Category Archives: 2) Frequent Destinations

Los Angeles’ Larchmont Boulevard….and awful traffic

I think I found this story below in Delta Sky Magazine – and since LA is back on my to-go map, thanks to my brother and his family moving there, I’m holding onto it. Also helps that the actress Judy Greer, whose recommendations the story features, is a fellow former Detroiter. Who knew?  Larchmont Blvd. is 8 miles south of Toluca Lake (where my brother  lives) which here in Des Moines would involve an 8 minute drive but apparently is a 20 minute drive in L.A., according to Mapquest. Which sounds about right since  L.A. just earned the dubious honor of the U.S. city with the worst traffic. (see story below). The average Los Angeles driver spent 59 hours sitting in traffic in 2012, or about 2 1/2 days. OMG.

On the bright side….Here is:

Judy Greer's Favorite Street

Larchmont Village Wine, Spirits & Cheese, Vanessa Stump

Photo by Vanessa Stump

Outside Larchmont Village Wine, Spirits & Cheese.

ERIN GULDEN

Long known as the quirky sidekick with impeccable comedic timing, actress Judy Greer has become a staple of TV (Arrested Development, Mad Love, Two and a Half Men) and movies (The Wedding Planner, 27 Dresses, Love and Other Drugs)—and her star is rising. She currently costars with George Clooney in Alexander Payne’s much-buzzed-about dramady The Descendants. Next up, Greer joins Ed Helms, Jason Segel and Susan Sarandon in Jeff Who Lives at Home and is part of a star-studded cast in Playing the Field, both out in early 2012.

The Detroit native moved to LA after college and says Larchmont Boulevard is her favorite street. “I love the mellow people,” Greer says. “It’s not super-Hollywood-y. There are still small, privately owned businesses, which adds to the neighborhood feel.”

“One time Steven Spielberg petted my dog when he was tied up outside of a coffee shop on Larchmont,” Greer says. “I didn’t actually see it, but someone told me when I came out with my coffee. And I believe that stranger, because I want to.”

Greer says that Larchmont is a must-stop when in LA, but remember to “pay the parking meter,” she says. “You will get a parking ticket. If you get lucky and find street parking on a nearby street, pay attention to the parking signs. You will get a parking ticket!”

For a great sandwich, Greer says that Larchmont Village Wine, Spirits & Cheese can’t be beat. “The line gets really long, but it’s worth it,” Greer says. “While you’re there, pick up a bottle of the wine of the month. It’s always amazing.” 223 Larchmont Blvd. N.

Pickett Fences is the best store for all your basics, and then some,” Greer says. “It has almost every jean, T-shirt and underwear line, plus some shoes and jewelry. Also, it has the best customer service—never pushy, but always helpful.” 214 Larchmont Blvd. N.

Village Pizzeria is my favorite pizza place in Los Angeles,” she says. “People are very funny about pizza, but you need to try a slice here and see what you think. I think it’s amaze-balls. I like the Greek slice, but that’s just me. I like feta cheese.” 131 Larchmont Blvd. N.

MORE TO EXPLORE
Just south of Hollywood, Larchmont Boulevard serves as Windsor Square’s main street, with shops, restaurants and entertainment.

  • “Noni has really hip clothes and a great aquarium, too!” Greer says. 225 Larchmont Blvd. N.
  • “I always seem to start and finish my holiday shopping at Landis Gifts and Stationery,” she says. “The store also has Le Pen, my favorite pen, in many colors.” 138 Larchmont Blvd. N.
  • “Check out Larchmont Beauty Center, it has everything. Period,” Greer says. 208 Larchmont Blvd. N.
  • Greer also recommends a stop at Le Petit Greek restaurant. 127 Larchmont Blvd. N.
  • TRAFFIC REPORT:
  • By Laura J. Nelson and Joseph Serna
  • April 24, 2013, 6:46 a.m.

    They say one of the best things about California is you can snowboard, surf, hike a mountain and walk in a desert all in one day.

    But on the other end of the spectrum, you can also sit idling in your car for an hour trying to accomplish all those things.

    In what will come as a surprise to virtually no Southern California commuter, Los Angeles has once again earned the dubious distinction of having the worst traffic in the United States, according to an annual congestion scorecard.

    The report, from data company Inrix, reaffirms what many Angelenos already believe: That L.A. has the worst traffic in the country, that its freeways are among the most crowded, and that the worst time of the week to drive home is Friday afternoon.

    The average Los Angeles driver spent 59 hours sitting in traffic in 2012, or about 2 1/2 days, the data showed.

    In Honolulu, the second-worst city and a previous traffic jam winner, drivers wasted about nine hours less.

    Two other California cities also ranked in the bad-congestion top 10: San Francisco was third, and San Jose was seventh.

    On Friday afternoons, the Inrix study revealed, it takes the average Los Angeles commuter more than an hour to get home.

    Los Angeles also is home to 35 of the 162 most-congested sections of highway in the country.

    And four freeways are in the country’s 10 most congested: The southbound 405, the eastbound 10, the northbound 405 and the southbound 5 Freeway.

    Analysts have long said the state of the economy is linked to how much traffic is on the road. When there are more jobs, it’s said, more people drive.

    Traffic got worse in 2012, Inrix said, because Los Angeles added about 90,000 jobs.

    Inrix is a data company that tracks and analyzes traffic data, and provides a popular smartphone application that allows drivers to see where and why routes are clogged.

    One bright spot in the report: A 13-mile segment of the northbound 405 between the 105 Freeway and Getty Center Drive dropped from the most-congested freeway in the country to the eighth most congested. The freeway now has carpool lanes.

    To top it all off, traffic isn’t likely to improve, the study says. In the first part of 2013, congestion increased 6% over the previous year. Nationally, traffic also increased after a two-year decline.

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Fun Summer Flicks (free on the lawn) of the Des Moines Art Center

Des Moines Art Center.jpg
Established 1948

Feels like spring for a change today in Des Moines. Keep It Coming! With warmer weather approaching, here’s an update on the Des Moines Art Center’s “Summer on the Hill” free film series, which has some good flicks the first Thursdays from June through September (except in July when they’re a week later due to the July 4th holiday):

My Dog Skip – June 6

The Philadelphia Story – July 11

Breakfast at Tiffany’s – August 1

Vertigo – September 5.

Also up this summer are First Friday gatherings – with live music, light bites, cast bar, form 5-8 p.m. in the Art Center’s lovely courtyard from 5-8 p.m. (only exception is July – which will be held on July 12, aka the second Friday.)

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Signs of spring on a drive through Iowa’s Madison County

John Wayne
John Wayne - still portrait.jpg
circa 1965
Born Marion Robert Morrison
May 26, 1907
Winterset, Iowa, U.S.

On a not-quite spring day, we set off on a drive through the backroads of Madison County south of Des Moines – and found a few signs of spring – green (green!!) rolling farmland, ducks bobbing in water-filled ditches along the two-lane Cumming Road (aka county road G4R), some  blossoms and buds here and there.  In Winterset, we had lunch at one of our favorite spots – the Northside Cafe, an old-fashioned country cafe that’s gotten a new infusion of hipness (but not too much hipness) and improved cuisine thanks to its new owners, who used to own the long-gone-and-lamented Chat Noir in Des Moines.

The Northside looks much the same – a long high-ceilinged storefront whose pale linoleum corridor is bordered  on one side by a long wooden counter/bar with round swivel stools  and on the other by a row of booths with somewhat sagging vinyl seats and fake-wood formica tabletops. The ceiling is stamped tin. The  weathered clock on a shelf along the bar – with the sign that flips business adverts for local realtors and car mechanic – remains.  The walls have old photos of the cafe and a hand-drawn Union Township map spelling out who owns every patch of land in the area (from Vernon Goodwin to Alice Anderson). In the adjoining room are huge colorful wall maps of the world pulled down from their wooden rollers  for full display – the kind that used to hang in 1960s school classrooms.

There  are a few new touches – an etched-glass sign in the front window and some spiffy graphics. But you can still picture Clint Eastwood stopping by for a bowl of soup – as he did while in character during the filming of “The Bridges of Madison County.” The  soup, though,  is much better now – and we made sure to have some.  It’s the thick creamy seafood bisque that used to be served at Chat Noir – full of crabmeat and shrimp. We also split a  muffuleta sandwich (another Chat Noir favorite) and some sweet potato fries.  (Although we were tempted by the chili – billed as “John Wayne’s favorite,” a tribute to a local hero whose humble birthplace is another Winterset tourist attractions. A portion of the proceeds from each cup of chili sold goes to supporting “The Duke’s” birthplace/museum.)

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Catch today’s lusty Carmina Burana in Des Moines! Spring! In-the-Tavern! Love!

Marin Alsop conducts the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra in Baltimore in 2007.
One more chance to see/hear the excess and spectacle of Carmina Burana in Des Moines today! (And I get one more chance to sing in it.) The DM Register review (see below), which I largely agree with, was favorable. It mentions that the guys one-upped the women – which is true, in part because they had more parts to sing and sang them very well!!  (To my surprise, I found myself quite envious of the guys…call it “#14-envy” – #14 is a particularly challenging but way cool number the men sing.)

And check out this interesting 2012 NPR story by Scott Simon about Carmina Burana – http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=6471891 – that includes some amusingly unorthodox Death Metal, Rap and Electronic versions – and a very interesting interview with Maestro Marin Alsop, music director of the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra (the first woman to hold this poisition with a major American orchestra, I gather.) Alsop conducted a new (2012) recording of Carmina Burana with the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra on the Naxos label

DES Moines Register Symphony review: ‘Carmina Burana’

Symphony review: ‘Carmina Burana’

3:08 AM, Apr 14, 2013 | by Michael Morain |

The audience got what it came for Saturday when the Des Moines Symphony and a mass choir delivered a rousing performance of Carl Orff’s blockbuster “Carmina Burana.” The nearly full house at the Des Moines Civic Center felt the visceral blast of 330-some musicians singing, playing instruments, and pounding on a drum the size of a small car.

The bodies on stage outnumbered the populations of more than 400 towns in Iowa.

So it’s a good thing those bodies had talent. They produced both the steamroller power of the work’s signature song, “O Fortuna” – made famous in countless movies and advertisements – as well as the earthier delights in the other two dozens songs about spring and love and drinking. (Orff set the music to a series of 13th century Latin poems he found in a secondhand book store.)

The orchestra has performed “Carmina” before, with guest conductors, but this was maestro Joseph Giunta’s first crack at it. He pulled it together well, with a strong sense of pacing and polished bombast. The score isn’t as technically difficult as some, but it takes a steady hand to get 330 people on the same page.

He had help from Drake University orchestra conductor Akira Mori, who prepared his students to play with the pros, and Drake choral conductors Aimee Beckmann-Collier and Linda Vanderpool, who rehearsed four different university choirs, including one that includes community voices. Barbara Sletto coached the Heartland Youth Choir, which held its own even amid the roar.

The women’s voices produced a supple, lively tone in the early flirty passages (“Salesman! Give me colored paint to paint my cheeks”) but the men one-upped them with a precisely rendered round of drinking songs. Their unaccompanied section (“If a boy and girl linger together”) was especially good.

The dramatically gifted baritone Robert Orth carried most of the solos with natural ease, as if Latin was his first language. He struggled at times to be heard but still managed to make himself understood, even wobbling back and forth during his bit as a drunken priest.

The talented soprano Carrie Ellen Giunta, who happens to be married to the conductor, sang best during her highest and most exposed solo (“Sweetest boy”). And the tenor Christopher Pfund made the most of his brief appearance as a swan – or former swan – lamenting its life while roasting on a spit. It’s one of the tenor’s specialities; he’s sung the role more than 150 times on three continents.

“Carmina” was written in 1937, the same year the Des Moines Symphony began as a combined ensemble of Drake and the community at large. Saturday’s concert (which repeats Sunday) honored that connection further by opening with a performance of Brahms’ “Academic Overture,” again with a mix of students and pros. It sounded as sunny as anything on the university’s admissions brochures.

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Spring construction report from the bike trail in downtown Des Moines

Grays Lake

Gray’s Lake (above)….For fantastic “zoomable”  Des Moines area trail maps see: http://www.dsmbikecollective.org/mapcentral!

We really haven’t gotten that perfect spring weather for biking yet (except for last Monday, when temps rose to the 70s, but then plummeted a day later and it got rainy). But last Saturday under overcast skies and with a cold wind, we did our first ride of the spring on our favorite loop through Beaverdale/Drake neighborhood to South of Grand to downtown Des Moines and back to Beaverdale/Drake, which includes bits of several officially-named trails (Walnut Creek, Bill Riley, Meredith, John Pat Dorian and the Inter-urban).

Each spring, we’re braced for various construction projects that may hamper our journey but the three c0nstruction projects we came upon all had handy detours that takeyou around the bridge construction at 63rd and Grand);  past the closed footbridge west of I-Cubs Stadium; ); and around the construction at the Botanical Center.  It also was nice to see that last year’s construction on the west side of the Riverwalk by Court Avenue appears to be done (or at least done enough that you can now ride along this stretch of the trail by the river.)

A more detailed look at our favorite 18-mile loop: We ride from our Drake/Beaverdale neighborhood house south from the Franklin Library to 56th Street, then south through the woodsy trail around there to 63rd street and Grand; then east along another wooded trail  to Waterworks Park and Gray’s Lake, past I-Cubs stadium and the East Village downtown;, then back north along the river along the Dorrian trail (which I always confuse with the Neal Smith trail further north) to the trestle bridge that leads west to MLKing Blvd;and then uphill on the Urbandale trail and over to 38th Street (or so) and south to our house. Our ride was about 18 miles.

 

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Villages (of Van Buren County) Folk School – places to go summer of 2013

It’s been awhile since I last visited the charming Villages of Van Buren County in southeast Iowa but this month’s issue of Iowa Farm Bureau’s Family Living (which my husband edits) had some good suggestions of places new and old to visit there:

Villages Folk School – Opened in 2009, this place  (which appears to be on 1st Street in the village of Bonaparte) offers weekend classes in “traditional arts and crafts” from rug weaving and blacksmithing to artisan bread baking. There are some weekend classes in pastel painting and out-of-town students can stay at the pretty Mason House Inn in Keosauqua. Another option is the Bonaparte Inn, an 1890’s building in Bonaparte.

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One more plug for Carmina Burana – April 13, 14 in Des Moines!

“O Fortuna” in the Carmina Burana manuscript

Time for one last plug of the performance of Carmina Burana by the Des Moines Symphony and about 225 singers from Drake University choirs (including me, in the Drake University Chorus) this weekend at the Civic Center downtown.  The Saturday show is at 7:30 p.m.; the Sunday show at 2:30 p.m. And as Ed Sullivan would say, it’s going to be “a realllly biiigggg show!”

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Maggie Maggie Maggie – Memories of Thatcher’s England

Hard to believe that Margaret Thatcher has died, although she has been long gone from the public stage and eye. I wasn’t a fan of her policies – I worked for the rival Labour Party in 1980 as an intern for a young MP named Jack Straw who went on to become a household name himself. And back then, we used to march through the streets during one rally or another  chanting ” Maggie, Maggie, Maggie, Out, out, out.” But I did admire her courage and determination. And this photo (below) of Maggie berating Jack has hung on my office wall for some 30 years.

20130408-100719.jpg

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Danish Modern in Elk Horn Iowa – sounds about right

Haven’t been to Elk Horn, an all things Danish town in western Iowa for years. When we lasted visited, we had young kids interested in touring the town’s famous windmill. Now there’s an exhibit of Danish Modern furniture at  Elk Horn’s Danish Immigrant Museum that looks well worth a visit. We have some remnants of my parents’ Danish Modern stuff from my childhood home in Michigan here in Iowa – but some of the choicer pieces, that now go for big bucks, are long gone, sadly. Used to love spinning around in our Arne Jacobsen swan chairs, which I didn’t know at the time were destined to be design classics. As Mad Men’s next season approaches, we’re all being primed to see more Danish Modern 1960’s classics. The show Danish Modern: Design for Living runs thorugh Jan. 5 so there’s plenty of time. see dkmuseum.org. We just watched a very good Danish movie last night, as fate would have it, “A Royal Affair” which was about a very interesting period in Danish history during the late 1770’s.

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“Once” “Alvin Ailey” coming to Des Moines in 2014!! And more good stuff!

The Civic Center of Greater Des Moines has done it again – it’s bringing some great shows to the city starting in fall 2013 and into 2014. This year, in February, we got  the national traveling tour of  the “Book of Mormon.” In 2014 we’re getting the one musical I REALLY wanted to see – “Once” – which comes April 22-27, 2014 (maybe I’ll go for my birthday on the 26th…I took my husband for his Feb. birthday to Book of Mormon). “Once” is the stage adaptation of the 2006 movie, which had such great songs by Glen Hansard and Markéta Irglová – Thank you thank you! Friends who saw it on Broadway raved!

Other great shows:

Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater – March 18, 2014 (photo below)

– Matthew Bourne’s Sleeping Beauty – sept. 27-28, 2013

– Porgy and Bess – april 1-6, 2014

– American Idiot (the Green Day -inspired rock opera) Jan. 24-25, 2014

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Filed under dance, Des Moines, theater