Arroyo Monthly March

Page 1

HISTORY PRESERVING

TOMMY LEI TELLS STORIES THROUGH PHOTOS, HOME RENOVATIONS

A FULLY IMMERSIVE EXPERIENCE

URBAN PRESS WINERY BRINGS BACK THE FUN + SLEEP MATTERS BY CHUAN

March 2023
Fine living in the greater P asadena area
Spring Real Estate Issue

Where Ideas Come to Life

CSLB653340
hartmanbaldwin.com
Photo by Ryan Garbin

6 A Splash of Creativity

Huntington Pools’ staff enjoys a good challenge

—By Christina Fuoco-Karasinski

10 Preserving History

Tommy Lei tells stories through photos, home renovations

—By Christina Fuoco-Karasinski

14 Shaping Design

Matt McIntyre named Showcase House benefit chair

—By Luke Netzley

16 MW Lofts

Development set to open along Walnut in Pasadena

—By Luke Netzley

18 Center Stage

Design experts share best practices for setting up home entertainment systems

—By Kamala Kirk

23 Sleep Matters

Langham Huntington, Pasadena’s program enhances guests’ wellness

—By Kamala Kirk

25 A Fully Immersive Experience

Urban Press Winery brings back the fun

—By Frier McCollister

29 Seasonal California-Inspired Fare

Lemonade launches new menu at all 21 locations

—By Kamala Kirk

30 ‘It’s an Honor’

Julian Shah-Tayler channels Bowie on acclaimed album

—By Christina

32 Gotta Have Art

Showcase is back with a night of art discovery

—By Leah Schwartz

33 Pressure’s Off

Meeting fans is addictive to ‘Dancing’ cast

—By Christina Fuoco-Karasinski

35 March Calendar

Variety of events abound this spring

—By Christina Fuoco-Karasinski

36 Vroman’s Live

Bookstore presents impressive March lineup

—By Arroyo Staff

40 Uplifting Communities

Assistance League changes the lives of adults, children

—By Morgan Owen

DEPARTMENTS

28 CULINARY CUPBOARD A cake for morning, noon or night

arroyo

fine living in the greater pasadena area

EXECUTIVE EDITOR

Christina Fuoco-Karasinski

DEPUTY EDITOR Luke Netzley

ART DIRECTOR Melissa Worrell

CONTRIBUTORS Emily Chavez, Kamala Kirk, Frier McCollister, Morgan Owen, Leah Schwartz

PHOTOGRAPHERS Lisa Boehm, Luis Chavez, Chris Mortenson, Bethany Nauert, Brad Nicol

ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES Lisa Chase, Catherine Holloway, Michael Lamb, Zac Reynolds

OFFICE MANAGER Ann Browne

TIMES MEDIA GROUP PRESIDENT Steve Strickbine

V.P. OF OPERATIONS Michael Hiatt

ASSOCIATE PUBLISHER Rebecca Bermudez CONTACT US EDITORIAL

christina@timespublications.com

PHONE (626) 584-1500

FAX (626) 795-0149

MAILING ADDRESS PO Box 1349, South Pasadena, CA 91031 ArroyoMonthly.com

03.23 | ARROYO | 5
VOLUME 18 | NUMBER 3 | FEBRUARY 2023 ©2023 Times Media Group All rights reserved.
arroyo
( 8 8 8 ) 8 81 - 2 0 0 7 w w w. D r S l i d e D o o r. c o m

Since 1988, Huntington Pools Inc. has designed and built custom swimming pools, spas and outdoor living spaces for homes in Los Angeles.

A Splash of Creativity

Huntington Pools’ staff enjoys a good challenge

Huntington Pools’ staff believes each project should have a unique balance and connection to the property’s overall landscape and architecture.

“We view each of our water shapes as a unique work of art and use only top industry professionals, select finish products and proven technologies,” owner Jeff Lokker says. “This skillful combination of engineering, form and fit is the signature of our water shapes.”

Based in San Dimas, Huntington Pools specializes in designing and building outdoor environments, like pools, patios and barbecues, masonry and landscaping — everything related to outdoor environments. The company ser-

vices the greater Los Angeles area, including Pasadena, San Marino, Glendale, Hancock Park and the Hollywood Hills.

Lokker founded Huntington Pools in 1988, but he’s been in the business beyond that. The award-winning pool designer/builder grew up with a friend whose family was involved in the pool business. He helped build the pools but never thought he would continue with it.

After high school, he entered the Army, in which he served from 1983 to 1987, in places like Italy and Central America.

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Huntington Pools/Submitted photo
FOOD AND WINE continued
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on page
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“It was a good experience,” says Lokker, who was stationed at Fort Bragg. “I think it’s good for all young people to serve a little bit. A lot of people are scared, especially during wartime. When I was in, we were still in the Cold War. There wasn’t a lot of active events going on.”

He earned a degree from California Polytechnic University in 1994 and eventually founded Huntington Pools.

Lokker is passionate for his occupation — and it’s paid off. He’s participated in the Pasadena Showcase House four times, which, he says, cemented his position in the area as a legitimate contractor and designer.

“If you’re going to do something, go in with passion, be educated about it and do good-quality work that’s going to play out in the long run,” he adds.

“Instead of blasting the media world with advertising, I think it’s

better to have clients tell their friends about me. A client’s world is the best advertising I can do. I love seeing clients years later, and they have a smile on their face when they talk about how much they love their backyard. I like seeing the long-term appreciation for things we do.”

Lokker also enjoys the creative end of his occupation.

“The ever-changing landscape of the pool industry is interesting to me,” says Lokker, whose business is a certified PebbleTec builder. “It’s an area in which I can be artistic and develop interesting designs. I can think outside of the box between concepts and materials.”

The most challenging jobs, from a technical standpoint, are hillside pools where water is flowing from all edges of the pool. Many times, they are integrated with patio space and a cooking center.

“What I like to do is not just think about the pools but develop the whole backyard space,” he says.

every day

Independent Living at MonteCedro means enjoying life on your terms. At our resort-style community in Altadena, you will discover the choice you deserve, the freedom you desire, and the flexibility you can count on. With freshly prepared, awardwinning cuisine, personalized health and wellness plans, and a commitment to life-long learning, our residents are empowered to be their very best every day.

Your legacy is now.

8 | ARROYO | 03.23
Huntington Pools 300 S. Walnut Avenue, Suite 401, San Dimas 626-332-1527, huntingtonpools.com
Huntington Pools/Submitted photo
365-4457 | montecedro.org An ECS Senior Living Community. Celebrating 100 years. Proudly nonprofit. RCFE 197-608908 COA 287
2212 El Molino Ave, Altadena, CA 91001
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healthyFueling
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Huntington Pools Inc. founder and President Jeff Lokker incorporates the architecture of the house and the owner’s lifestyle into the pool design.
626.945.8683 bradley.mohr@compass.com DRE 01220830 | 00910172 Compass is a real estate broker licensed by the State of California and abides by Equal Housing Opportunity laws. DRE 01866771. All material presented herein is intended for informational purposes only and is compiled from sources deemed reliable but has not been verified. Changes in price, condition, sale or withdrawal may be made without notice. No statement is made as to accuracy of any description. All measurements and square footages are approximate. Bradley& Susan Mohr Trust, Integrity & Commitment Representing and Showcasing Architecturally Significant Homes in San Gabriel Valley for Over 27 Years.

Preserving History

Tommy Lei tells stories through photos, home renovations

Tommy Lei calls himself a “creative soul.”

Whether he’s photographing his travels or renovating a home, he has what’s best for the subject at hand.

This chapter of his life started during the pandemic, when he discovered a “really deep love for interiors” with his first home.

“I believe in having a house you can call a home,” Lei says.

“Just from personal experience, I really love it when I walk inside a house and let the house do the talking. I never try to force something that doesn’t work in a home.”

He says it’s unfortunate that so many homes are quickly flipped in Los Angeles, as the house’s soul gets lost in the process. When he purchased his Spanish revival colonial in Pasadena, he absorbed the personality of the home.

“Again, I let the house speak to me,” he says. “I think that’s a big part of my interior design philosophy.”

Lei carefully chooses the homes he renovates. He accepts personal referrals but isn’t actively looking for new clients.

“I want a project to speak to me,” Lei says. “I’m definitely open to renovating projects that are more on the preservation side or the side of refreshing a home, decorating homes that are in need of a seasonal refreshment.”

Involvement runs deep

His involvement with the arts runs deep. Also during the pandemic, he saw

a lack of respect for artists of Asian American and Pacific Islander heritage.

He co-founded the Golden 8ours, a modern AAPI artist collective, to spotlight emerging Asian American talent or other artists who shy away from self-promotion.

“It’s important to pay it forward, and I think that can happen in any community,” he says. “It’s most important in the community that’s hugely underrepresented when it comes to art.

“As much as I love all of our pedigreed artists, like Basquiat and Andy Warhol, I believe in supporting living artists and their livelihood. I push my people to look around their local neighborhood, city or gallery and support a local artist who needs the exposure. It’s just so important to support your artist friends and living artists.”

He considers himself an artist as well. An avid traveler, Lei hoarded decades’ worth of photos from his trips. He couldn’t peruse artwork during the pandemic, so he — albeit quietly and shyly — decorated his home with his photos. That generated interest on his social media platforms.

“My audience asked if they could purchase prints,” Lei recalls. “I started using my own space as a way of showcasing my photographs. I had perceived my decadeslong photography hobby as just a hobby. I didn’t see it as anything beyond that.”

While renovating his first home, he took his collection and blended it with

continued on page 12

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Chris Mortenson/Staff photographer
SPRING REAL ESTATE
Tommy Lei hopes to combat a lack of respect for artists of Asian American and Pacific Islander heritage.
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works from other artists whose work he’s collected over the years.

“It was a cool way of creating a gallery wall that spoke to me on a personal and artistic level,” he says. “To see my own work mixed in with other people, it made the space so much more personal in that sense.”

From that point on, he promoted his work and exhibited in galleries including those in Brooklyn, Minneapolis and LA’s Chinatown, where he grew up.

“I feel like (the public) views Asian Americans as doctors, engineers and lawyers,” he says. “They never quite see us as artists. That’s become my personal mission — to really lift up our artists in our communities.”

Global citizen

Lei is a global citizen, someone who doesn’t stick with the touristy spots. He partakes in activities that take him out of his comfort zone.

The destination doesn’t have to be anywhere flashy either. Lei recently returned from Ohio and Pennsylvania, where he took in the

architecture and the history.

“My next trip, I hope, is going to take me back to Asia for a little bit,” he says. “I have not been back since 2019, and that was the biggest trip I had out there. I want to go back to my homeland of Hong Kong. I really do miss it.

“I’d love to go back to Santa Fe sometime this year but explore outside of the immediate city. I’d go to Taos and explore the wilderness a little bit. I’m also hoping to journey out to Japan. Asia — or anywhere that calls me, really — would be a big focus of mine this year. I was approached about doing a trip to South Africa. I’m looking into that as well.”

The key to his trips, photography and home renovations is the story and preserving it.

“I’m never that photographer who shoots in your face or who makes you pose in a certain way,” he says. “I find it uncomfortable, just as a bystander. I try to photograph people in their element, their best light, their natural state. I want to tell the stories around me no matter what I do. I love that act of preservation, solidifying that moment in time that you can never truly go back to.”

12 | ARROYO | 03.23
Tommy Lei says he tries “to photograph people in their element.” An avid traveler, Tommy Lei hoarded decades’ worth of photos from his trips. Chris Mortenson/Staff photographer Tommy Lei Studios tommylei.com Instagram: @tommy.lei

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After joining PSHA as a community volunteer in 2018, Matt McIntyre has gone on to become this year’s Showcase House benefit chair.

Shaping Design

Matt McIntyre named Showcase House benefit chair

For third-generation Pasadena native Matt McIntyre, service to his community has been a core part of his life since childhood. Having volunteered for institutions like Five Acres, Gamble House and the Tournament of Roses Association, he was drawn to Pasadena Showcase House for the Arts (PSHA) because it combined his love for design with the opportunity to benefit local communities.

McIntyre has now been selected as the benefit chair for the 58th Pasadena Showcase House of Design.

“It’s such a huge honor,” McIntyre says. “I’m excited for this year because we’ve come out of COVID. I’m excited for this year because we have a spectacular house. I’m so thankful to the owners of the 2023 Showcase House and the gift that they’ve given to our organization and to the people of Pasadena and the other patrons that come to support Showcase. It’ll really be a special year.”

McIntyre joined PSHA in 2018 as a community volunteer and has since taken on numerous leadership positions as both a board member and as part of the Benefit Leadership Team for last year’s Showcase House of Design.

While joining the organization allowed him to continue serving his beloved Pasadena, it also allowed McIntyre to volunteer alongside his husband, Garrett Collins, who sits on PSHA’s board of directors.

“Garrett and I had talked a lot about what we wanted. … We wanted something that captured both of our interests and that we would be able to enjoy side by side,” McIntyre explains. “Garrett’s undergrad was in music performance, and he was a classically trained flutist, so that had a nice connection to Showcase. He then went to graduate school focusing on nonprofit management. … It just felt like, here’s sort of the perfect marriage of our interests, which are interests that we’re not currently able to fully fulfill in our professional lives, so this feels like a great place for us. We joined and haven’t looked back.”

McIntyre’s passion for interior design was ignited during the formative year of his childhood, when his parents began a large-scale project on their home and enlisted the help of an interior designer, Tocco Finale owner Dona Dockendorf, a long-standing Showcase House designer.

McIntyre went on to study interior design and graduate from Cornell University, where he began to discover a love for real estate. He has since spent over 15 years in the real estate industry, was named Pasadena’s Realtor of the Year in 2018, and currently works as an agent for Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices California Properties.

McIntyre expresses hope that he can continue to utilize the skills he honed during his real estate career, particularly as “the logistics guy,” to contribute to the work that PSHA does to support the arts.

“I’m really honored with what Showcase has done in its history and what it continues to do,” he says. “Our contributions to the community through our ‘Gifts and Grants’ program has put out over 24 million in funds.

“The city of Pasadena is home to me. It’s where my maternal grandparents grew up. It’s where my parents grew up. … My parents met at Canterbury Records on Colorado Boulevard. My grandfather was a fire captain for the Pasadena Fire Department for many years. What I Chris

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Mortenson/Staff photographer
SPRING REAL ESTATE

especially love about Pasadena is that I can go to the dry cleaners or to the grocery store, or out to eat, and I know not just the employees but I know people in that space, and I love that kind of connection to the place that I live.”

McIntyre expresses excitement at unveiling this year’s Showcase House, a 1933 grand colonial estate called Stewart House, to the Pasadena community. He explained that having a house designed by Pasadena architectural partnership Marston & Maybury gives the space a certain “pedigree” and that it’s rare for PSHA to be given a house that has two flat acres of land.

Once Stewart House is opened to the public on Sunday, April 23, the collection of over 30 designers will be able to unveil their work to visitors. This year’s design team includes both international names such as Ra Designs’ Mouna Stewart, Lôue Interiors’ Louise Johnsen Mueller and Rterior’s Rydhima Brar, and local favorites like Karen Billman, Rachel Duarte, The Art

of Room Design’s Maria Videla-Juniel and Tocco Finale’s Dockendorf, the designer who inspired McIntyre’s love for interior design.

“We all come full circle,” McIntyre says. “My great hope is that Showcase continues to be an important part of the Pasadena community, and that future generations get to experience Showcase as I did growing up in this community and as a young adult in this community.

“With digital media, we have a great opportunity to see a lot of different design. Design has become very accessible for consumers to view and enjoy in a digital way. What it has done with that is that we don’t have as much interaction, physical interaction, viewing design spaces and seeing work that current interior designers are actively doing. Showcase is this great place for the public to come see what’s now, and I’m hopeful that continues for generations to come.”

03.23 | ARROYO | 15
Chris Mortenson/Staff photographer Matt McIntyre poses in front of Stewart House, a 1933 grand colonial estate designed by architectural partnership Marston & Maybury that will be vacated, then reimagined by a team of local and international designers for the 58th Showcase House. The Pasadena estate was previously used as a Showcase House in 1983.

MW Lofts

Development set to open along Walnut in Pasadena

For architect Jon Kelly, walkability is the forefront of his architectural vision. It’s a philosophy that he says is infused in Tyler Kelly Architecture’s newest Pasadena project, MW Lofts.

The 115-unit, twin-building project commanding the corner of Walnut Street and El Molino Avenue will be a mixed-use development that includes commercial, retail and restaurant spaces on the ground floor as well as a widened walkway to increase the flow of pedestrians in and around the site.

“There’s an aspect of new urbanism that we really try to subscribe to for all of our projects,” Kelly says. “That’s the ability to function in your daily life and with your daily routines without the use of a car. So having restaurants and retail on the ground floor that are activated and used and then being able to go upstairs to your residence is a principal component to a lot of the projects that we work on.”

The MW Lofts project began in 2015 as a partnership between developer Prominent Investment; general contractor PGK Partners; civil engineer Tritech Engineering; structural and MEP engineer Gouvis Engineering Group; and design and fabrication firm Creative Machines, among others.

Originally, Tyler Kelly Architecture was only contracted to work on the site’s eastern building before the scope of the project increased to include the western parcel. In terms of the design aesthetic, Kelly says that the aim was not to create “identical twins, but more so fraternal twins.”

“They’d have similarities in their massing and in their character, but

they would have some differences in how they’re perceived from the street,” Kelly explains. “The west building has a more vertical appearance, whereas the east building has a more horizontal appearance. In terms of the planning of both projects, we created an interior courtyard for the east building, and our circulation for the upper floors goes around that interior courtyard, whereas the west building’s principal exterior amenity is a rooftop terrace, which is something that isn’t normally seen in too many of these types of buildings. So we were very excited to be able to provide that opportunity for the residents.”

The site will also include a “loja” feature that covers the south side of both buildings to protect the walkways from the afternoon sun.

Another key feature of the MW Lofts development is that it is a density bonus project, which means that it possesses affordable units. Kelly explained that there are 10 “very low-income units” proposed for the site, which would afford MW Lofts with a relief on height restrictions. This would allow the development to be built up to six stories while the maximum height for most other buildings remains capped at five, giving MW Lofts the ability to house more penthouse units along with the rooftop amenity on the western building.

“This brings a taller building mass to the Walnut area,” Kelly says.

With the eastern building set for completion in March and the western building set to open by the end of the year, Kelly’s hope is that MW Lofts will not only improve the surrounding area’s walkability but also inspire others to consider building with the same tenets in mind.

“Walnut is an interesting street because it does have a lot of mixed-use developments that are beginning to rise in that area … so we were excited to be able to design on this site and give the community yet another cornerstone piece to continue the pedestrian experience along Walnut,” he says. “(MW Lofts) makes Walnut a very viable candidate for being … an artery within Pasadena. I think the legacy or the goal of this is … other developers will follow suit and will create a very vibrant active street for the future.”

MW Lofts

711 E. Walnut Street, Pasadena

16 | ARROYO | 03.23 Tyler Kelly Architecture/Submitted photo
MW Lofts was designed by Tyler Kelly Architecture to improve walkability around the corner of Pasadena’s Walnut Street and El Molino Avenue.
SPRING REAL ESTATE
03.23 | ARROYO | 17

Center Stage

Design experts share best practices for setting up home entertainment systems

Aside from the kitchen, the family media room/entertainment center is the other main hub in a home. It’s where people gather to spend time together and hang out, play games, watch TV and have family night. From speakers and TVs to connection cables and display devices, there are many different components that can contribute to disorganization and clutter in a space.

“A home entertainment center can often be a gathering space where folks may come to socialize and unwind,” says interior designer Sarah Barnard, founder of Sarah Barnard Design in Santa Monica. “It can

be beneficial to have a comfortable place to retreat to for entertainment that meets the overall needs of the users of the space. If in a living room or shared activity space, it can be beneficial to craft an entertainment center that supports relaxing and viewing while offering consideration to other activities that may take places in those spaces. For rooms dedicated to entertainment, it can be a quiet retreat to find time to enjoy these activities with loved ones without distraction.”

There are a variety of ways that one can design their home entertainment center or media room in order to make it more user friendly and stylish

at the same time. Here, interior design experts share their best tips for creating the ultimate space for entertainment.

TV placement

“Basically, everyone has a TV, as it’s become an integral part of the home,” says Amy Peltier, founder of Amy Peltier Interior Design & Home in San Marino. “In fact, most TVs are getting larger. Not only are they sizing up, but brands like Samsung are offering TVs that double as artwork. I also think that the pandemic placed an even bigger emphasis on having a home entertainment space because movies are skipping the box office and streaming right to your home. The options for displaying your TV are truly endless — you can hide it behind doors, you can place a piece of furniture under, or you can hang it above a fireplace.”

Peltier points out that TV placement can vary depending on what room in the house it’s in. In the bedroom, she says that most TVs tend to be placed above a dresser or fireplace, so they will be hanging on the wall without a way to be concealed.

In a living room, it’s easier to conceal one’s TV with a built-in unit, which gives it a chance to hide and

offers a polished look with a bonus of storage. And in a designated movie room where the only activity is watching TV, Peltier says that aside from stadium seating, the large projector or oversized TV are the main focus.

“Make sure to choose the correct TV size. It should not be bigger than the piece it is placed above,” Peltier says. “Do consider how far back you’ll be sitting and how high the TV needs to hang. This will help you determine what size to choose — there’s nothing worse than sitting too close to a TV and having to look way up to watch anything. Don’t stick your TV in the corner of a room or in front of window; this will make it look awkward. The point is to integrate it into the room as it was always meant to be there. And get creative — don’t be afraid to accessorize around it.”

Barnard adds that it’s important to be conscious of placement because entertainment spaces are often areas in our homes for comfort, and the TV arrangement should avoid any strain on our bodies or eyes.

“If installing in cabinetry, ensure the TV is brought toward the front of the entertainment center to avoid casting shadows on the screen and

18 | ARROYO | 03.23 Bethany Nauert/Submitted photo
DESIGN FEATURE
For spaces in a home where the entertainment center is the main focus, having built-in cabinetry for the storage of items can help keep the entertainment central to the space while still offering ample room for personal items and equipment storage.

for ease of viewing,” Barnard says. “It’s also helpful to determine the viewing height compared to furniture seat heights to ensure that the TV is installed at a comfortable eye level. Articulating arms can be beneficial in spaces or situations where the ability to adjust as needed aids in the viewing or storing of screens.”

She adds that having overhead lighting solutions that don’t interfere or reflect with the screen is also crucial for comfort.

“Consider arranging lighting or switching so that the lighting area nearest to the TV can be dimmed or shut off while still having options for ambient lighting in the room’s perimeter,” Barnard says.

Barnard also says that the TV doesn’t need to be the centerpiece in a room either.

“In areas where the room may be used for multiple purposes, it’s important to create visual balance and opportunities to use the space without screens functioning as the centerpiece,” Barnard shares. “Having additional seating that can be moved or rotated to face the screen can offer situations for socialization and viewing. Adding greenery, artwork, and items for other hobbies or interests

can also create visual balance and give weight to alternative activities.”

Cabinet displays and storage

For spaces in a home where the entertainment center is the main focus, like a in a media room, Barnard says having built-in cabinetry for the storage of items can help keep the entertainment central to the space while still offering ample room for personal items and equipment storage.

“A custom cabinet can also provide room for speaker systems, which can be visually minimized using speaker cloth that blends with the cabinet material,” Barnard says. “Depending on the home’s aesthetic style, more substantial cabinetry may be better suited for more traditional spaces, where ornate cabinetry will feel more integrated into the room.”

In areas like living spaces where the room will serve multiple purposes, Barnard says it can be helpful to have a more minimal entertainment center to offer space for other activities and create a balance of focus.

“Floating media centers will keep the entertainment area visually lighter so attention can be spread more evenly across the room while

offering a comfortable viewing space,” Barnard says. “Soundbars can offer a more compact option for a speaker system without requiring much space in these areas. Options with storage can provide room to store electronics to keep the visual presence of tech at a minimum.”

Barnard adds that it can be also be helpful to have a central entertainment space in a living room that still offers opportunities for socializing, reading and a wide range of personal activities.

“In these common or multipurpose areas, it can be helpful to have a more subtle or minimal media center that can support more diverse activities,” Barnard says. “But in bedroom spaces, many may want to switch between having entertainment available and hiding screens when ready to sleep. Having media built into a closet space can create options for convenient viewing while making it easy to hide TVs when resting or when wanting fewer visual distractions.”

And in independent media spaces, Barnard suggests that arranging the area to be devoted to entertainment activities can help improve comfort and add to the enjoyment of these experiences.

“Including dimmers, room-

darkening window treatments and comfortable seating can all contribute to an at-home entertainment space that feels fulfilling,” Barnard says.

Home theaters

“Home entertainment serves different purposes in a home,” says Jhoiey Ramirez, co-founder and creative director of The Sycamore Collective, a Los Angeles-based bespoke design studio. “It can be for intimate movie nights with your family or partner, or for a private screening with a small group of friends or a big group. Depending on a person’s lifestyle, home entertainment can be its own room or part of the usual spaces in a house like the great room or bedroom. Having a home theater is a usual go-to for most homes that are over 5,000 square feet.”

Ramirez says that each of her clients has a very different approach to their home entertainment system. Some want theirs hidden and tucked away instead of taking space. Others want it displayed as an art piece of its own, while some prefer an outdoor version for game nights.

“I like doing the alternatives to a home theater room. It’s more chal-

continued on page 22

03.23 | ARROYO | 19
Brad Nicol/Submitted photo
It’s important to be conscious of TV placement because entertainment spaces are often areas in our homes for comfort, and it should avoid any strain on our bodies or eyes.

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JOHN CALDERON, CR 310-870-5000 Info@AdvancedBuildingLA.com AdvancedBuildingLA.com @AdvancedBuildingLA.com

continued from page 19

lenging and it’s more practical as a multi-use,” Ramirez says. “I’ve done home entertaining systems coming out from the bottom of the bed, from the floor and from the ceiling. All very inconspicuous application as far as home entertainment centers go. And I personally like the challenge of hiding design elements or having alternative installations. I can’t wait to design my next one, as I have found the best alternative for theater chairs!”

When it comes to screen size, Ramirez says that should be based on the viewing distance; however, most clients want the wow factor of an enormous screen.

“I also think that after 85 inches, a projector screen is more suitable for maintenance and cost reasons,” Ramirez suggests. “Technology updates vary often as well, so you want

a system that is integrated and easy to upgrade. Hire a professional AV person to advise you on surround sound and integration. It can be a DIY project, but technology can be expensive and if you’re spending that kind of money, you should make sure it’s done right.”

But what’s more important to Ramirez than wow factor is learning what her client’s lifestyle and needs are.

“I based the location, application, design and type of entertainment system they need and will use,” Ramirez says. “Different people have very different and specific needs when enjoying a movie, watching shows and listening to music. Design around their needs, and if you get a client that challenges the norm, have fun with it! There are always trends to guide you, but letting your client’s needs guide your design and making it specific to their lifestyle is fail-safe instead of a fleeting trend.”

Amy Peltier Interior Design & Home peltierinteriors.com

Sarah Barnard Design sarahbarnard.com

The Sycamore Collective thesycamorecollective.com

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A home entertainment center can often be a gathering space where folks may come to socialize and unwind, so it is beneficial to have a comfortable place to retreat to for entertainment that meets the overall needs of the users of the space.
In areas like living spaces where the room will serve multiple purposes, it can be helpful to have a more minimal entertainment center to offer space for other activities and create a balance of focus.
The Sycamore Collective/Submitted photos

Sleep Matters

Langham Huntington, Pasadena’s program enhances guests’ wellness

The Langham Huntington, Pasadena is among the properties from Langham Hospitality Group that is helping guests get up on the right side of the bed with Sleep Matters by Chuan, a comprehensive global sleep wellness program developed in conjunction with the World Sleep Society, whose mission is dedicated to advancing sleep health worldwide with medical and scientific expertise.

“Langham Hospitality Group understands that sleep plays a vital role in a memorable hotel stay,” says Leslie Marks, e-commerce manager at The Langham Huntington, Pasadena. “In conjunction with the World Sleep Society and aligning perfectly with the Chuan Spa wellness brand’s connection to restorative practices, Sleep Matters was devoted to not only help guests improve their sleep quality and thus better enjoy their overall stay, but also to share some tips they can take home with them to continue their journey to better rest.”

Sleep plays a vital role in one’s well-being and quality of life, as well as physical performance and mental health. Numerous factors affect sleep, including travel and hotel stays. By improving the quality of guests’ sleep during their visit, Langham Hospitality Group is helping travelers create more memorable experiences which allows for greater enjoyment of their vacation and higher productivity on a business trip.

“Lack of sleep affects everything from physical energy to productivity and even general happiness,” Marks says. “Think about how much a poor night’s sleep affects your mood the next day. Giving the body time to fully rest and optimally recover from the day can help you achieve better quality of life in almost every aspect you can think of.”

Good sleep is the connec-

tive element between a hotel and its guests, and each of Langham Hospitality Group’s hotels around the world is offering their own packages and local elements as part of Sleep Matters by Chuan. Exclusive elements include a magazine curated by the World Sleep Society, as well as offerings based around wellness rituals from Langham Hospitality Group’s global wellness brand, Chuan Spa.

“Any change in routine has the potential to disrupt our natural rhythms, but especially travel because you’re in a new, unfamiliar place, and sometimes in a different time zone,” Marks says. “The elements of Sleep Matters aim to alleviate this by helping to calm the body and mind effectively and fully, optimally preparing you for a restful night and allowing the body to replenish itself as you sleep.”

At each hotel, guests will have access to a broad selection of offerings to help them get the best sleep possible, including a Sleep Matters Turndown Kit that features items such as herbal tea, branded ear plugs, a cushioned sleep mask and Sleep Tips Cards from World Sleep Society. The Langham Hotels in the United States will also offer SOM, an all-natural, drug-free sleep aid beverage that is available in regular and sugar-free options.

Guests also have access to a Sleep Matters Menu, which allows them to order a selection of wellnessrelated items during their stay, including a yoga mat and fitness ball for pre-sleep stretching; a selection of pillow options and white noise sleep machines; and, in select locations, Chuan elemental oils and lavender bath products for a pre-bedtime soak.

Other offerings include a Spotify playlist with specially curated tracks from around the world

continued on page 24

03.23 | ARROYO | 23 The Langham Huntington, Pasadena/Submitted photos
Langham Hospitality Group’s worldwide properties including The Langham Huntington, Pasadena are helping guests get better rest during their stay with Sleep Matters by Chuan, a comprehensive global sleep wellness program. Developed in conjunction with the World Sleep Society, the Sleep Matters by Chuan program includes exclusive elements such as a curated magazine and offerings based around wellness rituals and offerings from Chuan Spa.
WELLNESS

designed to help guests relax as they get ready for sleep and bedtime reading in the form of a Sleep Matters brochure and a special edition of the World Sleep Society Healthier Sleep Magazine, which can be accessed from every guest room via a QR code. It enables guests to explore The Langham Hotels &

Resorts and Cordis Hotels & Resorts Sleep Matters website, including Chuan Spa’s proprietary Five Elements questionnaire and tips for restful breathing exercises. The magazine was specially curated for The Langham and focuses on guest travel, covering a range of topics such as developing healthy habits for healthy sleep, circadian rhythms, improving children’s sleep, recovery

from jetlag and mindfulness, among other useful sleep wellness topics.

The Sleep Matters program at The Langham Huntington, Pasadena includes luxurious accommodations in the room type of one’s choice, two 60-minute Signature Chuan Harmony Massages with Aromatherapy Enhancement, two packets of aromatherapy bath salts for in-room use, two eye masks, two sets of ear plugs, and two SOM Sleep beverages.

“Almost every guest I’ve spoken to highlights the Chuan Spa elements of the package as the key, while the other package amenities support and further the calmness that the spa services have begun,” Marks says. “A Chuan Harmony Massage, followed by a warm aromatherapy bath back in your guestroom while sipping on the SOM drink, has truly become an effective journey for our guests, and they without fail have rave reviews upon checkout.”

Marks adds that The Langham

The Langham Huntington, Pasadena is a historic 23-acre oasis that offers refined rooms, stylish suites and unique offerings for a relaxing stay, including the award-winning Chuan Spa, a fully equipped fitness studio, outdoor swimming pool and tennis court.

Huntington, Pasadena also offers a few complimentary wellness add-ons that can be requested in room, such as a yoga mat and ball, fitness kit or a white noise machine, and some extras for purchase including a sleep mask and kettle with a selection of herbal teas. Rates start at $900 per night plus tax, based on double occupancy.

“Sleep Matters is available yearround. We do recommend booking in advance so we can ensure the spa services are also booked and confirmed ahead of time,” Marks says. “However, based on availability, we could accommodate an upgrade to the package upon check-in if a guest inquired. I would definitely encourage anyone who is curious about the program to visit our website to learn more about the package and Chuan Spa as a brand. There are so many different ways you can curate your own wellness experience to have a truly unique and memorable getaway.”

The Langham Huntington, Pasadena 1401 S. Oak Knoll Avenue, Pasadena 626-568-3900

Sleep Matters by Chuan langhamhospitalitygroup.com/en/brands/sleep-matters

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The Langham Huntington, Pasadena/Submitted photo
continued from page 23

A Fully Immersive Experience

Urban Press Winery brings back the fun

Aquiet block of San Fernando Boulevard in Downtown Burbank seems an unlikely location for a productive winery, tasting room and restaurant.

The modest and unassuming storefront belies a series of handsomely designed dining areas inside and a spacious outdoor porch and patio in back. Open a house brand bottle on the rustically elegant porch and the transportive atmosphere conjures a charming Tuscan trattoria, with live jazz music spilling out to the nearby alleyways of Downtown Burbank.

Urban Press Winery is the brainchild of the ever-affable and voluble Giovanni D’Andrea, a former tech executive and first-generation Italian native of Montreal.

“Growing up in Montreal, they had to import grapes from California. I had a little bit of knowledge on how to make wine back then but never took it really seriously,” D’Andrea recalls. “Coming out here, I realized grapes were available and we have wine-growing regions within an hour-, two-hour drive from us.”

After settling in Southern California in 1989, D’Andrea began making small batches of wine from his rented garage.

“I was actually renting a room, when I asked the owner for permission to start making wine in the garage,” he says.

“Back in 1993 was my first year. It came to the point where my wife told me, ‘OK, I think you have to move this out of the garage. You now have eight barrels.’”

Over time, his passion for winemaking extended to the acquisition of grapes from a few farmers’ vineyards in Sonoma County, where he expanded the scope and range of his winemaking. Still, D’Andrea’s vision was more expansive.

“I wanted to make the wines, but I wanted to bring the whole experience to the city. There are millions and millions of people here in LA who have never visited a tasting room or had the opportunity,” he notes.

He emphasized the importance of tasting and compares wine selection to buying perfume. A wine-tasting sample should direct you in the same way a spritz of perfume informs an aroma preference.

“The tasting room is all about educating people that there are great wines out there that are affordable,” D’Andrea asserts. Accessibility is important here. The reasonable price points for the high quality of the wine reflect the fact that there is no distributor or “middleman” adding surcharges.

In 2011, D’Andrea acquired his winemaking license. “We cultivated and produced our first vintages. Believe it or not those were all reds. Back then, I was really a ‘red’ guy. I was a big fan of the heavy cabs. Now we do four varietals,” he notes.

“Being in the city you have to be able to offer all kinds of varietals. I was never the biggest fan of pinot noirs. Guess what? I love pinot noir today. It’s one of our top sellers here. In the city, you have to please a lot of different palates.”

To that end, experienced French winemaker Francois Cordesse joined D’Andrea’s team in 2018. An award-winning oenologist, Cordesse largely tends to the active cultivation of the vineyards and their harvests for specific vintages.

D’Andrea grins and replies when asked about his favorite.

“Honestly? Any bottle that’s open,” he says. “But I’m really big into my syrah rose. We just released our 2017 syrah red. I’ve been eating and tagging

on page 26

03.23 | ARROYO | 25 Urban Press Winery/Submitted photo
Chef Emidio Tidu prepares freshly made pasta daily.
DINING
continued

continued from page 25

along with that syrah right now.”

For many connoisseurs, the best wine is meant to accompany and enhance the experience of enjoying finely prepared cuisine. One needn’t leave the premises of Urban Press Winery to test a chosen bottle with delicious food. It should also be noted that a complimentary wine tasting at the front tasting bar kicks off any dining experience at Urban Press from 6 to 10 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, and 6 to 9 p.m. Sundays.

D’Andrea recruited Romantrained chef Emidio Tidu in 2021 to help command a trailer with a woodburning oven that D’Andrea had built and placed in the open back patio. Initially limited to pizzas and pastas, Tidu was promised a full kitchen, the buildout of which was delayed until January of last year.

In May, Urban Press opened its dining rooms, presenting Tidu’s full menu of masterfully sophisticated, elevated takes on Italian cuisine. Each dish provides an ideal medium for sampling and pairing the subtly cultivated notes of the wines here.

A survey of the menu begins

with oysters, available by the half or full dozen ($21/$34). They arrive in a fresh combination of Kushu and Kumai, from British Columbia and Baja, respectively.

Depending on appetite and party size, there are two charcuterie boards ($32/$50) amply arrayed with a spectrum of Italian cheeses and cured meat, garnished with fig jam, olives, dried fruit and nuts. “Antipasti” choices include a house-favorite grilled octopus with fingerling potatoes and olives ($21) as well as beef tartare served with black truffle and caviar ($22).

There are steaks including a 9-ounce filet mignon ($41), a 14-ounce Angus ribeye ($40), or a massive 32-ounce tomahawk ($130) for two. Seafood entrees include grilled calamari with sauteed spinach ($25) and the obligatory cioppino, the Italian seafood stew of mussels, clams, shrimp and calamari ($31).

Pasta, risotto and individual pizzas come with the territory inevitably here, and all can find aptly delicious pairings with any of the winery’s bottles. Mushroom and truffle fettuccine ($33), lobster squid-ink ravioli ($25) and cacio e pepe ($18) all stand

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Gnocchi and wild mushroom pasta special pairs nicely with Urban Press chardonnay wine. Chef Emidio Tidu’s freshly made cannolis are an Urban Press dessert favorite. Owner/winemaker Giovanni D’Andrea in the Urban Press Barrel Room with “wine thief,” a tool used to taste-test wines. Urban Press Winery/Submitted photos

out as intriguing pasta options. The risotto Piemontese ($21) is highlighted as a signature dish and is prepared with arborio rice simmered slowly in Urban Press cabernet. Notable pizza preps: the garlic shrimp ($21) and the “Miss Italia,” also a house favorite with fresh prosciutto, arugula and Parmesan ($25).

Thirst and hunger will always be sated in an elegant and complementary fashion at Urban Press Winery. Brunch is offered on the weekends, and there is an attractive happy hour menu offered from 3 to 6 p.m. weekdays. Select Urban Press wines, $6, are available, as are five discounted menu options ($6 to $11).

In the winery’s tasting room, a flight of five selections can be sampled for $25. The fee is waived on with the purchase of two bottles. Or, if the charm and quality of Urban Press Winery bottles have thoroughly seduced a guest, an exclusive Wine Club membership program may also be considered for a waiver of the tasting fee.

The club offers three levels of engagement: The “Starter” is premised on the purchase of two bottles per month and includes a 15% discount on bottles to go and two tastings for two per month; the “Club” level — based on a three-bottle monthly purchase — offers a 25% discount on bottles as well as 5% off the food menu and three tastings for two per month; and the “VIP” membership includes a 35% discount on to-go bottles, a 10% discount off the menu, and four tastings for two each month. The memberships can be specified for red or white exclusively or for white and rose or “mixed” accordingly. Current pricing for memberships is available on its website.

The experience of Urban Press Winery is fully immersive in the sense that once you have settled at your table with food and wine, live music will also always be part of the fun. A rotating cast of combos and musicians plays near the tasting room. The jazz combo appearing for the weekend brunch service is particularly popular.

There are also periodic evening dinner package specials featuring coursed menus with wine pairings and live entertainment.

“We have a super staff now,” D’Andrea enthuses. Ably led by general manager Caryn Adams, Urban Press is expected to be serving lunch soon. “By the middle of the summer latest,” D’Andrea promises.

Musing on his surroundings and the placid oasis he has created in the middle of the city, D’Andrea notes, “Burbank has an unknown charm to it. What city has its own airport and its own Ikea? We have not just opened a winery; we have opened a destination.”

Looking out over the patio from the expansive porch, breeze lilting with soft jazz in the air, D’Andrea concludes, “The experience here is I’m trying to put the fun back into going out. (We have) affordable wines, great wines and probably one of the best Italian restaurants in our city today. People are looking for value. Great service. Great wine. Great food. I think we have it all covered.”

Urban Press Winery

316 N. San Fernando Boulevard, Burbank 818-561-4858, urbanpresswinery.com

03.23 | ARROYO | 27
Urban Press Winery/Submitted photo
Owner/winemaker Giovanni D’Andrea in the Urban Press “Brick Room” first-floor dining area.

A cake for morning, noon or night

Inspired by the sbrisolòna from Northern Italy, this nutty and crumbly cake is beautiful when placed at the center of the table welcoming everyone to break off their own piece.

The very nature of the crumbling texture is organic, informal and unfussy. Introducing cornmeal into my baking creates an uncommon texture that is hearty and unexpected when compared to all those other desserts that are described as fluffy and moist with a tender crumb, which, of course, I am a fan of as well.

But it is harder for me to rationalize having a cupcake first thing in the morning with my coffee versus a piece of a crumbly pistachio cake as the day is just starting. The foundational dough mix is perfect for experimentation with various nut and citrus combinations. If you prefer macadamias, pair it with lime and lemon zest instead. Or if you love the flavor of oranges, zest two and pair them with pecans. I recommend chopping up larger nuts so that they are more evenly distributed.

CRUMBLE NUT CAKE ACTIVE TIME: 20 MINUTES

TOTAL TIME: 1 HOUR | YIELDS ONE 9-INCH CAKE

INGREDIENTS

6 OUNCES UNSALTED BUTTER, MELTED

1 CUP ALL-PURPOSE FLOUR

3/4 CORNMEAL

1 CUP SUGAR

6 OUNCES PISTACHIOS

3 LARGE EGGS

1 LEMON, ZESTED

1 ORANGE, ZESTED OPTIONAL: POWDERED SUGAR FOR DUSTING

INSTRUCTIONS

WHISK TOGETHER FLOUR, CORNMEAL, SUGAR, PISTACHIOS AND CITRUS ZESTS IN A BOWL UNTIL COMBINED. SPRINKLE THE MELTED BUTTER OVER THE DRY INGREDIENT MIX.

LIGHTLY BEAT THE EGGS AND STIR INTO THE DRY MIX UNTIL A SOFT AND SLIGHTLY STICKY DOUGH IS FORMED.

POUR THE MIXTURE INTO A GREASED (WITH BUTTER OR OIL) 9-INCH CAKE PAN, GENTLY PRESSING THE DOUGH WITH A SPATULA TO SMOOTH.

BAKE AT 350 DEGREES FOR 30-35 MINUTES UNTIL THE TOP IS GOLDEN BROWN AND A KNIFE OR TOOTHPICK INSERTED INTO THE CENTER COMES OUT CLEAN.

LET THE CAKE COOL ON A RACK BEFORE CAREFULLY REMOVING FROM THE PAN.

JUST BEFORE SERVING, YOU CAN DUST POWDERED SUGAR ON THE TOP IF DESIRED.

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Luis Chavez/Contributing photographer
CULINARY CUPBOARD

Seasonal California-Inspired Fare

Lemonade launches new menu at all 21 locations

Lemonade recently launched a new menu that includes craveable warm flavors of fall and winter with natural, fresh ingredients. The renewed menu features an updated build-your-own protein plate, two new chef’s bowls, two new hot sides and a new vegan handcrafted sandwich.

“We are launching several seasonal menu items that are in line with our mission to serve colorful, seasonal, California-inspired food,” says chef Nate Weir, Modern Restaurant Concepts VP of culinary. “This is one of our most significant seasonal menu launches to date.”

Lemonade is a California-based modern cafeteria that serves colorful, seasonal and healthy fare. It offers beautifully prepared salads, signature grain bowls, hearty braised proteins, flavor-packed sandwiches and trademark handcrafted lemonades.

The new menu items include a sustainable salmon bowl; Comfort Bowl; rosemary sweet potato hash; roasted veggies; golden cauliflower sandwich; and a Brussels sprouts, dates and Parmesan marketplace side. It has also added a new raspberry mint lemonade, and the build-your-own protein plate features seven new proteins and six new sauces to pick from for a fully customizable guest experience.

“Customers will enjoy the flexibility and customization of the buildyour-own protein plate because up until now, a protein came with a specific sauce and our guests couldn’t make any changes,” Weir says. “There are seven proteins and six sauces, so there are a lot of different options that our guests can choose from to make a plate. You could come to Lemonade every day during the week with a different flavor profile you are looking for and get exactly what you want.”

The new items are available at all 21 of Lemonade’s locations, including Venice and Santa Monica. Seasonal items such as the raspberry mint lemonade and Brussels sprouts marketplace side are available until March. All other items are available until further notice.

“We’re engineering the menu to make the experience even better for our guests,” adds Josh Chesterson, Modern Restaurant Concepts culinary creative director. “Offering choices empowers our guests and, we hope, will move them to choose us with even more frequency.”

03.23 | ARROYO | 29 Lemonade/Submitted photos
Lemonade has launched several seasonal menu items that are in line with its mission to serve colorful, seasonal, California-inspired food. The new menu items include a sustainable salmon bowl, rosemary sweet potato hash and roasted veggies, among others.
DINING

‘It’s an Honor’

Julian Shah-Tayler channels Bowie on acclaimed album

Electro-pop artist Julian Shah-Tayler is in love, and he’s sharing his feelings on his latest album, “Elysium.”

The third under his own name, “Elysium” opens with “End of the Line,” which narrates the dissolution of old pain, paving the way for new beginnings. It continues along the emotional roller coaster that comes with a long-distance relationship.

“The record was basically the story of the love of my life,” Shah-Tayler says. “It’s about meeting her and becoming a relationship and the trials and tribulations.

“It’s been a long-distance relationship for a while. The album is almost a narrative.”

“Elysium” has myriad meaning for Shah-Tayler. It’s the name of the Austin club where he met the love of his life, burlesque dancer Eva Strangelove, who plans to move to Pasadena. In Greek mythology, Elysium describes the home of the blessed after death.

Formerly of Pasadena and Altadena, the Leeds, England-born Shah-Tayler now lives in South Pasadena, where he recorded the album. Shah-Tayler calls “Elysium” one of his most cohesive albums. Usually, he says, he throws a multitude of sounds at a record. “Elysium” is a little more focused.

“I limited my sound palate a little,” he says. “People appreciate that it’s a bit more focused in that sense.”

“Elysium” includes an appearance on “Devil Knows” by bassist David J from Love and Rockets (“Ball of Confusion”) and Bauhaus (“Bela Lugosi’s

Dead,” “Ziggy Stardust”).

“I love it when David (J) comes around,” he says. “Not only is he a fascinating character, his musical ideas are based in magic. He believes in the ‘happy accident’ like I do. I just put the mic up, run the track and sing along immediately. I follow whatever magic spirit comes. I will generally end up with the ideas I come up with on first go-around.”

Shah-Tayler says it produces something magical.

“If you develop something deeply, you generally get this visceral, spiritual reaction. It results in something quite special when it works.”

“End of the Line” and “Secret/Fisk” were co-produced by LA’s Robert Margouleff, whose credits include Devo and Stevie Wonder.

“He and I have this great rapport in the studio,” Shah-Tayler says. “We just honed one of the songs that Mike’s possibly going to play on. Carmine, David J — they’re all on this song I’m going to put Mike on. It’s going to have ridiculous star power. With Robert Margouleff co-producing, it’s up there on with the rock pantheon.”

Shah-Tayler discovered Alan Moore, a comic book writer whom he respects “massively,” when he was 16.

“When I read ‘Watchmen’ at 16, it changed my perception and life,” he says. “I didn’t realize that comic books could be literature. ‘Watchmen’ is the only comic book on the New York Times’ top 100 books of all time.” Shah-Tayler admittedly stole some of Moore’s movie imagery to combine with David J’s song that he covered for his 60th birthday “kanreki” album.

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John Travis, styling by Marika Soderlund, choreography by Molly D’Amour, VFX Joel Sigerson
ARTS AND CULTURE

“I did not know they were great friends,” he says. “It was the first time David (J) was aware of me. I made the song. He loved the song. It was incredibly synchronicity. It did not go unnoticed by David J.”

Great response

The response to “Elysium” has been great. Shah-Tayler has been featured in a multitude of magazines and has made end-of-the-year top 20s and top 10s for blogs and podcasts.

“I’m excited,” he says. “It’s not one consistent song. ‘End of the Line’ was proposed for a Grammy. It didn’t make the short list because I didn’t have the money to network to push it through to the next level. I was thrilled that it was at least proposed. A lot of people say it sounds very Bowie-esque. It’s an honor for me.”

Six of the songs from the sessions didn’t make it on the album. They’ll appear on the follow-up collection, which will feature David Bowie’s keyboard player Mike Garson.

“He’s agreed to play on the album,” he says. “I’m very excited about that. He listened to the track and offered to play on more than one. Carmine Rojas, the bassist from David Bowie’s band, will be on two of the songs.”

When Shah-Tayler isn’t recording his own music, he performs with Depeche Mode (Strangelove) and Bowie tributes.

“I have a lot of electronic music in my background,” he says. “For this album, I play acoustic guitar and piano and keep that extra bells and whistles to a minimum. It served the songs well.”

He uses his daft networking skills to introduce folks to “Elysium.”

“There’s a lyric by Bowie in ‘Modern Love’: ‘It’s not really work/It’s just the power to charm.’ Now I relate 100% to that lyric. I have to charm people enough to buy my record. They buy it because they like me and then they realize they like the music. The power is in the hands of the artist a little bit more.”

03.23 | ARROYO | 31
Julian
Julian Shah-Tayler recently released the album “Elysium.”
Shah-Tayler/Submitted photo
Julian Shah-Tayler julianshahtayler.com

Gotta Have Art

By Leah Schwartz

Art should be accessible to everyone: young, old, rich or poor. For more than 20 years, ArtNight Pasadena has created a free, all-ages experience, beyond what arts and cultural institutions offer.

The event is held twice a year — in October and March. This year’s Spring ArtNight will be held 6 to 10 p.m. Friday, March 10, and will have free admission.

“(ArtNight is) a wonderful experience and grants an appreciation for the depth and breadth of our arts and cultural community,” says Rochelle Branch, Pasadena’s cultural affairs manager. “We have an incredibly interesting, creative community here. And each venue has something in particular to offer. I hope that any audience attending would find something new that they could take delight in or enjoy some of the venues they’re already familiar with.”

The event is produced by the city of Pasadena’s cultural affairs division in partnership with local art and cultural organizations and nonprofits. This year’s Spring ArtNight will include 21 locations featuring a variety of art forms like dance, radio theater, music and visual arts experiences and exhibitions.

This year, ArtNight will offer “No Boundaries,” a districtwide kindergarten through 12th grade student art showcase presented by Pasadena Unified School District. Live music and food trucks at the City Hall Hub and live music at the Pasadena Conservatory of Music are part of the program.

Other venues will include the Armory Center for the Arts, ArtCenter’s HMCT and Williamson Galleries, the Jackie Robinson Community Center, Parson’s Nose Theater, Side Street Projects and the Pasadena Museum of History.

Patrons can curate what they want to see of the 21 venues. The city provides shuttle buses with docents and student ambassadors to guide attendees through the stops. ArtNight provides additional information about metro stops for those who prefer to take the metro. Some venues are even close enough to walk from one to the other.

Like the city of Pasadena, ArtNight is constantly shifting, with varying programming each evening; although many of the organizations featured are favorites, there are frequently new events and programs.

In the past few years, ArtNight has added Alkebulan Cultural Center, an African American institution in Northwest Pasadena, the Gamble House and Remainders Creative Reuse, where attendees can create artworks made from recycled materials.

Having returned to in-person programming last October, ArtNight is making a comeback after the pandemic and two years of virtual events. “We are still rebuilding our audience base after the pandemic,” Branch says. Pre-pandemic ArtNights attracted about 22,000 guests. Attendance is slowly climbing, with last fall’s event bringing in about 10,000 attendees.

This spring, Branch hopes that those numbers continue to grow.

“There’s an element of excitement and engagement with people riding the buses, convening in city hall, and attending each of the venues that is really unparalleled,” Branch says.

ArtNight Pasadena

WHEN: 6 to 10 p.m. Friday, March 10

WHERE: Locations throughout Pasadena

COST: Free

INFO: artnightpasadena.org

32 | ARROYO | 03.23
Matt Cobleigh/Submitted photos
ArtNight allows patrons to collaborate on group artworks.
Attendees can visit up to 21 exhibits and performances. AND CULTURE
ARTS Showcase is back with a night of art discovery

Pressure’s Off

Meeting fans is addictive to

“Dancing with the Stars” pro Emma Slater loves the “Dancing with the Stars” tours. After all, she’s not being judged by like the of Len Goodman.

“It’s more relaxed, as the pressure is off,” she says. “It’s a different experience. We get to hang with other professional dancers who we are best friends with. It’s really a fantastic time for us. I think that translates to the show. We get to meet the people who watch the TV show. We don’t get to do that in the studio.”

“Dancing with the Stars: Live! The Tour” comes to Pasadena Civic at 8 p.m. Friday, March 10.

The tour, which launched January 6 at MGM National Harbor in Washington, D.C., celebrates the show’s 31st season. Besides Slater, the tour features Brandon Armstrong, Alan Bersten, Sasha Farber, Kateryna Klishyna, Gleb Savchenko, Britt Stewart and “So You Think You Can Dance” winner Alexis Warr (who now appears on “Dancing with the Stars”).

“Dancing with the Stars” season 31 runner-up and star of “The Bachelorette” Gabby Windey will join the cast for the entire tour, while fellow season 31 castmates Vinny Guadagnino, Daniel Durant, Heidi D’Amelio and Charli

cast

D’Amelio will join the cast on select dates.

Slater says it’s fun to meet with fans on tour.

“I always get, ‘You’re so much smaller than I thought you were,’” Slater adds with a laugh.

“I can’t tell you how many times I get that. People think you’re a monster. In real life, I’m only 5-foot-4. But everybody is so nice and so flattering. It makes us excited to see them so excited. I’m blown away by their interest in what I do. There’s nothing more addictive than making people happy — especially with something like ballroom dancing that we love and can be celebrated.

Dancer Mandy Moore choreographed the numbers in the show.

“She is just an absolute legend in the space,” Slater says.

“She just choreographed ‘Babylon,’ this massive film. She curated the most wonderful, energetic, stunning, marvelous show that I’m really excited to be a part of. There’s some beautiful storytelling in there, some sweet moments that pull on the heartstrings. There are moments of comedy and playful

continued on page 34 03.23 | ARROYO | 33
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storytelling that I think will excite the audience.”

This year, “Dancing with the Stars,” the TV show, was on Disney+ instead of ABC. Slater says it was the right move for “Dancing with the Stars.”

“Disney+ was great,” she says.

“It marked the return of Con-

rad Green, who was an executive producer we had. He finally returned this season. He’s just a genius in what he does. He knows the show so well. He elevated the show to new heights again. That was an incredible feeling to be a part of.

“Alfonso (Ribeiro, host) was exceptional. He’s phenomenal. He’s a personal friend of mine. I’m so happy to see him do well.”

“Dancing with the Stars: Live! The Tour”

WHEN: 8 p.m. Friday, March 10

WHERE: Pasadena Civic, 300 E. Green Street, Pasadena COST: Tickets start at $94 INFO: ticketmaster.com, dwtstour.com

Dancers Emma Slater and Gleb Savchenko perform during the Disney+ show “Dancing with the Stars.”
34 | ARROYO | 03.23
Emma Slater and Alan Bersten, longtime “Dancing with the Stars” professionals, will perform at Pasadena Civic on March 10.
Download this app and receive: the free trial
Dancing with the Stars/Submitted
photos

“Sunday in the Park with George”

THROUGH MARCH 19

A 1985 Pulitzer-winning drama, “Sunday in the Park with George” celebrates “the art of making art.” Pasadena Playhouse, 39 S. El Molino Avenue, Pasadena, tickets start at $39, 626-356-7529, pasadenaplayhouse.org

The Blackouts

MARCH 3

The Blackouts return to The Mixx for a special live tribute to new wave, post-punk, dark wave classics with DJ Ane Uno. The Mixx, 443 E. Colorado Boulevard, Pasadena, tickets start at $10, 8:30 p.m., 626-500-0017, themixxclub.com

“Matter of Time”

MARCH 3 TO MARCH 16

Lineage dancers, singers, actors, writers and creators takes guests on a guided tour through a curated live performance event. As guests arrive, they’ll choose whether they want to go forward or backward in time, then travel beyond the theater for performances throughout entire Lineage space.

Lineage Performing Arts Center, 920 E. Mountain Street, Pasadena, $40, $25 students, various times, 626-844-7008, lineagepac.org/matteroftime

Old Pasadena Walking Tour

MARCH 4

Pasadena Heritage offers its inperson Old Pasadena Walking Tour, which includes historic Dayton Street and some of the first Black-owned businesses, the first fire station and Friendship Baptist Church. Learn the story of how the burning of a Chinese laundry began the expulsion from Pasadena’s first commercial district of our Chinese population.

Throughout Old Pasadena, $18 members, $22 nonmembers, 10 to 11:15 a.m., pasadenaheritage.org

Michael J. Fox Foundation’s LA Run/Walk

MARCH 5

The Michael J. Fox Foundation established the Run/Walk Series (formerly known as the Fox Trot) in 2017 in New York City. Since then, the series has evolved and expanded to several

March Calendar

locations across the United States. These family-friendly events connect those living with Parkinson’s, their loved ones, supporters and community partners. Collectively, the run/walk series has raised more than $6 million and united over 18,000 participants across the United States and internationally. Rose Bowl, 1001 Rose Bowl Drive, Pasadena, registration start at $20, 8:30 a.m., rosebowlstadium.com

GYO: “Exploring the Cosmos”

MARCH 5

The Glendale Youth Orchestra, led by music director and conductor Henry Shin, will perform a concert “Exploring the Cosmos” featuring Holst: The Planets; film music by John Williams, such as “ET” and “Star Wars,” and Michael Giacchino, like “Star Trek”; as well as the 2023 Concerto Winners Ewazen: Bass Trombone Concerto, Nathan Scherrer (17), trombone; Vieuxtemps: Violin Concerto, Jason Chen (17), violin. Alex Theatre, 216 N. Brand Boulevard, Glendale, see website for ticket information, 6 p.m., 818-2548456, glendaleyouthorchestra.com

Poco Pocho

MARCH 9 AND MARCH 16

Enjoy live cumbia with homegrown quartet Poco Pocho, joined by DJ Sloepoke.

The Mixx, 443 E. Colorado Boulevard, Pasadena, visit website for ticket information, 8 p.m., 626-5000017, themixxclub.com

DJ Speedy w/The Krows MARCH 10

The Krows hit the stage with rock en español. DJ Speedy will spin tunes. The Mixx, 443 E. Colorado Boulevard, Pasadena, tickets start at $10, 8 p.m., 626-500-0017, themixxclub.com

“Dancing with the Stars”

MARCH 10

Pros join select contestants for a night of high-energy performances. The Pasadena Civic, 300 E. Green Street, Pasadena, tickets start at $94, 8 p.m., ticketmaster.com, dwtstour.com

ArtNight Pasadena MARCH 10

The twice-yearly event celebrates

the city’s most prominent museums and cultural institutions for free. Throughout Pasadena, free, various times, cityofpasadena.net/artnight

Pasadena Festival of Women Authors MARCH 11

The Pasadena Festival of Women Authors is the signature event of the Pasadena Literary Alliance. The festival will feature Man Booker Prize finalist and New York Times bestselling author Karen Joy Fowler, along with acclaimed writers Lan Samantha Chang, Tess Gunty, Jean Hanff Korelitz, Dolen Perkins-Valdez, Tara Stringfellow and Belinda Huijuan Tang. Lunch will be served.

Pasadena Hilton, 168 S. Los Robles Avenue, Pasadena, tickets start at $100, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., pasadenaliteraryalliance.org

Power Station

MARCH 12

Taiwanese Mandopop’s Power Station is the soft-rock duo of Yu Chiuhsin and Yen Chih-lin, from the Paiwan tribe of Taiwan’s Pingtung County. Their music is characterized by emotional ballads as well as rock anthems.

The Pasadena Civic, 300 E. Green Street, Pasadena, tickets start at $88, 7 p.m., ticketmaster.com

Rose Bowl Flea Market

MARCH 12

The Rose Bowl Flea Market takes place the second Sunday of each month. Shop from over 2,500 vendors selling everything from coveted antiques, rare vintage finds and up-to-date trends.

Rose Bowl, 1001 Rose Bowl Drive, Pasadena, tickets start at $12, 5 a.m., rosebowlstadium.com

Kahane Plays Kahane

MARCH 12

It’s all in the family as conductor laureate and celebrated pianist Jeffrey Kahane performs “Heirloom,” a LACO commission by his son, composer Gabriel Kahane, and conducted by Chris Rountree. The program is rounded out with a flight of selections from Jean-Philippe Rameau’s operas Zais, Les Boreades and Dardanus, as well as Haydn’s final symphony, the London Symphony.

Alex Theatre, 216 N. Brand Bou-

levard, Glendale, see website for ticket information, 7 p.m., 818-2548456, alextheatre.org

“Unrivaled”

MARCH 16 TO APRIL 23

Ladies-in-waiting Murasaki Shikibu and Sei Shonagon are two of Japan’s most beloved writers. They also hated each other. “Unrivaled” is about friendship, heartbreak and what it means to be a female artist. Boston Court, 70 N. Mentor Avenue, Pasadena, see website for ticket information and special events, bostoncourtpasadena.org

Beethoven & Rachmaninoff

MARCH 18

Pasadena Symphony presents Huang Ruo as part of the annual Composers Showcase, featuring works by both emerging and established contemporary composers at each concert. Ambassador Auditorium, 131 S. St. John Avenue, Pasadena, tickets start at $40, 2 p.m. and 8 p.m., pasadenasymphony-pops.org

DM Fan Club LA Presents Depeche Mode Album Release and Tour KickOff Party

MARCH 18

The Depeche Mode Fan Club LA celebrates its heroes’ tour kickoff and the release of their new album, “Memento Mori.” Guests are DJs Protolkal, DJ Dark Krystal, Ray Kaos of the DM Convention and Jose Shuton. Enjoy rare music videos on the largest LED Wall in town. The Mixx, 443 E. Colorado Boulevard, Pasadena, tickets start at $10, 8 p.m., 626-500-0017, themixxclub.com

Walk to End Epilepsy

MARCH 26

The walk will feature a noncompetitive 5K run/walk and 1-mile stroll, family-friendly activities such as a pop-up village for children, epilepsy information booths, arts/crafts booths, a photo booth, Wishing Wall interactive art piece, stage performances and an awards presentation. The Epilepsy Walk Los Angeles will also feature community booths, food truck vendors and musical performances.

Rose Bowl, 1001 Rose Bowl Drive, Pasadena, $25, 8 a.m., rosebowlstadium.com

03.23 | ARROYO | 35
CALENDAR

Vroman’s Live

Bookstore presents impressive March lineup

Southern California’s renowned Vroman’s Bookstore is continuing the new year with more exceptional virtual and in-person programs in March.

Vroman’s in-store events are free and open to the public, unless otherwise noted. Off-site events are most often ticketed and will include a link to buy. Masks are strongly encouraged for those attending the events.

All in-person events will be held at Vroman’s, located at 695 E. Colorado Boulevard, Pasadena, unless otherwise noted.

To register, visit vromansbookstore.com. Those with questions can contact email@ vromansbookstore.com.

In-person events

Vroman’s presents Nedra Glover Tawwab, in conversation with Dr. Thema Bryant, discussing “Drama Free: A Guide to Managing Unhealthy Family Relationships” | 7 p.m. Monday, March 6

In this guide, licensed therapist and bestselling relationship expert Nedra Glover Tawwab offers clear advice for identifying dysfunctional family patterns and choosing the best path to breaking the cycle and moving forward. Covering topics ranging from the trauma of emotional neglect to the legacy of addicted or absent parents to mental health struggles in siblings and other relatives, and more, this clear and compassionate guide will help you take control of your own life.

This ticketed event will take place at All Saints Church, 132 N. Euclid Avenue, Pasadena. Tickets include one entry and one copy of “Drama Free,” which will be handed out at check-in. The ticket link is at eventbrite.com.

Cara Black, in conversation with Naomi Hirahara, discusses “Night Flight to Paris” | 7 p.m.

Wednesday, March 8

October 1942: It’s been two years since Kate Rees was sent to Paris on a British Secret Service mission to assassinate Hitler. Since then, she has left spy craft behind to take a training job as a sharpshooting instructor in the Scottish Highlands. But her quiet life is violently disrupted when Col. Stepney, her former handler, drags her back into the fray for a risky three-pronged mission in Paris.

Each task is more dangerous than the next: Deliver a package of forbidden biological material. Assassinate a high-ranking German operative whose knowledge of invasion plans could turn the tide of the war against the Allies. Rescue a British agent who once saved Rees’ life — and get out.

Michelle Dowd, in conversation with Michael Scott Moore, discusses “Forager: Field Notes for Surviving a Family Cult: A Memoir” | 7 p.m. Thursday, March 9

As a child, Michelle Dowd grew up on a mountain in the Angeles National Forest. She was born into an ultra-religious cult started in the 1930s by her grandfather, a mercurial, domineering and charismatic man who convinced generations of young male followers that he would live 500 years and ascend to the heavens when doomsday came.

Comfort and care are sins, Dowd is told. As a result, she was forced to learn the skills necessary to battle hunger, thirst and cold; learned to trust animals more than humans; and, most importantly, learned how to survive in the natural world.

John Sayles discusses “Jamie MacGillivray: The Renegade’s Journey” | 3 p.m. Saturday, March 11

It begins in the highlands of Scotland in 1746, at the Battle of Culloden, the last desperate stand of the Stuart “pretender” to the throne of the Three Kingdoms, Bonnie Prince Charlie, and his rabidly loyal supporters. Vanquished with his comrades by the forces of the Hanoverian (and Protestant) British crown, the novel’s eponymous hero, Jamie MacGillivray, narrowly escapes a roadside execution only to be recaptured by the victors and shipped to Marshalsea Prison (central to Charles Dickens’ “Hard Times”), where he cheats the hangman a second time before being sentenced to transportation and indentured servitude in colonial America “for the term of his natural life.” His travels are paralleled by those of Jenny Ferguson, a poor village girl swept up on false charges by the English and also sent in chains to the New World.

The novel follows MacGillivray and Ferguson through servitude, revolt, escape and romantic entanglements — pawns in a deadly game.

Arielle Estoria, in conversation with Simone Boyce, discusses “The Unfolding: An Invitation to Come Home to Yourself” | 7 p.m. Monday, March 13

Arielle Estoria is known for her moving and empowering words that encourage women and all people to be confident in who they are, compassionate about where they’ve been, and loving about who they are becoming. In this stunning collection of essays, poems and meditations, beautifully illustrated in earth tones, Estoria tenderly reveals the places in her life where she has been broken open, mended back together in new ways, and shows us how this process of “unfolding” helps us discover and return home to the person we were always meant to be.

Kristin Hannah, in conversation with Maggie Shipstead, discusses “The Four Winds” | 7 p.m. Tuesday, March 14

In Texas in 1921, Elsa Wolcott, deemed too old to marry in a time when marriage is a woman’s only option, the future seems bleak. Until the night she meets Rafe Martinelli and decides to change the direction of her life. With her reputation in ruin, there is only one respectable choice: marriage to a man she barely knows.

“The Four Winds” is a rich, sweeping novel that stunningly brings to life the Great Depression and the people who lived through it —the harsh realities that divided us as a nation and the enduring battle between the haves and the have-nots. This is a ticketed event located at Vroman’s. Tickets include one entry and one paperback copy of “The Four Winds.”

The ticket link is at eventbrite.com.

Elizabeth McKenzie and Yxta Maya Murray discuss their respective new releases, “The Dog of the North” and “God Went Like That” | 7 p.m. Wednesday, March 15

Penny Rush has problems. Her marriage is over; she’s quit her job. Her mother and stepfather went missing in the Australian outback five years ago; her mentally unbalanced father provokes her; her grandmother, Dr. Pincer, keeps experiments in the refrigerator and something worse in the woodshed. But Rush is a virtuoso at what’s possible when all else fails.

McKenzie follows Rush on her quest for a fresh start. In award-winning legal scholar and novelist Murray’s new novel, federal agent Reyna Rodriguez reports on a reallife nuclear reactor meltdown and accidents that occurred in 1959, 1964, and 1968 at the Santa Susana Field Laboratory.

continued on page 38 36 | ARROYO | 03.23
CALENDAR
03.23 | ARROYO | 37

An infamous research and development complex in California’s Simi Valley, the lab was eventually dismantled by the U.S. government — but not before it created a toxic legacy of contamination and numerous cancer clusters. Toxins and nuclear residue may have been further released by the 2018 Woolsey fire and 2019 floods in the area.

Erik Conway discusses “The Big Myth: How American Business Taught Us to Loathe Government and Love the Free Market” | 7 p.m. Monday, March 20

In their bestselling book “Merchants of Doubt,” Naomi Oreskes and Erik M. Conway revealed the origins of climate change denial. Now, they unfold the truth about another disastrous dogma: the “magic of the marketplace.”

With archival evidence, Oreskes and Conway document campaigns to rewrite textbooks, combat unions and defend child labor. They detail the ploys that turned hardline economists Friedrich von Hayek and Milton Friedman into household names; recount the libertarian roots of the “Little House on the Prairie” books; and tune into the General Electric-sponsored TV show that beamed free-market doctrine to millions and launched Ronald Reagan’s political career.

By the 1970s, this propaganda was succeeding. Free market ideology would define the next half-century across Republican and Democratic administrations, giving us a housing crisis, the opioid scourge, climate destruction and a baleful response to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Cathleen Schine discusses “Kunstlers in Paradise” | 7 p.m. Tuesday, March 21

For years Mamie Künstler, 93 years old, as clever and glamorous as ever, has lived happily in her bungalow in Venice with her inscrutable housekeeper and her gigantic St. Bernard dog. Their tranquility is upended when Mamie’s grandson, Julian, arrives from New York City. Like many a 20-something, he has come to seek his fortune in Hollywood. But it is 2020, the global pandemic sweeps in, and Julian’s short visit suddenly has no end in sight.

Mamie was only 11 when the Künstlers escaped Vienna in 1939. They made their way, stunned and overwhelmed, to sunny, surreal Los Angeles, where they joined a colony of distinguished Jewish musicians, writers and intellectuals also escaping Hitler. Now, faced with months of lockdown and a willing listener, Mamie begins to tell Julian the buried stories of her early years in Los Angeles: her escapades with eminent émigrés like Arnold Schoenberg, Christopher Isherwood and Thomas Mann. Oh, and Greta Garbo. While the pandemic cuts Julian off from the life he knows, Mamie’s tales open up a world of lives that came before him. They reveal to him just how much the past holds of the future.

Liam Callanan, in conversation with Marisa Silver, discusses “When in Rome” | 7 p.m.

Thursday, March 23

Meet Claire: 52, desperate to do something new and get a fresh start.

Enter the chance to go to Rome: Home to a struggling convent facing a precipitous end, the city beckons Claire, who’s long had a complicated relationship with religion, including a “missed connection” with convent life in her teens. “Once in Rome,” she finds a group of funny, fearless nuns in a gorgeous villa, beautiful runs throughout a color-saturated city, and a chance to reflect. It all leads her to an unexpected question — should she join the convent? — and an answer that startles her as much as it does those closest to her.

Vroman’s Local Author Day featuring Barbara Hanky-Rogers, Laurie Markvart and Kenneth R. Strange Jr. | 4 p.m. Sunday, March 26

Barbara Hanky-Rogers presents “It’s a No Grainer Cookbook”

“It’s a No Grainer Cookbook” takes the guesswork out of replacing grains and wheat flour with over 180 appetizing recipes for any occasion.

Laurie Markvart presents “Somewhere in the Music, I’ll Find Me”

Musician Laurie Markvart was adrift in life. In the wake of the deaths of her father and preemie baby, her family life was in anguish and her music career stalled.

Music was the remedy for anything in Markvart’s life. Looking for a quick fix, she attended an open audition in Los Angeles for the “X-Factor” reality TV singing show. During the demanding two-day audition, Markvart reflected on her lifelong music journey.

As a teen, she fled her isolated Wisconsin farm town for the famous music scenes of Minneapolis, Austin and New York City. In rock bands, on tours and with Broadway auditions, Markvart had many highs and lows, successes and failures — some humorous, some dangerous. At the center of it all was a stormy relationship with her mentally ill mother and Markvart’s growing anxiety disorder that plagued her most. The despair she thought would be extinguished with marriage and parenting was for a time, but it shattered with the profound loss of her father and baby.

With mounting pressure to succeed at the X-Factor audition, Markvart must push through her anxieties and heartbreaking reflections and not only find herself in the music but a way to move forward and heal.

Kenneth R. Strange Jr. presents “It’s Your Camino: One Couple’s 500-Mile Pilgrimage Across Spain”

The Camino de Santiago is quest and pilgrimage, goal and process. It is not a journey for the faint of heart or the soft of foot. People embark on the 500-mile, 31-day trek from the Pyrenees Mountains in France to the cathedral of Santiago de Compostela in Spain for all sorts of reasons—religious, spiritual, physical and personal. For author Kenneth R. Strange Jr. and his wife, Aurora, walking the Camino is about adventure and a lifelong love of Spain, both of which shine through in the award-winning “It’s Your Camino.”

Nathan Masters, in conversation with David Kipen, discusses “Crooked: The Roaring ’20s Tale of a Corrupt Attorney General, a Crusading Senator, and the Birth of the American Political Scan” | 7 p.m. Tuesday, March 28

Many tales from the Jazz Age reek of crime and corruption. But perhaps the era’s greatest political fiasco — one that resulted in a nationwide scandal, a public reckoning at the Department of Justice, the rise of J. Edgar Hoover, and an Oscar-winning film — has long been lost to the annals of history. In “Crooked,” Nathan Masters restores this story of murderers, con artists, secret lovers, spies, bootleggers and corrupt politicians to its full, page-turning glory.

Newly elected to the Senate on a promise to root out corruption, Burton “Boxcar Burt” Wheeler sets his sights on ousting Attorney General Harry Daugherty, puppetmaster behind President Harding’s unlikely rise to power. Daugherty is famous for doing whatever it takes to keep his boss in power, and his cozy relations with bootleggers and other scofflaws have long spawned rumors of impropriety. But when his constant companion and trusted fixer, Jess Smith, is found dead of a gunshot wound in the apartment the two men share, Daugherty is suddenly thrust into the spotlight, exposing the rot consuming the Harding administration to a shocked public.

Jacqueline Winspear discusses “The White Lady” | 7 p.m. Thursday, March 30

This heart-stopping novel, set in PostWWII Britain in 1947, follows the coming of age and maturity of former wartime operative Elinor White — veteran of two wars, trained killer, protective of her anonymity — when she is drawn back into the world of menace she has been desperate to leave behind.

A reluctant ex-spy with demons of her own, White finds herself facing down one of the most dangerous organized crime gangs in London, ultimately exposing corruption from Scotland Yard to the highest levels of government.

The private, quiet “Miss White,” as White is known, lives in a village in rural Kent, England, and to her fellow villagers seems something of an enigma. Well, she might, as White occupies a “grace and favor” property, a rare privilege offered to faithful servants of the Crown for services to the nation. But the residents of Shacklehurst have no way of knowing how dangerous White’s war work had been or that their mysterious neighbor is haunted by her past.

continued from page 36 03.23 | ARROYO | 38

Uplifting Communities

Assistance League changes the lives of adults, children

Assistance League of Pasadena has provided 2,500 lowincome students with clothes and school supplies.

More than 3,500 children have new huggable bears to comfort them when times are tough, and 140 seniors have been able to showcase and sell their crafts for supplemental income. That is the work Assistance League of Pasadena accomplished during 2022.

Assistance League of Pasadena is one of 120 Assistance Leagues nationwide that work to change the lives of children and adults through community programs. Assistance League of Pasadena’s president, Ursula Hyman, says even though they have a high impact on the community, it still seems like they are the best-kept secret in Pasadena.

The group has been hard at work

in Pasadena since 1936. Today, the volunteer-run nonprofit provides philanthropic services to the community through programs like Operation School Bell, Bear Hugs, assault survivor kits and school supplies for success.

“We’ve been clothing children in Pasadena since 1941,” Hyman says. “(Operation School Bell) is our largest program, the program we spend the most money on.”

Before the pandemic, Operation School Bell looked very different from how it does in 2023. Back then, Pasadena Unified School District would work with Assistance League of Pasadena to bus low-income students to their thrift store for a fashion field trip. The student would then be sent home with a nearly complete wardrobe and a voucher to purchase a pair of shoes.

Post-pandemic, Hyman says schools are reluctant to let the kids miss class time. Instead, the schools work with the Assistance League by having parents fill out forms with their children’s sizes and preferences. Their volunteers then use those forms to put together a backpack full of the clothing items the children need.

While she misses the personal interaction with the kids, Hyman says it is probably better that they no longer take a field trip to receive their supplies. That way, they aren’t singled out for bullying because of their circumstances at home.

“We hear from the community about families weeping (from relief) when they receive the clothing. … I dealt with a family last year who called us directly because they were

starting school the next day,” Hyman says as she recounted the story.

“I know you do this through the schools, but I have no clothes to put my children in. If they don’t (get clothes), they won’t go to school,” the mother told Hyman, who told the mother to come to Assistance League of Pasadena’s headquarters straight away.

“I met with her, and she was just crying as we tried on some clothes for her kids. … It was heartwarming to see. It really makes a difference for some families, especially this year with inflation.”

Hyman says that even though there are fewer children in Pasadena schools now than in 2019, the number of families who need assistance has increased. Last year, people requested services from ALP 41% more times

40 | ARROYO | 03.23 Assistance League of Pasadena/Submitted photo
Operation School Bell backpacks ready for distribution, with members of Assistance League of Pasadena.
PHILANTHROPY

than in previous years. In 2023, Hyman says she expects that number to grow another 10% to 15%.

Because of the increased demand, Hyman says ALP is looking at ways to expand its services. As part of the Operation School Bell program, the league also puts together school supply kits for all grade levels and has considered expanding its clothing services to middle schools.

Every Assistance League throughout the nation has an Operation School Bell program. But Hyman highlights what Assistance League of Pasadena has done that’s unique to this community. In particular, the Bear Hugs program has seen a 91% increase since 2021.

Through the Bear Hugs program, Assistance League of Pasadena distributes stuffed bears to neglected, abused or traumatized children. The organization ensures that first responders, foster facilities, hospitals and even dentist offices are all supplied with teddy bears they can give to children in need.

“Last year, we distributed over 3,500 bears, and I expect this year it’ll be closer to 5,000,” Hyman says. “While it’s tragic that so many bears are needed, we’re really glad we’re able to get them into the hands of children who need them.”

The stuffed bears can be instrumental in helping children endure stressful situations, Hyman says.

One mother told a volunteer that the bear helped her son get through a traumatic doctor’s appointment to fix a broken arm. Hyman also recalls feedback from dentists, who say the stuffed animals have helped children who haven’t had their teeth cleaned in years get through a cavity filling or root canal.

Out of Bear Hugs grew Assistance League of Pasadena’s assault survivor kit program. Many people who go to

the hospital or police station to provide a rape kit have their clothes confiscated as evidence. Assistance League of Pasadena’s assault survivor kits come with a change of clothes, underwear and a bag stocked with hygiene products, so those who seek justice don’t have to leave in a pair of scrubs.

Assistance League of Pasadena’s collaboration with nonprofits and nearby Assistance Leagues make it possible to provide its services. One such organization is the Assistance League of Flintridge, which helps Assistance League of Pasadena by providing backpacks and hygiene kits for their Operation School Bell program.

“I think the biggest lesson we learned is that we can reach far more people through affiliations,” Hyman says. “I started meeting with all the Assistance Leagues — the one in Flintridge, the one in Arcadia and the one in Glendale. No one had ever come together before. … (We began to) explore where we could be of more help to one another.”

Hyman has worked hard to move Assistance League of Pasadena into the 21st century, something COVID-19 helped with. Because she wasn’t bound by the mentality of “this is how we’ve always done it,” she says she has been successful in transforming the organization to work more efficiently in a post-COVID-19 world.

The group’s funding comes from three main sources: the Treasure Fair Thrift Shop, its annual appeal, and grants. From 2021 through 2022, Assistance League members and community individuals contributed $77,000 through their annual appeal.

In addition, Assistance League of Pasadena accepted $38,000 in funding from the Albertson Company Foundation, the Pasadena Tournament of Roses, the Pasadena Host Lions Club

continued on page 42

03.23 | ARROYO | 41
A young girl clutches one of Assistance League of Pasadena’s huggable bears in the back of a squad car as she is removed from her home and transferred to a foster care facility.
Pasadena Police Department/Submitted photo
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