After three months of waiting and hoping, the Palisades High girls volleyball team finally has a coach. His name is Matt Shubin, who played for three years at UCLA before joining a professional team in Greece. He was hired last Friday and didn’t meet all of his players until he arrived on campus 15 minutes before the Dolphins’ season opener Monday afternoon. The lingering question, however, is why it took so long to find a replacement for former coach and athletic trainer Cheri Stuart, who informed school administrators at the end of the spring semester that she would not be back. Looking for answers, parents of several players met with PaliHi Principal Gloria Martinez and Charlotte Atlas (vice principal in charge of athletics) before Monday’s match to express their concern for a program that has undergone six head coaching changes in the last six years. “When Cheri told us she was leaving I faxed and mailed letters to every school in the district stating that we had a coaching vacancy,” Atlas said. “So we have been looking. We interviewed several candidates. One said she couldn’t do it, one took another job and the other wasn’t qualified.” Upon learning that Palisades was still in need of a coach, local club coach and beach volleyball legend Gene Selznick volunteered to help several weeks ago, as he did in 2003 when the Dolphins won their last City Section title. However, he was not hired. PaliHi athletic director Leo Castro was asked to attend Monday’s meeting but refused to go. “I wanted Gene [Selznick]. He was my first choice,” Castro said. “Unfortunately, I can only make a recommendation. There has to be approval from the administration and Gene told me that Charlotte [Atlas] didn’t want him. My feeling is that we have the best teachers, why shouldn’t we have the best coaches?” Neither Atlas nor Martinez would comment as to why Selznick was not hired. Former coach Dave Suarez, who stepped down after leading the Dolphins to three straight City titles from 1997-99, is still a teacher on campus and ran summer tryouts with his brother, Mike, the girls’ golf coach. Unsure whether or not Shubin would show up for Monday’s opener, Suarez drilled the team and served as the coach of record for the match. “I was one of the first people they asked and I immediately told them I wasn’t interested in coming back [to coach],” Suarez said. “But as it got later in the summer and they still had no coach, I agreed to work with the girls until they found somebody.” Several parents said they provided the school with leads but none were pursued in a timely manner. Finally, Shubin, who was coaching for Sinjin Smith’s volleyball camp at Will Rogers State Beach, was referred to administrators by Jeanne Goldsmith, whose daughter Laura is a freshman on varsity. Asked about Shubin’s future status, Atlas admitted he would probably go back to Europe in the spring. “We got really lucky that Matt was available,” she said. “We’re still looking for somebody long-term.” Atlas was successful in getting a teacher of record, Holly Korbonski, so the sport counts as an official class and the players will receive a letter grade. “It’s been super frustrating,” PaliHi sophomore middle blocker Alex Lunder said. “Gene [Selznick] was my club coach and he was willing to coach us except that there was a problem between he and Ms. Atlas. A lot of names were submitted but I feel like the school wasn’t doing it’s part to find us a coach. It’s not our job to find a coach, it’s theirs. It’s almost like our sport doesn’t matter, like they care about football and nothing else.” Palisades won Monday’s match in three straight games over Valley Alternative and Shubin was pleased with what he saw. “I see a lot of talent out there but also a lot that the girls can improve on. It should be a fun season and I’m looking forward to it.” Assisting Shubin and coaching the junior varsity squad will be Julie Ruff, formerly a middle blocker at Kent State. Ruff has five years of experience coaching at the junior high and high school levels.
Sylmar Stymies Pali Offense

Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer
If football games were played in a courtroom rather than on a gridiron, it’s safe to say the Palisades High varsity team did not make a persuasive opening statement. In the weeks leading up to last Friday night’s season opener, Dolphin players insisted they were better prepared than the squad that lost a school-record nine games last year. Rather than provide answers, however, Pali’s 47-0 loss to Sylmar at Stadium by the Sea raised more questions about where the program is headed. It was Pali’s eighth consecutive loss dating back to last season and many of the deficiencies evident in 2004 resurfaced Friday. Most obvious was the offensive line’s inability to protect the quarterback. Starting his first varsity game, Raymond Elie was sacked five times and rarely was able to complete a five-step drop without defenders in his face. He completed two of nine throws for 17 yards with one interception and rushed for seven yards in 10 attempts. Walking to the locker room after the game, Elie was noticeably frustrated. “They didn’t do anything we weren’t expecting,” he said. “Our line just has to block better.” PaliHi head coach Leo Castro, who dropped to 0-2 in season openers, attributed Pali’s protection problems to inexperience. “Three of our young men (on the offensive line) had never played a down of varsity football. We’re a young team and we’ll learn from our mistakes. We obviously have to look at the film and make some personnel adjustments.” Not only are the Dolphins young but they suited up just 28 players, making them thin at every position. “Against a good team like this, going both ways can tire you out by the fourth quarter,” Castro said. “We have a number of guys playing ironman football.” Although Sylmar is likely the toughest opponent Pali will face this season, Castro said his team must continue to improve week by week to have a chance at a winning record. “You don’t write off the season after one game, but clearly we got beat up front. The strength of any good team has to be the line–that’s the foundation of your house. If it’s good you can weather the storm. If it’s bad the roof will cave in. It all starts there.” “Offensive” might be the best word to describe Pali’s offense, which totaled a meager 40 yards. The Dolphins went three-and-out seven times. They did not gain a first down in the second half and managed only three all game. Sylmar, meanwhile, racked up 17 first downs and controlled the ball for all but four of the last 24 minutes. The final score might have been more lopsided had Sylmar coach London Woodfin not ordered his players off the field instead of running a play with 19 seconds left on first-and-goal inside Pali’s one-yard line. The one positive Castro took from the game is that Sylmar is not on next year’s schedule. “Look, they are one of the top teams in the City,” Castro said. “That’s what we told our kids. We lost but you can’t get so down that it affects your performance the next game.” A bright spot for Pali was the all-around play of senior receiver/cornerback Ryan Henry. He returned a kickoff 58 yards, made a 13-yard reception (Pali’s longest play from scrimmage) and intercepted two passes–the second on a hail mary to end the first half. “I’m very disappointed we weren’t able to put points on the board,” Castro said. “We wanted the kids to experience that feeling of scoring a touchdown. You never want to put up a goose egg.” C.J. Gable, reputed to be one of the best tailbacks in the City Section, had a quietly efficient night. His longest run was a 26-yard score that gave Sylmar a 28-0 lead in the second quarter, though he still wound up with 153 yards and three touchdowns in 20 carries. “It didn’t feel like I gained that much yardage, to be honest,” he said afterwards. “For some reason I was a step slow hitting the holes. We did okay for a first game but we can do a whole lot better than this. I know I can.” Castro was impressed with Gable: “He was as good as advertised. He didn’t bust a long one but he sure made us miss a lot and that’s what a good back does.” Palisades has four more games before its Western League opener against Venice, which beat Carson decisively Friday night. In fact, the other four teams in Pali’s league–Westchester, Fairfax, University and Hamilton, also won. As for the Dolphins’ resiliency, the jury is still out. “I’m not all that concerned about morale,” Castro said. “The attitude of this team is much better. Last year, before every game it was like a funeral. But there’s no quit in these kids. They’re just young, that’s all. They have a lot of pride and I think they’re going to bounce back strong.” Frosh/Soph Sylmar turned three first-half fumbles by Palisades into 21 points en route to a 28-8 victory at Stadium by the Sea. Brandon Quarles scored the Dolphins’ only touchdown on a five-yard run in the third quarter to cap a 10-play, 73-yard drive. Jerald Ingram caught two passes for 60 yards and also caught a two-point conversion pass from quarterback Alan Ferguson. Safety Milton Strausberg led the defense with 10 solo tackles and linebacker Miles Nelson added six. “In the first half we just weren’t executing,” Pali head coach Calvin Parker said. “That was the best team we’re going to play all year and yet we outscored them 8-7 in the second half.”
Yaroslavsky Taps Krisiloff to Serve as Senior Deputy
Flora Krisiloff, community activist, chairwoman of the Brentwood Community Council, and recent candidate for Council District 11, will join County Supervisor Zev Yaroslavsky’s office as senior field deputy starting September 23. In her new position, Krisiloff will serve the southwest portion of Yaroslavsky’s district covering Venice, Santa Monica, Brentwood, Pacific Palisades, West L. A., Bel-Air, Westwood, Beverly Hills, West Hollywood and Hollywood. “Initially, I will be downtown and driving around a lot in outreach to constituents,” Krisiloff told the Palisadian-Post. “Later, we hope to open up a small office on the Westside.” Over the years, she and Yaroslavsky have worked on various issues, including the protracted discussions and controversy over the development at the Veteran Administration property. “Zev and I had a conversation and one thing led to another,” Krisiloff said, adding “there’s a really good fit there. I admire him tremendously and his office, which is so professional.” As chairwoman of the City’s district planning commission before resigning to run for office last year, Krisiloff became well acquainted with land-use issues throughout much of the same area that she will be serving for the county. Apart from her position with the supervisor’s office, Krisiloff is a member of the Federal Advisory Committee, appointed by the VA in her capacity of being a community leader. This group was established to review the VA’s plans for the almost 400-acre property and given the authority to offer options to the federal recommendations, although nonbinding. A strong believer in the need for an overall master plan for the highly prized property in the center of the Westside, Krisiloff was successful in her battle to scuttle the 2001 plan that proposed more than 7 million square feet of commercial and medical-related development and threatened to eliminate the congressional protection of open space. The options VA contractor PriceWaterhouseCoopers have developed based on their first overall review conducted from May 6, 2005 were supposed to have been posted on the Web site (www.va.gov/cares.), but as of press time, the report had not appeared. Supervisor Yaroslavsky and a few others, including Krisiloff, received a 23-page summary. After a cursory review of the summary report, Krisiloff told the Post that she was concerned that the plan recommended some commercial development and that designated open space might be threatened. “The option for parcel A, north of Wilshire Boulevard, would include community education, mixed-use residential and recreation. “It looks to me that some of that lies within the Cranston Act’s 109 protected acres. Besides the Cranston Act, former VA Secretary Anthony Principi came out and promised us that there would be no commercial development. Mixed-use has a commercial component. “This is a national process,” Krisiloff continued. “This is not the only VA that is going through the second round of planning and public meetings. But, what they have given us is a business plan, which is not the same as a 25- to 50-year master plan. This is the only VA in the country that must develop a master plan. It is the only way, for once and for all, to approach the land-use plan on a master scale.” The Local Advisory Panel (LAP) for the VA West L.A. study site will hold the next public meeting on Thursday, September 22. The meeting will begin at noon at the Veterans Affairs Wadsworth Theater located on the campus of the West Los Angeles Healthcare Center. The public comment period is from 4 to 7 p.m. Following the public comment period, the LAP will deliberate from 7 to 9 p.m. and provide recommendations to VA Secretary R. James “Jim” Nicholson on options developed for the West L.A. site.
FBI Nabs Busy Bank Robber
The “Fanny Pack Bandit,” Peter Soren Walsky, 45, was arrested in Brentwood on September 3. Walsky has confessed to 10 robberies since November 13, including seven in L.A., one in Manhattan Beach and two in Santa Monica. According to LAPD Senior Lead Officer Chris Ragsdale, he has been tied to three robberies in the Palisades. According the FBI affidavit, at appoximately 12:10 at the Bank of America, at 11911 San Vicente Boulevard, Walsky, 6’2″ tall, white male, weighing 140 pounds, wearing a grey shirt with tight grey shorts,and a blue and white baseball cap, approached a teller and handed him a note that read, “Give me your money. No tracking devices. No ink pack. You have 15 seconds.” Walsky then said, “I’m serious.” The teller did as instructed removing $1,256 from his drawer, including pre-recorded bait bills, and placed them on the counter. Walsky took the money and the demand note and put them both into a blue vinyl bag and exited the bank. As he walked east down San Vicente past Souplantation, his luck ran out. Two off-duty FBI agents just happened to be having lunch. They noticed a man carrying what appeared to be a bank deposit money bag emanating red smoke. The agents exited the restaurant and discovered that the smoke appeared to be pepper spray. They concluded a dye pack had been activated and the bank located next to the restaurant had just been robbed. The agents identified themselves and commanded the man to stop. When he began to run, a foot pursuit ensued. After a brief struggle, the subject was taken into custody.
Benton Stays; Intima Moves;
Bob Benton has signed a long-term lease to keep his sporting goods store on Swarthmore. ‘ la Tarte restaurant (next to Mort’s Deli) is up for sale. And Karen Richardson will move her Intima lingerie store from Antioch to an empty storefront on Swarthmore (see Intima story, page 7). These are the latest developments on the 1000 block of Swarthmore, a half-block stretch that has been in turmoil since March, when merchants learned that they faced major rent hikes by Palisades Partners, a multi-family trust that owns 18 of the 22 retail and commercial properties on the street. These rent increases would bring the monthly going rate from about $2.50 a sq.ft. to above $4. While the merchants would no longer have to live with month-to-month leases, they would still have to commit to 3- to 5-year leases. “We decided about five or six months ago to stay, but I’ve had to kind of keep it to myself until we completed our lease negotiations,” Benton said in an interview Wednesday morning. In fact, he was already paying his higher rent for months before receiving a signed new lease last Friday. “It hurt to pay the new rent, but I had to be out there buying merchandise for this fall and for next spring,” Benton said. “I couldn’t afford to be held captive to lease negotiations.” Did Benton gain anything in the protracted negotiations involving an attorney who has been representing about a half-dozen of the Swarthmore merchants? “No, there wasn’t one concession made,” Benton replied, smiling despite the obvious challenge he now faces to increase his store’s revenue in the face of much higher overhead. “But I’m looking at this as a new situation with my landlord. I really do believe you have to have a positive landlord-tenant relationship. So I have to make the new lease work. “I’m going to tweak our business to make it as lean and mean as possible, and we’ll be receptive to carrying new products,” Benton continued. “But I’m also counting on people staying in town to do their shopping. I received incredible emotional support from the community this spring’all those letters to the editor. I hope that now translates into business support.” Meanwhile, ‘ la Tarte owners Bert and Bonnie Yellen had been quietly shopping their popular French restaurant for several weeks until deciding to post a “for sale” announcement on craigslist.org last Friday. The ad said: “Great French bistro/bakery with super large kitchen…2,400 sq. ft. Looks like you walked into Provence.” When interviewed Tuesday evening, Bert said he wanted to “make it clear that we’re not selling because of any rent increase. We have a good relationship with the landlord and they’ve offered to help us find somebody to buy the place. Basically, we’re tired, after nearly 10 years building the business, and Bonnie [‘ la Tarte’s renowned pastry chef] is still recovering from an automobile accident a year ago.” He said that Bonnie, 52, was rear-ended by a Ford Explorer traveling 40 mph, and she subsequently has had two operations on her neck vertebrae and one on her elbow, while continuing to undergo physical therapy. “She kept going into the kitchen at 5:30 a.m., six days a week, to prepare the day’s pastries,” Bert said, “but she had trouble lifting trays and doing her work. She’s extremely hands-on in the kitchen, but she realized she couldn’t keep doing it herself’it was too stressful, too painful, too exhausting’so we tried to find a new assistant. When that didn’t work out this summer, we said ‘Let’s stop while we’re still successful.’ You don’t make a fortune at this business anyway, so when the fun starts to go, it’s time to move on.” On the phone, with Bonnie in the background, Bert emphasized that “we’re not going to sell to somebody who wants to turn our place into a sushi bar or a Tai restaurant. We want a continuity’the same type of restaurant, the same quality. And we won’t sell to somebody who has never been in the restaurant business. It wouldn’t be ethical; they’d lose their money.” After selling their restaurant, the Yellens said they plan to build “a million-dollar house for $250,000” on a piece of property they own along the Gulf of California near La Paz. “Bonnie is going to build her own professional kitchen and maybe write a cookbook, and I hope to buy a sailboat,” Bert said. “Perhaps perhaps one day we’ll also open up a little pastry shop where people from the Palisades can catch up on their ‘ la Tarte favorites.”
ACLU Honors Alexandra Paul as Activist of Year

Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer
Alexandra Paul seems to lead two lives, or at least one very full one. When the Palisades actress is not filming a TV movie or training for athletic races, she’s registering voters or protesting in front of the Federal Building in Westwood. And this Sunday, September 18, she is being honored as the ACLU’s “2005 Activist of the Year” for her long history of fighting for the environment, voting rights and peace. Yet Paul, who is best known for her five-year starring role in the TV series “Baywatch,” admitted during a recent interview with the Palisadian-Post that she is a little embarrassed about the honor. “I’ve never been an activist for the publicity,” says Paul, sipping a cup of hot chocolate at Terri’s Restaurant on Swarthmore. Even the environmental TV show she co-hosts with Palisadian Peter Kreitler, “EarthTalk Today,” was something she agreed to do only after Kreitler, the executive producer, asked her to be a part of it. “I made it clear to him that I’m not a producer at heart; I just really care about the environment” says Paul, who was the 75th guest on Kreitler’s show in 2000 (when it was called “Kaleidoscope”). “Peter’s a Renaissance man himself; he has a lot of different interests but the environment is really a big focus for him.” Paul has learned a lot by researching for and interviewing guests on “EarthTalk,” including Julia “Butterfly” Hill, John Quigley and state Sen. Sheila Kuehl. “We like to talk to people who ARE the change, who don’t just talk about it but do it and are inspirational,” she says, referring in particular to her September guest, John Francis, an environmental activist who gave up motorized transportation for 22 years and speaking for 17 years. Paul herself is one of the doers. “My first environmental act was writing to President Nixon and asking him to stop pollution. My sister did it, too, and our friend Nancy. We all got the exact same letter back, so we were very disappointed,” she says, laughing. Paul, 42, grew up in the New England countryside in a household where recycling, and turning down the heat in favor of wearing a sweater or using an extra blanket, were the norm. “My mom is from England and she lived during the war, so she came from that point of view that you just don’t waste things,” Paul says. “I do not leave a room [now] without clicking off a light.” When Paul was in sixth grade, she stopped eating tuna because the fishermen’s nets endangered the dolphins. She doesn’t wear leather, silk or wool, and will not use products tested on animals (this is in her contract). “I’m against any animals in captivity,” Paul says, adding that this issue arose when she was working on “Baywatch,” and one of the scenes was being filmed at Seaworld. She asked to be written out of the scene, and she was. In addition to the environment, Paul has also chosen to focus her activism on banning nuclear weapons. “I was really afraid of nuclear war in the 1980s,” says Paul, who walked across America for more than five weeks on The Great Peace March for Global Nuclear Disarmament when she was 23. She has been arrested more than a dozen times for protesting at the Nevada Nuclear Test Site. But Paul is not an amateur protestor. She’s been trained in the peace movement and spent a week in a workshop on civil disobedience, where she learned “to maintain respect for the arresting officers, and to retain dignity in the face of confrontation. “If you’re protesting a war, you need to be nonviolent yourself,” says Paul, who spent five days in federal jail in 2003 for trespassing onto federal property during a anti-war protest at the Federal Building in downtown Los Angeles. “The reason that I’m willing to be very candid and upfront on my Web site is because I felt that the [Bush] administration and the media had not wanted people to be candid [at the beginning of the war in Iraq],” she says. Paul also exercises her freedom of expression by calling her representatives every weekday morning. “I call the White House, I call my two senators and I call my congressman, and I tell them, ‘I want us out of Iraq.'” She also believes that a sense of community is important for activists. Three weeks ago, she joined the Cindy Sheehan vigil in Pacific Palisades and was impressed with the positive energy she felt on the Village Green that evening: “My friend, Wayne Glass, who’s a Palisadian and an expert on defense policy and nuclear weapons, was counting honks’people who were honking [in support] as they went by. He counted over 100 honks in an hour and a half. I didn’t hear any negativity, and believe me, a year ago, you would have. And certainly two years ago. That’s the same thing we’re finding on the corner of the Federal Building. I guess people are changing their mind [about how they feel about the U.S. presence in Iraq] or they’re speaking their mind.” Paul says she first got involved in the anti-Iraq war activism after hearing Scott Ritter, the former UN weapons inspector, speak on the absence of Weapons of Mass Destruction in Iraq in late August 2002. The event was held at the home of philanthropists Stanley and Betty Sheinbaum’coincidentally where she will be recognized by the ACLU this weekend. “Stanley is one of my political and social activism mentors,” says Paul, who’s been attending events at the Sheinbaum’s since she was in her early 20s. Working as an actress, in a job that is not a 9 to 5, has allowed Paul flexibility to pursue and maintain a life of activism. But she says it’s an irony that, with the exception of the films and shows she’s written, produced or hosted herself, none of her onscreen work is connected to her activism. “I starred for five seasons on a show-“Baywatch”‘that was considered the least intellectual show on television,” she says. “And my friends were surprised when I said ‘yes’ to doing it, but I have to say that I had the most fun on that show, and I don’t think life has to be all about earnestness and fighting for change.” Paul most recently starred in the Lifetime Television Network thriller “A Woman Hunted,” as well as an independent feature “Landslide” and the Lifetime movie “Saving Emily.” She is starring in the upcoming Lifetime movie “A Lover’s Revenge,” which debuts October 17, and is appearing in several other television movies filmed this year. When Paul’s not working, she says she enjoys spending time with her husband, Ian Murray, a triathlon coach, in their Highlands home, where they’ve lived for two years.
Kanner Celebrates Openness and Sunlight
With neighborhoods beginning to fill up with new houses that look as if they’ve been plucked from Nantucket or the Zorro movie set, it’s refreshing to see the modernist attitude alive and ever evolving at Kanner Architects. President of the firm Stephen Kanner is his own best proponent of the simple, airy and open philosophy: the view that values materials and construction techniques as essential rather than relying on applied decoration. Kanner’s own Pacific Palisades house, completed four years ago on Almar, is a star in his portfolio and an inspiration for many clients. The house has been on no fewer than 10 modern tours, joining classic mid-century houses designed by the Eameses, Pierre Koenig and Richard Neutra, but retains a warmth that easily envelops a family. “I hear people say they love the Eames House, but that it feels cold,” Kanner notes. Indeed, the Eames House on Chautauqua evolved from a steel bridge concept and uses steel trusses, beams and columns complemented with glass and painted cement board panels. Kanner credits people’s response to his own house'”that it feels like a family house”‘to his firm’s celebration of materials, openness and sunlight. Inexpensive materials such as fiberboard, sheer wall plywood and concrete turn into beauties simply by adding a translucent lacquer finish or leaving the trowel tracks on the concrete floors. Color and texture reign. Stephen and his wife Cynthia and children Caroline, 10, and Charlotte, 4, are committed to living in a neighborhood. In fact, when it came time to build their house, they participated in a sort of musical chairs on Almar that resulted in relocating just a block away because they wanted to stay close to their neighbors. Their friends Brad and Celia Bernstein sold their home to Steve and Cynthia, and moved next door. Whereupon the Kanners tore down that house to build their new house. The lot, the size of a standard tennis court (60′ x 120’) is surrounded by five homes. So in thinking about the 3,200-sq.-ft. house, Kanner placed his highest priority on blurring the line between inside and outside. The main part of the house, running perpendicular to the street, incorporates a guest room, kitchen and living room on the ground level; the children’s bedrooms and bathrooms, and the master suite complete the upstairs. The entry hall on the ground level connects the main house with a two-story vertical wing. “The lot was like a dark pit, so I sited the house to the north side of the lot, with the patio to the south allowing for southern light to penetrate the house,” Kanner says. Sensitive to the standards of design in the Palisades, Kanner was careful not to overwhelm the neighborhood. “When we took the design to the Civic League, the key was not to present a monster house,” he says, pointing out the generous setback from the street, 7-ft. side yard setbacks, and situating the second story on the back of the house, away from the street. Overall, Kanner is pleased with the way the house has functioned for the family, but has moved away from some of the design elements that pay homage to Pop Art, notably in the use of “porthole” windows. “This house is not what I’d design again. It proved to be a double-edged sword. On the one hand, it was a compelling design inspired by the imagery I saw as I was growing up’Googie-style drive-ins and my dad’s Pop art paintings. But on the other hand, the architectural world didn’t embrace it in a serious way, and thought it a veneer approach to architecture.” The house certainly proved to be a dead end in terms of pushing the Kanner practice in a substantially serious direction. This month the firm’started by Kanner’s grandfather Herman in 1946 and directed by his father, Chuck, until his death in 1998’is making a momentous move out of Westwood, where it has been located for the past 28 years, to a bigger space in Santa Monica. In the last few years, Kanner says, the firm has really solidified its approaches to a client’s needs, and to the site, light, views, sustainability and materials. “Now we’re looking at sustainable and recycled materials such as plastics and woods; bamboo or recycled tires for flooring materials. The firm, now with a staff of 34 architects, is really rowing in a clear direction.” The firm designs a variety of projects including retail buildings, such as the more than 50 Puma stores throughout the world; multi-housing units, such as a low-income development at the corner of 26th and Santa Monica Boulevard; commercial buildings, such as the La Brea/Slauson United Oil station; and recreational facilities, such as the gym at Palisades Recreation Center. Besides overseeing Kanner Architects, Steve is board president of the American Institute of Architects and president of the A+D Museum. His aim with the AIA this year is extending outreach to the public. “The L. A. public is not fully aware of what architects really do,” Kanner says. Often when talking to architecture students, he says many of them don’t know what the AIA does. Students and non-architects may be AIA members and receive free admission to monthly committee events on topics like the environment, health care, interiors, international practice and urban design; discounts on admission to seminars and the summer home seminars tour; and a subscription to various architectural publications. The A+D Museum is dedicated to exposing student talent to the public. “There are 12 different architectural schools in Los Angeles, whose work we highlight each year in what used to be called the 2 x 8 exhibit (reflecting eight schools); two projects from each school,” Kanner says. The museum is currently planning to relocate from West Hollywood back downtown, where it started in 2001. “We’ve found a 13,000-sq.-ft. building on 8th and Flower where we hope to house both the museum and the AIA.” He is optimistic that both will be up and running for the national AIA convention to be held in L. A. next June. Kanner’s trio of professional involvements all intertwine to nourish the story of our material landscape, from imagination to concept to design.
The Song-and-Dance Girl on the Road
By KAREN WILSON Palisadian-Post Contributor The road to Broadway stardom may be long, but one young Palisadian has already started the journey. Helene Yorke, 20, spent the summer making her professional acting debut as a member of the resident company at Music Theater of Wichita, which boasts one of the top summer stock programs for collegiate performers in the country. “It was awesome,” she says of the experience. “Best summer of my life.” For most people, Kansas isn’t the stuff of dreams. Then again, Yorke isn’t most people. Singing and dancing since age 3, she cut her teeth at Palisades Charter High School, performing leads in “Les Mis’rables” and “Crazy for You.” (Fellow students voted Yorke “Drama Queen” in the class polls.) After graduating in 2003, the honors student headed to the University of Michigan (UM), renowned for its top-notch theater program. In her first year at UM, Yorke was the only freshman cast in a featured role in the spring musical production of “Jesus Christ Superstar,” in which she played a member of the Soul Trio, a Supremes-esque girl group. As a sophomore, she understudied the roles of Cassie and Val in “A Chorus Line,” another step up the speaking-parts food chain. After “Chorus” had finished its run, Yorke began weighing summer options. In theater circles, it is widely held that a “summer stock” experience’when amateur actors spend time in a professional environment’is an important step for collegians. “If you perform a show for school, it’s more about that educational process,” Yorke says. “Summer stock is a nice bridgeway before doing Broadway or a company residency.” With that decided, she set her sights on Wichita and St. Louis MUNY, two theater companies whose stock programs are highly regarded. Yorke’s first lesson on the ins and outs of professional acting came during the cattle call: “To stage actors, auditioning is a job.” And it’s tough’her St. Louis tryout called for Yorke to sing 16 bars of music in front of an audience comprised solely of her competition. (“During auditions, I don’t worry about what other people are doing… if you’re worried about other people, you’re not growing.”) She nailed it. “Nerves are the anticipation of failure,” Yorke says, “a pointless emotion.” Her unique audition arsenal included songs from the obscure, difficult-to-sing Broadway shows “Mack and Mabel” and “Flora, the Red Menace.” At the end of the process, Yorke was offered jobs at both Wichita and St. Louis MUNY. She took a road less traveled and turned down more prestigious St. Louis. “Wichita offered me the role of Val in ‘Chorus Line,’ and a chance to perform in all five of their summer shows,” she explains. “At MUNY, I would have only been able to appear in three musicals. I would’ve gotten my Actors’ Equity card there”‘all actors appearing with that company must be members of the stage actors’ Equity guild'”but then I would’ve been forced to turn professional, and I never would have been able to do summer stock. I want time to learn more [as a student] before I turn pro.” Out of Wichita’s 500 applicants, 350 were invited to audition, and from that group, just 22 were invited to Kansas. Yorke was “thrilled” to get the job. “What I love about theater is that it’s a constant learning process,” she adds. “Summer stock is a natural progression.” Yorke arrived in Wichita prepared to work: “We staged five musicals in 10 weeks.” She was featured in the ensembles of “Seussical,” based on the books of Dr. Seuss; “Aida,” adapted by Elton John from Verdi’s opera; Mary Hart’s “Once Upon a Mattress,” and composer Maury Yeston’s “Phantom.” And, of course, “Chorus Line,” directed by Kerry Casserly, a disciple of the late Bob Fosse who had also directed Yorke in the UM incarnation. “We’d rehearse each show for 10 days,” Yorke recalls. “And we performed for paying audiences Wednesdays through Sundays. Often, we’d practice an upcoming production all day, then go out and perform a different show at night.” She had no problem memorizing lines and dance routines, but Yorke found overlapping “hard…the nice thing about a long rehearsal period is that you develop a relationship with the show and characters. In Wichita, there was no chance to do this. It was an enormous amount of material in such a short time.” (The average Broadway show has a longer rehearsal period than Yorke’s entire tenure in Kansas.) Well-known actors flew in for each production, and Yorke shared the stage with theatrical heavyweights such as Darren Ritchie, late of Broadway’s “Little Shop of Horrors,” and Nancy Lemenager, recently of the Great White Way’s “Movin’ Out” and “Never Gonna Dance.” “I remember sitting in audiences and idolizing these actors. The biggest learning experience of the summer was seeing their processes, how they prepared,” says Yorke. Another eye-opener was audience reaction to “Chorus Line,” which contains frank discourse on sexuality. “My character’s solo song was called ‘Tits and Ass,'” Yorke says. “And we were in the Bible Belt! We cut swear words from the show, but there was still local outcry. And the part they were really complaining about was my character! It was interesting, to say the least.” Asked to describe an average Wichita rehearsal period, Yorke can hardly contain her excitement: “We’d spend two days dancing and stage blocking, and four or five days learning the music. Then sitzprobe [singing to full orchestral accompaniment for the first time], and a full dress rehearsal on Tuesday night, which was always a fiasco! On Wednesday afternoon, we’d fix stuff that had gone wrong during full dress, then on Wednesday night, we opened to paying audiences.” Those spectators often sold out the company’s 2,500-seat theater. “I was about to sing my solo in front of 2,500 people, and I was like, ‘Yeah. Okay,'” she says. “I thought, ‘I got here, and I’m gonna take the most I can from it.’ No nerves.” (For the record, the Wichita Eagle’s critic gave her “special kudos.”) The connections Yorke made with fellow actors will prove invaluable. Wichita alums include Tony award winner Kristin Chenoweth and nominee Kelli O’Hara. Her inner circle includes UM roommate Andrew Keenan-Bolger, who originated the role of JoJo in the original Broadway company of “Seussical.” “The guy playing JoJo in our production needed pointers,” Yorke recalls. “I was holding out the phone saying, ‘Do you want to talk to the original?'” Making the trek to see “Chorus Line,” meanwhile, were dad Rhos, who works in software; mom Andrea, a seller at Village Books, and Helene’s grandmother. Along with her younger brothers Sudsy and Lance, all are supportive of Yorke’s career’and her recent name change. “It was time for a stage name,” she says (her legal moniker is Helene Dyke). “Yorke is my great-grandmother’s maiden name. My grandma gave me permission.” Next up? Two more years at UM, and then’who knows?’Broadway. “My goal is to be happy doing what I love,” she says. “And to win a Tony.” Careful, Helene. You might just achieve both.
‘Dead End’ Leads Nowhere
Theater Review
There’s something intriguing about a play that promises to simulate New York’s East River in one of the largest sets ever created for the Ahmanson, where you might get splashed as the characters cannonball into a six-ft.-deep orchestra pit filled with more than 10,000 gallons of water. And there’s something remarkable about experiencing the depth and height of James Noone’s richly textured “Dead End” set’four-story brick tenement buildings fitted with fire escapes, and juxtaposed with a marble Beaux Arts apartment complex. But as I sat in the front row of the Center Theatre Group’s revival production of Sidney Kingsley’s 1935 broadway hit, with a towel draped across my lap, the awe of the dramatic design quickly gave way to the baffling absence of a stimulating story and cohesive performances. By the first, early intermission, not much had happened at the wharf overlooking the East River except for a playful and energetic water show by the roughhousing Dead End Kids. Oh, and gangster Baby Face Martin (Jeremy Sisto), a former Dead End Kid, had returned to his old turf with the sentimental, albeit suspicious, look of a man seeking to reclaim something he lost. The gimpy gentle-looking guy sketching in the corner (also a former Dead End Kid) had yet to make the point of his character’s presence known. All of the main characters in “Dead End” have lost something’a mother, a childhood, an opportunity to escape the slums, a sense of hope. But while we sympathize with Tommy (Ricky Ullman), the leader of the Dead End Kids, whose boyish charm and honorable strength inspire his less fortunate and less brave friends, we don’t really understand or care about the pathetic Gimpty (Tom Everett Scott), an out-of-work architect who dreams of revitalizing the slum with a community housing project. The Pulitzer Prize-winning Kingsley (“Men in White”) was apparently “the first American dramatist to bring the mean streets of modern city life to the Broadway stage” by illuminating the devastating realities of the Depression, including the filthy living conditions of America’s poor and the common criminal fate of slum kids. When “Dead End” premiered on Broadway in the midst of the Depression, it earned one of the longest runs in Broadway history at the time, and had a profound social impact; First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt saw the production three times and FDR subsequently created a commission on slum housing. Unfortunately, the play’s political message fails to grip us, even though the issues of poverty and class divisions are particularly relevant in Los Angeles, which has the highest recidivism rate in the country. Perhaps the problem is that we aren’t moved by the characters or their co-existence in the spectacular setting. The mother-son relationship between Baby Face Martin and Mrs. Martin (Joyce Van Patten) feels forced and hastily developed. And the unbelievable love affair between Gimpty and Kay (Sarah Hudnut) is even more unemotional. One relationship that does work is that of Tommy and his protective, thick-skinned sister Drina (Kathryn Hahn), who struggles with the responsibility of raising him. Hahn and Ullman establish a believeable relationship that helps develop their individual characters. We see where Tommy learns his values and we therefore believe in his sincerity when he faces a big decision that decides his fate. Drina seems to be the best role model for Tommy’better than the depressing Gimpty and Baby Face Martin, who represent two different “futures” for Dead End Kids. The other notable performance is that of Sisto (of “Six Feet Under”) who humanizes his stereotypical gangster character through his abrupt and awkward interactions with people, revealing some of his underlying pain. One of these exchanges is with his ex-flame Francey (Pamela Gray). In a well choreographed scene, Sisto and Gray momentarily reconnect as they move around the stage’just a few feet between them’and dance out the sorrows of their fates. The only problem is that this emotionally jarring scene feels disconnected from the rest of the play. As the inaugural production of the Center Theatre Group’s new artistic director Michael Ritchie, “Dead End” might send the wrong message to dedicated Music Center theatergoers, especially if the play truly is what Ritchie called “a personal calling card of my theatrical taste.” With a cast of 42 actors (including 14 students from the USC School of Theatre) and an elaborate set that’s earned more talk than the actual production, the show is startlingly empty in its meaning. And even if the production succeeds in entertaining an audience with its live “East River,” one has to wonder if that much water wouldn’t be better utilized somewhere else, like in water-deprived California. “Dead End,” directed by Nicholas Martin, runs through October 16 at the Ahmanson Theatre, 135 N. Grand Ave. Tickets are $20 to $75. Contact: (213) 628-2772 or CenterTheatreGroup.org.
Gertrude H. Keller, 75; 45-Year Palisadian

Gertrude Haupt Keller, who was a Pacific Palisades resident for the past 45 years, died on August 30 in Santa Monica. She was 75. Born in Los Angeles on January 10, 1930, Gertrude was the daughter of Hazel and Dr. Arthur Haupt, a professor of botany at UCLA for many years. After attending University High and graduating from UCLA, she married Dr. Jeffrey Poland in Westwood. The couple lived in Germany, where Jeffrey was a university professor, until he died in 1960. Returning to the United States, Gertrude lived in an apartment in the Palisades until after marrying Maurice R. Keller in 1963, when they bought a house on Mt. Holyoke. They bought a house on Bollinger three years ago. An artistically inclined lady, Gertrude made jewelry, candles and carpets, and worked in framing stores and book stores in Westwood. Survivors include her husband Maurice, who was a construction manager for 35 years, and her sister, Dorothy Phillips of Woodland Park, Colorado. An in-home gathering of friends will be announced. Donations in Gertrude’s memory can be made to the comfort & care program for terminal cancer patients at St. John’s Hospital in Santa Monica.