Volume I No.12 | March 19, 2019
ARTS NEWS
& PROFILES
FROM
FLORIDA'S
TREASURE COAST & BEYOND
In This Issue
Rising Stars Breaking News - Doc Grober - My Fair Lady - Jazz Week - CeCe Teneal - The Whiffenpoofs - Cars at the Beach - Road Trip! Vizcaya

Calendar Listings
EASY LINKS
Guidelines for submitting to ARTS BLAST and
the Cultural Council of Indian River County's CulturalCalendar.org.
Music in the Air - Here, There, & Everywhere
Sometimes it just works out that a week is filled with one kind of art or another. Recently, it was theatre galore. This week, there’s music everywhere! This week and next, there’s a lot, and I mean a lot, of jazz, a famous men’s chorus with a new plus one, and a Broadway/film score that will make your heart sing.

The Treasure Coast Jazz Society’s schedule this season included Doc Grober and the Mudcats in March. Doc passed away before that could happen, but the Mudcats will carry on as part of a series of tributes to a great guy. I’ll have my own memories in this issue of Arts Blast, and some archived Arts Spotlight interviews with Doc from years ago. Now you see why I save everything.

Here's hoping that whatever bug has knocked Marcello Giordani out of his scheduled week with Vero Beach Opera doesn't linger. If you haven't picked up your three-day pass for the Rising Stars Vocal Competition, now with Deborah Voigt stepping in to judge for Marcello, click on the link in the story in this issue. internationally acclaimed Metropolitan Opera Soprano Susan Neves will replace Marcello in the March 22 concert.

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Arts Blast! is dedicated with gratitude to Helen Miller, Angelina Christaldi, and Bill Miller.
Join me Mondays at 5 p.m. for the Cultural Council of Indian River County's Cultural Connection on WAXE 1370 AM, 107.9 FM on the Treasure Coast and streaming at  www.waxe1370.com  at 5 pm. 
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A note from Community Church of Vero Beach: The Imani Milele Children’s Choir concert scheduled for March 24 has been canceled.
My Fair Lady is at Riverside Theatre until March 31
BREAKING NEWS!
Deborah Voigt Takes Over for an Ailing
Marcello Giordani For Rising Stars Competition in Vero Beach
From Vero Beach Opera:

Diva Deborah Voigt will conduct a Master Class and serve as a Judge in VBO’s Rising Stars Competition this week. We are extremely lucky and appreciative that internationally acclaimed Metropolitan Opera Soprano Deborah Voigt has graciously accepted our invitation to replace tenor Marcello Giordani who is unable to come due to an unexpected illness.


News about Debbie:
  On March 30, 2019, at 12 p.m., Ms. Voigt will host the next Met Live in HD production of Wagner’s  Walküre  at your local Majestic 11 Theater.
In fall 2016, Voigt launched a new appointment as a full-time member of the voice faculty at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music, where she offers coaching and mentorship through private lessons and masterclasses. Similarly, as the Artistic Advisor to Vero Beach Opera, she continues to advise on repertoire, casting, and production, besides judging the Deborah Voigt/Vero Beach Opera Foundation’s International Vocal Competitions.
David Pershall
Megan Marino
Anush Avetisyan
Matthew White
Metropolitan Opera Soprano Susan Neves 
This is the week!
Vero Beach Opera's Rising Stars Vocal Competition's Master Class is March 19, and the competition is March 20-21, all 2-5 p.m.at Vero Beach High School Performing Arts Center. $ 20 3-day pass- CLICK HERE FOR TICKETS.

The Rising Stars Concert is March 22 at 7 p.m. with internationally acclaimed Metropolitan Opera soprano Susan Neves and Metropolitan Opera artists David Pershall and Megan Marino, and Rising Stars Matthew White and Anush Avetisyan. Tickets are online.
Doc Grober - Never Forgotten
You can count on seeing neither an empty seat nor a dry eye in the house when the Treasure Coast Jazz Society’s tribute to Ronald "Doc" Grober kicks off March 23 at the Heritage Center in Vero Beach. The Mudcats, originally scheduled to play this weekend on the Jazz Society’s season calendar, were sidelined with the passing away of Doc in November, 2018.

Doc was a low-key, unassuming man but he isn’t going quietly, thanks to the many musicians, friends, and fans he left behind. He’ll be present in spirit as the Mudcats, led for the occasion by clarinetist Jim Snyder, raise the roof with the music Doc Grober’s Mudcats were famous for. Snyder’s first call from Doc was seven years ago, to fill in with the group at the Lyric Theatre. The clarinetist joined the likes of Eddie Metz, Jr., Davey Jones, Pat Gullotta, Rabbit Simmons, and Bob Leary.

Snyder said the Mudcats probably won’t continue without Doc. “This was Doc’s project. … This was, as he told me once, a chance to put together the ‘cream of the crop’ of traditional jazz musicians.” He said Doc had a way of presenting the program so it would appeal to “a wide range of folks, many who’d never listened to this kind of music before.” Snyder credits success to Doc’s warm personality that came through when he talked to the audience between songs. “The audience really came to see him!” This is truly a tribute to Doc, Snyder said. “We're even doing it without a piano player---sort of our version of the Air Force’s Missing Man Formation.’ We dearly miss him and are there to pay tribute.”

Reminiscing, Snyder said, “I remember the evening about two years ago when he flew us all out to Durango, Colorado, for a concert. We were drinking wine at the table before dinner and chatting about the music business, sharing stories, etc. Also at the table were trumpeter John DePaola, and the legendary trombonist Bill Allred. We'd each tell a story from our past and were all laughing---especially as the wine took hold on our empty stomachs. But I noticed that Doc was smiling warmly throughout the evening and realized that this moment was the part that made him the happiest. The camaraderie, the histories, the anecdotes, and the warmth of the people was what he loved most. I think I understood who he was from that evening.”

Those of us who worked at WQCS in Fort Pierce almost 20 years ago have our own memories of Doc Grober. In addition to his medical practice — yes, he really was a doctor — and his stint as physician for the New York and St. Lucie Mets, Ronald Grober did a radio show. Joe Lenartiene, who still does much of the technical production at WQCS, remembers that Doc would come into the studio and record the voice tracks and “I would mix the show together with the CDs he brought in.” He said the show was called The Sounds of Jazz and there were more than 50 produced in 2000 and 2001.

I was doing an interview show, Arts Spotlight, at the time, and over the lifetime of the show, Doc was a guest 17 times, probably a record. Hoarder that I am, I found several of those shows and have added them to the willimiller.com website for fans to enjoy.
 
The Treasure Coast Jazz Society’ s concert begins at 12:30 p.m. at the Vero Heritage Center. Tickets are available in advance or at the door. Lunch reservations can be made by calling 772-234-4600. The tribute at the Lyric Theatre in Stuart is March 28 at 7 p.m.
Ronald "Doc" Grober
Jim Snyder
The Elliott Museum Puts the Pedal to the Metal
March 23rd
The 23 rd Annual Classics at the Beach Car Show is the Elliott Museum’s biggest fundraising event of the year, featuring nearly 100 rare, antique, classic, luxury, sports, and other vehicles from all over Florida and out of state. Vote for your favorites for the People’s Choice and Kids’ Choice Awards and see the judges’ picks drive down the red carpet.  Classics at the Beach runs from 10 am - 3 pm, with the Awards Presentation at about 2:30 pm. 
All attendees pay regular admission to the Car Show which includes the Museum. Food trucks will be on site, and beer, wine, water, and soft drinks will be available. Bid on more than 50 fabulous Silent Auction items from 10 am until 1 pm. Parking will be available at Smithfield Plaza at Monterey Road at East Ocean Blvd. with free shuttle busses running from 9:30 am until 4:30 pm.

Infiniti Stuart will host a Pre-Car Show Benefit Reception, Friday, March 22 nd , 6-8 pm in their showroom. Live music, dancing, open bar, and food will highlight the evening. Admission to the Pre-Car Show Benefit Reception is $60 per person. RSVP at 772-225-1961.

The Elliott Museum is located at 825 NE Ocean Blvd. in Stuart. Open daily 10 am – 5 pm. Admission: Adults - $14; Seniors - $12; $6 for kids from 6-12; Under 6 free. Call 772-225-1961 for more information or visit our website: www.elliottmuseum.org . Click on the flyer to see it full size. Adv.
Attendees enjoy the cars at the 2018  Classics at the Beach  Car Show at the Elliott Museum. This year's show is March 23rd, 10 a.m. - 3 p.m.
My Fair Lady at Riverside Theatre
It’s impossible to imagine My Fair Lady without the music of composer Frederick Loewe and lyricist Alan Jay Lerner, but George Bernard Shaw did when he wrote Pygmalion, the 1913 play that came long before My Fair Lady. 

When it went to film in 1938, Shaw was having none of that music stuff for his story. After Shaw died, the road to music history was still a rocky one. Rodgers & Hammerstein, the brilliant minds behind Oklahoma!, The King and I, Carousel, South Pacific, The Sound of Music, and so many more, couldn’t do it. Even Lerner & Loewe, who eventually succeeded with the 1956 Broadway score, missed on their first try. There’s a great NPR interview from 2000 online that gives some fun background.

My Fair Lady opened at Riverside Theatre in Vero Beach almost exactly 53 years to the day after it premiered on Broadway, March 16, 1956. Back then it played 2,717 performances at the Mark Hellinger Theatre but there’s a firm end date at Riverside Theatre, March 31, that limits the opportunity to see it here, and tickets are selling fast.

Riverside Theatre’s production of My Fair Lady is directed and choreographed by James Brennan and stars Kristen Beth Williams as Eliza Doolittle, James Ludwig as Professor Henry Higgins, Tom Souhrada as Alfred Doolittle, Kathleen Huber as Mrs. Higgins, Ed Dixon as Colonel Pickering, John Donovan Wilson as Freddy Eynsford-Hill, Karen Murphy as Mrs. Pearce, James Beaman as Zoltan Karpathy, and Robin Lounsbury as Mrs. Eynsford-Hill.
A My Fair Lady Photo Album
Jazz Week Coming to Fort Pierce
From Don Bestor, president of the Fort Pierce Jazz & Blues Society: 
“You know how important Jazz Week is to all of us at Fort Pierce Jazz and Blues Society. We try to put on a terrific week of live concerts and keep most of them free, so everyone in St. Lucie County and on the Treasure Coast can enjoy the music. It’s our way of showing our gratitude for this community which helps support us and keeps live music and the arts and culture alive and active in the community.”

Jazz will be all over the place beginning Sunday when Jazz week begins its takeover of Fort Pierce. The Fort Pierce Jazz and Blues Society opens with the Waterside Blues Concert in the city’s beautiful Melody Lane setting. After the Jazz Ensemble gets things rolling at 1 p.m., the Rusty Wright Band takes over, with a little rock slipped into its blues recipe. This one’s free but you’ll need a ticket for the March 26 jam at the Sunrise Black Box Theatre. Seating is limited for Black Box shows and Steve Ahern will draw a crowd, so reserve early. 

For the outdoor concerts, bring a chair and something to keep the sun off, but no refreshments, please. There will be plenty of good stuff for purchase.

I’ll have more in the next issue of Arts Blast as Jazz Week carries on through more great concerts straight into the Saturday Jazz Market in downtown Fort Pierce. Get your calendar set up by downloading the complete schedule from www.jazzsociety.org .
Dancing On the Street is a Wednesday favorite during Jazz Week.
Vocalist Mia Batalini takes a break during Jazz Week.
Debbie Bestor belts out a tune at the Black Box Theatre.
On the Calendar - St. Lucie County
March 19-,  8:30 - Jazz Week in Fort Pierce and the  Fort Pierce Jazz & Blues Society  at Sunrise Theatre.

March 19 , 2 p.m.- A Land Remembered is the Florida Humanities Council presentation by  Backus Museum & Gallery  and  Fort Pierce Main Street , at Sunrise Theatre.

March 9 - 4/28  - Backus & Butcher and the Florida Landscape is the exhibit at the Backus Museum & Gallery , Fort Pierce.

March 14-31  -  The Lady Swims Today plays at  Pineapple Playhouse , Fort Pierce.

March 25 - Registration begins for the Missoula Children's Theatre summer camp program at Sunrise Theatre, Fort Pierce. contact the theatre at 772-461-4775 or www.SunriseTheatre.com.
The  St. Lucie Cultural Alliance  has several calls for artists listed.

Pineapple Playhouse  community theatre, 700 W Weatherbee Rd, Fort Pierce is looking for directors. 

Port St. Lucie Botanical Gardens is host to  T he Fort Pierce Jazz & Blues Society  for Wednesday Jazz Jams on alternate Wednesdays at 6:30 p.m. There is a cover charge.

The Jazz Market is  every Saturday , rain or shine, along the waterfront in downtown Fort Pierce.
Songbird CeCe Teneal
For CeCe Teneal, making music is all about what makes you feel good. When she brings her blend of soul, funk, and blues to the Sunrise Theatre March 22, it will be her Portrait of A Queen - A Tribute to Aretha Franklin that has the audience feeling the love. 

Teneal said, “Aretha’s music is special because it’s how I found my voice. Growing up listening and singing along with it gave me confidence in my BIG voice. As I grew older and learned to know the concept of the word, I realized I’d been studying a musical genius.” A few of the songs she’ll be singing at the Sunrise Theatre:  Freeway of Love, Natural Woman, and Since you’ve been gone (Sweet Sweet Baby).

Teneal and the band are based in Orlando but spend almost 100 nights on the road, and the number is growing. Teneal said she likes the intimacy of a small club but “festivals give me the ultimate rush.” The name of their first CD, #5or5000, is a reflection of Teneal & Soul Kamotion’s approach to performing, “giving the same show and a hundred percent … whether there are five or five thousand people in the audience.”

Teneal’s love of music and the talent she’s honed over the years began early, with music a big part of growing up. She said, “My mom toured with BB King for several years and is an amazing singer. Music was always in our home.” The first single from the album, “What I’d Do To Get Your Love Back,” was written by her mother, blues singer Yvonne Jackson.

The March 22 concert, Portrait of A Queen - A Tribute to Aretha Franklin, begins at 8 p.m. at Sunrise Theatre , Fort Pierce. Tickets are available online. 
Whiffenpoofs Plus One
It's another big birthday celebration, this one No. 110. The formerly all-male Yale Whiffenpoofs , established in 1909, will share their joy with audiences in Florida in three concerts this month. The group is commemorating its anniversary with the addition of its first female chorister, Sofie Campoamor. 

A formal statement from Whiffenpoof business manager Nick Massoud said the gender restriction would be eliminated and singers going forward would be selected based on “TTBB” (Tenor I and II, Baritone and Bass), standards generally used in a cappella singing. Juniors at Yale University audition for one of only 14 positions that will require extensive travel in their senior year plus a three-month world summer tour.

The Yale Whiffenpoofs will be in concert at 7 p.m. at the Emerson Center in Vero Beach March 26, then in two concerts at First United Methodist Church of Cocoa Beach, 3300 North Atlantic Avenue (A1A), Saturday, March 30, at 2 and 7 p.m. The concerts are sponsored by the Space Coast Symphony Orchestra . Director Aaron Collins calls them “young, energetic and a blast in performance. Musically, they are the best of the best." 
Photo credits Yale Whiffenpoofs - top: The Yale Whiffenpoofs a cappella singers, with their first female tenor.
Bottom: Tenor Sofia Campoamor, the first female to make the ranks of the Yale Whiffenpoofs.
Melbourne Community Orchestra
The Space Coast is well known for the Space Coast Symphony Orchestra, celebrating a 10th anniversary this year, but before SCSO there was the Melbourne Community Orchestra. it was formed in 1989 as an education group, not as a formal orchestra. Just get a bunch of musicians together, however, and an orchestra is the almost-inevitable result. Until 2008, it was an affiliate of the Space Coast Pops.

Claire Christy was the first conductor, holding the baton until 2000. He’s now Conductor Emeritus. Then Came Witold Dobrzynski, who stayed 10 years. By the time he passed the baton to Aaron Collins in 2010, the orchestra had 45 members seated. In 2016, Mark Nelson (above) took over for Collins.

Nelson has 40 years of experience under his belt, as conductor, clinician, and educator. He has conducted ensembles across the country, received national awards, co-founded the Community Band of Brevard, and started an American theatre program for the Brevard County school system. 

The Melbourne Community Orchestra musicians are professionals, some retired, and amateur and school musicians, all volunteers from Brevard and Indian River counties. Concerts are free and performed at Melbourne Auditorium, 625 E. Hibiscus Blvd., Melbourne, FL. The next concert, Tribute to Hollywood, is this week, March 20 and 21 at 7:30 p.m.

Photo credit: Melbourne Community Orchestra -- Mark Nelson
On the Calendar -Brevard County
March 20-21,  7:30 p.m. -  The Melbourne Community Orchestra  plays A Tribute to Hollywood at Melbourne Auditorium, 625 Hibiscus Blvd. Free.

March 8-24  - A Gentleman's Guide to Love and Murder at  Cocoa Village Playhouse .

March 22 , 7:30 p.m. - The  Melbourne Chamber Music Society  presents the Morgenstern Piano Trio at St. Mark's UMC, Indialantic. 321-213-5100
Marc Black at the Libraries
As many locals know, our libraries are treasure troves of all kinds of entertainment and information and it isn't all on the shelves. This week, Marc Black brings history to Indian River County libraries in the form of music, A History of the 50’s & 60’s Through the Lens of Popular Song . He mixes the colorful music — think blue suede and yellow polka dots — with a slideshow that will remind older audience members of the past and introduce the younger set to another side of their parents and grandparents. 

Black said his high school band “was top 40 in half the Country” and toured with some big-name musicians: the Doors, Van Morrison, and Neil Diamond. He hopes to enjoy some baseball while he’s in Florida. Black is not only a Mets fan — he’s a Mets composer. He said, “Back in 1987 and ’88, I composed all the music that was played in between innings on tv and radio.”

Black will be at the North Indian River County Library, sponsored by Friends of the North IRC Library, March 20 at 2 p.m. It’s free and refreshments will be served. The Library is at 1001 Sebastian Boulevard (CR 512) three miles west of U.S. 1. (772-589-1355 or www.irclibrary.org ) March 21 will find him at the main Indian River County library at 6 p.m.
On the Calendar - Indian River County
The Vero Beach Theatre Guild is growing...
The Vero Beach Theatre Guild is growing...and growing...and we are looking for a Bookkeeper to help with the day to day operations. 
If you have Quick Books experience and can dedicate 10 hours a week to this job, we would love to hear from you. Have your resume ready and let us know how much you know about using Quick Books. Send an email with your name and a phone number and we will set up an interview with you. Salary and hours will be discussed at your interview. APPLY HERE
ROAD TRIP! Vizcaya Museum and Gardens - Miami
Vizcaya is one of Miami’s major attractions for tourists, history buffs, celebrities and government officials. Queens, a king, presidents and even a Pope have visited the estate. The main house is a monument to the determination of industrialist James Deering (International Harvester) to create a unique winter estate after being told his declining health would do better in a warm climate. He purchased a total of 180 acres of bay-front property in Miami and set to work designing a home that would resemble an Italian villa that had stood for 300 years, according to the Vizcaya website.

Deering and Paul Chaflin, his artistic advisor, combined elements of European design and materials with those of Florida and the Caribbean. The construction of Vizcaya, between 1914 and 1922, employed ten percent of Miami’s population. Although it was intended to look old, Vizcaya was a product of Deering’s industrial background. It had elevators, a central vacuuming system, and an electric telephone exchange system and was built using poured-in-place concrete, a relatively new practice at the time.

When James Deering passed away in 1925, the estate went to his brother, Charles, who died in 1927. It was severely damaged by hurricanes in 1926 and 1935. Charles’ daughters eventually became the owners of Vizcaya.
 
It opened in 1953 as Dade County Art Museum, later becoming Vizcaya Museum and Gardens. According to the website, “The estate’s heirs conveyed 130 acres of Vizcaya’s property to Mercy Hospital and the Catholic Diocese of St. Augustine in the 1940s; the remaining 50 acres, including the Main House, gardens and Village, were conveyed to Dade County in 1952. Included was the donation of the estate’s substantial furnishings and art collection on the condition that Vizcaya be used as a public museum in perpetuity. In March 1953 Vizcaya opened to the public as the Dade County Art Museum, later becoming Vizcaya Museum and Gardens. It was named a National Historic Landmark by the United States Secretary of the Interior — a distinction granted to only about three percent of registered historic properties.”

There’s another side to Vizcaya, 12 acres of functioning history, Vizcaya Village. Produce for the estate was grown there and chickens and cows supplied eggs and milk. What wasn’t needed for residents and staff was sold at a farm stand. The Village had workshops, a garage, living accommodations for staff, barns, and greenhouses on its 12 acres. Eleven of the buildings are considered architecturally significant. In modern times, honoring farmers who serve the needs of the community is part of Vizcaya’s mission of sustainability and preservation of the environment.

The website has a tremendous amount of history available but there’s much more to Vizcaya than touring the estate. Learn about events on and off the grounds at https://vizcayatickets.org .

If you go:

Vizcaya Museum and Gardens is located on Biscayne Bay at 3251 South Miami Avenue. 
Open Wednesday through Monday from 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. and closed Tuesdays, Thanksgiving Day and Christmas Day. 
For more information, www.vizcaya.org , or call 305-250-9133.
FROM LAST WEEK'S ROAD TRIP!

Morse Museum’s Rites of Spring Continues
with Easter Weekend Open House

Continuing its long tradition, The Charles Hosmer Morse Museum of American Art will offer free admission throughout the three-day Easter weekend, April 19 through April 21. 

The Morse Museum’s weekend open house begins on Good Friday, April 19, with free admission from 9:30 a.m. to 8 p.m. as well as music by classical guitarist Joshua Englert from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. Admission is also free Saturday, April 20, from 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. and Easter Sunday, April 21, from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Morse Museum

445 North Park Avenue | Winter Park, FL 32789 | (407) 645-5311
On The Calendar - Martin County
March 17-19  -  The Barn Theatre  has open auditions for Just a Little Crazy. 

March 20, 10 a.m. - The Mansion at Tuckahoe in Indian RiverSide Park tours in Indian Riverside Park, 1707 NE Indian River Dr., Jensen Beach. First and third Wednesdays through April, 10 and 11 a.m., then every Wednesday in May.

March 21, 5:30-7:30 p.m. - Cultural Conversations: For the Love of Opera at the Court House Cultural Center, Stuart. Ticketed.

March 7-24 -   The Barn Theatre  presents Jekyll & Hyde The Musical. 

March 9-24 - The Smell of the Kill is the show at A.C.T. Studio Theatre , 2399 Southeast Ocean Boulevard, Stuart.
March 23,  10 a.m.- 3 p.m. 23rd Annual Classics at the Beach car show at the Elliott Museum.  Ticket price includes admission to the museum. 

March   23-24,  10-4 - The Garden Club of Stuart presents Garden Breezes, a secret gardens tour in Martin County. Tickets are on sale on the website,

March 24, 4 & 7 p.m. - The Manhattan Transfer at The Lyric Theatre, Stuart.

March 26, 7 p.m. - The Sicilian Tenors are in concert at The Lyric Theatre, Stuart.

March 31 , 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Port St. Lucie Arts League Art Show, 1855 SW Fountainview Blvd Port St Lucie.

Brandon Glick presents a concert series at St. Mary's Episcopal Church in Stuart .
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