders is to convince residents to curb their personal water use, which accounts for about 80 percent of all water used in the urban area, according to water officials.

“Despite all the restrictions, there have been days when our consumption has actually gone up,” lamented Caravati.

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Uncategorized

Fishbowl

The $10 million principle of the thing

After tears, jeers and more tears, WVIR is ordered to pay up for its cracked reporting

“Thirty-some years of my ambition to make something out of my life has been destroyed,” Sheckler wrote in court documents prior to the trial. “I have suffered so much mental anguish over this I don’t know how I stay alive.” On Friday, May 23, a City Circuit Court jury vindicated his anguish and gave him a reason to live—more precisely, a $10 million award in compensatory damages.

A Federal grand jury indicted Sheckler in March 2001 on one count of conspiracy to distribute and possess cocaine, although he was later acquitted. Novice reporter Melinda Semadeni of WVIR covered the indictment and falsely claimed, “DEA and JADE forces had confiscated 50 grams of crack cocaine and 500 grams of powder cocaine in a March 2001 raid on the home and business of Jesse Sheckler.” This single, erroneous sentence formed the crux of the multi-million dollar suit.

Sheckler alleges that WVIR’s report laid financial waste to his eponymous garage and used car business in Stanardsville and, according to his psychiatrist, left him with post-traumatic stress disorder. WVIR counters that broadcasts of Sheckler’s drug indictment, regardless of factual errors, would have had the same effect on his reputation and livelihood and, further, that a link between their broadcasts and the plaintiff’s ailments cannot be proven. News of the fabricated raid and drug confiscation aired on April 6 and 7, and again on October 29 and 30, 2001. No retraction has been issued, nor is one likely, since News Director Dave Cupp testified of one vague recollection in his 23 years at WVIR of issuing an on-air retraction.

The testimony of VCU mass communications professor Ted J. Smith opened Murray’s case, and in it, Smith stated that the most “bone-chilling” call a newsroom can receive, short of contact from the FCC, is a lawyer’s call regarding the facts in a story. Sheckler’s criminal attorney in 2001, Denise Lunsford, would testify that she contacted WVIR about their errors, although they never seriously addressed them. Murray made Smith’s claim his refrain, repeating—and savoring—the word “bone-chilling” almost hourly.

Murray pushed his next witnesses toward discrediting Semadeni. Her own video deposition rendered a barrage of equivocations, such as “I don’t recall” or “I really don’t recall” or “I believe so.” The hedging abruptly stopped when she was asked where she obtained the drug bust information. She remembered distinctly, it seems, her lack of fault. Assistant U.S. Attorney Bruce Pagel, she said. So the passing of the buck began.

Here’s a brief outline of the buck’s progress (don’t forget your trail of bread crumbs): Attorney Lunsford complained to Semadeni via telephone on April 7. When asked, Semadeni said Pagel was her source, but she referred Lunsford to Greene County reporter Nordia Higgins. Lunsford spoke to Higgins on April 9, but Higgins referred her back to Semadeni. Higgins and Semadeni exchanged e-mails. A WVIR employee passed a vague version of the complaint to News Director Cupp, who then told Station Manager Harold Wright. Then, nothing from either side until March 2002.

Enter Attorney Benjamin Dick. Dick testified in a later deliberation, which the jury did not hear, that he called Wright in March 2002 representing Sheckler. Dick’s inquiry into retraction elicited Wright’s purported response, “We’re not interested in a retraction. Go ahead and sue. We’ve got the best lawyer money can buy, and we stand by our story.” Presumably, although he would not comment, Attorney Albro is seeking the best writ of appeal money can buy.

When Sheckler, a big man with rough hands and a pencil moustache, took the stand next, Murray asked him how he felt when he saw WVIR’s report. Sheckler paused, bowed his head and, sobbing, replied, “I fell to the floor.” News Director Dave Cupp appeared moved, reporters Nordia Higgins and Semadeni listened with a flat, almost smug, affect and reporter Pedro Echevarria appeared to be nodding off. The plaintiff wept profusely all three days.

“What did people say to you?” Murray asked.

“It’s gotta be true. It’s on TV,” Sheckler replied, and a later string of Greene County witnesses seemed to confirm his assertion.

Sheckler’s wife and two daughters also testified through more tears.

“I don’t go out at night,” his wife Becky said, crying, “because I don’t wanna see people looking at me.”

 

Albro’s defense began with DEA agent Stan Burroughs, a man built like a linebacker. Burroughs arrested not only Sheckler, but also Sam Rose, to whom Sheckler loaned the $37,000 that brought his indictment. Convicted in October 2001, Rose drove lavish vehicles and made promises of lavish paybacks and—surprise!—dealt at least one kilo of cocaine per month. Burroughs said that Sheckler denied any financial relationship with Rose when confronted, telling him that anyone who made that claim “was a liar.”

Murray cross-examined Burroughs and, gathering his papers to finish, asked him, “Sometimes you get the wrong man, don’t you?”

“No,” Burroughs replied.

Leaning forward, Murray said, “You still think he’s guilty, don’t you?”

“Guilty as sin,” he said.

Albro objected, the judge sought order and Sheckler’s family gasped in disbelief.

To defend WVIR, Albro trumpeted erroneous reports regarding Sheckler’s indictment printed in both the Greene County Record, a newspaper with a circulation of 5,000, and the Daily Progress, papers whose representatives claimed to have acquired their inaccurate information from Pagel as well. Neither print report contained the fabricated drug bust.

“Rumor was spreading like wildfire” about Sheckler’s drug involvements, Record reporter Allen Browning testified.

In a coup de grace, Albro called Progress reporter Keri Schwab, who covered Sheckler’s indictment on April 11, 2001. Earlier, the grave and hard-hitting Pagel, who drafted Sheckler’s indictment, testified for the plaintiff that WVIR’s Semadeni visited his office and sobbed. Semadeni swore she had never seen Pagel until his testimony. Schwab admitted that it was she who had visited the Assistant US Attorney’s office and broke down in tears. The confusion and mistaken identity seems to speak to a low official regard for the press: one reporter’s the same as another.

Albro argued that Sheckler had an established history for his gastrointestinal problems, anxiety and depression, and that his arrest and criminal trial caused most of the harm. His witness, Dr. Bruce Cohen, a forensic psychiatrist, cited a litany of doctor’s reports filled with diagnoses and treatments of the very ailments Sheckler said WVIR caused, but which inconveniently predated the broadcasts and seemed to be linked to the anxiety of his criminal trial.

Asked by Albro for his professional opinion of the broadcasts’ direct harm to Sheckler, Cohen said with finality, “It is my opinion that you can’t come to an opinion.”

Poison dropped into the edge of a pool will eventually kill all life in the pool,” Murray said in his closing argument, drawing a metaphor to the continuing effects of defamation that goes uncorrected.

“You wanna talk about stress?” asked Albro in his closing, in a nod to Cohen’s testimony. “Would you want Stan Burroughs and Bruce Pagel after you?” If a retraction would have solved everything, he told the jury, then Sheckler should have asked for one, but since he didn’t, he deserved no compensation.

The jury disagreed.

“I wasn’t surprised,” Murray told C-VILLE in a post-verdict interview. “This man was terribly damaged by what WVIR had broadcast…. Maybe $10 million is too low,” he mused. “There is no price that can be placed on a man’s reputation.”

To win compensatory damages, a plaintiff must prove negligence, defined as deviating from a common standard of practice, according to defamation expert Tom Spahn, a partner in the firm McGuireWoods.

“It’s not uncommon for plaintiffs to win against media defendants,” Spahn told C-VILLE. “It’s very difficult to retain those on appeal. Nearly all of them are overturned. The appellate courts are more inclined in a First Amendment case to look at what happened, and most well-publicized verdicts are reversed and thrown out.”

“The money was not the issue,” Sheckler told C-VILLE. “It was the issue, but not for me personally….”

Sheckler interprets his trial as a sort of crusade.

“It’s gonna get in their pocketbook and sting the hell out of them,” he said of the $10 million award. “If we destroy that…we haven’t done our job…[and] I didn’t do what God put me here to do.”

And if the jury had not found in his favor?

“It would have completely destroyed my life,” Sheckler said over the phone between tears. “And I think I would have gone. I don’t think I would have stayed here. Even though the case is over with, I still have all kinds of dreams, nightmares, can’t sleep….”

Publishers, take note: This is not the last that will be heard from the suddenly lugubrious Sheckler.

“I’m gonna be writing a book about it. They definitely destroyed my life. It’s a mess,” he said. “You see, I’ve got to live with that for the rest of my life. At least I’ve got a chance to live now, whereas before, I don’t think I did.” —Aaron Carico

 

 

Double the fun

Local filmmaker seeks twins to shoot  

“The idea just occurred to me—what if these Siamese twins that were separated found that they missed each other, and could they find someone to surgically reattach them?” asks local artist and filmmaker Russell Richards. “That’s basically what the story is about, it’s about conjoined twins who are severed, and who later try to get themselves reattached because they decided they liked things better the way they were before.”

That’s the premise of Richards’ new short film, tentatively titled Separation Anxiety, and the 33-year-old is anxiously scouring the streets of Charlottesville for twins, or even people who look a lot alike, to star.

If it seems a slightly bizarre, slightly comic, slightly unsettling sort of topic, that’s intentional. Richards says his films feature “a grotesquely over-the-top sort of humor.” This sensibility is on abundant display in his previous work, fetish (the film was shown at the Vinegar Hill Film Festival), a nifty little black-and-white number that treats the human foot with about as much care as it can be treated, with a twist.

He works fast—Richards anticipates wrapping his newest project up in a couple of days, after the cast is assembled. “I just need a day to shoot interiors and a day to shoot exteriors, and a couple of fittings because I need to design some costumes for the conjoined twins scenes,” he says.

The final version will be about five minutes long or shorter, the latest in a series of what Richards calls “short, perfectly wrought little films.”

Richards, who has a studio at McGuffey Art Center and supports himself as a printmaker and sculptor, is looking to make filmmaking his “principal career.” He cites directors such as David Cronenburg, Stanley Kubrick and Terry Gilliam as influences, “filmmakers who have kind of an imaginative flair or make a personal statement.”

Apparently, he already has something in common with many of the greats he admires: a dash of hubris.

“I’ve decided recently that filmmaking is just a real talent of mine,” he says. “I think I’m really good at it, and I think that it might provide me with a more certain future than art.”

After severing and reattaching twins, what’s next?

“I do have a feature film script that I’m working on now, called Lust of the Monster. It’s about a Creature from the Black Lagoon type of monster who goes to Hollywood and becomes a movie star.”—Paul Henderson

 

 

Resale for sale

In the world of gently used, twice is no longer nice

Pamela Juers has tried everything to attract customers to her children’s resale consignment shop. Every morning she drags a few select items—strollers, clothes racks, wooden toys—outside to attract visitors, only to roll them back inside by evening. She’s even taken a massive yellow “Kids Resale” sign and hung it upside down along the sidewalk in front of her store. But with the exception of a passer-by who regularly comes in to notify her, “Your sign’s upside down, you know,” nothing seems to be working.

When Juers opened My Silly Goose exactly two years ago at the Seminole Commons shopping center near Forest Lakes, business was booming. Each month sales grew by more than 10 percent, and on busy days Juers would see upwards of 30 customers. Last November, however, her business dropped off by more than 50 percent.

“Maybe the newness wore off, I don’t know,” says Juers. “But after November, business just stopped, and never, ever recovered.”

Juers isn’t the only one to feel the pain of the faltering consignment world lately. In April, the Junior League’s Opportunity Shop announced it would be closing its doors by the end of that month. And Evelyn Davison, co-owner of the children’s resale and consignment store Heaven to 7 on Zan Road says that although her location has been open only one year, she’s already feeling the pinch.

“I have terrific days, I have good days,” says Davison, “and then I have days I only get by.”

Although Davison and Juers think the problem is partly rooted in a local mentality to buy upscale, shiny and new, not everyone agrees. Tamar Pozzi, proprietor of Glad Rags on Commonwealth Avenue, says she’s had her best year in recent history, partly due to shoppers wanting to spend less in a slowing economy, and partly because she refuses to carry hard-to-move products such as children’s wear.

“When I started out, I was selling kids clothes and I gave up within one year,” says Pozzi. She then turned her focus to women’s clothes and jewelry. “Children’s resale is a very hard row to hoe—you have to sell a whole lot, for only a little money,” she says.

Still, some blame the recent failings of area consignment shops on the mindset of the general public that resale shopping is more hobby than necessity.

“The first time we really felt the pinch was around this past Christmastime,” says Marie Donella, who’s been running Nelly’s Place consignments on the Downtown Mall for a decade. “The department stores were offering such huge sales. It affected consignment.” Donella, by the way, also closed shop—perhaps temporarily—last month. She is uncertain if she’ll reopen after summer.

For Juers, she knows that if business at My Silly Goose doesn’t pick up soon, she will be forced, like others, to close her doors.

“I think if people just knew that I was so close to closing that they would come in,” she says.

Glad Rags’ Pozzi believes things might be turning around, based on her store’s performance. But Juers, who plans to hang onto her children’s resale boutique until her lease expires next year, isn’t quite as optimistic.

“Have you ever thought to yourself, ‘Geez, I wonder what ever happened to that store?’”—Kathryn E. Goodson