Archive for October 1st, 2006

Nashville Ballet’s Theory Surprising

Posted in Borden Buzz, Case Related, On the Web on October 1st, 2006 by Stefani Koorey

In an article that appeared in the Tennessean.com, Nashville Ballet artistic director Paul Vasterling admits that “After endless research — and numerous worrisome nights — he’s created ”Lizzie,” his own interpretation of the events that set Victorian society on its ear.”

Vasterling’s theory is that Lizzie committed the crimes and was a victim of incest by her father Andrew. In order make the theory match the evidence, he also believes that Lizzie was nude during the murdering. To that end, his ballet of Morton Gould’s Fall River Legend includes a nude scene.

Principal dancer Jennifer McNamara says

”I am nervous about that,” said McNamara, 36. ”It’s not so much what the audience will think; I believe they’ll be so involved in the piece that it won’t be gratuitous.” Instead, it’s the other members of the company and the students she teaches through the ballet’s school that she’s concerned about. For the younger set, she plans to individually address her classes and answer any questions the students might have.

But more than anything, she hopes anyone who watches comes away with a view of Lizzie as ”a really strong woman for her time.”

Check out the Nashville Ballet site for a great flash ad for the ballet!

WHAT: Nashville Ballet’s Fall Series, including the world premiere of “Lizzie”; The Nashville Symphony accompanies.
WHEN: October 6-8. Performances at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday and 2 p.m. Oct. 8
WHERE: TPAC’s Polk Theater
TICKETS: $19-$52 through the TPAC box office downtown or at Davis-Kidd Booksellers in the Mall at Green Hills; Ticketmaster outlets; 255-ARTS (2787); or www.ticketmaster.com. Groups of 10 or more receive a 20% discount.
CONTACT: www.nashvilleballet.com

balletlizzie

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Adopt a Lighthouse

Posted in Fall River News on October 1st, 2006 by Stefani Koorey

flats

The Herald News reports that the 125 year old Borden Flats Lighthouse is up for adoption.

The lighthouse, which stands off-shore where the Taunton River flows into Mount Hope Bay, is being offered by the U.S. General Services Administration to local, state or federal agencies, non-profits, or historical or preservation societies.

Lighthouses like Borden Flats are offered for availability if the Coast Guard finds them unnecessary for navigational aid, said Jeff Gales, executive director of the United States Lighthouse Society, based in San Francisco.

“It’s quite common actually,” Gales said. “In earlier days, lighthouses were required to go to the highest bidder. In 2000, the National Historic Lighthouse Preservation Act was passed, which says that it can’t be sold to the highest bidder.”

Any group which adopts the lighthouse must be able to financially maintain it.

The Borden Flats Light was commissioned in 1875 and built six years later at a cost of $24,000 to warn passing ships of underwater jags. It was built with sensors to pick up humidity and fog to activate the foghorn and bell.

It was staffed by a lighthouse keeper around the clock for much of its life. The lighthouse was electrified in 1957 and became fully-automated in 1963. Its light was originally a kerosene lamp, but was updated to a plastic lens in 1977.

Much of the original living quarters have been removed, and only a staircase to the light remains. The 50-foot structure reportedly has been leaning since a hurricane in 1938.

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