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Stephen Sondheim: Broadway’s Greatest Artist, Part 3

For more of “Stephen Sondheim: Broadway’s Greatest Artist,” scroll down to previous posts, or link to Part 1 and Part 2.

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Although he had been writing musicals for 25 years, Stephen Sondheim did not make his mark as a composer until 1970, with a string of grown-up hits: “Company,” “Folllies” and “A Little Night Music.”

“My first exposure to the fully formed Sondheim was when I bought the original cast album of ‘Follies’ in the 1970s,” says Long Center managing director Paul Beutel. “The raw yet soaring emotion of songs like ‘Too Many Mornings’ and ‘Losing My Mind’ — so perfectly captured in music and lyrics — just wiped me out.”

Although musical devotees call these “Sondheim shows,” the artist always emphasizes his collaborations with writers and directors (Harold Prince, James Lapine, etc.) and, especially, his prized orchestrator, Jonathan Tunick, whose full-orchestra sound undergirds Tim Burton’s movie adaptation of “Sweeney Todd.”

“He is a most generous man, a mentor who is always ready to lend his support — creative, emotional and intellectual — to the work of others,” critic and editor Rick Pender says.

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Recently, two of Sondheim’s collaborators, George Furth and Larry Gelbart, died.

“George was an actor,” Sondheim says. “Music meant nothing to him. So writing with him was interesting. That’s one reason the songs don’t always fit the into the script. They are commentary; raisins in the cake. But George’s dialogue is extremely brilliant. It’s dialogic.”

Gelbart, his collaborator in “A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum,” adapting the Roman comedies of Plautus, understood music, he says.

“In ‘Forum,’ the songs are respites from the farce,” Sondheim says. “And ‘Forum’ is a very tight farce. The songs are breathing places. Otherwise the comedy would be relentless.”

One reason Sondheim’s shows — almost never big profit machines — are regularly revived is they provide peerless opportunities for performers.

“Sondheim’s work demands that a performer be equally gifted as an actor and as a singer,” says director Dave Steakley. “Sondheim’s melodies and harmonies, as well as the speed of his complicated lyrics in passages of songs, are rigorous for a singer to master. Equal to this is the emotional investment and honesty required to convey his character’s multi-layered states of being.”

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Patti LuPone, Angela Lansbury, Mandy Patinkin, Bernadette Peters, Raul Esparza, Audra McDonald and Elaine Stritch are among the prime Sondheim interpreters. One of Sondheim’s special muses, Lansbury, was in one of his early musicals, and she’s slated to play aged Madame Armfedlt in the upcoming Broadway revival of “A Little Night Music.” British director Trevor Nunn’s restaging of “Night Music,” transferred from London to New York, is simpler than earlier versions.

“The tone is Chekhovian,” Sondheim says. “That’s implicit in the piece anyway. It’s about shadow. But it’s still a comedy, done with chamber music in a chamber style.”

More to come …

A Conversation with Stephen Sondheim

When: 8 p.m. Nov. 12

Where: Long Center for the Performing Arts

Information: thelongcenter.org; 474-5664

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Stephen Sondheim: Broadway’s Greatest Artist, Part 2

For Part 1 of “Stephen Sondheim: Broadway’s Greatest Artist,” scroll down to the post below or go here.

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Born in 1930 in New York City, Stephen Sondheim wrote his first musical as a student whose schoolmates included the son of lyricist Oscar Hammerstein II. The elder artist had collaborated with composers such as Jerome Kern and Richard Rodgers to produce classics like “Show Boat,” “Oklahoma!” and “South Pacific.” In one of the happy coincidences of theatrical history, Hammerstein became a sort of surrogate father and oversaw the development of Sondheim’s tender aesthetic.

Although he studied music seriously, it was Sondheim’s lyrics that first drew the attention of Broadway professionals. And, in the postwar period, words made an emphatic point. Hammerstein had already linked the songs closely to the action, so that audiences actually paid attention to them.

“The next big change came with the rock revolution,” Sondheim says.

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“People started listening to lyrics. Nobody really listened to Cole Porter’s lyrics, except the clever, comic ones. After the pop revolution, people had a lot to say: There was anger and passion — (expletive) the establishment. Before that, lyrics were generally anodyne: ‘I love you darling,’ and all that. I’m oversimplifying, but …”

Sondheim’s lyrics were so adept, so clever, so crucial to each show’s emotional progress, he was recognized as a singular wordsmith.

“I am continually in awe of the multiple-emotional layers and thoughtfulness of Sondheim’s work,” says Zach Theatre director Dave Steakley. “The recent spate of stripped-down productions, fewer orchestrations and chorus members, have revealed new truths for his fans and have become new, meaningful works on their own, instead of feeling lesser.”

More than 60 years after penning his first lyrics, Sondheim has collected them in a two-volume book that will include recollections and commentary.

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“There are a lot of lyrics and a lot of comment,” jokes Sondheim, one of the few theater artists elected to the American Academy of Arts and Letters. Reviewing thousands of lyrical lines — all stored in the Library of Congress and the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts at Lincoln Center — were there any surprises?

“Honestly no,” he says. “Every now and then, I would glow with pride and delight, or wince with shame and embarrassment. But I’m a slow writer. I worked on these things meticulously, so there are not a lot of surprises left. I really know every word.”

More to come …

A Conversation with Stephen Sondheim

When: 8 p.m. Nov. 12

Where: Long Center for the Performing Arts

Information: thelongcenter.org; 474-5664

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Stephen Sondheim: Broadway’s Greatest Artist, Part 1

Stephen Sondheim, the creative force behind 18 major musicals, might be the greatest artist Broadway has ever produced.

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Consider his music, lyrics and theatrical collaborations over the past 50 years. He transformed the way words go with music during the musical’s so-called Golden Age (“West Side Story,” “Gypsy”). He later fused music and lyrics into darker material (“Company,” “Follies” “A Little Night Music”), which led to his mature theatrical masterpieces (“Sweeney Todd,” “Into the Woods,” “Sunday in the Park with George”) and even his lesser gems (“Merrily We Roll Along,” “Assassins”).

Critics believe his work will survive centuries, of not millenia.

“Sondheim — more than any other composer or lyricist — has given us music and theater that is memorable, challenging, intelligent and inventive, yet emotionally and intellectually satisfying,” says Rick Pender, editor of the Sondheim Quarterly, a national magazine devoted to its namesake. “I do not see this kind of multifaceted genius in any other Broadway artist.”

Sondheim is not so sure about his legacy.

“I wouldn’t make any pronouncements,” he says recently in a rare telephone interview. “Who knows if musicals will be done? Who does the musicals from 100 years ago? They are ridiculous. The songs are good. Not the musicals. You want to listen to an Irving Berlin tune, but not see an Irving Berlin show.”

(“Annie Get Your Gun” might be an exception.)

Thursday, the nine-time Tony Award winner — who also earned an Academy Award and a Pulitzer Prize — will make his first Austin appearance. He will extend a cycle of public conversations started two years ago with The New York Times opinion writer and former theater critic Frank Rich. At the Long Center, his colloquy partner will be Austin Chronicle arts editor Robert Faires.

Local musical aficionados can hardly wait for the verbal exchange.

“Sondheim represents everything that is good about American musical theater,” says Austin director Michael McKelvey, who recently staged an award-winning “Sweeney Todd.” “He is always original and thought-provoking, a composer with a grasp of all that Western music can deliver.”

More to come …

A Conversation with Stephen Sondheim

When: 8 p.m. Nov. 12

Where: Long Center for the Performing Arts

Information: thelongcenter.org; 474-5664

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Your A-List: Best Video Store

The A-List reader’s poll produces very few exact ties. Numerically, the more votes, the less chance for a tie. Yet we are faced with one in first place this week.

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For Best Video Store, voters gave exactly the same number of endorsements to Vulcan, the character-filled traditional outlet, as to Netflix, the mail-in option. Both recorded 31 percent.

Austin’s other traditional video spot, I Luv Video, came in a respectable third with 14 percent. Blockbuster and the Austin Public Library tied at 6 percent. Hastings, an older Texas chain, managed 4 percent.

Three percent or less of the voters chose Tapelenders, Encore and the Movie Store.

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Your A-List: Best Shopping Center

I’m serious. Twelve years ago, when we moved two blocks off South Congress Avenue, we had no idea it would become one of Austin’s top tourist attractions. The parking overflow annoys at times, but who would argue with the snappy shops, cool restaurants and sidewalks full of fellow pedestrians? (We’ll leave out any discussion of property values and tax rates.)

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South Congress, otherwise known as SoCo, won the A-List reader poll for Best Shopping Center with 24 percent of the vote. Barton Creek Square Mall, built on the standard indoor formula, was not far behind with 21 percent. The Domain, which combines the street experience with amusement-park design, came in third with 14 percent.

The somewhat similar but boxier Hill Country Galleria bagged 9 percent, while the Arboretum rang up 5 percent, tying with the Second Street District. The rest — Shops at the Galleria, Lakeline Mall, Highland Mall, Prime Outlets, Tanger Outlets, La Frontera, Wolf Ranch and Capital Plaza — earned 3 percent or less.

Sweet that ol’ Capital Plaza was remembered.

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Your A-List: Best Festival That’s Not ACL or SXSW

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South by Southwest and the Austin City Limits Festival have grown so ubiquitous, it’s hard to imagine anything else happening in Austin, socially, on those March or October weekends. Yet Central hosts many other festivals. Just not staged on that monumental scale.

The A-List reader poll for Best Festival That’s Not ACL or SXSW turned into a showdown between the Old Settlers Music Festival and Kerrville Folk Festival. Both are full-saturation events, out of doors and packed with music, so related thematically to the biggest fests. Old Settler’s took 50 percent of the ballots; Kerrville 41 percent.

Pretty much everything else fell to 3 percent or less: Fun Fun Fun Fest, Texas Book Festival, Austin Kite Festival, Austin Raggae Festival, Austin Film Festival, Batfest, Austin Gay & Lesbian International Film Festival, Keep Austin Weird Festival, Urban Music Festival, Art City Austin, Fantastic Fest, Cine Las Americas, Out of Bounds Improv Festival and Fuse Box.

I think I’ve covered all but one of these. Wanna guess which?

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Your A-List: Best Happy Hour

When you ask: What’s your favorite Austin happy hour, are you asking about the drinks? Or the food? Or the scene? Or the whole package?

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Some of the A-List reader choices for Best Happy Hour are restaurants; some are bars. So there’s a bit of a criteria split.

The winner is an old friend: multi-sited Trudy’s, which earned just over 20 percent of the votes, while funky South Congress music venue Continental Club came close with just under 20 percent.

Downtown restaurant McCormick & Schmick’s came in third with 13 percent. Saxon Pub and Baby Acapulco tied at 10 percent. Close behind were Doc’s, Roaring Fork, Cedar Door and Kyoto, with Brown Bar bringing up the rear.

All good happy hours. Where were Trio or Maria Maria in all this? Maybe they are still too new.

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Kanye West buys into Austonian?

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The rumor bolted around the Texas Tribune party like an errant musician at an awards ceremony:

Kanye West had purchased the top floor of the Austonian.

A building source says: “I hadn’t heard that.”

Can anyone confirm?

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Texas Tribune Launch at the Belmont

Now that was a mob …

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John Thornton and Evan Smith

Delegates from Law, Media and Business thronged to the Belmont on Tuesday to smash a figurative champagne bottle over the Texas Tribune’s bow …

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Dean and Andrea McWilliams

A nonprofit, online newspaper that covers public policy has been a years-long daydream for Austin Ventures partner John Thornton

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Kate Hersch and Richard Saja

With corporate and private donations — prompted by Thornton’s own $1 million+ ante — the Tribune is off and running …

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Cynthia Baker and Whurley

As usual for major meet-ups at the Belmont, the front courtyard was shoulder-to-shoulder, but the upper decks and inside spaces promised room to breathe, nibble and sip …

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Matt Waite (Hot Type Consulting), Kerri Taylor and Brandon Taylor (Tribune developer)

I talked to journalists, some formerly of the Statesman, others cherry-picked by Tribune captain Evan Smith for the new project …

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Priya Nihalani and Ken Miller

Also present were publicists, lobbyists, politicians and, especially, a lot of techies …

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Mark Oberholzer and Leigh Hopper

As a digital-only newspaper, the Tribune has attracted the attention and help of open-source, design and development wizards (like Mr. Whurley, already moving into alternate reality field) …

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Thom Singer, Susanna Hamner and Lance Avery Morgan

News and social junkies like your columnist will keep an eye on the Tribune as it sails out into the wide, wide world of journalistic discovery.

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Laura Scanlan Cho and Kenneth Cho

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Ben Hine and Ximena Estrada

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Steve Moakley and Natalie Bell

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Notable Women at the Long Center

The Notable Women movement had quietly exited the stage …

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Toya Haley and Dr. Joni Wallace

As imagined by Vickie Roan, owner of the Menagerie, the group raised $1.3 million for the Long Center project, simply by setting aside the price of a latte a day for a year …

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Jane Driscoll, Diane Lupsitz and Christina Hester

After the center opened, the Notables, as a group, slipped from view. Many of them reassembled, however, in the Kodosky Donor Lounge on Tuesday to catch up — and to learn details about the center’s upcoming 2nd anniversary party …

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Tony Jelik, Bobbi Topfer and Beau Nutt

Slated for March 27, the party is built around the indestructible ’80s act Hall and Oates, with Asleep at the Wheel out in the tent, entertaining for the remaining festivities …

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Patty Huffines and Vickie Roan

The color is purple for the party, which is a fresh twist for this gala-goer.

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Why Women Have Sex, Part 3

For more of “Why Women Have Sex,” scroll down to previous posts, or link to Part 1 and Part 2.

In their own words

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‘I was in a nonsexual relationship for 13 years. After that ended, I needed human touch to be reminded that I could still feel. Sex and physical pleasure helped me feel human again.’ — heterosexual woman, age 42

‘I was told that if a man could dance he could perform in bed. I did not believe this and wanted to see if it was true. … We ended up having sex and yes he was as good in bed as he was on the dance floor. … He literally danced while having sex. It was wonderful.’ — heterosexual woman, age 29

‘I had sex with someone who had a great sense of humor because every time I was with him, I had a great time. I have never had so much fun with anyone else as I had with him.’ — heterosexual woman, age 27

‘The reason I had sex with my ex-husband? I was young, I was 16 years old, and I wanted him to stay with me. I thought by having sex it would ensure a committed relationship. It didn’t, but at the time you could not have made me see that. I equated sex (with) love. And the more we made love, I thought, the more he must love me. I was a fool.’ — heterosexual woman, age 41

‘My husband cheated with my best friend, so I had an affair with her husband for three months. I did not feel guilty at all.’ — heterosexual woman, age 44

‘Sometimes, it was easier to just give in and do it when he wanted rather than put up with listening to him whine and complain about how horny he was.’ — heterosexual woman, age 29

‘After I broke up with the first person that I had sex with, I wondered if sex with different people was dramatically different, so I had sex with another boy I knew and … yeah, it was definitely different.’ — predominately heterosexual woman, age 18

‘I have had sex with my boyfriend to make my sexual skills better for the both of us. I see it as each time I have sex I’m also choosing to do it to heighten my skills so we can both have an even better experience than the last.’ — heterosexual woman, age 20

‘You know the situation with your spouse where you really want to please them sexually because you want to have your own way on something. Little things like choosing (where to eat) dinner.’ — heterosexual woman, age 25

‘(Sex) is a stress reliever, and let’s face it, most of the time men don’t care why, they’re just happy to help along.’ — predominately heterosexual woman, age 22

‘I can’t really describe this experience … but pure joy and connection with another person I feel is becoming closer to the cycles of life and the underlying, palpable energy of the world … in essence, God.’ heterosexual woman, age 21

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Why Women Have Sex, Part 2

For Part 1 of “Why Women Have Sex,” scroll down to the previous post, or go here.

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The Meston-Buss survey was conducted online over the course of three years. Responding to classified ads, more than 1,000 women from around the world and from a variety of backgrounds were asked if their reasons for having sex fit the 237 categories. Their often detailed responses were protected through encryption technology.

“(It’s) the most fascinating and illuminating look at female sexuality since Alfred Kinsey’s ‘Sexual Behavior in the Human Female,’ ” says Mary Roach, author of “Bonk: The Curious Coupling of Science and Sex.”

The Meston-Buss book is informed by evolutionary psychology (Buss’ expertise) about mate selection and psychophysiology (Meston’s specialty) on the female body’s response to sex.

“In the past, most people believed that whatever worked for men worked for women,” Meston says of her research. When male sexual enhancement drugs came on the market, for instance, pharmaceutical companies poured money into her research, hoping to find the first “pink Viagra.” With new measurement techniques, they discovered women’s bodies didn’t operate in the same way. (Mere genital blood flow did not trigger a sexual response in women’s brains.)

“What we’ve learned about the basic physiology of women’s sex in the past 10 years has exceeded what was learned in the previous 30, ever since Masters and Johnson,” she says.

What makes this book a potential best-seller are the words of the women themselves. The study respondents are remarkably candid.

“They could be entertaining, funny and heart-wrenching” says Meston, who spent months and months sorting through the colloquial responses. “Some say it succinctly, eloquently.”

Meston hopes the female readers who might not have reflected on why they have sex will be open to the variety of experiences recorded in the book.

“Some turn out well, some badly,” Meston says of sexual choices. “For these reasons, I feel good. For these reasons, I feel bad. Maybe we can make fewer negative choices.”

More to come …

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Why Women Have Sex, Part 1

“It’s complicated.”

No, that’s not how Cindy Meston lists her relationship status on her Facebook page.

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Instead, it’s the conclusion she and fellow University of Texas researcher David Buss reached when they asked, in a vast, unprecedented study: “Why do women have sex?”

“We both knew it was a question that had not been asked in the research literature,” Meston said. “People wondered, ‘What do you mean? Of course, it’s because we want to feel good.’ But we found it’s much more complicated than that.”

In fact, in two related surveys, women reported a full range of human responses, citing spirituality, conquest, sympathy, revenge, boredom, loneliness, curiosity, practice, attraction, esteem, reproduction, variety, evaluation, friendship, attention, submission, power, romance, pleasure, punishment, stress, adventure, barter, commitment, duty, infatuation, competition, guilt, coercion, jealousy and stimulation, among other motivations.

“We categorized them into 237 reasons,” said Meston, co-author with Buss of the book “Why Women Have Sex,” which has landed the psychology professors on “Dr. Phil” and “The Rachael Ray Show.”

“Most of what was known before was how to turn on a woman — physical cues, emotional cues, romantic cues, holding hands and so forth. Also the confidence and status of the man. This study told us so much more,” she says.

More to come …

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Austin Celebrity Roundup

It’s been a while. Sorry. We’ll catch up on Austin celebrities in installments.

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Last week, Austin’s Eugene Sepulveda was invited to the White House to witness President Barack Obama signing the Matthew Shepard Hate Crimes Act. Later, the incredibly connected head of the Entrepreneur’s Foundation of Central Texas was present at an Austin lunch where former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright endorse Jack McDonald for U.S Congress. For pictures of both events, go to his Community Matters blog.

Sherry Jameson of Annies Cafe and Bar on Congress Avenue hung out with Woody Harrelson at the Austin Film Festival wrap party at the Belmont. Jameson’s family got to know Texan Harrelson while he worked on movies in Smithville. Pictured: Janice Hurst (Sherry’s sister); Brenda Mitchell (Sherry’s sister), Woody Harrelson, Joanne Flynn and Sherry Jameson.

Multiple Hollywood sources say that Austin director Robert Rodriguez has walked away from a proposed movie of the futuristic TV cartoon, “The Jetsons.” Apparently, so did actor Jim Carrey, who was jawed as George Jetson.

What need reporters, when celebrities like Lance Armstrong tweet it all, including the take from his recent Sotheby’s charity bike auction: “1.3 mil raised for @livestrong!!! So incredibly humbling. From (artist) Damien Hirst’s masterpiece Tour de France ‘finale’ Trek Madone covered in real butterflies, to the KAWS ‘Chompers’ cycle that I broke my collarbone on in the Vuelta Castilla y Leon, every ride is a treasured piece of personal history that I’m proud to offer up to benefit LIVESTRONG.”

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Riverside: Highland and Lowland

I’ll take the high road and, what the heck, I’ll take the low road, too.

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Nora the Explorer Lab trotted alongside me on two long, morning strolls in the Riverside neighborhood last weekend. Saturday was devoted to the highlands south of Riverside Drive; Sunday to the lowlands between that busy traffic artery and Lady Bird Lake.

While the Colorado River floodplains and flanking hills define the terrain North-South, socially, Riverside is divided along a jagged, line between large apartment complexes to the East and small single-family zones to the West. The latter is crisscrossed by Parker Lane and Woodland Avenue, leading to narrow strips of cliff-side developments.

Among the steep, highland mounds — nobody driving Riverside or Interstate 35 can imagine how steep — the autumn flowers had dulled, but groundwater had risen to replenish the trees. Few birds lingered late in the morning, but two hawks flashed overhead. One encounters not so many dog-walkers as in nearby, gentler Travis Heights, but plenty of yard-dabblers, and a few water-toting trekkers like ourselves.

Only scattered evidence of pre-World War II activity here, mostly down along Old Riverside and up on Taylor-Gaines Street. (Were these names of settlers of that hilltop? Non-snarky readers please reply).

Otherwise, the highland homes fall into two categories: Mid-century moderns, built after work began on the interstate, some of them fastidiously placed on hillsides; and less thoughtful 1970s versions of Colorado chalets and Arizona desert ranchers, with skirts of milky limestone for local flavor. No longer hidden, this neighborhood remains a gem.

The sweet find this trip was a hilltop homestead plot on Parker. Ancient oaks guard the hill’s crest and a meadow drops down to a pond, probably feeding the almost completely erased Harpers Branch. The lot is for sale. That probably excites developers, but it would also make a superb, vest-pocket park in an area lacking them, especially if playgrounds were added to the vast lawns of two churches across the street.

These upper neighborhoods remain pretty much intact. No so the giant apartment complexes in the lowlands, almost all demolished (easily, given their temporary nature). A walk along Lakeside Drive and its LCRA-planted oak alleys explains why the area was targeted for new mix-use development. In any city, this would be a coveted location, so near downtown, the lake and Lakeside Park.

University of Texas students once dominated this area, as well as the apartments on the hillsides across Riverside Drive. No longer. Immigrants gather on the landings and cook in the courtyards. Some have fleshed out balconies with plants and decoration, which seems a little sad, since many of the remaining buildings will go, too.

Immigrants infuse Pleasant Valley Road, East Riverside and East Oltorf with enormous, international energy. Taquerias, carnerias, panderias, along with Vietnamese, Chinese, Indonesian and Mediterranean cafes, battle against American fast-food chain (guess which nutritionists and foodies would probably back).

No wonder H-E-B is expanding its keystone store at Pleasant Valley and Riverside. Would be a good time to partner with the city to finish the sidewalks along that side of Pleasant Valley, since a steady stream of families trod the mud between the grocery store and the authentic Gran Mercado complex down the street.

Developers, neighborhood activists and city planners are taking the next steps carefully. Overwhelming logic supports the boardwalk extension of the hike-and-bike trail. Also the balance between new amenities and affordable housing in the lowlands. Well-maintained landscaping and pedestrian crossings would help Oltorf and Riverside.

Eventually, one assumes, the soul-chilling acres of concrete parking lots will disappear as the area population diversifies. I predict an internationally-flavored organic grocery store will eventually replace American Bingo, one of the area’s most painful eyesores. I’d bet on it.

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Maria Groten’s Surprise Party at Kiss & Fly

One does not need a reason to glorify Maria Groten

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Claudia and Maria Groten

She’s a leader in the Style and Charity fields, while her husband, Eric, bolsters those endeavors through the worlds of Law and Arts …

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Jeff and Allison Swope (recently of New York City

Yet a 40th birthday does not go unheralded, even if Groten can look half that age, at least when spiraling across a dance floor …

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Clinton Peña and Douglas Kennedy

Early in the evening, Eric took Maria to dinner, where they happened to “meet” Zach Theatre director Dave Steakley and his partner, real estate agent Tony Johnson

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Dave Steakley, Julia McCurley, Dave McCurley and Tony Johnson

After dinner, the three men escorted Maria into the vast and empty (at that comparatively early hour) Kiss & Fly club, then down the stairs to the dim basement bar, where scads of friends from all fields wished her well among hugs, backstories and more dancing ….

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David Garza and Rachel Saldaña

Why a gay bar for the Grotens? Well, let’s see … Style, Charity, Arts, Law. Let’s just say they have a few gay friends …

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Tim Crowley (in from Marfa) and Emily Keeton (Santa Monica)

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First Edition Literary Gala at the Four Seasons

Each Austin scene ripens in its own time …

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Heidie Marquez Smith and Clay Smith

Law and Education in the Ancestral Era. … Business and Sports in the Modern Era. … Music, Movies, Arts and Food early in the Contemporary Era. … Style, Charity, Nightlife and Media in the late Contemporary Era …

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Jordan Sinclair and Brian Ferguson (who knew whom to know at the gala)

Almost simultaneously, the digital and literary subsets of the Media scene have emerged from their dormant state during the last 10 years, as chronicled by outgoing American-Statesman books reporter/editor Jeff Salamon

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Leslie Callahan and Deborah Treece (Representing Ancestral Austin!)

Salamon absolutely defined the phenomenon in today’s newspaper. He tied the fresh literary scene — building on mounds of tradition — to the Texas Book Festival, Michener Center for Writers, Ransom Center, Southwestern Writers Collection, Texas Monthly and Texas Writers League …

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Janie McGarr and Nancy Halbreich (daughters of former Dallas Mayor Annette Strauss)

All this coalesces as we embark on another book festival over a glorious Halloween weekend …

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Dave Hamrick (UT Press) and Tim Staley (Austin Public Library Foundation)

The First Edition Literary Gala at the Four Seasons Hotel brought many local and national celebrities of the word together …

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Natalie, Greg and Mari Marchbanks (who took me to my first Texas Book Festival gala ages ago)

Mort Meyerson introduced Bob Schieffer who introduced Richard Russo (“That Old Cape Magic”), Bryan Burroughs (“The Big Rich”) and Jon Scieszka (“The Stinky Cheese Man”), each funnier and more timely than the last …

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Lois Chiles (Houston actress and former Bond Girl) and Vance Muse (public face of the Menil Collection)

I sat next to the scion of the Ancestral Austin Callahan clan …

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Lois Qualben and Mary Louise McCarty (best glittering hat of the gala)

As well as to Mark Seal (“Wildflower: An Extraordinary Life and Untimely Death in Africa”), whom, to my chagrin, I didn’t identify right away as a contributing editor to Vanity Fair, or a former contributor to Texas Monthly, among many other publications, who now lives in Aspen, Colo. …

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U.S. Rep. Lloyd and Libby Doggett

After we exchanged cards, Seal said he’d read my column. I begged him not to …

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Pamela Weiss and Mort Meyerson (big names from other cities)

Mine is not the literary mode. I’m a crook-fingered blogger and columnist whose micro-insights into Austin are best left unexamined beyond the moment of their recording.

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Jeanne Klein and Jon Scieszka (leading art collector, profiled in Sunday’s newspaper, and outrageous children’s book writer)

But I do love a literary festival. Especially this one …

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Bart and Barbara Knaggs (Capitol Sports and Entertainment, Lance Armstrong’s managers)

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Jayne Barrett and Sarah Bird (my neighbor and my role model)

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Planned Parenthood Gala at Renaissance Austin Hotel

The banquet room at the Renaissance Austin Hotel filled unto overflowing …

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Travis County Clerk Dana DeBeauvoir, Rebecca Lightsy and Christy Ozman

Former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright as the marquee speaker was surely one motivation …

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Dianne Carr and Janet Gilmore

Another was the organization — Planned Parenthood — behind the gala …

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Katie Hallberg, Andy Brown and Asara Strother

Indeed, it seemed that almost every Austin-area politician — Democrats at least — were prominently in attendance, and upbeat in spirits. (One observer dubbed the crowd: “Seriously old-school Austin liberals.”) …

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Mark and Nancy Utkov

I missed most of the event, but grabbed a few key participants on the way out (near the cleverly placed coffee-to-go, something other gala planners should consider) …

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Niyanta Spelman and Lulu Flores

The only complaint I heard: The live auction lasted way too long. The next night, at the Texas Book Festival gala, the crowd cheered when it was announced there would be no live auction …

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Kevin and Austin City Council Member Sheryl Cole with Council Member Chris Riley

Now, such auctions can indeed work, done right, but perhaps organizers could be more judicious about electing to do so. Feels like a grassroots resistance against them.

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Ballet Austin Guild’s Vive le Vin at AT&T Center

The Ballet Austin Guild and the Ballet Austin board of directors are not mutually exclusive …

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Brooke Holmes and Darlene Byrne

The old-style guild and the new-style board work hand in hand, and membership overlaps …

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Betty Oltorf and Louise Hein

And the two tribes joined for Vive le Vin, one of the guild’s top annual events, at the AT&T Center (I appreciate what the phone company does in support of various local groups, but oh I wish a more euphoniously named organization underwrote the UT executive education and conference complex) …

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Cynthia Tays and Marilyn Rose

Several conversations buttressed my opinion that the ballet remains the buzziest large arts troupe in town …

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Samantha Segar and Steven Burton

Zach Theatre, with its recently unveiled plans for a third hall, is not far behind. The ballet, however, is already there, with paid-for education center, paid-for Long Center and a well-earned national reputation.

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Stephanie Nick and Sandy Bennett

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Chloe & Nuo at Parts & Labour

Two things enticed me to Parts & Labour on Thursday …

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Marques Harper and Chloe Dao

On a celebrity level, Houston’s Chloe Dao was showing some of her signature bags, a lure for any “Project Runway” devotee (she won on the second season, recall) …

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Adam Vuong and Eddie Libranda

On the personal level, Nuo’s Hank Holland would be there. The VP for marketing at the Austin firm that makes Dao’s travel collection had left me with several social insights at a AU40 happy hour a few weeks ago, and I wanted to see his work …

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Amanda George and Brittany Villareal

For its part, Parts & Labour nicely fills out its new, larger location, a former alteration shop on South Congress Avenue. The owners continue to flesh out the intersection of super-casual (printed T-shirts) and kicky designs with vintage inspirations …

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Keith Yawn and Katie Johnson

Dao’s bags for Nuo bristle with bold geometrics echoing the early 1970s. I settled instead for one of the men’s laptop satchels in sage canvas trimmed in a fawn-like hue, not of Dao’s design …

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Justin Britten and Dan Wilson

A full-time pedestrian must purchase a new satchel once a year. Lance Armstrong sold me on my last one, a black Timbuk2, at Mellow Johnny’s. Hank Holland sold me on this one. It’s just right for my Macbook Air and I’ve already shouldered it all over town.

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Stars in Your Eyes 10th Annivesary

The founders of Stars in Your Eyes could be seen as hardy pioneers of sorts …

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Dr. Emily and Steve Schottman

The vision specialists homesteaded a variable stretch of Congress Avenue across from the Paramount Theatre 10 years ago …

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Kyle Lagunas and Michael LaFon

This was before the rapid expansion of downtown residences. Many businesses have come and gone in the interim …

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Summer Beathe and John Cavanaugh

Stars combined sound medical evaluation with fashionable frames and reliable service. (How I know: I was among the first customers and have purchased all my eyeglasses there.)

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Emily Stark and Joyce Esmeria

The Stars staff threw an anniversary party on Thursday, with cake and other refreshments, along with an eyewear fashion show, run by the always stylish Rachel Elsberry. I ran into all sorts of interesting folks, such as Cindy Patrizi, who grew up with my college bud and New York actor, Ginger Grace. (I learned, for instance, that Ginger lived on Broadway in Beaumont.)

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Rachel Elsberry and Cindy Patrizi

They’ve got another location in Rosedale now. They still keep downtown Austin in focus.

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