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Trade Secrets is better than ever
May 21, 2025
Martha Stewart was busy talking to buyers of her new book “Martha Stewart’s Gardening Handbook.”
Christine Bates
Trade Secrets’ “Sunday in the Park” had a record number of gardeners, volunteers, plants, books and antiques on a cool May 17 at Lime Rock Park.
By 9:30 a.m., early ticket holders filled the parking lots, enjoyed a quick cup of coffee and a muffin and started inspecting the overwhelming variety of curated antiques, garden ornaments and plants from shy native shade lovers to blooming peonies and even vegetable starts.
The annual destination event that attracts gardeners from as far away as Indiana benefits Project SAGE, a nonprofit organization based in Lakeville that is dedicated to supporting, advocating, guiding and educating victims of relationship violence through a range of services and outreach programs.
Over 50 vendors exhibited their wares from French garden chairs and exotic plants to large stone urns under peaked white tents. Natalie Randall of RT Facts in Kent, who has exhibited since the very first Trade Secrets held at Bunny Williams’s house in Falls Village 25 years ago, observed that there were more vendors and more buyers than ever.
Admirers of Martha Stewart, one of the earliest supporters of the event, waited in a very long line to have a personally signed copy of “Martha Stewart’s Gardening Handbook.” The Sunday sale was preceded by a day of garden tours on Saturday including Bunny Williams’s own garden and other gardens in Salisbury, West Cornwall, and Millbrook.
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Richard Maltby talks ‘About Time’
May 21, 2025
Richard Maltby
Provided
"You think growing older means everything you’ve learned will finally pay off,” said Tony Award winning writer-lyricist-director Richard Maltby Jr., “but it turns out, most of what you thought you knew doesn’t apply anymore.”
“About Time,” is Maltby’s third and final entry in a musical trilogy that began in 1977 with “Starting Here, Starting Now,” returned in 1989 with “Closer Than Ever,” and now finds its coda in Chester, Connecticut, at Goodspeed’s Terris Theatre, opening May 24. It’s a musical revue that navigates the terrain of later life with songs about memory, missed chances, adult children, tech-savvy grandkids and more. “About Time” is a gently cosmic, sometimes blisteringly funny meditation on the “Third Act.”
Written with longtime collaborator David Shire — Maltby’s college friend turned creative life partner of over six decades — “About Time” is deeply personal. The pair got to test early material at their 65th Yale reunion on the same stage where they wrote and performed their first musicals. The show then went through iterations and workshops in New York City, with each presentation revealing more. “Each time you add a song,” Maltby said, “the whole show changes.”
Of this current cast, which includes Darius de Haas, Lynne Wintersteller, and Olivier nominee Issy van Randwyck, Maltby said, “They are breathtaking, and they own the show. It’s the best when a cast is just in love with the show, and they are in love with it.”
Maltby is also directing the production at Terris Theatre because, in many ways, who else could? “These songs are not what they seem,” he said. “If they sound happy, there’s probably something dark underneath. If they seem sad, there’s a joke hiding inside. I need to protect the words and the meaning.”
There are emotional layers to the show that are revealed slowly, that take time and perhaps repetition to surface. “People used to say if you put the songs in order, it felt like a life story,” said Maltby. “Well, ‘About Time’ is the last chapter. It’s about the strange joy and unexpected confusion of seeing your whole life laid out behind you.”
Show poster for “About Time”Provided
Maltby, of course, has seen the long view before. With “Miss Saigon,” for which Maltby won the Tony for best score in 1991, he revealed the truth of America’s wounded mythology through the lens of the Vietnam War. “Suddenly, we weren’t the good guys. John Wayne wasn’t coming over the hill, and our mythology was crushed.” In contrast, “About Time” doesn’t engage in overt politics, yet a sense of cultural reckoning still simmers under the surface. “There’s a song called, ‘What Do I Tell the Children?’” explained Maltby, “which is really the dilemma of a grandparent wanting to teach morality to a grandchild, to be the person who sets them on the right path. But when they turn on the news and see that crooks and charlatans win, how can you tell them that honesty pays? Honesty doesn’t pay. Dishonesty pays these days.”
Goodspeed’s Terris Theatre, which reopened post-COVID with a slimmed-down season, is presenting the perfect stage for the show that will have just over a three week run. “They haven’t gotten back to a full season yet,” Maltby noted. “But that intimacy is perfect for this. These songs are surprising. They’re about the things most people don’t write songs about.”
And in true Maltby/Shire fashion, the music sneaks up on you. “Our shows are subterranean,” he said. “You think they’re about nothing special, then you find yourself crying, and you’re not even sure why.”
Maltby has lived in Lakeville since 1972. “My wife, Barbara and I moved to Lakeville as a summer house and since have built a second house.” His son, David Maltby now lives in the family home. He and his wife, Chelsea Altman are the new co-owners of The Moviehouse in Millerton. “It’s all about storytelling,” Maltby said. “In one way or another, that’s the family business.”
When pressed on what comes next for “About Time,” Maltby offered the kind of wisdom only someone with his experience could. “All futures depend on the present,” he laughed. “When you’re growing up, really, for most of your life, you live in the future. Today almost doesn’t matter. It’s about planning for tomorrow. And then at a certain point, you can suddenly see the whole trajectory of your life, from where you started, what happened along the way, and where you’ve arrived. It’s often jarring, sometimes fulfilling, but never what you expected. If I’d set out as a young person, would I have imagined living the life I’m living now?” He shook his head and said, “Not a chance.”
“About Time” runs May 24 to June 15. More info at www.goodspeed.org.
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Partners in life and literature
May 21, 2025
Local authors William and Susan Kinsolving met attendees at a book talk they hosted at the Scoville Memorial Library on May 15.
L. Tomaino
Local authors and married couple William and Susan Kinsolving, each with a new book, gave a book talk at the Scoville Library in Salisbury on May 15.
William Kinsolving, an author of five novels, is also a screenwriter, a Ford Foundation Playwriting Grant recipient, and a critically acclaimed actor and director.His new novel, “Dangerous Times,” delves into the antebellum South, drawing sharp parallels to today’s divided world and shedding light on enduring truths from then and now. Susan Kinsolving’s novel, “The Head’s Tail,” is a witty, irreverent romp through the messy world of prep school drama. It is sharp, funny, and thoroughly entertaining.
Susan is the author of four poetry collections, one of which, “Dailies & Rushes,” was a finalist for The National Book Critics Circle Award. She has taught locally at the Hotchkiss School, as well as at colleges, universities, and a men’s prison.
The evening began with readings from both authors’ books.The Kinsolvings’ cousin, Katy Kinsolving, read Susan’s excerpt.Laughter erupted as the reading progressed and the protagonist, Miranda, embroiled herself further and further into a situation filled with “carnal danger.”
William brought his book to life with a vivid reading, voicing each character with distinct accents and drawing the audience into the antebellum era. Through his performance, the audience was introduced to his character William Fairfield, aide to a senator, who meets President Zachary Taylor.This meeting brings forth issues of the day, including slavery and the deep divisions of the country.
A question-and-answer period followed the reading where the Kinsolvings were asked about their work habits.
Susan answered that William is the disciplined one.William explained, “I go downstairs to my office and shut the door. I don’t hear anything.”He works for six to seven hours a day.
Susan admitted she was more disciplined in writing her novel than when she writes poetry.When writing poems, she takes breaks feeling they “are benefitted by absence.” In contrast, “Prose is not benefitted by absence,” and requires a more consistent schedule.
She added, “When I finally finished “The Head’s Tale,” I really missed my characters” and so, she began another novel, which takes place in the 1960’s.
William is at work on the next book in the series of which “Dangerous Times” is the first.It will deal with the time period of 1851-1856 and “James Buchanan, the second worst president of the United States.”
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Beetle mania
May 21, 2025
A hemlock infested with woolly adelgid
Provided
Late last summer I noted in this column the observation of far more purple loosestrife than in years past; some of you concurred. I knew that there had been a biological control in place in the Northwest Corner and the thought, “Is the biocontrol no longer working?” nudged me from time to time over the winter.
Biocontrol is the science of enlisting a natural predator to control a plant or animal that has become invasive and is harming an ecosystem. I had read about one that is being developed — but not yet approved — to curtail phragmites. Given its prevalence and destructiveness to habitat, a biocontrol for phragmites would be a game changer in the United States.
There is already a viable biocontrol against hemlock woolly adelgid, the insect that has been decimating hemlock trees on the east coast, and the scientist working on this biocontrol is right here in Connecticut.
Carole Cheah is an agricultural scientist with the Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station and I spoke with her recently.
The woolly adelgid is a small, aphid-like insect that comes from Japan where it feeds on Hemlock and Spruce trees. It was accidentally introduced in Virginia in the 1950’s where it found Hemlock trees here to its liking. The woolly adelgid’s telltale white fluff is easy to spot on hemlock stems. It has been decimating trees for years here, and many have already died.
Dr. Cheah has been studying the issue for over 30 years. After her predecessor at the CAES traveled to Japan and brought back the one insect that only feeds on woolly adelgid, the lady beetle (Sasajiscymnus tsugae), Carole worked to understand the viability of introducing this insect to the U.S.
These lady beetles are black and the size of a sesame seed. Since they only feed on woolly adelgid, the potential of lady beetle damage to other plants and insects was not an issue, as can be the case with introducing biocontrol. The key to this solution’s viability was, then, rearing the lady beetle for mass production. Even though the beetles overwinter in mild winters, they do still need to be produced in labs. Funding was accessed to set up an operation to research and rear the beetles in Connecticut and, when funding ran out, Jayme Cabrera, founder of Tree Savers in Jermyn, Pennsylvania, continued to rear them. Tree Savers now remains the sole production source of these beetles which are sold to the public. They are delivered in the spring and should be released when received. An arborist is not needed for release.
Biocontrol for hemlock woolly adelgid obviates chemical control, especially important as chemicals containing Imidacloprid and Dinotefuran, used by arborists against woolly adelgid, are also harmful to beneficial insects.
Currently,Tree Savers has a waiting list for beetles, but last year Dr. Cheah received extra beetles due to over-production by Tree Savers. She released them in the Northwest Corner, specifically in Mohawk Mountain’s Black Spruce bog, at Dean Ravine in Falls Village, around Furnace Brook and at Gold’s Pines.
My final question to Dr. Cheah was about the purple loosestrife re-appearance. She found my observation interesting. It turns out that Donna Ellis, from University of Connecticut, had led the beetle rearing program for loosestrife biocontrol until the USDA funding ended in 2014. Donna then retired in 2019 and since then, nobody has been working on this invasive plants proliferation.
On a different note, for the second year, The Cornwall Garden Club is hosting a native plant sale where you can add gorgeous native pollinators to your garden at gentle prices. I even grew some from seed! Please join us Saturday, May 24, from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. on the veranda of The Pink House Restaurant located at 34 Lower River Road in West Cornwall.
Dee Salomon ‘ungardens’ in Litchfield County.
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