So happy to see voter turnout increasing in Skokie and beyond – there were long lines on election day!
Cubs fans celebrate historic championship at Skokie's Village Inn
By Mike Isaacs, Skokie Review
No one packed into the Village Inn in downtown Skokie Wednesday night was as old as 108, but they all seemed to have the year 1908 in mind when the moment of a lifetime came.
Cubs third baseman Kris Bryant fielded a slow-rolling ground ball and threw to first baseman Anthony Rizzo for the final out, and then there was bedlam in downtown Skokie’s popular bar.
The Cubs had won the World Series for the first time since 1908.
Hugs, hollers, high-fives and a loud horn created an unhinged celebration – although a few fans had left after the game’s 17-minute rain delay broke up the unrelenting tension of the late innings.
Village Inn owner Randy Miles said business had been “fabulous” since the Cubs began their historic postseason run – up as much as 20 to 25 percent on each game day.
“It’s been stressful for us and a lot of work by the staff, too,” he said. “They’re pretty wiped out now. But it’s been great.”
Miles said the spike in business was on par with when the Bulls and Blackhawks made their respective championship runs. But fans at the Village Inn Wednesday – even younger ones – said they recognize the unique historic significance of the Cubs’ championship above all others.
Some shed tears below television sets displaying the Cubs crowded on the mound in Cleveland and mobbing each other for the last time this season.
Miles had placed a replica mini-scoreboard over the Village Inn entrance on Lincoln Avenue during the entire Cubs’ playoff run. By the time fans left, a sign was perched above the scoreboard declaring the Cubs as World Series champs.
Even leaving the Village Inn more than an hour after the game ended, the celebration could still be heard on the streets of Lincoln Avenue.
North Shore Center for the Performing Arts celebrates 20 years in Skokie
If the late Marvin Hamlisch performed at the North Shore Center for the Performing Arts today — just as he did 20 years ago as its first act — his rendition of the “The Way We Were” might make for timely nostalgia for the center itself.
To mark its 20th anniversary in Skokie, the North Shore Center has scheduled special community events and performances including a free open house, a Klezmer brunch, an educational blues camp, a sing-a-long movie event with Disney’s “Frozen” and a North Shore Center Foundation benefit in conjunction with an Art Garfunkel concert.
The open house is scheduled for 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Oct. 16 in the lobby of the center, 9501 Skokie Blvd. A complete anniversary event listing is available at NorthShoreCenter.org./20.
Michael Pauken, general manager of the North Shore Center for the Performing Arts, was not around at the center’s start but has led the performing arts facility for the last 14 years.
Skokie has been a partner since the facility’s inception.
“You just can’t make real money with more modest size theaters like this one,” he said. “If you could make money doing this, Disney would be opening them all over the country.”
But the center has been able to stay afloat and even make a profit – unlike some, he said.
Skokie and the operator of the North Shore Center for the Performing Arts extended their long-standing operating agreement not long ago.
Skokie Director of Marketing and Communications Ann Tennes, a member of the center’s authority board, called the venue “not only an important community amenity, but an important component of the Old Orchard corridor and the economic engine that it serves for the community.”
Village leaders have viewed the performing arts center, Westfield Old Orchard and the Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center — all located close together — as regional rather than just local draws.
Tennes said industry standards indicate between 70 and 80 percent of theater attendees dine in the area when they’re seeing a show.
“Every single year, they have had a very profitable and popular series at the venue. We’re gaining stature in the area for being a quality performing arts center,” she said.
The venue was an outgrowth, of sorts, from the old Centre East theater once housed on Lincoln Avenue, former home to Niles East High School. Once Oakton Community College moved to the property, a movement to find a new home for Centre East emerged, Pauken said.
“That was the initiating factor in getting this building built,” he said. “It just took a long time.”
Former Centre East Executive Director Dorothy Litwin applied to the state for funding under the “Build Illinois Program.”
According to the North Shore Center, the facility was then constructed at a cost of $18 million; contributions included $13.2 million from the state, $3.4 million from the village and the remainder from the Daniel F. and Ada L. Rice Foundation and other private donors. Northlight Theatre also raised funds.
Since 1996, the center says, more than $3.2 million in major capital improvements have been made to the facility. They have included new carpeting; a new concessions service and catering service area; replacement of the old Centre East seats; catwalks and dressing rooms for Northlight; upgraded theatrical lighting for the main theater; a new marquee at Golf Road and Skokie Boulevard and more.
North Shore Center underwent a facility studies need in 2013. It recently upgraded its orchestra shell for classical music performances, its green and star dressing rooms and its assistant listening system. It currently is undergoing a heating and cooling system replacement and has plans for lobby bathroom remodeling and even roof replacement, Pauken said.
But Pauken said the biggest reason for the venue’s success — which included surviving a brutal recession when some arts venues didn’t — has been due to popular programming.
It eventually did away with the more traditional yearly “subscription model” for a season of shows, which Pauken said has made a big difference.
“There are other performing arts centers including ones in the Chicago area that still have that model,” he said. “Our biggest problem with it was that it locks you into appealing to the same group of people over and over again.”
By abandoning a subscription model and by scheduling “eclectic and diverse” shows, Pauken said, the center began drawing new audiences. North Shore Center also continues to be a popular home to important rentals as well as community events from Taste of Skokie Valley to an annual local student art show.
That’s why North Shore Center officials say they want the 20th anniversary of the venue to be a community celebration.
The Oct. 16 open house will include backstage theater tours and children’s activities, storytelling by Linda Gotham, a theater master class with Northlight, a dance workshop with Kaleidoscope Dance and Movement Center, arts and crafts stations and an instrument petting zoo from the Skokie Valley Symphony Orchestra.
“We know (the center) is absolutely an important part of the village’s image of itself,” Pauken said. “This building attracts people from beyond the borders of Skokie, but we also service this community and hold an important place here. We want our celebration to reflect that, too.”
Twitter: @SKReview_Mike
Have you visited the Kosher wine section at Marianos in Skokie?
Check out Elisheva Klein’s blog: https://tipsysip.net/2016/09/30/wine-at-marianoss-in-skokie/
Skokie teacher welcomes 4th-graders back to school with rap video
Instead of sending out the boring, old, “Welcome Back” newsletter, Mr. Reed, a first year teacher from Skokie, wrote a rap song for his 4th grade students, and recorded a music video to go along with it! The song and video emphasize the reality that hard work is a must, but that school and learning can certainly be fun!