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New Year's BLUES
 
Now that Dick Clark has abandoned one of America's most enduring traditions (the Times Square New Year's Eve party), sold his soul and moved his TV special to Vegas, it's time to look to other programming options. For those who want to rock out, there's MTV. To usher in 1998 with the news, there's CNN. If El NiÒo's on your mind as the clock strikes midnight, there's the Weather Channel.

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If you have the blues, however, local producer and director Kathy Rankin offers another New Year's choice. She taped Jimmy Thackery and the Drivers' Sept. 6 show at the Aladdin Theater, then edited in interviews with the itinerant blues guitarist, and will air the footage on Paragon Cable's Channel 21 on Dec. 31 at 11 pm. The 95-minute film will be rebroadcast Jan. 6 at 3 pm and Jan. 10 at 9 pm.

It might not be as festive as watching a ball drop while a million New Yorkers count backwards from 10, but for blues aficionados, the Thackery concert will be the next-best way to start the new year. --Richard Martin

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ALTERNATIVES to Jingle Bells

Think there's nothing to do on Christmas but eat, open presents and watch football? Actually, there are plenty of possibilities for the tradition-flouting reveler. Here are some suggestions.

1. Fly somewhere: Air fares are extremely reasonable on Christmas day. A one-way plane ticket from PDX to Los Angeles is almost $200 cheaper on Christmas Day than it is on Christmas Eve. Plus, the airport isn't crowded, and you probably won't have to sit next to a large
 family.

2. Ski: Lift lines are usually shorter on Christmas Day (all the local ski areas are open), and the lodges prepare cafeteria-style stuffing, cranberry mold and sliced turkey with gravy.

3. Read: Powell's Books will be open from 10 am to 7 pm on Christmas Day.

 4. Drink: Most of Portland's neighborhood taverns are open on Christmas Day. Hotel bars--try Jake's, the Mallory, the Benson, the Heathman, or the new Portland Steak and Chop House in the Embassy Suites--are not only open, but also full of jolly travelers, and most have specials on winter ales.

5. Listen to hip-hop: Local acts Izaya, G-ism, Kenny Mack, Cool Nutz, B Sharp, Mack & Rob, Maniac Loc and Mixmaster KD will perform at Satyricon for the second-annual holiday hip-hop hoedown.

6. See a movie: Act III theaters are open, and Good Will Hunting, the new Gus Van Sant film, finally opens all over Portland on Dec. 25, along with several other Oscar-wanting blockbusters.
 --Brooke DeNisco

 

GUS AND PORTLAND:

TWO GREAT TASTES THAT TASTE GREAT TOGETHER

Gus Van Sant is Portland's unofficial cinematic ambassador. Has it helped the local film industry? As Van Sant's latest, Good Will Hunting (see Screen review), is sure to thrust him into the mainstream, WW asked David Woolson, executive director of the Oregon Film & Video Office (a state agency responsible for marketing Oregon as a film location and resource for film and television), to explain Van Sant's effect upon his adopted hometown.

WW: What's the relationship between Gus Van Sant and Oregon's film industry?

David Woolson: He is obviously very helpful to us in terms of our efforts to keep and put Portland on the map as far as Hollywood is concerned. He also works intimately with relatively small crews, in comparison to productions of similar sizes and budgets. So most of his crew have moved up very rapidly through their respective positions, whether through construction, props, wardrobe, whatever. Gus is clearly identified as being in Portland, and he's pleased to work from here and go to Hollywood just when he needs something.

Has the controversial nature of his films had a detrimental effect in luring productions here?

I wouldn't say he gives Portland a negative image. He has done some hard-hitting films, but I think there's just an honesty to them that really stands out. Whether a person loves one of his films or not, there's always a certain level of appreciation in how he makes them. I've never gotten a reaction like "After seeing Drugstore Cowboy, there's no way I'm filming in Portland!"

Is he someone who "gives back?"

I think he's been a contributor, not just with the film-production community, but with his time and efforts across the board. There's a lot of causes, like Outside In, that he believes in very sincerely. Some folks, once they taste success, it really changes them. Gus seems pretty unaffected, very committed to the community.

Has his success made Portland a sought-after location?

His success hasn't directly resulted in other projects, but I think he's a very good testament that Portland has a thriving, creative production community. While our business is generally "let's hustle Hollywood and get shoots here," we're very interested in showing how we can grow film and video from inside and out. People like Gus are key to get that happening.
 --Dale E. Basye

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Yuppies Get HIP

Hark! Is that style I hear, knocking on the door of our provincial little burg, hoping to gain entrance? Two years ago, Jason Brown and Andy Crawford opened their first Poker Face shop at 128 NE 28th Ave. But the small boutique--crammed with everything from vintage Fred Perry tennis shirts to the Poker Face specialty, vintage suits and dresses--has grown too big for its britches. So on Dec. 2, Brown and Crawford opened a second Poker Face shop at 128 SW 3rd Ave. This deep, stark space, which they have kept open and roomy except for the racks along the walls and a few down the middle, is reminiscent of the haute couture Valentinos and Armanis of New York's Madison and Chicago's Michigan avenues. The fabrics here aren't all silks and cashmeres that feel like butter, but for those of you who don't dig wrinkles and don't own an iron, this is the place--you'll find polyester, funky eyewear and the most eclectic collection of shoes and boots in town.

The gear at the original location is "more for the clubgoers into mod, rockabilly and swing," according to Brown, and it will remain the same. The clothes at the new store, though, are "fast enough to wear to a club, but classic enough to wear to the office." Does this mean Brown and Crawford have shifted targets from the underemployed underground crowd to a more yuppified mainstream scene? Perhaps, but at least we'll see some better-dressed young professionals.
 --Geoffrey W. Abraham

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