Feature: ‘Abba’cadabra

“I have been a fan of Abba for years, but for a long time I wasn’t sure how to tell people that,” confesses Jon Gallo, Bay Area pianist and musical director of Mountain Play’s colossal new production of Mamma Mia!, hitting Mt. Tamalpais with a five-weekend run beginning this weekend. “I didn’t tell many people how I felt about Abba until I saw an interview with Danny Elfman, the composer. He was asked what his greatest ‘guilty pleasure’ was, and he said it was listening to the entire Abba collection. I felt a little more validated after that. If a composer as smart and inventive as Danny Elfman can be open about liking Abba, then maybe I should step up and admit I like Abba, too.”

With a laugh, Gallo says that it’s a good thing, too, since Mamma Mia! showcases 23 of Abba’s greatest hits, including “Waterloo,” “Take a Chance on Me,” “Money Money Money,” “The Winner Takes It All,” “Dancing Queen” and, of course, “Mamma Mia!” The play’s story is admittedly a bit thin, following a free-spirited woman named Donna, who runs a tavern on a Greek island, when she’s suddenly faced with her bohemian past after her daughter, Sophie, invites all three of her possible fathers to give her away at her upcoming wedding.

“OK, this show may not be Shakespeare,” Gallo says, “but you can’t say it’s not a whole bunch of fun. It’s a feel-good story, and that’s a good thing.”

One certainly can’t deny that Mamma Mia! the musical, is a certified world-wide phenomenon.

“Ever since it first appeared,” Gallo says, “Mamma Mia! has developed this huge following of people who gather together to see every production they can. That’s because the songs are so fantastic. I guarantee you, even if you’ve seen Mamma Mia! a dozen times, you will never have seen a production like this one.”

Gallo is a founding member and resident music director of San Francisco’s Bay Area Musicals, a three-year-old company that focuses on presenting lavish musical theater productions with a sense of panache, grandeur and professional expertise. He graduated from Cal Poly, where he studied piano performance. For six years, he’s served as musical director at the Performing Arts Academy in Marin, and is a music teacher at Mount Tamalpais School.

This is his first show as musical director of the Mountain Play, a Marin County institution for more than 100 years. Staged in the massive 4,000-seat Cushing Memorial Amphitheatre, the annual Mountain Play show is famous for its enormous casts, its ambitious production values and its lavish costumes, choreography and orchestral support. This summer’s production of Mamma Mia!—written by British playwright Catherine Johnson, and premiered in London in 1999—is directed by Jay Manley, choreographed by Zoe Swenson-Graham, and features performances by Dyan McBride (Donna), Carrie Lyn Brandon (Sophie), Susan Zelinsky and Jennifer McGeorge (Tanya and Rosie, Donna’s best friends), and Tyler McKenna, Sean O’Brien, and David Schiller (Sam, Harry and Bill, Donna’s three former lovers), plus many more.

According to Gallo, if the 30-person cast was not initially all fans of the music of Abba, they are now.

“I honestly think most people have come to have a relationship with Abba’s music. Regardless of how they feel about ‘Dancing Queen,’ there’s no getting around the fact that this is fun, fun music to sing.”

For that reason, the Mountain Play has included a special “sing-along” show for Saturday, June 9. The audience will be provided with lyric sheets, and will be invited to sing out loud at certain portions of the show, mostly joining the cast on choruses.

“We’re not encouraging people to sing every single word, even if a lot of people probably could,” Gallo says. “But we will prompt them when to sing, and when not to. It’s going to be pretty great, having thousands of voices joining in. I can’t wait to hear that.”

Asked what it is about Abba’s songs that make them so irresistible, and so hard to get out of your head once you hear them, Gallo has a theory born of his years of experience as a musician and a fan of Abba.

Photo by Cindy Lang.

“I think it’s the way the melodies are composed,” he says. “Let’s take ‘Dancing Queen’ for example. The entire chorus is made up of ‘leading tones.’ Those are notes that, when you hear them played, seem to want to be resolved in a certain direction. They make you anticipate the notes you’ll hear next. In ‘Dancing Queen,’ it just leads you along, making you want to hear more, and more and more. Then it ends in a way that’s very satisfying, in part because you’ve just been waiting and waiting for that conclusion.”

Perhaps earworms—the slang term for such impossible-to-forget songs—are so effective because they all use leading tones to create a sense of auditory dependence. Once your subconscious has become so engaged with a tune, on such a deep level, it’s so rooted in one’s mind that it can’t be easily forgotten or replaced.

“Abba uses that kind of composition throughout their songs,” Gallo says. “They were masters at creating tunes you couldn’t stop thinking about. That’s a huge part of their success.”

As musical director, Gallo has assembled a nine-piece orchestra that is a bit different from the ensembles that have backed up recent Mountain Play productions like last year’s Beauty and Beast, and previous shows such as Guys and Dolls, The Music Man and Peter Pan.

“A lot of those shows used fairly traditional instrumentation,” Gallo explains. “But for this one, we have mostly all electronic instruments. We’ve got two guitars, an electric bass and four keyboards, to create those magical Abba sounds, replicating the electronic horns and flutes that exist in their music. There are also drums and percussion, of course. It’s going to be a fairly unique sound, compared to past Mountain Plays. It will be unmistakably Abba.”

In addition, he says, the music will employ a large chorus of voices, acting as a 10th member of the orchestra.

“Our acting ensemble is basically providing background singing for the entire show,” Gallo points out. “That’s a pretty ambitious and daunting task, to take these people who are singing and dancing out on stage, and also use them to sing background vocals the entire show. They are on stage sometimes, and singing backstage in the orchestra pit the rest of the time. It’s loud, and it’s big and it over-the-top, in a way that only an Abba musical would be.”

Gallo says that, though he’s worked on numerous traditional musicals and loves the genre, there’s something about rock musicals like Mamma Mia! that hold a special place in his heart.

“I’ve done Hair, and Jesus Christ Superstar, and The Wedding Singer and a lot more,” he says. “I think that rock musicals have a dramatic power that is very special.”

That said, he also admits that he loves a good, juicy musical with a huge score filled with strings, horns and classical beauty. This July, he’ll be the musical director of Bay Area Musicals’ production of The Hunchback of Notre Dame, the lavish musical inspired by Disney’s moody animated adaptation of Victor Hugo’s classic.

“It’s going to be spectacular,” he says of the show that will run in San Francisco’s historic Victoria Theatre. “It’s got this huge, orchestral Disney soundscape with gorgeous arrangements.”

But first things first. Gallo still has his stint on Donna’s Greek island, as recreated in detail high atop Mt.Tam.

“I’m really looking forward to getting the audiences up there to see what we’ve got in store for them,” Gallo says. “I’ve had such a good time working on this show. Every rehearsal has been a pleasure. As hard as it is to get these songs out of my head, it’s even harder to stop smiling on my way home every night.”

The Mountain Play production of ‘Mama Mia’ runs on Sundays, May 20 through June 17. The “sing-along” show takes place on June 9. All shows begin at 2pm at the Cushing Memorial Amphitheatre, 801 Panoramic Hwy., Mill Valley; mountainplay.org.

This Week in the Pacific Sun

This week in the Pacific Sun, our cover story, ‘Close-Up,’ is a behind-the-scenes look at Barack Obama’s presidency, through the eyes of former White House photographer Pete Souza. On top of that, we’ve got a story about the California GOP grappling with a top-polling neo-Nazi, a piece on Way Station—a BBQ eatery and craft beer garden in Fairfax and an interview with Daniel Ziblatt about his book ‘How Democracies Die.’ All that and more on stands and online today!

Free Will Astrology

ARIES (March 21-April 19): The Torah is a primary sacred text of the Jewish religion. It consists of exactly 304,805 letters. When specially trained scribes make handwritten copies for ritual purposes, they must not make a single error in their transcription. The work may take as long as 18 months. Your attention to detail in the coming weeks doesn’t have to be quite so painstaking, Aries, but I hope that you’ll make a strenuous effort to be as diligent as you can possibly be.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Born under the sign of Taurus, Edmund Wilson was a renowned 20th century author and critic who wrote more than 30 books. He also served as editor for Vanity Fair and The New Republic, and influenced the work of at least seven major American novelists. When he was growing up, he spent most of his free time reading books: 16 hours a day during summer vacations. His parents, worried about his obsessive passion, bought him a baseball uniform, hoping to encourage him to diversify his interests. His response was to wear the uniform while reading books for 16 hours a day. I trust that you will be equally dedicated to your own holy cause or noble pursuit in the coming weeks, Taurus. You have cosmic clearance to be single-minded about doing what you love.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): It’s possible that you could pass for normal in the next three weeks; you might be able to fool a lot of people into thinking that you’re an average, ordinary contributor to the dull routine. But it will be far healthier for your relationship with yourself if you don’t do such a thing. It will also be a gift to your less daring associates, who in my opinion would benefit from having to engage with your creative agitation and fertile chaos. So my advice is to reveal yourself as an imperfect work-in-progress who’s experimenting with novel approaches to the game of life. Recognize your rough and raw features as potential building blocks for future achievements.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): “Paradise is scattered over the whole earth,” wrote the scientific poet Novalis, “and that is why it has become so unrecognizable.” Luckily for you, Cancerian, quite a few fragments of paradise are gathering in your vicinity. It’ll be like a big happy reunion of tiny miracles all coalescing to create a substantial dose of sublimity. Will you be ready to deal with this much radiance? Will you be receptive to so much relaxing freedom? I hope and pray that you won’t make a cowardly retreat into the trendy cynicism that so many people mistake for intelligence. (Because in that case, paradise might remain invisible.) Here’s my judicious advice: Be insistent on pleasure! Be voracious for joy! Be focused on the quest for beautiful truths!

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): These days, your friends, allies and loved ones want even more from you than they usually do. They crave more of your attention, more of your approval and more of your feedback. And that’s not all. Your friends, allies and loved ones also hope that you will give more love to yourself. They will be excited and they will feel blessed if you express an even bigger, brighter version of your big, bright soul. They will draw inspiration from your efforts to push harder and stronger to fulfill your purpose here on Earth.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): One of the advantages you get from reading my horoscopes is that I offer confidential information about the gods’ caprices and leanings. For example, I can tell you that Saturn—also known as Father Time—is now willing to allot you a more luxurious relationship with time than usual, on one condition: That you don’t squander the gift on trivial pursuits. So I encourage you to be discerning and disciplined about nourishing your soul’s craving for interesting freedom. If you demonstrate to Saturn how constructively you can use his blessing, he’ll be inclined to provide more dispensations in the future.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Vincent van Gogh’s painting The Starry Night hangs on a wall in New York’s Museum of Modern Art. He created it in 1889 while living in a French asylum. Around that same time, 129 years ago, a sheepherder in Wyoming created a sourdough starter that is still fresh today. A cook named Lucille Clarke Dumbrill regularly pulls this frothy mass of yeast out of her refrigerator and uses it to make pancakes. In the coming weeks, Libra, I’d love to see you be equally resourceful in drawing on an old resource. The past will have offerings that could benefit your future.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Love everyone twice as much and twice as purely as you ever have before. Your mental health requires it! Your future dreams demand it! And please especially intensify your love for people you allegedly already love but sometimes don’t treat as well as you could because you take them for granted. Keep this Bible verse in mind, as well: “Don’t neglect to show kindness to strangers; for, in this way, some, without knowing it, have had angels as their guests.”

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): After meditating on your astrological aspects for an hour, I dozed off. As I napped, I had a dream in which an androgynous angel came to me and said, “Please inform your Sagittarius readers that they should be callipygian in the next two weeks.” Taken back, my dreaming self said to the angel, “You mean ‘callipygian’ as in ‘having beautiful buttocks’?” “Yes, sir,” the angel replied. “Bootylicious. Bumtastic. Rumpalicious.” I was puzzled. “You mean like in a metaphorical way?” I asked. “You mean Sagittarians should somehow cultivate the symbolic equivalent of having beautiful buttocks?” “Yes,” the angel said. “Sagittarians should be elegantly well-grounded. Flaunt their exquisite foundation. Get to the bottom of things with flair. Be sexy badasses as they focus on the basics.” “OK!” I said.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Now is a favorable time to discuss in elegant detail the semi-secret things that are rarely or never talked about. It’s also a perfect moment to bring deep feelings and brave tenderness into situations that have been suffering from half-truths and pretense. Be aggressively sensitive, my dear Capricorn. Take a bold stand on behalf of compassionate candor. And as you go about these holy tasks, be entertaining as well as profound. The cosmos have authorized you to be a winsome agent of change.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): In his 1931 painting The Persistence of Memory, Salvador Dali shows three clocks that seem to be partially liquefied, as if in the process of melting. His biographer Meredith Etherington-Smith speculated that he was inspired to create this surrealistic scene when he saw a slab of warm Camembert cheese melting on a dinner table. I foresee the possibility of a comparable development in your life, Aquarius. Be alert for creative inspiration that strikes you in the midst of seemingly mundane circumstances.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): “My whole life is messed up with people falling in love with me,” said Piscean poet Edna St. Vincent Millay. She spoke the truth. She inspired a lot of adoration, and it stirred up more chaos than she was capable of managing. Luckily, you will have fewer problems with the attention coming your way, Pisces. I bet you’ll be skilled at gathering the benefits and you’ll be unflummoxed by the pitfalls. But you’ll still have to work hard at these tasks. Here’s some help: Tip No. 1: Stay in close touch with how you really feel about the people who express their interest in you. Tip No. 2: Don’t accept gifts with strings attached. Tip No. 3: Just because you’re honored or flattered that someone finds you attractive doesn’t mean that you should unquestioningly blend your energies with them.

Homework: Do you allow your imagination to indulge in fantasies that are wasteful, damaging or dumb? I dare you to stop it. Testify at Freewillastrology.com.

Hero & Zero: Octogenarian Art & Verizon Void

Hero: Celebrate the work of Marin’s most talented octogenarian artists with a visit to 80 Over 80, an exhibit at the Bartolini Gallery in the Marin Center Exhibit Hall. This juried show features more than 80 pieces of art by artists over the age of 80. We were dazzled by the still life paintings, photographs, landscapes, abstracts, portraits and sculptures with subjects that include the Golden Gate Bridge, a fantastical castle emerging from the water and a lemon sun setting into a field of blooms. Competition was fierce for a place in the show and the job was tough for the jurors, former Marin Cultural Treasure Award winners Kathleen Lipinski and Steve Emery and Cultural Commissioner Donna Seager Liberatore. On view through June 1.
Zero: Verizon Wireless has called off mobile service in Novato, at least for now. For the past couple of weeks, residents have been experiencing lost calls on their cell phones or worse yet, the dreaded zero bars, indicating no service at all. It’s a first-world problem to be sure; however, for cord-cut customers, it’s an enormous inconvenience. Verizon reports that there’s a problem with a transmission site and they’re working to resolve it. In the meantime, folks should make some contingency plans for contact with the outside world—the company predicts that coverage could be spotty for another week. Can you hear me now, Novato?

Hero & Zero: Octogenarian Art & Verizon Void

Hero: Celebrate the work of Marin’s most talented octogenarian artists with a visit to 80 Over 80, an exhibit at the Bartolini Gallery in the Marin Center Exhibit Hall. This juried show features more than 80 pieces of art by artists over the age of 80. We were dazzled by the still life paintings, photographs, landscapes, abstracts, portraits and sculptures with subjects that include the Golden Gate Bridge, a fantastical castle emerging from the water and a lemon sun setting into a field of blooms. Competition was fierce for a place in the show and the job was tough for the jurors, former Marin Cultural Treasure Award winners Kathleen Lipinski and Steve Emery and Cultural Commissioner Donna Seager Liberatore. On view through June 1.

Zero: Verizon Wireless has called off mobile service in Novato, at least for now. For the past couple of weeks, residents have been experiencing lost calls on their cell phones or worse yet, the dreaded zero bars, indicating no service at all. It’s a first-world problem to be sure; however, for cord-cut customers, it’s an enormous inconvenience. Verizon reports that there’s a problem with a transmission site and they’re working to resolve it. In the meantime, folks should make some contingency plans for contact with the outside world—the company predicts that coverage could be spotty for another week. Can you hear me now, Novato?

Advice Goddess

Q: I was roommates with a girl five years ago. I was a spoiled brat for many years, but I’ve worked very hard to change. She, on the other hand, is still supported by her father, has no job or interests and just wants to get married. Whenever she calls, she wants advice on the same boy drama. I just don’t have the time or patience for this anymore. I tried not responding to her, but she keeps calling and texting, “I need to come over right now!”—Drama-Weary

A: “I need to come over right now!” What are you, a day spa for her emotions crossed with the Burger King drive-thru?

It’s easy to confuse the chunk of time a friend has been in your life with reason for them to continue being there. It helps to unpack the mystique about how friendships form. Social science research finds that a major driver of friendship is similarity—shared values and attitudes, for example. But demographic similarity is part of it, too—like both being 30-year-old single female zoo workers who went to a crappy college.

And though we want to believe that we carefully choose the friends in our lives, personality psychologist Mitja Back and his colleagues are among the researchers who’ve found that “mere proximity” seems to play a big role in who our friends are. This means, for example, living in the apartment next door, working in the same department or, in Back’s study, being randomly assigned to “neighboring seats” in a college class. In other words, you probably became friends with this woman because she was sleeping in the next room, not because you conducted a nationwide search for the best possible buddy for you.

Now’s the time to choose whether she stays in your life—and you don’t do that by hoping that she’ll hear your vigorous eye-rolling over the phone and take the hint. Breaking up with a friend, if that’s what you want to do, should work like breaking up with a romantic partner. Don’t just wordlessly cut off contact; that’s cruel—and likely to backfire. Tell her that you need to end the friendship, explaining the problem in broad terms: You’ve “grown apart” or you’re “in different places” in your lives. Even if she presses you, keep it kind by keeping it vague. The point is telling her that it’s over, not informing her that she’s got all of the emotional depth of a goldfish and then ducking out forever via call waiting: “Sorry—gotta go. Important robocall from Rachel from Card Services on the other line!”

Q: After six years of hard work, I’m starting to have some success in my career. Disturbingly, my best friend seems envious. I’ll tell her some exciting news, and she’ll barely respond. I understand that she’s trying to break through while working a menial job, but my other friends are really supportive and happy for me. She claims she is, too, but her behavior says otherwise. It really hurts my feelings.—Disappointed

A: We often do crazy things simply to keep up with our peers who are doing those things. We evolved to be creatures of “social comparison”—judging how well we’re doing by how we stack up to others. When we’re lagging behind our peers, envy often rises up—as it seems to be in your friend. Envy is mistakenly assumed to be ugly and shameful, but evolutionary social psychologist Bram Buunk and his colleagues explain that the feelbad we get from envy pushes us to get on the stick and narrow the “status gap” between ourselves and others.

Understanding the underpinnings of envy can help you have compassion for your friend, which might help you avoid taking it personally when she fails to celebrate your achievements by pulling out confetti and a kazoo. Try to accept that she probably can’t express the excitement you’d like her to because every success you rack up sneers, “Hey, loser! How come she’s up there and you’re down here?”

If you do tell her about some win, consider pairing the news with mention of the years of grubby work and daily failures that went into it. This might help her view the success you’ve achieved as something attainable—as opposed to some magical gift: “OMG, I was just sitting on my porch drinking a beer, when my boss called and said, ‘You often cut work and smoke a lot of pot. Let’s give you the VP job.’”

Film: Mommy Track

They called Juno whip-smart, and some of us still have the lash scars. Tully, by writer Diablo Cody and director Jason Reitman, has everything left out of their first film together that made it the crowd-pleaser that it was. Tully has some of the narcissism seen in Juno and their follow-up, Young Adult, but there’s also some unusually raw material, acted by Charlize Theron with barely smothered fury.

Marlo (Theron), vastly pregnant, has a young son who is vaguely on the autism spectrum, and an older daughter who is in an awkward stage. Her husband, Drew (Ron Livingston), has a high-tech job that he can’t begin to explain to listeners. When not plugged into shooter games on his console, he travels for work frequently, leaving Marlo alone on the mommy track.

Marlo’s very well-off brother Craig (Mark Duplass) offers a suggestion: He’ll hire Marlo a ‘night-nanny’ who comes in during the first difficult months after birth, to tend to the baby and bring it in for midnight feedings. The nanny finally arrives: Tully (Mackenzie Davis), as manic and as pixieish a dream girl as ever seen, is not only a perfect servant, but a marvelous confidante, helping to pull Marlo out of the pit of postpartum numbness and despair.

Tully’s well-articulated anguish over a mother’s loss of self while tending a newborn is very unusual. In the feminist days of rage, it would have been society who forced the woman into the role of brood sow and slop cleaner. In this aftermath of an unplanned pregnancy, Marlo did this to herself—she has no one to blame—and here is everything savage about new motherhood that was skated over in Juno. The montage of breast-pumping and diaper-changing is so brutal that you feel like calling your mom in the middle of the movie and thanking her.

Arts: Timely Lessons

If the old saying is true, then those who fail to learn from history are doomed to repeat it.

North Bay native and Harvard Professor of Government Daniel Ziblatt knows his history, and he has made a career of studying political systems around the world. More specifically, he’s an expert in how political democracies form and how they fail, and he offers a stark and revelatory history lesson in his best-selling book, How Democracies Die, co-authored with fellow Harvard professor Steven Levitsky.

Ziblatt engages in political discourse when he appears on Wednesday, May 16, at The Commonwealth Club in San Francisco and on Friday, May 18, in his hometown of Occidental at the Occidental Center for the Arts.

Ziblatt first began examining politics while attending a German boarding school as part of a high school exchange program in 1990. “This was the year of German unification,” Ziblatt says. “That was an exciting year to be in Germany, after the fall of the Berlin Wall.”

In college, Ziblatt studied German history, literature and eventually European politics. As a professor at Harvard, Ziblatt specializes in those subjects with an emphasis on democratization and state building. He has already authored two books on the topic, 2006’s Structuring the State and 2017’s Conservative Parties & the Birth of Democracy.

While Ziblatt was examining Europe, How Democracies Die co-author Levitsky studied Latin American politics, and the two have previously co-instructed classes on democratic crises around the world, though never focusing on the U.S.

“During the primary season of the [2016 presidential] election, we started talking about U.S. politics and how we were seeing echoes of things we had studied in other countries,” Ziblatt says.

As political candidate Donald Trump threatened to lock up his rival, called the press the enemy of the people and accused the government of potentially rigging elections, Ziblatt notes the unprecedented actions of that election mirrored events that occurred in other countries which experienced democratic breakdowns.

“[Democracies] don’t die the way they used to,” Ziblatt says. “They used to die through military coups; men with guns.”

Since the collapse of communism in the 20th century, Ziblatt explains that democracies have begun to die at the ballot box, with presidents and prime ministers being elected to office and then dismantling democracy from within.

“We started to realize there was some useful lessons to be learned,” Ziblatt says. “Some missteps to avoid and things that politicians and citizens should do. Just having elections is no guarantee of democracy.”

In How Democracies Die, Ziblatt and Levitsky point to several global examples, from 1930s Europe to contemporary Hungary and Venezuela, to show how elected leaders become authoritarian rulers. For those feeling discouraged by the polarized political atmosphere, Ziblatt and Levitsky offer steps that both Republicans and Democrats can do to save our own democracy.

“As much as we disagree with or are frightened by our political opponent, it’s important to continue to abide by and act in a way that reinforces democratic norms,” Ziblatt says. “In many cases, countries overcome their polarization only after major catastrophes. We want readers to understand the stakes of our current politics so we can overcome our problems without having to undergo those catastrophes.”

Daniel Ziblatt reads from ‘How Democracies Die’ on Wednesday, May 16, at The Commonwealth Club, 110 The Embarcadero, San Francisco, noon, $15-$40, 415/597-6705 and on Friday, May 18, at the Occidental Center for the Arts, 3850 Doris Murphy Ct., 7pm, $5, 707/874-9392.

Food & Drink: Gateway Spot

Way back in the spring of 2015, I wrote about a barbecue restaurant that was planning to open at 2001 Sir Francis Drake Boulevard in Fairfax. As is often the case, these things take longer than planned. For Brian Back, it took three years longer than he had anticipated—but in March, he finally opened the doors to Way Station in what was previously a gas station.
With the long process of permitting and health department regulations behind him, Back has created an open, spacious (seating for 107) indoor/outdoor eatery. The stripped-down space features plenty of concrete, glass, sliding metal doors and an outdoor gravel-covered beer garden with picnic tables.
More than a year ago, Back discovered Max Hill, who was selling his St. Louis-style ribs out of his food truck (Max’s Pig ’N’ Pie BBQ), and asked him to come onboard at Way Station; from the looks of it, Hill drove straight into the restaurant and set up shop. His truck, embedded in the back wall, has a fully equipped kitchen.
The restaurant’s signature ribs are smoked for five hours, covered with a special house-made rub and glazed with Hill’s BBQ sauce. Made in the Memphis style with a vinegar base, the Southern favorite strikes a balance between smoky, spicy and sweet.
Expect all of the fare to be heavy here—even the coleslaw is made with a hearty creamy mustard base. A Fairfax Crunch Salad of spinach, carrots and a sesame citrus dressing is the lone meat-free main dish offered. Alcoholic beverages are predominately from California, and include a Fort Point Black Lager and an Inizi Rosé from Guerneville.
Way Station, 2001 Sir Francis Drake Blvd., Fairfax; 415/300-3099; waystationmarin.com.

Food & Drink: Gateway Spot

Way back in the spring of 2015, I wrote about a barbecue restaurant that was planning to open at 2001 Sir Francis Drake Boulevard in Fairfax. As is often the case, these things take longer than planned. For Brian Back, it took three years longer than he had anticipated—but in March, he finally opened the doors to Way Station in what was previously a gas station.

With the long process of permitting and health department regulations behind him, Back has created an open, spacious (seating for 107) indoor/outdoor eatery. The stripped-down space features plenty of concrete, glass, sliding metal doors and an outdoor gravel-covered beer garden with picnic tables.

More than a year ago, Back discovered Max Hill, who was selling his St. Louis-style ribs out of his food truck (Max’s Pig ’N’ Pie BBQ), and asked him to come onboard at Way Station; from the looks of it, Hill drove straight into the restaurant and set up shop. His truck, embedded in the back wall, has a fully equipped kitchen.

The restaurant’s signature ribs are smoked for five hours, covered with a special house-made rub and glazed with Hill’s BBQ sauce. Made in the Memphis style with a vinegar base, the Southern favorite strikes a balance between smoky, spicy and sweet.

Expect all of the fare to be heavy here—even the coleslaw is made with a hearty creamy mustard base. A Fairfax Crunch Salad of spinach, carrots and a sesame citrus dressing is the lone meat-free main dish offered. Alcoholic beverages are predominately from California, and include a Fort Point Black Lager and an Inizi Rosé from Guerneville.

Way Station, 2001 Sir Francis Drake Blvd., Fairfax; 415/300-3099; waystationmarin.com.

Feature: ‘Abba’cadabra

“I have been a fan of Abba for years, but for a long time I wasn’t sure how to tell people that,” confesses Jon Gallo, Bay Area pianist and musical director of Mountain Play’s colossal new production of Mamma Mia!, hitting Mt. Tamalpais with a five-weekend run beginning this weekend. “I didn’t tell many people how I felt about...

This Week in the Pacific Sun

This week in the Pacific Sun, our cover story, 'Close-Up,' is a behind-the-scenes look at Barack Obama's presidency, through the eyes of former White House photographer Pete Souza. On top of that, we've got a story about the California GOP grappling with a top-polling neo-Nazi, a piece on Way Station—a BBQ eatery and craft beer garden in Fairfax and...

Free Will Astrology

ARIES (March 21-April 19): The Torah is a primary sacred text of the Jewish religion. It consists of exactly 304,805 letters. When specially trained scribes make handwritten copies for ritual purposes, they must not make a single error in their transcription. The work may take as long as 18 months. Your attention to detail in the coming weeks doesn’t...

Hero & Zero: Octogenarian Art & Verizon Void

hero and zero
Hero: Celebrate the work of Marin’s most talented octogenarian artists with a visit to 80 Over 80, an exhibit at the Bartolini Gallery in the Marin Center Exhibit Hall. This juried show features more than 80 pieces of art by artists over the age of 80. We were dazzled by the still life paintings, photographs, landscapes, abstracts, portraits and...

Hero & Zero: Octogenarian Art & Verizon Void

hero and zero
Hero: Celebrate the work of Marin’s most talented octogenarian artists with a visit to 80 Over 80, an exhibit at the Bartolini Gallery in the Marin Center Exhibit Hall. This juried show features more than 80 pieces of art by artists over the age of 80. We were dazzled by the still life paintings, photographs, landscapes, abstracts, portraits and...

Advice Goddess

advice goddess
Q: I was roommates with a girl five years ago. I was a spoiled brat for many years, but I’ve worked very hard to change. She, on the other hand, is still supported by her father, has no job or interests and just wants to get married. Whenever she calls, she wants advice on the same boy drama. I...

Film: Mommy Track

They called Juno whip-smart, and some of us still have the lash scars. Tully, by writer Diablo Cody and director Jason Reitman, has everything left out of their first film together that made it the crowd-pleaser that it was. Tully has some of the narcissism seen in Juno and their follow-up, Young Adult, but there’s also some unusually raw...

Arts: Timely Lessons

If the old saying is true, then those who fail to learn from history are doomed to repeat it. North Bay native and Harvard Professor of Government Daniel Ziblatt knows his history, and he has made a career of studying political systems around the world. More specifically, he’s an expert in how political democracies form and how they fail, and...

Food & Drink: Gateway Spot

Way back in the spring of 2015, I wrote about a barbecue restaurant that was planning to open at 2001 Sir Francis Drake Boulevard in Fairfax. As is often the case, these things take longer than planned. For Brian Back, it took three years longer than he had anticipated—but in March, he finally opened the doors to Way Station...

Food & Drink: Gateway Spot

Way back in the spring of 2015, I wrote about a barbecue restaurant that was planning to open at 2001 Sir Francis Drake Boulevard in Fairfax. As is often the case, these things take longer than planned. For Brian Back, it took three years longer than he had anticipated—but in March, he finally opened the doors to Way Station...
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