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The Philadelphia Orchestra Brings Copland’s ‘Appalachian Spring’ To SPAC For The First Time Ever

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The Philadelphia Orchestra’s opening week of performances at the Saratoga Performing Arts Center (SPAC) was nothing short of sublime. However, as good as week one was—with its fireworks, live cannon fire and a performance of John Williams’ soundtrack to Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets (while the movie played)—week two is packing just as big a punch.

Star Conductor and Music Director Yannick Nézet-Séguin was slated to take up the baton at SPAC on Wednesday, August 7. However, due to an injury sustained by his partner, Pierre Tourville, Yannick is delaying his highly anticipated return to Saratoga until Friday, August 16. That won’t affect the programming of this week’s performances, of course, as Kensho Watanabe, Assistant Conductor of the Philadelphia Orchestra, steps in to guide the orchestra on Wednesday, August 7 for a night of the symphony’s personal favorites: Clyne’s Masquerade, Chausson’s Poème de l’amour et de la mer and the lovely Symphony No. 1 by Russian composer Rachmaninoff. Watanabe will also be leading the orchestra for an important, and surprising, SPAC debut the following day. That is, Aaron Copland’s Pulitzer Prize-winning masterpiece Appalachian Spring, which audiences have waited more than 50 years to hear the orchestra play at the venue.

Appalachian Spring is one of those works so emblematic of American classical music that, frankly, it’s a little surprising that the 20-minute-plus piece hasn’t been played yet during a single Saratoga summer season. Originally commissioned in 1942 as a ballet with a 13-instrument chamber orchestra and premiered at the Library of Congress in 1944, it went on to win Copland the 1945 Pulitzer Prize for Music. The suite was later shortened and arranged for a much larger orchestra, and it’s this full orchestral version that will, at long last, be making its SPAC debut in concert this Thursday, August 8. The concert will also feature two other big SPAC premieres: blue cathedral by composer Jennifer Higdon and Anthology of Fantastic Zoology by composer Mason Bates, as well as one non-American piece, the classic Fountains of Rome by Respighi. The whole program was handpicked by Nézet-Séguin and shares a common theme of nature.

In addition to the auspicious premiere of Appalachian Spring, the Philadelphia Orchestra will close out its second week at SPAC with a night of South American Sounds on Friday, August 9, under the baton of Peruvian conductor Miguel Harth-Bedoya, as well as a performance of Disney Pixar’s Up, with the orchestra once again playing the film’s soundtrack while the movie is screened, on Saturday, August 10. For tickets and more information, visit SPAC’s website.

Saratoga Race Course Update

Here’s a roundup of everything going on in Saratoga’s horse racing world this week and weekend:

On Tuesday, August 8, the 12th Annual Visión exhibit will take place at Saratoga Race Course’s 1863 Club Patio, offering a behind-the-scenes look at backstretch photography from the “Estamos Aquí” (We Are Here) series. All proceeds from this event will benefit the Saratoga County Economic Opportunity Council’s Latino Community Advocacy Program, which is headquartered at the recreation hall at Saratoga Race Course.

Two can’t-miss events are taking place on Wednesday, August 7. First up is one of the track’s giveaway days; everyone who pays admission will receive a free Saratoga Race Course baseball cap. There’s a limited number, so be sure to get there early to grab one. Police officers, paramedics, firefighters and EMTs will also be honored at the track on Wednesday with the Saratoga Race Course’s First Responder Day. There will be interactive exhibits and activities at The Coca-Cola Saratoga Pavilion, and all first responders will also receive free Grandstand admission with ID that day.

On Thursday, August 8, celebrate women in racing and raise money for the Breast Cancer Research Foundation by heading to the Fabulous Fillies Day. All jockeys in this day’s card will wear pink armbands, and the track will be decorated with pink bunting and flowers. In addition to this, the iconic Thoroughbred statue in the Paddock of Sea Hero will be draped with a pink horse blanket.

And if you’re looking to grab some brunch at the track, Sunday, August 11 will feature Bubbles & Brunch at the 1863 Club, a bevy of brunch buffet foods with bottomless mimosas and bloody marys. (A second Bubbles & Brunch will take place on Sunday, August 25.)

And now for the big stakes this week. Get your racing sheets ready:

Wednesday, August 7
$100,000 Evan Shipman
$100,000 Mahony

Thursday, August 8
$100,000 Saratoga Dew

Friday, August 9
$100,000 Tale Of The Cat

Saturday, August 10
Grade 1, $500,000 Fourstardave Handicap
Grade 2, $200,000 Saratoga Special

Sunday, August 11
$100,000 Galway

Want to take a deeper dive into the Capital Region’s calendar of event? Check out saratoga living‘s hand-curated list of summer fun below.

Monday

Get your tickets to the Fashionable Fillies Luncheon at Saratoga National Golf Club in Saratoga Springs (August 5)

Take part in an entertaining conversation with Robin Traywick Williams, author of The Key to the Quarter Pole, at the Union Gables Inn in Saratoga (August 5)

Tuesday

Enjoy some Croquet on the Green, an amateur tournament open to all ages at Gavin Park in Wilton (August 6)

Pop band Why Don’t We is playing the Palace Theater in Albany (August 6)

Based on the popular 1992 animated film of the same name, Disney’s Newsies musical is coming to the Park Playhouse in Albany’s Washington Park (August 6-24)

Wednesday

Plein air artists (artists who paint outdoors or “en plein air”) from across the Northeast will be exhibited in the juried Plein Air Festival at The Hyde Collection in Glens Falls (August 7)

Get ready to stuff yourself at the New York State Food Festival at the Empire State Plaza in Albany (August 7)

Don’t miss the 11th Annual Country and Bluegrass Jamboree at the Little Theater on the Farm in Fort Edward (August 7)

Thursday

This year’s Sizzling Hot Pink Saratoga Hat Luncheon, benefitting the Breast Cancer Research Foundation, will take place at Saratoga Race Course’s Rail Pavilion (August 8)

Rock the Block: Rocket Man Show, a free tribute concert to Elton John, will bring plenty of fun to 72 Remsen Street in Cohoes (August 8)

Actor, writer and comedian Tom Segura will be performing at the Palace Theatre in Albany (August 8)

Visit local artist Rumara Jewett and see what she’s up to at her Open Studio Evening above Wheatfields on the 2nd floor of 444 Broadway in Saratoga (August 8)

Schenectady’s Classic Theater Guild presents Shakesplaining, a lighthearted dive into some of Shakespeare’s most famous scenes at Congregation Beth Israel (August 8) and Proctors Theatre (August 10)

The Bel Canto Institute Singers are performing at The Sembrich in Bolton Landing (August 8)

Badfish: A Tribute to Sublime, one of the country’s most popular cover bands, is playing at Putnam Place in Saratoga (August 8)

Grammy and Emmy-winning singer/composer Harry Connick, Jr. will be playing two sets at The Egg in Albany (August 8-9)

Friday

Take in some history with the 262nd Commemoration of the Surrender of Fort William Henry at the Fort William Henry Museum in Lake George Village (August 9)

SUNY Schenectady’s Barbershop Quartet, Out of Time, will perform classic barbershop music at the Addy in Proctors Theatre (August 9)

Eat healthy at the Brooklyn Food and Fitness Festival 2019 in Dr. Ronald McNair Park (August 9)

Catch A Midsummer Night’s Dream with Shakespeare at the Park (Dinner) Theater in Glens Falls (August 9-10)

The All White Affair Boat Party around Manhattan will be setting sail this weekend at Pier 15 Hornblower Cruises & Events in New York City (August 9-10)

Home Made Theater‘s popular Youth Theater Conservatory program will present Once on This Island Jr. at Saratoga Arts (August 9-10)

Pinball wizards and gamers will love the 2019 Saratoga Pinball & Arcade Show at the Saratoga Regional YMCA (August 9-10)

Take part in fun all weekend long at the Annual Hudson Black Arts and Cultural Festival & Parade at the Henry Hudson Riverfront Park in Hudson (August 9-11)

Enjoy an overabundance of traditional Italian food and live music all weekend at the St. Margaret of Cortona Annual Festa at Our Lady Queen of Peace in Schenectady (August 9-11)

Saturday

Catch the exhibition opening of Ree Morton—The Plant that Heals May Also Poison at Skidmore’s Tang Museum in Saratoga (August 10)

The Ajkun Ballet Theatre presents The Sleeping Beauty by Romantic Russian composer Pyotr Tchaikovsky at Albany’s The Egg (August 10)

Hudson Crossing Park in Schuylerville hosts its family-friendly 15th Annual Cardboard Boat Race (August 10, with a rain date on August 11)

The Saratoga Automobile Museum’s Tuners in the Park 5 will be held on the lawn of the Hall of Springs in Saratoga Spa State Park (August 10)

Celebrate Fort Ticonderoga’s rich history with its Summer Gala Dinner in Ticonderoga (August 10)

Hip-hop artist Suave the Don will be performing at the Upstate Concert Hall in Clifton Park (August 10)

Don’t miss all the family fun and youth exhibits at the Warren County Youth Fair at the Warren County Fairgrounds in Warrensburg (August 10)

Explore the importance of women in the history of flight with the Women in Aviation Weekend at the Old Rhinebeck Aerodome in Red Hook (August 10-11)

The 2019 TIME:SPANS Contemporary Music Festival, which presents a wide array of mostly twenty-first-century music, kicks off at the DiMenna Center for Classical Music in Manhattan (August 10-28)

Sunday

Nu metal band Korn, with special guest Alice in Chains bring their North American Tour to SPAC in Saratoga (August 11)

Americana folk quartet Mipso is performing two sets of Southern string music at Caffè Lena (August 11)

Violinist Philip Kates and members of The Philadelphia Orchestra will perform Give Me Your Tired, Your Poor, exploring the works of American immigrant composers at The Sembrich in Bolton Landing (August 11)

Take a trip back in time with the Annual 18th Century Day at the historic Schuyler House in Schuylerville (August 11)

Get those legs moving at the 38th Annual Battery Dance Festival at Robert F. Wagner Jr. Park in Manhattan (August 11)

Saratoga Race Course 2019: Everything Fun To Do On Dark Days At The Track

With Saratoga Race Course’s eight-week summer meet already in full swing—this weekend marks the running of the $1 million Whitney—it’s entirely possible that track-goers and non-Saratogian visitors alike might be thrown for a loop as to what to do on the two “dark days,” or Mondays and Tuesdays through September 2, when the track’s closed. The way we see it, it’s like having a four-day weekend every week! And it so happens that there are a wide range of fun activities that you can take part in around the Capital Region and beyond, where you can spend the prior week’s winnings at the track. As always, saratoga living has already done the hard work of curating a list of enjoyable, not-so-obvious activities to do during the track’s dark days, which, as it turns out, aren’t so dark anymore.

Go For An 18-Hole Golf Outing

The Spa City is renowned for its selection of beautiful golf courses, including the crown jewel, Saratoga National Golf Club, on Union Avenue, which was designed by award-winning golf course architect Roger Rulewich. With full knowledge that racing fans are looking for fun things to accomplish on dark days, Saratoga National offers discounted tee times every Monday through Wednesday from 8am to 3pm. Also, get in some great putting at some of the other local courses, such as Saratoga Spa Golf Course in the Saratoga Spa State Park, which offers a New York State resident discount, and McGregor Links Country Club in Wilton. We’d also suggest checking out Airway Meadows in Gansevoort—there’s an actual plane landing strip in the middle of one of the course—and Brookhaven Golf Course in Porters Corners, just outside of Saratoga. Beer-lovers will also enjoy Fairways of Halfmoon Golf Club, which has an actual craft beer tap room at the course. That’s only the tip of the iceberg.

The Saratoga Automobile Museum has great exhibits such as the ‘Wheels of Change: Cars & Culture in the 1960s,’ pictured here. (Saratoga Automobile Museum)

Brush Up On History At The Museums

History’s one-third of the official motto of Saratoga (“health, history and horses”), so of course, we have a great showing when it comes to museums in the area. For car lovers, the Saratoga Automobile Museum, located in the Saratoga Spa State Park, cannot be missed. There’s also the New York State Military Museum on Lake Avenue in Saratoga, which has some 15,000 artifacts dating from as far back as the Revolutionary War all the way up to the global war on terror. (You can’t miss it; there’s a real Sherman tank on its front lawn!)

The Hyde Collection, an art museum in Glens Falls, should also be on your list. It’s normally closed on Mondays, but it’s having a special Museum Mondays at the Hyde from 10am to 5pm all track season long through September 1. The museum is offering a free shuttle service from the Adelphi Hotel to the museum, courtesy of the Albany Auto Group, through August 26.

Other museums of note that are a bit of a longer drive from Saratoga proper? The Museum on Blue Mountain Lake, a kid-friendly favorite in Blue Mountain Lake, NY; The Clark in Williamstown, MA, which has a sprawling art collection; the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum, the Farmers’ Museum and the Fenimore Art Museum, all in Cooperstown, NY; and the Norman Rockwell Museum in Stockbridge, MA. All are about 1.5 hours from Downtown Saratoga.

Adirondacks
It’s a steep climb to reach the summit of Whiteface Mountain in Wilmington, NY. (Carl Heilman II)

Enjoy The Great Outdoors

With Lake George and the beautiful Adirondack Mountains just north of Saratoga, how could something outdoorsy not make it on this list? For those seeking an extended weekend journey, Saratoga is part of an ever-growing network of trails that crisscross the entire Capital Region. (Check out our “hikes for beginners” series here and here.) Hikers can even go farther by hooking up with the Empire State Trail, which includes more than 400 miles of off-road routes that run as far south as New York City and all the way west to Buffalo (to walk that far, of course, it would require more than just a four-day weekend). But you don’t even need to leave Saratoga to get a wonderful taste of nature. In addition to the Spa State Park, you can also take shorter, scenic hikes along the Spring Run Trail at East Avenue or the Bog Meadow Brook Nature Trail, right off of Lake Avenue.

Caffe Lena
Peter Yarrow, one of the founding members of classic folk trio Peter, Paul and Mary, playing at Caffè Lena. (Joe Deuel)

Catch Some Monday/Tuesday Night Entertainment

For starters, there’s an incredible lineup of shows at the Saratoga Performing Arts Center all summer long, including The Philadelphia Orchestra‘s summer residency in August, as well as a number of other hidden gems around town that fall on the track’s dark days. Caffè Lena hosts an Open Mic Night every Monday, where participants can play a number on the same stage that music legends such as Bob Dylan, Don McLean and Ani DiFranco ave performed. All ages and styles of music are welcome.

For those that want to continue tempting Lady Luck, Saratoga Casino Hotel has Club 55, which offers $10,000 in prizes every Tuesday from 11am to 8pm. Earn entries every Tuesday for a chance to win and also enjoy a discounted lunch and dinner at the Garden Buffet.

And fans of trivia are definitely in luck! Saratoga and the Capital Region are prime locales for trivia every night of the week.

Hamlet & Ghost
Some of Hamlet & Ghost’s delicious signature cocktails.

Drink And Eat To Your Heart’s Content

Downtown Saratoga is known for its burgeoning food scene, and there’s no shortage of local restaurants and bars right on Broadway offering their own dark day deals and specials. For instance, to help cool down this summer, Saratoga Tea & Honey on Broadway has Matcha Mondays, offering $3 iced (or hot) matcha teas all day long. The Wheatfields provides Meatball Mondays, $15 all-you-can-eat meatballs with salad, bread and herb garlic butter (it’s also offering a “2 for $20 To Go” every Monday, which includes an entree, salad and bread to go for just $20).

For one of the best happy hours in town, look no farther than Hamlet & Ghost which hosts its happy hour every Monday through Thursday with $1 oysters and $5 margaritas and old fashioned cocktails. Specifically for the dark days’ crowd, Saratoga Winery on Route 29 is offering free music every Tuesday from 3-6pm (plus a great happy hour that starts at 4pm. And on Tuesdays, Dango’s Saratoga has its popular Wing Night, 25-cent chicken wings from 3pm to midnight. Also, don’t miss Taco Tuesdays at two of Saratoga’s most popular restaurants, Harvey’s on Phila (with $2 tacos and $5 margaritas) and Cantina on Broadway (also with $2 tacos and $10 buckets of cold Coronitas). Why not visit both?

Hadestown
Amber Gray (center) starring as Persephone in the Broadway musical ‘Hadestown.’

For The More Adventurous…Catch A Show On Broadway

For those of you who want to take the four-day weekend option and leave the Spa City completely, New York City is just a 3.5-hour train ride (give or take) from Saratoga Springs (or a little less, if you venture to the Albany-Rensselaer station). Catch the train down to Penn Station—we’d suggest reading the latest issue of saratoga living to pass the time—and grab tickets to a hit show such as the new Beetlejuice musical, which opened in April, or the Tony Award-winning Hadestown by Caffè Lena regular Anaïs Mitchell.

Great Barrington
The historic Mahaiwe Performing Arts Center always has something going on inside.

Take A Road Trip To The Berkshires

Speaking of theater, you can jump in your car and drive two hours southeast of Saratoga to Western Massachusetts’ The Berkshires, where there are a ton of spectacular summer theater festivals and performing arts groups wowing audiences. Head to the Mahaiwe Performing Arts Center in Great Barrington, MA to enjoy the Berkshire Opera Festival’s performance of Don Pasquale on August 27 (a Tuesday). The Berkshire Theater Group (an amalgam of three performance spaces) in Stockbridge, MA and Pittsfield, MA is also offering theater programming throughout August. Additionally, there’s the famous Williamstown Theatre Festival every summer in the Williamstown, MA, not even 1.5 hours from Saratoga. The festival has shows running through the majority of August, including Ghosts by legendary Norwegian playwright Henrik Ibsen and the world premiere of Before the Meeting by Canadian writer Adam Bock on August 7 (a Wednesday, but it’s worth skipping a day at the track to check it out).

View of Montréal’s Clock Tower and Jacques-Cartier Bridge in the city’s Old Port. (Michael Vesia)

Drive Up To Montréal

Montréal is actually the closest large city to Saratoga Springs, just a straight three-hour shot up the Northway (New York City is a hair longer by car). During the summer months, The City of Saints really puts its arts scene on display. In the month of August alone, visitors can enjoy everything from the Orchestre Symphonique de Montréal’s Classical Spree, whose music director is none other than The Philadelphia Orchestra’s Yannick Nézet-Séguin, from August 7-11; to an inside look at the world of fashion at the 19th Annual Fashion & Design Festival from August 19-24; and, for the foodies out there, the Montréal Rib Fest, a three-day street festival of all things barbecue-related from August 16-18. Toward the end of the track season, August 23 through September 2, is the popular Montréal World Film Festival, with movies by both first-time and established filmmakers from more than 70 different countries.

Who knew that dark days could be so busy? Get cracking, because there are only four more weeks of Saratoga racing left!

Daily Racing Form: Marylou Whitney’s Spirit Dominates At Hall Of Fame Ceremony

SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y. – As always, the room was packed for the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame induction ceremony on Friday morning.

Inductees or representatives for this year’s bulky class of 16 – of which a dozen were in the Pillars of the Turf category – took their reserved seats near returning members of the Hall of Fame. Members of the public crowded into the Humphrey S. Finney Pavilion, not only to watch the ceremony, which was free to attend, but to take advantage of the opportunity to meet some of the sport’s legends.

But despite the crowd, there was one prime seat in the front row that was left empty, with the official Hall of Fame blazer presented to inductees resting on the chair. Atop it was a single pink rose, of the variety dubbed the “Marylou Whitney Rose.” John Hendrickson, president of the National Museum of Racing and the husband of the late “Queen of Saratoga,” brought the rose with him as he took the stage to accept for Pillar of the Turf Marylou Whitney.

Whitney, who died July 19 at age 93, was one of racing’s great philanthropists, in addition to her accomplishments as an owner and breeder, carrying on her family’s legacy in racing by campaigning Eclipse Award champion Bird Town and Belmont Stakes winner Birdstone. Whitney was beloved in Saratoga, credited with helping to revitalize and popularize the town via her influence as a socialite in the 1970s, and for major contributions to the arts scene here. Whitney, who was elected to The Jockey Club in 2011, was one of the founding members of the Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation and a major contributor to the opening of the Secretariat Center at the Kentucky Horse Park. She also has done substantial charitable work with backstretch workers.

Hendrickson delivered eloquent, succinct remarks – lasting about a minute – despite the emotion plain on his face during what he earlier acknowledged as “a hard day.” He recalled that Whitney was “extremely humbled” when she heard of her election to the Hall of Fame, announced in April.

“She told me she wanted to dedicate her induction to the horses and the people who love them, especially the unsung heroes, the backstretch workers,” Hendrickson said. “She said the sport of horse racing gave her the most incredible life, and she was extremely grateful. I want to thank all of you for loving Marylou. She loved this sport, and all of you, with her entire heart.

“So let us not cry because it’s over, let us smile because it happened,” Hendrickson concluded. “God bless you, and God bless Marylou.”

The audience gave Hendrickson and Whitney a standing ovation before the ceremony moved on to honor its other inductees. This year’s two contemporary inductees came from opposite ends of the spectrum, as three-time Eclipse Award champion racemare Royal Delta was inducted in her first year of eligibility, while Eclipse Award-winning jockey Craig Perret, who has been eligible since 1994, appeared on the ballot 12 times before being granted entry.

“I finally got off the also-eligible list, and look where I’m at now,” Perret, 68, joked.
In his acceptance speech, Perret recalled his 1990 Kentucky Derby victory aboard Unbridled as the signature moment of a career in which he also won the 1987 Belmont Stakes with Bet Twice and earned an Eclipse in 1990.

“I said, ‘my goal’s been reached,’ ” Perret, who retired in 2005, recalled. “Most horsemen and people, that’s what you dream about – Kentucky Derby, Kentucky Derby. That’s what everybody knows and loves.”

Royal Delta, the Eclipse champion 3-year-old filly of 2011 and older female of 2012 and 2013, won six Grade 1 races while trained throughout her career by Bill Mott, first for breeder Palides Investments and later for Benjamin Leon. Mott and Leon both took the stage to remember Royal Delta, who died in 2017 after producing her only foal.

“I was very lucky to train this mare,” Mott said. “I was able to train her mother, and for a while, I trained her grandmother. When you get lucky enough to get into these families, they just keep giving and giving, and Royal Delta is the result of one of those families. I was just so lucky.”

Royal Delta was one of three notable racemares honored. Regular rider Tony Black spoke fondly of 1976 champion sprinter My Juliet, while co-owners Peter M. Brant and George Strawbridge Jr., accepted on behalf of 1979 champion older female Waya, with both racemares inducted by the historic review committee. Black made comments Whitney surely would have approved of, pointing out the “unsung hero” Jim Maloney, My Juliet’s groom, who attended the ceremony.

The three living Pillars of the Turf inductees were on hand for the ceremony – James E. “Ted” Bassett III, 97, who will forever be tied to Keeneland; Arlington Park’s Richard L. “Dick” Duchossois, 97; and William S. Farish, 80, of Lane’s End Farm. All three were helped on with their Hall of Fame blazers by former track announcer Tom Durkin, who was the event’s master of ceremonies.

“This is a better jacket than I brought,” Duchossois joked.

Another late member of the Whitney family also was recognized this year in Helen Hay Whitney, with her great-grandsons Christopher and Peter di Bonaventura accepting. Another of racing’s great dynasties, the Phipps family, was well represented, with grandson Stuart S. Janney accepting on behalf of Gladys Mills Phipps, and longtime family trainer Shug McGaughey accepting on behalf of Ogden Phipps. Meadow Stud patriarch Christopher T. Chenery, who was involved in a famed foal-sharing agreement with the Phipps family, also was honored, with granddaughter Kate Chenery Tweedy making a repeat appearance on the pavilion’s stage. Tweedy also appeared last year at the induction of her mother, Penny Chenery.

Also inducted as Pillars of the Turf on Friday were John Hettinger, who, among other accomplishments, was a major figure in Thoroughbred aftercare, with son Bill Hettinger accepting; owner and breeder James R. Keene, with great-great grandson Keene Miller accepting; Frank E. “Jimmy” Kilroe, with Alan Balch, executive director of the California Thoroughbred Trainers accepting on behalf of that state industry stalwart; and Calumet Farm patriarch Warren Wright, Sr., with great-grandson Robert Lundy accepting via written remarks read by Durkin.

In the end, all the inductees and attendees, from the millionaires to the grooms, were tied together by a common passion – which Duchossois, who has developed his track’s signature Arlington Million into a major international event, spoke to.
“We all have one common language – horse racing,” Duchossois said. “There is no other industry in the world like the one we participate in.”

This story was originally published on DRF.com

5 Under-The-Radar Museums To Visit This Summer In The Saratoga Area

Saratoga Springs is a horse town. It’s a performing arts town and it’s a nightlife town. But it’s also a museum town. If you’ve spent any time in the Spa City, chances are you’ve been to at least one of its museums—maybe the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame, the National Museum of Dance, the Saratoga Automobile Museum, the Children’s Museum at Saratoga, the Saratoga Springs History Museum or the Frances Young Tang Teaching Museum at Skidmore College. Five notable museums in a city of less than 30,000 people is quite impressive, but that’s just the beginning. Here are five more lesser-known, but equally awesome, museums in and around Saratoga County for you to check out this summer.

The National Bottle Museum in Ballston Spa has rows upon rows of vintage bottles on display. (National Bottle Museum)

(1) The National Bottle Museum, located on Milton Avenue in Ballston Spa, is a single room stuffed to the brim with every kind of bottle you can imagine. Exhibits detail how bottles are made, bottle dating methods and what types of bottles are made in each state. Visiting the museum is free, but if you make a donation, you’ll receive an “orphan bottle”—one that doesn’t fit into the museum’s permanent collection but will look great on that shelf in your home! The museum is open Tuesday-Saturday from 10am-4pm.

(2) The Saratoga County Historical Society at Brookside Museum, more commonly known as the Brookside Museum, is also located in Ballston Spa. Originally built in 1792, the building was first used as an inn for guests visiting Saratoga’s mineral springs and is one of the oldest houses in the region. Now, the museum cares for documents, photographs and objects related to the history of Saratoga. The museum is currently running an exhibit called Chickens!: The Exhibition, which follows the importance of poultry (yes, poultry) in Saratoga County. You can visit the museum Wednesday-Friday from 10am-4pm and Saturday from noon-4pm.

(3) Another must-visit for history buffs is the Stillwater Blockhouse. Located southeast of Saratoga in nearby Stillwater, the museum explores what it was like to live in a small town during the battles that took place at Saratoga during the Revolutionary War. You can peek through the portholes that were used for firing at enemies during the war, or just pore through the photos, documents and memorabilia inside the house itself. The museum building is a replica of an 18th-century blockhouse and was built in 1927 from timbers of Revolutionary War-era structures that stood in what is now the Saratoga National Historical Park. The museum is open 10am-4pm on Tuesday-Sunday from May 24-October 12.

Saratoga’s military museum is located in the city’s former armory. (Peter/Flickr)

(4) For more on the battles of Saratoga—and wars, in general—you’ll want to visit the New York State Military Museum & Veteran Research Center, located in Saratoga’s historical armory building on Lake Avenue, just across the street from the fire station. The museum houses more than 10,000 artifacts dating from the Revolutionary War all the way up to the Gulf War, as well as the largest collection of state battle flags (more than 1700) in the US. The museum is free and open Monday-Saturday from 10am-4pm through August 26, when it will close on Mondays for the rest of the year.

(5) Last up is the Knickerbocker Historical Society, a mansion worth its weight in colonial-era history gold. Located in Schaghticoke, about 35 minutes from Saratoga in Rensselaer County, the museum is housed in a fully restored 1780s mansion that was once home to Johannes Knickerbacker III and his family (Knickerbacker—yes, there was an “a” not an “o” in the original surname—is a lengthy bloodline in the area). The historical society is staffed entirely by volunteers, and all funds raised by the museum are put back into the continual restoration of the mansion. Mansion tours are held every Sunday, May-October, from 11am-3pm, and the society hosts several events, such as a Harvest Festival and holiday bake sale, throughout the year.

Saratoga Winery To Double Indoor Seating Capacity With New ‘Wine Barn’ Tasting Room (Exclusive)

Saratoga Springs’ resident winemaker Saratoga Winery is on the cusp of a big expansion. On Tuesday, August 6, the winery will have an official ribbon-cutting ceremony with the Saratoga Chamber of Commerce to celebrate the opening of its brand-new Wine Barn tasting room at the winery’s location on Route 29, just a ten-minute drive from Downtown Saratoga. The local winemaker is set to double its indoor seating capacity with the expansion.

“We’re coming up on our tenth anniversary this fall, so we’re really excited about this new addition, which is really pushing us forward,” says Amy Greth, Saratoga Winery’s Events Coordinator and Marketing Manager. The new Wine Barn will not only expand the winery’s indoor seating capacity from around 125 seats to more than 250, but it will also serve as a versatile, multi-use space for comedy shows and musical acts, which the winery is hoping to host in the near future, as well as more weddings and private events. “One of the main reasons we needed to build [the Wine Barn] was because we’ve been doing a lot of weddings,” says Greth. “It’s been great for the winery.”

Wine Barn
Saratoga Winery’s brand new Wine Barn, which will be able to seat more than 125 people. (Saratoga Winery)

The Wine Barn will mimic the rustic, Adirondack aesthetic of Saratoga Winery, with the addition of higher ceilings and its own bar and restrooms. Plus, as to be expected, the space will have lots of working wine barrels. The new space will also include a big, wrap-around porch and large lawn area on which customers can enjoy a fire pit and play corn hole (in season, of course). Despite all the warm-weather activities that the Wine Barn offers customers, Greth says that the new tasting room will be most appreciated during inclement weather, as the winery has only been able to accommodate a limited amount of guests in the winter or when it’s storming in the summer. “Now with the new Wine Barn, it’s going to open up this place a lot,” she says.

The ribbon-cutting, which is scheduled for 3pm on Tuesday, is open to the public and will feature live music from 3-6pm on the deck. (The winery’s usual Tuesday happy hour will still be on tap from 4-6:30pm.) A separate kickoff party for the Wine Barn is currently being planned, and the date for that event will be announced soon.

Saratoga Race Course 2019: Celebrating ‘saratoga living’ Day

It’s not every day that you get personally escorted by New York Racing Association officials to Saratoga Race Course’s Paddock, then follow the jockey-mounted horses as they spill out onto the track in the post parade and are finally deposited in the Winner’s Circle, where you watch a race so close to the track that you you’re literally leaning on the rail.

That was the experience the saratoga living staff had on August 1, the day we sponsored the fourth race on the Thursday card at the racetrack. Celebrating the day from the luxury box, with the crew from our sister publication, Capital Region Living, we took in the races and reveled in Jockey Joel Rosario’s masterful win aboard Pecatonica in our sponsored race (he beat out one of last year’s saratoga living “The Races!” Issue cover stars, José Ortiz).

Of course, our own Billy Francis LeRoux was all over the track that day, shooting photos of the race and our staff. Check out his gallery above.

Daily Racing Form: Hall To Give Marylou Whitney A Final Salute

Marylou Whitney lived long enough to know she had been named earlier this year to the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame as a Pillar of the Turf. Her presence figures to be a central theme at the induction ceremony on Friday morning in Saratoga Springs, N.Y., as a bulky class of 16, including jockey Craig Perret and the mare Royal Delta, is enshrined.

Whitney, who died July 19 at age 93, was one of racing’s great philanthropists, owners, breeders, and socialites, her influence of particular note in her adopted hometown of Saratoga Springs. Her top runners included Birdstone, winner of the Belmont and Travers, and Kentucky Oaks winner Bird Town. She helped found the Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation and aided the plight of backstretch workers, among numerous charitable causes that helped bring her the Eclipse Award of Merit and, now, this honor.

There are 11 others who are being inducted as Pillars of the Turf, all chosen by a committee. In addition to Whitney, the other Pillars are James E. “Ted” Bassett III, Christopher T. Chenery, Richard L. “Dick” Duchossois, William S. Farish, John Hettinger, James R. Keene, Frank E. “Jimmy” Kilroe, Gladys Mills Phipps, Ogden Phipps, Helen Hay Whitney, and Warren Wright Sr.

Bassett and Duchossois, both 97, and Farish, 80 – the three living Pillars – all are scheduled to attend.

The historic review committee – equivalent to an old-timer’s committee – selected the champion racemares My Juliet and Waya. Both Perret and Royal Delta are the contemporary inductees, chosen by a voting bloc of 174 that considered nine finalists.

Tom Durkin, the former longtime racecaller, will be the master of ceremonies. The ceremony, which takes place at the Fasig-Tipton sales pavilion, around the corner from the Hall of Fame, begins at 10:30 Eastern time and will be streamed live on the Hall of Fame’s website, www.racingmuseum.org.

Perret, 68, won 4,415 races during his career and won the Eclipse Award for champion jockey in 1990, the year he won the Kentucky Derby on Unbridled. He led all apprentice riders in earnings in 1967, which likely would have won him an Eclipse Award had they existed then; the Eclipse Awards began in 1971. Perret also won the Belmont on Bet Twice, denying Alysheba’s Triple Crown bid, and he won four Breeders’ Cup races, four Haskells, and two runnings of the Travers and Queen’s Plate. He retired in 2005.

Royal Delta was voted in her first year on the ballot She won three Eclipse Awards – 3-year-old filly of 2011 and champion older female in 2012 and 2013 – and consecutive runnings of the Breeders’ Cup Ladies Classic in 2011 and 2012. She had six Grade 1 victories in a career that saw her win 12 of 22 starts, with earnings of more than $4.8 million. Bill Mott trained Royal Delta for the Besilu Stables of Benjamin Leon. Royal Delta died in February 2017 from complications after delivering a foal.

My Juliet won the Eclipse Award as champion sprinter in 1976, long before there were separate categories for male and female sprint champs.

Waya began her career in her native France, but found her best form in the United States, where she defeated males in the Turf Classic and Man o’ War in 1978. In 1979, she won major stakes on turf and dirt en route to the Eclipse Award as champion older female.

This story originally appeared on DRF.com.

VIDEO: ‘Daily Racing Form’ Previews Saturday’s Grade 1 Whitney Stakes

Dan Illman and Mike Beer from DRFBets preview the Grade 1, $1 million Whitney Stakes, the ninth race of the day on Saturday, August 3. Thunder Snow and Preservationist currently lead the field of eight, both with 3-1 odds. On Saturday, the race’s late namesake, Marylou Whitney, who passed away on July 19, will be honored at Saratoga Race Course with a “Marylou Whitney Day” celebration.

CAPTAIN’s Unbridled Affair Honors Community Leaders

On Thursday, July 25th, CAPTAIN Community Human Services held its 11th annual An Unbridled Affair Gala at Saratoga City Center. The event, catered by Longfellows Restaurant, featured live and silent auctions, an honoree celebration, CAPTAIN CHS client highlights, a performance by community rock choir Rock Voices and dancing.

The night kicked off with a speech from Ester Sweet, a client of CAPTAIN CHS. She spoke about how CHS’s Getting Ahead program changed her life, and the lives of her two children, for the better. Esther is the very definition of CAPTAIN CHS’ mission: she came to CHS in a crisis and worked with the program to gain the confidence and self-sufficiency she needed to provide a better life for her and her children.

Following Esther’s heartwarming speech, Steve Byk and Dan Bazile paved a path for one of the Gala’s most successful live auctions yet, raising nearly $30,000 for CAPTAIN CHS programs. During dinner, Bill and Betty Casey, Lisa Malloy and ReRun Inc. were honored for their commitment to bettering the community. The Thoroughbred Easy Goer was also honored for touching the hearts of CAPTAIN CHS personnel and the Saratoga community at large.

Philadelphia Orchestra 2019: Scenes From Opening Night At SPAC

The Philadelphia Orchestra’s season in Saratoga is once again off to the races. Kicking off its annual summer residency at the Saratoga Performing Arts Center (SPAC) last night, which will feature 19 SPAC debuts and run through August 17, the orchestra hosted an evening of dancing, fireworks and of course, great classical fare.

The program featured “hits” such as Ravel’s La Valse and Tchaikovsky’s 1812 Overture, the 19th-century version of AC/DC’s “For Those About To Rock,” which featured live cannon fire. The night also included performances by PHILADANCO! (The Philadelphia Dance Company), who last night made their SPAC debut.

saratoga living photographer Francesco D’Amico was onsite for the big night and snapped a number of shots. Relive the orchestra’s grand entrance into the Saratoga summer above. For more of D’Amico’s work at SPAC for the Live Nation crowds, click here.