These newish versions from Mast Landing and Banded might change your mind about the style.
Leslie Bridgers
Columnist
Leslie Bridgers is a columnist for the Portland Press Herald, writing about Maine culture, customs and the things we notice and wonder about in our everyday lives. Originally from Connecticut, Leslie came to Maine by way of Bowdoin College and never left. She joined the Portland Press Herald in 2011 as a reporter and spent seven years as the paper’s features editor, overseeing coverage of arts, entertainment and food.
‘Mack & Rita,’ a comedy about aging women, grows old fast
Growing old is a privilege denied to many. It’s hard to remember that – particularly if you’re a woman surrounded by anti-aging serums and polishing scrubs and needles that can take away every one of those hard-earned facial lines. Even though the pandemic inspired many women to embrace their gray hair, aging is still thought […]
Society Notebook: Scarborough Marsh Audubon Center marks 50 years
A fundraiser celebrating the busy hut brought in $30,000.
Deep Water: ‘Moon Jellyfish,’ by Richard Foerster
Maine poems edited and introduced by Megan Grumbling.
Best-Sellers: ‘The Midcoast,’ ‘Downeast’
The current top-selling fiction and nonfiction books at Longfellow Books in Portland.
Art review: Space, ICA mark anniversaries with exemplary shows
The Portland gallery and the institute at Maine College of Art & Design are respectively celebrating 20 and 25 years since opening.
Bar Guide: Peruse Maine-made items with wine in hand at The Maker’s Galley
The Commercial Street market and cafe also serves bloody Marys at its weekly Pajama Brunches.
Indie Film: If a film about abortion could change minds, it’s this one
PMA Films is screening ‘Never Rarely Sometimes Always’ on Thursday.
Society Notebook: Maine Island Trail Association splits its annual celebration into 3
The nonprofit held Toast to the Coast parties in different locations, including Fore Points Marina in Portland.
Art review: New takes on classical art forms in two Portland shows
Cove Street Arts focuses on portraiture, while Greenhut Galleries displays John Whalley’s trompe l’oeil paintings.