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date published:
December 29, 2008
Let
the folks in New York worship their Giant
glittering disco ball—here in Boston, New
Year’s Eve is a night of jubilation that
features a little something for everyone.
From the city’s popular First Night
spectacular—now in its 33rd year—to parties
ranging from the glamtastic to the
guitarrific, the Hub is hopping this
December 31 with a myriad of diverse
celebrations that will have you feeling fine
as you welcome in ’09.
Put Your Glad Rags On
There aren’t too many legit
occasions these days when a girl can get
dolled up like a princess, but New Year’s
Eve is definitely one of them. This December
31, Boston hosts several gala events sure to
bring out those Cinderella-inspired dreams
of ballroom glory.
The Hyatt Regency Boston (1 Lafayette
Ave., 617-912-1234) hosts Boston’s annual
40+ Baby Boomer bash, The Back Bay Gala,
a fundraiser benefiting the Ellie Fund (a
non-profit organization that aids families
in the fight against breast cancer). Tickets
range from $85–195 and include a
cocktail reception, hors d’oeuvres, gift
bags, party favors and dancing to both a DJ
spinning classics from the ’70s and ’80s,
and popular band The Love Dogs playing
everything from Motown to rock ’n’ roll
until 2 a.m.
On the other side of town at the Westin
Boston Waterfront Hotel (425 Summer St.,
617-532-4600) is the 12th annual
Resolution Ball, Boston’s
longest-running New Year’s Eve gala.
Beginning at 7 p.m., this New Year’s
celebration boasts complimentary cocktails
and a choice of an all-inclusive dinner or a
scrumptious selection of hors d’oeuvres
(depending on which ticket package you buy).
You’ll sway and shake to live music from the
Felix Brown Band and DJ Samuel L., and walk
away with goodies like party bags and
favors. Tickets range from $49–155 and
must be purchased in advance.
If you have your heart set on traveling
to Paris to ring in 2009 but don’t have the
cash flow to make it happen, fret not, for
one Boston hotel has you covered. The
Liberty Hotel Ballroom (215 Charles St.,
617-224-4000) hosts the Global Gala in
Paris from 8 p.m.–2 a.m. This
gala—which costs $50 for the Global
Gala silver ticket (10 p.m.–2 a.m.)
and $120 for the Global Gala gold
ticket (8 p.m.–2 a.m.)—is presented
by the Boston Young Professionals
Association and admission includes Lindt
Chocolate gift bags, a 3-D sculpted cake of
the Eiffel Tower, champagne toast at
midnight and DJ Holtie playing today’s top
40 and yesterday’s favorites.
If gowns, tuxedos and dancing ’til the
early hours really aren’t your thing, you
can still attend a “gala” event at Boston
Baroque’s Gala New Year’s Eve Concert at
Sanders Theatre (45 Quincy St., Cambridge,
617-484-9200). The concert begins at 8
p.m. and features the renowned area
ensemble welcoming in the new year with
classical pieces like Bach’s Violin
Concerto in E Major and Orchestral
Suite No. 3 in D Major, as well as
Handel’s Concerto Grosse in G Major
bookended around an intermission champagne
reception. Ticket prices range from
$25–69.
Hub Clubbing
If the glitz and glamour of
ballroom galas are a little too formal for
your liking, and what you really want is to
dance your way into 2009, then Boston
nightclubs boast several parties catering to
people who just want to shake their hips.
For those party people looking for a sexy
and stylish event, there’s Studio Rouge: NYE
2009 at Vinalia (101 Arch St.,
617-737-1777). The theme of the bash is a
combination of the decadence of Studio 54
and the sexiness of the Moulin Rouge. Local
event producers Future Classic, R.O.B. and
B3 Productions present this steamy soirée
featuring popular party DJ Frank White
spinning rock, hip-hop and dance until 3
a.m. alongside DJ Eight2. Tickets
range from $45 (general admission) to $65
(VIP).
Meanwhile, The Beehive (541
Tremont St., 617-423-0069) hosts an
extravagant New Year’s shindig of Bohemian
decadence and eccentric fun with its second
annual celebration, cheekily dubbed The End
is at Hand! Highlights include a hilarious
theatrical performance from the comedic
troupe Pinchbottom Burlesque and a night of
dancing to the sounds of Reality, a soul
ensemble that features three powerhouse
female vocalists. Chef Rebecca Newell serves
“gypsy fare” and desserts influenced by
Europe, the Mediterranean and good ol’
Americana in a cocktail-lounge setting. And
those who enjoy their holiday bubbly can
salivate over the 60 selections of fine
champagne to choose from for toasting at
midnight. Doors open at 10 p.m. and
tickets are $95 (with food) and $75 (without
food).
Admittedly, the tough economic times are
making life at little more hectic for
nightlife connoisseurs this holiday season.
While plenty of the city’s New Year’s Eve
party tickets are going for at least $50,
the folks over at Kings (refer to
nightclub listing) are taking a novel tack
much appreciated by budget-conscious
revelers. Its party, entitled No Cover, No
Commitment, No Problem, begins at 7 p.m.
and features free admission, party
favors, food and live music from Plaid Daddy
Band covering top 40, ’80s and ’90s tunes
until 2 a.m.
A Rockin’ New Year
Dick Clark may be nowhere in
sight, but that won’t keep fans of live
music from having some rockin’ places to
turn it up to 11 in celebration of the
arrival of 2009.
Funk, jazz and jam music enthusiasts can
spend New Year’s Eve at the Paradise Rock
Club (refer to
music listing)
grooving to the mind-blowing musicianship of Soulive. Tickets are $40.
Fans of high-energy rock can hit
Harpers Ferry (refer to
music listing) in the Allston neighborhood of Boston
this New Year’s Eve, as the popular concert
hall hosts Waltham, a hard-hitting rock band
named after its suburban Boston hometown.
Influenced by ’80s guitar rock, the always
melodic and entertaining Waltham and a slew
of special guests light up the stage
beginning at 8 p.m., with tickets just
$20.
While the much-adored, multi-platinum
band Sublime won’t be reuniting in Boston
for New Year’s, fans of the band’s
one-of-a-kind fusion of reggae, punk and ska
can catch the next best thing at Cambridge’s
The Middle East (refer to
music listing), when the Sublime tribute band Badfish—with special guests Uncle Billy’s
Smokehouse—hits the stage to perform all the
band’s classics beginning at 9 p.m.
Tickets are $40.
Another popular tribute band invades
The Hard Rock Cafe (refer to
restaurant listing) for a rockin’ New Year’s gig. The
Joshua Tree, one of the nation’s premiere U2
tribute bands, rings in the new year with
its take on U2 classics from “Sunday, Bloody
Sunday” all the way up to “Vertigo.”
Situated in the heart of Faneuil Hall
Marketplace, The Hard Rock’s New Year’s Eve
extravaganza kicks off at 9 p.m. and
tickets are $25.

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BUTTON UP!
An $18 First Night Button
(children under 4 are free) is your
general admission ticket to all of
the Hub’s indoor First Night events
this New Year’s Eve. Buttons can be
purchased at well over a dozen
locations, including Shaw’s
Supermarkets, Au Bon Pain, Tedeschi
Food Shops, Borders, the Museum of
Fine Arts, the New England Aquarium,
the Boston Children’s Museum, Boston
Common Visitor Information Center,
American Repertory Theatre, Bostix
(at both the Copley Square and
Faneuil Hall ticket booth locations)
and Harvard Book Store. On December
31, look for outdoor kiosks selling
buttons at the Park Street T
station, Hynes Convention Center and
the corner of Arlington and Boylston
streets.
You’ll want to hold on to that
button after the champagne’s gone
flat, too—flashing it wins you
savings well into the new year. A
few examples: 15% off any lunch or
dinner bill at The Barking Crab
through January; two-for-one
admission to any Wednesday, Thursday
or Friday night Improv Asylum
performance through March; free
child admission with paying adult to
the New England Aquarium through
January 31; 10% off tickets to the
Diving Performing Arts Chinese New
Year Spectacular through January 6;
and a 30% discount on Boston
Symphony Orchestra performances at
Symphony Hall through January 31.
For a full list of retailers and
complete schedule of First Night
events, visit
www.firstnight.org or call
617-542-1399.
If You Go: Whether
you’re looking for museum exhibits
or comedy, the stage or the silver
screen, family fun or poetry slams,
somewhere in Boston there’s a First
Night event right up your alley.
Comedy: Boston comedy
legends Tony V. and Kenny Rogerson
invite First Night revelers to “700
Billion Laughs,” a laugh out loud
stand-up comedy production that lets
onlookers start their “new year by
investing in some titters and
watching them grow to guffaws” (7:45,
9 and 10:15 p.m. in Hynes
Convention Center Exhibit Hall D).
The only entertainer who’s worked at
all 33 First Nights is Brother Blue,
a beloved Cambridge storyteller who
hilariously holds court with tales
from Shakespeare’s Romeo and
Juliet, Hamlet,
Othello and others (8 and
9:15 p.m. at Hynes Convention
Center). And one of Boston’s most
renowned comedic troupes, the actors
of Improv Asylum, develop
sidesplitting scenes based solely on
the audience’s suggestions (8–9
and 10–11 p.m. at 216 Hanover
St.).
Silver Screen: The
Roxbury Film Festival at the Hynes
Convention Center (in room 200)
presents Top of the Rox, a cinematic
collection of some of the best
African-American directed short
films from 2008’s Roxbury Film
Festival (7:30–11 p.m.). For
the folks who can’t get enough of
the high-octane animation that is
Japanese anime, there’s the New
England Anime Society presenting the
best and most popular Japanese
animation from 2008 (1–11 p.m.
at Hynes Convention Center’s
Room 312). Since 1976, local
filmmaker Karen Aqua has created
animated films exploring the themes
of ritual, journeys, transformation
and the human spirit. Join Aqua in
Room 311 at Hynes Convention Center
as she hosts Karen Aqua Animation, a
special program of her award-winning
animated shorts (1–6 and 7:30–11
p.m.).
For The Family: Most
New Year’s events tend to be geared
toward adults, but First Night
treats December 31 like a day that
should be celebrated by families.
That’s why The FedEx Family Festival
in Hynes Convention Center promises
all kinds of entertainment like
puppet shows, music, comedians,
jugglers, stunt daredevils and much
more (dozens of events go from
1–11 p.m.). Master ice-sculptor
Donald Chapelle wows kids and
parents alike with his jaw-dropping
ice-sculpture Mangrove,
which includes a wading flock of
flamingoes, towering palms and
friendly alligators (noon on Boston
Common). Last but not least, what
would New Year’s Eve be without a
fireworks extravaganza? At
Boston’s Family Fireworks
Celebration, the City of Boston
rings in the new year a little early
(7–7:12 p.m.) with an
intimate fireworks display that
lights up Boston Common for those
folks too wee to stay up until
midnight. |
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