2. L2 | SceneNewspaper.com | Appleton • Fox Cities | February 2016
Chic Unique Affordable
216 Main Street Menasha WI
111 W. Fulton St., Waupaca, WI
therevivalmail@gmail.com
165 North Park Avenue
Neenah, WI 54956-2294
Telephone: 920.751.4658
bmmglass.com
Free General Admission for Everyone, Always
This exhibition is supported in part by a grant from theWisconsin Arts Board with funds from the state of
Wisconsin andThe National Endowment for the Arts. A very special thank you goes to LinoTagliapietra, Inc.,
Schantz Galleries and Bonnie Marx for assistance in organizing the exhibition.
Transcending Time
a Survey of Works in Glass by Italian Maestro
Lino Tagliapietra
October 8, 2015 • February 14, 2016
Free Admission–Hours: TU–SA, 10am to 4:30pm, SU 1–4:30pm
A A C GArt Alliance for Contemporary Glass
Fenice, 2011
Photo by Russell Johnson
165 N. Park Avenue
Neenah
bmmglass.com
3. February 2016 | Appleton • Fox Cities | SceneNewspaper.com | L3
Advertising deadline for March is February 20 at 5 p.m. Submit ads to
ads@scenenewspaper.com.The SCENE is published monthly by Calumet
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CONTRIBUTORS
L8
L6
COVER STORY
R18 Wildwood Film Festival
FINE ARTS
R6 Foxy Finds
FOOD & DRINK
R2 Brewmaster
R4 Bravissimo to A’Bravo
ENTERTAINMENT
L6 Salsa Manzana
R4 Iola Winter Carnival
R5 Oshkosh Public Museum
R8 Dobie Maxwell
R8 “Monkey in the Middle”
R10 Miss Molly to Release
“Snow”
R12 Dracula
R13 Peridot releases “Lonely
Work”
R14 Postcards from Milwaukee
R15 Eaa’s Hops & Props
R16 Concert Watch
R18 Wildwood Film Festival
NEWS & VIEWS
L7 Media Rants
L8 Rohn’s Rants
L9 Right-Wing Nut
OUTDOORS
R17 Rob Zimmer
EVENT CALENDARS
R20 Live Music
L24 The Big Events
CONTENTS
Steve Lonsway
Patrick Mares
Jean Detjen
Dobie Maxwell
George Halas
Blaine Schultz
Rob Zimmer
Jane Spietz
Joshua Grover-David
Patterson
Tony Palmeri
Rohn W Bishop
Robert E Meyer
APPLETON • FOX CITIES
EDITION
5 O’clock Somewhere
Michiel’s Menasha
4. L4 | SceneNewspaper.com | Appleton • Fox Cities | February 2016
Picture Yourself in Winnebago County Parks!
Have we got a trail for you!
Trail may vary slightly due to
snow conditions.
5. February 2016 | Appleton • Fox Cities | SceneNewspaper.com | L5
Picture Yourself in Winnebago County Parks!
Have we got a trail for you!
Trail may vary slightly due
to snow conditions.
6. L6 | SceneNewspaper.com | Appleton • Fox Cities | February 2016
ENTERTAINMENT // SALSA MANZANA
BY GEORGE HALAS
As previously reported by The Inquisition, Salsa
Manzana is one of the most fun bands in the Fox Cities
and plays music to which one simply must dance.
On February 21st at The Lawrence University
Memorial Chapel at 7:00 p.m. (doors open at 6:30
p.m.), there will be a unique opportunity to have fun,
dance and support a good cause. Salsa Manzana will
join forces with Zeke and Pamela Cribbs of Boogie
Ballroom Dance for an evening of music and dancing
to support BLUME Haiti (Building Leaders Using
Music Education), a non-profit organization that seeks
to change the life trajectory of children in Haiti by sup-
porting music programs throughout the island.
Led by Professor of Music Janet Anthony, Lawrence
has been involved in Haiti for almost twenty years.
“I first went to Haiti in 1996,” Anthony said.
“Since then almost 80 students and several faculty,
Jose Encarnacion, Director of Jazz Studies, being the
latest, have gone to Haiti to teach with me. In 2012,
along with Haitian colleagues and a number of long-
term volunteer teachers including four LU alumni, we
formed BLUME Haiti (http://www.blumehaiti.org/),
a non-profit that works with Haitian and international
partners to develop leadership skills, awaken individual
potential and create opportunities for social and civic
collaboration and economic development through
music education and performance.”
In addition to this fabulous 12-piece band featur-
ing some of the Fox Cities’ best musicians – including
Encarnacion, as well as other LU professors and former
students - playing salsa, merengue, Brazilian, Latin jazz,
cha cha, bolero and other fun music, the suggested
$10.00 donation ($5 for students) includes an auc-
tion of painted cellos, an open dance floor and a dance
lesson with Zeke and Pamela Cribbs.
Salsa Manzana coming
to Lawrence University
7. NEWS & VIEWS // MEDIA RANTS
February 2016 | SceneNewspaper.com | L7
BY TONY PALMERI
Since 1976, Sonoma State University’s
Project Censored has challenged the news
media to meet their First Amendment
responsibilities. Annually the Project
compiles a volume of news stories “under-
reported, ignored, misrepresented, or
censored in the United States.” Walter
Cronkite said that “Project Censored is
one of the organizations that we should
listen to, to be assured that our newspapers
and our broadcasting outlets are practicing
thorough and ethical journalism.” Bestsell-
ing author and activist Naomi Wolf asserts
that, “Project
Censored is a
lifeline to the
world’s most
urgent and
significant
stories.”
P r o j e c t
C e n s o r e d
is famous
i t s n o n -
traditional
definition of
censorship,
referring to it
as “anything
that interferes
with the free
flow of infor-
mation in a
society that purports to have a free press.”
They argue that censorship includes not
just stories that were never published, but
also “those that get such restricted distri-
bution that few in the public are likely to
know about them.”
Censored 2016: Media Freedom on the
Line (Seven Stories Press) continues the
Project’s annual exploration of what a
panel of judges determines to be the top 25
most censored stories of the year.
The top three are (1) “Half of global
wealth owned by the 1 percent,” (2) “Oil
industry illegally dumps fracking wastewa-
ter,” and (3) “89 percent of Pakistani drone
victims not identifiable as militants.”
I’d say that #3 is a good answer to the
question “why do they hate us?” In fact,
just about every story covered by Project
Censored is an answer to the question
of why there is so much despair and ten-
sion in the world. If mainstream media
met its responsibility to give the stories
proper treatment, we would of course not
see an end to despair and tension. But we
WOULD see less ignorance and confusion
about the causes of trouble in the world,
and less ignorance always leads to more
positive action on behalf of reform.
Over the years when I have written
about Project Censored, some readers have
responded by saying that the organization’s
approach to censorship seems too con-
spiratorial. Such readers argue that news
media can only cover so much given time
and space constraints, and to favor some
stories over others probably has more to
do with commercial pressures and “giving
the audience what it wants,” rather than
actively “censoring,” certain stories. I think
there is some legitimacy to that critique;
the northeast Wisconsin corporate media
wall to wall Packer coverage for 20 to 30
weeks out of the year probably has more
to do with a ratings calculation as opposed
to news directors willingly dumbing down
the audience’s knowledge of critical labor,
political, environmental and other chal-
lenges facing regional communities.
Sometimes censorship is the simple
result of journalistic laziness.
My spouse, Lori and I recently experi-
enced the consequences of journalistic lazi-
ness when she decided to take out nomi-
nation papers to run in the April election
for Oshkosh Common Council. When
she took out the papers in December, she
was told by the Oshkosh City Clerk’s office
that she needed to obtain 200-400 signa-
tures by January 5th. When I asked my
friend and former Oshkosh Mayor Paul
Esslinger if he could get some signatures,
he pointed out that the requirement was
actually 100-200 signatures. Republican
Senator Rick Gudex and Republican Rep-
resentative Jeremy Thiesfeldt were able to
get the law changed so as to promote the
entry of more candidates in city council
races. When Lori showed up to get her
120 signatures certified on January 4th,
she was told by the Clerk’s office that the
requirement for Oshkosh was still 200-400
signatures; for some unclear reason they
believed the law did not apply in a place
represented by one of its chief sponsors
(Senator Gudex). Even the members of the
Oshkosh Common Council we contacted
about the signature requirement were not
aware of the law. On the morning of Janu-
ary 5th, the Clerk’s office contacted Lori
to say that they called the Government
Accountability Board in Madison and that
in fact the requirement was 100-200 sig-
natures. Lori will be on the ballot in April.
We will never know if potential candidates
were deterred from running because they
were given inaccurate information.
Sure, the Clerk’s office should know the
law. But the real problem in my judgement
was that the Gannett press, local television
and local radio simply did an awful job
of reporting on the impending campaign
season, and the requirements for running.
These are the same media who regularly
lament the shortage of candidates.
I would argue that the mass media
minimization of
the enthusiasm
for Bernie Sand-
ers’ presidential
campaign was
the most cen-
sored national
story of 2015.
Sa n d e r s h a s
spoken to record
crowds, raised
huge amounts
of money from
mostly small
donations, and
c o m p l e t e l y
shifted the Dem-
ocratic Party pri-
mary debate to
the left. He also
polls well against any Republican nominee.
All that, and yet to the New York Times
and other establishment media, Sanders is
virtually invisible.
One New York Times article quoted a
senior citizen Trump supporter who said
that, “This election is the first in my life
where we can change what it means to be
a Republican.”
Memo to the Times: the same is true
for the Democrats this year—your readers
would know that, if you would stop cen-
soring Bernie’s campaign!
Tony Palmeri (palmeri.tony@gmail.com) is
a professor of communication studies at UW
Oshkosh.
Censored in 2015
8. NEWS & VIEWS // ROHN’S RANTS
L8 | SceneNewspaper.com | February 2016
BY ROHN W. BISHOP
Late in 2015 State Senator Rick Gudex
announced he would not be seeking
another term as a state senator. This was
disappointing news because Rick Gudex
is a unique politician. Coming from a
blue collar private sector manufactur-
ing background, Gudex understood the
plight of regular middle class Wisconsites,
unlike much of the political class who float
through life looking for ways to enhance
their government pension.
Gudex was also unique in another way,
he wasn’t a bull sh**er. It takes a special
kind of ‘profile in courage,’ to represent
what has become an evenly divided dis-
trict, and tell people the truth, instead of
what they want to hear.
Gudex would speak to a room and
explain to people that the transportation
budget is a mess, and that we have trans-
portation projects that are important to
complete, both for our economy and the
safety of our drivers, but to pay for it we
need to raise the gas tax and the registra-
tion fee. Not exactly a popular position.
He had to tell both union guys, and
some of the area’s largest employers (and
Republican Party donors) both of whom
strongly opposed ‘Right to Work’ legisla-
tion, that he was voting for ‘Right to Work’
because he believes in the freedom to
choose, while at the same time explaining
to conservative activists being whipped up
by Charlie Sykes that he opposed repeal-
ing ‘Prevailing Wage,’ because those same
union guys and area employers depended
on the wage to earn a good living.
Most importantly, Gudex was a strong
advocate for the unborn, and our Second
Amendment Rights, while at the same
time he would also be a strong supporter
of Governor Walker and defender of ACT
10; while representing the senate district
with the second most government workers
living within it.
Not an easy task.
Facing a tough, but likely re-election
bid in 2016, and a leadership team he
believes threw him under the ‘Prevailing
Wage’ bus, Gudex decided to accept an
offer, and return to the private sector.
Seeing that Rick Gudex was the only
senator who’d ever show up on time for
events, he’s probably more suited for the
private sector anyway.
Now What?
Once Assembly Representatives
Michael Schraa and Jeremy Thiesfeldt
made it clear they had no interest in run-
ning, the Republican Party is wisely turn-
ing to another blue collar private sector
guy to succeed Gudex, Republican Party
of Fond du Lac County Chairman Dan
Feyen.
Much like Gudex four years ago, Feyen
starts a campaign with low name ID, little
money, and is not the preferred candidate
of the ‘Madison establishment.’ However,
after close to a decade of behind-the-
scenes grassroots work in the conservative
Republican movement, Feyen is very well
connected and is off to a good fundraising
start.
Feyen, 47, has a connect-ability to
the working class district that is the 18th.
With one of his children attending UW-
Madison and another in public high
school, it’s an “everyman” story that many
can relate to, and in a year of crabby voters
looking for outsiders to run, it might be a
perfect fit. (Full disclosure: I serve as Treasure
for the FDL GOP and am a volunteer on
Feyen’s campaign.)
In what is likely to be an expensive
race that could determine control of the
state senate, it’s likely to be a hard fought
and contentious race. The 18th senate
district was once a Republican safe seat,
with Scott McCallum and Carol Roessler
holding onto the seat for many years, easily
winning re-election, but since 2008 it’s
become something of toss-up.
That said, I think this seat still leans
Republican. In 2008, with no incumbent
in the race, Randy Hopper was elected over
Jessica King by 163 votes, in a terrible year
to be a Republican and when Obama was
winning Wisconsin by 14 points. Hopper
would lose a post ACT-10 recall election
in 2011, but only by 1,874 votes, at the
height of the ACT-10 backlash, and during
his messy divorce. A year and a half later,
in 2012, another bad year for Republicans,
Rick Gudex would reclaim the seat for the
GOP with a 601 vote victory over King.
I also contend the 2016 electorate
won’t be as Democratic as it was in 08
and 12, when people, especially young
people, were jazzed up to vote for America’s
first black president. Hillary Clinton, the
Obama of 2016, just doesn’t excite people
as much as did the Obama of 2008.
In 2000 and 2004 George W. Bush
lost Wisconsin by very close margins,
both years in which Carol Roessler easily
won re-election. Assuming an electorate
more matching of historical norms, and no
major screw-ups by the Republicans, (like
nominating Trump) this is a seat the GOP
should be able to hold onto.
What will be interesting to watch in
the battle for control of the chamber is,
will there be other retirements on the GOP
side? Can Dave Hansen survive his “tweet-
gate” scandal? Will former Packer Kabeer
Gbaja-Biamila challenge Hansen? Will the
GOP find a credible challenger to Jennifer
Schilling?
2016. It should be an interesting year!
Rohn W. Bishop is a monthly contributor to
Scene Newspapers.
Follow Rohn on Twitter: @RohnWBishop
http://new.scenenewspaper.com/category/
entertainment/rohns-rants/
The 18th Senate District and the
Fight for Control of the Senate
10. R2 | SceneNewspaper.com | February 2016
FOOD & DRINK // BREWMASTER
BY STEVE LONSWAY
This month’s beer report was derived
from a recent purchase at our local beer
outlet. The brew team of Stone Arch Brew
House are hopheads at heart so we wanted
to focus on more of a malty brew for this
article.
To get off our normally beaten path a
bit, we chose to go with a Belgian-style that
accents the maltiness of the brew. Another
reason this was purchased is that every
year, to celebrate our anniversary, we brew
a Grand Cru. Ours is named Inaugural
Brew Grand Cru and when we release it
each year on January 11th, we bring out
samples from our previous batches. We
offer lateral tastings of the Grand Cru
and this past month we offered four years
worth. It is astonishing the changes that
transpire during the years of cold storage.
It really adds complexity to an already very
complex beer and really rounds out the
smoothness. So with the Inaugural Brew
Grand Cru fresh on our minds, we chose
to report on Ale Asylum’s Mercy Grand
Cru.
The blue, black and white label of the
Mercy made the purchasing decision a bit
easier. Three very unique, demonic figures
standing as if on guard with arms crossed
almost daring you to buy it. Above their
confident heads is a brief description of the
beer that resides within. A nice touch for
those who may not be all that familiar with
the Grand Cru style.
As we poured the long neck bottles
into our snifters (which is the glassware
we would recommend for this style), very
little head appeared on the surface. The
carbonation is evident in taste but not so
much in its appearance. As we worked our
ways through the samples, there was little
evidence of lacing.
The appearance was pleasant in the
glass. Deep mahogany amber with off-
white, almost khaki colored head.
In the nose of the Mercy Grand Cru,
several very distinctive notes were recorded.
We detected plum, dates, fig, banana,
clove, cherry, brown sugar, dark fruits, malt
and strong
B e l g i a n
yeast tones.
As a Grand
Cru style
d i c t a t e s ,
complexity
in the nose
is a must and
Ale Asylum
did not leave
us hanging.
The fla-
vors detected
by our team
were even
more com-
plex than
t h e n o s e
produced.
The same
dark fruits,
fig, clove,
and cherry
tones came through in the flavor as well as
red wine, spiced fruit, fusel alcohol, candy
sugar, caramel, and intense fruitiness.
The Mercy Grand Cru finishes with an
obvious warming sensation, very tart and
a little on the sharp side. As time passes, a
whisky smooth finish was experienced, and
a bit of a CO2 prickle at the very end.
Food pairings for this beer should start
with dark fruits, aged cheddar cheese, brie
or better yet, bleu cheese. A beef stew or
shepherds pie would certainly work as well
as a rich cheesecake for the dessert aspect.
Head brewer Craig personally paired it
with that days Stone Cellar lunch special;
Uphoff Farms ham and brick cheese on a
pretzel roll, and he claimed it was destiny.
A good music pairing would most likely be
an old 90’s jazz band with sharp horns on
vinyl.
On to the makers; Ale Asylum. Housed
at 2002 Pankratz Street in Madison, Wis-
consin you will find the makers of the
Mercy. With an industrial motif you can
enjoy their tasting room and unique menu
items that focus a bit more on simplicity
and aggressive flavors. The menu is a bit
limited, but all items come with a sug-
gested beer pairing. They will fill growlers
as well as sell their six packs and have a
decent array of Ale Asylum gear available
for purchase as well. They do offer tours
every Sunday on the hour between noon
and 5:00 p.m.
Founded in 2005, Ale Asylum outgrew
their original facility and has since moved
into a 45,000 square foot building on Pan-
kratz Street at a cost of $8 million. With
the goal of going statewide in distribution
they are experiencing crazy growth as many
other craft brewers around the country
are experiencing. With their new facility,
larger tanks and super-fast bottler, they
are set for success. Of course it helps they
make awesome brews and have captivated
their customer base, or “inmates” as they
are called.
FINAL WORD: Have Mercy! You
will not regret that decision.
Mercy Grand Cru – Ale Asylum
Crescent Moon
Architectural Salvage
since 1987
Antiques & Salvage
537 N. Main St. Oshkosh
(920) 232-MOON (6666)
www.crescentmoonantiquesandsalvage.com
12. R4 | SceneNewspaper.com | February 2016
FOOD & DRINK // A’BRAVO
BY PATRICK MARES
We blew into A Bravo’ on a cold and
blustery winter night. The atmosphere in
the establishment was a nice counterbal-
ance to the wind outside. While the
weather may have kept some folks home,
there were a few of we hearty souls provid-
ing a nice background buzz.
As a dangerously smooth spiced hot
rum warmed us (and was the best use of
cinnamon I’ve found in recent memory)
July Beaudwin, co-owner and hands-on
manager for the restaurant, provided a his-
tory lesson.
“A Bravo’ was originally located in
the old Larson Canning Factory office,”
Beaudwin said. But after seven years, the
promised upgrade of the space never hap-
pened.”
Originally, July had partnered with her
sister Greta, but after the move, Mary Faye
and Dana Demara joined the team.
Fay in particular brings a skill set not
always present in a cookery, balancing
the books and the paying of finances and
vendors.
“When we started, A’ Bravo had
only nine tables,” Fay said “now we
have thirty. That’s a big step up. It’s
full service lunch and dinner, plus an
incredible Sunday brunch, and we
have a full bar.”
The staff has input as well.
“We invite all who work for us
to offer their opinions,” July said “to
help decide the season’s upcoming
recipes and menu items. We think
it’s a good idea to get
everyone’s thoughts. We’ll
brainstorm together, and
we’re all really proud of that.
Plus, it’s fun, and afterward,
everyone feels fat because we
eat a lot of what might get on
the final menu. Hey, we have
to taste it to know what we’re
talking about with our custom-
ers...right?” (laugh)
Seared Ahi Tuna
The seared Ahi picked up more of the
smokey grilled flavor than I’d typically
associate with this dish. Solid, and differ-
ent from the pack, its no wonder this is a
staple.
Sesame encrusted ahi tuna over jas-
mine rice, spicy spinach, with a sesame
vinaigrette & spicy peanuts & almonds.
Suggested wine: Ponzi Pinot Gris
Lobster Mac & Cheese - The Best Ever
This lobster pasta was just perfectly
but-
tery, complementing
the prominent chunks of lobster within.
An incredibly creamy blend of four gour-
met cheeses and lobster pieces, served
piping hot with truffle toast on the side.
Bianca Pizza
Cutting out the tomatoes is a bold step
for pizza. Once again, more savory than its
traditional cousin with red sauce.
Grilled flatbread topped with a mild
garlic cream sauce, mozzarella, prosciutto,
fresh basil chiffonade and finished with a
drizzle of truffle oil, a sprinkle of panko,
then baked.
Bravissimo to A’Bravo
Iola Winter Carnival
ENTERTAINMENT // IOLA WINTER CARNIVAL
13. February 2016 | SceneNewspaper.com | R5
ENTERTAINMENT // BE THE DINOSAUR
Find us on Facebook!
LEINIE’S FRIDAY FISH FRY!
Beer Battered Shrimp
(Thai Chili, Garlic Butter or Regular)
Lightly Hand-Breaded Baby Walleye
(Regular or Cajun)
Leinie’s Beer Battered Cod
Crispy Panko Breaded Cod
Hand-Breaded Haddock
(Regular or Cajun)
Hand-Breaded Butterflied Lake Perch
(Regular or Cajun)
Grilled 8 Oz. Ribeye
Surf N Turf Grilled 8 Oz. Ribeye with Beer
Battered Shrimp
UPCOMING EVENTS:
February 6 - Kitty Corona
February 13 - No Stone Soup
February 20 - Dave Olsen Band
February 27 - Grayling Pingel
March 5 - The Hits
Where
GOOD TIMES
& GOOD FOOD
come together!
live Music • Food • Great atmosphere
Book Your Private
Parties with Us!
The Bridge Bar & Restaurant
101 W Main St. Fremont, Wisconsin 54940
(920) 446–3300
www.bridgebarfremont.com
The annual Deck the Halls holiday
experience at the Oshkosh Public Museum
has truly become a community event.
In staying true to its mission, the
Museum provided free admission to 526
children under age 18 during this exhibi-
tion and over 1,500 adults took advantage
of the reduced admission rate. In addition,
over 200 local students and caregivers vis-
ited as part of a group field trip.
Holiday decorations reminiscent of
the times filled the historic Sawyer home
from November to January, and the life-
size Christmas Village exhibit windows
showcased a collection of toys on loan from
volunteers and community members.
The 2016 Christmas Village exhibit
theme is “miniature holiday trees,” and
once again the Museum is reaching out to
the community to help decorate the display
cases. Contact Curator Debra Daubert
at 920-236-5767 or email ddaubert@
ci.oshkosh.wi.us for more information if
you are interested in donating a decorated
tree.
An exhibition opening premier for Be
the Dinosaur™ will be held on Monday,
February 1. The Museum will be open from
10 am to 4:30 pm for this special event,
and Joseph E. Peterson, Ph.D., Assistant
Professor of Geology at UW-Oshkosh, will
present “Behaviors of Dinosaurs” starting
at 3 pm.
Dr. Peterson has been studying various
injuries in Cretaceous dinosaurs over the
last ten years. He will discuss his research
on these injuries, or “paleopathologies,”
and how they can provide insight into the
paleobiology and behaviors of dinosaurs.
The lecture is free with general admission
and open to the public. Light refreshments
will be served. Pre-registration is requested
by contacting Karla Szekeres at 920-236-
5763 or email kszekeres@ci.oshkosh.wi.us.
Be the Dinosaur™ is a groundbreaking
fusion of state-of-the-art video game tech-
nology and traditional exhibits featuring
full-size dinosaur bones, a paleontology
field station, a Safari Jeep and much more.
Unleash your wild side and experience the
largest and most complex restoration of an
extinct ecosystem ever created. The exhibit
will be on view until May 16.
Regular hours at the Oshkosh Public
Museum, 1331 Algoma Boulevard, are
Tuesday-Saturday from 10 am−4:30 pm
and Sunday from 1 pm−4:30 pm. For more
information about the Museum’s program-
ming events and exciting exhibits, visit
oshkoshmuseum.org, call 920.236.5799 or
email museum@ci.oshkosh.wi.us.
About the Oshkosh Public Museum
The Oshkosh Public Museum is a
regional history museum, nationally
accredited by the American Alliance of
Museums. Housed in the historic Sawyer
home since 1924, the Museum is entrusted
with the care of approximately 250,000
artifacts and historical documents repre-
senting all aspects of the region’s people
and heritage. The Museum is dedicated to
excellence in preservation of historical col-
lections strongly focused around the Fox
River and the extensive Winnebago water-
shed; interactively communicating the
story of Oshkosh and the Lake Winnebago
region through well-researched, quality
exhibitions, programs and publications;
and engaging guests in ways that inspire
discovery. For admission, hours and more
information about the Museum’s exciting
exhibits and events, visit oshkoshmuseum.
org, call 920.236.5799 or email
museum@ci.oshkosh.wi.us.
Oshkosh Public
Museum Be the
Dinosaur Exhibit
Opening!
14. R6 | SceneNewspaper.com | February 2016R6 | SceneNewspaper.com | September 2015
FINE ARTS // FOXY FINDS
Foxy FindsBY JEAN DETJEN,ARTFUL LIVING
Cheers to living
artFULLY in the
heart of Wisconsin!
Send your sugges-
tions for Jean’s Foxy
Finds to jdetjen@
scenenewspaper.com
Illuminate your world with this repurposed globe pendant light
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These eco-friendly
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Found at The Gathered
Earth, Appleton, a
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spirit.
What’s not to love
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Hang on a wall or
prop on a shelf singly
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Discovered at Art
on Artesia by Lisa
Ritchie, Malone.
Choose from a vari-
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Alpaca sweat-
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A variety of
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Rose Quartz and Serenity Pantone 2016 colors of the
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Top off your boots in style with these Crochet Lace Leg
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Find these in the trendy new accessory line at Joseph’s
Shoes, Appleton, serving the Fox Cities with great service,
footwear and more from all over the world since 1971.
15. February 2016 | SceneNewspaper.com | R7
Hwy Q over looking the Chain O’Lakes
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Featuring “Reverend Raven” on guitar and vocals
Westside Andy on blues harp and & “P.T.” bass
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Featured artists Warren Wiegratz on Sax, and
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16. R8 | SceneNewspaper.com | February 2016
ENTERTAINMENT // DOBIE MAXWELL
BY DOBIE MAXWELL
There comes a point when I think it’s
acceptable to ask just how much technol-
ogy do we really need? I think that point
is now. I can’t speak for anyone else, but
I’ve been deeply over my head with all of it
for several years now. Five year old kids can
run circles around me, and I know it.
Email was pretty cool, I must admit. I
think I bought my first computer in 1996
or right around there, and it was a desktop
behemoth somewhat akin to the old wood
grain TVs our grandparents had. I had a
dial up AOL connection and I thought I
was George Jetson. The future had arrived.
I reconnected with old friends online,
and made new ones. I was fine with that
level of business and had it not gone any
further I would be a happy man today. I
was never into video games or at the cut-
ting edge of needing to have the latest
gadgets, and that’s where I got trampled by
the herd.
Cell phones were another hurdle. I
scratched and clawed against getting one
for years, as I just couldn’t see a practical
need to carry a phone with me for any
other reason than my car breaking down.
With my luck with cars I should have been
one of the very first on the planet to have
one.
I finally relented around the year 2000
and signed up for a cell phone when I was
working in radio in Salt Lake City. The sta-
tion had a group discount plan, and I still
remember joking on air about how stupid I
thought it was for everyone to have to haul
them around like modern walkie talkies.
I found nothing wrong whatsoever
with how the old system was with a phone
at home, and others located at strategic
locations that could be used by anyone
who needed them. Why would we all need
to carry our own? Well, I guess none of us
actually need to, but it sure has caught our
fancy.
Who walking the earth in the 21st
Century could imagine life without a cell
phone? I left mine at home the other day
and needed to call someone, and actually
tried to find a pay phone. Good luck with
that search. I might as well look for two,
and if I’d happen to find them I’ll bet
Jimmy Hoffa will be talking to Amelia
Earhart. I am officially a member of the
last dinosaur generation.
That’s funny to me, as my grandparents
used to look at me as Mr. Spoiled Brat
with all the new technology they never
had – including indoor plumbing and run-
ning water. I heard about all their struggles
growing up, ranging from milking cows to
cutting wood for heat, and I’d laugh about
it.
Now everyone is laughing at me. I
was at the cell phone store the other day
because my, ‘what is supposed to be a smart
phone,’ wasn’t functioning properly. It
turns out the phone was totally fine, rather
I was the moron for not knowing how to
program it.
Phone - smart. Owner - not. How
ironic.
The latest obstacle I’ve been fighting is
Twitter. Everyone seems to be on it, but I
can’t for the life of me see why. Short blasts
of meaningless tripe from Ashton Kutcher
or Nicki Minaj aren’t a priority in my life,
but neither was all the other stuff I now
couldn’t live without.
I think I need to be very careful before
I totally poo poo the idea, but I’m too busy
with Facebook and Linkedin, and trying to
keep track of everything else I’m not able
to keep under control. Life has passed me
by.
Dobie Maxwell is a stand up comedian
and writer from Milwaukee. Visit
dobiemaxwell.com
‘TWITTER SHMITTER’
Unique Autobiography of Comedian/
Radio Personality Features Bad Luck,
Bikers and a Childhood Best Friend Who
Committed TWO Bank Robberies. No
Joke!
Whatever “normal” is, long time
nationally touring comedian Dobie Max-
well isn’t it. His life is an amazing story of
constant turmoil. Dobie has an incredible
talent for being in the proverbial “wrong
place at the wrong time”…ALL the time
- which is fascinating and funny if it isn’t
YOU.
Some people get a rough start in life,
but Dobie’s start takes the cake, and then
some. Born to a drug-abusing mother and,
“Outlaws” motorcycle gang member father
in Milwaukee, he was estranged from two
siblings and raised by his paternal grand-
parents from five months old who divorced
when he was 11. By the time he finished
high school all Dobie had was his best
friend.
The two became closer than their actual
blood brothers, and were each other’s
trusted “go to” surrogate family support-
ing each other through thick and thin
including Dobie’s early years as a standup
comedian, local radio personality and pro
wrestling promoter. They were inseparable.
Dobie was fired from his radio dream
job, and called his friend to arrange a cross
country road trip to Las Vegas to cheer
them both up. His friend had lost his job
as head of security at a local bank, and
before their trip he decided to ROB that
same bank – and stash the money in the
trunk of a rental car they used for their
trip. Oddly enough, he never told Dobie
until almost a year later.
The FBI suspected his friend, but
could never prove it. Dobie was sworn to
secrecy because if he talked he would be an
unwitting accomplice. Flush with the thrill
of getting away with it, his pal robbed the
very same bank AGAIN - this time in a
Gorilla Gram outfit. Who would possibly
rob a bank in such a wacky manner? Why,
a comedian of course! The FBI thought
that it was Dobie.
Dobie was faced with a horrible choice;
turn in his best friend or go to federal
prison for a crime he did not commit. Like
it or not – and he did not - Dobie became
the “Monkey in the Middle.”
“Monkey in the Middle” has every-
thing from heartache to high adventure, to
all out hilarity. The publisher is Eckhartz
Press (www.eckhartzpress.com) and the
official date of release is Monday March
14th, 2016 – Dobie’s birthday. There will
also be a live standup comedy show along
with a reading at Zanies Comedy Club
at 1548 North Wells Street in Chicago.
zanies.com
“Monkey in the Middle”
18. R10 | SceneNewspaper.com | February 2016
ENTERTAINMENT // THE SPANISH INQUISITION
BY GEORGE HALAS
There is a rich treasure trove of original
music being created in the Fox Cities and
some of it fits into pre-existing categories
like rock, jazz, country, pop, alt-rock, alt-
country, etc.
Then there is Miss Molly.
The Menasha-based duo, comprised of
keyboardist Molly Conrad and guitarist
Michael Theroux, incorporates so many
different and appealing elements into their
music that it fits in only one category:
outstanding.
Just a little more than two years after
the successful release of their debut album,
“Fly Tonight,” Conrad and Theroux are in
the studio putting the finishing touches on
“Snow,” which is targeted for a mid-March
release. It is a CD that developed organi-
cally into a concept album.
“We did not set out to do a concept
album,” Conrad said, “but as the songs
started coming together, we noticed that
they fit together and had a flow. We then
wrote an intro, an outro and a number
of instrumental passages that connect the
songs together.”
“The album is not just a bunch of songs
thrown together in random order,” Ther-
oux added. “I was listening to “Animals”
by Pink Floyd when we started – it has
a concept aspect to it – and our concept
started to emerge as we were recording. We
thought it would be cool to tie the songs
together.”
In addition to jazz, folk, rock, Irish and
Celtic influences, the duo cite Bruce Horn-
sby, Steve Winwood, Sarah MacLachlin,
Tory Amos, Amy Winehouse, and Willy
Porter as influences on the songwriting as
well as ethnic influences from the British
Isles, Spain, India and Africa.
The songwriting process is a collabora-
tive effort.
Conrad writes most of the melodies
and lyrics for the original songs.
“I start with piano, find chords that I
like, and the melody comes next,” she said.
“The lyrics usually flow when the melody
has been worked out.”
Theroux writes the guitar parts and
vocal harmonies as well as creating the
intros and outros, bridges and any instru-
mental passages the song might need,
much of which is initially improvised and
later worked into a solo that fits the song.
Performing as a duo developed organi-
cally as well. In 2011, Conrad wrote a song
called “Down.” Theroux heard her practic-
ing it, and joined in on guitar.
“It worked really well, so we wrote a few
more and formed “Miss Molly,” Conrad
said. “Michael was really into playing Irish
music at the time so we worked on several
traditional Irish tunes for our repertoire,
and this helped us land our first gig on St.
Patrick’s Day at Cannova’s.”
They’ve been playing as ‘Miss Molly’
for about four years now.
“Since that first show on St. Patrick’s
Day 2012 at Cannova’s in Neenah,” she
continued. “We were both playing music at
the time, but just not together. We started
messing around with some original songs
and found out we really clicked musically,
so we quit what we were doing and joined
forces. The rest is history. We still play
every other Sunday at Cannova’s.”
Conrad is originally from Appleton.
She was listening to music, taking piano
lessons and writing songs at nine years old.
“Before I got my first guitar at 10, I
was strumming on a badminton racket
and singing,” she said. “My friends and
I wrote songs together on the weekends
for fun. Our inspirations were ABBA and
Elton John as well as a lot of 80’s music
and alternative stuff. I was always in choir
and jazz vocal groups in college.”
A graduate of Appleton West, she
studied briefly at UW-Fox Valley and
the Minneapolis
College of Art and
Design before get-
ting a degree in Art
Education from the University of Min-
nesota. She played music in the folk scene
at the Uptown Bar, The Bryant Lake Bowl,
7th St. Entry and local coffee shops.
Both Conrad and Theroux teach music
in the Fox Cities area. She teaches piano
and composition at their studio in Mena-
sha while he teaches guitar, bass and several
other stringed and percussive instruments
at Island Music in Neenah.
Theroux grew up in Grand Forks,
North Dakota. He got his first guitar at
12 years old, inspired after attending a
Christopher Parkening concert with his
mother. He studied classical guitar for a
short time, but was really enamored with
70’s prog rock bands like Yes and ELP,
“with a large helping of the Stones and the
Beatles.” While in high school, he went
to the public library and discovered the
records of old blues masters like Son House
and Robert Johnson and dedicated much
of his playing to learning the blues.
He joined the Marines right after
high school and landed in California four
years later. While in Northern California,
Michael began studying Celtic, Middle
Eastern, and Indian Classical music - those
influences can be heard in much of his solo
playing.
A self-taught computer programmer,
he got a “lucrative offer” to do IT work in
Minneapolis and moved there on 2000.
Six years later, a job as a technical writer
for Plexus brought him to the Fox Cities.
He also began playing guitar in Unity The
Band at the time.
In addition to being a musician,
teacher, IT consultant, artist and researcher
who is going to school online to become
a certified homeopath, Theroux is also an
author whose new book, “Meetings With
Remarkable Kooks,” will be published very
soon. One of his previous books, “Rhyth-
mic Formative Forces of Music” is available
free at his web site, michaeltheroux.com.
In addition to releasing “Snow,” their
long-term objectives are straight forward.
“We want to keep writing, playing, and
performing music together,” Conrad said.
“We want to be an inspiration for other
musicians to write their own music and
share it with others.”
Miss Molly to Release
“SNOW” in time for Spring
Photo credit to Al Kolbeck
19. February 2016 | SceneNewspaper.com | R11
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20. R12 | SceneNewspaper.com | February 2016
ENTERTAINMENT // DRACULA
BY PATRICK MARES
On a Tuesday night, February 2nd
L.A. Theaterworks will be bringing a radio
play rendition of Brahm Stoker’s Dracula
to the Weidner Center. Much like the
old-is-new growth in podcast audio fiction,
L.A. Theaterworks brings literary audio
to millions of listeners. Their productions
are broadcast across the English speaking
world, and even play daily on the radio in
Beijing China.
We asked Associate Producer Anna
Lyse Erikson what separates a L.A. The-
aterworks’ productions from a traditional
play.
“It’s like being backstage at a radio
broadcast,” Erikson said “for instance the
sound of Dracula biting someone’s neck is
done by an actor taking a wedge of iceberg
lettuce and crunching it in his hands,
which is kinda fun. There are a lot of
sound effects which are done by the other
actors, doors opening and closing, lots of
things.”
She said that actors in their radio plays
also address the audience directly.
“Rather than scene partners kind of
facing each other and sharing the scene
with one another,” Erikson said “the audi-
ence, being this fourth wall, they see this
interaction as the actors are actually facing
the crowd and interacting with them as
much as with their scene partners.”
The live audience adds an additional
element to a radio play: visual.
There are of course a full set and actors
garbed in costume. Behind the action is a
screen, where animated drawings by Sean
Cawelti, their video designer, help bring
the play to life.
“There is a set and video projection
projected on a screen behind the actors,”
Erikson said. “Those are animated draw-
ings that move throughout the piece creat-
ing a really cool setting for it.”
Often the troupe will record one ver-
sion of the show for distribution and offer
another version tweaked for local audi-
ences. Since in this case the recorded tour
had been captured prior to this season, the
cast has been quite free to customize the
showings for their live audiences.
This production is a mix of old and
new.
“We chose Dracula because we wanted
to do something that was appealing to
popular culture,” Erikson said “and there’s
so much being done about zombies and
vampires right now. We choose our tours,
sometimes based on their social signifi-
cance, and sometimes on their entertain-
ment value, in
the thought that
this would be an
entertaining and
fun piece for the
audiences.”
S h e s a i d
that while the
costumes would
be period, or
at least an L.A.
Theaterworks
riff on that style:
the animations,
drawings of bats
and wolves, and
things that are
very important
to the story, are
attuned, not
to historical
accuracy, but
more modern
sensibilities.
While no one
is pulling out a
cell phone on
stage, the company is more interested in
presenting a truly creepy experience than
historical minutia.
The production itself runs 90 minutes
with no intermission.
“Which means like any
video or stage production,”
Erikson said “quite a bit
had to be cut out of the
book. The adaptation by
Charles Morey focuses on
Dr. Helsing. We discovered
a great way of telling the
story, because Dr. Van Hels-
ing’s journals are really what
shape the piece. And in a lot
of ways we found that he is
really the main character as
much as Dracula.”
L.A. Theaterworks just
celebrated its 40th anniver-
sary last year. Their founding
producer initially started out
with an organization called
Artists in Prison. Over the
years
it changed, evolving into a traditional the-
ater company and then transitioning the
radio plays they do now.
“We started recording plays for radio in
the mid 80s,” Erikson said. “There wasn’t
really another American company doing
that at the time.”
Erikson herself has been with the group
for five years, managing the casting, artistic
hiring, play selections, rights acquisitions,
and overall live production for L.A. The-
atreworks’ live and in-studio recordings
and tours.
L.A.’s recent productions have included
“In the Heat of the Night,” “The Gradu-
ate,” and Jane Austin’s “Pride and Preju-
dice,” but Erikson said there’s something
special about Bram Stoker’s masterpiece.
“With the undead so in the public
zeitgeist, we thought that this would be
an entertaining and fun piece for the audi-
ences of our tour.”
Dracula - Brought Back to Life!
21. February 2016 | SceneNewspaper.com | R13
ENTERTAINMENT // SERIOUSLY FUNNY
BY
C
Mikes Chamber Story
BY GEORGE HALAS
”Loving you is lonely work. I could use a
friend.”
For months, Trevor Jarvis sat with this
line before approaching Appleton native
Hillary Reynolds to help develop the song
into a duet. Now, a year later, Peridot has
released “Lonely Work” as their first single
with 91.1 The Avenue.
Peridot is a re-imagining of the Hillary
Reynolds Band, keeping Reynolds and
Jarvis from the HRB lineup along with
guitarist Marton Bisits.
“Over the last year, Hillary and I
had been writing all of this new material
together, and it just started to feel different
to us,” Jarvis said. “The process became
even more collaborative, my voice started
playing a bigger role along with hers, and
we reached a point where the music just
didn’t fit the band name anymore. Peri-
dot’s music is far more focused on what we
feel we’re best at which is folk music driven
by strong melodies and substantive lyrics.”
Rob Moore, vice-president of program-
ing of 91.1 The Avenue, is already a fan.
“The response we receive to Hillary and
Trevor’s music has always been notewor-
thy,” Moore said. “That’s why we are so
excited about Peridot. Sometimes new art-
ists come along who create an immediate
bond with the audience because the music
is at once both original and engaging. This
is true of Hillary’s recorded music as well
as her live performances. The fact that she
comes from our neck of the woods makes
it even more special.”
Lonely Work is accompanied by
a music video with a simple concept,
designed to marry with the song itself.
“The music video was filmed among
friends, champagne, and a small crew from
21summit Productions in Boston,” Reyn-
olds said. “We hatched the song in Trevor’s
apartment and it felt like the right place to
tell the story.”
Peridot will finish recording their
upcoming EP this winter and plan to visit
Wisconsin this spring for a concert mark-
ing its release.
Peridot Releases “LONELY WORK” with
91.1 the Avenue
22. R14 | SceneNewspaper.com | February 2016
ENTERTAINMENT // POSTCARD FROM MILWAUKEE
BY BLAINE SCHULTZ
Sure it would be possible to grab four
equally diverse musical acts based in Mil-
waukee, but the fact they all have recently
released albums demonstrates the ongoing
vitality of folks who have been at it for
decades. If the quote/unquote music biz
has become as harsh and cold as this Wis-
consin winter, check out these releases and
thaw your ears.
Drawing from Bluegrass, Celtic, folk,
Old Timey and all manner of acoustic
music, Frogwater is what happens when
you dedicate your life to making music.
Susan and John Nicholson have been
at it since 1997. The back cover image
of their recent cd Wide Rivers depicts an
ancient Martin acoustic hanging alongside
a fiddle, sporting a pair of fedoras. And
that image sums it up.
Capable of playing nearly any stringed
instrument, the Nicholson’s conjure land-
scapes of emotion and hint at stories with
their playing. Propulsive jigs come alive
like taut spider webs. This is music from
and for the ages. Susan’s bouncing pastoral
fiddle is supported by John’s sturdy rhythm
guitar. He returns the favor as his sprightly
plucking gets pushed by her cascading
bowed melodies to the drone of Sheila
Larkin’s pump organ. Elsewhere, “The
Travelogue Set” conjures Orson Welles’
Harry Lime moving through the streets of
Old Vienna.
If Frogwater’s music can be described as
pre-electricity, then let’s call Trolley post-
British Invasion.
Since the mid ‘90s the Milwaukee
quartet has trafficked in all manner of pop,
much of it power. With Caught in the
Darkness they spread their wings.
While still retaining that sense of mod
brashness, big hooks and fearless jangle,
the three songwriters continue to grow.
The wise guy listener might play “guess
the influence,” pointing to an Only Ones
reference or suggesting the royalties for a
certain bridge be addressed to Mr. Arthur
Lee. Yet all this does is prove these guys did
their homework.
The stew they come up with results in
an updated vibe utilizing vintage keyboard
sounds, Paul Wall and Mike Mike Perotto’s
ringing guitars and Terry Hackbarth’s
driving bass. Yet the glue that holds it all
together is John Phillip’s nuanced drum-
ming, setting the mood throughout.
The crackerjacks here is the final cut
“Take My Love,” a seemingly nice psy-
chedelic number that snakes its way down
a wormhole, turning itself inside out.
Then shedding its skin.This kind of sonic
monkey business suggests a meeting where
the Zombies and an undamaged Syd Barret
might have found audio verity common
ground. In this one tune, Trolley leapfrogs
over their days a pop hatchlings.
Xposed Foreheads, on the other hand
weren’t hatched, so much as grown in test
tubes. If you were lucky enough to survive
the heyday of MTV, welcome to your
nightmare.
Mark G.E., one-time commander
of cable-access television icon Joy Farm,
leads Xposed Foreheads’ social satire which
points back to the likes of DEVO, Oingo
Boingo and Kraftwerk. The irony here is
Joy Farm’s old lack of budget charm has
zoomed into the future where this band
can record using studio technology and
virtual reproduction of keyboards that
would have cost a small fortune back in the
day.
Not that it makes any difference to this
quintet of mischief makers. All sacred cows
are fair game on Choose To Be Human.
Social media, handheld devices, informa-
tion at our finger tips? Leave it to these
beavers to write a song called “I’m Not
Social,” whose lyrics are a laundry list of
how young moderns define social.
Local veterans Bob Jorin, Kelp Cholfs,
Carter Hunnicutt and Andy Stillin form
the nucleus of the band. Special guests
include ringers James Chance and Blaine
Reninger, along with Theresa Ala Mode
from Joy Farm. Listen at your own risk and
be prepared to think.
On Distant Planet Dr. Chow’s Love
Medicine writes Chapter Three in the
band’s history. Once characterized as “The
Rolling Stones fronted by Joe Cocker on
‘shrooms covering Frank Zappa,” these
guys prove to be an ageless express of punk/
garage energy. (Like the Trolley cd, this one
was also mastered by Neenah native Justin
Perkins at his Mystery Room Mastering
studio.)
Fronted by the antic Frank Chandek,
the band is anchored by the
rhythm section of drummer
Dan Glaser and bassist Joe
Polizzi. The low key fireworks
are provided by guitarists Paul
“The Fly” Lawson and Brian
Wensing, who may offhandedly
toss off shards of rockabilly
riffage, or a psychedelic light-
ning bolt with less than the
shrug of a shoulder.
With titles like the title cut
“61 Chevy,” and “Green Slime,”
Chow provides soundtracks to the best
B-movies you have never seen.
Postcard From Milwaukee
Trolley - Caught in the Darkness (Easter)
you can see what her drinking is doing to her...
but can you see what it’s doing to you?
find hope
and help
in Al-Anon
A l - A n o n / A l a t e e n
1-888-425-2666 www.al-anon.alateen.org
Dr. Chow’s Love Medicine – Distant Planet
Frogwater - Wide Rivers (BSM)
Xposed Foreheads – Chose to be Human
(Internal Combustion)
23. February 2016 | SceneNewspaper.com | R15
ENTERTAINMENT // HOPS & PROPS
Proceeds support EAA Air-
Venture Museum’s year-round
education programming
Beverages from around the world
accompanied by fine food and music high-
light this year’s edition of EAA’s popular
“Hops & Props” tasting fundraiser on
Saturday, March 5, from 7-10 p.m. at the
EAA AirVenture Museum in Oshkosh.
This is one of Wisconsin’s premier events
for beer connoisseurs. Proceeds support
EAA’s education programs.
More than 300 extraordinary beverages
are available from micro-breweries and
distributors from around the world, along
with delicious food and desserts. This year’s
food offerings include local Wisconsin
favorites from The Machine Shed in
Appleton.
Hops & Props tickets include entrance
to the museum, tasting guide, commemo-
rative tasting glass, hors d’oeuvres, and live
music throughout the evening.
Mary Ann Dilling is the EAA’s Director
of Events.
“Hops & Props has become an
extremely popular event for attendees,”
Dilling said “and the food and drink
exhibitors alike, with the fun festivities
all supporting EAA’s efforts to supply free
community programs through the year.
EAA can reach more people in the Fox
Valley with museum programs and activi-
ties through the support of those who join
us on this one-of-a-kind evening. It is defi-
nitely a fun night, with a greater purpose.”
Hops & Props offers a chance to meet
master brewers and understand the distin-
guishing characteristics of ales, lagers, and
hybrid or mixed styles of beers. Attendees
can learn about the brewing process and
history, and become discerning beverage
tasters.
In addition, the VIP Dining Experi-
ence offers an in-depth, more intimate
food and drink sampling experience. This
added gala begins at 5:30 p.m. with dinner
starting at 6.
This year’s event is hosted by Avery
Brewing of Boulder, Colorado, and
Becket’s Restaurant of Oshkosh. Guests
will be educated on the brewing process of
Avery’s specialty microbrew beers matched
by Becket’s culinary specialties.
Hops & Props general admission
tickets are $75 each ($65 for EAA mem-
bers). Limited tickets remain for the VIP
Dining Experience at $125 each ($115 for
EAA members). Tickets can be purchased
online at eaa.org or at the EAA AirVenture
Museum. Attendees must be 21 or older.
There are also special hotel rates available
that include shuttle transportation.
The EAA AirVenture
Museum is located just off Interstate 41 at
the Highway 44 exit in Oshkosh. The pre-
senting sponsor for EAA’s Hops & Props is
Festival Foods.
About EAA
EAA embodies the spirit of aviation
through the world’s most engaged commu-
nity of aviation enthusiasts. EAA’s 190,000
members and 1,000 local chapters enjoy
the fun and camaraderie of sharing their
passion for flying, building and restoring
recreational aircraft.
For more informa-
tion on EAA and
its programs, call
800-JOIN-EAA
(800-564-6322)
or go to eaa.org.
For continual news
updates, connect
with www.twitter.
com/EAA.
Beverages from Around the World
Highlight EAA’S HOPS & PROPS
Fundraiser on March 5
24. R16 | SceneNewspaper.com | February 2016
ENTERTAINMENT // CONCERT WATCH
BY JANE SPIETZ
Southside Johnny and the Asbury
Jukes have been rockin’ the Jersey Shore
music scene since the mid-‘70s. Although
band members have come and gone, their
horn-backed brand of soul-stirring rock ‘n’
roll, blues, and R & B is still going strong.
There is a huge following of diehard Jukes
fans that thrives on the energetic, feel-good
party atmosphere that comes out at all of
their shows.
Front man/vocalist “Southside” Johnny
Lyon is often referred to as the Godfather
of the New Jersey Sound. Jon Bon Jovi has
said that Southside was his greatest influ-
ence and his reason for singing.
Lyon and “Little” Steven Van Zandt co-
founded Southside Johnny and the Asbury
Jukes in Asbury Park, New Jersey. The two
became fast friends with Bruce Springsteen
and the three of them take turns playing in
each other’s bands even today. Springsteen
wrote a number of Southside Johnny’s best
loved songs for him, including “Talk to
Me” and “The Fever.” Van Zandt’s com-
position, “I Don’t Want To Go Home” is
Southside’s signature song.
The Jukes released a live 2011 CD
Men Without Women: Live 7-2-11, which
was recorded at the famed Stone Pony
in Asbury Park. It featured covers of Van
Zandt’s original 1982 album of the same
name that he released with his Disciples
of Soul. During the performance record-
ing, Little Steven makes a “surprise” guest
appearance. Lyon came up with the idea
for the band’s first new studio CD of all
original material in five years, SOUL-
TIME! (2015), while shopping in a giant
superstore. Read on for more about that
story.
Southside Johnny and the Asbury
Jukes features Southside Johnny Lyon on
lead vocals and harmonica, Jeff Kazee on
keyboards and vocals, Glenn Alexander on
guitar, bassist John Conte, Chris Anderson
on trumpet, John Isley on saxophone,
Neal Pawley on trombone, and drummer
Tom Seguso. The band is currently touring
throughout the U.S. and overseas.
Southside recently called me from Port
Arthur, Texas.
Jane Spietz: When you were a child,
your parents exposed you early on to blues
and jazz, and took you to many concerts.
You have said that you thought all parents
had that approach. What influence did
those early experiences have on you musi-
cally?
John Lyon: It was great to be in a house
full of music. I’d come home to the sounds
of Billie Holiday, Louis Armstrong, Count
Basie. My parents liked listening to black
music. They were fans of Big Joe Turner,
T-Bone Walker, Wynonie Harris – all of
the blues shouters. I thought all parents
did that. My parents were a little strange!
(Laughs) It also made us kids aware that
there were other cultures. What I took
away from it is that it is fun to make music,
and not a desperate attempt to make a
statement or get a point across.
JS: As a teenager, did you foresee that
you would someday have a career in music?
JL: At the time, I didn’t believe that.
Then I met Garry Tallent in high school
when we were 15 years old. Garry said that
he was going to be a musician. He later
became Bruce Springsteen’s bass player.
After Garry said that, I became acquainted
with Steve Van Zandt, Bruce and some
other guys who felt the same way. I got the
idea that if they were going to try get into
music, I was going to give it a try too.
JS: How did you first meet up with
Bruce Springsteen?
JL: Every day I used to walk over to
a club called the Upstage Club in Asbury
Park where I lived. Because there was no
alcohol served, they were open until 5 AM.
So I would stay all night long. Musicians
from all over would come here. It was one
big jam session, and we’d play blues. A
long-haired guy with a gold Les Paul was
playing there one day. He was singing a
hilarious song about how when he went
to Catholic school the nuns taught him
the blues. He was amazing. Playing great
guitar. I was thinking, ‘who IS this guy?’
Later on I walked up to Bruce to tell him
how great I thought it was. We ended up
becoming good friends. So Bruce, Steven,
the other guys and I worked on learning
different types of music and how to play
well together. It was like our college. It was
a great time. When I was singing onstage,
I could actually get girls to look at me!
(Laughs) We were paid $15 each.
JS: I was interested to learn about the
special Monopoly games that you, Steven
and Bruce used to play. You even had a
‘riot card’ to represent the1970 Asbury
Park race riots and a ‘Chief McCarthy’
go-to-jail-twice card for the Middletown,
N.J. police chief who was responsible for
the breakup of some of Bruce’s shows back
then.
JL: Yeah, we played many games of
cutthroat Monopoly. Bruce used to win
regularly cuz he would sell us his mom’s
homemade cookies for Monopoly money!
(Laughs)
JS: You all have been members of each
other’s bands throughout the years. How
do you feel you have influenced each other
musically?
JL: Bruce, Steven, and I have learned
from each other’s records and from per-
forming together. We’re always there for
each other and have a great time.
JS: Jon Bon Jovi said you were his
greatest influence from early on, and that
you’re his reason for singing.
JL: I don’t want the blame for that!
(Laughs) Seriously, Jon’s too kind. He’s
been a good friend for a long time. He
worked with me on my side project, The
Poor Fools. We did an acoustic album,
Songs From the Barn (2013). Jon always
lends me his studio if he’s not using it.
He’s spent time on the road with us. Jon’s
a great guy.
JS: How do you manage to maintain
your high energy performances year after
year?
JL: I always feel at home on stage. It’s
natural for me. When the music starts, it’s
like turning on a switch. And the best part
is when the audience is really getting into it
and havin’ fun. It just carries you along and
knocks you across the room!
JS: Your first new CD of all original
material in five years, SOULTIME!, was
released in September 2015. I read that
the idea for SOULTIME! came to you as
you were shopping in a giant superstore.
JL: That’s right. I was in the wine and
liquor section. Curtis Mayfield’s “Superfly”
came over the store speakers. I looked
around and I noticed that some of the
people around me were really boppin’ to
the music. That’s when I decided that it
was time to come up with some new music
to let people have fun and feel good again.
JS: Describe the music of SOULTIME!
JL: The idea behind SOULTIME! was
to write songs that let people take their
minds off their worries and bring joy to
them. It represents a return to the great
days of soul. It’ll make you want to get up
and dance.
JS: We are thrilled to have Southside
Johnny and the Asbury Jukes back in Mil-
waukee at Turner Hall on March 6.
JL: Get ready for a fun, wild night.
We’re gonna have a party!
Southside Johnny & the Asbury Jukes
Phtoto by Rodolfo Sassano
WHAT: Southside Johnny and the
Asbury Jukes
WHERE: Turner Hall Ballroom
WHEN: 8 PM Sun, March 6, 2016
COST: $29.50
INFO: www.pabsttheater.org/show/
southsidejohnny2016
www.southsidejohnny.com/
25. February 2016 | SceneNewspaper.com | R17
OUTDOORS // ROB ZIMMER
BY ROB ZIMMER
It may be the middle of winter, but for
gardeners, this is the most exciting time of
year.
New garden and seed catalogs are
arriving, and the dreams and fantasies of
gardeners everywhere begin to take flower.
Gardening conferences, along with
home and garden trade shows are in full
swing, all preparing us for a year of beauti-
ful gardens, lawns and landscapes.
To feed the growing fury, plant grow-
ers and breeders, along with specialty
plant organizations, unveil their selections
for 2016 Plants of the Year.
Many gardening organizations select
plants of different categories to feature
throughout the year and promote to gar-
deners everywhere.
This year’s award winning plants of the
year are varied and colorful, unique and
unusual, representing some of the best in
the gardening world.
Here is a look at 2016’s Plants of the
Year.
Perennial Plant of the Year
Each year, the Perennial Plant Asso-
ciation selects one perennial variety as its
Perennial Plant of the Year.
This year, Anemone ‘Honorine Jobert’
takes the coveted prize.
A tall, white variety of anemone
that grows 3-4’ high and blooms in late
summer and fall, this plant features large,
3 to 4 inch blooms in pure white.
Deer and rabbit resistant, great for
moist areas in full to part sun, this is a
stunning and elegant plant for late season
bloom.
Hosta of the Year
The American Hosta Society has
chosen the adorable hosta known as
‘Curly Fries,’ as its Hosta of the Year for
2016.
Curly Fries features thin, twisted and
rippled bright green leaves that explode
outward like fireworks, growing to about
18 inches wide, making it a lively and fun
medium sized hosta.
Curly Fries will take quite a bit of sun,
where its color will become even lighter
with stunning golden highlights.
Year of the Delphinium
The National Garden Bureau also
select several featured plants each year.
This includes a perennial, annual, edible
crop and bulb.
The Bureau has designated 2016 the
Year of the Delphin-
ium, celebrating
the towering
spires of colorful
bloom that make
the heirloom
stunner a hit with
gardeners.
Delphiniums
come in many
shades of blue,
making them
highly sought-
after by gardeners.
They grow well
in part shade and
some varieties
may reach 5 to 6
feet in height.
Ye a r o f t h e
Carrot
As its featured edible crop of the year,
the National Garden Bureau has selected
the colorful carrot.
Fun and easy to grow, even for chil-
dren, carrots are available in a wider range
of sizes and shapes than ever, and in many
vibrant colors.
That’s right, carrots are about more
than just orange. Many heirloom and
newer varieties are available in red, purple,
yellow, white and blue.
Make this the year you dive deeper
into growing these nutritious crops at
home. Try them in containers, straw bale
gardens, raised beds and more.
Year of the Begonia
The award for Annual of the Year from
the National Garden Bureau goes to the
colorful and versatile begonia.
From brightly colored, jewel-like
beauties such as angel wings to the mas-
sive, metallic spirals and patterns of Rex
begonias, these plants make wonderful
additions or specimens in sun or shade.
Wisconsin Nursery and Landscape
Association selections
Here in Wisconsin, the Wisconsin
Nursery and Landscape Association has
chosen ‘Hot Lips’ Rose Turtlehead as its
featured ornamental plant of the year.
Growing 2 to 3 feet tall and blooming
with unusual, tubular flowers in hot pink,
this plant is perfect for summer and fall
color. Turtlehead prefers moist soil and
some shade.
The Association has selected elegant
Serbian Spruce as Woody Plant of the
Year, for its slender form and cascading
boughs. This conifer does well in tough
places where it will grow 40 to 60 feet tall
at maturity.
Herb of the Year
Chosen as 2016 Herb of the Year, by
the International Herb Association, the
many varieties of colorful, delicious pep-
pers will be featured all year long.
Try growing some new varieties this
year and enjoy their beauty and flavors
from summer into fall.
Hot Plants for 2016
26. R18 | SceneNewspaper.com | February 2016
ENTERTAINMENT // WILDWOOD FILM FESTIVAL
BY JOSHUA GROVER-DAVID
PATTERSON
Part 1: From Humble Beginnings…
In 1991, Robert Rodriguez scraped
together seven thousand dollars, partially
by submitting himself to medical testing,
and made “El Mariachi,” his first feature.
It went to multiple major film festivals
and was picked up by Columbia Pictures,
launching a career that continues to this
day.
In 1993, author Joe Queenan heard
about Robert Rodriguez’s film and decided
to do him two dollars better, by making a
film for $6,998. The movie was “Twelve
Steps to Death,” and it launched exactly
zero careers. It got into a single film fest,
the First Tarryton International Film Fes-
tival, where it won the Golden Headless
Horseman award.
Of course, the open secret, detailed in
the book “The Unkindest Cut,” was that
Queenan threw the festival himself.
The story of the Wildwood Film Festi-
val - now in its fifteenth year and founded
by Craig Knitt, Jason Buss and Tom
Thorne - is more similar to Queenan’s story
than Rodriguez’s.
“Tom [Thorne] and Craig [Knitt]
have been friends since childhood and I
came into the picture when I acted in a
film Craig wrote and directed, called ‘The
Hunt,’” Buss said. “In short, the fest came
into being because Craig couldn’t find
a fest to play the film. The fact that [we
knew] everyone would like the movie if
they could see it, combined with the fact
that we lived in the fastest growing area
of the state, made us think the fest was an
idea whose time had come.”
The first Wildwood Film Festival took
place in 2001 at The Historic West Theater
in Green Bay. In addition to “The Hunt,”
the first festival featured eight other films,
including an entry from Rob Schrab,
who wrote the Steven Spielberg-produced
“Monster House,” and more recently
directed multiple episodes of the cult TV
show “Community.”
It would not be the last time a Hol-
lywood name graced the credits of Wild-
wood. Over the years, famous faces that
have appeared on the screen at Wildwood
include Richard Riehle (the very definition
of a That Guy, he’s been in everything from
“Office Space” to “Modern Family” to
“Bridesmaids”), David H. Lawrence XVII
(“Heroes,” “Good Luck Charlie”), William
Mapother (“Lost,” “The Mentalist”), and
Kim Rhodes (“Supernatural,” “Colony”).
Part 2: Wildwood, Part 2.
And 3. And 4…
Since that first year, the festival has
moved to Appleton, and the number of
film sessions has grown – this year there
are five of them, including a special Friday
night showing of a new feature film called,
interestingly enough, “Appleton.”
“I first learned about the Wildwood
Film Festival about five or six years ago,
but I can’t say I remember how. I know
that back then, having worked on a few
film projects in the Fox Valley area, I heard
about Wildwood and remembered it and
was always interested in supporting the fest
and seeing if we could create something to
(hopefully) take part,” said Greg Cebulski,
one of the producers on the project. “Now
that we have the opportunity, I’m really
proud about being able to come home and
share this movie we made with so many of
the people there that helped us get it done.”
The words “Fox Valley” are quite
important when it comes to Wildwood.
The Wildwood Film Festival focuses on
Wisconsin filmmakers. According to the
fest’s entry form, “The Wildwood Film
Festival is a non-profit event designed to
showcase emerging independent films/
filmmakers from Wisconsin. The pri-
mary creative personnel, such as director,
producer, [or] screenwriter, should have
Wisconsin ties.”
Because of this rule, most of the films
being shown every year were made in
Wisconsin. But many have been created
in such far-flung locales as California, Ten-
nessee, New York, and Sydney, Australia.
As for the film “Appleton,” despite its
ultra-local name, the movie primarily was
shot in and around Greenville, Hortonville
and Dale, with some shooting in Appleton,
including at Appleton Central High
School.
While “Appleton” is not the first feature
film to screen at Wildwood (that would be
“The Hungry Bull,” in 2009) it should be
noted that since its inception, Wildwood
has primarily shown short films. While a
short film usually is defined as anything
with a running time of 60 minutes or
under, most films screened at Wildwood
run for less than 30 minutes.
Moreover, Wildwood has been around
long enough to see gigantic shifts in camera
and computer technology, and what both
of those mean for the life of a short film.
Consider this – the first Wildwood
Film Festival (2001) predates both You-
Tube (2005) and the iPhone (2007). Fif-
teen years ago, most people connected to
the internet via phone line, making video
downloads and uploads a process that
frequently took hours, instead of seconds.
These shifts mean that the bar for
entry into filmmaking is simultaneously
both lower and higher. In the early days
of Wildwood it was possible to know the
general skill level of a filmmaker based
on whether they were shooting on film or
video. Today, a movie shot and edited on a
smartphone can, theoretically, look just as
good as a movie shot by professionals on a
high end camera.
And while fifteen years ago the best
way to get your film in front of an audi-
ence was to try to get into film festivals,
today filmmakers can finish their work and
have it uploaded to the world and shared
on Twitter and Facebook in a matter of
minutes.
Of course, there are certain experiences
you can only have at a film festival.
In 2008, for example, Wildwood
screened a short film entitled “Jake’s
Choice,” complete with a musical score that
was performed live as the film unspooled.
Regardless of how good your TV setup is,
that would be difficult to replicate in your
living room.
Also unique to the film festival experi-
ence will be an educational session – the
festival’s fourth. The topic of the work-
shop this year will be Filmmaking 101:
Getting Started, and it will be hosted at the
Radisson Paper Valley Hotel in downtown
Appleton at 9 AM the day of the festival
– admission is free, check www.wildwood-
filmfest.com for further information.
Some film festival experiences are a
little more universal, however.
John Pata is a filmmaker whose work
has appeared at Wildwood on multiple
occasions. In his own words, he, “[Works]
part-time slinging comic books at House
of Heroes in Oshkosh. I used to co-own a
screen printing shop, but sold that at the
end of 2010 to pursue my passion of film-
making. Since then, the plan has been to
work just enough to pay my bills, allowing
myself more time to focus on the films.”
Pata’s short film “Better Off Undead”
appeared at Wildwood in 2008. He com-
pleted a feature, “Dead Weight,” in 2012,
which secured distribution.
He then returned to Wildwood in 2014
with his short film “Pity,” which won Best
Horror/Thriller. Asked about the benefits
of film festivals, Pata said, “I’ve met a ton
of incredible humans due to all our festival
experiences, and that’s been the best part,
hands down. From screening ‘Better Off
Undead,’ I met people who would then be
a part of ‘Dead Weight.’ While hitting the
festival circuit with ‘Dead Weight,’ I met
even more people, (and) quite a few would
The Little Festival That Could
(Run for Fifteen Years)
27. February 2016 | SceneNewspaper.com | R19
ENTERTAINMENT // WILDWOOD FILM FESTIVAL
join the team for ‘Pity.’ I’m sure you can see
the pattern here, but there are people I met
from ‘Pity’s’ festival run that will be part of
our next film.
“But, more importantly, I’ve made a
ton of great friends from around the world
due to the films. It’s pretty insane to think
about, but it totally rules.”
Part 3: Wildwood 15 - The Not-So-Final
Chapter:
Asked whether or not they expected
Wildwood to still be going strong after
fifteen years, Tom Thorne and Craig Knitt
gave similar, yet diverging answers:
Knitt: “There’s no way we could have
ever anticipated 15 years of the Wildwood
Film Festival! We were all fairly confident
that we were creating something impor-
tant, but we worried many times that our
scope might have been too limited. Our
audience is quite diverse yet they all seem
to appreciate the artistic endeavors of our
filmmakers.
“Here’s a scary/funny thought...in the
early development stages of our festival we
actually considered calling the fest ‘Whack-
fest’ based on my production company
‘Out of Whack Productions.’ We might
have gotten a whole different crowd if that
name would have stuck!”
Thorne: “15 years? I certainly did not
expect it to make it this far. After a tiny
showing the first year I thought maybe once
was enough. I’m very happy to see that so
much good work/talent keeps coming out
of every corner of Wisconsin.”
Of course, a fifteenth festival means
fifteen years of selecting which films to
include, a process that can be both fun and
difficult.
“I wish that I could say that it was an
exact science but it is not,” Buss said. “We
have always said that if [a film] is shorter,
it stands a better chance of being accepted.
Though it (is) easier to program shorter
films than features, that concept also came
out of the realization that when we first
started it was the ‘shorts’ that were more
enjoyable and better quality because the
technology was so different. Now that the
tech cost hurdle has dropped, the only item
separating many films now is the quality
of the story. Whether we stay focused on
shorts or open it to all lengths of projects is
something that will be up for discussion in
the future.”
Knitt said a variety of factors goes into
the choice of films that Wildwood
screens.
“We look for films that cel-
ebrate the Midwestern sensibilities
as well as some that challenge
those same ideals. We’re always
hungry for some short, sweet
comedies, but if we get a film that
has a nice story, we’ll always try to
make room for it,” Knitt said. “We
tell folks that when they watch the
festival they’ll see some films that
will blow their socks off. I’ve heard
people say, ‘I can’t believe that was
made here in Wisconsin!’ But, we also try
to include some pieces that will challenge
folks to get out there and make some of
their own films. We consider story, acting
and production value when films come our
way, but also look at the significance of the
Wisconsin connection.”
Frances Perkins, a lecturer at University
of North Texas’ Department of Radio-
TV-Film and Journalism, served as both a
judge and a participant of Wildwood over
the course of several years.
“It has been such a pleasure to watch
Wildwood grow over the years,” said Per-
kins, who entered Wildwood with her hus-
band and collaborator, Troy Perkins. “Our
first screening at Wildwood was in 2006,
and we’ve had 6 shorts show over the past
10 years. Three years I’ve been a judge in
the competition. Students of mine have
volunteered and shown their own work,
and have always been welcomed into the
Wildwood family.”
Ultimately, judging is a multi-step pro-
cess, with the founders setting the overall
schedule of films, and a separate panel of
judges voting on which films will ultimately
be awarded as the best in their category.
Featured genres have ranged from horror to
comedy to music videos to documentaries
to student films to animation, and just
about every style and classification has been
represented over the course of fifteen years.
Thorne noted, “I’m not as involved as I
used to be in the actual selection of films.
Currently, I’m more of a dispute settler; if
there is a film or two that we are uncertain
if it should play, I am sometimes the decid-
ing vote for in or out. Personally, I like to
see short comedies. The reason we don’t see
very many of those is that it’s actually very
hard to make a good humorous film.”
Filmmakers looking for a challenge,
take note – the gauntlet has been thrown.
Part 4: Coming Soon…
Much like the proverbial shark that
must always keep moving, Wildwood must
both get through the current year and pre-
pare for the year(s) to come. This is a huge
and unique challenge as a one-time event,
much less as an annual occurrence.
This year the original triumvirate has
added a couple of new members to the
board: Brian Murray and Jim Bork.
“Brian Murray was integral in help-
ing us achieve our incorporation and our
non-profit 501c3 status,” Buss said. “He
has supported us with tax and appropriate
financial services. He has obviously been
a supporter for a while so he was a natural
addition. He and I have been friends for
years. We had become acquainted with
Jim Bork when he hosted Wildwood at his
business, the Big Picture. He has been our
bookkeeper ever since. He is very aware of
the inner workings of the group as it was,
and he was also a very easy and sensible
addition.”
Thorne offered some thoughts on the
Wildwood workload. “Wildwood to me is
like any other social event. It’s fun to be
around people that like sports if you like
sports, music if you like music, and movies
if you like movies. It’s kind of like throw-
ing a big party every year. The workload
is similar to that of a large wedding. And
when the event is over, we catch our breath
and then start all over.”
Perkins summed up the hard work the
board members face each year – and just
why she thinks it’s worth it.
“Jason, Tom and Craig are true film
lovers, and that passion shows in every-
thing they do,” she said. “If they didn’t love
it so much, they wouldn’t go through the
hard work and pressure it takes to put on
a film festival! I especially appreciate the
Wisconsin connection that all films must
have. It keeps the local feeling alive and
sets Wildwood apart from other festivals in
the state.”
Since it was Knitt’s films that kicked off
fifteen years of Wildwood, it seems fitting
to let him have the last word about where
he hopes the fest goes in the future. “The
biggest thing we’d like to see is that the
festival does more than break even. We’ve
struggled a few years, but feel strongly
about what we offer creators in our state.
We’ve had incredible audiences yet there is
no way we’re compensated for the energy
and time we all commit to Wildwood.
We’re looking at partnerships that will
make those efforts pay off. We’d also
like to see Wildwood utilized more as an
educational opportunity for tomorrow’s
filmmakers of all ages.”
Part 5: The Where’s and the When’s.
In a world where the movie theater
experience is filled primarily with sequels,
remakes, too-long-too-boring dramas and
unsubtle (and often unfunny) comedies,
The Wildwood Film Festival presents its
viewers with a completely unique viewing
experience. Unless you attend a lot of film
festivals, chances are good that the movies
you’ll see at Wildwood are movies that
you’ll never get a chance to see anywhere
else.
And who knows – perhaps one day
you’ll find yourself in a movie theater, see
a name go by on the screen, and think
– “Hey! I saw that person’s film at Wild-
wood!”
The Wildwood Film Festival is playing
Friday, February 19 and Saturday, February
20.
The schedule of films and ticket prices
are posted at www.wildwoodfilmfest.com.
28. R20 | SceneNewspaper.com | February 2016
CALENDAR // LIVE MUSIC
FEBRUARY 3
TOE KNEE V’S 80’S
MILL CREEK
APPLETON 7:00 PM
FEBRUARY 4
MICHAEL GRABNER
DÉJÀ VU
APPLETON 9:00 PM
OFF WITH THEIR
HEADS W/ SPRUCE
BRINGSTEEN, THE
BISCAYNIES
LYRIC ROOM
GREEN BAY 8:00 PM
ME LIKE BEES
W/ DUSK
MILL CREEK
APPLETON 9:00 PM
JOHNNY TBIRD AND
THE MPS
VILLAGE GREEN
HOWARD 6:00 PM
FEBRUARY 5
SAM LUNA
BECKETS
OSHKOSH 8:00 PM
LOFTLAND W/EDEN
CUP O JOY
GREEN BAY 7:30 PM
THE 151S
DÉJÀ VU
APPLETON 9:00 PM
AARON VORASS DUO
GREAT DANE
WAUSAU 9:00 PM
FROGLEG
GUU’S
STEVENS POINT 8 PM
CONSULT THE
BRIEFCASE
JACKSON POINT
SPORTS GRILL
SEYMOUR 9:00 PM
COOL WATERS BAND
MILL CREEK
APPLETON 9:00 PM
TWEED FUNK
MILWAUKEE ALE HOUSE
MILWAUKEE 9:30 PM
STAR SIX NINE
OTTER STREET
BRANDON BASH
MENOMINEE PARK
OSHKOSH 7:00 PM
WILDSIDE
SARDINE CAN
GREEN BAY 9:00 PM
EMINENCE
SHORT BRANCH
NEENAH 10:00 PM
BOBBY EVANS BAND
WISEGUYS
GREENVILLE 9:30 PM
REDFISH REMIX LIVE
WORLD OF BEER
APPLETON 9:00 PM
CROSSING PATHS
ANDUZZIS - HOWARD
HOWARD 9:00 PM
FEBRUARY 6
ONE HOT MESS
ANDUZZIS EAST GREEN
BAY
GREEN BAY 9:00 PM
SONIC CIRCUS
BACKSTAGE BAR
FOND DU LAC 9:00 PM
THE POCKET KINGS
BECKETS
OSHKOSH 8:30 PM
KITTY CORONA
BRIDGE BAR
FREMONT 7:00 PM
WILDSIDE
C&C TAVERN
NEENAH 7:00 PM
FROGLEG W/
STARGOYLE
CRANKY PAT’S
NEENAH 8:00 PM
THE KRAUSE FAMILY
BAND
CUP O JOY
GREEN BAY 7:30 PM
CONSULT THE
BRIEFCASE
FAT JOES
FOND DU LAC 9:30 PM
STAR SIX NINE
HEADLINERS
NEENAH 9:30 PM
BRUCE KOESTNER
HEIDEL HOUSE
GREEN LAKE 7-10 PM
GRAND UNION
LEAP INN
FREEDOM 9:30 PM
RABID AARDVARKS
REVS BOWL BAR AND
GRILL
OSHKOSH 9:00 PM
THE BOMB
STONE TOAD
MENASHA 9:00 PM
ANDY GELLES LIVE
WORLD OF BEER
APPLETON 9:00 PM
EMINENCE
WOUTERS SPORTS BAR
LITTLE SUAMICO 9 PM
FEBRUARY 7
RODEO DEVILLE
LEAP INN
FREEDOM 1:00 PM
432’S POWER TRIO
MILL CREEK
APPLETON 8:00 PM
FEBRUARY 10
LATIN JASS
WHEELHOUSE
KING 8:00 PM
FEBRUARY 11
ERIN KREBBS AND
JEFF JOHNSTON
DÉJÀ VU
APPLETON 8:00 PM
REVEREND RAVEN
VILLAGE GREEN
HOWARD 6:00 PM
FEBRUARY 12
ONE HOT MESS
ANDUZZIS EAST GREEN
BAY
GREEN BAY 9:00 PM
MM VS. CRS
BECKETS
OSHKOSH 8:30 PM
BOWSER
CRANKY PAT’S
NEENAH 8:00 PM
BOBBY COVERSTON &
JESSICA DEMI
CUP O JOY
GREEN BAY 7:30 PM
SLIDE
DÉJÀ VU
APPLETON 9:00 PM
BIG DOG MURPHY &
THE MOB
DUKE’S RED LANTERN
GREEN BAY 9:30 PM
LOCAL H, SATELLITE
ECHO, BAD WIG
LYRIC ROOM
GREEN BAY 8:30 PM
STAGE HOGGS
ACOUSTIC
MARITIME BAR
APPLETON 9:00 PM
POLAR PROJECT -
UNPLUGGED
MATT’S MILKHOUSE
KAUKAUNA 8:00 PM
BOXKAR
MILL CREEK
APPLETON 9:00 PM
FROGLEG
MINOCQUA BREWING
MINOCQUA 8:00 PM
NASHVILLE PIPELINE
MR GS
APPLETON 9:00 PM
ADAMS WAY
PAYNES POINT
NEENAH 6:00 PM
MODEL CITIZEN
REVS BOWL BAR AND
GRILL
OSHKOSH 8:00 PM
CONSULT THE
BRIEFCASE
SARDINE CAN
GREEN BAY 9:00 PM
BIG AND TALL
SHERRYTOWN STATION
NEENAH 9:00 PM
DOUBLE DOWN
STONE HARBOR
STURGEON BAY 9 PM
JOE WRAY LIVE
WORLD OF BEER
APPLETON 9:00 PM
FEBRUARY 13
THE COUGARS
ANDUZZIS - HOWARD
HOWARD 9:00 PM
REVEREND RAVEN
BECKETS
OSHKOSH 8:30 PM
NO STONE SOUP
BRIDGE BAR
FREMONT 7:00 PM
THE BOMB
CAPITOL CENTRE
APPLETON 9:00 PM
DANA ERLANDSON
CHEFUSION LOUNGE
GREEN BAY 7:00 PM
JIM COLE
CUP O JOY
GREEN BAY 7:30 PM
STAGE HOGGS
DAISYS WESTERN
SALOON
OSHKOSH 9:00 PM
ANDREW GELLES
BAND
DÉJÀ VU
APPLETON 9:00 PM
ROAD TRIP
FAT JOES
FOND DU LAC 10:00 PM
NASHVILLE PIPELINE
FOX HARBOR PUB &
GRILL
GREEN BAY 9:30 PM
THE PRESIDENTS
FRATELLOS
OSHKOSH 8:00 PM
GRAND UNION
HEADLINERS
NEENAH 9:30 PM
BILL STEINERT
HEIDEL HOUSE
GREEN LAKE 7-10 PM
WILDSIDE
JUMPERS
MARATHON 9:00 PM
SPITFIRE RODEO
KOUNTRY BAR
APPLETON 9:30 PM
R P M
LEAP INN
FREEDOM 10:00 PM
CAT 5
MOLE LAKE CASINO
CRANDON 8:00 PM
BOOMBOXX
NEW LONDON LANES
NEW LONDON 8:30 PM
JOHNNY WAD
NUMBNUTS JAMBOREE
CECIL 3:00 PM
HYDE
OCTANE BAR AND
GRILL
WI RAPIDS 9:00 PM
ONE HOT MESS
PAYNES POINT
NEENAH 5:00 PM
CONSULT THE
BRIEFCASE
POLAR PLUNGE - 7 LAKES
CATO 7:00 PM
CRANKIN YANKEES
REVS BOWL BAR AND
GRILL
OSHKOSH 9:00 PM
BAD HABITZ
SARDINE CAN
GREEN BAY 9:00 PM
ADAMS WAY
SLUGGERS
APPLETON 9:30 PM
WILLY PORTER AND
CARMEN NICKERSON
THRASHER OPERA
HOUSE
GREEN LAKE 7:30 PM
PHIL NORBY LIVE
WORLD OF BEER
APPLETON 9:00 PM
FEBRUARY 14
432’S POWER TRIO
MILL CREEK
APPLETON 8:00 PM
FEBRUARY 18
STEVE ARNOLD
DÉJÀ VU
APPLETON 8:00 PM
FEBRUARY 19
JAZZ MARKET
BECKETS
OSHKOSH 8:30 PM
REDSTAR EXPRESS
BLUEGRASS
CUP O JOY
GREEN BAY 7:30 PM
RYAN MEISEL TRIO
DÉJÀ VU
APPLETON 9:00 PM
GGOOLLDD, W/ 2
BANDS TBA
LYRIC ROOM
GREEN BAY 8:30 PM
BOXKAR
MILWAUKEE ALE HOUSE
MILWAUKEE 9:30 PM
FBI & THE
UNTOUCHABLE
HORNS
FEBRUARY 2016
Wisconsin’s Arts & Entertainment Paper
SC NE E
Live Music
C A L E N D A R
29. February 2016 | SceneNewspaper.com | R21
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30. R22 | SceneNewspaper.com | February 2016
CALENDAR // LIVE MUSIC
ROUTE 15 SPORTS BAR
GREENVILLE 7:30 PM
MODEL CITIZEN
SARDINE CAN
GREEN BAY 9:00 PM
DANA ERLANDSON
THE BOTTLE ROOM
GREEN BAY 7:00 PM
CONSULT THE
BRIEFCASE
WISEGUYS
GREENVILLE 9:30 PM
LISTENING PARTY LIVE
WORLD OF BEER
APPLETON 9:00 PM
FEBRUARY 20
JOHNNY WAD
ANDUZZIS -
HOLMGREN WAY
GREEN BAY 9:30 PM
CONSULT THE
BRIEFCASE
ANDUZZIS EAST GB
GREEN BAY 9:00 PM
RINGS
BECKETS
OSHKOSH 8:30 PM
DAVE OLSEN BAND
BRIDGE BAR
FREMONT 7:00 PM
6 FIGURES
CRYSTAL FALLS
NEW LONDON 7:00 PM
DARA MACLEAN W/
SETH BOYTE
CUP O JOY
GREEN BAY 7:30 PM
THE POCKET KINGS
DÉJÀ VU
APPLETON 9:00 PM
STAR SIX NINE
FAT JOES
FOND DU LAC 10:00 PM
ASK YOUR MOTHER
HEADLINERS
NEENAH 9:30 PM
FRAN STEENO
HEIDEL HOUSE
GREEN LAKE 7-10 PM
WILDSIDE
LEAP INN
FREEDOM 9:30 PM
INDONESIAN JUNK,
REV NORB AND THE
ONIONS, SCRAP
HEAP KINGS
LYRIC ROOM
GREEN BAY 8:30 PM
COOKEE...TIMELESS
MUSIC
MACKINAWS
GREEN BAY 7:30-11 PM
R P M
MENOMINEE PARK
OSHKOSH 11:30 AM
SPITFIRE RODEO
MENOMINEE PARK -
Y100 TENT
OSHKOSH 12:00 PM
GRAND UNION
ROCKY AND TARAS
NUTHOUSE
KAUKAUNA 9:00 PM
DIAMOND AND STEEL
SLUGGERS
APPLETON 9:30 PM
STAGE HOGGS
STONE TOAD
MENASHA 9:00 PM
MODEL CITIZEN
TANNERS
KIMBERLY 8:00 PM
EMINENCE
THE HILL
OMRO 6:00 PM
PERT NEAR SANDSTONE
THRASHER OPERA
HOUSE
GREEN LAKE 7:30 PM
NASHVILLE PIPELINE
WELSCH ALE HOUSE
MALONE 8:00 PM
THE STANGS LIVE
WORLD OF BEER
APPLETON 9:00 PM
FEBRUARY 21
432’S POWER TRIO
MILL CREEK
APPLETON 8:00 PM
FEBRUARY 24
OTIS & THE
ALLIGATORS
REUNION TOUR
WHEELHOUSE
KING 8:00 PM
FEBRUARY 25
CRAIG HAWKINSON
DÉJÀ VU
APPLETON 9:00 PM
GUTTERMOUTH
W/ THE CRYPTICS,
AVENUES, THE
JEFFERTONS
LYRIC ROOM
GREEN BAY 8:00 PM
PAUL FILIPOWICZ
VILLAGE GREEN
HOWARD 6:00 PM
FEBRUARY 26
KWT
BECKETS
OSHKOSH 8:30 PM
DIG DEEP
CRANKY PAT’S
NEENAH 8:00 PM
REFLECT WORSHIP &
CHERIE NORGUAY
CUP O JOY
GREEN BAY 7:30 PM
THE 432S
DÉJÀ VU
APPLETON 9:00 PM
IFDAKAR,
CHOCOLATEERS,
BEACH PATROL
LYRIC ROOM
GREEN BAY 8:30 PM
DOUBLE DOWN
MARITIME BAR
APPLETON 9:00 PM
GREAT UNKNOWN
RADIO BENEFIT
MILL CREEK
APPLETON 8:00 PM
THE DEL RAYS
REVS BOWL BAR AND
GRILL
OSHKOSH 8:00 PM
STAGE HOGGS
SARDINE CAN
GREEN BAY 9:00 PM
DANA ERLANDSON
THE BOTTLE ROOM
GREEN BAY 7:00 PM
CONSULT THE
BRIEFCASE
TIMBERLINE RESORT
CRIVITZ 9:00 PM
JORGENSEND TAGG
WORLD OF BEER
APPLETON 9:00 PM
FEBRUARY 27
BIG MOUTH
ANDUZZIS - HOWARD
HOWARD 9:00 PM
NASHVILLE PIPELINE
ANDUZZIS EAST GB
GREEN BAY 9:30 PM
TIN SANDWICH
BECKETS
OSHKOSH 8:30 PM
GRAYLING PINGEL
BRIDGE BAR
FREMONT 7:00 PM
POUNDING FATHERS
CAPITOL CENTRE
APPLETON 9:00 PM
CORNMEAL W/ TBD
CRANKY PAT’S
NEENAH 10:00 PM
CHARLES WALKER
BAND
DÉJÀ VU
APPLETON 9:00 PM
THE PRESIDENTS
FOX HARBOR PUB &
GRILL
GREEN BAY 9:00 PM
VIC FERRARI
HARLEY DAVIDSON
MUSEUM
MILWAUKEE 5:30 PM
JOHNNY WAD
HEADLINERS
NEENAH 9:30 PM
CAT 5
HORSESHOE BAY GOLF
CLUB
EGG HARBOR 8:00 PM
WILDSIDE
IZZYS PUB
BERLIN 9:00 PM
ASK YOUR MOTHER
JACKSON POINT
SPORTS GRILL
SEYMOUR 9:00 PM
CONSULT THE
BRIEFCASE
JIMMY SEAS
GREEN BAY 9:00 PM
BAD HABITZ
KOUNTRY BAR
APPLETON 9:30 PM
REPLICA
LEAP INN
FREEDOM 10:00 PM
DANA ERLANDSON
MACKINAWS
GREEN BAY 7:30 PM
BIG AND TALL
MARITIME TAVERN
APPLETON 9:00 PM
RABID AARDVARKS
MILWAUKEE ALE
HOUSE
MILWAUKEE 9:30 PM
HYDE
MOLE LAKE CASINO
CRANDON 8:00 PM
BOXKAR
REVS BOWL BAR AND
GRILL
OSHKOSH 9:00 PM
CRANKIN YANKEES
RIVER RAIL
SHIOCTON 8:30 PM
ADAMS WAY
SARDINE CAN
GREEN BA 9:00 PM
SONIC CIRCUS
SLUGGERS
APPLETON 9:30 PM
BOOMBOXX
STONE TOAD
MENASHA 9:00 PM
MIXTAPE
THE HAWK BAR AND
GRILL
CRIVITZ 9:00 PM
CRYSTAL BOWERSOX
THRASHER OPERA
HOUSE
GREEN LAKE 7:30 PM
6 FIGURES
TIMBERLINE RESORT
CRIVITZ 9:00 PM
STAGE HOGGS
WHISTLE INN
NICHOLS 9:00 PM
JORGENSEND TAGG
WORLD OF BEER
APPLETON 9:00 PM
FEBRUARY 28
ROCKER
LEAP INN
FREEDOM 2:00 PM
432’S POWER TRIO
MILL CREEK
APPLETON 8:00 PM
MARCH 3
ROB ANTHONY
DÉJÀ VU
APPLETON 9:00 PM
MARCH 4
RED CLOVER
21 GUN ROADHOUSE
LEDGEVIEW 9:00 PM
JANET PLANET
BECKETS
OSHKOSH 8:30 PM
HITS
CIMARRON
MENASHA 9-1:00 PM
THE 151S
DÉJÀ VU
APPLETON 9:00 PM
ROBERT ALLEN JR.
BAND
MILWAUKEE ALE
HOUSE
MILWAUKEE 9:30 PM
6 FIGURES
SARDINE CAN
GREEN BAY 9:00 PM
STAR SIX NINE
THE SHORT BRANCH
NEENAH 10:00 PM
MARCH 5
REPLICA
ANDUZZIS - HOWARD
HOWARD 9:30 PM
DIAMOND AND STEEL
ANDUZZIS EAST GB
GREEN BAY 9:00 PM
ANDY’S AUTOMATICS
BECKETS
OSHKOSH 8:30 PM
THE HITS
BRIDGE BAR
FREMONT 7:30 PM
ROWDY SHADEHOUSE
W/ TBD
CRANKY PAT’S
NEENAH 10:00 PM
FAIRLAND BLUEGRASS
CUP O JOY
GREEN BAY 7:30 PM
LOVE MONKEYS
FAT JOES
FOND DU LAC 10:00 PM
BAD HABITZ
GRAVEL PIT SPORTS
BAR AND GRILL
KIEL 9:00 PM
SONIC CIRCUS
HEADLINERS
NEENAH 9:30 PM
BRUCE KOESTNER
HEIDEL HOUSE
GREEN LAKE 7-10 PM
HYDE
LEAP INN
FREEDOM 9:30 PM
RABID AARDVARKS
OCTANE BAR AND
GRILL
WI RAPIDS 9:00 PM
NASHVILLE PIPELINE
REVS BOWL BAR AND
GRILL
OSHKOSH 9:00 PM
SPITFIRE RODEO
RIVER RAIL
SHIOCTON 8:30 PM
CRANKIN YANKEES
SARDINE CAN
GREEN BAY 9:00 PM
GRAND UNION
SLUGGERS
APPLETON 9:30 PM
THE COUGARS
THE BAR LIME KILN
ROAD
GREEN BAY 9:30 PM
THE ALAN KELLY
GANG
THRASHER OPERA
HOUSE
GREEN LAKE 7:30 PM
ROAD TRIP
WOODEYES
WINNECONNE 8:00 PM
31. February 2016 | SceneNewspaper.com | R23
All Performances at 7:30pm
Doors open at 6:30pm, featuring
musicians from Lawrence University.
Season VI Series Sponsors:
Artistic Director John Harmon
Tickets: $20
Museum Members: $12
Students: $5
Tickets available online or
by calling 920-733-4089
THE EVOLUTION OF JAZZ
Feb. 18, 2016
Dave Sullivan Quartet
BeBop Guitar
March 17, 2016
Janet Planet feat. John Harmon
Jazz Vocals
Sponsored by:
April 21, 2016
Dave Bayles
Conventional Piano Jazz Trio
May 19, 2016
Matt Turner and John Harmon
Contemporary/Future
BECKY & DAN
LUETT
February 1 – May 16
Want to know what it
would be like to be
a dinosaur? Now you
can through virtual
technology in this new,
innovative exhibition!
1331 Algoma Boulevard, Oshkosh WI 54901
920.236.5799 • oshkoshmuseum.org
OSHKOSH
PublicMuseum