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Ato Essandoh: From Schenectady To Scorsese

It’s always a surprise when you find out an actor or actress you’ve seen on the big screen is from your neck of the woods—especially when your neck of the woods is humble Schenectady. Some Schenectadian glitterati we’ve covered in the past include the late Ann B. Davis (The Brady Bunch) and actor Mickey Rourke (The Wrestler). 

Another superstar to add to the ranks? Ato Essandoh, a Ghanaian-American actor best known for his roles in Jason Bourne, Blood Diamond and Garden State, who was born in the Electric City in 1972. After attending New Rochelle High School in Westchester County, he went on to study chemical engineering at Cornell University. It was at Cornell that Essandoh got his first taste of acting; during his junior year, his college sweetheart encouraged him to audition for a play on campus. “I’ll never forget coming on stage and hearing people laugh, feeling them connect, hanging on every word we said,” Essandoh told Cornell’s alumni magazine.

After college, Essandoh began studying at The Acting Studio in New York City and landed his first TV role as an injured bike messenger on NBC’s Third Watch in 2001. Since then, the Capital Regionite has worked with directors Quentin Tarantino and Martin Scorsese on Django Unchained and HBO’s Vinyl, respectively, and has also appeared in HBO’s Girls, Netflix’s Altered Carbon and blockbuster X-Men: Dark Phoenix. 

Now, that’s electric.

23rd [And Fourth]: Mother-And-Daughter Duo And Co-Owners Janet Longe And Jamie Davies Consider Their Clients Family

Just under a decade ago, the co-owners and founders of Saratoga Springs’ 23rd [and Fourth]—mother-daughter team Janet Longe and Jamie Davies—noticed a growing need for a contemporary furnishings store in the city. They jumped at the opportunity to provide Saratoga and the surrounding region with a home furnishings and design destination, offering its ever-growing clientele—from Saratoga to Albany, Lake George and beyond—premier, clean-lined interior design and fine furniture. So, in 2012, the duo combined their respective expertise in interior design and business and launched 23rd [and Fourth], which has been greeted with success and support ever since. (If you’re wondering about their name, it’s a nod to Davies’ and Longe’s birthdays, March 23 and September 4, respectively.)

A big part of what keeps customers coming back to 23rd [and Fourth] is its focus on providing customers with individual attention. “We become close to our clients, and they essentially become friends and family,” Davies says. “We really care about their needs and wants and how they live and their lifestyles. One’s concept of ‘home’ is specific to individuals and families, so the more we know about our clients, the more we can create a space that is really to their want and lifestyle.”

Currently, 23rd [and Fourth]’s 3,000-square-foot showroom is located at 130 Excelsior Avenue in Saratoga, after moving from Franklin Square a few years ago. The store offers customers a wide range of items for purchase in-store, including sofas, chairs, lamps, bedroom furniture, area rugs, window treatments, custom draperies, chandeliers, sconces—the list goes on and on. Additionally, 23rd [and Fourth] will be launching its own e-commerce hub in the near future, which will allow clients to browse everything from the showroom and purchase online. 

Committed to fulfilling its clients’ needs, Longe and Davies can also connect customers with area contractors for interior design projects, large or small. These include projects everything from one-room design and commercial work to design work on a client’s entire home. “We have a great interior design customer base,” says Davies. “People come in the store, and their reactions are all positive—like Saratoga needed this.” Indeed they did.

Jockey Club: Meet Manny Franco

Manny Franco is one of the top young riders on the New York circuit. In each of the past five years, he’s ranked among the top 15 in earnings among North American jockeys, and in both 2018 and 2019 had more wins at New York Racing Association (NYRA) tracks than any other rider. Franco rode his first Breeders’ Cup winner in 2019, piloting Sharing to victory in the Juvenile Fillies Turf. He has eight Grade 1 victories in his career to date, including the 2017 Fourstardave Handicap at Saratoga Race Course. A regular rider of Sackatoga Stable’s Tiz the Law, which Saratoga Living picked as its top early Kentucky Derby contender, Franco finished ninth in the Saratoga standings with 17 wins in 2019. 

Fun fact: Franco rode five winners at Aqueduct Racetrack on February 21. It was the third time in his career he’d won five races on a single card.  

Born: December 19, 1994
Birthplace: Carolina, Puerto Rico
Height: 5′ 1″
Weight: 112 pounds

Manny Franco’s recent riding statistics

Year Mounts Wins Win % Earnings

2016 1,480 192 13% $12,479,746 
2017 1,327 187 14% $12,688,342
2018 1,419 252 18% $17,088,709
2019 1,340 221 16% $16,688,680 
2020 196 48 24% $2,515,805*

Manny Franco’s career riding statistics (2003-2019)

Mounts Wins Win % Earnings

2013-2020 9,282 1,336 14.39% $83,310,633*

*2020 and career stats through March 1

Saratogian Of The Month: Glenn LaPorte

I first met Glenn LaPorte at a party—Saratoga Living’s “Miracle On Ice” party at Putnam Place, if we’re being specific. Surrounded by the din of drinks clinking, music blaring and people laughing, Glenn was noticeably calm, as if what was happening around him had little to do with his own existence. It’s not that he wasn’t aware of the party or wasn’t having a good time—he was just taking it all in.

So, it didn’t surprise me when I found out that Glenn is a masseur. That inner calm so few of us find on a day-to-day basis? Glenn exudes it. I guess that’s part of the job; he’s there to make his clients feel as relaxed as possible. 

Born in Central New York and raised for most of his life in Colonie, Glenn now resides in Clifton Park, home base for his massage operation. He calls himself The Mobile Masseur: Rather than working out of one studio, Glenn travels to his clients, specializing in in-home (or -hotel) massages. He also gives massages at sporting events, such as marathons and 5Ks, and at health fairs, employee appreciation days and bridal showers. And he keeps busy—once, Glenn tells me, he gave massages for a total of 12 hours in one day.

I caught up with the man behind The Mobile Masseur.

What’s something about your job as a professional masseur that might surprise our readers?
Before I got into it, I didn’t realize how male therapists can be discriminated against by both genders. People are more open to a male therapist now than when I first started in 2003, but there are still females who may not be comfortable with a male therapist, and males who will say, “Oh, I don’t want a guy touching me.”

Do you consider yourself a healer or practitioner?
My first thought was healer, but the body really heals itself—I just help facilitate it and lead it in the right direction. I would say God is a healer, and I want to have Him work through me even more, so I can have a greater impact on people.

What does success look like after a massage?
When a client’s demeanor changes. When they’re brighter and have a bigger smile and they’re like, “That was amazing.”

New York Governor Cuomo Believes COVID-19 Outbreak Has Been ‘Stabilized’ Upstate

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Yes, the New York State lockdown is still in place—and yes, you should continue to be practicing social distancing and stay at and/or work from home as much as possible. But in his April 11 press briefing, New York State Governor Andrew Cuomo did say that, in regard to the spread of the COVID-19 virus throughout the state, “we believe that we have stabilized the situation upstate and in the suburbs.” (The suburbs being the counties that surround New York City.)

This comes on the heels of positive news yesterday about a downward trend in the number of hospitalizations, ICU admissions and daily intubations. Today brought more positive news in those areas: the three-day average of hospitalizations and ICU admissions were trending down, and the number of daily intubations was a negative one.

However, that positivity was tempered with more grim news about the number of COVID-19-related deaths reported. The number rose slightly, day-over-day, from 777 on April 9 to 783 on April 10, marking the fourth straight day in the 700s.

The talk of the stabilization did lead to that of the potential for reopening businesses in New York, but as Cuomo noted, it was not only an economic decision, but also a public health one. “I am unwilling to divorce the two,” he said. The state will only begin reopening businesses once it’s sure that there won’t be a “second wave” of the pandemic.

It’s also worth noting that there have been reports today that New York City’s Mayor Bill de Blasio cancelled school for the rest of the year there; the governor refused to confirm the closure of city schools, running in counterpoint to de Blasio’s order, because he felt that it would need to be coordinated with all other counties in the region. It’s unclear whether this decision would affect the school year statewide. The governor said he also hoped to coordinate the eventual reopening of schools with that of the state’s businesses.

 

Clifton Park Teen Starts #WriteToAppreciate Campaign For Senior Centers, Assisted Living Facilities And Hospitals

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Talk about making the best of a bad situation. Sahil Swali, a junior at Clifton Park’s Shenendehowa High School and a member of the Civil Air Patrol, had been selected to go to Australia this summer as part of the Australia International Air Cadet Exchange. Then the COVID-19 pandemic hit, and the exchange was cancelled. Instead of sinking into disappointment, Swali decided to take a step back, write about what he appreciated and email that message of positivity to some of the people that needed it the most: senior citizens in hospitals, nursing homes and patient care facilities.

Swali has now transformed his simple act of generosity into an online campaign, #WriteToAppreciate, and he’s hoping that his fellow New Yorkers—and all Americans, for that matter—will join him. “Reading the news, I learned that these senior centers can’t have visitors, and the people are very lonely,” says Swali. “I knew that was a problem that I could help solve.” It all started with a Facebook post on March 14, the same day that Swali learned about his Australia trip getting cancelled. In the post, Swali asked others to join him in writing their own letters of gratitude and uploading photos to #WriteToAppreciate. (The letters are “delivered” digitally so as to eliminate any threat of contamination.)

Since then, Swali has received more than 150 letters that he’s sent out to 30-plus nursing homes and patient care facilities across New York State, Connecticut, Massachusetts and even as far away as Nebraska. He’s also sent letters to two hospitals in New York City—NYC Health + Hospitals (Jacobi) and Montefiore Medical Center Einstein Campus—and one in Dallas, the Texas Oncology–Baylor Charles A. Sammons Cancer Center. “I’m currently working on partnering with more facilities to expand it,” says Swali. “I’m also trying to get more people involved in writing the letters.”

So, what exactly should people write in their letters? Swali says that the subject’s up to each person. “We’ve received everything from drawings from two year olds to full letters from adults,” says Swali. “Some Boy Scout and Girl Scout groups are also planning on writing letters soon.” For those suffering from writer’s block, on Swali’s website there are examples and ideas of what to write about or draw. #WriteToAppreciate even has a form to recommend other facilities that would benefit from the program.

Swali plans on continuing the #WriteToAppreciate campaign for the duration of the COVID-19 outbreak. As for what he appreciates right now? “I’m definitely appreciative of my family and my school,” he says. “They’re all doing their best to make sure I feel supported and can maintain as normal a life as possible with everything crazy going on.”

Saratoga Holiday Inn Temporarily Housing Homeless Population

The Saratoga Springs Holiday Inn is now being used as a shelter for Saratoga’s homeless population in response to the COVID-19 outbreak. The hotel, located at 232 Broadway, has agreed to house up to 40 homeless Saratogians in an effort to prevent the spread of coronavirus among this vulnerable population.

“Social distancing and hygiene is the only way to slow the spread of COVID-19,” Shelters of Saratoga Executive Director Karen Gregory said in a press release. “Unfortunately, people experiencing homelessness don’t have the ability to stay home. People experiencing homelessness don’t have regular access to sinks where they can wash their hands and those staying at homeless shelters can’t always remain six feet from another person. There are simply too many people and not enough space.”

Until the outbreak of COVID-19 in mid-March, Saratoga’s homeless population was housed in the seasonal Code Blue shelter located at 4 Adelphi Street. When the pandemic began to worsen, Shelter administration took preventative measures by moving many of the shelter’s inhabitants to an emergency location at the Saratoga Senior Center on Williams Street. That lasted until this past week, when Gregory and Mayor Meg Kelly approached the Holiday Inn for assistance due to growing concerns about social distancing. Holiday Inn General Manager Kevin Touhy answered the call to action, and within days, people were moved from the Senior Center to the hotel.

In the press release, Touhy expressed his commitment to aiding the local community during this turbulent time, sharing pride for being able to offer the Holiday Inn as a safe home for those in need.

Albany Medical Center Is One Of The First Hospitals In The Nation To Use Experimental COVID-19 Treatment

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Albany Medical Center is helping lead the charge against the COVID-19 pandemic. As part of Governor Cuomo’s “systematized,” statewide hospital network, which he’s created to fight off the spread of the virus, more downstate COVID-19 patients are being treated up here in the Capital Region. To that point, on April 9, the hospital announced that it had become one of the first hospitals in the country to gain US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval for an experimental COVID-19 therapy that involves using the plasma from survivors of the disease to treat critically ill patients. 

“As the region’s only academic medical center, Albany Med participates in many cutting-edge clinical research trials,” says Dr. Dennis McKenna, Albany Med’s president and CEO. “We’re honored to have the ability to administer this experimental therapy as we fight this global pandemic and hope that it can provide the life-saving treatment these patients inflicted with COVID-19 so desperately need.”

The treatment is called “convalescent plasma therapy,” and it uses the antibodies built up in the blood from a person who’s recovered from COVID-19 to attack the virus in someone who’s currently battling the disease. Though newly approved, treatments like this have existed for some time. Convalescent plasma therapy was used during the deadly 1918 flu pandemic that claimed at least 50 million lives globally. Though COVID-19’s mortality rate hasn’t been that high, the deadly disease has shown some similarities to the 1918 flu pandemic.

Albany Med has already received its first donation, from one of its own employees, and has treated its first patient with the therapy. Right now, the local hospital is seeking more plasma donors who’ve had COVID-19 and recovered. Those wishing to donate must be completely recovered from the disease and not have exhibited any symptoms for the last 14 days. All potential donors will be retested to make sure that COVID-19 is not still in their systems. To determine eligibility for a plasma donation, you can call 518-262-9340.

New York Governor Cuomo: Hospitalizations, ICU Admissions And Deaths All Down

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Happy Friday. In terms of the roller coaster that’s been the last several days of press briefings from New York State Governor Andrew Cuomo, the one on April 10 had the closest (if not faintest) sign of a light at the end of the tunnel for the COVID-19 crisis in New York.

Governor Cuomo reported a “dramatic decline” in the total number of hospitalizations, and for the first time since he’d begun giving his briefings, Cuomo noted that there was a negative number in terms of new ICU admissions. Although daily intubations were up slightly, the trend was still down. And in a week that saw three straight days of record totals of COVID-19-related deaths, Friday’s total was down, day-over-day, from 799 on April 8 to 777 on April 9.

But the governor spent the majority of the briefing driving home the point that we’re not out of the weeds yet—that the social distancing and stay-at-home orders are helping “flatten the curve” and that they could easily mean the difference between life and death for some New Yorkers.

To help with the hardships that have mushroomed up because of the pandemic, Cuomo said that the state would be allotting $200 million in emergency food assistance for 700,000 low-income households enrolled in Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP). Also, he reported that Airbnb would be contributing $2 million to provide rooms in union hotels for frontline workers at no cost to them (a number of other New York City hotels would also be taking part in the program, offering up free rooms). And lastly, he noted that he’d be working with the state/federal government on launching a COVID-19 Heroes Compensation Fund, much like the one put in place after 9/11.

London-Based Jazz Musician, Club Owner And Saratogian Weathering COVID-19 Via Live YouTube Series

Way back when we first relaunched Saratoga Living magazine, I published a list of Saratogian movers and shakers, who have gone on to become stars in their various areas of influence (see: Anthony Weaver). One of those rising stars was jazz clarinetist/saxophonist, Giacomo Smith, whom I’ve known for more than a decade and am lucky enough to call a friend (his mom and my parents worked together at Skidmore College back in the day). Like something stripped from a Christmas tale, Giacomo, along with his mom, have been known to show up at my parents’ doorstep the night of Christmas Eve, and if all are lucky, he’ll sit down at my parents’ old piano, sight-read Christmas carols and even bang out the occasional jazz number. The guy is about as close to a musical genius as I know.

Giacomo was actually born in Italy but grew up in Saratoga Springs. After graduating from Saratoga Springs High School (he was a few years younger than me), he went off to get his undergrad music degree at Boston University and his master’s at McGill in Montreal. Giacomo now lives in London, England, where, besides being a highly sought-after jazz musician and soloist, he runs a popular jazz club and bar called Kansas Smitty’s in the city’s trendy Broadway Market. He’s also a member of the jazz ensemble Kansas Smitty’s House Band, which has performed everywhere from London’s Royal Albert Hall and Barbican to Manhattan’s Jazz at Lincoln Center (at the request of Wynton Marsalis, no less). He’s even played for the Queen of England! And last summer, he came full circle, popping across the Atlantic and playing the Saratoga Jazz Festival at the Saratoga Performing Arts Center (SPAC), right here in Saratoga.

Because it’s obviously tough being a performing musician anywhere right now, what with the COVID-19 pandemic shutting down all manner of normal, public life, Giacomo recently started producing a live music and interview series, “Live at Five,” on his group’s YouTube channel, which he’s been streaming live at 5pm (GMT+1, that is), daily, and then archiving the videos on the page for all to enjoy whilst eating their tea in social isolation (“tea” also means dinner in England, by the way).

In a special episode on April 9, Giacomo interviewed an old friend of mine, Nick Lewis, head of music and promotions at London’s legendary Ronnie Scott’s Jazz Club, which has hosted music royalty such as Tom Waits, Mark Knopfler (of Dire Straits), Jack Bruce (of Cream), the aforementioned Marsalis, the late Prince, Jeff Beck (of the Yardbirds) and countless others. When I was on my study year abroad at the University of Edinburgh in Scotland, Nick lived in the dorm room directly below mine (I was a junior, he was a “fresher”). Throughout the year, we could often be heard jamming on something—I’d bought a cheap acoustic guitar in Edinburgh and had just discovered Neil Young, so I can imagine he heard a lot of Harvest and After the Gold Rush that year; and he had a keyboard and used to play quite a bit, too (before I left, I ended up selling Nick my guitar for tuppence on the pound, and because he’s a lefty, he reengineered the guitar so it fit his needs). Either way, we became friends and stayed in touch long after I was back in the states and he, continuing his studies at uni.

And then, by chance, years later, my folks introduced me to Giacomo and told me he was an aspiring jazz musician, who had just moved to London and was looking for contacts across the drink. Nick, who had already started working at Ronnie’s, immediately came to mind. So, I set up an email introduction between the two guys and figured they’d possibly connect, but not much else. I had no idea that the two would end up becoming thick as thieves, and Giacomo and his ensemble would end up playing Ronnie Scott’s Jazz Club multiple times. (I take zero credit.)

Take a listen to the latest Live at Five recording above—and round about the 9- or 10-minute mark, you might hear about some guy from Saratoga who works at some magazine there.