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Tony-winner Robert Sean Leonard returns to Bergen County and Broadway

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JANUARY 31, 2016    LAST UPDATED: SUNDAY, JANUARY 31, 2016, 1:21 AM
BY ROBERT FELDBERG
RECORD COLUMNIST |
THE RECORD

Tony-winning actor Robert Sean Leonard is experiencing not one, but two homecomings.

The more literal is his return from California – where he played Dr. James Wilson in eight seasons of “House” — to Ridgewood, where he was raised.

“My brother, who’s a cop in Ho-Ho-Kus, called about two years ago to tell me that he heard that this lovely old Victorian house near where we grew up was for sale. So I just called the owners, cold, and asked if they were thinking of moving,” Leonard said, with a brief look of mortification on his face as he recalled his audacity. “They said they weren’t, but I told them that if they ever did want to sell, to give me a call.”

A year ago they did, and last month Leonard, his wife Gabriella and their two daughters, Eleanor, 7, and Claudia, 3, moved in.

In the midst of unpacking boxes, though, Leonard was often absent, because of his other homecoming – his first role on the New York stage since returning from Los Angeles.

He’s appearing in “Prodigal Son,” which was written and is being directed by John Patrick Shanley, the author of “Doubt.” Now in previews, the drama opens Feb. 9 at the Manhattan Theatre Club’s off-Broadway space at the New York City Center.

With a kind of full-circle neatness, Leonard, whose breakout role was a prep-school student in the 1989 film “Dead Poets Society,” portrays a prep-school teacher in the play, which is based on Shanley’s own experience as a working-class Bronx boy attending a New England private school.

“I was told that Shanley was interested in me,” Leonard said. “I read the script and I liked it; it’s a very unique play, very surprising. Kind of like a ‘Twilight Zone’ episode.”

Leonard, who started out as a child actor, is known for his enthusiasm for stage acting, and he’s built an impressive list of Broadway successes.

He made his debut replacing Matthew Broderick in Neil Simon’s “Brighton Beach Memoirs,” and his subsequent plays have included “Arcadia,” “The Iceman Cometh,” “Long Day’s Journey Into Night” and “The Invention of Love,” for which he won his Tony. During a break from “House,” he came to New York to do “Born Yesterday.”

Many of the plays he’s done, on Broadway and elsewhere, are revivals of classics, which, he said, made “Prodigal Son” a different kind of challenge.

“Working with an author who’s breathing is an unusual experience for me,” he said,

At 46, Leonard still has an enormously engaging boy-next-door quality. He’s unstintingly praising of other actors, enthusiastic, good-humored and unassuming — he kept apologizing for being late for our interview at the theater (he hadn’t seen the message moving the start time up a half-hour), and he good-naturedly posed for a photographer right after walking in, without even a glance at a mirror.

https://www.northjersey.com/arts-and-entertainment/celebrities/he-s-come-home-to-ridgewood-and-to-n-y-stage-1.1502976

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Town-house plan roils Ho-Ho-Kus

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JANUARY 17, 2016    LAST UPDATED: SUNDAY, JANUARY 17, 2016, 1:21 AM
BY STEVE JANOSKI
STAFF WRITER |
THE RECORD

HO-HO-KUS — The fate of a developer’s proposal to nestle dozens of town houses in a neighborhood of single-family homes may rely on the state’s new process of getting communities to meet affordable-housing obligations.

The plan, put forward by the Upper Saddle River-based Chamberlain Developers, is to build 45 town homes on a 3.66-acre corner lot off West Saddle River Road and Hollywood Avenue. Some of those units would be designated to help the borough meet its court-mandated obligation to promote housing for low- and moderate-income residents.

But opponents say such dense housing would be wholly out of character in an area dominated by sizable single-family homes.

“For almost 100 years, there’s been single-family development on the applicant’s property,” said Ho-Ho-Kus attorney Robert Inglima, representing four neighboring families opposed to the proposal. “So to take that property and transform it into a site for any number of multifamilyhousing units would be a significant departure from the prior zoning pattern … this is an established neighborhood we’re talking about.”

But land is gold in North Jersey, and as more residents — especially young professionals and empty-nesters — seek smaller units closer to mass transit, development firms are reacting, said Bergen Realtor Robert Abbott.

https://www.northjersey.com/community-news/town-government/town-house-plan-roils-ho-ho-kus-1.1493801

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Ho-Ho-Kus bistro’s future hangs on a thread two months after auto crash

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OCTOBER 11, 2015    LAST UPDATED: SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015, 9:56 AM
BY ELISA UNG
RESTAURANT CRITIC |
THE RECORD

Janice Tinari, a longtime stay-at-home mom who turned her devotion to the Betty Crocker cookbook into a culinary career, has spent the last 14 years building a Ho-Ho-Kus neighborhood spot known for its breakfast tacos, moist short ribs, creamy risotto and striking flourless chocolate cake.

Just Janice defied many of the odds of the notoriously risky restaurant business: It managed to remain popular and in business for many years as a small, non-chain, family-run bistro with no liquor license.

Then in the early-morning hours of Sunday, Aug. 2, a driver careened through the front of the restaurant, breaking the front windows, causing structural damage and destroying outdoor furniture and some indoor tables. The 55-seat restaurant was closed at the time and no one was seriously injured.

More than two months later, the once-lively dining room still sits empty and dusty as Tinari struggles with insurance companies that, she says, paid her less than she needs to reopen. The 60-something owner had been counting on one day selling the restaurant to fund her retirement. Now she’s just hoping she can keep it in business.

“At my age, I’m scared to death. If this doesn’t work out, after this, what do I do?” she said.

Tinari’s situation illustrates the risks of running a small business in an industry with thin profit margins: She and her son and manager, David, say they made less than 10 percent profit (the National Restaurant Association says the national average is 3 to 6 percent). Tinari adds that she had been living paycheck to paycheck since getting divorced in 2013 and buying out her ex-husband and partner, John.

https://www.northjersey.com/food-and-dining-news/dining-news/bistro-s-future-hangs-on-a-thread-two-months-after-an-auto-crash-1.1430164

 

23 Sheridan Ave
Ho-Ho-Kus, New Jerse
(201) 445-2666
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Grand Jury Indicts former Ridgewood Lacrosse star In Mother’s Death

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July 1,2015

the staff of the Ridgewood blogRidgewood NJ, A grand jury has indicted a former Ridgewood Lacrosse Star Nicholas Piotti of Ho Ho Kus for the killing of his mother.

Piotti was accused of stabbing and beating his mother to death in the fall of last year.

Nicholas Piotti, 24, was indicted on a first-degree murder charge in the killing of his mother, Karen, and two counts of criminal possession of a weapon

According to prosecutors, the 63-year-old victim suffered multiple stab wounds and beating trauma in the Sept. 1 attack.

Piotti’s lawyer said last year his client had psychiatric problems and he’d pursue an insanity defense.

Piotti, is due back in court in August and is currently being held in the Bergen County Jail in lieu of $2 million bail.

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UPDATE : Black bear cub spotted near Ho-Ho-Kus Public School

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Borough of Ho-Ho-Kus OEM NJ Advisory: The bear cub has been sighted again in the area of Arbor Dr. Please use caution with children and small pets when outside.

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JUNE 10, 2015, 8:46 AM    LAST UPDATED: WEDNESDAY, JUNE 10, 2015, 3:33 PM
BY CHRIS HARRIS AND STEFANIE DAZIO
STAFF WRITERS |
THE RECORD

HO-HO-KUS — A black bear cub was spotted in the borough on Wednesday morning but appeared to pose no threat to the public, police said.

Lt. Christopher Minchin, the officer in charge of the Ho-Ho-Kus Police Department, said the cub “exhibited normal behavior” and eventually moved on, heading south.

The cub was initially spotted on Sheridan Avenue around 7 a.m., close to the Waldwick line, Minchin said.

Police decided against intervening, but then the cub headed toward the Ho-Ho-Kus Public School on Lloyd Road. That’s when officers approached the cub, Minchin said, working together to direct the animal out of the borough.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/black-bear-cub-spotted-near-ho-ho-kus-public-school-1.1352655

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Housing complex proposed for downtown Ho-Ho-Kus

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MAY 18, 2015, 7:12 PM    LAST UPDATED: WEDNESDAY, MAY 20, 2015, 11:09 AM
BY CHRIS HARRIS
STAFF WRITER |
THE RECORD

HO-HO-KUS — A multifamily housing complex is being pitched for the borough’s downtown.

The proposed three-story development would have 27 one- and two-bedroom units. It would also have nearly 13,000 square feet of space for retail use and 9,300 square feet for offices.

Plans submitted to the Ho-Ho-Kus Planning Board show the proposed project would include some units of affordable housing.

Helmed by the borough’s Mechanic family, the owners of several properties throughout borough, the development would be built on 2.12 acres located in the heart of downtown, affecting 619 North Maple Avenue and 217 and 239 First Street.

To make room for the construction on the south side of North Maple Avenue, some demolition is planned, including the razing of Granny’s Attic, an antiques shop.

“The project will include significant architectural upgrades with careful attention to streetscape, together with enhanced drainage, landscaping, lighting and other site improvements which will present an aesthetically pleasing and appropriate redevelopment of the property,” the application states.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/housing-complex-proposed-for-downtown-ho-ho-kus-1.1337302

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Village Council hears presentation on establishing train horn ,”Quiet Zones”

>At the request of Village residents who live within earshot of two Ho-Ho-Kus grade level railroad crossings (Hollywood Avenue and Glenwood Road), the Village Council last night listened to an engineering consultant describe how train horn “quiet zones” could be established. However, Council members seemed rather uninterested in moving beyond the listening stage after learning that expenses associated with implementation of a federally approved plan could cost between $200K – $1.2 million. So for now, this proposal seems dead in the water.

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