The Mercury News

Theater recovers some stolen costumes

- Sal Pizarro COLUMNIST

After a truly terrible start to the year, there’s been some good news lately for San Jose Dance Theatre. You might remember that nearly 100 of the company’s handmade costumes were stolen when its storage space was broken into this month.

That amounted to thousands of dollars of work and threatened the upcoming May production of “The Sleeping Beauty,” not to mention future production­s including San Jose’s longestrun­ning version of “The Nutcracker.”

Artistic Director Linda Hurkmans said that on Tuesday a woman posted on Next Door that she found a trash bag with 16 tutus in it left in the street at Bernal Park, at Seventh and Hedding streets in San Jose. Another person who was aware of the theft told her to contact San Jose Dance Theatre. Unfortunat­ely, only the bottoms were in the bag and the tunic tops are still missing.

“Of course, we are very happy to have these back but hope to recover more of the almost 100 costumes stolen,” Hurkmans said.

More good news is that $10,000 has been donated to the fund set up to replace the stolen costumes. You can contribute to the cause at sjdt.org/donate and if you’re in the Northside area of San Jose, keep your eye out for any tulle fabric sticking out of suspicious bags. You just might make a ballerina very happy.

THE REST OF THE STORY >> I recently wrote about the 50th anniversar­y of the first print appearance of the term “Silicon Valley” and learned from David Laws, semiconduc­tor curator at the Computer History Museum, that some stories are just too good to be true.

After Ralph Vaerst‘s death in 2001, his wife told my former Merc colleague Mike Cassidy that her husband was the guy who first said the magic words to Electronic News journalist Don Hoefler. But Laws talked to John Vincler, co-owner of Vincler Communicat­ions in Redwood City, who says it was a couple of marketing guys who put the Silicon Valley idea in Hoefler’s mind at a lunch in San Francisco. He went back to the office, changed the title of his

piece to “Silicon Valley U.S.A.” and sent it off into history.

Vincler was working for Electronic News at the time and says he tagged along on the lunch, which makes him a primary source. Vincler told Laws that Vaerst was a friend of Hoefler’s and they often lunched at Walker’s Wagon Wheel in Mountain View, but he was not at that particular meeting in S.F.

Given that all this happened in 1971 and it’s hard to get the story straight, it’s stunning anyone believes a word about the Peloponnes­ian War.

THE TIMING COULD HAVE BEEN BETTER >>

Wouldn’t you just know it? Guadalupe River Park Conservanc­y Executive Director Jason Su announced this week that the Rotary Playgarden, the accessible playground that’s one of the park’s most popular features, would reopen Saturday. That’s right, just as an atmospheri­c river was dumping a boatload of much-needed rain on the South Bay.

But when the weather clears up, the Playgarden still will be there. There are rules, of course, including masking, social distancing, a limit of 60 visitors at a time and a maximum visit of 30 minutes. I don’t know about yours, but my kids would raise heck about that last one, so I’m glad they don’t wear watches. I’ll tell ’em it’s been an hour and they might buy it.

FAREWELL, BUT NOT GOODBYE >>

Former San Francisco Mayor Willie Brown‘s weekly column in the San Francisco Chronicle comes to an end today after running more than 12 years, but he told the Los Altos Rotary Club this week that he’s not necessaril­y riding off into the sunset.

“At some point, you will hear and see Willie Brown,” said Brown, who neverhasha­daproblem with being seen or heard. “You might even see me in another publicatio­n because I’m a great lover of newspapers. At almost 87 years of age, starting a new career is a challenge for anybody.”

Brown said he looks forward to the day when the pandemic has ended and he can return to San Francisco’s restaurant­s and other cultural attraction­s — in part to show off his new clothes.

“I have literally put together a whole new wardrobe,” the noted clotheshor­se told the club Thursday afternoon. “My late friend Wilkes Bashford would have loved it, but I don’t have anywhere to wear my clothing. I suspect on some days I may have to change clothes two or three times a day.”

BE LIKE AMANDA >> Ok,we are all still reeling from the powerful performanc­e by National Youth Poet Laureate Amanda Gorman at the inaugurati­on of President Joe Biden on Wednesday. The Harvardedu­cated, Los Angeles native show stealer put to words what so many people in this country were feeling.

But Janice Lobo Sapigao, Santa Clara County’s current poet laureate, knows Gorman is not the only young person in this country with a voice that demands to be heard. That’s why she is championin­g the Santa Clara County Youth Poet Laureate program, to create a community of younger voices.

“Youth are a vulnerable population in this current era we are living in,” she writes. “They are the ones staying home to protect us and keep us safe from COVID-19, they are the ones working and contributi­ng to our local and national economies as essential workers, they are at school and meeting with friends through a social media app or computer screen. So much has been taken from them, but their voices will remind us to give back to them what they give us: hope.”

Go to sccyouthla­ureate. com to find out how to apply and learn more about youth writing workshops. Like they say in commercial­s, we’re waiting to hear from you.

 ??  ??
 ?? COURTESY OF SAN JOSE DANCE THEATRE ?? These are some of the tutus that were among items stolen from a San Jose Dance Theatre storage space and recovered from a trash bag at San Jose’s Bernal Park on Tuesday.
COURTESY OF SAN JOSE DANCE THEATRE These are some of the tutus that were among items stolen from a San Jose Dance Theatre storage space and recovered from a trash bag at San Jose’s Bernal Park on Tuesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States