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Green-Rainbow gubernatorial candidate Jill Stein and Membership Director Patrick Burke will be at Tuesday's meeting.

Green-Rainbow Party Mobilizing in the Berkshires

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff
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LENOX, Mass. — The term "green" has swiftly become shorthand for thoughtful alternatives — in energy, in food and now, in Massachusetts, in political parties.

Local Green-Rainbow Party activists are hoping to keep voters thinking green with a "public mobilization" on Tuesday night from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. at the Lenox Library to lay the groundwork to grow at both the state and local level.

Lee Scott Laugenour of Lenox, one of the organizers and the Green-Rainbow candidate for state representative in the last election, said the response so far has been great.

"I'm thrilled with the RSVPs we've had," he said recently, adding that the party's platform seems to be connecting with voters. The meeting has been moved to the library's Welles Gallery to accommodate the expected turnout. "It's about tax fairness, and real health care and real infrastructure improvement and education ... it sounds like something radical but these are the larger issues that people did respond to."

The party's gubernatorial candidate Jill Stein and Membership Director Patrick Burke will be attending the meeting, which will include forming town and ward committees.

The Green-Rainbow Party of Massachusetts' showing in the November election boosted it to "major party" status, meaning that it will now be automatically listed on voter registration forms along with the Democratic and Republican parties. People could select the party before but they had to check a box and write it in.

It was Nat Fortune's 5 percent polling for state auditor that put the party back on the forms (where it resided for a couple years after the 2002 election) and gubernatorial candidate Jill Stein took 1 percent but there's no mistake that Berkshire County was far more enamored of the party's possibilities.

The best showings came from Laugenour, who polled 18 percent against popular incumbent Rep. William "Smitty" Pignatelli in the 4th District, and Mark Miller, the former Berkshire Eagle editor who came within striking distance of Rep. Christopher Speranzo with 45 percent of the vote in the 3rd District.

"They came out for Nat Fortune and Jill Stein a little bit more than average," said Laugenour, who also noted his and Miller's showing. "We're thrilled with those results. Those people who voted Green for the first time are breaking a habit and it isn't all that easy for voters to break that habit."

To keep major party status — and make it easier for people to break old habits — the Green-Rainbow Party has to register at least 1 percent of the state's voters. Of the state's 4.2 million registered voters, 1.5 million are Democrats and less than half-million Republicans; more than 2 million aren't registered with any party.

The Green-Rainbow Party needs about 42,000 people to check its box on the voter registration form. The way to do that is by doing more local outreach, say party activists, something major party status will help make easier.

"It's easier for people to decide to join us but it also allows us to be more active in the local community," said Laugenour, because the status allows the creation of town party committees. "Most people have considered us a party but not the way Massachusetts decides it's a full party."

The designation also lifts some campaign fundraising limits although Green-Rainbow is the only party in the state that does not accept accept corporate or lobbyist contributions and neither do its candidates.

Laugenour and Darlene Baisley of Lee, both whom were representatives to the Green-Rainbow convention last month, are hosting the meeting. They've invited Rebublicans and Democratics to provide an overview and suggestions on how local party committees work, and how they might work together. Other items on the agenda will be membership growth, voter education, and organizing for future campaign support.

Anyone interested in learning about the Green-Rainbow Party is invited to attend. RSVP is suggested to berkshiregreens@gmail.com.

If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.

Prima Music Foundation To Perform at Ventfort Hall

LENOX, Mass. — Prima Music Foundation returns to the Berkshires with a series of summer concerts at Ventfort Hall.

The first concert in the series will take place on Thursday, June 27 at 4 pm with. There will be a cash bar serving beer and wine and will open one half hour before the concert.

Join Artistic Director, Anastasia Dedik, and the Prima Music Foundation who will present Piano Extravaganza with piano works by J.S. Bach, F. Chopin, C. Chaminade and S. Prokofiev performed by pianists Victor Rosenbaum, Anastasia Dedik, Visha Nguyen and Anna Shelest.

According to a press release:

Anastasia Dedik, born in St. Petersburg into a family of distinguished musicians, holds degrees and honors from the St. Petersburg Conservatory, Oberlin Conservatory, and The Juilliard School. Anastasia’s transformative experience at Oberlin as a female Russian immigrant inspired the creation of the Prima Music Foundation—a non-profit dedicated to nurturing and showcasing talented pianists. Through PMF, Anastasia offers performance opportunities and educational guidance, including master classes with esteemed instructors. The annual Rising Stars Piano Camp in Berkshires is held at BMS from June 22 to the 29. The Camp provides an exceptional learning environment, fostering the growth of young artists. As the Artistic Director of the Summer Concert Series at Ventfort Hall in Lenox, Anastasia showcases both established and emerging talents, with ticket proceeds supporting scholarships for the Camp. PMF's primary focus is providing scholarships to those in need.
 
American pianist Victor Rosenbaum has concertized widely as soloist and chamber music performer in the United States, Europe, Israel, Brazil, Russia, and Asia in such prestigious halls as Tully Hall in New York and the Hermitage in St. Petersburg, Russia. Recently retired from the faculty of New England Conservatory in Boston where he taught for more than fifty years, he chaired its piano department for more than a decade, and was also Chair of Chamber Music.
 
Nguyen Visha was born in Vietnam and holds a PhD from Moscow State Conservatory. She is the laureate of international competitions, including 1st prize at the Rubinstein international competition (Paris, 2008), 1st prize at the Russian Scriabin Conservatory (Paris, 2009), 2nd prize at the International Olympic of Art (Moscow, 2011) and 3rd prize at Scriabin’s International Competition in Moscow (2012). Due to the war in Ukraine she had to move to the USA with her husband, a renowned Russian pianist and teacher and their young child. She continues her musical path in New York City, teaching piano to kids, and at the same time, playing concerts with unique programs. She is the only Vietnamese pianist who played and recorded all 48 Preludes and Fugues, all 6 partitas and Goldberg-variations by Bach.
 
Hailed by The New York Times as a pianist of “a fiery sensibility and warm touch,” Anna Shelest has appeared at numerous venues including Alice Tully Hall and Carnegie Hall’s Stern Auditorium in New York, the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., Wiener Konzerhaus in Vienna, and Palacio de Bellas Artes in Mexico City. Anna’s ongoing project, Donna Voce, started in 2019 as a series of recordings surveying music for solo piano and piano and orchestra by women composers from the last three centuries. A graduate of The Juilliard School, Anna makes her home in New York City with her husband and two sons. To learn more, please visit www.AnnaShelest.com


Tickets are $45 general admission. Reservations are required as seats are limited. For reservations visit https://gildedage.org/pages/calendar or call  (413) 637-3206. Note that all tickets are nonrefundable and non-exchangeable. The historical mansion is located at 104 Walker Street in Lenox.

 

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