KEY Milwaukee November, 2013 Issue
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Transcript of KEY Milwaukee November, 2013 Issue
November 2013 KeyMilwaukee.comKeyMilwaukeeMobile.com
INSIDE: MAPS EVENTS ARTS SHOPPING DINING NIGHTLIFE ATTRACTIONS
HolidayHighlights Issue
HOLIDAY FOLK FAIR INTERNATIONALNovember 22-24 Celebrating 70 years!
HOLIDAY FOLK FAIR INTERNATIONAL
Thomas Sully, Prison Scene from J. Fenimore Cooper’s “The Pilot”: Cecelia Howard and Katherine Plowden Arousing the Prisoner Edward Griffith from His Slumber, 1841 (detail). Birmingham Museum of Art.
American Old Master painter Thomas Sully created dynamic characters that play their parts on canvas, in performances staged in paint. See nineteenth-century celebrities and theatrical classics, from President Andrew Jackson to Cinderella, beautifully brought to life.
THROUGH JAN 5, 2014
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KEY Milwaukee, Milwaukee’s only monthly visitor guide, is a licensee of KEY Magazines, Inc., a growing national network ofindependently owned visitor guides. Visit www.keymagazine.com to make your national travel plans. KEY Milwaukee is distributed inhotels, motels, visitor centers, corporations and retail stores inSoutheastern Wisconsin. Copyright 2013. All rights reserved. No part may be reproduced without written permission.
KEY Milwaukee Magazine, Inc. 10800 N. Norway Dr., Mequon, WI 53092Phone: 414-732-7320 [email protected] www.keymilwaukee.comKEY Milwaukee makes every effort to maintain the accuracy of the information provided, but assumes no responsibility for errors, changes or omissions.
MEMBER
On the Cover: The Holiday Folk Fair International is a don’t-miss event for fans of all ages. The 70th annual version of theMilwaukee favorite is Nov. 22-24. Our cover contains photosfrom past fairs. For details on this month’s Folk Fair see pages 8 and 9.
PAGE 40
PAGE 38
PUBLISHER Beth StaffordMANAGING EDITOR Roger StaffordDESIGN Amber Graphic MediaWRITERS Liz Russell, Mike Ewing, Chris PeppasCONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHERMark Bertieri, MKEimages.com
GOLF EDITOR Jerry SlaskeADVERTISING (414) 732-7320 or (414) 732-7337PRINTER J.B. Kenehan, LLC
NOVEMBER
2013
PAGE 8
Official welcome to Milwaukee . . . . . . . . . . . .Page 6
KEY Cover FeatureHoliday Folk Fair International . . . . . . . . . .Page 8
Special Events . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Page 12
KEY Milwaukee wins award . . . . . . . . . . . . .Page 14
Arts & Entertainment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Page 16
Tours . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Page 25
Attractions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Page 26
Metro Area Map . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Page 32
Downtown Map . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Page 34
KEY Galleries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Page 36
Music Under Glass . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Page 38
Holiday Lights Festival . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Page 40
KEY Shopping . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Page 42
Rehorst’s Pumpkin Spirit available now . . . .Page 43
KEY Sports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Page 46
Visitor Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Page 47
Vets Honored . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Page 49
KEY Dining Guide . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Page 51
Restaurant of the MonthMaharaja . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Page 58
Nightlife Guide . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Page 60
Web-only coverage such as KEY Family Funand KEY Sports exclusives can be found online atKeyMilwaukee.com and VisitingMilwaukee.com
CONTENTS
NOVEMBER inmilwaukee
Veterans’ Day Parade to Holiday Parade and the award-winning Holiday Festival of Lights, Milwaukee’s
must-do list for fun lives at VISITMilwaukee.org.
You’ll �nd it easy here – Milwaukee.
Big is often better.
Milwaukee is home to one ofthe largest music festivals,Summerfest. We also havehuge annual festivals that cele-brate the cultures of variouscountries or ethnicities.
We have a big, impressive zoo, a major league baseballteam drawing millions of fans each year, and an expan-sive lakefront with museums, beaches and parks.
We have large and successful businesses callingMilwaukee home. Harley Davidson, NorthwesternMutual, Rockwell Automation, and Johnson Controls all have long histories in Milwaukee. Much of the city'seconomic development efforts focus on helping privatesector companies grow bigger and better.
We are building an ecosystem in Milwaukee thatencourages smaller businesses to grow into largeenterprises.
Yes, in Milwaukee we love big.
Sincerely,
Tom Barrett, Mayor
The sunny and warm days ofsummer have passed, but inMilwaukee County there are stillunequaled opportunities to getoutside and enjoy the manythings we offer.
Visitors can take in the brilliantholiday lights at many countyparks, including Pere MarquettePark, Cathedral Square Park and Zeidler Union Square.
As the temperature drops, you can lace up your skatesand hit the ice rink at Red Arrow Park, help count birdswintering at the Wehr Nature Center, participate in theSanta Shuffle Run/Walk along the lakefront, or attend an art fair at the Mitchell Park Domes.
As always, sites such as the Milwaukee Art Museum and Milwaukee Public Museum offer excellent optionsfor an interesting day out. And KEY Milwaukee is anexcellent resource for planning your time.
No matter what you choose to do in Milwaukee County, I hope you enjoy your time with us.
Sincerely,
Chris Abele, Milwaukee County Executive
Sponsored by: We Energies, Columbia St. Mary’s, Madison Medical Affi liates, Zilber Property Group, The Shops of Grand Avenue, VISIT Milwaukee, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, Coach USA, WISN 12, 99.1 WMYX, Milwaukee Magazine, OnMilwaukee.com, Clear Channel Outdoor, City of Milwaukee, Milwaukee County Parks and Milwaukee Downtown, BID #21
Milwaukee Holiday Lights FestivalKick-Off Extravaganza
Thursday, November 21 • 6 pm • Pere Marquette Parkmilwaukeeholidaylights.com • 414.220.4700
The Milwaukee Holiday Lights Festival is pulling out all the stops for its 15th annual kick-off extravaganza. Music, dancing, ice carving, Santa, new animated light displays and a thrilling fi reworks show – downtown has never beamed so brightly. So round up the kids and zip downtown. This is one holiday party you won’t want to miss. Best of all, it’s free – right down to the cocoa and Jingle Bus rides. Cya Downtown, Milwaukee!
MILWAUKEE’S HOLIDAY FOLK FAIR Internationalcelebrates its 70th anniversary Nov. 22-24, onceagain providing the opportunity to travel aroundthe globe without airline tickets, hotel reservationsor jet lag.
Held in the Wisconsin Exposition Center atWisconsin State Fair Park, 8200 W. Greenfield Ave.,the three-day celebration features tantalizing foods,irresistible music, intriguing dance performancesand a vast array of exhibits and merchandise.
Produced by the International Institute ofWisconsin, the Milwaukee-based nonprofit socialservice organization dedicated to racial, culturaland ethnic understanding, the award-winningevent is one of the oldest and largest festivals of itskind. Fair-goers have the opportunity to learn theways in which music, food, dance, and art explain aculture’s history and traditions.
This year’s theme is “Celebrate the Culture ofCommunity.” Al Durtka, president of theInternational Institute, explains that “folklore” or“folk life” is the living expression of culture woveninto everyday life – anyone’s culture – learned andpassed on informally from person to person. It mustbe alive and current to be folk life, even though itmay have existed over long stretches of time.
“This intangible cultural heritage refers to traditionsor living expressions inherited from our ancestorsand passed on to our descendents,” says Durtka.
Key COVER FEATURE
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“This includes oral traditions, performing arts,social practices, rituals, festive events, knowledgeand practices concerning nature and the universe,and the knowledge and skills to produce traditionalcrafts.”
For 70 years, the Holiday Folk Fair International hasbeen a keeper of our rich and diverse livingheritage, safeguarding the past, honoring thepresent, and embracing the future. A special exhibitwill use archival materials to tell the fun andfascinating story of the Folk Fair’s last sevendecades. For example, every poster from first FolkFair will be on view.
Rights and Freedoms, There and Here is a locallycreated United Nations exhibit. Those “Rights andFreedoms” are water, education and civil rights.The exhibit will debut at the Folk Fair. The exhibitHuman Rightswill explore that topic in words andpictures.
Another exhibit by Sister Cities Internationalfeatures the winners and finalists for theorganization’s 2013 Young Artists and AuthorsShowcase. For more than 20 years, the showcasehas given youth from around the globe theopportunity to artistically express their vision for amore unified peaceful world.
The popular bonsai exhibit returns, with theaddition of special demonstrations that will showhow these living works of art are created.
70th Holiday FolkFair Internationalpreserves culturalheritages
Representatives from Old World Wisconsin willdemonstrate food preservation techniques and flaxspinning and weaving. The wood turners alsofascinate Folk Fair visitors.
Kids of all ages will delight in the interactive exhibiton hopscotch around the world. The pattern thatAmericans are familiar with is just one of manyused around the world. Areas that will be expandedin 2013 include the international chess tournamentand the Native American Area.
At every Folk Fair, the way various cultures preparetheir cuisine intrigues visitors. Food booths offerappetizers, main dishes, sandwiches and desserts,all authentically prepared and priced to encouragesampling.
At the Coffee House, coffee or tea, sweet treats andmusic tempt fest-goers. The Callen ConstructionCooking Demonstration Stage features local chefs.Traditional foods and the recipes passed on to thenext generation are examples how the elements ofeveryday life are part of building the “Culture ofCommunity.”
The International Bazaar is the perfect place forholiday shopping with items to fit every budget.Booths decorated to represent the featured countryoffer items that showcase artistic traditions andhandicrafts as well as holiday customs.
On Heritage Lane, visitors interact with ethnicvolunteers to learn about the customs andtraditions of many different cultures. “Passports”are available for children, who then have themstamped at the decorated booths.
Regularly scheduled shows at the All NationsTheater feature groups performing traditionalmusic and dance with flair, drama and color. At theInternational Stage, attention focuses on danceperformances by young people. The Music Pavilionfeatures an array of musical groups.
Other regular events include the EducationDay/Cultural Awareness Program held Friday forfourth- through eighth-grade students from theGreater Milwaukee area. On Sunday, the 13thAnnual Around the World 5k Run/Walk starts at 9a.m. Phone 414-225-6225 or register online atwww.folkfair. Also on Sunday, a religious service isheld at 10:30 a.m.
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Hours are 2-10 p.m.Friday, 10 a.m.-10p.m. Saturday and 10a.m.-7 p.m. Sunday.Admission is $10 inadvance and $12 atthe door. Children fiveand younger areadmitted at no chargeand tickets for children6-12 and seniors 62and older are $10 at the gate (no admission charge formilitary personnel with military ID). A raffle is included in theticket price, and winners need not be present at Sunday’s6:30 p.m. drawing.
Advance tickets, group tickets and family four-packs for $36may be purchased by calling 1-800-FAIR-INTL or visitingwww.folkfair.org. Advance tickets also are available at ParkBanks, Usinger’s Famous Sausage at 1030 N. Old World3rd St. and ten Sendik’s supermarkets in the metro area.Advance tickets must be purchased by Thursday, Nov. 15.
For more information, visit www.folkfair.org, phone theInternational Institute of Wisconsin at 414-225-6220, or follow Holiday Folk Fair on Facebook.
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SPECIAL EVENTSComplete address of sites and phone numbers are listed with first mention. Telephone Area Code 414 unlessshown otherwise. Please confirm events when possible; listings are subject to change. For a complete list of 2014events, visit KeyMilwaukee.com.
HAUNTFEST, Oct. 30-Nov. 2; Wisconsin State Fair Park,Original Cream Puff Pavilion, 8200 W. Greenfield Ave., West Allis.282-4386, hauntfest.com.
UMPHREY’S MCGEE ANNUAL HALLOWEEN MASH UP, Oct.31-Nov. 2; Riverside Theater, 116 W. Wisconsin Ave. 286-3663.
TWILIGHT TOURS, Nov. 1, Nov. 29 & Dec. 20; Pabst Mansion,2000 W. Wisconsin Ave. Costumed guides, elaborately decoratedrooms, Victorian holiday history, and warm refreshments. Tickets931-0808.
AUTUMN FESTIVAL ARTS & CRAFTS SHOW, Nov. 1-3;Wisconsin State Fair Park, Expo Center, 8200 W. Greenfield Ave.402-331-2889, hpifestivals.com.
MILWAUKEE COUNTY WINTER FARMERS MARKET,Saturdays, Nov. 2-mid April; Mitchell Park HorticulturalConservatory, “The Domes,” 524 S. Layton Blvd. 9 a.m.-1 p.m.facebook.com/mcwfm
FAMILY FREE DAY AT THE ZOO, Nov. 2; Milwaukee CountyZoo, 10001 W. Bluemound Rd. 9:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. 256-5412.
TARGET FREE FIRST THURSDAY, Nov. 7; Milwaukee ArtMuseum, 700 N. Art Museum Dr. No admission charge all dayfrom 10 a.m.-8 p.m. 224-3200.
SYLVIA BROWNE, Nov. 7-8; Northern Lights Theater,Potawatomi Bingo Casino, 1721 W. Canal St. An Evening ofInsights and Live Readings. 8 p.m. Box Office, 847-7922;Ticketmaster, 800-745-3000.
VETERAN’S DAY PARADE, Nov. 9; downtown Milwaukee.
TRAINFEST, Nov. 9-10; Wisconsin State Fair Park, Expo Center,8200 W. Greenfield Ave. More than 60 model railroads, 100+manufacturers and hobby dealers, displays from ten differenthistorical societies plus educational demos and “how-to” clinics. 9a.m.-5:30 p.m. 262-820-3566, trainfest.com.
DUCK COMMANDER BOOK TOUR, Nov. 14; RiversideTheater. 286-3663.
HOLIDAY WINDOW UNVEILING, Nov. 15; Historic Cedarburg; 6p.m. 262-377-7224, ThinkCedarburgFirst.com.
MAM AFTER DARK, Nov. 15; Milwaukee Art Museum, 700 N.Art Museum Dr. Tailgate theme, music and more. 6 p.m.-midnight. 224-3200.
DELAFIELD TREE LIGHTING, Nov. 15; Downtown district.Treelighting at 5:30 p.m. 5-6 p.m. 888-294-1082 or 262-646-810.www.visitdelafield.org
DISNEY LIVE! THREE CLASSIC FAIRY TALES, Nov. 16;Milwaukee Theatre, 500 W. Kilbourn Ave. 800-745-3000.
Breakaway to Brookfield! Minutes from Milwaukee, just o I- 94. With 13 hotels, 200+ shopping opportunities and 150+ restaurants, you’ll see why we say “Brook�eld--stay, shop, eat and have fun!”
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SPECIAL EVENTSJEWELRY AT THE DOMES, Nov. 16-17; Mitchell ParkHorticultural Conservatory, The Domes. Exhibitors displayunique, hand-crafted jewelry for sale. Presented by the LooseBead Society of Greater Milwaukee. 9 a.m.-4 p.m. 257-5611.
2013 WINE & DINE WISCONSIN, Nov. 16-17; WisconsinCenter, 400 W. Wisconsin Ave. Sample from 150+ exhibitors,pouring 150+ wines and 150+ craft and imported beers, plusscores of spirits and craft cocktails in almost 200,000 squarefeet of space. Taste samples from Wisconsin’s artisanal foodmakers and Milwaukee restaurants. 11 a.m.-5 p.m.
CHRISTMAS PREVIEW GALA, Nov. 21; Pabst Mansion.Sneak peak reception. Enjoy champagne, hors d’oeuvres, asilent auction, and a stroll through the Mansion’s enchantingrooms. Tickets: $15 members; $40 non-members. 5:30-7 p.m.931-0808.
MAM MEMBER HOLIDAY SHOPPING EVENT, Nov. 19;Milwaukee Art Museum, 700 N. Art Museum Dr. After-hoursparty at the Museum Store. Complimentary wine andappetizers, live music, 20% off purchases (double Member’sdiscount), and free gift-wrapping. 5-8 p.m. RSVP to DonelePettit-Mieding at [email protected] or 224-3875.
CITY/COUNTY TREE LIGHTING, Nov. 20; Red Arrow Park,920 N. Water St. Activities start at 4:30 p.m. with tree lightsswitched on at 5:15 p.m. 100th anniversary of the tree lighting,with program that includes Mayor Tom Barrett, CountyExecutive Chris Abele and Mary Dowell, representing sponsorJohnson Controls.
HOLIDAY LIGHTS FESTIVAL KICK-OFF EXTRAVAGANZA,Nov. 21; Holiday Lights Festival Kick-Off, Pere Marquette Park,W. State and N. Old World 3rd Sts. 6 p.m. See pages 7, 40.
8th ANNUAL CEDARBURG HOLIDAY OPEN HOUSE, Nov.22-23; Historic Cedarburg. Shopping, food and holiday cheer.
HOLIDAY FOLK FAIR INTERNATIONAL, Nov. 22-24;Wisconsin State Fair Park, Expo Center. See KEY CoverFeature, pages 8-9.
A GRAND AVENUE CHRISTMAS, Nov. 22-Jan. 5; PabstMansion, 2000 W. Wisconsin Ave. 931-0808.
CEDARBURG FESTIVE FRIDAY EVES, Fridays, Nov. 22, 29,Dec. 6, 13, 20; Cedar Creek Settlement, Washington Ave. andBridge Rd. in Historic Cedarburg. Series of free, family-orientedspecial evening events during the holiday season. 866-626-7005.
WINTER GLORY FINE CRAFT SHOW, Nov. 22-23; Harley-Davidson Museum. Showcasing 52 regional artists. 3-9 p.m. Fri.,10 a.m. 5 p.m. Sat.
MILWAUKEE’S 87th ANNUAL HOLIDAY PARADE, Nov. 23;Downtown Milwaukee, beginning at Kilbourn Ave. and Astor St.,moving west on Kilbourn to Old World 3rd St., south to theentrance of the Shops of Grand Ave. Starts at 9:30 a.m.
THE NUTCRACKER SUITE–HOLIDAY SHOW, Nov. 23-Jan. 5;Mitchell Park Conservatory, The Domes. The popular ballet isreinterpreted as the holiday floral show. Poinsettias surround a 30-foot holiday tree. Stroll past scenes of toy soldiers in battle withmice, the enchanting Land of Snow and the Land of Sweets.
GRAFTON COMMUNITY TREE LIGHTING, Nov. 24; ParamountPlaza, Downtown Grafton. Entertainment, food and song. 6:30p.m. 262-377-1650.
FRESH COAST CLASSIC COLLEGE & RESOURCE FAIR, Nov.27; Wisconsin Center, 4000 W. Wisconsin Ave. Regional eventthat exposes Milwaukee area adults and students to the legacy ofHistorically Black Colleges and Universities. 9 a.m.-4:30 p.m. TheFresh Coast Classic Basketball College Tournament is Nov. 29-30at Wisconsin Lutheran College. freshcoastclassic.org.
MUSEUM STORE: MEMBER DOUBLE DISCOUNT DAY, Nov.29; Milwaukee Art Museum. (Use promo code "doublediscount"when checking out from the online shopping cart.)
SESAME STREET LIVE, Nov. 29-Dec. 1; BMO Harris BradleyCenter, 1001 N. 4th St. “Make A New Friend.” 7:30 p.m. 800-745-3000, ticketmaster.com.
SMALL BUSINESS SATURDAY, Nov. 30; Locally ownedbusinesses throughout the Milwaukee metro area.
GRAFTON’S BREAKFAST WITH SANTA, Nov. 30; Circle BRecreation Center, 6261 Hwy. 60, Cedarburg. Buffet stylebreakfast with Santa and friends by Grafton Lions Club. 7:30-10a.m. 262-377-1650 (reservations).
GRAFTON 34th ANNUAL CHRISTMAS PARADE, Nov. 30;Downtown Grafton. Holiday floats, marching units, bands, SouthShore Drill Team and Santa Claus. 11 a.m. 262-377-1650.
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THE WISCONSIN ECONOMIC DevelopmentCorporation (WEDC) recently recognized KEYMilwaukee as the Outstanding Woman-OwnedSmall Business of 2013.
Winners in this and other competition categorieswere announced at this year’s Marketplace 2013Governor’s Conference on Minority BusinessDevelopment in Milwaukee held at the PotawatomiBingo Casino Expo Center.
WEDC chiefoperating officerand deputy sec-retary RyanMurray present-ed the awardsrecognizingminority andwomen-ownedbusinesses forshowing overallbusiness excel-
lence in sales, product, customer relations, employ-ment, and management dimensions.
KEY Milwaukee placed first in the Woman-Owned
Small Business category based on its steady expan-sion of visitor information services over the past 20years. Founded in 1965, Beth Stafford acquired thepublication in 1993 and has expanded it steadily intoweb and social media. Currently publishing the onlymonthly print visitor guide in Metro Milwaukee, thecompany also operates KeyMilwaukee.com andVisitingMilwaukee.com) and has a strong socialmedia presence.
Glorious Malone's Fine Sausage in Milwaukee wasthe first runner-up in this category; StrateVantageCommunications LLC in Waukesha was the secondrunner-up.
Commenting on the recognition, Stafford said a greatdeal of KEY Milwaukee’s success is due to partner-ships with other small businesses, including AmberGraphic Media of Oak Creek, Productive Knowledgeof Brookfield and MKE Images of Germantown.
“I am proud to celebrate and honor the successes ofthe finalists of 2013 Governor’s Minority BusinessAwards,” Murray said. “Our state is well servedwhen business ownership reflects the strength anddiversity of our population.”
KEY Milwaukee wins small business award
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from World War II, Korea, and Vietnam, rendering first-handaccounts of valor which resulted in the nation’s highest militaryaward, the Medal of Honor. 273-7206.
GROUCHO: A LIFE IN REVUE, Nov. 14-Dec. 8; Next ActTheatre, 255 S. Water St. Groucho (Julius) Marx tells the familystory, from Brooklyn childhood to their start onstage, and all thechallenges and triumphs of working with his zany brothers. Theboys perform many of their best routines and favorite songs,Presented by Next Act Theatre Company. 278-0765.
NOISES OFF, Nov. 19-Dec. 22; Quadracci Powerhouse Theater,Milwaukee Theater Center, 108 E. Wells St. Called “the funniestfarce ever written” by the New York Post, Michael Frayn’s uproar-ious play-within-a-play follows the on- and off-stage antics of themembers of a mediocre touring company as they blunder froman ominously bad dress rehearsal to a spectacularly disastrousclosing performance. Milwaukee Repertory Theater production.224-9490.
THINGS BEING WHAT THEY ARE, Nov. 20-Dec. 15; StudioTheatre, Broadway Theatre Center. The minute Bill moves intohis new condo, while preparing for the arrival of his waywardwife, his nosy neighbor Jack appears at the door - looking forsome beer and sympathy. Milwaukee Chamber Theatre produc-tion. 291-7800.
THE NORTH PLAN, Nov. 23-24, 29-Dec. 1, Dec. 6-8; SixthStreet Theatre, 318 Sixth St., Racine. After a ruthless factionseizes power, Carlton Berg, a bureaucrat for the StateDepartment, runs off with the new regime's top secret enemieslist. Carlton's last hope is in the people around him: an unsympa-thetic police chief, an ambivalent administrative assistant, and afellow prisoner. (Adult language.) 262-632-6802.
A CHRISTMAS CAROL, Nov. 29-Dec. 24; Pabst Theater, 144 E.Wells St. The ultimate holiday tradition returns again for its 37thyear. Dickens’s classic masterpiece will delight and brighten yourholiday season with beautiful carols and a timeless message ofhope, peace, love, and the true meaning of the holidays.224-9490.
THE BEST CHRISTMAS PAGEANT EVER, Nov. 29-Dec. 29;Marcus Center. Despite the interruptions in church, the fights –and even a small fire! – the spirit of the season comes alive in theHerdmans. Presented by First Stage.
A CUDAHY CAROLER CHRISTMAS, Nov. 29-Jan. 5; TenthStreet Theatre, 628 N. 10th St. Stasch must reunite the CudahyCarolers to restore the spirit of the season in the hilarious hom-age to bowling, beer, friendship and forgiveness. 271-1371.
M U S I C
NOTE: At Potawatomi Bingo Casino, no one under 21 isallowed in the theater under any circumstances.
TRINITY • THREE IRISH PUBS LIVE MUSIC, 125 E. JuneauAve. Live music, phone for information. On Friday and Saturdaynights, ride the trolley between Trinity, The Harp, The Black Roseand RC's. 278-7033.
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
16
Complete address of sites and phone numbers are listedwith first mention. Area codes of phone numbers are 414unless shown otherwise. Please confirm events when possible; listings subject to change. For updates and links to websites, visit KeyMilwaukee.com.
T H E A T E R
VENUS IN FUR, through Nov. 3; Stiemke Studio Theater,Milwaukee Theater Center, 108 E. Wells St. A late-nightencounter in a deserted audition studio evolves from banal rou-tine into a sizzling battle of the sexes blending love, libido, and lit-erature. A Milwaukee Repertory Theater production.
THE DIVINE SISTER, through Nov. 3; Off the Wall Theatre, 127E. Wells St. Evoking such films as The Song of Bernadette, TheBells of St. Mary’s, The Singing Nun and Agnes of God, the storyof a mother superior who decides to tear down her crumbly oldconvent and replace it with a shiny new one. 327-3552.
THE BELLE OF AMHERST, through Nov 10; Studio Theatre,Broadway Theatre Center, 158 N. Broadway. A play based onthe life of Emily Dickinson. Presented by RenaissanceTheaterworks. 291-7800.
THE HUNGRY, HUNGRY GAMES: THE UNAUTHORIZEDPARODY, Nov. 3; Pabst Theater, 144 E. Wells St. 286-3663.
BEYOND GLORY, Nov. 11; Marcus Center for the PerformingArts, 929 N. Water St. Award winning playwright, stage andscreen star Stephan Lang presents the stories of eight veterans
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THE AUSTRALIAN BEE GEES SHOW, through Nov. 3; NorthernLights Theater, Potawatomi Bingo Casino, 1721 W. Canal St. Atribute to the Brothers Gibb. 8 p.m. Box Office, 847-7922; Ticketmaster, 800-745-3000.
SHREK THE MUSICAL, through Nov. 17; Marcus Center. Story ofadventure, friendship and ogre love by First Stage Theatre.
FOREVER PLAID, through Dec. 29; Stackner Cabaret ofMilwaukee Theater Center, 108 E. Wells St.. On a stormy night inthe 1960s, four eager singers known as “The Plaids”—Sparky,Jinx, Frankie, and Smudge—are killed in a car crash on the wayto their first big gig. In 2013, they get one chance to return fromthe afterlife and bop-shoo-bop their way through classic hits.Milwaukee Repertory Theater productio
HELLO DOLLY, Nov. 1-2; Milwaukee Theatre, 500 W. KilbournAve. Broadway touring company stars Sally Struthers.
YAMAMOTO, THE DRUMMERS OF JAPAN, Nov. 2; SharonLynne Wilson Center for the Arts, 19805 W. Capitol Dr., Brookfield.8 p.m. 262-781-9520.
PINK, Nov. 3; BMO Harris Bradley Center, 1001 N. 4th St. 227-0400, Ticketmaster, 800-745-3000. CANCELLED
AMOS LEE, Nov. 5; Riverside Theater, 116 W. Wisconsin Ave.286-3663.
LOS LONELY BOYS/JONNY LANG, Nov. 5-6; Northern LightsTheater, Potawatomi Bingo Casino.
JAKE SHIMABUKURO, Nov. 7; Pabst Theater, 144 E. Wells St.286-3663.
BLIND BOYS OF ALABAMA, Nov. 8; Pabst Theater (LowerLevel).
BLACK CROWES, Nov. 8; Riverside Theater.
LA TRAVIATA, Nov. 8 & 10; Marcus Center, 929 N. Water St.Verdi's tale of forbidden love will open Florentine OperaCompany's 80th Season.
ABBA MANIA! Nov. 15; Riverside Theater.
TWO PIANOS FOUR HANDS, Nov. 15; Marcus Center.Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra Associate Conductor FrancescoLecce-Chong, and his former teacher Pavlina Dokovska, interna-tionally renowned pianist, perform together.
FLITER PLAYS CHOPIN, Nov. 15-16; Marcus Center. MilwaukeeSymphony Orchestra.
THE BRIAN SETZER ORCHESTRA CHRISTMAS ROCKS!10TH ANNIVERSARY TOUR, Nov. 16, 18, 19; Northern LightsTheater, Potawatomi Bingo Casino, 1721 W. Canal St.
JOHN LEGEND, Nov. 18; Riverside Theater.
TONY DESARE, Nov. 20; Wilson Center, Brookfield. 8 p.m.
NELLIE MCKAY, Nov. 22; Wilson Center, Brookfield. 8 p.m.
CONTINUED ON PAGE 18
Customer oriented!• lay away • easy, convenient parking • gift certificates
• 18th thru 20th century • Almost 15,000 sq ft., packed!• Dozens of southeastern Wisconsin’s top antique dealers
and decorators • From the elegant to the funky • Small items, big items in all prices ranges
Print out directions/map from your door to ours:
www.RiverviewAntiqueMarket.com
Open 7 Days a Week, 10 a.m.-5 p.m.Questions? 414-278-9999
LES MISÉRABLES, Nov. 22-Dec. 29; Cabot Theater, BroadwayTheatre Center, 158 N. Broadway. Set in 19th century France, inthe midst of revolution, the musical follows Jean Valjean on hisquest for redemption after being jailed for stealing a loaf of bread,inspector Javert who relentlessly pursues parole violator Valjean,and an abundance of other compelling and entertaining charac-ters. Skylight Music Theatre production.
SCHUBERT’S SIXTH, Nov. 22-24; Marcus Center. MilwaukeeSymphony Orchestra.
THE LEGEND OF ZELDA: SYMPHONY OF THE GODDESSES:THE SECOND QUEST, Nov. 23; Riverside Theater.
CHARLIE DANIELS BAND, Nov. 26-27; Northern Lights Theater,Potawatomi Bingo Casino.
WHITE CHRISTMAS, Nov. 26-Dec. 1; Marcus Center. The classicholiday tradition comes to the stage at last, as a brand new IrvingBerlin musical direct from Broadway.
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ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT CONTINUED FROM PAGE 17
C O M E D Y
DAVID SEDARIS, Nov. 1; Pabst Theater, 144 E. Wells St. 286-3663.
KATT WILLIAMS, Nov. 1; US Cellular Arena, 400 W. KilbournAve. 800-745-3000.
D A N C EROMEO & JULIET, Oct. 31-Nov. 3; Marcus Center, 929 N. WaterSt. Milwaukee Ballet Company tells the story of the doomed loverscaught between feuding families. 902-2103.
E X H I B I T SAT HOME WITH FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT, continuing; The S.C.Johnson Gallery, 1520 Howe St., Racine. Gallery on Wright-designed campus features the famed architect’s Usonia Vision ofthe American Home. Open for tours Fridays and Saturdays. Noadmission charge. Call 262-260-2154 or visitscjohnson.com/visit for additional tour information.
LES PAUL: THE WIZARD OF WAUKESHA, continuing;Waukesha County Museum, 101 W. Main St., Waukesha.Permanent exhibit with one-of-a-kind artifacts and displays that tellthe story of Waukesha native Les Paul and how he changed themusic world. lespaulexperience.org.
DINOSAURS UNDER GLASS, through Nov. 3; Mitchell ParkHorticultural Conservancy (The Domes). Four model dinosaurs,ranging in length from 9 to 16 feet, are nestled among plants ofthe tropical dome. Allosaurus, Stegosaurus, Triceratops andDromaeosaurus are easily viewed from the walking paths.Educational, interpretive signage and interactive elements arelocated throughout the exhibit.
FALL INTO THE ‘50s - MUM SHOW, through Nov. 10; MitchellPark Horticultural Conservatory (The Domes), 524 S. Layton Blvd.Chrysanthemum-filled landscape fir this seasonal exhibition in theshow dome.
VETERANS BOOK PROJECT: OBJECTS FOR DEPLOYMENT,through Nov. 10; Milwaukee Art Museum. Library of booksauthored collaboratively by artist Monica Haller and dozens ofveterans who have been affected by the current American wars inIraq and Afghanistan and have archived their experiences.
ASHLEY JANKE: nAbr GALLERY, through Dec. 1; LyndenSculpture Garden, 2145 W. Brown Deer Rd., River Hills. Anoutdoor iteration of Janke’s nAbr gallery has been constructed onthe grounds. Consisting only of studded walls without a ceilng,
the exhibitin houses artists selected by Janke for a series ofrotating exhibitions over the course of a year.
FORREST MYERS: DOMESTICATED MONUMENTALISM,through Dec. 1; Lynden Sculpture Garden. Lynden celebrates theunveiling of Quartet, 1967/2013 with an exhibition of Myers’maquettes, furniture and metal paintings curated by NicholasFrank.
A WORKING RANCH BY JIM BROZEK, through Dec.13;Grohmann Museum, 1000 N. Broadway. Milwaukee photographerJim Brozek presents a striking visual meditation on life and workon an American ranch. Working on a New Mexico ranch in the late1970s and early ‘80s, Brozek captured the essence of ranchinglife and all of its nuances. 277-2300.. MILWAUKEE IN MINIATURE, through Dec. 31; MilwaukeeCounty Historical Society, 910 N. Old World 3rd St. Milwaukee’streasured historical landmarks in miniature form – 16 scalemodels of Milwaukee’s buildings as they appeared at the turn ofthe century. 273-8288.
THE SCOOP ON POOP, through Jan. 14; Milwaukee PublicMuseum. 800 W. Wells St. With a tactful blend of good scienceand fun, An investigation of what poop is and how animals andhumans use it.
THOMAS SULLY: PAINTED PERFORMANCE, through Jan. 5;Milwaukee Art Museum. This American Old Master createddynamic characters that play their parts on canvas, in perform-ances staged in paint. Includes 19th century celebrities fromPresident Andrew Jackson to stars of the international stage,and theatrical classics from Cinderella to Macbeth.
A GRAND AVENUE CHRISTMAS, Nov. 22-Jan. 5; PabstMansion, 2000 W. Wisconsin Ave. 931-0808.
CURRENTS 36: DIRK SKREBER, Nov. 22-March 2;Milwaukee Art Museum. Skreber is best known for his paintingsand sculptures that portray catastrophic events. Aerial views ofbuildings submerged in flood waters and scenes of violent caraccidents are depicted with a calm detachment that infuse thepaintings with an uncomfortable tension.
THE NUTCRACKER SUITE, Nov. 23-Jan.5; Mitchell ParkHorticultural Conservatory (The Domes). Holiday floral showincludes a myriad of poinsettias around a 30-foot holiday tree,scenes of toy soldiers in battle with mice, the enchanting Landof Snow—and every child's dream, the Land of Sweets.
BMO HARRIS BANK’S HOLIDAY DISPLAY, Dec. 2-Jan. 6; Lobby of theBMO Harris Bank, 770 N. Water St. Incredible display of stuffed animals.See KEY Attractions for hours. For each visitor to the display, BMOHarris Bank will donate $5 to Feeding America Eastern Wisconsin.
D O M E T H E A T E R / P L A N E T A R I U M
THE DANIEL M. SOREF NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC DOMETHEATER & PLANETARIUM, 800 W. Wells St. within theMilwaukee Public Museum complex offer visitors three uniquevisual experiences in one venue. Choose between 3D films, planetarium shows or giant-screen films. mpm.edu.
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Port
Was
hing
ton
Po
rt W
ashi
ngto
n
Port
Was
hing
ton
Po
rtBring in this ad for aFREE Margarita,
Sangria or Smoothiewith entrée
Expires 12/31/13 - Key
Dome Theater shows:
THROUGH NOV. 27FLIGHT OF THE BUTTERFLIES: Features a triumphant journeyof perseverance that spans thousands of miles.
THROUGH JAN. 5SEA MONSTERS 3D: Explore ancient seas populated with saber-toothed fish, prehistoric sharks, giant squid and other extraordi-nary reptile predators.
MEERKATS 3D: Follows an extraordinary – not to mentionadorable - family that stands just 12 inches tall. A NationalGeographic production, supported locally by Kalahari Resorts.
Planetarium shows:
SHOWING SELECT SATURDAYS EACH MONTH:ONE WORLD, ONE SKY: Journey with Big Bird into outer space.
SHOWING AT 10 A.M. ON SATURDAYS & 11 A.M. SUNDAYS.WISCONSIN STARGAZING: Tour the current Wisconsin night sky inthis 20-minute guided planetarium show
THROUGH JAN. 5SPACE JUNK 3D: Explore the growing ring of dangerous debris thatorbits our planet.
NOV. 21-FEB. 5CHASING THE GHOST PARTICLE: Digs deep into the ice ofAntarctica, where world’s biggest detector waits for mysterious mes-sengers from the cosmos.
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CEDARBURG
The WashingtonHouse Inn
B e d & B r e a k f a s t
Savor the romance of aCountry victorian Inn thatblends today’s comfortand conveniences with thecaptivating charm of thepast. Elegantly renovated andrestored, guest rooms feature antiques, whirlpoolbaths and fireplaces. Located in the heart ofCedarburg’s Historic District.
Gift Certificates AvailableW 62 N573 Washington Ave. Cedarburg, WI 53012
2 6 2 - 3 7 5 - 3 5 5 0www.wash ing t onhous e i nn . c om
Friday, November 22, 5-9 PM... “Christmas in Ireland” Celebrate the Christmas season with the traditions ofIreland. Irish Dance, Irish music with musician/singer IanGould. Celtic Harp with Mary Ann Miller. Irish FoodSampling. Complimentary Cider & Cookies, Wine Tastingand Olive Oil & Balsamic Tasting.
Friday, November 29, 5-9 PM...“Home For The Holidays”Two "Make It & Take It" Holiday Projects and TemporaryTattoos (free). Easy Entertaining Ideas for the Holidays. LiveMusic. Complimentary Cider & Cookies, Wine Tasting andOlive Oil & Balsamic Tasting. Soloists from The Nutcracker-Lake Shore Dance.
Friday, December 6, 5-9 PM...“Christmas in the Country”Wisconsin's Premier Christmas Boutique.Dates: December 6-8. Boutique. Admission $3.00.
Friday, December 13, 5-9 PM...“Santa’s Workshop”Visit with Santa Claus in his winter wonderland. David HBDrake's Children's Songs of the Season. Children's HolidayMake & Take Project & Cookie Decorating (free).Complimentary Cider & Cookies and Wine Tasting.
Friday, December 20, 5-9…“A Taste of Christmas”A Night for Grown-Ups. Leisurely shopping in a festiveatmosphere. Complimentary munchies. Wine Tasting andOlive Oil & Balsamic Tasting. Live Music, Choral Singers.
CEDAR CREEK SETTLEMENTWashington Avenue & Bridge Road • Historic Cedarburg, Wisconsin
(866) 626-7005 or (262) 377-4763www.cedarcreeksettlement.com
Holiday Friday Evenings 5-9*Mon-Thurs 10-5 • Fri 10-9 • Sat 10-6 • Sun 11-5
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Kapco Kids2Kids Christmaswww.kapcoinc.com
CEDARBURG
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Corner of Bridge and Washington, CedarburgIT’S ALL HERE... 25 Shops • Restaurants • Winery
OPEN 10-5 MON-THUR • 10-6 FRI • 10-6 SAT • 11-5 SUN • 866-377-4781 • WWW.CEDARCREEKSETTLEMENT.COM
Cedar Creek SettlementCedar Creek SettlementEXPERIENCE
Festive Friday Eves: 11/22-12/20, 5 p.m.-9 p.m.
Dine in the rustic surroundings of the oldmill overlooking picturesque Cedar Creek.
Don’t miss our delectable dessert crepes.Mon 10-5, Tues-Sat 10-8, Sun 11-5
CEDAR CREEK SETTLEMENT 262-377-0900
CrepesSalads
Homemade SoupsSandwiches
262-388 -4507 W62 N590 Washington Ave (at The Shoppes) Cedarburg, WI
23
CEDARBURG
Sample the Country’s largest selectionof Olive Oils and Balsamics
Also featuring a wide selection of specialty food products,gifts and custom gift baskets.
Join us for cooking demos and special events.
www.oliveandvinnies.comW64N707 Washington Avenue, Cedarburg, Wisconsin (262) 377-5944Open 7 days a week
Olive Oils, Balsamics and More!
10% OFF
with this adexpires 12/31/13
Available in holiday gift box collections.
Corner of Bridge & Washington in Downtown Cedarburg 262-377-8020Hours: Mon.-Thurs. 10-5; Fri. & Sat. 10-6; Sun. 11-5Extended Fridays evening hours for the Holidays www.cedarcreekwinery.com
Perfect for gift giving or holiday entertainingChristmas Blush & White.
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Ozaukeetourism.com (800-403-9898)CEDARBURG
A Cedarburg Christmas Everyone’s home for the
holidays Cedarburgchristmas.com
Here’s a sampling of seasonal specials:
GRAFTONBreakfast with Santa
34th Annual Grafton ParadeNov. 30
grafton-wi.org
PORT WASHINGTONChristmas on the Corner
& Parade Dec. 7
visitportwashington.com
Yes, Virginia …
Santa is alive and we
ll, and will be
pointing his sleigh tow
ard Ozaukee
County during the ho
lidays. Be sure
not to miss out on the many events
geared toward the you
ng and young-
at-heart in Belgium, Cedarbur
g,
Fredonia, Grafton, Lux
embourg,
Mequon, Port Washington,
Saukville
and Thiensville.
www.grafton-wi.org262-377-1650
Bring your Letters to Santa to any of these events!
Community Tree
Lighting
Sunday, Nov. 246:30 p.m.
Paramount Plaza Downtown
Breakfast with Santa
Saturday, Nov. 307:30-10:00 a.m.
Circle B Recreation262-377-1650
(advanced reservations required)
34th AnnualChristmas Parade
Saturday, Nov. 3011:00 a.m.
DowntownGrafton
Visit Port Washingtonon Lake Michigan, just north of Milwaukee
Experience wonderful dining; unique shops. Lakeview lodging; off-season specials. Winter hiking, ski, & snowmobile trails nearby. Bring yourcamera for the dramatic photo opportunities!1-800-719-4881 or VisitPortWashington.comFind us on Facebook
Visit Port Washingtonon Lake Michigan, just north of Milwaukee
Experience wonderful dining; unique shops. Lakeview lodging; off-season specials. Winter hiking, ski, & snowmobile trails nearby. Bring yourcamera for the dramatic photo opportunities!1-800-719-4881 or VisitPortWashington.comFind us on Facebook
Give yourself a gift & enjoythe preparation for this
holiday season, or plan tocome relax after it is past.
25
invite you into Bavarian-Style Miller Inn for free samples (onlyfor 21 and older). MILLERCOORS HOLIDAY TOURS: HolidayLites tours run Fridays and Saturdays the first three weeks ofDecember, 4- 9 p.m., with last tour at 8 p.m. Video, speciallight show, and samples of MillerCoors seasonal brews. VisitorCenter closed Dec. 24 & 25, Dec. 31 and Jan. 1.
SEE THE CITY
HISTORIC MILWAUKEE. Saturdays at 1 p.m., “Skywaukee”tours are conducted via Milwaukee’s skywalks through Dec. 14then resume Jan. 4-May 10. Tours start at Shops of GrandAvenue, 161 W. Wisconsin Ave., at the statue on ground flooratrium beside TJ MAXX. 277-7795, historicmilwaukee.org.
MILWAUKEE FOOD & CITY TOURS, 800-979-3370. DiscoverMilwaukee’s most delicious neighborhoods. Guided walkingtours, tastings, plus stories of rich immigrant past. Customgroup tour planning - factory tours, progressive dinners, cooking demonstrations, unique Pizza Bus Tours and otherspecialty tours. MilwaukeeFoodTours.com.
UNTAPPED TOURS Seasonal three-hour city tours resume inMay, 2014. 414-698-8058. Untappedtour.com
TAKE A SIDETRIP
TEN CHIMNEYS, Genesee Depot (exit I-94 at Hwy. 83 south, 30 min-utes west of Milwaukee. 262-968-4110. Estate tours of the home ofBroadway greats Alfred Lunt & Lynne Fontanne, a National HistoricLandmark. Tours Tues.-Sat. through Dec. 1.
SEE AND SAMPLE
BEST PLACE at the historic Pabst Brewery, 901 W. JuneauAve. 630-1609. Experience Milwaukee brewing history by tour-ing the former Pabst headquarters (Closed Tues.). Best PlaceTavern: 11:30 a.m.-8 p.m. Sun., Mon. & Wed. ; 11:30 a.m.-midnight Thurs.-Sat. Gift Shop open 11:30 a.m.-6 p.m. Wed..-Mon. Beer History Tours 2 & 4 p.m. Mon., Wed. & Thurs.;noon, 1 p.m. & 2 p.m. Fri.-Sun.
CEDAR CREEK WINERY, corner of Bridge and WashingtonSts. in Cedarburg. 262-377-8020. Tours 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Mon.through Sat. and 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Sun. year-round. Gift shop.
GREAT LAKES DISTILLERY, 616 W. Virginia St. 431-8683.Tasting Room hours are 11 a.m.-10 p.m. Mon.-Thurs., 11 a.m.-midnight Fri. & Sat., 11 a.m.-8 p.m. Sun. Call or visit great-lakesdistillery.com for tour times.
HARLEY-DAVIDSON PILGRIM RD. POWERTRAIN OPERATIONS FACTORY TOUR, W156 N9000 Pilgrim Rd.,Menomonee Falls. The Pilgrim Rd. Steel Toe Tour packageincludes a ticket to the Harley-Davidson Museum. A shuttletakes visitors from the museum to Pilgrim Rd. to see an up-close-and-personal view of the assembly line, powder coatprocess, cold testing and steel and aluminum machining. TheSteel Toe Tour goes behind-the-scenes through areas previ-ously unseen by the public. Free Pilgrim Rd. factory tours alsoare available. For tour times and reservations, visit harley-davidson.com/experience or call 877-883-1450.
LAKEFRONT BREWERY, 1872 N. Commerce St. 372-8800.For tour times and details, lakefrontbrewery.com
MILWAUKEE BREWING COMPANY, 613 Second St. 226-2337; Small-scale craft brewery operated by Milwaukee Ale House. Regular tours.
SPRECHER BREWING COMPANY, 701 W. Glendale Ave.964-7837. Milwaukee’s original microbrewery, nationally knownfor fine European style beers and gourmet sodas. Only a fewmiles north of downtown. Call for tour info. Gift shop openevery day 11 a.m.-6 p.m., except major holidays.
MILLER BREWERY TOURS, 4251 W. State St. 931-BEER/2337 or .millercoors.com. Experience brewing historysince 1855. See production from brewing to bottling and distri-bution. Visit the Historic Caves where Fred Miller himself will
KEY TOURS
furnishings and worldwide art collection. Open 1-5 p.m., Wed.-Sun.
DISCOVERY WORLD, 500 N. Harbor Dr. 765-9966. Unique interactivescience attractions, freshwater and saltwater aquariums and a virtual-reality chamber with 30 simulated environments. Open to public from 9a.m.-4 p.m. Tues.-Fri.,10 a.m.-5 p.m. Sat. & Sun. Home of Great Lakesschooner Denis Sullivan.
BRONZE FONZ, just south of W. Wells St. on Milwaukee’s RiverWalk(east bank), is a statue of Arthur (The Fonz) Fonzarelli, the charismaticrole played by actor Henry Winkler in the long-running “Happy Days”television series set in Milwaukee. Great spot for a picture.
GROHMANN MUSEUM at Milwaukee School of Engineering, 1000N. Broadway. 277-7501. Home of the world’s most comprehensive artcollection dedicated to the evolution of human work. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Mon.-Fri., noon-6 p.m. Sat., 1-4 p.m. Sun.
HARLEY-DAVIDSON MUSEUM, 400 W. Canal St. 877-436-8738.Whether visitors were born to be wild – or mild – makes no difference atthe Harley-Davidson Museum in Milwaukee. More than a nostalgia tripfor motorcycle enthusiasts, the museum offers a glimpse of American his-tory and culture like as never seen before – through the successes andtrials of an iconic American company. Open daily 10 a.m.- 6 p.m. and until 8 p.m. on Thurs. H-DMuseum.com.
HOLY HILL near Hartford, northwest of Milwaukee, is the highest point inSoutheastern Wisconsin and includes the Basilica of Holy Hill.
IRISH CULTURAL AND HERITAGE CENTER OF WISCONSIN, 2133 W. Wisconsin Ave. 345-8800. Located in the landmark GrandAvenue Congregational Church building, the center hosts cultural pro-grams, concerts and dances and is a center for genealogical research.
LAKESHORE STATE PARK, 273-1173. 17-acre park located on LakeMichigan adjacent to Summerfest and Discovery World.
LUXEMBOURG AMERICAN CULTURAL CENTER, 262-476-5086.Located in Belgium, Wis., 40 minutes north of Milwaukee. Genealogicalrecords, gift shop. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Wed., Thurs. & Fri. and 1-4 p.m. firstand third Sat. of each month. I-43N at Exit 107, left to County LL andright to center. luxamculturalsociety.org
BEST PLACE at the historic Pabst Brewery, 901 W. Juneau Ave.630-1609. Experience Milwaukee brewing history. See KEY Tours.
BETTY BRINN CHILDREN’S MUSEUM, 929 E. Wisconsin Ave. 2ndFloor. 390-KIDS. Milwaukee’s only area museum designed for childrenages 1-10. Interactive exhibits provide hands-on learning for kids to “Playtheir way Smart!” 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Mon. through Sat,. noon-5 p.m. Sun.
BMO HARRIS BANK’S HOLIDAY DISPLAY, lobby of the BMO HarrisBank, 770 N. Water St. Open Mon., Dec. 2 through Mon., Jan. 6. Hoursare Mon. through Fri. from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. On weekends, ChristmasDay and New Year's Day, the display will be open from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.Special Note: The lobby will be closed after 1 p.m. on Sat., Dec 14, andTues., Dec. 24; and after 5 p.m. on Mon., Jan 6. For each visitor to thedisplay, BMO Harris Bank will donate $5 to Feeding America EasternWisconsin.
BOERNER BOTANICAL GARDENS/WHITNALL PARK, 9400 BoernerDr., Hales Corners. 525-5600. Fifty-two acres of formal gardens sur-round the expansive Education and Visitor Center. Call for hours.
CAPTAIN FREDERICK PABST MANSION, 2000 W. Wisconsin Ave.931-0808. This Flemish Renaissance home of Captain Frederick Pabst,built in 1893, features unique Victorian craftsmanship and design. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Mon. through Sat. Noon-4 p.m. Sun. HOLIDAY SEASONPASS: Visitors may choose the $15 Holiday Season Pass to the PabstMansion, Charles Allis Art Museum, and Villa Terrace DecorativeArts Museum. The pass may be used through Jan. 5.
CHARLES ALLIS ART MUSEUM, 1801 N. Prospect Ave. 278-8295.Elegant 1911 Tudor-style mansion museum with period rooms, original
ATTRACTIONS
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Milwaukee County Zoo
Pabst Mansion
Shops of Grand Avenue
LYNDEN SCULPTURE GARDEN, 2145 W. Brown Deer Rd. 446-8794. A unique experience of art in nature through a collection of morethan 50 monumental sculptures. Thru March 11: 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Mon.,Tues., Wed., Fri.; noon-5 p.m. Sat. & Sun. CLOSED Thurs.
MARCUS CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS, 929 N. Water St.273- 7121. Home of the Milwaukee Symphony, Milwaukee Ballet,Florentine Opera Company, First Stage Children’s Theater.
MILWAUKEE ART MUSEUM, 700 N. Art Museum Dr. 224-3200. Themuseum includes the internationally acclaimed Santiago Calatrava-designed Quadracci Pavilion, Burke Brise Soleil and the Cudahy Gardens.10 a.m.-5 p.m. Tues.-Sun. and until 8 p.m. on Thurs.
MILWAUKEE COUNTY HISTORICAL SOCIETY, 910 N. Old World 3rdSt. Open 9:30 a.m.-5 p.m. Mon.-Sat. 273-8288.
MILWAUKEE COUNTY ZOO, 10001 W. Bluemound Rd. 771-3040. Just10 minutes from downtown, the Milwaukee County Zoo is home to 2,500rare and wild animals. The animals roam in natural exhibits on 194 acres.Nov. thru Feb.: 9:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Mon.-Fri., 9:30-4:30 Sat. & Sun.Entrance gates close 45 minutes prior to closing time, animal buildings15 minutes prior to closing time. Open 365 days a year.
MILWAUKEE PUBLIC MARKET, 400 N. Water St. in the Historic ThirdWard. 336-1111. Milwaukee’s ethnic diversity is reflected in fresh fish,cheese, wine, baked goods, coffee, confections and spices.
MILWAUKEE PUBLIC MUSEUM AND THE DANIEL M. SOREFNATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC DOME THEATER & PLANETARIUM, corner of 7th and Wells Sts. 278-2728.The Milwaukee Public Museumboasts award-winning, walk-through exhibits and lifelike dioramas.MPM's Dome Theater and Planetarium offers visitors two unique visualexperiences in one space.
MITCHELL GALLERY OF FLIGHT, main concourse of MitchellInternational Airport. Traces role Milwaukee played in the history of civilianand military air travel.
MITCHELL PARK CONSERVATORY, THE DOMES, 524 S. Layton Blvd.257-5611. One of a kind horticultural facility, featuring arid, rain forest andshow domes. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Mon.-Fri., 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Sat. & Sun.
NORTH POINT LIGHTHOUSE in Milwaukee's Lake Park. 332-6754. 74-foot, 1888 lighthouse is open 1-4 p.m. Sat. & Sun.
All phone numbers 414 area code unless otherwise indicated
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‘Slice of Ice’ at Red Arrow Park
POTAWATOMI BINGO CASINO, 1721 W. Canal St. Located minutesfrom Milwaukee’s downtown, two-story entertainment complex offershigh-stakes bingo; blackjack, craps and roulette table games and videoand reel slot machines. 500-seat cabaret-style theater. Buffet, sports barand fine dining restaurants. Open 24 hours a day. paysbig.com
RED ARROW PARK ICE SKATING, 920 N. Water St. north ofMilwaukee City Hall. Opens beginning of December, weather permitting.
ST. JOSAPHAT BASILICA, 601 W. Lincoln Ave. 645-5623. One of 16basilicas in the U.S. features one of the five largest domes in the world.
SCHLITZ AUDUBON CENTER, 1111 E. Brown Deer Rd. 352-2880.
SHOPS OF GRAND AVENUE, Wisconsin Ave. at Old World 3rd St.,Hosts the Warming House for the Jingle Bus and presents "Saturdays withSanta" 10 a.m.-noon Nov. 23, 4:30-6:30 Dec. 7, and 4-6 p.m. Dec. 14 &21. Also on the first floor Nov. 15-Jan. 2, Maestro Leonard Bearstein andhis animatronic orchestra of bears perform every hour, on the hour.
SKY KNIGHTS SPORT PARACHUTE CLUB, East Troy, Wis., 30 min-utes southwest of Milwaukee off I-43. 262-642-9494.Tandem skydivesand Accelerated Freefall Program available. Jump year-round as weather permits. SkyDiveMilwaukee.com.
TEN CHIMNEYS, Genesee Depot (exit I-94 at Hwy. 83 south, 30 minuteswest of Milwaukee. 262-968-4110. Estate tours of the home of Broadwaygreats Alfred Lunt & Lynne Fontanne, a National Historic Landmark. May 7-Dec. 1: 10 a.m.-2:45 p.m. Tues.-Sat. Call for reservations.
VILLA TERRACE DECORATIVE ARTS MUSEUM, 2220 N. Terrace Ave.271-3656. Renaissance-style villa with formal gardens overlooks LakeMichigan. Open 1-5 p.m, Wed. through Sun.
WAUKESHA COUNTY MUSEUM, 101 W. Main St., Waukesha. 262-521-2859. Historical exhibits, including Les Paul: The Wizard ofWaukesha. 10 a.m.- 4:30 p.m. Tues.-Sat.
WISCONSIN MARITIME MUSEUM, 75 Maritime Dr., Manitowoc, Wis., 79 miles north of Milwaukee. 920-684-0218. Tour a fully restoredWWII submarine moored at the museum, a Smithsonian affiliate and thelargest maritime museum on the Great Lakes. Open every day.
Lynden Sculpture GardenAlexander Liberman, Orbits
SMALL BUSINESS SATURDAYHoliday shopping is in the air! Support Milwaukee retailers and shop the locally-owned businesses in the Historic Third Ward. As part of Small Business Saturday, select retailers
will offer shoppers the opportunity to receive a complimentary gift with purchase. Some restrictions apply. Visit shoptheward.com for details.Saturday, November 30 ~ 10am to 6pm
CHRISTMAS IN THE WARDVisit the Historic Third Ward’s 25th Annual Christmas in the Ward Friday, December 6 and Saturday, December 7. On Friday, bring the family to experience an old-fashioned tree lighting ceremony and
by the Trinity Irish Dancers and of course…Santa! On both Friday and Saturday enjoy live reindeer, musical entertainment, horse-drawn carriage rides and more. Visit Santa and have your picture taken! Make a $5 donation to the Ronald McDonald House and get a keepsake photo with Santa at Jolly’s Outdoor Gingerbread House. So bundle up and
your Christmas tree, shop, dine, and play!
SCULPTURES ON ICEWinter Gallery Night and Day will be the host of Sculptures on Ice, Milwaukee’s annual ice sculpting exhibition on Friday, January 17. Bundle up and bring your family and friends to witness these artistic cold weather creations! Between 10am and 6pm on Friday, you can watch local
ice into creative pieces of art in Catalano Square (Broadway & Menomonee St.) It will truly be amazing to see.
Visit HistoricThirdWard.org
HISTORICHISTORIC
Third WardThe best place to shop, dine, and play!
Photo by David Ware
Check out our new happy hour!
Featuring $2 off all Milwaukee Brewing Beers,Wines and Rail Cocktails
and a three, four and five dollar food menu.
Served Tuesday - Friday 3pm - 6pm & Thursday 10pm - close
ale-house.com 233 N. Water St. 414-276-2337
VotedMilwaukee’sBest BrewPub in 2012!
East Town Women’s ShopThe very best in resale fashions!
Tremendous selection of name brand anddesigner items including St. John, Chanel,
Gucci, Hermes, Prada, Ferragamo and moreat a fraction of original retail!
World Class Re-Sale ESTABLISHE1928Now featuring high-end men’s designer clothes
Hours: M-F: 10-5:30; Sat: 10-5; Sun: Noon -4. 159 N. Broadway 414-273-1030
www.east townwomensresale .com
Winter Fashions Arriving Daily!
SMALL BUSINESS SATURDAYHoliday shopping is in the air! Support Milwaukee retailers and shop the locally-owned businesses in the Historic Third Ward. As part of Small Business Saturday, select retailers
will offer shoppers the opportunity to receive a complimentary gift with purchase. Some restrictions apply. Visit shoptheward.com for details.Saturday, November 30 ~ 10am to 6pm
CHRISTMAS IN THE WARDVisit the Historic Third Ward’s 25th Annual Christmas in the Ward Friday, December 6 and Saturday, December 7. On Friday, bring the family to experience an old-fashioned tree lighting ceremony and
by the Trinity Irish Dancers and of course…Santa! On both Friday and Saturday enjoy live reindeer, musical entertainment, horse-drawn carriage rides and more. Visit Santa and have your picture taken! Make a $5 donation to the Ronald McDonald House and get a keepsake photo with Santa at Jolly’s Outdoor Gingerbread House. So bundle up and
your Christmas tree, shop, dine, and play!
SCULPTURES ON ICEWinter Gallery Night and Day will be the host of Sculptures on Ice, Milwaukee’s annual ice sculpting exhibition on Friday, January 17. Bundle up and bring your family and friends to witness these artistic cold weather creations! Between 10am and 6pm on Friday, you can watch local
ice into creative pieces of art in Catalano Square (Broadway & Menomonee St.) It will truly be amazing to see.
Visit HistoricThirdWard.org
HISTORIC
Third WardThe best place to shop, dine, and play!
Photo by David Ware
DELAFIELD 262-646-4534
MADISON414-273-4534
CEDARBURG 262-376-4534
WAUKESHA 262-549-4534
MILWAUKEE 414-273-4534
WAUWATOSA 414-258-4534
30
158 N. Broadway | 414.291.7800milwaukeechambertheatre.com
A bromantic comedyby Wendy MacLeod
Nov. 20 - Dec. 15“you got any brewskies?”
Mark your calendar for Christmas in the Ward, Dec. 6-7
31
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Web site provides details
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CONSTRUCTION is more than 50%
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Travelers are advised by the Wisconsin Department of
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construction, current traffic conditions, current and
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Travelers are advised by the Wisconsin Department of
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updates on the project, including driving directions around
construction, current traffic conditions, current and
upcoming road closure information and planned future clo-
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36
KEY GALLERIESART GALLERIES can yield incredible, one-of-a-kind gifts. Located in the Historic Third Ward,KATIE GINGRASS GALLERY has movedfrom its long-time Broadway location to theMarshall Building at 207 E. Buffalo St. On dis-play through Nov. 16 are paintings by“Wisconsin’s own American Impressionist”Tom Nachreiner. (Examples of Nachreiner’swork are shown on this page.)
RIVERVIEW ANTIQUE MARKET, 175 S.Water St. just across the Milwaukee River fromthe Historic Third Ward, is the destination forvintage art and photos from the area’s leadingantique dealers and decorators. The market isopen seven days a week, 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
Especially during the holidays, we love to headnorth to historic Cedarburg, just 30 minutesnorth of downtown.
A new favorite stop is ELVIA’S ARTE-GALLERY BOUTIQUE, located at theWashington Avenue Shoppes, W62 N590Washington Ave., in the heart of Cedarburg.Owner Elvia Pena-Savage creates beautifulworks of art in watercolors, acrylics and oils.The colors used in the abstract artworks rangefrom strident bolds to dreamlike pales, butevery artwork beckons to the visitor. Clearly,the longer you spend with Penn-Savage’s work,the more you see. An example of her artwork ison the following page. Contact the gallery at262-388-4507.
Also in Cedarburg, don’t miss THE PINKLLAMA GALLERY (thepinkllama.com) whichhas an address of W62 N580 Washington Ave.,but is entered through the rear porch across thestreet from the red and white pagoda. Thegallery features fine art, accessories and more.
CEDAR CREEK POTTERY in Cedarburg’sCedar Creek Settlement features handcraftedwork of artists from Wisconsin and beyond.Also in the historic Settlement, LA DIVA offersjewelry crafted by the owner and features art-work that is perfect for gifts.
For years, LEAP OF FAITH has been inspiringvisitors with its nurturing atmosphere and art-work from around the world. Owner PatriciaLietzke is retiring, however, and the gallerycloses at the end of 2013. “Gentle discounts” areplanned on remaining inventory, starting thismonth.
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In Port Washington, visit BLUE HERON ARTISAN’S GALLERY. The gallery 102 E. Pier St.is located in a 1929 fire station building. ThroughNov. 17, explore Inside Out & Upside Down. Theexhibition focuses on opposites, optical illusions
and tricking the eye. Owner Bette Langford says,“Things aren't always how they appear to be!”From Nov. 22-Dec. 23, the Arch Gallery Showroomwill be transformed into a mini Holiday GiftBoutique.
Popular Music Under Glass begins fifth season at the Domes
MUSIC UNDER GLASS, the popular series ofconcerts at Milwaukee County’s landmark horti-cultural domes, opens its fifth season Nov. 7 andcontinues every Thursday through April 3,including Thanksgiving.
Held in the show dome from 6:30-9:30 p.m., theconcerts include light shows set to music andplayed during breaks and following each perfor-mance. About 14,000 people enjoyed the 2012-13concert series and this season’s lineup is expectedto bring a new high in attendance.
“Music Under Glass celebrates area talent andbrings music and culture to our residents,” saidMilwaukee County Executive Chris Abele. “Thisis an amazing weekly event that transforms TheDomes into a fall and winter ‘getaway.’”
New this year is an area in the lobbywith information tables staffed by com-munity non-profit groups. Each week anew group will explain its mission andhow the public can become involved.
“In addition to taking in great perfor-mances, seeing spectacular light showsand exploring a ‘Milwaukee’s LivingLandmark,’ the public can becomeaware of all the great opportunities thenon-profits offer,” said John Dargle,interim parks director. “Concert-goerswill be introduced to a variety of organi-zations and will learn how theirinvolvement can make our community abetter place.”
The concert series is completely fundedthrough partnerships. Funding partners,including WaterStone Bank, VMP, BlueMoon Brewing Company and Friends ofThe Domes, will have informationbooths in the lobby.
During the run of the concert series, twoof the most popular floral shows will beon display in the show dome.
Beginning Nov. 23, “Nutcracker Suite”brings a floral reinterpretation of theholiday classic. And starting Jan. 18, thegarden train show called “Gas lampExpress” features G-scale trains runningover more than 600 feet of track, sur-rounded by a landscape created withminiature plants.
Completed in 1967, the unique threebeehive-shaped horticultural domes at524 S. Layton Blvd. quickly became alandmark for visitors to Milwaukee. In2008, a new LED lighting system illumi-nated the domes nightly and led todevelopment of light shows inside theshow dome.
Admission to Music Under Glass isunchanged from the past season: $6.50for adults and $5 for youth 6-17. Foodand beverages are available for pur-chase from the Zilli Hospitality Group.
For additional information, visit countyparks.com or call the Domes at 414-257-5611.
Scheduled bands and themes:
Nov. 7: WAMI Award winner Tweed Funk, horn-drivenblues, soul and funk with a show band style.
Nov. 14: Jack and Jill Jazz, Voice-guitar Jazz Duo (showin lobby)
Nov. 21: Reverend Raven & the Chain Smokin’ AlterBoys, blues.
Nov. 28: (Thanksgiving Day) Valerie B and the Boys,R&B and Funk. Hours extended until 10 p.m.
Dec. 5: Tom Brusky Polka Band, polka variety band.
Dec. 12: De La Buena, jazz that explores the textures ofdiverse cultures.
Dec. 19: “Santa Gets Rocked Night” with The CheapShots, a party-rock cover band.
Dec. 26: Holiday Show with the Kai Bergendahl Pro jazz,Christian and pop originals.
Jan. 2: Semi Twang, roots-based with lead singer/songwriter John Seeger.
Jan. 9: The Neil Diamond and Nostalgia Show with Ebertand Alper (show in lobby).
Jan. 16: Johnny Cash Tribute with the Liam Ford Bandplaying Johnny’s 20 greatest hits.
Jan. 23: Almighty Vinyl (formerly Stoneship Eden), ‘70sclassic rock.
Jan. 30: Star Wars Night, a tribute to Outer Space withSigmund Snopek and David Woods.
Feb. 6: The R Country Gals, Bluegrass with five-part harmonies.
Feb. 13: Valentine’s Celebration with Vivo, featuringWarren Wiegratz, contemporary jazz, pop, Bossa, samba.
Feb. 20: Beatles Tribute with The BriTins.
Feb. 27: The Test 1.2 Band, full mix of semi-acousticsongs.
March 6: Marcell’s Matrix, blues, rock and funk.
March 13: Irish Celebration Night with Tallymoor playing energizing Celtic and folk classics.
March 20: Jake Paul Band, jam band playing rock,Reggae and blues.
March 27: The Noyz Boyz & Girls, 10-piece horn bandwith three vocalists playing rock and R&B.
April 3: Beach Party Night as John Van Thiel sings Elviswith backup by the Ocean Rush Band and dancers fromHale O Malo.
40
The 15th Annual Milwaukee Holiday LightsFestival, Nov. 21-Dec. 29, begins with a gala open-ing night on Thursday, Nov. 21. The six-week festi-val hosts a switch-flipping ceremony in PereMarquette Park, 900 N. Plankinton Ave. Attractingover 5,000 guests annually, the celebration featuresmusic, dancing, Santa and a much-anticipated fire-works show.
The cast of this year’s Milwaukee Holiday LightsFestival Kick-Off Extravaganza includes SpiderGeorge & The Web; Ice Beat Factory, an ice-sculpt-ing performance group; Studio VIA; The Tempters;Danceworks; First Stage theater company perform-ing a scene from “The Best Christmas PageantEver;” and the show’s guest of honor, Santa Claus.
Entertainment begins at 6 p.m. At approximately6:30 p.m., invited guests Governor Scott Walker,Mayor Tom Barrett, County Executive Chris Abeleand Milwaukee aldermen lead the crowd in acountdown. Fireworks synchronized to holidaysongs top off the program and free Jingle Bus ridesoperate from Pere Marquette Park, taking guestspast all of downtown’s newly lit decorations.
Not-to-be-missed are the chandeliers suspendedabove Wisconsin Ave. Also delighting kids of allages is the décor in Pere Marquette Park at WestState and Old World 3rd Streets; Cathedral Square
Park at North Jefferson and East Wells Streets andZeidler Union Square at West Michigan between3rd and 4th Streets.
The themes for each park are “Electric Elves” atPere Marquette Park, “Community Spirit Park” atCathedral Square Park and “Musical Bears” atZeidler Union Square.
Milwaukee Downtown, Business ImprovementDistrict #21 is the organization responsible for theprocurement, installment and maintenance ofthese decorations. The BID also coordinates theNov. 21 kick-off ceremony in Pere MarquettePark.
After opening night, Jingle Bus rides operatefrom 6 p.m. to 9 p.m., Thursdays throughSundays, Nov. 22-Dec. 29. The 40-minute tour isnarrated by Milwaukee Downtown’s PublicService Ambassadors. Rides are $1 per personand depart from The Shops of Grand Avenue’sCenter Court, Third Street and WisconsinAvenue.
For additional information on the MilwaukeeHoliday Lights Festival, phone 414-220-4700 orvisit milwaukeeholidaylights.com.
Join the fun at Holiday Lights Festivalkick-off extravaganza on Nov. 21
41
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home of Broadway Legends ALFRED LUNT and LYNN FONTANNE (262)968-4110 | W W W.TENCHIMNEYS.ORG
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WE THINK YOU’LL LIKE...MILLER BREWING COMPANY’S GIRL IN THE MOON GIFTSHOP located in the tour center of the company’s landmarkMilwaukee brewery, N. 42nd and W. State Sts., is a greatplace to buy distinctive gifts.
BEST PLACE at the historic Pabst Brewery, 901 W. JuneauAve., has a gift shop that is open noon-6 p.m., Thurs.-Sun. Thisis the spot to pick up a piece of Milwaukee brewing history.
At GREAT LAKES DISTILLERY, 616 W. Virginia St., you canbrowse for souvenirs of your visit and visit the Tasting Room11 a.m.-10 p.m. Mon.-Thurs., 11 a.m.-midnight Fri. & Sat., 11a.m.-8 p.m. Sun. Products such as Rehorst PremiumMilwaukee Vodka, Rehorst Premium Milwaukee Gin andRehorst Citrus & Honey flavored Vodka also are available atbars, restaurants and retailers. Tour info is at 431-8683.
SPRECHER BREWERY, 701 W. Glendale Ave., Milwaukee’soriginal micro-brewery for beer, collectibles and even beer-fla-vored kettle chips. Shop the brewery’s gift shop from 11 a.m.-6 p.m. Mon.-Fri. and 10 a.m.- 5 p.m. Sat. Brewery tours infoat 964-2739.
SUBURBAN MOTORS Harley-Davidson & Buell, north ofMilwaukee at 139 N. Main St. in Thiensville, is the largest vol-ume dealer in Wisconsin and the fifth largest in the world.
KLOIBER JEWELERS on the Galleria level of US BankCenter, 777 E. Wisconsin Ave., has been Milwaukee’s sourcefor fine jewelry at great prices for 80-plus years. Phone 276-2457 for information on hours.
KEY SHOPPING
MUSEUM SHOPS & MOREThe shop at THE MILWAUKEE ART MUSEUM, 700 N. ArtMuseum Dr., offers distinctive gifts and items emblazonedwith images of the Burke Brise Soleil that now symbolize thecity of Milwaukee. DISCOVERY WORLD MUSEUM, 500 N.Harbor Dr., offers a diverse array of products in its gift shop.Inside the MILWAUKEE PUBLIC MUSEUM, 800 W. WellsSt., browse through a unique collection of items gatheredfrom around the world. The HARLEY-DAVIDSON MUSEUM,400 W. Canal at S. Sixth St., has a gift shop for items thatsay “Milwaukee Iron,” located just outside the museum. Whenyou Visit the MILWAUKEE COUNTY ZOO, don’t overlook thezoo the gift shop for a souvenir. Zoo gift cards can be usedtowards food, merchandise and membership.
WATER STREETShop the MORNING GLORY GALLERY, inside the lobby ofthe Marcus Center for the Performing Arts in downtownMilwaukee. The Gallery is your one-stop source for hand-some holiday gifts, all made locally by Wisconsin artists.Choose from jewelry, fiber, ceramics, leather, glass, sculpture,wood, photography, painting and mixed media. Open Thurs.,Fri. and Sat. 12-6 p.m. and during all shows in Uihlein Hall.929 N. Water St. 515-765-7227, mggallery.org
OLD WORLD THIRD STREETStroll down Old World 3rd St. and you can sample some ofMilwaukee’s finest foods. Perhaps the area’s most-visitedfood retailer is USINGER’S FAMOUS SAUSAGE, 1030 N.
La Diva, Cedarburg
goo goo gaa gaa, Brookfield
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GREAT LAKES DISTILLERY,Wisconsin’s first distillery since Prohibition, is a small-batch distillery that has beenwinning awards almost since its inception in 2006.
Located at 616 W. Virginia St.,Great Lakes is known for itsRehorst Premium MilwaukeeVodka, Rehorst Gin, RoaringDan’s Rum and KinnickinnicWhiskey, and also producesother hand-crafted specialties.
Intrigued by the taste ofLakefront Brewery’s PumpkinLager, Great Lakes used thelager to create a wonderful seasonal spirit. Lakefront'sPumpkin Lager is based on a recipe fromThomas Jefferson, made with real pumpkinand described as the “only pumpkin lager inexistence.”
Artisans at Great Lakes distill the lager, age itand then bottle it at 90 proof. Bottles are handdipped in pumpkin orange wax and handnumbered. The Beverage Testing Institute’sreview of the specialty product gave it a SilverMedal and a rating of 89 points (highly recom-mended).
This year’s Batch 6 of Pumpkin Spirit was agedin a unique combination of woods, includingused Rum, Bourbon and Cabernet Sauvignonbarrels, as well as new charred American Oak.
Information on Great Lakes’ tours is on page24 of this issue.
Special events planned at Great Lakes:
• Nov. 5: Fifth Annual Winter Cycling Forum& Party, 6:30-9 p.m.
• Dec . 8 (tentative): Milwaukee’s LargestBloody Mary Party.
Great Lakes Distillery offers seasonal specialty
Old World 3rd St. Located at the same site since the 1880s,Usinger’s adheres strictly to the original family sausagerecipes. If you can’t stop, call 800-558-9998 or visit www.usinger.com
HISTORIC THIRD WARDJust south of Downtown, this vibrant former wholesale and manufacturing district is enjoying a sparkling renaissance, withshops, galleries and restaurants. Don’t miss the round of spe-cial events held here. BREW CITY BEER GEAR has set up anew shop at the Milwaukee Public Market, 400 N. Water St.While the market has always been a great place to eat like acheesehead, you can now score a Wisconsinite “look” as well.
SACHEN CONTEMPORARY IMPORTS, now at 241 N.Broadway, pulls its name from the German word for “things.”Inspired by European designs, this is the place to find func-tional items – from toys to teapots – that adorn your homewith style and practicality.
EAST TOWN WOMEN’S SHOP, 159 N. Broadway, located onthe first floor, is the Milwaukee area’s oldest and finest resaleshop. You’ll find the finest designer and name brand fashionsas you browse for something “new for you” to update yourwardrobe. This also is a “green” way to look right. Right next door is BANGLES & BAGS, a jewelry, handbagand accessory boutique for those looking for an affordableway to accessorize. The arrangement of items in color group-ings makes this a fun as well as budget-friendly stop. Alsolook for locations in Waukesha, 307 W. Main St.; Delafield,611 Main St.; Cedarburg, W63 N672 Washington Ave.; andWauwatosa,1504 Underwood Ave.
WALKER’S POINT/FIFTH WARDRIVERVIEW ANTIQUE MARKET at 175 S. Water St. hosts 50 dealers from throughout Wisconsin. In 15,000 square feet of space, you will find small and large items in all price ranges.
Bangles & Bags
Cedar Creek Winery, Cedarburg
KEY SHOPPING CONTINUED FROM PAGE 43
CEDARBURGFamous for its historic limestone buildings, Cedarburg provides a small town getaway, only 20 minutes north ofMilwaukee. At the corner of Washington and Spring is theGeneral Store Museum, which includes the CEDARBURGCHAMBER OF COMMERCE & VISITOR CENTER. For moreinformation, call 262-377-5856 or (800-CDR-BURG) or visitcedarburg.org.
We love the natural light and “art gallery vibe” of theBANGLES & BAGS location at W63 N6672 Washington Ave., Cedarburg. Like all B & B locations, the arrangement bycolors makes matching an accessory to that special outfit abreeze. Find FRILL at W63 N680 Washington Ave., specializ-ing in a collection of eclectic handmade personal accessories,home decor and gifts by U.S.- based artisans
In the Washington Avenue Shoppes at W62 N590 WashingtonAve., visit ELVIA’S ARTE GALLERY BOUTIQUE. OwnerElvia Pena-Savage displays artworks that will inspire andintrigue. The large abstract paintings are created in watercol-ors, acrylics an doils. For those who would like to tap theirown creative spark, painting parties are offered. While thePINK LLAMA GALLERY has a Washington Avenue addressat W62 N580, you actually enter the gallery through the build-ing’s back porch, located across the street from the pagodajewelry store.
Cedar Creek SettlementBe sure to visit this renovated 1864 woolen mill and adjacentbuildings at the corner of Washington and Bridge Sts. inCedarburg. cedarcreeksettlement.com. CEDAR CREEK WINERY provides visitors with tours andtastings are available and gift boxes make a perfect “Made in
Wisconsin” gift. Take the short flight of stairs to go from thewinery to the main part of the settlement to reach CEDARCREEK POTTERY. The vast array of handmade pottery andfine craft will amaze you. “An elegant blend of art and func-tion” rules here. On the second floor, LEAP OF FAITH hasbeen inspiring visitors for years. As the owner retires and theshop closes at the end of the year, “gentle discounts” will beoffered on some items beginning in November. At LA DIVA,find casual yet trendy t-shirts to hand-beaded blouses forparty wear. Accessories include designer handbags, silkscarves, hair ornaments and hand-crafted jewelry, and more.
Directly across Washington Avenue from the Cedar CreekSettlement is OLIVE ‘N VINNIE’S MARKET. Discover 60gleaming stainless steel tanks filled with the freshest andfinest extra virgin olive oils along with an array of flavoredBalsamic vinegars from around the world and much more.
PORT WASHINGTONAbout 30 minutes from downtown Milwaukee, PortWashington enjoys a setting on Lake Michigan, with a marinathat is the departure point for many charter fishing boats. Stopin at the Port Washington Tourism Council office,126 E. GrandAve. VisitPortWashington.com for info and suggestions. Lookfor the orange tile roof of Port’s 1929 fire station to find BLUEHERON ARTISAN’S GALLERY. Located at 102 E. Pier St., thegallery features more than 25 artists. For information on exhibits, seeKEY Galleries. THE CHOCOLATE CHISEL, located at 125 W.Grand Ave., is a perfect spot to visit for ice cream, handmadechocolates or a concoction from the espresso bar.
GRAFTONNorth of Cedarburg, Grafton boasts a revitalized downtownthat highlights its Paramount Records blues legacy. There’s aone-of-a-kind Walk of Fame tribute to blues artists whorecorded at the Grafton studio in the late 1920s, unique foun-tain and stage area, distinctive restaurants and shops.
Leap of Faith, Cedarburg
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45
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DELAFIELDWest of Milwaukee just off I-94, this spot merits a special stop.Charm reigns here, with Delafield’s signature look making itthe perfect spot for holiday shopping and dining. You’ll betempted to make a weekend of it at the elegant DelafieldHotel. For more info, VisitDelafield.org or 888-294-1082.
BROOKFIELDBrookfield, just minutes west of downtown Milwaukee, is hometo a broad array of retailers and restaurants.Shopping anddining opportunities are available along Bluemound Road, tothe north along Capitol Drive and in other areas of Brookfieldand Elm Grove, just to the east. Brookfield’s Convention andVisitors Bureau is at 800-388-1835 or visitbrookfield.com.
Brookfield Towne CentreLocated at the corner of Capitol Drive and Brookfield Rd.,18905 W. Capitol Dr., don’t miss this shopping area with a vil-lage atmosphere. GOO GOO GAA GAA offers a vast range ofdistinctive items for babies, toddlers and youngsters. Findapparel, home décor, gifts, toys and books. This is the placefor something unique and timeless. Special occasion itemsare a specialty here and also featuring UGG® boots and shoesfor babies, toddlers and big kids!
SHOPPING CENTERSDowntown:Enter the SHOPS OF GRAND AVENUE complex at Old World3rd Street and Wisconsin Avenue. Don’t miss BREW CITYGEAR off the second-floor walkway for a souvenir.
North of Milwaukee: BAYSHORE TOWN CENTER, 5800 N. Bayshore Dr.,Glendale. Explore 100+ stores in an outdoor setting.
West of Milwaukee: BROOKFIELD SQUARE, 95 N. Moorland Rd., Brookfield. 262-797-7245, shopbrookfieldsquaremall.com.
MAYFAIR, 2500 N. Mayfair Rd., Wauwatosa. 180 stores+,enclosed mall, restaurants and movie theater complex.
South of Milwaukee: SOUTHRIDGE MALL, 5300 S. 76th St., Greendale. 130 stores offer something for everybody.
Olive ‘n Vinnie’s, Cedarburg
Milwaukee’s Morning Glory Gallery, featuring jewelry byRenata Mikota
Cedar Creek Pottery, Cedarburg
KEY SPORTS
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THE MILWAUKEE Bucks, with a new coach andalmost entirely new starting lineup, open theNational Basketball Association season inMilwaukee this month against the TorontoRaptors.
New coach Larry Drew brought in a new team ofcoaches to handle a vastly changed Bucks lineup.Gone are guards Brandon Jennings and MontaEllis. Signed to replace them were former DallasMavericks guard O.J. Mayo and Brandon Knight,a rookie last season with Detroit. Also returningto Wisconsin to play for the Bucks is Racinenative Caron Butler, a veteran who last played forthe Los Angeles Clippers.On the Bucks front line are Larry Sanders, thesecond leading shot blocker in the NBA last sea-son, and John Henson, a power forward who per-formed well in his rookie season last year.
The Bucks play all home games at the BMOHarris Bradley Center, 1001 N. Fourth St. For tickets, visit Bucks.com. If prime seats aredesired, visit TheTicketKing.com.
Home games this month:Nov. 2 vs. Toronto Raptors, 7:30 p.m. Nov. 6 vs. Cleveland Cavaliers, 7:30 p.m.Nov. 9 vs. Dallas Mavericks, 7:30 p.m.Nov. 16 vs. Oklahoma City Thunder, 7:30 p.m.Nov. 20 vs. Portland Trailblazers, 7 p.m.Nov. 23 vs. Charlotte Bobcats, 7:30 p.m.Nov. 27 vs. Washington Wizards, 7 p.m.Nov. 30 vs. Boston Celtics, 8 p.m.
Professional hockeyTHE MILWAUKEE ADMIRALS, the AmericanHockey Association affiliate of the NashvillePredators, open the season with four games inthe BMO Harris Bradley Center.
Home games:Nov. 1 vs. vs. Rockford IceHogs, 7 p.m.Nov. 13 vs. Grand Rapids Griffins, 7 p.m.Nov. 15 vs. Chicago Wolves. 7 p.m.Nov. 19 vs. Abbotsford Heat, 7 p.m.Nov. 22 vs. Chicago, 7 p.m.
For tickets, visit milwaukeeadmirals.com or theBradley Center Box Office.
Bucks open home seasonwith eight November games
728 E. Brady St. 414.271.6000CasablancaOnBrady.com
Patio now open
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(all numbers area code 414 unless indicated otherwise)
AirportsMitchell International Airport 747-5300Timmerman Field 461-3222Crites Field/Waukesha County 549-6150
Bus LinesBadger Bus 276-7490Mil. County Bus Route Info 344-6711Coach USA/Wisconsin Coach 262-542-8861Airport Express to O’Hare Midway & Mitchell 800-236-2028
Rail ServiceAmtrak 271-0840 or 1-800-872-7245
Coach/Limo ServiceCorporate Limousine 483-0003Blackline Limos 481-2599
Ferry ServiceLake Express high speed ferry 866-914-1010
TaxiAmerican United 220-5000Yellow Cab Co-op 271-1800
Catering ServicesBartolotta’s 935-5000Louise’s 271-9506Saz’s 256-8765
Photography ServicesMKEimages.com 262-255-3666Rick Ryerson (aerial) 481-4273
TicketsThe Ticket King 273-6007
Milwaukee County Park Info 257-6100Weekend Hotline 257-5100
At your service...
Historic Milwaukee, Inc.
Walking Tours Skywaukee Tour
Explore the early history of Milwaukee as seen from the glass skywalk system. All indoors!
Every Saturday at 1 p.m., Oct. 26-Dec. 14 & Jan. 4-May 10
No Reservation Required. Meet at the Plankinton statue
(Sreet level lobby, TJ Maxx entrance in the PlankintonBuilding, Shops of Grand Avenue)
161 W. Wisconsin Ave. $10 per person (cash or check)
277-7795 • historicmilwaukee.org
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sazs.com
Saz’s State House is a can’t miss Milwaukee restaurant. Saz’s is just a few blocks from MillerCoors Brewery
Enjoy Award Winning BBQ Ribs at a Classic Milwaukee Landmark
Staybridge Suites Milwaukee Airport South 9575 S. 27th St., Franklin, WI 53132
(414)761-3800 www.stayfranklin.com
Join our VIP Text Club to receive special offers, coupons
and hotel updates!Text to: 36000 Message: M877
Holiday Sleepover Special!Saturday, Dec 7, 2013
Package includes:• Overnight accommodations
(2 adults/2 children)• Cookies, milk and hot cocoa• Family photo package with
Santa & special gift• Enjoy our indoor pool and
free movie showings in thetheater from 3 pm - 9 pm
• Full hot buffet breakfast inthe morning
Santa arrives at 6 pm and headsback to the North Pole at 7 pm.
Rates starting at $89 plus tax.
Please contact the front desk to make your reservations!
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2730 N. Humboldt Blvd. Riverwest Area of Milwaukee
414.562.5540 • riowestcantina.com
• DELICIOUS MEXICAN CUISINE • UNIQUE DAILY SPECIALS• MORE THAN 70 TEQUILAS • SPECIAL PARTY ROOMS
• OUTDOOR PATIO • BRUNCH ON SAT. & SUN.
OPEN EVERY DAY AT 11 A.M.
RIO WEST CANTINA
3565 N. Morris Blvd.Shorewood
414.332.4207 hubbardlodge.com
LUMBERJACK BRUNCH EVERY SUNDAY 9 A.M.-2 P.M.
POLKA FISH FRY EVERY FRIDAY5-9 P.M.
Enjoy our historic landmark log cabin nestled in the woods along the Milwaukee River!
AS A SALUTE TO Veterans Day, Nov. 9-11 theHarley-Davidson Museum features a special mili-tary-dedicated lobby display and free museumentry for military and their families.
In addition, the Disabled American Veteransmobile service unit will be at the H-D MuseumNov. 9. providing free, professional assistance toveterans and their families in obtaining benefitsand services earned through military service.
Following the Nov. 9 Milwaukee Veterans DayParade, Rock the Rumble at the museum is a ben-efit rock concert for Guitars for Vets. G4V is anon-profit organization that enhances the lives ofailing and injured military Veterans by providingthem free guitars and music instruction. The $20general admission ticket includes access to Rockthe Rumble and the H-D Museum.
For more information, phone 877-HD-MUSEUMor 414-287-2789, or visit harley-davidson.com.The museum is open daily 10 a.m.- 6 p.m. anduntil 8 p.m. on Thurs.
Vets honored at H-D Museum
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OPEN DAILY 11AMWEEKEND BRUNCH
DELIVERY AVAILABLE
2856 N. OAKLAND AVE.
SOLOPIZZAMILWAUKEE.COM
RESTAURANT LOCATORDO
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HAladdin, Middle EasternAll Aboard, Middle Eastern & AmericanBacchus, ContinentalBuca di Beppo, ItalianCafe Benelux, ContinentalCafe Calatrava, Genuine MilwaukeeChez Jacques, FrenchCounty Clare, IrishDream Dance Steak, SteakHarbor House, SeafoodThe Harp, IrishKanpai, JapaneseLakefront Palm Garden, Genuine MilwaukeeLake Park Bistro, FrenchLouise’s, ItalianMader’s Famous Restaurant, GermanMillioke, Genuine MilwaukeeMilwaukee Ale House, Brew PubMilwaukee Brat House, Genuine MilwaukeeMolly Cool’s Seafood Tavern, SeafoodMotor, Genuine MilwaukeeMykonos, GreekRodizio Grill, BrazilianRudy’s Mexican Restaurant, MexicanRuYi, Global FusionSafe House, Genuine MilwaukeeTrinity-Three Irish Pubs, IrishTrocadero, ContinentalTwisted Fisherman, SeafoodWater Street Brewery, Brew PubWild Earth Cucina Italiana, Italian
El Fuego Mexican Restaurante, MexicanJoey Gerard’s, SteakThe Packing House, Genuine Milwaukee
Apollo Café, GreekThe Black Rose, IrishCarino’s La Conca D’Oro, ItalianCasablanca, Middle EasternLake Park Bistro, FrenchMaharaja, IndianRio West Cantina, MexicanSoLo Pizza, Pizza
Crawdaddy’s, CajunPizzeria Piccola, PizzaRistorante Bartolotta, ItalianSaz’s State House, American
Anvil, AmericanBeanies, MexicanCream & Crepe Café, AmericanGrafton Ale House, AmericanJoey Gerard’s, SteaksWater Street Brewery-Grafton, American
Joey’s Seafood & Grill, Seafood Louise’s ItalianMr. B’s Steakhouse, SteaksWasabi Sushi Lounge, JapaneseWater Street Brewery-Lake Country, AmericanWeissgerber’s Seven Seas, Continental
G E N U I N E M I L W A U K E ECAFE CALATRAVA Milwaukee Art Museum, 700 N. ArtMuseum Dr. 224-3831 Under the museum’s Calatravaaddition is a spot for lunch that is second to none. Themuseum’s chef regularly updates the menu with entreesinspired by the featured exhibition. Also kid-friendly selec-tions. mam.org/visit/cafe.php
LAKEFRONT PALM GARDEN FISH FRY 1872 N.Commerce St. 273-8300 Stop here Fridays from 4 p.m.to 9 p.m. for an award-winning rendition of a Milwaukeetradition, a fish fry accompanied by live music by the BrewHouse Polka Kings. Reservations for groups of eight ormore with seating times before 5:30 p.m. Others servedfirst-come, first-served. lakefrontpalmgarden.com
MILLIOKE, 323 E. Wisconsin Ave. 278-5999 Offering ataste of Wisconsin with every course, Millioke (theAlgonquin word for Milwaukee) starts with charcuterie orcheese plates and 20 craft beers on tap. Salads, entreesand even desserts include products of Milwaukee andWisconsin.Stand-alone restaurant of Milwaukee Marriottserves breakfast 6:30 -10:30 a.m., lunch 11 a..m.-2:30p.m., dinner 4-11 p.m. Visit milliokerestaurant.com.
MILWAUKEE BRAT HOUSE 1013 Old World 3rd St. 273-8709 Milwaukee’s favorite sandwich, the bratwurst, isavailable here until closing. With a decor that mirrors his-toric bars in New York City and Milwaukee, the BratHouse offers a menu full of sausages and other entrees,full bar service and even specialty beers made for theBrat House. milwaukeebrathouse.com
MOTOR 401 W. Canal St. in the Harley-DavidsonMuseum. 1-877-436-8738 Motor offers American classicsthat celebrate discoveries on the open road. Featurescommunal tables. harley-davidson.com
NORTHPOINT CUSTARD Lakefront at 2272 N. LincolnMemorial Dr. 727-4886 Open seasonally and serving upMilwaukee’s classic custard, plus shakes burgers andfries. Grab a seat at a picnic table and enjoy the peoplewatching and Lake Michigan breezes.northpointcustard.com
RUMPUS ROOM 1030 N. Water St. 292-0100 Dining is partof the fun here. Great flavor and a twist on the conven-tional can be found in the bar snacks, soups and salads,appetizers and entrees. Think house-made charcuterieitems, octopus salad, pork belly and a perfectly madeScotch egg. Add the amazing beer and cocktail selectionand have an evening you won’t soon forget. rumpus-roommke.com
THE PACKING HOUSE 900 E. Layton Ave. 483-5054 Fornearly 40 years, this family-owned restaurant just minutesfrom Mitchell International Airport has delighted residentsand visitors. Try Garlic Stuffed Filet, Steak au Poivre, Bar-B-Que Ribs, lobster and seafood. Open 365 days a year,it’s known for Friday fish fry. Live music Wed.-Sat.PackinghouseMKE.com.
SAFE HOUSE 779 N. Front St. 271-2007 Visitors are chal-lenged to find this internationally celebrated spy-themerestaurant. (Look for International Exports, Ltd. on thedoor.) People Magazine said there’s “no better place to getone’s martini made just the way James Bond fancies them- shaken not stirred.” Class - ified areas for parties, meet-ings. Contemporary American fare. safe-house.com
B R E W P U B S
MILWAUKEE ALE HOUSE 233 N. Water St. in Milwaukee,226-2337 and in Grafton at 13th St., just south of Hwy60, 262-375-2337 Milwaukee’s own all-grain brew publocated on the Milwaukee River. Hand-crafted housebeers, plus special session beers. Menu includes pastadishes, burgers, steaks and seafood. alehouse.com
WATER STREET BREWERY 1101 N. Water St. inMilwaukee, 272-1195 and in Delafield at 3191 Golf Rd. atHwy 83, 262-646-7878 and I-94 and Grafton at I-43 andHwy. 60, 262-375-2222 Milwaukee’s Brew Pub since1987. Brewing on premises a continuous variety of tradi-tional and specialty beers. Serving appetizers, sandwich-es, nightly entrée specials and take-out. Merchandise andgift certificates available. waterstreetbrewery.com
A M E R I C A N
THE ANVIL PUB & GRILLE N70 W6340 Bridge Rd.,Cedarburg. 262-376-2163 Located in former site of theCedar Creek Settlement’s restored 19th century blacksmithshop, the Anvil offers casual dining in welcoming atmos-phere. anvilpubandgrille.com
CREAM & CREPE CAFE N70 W6340 Bridge Rd.,Cedarburg 262-377-0900 Delicious entree and dessertcrepes. Dine in the rustic surroundings of the old mill over-looking Cedar Creek. Treat yourself to a light luncheon ordinner of crepes, salads, homemade soup and sandwichesor try a delectable dessert crepe. creamandcrepecafe.com
SAZ’S STATE HOUSE 5539 W. State St. 453-2410 Locatednear Miller Brewery, Saz’s features American cuisine with anemphasis on Award-Winning Ribs made with Saz’s OriginalBarbecue Sauce. sazs.comB R A Z I L I A N
A M E R I C A N
RODIZIO GRILL 777 N. Water St. 431-3106 Recognized asAmerica's first authentic Brazilian Steakhouse orChurrascaria, Rodizio Grill came to Milwaukee in 2012.Menu highlighted by three-foot skewers of unlimited meats,expertly carved tableside, also includes unlimited appetiz-ers, more than 30 gourmet salads and a wide variety ofdeserts. rodiziogrill.com.
C A J U N & C R E O L ECRAWDADDY'S 6414 W. Greenfield Ave., West Allis 778-2228 Milwaukee's first Louisiana-style restaurantrecreates the sights, sounds and – most importantly – flavors of New Orleans. crawdaddysrestaurant.com
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KEY DINING
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C O N T I N E N T A LBACCHUS 925 E. Wells St. 765-1166 At Bacchus, sleekdecor and world-class service combine with outstandingcuisine to provide an extra special experience. A glassed-inconservatory provides amazing views. Whether making adinner of several “small plates” or ordering an entrée, saveroom for a fabulous dessert (such as the Wisconsin ArtisanCheese Selections). bacchusmke.com
CAFE BENELUX 346 N. Broadway 501-2500 Named afterthe Benelux region (Belgium, Netherlands, andLuxembourg), the cafe features regional favorites like mus-sels, pannenkoeken and frites. cafebenelux.com
TROCADERO 1758 N. Water St. 272-0205 This European-style cafe offers lunch, dinner, an extensive wine list andSaturday and Sunday brunch.
WEISSGERBER’S SEVEN SEAS On Lake Nagawicka,Hartland. 262-367-3903 Casual or formal dining withunforgettable views of Lake Nagawicka. Award-winningwine list. North of I-94 off Hwy. 83 (exit 287).
G E R M A N
MADER’S FAMOUS RESTAURANT 1037 N. Old World 3rdSt. 271-3377 or 800-558-7171 German as well as conti-nental specialties prepared in the German tradition.Remarkable collection of medieval weaponry, steins andwoodcarvings. Cocktails, extensive wine and beer lists.madersrestaurant.com
F R E N C H
CHEZ JACQUES 1022 S. 1st St., Walker’s Point. 672-1040 Touch of Paris in the heart of Milwaukee offersauthentic breakfast, lunch and dinner entrees, using ingredi-ents true to French customs and created fresh to order.Extensive French wine list, including organics. Private par-ties, catering, take-out, local delivery. chezjacques.com
LAKE PARK BISTRO 3133 E. Newberry Blvd. 962-6300The restaurant’s location in Milwaukee’s lovely Lake Parkmeans sweeping views overlooking Lake Michigan’s shore-line. French specialties range from appetizers to desserts(caramelized upside-down apple tart served warm withcrème fraiche, caramel sauce and cherries). Sunday brunch.lakeparkbistro.com
G L O B A L F U S I O NRUYI Potawatomi Bingo Casino, 1721 W. Canal St. 847-7335 Japanese, Chinese, Korean, Thai and Hmongcuisines are featured in contemporary, Asian-styled sur-roundings. Specialty dishes include Roast Peking Duck andWok Fried Seasonal fish. paysbig.com/dining/ruyi/
G R E E K
APOLLO CAFE 1310 E. Brady St. 272-2233 Your destinationfor experiencing traditional Greek recipes handed down
CONTINUED ON PAGE 54
All phone numbers 414 area code unless otherwise indicated
Friday fish specialsSunday 1/2 off bottle wine (per two dinners purchased)
Lunch Buffet, Tuesday through Friday, $9.95
3468 N. Oakland Ave., Milwaukee Just 2 blocks from UWM and close to downtown
Public parking lot on corner of Edgewood and Oakland
414-963-9623 www.atouchofsicily.com
Seasonal Menu!
Happy Hour from 4 p.m.-9 p.m. Monday
Half Price Appetizers
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through generations. Savor authentic Greek favorites likePastítsio, Spanakópita or a fast Rotisserie Gyros. EnjoyBrady Street patio. Delivery 765-1925. apollocafe.com
MYKONOS GYRO & CAFE 1014 N. Van Buren St. 224-6400 Classic American food and a wide selection ofGreek dishes, including Moussaka (eggplant and potatoes)and shish kabobs. Appetizers include Saganaki (Kefalotiricheese flamed with brandy) and spinach pie. Full break-fast, including Greek dishes, all day, every day. Open 7a.m.-10 p.m. Sun.-wed., 7 a..m.-3 a.m. Thurs., 7 a.m.-3:30p.m. Fri. & Sat. mykonoscafe.com
I N D I A NMAHARAJA 1550 N. Farwell Ave. 276-2250 Top-ratedMaharaja offers outstanding North and South Indian cui-sine, including freshly baked bread from a clay oven. All-you-can-eat luncheon buffet is a delight and the dinnermenu offers tempting choices, including lamb, chicken,beef, seafood, and vegetarian menu entrees. maharajarestaurants.com
I R I S HCOUNTY CLARE 1234 N. Astor St. 272-5273 Thispub/restaurant, located in a guesthouse, features Irish foodcreatively re-interpreted. Specialties include house ver-sions of root soup, smoked salmon, corned beef hash andlamb chops. countyclare-inn.com
THE BLACK ROSE 2856 N. Oakland Ave. 763-6526Traditional Irish pub on Milwaukee’s East Side near UW-
Milwaukee. Serving Milwaukee favorites & Irish specialtiesblackroseirishpub.com
THE HARP 113 E. Juneau Ave. 278-7033 One of the city’soldest and most popular pubs enjoys prime location onMilwaukee River. Legendary patio and great views of theriver even in winter. theharpirishpub.com
TRINITY-THREE IRISH PUBS 125 E. Juneau Ave. 278-7033 Don’t miss this “trio of Irish authenticity” -three distinctive Irish pubs called Duffy’s, Foy’s andGallagher’s. Each of the pubs serves Irish entrees andIrish drinks, as well as a traditional Irish breakfast onSaturdays and Sundays. trinitythreeirishpubs.com
I T A L I A NCARINI’S LA CONCA D’ORO 3468 N. Oakland Ave. 963-9623 Specializing in the freshest seafood, La Concad’Oro (“conch of gold”) features dishes individually pre-pared using the finest ingredients or choose from 14antipastos, five kinds of spiedini, 21 pasta dishes, veal,steak or chicken, and homemade cannolis and cassata.Banquet facilities available. Located close toUW–Milwaukee. atouchofsicily.com
BUCA DI BEPPO 1233 N. Van Buren St. 224-8672 Bucaserves up Southern Italian immigrant specialties. Redsauce is “king.” Red-checked tablecloths, offbeat familyand celebrity photographs, and Frank Sinatra crooning inthe background are among the atmospheric delights.bucadibeppo.com
LOUISE’S 801 N. Jefferson St. in Milwaukee, 273-4224and 190th & Bluemound Rd. in Brookfield,262-784-4175 California-style specialty pizzas, freshlymade pastas, and foccacia breads, all baked on premises.Takeout and delivery available. Located on picturesqueCathedral Square in Milwaukee and just off BluemoundRoad in Brookfield. louiseswisconsin.com
RISTORANTE BARTOLOTTA 7616 W. State St.,Wauwatosa 771-7910 Enjoy the diversity and bounty ofregional Italian cuisine as well as a wine list worthy ofexploration. Order from the regular menu or dive into thechef’s seasonal menu, capitalizing on the best availableingredients (international, regional or locally sourced). bartolottaristorante.com
WILD EARTH CUCINA ITALIANA Potawatomi BingoCasino, 1721 W. Canal St. 847-7883 Wild Earth featurestraditional Italian favorites like Chicken Carbonara, alongwith classics with a twist – Duck Confit and Frutti de Mare.Premium local and seasonal products used when possible.30 Italian wines from every region of Italy, hand-craftedcocktails, Italian beer and house-made Italian sodas.http://paysbig.com/dining/wild-earth-cucina-italiana
J A P A N E S E
KANPAI IZAKAYA JAPANESE RESTAURANT 408 E.Chicago St. 220-1155 Small-plate items, extensive Sakelist and trendy atmosphere make Kanpai stand out. ThisJapanese gastropub welcomes guests to the Historic ThirdWard. kanpaimilwaukee.com.
WASABI SUSHI LOUNGE 15455 W. Bluemound Rd.,Brookfield. 262-780-0011 Located by Brookfield SquareShopping Center. Executive Chef Brian Park creates avariety of Wasabi signature rolls plus chicken, steak andseafood entrees and great salads. wasabisakelounge.com
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 53KEY DINING
900 E. Layton Ave., Milwaukee WI 53207(414) 483-5054PackingHouseMKE.comNext to Mitchell airport
Open every day of the yearLunch Mon.-Fri . and dinners n ightlyFriday F ish Fry • Sunday BrunchLive Music Wed.-Sat. , schedule online
Family owned and operated since 1974
Fourdecadesof f inedining
Ribs - Steaks - Seafood - Poultry - Veal
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M E X I C A N
BEANIES 102 E. Grand Ave., Port Washington 262-284-7200 Enjoy the best margaritas in Wisconsin asyou swing (literally) at the unique tree bar. In business formore than 20 years, this family-friendly restaurant opens at11 a.m. seven days a week. beaniesmexican.com.
EL FUEGO MEXICAN RESTAURANTE 909 W. Layton Ave.455-3534 Located near Mitchell International Airport, thisstylish yet casual restaurant offers specialties from all areasof Mexico. Dine in a quaint village setting or by a waterfall onthe patio. Kids menu, banquet facilities and the “hottesthappy hour in Milwaukee.” ElFuegoMKE.com.
RIO WEST CANTINA 2730 N. Humboldt Blvd. 562-5540Near UWM and minutes from downtown in River Westneighborhood, this Tex-Mex spot offers reasonably priceda la carte and combination platters. More than 60 types oftequilas for the adults, special children’s play room foryoungsters. Free Wi-Fi. riowestcantina.com
RUDY’S MEXICAN RESTAURANT 1122 N. Edison St.(Highland Ave. just west of Water St.) 223-1122Since 1985 Rudy’s has been known for authentic Mexicanfood and excellent Margaritas. Entrees include supremeenchiladas, chimichangas and other house specialties.Takeout and group space available. rudysmexican.com
M I D D L E E A S T E R N
ALADDIN 400 N. Water St. in the Milwaukee PublicMarket. 271-0400 Authentically prepared lamb, beef,chicken and vegetarian entrees.
ALL ABOARD 433 W. St. Paul Ave. in the MilwaukeeIntermodal Station Owner of Aladdin offers some of hisspecialties, along with breakfast items, sandwiches andsalads for travelers arriving or departing Milwaukee.
CASABLANCA 4728 E. Brady St. 271-6000 Offering anextensive vegetarian lunch buffet served daily from 11 a.m.to 3 p.m. For dinner enjoy fine Middle Eastern Cuisinemade from family recipes in a warm and exotic atmos-phere. On Friday nights enjoy belly-dancing performances.casablancaonbrady.com
P I Z Z A & M O R EPIZZERIA PICCOLA 7606 W. State St., Wauwatosa 443-0800 Located next to Ristorante Bartolotta in thequaint village of Wauwatosa, Pizzeria Piccola featuresauthentic thin-crust Neapolitan pizzas baked to perfectionin a 600-degree wood burning oven. All pizzas are madeto order incorporating the freshest seasonal ingredients.pizzeriapiccola.com
SOLO PIZZA 2856 N. Oakland Ave. 964-2850 Featuringpersonalized pizzas prepared in an open display kitchen.Traditional Italian specialty pastas, appetizers and sand-wiches served in a casual chic, modern atmosphere.Located south of Locust St. near UW-Milwaukee. solopizzamilwaukee.com
S E A F O O D & M O R E ORIEN
HARBOR HOUSE 550 N. Harbor Dr. 395-4900 With breath-taking views of Milwaukee’s skyline, world-renowned artmuseum and Lake Michigan, Harbor House delivers equally
QualityIndianFoodReigns
1550 N. Farwell Ave. Milwaukee
414-276-2250
11:30 a.m.-3 p.m. and 5-10 p.m. daily
www.restaurantmaharaja.com
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All phone numbers 414 area code unlessotherwise indicated
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 55KEY DININGgreat seafood, steaks, raw bar and cocktails. Pick a combi-nation plate and match filet mignon with Maine lobster, seascallops, crab legs, Madagascar prawns or salmon. Thespacious patio is a favorite spot to watch the sunset andenjoy a signature cocktail. harborhousemke.com
JOEY’S SEAFOOD & GRILL 12455 W. Capitol Dr.,Brookfield 262-790-9500 While the atmosphere is casual,diners find seafood and service that is world class. Batterswith homemade sauces and dressings make the most of thefreshest seafood available. Also steaks, chicken, burgers,salads and pasta. Full bar. .joeysbrookfield.com
TWISTED FISHERMAN 1200 W. Canal St. 3842722 Coastalstyle Crab Shack offering a variety of fresh seafood, craband specialty drinks. Located in Milwaukee’s MenomoneeValley on the banks of the Menomonee River. A sand beach,lounge chairs and deck with picnic chairs make this afavorite spot. Or, grab a seat inside and enjoy a Milwaukeestyle on Fridays. twistedfisherman.com
MOLLY COOL’S SEAFOOD TAVERN 1110 N. Old World 3rdSt., Brookfield 831-8862 Located on the bank of theMilwaukee River in downtown Milwaukee, this seafood spe-cialist also offers oysters, sushi rolls, a raw bar and steaksand surf and turf specialities in the evening. Open 11 a.m.-10 p.m. Sun.-Thurs. and 11 a.m.-midnight Fri. & Sat.www.mollycools.com
S T E A K S & M O R E ORIEN
DREAM DANCE STEAK Potawatomi Bingo Casino, 1721W. Canal St. 847-7883 Award-winning restaurant offers awide variety of steaks, along with soups, salads and an array of side dishes. Specializes in locally sourced ingredi-
ents. Retail-priced wines. paysbig.com/dining/dream-dance-steak
JOEY GERARD’S 5601 Broad St. in Greendale, 858-1900and in Mequon at 11120 N. Cedarburg Rd., 262-518-5500Captures best of the supper club tradition with a family-friendly atmosphere, plush black leather booths and nostal-gic photos. Start with a Lazy Susan, add in a daily specialor a charbroiled steak with a sauce and side, then top it offwith an ice cream drink. Kid’s menu available.joeygerards.com
MR. B’S STEAKHOUSE 13830 W. Capitol Dr., Brookfield262-790-7005 This classic Italian steakhouse features juicysteaks, chops and fresh seafood (bacon-wrapped scallops).Beef choices range from a Petite Filet Mignon to the 28 oz.Porterhouse, while the list of Mr. B’s Prime Cuts includes aWagyu New York Strip. Toppings add to the incredible fla-vors. mrbssteakhouse.com
A cozy French Brasserie in the heart of Milwaukee offering authentic cuisine in a warm and romantic environment.
414.672.10401022 S 1st St., Milw.
Take Your Celebration To France without the plane ticket
(414) 273-6007 1-800-334-5434
SportsConcertsTheatre
Locally owned & operatedDowntown at Broadway and Mason St.www.theticketking.com
PackersBucksBadgers
Harbor House
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PREPRESS
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Key RESTAURANT OF THE MONTH
WHILE MAHARAJA has been Milwaukee’s foremostIndian restaurant for 16 years, its original owners,Balbir Singh and Baldev Bolla, believed it was time fora change – nothing drastic, but an updating to meetthe needs of a changing clientele.
“We saw new dining trends and felt we needed tomake changes to stay on top,” said Balbir’s son,Prince Singh, who is leading the changes at the popular restaurant at 1550 N. Farwell Ave. onMilwaukee’s near east side.
Maharaja’s commitment to authentic, traditionalNorth and South Indian cuisine has not changed, butearlier this year the menu was slimmed down frommore than 200 dishes to 66, each with its own flavorprofile. The chosen 66 dishes are the most popular,pleasing “regulars” and already attracting “a lot ofnew faces,” says Singh.
Some of the menu items are now featured as specialson specific days. In addition, a new wine list is beingintroduced, along with new cocktails and craft beers.Still to come are physical changes both outside andinside the restaurant that is just minutes from down-town hotels.
A popular luncheon buffet that is consistently ranked
among the top in the city continues to delightdiners daily and offers choices for meat-loversand vegetarians. The dinner menu also offerslamb, chicken, seafood and vegetable appetizersand entrees.
The subtle and exotic flavors of Indian food comefrom the array of spices that are used, includingcardamom, cinnamon, clove, coriander, nutmegand saffron. There is a range of “heat” in Indianfood, so whether you like your food with a bit ofbite or not, count on lots of options.
The dining experience at Maharaja begins withthin, crispy Papadam made from gram flowerand black pepper, served with spicy onion, mintand sweet chutneys. It comes promptly after youare seated, a luscious introduction to what is tocome. Appetizer choices at dinner include friedPakora, vegetable, cheese or chicken dipped inchick pea batter; catfish marinated in yogurt andspices or the renowned Samosa, a fried pastrystuffed with spiced potatoes and green peas.
The Mulligatawny Soup combines lentils andvegetables, while Coconut Soup combinescoconut with cream, pistachios and more. Thereare a number of other Indian specialty breads list-ed on the menu that can be ordered, includingversions stuffed with ingredients such as potatoesor nuts and raisins.
“Roasted in the Tandoor” describes an Indianspecialty involving aromatic herbs, culturedyogurt and ground fresh spices basted on foodsthat are then roasted in a charcoal clay oven
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(Tandoor). The result is lean meat with amazingtenderness. Order chicken, lamb, shrimp or try alittle bit of everything with the Tandoori MixedGrill.
At Maharaja, dinners are served with Basmati Rice.Curries can be ordered to the diner’s choice of“heat” – mild, medium or spicy – and are availablein chicken, lamb, vegetable, fish or goat versions.
Some menu choices are now offered on specificdays. Examples are Chicken Mango (Fridaynights), boneless chicken cooked in an onion, gar-lic, ginger and mango sauce, and ChickenMakhani (Tuesday nights), boneless Tandoorichicken in butter and cream sauce.
The Southern Indian menu includes Chicken TikkaDosa, crispy rice crepes filled with roasted chicken,and Fish Moly, a catfish filet simmered in coconutmilk and curry leaves.
A review of the menu at Maharaja reveals why vegetarians seek out Indian cuisine. The lengthylist includes Baingan Bhartha, eggplant baked overan open flame, mashed and then sauteed withonions, garlic, ginger and other spices.
Maharaja has a full bar serving cocktails, wines andbeers that include India’s King Fisher, Taj Mahal,Flying Horse and Maharaja. As part of the updat-ing, many craft beers are now available. The restau-rant also makes its own Masala or Chai Tea,brewed with spices, milk and sugar.
There is a parking lot across Farwell for Maharajacustomers. The restaurant also offers a banquet hallfor various occasions with room for up to 90..Hours are 11:30 a.m.-3 p.m. every day, 5-10 p.m.Sun.-Thur. and 5-10:30 p.m. Fri. & Sat. daily.
For additional information on this pillar of theMilwaukee dining scene, call 414-276-2250 or visitmaharajarestaurants.com.
BARS & CLUBS
TRY YOUR LUCK at POTAWATOMI BINGO CASINO1721 W. Canal St. 645-6888 or visit www.paysbig.com.Located minutes from downtown and open 24 hours aday. In addition to gambling and top-name entertain-ment, the Casino’s Fire Pit is a top sports bar.
FOR A GOOD LAUGH…COMEDYSPORTZ420 S. 1st St. 414-272-8888. Milwaukee’s longest-run-ning comedy show offers improvisational comedydesigned for all ages.
DOWNTOWN MILWAUKEEBACCHUS, 925 E. Wells St. 765-1166. Sophisticatedspot with one of the most extensive wine lists in theMidwest.
BEST PLACE, 901 W. Juneau Ave. 630-1609.Experience brewing history. Tavern open noon-midnight,Thurs.-Sun.
COUNTY CLARE, 1234 N. Astor St. 272-5273. Irishfood with an American spin, plus Irish drink and enter-tainment.
DISTIL, 722 N. Milwaukee St. 220-9411. Upscale experi-ence, exclusive bourbon and rye selections.
MILLIOKE, 323 E. Wisconsin Ave. 278-5999 Twenty craftbeers on tap, specialty cocktails.
MILWAUKEE BRAT HOUSE, 1013 N. Old World 3rd St.273-8709. Serving brats and fun until closing.
MYKONOS GYRO & CAFE, 1014 Van Buren St. 224-6400. Late dining on weekends.
SAFE HOUSE, 779 N. Front St. 271-2007.Internationallly known for “James Bond” decor. AdjacentNewsroom Pub houses Milwaukee Press Club’s signa-tures of famous Milwaukee visitors to since 1890s.
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NIGHTLIFE GUIDETWISTED FISHERMAN, 1200 W. Canal St. 384-2722.Location on Menomonee River will put you in the moodto kick back a special cocktail. (Boat drinks, anyone?)
BRADY STREETCenter of the counterculture during the 20th century, theethnically diverse history of this area makes it one of thecity’s most popular destinations.
APOLLO CAFE, 1310 E. Brady St. 272-2233. AuthenticGreek favorites in a European atmosphere.
CASABLANCA, 728 E. Brady St. 271-6000. Come seeand be seen every weekend with DJs, exotic hookah fla-vors and live belly dancing performances Friday nights.
EAST SIDECARINI’S, 3468 N. Oakland Ave. 963-9623. Known forItalian specialties and homemade Limoncello.
WATER STREET One of the city’s oldest entertainment districts, this area runs from E. State Street north to Brady.
WATER STREET BREWERY, 1101 N. Water St. 272-1195. Award-winning microbrews. Games on bigscreens.
RUMPUS ROOM, 1030 N. Water St. 292-0100. Greatbeer and cocktail selection.
TRINITY•THREE IRISH PUBS, 125 E. Juneau Ave. 278-7033. Three distinctive Irish pubs in one place, ablock west of Water Street. Friday and Saturday nights,ride the trolley between Trinity, The Harp, The Black Roseand RC's.
RUDY’S, 1122 N. Edison St. 223-1122. Known for specialty Margaritas.
THE HARP, 113 E. Juneau Ave. 289-0700. On theMilwaukee River a block west of Water St. Great patio.
HISTORIC THIRD WARD AND WALKER’S POINTThe Third Ward is just south of downtown. Continuesouth to Walkers Point, also called the Fifth Ward.
CHEZ JACQUES, 1022 S. 1st. Street. 672-1040
Paris without jetlag. A real French bistro atmosphere. Call for live entertainment info.
KANPAI, 408 E. Chicago St. 220-1155. Milwaukee’s firstJapanese gastropub.
MILWAUKEE ALE HOUSE, 233 N. Water St. 226-BEER.
All-grain brew pub in the Historic Third Ward offers livemusic most evenings.
GRAFFITO, 102 N. Water St. 727-2888. Great food,drink and a great river-side patio.
SPIN MILWAUKEE, 233 E. Chicago St. 831-7746.Midwest’s only ping pong club with full bar, food service.
SOUTH SIDETHE PACKING HOUSE, 900 E. Layton Ave. 483-5054.Live music Wed.-Sat. evenings.
EL FUEGO, 909 W. Layton Ave. 455-3534 “Hottesthappy hours in Milwaukee” 2:30-6 p.m. every day, 9-11 p.m. Sun.-Thurs.
ST. FRANCIS BREWERY, 3825 S. Kinnickinnic Ave., St.Francis, 744-4448. Near Mitchell International.
WEST SIDECRAWDADDY’S, 6414 W. Greenfield Ave. 778-2228.Recreates sights, sounds and flavors of New Orleans.
WASABI SUSHI LOUNGE, 15455 W. Bluemound Rd.,Brookfield 262-780-0011.
SAZ’S STATE HOUSE, 5539 W. State St. 453-2410.Close to Miller Park. Always packed with sports fans.
JOEY’S SEAFOOD & GRILL, 12455 W. Capitol Dr.,Brookfield. 262-750-9500. Open to 9 p.m. weekdays, 10 p.m. Fri. & Sat.
FAR WEST SIDEWEISSGERBER’S SEVEN SEAS,1807 Nagawicka Rd.,Hartland. 262-367-3903. Relax in beautiful “lake country.”
WATER STREET BREWERY, Delafield at 3191 Golf Rd.at Highway 83 and I-94.
FAR NORTH SIDEMILWAUKEE ALE HOUSE, Grafton at 13th St., justsouth of Hwy. 60. Overlooks Milwaukee River, two-storydeck.
WATER STREET BREWERY, Grafton at I-43 and Hwy. 60, 2615 Washington St.
BEANIE’S, 102 E. Grand Ave., Port Washington. Knownfor its swinging bar seats.
Water Street at Highland Avenue1122 N. Edison St. • Milwaukee, WI 53202(414) 223-1122 • www.rudysmexican.com
Open Daily 11 am
louiseswisconsin.comMILWAUKEE
801 N. Jefferson Street • 414-273-4224BROOKFIELD
190th & Bluemound Rd • 262-784-4275
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photo by Mike Nepper 4205I09
Key Mag Ad09:Key Magazine ad 9/11/09 3:17 PM Page 1
113 E. Juneau Ave.Milwaukee, WI 53202
414-289-0700www.theharpirishpub.com
125 E. Juneau Ave.Milwaukee, WI 53202
414-278-7033www.trinitythreeirishpubs.com
113 E. Juneau Ave.Milwaukee, WI 53202
414-289-0700www.theharpirishpub.com
125 E. Juneau Ave.Milwaukee, WI 53202
414-278-7033www.trinitythreeirishpubs.com
MILWAUKEE’SIRISH INTERSECTION
CEAD MILE FAILTE!