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The Late Show: What Really Happens In Downtown Saratoga When The Sun Goes Down

Did we see you tonight? saratoga living set out to find out what really happens in Downtown Saratoga Springs after dark. Photographer Kyle Adams documented what he saw at a number of local favorites, including Putnam Place, 9 Maple Ave., Gaffney’s, Sinclair Saratoga, The Ice House and more. We weren’t quite ready for the results. Prepare yourselves.

Saratoga After Dark
(Kyle Adams)

9:22pm
The Wesley Foundation Gala at the Saratoga Golf & Polo Club

Red light soaks the interior of a party tent where guests in Spanish-themed cocktail attire dance, eat, socialize and drink. On the checkered dancefloor in the center of the tent, a young couple performs a tango routine. Outside, men smoke cigars in small groups, and a silent auction is under way. I’ll run into some of the same couples later that night, as they continue the party at The Adelphi Hotel and in the bars on Caroline Street.

(Kyle Adams)

10:36pm
The Adelphi Hotel

The waitstaff closes down the dining room as the bar slowly fills up on a Saturday night. A neatly dressed bartender mixes me a Sting Like a Bee and sets it on fire as he discusses the rhythms of Saratoga nightlife. In the lobby, parents of Skidmore College students—from Buenos Aires, Miami, Caracas—celebrate graduation weekend.

Saratoga After Dark
(Kyle Adams)

1:03am
Corner of Phila & Broadway

As the sun sets, Broadway’s packed with people finishing dinner on patios and strolling past the storefronts. By midnight, it’s nearly vacant, save for people on their way back to their cars, couples finding a secluded place to talk or fight and the busker playing acoustic Pink Floyd covers on the corner of Broadway and Caroline.

Saratoga After Dark
(Kyle Adams)

1:15am
The Newberry Music Hall

The Newberry is one of the few spots of activity on Broadway at this time of night.

(Kyle Adams)

9:07pm
Parking garage at Putnam & Spring Streets

It’s the beginning of the night, and Aidan Gregory, Sina Kum and their friends have just arrived in Downtown Saratoga. They hang out in the car for a few minutes before heading out.

Saratoga After Dark
(Kyle Adams)

11:15pm
Sinclair Saratoga

The hot spot’s signature neon sign throws fuchsia light over the crowds at the bar and on the dancefloor.

(Kyle Adams)

10:55pm
The Ice House

I’m on the trail of Tony Weils (pronounced “wails”), the accurately named singer, when I come across Jon Zinter and Elaina Rando at The Ice House. It’s a warm night, so everyone’s enjoying the fresh air. I run into Zinter again later, around 2am, on the roof of The Saratoga City Tavern with a different group of people.

(Kyle Adams)

9:48pm
Putnam Place

Sierra Fancher, Charli Morgan and Hailey Bugaj listening to The Melting Nomads, the opening act for Melvin Seals & Terrapin Flyer.

(Kyle Adams)

9:24pm
Putnam Place

The Melting Nomads open for Melvin Seals & Terrapin Flyer at Putnam Place on a Friday night. Seals, a longtime member of the Jerry Garcia Band, drew an enthusiastic crowd later that evening.

Saratoga After Dark
(Kyle Adams)

12:25am
Gaffney’s

It’s been a cold spring, so there’s a particular zeal among the crowds finally able to enjoy a warm night on Caroline Street. It’s also wedding season. While I shoot photos of this wedding party, they tell me there’s another, and possibly a third, already inside the bar.

(Kyle Adams)

12:01am
Putnam Place

I show up hoping to catch the tail end of a show by Let’s Be Leonard; it turns out they’ve just started. When I walk in, the band is nearly motionless, in the middle of a glacial jam led by the saxophonist.

Saratoga After Dark
(Kyle Adams)

12:02am
Putnam Place

The mostly young crowd sways gently and quietly during Let’s Be Leonard’s first few songs.

Saratoga After Dark
(Kyle Adams)

12:20am
Sinclair Saratoga

Sinclair hooks me with its fuchsia glow, courtesy of a neon sign on one wall that reads, “Together is a beautiful place to be.” There’s an arcade in the back room and a beer garden, both low-key alternatives to the dancefloor, which, while I was there, was stormed by a bachelorette party.

Saratoga After Dark
(Kyle Adams)

12:42am
Putnam Place

Steve Callander, who calls himself a CeeLo Green look-a-like, works the door at Putnam Place. He’s a popular guy—every time I raise the camera to shoot, someone jumps in the photo with him.

Saratoga After Dark
(Kyle Adams)

10:15pm
Hamlet & Ghost

Cook Bryan Nitsche serves up some of the last dishes before closing the kitchen for the night. When I ask the owner for the name of the cook with the cleaver tattoo, he says, “Which one?”

(Kyle Adams)

10:04pm
Hamlet & Ghost

Hamlet & Ghost is packed with couples and groups finishing dinner and transitioning to drinks. George and Tea Varghese enjoy cocktails in front of the picture window with a broad view of the crowds arriving on Caroline Street.

(Kyle Adams)

9:35pm
Putnam Place

Melanie Ryder pours a drink for a customer while The Melting Nomads play an opening set for Melvin Seals & Terrapin Flyer. It’s early, and the place is only just starting to fill up. Ryder and the other bartenders have time to talk with the customers, many of them apparently friends and regulars.

Saratoga After Dark
(Kyle Adams)

After Midnight
Corner of Caroline and Putnam

I spend some time here watching people come and go from the bars on Caroline Street. Early in the night, it’s mostly couples and groups in good spirits. After midnight, things get drunker, messier and more dramatic, with the occasional Saratoga police intervention.

(Kyle Adams)

11:09pm
9 Maple Avenue

This alley and its various frames make for a good place to hang out and wait for a photo. Apparently, I’m not the only one who thinks so. The bouncer, who chats with me for a while, says it’s often used for photo and video shoots.

American Cancer Society’s Red, White & Blue Party: An All-Access Pass

The day I landed my dream job of planning “distinguished events” for the American Cancer Society (ACS), I felt an overwhelming sense of excitement—and nerves. I knew that planning parties of this caliber was going to be a lot of fun, and it is…but that it was also going to be very difficult. So many logistics to coordinate, dollars to raise—and above all, people in need of ACS’ services that are funded through these events. Ever since that day, my life has been consumed with to-do lists. ’Cause let’s be honest, with all that needs to be done, if it’s not on the list, it’s not getting done.

Now, before I bring you behind the scenes of planning our annual Red, White & Blue Party at Saratoga National—i.e., to see what my to-do list looks like in action—I want to remind you of what I remind myself of on days when I get totally overwhelmed trying to check things off this seemingly never-ending list: This is who we are and what we do. We fight cancer. Passionately, intelligently, consistently. We do this because we know that when we bring the community together as one at these events, we are enabling the ACS to charge at cancer from multiple fronts, breaking it down bit by bit with our compassion, commitment and courage, until we all stand victorious against this disease. And just like that, I’m ready to conquer any to-do list, no matter how long, challenging or ever-changing it may be. So, let’s take a look at what goes into planning ACS’ all-American-themed Saratoga summer extravaganza, the Red, White & Blue Party.

July 2017
Yes, we start planning for the event the month after the previous one ends.
★  Thank everyone who helped make the year’s event possible.
★  Collect as much feedback as possible from sponsors, guests and volunteers who were at 2017’s event (and be prepared to take criticism; it will make next year’s event even better!).
★  Host the committee wrap-up meeting and party! (Have you thanked the committee members again and again?)
★  Start recruiting more volunteers to participate in the planning committee. Remember: The more volunteers we have helping us, the larger our circle of influence will be.

August 2017
★  Reevaluate sponsorship opportunities—and make any necessary changes.
★  Remember: Make the event look pretty—but less is always more. Don’t make it too confusing or difficult for people to understand. (Not everything needs to have sparkles.)
★  Secure a venue/date and make an indoor plan, even though it won’t rain like it did last year.
★  Get contracts ready to go and send them to ACS’ legal team for approval.
★  Work with the planning committee to determine the night’s honorees.
★  Create a budget and remember to check it every day.
★  Set goals for the event, including sponsorships, ticket sales, auction and night-of donation goals.
★  Check expenses for the venue, decor, food and drinks, printing and photography; make sure the expense ratio—the annual fee charged to our stakeholders—stays under 25 percent. Remember: One less decoration purchased could mean one more ride to treatment for someone in need.
★  Start securing sponsors. (No, it’s never too early; making our mission a reality wouldn’t be possible without these generous people and their organizations!)
★  Shout out to our presenting sponsor, saratoga living! Not to mention our other distinguished partners for 2018: Anthony Ianniello, Putnam Place, SEFCU, Prime Companies, The Lia Family, Bouchey Financial Group, Regeneron Pharmaceuticals and DeCrescente Distributing Company!

The Red, White & Blue Planning Committee at a meeting in June, just weeks before the big night. (Pamela Camargo)

September 2017
★  Schedule one committee meeting per month from now until the event.
★  Start planning the auction: How many items should there be? (Seek quality over quantity!) Draft the auction letter, forms and donor lists. Update the website with ticketing information, add sponsorship opportunities, logistics, logos and everything else. (Thank SM2 Dev a million for our beautiful website!)

October 2017
★  Start working on the design for our vision. (Hey, Lauren Childs, you’re amazing!)
★  Hold a status meeting with the planning committee: Where are we at? What’s our plan to get to where we want to be? Who’s responsible for what? Go, team!
★  Secure the entertainment. (Get on Funk Evolution’s calendar ASAP; start looking for dancing shoes!)
★  Stay up to date with sponsorship opportunities and the auction.

November 2017
★  Hold a committee meeting to figure out never-before-seen revenue enhancers for the event. What do we need to do to make this sort of thing happen?
★  Keep up with sponsorships and the auction: Don’t send too many reminders. Think of new people. Who else might want to support us?

December 2017
★  Schedule a committee meeting and begin planning how to incorporate ACS’ mission into the event. (Make sure people leave knowing they made a difference, but don’t make it too sad.)
★  Start uploading the auction items to prep for online bidding. (Don’t put this off until the last minute, because it takes forever, and you’ll regret it during crunch time!)
★  Start designing the invitation. (Send Lauren nine million emails so she knows what needs to be included!)

January 2018
★  Schedule a committee meeting and launch personal fundraising pages for each of our committee members.
★  Launch our media plan: social media, radio, TV and print. (For 2018, that equals getting everyone else thinking “red, white and blue.”)
★  Stay on top of sponsorships! Who are we forgetting to invite and/or partner with?
★  Order all the equipment needed for registration, mobile bidding and everything else.

February 2018
★   Hold a committee meeting to review the event’s progress and brainstorm ways to fill in the gaps. Secure vendors, a photographer, a photo booth, a videographer and an audio-visual crew. (Get all the contracts to legal ASAP!)
★  Secure the members for our honorary committee (and double- / triple-check the spelling of all their names).
★  Don’t forget about sponsorship requests, meetings and follow-ups.

March 2018
★  Hold a committee meeting to discuss the event’s day-of experience: menu, signature drink, activities, etc.
★  Figure out all of our setup and rental needs, and place the requisite orders to secure them.
★  Make sure our social media and website are up to date.
★  Follow up on our honorary committee and sponsorship requests; print deadline is next month!

Red, White & Blue Party
Lizzie Hunter and Aspen Witt talking party details after a recent committee meeting. (Pamela Camargo)

April 2018
★  Hold a committee meeting; the print deadline is fast approaching! Do we need to confirm any invitations? Who’s picking up what auction items?
★  Secure emcees; work on the program layout and start writing scripts. (It should be short and sweet!)
★  Organize all the information needed on the invitation, copy edit it thoroughly and send it to our designer.
★  Order the awards for our honorees (and make sure everything’s spelled right on the awards when they arrive).
★  Start pushing ticket sales!

May 2018
★  Hold a committee meeting to discuss day-of sponsorships and the auction details*.
★  Pull mailing lists and make sure all the addresses are up to date. (Goal: no return-to-senders!)
★  Get a proof of the invitation. (Have someone else edit it before approving it!)
★  Print the invitations and mail them. (Woo-hoo!)
★  Confirm the evening’s scheduling; make sure everyone who needs to know, knows.
★  Assign volunteers their roles for the night of the event and train them so they know what to do.
★  Sell, sell, sell tickets!

June 2018
Eleven months ago, we began planning the event, and we’ve finally reached party month!
★  On June 1, start checking the weather—today and every day until the event, because it’s outdoors. Knowing what the weather will be will make all the difference.
★  Schedule a committee meeting and begin crafting the big night! (Try not to spray-paint Mom and Dad’s garage red, white or blue or break their sink this year.)
★  Start collecting our sponsors’ names and uploading them into our system so they’re available at check-in; make sure our sponsors have everything they need and know all the details of the night.
★ Send all of our night-of signage needs to our designer and printer.
★  Schedule a venue walk-through, confirm the set-up day, make sure the Wi-Fi works and attend to all the other minutia.
★  Remember: Sleep!
★  Tickets: Sell, sell, sell! And ramp up media: record radio PSAs, do on-air interviews, etc.
★  Make a packing list: Organize and get everything in the storage room ready to pack (registration materials, decor, auction items, set-up supplies and more). Plan how to get everything to and from the venue.
★  Prepare the auction: Upload the items and open mobile/online bidding; package all of the physical auction items to make them look nice. (Buy more bows and baskets!) Make display sheets that include item descriptions and values, donor names and photos. (Get each one in a frame before the event; you won’t be happy if you’re doing it the morning of the event again!)
★  Make PowerPoint presentations for all of the event’s screens. (Test them all to make sure they look good on the big screen and that nothing’s spelled wrong.)
★  Get more sleep! (Get a notebook to put next to your bed for all the things you wake up remembering to do in the middle of the night.)
★  On June 20, start checking the weather hourly, not daily; try not to call the local meteorologists again to ask them about the weather.
★  Schedule a logistics meeting with all ACS staff and volunteers; make sure everyone’s comfortable in their role, and remember: People can’t read your mind, and won’t know what to do if you don’t tell them.

Friday, June 29
(Day Of The Red, White & Blue Party)
★  9am Start setting up, and don’t panic when it looks like it’s a mess (Mazzone will make everything better and look amazing).
★  1pm Go home and get ready.
★  4pm Return to the venue and get all the audio-visual aspects sorted out.
★  5pm Volunteers arrive for dinner and training.
★  6pm PARTY TIME!
★  11pm Party’s over; start cleaning up.
★  12am Go. To. Sleep.

Saturday, June 30
★  Wake up at 9am feeling sad that it’s all over—and email the photographer to ask if he or she has edited all the photos yet. (Just kidding…kind of!)
★  Start thanking all the talented people who contributed to our big ACS celebration.
★  Start brainstorming ideas for next year’s event.

Now, three years in, whenever I have a spare minute to think about my career, I still feel the same overwhelming mix of emotions. It’s one of those jobs that doesn’t get easier as you go—you can’t plan the same party every year or everyone will get bored. However, one thing this job has that all the others don’t? A goal of bringing the community together for an incredible evening with the sole purpose of eliminating the pain and suffering caused by cancer. And that’s why I feel so incredibly grateful. Thank you to of our volunteers, sponsors, party guests and community partners who make this possible!

‘Saratoga Living’ Throws Party for Its ‘After Dark’ Issue at Gaffney’s

If you were driving into Saratoga Springs yesterday morning, you may’ve had your windshield wipers going bonkers like I did. In fact, there were showers forecast all day and night. But then the weather report suddenly shifted—no more rain. I’d like to think that had something to do with the fact that saratoga living was throwing another one of its epic magazine launch parties at Gaffney’s, this time, for its “Saratoga After Dark” issue.

Along with the big cover reveal—David “Big Papi” Ortiz—the Saratoga community once again came out enforce, dancing the night away and enjoying white and red wine courtesy of Ortiz’s own Arias Wine. As always Bigler Studio was there to capture the night’s merrymaking. Check out an exclusive gallery of photos above.

Exclusive: Former Boston Red Sox Slugger David Ortiz Talks Baseball, Wine And Giving Back. Big Papi Gets Candid.

Where do I even begin? OK, so, somewhere between boarding a private jet and spending the day with my baseball hero at his home, while reliving the most iconic moments of his extraordinary career with said superstar, it suddenly hits me: Today, right now, is the moment where I, too, get to be impressed and taken aback by my ridiculous, endorphin rush of good fortune. Think about it: The totality of this day’s events is, by anyone’s standards, exactly what a mind-blowing experience should feel like—I mean, exactly. And, yes, some context is needed.

I was born in Boston at Mass General Hospital—in the same room as my other idol, Donna Summer(!)—and quite literally my first memory as a human being was of my father holding my hand as the smell of the freshly cut grass at Fenway Park overwhelmed my senses. Here, at baseball’s holiest of temples, was where I chose to become aware that I was, in fact, alive. Even now, if I close my eyes, I’m back as my two-year-old self, giggling at my Cuban-born dad’s attempt to properly pronounce the name of Boston’s best player back then, Carl Yastrzemski. Jastrim-skeee! Jastrim-skeee! my father kept repeating as a sort of reverential mantra while pointing over at Yaz, who was hovering near his first-base perch. The thing is, I still remember that moment because it mattered so, so much to me. And it still does.

From that day, needless to say, I became a lifelong, baseball obsessed, die-hard Red Sox fan. As a kid, seeing the likes of Fred Lynn (that sweet swing), Jim Rice (effortless power), Dwight Evans (right field god) and, most especially, the Cuban pitching ace and huge personality, Luis Tiant, year in, year out, only to get thisclose to winning the ever-elusive Fall Classic, just to fail over and over and over again, made me and millions of Red Sox Nation members that much more determined that next season would be the year our boys would win the Series. And so it went, for the entirety of my childhood (1975, Reds) and the better part of my adulthood (1986, Mets).

David Ortiz
David Ortiz makes his signature gesture to his mother after a home run, which later inspired his wine brand’s logo. (Michael Ivins/Boston Red Sox)

Then, enter David Ortiz. Acquired by the Red Sox in 2003 after intense lobbying by Red Sox pitching phenom, Pedro Martinez, Ortiz was known then as a big potential talent with a bigger hole in his swing. I’ll never know how, exactly, the Red Sox management saw what most other teams didn’t, but here he was, the pride of Santo Domingo, ready to show the notoriously tough Boston fans how great a player they’d just gotten. And did he ever. My goodness.

It’s hard to believe now, after so much has happened, but Ortiz really became “Big Papi” in 2004, only a year after signing with Boston. During the American League Championship Series, against the dreaded (and powerful) New York Yankees, Ortiz carried his new teammates on his back and, not only improbably, but impossibly—as in, it had never happened in the history of the sport—time and time again delivered the clutch hits and home runs that propelled the single greatest comeback in MLB postseason history. The Sox rallied from a 3-games-to-0 hole and slayed the mighty Yankees 4 to 3 before Papi—again!—led the Red Sox as they won their first World Series in more than eight-and-a-half decades. These are the moments where legends are made, and this incredible man, this David Ortiz, Big Papi, was and remains all about legendary moments. Red Sox Nation then and there fell desperately in love with the smiling Dominican giant with the gentlest of souls. Seriously, what’s not to love?

But let’s not get bogged down in Ortiz’s Hall Of Fame-worthy statistics—I don’t know a single credible baseball aficionado who doesn’t believe Big Papi is headed straight to Cooperstown. If his raw numbers aren’t convincing enough, then Ortiz’s opportunistic and infallible tendency to come up big when it counts the most seals the deal. Yes, the Yankees’ captain, Derek Jeter, has similar qualities to be sure, but Ortiz displays his unrivaled genius in bolder, more audacious, truly explosive circumstances that engulf, delight and overwhelm his millions of fans. No one does it quite like Big Papi, for there’s only one Big Papi.

David Ortiz
David Ortiz and his wife, Tiffany. (Chaz Niell)

It’s under this haze of being part fan-boy, part man-with-a-job-to-do that I first meet David Ortiz on a sunny, hot June day in his impressive, lived-in beauty of a home (“Big Papi’s Castle”) a half hour from Beantown. Surrounded by the people who matter most in life (his wife, Tiffany, is there, as are two of their three children), Ortiz greets me with that smile that could melt icebergs, and I’m hooked. I have to say, it feels unfamiliar, because I pride myself, over a many-decades-long career, on being aggressively unimpressed by the famous. I’ve met, befriended and written about some of the planet’s biggest stars—Jennifer Lopez, Barbra Streisand, Heath Ledger, Eva Mendes, Chris Hemsworth, Sylvester Stallone, Zac Efron, Alex Rodriguez, Dan Marino, Kim Kardashian and so on—and I’ve never before felt like I was in the presence of anyone superhuman, just super, super cool. With Big Papi, the aura grew bigger, somehow, even as he behaved in the most low-key, suburban dad way. The more “like us” he acted, the bigger the “wow” factor I felt. It was a feeling I won’t soon forget.

With Big Papi presently in his second full year of post-Red Sox life, the question I keep telling myself to be on the lookout for is this: Who is David Ortiz now? When I tell a dear friend of mine, who doesn’t follow sports and wouldn’t know the difference between a home run and a slam dunk, that I’m going to interview David Ortiz for the next cover of saratoga living, she squints a little in the midday sun and says, “Oh, I know who he is! He’s the ‘This is our f— town’ guy, right?” And just like that, I’ve answered my own question: David Ortiz after retirement is David Ortiz before retirement—he’s a leader, and he cares deeply and emotionally about the people of his adopted community.

On one of those most painful of days directly after the Boston Marathon bombing, Big Papi not only unified a city, but energized all of New England. With one sentence, he unbelievably transcended sports and became a nearly mythical figure of epic stature for articulating, with his deliciously heavily accented growl, on the same field I saw so many of my childhood heroes play on, unequivocally, that: “This is our f— city! And nobody’s going to dictate our freedom! Stay strong!” Mic drop. Big Papi style.

David Ortiz
David Ortiz giving his “This is our f— city” speech at Fenway Park, following the Boston Marathon bombing. (Michael Ivins/Boston Red Sox)

Since retirement, Ortiz has pursued several ventures with gusto, not the least of which was launching a wine brand that would go by the name Arias, the surname of Ortiz’s mother, who, tragically, passed in 2002. Undoubtedly, Big Papi’s most recognizable gesture—pointing two hands to the sky after each home run to pay tribute to his mother—became the image on all of Arias’ wine labels. This tribute led Ortiz to Arias Co-founder Peter Ianniello, who shared a similarly devastating maternal experience. Arias’ wine lineup consists of a Merlot, Chardonnay, Cabernet Sauvignon, Sauvignon Blanc and a bottle Ortiz calls Christalan, named after a statue in Saratoga Springs’ artist retreat, Yaddo. Christalan stands for resiliency and overcoming adversity to turn it into a positive. The Arias brand, Ortiz says, is all about celebrating the rising of the human spirit, and never quitting. You can see why Ortiz was drawn to take his place among the wine world’s most unexpected connoisseurs and moguls…and why Arias is popping up in every bar and fine restaurant I’ve been to since landing in Saratoga. Arias, much like Big Papi, is swinging for the fences—and connecting.

As my talented magazine team and I go from room to room in Ortiz’s home, in search of the perfect spot for our next photo setup, I overhear Big Papi engaging in business surrounding his incredibly successful and important charity, The David Ortiz Children’s Fund. You want passion? Ask Big Papi about the work his foundation is doing. It’s something that the superstar feels he must do, cannot not do. This selfless effort is arguably the most meaningful work of his life, and Big Papi wouldn’t have it any other way. In short, The David Ortiz Children’s Fund was created to help kids in New England and throughout the Dominican Republic who don’t have access to the critical pediatric services they need. The fund partners with Mass General Hospital for Children and the World Pediatric Project through its work with CEDIMAT. Thus far, Big Papi’s charity has raised more than $2 million, saving more than 500 lives in the Dominican Republic and, yes, countless others in New England.

When I mention Saratoga, Ortiz tilts his head toward me, and his expressive mug builds to a full grin as he says: “Oh, yes, Richard—I love it there! I have so many great friends, so many memories from there.” Most recently, Big Papi was turning heads at last summer’s Saratoga Wine & Food Festival at the Saratoga Performing Arts Center (SPAC).

David Ortiz
David Ortiz with fellow Arias Wine Co-founder, Peter Ianniello, in Reading, MA. (Gopal Patel)

As we wind down this fantasy/dream of a day, and I say my goodbyes to all involved, I take an imperceptible extra microsecond of a moment to lean in for a bro hug with one of my legit heroes. “It was great, Papi. Thank you,” I say to David Ortiz, one of the most magnificent baseball players and humanitarians I will ever meet. “No, Papi. Thank you,” he counters, smiling at me again. At that moment, all I can think of is how proud my actual Big Papi, my dad, would be right now. And how I wish my father were here with me (and not in Miami) to share this moment, and soak in some of this cool bonding with the greatest hero Fenway Park has known in my lifetime.

Yeah, this was quite a day. It really was. I can’t wait to call Dad.

Describe yourself in one word.
Um, I can call myself…I’m a strong person, but I can be soft at the same time.

So, you’re tough and sensitive?
Yeah.

When you wake up, what’s your first thought about what lies ahead that day? Do you wake up excited or tired or filled with gratitude?
No, I’m always in a good mood when I wake up, you know, knowing where I come from and looking at myself where I’m at and what I’m surrounded by. It brings nothing but happiness.

Do you see yourself the way others see you? Are you your own hero?
Nah, not really. I stay humble; I try not to think about fame or money much, because I know a couple of people who focus on that too much.

That you’re being so humble—and you’re famous for your humility—makes you more lovable.
Yeah, I agree with you, you know? You never get your feet off the ground. Keep it humble and you become a more likable person.

And a happier person.
Yeah.

David Ortiz
Baseball aficionados and critics alike all agree that Big Papi is headed straight to Cooperstown. (Dori Fitzpatrick)

Tell me a Big Papi story most people don’t know.
I could pretty much say anything about me. [Laughs] I have two books out there that basically talk about everything I do.

Tell me your thoughts about Saratoga.
It’s a great town, a lot of good people around. It’s a very nice place to be. I have friends out there that show me around. It’s a fun place to be.

Any chance in the future that you might have a place up in Saratoga or maybe Lake George?
You never know! Look, I never thought about living in Boston for 17 years, and here I am. So, you never know.

Arias Wine—why did you go into the wine business? 
Wine is pretty much the product that comes with a lot of personality, and that’s me. That’s what I feel like I am. One package with different things. And with wine, you can express yourself in so many different ways.

And that wine label is so iconic.
Definitely. You know, they came to me with an idea, talking about my history, my family history, you know…

And the name of it.
And the name of it, yeah, exactly. There’s things involved in it that really caught my attention.

The gesture that you make to heaven…I’ve always wondered, after a home run when you crossed home plate, did you say anything while making the gesture?
Just thinking about my mom—always. That’s my first thought when I touched home plate and looked up at the sky. I’m just thinking about the blessing from God, and the true blessing that was my mom.

If you’d never played baseball, what other job would you do that you think you’d be the very best at?
Auto parts. Cars.

Detailing?
Yes, both sides. Detailing for sure. That’s my thing. I love it!

There are so many children’s charities—thousands of them. Tell me why yours is different and so important.
Well, there are different diseases out there. That’s one thing, you know. But the most important thing is, you want to make sure that the one that you work on gets properly funded so that we can do the necessary kinds of surgery that we do for the kids.

And it’s also impacting the community that you’re from, too.
Exactly! You know, like a lot of people approach me with different types of things, but there’s only so much that you can do, you know? And I want to be basically strong at what we do, and that’s why I focus on that and on healthcare so much. Because the big problem is, it’s very expensive and there are a lot of poor people out there who can’t provide for their children. We have to do everything we can to help.

And they see you as an inspiration.
Yeah, I think so.

David Ortiz
“I have so many greatest moments. [I’ve been blessed with] a lot of wonderful moments,” Ortiz says. (Dori Fitzpatrick)
Shifting gears: Are you the greatest clutch hitter in modern baseball?
[Laughs] Hmmm…

There’s an ongoing debate about this, you may have heard.
I don’t know, I mean…

The answer, to me, is “yes.” Now, whether you acknowledge that or not, Papi, is, well…
[Laughs]

Well, I want you at the plate when there are two outs in the ninth.
There you go! You got your answer, Richard! [Laughs]

If you had been signed by the Yankees instead of the Red Sox after the Twins, do you have any notion what your life would be really like?
Well, I think it was going to be good, because, I tell you, I dedicate myself to getting better every day, and it didn’t matter where I was going to be at. I was just going to give everything I had. But I’m happy things worked out so well.

That would’ve been scary/powerful: You, Jeter, A-Rod.
Yeah, that would’ve been crazy.

It would’ve been like LeBron, D-Wade and Bosh [Miami Heat].
[Laughs]

Tell me about the greatest moment in your life. The moment you think back on and go, “Wow, this is me.” 
Ah, I don’t know. I have so many greatest moments. God blessed me with a lot of wonderful moments, but you know, I think, you know, every time one of my children was born, I think it was one of the best things to happen to me.

And as a Red Sox player? 
For the Red Sox, I can tell you probably winning the World Series—the first one in 2004. Now that was something.

That world championship changed people’s lives. Fundamentally.
Yeah, yeah, it’s true. I never thought that a sport was so big before we won that 2004 World Series. I can’t really believe the impact that sports have on everyone, you know?

I believe the greatest moment was the broken-bat single against the Yankees in the 2004 ALCS at Fenway. Honestly, that changed the whole course of history.
Yeah, man. It did.

David Ortiz
“I just want to continue getting better, staying busy and giving back,” Ortiz says. Here, he sits in his backyard in the genuine Fenway Park seats the Red Sox gifted him when he retired. (Dori Fitzpatrick)

How do you feel about J.D. Martinez, my fellow Cuban, and Mookie Betts this year?
Happy, very happy. They’re good players, good kids.

Is it funny that it takes two superstars to replace you?
[Laughs] They’ve been doing really well; I’m happy for them. I’m in touch with all of them. And I get to talk to them once in a while.

You look like you could still play. I feel good.

Want to tell me a joke?
I’m not good at jokes. [Laughs] I’m terrible at jokes. I laugh at my own jokes, and nobody else’s!

Papi, what’s the best advice you’ve ever received?
I got really good advice from Warren Buffett. He said, “Do not invest your money in things you don’t know.” [Laughs] Keep it simple, brother.

You’re such a happy, optimistic guy. When was the last time you cried? 
Two nights ago, watching a movie. [Laughs] Matter of fact, I was watching a commercial where it was a guy that, on purpose, dropped his wallet in front of this homeless guy, just to see what his reaction was going to be, and the guy picked it up and chased him and gave it back to him. And this is a guy that’s asking for money on the street. And he gave him his money back. And the guy who dropped his wallet was really grateful that that was the decision that the homeless man made. He gave him his wallet back, and then the guy who dropped the wallet takes the money out of his wallet and gives it to the homeless guy, and they have a cameraman chasing the homeless guy to see what he was going to do with the money. The guy with the wallet was prepared, just to see. You know what he did? He went and bought food and gave it to the rest of the homeless people. That really got me; it was such a beautiful and powerful story.

So, you’re an emotional person.
I am, I really am. I’m very emotional.

That’s why you always played with such undeniable passion. 
Yep. That’s true.

Like, with your unbelievable speech, “This is our f— city!””
[Laughs]

I was joking with my team that I was going to walk in here, and you were going to say, “This is my f— house!” “These are my f— kids!”
[Laughs] That’s so funny.

Tell me your favorite television shows that aren’t sports. 
I like Power and Game Of Thrones.

What’s your all-time favorite movie?
Scarface—I’ve watched that movie, something like, 25 times. So good.

What’s favorite kind of music? Is there one?
I like all kinds of music. I like everything really. I like hip-hop, salsa, merengue, reggaeton—all of it.

What do you consider your single greatest achievement? 
You know what? I’ve always tried to live my life being a good person, because that adds more good things to you than bad things.

You’re still young and have many lives left to live: What’s coming up next for Big Papi? 
I don’t know. I just want to continue getting better and giving back and learning and working. I like working and staying busy and just being able to help whenever I can.

And now for the single most important question of the day: If I played for the Red Sox, what position do you think I’d play?
Richard, I think you’d be a really, really great coach! [Laughs]

Woody’s Horse Hunch: Getting Excited About Opening Day At Saratoga Race Course

Well, It’s pretty much summertime here at Woody’s Barbershop, and that means the Fourth of July, vacations, insanity for the business and best of all, horse racing season. I have been waking up at 4:30am or so and living the dream most days, and to me, that means that I’ve been spending my mornings at the Oklahoma training track, watching the horses, talking with trainers and observing everything I can take in. It’s an interesting and amazingly fun way to start the day. I always go to my good friend Eric Guillot’s barn and ride around with him, and gather all the information about horses I can, and I assure you, watching and learning from him is pretty amazing. He observes what others might miss, because as a private trainer, with a small number of horses, he likes to watch not only his own horses, but every other trainers’ as well. Knowing the competition can have its advantages!

Each morning is better than the last, and it’s crazy and fascinating to me how friendly and happy everyone is all the time, although with the infamous Saratoga Race Course season rapidly approaching us, how could anyone not be completely overjoyed as we count down the remaining days, minutes and seconds? I regularly see, meet, talk and listen to all the famous trainers, as well as the not-so-famous ones, and I assure you, they’re all regular, hard working folks, just like you and me, almost everyone one of them is friendly and kind. Watching these experts at there craft really makes me enjoy horse racing more, and then to make things even better, H. James Bond, longtime trainer and founder of H. James Bond Racing Stables (007) and Song Hill Thoroughbreds, and his wife Tina, were kind enough to take me on a complete tour of the their amazing 100-plus acre Thoroughbred farm. Mr. Bond (Jimmy to most everyone), walked me through a countless number of barns and stalls and shared his whole amazing farm with me, and I gotta tell you, if I were to ever have anything to do with horses around here, his farm is where I’d want them to be! Heated and air-conditioned stalls, fenced fields filled with level green grass and sandy grazing areas and barns so clean you could eat off of the floors…OK, OK, so maybe only horses can and want to do that, but you get where I’m going. Even more cool is that as clean as his farm is, he had no idea Eric and I were stopping over to visit, so I’m sure it’s kept like that on a daily basis.

Enough rambling, though. Don’t forget the big day: July 20, Opening Day at Saratoga Race Course. Look out for saratoga living’s “The Races!” issue then, as well as an article by yours truly. I’m so excited! Can I get a “yee-haw”?

Until next time,

Woody

The Calendar: What To Do In Saratoga Springs This Weekend

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We’re on the cusp of Independence Day week—the Fourth of July falls on a Wednesday this year—but before you start lighting your loudest, legal firecrackers next to your least-favorite neighbors’ house, get ready to fill up on some of Saratoga Springs’ finest food and drink at the inaugural Eat Drink Saratoga on Saturday, June 30.

The event’s the brainchild of Jillian Petercsak, whose husband is co-owner of Downtown eatery (and Eat Drink Saratoga participant) Hamlet & Ghost. (saratoga living will be there for the fun; we’re the official media sponsor.) If you grew up in Saratoga in the 1980s or ’90s like I did, you’ll remember the incredibly joyous event that was the Caroline Street Block Party; think of Eat Drink Saratoga as its younger, hipper cousin. What to expect at the event? You’ll be able to taste the tipple of 40 area breweries and cideries, 20 distilleries and 10 wineries, as well as feast on dishes from 15 local restaurants, including title sponsor Druthers Brewing.

For $60, you’ll get a $10 food voucher and be able to sample every alcohol distributor—not to mention, get a souvenir glass. The event will be held over two sessions: from 1-4pm and 5-8pm. Did I mention it’s for a good cause? Ten percent of all proceeds from Eat Drink Saratoga will be donated to the Saratoga County Children’s Committee (SCCC), which works year-round to meet the basic and emergency needs of underprivileged children.

Friday, June 29

Operation Lunch Lady – all day – Fingerpaint, Saratoga Springs

Red, White & Brew Festival – 5pm – Proctors, Schenectady

American Cancer Society’s Red, White & Blue Party – 7pm-11pm – Saratoga National, Saratoga Springs

Jazz at The Place: Duocracy ft. Keith Pray and John LeRoy – Putnam Place, Saratoga Springs

Troy Night Out – various locations – Downtown Troy

Tri-City ValleyCats vs. Hudson Valley Renegades – 7pm – Joseph L. Bruno Stadium, Troy

Saturday, June 30

Eat Drink SaratogaThe Saratogian lot, Saratoga Springs

Ballston Spa Farmers’ Market – Wiswall Park – Ballston Spa

Rocking Horse Winner and Vinkensport) – 7:30pm – The Spa Little Theater, Saratoga Springs

Steely Dan & The Doobie Brothers – 7:30pm – Saratoga Performing Arts Center, Saratoga Springs

Albany Dutchmen vs. Glens Falls Dragons (baseball) – 5pm to 8pm – Siena College, Loudonville, NY

Sunday, July 1

Martha Redbone Roots Project/Heard/The Quinton Cain Quartet – Caffè Lena at SPAC on the Gazebo Stage, Saratoga Springs

Candles and Mimosas – 11:30am to 2pm – The Candle Collective and The Factory Eatery, 20 Prospect Street, Ballston Spa

Opera Saratoga (The Merry Widow) –  2pm to 5pm – The Spa Little Theater, Saratoga Springs

Join ‘Saratoga Living’ for Our ‘Saratoga After Dark’ Issue Party on June 28

When we here at saratoga living say we’re going to throw a party, we always come through in a big way. Anyone who was at our “I Do” Issue relaunch party, “Design Issue” soirée or 20th Anniversary bash can attest.

So for our next big shindig—you can still RSVP here!—we decided to kick into high gear the Saratoga summer season by unveiling our “Saratoga After Dark” Issue at the heart of the Downtown party scene. That, of course, is Caroline Street, and our co-host is its nightlife specialist, Gaffney’s.

What can you expect at the event? For one, you’ll be seeing, for the first time ever, saratoga living‘s “Saratoga After Dark” Issue (and hopefully, taking a copy home with you), a full day in advance of its distribution around Saratoga, the Capital Region and beyond. The issue covers all aspects of the city’s incomparable nightlife and restaurant/bar scene—and has a major celebrity on its cover. You’ll have to swing by to figure out who that person is.

The night will be presented by Arias Wine, and of course, there’ll be more than your fair share of music, cocktails and surprises to go around. So join us from 7pm – 10pm on Thursday, June 28, to celebrate. Did we mention it’s free to get in? You won’t want to miss out!

Saratoga Spa State Park’s Peerless Pool Reopens In Time For Summer Season

Long before I discovered the its trendier, bougier cousin, the Victoria Pool, I was a mainstay at the nearby Peerless Pool. Sure, it could be a splash-fest at times and it had its fair share of unruly children (and shout-y adults), but it was a place that I could go as a kid to beat the Saratoga summer heat.

While the Peerless Pool usually shuts down on Labor Day, last year, it clammed up a little early on August 14. It turned out the complex was in dire need of renovations—and the State dug deep into its pockets (i.e. Governor Andrew Cuomo’s NY Parks 2020 initiative) and came up big. Now, $2.9 million later, the pool has reopened just in time for the summer surge, with a bevy of new upgrades.

Although the old-school bathhouse has been reduced in size by a third, that’s allowed for a greater amount of green space in the vicinity of the pool. Upgrades have been made to changing room areas, with the addition of family bathrooms for an atmosphere yet friendlier to the knee-high crowd. Other extras include a new entrance plaza and courtyard, with benches, bike racks, a shade canopy, covered shelters and better accessibility for people with disabilities.

Peerless Pool
A peek inside the recently renovated Peerless Pool Complex. (New York State Parks, Recreation & Historic Preservation)

Next to the pool complex, there’s now shaded bench areas, rentable pavilions for family gatherings and pre-teen soirées, a disc golf course, a pollinator garden and wildflower meadow with bluebird boxes.

“For generations the Peerless Pool has provided families with great summer memories, and these improvements will help ensure that tradition continues,” said Rose Harvey, State Parks Commissioner, in a statement. “State parks are extremely affordable and enjoyable as they offer a full day of family entertainment that will build lasting memories for a lifetime.” Saratoga Springs’ Mayor Meg Kelly concurred. “The Peerless Pool is a great asset to the region. I have fond memories swimming here as a child. It is a great family friendly destination in the beautiful Saratoga Spa Park. Thank you to all who have made this beautiful renovation a reality.”

The Peerless Pool Complex consists of an Olympic-sized pool, waterslide pool and children’s wading pool and fountain, and attracts over 30,000 visitors on average per year.

Glens Falls Music Academy Bringing Drum Corps International Competition Back To Area On July 21

After a five-year hiatus, the Drum Corps International (DCI) competition is back in Glens Falls on Saturday, July 21, and you have Glens Falls Music Academy to thank for its curtain call. Billed as the Glens Falls Music Academy Showcase, the event will feature drummers, brass musicians and costumed color-guard performers all marching in time to elaborate, fast-paced choreography and competing for entry into the DCI World Championship Finals in Indianapolis on August 11.

For those unfamiliar with the DCI, it’s basically the major leagues for marching bands and marching-related music—and the finals, its World Series. (Ever seen Drumline with Nick Cannon? That’s what we’re talking about). In all, four different drum corps from Michigan, New Hampshire, Connecticut and New Jersey will compete for a spot at championship finals.

Bringing Drum Corps back to Glens Falls is a major coup for the Academy, which has been in business for more than a decade. (Prior to 2013, the Fort Edward Lions Club had hosted the competition for three decades.) Located on Harrison Avenue in Downtown Glens Falls, the Academy’s home to 25 instructors who teach classical music, rock, folk, R&B, jazz and musicals (and everything in between) to approximately 140 students per week. Glens Falls Music Academy was established with only three lesson rooms and a handful of teachers in April 2007, just a few months shy of the Great Recession. “It wasn’t the best time to open a new business,” says Reed. “But we got through it.” Now, two major renovations and four additional lesson rooms later, Glens Falls Music Academy has grown tremendously. Besides lessons and recording, the Academy now offers various summer camps like Campapella and Ukulele Camp, a stringed instrument rental program through Vermont Violins (which has gained tremendous popularity in Glens Falls and Queensbury schools over the past 18 months). The Academy also hosts various jazz ensembles and instrument clinics, and most recently, a preschool music program for children ages 1-6 called Niki’s Little Maestros.

For more than a decade, the Glens Falls Academy of Music has been bringing everything from music lessons to recording to the community. (Glens Falls Music Academy)

The Academy also encompasses a professional recording studio and has recorded many local artists, such as Forthlin Road, Ben Miller & Anita MacDonald and The Radium Girls, with its owner and founder, Chris Reed, sitting in as sound engineer—and occasional studio drummer when a band needs one. “Just ten years ago, if you lived in Glens Falls or Queensbury and wanted to record a few songs or even just have access to a selection of quality music lessons under one roof, you probably had to drive 20 minutes down the Northway to Saratoga Springs,” says Reed, a self-described “fifth-generation townie.” “There were some music stores where you could get guitar lessons in a room in the back. But there wasn’t anything like this.” Having grown up in Glens Falls, Reed tells me he always had a vision to offer a place in the community for musical growth and enrichment. “For ten years now, we’ve been trying to drag the culture up the Northway a little bit at a time,” he says.

The return of the Drum Corps International competition will only help further Reed’s vision for the community. He’s hoping to draw 1,700 fans to East Field, which can accommodate up to 2,700. Reed says bringing back the DCI competition next year will be contingent on how many tickets are sold, so make sure to go out and support the Academy, DCI and your favorite marching band on July 21 at 7pm. Tickets cost $18-$25, and can be purchased either online or at the Cool Insuring Arena’s box office at a discount.

The Beatles’ Paul McCartney Makes An Appearance On ‘Carpool Karaoke’

It’s not much of a confession to say you’re a Beatles fan; they’re just about the most famous and influential rock band on the planet, and if you’ve never heard of them, your parents just aren’t spinning the right records around the house. That’s my humble opinion, at least, as a 38-year-old Saratoga native.

I still remember when my mom bought me and my brother the cassette tapes for Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band and the US version of Rubber Soul, probably at Strawberries record store on Broadway. My brother and I listened and re-listened to those tapes on the way from Saratoga Springs to grandma and grandpa’s house in Schenectady what seemed like a million times—and I can still revisit those albums today and be transported to that cold, pleather-y backseat in my parents’ Oldsmobile Cutlass Ciera (what an ugly car that was!).

So when I noticed that Late Late Show host James Corden had landed Beatle Paul McCartney for his Emmy-winning “Carpool Karaoke” segment, I had to carve out a little more than 20 minutes of my morning to watch it. It doesn’t disappoint. You get to hear the pair sing several Beatles classics, including “Drive My Car” (obviously) and “Blackbird,” as well as a new solo number from Macca. Corden even brings McCartney back to his childhood home for a tour—and to a local pub, where the pre-fame Beatles used to gig, to give some very lucky Liverpudlians the surprise of a lifetime.

I strongly urge you to set aside 20 minutes right now to watch the video above.