














Iturned 30 this past May a bittersweet occasion, wherein my madcap twenties were laid to rest and the possibilities of a somewhat wiser decade lay ahead. I was gifted a familiar tome at my birthday party, one Iâd lost years before: The Collected Poems of W.B Yeats. Yeatsâ poems, and his prose, had made a great impression on me during my studies at UNL. One passage in particular, from The Celtic Twilight (1893) an unpolished yet ambitious collection of Yeatâs essays has stuck with me:
âI have desired, like every artist, to create a little world out of the beautiful, pleasant, and significant things of this marred and clumsy world [âŚ] Hope and Memory have one daughter and her name is Art, and she has built her dwelling far from the desperate field where men hang out their garments upon forked boughs to be banners of battle. O beloved daughter of Hope and Memory, be with me for a little.â
Indeed, it seems no matter how rich or barren the landscape of oneâs circumstances, artistic expression finds fertile ground.
Take for example our cover subject, prolific painter and Holocaust survivor, Samuel Bak. It was in the Vilna Ghetto in modern-day Vilnius, Lithuania with the help of Yiddish poets Avrom Sutzkever and Szmerke Kaczerginski where he first exhibited his art. Sutzkever and Kaczerginski feared it might be the then 9-year-old Bakâs first, and last, opportunity to share his talent. However, Bak and his mother managed to evade capture; the only two members of his family to survive. The 89-year-old hasnât put down his paintbrush since, with thousands of works to his name and numerous gallery exhibitions internationally including a permanent hub at the University of Nebraska at Omahaâs newly established Samuel Bak Museum.
Returning to Yeats, it was regrettable to learn that the young poet who once championed free expression and founded Dublinâs Abbey Theatre stared too long into âa gaze blank and pitiless as the sunâ following the Easter Rebellion and the aftermath of the first World War turning to fanatic mysticism and even flirting with Fascist ideology to reframe his shattered worldview prior to his death in 1939.
With that said, Iâd like to turn a new page one I discovered while editing our feature on Samuel Bak to a stanza by one of the Yiddish poets he met in Vilna, a fellow survivor and friend of Bakâs who passed in 2010. From Avrom Sutzkeverâs âGrains of Wheatâ (Vilna Ghetto, 1943):
âPerhaps these words will endure, And live to see the light loom And in the destined hour Will unexpectedly bloom?
And like the primeval grain That turned into a stalk The words will nourish, The words will belong To the people, in its eternal walk.â
*Note: The hotel edition of Omaha Magazine has a different cover and does not include all of the editorial content included in the magazineâs full city edition. For more information on our city edition,
048
003 From the Editor Home Sweet Omaha
006 Between the Lines
007 Calendar of Events
042 Adventure
On the Record with Joe Benson
060 History
Omahaâs Original âLittle Theaterâ
081 Obviously Omaha
Concert Venues New and Olds
098 Explore!
103 Instagram
104 Not Funny Art for Your Auntie
ARTS + CULTURE
014 Theater
Graham Brookâs Opera Omaha Debut
018 Visual
Etching a Legacy with Jenna Lambrecht
020 Style La Dama Vintage Trading Co.
022 Film
What it Means to âLook Like Somebodyâ with WMK Media
PEOPLE
044 Gen O Magie Wadginski Explores the Meaning of GRIT
062 Sports Paintballer Enthusiast
Chad Noahr on the âArt of Warâ
GIVING
066 Calendar
070 Feature BFF:
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025
Holocaust survivor Samuel Bak reposes in his home studio, surrounded by surrealist landscapes and blooming paintbrushes. At the University of Nebraska at Omaha, 53 of a planned 500 of Mr. Bakâs paintings are on display in the newly established Samuel Bak Museumâa testament to his artistry, his tenacity, and to the millions of lives extinguished under Nazi occupation, witnessed first-hand or otherwise.
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Kim Carpenter earned her Ph.D. in German history from Georgetown Universityâs Center for German and European Studies and has been both a Fulbright and Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst to Germany. Much of her graduate studies centered on examining the Holocaust and what led to the German people perpetrating genocide. âIt was an honor and a privilege to interview Mr. Bak,â she said. âHe is the last generation of Jews who survived the Holocaust. Weâve said ânever again,â but people have a way of forgetting. I hope his story serves as an urgent reminder.â
JULY/AUGUST 2023
VOLUME 41 // ISSUE III
EDITORIAL
Managing Editor
JULIUS FREDRICK
Senior Editor
LINDA PERSIGEHL
Senior Staff Writer
KIM CARPENTER
Editorial Intern
ELIZABETH DIAMOND
Contributing Writers
JACOB ANDERSON ¡ LEO ADAM BIGA ¡ TAMSEN BUTLER
MICHAEL KELLY ¡ SARA LOCKE ¡ SUSAN MEYERS ¡ CAROL NIGRELLI
SOPHIA RIDGE ¡ WILLIAM RISCHLING
DOUGLAS âOTIS TWELVEâ WESSELMANN ¡ MIKE WHYE
SARA WIEBOLD ¡ DAVID WILLIAMS
CREATIVE
Creative Director
MATT WIECZOREK
Graphic Designer II
RENEĂ LUDWICK
Graphic Designer I
RACHEL BIRDSALL
Contributing Photographer
SARAH LEMKE
SALES DEPARTMENT
Executive Vice President
Sales & Marketing
GIL COHEN
Branding Specialists
DAWN DENNIS ¡ GEORGE IDELMAN
Over a 48-year career with the Omaha World-Herald , Michael Kelly covered police, courts, the county, and city hall, and spent a decade as sports editor and sports columnist; he also penned a column in the general-news sections for 27 years. In 2003, he received the American Society of Newspaper Editorsâ first-place national award for commentary and column writing. In more recent years, he twice won first place for column-writing in the eight-state Great Plains Journalism Awards and was inducted into the inaugural class of the Great Plains Journalism Hall of Fame in 2021. Over his career and through retirement, heâs written a number of books on Omaha and high-profile figures in the metro. Kelly and his wife, Barbara, have four children and 11 grandchildren.
After decades working for a Fortune 500 communications company, this late bloomer stumbled upon a totally accidental second career when he was published around the time of his 47th birthday. The award-winning writer went on to become the editor of the Omaha Magazine family of titles after holding the same position at both The Reader and Metro Magazine. His almost decadelong absence from writing is explained by the fact that he has been institutionalized in a clinic nestled in the Swiss Alps that specializes in the treatment of Scriptoris Obstructionum , the malady more commonly known as writerâs block.
Contributing Branding Specialists
GREG BRUNS ¡ TIM McCORMACK
Publisherâs Assistant & OmahaHome Contributing Editor
SANDY MATSON
Senior Sales Coordinator
ALICIA HOLLINS
Sales Coordinator
SANDI M cCORMACK
OPERATIONS
Business Manager KYLE FISHER
Ad Traffic Manager
DAVID TROUBA
Digital Manager
LUIS DE LA TOBA
Distribution
Summer in the metro is jam packed with tons doâart, concerts, theater, festivalsâweâve got you covered with our comprehensive list and highlighted picks!
Bemis Center for Contemporary Arts
September 17
Admission: Free
724 S. 12th St. bemiscenter.org
âTo eat bitterness,â or chi ku, is a Chinese idiom that describes enduring hardships without complaints. Both an art and a virtue, âeating bitternessâ makes one tenaciousâbut also, submissive. Jennifer Ling Datchuk uses this concept as a vehicle for examining the complicated and sometimes overwhelming aspects of growing up in a blended family. Her combined identity as a Chinese-American woman, an American, and a third-culture kidâa child raised in a culture diff erent from that of her parentsââhas led her to build an artistic practice that discusses fragility, beauty, femininity, identity, and her personal history. Trained in ceramics, Datchuk works with porcelain and other materials often associated with traditional womenâs work like textiles and hair. Porcelain in particular allows her to describe dualities, because the material is simultaneously fragile and resilient. She uses adornment, blue and white patterns, reflective surfaces, and both synthetic and human hair to explore the global inequalities of labor, girlhood, and protest. 11am to 5pm Wednesday, Friday, Saturday, and Sunday; 11am to 9pm Thursday. 402.341.7130.
Holland Performing Arts Center
July 28
Admission: Ticket Prices Vary 1200 Douglas St. ticketomaha.com
Diana Krall is the only jazz singer to have eight albums debut at the top of the Billboard Jazz Albums chart. To date, her albums have garnered two GRAMMY awards, 10 Juno awards, and nine Gold, three Platinum, and seven multi-Platinum albums. Her 1999 release âWhen I Look in Your Eyesâ spent an unprecedented 52 weeks in the #1 position on Billboardâs Jazz chart, won two GRAMMY awards, and went Platinum in the US and Canada. Her most recent release, âTh is Dream Of You,â has garnered critical acclaim from fans and press alike. Krallâs unique artistry transcends any single musical style and has made her one of the most recognizable artists of our time. As Th e New York Times recently noted, she possesses âa voice at once cool and sultry, wielded with a rhythmic sophistication.â 402.345.0606.
Ta-Ha-Zouka Park
August 18-19
Admission: $15-21
20828 Elkhorn Dr., Elkhorn showofďŹceonline.com/NebraskaWineBalloon
Few sites are as majestic as a Nebraska sunset. Pair that with the glow of over a dozen hot air balloons ascending in unison, and you have one of the most breathtaking skylines of summer. Add wine, beer, food, and family activities, and it becomes one of the most memorable events of the season. Th atâs thanks to the Nebraska Balloon & Wine Festival, happening this year at Elkhornâs Ta-Ha-Zouka Park. The annual aff air, held by Mid-America Expositions and now entering its 17th year, attracts thousands of hot air balloon and wine enthusiasts for a reason. Aside from the main attractions in the festival title, the popular event off erings include skydivers, paragliders, a KidZone with pony rides, infl atables, bungee jump bouncing, face painting, and other family-friendly activities, as well as live music that includes: the island rock, funk, and reggae band the Fishheads, the rhythm and blues group Front Ro, and High Heel, a band that covers everything from classic rock to country.
Tickets: $15 general admission for adults; $8 for kids aged 6 to 11; 5 & under free. Wine tasting packages include admission, fi ve wine tastings, and a souvenir glass: $17 in advance; $21 at the gate. VIP packages and food tasting experiences also available.
DIANA KRALLÂť EXHIBITIONS ÂŤ
IN THE BEGINNING: THE ARTIST SAMUEL BAK
LANDSCAPES BY REAGAN D. PUFALL
Th rough July 23 at Lauritzen Gardens, 100 Bancroft St. Documenting landscapes has long been a reason for artists to explore their country. While focusing on the roads, fields, and vistas rather than on buildings or fi gures, Pufallâs photographs acknowledge the presence and influence of humanity. Open daily, 9 am to 5 pm. Admission: free with garden membership or paid admission. 402.346.4002.
JAMES SURLS: NIGHTSHADE AND REDBONE
Th rough August 13 at KANEKO, 1111 Jones St. Th e solo exhibition features work by the internationally recognized sculptor, one of the most preeminent artists living and working in the United States, whose sculptures, drawings, and prints reflect his unique sensibility regarding natural forms. 11 am to 5 pm Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday; 11am to 8pm Thursday. Admission: free for members; $10 general admission. 402.341.3800.
TRAJES MEXICANOS/MEXICAN COSTUMES
Th rough August 12 at El Museo Latino, 4701 S. 25th St. Features a selection of prints from the 1940s by Guatemalan artist Carlos MĂŠrida, one of the fi rst artists to fuse European modern painting to Latin American themes. 11 am to 5 pm Wednesday, Thursday, & Friday; 11 am to 2 pm Saturday. Admission varies. 402.731.1137.
MILTON WOLSKY: A MIDCENTURY NEBRASKA ARTIST
Th rough August 20 at Gallery 1516, 1516 Leavenworth St. Highlights work from throughout Wolskyâs career, giving visitors insight into his evolving and genre-spanning talents which included creating work for major publications like Th e Saturday Evening Post, Good Housekeeping, McCallâs, Redbook, and Collierâs. Admission: free. 11 am to 5pm TuesdayâSunday. (Appointments preferred.) 531.375.6643.
THE LUNCHBOX: PACKED WITH POP CULTURE
Th rough Sept. 3 at Durham Museum, 801 S. 10th St. Featuring hundreds of lunchboxes from the 1950s through the 1980s as well as one-of-a-kind original paintings on loan from local lunchbox collector Mark Kelehan, the display provides an overview of the history of lunchboxes, insight into the production process, and an educational introduction into the dynamic world of collecting. Noon to 4pm Sunday; 10am to 4pm TuesdayâSaturday. 402.444.5071. âdurhammuseum.org
Th rough Sept. 3 at Durham Museum, 801 S. 10th St. Explores the history of Omahaâs seminal park, which was formed from a 65-acre tract of land formerly occupied by the Happy Hollow Country Club and later, the Dundee golf course, to become the site of a permanent tribute for those men and women who served our country in the U.S. military. Noon to 4 pm Sunday; 10 am to 4 pm TuesdayâSaturday. 402.444.5071. âdurhammuseum.org
Th rough September 17 at Bemis Center for Contemporary Arts, 724 S. 12th St. Features work focusing on the complexity of everyday relationships through portraits and domestic scenes that examine personhood, memories, and the speeding up and slowing down of contemporary life. 11 am to 5 pm Wednesday, Friday, Saturday, and Sunday; 11 am to 9 pm Thursday. Admission: free. 402.341.7130.
âbemiscenter.org
FLIGHT AND HOPE
August 12âDecember 22 at the Samuel Bak Museum: Th e Learning Center, University of Nebraska-Omaha, 2289 S 67 St. Th is exhibition explores themes of fl ight, journey, and migration through Samuel Bakâs oeuvre informed by his experiences as a forced migrant and refugee in the aftermath of World War II. 10 am to 4 pm Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday; 10 am to 6 pm Thursday; noon to 4 pm Sunday. Admission: free. 402.554.6100.
âunomaha.edu
Sarpy County Museum BEST ATTRACTION
Holiday Inn Express & Suites Gretna BEST HOTEL
El Vallarta Mexican Restaurant Gretna BEST RESTAURANT
The Candle House BEST RETAIL BUSINESS
Gene Leahy Mall at The RiverFront BEST ATTRACTION
Hotel Deco BEST HOTEL
Block 16 BEST RESTAURANT
Borsheims BEST RETAIL BUSINESS
Dreamland Theatre BEST ATTRACTION
Ameristar Casino Hotel BEST HOTEL
The Back Forty Bar & Grill BEST RESTAURANT
The Occasional Collective BEST RETAIL BUSINESS
July 1, 7 to 10 pm, at Stinson Park in Aksarben Village, 2285 S. 67th St. The Saturdays at Stinson Concert Series features the four-piece Omaha cover band.
âaksarbenvillage.com
FLEETFOXES: SHORE TOUR 2023
July 2, 8 pm, at Steelhouse Omaha, 1114 Dodge St. Showcases the American indie folk band from Seattle led by singer-songwriter Robin Pecknold. The band released their fourth critically acclaimed album Shore in the fall of 2020, which earned them their second Grammy nomination for Best Alternative Music Album. 402.345.0606.
âsteelhouseomaha.com
TRACE ADKINS: SOMEWHERE IN AMERICA TOUR
July 6, 8 pm, at Harrahâs Casino Stir Concert Cove, One Harrahâs Blvd., Council BluďŹ s, IA. In his 25-year career in country music, Trace Adkins has sold over 11 million albums, charted over 20 singles, with hits like âEvery Light In the House Is On,â âTh is Ainât (No Th inkinâ Th ing),â and more. 712.329.6000.
âcaesars.com/harrahs-council-bluff s
JAZZ ON THE GREEN: LARRY MCCRAY
July 6, 7:30 pm, at Turner Park, 3110 Farnam St. The rust belt blues shouter and guitar slinger has been nonstop touring and recording over the past three decades. 402.345.0202. âo-pa.org/jazz-on-the-green
RIVER RIOT: THE POPULAR MONS TOUR
July 12, 3 to 11 pm, at Westfair Amphitheater, 22984 US-6, Council BluďŹ s, Iowa. The concert line-up features Falling In Reverse, Ice Nine Kills, Underoath, Catch Your Breath, and more. 712.328.8970.
â897theriver.com/event/river-riot
July 13, 7:30 pm, at Turner Park, 3110 Farnam St. Reigning as the ultimate soulful performance, Xperience takes the crowd down memory lane to some of the greatest jazz, soul, gospel, and R&B hits of all time. 402.345.0202.
âo-pa.org/jazz-on-the-green
July 14, 8 pm, at Harrahâs Casino Stir Concert Cove, One Harrahâs Blvd., Council BluďŹ s, IA. Features Ice Cubeâreal name OâShea Jackson Sr.âthe rapper, actor, and fi lmmaker from Los Angeles, California. 712.329.6000.
âcaesars.com/harrahs-council-bluff s
July 14, 8 pm, at Slowdown, 729 N. 14th St. Cowgirl Eastern serves as a sonic playground for its listeners to wander the post-genre chaos with notes of 60s psychedelia, hints of fuzzy garage rock, and whiff s of indie brooding all swirling in the cowgirl cauldron. 402.345.7569.
-âtheslowdown.com
July 14â15, 4 to 10 pm, at Turner Park, 3110 Farnam St. Features Sugaray Rayford, a Texas-rooted blues singer with southern soul; Eddie 9V, Atlanta-based blues singer-guitarist specializing in soul; Twelve Bar Blues Band, an award-winning group from Amsterdam that mixes elements of Chicago, Delta, and Texas blues; Dom Martin Band, a Northern Ireland-rooted bluesman; and Justin Saladino, a Montreal-based blues, rock, and funk artist.
âmidtowncrossing.com
LIVE ON THE LAWN SUMMER CONCERT SERIES: FINDING DIXIE
July 14, 6 to 9 pm, at Gene Leahy Mall at Th e RiverFront, 1001 Douglas St. Features a concert by the popular country cover band.
TORI AMOS
July 15, 8 pm, at the Orpheum Th eater 409 S. 16th St. A concert by the renowned American singer-songwriter and pianist, who is a classically trained musician with a mezzo-soprano vocal range. 402.345.0606.
âticketomaha.com
July 8, 6:30 to 9 pm, at Miller Park Pavilion, 2707 Redick Ave.
Features Enjoli and her R&B/Soul band, who have opened for artists including Pleasure P, Juvenile, Angela Winbush, and CeCe Peniston. âo-pa.org/on-stage/music-at-miller-park
BĂLA FLECK: MY BLUEGRASS HEART
July 9, 7:30 pm, at the Holland Performing Arts Center, 1200 Douglas St. The worldâs premier banjo virtuoso, celebrated musical adventurer, and 16-time Grammy winner returns in this homecoming of sound, which also features Michael Cleveland, Justin Moses, Mark Schatz, and Bryan Sutton. 402.345.0606.
âticketomaha.com
âcityofomaha.org
ZZ TOP & LYNYRD SKYNYRD: THE SHARP DRESSED SIMPLE MAN TOUR
July 16, 6 pm, at Harrahâs Casino Stir Concert Cove, One Harrahâs Blvd., Council BluďŹ s, IA. Th e classic rock icons take over 22 cities in North America for this co-headlining tour. 712.329.6000.
âcaesars.com/harrahs-council-bluff s
LITTLE FEAT WITH LEFTOVER SALMON
July 19, 7 pm, at the Orpheum Th eater 409 S. 16th St. Little Feat combines earthy, organic material with fi rst-rate musicianship in a combination that transcends boundaries. Feat performs California rock, funk, folk, jazz, country, rockabilly, New Orleans swamp boogie, and more. 402.345.0606.
âticketomaha.com
CHRIS STAPLETON
July 19, 7 pm, at the CHI Health Center Arena, 455 N. 10th St. Acclaimed musician and songwriter Chris Stapleton returns to Omaha for an unforgettable evening of live music. Omahaâs stop will also feature special guests Marty Stuart and The War and Treaty. 402.341.1500. âchihealthcenteromaha.com
LIVE/LOUD CINDERELLAâS TOM KEIFER BAND
July 19, 7:30 pm, at Steelhouse Omaha, 1114 Dodge St. Features Tom Keifer of Cinderella and L.A. Guns. 402.345.0606.
âsteelhouseomaha.com
JAZZ ON THE GREEN: RON ARTIS II
July 20, 7:30 pm, at Turner Park, 3110 Farnam St. Ron Artis II performs music deeply influenced by gospel, soul, and R&B. 402.345.0202. âo-pa.org/jazz-on-the-green
THE FRIGHTS: GALLOWâS HUMOR TOUR
July 21, 8 pm, at Slowdown, 729 N. 14th St. Since their 2013 self-titled debut, The Frights have embodied a carefree vulnerability, setting their most awkward and painful feelings to a wildly joyful surf-punk sound. 402.345.7569. -âtheslowdown.com
GREEN JELLY
July 21, 8 pm, at Th e Waiting Room Lounge, 6212 Maple St. With Cordial Spew, Molten, and Noizewave. 402.884.5353. âwaitingroomlounge.com
OMAHA JAZZ FESTIVAL
July 22, 4 to 10 pm, at Stinson Park in Aksarben Village, 2285 S. 67th St. The annual jazz festival features top tier jazz talent. âaksarbenvillage.com
JULIA JACKLIN
July 25, 8 pm, at Slowdown, 729 N. 14th St. Melbourneâs Julia Jacklin has carved out a fearsome reputation as a direct lyricist, willing to excavate the parameters of intimacy and agency in songs both stark and raw, loose, and playful. 402.345.7569.
-âtheslowdown.com
YOUTH LAGOON
July 26, 8 pm, at Slowdown, 729 N. 14th St. Features Trevor Powers, aka âYouth Lagoon.â 402.345.7569.
-âtheslowdown.com
JAZZ ON THE GREEN: BOBBY WATSON
July 27, 7:30 pm, at Turner Park, 3110 Farnam St. Multi-Grammy-nominated saxophonist, composer, bandleader, and producer Bobby Watson sits among the pantheon of present-day jazz greats, with a career that spans more than four decades. 402.345.0202.
âo-pa.org/jazz-on-the-green
BOZZ SCAGGS
July 29, 7:30 pm, at the Orpheum Th eater 409 S. 16th St. Features the renowned blues performer and his music, which spans a fi ve-decade musical career. With special guest Kebâ Moâ. 402.345.0606.
âticketomaha.com
ANDY GRAMMER: THE NEW MONEY TOUR
July 30, 7 pm, at Th e Admiral, 2234 S. 13th St. Emmy award-winner and multi-Platinum artist Andy Grammer continues to engage, energize, and empower audiences with stomping stadium-size pop anthems meant to be shared at full volume. 402.706.2205.
âthe admiral.com
JAZZ ON THE GREEN: CHAD STONER BAND
August 3, 7:30 pm, at Turner Park, 3110 Farnam St. Every band performance is an unforgettable experience of R&B swagger and funk fi re 402.345.0202.
âo-pa.org/jazz-on-the-green
August 3, 8 pm, at Slowdown, 729 N. 14th St. Features the American punk rock band from Los Angeles. 402.345.7569.
-âtheslowdown.com
KANSAS: 50TH ANNIVERSARY TOUR
August 5, 7:30 pm, at the Orpheum Th eater, 409 S. 16th St. With a legendary career spanning fi ve decades, KANSAS has fi rmly established itself as one of Americaâs iconic classic rock bands. Th is âgarage bandâ from Topeka released their debut album in 1974 and have gone on to sell more than 30 million albums worldwide with timeless hits like âCarry On Wayward Sonâ and âDust in the Wind.â 402.345.0606.
âticketomaha.com
IN THE MARKET FOR BLUES
August 5, starting at 12 pm. Locations vary in downtown Omaha. Features 30+ blues bands for over 14 hours on indoor and outdoor stages. âomahablues.com/in-the-market-for-blues
JAM SESSION AT THE RIVERFRONT
August 10, 5 to 8:30 pm, at Gene Leahy Mall at Th e RiverFront, 1001 Douglas St. Part of the Omaha Mobile Stage Youth Talent Show series, performances are by youth ages 3-19.
âtheriverfrontomaha.com
August 11, 7:30 pm, at Th e Admiral, 2234 S. 13th St. A.J. Croce performs a special night of music featuring a complete set of classics by his late father Jim Croce, some of his own tunes, and songs that influenced both him and his father. 402.706.2205.
âthe admiral.com
August 11, 8 pm, at Harrahâs Casino Stir Concert Cove, One Harrahâs Blvd., Council BluďŹ s, IA. Genre-bending band Whiskey Myers fi nds fans among country, rock, and pop fans. 712.329.6000.
âcaesars.com/harrahs-council-bluff s
August 11â12, 4 to 10 pm, at Turner Park, 3110 Farnam St. The free summer concert series showcases blues, rock, soul, funk, roots, and R&B, including the Danish blues-rock band Thorbjørn Risager & The Black Tornado; Toronto-based blues band Samantha Martin & Delta Sugar; southern soul band Bywater Call; British singer-guitarist Joanne Shaw Taylor; Lincoln band Josh Hoyer & Soul Colossal; and Omaha youth group Us and Them from BluesEd.
âmidtowncrossing.com
MAHA MUSIC FESTIVAL
July 28, 4 to 11 pm, & July 29, 2 to 11 pm, at Stinson Park in Aksarben Village, 2285 S. 67th St. The 15th annual two-day music festival features a massive indie line-up. July 28: Turnstile, Alvvays, Ekkstacy, Icky Blossoms, Hakim, Bib; July 29: Big Th ief, Peach Pit, The Beths, Terry Presume, Black Belt Eagle Scout, Say She She, M34N STR33T, Garst, and Ebba Rose. âmahafestival.com
August 6, 2 to 5 pm, at Gene Leahy Mall at Th e RiverFront, 1001 Douglas St. Th e Great Plains Bluegrass and Old-Time Music Association engages in an acoustic jam of lively oldtime fiddle tunes and bluegrass standards in a sit-down casual, old-time circle jam featuring fiddle, banjo, mandolin, bass, guitar, hammered dulcimer, and autoharp.
âtheriverfrontomaha.com
JAZZ ON THE GREEN: ANA POPOVIC
August 10, 7:30 pm, at Turner Park, 3110 Farnam St. Internationally renowned guitarist Ana Popovic has built her career on defi ning and describing the essence of American music. 402.345.0202.
âo-pa.org/jazz-on-the-green
August 11â12, check for times, at Falconwood Park, 905 Allied Rd., Bellevue. Features Lord Huron, Modest Mouse, Jimmy Eat World, Gregory Alan Isakov, Manchester Orchestra, Th e Faint, Cat Power, Horsegirl, Th e Good Life, Th e Envy Corps, Criteria, and Minne Lussa. 402.210.4747.
âfalconwoodpark.com
July 8, 6:30 to 9 pm, at Miller Park Pavilion, 2707 Redick Ave.
Features the winner of the 2020 International Blues Challenge, whose smooth, smoky voice, audacious groove, and lyrical guitar mastery weaves stories of a life lived for the love of music.
âo-pa.org/on-stage/music-at-miller-park
August 13, 5:45 pm, at Charles Schwab Field, 1200 Mike Fahey St. Features the co-headliners alongside Alice Cooper. 402.546.1800.
âticketmaster.com
WHITE REAPER
August 13, 7:30 pm, at Th e Waiting Room Lounge, 6212 Maple St. Features the American garage punk band based in Louisville, Kentucky. 402.884.5353.
âwaitingroomlounge.com
DARYL HALL AND DARYLâS HOUSE BAND
August 15, 7:30 pm, at the Orpheum Th eater 409 S. 16th St. One of the great soul singers of his generation, Daryl Hall also was an inventive pop/rock songwriter, both on his own and in conjunction with his lifelong creative partner, John Oates. With special guest Todd Rundgren. 402.345.0606.
âticketomaha.com
August 15, 8 pm, at Steelhouse Omaha, 1114 Dodge St. Features the heavy metal band plus Armored Saint. 402.345.0606.
âsteelhouseomaha.com
70âS BAND
August 19, 7 to 10 pm, at Stinson Park in Aksarben Village, 2285 S 67th St. The Saturdays at Stinson Concert Series features the band that plays beloved covers from the 1970s. âaksarbenvillage.com
PINK: SUMMER CARNIVAL 2023
August 21, 6:30 pm, at Charles Schwab Field, 1200 Mike Fahey St. The three-time Grammy Award-winning singer, performer, and international pop icon performs alongside her friends and special guests, Brandi Carlile and 2022 Hall of Fame inductees Pat Benatar & Neil Giraldo on select dates. Grouplove and KidCutUp perform on all dates. 402.546.1800.
âticketmaster.com
JELLY ROLL: BACKROAD BAPTISM TOUR 2023
August 25, 7 pm, at the CHI Health Center, 455 N. 10th St. Features Jelly Roll alongside Ashley McBryde, Struggle Jennings, and Josh Adam Meyers. 402.341.1500.
âchihealthcenteromaha.com
STYX
August 26, 8 pm, at Harrahâs Casino Stir Concert Cove, One Harrahâs Blvd., Council BluďŹ s, IA. Spawned from a suburban Chicago basement in the early 70s, the band is known for big rockers and soaring power ballads. 712.329.6000. âcaesars.com/harrahs-council-bluff s
MASTODON & GOJIRA: THE MEGA MONSTERS TOUR 2023
August 26, 7 to 11 pm, at Westfair Amphitheater, 22984 US-6, Council BluďŹ s, Iowa. The summer concert series features special guest Lorna Shore. 712.328.8970.
â897theriver.com/event/river-riot
DEVON ALLMAN & DONOVAN FRANKENREITER
August 29, 7:30 pm, at Th e Waiting Room Lounge, 6212 Maple St. Features the blues award-winning singer, guitarist, songwriter, and producer Devon Allman, and Donovan Frankenreiter, the American musician, songwriter, and professional surfer who entertains audiences with his unique blend of laid-back grooves. With special guest Davy Knowles. 402.884.5353. âwaitingroomlounge.com
THE CHICKS WORLD TOUR 2023
August 30, 7:30 pm, at the CHI Health Center Arena, 455 N. 10th St. Features the American country music band from Dallas, Texas, which consists of Natalie Maines and sisters Martie Maguire and Emily Strayer. 402.341.1500. âchihealthcenteromaha.com
JAMES BAY
August 30, 8 pm, at Slowdown, 729 N. 14th St. Showcases the UK singer, songwriter, guitarist, and producerâs clever lyricism, honest confessions, and instrumental proficiency. 402.345.7569.
-âtheslowdown.com
FORTUNE FEIMSTER: LIVE, LAUGH, LOVE!
July 7, 7:30 pm., at the Holland Performing Arts Center, 1200 Douglas St. Catch the stand-up comedian, writer, and actor who has performed on the radio, screens both big and small, and touring her stand-up across the nation. Feimsterâs fi rst one-hour special, SWEET & SALTY, is currently streaming on Netfl ix and was nominated for Best Comedy Special for the Criticsâ Choice Awards. 402.345.0606. âticketomaha.com
RUPAULâS DRAG RACE
July 9, 8 pm, at the Orpheum Th eater 409 S. 16th St. The Official RuPaulâs Drag Race World Tour returns with an all-new production featuring Angeria, Aquaria, Bosco, Daya Betty, Ginger Minj, Jaida Essence Hall, Kandy Muse, and Laganja Estranja. 402.345.0606.
âticketomaha.com
DAVID NIHILL
July 13, 7:30 pm; July 9, 7 & 9:30 pm, at Funny Bone Comedy Club, 17305 Davenport St., Village Pointe. Features the comedian, businessman, and speaker from Dublin, Ireland. 402.493.8036. âomaha.funnybone.com
CHRISTOPHER TITUS
July 14, 7:30 pm; July 15, 7 & 9:30 pm, at Funny Bone Comedy Club, 17305 Davenport St., Village Pointe. Employing what heâs labeled âhard funny,â Christopher Titus has released seven 90-minute albums in as many years. He has six one-hour comedy specials currently running on Comedy Central , and his seventh special, âBorn With a Defect,â spent four weeks on the Billboard Top Ten Comedy Chart. 402.493.8036.
âomaha.funnybone.com
RORY SCOVEL: THE FINAL TOUR
July 20, 7 pm, at Th e Waiting Room Lounge, 6212 Maple St. Features the American comedian, actor, and writer, who released his fi rst stand-up comedy album in 2011. 402.884.5353.
âwaitingroomlounge.com
MS. PAT
July 21, 7:30 pm & 10 pm, and July 22, 7 & 9:30 pm, at Funny Bone Comedy Club, 17305 Davenport St., Village Pointe. Declared by Th e Washington Post as âunforgiving and darkly hilarious,â Patricia Williams (aka Ms. Pat) is a comedian, author, radio host, podcaster, and actress who helms the Emmy-nominated multi-cam series Th e Ms. Pat Show. 402.493.8036.
âomaha.funnybone.com
BEN BRAINARD
July 26, 7:30 pm; July 9, 7 & 9:30 pm, at Funny Bone Comedy Club, 17305 Davenport St., Village Pointe. Features the the comedian who found viral success producing The Table, a sketch comedy series about how the various states of the US are handling current events. 402.493.8036.
âomaha.funnybone.com
TRAE CROWDER
July 27, 7:30 pm, at Funny Bone Comedy Club, 17305 Davenport St., Village Pointe. Features the American comedian and co-author of Th e Liberal Redneck Manifesto: Dragginâ Dixie Outta the Dark. 402.493.8036.
âomaha.funnybone.comT
DAVE LANDAU
July 28, 7:30 pm; July 9, 7 & 9:30 pm, at Funny Bone Comedy Club, 17305 Davenport St., Village Pointe. Getting his start in Detroit at the Second Cityâs Conservatory, Dave Landau has become one of the most in-demand headliners working today. As a top rising comic, Daveâs laid-back demeanor and dark style of comedy landed him on Comedy Centralâs âTh is is Not Happening .â He was also a fi nalist on season 8 of Last Comic Standing on NBC. 402.493.8036.
âomaha.funnybone.com
BROKEN MAGIC COMEDY: SATURDAY
July 29, 3 & 6:30 pm, at Millwork Arts Lounge, 2111 S. 67th St. Features a stellar comedy lineup hosted by Broken Magic Comedy. âeventvesta.com
9 TO 5, THE MUSICAL
July 15â16, 20â23, 27â30, check for showtimes, at Lofte Community Th eatre, 15841 Manley Rd., Manley, NE. Based on the 1980 hit movie, 9 to 5 Th e Musical is a hilarious, outrageous, and thought-provoking story of friendship and revenge in the Rolodex era. 402.234.2553 âlofte.org
RORY SCOVEL: THE LAST TOUR
July 20, 7 pm, at Th e Waiting Room Lounge, 6212 Maple St. Features the American comedian, actor, and writer, who released his fi rst stand-up comedy album Dilation in 2011. 402.884.5353. âwaitingroomlounge.com
AKKASH SINGH
August 2, 7:30 pm, at Funny Bone Comedy Club, 17305 Davenport St., Village Pointe. Features the nationally touring stand up comedian, podcaster, and actor. 402.493.8036.
âomaha.funnybone.com
NATHAN TIMMEL
August 3, 7:30 pm, at Funny Bone Comedy Club, 17305 Davenport St., Village Pointe. Features the viral sensation, who has amassed over 250,000 followers on social media, and theyâve watched his videos over 100,000,000 times. 402.493.8036.
âomaha.funnybone.com
RALPH BARBOSA
August 11, 7:30 & 9:45 pm, and August 12, 7 & 9:30 pm, at Funny Bone Comedy Club, 17305 Davenport St., Village Pointe. Barbosa is a young comedic talent born and raised in Dallas, Texas, who has a comedy style that appeals to all. 402.493.8036.
âomaha.funnybone.com
DINNER, DRINKS, AND DRAG!
August 17, 7:30 pm, at Funny Bone Comedy Club, 17305 Davenport St., Village Pointe. Showcases an evening of Omahaâs LGBTQ+ nightlife entertainment featuring some of the Midwestâs most deceiving divas and sizzling male entertainers lip-syncing and dancing to your favorite songs. 402.493.8036.
âomaha.funnybone.com
TONY ROCK
August 18, 7:30 & 9:45 pm, and August 19, 7 & 9:30 pm, at Funny Bone Comedy Club, 17305 Davenport St., Village Pointe. The comedian has a reputation as a young star in the making with Th e Hollywood Reporter picking him as one of the hot young talents to come out of New York. 402.493.8036.
âomaha.funnybone.com
DUSTIN NICKERSON
August 23, 7:30 pm, at Funny Bone Comedy Club, 17305 Davenport St., Village Pointe. A Seattle native now suff ering in Southern California, Dustin Nickerson is an in-demand comic on the rise. 402.493.8036. âomaha.funnybone.com
TIM HEIDECKER: THE TWO TIMS SUMMER TOUR 2023
August 23, 8 pm, at Th e Admiral 2234 S. 13th St. Tim Heidecker (from Tim and Eric Awesome Show, Great Job! and beyond) is taking The Two Tims (his âNo More Bullshitâ stand-up character) back on the road across America to present his acclaimed one-of-a-kind, two-act evening of comedy and music. 402.706.2205. âthe admiral.com
PAT MCGANN
August 25, 7:30 pm, and August 26, 7 & 9:30 pm, at Funny Bone Comedy Club, 17305 Davenport St., Village Pointe. The comedian is quickly rising as one of the sharpest stand-ups in the comedy world. 402.493.8036. âomaha.funnybone.com
TOWERS OF TOMORROW WITH LEGO BRICKS
Th rough Sept. 3 at Durham Museum, 801 S. 10th St. Features 20 skyscrapers from North America, Asia, and Australia constructed in breathtaking architectural detail by Ryan McNaught, one of only 21 LEGOÂŽ-certifi ed professionals in the world. Noon to 4 pm Sunday; 10 am to 4 pm TuesdayâSaturday. 402.444.5071. âdurhammuseum.org
July 15, 9 am to 4 pm, at Florence City Hall, 2864 State St. The arts festival makes a diff erence through reading and interaction and features activities for the entire family. 402-413-9496. âmissouririverliterary.com
July 22, 10 to 11:30 am, at Lauritzen Gardens, 100 Bancroft St. Join a docent to learn which butterfl ies visit throughout the season, how to attract them to your garden areas, and how to keep them coming back year after year as you sight butterfl ies and fi nd butterfl y âhot spotsâ in the garden on a guided butterfl y walk. Admission: $10 garden members; $20 non-members. 402.346.4002.
âlauritzengardens.org
2023
July 22, 4-11 pm, at Th e Ralston Granary, 7401 Main St., Ralston. Rib lovers and lager enthusiasts can also meet Husker athletes and Tom Osborne as eight of the top BBQ trucks compete for the coveted âPeopleâs Choiceâ Award.
â ribstockbbq.com
WATER LANTERN FESTIVAL
July 22, 1 to 5 pm, at Gene Leahy Mall at Th e RiverFront, 1001 Douglas St. As the sun begins to set in the evening sky, the festival begins to shine with the launch of the lanterns onto the water. Watch your unique lantern drift out into the water as it joins other lanterns carrying hope, love, happiness, healing, peace, and connection. âwaterlanternfestival.com/omaha
BENSON DAYS 2023
July 29â30, check for times, downtown Benson. Benson Days is a family-friendly summer festival that celebrates the neighborhoodâs creative and diverse culture. Activities include a pancake feed, maker and local booths, unity parade, Benson bike tour, kickball tournament, and more.
âbensondays.com
IABCAâS
July 15â16 at Companion Dog Club, 10803 N. 72nd St. An all-breed and rare breed confi rmation dog show with written critiques from each of the judges and the opportunity to earn international titles.
âiabca.com
July 16, 12 pm, at Shadow Lake Towne Center, 7775 Olson Dr., Papillion. Lokul Car Club presents itâs annual post Independence Day car show. Enjoy cars of all makes and models, food trucks, vendors, and music by DJ Corleone.
âshadowlaketownecenter.com
July 21-23 at Mid-America Center, 1 Arena Way, Council BluďŹ s, Iowa. The expo returns for its sixth year celebrating indie comics and pop culture in the Omaha metro.
âtheoconexpo.com
GREEK FESTIVAL
August 19, beginning at 12 pm, at St. John the Baptist Greek Orthodox Church, 602 Park Ave. Th e annual family-friendly festival celebrates Greek culture with food, music, dancing, and more. 402.345.7103.
âstjohnsgreekorthodox.org
2023 NEBRASKA RENAISSANCE FAIRE & MIDLANDS PIRATE FESTIVAL
August 26â27, 10 am to 6 pm, at RiverWest Park, 233rd & West Maple Rd., Elkhorn. Features entertainment such as Joust Evolution, food, shopping, and more.
ânebfaire.com
HIPPIE FEST
August 26, 12 to 7 pm, at Falconwood Park, 905 Allied Rd., Bellevue. Th e family-friendly arts festival features vibrant entertainment for all ages. 402.210.4747.
âfalconwoodpark.com
Would you like weekly event recommendations delivered right to your inbox? Open the camera on your smart device and hover over the QR code (left) to subscribe to Omaha Magazine âs Weekend Entertainment Guide online.
In a letter to a family friend dated January 15, 1786, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart details a visit to Prague, where his most recent opera, Le nozze di Figaro , had drawn a particularly ravenou s following:
âAt six oâclock I went with Count to what is called the Breitfeld Ball, where the flower of Prague beauties assemble [âŚ] I neither danced nor fl irted with any of themâthe former because I was too tired, and the latter from my natural bashfulness. I saw, however, with the greatest pleasure, all these people flying about with such delight to music of my âFigaro,â transformed into quadrilles and waltzes; for here nothing is talked of but âFigaro,â nothing played but âFigaro,â nothing whistled or sung but âFigaro,â no opera so crowded as âFigaro,â nothing but âFigaroââvery fl attering to me, certainly.â (The Letters of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart 1769-1791)
Some 237 years later, that very name, âFigaro, Figaro, Figaroâ echoed through the mind of 25-year-old tenor, Graham Brooks. A combination of talent, dedication, and impeccable timingâlike Mozart, when he chanced to meet librettist Lorenzo Da Ponte in a partnership that would yield the maestroâs most popular Italian operas (beginning with âFigaroâ)âled to Brooksâ professional debut as Don Basilio/Don Curzio on the Orpheum Theater stage this past March.
âI came by the roles in a fairly unique way; very blessed,â Brooks said. âI just happened to be in the right place at the right timeâŚI moved back to Omaha in August to help my buddy with his specialty landscaping company, and with coming back, I desperately wanted to keep taking voice lessons over Zoom, as well as fi nd a vocal coach in the area.
o, I found a coach to practice my audition arias; you have five or so arias in four or five different languages. And then in the fall, and this more for the younger artists and apprentice circuit, but youâll go around and sing your arias and try and get a spot in a program. I reached out to the former head of music at Opera Omaha, Sean Kelly, and he agreed to work with me on my audition repertoire [âŚ] I kept working with him and established a good relationship. Then, the former professional singer had to drop the opportunity to sing Basilio/ Curzio due a scheduling confl ict [âŚ] and then Sean messaged me one morning, and I didnât believe it at first. Heâs like, âGraham, as my last act as head of music at Opera Omaha, Iâd like to offer you Basilio/Curzio in our production of Marriage of Figaro [âŚ] Iâd like to jumpstart your career.ââ
While Brooks was both honored and pleasantly surprised by Kellyâs endorsement, it wasnât without merit. For the better part of a decade, Brooks has immersed himself in the rewarding, yet challenging and often uncertain, realm of classical and operatic singing. An Omaha native, he initially discovered his voice at Papillion La Vista South High before earning his undergraduate degree at Simpson College in Indianola, Iowa, followed
by securing a coveted spot in the voice program at Florida State University.
âI remember my fi rst favorite type of song to sing was the âNeapolitan Art Song,â the âItalian Art Song,â people like Donati and Tosti are two of the composers I really jive withâa lot of their songs are about the morning, or the sunâŚâ Brooks recalled. âI mean, theyâre writing [music] off the coast of Capris, and the western coast of ItalyâŚIf I had that every morning, I think Iâd be inspired to write some pretty cool music [too].â
Today, Brooks is not only a student of opera (and mathematics), but has grown skilled enough serve as a mentor in his own right.
âI have some students I picked up in Tallahassee that I still teach,â Brooks said. âThereâs a lot of physics and anatomy involved in [singing], and that kind of clicks with me. In a sense, itâs all mathematical, right? And I use that in my own teaching method as well.â
However, as Opera Omahaâs Marriage of Figaro curtain call drew ever closer, Brooksâ schedule and focus honed in on memorizing his libretto and attending rehearsals.
âThe first musical run-through rehearsal, when everyone shows up to sing through the opera, everything memorized, was March 6th,â
Brooks explained. âWe had performances March 31st and April 2nd, so we had almost a full month to rehearse, which is actually a pretty big luxury compared to some places. We rehearsed six days a week.â
As for Brooksâ main role, the irksome and salacious Don Basilio, the young singer not only had to perfect his range, but also master his characterâs expressions and unique movements. His director, veteran performer Dean Anthony, provided great insightâand a touch of pressure.
âIt wasnât only a professional debut, but a role debut. Many of the other people [in the cast] had already experienced these roles before [âŚ] all of these very, very talented people from the across the countryâ Brooks said. âOur director is a wonderful director, but he had a previous career as a character tenor, and for a couple of decades made a lot of his money off of Don Basilio and Don CurzioâŚand so he knew the role inside and out, and I was just excited to be a sponge and soak up everything he had to say about the roles.â
When the evening of the 6th arrived, and patrons began fi ling in beneath the marquee of the Orpheum, Brooksâ chest swelled with a mix of pride and excitement. The words of his librette, âENTRA BASILIOâ fi nally materialized as he took the stage to perform his terrazio at the end of the fi rst act. Itâs an experience heâll never forget.
âThe funny moments were funny, the beautiful moments were beautiful, it wasâŚit was really great,â he recalled. âOur cast just really jelled and our timing was pretty spectacular. And I know we were kind of on a show-high, and everyone was feeling good about it, but a lot of my castmates were like, âYeah, this is probably my favorite âFigaroâ that Iâve ever done and the audiences were very receptive as well.â
As for Brooksâ future at Opera Omaha, he said, âIâm doing my best to try and sound my best, trying to act my best, and trying to make everyone else around me betterâŚand I donât want to say anything for certain, but folks in Omaha may see me on the Orpheum stage next year.â
Visit operaomaha.org for more information.
For an audio version of this story, open the camera on your smart device and hover over the QR code above.
âI came by the roles in a fairly unique way; very ble ed. I just ha ened to be in the right place at the right time.â -Graham Brooks
âI used to love peeling the resist tape off dadâs glass etchings. I always had the patience for the little jobs.â -Jenna Lambrecht
Walking through the door of the ivy-covered brick building nestled in Omahaâs Old Market, one canât help but gawk in amazement at the huge, cavernous, cluttered space. How can such an industrial-looking expanse the size of half a football ďŹeld and ďŹ lled with design tables, reams of paper, and wooden shipping crates produce fragile and delicate works of stained-glass art?
Jenna Lambrecht knows. She knows every nook and cranny of the Lambrecht Glass Studioâthe business her parents started in 1978. She knows how glass reacts to heat, light, paint, and a blast of sand. She knows what dalle-de-verre in epoxy means. She knows how color and design can reach peopleâs souls. After all, itâs her heritage.
âMom and Dad met in college at Lincoln,â Jenna said, reďŹecting on the beginnings of the family business. âMom took interior design, [while] dad was more on the business end, but he was also very creative.â
One day her mother took a stained-glass workshop and prophetically said to her then-boyfriend, âMark, I think this is something youâre going to like.â
Mark and Kristi Lambrecht eventually settled in Omahaâs Dundee neighborhood and worked out of their home, displaying their glass creations at art fairs and restoring stained-glass windows in some of the wealt hier homes.
As their business grew, so did their family. When Kristi gave birth to the ďŹ rst of three daughters, the couple realized, âyou canât have kids in the house around glass. So they built a garage behind the house. It had nothing to do with cars,â Jenna deadpanned.
While Mark assembled the glass in the main part of the garage, Kristi drew up the designs in the loft.
âIt was our fun place,â Jenna recalled, whose earliest memories revolve around that garage. â ere are pictures of us in boxes with peanuts. Our parents would play the Beatles and we danced on the [design] tables.â
â e girls were all raised in the studio in their baby seats on the bench,â Kristi Lambrecht added. âI kept them close. ey all know how to make a window.â
Strong word-of-mouth about the coupleâs honesty and craftsmanship kept the projects coming. Mark began working with architects and developers, many of whom had turned their attention from building houses to raising churches. Creating new stained-glass and
restoring Omahaâs vast trove of neglected windows necessitated the move to a larger workspace. In 1993, when Jenna was 8, her parents moved the Lambrecht Glass Studio to 715 South 12th Street, near Leavenworth. e Old Market building became Jennaâs second home.
âI used to love peeling the resist tape oďŹ dadâs glass etchings,â Jenna said. âI always had the patience for the little jobs.â
ough all three girls are creative, it was Jenna, the middle child, who had the deep desire to watch, learn, and absorb everything her father did.
After graduating from the University of NebraskaâLincoln with a Bachelor of Fine Arts, Jenna augmented her vast knowledge of art history and iconography by working with European glass masters, including multiple artists from Denmark. She always knew sheâd work side-by-side with her parents.
âI would paint the ďŹowers and foliage in the windows and Mom would do the ďŹ gure workâall the faces and hands. en Dad and I would work together, maybe laying out the large, etched pieces, or go to meetings with clients or architects,â noted Jenna, now age 38.
Included in the Lambrechtâs extensive portfolio: the clear glass etching of the Holy Family that adorns the Holy Family Shrine, visible from I-80 in Gretna; a contemporary, kaleidoscope window design at St. Vincent de Paul Catholic Church in Omaha; stained-glass windows at Morningstar Lutheran Church, Countryside Community Church on the Tri-Faith campus, Beth Israel Synagogue, and Madonna Rehabilitation Hospital; the textured glass railing at Immanuel Hospital, and the etched, ultra-clear starphire glass at Borsheims in Regency Shopping Center.
With Lambrecht creations inspiring awe throughout Nebraska and beyond, plus big projects in the hopper (even during COVID) the future appeared boundless. en, the glass shattered.
Mark Lambrecht was diagnosed with ALS, commonly known as Lou Gehrigâs disease, and died shortly afterward in early 2020. Jenna was pregnant with her ďŹrst child when he passed away. With her father gone, and her mother reeling from the loss of her husband of 40 years, Jenna suddenly found herself responsible for much more than the artwork alone.
âI never thought it would be all on me,â she confessed quietly.
But her father had never failed her before, even as his health failed him.
âWhen Mark got sick, Jenna sat right next to him, and he taught her the deeper parts of the business for when she would take over,â Kristi said. âIt was 18 months of learning, and when he couldnât talk any more, she translated his sig n language.â
Out of deep sadness emerged incredible joy. Baby Jude came into the world a few months after his grandfather died. True to family form, Jenna brought Jude to the studio, strapping him on her back so she could lean over a de sign table.
Jennaâs two talented and trusted full-time employees, Jimmy and Kenny, install Jennaâs designs and perform the âreally dirty workâ at the warehouse down the street. At home, her husband, Bellevue native JeďŹ Dennis, oďŹers love and support. And Jennaâs mother has found peace in her daughterâs success, and her familyâs ongoing legacy.
âI passed the baton, gave it to her, and oďŹ she went,â Kristi aďŹ rmed. âIâm really proud of her.â
For more information, visit lambrechtglass.com.
It ,s not like I walk around in overtly costume-ish things like poodle skirts and saddle shoes. It ,s more of a subtle but serious commitment to a different era, a different style."
-Lauren Ramm
Awoman in Spain recently spent 500 days alone in a cave 230 feet underground as part of an experiment designed to study the physical and mental effects of prolonged isolation. Upon returning to the surface, the subject reported that her perception of time had come unraveled. It was as if the entrance to the cave had acted as a mysterious portal, one that had the power to bend time into spirals.
Lauren Ramm of La Dama Vintage Trading Co. has the same experience every time she emerges from her closet.
Th atâs where the staccato âclink-clank-clunkâ of shuďŹed hangers activate the controls of her very own time machine as she travels through much of the last century, bouncing back and forth from decade to decade.
Her retro clothing has been featured on such shows as ABCâs The Astronaut Wives Club and The Winchesters, the prequel for The CW series Supernatural . Her historic home in the Gibraltar neighborhood in Council Bluff s, Iowa, now hosts visits from costumers across the spectrum of fi lm, television, and theater.
But just as Hollywood has had to cast an increasingly wider net to source the most authentic pieces for their productions, so too does Ramm in her quest to maintain a robust inventory of the best period attire. Working against her is the passage of time. The youngest of the women who first wore the fashions that Ramm seeks, all those Ednas and Ethels and Eleanors, are now at least 80, and their wardrobes are increasingly likely to have gone extinct along with other vestiges of The Greatest Generation.
âI first built my business scouring all the usual suspects in Omaha,â Ramm explained. âBut there are only so many thrift stores, estate sales and the like. Now I fi nd myself increasingly traveling all throughout Nebraska and the surrounding states in order to keep up.â
Rammâs love of vintage fashion can be traced to something found in almost all homes, the family photo albumâthat black-and-white time capsule of what once was.
âGrowing up, Iâd leaf through all those pictures of my grandmotherâŚmy momâs mom⌠born here in Omaha of Mexican parents,â she said. âAll throughout the 1940s and beyond, like so many women back then and especially during the war years, she did a lot of her own sewing. She was always dressed to the nines in those pictures. So striking. So elegant. So feminine.â
An early introduction to the world of handme-downs further cemented her passion for the styles of an earlier era.
âAs a kid,â she continued, âwe, by necessity, shopped quite a bit at thrift shops, but I gravitated to the older things, the things that were out of time and out of place. Everyone thought I was a bit weirdâŚand thatâs okay. Itâs just who I am.â
La Dama Vintage Trading Co. now presents its clothing, shoes, hats, and accessories through a number of sale s channels.
âPop-ups at various events are great,â she noted. âAnd participating in runway shows at such venues as Slowdown way back when brought the increased visibility I needed, but I much prefer doing private appointments here in my home. Th atâs where I can take the time to really get to know a client and their style, all against the backdrop of having my entire collection at hand for viewing.â
While Ramm looks to many Golden Age legends as her fashion icons, her vampy, precision-cut, razor-sharp bangs are a nod to her favorite influence: Bettie Page.
âItâs hard to put oneâs fi nger on it, but it is undeniable that there is a certain hint of naughtiness and shades of eroticismâ in vintage looks, observed the woman whose shelves are dotted with books featuring the sort of saucy, garter-exposing pin-up art that once graced the nosecones of World War II aircraftâlike those made in Omaha at the Martin Bomber Plant where her aforementioned grandmother worked as a seamstress sewing brass buttons onto Air Force uniforms.
Vintage clothing is more than a side business for Ramm, who works in senior care, and she is no mere weekend warrior when it comes to her wardrobe. She endeavors to live her entire life in vintage pieces.
âI own very few things that are not vintage,â she added. âI guess I do have Converse Chucks, but even those have a long lineage (that goes back more than a century).â
On the day of the interview with Omaha Magazine, she sported a dressed-down, Rosie the Riveter vibe consisting of a simple, bandana-print cotton top in red matched with dungarees and puff-ball lou nging mules.
The new-looking denims, however, were suspectâa little too crisp for a thrift store score.
âNext best thing,â she countered. âTheyâre from an English company that uses original patterns from the â40 s and â50s.â
When out in public, Ramm gets a good number of double-takes, but also a lot of compliments.
âItâs not like I walk around in overtly costume-ish things like poodle skirts and saddle shoes,â she said. âItâs more of a subtle but serious commitment to a different era, a different style.â
People at work have grown accustomed to her distinctive look, but in a previous job in commercial real estate one of her coworkers asked if Ramm could bring in some of her âcostumesâ to borrow as Halloween approached.
âLeave it to a man, the maintenance man, no less, to jump in to set things straight,â she said.
âTh eyâre not costumes,â heâd said with a wag of a fi nger. âItâs how she lives. Itâs who she is.â
For more on La Dama Vintage Trading Co., visit ladamavintaget rading.com.
maha visual content production company WMK Media Enterprises made a splash with a 2022 SOS Heating and Cooling commercial featuring then-Husker wide receiver Decoldest Crawford. The 30-second spot puns Crawfordâs name to promote the HVAC company. Hailed as an ideal NIL (Name, Image, Likeness) ad, it went viral online, netting millions of views and generating stories nationwide.
Now, WMK hopes to make waves with a documentary detailing the redemptive journey of another former Husker wide receiver, Ricky C. Simmons chronicling his transformation from addict to motivational author and speaker. Look Like Somebody: The Ricky C. Simmons Story is an hour-long dive into his prison stretches and faltering rehab attempts, before finally overcoming addiction with encouragement from his old coach, Tom Osborne.
Simmons played on the 1981, 1982, and 1983 teams headlined by âThe Tripletsâ Turner Gill, Mike Rozier, and Irving Fryar that contended for back-to-back national titles. The hotly recruited Greenville, Texas, native arrived in Lincoln already mired in addiction. His clique even had their own party house near campus.
The film, which screened at the Omaha Film Festival and won a Spotlight Documentary Film Awards prize, is the first documentary produced by WMK.
âWeâd never attacked a project even remotely the size of this one. It was a trying but beautiful process. We all learned and grew so much working on this,â said Co-Director Walt Sanders.
Native Omahan actor, writer, producer, and director Randy Goodwin of Girlfriends and Vampire Diaries acclaim offered counsel to the rookie docu mentarians.
â[Goodwinâs] been an advocate [for the project] ever since,â added Co-Director Mic hael Murphy.
Prior to WMK Mediaâs formation, Murphy and Executive Producer Matt Keyes worked at the Stephen Center which assists individuals dealing with homelessness, substance abuse, and mental illness while Murphy served as the nonprofitâs marketing director, and Keyes a crisis intervention therapist. Both were struck by a talk Simmons gave detailing his recovery journey, prompting Murphy to invite the former Husker to a podcast he hosted a t the time.
âI really thought this was a story that should be amplified,â Murphy recalled.
When Murphy left to launch his own media company, Keyes joined him.
âWe were coming across stories of rebuilding every day. People coming from literally the lowest points in their lives to turn their life around and to excel and thrive,â Keyes said. âWe agreed we had to tell these stories. The world needs to know what people go through to become healthy and successful.â
Meanwhile, Sandersâ corporate branding firm shared office space with Murphy and Keyes. Not only did all three men discover they were lifelong Big Red fans; they all felt called to Simmonsâ tale. When Simmons signed on, the producers merged companies to form WMK, and work began in earnest to document his message of hope a nd healing.
âWeâre very proud to partner with Ricky in telling his story,â Murphy said. âIt fits with what weâve set out to do in telling inspiring stories that have a positive impact. We think this is one we can definitely hang our hat on.â
Even though the producers emphasize the story isn't unique to Nebraska, it does intersect with NUâs glory days. Thus, Rozier, Fryar, Osborne, and a Husker who received help from Ricky, Terrell Farley, spoke candidly on camera.
âRicky has the courage to throw himself under the bus to tell his story in a way thatâs so transparent and authentic it caused these other guys to open up,â Sa nders noted.
Murphy believes the players and coaches cooperated with WMKâs vision, âbecause of the way Ricky treats people and manages relationships people just like being around the guy.â
Indeed, Murphy marvels at his âenergy and positivity,â as heard every Sunday night on the airwaves during Simmonsâ Lincoln broadcast, 93.7 FM The Ticket .
âAs long as this can help him get in front of more people at prisons, schools, rehab clinics, heâs happy,â Murphy said of Simmons. âHe wants it out there so that people can reach out to hi m for help.â
The film proved so impactful, it was later screened in front of the entire 2022 Husker football team and coa ching staff.
âAfter the screening every single player stood in a single-file line, went up to him, shook his hand,â Murphy said. âHe was probably there for two hours. Iâve never seen anything like it. It was a great experience.â
âTwo players stayed back because they were struggling with issues and needed Rickyâs advice,â Keyes reflected. âThat experience was worth every nickel, every minute that went into this project. We want to reach people who are struggling with difficult situations, with mental health crises, [and] with substance abuse. That, personally for me, is the point.â
Additionally, a graphic novel adaptation of Simmonsâ story, sponsored by the Secular Organizations for Sobriety (SOS), was provided to e ach player.
Where Look Like Somebody: The Ricky C. Simmons Story will screen next, however, is still up for debate.
âWeâre in talks with different platforms to find a way to get this out there so that people can consume it,â Murphy said.
âIâm eternally grateful for the opportunity to work on this project,â Sanders added. âItâs forged relationships that will withstand the te st of time.â
âI wanted to make a film my whole life,â Murphy continued. âI didnât know who it would be with. The circumstances that brought me to Stephen Center make me feel I was being led down a path by my higher power. It allowed all of our paths to cross at the right place, at the right time.â
As Tom Osborne has always preached, Murphy believes itâs the journey t hat matters.
As for whatâs next, he said, âWe have some pet projects we have been documenting the last year or two. Weâre also looking to assist individuals [to] build their YouTube brands and social impacts. We want to help people step up and follow thei r dreams.â
Visit wmkmedia.com for more information.
maha Magazine values your opinion. That is why we started a contest that allows the public to vote on their favorite places in Omaha. Since 1992, our Best of Omaha contest has been a fun event. Best of Omaha was established to be a true award businesses cannot buy their way into the contest.
Through the years, the contest has grown, and with it, the number of voters has grown. Best of Omaha is highly competitive with tens of thousands of votes counted each year and voter participation remains pivotal to the outcome.
In order to become a âBest of Omaha,â restaurants, retailers, and businesses need your vote. You can feel good about voting in Best of Omaha, because we are the cityâs legitimate âbest ofâ contest.
Like the local businesses you love, our voting system is fair, convenient, and free from manipulation. We use a verified email system for all voters. We only accept one ballot per verified email to avoid vote-stuffing. The ballots are free of advertising and sponsorships. It doesnât take much time to vote, and, although there are lots of fun categories from which people can choose âCookiesâ and âWedding Videographyâ are among new favorites around here the minimum number of votes is five. We also leave the category fields blank so voters are not steered toward certain businesses.
To encourage voting and say thank you, many local businesses offer discounts that the public can obtain simply by showing their proof-of-voting certificate. Anyone who completes the Best of Omaha voting ballot will receive the certificate and discounts that come with it. Who you vote for does not show or affect your ability to receive the discounts.
Please take a few minutes and vote July 1st through August 10th at best ofomaha.com
Local businesses are the cornerstone of what makes Omaha a great place to live and work. From someplace new to an old favorite you go back to again and again, thereâs something special about the businesses that serve our community. Every day KETV works with local business owners to highlight the great work theyâre doing and their positive impact.
Thatâs why KETV is proud to be a part of Omaha Magazine âs Best of Omaha campaign. Your votes help shine a light on the amazing local businesses making a difference in Omaha. From the nominees to the winners, thanks for making Omaha such a unique and fun city.
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Omaha Magazine continues to do an outstanding job of making the Best of Omaha the premier program in the country.
We encourage you to support the businesses and sponsors throughout the coming year.
Throughout itâs 31-year history, a chord has strummed at the heart of Omaha Magazine âs Best of Omaha contest: one of harmony and mutual appreciation between local consumers and their favorite area businesses.
For example, Clearview Pet Care Centre regular Kari Longo had this to say about her preferred pet boarding facility, and more:
âWhen I settled on Clearview, it was an obvious choice. [Manager] Andrea and her team are completely focused on providing a happy, healthy environment for pets. I then learned about Best of Omaha because Clearview had the contest seal proudly displayed at their entry. The contest is vetted fairly, and votes are placed by consumers. It was obvious that the contest spotlighted the best of the best. I have used the contest results in choosing auto-repair shops, home-repair services, and others. I have found the âBestâ choices to be all I hoped for in quality,â she affirmed.
On why Longo takes the time to vote in Best of Omaha year after year, she said:
âI use Clearview weekly and have for many years. I want folks to know what I know: that Clearview offers the Best of the Best in pet boarding and daycare. That is why I continue to vote, because that BOO seal confirmed what I found to be true about the business at Clearview, and I wanted others to know.â
As for metro businesses, the feelings are very much mutual.
âIt means a lot to us when our clients show their appreciation by voting. We try our best to be the best and it feels good when our clients think the same,â said Clearview Lodging Manager Andrea Delisi. âMost people think âthis must be a good, trustworthy placeâ when they see the BOO signage at our facility and on our social media. So, I definitely think that by being voted in the top three every year gets us more and more new clients, which is amazing. We want people to know they can trust their pets with us.â
Omaha Magazine is proud to present the longest standingâand most reliableâcontest of its kind in the metro. Every vote has a story, and we hope youâll continue to add yours to Best of Omaha each year. Thank you to all who participate.
â My name is Joe, but what does that mean? Iâm everything thatâs ever existed. Same with you. Weâre gold, silver, and space dust. We have receptors for sound and taste and all that. So weâre part of those things. â -Joe
rom vibrant highs to serene lows, music conveys the spectrum of emotion in its purest form. So strong is this allure for Joe Benson an Omaha teacher, farmer, and DJ that it extends to every aspect of his life.
On the length of his career, Benson said, âI started about 10 years ago. But Iâve been into music my whole life. The way that DJs play on the radio is kind of how I think about play ing music.â
Performing weekly at the Kimpton Cottonwood Pool Club and at Benson First Fridays, his intimate understanding of theme and melody lend coherence to his sets.
âWhen you can blend sound you can make a continuous thing. Itâs a little different than a jukebox, for instance, where thereâs one song and then itâs over, and then the next song plays and then that song is over. Itâs more like a soundscape,â B enson said.
The skills required to mix and present music onstage are more complex than simply pushing buttons, twisting dials, and spinning discs; the interplay between DJ and audience entails a fine-tuned ear and a talent for showmanship. Thanks to Bensonâs eclectic tastes and active lifestyle, heâs developed a wide pool of inspiration to draw from.
Elaborating on what it takes to be a DJ, he explained, âMath is important; understanding timing, reading the crowd kind of being a psychologist, if you will. Telling stories, listening to stories, stuff like that. Iâm inter preting it.â
Bensonâs personal connection with music is illustrated by his staggering vinyl library approximately 3,000 LPs and several thousand 45âs, ranging from well-known classics to obscure, underg round cuts.
âIt could be from somebody in Russia or from somebody in Finland or Iceland or whatever like that. Everybody has something to say,â Benson noted of his expansive collection. âI have this really interesting 7-inch record. I canât even remember the name of it, but itâs really dark and itâs nothing that I would have ever found on YouTube or anything. I would have never ran into that. So thatâs where having records are really important because you can discover something somebody made in Plainfield, New Jersey, in 1984, and now I have it here, and I can share it with people.â
Benson doesnât amass records to boast, as he ends up selling many of them. In his eyes, music is as necessary to existence as any vital commodity.
âItâs essential. As much as water or anything else. Seeds, food? Nourishment, just like the sun. Sometimes you can put on some music that will make you feel better. You know, the sun comes out. I think itâs so important,â Benson exclaimed. âWhen I was transitioning from a difficult time in my life, thatâs one thing I said to myself, like, âIâm gonna kind of dedicate my life to music.â It gave me something to do. Because at first, it was like a little tiny light, like, âOkay, I need to go there.â And then it became apparent music was something I was passionate about.â
Between all three of Bensonâs current professions, he injects this into everyth ing he does.
Bensonâs myriad know-hows stem from his openness to experience and diversity of lifestyles heâs led.
With a reminiscent smile, Benson recalled, âIâve had lots of jobs. I spent two and a half years basically living on the road as a Tibetan tour monk. So they fly here, they go to work, visa, etcetera. They do monk stuff, and we travel around. And I basically was like a roadie, if you will, for the Gaden Shar tse monks.â
Benson absorbs something new from each c areer pivot.
âIt depends on each job,â he illustrated. âLike in a kitchen, you get really mindful of sharp things. You donât want to cut your finger off. You start noticing how chemistry works as a chef, so you have to be mindful of how you blend things, just like as a DJ, youâre blending things together. It can be two totally different things but sometimes odd combinat ions work.â
Benson speaks with an air of spirituality, and a fascination with the daily, even mundane, aspec ts of life.
âHaving experience with so many different things, you just kind of blend everything together, just like us,â he said. âMy name is Joe, but what does that mean? Iâm everything thatâs ever existed. Same with you. Weâre gold, silver, and space dust. We have receptors for sound and taste and all that. So weâre part of those things.â
In regard to his teaching position, Benson explained, âAbout the first four weeks I had a student spitting on me every day. But again, some of the things I went through with the monks [taught me] compassion and patience. I try to take myself out of my [own] point of view. Even then, we were kind of taught to just keep teaching, to keep our attention fixed on some thing else.
"Thatâs actually a secret amongst teachers is none of us know what the hell weâre doing. Obviously we do to some extent, but we go to work every day not knowing whatâs going to happen. Just go because you want to be there. Enrich peopleâs lives and teach them about something. Like when I can teach them about a piano player, like Thelonious Monk [or musicians like] James Brown and M iles Davis.â
At the core of his love for music is its capacity for human connection a rhythm, a heartbeat, that binds people across time and space.
âItâs like a little bit of time that was recorded, so you can hear it. I donât know, I just think itâs really cool to hear something that happened so long ago, just as it happened,â Benson explained, grinning. âItâs kind of like folklore in that way, itâs from a specific time and place. A record is a direct transfer, usually from a magnetic tape, as the music was heard at that time.
âItâs awesome it makes you feel connected to older generations.â
Goals. Relationships. Intentions. Time Out. Thatâs how recent Westside graduate and current Miss Lincoln Outstanding Teen Maggie Wadginski defines GRIT. Itâs a mantra she both practices and promotes in life, in speech, and most recently, in ink.
Seventeen-year-old Wadginski has loved to dance since toddlerhood; a passion threatened early by a tumor in her hip and an operation to remove it at age 3. The surgery was a success, and the youngster learned to walk, and in time, dance once more. However, she couldnât have guessed that dancing would be the skill that would one day earn her scholarships to achieve a new dream a degree in forensic accounting.
âFor a long time, I was on track to become a professional dancer,â Wadginski said, âBut once I decided not to pursue dance professionally, I had to come up with a new plan for college.â
Wadginskiâs time with the FBIâs Teen Academy over the past two summers proved insightful; she wanted to join the FBIâs forensic accou nting team.
âThey only select 20 teens to join this day program each year. We went to the headquarters here in Omaha, and we got to take part in a mock hostage negotiation. We learned about the process of fingerprinting, molding footprints, and we got to see the cyber work they do,â Wadginski recalled. âI asked what kind of a degree to pursue if I wanted a future with the FBI, and they said that they needed people from every field. It was amazing to see just how many perspectives they use to do their work. It is by default an incredibly inclusive environment, and I wanted to be part of it.â
Now that sheâd uncovered the âwhat,â Wadginski needed to suss out the 'how.'
âMy mom and I used to watch the Miss USA and Miss America pageants together when I was a little girl,â Wadginski said. âWhile we had always watched together, it wasnât until I thought about college that it occurred to me to compete.â
âSome of the pageant wisdom has stayed the same,â recalled Wadginskiâs mother, Wyn Sipple. Sipple not only provides her daughter encouragement and support; she also shares her pageant stage experience as Miss Michigan Teen USA 1992, and Miss Nebraska USA in 1999.
âYou want to look your best, and of course Maggie is as beautiful inside as she is outside. I can say that, even though I am her mother. Iâm biased, but itâs also just true. Itâs also still important to be a little conservative,â Sipple explained. âYou want to present yourself in a way that isnât distracting. And itâs so important for your talent to be technically excellent and still entertaining. All of that was a constant, but the rest of this? The role of social media in the pageant system and scholarship progr am is huge.â
In the talent portion of the competition, Wadginski had only 90 seconds to earn 40% of her score and she danced her way to the crown.
Wadginskiâs win was about more than accessing her education; it was about furthering a cause. After losing a friend to suicide in 2020, Wadginski learned some sobering statistics.
âThe CDC said that in 2023, 44% of high school students feel persistently sad and hopeless. Suicide is the second-leading cause of death for teenagers, and those stats are increasing,â Wadginski said. âWhile I initially chose suicide prevention as my platform, I realized I wanted to reach a younger audience.â
They only select 20 teens to join this day program each year. We went to the headquarters here in Omaha, and we got to take part in a mock hostage negotiation. We learned about the process of fingerprinting, molding footprints, and we got to see the cyber work they do.
-Maggie WadginskiThe teen took to the page. She penned her first book, titled GRIT is Our Superpower. The compassionate, timely work is a tribute to the mental fortitude and the sense of community required, even at a very young age, to clear lifeâs unexpec ted hurdles.
âToward the beginning of the year, I requested a meeting with the school board. The state requires just one hour of suicide prevention education each year, and I felt that our lives were worth more than just an hour,â Wadginski explained. She had hoped to bring attention to the cause, but didnât expect what came next.
âFrom there I got an email from the Westside Foundation asking me to come and talk about my message,â she continued. âThey suggested I apply for a grant from the foundation. No student had ever received a grant from the foundation before, but no other student had asked. I filled out the same application any school would submit, and they a ccepted it.â
Wadginskiâs debut book is available on Amazon, Kindle, and at Omahaâs Public Libraries. With the grant she received, sheâs handing out 1,000 free copies to children who may not otherwise have the opportunity to read it.
The charitable gesture didnât surprise Sipple, who said, âAfter Maggieâs sleep away ballet camp, around her 12th birthday, she heard about a girl who couldnât afford to go. That year for Maggieâs birthday, she requested that instead of presents, everyone donate to the dance camp so they could provide scholarships to kids who couldnât afford it. Thatâs just Maggie. She sees a need and instantly wants to be part of the solution.â
âItâs not about making money; itâs about sharing this very important story in a way that children can understand,â Wadginski affirmed. âIf you speak your message to a thousand people, that message is going to find the person who really needs to hear it.â
Visit gritisoursuperpower.com for more information.
Toward the beginning of the year, I requested a meeting with the school board. The state requires just one hour of suicide prevention education each year, and I felt that our lives were worth more than just an hour.
-Maggie Wadginski
rt therapy is a growing therapeutic technique that, for some, can provide healing and a deeper understanding of oneself. Christine Hennig, MH, ATR, LIMHP, a registered art therapist and mental health practitioner, has discovered art therapy has far-reaching benefits both in her professional and personal life. She describes it as the catalyst that ultimately liberated her from one of the most difficult strugg les in life.
As a child, Hennig suffered years of sexual abuse. She was ashamed. She blamed herself. It was too painful, too difficult to discuss. So, Hennig suppressed it.
That was until she discovered the healing power of art.
Now, when childhood memories of her personal trauma resurface and threaten to consume her, she picks up her brush and begi ns to paint.
âItâs a release a powerful form of communication that allows you to reach into the deepest part of your soul to explore and express your feelings about the challenges in your life,â Hennig said.
For Hennig, art has provided validation for her experiences and has helped reduce feelings of shame a nd anxiety.
âIt can be soothing and centering and helps enhance your self-esteem,â she said.
The basis of art therapy lies in the idea that creative expression can encourage healing, self-expression, and overall mental well-being. While people have been using the arts for communication and self-expression for thousands of years, it didnât formally become a part of clinical practice until t he 1940s.
Studies have found that it can be especially effective for people suffering from mental disorders and psychological distress, such as: trauma, grief, personality disorders, self-esteem problems, anxiety, depression, stress, and chronic hea lth issues.
Hennig invites her clients to use art when words arenât enough or simply wonât materialize to express their feelings and unique challenges.
âItâs not for everyone,â Hennig said. âBut for those who find it helpful, it can have a profound impact.â
Hennig was in college pursing an art degree at the Kansas City Art Institute, in Kansas City, Missouri, when she first realized that her canvas had become a reservoir for suppressed feelings. Using a variety of mediums, Hennig found the process of creating art freeing and uplifting. The lingering helplessness she had felt as a child was gradually replaced with a new sense of control and e mpowerment.
âI found the process of art making stimulated both the cognitive and the emotional centers of the brain, resulting in a holistic therapeutic experience,â Hennig said. âIt helped me tre mendously.â
Excited about the newfound insight sheâd gained from her art, Hennig began seeing an art therapist. Thatâs when she knew she had found her vocation. After completing a degree in fine arts, Hennig went on to become a licensed mental health practitioner and a registered art therapist herself.
Today, Hennig focuses her practice on people who have experienced trauma and abuse, medical challenges, and aging difficulties. She integrates psychotherapy (talk therapy) with art for those seeking alternative avenues to healing.
âPeople often find there are some things that canât be expressed with words,â Hennig explained. âArt accesses a different part of the brain that allows a person to express feelings of shame, grief, trauma, loss of independence, or control. It becomes a powerful form of communication about yourself.â
Part of the beauty of art therapy is that artistic ability isnât necessarily required to reap the benefits of the techniques. Thatâs because the process is not about the finished product, but rather, about finding associations between the creative choices made and oneâs inner feelings and experiences. With the guidance of a certified art therapist, clients can find deeper meaning in their creations by interpreting the messages, symbols, and metaphors that appear in their art. This can serve as a springboard to reawaken memories and help them attain a deeper understanding of themselves and their behaviors.
Kimberly Mueller, MS, ATR, LIMHP, a registered art therapist and licensed mental health practitioner, has found art therapy to be an effective adjunct to talk therapy, utilizing various tools and exercises to help her adult and teen clients find psychological relief and greater self-awareness.
She often starts new client visits with an art project that serves as an icebreaker. The project entails having the client create a picture or collage representing the relationships in their lives. This art becomes a vision board that helps them understand and express what they want from those relationships, Mueller noted.
She has also found the âbroken bowlâ exercise to be an effective way to help patients better understand their own fragmented psyche. The exercise entails breaking a bowl and then having the client piece it back together and mend it with gold foil.
âSometimes in life you have to destroy something before you can create something new,â she explained. âThe client has to make decisions about how they are going to fit the pieces back together and make it whole again. It symbolizes the work they are accomplishing in therapy and helps them see their brokenness in a different light.â
Mueller said she always likes to keep a variety of art supplies on hand when meeting with clients, especi ally teens.
âI may hand them a clay ball and ask them to make something that symbolizes who they are,â she said. âTheir hands may start to form shapes without even thinking about it. Sometimes feelings and emotions can come out in your art that youâre not even aware of. The great thing about art is that while you canât go back and look at your words, you can go back and look at your art.â
Mueller said the healing power of art has revealed new perspectives and broken barriers for many of her clients. She has found the applications for art therapy to be endless and the insights, invaluable.
Jea Theis, MSW, LCSW, LIMHP, first encountered the benefits of art therapy approximately five years ago, and has since become an ardent proponent of its benefits. Theis is a licensed mental health therapist and is certified in expressive arts therapy, which is founded on the same principles as traditional art therapy, but incorporates other forms of art, such as drama, dance, and music to provide clients a wider range expression.
Theis has been working in the social services and mental health field for nearly 20 years. Most of her clients have experienced some type of trauma, whether it be family violence, grief and loss, or sexual abuse. She also works with professionals dealing with compassion fatigue a phenomenon that can occur among caregivers who are frequently exposed to other peoplesâ traumas or stressors leading to emotional and physic al burnout.
âI found the process of art making stimulated both the cognitive and the emotional centers of the brain, resulting in a holistic therapeutic experience. It helped me tremendously.â
-Christine Hennig
She was initially introduced to the therapy by colleague Betsy Funk, LCSW, LIMHP, MPA REAT, a clinical social worker, licensed independent mental health practitioner, and registered expressive art therapist, whom she was sharing an office with at the time.
The timing proved ideal. Theis had been searching for ways to incorporate more creativity into her practice that would allow her clients to process trauma and life challenges from different angles. As the two discussed the therapy, Theis was intrigued by the potential outcomes of expressive arts therapy.
Theis decided to test the therapy by incorporating it into several workshops she was leading that focused on helping professionals address compassion fatigue.
The results proved highly positive.
âThereâs something about expressing yourself through creative arts without using words that helps bring about a deeper understanding of yourself and your challenges,â Theis said. âI found the healing process can be intensified by clients immersing themselves in art and nature and through the connection with others.â
Shortly thereafter, Theis completed her training in expressive arts therapy and became a registered expressive arts therapist through the International Expressive Arts Therapy Association (IEATA).
In the meantime, Funk had developed a program for children and teens through local nonprofit Project Harmony called Growing through Expressive Arts Together (GREAT). The program involves a series of eight small group sessions held at schools to help teens work through mental health issues such as anxiety, depression, relationships, behavioral issues, and social skills.
Funk began leading the groups at a handful of area high schools, and the program quickly surged in popularity. To keep up with its rapid growth, Funk developed a facilitator training program in 2019 to train other therapists on how to lead the groups using the expressive arts model. It is now offered at the majority of local elementary and middle schools throughout the greater Omaha area. Theis said they expect to have nearly 50 more therapists trained to lead the school groups by this summer.
The GREAT group typically starts by taking a feelings thermometer from the students. âWe use expressive arts to help teens work through things like âWho am I?â âHow do I share my feelings with others?â and, âHow do I identify?â Theis said. âThe students can use a variety of expressive modalities including visual art, writing, music, and drama to movement anything with the body thatâs expressive.â
Relaxation techniques like breathing and meditation are also central to the process.
âBy the end of the eight-week session, we typically see a significant shift in stress levels, reactive emotions, acting out, and anxiety,â Theis said. âThis group gives the students a voice a way to express how theyâre feeling. It helps them form relationships and gain a greater sense of belonging.â
In fact, a recent survey of 141 student participants revealed a significant decrease in emotional symptoms, conduct problems, hyperactivity, and peer conflicts by the end of the eight-week sessions.
Kate Kiger, an Omaha middle-schooler, is one such participant who has been touched by the healing power of art therapy. Before she began attending the group, Kate confessed she was very shy, had extreme social anxiety, and was afraid to talk to other peers in a group setting. She mostly kept to herself and avoided eye contact with others.
When her father, Jason Kiger, heard about the GREAT group, he said he knew Kate had a love for art and hoped the combination of art and therapy would be good for her.
As It turned out, it was exactly what Kate needed.
Initially, Kate didnât like talking, so doing art projects was an escape for her.
âIt allowed me to express myself through my art instead of talking,â she recalled. âIt felt calming and relaxing.â
Gradually, Kate began to share her feelings, but doing art at the same time allowed her to speak openly without maintaining eye contact with others. As Kate learned to share, she realized that others in the group held similar feelings and could relate.
âThe group allowed us to talk about our problems, share how we felt, and develop solutions,â she said.
As her fear of sharing gradually began to dissipate, a newfound confidence carried over to her life outside of the group.
âThe change has been remarkable,â Jason said. âToday, she has a good group of friends, she has better control of her emotions, and she can verbalize herself much better than ever before.â
Success stories like these have encouraged Theis and Funk to incorporate expressive arts therapy into their practices in novel ways. They have found its benefits undeniable, especially for those dealing with trauma or mental health issues. Ongoing research validates its effectiveness.
âExpressive arts therapy continues to accrue research in support of its efficacy in improving mental health outcomes,â Theis said.
In 2016, Theis and Funk founded the Omaha Therapy & Arts Collaborative. OTAC is a therapeutic group practice dedicated to providing mental health services through traditional psychotherapy combined with other unique and specialized forms of therapy, including: expressive arts therapy, animal-assisted therapy, and eco-therapy (nature-based therapy).
In addition to private counseling, OTAC also offers mental health retreats and training to attorneys, therapists, teachers, social workers, other school personnel, and professionals. Additionally, GREAT program groups are offered at t heir clinic.
The two women, along with colleague Natalie Hogge, MA, LIMHP, registered expressive arts therapist, later founded the community-based nonprofit Nebraska Expressive Art Therapy Foundation (NExT) to provide greater access to mental health and expressive arts therapy for individuals or groups who are marginalized or underserved. Expanding training and certification opportunities in this field for students in Nebraska and the surrounding area is another important goal of NExT.
âSeeing the positive effects expressive art therapy can have on people and watching them grow and change is very inspiring,â Theis said. âItâs what inspires me to keep learning and developing new and innovative ways to help others. Through our work with the NExT Foundation, we hope to grow the pool of practitioners offering this therapy and expand the number of people who have access to it and can experience the healing power of art.â
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âIcon of Loss, For the Many Davidsâ
When Samuel Bak was 10 years old, his father, Jonas, roughly stuffed him into a burlap sack filled with sawdust and dropped him out of a second-story window. The act, from a contemporary viewpoint, seems appalling but not for the reasons people consider today. When given the context, the action is understood as an attempt born of love, desperation, and tenacious hope. Days earlier, the Gestapo had murdered some 250 children. The date was March 27, 1944, and the place was HKP 562, or the Heeres-Kraftfahr-Park work compound, in Vilnius. The mass murder became known as
This was just one of the genocidal atrocities the Nazi regime perpetrated against the Jewish people. In a split-second decision, Bakâs mother, Mitzia, hid her son under a bed with two other children. A few minutes later, staccato gunshots rang out followed by the keening of grieving parents. Knowing the Nazis would return to search for remaining children, Jonas Bak quickly returned his son under the bed and arranged his wifeâs escape. After a few days had passed and it seemed safe, he tied his son into the sack and lowered the boy out the window.
Samuel heard one word as he hit the soft ground below: âRun! â
Awoman waved his motherâs checkered scarf in a pre-arranged signal and took him to a Benedictine cloister, where he reunited with his mother. They sheltered there until liberation. His father, who had remained behind in the camp, was rounded up with other workers and executed in the Ponary forest just 10 days before Russian forces freed Vilnius from Nazi occupation. His four grandparents were also murdered.
The Bak family members were five of more than 70,000 Jews slaughtered at the mass gravesite. Only 10% of Lithuanian Jews survived the Holocaust; the Nazis massacred almost the entirety of the countryâs Jewish population.
Samuel Bak turns 90 in August. Heâs come a world away from the Vilnius work compound and that burlap sack. Heâs far from the displaced persons camp in Germany where he and his mother began the arduous process of rebuilding their lives. Heâs miles from Israel, where he served in the fledgling stateâs ne w military.
Today, Samuel Bak is a world-renowned artist whose oeuvre bears witness to the Holocaust. Heâs a writer, whose words work as testimony to the Nazisâ coordinated attempt to exterminate the Jewish people. And heâs the namesake for the Samuel Bak Museum: The Learning Center, which opened in February at the University of Nebrask a at Omaha.
This latest addition to UNOâs campus, which is free to the public, serves as a source for students, faculty, staff, and the community to gather around the subjects of art, Holocaust education, human rights, and genocide. The museum will hold more than 500 of Bakâs paintings in its permanent collection and also showcase other artistsâ work on a rotating basis. The learning center will be home to the Goldstein Center for Human Rights, the Schwalb Center for Israel & Jewish Studies, the Fried Holocaust & Genocide Studies, and the office for Diversity, Equity, Access, and Inclusion.
To understand how this ambitious project came to exist, itâs first necessary to examine the extraordinary life that inspired it.
Bak was born on August 12, 1933, in Vilnius, which was in Poland before the Nazi invasion made it part of Lithuania. He enjoyed, by his account, a very comfortable childhood. âI was born to a middle-class, Jewish family not very religious I would say quite comfortable,â he said from his home in Weston, Massachusetts, during his interview with Omaha Magazine
When asked about being born the same year that Adolf Hitler rose to power and his experience as a child during the Holocaust, Bak paused.
Obviously, I did not have the vision of the immensity of the crime against humanity that was perpetrated. I looked at everything from a very personal point of view, how it affected me, but it was a kind of gradual transformation of my childhoodâŚthe grown-ups, were certainly already becoming aware that they were very, very concerned about what was happening beyond the border of their country.
Bak was soon concerned himself. By 1941, the Nazis forced the family from their home into the Vilnius Ghetto. âWe were occupied by the Germans, and very quickly the terrible laws, the discriminatory laws against the Jews, appeared,â he recounted. âWe were forbidden to use the radio, read the newspapers, to get out into street we had an hour or two to go get something to eat. The regime was very frightening within a few weeks.â
Still, there was space for beauty among such brutality. From an early age, Bak had demonstrated artistic talent. Encouraged by his mother, an art school graduate, he quickly emerged as a child prodigy i n painting.
âI cannot say that I was very enthusiastic to be a painter,â the artist confessed with a laugh. âI wanted to sell candy on the street or be a clown or maybe ride on the wonderful wagon of the firefighters but the family decided that I was going to be a painter. And this was quite unusual for a Jewish family because if they had the means, the child should be either a doctor or a lawyer. In worst case, an accountant!â
While in the ghetto, other creatives recognized his remarkable talent and invited the 9-year-old to show his drawings publicly. The event, held in 1943, marked his first art exhibition.
Even with the shortage of art-making supplies, Bak continued to create within the confines of the ghetto, doing so against the stark omnipresence of unrelenting deat h and dying.
The artist describes what happened in Vilnius, which before World War II had over 55,000 Jews among a population of 200,000. âOf the Lithuanian Jews, only a small percentage survived,â he said. âWhen we returned, the people who were saved in the city, there were about 250. When I personally look back at that scene of my life or my many lives, something leaves me completely speechless. I donât know how to explain it.â
Being among that tiny number is staggering for Bak, even all these decades later.
âThese are incredible gifts of life, and I feel incredibly privileged and lucky to be part of something that had so very, very few chances to survive and mainly to survive in what I would say a relatively functional state,â he reflected. âI was able by means of my art in some way to survive what I have survived.â
That art demonstrates an astonishing, sophisticated mastery of genres, which include his interpretations of figurative, still life, Expressionism, Surrealism, abstract, landscape, and even digital art. Such a wide breadth of styles, no doubt, derives from a life spent in a state of perpetual migration during which Bak was constantly encountering, studying, and making art.
Immediately after the war, the artist continued creating work with supplies donated by a US servicemanâs wife to a displaced persons camp in Landsberg, Germany, where he and his mother were transferred in 1945. Although only in his early teens, he enrolled in painting lessons at the Blocherer School in Munich. Three years later, he immigrated with his mother to the new state of Israel, where he continued his education at the Bezalel Art School in Jerusalem and served in the Israeli army. In 1957, the painter moved to Paris to study at the Ăcole des Beaux Arts, and then two years later, he relocated to Rome, where his first exhibition of abstract paintings took place. In 1964, Bak exhibited at the Venice Biennale, the pinnacle of success for most work ing artists.
The ensuing decades continued to be just as peripatetic. Bak returned to Israel several times and lived and worked in New York, Paris, and Lausanne, Switzerland. In 1993, he settled in Massachusetts with his wife, JosĂŠe, and today, the couple makes their home just outside Boston. He has three daughters.
No matter where Bak spent his time, art has been the defining, enduring constant of his life, and he creates art daily, art that is richly metaphorical and highly symbolic. For example, pears, sometimes decaying from within, represent the human form, while chess pieces symbolize war pawns. âI paint every day,â he said. âI have a feeling that the day I do not paint is the day I do not live.â He estimates that over the decades, heâs produced over 10,000 pieces of art.
In reflecting on his prodigious career that began with the 1943 exhibition, the painter said, âI am grateful. I opened an exhibition a few days ago. This is now more than 80 after my first exhibition. Are there any other artists in the worldâŚwho could look back at 80 years since their first exhibition?â
For as much as Bak has used art to work through his own trauma, he remains keenly aware of the gifts he has been given and the ones he also owes. âI always felt a very large part of my work shouldnât belong to me nor to any private people, because I was given so
much,â he explained. âLife was so generous with me, I felt that it was not even the generosity of my part, it was just giving back a certain something t hat I owed.â
This is how UNO became the recipient of more than 500 of the artistâs works and why it established the museum coupled with a learning center. When the university hosted the exhibition âWitnessâ in 2019, over 5,000 people visited the campus gallery. The paintings and their message deeply resonated with the public.
Then-UNO chancellor Jeffrey Gold initiated a discussion with Bak to donate paintings, which led to the artwork bequest. From there, further conversations took place, and in April 2021, the Board of Regents approved a proposal to establish an academic center in his name. That expanded to include a museum when Joanne Li became chancellor three months later. In February 2023, the Samuel Bak Museum: The Learning Center opened to the public in temporary space in Aksarben Village. For the second phase of development,
UNO will build a standalone facility for intercultural dialogue and education.
âThe conversation can be so broad here,â executive director Hillary Nather-Detisch stated. âFor us itâs about having a dialogue. And of course, we want that dialogue to focus around human rights, the Holocaust, and genocide. But sometimes, itâs coming from a different perspective, and t hatâs okay.â
âThis institute is exceptionally meaningful,â Li added. âIt will educate students, engage the community, and ask important questions. When I talked with Sam, he said, âI paint because I have something to say, somethi ng to ask.ââ
That something is abundantly clear in the inaugural exhibition. âIn the Beginning: The Artist Samuel Bakâ is on view through mid-July and features over 50 paintings that span work created in the displaced personâs camp in 1946 to the present.
Itâs not just about going and admiring art,â Li said. âWe want the experience to be transformative. It doesnât matter if youâre in the fifth grade or 65. Youâre meant to be impacted.â
The impact is profound. For example, Bak painted âUnder a Star,â an abstract work from 1963/64, on burlap. The surface references the ubiquitous wartime textile used for the rough, loosely woven clothing Jews wore in the camps and the material that contained their meager food rations. Jonas Bak also used it to smuggle his son, bent into the fetal position, to safety. It was the conduit for young Samuelâs escape and his rebirth beyond the Holocaust. Bursting from the burlap is a Star of David, the identification badge Nazis forced Jews to display on their clothes. It is battered, tattered, and torn but still there. It exists; it failed to be ex tinguished.
The Star of David alongside Samuel Bak and others like hi m survived.
A more recent painting from 2008, which is part of Bakâs lauded âIcons of Lossâ series, features a young boy with arms raised. Based on the famous photograph of a young Jewish boy in the Warsaw Ghetto, the work references childhood innocence lost to craven inhumanity.
âIt spoke to me very much, the boy with the arms raised. No one knows if this boy survived or no,â reflected Bak on how he identified with the photoâs subject. âMany years later, there were two or three men who claimed they were that boy, but it doesnât matter. That boy became a symbol, a highly recognizable symbol, the most known symbol of the Holocaust. And this boy looked very much like me.â
âSam takes this image and says, âThis is a symbol: that was me,ââ Nather-Detisch explained. ââThatâs what I dressed like. This is what all little boys dressed like. I wore that hat.â He really uses this as a symbol of all the children who were killed in the Holocaust.â
When I saw this boy, I thought immediately of my very best friend, who was called, like me, Samuel, and who was hidden by his nanny, by his Christian nanny, and whom the SS discovered and shot. They left his bleeding body on the staircase of the house so that for 24 hours no one was allowed to touch this boy so that all the neighbors would learn what happens to somebody who saves a Jew or what happens to a Jew who is hiding in these premises.
Bak, however, quickly emphasizes that while he saw the worst of human behavior during the Holocaust, he also experienced the best, especially when he thinks of people like the stranger who waved his motherâs scarf or the Benedictine nuns who sheltered him and his mother.
âI was able to think about what the Holocaust meant to me and meant to the laboratory of the maximal behavior for humans, for the good and for the bad,â he said. âIf I am alive, I owe my life to maybe 10 people several of them are Lithuanian priests, a Catholic nun people who risked their lives to save ot her people.â
Li expanded on this. âSam says, âWhen people were dying in the gas chambers, other people were outside trying to save lives. The war brought out the best and the worst of people. The best of people kept me alive.ââ
âSam doesnât want to forget the best of people,â Nather-Detisch added. âSome people can approach his work and say this is really hard and place the emphasis on the negative, but he wants it to be also a positive conversation.â
Alexandra Cardon, the Bak Museum curator, said that while viewing the works can be challenging, it is equally enriching. âIt forces you to consider the world around you and how we are functioning today as a society,â she explained. âItâs work that demands that you take a position, that demands you become an active participant in the structure of your society.â
That participation involves lectures, talks, workshops, and more exhibitions. In mid-August âFlight and Hope,â which explores flight, journey, and forced migration, opens and runs into la te December.
That theme is still fresh for Bak as he views the unfolding situation in Eastern Europe. âI look to the television screen of my home [at] the women and children of Ukraine, and I saw in them myself with my mother, and there were tears in my eyes,â he reflected. âI mean, what can I say? I never imagined that after all the horrors I have experienced that anything like that would happen again. And yet it happened.â
Bak is also aware of book banning happening in states like Florida, where in the spring the Education Department rejected the high school textbooks Modern Genocides and History of the Holocaust . This school year, the childrenâs book Chik Chak Shabbat about Jewish traditions was also removed from Duval County elementary school library shelves, while Anne Frankâs Diary: The Graphic Adaptation was similarly pulled from an Indian River County high school. On May 15, legislation was passed that bars Floridaâs state colleges and universities from spending state or federal funding on diversity, equity, and inclusion programs, raising fears that emphasis on Jewish and Holocaust studies could be diminished. Two days later, the Ohio Senate passed a si milar bill.
âI must say you can well imagine how I feel about it,â the artist said. âItâs frightening⌠itâs very f rightening.â
This reflection echoes what Bak said about being forced into the Vilnius Ghetto all those decades ago.
The regime was very frighten ing within a few weeks.
Bak, however, still has hope for humansâ capacity for good and ardently believes that continued education is key to avoid repeating history. Itâs why heâs so gratified about his museum and learning center at UNO.
Itâs about the best of people.
âI must say, I realize it in my long life, that very extraordinary things happen when very good people meet, when interests converge,â he emphasized. âThey do unbelievable things, and they attract other good peopleâŚit will be an exercise in humanism. I think that education in Omaha to the young people can, I hope, prevent such possibilities in our country.â
Cardon agrees and knows the power of Bakâs compelling art. âYou canât walk out of here and feel nothing,â she said. âAnd thatâs why itâs such exciting work to look at because through active interpretation, you are becoming more engaged. It forces you to think.â
The word ecstasy comes from the Ancient Greek drama term âekstasis,â which refers to the moment an actor releases their identity, ego, and consciousness in order to become âempty for the divine.â This force then inhabits the body, the body becomes a âcharacter,â and the audience is held in a state of suspended disbelief as reality gives way to expression. However, in early 20th century America, this experience became limited by the commercialization of theater and the advent of movies, or as they were known then: âphotoplays.â Craving a more âecstatic,â and expressive experience, amateur founders across America inspired by the work of the German director Max Reinhardt and Swiss architect Adolphe Appia for their expressionist work started the âLittle Theatre Movement,â from which the Omaha Community Playhous e was born.
In the early 1900s, it was popular for department stores to have tearooms, and in one of these luxurious chatter spots is where the Omaha Community Playhouse was conceived. According to Warren Francke in The Omaha Community Playhouse Story: A Theatreâs Historic Triumph, in 1924 in the tearoom of Burgess-Nash formerly located at 16th and Harney streets in the Old Market a group of performers sick of movies purloining their gigs gathered to sit crooked and talk straight about plans to produce, direct, and design plays. The individuals in attendance were Marguerite Beckman, Rex Morehouse, Alan McDonald, Mark Levings, and the Mackin sisters, among others. Dodie Brando had missed the meeting as she had plenty of children to dote on one son, just 6 months old at the time, being future The Godfather icon Marlon Brando but later starred in many Omaha Community Playhouse productions.
According to The Omaha Morning Bee newspaper, on March 4th, 1925, the Omaha Community Playhouse introduced their by-the-people-for-the-people art organization in the auditorium of Technical High School, now the district headquarters for Omaha Public Schools. The first production was a variety show displaying much of Omahaâs talent: Susan Glaspellâs one-act drama Trifles , Francis Potterâs two banjo performances, Adelaide Foggâs dance number titled âThe Clock,â accompanied by The West Sistersâ quartette, an âAll Scotch Trio,â and disappointingly (but not surprising for the time period) a student-performed âAmerican Indian danceâ by area teacher, Mary Cooper.
In April of 1925, Dodie Brando starred in Arthur Wing Pineroâs play under the direction of Greg Foley, The Enchanted Cottage, put on by the Omaha Community Playhouse, which was reviewed by The Omaha Morning Bee as âone of the strongest ever [play productions] given by amateur talent in Omaha,â with students at the Technical High School helping to create the set design.
The Omaha Community Playhouse would then host productions at the Cooper Dance Studio at 4012 Farnam Street for a couple years until the first OCP building was constructed in 1928. The original Omaha Community Playhouse was built in 28 days on 40th and Davenport, located on Sarah Joslynâs cow pasture. In Omaha Community Playhouse Story: A Theatreâs Historic Triumph, Francke also noted that John and Alan McDonald, the same Omaha architects responsible for the design of the Joslyn Art Museum, created an extravagant blueprint for the playhouse complete with wide opera seats, a motion picture booth, and an orchestra pit. However, following the economic crash of the Great Depression, the more extraordinary features had to be omitted.
One of the biggest names to come out of the Omaha Community Playhouse is without a doubt Henry Fonda, who is decorated with film awards for works like Grapes of Wrath (1940), 12 Angry Men (1957), and On Golden Pond (1981), among other famous Hollywood flicks. According to Francke, it is said that Dodie Brando called Henryâs mother, Herberta Fonda, and stated that the playhouse needed a young actor for productions in the summer of 1925. The 20-yearold agreed to play the character Ricky for the play You and I. Fondaâs Nebraska roots followed him to Hollywood to his chagrin. The Evening Star in Washington, D.C. reported in November of 1942 that the actor âyearns for [a] film role where he can be [a] polished city slickerâ and âwas getting plenty fed up at people constantly referring to him as a hillbilly and a farmer.â
HISTORY // STORY BY SOPHIA RIDGE PHOTOGRAPHY PROVIDED BY OMAHA COMMUNITY PLAYHOUSE // DESIGN BY MATTWhen Henry Fonda returned to Omaha to perform for the Omaha Community Playhouse, he met 13-year-old Dorothy Hackett McGuire who was cast in a role alongside him in A Kiss for Cinderella (although this was a few years before Fonda gained notoriety in Hollywood films). Years later, McGuire would play the lead role in Claudia , which was then made into a film of which McGuire also played the lead role and so began her journey to fame. McGuire would go on to play leading roles in films such as The Enchanted Cottage ( 1945), A Tree Grows in Brooklyn ( 1945), and The Spiral Staircase (1946) and was even nominated for a Best Actress Academy Award for a film on anti-semitism titled Gentlemanâs Agree ment (1947).
The Omaha Community Playhouse has changed a great deal since its founding. In a conversation with OCPâs Executive Director, Katie Broman, she explained how some things have changed about the playhouse, but the spirit of being a by-andfor-the-community theater has always remained at the heart of OCP. A major difference from then to now with OCP is that it is no longer completely volunteer work, and most workers get paid for their labor. Of course, the playhouse has grown exponentially since its establishmentâthe address no longer on Davenport but rather on Cass Street since 1959 with a scene shop expansion, a caravan of traveling actors (stalled recently since COVID-19), and even a tornado ripping the roof off in the â70s followed by a huge expansion in the â80 s and â90s.
In June 2023, the Omaha Community Playhouse wrapped up its 98th season. What Broman and others at OCP look forward to in the coming years is the inclusive community work they hope to bring to Omaha, not necessarily carrying on, but rather progressing the same spirit the playhouseâs founders once had: ekstasis, and catharsis, for the c ommunity.
Visit omahaplayhouse.com for more information.
Itâs mesmerizing to listen to someone talk about their passion in life; the gleam in their eyes meeting an atten tive audience, their spitfire speech painting a picture of joy and inti mate knowledge. Indeed, this excite ment is on full display when speaking with Chad Noahr about his favorite pastime the fine art of paintball.
Noahr is the general manager of Mad Cow Paintball, a multi-course outdoor paintball facility located in Louisville, Nebraska. However, his love for the sport began decades prior with an invitation to a friendâs birthday party an event that would color his perspective, and his clothing, forevermore.
âI actually started playing paintball when I was 9 or 10 years old for a friendâs birthday party. That turned into once, here or there, in a friendâs grandpaâs backyard. Then it turned into once every couple of months, then once a month, to once every other weekend, to once a weekend,â Noahr said.
His love for the sport eventually led to Noahr forming a team and entering local, then national, tournaments. As to be expected, the relatively inexperienced squad faced some sobering statistics only earning around three or four points during their first national outing. They suffered some major losses but continued to practice and improve, eventually training in the same circles as Nebraskaâs former professional paintball team, âVicious.â He and his teammates have since gone on to become a serious force in the nat ional scene.
In his current position as the general manager of Mad Cow Paintball, Noahr has shifted his focus away from practicing and toward maintaining and updating the courses at his facility. However, he said he and his friends are planning a âglory year,â as many of the crew are turning 40. In fact, they plan to enter another national tournament for kicks and for old timeâs sake.
BY BILL SITZMANN // DESIGN BY MATT WIECZOREKThese lofty goals aside, Noahr and his teammates regularly get together with their families and attend local paintball festivals, or simply camp together with gear in tow the sport a reliable source of fun and camaraderie among its members.
Dan Napoli, producer and director of several documentaries on paintball, said, âYou spend so much time together in airports, hotels, cars, and vans. Youâre probably starting by cramming as many people as possible into a Motel 6 room and borrowing someoneâs minivan to start because you have no sponsorship money.
âThereâs so much intimacy in traveling that closely with a small group of people. Iâve witnessed that firsthand and been lucky to document it in a few films.â
Noahr can often be seen wandering from room to room in his house picking up various competitive paintball markers (guns), describing the significance of each. Thereâs one thatâs been customized with laser-inscribed doughnuts, one that looks gold thatâs been passed from teammate to teammate over the years, one that he describes as his âworkhorse,â and one of his first markers that he still carries with him to t ournaments.
WHEN SOMEONE ASKED ME WHATâS GRATIFICATION FOR ME AT MAD COW, I TELL THEM HIGH-FIVES AND SMILES. ,, -CHAD NOAHR
As much as Noahr enjoys his collection of markers, he wants people to know that an expansive armory isn't needed to enjoy paintball at Mad Cow. Everything is provided for nearly every age, including gear for children as young as 5, with softer projectiles for safety.
âWe always say weâre in the business of making memories,â Noahr said.
For the groups that fill the facility, such memories are not only fond, but frequent.
âGroups of high school kids, the bachelor parties, the bachelorette parties, the birthday parties, the wedding parties, the trash-the-dress parties. Itâs [all] amazing,â Noahr said of his guests.
Itâs undeniable Noahr genuinely loves to see his guests enjoying the game he personall y cherishes.
âWhen someone asked me whatâs gratification for me at Mad Cow, I tell them highfives and smile s,â he said.
With the passion that Noahr has for the sport and the joy it brings him to see others playing it, it's little wonder that Mad Cow is among the premier paintball facilities in Nebraska. There are three different styles of courses available for players, both veterans and newcomers. For those looking to try something unique and exhilarating on a beautiful summer day, consider making the trip up to Louisville, Nebraska, with some friends. After all, discovering new passions is often a messy, colorful, and ultimately,
Visit madcowpaintball.com for more
Radio profoundly changed the American culture by exposing more people to new ideas, music, news, and entertainment. Today, Omaha Public Radio continues to play a vital role in spreading information, educating and enlightening people, and it helps make listeners in our pluralistic society more responsive, informed human beings and intelligent responsible citizens.
Omaha Public Radio brings the world to the Omaha community and beyond 24 hours a day the world of politics, science, culture, and music. Through our daily lineup of fact-centered reporting, insightful conversations, and strong community focus, KIOS provides connections to the heartbeat of Omaha in ways no one else does.
In addition to national and regional programming, KIOSâs coverage of arts and culture is focused on locally produced shows that reflect how our community lives. This is reflected in jazz, blues, adult alternative, ambient and retro music shows, live interviews
on a diverse range of cultural topics and film, and conversations on how to live well physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually across fields and disciplines. KIOS also amplifies the voices of local nonprofits in a daily intervie w segment.
KIOSâS COVERAGE OF ARTS AND CULTURE IS FOCUSED ON LOCALLY PRODUCED SHOWS THAT CONSIDER HOW OUR COMMUNITY LIVES.
JULY/AUGUST 2023
OMAHA GREEK FESTIVAL
Benefiting: St. John the Baptist Greek Orthodox Church and Ladies Philoptochos Society
Aug. 18-20
Billed as âOmahaâs Original Greek Festival,â this annual event has brought Hellenistic cuisine and live entertainment to the metro since 1978. Attendees can enjoy authentic, delicious Greek food and pastriesâincluding lemon-roasted chicken riganato, and everyoneâs favorite, baklavaâa taverna offering imported drinks, traditional dance and music performances, and are invited to browse the festivalâs boutique and jewelry table. Additionally, the event features various activities for kids and historic tours beneath the cupola of the majestic St. Johnâs church. The party goes on rain or shine, with tents and indoor seating available on-site. Admission is $5 for adults, and free to students and visitors under 12. Guests wonât be able to stifle an exuberant âOPA!â as they enjoy a slice of Greece in Omaha this summer. âgreekfestomaha.com
July 1.
VOLUNTEER AT THE COMMUNITY DONATION CENTER
Benefits: Restoring Dignity
Location: 108th and J Streets ârdomaha.org
July 8.
RELAY FOR LIFE OF GREATER OMAHA NE
Benefits: American Cancer Society Location: Stinson Park, Aksarben âcancer.org
July 10.
BLAND CARES GOLF OUTING
Benefits: Angels Among Us
Location: Champions Run Golf Course âmyangelsamongus.org
July 08
July 13.
29TH ANNUAL SWING FOR YOUTH BEST BALL GOLF TOURNAMENT
Benefits: Southwest Kiwanis of Omaha
Location: Tiburon Golf Course âswomahakiwanis.org
July 13.
MERRYMAKERS SONG AND SUDS 2023
Benefits: Merrymakers Association.
Location: Happy Hollow Ballroom âmerrrymakers.org
July 18.
HOLES FORE HEROES GOLF TOURNAMENT
Benefits: Heart Heroes Inc.
Location: Quarry Oaks Golf Course, Ashland âheartheroes.org
July 13
July 21.
NATIONAL BE SOMEONE DAY!
Benefits: Project Harmony
Location: Project Harmony Child Advocacy Center âprojectharmony.com
July 22.
10TH ANNUAL HEAD FOR THE CURE 5K
Benefits: Head for the Cure Foundation
Location: Zorinsky Lake Park âheadforthecure.org
July 22.
BLUE WATER BASH
Benefits: Boys Town
Location: Boys Town Okoboji
Campgrounds, West Okoboji, Iowa âboystown.org
July 22.
CHILDRENâS SQUARE FUN RUN & WALK
Benefits: Childrenâs Square U.S.A. Location: Childrenâs Square U.S.A., Council Bluffs, Iowa âchildrenssquare.org
July 23.
THE INFUSION: BLOODY MARY MIX-OFF
Benefits: Nebraska Chapter of the National Hemophilia Foundation Location: Founderâs ONE | NINE ânebraskanhf.org
July 24.
BACK TO SCHOOL DRIVE PROGRAM
Benefits: Calistus Multiple Myeloma Foundation
Location: African Farms âcalistusfoundation.org
July 27.
July 24
6TH ANNUAL GREAT PLAINS PVA/AWBA INVITATIONAL
Benefits: Paralyzed Veterans of America - Great Plains Chapter Location: Mockingbird Lanes âgreatplainspva.org
July 29.
KEEP KIDS ALIVE DRIVE 25 âLIVE FORWARD!â 5K RUN/WALK TO REMEMBER 2023
Benefits: Keep Kids Alive Drive 25 Location: Skutt Catholic High School âkeepkidsalivedrive25.org
August 4.
2023 FAIRWAYS FORE AIRWAYS GOLF SCRAMBLE
Benefits: Lungs4Life Foundation Inc.
Location: Tiburon Golf Club âlungs4life.org
August 5.
ZERO PROSTATE CANCER
RUN/WALK
Benefits: ZERO Prostate
Cancer
Location: Zorinksky Lake Park âzerocancer.org
August 7.
QLI ANNUAL GOLF CHALLENGE
Salina Anderson, APRN
Geraldine Alexis, LIMHP, PLADC
Julie Bierman, LCSW, LMHP
Chantel Bruha, LIMHP, LADC
Korrie Conners, LMHP, CSAT
Kirby Davis, LMHP
Peggy Deaver, LIMHP, CPC
Davin Dickerson, APRN
Beth Farrell, LCSW, LIMHP
Dumayi Gutierrez, PhD, LMHP
Lucy Hancock, MA
Aug. 05
Charlene Hills, LCSW, LIMHP
KG Langdon, APRN
Mary Loftis, LMHP, CPC
Kim Mueller, LIMHP, CPC
Nicole Obrecht, LIMHP
Kara Schneider, BA
Marty Stoltenberg, APRN-BC
Kristi Tackett-Newburg, PhD, LIMHP
Greg Tvrdik, LIMHP, CPC
Sarah Wenzl, LMHP, CPC
Michele Yanney-Wehbi, LIMHP, CPC
Benefits: QLI Brain and Spinal Cord
Injury Specialists
Location: The Players Club at Deer Creek âteamqli.com
August 11.
SAFE HAVEN GOLF TOURNAMENT
Benefits: Heartland Family Service
Location: Eagle Hills Golf Course âheartlandfamilyservice.org
August 11.
WINGS AND WHEELS GALA
Benefits: Ronald McDonald House
Charities - Omaha
Location: Signature Flight Support ârmhcomaha.org
August 12.
LYNX HOOPS GOLF FUNDRAISER
Benefits: Abraham Lincoln Lynx
Basketball Location: Dodge Riverside Golf Club, Council Bluffs, Iowa âalhslynx.com
VOTED FIRST PLACE! -7 YEARS IN A ROW-
August 17.
SAVE PROGRAM GALA
Benefits: SAVE Program Location: Cascioâs Steakhouse âsaveprogram.org
August 25.
RITECARE CLASSIC GOLF BENEFIT
Aug.
Benefits: RiteCare of Nebraska Location: Dodge-Riverside Golf Course, Council Bluffs, Iowa âscottishriteomaha.org
August 26.
2023 NEBRASKA EPILEPSY RUN, WALK, AND ROLL
Benefits: Midwest YouCan Foundation
Location: Chalco Hills Recreation Area âmidwestyoucan.org
August 27.
THIRD ANNUAL BAGS FOR BAGS CORNHOLE TOURNAMENT
Benefits: Bags of Fun Omaha
Location: THE BARN Ackerhurst Dairy Farm, Bennington âbagsoffunomaha.org
August 28.
GOLF OUTING PRESENTED BY UNION PACIFIC
Benefits: Youth Emergency Services (yes) Location: The Players Club at Deer Creek âyesomaha.org
Event times and details are correct as of presstime, but are subject to change.
Omaha Magazine encourages readers to visit venues' websites and/or calling ahead before attending an event or visiting a museum.
Benson has seen an entrepreneur-led evolution in its century-plus history, continuing today with visionaries like BFF Omaha Executive Director Alex Jochim. Heâs witnessed Benson transform from ghost town to destination magnet to Omahaâs cre ative pulse.
Founded by namesake Erastus Benson, the Benson neighborhood began as a suburban sanctuary before being annexed by Omaha and emerging around its own bustling Maple Street business center. By the late 1960s, Benson was an inner city enclave with modest single-family homes and a thriving business hub dominated by family-owned stores.
By the â80s, however, many storefronts sat vacant or rundown. Benson has since reemerged as a vibrant center of commerce and in-demand place to live thanks to entrepreneurs whoâve opened speciality shops, bars and restaurants, and entertainment and art venues. Helping foster the burgeoning creative scene was Jochim, a photographer, who with artist JD Hardy, launched the Benson First Friday Art Walk in 2012.
The eventâs popularity begat more art walks and programs until BFF organized as a nonprofit that sponsors year-round, offbeat programming.
âWe like to keep things weird, avant-garde and nontraditional,â Jochim said. âAnd we like to have fun.â
By the time it rebranded as BFF Omaha in 2019, Bensonâs renewal was in full swing.
âBefore BFF, everything was pretty sterile, and weâre the opposite of that,â he continued. âWe created this sense of community not only for creatives but for Benson overall. In the 12 years Iâve been there, Iâve seen a lot of development. The good thing is that itâs mainly owned and operated by people who invest in the community. It allows for less gentrification and more sense of community. That is what drew me to Benson and whatâs keepi ng me here.
We use BFF Omaha as a tool to create community and to support artists/creatives with new opportunities. Itâs created this very broad mission of what we do, so we can tailor it to whatever creative endeavor we feel is our next move as long as itâs supporting the arts and artists and community, it falls within our realm.â
John-Paul Gurnett first intersected with BFF while working as a public school teacher. Heâs gone from a patron to creating events that plug into BFF, to becoming its communication s director.
âBFF has continued to grow and evolve to meet the needs of our community, which legitimizes the work of so many who share their time, energy, and money,â Gurnett noted. âIt has allowed me to draw upon all my areas of expertise in a creative way that benefits the place I call home.â
Professional development is part of how BFF invests in people,â Jochim added. âI love seeing people develop skills and being there as a teacher or guide to help them learn some of these processes.â
When Jochim moved to Benson around 2009, he discovered a neighborhood in transition.
âIt wasnât necessarily visually arts-focused,â he recalled. â[Though] there were a lot of musicians.â
He âgot caught upâ in making things happen on the visual arts front.
âI formed relationships through that,â he said. âThen those groups of people helped spark the idea to start the First Friday Art Walks. Once we started that it created this whole sense of a creative community that I didnât even know existe d in Omaha.â
Shelby Audiss has been with BFF in various roles since the start and now serves on its executive board.
âIâm a lifer. This organization is so special to me because of the people involved,â she said, crediting much of BFFâs success to Jochim.
âThe word âimpossibleâ does not exist in his lexicon. He has a knack for taking a creative vision, drumming up support, and making it happen. Heâs instilled this sense of limitless possibility, acceptance, and support of everyone.â
âWe canvassed the neighborhood, talked about the vision, got a lot of people on board,â Jochim recalled of the premiere art walk. âPeople asked what we were doing next. It was a sense of, okay, weâve got to keep this going. Besides, we enjoyed it. We did a lot of pop-up shows in vacant spaces. It necessitated us remaining involved.â
BFF took on physical event spaces, Petshop and Sweatshop, and now supports fou r galleries.
Once established, Jochim said, âTraditions formed and we started getting more and more community involvement and partnerships.â New creative spaces have emerged in 402 Arts Collective, Maple Street Construct, and Benson Theatre.
âWe partnered with nonprofits and businesses to do stuff together and to form one common vision. We had the artists and the energy, and those organizations had the resources.â
Ted and Wallyâs and Jakeâs Cigars, where Jochim tended bar for man y years, are longtim e partners.
The New American Arts Festival which highlights the creativity and cultures of area refugee and immigrant communities celebrates 10 years this August. BFFâs largest fundraiser, the Petfest Music Festival, is set to feature local and regional artists on August 19.
Additionally, the final big First Friday of the season on September 1 turns into âFurst Fridayâ and features dog-friendly activities.
Outside of Benson, BFF partners with Lincoln Calling and the Omaha Summer Arts Festival. Its converted semi-truck mobile MAMO Gallery makes the trip to Maha Music Festival, the annual Earth Day celebration, and ot her events.
âWeâre not limited to Benson,â Jochim noted. âPublic art is a great way we can get out. We did a big social justice mural project on Farnam Hill. We installed artist-designed billboards throughout rural Nebraska advocating for abortion access services. We believe in using art as a catalyst for change.â
Still, taking on a greater volume of projects and events comes with its share of growing pains.
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âWeâve had our ups and downs, burnout moments, and doubts about making this sustainable. Thatâs actually why we became a nonprofit,â Jochim explained. âWe needed a direction to go with it. It couldnât be grassroots anymore.â
A small core staff and around 45 dedicated volunteers keep BFF firing on al l cylinders.
âWeâre here as a backbone consultant to businesses and organizations that want to get involved. We talk with them about best practices,â Jochim said. âWe work with people about getting creative with their spaces. It doesnât need to be a white wall gallery to showcase art or a creative element. It can even be window displays. It can be digital media. It can be having a performer out in front of your business.â
All of it, he said, âprovides more opportunities for emerging artists and, I feel weâve had a big impact on t hat front.â
âI feel like weâre still growing our roots and getting our foundation. Itâs taken us a while to crack that foundation code for funding,â Jochim continued, noting his transition to working BFF full time. âBefore, I didnât have the capacity to dedicate what this organization needed.â
Now that state legislation has designated Benson a creative district, heâs involved in shaping its future.
âOnce we hire someone to run that, I feel like itâs going to be unstoppable because the creative district (a Nebraska Arts Council administered program) allows access to more funding from the state,â Jochim said. âYou can do infrastructure changes and large-scale projects. Thatâs whatâs going to keep Benson growing and to allow BFF, which has been kind of managing that, to step out and pursue our vision of spreading to other communities."
While the additional funding is exciting and certainly appreciated by Jochim, itâs the people BFF supports, and now employs, that keeps him c oming back.
âI love actually being with people having conversations, and working with artists in nontraditional settings, poking at their creativity, and having them see it from different perspectives and angles. I love the installation process. That is what keeps me fueled. The other thing that keeps me going is my team.â
Visit bffomaha.org for more information.
They arrived 22 years ago. One by one, 107 fiberglass sculptures appeared throughout Omaha. The anonymous and androgynous figures, or rather the project writ large, went by âJ. Doeâ and served as the metroâs first wide-scale public art project. Whether it was a âJaneâ or a âJohn,â people couldnât escape talking about the figures or, indeed, encountering them throughout the city. From Creighton Universityâs campus to Saint Cecelia Catholic Cathedral, Eppley Airfield to Fontenelle Forest even a No Frills Supermarket the temporary artworks dominated just about every public space, and the public discourse, throughout the sum mer of 2001.
J. Doe was
of
Inspired by similar fiberglass community projects in cities like Chicago, Kansas City, and New York, the longtime arts advocate and educator came up with a novel approach in Omaha. Most urban areas had typically used animals for similar projects. (Zurich, Switzerland, started the urban craze with its âCow Paradeâ in 1998). Buis, however, saw people as the main draw, and Omaha became the only city to use the human figure as the canvas for artists to interpret.
âWe wanted to do humans, because Omaha is famous for its people,â she explained. âWe donât have scenery, but we do really have the friendliest people.â
Buis met with a committee of fellow arts advocates at the Hot Shops Art Center to get the project started and enjoyed a supportive, enthusiastic response from the community.
âIt was pretty ambitious, but people jumped all over it,â she remembered. âWe talked to everyone who made art in Omaha and got donations; we got so muc h support.â
Businesses like Lozier Corporation, Omaha Steaks, and Union Pacific Railroad played a major role in producing the J. Does, which towered over 6 feet and cost $2,500. As did local nonprofits such as the Rose Blumkin Foundation, the Omaha Community Playhouse, and the Omaha Childrenâs Museum. Individuals, too, opened their checkbooks to become patrons of Omahaâs urban art.
Ninety-five artists participated in the project, with some creating more than one sculpture. The roster read like a short list of Omaha creatives, including: Catherine Ferguson, Mary Zicafoose, John Thein, and Les Bruning, all of which were well-established, or well on their way. Ferguson landed the plumb role of designing sets and costumes for Opera Omaha. Zicafoose became a leading global textile artist. Printmaker and painter Thein, who died last May, was a beloved professor at Creighton University. Sculptor Les Bruningâs sculptures appear throughout the metro. Many more artists remained fixtures of Omahaâs local visual arts scene, while others have enjoyed success elsewhere.
Each artist brought their own inimitable imprimatur to their sculpture. For example, Trudy Swansonâs âHeart & Soul,â sponsored by One Pacific Place Shopping Center, depicted a bifurcated figure with a flare of
twisting, twirling metal springing forth emblematic of the positive energy people experience from their âheartsâ and âsouls,â and symbolic of an individual âburstin g with joy.â
âThis was my first public sculpture, and it was a big, exciting project to do,â Swanson recalled. âI was so excited it went somewhere where it was really seen a nd visible.â
Public response to the army of J. Does was overwhelmingl y positive.
âThe sculptures were pretty impressive. It was fun, people loved it, and it was pretty popular,â Buis remembered. âIt was a happy project, and I think it put us on the map.â
The figures remained in place into September of that year before being auctioned off, with
a portion of the proceeds benefitting the City of Omaha Public Arts Commission. Many corporate donors purchased the pieces they sponsored for display at their headquarters, while some private individuals bid on sculptures for their homes. (Buis recalled one sponsor who prominently positioned a J. Doe in her living room after winning it at auction.)
The projectâs legacy served as a point of inspiration for more art in public spaces. One year after Buisâs project, the copycat J. Doe II appeared in Omaha with just over 50 sculptures scattered across Omaha. In 2003, Tour de Lincoln arrived in the capital with 150 miniature bicycles that marked the cityâs first pubic art project. Artist Liz Shea-McCoy, who spearheaded Tour de Lincoln, said in the project pamphlet: âWhat I loved most about experiencing the J. Doe Project, and others since that time, was that one really feels the desire to explore that city, searching for the next sculpture and the next!â
Several more fiberglass ânextsâ were yet to come. The Bemis Center for Contemporary Art oversaw a similar initiative by Alegent Health in 2007 with the O! Public Art Project, which commissioned 22 âOâ shapes throughout the city. In 2016 the Nebraska by Heart project saw more than 80 heart-shaped sculptures installed throughout Lincoln to celebrate the stateâs sesquicentennial. That same year, eight Horses of Honor commissioned to memorialize police officers who died in the line of duty made their debut in key Omaha pu blic spaces. Today, Swansonâs âHeart & Soulâ is the sole J. Doe still on public display at its original site near Trader Joeâs at 103rd and Pacific streets. Itâs become so much a part of Omahaâs cityscape that the artist was delighted to discover it had become a location in the popular PokĂŠmon GO mobile app game.
âMy daughters were playing that game, and one of the PokĂŠStops was my sculpture,â she shared. âThey sent me the pic, and I used it to make my business cards. J. Doe str ikes again!â
Augmented reality games aside, Swanson is pleased that her contribution continues to resonate with the public.
âI still run into people these many years later, and they tell me what the piece means to them,â she said. âItâs an old friend, an old piece of myself thatâs still out there bringing joy. Itâs a wonderful, wonderf ul thing.â
For more information about Omahaâs public art projects, visit publicar tomaha.org.
maha artist Peg Watkins considered a piece of pottery she had created in 1978. The jar, done in earth tones and slightly tapered at the top, is embellished with three-dimensional cross-hatchings done in a rough style.
Itâs easy to connect that jar to a cold wax oil painting that Watkins completed only two years ago its gritty surface also cut with crisscrossing, texture d lines.
One might think that Watkinâs work hasnât changed much between the two pieces, but it has. The connections between that vase and the painting show that she loves the textures that she used as a potter and now integrates them into paintings primarily composed of oil paints and waxy substances.
âWhen I paint, I think Iâm still a potter, because Iâm concerned about the colors and textures,â said Watkin s, age 75.
Watkins, an early member of the Old Market Artists Gallery located in the shopping hubâs iconic Old Market Passageway, occasionally swaps pieces of her featured art there with others from her home. Among her recent works in the Passageway was a shallow square glass bowl with a blue center circled by iridescent colors that change when handled. A glass tray with a shallow curve shines brilliant with broad white and yellow panels separated by thin black stripes. Orange and yellow orbs dance across an oblong green glass tray. Two square, muted yellow-and-rust-colored abstract paintings are speckled with small dark r ectangles
Born and raised in Omaha, Watkins graduated from Duchesne Academy of the Sacred Heart and attended college there until its closure two years later. Afterwards, she married, had a son and a daughter, divorced, and returned to college in her 30s, this time at the University of Nebraska at Omaha. There, she earned a bachelorâs degree in education and a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree, doing her thesis in ceramics.
Afterward, she became a supervisor with Omahaâs Parks, Recreation and Public Property Department, helping to direct the recreation centers, pools, playgrounds, and other public works.
âI ran five or six community centers and the day camp at Hummel Park We also had a Sundog playground program. It was a good job, a fun job,â Watkins recalled.
During her tenure with the city, she also earned a masters degree in mana gement.
Besides teaching art in the various recreation centers, Watkins utilized the space and supplies to create works of her own there as well. About three years before retiring in 2007, she gave up pottery because of its âdust and messâ and turned to making fu sed glass.
âWhen you put the pieces together, they flow into each other,â she said. âThatâs great.â
Often, Watkins wore and still wears some of her glass fusion jewelry on necklaces.
âMy theory is if I donât wear them, no one else will,â Watkins said. âI sold a lot of them in the elevator at city hall. I always kept one in my briefcase so I could replace it if I sold one.â
canât be sculpted with palette knives and non-traditional fine arts items, like paint rollers, scrapers, and squeegees. Watkins also uses sand, ash, and other materials (such as tissues and coffee filters) to layer her paintings with the textures she loved as a potter.
âI am an intuitive painter. I make a mark, paint a shape, add a texture, then see how that leads me into the next step,â Watkins explained. âI never start with a specific end in mind. I let the paint and the art elements draw me into the work until I feel it is complete.â
Though she no longer teaches, Watkins continues to inspire those around her. Lynda Tygart, who creates bromoil prints, showed some of her works to Watkins one day a few years back impressing Watkins so much, that she immediately whisked her to meet the owner of Dundee Gallery to market her works there.
âPeg has an overall creativity and shares that with others,â Tygart noted. âSheâs enc ouraging.â
Being a long-time fixture of Omahaâs art community has allowed Watkins to observe it s evolution.
After about 30 years, Watkins left her post with the city and joined the gallery in the Old Market, originally founded by potters Tom Harnack and Rob Johnson and painter Za ch Jones.
Upon retiring, Watkins took to creating paintings when she moved into a new house and couldnât abide the sight of its bare walls. At first, she used acrylics before shifting to oils. However, put off by how long the paints take to dry, she began using a cold wax process with oil paint after learning about it at the Hot Shops Art Center. She studied it more, for about three years, with Diane Lounsberry-Williams, an Omaha artist known for her cold wax paintings.
This technique allows an artist to mix oil paints with waxy substances to shorten their drying time, but not to the point that they
âThe Omaha art scene has changed notably over the past several years,â she said. âThrough the J. Does and art benches set up around the city, Omaha has been been wonderfully spotted with institution art. Kaneko has encouraged art around the city, and the Joslyn expansion is a wonderful gift to the city.
âMore attention is is given to local artists now. Sometime ago, if art was not from California or a place like that, there was no chance to sell it here. Itâs not tha t way now.â
About her own experiences in Omahaâs art scene, Watkins concluded, âIâve built a nice life for myself. Every dayâs a gift.â
For more information, visit oldmarketartistsgallery.com.
âI am an intuitive painter. I make a mark, paint a shape, add a texture, then see how that leads me into the next step. I never start with a specific end in mind. I let the paint and the art elements draw me into the work until I feel it is complete.â
-Peg Watkins
Lots of duos have come and gone: Lennon and McCartneyâŚSonny and CherâŚKobe and ShaqâŚSimon and Garfunkel. As partners, they didnât last. Nor did, say, Bonnie and ClydeâŚMantle and MarisâŚThelma and Louise.
But one pair who matched up in 1976 endures like milk and cookies, mashed potatoes and gravy, or peanut butter and jelly. Or like two other pals whose partnership dates to the mid-â70s, Sesame Streetâs Ber t and Ernie.
Meanwhile on Dodge Street, itâs the singing, guitar-playing music-and-comedy team of Bozak & Morrissey.
âWeâve got a good thing here,â said Lou Bozak. âAnd we love Omaha.â
âWeâre like brothers,â added Dan Morrissey. âWe have our moments, but weâre as tight as can be. Lou is the godfather to my son.â
They perform danceable âoldies rock and rollâ with their Bozak & Morrissey Band in recent years, monthly at the Firewater Grille near 72nd and Grover streets on âNostalgic Wednesdays.â Thatâs just the latest in their long list of venues, including more than a decade at the Ozone Lounge until its closur e last year.
âA couple of years ago, a couple came out to the Ozone on their 35th wedding anniversary,â Bozak recalled. âTheir first date was a Bozak & Morrissey gig. Those are the kinds of relationships we have and the gratification we receive.â
For Bozak and Morrissey, it all started in their 20s when they auditioned for Galileo at the Omaha Community Playhouse. They hadnât met, and both sought the role of âthe monk,â whose job was to confront astronomer Galileo Galilei about his controversial views on the cosmos.
âI read for the part and got a callback,â Morrissey said. âThen this guy walks in and everybody starts fawning all over him: âOooh, Louie!â He got the part and I got four small roles, so of course I instantl y hated him.
âWe were put in the same dressing room, and I brought my guitar in for a minstrel role. Lou says, âSo you play the guitar?â I say, âNo, I just carry one around.â But we liked the same kind of music, and the approach to acting, and beca me friends.â
The director, Charles Jones, asked if they would warm up the cast in the Green Room, and on opening night they played 1950s doo-wop. The pair came up with something new each night, and at the end of the playâs run had polished a repertoire of 25 songs. Thus, Bozak & Morriss ey was born.
They soon played at the Wine Cellar under the Firehouse Dinner Theatre (now the Upstream restaurant) in the Old Market. Their pay was whatever Louâs sister collected at the door. They paid her $10, and on some nights, Morrissey confessed, âMary Lou made more t han we did.â
But they caught on and drew a following. The Wine Cellar ran ads in the Omaha World-Herald about their âsongs of the â50s and â60s.â Some ads called them âzany.â With a humorous nod to his ancestry, Bozak sang a âCroatian Cowboyâ parody of Glen Campbellâs âRhinestone Cowboy.â
They took a break in the late â70s when Morrissey went to graduate school in California, but reunited and performed in a comedy shop at Oliverâs Back Alley, north of 93rd and Maple streets. In 1980 they formed their band with the Van Fleet brothers, Larry and Gary, appearing at the old Peony Park, Arthurâs Lounge, the Ranch Bowl, and elsewhere. They also entertained at priv ate parties.
Morrissey and wife Kathryn met while working at Mutual of Omaha, and the band went on hiatus. But after 18 months, the musicians re-formed in 1986 for the âNerd Prom,â adding lead guitarist Greg Fox. The âB&M Bandâ has played ever since.
âLou and Dan are both personable and have good chemistry,â said Fox, a founder of the popular Chevrons band in the â60s. âTheyâre really good musicians, but sometimes itâs also like a standup routine and the other four guys in the band are afraid of what theyâll say next! But they have that theatrical stage sense about them and it works.â
Before they became Bozak & Morrissey, Bozak and Morrissey each performed in plays and bands as teenagers; Lou graduated
from Ralston High and Dan from Creighton Prep. In 1973, as a Creighton University student, Dan was pictured on the cover of The World-Heraldâs Sunday magazine as Superman emerging from a phone booth.
The accompanying article mentioned both of them Lou was at the University of Nebraska at Omaha as part of a combined-schools âWorld of Jules Feifferâ revue. Three years later, they met at the Playhouse and the rest, as they say, is hysterical. Each has lived a busy life, though, besides playing music. Bozak is a carpenter by trade, as was his father, and today works in business development and marketing for Paul Davis Restoration. He also performs separately with âLou Bozak and Friends.â In the 1990s he played a lead role in Little Shop of Horrors , and a few years ago hit the floor for a local Dancing with the Stars fundraiser. Morrissey owned an events and meetings company and served as president of the Omaha Sports Commission when it helped acquire the Olympic Swim Trials for the city. He also worked in marketing for College World Series, Inc. Earlier yet, he played rugby and ice hockey.
âPlaying in a band is as close to a team sport as Iâm going to get now,â he said. âEverybody has a role to play and knows his job. Egos get checked a t the door.â
Besides Fox, other bandmates include: Jay Buda on keyboards, Lloyd Brinkman on drums, and Fred Genovesi on bass. All sing, and harmonies are part of their show. For all, performing is more than a hobby. Bozak said, âItâs just what we do.â
Through the years they have played at such venues as the Interlude Lounge, the Whiskey Roadhouse, the Mutual of Omaha Dome, Le Grille, Barry Oâs, Pauliâs, the Happy Hollow Club, Fontenelle Forest (indoors), Village Pointe (outdoors) and even for the Aksarben Coronation. The year that UNO Chancellor Del Weber reigned as king, they feted him with âKing of the Road.â
Dan and Lou often appeared at Arthurâs Lounge, 83rd and Dodge streets, and the Ranch Bowl, south of 72nd and Pacific (now the site of a Wal-Mart).
âWeâre like brothers. We have our moments, but weâre as tight as can be. Lou is the godfather to my son.â -D an Morrissey
âIt was so fun to go to Arthurâs,â Kathi Jensen reflected. âIâve been following Bozak and Morrissey forever. They not only sing well and are so entertaining, but they are quick and funny.â
Arthurâs and the old Ranch Bowl stand out in B&M history.
âOne of the things Lou and I are most proud of, is that we turned Arthurâs and the Ranch Bowl into the two premier live music venues in Omaha in the â80s and â90s,â Morrissey said. âWe were essentially the âhouse bandâ for both of those venues, which never had bands before, and built up a huge following opening the doors for some other great bands to play there.â
The nutty buddies enjoy ragging on each other onstage.
âIâll make fun of Louâs foibles or his appearance,â Morrissey said. âAnd heâll tease me about my baldness. Itâs all in fun.â
Cheryl Wild Goodrich, who has danced to B&M at the Ozone and now at the Firewater Grille, said fans appreciate hearing the music of t heir youth.
âBut what I love as much as their music is their humor and how crazy they are,â she said. âThey can get offstage and engage the audience especially Lou. It just gets to be a big party.â
âLou is a big personality, as vibrant as can be,â Morrissey echoed. âIn his head heâs still in his 20s, which comes across on the stage. He has an innate ability to connect with the audience.â
Having paired up in the â70s, Bozak and Morrissey are now in their 70s. Both enjoy longevity in their genes. Louâs parents lived to 92 and 96, and Danâs mother to 103.
In 2020, Bozak & Morrissey were inducted into the Nebraska Music Hall of Fame. So how long will they conti nue to play?
âAs long as the audience still likes us and we have a place to play and can have fun with it,â Morrissey said. âWhen it stops being fun, it will be time to cal l it quits.â
For now, itâs still great fun.
Visit the Bozak & Morrissey Facebook page and YouTube channel for more i nformation.
âIâll make fun of Louâs foibles or his appearance, and heâll tease me about my baldness. Itâs all in fun.â -D an Morrissey
Summer is in full swing, and that means Omahaâs concert scene is heating up. Whether youâre into classic rock, southern soul, heavy metal, country, funk, rap, blues, pop, indie, R&B, or smooth jazz, there's a place to get your groove on. Here, we introduce you to some of the metroâs newer venues to catch the latest tour, as well as a few old favorites that always deliver when it comes to showcasing a broad swath of mus ical genres.
1. STEELHOUSE OMAHA
1100 Dodge St. | 402.345.0606 steelhouseomaha.com
Omahaâs latest jewel on the concert scene just opened in May and is a state-of-the-art venue designed to accommodate up to 3,000 music lovers. Part of Omaha Performing Artsâ entertainment campusâthat already includes the Orpheum Theater and the Holland Performing Arts Centerâthe $104 million venue is in the heart of downtown. Steelhouse is transforming the local music scene by bringing in acts that typically bypass Omaha for cities like Chicago, Kansas City, and St. Louis. Taking to the stage this summer and fall: Fleet Foxes, Tom Keifer (of Cinderella fame), W.A.S.P., and Parliament Funkadelic featuring George Clinton. Standing room only with VIP seating on the upper level.
2. RIVERFRONT PAVILION
Gene Leahy Mall, 1001 Douglas St. theriverfrontomaha.com
Part of the $400 million remodel effort by the Metropolitan Entertainment and Convention Authority (MECA) to revitalize downtown, RiverFront Pavilion is the latest place to catch an outdoor concert while simultaneously serving as a gateway between the historic Old Market and north downtown Omaha. Reminiscent of old-fashioned bandstands, the pavilion has hosted heavy hitters like Tony Award-winner Kristin Chenoweth, as well as local youth. Concerts this summer run the gamut, including the Live on the Lawn Summer Concert Series in July featuring Lemon Fresh Day and Finding Dixie and acoustic jam sessions by The Great Plains Bluegrass and Old-Time Music Association in August. Grab a blanket or lawn chair and settle in for a summer of great music.
3. THE ADMIRAL THEATER
2234 S. 13th St. | 402.706.2205 admiralomaha.com
New but old, the Admiral already hosted its fair share of concerts as the Sokol Auditorium. Rebranded and renovated, this venue, situated in the heart of Little Bohemia, was built in 1926 as a place to host events for the local Czech community. Itâs evolved with the times, and today hosts a line-up of established and up-and-coming artists. Taking to the Admiralâs stage this summer: Andy Grammer, Orville Peck, Steve Earle, and A.J. Croce (son of the legendary Jim Croce). Standing room only with some VIP seating upstairs.
4. THE WAITING ROOM LOUNGE
6212 Maple St. | 402.884.5353
waitingroomlounge.com
Long a favorite on the Omaha concert scene, this venue is located on Bensonâs main drag in what started as a 1920s car dealership. Roughly a century later, it has a well-earned reputation for bringing in future stars like Matt & Kim, Wiz Khalifa, Imagine Dragons, Sara Bareilles, and Macklemore before they hit it bigâas well as music legends like the Psychedelic Furs. With floor space for 250, this is the place to see onstage talent in an intimate setting. Hitting The Waiting Room Lounge this summer: Green Jelly, White Reaper, and Devon Allman & Donavon Frankenreiter. Grab a beer and settle in for a standing-room-only show.
5. SLOWDOWN
729 N. 14th St. | 402.345.7569
theslowdown.com
Affiliated with Omahaâs own Saddle Creek Records (renowned for indie bands like Bright Eyes, Cursive, and The Faint), this NoDo anchor venue, which includes two stages, is small enough to feel intimate, yet large enough to pull in established talent. The close quarters allow the crowd to connect more immediately with the musicians for an unforgettable concert experience. Featured on stage in July and August: Cowgirl Eastern, The Frights, Julia Jacklin, Youth Lagoon, The Regrettes, and James Bay. Mostly standing room only with some seats and tables available in the bar area.
3110 Farnam St.
midtowncrossing.com
Located in the heart of Midtown Crossing, the bandstand at Turner Park hosts an eclectic array of music from the beloved Jazz on the Green concert series to pop-up performances by Opera Omaha. This summerâs concert highlights include the free Playing With Fire concert series, held two weekend nights in both July and August. Featuring international blues-influenced bands, the lineups include: Sugaray Rayford, a Texas blues singer; Atlanta-based Eddie 9V; Twelve Bar Blues Band from Amsterdam; Dom Martin Band from Northern Ireland; Montreal-based Justin Saladino; Danish blues-rock band Thorbjørn Risager & The Black Tornado; Toronto blues band Samantha Martin & Delta Sugar; and British singer-guitarist Joanne Shaw Taylor. The verdant setting is ideal for a cooler full of cold drinks, and a night full of choice tunes.
Itâs easy to imagine railroad proponent and philanthropist Henry Farnam walking through the Farnam Hotel on his way to have a meal at the Dynamite Woodfire Grill. He would probably wear a suit with a stiff collar, as most men did during his era (the 1800s).
Perhaps heâd pause at the Catalyst Lounge named for the spark that lit the dynamite used during the building of the first transcontinental railroad. He might realize that the Lone Tree Landing coffee shop is named after the lone tree where he and his cohorts frequently met to discuss railroad development in Omaha. And if he was paying very close attention, he might notice that the carpet throughout the hotel and into the restaurant is an artistic rendering of a topographical map of the river by which the lone tree stood.
âNot many people notice the carpet,â said Dynamite Woodfire Grill Executive Chef Robert Murphy. âEverything around here is done with a purpose.â
Mr. Farnam would likely be greeted warmly by every employee he encountered and some who would go out of their way to encounter him with a greeting and offer of help, a common practice at the hotel. Upon approaching the restaurant adjacent to the lobby, he might immediately realize the cleverness of the restaurantâs name and its nods to the assembly of the railroads.
The menu at the Dynamite Woodfire Grill would likely surprise and delight him, just as it surprises and delights modern-day visitors. Chef Murphy is well traveled, and itâs reflected in his cuisine. He elevates comfort food with innovative, global influences. His many travels taught him about different flavors and ingredients that arenât common in American comfort foods.
For example, on Murphyâs menu, deviled eggs become Bloody Mary shrimp deviled eggs. Other adventurous starters include Reuben Croquettes (a favorite of the hotelâs general manager Shane Lonowki) and octopus.
âIâve experienced a lot of stuff in my day,â said Murphy, who has 30 years of experience. âYou may not recognize the Caribbean or Asian influences in my food, but theyâre there.â
Food and beverage manager Robert Smith noted that the restaurantâs wood-fire grill leads some guests to believe the restaurant is all about steaks.
âPeople see the grill and think steak, but more things than just steak are charred on the grill,â he said, adding that he personally enjoys the grilled vegetables. Scallops, salmon, short rib, chicken, and burgers also appear on the menu.
Cuisine card is in the process of getting its seasonal update. Chef Murphy is particularly excited about adding steak tartare to the menu, but his favorite dish changes depending on âcurrent trends, local markets, and what farms have available.â
The Sunday brunch offered by Dynamite Woodfire Grill features a âLight & Wellnessâ menu, which includes smoothies and fruit platters. Meanwhile, the âFarnam Signatureâ menu sports a salt-crusted prime rib Benedict, a brunch burger, and more. Brunch salads are also featured, including a chicken and waffle salad with fried chicken bits, waffle croutons, field greens, and a maple bourbon vinaigrette. Guests can finish brunch with key lime mousse or a slice of chocolate peanut butter cream pie.
âHospitality isnât just food. SERVICE IS WHAT YOU DO, HOSPITALITY IS HOW YOU MAKE PEOPLE FEEL. Weâre not just selling wineâweâre selling a lifestyle.â
âRobert Smith
At time of writing, the restaurant locally sources around 20-30% of their ingredients, but that number will increase exponentially as the weather warms, Murphy noted. Filet and ribeye come from a farm in Lincoln, microgreens are supplied by Nathan Pfeifer in Omaha, and additional fresh components are sourced from Long Walk Farm in Council Bluffs and eCreamer y in Dundee.
Murphy enjoys working in a restaurant that celebrates Omaha history and culture. Every piece of displayed art throughout the hotel and restaurant is by local artists, with one impressive piece in the restaurantâs dining room telling an important, dramatic event from downtown Omahaâs storied history.
âDo you see the pattern of the wood?â Chef Murphy asked, gesturing toward an imposing installation consisting of staggered wooden beams stacked on the wall. âThatâs wood from Mâs Pub. And that pattern is a recreation of the aerial shot taken after the explosion.â
This is the eighth hotel restaurant in which Chef Murphy has worked and it has proven a positive experience for him as he flourishes his take on approachable, internationally influenced fine dining. He recalled that back in the 2000s, hotel restaurants became âtabooâ because they were âbland, boring, and overpriced.â
Today, as the Dynamite Woodfire Grill demonstrates, thatâs no longer true.
In fact, most diners at the Dynamite Woodfire Grill are Omaha natives. Many of them donât even realize the restaurant is part of the hotel, Murphy explained, because thereâs an exterior entrance to the dining room from Farnam Street.
General Manager Shane Lonowski described Dynamite Woodfire Grill as âa cutting-edge restaurant with an innovative atmosphereâ while Smith said, âItâs chic, relevant, elegant, and up to date. Itâs not dated far from it.â
Lonowski added that itâs a âwine loverâs paradiseâ because of the extensive wine offerings. Smith, who also happens to be the only master sommelier in the state of Nebraska, has many connections within the beverage industry tapping them to expand their stock of wines and spirits that canât be found anywhere else in the city.
âRob opens doors for things that Nebraska is often overlooked for,â Murphy said. âSeveral bottles of wine that we have can only be found here in the state. He tries to appeal to a wide audience.â
Locally owned by Angie and Jason Fisher, the hotel is part of the Marriot Autograph Collection. So while they must adhere to some Marriot standards, they have the liberty to give the hotel and restaurant an âOmaha feel.â
The hotel and restaurant are of a notably high caliber for a smaller market.
Said Lonowski, âTheyâre the best team in Omaha! And Chef is a thoughtful and artistic
chef. Heâs intentional,â Lonowski said, adding that some staff members have work experience in Michelin Star restaurants.
Smith agreed with Lonowkiâs assessment of the team.
âHospitality isnât just food,â he affirmed. âService is what you do, hospitality is how you make people feel. Weâre not just selling wine weâre selling a lifestyle.â
Of his team, Chef Murphy said, âItâs a massive amount of brain power, all chugging along in the same direction.â
Smith said the Omaha population was ready for a high-end hotel to open, and had the resources to support it.
âOmaha is unique. The fifth-generation Omahans are used to coastal markets. They expect things. Omahaâs really enigmatic as far as whatâs the next step,â he said. âThis areaâs about to explode. Itâs reminiscent of big markets 20 to 30 years ago.â
As Omaha continues to expand and its people refine their tastes, Dynamite Woodfire Grill smolders as an emerging hot spot. As for how Henry Farnam would react to his namesake hotel, one can only speculate. However, if he could experience the hotel and restaurantâs attentive staff, delicious food, and expansive wine offerings, lending a smile and a tip of his hat doesnât seem farfetched.
Visit dynamitewoodfiregrill.com for more information.
While Chef Brad Groesser of Omaha would never describe himself as wise, heâs certainly earned the epithet. Thatâs because the âGadget Chefâ as heâs lovingly called by his patrons, knows that experience canât be loanedâit must be bartered with, often at great cost.
âIt was a gun mount accident on board ship; a hot gun, bad powder, and a misfire, and my hand got brushed off in the recoil,â Groesser recalled of the event that claimed his right hand and most of his forearm. âI mean, that was pure shockâŚit took them about 45 minutes to cut me out of the gun and I mean, youâre talking about about a gun that has a 15 foot barrel, 5 inch caliber [âŚ] it was 18 hours before I actually sa w a doctor.â
Severals years prior, a listless 17-year-old entered a US Navy recruitment office. In his youth, Groesser spent half the year with his dad at his grandfatherâs farm in Weeping Water, Nebraska, and the other half with his mom in Los Angeles, California, where he found his sea-legs working shipyards.
Still, the frequent moves instilled a certain restlessness in Groesser, a comfort with shifting environments, and a desire to see the world. The Navy, he thought, would stay his wanderlust. And for a t ime, it did.
âI was lucky enough to be on a ship rigged for sub warfare, so we werenât with a big detachment we were always out on our own,â Groesser said. âAnd it was old enough that it broke down all the time, and we got towed into secure places. And my chief, rather than sit on the ship and wait for the repair part would be like, âWeâre gonna rent a car to go pick it that up so we can get underw ay faster.â
âYou know, Iâve skied Sarajevo, Iâve skied Mount Etna, skied the Pyrenees in Spain, surfed MoroccoâŚso, very nice opportunities , you know?â
Yet, in a fraction of a second amid plumes of gunpowder and cries for help Groesserâs life sharply, irrevocably, cha nged course.
âI was off the coast of Nicaragua when this happened,â said Groesser, nodding toward his customizable prosthetic. â[Then] I was at Wilford Hall Medical Center in Lackland Air Force Base getting rehab. And then they sent me to Naval Air Station in Corpus Christi, and I was there for six months before I finally got medically discharged.â
The result was a tremor of disbelief, and for a time, the trance of ennui.
âI was partying hard. But again, I was 20. Itâs something the military teaches, sadly, but I think it keeps us sane out there,â Groesser noted.
Once again, Groesser found himself pinging between California and Nebraska, weighing and ultimately rejecting the benefits of the GI Bill. In time, memories of the ship that took his hand resurfaced, and tellingly, the good outweighed the bad.
âMy best friend in the service was a cook, I was a storekeeper supply guy, so I would help him order his food [âŚ] but after hours when I wasnât working, and he was down there working the midnight shift, I would go in there and just cook with him and hang out,â Groesser said.
After five years climbing the ranks at TGI Fridays and a stint waiting tables at then Clint Eastwood-owned Hogâs Breath Saloon, Groesser was finally ready to take the leap from front to back of house, returning to Nebraska for culinary school. This new battleground, however, demanded a more sophisticated arsenal.
âMy mother, who lived in Houston at the time, read an article in the paper about this student who had a similar thing who made a similar attachment,â he said. âSo now Iâve got this attachment on my prosthesis; hook up a knife or a carrot peeler or a grater, 10 different kinds of knives [âŚ] I can chop pretty fast. Donât cut myself too much. Canât complain.â
Following the upgrades, the newly forged âGadget Chefâ wasted no time accruing professional experience working alongside the late chef Gene Commorata at the Brass Grille while still in school, landing the executive chef position at the Dundee Dell following graduation, and later serving as the food service director at the Ralston Arena.
âAfter the Ralston Arena, I went back out there and was food service director for Iowa Western [Community College],â Groesser said. âAnd then this opportunity came up, and I opened the Sojourn.â
Named for his many journeys, the Sojourn Cafe opened in Ralston in 2019 to rave reviews the made from scratch meals and breezy, California-inspired interior earning the Gadget Chef a slew of regulars. Quality standards were exacting, as Groesser alongside his right-hand man and Iraq war veteran Jason Russell ran a tight ship.
âI was a noncommissioned officer, I got my stripes [âŚ] so my leadership style is a little more brutal,â Russell confessed. â[Groesser] does have a soft spot for people. Heâs not like Gordon Ramsay, Iâm more Gordon Ramsay, right? When you have kids at first-time jobs, they typically need direction and discipline, and you get that in the military.â
Despite Sojournâs initial momentum, no restaurant could outpace the all-consuming pandemic of 2020. While mandated closures werenât immediately fatal, they would prove to be a killing blow as the cafe hemorrhaged employees. Groesser shouldered much of the responsibilities himself, leading to burnout and the eventual closure of the Sojourn Cafe in late March, 2023.
âYou know, Iâve left early, Iâve come in late, but Iâve just not been here a day we were open,â said Groesser during an interview during Sojournâs final week. âExcept one Sunday when I had the flu. So, almost four years, thatâs the one day I closed down.
âIâm justâŚtired. Iâm sad because we have a great following and reputation, itâs not because business sucks. Itâs just, Iâm worried I canât keep up this pace, you know? Itâs bittersweet. Itâs going to take awhile to set in because I put my heart and soul into this place, itâs my familyâŚbut I have to take care of myself.â
Despite the setback, the Gadget Chef continues to adapt and reconfigure; another experience in his armory, wiser for the exchange. Today, Groesser helms the downtown Marriottâs kitchen as their new Chef de Cuisine his mettle untarnished, and stronger than ever.
Starters:A varietyof cured meets served with Midwest cheese, candied nuts, flatbread, anda witha cupof house jam (Cheese and Charcuterie) and sweet soy-glazed Brussel sprouts with wasabi almonds (Crispy Brussel Sprouts)
Nestled in the Capitol District in downtown Omaha, The Jewell is a sophisticated music club that offers a unique and immersive experience for music enthusiasts and food connoisseurs alike. Boasting a fusion of captivating music genres, chef-driven cuisine, custom cocktails, and a remarkable ambiance, itâs unlike any other establishment in Omaha and stands as a testament to our cityâs vibrant cultural scene. The location seamlessly blends with the Capitol Districtâs ene rgetic vibe.
From the moment you step foot inside The Jewell, you are transported to an era of timeless elegance within this modern music haven. The venueâs tasteful aesthetic and intimate seating create an atmosphere that perfectly complements the essence of live music. The plush booth seating offers both comfort and intimacy, allowing patrons to immerse themselves fully in the performance. Whether you are taking in the scene from the bar or sitting stage-side at a table, the attention to detail with their layout makes it an inviting space to relax, unwind, and indulge in the musical experience. The maĂŽtre dâ whisked us to our table, and I was enthralled by the modern artistic setting. I knew I was in for an experience that I had only had in St. Louis or Chicago, and I couldnât wait for my night to unfold. From the sleek furnishings to the contemporary design elements, the venue exudes an air of sophistication and urban charm. The inviting atmosphere immediately entices its patrons to immerse themselves fully in an odyssey of rhythm a nd melody
One of the defining features that sets The Jewell apart from a typical music venue is its commitment to culinary excellence. Its menu, carefully curated by a skilled back-of-house team, showcases a harmonious blend of flavors and textures that perfectly accompanies the musical journey. From delectable Brussels sprouts I canât get off my mind, to a mouthwatering burger, the cuisine at The Jewell is a testament to the dedication and creativity of the culinary team. Our service was prompt and timed perfectly with the show, allowing us to fully enjoy our meal without having to manage around interruptions. The menu isnât extensive but its intentional with its offerings, a diverse range of options that cater to various tastes and preferences. My guest and I went with a tapas-style dinner, opting for a side of Brussels sprouts, a charcuterie board, a burger (which we split), and a âliquid dessertâ to finish.
In addition to the delectable cuisine, The Jewell also offers a well-thought-out selection of New Orleans- inspired cocktails. The talented mixologists behind the bar create concoctions that are as seasonally innovative as they are refreshing. From spins on classic favorites like the Sazerac, to unique signature drinks, the cocktail menu is a testament to the venueâs commitment to providing a holistic experience. In my opinion the tried-and-true French 75 (gin, lemon juice, Prosecco, or Champagne) is the perfect cocktail balanced, fresh, and effervescent. Here, they feature it with a homemade lemon cordial and Hibiscus-infused gin. I have an admittedly high standard when it comes to this classic and was pleased to
find all ingredients in perfect alignment. Gastronomists and mixologists alike say we consume with our eyes first, and every cocktail was as aesthetically appealing as it was quaffable. Sipping on a well-crafted drink while enjoying the melodic tunes established an upscale feel. The Jewell boasts a full bar, if you are looking for a lower ABV option or like to dabble in digestivos. The uniqueness of the experience was not lost on me, making it a memorable evening for all o f my senses.
While not claiming to be an expert on acoustics, I found the audio experience at The Jewell to be quite enjoyable. This venue is thoughtfully designed to ensure excellent sound quality no matter your vantage point. The artist performs in front of a beautiful custom stage piece made of wooden acoustic panels that allows the music to resonate throughout the space without distortion no matter if itâs a full jazz assemble or a solo blues artist with an acoustic guitar. Each note was conveyed with clarity, enriching the listening experience for everyone in th e audience.
Whether you are a music aficionado or a novice seeking an evening of refined entertainment, The Jewell is a destination that should not be missed. Offering an alluring escape into the timeless world of music that embodies the spirit of modern technology and culinary excellence. Immerse yourself in the atmosphere, indulge in the masterfully crafted apĂŠrtifs, and let the melodies transport you to a state of pure sensual bliss.
Visit jewellomaha.com for more information.
Jewell 75 Cocktail: Butterfly-pea flower gin, St-Germain Elderflower Liqueur, Bitter TruthBARREL & VINE- $$
1311 South 203rd St., Omaha, NE 68130
- 402.504.1777
Barrel and Vineâs restaurant is an elevated food experience that is made from scratch daily with love in our kitchen. Our menu combines a mixture of Chef driven creative dishes, craveable comfort meals and premium Nebraska steaks. Barrel & Vine also doubles as a live music venue and offers a rooftop bar, outdoor patio with firepits, and dozens of high end bourbons, scotch, and over 100 wine selections. Come check out an experience that is like nothing else in Nebraska. Open 7 days a week. âbvomaha.com
DJâS DUGOUT SPORTS BAR - $
Seven Metro Area Locations:
Bellevue - 10308 S. 23rd St.
- 402.292.9096
Miracle Hills - 777 N. 114th St. - 402.498.8855
Downtown - 1003 Capitol Ave. - 402.763.9974
Aksarben - 2102 S. 67th St. - 402.933.3533
Millard - 17666 Welch Plaza
- 402.933.8844
Elkhorn - 19020 Evans St. - 402.315.1985
Plattsmouth - 2405 Oak Hill Rd. - 402.298.4166
Voted Omahaâs #1 Sports Bar, DJâs Dugout is locally and Vietnam
Veteran owned. DJâs Dugout features delicious burgers, wings, wraps, salads, sandwiches and an impressive drink menu. Plus, DJâs has huge media walls full of HD TVs and projector screens. Catch all the action at DJâs seven Omaha-area locations. Dig In... At The Dugout! âdjsdugout.co m
JAMS- $$
7814 Dodge St. - 402.399.8300
17070 Wright Plz, Ste. 100 - 402.810.9600
1101 Harney St. in the OldMarket - 402.614.9333
Jams is an Omaha restaurant legacy, an âAmerican Grillâ that offers a melting pot of different styles and varieties. The dishes are made with high-quality ingredients that pair well with award-winning wines or creative cocktails. âjamseats.com
LE PEEP - $
69th & Pacific - 402.933.2776
177th and Center St. - 402.934.9914
156th St. & W. Dodge Rd. - 402.408.1728
120th and Blondo St. - 402.991.8222
Le Peep puts a wholesome perspective on your favorite neighborhood breakfast and lunch spot. Fresh. Simple. Elegant. Inviting. We put the emphasis on people, both patrons and staff. We focus on providing each of our guests the fresh food and friendly service that they have come to expect. Open daily 6:30 a.m.-2 p.m. âlepeepomaha.co m
STELLAâS - $
106 S. Galvin Road, Bellevue - 402.291.6088
Since 1936, weâve been making our world-famous Stellaâs hamburgers the same way. The family secrets have been handed down to each owner, ensuring that your burger is the same as the one you fell in love with the first time you tried Stellaâs. And if itâs your first time, we know youâll be back! Monday-Saturday 11 a.m.-9 p.m., closed Sunday.
âstellasbarandgrill.co m
T ED AND WALLYâS - $ 1120 Jackson St. - 402.341.5827
Come experience the true taste of homemade ice cream in the Old Market. Since 1986, weâve created gourmet ice cream flavors in small batches using rock salt and ice. We offer your favorites, plus unique flavors like margarita, green tea, Guinness, and French toast. Special orders available. Mon.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-10 p.m., Fri.- Sat. 11 a.m.-11 p.m., Sunday. Noon-10 p.m.
âtedandwallys.co m
VARSITY SPORTS CAFE - $$
Ralston - 9735 Q St. - 402.339.1944
Bellevue - 3504 Samson Way - 402.932.1944
Millard - 14529 F St. - 402.505.6660
Ralston, Bellevue and Millard. We are truly grateful to have been welcomed into each of these communities and welcome you in for good food, a cold drink and a comfy seat to enjoy the sport of your choosing! Determined to bring only the freshest ingredients, homemade dough and our specialty sauces to the table, we have worked hard to perfect our craft for you. Our goal is to bring the best food service to the area and show the best sports events that you want to see. Pick up and Delivery availalble. Please check website for hours of operation. âvarsityromancoinpizza.com
PASTA AMORE - $$
11027 Prairie Brook Rd. - 402.391.2585
Pastas are made fresh daily, including tortellini, fettuccine, and capellini. Daily specials and menu items include a variety of fresh seafood and regional Italian dishes, such as linguini amore and calamari steak, penne Florentine, gnocchi, spaghetti puttanesca, and osso buco. Filet mignon is also offered for those who appreciate nationally renowned Nebraska beef. To complement your dining experience, the restaurant offers a full bar and extensive wine list. Be sure to leave room for homemade desserts, like the tiramisu and cannoli. Monday-Thursday 9 p.m. and Friday-Saturday 10 p.m. Reservations recommended. âpastaamore.co m
S PEZIA - $$$
3125 S. 72nd St. - 402.391.2950
Choose Spezia for lunch or dinner, where youâll find a casual elegance thatâs perfect for business guests, get-togethers, or any special occasion.
Exceptional food, wine, and service, with a delectable menu: fresh seafood, certified Angus steaks, innovative pasta, risotto, gnocchi, cioppino, lamb, entrĂŠe salads, Mediterranean chicken, flatbreads, and fresh salmon daily. Enjoy a full bar, Italian and California wines, Anniversary/ Loversâ Booth (call to reserve), private dining rooms, and woodfired grill. Open Monday-Sunday. Cocktail hour 4-6 p.m., when all cocktails, glasses of wine, and beers are half price. Evening reservations recommended.
âspeziarestaurant.com
MEXICAN FERNANDOâS - $
7555 Pacific St. - 402.339.8006.
380 N. 114th St. - 402.330.5707
Featuring Sonoran-style cooking made fresh daily. Catering and party rooms also available.
Monday-Thursday 11 a.m.-10 p.m., Friday-Saturday 11 a.m.- 11 p.m., Sunday 4-9 p.m.
âfernandosomaha.com
LA MESA - $$
158th St. and W. Maple Rd.
- 402.557.6130
156th and Q streets
- 402.763.2555
110th St. and W. Maple Rd.
- 402.496.1101
Fort Crook Rd. and Hwy 370
- 402.733.8754
84th St. and Tara Plaza
- 402.593.0983
Lake Manawa Exit
- 712.256.2762
Enjoy awesome appetizers, excellent enchiladaâs, fabulous fajitas, seafood specialties, mouthwatering margaritas and much more at La Mesa! Come see why La Mesa has been voted Best of Omahaâs 20 Years in a Row! Friday-Saturday 11 a.m.-10 p.m., Thursday-Sunday 11 a.m.-9 p.m. lamesaomaha.co m
ROMEOâS MEXICAN FOOD AND PIZZA - $
90th and Blondo streets
- 402.391.8870
146th St. and W. Center Rd.
- 402.330.4160
96th and L streets
- 402.331.5656
Galvin and Avery roads
- 402.292.2028
29th and Farnam steets
- 402.346.1110
Romeoâs is your friendly, family Mexican food and pizza restaurant. We take real pride in serving our guests generous portions of the freshest, most flavorful dishes made with the finest ingredients available. Zesty seasonings and the freshest ingredients combine to ensure the ultimate in flavor. Our savory taco meat is prepared every morning at each location. Make sure to try our chimichangas; theyâre the best in town.
âromeosomaha.com
CRESCENT MOON ALE HOUSE - $
3578 Farnam St. - 402.345.1708
Founded in 1996, weâve grown into Beer Corner USA with the additions of The Huber Haus German Beer Hall, Max and Joeâs Belgian Beer Tavern, and BeertopiaâOmahaâs Ultimate Beer Store. With more than 60 beers on tap and Omahaâs best Reuben sandwich, we are a Midtown beer-loverâs destination. Hours:
Monday-Saturday 11 a.m.-2 a.m. Kitchen hours: MondayWednesday 11 a.m.-1 p.m., Thursday-Saturday 11 a.m.midnight. Closed Sunday. âbeercornerusa.co m
GREEK ISLANDS - $
3821 Center St. - 402.346.1528
Greek cuisine with specials every day at reasonable prices. We are well-known for our gyro sandwiches and salads. We cater and can accommodate a party for 65 guests. Carry-out and delivery available. Monday-Thursday 11 a.m.-9 p.m., Friday-Saturday 11 a.m.-10 p.m., Sunday 11 a.m.-7 p.m. âgreekislandsomaha.co m
ZEN COFFEE COMPANY - $
West - 132nd and Center
Downtown - 25th and Farnam
One Pacific Place - Drive Thru Kiosk next to Trader Joes
Zen features over 50 popular drink options including Butter Beer, Honey Bee, Lavender Lady and Sunshine Daydream. Choose from hot or iced lattes, blenders, fruit smoothies and teas! Grab a flight or double cup to try the seasonal features! Delicious pastries and toasts made in house daily. âzencoffeecompany.com
CASCIOâS - $$
1620 S. 10th St. - 402-345-8313
C ascioâs is Omahaâs No. 1 steakhouse. We have been serving Omaha for 69 years. We feature steaks, chops, seafood, and Italian specialties. We have seven private party rooms, seating for up to 400 people, and plenty of parking. âcasciossteakhouse.co m
T HE DROVER RESTAURANT & LOUNGE - $$$
2121 S. 73rd St. - 402-391-7440
Famous for the original Whiskey Steak. Truly a one-of-a-kind Midwestern experience. Excellent food, wine, service, and value. Rare...and very well done.
LUNCH: Monday-Friday 11 a.m.-2 p.m., DINNER: Monday-Friday 5 p.m.-10 p.m., Saturday 4:30 p.m.-10:30 p.m., Sunday 4:30 p.m.-9 p.m., LOUNGE: Monday-Friday Cocktails only 2 p.m.-5 p.m. âdroverrestaurant.com
NEBRASKA
PATRIOTIC GNOME HUNT July 1â4 at Tree Adventure at Arbor Day Farm in Nebraska City. The hunt is on at Tree Adventure. Visitors can look high and low as they use a map and solve a series of patriotic clues to find forest gnomes climbing trees and hiding in the underbrush. Itâs fun for all ages and abilities and free with regular Tree Adventure admission. 402.873.8717 âarbordayfarm.org
4TH OF JULY FLEA MARKET
July 2â4 at Fairbury City Park in Fairbury.
Hundreds of vendors attend the flea markets yearly to create this antique paradise. Admission is free, and guest can enjoy fireworks at dusk sponsored by Fairbury VFW Post #3113. âfairburyfleamarket.com
July 1-4
ZOOFEST July 6â8 at the Zoo Bar in Lincoln. The festival features headliners Charlie Musselwhite, Karl Densonâs Tiny Universe, and Shemekia Copeland. Guests can enjoy these artists and more at the Zoo Barâs 50th annual music festival in Downtown Lincoln. 402.435.8754 âzoobar.com
THE WAYNE CHICKEN SHOW
July 7â9 in Wayne. Poultry lovers should take a trip to Ye Olde Chicken Show. With several fun contests, a parade and a plethora of food vendors, this yearâs medieval-themed chicken show will be provide fun for the whole family. 402.375.2240 âchickenshow.com
July 7-9
TIM CONNELL- GIVE MY REGARDS⌠TO AMERICA! July 14â16 at the Brownville Concert Hall in Brownville. Critically acclaimed actor, singer, storyteller, Tim Connell makes his debut concert appearance at the Brownville Concert Series alongside Musical Director James Followed. The eveningâs program will invite the audience to take a journey with him as he celebrates his Irish heritage and his ancestors who ventured to America. 402.825.3331 âbrownvilleconcertseries. com
SEWARD FOURTH OF JULY CELEBRATION July 4 in Seward. Visitors to Nebraskaâs official 4th of July city can spend the holiday enjoying the Grand Parade, car show, fireworks display and many more events that are all a part of the cityâs awardwinning celebration. 402.643.4189 âjulyfourthseward.com
STIR-UP DAYS CELEBRATION July 14â16 in Ashland. This yearâs Grease-themed celebration will be fun for the whole family. Friday events include Stir-Up royalty coronation and a balloon glow. Saturday will feature a parade and a carnival, with a street dance capping of the night. The festival wraps up on Sunday the annual car show and craft fair. 402.944.2050 âbusiness.aaedc-ne.org
KEARNEY CRUISE NITE: COOL CAR CARNIVAL July 15 at the Hilltop Mall in Kearney. The Cool Car Carnival allows families to explore the coolest vehicles in town at this kidfriendly event. Children can climb in the back of police cars, honk the horns of firetrucks, and experience so many other unique vehicles. âshophilltopmall.com/events
THE 30TH ANNUAL NEBRASKA STAR PARTY
July 16â22 in Valentine. Visitors can learn how to search for the west star in the night sky at the Beginnerâs Field School, then spend the rest of the week in the observation field looking at the sky from dusk âtil dawn. The star party offers evening meals and events to help guest get to know their fellow star-gazers. 402.333.5460 ânebraskastarparty.org
July 16-22
NEBRASKAâS BIG RODEO July 26â29 in Burwell. For over 100 years, the community in Burwell has hosted visitors from all over the world at their one-of-akind rodeo. Visitor can experience classic rodeo events such as Saddle Bronc and the wild and woolly action of the Wild Horse Race and Canadian Chuck Wagon Races. 308.346.5010 ânebraskasbigrodeo.com
SMITHSONIANâS VOICES AND VOTES: DEMOCRACY IN AMERICA
July 19â August 20 at the Thayer County Historical Society and Museum in Belvidere. The âVoices and Votesâ exhibit is based on a larger exhibit currently on display at the Smithsonianâs National Museum of American History. Through its use of historical artifacts and engaging multimedia activities, visitors can explore the story of democracy in America. 402.768.2147 âthayercountymuseum.com
TRAIN August 4 at the Pinewood Bowl Theater in Lincoln. With special guest Better Than Ezra. This multi-GRAMMY and Billboard Award-winning band from San Fransisco is bringing their 14 Hot 100 list songs and the rest of their rock repertoire to Lincoln. 402.904.4444 âpinewoodhowltheater.com
THE 2023 OLD WEST BALLOON FEST
August 9â12 in Gerring, Scottsbluff, and Mitchell. The Old West Balloon Fest has something for everybody. The event kicks off with an opening ânight glowâ and features a craft fair, a corn-hole tournament, a Weiner dog race and the main event: the âmass ascension,â in which 30 hot air balloons take off at once. âtheoldwestballoonfest.com
Aug.
KOOL-AID DAYS FESTIVAL August 18â20 at the Adams County Fairgrounds in Hastings. The annual Kool-Aid Days Festival is celebrating their anniversary with 25 flavors for 25 years. Visitors and fans of the soft drink can celebrate with the Grand Parade, 5K Run, the Kool-Aid drinking contest and many more events. 402.463.8669 âkool-aiddays.com
NEBRASKA STATE FAIR August 15â September 4 at The State Fair Grounds in Grand Island. Participate in traditional fair activities like livestock exhibits, dirt competitions, and lots of fried food. The fair also includes The Nebraska Lottery Concert Series with live performances by Oak Ridge Boys, Gabriel âFluffyâ Iglesias, TobyMac, Bush (with special guest Pop Evil), Lee Brice, and Banda Maguey. 308.328.1620 âstatefair.org
IOWA
SOUTHEASTERN IOWA KENNEL CLUB
DOG SHOWS July 8â9 at the Bridge View Center in Ottumwa. American Kennel Club licensed All Breed Dog Show. Conformation, Junior Showmanship, and National Owner Handler Series competitions are to be held on both days, and a pee Wee competition will be held on Saturday only. Entires from all over the USA will compete for Best in Show each day. 641.684.4303
SNAKE ALLEY FILM FESTIVAL
How much fun can you pack into a trip to Lincoln? A relaxing and stress-free vacation is waiting for you. Trek around town at your leisure and discover a surprise around every corner.
July 13â16 at the Capitol Theater in Burlington. The Snake Alley Festival of Film is dedicated to showcasing the best short films from around the world. Prized will be awarded for Best of the Fest, The Audience Choice, Best Iowa Film, and The Directors Award for outstanding performance. âsnakealleyfestivaloffilm.com
DRAMA LLAMA IN LINCOLN, NEBRASK A
THE ACCEL CRAWFISH CRAWL July 22 at the River Place Plaza in Cedar Falls. The Accel Group is bringing something different to the Cedar Valley. They are hosting the first annual Accel Crawfish Crawl in downtown Cedar Falls. This will be a family-friendly event with a festival and celebration feel. With a riverside 5k run for adults, a race for kids, a delicious meal, and a live band, the Accel Crawfish Crawl is the perfect summer event. âacceladvantage.com
HINTERLAND MUSIC FESTIVAL
2023 August 4â6 at the Avenue of Saints Amphitheater in St. Charles. Bon Iver, Zach Bryan, and Maggie Rogers headline this 4-day indie rock festival in St. Charles, with local vendors providing food, drinks, and merchandise. Festival-goers can bring a tent and camp on the festival grounds (camping pass required), with shuttles available from Des Moines. âhinterlandiowa.com
Aug. EXPLORE CALENDAR
SUMMER CELEBRATION August 12 at Starrâs Cave Nature Center in Burlington. This free family event will let guests have fun while learning about the natural world. They can hike, play, catch critters, make sâmores- all while learning from conservation officers and naturalists about Iowaâs wildlife habitat, insect species and more. 319.753.5808 âdmconservation.com
FESTIVAL OF THE ARTS August 13 at the Amana Colonies. Set beneath a historic Amana barn complex, the juried Amana Festival of the Arts showcases handmade works of art with 30+ vendors, demonstrations, food trucks, childrenâs activities and more. The festival will be celebrating its 45th year this summer and serves as a fundraiser for the Amana Arts Guild, a local nonprofit. 319.6223678 âamanacolonies.com
OSAWATOMIEâS LIGHTS ON THE LAKE July 1 at the Osawatomie City Lake & RV Campground in Osawatomie. Attendees can spend the afternoon at Osawatomie City Lake with fun acuities including all-ages bounce equipment, face painters, balloon artists and more. The lakeside party also includes a variety of food trucks and hours of live music. 913.755.2146
âtravelks.com
123RD KANSAS WHEAT FESTIVAL
July 11â15 at the Wellington Visitorâs Center in Wellington. The Kansas Wheat Festival has been a Kansas tradition since the year 1900 when Sumner County came together to celebrate a bumper wheat harvest that earned Wellington the title of âWheat Capital of the World.â This festival features a carnival, food trucks, contests, baseball, a cowboy action shootout contest, a beer garden, The Kansas Wheat Festival Parade, and nightly free outdoor concerts. 620.326.7466 âwellingtonkschamber.com
THEATRE UNDER THE STARS
July 21â22, 28â29 at Swenson Park in Lindsborg. The 2023 production of the musical Brigadoon will be held in Swenson Park on the Band Shell under the stars. Audience members can grab their lawn chairs and lemonade for a shady evening in Swenson Park to enjoy the musical produced by Broadway RFD, the longest-running outdoor theatre in Kansas. 785.227.8687
âvisitlindsborg.com
Aug. Digital Advertising Solutions Reach your ideal audience, wherever they are. EMAIL MARKETING SOCIAL MEDIA DISPLAY ADVERTISING business by contacting our digital manager, Luis De La Toba, at 402.884.2000 luis.delatoba@omahapublications.com
FRIDAY FLAMINGLE-
IN JULY July 14 at the Kansas City Zoo in Kansas City. The Kansas City Zoo invites guests 21-andover to get in the holiday spirit for their Christmas-themed night. They can show off their competitive spirits in Reindeer Games and may get the chance to see the jolly man himself. 816.595.1234 âkansascityzoo.org
INNOVATION FESTIVAL August 3â5 at Crown Center Square in Kansas City. The convergence of music and innovation is headlined by national touring and breakout alternative rock artists. Taste the biosciences in the Midwest as flights from everyoneâs favorite bio manufacturers âbreweriesâare served. 816.274.8444 âtheinnovationfestival.com
PRISON BREAK RACE
August 27 at the Missouri State Penitentiary in Jefferson City. The Prison Break is not a typical fun run. Runners will set out on a 3+ mile course that will test every facet of their athleticism. Participants will face wall climbs, mud pits, army crawls and more. Breaking out of prison isnât easy, and this course wonât be, either. 573.632.2820 âvisitjeffersoncity.com
EVENT TIMES AND DETAILS MAY CHANGE. Visit omahamagazine.com for complete listings. Check with venue or event organizer to confirm.
Somebody said that. I tried to research it to discover who⌠I can say that it was either Thomas Jefferson, one of the Kardashians, Sigmund Freud, Larry David, the ancient Greek novelist Longus, or Morley Safer. Who said it first? It just seems to be one of those mysteries whose solutions are hidden by the mists of time.
So, join me now in those mists.
Imagine you are one of our ancient furry ancestors on the tree of evolution. I mean way back in the âWandering Around Looking for Roadkill (Before There Were Any Roads), Seeds, and Berries Age.â
Imagine that winter is approaching and your clan has returned to that cave that âWe Always Return Toâ because thatâs the cave they always return to whenever Winter approaches, and the clan has noticed a few dozen great-grandmothers ago that winter always approaches, so itâs time to go back to the cave and you do. That make sense?
Imagine, that when you got to that cave, you would crawl back deep into the dripping stalagmite and stalactite festooned depths of that cave. Those were the good old days when they didnât have any specific words that differentiated the deposits that hang down from the roof of the cavern with the ones that built up from the floor, so you didnât have to know which was which. Even better, in those olden days they had not yet invented the word âfestooned.â
Imagine you carry with you the bones of your auntie who was half-eaten by a Sabertooth Marmoset back last spring. It is your duty to deposit her bones in the sacred cave âWe Always Return To.â As you slip through narrow passages and descend deeper into the gloom, the leather pouch holding her bones keeps snagging on stalactites⌠or are they stalagmites? You canât remember which is whichâŚno matterâŚon you go, nightmarish, frightening images of bloodspattered marmosets in your head.
Imagine as you crawl further into the darkness, you spot a rusty pool of water turned red by iron oxide leaching out of the rock. You realize you have reached the inner sanctum. There in front of you is a large pile of bones of your ancestorsâmany of them also victims of murderous little monkeys. You add your auntieâs femur and a few salvaged metatarsals to the pile and whisper a little prayer to the stalactites orâŚstalagmitesâŚwhatever.
Imagine you put your mouth to the rusty puddle and take in a mouthful of the water. You place your hand on the wall of the cave, spread your fingers wide, and, with all of your might, you spit-spray the water explosively across your hand.
Imagine that when you remove your hand from the cave wall you see revealed your own appendageâs stencil-like image your splayed-out fingers all surrounded by the red pigment of rustâŚiron oxide. A human hand on the wallâŚforever.
And finally, imagine as you hold your torch up to illuminate the new mural you have created more clearly that in the echoey subterranean chamber you find yourself muttering those now famous words for the first time in human history:
âI donât know art, but I know what I like.â
Otis Twelve hosts the radio program Morning Classics with Otis Twelve on 90.7 KVNO, weekday mornings from 6-10 a.m. Visit kvno.org for more information.
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