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AROUND WELLINGTON STORIES OF THE MONTH


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Cultural Corner

 

Local Bands and Their Origins

 

Kamelleon Live, The OtherSIDE, The Funkabilly Playboys

 

By Marla E. Schwartz

 

Music moves us, motivates us and inspires us. It’s also true that music means different things to different people.

 

The ability to exactly define music has eluded the best of the most noted musicians and even philosophers, sociologists as well as neurologists because its diverse use throughout history, regions and societies from all walks of life makes it difficult characterize. The easiest way to describe music is that it’s the art of sound in time that expresses ideas and emotions in significant forms through the elements of rhythm, melody, harmony, and color. The most romantic notion at best that defines music is it is poetry sung aloud that literally touches the core of our very souls. Some turn to famous rock groups to fulfill this desire while others turn to cover bands to secure their own significantly meaningful relationship with music.

 

Cover bands usually play well-known songs written and recorded by other artists. Some cover bands play material from certain decades, such as the 1960s or 1980s. Others focus entirely on the music of a particular group and have come to be known as tribute bands. It’s not uncommon for example to find Pink Floyd or U2 tribute bands. Most cover bands play a wide selection of songs from a diverse set of artists, genres and various decades.

 

Today you’ll be introduced to three local cover bands and learn more about some of the individual artists in each rock group as well as where you can see them perform.

 

Kamelleon Live

 

The first band is from right here in Wellington and its called Kamelleon Live and primarily has a standing engagement at the Cadillac Ranch at the Villages of Gulfstream Park (921 Silks Run Road) in Hallandale Beach. It’s an all American Bar & Grill that has the most talked about mechanical bull in town. You can call for more information about the band or the restaurant, at 954-456-1031. The web address is: http://www.cadillacranchmiami.com/.  Kamelleon Live band members include Robert Schiff, Scott Sander, David Francine, Tammy Welson Smith, and Roderick Kohn. This group can be found on Facebook as Kamelleon- South Florida’s Classic Rock Party Band and can be found at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Kamelleon-South-Floridas-Classic-Rock-Party-Band/124703340890979.  They are able to occasionally offer coupons for a 10% discount on menu items at Cadillac Ranch when you attend a Wednesday night performance from 7-11 PM of Kamelleon Live.

 

Kamelleon Live - (L) Tammy Welson Smith. (R) Dennis Rodman with Tammy Welson Smith.

Kamelleon Live - (L) Tammy Welson Smith. (R) Dennis Rodman with Tammy Welson Smith.

 

 

Lead vocalist Tammy Welson Smith she sat down and answered a few questions for us.

 

 

 

1.       When did the band form and how did you come to be a part of the group?  

I grew up in North Miami Beach and had been performing music and acting throughout high school and college.  When I married in 1993 and moved here to Wellington, I lost touch with all of my friends from that time in my life.

Thanks to Facebook, I reconnected with almost every friend I’ve ever known…an amazing, life-changing experience!  I was delighted to find many of my “arts” friends were still performing.  Robert Schiff (keyboards), who also now lives here in Wellington, brought me in to the band.

 

2.       Do you remember where you played your first gig?

 My first gig with Kamelleon, early this year, was at The Newport Beachside Resort on Sunny Isles, North Miami Beach.  It is an iconic N. Miami Beach hotel, so it was especially a joy to not only be back on stage performing again after all these years, but to be in a place special to my memories.  (As a young teenager, I met Bruce Springsteen in the lobby when he performed in concert at The Sportatorium).

Also, as we were finishing our first gig, Dennis Rodman surprised us by jumping on stage to sing with us!

 

3.       What’s your most requested song?

 “Something” by Pearl Jam, requested by Dennis Rodman!

 

4.       When did you become interested in performing/music?

 As a very little child, I constantly performed (usually for no one) in my living room to my parents Broadway show albums.

 

I first sang professionally from age fourteen with the band “Johnny Milanese and the Interludes” at Turnberry Isle Country Club, The Fontainebleau Hotel, and summers at a dude ranch resort in Lake George, NY.

 

5.       Is the band accepting any new recruits? I mean, if someone wants to join your band, can they; if so, how does someone go about contacting you for more information?

Yes, I’d love to hear from musicians and singers in this area!  Robert Schiff and I have been jamming with other people here locally.  We play classic rock and will be performing at venues like John Bull in West Palm Beach. 

 

Also, my teenage sons, Danny and Jason Smith play lead and bass guitars.  They also want to find teenaged musicians to jam and perform with.

Please write me at tammyw.smith@yahoo.com or find me on Facebook “Tammy Welson Smith.”

 

Young musicians; please find the Facebook group page Palm Beach County Jams and join up with my sons.

 

6.       Please feel free to add anything else.

I have also written a short film “Murder at Upminster K”, which is in the developing stages to be shot and entered in the Delray Beach Film Festival, as well as other exciting performing arts projects under way.

 

The OtherSIDE

 

The next band hails from Boynton Beach and it’s called The OtherSIDE and this group mainly can be seen rockin’ and rollin’ at The Irishmen in Boca Raton, but have also performed at the Havana Hideaway in Lake Worth, the City Pub in Deerfield Beach, private parties, corporate events and even played at the Deerfield Beach Founders Day Festival (it raises money for local charities, school and youth groups, and civic organizations) two years ago and would delighted to perform in Miami.

 

The Other Side band members perform in November of 2009

The Other Side band members perform in November of 2009

 

 

Band members include Greg Moore, Rick Voorhees, Jeffrey Cripe, Jorge Rodriguez-Baz and on lead vocals is Barb Dyer. Here’s a little bit of background information on the band members: 

Greg Moore has played drums in the local Ft. Lauderdale/South Florida area since 1975. Playing since the age of 12 Greg played in his High School marching band, Symphonic band, and Jazz band before joining his first rock band in 1975, Ten Miles High. He played and recorded with local bands Dyamond, Satin Steel, First Run, and East Ocean. His various styles cover many music genres. Greg is presently playing with local rock band The OtherSIDE and is also involved in reuniting ‘Dyamond’ after over 30 years!

 

Rick Voorhees started playing guitar in the sixth grade.  Rick spent a short time in the junior high school jazz band, but left to pursue rock music in bands Pegasus, Black Rose, and later Starliner.  In college, Rick played in the Boston-based original power pop band The Normalz.  Rick’s favorite genre has always been rock music, and he now plays with the classic rock cover band The OtherSIDE.

 

Jeff Cripe was taught to play piano at the age of 5 by his favorite Aunt Rhea.  Never having any formal training, Jeff created his own style being influenced by artists like Dave Brubeck, Billy Joel and Elton John through high school in Chicago.  During that time Jeff played for the not so appropriately named Acapella choir.  One of the most defining moments in his life occurred while playing at this graduation on a grand piano at Orchestra Hall right on Michigan Avenue.  Being totally calm playing where the Chicago Symphony Orchestra plays (well maybe not so calm after knowing 1500 people doing nothing but listening to you!!!) caused Jeff to realize his passion for performing.  College at University of Illinois found him playing at local residence halls by himself or with the JD Club Band (soon banished from renting the practice room at Illinois Residence Hall).  After moving to Florida, Jeff has played with many local bands as the Hippy Cowboys and The Flyers and currently drinks Jack Daniels and rides Harley Davidson motorcycles between gigs with The OtherSIDE.  You may catch him playing open mic nights in Lake Worth or Boynton.

 

 Jorge Rodriguez-Baz has played the guitar since he was a boy in Cuba where his mother used to take him and his brother to different venues to play. In high school and college, he was a drummer for cover bands and seven years ago started playing the bass. Jorge enjoys and plays many types of music from Latin Ballads to Salsa to Country and Rock n Roll.  He is currently the bass player for a local Classic Rock band called The Other SIDE.  Jorge is also a Director in a fortune 500 company in South Florida where the job takes him to many different countries with different cultures enhancing his music diversification. 

 

While Barbara Dyer has focused her career as a procurement manager, a native to Baltimore, Md., she began her part-time singing debut some thirty-five years ago as a lounge singer for the Intercontinental Hotel at BWI Airport. Barbara is the founder of Bella Enterprises and is best known for her “sultry vocal” styles entertaining at restaurants such as Thaikyo and Café L’Europe in Palm Beach. However her breath of vocal ability ranges from rock-n-roll to country, swing to jazz, and R&B to contemporary “pop”, as she currently sings in the Classic Rock-n-Roll cover band, The OtherSIDE. In her current role as a Sr. Commodity Manager for a Fortune 500 company, she has traveled extensively to countries outside the US such as Germany, The Czech Republic, China, Taiwan and Mexico where she has expanded her varied musical talents by experiencing such diverse cultures and music styles.

 

Please contact The Irishmen for more information on upcoming gigs for The OtherSide at 561-368-1129. This Irish Pub is more than a just a neighborhood sports bar that features outstanding cover bands, it serves a tasty outlet for delicious beers such as the outstanding American brew Yuengling draft, and hands down you cannot get a more authentic Shepard’s Pie for miles around. The Irishmen is located at 1745 NW Boca Raton Blvd., and its web site is theirishmenpub.com.

 

The Funkabilly Playboys

 

The third and final group, a band that I’ve seen perform many times is none other than the outstanding Delray Beach group called The Funkabilly Playboys. It’s a full-on-party band hybrid that mainly performs at Boston’s on the Beach in Delray Beach. Band members include . . .

Chuck Farthing  – Bass and Vocals, Michael Vullo – Guitar and Vocals, Scott Henze –Keys, Guitar and Vocals, Tim Kuchta – Drums and Michael “Bongo” Hawn – Percussion and Vocals. Their musical style ranges from Rockabilly to Blues to Louisiana Swamp Funk to Classic Rock to Heavy Metal.

 

The Funkabilly Playboys

The Funkabilly Playboys

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

If you check out the group’s website at www.funkabillyplayboys.com you’ll find more information about this band, each band member, when/where they’ll be performing and you can even subscribe to their mailing list in order to receive an occasional newsletter updating you on the bands performances, and more. And don’t forget to check out the website for Boston’s on the Beach for information on bands scheduled to perform and more, at:  www.bostonsonthebeach.com. Also check out band member Tim Kutchta’s website for more information on all of his work including drum lessons that he offers as well as music samples at, www.timkuchta.com.

 

The Funkabilly Playboys with Mike Hawn (middle) perform at a wedding in Coral Gables

The Funkabilly Playboys with Mike Hawn (middle) perform at a wedding in Coral Gables

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Michael “Bongo” Hawn who is a percussionist and a vocalist for the band took a few minutes to answer some questions for us.

 

1.       When did the band form and how did you come to be a part of the group?

 

The band formed in 1998 and it started as collaboration, my friend Chuck and I had been in a couple different two-piece and three-piece little things, we used to play at the Acapulco Grill and different places around town for happy hour. Then we took a break but we were still in contact with each other and we both had businesses in the same area so we used to meet for lunch once in a while. We had a discussion one day talking about how we were getting an itch to play again and he had this idea of putting together a really good band and I said ‘yeah that sounds good’. One of the local bands we used to see all the time called The Groove Things had broken up and gone their separate ways and the lead singer moved out of town, and we thought they were a really great band that played a different selection of music than most bands played locally. So we wanted to fill the hole and put together a really great band that played really great music - and that’s how it started. We started to put together a list of names of people we wanted (to be in our band) and we got very lucky.

 

2.       Do you remember where you played your first gig?

 

We actually played our first gig at a private party. A friend of ours was having a Halloween/Birthday party for himself as his house and his name was Chuck King and he is a Boca resident and has worked for IBM and is also a writer and is really into minor league baseball. His brother is a minor league baseball player, and we had a really good time. He still shows up at our gigs and we see him from time to time.  {In 2004 Chuck wrote a book called The Funniest Thing I’ve Ever Seen: More than 100 crazy stories from minor league baseball.  You can check out his website at MinorLeagueDugout.com.}

 

3.       What’s your most requested song?

 

Dan Marino with the Funkabilly Playboys members

Dan Marino with the Funkabilly Playboys members

Probably Mustang Sally. But we refuse to play it. This is an example of how we select the songs we play. Our central core as to how we select our songs is that we refuse to play the standard thirty songs that every bar band plays and at the top of that list is Mustang Sally. If you go to our website (www.funkabillyplayboys.com) it explains in detail that the number one rule is NO Mustang Sally. We’ve refused that request probably a hundred times including a request by Dan Marino at his own … well, we’ll just leave it at that, yes – we refused Dan Marino. But there are a lot of things we’ll try. If it’s a decent song and one of us knows it, we can usually (figure) our way through it. Saturday night we had a request for The Monkees. Now, we’ve never played a Monkees song in our lives but guitarist Mike Vullo knew the song pretty well and everybody kinda knows the song and we did I’m a Believer for a woman who was celebrating her forty-ninth birthday.

 

4.       You have a beautiful singing voice and I really enjoy your bongo playing - when did you first become interested in music?

 

My musical career started by accident. I’ve always liked music and in college planned on studying broadcasting and possibly (how to become) a DJ, but the music playing came by accident. I had a friend named Matthew Craig and he and I used to play at the Grill all the time. He’s a guitar player and I used to record him at my house. I had a nice cassette deck and he would come over and write a new song and he’d want to record it, so he could listen to it and work on it some more. We’d record music and one time he came in with a new song that had kind of a different rhythm pattern than usual. He asked me if I would help him by keeping time on a pair of bongos that be brought with him. He wanted me to keep time so he wouldn’t fall off meter and he took that recording and said it turned our really well and he shopped it around looking for a couple gigs. One of the places that he ended up getting hired at right away was the former Blarney Stone, which is now The Duck Tavern (ducktavern.com) on Federal Highway. It was at that first gig where the bar owner said to him, “hey, where is your bongo player?” He heard the bongos on the tape and wanted a bongo player so I was hired the next week as the bongo player for Matthew. We played the Blarney Stone for two or three months in a row. Then we got hired at several other places and ended up having a really long run at the Acapulco Grill back in the day.

 

5.       What does music mean to you? How does it inform your life?

 

First and foremost it’s a way to get out of the house and have some fun and play some music for people who really appreciate it. The pay isn’t too bad but the main reason I do it is to share some fun with some people who seem to enjoy it.

 

6.       Please feel free to add anything else.

 

There’s the whole as aspect as to whether or not you’re going to be signed by a major label or not and why people do what you kinda do.  There are all these younger guys that are trying to write songs and become great big successes either on the radio or on television and now on the Internet. And then there are guys like us who know it’s probably not going to happen for us but we’re trying to have a good time while we’re doing it anyway. There are the serious, serious local musicians and we don’t really travel in the same circles but we have a great appreciation for those who are trying to make it big in the business. We’ve all, each of us in this band, have all known somebody who has gone on to have a major record label deal. Some of them have done well and some of them haven’t. We do a little bit corporate, but not very much, so we’ve done some corporate shows and we’ve done fundraisers and we try to go pro bono work at least a couple times a year because there are a lot of musicians out there who don’t have insurance and when something happens that involves someone we know we try to do a couple pro bono shows a year to help raise money for somebody’s medical expenses or unfortunately in some cases funeral expenses. It’s just one of those things that go along with the territory. Because we come from different backgrounds musically, we’ve all played in different kinds of bands, our network of friends is pretty widespread and if we don’t know every musician, we know somebody who knows every musician here and we’ve been around awhile. We’ve done several fundraisers including one for Dan Marino’s Autism Foundation (www.danmarinofoundation.org).

 

If you’re a fan of The Funkabilly Playboys or if you haven’t seen them perform yet, be sure to check out their upcoming shows:

 

Saturday

September 18th, 2010         9:00pm         Boston’s On The Beach

40 S. Ocean Blvd. (A1A)

Delray Beach, FL 33483

 

Friday

October 1st, 2010     8:00pm ’til 11:00pm   Oakland Park Oktoberfest

Jaco Pastorius Park

Oakland Park, FL 33334

 

Now that you’ve been informed about these three kick-ass local bands, Kamelleon Live, The OtherSIDE and The Funkabilly Playboys, here’s a little sidebar about another group you may want to catch – although they certainly aren’t a local band. If you’re a General Hospital fan and you haven’t heard of the band Port Chuck formed by some of the hottest daytime stars from this show – here’s what you need to know about this awesome group! The band members are comprised of Brandon Barash (Johnny Zacchara), Bradford Anderson (Spinelli), Scott Reeves (Dr. Steven Webber) and Steve Burton (Jason Quartermaine) and you can read all about what these guys are doing on their down time while performing in this new band at, www.portchuck.com. (Many GH fans secretly wish that Rick Springfield and other talented artists currently appearing on the show or from season’s past would make surprise appearances at some of these gigs – including some of the female actors from this long-running soap!)

 

Unfortunately, the group isn’t coming to South Florida, but they’ll be close enough. You can head to any of these locations to see them perform live:

 

 

Nashville, TN | Sept. 8, 2010

Zanies Comedy Club

Tickets: (615) 269-0221 - CALL FOR TICKETS

Wednesday, September 08, 20102025 8th Avenue S.

Showtime: 8:00pm/6:00pm Super VIP-photo, pre seating & more

- General Admission Added (show and Q & A only)

 

Veron Hills, IL | Sept. 9, 2010

Zanies Comedy Club

230 Hawthorn Village

Vernon Hills, IL 60061

Tickets: (847)-549-6030 - CALL FOR TICKETS

Showtime: 7:00 pm/5:00 Super VIP-photo, premium seating & more

- Super VIP, Reduced Prices, & General Admission Added (show and Q & A only)

 

Newtown, CT | Sept. 10, 2010

Treehouse at Edmond Town Hall

45 Main Street

Newtown, CT

Tickets: (203) 268-5857 - CALL FOR TICKETS

Friday, September 10, 2010

Showtime: 7:00 pm/5:00 Super VIP-photo, premium seating & more

 

Levittown, NY | Sept. 11, 2010

Governor’s Comedy Club

90 Division Avenue

Levittown, NY

Tickets: (516) 731-3358 - CALL FOR TICKETS

Saturday, September 11, 2010

Showtime: 2:00pm

- Super VIP, Reduced Prices, & General Admission Added (show and Q & A only)

 

Staten Island, NY | Sept. 12, 2010

Uncle Vinny’s at the Lane Theatre

168 New Dorp Lane

Staten Island, NY 10306

Tickets: (877)-862-5384 - CALL FOR TICKETS

Sunday, September 12, 2010

Showtime: 11:00am/9:00am Super VIP-photo, premium seating & more

- Super VIP, Reduced Prices, & General Admission Added (show and Q & A only)

 

 

One could say that it’s very exciting to discover all these talented groups that it’s ‘music to my ears’,  or better yet, these bands are exactly what you want to hear when you’re looking for a good night on the town.  After all, when you have a chance to listen to music that energizes you and tells stories of love, lost love, sorrow, bliss or brings back memories of special occasions while helping us live our lives to the fullest, these bands of choice are highly recommended for such musical inspiration that will definitely touch the core of your very existence.

 

Marla E. SchwartzA native of Toledo, OH and a graduate of Kent State University, Marla E. Schwartz is a Senior Writer for Miami Living Magazine and is currently a freelance writer for Around Wellington Magazine and Lighthouse Point Magazine. Her photographs have appeared in numerous Ohio publications, as well as in Miami Living, The Miami Herald, The Ft. Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel and The Palm Beach Post. She has had numerous plays published and produced around the country. Her short play, America’s Working? was produced in Los Angeles at both the First Stage and the Lone Star Ensemble theater companies, in Florida at Lynn University and then at an off-Broadway playhouse in NYC. Her piece, The Lunch Time Café, was a finalist for the Heideman Award, Actors Theatre of Louisville. Please check out the re-print of her interview with authors Dave Barry & Ridley Pearson in the upcoming October 2010 issue of Duff Brenna’s ServingHouse: A Journal of Literary Arts at www.servinghousejournal.com. Please feel free to contact her at marlaschwartz@att.net.

 

 

 


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Stars of Showtime’s WEEDS

An Inside View with Demian Bichir and Alexander Gould

By Marla E. Schwartz

 

Demián Bichir is a gentleman in every sense of the word but he certainly doesn’t play one on TV. Demián portrays the dastardly Major of Tijuana, Esteban Reyes, who is the love interest of the lead character Nancy Botwin, played by the effervescent Mary-Louise Parker on the Showtime hit WEEDS. Basically, demiancollage-lighterit’s the story of a woman who gets into financial trouble after the sudden death of her husband and becomes the neighborhood pot dealer in her idyllic community. This highly successful series begins its sixth season at 10 PM EST on Monday, August 16th in which audience members will finally be able to find out the fate of the shows antagonist, Pilar plated by the great Kate del Castillo. In fact, one of the final scenes last season between Nancy, Pilar and Esteban was pure acting gold, and Demián’s take on his character is something that makes the audiences come back for more and more!

 

The extraordinarily-gifted actor laughs a few times as he recalls one particular scene he had with Mary-Louise. This scene involves Nancy telling Esteban that she wants a cut of his next WEEDS shipment and he refuses. He feels she’s breaking the chain of command, the conversation ensues and Nancy gets punished. A spanking takes place. Well, a majorly sexy spanking, that is. It’s obvious that these two actors have chemistry – and in spades.

 

This scene is even a favorite among celebrities. “It’s Benicio Del Toro’s {they appeared together in Steven Soderberg’s two-part film Ché} favorite scene. He was really thrilled by it and a lot of people talk about that scene,” Demián said. “It was really hard to do because we did that scene the first week of work. Every scene I’ve had with her is really great because she takes you to a higher level and invites you to be on the top of your game.” As the spanking scene comes to an end, you can see a sly smile on Esteban’s face – it’s very well done and extremely fun to watch. If you haven’t seen it, you can catch the clip on YouTube at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=igw9Q5-tJ08&feature=related.

 

“I can only say that I’m really lucky because I never really thought about doing TV and when I got the call to read for this role my former girlfriend told me that this isn’t TV, it’s something else,” Demián said. This very wise woman insisted that Demián look into auditioning for the series by saying to him, “It’s really a show that’s well written and the cast is great and you have to watch it.”  He thought about her advice but had his own take on the situation. “I didn’t really want to watch anything because then I thought if I really like it then I’ll be dying to get it.” He went in and auditioned for the part. “After the audition they called me back two days after my first reading to meet with Mary-Louise and to read with her and then I thought I’ve got to do it,” he explained. “As an actor you’re always looking for not only great projects but the possibility to work opposite great, beautiful actors such as Mary-Louise and that was my chance and I’m really lucky that I got it.”

 

Demián is Latin America’s most beloved actor and has made significant inroads into making a mark for himself as an up and coming legendary actor who will no doubt make a significant impact on the American cinema landscape. There’s no doubt that his smoldering good looks combined with his wonderful sense of humor will keep him working for years to come. He’s a renowned stage actor who has appeared in a myriad of modern and classical productions in his home country of Mexico by performing in such plays as A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Richard the III, The Ghost Sonata, Equus, Ah! Wilderness, Broadway Bound and The Odd Couple. In America he has appeared in numerous films such as In the Time of the Butterflies with another breathtaking colleague originating from Mexico, Salma Hayek. Additionally, Demián has received a multitude of awards for his exemplary work.  His talent have brought him a Silver Ariel Award (Mexico’s version of the Oscars), as Best Actor winner for his role in the movie Hasta Morir given by the Mexican Academy of Cinematography and has garnered other prestigious honors and achievements throughout his career, including a Medal of Honor from Mexico City. Some of his other awards and nominations are as follows:

 

Ariel Awards, Mexico

Year

Result

Award

Category

2000

Nominated

Silver Ariel

Best Actor (Mejor Actor)
for: Sex, Shame & Tears

1997

Nominated

Silver Ariel

Best Actor (Mejor Actor)
for: Cilantro y perejil

Best Supporting Actor (Mejor Coactuación Masculina)
for: Luces de la noche

1995

Won

Silver Ariel

Best Actor (Mejor Actor)
for: ‘Til Death

 

MTV Movie Awards, Mexico

Year

Result

Award

Category/Recipient(s)

2003

Won

MTV Movie Award

Best Bichir in a Film (Mejor Bichir en una Película)
for: Don’t Tempt Me

Nominated

MTV Movie Award

Best Bichir in a Film (Mejor Bichir en una Película)
for: Dark Cities

 

Screen Actors Guild Awards

Year

Result

Award

Category/Recipient(s)

2009

Nominated

Actor

Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Comedy Series
for: WEEDS

 

The Bichir side of the family, originally hailing from Lebanon, has made a major impact in the entertainment business in Mexico. His father, Alejandro Bichir is a distinguished theatrical director and his mother Maricuz Nájera and brothers Odiseo and Bruno are all famously notable actors in their own right. In fact, the Mexican “MTV Movie Awards” created a category called El Mejor Bichir en Una Película or Best Bichir in a Film. Demián received the honor.

 

Most recently, Demián wrapped up three films, “The Gardner”, “The Runway” and “Hidalgo”. “The Gardner, with Chris Weitz directing, is my first lead role in a studio movie and I couldn’t have been luckier because the script was fantastic and Chris is absolutely a fantastic director,” Demián said. It has also been reported that Demián is attached to a film about a young Colombian woman named Leona who becomes a powerful gang leader in South Florida. “I heard of this project almost a year ago, but I haven’t heard anything back,” Demián said. “I don’t know if the project is still on.”

 

It would be great to have Demián attached to a film that’s shot in South Florida. “I’ve been to Miami plenty of times,” he said. “I love the architecture along the beach, the great Cuban restaurants, the feel of the city and the people are really great,” he said.

 

There’s no doubt that Demián Bichir will again make an appearance in Miami and while his star continues to rise, you most certainly shouldn’t miss his ride!

 

There’s another prominent actor in WEEDS who also excels at portraying his character. This marvelously talented young man is Alexander Gould, and he portrays Nancy Botwin’s son, Shane Botwin, who happened to be with his father at the time he passed away. His character began as a social misfit who spoke to his dead father similarly to the way a child speaks to an imaginary friend. His mother’s ascension into the drug business slowly affected him in a way that changed his character into a bold human being who not only gets shot but appears to have committed murder in last year’s season finale. Alexander does such a splendid job in this role that he’s sure to have a long career after his role on WEEDS has come to an end.

 

Alexander was nice enough to answer a few questions for AroundWellington.com:

 

QUESTIONS FOR ALEXANDER GOULD

 

AW: Please explain what your character Shane Botwin is like for people who haven’t yet seen the show?

 

ALEX: Shane is a very disturbed character. His dad died when he was young and ever since he has been kind of the moral center of the family but is also slightly immoral himself. His big issue is that he can never quite fit in with anybody else.

 

AW: How old were you when you began working on WEEDS?

 

ALEX: I was ten and never imaged it would turn into what it is today.

 

AW: How old are you today?Alex Gould collage

 

ALEX: Sixteen.

 

AW: Are you driving yet?

 

ALEX: Yah. I get my license at the end of the month.

 

AW: Congratulations.

 

ALEX: Thank you.

 

AW: You probably made enough money to buy your own car, but are you allowed to buy your own car?

 

ALEX: I’m going to buy one, yah.

 

AW: Do you have a favorite scene from last season?

 

ALEX: A few of the scenes I was in with a couple of girl characters who I had some activity with and they were my favorite scenes to act out obviously because they were very risqué. But I really loved doing scenes with the girl characters because they were so great to work with and the actresses were really fun and it was fun to have someone my age on the set for a change.

 

AW: Have you finished shooting the current season or what is your schedule like?

 

ALEX: We’re in the last four episodes of the season. I’ve been working consistently almost every day and it has been a great season and I’m really looking forward to it. I think it’s going to be one of the best one’s yet!

 

AW: What does Shane think of Esteban?

 

ALEX: At the beginning, when they first met, it was kind of a bitter standoff and he was at odds against Esteban because he was a new kind of father figure. And near the end of last season I think that they talked and because Shane was living with him for so long they became kind of friendly with each other and they were at a good place when we left them.

 

AW: The news is always reporting about how difficult it is for child stars to make the transition into adulthood and continue their careers, is this something you think about in terms of your own life?

 

ALEX: Definitely. I’ve been struggling because I really want to go to college and that’s coming up in a couple years and it’s hard to continue acting while I’m in college. One good thing is that I’m not coming from a young child’s place. I’m coming from WEEDS which is a very adult show and that can transfer over to acting as an adult a lot easier than say coming from something that portrays me more as a child.

 

AW: Do you want to continue in the entertainment business when you graduate from college?

 

ALEX: I definitely do. I love doing it and I don’t see myself doing anything else.

 

AW: Can you recall your most memorable scene so far in WEEDS or would you say it’s the same as your favorite scene?

 

ALEX: There are two. The scene that I think was in the second season where Uncle Andy is teaching Shane about masturbation. It’s memorable because the context was so weird and that’s the most watched WEEDS clip on YouTube. And the other one would be the scene last season when where I whack Pilar in the head with the mallet. That is probably one of my most favorite scenes to watch. It was such a fun kind of scene (to do) because I’m not a violent person by nature.

 

AW: Was it a hard scene to shoot? Did you have to rehearse it a lot?

 

ALEX: I did have to rehearse it a lot because at first I was very uncomfortable swinging the mallet. It was padded in rubber so it wasn’t actually going to hurt her.

 

AW: Do you have any advice for children who want to act?

 

ALEX: Keep doing what you’re doing and don’t be afraid to give it your all because I mean with WEEDS I’ve given it my all and there’s a lot of stuff I haven’t been comfortable doing, but you can’t be afraid to get going and do it and give it your all - as opposed to holding back.

 

AW: Is there anything you’d like to add that I haven’t asked you?

 

ALEX: I don’t think so. We’ve pretty much covered it all.

 

Thank you very much, Alex Gould!

 

Bravo to both Demián and Alex! May their stars shine brightly for many years to come.

 

 

Marla E. SchwartzA native of Toledo, OH and a graduate of Kent State, Marla E. Schwartz is a Senior Writer for Miami Living Magazine and is also a freelance writer for Lighthouse Point Magazine. Her photographs have appeared in numerous Ohio publications, as well as in Miami Living, The Miami Herald, The Ft. Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel and The Palm Beach Post. She has had numerous plays published and produced around the country. Her short play, America’s Working? was produced in Los Angeles at both the First Stage and the Lone Star Ensemble Theater companies, in Florida at Lynn University and then at an off-Broadway playhouse in NYC. Her piece, The Lunch Time Café, was a finalist for the Heideman Award, Actors Theatre of Louisville. Feel free to contact her at: meschwartz1@hotmail.com.

 

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Grilled Salmon

Prep: 10 min./ Cook: 15 min.

Ingredients125222-grilledsalmon

  • 2 pounds salmon fillets
  • 1/2 cup vegetable oil
  • 1/2 cup lemon juice
  • 4 green onions, thinly sliced
  • 3 tablespoons minced fresh parsley
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons minced fresh rosemary
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1/8 teaspoon pepper

Directions

1.                        Place salmon in shallow dish. Combine remaining ingredients and mix well. Set aside 1/4 cup for basting; pour the rest over the salmon. Cover and refrigerate for 30 minutes. Drain, discarding marinade. Grill salmon over medium coals, skin side down, for 15-20 minutes or until fish flakes easily with a fork. Baste occasionally with reserved marinade. Serves 4.

Grilled Vegetables with Couscous

Prep Time: 20 Min./ Cook Time: 15 Min.

Ingredients259748-grilledveggies

  • 1 tablespoon olive oil
  • 1 red bell pepper
  • 1 zucchini
  • 1 small eggplant
  • 1 large sweet onion
  • 3/4 cup frozen broad beans
  • 1 (14.5 ounce) can diced tomatoes
  • 2 tablespoons balsamic vinegar
  • 1 cup couscous
  • 1 cup vegetable stock

Directions

1.                        Remove the seeds from the pepper, and chop into strips about 1 to 2 inches long. Cut the eggplant crossways into rounds about 1/3 to 1/2 inch thick, and cut each one into 6 to 8 even chunks. Peel the onion, and chop into 8 portions. Trim the zucchini, and cut into thick slices.

2.                        Heat grill pan over a high heat with a generous splash of olive oil. When it is very hot, add all the vegetables to the pan. Press down occasionally to get grill lines across them. Turn occasionally to prevent burning. Cook for about 15 minutes, or until the vegetables are evenly browned and cooked through.

3.                        Stir broad beans into the vegetables. Add chopped tomatoes, and vinegar. Simmer for a few minutes while the couscous is prepared.

4.                        Place couscous into a medium bowl. Add boiling vegetable stock, and stir with a fork. Keep lifting the couscous occasionally to prevent it sticking. It only takes 2 to 3 minutes to become soft. Place couscous in a large bowl or serving platter, and serve the vegetables on top. Serves 4.

Red, White & Blue Refresher

 

Ingredients122695-redwhiteblue

  • 1 quart pineapple or lemon sherbet
  • 1 cup sliced fresh strawberries
  • 1/2 cup blueberries
  • 1/2 cup white grape juice or white wine

Directions

·          Divide the sherbet between four dessert cups or bowls. Top with the berries and grape juice.

 

Thanks to www.allrecipes.com for these yummy summer recipes.


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Cultural Corner

 

Summertime, a Time for Great Books

 

By Marla E. Schwartz

 

There’s no doubt that summertime in Florida is literally just as scorching to our outsides as well as it is to our insides. It’s easy to find a way to cool down on the outside, you can jump in a pool or stay in the air conditioning - but cooling down on the inside is another matter. So when you’re sipping on a tall glass of cold water or something a bit harder, keep in mind that summer reading is every bit as indispensable to sustain us during these seemingly endless sweltering days. There are multitudes of authors and books to choose from but this list focuses on work by Floridians or books that engage Florida in their plot twists.

 

If you belong to a book club where monthly selections are suggested ahead of time, that’s terrific. If not, check out some of the following local groups. The Readers’ Lane Book Club (www.readerslane.net) has locations in Miramar and Pembroke Pines. Miami’s Euphoria Book Club members try to focus on themes dealing with African-American women; to enroll email Patricia at euphoriabookclub@yahoo.com. You can also join JORKOR (Coming Together) a book club for women living in Miami and Ft. Lauderdale. This club focuses on social and political books affecting the lives of women of color. Contact woc_bookclub@hotmail.com for more information. And in Palm Beach County, check out the Spanish River Book Club. This group recently featured guest authors (who live in Boca Raton and were featured in last month’s issue of AW), Deborah and Joel Shlian where they answered questions about their fourth novel Rabbit in the Moon. You can get more information about the Shlian’s at, www.shlian.com, and if you’re interested in joining this book club, send an email to, spanishriverbookclub@yahoo.com. This group is discussing the book House Rules in August.

 

And it goes without saying that reading in the summertime begs a visit to Key West for its annual Hemingway Days Festival. The festival takes place July 20-25th and celebrates all that surrounds the great literary genius of Ernest Hemingway and the ever-lasting affect his presence has had on this Florida city. The most well-known event highlighting the festival is the Sloppy Joe’s Hemingway Look-Alike Contest where gentlemen from come far and near to compete for the exalted title of looking like the man whose zest for life seems incomparable to many of us. Other exciting events surrounding the celebration of Hemingway’s memory include the gathered Papas as they compete in the ‘Running of the Bulls’ tribute on Saturday afternoon, a three-day marlin tournament, daily tours of Hemingway’s house, the Sloppy Joe’s Arm Wrestling Contest and a Caribbean street fair.

 

The literary highlight of the festival is the Lorian Hemingway Short Story Competition. Lorian, the author’s granddaughter (and herself a celebrated author, memoirist and nature writer), announces the winners at this event which takes places at Casa Antigua, 314 Simonton Street, which is where the original Papa stayed during his first trip to Key West. Go to HemingwayDays.Org for further information. This years’ festival is commemorating the 110th anniversary of Ernest’s July 21st birth. And it turns out that the Spanish-Colonial home at 907 Whitehead Street where Hemingway lived wasn’t named an official Literary Landmark until this past March. Hemingway aficionados would most certainly had hoped this would’ve happened years ago, and some swear of course, it had happened a long time ago, but finally this home, where the author lived for nine years, the most prolific of his writing life, has been given this honor, making it the eighth literary landmark in Key West, including the former home of Tennessee Williams.

 

It just so happens that Lorian’s brother John Hemingway recently published his poignant memoir Strange Tribe: A Family Memoir. John was born in Miami, and currently lives in Montreal, Canada. He attended UCLA and eventually moved to Italy to pursue his own writing career. Lorain wrote about her father, Dr. Gregory (Gloria) Hemingway in her 1999 book Walk on Water: A Memoir and John appeared at the 2009 Miami Book Fair International in order to speak about his current tome, which speaks volumes about what it was like for him growing up in both Florida and Montana with a schizophrenic mother and a bipolar, cross-dressing father who ultimately had a sex-change. The book examines the difficulties in life that both his father and grandfather experienced. (Let’s cross our fingers that this marvelously talented and very kind man finds his way back to South FL!) The book portrays the comparisons and struggles that his father and grandfather had and how similar they really were.

 

“It was after my dad had just died and I was traveling from Milan, where I lived, to Miami for his funeral. The stewardess on the flight was handing out copies of the local paper, Il Corriere della Sera, and on the front page there was an article about my dad written by their NY correspondent,” John said. “She was calling my dad’s death in the woman’s ward of the Miami Dade County Women’s correctional facility a “disgrace” to the image of my grandfather and saying that there could be no connection between the two. At the time I hadn’t started to do the research for my book, Strange Tribe, but I remember thinking that this woman didn’t know what the hell she was talking about! I knew that there was a much deeper connection between these two than either the general public or scholars were aware of. It was then that, subconsciously at least, I knew that I would have to write this book.”

 

John is currently working on a collection of short stories. “I’ve already published three of them and I hope to have about ten or fifteen when I’m finished, perhaps this fall,” he said. “I don’t have a title for this collection. I usually think of a title when I’m finished writing.” What is he reading right now? “I highly recommend Jeff Lindsay, he’s a great writer and also family - married as he is to Hilary Hemingway, one of my cousins,” he said.

 

Authors residing in the state of Florida

 

Jane Alison: The Sisters Antipodes (2009) {Mariner Books, part of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, released the book in paperback this past April}; Natives and Exotics (2005); The Marriage of the Sea (2003); The Love-Artist (2001).

 

Jane, originally from Canberra, Australia is an Assistant Professor in the English Department at the University of Miami and lives in South Beach. Her deeply affecting memoir The Sisters Antipodes is about two families with similar lives that meet, tear each other apart and rebuild. Jane is currently working on her fifth book. “So far it’s untitled, but it’s inspired by the obsession that world-renowned modernist architect Le Corbusier had with fellow designer Eileen Gray. I expect it to be completed within the year.”

 

Liz Balmaseda: Sweet Mary (2009) {Released June 2010 in Paperback}; Waking Up in America (1999) {with Pedro Jose Greer, Jr}; I Am My Father’s Daughter (2007) {with Maria Elena Salinas}.

 

This Cuban born woman is a resident of Miami and is a former columnist for The Miami Herald and a journalist for The Palm Beach Post. She has received two Pulitzer Prizes, the first in 1993 for her commentary on the plight of Haitian refugees and the Cuban-American population, her second in 2001 for reporting on the federal raid involving the refugee boy Elián González. She recently was honored with the Hispanic Heritage Award in writing excellence at the Kennedy Center in our nation’s capital. Her novel Sweet Mary is based on a true story about the life of fictional Miamian Mary Guevara who is erroneously accused of being a cocaine queen and how she seeks justice by searching for the real culprit. Last summer Gloria Estefan (Andy Garcia was in the house) hosted a party at the Eden Roc to celebrate the release of Liz’s debut novel. And now that it’s released in paperback, it’s a perfect choice for your summer bookshelf.

 

Edna Buchanan: Legally Dead (2008); Love Kills (2007); Carr: Five Years of Rape and Murder (1979); The Corpse Had a Familiar Face: Covering Miami, America’s Hottest Beat (1991); Never Let Them See You Cry: More from Miami, America’s Hottest Beat (1992); Vice: Life and Death on the Streets of Miami (1992).

 

Born in Paterson, NJ and a Miami resident for years, Edna is a celebrated American mystery writer of seventeen novels and a Pulitzer Prize winning journalist. Her most recent novel Legally Dead has just been released in paperback and is about the life of U.S. Deputy Marshall Michael Venturi as he attempts to transport a mobster into the Federal Witness Protection Program. The mobster commits an armored car robbery, and Venturi’s life is forever changed as he tries to make his way out of this mess. He hopes an old friend in Florida can help him out.

 

Joy Fielding: The Wild Zone (February 2010); Still Life (2009); Charley’s Web (2008).

 

Joy resides in both Toronto and Palm Beach, FL and is the highly successful author of nineteen novels, seven of them taking place in Florida, including her most recently published book The Wild Zone. It revolves around the lives of two brothers who are enjoying a night out at their favorite South Beach bar. They see a woman drinking alone and place a bet on which one of them will be able to seduce her. The story soon takes a treacherous turn. You can also turn to her 2008 novel Charley’s Web for more Florida intrigue. Charley is a popular columnist for the Palm Beach Post who becomes unwittingly becomes involved in a mystery where she is placed in a situation in which she must save her son who is being targeted by a convicted child killer.

 

Carl Hiaasen: Star Island (July 27 2010); Scat (2009); Nature Girl (2006); Paradise Screwed (published in 2001, June 2009, new edition); Kick Ass (1999, 10th Anniversary Edition now available).

 

Carl, who was born in Plantation and lives in Miami has set all of his books in Florida. His name is most recognizable as the author of Strip Tease that was subsequently turned into a movie starring Demi Moore and Burt Reynolds. His new book Star Island is about a slightly competent, unmanageable pop-singer who is hounded by the paparazzo. He began writing for The Miami Herald in 1976 and you can check out his regular column at, http://www.miamiherald.com/424/index.html where he’s recently written about the BP oil spill and more. The majority of his novels have been classified as environmental thrillers and he and his wife are very active in community/charity events and have made great progress in altering people to environment concerns in the state of Florida. In 2008 his bestseller Lucky You was adapted for the stage, with music written by Loudon Wainright III and premiered at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe. In addition to writing, Hiaasen also does speaking engagements and lectures. For more information go to, www.carlhiaasen.com.

 

Stephen King: Blockade Billy (April 2010); The Talisman: Vol. 1: The Road of Trials (May 2010); American Vampire Vol. 1 (March 2010), Full Dark, No Stars (Nov. 2010); Ur (2010); Under the Dome (2009); Stephen King Goes To The Movies (2009); Road Rage (2009); Duma Key (2008).

 

Stephen King is famous for his remarkably prolific output of the most exceptional horror stories ever written situated in his home state of Maine. He has penned more than fifty internationally bestselling books. He and his wife Tabitha reside in Bangor during the summer and spend the remainder of their time in Sarasota, Florida. They have three children, and one of them, their daughter Naomi, is a permanent resident of Florida, making her home in Plantation, where she is a minister for the Unitarian Universalist Church of River of Grass. Stephen’s most recent novel Blockade Billy is about William Blakely, one of the greatest baseball players of all time, whose name has been mysteriously expunged from the record books. Stephen’s book The Talisman: Vol. 1: The Road of Trials, co-written with Peter Straub is a graphic novel about thirteen-year-old Jack Sawyer’s journey to find the magical Talisman that holds the secret to saving his mother’s life. King’s American Vampire Vol. 1 is the first in a new graphic novel series in which he’ll co-author the first five books with Scott Snyder. The main character is a feral vampire whose story stretches from the wild west through America’s ascension into a superpower. King’s novel Duma Key mostly takes places on this fictional reef located near Sarasota. The story revolves around Edgar Freemantle who is in a construction accident and moves to Duma Key when he inexplicably begins to create dreamlike paintings that predict the future.

 

Jeff Lindsay: Dexter is Delicious (Hardback, September 2010/Paperback, August 2011); Dexter by Design (2008); Dexter Omnibus (2008); Dexter in the Dark (2007); Dearly Devoted Dexter (2005); Darkly Dreaming Dexter (2004).

 

This extraordinary writer was born and raised in Miami and follows a highly regulated daily writing schedule at his home office in Cape Coral, FL where he lives with wife, Hilary Hemingway and their three children. Jeff’s first book in his deftly created Dexter series is Darkly Dreaming Dexter and is the basis for Showtime’s number one rated series, Dexter. The marvelous actor who brings Dexter to life is the mesmerizing Michael C. Hall, who portrayed David Fisher on the hit HBO drama, Six Feet Under. Jeff created the very first ‘loveable’ serial killer in the history of literature in his character of sociopathic vigilante Dexter Morgan. His book Dexter by Design debuted at #8 on the New York Times Bestseller List last September. And for all you fans who cannot get enough of Lindsay’s work, don’t worry, there’s more to come! “The book I’m finishing now is about cannibalism, called Dexter is Delicious. That’s one of my favorite titles,” Jeff said. “I was recently in Australia (on a book tour for Dexter by Design which was released in Australia in February 2009) and they’re crazy about him and want him to visit Australia. So I thought that Dexter Down Under would be a good title.” If you’re lucky, you can catch Lindsay at future book fairs or during his many visits to Miami at Books and Books in Coral Gables.

 

Brad Meltzer: The Inner Circle (January 2011); Heroes for My Son (May 2010); The Book of Lies (2008); The Book of Fate (2006).

 

Brad grew up in Brooklyn, NY but moved to South Florida when he was still a youngster and attended N. Miami Beach Senior High School. This down-to-earth man is the #1 New York Times best-selling author of The Book of Fate, as well as the bestsellers The Tenth Justice, Dead Even, The First Counsel, The Millionaires, The Zero Game, and The Book of Lies. He lives with his wife Cori and their three children right in our own backyard of Aventura where he scooped ice cream for four years at the Haagen Dazs in Aventura Mall and where he’s now known for coaching Little League games in which his children participate. You’ll have to wait a few more months to read his next thriller, so if you haven’t yet read his book Heroes for My Son, it’s a must read for inclusion in your summer reading list. I highly recommend you check out these websites for this book, heroesformyson.com/the-book, www.facebook.com/HeroesforMySon, and make sure to send out your own ‘Heroes’ video he has created to the special people in your life. This book makes a perfect gift for anyone with an upcoming special celebration. The idea for writing this book took came to Brad a number of years ago. “It began the night my first son was born. I was stuck at a red light, and I remember looking up at the black sky and thinking of this baby boy we were just blessed with,” he explained. “That’s when I asked myself this question for the very first time: what kind of man did I want my son to be? The book was just a list of silly platitudes until a friend of mine told me this story about the Wright Brothers. Every day Orville and Wilbur Wright went out to fly their plane and they’d bring enough materials for multiple crashes. That way, when they crashed, they could rebuild the plane and try again. Think about it a moment: every time they went out every time - they knew they were going to fail. But that’s what they did: Crash and rebuild. Crash and rebuild. And that’s why they finally took off. I loved that story. And that’s the kind of story I wanted my son to hear: a story that wouldn’t lecture to him, but would show him that if he was determined…if he wasn’t afraid to fail…if he had persistence the impossible becomes possible. Since that time, I’ve been collecting heroes for this book, which has been one of the most rewarding projects of my life.” Make sure you go to Brad’s website and read his blog because this is where he encourages people to send him list of their heroes. “If you have one, please send him or her along,” he insists. “I have a daughter and I’ve been working on her (book of heroes) ever since the day she was born,” Brad said. “And she asks everyday, ‘where’s my book?’ So Heroes For My Daughter is coming soon.” Brad’s website is: www.bradmeltzer.com.

 

James Paterson: Cross Fire (November 2010); Battle for Shadowland (October 2010);  Don’t Blink (September 2010); The Postcard Killers (August 2010); Demons and Druids (July 2010); Private (June 2010); 9th Judgment (April 2010); Fang (March 2010); Worst Case (February 2010).

 

James was born in Newburgh, New York but lives in Palm Beach with his family. He has written sixty-five novels in thirty-three years, has had nineteen consecutive #1 New York Times bestselling novels and holds the New York Times record for most Hardcover Fiction bestselling titles by a single author (48 total), which is also a Guinness World Record. He’s most known for his Alex Cross and Maximum Ride series. His two summer releases, Demons and Druids and The Postcard Killers will no doubt thrill all his fans. Demons and Druids is the third book in his Daniel X Series in which the young protagonist finds himself with a secret power that creates objects out of thin air. The Postcard Killers, co-authored with Swedish writer Liza Marklund is a crime novel about a young American couple murdered while vacationing in Europe. For more information go to www.jamespaterson.com.

 

Authors that include South Florida in their books.

 

Betsy Carter: The Puzzle King (2009); Nothing To Fall Back On (2008); Swim to Me (2007); The Orange Blossom Special (2005).

 

Although Betsy was born and currently resides in NYC, she spent her formative years in Miami. Because she was exposed to the colors, unique splendor and unusual qualities (Seminole Indians wrestling alligators behind gas stations) that make this city so combustible she has written about Florida in all of her books, except her most recent one, The Puzzle King. This historical novel takes place in New York and Kaiserlautern, a small town in Germany. Her official website for the book, www.betsycarter.net, includes a Q & A with the author in which she discusses why she didn’t include Florida in this book and where she came up with the idea for it. “The story of The Puzzle King has been kicking around all of my live,” she said. “It’s based on the history and mythology of my family. My parents were German Jews who narrowly escaped Hitler through the heroic efforts of my great aunt and uncle.” She thought her great uncle Morris Einson, whom the character of Simon Phelps in the novel is loosely based upon, invented monopoly, but discovered he really made his fortune, enabling him to save the lives of her parents and others, by creating jigsaw puzzles out of cardboard. But just because Florida isn’t a main theme in this book, is certainly is mentioned in the book when the character of Seema, trying to cover up the fact that her boyfriend is married, and lies to her family, telling them that she and her boyfriend were spending time in either Havana or Florida. And once you’ve devoured this historical novel, make sure you read her other books. Her memoir, Nothing To Fall Back On was a national bestseller; Swim to Me is a whacky and fun story about a young girl named Delores Walker who leaves the Bronx for Weeki Wachee Springs, Florida and becomes the featured mermaid in an underwater show, and The Orange Blossom Special spans twenty-years, beginning in 1958 when widowed Tessie Lockhart decides to leave Carbondale, Illinois and reserves two seats, one for herself and the other for her teenage daughter Dinah, on a passenger train to Gainesville, Florida. Betsy is a contributing editor of O: The Oprah Magazine and writes for Good Housekeeping, New York, and AARP and has been an editor at Esquire, Newsweek, Harper’s Bazaar and was the founding editor of New York Woman.

 

Patricia Cornwell: “Kay Scarpetta” series Book of the Dead (2007), Scarpetta (2008), The Scarpetta Factor (Released October 2009); “At Risk / Win Garano” series - At Risk (2006) {originally a serialization for The New York Times} debuted on the Lifetime Channel April 10, 2010 and The Front (2008) which was also adapted to television on the Lifetime Channel on April 17, 2010.

 

Cornwell, crime novelist extraordinaire, was born in Miami and currently lives in Massachusetts. Her series of novels featuring medical examiner Kay Scarpetta basically takes this character from her home in Florida to Virginia, back in Florida, returning to Virginia, moving back to Florida taking a job as the head of the National Forensic Academy in Hollywood then relocating to Charleston, South Carolina, then moving to Massachusetts and now in The Scarpetta Factor is working in NYC. She’s currently a senior forensic analyst for CNN and her boss creates a TV show called The Scarpetta Factor. It’s about Kay’s so-called mythical ability to solve her cases. Cornwell recently spoke privately with Angelina Jolie to discuss writing a film script as a vehicle for this Academy-Award winning actress to star in where she’ll portray Scarpetta for the big screen. For more information go to www.patriciacornwell.com.

 

For those book lovers looking for more to read once summer is over, the next Miami Book Fair International takes place November 14-21 at Miami Dade College. Many of the author’s in this summer reading series appeared at last year’s (or previous ones) fair, but confirmed authors for this year’s highly anticipated literary extravaganza haven’t been announced yet. This information will ultimately be accessible at www.miamibookfair.com.

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Marla E. SchwartzA native of Toledo, OH and a graduate of Kent State, Marla E. Schwartz is a Senior Writer for Miami Living Magazine and is also freelance writer for Lighthouse Point Magazine. Her photographs have appeared in numerous Ohio publications, as well as in Miami Living, The Miami Herald, The Ft. Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel and The Palm Beach Post. She has had numerous plays published and produced around the country.  Her short play, America’s Working? was produced in Los Angeles at both the First Stage and the Lone Star Ensemble Theater companies, in Florida at Lynn University and then at an off-Broadway playhouse in NYC. Her piece, The Lunch Time Café, was a finalist for the Heideman Award, Actors Theatre of Louisville. Feel free to contact her at: meschwartz1@hotmail.com.


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