Horoscope: What’s Your Sign?

by Leona Moon

ARIES (March 21 – April 19) Time to get naked, Aries! Whoa—keep it PG. We’re talking about baring your soul. The full moon on May 3 will be a tell-all. All those secrets you’ve been hiding will pour out like a leaky faucet. No use hiding the fact that you have webbed feet any longer.

TAURUS (April 20 – May 20) There’s something in the air, and it’s not just that new Febreeze air freshener you picked up from the store, Taurus! What could it be? It’s love—and clearly, there’s never been a better time to stock up on air fresheners and mouthwashes alike. The full moon on May 3 will have you seducing at your full potential.

GEMINI (May 21 – June 20) Want some more cash, Gemini? Welcome to the club. Ever consider a little feng shui? It’s the quickest fix for a dried-up bank account. If you’re really hoping to purchase that matching patio furniture by the end of the month, make a drastic move. Try switching your living room with your bedroom.

CANCER (June 21 – July 22) Two of your worlds are colliding, Cancer! Are you moving in with your hopefully to-be betrothed? It looks like love and finances are dancing the tango this week, and you’re going to take it to the next level with the full moon in fellow water sign, Scorpio, on May 3. Expect the unexpected, and a few speed bumps.

LEO (July 23 – Aug. 22) Communicate while you can, Leo! Mercury is set to go retrograde in two weeks, and its slippery, conniving effects are already using you as target practice. Reading a few short stories from Chicken Soup for the Leo’s Soul might warm you up before a big communication barrier breakdown. Baby steps—and do your best to articulate on May 6.

VIRGO (Aug. 23 – Sept. 22) No vacationing in the Galapagos for you, Virgo! You’ve got more than enough projects to keep you busy. You’ll be whistling while you work all week long with your house of professional accomplishments lighting up to make some serious career moves.

LIBRA (Sept. 23 – Oct. 22) Are you retiring, Libra?! You may have never thought that you’d see the day, but all of your relatives have been praying for it. The full moon in Scorpio is finally giving you the gusto to walk away from a job or commitment that has left you feeling unhappy or subpar. Either enjoy your new life of golfing on weekdays or find a boss who respects you and provides free coffee and snacks daily.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23 – Nov. 21) It’s going to be a stressful one, Scorpio! The full moon in your sign on May 3 will have you re-evaluating your entire life. Have you taken all the right steps to end up where you are now? Did you break up with the right people, or say yes to the wrong ones? Your house of long-term planning and goals is on fire. Maybe start with a to-do list and manifest a game plan to tackle this forward thinking.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 – Dec. 21) Want to pick up some extra projects, Sagittarius? It’s always good to do a little freelance work on the side. You never know when a company might just up and Washington Mutual on you. Invest in a partnership (maybe with that woman to the left of you at SoulCycle). Whoever it is, you’ll be thankful for a little collaborative innovation.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 – Jan. 19) Not to quote the Who, but, “Who are you? Who, who, who, who?” You might find yourself going through a little identity crisis on May 5. Getting deep never hurt anyone—and you can’t avoid it forever. Carve out some time on your lunch break to get a little introspective.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 – Feb. 18) Interested in a promotion, Aquarius? If you’re gunning for a new position, the full moon in Scorpio on May 3 has your back! It’s never been a better time to seek professional success. That Employee of the Month placard is yours—no competition.

PISCES (Feb. 19 – March 20) Take a trip down Memory Lane recently, Pisces? What a place. Be careful how much time you spend there, though. While it may be helpful to analyze past mistakes (to avoid repeating)—don’t look too carefully or you might end up staying. It’s all about growth on May 3—move forward!

Video: Finding solace

by Richard Gould

WILD is a terrific film and deserves an even larger viewing than its hit December release garnered it. Credit all to Reese Witherspoon who, despite being in virtually every scene<0x2014>and most of those alone on some vertebra of the long Sierra backbone<0x2014>absolutely radiates the drama her character’s impulsive decision has sent her on. That decision is of course to hike the famed Pacific Crest Trail from border to (almost) border, the Camino de Santiago of spirit-seekers up and down the West, in hope of coming to terms with old demons left behind and finding new bearings to give her life meaning. It’s a windswept, unforgiving place where she comes to realize that no such deals are expected or deserved. The genius of director Jean-Marc Vallée and screenwriter Nick Hornby is to have the surrounding vastness carry her memories right back to her<0x2014>fresh-scrubbed, the way they often will on a long stretch of solitude, and their cumulative effect is devastating. It turns out that Cheryl Strayed was no angel, and the long march north will work out several toxins in the expected manner. But what haunts her are the sins that only she knows about, a shying away from life’s commitments and casual treatment of people close to her she now sees were fragile and vulnerable. How unexpected to find solace in other people met along the way, in all their variety, here in the faraway wild. Walden it ain’t, and thank the void for that. If you’re at all doubtful about getting nature’s uplift from a rental, see this movie.

Upfront: Breaking the impasse?

by Peter Seidman

A little community pressure on the North Marin Water District (NMWD) signaled the possibility of a second-unit bloom in Marin County.

The fertilization of the second-unit concept comes as part of a push to persuade water districts that are charging regular water connection fees for what are called junior second units makes little sense and stymies a housing model that could break an impasse in the affordable housing debate—or at least contribute to breaking the impasse.

At issue is whether a new paradigm of housing (actually it’s an old model) should be subjected to the same regulatory and fee requirements as a full second unit. Junior second units are a relatively new concept, or a reborn concept, and utility districts have no rules for them—yet.

If proponents of the new housing model can lower the fee barrier and reduce the amount that homeowners must pay to hook up utilities to new junior second units, they could provide some of the lowest rental units in the Marin market.

The NMWD is working to set connection fees for the junior units. Proponents say that the fees, if any, should be set low enough to encourage homeowners to build junior units.

Virtually everyone agrees that the county needs housing for its younger residents that allows them to remain in Marin. The county and its cities also need housing for the increasingly large older population that allows older residents to remain in the county in private houses. Junior second units fit the bill, say proponents.

And to top off the attraction, they add, the state says that the junior units qualify as housing when it’s time to tally residential stock for regional housing need calculations. That should satisfy members of the community who balk at creating new housing along the Highway 101 corridor and its arterials to satisfy state mandates.

Junior second units, while far from a panacea when it comes to providing affordable housing, could go a long way toward adding an important link in a continuum of housing options—one that currently doesn’t exist to any appreciable extent.

Late last year, Novato passed an ordinance that set rules and regulations for junior second units, which the city included as a possibility in its housing element. The city codified the philosophical stance with the ordinance.

It delineates the differences between full second units and junior units. “Accessory Dwelling Units [are] a second permanent dwelling that is accessory to a legal primary dwelling on the same site. An accessory dwelling unit provides complete independent living facilities for one or more persons, including permanent provisions for living, sleeping, eating, cooking, sanitation and parking. An accessory dwelling unit also includes manufactured homes.

“Junior Accessory Dwelling Units [are] a type of accessory dwelling unit that is accessory to and included within a legal primary dwelling on the same site. A junior accessory dwelling unit provides independent living facilities for one or more persons, including permanent provisions for living, sleeping, eating and cooking. Cooking and food preparation facilities shall be limited to an efficiency kitchen … Sanitation facilities may be independently provided for the junior accessory dwelling unit or may be shared with occupants of the primary dwelling, provided interior access is available.”

A junior unit in the city can be between 150 square-feet and 500 square-feet. Junior units are inside the main home and may or may not share a bathroom. In Novato, they will have dedicated exterior access, making them a separate living arrangement from the main dwelling. There may be a door between the junior unit and the main house. But that door may be closed and unused, much like a door between rooms in a hotel. The door, however, also could be open, giving the occupants of the main house and the junior unit options to alter their living arrangement. The key is that owners of the main house can convert a bedroom to a junior second unit by, at the least, adding a sink and counter space to accommodate small electric appliances. No gas connections are allowed. The junior unit may have a bathroom, but it may not have one, and occupants may use the bathroom in the main house. It’s up to residents of the structure.

Rachel Ginis knows the value of junior second units. About 15 years ago, she was a single mother living in Corte Madera, trying hard to make ends meet in her single-family home. She realized that renting space in her home could generate much-needed income to cover expenses. But her ideas went beyond renting just a bedroom. By creating what amounted to a junior second unit, Ginis arrived at a solution that allowed her to bring in rent on a temporary basis.

The glitch, she discovered, was that Corte Madera had no ordinances that allowed her creation to exist.

That seemed to make no sense then, and proponents say it makes no sense now. Paying relatively high connection fees for water, power and sewer is unfair because no new connections are required for a junior second unit, unlike new connections to a detached full second unit. Ginis is a residential designer and understood the possibilities that the fees were blocking innovation. “I recognized the point that they hurt everybody,” she says, “the homeowners as well as the prospective residents of the junior unit. I recognized that the fees made no sense; they were unreasonable.”

And because Corte Madera had no ordinance delineating rules for junior units, the unit Ginis created was illegal. The experience led her on the path she now travels as the CEO of Lilypad Homes. The company started as a for-profit firm that guided people through the planning process for second units. Ginis and Lilypad also participated in designing units for clients. Although the first incarnation of the company was aimed at making a profit, Ginis says, Lilypad is moving toward full nonprofit status. A key part of that move is encapsulated in the Lilypad Flexible Housing Initiative.

The idea of creating junior units that can increase what Ginis calls flexible housing in existing homes presents a potentially interesting vision: Opponents of using what they call high-density housing as a way to satisfy the need for additional housing in Marin usually say that they have no objection to building affordable housing, it’s just that high-density housing is the devil they want to keep at bay. The county and its cities should explore alternative ways to produce more housing options, they say, a critical need for potential middle- and lower-income residents.

As Ginis has spread the word about her junior second unit concept, she says, she has met overwhelming support from a full spectrum of housing advocates all the way to slow-growth advocates. And the state will accept the units in housing need calculations.

Just how many of the junior units can be added to the county’s housing stock is a big, open question. But whatever the number, added junior units could be a welcome addition to the calculations. So far, all of the cities in Marin except two have included the junior second-unit concept in their housing elements. Fairfax and Ross have yet to make the addition. The county housing element also lacks junior second units. But Ginis thinks that it’s just a matter of time. It’s too good to reject, say supporters. Novato and Tiburon were the first cities that actually wrote junior second-unit ordinances, after including them in their respective housing elements.

There’s just one hitch in the junior unit step. And it made itself known in Novato, which is the first city to wrestle with the intricacies of a junior unit ordinance. At the top of the list was a potential junior unit killer—a water connection fee. The North Marin Water District charges $10,000 for a new connection. That’s the fee that a homeowner would pay to connect a full second unit. But because a junior unit is inside a home that already has a connection, the high fee is unfair, says junior unit supporters. Novato’s mayor asked the NMWD to reduce the fee to a level that homeowners of relatively modest means could afford. That seemed reasonable because a strong impetus for creating junior units comes from a need to generate income to stay in a home. An unrealistically high fee also could scare off those contemplating new junior units in their homes and push the homeowners and their renters into the shadows. The whole idea is to bring the units into the light.

Following the mayor’s request, the North Marin Water District staff came back with a new number: Homeowners could add a junior unit water connection for $6,100, even though an existing house needed no additional connection. The Coalition for a Livable Marin said that the reduced fee was still “way too high, and it will throw cold water on one of the most promising housing policies in the county.” Kiki La Porta, involved with the organization’s steering committee, made the case that “a $6,100 fee would put legal second-unit conversions out of reach for most people. She asked with a rhetorical flourish, “Isn’t infill housing, in character with the surrounding community, exactly what we want to promote?”

Her reasoning, as well as the comments from other members of the community, swayed the water district board, which sent the issue of the fee back to staff for more consideration. The district might further reduce the fee, possibly to what Bob Brown, Novato Community Development director, calls a small administrative charge. Advocates of the junior-unit concept say that they think the experience at the board level is a win. (The Marin Municipal Water District is looking at its fee structure for connections and could include the junior-unit concept in those considerations. Brown is optimistic that the MMWD will look kindly on junior units.)

Ginis says that it’s a matter of fairness: In Novato, a homeowner pays no additional connection fee to add a wet bar sink. Why should a homeowner who adds a sink in a bedroom converted to a junior unit have to pay a connection fee?

Brown says that Ginis came to him with the idea for junior units, and it took considerable work to hammer out a workable ordinance. “I spent the first three meetings with her describing why this couldn’t happen,” he says. “But there was a nugget of a good idea there. We kept at it and figured out a way it could be written in the terms of a city ordinance.”

Brown and Ginis worked for about six months. The city approved it, but then there was the issue of negotiating through the utilities. There still is. “If we can get the utility districts to waive fees,” or at least to provide substantive discounts, it could go a long way to supporting a new segment of the Marin housing stock. (Second units have been around for a long time, but the cities in Marin and the county have approved precious few over the years.)

“This is just repurposing a bedroom,” says Brown, not adding traffic, congestion or density. “The number of people that would be in the home was taken into account when the home was originally built.” Over the years, fewer and fewer people have occupied the average home in Marin and in the state. Currently, according to Brown, more than half of the homes in the state and in Marin have only one or two occupants.

Brown says that if supporters can get the utility agencies on board and a few more cities join the push, he will submit the story to Western City Magazine, the League of California Cities’ publication, for wide distribution as a new housing paradigm—or actually a return to the multi-generational model that flourished before World War II.

Contact the writer at pe***@******an.com.

Hero and Zero: Marin Human Race and narcotics robbers

by Nikki Silverstein

HERO: Sure, we’re all Homo sapiens, but that doesn’t mean that we’re part of the Marin Human Race. We should all join by running, walking or rolling in the 33rd Annual Marin Human Race, the largest collaborative fundraising event in the county. Last year, more than 4,000 people attended, and $285,000 was raised for 78 vital nonprofit agencies. The timed 5K race takes place on Saturday, May 9 at the Marin Center Fairgrounds and Lagoon. Registration begins at 7am and the racers start at 9am. Out-of-shape humans, do not despair—the course is mostly flat. Young citizens love the kids’ races and activities, and everyone enjoys the dog walk, pancake breakfast and Community Village Fair. Join the Human Race. Visit marinhumanrace.org for more information.

ZERO: Just say no. Too bad the two degenerates that robbed the Rite Aid pharmacy at the Corte Madera Town Center last week weren’t familiar with the concept. One man, armed with what appeared to be a black handgun, went behind the pharmacy counter and helped himself to prescription narcotics. He must have been channeling Nurse Jackie to make such a bold move in the middle of the day. The alleged accomplice, Kurt Allsman, was captured on video assisting the robber in the getaway.  (Ne ’er-do-wells, look around—Cameras are everywhere.) On Tuesday, the Central Marin Police served a search warrant for Allsman’s vehicle and Mill Valley residence. They found the stolen drugs and anticipate finding the robber soon, thanks to detective work and DNA.

Got a Hero or a Zero? Please send submissions to ni***************@***oo.com.

 

Newsgram: Celebrating Marin nonprofits

 

If you’re a Marin nonprofit founder, it’s your time to shine. Founders of Marin nonprofit organizations will convene on Sunday, April 26 at the Marin Founders Celebration at the Buck Institute in Novato. The event is being presented by Marin Founders, a new nonprofit organization that was formed to present the celebration, a documentary and a TV series featuring a different Marin nonprofit founder each week.

The purpose of the event, which is open to all Marin nonprofit founders, is to recognize and celebrate the contributions of those whose organizations have been in existence for 10 years or more. With more than 400 active Marin County nonprofits–the Marin Symphony, the Agricultural Institute of Marin and the California Film Institute, to name a few–there will be much to celebrate. “Our volunteers are helping to identify founders and we plan to honor at least 50 at this inaugural event,” says Marinda Freeman,” one of the event organizers.

The idea for Marin Founders, and the celebration, came from Jacqueline Janssen, a nonprofit consultant who has served on the boards of various Marin nonprofits. She said that she got the idea around a year and a half ago–she was amazed and inspired by the stories she heard from nonprofit founders about what they were doing to serve the community. “Nonprofit founders are inspired, passionate, committed, persevering and amazing,” Janssen says. “Some have been celebrated and some have not. Nonprofit founders should all be honored and brought together to be appreciated as a group.”

Janssen decided that she wanted to find a way to spread the word about these unsung heroes, and collaborated with two of her colleagues–Marinda Freeman of MF Productions, and Mary O’Mara, the executive director of Marin Link.

The event will feature a preview trailer of a Spirit House Productions documentary that includes interviews with nonprofit founders, board members and staff and volunteers who contribute to each organization. The interviews will be aired as a weekly TV series after the event, on the Community Media Center of Marin’s Channel 26.

Marin Founders Celebration, Sunday, April 26, 2-5pm, the Buck Institute, 8001 Redwood Blvd., Novato. Tickets, which are $50 (free for honorees and Marin nonprofit founders), and include wine and hors-d’oeuvres, can be purchased at brownpapertickets.com. For more information, visit marinfounders.org. For volunteer opportunities or to nominate a founder, email in**@***********rs.org, or call Jacqueline Janssen at 415/999-1111.–Lily O’ Brien

 

Talking Pictures: A reawakening

by David Templeton

“Star Wars Trailer Star Wars Trailer

Star Wars Trailer Star Wars Trailer

Star Wars Trailer Star Wars Trailer

Star Wars Trailer Star Wars Trailer

Star Wars Trailer!!!”

So posted San Francisco science fiction aficionado Skot Christopherson, his contribution to a late-night Facebook thread on the page of mutual Facebook friend John Harden. The latter, who’d been asked, by me, for his opinion on the aforementioned trailer—the second this year to include footage from the much-anticipated seventh Star Wars film—has been touring the festival circuit with his own science fiction epic, the short film, New.

His response to my question is a bit more reserved than Christopherson’s.

“Uh, Star Wars …,” he writes. “My quote on the FIRST teaser trailer. ‘Some people’s thresholds for freaking out are set awfully low.”

This was followed by a second post.

“But the new one is better.”

No kidding.

Forget about Furious 7 and its record-breaking accumulation of dollar bills—more than a billion-and-a-half in just three weeks. That spectacular reception is nothing compared to the warm welcome given to last weekend’s debut of the new Star Wars: The Force Awakens teaser trailer. Estimates are that 88 million people watched (and re-watched and re-watched) the 109-second preview in just its first 24 hours after being unveiled online. For comparison’s sake, consider that 88 million is more than twice the population of Canada. It’s slightly more than the total number of personal computers Hewlett Packard sold in its fourth quarter of 2014.

Compared with other movie trailers, it just might be an all-time record. According to a number of Hollywood media outlets—people who track this sort of thing as closely as a C-3PO sticks to R2-D2—the recent Avengers: Age of Ultron trailer was seen by 35 million people in its first 24 hours, and even Furious 7, destined to become one of the most successful films of all time, was only watched 66 million times in the same 24-hour period.

Clearly, people can’t wait for the next Star Wars film, in part because it will mark the onscreen reunion of Luke Skywalker, Princess Leia and Han Solo, with original stars Mark Hamill, Carrie Fisher and Harrison Ford. Ford, adding to the excitement, actually appears in the new trailer, dressed in his iconic Han Solo attire, standing next to his longtime hirsute best-buddy Chewbacca, uttering the line, “Chewie. We’re home!” Other highlights include shots of the desert planet Tatooine, a vast graveyard of crashed Imperial spacecraft, the Millennium Falcon being pursued by bad guys into the fuselage of a vast crashed spaceship, and a mysterious sight of the diminutive droid R2-D2 being caressed by what appears to be the robotic hand of a hooded Luke Skywalker. All of it is narrated by Skywalker himself, telling some unseen character, “The Force is strong in my family. My father has it. I have it. My sister has it. You have that power, too!”

Whoever it is that has that power, they’re sharing it with the Walt Disney Company, which purchased Star Wars creator George Lucas’ Lucasfilm in 2012. According to some financial websites, the sheer overwhelming orgasmic splendor of the new trailer caused a spike in Walt Disney stock prices, instantly adding $2 billion dollars of value to the company, which paid just over twice that to purchase Lucasfilm, and with it the rights to make the new Star Wars movies as often as they like. Disney has announced that they plan to release a new Star Wars movie each year, pretty much forever, and they’re already at work on another sequel, plus a spin-off film, Rogue One, which will go back in time a bit to explain how the rebel alliance acquired the plans that allowed them to blow up the Death Star in the very first Star Wars film—episode IV, long before Lucas went back and made episodes I, II, and III. The new one, by the way, is technically episode VII.

“Has anyone noticed,” posts another Facebook user who prefers not to be named, “that Star Wars: The Force Awakens is technically the first movie in the series to have an episode number that actually matches the order in which it appears?”

But back to the trailer.

No sooner had those 88 million people watched it on day one, than the Internet began filling up with YouTube parodies and all manner of outrageous responses. By now, most of us have seen the video in which footage from the movie Interstellar has been fused with the new Star Wars trailer to make it look as if Matthew McConaughey is watching it for the first time, his reaction—actually a scene in which his astronaut character watches video his kids have sent from Earth—is pretty much the same as a lot of us—an emotional outpouring of tears and outright blubbering.

But no public response comes close to that of Father Roderick Vonhogen, of the Netherlands. A frequent blogger and podcaster on matters related to science fiction and Star Wars, Father Roderick’s video shows his own very real first reaction to the trailer. The reaction is one of the purest expressions of film geek joy ever to be captured on video.

“Holy Cow!” he says over and over, his face alternately beaming with delight—“Oh wow! An X-wing fighter!”—or glowing with open-mouthed wonder—“Darth Vader’s mask! What? Who’s talking? That’s Luke Skywalker! It must be!”—all of which ultimately devolves into a series of inarticulate “whoops” sounds and ecstatic repetitions of “Holy cow! Holy cow! Holy cow!”

Seeing Father Roderick’s unfettered glee is almost as much fun as watching the trailer itself. What does it say about the state of technology, or the commitment of fans, that a two-minute trailer can become such a global phenomenon months before the movie it’s advertising is released?

“I was not very interested,” posts North Bay actress Cindy Brillhart-True, “until the last shot with Hans Solo and Chewie … then I was completely hooked!!! It brought back such fond memories from my childhood! I can’t wait to see it!!!!!!”

Of course, as many are quick to remind me, this isn’t the first time that a trailer has raised expectations for an upcoming Star Wars film. Many are still stinging from the experience of the last three films—otherwise known as the first three films—which left many hardcore fans disappointed.

Posts self-described “Internet contrarian” Tadd Schellenbach, “Remember when everyone was so excited about ‘Phantom Menace’ after the trailer came out?”

Yes, Tadd. We all remember.

But that was a long time ago in a (non-Disney) galaxy far, far away. A new generation of filmmakers has taken over the ship, and if The Force Awakens is even half as much fun as the fervor that is growing in anticipation of it, the Force may truly be with us.

Till then, as Skot Christopherson has so eloquently put it:

“Star Wars Trailer Star Wars Trailer

Star Wars Trailer Star Wars Trailer

Star Wars Trailer Star Wars Trailer

Star Wars Trailer Star Wars Trailer

Star Wars Trailer!!!”

Ask David if the force is with him at ta*****@*******nk.net.

Theater: Double bravura

0

by Charles Brousse

Like rare night sky conjunctions of the solar system’s major planets, it doesn’t happen very often that our region’s “flagship” theaters—San Francisco’s A.C.T. and the East Bay’s Berkeley Rep—open new productions within a couple of days of each other. This, however, is precisely what occurred last week, and the event provides a welcome opportunity to compare approaches to a pair of contemporary plays that open windows on black family culture in white-dominated countries thousands of miles apart. Both feature bravura performances by the lead characters that may, or may not, outweigh some serious script problems, depending on the limits of your sentimentality quotient.

Let There Be Love (A.C.T.): Alfred, a West Indian immigrant living in suburban London (superbly played by Bay Area actor Carl Lumbly), has little to be happy about in this recent drama by British playwright Kwame Kwei-Armah, directed by Maria Mileaf. Alfred’s woes include being deserted by his wife, forced out of his eldest daughter’s home after she marries a “proper” English gentleman and scandalized by his younger daughter Gemma (a solid performance by Donnetta Lavinia Grays) when she exits the lesbian closet. Nor are his complaints limited to family. More recent immigrants, especially those from South Asia and Eastern Europe, are denounced for their slovenly ways and questionable work ethics. Government services are failing. Everywhere Alfred looks, society seems to be coming apart. To top it off, after being diagnosed with a terminal illness, he has been given a month to live.

Then, just as the gloom threatens to crush Alfred’s spirit, temporary salvation arrives in the form of a healthcare worker named Maria (Greta Wohlrabe), sent by Gemma when it becomes clear that father and daughter can’t stand each other. Although she’s young, attractive and physically vibrant, his first instinct is to send her away. Gradually, however, she becomes the catalyst for one of the fastest transformations since Scrooge heeded the advice of Marley’s ghost and did a moral reversal in Dickens’ A Christmas Carol. Does the fine acting overcome the feel-good ending and carry the production? That I leave for you to decide.

Head of Passes (Berkeley Rep): Whereas A.C.T. gives us a tiny play (three characters) in a huge space, the Rep offers the opposite: Tarell Alvin McCraney’s sprawling nine-character portrait of a dysfunctional African-American family is compressed by director Tina Landau within the far more modest confines of the company’s Thrust Stage. The Lousiana swamp house set design by G.W. Skip Mercier is impressive. Everyone has a relationship problem (or two) and dark intrigues are suggested. Discourse is both loud and contentious. A lot happens (including multiple deaths) that may be suitable for a Greek tragedy, but a bit too much for such a slim narrative. After two hours, it ends with a bang. Literally. But I won’t go into that.

McCraney builds his story around Shelah, the family matriarch, who is played with tremendous power by Chicago actress Cheryl Lynn Bruce, who originated the role. It was Shelah who, years before, purchased the property in the bayous with her husband and ran it as a guest house. Now, years later, the nearby rivers have changed course, threatening to bring floodwaters to her doorstep. What to do? Family and employees all have their suggestions, many of them self-serving, but the decision is ultimately hers to make. At the same time, she must cope with a life-threatening disease—visible to her in the form of a mysterious Angel of Death (Sullivan Jones). As the destructive forces close in, she expresses her crisis of faith in a 20-minute, gut-wrenching monologue that, as far as I know, has no parallels in modern American theater. Is this overwritten melodrama, or brilliant playwriting? You pay your money and make your choice.

Charles Brousse can be reached at cb******@*tt.net.

Trivia: Identify this mythological winged horse (pictured), the son of Medusa and Poseidon, Greek god of the sea.

For more trivia questions (and answers!) see Howard Rachelson’s Trivia Café every week in the Pacific Sun.

Answer: Pegasus

Letter: ‘Why can’t they [share] in Marin?’

Marin: One-track mind

I’ve been an active runner since my high school days and an avid mountain biker for 16 years. I live in the East Bay but spend a great deal of time in Marin enjoying the many wonderful areas to run and ride my bike. Most often, my trips to Marin are with groups of friends and we often spend money in your eating establishments and sporting goods stores.

That said, we increasingly find ourselves looking elsewhere to ride because there are simply not enough non-fire-road trails in Marin that are open to mountain bikes.

I understand that mountain bikers are now about a third of the users of Marin open space lands, but they only have access to about 10-15 percent of the single-track trails. I don’t know how many times I’ve come across awesome-looking trails only to find that they are not open to mountain bikes. We are greatly disappointed that in the county where modern mountain biking was born, this growing user group is only allowed to enjoy a fraction of the public trails.

I have ridden in many other places like Annadel State Park in Santa Rosa, Joaquin Miller Park in Oakland, Rockville Park in Fairfield, Skyline Park in Napa and Crockett Park [in Crockett], where most narrow trails are open to all users and everyone coexists on the trails just fine. If people can share there, why can’t they in Marin?

Jeannine C. Pires, Benicia

Letter: ‘Talk about a ZERO …’

I know you are, but what am I?

Before you labeled the Marin County Personnel Commission members who voted to protect the civil rights of a Marin County Sheriff [Hero & Zero, April 10], I presume you heard all the testimony or read the entire transcripts of their hearings. Oh wait—you also jump to conclusions and dismiss the fellow in the road rage issue without benefit of all the facts. Your superficial understanding and simplistic conclusions printed as if they have meaning are the utmost in arrogance or ignorance. Talk about a ZERO.

W. Campagna, Fairfax

 

Horoscope: What’s Your Sign?

All signs look to the 'Sun'
by Leona Moon ARIES (March 21 - April 19) Time to get naked, Aries! Whoa—keep it PG. We’re talking about baring your soul. The full moon on May 3 will be a tell-all. All those secrets you’ve been hiding will pour out like a leaky faucet. No use hiding the fact that you have webbed feet any longer. TAURUS (April 20...

Video: Finding solace

by Richard Gould WILD is a terrific film and deserves an even larger viewing than its hit December release garnered it. Credit all to Reese Witherspoon who, despite being in virtually every scene<0x2014>and most of those alone on some vertebra of the long Sierra backbone<0x2014>absolutely radiates the drama her character's impulsive decision has sent her on. That decision is of...

Upfront: Breaking the impasse?

by Peter Seidman A little community pressure on the North Marin Water District (NMWD) signaled the possibility of a second-unit bloom in Marin County. The fertilization of the second-unit concept comes as part of a push to persuade water districts that are charging regular water connection fees for what are called junior second units makes little sense and stymies a housing...

Hero and Zero: Marin Human Race and narcotics robbers

hero and zero
by Nikki Silverstein HERO: Sure, we’re all Homo sapiens, but that doesn’t mean that we’re part of the Marin Human Race. We should all join by running, walking or rolling in the 33rd Annual Marin Human Race, the largest collaborative fundraising event in the county. Last year, more than 4,000 people attended, and $285,000 was raised for 78 vital nonprofit...

Newsgram: Celebrating Marin nonprofits

  If you're a Marin nonprofit founder, it's your time to shine. Founders of Marin nonprofit organizations will convene on Sunday, April 26 at the Marin Founders Celebration at the Buck Institute in Novato. The event is being presented by Marin Founders, a new nonprofit organization that was formed to present the celebration, a documentary and a TV series featuring...

Talking Pictures: A reawakening

by David Templeton "Star Wars Trailer Star Wars Trailer Star Wars Trailer Star Wars Trailer Star Wars Trailer Star Wars Trailer Star Wars Trailer Star Wars Trailer Star Wars Trailer!!!” So posted San Francisco science fiction aficionado Skot Christopherson, his contribution to a late-night Facebook thread on the page of mutual Facebook friend John Harden. The latter, who’d been asked, by me, for his opinion...

Theater: Double bravura

by Charles Brousse Like rare night sky conjunctions of the solar system’s major planets, it doesn’t happen very often that our region’s “flagship” theaters—San Francisco’s A.C.T. and the East Bay’s Berkeley Rep—open new productions within a couple of days of each other. This, however, is precisely what occurred last week, and the event provides a welcome opportunity to compare approaches...

Trivia: Identify this mythological winged horse (pictured), the son of Medusa and Poseidon, Greek god of the sea.

For more trivia questions (and answers!) see Howard Rachelson’s Trivia Café every week in the Pacific Sun. Answer: Pegasus

Letter: ‘Why can’t they [share] in Marin?’

Marin: One-track mind I’ve been an active runner since my high school days and an avid mountain biker for 16 years. I live in the East Bay but spend a great deal of time in Marin enjoying the many wonderful areas to run and ride my bike. Most often, my trips to Marin are with groups of friends and we...

Letter: ‘Talk about a ZERO …’

I know you are, but what am I? Before you labeled the Marin County Personnel Commission members who voted to protect the civil rights of a Marin County Sheriff , I presume you heard all the testimony or read the entire transcripts of their hearings. Oh wait—you also jump to conclusions and dismiss the fellow in the road rage issue...
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