Dougy Center’s 2016 Reflection Benefit Raises Over $685,000

Dougy Center’s 2016 Reflection Benefit Raises Over $685,000

Portland, OR. Over 500 community leaders gathered at the Portland Art Museum on May 6th to support The Dougy Center, a National Center for Grieving Children & Families. The 2016 Reflection Benefit & Auction was presented by KinderCare Education. This year’s event raised the most money in Dougy Center history. The night included a silent auction showcasing a gallery of one-of-a-kind art designed by children and teens, an elegant dinner, a testimonial by a Dougy Center family and a live auction. The benefit, Co-Chaired by Dougy Center Board Member Kevin Sailor and his wife Jessica, raised over $685,000 for programs to support children, teens, young adults, and their families grieving a death or those living with a family member with an advanced serious illness.

Artwork was a popular auction item.

Artwork, like “The Blue Dragon”  were popular auction items.

Benefit packed house_1_sm

There was a lot of excitement about picking the Boxster raffle ticket. It's first time in 19 years – The Dougy Center Porsche Boxster Raffle completely sold out of all 2,000 tickets.

There was a lot of excitement about picking a Boxster raffle ticket. It’s first time in 19 years that The Dougy Center Porsche Boxster Raffle completely sold out of all 2,000 tickets.

The winner, David Jackson of Beaverton, Oregon, who was not in attendance, was exhilarated (and shocked) to receive a phone call from The Dougy Center’s Executive Director, Brennan Wood, with 500 benefit attendees cheering his good fortune in the background.

The Boxter winner, David Jackson of Beaverton, was not at the auction, but posed with his new car when it was delivered.

From The Dougy Center:

The Dougy Center provides support in a safe place where children, teens, young adults and their families who are grieving a death can share their experiences. Locally, The Dougy Center serves over 500 children and 350 adult family members each month with peer support groups in Portland, Hillsboro and Canby. Through the National Center for Grieving Children & Families, The Dougy Center also provides information and training locally, nationally and internationally to individuals and organizations seeking to assist children in grief. The Dougy Center does not charge for its support services, and relies solely on the generous donations of individuals, corporations and foundations.

Ride Connection Accessible Transportation Services are “Going Places”

Ride Connection Accessible Transportation Services are “Going Places”

Portland, OR. Ride Connection held its annual fundraising event, Going Places, at the Oregon Zoo on May 13th, raising close to $72,000. Nearly 220 guests, including Joe Connors, Lisa Schmidt and Jeff and Lisa Faust, (representatives from event sponsor Pacific Continental Bank) showed their support for the organization by participating in live and silent auctions as well as a paddle raise. Customers also told their stories to highlight the work Ride Connection does in the community to provide accessible transportation options throughout the Portland region. The Ride Connection network is made up of a collection of agencies who serve older adults and people with disabilities as well as low-income individuals and general public by offering a variety of transportation options in Clackamas, Multnomah, and Washington counties. Together, it provided nearly 500,000 rides and supported over 2,000 individuals with training and access to public transportation last year. This video tells the story of Ride Connections:

Representatives from event sponsor, Schetky NW Bus Sales, Randy, Dave and Chase Schetky and guests.

Representatives from event sponsor, Schetky NW Bus Sales, Randy, Dave and Chase Schetky and guests.

 Ride Connection customers Donna and Tonja were featured in the event video and shared their story during the program.

Ride Connection customers Donna and Tonja were featured in the event video and shared their story during the program.

Event sponsor, Holst Architecture and guests.

Event sponsor, Holst Architecture and guests.

Guests Adam and Laura Troxel and Jeff and Amy Olson enjoyed the photo booth.

Guests Adam and Laura Troxel and Jeff and Amy Olson enjoyed the photo booth.

From Ride Connection:

Ride Connection is a private, non-profit organization based in Portland, Oregon, dedicated to coordinating and providing transportation services to people with limited options in Clackamas, Multnomah and Washington counties. Our organization has been linking transportation to people in our communities for over 25 years.

We believe transportation is a basic human right. Access to transportation means mobility, and being mobile allows a person to connect with his or her community and other essential life destinations.

Three Featured Playwrights Bring New Scripts to Portland for Development;  Two Workshops for PCS’s Upcoming World Premiere Productions

Three Featured Playwrights Bring New Scripts to Portland for Development; Two Workshops for PCS’s Upcoming World Premiere Productions

Portland, OR. Three scripts have been selected from more than 175 submissions to be featured in Portland Center Stage’s 18th annual festival for new work development, JAW: A Playwrights Festival. One performance will be a new musical event from Blitzen Trapper: Wild and Reckless. Playwright Kevin Artigue will develop The Forcings, a magic realism-infused play that stares unflinchingly at a family in crisis and a civilization barreling toward extinction; Mia Chung will develop Catch as Catch Can, a story exploring the shifting roles we play in the presence of family; and Nathan Dame will develop The Saints, a funny and poignant journey of a young woman making her way back to hope. To add to the excitement of this year’s JAW festivities, PCS will also workshop two of the world premiere productions that are slated for its 2016-2017 season: Wild and Reckless and Lauren Weedman Doesn’t Live Here Anymore by Lauren Weedman (The People’s Republic of Portland, 2013 and 2015).

The playwrights will gather at PCS for two weeks of script development with directors, actors and dramaturgs, concluding with public readings of their scripts. Free JAW public readings will be presented on Saturday, July 30 (12:00 p.m., 4:00 p.m. and 8:00 p.m.) and Sunday, July 31 (4:00 p.m. and 8:00 p.m.). A JAW Kickoff event will be held on Friday, July 29 at 8:00pm, featuring staged readings from Promising Playwrights, the six Portland-area high school students selected from PCS’s Visions and Voices playwriting program. Throughout the festival, Press Play performance pieces will be presented before and after the readings, along with a selection of Community Artists Labs. A full schedule will be announced at a later date. All of the staged readings are free, no reservations necessary. Attendance for the labs is limited and determined by lottery. Find more information at www.pcs.org/jaw.

ABOUT JAW: A PLAYWRIGHTS FESTIVAL

Since launching in 1999, JAW (short for Just Add Water) has created a space for playwrights to have complete creative control and the resources to work on whatever they want to develop in their scripts. Each year, playwrights are chosen from nearly 200 submissions nationwide to collaborate with directors, dramaturgs, actors and other theater professionals from across the United States. Of the 60+ plays that have received workshops at the festival, more than 50% have received world premiere productions at a regional theater, ranging from the NY Theater Workshop to Steppenwolf Theatre, to Berkeley Repertory Theatre to Portland’s own Third Rail Repertory Theater. Fourteen JAW plays have received fully staged productions at PCS, giving Portland a strong national reputation for not only incubating new work, but helping to see that work to successful fruition.

JAW COMPANY

The JAW Festival Director is PCS Associate Artistic Director Rose Riordan, and her JAW team at PCS includes: JAW Festival Co-Producer Kelsey Tyler; JAW Festival Co-Producer Brandon Woolley; JAW Festival Company Manager Don Kenneth Mason; JAW Literary Manager Benjamin Fainstein; JAW Literary Associate Mary Blair; and countless hardworking PCS staff and volunteers that bring their talents and energies to JAW each year.

2016 JAW FEATURED PLAYWRIGHTS

THE FORCINGS BY KEVIN ARTIGUE

Nobody knows what happened to “The 17,” a group of environmental activists whose disappearance from an anti-Exxon protest site in Mexico sparked international outrage. Ernie Ledezma, the public face of Exxon’s operations, navigated the corporation through the scandal, and now, on the eve of his retirement, his loved ones have gathered to celebrate. But the ghosts that haunt his achievements cast a shadow over the festivities, and the appearance of a mysterious stranger triggers a deluge of secrets to slip through his fingers. Rife with magic realism, The Forcings is a dynamic new play that stares unflinchingly at a family in crisis and a civilization barreling toward extinction.

KEVIN ARTIGUE is a playwright and filmmaker born and raised in Southern California and based in New York City. He’s currently a member of the 2016 Interstate 73 Writers Group, and formerly part of The Public Theater’s 2014-2015 Emerging Writers Group. His play The Most Dangerous Highway in the World premiered in San Francisco in May, produced by Golden Thread and directed by Evren Odcikin. His plays have been presented and developed with The Public Theater, National New Play Network, New York Theater Workshop, Theatre of NOTE, Playwrights Foundation, Great Plains Theatre Conference, Yale Cabaret, Iowa New Play Festival, Golden Thread and the Playwrights’ Center in Minneapolis. A graduate of the Iowa Playwrights Workshop, Kevin was awarded a Provost’s Visiting Writer Fellowship at the University of Iowa, where he taught creative writing.

CATCH AS CATCH CAN BY MIA CHUNG

The Phelans and the Lavecchias grew up in each other’s homes, sharing the good times and the bad in their tight-knit middle class community. But when Tim Phelan moves back home with unexpected news, the members of this extended family find their bonds and very identities put to the test. Catch as Catch Can makes unconventional use of theatrical conventions to explore the shifting roles we play in the presence of family.

MIA CHUNG is the author of You for Me for You, This Exquisite Corpse and Skin in the Game. You for Me for You had its UK premiere at The Royal Court Theatre in London (December, 2015) and is published by Bloomsbury Methuen Drama. The play premiered at Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company (Washington, D.C., in association with Ma-Yi Theater Company and supported by the National Endowment for the Arts, 2012) and has also been produced by Company One Theatre, Portland Playhouse and Mu Performing Arts/Guthrie Theater. Mia’s work has been supported by awards, fellowships, and workshops, including the Bay Area Playwrights Festival, Berkeley Rep’s Ground Floor, Civilians’ R&D Group, Hedgebrook Women Playwrights Festival, Icicle Creek Theatre Festival, Inkwell Theatre, LAByrinth, Playwrights Realm, RISCA, Southern Rep Theatre, Stella Adler Studio and TCG. She is a member of New Dramatists, a Huntington Playwright Fellow, and an emeritus member of the Ma-Yi Writers Lab.

THE SAINTS BY NATHAN DAME

As a child, Madison always felt adrift. She was shuffled around from foster home to foster home, and things haven’t gone much more smoothly in adulthood. Just when her struggle for stability threatens to consume her, a chance encounter with a pair of young missionaries challenges Madison to put her past to rest and determine who she wants to become. Over the course of one gritty January in New York, The Saints chronicles the stingingly funny and poignant journey of a young woman making her way back to hope.

NATHAN DAME has had original plays and musicals developed by Roundabout Theatre Company, The New Group, Barrow Street Theatre, Woodshed Collective, In Absentia Productions and New York Theatre Experiment. He was a writer on The New Ensemble’s Experiment America, produced by the Institute of Contemporary Art in Boston and A.R.T. He was also a writer on Woodshed Collective’s The Office Project. He is represented by Ross Weiner at ICM Partners.

WORLD PREMIERE WORKSHOPS

WILD AND RECKLESS:

A NEW MUSICAL EVENT FROM BLITZEN TRAPPER

Portland folk rockers Blitzen Trapper refuse to be pinned down and boxed in. The acclaimed band has mixed genre after genre into their musical arsenal over the fifteen years of playing together. Now they’re unleashing their sound — and knack for lyrical storytelling — on the PCS stage. They’ve mined their Oregonian roots to create a show that asks: What’s the sound of a life falling through the cracks? Fusing the energy of a rock concert with the imaginative possibility of the theater, Blitzen Trapper and PCS join forces in this new project, tracing the unforgettable stories of ordinary Americans caught in an extraordinary struggle to not get left behind. The world premiere production of Wild and Reckless will run March 16 through April 30, 2017, on Portland Center Stage’s U.S. Bank Main Stage.

LAUREN WEEDMAN DOESN’T LIVE HERE ANYMORE

BY LAUREN WEEDMAN

Lauren’s current obsessions: love and heartbreak; big hair and tight jeans; Loretta Lynn and John Prine — or songs she thinks make her look skinny and appropriately tragic. The hilarious and versatile Lauren Weedman (Bust, The People’s Republic of Portland) knows a thing or two about love gone wrong, and she’s ready to sing her heart out about it (Yes! Lauren sings!) and tell you a few tall tales, too. Lauren will be joined by a band of fine musicians; and we’re pretty sure her hair will be bigger than ever. The world premiere production of Lauren Weedman Doesn’t Live Here Anymore will run March 17 through April 30, 2017, on Portland Center Stage’s U.S. Bank Main Stage.

LOCATION: All JAW events happen at Portland Center Stage’s home, the Gerding Theater at the Armory, 128 NW Eleventh Ave., Portland, Ore., 97209

ACCESSIBILITY: PCS is committed to making our performances and facilities accessible to all of our patrons. Learn more at http://www.pcs.org/access/.

AGE RECOMMENDATION: Recommended for high school age and up. Children under 6 are not permitted.

JAW: A Playwrights Festival is supported in part by The Kinsman Foundation, Don and Mary Blair, Ronni Lacroute, WillaKenzie Estate, and a grant from the Oregon Cultural Trust: Oregonians sustaining, developing and participating in our arts, heritage and humanities. Additional support is provided by the Regional Arts & Culture Council/Work for Art and the Oregon Arts Commission. Portland Center Stage’s 2015-2016 season is funded in part by Season Superstars Tim and Mary Boyle and Lead Corporate Champion Umpqua Bank; Supporting Season Sponsors the Regional Arts and Culture Council, The Wallace Foundation, Work for Art and KINK FM. The official hotel partner for PCS is the Mark Spencer Hotel. PCS is a participant in the Wallace Foundation’s Building Audiences for Sustainability Initiative, a four-year effort with a nationwide cohort of 26 performing arts organizations.

Portland Center Stage inspires our community by bringing stories to life in unexpected ways. Established in 1988 as a branch of the Oregon Shakespeare Festival, PCS became an independent theater in 1994 and has been under the leadership of Artistic Director Chris Coleman since May 2000. The company presents a blend of classic, contemporary and original productions in a conscious effort to appeal to the eclectic palate of theatergoers in Portland. PCS also offers a variety of education and outreach programs for curious minds from six to 106, including discussions, classes, workshops and partnerships with organizations throughout the Portland metro area.

The Gerding Theater at the Armory houses the 590-seat U.S. Main Stage and the 190-seat black box Ellyn Bye Studio. It was the first building on the National Register of Historic Places, and the first performing arts venue, to achieve a LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) Platinum certification. The Gerding Theater at the Armory opened to the public on Oct. 1, 2006. The capital campaign to fund the renovation of this hub for community artistic activity continues.

 

30th annual Oregon Episcopal School Auction Raises $520,000

30th annual Oregon Episcopal School Auction Raises $520,000

Portland, Oregon. It was a star-studded night at the 30th annual Oregon Episcopal School auction. Over 300 guests walked the red carpet past student paparazzi to celebrate the Golden Age of the Silver Screen. “Aardy Goes to Hollywood,” held at Montgomery Park, featured Auction Chair Michelle Fitzhenry, Co-Chair Hilary O’Hollaren, Master of Ceremonies Cameron Jack, and Auctioneer Kelly Russell.

OES kids rally the troops.

OES kids rally the troops at the March 12th event.

OES Parent Volunteer Carol Timm Sells Raffle Tickets

OES Parent Volunteer, Carol Timm, Sells Raffle Tickets.

OES Student ‘Paparazzi’ Welcome Auction Guests

OES Student ‘Paparazzi’ Welcome Auction Guests

Scene-stealing OES students appeared in a video entitled “A Second Home,” and then spoke to the audience on what it means to be an Aardvark. By the time the credits rolled at the end of the evening, the behind-the-scenes crew returned with box-office receipts totaling over $520,000.

The OES Auction is held every spring. Proceeds support the Aardvarks Advocate Skills and Knowledge (AASK) community educational partnership program, employee professional growth and development, and other important projects that enhance both the OES campus and student learning experiences.

About OES:

THE ESSENTIALS

  • PreK-12 college preparatory independent school
  • 850 students from the Northwest and around the world
  • Day program for PreK-12, and boarding program for grades 9-12
  • Small classes, superb faculty, individualized education
  • Global experiences across six continents through exchange programs, winterim trips and curricular connections
  • Episcopal tradition and heritage
  • Fifteen minutes from downtown Portland, an hour from the Cascade Mountains and less than two hours from the Oregon Coast

OUR VALUES

OES provides the next generation of global leaders with the skills needed to thrive in a changing world:

  • The ability to think critically and communicate clearly
  • The ability to engage with people from across the U.S. and around the world
  • The ability to work effectively as part of a team in a collaborative community
  • The ability to understand and appreciate the diversity of the world’s religious traditions
  • The ability to make sound ethical decisions
Here’s a List of Interactive Fountains and Splash Pads at Portland Parks

Here’s a List of Interactive Fountains and Splash Pads at Portland Parks

Portland, Or. With record-breaking temperatures on the way, Portland Parks is getting out the word about great places to cool off. Here’s that all important list! 

Interactive Fountains

Splash Pads

Splash pad are typically turned on starting on the Friday before Memorial Day and run through the end of September, from 11:00 AM to 9:00 PM daily.