Draft Strategic Plan to Be Presented to School Board Monday at High School. Pub

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WPCNR SCHOOL DAYS. From Michele Schoenfeld, Clerk to the Board of Education. November 28, 2007: The White Plains Board of Education will hear a presentation of a Strategic Plan for the district at a special meeting on Monday, December 3rd, 7:30 P.M. in the White Plains High School Media Center.  Teresa Niss, district internal coordinator of the project, Superintendent Timothy P. Connors and several High School students will provide background and lead the Board through the plan.   The Board will then decide whether to approve it for implementation.  The public is  


welcome to attend.


 


The Strategic Plan was developed over the last year with the participation of several hundred community residents and staff members who provided input on the future of education in White Plains.  A core committee, comprised of 30 members, then developed statements on Core Values and a new Mission for the district.  Following this, Strategic Objectives were formulated for the next five years, along with strategies to implement those objectives.  They cover the areas of curriculum, leadership, resources, culture and communications.


 


The process was guided by Dr. Steven V. Barone from Transformation Systems, Ltd.


 


The evening will begin with a reception at 7 P.M. to celebrate the completion of the


 


planning process.


 

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Man of La Mancha Poses Musical Question: Does White Plains Want Real Broadway?

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WPCNR STAGE DOOR. By John F. Bailey. November 28, 2007:  When Jack Batman heard the “Leading Man of the 90s” Robert Cuccioli’s  Lone Star Love  show playing in Seattle  was closing in September,  Mr. Cuccioli told the CitizeNetReporter the new Artistic Director of WPPAC contacted him to take the lead in  the White Plains Performing Arts Center debut musical production Man of La Mancha, which opens Thursday night. C uccioli did not hesitate. He took it and it was the beginning of the fulfillment of his “Impossible Dream.” It was a coup — for the theatre and the actor.



Robert Cuccioli has not only a role he has always wanted to play – but by sheer magnetism of his performance – has the opportunity to give the White Plains Performing Arts Center the cache, the professionalism, and charisma it needs.



Cuccioli said he decided to do La Mancha in WP,  because he had always been fascinated with the dream of doing the show. The fascination began when he saw Robert  Goulet play the lead, when Cuccioli was a child.


The dashing leading man’s cross country move gives WPPAC  genuine star power in its lead show of the season. The massive set created by an Emmy-winning designer, the dream tenor role created by Cuccioli, the synergy of key, expensive talent has been assembled to put White Plains to the test.


Cuccioli came to stardom playing  Javert on Broadwy in Les Miserables in the early 90s, and followed that up  with his Tony-nominated  Jekyl lead role in Jekyll and Hyde in 1996, says he will be bringing his own feel to the role of Don Quixote.



Actors in Rehearsal Tuesday afternoon at White Plains Performing Arts Center. Two days to Opening Night.


Cuccioli told WPCNR the massive set is conducive to a more intimate Man of La Mancha experience than audiences are used to experiencing. He likes the chemistry with fellow leads  and promises the audiences who know the show will experience the inspiration of the famous show more powerfully than before  because of the all stops out, Broadway style of production.


Mr. Batman has spared no expense to give his star the production backup needed to win over the fickle and demanding White Plains audience who have Batman they wanted Broadway musicals. Well this Man of La Mancha is a gamble, that Mr. Batman appears to be giving every chance.


Man of La Mancha 2007 White Plains style is a distinct departure from previous WPPAC productions.


Mr.  Batman is hoping this Broadway style production is the theater White Plains has been missing and has not seen previously at the WPPAC. 


He commissioned Michael Hotopp, winner of 5 Emmies for set design, who has created a set of towering blue ramparts  of grays and blues representing the Spanish Inquistion prison where the show takes place.  


He has hired Carrie Robbins as Costume Designer who has designed the wardrobe for 33 Broadway Shows, and the lighting which was being rehearsed Tuesday afternoon with the cast in costume was created by Tom Weaver, who just “lit” the production of Frankenstein (not to be confused with Young Frankenstein.


The brief sequence WPCNR saw in run-through Tuesday afternoon created atmosphere. Even without mikes,the acoustics of the WPPAC were crisp and electric. The number I heard briefly a cappella to get the lighting shifts right was  entertaining, the cast together and  if a mere snip of the show grabbed my interest.


Mr. Batman may have a very appealing first gambit towards winning back White Plains and Westchester theatre aficionados .


 The towering ramparts of the set evoke the sixteenth century, the costumes were intricate, realistic. The stage foreboding and soaring simultaneously.  Definitely not the sets and bare bones productions WPPAC has been known for in the past.  Man of La Mancha, WPPAC reckons is going to overwhelm the audience. It will be big, up close and personal, classy and Broadway.


The show is 63% sold out as of this time, which is a feat in and of itself. It runs through December 19.


Harris noted that  the theatre is being programmed to appeal to The Ritz Carlton residences across the street. He said that many of the new residents of the Ritz-Carlton residences had purchased season subscriptions for the productions coming up, Ragtime, How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying and Ain’t Misbehavin.


 Man of La Mancha is a quarter of a million dollar gamble. To break even it has to sell out the show.


Mr. Cuccioli expressed regret this was such a short run, and said he would be developing the part with each performance as he had never done the role before.  Asked how he saw his career going at this stage of his life –whether he would continue to perform or take on more of a producing or directing role, he said he loved to direct, but liked the whole of the theater experience, performing, acting, directing and that he was not concentrating on heading in any one direction.


Mr. Cuccioli, though has perhaps has never played a role with more consequence for the venue in which he is playing than the one he creates personally for the first time tomorrow night.


Man of La Mancha would appear to have everything going for it. The mannerisms of the technicians observing the run-through, the cast’s intricacy and concentration  onstage, and the concern of the executives’ hopes were palpable.  There was electricity in the air.


But that’s the glamour and the glitz of show business. You never know. You give it all to the show and maybe, just maybe you click.


For Man of La Mancha is not only a drama on stage of the significance of hope, its very production in the little theatre in the City Center  is a drama of hope for the theatre born again.


Will Jack Batman’s Man of La Mancha be the smash production WPPAC needs to bring back the public?


Will Robert Cuccioli be the catalyst for a WPPAC renaissance?


It’s the drama within a drama.


See for yourself, for more information go to www.wppac.com.

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District Approves $1.4 Million Certiorari Refund; Budget Pressures Explained

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WPCNR SCHOOL DAYS. By John F. Bailey. November 27, 2007: In its biweekly meeting last night, the Board of Education, approved in Executive Session a certiorari refund of $1,424,204 to Hillside Village Condominiums, Reckson Properties and T&J Realty following up its share of the certiorari settlement approved by the Common Council November 5.   The city refund of  $429,716 granted November 5, translated into a $1.4 Million refund out of the School District coffers Monday night, showing that for every $1 the city refunds in settling certiorari suits, the school district has to pay back about $3 to $4.



The City  granted  certiorari, dropped T & J Realty Company at 4 Quarropas Street assessment relief from $170,000 to $86,000, and agreed to a $44,395 refund over 5 years.


It dropped Reckson Properties at 140 Grand Street from $1,220,000 in assessed value to $1,050,000, granting a $166,023 refund over 7 years.


It lowered the assessment on Hillside Village Condominiums from $950,000 to $575,000, agreeing to a $219,298 refund.


 Assistant Superintendent for Business for the School District, Fred Seiler told WPCNR today, said part of the school district $1.4 Million pay back would come out of the district reserve for certiorari and another part of it from the bond the district executed last year for the certioraris but has not tapped yet.  Seiler said the city has scheduled certiorari settlements up for approval next week and in months following on a consistent basis, and Seiler expect more refunds to come.


In other budget news, Mr. Seiler wrote the Board of Education a memo about pressures on the 2008-2009 budget. Seiler said budget matters that would hit the 08-09 spending hard were the new teachers contract for 2008-2009, (the teachers are currently on a stopgap one-year contract that expires in June), the district self-insurance contract, and the health benefits package he said would cost the district 10-1/2% to 12% more.  Other factors WPCNR envisions are increased energy costs, the beginning of paying off the school construction bond (the first $20 Million which has not been offered to the financial markets yet). 


Last year the school district kept its budget to a 4.4% increase to $174.1 Million—it’s lowest year-to-year increase since 1998-99 when the budget was increased 3.43%


Superintendent of Schools Timothy Connors said the administration was going to school administrators next week to start formulating budgets, and he had told them “no new programs.” Sheryl Brady, a new member of the Board of Education raised the issue of adding more teachers to high school honors programs which she said often had 30 students in them. Connors said, in his 28 years experience as a Superintendent of Schools, it has always been his experience that schools will ask for more personnel, and it is his job to hold the line and say “No.” He said he would have the actual student totals in the honors classes at the high school to see what the facts were. He did not rule out an adjustment in honors course staffing. No one asked if perhaps too many students were being placed into the Honors courses.


Donna McLaughlin  said she did not want to say that new programs would not be considered, but that the question was what the tradeoff was, what the district would cut to start new programs.


Connors said the board would want to consider whether or not to present a Superintendent’s rollover budget  to the Annual Budget Committee prior to the first public meeting with the ABC Committee February 6.


The Board expressed concern about what the Equalization Rate was (2.69% — a major .50 Drop from last year, which adversely affects the city assessment roll). Donna McLaughlin said it was not the city’s fault that the rate drops, and said it was important the School District explain to the public the effect Equalization Rate had on lowering the Tax Roll.

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Photograph of the Night

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WPCNR PHOTOGRAPH OF THE NIGHT. By the WPCNR Roving Photographer. November 27, 2007: It was a night for trench coats, snapbrim fedoras, black coffee and cigarettes in the night, and stakeouts in White Plains as a thick Londonesque fog silently shrouded the city, a metaphor for the future. Education House was cloaked in tendrils of mist, looking like Baskerville Hall.


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Ice Lightning! Flying Tigers Pepper Ryetown-Harrison, 6-1 for Invitational Crown

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WPCNR RINKSIDE. By “Red Light” La Fleur. November 25, 2007: The White Plains Ice Tigers bottled up Rye Town-Harrison’s Titans in their own end Sunday night, scoring 3 goals in the first period and cruising to a 6-1 win to take their own 2007 Invitational Tournament. The Tigers’ speed and relentless forechecking  and whirlaround passes to the front of the goal from behind the net and  consistent deft interception of clearing passes in the alleys, saw White Plains outshoot les visiteurs, 48-29.



Taking Matt-ers into their own hands:  Matt Altieri (6) fires…Titan goalie loses the puck in his pads, and Matt Goldstein far right is about to skate in and deftly poke it into the net for a 2-0 lead in the First Period. The Matt Line had three of the six Tiger goals. Steve McCarrick is at far left on the doorstep.




The Tiger speed is reminiscent of the old Montreal Canadians the way they fly down the ice and it was too much for the Titans to keep up. All six goals came on 3 on 1s  and breakaways and pesky puckwork behind the net. 



Goaltender Abuse: The chief Titan tormentor was Rui Encarnacao (9) who scored two goals on breakaways to put the game out of reach in the second period and was always around the puck no matter where it was.



Steve McCarrick scored the first Tiger goal swooping in on left wing trailing Matt Altieri, the puck slithered back to McCarrick who slipped it behind the Titan tender for a 1-0 lead at 5:41 of the First period.  At  8:11, Altieri  broke in again on the Titan goal all alone fired, the goalie made the initial stop, and  Matt Goldstein trailing the play swooped in for the rebound and rammed it home for a 2-0 lead.


At 9:44, it was McCarrick’s turn again getting a feed on a 3 on 1 from Altieri and Goldstein and rifled home a wrist shot inbetween the circles from 30 feet out for a 3-0 lead. 


Mike Cambareri in goal for the Tigers withstood an onslaught from the Titans the first five minutes of period two before Encarnacao got the first of two breakaway scores at  11:11 of the second stanza to put the game out of reach. Monroe Woodbury took Third place in the tournament and Stepinac fourth.


Mitch Stogel scored the other Tiger goal.


The Tigers play Scarsdale Thursday evening at 5:15 PM at Ebersole Rink.


 


White Plains come-from-behind win over Stepinac Saturday night, 4-3 was another fine performance.

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County Executive Issues Statement on Cross Burning in Cortlandt

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    WPCNR COUNTY CLARION-LEDGER. From Westchester County Department of Communications. November 26, 2007:    County Executive Andy Spano said that a cross burning incident that took place on Thanksgiving Eve should bring the community together to abhor such acts, and not be used as an opportunity to escalate bigotry.


        A Cortlandt family found a cross burning on their lawn Wednesday night and were the victims of a second act of vandalism yesterday. Although Westchester County Police share police jurisdiction in the town, the incident is being investigated as a hate crime by State Police.


      “In this season where peace is the watchword, it is particularly disheartening to see this type of incident,’’ said Spano. “Westchester is known across the nation as a diverse community where tolerance is placed above all else, and I was happy to see so many people in the community come forward to support this family. I have one word for those who would use this incident to stir up more anger: Don’t.’’


            Spano said that he has asked his African-American community liaison to reach out to the family to offer his support.


          “Bigotry has no place in Westchester,’’ he said. “Our diversity is our greatest strength.’’


 

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The Muckraker’s Notebook

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WPCNR MUCKRAKER’S NOTEBOOK. In the absence of any real news today, and the lack of guidelines for fledgling young reporters from the journalism schools today – that never teach the sad truth that the most respectable officials and leaders lie to  people and reporters on an hourly basis – and those who think what they see on television and read in the mainstream press is how reporting should be done,  WPCNR turns to The Muckraker’s Notebook which will bring the public some of the truisms and sayings by famous reporters of the past, not all of whom ever existed.


 Many of the sayings have been collected by Tom Henderson who is Managing Editor of the Polk County Itemizer-Observer in Dallas, Oregon, who wrote the article, Everything I Need to Know About Journalism I Learned from Superman (And Other ComicBooks).  Todays’ reading from The Muckraker’s Notebook comes from the crusading columnist, Spider Jerusalem of Transmetropolitan Comics.  You can see the complete article of Mr. Henderson’s on http://www.ijpc.org/comicbooks%20tom%20henderson.htm



“You people don’t know what the truth is! It’s there just under their “BS” but you never look! That’s what I hate most about this city. Lies are news and the truth is obsolete” Spider Jerusalem.


 


 

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FEMA reinstates White Plains as Eligible for Flood Insurance

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WPCNR COMMON COUNCIL-CHRONICLE EXAMINER. November 26, 2007: WPCNR has learned from Carey Gouldner that the Federal Emergency Management Administration, being informed of White Plains passage of a local law last Tuesday accepting the new FEMA flood plain maps, has reinstated White Plains as a city eligible for flood insurance under the National Flood Insurance Program. The Department of Public Works had failed to act on the new flood plain maps due to a bureaucratic delay in analyzing the plans, and White Plains had been suspended from eligibility for the flood insurance since September 28. Action by the Common Council last Tuesday passed the local law.


The notice of passage was Federal Expressed to the Department of Environmental Conservation last Wednesday. FEMA received word Thursday and White Plaisn was reinstated Friday. Residents may now apply for new flood insurance and renew insurance that expires indefinitely, according to Gouldner.

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Crews’ Cruisers: O’Connor, Reilly-Boccia and Wright Ink Scholarships to Div I S

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WPCNR PRESS BOX. By John F. Bailey. November 25, 2007: This month, the White Plains Institute of Cloutology, known commercially as Frozen Ropes on East Post Road, graduated its Class of 2007 scholarship-winners to three of the nation’s top fastpitch softball programs. Each says their training with “Dr. Clout,” Rob Crews was instrumental in their hitting their way to full-rides (4 year scholarhips) at three of the nation’s top fastpitch programs.



 


 


  CREWS CRUISERS: Kasey O’Connor , (far right), Yorktown’s belting, hit-swiping Shortstop and the Huskers’ first baser, Cassie Reilly-Boccia (far left), and Hen Hud’s Kirby Wright, (second from left),  the former Hudson River Bandit of legend signed Letters of Intent for full four year softball scholarships with parents, coaches and instructors beaming at their achievements on the diamond. Mr. Crews, second from right has guided over ten players to scholarships for softball in the last seven years.


Yorktown High School’s Cassie Reilly-Boccia, signed her National Letter of Intent to the University of Alabama, where she will play for the 2007 regular season no. 2 softball program in the nation. Cassie plays first-base for Yorktown HS and for the Jersey Inferno Gold.


     


 


Henrick Hudson’s Kirby Wright, inked her National Letter of Intent to play at the University of Nebraska. The Huskers were ranked no. 6 pre-season for 2007, and compete in the Big 12 conference. Kirby is a catcher for Henrick Hudson HS and the Jersey Breakers Gold.


 


Yorktown High School’s Kasey O’Connor, signed with the University of Notre Dame. The Fighting Irish was the runner up in the Big East Tournament in 2007. Kasey plays Shortstop for Yorktown HS and Jersey Intensity Gold.   


 


The Yorktown duo of Kasey and Cassie (they ride from Yorktown to enforce the law) were instrumental in Yorktown’s winning the Section I Championship from White Plains last spring with O’Connor hitting a solo shot on the first to her to get Yorktown started. Yorktown softball coach said she had hit homers in each of the four Yorktown sectional wins, and was a tremendous natural leader, always rallying the team on the bench and setting the example of getting the big knock when the team needed it.


 


The Yorktown stars said Rob Crews took hitting apart for them, taught them how to think and strategize at the plate, in addition to finetuning their mechanics with strength training and developing their power potential


 


Kirby Wright the catcher for the Hen Hud Section Champions, saluted Crews for developing her as a hitter, and the Frozen Ropes team for honing her catching skills.

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Penny’s From Heaven.

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WPCNR  The Night Life. By Stagedoor Johnny. Review November 24, 2007: Somebody’s always swinging with style at  The Emelin Theatre in Mamaroneck these nights. Friday evening,  Brenda Starr and I had our second most enjoyable experience at “The Em”  in a month,  being intimately entertained by the Broadway Songbird, Penny Fuller original star of Barefoot in the Park, Applause, and  Rex, emoting, evoking,belting, styling and singing personally to you as only a Broadway babe can.


The intimate audience  created a very cozy atmosphere in the laid back swoop of “The EM.” Ms Fuller is a throaty saucy seasoned blonde with a past. A songbird of silky, slinky sophistication as smooth as a sip of Glenlivit scotch.


 Ms. Fuller demands sipping and savoring to enjoy the depths of her very personal voice that goes from soft and sexy to brassy and Broadway in a moment. She’s a lady of easy-to-love, hard-to-forget style whose show features songs from composers of shows she has played in in her Broadway runs.  


 Ms. Fuller brings her Manhattan sophistication to little old Mamaroneck as part of The Emelin Theater in Concert Series, the brainstorm of Michael Bush, the new Artistic Director of the EM. It is a unique series of  cabaret performances in a theatre setting, plus two theatre works aimed apparently to win new friends  as “EM” gears up for a major $10 Million expansion into a major “performing arts center.” Its Board of Directors sought  Michael Bush, former impresario at the Charlotte Repertory Theater (2002-2004) and prior to that Director of Artistic Production at the Manhattan Theatre Club for  25 years to build the customer base to set the stage for the expansion.


Ms. Fuller is a great start.


 Previously, Brenda Starr’s attempts to culturate the CitizeNetReporter at The EM yielded a splendid experience listening to Maude Maggert, who delivered her unique interpretation of songs about women – many of which I had never heard before that were simply sublime as was the compelling Maggert voice. 


 Solo performers  have to be at their best in the cozy Emelin. The patron gets to experience the up-close-and-personal atmosphere of a club performance for  a most “unclubby” price,  where the artists perform with an immediacy and impact as if you were hearing them in Cole Porter’s apartment in the Waldorf, high above the perfect Manhattan.


Mr. Bush welcomed the audience in person. He said this Theatre In Concert sequence of two performances each by musicians and artists is to show the community what the theatre is all about and to celebrate all the influences and styles the theatre has delivered over the years. He did not say this, but the next two weeks of artist festival seems designed to get the public to think of the Emelin as a place where there is always an attraction good to see from discovering Broadway delights like Ms. Fuller to new plays .


Bush has chosen apparently to go the new play route and performances by some of his associates, like Ms. Fuller, over the years. Over the next two weeks, the venue is filled days of two different performances each day – of singers, musicians, improvisers, one-man shows.  It is eclectic to say the least. Bush is mixing in his own unique touch in this series supplementing previously scheduled shows with his artistic palette of New York sophistication, even country coming up next week.


The Blonde with a Past


 With Ms. Fuller he showcased “diva diversity,” where the  Blonde with a Past reprised songs from composers of shows she has starred in on Broadway —  creating “Eve” in Applause opposite Lauren Bacall (she belts out Eve’s  I’m Here” her showstopper in that classic); She sings Do I Hear a Waltz? From Carousel, her first Broadway show.  Her blue eyes (why do all Divas have blue eyes?) freeze you, her catlike movements retain such sophisticated precision and controlled sexuality the theatre is alive with the emotions she portrays. When she moves, you feel her move.


She began the set with Where or When, most appropriate for this is a show all about Penny and the composers in the shows she has appeared in.


She springs an interesting song that was dropped out of Cabaret where she understudied the role of Sally Bowes, then delivers the classic, Cabaret.


She reminisces about her Broadway experience with each show and then delivers a song from the composer of that show.


The highlight of the 1 hour and 20 minute set,  non-stop, was her reminiscing of Harold Arlin when she was on a competition judging panel with this great. She told how he always dressed in a high collar, a boutonniere in his suit lapel even on the hottest days. She looked back before our eyes, as if watching him again play the piano during a break in auditions and how he sang a special line just for her.


Then she sang, One for the Road the classic Arlin song that begins “It’s a quarter to three. There’s no one in the place but you and me. So set em up, Joe and make it one for my baby and One for the road.”


The place was so quiet as she velvet-voiced One for the Road. All that was missing was the tinkle of ice in an Old-fashion glass, and a Lucky Strike in my mouth — because the memories weaved by her elegant articulation floated like cigarette smoke in a spot light. You hear every lyric of every song.  


She smoothed this into a medley of My Old Flame, when her smoky voice made for a pillow,  gets inside your soul and makes you remember your old flames. You know the ones that you’d go anywhere just to see them again once more. Ms. Fuller makes you feel down in the dumps and feel good about it. She brought us out of the depths on the ninetieth floor, finishing off the bluesy set with ‘I’m not,” a song new to me that breaks you out of the blues with a new attitude.  She does the blues real good.


Ms. Fuller’s show business insider stories about Applause are like a conversation..  Ms. Fuller is either a great actress, or she really enjoys telling her stories because she gets so into dishing, she occasionally fails to seat herself on the piano, or position herself on the singing stool – but that is part of the charm of this performance. It comes across as honest, that she is really enjoying herself, and the songs well, they sing for themselves.


Ms. Fuller has the presence that she could handle  the role of Norma Desmond in Sunset Boulevard, easily enthralling a younger man. Her pianist  Paul Greenwood plays a muted nostalgic piano while bassman Louis Tucci provides jazzy minimalist accompaniment. The sidemen support the great instrument that Ms. Fuller is.


 Dressed in black slacks with sequined white sweater and heels, her look is informal, the style, entertaining friends. The effect is more intimate than if she wore a formal gown that somehow puts distance between performer and audience, while her casual attire creates the intimacy of raconteuring in song in a very dark little club with the neon light flashing outside.


Other numbers to note are her plaintive, and clever song she weaves from a job application, she’ll tell you the story how that came about. And, her encore, Time, that is a new song not too many have heard, since it is from a new musical written by Barry Kleinbort. It is worth hearing for its sweep and its melancholy.


Penny Fuller has performed Friends in Deed in New York at the Metropolitan Club. The show brings the New York late night cabaret experience to Little Old Mamaroneck. For Box Office lowdown on the rest of Mr. Bush’s Theatre In Concert Series, go to www.emelin.org. or call the box office at (914) 698-0098.


No need to go to the Carlyle or the ‘Quin. Penny Fuller creates that Broadway elegence of Manhattan.


But, that’s not really where this songbird comes from.


 Penny’s from Heaven.

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