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‘Holy Cow' Review: How to Become a Big Cheese

‘Holy Cow' Review: How to Become a Big Cheese

New York Times27-03-2025

The low-key charms of the coming-of-age story 'Holy Cow' emerge gradually but steadily. Set amid the rolling slopes of the Jura, a mountainous region in eastern France, the movie traces a teenager's progression from carefree, at times careless youth to adulthood after a life-altering tragedy. That might lead to a rainstorm of tears elsewhere, but this is a world of dry-eyed pragmatism. And here everything does ripen, an eventuality that this movie charts with wry humor, appreciable regional sensitivity and many wheels of artisanal cheese.
The writer-director Louise Courvoisier fills in the contemporary story with light, brisk economy. Shifting between the specific and the general, she quickly lays out the narrative coordinates, introducing a people and a place that are at once geographically isolated and interdependent. The first time you see the 18-year-old Totone (Clément Faveau) he's at a county fair — where people are milling about with cows — soused and demanding beer. One moment, he is standing on a table and being goaded to take it all off by the raucous crowd; in the next, a cigarette is dangling from his mouth and his briefs are puddled around his ankles.
Totone's striptease turns out to be a prelude for his character's ensuing, more freighted adventures. With quick-sketch portraits, Courvoisier fills in Totone's life, including his testy relationship with his father, a cheesemaker who's soon out of the picture. Abruptly unencumbered by parents (his mother is missing-in-action), Totone becomes the sole caretaker for his sober-eyed 7-year-old sister, Claire (Luna Garret). He also finds himself without much of a safety net. With only some friends to help — unlike in many French films, no government functionaries come to the rescue — he fends for him and his sister largely on his own. He sells most of his father's equipment and takes a job with another cheesemaker.
Courvoisier grew up in the Jura, where her parents are farmers. She has an insider's unforced ease with this world, which she economically opens up with piquant details, lived-in spaces, careworn faces and just enough shots of the landscapes to convey both its beauty and its isolation. It's never clear if Totone truly sees this loveliness and how pretty the cows look on the misty fields. Like all the performers in the movie, Faveau is an nonprofessional actor, and while he has a bright, expressive affect, Totone is one of those characters whose inner life is largely expressed externally through his grins and grimaces, his gestures and actions.
Even so, from the movie's amusing opening image of a calf inexplicably standing inside a small, otherwise empty car, Courvoisier underscores the intimacy between the region's people and their world. These connections come more into play once Totone begins working at the dairy, a multigenerational family enterprise that produces prizewinning Comté. There, the story begins gathering momentum as he finds tension and trouble, along with a romance with the owner's daughter, Marie-Lise (Maïwène Barthelemy), who tends the cows. Also crucially, Totone discovers that the awards the dairy has won come with hefty cash payouts so he does what you've expected him to do from the start: He tries to produce his own cheese.
Totone's new venture has its ups and downs; he blunders early and sometimes comically. Yet one of the virtues of Courvoisier's storytelling is that while Totone's nascent cheese making parallels his growth, her attention to his labor and the production process — to the temperature of the boiling milk and how the curds are separated from the whey — keeps the story grounded. Totone watches videos, observes veteran cheese makers, scrubs out his father's one remaining copper vat and discovers that spring flowers affect the taste of cheese. He also learns how to successfully deliver a breech calf: calmly and with rope tied around its legs, a birth that drolly echoes when he stood naked with his pants around his ankles.
If 'Holy Cow' were a different, more sentimental movie, all this would land far too squarely on the nose. But Courvoisier is more interested in human complexity than in generically packaged uplift, which makes the fact that this is her feature directing debut all the more impressive. (It won a special 'youth prize' at the 2024 Cannes Film Festival.) So as Totone continues to struggle to make cheese, he keeps on struggling at life, too. He stirs the pot, learns how to make love, cares for a calf, leans on his pals (Mathis Bernard and Dimitry Baudry). In time, he also learns how to dip his hands and forearms into the scaldingly hot milk without burning himself, one of those lessons that works as well in life as it does in this modest, gentle movie.

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After a ‘Chi-town throwdown,' just one Chicago chef remains on ‘Top Chef'
After a ‘Chi-town throwdown,' just one Chicago chef remains on ‘Top Chef'

Yahoo

time16 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

After a ‘Chi-town throwdown,' just one Chicago chef remains on ‘Top Chef'

Warning: Spoilers ahead for all of 'Top Chef' Season 22, except the remaining finale episode. Only one Chicago competitor remains for the final episode of this season's 'Top Chef,' which airs Thursday evening. Chi-town could have another local Top Chef if they win, a coveted title that frequently propels cast members to successful restaurants, television spots and cookbooks. Bailey Sullivan, executive chef at Monteverde, qualified for the finale of 'Top Chef: Destination Canada' from a competitive pool of 15 chefs. 'Top Chef' Season 10 winner Kristen Kish hosted this season, joined by judges Tom Colicchio and Gail Simmons. The other chefs who made it to the final episode are Shuai Wang, chef-owner of Jackrabbit Filly and King BBQ in North Charleston, South Carolina, and Tristen Epps, chef-owner of Epps & Flows Culinary in Houston. Earlier in the season, Sullivan was joined by Chicago peers Zubair Mohajir, the executive chef and founder of Lilac Tiger, Coach House and Mirra, and César Murillo, executive chef of North Pond. Sullivan's combination of compassionate competition and camaraderie was a consistent feature of this season, which was low on drama and high on quality cooking. Over the weekend, her Instagram account shared a photo of a group hug between her and the final four competitors, captioned 'Some of the best folks I know.' 'You grow so close with these people,' Sullivan said in an interview with the Chicago Tribune ahead of the finale. By her admission on the show, Sullivan's journey to the top of the competition was slow to start. She was initially eliminated in the second episode for her maple tart. 'I think I just attribute my struggles early on as being totally freaked out, 100%,' Sullivan told the Tribune. 'I had never been on TV before.' Meanwhile, Mohajir won that episode's elimination challenge with a variation on his signature tandoori fried chicken dish, which was eventually featured on the menu at Lilac Tiger. But in the fourth episode, the James Beard-nominated chef was eliminated, to the surprise of many — it was his only time at the bottom. Contestants are kept in the dark about some elements of the production, so it was bittersweet for Mohajir and Sullivan to find out they'd be facing off in 'Last Chance Kitchen,' a web series where eliminated chefs get a chance to return. 'I've been impressed by both of you,' said Colicchio as he was judging their showdown of savory and sweet. 'Zubair, I was quite frankly surprised to see you just this early here, based on some of the earlier challenges. And Bailey, in 'Last Chance Kitchen,' you've been cooking really well.' Eventually, he picked Sullivan's pork and panna cotta dishes over Mohajir's scallops and French toast to win, though it was close. Reflecting back on her cook in 'Last Chance Kitchen,' Sullivan said she was able to keep a positive attitude knowing that no matter what, someone from Chicago would go on to compete. 'I will cheer on Zubair on everything he does going forward,' Sullivan said. In Chicago, her love for the restaurant industry started with growing up at Goldyburgers in Forest Park, a restaurant her father bought. She became a 'Top Chef' fan watching the show with her mother and ended up training under another 'Top Chef' alumni, Beverly Kim of Parachute, as well as Sarah Grueneberg, Monteverde, head chef and owner. Sullivan rejoined the main competition in the fifth episode, where she and Epps won a team elimination challenge with fire-kissed grilled octopus with olives. Team Chicago would face one more loss in the penultimate episode. North Pond's Murillo had a strong showing all season, with Collichio calling his pickle-inspired dessert from Episode 9 one of the best dishes he'd ever had on the show. The finale is taking place in Milan, Italy, and fittingly, last week's elimination challenge was a head-to-head based on Italian ingredients. Wang and Epps had qualified for the finale by winning the polenta and beet rounds, respectively, which left one final spot for either Sullivan or Murillo. Sullivan called the gorgonzola round a 'Chi-town throwdown.' As they finished their dishes, the chefs hugged and said they loved each other. Sullivan had been critiqued for her usage of the cheese earlier in the season — in Milan, she took the opportunity to redeem her earlier failure. This time, she came out on top with a bruleed gorgonzola. The judges praised her quirky, endearing personality. 'Cesar, you put together a really great dish,' Collichio said after announcing Murillo's elimination for his butternut squash casserole. 'Bailey's was a little more focused on the gorgonzola. That's the only reason.' Sullivan couldn't share how she did in the finale, but if she won, she wouldn't be the first Chicago chef; Stephanie Izard and Joe Flamm were both crowned Top Chef of their seasons and Rick Bayless won the first season of 'Top Chef Masters.' Sullivan's Monterverde mentor, chef Sarah Grueneberg, made it to the top two of Season 9 of 'Top Chef.' 'I do kind of feel like I'm following in Sarah's footsteps, being on 'Top Chef,'' said Sullivan. 'I just celebrated nine years at Monteverde this June.' The Top Chef usually receives money, press and various perks but new this year, the winner will have the opportunity to present at the James Beard Awards in Chicago on June 16, a week after the finale airs. Win or lose, Bailey Sullivan has made it. 'Top Chef' Season 22 concludes on June 12. The final episode, along with the rest of the season, will be available to stream the next day on Peacock. Big screen or home stream, takeout or dine-in, Tribune writers are here to steer you toward your next great experience. Sign up for your free weekly Eat. Watch. Do. newsletter here. This Chicago chef just won season two of Food Network's '24 in 24: Last Chef Standing'

After a ‘Chi-town throwdown,' just one Chicago chef remains on ‘Top Chef'
After a ‘Chi-town throwdown,' just one Chicago chef remains on ‘Top Chef'

Chicago Tribune

timean hour ago

  • Chicago Tribune

After a ‘Chi-town throwdown,' just one Chicago chef remains on ‘Top Chef'

Warning: Spoilers ahead for all of 'Top Chef' Season 22, except the remaining finale episode. Only one Chicago competitor remains for the final episode of this season's 'Top Chef,' which airs Thursday evening. Chi-town could have another local Top Chef if they win, a coveted title that frequently propels cast members to successful restaurants, television spots and cookbooks. Bailey Sullivan, executive chef at Monteverde, qualified for the finale of 'Top Chef: Destination Canada' from a competitive pool of 15 chefs. 'Top Chef' Season 10 winner Kristen Kish hosted this season, joined by judges Tom Colicchio and Gail Simmons. The other chefs who made it to the final episode are Shuai Wang, chef-owner of Jackrabbit Filly and King BBQ in North Charleston, South Carolina, and Tristen Epps, chef-owner of Epps & Flows Culinary in Houston. Earlier in the season, Sullivan was joined by Chicago peers Zubair Mohajir, the executive chef and founder of Lilac Tiger, Coach House and Mirra, and César Murillo, executive chef of North Pond. Sullivan's combination of compassionate competition and camaraderie was a consistent feature of this season, which was low on drama and high on quality cooking. Over the weekend, her Instagram account shared a photo of a group hug between her and the final four competitors, captioned 'Some of the best folks I know.' 'You grow so close with these people,' Sullivan said in an interview with the Chicago Tribune ahead of the finale. By her admission on the show, Sullivan's journey to the top of the competition was slow to start. She was initially eliminated in the second episode for her maple tart. 'I think I just attribute my struggles early on as being totally freaked out, 100%,' Sullivan told the Tribune. 'I had never been on TV before.' Meanwhile, Mohajir won that episode's elimination challenge with a variation on his signature tandoori fried chicken dish, which was eventually featured on the menu at Lilac Tiger. But in the fourth episode, the James Beard-nominated chef was eliminated, to the surprise of many — it was his only time at the bottom. Contestants are kept in the dark about some elements of the production, so it was bittersweet for Mohajir and Sullivan to find out they'd be facing off in 'Last Chance Kitchen,' a web series where eliminated chefs get a chance to return. 'I've been impressed by both of you,' said Colicchio as he was judging their showdown of savory and sweet. 'Zubair, I was quite frankly surprised to see you just this early here, based on some of the earlier challenges. And Bailey, in 'Last Chance Kitchen,' you've been cooking really well.' Eventually, he picked Sullivan's pork and panna cotta dishes over Mohajir's scallops and French toast to win, though it was close. Reflecting back on her cook in 'Last Chance Kitchen,' Sullivan said she was able to keep a positive attitude knowing that no matter what, someone from Chicago would go on to compete. 'I will cheer on Zubair on everything he does going forward,' Sullivan said. In Chicago, her love for the restaurant industry started with growing up at Goldyburgers in Forest Park, a restaurant her father bought. She became a 'Top Chef' fan watching the show with her mother and ended up training under another 'Top Chef' alumni, Beverly Kim of Parachute, as well as Sarah Grueneberg, Monteverde, head chef and owner. Sullivan rejoined the main competition in the fifth episode, where she and Epps won a team elimination challenge with fire-kissed grilled octopus with olives. Team Chicago would face one more loss in the penultimate episode. North Pond's Murillo had a strong showing all season, with Collichio calling his pickle-inspired dessert from Episode 9 one of the best dishes he'd ever had on the show. The finale is taking place in Milan, Italy, and fittingly, last week's elimination challenge was a head-to-head based on Italian ingredients. Wang and Epps had qualified for the finale by winning the polenta and beet rounds, respectively, which left one final spot for either Sullivan or Murillo. Sullivan called the gorgonzola round a 'Chi-town throwdown.' As they finished their dishes, the chefs hugged and said they loved each other. Sullivan had been critiqued for her usage of the cheese earlier in the season — in Milan, she took the opportunity to redeem her earlier failure. This time, she came out on top with a bruleed gorgonzola. The judges praised her quirky, endearing personality. 'Cesar, you put together a really great dish,' Collichio said after announcing Murillo's elimination for his butternut squash casserole. 'Bailey's was a little more focused on the gorgonzola. That's the only reason.' Sullivan couldn't share how she did in the finale, but if she won, she wouldn't be the first Chicago chef; Stephanie Izard and Joe Flamm were both crowned Top Chef of their seasons and Rick Bayless won the first season of 'Top Chef Masters.' Sullivan's Monterverde mentor, chef Sarah Grueneberg, made it to the top two of Season 9 of 'Top Chef.' 'I do kind of feel like I'm following in Sarah's footsteps, being on 'Top Chef,'' said Sullivan. 'I just celebrated nine years at Monteverde this June.' The Top Chef usually receives money, press and various perks but new this year, the winner will have the opportunity to present at the James Beard Awards in Chicago on June 16, a week after the finale airs. Win or lose, Bailey Sullivan has made it. 'Top Chef' Season 22 concludes on June 12. The final episode, along with the rest of the season, will be available to stream the next day on Peacock. Big screen or home stream, takeout or dine-in, Tribune writers are here to steer you toward your next great experience. Sign up for your free weekly Eat. Watch. Do. newsletter here. This Chicago chef just won season two of Food Network's '24 in 24: Last Chef Standing'

The leader of the opposition
The leader of the opposition

Politico

time2 hours ago

  • Politico

The leader of the opposition

Presented by With help from Eli Okun and Bethany Irvine On this morning's Playbook Podcast, Jack and Adam Wren discuss Gavin Newsom's emergence this week at the front of the anti-Trump pack … and why Saturday's grand military parade in D.C. may not be entirely comfortable viewing for either GOP grandees or military top brass. Good Wednesday morning. This is Jack Blanchard, more bleary-eyed than usual after last night's glammed-up party at the French Ambassador's place. But fear not: I stuck to sparkling water all night long, just for you guys … Playbook is a cruel mistress indeed. Let me know how I'm doing so far. BREAKING THIS MORNING: Elon says sorry. 'I regret some of my posts about President @realDonaldTrump last week. They went too far,' Elon Musk wrote on X at, erm, 3.04 a.m. this morning. It follows Musk's decision to delete some of his most egregious messages about Trump from last Thursday's blowup — yes, including the Jeffrey Epstein one — and marks the culmination of a pretty unprecedented climbdown, by Musk's standards. There's no sign of a response from the president as yet, but he'll surely be lapping it up. Popcorn at the ready: And if that's not enough theater for you, Trump — joined by the lesser-spotted Melania — will head to the Kennedy Center this evening for the opening night of 'Les Misérables.' Trump, of course, fired the arts center's entire board in February and appointed himself chair. And now — as luck would have it — his favorite musical's coming to town. Enhanced security will be in place all day, though whether that stops Trump getting the JD Vance treatment remains to be seen. Plot twist: For those who haven't seen it, 'Les Mis' follows a group of 19th-century king-hating revolutionaries who take to the streets against their authoritarian government, but ultimately see their hopes of change crushed. It's hard to see how it could have any real relevance today. In today's Playbook … — Newsom grabs his moment as hundreds of U.S. Marines hit the streets of LA. — Bessent heads to the Hill after trade breakthrough with China. — GOP senators huddle to discuss reconciliation tweaks. DRIVING THE DAY WATERSHED MOMENT: Hundreds of U.S. Marines will hit the streets of Los Angeles today as the Trump administration cranks up its pressure on the city's immigrant population. The 700 active-duty Marines sent to L.A. will join existing National Guard troops in 'protecting federal property and personnel,' a spokesperson for the U.S. Northern Command said this morning (per the NYT) — 'including providing security to ICE agents on their missions.' It follows a complaint from border czar Tom Homan that the LA protests have made it 'dangerous' for ICE officials to do their jobs. Mission creep: The anarchic and riotous scenes we saw in downtown Los Angeles on Sunday have actually largely dissipated — especially following Mayor Karen Bass' decision to impose an 8 p.m. curfew last night. But the troops Trump has deployed are going nowhere. Instead, official ICE pictures yesterday showed National Guard troops standing guard alongside ICE officers as they carried out raids on undocumented migrants across LA. (Bloomberg News confirmed this is happening). And it sounds like the newly deployed Marines will be asked to do the same. Let's be clear: These are precisely the sorts of scenes — U.S. troops assisting with immigration raids in liberal cities — that Dems have feared since Trump's election. They are also precisely the target of California Gov. Gavin Newsom's request for an emergency injunction against the way Trump is deploying military force in his state, per POLITICO's Kyle Cheney and Josh Gerstein. District Judge Charles Breyer — the Bill Clinton-appointed brother of former Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer — will hear that case tomorrow. It could be quite a moment. We need to talk about Gavin: Newsom, for his part, delivered a pretty extraordinary address to the nation last night, in which he sought to position himself as the leader of America's anti-Trump opposition. Speaking directly to camera in a crisp, eight-minute monologue, Newsom denounced Trump's aggressive deployment of ICE officers and military forces in LA — before raising his eyes to horizons far beyond his own state. 'This isn't just about protests here in Los Angeles,' Newsom told America. 'This is about all of us. This is about you. California may be first, but it clearly will not end here. Other states are next. Democracy is next. Democracy is under assault before our eyes.' Going viral: The video is getting plenty of love from Dems online — hitting more than a million views on the MeidasTouch YouTube channel inside three hours last night. And it was on the front pages of both the NYT and WaPo early this morning. 'I for one am very happy to see somebody that isn't afraid to speak up,' Ana Navarro told CNN. 'I have been so thirsty for somebody that is not cowardly, bending the knee and selling out to Donald Trump as he does all of this to America.' Even the WSJ describes Newsom as 'the leader of the opposition.' This is all fascinating stuff for kremlinologists of the fledgling 2028 Democratic race. Playbook noted yesterday that politicians aligning themselves with anti-ICE protesters may be taking on political risk come a general election, but Newsom is playing a different game right now — and playing it well. He even leaned into Trump's threat to have him arrested, spying the same political opportunity enjoyed by Trump himself in 2023. (POLITICO's Jeremy White and Melanie Mason take a closer look at Newsom's leadership prospects here.) White House pushback: Trump has yet to respond directly to Newsom's video, but it was striking to see the White House comms operation move into overdrive last night. White House comms director Steven Cheung and his deputy Alex Pfeiffer were both going predictably hard at Newsom on X, as was the White House's Rapid Response account. Stephen Miller did not hold back. Trump's pal Jon Voight published a blistering video response. Others in MAGA world simply mocked Newsom for the technical glitches that wrecked the initial live broadcast. But but but: It's worth noting Team Newsom is giving as good as it gets, mimicking the ways Trump has successfully deployed social media over recent years. We're seeing rapid response pushback; caustic humor, deeply mocking tones. And again — plenty of online Dems are lapping it up. WaPo's Tatum Hunter has more on that. Taking it offline: Trump, predictably, now appears to be considering other ways to punish California, including cutting federal education funds (per POLITICO's Rebecca Carballo and colleagues) and killing its nation-leading vehicle emissions standards (per POLITICO's Alex Nieves.) First in Playbook: This all comes ahead of Trump's big military parade in D.C. on Saturday, and the split-screen scenes in Los Angeles and Washington 'underscore how Trump is leveraging his role as commander-in-chief in a much clearer and more urgent way than he did during his first term — embodying the image of a strong military commander that he has long admired in other foreign leaders, allies and adversaries alike,' POLITICO's Megan Messerly and colleagues write this morning. The heartburn: NYT's Helene Cooper reports some military leaders are feeling a little uncomfortable about the whole thing, now that troops are literally being deployed on U.S. streets to help quell protests. Even GOP Hill members are squirming: POLITICO surveyed 50 GOP lawmakers, and only seven said they planned to stay in Washington this weekend for the festivities. Also uncomfortable viewing: U.S. troops booing and jeering Trump's rivals during yesterday's presidential speech at Fort Bragg. Watch the clip IT'S THE ECONOMY, STUPID INFLATION NATION: The monthly Consumer Price Index data for May comes out at 8:30 a.m., the latest measure of whether Trump's trade wars are driving up costs for Americans. Economists predict a tick up to 2.9 percent inflation annually and 0.3 percent month to month, reflecting a moderate impact from tariffs, Bloomberg's Mark Niquette reports. 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Indeed, analysts say that China's effective use of rare earths as leverage illustrates how the 'Trump administration underestimated Beijing's ability to withstand the pain of tariffs,' WaPo's Katrina Northrop writes. Trump won't enjoy reading that. In better news for Trump: The president landed a significant victory last night as an appeals court lifted a ruling that had blocked the president's sweeping 'Liberation Day' tariffs, per Reuters. The court said Trump can enforce the levies while litigation on the merits proceeds. Arguments aren't scheduled until the end of July. And it's not just China: Negotiators are also close to a deal with Mexico that would remove some U.S. tariffs on steel, Bloomberg's Joe Deaux and Eric Martin scooped. 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Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-D.C.) told reporters she's running for election again after 18 terms — only for her office to suddenly introduce some wiggle room after a noisy outcry, POLITICO's Nick Wu reports. … 76-year-old Rep. Kweisi Mfume's (D-Md.) is hoping to benefit from seniority as he seeks the House Oversight ranking member spot, Nick and colleagues report. … And while we're doing elderly politicians, former White House aides Neera Tanden, Anthony Bernal, Ashley Williams and Annie Tomasini have agreed to testify before House Oversight as it investigates former President Joe Biden's abilities in office, per POLITICO's Hailey Fuchs. Half of D.C. will be tuning in for that. BEST OF THE REST CLIMATE FILES: EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin is due to announce a major pollution-prevention rollback at 2 p.m., Bloomberg's Ari Natter and Jennifer Dlouhy scooped. The agency's latest deregulatory moves will unwind Biden-era rules that forced power plants to curb emissions. 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PLAYBOOK METRO SECTION — House Republicans are no closer to fixing the billion-dollar hole they blew in the city's budget … but they are passing bills this week to repeal a D.C. law that allows non-citizens to vote in local elections, NYT's Michael Gold reports. OUT AND ABOUT — French Ambassador Laurent Bili, Steve Clemons, Heather Podesta, Kellyanne Conway and Cory Gardner hosted the fourth edition of Amethyste at Bili's residence last night. SPOTTED: Sens. Deb Fischer (R-Neb.), Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.), Dave McCormick (R-Pa.) and Dina Powell McCormick, Chris Murphy (D-Conn.), Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.) and John Hickenlooper (D-Colo.), Reps. Mike Turner (R-Ohio), Lizzie Fletcher (D-Texas) and Gabe Amo (D-R.I.), Del. Stacey Plaskett (D-U.S. Virgin Islands), Joe and Gayle Manchin, Vince Haley, CMS Administrator Mehmet Oz, NIH Director Jay Bhattacharya, Kiron Skinner, Justin Fanelli, Paul Dabbar, Omar Vargas, Faryar Shirzad, Teresa Carlson, Nick Carr, Dante Disparte, Riaz Valani, Joe Bartlett, Ludovic Hood, Sarah Rogers, Alex Wong, Joe Hack, Hogan Gidley, Morgan Ortagus, Sébastien Fagart, Belgian Ambassador Frédéric Bernard, Japanese Ambassador Shigeo Yamada, Roy Blunt, Dan Knight, John Hudson, Kaitlan Collins, Josh Dawsey, Tammy Haddad, Gloria Dittus, Daniel Cruise, Vincent Voci, Michael Wilner, Matthew Mazonkey, Garrett Haake, Tyler Pager, Juleanna Glover, Michael Shepard, Goli Sheikholeslami, Dafna Linzer, Michael Froman, Douglas Rediker and Heidi Crebo-Rediker, Tomicah Tillemann and Susan Blumenthal. — The Shakespeare Theatre Company's annual Will on the Hill event last night included participation by Sen. Chris Coons (D-Del.), Reps. Gabe Amo (D-R.I.), Sydney Kamlager-Dove (D-Calif.) and Dina Titus (D-Nev.), D.C. Council Chair Phil Mendelson, D.C. Councilmember Brooke Pinto, Aaron Myers, Grover Norquist, Holly Twyford, Renea Brown, Marla Allard, Olivia Beavers, Rich Edson, Steven Clemons, James Hohmann, Simon Godwin and emcee Mike Evans. Also SPOTTED: Carol Danko, Angela Lee Gieras, Neal Higgins, Victoria Hamscho, Karishma Shah Page, Alexa Verveer, LeeAnn Petersen, Andrea LaMontagne, Kathleen Coulombe, Michael Sinacore, Ryan Alcorn, Scott Gelbman, Joe Harris, Nick Sanders, James Sonne, Blake Major, Evan Williams, Cheyenne Hopkins, John Donnelly and Ana Delgado. — The Barbara Bush Foundation for Family Literacy marked the recent centennial of her birth with a celebration of reading last night at Vinegar Hill in Arundel, Maine — part of a three-day commemoration of the former first lady in Kennebunkport. The night included keynotes from bestselling authors Claire Lombardo, Dani Shapiro and Chris Whitaker, a video message from Jenna Bush Hager and a conversation with former staffers led by Jean Becker. Also SPOTTED: Doro Bush Koch, George Dvorsky, Ellie Sosa, Neil and Maria Bush, Margaret Bush, Marshall Bush, Andy Card, Shawn Gorman, Mark Lashier, Andrew Mueller, Kristan and Kyle Nevins, Anita McBride, Andrew Roberts and Tom Collamore. WHITE HOUSE ARRIVAL LOUNGE — Wayne Wall has been named senior director for the Middle East at the NSC, which is starting to staff up after a major purge, Axios' Barak Ravid reports. He previously was at the Defense Intelligence Agency. TRANSITIONS — Sabrina Singh is joining Seven Letter as a partner. She most recently was deputy press secretary at the Defense Department, and is a Kamala Harris alum. … Karina Lubell will be a partner at Brunswick Group. She previously led the competition policy and advocacy section at DOJ's Antitrust Division. … Ashley Moir has launched Ashley Moir Media, a PR company with booking services, media training and comms strategy. She most recently was director of national broadcast operations at Deploy/US and is a former senior booker at Fox News. … … Gopal Das Varma is now a VP at Cornerstone Research. He previously was VP at Charles River Associates and is a DOJ Antitrust Division alum. … Allison Rivera will be VP for government and industry affairs at the National Grain and Feed Association. She most recently was executive director of government affairs at the National Cattlemen's Beef Association. … Daniel Harder is now a senior government affairs adviser at Mayer Brown. He previously was director of government affairs and public policy at Biogen. WEEKEND WEDDING — John Hagner, partner at Workbench Strategy, and Adam Koehler, professional learning facilitator at World Savvy, got married Saturday in Minneapolis. They met online three years ago. Pic WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Derek Robertson, a reporter for POLITICO's Digital Future Daily and contributor to POLITICO Magazine, and Rachel Greer, associate director of records and archives at the ACLU, recently welcomed Margaret Hope Robertson. HAPPY BIRTHDAY: CMS Administrator Mehmet Oz … David Cohen … Jennifer Rubin … Kim Oates of the House Radio/TV Gallery … Disney's Lucas Acosta … Eric Lieberman … J Street's Jeremy Ben-Ami … Greta Van Susteren … Lindsey Williams Drath … Cesar Gonzalez of Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart's (R-Fla.) office … Jamal Brown … Mike Schoenfeld … Tad Devine of Devine Mulvey Longabaugh … Lorissa Bounds … Kristen Thomaselli ... Mary Kate Cunningham … Marty Kearns of Netcentric Campaigns … POLITICO's Meg Myer … Emily Dobler Siddiqi … former Rep. Mike Conaway (R-Texas) … Ryan Bugas … former South Dakota Gov. Dennis Daugaard … Wendy Teramoto … CNN's Morgan Rimmer … Will Rahn … Sofia Jones of the House Agriculture Committee … Jonathan Martinez of Haleon … Tamar Epps of the National Head Start Association … Amy Barrera of Senate Majority Leader John Thune's office Did someone forward this email to you? Sign up here. Send Playbookers tips to playbook@ or text us on Signal here. Playbook couldn't happen without our editor Zack Stanton, deputy editor Garrett Ross and Playbook Podcast producer Callan Tansill-Suddath.

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