Rockaway Drama: Romeo & Juliet — This Weekend, Aug. 22–24

 Rehearsal in action! Josh Armstrong (left), Eric Dahl (center), Steve Hyltons (Right)
Rehearsal in action! Josh Armstrong (left), Eric Dahl (center), Steve Hyltons (Right).  Photo by: Jena Cumbo

It’s the perfect, hot, sunny beach day — yet fifteen dedicated actors, some from Rockaway and others from afar, head up the stairs to the small rehearsal space at the Knights of Columbus on Beach 90th Street, as they have been for months. The scene: discipline and dedication, with laughter and serious tone scattered throughout the hours. Sword fights! Stops and starts, iced matcha, tension over creative, 5-inch tan, sparkly high heels, and drama twirled into the must-do energy — all in service of one shared goal: bringing live theater to Rockaway.

This spirit fuels Shakespeare on the Rocks, a new theater company led by producers and co-directors Elwin Cuevas and Robert Bryn. Cuevas is an NYC SAG-AFTRA actor, an activist and boundary-pushing theatre officiant. Bryn, a poet, filmmaker, playwright, and Wild Yak— now channeling decades of storytelling to directing. Both artists live in Rockaway—Cuevas for three years and Bryn for decades—bringing distinct pieces of their lived experiences on the peninsula to the production, which are woven into the subtext of the performance.

Romeo (Ellington-Blue Chapman) and Juliet (Jeniece Brown) running lines
Romeo (Ellington-Blue Chapman) and Juliet (Jeniece Brown) running lines.  Photo by: Jena Cumbo

It’s the perfect, hot, sunny beach day — yet fifteen dedicated actors, some from Rockaway and others from afar, head up the stairs to the small rehearsal space at the Knights of Columbus on Beach 90th Street, as they have been for months. The scene: discipline and dedication, with laughter and serious tone scattered throughout the hours. Sword fights! Stops and starts, iced matcha, tension over creative, 5-inch tan, sparkly high heels, and drama twirled into the must-do energy — all in service of one shared goal: bringing live theater to Rockaway.

This spirit fuels Shakespeare on the Rocks, a new theater company led by producers and co-directors Elwin Cuevas and Robert Bryn. Cuevas is an NYC SAG-AFTRA actor, an activist and boundary-pushing theatre officiant. Bryn, a poet, filmmaker, playwright, and Wild Yak— now channeling decades of storytelling to directing. Both artists live in Rockaway—Cuevas for three years and Bryn for decades—bringing distinct pieces of their lived experiences on the peninsula to the production, which are woven into the subtext of the performance.

The play: “Romeo & Juliet. The stage: Under the sky at the amphitheater (boardwalk at Beach 94th St.), The When: August 22-24, 6:30-9pm.

Artist Carolin Wood (left) with Co-Producer Robert Bryn. Photo courtesy of Carolin Wood
Artist Carolin Wood (left) with Co-Producer Robert Bryn.  Photo courtesy of Carolin Wood. Photo by Tonya Smay

Jeniece Brown, cast as Juliet after self-submitting on Backstage.com, commutes from Washington Heights for rehearsals. Her take on Rockaway’s Juliet: “She starts young, but she’s very intelligent. You watch her take action and agency over her life.” Asked about the famous kiss, she shrugs like a pro: the production works with a certified intimacy coordinator, so “everything is choreographed to serve the story—timed, repeatable, not awkward.”

Ellington-Blue Chapman, who splits time between Brooklyn and Rockaway and teaches surfing, was sought out by Bryn. Chapman showed up to audition with a single goal: “I came here for Romeo.” He points to Act 3, Scene 3 as his northstar—“the turn,” when grief, banishment, and love collide. Acting, he says, feels like freedom—“chasing the dream,” the same way a good set of waves demands your whole attention.

Eric Anthony Dahl (Samson) is the swagger and spark that helps ignite the feud. A veteran improviser returning to scripted work, he’s delighted to discover the joy and rigor of being a part of a scripted play. “It’s a different muscle—no riffing; every word matters.” Eric landed in Rockaway during lockdown and never looked back.

The Nurse is played with warmth by Catherine Yeager McQuaid, a licensed massage therapist who owns a local practice and holds a BFA from Marymount. Classically trained and once a touring Shakespeare actor, she moved to Rockaway for the Boatel Art project at Marina 59 in 2011 and stayed through Sandy—“that kind of rooted me here.” For Catherine, the location of the play is a character of its own: “You hear the shore, watch the sun drop, then sit under the stars. Theater is teamwork. This show feels like the community, working in rhythm.” She nods to the amphitheater and post-Sandy positives—proof that art can be part of rebuilding.

Music Director Dave Treut opens each evening with a 6:30 pm set, then threads music and motifs through the play. He’s written a tone poem inspired by Kahlil Gibran’s “On Love” and is reimagining a Lakota Sioux flute melody as Juliet’s theme. The wireless mics purchased with fundraising money, will carry both voices and instruments, so the surf can still hum through his arrangements.

For the set design, the show leans proudly DIY. Many local, multimedia artists have contributed their talents including prop design by Carolin Wood, poster design by Teresa Farrell as well as styling cast member Sean Flaherty into a living tree. Wood built and created a giant oversized sun “so big two people have to carry it,”  among other key visuals to set the theatrical mood.

Co-director Robert Bryn shares the evolution of the vision for this Rockaway rendition of Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet: he toyed with color-coding the feuding houses, Montagues (red) and the Capulets, (blue), a reference to our current rivaling political tribes. Then the cast formed —diverse in age, background, and politics—and the idea evolved. “It stopped being about sides. It became about cooperation—how you actually make a town, or a play, unite despite our differences.”

Produced and Directed by Robert Bryn (left) and Elwin Cuevas (Right)
Produced and Directed by Robert Bryn (left) and Elwin Cuevas (Right).  Photo by: Jena Cumbo

The cast also includes Peyton Housten (Lord Capulet), Charlene Ruscalleda (Lady Montague), and Lauren Harrison—who also serves as fight choreographer—doubling as Benvolio and Balthazar, along with Myles Rich (Mercutio), Seamus O’Sullivan (Tybalt), Sydney Reeddeleon (Peter), Abishek Ojha (Paris), Vera Kahn (Abraham), Josh Armstrong (Gregory), Eric Dahl (Sampson), and Steve Hyltons (the Apothecary). Also featured, Owen Loof (Prince), Rob Bryn (Friar Laurence), Jerry Rea (Lord Montague), and Ginger Ladd (Lady Capulet).

In addition to those already mentioned, the production team includes costume director Sam Burgoon, set designer Tim Reckel, and intimacy coordinator Connor Percifield.

Backed by months of work, this production delivers three evenings of community collaboration, effort and art. As Bryn puts it: “There’s something precious about a short run. It’s like an arrow flying—here for a moment, then gone. That makes it special.” If the goal is to expand what feels possible on the peninsula, this play does just that.

Romeo & Juliet by Shakespeare on the Rocks — outdoors at the Rockaway Beach Amphitheater, Experience it Friday through Sunday, August 22–24, 6:30pm. Admission is free, and all ages are welcome. Plan for the ocean breeze—bring a blanket, a chair, some snacks, a friend; sit next to your foe or hold hands with your lover—and enjoy this wildly creative interpretation of love, tragedy, and unity.

Fund the drama (the good kind): Venmo @robert-Bryn, follow @shakespeare_on_the_rocks and see what’s next at shakespeareontherocks.org.

tagged in art, community, rockaway

Soil Therapy Sessions

Over the past few weeks in the community garden, I’ve heard many people say some version of, “I’m so happy to have my hands back in the soil.” Gardening is good for wellness. It reconnects us to the earth, to nature, and to our natural state as human beings.

All the sensory experiences associated with gardening or just being outdoors are calming—the scent of the soil, the texture of the plants to our touch, the warmth of the sun on our skin,  the colors of the flowers focused in your eyes, the sound of the wind moving through the trees and the birds humming in our ears.

Hands-in-the-Soil-highly-recommended
Hands in the Soil, highly recommended.

For me—and I think I can safely say for many others—gardening is therapeutic because it brings you into the present moment. It can be simple and freeing, with no need for overthinking. That’s what I enjoy so much about my time in the garden – the repetitive process and the quick, satisfying rewards of pulling a weed or potting a plant. This helps shift my mind into the right place, and I feel grounded.

And if you don’t have a garden space, just get outside and get close to the earth.

The other day, I was in Prospect Park, lying flat on my back with only a thin sheet between me and the damp soil. I felt the coolness. I looked up at the tree branches as the leaves waved back and forth. I saw shadows and shades of green overlapping like a dance performance just for me. I saw a bird’s nest—it was large, and a few birds passed by. Finally, after two days, my nervous system returned to baseline. What a relief.

cat in tree

Sunday looks perfect for a park visit. Here are a few of my recs, off the beat and quiet:

I hope you find some calm this weekend. Get grounded with the soil and all the things us humans were supposed to be immersed in.

Follow me on Instagram @theglorifiedtomato—on the ground and growing.

tagged in garden, gardening

Plant Sale Fundraiser at the Beach 91st Street Community Garden!

plant sale rockaway beach

This Saturday, May 17, from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m., visit the Beach 91st Street Community Garden for our Plant Sale Fundraiser! Soak in the spring, connect with neighbors, and make a day of it.

We’ll have a mix of plants to inspire your garden. There will be veggie starters and culinary herbs, perennials, including walker’s low, autumn joy, milkweed, daylily, and coastal grasses. We’ve also got some houseplants and garden pots!

Adding to the fun this year:

  • Holland Ave Soap Co. (@hollandavesoapco) will be on-site, offering ocean-inspired cold-process bar soaps—some made with purified seawater, others infused with herbs grown right here at the Beach 91st Garden. Clean, coastal, and handcrafted by our leadership member, Mike Benigno.

Photo-Credit-Mike-Benigno
Photo by Mike Benigno

  • Dengo Botanica (@dengobotanica) will bring their botanical treasures—plant-powered skincare rooted in Brazilian traditions. Each product is handcrafted with herbs, flowers, and intention to naturally nourish both skin and spirit.

Courtesy-of-Dengo-Botanica
Photo Courtesy of Dengo Botanica.

  • Bella’s Lemonade Stand – run by the young entrepreneur, offering fresh, tart lemonade served with a bright smile!

Stay awhile, bring a picnic, and spend a relaxed afternoon in the garden. It’s a great chance to meet new neighbors, catch up with friends, and enjoy the calm, surrounded by plants, birds, and community magic.

Proceeds from the fundraiser go toward enhancing the garden’s infrastructure and supporting our community events and educational programming. The Beach 91st Street Community Garden is grateful for the continued support from our neighbors and the greater Rockaway community.

Follow @beach91communitygarden on Instagram to stay in the loop on community outreach, garden projects, and all things growing. Keeping Rockaway Green Since 2009.

tagged in events, garden

How To Grow A Potato From A Potato

After my stamping art project with compostable foods, including the potato, I started to wonder… How do you grow a potato from a potato?

I’m a gardener, and I’ve never grown potatoes. Embarrassing to admit, but here we are.

I checked in with fellow Beach 91st Street Community Garden members last Sunday during our second meeting of the season. Kilee and Dan have both grown potatoes from sprouting spuds found right in their kitchens. They confirm it’s totally easy.

grow a potato

Store-bought potatoes (Red Bliss) like this aren’t as disease-resistant as certified seed potatoes since they’re grown for mass production, but they’re free, reusable, and so far, my fellow garden members haven’t had any issues!

Potato Planting Guide:

  1. Cut the “potato seed”: If the sprouting potato is big and has multiple “eyes” (those sprouty things), cut it into chunks. Each chunk should have at least one or two eyes. Let the cut pieces sit out in a dry spot for 1–2 days so the cut sides scab over. This prevents rotting.
  1. Plant the chunk: Plant your potato piece about 4 inches deep, eyes facing up. If planting in a pot, start with a few inches of soil, plant the potato, then cover with more soil.
  1. Water & wait: Keep the soil moist but not soggy. In a week or two, leafy green shoots will emerge!
  1. Hilling: As the plant grows, keep adding soil to cover the lower stems (called “hilling”). It encourages more tubers to form.
  1. Harvest time: Once the plant flowers, baby potatoes are forming! For full-sized potatoes, wait until the leaves yellow and die back, usually around 90–120 days. Dig gently, like you’re unearthing an Irish treasure.

In Rockaway (Hardiness Zone 7b), the ideal time to plant potatoes from eyes is between late March and early April, when soil temperatures consistently reach at least 40°F. But my garden friends say it now works too, especially since it’s been unseasonably cold this spring. Mine potatoes will be ready in August.

Another tip I picked up at the garden meeting: the longer you leave the potato in the ground, the bigger it gets. And as Dan said, one of the best things about growing potatoes is that you can harvest them as needed—just dig up what you need for dinner and leave the rest in the ground for later.

Why do potatoes sprout in the house anyway? Because they’re still alive and respond to warmth, darkness, and moisture, which mimics being in the soil. To avoid this, keep them on the counter in a cute decorative bowl, and never in the fridge — cold temps turn their starches into sugar, messing with the taste and texture.

I’ll keep you updated on this potato planting project as it grows—stay tuned!

Have you ever grown potatoes? I’d love to hear about it! Reach out on Instagram @theglorifiedtomato

Source: www.gardenary.com  www.themarthablog.com

tagged in garden, gardening