stephen baldwin
Transcription
stephen baldwin
t{ PEOPLE of the YEAR RGy LAND RESIDENTS A COUNTDOWN OF THE 20 ROCK WHO HOGGED ALL THE HEADLINES IN 2007. } If you thought moving to Rockland County meant you were escaping all the hubbub, scandal, and celebrity of that mega-metropolis to our south, think again. Simply skimming this list of newsmakers should make that clear. As we discussed the candidates for People of the Year at Rockland Mag HQ, we often debated where to draw the line. In the end, our method was hardly scientific, but we chose these residents for one simple reason: They were the ones who most affected the news in 2007—for better or worse. by ted mann illustrations by ismael roldon STEPHEN REDMOND New City natives Keith Bulluck, of the Tennessee Titans, and Adam Rodriguez, of CSI: Miami, may have helped to up their hometown’s celebrity cred. But it took rapper Stephen Redmond (a.k.a. Lucky Me) to finally give the Rockland municipality its own song. The music video for “I Love New City” (viewable on YouTube) doesn’t just feature local landmarks like New City Bowl, it’s also as addictive as those illegal drugs mentioned in the song’s refrain. PREDICTION FOR 2008 Seeing as how Redmond has already milked this tune dry (see the five YouTube “response” videos), it’s time for a new rap. Check it out: Spring Valley rhymes with bling tally! 20 THE RIVERSPACE GANG 19 At first we were going to salute Deborah Darbonne, who, as chair of Friends of the Nyacks, helped save the Helen Hayes space from extinction. But also critical to the birth of Riverspace were co-artistic directors Elliott Forrest and Darrell Larson, who lured in acts like They Might Be Giants, Mia Farrow, and Lewis Black. Then, of course, there were locals like Piermont singer Tom Chapin and Nyack actor Bill Irwin, who helped with fund-raising. And we can’t forget Dara Falco, the new managing director. Ah, you get the idea. Great team effort! PREDICTION FOR 2008 No events are official yet, but a partnership with Rivertown Film (which counts Ellen Burstyn and William Hurt as advisors) means they won’t be hurting for programming. 72 rockland magazine december 2007 STEPHEN 18 BALDWIN After a busy 2006—during which Baldwin led a public crusade to stop a porn store from opening in Nyack; wrote his own born-again memoir, The Unusual Suspect; and starred in a slew of lowbudget films—the Upper Grandview resident spent much of 2007 focusing on his spiritual side. As self-appointed leader of the evangelical, extreme-sportsbased Breakthrough Ministry, St. Stephen preached the Good Book out of the back of his van and was even appointed as a “cultural advisor” to President Bush. Alas, his acting career wasn’t as enlightened. While brothers Alec and Billy had hits with 30 Rock and Dirty, Sexy, Money, the best Stephen could do was Celebrity Bull Riding Challenge. It was painful to watch, and we’re not just talking about Baldwin’s broken rib and shoulder. PREDICTION FOR 2008 Let’s hope that was his last celebritythemed reality-TV travesty. Why not try teaming up with fellow man of faith Mel Gibson? y BJÖRK Why do we love the quirky, genre-bending Icelandic songstress so much? For starters, she lives in Rockland. And in 2007 alone, she had almost too many bizarre moments to count. Still, we’ll try to recap a few. In March, there was her hilarious unplugged cover of “No Limit” (“No, no, no, no, no, no ...”) at the Paris club Baron. Later came “Earth Intruders,” the spacey electronica ditty off Volta, the album she released earlier this year. Oh, and we can’t forget her April performance on SNL, the single most mesmerizing (and weird) musical-guest gig the show has seen since—well, Björk last appeared on it in 1997. PREDICTION FOR 2008 Another film role like 1999’s Dancer in the Dark? One-upping her 2004 Olympics performance (remember the 10,000-square-foot dress?) at the games in China? Your guess is as good as ours. 17 MICHAEL TAUBER As the developer behind the Tartikov Rabbinical College, he sparked a powderkeg controversy in Pomona (see “Culture Clash,” from our September issue, at lohud.com/rocklandmag). Homeowners are worried about flooding the small town with up to 9,000 new residents, the Hasidic community is anxious about discrimination, and some activists are simply PO’d about overdevelopment and the loss of old fishing spots. Over the summer, Pomona turned down the Tartikov group’s proposal. PREDICTION FOR 2008 The fate of the project is now in the hands of the federal courts. Should they agree that the developer’s civil rights were violated, Tauber may just get his college after all. 15 FROM LEFT: VINCENT DISALVIO/TJN; AP PHOTO/GARY HE; PATRICK ANDERSSON, COURTESY RIVERHEAD BOOKS; MARK VERGARI/TJN SHALOM AUSLANDER 16 Ever since first hearing this Monsey refugee’s tales of his Hasidic upbringing on This American Life and in the pages of The New Yorker (“I was raised like a veal”), we’ve had a hunch he might just be the second coming of Philip Roth. And with the 2007 release of Foreskin’s Lament, we’re happy to say: Called It! PREDICTION FOR 2008 Luckily, Auslander isn’t a Rothian recluse, and he’ll continue touring with the book (he’s already booked the 92nd Street Y for January 24). Given his stage presence, a more fitting literary analogy might be: the David Sedaris of Orthodox Jews. lohud.com/rocklandmag 73 SKIP STORCH 14 In September, the 50-year-old Nyacker broke a world record by swimming three straight unassisted laps around Manhattan, in 32 hours, 52 minutes. Yes, that meant eating meals, resting, and, um, relieving himself while treading water. PREDICTION FOR 2008 Storch hopes to be inducted into the Marathon Swimming Hall of Fame. Why stop there? The world’s pogo-juggling record is just begging to be broken. 13 LORRAINE BRACCO Nobody felt the bursting of the local real-estate bubble quite like Bracco, a.k.a. the shrink from The Sopranos. While the mob series was wrapping up its final season, she tried unloading her two-acre Sneden’s Landing estate. Yet over the course of 2007, the asking price was hacked away like Richie Aprile’s corpse in the butcher shop—as of September, the initial asking price of $4.4 mil has been lowered to $2.9 (call Mason Sammett at 359-4940, if you’re interested). Bracco also lost the Best Supporting Actress race at the Emmys to New Caanan’s Katherine Heigl. But there is some good news: Late in the year she was cast in a pilot for Lifetime; she got a chance to appear on Oprah (albeit to talk about her infidelity to Harvey Keitel); and her brand of vino, Bracco Wines, is already selling tens of thousands of cases. Salud! PREDICTION FOR 2008 Long Island Confidential, the new Lifetime show, doesn’t promise to be nearly as edgy as The Sopranos, but the wine business will continue to boom. Two-Buck Bracco, anyone? AL PACINO 12 DEBORAH BRENNER Like Lorraine, this Tappan resident also took on the male-dominated wine establishment with her 2007 book Women of the Vine. Whether or not you’re a cork dork, the collection of profiles of female winemakers, sommeliers, wine writers, and wine-club founders is sure to inspire local women. PREDICTION FOR 2008 Shortly after the book debuted, Brenner formed Women of the Vine Cellars, which aims to unite award-winning women winemakers under one label. Could a Bracco-Brenner partnership be in the cards? We’ll drink to that. 74 rockland magazine december 2007 The “whoo-ha” man gave us something to “ooh and ah” about with his return to the big screen as casino kingpin Willie Bank in Ocean’s Thirteen. Pacino, who lives in Sneden’s Landing, also had the Internet buzzing about his next two projects: Dali & I: The Surreal Story and Righteous Kill. In the former he’ll play the famed artist during his final years—also known as his melting-clocks phase—while the latter, a crime thriller filming in Norwalk, also features Robert DeNiro. And Al wasn’t the only Pacino making news in 2007; daughter Julie, a recent Tappan Zee High grad, also earned her fair share of headlines as one of the school’s softball superstars. PREDICTION FOR 2008 The Dali biopic may earn Pacino his second Academy Award. But it’s Righteous Kill—the first reuniting of the PacinoDeNiro dramatic dream team since 1995’s Heat— that we’re dying to see. 11 JOHN SHIELDS 10 The openly gay mayor of Nyack (one of only a few in the state) has been an advocate for same-sex marriage, new downtown parking, and less development in the region. It came as no huge surprise that he ran unopposed for re-election this year; we’d want no one else leading the way in this progressive Hudson Valley village. PREDICTION FOR 2008 After making the cover of The Advocate for performing gay weddings, Shields may take his movement to Albany to legalize the practice statewide. ELLEN BURSTYN BILL MURRAY The Sneden’s Landing smart alec may like to joke about retiring, but if 2007 proved anything, an out-of-work Murray is a restless Murray. While playing golf with Will Smith in March, he ripped off his shirt and began running up and down the fairway flapping his wings (he later explained that he’d been stung by a bee). Then in May—at the opening of good friend Peter Kelly’s X20 restaurant in Yonkers—he celebrated by hoisting the restaurateur onto his shoulders and doing a victory lap. And then picking up another Kelly, brother Ned, for a second lap. In July, he showed up for his graduation from Regis University 30 years late ... and accepted his honorary diploma wearing shorts. And in August, the weirdest incident of all: Police in Stockholm, Sweden, pulled him over for a DUI. The vehicle? A golf cart. PREDICTION FOR 2008 Fortunately, Murray is back making movies again! Keeping him out of trouble right now is City of Ember, a fantasy flick in which Murray plays the mayor of a brightly lit city with a failing generator. It’s set to arrive in theaters by October 2008. 8 The 74-year-old film icon lit up the small screen this year with a memorable stint on the polygamy soap Big Love. But it was her new memoir, Lessons in Becoming Myself, that landed Burstyn a seat on Oprah’s couch. In the book, she shares the story of her abusive childhood and her troubled former husband, who stalked her for years, and eventually killed himself. The Nyack resident also told the big O about her recent Buddhist “street retreat,” in which she slept on NYC sidewalks, ate in soup kitchens, and begged for money. So remember, next time you see a panhandler outside Vertigo, you could be looking at an Academy Award winner. PREDICTION FOR 2008 More Oscarcaliber parts, including roles in Greta and The Loss of the Teardrop Diamond. 7 FROM LEFT: TOM NYCZ/TJN; AP PHOTO/CHRIS PIZZELLO; MARK VERGARI/TJN; ANGELA GAUL/TJN GEORGE DARDEN 9 At the height of the summer’s immigration debate, this mayor of Spring Valley pulled into the parking lot of a Route 59 mall and said to some undocumented day laborers, “Do you work?” He hired them at $10 an hour to clean out a building slated for demolition. When he was later criticized for this, he said simply, “I’m the mayor of all the people in Spring Valley, not Jamaicans and Hatians and Jews ... all the people, and they’re included. We’re going to try to make sure they’re productive.” PREDICTION FOR 2008 Although hiring illegals is, uh, illegal, the mayor isn’t about to admit any wrongdoing. We expect he’ll continue his efforts to provide jobs to all immigrants, aliens or not. lohud.com/rocklandmag 75 MASSAGE PARLOR MADAMES 6 Orangetown was red with embarrassment when several massage parlors turned out to be offering more than typical back rubs. In April, local police raided the Asian Therapy Center on Middletown Road and arrested two women on prostitution charges; the next month they rounded up four more women after an undercover sting operation at Eastern Health Spa. PREDICTION FOR 2008 Let’s just say we’ll be extra careful when planning our next Rockland Magazine spa feature. PETER KELLY 5 Kelly was already a legend in Rockland thanks to Xaviars, Freelance, and Restaurant X—all perennial Zagat darlings. But when he took down celebrity chef Bobby Flay on Iron Chef America, all of a sudden he became famous to a national audience. Then the May opening of X20 in Yonkers further cemented his rock-star status. As for those people just discovering our hometown hero: What took you so long? PREDICTION FOR 2008 It would be tough to top 2007, but we do have two ideas: First, how about an X20 in Haverstraw? Second, after making mincemeat of Flay, it’s time to do battle with Mario Batali. 76 rockland magazine december 2007 HAYDEN PANETTIERE Oh, to be young, rich, and synonymous with the most memorable TV catch-phrase of the year. “Save the cheerleader, save the world” didn’t just turn Heroes into NBC’s only new hit show, it also made Panettiere—the indestructible, cutoff-a-toe-it-grows back cheerleader character—into a household name. She’s since appeared on the covers of Entertainment Weekly, TV Guide, and Vanity Fair, all before turning 18. After recently moving from Palisades to L.A., she also became a spokesperson for Neutrogena and the “Got Milk?” campaign. Of course, with that kind of positive exposure also comes the other kind—daily videos on TMZ.com and nonstop blog buzz about her rumored boyfriends. Only problem: This fair-skined blonde isn’t your typical teen-star train wreck. She doesn’t drink, smoke, or have run-ins with the law. By all accounts, she’s as pure as the driven snow. PREDICTION FOR 2008 Provided she doesn’t get caught up in any of the usual Hollywood trappings (like, say, that other kind of snow), Panettiere has a bright year ahead, with the continued success of Heroes and a role in the upcoming Julia Roberts film Fireflies in the Garden. 4 DR. JEFFREY OPPENHEIM 3 Early in 2007, the neurologist and mayor of Montebello led the campaign to ban smoking in cars with kids under 18. (Kind of makes Mike Bloomberg’s NYC nosmoking-in-restaurants laws seem tame, by comparison!) Oppenheim also pushed for a law requiring cyclists to wear helmets, led the fight against new FAA flight paths over our towns, and made Montebello ecofriendly by wiring up village hall with solar panels (hence the “green” mayor nickname). PREDICTION FOR 2008 Next up for the über do-gooder: fixing the Tappan Zee Bridge, saving the rain forest, and, of course, world peace. GREAT CHINA BUFFET’S GARLIC MAN 2 We all love that grape-crushing scene from I Love Lucy, but there is such a thing as taking it too far. Case in point: the Nanuet restaurant worker who was caught crushing garlic by stomping on it in an alley with his boots on. Since the September incident, the worker was fired, the establishment has tried changing its name to “Grand Taste Buffet,” and the Rockland County Health Department handed down multiple fines. PREDICTION FOR 2008 Paging Gordon Ramsey. We have a candidate for the next season of Restaurant Nightmares. FROM LEFT: TON MYCZ/TJN; GARY SIMONETTI/TJN; DAN BARETTO; VINCENT DISALVIO/TJN ROSIE O’DONNELL No need to roll your eyes. Aside from Britney, Paris, and Lindsay, few tabloid regulars exhausted the public’s patience quite like O’Donnell. From the never-ending feuds—with Trump, Ripa, O’Reilly—to the now-infamous splitscreen showdown with View co-host Elisabeth Hasselbeck, the South Nyack resident became a better fight-maker than Don King in 2007. Even after she quit the daytime gabfest (three weeks before her contract was up), Rosie continued churning up controversy in her wake, even going so far as to suggest in her new memoir, Celebrity Detox, that Barbara Walters should retire. But putting aside all the bilious rhetoric for a sec, one thing separates the former Queen of Nice from the aforementioned tabloid bimbos: O’Donnell’s public showdowns all stemmed from a passionate defense of her liberal views (on Bush, the Iraq war, gay rights, etc.)—and not from, say, a lack of panties or repeat DUIs. Her tirades might have been over the top, but her political courage does make her a role model of sorts. That said, if she ever takes your parking spot at the Palisades Center, don’t even think of starting a shouting match—she’s way out of your league. PREDICTION FOR 2008 She may have lost The Price is Right hosting gig to Drew Carey, but we predict a return to network TV, as the co-host of the newest British import, Boiling Point. 1 lohud.com/rocklandmag 77