Paradise in San Diego

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People always talk about vacationing in paradise. Hawaii, Bali, the Bahamas…but paradise can be as close to LA as San Diego – and it is.

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Paradise Point Resort is an absolutely perfect spot to unwind. The 44-acre private island on Mission Bay is a world apart, even though it’s less than seven miles from the heart of San Diego.

It’s easy to find your bungalow, unpack the car, and then never leave the island – except to kayak around it. 
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Let’s start with the rooms. The cheerful, modern decor includes flat-screen TVs, luxury bedding, and patios. Some patios face the lush lagoons or offer bay views. We stayed in a Bungalow lodge right on the beach. The resort’s mile of white sand is a semi-circle dotted with fire pits.
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Our sleek suite featured a separate sitting room, dining table, and wet bar.  The rooms are described as “Balinese-influenced,” and they have an unobtrusive tropical feeling, enhanced by plenty of white, gold, turquoise, wooden shutters, teak furnishings. 

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The property itself offers even more paradise than the rooms.

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With five pools, including a vast main pool, a calm adults-only pool, and small blissfully heated bodies of water throughout the property plus hot tubs, there’s plenty of places to splash besides the bay.
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There’s also a beautifully maintained, charming putting green, bicycles to rent, tennis courts, and a luxurious fitness center.  There’s croquet and sand volleyball, too, plus a calm, lovely spa that offers massages and other treatments in an airy pavilion.
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It’s fun just to stroll the grounds, looking at the bay, the  hibiscus and birds of paradise, the lagoons with their small wooden bridges. In the center of the property, near the main pool, a tower rises to the sky, offering great views of the island and property.

 

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The island resort was once known as Vacation Village, an island setting created by movie producer Jack Skirball, architect Eldridge Spencer, and builder Bob Golden in the 1960s. The Hollywood connection resulted in some attractive artifacts on the property including the central fountain with its porpoise design, and the mission bells throughout the island. While the South Seas ambiance has been stylishly updated, the tropical, fecund feeling has continued to thrive. There’s a small waterfall near the marina, and an enclosed water space where a variety of fish slip through shallow water, a flotilla of ducks on the lagoons, and a large copper fireplace in the lobby.

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The resort is family friendly, but it’s also romantic, and there’s plenty of room for kids to play and enjoy the property’s amenities without conflicting with adult relaxation. Families will also enjoy the proximity to Sea World, just a five minute drive away, and the San Diego Zoo, a fifteen minute drive. The resort’s Barefoot Grill offers an enjoyable kid’s menu with plenty of choices and libations for adults.

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After strolling the property, indulging in poolside relaxation, and watching boats sailing along the bay, it was time for dinner.

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We had an amazing meal at resort’s elegant signature restaurant, Tidal. This restaurant is a destination even for those not staying on the island, a dining experience with an emphasis on seafood and Mediterranean style created by Chef Amy DiBiase. It is a culinary delight.

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Inside, the dining room is spacious, with stunning light fixtures, and plenty of glass. The optimal romantic setting is on the outdoor patio, where San Diego lights glitter across the bay.  Wherever you sit, the view is lovely; and whatever you eat will probably be exceptional.

DiBiase is classically trained. “French, Italian, some Spanish, those are my influences,” she says. “We use ingredients that are as fresh and organic as possible, and we stay as seasonal as possible, too, and focus on developing the flavor of every dish. When preparing fish, the result should hit all your different senses, in one bite, spicy, cool, crunchy.”

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We began with an incredible cheese board, beautifully curated. I’m a fan of cheese boards, and order them when I can, and this was truly one of the best and most generous boards I’ve tasted. Humbolt Fog goat cheese, smoked berry crostini, smoked tomato jam, cave-aged Mellage Carr Valley cheese – all superlative. The sheep, goat, and cow milk cheese selections change daily.

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A grapefruit and avocado salad, perfectly dressed, made a refreshing second course.

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Fish, which also changes based on available fresh offerings, is lovingly and inventively prepared. We had divers scallops and prawns. The scallops rested on a bed of pureed fava beans, plus baby squash, blistered tomato, wilted spinach, and a truffle beurre blanc.

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Equally succulent were the prawns, which were richly prepared with rosemary-polenta and smoked chili aioli.

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For dessert: chocolate banana tart, which was both intense yet light.

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Beverage selections were equally delightful: lemongrass tea, Red Rocket ale, and Hess Grapefruit IPA made for perfect company with our main dishes and dessert. Before the meal, we enjoyed two beautifully nuanced craft cocktails: Thee Barnacle uses milagro tequila as a base, and features fresh pressed grapefruit and lemon, agave nectar, and a zingy cayene infusion. The Double Down featured rye whiskey, pecan nutmeg infusion, and chocolate bitters. This was a darker drink, made for sipping.

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We took another stroll around the island, enjoying the evening quiet, the sounds of crickets and lapping water before our final treat of the evening: the hotel’s s’mores package.

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Firewood, matches, skewers, marshmallows and chocolate, all in one package, are left in guests’ rooms upon request. We had to stroll on a few steps to a fire pit, set up our logs, relax in Adirondack chairs, and have a final desert. Stars above, sand between our toes, and charred marshmallows – what could be better?

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In the morning, we rented kayaks from the hotel’s marina, and took a wonderful, gentle circle of the island. We saw jelly fish, rays, and slithery silver fish beneath our oars, on a beautiful, sun-filled morning.  Yes, paradise – and we didn’t need a passport or a long plane ride to get there.

 

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Paradise Point is located at 1404 Vacation Rd, San Diego, CA 92109

For more information visit http://www.paradisepoint.com

One City One Pride: Into the Streets

2016 One City One Pride Logo
The city of West Hollywood’s 40-day One City One Pride festival is a tribute to diversity that is itself wonderfully diverse in the wide variety of arts programming it offers.

2016 One City One Pride main poster image - artwork by Ricky Serrano

Continuing through June 30th are an exceptional range of over 90 events, exhibitions, performances, and interactive programming, all built around the 2016 festival theme of “Into the Streets,” which explores LGBTQ activism and history. The festival’s theme recalls an early rallying cry of LGBTQ rights groups “Out of the closet and into the streets.”

From theater to art exhibitions, concerts and conversations, there’s something for everyone to explore and enjoy as a part of the inclusive program.

Running through June 26th is Hollywood Fringe/One City One Pride. The City of West Hollywood is collaborating with The Hollywood Fringe Festival to present a full line-up of exciting LBGTQ-themed theatrical productions. Partnership shows include God’s Waiting Room, Life’s A Bitch and So Am I, The Gay Guide to Tinseltown, Sarah G’s Spot: The #1 Ballsy Woman, Snatched…Stories from Down There, Reclaimed Freedom: Fact or Fiction, Skin of Honey/Piel De Miel, and The Collection by Harold Pinter/Anniversary by Rachel Bonds. For dates, times, locations and prices, see http://www.hollywoodfringe.org/weho.

June 10 - LAAA Out There exhibit - Artwork by Julio Panisello

Lena Moross, Carmine after Degas

Opening June 10th from 6 to 9 p.m., and running through June 17th, Gallery 825 hosts the 9th annual Out There group exhibition. The subject asks artists to explore West Hollywood’s commitment to the LGBTQ community. Out There was juried by William Escalera and Francisco George, and features cutting edge mixed media, paintings, photography, and sculptural work by artists including Robyn Alatorre, Debi Cable, Kathy Curtis-Cahill, Bibi Davidson, Dwora Fried, Shelley Heffler, Tom Lasley, Shana Mabari, Lena Moross, Johnny Naked, Hung Viet Nguyen, Kenn Raaf, Osceola Refetoff, Cory Sewelson, Skye Amber Sweet, Scott A. Trimble, and Monica Wyatt, among many others. The gallery is located at 825 N. La Cienega, and is open Tuesday through Sunday from 10-5. For more information, see http://www.gallery825.com/exhibitions.html

Photos: Joshua Barash City of West Hollywood Pride parade 2010 Santa Monica Blvd.
Photo: Joshua Barash

June 12th, starting at 10:45 a.m. is the renowned LA Pride Parade, and as a part of the parade itself, FATA – From the Archives to the Archives – Queer Signs of the Times 1965 – 2010. The pride parade is produced and presented by Christopher Street West, and runs from Crescent Heights to Robertson Boulevard along Santa Monica Boulevard. When watching the always-popular parade, don’t miss Queer Signs of the Times 1965-2016, a stellar art project that takes place within the parade, which includes 75 re-created protest signs taken to the streets in a mock protest rally. The re-created signs date back as far as 1965.

June 12 - Queer Signs of the Times - Historic Signs from 1965-2016 - Flyer - Artist Ruben Esparza

Mid-week, author Felice Picano talks about the strong gay presence in Hollywood during the 1930’s on June 15th at 7 p.m. Held at the West Hollywood City Council Chambers, located at 625 N. San Vicente Blvd, this free event also features a short reading excerpted from the novella “Wonder City of the West.” For more information, see http://bit.ly/GayHollywood30s

On Sunday June 19th from 4-8 p.m. the book launch for the ONE Archives exhibit running through July 10th takes place in Plummer Park’s Long Hall. The C*ck, Paper, Scissors Book Launch and Collage Workshop centers around the first catalog to examine queer collage practices in an historical context. It was published in collaboration with the Leslie-Lohman Museum of Gay and Lesbian Art. Supporting this seminal achievement is a free collage workshop led by feminist artist Suzanne Wright. Long Hall is located at 7377 Santa Monica Blvd., where the exhibit is also displayed.

The last weekend of June serves up more strong OCOP events, including the Alliance of Los Angeles Playwrights’ Pride Play Reading Festival, two rehearsed reading programs featuring LGBTQ-themed plays. Six short pieces will be featured on Saturday; a single full-length project presented on Sunday. Both free programs will take place at the Plummer Park Community Center, Rooms 5/6, located at 7377 Santa Monica Blvd.

June 26 - 'I Stand Corrected' Film Screening and Summer Sounds concert with Jennifer Leitham - Photo courtesy of Jennifer Leitham

Both a film screening and Summer Sounds concert will also take place on Sunday the 26th. The screening of the film I Stand Corrected takes place at 2 p.m. in West Hollywood’s City Hall at 8300 Santa Monica Blvd. The film tells the story of Jennifer Leitham, who transitioned from being known as John Leitham during a 2001 concert tour with Doc Severinson. Leitham was recently chosen as one of LA Weekly’s most interesting people of 2016, and was featured in the Vanity Fair special edition Trans America issue. A Q&A with filmmaker Andrea Meyerson will be held following the film. At 4 p.m., Leitham will perform at the City of West Hollywood’s free Summer Sounds concert series outside in the City Hall Community Plaza. There’s no RSVP required, but more information can be found at http://bit.ly/SSJL2016

A Brief History of Drag exhibit 'Portrait of Anyone Who Shows Up In Drag, Los Angeles Edition, 2016' and artwork by Austin Young

Continuing through June 27th is “A Brief History of Drag,” a fascinating photography exhibition that chronicles both the Los Angeles and WeHo drag scenes from the late 1800s to the present. Installed on the second floor of the West Hollywood Library, this exhibition includes work by Austin Young, whose “Portrait of Anyone Who Shows Up In Drag, Los Angeles Edition, 2016,” a 7.5 x 7.5-foot composite photograph, features more than 100 people in drag. The exhibition is a collaboration between the City of West Hollywood WeHo Arts and One City One Pride with the Los Angeles LGBT Center’s Advocate & Gochis Galleries, and CAP UCLA with assistance from the ONE National Gay & Lesbian Archives. See more at: http://www.weho.org/residents/drag-angeles-one-city-one-pride

June 4 - Art Out! West Hollywood City Poet Steven Reigns will host a 'Poet-tree' reading during Art Out! Photo of Steven Reigns by Tony Coelho

The Lesbian Speakers Series/WeHo Reads/One City One Pride will present Natalie Goldberg in conversation with West Hollywood City Poet Steven Reigns on the 30th anniversary of Natalie Goldberg’s classic Writing Down the Bones – Freeing the Writer Within. This free event will take place June 30th at 7 p.m. in the West Hollywood City Council Chambers at 625 N. San Vicente Blvd. More information is available at: www.weho.org/wehoreads

For more information on all events and RSVP links, visit:
www.weho.org/pride
and
http://weho.org/home/showdocument?id=26443 (PDF format)

Do You Like to Dance? Step on Out with Dances with Films

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Cast and crew of Valley of Ditches, above.

Dances with Films continues with strong line-ups every day through the 12th.

Two horror/suspense films, Shortwave and Valley of Ditches captured our attention over the weekend.

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Shortwave cast and crew above.

Shortwave made me scream and jump – the intense audio soundtrack, stunning camera moves, and sleek/modern contained interior setting brought chills and thrills.

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Director/writer Ryan Gregory Phillips was “inspired by creepy sounds coming from the TV, and then the script was written in three days. We really wanted to do something like Ex Machina with our location. We wanted to make the setting real, but we wanted our characters trapped in the modernism, to create a real aura of claustrophobia,” he says.

One technique used was vasoline on the camera lens and diopter. “It allowed us to keep with the negative space, and create isolation in our shots.”

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The New York state location is actually the director’s own home. “We built the lab in my garage in four days,” he relates.

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He says the biggest challenge in the film was “having our characters express their loss, deal with the loss of their daughter in a meaningful way.” The story revolves around the sudden abduction of the daughter of a research scientist and his wife, aliens seeking contact, mysterious sounds on the shortwave radio, and the intensity of loss. “There’s a prequel and a sequel we’ve talked about,” Phillips says. “If this does well, you’ll see something even more screwed up than what was on screen this time.”

Juanita Ringeling as Isabel, the mom living with her loss day by day, gives an especially intense performance.

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Cast and crew of Valley of Ditches, above.

Valley of Ditches served up a leaner take on horror than Shortwave, but an incredibly effective and beautifully intense one. Set in the desert of Joshua Tree, a girl and her boyfriend are abducted from their van, the boyfriend killed, the girl left for dead by the Bible-quoting madman who kidnapped her.

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“Our logline,” director Christopher James Lang explains, “is a woman is left for dead and struggles to keep her sanity in a dark but accessible horror film. It’s an intensely personal struggle. We were trying to make a horror thriller that’s very accessible to general audiences.”

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He and writer/star Amanda Todisco have succeeded, shooting over ten days using C300 digital. “It took us a year to edit. The film is having its world premiere at Dances with Films.”

Currently in talks with agents and distributors, the director should see good things ahead for this chilling, nail-biting film with a great third act twist.

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“The project came about when Amanda and I were touring with our first feature, Our life in Make Believe, which is basically an uplifting road movie,” Lang states.  “We decided that working together, looking for something darker would have more impact.”

The two worked on the script together, with Lang passing his outline to Todisco.

She says “People told us that with no-name leads it would be easier to sell horror. So James did the outline, the story line, and sent it to me. I added all the weird religious stuff. I wanted to give Sean, the murderer, a reason for what he did. We found a great quote from Kings 2 in the Bible, and built our idea around that.”

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While shooting in the desert presented it’s challenges according to cinematographer Jack Yan Chen, who stabbed his hand on a cactus, the setting “shaped the performances. Dealing with the elements was a great challenge, but the desert itself was really another character.”

“It was an amazing setting,” Lang adds.

Pacing and editing are intensely perfect; this is a simply terrific film that will have you looking over your shoulder all the way home.

Don’t have Dances with Films tickets yet? Get them now!

 

Director Joe Dante Shows Sierra Spirit

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At the Mammoth Lakes Film Festival, held  May 25 through 29th, director Joe Dante (Gremlins, Innerspace) received the first annual Sierra Spirit Award. We interviewed Dante, learning about his past, his films, and his future plans.

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What inspired the director to get started in filmmaking? His love of cinema of course.

“I wrote about movies, I watched movies. I never really thought I would end up making movies – I thought the process would be too hard. I remember seeing Lord of the Flies in New York in 1963. I saw it many times. I went back, and I counted the shots, and I thought, I can’t do that, it’s too hard, I’ll just write about movies,” he laughs.

Dante enjoyed his first job as a trade reviewer, but when friends moved to Los Angeles to work with Roger Corman, they encouraged him to join them.

“They said come out, see what you might like to do. So I did, and I started editing trailers. You really have to cut to the essentials with trailers. Some films were good, some weren’t, but the other trailer editor, Allan Arkush, and I both learned a lot from working on them all.”

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Above and below, Dante receives the Sierra Spirit Award from longtime friend and ensemble actor Robert Picardo, who hilarious played the role of “Cowboy” in Dante’s Innerspace.

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Eventually, Dante and Arkush asked to make their own film. They decided on the title Hollywood Boulevard, and put together a film that followed the iconic formula of many of Corman’s genre pictures at the time. The script riffed on the “three girls” formula popular at the time.

“We made our three girls starlets as opposed to nurses and teachers. But all the films basically it was three girls having adventures and taking their clothes off. Making them starlets, we could use existing action footage from disparate trailers, jungle settings, Bonnie and Clyde type settings, sci fi, we had actions scenes for all of that. We wrote the story around the stock footage we had access too, and basically cast our three girls in each of these types of film. It ended up being a pretty accurate depiction of being a starlet and making movies in the 70s,” he recalls.

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Above, Dante chats after receiving his award with Robert Picardo and festival programmer Paul Sbrizzi.

Although the film had a limited release – “just another movie thrown out into the drive-in world,” Dante says – later it was considered to have a “certain charm. But it’s so politically incorrect it’s embarrassing.”

But without having crafted the film, Dante says he wouldn’t be talking to us today.

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“We went back to editing, but the trailers improved because Roger was distributing some quality films by directors like Fellini and François Truffaut,” Dante relates. “We wanted to make more films ourselves. Two projects came up: Piranha, and Rock n’ Roll High School. I preferred the latter, but Allan wanted that project, so I got Piranha.”

Piranha marked the real start of Dante’s career.

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“It came to me as not very good script, but John Sayles was one of the talented young people on Corman’s short list. He was hired to rewrite it, and added a lot of satire to it and some political angles, both of which pleased me. We made a somewhat unexpected take on what would’ve been a drive-in movie exploitation film otherwise. It kind of got me noticed,” Dante says self-deprecatingly.

Dante has had a recent series, Splatter, produced for Netflix, and he says the film industry itself has changed; he prefers to come up with his own ideas and projects and work on his own funding. “Things are so different today. No one comes to you with a script and says let’s make this movie. They come up with a project, and if you’re interested you become attached to it while they try to raise money for it using your name. You spend more time begging for money than you do filmmaking.”

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Regardless of how the process has changed, Dante lives, breathes, and loves movies, calling the movie-going experience itself a spiritual one.

His filmmaking sensibility is finely honed. “Writing reviews in the late sixties and 70s , I covered such a cross-section of films, even porno films. I had a really good handle on the business, I didn’t even realize I’d put away as much knowledge about the movies as I had, and it really helped me in Hollywood.”

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His magazine writing also contributed to the respect Dante shows to his writers. He’s well known for providing remuneration in the form of a small on-screen part simply to get the writer on-set.

“It started with Piranha. I wanted John Sayles on the set to work things into the script that I’d found when we were scouting locations. I like to have the writer around, and the only way to get them on location is to give them a part.  It’s important to have the writer there to rework or add to a script. If it ain’t on the page, it ain’t on the stage,” Dante asserts. “With Piranha, we used a ‘resort’ called Aquarena Springs. There were dancing chickens, and Ralph the Swimming Swine as a part of the attraction. I wanted Sayles to add the location into the script, so I brought him down to our location.”

With many of Dante’s films depicting fantastical elements – such as the miniaturization premise of Innerspace, which screened at the festival as part of the tribute to Dante,  we asked what the director would do now when it comes to such elements.

“It’s difficult to do something like that now,” Dante ruminates. “Everything has been done really, including self-aware movies like Scream, that have highlighted all the cliches. It’s hard to come up with something new and still give the audience the kind of genre film they want to see. There’s a limit to how far you can go off the beaten track,” he notes.

He cites Cabin in the Woods as an example of a film in which “they turned audience expectations on their head, but that’s tricky to pull off, although the audience gets more for their money so to speak. Still, that script sat on the shelf for three years before it was produced.”

One aspect that affects filmmaking today most strongly, Dante believes, is the use of technology, from drone shots to CGI, which the director didn’t have when he crafted Innerspace. Instead, he relied on actors, a witty script, and techniques from well-crafted models to break-away clothing to handle the action. “Today, technology is the tail that’s now wagging the dog,” he says. “It’s the reason we get the movies we do, in order to utilize it.”

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Above, Dante, Festival Director Shira Dubrovner, and actor Robert Picardo.

As to Innerspace, even without today’s technology, the story holds up, the script is bright and fast paced, and the limited effects used still play well without looking dated. “It works,” Dante attests. “The comedy holds up. Originally they wanted it to be a straight spy movie, but I thought it was too silly.  So it became a comedy.”

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A comedy like much of Dante’s work, which has stood the tests of time and technology, reflecting the director’s intelligence and creativity and entertaining generations of film goers.

  • Genie Davis; All Photos: Jack Burke