accessAtlanta

City & State or ZIP Tonight, this weekend, May 5th...
City & State or ZIP
City & State or ZIP Tonight, this weekend, May 5th...
City & State or ZIP
New url for Peach Buzz

Bookmark this new url for Peach Buzz.. We have moved to Wordpress!

Access Atlanta > Blog > Archives > 2008 > February > 08 > Entry

Memorial Day jazz moving from Piedmont to Woodruff

Weather conditions notwithstanding, Camille Love, Atlanta’s director of the Office of Cultural Affairs, assured us Friday that there will be no jazz drought this Memorial Day.

In fact, in addition to the city’s official 31st annual Atlanta Jazz Festival weekend May 24-26, fans can also expect official festival events sprinkled throughout the city all through May.

There is one major tweak this year, however.

Due to drought restrictions in Piedmont Park, the outdoor concerts set for Memorial Day weekend will be held in the smaller Woodruff Park downtown.

“There will be a slightly different ambience, but plenty of good jazz,” Love told Buzz Friday between budget meetings. While still a family-friendly weekend, grills and tents won’t be permitted in Woodruff Park. Lawn chairs and blankets — other festival staples — will be welcomed, Love said. Food and merchandise vendors will also be on hand.

Billed as “Thirty One Days of Jazz,” celebrating the 31 years of the festival, the events will be scattered through four Atlanta area neighborhoods throughout May. The venues will be named in April.

As for specific performers, Love won’t name names until the official Atlanta Jazz Festival news conference in April.

“I can tell you this, though,” Love said. “We have some of the city’s best musicians, and we’ll be celebrating jazz all over Atlanta.”

For info: 404-853-4234 or www.atlantafestivals.com.

TURNER’S NEW TITLE

Captain Outrageous has a brand-new title: admiral. This week, as part of the celebration of the grand opening of the Ted’s Nebraska Grill in Omaha, Neb., CNN founder Ted Turner was named an “admiral” in “the Great Navy of the State of Nebraska.” Presenting the honor to Turner was Nebraska Lt. Gov. Rick Sheehy. We’re told the unusual tradition “began in 1930 when Gov. Charles W. Bryan went on vacation and Lt. Gov. T.W. Metcalfe took over the affairs of state. Acting Gov. Metcalfe wanted to do something to honor his friends, so he created The Great Navy of the State of Nebraska and appointed his friends as admirals. Since then, Nebraska admiralships have been bestowed on many notable Nebraskans and others who have contributed to the state, “promoted the good life in Nebraska, and warranted recognition by the governor.”

And since Turner Enterprises owns five ranches in Nebraska, representing 425,221 acres, and more than 21,000 head of bison in the state, well, you get the idea.

But given how land-locked Nebraska is, smack dab in the center of our nation, we just can’t seem to get the recurring image of Ted Turner in an admiral’s hat in a bathtub out of our mind. And the answer is yes: Buzz is seeking professional help …

HERE A WILL, THERE A WILL

Still think your family is a smidge dysfunctional? Nah. This week, an attorney for five of James Brown’s children questioned the late soul singer’s ex-trustees during a court hearing on whether they hid one of Brown’s earlier wills.

The former trustees dismissed the allegation, saying the only valid will was the one filed in 2000, which left clothes, jewelry, boats and automobiles for Brown’s six adult children.

The children were largely left out of the financial portion of that will, which leaves the bulk of the soul singer’s money to charitable trusts.

Attorneys for the children argue that earlier wills drafted by their father cast doubt on whether he truly wanted to leave his estate to charity.

Ex-trustee Alford Bradley, who spent years handling Brown’s financial affairs, said the singer changed his will several times.

“When Mr. Brown would fall out with somebody, he would change his will,” Bradley said.

Brown died here in December 2006, throwing into turmoil his will and the future of his trust. The contents and total value of both are still unclear.

Five of Brown’s children say their late father’s 2000 will should be invalidated because his former advisers used undue influence to get him to create charitable trusts that the advisers would profit from.

The next hearing will be Feb. 20.

CELEBRITY BIRTHDAYS

Today: News correspondent Roger Mudd is 80. Singer Carole King is 66. Actor Joe Pesci is 65. Author Alice Walker is 64. Actress Mia Farrow is 63. Actress Judith Light (“Ugly Betty”) is 59. Country singer Travis Tritt (right) is 45.

Sunday: Actor Robert Wagner is 78. Singer Roberta Flack is 71. Actress Laura Dern is 41. Actress Elizabeth Banks (“Scrubs”) is 34. Actress Emma Roberts (“Unfabulous,” “Nancy Drew”) is 17.

ON MY iPOD

“General Hospital” actor Anthony Geary: “I’ve got about 7,000 songs in my library and 3,000 on my Nano. I listen to a lot of standards. I’ve got Frank Sinatra, Nat King Cole and Michael Buble. I also like Stan Getz, and I have quite a few Dinah Washington selections on there. I don’t download much though. I usually buy the entire album and add it into my laptop. I’d be surprised if I’ve ever downloaded even a dozen things.”

Contributing: News services

If you have a tip, call 404-526-2749. Or fax 404-526-5509. Or e-mail: buzz@ajc.com.

Permalink | |

 

Sign up for our weekend events newsletter »

Become a fan of accessAtlanta on Facebook »