NEW BLOG ON THE BLOCK: RANDOM BROOKLYN

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Lois Ruben Aronow took this photograph on the day of the Whole Foods groundbreaking and put it up on her newish blog, Random Brooklyn. She is an artist with a studio in the Can Factory right across from where the Whole Foods is going in. "I’m a big fan of your blog, and I was hoping to exhange links," she writes. "And of course you’re welcome to use the pic if you link it back to my site.  www.randombrooklyn.blogspot.com."
I for one plan to be a regular vistor at Random Brooklyn and am curious about her ceramic work as well. She has two sites:
www.loisaronow.com
www.randombrooklyn.blogspot.com

SEEING GREEN FINDS A HEAVENLY CROISSANT

Seeing Green bemoans the state of croissants in Brooklyn. But there’s hope. He had his first croissant at Sweet Melissa’s and was…delighted. He also talks coffee…

In New York (all of it, not just Park Slope) both the coffee and the
croissant situation has been dismal. Coffee? That weak brown liquid
sloshed with too much milk in spite of pleading "very very dark, and NO
sugar," (why the hell don’t they let you whiten and sweeten your own
coffee around here?)  Or the too bitter brew if you ask for a double?
And squishy bread masquerading as the real thing?

Well it has changed…today I got my first croissant from Sweet Melissa
and it was…heavenly! Just the right combination of flakiness and
slightly gooey doughiness on the inside, breaking apart just so, and
the right undercurrent of real butter to assault the taste buds,
dormant now for five years.

And…coffee? Haven’t tried the Sweet Melissa offering, but
Elizabeth says it’s good, and that’s something (she drinks triple
strength in the morning.) I think Gorilla Coffee (341 Fifth Ave) has the best around, but it’s a walk. Ozzie‘s on 5th Ave. is right around the corner from me; good coffee but not quite up to par. At home we get Peet’s
coffee delivered all the way from Northern California (not least
because they’ve been a long-time client of mine) and that level of
super-black, sticky-oily, aromatic roastedness I have not yet found
here.

LAST NIGHT AT BROOKLYN READING WORKS

Well, if you missed it it’s your loss. Despite the pouring rain, a good-sized crowd gathered for a great reading last night at Brooklyn Reading Works.

Darcey Steinke read a piece from an upcoming memoir from Bloomsbury Press about stuttering. Funny. Sad. Smart. Great writing and reading.

Ilene Starger read beautiful poems of love, loss, loneliness, death and the reach for meaning in life.  Heart strong, languagey, dryly funny and sad.

Elissa Schappell read a fast-paced story called The Joy of Cooking—so engaging with a great great voice that was funny, sad, real and wrenching all at once. Can’t wait to see it in print (New Yorker Magazine, hello?).

Reason to come to BRW: a chance to be the first to hear great writers read unpublished works and work-in-progress.  It’s a fun, warm, comfortable, attentive, and un-stuffy environment for the appreciation of good writing.

Please come next time: December 14. The poets and publisher  of 32 Poems Magazine.

PARKING AT WHOLE FOODS

For an area that is seriously lacking in parking spaces, the fact that the long-awaited Gowanus/Greater Park Slope (ha ha)  WHOLE FOODS will include a three-story, 430-car parking garage in
addition to surface parking is probably the biggest news of all.

They could probably make more money turning the lot into a parking condo. Or maybe not. That many parking spaces. Whoa.

We won’t need a car — unless we’re doing a big shop — cause we can walk there from the apartment on Third Street.

MUSICAL CHAIRS ON SEVENTH AVENUE

So Kiwi finally moved into their new store where Soundtrack used to be (Seventh Avenue between Carroll and President). I overheard the owner of Soundtrack leaving a message for someone yesterday. He said, "I just walked by the new shop. It’s looks beautiful. Much nicer than my place ever looked…"

Yes, Kiwi looks lovely. Yellow paint, Kiwi green trim — a little good taste goes a long way. But a CD shop is supposed to have a different vibe.

A sign went up on the window at Peek-a-Boo Kids (Seventh between Berkeley and Union) that suggests (to me anyway) that they’re moving down the street into the old Kiwi location.  It said, "Moving soon to a space on this block." I put one and one together and got — the Kiwi space.

Fifth Avenue News: a reader wrote back that the storefront of Fifth across from MS 51 has dancing hot dogs painted on the wall inside, which suggests that a Hot Dog place is going in. Gourmet hot dogs no doubt.

The questions still remains: Is Soundtrack re-opening on Fifth Avenue or not?

That’s the news from Seventh and Fifth Avenue…

LITERARY SALON: BROOKLYN READING WORKS

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Thanks Judd Lear Silverman for blogging about Brooklyn Reading Works on your  blog in such a nice way. I’m gonna put it up here for all to see. Thanks for calling it a literary salon – that sounds so nice.

Literary Salons Live

As mentioned in a previous "blogs," Brooklyn Reading Works at the Old Stone House in Park Slope is a wonderful way to meet writers
and have the express pleasure of hearing authors read from their own
works. Curated by Louise Crawford, herself a writer and blogger–click
on the links for Only the Blog Knows Brooklyn–Brooklyn
Reading Works provides an evening of two or three authors’ readings,
followed afterwards by a convivial meet-and-greet with light
refreshments. (Okay, that may sound like Hyacinth Bucket on Keeping Up Appearances,
but it really is charming and fun!) In this fast-paced,
hustle-and-bustle city, it’s a wonderfully civilized way to stop and
smell the literary roses!

This coming Thursday, November 16th at 8 pm, the talented guest writers will be  Elissa Schappell, Ilene Starger and Darcy Steinke. The Old Stone House
is located in JJ Byrne Park on Fifth Avenue between 3rd and 4th Street
in Park Slope. 8 p.m. $5.00 includes the afore-mentioned light
refreshments. Books are sold at all readings.

AN EVENING OF GREAT WRITING: TONGHT

Brw_finalposter_lowres THREE GREAT WRITERS at the Old Stone House. Fifth Avenue between 3rd and 4th Streets. November 16, 2006. 8 p.m. SPECIAL BOOK AND POSTER RAFFLE

Elissa Schappell
is the author of USE ME, which was a finalist for the Pen/Hemingway award. She is co-editor with Jenny Offill of THE FRIEND WHO GOT AWAY and the forthcoming MONEY CHANGES EVERTYTHING. The  co-founder of TIN HOUSE with Rob Spillman and Win McCormick, Elissa also writes the HOT
TYPE column in Vanity Fair.

Ilene Starger, is a poet whose work has appeared in
Bayou, Oyez Review, Georgetown Review, and numerous other magazines.
She was a finalist for the 2005 Ann Stanford Prize.

Darcey Steinke is the auuthor of SUICIDE BLONDE (chosen as a New York Times notable book of the year), UP FROM THE WATER and JESUS SAVES.

Come one, come all. You won’t want to miss this one.

November 15, 2006 in BROOKLYN READING WORKS  |

THE MAGIC FLUTE AT THE MET: WITH THE KIDS

This could be a fun thing to do with the kids during the Christmas holiday:

THE MAGIC FLUTE

Julie Taymor’s dazzling production has been abridged by the director into an appealing 100-minute version for The Met’s first holiday family opera presentation, with a new English text by J.D. McClatchy.
The Magic Flute features all the spectacular visual effects of Taymor’s original production, including flying birds, dancing bears and the magnificent star-shimmering Queen of the Night. The cast includes young Met stars Ying Huang as Princess Pamina and Nathan Gunn as Papageno, the birdcatcher. James Levine conducts.
Ticket prices range from $12 (Standing Room) to $125. Premium tickets, which include prime seating, a special photo opportunity with cast members and exclusive Magic Flute-themed merchandise, are $150 in the Orchestra and Grand Tier, and $175 in the Center Parterre.

THE VOICE IN THE MORNING:

While I was looking for the spelling of the name of Soterios Johnson, one of the morning newscasters on WNCY, for a post I was writing, I came across a Brooklyn-based band by the name of Satirius Johnson, that was named for the WNYC newscaster. I also found an article about Johnson from the Columbia University web site. I listened to the band on their MySpace page and thought they sounded interesting. I’m dying to hear the song about Soterios Johnson.

I am hearing his voice right now. It’s hard to describe. It’s expressive, smart, easy to listen to; flawless without being smooth. I like it very much. He got his start in radio at Columbia University’s WKCR, a legendary station.

In addition to news from WNYC reporters, Campbell and Johnson watch the newswire and television monitors for breaking news, and nearby are copies of local and national newspapers. In the early morning, they have a general idea of what stories they plan to broadcast, but events dictate changes and Johnson and Campbell quickly write and rewrite stories during the course of the show.

Johnson edits everything he will say; he adds ellipses and breath marks to the page to indicate where to pause to add clarity to his delivery. “You try to write news and deliver it in such a way that listeners can understand it the first time around,” he says. “Keep the subject and verbs close together without a lot of clauses muddying things up.”

Though he is known as “So-Jo” at WNYC, the name Soterios intrigues many listeners. A variation of soter, Greek for “savior,” it refers to Jesus in the New Testament and comes from his maternal grandfather, who died in Athens before the two met.

The last name was born out of an American experience. Johnson’s paternal grandfather arrived in New York from Cyprus with the name Ioannou, a patronymic that in English means “son of John.” According to family legend, on the day he became an American citizen, Johnson’s grand-father went out in the morning an Ioannou and returned home a Johnson.

The singular name and standout personality seem to inspire New York artists. A Brooklyn-based rock band took the name “Satirius Johnson.” Singer-songwriter Jonathan Coulton, who says he wakes to Johnson’s “soothing” voice every morning, wrote an entire song about him, “Dance Soterios Johnson Dance.” In Coulton’s song, the newsman possesses a secret identity as a club dancer. “I’m quite honored,” Johnson says. “It’s a clever and catchy song written by a very creative guy.”

            
            
            

GREEN RAIN BOOTS KIND OF DAY

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I will be wearing my green rain boots today because WNYC’s Soterios Johnson keeps saying that it’s gonna be a warm, wet day. Wearing the boots means acceptance and readiness of the weather conditions. There may be rain this evening but that, hopefully, won’t keep people away from Brooklyn Reading Works. Will it?

Come anyway. It is a cozy place to be in the rain.  The Old Stone House. Fifth Avenue between 3rd and 4th Streets. 8 p.m.

Photo by Bannini on Flickr

LOCAL FILMMAKERS ON FRONTLINE

Beth Elohim rabbi, Andy Bachman, blogs about a film made by Brooklyn locals about former Spokane Mayor Jim West on his site, Brooklyn Jews.

A Brooklyn shout-out to CBE members and Brooklyn Jews Rachel Dretzin
and her husband and filmmaking partner Barak Goodman for their
excellent portrayal of former Spokane Mayor Jim West which appeared on Frontline last night on PBS. 

For
those interested in good journalism around the issue of politics and
sexuality and want to grasp a tragic story, catch the rerun of the show
when it appears.

And for an interesting conversation, see the Washington Post for this “live chat” Rachel had with viewers.

Jim
West was driven from office by homophobia. And that he died of cancer
five months after his recall election left me sleepless last night for
how cruel and debased and hypocritical our American politics can be.

Film
often captures what print journalism can’t. And watching the footage of
West witnessing his own downfall showed him to be an exceedingly
complicated, tragic man who even in his deepest despair didn’t lash out at his enemies.  It is a profound site worth seeing.

SIDES AT THE SECOND STREET CAFE

Hepcat and I had a nice dinner after OSFO’s parent-teacher conference last night at the Second Street Cafe on Seventh Avenue and 2nd Street.

The well-run restaurant is owned by two locals with lots of experience in the restaurant business.

We haven’t had dinner in there in ages. We’ve been there for breakfast and lunch but not dinner. Seems that there’s a new menu (about a year old) with lots of choices.

For dinner, they offer an extensive menu of sandwiches, entrees, green market entrees and specials. They also have a deal where you can order four interesting side/appetizer type dishes for $12.00.

That’s what I had. It was so fun to order. I had Chicken Satay, Crab Cakes, Brussel Sprouts and Mashed Potatoes.

It arrived on a large, white rectangular plate and was beautifully presented. Almost like a sushi platter but with Second Street comfort food.

Hepcat had venison with delicious potatoes and turnips, which he enjoyed.

The Second Street has an extensive wine list.

SIMONE DINNERSTEIN: THIS SUNDAY

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Simone Dinnerstein (left),
the daughter of Park Slope fine artist, Simon Dinnerstein and educator, Renee Dinnerstein will perform this Sunday November 19th at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. She was featured recently on WQXR:

Named in a September article The New York Times as one of five artists "on the cusp of promising futures," Brooklyn pianist Simone Dinnerstein is presented this Sunday afternoon in the "Accolades for Pianists" series at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Ms. Dinnerstein’s program comprises works by Bach, Beethoven, Schumann and Copland. It’s program of works with depth and substance, much like Ms. Dinnerstein herself, as WQXR’s  Jeff Spurgeon discovered in this conversation with her. Click
here
to listen this interview in MediaPlayer.

November 19, 2006

Simone Dinnerstein

Copland Piano Variations
Schumann Kinderszenen, Opus
15
Beethoven Sonata No. 32 in C
Minor, Opus 111
Bach—French Suite No. 5

Call 212-570-3949 for tickets.

Only New York recital


3:00 p.m.
The Grace Rainey Rogers Auditorium
Single Tickets: $20

 


 

AMBITIOUS GREEN EDUCATION AT PS 321

OSFO is really excited about recycling this week.

That’s because Parents and staff at PS 321 have launched an ambitious recycling and green education program at the school. Creative signage went up all over the school in a recylcing awareness campaign. The kids are learning all about it and what it means for the environment.

Yesterday, at the evening parent/teacher conferences, there was a table staffed by a parent with all kinds of recycling information; a tip off to the parents that the school is taking this initiative very seriously.

Kudos to the people involved in this important project for getting it up and running in such an interesting and colorful way.

COME TO BROOKLYN READING WORKS: NOV. 16th 8 p.m.

Brw_finalposter_lowres THREE GREAT WRITERS at the Old Stone House. Fifth Avenue between 3rd and 4th Streets. November 16, 2006. 8 p.m. SPECIAL BOOK AND POSTER RAFFLE

Elissa Schappell
is the author of USE ME, which was a finalist for a Pen/Hemingway award. She is co-editor with Jenny Offill of THE FRIEND WHO GOT AWAY and the forthcoming MONEY CHANGES EVERTYTHING. The  co-founder of TIN HOUSE with Rob Spillman and Win McCormick, Elissa also writes the HOT
TYPE column in Vanity Fair.

Ilene Starger, is a poet whose work has appeared in
Bayou, Oyez Review, Georgetown Review, and numerous other magazines.
She was a finalist for the 2005 Ann Stanford Prize.

Darcey Steinke is the author of SUICIDE BLONDE (chosen as a New York Times notable book of the year), UP FROM THE WATER and JESUS SAVES.

Come one, come all. You won’t want to miss this one.

COMMUNITY REACHES OUT TO PARK SLOPE CHILD CARE COLLECTIVE

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I ran into a friend on Seventh Avenue who was walking with his little four-year-old boy. The child is a student at the Park Slope Childcare Collective, a school located in the Seventh Avenue church that recently had a fire.

Somehow I didn’t put two and two together.

Seems that the school had to relocate because the church is being renovated. Luckily, quite a few local institutions, including Old First Reformed and PS 321 have made space for the PSCC kids and teachers.

What a drag for parents of kids to have this kind of disruption during a school year. Pre-school is a hard enough transition for little two, three, and four-year-olds.

The renovation at the church will take six months. The school is currently looking for a temporary space to use until their space is fixed up.

Nice to see that the community reached out to help the collective, a day care that’s been around as long and probably longer than I’ve been in Park Slope.

The child pictured has nothing to do with the PSCC. She was photographed by Hugh Crawford.

FAITH IN BLOGGING

I love the fact that the leaders of two local religious congregations are bloggers. I check in every day or so to see what Pastor Daniel Meeter of Old First Reformed Church and Rabbi Andy Bachman of Congregation Beth Elohim are blogging about. Blogging seems a perfect outlet for religous leaders; a way for the community to get to know them.

These are personal blogs, which makes them all the more interesting. You gain insight into what these men are thinking about.

Old First
Brooklyn Jews

ATLANTIC YARDS: COMMUNITY MEETING THIS THURS.

This Thursday evening, November 16th, at 7:00 p.m., there’s a  community forum featuring an update on the proposed “Atlantic Yards” arena and high-rise development project.

The meeting will take place at the Hanson Place United Methodist Church, located at the corner of Hanson Place and Saint Felix Street in Fort Greene, just up the block from the Williamsburgh Savings Bank building.

The evening’s program will feature:

— An update on the recently filed Federal eminent domain lawsuit, and other legal challenges
— A presentation by the Council of Brooklyn Neighborhoods on the project’s potential environmental impacts
— An Albany and City Hall update from local elected leaders
— Q&A session

Invited speakers include:

— Assemblyman-elect Hakeem Jeffries
— Assemblyman Jim Brennan
— Assemblywoman Joan Millman
— State Senator Velmanette Montgomery
— City Councilwoman Letitia James

Forum Sponsors:

Atlantic Avenue Betterment Association • Bergen Street Block Association • Brooklyn Bears Community Garden • The Brooklyn Christian Times • Brooklyn Vision • Carroll Street Block Association (5th-6th Ave.) • Dean Street Block Association (4th-5th) • Develop Don’t Destroy Brooklyn • East Pacific Block Association • Fifth Avenue Committee • Fort Greene Association • Friends and Residents of Greater Gowanus • Park Slope Neighbors • Pratt Area Community Council • Prospect Place Block Association Atlantic Yards Task Force • Sierra Club • South Oxford Street Block Association • South Portland Block Association • The Society for Clinton Hill • Times Up! • Warren St. Marks Community Garden • Reverend David Dyson, Pastor of Lafayette Avenue Presbyterian Church • Reverend Dr. Daniel Meeter, Pastor of Old First Reformed Church

NEW CONEY AMUSEMENT PARK: 2011

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This from NY 1:
Although the Stillwell Avenue subway station recently got a
multi-million dollar renovation, trash and graffiti are what greet
visitors to Coney Island once they get to the street. But developers
envision a grand new entrance for the area. Something like a tower of
water with a light show and an observation deck overlooking a
magnificent amusement park.

“It’s this ‘wow’ of an introduction,” explained architect Stanton
Eskstut. “An orientation to everybody that well, you’ve just arrived,
wait until you see what else there is.”

Eskstut has been hired by development company Thor Equities to help
transform ten acres along the Coney Island Boardwalk. Included in the
plans are movie theaters and an indoor water park, and the first major
roller coaster to be built in the city since the Cyclone in 1927. The
ride will take coaster enthusiasts through buildings.

“What we’re sketching right now is to how to bring it into the
water park, bring it around the cinema lobbies, and integrate it around
the carousel,” said Eskstut.

The carousel will be a three-story centerpiece with canopies
overhead and glass walls for use year round. The idea is to change
Coney Island from a seasonal to a year round destination, complete with
hotels, restaurants and stores.

“It’s going to be a place that’s a constant show, where lights,
water, color, and sound is integrated throughout every corner, every
block,” said Eskstut.

Developers say the new park will enhance the landmark rides and
provide a bridge between Keyspan Park on one end of the strip and the
New York Aquarium on the other. The aquarium will soon undergo its own
renovation. By year’s end a committee is expected to choose which of
three designs will become the new exterior for the aquarium.

“The concept behind these designs is to find a way to enhance the
aquarium as the eastern anchor of Coney Island,” said Cynthia Reich of
the NY Aquarium.

Planners for both projects say they will make sure the boardwalk is
incorporated into their plans. Thor Equities said creating its vision
could cost $1.5 billion and wants the approvals process to start early
next year so that construction can begin. The hope is to have a new
amusement park by the year 2011.

Pix by the master himself, Hugh Crawford

   

SMALL PLANE LANDS IN BROOKLYN PARK

THIS FROM NY1:
A small plane made an emergency landing on a ballfield in Offerman Park
in Brooklyn Tuesday morning, but no one was injured .

The incident happened just before 11 a.m. on Cropsey and 27th
Avenue in Gravesend. Police say the pilot requested an emergency
landing after experiencing engine trouble.

The single-engine Cessna landed safely in a field used by Saint
Francis College. Although no one was injured, the incident did scare
nearby residents.

"I was in my driveway on 16th Street and I looked up and I saw this
single engine plane wobbling back and forth. It looked like it was
going to hit the building, and then it tried to get back up," said
resident Thomas Tornetto. "It was wobbling and then it made a turn
right toward Pathmark and it came down this way and came over here, in
the weeds back there."

"The gentleman who was flying was very lucky, and I’m very glad
that nobody was injured," said resident Chuck Richenthal. "The plane
seems to be completely intact."

Sources say the single engine plane took off from Linden Airport.

PRETTY IN PEPTO BISMO PINK

There seems to be no end of interest in the pink house on Garfield Place. Does that house have a publicist. This from Sunday’s CIty section of the New York Times.   Personally, I love it because it exemplifies the human need to differentiate oneself from the pack.

The brownstone at 233 Garfield Place in Park Slope has the same
carved wood door as the house next door, at No. 235, and the same
stonework as the house at No. 237. What makes No. 233 unique, as
everyone in the neighborhood well knows by now, is something rather
less subtle: its color.

Or is magenta the word for 233 Garfield Place?

 
   

The house has been pink for
decades — since before the Park Slope Historic District was created in
1973 — but turned a brighter shade a few months ago when its owner,
Bernie Henry, gave it a new coat of paint.

“Now,” said Craig
Hammerman, district manager of Community Board 6, “it’s a really bright
magenta. It used to be a softer, pastel-type pink.”

Ever since
Mr. Henry, who is 90, had the house repainted, it has been a magnet for
reporters and attention-seekers. Neighbors rattle off the names of
local television stations that have sent camera crews, and the house
has even attracted its own tourists, as Anne Joseph, who lives on the
next block, discovered when one of them stopped her partner on the
street.

“He said: ‘We’re driving around; we’re from Staten
Island; where is that pink house?’ ” Ms. Joseph recalled one morning
recently.

As for why the house was painted pink in the first
place, Mr. Henry, reached by phone, shed little light on the matter.
“So what’s wrong with the house?” he said. “I’ve been through that
already. Why are you asking me about it? Get somebody else’s house.”

In
the professional opinion of Ken Herbert, a Manhattan resident who the
other day was sitting on the stoop of a nearby brownstone and who owns
a flooring and painting company that was renovating the neighboring
building, the house is “bubblegum pink,” and is one of the strangest he
has seen. But Mr. Herbert

BROOKLYN READING WORKS: THIS THURSDAY

Brw_finalposter_lowres THREE GREAT WRITERS at the Old Stone House. Fifth Avenue between 3rd and 4th Streets. 8 p.m.

Elissa Schappell
is the author of USE ME, which was a finalist for a Pen/Hemingway award. She is co-editor with Jenny Offill of THE FRIEND WHO GOT AWAY and the forthcoming MONEY CHANGES EVERTYTHING. The  co-founder of TIN HOUSE with Rob Spillman and Win McCormick, Elissa also writes the HOT
TYPE column in Vanity Fair.

Ilene Starger, is a poet whose work has appeared in
Bayou, Oyez Review, Georgetown Review, and numerous other magazines.
She was a finalist for the 2005 Ann Stanford Prize.

Darcey Steinke is the author of SUICIDE BLONDE (chosen as a New York Times notable book of the year), UP FROM THE WATER and JESUS SAVES.

Come one, come all. You won’t want to miss this one.

CANCELLED BRANGELINA WEDDING IN WAX: VERY CREATIVE

Pitt
told Esquire magazine (October edition) Brangelina nuptuals are on hold until legal restrictions are lifted in the U.S. and
”everyone else in the country who wants to be married is legally
able.” So he probably doesn’t want to get married in wax either.  This from the New York Times:

Organizers of a fantasy wedding on the Las Vegas
Strip between Hollywood’s hottest unmarried couple got cold feet.
Madame Tussauds nixed the plan to stage a depiction of Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt tying the knot after a representative for Pitt protested, representatives for the actor and the wax museum said Monday.

”I
personally found it a little odd that they were re-creating a wedding
that never really happened,” said Cindy Guagenti, Los Angeles-based
spokeswoman for Pitt. ”As Brad’s representative, I found it
disturbing.”

Adrian Jones, general manager of the wax museum at
the Venetian resort, said in a statement that the decision was made to
not cross the stars.

”Since Madame Tussauds enjoys excellent
relationships with the celebrity community, we made our own decision
not to create the wedding scene,” he said.

The Brangelina wedding had been scheduled Wednesday to mark the unveiling of a Jolie wax figure. Pitt’s already got one.

The scene would have had wax figures of George Clooney,
standing in as best man, and the Rev. Robert Schuller, pastor and
president of the Crystal Cathedral in Garden Grove, Calif., officiating.

Wax witnesses would have included the likenesses of the likes of Elvis, Liberace, John Wayne, Bugsy Siegel, Frank Sinatra, Ben Affleck and Luciano Pavarotti.

Instead, Jolie’s wax figure will be introduced Wednesday, without the wedding bells.

Guagenti
said Pitt was unaware of Madame Tussauds’ plans. He and Jolie were with
their three children in Mumbai, India, where Jolie is filming a movie
about slain journalist Daniel Pearl.

LOOK OUT LITTLE THINGS: FAO SCHWARTZ IN PARK SLOPE?

I won’t bore you (or maybe I will) with my childhood memories of visits to FAO Schwartz with my maternal grandmother. But check out this scoop via Brooklyn Record. Could it possibly be true? Look out Little Things.

Chain restaurants aren’t always welcome in Brooklyn neighborhoods, so
we’re curious to see what our readers think about this bit of gossip.
According to NY1, "Crain’s New York Business says FAO Schwarz plans to
open two more stores in the city, smaller than the flagship store on
Fifth Avenue. The company is reportedly looking to have a presence in
neighborhoods like Union Square and Park Slope, Brooklyn." (We don’t
have a Crain’s subscription, but if anyone does, please share the
details!) Would this be a welcome chain store for the families of Park
Slope — or just an annoying tourist attraction? NY1 also reports that
"more than two million people visit its New York City location each
year."
FAO Schwarz Plans For Two More City Stores [NY1]