Facetime

FACETIME- Everson's rolling: Filmmaker is in demand
Published on Mar 2nd, 2006
0 comments While most UVA faculty members took a breather between fall and spring semesters, filmmaker and art professor Kevin Everson was jet-setting in the name of his craft. After celebrating Christmas with...
FACETIME- Fischer's price: Hired by Keswick, he rocked
Published on Mar 2nd, 2006
0 comments Describing someone as a "musician's musician," is typically a value judgment– "This guy is good," it implies. "Even other artists appreciate his work." In Vernon Fischer's case, however,...
Everson's rolling: Filmmaker is in demand
Published on Mar 2nd, 2006
0 comments   While most UVA faculty members took a breather between fall and spring semesters, filmmaker and art professor Kevin Everson was jet-setting in the name of his craft. After celebrating...
FACETIME- Elevated: Haidt redefines happiness
Published on Feb 23rd, 2006
0 comments Jonathan Haidt is serious about happiness, and he taps into science and philosophy to answer the age-old question: how should we live? Just don't call his new work a self-help book. The UVA...
FACETIME- Shea's stadium: Meet Satellite Ballroom's booker
Published on Feb 16th, 2006
0 comments Danny Shea is no high-powered booking agent; he seems to bristle at even being given an official title. To see him behind the counter at Plan 9 Music– where he's worked for 10 years– he...
Shea's stadium: Meet Satellite Ballroom's booker
Published on Feb 16th, 2006
0 comments Danny Shea is no high-powered booking agent; he seems to bristle at even being given an official title. To see him behind the counter at Plan 9 Music– where he's worked for 10 years– he...
FACETIME-Family plan: Revolutionizing pop culture
Published on Feb 9th, 2006
0 comments To the untrained eye, the Monkeyclaus headquarters looks like any other small roadside house in rural Nelson County. But once inside the doors, visitors may be surprised to find a state-of-the-art...
Family plan: Revolutionizing pop culture
Published on Feb 9th, 2006
0 comments To the untrained eye, the Monkeyclaus headquarters looks like any other small roadside house in rural Nelson County. But once inside the doors, visitors may be surprised to find a state-of-the-art...
FACETIME- Hall pass: Musicians unite behind her
Published on Feb 2nd, 2006
0 comments She may be 50 years old, but in a manner of speaking, Mary Gordon Hall is only just now starting to come of age. "I had written children's songs for years," she says. "'Love You Now,' woke me up in...
Hall pass: Musicians unite behind her
Published on Feb 2nd, 2006
0 comments   She may be 50 years old, but in a manner of speaking, Mary Gordon Hall is only just now starting to come of age. "I had written children's songs for years," she says. "'Love You Now,' woke me...
First comes Love: Wedding celebrant aptly named
Published on Jan 26th, 2006
0 comments   With her last name, it seems only fitting that Frankee Love would work in the wedding biz. And she's not the first in her amorously monikered clan: her family ran a jewelry and crystal...
Eager reader: Gallagher picks Caldecott winner
Published on Jan 19th, 2006
0 comments Genevieve Gallagher has read pretty much every picture book published in 2005. That's 575 and counting, with more coming in every day. Her zeal suggests a Type A librarian, but Gallagher has another...
Music man: King anchors Grammy 'Poole'
Published on Jan 12th, 2006
0 comments Anyone can dust off an old record, but for Faber resident Christopher King, the work doesn't stop there– in fact, that's where it all begins. King, who won a Grammy in 2003 for his work on...
Scene masters: Perry, Beattie book it back to town
Published on Jan 5th, 2006
0 comments The light fades on a late November afternoon as writer Ann Beattie and her husband, painter Lincoln Perry, relax over a cup of tea. He tucks his legs under him on the living room sofa. She leans...
First knight: Levine leads New Year's charge
Published on Dec 15th, 2005
0 comments When First Night Virginia launched in Charlottesville in 1982, a teenaged Steven Levine was there to see it happen– though there wasn't that much to see. The event was "much smaller," he says...
FACETIME- Funny girl: Horne brings improv to town
Published on Dec 8th, 2005
0 comments Lots of people love their work, but few can make the same claim as Jennifer Horne, founder of the Bent Theatre Company (formerly Whole World Theatre Charlottesville). "People pay to make me laugh,"...
Amen, Elvis: Grissom explores King fixation
Published on Dec 1st, 2005
0 comments Doug Grissom had never been a fan, but after reading Peter Guralnick's book, Last Train to Memphis: The Rise of Elvis Presley, the iconic power of the King began to work its magic. "I became...
Optimist's club: Bailey tackles touchy subjects
Published on Nov 24th, 2005
0 comments If you're like most people, you probably avoid talking about politics and religion. Well, Charlottesville journalist Ron Bailey isn't most people. In fact, he relishes biotechnology debates–...
Peet's sake: Seeing peace in the Mideast
Published on Nov 17th, 2005
0 comments Jared Peet says he wasn't shocked by the recent suicide bombings in Jordan. "There was a lot of tension between Iraqis and Jordanians beforehand," says the fourth year UVA foreign affairs and Middle...
Kicker uplifts: Star Cavalier helps local fan
Published on Nov 10th, 2005
0 comments As the place kicker for UVA's football team, Connor Hughes is used to saving games. But one local fan says Hughes helped save his life. Forced to have his foot amputated after a workplace injury in...
The Sanborn Identity: Award-winning filmmaker
Published on Nov 3rd, 2005
0 comments Sissy Spacek wasn't the only C'ville celeb who made an appearance at last weekend's 18th annual Virginia Film Festival. WINA reporter Bruce Sanborn was also present– but not for his day job....
Longest race: Citizen Toscano's run for Richmond
Published on Oct 27th, 2005
0 comments If the pundits are to be believed, David Toscano has been running for the 57th District delegate's seat for years. When he didn't seek reelection after 12 years on City Council in 2002, it was widely...
B3 backer: Melvin loves his Hammond
Published on Oct 20th, 2005
0 comments With Charlottesville's diverse music venues– think Scott Stadium, then think the Tea Bazaar– you need only walk the length of the Downtown Mall to hear everything from hard rock to hymn...
Grant's charge: BOS with no BS
Published on Oct 20th, 2005
0 comments Gary Grant acknowledges that he's brutally honest. "I think that's what we need in government," says Grant, the Republican candidate for the Rio District Board of Supervisor's seat. "Some people don'...
FEMA dispatcher: Inspector heads into Katrina's wake
Published on Oct 13th, 2005
0 comments Peter Drenan is no newcomer to disaster relief. For the past three years, the home inspector has worked with FEMA to rebuild homes ravaged by natural disasters. Now Drenan is headed to Baton Rouge,...
French fan: Group's founder <I>tres occup&eacute;e</I>
Published on Sep 22nd, 2005
0 comments When former Frenchwoman Andrée King followed her husband to the United States 25 years ago, she was reluctant to leave behind her first love, one that was less romantic and more patriotic. Upon...
Early word: Locals bring water and hope
Published on Sep 8th, 2005
0 comments Television news features non-stop coverage of Gulf Coast devastation: homeless refugees, hit-and-miss rescue efforts, and bumbling politicians. It's disheartening to watch. But for Chad Myhre, 35,...
Nola contender: Musician flees flood for roots
Published on Sep 8th, 2005
0 comments Alexandra Scott still had the sheets of plywood she bought a year ago when fleeing before Hurricane Ivan. Still, after hiring a stranger to board up her house in the Uptown district of New Orleans,...
The aftermath: Beslan tragedy still hurts
Published on Sep 2nd, 2005
0 comments One year after the horrifying carnage at Beslan Middle School Number One, the Russian community's wounds are still gaping. "The school is frozen in time," reports Lisa Aronson, a trauma expert who...
Rainbow warrior: James writes of skin and sin
Published on Aug 25th, 2005
0 comments If you're in the mood for some light summer reading, don't look to Greene County author William James. But if you have a hankering for a book on complex social issues and bitter intra-racial...