I am tired of people liking John Shea pimping off someone elses ideas. Can someone tell Mr. Shea that he probably watched to many Spike Lee movies or Soprano specials? I find it particularly insulting that someone needs to resort to using cheap and demeaning steroptypes that are demeaning to the long time residents (current and past) of Somerville..
To minimize and insult "old" Somerville in any way... is no less insulting than it is to minimize the American-Italian culture as "mafia", the American-Irish as "drinkers", or the African-Amercians as "lazy".
I lived in Somerville from 1967 to 1994, and have remained active in the City my entire adult life. I knew all of the Mayors on a first name basis back to Jim Brennan (circa 1965). I own property in Somerville- and now and my wife and I are likely to move back there. Whether I live in Somerville or not- I have always been proud to say that I am from Somerville- because of the content of the people I knew and grew up with.
I lived through the years that people from the outside called Somerville.. Slumerville... in large part - because as Mr. Shea inacurately depicts - they had no clue as to what was going on in the old Somerville. There was a perception by couch potatoes and people afraid of urban life that the sensationlism depicted on an occassional news show was reality. The fact is the "old" Somerville has a lot I hope it will pass along to the "new" Somerville.
The old Somerville took care of its family and friends when no one else would. The Somerville I grew up in was not afraid of newcomers- the reason most of us where Irish and Italian was not one else wanted to live in Somerville. People from Somerville then as they do now went to work every day, took care of their families, restored property, where spiritual, and had a great sense of community. Most of us welcomed newcomers... Please tell Mr. Shea the "old" Somerville was not like one of those Spike Lee movies... we never vandalized or burnt down any restaraunts... we just ate at them... We never had a Mayor who set up an immigrant... we had Mayors who looked out for their friends and families when no one else would...The "old" Somerville I knew did not consist of newcomers getting a beatdown. The rough and tumple that existed was applied to everyone- and it made most of us smarter and stronger. Please tell Mr. Shea he needs to do some homework.... however I am sure he is welcome to stay in Somerville whether he is right or wrong... because thats the way it has always been.
Finally... I really like Davis Square area... but I am a little tired of people wanting to make Somerville the next Cambridge.. I believed then as I do now that the character of Somerville was a unique and wonderful... and we should pass it along... not crap on it ... or try to make it into something it is not.
Sincerly
Bud (O'Brien) Melaragni
Saturday, November 20, 2010
this was not somerville then
Seventeen people are crowded into a classic Somerville two-family that's split between worlds. On the traditional side, there are drop ceilings and huge school portraits; on the artsy side, framed Broadway posters and playbills.
It's a fitting juxtaposition. The play they're rehearsing, "Welcome to Somerville: Permit Parking Only," by lifelong resident John Shea, shows a city that's trembling between old and new. The play gets a two-night reading this weekend.
In Shea's vision, resident permit parking is a metaphor for the city's insularity: No outsiders need apply. And though the parking policy went into effect citywide only this year, the play depicts a xenophobia you might have thought melted away years ago, or at least in the mid-2000s when the blue-collar group Save Our Somerville began forging alliances with newcomers who also wanted to preserve the city's neighborhood fabric.
In fact, the level of anti-outsider hatred, especially towards non-white immigrants, is startling. (Never mind that the angry characters all have Italian, Irish, and Greek last names.) After the first dinner with her son's Connecticut girlfriend, an unemployed boozer mom spatters bitterness at the girl's fancy vocabulary and snobby restaurant choice: Gargoyle's in Davis Square.
The 20-somethings in the play aren't so far away from the days when they used bullying, beat-downs, and vandalism to push newcomers out. A fist is more effective than a ticket.
Some of the characters are still at it. In the play, an Indian restaurant is vandalized; a Latina teenager is beat up in retaliation for a wrong her brother didn't even commit. Says Mikey Dee, one of "the Mikes," an unemployed duo that hangs out in Magoun Square, "I'm sick of everyone coming here thinking they can change how things are."
In Shea's Faulknerian city -- to use a reference the alcoholic mom would despise -- the past isn't even past. The Ball Square waitresses and Davis Square liquor store clerk are hubs of (mis)information, recirculating the old stories that stain people's current endeavors. Everyone knows troubled teen Michelle was born out of wedlock -- except Michelle.
Knowledge is power, and the mayor in particular loves to wield it. The (immigrant) teen who's accused his School Committee pal of abuse ... well whaddaya know, his brother's up on drug charges. Maybe the family will trade one dropped charge for another.
Despite the ugliness, there's something comforting about this world where everyone knows everyone and the retired guys have the same quarrel every day. The Mikes try to pin down a story:
"Who, Eddie Mahoney?"
"No, Eddie Murray."
"From over the drugstore?"
"No, from over Foss Park."
By the end of the play, Shea's world is starting to come to terms with Somerville's new normal. Pizzeria owner Dom badmouths the Indian restaurant -- until it's vandalized. "I might not like them but I know how hard it is to run a business," he says. The mayor acknowledges that while he can still pull strings, "It's not as easy as it used to be," and thus being in charge isn't as much fun anymore.
For the performers, it's not all make-believe. Shea cast the play partly with old friends from across the city like first-time performer Connie Fillios, the manager of the Hacienda restaurant where he worked as a waiter. Curtis Eames, who plays Dom the pizza guy, teaches English and drama at Somerville High; Kathryn Long, the troubled teen Michelle, is one of his students.
In fact, the challenge for city native Krystal Batzek, 25, is twisting her acting away from reality. "You are the only character in this play not from Somerville so I need to hear some Rs," Shea coaches.
Jeff Benoit, 35, thought the play got it dead-on. "100 percent," he says. The Shea family friend plays the quieter of the Mikes. "Not that I hang on the corner," he says, but "I've seen all that."
"It does. It does reflect parts of Somerville," Long says, though "up until the play I had no idea that most of this is going on."
Metaphor aside, the play's title resonates with Poul LaPlante (right) who plays the mayor. He once was fined for putting his Somerville resident sticker in the wrong corner of his windshield. His neighbor "got a ticket for not taking care of her garden because the guy didn't know what the plants were," he says. (The hearing clerk, a gardener himself, dismissed the ticket.)
When the Nov. 17 rehearsal ends, everyone splits except one last visitor who's hardly a visitor at all. Lori Batzek, Krystal's mom, grew up on the same street as Shea and now works for the city. In 2010, isn't the kind of vicious hatred of outsiders depicted in the play generally gone from Somerville?
"One would think that, wouldn't one?" Lori says. But "there are ignorant people in the world that don't know any better."
Lori's playing her mother, Joanie, a retired city meter maid known to old-timers as the raspy waitress at the original Paddock restaurant and to brunchers as the sarcastic counter gal at Kelly's Diner. She was in the Osco mural in Davis Square until it was painted over. Secretly the play is a tribute to Joanie, Shea says, the only character given a real name.
Joanie's had to stop working at Kelly's "Cancer," Lori says quietly. But she's coming Friday by hook, crook, or transfer chair.
A gust of wind lifts the dining room's acoustic tiles straight off their frame. The old-timers, perhaps, are watching.
The reading of "Welcome to Somerville: Permit Parking Only" takes place tonight and tomorrow at 7 p.m. at First Church Somerville, 89 College Ave. Tickets are $15. Non-residents who drive to the play should make sure not to park on the side streets. Learn more at playsbyshea.com.
Contact Danielle at somervillescene@gmail.com.
It's a fitting juxtaposition. The play they're rehearsing, "Welcome to Somerville: Permit Parking Only," by lifelong resident John Shea, shows a city that's trembling between old and new. The play gets a two-night reading this weekend.
In Shea's vision, resident permit parking is a metaphor for the city's insularity: No outsiders need apply. And though the parking policy went into effect citywide only this year, the play depicts a xenophobia you might have thought melted away years ago, or at least in the mid-2000s when the blue-collar group Save Our Somerville began forging alliances with newcomers who also wanted to preserve the city's neighborhood fabric.
In fact, the level of anti-outsider hatred, especially towards non-white immigrants, is startling. (Never mind that the angry characters all have Italian, Irish, and Greek last names.) After the first dinner with her son's Connecticut girlfriend, an unemployed boozer mom spatters bitterness at the girl's fancy vocabulary and snobby restaurant choice: Gargoyle's in Davis Square.
The 20-somethings in the play aren't so far away from the days when they used bullying, beat-downs, and vandalism to push newcomers out. A fist is more effective than a ticket.
Some of the characters are still at it. In the play, an Indian restaurant is vandalized; a Latina teenager is beat up in retaliation for a wrong her brother didn't even commit. Says Mikey Dee, one of "the Mikes," an unemployed duo that hangs out in Magoun Square, "I'm sick of everyone coming here thinking they can change how things are."
In Shea's Faulknerian city -- to use a reference the alcoholic mom would despise -- the past isn't even past. The Ball Square waitresses and Davis Square liquor store clerk are hubs of (mis)information, recirculating the old stories that stain people's current endeavors. Everyone knows troubled teen Michelle was born out of wedlock -- except Michelle.
Knowledge is power, and the mayor in particular loves to wield it. The (immigrant) teen who's accused his School Committee pal of abuse ... well whaddaya know, his brother's up on drug charges. Maybe the family will trade one dropped charge for another.
Despite the ugliness, there's something comforting about this world where everyone knows everyone and the retired guys have the same quarrel every day. The Mikes try to pin down a story:
"Who, Eddie Mahoney?"
"No, Eddie Murray."
"From over the drugstore?"
"No, from over Foss Park."
By the end of the play, Shea's world is starting to come to terms with Somerville's new normal. Pizzeria owner Dom badmouths the Indian restaurant -- until it's vandalized. "I might not like them but I know how hard it is to run a business," he says. The mayor acknowledges that while he can still pull strings, "It's not as easy as it used to be," and thus being in charge isn't as much fun anymore.
For the performers, it's not all make-believe. Shea cast the play partly with old friends from across the city like first-time performer Connie Fillios, the manager of the Hacienda restaurant where he worked as a waiter. Curtis Eames, who plays Dom the pizza guy, teaches English and drama at Somerville High; Kathryn Long, the troubled teen Michelle, is one of his students.
In fact, the challenge for city native Krystal Batzek, 25, is twisting her acting away from reality. "You are the only character in this play not from Somerville so I need to hear some Rs," Shea coaches.
Jeff Benoit, 35, thought the play got it dead-on. "100 percent," he says. The Shea family friend plays the quieter of the Mikes. "Not that I hang on the corner," he says, but "I've seen all that."
"It does. It does reflect parts of Somerville," Long says, though "up until the play I had no idea that most of this is going on."
Metaphor aside, the play's title resonates with Poul LaPlante (right) who plays the mayor. He once was fined for putting his Somerville resident sticker in the wrong corner of his windshield. His neighbor "got a ticket for not taking care of her garden because the guy didn't know what the plants were," he says. (The hearing clerk, a gardener himself, dismissed the ticket.)
When the Nov. 17 rehearsal ends, everyone splits except one last visitor who's hardly a visitor at all. Lori Batzek, Krystal's mom, grew up on the same street as Shea and now works for the city. In 2010, isn't the kind of vicious hatred of outsiders depicted in the play generally gone from Somerville?
"One would think that, wouldn't one?" Lori says. But "there are ignorant people in the world that don't know any better."
Lori's playing her mother, Joanie, a retired city meter maid known to old-timers as the raspy waitress at the original Paddock restaurant and to brunchers as the sarcastic counter gal at Kelly's Diner. She was in the Osco mural in Davis Square until it was painted over. Secretly the play is a tribute to Joanie, Shea says, the only character given a real name.
Joanie's had to stop working at Kelly's "Cancer," Lori says quietly. But she's coming Friday by hook, crook, or transfer chair.
A gust of wind lifts the dining room's acoustic tiles straight off their frame. The old-timers, perhaps, are watching.
The reading of "Welcome to Somerville: Permit Parking Only" takes place tonight and tomorrow at 7 p.m. at First Church Somerville, 89 College Ave. Tickets are $15. Non-residents who drive to the play should make sure not to park on the side streets. Learn more at playsbyshea.com.
Contact Danielle at somervillescene@gmail.com.
Tuesday, November 16, 2010
Ward Captains
In 1977 the race for Mayor was between Tom August, Bill Pickett, and Gene Brune. More on each of them later.
Each had organizations in place that where the standard of any serious candidate for Mayor. There was a Campaign Manager, and reporting to him where Ward Captains.
The role of the Ward Captain was central to the campaign. He was responsible for getting things done during the campaign and then getting out the vote on election day.
In Somerville all elections where local and very personal. So the more connected you where to each ward and precint with a representative who was from his neighborhood and would do the work needed the stronger your candidacy was.
The effectiveness of Ward Captains varied widely. There was no training or selection process. It was catch as catch can ... and give each some broad instruction on what was needed.
The hope was that the candidate could leverage the local personality and his or her family and friend connections to enhance his own campaign. It did not always work that way. When it did the Ward Captain would get the all important coffee party, have roof racks put on, load up bumper stickers, stand outs, do the all essential drops, and have people at the polling place on primary and election day. The more effective ward captain would keep a list of the voters and have a yellow marker to identify who was with the candidate. They would then organize a drop and pull- and in a close election that was the difference without question. They would also be constantly looking to expand the base of the candidate by bringing people in as precint captains, standouts
Tom August had appointed the following Ward Captains: Jimmy (Ward 1), Gerry Redman and Jim Stace (Ward 2), Joe and Joanne Mitzer (Ward 3), Jay Holmes (Ward 4), Ray Gauthier (Ward 5) ...
The named campaign manager was Ray Gauthier- the campaign manager in practice and behind the scenes was Larry Bretta. The focus here was money and message
Jimmy was a red faced large belly former Ward 1 Alderman- who did a lot more talking than working.
Each had organizations in place that where the standard of any serious candidate for Mayor. There was a Campaign Manager, and reporting to him where Ward Captains.
The role of the Ward Captain was central to the campaign. He was responsible for getting things done during the campaign and then getting out the vote on election day.
In Somerville all elections where local and very personal. So the more connected you where to each ward and precint with a representative who was from his neighborhood and would do the work needed the stronger your candidacy was.
The effectiveness of Ward Captains varied widely. There was no training or selection process. It was catch as catch can ... and give each some broad instruction on what was needed.
The hope was that the candidate could leverage the local personality and his or her family and friend connections to enhance his own campaign. It did not always work that way. When it did the Ward Captain would get the all important coffee party, have roof racks put on, load up bumper stickers, stand outs, do the all essential drops, and have people at the polling place on primary and election day. The more effective ward captain would keep a list of the voters and have a yellow marker to identify who was with the candidate. They would then organize a drop and pull- and in a close election that was the difference without question. They would also be constantly looking to expand the base of the candidate by bringing people in as precint captains, standouts
Tom August had appointed the following Ward Captains: Jimmy (Ward 1), Gerry Redman and Jim Stace (Ward 2), Joe and Joanne Mitzer (Ward 3), Jay Holmes (Ward 4), Ray Gauthier (Ward 5) ...
The named campaign manager was Ray Gauthier- the campaign manager in practice and behind the scenes was Larry Bretta. The focus here was money and message
Jimmy was a red faced large belly former Ward 1 Alderman- who did a lot more talking than working.
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