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date published:
December 14, 2009

Panorama’s best bets for ringing in the
New Year
by Josh B. Wardrop
If you’re going to be in Boston for new
year’s eve, there’ll be no excuse for
sitting in front of the TV watching the ball
drop in the Big Apple—not when the Hub is
hopping with such a wide range of exciting
ways to ring in 2010. Whether you’re into
stand-up comedy, live music, fancy parties
or family activities, Boston has the perfect
celebration to indulge in as 2009 bids us
all adieu.
First Night 2010
In 1976, a small group of
Boston-based artists thought it would be a
nice idea to put together a New Year’s Eve
celebration that was less about alcohol and
raucous partying and more about celebrating
the visual and performing arts. Fast-forward
34 years and what began as a small arts
event centered around Boston Common has
become the annual
First Night Boston
extravaganza, the nation’s oldest and
largest New Year’s arts celebration, and the
inspiration for more than 200 similar events
worldwide. As usual, this year’s First Night
event takes place at locations all around
the city, providing family-friendly
activities throughout the day and into the
evening, when the festivities culminate in a
Grand Procession down Boylston Street and
two fireworks displays (one at 7 p.m. for
families, the latter at midnight
for late-night revelers). Other highlights
of this year’s event include Bombay Cinema
(a 10-hour program of the best of Bollywood
film) at Hynes Convention Center; a
performance at Berklee Performance Center by
saxophonist/clarinetist/Berklee College of
Music alum Anat Cohen; the live Japanese
monster wrestling spectacle of Kaiju Big
Battel at Hynes; and A Shakespeare
Cabaret by the Commonwealth Shakespeare
Company at St. Paul’s Cathedral. All outdoor
First Night events are free; the remaining
events require a First Night button ($18;
free for children under 4), available at
dozens of locations around Boston. For a
list of button-vending locations, and a
complete schedule of First Night events,
visit
www.firstnight.org.
Glam it up
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.
For the last 13 years, the annual
Resolution Ball has been Boston’s
longest-running and most popular New Year’s
Eve gala. This year, though, the organizers
have decided that one spectacular event
simply isn’t enough. The result is two
Resolution Balls—a South End version taking
place at the Cyclorama at the Boston Center
for the Arts (539 Tremont St.) and a Back
Bay ball hosted high above the city on the
Skywalk observatory level of the Prudential
Center (800 Boylston St.). Beginning at
8:30 p.m., the Back Bay event boasts
complimentary hors d’oeuvres and a cash bar,
as well as live entertainment from popular
local band The Love Dogs playing Motown,
soul and R&B, and a DJ spinning tracks from
the ’70s to today’s Top 40 hits. Meanwhile,
in the South End, partygoers can sway and
shake to music from the Felix Brown Band and
DJ Samuel L. while sipping designer
cocktails from a cash bar (no food is served
at this event). Both events are black-tie
optional and tickets (which must be
purchased in advance by calling
781-444-7771) range from $99–239.
Spending New Year’s Eve in a foreign land is
a great idea for the jet-set crowd, but even
Bostonians can experience a touch of
international flair this December 31
at the Boston Young Professionals
Association’s annual Global Gala,
taking place at popular Back Bay
pub/restaurant Lir (903 Boylston St.). Lir’s
three floors are transformed into three
different exotic cities—Shanghai, New
Orleans and Paris—and boast DJs spinning
everything from oldies and Top 40 to
chilled-out lounge music. Tickets begin at
$65 and include a breakfast buffet,
champagne toast at midnight and a gift bag
bursting with Lindt chocolates. Visit
www.bostonypa.com for more information.
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 a
pair of one-act comic operas—Mozart’s
Bastien and Bastienne and Cimarosa’s
The Music Director. (And, if you miss
out on the show on New Year’s Eve, the whole
production is repeated on New Year’s Day at
3 p.m.) Ticket prices range from $29–69.
A Rockin’ New Year
There’s no better way to
enter a new year than with a song in your
heart (and, perhaps, a lighter waving in the
air). This year, several Boston venues turn
it up to 11 as the clock strikes 12.
The
Boston Pops spend most of
December performing family-friendly concerts
filled with light classical renditions of
holiday favorites, but on December 31,
the ensemble—led by conductor Keith
Lockhart—gets to show off a bit of alt-rock
edge as they team up with Boston’s punk
priestess provocateur Amanda Palmer for a
10 p.m. show at Symphony Hall. The lead
singer of beloved Boston punk cabaret act
The Dresden Dolls, Palmer and the Pops
present a symphonic take on her conceptual
art-rock both with the Dolls and from her
recent solo work.
Most of the year, nightlife fans flock to
Kings
in the Back Bay for great food and
drink, bowling and billiards in a grown-up
nightclub atmosphere. On New Year’s Eve,
however, all of those fun-filled activities
take a backseat to two special performances
by pop heartthrob Ryan Cabrera—an all-ages
show at 7 p.m. (tickets: $20)
and a 21+ performance at 10 p.m. ($40,
including appetizers and a champagne toast).
We might be getting ready to ring in 2010,
but it’s gonna be 1988 all over again at the
Paradise Rock Club when the popular Guns N’ Roses
tribute band Mr. Brownstone returns to the
Hub to host a New Year’s Eve Ball. These
dead ringers for Axl Rose, Slash, Duff
McKagan and the rest of G N’R tear the roof
off the venue as they expertly recreate
headbanger classics like “Sweet Child O’Mine”
and “Welcome to the Jungle.” Tickets are
$25.
And another popular tribute band invades
The Hard Rock Cafe 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 “Magnificent.”
Situated in the heart of Faneuil Hall
Marketplace, The Hard Rock’s New Year’s Eve
extravaganza kicks off at 8 p.m.; tickets
are $25.

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The Great Dane
Comedian
Dane Cook has come a long way from
his days as an aspiring teen
stand-up comic growing up in the
Boston suburb of Arlington. Today
he’s a bonafide mega-star who’s sold
millions of comedy albums, starred
in films like My Best Friend’s Girl
and Mr. Brooks, and routinely sells
out stand-up shows in mammoth
arenas. He’s back on home turf to
ring in 2010, bringing his ISolated
INcident Global Thermo Comedy Tour
to the TD Garden at 7 p.m. on New
Year’s Eve. Refer to
comedy listing.
What
motivated you to get back out and
tour this year?
I did a lot of film stuff
back-to-back, and I just felt that
urge to get back onstage and replant
the comedy flag. Stand-up is my
nutrition—if I’m not onstage for
awhile, I get headaches. And if I’m
doing a tour, I want to do something
really big. I’m somebody with a lot
of respect for the history of
stand-up and I definitely want to
leave my mark on it.
It must
be exciting to get to come back to
the old hometown for such a huge
show on a big night like New Year’s
Eve.
This has been a wild and incredible
year, and the goal for me was to do
a historic kind of comedy tour—70,
80, 90 dates—and wrapping up 2009 in
Boston is just awesome. This is my
20th year doing standup, and I
couldn’t think of a better way to
bring it all full circle. It’ll
definitely be emotional for me—I’m
still an Arlington kid, hopefully
making my town proud.
What’s
it like doing a stand-up show in an
arena? How do you approach the
performance knowing the intimate
connection with the audience isn’t
the same as in a club?
Well, first
off, I just thank God I’m not
playing the old Boston Garden, where
the sound was so heinous (laughs).
Honestly, though, I’ve always loved
doing shows in the round, and the
key is finding an amazing technical
crew—which I have—that can set up,
basically, this boxing ring for me
to perform in. As I turn, it really
feels like playing four small
theaters, and that helps me feel
connected to the audience. My video
and sound system is designed to help
bring across the subtle nuances, yet
I can still get that big crowd
energy.
What
memories do you have of celebrating
New Year’s Eve in the Boston area?
Well, I’ve not had a drink in my
life, so New Year’s Eve was never
that big “party” night for me.
Usually, I guess I would end up
going down around the Charles
River…catch the Boston Pops
playing…those are some of my warmer
memories, really. I was a local guy
making enough bucks to get by doing
stand-up, but not really well known.
I could go out on New Year’s Eve and
hang out anywhere I wanted, and
nobody cared.
How do
you feel growing up around Boston
influenced your comedic style?
I always loved Boston
comics—watching them perform and
just soaking it in. Boston guys
aren’t “schticky” comics. It’s more
about how much energy and
performance you can put into it, not
just jokes. The first lesson in this
town is “Don’t worry so much about
how you look.” (laughs)
What’s
on deck for you in 2010?
I have been nonstop for a really
long time, and I’m pretty excited to
take some time off and hang out in
my new house—my first house, ever. I
want to put down the microphone for
a while because I’ve wrung out
everything with this tour, and it’s
time to just take some time to live
life. So, I can have something new
to write about! (laughs) |
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