It’s a misty autumn afternoon and along a winding country road in New Milford, a housing development emerges of stately though modestly-scaled homes with manageable lawns and pristine porches.
Connecticut
Missing CT hiker’s family leaves Japan; local teams continue search for Pattie Wu-Murad
Kirk Murad of Storrs, whose spouse Pattie Wu-Murad disappeared whereas climbing in Japan on April 10, has left Japan together with his household however stated he isn’t giving up the seek for his spouse of 33 years.
“It wasn’t a straightforward resolution,” Murad stated Sunday from Singapore, the place he’s staying with a pal. “To depart Japan with out her was excruciating. However we have now to make use of what cash we have now to pay for the search reasonably than for us to attend there for them to go looking.”
Wu-Murad, 60, an skilled hiker who went on excursions around the globe, went lacking April 10 after setting out for a 12-mile hike on the Kumano Kodo path in a mountainous space of central Japan. The innkeeper who directed her to the trailhead at 7 a.m. was the final identified individual to see her. When she didn’t arrive on the subsequent hostel the place she was supposed to remain, the proprietor referred to as police, who looked for her for 3 days. Murad, who didn’t count on to listen to from Pattie for 3 to 4 days due to the place she was climbing, didn’t discover out his spouse was lacking till April 14 when the U.S. consulate referred to as him.
He has been in Japan since April 17, alongside together with his daughter Murphy, who lives in Singapore, and his son Bryce, who lives in Chicago. The household raised over $185,000 with a GoFundMe web page to spend on search and rescue groups in addition to lodging and meals whereas they had been in Japan. Each American and Japanese groups, together with the Murad household who needed to coordinate the search, combed the path and the mountain the place Wu-Murad was imagined to have hiked. They discovered nothing.
“It’s Day 28 and we aren’t any nearer to discovering her,” Murad stated. “There’s no clues, there’s no suspects on the legal facet, there’s no leads. Not a shoe that fell off her, nothing. Nonetheless ready on the telecoms to see in the event that they’ll give us any data. Not that there’s any data, however we wish to verify that field.
“It’s not going the best way we had hoped. However we nonetheless have to carry out hope,” he stated.
The final of the American search and rescue group members left Friday. The Japanese group remains to be there, looking in laborious to achieve locations. The native police launched a legal investigation into Wu-Murad’s disappearance and after discovering nothing, closed the case, Murad stated.
“We determined Friday we had been going to go away – it was costing us between $400 and $500 a day to remain in Japan,” Murad stated. “They cost by individual, not by room, and there have been 4 of us.
“I didn’t wish to preserve consuming up our finances – Murphy has an house (in Singapore), she will return to her house. I’ve acquired some associates I can stick with, not indefinitely, however a time period. I lived right here for seven years so I do know some folks. If one thing develops, I’m a six-hour flight away. No matter cash we do have, we’re going to spend it on the search and rescue group from Japan. They’ve been at it since Day 1. They began on April 16.”
One of many members of the group stated one thing to Murad final week in Japanese and the translator was uncomfortable translating it, he stated.
“He stated one thing and she or he paused and regarded like she was going to cry and I stated, ‘Simply say it’ and he stated, ‘I don’t understand how lengthy we will keep on this case. I don’t even suppose she’s on this mountain.’ That was 5 days in the past,” Murad stated.
However he added, when he left, the very last thing one of many group members stated to him was: “I wish to discover her.”
“Now there’s a line that (the Japanese SAR group) goes to attract and I don’t know the place that line is but, once they’re going to say, ‘We will’t work on this case anymore.’ A part of not wanting to go away was to be there so in the event that they considered it, they’d see my face…” Murad stated.
“As a lot as I didn’t wish to depart Japan, I’ve associates right here (in Singapore), I’ve assist system right here. I simply really feel like we want assist,” he stated.
Connecticut
Tony-award winning director Jack O'Brien talks about career, life in CT
In one of the dozen or so homes in this quiet mini-village is where theater director Jack O’Brien has lived for the past 10 years.
“I call the style of home ‘Early Ozzie and Harriet,’ ” he said laughing, as he greets his visitors.
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Like the avuncular man himself, the two-story house reflects a sense of the classic, the playful and the practical.
Over a six-decade career in the theater and nearly 50 Broadway credits, O’Brien has earned three Tony Awards and in June received another for lifetime achievement.
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At 85, he’s still achieving plenty.
This fall on Broadway he directed close chums Patti LuPone and Mia Farrow — who live nearby — in the Jen Silverman comedy “The Roommate.” He also launched the national tour of the 2023 Broadway musical “Shucked,” which earned him his seventh nomination. He is readying to cast the musical for its London premiere and for 2025 he will be working on a Broadway-bound revival of “The Sound of Music.”
“Let’s go upstairs,” O’Brien eagerly said, leading his guests to a large alcove whose walls are covered with production photos, design sketches and posters of some of the hits (and misses) of his career. To comfortably take it all in there’s a butterscotch-colored leather couch, accented with a colorful variety of textured pillows.
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“Isn’t this fun?,” he said taking a seat, clearly pleased in showing off the room to a theater aficionado. “And this isn’t even everything!”
It’s a theater archivist’s dreamscape: memorabilia that goes back to the start of his career with the APA Phoenix Repertory Company in the ‘60s; the launch of his Broadway career — in the ‘70s with an acclaimed production of “Porgy and Bess;” his years as artistic director of San Diego’s Old Globe and its Broadway transfers in the ‘80s and ‘90s; a string of hit musicals and collaborations with Tom Stoppard in the 2000s; more awards and nominations in the 2010s; and his latest nomination in the 2023 for “Shucked.”
For each piece of the past, there’s inevitably a backstage tale and O’Brien is known to be one of the best theater storytellers in the business, the person you most want to sit next to at dinner. He has authored two anecdote-filled memoirs, the last being “Jack in the Box or, How to Goddamn Direct.”
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The airy second floor is for overnight guests and those who might enjoy looking at his theater collection, he said. For himself, well, O’Brien is just too busy to overindulge in nostalgia, residing on the ground floor.
“I have no rear-view mirror,” said the upbeat director. “I only look forward.”
Connecticut escape
Connecticut — and specifically Litchfield Country — has been O’Brien’s refuge from the demands and chaos of Manhattan for nearly 25 years, initially wooed by theater pals who lived here.
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“Lindsay Law, who produced all my television shows (for PBS’ “American Playhouse” in the ‘70s) lived in Roxbury and I would come up to visit every weekend,” he said.
Following the death of his partner, composer James J. Legg Jr., in 2000, O’Brien decided to create new memories in the serene corner of Connecticut. He bought a sprawling homestead which he named “Imaginary Farms,” after the 2002 Broadway play he was directing at the time, “Imaginary Friends.”
”It was the house that ‘Hairspray’ built,” he said, referring to his 2002 hit musical.
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“It was gorgeous,” he said of that first home, noting its swimming pool, guest house and 20 acres. “We always had loads of friends there. I traditionally cooked Thanksgiving or Christmas for (composer Stephen) Sondheim and all our friends.”
“But several years ago my financial advisor said to me, ‘You can’t keep this house because it takes three staffs of people to run it.’ So I said OK, and I made a video of the place and sent it to all my theater people, most of whom had been guests there at one time or another.’
Ethan Hawke, whom O’Brien directed in Stoppard’s “The Coast of Utopia” trilogy and Shakespeare’s “Henry IV” and “Macbeth,” bought the house “And everything in. He said, ‘We want to live like you live.’ I feel so wonderful about how it all turned out.”
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After selling his apartment on Central Park West 10 years ago, he sought a return to Connecticut. He learned that a new development was being built in New Milford, and that he could customize a home to his tastes, which one might call a slightly different kind of directing.
“The entire development looks like the back lot of MGM in 1945,” he said. “And by that I mean quite charming. It’s perfect for me now.”
Long runs for directors
O’Brien leads his guests to his ground-floor bedroom where on display are shelves of his multiple awards — including his Tonys, an armful of Drama Desk trophies, and the Theatre Hall of Fame honor. On the floor there’s a throw rug created by stage designer David Rockwell completely made up of colorful satin bow ties.
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In the living room, he eases into an oversized, wing-chair next to a marble fireplace, as Coda, as if on cue, jumps into his lap.
“I’ve had four Yorkies in my lifetime and Coda (is) the last of a distinguished line,” he said, seemingly a nod to his own age more than his dog’s.
It is pointed out to him that legendary theater director George Abbott lived to be 107 and continued working until his death in 1995.
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“I met him when he was 105,” he said, referring to the time O’Brien directed a revival of “Damn Yankees” starring Jerry Lewis. Abbott was protective of his original script which O’Brien sought to rewrite. “Those extra two angry years kept him alive,” he said.
“I guess there’s something about theater directors. Twenty years ago, I didn’t know anyone in their 90s. Now I know a lot and many of them are still working. I’m working all the time now, too. It’s ridiculous. I thought it was going to stop — but it didn’t.”
Connecticut
Officials: CT troopers respond to 108 crashes from midnight Monday to about noon Tuesday
As of noon Tuesday, Connecticut State Police stopped 98 vehicles since the start of the Christmas holiday.
State police responded to 108 vehicle crashes, including 12 in which a person was injured. No fatalities were reported.
Eleven people were arrested for driving under the influence since midnight Monday.
State police responded to 982 calls from motorists seeking assistance on the highway.
Connecticut
O Little Town of Bethlehem: Connecticut Town Celebrates Christmas All Year Long
A rural town connects beautifully to the miraculous event so long ago.
“O little town of Bethlehem, how still we see thee lie,” begins a beloved Christmas carol sung since 1868, paying homage to Jesus’ birthplace.
But have you heard of Bethlehem, Connecticut?
It’s a favorite destination because of its Christmas connection. With approximately 3,400 residents, modest in size like its ancient namesake once was, the rural town of Bethlehem has two places that connect beautifully to that miraculous event of the Nativity.
The Nutmeg State’s Bethlehem is home to Regina Laudis Abbey, a community of cloistered Benedictine nuns founded after World War II. Here, the nuns have a magnificent early-18th-century Neapolitan crèche, displayed in a restored barn nearly as old and donated specifically to house this Nativity scene. Both the crèche and barn received a meticulous four-year restoration completed less than two decades ago by experts from the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City.
This is no small Neapolitan crèche. It spans 16 feet wide and 6 feet deep. The Nativity scene takes place before a backdrop mural of an 18th-century seaside and an azure sky.
Jesus, Mary and Joseph are at the heart of the crèche where our Savior’s birth is set vividly in a Neapolitan mountainside village — complete with angels hovering in wonderment and awe and scores of villagers react in different ways to the overwhelming presence of the Holy Family.
Simple peasants close to the Holy Family stand in awe and mingle with the Three Kings. Some villagers stop to contemplate Jesus’ birth. Others go on with everyday life as if nothing unusual or life-changing is happening.
The animated scene’s 68 figures and 20 animals of carved wood, ceramic, metal and plant fiber stand up to 16 inches high. They’re dressed in their original period dress that the Metropolitan Museum specialists also carefully restored to pristine condition.
From all indications and evidence, this crèche was a gift to Victor Amadeus II of Sardinia on his coronation in 1720. In 1948, it was brought to America and then in 1949 the woman who then owned it donated it to the abbey to preserve and display it.
Also on the abbey’s grounds is a simple, life-size Nativity scene of the Holy Family, located in a simple shed, with Joseph dressed in a checked farmer’s jacket. Abbey visitors might even spot a sheep or two.
Later during the Christmas season, you might want to watch the 1949 film Come to the Stable that tells the story of Regina Laudis Abbey and whose main characters, two nuns played by Loretta Young and Celeste Holm, are based on the actual Benedictine nuns who came from France after World War II to establish it. It’s a much neglected classic.
Church Highlights Nativity All Year
In nearly a straight line, less than 3 miles from the abbey and a few yards from the center of town, the Church of the Nativity remembers the birth of Jesus year-round. Now a part of Prince of Peace parish, the church was built in 1992 of fieldstone and wood and specifically designed to suggest or look like a large crèche. The church is topped with a star that is lit at night and directs people to the sacred edifice like the star directed the Magi.
The focal point of the church vestibule is a life-size manger scene. The figures were carved from a single pine tree by a Maine artist.
A panorama of the town of Bethlehem is etched high on the glass behind the Holy Family. Etched on another glass panel are the Three Kings, depicted following the star to adore the Newborn King.
In the nave, the church’s interior of stone, wood and large beams intentionally add to the manger atmosphere — as do the words “O Come All Ye Faithful” that stretch and beckon from high behind the altar.
The Nativity atmosphere continues all year. The Knights of Columbus built a 20-foot crèche on the parish’s front lawn.
Another Major Nativity
A little over 500 feet away is the Bethlehem Post Office, which, of course sees lots of extra traffic at this time of year — people enjoy getting their Christmas cards postmarked from “Bethlehem” and envelopes stamped with a Christmas greeting from the town.
Those who do visit these two Nativity treasures can continue singing Little Town of Bethlehem’s later verses:
How silently, how silently The wondrous gift is given! So God imparts to human hearts The blessings of His heaven. No ear may hear His coming, But in this world of sin, Where meek souls will receive him still, The dear Christ enters in.
O holy Child of Bethlehem Descend to us, we pray Cast out our sin and enter in Be born to us today O come to us, abide with us Our Lord Emmanuel!
PLAN YOUR VISIT
Visiting hours for the abbey crèche: Wednesdays through Sundays from 10 a.m. – 3 p.m. Closed Mondays and Tuesdays. Winter Closure: Jan. 7-Easter Sunday; free.
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