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Tag: Chevy Chase

  • The Funniest Christmas Movie Is Also the Most Honest About Why the Holidays Are So Hard

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    Picking a favorite line from National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation is nearly impossible, so let’s just go with the one that struck me this year. Chevy Chase’s long-suffering Clark W. Griswold is grocery shopping with his sweet but repellent cousin-in-law Eddie, played by Randy Quaid. As they small-talk about work, Eddie asks, “Your company kill off all them people in India not long ago?” To which Clark replies, “No, we missed out on that one.” I’ve seen this movie easily dozens of times, and I’ve never before picked up on the casual horror of Eddie’s barely interested question or the way Clark reframes the slaughter as a missed opportunity. Next year, a different line will jump out at me. There’s a nearly endless supply.

    John Hughes’s Vacation films are unique in his oeuvre as a screenwriter, in that the jokes take priority over the plot; by the end of the movie, it’s hard to believe that this won’t happen all over again next Christmas, next Easter, or at Rusty’s and Audrey’s future weddings. Christmas Vacation is Hughes’s highest-octane entry in the series, the most dense with jokes; even the setups are funny (“It’s a storm sewer. If it fills with gas I pity the person who lights a match within fifty feet of it.”) Of course, many of Hughes’s movies have great bits, especially Ferris Bueller’s Day Off and Planes, Trains, and Automobiles, but in none of them is the fundamental fabric of the movie made from jokes, so many of which are delightfully wicked. Christmas Vacation landed in theaters during the holiday season of 1989. A year later, a far more sweet-hearted Hughes-scripted Christmas movie, Home Alone, would become one of the highest-grossing comedies ever, sending his work in a different direction. 

    Of the three 1980s Vacation movies, which also include the original Vacation and the 1985 sequel, European Vacation, the Christmas installment is the only one that isn’t directed by a known quantity. And yet to take nothing away from the great John Landis and Amy Heckerling, journeyman director Jeremiah Chechik does the best job in bringing all of Hughes’s gags to brilliant visual life. The movie’s comedic timing is chronometer-certified, the shot framing expert, every little detail perfect, from Cousin Eddie’s square-bottomed black dickie showing through his white V-neck sweater to the array of differently wrapped but identically shaped presents crowding the table in the office of Clark’s boss. Much more than in the first two Vacation movies, Chechik draws on the heightened visual slapstick of Warner Bros. Looney Tunes shorts, in everything from the whoosh of flame that annihilates Clark’s self-felled Christmas tree, to the cannon-fire impact of the runaway squirrel crashing into Julia Louis Dreyfus’ chest.  

    From left: Chase as Clark Griswold, Randy Quaid as Cousin Eddie in National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation.

    Warner Bros./Courtesy Everett Collection

    Christmas Vacation has the best cast of the three original movies, but less appreciated is that it also represents an inflection point in the career of Chevy Chase. The SNL alum was on a good run, coming off of Fletch and Spies Like Us and a couple of Oscar hosting gigs, but his film career fell off a ladder after this movie thanks to a series of box-office flops and his unsuitability for manning a late-night desk As time continues to churn even recent history to oblivion, it’s increasingly clear that Chase owes any shot he has at immortality to John Hughes. Thanks to the enduring power of the TV holiday movie, Chase is likely to remain forever Clark W. Griswold, the last true family man, the guy who would cut a down-payment check he can’t cover to put in a backyard swimming pool in the mostly-cold Chicago suburbs as a Christmas surprise. 

    The role is easily the high watermark of Chase’s career, largely because he commits so completely to the bit and, at 45, retains the physical agility to pull off every pratfall. Also, evident for anyone looking closely or even not too closely, Clark Griswold — like many of Chase’s best characters — is kind of an asshole himself, and for all that Chase is able to find the character’s redeeming sweetness, the joy is mostly in watching him be a prick. The extremes to which Clark will go to try to make Christmas perfect for his family reveal betray near Walter White levels of self-delusion about his own selfishness, since virtually everything he does to make his family happy has nearly the opposite effect. Despite Clark’s protestations of just wanting a “good old-fashioned Griswold family Christmas,” in a parallel-world drama version of the movie, it’s no stretch to imagine him finally being forced to confess, “I did it for me.”  

    Never is that more apparent than in the central scene that establishes the deeply nostalgic emotional stakes of the movie, when Clark accidentally gets trapped in the attic for the morning and winds up entertaining himself with reel-to-reel movies of his childhood Christmases. The look on Chase’s face as he takes in the memories is priceless, a mix of emotion and excitement, the thrill of reliving the perfect moment from the gauzy past that he’s already spent half the movie trying and failing to resurrect in the present. It’s actually the emotional core of the entire series, the best explanation of who Clark Griswold really is and why he has been relentlessly torturing his family across the United States and Europe for all these years. 

    But it’s also this desire more than anything else that makes Christmas Vacation the best and most enduring of the series — more than any other time of year, the holidays bring with them that particular mix of nostalgia and expectation around family that makes them such a fulcrum of guilt, disappointment, and regret. Hughes’s script captures perfectly the collision between our desire for the holidays to conform to the rose-colored memories of the past and the unpleasant fact that, even during the holidays, people continue to be as stubbornly imperfect as they are during the rest of the year. Clark’s parents and his in-laws always fight, and they keep fighting right through Christmas. Cousin Eddie’s myopically bad decisions and misplaced priorities are his hallmark, and here they help get a cat killed while his dog destroys Clark’s house. Clark’s boss, Frank Shirley (Brian Doyle-Murray), is a miser — why is it any real surprise that he’s cut out Christmas bonuses without telling anyone? At nearly Clark’s lowest moment, when he finally admits to his father his true memories about his childhood holidays — far from the sentimentalized reel-to-reels, they “were always such a mess” — his father replies that he only got through “with a little help from Jack Daniels.”

    The truth is that for most people, these conflicted feelings around the holidays never get resolved on Christmas Eve in a Hollywood ending. Of course neither, really, do they for Clark. Let’s not forget that, despite the deliverance of his much-needed bonus (plus 20 percent!), this is still a movie whose last scene features the Chekhov’s-gas cloud explosion of that previously defiled storm sewer, which nearly blows Santa and his reindeer out of the sky and culminates in the singing of the national anthem led by the loopy family aunt. 

    Kevin Doughten is an editor and publishing executive based in Chicago.
     

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    Julian Sancton

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  • Chevy Chase Addresses His SNL Exit 5 Decades Later

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    Nearly fifty years after his short time on Saturday Night Live, Chevy Chase addresses his exit from the show in the upcoming CNN documentary, I’m Chevy Chase And You’re Not. The trailer also hints at reflecting on the fame he gained from the success of his later work.

    Chevy Chase talks about leaving Saturday Night Live in new documentary

    Veteran actor Chevy Chase reflects on his decision to leave SNL in the new CNN documentary, I’m Chevy Chase And You’re Not. He said that it was a “mistake to leave SNL.”

    Not much else has been revealed in the trailer on the subject, aside from the fact that the documentary will air on New Year’s Day. It also features interviews from other celebrities like Martin Short, Lorne Michaels, Beverly D’Angelo, and more.

    Chase was one of the original cast members when Saturday Night Live debuted in 1975. At the time, the show was titled NBC’s Saturday Night. He starred alongside an ensemble cast that included Dan Aykroyd, John Belushi, Gilda Radner, George Coe, and others.

    He quickly became the breakout star of the show thanks to his Weekend Update segment and went on to work as both a writer and a performer.

    In 1976, a year later, the Caddyshack star decided to leave SNL after his girlfriend, Jacqueline Carlin, expressed no desire to move to New York. He left the show and relocated to Los Angeles, where the two later married.

    Despite his short stint on the show, his work earned him two Primetime Emmy awards in 1976. During its 1976–1977 second season, SNL replaced him with Bill Murray. Nonetheless, Chase remained connected to the show as a recurring guest host until 1999. After departing from the series, the actor continued to garner massive stardom with movies like Caddyshack and National Lampoon’s Vacation.

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    Harsha Panduranga

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  • ‘National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation’ screens in Orlando with star Chevy Chase in the house

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    Let’s hear what he has to say Credit: screengrab/National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation

    Mark the 35th anniversary of holiday cinema classic National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation with a screening at the Dr. Phillips Center, featuring special guest Chevy “Clark Griswold“ Chase.

    After the show, Chase will speak about the 1989 film and take questions from the audience alongside his wife, Jayni. The film has held up remarkably well over the years, and Chase’s over-the-top performance as the frazzled Griswold patriarch cracking up under the pressure of making the trip perfect is much of the reason why.

    But will the famously prickly Chase be naughty or nice in person? Much like opening a Christmas gift from a loose-cannon relative, half the fun is the nervous uncertainty.

    7:30 p.m., Friday, Nov. 21, Walt Disney Theater, Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts, 445 S. Magnolia Ave., drphillipscenter.org, $53-$295.


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    Music, vendors, food trucks, a children’s holiday village and a fireworks display

    The game is only half the fun

    Holiday tradition returns for a 13th year



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    Emmy Bailey
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  • Houston Concert Watch 9/3: Chris Brown, Parker McCollum and More

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    From the beginning – and here I mean the beginning of the show, not time, as “Saturday Night Live” hasn’t been on the air that long – SNL has earned a reputation for being a real pressure cooker. Long hours. Sleepless nights. Unreasonable demands. Backstage fights.*

    Add to that a tradition of management treating the careers of performers and writers in a rather cavalier fashion, with loyal team members being dismissed on a whim, often times in a cruel (or at the very least, insensitive) fashion.

    Over the past several days, as SNL ramps up to the debut of its 51st season, a number of personnel have received their walking papers. Cast members Michael Longfellow, Devon Walker and Emil Wakim, along with writer Celeste Yim, are all out. Heidi Gardner announced that she will not return next season, but speculation is that she moved on of her own accord. Walker has stated publicly that the atmosphere at SNL could be “toxic as hell.” Wakim called his firing “a gut punch.”

    According to numerous books and articles (Live from New York: The Complete, Uncensored History of Saturday Night Live as Told by Its Stars, Saturday Night: A Backstage History of Saturday Night Live, Lorne: The Man Who Invented Saturday Night Live), much of SNL’s dysfunction can be laid at the feet of the show’s producer, Lorne Michaels.

    A man who has long cultivated an image of inscrutability, Michaels is someone who, it would seem, likes to play with his employee’s heads in a variety of ways, so as to keep them off-balance. Making people wait in his reception room for hours. Sometimes not telling future cast members that they had been hired. Playing favorites. Putting tremendous pressure on his staff and mandating unreasonable deadlines “because that’s the way we’ve always done it.”

    Michaels is an old dog, so it is highly unlikely that he is going to learn any new tricks. Maybe it’s time for a new dog, er, producer?

    *When Chevy Chase returned to SNL to host an episode after leaving the show at the end of its first season, he managed to get into a fist fight with Bill Murray prior to the broadcast. Chase had been taunting Murray for several days, but it was Murray who got the last word, hollering “Medium talent! Medium talent!” as he and Chase were pulled apart.

    Ticket Alert
    If you like your rock and roll lewd and lascivious, you just might dig a double bill featuring Buckcherry and Nashville Pussy on Sunday, September 28, at Warehouse Live Midtown. Tickets are on sale now for a show that will have something to offend just about everyone.

    Austin’s Uncle Lucius returned to the Heights Theater on Friday, October 10, with its signature blend of rock and roll, country and blues. Tickets are currently on sale, and they are going fast.

    Lorrie Morgan is the real deal, first appearing onstage at the Grand Ole Opry to sing “Paper Roses” when she was only 13. During the ‘90s, she racked up an armload of platinum and gold albums by bringing a touch of pop into a more traditional country sound. Morgan will perform at the Dosey Doe on Saturday, February 21, as part of the venue’s popular “dinner and a show” format.

    Born in Serbia, guitarist Ana Popovic knew her way around a guitar by the time she was a teenager, steeped in American rock and blues. She’s known for her guitar chops, but Popovic is an equally expert vocalist. You can catch her act on Friday, February 22, at the Dosey Doe Big Barn. Again, it’s a dinner / show thing, so go there hungry and ready for some chicken-fried steak.

    Concerts This Week
    The Fixx was among the best of the early MTV bands, with a sleek rock sound and a commanding visual style. But what really distinguished the band was a run of well-crafted songs like “One Thing Leads to Another,” “Red Skies at Night,” “Stand or Fall” and “Saved by Zero.” Significantly, most of the musicians from the Fixx’s golden era are still around, including Cy Curnin (vocals), Jamie West-Oram (guitar), Rupert Greenall (keyboards) and Adam Woods. Return to those thrilling days of yesteryear tonight at the House of Blues.
    Nelly is at the Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion on Thursday, on a bill that also includes Chingy and Ja Rule. Early in his career, Nelly set himself apart from the pack by emphasizing his Midwest roots in St. Louis during an era that was dominated by rap from the east coast, the west coast and the south. In addition to his activities as a recording artist, Nelly has appeared in films (The Longest Yard) and television (“CSI: NY”). And if that weren’t enough, Nelly can also boast a third-place finish on “Dancing with the Stars” in 2020.
    The Pixies have long been considered one of the most influential alt-rock bands, inspiring acts like Nirvana and Smashing Pumpkins. Almost 40 years on, the band is still touring with a lineup that includes three of the band’s original members (Black Francis, vocals and guitar; Joey Santiago, guitar; and David Lovering, drums). Catch the Pixies on Saturday at the White Oak Music Hall and learn more by consulting this week’s interview with Santiago in the Houston Press.
    Conroe-born Parker McCollum will be at the Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion on Saturday as part of his “What Kind of Man” tour, on a bill that includes Kameron Marlowe and Vincent Mason. The country juggernaut has been on a roll this year, headlining a Rodeo Houston performance at NRG Stadium in March and releasing the album Parker McCollum in June. Traditionalists will be cheered to hear that the new record has a lean production style, harkening back to his debut, The Limestone Kid.
    Several significant rap shows are coming up this week, including performances from Nelly (see above) and Chris Brown (see below), along with NBA YoungBoy at Toyota Center on Saturday. To clarify, “NBA” has nothing to do with the National Basketball Association. It stands for “never broke again.”

    It’s been quite a year so far for YoungBoy. In April, he completed over three years of house arrest stemming from convictions for the distribution and manufacture of drugs, possession of stolen firearms and a federal firearm charge. Well, I supposed it gave him plenty of time to write new material and prep for his current tour. And by the way, don’t despair if you couldn’t get tickets for YoungBoy’s concert this week. He will return to Toyota Center for another show on Tuesday, October 28.
    R&B singer, songwriter, rapper, dancer and actor Chris Brown has been a lightning rod for controversy over the years, but things seem to have calmed down somewhat in his sphere as of late. Brown will bring his “Breezy Bowl XX” event to Daikin Park on Monday, with a lineup that also includes Summer Walker and Bryson Tiller. Brown is pulling out all the stops for this tour, promising a show that features multiple LED screens, pyro, lasers, inflatables and AI-generated video material.

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    Tom Richards

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  • Big Chevy Chase food hall The Heights closes after less than 2 years – WTOP News

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    A food hall welcomed along the Chevy Chase, Maryland, border with D.C.’s Friendship Heights has closed after less than two years in the business.

    File photo of The Heights food hall. (Courtesy Common Plate Hospitality)

    An eclectic food hall that was welcomed along the Chevy Chase, Maryland, border with D.C.’s Friendship Heights and lunchtime-spare restaurant scene has closed after less than two years in the business.

    The Heights took over space formerly occupied by PF Chang’s restaurant, including a total of 10,000-square-feet with outdoor dining and a variety of food styles. Among the original tenants: both Michelin-starred chefs and a James Beard Award nominee.

    At its peak, the half-dozen food stalls also induced full-service restaurant Urbano and full-service Bar, The Heights Bar.

    The Heights’ last day, at 5400 Wisconsin Avenue, was Sunday, Aug. 24.

    “After many wonderful memories, The Heights Food Hall will be permanently closing our doors. This space was built for gathering, sharing food and creating moment together — and that is exactly what you all made it. We’ll carry those memories with us,” Food Heights posted on social media.

    Common Place Hospitality, the restaurant group behind Urbano, launched the food hall after it underwent months of delays in December 2023.

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    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    Jeff Clabaugh

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  • ‘All About That Bass’: Meghan Trainor joins WTOP with Md. native Chris Olsen before Jiffy Lube Live – WTOP News

    ‘All About That Bass’: Meghan Trainor joins WTOP with Md. native Chris Olsen before Jiffy Lube Live – WTOP News

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    Meghan Trainor brings her “Timeless” tour to Jiffy Lube Live in Virginia on Tuesday, Sept. 17 alongside Chevy Chase, Maryland, native Chris Olsen.

    WTOP’s Jason Fraley previews Meghan Trainor & Chris Olsen at Jiffy Lube Live (Part 1)

    She’s all about that bass, no treble — and he’s all about returning to his home base, no trouble.

    Meghan Trainor brings her “Timeless” tour to Jiffy Lube Live in Virginia on Tuesday alongside singer, actor and TikTok guru Chris Olsen, who grew up in Chevy Chase, Maryland.

    “I feel like I’ve listened to this [radio station] so many times in my life,” Olsen told WTOP. “This would be the radio that I’m pretty sure would be on every morning driving to school. This is D.C. This is it. We’ve made it.”

    “Chris’ hometown!’ Trainor told WTOP. “He came on my podcast called ‘Workin’ On It’ and we realized our birthdays were the same exact date, Dec. 22, so we fell in love like, ‘Whoa, we’re soul mates, we are the same person.’ We’ve been inseparable ever since and I hired him to help me with my TikToks and be my best friend.”

    While Olsen was born in D.C., Trainor was born in Nantucket, Massachusetts, and grew up listening to 2000s pop.

    “I was listening to T-Pain, I loved T-Pain,” Trainor said. “I was listening to whatever my brothers put on, then sometimes I would get to have a say and put Britney Spears on, but luckily my brothers loved the Backstreet Boys and NSYNC with me so we would all listen to that together. Then my dad would play us old-school music, so we would listen to Ray Charles and Stevie Wonder. Then my mom would play a lot of Madonna and Billy Joel.”

    In 2014, she signed with Epic Records for her first album “Title” (2015) with hits like “Dear Future Husband” and “Lips Are Movin.’” Trainor co-wrote the songs with Baltimore native Kevin Kadish, who attended Owings Mills High School and created his own music management major at the University of Maryland in College Park.

    “I was 18 I think and I was living in Nashville and I drove to Franklin to write with a guy named Kevin Kadish,” Trainor said. “We were working together on the whole album and just kept getting confused by what we were hearing from the label and managers. We were hearing different things, so we were like, ‘Let’s write a song to them saying, ‘Your lips are movin’, I know you’re lying because your lips are movin’, you just talk in circles.’”

    Of course, the album’s biggest pop hit was the catchy No. 1 smash “All About That Bass.”

    “[Kevin] had a title in his notes that said ‘all bass, no treble,’ and I was like, ‘Well, all the kids say, ‘I’m all about that’ when they’re saying I like something, and literally I’m all about my booty, my thickness and I got no treble,” Trainor said. “Like in music, bass is thick and treble is the thin, high parts … so I was like, ‘I’m all about that thick,’ you know? Then we wrote it that day in 45 minutes and I was like, ‘No one is ever gonna hear this.’”

    “All About That Bass” was not only nominated for song of the year at the Grammys, it was also nominated for the top prize of Record of the Year alongside Taylor Swift’s “Shake It Off,” Sia’s “Chandelier,” Iggy Azalea and Charlie XCX’s “Fancy” and Sam Smith’s “Stay With Me,” which ultimately won.

    “He got me,” Trainor said. “I’ve never felt cooler. I was like fan-girling the whole night. I was living at like Park La Brea [in Los Angeles] and I was like, ‘What am I doing here?’ It was the best night of my life.”

    The following year, Trainor returned to the Grammys to win best new artist just a few months before the release of her second album “Thank You” (2016), featuring the hit single “No.”

    Her third album “Treat Myself” (2020) delivered even more hits with “No Excuses” and “Nice to Meet Ya” featuring Nicki Minaj, followed by her Seth MacFarlane duet “White Christmas” on her holiday album “A Very Trainor Christmas” (2020). Her fifth album “Takin’ it Back” (2022) delivered the hit song “Made You Look” with funny turns of phrases like, “Call up your chiropractor just in case your neck breaks.”

    Now, her latest album “Timeless” just dropped in June with the single “Been Like This” featuring T-Pain.

    “‘Been Like This,’ thank you for playing it on the radio,” Trainor said. “‘Whoops’ is one of my favorites, that’s been playing on the radio recently so thank you, then we just released the deluxe, which has my favorite songs: ‘Make a Move,’ ‘Booty’ and ‘Criminals,’ which is also in the new TV show ‘The Perfect Couple,’ which is my dream come true. It’s crazy seeing all these famous talented actors [like Nicole Kidman] dancing to my pop song.”

    At this point, they had to run to get ready for their next show, doing makeup in the green room.

    “I’m starting my makeup, so I have beautiful, blue, glittery eyes right now,” Trainor said. “You should do that for your hometown. For the hometown, if you show up, Chris is going to have gorgeous makeup that I’m gonna do.”

    “Meghan is the makeup artist for this tour, so she is doing it for me as well,” Olsen said. “I’m ready. If people show up for the show, I will show up with the glittery makeup. … My parents still live in Maryland, so I’m still a DMV girl.”

    WTOP’s Jason Fraley previews Meghan Trainor & Chris Olsen at Jiffy Lube Live (Part 2)

    Listen to our full conversation on the podcast below:

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    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    Jason Fraley

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  • Chevy Chase will not get historic DC neighborhood designation, at least for now – WTOP News

    Chevy Chase will not get historic DC neighborhood designation, at least for now – WTOP News

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    One of D.C.’s wealthier neighborhoods, Chevy Chase, will not get the designation of being a historic district, at least for now. D.C.’s Historic Preservation Office says it will not consider the application, citing lack of community consensus. 

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    Chevy Chase in D.C. will not get historic designation, at least for now

    One of D.C.’s wealthier neighborhoods, Chevy Chase, will not get the designation of being a historic district, at least for now.

    With recent median home sale prices between $1,237,500 and $1,700,000, an application to create the Chevy Chase Historic District was filed in 2002, which would be D.C.’s 38th neighborhood historic district.

    However, the District’s Historic Preservation Office said Monday, in a status update, that it will not consider the application, citing “the lack of community consensus.”

    Proponents for the Chevy Chase Historic District have said it was needed to protect the neighborhood’s “small town in a big city” feel from future development.

    “It is clear that public sentiment on the proposal is sharply divided,” according to the Historic Preservation Office update.

    The proposed historic district included 41st Street, Western Avenue, Chevy Chase Parkway and Military Road Northwest as its boundaries.

    The application was filed as the District sought to fill-in the community’s commercial corridor, along Connecticut Avenue, and redevelop the Chevy Chase Neighborhood Library and Chevy Chase Community Center to include affordable housing and new public buildings.

    “Given the lack of community consensus and concerns about the proposed boundaries, as well as the need to conduct a citywide analysis in order to more effectively evaluate historic district nominations, HPO is not prepared to recommend that the current proposal for a Chevy Chase Historic District be considered by the [Historic Preservation Review Board] at this time,” the status update read.

    Opponents of creating a historic district have said there are no distinctive architectural styles in Chevy Chase that require preservation, and making the community more inclusive should be prioritized over seeking the historic designation.

    Beginning in fall 2024, the District’s Historic Preservation Office said it “will begin data collection, mapping, and equity analysis of historic resources across the District. This work will be critical in informing HPO’s evaluation of future historic district proposals.”

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    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    Neal Augenstein

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  • M. Emmet Walsh, unforgettable character actor from ‘Blood Simple,’ ‘Blade Runner,’ dies at 88

    M. Emmet Walsh, unforgettable character actor from ‘Blood Simple,’ ‘Blade Runner,’ dies at 88

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    LOS ANGELES – M. Emmet Walsh, the character actor who brought his unmistakable face and unsettling presence to films including “Blood Simple” and “Blade Runner,” has died at age 88, his manager said Wednesday.

    Walsh died from cardiac arrest on Tuesday at a hospital in St. Albans, Vermont, his longtime manager Sandy Joseph said.

    The ham-faced, heavyset Walsh often played good old boys with bad intentions, as he did in one of his rare leading roles as a crooked Texas private detective in the Coen brothers’ first film, the 1984 neo-noir “Blood Simple.”

    Joel and Ethan Coen said they wrote the part for Walsh, who would win the first Film Independent Spirit Award for best male lead for the role.

    Critics and film geeks relished the moments when he showed up on screen.

    Roger Ebert once observed that “no movie featuring either Harry Dean Stanton or M. Emmet Walsh in a supporting role can be altogether bad.”

    Walsh played a crazed sniper in the 1979 Steve Martin comedy “The Jerk” and a prostate-examining doctor in the 1985 Chevy Chase vehicle “Fletch.”

    In 1982’s gritty, “Blade Runner,” a film he said was grueling and difficult to make with perfectionist director Ridley Scott, Walsh plays a hard-nosed police captain who pulls Harrison Ford from retirement to hunt down cyborgs.

    Born Michael Emmet Walsh, his characters led people to believe he was from the American South, but he could hardly have been from any further north.

    Walsh was raised on Lake Champlain in Swanton, Vermont, just a few miles from the U.S.-Canadian border, where his grandfather, father and brother worked as customs officers.

    He went to a tiny local high school with a graduating class of 13, then to Clarkson University in Potsdam, New York, and the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in New York City.

    He acted exclusively on the stage, with no intention of doing otherwise, for a decade, working in summer stock and repertory companies.

    Walsh slowly started making film appearances in 1969 with a bit role in “Alice’s Restaurant,” and did not start playing prominent roles until nearly a decade after that when he was in his 40s, getting his breakthrough with 1978’s “Straight Time,” in which he played Dustin Hoffman’s smug, boorish parole officer.

    Walsh was shooting “Silkwood” with Meryl Streep in Dallas in the autumn of 1982 when he got the offer for “Blood Simple” from the Coen brothers, then-aspiring filmmakers who had seen and loved him in “Straight Time.”

    “My agent called with a script written by some kids for a low-budget movie,” Walsh told The Guardian in 2017. “It was a Sydney Greenstreet kind of role, with a Panama suit and the hat. I thought it was kinda fun and interesting. They were 100 miles away in Austin, so I went down there early one day before shooting.”

    Walsh said the filmmakers didn’t even have enough money left to fly him to New York for the opening, but he would be stunned that first-time filmmakers had produced something so good.

    “I saw it three or four days later when it opened in LA, and I was, like: Wow!” he said. “Suddenly my price went up five times. I was the guy everybody wanted.”

    In the film he plays Loren Visser, a detective asked to trail a man’s wife, then is paid to kill her and her lover.

    Visser also acts as narrator, and the opening monologue, delivered in a Texas drawl, included some of Walsh’s most memorable lines.

    “Now, in Russia they got it mapped out so that everyone pulls for everyone else. That’s the theory, anyway,” Visser says. “But what I know about is Texas. And down here, you’re on your own.”

    He was still working into his late 80s, making recent appearances on the TV series “The Righteous Gemstones” and “American Gigolo.”

    And his more than 100 film credits included director Rian Johnson’s 2019 family murder mystery, “Knives Out” and director Mario Van Peebles’ Western “Outlaw Posse,” released this year.

    Johnson was among those paying tribute to Walsh on social media.

    “Emmet came to set with 2 things: a copy of his credits, which was a small-type single spaced double column list of modern classics that filled a whole page, & two-dollar bills which he passed out to the entire crew,” Johnson tweeted. “’Don’t spend it and you’ll never be broke.’ Absolute legend.”

    Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

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    Andrew Dalton, Associated Press

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  • 1 killed, 2 injured in Montgomery Co. crash on Connecticut Avenue – WTOP News

    1 killed, 2 injured in Montgomery Co. crash on Connecticut Avenue – WTOP News

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    A man was killed and two people were injured overnight Saturday during a crash in Montgomery County, Maryland, according to police.

    A man was killed and two people were injured overnight Saturday during a crash in Montgomery County, Maryland, according to police.

    It happened around 12:20 a.m. when they were called to the area of Connecticut Avenue at Quincy Street for the report of a crash, police said in a news release Sunday.

    Police said that a 2023 Dodge Ram 1500 pickup truck and a 2012 Mercedes SLK were traveling northbound on Connecticut Avenue before Quincy Street when they “collided in the roadway,” police said.

    After the initial crash, police said that the Dodge then struck a Pepco pole and several trees. The driver of the Dodge, Jobani Alfredo Cruz, 29, of D.C. was ejected from the truck and died on the scene, police said.

    A woman who was a passenger in the Dodge was injured and transported to an area hospital with injuries that aren’t considered life-threatening, according to police.

    During the crash, the Mercedes overturned, police said. The man driving the Mercedes was also transported to area hospital with non-life-threatening injuries, police said.

    Montgomery County police, Chevy Chase Village police and Montgomery County Fire and Rescue all responded to the scene.

    The investigation into the crash is active and ongoing investigation and police ask anyone with information about the crash contact detectives at 240-773-6620.

    See a map of the crash location below:

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    Valerie Bonk

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  • Borscht Belt comedian Freddie Roman dies at age 85

    Borscht Belt comedian Freddie Roman dies at age 85

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    Comedian Freddie Roman, the former dean of The Friars Club and a staple of the Catskills comedy scene, has died. He was 85.

    Roman died Saturday afternoon at Bethesda Hospital in Boynton Beach, Florida, his booking agent and friend Alison Chaplin said Sunday. His daughter told the entertainment trade Deadline that he suffered a heart attack that morning.

    Roman made his name performing at hotels and resorts in the Catskill Mountains, also referred to as the Borscht Belt for the largely Jewish crowd that vacationed there and the comics such as Mel Brooks and Don Rickles who entertained them. He later performed at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas and Bally’s Grand in Atlantic City, and he roasted the likes of Rob Reiner, Chevy Chase, Jerry Stiller and Hugh Hefner. He also conceived of “Catskills on Broadway,” where he and his friends Dick Capri, Marilyn Michaels and Mal Z. Lawrence brought their nostalgia-tinged, Catskills-flavored standup to New York. He also appeared in various television shows and films over the years, including “Red Oaks” on Amazon.

    “A great loss to the world of comedy,” Paul Reiser wrote on Twitter. “He was such a huge supporter & mentor when I was starting out. A GREAT comic, the ultimate pro with the biggest heart. I will miss our phone calls and his big, beauty laugh.”

    Born Fred Kirschenbaum on May 28, 1937 in Newark, New Jersey, and raised in Jamaica, Queens, Roman got a taste for stand-up comedy early thanks to his family. His uncle and grandfather owned the Crystal Spring Hotel in the Catskills, where Roman started emceeing at age 15.

    In “Catskills on Broadway,” Roman commented about everything from his childhood in Queens to his “retirement life” in Florida.

    “I took a cholesterol test,” Roman quipped. “My number came back 911.”

    The New York Times, in its review of the show in 1991, wrote, “Catskill resorts may be fighting the recession, but Catskill comedy has not lost its flair.”

    The show, he’d later say, changed his life. It went to Broadway and then toured around the country, and Roman would continue performing for years to come. He was also made Dean of the New York City Friars Club, where he mentored many aspiring comedians and infused the private club with young talent.

    One of those young comedians was Jeffrey Ross, who said of Roman in 2003 that, “When I was becoming a member, there weren’t many of us who were younger. … But Freddie would always come over and spend time with me and my friends and be real lovable.”

    Capri, in the same interview, said Roman was the perfect comedy ambassador.

    “He’s the social director of the world,” Capri said. “And he loves every second of it.”

    The stint lasted a bit longer than he expected. Roman joked of his tenure that, “Eleven years ago I became president for two years. I’m like the Fidel Castro of comedians. I’m president for life.” In 2014, he was succeeded by Larry King.

    But, he told Atlantic City Weekly in 2011, the greatest job he ever had was opening for Frank Sinatra, when his regular opening comedian Tom Dreesen wasn’t available. Roman learned about the opportunity on a layover in Chicago, left the plane and boarded another for Philadelphia to make the show in Atlantic City with just a few hours to spare.

    He left the stage to see Sinatra laughing. The singer even called him back for another bow.

    “Frank hugged me, and I saw my wife and daughter and they were crying,” Roman said. “It was unbelievable. … Nothing ever topped working with Sinatra.”

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  • Borscht Belt comedian Freddie Roman dies at age 85

    Borscht Belt comedian Freddie Roman dies at age 85

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    Comedian Freddie Roman, the former dean of The Friars Club and a staple of the Catskills comedy scene, has died. He was 85.

    Roman died Saturday afternoon at Bethesda Hospital in Boynton Beach, Florida, his booking agent and friend Alison Chaplin said Sunday. His daughter told the entertainment trade Deadline that he suffered a heart attack that morning.

    Roman made his name performing at hotels and resorts in the Catskill Mountains, also referred to as the Borscht Belt for the largely Jewish crowd that vacationed there and the comics such as Mel Brooks and Don Rickles who entertained them. He later performed at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas and Bally’s Grand in Atlantic City, and he roasted the likes of Rob Reiner, Chevy Chase, Jerry Stiller and Hugh Hefner. He also conceived of “Catskills on Broadway,” where he and his friends Dick Capri, Marilyn Michaels and Mal Z. Lawrence brought their nostalgia-tinged, Catskills-flavored standup to New York. He also appeared in various television shows and films over the years, including “Red Oaks” on Amazon.

    “A great loss to the world of comedy,” Paul Reiser wrote on Twitter. “He was such a huge supporter & mentor when I was starting out. A GREAT comic, the ultimate pro with the biggest heart. I will miss our phone calls and his big, beauty laugh.”

    Born Fred Kirschenbaum on May 28, 1937 in Newark, New Jersey, and raised in Jamaica, Queens, Roman got a taste for stand-up comedy early thanks to his family. His uncle and grandfather owned the Crystal Spring Hotel in the Catskills, where Roman started emceeing at age 15.

    In “Catskills on Broadway,” Roman commented about everything from his childhood in Queens to his “retirement life” in Florida.

    “I took a cholesterol test,” Roman quipped. “My number came back 911.”

    The New York Times, in its review of the show in 1991, wrote, “Catskill resorts may be fighting the recession, but Catskill comedy has not lost its flair.”

    The show, he’d later say, changed his life. It went to Broadway and then toured around the country, and Roman would continue performing for years to come. He was also made Dean of the New York City Friars Club, where he mentored many aspiring comedians and infused the private club with young talent.

    One of those young comedians was Jeffrey Ross, who said of Roman in 2003 that, “When I was becoming a member, there weren’t many of us who were younger. … But Freddie would always come over and spend time with me and my friends and be real lovable.”

    Capri, in the same interview, said Roman was the perfect comedy ambassador.

    “He’s the social director of the world,” Capri said. “And he loves every second of it.”

    The stint lasted a bit longer than he expected. Roman joked of his tenure that, “Eleven years ago I became president for two years. I’m like the Fidel Castro of comedians. I’m president for life.” In 2014, he was succeeded by Larry King.

    But, he told Atlantic City Weekly in 2011, the greatest job he ever had was opening for Frank Sinatra, when his regular opening comedian Tom Dreesen wasn’t available. Roman learned about the opportunity on a layover in Chicago, left the plane and boarded another for Philadelphia to make the show in Atlantic City with just a few hours to spare.

    He left the stage to see Sinatra laughing. The singer even called him back for another bow.

    “Frank hugged me, and I saw my wife and daughter and they were crying,” Roman said. “It was unbelievable. … Nothing ever topped working with Sinatra.”

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