Susanna Wickham, Alexis and Paula Fasseas and Suzanne LeMignot.
It was a night of tail-wagging fun for the nearly 700 guests at PAWS Chicago's 17th annual Animal Magnetism party at Morgan Manufacturing. Partygoers, many with pups in tow, arrived at this popular venue in the West Loop to raise
Sylvia Perez and daughter Magali Blasdell.
funds for PAWS Chicago, the Midwest's largest no-kill shelter. Held on April 28, the event was hosted by PAWS Chicago's Professional Board and presented by Becker’s Healthcare. Co-chairs were Sarah Atkinson, Brittany Keegan and Paige Krueger. Many guests arrived with their dogs dressed in full party mode wearing frilly dresses, sunglasses,
Susanna Wickham, PAWS Chicago CEO, with adoptable dog.
tuxes and more to enjoy an evening that included a VIP dinner sponsored by Avli (Chef Nikolaos Kapernaros), dancing, a silent auction and raffle, and an award presentation. A lavish buffet was served by some of the city’s top chefs, including Cristiano Bassani (Gene & Georgetti), and so many others. Partygoers could have some fun posing on the
Avli (VIP dinner sponsor) Chef Nikolaos Kapernaros.
“glambot pup-parazzi” pedestal (hosted by PetCon and The Dog Agency) and get an illustration of their pets from well-known artists onsite. Canine guests relaxed in doggie daycare and the “pampered pooch” station and enjoyed custom buffets. Jake Hamilton (of Fox-32) and Fred (Kiss-FM) served as the evening’s emcees. CEO Susanna Wickham welcomed guests and announced the presentation of the adoptable dogs showcase and
Chuck Jordan, Chris Wickham and Gus!
the Animal Welfare Leadership Awards, a special recognition for members of the community who have gone above and beyond for animals in need. Susanna, along with co-founders Paula and Alexis Fasseas, presented the awards as the emcees shared the recipients’ remarkable stories. Suzanne LeMignot (CBS-2
Phil Brooks (aka CM Punk) was an honoree.
weekend morning anchor) was the first award recipient. She has been involved with PAWS Chicago since the very beginning, going door-to-door with Paula helping start the first humane education program in the Chicago Public School system. She would take her pit bull mix, Pixie, to school assemblies to show kids that dogs are not violent, as they might have previously learned from experiencing dog fights in their neighborhood. She now sits on PAWS Chicago’s Board of Directors
Emcees Jake Hamilton and Fred (KISS-FM).
and continues to help homeless dogs and cats each week through the PAWS Pet of the Week segment, which started in the 1990s, and still airs on CBS 2 to this day. The next award recipient, Phil Brooks, aka CM Punk (professional wrestler, actor, and author), adopted his first PAWS dog in 2015 with his
Co-chairs Paige Krueger and Sarah Atkinson.
wife AJ Mendez. Larry was a misfit dog with a scruffy look, tough underbite and a personality that required a special adopter willing to work through his challenges. In 2017, Phil brought national attention to the cause by choosing PAWS Chicago as his charity when he was a contestant on MTV’s “The Challenge: Champs vs. Pros, “ and in 2021, he partnered
Co-chair Brittany Keegan.
with PAWS to tell his story about the transformation possible once a misunderstood dog finds the right home. He and Larry became the face of the “Underdog to Wonderdog” campaign to bring much-needed awareness to forgotten dogs and inspire people to consider adopting an overlooked pet. Dr. Aaron Jackson, a
Honorees Dr. Aaron Johnson, Dr. Paula Zdziarski-West, Phil Brooks (CM Punk), Suzanne Le Mignot, and Eileen Johnson.
veterinarian surgeon who focuses on orthopedic cases, was the next honoree. He was the very first Medical Director of MedVet and has performed more than 15,000 surgeries over the course of his career. He volunteers his time to perform these types of surgeries at the PAWS Medical Center, providing care for some of the most difficult cases that come through their doors. Dr. Jackson has also established an orthopedic program at PAWS, while mentoring future generations of surgeons to continue this important work. He advanced
Judy and Howard Tullman, longtime supporters/board members.
surgical care to animals that would never have had the
PAWS dog anyone?
opportunity to recover. The next award recipient was Dr. Paula Zdziarski-West, also a veterinary surgeon who has helped so many PAWS pets get their second chance at life. She finds surgery to be a rewarding specialty because she can literally fix problems, returning function to animals who would otherwise be disabled, or save an animal with a life-threatening illness or injury. Since starting her volunteer work in 2022, providing orthopedic surgeries to PAWS Chicago, Dr. West has performed and saved PAWS more than $60,000. Last, but not least, the final award recipient was
Cute partygoers.
Eileen Johnson, a PAWS volunteer since 2015. To date, she has put in nearly 3,800 hours. As a volunteer, Eileen has washed
Gene & Georgetti executive chef Cristiano Bassani.
thousands of dishes, done hundreds of loads of laundry, and of course, given love and enrichment to the dogs and cats. Over the last three years, she has driven over 36,000 miles traveling with the PAWS Chicago intake team, driving multiple trips to disaster areas to clear shelters, allowing lost animals an opportunity to be found by their owners, and saving thousands of those lives who were already up from adoption. Following the program, guests enjoyed dancing, dessert tasting stations, a glow bar and a photo booth. Since PAWS Chicago’s founding in 1998, over 76,000 pets have found forever homes. (pawschicago.org)
Glam partygoers Stephanie Andre, Melissa Canning (PAWS Board Development Board Chair), Helan Kalantzis, Lori Paris and Shanna Nikolic.
Game show fun with Chicago White Sox players at the Beyond the Diamond fundraiser.
The Chicago White Sox hosted its signature fundraiser, Beyond the Diamond, presented by Peoples Gas and Wintrust, in Navy Pier’s Aon Grand Ballroom on April 19. Fans and friends of the organization came together for a gala evening of entertainment benefiting Chicago White Sox Charities (CWSC). White Sox players, coaches,
White Sox Charities ED Christine O'Reilly.
broadcasters and alumni attended the evening celebration to raise funds for youth baseball initiatives supported by CWSC. The evening began with an hour-long First Pitch Reception, presented by Modelo, followed by remarks from White Sox manager Pedro Grifol and White Sox Charities executive director Christine O’Reilly. Attendees enjoyed guest
ACE athlete Sir Jamison Jones.
appearances from fan-favorite White Sox stars and a Family Feud-style game show with players from the 2023 roster hosted by play-by-play broadcaster Jason Benetti. The game included the “Cease Family” – Dylan Cease, Andrew Vaughn, Andrew Benintendi, Gavin Sheets and Romy Gonzalez. And the “Giolito Family” – Lucas Giolito, Seby Zavala, Jimmy Lambert, Eloy
Young athletes in White Sox ACE initiatives.
Jimenez and Jake Burger. Additional highlights included a Q&A with athletes from the CWSC-supported White Sox Amateur City Elite (ACE) program and Team Teflon, a Black-owned travel youth softball program, and a conversation with White Sox ACE athlete Raised in Chicago’s Englewood neighborhood, catcher Sir Jamison Jones has been a member of the White Sox Amateur City Elite (ACE) program since 2017. The St. Rita High School junior is committed to Illinois State and has attended top MLB events, including the Breakthrough and Dream Series, Hank Aaron Invitational, MLB States Play and Area Code Team, where he was selected to compete by the White Sox scouting department. Jones had breakout performances at both the “A Dream Fulfilled” game at the MLB at Field of Dreams game in Dyersville, as well as the RBI Junior World Series, where he helped the organization win its fifth championship in Vero Beach, Fla. The gala concluded with attendees enjoying an Extra Inning Celebration, presented by NBC Sports Chicago. (whitesoxcharities.org)
With Nick Pullia, Greg Cameron (The Joffrey Ballet president- CEO) and Chuck Jordan. (Photo by Sean@PurplePhoto.com)
Stormy skies and traffic jams didn’t keep The Joffrey Ballet’s supporters away from opening night of “The Little Mermaid.” In fact, it was a full house, filled with anticipation before the 2.5 hour performance of
Victoria Jaiani as The Little Mermaid, Anais Bueno, Dylan Gutierrez and Stefan Goncalvez. (Photo by Cheryl Mann)
this hauntingly beautiful ballet that combined breathtaking dance with the heart-breaking story by Hans Christian Anderson. John Neumeier, longtime director and choreographer of the Hamburg Ballet, brought this story
Ken Norgan with choreographer John Neumeier.
to life through exuberant contemporary choreography, stark but effective scenery and unique costuming. And, although “The Little Mermaid” is probably better known from Disney’s 1989 animated version, do not expect any similarities. Neumeier’s production is more in keeping with the original dark fairytale from 1837. The ballet is
Young ballerina/fans before the performance.
the story of a mermaid who longs for love and desires to be human but, just as in life, we don't always get what we want. The Mermaid's story is one of pain and loss superbly performed by Victoria Jaiani, dancing the role of a lifetime. Her moves,
Artistic Director Ashley Wheater with Nichelle and William Mayberry.
mostly done while trailing voluminous material behind her as fins, was riveting to watch. She is as much a great actor as she is a superb dancer. This difficult performance calls on skills we’ve not seen before and that seem appropriately, almost inhuman. She completely inhabits the role of the Little Mermaid and
The Joffrey Ballet's Brian Smith with Pam Crutchfield and Dawn Stanislaw.
loses herself in the character before our very eyes. She’s onstage for nearly the entire ballet, demonstrating yet again, her extraordinary endurance and other-worldly capabilities. The musical
Victoria Jaiani, in the role of a lifetime. (Photo by Cheryl Mann)
score, composed by Lera Auerbach and performed live by the Lyric Opera Orchestra, brought the production and the audience to another level, perfectly matching the intensity of what we see onstage. The addition of the theremin, an electronic instrument invented in 1928, depicts the Mermaid’s voice and her ethereal, mystical side. People may recognize the eerie sound of this
The Joffrey Ballet president/CEO Greg Cameron with Jean de St. Aubin.
instrument from sci-fi films of the 1950s. It is controlled without physical contact- the musician (thereminist) waves their hands near two antennas to create sounds associated with ominous situations, of which there were many throughout the performance. The entire cast was outstanding. Yoshihisa Arai, retiring at the end of the 2022-23 season, played the menacing Sea Witch and Dylan Guiterrez expertly performed the role of the Prince, also requiring as much acting skills as dance and succeeding wildly at both. A heart-warming tender moment occurred when the dancers were taking their many curtain calls. Jaiani’s 9-year-old son and husband, former Joffrey dancer Temur Suluashvili, both presented their shining star with flowers. The production was entrancing, unsettling and danced with skills beyond imagining. During intermission, VIP guests enjoyed mixing and mingling in the Graham Room. If you missed this production this time around, make sure to see it when it returns!
And in more The Joffrey News ! Join this amazing dance company for a weekend of surrealism and dance, celebrating President and CEO Greg Cameron on the occasion of his 10th anniversary with the organization. Unleash your imagination and unlock your subconscious at the Joffrey’s fantastical bash, "Sir Real." Expect to be mesmerized into an all-consuming surreal dreamland for the senses. With bizarre surprises and dazzling curiosities around every corner, dare to dress in your most avant-garde fashions and join the party, taking place in the Old Post Office on Friday, June 23. This event will support Joffrey for All initiatives.The Friday night gala will be followed by a free performance in Millennium Park on Sunday, June 25. The free public performances will take place in the heart of downtown Chicago in Pritzker Pavilion in Millennium Park. Created as a gift to all Chicagoans, and the first event of its kind, The Joffrey Ballet’s Joffrey for All Celebration will feature dance workshops on the lawn and performances by Joffrey Company Artists, the Joffrey Academy of Dance, and students from the Joffrey Community Engagement programs.
Service Club Day on the Terrace co-chairs Tracey Tarantino DiBuono, Sharyl Mackey and Jean Antoniou.
Now that the Service Club of Chicago has its successful Spring (Hat) Luncheon under its belt (watch for complete coverage in next post), I want to share their next exciting event coming up Monday, August 7, at the Peninsula. Co-chaired by Jean Antoniou, Tracey Tarantino DiBuono and Sharyl Mackey, the event will feature a spectacular fashion show and luncheon. Top retailers and designers from around town will showcase their most eye-catching looks, that will be available for purchase, on the catwalk. This event always sells out so be sure to get your tickets when they become available here! (Returning exclusive hair stylist is the Charles Ifergan Salon– thank you Philippe!)
Houndstooth ball host Elliott Bambrough with Heather Owen, One Tail at a Time executive director.
The 15th annual Houndstooth Ball attracted more than 500 animal-loving supporters, many with their pups, to Morgan Manufacturing on March 18. Benefiting One Tail at a Time (OTAT), a no-kill animal rescue organization, the event celebrated 15 years of supporting ongoing and new
Partygoers and pup.
initiatives such as its ISO House, a quarantine location in Logan Square that creates a safe, transitional space for sick or injured dogs from Chicago shelters. During the lively evening, that celebrated a decade of lifesaving, partygoers enjoyed a whiskey tasting presented by Green Briar and made memories in a variety of animal-related photo ops. Professional doodlers created hand-drawn portraits of pets and an onsite SPAW helped them relax. The silent and live auctions featured over 100 items, including a unique OTAT “patchwork” quilt. The program was emceed by Elliott Bambrough (of Chicago’s Best), who was joined by Heather Owen, OTAT executive director. Bambrough spoke about being inspired by the dedication of the organization's volunteers and how well it functioned as a family. Owen thanked the crowd and sponsors and shared the nonprofit's ongoing success story. An all-vegan buffet was served and, on every table, were photos with short stories of OTAT's adoption successes. The event raised over $300,000 which will fund the rescue, rehabilitation and adoption of dogs, kittens, and bunnies in need. The funds will also help support adopters and grow community outreach, including humane education and assistance for disadvantaged and low-income families. Rescued animals are housed in both foster homes and at OTAT's Bucktown adoption center location. (Photos by Jeremy Lawson, onetail.org)
Pooped-out pup at Houndstooth Ball (those lil' shoes tho').
2024 Guy Adkins Award recipient Roberta Duchak speaks at the event.
Porchlight Music Theatre’s annual signature fundraising event, Chicago Sings, returned with Chicago Sings Broadway Pop II, at the House of Blues Chicago recently. The production was directed by Porchlight’s Artistic
The company performs at Chicago Sing Broadway Pop II at the House of Blues.
Director Michael Weber and Producing Artistic Associate Frankie Leo Bennett with music direction by David Fiorello and choreography by Clayton Cross. The presentation of the 2023 Guy Adkins Award for Excellence in the Advancement of Music Theatre in Chicago went to Roberta Duchak. A Chicago cast of Porchlight favorites and students from Porchlight’s summer camps and classes delighting the audience with songs that have appeared on Broadway. The event raised over $175,000. ______________________________________________________________________
Chicago Lights Executive Director Stacy Jackson (l) and Fourth Presbyterian Church Pastor Shannon Kershner.
Chicago Lights held its annual Gala of Hope benefit at the Ritz-Carlton recently. The event attracted over 350 guests and is the organization’s biggest fundraiser. The night included an evening of dinner, dancing, live and silent
Gala Co-Chairs Pete Shannon (l) and Bill Patterson.
auctions, and so much more. Chicago Lights Executive Director Stacy Jackson welcomed guests before Shannon Kershner, pastor of Fourth Presbyterian Church, offered a blessing. The nonprofit was founded by the Fourth Presbyterian Church of Chicago, launching its tutoring program in 1964. Since its inception, the nonprofit has served more than 60,000 people. _______________________________________________________________________
DJ Casper and ABC-7 Samantha Chatman.
After School Matters celebrated its 3rd annual Sneaker Ball April 29 at the Chicago Sports Museum. More than
Adorable Sneaker Ball guests.
230 guests enjoyed performances and exhibitions by After School Matters teens, a live performance by DJ Casper—the creator of the famed Cha-Cha slide—as well as live music, food and drink, and more. The event raised over $175,000 for After School Matters fund which pays teens for their participation in their programs.
"Chicago Chefs Cook" did it again! This time they came together to celebrate the much loved Ina Pinkney, "The Breakfast Queen of Chicago," on the occasion of her 80th birthday! The party was held at The Geraghty on April 26. The event featured tasting stations from more than 60 of the city’s most celebrated chefs and benefited the nonprofits Green City Market andPilot Light. (Photo by George Burns)
Big thanks to Rick Kogan for having me back on WGN Radio! We chatted for a whole hour about everything you can imagine! Please listen to the show, “The candid life of Candid Candace,” (LOL) here.
Speaking of shows, we are now on “Candid Candace: The Podcast” number TWO! As always, a big, big thanks to my steadfast co-host and producer, the one and only John St. Augustine! I’m so lucky to have this ultimate pro on my team as well as the amazing intro by Jenniffer Weigel, another a media legend. In this latest episode, I take you behind the scenes to all the best parties, share the events you need to put on your calendars and talk with one of my besties, August of 1982 Playboy Playmate, the fabulous Cathy St. George. We chat about our shared experiences, what we loved about Hugh Hefner, celebs we’ve met along the way, what life was really like at the Playboy Mansion and what Frank Sinatra shared with Cathy in confidence! John couldn’t help slipping in a little "Harry Caray" tribute on the side! Holy Cow! (Listen here!)
The Ronald McDonald House Gala, we held at the Geraghty recently with over 650 guests. This year’s event featured the Kozak family whose lives were forever changed when their daughter Adeline, now three-years-old, was diagnosed with hypo-plastic left heart syndrome
Molly Gilbride, Jane and Scott Billish and Holly and Kraig Buckendahl.
at birth. The Gala offered a look into the Kozak family’s journey and how the Ronald McDonald House near Advocate Children’s Hospital allowed Adeline’s parents to stay just moments away from their daughter for over 200 nights while she recovered in the hospital. More than 650 guests were in attendance raising $1.3 million in critical funds to help connect thousands of families with sick children with high-quality medical care and resources. (Photos by Hilary Higgins/Ronald McDonald House Charities of Chicagoland and Northwest Indiana)
On April 23, we celebrated the beautiful life of Shirley Baugher, also known as the Mayor of Old Town, at the Old Town Triangle Center. Chuck and I were lucky to know her and her artist husband Norman during the years that we
The late, great Shirley Baugher.
lived there. She was a force of nature and involved in all good deeds in the neighborhood. She was also a source for advice and inspiration if you were feeling low. She knew
this part of Chicago better than anyone else and was its biggest cheerleader. Her book, “Hidden History of Old Town” was/is a must-have in every home. She was an incredible cook, a graduate of Le Cordon Bleu, and upon her passing, had amassed over 2000 cookbooks. I loved her for her honesty, among many other reasons. You could always expect the truth from Shirley. She had a heart as big as all outdoors and she never knew a stranger. She was welcoming, funny, kind and wickedly smart. Chuck and I will always treasure our memories of her and Norman. But then, no one ever really dies. She will always live in our hearts.
Amdur Productions gives artists, young and young-at-heart, the opportunity to showcase their original work across multiple platforms. This summer, they are inviting creative kids and teens this opportunity at the following festivals: Port Clinton Art Festival (Aug. 26-27); Deerfield Art Festival (June 3-4) and Bayshore Spring Makers Market (May 20-21). For only a $50 entry fee, kids can show and sell their works. Scholarships are also available on a need basis. (They are also looking for interns!) To enter and for more information, call 847-926-4300 or email info@amdurproductions.com
the Ritz-Carlton. The afternoon event, celebrating a decade on the runway, will honor Tracey Tarantino DiBuono and feature fall looks from Chicago’s top designers and retailers. Returning co-chairs are Sherrill Bodine, Sherry Lea Holson and Sheree Schimmer. I will return as event host along with Tracey. I hope you can join us to help support the Lighthouse’s many programs for the blind, visually impaired, disabled and Veteran communities. (For info, click here!)
The Chicago Lighthouse 2023 FLAIR Planning Committee.
After a three year-hiatus, the Chicago Public Library Foundation Associate Board brought back Night in the Stacks, a special party for library supporters, in Harold Washington Library Center’s iconic Winter Garden. The
The B Sisters, Adiat Baker and Iya Bakare.
event, which was held April 14, celebrated the Library’s 150th birthday and raised more than $125,000 for its programs. In celebration of this historic milestone, the Library transformed after dark with neon bright décor, dance floor, live music from DJ Rex Balcita, and an open bar. Nearly 400 attendees saw the Maker Lab’s 21st-century technologies in action, took a spin in a 360-photo booth, and joined the raffle for chances to win amazing prizes.
CPLF's Night in the Stacks 2023
“What a comeback for Night in the Stacks! We are so grateful to our dedicated Associate Board for creating an event that is unique, memorable and brings our community of Library supporters together,” says Brenda Langstraat Bui, President & CEO of the Chicago Public Library Foundation. Since 2014, Night in the Stacks has raised funds for free library programs such as homework help with Teacher in the Library, one-on-one digital literacy support lessons for adults, creative spaces for teens, preservation of Chicago’s history through archival collections, among many others. The evening’s Platinum Sponsors were BMO, For Good Advisory and In Memory of Barbara Lewis.
Fleurs de Villes, the exhibit featuring custom, floral couture made of thousands of fresh blooms (thanks the floral donations from Kennicott Brothers), returned to 900 North Michigan Shops. This year's theme, "Voyage,” took guests on a fragrant and visually arresting journey to
The 900 Shops' Alicia Skruba and Taylor Stucker.
some of the world's most iconic travel destinations. Floral exhibit standouts spotlighted the Honduras (from Bloome Floral Design, which won for Best in Show); Marrakech (created by Lucalessa Floral Design); London Guard Mannequin (also a winner, by The Roof Crop); Peru (by Vision in Bloom); Egypt Mannequin (by Dilly Lily) and many others. The preview party, held May 3, featured signature cocktails, light bites and DJ Megan Taylor. Dancers from ZZAZZ Productions entertained guests before the judging results were announced. The Honduras, Best in Show exhibit/mannequin byBloome, was created in honor of exchange student Christi Carol Garcia Orellana, who studied here for her college degree before heading back to her home in Honduras. In addition to the exhibit, there were daily, floral workshops and a pop-up, fresh flower market.
Skyline columnist extraordinaire Thomas O'Gorman will be hosting an exhibit of his colorful artwork on May 13-15. The exhibit will take place at 1059 N. Winchester (corner house at Winchester and Thomas) from 11 to 3 pm. (See his Instagram page for full collection, @thomasogormanart)
Another packed edition of Candid Candace and I hope you've enjoyed every bit of it. I want to share with you how this whole concept actually
With my much loved Mom, Elsa Mae Stott.
came about. I'm an only child, as some of you know, and my mom was as much my sister as she was my mother. We were thick as thieves and did everything together–traveled, shopped, talked into the wee hours- no one knew me better than my mom Elsa Stott. When I moved to Chicago, I wanted her to see everything I saw through my eyes so I began writing very detailed letters about any event, party, dinner, etc. that I attended so she would feel like she was there. I think this style, and the reason for it, has served me well. Now, I get to take all of you around town with me –so basically, you're family too. 🙂
I might be late with my blog, but I'm sure not going anywhere. After 13 years, CandidCandace.com is still here and I'm hoping you agree, better late than never! So much has happened since we last talked. Chicago Star, which is growing by leaps and bounds, celebrated its first birthday, Valentine's Day came and went, and finally we're seeing signs of
Restaurant Lola 41 with Ken Norgan and Sebastian Krug.
Spring. As in years past, Chuck and I have been very fortunate to have the opportunity to get to a warmer clime for a winter vacation. Palm Beach has become one of our top spots in Florida but, truth be told, we would take any part of this great state. We love everything about it. When you first arrive in town, there is nothing like seeing this sign:
We were thrilled to meet Guy Fieri at Buccan!
This way to the beaches. I need to have this hanging over my bed as a sign of hope and happiness. (I know you all know what I mean.) Our hostess has an exquisite home half block from the ocean and, even though she says she's not finished decorating and revamping, I think it's definitely ready for Architectural Digest. Her taste is impeccable. We
See Captain John (out of the Sailfish Marina) for the best boat tour in town.
enjoyed so many restaurants there, here's a rundown of our favorites–Buccan is at the top of this list. First off, because it stays open later than most, second for the food (they
Swifty's, with Chuck and Leslie Hindman.
have sushi!) and thirdly for the trendy, chic clientele. On one of our nights there, we ran into Food Network's Guy Fieri. His "Diners, Drive-ins and Dive" series spotlighted two of our top Chicago restaurants, Tufano's and La Scarola. When I reminded him of this, his face lit up–he said he just loves these two Chicago favorites (almost as much as we do!) We dined at almost every spot we could find—Green's Pharmacy (we like it wayyyy better than Surfside Cafe, maybe because of the quirky serving staff and cast of characters who dine there regularly), Le Bilboquet, Bricktop's, La Goulue, Bice, Palm Beach
Dinner at Cafe Flore with Michelle Durpetti and Collin Pierson.
Entry to "Oh, My Chocolates!" on Clematis in West Palm Beach. They had me at stuffed animals.
Grill, Lola 41 (in the White Elephant Hotel), Swifty's, Pizza al Fresco, Renato's, Rhythm Cafe, Polpo Palm Beach (in Eau Palm Beach), Sushi Jo, Sailfish Marina & Resort, Kabuki Sushi, Echo Restaurant, Cafe Boulud, Elisabetta's, Howley's (if you like an old Howard Johnson's feel which we do!), Rocco's Tacos and more. And then we wonder why we're gaining weight but, when you're on vacation, every night seems like the Fourth of July! We would also recommend Captain John for a delightful, informative boat
Another favorite, Pizzeria al Fresco.
tour of the island. He came highly recommended and didn't
Cocktails at Nancy Traylor's beautiful home by the sea with Leslie Hindman.
disappoint. He has a encyclopedic knowledge of Palm Beach and the people who live there, but you have to book ahead (at the Sailfish Marina) as his tours fill up fast. On this trip, it seems like there were more Chicagoans there than in Chicago! Bill Zwecker and Tom Gorman, Mary Clare and Ken Moll, Michelle Durpetti and Collin Pierson, Nancy Traylor, Leslie Hindman, Peggy Martay, Marci Holzer (celebrating her birthday nearby in Miami Beach), Ken Norgan and so many others. We noticed some things were different in Palm Beach than in year's past….more restaurants, more chic, young peeps and a major problem getting restaurant reservations. I was told
Filming for RTL Media at friend Kim Renk Dryer's beautiful home in PB, with one of her rescue rabbits.
A colorful room at the Kip's Bay Showhouse in West Palm Beach.
someone who comes down every year in season, books wayyyy ahead of time– every night at a different restaurant to be sure of a reservation. We sort of winged it and, luckily, didn't have much trouble getting in. On our first morning there, we woke up to birdsong, which was like waking up from a dream. I haven’t heard nature in so long, it didn’t even seem real. There is
Wiith my beautiful friend, Playmate Cathy St. George, at Cafe Boulud.
nothing more life affirming that escaping Chicago’s winters to a warm climate and, for us, Florida is the answer. Just flying into the Palm Beach Airport and seeing the Everglades from above makes your heart sing. All those wetlands just teeming with life. And don’t get me started about seeing a palm
RTL Media Group's Dominik Maur at Cafe Boulud.
tree after trudging through ice, rain, sleet, cold and snow in the Windy City. If I sound like a geek, I accept the title with pride. I am a total geek about experiencing life to its fullest and, no matter how many times we visit, it just never gets old.
Chuck with sister Nancy Steinwald and Archie at Pizzeria al Fresco.
I’ve been coming to Florida since I was a little kid, both with my Mom and stepdad and with my Dad and stepmom. Both experiences completely different but both wildly fulfilling. I was hooked. As a matter of fact, on this recent trip, as Chuck and I were driving back to Palm Beach
This Sahara Resort tableau has been around forever–brought back great memories.
from Bal Harbor, I screeched to a halt when I saw the Sahara Resort with its tacky camel tableau still out front. The building is a tad run-down but the three camels and their drivers looked like they had been freshly painted. Someone has been taking great pride in this roadside attraction for well over 60 years and it made me smile from ear to ear.
Pelican Cafe in West Palm Beach–great food and ambiance and (sometimes) live music.
Some days we took a walk to the beach, other days we window-shopped along Worth and into the charming vias. A friend mentioned that one of the things he liked about Palm Beach was that no one ever seemed to work. I agree—people are eating and drinking at any and all
Leslie Hindman with her Chicago Star in PB!
hours of the day and night. It was pure escapism and Chuck and I loved every minute. Being with our friend Leslie Hindman again was a real treat too. We are so grateful for her invitation to visit and jump at every opportunity. This time we cat-sat for her darling “kids” William and Laura, two of the coolest Bengal cats you’ll ever see. Their mom
William and Laura, Leslie Hindman's cute kids–Bengal cats.
took an exciting trip to Saudi Arabia while we tended to the house and pool. We bought two giant pool toys (which I’m sure she just loved) and lounged in the sun as often as we could. I still worked on Chicago Star, since our April issue was due. Out now and FANTASTIC! (Read it here!) I also planned Chicago Star's first birthday party, held on April 14 at Robert’s Pizza & Dough Co. (See
Such a nice surprise, running into Mary Clare and Ken Moll at Buccan.
pics below!) Anyway, it’s funny how days filled with sunshine can change your whole outlook on life. I wish everyone could have this opportunity. We left Chicago feeling
The patio is where the action is at Lola 41 in the White Elephant Hotel.
disgruntled, pale and a little hopeless with the crime, politics, weather and more being in such sorry shape and came back refreshed and ready to dive back into the deep end of the pool. I did miss the fabulous Chicago Chefs for Ukraine event at Navy Pier, sadly, but have a great recap below from Nina Mariano!
While we were away, that hot mess of a series, A&E's
Diana Peterson, beautiful former Playboy Bunny and fellow Hef/Playboy advocate.
"Secrets of Playboy" was playing out –all Hef and Playboy bashing from a handful of unhappy, bitter women desperately seeking another 15 minutes in the spotlight. The film’s director Alexandra Dean should be ashamed of herself too. I, along with 100s of other Bunnies and Playmates, am appalled and have signed
So lucky to have known him.
petitions which were collected by Cooper Hefner. We’ve shared our side of the story anywhere and everywhere we could. (Including on the clips below). During our trip to PB, Dominik Maur, a journalist from RTL Media Group, came down to film me for a program that aired last week about my life with the organization. My friend, and fellow Playmate, Cathy St. George, lives in West Palm Beach so I invited her to join me for some loving convo about the man who “brought us to the party, Hugh Hefner. I was so happy sharing memories of our Playboy days and seeing her beautiful face again. The segment titled "Exclusive with Candace Collins Jordan" aired in Germany, Switzerland and Austria. (In German, watch here)
Love and thanks to all who welcomed us into their homes during our trip….you know who you are. Can’t wait to see you again soon! Have fun in paradise!
Event co-chairs Bobbi Panter (L) and Myra Reilly (R) with Jean Antoniou (SC president) and Greg Hyder.
The Service Club of Chicago brought back a much loved tradition, the Valentine's Day Tea! Back in the day, this idea was brilliantly brought to life by the
Debi Catenacci, Sherrill Bodine and Kristine Kinder.
much-loved man-about-town, Bunky Cushing who hosted the event every year, usually at the Ritz, and always benefiting the Howard Brown Health Clinic. Women (and some men) would clamor for the coveted invites to this well publicized event. The attire always insisted on red, with Bunky clad in his signature bow tie. I loved seeing the ladies there, all dressed up, and bubbling over with
Dr. Joyce Kenner, Carolyn Curry and Sheila Chalmers-Currin.
excitement. The event was always covered in every social magazine as well as this Blog. This year, The Service Club
Sally Jo Morris Pfaff, Sherree Schimmer and Lauren Lein Cavanaugh.
of Chicago firmly and deftly took the helm of this popular event and brought it back to life. Congrats to co-chairs Bobbi Panter, Myra Reilly and their dedicated committee for their hard work. The bright, airy Atrium at the Ritz was filled with excited guests, all wearing red, the color of the day. President Jean Antoniou welcomed all
Tina Weller and Sharyl Mackey.
by saying “Please know how much you are appreciated. On a cold February day, you put on your red, bought your tickets, and came out to support Service Club like you
Kathy Wolter Mondelli.
always do! Thank you”. A wonderful Raffle allowed ticket buyers to “choose their item” they wanted to win, and the lucky red tickets were selling fast and furious. Prizes ranged from a Ritz Spa certificate and a Fumee Claire candle basket, to a gorgeous necklace from Crown Jewelers in Naples and
Kristine Kinder, Alexandra Cuquoz, Kate Prange, Margaret Wenzel and Julia Jacobs.
a Kate Spade tote bag. Chocolates, love, and merriment abounded. John Reilly Photography graciously donated their services, so the cameras were clicking, the champagne was flowing, and guests celebrated old and new friendships. Guests were already talking about “next year”. Designed as a new event to fill the winter
Tina Gravel, Melissa Jakovich-Lagrange and Elyse Leavy.
months, the Valentine’s Day Tea was quite the success. This year’s event raised over $20,000. The nonprofit's mission is to assist, improve and expand upon nonprofit agency programs in the Chicagoland area. Its grant recipients operate in the area of social service, cultural, educational, and civic fields and serve children, elderly, the abused and neglected individuals in our community. The Service Club of Chicago is an all-volunteer women's organization founded in 1890. Mark your calendars now for the SC's popular Spring Hat Luncheon, co-chaired by Sherry Lea Fox, Pat Maxwell and Dr. Stacie McClane, on May 16 (details here) and the exciting Day on the Terrace Fashion Show & Luncheon, co-chaired by Jean Antoniou, Sharyl Mackey and Tracey Tarantino DiBuono, on August 1 (details here).
Tom Serpento Nancy Gianni (Gigi's Playhouse founder) Reggie Smith (of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers).
GiGi's Playhouse, the first ever Down syndrome achievement center held its annual national “i have a voice” gala at the Renaissance Schaumburg Convention Center Hotel in Schaumburg. It raised a
Franco Gianni with his sister GiGi Gianni, the nonprofit's namesake.
staggering $479,000 with 475 attendees. This high-energy, inclusive, black tie affair was co-hosted by the organization’s namesake, THE GiGi Gianni, a 19 year old with Down syndrome, and Model/Actress and leading disability awareness advocate Amanda Booth. Amanda has been featured on the cover of Vogue Magazine with Micah, her
Jaimie Rios, her brother Robert Migliore and GiGi Gianni.
son with Down syndrome. The “i have a voice” gala – the organization’s prestigious national fundraising event – benefits GiGi’s Playhouse Down Syndrome Achievement Centers – a fast-growing network of 60 playhouses and startups in the U.S. and Mexico, serving
GiGis Executive Board member Tim Boundy, his wife Kim and daughter Alex.
families in 81 countries. GiGi’s Playhouse provides purposeful and FREE programs that help people with Down syndrome learn, thrive, and live their best lives, without putting an additional financial burden on families who benefit from its services. As they do every year, attendees received the “red carpet treatment” at this one-of-kind fundraiser, featuring live music from the Barrington School of Rock. Then during the dinner program, this year’s Gen G Award was
Former NFL Sean Cattouse of the San Diego Chargers and Cristian Richardson.
presented to Jaimie Rios of Accurate Personnel. The evening concluded as guests danced the night away to live music from the lively and talented band, 7th Heaven, and enjoyed a late-night pizza party! In addition to celebrating with Amanda Booth, guests rubbed elbows with former Chicago Bears wide receiver Wendell Davis, and Super Bowl Champion Anthony Hargrove, among many former NFL players. For more information about free programs, volunteerism, impact partnerships, events, and the many ways to support GiGi’s Playhouse families, please click here.
After more than a two-year hiatus from hosting public events, 900 North Michigan Shops closed Women’s History Month with a luxe kickoff party to inaugurate Fleurs de Villes FEMMES – a five-day, immersive experience that essentially transformed 900 Shops into equal parts art gallery and floral boutique. Some 275 guests attended the after-hours affair to celebrate the opening of the stunning exhibit featuring more than a dozen mannequins dressed in custom gowns made of thousands of fresh flowers. Each mannequin honored one of the following luminaries: Betty White, Michelle Obama , Frida Kahlo, Malala Yousafzai, Maria Tallchief, Audrey Hepburn, Oprah Winfrey, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, Rita Moreno, Diana Ross, Empress Xiaozhuangwen, Bertha Palmer and Queen Anne. Florists competed for the following categories: Florist Favorite (Bloome, for Oprah Winfrey); Most Realistic (Flowerchild, for Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis); Most Creative (Ki iHouse, for Bertha Palmer); Best in Show (Hedonia, for Empress Xiaozhuangwen). The judges panel was made up of, Courtney Hopkins, former president, The Costume Council; Patience Pickner, floral designer, Kennicott Brothers; Cortney Hall, co-host of Chicago Today and Rosie Clayton, social media influencer. Guests were treated to an array of hors d'oeuvres from Aster Hall, and cocktails courtesy of the exhibit’s liquor sponsor, Hendrick’s Gin. In addition to the exhibit, guests were also the first to experience the garden setting of Le Jardin, where floral workshops took place throughout the run of the show, with décor provided by Kehoe Designs. The Costume Council provided photography and support for the installations honoring Maria Tallchief and Bertha Palmer.
Heather Owen, executive director One Tail at a Time.
One Tail at a Timebrought back its Houndstooth Ball after hosting virtual galas during the pandemic. The 13th Houndstooth Ball welcomed nearly 600 of Chicago’s animal philanthropists, rescuers and their furry friends for a fundraiser on March 12 at the Morgan Manufacturing building. The gala was held virtually the past two years because of the COVID-19 pandemic. All proceeds benefit the rescue, rehabilitation and adoption of dogs,
Emcee Fred, Kiss FM, with Heather Owen (R) and friend.
cats and rabbits in need. It will also support One Tail at a Time adopters and community outreach efforts, including its work to provide humane education and assistance for disadvantaged and low-income families. Attendees enjoyed a vegan dinner from Liberation Donuts while their dogs received their own special meals. The event is always a sellout and this year brought out supporters in force. A silent auction offered over 100 packages including a photo session with Becky Brown Photography, a custom tattoo of your dog and a rescue ride-along with Executive Director Heather Owen. VIP ticket holders enjoyed an extra hour of cocktails with vegan appetizers and a VIP bag full of goodies. The event was emceed by Fred of 103.5 KISS FM.
A longtime fixture in the Chicago community has passed. Ken Price, who spent decades as the public relations director for the Palmer House left us at age 82 after a long bout with cancer. His memorial in the Empire Room of the Palmer House was standing room only. He was beautifully eulogized by Dean Lane
A Celebration of Life was held in the Empire Room of the Palmer House with an SRO crowd.
(Palmer House GM), Charles Hagopian Jr. (Director of External Affairs, Office of the Ill. Comptroller, Julie Stevens (Ken's niece), Lisa Cole (Director of Corporate Communications), J. Peter Lynn (former GM), Larry Horwitz (ED Historic Hotels of America) and Shelley MacArthur Farley, a longtime friend of Ken's who also sang a song from the Great American Songbook (Ken's favorite) with Rich Daniels and Dean Rolando (of the City Lights Orchestra). In lieu of flowers, Ken requested a tribute and memorial donation be made to PAWS Chicago. RIP dear Ken.
This year's Bear Necessities Pediatric Cancer Foundation'sBear Tie Bash is going to be SO much fun and SO COLORFUL!
Blue Plate Catering dessert.
Our theme is "Magic in Bloom" and just look at this dessert from Blue Plate Catering! 'Nuff said! Come out and join us on Saturday, June 4, at this cool venue, Wintrust's Grand Banking Hall, 231 S. LaSalle, as we present Paul R. Iacono with the nonprofit's highest honor, the William J. Casey Hope Award. I'm proud to return as co-chair with Nina Mariano and beautiful emcee Sylvia Perez. (All details here)
Manolis Alpogianis accepting the award on behalf of his company, America's Dog & Burger.
Congrats to legendary restaurateur Manolis Alpogianis, his family and team on receiving Vienna Beef's highest honor,
It's a family affair! Manolis and his darling sons.
induction into the Vienna Hot Dog Hall of Fame! Manolis accepted the award at ADB's Navy Pier location with his two darling sons, one dressed as a hotdog! Not only do they have the BEST weiners in town, but the family and the company have always been a huge philanthropic presence in and around Chicago. (Check them out!)
Honorees Kathy O'Malley Piccone and Dr. Ali Djalilian.
Eversight hosted a kick-off party at the fabulous Steak 48 this week honoring past and current gala honorees. We had a great turnout and a lot of fun promoting our upcoming "Circus of Dreams" event coming to the Peninsula Thursday, Sept. 22. This year's in-person party will honor Kathy O'Malley Piccone and Dr. Ali Djalilian. So dig out your favorite "circus" attire and join us! (Chicago Star is the proud media sponsor! All details here!)
Love and congrats to everyone's favorite "sweeties", Maureen and Marc Schulman of Eli's Cheesecake Company. They and their ECC team were honored by the Mayor last week with the Medal of Honor, not only for their iconic business but also for their endless contributions to community service. KUDOS! (Photo on right from Chicago Star's 1st birthday party–they supplied the awesome "slice"!)
Elaine Hyde (Editor/Publisher), Nuria Mathog (Assistant Editor), me, Marc and Maureen Schulman, and Angela Gagnon (community contributor).
At the end of March, Chicago Star Media celebrated a milestone, its first birthday! Fans, friends and
New Chicago Star board member, Tracey Tarantino DiBuono, was presented with our first Star Award for her support.
advertisers turned out in force at Robert's Pizza & Dough Company to help us celebrate. The pizza party was a hit with fun photo props from Kehoe Designs, balloons, Eli's Cheesecake (it's not a party without Eli's!), cocktails and so much more! Editor/publisher Elaine Hyde, Assistant Editor Nuria Mathog
Nick Pullia, Dana Hokin Garvey and Borris Powell.
and me (Associate Publisher) delivered welcome toasts as we all sang happy birthday to this amazing paper that now has a reach of over 50,000. Seen on the scene were Rick Kogan and his Kate McMurrary, Andrew and Jon Landan, Sugar & Spice (Almira Yllana and Giovanna Krozel), Paul Iacono, Jennifer and Dr. Joaquin Brieva, Todd Hatoff and Frank Jeffrey, Dionne Williams, Borris Powell, Bethany Florek and Andy Kitick, Lauren Lein Cavanaugh, Michael Kutza, John Lanzendorf, Joey Hyde, Maureen and
Double the fun with the Landan Twins and Sugar & Spice!
Marc Schulman, Nick Pullia, Gail Spreen, Curt Rose and Maggie Baczkowski, Robert and Dana Garvey, Jerry Bern, Troy and Elizabeth Mairs, community contributors Angela Gagnon, Joe Luther and
Todd Hatoff, Dr. Joaquin Brieva, Jennifer Sutton Brieva, Paul Iacono and Frank Jeffery.
Susan Berkes, among others. New board member Tracey Tarantino DiBuono was presented with our first Star Award for her above-and-beyond support in promoting the paper! (Congrats TRACEY!) And now, here's an update on how our paper is doing: People are responding to our mission of only sharing positive, uplifting content. Besides the print edition, we can also be seen online, through subscriptions and in
MB Luxury's Maggie Baczkowski and Curt Rose.
nearly 400 high-rise residential buildings in the Streeterville, Loop/New Eastside, West Loop, South Loop, Gold Coast, River North and River West neighborhoods; grocery store and retail locations such as Mariano's, CVS, Bockwinkel's, Jewel-Osco, Sunset Foods and Potash;
newspaper boxes in the Loop and Magnificent Mile; and local businesses downtown, such as Gibsons Bar & Steakhouse, Urbanspace, Bravco, Tufano's and others. Recently, we've expanded into locations in Lake Forest, Winnetka, Glenview, Hinsdale, Highland Park and Northfield. (Past editions can be found here) (For advertising info, please contact me! We would love to have you! Candace@CandidCandace.com.) I hope you're a subscriber too! :-)
Maryville Academy will present "Light Up a Child's Life" on Wednesday, June 1, at Offshore (Navy Pier, 6-9 pm). This special evening, co-chaired by Beth and Curt Coolidge and Cece and Jack Hartman, will benefit The Maryville Crisis Nursery, an innovative program designed to help parents or guardians get through stressful times. They offer up to 72 hours, around the clock, child care for children ages birth to 7 years of age. Families facing medical emergencies, mental illness, homelessness, domestic violence or other crises often have nowhere to turn, but Maryville Crisis Nursery is there to help, free of charge and in a safe and loving environment. People can call their 24-hour Crisis Helpline at (773) 205-3637. For more info, please click here AND please JOIN US on June 1!
Chicago Lights, a leading youth and social services organization, raised $650,000 at its Gala of Hope recently. The annual event is a celebration in support of the organization’s programming, benefiting youth
Mike Rolfes, Stephanie and Nicholas VanDerSchie, Chicago Lights President of the Board of Directors.
and adults throughout Chicagoland who continue to face many hardships during the ongoing pandemic, with the goal of building brighter futures for all Chicagoans. Funds raised at the Gala of Hope will support five outreach initiatives of Chicago Lights, including Tutoring and Summer Day, Dance
Pete Shannon (Gala of Hope Co-Chair and Board of Directors), Stacy Jackson (Chicago Lights Executive Director), Bill Patterson (Gala of Hope Co-Chair).
Academy, the Urban Farm, and the Elam Davies Social Service Center — as well as the Replogle Center for
Ken Arlen Evolution Orchestra rocked the room with the fabulous Caitlin Simone on vocals.
Counseling and Well-Being. These successful, proven programs focus on areas including social services, education, the arts, mental health, and economic development for Chicagoans. After hosting the event virtually last year, the Gala of Hope returned to in-person programming with 330 guests on Friday, March 4 at the Ritz-Carlton Chicago. Co-chaired by Bill Patterson and Pete Shannon, founding members of Chicago Lights’ Associate Board in 2011, and managed by Chicago Lights’ Associate Director of Development Laura Woods, the premiere black-tie fundraising gala kicked off with a cocktail hour starting at 5:30 p.m., with celebrations and entertainment lasting until 11:30 p.m. (To learn more, click here!)
Giordano Dance Chicago'sLegacy Ball will return even bigger and better on Thursday, June 2 to the Ravenswood Event Center! From the moment the night begins, the energy will be palpable! Experience the venue’s unique ambiance lined with vintage cars & oversized retro neon signs. The dance floor will be hot, food & drinks delicious and abundant, and GDC's beautiful and talented dancers will wow you with pop-up performances, plus so much more! A night not to be missed! The event will honor dance legend Homer Bryant! For tickets and more info, click here!
A Silver Lining Foundation's "Glitz & Glamour" is back and in-person on May 11! The seventh annual luncheon and fashion show, produced by ZZAZZ Productions, will again be held at The Peninsula Hotel showcasing the elegant jewels of A Marek Fine
With A. Marek Fine Jewelry's Barbara Bradford (event sponsor) and Dr. Sandy Goldberg (A Silver Lining Foundation founder).
Jewelry and featuring custom couture from celebrated Chicago fashion designers Contessa Bottega,Peach Carr, Ann Everett, Al Menotti, Mira Couture, Model Atelier, Elda de la Rosa and Sylwia. Lending their support as models will be local notables Susanna Homan,CEO, PAWS Chicago; Micah Materre, Anchor, WGN Evening News; Susanna Mendoza, Comptroller, State of Illinois; Whitney Reynolds, Host, The Whitney Reynolds Show; LeeAnn Trotter, Entertainment/Lifestyle Reporter, WMAQ – NBC 5; Roz Varon, Traffic Anchor, ABC 7 Chicago; Caylei Vogelzang, Founder, Cancer Wellness Magazine and moi! Chicago Star is the proud media sponsor! Event proceeds benefits the nonprofit's mission to provide respectful and equal access to cost-free breast health testing. (For tickets and more info, click here! _______________________________________________________________________
Dr. Joaquin Brieva, in need of a kidney. Blood type O.
As you may or may not know, a dear friend and much loved member of the Chicago community, Dr. Joaquin Brieva, is in need of a kidney. I know we all have many worthwhile causes and even friends who are also in need, but if there's space
Walk for Kidneys coming June 12.
(and interest) in your heart, please consider joining Joaquin and his beautiful, warrior wife Jennifer Sutton Brieva on Sunday, June 12 for the annual National Kidney Foundation of Illinois (NKFIL) “Walk for Kidneys 2022”! It’s a short 3 mile walk along the lakefront from 10-11:30 am and includes family-friendly activities before and after. Be a part of #teamjoaquin and help them raise awareness, fund research and hopefully find our beloved Joaquin a donor match for a transplant! Below is a link to join the team. If you
Dr. Joaquin and Jennifer Brieva.
can’t join, please consider making a donation. Below is a link and info on how your donation is put to use. This is where your donation goes: $25 DONATION –Help off-set the cost for one person to attend a Living with
Dr. Joaquin Brieva with their cat Zoe.
Kidney Disease & Transplantation seminar full of valuable information and resources from experts; $85 DONATION–Provide one at-risk Illinois resident with a FREE Kidney Mobile Screening. They'll receive tests for diabetes, high blood pressure, and chronic kidney disease; $100 DONATION–Provides one week of education for a patient as part of the Take Charge: Chronic Disease Self-Management Program; $250 DONATION–Send five advocates to Springfield with the Kidney Advocacy Council to speak up for patient and donor rights; $1,000 DONATION–Makes it possible for families across Illinois to travel to our annual Kids with Kidney Disease & Transplantation program. (To join, donate and for more info, click here)!
There is so much happening in Rosemont! Two of my favorite events are the "Spring Fun Fest" at Parkway Bank Park on May 14. Kids will lose themselves in a gaggle of free activities including balloon sculpting, bounce houses, face painting, petting zoo and live entertainment by Scribble Monsters. The park is home to 15 venues offering upscale international cuisine, live music, comedy, state-of-the-art film, bowling and more. Free admission, Parkway Bank Park, 5501 Park Place, Rosemont, (847) 349-5009, rosemont.com.
And, on June 4-5, enjoy ROSEMONT UNCORKED Wine Festival with over 18 wineries participating, live music and so much more! The Festival will also take place at the Parkway Bank Park with live music provided by the Real Pretenders, Michael Charles, Radium City Rebels, The Prissillas and Rosie and the Rivets! You won't want to miss it! (rosemontuncorked.com)
The Mira Couture finale models pose on the elegant stairwell of The Odyssey.
Huge congrats to Ingalls Development Foundation on its recent "Promise of Hope" fashion show/fundraiser held at the Odyssey in Tinley Park. Expertly produced by ZZAZZ Productions (Tracey Tarantino DiBuono), the event wowed the sell-out crowd and raised funds for UChicago Ingalls Memorial, a nonprofit community hospital that has been providing healthcare services to the Chicago Southland community for over 80 years. (For more info, click here).
Maria Pappas, named Person of the Year by the Polish Daily News!
This and that! Congrats to Cook County Treasurer Maria Pappas who was recently awarded the Person of the Year
So honored to be featured on THE WHEEL!
Award by Chicago's oldest Polish newspaper, the Polish Daily News. She accepted the award from Dziennik Zwiazkowy, the 2021 Person of the Year! Kudos Maria (still waiting for you to announce your run for Mayor!?)
And, a personal thanks to Navy Pier for putting my mug on the face of its iconic Centennial Wheel! The special event included other media personalities' images and celebrated the first mask-free day in the city.
Thank you so much for sticking with me! The world seems to be speeding up now that
The May issue, coming soon! Jam packed with FUN from end to end!!
masking and Covid are seemingly behind us. I think we all want to reach out and grab life with all the gusto we can. I know I do. I feel like we've missed so much and have a lot to make up for. I will proudly continue to share all the news about this great city (and beyond), so, if not a subscriber, please sign up for my blog here and read Chicago Star's May issue here! See you SOON!
Plus: Chicago Lighthouse's FLAIR "Eye on Style"; Eversight's Fantasea; Cindy on the red carpet; Chicago International Film Festival hosts a new kind of party; A hometown reunion; Printer's Row Lit Fest brings out Bunnies; A birthday bash with Neal and Marko; Illinois Holocaust Museum's SOIREE; Andrew and Bethany sittin' in a tree; Runway LatinX's sizzling Fashion Show; Navy Pier is ready to "Light Up the Lake"!; ASLF's "A Sterling Event"'; The Joffrey Ballet's "Home"; Fab fall events and what to do for Halloween; Darling video and SOOO much more!
Long time, no see! I'm so sorry my blog is late! I had no idea of the amount of time and effort it takes to get a newspaper out! But, Chicago Staris a labor of love and I hope
Chicago Star's first fashion and beauty issue was a great success! Thanks to all who support it!
filled with uplifting, fun and positive news. No "if it bleeds, it leads" sort of stuff for us! As a matter of fact, our October issue was our first Fashion & Beauty issue and I/we had a blast putting it together! From the outstanding cover photo of some of our town's most beloved designers (that I produced with the one and only Hilary Higgins and Erin Lyle Photography) to the "Secrets of Style from Industry Insiders" article to a very clever take on fashion from a completely different point of view, contributor Jon Cohn's, this issue had it ALL! Read it here and let me know what you think!
Even though this has been a trying summer, I think we still have so much to be grateful for. Hopefully, we're near the tail end of this seemingly never-ending pandemic. We've been separated from our loved ones, in fear of our health, zoomed away from our jobs and discombobulated in 100s of other ways and I can still feel it, can't you? I've always loved summer, reveled in it really, but this year, I've viewed every day with caution and some discomfort, not knowing how many shootings the day might bring or if I would hear of another friend or acquaintance who's come down with Covid (like dear Former Secretary of State Colin Powell), despite being fully vaccinated. It's fear of the unknown that we're all dealing with on a regular basis now and this anxiety can be felt throughout the city and in everyone I know. Summer is supposed to be the time of joyous abandon, but this year, it's been exactly the opposite. I pray this will end soon so we can get back to being the people we're supposed to be–kind, loving, giving, helpful–and move away from all of this negativity and fear. Fall brings change and I hope it brings us more happy days filled with corn mazes, apple cider donuts, glowing fireplaces, walks in the woods, bundling up in your favorite sweaters and roadtrips with friends and family. Here's to you dear readers and to a kinder, gentler season for us all.
Cindy Crawford and photographer David Yarrow at Hilton Asmus Contemporary gallery opening.
Picture perfect! It was the first and best red carpet experience to come back in Chicago since the pandemic so it was no wonder that the nearly 200 guests at the Hilton|Amus Contemporary art gallery opening didn't want to leave. The event, hosted by the gallery in its new Bridgeport location on October 9, celebrated the opening of its upcoming exhibition, "Changing Lanes," which featured the works of renowned photographer David Yarrow in collaboration with supermodel Cindy Crawford. The exhibition included Yarrow's stunning interpretation of Cindy's iconic Pepsi ad by Joe Pytka, simply titled "1992," which was the year the original commercial aired
David Yarrow, Arica Hilton, Cindy Crawford and Sven Asmus in front of Yarrow's iconic recreation titled "1992."
during the Super Bowl. Both stars were in attendance, first chatting with the media and then, Cindy snapping photos with ALL of the guests before dinner. A Q&A followed led by
Stan Wozniak (2nd from R) and friends.
Fox-32's Jake Hamilton. The event helped raise funds for the University of Wisconsin Kids Cancer Program, the same hospital that treated Cindy's late brother Jeff who passed away from leukemia as a child. The red carpet stretched all the way through the garage into the massive freight elevator and then up to the main gallery. Art enthusiasts stepped into the 5,000-square-foot
Mancow Muller, Arica Hilton and friend.
space, done in chic shades of black, white and
Charles Miers, head of publishing Rizzoli NYC.
grey to coordinate with the oversized photographs that adorned the walls. On this night, David Yarrow's exquisite work was on full display, many featuring Cindy, while others focused on the Wild West and animals in the wild. Cindy arrived in a stunning, sequin-studded gun-metal grey jumpsuit to greet guests. She graciously chatted with media in front of her iconic image, along with Mr. Yarrow. They shared their joy over
Thrill of a lifetime! Watch for interview on ChicagoStarMedia.com produced by Troy Mairs.
collaborating together again, how much it meant that the funds were going to the University of Madison Kids
Americana, another great image by David Yarrow available at this gallery.
Cancer Program (together, they raised over $1 million over the weekend for the American Family Children's Hospital there) and more. Cindy spoke about the legendary Chicago photographer, Victor Skrebneski, who discovered and mentored her. She said he taught her professionalism and to remember that the photos were about selling the product and not the model. She also spoke about her daughter Kaia, also a supermodel, and how proud she was of her and the decisions she's
"1992", David Yarrow's recreation of the iconic Pepsi ad with Cindy, sold 3 times that night for charity.
made in the business. Dinner from Inspired Catering (Karen Stefani), consisted of a choice of filet, sea bass, ravioli or a vegetarian option. Every detail was attended to, right down to the flowers on the table
Loretta Wilger, who modeled with Cindy, Dennis Minkel, Cindy and Jack Perno.(Photo by Perno)
which included yarrow, as a nod to the photographer. A red Cadillac Eldorado, a duplicate of the one used in the photo recreation, was displayed in the gallery as well. During dinner, Arica Hilton addressed the attentive crowd and shared the mission of her gallery. "The artwork and artists we
A very attentive crowd.
represent are all about making the world a better place. We're not just selling art. We choose who we represent for a reason. David, over the last couple of years, has raised over $5 million for various charities–from cancer research to animal protection and conversation to ocean conservation. That's what we are about." She
Expertly catered by An Inspired Event (Karen Stefani)
acknowledged celebs in the crowd, radio personality Mancow Muller, head of Rizzoli Publishing in NY Charles Miers and stars of Showtime's "The Chi," Yolonda Ross and Tai Davis.
The image that started Cindy's career.
Yarrow also addressed the crowd, "Yesterday, we had an event in Madison, Wisconsin. Visiting the hospital there was one of the most humbling experiences of my life. I was meeting people who were changing and saving children's lives and it put everything into perspective for me. The UW is a trailblazer. The iconic picture we recreated of Cindy has been shown
Even more beautiful in person.
across Europe. And everyone wants this photo! Last night, they sold $400,000 worth of that picture and every penny is going to the UW. I know the Chicago Bears can't beat the Green Bay Packers (ha, ha) but, tonight's your chance to give Wisconsin a run for its money.
David and Cindy with Charles Miers and friend.
Cindy, who's a national treasure, will sign the photograph for you. There's only about 12 of these left." (Three of the pieces were sold during the evening) Dr. Paul Sondel, head of the pediatric cancer
Karen Konyer and her cute hubby.
research program at UW, was in attendance as well. He's recognized around the world as an expert in his field. He said, "In 1950, children diagnosed with cancer had no treatment available. Almost all of those children died within a few months of their diagnose. But now, in 2021, here
Cindy appearing in a Chicago International Film Festival poster shot by the late, great Victor Skrebneski.
in the U.S., 85% of children with cancer are cured and the cancer won't come back. That's because of research, both in the lab and in the clinic. But, in many cases, because of the cure, they
"American Beauty", another spectacular photo by David Yarrow available at Hilton-Asmus Contemporary.
will have lasting medical problems because of the toxicity of the treatments. Our vision is to have kinder, gentler, more intelligent and more effective treatments to eliminate the cancer without harming normal tissue. And the approach we're using to help get there is the use of immunotherapy, trying to get the immune system to attack the cancer so we can use less radiation and chemo. We also know these advances will help treat
Photo bombed by Stan Wozniak.
cancer in adults. We're convinced we can get there because we see it happening every day. Since 1992, Cindy has made childhood cancer and the UW her special focus,
Arica's great friends, Karin Carlson and Ann-Marie Streibich.
providing major financial support, visiting the hospital and being an ambassador. And David has turned his work into protecting our earth and supporting all of its species and people to protect its future. He lives his commitment every day. Together, they are raising awareness worldwide for children and their families who are facing cancer."(Yarrow's images at the gallery run from $35,000 to $55,000. "1992", signed by both Crawford and Yarrow and measuring 47" X 63" including frame, is for sale at $35,000.) Hilton|Asmus Contemporary, 3622 S. Morgan St. (www.hilton-asmus.com); David Yarrow, (www.davidyarrow.photography.com) (Photos by Justin Barbin and Mila Samokhina)
Justine Fedak, Woman of Vision 2021, and Sherry Lea Fox, Woman of Vision 2020.
Eversight was FINALLY able to host its popular Gift of Sight Mystery Masquerade on September 8 at the Peninsula. It was great to see nearly 300 attendees who were anxious and
Gift of Sight honoree Dr. Parag Majmudar and his proud family.
excited to return to in-person events! The theme for this year's party was Fantasea, which was a fun-filled, under-the-sea theme that guests were happy to embrace. I loved seeing all of the SEE-worthy outfits including outstanding looks from Sugar & Spice, Giovanna Krozel and Almira Yllana, Susan Gohl and Jonathan Grabill (Jonathan was wearing an adorable shark hat), Patty Brand Nalepa (pretty in blue), Eversight president/CEO Diane Hollingsworth (also pretty in blue) and especially our Woman of
Proud to return as co-chair, with the always adorable Michael Caputo.
Vision, Justine Fedak, who was truly a vision enveloped
Diane Hollingsworth, looking glam in Fantasea blue. (Eversight pres/CEO)
in a sparkly sea-blue design created by Sylwia Designs. The weather couldn't have been more perfect on this night which was a godsend since we had planned a large part of our event to be held on the patio. Beautiful lighting, magnificent sea-themed decor (by Tamar Productions with bar and support from Kehoe Designs), coral mixed with florals for the tabletops and dramatic video-mapping of a beautiful undersea world that was brought to life by last year's Woman of Vision and longtime supporter, Sherry Lea Holson. It created the perfect ambiance.
Greg Hyder and Jim Smith.
Tamar Productions' Mary Ann Rose even donated beautiful
Tom Dreesen with a beautiful mermaid, courtesy of ZZAZZ Productions, Caroline Koch.
rhinestone crowns for every guest. A "mermaid," courtesy of ZZAZZ Productions (Tracey Tarantino DiBuono), charmingly posed for photos with guests. A surprise guest, comedian Tom Dreesen (in from Hollywood), wowed the crowd as he shared a funny sketch before joining "G-Man" Greg Dellinger to conduct the live auction and a fund-a-need. Before dinner, which was Chilean sea bass (another nod to our theme!), an awards presentation and an inspiring impact story was presented. My co-chair, Michael Caputo, and I were honored to share the stage
Magnificent decor by Tamar Productions with elements by Kehoe Designs.
again to welcome guests and thank our sponsors—Cornea Consultants (Visionary Sponsor), Leadership Sponsors Cheryl Coleman and Ron Katz, Sherry Lea Holson, Tony and Moira Saliba, Mamie J. Walton, Warby Parker, Gift of Hope, Illinois Eye and Ear Infirmary and MyEyeDr. Eversight pres/CEO Diane
Tamar Productions' Mary Ann Rose donated darling crowns for each guest in a nod to our theme.
Hollingsworth spoke about the nonprofit's mission to preserve and restore sight through the healing power of donation, transplantation and research. "We honor our doctors and donor families that make the miracle of transplantation happen. We celebrate our surgeons that give people their
Sugar & Spice (Almira Yllana and Giovanna Krozel) light up every party they attend!
lives back through transplantation. We use diseased eye tissue to help find cures for all blinding eye conditions. We exist to serve and support this amazing community, drive toward new innovations and strive to have donor families, surgeons, our Organ Procurement, and hospital partners trust in our relationship to serve this community together," Diane said. Marta Garczarczyk, Eversight Philanthropy Director, shared a special letter from one of
Beautiful (CHAMPION!) Chicago Sky basketball players Diamond DeShields and Lexie Brown.
Dr. Parag Majmudar's recipients. The recipient has corneal dystrophy which runs in his family. Dr. Majmudar has successfully treated 3 generations of his family members. Dr. David Lubeck, 2019 Gift of Sight honoree, introduced this year's honoree, Dr. Parag Majmudar.
Playful Susan Gohl and Jonathan Grabill get into the spirit of the party.
Lubeck ceremoniously draped a sparkly cape around Dr. Majmudar before he delivered his acceptance speech. Sherry Holson and I introduced Justine Fedak, this year's Woman of Vision. Justine lived with MS for over 20 years and miraculously regained her mobility and health. She was also a BMO C-Suite marketing exec for 20 years and left January 2020 to live out her work life as a Corporate
Justine Fedak, honoree, Sylwia Wilczynska, Kathy Piccone and Mark Olley.
Hippie, consulting, doing motivational speaking and writing a children's book. She is committed to motivating and inspiring people to "see" their best and true selves. In short, she is a perfect WOV! Both of the honorees' speeches brought the crowd to their feet,
Dr. Parag Majmuder, Gift of Sight honoree 2021, and Dr. David Lubeck, 2020 honoree.
as they were so moving, inspiring and thoughtful. DJ Akib, played throughout the night and, in the end, people didn't want to leave. I think we were just all so grateful to be reunited that we didn't want the night to end. Thank you to all who attended, donated and supported this event which raised over $150,000.
With the Eversight Team: Michael Caputo, Teresa Clark, Justine Fedak (honoree), Dr. Parag Madmudar (honoree), Diane Hollingsoworth, Mary Ann Rose, Greg Hyder and Marta Garczarczyk.
Susan Griffiths Gohl, The Chicago Lighthouse's Hood/Swift Woman with Flair honoree, with Monsignor Ken Velo and Jonathan Grabill.
The Chicago Lighthouse presented its popular FLAIR "Eye on Style" fashion show fundraiser on October 1 at the Drake. Nearly 300 supporters were thrilled to return to a live, in-person event and this one didn't miss a beat. From the deserving Hood/Swift Woman with FLAIR honoree, Susan Griffiths Gohl, to the glamorous runway models to the exciting designers and retailers, everything in the spectacular Gold Coast Room was perfect. Sherrill Bodine and Sheree Schimmer returned for their 5th year as the pro co-chairs that they are to rally support for this nonprofit that provides programming for the blind and visually
Cheryl Bollinger, Shauna Montgomery and Sally Jo Morris.
impaired. I had the honor of returning as co-host with Tracey Tarantino DiBuono. This year's event supported the Lighthouse's children's
Caroline Grossinger and Dr. Janet Szlyk, Chicago Lighthouse president-CEO
programming. The luncheon kicked off with a video showcasing highlights from last year's virtual show, produced by ZZAZZ Productions as was this year's presentation. Dr. Janet Szlyk spoke eloquently about the organization and I had the pleasure of introducing Susan, who couldn't have been a more perfect honoree. She's an
Front L to R, Theresa Strnad, Vonita Reescer, top L to R, Melinda Jakovich-LaGrange and event co-host Tracey Tarantino DiBuono.
ardent philanthropist who supports so many charities, including the Service Club of Chicago as well as many animal and equestrian nonprofits both here and in Naples. She enlisted her friend Monsignor Ken Velo to deliver the blessing before lunch. During the program, models strutted looks from Mira
Sherrill Bodine and Sheree Schimmer, fab returning co-chairs.
Couture, Anne Fontaine, redE Mas, Frances Heffernan, Al Menotti Couture, Lauren Lein Ltd., St. John, Contessa Bottega, and the finale, Macy's MyStylist. An inspiring musical performance by Nina Vargas, who was discovered in the Lighthouse's Youth Transition Program talent show, brought the house down. She sang a hit from The Greatest Showman, "A Million
Kevin Sullivan, who makes all things possible.
Dreams." (Watch it here!) Special thanks to all who supported this wonderful cause and a big shout-out to Kevin Sullivan, who along with his team Adrienne Squires and Francisco Perez, makes all things possible. DJ Akib, as always, kept the runway rockin'! (Chicago Star was the proud media sponsor)
CIFF artistic director Mimi Plauche delivers remarks after receiving her honor.
The Chicago International Film Festival hosted its first in-person fundraiser since the beginning of the pandemic themed, Lights, Camera, Chicago" at event space Bridge410
CIFF founder Michael Kutza.
on September 13. This unique space at 410 N. Paulina, was the perfect spot for people still a bit cautious about venturing back into the events scene with an outdoor space that looked like something straight out of a Norman Rockwell painting. Food trucks dotted the space with yummy Eli's Cheesecake Dippers passed around on silver trays. Guests enjoyed 'tastes of Chicago,' live music, a silent auction, films and an award presentation– the Chevalier des Arts et Lettres award presentation to Artistic Director, Mimi Plauché. Proceeds from the event will benefit the year-round programs of the Chicago International Film Festival.
Not many showed up from my year but we still had fun!
I don't agree with Thomas Wolfe, I think you can go home again and should. It was life-affirming to return to my hometown of Dupo, Illinois recently for my "No Class Reunion, " that was filled with all the faces of my childhood. Sadly, with each passing year, we lose friends and the
Drone view by Matt Jones of the idyllic Dupo American Legion Park where the reunions are always held.
memories turn bittersweet but we are still there to commemorate them and carry on. The event is always expertly planned by Marsha Bieber English and Rose Freppon Falana and held in the American Legion Park. We usually have food vendors
Took a side trip to Eckert's Fun Farm in Columbia, Ill. Here, Chuck pretends like he's never seen a pumpkin before.
but, this year, due to that damn Covid, we had to change plans so everyone brought their own snacks and drinks. It was no hardship–we were just all happy to see each other. Each class, going all the way back to 1946, had a group picture snapped….my class of 1972 was small but mighty (next year I'm hoping to see more classmates)
Reunion organizers Marsha Bieber English and Rose Freppon Falana.
but every class was represented and proudly stood by the little Dupo No Class Reunion sign firmly planted in the ground outside the pavilion. We chatted, laughed, shared gossip and cherished every moment since, for some of us, it might be
Thoughtful friend Debra Nichols Mikel had this purse designed with my Playboy cover!
our last. Dear friend and fellow classmate Debra Nichols Mikel even had a beautiful purse created for me using one of my Playboy covers! You could've blown me over with a feather! And thank goodness Chuck always enjoys these road trips to my hometown. We both agree, this lifestyle could probably lengthen our lives–the air is fresh and there's no stress. My Aunt Lora Stott is proof positive at 90 years young! She could still be an Ivory Soap model. Not a wrinkle on her pretty face. When we were there, we made the most of our time and packed a lot
Dear friend Tommy Hundley with Chuck and the Chicago Star!
of sightseeing into a couple of days. One day, we had dinner in Waterloo at a cute Italian spot called Frederico's. The next night, we missed the reunion kick-off party and had a quiet dinner at
Mike Sager, and friends, celebrate part of his 1968 class.
Reifschneider's in Columbia, surrounded by Cardinal fans as they trounced the Cubs. A license plate in the parking lot said "No Cub"….okay, we get it! LOL!! One afternoon, we drove to Millstadt, an old German town where my mom, my stepfather Donald and I would always go for Friday night fish frys–and the place is still there, Ott's! We also visited Eckert's Fun Farm, that features camel rides, pig races, farm stand food (including succotash cooked in a ginormous cast iron skillet) and a packed local food store with canned
Sign seen in Dupo American Legion Post 485.
goods made from the farm's produce. The weather couldn't have been more perfect and we never once
A small part of the Class of 1969.
had to put the top up on our convertible (we even drove the 5 hours home with it down!)….. I drove Chuck to the edge of the Mississippi River where we could see the barges packing the waterway. From there, into East Carondelet where Mama Mary Johnson lived. She was like a second mother to me and I miss her still. Her house is torn down but I could visualize it and her sitting proudly on her porch in front of her prized forsythia bush as
Mindy Mernick (far right) and her cute class.
husband Jim worked in their huge garden behind the house. He pulled the plow himself, that's how strong he was. Jim also worked on the railroad, where an uncle of mine also worked. My
Fun with good friends.
uncle would tell stories of Jim's strength and how he could, single-handedly, lift an entire engine wheel. He was the original Paul Bunyon. We passed the bingo hall where Mary used to play (and always win), the community center where I hosted her 90th birthday party and the Flat Creek Baptist Church where I proudly went with her and Jim on the Sundays
We always love stopping in at the Pink Elephant Antique Mall in Livingston, Il.
when I was in town. So many memories. Even my childhood home in Dupo, at 325 Louisa Avenue, is still standing and looks much better than I remember it. We visited
Chuck beside the Big Muddy, the Mississippi River.
the American Legion Post 485 where I honed my pool skills–they later become very, very useful when I became a Playboy Bunny and beat anyone who played me on the bumper pool table. LOL! Those were the days. It was such a rewarding trip and I always come back revitalized and more hopeful about mankind. My friends are the salt of the earth and I'm so proud to be from a small town. I can't wait to go back next year to celebrate our 50th class reunion! I'm already planning my wardrobe.
Talented, charming and a great sport–author Christina Clancy, holding her latest book "Shoulder Season" set in and near the Lake Geneva Playboy Club.
The 36th annual Printers Row Lit Fest, presented by the Near South Planning Board, returned Sept. 11-12 to the South Loop. Headlining the festival was National Book
Panel discussion with author Christina Clancy (R) and moderator/author Christine Sneed.
Award winner Ta-Nehisi Coates ("The Water Dancer," Between the World and Me", "The Beautiful Struggle") but my favorite was the charming author of "Shoulder Season", Christina Clancy. Her latest book is one of the first books of fiction to feature the world of Playboy, in particular, the life of a small town girl (Sherri Taylor) who became a Bunny at the Lake Geneva Playboy Club. Christina invited me to discuss my experiences and compare them to the title character during a panel discussion on the Main Stage. There was an inquisitive audience who asked intriguing questions–it was a
Christina Clancy with her proud agent.
joyous walk down memory lane and, thankfully, Christina had portrayed Hefner and the organization in a wonderful light, as it should be. Surprisingly, after I read the book, I thought Christina had captured my own story almost down to the names of my hometown friends. It was a bit eerie but I was very flattered and devoured the book. It was named a Best Book of Summer by Good Morning America, CNN, Parade, Travel & Leisure and others. (Order it here, you will thank me later!)
Neal Zucker and partner Marko Iglendza celebrated double birthdays with a grand Gatsby-esque bash at the Peninsula. (Photo by Linda Alpert)
Neal Zucker and his partner Marko Iglendza hosted a double birthday celebration at the Peninsula on September 17. Neal was celebrating his 55th and Marko his 50th with nearly 300 of their closest friends. The
Darling bookends–Eric Kicherer and Paul Iacono with ZZAZZ Productions' model.
blow-out affair had everything, exotic showgirls (from ZZAZZ Productions) dressed in "Shanghai chic" attire, guests dressed to impress, cocktails flowing in every area of the Peninsula, music and then, of course, the rain. What had been forecast for a week was clear skies but what
Dramatic event decor by VH Designs (Vince Hart)
actually transpired was a completely different story. On the patio, beautiful decor by VH Designs (Vince Hart) was drenched but the crack team at the Pen, led by Maria Zec with support from Greg Hyder, magically and quickly transformed what could've become a mess into an evening no one will soon forget! The tables were
Birthday fun at the Pen!
repositioned in the hotel's lobby, which was the first time this had been done. And even though guests were a bit discombobulated for a while, party
After-party in the ballroom.
faces returned and dancing continued into the wee hours in the ballroom. No one wanted to leave. Kudos to the Pen for pulling off this difficult feat with such aplomb and, of course, to the generous birthday boys. It was a night like none other and just what we all needed. Thanks Neal and Marko!
Arabel Alva Rosales, founder of Runway LatinX and Pivoting in Heels, welcomes the SRO crowd.
The Runway LatinX We Flourish fashion show on October 16 was SRO at Cine City Studios. The space was perfect for this spectacular fashion show that featured sizzling looks from
One of the many beautiful designs in the show, this one by Adolfo Sanchez.
designers Delvin McCray, Andrea Salazar, Adolfo Sanchez and Fernanda Flores. The 3-day long series of events was hosted by Arabel Alva Rosales, the founder of the event's nonprofit beneficiary Pivoting in Heels, which strives to empower women in a variety of ways by hosting panel discussions, tutorials, events like this one, and more. I was proud to co-emcee alongside Univision's David Miranda, who charmed the crowd at every turn! The event was also live-streamed to Mexico and Columbia as well as several states in the U.S. DJ Raddick played throughout the evening. Special thanks to Arabel for all she does to promote women and her community. (For details on Pivoting in Heels, click here!)
The dynamic Women's Leadership Committee of the Illinois Holocaust Museum.
It was such an honor for me to return to host the Illinois Holocaust Museum's SOIREE event at the Botanic Garden. The event, hosted by the Women's
The beautiful setting at the Chicago Botanic Garden.
Leadership Committee, was held "under the stars" in a tent near a beautiful lake to help fund the museum's important programming. SOIREE, co-hosted by WB members Juliet Gray and Caroline Pfeffer, featured a video presentation hosted
Fritzie Fritzshall honored in a video tribute.
by Melissa Forman of a virtual tour of the Museum and a video tribute to the late Fritzie Fritzshall, who was integral to the Museum's success. A lavish buffet, dancing, a signature donut wall, and raffle prizes followed. The Museum's next exhibition, "Rise Up: Stonewall and the LGBTQ Right Movement," will open October 17 and will explore the June 1969 police raid of the Stonewall Inn that ignited the modern gay rights movement in the U.S. (Click here for all the info!)
This n' That: Congrats to Bethany Florek and her love, Andrew Kitick, who recently became engaged! Sugar & Spice (Almira Yllana and Giovanna Krozel) recently
Giovanna and Ken Krozel and Almira Yllana (Sugar & Spice) hosted a watch party for the Adler Planetarium's Celestial Ball at LondonHouse.
hosted a bash at LondonHouse Chicago to celebrate Adler Planetarium's virtual Celestial Ball. They always bring it! Their enthusiasm makes every party they attend so much better! And more kudos are in order for PAWS Chicago, which recently hosted a grand re-opening celebration for its state-of-the-art medical center at 3516 W. 26th St.
I'm thrilled to report the event scene is still heading in the right direction! Here's a few of note and some events/experiences you might be interested in!
Navy Pier will be full of fun and fright each Saturday through Oct. 30, during Slightly Spooky Saturdays, a series of themed immersive pop-up events for families in the Fifth Third Bank Family Pavilion. Each Saturday will feature interactive performances from costumed actors, acrobatic feats courtesy of the Actors Gymnasium, free Axe Throwing for guests from Axeplosion, a professional photographer with custom backgrounds and Professional VFX Make-Up Demonstrations from Faces in Focus. In addition, each themed Saturday will have their own special one-time only activities. (Details here!)
And more big news from the People's Pier with "Light Up the Lake"–Navy Pier will brighten the winter season with Light Up the Lake, an indoor, temperature-controlled experience, featuring large-scale light-sculpture displays comprising more than 600,000 twinkling lights; a regulation-size Alpine ice rink, authentic holiday beer garden, kiddie train rides, Santa’s Village and gift market and other family-friendly events. Offering something for everyone, Light Up the Lake will run from Nov. 26 through Jan. 2, in Festival Hall at Navy Pier. Special themed events, including date nights, are also planned. Transforming more than 100,000 square feet of Navy Pier’s expansive Festival Hall, Light Up the Lake will also offer sit-down dining with holiday-themed eats, signature cocktails, and seasonal brews. Grab-and-go meals and snacks will be available throughout the event space. (All the exciting deets here!)
Dr. Sandy Goldberg and her Greg Hines hosted another successful gala for A Silver Lining Foundation.
A Silver Lining Foundation’s 17th Annual A Sterling Event took place on Saturday, October 2 at the Hyatt Regency McCormick Place. Over 200 people were in attendance celebrating being together again and in full
Philanthropists/ restaurateurs, Al and Pam Capitinini served as dinner co-chairs.
compliance with all COVID related guidelines and mandates. There were lively bidding wars for both the silent and live auctions – resulting in significant fundraising efforts to cover the costs of programs and services for A Silver Lining Foundation. Dr. Sandy Goldberg and Greg Hines, A Silver Lining Foundation Co-Founders, are pleased to announce that plans are underway for the 18th Annual A Sterling Event scheduled to take place on October 8, 2022. The event promises to be fun and exciting as A Silver Lining Foundation prepares to celebrate the 20th anniversary of its founding!
The Joffrey Ballet's triumphant return to the stage.
The Joffrey Ballet's opening night, October 13, was a triumph, both in performance and its new venue at the Lyric Opera House. "Home: A Celebration" is an appropriate name for this night that brought together old and new Joffrey friends. The Lyric's renovations had everyone smiling and the dancers onstage received too many standing ovations to count. Now through Oct. 24! (Details here)
Arts in the Dark, a family-friendly annual event on October 30, will celebrate the artistic side of Halloween along State Street. This enchanted nighttime parade features large-scale puppets,
Arts in the Dark, an enchanted nighttime parade coming to State St. October 30.
costumed performers, elaborate floats, luminous lanterns, music and more. The city’s creative community, including cultural institutions like the Art Institute of Chicago and Lookingglass Theatre Company, will combine forces to create this surreal evening in downtown Chicago. The parade is not only a salute to Chicago’s cultural community, it has become a showcase for the creativity and diversity of Chicago’s neighborhoods. This must-see event is the only parade that features performers from every one of Chicago's 50 Wards! Family-friendly and free and open to the public.
Jack's Pumpkin Pop-Up going on now in Goose Island.
through Oct. 31 for an unforgettable 2-acre, 100% outdoor fall experience with Chicago’s largest corn maze, a hidden boozy bar, axe throwing, carnival games, music, fortune telling, pumpkin patch, three full-service bars, food trucks, one-of a-kind Instagram photo opps and MORE!
The Northalsted Halloween Parade, ranked one of the 10 Best Halloween Celebrations in the U.S. by Fodor’s Travel, will be held in the heart of the Northalsted
Northalsted Halloween Parade coming Oct. 31.
(also known as Boystown) neighborhood. The procession kicks off on Sunday, Oct. 31 at 7:00 p.m. on Halsted at Belmont with the Chicago Thriller flash mob, a troupe of ghoulish zombies performing and so much more! Join in the dancing or follow the parade route north, where a panel of drag queens will award prizes for the best costumes.
Streeterville Doggie Halloween Party, will be held in the MCA's garden on October 31. Alderman Brian Hopkins and Maureen Schulman will begin judging doggie costumes beginning at 9:15 am. with treats from Eli's Cheesecake and coffee. Free to the public.
A rendering of the Museum of Ice Cream coming to Chicago in the summer.
Museum of Ice Cream–Museum of Ice Cream (MOIC) is bringing its experiential museum to Chicago this coming summer 2022. Located at The Shops at Tribune Tower, 435 N Michigan, the one-of-its-kind space will span 13,544 square feet and encompass retail, entertainment, and a cafe and bar. The whimsical installations, imaginative tours, themed retail and more are designed under the premise that ice cream is a symbol of joy, a universal connector and a transportive vehicle for anyone’s imagination.
Howard Brown will host its 6th annual Big Orange Ball (virtually) on Saturday, October 23 from 8-9 pm and then for one week only On Demand through Sunday, October 31, at midnight. Kick off the 2021 Halloween season from the comfort of your couch or coffin, as this party-turned-premiere has you venture into a fright-filled night with ghostly treats, a dead-silent auction, and other spooky surprises! Prepare for a scare with spine-chilling stories that are sure to DRAG you straight to hell! The spooktacular show will be hosted by Lucy Stoole and featureghost stories told by Wanda Screw, Coco Sho-Nell, Tenderoni, and Irregular Girl. Your tickets and donations will benefit Howard Brown Health, making healthcare less scary for LGBTQ community. (Details here)
HCRF's Wings to Cure Gala coming Nov. 6.
Hippocratic Cancer Research Foundation will host its "Wings to Cure" gala on Saturday, November 6, at the Hilton Chicago. Established in 2015, HCRF's mission is to discover, develop and implement effective new cancer therapies by supporting groundbreaking research. (Gala details here)
The Apparel Industry Foundation will host REV UP!, a fashion show fundraiser on Thursday, October 21, to support our local design community. Models will strut
AIBI presents Rev UP! 2021, Oct. 21.
their stuff in virtual segments showcasing local designers' looks for fall. A VIP viewing party of the fashion video will be held at Bentley Gold Coast. The AIBI nurtures and supports the sewn products industry, including designers, through programming that includes all facets of the industry–merchandising, retail, sales, marketing, etc. (I'm emcee) Details here!
PAWS Chicago will host its annual Fur Ball on Friday, November 12 at the Drake Hotel. This year will celebrate the nonprofit's 20th anniversary. So, if you love seeing dogs in tuxes and supporting animal welfare, this event is for you! (Details here!)
Service Club Gala coming Nov.5 with celeb emcee John O'Hurley.
up to be a sellout so be sure to get your tickets NOW! The black-tie event,"Our Kind of Town Chicago…And All That Jazz", will be held on Friday, November 5, with actor John O'Hurley (Seinfeld's J. Peterman), as the event emcee. The event will be held at the Four Seasons to benefit the nonprofit's Philanthropic Grant Program. Co-chaired by Melinda Jakovich-LaGrange, Heather Spyra and Lyn McKeaney. Music will be provided by the Gold Coast All Stars. (Raffle, silent and live auctions) (Details here)
The Chicago Police Foundation's True Blue event will honor John Robak on Nov. 6.
Sat., Nov. 6. The nonprofit will honor beloved philanthropist John Robak, at the Four Seasons. Proceeds will support and fund programs that provide supplemental resources in the areas of safety equipment, advanced technology, enhanced training and officer wellness for the Chicago Police Dept. Details here!
Fox-32's Sylvia Perez.
Special thanks to Sylvia Perez for having me back on her fabulous Fox-32 Chicago show! We always have fun and had so much to discuss! (See video below) Thanks also to Anna Davlantes for having me back to chat on her cool WGN-Radio show, always a great time with both of these iconic media personalities!
Welcome back CHICAGO! Thanks for reading and supporting, I hope you're having a great fall! We have been having a wonderful time, especially now that we have a recurring visitor, a female Cardinal, who comes when I call! Ahhh, the thrill of nature!
Plus: Haute hats for the Service Club; Sable hotel's GRAND opening at Offshore; Chicago Star/Mariano's Streeterville Week kick-off party; Digestive Health Foundation's "Together on the Terrace"; "Random Acts of Kindness" with Maria and Fresh Farms; Steppenwolf's exciting plans, and a new live show; Good and bad news for Randolph Street Market; Ronald McDonald House Charities Gala; Pride done right; Gone too soon, Holocaust Survivor Fritzie Fritzshall; Adalina, chic, sexy and delish; Safety tips and tricks from a cop who knows; Chicago Children's Choir's "Red Jacket Optional"; Auditorium Theatre's devilish "Devil's Ball; Hef and the History Channel; The Chicago Lighthouse FLAIR event will honor ? (see who below!); Black Tie and Sneaker Ball; Apparel Industry Foundation's REV UP! is BACK!; Ravinia Festival Gala debuts a real winner; Navy Seal Foundation's "Evening of Tribute" with a surprise keynote speaker; Publicity Club of Chicago celebrates the best of the best; Cute videos and SOOOO much more!
It's thrilling to watch Chicago's return, which I'm gauging on the strength of my events calendar. There are an enormous number of events and activities coming back bigger and better than ever and I couldn't be happier! Our streets are full, restaurants are busy, the boat tours have all returned and things are getting really exciting around here. I think after all the "you can't do thats", that people are rejoicing like it's Mardi Gras now just because they CAN! I feel like a great weight has been lifted off our shoulders. It's an honor to share some of these parties, activities and more below. I hope you have wonderful plans for summer….maybe you'll get some ideas here!
Spring Luncheon co-chairs Cathy Bartholomay, Michelle Baker and Annette Findling.
First up, the irrepressible Service Club of Chicago hasn't missed a beat during the pandemic. In fact, most of their events have raised even more money than before. That's because their members put their money where their hearts are and it's a joy to see. Their latest
SC members Bethany Florek, SC pres Sherrill Bodine and Lauren Lein Cavanaugh.
big fundraiser was the Spring Luncheon, lovingly referred to as the Hat Luncheon. Co-chairs Cathy Bartholomay, Michelle Baker and Annette Findling, put together an exciting event that was spread across two rooms at the venerable Woman's Athletic Club (WAC).
Myra Reilly and Cheryl Coleman.
Over 200 ladies donned their finest millinery attire to attend. SC president Sherrill Bodine said, "We have all walked through a dark storm together and now here we are with our heads held high, and wearing beautiful hats, ready to take on the world again. And what a new beginning!" The guest speaker, Sandy Schreier, is the famed fashion curator and historian whose designer collections have been exhibited around the world. Sandy discussed her collection, design career, TV appearances, books and famous friendships to a rapt audience. (A VIP reception was hosted the night before at Neiman Marcus Michigan Avenue). Auctioneer Andy Baker and I conducted an open call for donations and a live auction that featured a
Peg Lombardo, Tracey DiBuono and Vonita Reescer.
package donated by Brunello Cucinelli that included a trip to Casa Cucinelli in New York, hotel and airfare, lunch and dinner, a tour and fashion presentation. At the end of the day, the event raised over $190,000 which will support the organization's Philanthropic Fund. The SC is an all-volunteer woman's organization that was founded in 1890. All proceeds raised are distributed to Chicago's worthiest nonprofits. This year that amount was over $500K! (To learn more about the SC, click here!)
With Mariano's Amanda Puck (love the background subject!) (Cool photo prop by Kehoe Designs).
A pat on the back to Chicago Star, who hosted its first big event at Mariano's Lakeshore East (May 21) on their beautiful rooftop patio. Special thanks to Amanda Puck,
Jim Smith, Chilli Pepper, Jay Frankovich and Jeremy Plummer.
Mariano's Director of Strategic Brand Development, who helped coordinate this fun effort that celebrated the kick-off of Streeterville Week, a Chicago Star initiative supporting local business. The night couldn't have been more perfect for this outdoor party–a gentle breeze, warm temps–and those jaw-droppingly beautiful views of Lake Shore East Park. The
Supporters Judy and Howard Tullman (board member), with Bonnie (board member) and Jim Spurlock.
party was for Chicago Star's supporters, friends, sponsors, board members and advertisers and, at 60+ guests, we were at capacity since the city hadn't fully opened yet. The
Giovanna Krozel and Almira Yllana (Sugar & Spice) with Doorstep Divas (Molly Callinan and Caitlin Simone).
The Landan Twins (Jonathan and Andrew) with Billy Rairigh, Paul Iacono, Amanda Puck and friend.
who added a lot of pizzazz to this party. Delicious bites
Michael Kutza, Maggie Baczkowski and Curt Rose.
from Mariano's included mini fried chicken sandwiches, Oki sushi, Oki veggie rolls, individual shrimp cocktails, smoked salmon on toast and crackers, mini cheeseboards, Murray's Lemon Cheese Bites, plus wine and beer. Friends, this WAS a PARTEE UNTIL….We had decided earlier to try to shoot a cover shot for the paper and include everyone in attendance. Kristan
Cook County Treasurer Maria Pappas with Chuck.
Lieb was our photog and she had clambered onto a ladder for an overview shot. The guests were grabbing copies of the paper to
Fabulous Eli's Cheesecakes and floral design by Luxe Bloom.
hold and moving into position near the railing with the park as our backdrop. Everything looked so perfect except for one annoying cast-iron garbage receptacle. Soooooo, as always, I wanted to get the perfect photo so I tried moving it (VERY BAD IDEA)…as I grabbed it, a very heavy piece pulled away and slammed directly onto my foot. Well, it swelled up as big as a football but I still gamely limped into the photo (LOL!)…Afterwards, I sat down and watched it get bigger. So many wonderful people brought ice, including Chicago Star
Elaine Hyde, Chicago Star founder, with the Landan Twins.
founder Elaine Hyde's sweet husband Joey. I was so
With Chicago Star Team: Nuria Mathog, Elaine Hyde, Angela Gagnon and Jay Kopp.
disgusted with myself. We had been planning this party for weeks and weeks and now to have this happen. Anyway, I thought I could stay and just sit in a chair but I wasn't sure if I'd broken anything so a trip to the emergency room was in order. Thank goodness I went to Thorek, at the suggestion of a friend, because they took care of me like no one before. (Special shout-out here to staff and especially Dr. Rachel Goldstein, who was a saint!) Anyway, thanks to all our friends who came and know that I was so very sorry to have to leave half-way through! Streeterville Week was
Doorstep Diva Molly Callinan and DJ World.
created by Chicago Star in November 2020 as an initiative designed to lift community spirits, boost morale and encourage residents and visitors to shop locally during the pandemic. More
WBBM's Lisa Fielding, she's a fan.
than two dozen local businesses took part in the inaugural event, with some participants, such as Pinstripes, seeing over 40% increases in revenue. Guests in attendance included Manolis Alpogianis, Bonnie and Jim Spurlock, Howard and Judy Tullman, Jim Sharp, Sarah Tuohy, Curt Rose, Maggie Baczkowski, Greg Hyder, Jim Smith, Chilli Pepper and friends Jeremy Plummer and Jay Frankovich, Cee and Vince Reyes, Michael Caputo, Cook County Treasurer Maria Pappas and Peter
Jim Smith, Marilyn, Michael Caputo and Tom Kehoe.
Cee Reyes, Greg Hyder, Vince Reyes and CSM's Jay Kopp.
Kambreros, Andrew and Jon Landan, Giovanna Krozel and Almira Yllana, Tom Kehoe, Shelley Rosen, Tina Koegel, Paul Iacono, Tracey Tarantino, Michael Kutza, Richard Ward, Marc Schulman, Will Nifong, Sherren Leigh, Mario Hollemans, Dr. Valerie Mayuga, Geno Suarez, Lisa Fielding, Joyce Winnecke and George Houlihan, Kathleen Jenkins, Lindsay Forman, Tom Claxton and so many more! Can't wait to plan another fun event, this time at FULL CAPACITY! (Love you so much Amanda Puck!) (Video below by Kairos & Co. Film) (First published in Chicago Star)
The Digestive Health Foundation at Northwestern Medicine hosted its first live event in over a year at the MCA on June 5. With in-person attendance of 220 and additional supporters participating virtually via livestream, the DHF’s
Tom Swimmermaker, Nancy Payne, Karen Mandel, Zack Karmin
Together on the Terrace: An Evening of Art, Appetizers and Spirits, Al Fresco raised a whopping $1.3 million, bringing the total sum raised by DHF since its inception in 2015 to nearly $15 million! Held outdoors in the museum’s Anne and John Kern Terrace Garden, the event featured mixology demonstrations, wine tasting, light bites, live music by the TVK Orchestra, museum tours, silent and live auctions and raffle prizes. Auction highlights included Ryder Cup tickets, a trip to New York City with VIP tickets to The Late Show with Stephen Colbert, and dinner prepared by
Michael Baum (Digestive Health Foundation Board Member and Ambassador Board Champion)
Jake Dockser and Olivia Kleinman
Michelin-starred chef Soo Ahn, who helms the kitchen at the fabulous Italian restaurant Adalina in the Gold Coast. FOX 32 Chicago’s Sylvia Perez kicked off the event as well as the livestream. Event proceeds will benefit digestive disease research as well as supporting the DHF Ambassador Board’s commitment to promoting greater equity in access to medical care and education through two projects that include the new Digestive Health Foundation MCAT Prep Program created in partnership with the I Am Abel Foundation to provide funding, resources and mentoring to help under-
Dr. Leila Kia, MD
represented students prepare for medical school, and the Elizabeth Blackwell Fund for
Eric Corwin and Julie Kaviar (DHF Ambassador Board and MCA Overall Event Lead)
independent female GI researchers in honor of the first U.S. woman to earn a medical degree. Since inception six years ago, DHF has funded 67 crucial annual grants as well as ongoing research studies including the DHF BioRepository, a blood and tissue bank used for digestive disease research that is one of the few databases of its kind in the world. (For more info on DHF, click here)
Sable at Navy Pier hosted a grand opening party June 9. The by-invite-only affair was held on Offshore's magnificent rooftop and included notables such as American Idol's Grace
Offshore, supposedly the world's largest rooftop bar.
Kinstler and the Mayor, who delivered a powerful, inspiring speech about the city's return. The program was hosted by the much loved Israel Idonije. Another fan favorite, David Rothstein Music, performed throughout the night against a backdrop of heart-stopping skyline views. Greeters dressed in nautical attire directed guests to the party from the check-in in Sable's lobby. Enroute, partygoers could partake of popcorn and champagne carts. Magnificent, over-sized floral
American Idol's Grace Kinstler.
arrangements and candles were scattered throughout the space. Owners of the Sable had flown in from Switzerland and Sable's dapper GM, Laurent Boisdron, was on hand to present the hotel's very first
Sable GM Laurent Boisdron presents bouquet to the hotel's first guest.
guest with a beautiful bouquet. The Mayor introduced Izzy as the "personification of what a good public servant is all about." She continued, "We have the lowest unemployment rate of any city in the
Darling, nautically attired greeters.
country, our buying power is second to none and our economy is already roaring back." The Sable is the only hotel in Chicago where every room has a breathtaking lake view. The hotel also features Lirica restaurant (with Latin and Iberian-inspired cuisine) and a beautiful outdoor patio. It's a perfect spot for a staycation or out-of-town visitors–friendly staff, beautiful, sleekly designed rooms and, of course, those views. (Details here)
Carrie Coon and Namir Smallwood star in the Tracy Letts play "Bug" at Steppenwolf Theatre. (Michael Brosilow Photo)
Steppenwolf Theater Company will come roaring back on November 11 when its first live show will be the remount of BUG by Tracy Letts, starring ensemble members Carrie Coon and Namir Smallwood. Previews will begin November 11 in Steppenwolf's Downstairs Theater where you will see a whole new lobby plus a new wine bar on the second floor in the existing theater building! Steppenwolf will welcome back theater-goers to a brand new, 50,000-sq.-ft. building and education center at 1650 N. Halsted. As the world came to a pause in 2020, the walls of the state-of-the-art arts facility continued to rise, symbolizing hope for
Rendering of the new Shakespeare Theatre Company.
the entire Chicago arts community. Designed by world-renowned architect Gordon Gill of Adrian Smith + Gordon Gill Architecture (AS+GG) with theater design and acoustics
Rendering of Steppenwolf's wine bar/lobby area.
by Charcoalblue, the transformed Steppenwolf Theatre Company campus will change the way Chicagoans and visitors experience the company’s cutting-edge theater. In Fall 2021, Steppenwolf builds on the global reach and acclaim of its virtual stage (currently streaming in all 50 states and more than 20 countries) with a lineup of new virtual works by ensemble members Tina Landau, Tracy Letts and Tarell Alvin McCraney. (See full schedules and more details here).
The Publicity Club of Chicago (PCC) celebrated the 62nd anniversary of the Golden Trumpet Awards, the most prestigious awards program in the Midwest, honoring distinguished individual achievement in public relations, marketing and communications. The awards ceremony took place on Thursday, June 17 and was PCC’s second virtual Golden Trumpet Awards ceremony. I was honored to present Cramer-
Presenters and hosts for the 2021 Golden Trumpet Awards
Krasselt with the event's top honors, the 'Best of Show' award, for their 'Navigating Coronavirus with the Brand Name Corona’ campaign as well as deliver a tribute to the
Delivering my tribute to the late Dori Wilson.
late, great Dori Wilson who passed away earlier this year in February. Over 200 guests joined an online platform that included virtual meeting rooms and a livestream presentation emceed by WGN-9’s Ben Bradley and Lourdes Duarte, Comcast’s Maria Castro, PCC Board Members Jim O’Reilly and Payal Patel and me. In partnership with the PCC, the production was put together by Video Parachute. Other winners included: Jasculca Terman Strategic
Navy Pier's Strategic Communications Leader Payal Patel was a host.
Communications, who won the 'Edwin J. Shaughnessy Quality of Life Award' for the ‘Lakeview Pantry COVID-19 Response’ campaign; L.C. Williams & Associates won the 'Buell Patterson Technology Award'
Maria Castro, Comcast Regional Affairs Manager, presented awards.
for the 'AASM – Student Sleep Health Week' and MWW, who won the 'Elynore Dolkart Meserow Creativity Award’ for the ‘Bridging Remote Learning During COVID-19’ campaign. PCC Board Member and Metropolitan Family Services’ Bridget Hatch (love her) received PCC’s Volunteer of the Year Award. Established in 1941, the Publicity Club of Chicago (PCC) is a network of inspired Chicago- area public relations professionals and counselors who work at every type of organization and, together, compose the nation's largest independent public relations membership organization.
Adalina hosted "Friends & Family" dining this week in advance of its opening at its Gold Coast location, 912 N. State. The restaurant was buzzing with activity as servers flew around the elegant space with dishes created by its talented Michelin-starred Chef Soo Ahn. Against a backdrop of midnight blue walls, plush velvet banquettes, large scale artwork and a dramatic chandelier, diners enjoyed dishes that included handmade pastas such as rigatoni with Maine lobster, Red King crab and Calabrian chile and scallions; ravioli with summer truffles, corn, ricotta, pearl onions and aged balsamic and carved tableside porterhouses and Dover sole; salmon vesuvio; veal chop parmigiana, roasted chicken, a Wagyu strip steak and so much more. Starters included charred octopus, gnocco fritto, truffled caesar (prepared tableside) and a delicious fried green tomato caprese, among others. Opening Monday, June 21, hours will be 3pm to 1 pm, Monday through Sunday, with lunch and brunch service coming soon. Partners Phil Siudak, Miles Muslin, Matt Deichl and Jonathan Gillespie, along with general manager Tee Efendija, must be very excited about their bright future here. Among the familiar faces seen on the scene were Peter and Cynthia Au, Kasia and Greg Kay, Jay and Albrey Kopp, Michael Kutza, Ryan Chiaverini and Pasquale Gianni, among others. Welcome to the 'hood Adalina! (First published in Chicago Star)
With Cook County Treasurer Maria Pappas and Dino Svigo (Fresh Farms) passing out boxes of candy to Chicago's dads.
I've been so excited to partner with Cook County Treasurer Maria Pappas dispensing "Random Acts of Kindness" around the city. It was the Treasurer's
Shelley Rosen (Luxe Bloom)–Mother's Day
idea to do this to help lift people's spirits following the pandemic and also to help beautify the city. Our first event was held in collaboration with Shelley Rosen (founder of Luxe Bloom). Shelley's company put together a partnership with JC Decaux North America to install, a two-sided fresh floral display on the NW corner of Michigan and Chicago for Mother's Day and throughout the month. On
With Jay Kopp, Maria Pappas, Dino Svigos and friend on Father's Day.
May 9, we gave away more than 500 Ecuadorian roses to honor the mothers and women of Chicago, promote the beautification of the Mag Mile and support local business. We
Paul Iacono, Chuck and Bonnie Spurlock on Mother's Day.
even handed out Luxe Bloom roses to bus drivers and one under-appreciated mom who broke down in tears. It's amazing (and heart-warming) to see how a small, random act of kindness can make such a difference. So proud to be a small part of this big community effort! Love and thanks to all who came out to support us like Paul Iacono, Maria Mancuso, Suzie Glickman, Joey Majumdar, Jonathan Tam, Humberto Jimenez (Consul General
With Real Men Charities founder Yvette Moyo and Maria Pappas at Real Men Cook event, 2425 E. 75th St.
of Ecuador), Kenichi Okada (Consul General of Japan), Yvette Moyo (Chairman/CEO Real Men Charities), Marco Polo Valladolid (President Mexican Civic Society of Illinoi), Sam Ma (Honorary Chair of the
Marta Farion.
American-Asian Association), Marta Farion (President Kyiv-Mohyla Foundation of America), Kina Bagovska, (Director Magura Bulgarian Cultural Center), Nanta Buranakanchana (Asian American Coalition of Chicago) and Vandana Jhingan (Midwest Bureau Chief TV Asia) and Marta Farion. We repeated these "Random Acts of Gifting" on Father's Day at another corner on Michigan Avenue giving out boxes of truffle candies, courtesy of Fresh Farms (Dino Svigos and his sons Niko, Dean and Alex. Following this event, Maria and I went to the 32nd Real Men Cook celebration benefiting Real Men Charities (founded by Yvette Moyo) and handed out more candy! (ALL of the good photos are by Barb Levant)
RSM debut market in Three Oaks with Sally Schwartz (R), D. Graham Kostic (2nd from R) and family.
First, the good news–Randolph Street Market's first day back after the pandemic was a slam dunk. Held for the first time in Three Oaks, Michigan, on Memorial Day Weekend (29/30), RSM founder Sally Schwartz and 40 dealers from across the country welcomed guests
Chuck congratulating Sally on her first market in Three Oaks.
back after a long, hard year. Shuttle buses were flying back and forth and police, with lights flashing, helped direct traffic. It was so good to see this award-winning and much loved market return. Sally welcomed guests who traveled from near and far to peruse the large selection of goods, socialize and
Randolph Street Market's first day in Three Oaks.
enjoy snacks from the Pigs by Pigs food truck stationed on the grounds. A portion of the ticket sales ($5 for adults with children under 12 free) supported Fernwood Botanical Garden in Niles-Buchanan. Now the bad news, Due to continuing adverse weather conditions, the Randolph Street Market in Three Oaks has canceled the rest of its summer
RSM is always an Aladdin's Cave of finds.
schedule. Here's a message from founder Sally Schwartz: "For the first time in Randolph Street Market’s 18-year history, we have to close the balance of our summer festival due to severe weather
I wish I would've bought these.
and venue conditions. Refunds will be promptly sent out this week. Most of you know our super huge antique market festival venue in Chicago’s West Loop is currently under construction, which prompted us to create a mini “taste” of Randolph with the original concept of bringing a select group of 40+ dealers on a road trip this summer. We landed in Three Oaks, Michigan, an artsy, cultural community with boutique-style retail that complemented our Antique and Vintage vibe. The show would be a fun day-trip for our Chicago customers and offer our clientele with homes up there a fun way to reconnect with us…With heavy rain happening now and predicted through next week, and our indoor venue space having size and A/C limitations, our inability to accommodate more dealers, sponsors, and entertainment make expansion and operations impossible. Unfortunately, these issues can’t be resolved for the balance of our summer program which now has forced us to shut down." We anxiously await your return dear RSM!
The late Fritzie Fritzshall in front of her hologram in the Illinois Holocaust Museum's Survivor Stories exhibit.
The world has lost a hero. As a Survivor of the Holocaust and the President of Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center, Fritzie Fritzshall devoted her life to combating hatred and prejudice, inspiring people to become Upstanders instead of bystanders, and speaking out to make our world a better place. Everywhere she spoke, she changed people's lives and the way they see the world. I know because I am a witness. She passed away recently at age 91, and during her lifetime, she influenced all who met her or heard her words. During the Holocaust,
Fritzie revisits a concentration camp where she and her family were held.
Nazis occupied Fritzie's hometown of Klucharky, Czechoslovakia, and deported her, her mother and two brothers to Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp when Fritzie was just a young teenager. Her mother, two younger brothers and other family members were murdered. “There is no way to describe what it was like to be in the rail car hungry, cold, without food, without water, watching pregnant women begging for water, watching different people dying in front of you from lack of food, air, and water,” Fritzie said. “My own grandfather died in this car going to Auschwitz. In 1946, After surviving these atrocities, Fritzie came to Skokie, Illinois, and reunited with her father, who worked for Vienna Beef and had come to America before the Holocaust to provide his family with money from abroad. Fritzie, in a 2019 interview, said, “I want the world to remember and to know to never, ever, ever, ever forget about the Holocaust. We say ‘never again,’ but we don't often mean ‘never again.’ ‘Never again’ must be ‘never again.’ It must stop.”
Chase Garret, a retired 32-year vet with the Chicago Police Dept. and friend.
With all the crime in the city now, I felt it would be helpful to share some tips from retired policemen, Chase Garrett. Actually, his tips are part of a larger feature article I wrote for Chicago Star's July issue called "What the Pros Know". (Read all pro tips here) In it, there are tips from famed interior
Interior designer Nate Berkus offers tips on designing for a small space in the next issue of Chicago Star.
designer Nate Berkus (how to decorate a small space); Chef Art Smith (how to cook the perfect fried chicken); Robert Garvey (Robert's Pizza, tips for creating the perfect pizza at home); Jason Kollar (my IT guy–KCS Computer Technology— who knows EVERYTHING about computers, gives us tips for what we should
Chef Art Smith shares his secrets for the best fried chicken.
buy); Colin Collette (Mangels Florist), gives advice on creating the perfect floral arrangement; Debi Lilly (A Perfect Event) tells us how to plan a summer party; Sugar & Spice (aka Gio Krozel and Almira Yllana) are experts on all things Disney and they share secret tips and tricks for planning that perfect trip to Disney World; Jerry Torpy, our handyman and founder of Appliance Rescue Service, shares advice for keeping cool this summer; DavidLampert (Lester Lampert Jewelers); Rob Morhaim (president Morhaim Media Consulting), offers expert advice on delivering slam-dunk business presentations; and Monika Dixon (Monika Dixon PR) offers great suggestions on social media and branding).
Here's Chase's tips for keeping safe in the city. I wanted to share them in their entirety because I feel they are so important. In the paper's article, they are edited but I'm happy to be able to share his complete, very thoughtful suggestions here, for keeping safe in these difficult times. My Citizen's app is going off constantly now with reports of crime in every part of the city. Sort of feels like a war zone right now. Anyway, I hope these will be helpful for you. (And remember, to see the complete list of tips from the pros, click here!) (Published first in Chicago Star)
1) DON'T BE AN EASY TARGET–Criminals usually target easy prey. They look for those that are not paying attention to their surroundings. They know you aren't paying attention when they see you on your phone. They know you are distracted by a conversation, or listening to music, especially with your earplugs in. They usually attack you from behind, take your possessions and disappear, before you even realize what happened. This is to their advantage, because if you never see them coming, even if the police caught them, you wouldn't be able to identify them. This is why being alert is so important! If you stay alert and aware of your surroundings, you can notice when people are watching you. You can notice the same car, possibly with tinted windows, circling the block as you walk down the street. Use your phone to call a friend, or loved one and tell them where you are and what's happening. Give them the license plate number of the car, or take a picture of it. Discreetly take a photo of someone you feel is suspicious and send it to a friend. If you can't take any pictures, remember as much about that person(s), as you can, in case you have to notify "911".
2) KNOW WHAT TO DO IF YOU'RE A VICTIM OF A CRIME–If you get attacked, threatened, or robbed, you want to immediately contact "911". "911" is for emergencies and "311" is for making non emergency reports. When you call "911", you will speak with a Call Taker. That person will ask you several questions. The more of those questions that you can answer, the better. They will ask you for your name, location and what happened. They will ask when it happened, how many offenders were there, if any vehicles were involved and a description of the vehicle. They will ask you to describe your assailant. Their race, approximate age, height and weight. They will ask about the color of their eyes and hair and to describe any clothing. All of this information is then relayed to a Dispatcher, who notifies the patrol cars in the area. Several cars will immediately begin looking for the offender(s) and other vehicles will come to you. If you were able to give out a relatively good description of the assailant(s), the police may locate someone near the address of occurrence and bring them back to the scene, for a "Show Up". If you identify the person(s), they will be arrested and taken to the district. If you do not identify them, they are released and the search continues.The police will search for witnesses and video surveillance to assist in locating any offenders. Remembering as much information as possible, is vital to the arrest and prosecution of any and all offenders. If your wallet or identification is taken, or stolen, immediately contact one of the major credit reporting agencies. Trans Union, Equifax, or Experian. Give them your police report number and ask for a 7 year Fraud Alert on your credit. This means that no one can open credit in your name, without contacting the phone number that you give them. All that is needed is a police report, stating that your personal information was taken.
3) WHAT TO DO, IF YOU GET PHYSICALLY ATTACKED–If someone physically attacks you, you have no choice but to defend yourself. I suggest always keeping a weapon, such as pepper spray, in your hand while walking in isolated areas. Pepper spray is legal and its easy to hold in your hand, discreetly. It does you no good, if it's in the bottom of your purse and someone takes your purse. If you have no weapons and you're being physically assaulted, try to scratch your assailant in the face. This makes them easily identifiable, when the police begin their search. Bloody scratch marks in one's face, is usually a good clue that they were involved in something nefarious! If you scratch them on the arms, or body, you can get their DNA under your nails. Everything goes of course, if you're fighting for your life. Bite them, gouge them in the eyes, use your weapon, do whatever you can to get away and scream. Screaming will alert others, that you're being attacked and hopefully they will help you, or call the police. Don't scream fire, because you will only confuse people. Scream for help and scream to have someone call for the police!
CHASE'S TIPS FOR AVOIDING A CAR JACKING: 1) Keep your doors locked at all times, when you're in or out of vehicle; 2) Remove the keys from the ignition, when pumping gas; 3) Don't leave your purse, or other valuables in plain view when exiting the vehicle; 4) Leave plenty of space in front of you when pulling up to stop signs, or red lights, in case you have to make an evasive action.; 5) If you pull up to an intersection and someone starts approaching your vehicle and you feel threatened, run the red light, after making sure no traffic is coming. It's better to risk getting a traffic ticket, than to stay in an unsafe position.; 6) Know that most car jackings occur when you're parking and exiting the vehicle. This can be in a gas station, garage, or on the street. Be extra alert at these times.; 7) If you're surrounded, or someone approaches with a weapon and demands your car, do not resist. Give them your car and immediately contact 911, as soon as possible. Your car is insured and can always be replaced. Your life can't. (First published in Chicago Star).
Chicago Pride Month is always filled with fun-filled celebrations to honor the LGBTQ community. One of my favorites is hosted by Tom Kehoe is his Old Town neighborhood. You never know who will show up, last year Governor Pritzker and his First Lady MK, were guests. This year, his magical home showed off the design skills that he and his companies are known for. Spray painted, Pride-colored, over-sized palm fronds filled every container throughout the space. Colorful, oversized Pride banners out front directed party-goers to the main event. In the beautifully landscaped backyard, Pride banners were used as sun shields and were draped from the roof to the back fence. A DJ standing behind a Pride-colored table kept the beats alive as servers presented tasty treats on, you guessed it, Pride colored dishes and cups. It was such a colorful day spent with colorful friends. Love you Tom.
The Chicago Children's Choir's "Red Jacket Optional" event returns on Saturday, October 16. It hasn't been determined whether or not it will be in-person, virtual or a hybrid. Live music and exceptional dining are always hallmarks of this evening which celebrates 65 years of bringing youth and communities together for a stronger future. (Check here for details)
The Auditorium Theatre Auxiliary Board will host its annual Devil’s Ball on Friday, August 27. It's the first public event at the theatre since its temporary closure in March of 2020. All proceeds will benefit the restoration and preservation of the National Historic Landmark Auditorium Theatre. This year's event, themed Roaring Back, will be held on the theatre's stage and feature Gatsby-themed cocktails, fabulous nosh, live jazzy tunes, a photo booth, silent auction, wine raffle, behind-the-scenes tours, a surprise pop-up performance and dancing beneath the architectural brilliance of the theatre! (Tickets/details here)
Ronald McDonald House Charities will host its annual gala Saturday, August 7. Presented by HAVI and Wintrust, the nonprofit's premier fundraising event will feature gourmet cuisine, live entertainment, live and silent auctions and a one-of-a-kind experience, all to support programs that enable families with sick or injured children (worldwide) stay together and near leading hospitals and healthcare services. (More details will be announced here soon)
The Service Club of Chicago will present its annual "Day on the Terrace' fashion show/fundraiser, this year themed "Here Comes the Sun," Monday, Aug. 2, 11am at The Geraghty. The event will be chaired by SC vets Jean Antoniou, Tracey Tarantino DiBuono and Sharyl Mackey. The show, produced by ZZAZZ productions, will offer a first look at fall fashion from some of the city's top retailers and local designers. Funds raised will support its Philanthropic Grant Program, which recently donated over $500K worth of grants to deserving nonprofits. (Details/tickets here!) (Chicago Star is the proud media sponsor!)
I'm so excited the Apparel Industry Foundation will be hosting REV UP! this year on Thursday, October 21 at Joe Perillo's Bentley Gold Coast (834 N. Rush)! The event may be a combination of in-person and virtual but you can bet it will be as exciting as ever, with the in-person element at the dealership! The show will be produced by ZZAZZ Productions and will feature looks from some of Chicago's top local designers. All emerging designers, fashion students and high school hopefuls are encouraged to sign up herefor the organization's Scholarship Competition! (I'm thrilled to return as host and excited that Chicago Star will be the media sponsor). (All details here!)
The Chicago Lighthouse will host its much loved FLAIR fashion show/fundraiser on Friday, October 1 at the Drake Hotel.
Chicago Lighthouse FLAIR 2021 honoree Susan Gohl with Johnathan Grabill at this year's Derby.
The event will showcase the best in fall fashion produced by ZZAZZ Productions. AND, drum roll please…..This year's honoree is the much deserving SUSAN GOHL! I'm excited to return as a co-host for this event with the one and only Tracey Tarantino DiBuono. (Check here for all the details coming soon!)
The Navy Seal Foundation's 2021 Midwest Evening of Tribute will be held on Tuesday, September 14. Greg Brown, CEO Motorola Solutions) and Anna Brown will serve as co-chairs for this patriotic salute and support for our warriors. The Navy Seal Foundation provides a comprehensive set of programs specifically designed to reduce the stressors associated with life in Naval Special Warfare to both the special warfare operators and their families. This year's event will also honor David Herro (Chief Investment Officer International Equities at Harris Associates LP.) To discover who the keynote speaker is and for more details, click here).
Maryville Academy will host its second Wine Tasting and Garden Tour, to benefit Maryville's Jen School, on Saturday, August 7, at the Des Plaines campus on 1150 N. River Road. Each guest will pay $35 to sample wines, enjoy appetizers, tour the Jen School garden and more. Maryville Jen School, founded in 2007, was selected by the National Association of Special Education Teachers (NASET) as a NASET School of Excellence for eight years in a row. It is the only school in the country that offers vocational education for young children with special learning needs. It works with young people ages 10 to 21 with academic, emotional, behavioral or intellectual challenges. (Learn more here)
The American Writers Museum (AWM) is hosting its annual OnWord benefit dinnerin-person for the first time since 2019 on August 31, from 6:00 pm to 9pm.The event will be hosted by award winning novelist and short story writer Rebecca Makkai at the Radisson Blu Aqua Hotel. The AWM Cultural and Civic Leadership Award will honor Dr. Malcolm O'Hagan. Since 2019, AWM has hosted the annual OnWord benefit dinner to provide important support, allowing the museum to continue to present educational exhibits and programming that celebrate freedom of thought, diversity, connection and understanding. (All details here)
The Art of Giving Foundation will host its “BLACK TIE & SNEAKER BALL” at Artifact Events, 4325 N. Ravenswood, on July 9. The Foundation, founded by Autumn Pippenburg, is dedicated to funding local art programs and artists in need of seed funding to launch or maintain social initiative programs that benefit their communities. Included in the evening’s festivities will be a live auction, a sneaker and accessory fashion show, as well as a “Best Sneaker Design” competition. Chicago fashion designer Borris J Powell will be presenting a “Best Dressed” award for the most stylish guest. General admission tickets are $175 and there are four levels of VIP sponsorships available that include various amounts of VIP tickets, table reservations, champagne and private artist meet n’ greets. (Details here!)
Recently, I was contacted by the History Channel for a docu-series on Hugh Hefner, Playboy and other
With the Lucky 8 TV crew in NJ.
legendary visionaries filmed by Lucky 8 TV. Chuck and I were flown to New Jersey for a taping. You all know how much I love chatting about Hef and all-things Playboy so I just can't wait! I'll share the details when it happens.
That's it for this week! As you can see, a lot of our event's are coming back in full force and I couldn't be happier. It's tough being a "social scribe" when you have nothing to write about! But all that is changing now! Special thanks to Fox 32's Sylvia Perez for welcoming me back to talk about all of our reopening excitement, see video below for more fun events and things to do. And I will see you again soon! Thanks for checking in!
Plus: Brookfield Zoo's "Whirl"; Hard Rock Casino's grand opening party; Tina's FAB Fumee Claire candles; A tribute to Bernie; Blooms on the Mag Mile; Deborah's "Journey to Joshua"; What's happening in Chicago NOW?; "Wonders of the Park" auction for Lincoln Park; Banksy art fans on pins and needles; Schulman Felix Mag; AVLI on the Park; Chicago Pride Fest; Pendry Chicago's, Chicago Star releases June issue!; elegant, grand opening; Birthday joy at La Scarola; Northalsted Market Days; Randolph Street Market updates; Imerman Angels' Angels Spirit Week; Maria Pappas, why we need her; Sweet video, and SOOO much more!
Neiman Marcus Michigan Ave. GM Wendy Krimins, Joffrey pres/CEO Greg Cameron and Joffrey WB member Noren Ungaretti.
Neiman Marcus Michigan Avenue, Northbrook and Oakbrook joined in partnership to support The Joffrey Ballet for their FIRST in-person event following the Covid outbreak, "Fashion for a Passion." The event combined an in-person luncheon with a video-taped fashion show
Beautiful decor for this first in-person event!
featuring spring trends. Guests were welcomed by the GMs at each store, Wendy Krimins (Michigan Ave.), Linda Piepho (Northbrook) and Michelle Distasio-Flinn (Oakbrook). Around 70 guests were in attendance at all three
locations with over 30 more zooming in for viewing. Tina Koegel, Brand Experience manager at the Neiman Marcus Chicago location, said, "I’m proud of our longstanding support [a 12 year partnership] of the Joffrey Ballet and our wonderful relationship with their incredibly
Noren Ungaretti holding a beautiful gift box courtesy of Neiman Marcus.
successful Women’s Board. The three Chicago Metro stores donated 10% of all eligible sales over the course of 5 days from April 15th through the 19th." I was thrilled to attend this first in-person event for these two Chicago icons and I can tell you, it was so
With Neiman's Tina Koegel.
refreshing to see people in real time as opposed to yet another zoom call. Everyone was dressed in their finest and the table decor took my breath away. All the colors of spring with bright yellow tablescapes, florals of yellow roses and snapdragons and exquisitely boxed lunches (pink and white striped boxes tied with yellow ribbons). Lunch, catered from Food for Thought, consisted of roasted chicken salad tea sandwiches, a spring greens salad and strawberry panna cotta with berries for dessert. Each guest was also treated to a custom-made gift box that included a darling
Melissa Babcock and Leslie Logsdon.
toe-shoe shaped cookie, a notebook and product samplings. The virtual fashion
Even a toe shoe-shaped cookie in the goodie bag!
show was presented by contemporary buyer Lori Caplin from the company's Northpark Mall in Dallas. Four fabulous models showcased 20 looks ranging from casual to daytime and concluded with glamorous evening looks. Some highlights of the show included a stunning Oscar de la Renta red satin dress and a Dries van Noten metallic foil jacket. One of the things I loved most was how so many of the looks were paired with tennis shoes, a
Even the Joffrey WB members are fans of Chicago Star! Lol! (Wink! Wink!)
nod to our pandemic past, no doubt! Following the show, Greg Cameron, Joffrey president/CEO, addressed the crowd. He commented on the 12 year-long partnership between The Joffrey Ballet, its Women's Board and Neiman
Overview of the beautiful space at Neiman Marcus Michigan Ave.
Marcus and talked about the Joffrey's Crisis Stabilization Fund, created to ensure the Company's long term health with support going directly to support the Company artists, students and education programs during the pandemic. The group applauded when they heard that they reached $11 million dollars, towards their goal of $12 million. Greg also expressed excitement over returning to the Lyric stage in October for live performances. In attendance at the Michigan Avenue location were Joffrey Women’s Board President Sandi
Joffrey's Brian Smith and Chris Jabin with WB president Sandi Hartstein.
Hartstein, Cameron, Farissa Knox (WB 2nd Vice President), Melissa Babcock, Dana Treister, Casey Carey, Geeta Nagpal, Nancy Berman, Valerie Gerber, Bonnie Fong, Kelly Rosen LaGrange, Ellie Forman, Karen Zupko, Jennifer Fabian, Johanna Ferguson and Liz Sharp and others. The Michigan Avenue luncheon was hosted by Noren Ungaretti, immediate past WB President. The Oakbrook luncheon was hosted by Marcie Wright. In attendance at the Oakbrook location was Julia Doherty, Director of Principal Gifts at the Joffrey. The Northbrook event was hosted by Camille Rudy, Heather Martin, Joan Malliband and Jenelle Chalmers. (Shared first in Chicago Star's "City Seen" debut column!)
WHY CHICAGO NEEDS MARIA PAPPAS: Maria Pappas is our Cook County Treasurer, has been since 1998. But oh, she is so much more. She has been a cheerleader for Chicago for as far back as I can remember and is a
Maria with Mayor Lightfoot, Lightfoot's mother and wife First Lady Amy Eshleman.
force in every community throughout the city. You can see her at a ceremony commemorating the Polish plane crash in Russia 11 years ago; singing Gregorian chants in her church; honoring and speaking for friends who have passed in the Filipino community; celebrating the first donors at the
Zooming with Telemundo for property tax issues.
Illinois Holocaust Museum; visiting friends and speaking at the Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village; celebrating Greek Independence Day; attending events at Univision Mexico; cooking in church halls; doing Serbian TV interviews; being the honored guest and
Maria being interviewed by the Serbian Times.
speaker at the Polish Museum; touring bakeries; being featured on zoom calls for R.A.G.E. (Resident Association of Greater Englewood); zooming with the
Maria at a Ukranian picnic.
Finance Ministry from Madrid (who asked her to teach them her methods); presenting her Christmas Trees Around the World exhibit at her Cook County Treasurer's offices (every year); zooming with Telemundo about property tax payments; zooming with the State Department about property tax collections for foreign countries; trying
Maria supporting the cops in Greektown.
her skills at an axe-throwing contest; saluting veterans at a variety of events around town; appearing at Bronzevillededications; celebrating mass at Holy TrinityChurch; appearing on Hispanic Talk Radio; appearing on the cover of the Filipino VIA Times, Korean Television, Chinese News, etc.; taping infomercials at Graham Methodist; writing a children's book, "Me and My Iguana," to help them cope during the pandemic; baking for St. Joseph's Day; celebrating Bulgarian Independence Day; honoring African American history in Englewood; playing a
Maria in the pulpit!
mean piano during office holidays and so much MORE!….I think you get the picture. Maria is
Maria saluting our vets.
on top of whatever is happening in the city and, more importantly, she's making appearances that matter in our communities. Besides being talented at writing, playing the piano and cooking, she clearly loves and cares about people. And they love her right back, connecting with her from every ethnicity. She has friends in high, low and everything-in-between places. We all want to be her best friend. Some of her latest triumphs include hosting her own show on WVON 1690 AM
Speaking at the Polish National Alliance.
radio, "Black Houses Matter." On the show, she lets viewers know the many ways they can collect property tax refunds that they might not be aware of. (Her Cook County Treasurer's website is in 24 different
Baking for St. Joseph's Day.
languages!) She expanded this property tax refund idea to a live phone bank telethon that's appeared on ABC-7 several times. To date, this telethon has generated nearly $13 million in refunds to Illinois property owners! Her "20 Year Tax Bill Study" rattled a lot of cages around town when she discovered and disclosed that the county's tax bills virtually doubled
Maria participating in an axe throwing contest.
over the past 20 years, an increase that is nearly triple the rise in the cost of living index. Her latest efforts involve a re-beautification of the Magnificent Mile which, as we all know, has suffered greatly following the rioting with many stores still boarded up. Her Instagram and Facebook posts ask
Maria on Hispanic Talk Radio.
Alderman Brian Hopkins, "What is magnificent about this?" as she shares photos of crumbling sidewalks, trash and other unsightly scenes. She clearly feels our pain. And I will admit, I'm also speaking as a friend. I've had the privilege of knowing her for many years now and I can tell you, what you see is what you get. There is not a phony bone in her body and her empathy for others knows no bounds. Personally, I think she would make a great mayor. I know she says no, but I think Mayor Maria has a great ring to it. (Follow her on Facebook and Instagram, www.cookcountytreasurer.com )
Whirl raised over $1M for Brookfield Zoo and its programs.
I'm so excited for Brookfield Zoo! This year, the Chicago Zoological Society (CZS) celebrated its 40th anniversary of the Whirl, its largest annual fundraiser. The event, co-hosted by the Society’s Board of Trustees and Women’s Board, was held virtually on May 1. Hundreds of guests tuned in during the virtual
Michael and Melissa Canning, WHIRL co-chairs.
fundraiser, which grossed over $1.1 million for the animals at Brookfield Zoo as well as the Society’s conservation, education, and research programs. The evening featured welcoming
Dr. Stuart Strahl, president and CEO of the Chicago Zoological Society
comments from Dr. Stuart Strahl, president and CEO of CZS, who recognized the 100th anniversary of the founding of the Chicago Zoological Society, the nonprofit organization that manages Brookfield Zoo. Additional remarks were given by Michael and Melissa Canning, Whirl co-chairs; Toni Preckwinkle, president of the Forest Preserves of Cook County; John Grube, chairman of the Society’s Board
Sasha Gerritson, president of the Women’s Board of the Chicago Zoological Society
of Trustees; and Sasha Gerritson, president of the Women’s Board of CZS. Auctioneer Jonathan Kraft announced the fundraiser’s virtual paddle raise and live auction. Additionally, videos
The band Maggie Speaks performed via Zoom.
featuring many of Brookfield Zoo’s charismatic animals were highlighted throughout the evening and Maggie Speaks, one of Chicago’s most popular bands, entertained the viewing audience with several songs. During the event, attendees were able to bid on dozens of
John Grube, chairman of the Chicago Zoological Society’s Board of Trustees
amazing silent auction items that included a stunning piece of jewelry courtesy of A. MarekFine Jewelry; a
Toni Preckwinkle, president of the Forest Preserves of Cook County
Kate Spade exotic tote; sports memorabilia, including a signed football by Green Bay Packers legendary quarterback Bart Starr; an exquisite elephant brooch; an array of gift basket packages from local venues; and animal-themed opportunities from Brookfield Zoo such as VIP tours and naming one of the zoo’s Bennett’s wallaby joeys and a black-footed cat.
A day in the country was just what we all needed, especially when it was our first-time trip to Richardson's Adventure Farm. Arranged by Service Club of Chicago leader Heather Spyra, in Spring Grove, IL. (909 English Prairie Rd.), the event was an opportunity for a few Service Club members to experience this adventure that included a
Chuck got into the bloomin' spirit too!
delightful box lunch. Heather put her own touch on everything, including a tulip shaped cookie! This was the farm's first time Tulip Festival and the turnout, despite inclement weather, was terrific. The festival ended May 9, but, believe me, this place ALWAYS has something going on!
The SC gang is all here!
When we visited, there were 300,000 tulips popping up in 30 different varieties, with many guests picking their own bouquets in a specially designated area. The venue is on a private lakefront location with food trucks scattered here and there. There was plentiful free parking, dogs were welcome on leashes and, throughout the year, they also offer live music on
Tracey Tarantino DiBuono and Sapna Rathi.
Saturday and Sunday afternoons, a corn maze, a Christmas event with trees and lights, a Halloween Festival, a great gift shop with fresh donuts, kettle corn, etc. and so much more. I loved seeing so many familiar faces that day like Sherrill Bodine, Liz
They have a great gift shop there too!
Teasley, Kathy Mondelli, Tracey Tarantino DiBuono, Sherry Abrahams, Bonnie Rickard, Sapna Rathi, Lezley Hodes, Lauren Lein Cavanaugh and so many others. Since Lake Geneva is only 20 minutes away, Chuck and I decided to make a weekend of it. We stayed, for the first time, at the Geneva Inn. We tried to stay here previously
Such beauty there! Richardson's has something going on year-round so be sure and check it out!
but they don't accept pets, so I doubt we'll return, but it was a lovely spot situated right on the lake. The dining room has beautiful views of the sunset but, our top choice for dining is always Mars Resort–it has live piano music, a lively bar and a mean Friday night fish fry. We also love Anthony's Steakhouse and I always get a kick out of the grizzled old men doing the seating. They seem like they could care less if anyone was there or not but, even this was charming and I always love a good relish tray. Lake Geneva will never lose its charm for us. (On the way back, we stopped at a wonderful grocery store in Antioch, the Old Mill Creek Country Store–loaded with items we'd never seen before….wish it was closer!)
Marlon and Tito Jackson accept plaque declaring "The Jackson Family Day" in Gary at the opening of the Hard Rock Casino.
It was a Windex-blue sky for the grand opening of The Hard Rock Casino Northern Indiana that opened with much fanfare and a guitar smash on Friday, May 14. An untold number of city officials were proudly in attendance as was Gary Mayor Jerome Prince and his wife, former Senator Earline Rogers (known as "the Queen of Gaming" as she's responsible for the legalization of gaming in Indiana), Tito and Marlon Jackson, Deniece Williams (4-time Grammy Award winner, "Let's Hear it for the Boy"), Kym Mazelle (the "First Lady of House Music"), Marshall Thompson (member of the Grammy Award-winning group,
Kym Mazelle, the "first lady of house music".
the Chi-Lites), Pete Wentz (Fallout Boy), Mark Sayers McGrath (lead singer for rock band Sugar Ray), Crystal Taliefero (singer/songwriter), Donald and Ken Kinsey (Big Daddy Kinsey and the Kinsey Report), members of The Seminole Tribe of Florida (who own the HRI brand), and so
Rockers Pete Wentz and Mark McGrath.
many others. Mayor Prince welcomed the crowd, including dozens of press outlets, to the event. He proclaimed it "The Jackson Family Day" in the city and presented Marlon and Tito with a plaque. Dozens of pieces of memorabilia are on display from the Jackson family including Joe Jackson’s original guitar, that started it all (a 37-foot replica is the centerpiece of the complex located at the entrance), outfits worn on stage by the Jacksons, Michael’s famous Swarovski crystal
Lots of Jackson Family memorabilia at the Hard Rock Casino Northern Indiana.
glove and Florsheim Imperial shoes from his "Thriller" video, THE red leather jacket from the "Beat It" video, Janet Jackson’s suit from her "Velvet Rope" tour as well as objects from other artists that have connections to the Jacksons – including Elvis, Lady Gaga, Eddie Van Halen, Justin
Kym Mazelle, Mayor Justin Prince, Deniece Williams, and Regina Smith.
Timberlake, Madonna, Mariah Carey, Pharrel, Shakira and Fergie. Marlon said, "I want to thank the Hard Rock Hotel for being the first to take a step and see Gary's vision and wanting to be a part of it, creating so many jobs. So, Gary, a diamond in the rough–you're ready to get polished baby!" He and Tito also thanked city officials for making
The Jackson Family Home, soon to be landmarked, at 2300 Jackson St.
the Jackson Family Home, at 2300 Jackson St., a historical landmark. "It was about a city called Gary, a school called Roosevelt, but most of all it was about a little house on a little street filled with noise and
Earline Rogers, known as the "Queen of Gaming" for her efforts at bringing gaming to Indiana.
music, and most of all, love, " Tito said. A customary Hard Rock guitar smash followed many speeches and signaled the opening of the Casino as all the dignitaries onstage smashed guitars emblazoned with the HR logo following a countdown. Fireworks went off
Michael's GLOVE on display at Hard Rock Casino Northern Indiana.
behind the stand as the crowd rose for a standing ovation. A bank of press, stationed in the rear, captured every moment. The Casino is easily accessible from Chicago (just 45 minutes away) and is located on 29th Street just off Interstate 80/94 at the Burr Street exit in Gary. The $300 million, 200,000 square-foot entertainment complex has nearly 1,600
Members of The Seminole Tribe of Florida, who owns the HRI brand.
gaming tales, 5 restaurants, a theater and a 1,954 seat live performance venue. The new casino is the result of the relocation of the two Majestic Star Riverboat Casinos that are owned by The Seminole Tribe of Florida, into one land-based facility. Since the groundbreaking for the new facility in 2020, Gary officials hope it will provide the economic boost that the struggling Northwest Indiana city needs. (Open 24 hours daily, all details here) (First published in Chicago Star)
Bernarda "Bernie" Wong, a champion for the Chinese American community and so many others.
The Chinese American Community has lost one of its biggest champions in Bernarda "Bernie" Wong who passed away at age 77 on April 27. She was beyond a dynamo and, when I first met her, I just couldn't believe how much love, spirit, laughter, caring and empathy for others she carried in that small frame of hers. Former Mayor Rahm Emanuel joked that "no one ever says no to Bernie" and he was so right. She was always on a mission to improve her community and
Bernie Wong in her award-laden office at CASL.
mankind in general and it was an honor to know her and a pure joy to see her in action. I was invited to her Senior Center in Chinatown once to receive a little plaque and Bernie beamed from ear to ear the entire time and was so joyous introducing me to each and every one of the members,
With Bernie Wong and her beloved seniors.
acknowledging their families and relating all of their many histories, which she knew by heart. Her office was filled to over-flowing with every kind of award imaginable. She was such a beloved individual and I know, anyone who knew her or of her, will have a deep hole in their hearts with her passing. Please sign the Bernie Wong memorial page here and save-the-date for the next Chinese American Service League (CASL) Gala which will be held in her memory on October 21. Details here.
With Cook County Treasurer Maria Pappas and Luxe Bloom's Shelley Rosen on Mother's Day.
Luxe Blooms' Shelley Rosen wanted to cheer up Chicago so she enlisted two of its biggest cheerleaders, Cook County Treasurer Maria Pappas and me! On a
Paul Iacono, Chuck Jordan and Bonnie Spurlock.
rainy Sunday, we, along with loyal supporters, gathered around the JC Decaux bustop at the corner of Michigan and Chicago Avenues and handed out over 500 long-stemmed Ecuadorian roses. The bus stop had been bedecked with a spectacular floral wall, courtesy of Luxe Blooms, that will last until the end of May. This Mother's Day event was a celebration of all mothers and women of Chicago and intended to bring the community together as a reminder to take care of our city and neighborhoods. We jumped on buses to hand out roses and stopped people in the street. One woman broke
Marie Mancuso (R) and her goddaughter Judith Kenny.
down in tears after Bonnie Spurlock handed her a flower. Other do-gooders included Paul Iacono, Paul Kawa,
Luxe Bloom's Shelley Rosen, R, and friend in front of her JC Decaux floral wall.
Humberto Jimenez (Consul General of Ecuador), Kenichi Okada (Consul General of Japan), Sam Ma (Honorary Chair of the American-Asian Society), Kina Bagovska (Director Magura Bulgarian Cultural Center), Nanta Buranakanchana (Asian American Coalition of Chicago), Vandana Jhingan (Midwest Bureau Chief TV Asia), Suzie Glickman, Kate Murray, Joey Majumdar, Marie Mancuso (and friend) and others. It was a "Random Act of Kindness" that brightened peoples' day. We need more of this, right? (Check out Luxe Blooms' amazing (miracle) roses here and thanks for all you do in our communities Maria and Shelley!
Deborah Farmer, author "My Journey With Joshua" w/ her adopted son.
Media veteran, communications agency owner and friend, Deborah Farmer, has written a new book, "My Journey with Joshua", which chronicles her experiences in adoption. She says, "Much of what people know about foster care and
Deborah Farmer and her son Joshua.
adoption turns out to be very little or they know misinformation." Farmer grew up in Chicago, where she worked in newsrooms for two decades before launching Brown Farmer Media Group, a full-service communications firm with nonprofit, small business, corporate and government clients. She adds, "Choosing to adopt is just as valid a route to having kids as is biological birth. I truly never understood the stigma it can have." Her book answers a lot of probing questions about the process as well as describes her joy with motherhood. (More details, purchase the book here!
I'm so excited to see so many events and festivals coming back! Following Mayor Lightfoot and the Governor's comments about Chicago opening up by July, I decided to check to see exactly what was returning and when. Here's what I found: Riot Fest will return to the Douglas Park Golf Course, Sept. 17 thru Sun. Sept. 19. And the debut of the ARC Music Festival (electronic, dance and house music, etc.) is set for Sept 4/5 in Union Park, Chicago. The Gold Coast Art Fairreturns August 21-22 to Grant Park, Butler Field with 200 juried artists and food. The Windy City Smokeout will kick off Chicago's summer festival season in July. The four-day event is scheduled to take place from July 8 through 11 in the parking lot
Pride Fest returns June 19/20.
by the United Center, featuring headlining sets from country artists Brett Eldredge, Jon Pardi, Darius Rucker and Dierks Bentley. Windy City Smokeout will also feature world-class Q provided by pit-masters from across the country, including Truth BBQ (Houston, Texas) and Peg Leg Porker (Nashville). Tickets, on sale now, range from $35 for a single-day ticket to $625 for a four-day VIP pass. The Chicago Park District's Night Out in the Parks is set for July 6-11, bringing more than 100 outdoor screenings of family-friendly films to neighborhood parks this summer. The series will kick off July 6 at Oakdale Park. Details here! And this is just a very few of the events that I've found! Looks like Chicago is coming back bigger and better than EVER! Woot! Woot!
Situated in the former III Forks restaurant space in Lakeshore East, at the corner of Field Blvd. and Benton Place, Avli is far removed from the ghost of this old, dark restaurant. In fact, it's the polar opposite with everything artfully designed in sparkling shades of cream, beige and
With partners LouieAlexakis, designer Nike Demacopoulos and Lou Canellis.
white by the talented Nike (pronounced Nicki) Demacopoulos. The two-level, 13,000-square-foot restaurant, owned by Louie Alexakis, Bill Glastris and Lou Canellis (Fox-32 sports anchor), in partnership with the Magellan Development Group, is draw-droppingly beautiful from the moment you walk through the door. A birch-lined cocktail area, and I suspect a soon-to-be holding "pen," is on the right, before you reach the
The not-yet-complete roof deck will feature gauzy curtains, a long bar and a fire-pit lounge.
hostess station. Then, the room opens up with a direct view of the long, elegant U-shaped bar, a brightly lit wine cellar and wrap-around seating. An outdoor, rooftop deck will offer dazzling views of the city and Lake Shore East Park, a variety of seating options as well as a fireplace lounge. Every single server and worker there were all smiles as well as the principals, including GM Stefanos Lemonis, who table-hopped
Dazzling city views from Avli's soon-to-be-open roofdeck.
throughout the night. That's the way you win friends although with the high level of food service and a delicious menu by Chef Nikolaos Kapernaros, I think they already have it made. Chef Kapernaros has selected dishes for the menu that include his own family's recipes. This is the 4th restaurant in Avli's dining empire with locations in Lincoln Park, River North and suburban Winnetka. Avli on the Park, 180 N. Field Blvd., is open 7 days a week for dinner from 5-11 pm, with reservations via Tock. The restaurant seats 180 in the main dining room, 120 on the rooftop (when it opens), with party and event spaces for 8-100. The restaurant will soon launch a lunch service and a weekend brunch. The venue will also host live music on occasion (think popular Mykonos singers and more). (For more info/ reservations, click here) (First published in Chicago Star here)
The Lincoln Park Conservancy will host a virtual auction, "Wonders of the Park," June 18-20 to benefit Lincoln Park and specifically, the restoration of North Pond. Last year, due to Covid, the Conservancy transformed its annual in-person gala to a virtual auction which raised more than $85,000. This year's virtual auction will offer one-of-a-kind park experiences; uniquely Lincoln Park and Chicago items; hospitality packages showcasing all our great city has to offer; opportunities to purchase benches, trees, gardening supplies, and so much more. Established in 1984 as a nonprofit partner of the Chicago Park District, the Lincoln Park Conservancy has supported Chicago’s largest and most visited park for over 35 years.Proceeds will support the Conservancy’s stewardship and programming across the Park and will help close the last remaining funding gap for the restoration of North Pond beginning this fall.
Maureen and Marc Schulman and family celebrate the reopening of the Eli M. Schulman Playground.
Congrats to the much loved Schulman Family on the grand reopening of The Eli M. Schulman Playground & Seneca Park on May 18. Top political leaders, ranking members of the Chicago Fire Department, local notables, friends and family came together to honor the memory of
Alderman Brian Hopkins presided over the proceedings.
the late, great Eli Schulman in a ceremony at the park created in his honor. Located just east of Chicago's historic Water Tower, Seneca Park and the Schulman Playground provide a peaceful oasis and a welcome touch of green amid an increasingly concrete-heavy city. Not since 1990 has the playground been renovated, Now, updates to
A little superhero in attendance.
the play area include a 16% increase in space and softer surfaces for safety. One area mom, Sharyl Mackey, pointed out that it was nice to see some installations created for older children there too.
CFD Commissioner Annette Holt.
The ribbon-cutting ceremony was led by Alderman Brian Hopkins, whose young daughter presented the countdown. Other speakers included Maureen and Marc Schulman, son of Eli and Chair, Seneca Park & Eli M. Schulman Playground Advisory Council; Michael Kelly, CEO Chicago Park District; Annette Holt, Commissioner, Chicago Fire Department; Grant DePorter, Magnificent
Grant DePorter.
Mile Association and Harry Carays; Brian Butler, SOAR VP; Jack Guthman, attorney & trustee, MCA, and others. Recognition was given for Jim
The beautiful Eli M. Schulman Playground is now open!
Letchinger, CEO, JDL & developer, One Chicago. Notables seen in the crowd included Abra Prentice Wilkin and Jim Wilkin, Cook County Treasurer Maria Pappas, Mickey Siegel, Sharyl and Mike Mackey, Maria Smithburg, Kate Murray, Rick Kogan and Willa Lang, among others. The event concluded with a poem by Sally Park, read by Andy White of the Lookingglass Theatre. Alderman Hopkins said the playground will see more upgrades in the near future. (First published here in Chicago Star)
Image of Flag Wall Room at The Art of Banksy exhibit in Toronto.
Whoa! Check this out! $35 million worth ofBanksy art is coming to Chicago's West Loop this summer, opening July 1! The world's largest collection of privately- owned Banksy art is coming to the Windy City and will feature prints, canvasses, screen-prints, sculptures and limited-edition pieces dated between 1997 and 2008, including his iconic works "Girl with Balloon (shown in image)," "Flower Thrower" and "Rude Copper.' The event will be held at a yet-to-be-disclosed location in the West Loop (btw, this is getting pretty old already). Tickets on sale here with prices starting at $40 for adults and $30 for children age 16 and younger.
Northalsted Market Days, one of the Midwest's largest street festival, will return August 6-8, adding a Friday night edition, the first in its 38-year history, according to the Northalsted Business Alliance. First held in August 1982, Market Days has grown to a half-mile long, annual summer ritual on Chicago's north side, featuring all-day lineups of live music and international DJs on 5 stages, 300 vendors, arts, crafts, wares, summer food and drinks, dancing in the street, and more. Market Days, along with Chicago Pride Fest, was canceled in 2020 due to the pandemic.
With CSM publisher Elaine Hyde, Jay Kopp and Jon Cohn.
And, as a part of Chicago Star's many offerings to the community, we will be providing video updates of coming events on a regular basis. Here's our first effort, moderated by Elaine Hyde (publisher/editor) and my colleagues Jay Kopp (CSM Director of Brand Development) and columnist Jon Cohn. Watch here!
We're getting pretty excited about our road trip to Three Oaks, Michigan, to enjoy the new, temporary location for Randolph Street Market (while it's Chicago venue undergoes renovation), opening Memorial Day Weekend, May 29/30. Entrance fee is $5 per adult with children under 12 free. One dollar of every tickets purchased will support Fernwood Botanical Garden in Niles-Buchanan, Michigan. Market dates: June 19/20; July 3/4; August 7/8; Sept. 4/5. Can't wait to see YOU Sally Schwartz! (All details here)
Jonny Imerman and his Imerman Angels will be hosting Angels Spirit Week, now through May 27. Each day will offer a different theme, all to benefit and celebrate this wonderful nonprofit that provides 24/7, 365 comfort and understanding for all cancer fighters, survivors, previvors and caregivers through a personalized, one-on-one connection with someone who has been there. (For all info, click here!)
Kudos to Tina Weller, besides being a glam-girl-around-town, she also is one of the most philanthropic people I know. Her most recent project, Fumee Claire Candles(clean smoke), came about following a health scare. Many candles give off a number of known toxins so I think her timing for this couldn't be better. Each product purchased will help contribute to a yearly philanthropy fund awarded to a variety of charities that make a difference to those in need. Tina and her team select agencies that provide services to women and children, the food insecure, the disabled, medically challenged, elderly, the arts, preservation and the homeless as well as education enrichment programs for the underprivileged. Not only are they beautiful and smell good but they're also good for your health and the environment. (For more info, click here!)
Tina Weller and her Fumee Claire Candle products, healthy for you and the environment.
me in its cover feature! It's especially nice as I was given the opportunity to highlight one of my favorite nonprofits, PAWS Chicago. The feature was shot on location at the adoption center (1997 N. Clybourn), with a passel of adorable pups. It took all the will power I had not to go home with all of them! This luxury lifestyle magazine serves Chicago, NYC and LA covering the latest trends in fashion, fine dining, nightlife, arts and cultures. 100% of the net proceeds benefit The Aparecio Foundation, a nonprofit that raises funds for educational grants and programs for low-income, high potential women in public high schools. (Read article here and, to order/subscribe, click here).(Article by Courtney Simich, photos by Hope Sayre)
It's like comparing apples and oranges but there are a lot of similarities between the newly opened Greek restaurant Avli in
Venteaux restaurant inside Pendry Chicago.
Lakeshore East and the recently opened, May 26, Pendry Chicago. Located in the loop (230 N. Michigan), the Pendry is a re-imagination of the iconic 1920s era Carbide and Carbon Building. This hotel was formerly the St. James and the differences between then and now are stark. Where the St. James was dark, the Pendry is all light with sparkling brass touches. In its 364 guest rooms and suites, beautiful parquet floors were discovered under the old carpeting. In the grand ballroom, which seats 500+, an enormous window, that was previously covered over, was revealed with great views of Michigan Avenue. And on and on. As the world opens up following the pandemic, restaurants, hotels and bars seem to be following suit, offering guests a more airy feel after the heaviness of isolation. (Read full story here in Chicago Star!)
Love and thanks to all my friends and supporters who
With La Scarola's Joey Mondelli.
reached out to me on my birthday on May 26! The messages and photos took me down memory lane and I'm so grateful. Thanks also to special friends Maria Pappas, Jennifer Sutton Brieva, Peter Kamberos, Paul Iacono, Michael Kutza who made my BD so perfect at La Scarola! And especially big, big love to Joey Mondelli. What a gift you all are!
Chicago Star June 2021, with twins Giovanna Krozel and Almira Yllana (Sugar & Spice) and Landan Twins (Jon and Andrew).
I'm so very exciting to share the newly released June issue of Chicago Star! Read all the fun including my first CSM social column, "City Seen" (if you like what you see, please let my
The debut of "City Seen" with The Joffrey Ballet and Neiman Marcus.
publisher know at ainfo@chicagostarmedia.com. I want to make sure our nonprofit and event communities have an outlet here so please let them hear you!). Also, I hope you enjoy my Ask Candid Candace advice column, my feature about where Chicagoan's want to go next now that travel restrictions are being lessened, Cooking with Amanda Puck and so much more!. All the news you need to make you love where you live, work and play! (Read issue here and please join our family here!) (Don't we have the cutest cover stars too, twins Sugar & Spice (Giovanna Krozel and Almira Yllana) and the Landan Twins (Jon and Andrew)?!
I know this is a lot to take in but I don't want to miss sharing with you! If you have an event, a happening, know of some inspiring person, or have info you would like to see here, please send it to candace@candidcandace.com. And don't forget to send any questions for my Chicago Star monthly Candid Candace Advice Column along too! I love hearing from you!
And, if I've forgotten to include anything you sent previously, please forgive me and give me another chance. With Chicago opening up again, events, restaurants, bars, cultural events and more are exploding with business, not enough yet to make up for their losses, but it's so good to see the buzz in the city again.
And, if not a blog subscriber, please do so now here and follow along with all the fun!
Plus: Norma zooms into the Chicago Costume Council funder; Illinois Holocaust Museum's virtual Humanitarian Awards; Girls in the Game's (virtual) Field of Dreams Gala; Chicago Star lights up the Windy City; Steak 48 teams up with Common Threads; The Landan Twins want to help; Richardson Adventure Farm's first ever TULIP FESTIVAL!; Dining in the Dark, a new pop-up culinary experience; Cindy McCain keynotes Rush Woman's Board Luncheon; Back to the movies (what's open NOW?); Jurassic Quest is BAAACCKKK!; The Pendry Chicago set to open mid-May; PAWS Chicago's High Rollers Bingo; The Service Club is "Desperately Seeking Fashion"; ULBGC Ring Lardner Awards; "The Happy Magic Chair" makes its debut; Bear Tie Ball "Untied"; Ingalls' Fashion Reveal; Event updates; Randolph Street Market premieres in Three Oaks!; Memories of Hef on his 95th heavenly birthday; Fun videos and SOOO much more!
Can't you feel it? Along with Spring, comes a rebirth for Chicago too. It's been over a year now since the horrors of the pandemic began and we are all ready to begin anew without the P word hanging over our heads. I'm thrilled to hear laughter pouring out of our beleaguered restaurants and bars and I loved, loved, loved seeing a few lucky people at the Cubs opener. I'm so glad to see people back in movie theaters again too, albeit socially
Godzilla vs Kong
distanced. (Godzilla vs Kong is fabulous at AMC River East (600 N. Michigan), a great surprise ending, as is Courier with Benedict Cumberbatch). I think good weather and sunshine are powerful healers as well as having Covid shots opened up for everyone now (aged 16 and older). As of April, data from the CDC tallied over 150,000,000 vaccine doses were administered across the U.S. I know I'm feeling safer and had no qualms whatsoever about getting away for a vaca in February. Recently, I even renewed our passports and made sure we had vaccine certifications just in case. Who knows the places we all might go when things really open up for good? Right? I know we've been dreaming of "getting back to normal" for a long time now but I fear our ideas of normal might never return. Already, nonprofits have seen the benefits of having virtual events at no-to-low costs, opening up their mission to people they would've never reached before, having easier access to celebs and entertainment who only need to
Back to the movies!
zoom in and having the ability to be very creative–all assets in this brave, new world. Granted, in-person events are slowly returning too, but the packed ballrooms of old might be a thing of the past–along with handshakes. I think our future events will be fabulous hybrids with virtual and in-person components combined. I know we have all learned a lot of new tricks this past year, like the importance of a good ring light, having a great background and comfortable sweat pants. And honestly, I don't think I'll ever be able to wear my high heels again. (But you know I'll try!) As I mentioned in my last blog, I cleared my closet of overly fancy gowns and dresses. If and when they ever come back again, I believe the look will be outer space chic so they wouldn't work anyway. I have learned the importance of a great book and have been reading now more than ever! Even though I'm not a big history buff, Erik Larson's (of "Devil in the White City" fame) recent book, "The Splendid and the Vile: A Saga of Churchill, Family, and Defiance During the Blitz," was riveting. I couldn't put it down….Another great book is, "The Rose Code" by Kate Quinn. It's based on true stories of those wacky, wonderful, wise, secret-keeping code-breakers of England's Bletchley Park during WWII. And although my reading skills have increased during the past year, my cooking skills, sadly, have stayed the same. My sister-in-law, Nancy Steinwald,
gifted me with a wonderful cookbook (bless her heart, she's
Vegetarian paella from The Mediterranean Diet Cookbook for beginners.
trying to help), and it's healthy and easy with mouth-watering Mediterranean recipes ("The Mediterranean Diet: Cookbooks for Beginners" by registered dietician/nutritionist Elena Paravantes. (I made the vegetarian paella, sooo good). And even though I've enjoyed this time at home with Chuck, I am ready to rumble! I miss social interaction almost more than breathing. For a Gemini and an only child, social interaction is a life-affirming necessity for me. I need hugs, I need to kiss, I need to embrace humanity again. So, if you see me, you better cross the street.
Legendary fashion designer Norma Kamali zoomed in for a scintillating discussion about fashion, health and living through the decades.
The Costume Council of the Chicago History Museum hosted a fascinating discussion, "New Year, New You" with legendary fashion designer Norma Kamali recently. She discussed her new book, "I Am Invincible" and shared so many valuable tips for surviving and thriving through the decades as well as helpful advice for living a healthy lifestyle. The zoom presentation opened with welcoming remarks from Justina Doyle, the Museum's member relations manager. Michelle Bibergal, Costume Council president, thanked sponsors and introduced the event sponsors–Presenting Sponsors were Liz Stiffel, Richard and Diane Weinberg and Lee Blackwell Baur and
Justina Doyle, Museum's Member Relations Manager.
Designer's Circle Sponsors were Mary Jo Basler, Courtney Hopkins, Maggie M. Morgan, Karen Peters, Mary Shearson, Dusty Stemer, Mary Kay Touhy and Karen Zupko. CC development chair Maggie Morgan spoke about the "Head to Toe" giving campaign that, to date, has raised over $35,000 to preserve the Museum's collections, that include Norma Kamali pieces. She shared Kamali's exciting history and achievements that
Designer Circle Sponsor and speaker Maggie M. Morgan.
included being one of the first designers to launch e-commerce; designing the iconic swimsuit for the famous Farrah Fawcett poster (which is now in the Smithsonian); being one of the first designers to ink a deal with Walmart to create a collection of classics all priced under $20; seeing her "Sleeping Bag Coat" included in the Met Costume Institute's exhibit; creating a high-heeled sneaker that
Norma wearing her signature "sleeping bag coat."
was featured in a Met Costume Institute "Extreme Beauty" exhibition; creating some of the first athleisure wear with her "Sweats" collection and so much more. She has always been ahead of the trends because, as she
Farrah Fawcett wearing a Norma Kamali swimsuit in her iconic 1976 poster.
says, she "likes to live in the moment." In her 50s, she sold everything she had including a fabulous NYC mansion that used to be part of the Woolworth estate. She wanted to free herself of her belongings so she could be "clear about her next direction in life." Her book, "I Am Invincible" came about as the result of a friend's 50th birthday. She wrote a notebook filled with tips about turning 50 and her publisher convinced her to expand it into a book. Her interest in a healthy lifestyle began during the AIDS epidemic when she lost so many friends to the disease. She then realized the importance of a healthy immune system so she immersed herself in learning about how to go about achieving this, including realizing the power of plants and herbs in our diets. In 1967, she opened her first Kamali store in NYC selling clothing brought from London. The next year, she began designing her own pieces. For her first fashion show, her friend Bette Midler narrated. So many celebs have been fans and bought her
Norma's great book–I loved it and highly recommend it. Great tips for life plus recipes and great photos.
clothing–Elvis, Raquel Welch, Sly Stone, John Lennon and Yoko Ono, Robert De Niro and Toukie Smith, JLo and more. She prides herself on the fact that she's never given away free clothes. At age 75, she looks a decade younger and her book
Beyonce wearing Kamali in "The Lion King."
is a great guidebook on aging. She says, "At age 50, I believe everyone is at a point of reinvention. It's how you handle this turning point that dictates your future." She believes that the three pillars of a healthy lifestyle are "sleep, diet and exercise." She is preparing for her next decade and has found that the one thing women in their 80s, 90s and 100s have in common is that they ALL love to dance! Her book is fabulous and I highly recommend it. There are also dozens of recipes included as well. (Buy it here and support the Costume Council of the Chicago History Museum here!)
IHMEC's virtual Humanitarian Awards' keynote speaker, former NBA superstar Kareem Abdul-Jabbar.
TheIllinois Holocaust Museum’s Annual Humanitarian Awards Dinner went virtual this year, with close to 2,000 people tuning in to hear the evening’s keynote speaker/activist and former NBA superstar Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. Museum CEO Susan Abrams conducted
Susan Abrams, IHMEC president, conducted the Q&A Kareem.
a conversation with Kareem who passionately addressed current issues surrounding hatred, suggesting “until all of us are free from fear, none of us are free from fear.” He added, “we have to act in ways that challenge, we cannot allow people to express [hatred] without being challenged.” Kareem is a Medal of Freedom recipient, the author of over 14 books, raises awareness for
Scott Swanson, honoree.
cancer and is proud of the fact that he's "been able to make a successful transition from basketball." His dad and grandfather were both police officers. He said, "Police officers can be a very positive force in any community but they have to have compassion for the people they serve. Misfortune and lack of opportunity make people do desperate things. When you don't respect the law because the law doesn't respect you, it becomes very
Katie Kadan performed on the virtual presentation.
negative and a source of serious conflict." When asked
Cook County Treasurer Maria Pappas spoke of her love for the Karkomi family.
his message for the future? "Make friends with somebody who doesn't look like you." In addition to hearing Abdul-Jabbar’s insightful words, the Museum presented Humanitarian Awards to Scott Swanson, President of PNC Bank, Illinois and to the Exelon Corporation, accepted by Chris Crane, President, and CEO. Josh Hale, Big Shoulders Fund president/CEO, spoke about Swanson
Zev and Shifra Karkomi were honored posthumously.
saying, "He has a goodness in him, a moral compass, that's deeply embedded in his trying to help others." In his emotional acceptance speech, Swanson spoke about his late father who passed last year. "I never heard him say a hateful word about anyone so I know first hand that it is possible to lead a life driven by the need for
Chris Crane, president/CEO Exelon Corp. accepted an award on his company's behalf.
tolerance and understanding. The time is now to be an upstander and help to make the world a better place." Each award recipient was recognized for their demonstrated commitment to making a positive difference, including educating current and future generations about the Holocaust and
Susie Karkomi and husband Marvin Leavitt, spoke movingly of her family's history and love for the Museum.
the dangers of hatred, prejudice, and indifference. Zev and Shifra Karkomi were also honored posthumously with the Survivor Legacy Award, recognizing their vision and support in the creation of the Museum. (They were the first major donors.) The award was accepted by their daughter and board member Susie Karkomi and her husband
Maria Pappas and Peter Kamberos on a trip with Zev and Shifra Karkomi.
Marvin Leavitt. Susie shared, "Their mission was not only to honor the family members they lost, it was important for them that others learn about the horrors experienced by so many in the hope that educating future
IHMEC's Susan Abrams in conversation with Kareem Abdul-Jabbar.
generations would prevent such an atrocity from happening again." The Karkomi's longtime friend Maria Pappas (Cook County Treasurer) shared her thoughts about the giving couple too. The Humanitarian Awards Dinner, which raised over $2 million on this night, demonstrates the impact Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center plays in our local community and beyond. “The Museum is here to teach universal lessons that combat hatred, prejudice, and indifference, and to inspire audiences to be Upstanders who speak out for what is right – turning powerful lessons of history into positive actions for today." (Learn more here)
WNBA legend Sue Bird, a Girls in the Game "Field of Dreams" champion for 2021.
Girls in the Gamehosted its annual Field of Dreams gala virtually this year. Last year marked 25 years of GG helping girls find their voice, discover their strength and gain the confidence they need to be game-changers. Dedicated to the whole girl, GG programs encourage physical and emotional health to promote active minds, bodies and hearts. Last year's event celebrated the nonprofit's silver anniversary just weeks before lockdown orders were issued. This year's event was themed "25th Anniversary Plus One Online." Throughout the evening, guests heard
Jessica Mendoza, ESPN broadcaster and US Olympian, and honoree.
inspiring stories from some of the girls who have participated in GG's programs as well as from honorees who have changed the game for girls. Honorees included Sue Bird (WNBA Legend and United States Olympian); Jessica Mendoza (ESPN Broadcaster and United States Olympian) and Mary Ann Schaffer (Systems Chief Pilot, United Airlines). Mendoza won 9 Gold Medals in
Captain Mary Ann Schaffer, Systems Chief Pilot, United Airlines, and honoree.
softball, was the first female analyst to cover a major league post season baseball game and was the first woman analyst for a World Series broadcast. She spoke about how important it was to be a teammate. "Stop trying to fit in, appreciate who you are." Captain Schaffer has been with United Airlines for over 30 years, starting as an electrical engineer working on space programs. She graduated magna cum
Event co-chair Tanara Golston.
laude in law in 2007 and became a United Airlines captain in 1997. One of her favorite things to do is mentoring. "We're always better together than we are as one." WNBA legend Sue Bird has won 4 Olympic Gold Medals, 4
Event co-chair Tobey Kramer.
WNBA Championships; 2 NCAA Championships and so much more. She is regarded as the world's premier point guard. She said, "There are so many positive takeaways from sports. I made new friends, learned how to set goals and not give up, how to get along with others, how to handle adversity and how I could grow and be challenged. Some of the greatest lessons in life, I learned through teamwork." The event exceeded its goal, raising over $265,000!! (To learn more about this wonderful nonprofit, click here!)
I hope you've seen the latest edition (volume 1, no. 2) of Chicago Star! I'm so proud of how far we've come in just a few short months and so much more fun (and upgrades!) to come! We will be adding a nonprofit/ on-the-scene page when our beloved events come back so
Fred Weintraub's "Worldly File" can be found online at Chicago Star.
please be sure to send me your event info! We're also going to celebrate, in our next issue, Chicago's return to "semi-normalcy" so stay tuned for that too! Also, where to go, what to do in the coming months, with some exciting unexpected suggestions for you. We've been very
My new advice column debuts in the next issue! Are you a subscriber?
lucky to have been included in the press with our "feel-good" newspaper–Thanks again to Fox-32's Sylvia Perez, WGN Radio's Anna Davlantes and Robert Feder for featuring us! Fred Weintraub, a legendary force in the TV/news business, has joined Chicago Star with his
Just love our new subscription promo filled with CSM friends!
podcast "The Worldly File" which is online now. Our Director of Brand Development, Jay Kopp, will be a regular guest on The Hannah and Fred Show too. So, we're spreading the love as fast as we can! I hope you will consider joining our family by subscribing here! Special thanks to our super-star influencers for being a part of our cover feature story, "Life in the Insta-Lane"–Jen Worman (@Red SolesandRedWine), Meiling Jin (@meilingjinxo), Ali Chanel (the first plus size Playboy Playmate (@AliChanel), Matt Rodriguez, NBC Today co-host (@rodriguesmatt) and Erica Eckman (@everythingerica). Join our family!
Steak 48 Chicago will team up with Chef Art Smith's nonprofit, Common Threads, on Sunday, April 25 (11:30 am –12:30 pm). Chef Brian Key will demo how to create the perfect steak and give viewers tips and recipes for doing it at home. Steak 48 is donating 100% of the proceeds to Common Threads, an organization dedicated to providing cooking and nutrition education programs for kids (and families) across the country. They currently serve approximately 40,000 children, parents and educators. (To sign up, click here!)
The Landan Twins, Jon (L) and Andrew. (Photo by Mila Samokhina).
Congrats and thanks to the Landan Twins (Andrew and Jon), who are two of our city's biggest ambassadors! They have partnered with MyVintro, a new investing website that allows restaurants to pitch their ideas for funding to over 100 investors on the Illinois Restaurant Channel. The Landans say, "Pitch us your idea for your current restaurants, your idea for a new concept or your idea to re-concept your restaurant so we can get our friends to give you money and turn your dream into a reality! Check it out here and good luck!
Richardson Adventure Farm is hosting its first Tulip Festival!
Thanks to Heather Spyra for alerting me to the Richardson Adventure Farm TULIP FESTIVAL, going on now! If there ever was a great road trip idea, this is it! Richardson Adventure Farm in Spring Grove, Illinois, is welcoming guests to its first ever Tulip Festival open now through May. 300,000 bulbs in 30 different varieties will provide a colorful backdrop for all your Insta-fun in addition to its beautiful lakeside location and seemingly endless amenities. The farm, established in 1836, offers visitors perks that include food trucks; free parking; walking trails; free games (giant checkers, jenga, cornhole and more); live music on Saturdays and Sundays; friendly dogs on leashes welcome; picnic tables; fall pumpkin patches; Christmas Tree Farm; live pig races; ORBiting (where you put yourself inside a giant, 11' ball, and roll and bounce down a slope); 700' zip line; goat walk; pedal trikes; 50' long slide; campfires; gift shop (with fresh donuts, fudge, popcorn, etc.); 50' tall observation tower and so much more! (The Farm's website predicts the tulips will be best from April 17- May 9 but check its Facebook page and website for updates. (We already have our visit planned!)
The Pendry Chicago will open mid-May in the old Carbide & Carbon Building.
The Pendry Chicago is set to open mid-May. Steeped in history and anchored in style, the hotel is set within the iconic 1929 Art Deco Carbide & Carbon Building in Chicago’s Loop. It's a modern-day luxury hotel that pays homage to both the past and the
The new Pendry Chicago–opening mid-May.
present with contemporary, comfortable interiors, signature culinary and cocktail concepts and inspired gathering spaces throughout that embody the spirit of Chicago. Its Parisian-inspired Venteux brasserie is an oyster and champagne bar and cafe, all brought to life by the city's youngest Michelin-starred talent, Chef Donald Young. Boasting stunning 40-foot floor to ceiling windows and an intimate private dining room, it's the perfect spot for special celebrations. (More details/photos to come after I visit it for you!)
An exciting new dining experience! Discover what goes on within the darkness with Dining in the Dark with The Secret Society's tasting experience (90 minutes) held at Masq at Hubbard Inn (110 W. Hubbard). Guests are encouraged to arrive masked as an ensemble of assistants, wearing night vision goggles, serves a three course tasting menu paired with wine. As the description goes, "Cutting-edge cuisine will have your taste buds tingling. With luck, you will be initiated into the Secret Society provided you pass a few trivial tests and trials. Dress smart and pay attention, because you’re in for an inconspicuous induction like you’ve never seen before." Tickets are $89 per person, all info here.
Cindy McCain will keynote the Rush Woman's Board's virtual Spring Luncheon.
The Woman's Board of Rush University Medical Center will host its first virtual Spring Luncheon on Tuesday, May 11, featuring keynote speaker Cindy McCain, a humanitarian, business leader and chairperson of The McCain Institute. Co-chaired by Katie Frekko and Brooke Kuehnle, the luncheon will begin at 11:45 am with a musical welcome followed by introductions before a Q&A with McCain. Funds raised at the luncheon will be directed to Rush Medical Center’s education, research and community service programs, as well as to its 2021 principal project, The Woman’s Board Fund for Precision Oncology Research. (Event details, and more, here)
As of now, these are the movie theatres that are open! Let's go back to the movies! (List compiled by Chuck Jordan) OPEN: AMC Dine-In (600 N. Michigan, open Fri., Sat., Sun.); AMC River East 21 (321 E. Illinois); AMC Dine-In Block 37 (108 N. State, open Fri., Sat., Sun.), Showplace ICON at Roosevelt Collection with ICON-X (1011 S. Delano Ct. E), Landmark's Century Cinema Theatres (2828 N. Clark St.). CLOSED: Arclight Cinemas (closed permanently); IMAX Navy Pier (Navy Pier, closed permanently), Regal Webster Place (1471 W. Webster). (As of publication, these are the local theatres' standings. Please check websites before planning a visit.)
THEY'RE BAAAAACKKKKK!!! More than 70 animatronic dinosaurs are ready to return from extinction to delight families and dino fans everywhere, as Jurassic Quest Drive Thru, the nation’s largest and most realistic dinosaur experience, returns to Chicago (to NOW Arena in Hoffman Estates), July 9-25. This fun-filled drive-thru experience has it all for fans of the Jurassic and Triassic Ages, from baby dinos held by its trainer to meet-and-greets, photo opps, a choose-your-own-audio adventure tour and more. Jurassic Quest's herd of animatronic dinos are displayed in realistic scenes that allow guests to experience them roaring and moving as they drive through the tour. Jurassic Quest worked in collaboration with leading paleontologists to ensure each dinosaur was painstakingly replicated in every detail, from coloration to teeth size(!) to textured skin, fur or feathers, drawing on the latest research about how we understand dinosaurs and ancient giants of the sea looked and moved. Although the drive-thru experience means visitors will stay safe inside their vehicles, they’ll still need to avoid the swinging tail of the 50-foot Spinosaurus and the gigantic grinning Megalodon! Tickets for Jurassic Quest are $49 per vehicle (8 people or less) and available at www.jurassicquest.com. An audio tour comes standard with every purchase (choose from two; special accommodations can be made for the hearing impaired) as well as a safari-style digital souvenir photo of your vehicle and family transported back in time via a Jurassic setting. Special souvenir packages and other add-ons can be purchased at check out. (The attraction follows all Covid-19 protocols. Police, military, medical personnel and first responders receive 10% off ticket prices with valid ID.) (We went last year and loved it although the car lines were very long!)
PAWS Chicago will host High Rollers Bingo on Wednesday, April 28, 6 pm. Join them for 3
PAWS Chicago's virtual bingo fundraiser.
rounds of virtual bingo emceed by board member Fred from The Fred Show on 103.5 KISS FM. $20 for one card or $50 for three cards.
And a brand new event for PAWS Chicago, Fore PAWS: A Golf Outing Benefiting PAWS Chicago will take place on Monday, June 14 at Westmoreland Country Club. For info, click here!
Eversight's Gift of Sight Masquerade returns Wed., Sept. 8 to the Peninsula.
Eversight Illinois'Gift of Sight Masquerade, themed Fantasea, will be held at the Peninsula Chicago on Wednesday, September 8, honoring community leaders Justine Fedak and Dr. Parag Majmudar. I'm proud to return as co-chair with Michael Caputo for this friend-raiser to help restore sight and prevent blindness. (Click here for info!)
The Service Club of Chicago will host its uber-popular hat luncheon, this year themed "Desperately Seeking Fashion." The event will be held at the Woman's Athletic Club (WAC) on Friday, May 21. To accommodate safety and distancing requirements, there will be 4 separate rooms of 50 people each, with guests sporting their finest millinery for what has become THE Hat Luncheon in Chicago! Co-chaired by Michelle Baker, Cathy Bell Bartholomay and Annette Findling, the hybrid event will be produced by Tracey Tarantino DiBuono (ZZAZZ Productions). The guest speaker will be Sandy Schreier, the famed fashion curator and historian. For tickets/more info, click here. The SC's next event, Day on the Terrace, will return on Monday, Aug. 2, co-chaired by Sharyl Mackey, Jean Antoniou and Tracey, whose ZZAZZ Productions will again produce the show. More details coming soon for DOT. (Chicago Star Media will be the proud media sponsor!)
The Union League Boys & Girls Clubs will host the Ring Lardner Awards, honoring excellence in sports journalism via zoom on Thursday, April 29, 7 pm. All funds raised will go to ULBG, which has served the after-school development needs
Dan Roan, sports anchor at Nexstar, WGN-9, has been named broadcast recipient of the 2020 Ring Lardner Award for Excellence in Sports Journalism.
of Chicago's youth for over 100 years. Since 2002, the program has honored writers and Chicago sports broadcasters who encapsulate the same "wit and warmth" of Lardner's writing. The Ring Lardner Awards represent journalists in three categories: Broadcast, Print, and Posthumous. This year’s honors include Chicago sports journalists Toni Ginnetti (former Chicago Sun-Times reporter, to be presented by current Sun-Times senior columnist Rick Telander); Dan Roan (current WGN TV sports anchor, presented by former WGN TV sportscaster Rich King); and Cooper Rollow (former Chicago Tribune sports editor, to be presented by former Chicago Tribune sports reporter Mike Conklin).
For the past 28 years, Bear Necessities Pediatric Cancer Foundation has hosted the annual Bear Tie Ball. This event is the nonprofit's largest fundraiser of the year, empowering them to bring joy and hope to children battling cancer. Although this year looks different, families continue to need their support. On May 1, "Bear Tie Ball: Untied," a virtual event, will feature a video showcasing the families, kids, supporters and more. Please consider tuning in/donating or both, here.
The Ingalls Development Foundation will host "Promise of Hope Fashion Reveal," a virtual fashion show produced by ZZAZZ Productions. The event will take place on Sunday, April 18, 5-7 pm CST, to support its cancer research program. Register for FREE here!
Children's Place will celebrate 30 years of supporting Chicago's most vulnerable kids with its annual gala, this year honoring Alex Kotlowitz and Maria Woltjen. (Click here for details!)
"Games Galore” for The Chicago Lighthouse's Associate Board! Join them virtually on Wednesday, April 14 for virtual canasta. Purchase raffle tickets to win some great prizes, including a gold and diamond necklace by Dana Rebecca Designs and so much more! (Tickets and all info here.
Friday, April 9 was Hugh Marston Hefner's 95th (heavenly) birthday. The memories I have of Playboy and Hef will last me several lifetimes and beyond. I've been dabbling on a book but who knows what will happen with it. All I know is that I miss him so and am so appreciative of the life he's given me. I wrote a sort of love letter to him here in Chicago Star Media. I hope you like it.
Special thanks to Chicago State Foundation and its executive director Darrious Hilmon for featuring me on "5 Questions with…", a short video series that highlights both local and national leaders and professionals. The series lives on their YouTube channel. My segment is below. (Chicago State Foundation advances the interest and welfare of Chicago State University by building relationships, securing philanthropic support and more. Read all about it here).
And special thanks to Art "Chat Daddy" Sims, for having me on his "The Real Chat Daddy Show" in honor of Women's History Month. It was a fun, free-wheeling interview with Art and his co-host K. Renee Mason. See segment below, my part comes in at 1:05, but it's all good!
______________________________________________________________________ I couldn't be more excited about the return of my favorite market, Randolph Street Market! Watch for Sally Schwartz' first market foray into Three Oaks, Michigan, on Memorial Day Weekend, May 30 and 31 (Saturday and Sunday). Other dates on the books are June 19,20; July 3,4; August 7, 8; September 4, 5; and October 2,3. I can't wait to attend and love the idea of a little road trip out of the city! Who's with me!? 🙂
Congrats, with love, to author Justine Fedak and her creative partner Chris Walker (Urbanime). Their new
Illustrator Chris Walker, founder of Urbanime.
book, "The Happy Magic Chair" is out now and is a must-have for kids of all ages. It's a story written for children that know they are "magic" and to remind adults OF their magic. The character, Little Pea, beautifully realized by Chris, sometimes feels sad but she doesn't know why. Thanks to the Happy Magic Chair, she realizes that she has everything she needs already inside. (Buy it through publisher Balboa Presshere and on Amazon).
Enjoying Jennifer Sutton Brieva's special birthday at Le Colonial recently.
As you can see, things are heating up around town, especially with the return of many of our beloved nonprofit events! I know many are still virtual or hybrid but at least they're returning and are STILL HERE! This is very good news! And the
La Scarola with Armando, Chuck and Michael Kutza.
same is true for our restaurants, slowly filling with smiling, happy faces. We've visited La Scarola, Gibson's, Le Colonial, RL, Ping Pong, Pizano's, Shaw's Oyster Bar and others, and have been so happy to see them safely filled with new and old customers. A special shout-out again to the Landan Twins for trying to advance restaurants' efforts through their new lending program (see details above).
I hope you are successful with your vaccinations and that you're happy and healthy. Just remember, this too shall pass…..
There is no better antidote for Chicago's winters than a trip to a warm climate. Chuck and I were lucky this year to have an extended vacay in Florida, a week in Hobe Sound with my sister-in-law and then two glorious weeks in Palm Beach. The first word that comes to mind about being in
With Leslie Hindman and Chuck at Trevini restaurant, Palm Beach.
Florida is "liberating." Restaurants are open, people are walking the streets with smiles on their faces, churches are holding services and I didn't see one boarded up store.
The manicured perfection of Palm Beach.
Granted, people are still masked and practicing social distancing but it seems less fear-based than Chicago and more common sense-based there. I'm not surprised that people live longer in Florida, no dangerous icy sidewalks, more physical activity and a LOT more vitamin D! In a perfect world, I would divide my time between the two but that's not doable so I will
At Pizza al Fresco, PB, with Kim Renk, Greg Dryer, Leslie Hindman and Chuck.
just enjoy every minute we're away and keep those memories top of mind when I receive weather updates
Beauty along A1A.
from Chiberia. Hobe Sound is beautiful, quiet but lovely. You can actually hear the birds in the trees and the gentle sounds of kids playing pickleball from Loblolly Pines Golf Club. We spent time with my sister-in-law, Nancy Steinwald, who lost her husband Dr. Os Steinwald a year ago. It
Kitchy City Diner in West Palm Beach.
was bittersweet as there was really nothing we could do to ease her pain except be there for her. So, we went to dinners and had a memorable brunch at Harry and the Natives, a restaurant that seemed to be plucked
Harry & the Natives in Hobe Sound, a Jimmy Buffet inspired restaurant.
straight out of Jimmy Buffet's "Cheeseburger in Paradise" song. After the end of our stay in Hobe Sound, we rented a racy red Mustang convertible and headed for Palm Beach where our dear friend Leslie Hindman was gracious enough to invite us for a stay. Her home, in the heart of Palm Beach, had just been sold within 4 hours of being on the market! Her new home is even closer to the ocean and so beautiful. She has impeccable taste and
At Renato's, PB, with Ken Norgan, Leslie Hindman and Chuck.
vision so we can't wait to see what she does with this latest acquisition. When we left, it was already Architectural Digest perfect. As smart as she is in her auction business, I think her true calling lies in real estate. I think it's also a passion of hers….We had so many
With Christine Schott, Palm Beach Social Diary author.
dinners at wonderful restaurants that I lost count….but, as for the extra pounds Chuck and I gained, sadly I do know that number. There is so much happening in Palm Beach now. It's not the sleepy little town I
The Breakers which, sadly, appears to now have office furniture for the lobby decor.
remember from our first visit years ago. In part, due to the influx of NYC restaurants that have recently relocated there. Our favorite, Swifty's, is also the most beautiful with old world charm combined with rich, modern touches. The hotel it lives in, The Colony (155 Hammon Ave), is steps from Worth Avenue and was established in 1947. After Andrew Wetenhall (Andrew's family were the hotel's previous
Peace and quiet in Hobe Sound.
owners) and wife Sarah purchased the hotel in 2016, Sarah discovered a mid-century postcard featuring the hotel's original lobby which was painted with a mural titled "The Early Days in Palm Beach." The mural inspired a partnership with the famed house of de Gournay, known for exquisite, hand painted
One of my favorite shops in PB, F. S. Henemader.
wallpapers. Kemble Interiors created the decor and the place is even more beautiful now with the wallpaper hiding secret meanings about the owners and its history, including a sweet drawing of the couple's King Charles Spaniel. Swifty's founder, Robert Caravaggi, has created another hit here and his presence makes the restaurant hum with excitement day and night. (The Colony contacted
Before dinner at Club Colette with Leslie Hindman, Nancy Traylor and friend.
him in 2019 asking him to open there after the NYC outpost closed in 2016.) On this visit, I was lucky to dine here on a couple of occasions, once
Chuck, dreaming on Worth Avenue.
for dinner around the pool (with its dramatic views) with Leslie and Chuck and, on another day, lunch with friends Kim Renk, Sharon Bush and Fran Weissler. Fran is 93 years young and a real hoot. She regaled us with her stories in show business with her husband Barry (they are Broadway producers with over 9 Tony Awards to their credit!–Pippin, La Cage aux Folles, Sweet Charity, Wonderful Town, Grease, Cabaret–you get the picture). Their first production on Broadway, "Othello," scored their first Tony Award and starred Christopher Plummer and James Earl Jones. The story of how she snagged Plummer for the role could be made into its own movie. Anyway, we also dined at another former NYC hotspot, Le Bilboquet (245 Worth Ave.), that's also relocated to PB. This was a slightly different story….Even though the space was heart-breakingly chic, the service and prices were not. Our waiter took my order and then walked away without even taking Chuck's! It is a new spot, but at these prices, there should be no room for errors like this.
La Goulue, Palm Beach, another NYC transplant to PB.
Anyway, I hope they can up their service game as it is a lovely spot. The third hotspot transplanted from NYC is the newly opened La Goulue at 288 S. County Rd. This restaurant
Batch, a Southern-style restaurant in Palm Beach on bustling Clematis Street.
is so true to the original that you feel like you could be at the one still located in NYC. The
Another great home decor shop in PB, Jennifer Garrigues.
French cuisine is impeccable and delicious. The Wine Channel's Jessica Altieri suggested a waiter there that she knew, Fernando, who came from the Four Seasons PB (which was entirely taken over by Ken Griffin's Citadel corp. during quarantine!) Anyway, the whole evening was a delight there and I highly recommend it. In a Palm Beach Social Diary article, "All Eyes on Palm Beach," one of my favorite writers, Christine Schott, said, "Booking a reservation in Palm Beach has now become a sport." I agree, it was difficult at times, but if you're nice
The one and only Colony Hotel with its beautiful, new de Gournay wallpaper.
on the phone, sometimes reservations do open up. Lol! And not only is the restaurant scene heating up, but the real estate market is insane. In a Palm Beach Daily News article (the "shiny sheet"), the cover story was
Le Bilboquet, looking down its tunneled entryway.
about an estate at 320 Island Road that sold in January for $26M and then was back on the market in less than a month for $45M! Miami Realtors Association stated, "Palm Beach County luxury home sales spiked 83% in Q3, of 2020." A fun note about the "shiny sheet", I was talking to the check-out lady at Green's Pharmacy and she gave me a little history about this revered newspaper that is now all plain, white paper. She
Driving A1A, the best….
said, "Back in the day, when women wore white gloves, they didn't want to get ink on them so the paper was glossy to avoid newsprint, aka the "shiny sheet." So, now you know. Some other highlights included the newly opened White Elephant Palm Beach (280 Sunset Ave.) a super-chic, super-
With Leslie Hindman and Chuck at her new PB house.
pricey luxury boutique hotel (with Lola 41 restaurant, which friends Phillip Emigh and Bruce Haas LOVED); The Ben (part of the Marriott's Autograph Collection) at 251 N. Narcissus in West Palm Beach. Its rooftop restaurant, Spruzzo, has breathtaking views of PB; Pizza al Fresco (where a famous descendant of President John Adams resides in the former Addison Mizner home with his pet pig, wife and an assortment of other pets), 14 Via Mizner; a couple of favorite design stores, F.S. Henemader, 316 S. County Road, and Jennifer Garrigues, 308 Peruvian); Batch, a fabulous Southern-style restaurant in West Palm Beach at 223 Clematis; Henry's Palm Beach (owned by The Breakers) at 229 Royal Poinciana Way is too cold and stark, we walked out; City Diner, a charming throwback diner in West Palm Beach at 3400 S. Dixie Hwy.; Trevini, a chic restaurant at 223 Sunset Ave.; Palm Beach Grill at Royal Poinciana Plaza doesn't have the pizzazz it once had; and of course Renatos, at 87 Via Mizner is perpetually elegant and chic.
Views from The Ben, a new hotel in West Palm Beach owned by the Marriott.
Our friend/designer Daniel Kinkade told us not to miss The Breakers this year. He wanted to know what I thought about its recent reno. I didn't like it at all. It looked like they replaced their plush, luxurious lobby furniture with stuff from IKEA. It was a horrible mix for this iconic, National Historic Landmark that deserves better. Thankfully, the magnificent carpet is still in place as are the luxurious floral arrangements that dot the vaulted lobby. This vacation was sorely needed. I'm sorry my blog is late because of it, but it gave us memories to last a lifetime and I hope some news you can use here. Special thanks, with love, to all of our friends (and my sister-in-law Nancy) who joined us, played with us and shared their homes. Forever grateful.
No restaurant in PB beats dining around the Colony's pool at Swifty's, our favorite hands down.
Dori and Lori, she knew everybody and they loved her.
Still can't believe she's gone. Dori Wilson was such a powerful light, every room she walked into she made it better. I met her
Dori Wilson, one of the best kind.
when I first moved to Chicago in the early 70s. She was a Chicago star even then and she kindly took me under her wing, introducing me to all the important people. She even had me in the front row at Operation Push headquarters to meet Rev. Jesse Jackson. Everyone who knew her, loved her. We even talked about going into the public relations business together. Don't get me wrong, she wasn't all warm and fuzzy. Whatever was on her mind, she let you know. She was a "no bull-sh_t" kind of a girl for sure. And I admired that. She never pretended to be something she wasn't and didn't want her friends to be that way either. She gravitated towards people who were similar–real, honest, hard working and good-hearted–she loved Michael Kutza who she saw regularly, the late Victor Skrebneski who photographed her
With her dear friends Michael Kutza and Victor Skrebneski.
often and her dearest friend Lee Blackwell Baur, who created a foundation (with other friends) in
Dori during her successful modeling days.
her honor, The Dori Wilson Foundation. This foundation will support some of the many charities she lent her heart and time to. She loved and raised her nephew Travis and always shared his achievements like a proud mom. We were both Chihuahua lovers and she called hers, Taco and Belle, they were her "babies." But as much as I thought I knew her, I realized after reading her obit (written lovingly by another dear friend of hers, Tarrah Cooper Wright), that there was so much I didn't know about this most remarkable woman. Here's an excerpt: "Dori Wilson was born to Fannie Brown Wilson and William Wilson on October 15, 1943, in Winona, Mississippi. She spent the earliest years of her life smelling the honeysuckle bush on the side of the house,
Beautiful Dori.
walking uphill to school each morning, developing a fondness for fishing, and listening to the crickets as she lay in bed each night. When Dori was 7, the family moved to Hyde Park, Illinois, and then to Chicago’s bustling Washington Park neighborhood. Dori loved reading, tumbling and doing double-dutch, but would later remember always working—reupholstering chairs, finishing her homework and book reports early so she could draw and create art, and earning money by doing hair for the
Dori with friends Patrick Sheehan and Cheryl Coleman.
neighborhood ladies when she was just 9. For Dori, having a keen eye for beauty and a strong work ethic always came naturally. As a high school freshman at Hyde Park High School, Dori caught the bus to the Woolworth store at 43rd & Ellis, where she—age 14, not 16—had lied about her age to get a
Dori with former Mayor Harold Washington.
job. After high school, Dori attended Roosevelt University before working at Goldblatt’s on State Street, and then at Compton Advertising as a secretary and assistant producer. One day, while at a commercial shoot, Dori met a talent agent who suggested
Dori, always chic, even working….
that Dori shouldn’t just be behind the camera—she should be in front of it. Tall, thin and beautiful, Dori had all the makings of a model. She later remembered that while there were few models who looked like her at the time, she didn’t see that as a roadblock—she saw her uniqueness as an asset, and she was right. Dori was motivated by her inner drive to always go after what she wanted and to not take no as a final answer. But she also knew she was breaking barriers for other Black girls and women. As a dark-skinned Black woman, Dori felt that she always had to work harder, try harder, and aim higher than many of her peers because of the way things were stacked against her; Dori was determined to succeed against any obstacle, and she did. “I first saw Dori from afar when I was a teenager working in
Lee Blackwell Baur, Dori, Zorada Gowenlock and Deirdre Pratt.
a stock room on Oak Street,” said longtime friend and Ariel Investments Co. CEO/President Mellody Hobson. “When I raved about her to my mother, she told me that Dori was helping to change old-fashioned and highly conventional definitions of beauty. When I later met her as a young professional, we became instant friends. I often told her that when I looked at her face, I saw the face of my own mother. She was
Dori with Pam Capitanini and Myra Reilly.
quite special to many, including me.” In 1964, Dori became the first Black runway model in Chicago. She opened shows for Bonwit Teller, Marshall Field's, I. Magnin, Carson Pirie Scott and Saks and worked with acclaimed photographer and friend Victor Skrebneski. Around this time, people in the business told her to quit advertising and model full time. But Dori had too many
With Dori, Barb Samuels and friend.
ideas to just be a canvas on which other people painted their stories. In 1968, she joined Foote, Cone & Belding to work on their advertising project with Sears, Roebuck & Co, and in 1970, she was promoted to Director of Fashion and Casting. That same year, an appearance as a contestant on TV’s “The Dating Game” won her a trip to Italy and England. Dori
continued to split her time and modeled in numerous fashion shows, advertisements and events, including Gucci’s Fall 1970 campaign and the Dress Horsemen and Trophy Board Annual Benefit Fashion Spectacular
Dori featured in "My Start Story."
in 1975. She even served as the prototype for the first Black mannequin in Marshall Field’s and hosted her own public affairs talk show called “Memorandum” on WMAQ-TV. In 1980, Dori launched Dori Wilson & Associates. For 40 years, she served clients across a broad range of industries, crafting their messages and helping them reach new audiences. Her clients included the City of Chicago, Tiffany & Co., the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, and many more. Dori never waited for the phone to ring; instead, she picked it up and asked for what she wanted. She was never scared of hearing “no.” She kept moving until she found the “yes.” Dori was committed to giving back to the community and served on the board of many organizations including the Harris Theater, The Council of Regents of Loyola University, PAWS Chicago, Chicago Workforce Board, Chicago International Film Festival, Columbia College, Brookfield Zoo, First Bank & Trust of Illinois, Board of Trustees of the Chicago Public Library, Girls Scouts of Chicago Association Board, and more. In interviews with The History Makers organization, Dori
Dori with Helen "Helpful" Melchior.
noted that while she got her work ethic from her father, she got her kindness from her mother—a quality she prized even more. She was asked many questions, but two in particular resonate today. How would you like to be remembered? “Dori was good and kind and did her best to help others,” she said. If Travis is watching this, what would you want him to know? “That I loved him and did the best I could, and that I’m very happy to have had him in my life.” Dori departed the world on February 1, 2021. She is survived by her nephew Travis Wilson, her brother William Thomas Wilson, Sr. and his spouse Joanna; her nephew Wil Wilson and his wife
Dori and Shauna Montgomery.
Kathy, grand-nieces Laura, Brittany and Taylor Wilson; first cousins Mary Elizabeth Hunt and her husband Colle, Bettie Ann Priester and her husband John; second cousins Maria Hunt, Lisa Hunt, Colle Hunt, Jr. and wife Janice and their children Naomi
Kate and Leslie Zentner with Dori.
and Isabel. She was preceded in death by parents Fannie Laura Brown and William (Willie) Wilson, sister Mamie Agusta Wilson, and half-sisters Georgia Jones and Dorothy Edwards. Dori's friend/philanthropist Lee Blackwell Baur, summed up her friend's remarkable life and presence, “Dori Wilson was a trailblazing woman and Chicago icon who brought a larger than life status to the many fundraising efforts and charitable organizations she touched. Her stunning beauty and unbridled energy put her in a distinctive category, touching the lives of so many including my own. Our 20-year friendship was one of mutual respect and undying love. We will honor Dori’s life with the creation of the Dori Wilson Foundation, which will support those organizations to which Dori so intimately gave her heart and soul.” You are greatly missed dear Dori.
Kudos to Sam Toia and the Illinois Restaurant Association for continuing to fight for our restaurants
Restaurateur Sam Sanchez, new IRA board chair.
and also for its exciting new honorees and board of directors! First off, congrats to Sam Sanchez, the newly elected chairman of the board. Sanchez most recently served as the IRA's First Vice Chairman and is the Founder and CEO of Third Coast Hospitality Group. In the mid-80s, Sam moved from his family's hometown in Sabinas Hidalgo, Mexico to start what is now an accomplished
Restaurant critic Phil Vettel, Lifetime Achievement honoree.
hospitality career in Chicago. In addition to his
Amanda Puck, Mariano's Director of Strategic Brand Development, accepted the Sara Rowe ProStart Company of the Year award on behalf of Mariano's.
restaurants, he also owns EMC Construction, a full-service construction company that handles renos of existing properties and new construction. In other IRA news, award recipients were announced in four categories: Restaurateur of the Year to Gregory Schulson, CEO of Burrito Beach and Lunan Corporation; Vendor of the Year to Gordon Food Service, Performance Foodservice, US Foods and Sysco; the Sara Rowe ProStart Company of the Year to Mariano's (accepted by Amanda Puck, Director of Strategic Brand Development) and a special Lifetime Achievement Award went to Phil Vettel, longtime food writer for the Chicago Tribune. Congrats to ALL!
Misericordia's Sister Rosemary Connelly and Lois Gates, Assistant Executive Director.
And, in the mean time, I'm receiving lots of encouraging event notices. I'm hopeful we'll be back in person soon at our beloved nonprofit events. On Feb.
Beloved philanthropists Diane and Richard Weinberg.
27, Cal's Angel's hosted a virtual fundraiser for pediatric cancer. The Costume Council of the Chicago History Museum hosted Norma Kamali as she discussed her new book, virtually, "I AM Invincible" on Feb. 25. Presenting sponsors were Liz Stiffel and Richard and Diane Weinberg. The Chicago Lighthouse hosted a Texas Hold 'Em poker tournament on Feb. 26 to raise funds for its mission of serving the blind, visually impaired, disabled and Veteran communities. On February 26, Misericordia hosted "Heart of Gold: A Night at the Races" to support its services for children and adults with special needs. Girls in the Game celebrated its 26th anniversary, also on Feb. 26, of empowering girls and helping them build their confidence and social skills. More to come!
Join the dynamic ladies of The Service Club of Chicago on Monday, March 8, from 5-6 pm, CST. I'm so proud to host this tribute/Zoom party in honor of International Womens Day! Any donation of $25 or more will get you into the virtual party! Join us to help the SC carry on their 131 year mission of supporting those in need. (Click here to register/donate here)
Each spring, the Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center hosts its signature event, the Humanitarian Awards Dinner. Now one of the largest fundraising dinners in the city of Chicago, this high profile event pays tribute to pillars in our community, Holocaust Survivors and highlights the Museum’s achievements. This year's dinner on Wednesday, March 10, will be a hybrid event with virtual and in-person (limited) programming. Honorees include Exelon Corporation, Scott Swanson (PNC Bank, Ill.) and Zev and Shifra Karkomi (posthumously, Survivor Legacy Award). Keynote speaker will be Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, former NBA star/activist. (For tickets and more info, click here!)
Porchlight Music Theatre will host "Chicago Sings Rock & Roll Broadway" virtually on Saturday, March 20. The honoree will be Tony Award winning actress Felicia P. Fields. The event will feature a who’s-who roster of Chicago’s own music theatre and cabaret favorites with all funds raised supporting the theatre's artistic and educational programming. (For tickets/details, click here!)
St. Patrick's High School, led by friend and president Joe Schmidt, is asking for your support of its virtual Shamrock Green & Gold Gala on Thursday, March 11. Funds will support its mission to provide educational experiences of the highest quality which enables young men to develop their highest potential as lifelong learners and assets to society and the Church. (For more info, click here)
Join the Costume Council of the Chicago History Museum for some vintage, fashion fun on Tuesday, March 23 from 5:30 – 7 pm, CST! The webinar presentation will discuss the rich history of Bes-Ben hats, Chicago's Mad Hatter, alongside former costume curator of the Museum, Elizabeth Jachimowicz, and Nena Ivon.The first 40 registrants will receive a free set of Bes-Ben magnets! Details here!
And speaking of nonprofits, I was so proud to co-host,
Steak 48's Oliver Badgio and Agency H5's Kathleen Sarpy.
with Agency H5's Kathleen Sarpy, Pretty Powerful 3.0, a zoom party celebrating the city's philanthropic leaders. Nearly 70 women joined us for a virtual cocktail party sponsored by Steak 48 on February 9. Last year, we hosted the party at the restaurant but, this year, we were proud and grateful to be able to continue this tradition despite Covid. Four nonprofit
Some of the nearly 70 community leaders who joined Pretty Powerful 3.0.
leaders: Nancy Wright, CEO of Girl Scouts of Greater Chicago; Holly Buckendahl, CEO of Ronald McDonald House Charities of Chicagoland and Northwest Indiana; Lauren Schrero Levy, executive director of The Nora Project and Marilynn Gardner, CEO of Navy Pier, shared how their organizations had pivoted and adapted to the changes caused by the pandemic, as well as their hopes for the future. I was so excited to see so many familiar (powerful) faces, including Heather Owen (One Tail at a Time), Katie Law (PAWS Chicago),
More Pretty Powerful 3.0 participants.
Brenda Langstraat (Chicago Public Library), Mimi Plauche (Chicago International Film Festival), Joyce Winnecke (YWCA Metro Chicago), Lindsay Avner (Bright Pink), Shelley MacArthur (Old St. Pat's rep), Sandi Hartstein (The Joffrey Ballet), Rebecca Darr (WINGS) and SOOO many others! As a surprise at the end of the zoom party, Steak 48 (Oliver Badgio and Jeff Mastro, Steak 48 owner) provided participants with a dining gift certificate to the restaurant, located at 615 N. Wabash Ave., as a show of appreciation for their service to the Chicago community. I'm already looking forward to Pretty Powerful 4.0!! Thanks to all who participated and shared their plans for the future and told us how they coped in 2020. It was such an inspiring hour of hope and friendship! God Bless our Nonprofits!
power of a dog’s unconditional love. You’re invited to join TPAN and me on March 25 for a discussion featuring the author of "When Dogs Heal," Dr. Rob Garofalo, an HIV specialist whose practice centers on adolescents and LGBTQ youth. Join us as we discuss the book, share our life journeys—and, of course, talk about dogs! Dr. Rob will be joined by some of the people living with HIV who appear in the book, and by Julie Supple, TPAN’s programs director, who will discuss Paws N' Effect, TPAN’s program that brings together people living with HIV with a dog companion. When you purchase When Dogs Heal from Unabridged Bookstore either online or at their store, Unabridged will donate 20% of the book price to TPAN with all proceeds going directly to the Paws n’ Effect program, which helps find safe, forever homes for rescue dogs. “ Please sign up here and join us at 6 pm, CST, Thursday, March 25.
And she can cook too, Maria Pappas, Cook County Treasurer.
Hats off, again, to Cook County Treasurer Maria Pappas. She had a standing O at the Polish Museum of America recently in honor of Pulaski Day. She gave this amazing speech (without notes, see below)) that left the audience wildly applauding. She is one of our city's most active politicians, always looking for ways to help we, the people. Recently, she and her team assembled a 234 page report describing the eye-popping trends of property tax growth in Cook County. She is sharing the data as a call to action for voters who have sat on the sidelines while taxes have continued to skyrocket. "The residences and commercial owners, who do not vote have allowed this to happen because they don't hold anybody accountable. I want to inspire people to get registered," she said. Amen to that Maria! On another Maria note, catch her WVON radio show every Monday (1690 AM) when she hosts "Black Houses Matter," a talk show about helping homeowners access unclaimed property tax refunds. Mayor Pappas? Sounds good to me!
There is lots of exciting news on the Chicago Star Media front! First off, I'm thrilled to announce that I've been named Contributing Editor to this wonderful group of papers that I like to call "a love letter to Chicago." I love its mission, which is mine too, to deliver positive news you can use with a hyper-local bent. In other words, a paper about Chicago,
With CSM publisher/founder Elaine Hyde. (Who's also a physicist!)
for Chicago! Our first rebranded issue as Chicago Star debuted on March 1 and it's a hit, I'm proud to say! (Read it all here) We have a brand new writer, Bridget McGuire,
Gibson's Restaurant Group are Chicago Star fans! (Thank you Kathy O'Malley Piccone!)
whose story "The Pandemic, Sales and the Single Girl", will make you laugh out loud! And I'm pretty proud of my column in this new issue too, "Wedding Bell DOs", with fabulous love stories and advice and tips from couples you know from around town. They include Gibson's Restaurant Group's Peg and Steve Lombardo, Izzy Idonije and Jatnna Toribio, WGN-TV's Ana Belaval and Steve Vihon, "Windy City Live's" Val Warner and Elijah "Jobba" Maxey, The Joffrey Ballet's Victoria Jaiani and Temur Suluashvili, Kristina and Mike McGrath, Cheryl and Albert Grace, Marcus Riley and Jude Fitzgerald, Donna La Pietra and Bill Kurtis, award winning producer/director/writers Robert and Leslie Zemeckis, Agency H5's
Chicago Star Advisory Board member Howard Tullman and Gertie.
Kathleen and Chris Sarpy and more. These couples shared some great tips on making, keeping and building relationships with some surprising admissions. (Read story here!) We are building a family at Chicago Star and want you to be a part of it! Don't miss an issue, subscribe now
Chicago Star Advisory Board member Bonnie Tullman (and her Remi) are fans!
here! Special thanks to our exciting, STELLAR new Advisory Board members too: Howard Tullman, Sargent McCormick, Bonnie Spurlock, Sherren Leigh, Paul Iacono, Leslie Hindman, Cook County Treasurer Maria Pappas, Michael Kutza, Robert Zentner, Alex Pissios and Tom Kehoe. We are SOOOO grateful for your support! In more exciting news, Chicago Star was the featured article in this week's must-read Robert Feder's column. (Read it here)
Love and thanks to all of the romantic couples here who shared their stories with me!
I hate sharing bad news but it doesn't look like our city's convention business is coming back, this year at least. The Chicago Dental Society has cancelled its annual February meeting. Since March, more than 200 trade shows have been scrapped according to info from the Illinois Restaurant Association. These shows were expected to generate more than 2 billion for Chicago. Other cancellations include the National Restaurant Association show, the Inspired Home show and even Macy's annual, greatly anticipated Flower Show display at the State Street store. On a brighter front, it appears that the Chicago Auto Show is still working on returning this year. Fingers crossed for better convention news coming soon.
I started spring cleaning early this year. Saw a moth and freaked. I'm finished now with one walk-in closet and will soon be heading for the others. It was a bittersweet walk down memory lane. I'm a saver so I loathe throwing anything away, especially things with sentimental value. I had to decide what to do with a lot of pieces of clothing that had special memories for me. I have the top I wore when Chuck and I got our marriage license; the gown I wore to my first Joffrey Ballet Gala; the gown I wore when I co-chaired a Service Club Gala; the cocktail dress I wore when I was honored by the Chicago Lighthouse; the short red
I started a little early.
dress I wore to the opening of the Modern Wing, the fancy custom top, created by an Art Institute student, I wore when I was inducted into the BizBash Hall of Fame…well, you get the idea. They all hold such special memories for me and even looking at them makes all of those memories and occasions come back in a rush. But, I have to grow up and out of this habit. I got rid of them all and I feel 20 pounds lighter (kinda). I got rid of everything except the top I wore for getting our marriage license. That will stay.
With the weather getting warmer and restaurant restrictions becoming more reasonable, I'm almost giddy with excitement. We get our second shot recently and, after that, I can't wait to go bar hopping and cram myself into crowded elevators. (Totally kidding here) But it's fun to think about reaching a better place in our city and country….(prayer hands here).
Thanks for tuning in and for your patience with my late blog! If not a subscriber, please sign up here!
Love, as always,
Candace
(Send any info, questions or comments to Candace@CandidCandace.com)
We are all suffering in one way or another during these strange times. People in the restaurant industry, the arts, design and the nonprofit communities are the ones that first come to mind for me. I guess because I have dear friends in all of these categories and know of so many who have lost their jobs and businesses or who are struggling. I'm thrilled the restaurants and bars have partially reopened but we still have a long way to go. The nonprofits, to me, are the backbone of our city, maybe because I've worked with so many of them for so long. They help prop up the most vulnerable and even our homeless pets find care, comfort and protection through them. Since 2008, I've been writing about and promoting charities and events that are close to my heart. I want to put them in the spotlight now, so I quizzed some of my favorites to find out what they were planning for 2021. Please take note. Some have a whole calendar filled with a variety of fundraisers while others have nothing planned. It's a new normal that some are having difficulty navigating. However, I've included as many as I could and I hope you will mark your calendars for their events as well as share them across your social media. I've been asked on many occasions how people can get involved and which charities I would recommend. All of the ones listed below are well vetted and wonderful. And, if you don't have money to donate, there are many other ways to become involved, including volunteerism. Websites are included for each organization, so reach out to the one/ones that touch your heart. And, if your nonprofit's events aren't listed below, be sure to send them to Candace@CandidCandace.com for the next edition. I'm determined to make all of your voices heard moving into the New Year. (Events/nonprofits are mentioned in no particular order below, and they all need our help).
Chicago Children’s Choir, a nonprofit that inspires and unites youth from diverse backgrounds to become global ambassadors through music, will present its free virtual Black History Month concert, Preserving and Persevering, on Thursday, Feb. 25 at 7 p.m.
Chicago Children's Choir.
CT. Exploring how the power of Black music has been
Chicago Children's Choir, live onstage on national TV.
the cultural key in both preserving African traditions in America and in helping millions persevere in the face of racial injustice, the concert is curated by CCC’s Director of African Diasporic Music and Studies Lonnie Norwood and includes performances from the Voice of Chicago, Dimension and Neighborhood Choir singers. And on Saturday, Sept. 26, the CCC will present "Reverberations" (formerly Red Jacket Optional Gala). Kudos also to conductor/pianist/singer Josephine Lee and her CCC for their recent live appearance on the Late Show with Stephen Colbert. They performed alongside Chance the Rapper, Chicago Youth Symphony Orchestras, Kofi Lost, Peter CottonTale and Cynthia Erivo. (Details here!)
One Tail at a Time executive director Heather Owen and friend.
One Tail at a Time'sHoundstooth Ball is set for Friday, November 19. This wonderful animal rescue saves homeless dogs and cats with their goal, this year, being 2,250 rescues. They will also focus on growing their outreach and support programs in big ways for Chicago pet families struggling to make ends meet. Please check out the details here!
The Union League Boys & Girls Clubs are celebrating its 102nd year of mentoring the next generation to become leaders in their communities, particularly those who are underserved. Despite Covid, this nonprofit wants you to know that they are still offering a safe and spacious home to its Club's youth for e-learning. Save the date for February 25 for their annual (virtual) Youth of the Year event! (Details here!)
PAWS Chicago, the largest No Kill animal shelter in the Midwest, has several events
PAWS Chicago, adoptable cats and dogs.
planned. At this point, they're not sure if the summer Beach Party will be virtual or a smaller, in-person event at the Castaways but I will keep you posted. In the meantime, mark these events on your calendar! Virtual Trivia Night, Thursday, February 25 ($5 minimum donation to participate); Virtual Mutt Madness, fundraising/adoption event in which 32 dogs and 32 cats work their way through a 6 round tourney ala an NCAA tourney, March 11-18; Inaugural Golf Outing, Monday, June 14, at the Westmoreland Country Club in Winnetka; PAWS Chicago Beach Party, August (date TBD); PAWS Chicago 5K/Walk/Run, September (date TBD); PAWS 20th annual Fur Ball, November 12 (location TBD); Team PAWS (fall). (Check website here for more event info and to register).
Each year, the Illinois Holocaust Museum hosts one of the largest fundraisers in Chicago and welcomes over 2,000 civic, business, and community leaders in support of the Museum’s educational outreach. On March 10, 2021, former NBA Star & Activist Kareem Abdul-Jabbar will be the keynote speaker of the 2021 Humanitarian Awards Dinner. During the virtual and in-person event, the Humanitarian Award will be presented to Exelon Corporation, accepted by CEO Chris Crane and Scott Swanson, president of PNC Bank, Illinois, for their demonstrated commitment to educate current and future generations about the Holocaust and the dangers of hatred, prejudice, and indifference. Zev and Shifra Karkomi will be honored posthumously with the Survivor Legacy Award to recognize their vision and support in creating the Karkomi Holocaust Exhibition – a cornerstone of the Museum. (Dinner details here.) For the Women's Leadership Committee's signature event, SOIRÉE, I'm thrilled to be returning as host! This annual event typically brings together guests for a spirited evening filled with socializing, silent auction bidding, and entertainment. It raises funds to support the Museum’s mission to combat hatred, prejudice, and indifference and to inspire visitors to become Upstanders who speak out for what’s right – turning powerful lessons of history into positive actions today. The 2021 event is scheduled for Wednesday, September 1, and will likely be a hybrid of in-person and virtual. I hope you can join us! (Details here!) Two new, BIG exhibitions are coming up too, “Mandela: Struggle for Freedom" (Feb. 2021 – Sept. 2021) and "Rise Up: Stonewall and the LGBTQ Rights Movement" (Oct. 2021 – May 2022).
The Service Club's All-In Zoom meeting with over 100 members celebrating their record-breaking fundraising success.
The Service Club of Chicago certainly didn't let a pandemic slow down its fundraising efforts! They broke two records this year — in their 131 year history! The SC held its most profitable Gala ever — and also raised the most revenue overall to distribute through its Philanthropic Grant Program, an all-time high of $ 621,632.28! For the coming year, they're still going full steam ahead! First, the Spring Hat Luncheon, which is hopefully scheduled for May (in person, hybrid or maybe a combo); Day on the Terrace will be the first Monday in August at the Peninsula; the Gala will be held at the Four Seasons on November 5 and their Holiday Luncheon will be back in the beautiful dining room of the University Club on December 1. As president Sherrill Bodine stated, "We will never surrender our mission to help make Chicago a better place in which to live." (Donate/learn more, here!)
Hyde Park Art Center, the non-profit hub for contemporary art located on Chicago’s South Side, will present socially-distant exhibitions throughout the coming year that highlight Chicago’s diverse art scene featuring emerging and established artists. While all time-frames are subject to change, visual arts fans can expect the following: FEBRUARY will see the opening of a trio of exhibitions: Ground Floor, a biennial that features some of Chicago’s most promising emerging talent from area MFA (Master of Fine Arts) graduate programs; Cuts & Beats, a solo multi-media exhibition by Cecil McDonald, Jr.; and Next Window, Please!, showcasing young adult artists from the Art Center’s Teen Program. THIS SPRING, artist Gabriel Villa translates the language of Mexican traditions and the personal urban American experience into charged intimate narratives in The Metamorphosis of Gabriel Villa while artist Faheem Majeed creates a new installation that focuses on the history of the historic South Side Community Art Center, in Faheem Majeed: Planting and Maintaining a Perennial Garden IV. SUMMER will bring Future Fossils: SUM, the final major sculpture installation in a trilogy of work by Lan Tuazon. And note that every month on the first Sunday, the Hyde Park Art Center hosts Center Sundays, a free public program introducing ongoing offerings at the Art Center for all ages, interests and skill levels, which is now being held virtually but soon will return to in-person. For more information on all, click here!
Some members of the Merit School of Music performing.
Merit School of Music, for over 40 years, has been dedicated to helping young people transform their lives by providing equal access to a high-quality music education, with nearly 70 percent of students benefiting from need-based financial aid and low-cost instrument rental. Merit will host its 42nd annual benefit Gala, honoring Lyric Opera of Chicago Music Director and Principal Conductor Sir Andrew Davis as he concludes his two-decade-long Lyric tenure. Davis will receive Merit’s Alice S. Pfaelzer Award for Distinguished Service to the Arts at the virtual Gala celebration in mid-May (date TBC). Plus, Merit will be offering both online and in-person options for its summer line-up of camps, classes, electives and workshops. Merit School of Music’s online summer camps and classes help students, from early childhood through high school, to stay social, creative, and engaged with their instrument from the comfort of home or in a socially-distanced small group environment. Summer registration opens in May; more information can be found here.
Misericordia, that fabulous place that provides love, caring and comfort, since 1921, for those with intellectual and developmental disabilities, is hosting a few fun events this year! I'm super excited to support this amazing nonprofit via video for their Women's Auxiliary – All You Need is Love event with a wine theme happening on February 12. And don't miss the Women's League – Heart of Gold, Night at the Races event with a Kentucky Derby theme happening on February 26. Love Sister Rosemary and Lois!
Some of the inspiring members of Giordano Dance Chicago.
Giordano Dance Chicago, one of the premiere jazz dance companies in the world, has some exciting highlights for 2021. The Nan Giordano Certification Program® continues virtually in March with dance educators from around the globe. And on June 13-18, the Giordano Workshop goes virtual! GDC will bring its high energy technique and repertoire into people’s homes and studios around the world. Artistic director Nan Giordano said, "While operations have slowed due to COVID-19, we have taken the opportunity to engage in a strategic planning process to strengthen our organization and ensure we emerge from this time better than ever!" And I know they will! Follow them along here!
The Joffrey Ballet, like many other dance companies, have had to cancel performances due to Covid. Luckily, they have a deep well of material to choose from as well as the creativity and artistic talent to create something new and suitable for the times. Their main goal is to stay afloat financially, which they have managed to do so far through significant budget cuts and a $12 million fundraising
The Joffrey Ballet rehearses Bolero.
campaign. They plan to return to the Lyric Opera House this fall with a full 2021–22 season. Their strategy, for now, is to create short, studio performances and footage that artistic director Ashley Wheater says “pulls back the curtain” on the rehearsals and staging like they did with their recent online "Nutcracker" production. Originally created for its spring gala, "Bolero" is the company's latest offering, a 16-minute one-act production that is ideal for online viewers who, like me, have short attention spans. Here's to more Joffrey greatness in the coming year! (Follow their event and production schedule here)
Congo Square Theatre Company, one of the nation’s premier African American theatres (they worked with a young playwright named Chadwick Boseman before he was a household name), has pivoted to digital programming for their 21st season. Coming up is their three-day arts celebration Festival on the Square from Feb. 4-6, culminating with the 2021 Vision Benefit honoring founding board chair Les Coney and the company’s first director, Ron OJ Parson. Ongoing is the theater’s new digital sketch comedy show Hit ‘Em on the Blackside, currently available for free viewing on their website with new episodes starting in March. More information here!
On January 31, the Chicago Dance History Project will host a Marathon Interview with the world's leaders in dance–7 hours of interviews with amazing dance people from all over the world (Twyla Tharp, Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater’s Robert Battle, Lou Conte, Ashley Wheater and many, many more). Info and sign up here.
The Music Institute’s 90th Anniversary Gala is scheduled Monday, May 10 starting at 6 p.m. in a virtual format with some live components (pending pandemic restrictions) for a limited number of guests at Nichols Concert Hall. The Dushkin Award, which for 35 years has been bestowed upon some of the world’s most accomplished musicians, will be presented to Maestro Zubin Mehta. (There will also be a Cultural Visionary Award and a Richard D. Coburn Award for Teaching Excellence—recipients TBD.) Proceeds go toward scholarships and financial assistance for music instruction through the Music Institute’s Community Music School, which leads people toward a lifelong engagement with music by providing widely accessible resources for high-quality music teaching, performing, and service activities. (All info here!)
Chicago Dancers United is making plans for the 30th anniversary of its annual fundraiser Dance for Life, which supports The Dancers’ Fund assisting those with diagnosed critical health needs (expanded this past year to cover routine medical expenses due to the pandemic). The hope is for a live, outdoor event some time in August, more details to come soon! (Check their website here for upcoming plans!)
The Jackson Chance Foundation is hoping you'll join them for the Owl Ride for Jackson, a two-day 111-mile round-trip bike ride from Chicago to Valparaiso, IN. taking off from Chicago’s lakefront on Saturday, Aug. 21 through Sunday, Aug. 22 . The route serves up breathtaking views
Jackson Chance Foundation founders Carrie and Terry Meghie.
and scenic bike trails to Valparaiso with bikers riding 55.5 miles on day one. Enjoy a complimentary dinner and an evening in Valpo and then another 55.5 miles day 2 back to Chicago. With a mix of rolling terrain and a few punchy climbs it offers something for cyclists of all abilities. (A one-day option is also available.) All riders are invited to enjoy a post-ride celebration on Sunday including dinner, treats and massages! Proceeds from Owl Ride for Jackson benefit JCF’s NICU Transportation Program which partners with Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital, Northwestern Prentice Women’s Hospital and Rush University Children’s Hospital to provide complimentary parking passes for families with critically ill babies in the NICU. Challenge yourself or enjoy the ride while impacting so many families when they need it most. Register today here!
Chicagoan Lauren Schrero is co-founder and executive director of The Nora Project. When Lauren’s daughter was born disabled, she became inspired to create a place for disability studies in every child’s education and launched The Nora Project to help create a more inclusive and accepting world. (Watch Lauren’s TED Talk about the program, here) Next month, The Nora Project is celebrating its 4th annual Friendship February, a charitable effort that challenges community members to commit to 28 days of friendship, kindness and inclusion. As we head into nearly 12 months of pandemic lockdown, it’s a great time to spread friendship and kindness as many continue to face hardship, emotional distress and COVID-19 fatigue. To see a complete list of Friendship February Challenges and get a sense of what this campaign is all about, see video below. Beyond Friendship February, The Nora Project supports local schools and communities year-round and brings students of all abilities together to teach empathy, demystify disability and promote inclusive beliefs and practices in school and beyond. Friendship February is an extension of these programs, and part of the campaign proceeds will provide grants to partner schools to make inclusion improvements like adding ramps, diversifying library books, and making all kids feel more included and welcome. (All info here!)
Girl Scouts of Greater Chicago Area and Northwest Indiana (GCNWI) and Girl Scouts of the USA (GSUSA) kicked off the 2021 Girl Scout Cookie season nationally, during a challenging time when many Girl Scouts are selling in creative, socially distant, and contact-free ways to keep themselves and their customers safe. Even in light of Covid, girls are adapting their sales methods to share the joy of Girl Scout Cookies through the largest girl-led entrepreneurship program—including taking contact-free pickup and delivery orders through a new national collaboration with Grubhub. Additionally, GCNWI has made online cookie ordering available so consumers who don’t know a Girl Scout can still purchase cookies from a local troop for direct shipment to their homes or donation to local organizations. If you don't know a Girl Scout to order from, click here!
Since 1974, Ronald McDonald House Charities have been providing a home away from home and resources to families who travel far from home for the medical care their child needs. To date, RMHC around the world have provided 2.5 million overnight stays for families with nearly 700 programs in 65+ countries and regions. In the Chicago region, they learned a lot in 2020, and have adapted their lineup of special events to be more inclusive by incorporating both in-person and virtual components to each experience. Mark your calendars for the following: Annual Golf Classic, Wed., June 9; Annual Gala, Saturday, Aug. 7; Sporting Clays Tournament, September 24/25 and Paint the Night, Sunday, Feb. 7. (Find further details and buy tickets here!)
The Chicago History Museum reopens to the public on March 4, the city's birthday! AND its fundraising arm, the Costume Council of the CHM, will present a zoom presentation on Thursday, February 25, with one of my favorite designers, Norma Kamali. Norma will discuss her new book, "Norma Kamali: I Am Invincible" and registrants will receive a gift box that includes a signed copy of the book, her Normalife Skinline Kit and more! Costume Council Patron Members and "Head to Toe Annual Appeal Donors" of $50 or more will receive a complimentary invitation to the Zoom lecture. All proceeds benefit the Costume Council of the Chicago History Museum. (Tickets/more details here!)
The Lynn Sage Breast Cancer Foundation and the Lynn Sage Foundation have merged to become the Lynn Sage Breast Cancer Foundation. With 35 years of success, this old/new org will continue to fight breast cancer by funding research to find cures and raising awareness about prevention and screening. Click here to for event updates. I was told their uber-popular Fall Benefit Luncheon will probably be virtual again this year but they had great success with this in 2020 (the event was hosted by Hoda), so I can't wait to hear of all the fun they have planned this year! (I'll share the details when they're available!)
A Silver Lining Foundationhas an exciting line-up of events for 2021! For spring, they are planning a celeb-filled virtual fundraiser sometime in May. Details are still being ironed out. In the summer "Tasting Stars" will return on June 19, benefiting the programs and services provided by this
Dr. Sandy Goldberg and Greg Hines.
wonderful nonprofit in its efforts to ensure everyone can afford a mammogram and have access to all the services. For fall, the 17th annual "A Sterling Event" will take place on Saturday, October 2. This is the Foundation's largest fundraiser and it's being planned as a hybrid experience featuring live and remote access to what will most certainly be a memorable evening. Proceeds from all of these events will provide life-saving breast health testing to uninsured, underinsured and, most recently, to those who have lost their health insurance due to the pandemic. I hope you can join us for ALL! (Details here!) (The charity was recently spotlighted by The Ford Motor Company in its "Built For" campaign for doing "meaningful and essential work throughout America.")
The Big Shoulders Fund has been serving the communities since 1986, supporting Catholic schools in the neediest areas of inner-city Chicago. Through scholarship support and a variety of programs, BSF provides children in need access to a quality, values-based education. Reopening school buildings (75 inner-city schools) safely in August was a huge task, and teachers and principals were nimble and innovative in determining how best they could continue to meet the needs of their students in the COVID-19 era. Now in 2021, their work continues. Upcoming fundraising events will further these efforts by providing much needed scholarship and operational support. Big Shoulders is continuing to plan for its upcoming events and will host them in some capacity, whether in person, hybrid or virtual as safety guidelines advise. The large fundraisers for the year will include: Humanitarian Award Dinner, Friday, May 21, 6 pm; Golf Classic, Monday, August 9, 8:30 am, Check-in and 11 am shotgun start. Olympia Fields Country Club;Big Shoulders Fund Ball, Friday, October 1. And, in the coming months, they will also be hosting a number of other events such as: Scholar Events/Activities, Virtual Student Activities, Programming–CapitalOne Coding, Junior League Art Club, How to be an Entrepreneur; Virtual events that will include special speakers, dance classes, field trips to museums, and on January 29, Chicago Sky’sCheyenne Parker is speaking to elementary and high school students in a fun special assembly; Volunteers from companies like KPMG,Houlihan Lokey, etc. reading books, doing career panels and playing jeopardy learning games with students virtually; Scholar events/opportunities; Scholar tours and learning sessions with the Chicago History Museum; High School Scholar Symposium where students learn about trending careers, applying to college and for financial aid, what it means to be a scholar athlete and so much more in a fun virtual and video based event; They will continue to have guest speakers (Chris Gardner is scheduled) speak to students on a variety of topics from careers to life skills; Big Shoulders Fund Supporter Activities; Networking speaker events included one for the kick-off to their Black History Month Book Club where next generation board members and high school scholars read and discussed “Strides Toward Freedom, The Montgomery Story" which was moderated by State Representative Curtis Tarver. (For more info, click here!)
Established in 1985, WINGS is one of the biggest domestic violence programs in the Midwest. This nonprofit provides a pathway to independence for people whose lives have been disrupted by domestic violence by providing housing, integrated services, education and advocacy. It has big plans for the coming year that include these events and programs: WINGS Metro 5-Year Anniversary Celebration on Thursday, February 11, 5:30pm–Join a virtual cocktail hour when WINGS will share stories and videos to highlight the history and impact of WINGS Metro which, when it opened, was the first new shelter for victims of domestic violence to open in Chicago in more than 10 years. Since it opened, WINGS Metro has provided 59,919 nights of critical emergency shelter and served 815 domestic violence survivors, including 410 children. (Spotlighting a special thank you to WINGS Board member Amy Rule and Rahm Emanual, who as Mayor, led the plan to establish WINGS Metro, and donated $25,000 to mark this anniversary.) Register here for FREE . ($2,500+ donors will receive a cocktail party kit to enjoy during this virtual celebration); WINGS Sports Luncheon, June 2021, Exact date TBD, Four Seasons Hotel in Chicago, 11:00am to 1:30pm—A Conversation with Chicago’s sports team owners George McCaskey , Michael Reinsdorf , Tom Ricketts and Rocky Wirtz, Event co-chairs Trish Rooney and Karen Z. Gray-Krehbiel, Sponsorship levels: Presenting $100,000; Premier $50,000; Lead $25,000; Gold $15,000; Silver;$10,000, Bronze $5,000’ Tickets: TBD , FYI: This benefit originally was scheduled for March 16, 2020; all sponsorships and ticket purchases made for that fundraiser are honored for this benefit luncheon. WINGS 21st Annual Purple Tie Ball, Saturday, October 2, The Westin Hotel in Itasca, 6:00 PM to midnight , Traditionally held during Domestic Violence Awareness Month, Event co-chairs: Melissa Canning and Debby Jackson, Sponsorship levels: Presenting $50,000; Lead $25,000; Gold $10,000; Silver $5,000; Angel $2,500; Tickets: $250 per person. 18th Annual Sweet Home Chicago, Sunday, December 12, Four Seasons Hotel in Chicago, 10:00am to 1:00pm, Honorary chairs: Rita and John Canning, Event co-chairs: KatherineBanich, Meghan Norton and Maria Shideler, Sponsorship levels: Title $100,000; Presenting $50,000; Lead $25,000; Gingerbread $15,000; Gum Drop $12,000; Candy Cane $6,000. (ALL info HERE!)
Eversight Illinois' mission is to restore sight and prevent blindness through the healing power of donation, transplantation and research. In 1985, the Illinois Eye-Bank and Michigan Eye-Bank formed a partnership—one that would earn a reputation for clinical excellence made possible by some of the finest medical directors, staff and board members in the eye banking field. The success of the organization attracted affiliations with other regional eye banks like the BroMenn-Watson Gailey Eye-Bank, Lions Eye Bank of New Jersey, Cleveland Eye Bank and the Connecticut Eye Bank, forming one of the largest networks of eye banks in the U.S. In 2015, the network
Sip and Sup for Sight, Feb. 11.
became known as Eversight, all working together as a unified operation to deliver the highest quality services to surgeons and their patients and to continue to grow our impact around the world. Their fundraising efforts continue this year with their signature fundraiser, the Gift of Sight Celebration, which will be held at the Peninsula in the fall. The event will honor Justine Fedak as its Woman of Vision and Dr. Parag Majmudar as its Gift of Sight honoree. I'm proud to return as co-host with Michael Caputo. I hope you can join us for Fantasea, Mystery Masquerade! (Watch for details here!)
Sips and Sweets for Sight, a virtual tasting on Feb. 11, 7-8 pm.
Since 1906, The Chicago Lighthouse has been a leader in comprehensive vision care and social services that improve the quality of life for patients, clients and their families. Even through these difficult times, they have not stopped delivering for those who depend on them. In 2020, I was proud to co-host their virtual FLAIR Fashion Show with Tracey DiBuono. They are planning the next one, which they hope to have in-person with a video component included (details to follow). As “stay-at-home” orders were being issued in March, their IT and management teams worked around-the-clock securing licenses and assistive technology equipment so that many of their employees with disabilities could continue working from
Chicago Lighthouse president/CEO Dr. Janet Szlyk.
home. Birth-to-Three Program Senior Director Marla Garstka personally appealed to state officials for the ability to provide remote therapies. Though physically separated, their community rallied online too, donating more than $40,000 on #GivingTuesdayNow, guaranteeing their clients would have assistance when they needed it most. To help some of the youngest members of their community, art therapy kits were packed and distributed to Preschool and Children’s Development Center students. When one of their employees, who is visually impaired, needed a safe place to live, Human Resources Senior Vice President Jeanette Bonzani helped secure a new apartment for her and her family. As some staff members who are blind remained homebound, their colleagues went to grocery stores and pharmacies for necessities. This is what they are, a “Community of Care” and this type of giving will continue into 2021 promises Lighthouse president/CEO Dr. Janet Szlyk. (To learn more, click here!)
Gilda's Club Chicago is a place where men, women and children whose lives have been impacted by cancer, as well as their families and friends, can feel they are part of a welcoming community of support. Even throughout Covid, they figured out ways to maintain their level of support and are now offering over 150 virtual programs monthly, such as cancer support groups, lectures, healthy lifestyle activities and more. At various times during the year, GCC hosts special events. Please watch for these event details on their virtual calendar: Gilda's Night In hosted by the Associate Board; Annual Awards Dinner; Red DoorSociety recognition event for donors who have contributed $1,000 or more each year; Gilda’s Club Untapped. Enjoy an evening of craft beers, wines and a raffle for some great prizes; Team Gilda raises money and awareness for GCC as an official charity partner of the Bank of America Chicago Marathon and Shamrock Shuffle, RAM Racing's Cinco de Miler and other races. (For more info on programming and events, click here) ________________________________________________________________________
After School Matters students.
After School Matters is a non-profit organization that provides life-changing after-school and summer program opportunities to 20,000 Chicago high school teens each year. They continue to design and deliver project-based, apprenticeship programs in a variety of areas, including the arts, communications and leadership, sports and STEM. They develop public-private partnerships including those with CPS, Chicago Park District, the Chicago Public Library and others to further support their youth. In 2020, they hosted their popular After School Matters Gala virtually (see video below) and are planning more fundraising opportunities for 2021. (Details to follow here)
Since 2016, SocialWorks, founded by Grammy-award-winning musician and humanitarian Chance the Rapper, has been empowering youth through the arts, education and civic engagement. The nonprofit has created 5 initiatives for youth to help them learn and act on their passions. Programming focuses on education, mental health, homelessness and performing and literary arts. Through the initiatives, OpenMike, Warmest Winter, Kids of the Kingdom, The New Chance: Arts & Literature Fund and My State of Mind, SocialWorks hopes to inspire creativity, build dreams, and advocate for youth success in all its forms. (For more information on these initiatives, click here.) Lately, school districts around the nation have been struggling to create remote education plans for diverse learners. To help fill the need for these students, SocialWorks and Altitude Chicago have created an education pod. Students within the SocialWorks' e-pods follow the school's curriculum within a controlled CDC compliant atmosphere and receive lunch, supervision, specialized tutoring and socialization exercises throughout the school day. SocialWorks and Altitude Chicago hope to support 32 students and teachers and teacher aides this coming school year. (Classes are scheduled to start Monday, February 1, 2021.)SocialWorks and Altitude Chicago's e-pod was inspired by
A SocialWorks learning program.
a local parent, Danielle Giles, whose son struggled with remote learning. Danielle researched ways to help her son and realized that wealthier communities created their own pods and micro-schools. Frustrated with the lack of similar support in her area, Danielle made a GoFundMe page to help support diverse learners like her son, who is deaf. After connecting with Tori Niestrom, a local educator, and SocialWorks, the Diverse Learner Pod Program was born.(Qualified teachers and aides are needed to make this programming possible and are encouraged to apply here. Pod Leaders and Aides must have experience with sign language or children with disabilities, be CPR certified and a DCFS mandated reporter. Parents and students can register here. Interested groups must have 3-8 diverse learners of the same grade and school to register for a pod. All students must individually register to be considered.) To support the pod, reach out to info@socialworkschi.com or donate here.
The ARK Chicago, a nonprofit that annually supports over 4,000 area Jews facing adversity, announced the newest members of its leadership team as it enters its 50th year of service in 2021: Marna Goldwin as CEO, Steven Blonder as president of the Board of Directors and Michael Garlin as Chief Sustainability and Innovation Officer. The ARK continues to commit itself to serving the growing and changing needs of the Chicagoland Jewish community, focusing on providing high-quality, free care and support in a safe and dignified setting, while expanding efforts to move its programs forward in all ways. With more than 2,000 volunteers serving in a number of different departments, it has become an integral part of the Chicagoland community. For more information about The ARK, its services and its expansion, please click here. Watch the story of The Ark Chicago below….
Chicago Scholars is entering its 25th Anniversary year in 2021 and celebrating continued growth in creating college access and mentorship for Chicago’s first-generation and under-resourced high school students! They will share more exciting events in honor of this milestone year in the coming months. They also welcomed Jeffery Beckham Jr. as interim CEO in December – Jeff was previously the VP of Partnerships for the organization.
Chicago Lights’ "Gala of Hope at Home" is virtually scheduled for Friday, March 5 at 7pm. This signature annual event benefits the youth development and social service programs of Chicago Lights and the community support efforts of the Replogle Center for Counseling and Well-Being. The event is free to register with any donations happily accepted. (Sign up here!)
Devices 4 the Disabled was honored to start the year as the recipient of the Chicago Bear’s 2020 Community All-Pros initiative. This generous grant brings awareness to a critical need of medical equipment that is often not met for Chicagoans and gives D4D the ability to ensure people with disabilities have access to the medical devices they need. (Learn more here!)
This year, The Ruth Page Center for the Arts is celebrating 50 years of dance education and artistic support! In 1971, having already established herself as an internationally acclaimed dancer, choreographer, and arts patron, Ruth Page created an arts center and school of dance where artistic excellence could thrive. The Ruth Page Center for the Arts stands today as an example of how far her legacy has grown in 50 years. The Center has become home to a vibrant Artists In-Residence program and a comprehensive theater performance space. It consistently provides performance and professional opportunities to the next generation of dance artists and world-class training with a strong focus on international partnerships. The arts organizations who work and create there, and the artists who train and perform there, together are truly representative of Ruth Page’s iconic work, "Expanding Universe," created in collaboration with artist Isamu Noguchi. Any donations will go towards supporting dance teachers, accompanists, and subsidized instruction for students in need, in addition to artistic development programs such as the Keystone Dance Academy, Artists In-Residence, Subsidized Theater and Studio Rental, International Dance Experience, and The Ruth Page Civic Ballet Training Company. The mission of The Ruth Page Center for the Arts is to “Be a platform for developing great artists and connecting them with audiences and community.” To celebrate its 50th, the Center is hoping to raise $50,000, one thousand dollars for each year. To support this remarkable nonprofit, click here!
HCRF co-founder Eleni Bousis, Dr. Leonidas Platanias and friends at a Wings to Cure Gala.
Nearly half of all men and one-third of women in the United States will develop cancer during their lifetime. The mission of the Hippocratic Cancer Research Foundation is to discover, develop and implement effective new treatments for patients with cancer by advancing groundbreaking research. The Foundation's diverse network of donors helps provide the philanthropic support to fund interdisciplinary research teams at the Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center of Northwestern University, empowering world-class investigators to join forces and address the most urgent questions in the fields of cancer biology and oncology in innovative ways. By investing in "out of the box" research, with an emphasis on translational cancer research, the HCRF will accelerate and heighten the impact of scientific discoveries. For the coming year, they will host their 6th "The Wings to Cure Gala" on Saturday, November 6. at the Hilton Chicago, (For more info, click here.)
Young at Heart Pet Rescue–It all began in 2005 with a group of people who loved animals. But in particular, the older animals: Dogs who had a little grey around the muzzle, but whose hearts were young and whose love knew no bounds. Cats who lounged around, pretending to be hard of hearing, until the whir of the can-opener proved otherwise. These animals had once been loved, cherished and part of a family until one day they were no longer wanted. Passed by for younger dogs and cats, these pets are often just what an adopter is looking for – quiet, calm, housebroken, good with kids, affectionate and easily acclimated to a new home. Yet, they sit and wait for someone to love them, until many times, it is too late. In April of 2005, Young At Heart was formed to aid in the rescue and re-homing of older dogs and cats in the Chicagoland area. Since that fateful day, hundreds of senior pets have been rescued and adopted into loving homes. And, in September 2019, Young at Heart opened Chicagoland's first adoption center and sanctuary just for senior dogs and cats., a place where age is just a number, and where the care and comfort of those with greyer muzzles and stiffer joints than their younger counterparts come first and foremost. Executive director Dawn Kemper tells me they have a lot planned
Senior dog and cat resting at YAH, waiting for new homes.
for 2021 but are being careful. First up, this exciting PELOTON BIKE+ RAFFLE. Only 500 tickets will be sold, $50 each. Raffle ends on 1/31/21! Click here for rules and ticket purchase; VALENTINE'S AT-HOME WINE & CHOCOLATE PAIRING KITS For Valentine's Day, Young at Heart offering an At-Home Wine & Chocolate Pairing Kits; SUMMER VIBES MUTT MOSEY fundraiser walk from May 15 – August 15th, 2021. Teams must commit to and raise $500 or more to qualify. Prizes awarded for top fundraising teams. Registration opens in March 2021; OUTDOOR YOGA IN PEACHES' MEADOW classes offered monthly May – September. Ticket is required. Limited number of participants per class, and all Covid safety measures will be followed. Registration opens April 2021. (To find more details for these fun events, click here!)
Since 1916, the Chicago Urban League, through collaborative community, corporate and civic relationships, has helped people find jobs, secure affordable housing, enhance their educational experiences, and grow their businesses. One of the oldest and largest affiliates of the National Urban League, they promote strong, sustainable communities through advocacy, innovation, and collaborative community, corporate and civic relationships. They work to achieve equity for Black families and communities through social and economic empowerment. Throughout 2020 and now into 2021, they create programming, initiatives and events to help them achieve their mission. During the Covid crisis, they administered more than $6 mil in grants to more than 1,000 small businesses and hosted a virtual Golden Fellowship Exchange, partnering with Black owned restaurants which delivered nearly 500 meals across Chicago. Follow them here to learn more!
Imerman Angels’ was founded in 2003 by Jonny Imerman, a testicular cancer survivor. The nonprofit was created on the belief that no one should have to face cancer alone. They provide 24/7, 365, one-on-one FREE cancer support to anyone who needs it around the world. Their mission is to provide comfort and understanding for all cancer fighters, survivors, pre-vivors and caregivers through a personalized, one-on-one connection with someone who has been there. Through its unique matching process, Imerman Angels partners anyone, any age, any gender, anywhere and any cancer type seeking support with someone just like them – a “Mentor Angel”. (A Mentor Angel is a cancer survivor or caregiver who, most importantly, has faced the same type of cancer.) Throughout a typical year, they offer a variety of friend-raising opportunities. (Watch this website for their event news coming in 2021)
Chicago House is a social service organization that supports individuals impacted by HIV/AIDS and the broader LGBTQ community with housing, health, and employment support. Founded in 1985 during the height of the AIDS crisis, this nonprofit initially served as a housing resource, and in most cases a hospice, for those affected. Today, the organization continues to empower the people they serve by supporting advancements in medicine and being a leader in finding housing opportunities. Moving into the New Year, they will continue their many support programs and are planning for future fundraisers. (Follow their progress here!)
Cinema/Chicago, the presenting organization of the Chicago International Film Festival (CIFF was founded in 1964 by Michael Kutza), is a year-round non-profit cultural and educational organization dedicated to fostering better communication between people of diverse cultures through the art of film and the moving image. They are not letting Covid slow
Michael Kutza, CIFF founder. (Photo by Tim Klein)
down their world class delivery of film–For instance, CineYouth, their four-day youth film festival showcasing short films from filmmakers 22 years old and under, will be virtual and include free screenings, filmmaker talks, and master classes in May 2021 and will be free on the Festival's streaming platform. Their annual free Summer Screenings program, usually held at the Chicago Cultural Center, will also be virtual and run May-September, again on the Festival's streaming platform. The 57th Chicago International Film Festival (with over 100 films on offer!) will take place October 13-24 as a hybrid event with both in-person (theater and drive-in) and virtual screenings and events. Monthly virtual film screenings and filmmaker Q&As through Cinema/Chicago's Member Film Series and Virtual Cinema will continue throughout the year. (For all the details, click here!)
Bear Necessities Pediatric Cancer Foundation was founded in late 1992 by Kathleen Casey, CEO/President. The foundation is named in memory of her eight-year-old son, Barrett “Bear” Krupa, who died after a courageous five and a half year battle with Wilms Tumor, a pediatric cancer. Bear Necessities operates two programs, Bear Hugs and Bear Discoveries. While the Foundation is funding cutting-edge research to end pediatric cancer, it’s also providing for the immediate needs of the children and families battling the disease. Throughout the year, they host a number of fundraising events, including the Bear Tie Ball, A Walk for the Bear, Little Black Dress Luncheon, Young Professional Board and third party events. (Watch their website here for events coming this year and see video below!)
The leading emerging designer runway show "Emerge! Fashion Show," established to be a catalyst and provide a platform for designers, will celebrate its 10th anniversary during New York Fashion Week on February 16 with a virtual fashion event. The show themed “A Decade of Diversity on the Runway,” will feature top emerging designers from the United States as well as Africa. The virtual event will stream on GFNTV.com and on http://www.Emergerunwaynyc.com at 6:00PM CST/7:00PM EST. GFNTV is a premiere online video network, which also streams live on various platforms including ROKU & Apple TV. The virtual fashion event will be hosted by Claire Sulmers of Fashion Bomb Daily, with special guest presenters Andre’ Leon Talley (former Vogue
Dionne Williams, Emerge! fashion show creator.
contributor) and Fern Mallis (creator of New York Fashion Week). The virtual event will also feature congratulatory remarks from fashion and style notables, a performance by Yanna Cello, a look back
Super model Pat Cleveland, a past Emerge honoree.
over the 10 year history of Emerge! with special clips including a design talk with London-based designer Ozwald Boateng, urban street wear designer Karl Kani and iconic model Pat Cleveland. Each season, EMERGE! presents the coveted Fashion Innovator Award. Past recipients have included Audrey Smaltz (president of the Ground Crew, presented by Harriette Cole); Constance C.R. White (editor-in-chief Essence Magazine presented by Tracy Reese); Andre’ Leon Talley (former contributing editor of Vogue, presented by Diane Von Furstenberg); fashion icon Mikki Taylor, presented by style expert Philip Bloch); legendary model Pat Cleveland
Diane Von Furstenberg and Andre Leon Talley with Dionne Williams at a past event.
(presented by equally legendary fashion designer Stephen
Burrows) and Fern Mallis (presented by Bibu Mohapatra). This year’s Fashion Innovator Award Honoree is celebrity stylist and “image architect” Law Roach. Law will be recognized for his impact
Guest presenter Fern Mallis, a past honoree and creator of NYFW.
in shaping the global fashion industry. A host of emerging designers will also unveil their newest collections: Terri Stevens of funkinbeautiful Designs (Chicago), Scalo Designs (Johannesberg), Jesu’ Segun London , Orla Couture (Lagos, Nigeria), Haus of L.A. (Los Angeles, Chicago). The runway will be “reimagined” and feature the designs in creative vignettes. “I am so excited about the upcoming anniversary show,” says Dionne Williams, creator and producer of Emerge! Fashion Show, “When I created Emerge 10 years ago my purpose was to highlight the creativity and art that designers create for the runway. I am always in awe of the talent and gifts that designers bring to light.” (To register for free access to the virtual event, click here or visit http://www.GFNTV.com the day of the show.)
Renowned Irish violinist Patricia Treacy, who performed at the Inauguration.
Beauty AND talent! Congrats to renowned Irish violinist Patricia
Being fitted for a glam gown at Dimatra's Bridal Couture with Ismini Walsh.
Treacy, who performed during the Presidential Inauguration at the request of President Joe Biden. Patricia performed for him many times when he was VP and, for this important occasion, played a rare $4 million dollar Stradivari violin (courtesy of Bein & Co.) during the inaugural mass. (Only 244 of these rare violins are known to exist). She said in her beautiful Irish brogue, "I'm going to be sick to the gills having to give it up." It was touch and go whether or not she would be playing live or virtually due to security concerns, but in the end, she appeared live onstage at the Cathedral of St. Matthew the Apostle. She wore a stunning blue dress (the official color of Ireland!) by Dimitra's Bridal Couture (1009 N. Rush St.) and diamond earrings from Martin Katz Jewelers (Beverly Hills). Patricia lives in Ireland, County Louth, but travels frequently around the world performing. She recently filmed a documentary about Ireland, with actor Liam Neeson doing the voiceover, that she hopes will be unveiled at the White House sometime in March. See her rehearsal video below at Chicago's Old St. Patrick's Catholic Church (produced by One CityFilms). Kudos to this very accomplished Irish beauty!
With Chicago Star Media editor/publisher Elaine Hyde.
I am SO excited with my new affiliation as a columnist with Chicago Star Media! This small group of community-centric newspapers is determined to make an impact in our communities and so am I. Think of them as your love letter to Chicago! No politics, only news you can use, feel-good stuff, people you should know and so much more.
With CSM's Elaine Hyde and Jay Kopp.
Many of you have already subscribed (I know who you are and am working my way through thank-you emails now) and some of you didn't know this opportunity existed! Well, it's just now being offered so you will be the first onboard. They/we offer both digital editions and hard copies as well as a free newsletter. Prices are very reasonable for all the great content you'll be receiving (like my columns–wink, wink– including a new "Ask
Zoom meeting with some of the Chicago Star Media team.
Candid Candace" advice column coming soon!!) Other fabulous, dedicated writers include Nuria Mathog (also associate editor), Angela Gagnon, Jon Cohn and Jacqueline Davis. Jay Kopp is in charge of marketing and advertising and Elaine Hyde, the editor/publisher (if you would like to send letters to the editor, please write to her here: info@chicagostarmedia.com. And here are the subscription options: $4.99 monthly; $78 for 2 years; $49 for one year or digital for $27 annually. And, please start planning your questions for my advice column now too–I'll answer anything– fashion, romance, what to do, where to go, etc., WHATEVER! Send all questions here, CandidCandace@ChicagoStarMedia.com and maybe yours will be selected. Make sure to include your name and title too! All details to subscribe are here AND don't forget to sign up for the free newsletter too: https://bit.ly/35QoN28 (I would be so grateful!)
I love seeing all of the creativity and fun surrounding the
Bernie in Charles Ifergan's chair.
meme-generator that lets you place Bernie Sanders anywhere in the world. I've seen images of him on The Dating Game, in Stephen King's movie "The Shining," in bed with one of the Golden Girls, with his arms wrapped around Janet Jackson, sitting in stylist Charles Ifergan's chair getting a haircut, inside the Oscar Meyer Weiner Mobile, chatting with Svengoolie and so many others. I even saw him
Tobey Time Crochet Bernie doll.
in front of my childhood home in Dupo, Ill! LOL! Nick Sawhney, the creator of the meme-generator says over 9 million people used the online tool and, that due to costs, had to be scrapped. And now, Tobey Time Crochet has created the most believable tiny knitted version of him
Bernie with a Golden Girl.
seated wearing his now-iconic mittens that is up for auction. The current bid is $14,900! The meticulously crafted doll includes hair, glasses, the blue surgical mask and the mittens and measures approximately 9". A reporter asked Bernie about his mittens and he replied, "Fashion? Every American needs their $2000 check!" Bernie is also using his image to
Double Bernie in The Shining.
raise money for charity, turning the events from "fun to good." He told CNN, "We're going to be selling sweaters, T-shirts and more around the country with all of the money raised, I expect a couple of million dollars, going to programs like Meals on Wheels that feed low-income senior citizens." Tobey Time Crochet has made these Bernie patterns available but notes they're not for beginners. (And, if interested in bidding on the Bernie doll auction, click here!)
Wisconsin's Door County will welcome a brand new hotel in the village of Sister Bay in late May. The Dorr Hotel will feature 47 contemporary rooms and suites, a two-story beamed lobby with fireplace, a welcoming lobby bar, a large outdoor courtyard with fire pit and lawn games and a guest experience team who will design Door County touring itineraries. The Dorr will be the area's first newly built hotel in almost 20 years! Inspired by the area's Scandinavian heritage, the four-story cobalt blue building will embody "coziness and contentment" according to owner Christopher Schmeltz. Rooms range from $175 to $440 per night. For further info, call 844.944.0354 or click here.
Ms. Anita Harris turns 102! (Photo by her goddaughter Jonquil Byers.)
Happy birthday, with love, to Miss Anita Harris who turned 102 on January 25! She's as spry as can be with a beautiful full head of blond hair that she tends to on a regular basis at her favorite, local beauty salon. She loves fashion, watching "Jeopardy" and "Family Feud" and listening to smooth jazz while enjoying a mimosa now and then. She lives by herself in the iconic
Ms Anita Harris and her own beautiful blond hair!
complex known as Hilliard Homes and enjoys cooking healthy meals, including gourmet food. She's an upbeat, positive person who has learned to adjust to difficulties imposed by Covid–including having to attend her Salem Lutheran Church services via Zoom. She was born in 1919 at the old St. Luke's Hospital and lived for 30 years in the Jackson Park neighborhood. She is married and the mother of one daughter (husband and daughter both now deceased). Ms. Anita was a housewife for many years before going to work for the Department of Welfare and finally, the Board of Education where she spent 17 years. She said, "Some of my family were enslaved. I can't believe we're going through this kind of turmoil again. This is all so sad." She said she was "so happy to have lived long enough to see a Black president and now a Black woman as VP." She donates to charities, including those dedicated to cancer survivors, the homeless and pets. God Bless you and keep you Miss Anita! Love your inspiring story!
Nick Pullia with his late, much loved Moluccan cockatoo Elliott.
Many of you know and love dear Nick Pullia, he of the always upbeat demeanor and scintillating wit, who also happens to be the director of communications for the venerable Ravinia Festival. Chuck and I have been privileged to have spent time with him throughout the years and the one thing that always stood out was his
One of the many tributes Nick has received in honor of Elliott.
larger-than-life love for all animals. He owned many himself, including big, happy dogs as well as birds. (Between you and me, I think his heart stretched out a little bigger when he was with his avian friends). Recently, he suffered horrible heartbreak when he unexpectedly lost one of his best friends, a Moluccan cockatoo named Elliott. "She" had been his constant companion
The late, great Baby Elliott Pullia.
since she was 4 months old and they recently had celebrated 30 wonderful, fun-filled years together. Shortly after this milestone celebration, Elliott passed away unexpectedly when she suffered massive trauma caused by a prolapse while trying to pass an egg. The heartbreak is unimaginable and our prayers and love go out to Nick and the rest of his furry/feathery family. Nick had made arrangements for Elliott's care after HE had passed with A Refuge for Saving the Wildlife, a parrot rescue that helps homeless birds find new families.(Their motto is "don't buy, don't breed, please adopt a bird in need.") Being the wonderful pet parent that he is, he had, of course, thought of everything. Sadly, life had other plans. RIP dear Baby Ell and, if you would like to support this wonderful bird wildlife refuge (and Nick), please donate here.
Special thanks to MB Luxury Group's Maggie Baczkowski and Curt Rose, the wonderful co-hosts of a new show
With co-hosts Maggie Baczkowski and Curt Rose.
called "Switching Gears." And, even though they're both luxury real estate specialists, this show is about all the things that make Chicago fun! I was proud to be the first interview on their debut show that also included Shaun Rajah, Joseph Szymczak and DC Crenshaw. (Watch segment here, my part runs from 21:25 to 34:06, but it's ALL good!)
Interviewing Larry King with Sugar Rautbord enroute to a Cubs game.
RIP dear Larry King. I was so sorry to hear of his recent passing. I've always admired this talk show legend and was beyond thrilled to be offered a one-on-one interview with him in August of 2011 when
he traveled to Wrigley Field to throw out the first
Pals Sugar Rautbord and Larry King.
pitch at the Cubs/Cardinals game. Larry was in town being feted by author/socialite, Sugar Rautbord. She was a great pal of his and hosted a party at her house following the game for his book "Truth Be Told." (She also arranged this opportunity that I will never forget.) Larry was
Larry King after throwing out first pitch at a Cubs/Cardinals game in 2011.
witty, charming and funny and the interview lasted the entire route from the Park Hyatt to the ballpark! He talked nonstop and was the perfect interview. I was spellbound hearing his amusing stories with world leaders like Vladimir Putin who called him at the barber shop (due to his mistrust of cell phones) or the time Saddam Hussein called him at a restaurant (he told the waiter to "put him on hold.") or the time former President Clinton called during his impeachment proceedings and asked "who's winning?" With his far reaching knowledge and humor, it's no surprise that he became a much loved celebrity himself. Read the full story here! (Photos by Mila Samokhina)
That's it for now, my love letter to some of Chicago's beloved nonprofits. As I mentioned in my opening, if I missed your organization, please send me your event updates for 2021 and I'll be happy to include it in the next edition. As we move into the New Year, let's hope it doesn't even remotely resemble the year past. I'm looking forward to celebrating and hugging as many people as possible and am excited to see what new opportunities this year brings for all of us. As Winston Churchill said, "If you're going through hell, keep going." And that's exactly what we're all going to do….
Plus: What nonprofit fundraisers are coming back in 2021?; YWCA Metropolitan Chicago's GREAT news; Izzy "Shops with a Cop" for the kids; Silver linings for PAWS Chicago, One Tail at a Time and Young at Heart Pet Rescue; CHI-lebrities open their hearts in Chicago Star Media; Remembering Hef's HOT New Year's Eve parties; Eversight Illinois' Mystery Masquerade; Playboy's new centerfold policy; Hippocratic Cancer Research Foundation's Wings to Cure; Chicago Light's Gala of Hope; Happy engagement announcements; Six Flags Holiday Drive-Thru; In the news with John and Steve; Thoughts on 2020 and what the New Year will bring; A touching video and SO MUCH MORE!
New Year's Eve looked a little different this year. Besides Covid changing the landscape of the entire world, it also kept us from celebrating the end of one of the worst years in recent memory. Restaurants missed out on much needed revenue, friends missed traditional celebrations with family and Times Square was eerily empty. People could only peek out their windows like Jimmy Stewart in "Rear Window" trying to get a feel for what was happening outside. We are all still on lockdown, mentally and physically. Chuck and I grabbed longtime friend Michael Kutza
NYE at cozy Avli on Wells.
determined to still experience NYE, this year in a tent with heaters. Even though people were having fun we all knew this was just a (hopefully temporary) substitute for the real thing. All of this lack of freedom made me think about the wild and woolly days of NYEs past. We're so lucky
Yurts at Swift & Sons designed by Kehoe.
to have experienced the heyday of Playboy with Hefner at his Mansion in LA. I always felt his parties rivaled Jay Gatsby's in exquisite excess and excitement. The invitations, always with beautiful pinup artwork created by Olivia De Berardinis, arrived in the mail a few weeks before the big event (I've saved them all).
LA Playboy Mansion lit up for NYE 2009.
We would RSVP immediately and then the anticipation began. You never knew what to expect at any of his
With Hef at a past NYE in LA.
parties as the guest lists were always changing to accommodate whoever was in town along with some of his celebrity friends. One year, the Village People performed, another year Three Six Mafia hit the stage that was inside a ginormous tent on the grounds of Hef's Holmby Hills estate. Another year, one of Hef's three girlfriends, Bridget Marquardt, popped out of a giant cake
Hef surrounded by admirers at a past NYE.
and did a slow strip tease as she gazed into his eyes (the crowd went wild). Hef's party guests have included John Elway, Penelope Cruz, James Caan, Nicholas Cage, astronaut Buzz Aldrin, Robert Culp, Tiffany Trump, Donald Trump, Julie Newmar, Bill Cosby (ick), Jane Russell, Quentin Tarantino, Pamela
Chuck enjoying the views at one of Hef's NYE parties.
Anderson, Jack Nicholson, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Madonna, Eddie Murphy, Warren Beatty, Justin Timberlake, Jimmy Connors, Paris and Nicky Hilton, Eddie Murphy and so many more. It was always a great
adventure wondering who you would see that night. I was lucky that Hef liked Chuck too and always included him. During the parties, guests enjoyed gourmet buffets,
Celebrating with fellow Playmates Marcy Hanson, Hope Olson and Patti McGuire Connors.
unlimited champagne and cocktails, swimming in the pool or lounging in the grotto. Guests were encouraged to wear lingerie which definitely added to the excitement. Some girls' interpretations of the "suggested attire" left little to the imagination. Oh, those were truly the days! I'm happy to see Playboy doing so well online now too. Even though the magazines have physically disappeared, the brand's online presence is strong and growing. I'm so happy to still have them as a family too. Here's to another 68 years and to a bigger, brighter 2021 for us all!
I quizzed some of my favorite bold-faced names to see how they were handling the pandemic, what their NYE resolutions were, their best moments of 2020, hopes for the future and any advice that might give us some inspiration. I discovered that we all have more in common than we know. I hope you enjoy these enlightening, and in some cases, surprising, comments from some of my favorite Chicago notables.
One of my favorite media peeps, Sylvia Perez (Fox-32) provided these thoughtful answers. Her
Sylvia Perez: "We are Puerto Rican and I love these shirts. We eat Pasteles and drink coquito (Puerto Rican egg nog) it’s a holiday tradition!"
favorite moment, "When they finally took Texas off the travel ban list and I was able to see my 86 year-old mother who I had not seen since last year because of the pandemic. It warmed my heart. I needed my mommy. It doesn't matter how old you are." Her NYE resolution? "To live in the moment!" Her advice? "Everyone is going through something, respect and try not to judge."
Kathy O'Malley Piccone
Kathy O'Malley Piccone, the hostess with the mostest at Gibson's Steakhouse, said her favorite moments during the pandemic were "when people started to reach out to each other, sending texts, jokes, puzzles, flowers, delicious foods from local restaurants and the wonderful 'calm app.'' She said, "Most of all, just sending love and positive vibes to each others. Touching moments that brought me to tears every evening at 8 pm throughout the city [when people serenaded the healthcare workers]." Her NYE resolution is to "spread more kindness, more love and generosity, more understanding of one another, more courage and peace and be more in the moment."
Amanda Puck, Director Strategic Brand Development Mariano's, has worked in the food industry for a long time. She shared,
Amanda Puck w/ Mariano's community partner Jermaine Anderson, Corey Carr, 6th Ward Alderman Roderick Sawyer, Ron Baker Jr. and Otis Wilson.
"Through the pandemic, it was great to see organizations and individuals step up and help the community more than ever! Both the Greater Chicago Food Depository and Northern Illinois Food Bank have worked so hard feeding the community, as well as all the local food pantries across Chicagoland." During the isolation she learned "how to make a mean arancini from Chef Tony Priolo, delicious Mac & Cheese from Chef Brian Jupiter and taste more wines with Belinda Chang all via our Mariano's meet-ups and zoom classes." Her NYE resolution? "To read more! She has started with Julia Child's "My Life in France." Amanda said, "I admire her, she started and blossomed in her career later in life. She's an epic legend in our industry." She added a quote from one of her favorite authors Morgan Harper Nichols, 'Even if the wait carries on another year, I will not get where I am going without first learning to be here.'"
Melody Spann Cooper with former First Lady Michelle Obama.
Melody Spann Cooper, Chair and CEO Midway Broadcasting Corp., said her favorite moment of 2020 was "when Joe Biden and Kamala Harris were declared the President and VP-Elect of the United States. I didn't realize how sleep deprived I had been over the past four years." Her NYE resolution is to "remain healthy and helpful. I'm making a commitment to 365 days of giving. Every day I plan to intentionally give something that will help someone." Her hope for the future? "I hope for healing and restoration. Restoring health to those who have been impacted by the pandemic. Restoring compassion in all of humanity and restoring Chicago to the great city we love. It's not perfect, but in its imperfection, it's still home and a place that has allowed me to dream past my zip code."
Paul Iacono, president Chicago Dowel Company, and much loved man-about-town, said his
Paul Iacono with niece Jennifer and nephew Tommy.
favorite moment of 2020 was being able to squeeze in a last minute trip to Hawaii during Pearl Harbor Remembrance Day. His hopes for next year are a "quick return to normalcy, especially for my friends in the hospitality industry who truly have had a rough go of it." His words of advice, "This too shall pass."
Always stylish, Mark Olley.
Another handsome friend, Mark Olley (Co-op Lending Manager, Chicago Financial Services), said, "No matter what hand we've been dealt, we adapt, we flourish, it's who we are, it's what we do, we're CHICAGO STRONG!" Mark discovered new skills during the pandemic, as many of us did. He enjoyed learning to cook, plant and tend to a vegetable garden and credits his husband and dog Grayson for keeping him sane. Mark says, "I always lead with hope, optimism and love." His dream for 2021 is good health and an end to Covid-19. "A positive mind and outlook, no matter how trying the circumstances, helps to get us through a lot."
Yolanda "Dusty" Stemer, philanthropist, member of Service Club of Chicago, Costume Council and others, said that two of her three sons had mild cases of Covid and both recovered rapidly."Things like this makes you realize and give credit to our healthcare workers." Her NYE resolution is to "not turn that Peloton into a clothes rack!" Her hopes for 2021, "The same as everyone, to get a vaccine to all of our loved ones and free Botox for all!" Dusty is married to Dr. Alex Stemer, who is deeply involved in treatment, research and prevention of Covid. "There is light at the end of the tunnel. Recent advances will help make 2021 much better than 2020…Tomorrow is promised to no one, and the one thing Covid steals from us is time with those we love," she said.
Justine Fedak, Corporate Hippie, motivational speaker and soon-to-be Woman of Vision
Justine Fedak, "a girl who never gives up!"
for this year's Eversight IllinoisGift of Sight Celebration told me her title should be "a girl who never gives up." She's a good friend and I can tell you I have never met anyone so tenacious and driven (in a very good way). She said 2020 was a time of total renewal for her. She regained mobility "by some miracle" [she suffered from MS for years and years] and "connected deeply" with her dearest friends. Her NYE resolution is to "cry when things make me happy or sad and to feel and live my life to the fullest, no pretending anything." Her motto? "Be in love with your life every single minute. My grandma passed away this December at age 98 and she was the strongest, toughest, most loving person who never complained about anything she had to live through. To be alive is to be in love…with your life," she said.
Sherrill Bodine with Paula Borg and Sherry Lea Holson.
Sherrill Bodine, author, president of the Service Club of Chicago and philanthropist, said her favorite moment of the last year was "working with the dedicated women of the Service Club who worked tirelessly through these challenging times to raise money for our Philanthropic Fund which will be given out in 2021 to worthy charities all over Chicago." Sherrill recently lost her husband and said her resolution is "to seek the light and find my way on this new journey without John." She always greets each day with hope and vows to "never surrender."
Sean Lewis, WGN News Anchor, remembers his favorite moment of 2020 very well. He
Newlyweds Sean Lewis and Trover Gray Wilson.
married the love of his life, Trover Gray Wilson, in a ceremony at City Hall. "The pandemic didn't allow us a large in-person celebration but I'm hoping 2021 will!" He said his resolution is "to realize that resolutions aren't a good idea. Usually it becomes the first disappointment of any new year for me." He hopes that when the pandemic ends, that people will treat each other better. His words of advice? "Eat well, appreciate the small things and learn one new thing a day."
Nan Giordano (3rd from L) with Joshua Blake Carter, Beth Tarrant, her son Keenan Casey, Sophie Darley and Cesar Salinas.
An icon in the dance world, Nan Giordano, artistic director Giordano Dance Chicago, is looking forward to "launching Illuminate the Possibilities, an initiative which represents global connection, unity, positivity and possibility, all through dance." She said, "Amidst our dim world light I have chosen to focus on the many silver linings that have immersed. I hope we learn and grow and take the many challenging circumstances and make something positive out of them. Mankind and peace, front and center!" Her motto? "Today is the day! Adversity creates strength and change brings opportunity."
Dear friend Michael Caputo, brand and creative strategist, enjoyed long walks around
Michael Caputo (R) with friend Greg Hyder at RL.
the lakefront in the warmer months. He said, "It was lots of good thinking time. The views of our beautiful city were a hopeful reminder that things will soon return to normal." His NYE resolution is to "be adept with change and related growth." He said, "This pandemic has challenged us to rethink the 'why' of our respective lives/careers." His advice: "Every storm runs out of rain. We've all had to make do and redirect energies this past year, that can be stressful. Don't let a setback define the day. Or your life."
Dionne Williams
Dionne Williams, president D. Williams PR Group, said, even though 2020 was a "rough year", she was able to spend more quality time with her family and a small group of friends, by staying in touch via phone or Zoom. She said, "2020 made me slow down, so for 2021 I will continue to not rush myself and live in the present and enjoy my surroundings. I want to focus more on fitness and travel when it's safe to do so." She added, "During these rough times, I have learned to be more patient. I also will take this time to work on things that I was too busy for previously, in life and business."
Tracey Tarantino DiBuono, executive producer ZZAZZ Productions, said, "Having family
Tracey Tarantino DiBuono and her Joey.
close and my young granddaughters in my home has given me a foundation of great unity as a family. Work paused. My husband Joey prepared family dinners that brought us all to the table, dinners that we never dreamed would happen in our previously busy lives." She looks forward to adding a new component to her business, virtual fashion shows and events. Her NYE resolution? "Don't expect things to return to normal…make a choice to accept and then create a new normal and keep my faith in God." She hopes that "new avenues become open to us and that prayers will be answered for everyone. Open your heart to what has been given and find gratitude in every day."
Michelle Durpetti with her fab fam–dad Tony Durpetti, mom Marion and hubby Collin Pierson.
Michelle Durpetti, managing partner Turnkey Hospitality Group, chief planner Michelle Durpetti Events, said her favorite moment of 2020 was seeing her Gene & Georgetti management team come together, be more creative, more adaptive and supportive of each other. "We have even laughed while sometimes we felt like
Michelle Durpetti and her team from Gene & Georgetti restaurant.
crying and I think that is because we have each other. Yanni, Sal, Cristiano, Luis, Jessica, Nicole, Jeremy and Angelo are all such incredible human beings. My favorite moment hands down has been seeing them flourish and fight all the challenges." As far as resolutions, "I don't believe in resolutions to be honest. I live my life out loud, with empathy and compassion always and when I get something wrong, I own it. And that is year round." Her advice going forward: "I think I now live with the knowledge that life truly can change so fast. It has really affirmed for me that I need to take a moment every day to be grateful for all that I have and for making it this far." Her words of advice? "Let's stop tearing at one another and, instead, extend helpful hands and grateful hearts towards each other."
Holly Buckendahl, CEO Ronald McDonald House Charities of Chicagoland & NW Indiana, said a silver lining, that she didn't expect, was the ability to stay connected virtually with family and friends. Her hope for the coming year? "While open through the pandemic (with many restrictions), I look forward to RMHC-CNI reinstating the full breadth of services critically ill children and their families need on their journey to heal together." Her advice during these tough times comes from professor, social worker and author Brene Brown who said, "In order to empathize with someone's experience, you must be willing to believe them as they see it and not how you imagine their experience to be."
My PR gal pal Kathleen Sarpy, founder/CEO Agency H5, said her favorite moment of 2020,
Kathleen Sarpy and her family.
despite a tough year filled with personal losses, was being able to be "immersed" with all of her kids. She and her husband Chris discovered that "love and connectedness is truly the most important thing." She said, "I really need to find a hobby. I'm a wife, a mom to 6 awesome kids, run a company and I don't really have something that I do just for me. I might finally give meditation a try or yoga, to have a space to be mindful in body and spirit."
Pandemic baking with Jennifer Sutton Brieva and Paul Iacono.
Jennifer Sutton Brieva, felt that Christmas was one of her favorite moments of 2020. She said "it was a much needed shift in energy for everyone. We need that all year long." Her hopes for 2021? "To learn from 2020 and never take people or experiences for granted again and to get back into pre-Covid shape!" Her words of advice? "People need to be grateful and embrace the simple pleasures of life that have become so very vital." I am so grateful for a FaceTime call with my parents, happy hour Zoom with dear friends, a classic movie with my cat Zoe or even a walk in Lincoln Park or a dance party in the kitchen with my husband Joaquin–those every day opportunities for joy often overlooked become special moments of connection, never to be taken for granted again."
WBBM Newsradio anchor/reporter Lisa Fielding, who has one of the most distinctive voices
Lisa Fielding, the Voice of WBBM.
in the business, said her favorite moment of 2020 was a mother/daughter trip to Mexico in February. "I got my travel fix, after this, by hitting the road to Michigan a couple of times to see the sunset from the other side. I'm a big "sunset" person and try to find them wherever I go," she added. Her hope for the coming year? "I hope for better days for the world, where jobs and prosperity return, where we can hug each other, sing and dance with each other while enjoying live music in our favorite venues or in that dark bar with the awesome jukebox, where we can travel the world again, enjoy a cold one and the crack of the bat at a baseball game, enjoy family gatherings, weddings, celebrations, our favorite restaurants, happy hour with friends and escape through live theater."
Another dear friend in media is Dori Wilson, publicist/founder Dori Wilson Public Relations. Her favorite moment of 2020 was "watching a racially diverse movement develop and grow in recognition of long-standing racial inequality and injustice in this country, watching individuals and corporations commit to do better and recognition of "we're all in this together." Her NY resolution? "To actually use my Peloton!" Her hope for 2021? "I am so hopeful for a vaccination and a vacation!"…..Words of wisdom? "Laughter is the best medicine and forgiveness runs a close second!"
The editor-in-chief of Cancer Wellness magazine, Caylei Vogelzang, said the best moment of 2020 was being able to spend more time with her family on the golf course. Her NYE resolutions include learning to do the splits 3 ways and a backward walkover; improve on physical fitness assessments; visit a yoga retreat; grow and expand her magazine and "become more of an essential source for those touched by cancer"; plan a family holiday to a national park; wear more pieces from local designers and sustainable fashion and practice gratitude daily and more meditation. The words she lives by is "exercise, exercise, exercise!"
Jean de St Aubin, the executive director of the Gene Siskel Film Center, says her favorite
Jean de St. Aubin and her daughter holiday baking.
moment of 2020 was presenting the Black Harvest Film Festival. She said, "The timing could not have been better. It was so great to have a month of celebrating Black stories, the joy felt virtually was a much needed balm to a turbulent year." Her hopes for 2021? "That everyone gets vaccinated ASAP, and that we all be together again. I think I will turn into a hugging machine as soon as it is safe." Her advice? "Count your blessings and share your gifts."
Jean Antoniou and family at Chicago Botanic Garden.
Jean Antoniou, philanthropist, Service Club of Chicago Board of Managers, said her favorite part of 2020 was "knowing it is almost over." Her advice moving forward? "To cherish family and friends because they will always be your biggest supporters. Glass is half full is always a good way to look at each day."
Michelle Mekky, president and founder of
Michelle Mekky
Mekky Media Relations, found silver linings in a tough year. She said spending more time with her kids and husband made her so grateful for "the little moments." She also found joy in the hiring of four new people for her 5 year-old business. In 2021, she plans on prioritizing her own health and to invest in herself in ways she never has. Her motto? "Every day is a new day. Every morning we wake up with a new chance. I truly believe the energy you give out is what comes back to you. Despite all of the negativity around us, never lose hope. We will get through this!"
Pam Capitanini (center) with friends Simona Garcia and Cristina Montgomery.
Pamella Capitanini, philanthropist, Service Club of Chicago, loved watching people's inventiveness during 2020 as many learned new ways to pivot. She said, "From drive-by birthday celebrations, mask creativity and eating in igloos, it was amazing and inspiring to see." Her NYE resolution: "To keep smiling and do my best! And remember the front line workers who have given all and those who have left us." She added, "I believe many of us have realized that nails, hair and party dresses don't make a difference, but reaching out to one another does!"
And last but certainly not least, everyone's favorite elf, The Real Elf Tommy Holl,Head of Media for The
Tommy Holl, aka "The Real Elf."
North Pole, had much to be thankful for in 2020. "This holiday season is one for the history books that I hope we never have to repeat, but we were able to create a spark of joy for young and old." His favorite moments included: "Elfing" at 900 North Michigan Shops; Sending Elf Gram video messages with proceeds benefiting Imerman Angels (Tommy is a cancer survivor); Being hired to pop into 5 Zoom calls from around the world; Appearing on "Around Town with Ana Belaval", "Happy Hour with the Hoovers", WGN radio with Paul Lisnek, Tom Skilling's Christmas Eve and so much more. His NYE resolution is to: "Pause, reset, reorganize, reflect, be prepared, be ready, be thankful and be kind." His advice? "You can't grow from NO. It's okay to say no when it doesn't feel right, but saying no all the time will lead you nowhere. Try not to take things too seriously, none of us get out of here alive. And appreciate what you have."
Eversight Illinois "Gift of Sight Celebration" Save-the-Date with mask included.
I'm so excited to see some events coming BACK!! Mark your calendars for Eversight Illinois' "Gift of Sight Celebration", set for Thursday, October 21 at the Peninsula. Justine Fedak will be honored as the Woman of Vision and Dr. Parag Majmudar will be the Gift of Sight honoree. This year's masquerade theme is "Fantasea" and I'm honored to return as co-chair with Michael Caputo! (For more details, click here!)
Hippocratic Cancer Research Foundation Save-the-Date with mask included.
Foundation, will host its 6th annual "Wings to Cure." This gala will be held at the Hilton Chicago and funds raised will help support cutting edge cancer research at the Lurie Cancer Center. For more details, click here!
Chicago Lights "Gala of Hope at Home" is still set for Friday, March 5 at 7 pm CST. This signature event will benefit the youth development and social service programs of Chicago Lights and the community support efforts of the Replogle Center for Counseling and Well-Being. (More details here!)
Philanthropist MacKenzie Scott, ex-wife of Amazon's Jeff Bezos.
million unrestricted contribution from billionaire venture philanthropist MacKenzie Scott. This major gift will help the nonprofit and its mission to empower women and families and advance racial justice. This major gift is part of more than $4 billion in philanthropic contributions made by Ms. Scott over the past four months. Board president Joyce Winnecke (just love her!) called this gift an "affirmation of YWCA Metropolitan Chicago's strategy."
Israel "Izzy" Idonije with CPD officers from his "Shop with a Cop" initiative.
Former Chicago Bear Israel "Izzy" Idonije has lifted charitable giving to an art form. For the 6th year in a row, Izzy and his IF Charities team hosted "Shop With a Cop", a great initiative that builds trust between CPD officers and the communities they serve. On Thursday, December 17, more than 60 police officers shopped for kids in need, who had submitted a wish list "for Santa" in advance. The officers picked up items that were donated by Target with special $50 gift certificates included for family dinners donated by Jewel. (To support Izzy in his many charitable endeavors around town, click here!)
Special thanks to CBS-2 Chicago's Steven Graves and to
John Garcia, ABC-7.
ABC-7's John Garcia for having me on their segments recently! I loved chatting about what to do for NYE with John (watch segment here) and to Steven about how our nonprofits are pivoting their fundraisers. (Watch this segment here!)
One of my favorite silver linings to this pandemic mess is the fact that our animal shelters are at their lowest point with un-adopted rescues! As a matter of fact, PAWS Chicago has reported a near record number of adoptions in 2020–4,100! Through their Holiday-Adopt-a-Thon and usual grassroots efforts, they have managed to find forever homes for 4100 DOGS AND CATS! Can I get a Woot! Woot!? PAWS Chicago also provides extensive resources to help pets make a seamless transition into their news home and also provides a lifetime safety net for every animal, ensuring that if something happens to the adopter, their PAWS pet will always be cared for. I'm hearing similar good news from One Tail at a Time and also Young at Heart Senior Pet Rescue–all my favorites and much recommended animal shelters. Please check them out if you're looking for a pet!
I'm so loving my new home at Chicago Star Media! This group of hyper-local papers delivers, monthly, positive news you can use and I hope you're a subscriber! (Please click here for details or just leave your name and address here, info@chicagostarmedia, to receive the free online newsletter.) My latest column, "Chicago's CHI-lebrities Reflect on 2020, Share Hopes for the Coming Year" has been a hit, garnering both the front page and centerfold of the recent publication! (Read it here and get advice and discover the hopes and dreams of Chef Art Smith, rocker Jim Peterik, Bill Kurtis and Donna La Pietra, comedian Tom Dreesen, Kerry Wood and his Sarah, Cook County Treasurer Maria Pappas, Leslie Hindman, Israel "Izzy" Idonije, The Joffrey Ballet's Ashley Wheater, entertainer Chilli Pepper, restaurateur RJ Melman, Alpana Singh, Michael Kutza, Aldmerman Brian Hopkins and Dr. Ian Smith. I was so moved by their honest, thoughtful answers….there is uplifting advice, inspiration for the future and their thoughts on 2020! Read it all here!
There's a lotta love in the air right now! So many exciting betrothals to announce! First off, love and
Marcus Riley is engaged to Jude Fitzgerald!
congrats to Jatnna Toribio and her Israel Idonije, who were recently engaged. Also, congratulations to Marcus Riley and his Jude Fitzgerald who got engaged on New Year's Day and,
Val Warner is engaged to Jobba Jordan.
last but not least, to Windy City Live's Val Warner who just became engaged to Jobba Jordan. I'm thrilled for each and every one of these beautiful people who managed to not only survive during
Val and Jobba sittin' in a tree…..
this nasty year, but to thrive and find love. It's definitely easier to face any storm when you're supported by your best friend. Here's wishing them all a lifetime of health and happiness and, as Kup always said, "Long may they love!"
We recently experienced Six Flags' Holiday in the Park Drive-Thru in Gurnee. Over 3 million lights illuminate the park as cars drive through at 3 mph. We ordered hot chocolate, a funnel cake and I bought an ornament (of course). We listened to piped in holiday music and it was sort of eerie, to be honest, and had the feel of driving through a deserted theme park in the Truman Show. However, I guess if we'd lived closer, the experience would've been a little easier and better. But, frankly, driving through the park with the Notre Dame game blasting on the radio might've had something to do with my lack of enthusiasm (although Chuck was certainly entitled to cheer on his favorite team!) This is only my POV, so please go and find out for yourselves (and let me know what you think!) The experience has been extended through Jan. 10, details here!
Playboy has changed the format of its iconic centerfold. No longer will the featured Playmate be spotlighted for just a month, now she will have a whole season all to herself! There will be only 4 Playmates a year….makes me wish for a do-over! Read deets here on how Playboy is growing, and meet the Winter 2021 Playmate, Izabela Guedes.
As I close out my first blog of 2021, I must say, I am glad to leave 2020 (far) behind. I've never had a worse year and I know many of my friends feel the same. There's was no "dashing through the snow on a one horse open sleigh, o'er the fields we go, laughing all the way"…… Not this year when everything in the world changed in the blink of a Covid eye. I couldn't even get in my usual cheery mood for Christmas, at least not in the way I used to. One minute, we're planning family gatherings, figuring out seating, who will sit at the kids' table and the next thing you know, we're all Zooming in to "celebrate" on computer screens. I found myself decorating for Christmas almost manically, trying to create much needed joy that is at a premium now. I know store
This is definitely NOT my work, beautiful gingerbread house by Jennifer and Joaquin Brieva (kit from Vanille Chicago).
shelves were shopped clean of all holiday decor long before the usual time. On social media, my friends busily shared photos of their trees, holiday cookies, DIY Christmas ideas and so much more. Hell, we even attempted building a gingerbread house for the first time but it
I'm thinking our tree will be up until Easter or beyond. (Sort of kidding?)
looked like a tornado hit it before I could even ice the roof. This year, we lost our dog, family members, I lost a job, Chuck lost his three dearest friends and had a TIA (mini-stroke). I think I was entitled to decorate as much as I wanted to try to fill this void and you can bet these decorations are gonna be here for a while. Nothing makes me happier than twinkling Christmas tree lights. It reminds me of all the GOOD years in the past when all of our family was gathered together, giving gifts and
Marshall Field's famous Chicken Pot Pie.
thanks for our good health and the fact that we were still here. Pre-Covid, you could still find Santa in all the department stores, which were decorated to the nines. I'm happy though to see that retail, despite all its setbacks, still
Marshall Field's Walnut Room at Christmas 1950.
tried to be festive. Macy's, although certainly not close to the old Marshall Field's in holiday decor, still had cheerful windows and the Great Tree in the Walnut Room. And, although families couldn't carry on life-long traditions of dining there during the season, they could still order carry-out–the famous Mrs. Hering's Chicken Pot Pie (recipe here), lobster bisque, Frango Mint
Ann Gerber's book, "Sweet Tooth," a collection of recipes by Chicago notables.
Chocolate Ice Cream Pie and more. For Chuck and me, we still tried to carry on family traditions. We baked my mom's ham (Cooks only) and I fixed Mama Mary Johnson's famous sweet potato pie (whose recipe was featured in Ann Gerber's 1985 book, "Chicago's Sweet Tooth."). I also cooked the requisite black-eyed peas for good luck on New Year's Day (I pray it works). We toasted to the loved ones we lost and prayed for a better future, one that will bring back the human element and social interaction that is necessary to the survival of a species. We can't drift apart. We need "parties for hosting, marshmallows for toasting and caroling out in the snow," now more than ever. Here's hoping this year is off to a great start for you!
Plus: Fun, fashion and FUR-lanthropy for Infant Welfare Society; Cooking with Sarah and Kerry for Pitch In; WINGS' virtual "Sweet Home Chicago" party; Jack Frost's Winter Walk & Christmas Tree Farm; Frosty's Holiday Pop-Up Hotel (the first and only); Albany Park unites with lights; CircuitMOM's Holiday Pop-Up; The Drake Hotel's homage to Princess Diana; Top designers share tips/tricks for holiday decorating; Jim Peterik and the Ides of March (FREE) Christmas show; Kehoe Designs makes Christmas Merry & Bright for the needy; Shaun and Joseph's towering holiday gift giving idea; Skyline's Thomas O'Gorman; National Jingle Bell Day from Chicago Star Media (JOIN US!); Porchlight Music Theatre's "Burning Bluebeard"; Playboy remembers its Playmates at Christmas; Ruth Page Center's virtual Nutcracker; Chicago Light's "Gala of Hope at Home"; GREAT toy drive list; Nadia Lee Cohen's "WOMEN"; Special thanks to Sylvia, Anna, Robert, Thomas, Steve, Fred and Hannah; This & That; Fun videos and SOOO much more!
Isabel Wilkerson, Carl Sandburg Literary Award recipient.
The Chicago Public Library Foundation has hosted an elaborate Carl Sandburg Literary Awards Dinner for the past 20 years, the last being in 2019 with an extravagant affair at the UIC Forum where over 1000 guests enjoyed a sit-down dinner at tables loaded with books from featured authors and even the authors themselves joining guests at their tables. This year, it was a little different with a virtual event but it was certainly no less exciting. Longtime host Bill Kurtis opened the hour-long event seated in an easy chair in a cozy virtual library. He presented speakers Bob Wislow (CPLF chair), Linda Johnson Rice (CPL chair), Brenda Langstraat (CPLF president), Dave Casper (CPLF vice chair, U.S. CEO BMO Financial Group) and moderator Scott Simon (host NPR Saturday Weekend Edition). Kurtis spoke about past literary giants who had been honored at this prestigious event like Kurt Vonnegut, Margaret Atwood, Salman Rushdie and Toni Morrison. He introduced this year's three honorees: Nate Marshall (21st Century Honoree), Donna La Pietra
Donna La Pietra, the first CPLF Civic Award winner.
(Inaugural Civic Award) and Isabel Wilkerson (Carl Sandburg Literary Award). Mayor Lightfoot and First Lady Amy Eshleman served as honorary chairs. Langstraat spoke about the successful pivots the Library has been forced to make due to the pandemic like shifting to virtual programming, creating over 100K grab-and-go activity kits and virtual story sessions like "Live from the Library", the most successful social media campaign in the Library's history! It featured celebrities with ties to Chicago reading to kids including former President Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle, Oprah, John C. Reilly, Bonnie Hunt, Gabrielle Union, Common,
Nate Marshall, CPLF 21st Century honoree.
Chelsea Clinton, the Mayor, Jane Lynch, Michelle Williams and many others. This uber-successful campaign garnered 22 million video views and 800 million impressions with viewers tuning in from over 37 countries! Wislow then introduced the 21st Century honoree, Nate Marshall, a rapper, poet, playwright, educator, community-engaged artist and more. Marshall was raised in West Pullman and is the grandson of a Chicago Public librarian. Nate said he was "forged in the farthest reaches of this city" and that his family has had a presence here for a century. He urged viewers to support the library where he was
Former president Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle appeared in video for "Live from the Library."
"nurtured" and ended his acceptance speech with his poem titled "Imagine" dedicated to all those who influenced him. Video congrats came from Natalie Y. Moore (a fellow 21st Century honoree, 2017), Helen
Event host Bill Kurtis and his Donna La Pietra, Civic Award honoree.
Zell, Dr. Eve L. Ewing (2019 21st Century honoree) and Mary Ellen Messmer (CPL Acting Commissioner). Linda Johnson Rice introduced Donna La Pietra as the inaugural Civic Award honoree calling her "a force." Bob Wislow said, "Donna embodies the spirit of this award." Everyone who knows and loves Donna knows what a perfect
choice she is for this honor. She has been on the CPLF board for over 20 years, invited by
Gabrielle Union appeared in the presentation from "Live from the Library."
the board's founder and Donna's
Rap artist Pinqy Ring-After School Matters.
mentor, Cindy Pritzker. Donna, a longtime producer and Emmy Award winner, was also instrumental in the creation of Millennium Park, is active on the boards of many civic organizations, including the Library Foundation, Steppenwolf, Shedd Aquarium and Chicago Botanic Garden to name just a few. She is an avid gardener and land conservationist. There's really not enough space or time to mention all of the ways she has enhanced Chicago and inspired the people who live here, including me, with her unique
Brenda Langstraat, CPLF president.
Chef Rick Bayless.
brand of magic. Donna said, "How lucky am I to have found my way to so many of Chicago's nonprofit organizations, who at their hearts, have a desire to serve and at their soul is volunteerism." Congratulatory videos came in from Greg Cameron (CEO Joffrey Ballet), Rick Bayless, Michelle Boone (Navy Pier), Peter Sagal ("Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me"), Jaume Plensa (artist), Justice Anne Burke, Rhona Frazin (past CPLF pres/CEO), Pinqy Ring (rap artist
Greg Cameron, CEO Joffrey Ballet.
with After School Matters) and artist Nick Cave.
Linda Johnson Rice, CPLF chair.
Donna dedicated her award to her mentor Cindy Pritzker who she said, "has been her role model for service, for fostering fearlessness, for her visionary thinking, for rewarding the risk-takers and for a wide diverse embrace of people and ideas." Pritzker said of Donna, "When I think of the doers in our wonderful city, the first name that pops up is Donna La Pietra. Nobody can come close. She is Miss Chicago." Isabel Wilkerson,
Dr. Eve L. Ewing, 2019 21st Century Award recipient.
the Carl Sandburg Literary Award winner, was featured
Dave Casper, U.S. CEO BMO>
in a Q & A with NPR radio's Scott Simon. Wilkerson is the winner of the Pulitzer Prize and the National Humanities Medal and is the author of the New York Times bestsellers "Caste: The Origins of Our Discontents" and "The Warmth of Other Suns." She spoke about her deeply-researched works that provide insights into America's history and the divides that linger today. She grew up in Washington, D.C. where her father was a Tuskegee Airman. Congrats on this wonderful first virtual Awards event and to all the winners! So inspiring. There is a branch of the Chicago Public Library in all of Chicago's 77 neighborhoods.
Fun, fashion and FUR-lanthropy were the themes for the Oak Brook Chapter of the Auxiliary of the Infant Welfare Society when they hosted "Home for the Holidays" on December 6. Presented by longtime emcee Alison Rosati (NBC-5), the virtual "Mistletoe Medley" event included fabulous fashions curated by Tracey Tarantino of ZZAZZ Productions (in a collaboration with Chapter member Marge Tresley)
Tracey Tarantino DiBuono (ZZAZZ Productions) at Kehoe Design's Holiday Shoppe.
all presented by my favorite model Elizabeth McNally Mairs. Alison opened the show welcoming viewers and acknowledging Angel Donors Nives Rizza and Susan Heil. Chapter president Lou Smeja thanked supporters and shared that this event raised over $160,000 for the Infant Welfare Society (and the Angel Harvey Family Health Center) and that the Chapter has donated nearly 9,000 hours of volunteer service in 2020. Tracey reported in from redE Mas Boutique in Hinsdale (36 E.
Allison Rosati, longtime event emcee (NBC-5).
First St.) where she showed blazer looks that are perfect for Zoom meetings and then it was onto York Furs. York Furrier (located at 107 N. York St. in Elmhurst) is celebrating 89 years in business and has
Designer Peach Carr, the one and onlyl.
supported nonprofits in the community since its inception. Owners Kathy and John Rezny greet guests like they're family members and the selection of furs, outerwear and unique accessories is one of the best in the city. For this presentation, glam luxe were the watch words as Elizabeth swished about in a beautiful variety of furs and handbags. Tracey then interviewed Project
Tracey Tarantino at redE Mas Boutique.
Runway star, designer Peach Carr, a Chicago native, from her private atelier above her home built in 1870. The space was once a hay loft and has now been transformed into Peach's "happy place" with light
Elegant Elizabeth McNally Mairs wearing an outfit from redE Mas Boutique.
wood and lots of windows. Peach recounted her journey to appear on Project Runway where she was hand-selected by style arbiter Tim Gunn. Peach's daughter Molly was the driving force behind this exciting opportunity urging her mother to submit an application. Peach eventually appeared in
Peach Carr pointing out 3 of her archived designs.
episodes for both Project Runway and Project Runway All-Stars. In a riveting Q & A with Tracey, Peach shared that her collections have always been "about women, for women and made in Chicago." She said she wants women to feel good about themselves
Elizabeth McNally Mairs wearing Peach Carr's popular "paper doll" dress.
and that all of her pieces are very
stretchy, very easy to wear and forgiving, especially with all of us "eating our way through the pandemic." She said Edie Sedgwick, one of Andy Warhol's Factory superstars, has always been her muse and that she even met Edie's aunt Kyra Sedgwick, at an event where Kyra said to
Tracey Tarantino at Kehoe Design's Holiday Shoppe at the Peninsula.
her, "You're the one who designs for my dead aunt, right?" Peach discussed three of her iconic designs that she keeps in the loft. The first, a black cocktail dress, was part of her first collection following Project Runway. A glamorous, pale peach coat dress was her audition piece and a third look, a red dress designed as an
Elizabeth McNally Mairs wearing a Peach Carr design.
homage to Chicago, was the first piece she designed following her bad accident. The event concluded with a beautiful segment filmed at Kehoe Designs' Holiday Shoppe, where Tracey spotlighted all the festive offerings there including centerpieces, ornaments, Hanukkah items, trees and more. Congrats to all of these hardworking women who are supporting the Angel Harvey Family Health Center with such devotion. The Center provides comprehensive, state-of-the-art care for children, adolescents and adults. (More info here!)
Cooking with Sarah and Kerry Wood for the Wood Family Foundation's Pitch In program.
The Wood Family Foundation hosted a "tasty" virtual fundraiser that involved cooking a holiday dinner with Boka Chef Lee Wolen and Foundation founders Kerry and Sarah Wood. It was a very intimate hour with the Woods Zooming in from their elegant all white kitchen and Chef Wolen from another location to prepare parmesan crusted chicken with butternut squash and
Laura Muriello, Wood Family Foundation executive director.
polenta. Sarah and Kerry work as well together in the kitchen as they do in real life raising a family of three, Justin, Katie and Charlie. Laura Muriello, executive director of the Wood Family Foundation, introduced the event along with Abby
Boka Chef Lee Wolen.
Kritzler, executive director of the Boka Restaurant Group. Lots of supporters shared their dishes during the video presentation including Erin and Shawn Doty, whose smoke detector went off during their efforts. Lol! Young Cooper Smith and his brother asked Kerry "what was the fastest pitch you ever threw", the answer was
Happy culinary participants.
102 mph! Tom and Cece Ricketts were also cooking along with Chef Wolen and the Woods as well as some mentors in the Foundation's Pitch In program. In its early years, the Foundation
Young supporters.
sponsored one-time initiatives like coat drives, holiday gift programs as well as funding projects like the playroom at Lurie Children's Hospital. As time wore on, the Woods realized the greater needs in the community and, in 2014, developed an after-school mentoring program
Sarah and Kerry's tasty finished dish.
that currently serves four communities and is growing. Sarah and Kerry concluded the evening showing their beautiful finished dishes and thanking supporters. She said, "It's a rough year for nonprofits and our organization is still working hard every day for our students, giving them everything they need from essentials to school supplies to support with their learning as well as meeting virtually every week. We couldn't do this without events like this." Here's to a lot more success Kerry and Sarah! Thanks for your dedication to Chicago's kids! (Learn more about this much needed nonprofit here!)
Ralph Covert, of Ralph's World, performs at WING's "Sweet Home Chicago" event.
WINGS (Women in Need Growing Stronger)took its popular "Sweet Home Chicago" fundraiser virtual on December 13. In the past, these Sunday brunch fundraisers were held at the Four Seasons with a room full of laughing, dancing kids intent on creating the very best gingerbread houses. This year, supporters could order gingerbread house kits to be delivered to
Rita and John Canning.
their homes as they viewed this 17th delightful (virtual) event. One component that has remained the same though was the joyous, kid-friendly music delivered
Rebecca Darr, executive director WINGS Program.
by Ralph Covert of Ralph's World, a children's musical group that has been a part of this event for the past 11 years. Ralph opened the event Sesame Street-style with a pair of adorable puppets. The event even had a little Mister Rogers' "won't you be my neighbor" feel to it too as Ralph interacted with the puppets and Rebecca Darr, WINGS Program CEO. Darr thanked viewers and
Adorable event participants!
encouraged them to "embrace this fun time and forget about everything happening in the world." She thanked longtime, dedicated event founders/supporters Rita and John Canning. Early on
The late Rich Martin, his wife Donna and their amazing comfort dogs.
Rita realized there were no domestic violence shelters near her home so she decided to build one with the first safe house being built in Chicago's northwest suburbs. Since then, the Cannings have helped raise millions to support those affected by domestic violence. Rita and John appeared on-camera from their home and announced that the event raised over $700,000, making it the largest fundraiser of the year. Lots of cute kiddies appeared onscreen dancing in their jammies to Ralph's "Alphabet Song." Sadly, it was announced that Rich Martin (and his wife Donna),
Dancing to Ralph's World!
whose comfort dogs were a key part of these annual events, had passed away recently due to Covid. In the past, his Golden Retrievers could be seen lounging around the Four Seasons ballroom as kids petted and relaxed around them. The event closed with these encouraging words from Rebecca. "Please know that your support is helping people transcend their life of violence to a life of happiness. No pandemic is going to stop us." (WINGS info here). Currently, WINGS provides 33 safe housing options in and around Chicagoland.
You can still find a LOT of holiday cheer at Jack Frost's Winter Walk & Christmas Tree Farm. This pop-up experience is located at 1455 N. Elston in Goose Island. It's decorated with over 1 million lights and dozens of Insta-worthy photo opps. You can pick out a perfect tree, visit with Santa, get lost in a Christmas
Candid Candace TV team Tracey Tarantino DiBuono, Troy Mairs and Elizabeth McNally Mairs.
Tree Trail/Maze and enjoy donuts and hot chocolate as you stroll along to the sounds of the season. (Covid guidelines in place, closes January 10 and you must have a res/ticket before arrival. Details here). I hope you enjoy my latest video from Candid Candace TV (below) with special thanks to the production Dream Team, Troy Mairs, Tracey Tarantino DiBuono and Elizabeth McNally Mairs, for making it happen! Not a subscriber, please sign up here!)
And, if you have out of town visitors who love the holidays, steer them to Chicago's first and only pop-up Christmas hotel, Frosty's, at 221 N. Columbus Ave. Yes, it IS the Radisson Blu but, for this brief moment in time it has been transformed into a magical place sprinkled with loads of holiday cheer! Even the rooms are decorated with trees! Dogs and cats are welcome and only registered guests will be allowed access to the hotel. (Details here).
A little bit of holiday magic is also happening in the 4100 block of N. Francisco Ave. in Albany Park where neighbors
Chuck enjoying N. Francisco Ave. in Albany Park.
have erected endless, lighted "tunnels of love." What began last year between neighbors George Heitz and Ignacio Martinez, has caught on with others along the blocks who wanted to help bring an appreciation for the community. The results are dramatic! (Video here!)
For 20 years, CircuitMOM Productions has been producing world class experiential events led by Matthew Harvat and Edwin Martinez. This year, they have jumped into the holiday
CircuitMOM's Holiday Pop-Up at 409 N. Wolcott.
spirit with all four feet with "CircuitMOM's Holiday Pop-Up" at 409 N. Wolcott. The excitement began on December 9 after they transformed their venue into a winter wonderland. The pop-up offers 8 unique holiday environments where you
With CircuitMOM's Edwin Martinez and Matthew Harvat.
can capture special memories with family, friends and pets, all in a Covid safe environment. Details here: Kids (Under 10) – $6 per (Payment done on site. Cash Credit Card, Zelle, Venmo, PayPal); Adult – $12 per adult (4 people minimum); Professional Pictures – $45 ( Pictures in 3 sets, will receive digital copies, payment done on site. Cash Credit Card, Zelle, Cash-App, PayPal); Prints – $20 (Payment done on site. Cash Credit Card, Zelle, Cash-App, PayPal). (For tickets or more info, click here!) _______________________________________________________________________
I was able to cross something off my bucket list recently with a visit to the iconic and historic Drake Hotel's magnificent Princess Diana Suite, formerly the hotel's Presidential Suite. It was renamed after Princess Diana's
Part of the luxurious Princess Diana Suite.
historic, and only, visit to Chicago in June, 1996. Watch for a Chicago Star Media all-access video coming soon of my interview with Damien McArdle, the Drake's GM, who shares fun-filled details about the Princess' visit and a fabulous package they're offering in the suite now! Trivia question, do you know why the hotel's hallways are so wide? To be able to accommodate two women in period ball gowns walking side by side. (Now, take a suite peek here!)
I know most of us have already decorated for the holidays, but I quizzed some of my favorite event designers on their favorite tips and tricks. Debi Lilly, A Perfect Event, loves filling her trees with fresh flowers,
Debi Lilly's beautiful, flower-filled Christmas tree (photo by Tiffaney Childs)
peonies and hydrangeas and mixing them in with faux flowers. She also suggests styling a winter wonderland champagne bar topped with flowers in silver vases or mercury glass. She loves gifts wrapped in velvet bows with cheeky tags and adding luxe to wrapping paper with suede tassels, Swiss silk double face ribbon and tiny pom poms hot glued onto craft paper. Vintage bottle brush trees are another favorite item to
Michelle Durpetti's elegant holiday table.
decorate with as are fresh pine boughs. Michelle Durpetti, another fabulous wedding planner, event designer and co-owner of Gene & Georgetti's restaurant, says don't limit yourself to traditional holiday colors. Consider jewel tones and don't be afraid of
Greg Hyder and Jim Smith's ornament-filled chandelier.
adding texture to your holiday table. Think velvet table linens with gorgeous glassware, Shantung napkins with wooden chargers. She loves using her mom's (Marion
Ramsey Prince decorates a gorgeous holiday table. (Maison du Prince, 566 Chestnut, Winnetka)
Durpetti) collection of salt and pepper shakers, flatware and china that she picked up in her travels. She said, "This way, the table provides direct access to memory lane as a conversation starter." Event planner Derrick Taylor says "don't get caught up in commercial fads. Christmas is really about feeling. Collect ornaments that tell your story." Greg Hyder helps plan plenty of seasonal decor at
Debi Lilly with a locally sourced tree.
the Peninsula Hotel but for his own home, with partner Jim Smith, he likes to go a little more over the top. He's as much a fan of Christmas as I am (if this is even possible?!) and he decorates every nook and cranny. In their new, multi-
Debi Lilly's pastel bottle brush trees add a charming touch.
level home, he has plenty to work with but is conscious of his carbon footprint. He repurposes decor to suit the holiday. For instance, when Halloween is over, the bright orange pumpkins are transformed into silver and gold works of art that adorn their front steps. Greg loves using ornaments in unexpected places too like hanging from chandeliers or worked into vignettes for the mantle. He's a great collector of vintage items and decorates with traditional as well as modern
Meet Sookie Hyder-Smith. Finally, a home for the holidays (rescued from PAWS by Greg and Jim).
elements. I love all of these friends' styles and know their homes are filled with so much holiday cheer! For Chuck and me, we LOVE to decorate and, most years, leave our Christmas tree and decorations up way past their due date. I can't stand to part with it. Actually, I keep a curio cabinet up year-round filled with vintage Christmas items along with a 4-foot-tall Santa that I bought with my Mom at Marshall Field's. A giant, lighted wreath adorns our antique liquor cabinet (that I bought in high school for $45 on layaway). These are things I just can't part with, they provide way too many happy memories. Fortunately, Chuck feels the same (I think).
Kehoe Designs helping those less fortunate during the holidays.
Kudos to Tom Kehoe! His Kehoe Designs is working with local nonprofits to gift fully decorated Christmas trees to those in need of a little extra holiday cheer. Working with the American Heart Association, HIRE 360 and NAMI Chicago, the partners have identified recipients who have had particularly challenging experiences this year. The first tree went to Angelo Panzica, who came down with Covid after being hired by HIRE 360. Thanks for all you do in our communities Tom!
A great gift idea brought to you by Shaun Rajah and Joseph Szmczak,, Holiday Happy Hour Towers! Stylishly curated bundles of sweets, savories and holiday scents for Christmas and NYE that come in beautiful, signature holiday packaging! (Details here!)
I want to give a shout-out to my fellow columnist Thomas
The uber-talented Thomas O'Gorman of Skyline newspaper.
O'Gorman, the delightful, around-town writer for the Skyline newspaper. In my wildest dreams, I could never write as good as he does. His work is sheer poetry and his knowledge of the arts, history, Chicago and even gourmet cooking runs very, very deep. I love all of his columns and never miss them but, his most recent one, "Who would ever want to be king," truly captured the spirit of the holidays and Chicago in its present state. It is a must-read! Keep up the great work Thomas! YOU are a Chicago treasure! (Scroll down his Facebook page to his column here!)
National Jingle Bell Day presented by Chicago Star Media, Saturday, December 19, 6 pm CST!
I'm so excited and hope you can join me on Saturday, December 19 at 6 pm CST. Chicago Star Media has come up with a really BIG idea to bring the city and, hopefully, the country together for National Jingle Bell Day! The concept for NJBD was born after the resurgence of Covid-19 in Illinois caused another wave of shutdowns this fall that has extended into the holidays. Elaine Hyde, publisher/editor of Chicago Star Media, created the event after being inspired by the community sing-a-longs that took place in Chicago earlier in the year. So, on Dec.19, at 6 pm CST, wherever you are, indoors, outdoors, in your car or in your workplace, videotape yourself singing Jingle Bells and post to social media with the hashtag #jinglebellday2020! OR, come join us around the Great Tree near the Wrigley building on Saturday, Dec. 19 at 6 pm! Bring your bells, we will be live-streaming! (For more info, visit Chicago Star Media hereand let's SING!)
Porchlight Music Theatre announces its latest virtual offering, the holiday return of The Ruffians’ Burning Bluebeard!Burning Bluebeard, now in its ninth year, was created and performed by the critically acclaimed theatre troupe The Ruffians. A magical story, told with music, clowning, tumbling, acrobatics and dance, Burning Bluebeard is a physical-performance phenomena inspired by the true story of Chicago’s former Iroquois Theatre and the unforgettable events that resulted in tragedy for 600 theatergoers at Christmastime in 1903. "A vaudevillian musical delight with a story that excavates the poetic and poignant remains of a piece of Chicago’s rich history and will leave you with an unforgettable experience." (Details here, through January 3!)
_______________________________________________________________________ Chicago’s oldest Nutcracker tradition is transformed into a one-of-a-kind, immersive, virtual experience featuring (pre-recorded) dance at the historic Ruth Page Center for the Arts located in Chicago’s Gold Coast. Streaming now, join the Stahlbaum’s at their holiday gathering. Experience Clara’s dreams of sugar plums, rogue bon bons, impish peppermints and a pine forest dusted with snow. Peek into Drosselmeyer's Workshop and the Kingdom of Sweets to see the Sugar Plum Fairy dance with her friends. Visions: A Nutcracker Experience gives everyone a chance to see The Ruth Page Center for the Arts as never before and an opportunity to celebrate the season in a whole new way. (Through Dec. 20, details here!)
Chicago Lights will host its "Gala of Hope, at Home", on Friday, March 5 at 7 pm. This virtual event will benefit the life-changing and youth development and social service programs of Chicago Lights and the community support efforts of the Replogle Center for Counseling and Well-Being. Details here!
And, it's not too late to donate to the holiday toy drives going on across Chicagoland! Here's a great list comprised by Block Club Chicago!
Nadia Lee Cohen holds copy of her first book, WOMEN, a sell out in its first run!
I'm so excited about Nadia Lee Cohen's first book, WOMEN. British-born, Los Angeles-based photographer
Nadia Lee Cohen's "WOMEN."
Nadia's WOMEN, her IDEA-published photo book debut, is the result of six years of work and features 100 "extra unordinary portraits." And I am one of them. Pinch me. It opens with Mick Jagger's daughter, Georgia May. The first run, a limited edition of 1000, is already sold out! They are taking orders now for the second edition here.
My favorite rock legend, Jim Peterik, will be offering his 25th
Rock legend Jim Peterik, the Ides of March.
annual "Sharing Christmas with the Ides of March" on Saturday, Dec. 19, 8 pm, CST. This live-streamed event (from his studio!) will be available for FREE (Jim's Christmas gift to his fans) on youtube and facebook! (Details here)!
The year is coming to a close and this seems to be about the
Anna Davlantes–WGN radio host. (John Reilly photo).
end of virtual fundraisers until next year. I've been traveling around town gathering up as much holiday cheer as I possibly can to share with you and it's been a gold mine out there. People are celebrating and decorating in ways I've never seen before. An event designer friend of
Sylvia Perez–Fox 32 Chicago.
mine told me stores like Michael's, Target, Home Goods, Home Depot and others, were sold out of Christmas decor almost before they were stocked! I'm thrilled to be able to find so many media outlets
Robert Feder's column.
covering places to go and things to do for the holidays too. It was a thrill to present my Holiday Hot List (read it here on Chicago Star Media) and more fun news from around town with the one and only Sylvia Perez (Fox 32 Chicago), Anna Davlantes (WGN–Radio) and Fred Weintraub and Hannah Stanley (WGCO radio's "The Hannah & Fred Show," listen here!) I loved chatting about what I know and love best, CHICAGO, and I'm so lucky to have such wonderfully supportive media friends! And a special thanks to Robert Feder and Skyline's Thomas O'Gorman for including me in their must-read columns too! (Watch my fun interview with Sylvia below!) Love and thanks to ALL!
Playboy never forgets its Playmates. For years and years, Hefner always sent Christmas gifts to every one of his Playmates. Gifts included everything from branded clothing (PB backpacks) to jewelry to customized cosmetics (think "Playmate Pink" blush)! I'm so happy to see his tradition continue! Thanks dear Playboy for
Steve Ewert photo.
never forgetting those who brought you to the party!
Special thanks to photographer Steve Ewert who included me in his "Portraits of Successful Women" campaign. It's an honor to appear alongside alongside Brandis Friedman, Dominique Jordan, Lily Liu, Laura Chavez, Kate Sullivan and others. Thanks so much for including me Steve! (Read my story here, if you want, lol)
______________________________________________________________________ The spirit of the season has not been dampened for me even with Covid and all the problems we're facing right now. If anything, I'm feeling even more hopeful. I was chatting with a very knowledgeable friend who's in retail recently and he really opened my eyes with his interesting take on things. He said, "Can you imagine what it's going to be like when this is all over and people are safe and free to travel again? We will be swamped here in Chicago with people from the Midwest and across the country finally anxious to get out and about! The stores, hotels and restaurants will be packed. It will be like after Prohibition!" I had never thought of things this way but I think he is absolutely right! I know I will be jumping out of my sneakers (no more heels in the near future) to do all of the things I haven't been able to enjoy for all these many months. I will feel like Secretariat breaking free of the starting gate! So, I do see light at the end of our long, dark tunnel. And I just can't wait to celebrate (with you)!
Have a Happy, Healthy, Safe Holiday Season and a Very Merry Christmas! Here's to a big, bright 2021 for us all!