Your Letters, March 18

Hypocrisy 101

Chump posted a tirade noting treason is considered one of the most severe crimes, and anyone owing allegiance to America who goes to war against them or aids and comforts their enemies can be subject to the death penalty or imprisoned for a minimum of five years.

But election denying, defamation of the voting process, sedition and supporting an insurrection is not?

Gary Sciford
Santa Rosa

Weather or Not

It is, at present, too damn hot. I’m not sure what the editorial policy is on weather control, but it seems like the sort of civic responsibility a publication might consider assuming. A strongly worded front-page editorial directed at the sun would be a good start. Perhaps a sidebar explaining the benefits of cloud cover.

Please look into this immediately. If the paper can endorse candidates, surely it can endorse a breeze.

Hot Dude
Marin County

We appreciate your letters, which you can send to le*****@********un.com or le*****@******an.com.

Free Will Astrology, March 18-24

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ARIES (March 21-April 19): In 1960, Aries primatologist Jane Goodall arrived in Tanzania to study the social and family lives of chimpanzees. Her intention was to engage in patient, long‑term observation. In subsequent months, she saw the creatures using tools, a skill that scientists had previously believed only humans could do. She also found that “it isn’t only human beings who have personality, who are capable of rational thought and emotions like joy and sorrow.” Her discoveries revolutionized our understanding of animal intelligence. I recommend her approach to you in the coming weeks, Aries. Your diligent, tenacious attention can supplant outmoded assumptions. Let the details and rhythms of what you’re studying reveal their deeper truths. Your affectionate watchfulness will change the story.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Ancient Romans had a household deity called Cardea, goddess of hinges and thresholds. She protected the pivot points, like the places where the inside meets the outside and where one state transforms into another. In the coming weeks, you Tauruses will benefit from befriending a similar deity. I hope you will pay eager attention to the metaphorical hinges in your world: the thresholds, portals, transitions and in-between times. They may sometimes feel awkward because they lack the certainty you crave. But I guarantee that they are where the best magic congregates.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): You are fluent in the art of fruitful contradiction. While others pursue one-dimensional consistency, you thrive on the fact that the truth is too wild and multifaceted to be captured in a single, simple story. You make spirited use of paradox and enjoy being enchanted by riddles. You can be both serious and playful, committed and curious, strong and receptive. In the coming weeks, Gemini, I hope you will express these superpowers to the max. The world doesn’t need another person who separates everything into neat little categories. Your nimble intelligence and charming multiplicity are the gifts your allies need most.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): In traditional Japanese aesthetics, wabi-sabi celebrates imperfection, impermanence and the soulfulness that comes with age. A weathered wooden gatemay be considered more beautiful than a new one. Its surface has a silvery grain from years of exposure to rain and sun. Its hinges creak from long use by countless passersby. Let’s invoke this lovely concept as we ruminate on your life, Cancerian. In my astrological estimation, it’s important that in the coming months you don’t treat your incompleteness as a deficit requiring correction. Consider the possibility that your supposed blemishes may be among your most interesting features. The idiosyncratic aspects of your character are precisely what make you a source of vitality.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): In medieval Japan, swordsmiths would undertake spiritual purifications before beginning work on a new blade: abstinence, ritual bathing, prayer and fasting. They believed that the quality of their consciousness influenced the quality of their creation—that the blade would absorb the maker’s mental and spiritual state. I bring this to your attention because you’re in a phase when your inner condition will have extra potent effects on everything you build, develop or initiate. My advice: Prepare yourself with impeccable care before launching new projects. Purify your motivations. Clarify your vision. The creations you will be generating could serve you well for a long time.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Master chess players don’t necessarily calculate more moves ahead than amateurs. Their years of study enable them to perceive the developing trends in a single glance, bypassing complex analysis. What appears to be stellar intuition is actually compressed expertise. You’re in a phase when you can make abundant use of this capacity, Virgo. Again and again, your accumulated experience will crystallize into immediate knowing. So don’t second-guess your first assessments, OK? Trust the pattern recognition that you have cultivated through the years.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): The cosmic powers have granted you a triple-strength, extra-long, time-release dose of sweet, fresh certainty. During the grace period that’s beginning, you will be less tempted to indulge in doubt and indecision. A fountain of resolve will rise up in you whenever you need it. Though at first the lucid serenity you feel may seem odd, you could grow accustomed to it—so much so that you could permanently lose up to 20% of your chronic tendency to vacillate.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Crows can hold grudges against individual humans for years. But they also remember acts of kindness and bring gifts like shiny objects and buttons to those who’ve helped them. They’re capable of both revenge and gratitude, and they never forget either. I suspect you’re entering a period when you’ll need to decide which of your crow-like qualities to emphasize, Scorpio. You have legitimate grievances worth remembering. You have also received gifts worth honoring. My counsel: Spend 20% of your emotional energy on remembering wrongs (enough to protect yourself) and 80% on remembering what has helped you thrive. Make gratitude your primary teacher, even as you stay wisely wary.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): More than any other zodiac sign, you Sagittarians can be both a discontented rebel and a sunny celebrant of life. You can see clearly what’s out of alignment and needs adjustment without surrendering your wry, amused tolerance. This double capacity will be especially useful to you in the coming days. You may not find many allies who share this aptitude, though, so you should lean on your own instincts and heed the following suggestions: Be joyfully defiant. Be a generous agitator and an open-hearted critic. Blessings will find their way to you as you subvert the stale status quo with creativity and kindness.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Your persistence and endurance are among your greatest gifts to the world. You’re committed to building useful structures that outlast transitory moods and trends. On behalf of all the other signs, I say THANK YOU, dear Capricorn. You understand that real power comes from showing up consistently and doing unglamorous work, refraining from the temptation to score quick and superficial victories. May you always recognize that your pragmatism is a form of loving faith. Your cautionary care is rooted in generosity. Now here’s my plea: More than ever before, the rest of us need you to express these talents with full vigor.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): One of your power symbols right now is the place where two tributaries blend into a single river. A second is where your favorite tree enters the earth. Here are other images to excite your imagination and stimulate your creativity: the boundary between cloud and sky, the darkness where your friend’s shadow overlaps yours, and the time between when the sun sets and night falls. To sum up, Aquarius, I hope you will access extra inspiration in liminal areas. Seek the vibrant revelations that arise where one mystery coalesces with another.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Poet Mark Doty wrote, “The sea doesn’t reward those who are too anxious, too greedy, or too impatient. We should lie as empty, open, and choiceless as a beach—waiting for gifts from the sea.” This quote captures your Piscean genius when it’s working at its best. Others may exhaust themselves trying to force results, but you know that the best gifts often come to those who are patient, open and relaxed. This is true right now more than ever before. I hope you will practice intense receptivity. Protect your permeability like the superpower it is. Be as supple and responsive as you dare.

Homework: What message will you send the person you’ll be in 3 years? Newsletter.FreeWillAstrology.com

Shake It Up: Natalia Faustino Makes a Mean Margarita

As a founding member of the Banquets Bar team at Montage Healdsburg, Natalia Faustino was recruited by Little Saint’s founding executive bar director, Matt Seigel, in 2023. 

Faustino jumped over to Little Saint, creating a bar program that highlights seasonality and zero waste, ultimately becoming general manager. 

Amber Turpin: How did you get into this work?

Natalia Faustino: I began my career in hospitality after moving to Brooklyn in 2015. Like many immigrants, I found limited opportunities outside the restaurant industry and started working as a server. As a naturally social person, I quickly found purpose in the daily rhythm of the restaurant—connecting with guests and building a sense of community.

After relocating to San Francisco, the beverage director of the restaurant I worked at encouraged me to try bartending. I began training and immediately discovered a new passion. 

Did you ever have an ‘aha’ moment with a certain beverage? If so, tell us about it.

Yes. My ‘aha moment’ came while I was working at a classic French restaurant in San Francisco. The cocktail list leaned heavily on classic cocktails, and one night I tried a French 75 for the first time.

It completely blew me away. It combined two of my favorite ingredients, gin and sparkling wine, but what struck me most was the balance. The brightness, the elegance, the lift from the bubbles; it was both delicate and powerful at the same time. That drink shifted something for me.

What is your favorite thing to drink at home?

After a long day, nothing hits the spot quite like a fresh, well-balanced margarita. It’s straightforward, refreshing and exactly what I need to unwind. When I have friends over, I make caipirinhas. I always keep a bottle of my favorite cachaça—Carvalheira—from my hometown of Recife, Brazil, on hand. Sharing it feels personal; it brings a taste of home.

Where do you like to go out for a drink?

I am always working, so I don’t get out as often as I’d like, but Healdsburg has no shortage of excellent cocktail spots. I often find myself at the bar at Little Saint, where I currently work, as well as Spoonbar and Lo & Behold. I love going out when there’s a real buzz in the room—sitting at a lively bar brings me so much joy. Lioco, Marine Layer and BloodRoot are my favorite tasting rooms in town. I can always count on running into friends there, and it’s the perfect setting for a relaxed afternoon of day drinking and great conversation.

If you were stuck on a desert island, what would you want to be drinking (besides fresh water)?

I would definitely go for fresh passion fruit juice and coconut water straight from the coconut.

Little Saint, 25 North St., Healdsburg, 707.433.8207, littlesainthealdsburg.com.

Tickets to Garagiste Wine Festival Grand Tasting

Enter for a chance to win a pair of Grand Tasting tickets to the Garagiste Wine Festival 8th Annual Northern Exposure at Sonoma Veterans Memorial Hall on May 2 from 2:00–5:00 p.m.

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Free Will Astrology, March 11-17

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ARIES (March 21-April 19): In theater, “breaking the fourth wall” means acknowledging the audience. An actor steps out of the pretense that what’s happening on stage is real. It’s a disruptive moment of truth that can deepen the experience. I would love you to break the fourth wall in your own life, Aries. It’s a favorable time to slip free of any roles you’ve been performing by rote and just blurt out the more interesting truths. Tell someone, “This isn’t working for me.” Or say, “I need to be my pure self with greater authenticity.” Breaking the fourth wall won’t ruin the show; it will be more fun and real and entertaining.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): English speakers like me use the terms “destiny” and “fate” interchangeably. But a scholar of ancient Sumer claims they had different meanings in that culture. Nam, the word for “destiny,” was fixed and immutable. Namtar, meaning “fate,” could be manipulated, adjusted and even cheated. I bring this to your attention, Taurus, because I believe you now have a golden chance to veer off a path that leads to an uninteresting or unproductive destiny and start gliding along a fateful detour.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): The coming months will be a favorable time for you to shed the fairy-tale story of success that once inspired you when you were younger and more idealistic. A riper vision is emerging, calling you toward a more realistic and satisfying version of your life’s purpose. The transformation may at first feel unsettling, but I believe it will ultimately awaken even deeper zeal and greater creativity than your original dream. Bonus: Your revised, more mature goals will lead you to the very rewards your youthful hopes imagined but never quite delivered.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Even if you’re not actually far from home, Cancerian, I bet you’re on a pilgrimage or odyssey of some kind. The astrological omens tell me that you’re being drawn away from familiar ideas and feelings and are en route to an unknown country. You’re transforming, but you’re not sure how yet. During this phase of exploration, I suggest that you adopt a nickname that celebrates being on a quest. This will be a playful alias that helps you focus on the pregnant potential of this interlude. A few you might want to consider: Journey Seed, Threshold Traveler, Holy Rambler, Map-Edge Maverick or Wanderlust Wonderer. Others? Choose one that tickles you with the sense that you are being born again while you travel.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Love is more than a gentle glow in your heart or a pleasurable spark in your body. When fully awakened and activated, it becomes a revolutionary way of being in the world that invites you to challenge and rethink all you’ve been taught about reality. It’s a bold magic that alters everything it encounters. You can certainly choose a milder, tamer version of love if you wish. But if you’d like to evolve into a love maestro—as you very well could during the next 12 months—I suggest you give yourself to the deeper, wilder form. Do you dare?

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Octopuses have neuron clusters in their arms that enable them to “think with their limbs.” Let’s make them your spirit creature for now, Virgo. Your body’s intuitions are offering you guidance that might even be as helpful as your fine mind. This enhanced somatic brilliance can serve you in practical ways: a creative breakthrough while doing housework, a challenging transition handled with aplomb, a fresh alignment between your feelings and ideas. I hope you will listen to your body as if it were a beloved mentor. Trust your movements and physical sensations to reveal what you need to know.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): I love your diplomatic genius: the capacity to understand all sides, to hold space for contradictions, to find the middle ground. But right now it’s in danger of curdling into a kind of self-erasure where your own desires become the one thing you can’t quite locate. Another way to understand this: You are so skilled at seeing everyone’s perspective that you sometimes lose track of your own. Here’s the antidote I recommend: Practice the revolutionary act of having strong opinions, of preferring one thing over another without immediately undercutting your preference with a counter-argument. I guarantee that your relationships will survive your decisiveness. In fact, they will deepen as people locate the real you beneath your exquisite balance.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): New love cravings have been welling up inside you, Scorpio. These cries of the heart may confuse you even as they delight you and invigorate you. One of your main tasks is to listen closely to what they’re telling you, but to wait a while before expressing their messages to other people. You need to study them in detail before spilling them out. Another prime task is to feel patient awe and reverence for the immensity and intensity of these deep, wild desires.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): If you are fulfilling your birthright as a Sagittarius, you are a philosopher-adventurer with a yearning for deep meaning. As you seek out interesting truths, your restless curiosity is a spiritual necessity. You understand that wisdom comes from collecting diverse, sometimes contradictory experiences and weaving them into a coherent worldview. You have a fundamental need to keep expanding and reinventing what freedom means to you. All these qualities may make some people nervous, but they really are among your primary assignments now and forever. They are especially important to cultivate these days.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): In traditional navigation, “dead reckoning” means finding your position by tracking your previous movements. Where you have been tells you where you are. But it only works if you’ve been honest about your course. If you’ve been misleading yourself about the direction you have been traveling, dead reckoning will get you lost. I bring this to your attention, Capricorn, because I really want you to rededicate yourself to telling yourself the deepest, strongest, clearest truths. Where have you actually been going? Not where you told yourself you were going or where other people imagined you were going, but where your choices have actually been taking you. Look at the pattern of your real movements, not your stated intentions. Once you know your true position, you can chart a true course for the future.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): You’re entering a rambling zigzag phase. Each plot twist will branch into two more, and every supposed finale will reveal itself as the opening act of another surprise. Fortunately, your gift for quick thinking and innovative adaptation is sharper than ever, which means you will flourish where others might freeze. My suggestion? Forget the script. Approach the unpredictable adventures like an improv exercise: spontaneous, playful and open to the fertile mysteries.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Can you compel acts of grace to intervene in your destiny? Can bursts of divine favor be summoned through the power of your will? Some spiritual scholars say, “Absolutely not.” They claim life’s wild benevolence arrives only through the mysterious tides of fate—impossible to solicit and impossible to predict. But other observers, more open-minded, speculate that your intelligent goodness might indeed attract the vivid generosity of cosmic energies. I bring this up because I suspect you Pisceans are either receiving or will soon receive blessings that feel like divine favor. Did you earn them, or are you just lucky—or some of both? It doesn’t matter. Enjoy the gift.

Homework: Take yourself to the river when it’s time to go to the river. Newsletter.FreeWillAstrology.com

Pigs & Pinot: Chef Charlie Palmer

Charlie Palmer is a chef first and foremost, and one with a lauded career. But his more recent title is co-founder and CEO at Appellation, the new culinary-first hospitality brand. The freshly opened Appellation Healdsburg property will be the site for Palmer’s signature event, Pigs & Pinot, marking its 19th year on March 20–21. 

As usual, it will bring together an impressive roster of culinary talent. But this year is even more notable, with some head-spinning programming like the legendary father-and-son chef duos, including Charlie and Reed Palmer, Jean-Georges and Cédric Vongerichten, and Emeril and E.J. Lagasse (the youngest chef to lead a two Michelin Star kitchen). The event’s Gala will also feature its first-ever all-female winemaker lineup, spotlighting trailblazing Sonoma leaders. All events, from tastings to seminars to behind-the-scenes culinary moments, benefit the Palmer Family Education Foundation. 

Amber Turpin: How did you get into this work?

Charlie Palmer: I’ve always believed that food is one of the most powerful ways to bring people together. I grew up in upstate New York, surrounded by farms and a deep appreciation for ingredients at their source, which naturally led me to the kitchen… 

After graduating from the Culinary Institute of America and spending formative years cooking in France, I developed a foundation rooted in technique, seasonality and simplicity. That experience shaped not only how I cook, but how I think about hospitality. Over time, my focus expanded beyond standalone restaurants to a bigger idea: creating destinations where food isn’t just an amenity, but the driving force of the experience. 

Did you ever have an ‘aha’ moment with a certain beverage? If so, tell us about it.

When I first tasted aligoté, which is the only white wine grape grown in Burgundy besides chardonnay. My first thought was, why haven’t I tasted this before? And my second thought was, I’ve been missing this my whole entire adult life drinking Burgundy.

What is your favorite thing to drink at home?

As we approach spring and summer here in wine country, my go-to is sauvignon blanc, and more recently, Gruner Veltliner. And I know it’s against the rules, but a lot of times I’ll put an ice cube in it, especially in the hot tub.

Where do you like to go out for a drink?

I’m a Negroni guy, and my take on it is with half Aperol, half Campari. When I’m home in Healdsburg, Lo & Behold makes a great Negroni, as does our ‘bar chef,’ Jess, at Dry Creek Kitchen and our bar crew at Andy’s Beeline, our rooftop bar at Appellation Healdsburg.

If you were stuck on a desert island, what would you want to be drinking (besides fresh water)?

If not storming, anything that’s white, fresh and delicious, but I always think in the tropics that rosé is the way to go.

Pigs & Pinot at Appellation Healdsburg, 101 Dovetail Ln., pigsandpinot.com.

Your Letters, March 11

Tunnel Time

Reopening the old railroad tunnel between Mill Valley and Corte Madera could be Marin’s most ambitious Rails to Trails project in the 25 years since we first introduced the idea. Thanks to transportation alternatives of Marin, the general community census was positive, as long as the cost did not detract from local schools, etc. 

Measure AA has been generating $35 million per year for 20 years for transit. It would seem reasonable that a hefty chunk of that money could go to the most important bicycle facility in Marin. In an ideal world, Mill Valley City Council would find the thousands of signatures that supported the project that we submitted 15 years ago. 

We know the alto tunnel proposal has a vociferous lone opponent who will say anything to keep extra people away from his backyard. 

Let’s hope that somebody in power steps up to make it happen for the greater good.

Christopher H. Lang
Founder
Marin County Bicycle Coalition

Whine Country

I never thought I’d live to see the day when tourists made Petaluma louder than your average show at the Phoenix Theatre. In the old days, if you wanted noise, you crammed right up against the PA speaker and let a band like Lung Butter rearrange your sensory perception for the night (or week, depending).

Now the racket comes from Wine Country tourists—packs of weekend wanderers who treat downtown like it’s their personal theme park. I’m an old punk—I believe in a little chaos. But maybe keep it under 11. Some of us survived the ’80s and would like to hear the birds again.

Cassady Caution
Petaluma

“Make. Believe.” Jonas Goldstein and Timo Ryan of The Laguna Lab

On the afternoon of Friday, Feb. 27, The Soft Medicine Sanctuary announced its sudden permanent closure, effective the next day. 

That evening, on the other side of Sebastopol, The Laguna Lab held its long-planned official opening. Thus, accidentally and fatefully, one venue closed and another opened in Sebastopol. It was as if the universe had stepped in to strike a decisive balance.

The Laguna Lab opening event was given the name “Make. Believe.”, and the lineup included Deep House Yoga, a communal black light painting, Mitzi and her band, The Space Walker, DJ Bank$hot, oracle and tarot, Timoteo, Shiny Objects, and Laiddbackzach and his band.

By their own account, their most successful events to date were a Bob Weir (Grateful Dead) tribute night and a family-friendly New Year’s Eve party (based on ’80s New York City hip-hop culture). They plan a regular funk night, a teen AI bootcamp, puppet theater, perhaps an educational mini-golf course and limited partnerships with Sebastopol Center for the Arts and the Laguna de Santa Rosa Foundation—“Big ideas, no money,” in the words of Timo Ryan, one of the two team principals. Indeed. They are indeed in the middle of a funding gap and require an additional $25,000 to keep the space open.

The following Tuesday afternoon, I met Ryan and Jonas Goldstein—the other team principal. They toured me through the space and showed me their investor pitch deck. It was glossily impressive. Goldstein has a background in art direction and marketing—as well as video art, sculpture and digital art spaces. Ryan’s talents include DJing, local FM radio, hospitality and regenerative farming. Together they share an aesthetic (and a lease).

The space was starkly impressive; a former e-bike manufactory, it has 3,500 square feet of open event space and 1,500 square feet of office space. The event space was largely empty, except for a DJ both, a ping pong table adapted into a sign, a skeletal egret puppet, a large banner by Jun Jun Li reading “looking forward to the future” and a two story paper mache sculpture of a yogi balanced on their head and neck.

Ryan and Goldstein and the team take the water bird egret as their mascot and derive much meaning from the venue’s location, at the bleeding edge of the Laguna de Santa Rosa— across the street from The Barlow complex. Conceptually, it is the blending zone, the mixing zone, the border between civilization and primordial nature. Culturally, its team is located at the intersections of art media, genders, generations, analog and digital, West Coast and East Coast, including both urban art professionals and regenerative farmers, all coming together to make things happen.

That is, if they can make their funding shortfall (grants and angel investors are in process but months away). See ways to help below. The Laguna Lab is also asking the community for volunteers with a background in operations to work on their COO advisory board.

Just before deadline, Goldstein reached out to thank their angel landlord, Dan Davis, “who gave us the runway to launch.” It remains to be seen whether the community, lately bereft, will answer their call.

Learn more: The next event scheduled at The Laguna Lab is March 14. Titled, ‘Get on the Bus,’ it is the first of their intended funk sessions. For times and location, visit The Laguna Lab via lagunalab.org or instagram.com/lagunalab_.

Human Habitat: Restoration Not Just ‘For the Birds’

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Nature lovers know that scientists who study the health of bird populations and their habitats in the San Francisco Bay Area have detected an alarming decline in bird populations. 

A report published in January by the San Francisco Bay Joint Venture and Point Blue Conservation “points to a concerning decline of shorebirds over the past two decades.” 

Julian Wood, the San Francisco Bay program leader at Point Blue, said, “I was shocked. The declines range from 25% to 86% for some of these birds since 2006.” The last such report was published in 2011. These reports are the product of a monitoring program that encompasses 20 different bird species, five in different habitat groups, with more than 100 volunteers participating. Wood is hoping people can see value in habitat restoration and “enjoy progress that we have made towards boosting some but not all of these populations.”

Reading about the study got me thinking, what about creating and maintaining healthy human habitats? 

There are homeless encampments throughout the Bay Area. What in the world have we allowed to happen to a segment of our population such that they need to live in squalor?

Homelessness is not a new problem, but it is probably a bigger one now than ever, and like the loss of bird habitat, probably all over the world. It is an extremely complicated issue, the experts would say, with many root causes, but all of them result in a serious form of loss of human habitat—at least for some people.

In addition, it is a social problem from which people run like hell. Whereas we have well-funded organizations that study the natural world very skillfully, we seem to have many fewer that study the world of human habitats as successfully. We have lots of opinions, tons of rhetoric, a large pile of prejudice, but no good data and no answers.

The best answer to restoring bird populations is to restore habitat. So, what would it take to restore habitat for humans?

Craig Corsini is a writer and grandfather in Marin.

Keeping ‘Company’: Youth Performers Take On Sondheim

Most Marinites know 142 Throckmorton in Mill Valley, the pre-professional theater training program for youth. This month, the teen group is presenting the second of their Season of Stephen Sondheim shows: the multiple-Tony Award-winning Company.

“Everyone who heard we were doing Company with teenagers thought we were nuts,” says co-director/choreographer Erin Gentry. “But it made sense to us because we knew these kids and knew how much they love to be challenged.”

“That’s true,” confirms program director Reba Gilbert. “These kids always rise to the challenge.”

If one doesn’t know the show, Company is the first non-linear concept musical. It’s considered a cornerstone of the post-Golden Age of Broadway musicals. Originally produced in 1970, the show follows perpetual bachelor Bobby as his 35th birthday approaches. Exploring themes of dating, divorce, commitment and loneliness, this show is usually seen as very adult.

“It’s actually perfect for teenagers,” Gentry says. “You don’t need to be married or divorced to understand the nuances in relationships. The teen years are the most complicated times in someone’s life when it comes to navigating that nuance.

“Some of the kids surprised us at auditions,” Gilbert adds, “by telling us that Company was their favorite show. But it’s not really that surprising. Since it’s told in vignettes, it is deeply modern in format. The show is always moving, which is perfect for current attention spans.”

Despite the modern format, co-directors Gentry and Adam Maggio have decided to do the play in the era it was written. “I had to teach the kids how to use a phone,” Gentry notes with a laugh. “They had no concept of handsets or a phone service.”

However, Gentry was not surprised by how authentically the teenagers are responding to their roles. “They are playing vulnerable real people. It’s why I knew I had to work with Adam for the play; he is a great director for scene study,” Gentry points out.

“This is probably the closest we’ve come to a straight show,” Gilbert adds, “but also, this show is really funny.”

“It really is,” Gentry confirms. “Everyone will find something relatable. It’s about how we get through the world with and without each other. There is a character in the show for everyone to relate to.”

“Also, the show is double cast,” Gilbert says. “So you can watch it twice in a weekend and not see the same show.

Gilbert adds, “Just, please, don’t wait until closing weekend.” 

Throckmorton Youth Performers present ‘Company’ through March 22 at the Throckmorton Theatre, 142 Throckmorton Ave., Mill Valley. Fri & Sat, 7pm; Sun, 2pm. $30-$48.  415.383.9600. throckmortontheatre.org.

Your Letters, March 18

Hypocrisy 101 Chump posted a tirade noting treason is considered one of the most severe crimes, and anyone owing allegiance to America who goes to war against them or aids and comforts their enemies can be subject to the death penalty or imprisoned for a minimum of five years. But election denying, defamation of the voting process, sedition and supporting an...

Free Will Astrology, March 18-24

Free Will Astrology
ARIES (March 21-April 19): In 1960, Aries primatologist Jane Goodall arrived in Tanzania to study the social and family lives of chimpanzees. Her intention was to engage in patient, long‑term observation. In subsequent months, she saw the creatures using tools, a skill that scientists had previously believed only humans could do. She also found that “it isn’t only human...

Shake It Up: Natalia Faustino Makes a Mean Margarita

When Natalia Faustino started working at Little Saint, she created a bar program that highlights seasonality and zero waste,
As a founding member of the Banquets Bar team at Montage Healdsburg, Natalia Faustino was recruited by Little Saint’s founding executive bar director, Matt Seigel, in 2023.  Faustino jumped over to Little Saint, creating a bar program that highlights seasonality and zero waste, ultimately becoming general manager.  Amber Turpin: How did you get into this work? Natalia Faustino: I began my career...

Tickets to Garagiste Wine Festival Grand Tasting

Garagiste Wine Festival Giveaway
Enter for a chance to win Grand Tasting tickets to the Garagiste Wine Festival in Sonoma on May 2. Drawing Date is April 16, 2026.

Free Will Astrology, March 11-17

Free Will Astrology
ARIES (March 21-April 19): In theater, “breaking the fourth wall” means acknowledging the audience. An actor steps out of the pretense that what’s happening on stage is real. It’s a disruptive moment of truth that can deepen the experience. I would love you to break the fourth wall in your own life, Aries. It’s a favorable time to slip...

Pigs & Pinot: Chef Charlie Palmer

The freshly opened Appellation Healdsburg property will be the site for chef Charlie Palmer’s signature event, Pigs & Pinot, marking its 19th year on March 20–21.
Charlie Palmer is a chef first and foremost, and one with a lauded career. But his more recent title is co-founder and CEO at Appellation, the new culinary-first hospitality brand. The freshly opened Appellation Healdsburg property will be the site for Palmer’s signature event, Pigs & Pinot, marking its 19th year on March 20–21.  As usual, it will bring together...

Your Letters, March 11

Tunnel Time Reopening the old railroad tunnel between Mill Valley and Corte Madera could be Marin’s most ambitious Rails to Trails project in the 25 years since we first introduced the idea. Thanks to transportation alternatives of Marin, the general community census was positive, as long as the cost did not detract from local schools, etc.  Measure AA has been generating...

“Make. Believe.” Jonas Goldstein and Timo Ryan of The Laguna Lab

The Laguna Lab, an arts and event space in Sebastopol, held its long-planned official opening last month.
On the afternoon of Friday, Feb. 27, The Soft Medicine Sanctuary announced its sudden permanent closure, effective the next day.  That evening, on the other side of Sebastopol, The Laguna Lab held its long-planned official opening. Thus, accidentally and fatefully, one venue closed and another opened in Sebastopol. It was as if the universe had stepped in to strike a...

Human Habitat: Restoration Not Just ‘For the Birds’

Daedalus Howell, editor of the Pacific Sun and the North Bay Bohemian. considers April Fool's Day a celebration of humanity.
Nature lovers know that scientists who study the health of bird populations and their habitats in the San Francisco Bay Area have detected an alarming decline in bird populations.  A report published in January by the San Francisco Bay Joint Venture and Point Blue Conservation “points to a concerning decline of shorebirds over the past two decades.”  Julian Wood, the San...

Keeping ‘Company’: Youth Performers Take On Sondheim

In March, the Throckmorton Theatre's teen group is presenting the second of their Season of Stephen Sondheim shows: the multiple-Tony Award-winning 'Company.'
Most Marinites know 142 Throckmorton in Mill Valley, the pre-professional theater training program for youth. This month, the teen group is presenting the second of their Season of Stephen Sondheim shows: the multiple-Tony Award-winning Company. “Everyone who heard we were doing Company with teenagers thought we were nuts,” says co-director/choreographer Erin Gentry. “But it made sense to us because we...
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