april 21, 2011 weekend
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V O L U M E 1 , N U M B E R 4 5 | T H U R S D A Y , A P R I L 2 1 , 2 0 1 1
THE TULSA WORLD’S ENTERTAINMENT MAGAZINE
T U L SAWOR L D . COM /WE E K E ND
RUN WALK RIDEWhether you prefer to exercise on foot or on a bike, take a look
inside at some of the best outdoor places in Tulsa to stay in shape
PAGE 3TULSA WORLD • APRIL 21, 2011 WEEKEND
Features
What else...
GET OUTSIDE AND GET MOVINGWe’ve tracked down the best walking, running and biking trails in Tulsa.
Page 12.
CONTACT USAshley Parrish, Weekend Editor ...........918-581-8318ashley.parrish@tulsaworld.com
scene@tulsaworld.com
TO ADVERTISE IN THIS MAGAZINE, CALL 918-581-8510
Tix on 6 6At the movies 10
Jake’s Cafe 16Restaurant news 18
Jenks Herb & Plant Festival 19On TV 22
STILL ROCKINGGeorge Thorogood makes his way to the Joint at Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Tulsa on Friday. Jason Ashley Wright spent a few minutes talking to him about his latest album and why his music has been so enduring.Page 9.
DAYS GONE BYArnold’s Hamburgers in west Tulsa harkens back to the ’50s, with its jukebox, Elvis prints and neon signs. But it’s the burgers and shakes that keep families coming back year after year.
Page 15.
‘RISEN’For many, it wouldn’t feel like Easter without a visit to Victory Christian for its annual production. This year, “Risen,” will include a multimedia component and an elaborate set.
Page 21.
HEATING UPCompadre’s Mexican Grill & Cantina started in a tiny convenience store in Broken Ar-row, and the owners haven’t looked back. Scott Cherry stopped in recently to try the food that has made this local chain such a success.Page 5.
MATT BARNARD/Tulsa World
5 questions with Jack Wing
‘THE VOICE’ OF THE TULSA RUN
Jack Wing is enjoying an active lifestyle again after beating cancer. MIKE SIMONS/Tulsa World file
BY KIM BROWNWorld Scene Writer
Cancer interrupted Jack Wing’s 32-year tenure as “the voice” of the Tulsa Run.
But he has recovered, and he’s got cabin fever.After battling cancer — he was diagnosed with mul-
tiple myeloma in 2009 — he’s looking forward to a hospi-tal-free spring. The longtime announcer for the Tulsa Run says that though he’s no longer running (the cancer caused bones in his back to break), he’s still working up a sweat around town.
Kim Brown 918-581-8474kim.brown@tulsaworld.com
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42
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What have you been up to lately? I’m doing fantastic. I saw my
oncologist a couple of weeks ago, and he said, “I don’t want to see you for a year.” My hair is back, and it’s curly — I’ve never had curly hair. It’s a totally different look, but it has come back the same color. And my beard’s back, too.
Have you been exercising?I’ve been working out five
days a week, an hour and a half each pop. My running days are over, but that’s OK. I had running for many, many years, and I don’t regret it. I do the treadmill, elliptical, hand crank and some spinning. And every other day I do a round of weights. I lost every muscle in my body — I went down to 164 pounds when I had cancer, and I’m back to 173. There’s no question that it’s very impor-tant to keep yourself in good physical and mental shape. Get out there and sweat.
What are some of your favorite places to be outside in Tulsa?
I live right on Riverside Drive,
so I walk out the front door and we’re on the (River Parks) trail. My wife is a marathoner, and when she goes to run, I ride my bike with her. When she’s in marathon training, she pumps it up to 18 miles, and I go along with her and one of her girlfriends with a backpack carrying their water. They call me Backpack Jack.
Do you ride your bike on your own?Yes, last week my goal was to
ride up the hill to Turkey Moun-tain and back — it’s 13 miles round-trip. And I did it. It’s a good bike ride, it gives you that big hill on Turkey Mountain.
What are you plans with the Tulsa Run this year?
I’m going to be on the micro-phone at the start and finish line. Last year was the first I missed in 32 years — it was hard not to do it.
This year I plan on being up on scaffolding at the start and finish. You meet so many great people. If I hadn’t had so many people praying for me, I don’t know. … I was very blessed.
TULSA WORLD • APRIL 21, 2011 PAGE 4 WEEKEND
Tulsa BarTlesville sand springs ponca ciTy skiaTook hominy pawhuska
mil l iondol lare lm.com (918) 699-7777 Find us on Facebook!
Fulfill your thrill.
Gates open at 5pm. All ages welcome unless otherwise noted. Bring your own chairs. No outside coolers, food or drinks allowed. For more information visit milliondollarelm.com.
Put on your boots and kick up your heels! We’re rocking Green Country this spring with Osage Country Jam free outdoor concerts. Join the fun as some of Oklahoma’s best local talent takes the stage.
Jason savory BandslideBarmerle Jam
6 pm7:30 pm
9 pm
iron countrymuskogee’s wild card BandBlack water Band
6 pm7:30 pm
9 pm
Badly Bentkinsey & co.Thomas martinez
6 pm7:30 pm
9 pm
cody canada and The departedGates open at 7pm. Must be 18 to attend. Ticket required. For tickets, visit the Bartlesville Players Club or call the Osage Event Center in Tulsa at (918) 699-7667.
9 pm
“santa Fe” acoustic duo60 westhell or high water
6 pm7:30 pm
9 pm
©2011 Osage Million Dollar Elm Casino.
PAGE 5TULSA WORLD • APRIL 21, 2011 WEEKEND
IT IS DIFFICULT to put your finger on why brothers Jer-emiah and Joe Lindsey have
shown a magic touch with their Compadre’s Mexican Grill & Can-tina restaurants.
They stress customer service, but so do many restaurants, successful or not.
The food is solid Tex-Mex, good but not extraordinary.
The $2.99 margaritas are a draw, but nothing that would make or break a business.
Maybe it is a combination of those things, or something more mysteri-ous, but whatever, it must be more than just good luck that their restau-rants have thrived since they convert-ed on old convenience store into their first Compadre’s at 101st Street and 145th East Avenue in Broken Arrow. That was in 2005, and the place has been packed ever since.
In 2006, they opened an Owasso location, last year they took over a former Mexicali Border Cafe spot on the hill at 71st Street and Sheri-dan Road, and a couple of weeks ago they opened their newest restaurant at Oklahoma 51 and Oneta Road, in a new shopping center roughly be-tween Broken Arrow and Coweta.
In a couple of months, the origi-nal store will move a few yards west into a new shopping center on 101st
Street.“For sure our first store took off bet-
ter than expected,” Jeremiah Lindsey said. “We knew we had a good prod-uct, but we did grow quicker than we thought we would.”
The original store should be the plushest of the four when it moves, but we decided to go ahead and check out the new Compadre’s at Oneta Road.
The Compadre’s Dinner ($8.99) has been a staple item since the first res-taurant opened, and it still is a tasty choice. It includes a mix of grilled steak, bacon, sausage, onions, green peppers and tomatoes, served with rice, beans and warm tortillas.
Another signature dish, the Com-padre’s salad ($8.99), features a bed of romaine lettuce topped with fajita chicken or shrimp (we chose the lat-ter) and pepperjack cheese, and gar-
nished with slices of fresh avocado and thick, house-made potato chips. It came with an avocado ranch dress-ing on the side.
Except for some black spots on the avocado, the salad was fresh and fla-vorful and included at least a dozen small shrimp.
The Burrito de la Casa ($8.49) was a monster, a foot-long tortilla filled with beans, shredded cheese and beef, then topped with creamy, some-what salty white queso, sour cream, guacamole and jalapenos. The gua-camole had bits of cilantro, onion and tomato.
The complimentary salsa was thin, peppery and a bit spicy. Better was a warm roasted salsa that was milder but more flavorful with cilantro, ol-ives, tomato chunks, green peppers and pepper seeds.
We shared a flan ($3.25) that had a smooth texture and nice cara-mel taste. I preferred it without the
whipped topping, which had an off flavor.
Compadre’s has an extensive menu with a wide variety of fajitas, tacos, enchiladas, regional entrees, seafood and burritos. A lunch menu has 10 items for $5.95 to $9.35.
The restaurant has two dining ar-eas and a separate bar room. The ba-sic house margarita is $2.99 ($4.99 with Patron), and a 32-ouncer, served in a giant cocktail glass, is $6.99.
Our server, Jesse, was efficient and informative.
thursdayBY SCOTT CHERRY | World Scene Writer, 918-581-8463 | scott.cherry@tulsaworld.com
Tex-Mex eatery discovers elusive recipe for success
The Compadres Dinner (foreground) has been a staple since the first restaurant opened, and the newest location for the eatery also offers $2.99 margaritas. Photos by MATT BARNARD/Tulsa World
COMPADRE’S MEXICAN GRILL & CANTINA
24188 E. Oklahoma 51, Broken Arrow918-574-2667Food •••Atmosphere •••Service •••(on a scale of 0 to 4 stars)11 a.m. to 9 p.m. Sunday-Thursday, 11 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. Friday-Saturday; accepts all major credit cards.
THE SPECIALSMonday — half off meal with one of equal value (dine-in only).Tuesday — a free kid’s meal with each adult dinner.Wednesday — enchiladas $5.39 (dine-in or carry-out).Thursday — fajitas for two with queso and two margaritas $19.99.
Jeremiah Lindsey, who owns Com-padre’s Mexican Grill & Cantina with his brother Joe, relaxes in their new-est restaurant, located between Broken Arrow and Coweta.
TULSA WORLD • APRIL 21, 2011 PAGE 6 WEEKEND
tulsaworld.com/weekend
TIX ON 6Look here each week for information on tickets and
event times and locations. Shows will be added as ticket announcements are made.
LOCATIONSArea theaters, museums, casinos and concert halls.
VenuesBOK Center ................................................866-726-5287200 S. Denver Ave., tulsaworld.com/bok
Brady Theater ........................................... 918-582-7239 105 W. Brady St., tulsaworld.com/brady
Cain’s Ballroom ....................................... 918-584-2306423 N. Main St., tulsaworld.com/cains
Living Arts of Tulsa ..................................918-585-1234307 E. Brady St., tulsaworld.com/livingarts
Mabee Center ..........................................918-495-60007777 S. Lewis Ave., tulsaworld.com/mabee
Tulsa Performing Arts Center ................918-596-7111110 E. Second St., tulsaworld.com/mytix
MuseumsGilcrease Museum ...................................918-596-2700 1400 N. Gilcrease Museum Road , tulsaworld.com/gilcrease
Philbrook Museum of Art ........................918-749-79412727 S. Rockford Road, tulsaworld.com/philbrookSherwin Miller Museum of Jewish Art ....918-492-18182021 E. 71st St., tulsaworld.com/jewishmuseum
CasinosHard Rock Hotel & Casino .................... 918-384-7800777 S. Cherokee St., Catoosa , tulsaworld.com/hardrockcasino
Osage Million Dollar Elm ....................... 918-699-7777951 W. 36th St. North, tulsaworld.com/milliondollarelm
River Spirit Casino ....................................918-299-85188330 Riverside Parkway, tulsaworld.com/riverspirit
BOK CENTERBob Seger & The Silver Bul-let Band, 7:30 p.m. April 28. $75.
Foo Fighters, 7:30 p.m. May 17. $25-$49.50.
Josh Groban, 8 p.m. May 20. $75, $95.
Widespread Panic, 8 p.m. June 19. $35.
New Kids on the Block-Backstreet Boys, 7:30 p.m. July 17. $31.50-$91.50
Def Leppard, 7:30 p.m. July 19. $35-$125.
Professional Bull Riding, 8 p.m. Aug. 12; 7 p.m. Aug. 13. $12-$102.
Keith Urban, 7:30 p.m. Aug. 18. $27-$61.50.
Taylor Swift, 7 p.m. Sept. 21. $27-$71.50.
BRADY THEATERKe$ha, Monday. Doors open at 7 p.m. SOLD OUT.
The Moody Blues, May 3. Doors open at 7 p.m. $57.50-$77.50.
Steely Dan, July 12. Doors open at 7 p.m. SOLD OUT.
Earth Wind and Fire, May 20, Doors open at 7 p.m. $47.50-$65.
Lyle Lovett and John Hiatt, June 24, Doors open at 7 p.m. $45-$64.
CAIN’S BALLROOMUmphrey’s McGee, Thursday. Doors open at 7 p.m. $19.
Luke Bryan, Saturday. Doors open at 7 p.m. SOLD OUT.
Bowling for Soup, April 28, Doors open at 6:30 p.m. Show begins at 7:30 p.m. $20.
Social Distortion, April 29, Doors open at 7 p.m. Show begins at 8 p.m. $35.
Slightly Stoopid, April 30, Doors open at 7 p.m. Show begins at 8 p.m. $19 plus fees for advance tickets, $24 plus fees at the door.
Flogging Molly, May 2, Doors open at 6:30 p.m. Show begins at 7:30 p.m. $34.
Wilco, May 8. Doors open at 7 p.m. SOLD OUT.
Lucinda Williams, May 10. Doors open at 7 p.m. $29.
Ninth-annual ’80s Prom, May 13. 8 p.m. $17.
CONVENTION CENTERPlies and Paul Wall, 7 p.m. May 7. $23-$43.
OK Play! Children’s Expo, 10 a.m.-6 p.m. June 18-19. Free. $5 for “Bounce Zone.”
Antiques Roadshow, July 23. Ticket lottery applicants can check pbs.org/antiques starting May 6.
EXPO SQUAREGreat Southwest Home Show, QuikTrip Center. April 28 through May 1.
Tulsa Flea Market, 8 a.m.-4 p.m. Saturdays. Exchange Center.
Metcalf Gun Show, Exchange Center. April 30-May 1.
Thomas & Friends Live on Stage, “Thomas Saves the Day,” Pavilion. April 30-May 1. $16-$35.
GILCREASE MUSEUMHome Lands: How Women Made the West, through May 15.
America: Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of a Nation, through Jan. 2.
HARD ROCK HOTEL & CASINO TULSAGeorge Thorogood, 8 p.m. Friday. $45-$55.
The Oak Ridge Boys, 7:30 p.m. April 28. $35-$45.
Luke Bryan sold out Cain’s for his show Saturday. Courtesy
////Your ticket index //////////////////////////////////////////////
Gilcrease MuseuM a university of Tulsa/city of Tulsa Partnership
1400 North Gilcrease Museum Road • (918) 596-2700 • gilcrease.utulsa.edu • TU is an EEO/AA institution.
This dynamic, interactive exhibition celebrates the spirit of women of the West and their central role as builders of home and community – presenting a complex tale of competing visions about tradition and modernity, practicality and spirituality.
Through May 15
Home Lands How women made tHe west
Elizabeth (Buff) Elting (United States, born 1953), Where the Sea Used to Be, 2004. Oil on canvas. Museum of the American West, Autry National Center; 2006.4.1
organized by tHe autry nationaL Center, Los angeLesHome Lands is generously supported by Cam and Peter Starret, Ernst & Young, Eastman Kodak Company, the National Endowment for the Humanities, Unified Grocers, Wells Fargo, KCET and the Friends of the Autry.
PAGE 7TULSA WORLD • APRIL 21, 2011 WEEKEND
Craig Ferguson, 8 p.m. April 30. $50-$65.
Blake Shelton, 8 p.m. May 6. $55-$65.
Xtreme Fight Night, May 13, 8 p.m. Doors open at 7 p.m. $41-$101. Must be 21 and older.
PHILBROOK MUSEUMTypeface: Tapping Tradi-tion for Innovation, 5:30 p.m. Thursday. Free with admission.
BookSmart Tulsa, “Genius, Madness and Murder,” 6:30 p.m. April 28 at Mabee Lobby. Free with admission.
Family event, Reuse, Recycle, Remix, 2 p.m. April 30. Free with admission.
The Adkins Collection, Native American and Southwestern paintings, pottery, baskets and jew-elry, through May 22.
RIVER SPIRIT CASINOThe Fab Four, Beatles tribute band. 7 p.m. April 29. $30-$50.
John Michael Montgom-ery, May 13, 7 p.m. $39-$59.
SPIRITBANK EVENT CENTERPiccadilly Circus, May 31-June 1. Times and prices TBD.
OK Video Game Expo, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. June 18. $5.
TULSA PERFORMING ARTS CENTER
Tulsa Ballet: “Creations in Studio K,” 7 p.m. April 29, May 4-6; 2 and 7 p.m. April 30 and May 7; 2 p.m. May 1 and May 8, Studio K, 1212 E. 45th Place. 918-749-6006.
Swimming in the Shal-lows, 8 p.m. April 28-30; 2 p.m. May 1; 8 p.m. May 5-7; 2 p.m. May 8, Charles E. Norman Theatre. $20.
Tulsa Opera: Norma, 7:30 p.m. April 30 and May 6; 2:30 p.m. May 8, Chapman Music Hall. $10-$98.
Artbike 2011, PAC Gallery, May 5-June 1.
TULSA DRILLERS HOME SERIESAll games at ONEOK Fieldvs. Springfield, 7:05 p.m. Thursday, Friday, Saturday. $5-$15.
vs. Arkansas, 7:05 p.m. May 3, 11:05 a.m. May 4, 7:05 p.m. May 5. $5-$15.
TULSA SHOCK HOME GAMESAll games at the BOK Centervs. San Antonio, June 10
vs. Washington, June 18
vs. Seattle, June 21
vs. New York, June 23
vs. Minnesota, June 30
vs. Phoenix, July 8
vs. Los Angeles, July 15
vs. Atlanta, July 26
vs. Chicago, July 28
vs. Seattle, July 30
TULSA TALONS HOME GAMESArena Football League games at the BOK Centervs. Iowa, Saturday
vs. Chicago, May 7
vs. Kansas City, May 21
vs. Utah, June 11
vs. Dallas, June 25
////Your ticket index //////////////////////////////////////////////
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Tickets starting at just $10. Call 918.587.4811 or visit TulsaOpera.com.
TULSA WORLD • APRIL 21, 2011 PAGE 8 WEEKEND
Introducing WindChoice: 100% home-grown Oklahoma wind power for your home or business – for as little as 6¢ per day.
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Don’t miss PSO Night at ONEOK Field - April 22. Powered by WindChoice: 100% home-grown Oklahoma wind power from PSO!
PSO211510_WC_TW_WKEND_Layout 2 4/12/11 8:55 AM Page 1
PAGE 9TULSA WORLD • APRIL 21, 2011 WEEKEND
fridayBY JASON ASHLEY WRIGHT | World Scene Writer, 918-581-8483 | jason.wright@tulsaworld.com
Blues rocker keeps focus on music, not the industry
GEORGE THORO-GOOD HAS never had a Sam Adams
beer.“How do you like that?”
said the blues-rocker, whose hit “Who Do You Love?” has been featured on the brew’s commercials.
He hasn’t had the chance — well, more like doesn’t need one, we gathered — to see the hit television series “Glee,” which covered his song “One Bourbon, One Scotch, One Beer” this season.
“I don’t care what they say, good or bad, as long as they keep me in the conversation,” he said in a recent phone in-terview.
He’ll be the talk of the town, no doubt, when he brings his signature blues-infused rock ’n’ roll to Tulsa this weekend at the Joint at the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino.
The Destroyers have ex-panded through the years, by the way, with drummer Jeff Simon and bassist Billy Blough, plus guitarist Jim Suhler (a Texan who was brought aboard in 1999) and saxophonist Buddy Leach, who joined in 2003.
Hopefully, their set list Friday night will not only include the standards we mentioned earlier — includ-ing what is arguably Thoro-good’s most famous hit, “Bad to the Bone” — but songs from his and the Destroyers’ upcoming Capitol/EMI al-bum, “2120 South Michigan Avenue.” Their 17th studio offering, the album’s name is derived from the address of Chess Records’ Chicago headquarters.
For 30-plus years, Tho-rogood and the Destroyers, who have sold more than 15 million albums worldwide, have stayed on music’s radar — sometimes peripherally,
depending on the year, but there nonetheless. After the early-’80s success of “Bad to the Bone” came 1988’s album “Born to Be Bad” with its hit, “You Talk Too Much.’’ The ’90s saw more hit-making with 1993’s “Get a Haircut,’’ followed into the new millen-nium with 2003’s “Ride ’Til I
Die” and 2006’s “Hard Stuff.” The band’s 2004 compila-tion, “Greatest Hits: 30 Years of Rock,” went gold, spent 60 weeks at No. 1 on Billboard’s blues chart, and won the magazine’s award for blues record of the year.
But he didn’t go into all that in our conversation. All that stuff came from a press release.
Instead, we talked about his influences, which you can hear on the new album, with his rollicking treatment on classics by a who’s-who of the blues, including Willie Dixon, Muddy Waters, Bo Diddley, Chuck Berry, Howlin’ Wolf, Buddy Guy, Sonny Boy Wil-liamson and Little Walter, along with new material by himself, producer Tom Ham-bridge and Richard Fleming.
His favorites are Berry and Diddley. “Those are the guys who took the blues and turned it into something else,” Thorogood said. “They’re the ones that brought rock to the consciousness of the world.”
Berry’s important to his-tory, he said, not just music history. History, period.
“Can you imagine a time when they weren’t there? When rock didn’t exist?”
Nothing against the indus-try now (or maybe so), but it doesn’t excite him much, he said. “It’s such a business now. It’s a corporate busi-ness, a multi-billion dollar industry — even though they say the industry’s going to s---.”
When he was in his teens, “the biggest commodity was time,” he said. No iPod, no
video games, no Internet. “There was one-50th as many artists then.”
“People’s careers have come and gone, and I don’t even know who they are,” he said.
Not his, though. From his new albums to the classics that are showing up on TV, movies and advertisements, people still know him.
“It’s great to be here,” he said, paraphrasing a famous quote from George Burns.
George Thorogood plays the Joint at Hard Rock Hotel & Casino on Friday. Courtesy
GEORGE THOROGOOD AND THE DESTROYERS
What: “Bad to the Bone” singer and his band answer the ques-tion “Who Do You Love?”When: Friday, doors open at 7 p.m.Where: Hard Rock Hotel & Ca-sino Tulsa, 777 W. Cherokee St., CatoosaTickets: $45-$55, tulsaworld.com/hardrockcasino or 918-384-ROCK.
‘I don’t care what they say, good or bad, as long as they keep me in the conversation.’
George Thorogood
TULSA WORLD • APRIL 21, 2011 PAGE 10 WEEKEND
tulsaworld.com/weekend////friday //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
This weekend: What’s opening in theaters
Tyler Perry’s Madea’s Big Happy Family1 hour, 46 minutes, starring Tyler Perry, Loretta Devine and Bow Wow, rated PG-13
Tyler Perry wears a dress. Domestic dysfunction breaks out. Hilarity ensues. Madea gathers the family when a health crisis threatens. Loretta Devine and Bow Wow are among the co-stars.
African Cats1 hour, 29 minutes, narrated by Samuel L. Jackson, rated PG-13
April 22 is Earth Day, mean-ing that Disneynature — the people behind “Earth” and “Oceans” the past two years — returns with a new nature-themed documentary. Watch as a pair of big cat families interact and teach their young how to survive in the wild.
Of Gods and Men2 hours, 2 minutes, starring Michael Lonsdale and Lambert Wilson, rated PG-13
When a collection of Trap-pist monks come under threat by fundamentalist terrorists, they must decide whether they will leave or stay in the impoverished Algerian community where they’ve been stationed. In French and Arabic.
BY MICHAEL SMITHWorld Scene Writer
Water For Elephants2 hours, 2 minutes, starring Reese Witherspoon, Robert Pattinson and Christoph Waltz, rated PG-13
Sara Gruen’s novel is adapted for the big screen, with Robert Pattinson as a veterinary student who leaves school following the death of his parents and who then takes a job with a traveling circus. Reese Witherspoon and Christoph Waltz co-star.
Showtimes & Tickets at thecirclecinema.com
Tulsa’s Non-Profit Cinema
592-FILM (3456)
12 S. LEWIS
12601 E. 86th N.376-9191
Owasso12
FOR SHOWTIMES PLEASE VISITWWW.SHOWPLEXCINEMAS.COM
May5-31 Art Bike Tulsa PACGallery
6-8, 12-14 The Gin Game Tulsa TheatreTulsa
6-8,12-14 A Lesson Before Dying AmericanTheatre Company
April28-30 Swimming in the Shallows 5/1,5-8 OdeumTheatreCompany30 Norma5/6,8 TulsaOpera30 Songs of the Heart III NubianHeritageSociety
MIDTOWN15th Harvard
747-2301
RIVERSIDE101st & Riverside
296-9000
SOUTH71st & Garnett
250-1607
Hop Into Merritt’s This Easter...
ETON SQ. CINEMA61ST & MEMORIAL 286-2618
SUPERSAVER CINEMA31st & SHERIDAN 551-7002
$1.50 ADMISSION 50¢ TUES.I AM NUMBER FOUR (PG-13) 12:00 2:20 4:30 7:30 9:50BEASTLY (PG-13) 12:10 2:25 4:45 7:20 9:35RED RIDING HOOD (PG-13) 12:05 2:40 4:40 7:10 9:20JUSTIN BIEBER NEVER SAY NEVER (G) 12:25 2:35 4:55 7:30 9:45GNOMEO & JULIET (PG) 12:20 2:15 4:35 7:05 9:10JUST GO WITH IT (PG-13) 2:20 7:15ADJUSTMENT BUREAU (PG-13) 12:10 4:45 9:15BIG MAMA LIKE FATHER LIKE SUN (PG-13) 12:15 2:35 4:50 7:25 9:40
MADEA’S BIG HAPPY FAMILY (PG-13) 12:00 2:40 5:00 7:20 9:40DIARY OF A WIMPY KID (PG) 12:15 2:30 4:50 7:00SOURCE CODE (PG-13) 12:25 2:40 5:10 7:20 9:40ARTHUR (PG-13) 12:05 2:45 5:05 7:25 9:45HANNA (PG-13) 12:20 2:50 5:05 7:10 9:25HOP (PG) 12:10 2:35 4:55 7:15 9:30
TIMES GOOD STARTING FRIDAY
PAGE 11TULSA WORLD • APRIL 21, 2011 WEEKEND
tulsaworld.com/weekend////friday //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
First-run movies ending Thurs-day: Rango, Just Go With It, Gnomeo & Juliet, Black Swan
New at the dollar movies on Friday: I Am Number Four, Justin Bieber: Never Say Never, Red Riding Hood, Beastly
LAST CHANCES
Recaps:What we’ve
seen recently (in case you missed it)
Check out our full page of movie listings in Friday’s
Scene section.
Read past movie reviews and other movie-related
news at tulsaworld.com/scene
Hop•• 1 hour, 35 minutes, rated PG
“It doesn’t take long to de-termine when a family film isn’t very smart. It doesn’t take long, sitting amongst an army of children in a theater, to realize that if they’re not laughing, it isn’t very funny, either, even for its target audience. It’s not that there are no laughs in ‘Hop,’ but there are remarkably few in this combination of live action and animated characters.”
— Michael Smith, World Scene writer
Source Code•••• 1 hour, 33 minutes, rated PG-13
“I love science-fiction movies that revolve around outlandish ideas, but which can make me suspend my disbelief and end up rooting for the impossible. A disabled soldier made whole by a 10-foot-tall avatar? A plutonium-fueled DeLorean traveling back in time? Love it.
‘Source Code’ is special in this sense as well, with Jake Gyllenhaal playing a U.S. Army helicopter pilot who wakes up in the body of another man, with the chance to stop a bomb from blowing up. The tick-tick-ticking of this plot device is absolutely Hitchcockian, and the picture is smart, funny and more romantic than I could have imagined.”
— Michael Smith, World Scene writer
April 29, 2011 — May 7, 2011
Presenting...Shirley Jones
May 3, 20116:30pmat the
Robson Performing Arts Center
Back by Popular Demand...Opening Performance by Sounds of Music Orchestra.
Sponsored by....
Cherokee Casino Will Rogers Downs presents a Meet-N-Greet with Shirley Jones, May 4, 7pm-9pmin the Turf Club. Tickets available at Will Rogers Downs Gift Shop, 918-283-8844
or Claremore Convention & Visitors Bureau, 877-341-8688
Taste of Clar emor e, showcases our local favorite eateries, caterers, and wineries. Entertainmentprovided by JT and the Big Band May 6 from 6pm-8 pm at Will Rogers Memorial Museum.
Tickets available at Claremore Convention & Visitors Bureau or at the door.
For more information or a full schedule of events for Destination Claremore,go to www.visitclaremore.org
or call 877-341-8688.
Tickets available at www.MyTicket Office.com or call 918-699-7390April 29, 2011 — May 7, 2011
Presenting...Shirley Jones
May 3, 20116:30pmat the
Robson Performing Arts Center
Back by Popular Demand...Opening Performance by Sounds of Music Orchestra.
Sponsored by....
Cherokee Casino Will Rogers Downs presents a Meet-N-Greet with Shirley Jones, May 4, 7pm-9pmin the Turf Club. Tickets available at Will Rogers Downs Gift Shop, 918-283-8844
or Claremore Convention & Visitors Bureau, 877-341-8688
Taste of Clar emor e, showcases our local favorite eateries, caterers, and wineries. Entertainmentprovided by JT and the Big Band May 6 from 6pm-8 pm at Will Rogers Memorial Museum.
Tickets available at Claremore Convention & Visitors Bureau or at the door.
For more information or a full schedule of events for Destination Claremore,go to www.visitclaremore.org
or call 877-341-8688.
Tickets available at www.MyTicket Office.com or call 918-699-7390
Presents
Shirley Jonesaccompanied by
Ron Abel, ConductorMay 3 • 6:30pm
at the Robson Performing
Arts Center
Back by Popular Demand
Opening Performance by Sounds of Music Orchestra
Destination Claremore April 29-May 7
Tickets available at www.MyTicketOffice.com
or call 918-699-7690
Cherokee Casino Will Rogers Downs presents a Meet-N-Greet with Shirley Jones, May 4, 7pm-9pm.
Taste of Claremore, May 6, 6pm-8pm at the Will Rogers Memorial Museum. Experience tastes by local favorite eateries, caterers, and
wineries, with entertainment by JT and the Big Band.
For ticketing information or a full schedule of events for Destination Claremore, go to www.visitclaremore.org or call 877-341-8688.
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We also repair biker leathers, jackets,purses & Etc., Etc., Etc.
TULSA WORLD • APRIL 21, 2011 PAGE 12 WEEKEND
////cover story //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
BY BRANDI BALL | World Scene Writer
MELISSA BUNTING IS an out-doors enthusiast who caught the bug by taking strolls in her
neighborhood.“My mom had just had surgery, and the
doctors told her to walk every day,” Bunting said. “She was stubborn about getting out and exercising, so I went to her house every day at noon, and pushed her out the door.”
All it took was a week, and Bunting was hooked. And her mother, MaryAnne Mitch-ell, soon ditched her daughter for a neigh-borhood walking group.
So Bunting joined a running club. Seven 5ks and a half-marathon later, she
was leaving everyone in her dust.“Tulsa has such extensive trails that you
never get bored,” Bunting said. “When I get tired of looking at the river, I head over to the wooded areas. When I get tired of that, I just go to LaFortune and people-watch while I’m running.”
With close to 80 miles of maintained trails in Tulsa, there is something for every skill level, and trails are evenly scattered geo-graphically.
Bunting’s family, like her interest in run-ning, has grown since she took those first steps eight years ago.
“I took two breaks in between, but they were circumstantial,” she said, referring to the time after her two boys were born. “In-stead of completely stopping, though, I used only paved trails so I could take the stroller along.”
Now, two days a week when her oldest son is not in preschool, Bunting takes the trek to Zink Park at 31st Street and Trenton Avenue.
“It really makes the exercise a family experience,” she said. “My son Caden plays on the toys, and then I stick both kids in the wagon and pull them around on the trail. It is a really safe area, perfect for young moms.”
Just because your life changes, doesn’t mean you can’t have a healthy lifestyle, Bun-ting said. The local parks and trails make it easy to be active.
“Now I just need to convince my hus-band,” she said with a laugh. “Maybe I’ll be sneaky and stick the newspaper on his pillow.”
Brandi Ball 918-581-8369brandi.ball@tulsaworld.com
Trails offer experiences for variety of enthusiasts
TOP TO BOTTOM: Turkey Mountain trail, Oxley Nature Center at Mohawk Park, River Parks West and LaFortune Park (right). Tulsa World file photos
THE GREAT OUTDOORS
PAGE 13TULSA WORLD • APRIL 21, 2011 WEEKEND
WALK THIS WAY
With more than 60 trails and parks in the area, it’s hard to narrow down the best. De-
pending on what you’re looking for — quiet, noisy, lighted, paved, non-paved, flat or hilly — it just comes down to personal choice. Here are some of the most popular spots for walking, running and biking in various parts of the city.
Mingo Trail41st Street to 11th Street — 3.75 milesMemorial Road to 81st Street — 3.39 miles
The best place to access the trail is Hicks Park, located at 35th Street and Mingo Road. The trail is fairly easy with some minor hills as the trail crosses under bridges. The trail passes a storm-water retention area that doubles as a soccer complex near 21st Street and Skelly Drive (Interstate 44). There is parking there that can be accessed via the Skelly Drive access road.
River Parks West TrailRuns 8 miles from Southwest Boulevard (also known as the 11th Street bridge) to 71st Street
In midtown at both the 21st Street Bridge and Midland Valley pedestrian bridge, you can cross to the River Parks East Trail. Also runs by the Turkey Mountain Urban Wilderness Area (bor-dered on the south at 71st Street). Con-nects to the Katy Trail (Sand Springs Trail at Gilcrease Road), Newblock Park Trail, Creek Turnpike Trail and Jenks Aquarium Trail.
The off-road trails near 56th Street and Riverside Drive are a great spot for sport biking.
River Parks East TrailRuns 14 miles along Riverside Drive, from 11th Street near downtown, south to 101st Street
The east bank trails feature separate cycling and pedestrian lanes from 11th to 71st streets.
By far the most popular trail for runners, walkers and bikers, it winds through midtown along the Arkansas River. There’s even a spot to rent free bikes at 96th Street and Riverside Drive.
Turkey MountainThree marked trails totaling 6.7 milesSeveral unmarked trails (approximately 25 miles)Main entrance is at 68th Street and Elwood Avenue.
Steep hillsides combine with thick
vegetation to offer a challenge to trail runners, hikers and bikers. The area is about seven miles from downtown and has views of the Arkansas River. There are three marked, color-coded trails requiring various ability.
Creek Turnpike TrailRuns 4.1 miles from 96th Street and Riv-erside Drive to Memorial Road and runs parallel to the Creek Turnpike
Has some moderately difficult climbs and descents, as it follows the grade-separated crossings at many of the
intersections with arterial roads. It is known as one of the Tulsa area’s most challenging trails.
You can access the trail from Hunter Park, one of the city’s largest parks near 91st Street and Yale Avenue. Hunter Park has its own half-mile walking trail that connects to River Parks and the Mingo Trail.
Mohawk Park5701 E. 36th St. North
Mohawk Park is a sprawling 2,800-acre park that contains the Oxley
Nature Center. Oxley has 800 acres of protected land with 9.1 miles of hiking trails. The trail system is made up of many individual loops and stretches of trail (from 0.3 miles to 1.3 miles) linked together. The courses are smooth and mostly flat.
LaFortune ParkCircles 3 miles from 51st Street and Yale Avenue to 61st Street and Hudson Avenue
LaFortune Park isn’t paved, which makes it a good choice for those with knee or shin problems. Walk or run among tennis courts, playgrounds, a duck pond and the LaFortune Park Golf Course.
Osage Prairie TrailThe 14.5-mile trail begins at OSU-Tulsa and continues to Oklahoma 20 in Ski-atook.
Located on the old Midland Valley Rail bed, it was abandoned until Vision 2025 funds were used to develop it for recreational use. There are several access points along the trail, equipped with bike racks, water fountains, park-ing and benches. Through the length of the trail, scenery varies from the down-town Tulsa skyline to rural farmland and ponds beyond the tree-lined path. As the trail winds through downtown Sperry and Skiatook, ornamental lights flank the trail.
Zink Park31st Street and Trenton Avenue
With its playground and lighted walk-ing trail, it is a favorite of moms and toddlers. The midtown location offers a safe, contained place for a mom to push a stroller and for the kids to play. On warmer days, kids like to jump around on the splash pad after burning energy on the monkey bars.
Chandler Park6500 W. 21st St.
These limestone cliffs wind through the hillside and are a popular spot for locals and visitors to rock-climb. Most of the rock is vertical to overhanging.
If you travel further down along Avery Drive, cliffs are about 40 feet compared with 20 to 25 feet in the main area of Chandler Park.
If you are a beginner or just need a map, contact the park’s main office at 918-591-6053.
Sources: INCOG; Tulsa County Parks Department;
Turkey Mountain Urban Wilderness
tulsaworld.com/weekend
Peor
ia A
ve.
Cinn
cinati
Ave
.
TULSA
SKIATOOK
JENKS
11th St. S.
21st St. S.
31st St. S.
41st St. S.
61st St. S.
71st St. S.
81st St. S.
91st St. S.
101st St. S.
Garn
ett R
d.
Sher
idan R
d.
Mem
orial
Dr.
Ming
o Rd.
Yale
Ave.
Harv
ard A
ve.
Lewi
s Av
e.
145t
h E. A
ve.
129t
h E. A
ve.
244
244
75
75
169
4451
64
64 51
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
Admiral Pl.
36th St. North
46th St. North
Apache St.
Pine St.
OWASSO
56th St. North
DAVID HOUSH/Tulsa World
1 Mingo Trail2 J.D. Metcalf Retention Area3 River Parks4 Turkey Mountain5 Lafortune Park
6 Chandler Park7 Mohawk Park8 Creek Turnpike9 Osage Trail Zink Park
TRAIL LEGEND
51st St. S.
THE GREAT OUTDOORS
View a larger and more complete map of pedestrian and bicycle trails in the Tulsa metro area on our website. tulsaworld.com/trailsmap
PAGE 13TULSA WORLD • APRIL 21, 2011 WEEKEND
WALK THIS WAY
With more than 60 trails and parks in the area, it’s hard to narrow down the best. De-
pending on what you’re looking for — quiet, noisy, lighted, paved, non-paved, flat or hilly — it just comes down to personal choice. Here are some of the most popular spots for walking, running and biking in various parts of the city.
Mingo Trail41st Street to 11th Street — 3.75 milesMemorial Road to 81st Street — 3.39 miles
The best place to access the trail is Hicks Park, located at 35th Street and Mingo Road. The trail is fairly easy with some minor hills as the trail crosses under bridges. The trail passes a storm-water retention area that doubles as a soccer complex near 21st Street and Skelly Drive (Interstate 44). There is parking there that can be accessed via the Skelly Drive access road.
River Parks West TrailRuns 8 miles from Southwest Boulevard (also known as the 11th Street bridge) to 71st Street
In midtown at both the 21st Street Bridge and Midland Valley pedestrian bridge, you can cross to the River Parks East Trail. Also runs by the Turkey Mountain Urban Wilderness Area (bor-dered on the south at 71st Street). Con-nects to the Katy Trail (Sand Springs Trail at Gilcrease Road), Newblock Park Trail, Creek Turnpike Trail and Jenks Aquarium Trail.
The off-road trails near 56th Street and Riverside Drive are a great spot for sport biking.
River Parks East TrailRuns 14 miles along Riverside Drive, from 11th Street near downtown, south to 101st Street
The east bank trails feature separate cycling and pedestrian lanes from 11th to 71st streets.
By far the most popular trail for runners, walkers and bikers, it winds through midtown along the Arkansas River. There’s even a spot to rent free bikes at 96th Street and Riverside Drive.
Turkey MountainThree marked trails totaling 6.7 milesSeveral unmarked trails (approximately 25 miles)Main entrance is at 68th Street and Elwood Avenue.
Steep hillsides combine with thick
vegetation to offer a challenge to trail runners, hikers and bikers. The area is about seven miles from downtown and has views of the Arkansas River. There are three marked, color-coded trails requiring various ability.
Creek Turnpike TrailRuns 4.1 miles from 96th Street and Riv-erside Drive to Memorial Road and runs parallel to the Creek Turnpike
Has some moderately difficult climbs and descents, as it follows the grade-separated crossings at many of the
intersections with arterial roads. It is known as one of the Tulsa area’s most challenging trails.
You can access the trail from Hunter Park, one of the city’s largest parks near 91st Street and Yale Avenue. Hunter Park has its own half-mile walking trail that connects to River Parks and the Mingo Trail.
Mohawk Park5701 E. 36th St. North
Mohawk Park is a sprawling 2,800-acre park that contains the Oxley
Nature Center. Oxley has 800 acres of protected land with 9.1 miles of hiking trails. The trail system is made up of many individual loops and stretches of trail (from 0.3 miles to 1.3 miles) linked together. The courses are smooth and mostly flat.
LaFortune ParkCircles 3 miles from 51st Street and Yale Avenue to 61st Street and Hudson Avenue
LaFortune Park isn’t paved, which makes it a good choice for those with knee or shin problems. Walk or run among tennis courts, playgrounds, a duck pond and the LaFortune Park Golf Course.
Osage Prairie TrailThe 14.5-mile trail begins at OSU-Tulsa and continues to Oklahoma 20 in Ski-atook.
Located on the old Midland Valley Rail bed, it was abandoned until Vision 2025 funds were used to develop it for recreational use. There are several access points along the trail, equipped with bike racks, water fountains, park-ing and benches. Through the length of the trail, scenery varies from the down-town Tulsa skyline to rural farmland and ponds beyond the tree-lined path. As the trail winds through downtown Sperry and Skiatook, ornamental lights flank the trail.
Zink Park31st Street and Trenton Avenue
With its playground and lighted walk-ing trail, it is a favorite of moms and toddlers. The midtown location offers a safe, contained place for a mom to push a stroller and for the kids to play. On warmer days, kids like to jump around on the splash pad after burning energy on the monkey bars.
Chandler Park6500 W. 21st St.
These limestone cliffs wind through the hillside and are a popular spot for locals and visitors to rock-climb. Most of the rock is vertical to overhanging.
If you travel further down along Avery Drive, cliffs are about 40 feet compared with 20 to 25 feet in the main area of Chandler Park.
If you are a beginner or just need a map, contact the park’s main office at 918-591-6053.
Sources: INCOG; Tulsa County Parks Department;
Turkey Mountain Urban Wilderness
tulsaworld.com/weekend
Peor
ia A
ve.
Cinn
cinati
Ave
.
TULSA
SKIATOOK
JENKS
11th St. S.
21st St. S.
31st St. S.
41st St. S.
61st St. S.
71st St. S.
81st St. S.
91st St. S.
101st St. S.Ga
rnet
t Rd.
Sher
idan R
d.
Mem
orial
Dr.
Ming
o Rd.
Yale
Ave.
Harv
ard A
ve.
Lewi
s Av
e.
145t
h E. A
ve.
129t
h E. A
ve.
244
244
75
75
169
4451
64
64 51
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
Admiral Pl.
36th St. North
46th St. North
Apache St.
Pine St.
OWASSO
56th St. North
DAVID HOUSH/Tulsa World
1 Mingo Trail2 J.D. Metcalf Retention Area3 River Parks4 Turkey Mountain5 Lafortune Park
6 Chandler Park7 Mohawk Park8 Creek Turnpike9 Osage Trail Zink Park
TRAIL LEGEND
51st St. S.
THE GREAT OUTDOORS
View a larger and more complete map of pedestrian and bicycle trails in the Tulsa metro area on our website. tulsaworld.com/trailsmap
TULSA WORLD • APRIL 21, 2011 PAGE 14 WEEKEND
Voice talent, beautiful scenery makes ‘Rio’ a delightBY KIM BROWNWorld Scene Writer
Small-town exotic bird makes it to the big, bright city. Just your average day in “Rio,” the fun and certainly fluffy animated film from the makers of “Ice Age.”
Kid-friendly and cuddly, “Rio” has a sweet story line and bright colors, perfect for 3-D viewing. But although it’s fun to watch the feathers fly in your face, the voice per-formances are what steal the show.
Jesse Eisenberg (“The So-cial Network”) lends the voice for Blu, a domesticated blue macaw from Minnesota who finds his way back to his na-tive country to propagate his species. He is apparently the last living male of his kind.
His human companion Linda (Leslie Mann) is reluc-tant to take him away from his snuggly home, but a Brazilian bird doctor persuades her to fly off to Rio de Janeiro.
Blu meets his lovely female counterpart, Jewel (Anne Hathaway), who seems per-fect for him. The only prob-lem is Blu isn’t exactly a bird-ie’s man — he’s a bit of a bird nerd, delightfully so. And be-cause he’s been a home bird his whole life, he can’t fly.
Writer-director Carlos Saldanha (who also helmed the “Ice Age” movies) does a
nice job of creating a semi-serious situation — Blu and Jewel quickly get captured by smarmy bird smugglers, led by creepy cockatoo Nigel (Jemaine Clement) — giving the audience an adventure to follow.
But there’s also time to en-joy the view. The animation of this brilliant city is impres-sive, and we’re lucky to get a bird’s eye view of its most famous landmark, the Christ the Redeemer statue. The timing of their trip is during
the city’s biggest celebration, Rio Carnival, which adds even more dazzling visuals.
This cadre of silly charac-ters — voiced by Jamie Foxx, the Black Eyed Peas’ will.i.am, Tracy Morgan and others — keeps the tone light, just as a G-rated film should do. Sure, there are a couple of winks intended for adults, but un-like its other complicated ani-mated counterparts, such as “Rango,” the kids can actually follow along with “Rio.”
And there are, of course, a
couple of messages: Blu’s fear of flying and Jewel’s quest for freedom are themes to which both children and adults can relate.
Eisenberg is a natural in this role, and Hathaway proves with her singing tal-ent that she’s a perfect choice for more animated fare.
So together in “Rio” they make the perfect couple — feathers or no feathers.
Kim Brown 918-581-8474kim.brown@tulsaworld.com
Small-town exotic bird Blu (center) sets off on an adventure to learn how to fly in “Rio.” Courtesy
review‘RIO’
Stars: Anne Hathaway, Jesse Eisenberg (voices)Theaters: (in 3-D) AMC South-roads 20, Cinemark Tulsa, Cin-emark Broken Arrow, Starworld 20, RiverWalk, Owasso, Sand Springs; (in 2-D) Eton SquareRunning time: 1 hour, 36 minutes Rated: GQuality: ••• (on a scale of zero to four stars)
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PAGE 15TULSA WORLD • APRIL 21, 2011 WEEKEND
saturdayBY SCOTT CHERRY | World Scene Writer, 918-581-8463 | scott.cherry@tulsaworld.com
Burger joint harkens back to ‘Happy Days’ era dinersI HAVE GRANDKIDS
WHO never have seen an episode of “Happy
Days,” so they don’t know about Richie, Joanie, Potsie, The Fonz or Ar-nold’s Drive-In.
That means Arnold’s Ham-burgers, a fixture in west Tul-sa for the past 25 years, has, for many, outlived the mem-ory of the fictional eatery on which it was loosely based.
Like the TV sitcom, Arnold’s Hamburgers has a 1950s set-ting, with red and blue neon reflecting off a glass-block order counter, gray-and-pur-ple booths, metal cafe chairs and prints of Elvis, Lucy and James Dean on the walls.
Music from that era — I heard the Fleetwoods, Ricky Nelson and Dion, among oth-ers, when I was there — is pumped through the speak-ers of an otherwise nonwork-ing 1953 Wurlitzer Hi-Fi Ste-reo jukebox.
Conveniently, Arnold’s also reflects the name of the own-ers, Vicki and Frank Arnold.
“People who ate here as children are bringing their own children, and they come from all over,” Frank Arnold said.
“Like a lot of businesses, we’ve been down a little, but we’re still kickin’. We still serve 500 to 600 hamburgers a day.”
We were part of that num-ber on a recent evening when we ordered a regular double with all the trimmings — mustard, onion, lettuce and tomatoes — and a double cheeseburger with every-thing except onions.
The burgers had a good, old-fashioned flavor, and the seasonings cooked into the ground beef were pretty salty, which made a large — and I mean large — cherry lime-
ade ($1.55) taste like a slice of heaven.
Onion rings ($2.09) were medium-sized and crunchy, and if you don’t bite all the way through, the onion will slide out of the ring. Fries were ordinary.
A plus for Arnold’s are
the shakes and malts ($2.09 small, $2.29 large) in choco-late, vanilla, strawberry, ba-nana and cherry. We had va-nilla and chocolate malts, and both were wonderful.
Diners don’t have many de-cisions to make at Arnold’s, which I count as another plus. You have hamburgers — singles, doubles, triples, one cheese, two cheese — from $2.79 to $5.59, along with a grilled chicken sandwich ($3.79), fried chicken sand-wich ($3.79), chicken club sandwich ($4.22) and a bone-less chicken basket ($4.89).
“The boneless chicken is something we added to the menu, and it’s good,” Arnold said. “We get it from the same
people who used to supply the old Rex’s Chicken.”
In addition to shakes, malts, cherry limeade and standard soft drinks, Arnold’s also serves root beer in a frosted mug, another tempt-ing beverage choice.
A junior burger for the
younger ones is $1.40, with cheese $1.50.
Throw in fries and onions rings, and that’s the entire menu.
The Arnolds also operate the Frank Arnold Ministries and organize and stage gospel concerts in a nine-state area.
The Arnold’s Hamburgers neon sign frames the quintessential diner meal: a double cheeseburger, onion rings and chocolate shake. JAMES GIBBARD/Tulsa World
ARNOLD’S HAMBURGERS
1722 W. 51st St.918-445-4633Food ••Atmosphere ••Service: Counter service(on a scale of 0 to 4 stars)11 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday-Satur-day; accepts Visa, MasterCard.
WEST-SIDE ROOTSFrank Arnold got his start in the restaurant business work-
ing at Carl’s Coney Island in the Crystal City Shopping Center when he was a student at Webster High School.
When he was 21, he bought a coney place in Catoosa and ran it for five years. He was out of the business for three years before returning to west Tulsa and opening Arnold’s Hamburg-ers.
“This is home for me,” he said.
TULSA WORLD • APRIL 21, 2011 PAGE 16 WEEKEND
Hardworking brothers’ new-career gamble pays off
IT WAS 12 years ago when brothers Basel and Michael Jasasra decided time with
family was more important than long hours at high-powered jobs.
Basel Jasasra was food-and-bever-age manager at the Embassy Suites, and Michael Jasasra was in charge of food service and retail at Tulsa International Airport.
“It was just too much, and we were never home,” Michael said. “So, we decided to be partners, and we opened Jake’s Cafe.”
Although it was an admirable life change, Basel said few people gave them much hope of making it with the breakfast-lunch restaurant at the intersection of Houston Street and Aspen Avenue (81st Street and 145th East Avenue).
“I think there had been at least three different restaurants in this space before us, and even some of our friends didn’t think we could make it here,” said Basel, whose nickname is Jake.
But make it they did, in large part due to the brothers’ personalities. They are warm and gracious hosts, and they’re quick to refill coffee cups and run table errands when servers are overwhelmed.
Basel’s wife, Fatima, formerly breakfast manager at Embassy Suites, oversees the kitchen.
“She owns the kitchen,” Michael said. “She is a fabulous cook.”
We recently stopped in for a Sun-day breakfast, landing at one of the two tables vacant at that time.
My pulse was feeling strong that morning, so I went for the Jack’s Country Breakfast ($5.19), one of four new breakfast items to be added to the menu last week.
It started with biscuits topped with, in order, two sausage patties, a layer of cream gravy (a straight white gravy, no sausage) and two eggs (I asked for over-medium), along with a side of hash browns.
You notice this is your basic egg, sausage and biscuits-and-gravy breakfast, but for those of us who like to mix it all together, this dish does it for you. The hash browns were crispy and golden on top and had a good flavor.
A veggie omelet ($6.19), my wife’s more rational choice, was filled with sauteed onions, green peppers, mushrooms, celery and tomatoes, and it came with a choice of hash browns, grits or sliced tomatoes, and toast, biscuits-and-gravy or three buttermilk pancakes. The pancakes were light and fluffy, and they came with butter and syrup.
We also tasted an order of French toast ($3.99) with bacon ($1.99) and hot syrup, and it was excellent.
The other new breakfast items are a fiesta skillet, breakfast burrito and muffin melt sandwich.
The lunch portion of the menu fea-
tures a variety of traditional Ameri-can sandwiches and entrees, such as pork chops, fried chicken tenders, grilled chicken breast, chicken-fried steak, roast beef sandwich, club sandwich, patty melt and tuna melt. Lunch prices range from $4.99 to
$7.99.A children’s menu for ages 10 and
younger includes 10 items for $2.49 to $3.49.
Our server, Crystal, kept the steaming coffee coming and was professional and efficient.
Since the restaurant opened, the brothers have replaced all of the table tops with ones that feature local ads covered in a shiny acrylic finish. Bathrooms, too, have been refurbished.
“We still have some improvements to make,” Michael Jasasra said. “We want to keep our customers happy.”
Scott Cherry 918-581-8463scott.cherry@tulsaworld.com
The fiesta skillet includes hash browns topped with cheddar cheese, mushrooms, onions, celery, bell peppers and two sunny-side up eggs. Photos by CORY YOUNG/Tulsa World
JAKE’S CAFE626 S. Aspen Ave., Broken Arrow918-258-7710Food •••Atmosphere ••Service •••(on a scale of 0 to 4 stars)7 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday-Monday, 6 a.m. to 2 p.m. Tuesday-Friday; accepts all major credit cards.
A desire to spend more time with family led Michael Jasasra (left) and his brother, Basel Jasasra, to open Jake’s Cafe.
PAGE 17TULSA WORLD • APRIL 21, 2011 WEEKEND
UNI_CNC_L13_TulsaWorld.indd 1 3/16/11 11:54 AM
TULSA WORLD • APRIL 21, 2011 PAGE 18 WEEKEND
Get the dish on what favorite eateries are serving upGo West for Easter
Go West, 6205 New Sapulpa Road, will serve an Easter buffet with such choices as brisket Benedict, trout ran-chero, split-roasted whole hog, smoked roast beef, ceviche, Caesar salad, cheesy potatoes and an array of desserts from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Cost is $29 for adults and $12 for ages 12 and younger, plus tax and gratuity. Reservations required: 918-446-7546.
Pei Wei to host online cooking class Thursday
Pei Wei Asian Diner will host a free, online cooking class at 8 p.m. Thursday, featuring a live demonstration of three Asian barbecue recipes by executive chef Eric Justice.
The recipes:Yakitori — Grilled chicken
with three sauces, including sichimi togarashi, yuzu ponzu and garlic soy.
Southeast Asian satay — Coconut curry pork grilled and served with Vietnamese herbs and sauces.
Shanghainese ribs — Roast-ed pork ribs with five-spice rub, finished on the grill with a Shanghainese sauce.
The demos can be viewed on the Pei Wei website at tulsa-world.com/peiwei.
Oliveto Italian Bistro adds chalkboard specials
Oliveto Italian Bistro, 8922 S. Memorial Drive, has added a variety of chalkboard specials that will run through May.
The new dishes include calamari della casa ($8.75), calamari rings breaded in a panko bread crumb mixture and served with marinara sauce and horseradish aioli; tilapia Parmesan ($11.50), a pan-seared tilapia fillet topped with marinara and melted provo-lone and mozzarella; chicken marsala ($13.50); pasta bianco ($11.75), sauteed clams with herbs, white wine and Asiago cheese over angel hair pasta; a bistro burger ($7.50), a three-meat pizza ($6) and creme brulee cheesecake ($5.50).
—SCOTTCHERRY,WorldScenewriter Oliveto Italian Bistro’s tilapia Parmesan is topped with marinara and melted cheeses. Courtesy
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PAGE 19TULSA WORLD • APRIL 21, 2011 WEEKEND
Make plans for spring planting at gardening eventShopping for your garden
can be just as fun as planting it.
The 15th annual Jenks Herb & Plant Festival is set for Saturday in downtown Jenks. The event will feature plenty of herbs, along with plants, gardening products, food and new vendors.
New booths have been added for this year’s event, including German food, ice cream made fresh at the festi-val, a professional potter and a puppet maker.
Early birds won’t want to miss the Kiwanis Club’s an-nual pancake and sausage breakfast from 7 to 10 a.m. at First Methodist Church. And the Oklahoma Aquarium will have a Kids Zone featuring
Find herbs, plants and a variety of entertainment at the Jenks Herb & Plant Festival on Saturday. TOM GILBERT/Tulsa World
JENKS HERB & PLANT FESTIVAL8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturdaydowntown Jenks, near Main, First and Third streets and spill-ing onto A Street. For more, tulsaworld.com/jenks-gardenclub
activities and coupons. For entertainment, check
out the Reasor’s Festival State at Second and Main streets, which will feature bluegrass music, fiddling, jazz and youth performers.
— KIM BROWN, World Scene writer
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Sometimes Mexican food is the only thing that will satisfy, and Chimi’s knows how to make its customers say “Arriba!” “We take the freshest, high-quality ingredients and make each dish to order,” said Brandon Fischer, who now owns all Tulsa Chimi’s restaurants. With three locations — 15th Street and Peoria Ave-nue, 53rd Street and Harvard Avenue and 81st Street and Sheridan Road — it’s easy to find one that is convenient. Daily specials and a full bar are among the reasons that customers flock to Chimi’s. Kids eat free on Monday nights. On Tues-day, American tacos and Tecates are $1.50 each. Come in Wednesday for the two cheese, chicken or beef en-
chilada special with rice and beans. The Thursday special is chile rellenos, and get the best crispy or grilled fish tacos in town on Friday. A special deal on fajitas for two makes Saturday special. “We have other fish and seafood items such as shrimp quesadellas, grilled tilapia and shrimp enchiladas,” said Lori Lieb-Rosas, Chimi’s general manager. “Try our three different salsas — fresca (mild), picante (a little hot-ter) and Dad’s (a hot one cre-ated by the founder’s father). Be sure to mark Chimi’s on your calendar for Cinco de Mayo and Mother’s Day. Spe-cial activities are planned for each. For more information, call 918-587-4411 or go to chimismexican.com. Chimi’s also provides catering. Con-tact Lieb-Rosas for details.
TULSA WORLD • APRIL 21, 2011 PAGE 20 WEEKEND
Huey Lewis, Rob Zombie perform separate Tulsa showsHuey Lewis and the News
will play the Joint inside the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Tulsa on June 17.
Tickets start at $45 and go on sale May 5.
The group’s biggest hits came in the ’80s with “Wor-kin’ for a Livin’,” “Heart and Soul,” “I Want a New Drug,” “The Heart of Rock & Roll” and “If This is It.”
Huey Lewis and the News released nine studio albums,
selling more than 30 million worldwide.
The band is currently tour-ing in support of 2010’s “Souls-ville,” which is the band’s first studio recording since 2001.
Ticket prices and infor-mation on upcoming shows are available online in the Joint section of tulsaworld.com/hardrockcasino or by calling 918-384-ROCK.
All guests must be 21 years of age or older.
Huey Lewis and the News will play the Joint at the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Tulsa on June 17.
CONCERT NEWS
Downtown festivalRob Zombie is set to head-
line the Hot as Hell Festival on July 17 in the downtown Tulsa Brady Arts District, at the corner of Boulder Avenue and Cameron Street.
Tickets go on sale at 10 a.m. April 29, and a limited num-ber of tickets sold that week-end will be $25. All other
tickets are $34.Also on the bill are Five
Finger Death Punch, Seven-dust, 10 Years, Underoath and Times of Grace.
Tickets can be found at Reasor’s stores and Starship Records in Tulsa, by calling 866-977-6849 or online at tul-saworld.com/protix.
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PAGE 21TULSA WORLD • APRIL 21, 2011 WEEKEND
sundayBY KIM BROWN | World Scene Writer, 918-581-8474 | kim.brown@tulsaworld.com
MORE THAN 200 volunteers at Victory Chris-
tian Center will take “Ris-en” to a new level.
This year, the church’s an-nual dramatic Easter produc-tion will include new filmed elements to add to the multi-media live performance, said Ryan Stafford, director of productions for the church.
“This is the first year we’ve done something like this. Part of the genesis of it was when we did a production in the fall, an original production called
‘The Mission.’ We did part of it live and part of it filmed on locations and places down-town and in the area.”
The resulting production “got us thinking about how we could do that for other things.”
So the church’s annual Eas-ter production of “Risen,” which is typically seen by some 18,000 people over Eas-ter weekend, seemed like the perfect fit.
“We wanted to show scenes of some of the miracles Jesus has done,” Stafford said. “So we thought it would be great to film them, so we don’t have
to (perform) some of them in front of the tomb or another set piece.”
Viewers will watch the live dramatic production, which focuses on the final week of Jesus’ life. Then the filmed scenes will be cut into the show to broaden the story, Stafford said.
To make the scenes seem as authentic as possible, a group of volunteers and profession-als created a set of Jerusalem in the church’s gymnasium and got to work bringing in sand, building sets, putting actors and extras in costumes and makeup and setting up
lights.The filmed scenes will help
viewers “get outside of our set,” Stafford said, by having them look up at the 60-to-70-foot movie theater screen.
“It’s such a dominant fea-ture, and we wanted to use it,” he said of the screen. “We think the biggest thing, overall, is to graphically and vividly offer an experience of the things Jesus did. For those who are Christians, it’s a reminder, and it’s impactful. And for those who are not, it’s an eye-opener.”
Stafford said it takes hun-dreds of volunteer hours from members of the congregation to put on the production.
“We are literally amazed ev-ery year it gets pulled off,” he said. “We kind of joke and say that it’s the Easter miracle.”
Filmed scenes depicting some of the miracles Jesus performed have been added to Victory Christian Center’s live production of “Risen.” DEANA SPYRES/Courtesy
VICTORY CHRISTIAN CENTER’S ‘RISEN’What: Multimedia Easter drama-tization When: Shows are at 7 p.m. Friday; 5 and 7 p.m. Saturday; 9 and 11 a.m. and 6 p.m. SundayWhere: 7700 S. Lewis Ave.Cost: FreeFor more: tulsaworld.com/victory
Easter show offers audience further Jesus experience
TULSA WORLD • APRIL 21, 2011 PAGE 22 WEEKEND
‘30 Rock’ show-within-a-show faces cancellationBY RITA SHERROWWorld Television Editor
“TGS” canceled? Say it ain’t so or, even better, see what Liz Lemon and compa-ny do to try to stop the pend-ing move on “30 Rock.”
Also up this weekend is the first of the final five epi-sodes of “Smallville” on CW and “Dr. Who,” who ends up in the Utah desert and the White House on his first vis-it to the United States.
Hank Hooper is about to lower the cancellation boom on “TGS,” but Jack con-vinces him to let Lemon and the cast and crew produce a 100th episode on “30 Rock.” Meanwhile, off the set, Jack is doubting his decisions, and Jenna is contemplating motherhood. It airs at 9 p.m. Thursday on NBC, channel 2, cable 9.
More powerful than a lo-comotive, able to leap tall buildings in a single bound and directed by series star and executive producer Tom Welling, Friday night’s epi-sode of “Smallville” has it all. A fame-hungry superhero from the future, Booster Gold, sweeps into town and starts saving the day, much to the delight of Metropolis residents. But when an alien weapon fuses itself to a boy who becomes the Blue Bee-tle and then starts attacking
the city, it’s Superman to the rescue. This is the first of the final five episodes of the se-ries. Be there or else, 7 p.m. Friday, CW, channel 19, cable 12.
He’s back and on Ameri-can soil for the first time. Four envelopes are sent. Each with a date, time and map reference, unsigned, but TARDIS is shown in blue. Who sent them? Who is the intended recipient of the first envelope?
It’s up to the Doctor, who is reunited with Amy, Rory and River Song in the middle of the Utah desert, to find the answers. “Doctor Who” returns at 8 p.m. Saturday with the first of a two-parter that sends them to the White House. It airs on BBC Amer-ica, cable 176.
And, on a more somber note, Discovery Channel is debuting its documentary “Megaquake: Hour That Shook Japan” at 9 p.m. Sun-day on cable 30.
The special examines sci-entifically what happened on March 11 and tells the story through the eyes of those who survived the mo-ment a 9.0 earthquake and a massive tsunami took more than 12,000 lives in their country.
Rita Sherrow 918-581-8360rita.sherrow@tulsaworld.com
“TGS” is in danger of cancel-lation when Jack (Alec Baldwin, right) convinces Hank Hooper that Liz (Tina Fey, left) and the cast should be allowed to produce the show’s 100th episode on “30 Rock.” Also pictured is Jack Mc-Brayer as Kenneth Parcell. ALI GOLDSTEIN/NBC
Matt Smith stars as Dr. Who, who makes his first trip to the United States — Utah to be exact — in the two-part season opener of “Dr. Who.” 8 p.m. Saturday on BBC America, cable 176. BBC
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PAGE 23TULSA WORLD • APRIL 21, 2011 WEEKEND
TU band to play with jazz artistBY JAMES D. WATTS JR.World Scene Writer
Two of Kansas City’s great-est contributions to Ameri-can culture — jazz and bar-becue — came together last year, when saxophonist Bobby Watson released “The Gates BBQ Suite.”
Gates is one of Kansas City’s most venerable barbe-cue establishments, found-ed in 1946 and still family-owned.
And Watson, who grew up in Kansas City, Kan., is one of the country’s leading alto saxophonists, whose career has included being a member of groups such as Art Blakey Jazz Messengers and as lead-er of the acclaimed ensemble Horizon.
Watson will perform with the TU Big Jazz Band at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Okla-homa Jazz Hall of Fame, 111 E. First St. He will be doing a two-day residency as a visit-ing artist at the University of Tulsa.
Watson returned to his hometown to accept the first William D. and Mary Grant Distinguished Professorship
in Jazz Studies at the Univer-sity of Missouri-Kansas City Conservatory of Music and to serve as director of the uni-versity’s jazz programs.
Soon after resettling, Wat-son started thinking about creating a large-scale work that would celebrate his hometown, allow him to exploit skills and experi-ence he had gathered from a quarter-century of working with many of the top jazz art-ists in the country, and give the young musicians he was teaching a chance to stretch.
Watson premiered the sev-en-part “Gates BBQ Suite” in December 2008 on the UMKC campus Conservatory’s Con-cert Jazz Band. This student ensemble also worked on the recording the piece.
Tickets for Bobby Watson are $15-$20. Call 918-281-8600 or visit tulsaworld.com/mytix.Easter Gospel Brunch
The Jazz Hall of Fame’s other show this weekend also involved food, but in a literal and well as spiritual way.
Hall of Fame inductee Joey Crutcher will lead the tradi-
Saxophonist Bobby Wat-son, visiting artist at the University of Tulsa, will perform Thursday at the Oklahoma Jazz Hall of Fame. Courtesy
tional Easter Sunday Gospel Brunch, Sunday afternoon at the Jazz Depot, 111 E. First St. Doors open at 1 p.m., with the show beginning at 2 p.m.
Guests will enjoy a full brunch menu as Crutcher leads an ensemble of vocalists in an all-gospel program.
Tickets are $25 per per-son. Call 918-281-8600, tulsa-world.com/mytix.
James D. Watts Jr. 918-581-8478james.watts@tulsaworld.com
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TULSA WORLD • APRIL 21, 2011 PAGE 24 WEEKEND
Tickets available Monday–Thursday, 10am–6pm, and Friday–Saturday, 10am–9pm, at the box office or call 918.384.ROCK (7625) HARDROCKCASINOTULSA.COMCopyright © 2011 Cherokee Nation Entertainment, LLC. Dates, times and acts subject to change.
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