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View from Presidio Heights near Swig home. |
| by Jeanne Lawrence THE BONE SETTER’S DAUGHTER- BOLD AND NEW OPERA Some fortunate San Francisco Opera patrons got a sneak peak at the new American opera, The Bonesetter’s Daughter, at the home of art patron Roselyn Swig. Based on Amy Tan’s bestseller, this bold opus will premier in the fall of 2008.
How did all this come about? Well, Sarina and Amy are long-time friends from their days at Yaddo, the well-known artists’ retreat in Saratoga Springs, NY. Sarina hosted a party for the publication of Amy’s book, The Bonesetter’s Daughter, which examines the secret lives of three generations of Chinese-American women, and is the latest in Tan’s growing list of bestsellers including The Joy Luck Club (also a movie), The Kitchen God’s Wife, and the children’s book The Moon Lady. For the occasion, Sarina asked her good friend Stewart Wallace (Harvey Milk opera) to compose a little something based on Tan’s book, inspiring the idea of an opera.
The saga continues when, last fall at New York’s Asia Society on Park Avenue, the Citigroup sponsored “Series on Asian Arts and Cultures” featured an evening entitled “Discussion and Opera Work-in-Progress, The Bonesetter’s Daughter.” Flying in from Beijing, mezzo-soprano Zheng Cao and opera star Qian Yi joined Li Zhonghua (to perform?) performed a selection of arias followed by discussions on the making of this unique work. According to SFO General Director David Gockley, “These themes are very relevant to present-day America and will find a rich and powerful expression in an opera that bridges time, distance, and culture.” The plans are to take the production to Beijing after San Francisco, so if you love being involved from the get-go, now’s the time to jump in and support this innovative project. |
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| NEW WEST COAST FLAGSHIP FOR BLOOMINGDALE’S One afternoon I headed to the newly expanded San Francisco Westfield Shopping Centre, located downtown on Market Street and Fifth, to shop at the new Bloomingdale’s. With over 350,000 square feet, it is the second-largest store in the chain after its Manhattan flagship. The black-and-white checkerboard marble floors, and everything brand-spanking-new make it such a smart place to shop. My friends raved about the glamorous grand opening. Even Chairman and CEO Michael Gould flew out to celebrate with over 1300 revelers, who feasted on a sumptuous cocktail buffet catered by Dan McCall and clapped their hands to jazz and some music from Grammy winning trumpeter Chris Botti. With the help of Bloomies PR maven, Ann Keating, the evening benefited the University of California San Francisco (UCSF) Children’s Cancer Program, one of the top children’s hospitals in California.
Bloomies new fashion director, Stephanie Solomon, had been in the city earlier checking out the local fashion and vowing to support local designers - she had already added designs by Colleen Quen. The newly expanded Westfield mega-mall was years in the making because of demands from preservation minded San Francisco groups. Personally, I’m happy they retained the historic façade of the turn-of-the-century Emporium Department Store and the famous rotunda too, sets it apart from other malls. The Market Street location makes it easy to catch a trolley around town, or you can cross the street and ride the Cable Car so you don’t have to drive. Also, there’s valet parking so there’s no need to hunt for those non-existent parking spaces. Now, the Westfield is a veritable mecca for all fashionistas west of the Sierra Nevadas boasting over 170 boutiques such as Theory, Mango, Neiman Marcus, Nordstrom, J. Crew’s Madewell, Bebe and Furla. At the end of a day of shopping, you can lounge in the Burke Williams day spa or take in a movie at the nine-theater Century Theatres Cineplex, or stock up at Bristol Farms specialty groceries, which has made those downtown dwellers ecstatic. And then there are the gourmet Food Emporium where you can sample every imaginable cuisine, like Breadbar, and a floor full of The Restaurant Collection including NY celebrity chef Tom Colicchio’s ‘Wichcraft. Westfield’s garnered such rave reviews, it’s bound to lure even die-hard mall haters. |
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OPENING OF BIRCH FLORAL SHOP ON SACRAMENTO STREET
Birch, a smart-looking floral shop, owned by Torryne Choate and Errin Rosenow (with 26 years of experience between them) recently opened on Sacramento Street near the Presidio, to the neighbors’ delight. Torryne’s daughter Canada Choate was there to help. The shop is ever so chic with its black on black interior offsetting their sophisticated floral bouquets, some in floating Lucite trays, and an array of gift items too. Everyone was duly impressed.
Her mother, Elizabeth Swanson (of Swanson Vineyards) arrived early and was snapping photos of the flowers for ideas as she loves to garden at her Napa Valley estate. I spotted her last summer, with her watering can in hand, tending the flowers at Napa’s Lincoln Theater, where she is involved. The guests, all pretty young things, many young mothers, came casually dressed to sip and see. In the crowd: my house guest Nini Ferguson, a lobbyist from Washington D.C., DedeWilsey (Alexis mother-in-law), Pam Kramlich, Claiborne Swanson, Astrid Murray, Suzanne and Alexis Levit, Sloan Barnett, Gretchen Leach and Emily Martin, who is the granddaughter of dynamo Nancy Holmes of San Antonio. |
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| Photographs by Drew Alitizer, Jeanne Lawrence, Heather Wiley, & Tom Gibbons |
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