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Anne’s Washington Inn: Saratoga’s Family-Run Gem

It was during a 2008 kitchen renovation that Leonard Muller, a lifelong carpenter for Anne’s Washington Inn, spotted a message in a bottle tucked between two walls of the 130-year-old, two-house property. It was actually the second historical memento he’d come upon; the last had been an old wooden board signed by the building’s original framers and dated 1885. Inside the bottle, Muller found a note written in what appeared to be his father’s hand. The Bokan family opened Anne’s Washington Inn back in 1943, and Leonard’s father, George, was their previous carpenter. “It’s a beautiful day in January, 25 degrees,” it read. Leonard read on, fascinated, until he reached the signature: Leonard Muller, 2003. He’d forgotten that, during a project five years earlier, he’d tossed his own message to posterity over an exterior wall.

This is just one of many stories that have become part of the lore and lure of the Inn, a three-generation family business steeped in decades of Saratoga history. The hotel’s current owners, Joe Bokan Jr. and his wife, Kathy, have kept the family business afloat, even after facing some serious financial challenges. Right around the time that Leonard Muller found that bottle, the Bokan family’s 70-year-old enterprise, then called “The Washington Inn,” was struggling to find new customers. Many of their most loyal guests had either passed away or were unable to continue traveling, and the Inn’s location, tucked away at the end of a long driveway just up from South Broadway, made it an easily overlooked venue. Luckily, Joe Jr. had the wherewithal to rebrand it as “Anne’s Washington Inn” in honor of his mother, Anne Bokan, who ran the hotel before him. The seemingly small name change turned out to have a dramatic effect on business. “The first year our sales went up 20 percent,” Joe says. It turned out that by adding “Anne’s” to the front of the name, it made the Inn appear way higher in Google search results. “We went from page seventeen on every search engine to the top of page one!” he says.

It seems appropriate that Anne’s name became the hotel’s saving grace: Joe’s mother brought the Inn to life in the first place. She and her husband, Joe Bokan, Sr., were innkeepers for more than 50 years. According to her children and grandchildren, Anne managed to host 18 rooms worth of clients; raise Joe Jr. and his five sisters; and still find time to entertain her colorful guests—celebrities, journalists, jockeys and mafiosos—on the South House’s classic wrap-around porch. “She ran the hotel, she loved greeting people and talking to them…She was the hotel,” Joe Jr. says of his mother.

Anne's Washington Inn
(from left) Anne’s Washington Inn owners Joe Bokan, Jr., and his wife, Kathy; and their children Madeleine, Isabella and Joseph III. (Lawrence White)

Anne had some help from her kids, who lived at the inn year-round and spent summers working there with friends and cousins. Even as young children, they took reservations, cleaned, did laundry and performed simple repairs around the house. These days, it’s still very much a family business. Madeleine, Joe Jr.’s daughter, handles the public relations and marketing for the Inn from her home in Manhattan. “She was the personality of the hotel,” Madeleine says of her grandmother. “And now my father is!” Joe Jr. and Kathy have changed more than just the name since taking over the Inn some 25 years ago. “Every day is always a new project,” Joe says. “One minute I’ll be touching up paint, the next I’ll be working on plumbing, 20 minutes later I’ll be putting breakfast out, mowing the lawn, setting up for another party…you never know what’s going to happen; it’s always in flux.”

Along with modernizing the decor, Joe and Kathy built out a bright and stately dining room in the South House that can seat 100 guests. Now, on top of managing reservations and maintenance, they host special events and weddings, a new source of business that has proven very successful. “Once a bride comes up here, I book nine out of ten,” Joe tells me, smiling. It’s not hard to see why. Anne’s grassy grounds, Victorian front porch, and archetypal white gazebo make for charming photos. Plus, brides looking for a natural backdrop have the option of heading next door to the Saratoga Spa State Park. The Inn also provides a bridal suite, where brides can oversee wedding preparations through a South-facing window; an outdoor tent that accommodates up to 300 guests; connections with talented local caterers; and off-street parking. But the kicker? Couples can rent out both the event space and the hotel, so their friends and family can head upstairs at the end of the night.

Anne’s Washington Inn has become a popular wedding venue. (Candidly Beth Photography)

“Not to be dramatic, but I would say it’s quintessential,” Ardith Jane Russel says of Anne’s Washington Inn, where she and her husband, Dan, were married. “Because all of those things you think about when you’re an event planner or you’re the bride and groom trying to plan an event—there’s parking, there’s a place to stay, the rooms and the setting are beautiful—it has all the elements right there.” But what seems to stand out the most is the Bokan family’s earnest and welcoming hospitality. “I can’t think of any time whatsoever during the planning of our wedding, throughout the wedding or when we were getting up to leave that we didn’t feel completely comfortable,” says Dan. Adds his wife: “It was just like our home—it was like we owned a mansion for a day. And that felt special; that felt like a gift we gave to our guests.”

Another satisfied bride concurs with the Russels: “The owner, Joe, is an absolute sweetheart, and we are so happy that we chose to work with him. We had the family and wedding party stay the night before as well as the night of the wedding, which lent us an intimate and real ‘getaway’ feel to our weekend.” And she clearly agrees with Joe Jr.’s daughter about his larger-than-life personality. “Joe is the shining light at the center of the Inn; he’s very excitable and personable, making you feel like you’re the first and only wedding he’s ever hosted.”

With weddings added to their services, Joe and Kathy stay busy raising, hosting, employing and uniting families, one generation at a time. Fortunately, they have their own arsenal of young people to help out. Along with Madeleine, their two teenagers, Joseph III and Isabella, work summers at Anne’s, along with a handful of Skidmore College and local high school students. “You can see Anne in Joe, and you can see Joe in the kids. The apple doesn’t fall far from the tree,” says Michael Blowen, a retired sports journalist for the Boston Globe, who’s been coming to the Inn every year since 1992. He even hatched the idea for his racehorse rescue foundation, Old Friends, right on the front porch. Old Friends now cares for well over 100 retired racehorses, and the Inn hosts its annual fundraiser. “I think in a lot of ways Joe personifies Saratoga,” Blowen says. “Saratoga’s got depth, it’s got culture, it’s hearty, it’s appreciated by a wide variety of people. I think Joe is all that.” Blowen goes a step further, paying Bokan maybe the greatest compliment of them all—at least, if you’re a Saratogian: “I know Mary Lou Whitney is the Queen of Saratoga, but I think if Joey’s not quite the King, he’s at least Sir Lancelot. He’s part of the round table.”

To this day, Joe is still thankful for that second wind that rebranding the Inn brought him and his family business. “If I hadn’t changed the name, I think I’d be out of business by now,” he says. “It just completely rewrote the future of this place.” Maybe you can be a part of that future the next time you stay in Saratoga.

A shortened version of this feature ran in the “I Do!” Issue of saratoga living magazine. 

Saratoga Staycation: Become A Tourist In Your Own Hometown For A Weekend

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As a Saratogian, you know you live in a special place. But do you ever take the time to enjoy your city the way tourists do? If the winter blues are leaving you shivering, bored and restless, try this fun, budget-friendly staycation below. The options are endless, but we’ve come up with a three-day weekend itinerary for you. How’d we do? Let us know in the comments section.

Friday

Start your staycation with whiskey and a wood-fired pizza at recently renovated interior, and try not to think about the fact that Morrissey breathed his last breath perched at the old Adelphi Hotel’s bar.

Next stop: Caffè Lena, where Friday nights tend to get pretty eclectic. Depending on what weekend you show up, you might hear Celtic folk songs, Nola street music or old school rock and roll.

Finish out the day with a nightcap at One Caroline, where there’s sure to be more live music—and, if you’re so inclined, you can get your dance on down the street at the Saratoga City Tavern. If you have the disposable income, book a room at the Adelphi. If you don’t, your own pillow isn’t a terrible substitute.

Saturday

Sleep in and then revive yourself with a slow-burn brunch at Max London’s. Start out with an espresso—and maybe a mimosa, if you’re game after the previous night’s affairs. You’ll need fuel for the rest of the day ahead, so we recommend the smoked chicken hash with extra bacon. (There’s also a wide array of breakfast pizzas, omelettes and choices for vegan/vegetarian staycationers, too.)

Now, since its winter, your next step should be strapping on some snowshoes or cross-country skis and taking an invigorating tromp (or glide) across the Saratoga Spa State Park. Despite it being where you golfed the previous summer, the trails and wooded areas make for a perfect athletic jaunt. If you want to extend the definition of staycation and jump in your car, the Saratoga National Historic Park—where the famed Battle of Saratoga, the turning point in the American Revolution, took place—is about 30 minutes away in Stillwater. It’s also another great place to cross-country ski, snowshoe or simply take a long, leisurely hike with your family (or furry friend).

After that, you’ll have had it up to here with education and exercise, so it’ll be time to hail a cab (or drop your car off and Uber over) to the Saratoga Winery. Try out local wines, nosh on some crispy queso blanco cheese sticks and enjoy live music from 3pm to 6pm. Depending on which Saturday you decide to staycate, you may have the option of staying for a 9pm comedy show as well.

Once you’ve had your fill of wine and cheese, tag along with the crowd enjoying whatever Winterfest event is in store that weekend; whether you’re dancing to live music or buckling down for beer week’s Saratoga Beer Summit, you’ll be sure to have a good time.

Sunday

After all that dining, imbibing and outdoorsmanship, Sunday will make for the perfect Saratoga spa day. Try the Roosevelt Baths and Spa. Sign up for their Bed, Breakfast & Bath package beforehand, so you can get accommodations, a breakfast for two at Putnam’s Restaurant and a 40-minute detox soak in the hydrotherapy Mineral Baths.

Once you’re refreshed and back on your feet, it’s time to meander through Skidmore College’s Tang Museum. And don’t just enjoy their exhibits; keep in mind that the building’s architecture—designed by Antoine Predock, the architect behind the National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington, DC; the Canadian Museum for Human Rights in Winnipeg; and the New National Stadium in Tokyo—is a feat of mastery unto itself.

And finally, what better way to end a busy winter weekend than with a casual dinner and a movie? Even “tourists” get tired. Stop in to Ravenous Creperie for some comfort food (try not to eat too many of their addicting pommes frites), and save room for candy and popcorn at Bow Tie Criterion Cinemas.

What Would Woody Do: Chapter II

How many times have you gone to a bar or restaurant to see a live local band and they take a break every 20-30 minutes for 20-30 minutes? Seemingly, it happens all the time, and it makes me angry every time. Us “real working folk” don’t get to do that. Imagine you sitting down at the job and getting a break every 20-30 minutes on the hour, all day long. Man, we would all want to have that job right? I can only imagine myself doing a haircut and having two or three guys waiting for me, and telling them “Sorry, it will only be another 15 minutes; I need to take a break to rest my poor tired hands and feet,” and then repeating that process every other customer. I wouldn’t be in business long. It’d be ridiculous! In fact, I’m one of the guys who often leaves when the band goes on a break, as many others do I’m sure.

Recently, we went out to dinner at a local bar/restaurant and saw a couple of guys setting up to play (the P.J. Ferguson Duo). So we decided to eat at the bar and listen to them, and wow, we were thoroughly impressed! These two kids, in their low to mid 20s, played for four hours straight without taking a break. Really, it was a sight to see. They played song after song, hit after hit. They played songs from the ’50s, ’60s, ’70s, ’80s and right up to a couple of modern-day hits. I personally can’t remember ever going to see a cover band in a local bar that played Nancy Sinatra, Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd, the Cars, Tom Petty, Johnny Cash and numerous other great artists all in one set. Every genre was covered— even a Christian rock song—and there was music for all, and they never stopped playing. No breaks!

The crowd was so impressed after their three-hour set that everyone sitting at the bar stood up and cheered, clapping and then pitched in and enticed the band to play for another hour. It was really fun to see the excitement in the crowd and the band’s music. I really loved watching these guys, and the energy they put into there music. OK, so maybe they’re not going to be famous rock stars—at least not yet—but to have the ability to play all of these covers, all in their own way and all in their own versions was beyond any expectations I certainly had. And a four-hour set was and is unheard of. (Unless your name is Bruce Springsteen or something.) To quote the Beach Boys, “Fun Fun Fun” is the best words to describe their show!

Well that’s my story and I’m sticking to it. Now I need to take a break. This has taken me at least 20 minutes to write.

—Woody

John Morrissey: The Championship Boxer And Friend Of Abraham Lincoln Who Launched Saratoga Race Course

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In Saratoga Race Course: the August Place to Be, author Kimberly Gatto sets the scene: It’s the summer of 1861, and a tall, mean-looking boxer shows up in Saratoga Springs with the intention of building a gambling empire. “John Morrissey had arrived, and Saratoga was about to be changed forever.”

Besides being a California Gold Rush prospector, a mean poker player, an International Boxing Hall of Famer, the leader of the New York gambling gang the Dead Rabbits, a New York State Senator and an acquaintance of Abraham Lincoln, John Morrissey, a.k.a. “Old Smoke,” was the businessman responsible for the establishment of the Saratoga Race Course. According to Gatto, Morrissey traveled to Saratoga that summer “armed with a barrage of roulette wheels, faro cards and…suave dealers and strong-armed attendants.” He intended to start a casino, luxurious enough to attract a flock of wealthy travelers, but because gambling was an off-color activity reserved for after dark, Morrissey decided to establish a world-class racetrack to entertain his deep-pocketed patrons during the daylight hours. He constructed the course with the help of some wealthy and well-positioned friends he made while dabbling in the stock market.

The first race meet was held in August 1863, one month after the Battle of Gettysburg. The event made headlines in the local and national press, and Saratoga’s Grand Union and the United States Hotels on Broadway—two of the largest hotels in the world at the time—quickly filled to capacity.

John Morrissey
A stereoscopic photograph of a race at Saratoga Race Course, circa 1865. (Robert N. Dennis Collection)

Encouraged by the consistent success of the racetrack, Morrissey established the Saratoga Club House. In All the Law in the World Wont’s Stop Them, Greg Veitch describes the reception of the lavish casino: “By the time Morrissey’s grand offering to the gambling gods was complete in 1870, he had already spent $90,000 on the building. Descriptions of the elegant hall abound…massive mirrors, plush wall-to-wall carpeting, cornices and mantels made of French cheval, ornate carvings in the furniture including elaborate tiger heads on the mirrors, silk curtains, golden chandeliers and hundreds of lights.” For all the extravagance of his businesses, Morrissey remained the same eccentric, rough-and-tumble character. “Morrissey enjoyed performing the public service of directing traffic in front of his Club House,” writes Veitch. “Standing in the middle of East Congress Street at Putnam Street, Morrissey was a sight to behold as he directed the throngs of people, horses, and carriages to and fro.”

Morrissey died the same way that he lived: legendarily. As the story goes, in 1878, he allegedly kicked it at the Adelphi’s bar—though some claim he succumbed to pneumonia and bronchitis in Room No. 5 (the Adelphi named its new bar, Morrissey’s, after him). Either way, it was an untimely death: “Old Smoke” was only 47, but it capped a career that helped put Saratoga on the map for good.

The Calendar: What To Do In Saratoga Springs This Weekend

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This marks saratoga living‘s inaugural entry of The Calendar, our expertly curated list of the top events, live music, readings, workshops and everything else in between hitting the Capital Region on Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays of each week. The Calendar will be updated every Thursday, so that you’ll have a jump on your weekend plans.  Below, you’ll find one “featured” event, which we think is a must-see, along with a number of additional goings-on that should be on your radar. You’ll never have to ask, “What’s going on in Saratoga?” ever again.

Saratoga Beer Week – February 20-24

Saratoga’s Beer Week actually began on Tuesday, February 20, with an Official Kick Off Party at Henry Street Taproom. The annual celebration will continue through the weekend—with three featured events happening on Thursday (Whiskey Night), Friday (Cider Night) and Saturday (Beer Summit). “This is our seventh year which is really cool,” says Beer Week Coordinator Samantha Yates. “We have 160 craft beer samples from more than 80 breweries, some of which are local and some of which come from as far as Alaska.”

As is tradition, Saturday’s Beer Summit will be the can’t-miss event of the weekend, but festival sponsor America On Tap will be holding several major sampling parties at the Saratoga City Center as well, including the aforementioned Whiskey Night (a Beer Week first!) and Cider Night. Also on tap for the weekend, local vendors such as Toga Threads and Spirichill will be selling their wares onsite to festival-goers; the Albany Football League will have a table for potential new registrants; and reps from Schenectady County Community College will be spreading the word about their new brewing program. “It’s the end of February. Beer Week is the best way—if you’re a beer, cider or whiskey lover— to kick off your spring,” says Yates. “Come and spend your weekend meeting new people and sampling all these craft beers!”

How do you get to and from Beer Week without a set of wheels? America On Tap has you covered: They’ll be providing shuttles to and from the Saratoga City Center for patrons who may leave the event too tipsy to get behind the wheel and drive home. (Plus, there’s always Uber or Lyft.) Beer lovers who want to celebrate in style may be interested in signing up for the Saratoga Arms’ Beer Week package, which includes a three-night stay at the hotel, mere minutes from the event; exclusive in-room gifts; and, the morning of the Beer Summit, a four-course “Brewer’s Breakfast Bash” sponsored by local brewers Schmaltz. Proceeds for the Beer Summit’s coatcheck will go to Kiwanis, an international co-educational service club dedicated to finding creative ways to pursue the needs of children through fundraising and projects in their local communities.

Friday, February 23

 Saturday, February 24

Sunday 25

The Saratoga Winter Club: Churning Out Speed Skating Olympians For Decades

Long removed from its humble beginnings as the Saratoga Toboggan Club in 1888 (the year of the city’s Great Blizzard, by the way), the Saratoga Winter Club (SWC) has become the top speed skating training center for the area’s most elite athletes. In their professional-grade ice rink, the dark blurs of past, present and future Olympians sweat it out for potential future glory. “We have had eight Olympians, and currently, have four Olympic coaches that volunteer their time,” says Maxine Lautenberg, the Vice President of the Saratoga Winter Club.

One coach at the SWC, Pat Maxwell, has been there since 1976. Maxwell is a National Speed Skating Hall of Famer; was the US National Team Coach from 1983-98; and coached the US team at the Olympics on two different occasions. SWC Coach Amy Peterson-Peck competed in the Olympic Games five times. (Peterson-Peck is married to the brother-in-law of Kristen Talbot-Peck, one of the local Olympians saratoga living profiled in our “I Do!” Issue.) Another, Paul Marchese, has been the speed skating technician and coach for a number of teams, and according to Lautenberg, “is one if not the leading custom speed skate boot makers in the world.” Together, the SWC’s all-star team churns out serious skaters who compete on national and international platforms.

One-hundred and thirty years ago, the earliest members of the Saratoga Winter Club were just local toboggan enthusiasts. (Saratoga Winter Club)

But as you might have guessed from the name “the Saratoga Toboggan Club,” the SWC’s founding members were anything but serious sportsmen. In the late 1800s, it was just a group of locals who ran a large toboggan slide that shot riders out onto Saratoga Lake, not unlike the ski slide on Mirror Lake in Lake Placid. By the early 1900s, the club had added other sports and events into the mix; and members were skiing, skating and even coronating a Winter Snow Queen. It wasn’t until the SWC started holding the Eastern States Outdoor Speed Skating Championships (ESOSC) that the club came into its own as a serious speed skating organization. The ESOSC eventually attracted the attention of Olympic team members and national champions, transforming the SWC into the local speed skating mecca that it is today.

These days, members of the SWC are young, aspiring skaters who attend weekly training sessions in the hopes of joining the ranks of the SWC’s speed skating elite. One such superstar is Schenectady native Trevor Marsicano, whose comeback story is one for the ages. In 2009, after being bullied and weathering a bout of depression and an eventual, overdose, Marsicano became the youngest gold medalist in the history of the World Single Distance Championships. Marsicano went on to win a silver medal at the 2010 Olympics in Vancouver, Canada, and is the club’s most recent Olympian.

Interested in getting involved in the SWC? The club tells us that in March, it will be holding its first-ever speed skating how-to program in Saratoga Springs.

What Makes The Olde Bryan Inn’s 200-Year-Old Interior Design Look So Revolutionary

For any Saratogian who calls this wonderful city home, it’s a well-known fact that restaurants come and go. Maybe you were a fan of the Saratoga Pizza House, Mino’s Sushi or Jacksland’s. All are now distant memories in Saratoga’s culinary past. But one Saratoga restaurant has endured the test of time—in more ways than one. The Olde Bryan Inn is one of those spots that will seemingly never go out of style because of it’s incredible, frozen-in-time decor. Sure, the French onion soup and chicken wings are top of the line, but it’s that homey, old-fashioned interior design that keeps us coming back and feeling like we’re sitting inside something historical.

The Olde Bryan Inn flaunts feats of architectural expertise that have gone untouched for more than 100 years. The three Rumford fireplaces—built tall and shallow to allow more heat to spill sideways instead of up the chimney—are fixtures of the Inn, and, in the winter, determine the best seats in the house. Stone lintel designs remain above several door frames, including the one leading from the bar to the front dining room. The front door, exposed beams, ceiling joinery, staircase and stone wall date back to the 19th century. “The wall outside is as straight as straight can be,” says John Kosek, the Inn’s former General Manager and its quasi-in-house historian. “You can’t imagine the artistry of putting that house together back then. I couldn’t imagine what it would cost to put together a house like that today.”

John Bryan built the Federal-style stone house in 1826. In Bryan’s time, it was a family home built on the site of a tavern run by his father, Alexander Bryan, a scout in the Revolutionary War that relayed information about the advance of British troops during the Battle of Saratoga. Since then, the Inn has changed hands many times, hosting a handful of families and even moonlighting as a laundromat. “Lots of people have lived there,” Kosek says. “And lots of changes have been made.”

The Inn’s latest owners, Dave Powers and Steve Sullivan, have been running it for almost 40 years. They added much of the building’s current interior decor: church-pew booth seating bought from the Church of St. Peter in the late ’70s; portraits of children painted in the first half of the 18th century; photos of the Inn in its earlier iterations; and etchings of the Saratoga area. Their touch reinforces the rustic, timeless feel of the Inn, without allowing it to feel too antiquated.

Samantha Bosshart, Executive Director of the Saratoga Springs Preservation Foundation, is a big fan of the Inn—especially the 12-over-12 windows: “Some of the panes you can see were hand-blown,” she says. As the only remaining Federal Style house in Saratoga, the Olde Bryan Inn isn’t just a charming restaurant, but “is important to Saratoga’s architectural heritage.”

Saranac Lake Getting Prepped For Its Inaugural Adirondack Snowshoe Fest

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Tucked between the High Peaks Wilderness and McKenzie Mountain Wilderness areas, just under ten miles west of Lake Placid, Saranac Lake’s 5,000 villagers are preparing for the second coming of the World Snowshoe Championships. Last year, more than 400 people flocked to the small Adirondack town to participate in the 10K Open World Championship, 5K Junior World Championship and 5K Shoe-Be-Doo Walking party. This year’s set-up is in many ways less chaotic, since it’s looking like there’ll be enough snow to go around. (Though, with 60s and 70s in the weather forecast this week, it’s anybody’s guess.) “We had a terrific meltdown last year,” says Rich Shapiro, Saranac’s Village Trustee. “It was in the 50s…we ended up getting 125 truckloads of snow—municipal dump trucks; the big ones—and about 100 people from the village came out with shovels and plastic sleds and helped spread it around.” They managed to prepare the race courses just in time for a fairly whimsical sight: snowshoed runners, sweating through tank tops in the balmy weather, navigating their way to the finish line.

Now, the village of Saranac is building on this successful first run. The inaugural Adirondack Snowshoe Fest is set to begin on Saturday, February 24, with a 10K and 5K Shoe-Be-Doo at Dewey Mountain. Sunday’s 15K and 5K races will be held at Paul Smith’s College Visitor Interpretive Center (VIC). All races will offer cash prizes to the top three places, male and female. Not that you have to compete to enjoy the Snowshoe Fest—on Saturday, there will be guided snowshoe tours of Dewey Mountain; an after-dark, under-the-lights Snowshoe Stomp between bonfires and hot chocolate stations; and an under-the-lights snowshoe hike through the woods. When everyone’s ready to warm up, Dewey Mountain Lodge will be serving chili and cornbread. On Sunday, the VIC is hosting a snowshoe tour, scavenger hunt and obstacle course for all ages; and the world premier of Saving Snow, a documentary about ski towns fighting climate change. You don’t have to be a winning runner to take home a prize. “All competitors get their numbers put into a hat,” Shapiro says. “We have prizes from Hotel Saranac Lake, and snowshoes will be given away.” In addition to Hotel Saranac Lake, the Adirondack Motel and Adirondack Health make up the handful of local businesses supporting the event.

Adirondack Health is the event’s main sponsor, and the way they see it, the Adirondack Showshoe Fest isn’t just about fun and games, it’s also about promoting a healthy and active lifestyle. “Regular physical activity plays a central role in combating chronic conditions like diabetes, obesity and heart disease,” says Adirondack Health’s Matthew Scollin. “It is our hope that the Adirondack Snowshoe Fest, and other events like it, will introduce area residents to lifelong, outdoor activities that end up bolstering overall health and happiness.”

Exclusive: Grammy-Winning Folk Artist Tom Paxton Discusses His 15th Gig At Caffè Lena

“It’s so intimate; people are right in your face; it’s a living room kind of a feeling; very personal,” says Tom Paxton, reminiscing about his 14 previous gigs at Caffè Lena. (That’s right, 14.) He’s calling from a hotel room in Kansas City, MO, where he’s planning to attend the annual Folk Alliance International conference. Soon after, he’ll be heading to Saratoga Springs for his staggering 15th performance at Caffè Lena on February 22. “I like to have people close if that’s possible. I like to see their faces, react to their reactions; a symbiosis forms back and forth, back and forth. Most of it’s unconscious, but it’s a very great shared experience and in a small place like that, you get that in spades.”

The club’s original owner, Lena Spencer, recruited Paxton to play at the famed venue back in 1960, after seeing him perform in Greenwich Village. At the time, Paxton was 23 years old and the Caffè had only been open for three weeks. “She heard me at either the Gaslight or the Commons, and invited me up, and I said of course!” Paxton says. “I was just a raw beginner and happy for the chance to get up and perform. I was down for that.” He laughs when I ask him how much he was paid for the gig. “I’m sure it was bus fare and $25 or something; it wasn’t much,” says Paxton.

As it has been for many artists, Caffè Lena was a springboard for a tremendously brilliant and important career as a songwriter. Paxton went on to become a major name in folk music, playing solo shows at New York City behemoths like Carnegie Hall and Town Hall; and Festival Hall in London, to name a few. Music luminaries such as Bob Dylan, John Denver and Willie Nelson have all covered his songs. And among a number of other awards he’s received from everyone from the Folk Alliance to the British House of Commons, Paxton also received a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in 2009. He’s very modest about all the various accolades. “I think if you live long enough, they just give them to you,” he says.

Paxton says he’s especially looking forward to his trip to Saratoga: “I always loved Saratoga Springs. It’s a beautiful, beautiful town. Very historic—the battlefield and all that. It’s a great place to visit.” And even after a lifetime of performances, Paxton still sees something special in Caffè Lena: “I love the memory of Lena Spencer and all she meant, not just to Saratoga—but to folk music, period,” he says. “It’s an honor to come back up and sing in Lena’s Caffè.”

Local Students Learn Dance, Choreography Skills From Broadway Pros

The energy inside the Malta School auditorium in Ballston Spa is off the charts. Ninety fifth-graders are getting ready to perform complex choreography that’s set to some of the greatest music of the Motown era, and the kids can barely contain themselves. They’ve worked with professional Broadway performers for weeks, and now they’re ready to make it real. For those of us who grew up in the Motown era this is a delightful generational déjà vu with enough enthusiasm to completely blow-away any audience. For someone who studied dance as a child, as I did, it is even more so.

The public school dance residency program was initiated in the Ballston Spa Central School District as part of the Saratoga Performing Arts Center (SPAC) Youth Arts Education Program. The program started at the end of January with fifth-graders from Malta Avenue Elementary School, along with several students from Wood Road Elementary School. During the program, the students looked forward to weekly dance and choreography lessons by professional New York City Broadway performers. These included SPAC’s Senior Director of Education, Dennis Moench, who was in the Broadway revival of Les Misérables; as well as Jennifer DiNoia, who had the lead role of Elphaba in the Broadway production of Wicked; and Barrett Davis, whose credits include performing in the original Broadway production of Mary Poppins. The spirited musical accompaniment is performed by Elizabeth Woodbury Kasius on keyboard/melodica and percussionist Brian Melick.

Moench is the director of the event. He’s like a magician in how he deals with the kids, and they clearly enjoy the instruction. It’s difficult for any director to maintain order over an adult cast, let alone 90 fifth-graders, but he does so with relative ease. Each separate school class performed to a different song and each wore their own color T-shirt (red, blue and green are classes in Malta School; and purple are students from Wood Road School). Both Davis and DiNoia were onstage the entire time, with Moench providing additional instruction and guidance. Malta Avenue Elementary School Principal, Sharon D’Agostino, was clearly pleased with the way the students were responding. She stood in the center aisle of the auditorium closely watching the rehearsal as she spoke to me. “At first some of the kids were shy,” she said. “They did not want to really express themselves yet. But as it went on, many of them became the most expressive dancers. This experience brought them all together as a group, but it also strengthened the character of the individual students and gave them a sense of confidence and self-esteem.”

After DiNoia finished singing a knockout version of Stevie Wonder’s “Uptight,” she walked into the lobby with me to discuss her involvement with the project. “Besides working on Broadway, I am also the mother of a two year old and I teach and work with kids from all over the country,” she told me, as we stood in front of a Motown mural created by the kids. “When my dear friend Dennis asked me if I was interested in working with him on this project, well, of course the answer was yes.”

DiNoia went on to tell me that the program wasn’t just about getting kids excited about the choreography that goes into a dance routine—or their heart rates up. “There is a lot of thought process and memorization in dance,” she said. “There is math and physics and then there is a style layer to it. They have to work in a box dictated by the choreography and the music. That is the challenge. They must find their own style and learn to express it in the different angles and corners of the box. This experience is a lesson in how they can individually express themselves while being part of the group.” DiNoia said that she has studied dance for her entire life, but for kids who might not end up with a career in the arts, “it can still become a vital part of creating a well-rounded adult,” she said. “After all, creative minds ultimately create a better society.”

As DiNoia walked back into the auditorium, and I prepared to leave, the Contours classic Motown hit, “Do You Love Me Now That I Can Dance,” came echoing down the hallway. For the exuberant classmates and proud families of Ballston Spa who witnessed the kids’ performance, the answer to that musical question is a resounding “yes!”