San Francisco, CA
San Francisco Opera Honors Michael Cavanagh With Award – OperaWire
San Francisco Opera has awarded director Michael Cavanagh, who passed away on March 13, 2024 at the age of 62.
The director debuted at San Francisco Opera in 2012 with a production of “Nixon in China” and also led productions of “Susannah,” “Lucia di Lammermoor,” and “Svabda-Wedding” as part of the San Francisco Opera Lab in 2016. Finally, he created a new production of the Mozart-Da Ponte Trilogy between 2019-2022.
“It was clear from the moment Michael debuted with us in 2012 that his vision, energy and collaborative spirit resonated beautifully with the Company and this city,” said San Francisco Opera Dianne and Tad Taube General Director Matthew Shilvock in an official press statement. “We entered into a series of new productions with Michael that have defined so much of the artistic arc of the Company over the last decade. In recognition of his extraordinary impact on the artistry of our stage, we proudly awarded Michael our highest honor, the San Francisco Opera Medal. His beloved wife, Jackie Short, was able to share the news with him shortly before he passed.”
The company will celebrate the director this weekend with an event on April 21, 2024.
San Francisco, CA
The EndUp Turns 50 and They're Taking Over Union Square With a Dance Party Saturday
That venerable, inimitable, sloppy palace of bad decisions The EndUp was born 50 (and a half) years ago, and they’re now getting around to celebrating — appropriately kinda late — with a Union Square takeover dance party.
Once upon a time in an era of SoMa dominated by leather and country-and-western bars (The Stud, after all, began as a country-and-western themed bar, hence the double-entendre name), The EndUp was born. It was actually born in mid-November 1973, as a sibling establishment to The RoundUp, a western bar one block up 6th Street, owned by Al Hanken and Greg Loughner.
The bar was primarily gay from the 70s into the 90s, becoming known starting in 1974 for its Jockey Shorts Dance Contest — which was featured in Armistead Maupin’s Tales of the City column in the Chronicle and subsequently featured in the PBS mini-series based on the first book of those columns.
It was always known as a big dance bar with indoor and outdoor spaces, and as an after-hours club — and the latter has made it legendary in an IYKYK kind of way.
In the 90s, it was home to the legendary Club Uranus, which birthed such stars as Justin Vivian Bond, Heklina, Kitty Litter, and Trauma Flintstone. And Fag Fridays launched in 1996 and ran through 2008, featuring an array of LGTBQ club DJs from the Bay Area including Ellen Ferrato and resident DJ David Harness.
After a series of ownership changes and the demise of those weekly LGBTQ events, the club became more mixed and attracted various crowds to events like Sunrise Sunday. And some bad vibes arrived in 2016 with two separate fatal shooting incidents that could have threatened the club’s existence — one in June 2016 that took place inside the club, and one that took place outside in October 2016.
But The EndUp has endured, it was granted Legacy Business status by the city in 2019, and Saturday, June 15 will be a big 50th birthday bash in Union Square — potentially drawing a pretty huge crowd.
Given that the actual birthday was seven months ago, the Facebook invite just calls this party a “fashionably late” one.
“Known as San Francisco’s most legendary after-hours nightclub and premier day-club, @endupsf celebrates dance culture fifty years strong since 1973,” the club says.
DJs include Oscar G, Paul Goodyear, Dean Samaras, Brian Salazar, and Hawthorne. (See the DJ bios here.)
The free party in Union Square runs from 1 pm to 9 pm, Saturday — and, of course, the party continues at The EndUp after that, with DJ Oscar G doing an encore set, joined by DJs Hawthorne, Steve Fabus, and more.
San Francisco, CA
Rehabilitated pelicans released into San Francisco Bay
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San Francisco, CA
Financial elder abuse: Authorities educate SF Chinatown seniors to prevent loss
SAN FRANCISCO (KGO) — A warning from law enforcement about a growing problem that’s hurting our seniors. June 15 is World Elder Abuse Awareness Day.
City, state and federal leaders came to San Francisco Chinatown to make sure elders understand the extent and impact of this abuse – especially financial abuse.
California Attorney General Rob Bonta says fraudulent schemes targeting seniors are a big deal.
“Older adults lose nearly $3 billion to financial fraud and schemes every year,” said Bonta. “The scams are realistic, they’re compelling, they’re persuasive.”
Authorities want everyone to be aware of scams, fraud, and financial elder abuse.
MORE: Americans older than 60 lost $3.4 billion to scams in 2023: FBI
“The scams vary from call center scams, romance scams, grandparent scams. AI is used being used to simulate loved ones in danger and in jeopardy who need money now and you need to send it,” said Bonta.
Community leaders say scammers prey on elders in ethnic communities, such as San Francisco’s Chinatown, by leveraging culture and language to gain trust.
One common scam is the blessing scam.
“Two Cantonese middle age will approach a Chinese Cantonese speaking older female. Once they approach the elderly walking by herself, they started to talk to them. They need blessing because they don’t look to well,” said Anni Chung with Self-Help for the Elderly.
Attorney Janry Mak represents the victims of a $39 million Ponzi scheme that targeted residents of Chinatown.
“It targeted a monolingual Chinese community,” said Mak. “In this case, it was someone they knew and trusted for over 30 years.
TAKE ACTION: Get help with elder care
Camilla Ha says scammers have tried to contact her, asking for her address or social security number.
“I always hang up. I don’t want to say anything,” said Ha.
Authorities say it’s important to report these scams and fraudulent crimes so that law enforcement can follow up and so that it doesn’t happen again to anyone else.
“We know these crimes are under-reported,” said San Francisco Police Chief Bill Scott. “If we don’t have them reported, then we can’t catch the people who are doing this.”
Besides contacting police, crimes against elders should be reported to adult protective services.
Suspected cases of elder abuse also can be reported at the state level to the Attorney General’s office.
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