After (Top 9) Victory on ‘The Voice,’ Braiden Comes Home to a Hero’s Welcome

Braiden Sunshine sings to a packed Commons at Lyme-Old Lyme High School. All photos by Missy Colburn.

Braiden Sunshine sings to a packed Commons at Lyme-Old Lyme High School. All photos by Missy Colburn.

(5:44pm: Town of Old Lyme Proclamation text now added) You just know something big is happening at Lyme-Old Lyme High School when you have to park in the junior parking lot …

Well, the signs were right — it really was a night to remember in Old Lyme yesterday evening.  Braiden Sunshine came home from his amazing run on NBC’s ‘The Voice’ in which he ended in Top 9 … and the town certainly rolled out the metaphorical red carpet for him!

The Commons at the high school was packed to capacity with town and state dignitaries, Braiden’s friends and relatives … and a mass of screaming fans!

Despite his now national fame, Braiden remains the humble young man (just 15-years-old) that we all feel we’ve known — and been listening to — for ever, and he gratefully acknowledged the attention he was being given by so many of all ages.

First Selctwoman Bonnie Reemsnyder presents Braiden with a Town of Old Lyme Proclamation.

First Selctwoman Bonnie Reemsnyder presents Braiden with a Town of Old Lyme Proclamation.

When Old Lyme First Selectwoman Bonnie Reemsnyder gave him a proclamation officially declaring Friday as ‘Braiden Sunshine Day,’ he betrayed an almost childlike delight. Reemsnyder read aloud the Proclamation, which cleverly used many of the songs that Braiden had sung on “The Voice,” (in bold) as follows:

WHEREAS, it is TRUE that BRAIDEN SUNSHINE is a sophomore at Lyme-Old Lyme High School; and,

WHEREAS, Braiden is the youngest contestant ever to appear on NBC’s The Voice; and,

WHEREAS, With AMAZING GRACE, Braiden earned the loyalty and support of fans across the United States; and,

WHEREAS, Braiden’s performances on The Voice made front page news in newspapers throughout our State, and the lead news story on our local television and radio stations; resulting in a RADIOACTIVE reaction in our community, and,

WHEREAS, Viewer response to Braiden’s performances on The Voice led to his advancement to the semi-finals!; and,

WHEREAS, Friends in Lyme & Old Lyme were FEELING GOOD about seeing Braiden’s parents (& later, grandparents!) in the audience of the Voice; and,

NOW, THEREFORE, the Board of Selectmen of The Town of Old Lyme hereby proclaims December 18, 2015 as Braiden Sunshine Day in the Town of Old Lyme, and encourages all residents, businesses and organizations in the Town of Old Lyme to celebrate Braiden’s success!

Lyme First Selectman Ralph Eno then invited Braiden to serve as the Grand Marshall of the 2016 Fourth of July Parade in that town — another honor Braiden gleefully accepted.

Next up was State Representative Devin Carney (R-23rd), who presented Braiden with a State of Connecticut citation, the text of which noted it was in recognition of: “Your top 9 finish on Season 9 of NBC’s “The Voice”, adding, “You have made Lyme, Old Lyme, and the State of Connecticut very proud for all you were able to accomplish. Not only was your wonderful singing ability on display for the world to see, but your courage and kindness were as well. We are all looking forward to your bright future ahead.”

Braiden took questions from the huge audience at one point.

Braiden (center) took questions from the huge audience at one point.

And then the moment for which the fans had been waiting … Braiden sang … and he didn’t just sing … he sang his heart out … accompanied by long-time friend and fellow performer Ian Maxwell.  Braiden sang songs that were his personal favorites and songs that he had performed on ‘The Voice.’  Each one was followed by deafening applause, cheers and screams.

Braiden was home for Christmas … and the people of Lyme and Old Lyme came out in force to celebrate his success and show him how proud they were of him … congratulations again, Braiden!

Essex Winter Series Offers World-Class Performers in Diverse Programs

Essex Winter Series has announced the artists and programs for its 2016 season. Designed by Artistic Director Mihae Lee for its quality and variety, this 39th season promises to be an exciting one, all four very different programs by world-class artists. Enjoy great chamber music, hot jazz, expressive vocal music, and the thrill of a full orchestra.

All of the concerts are on Sunday afternoons at 3 p.m. in Deep River. Concerts take place at Valley Regional High School, with the exception of the March 6 concert, which will be presented at John Winthrop Middle School.

Mihae Lee

Mihae Lee

Jan. 10: The Juilliard String Quartet with pianist Mihae Lee
Valley Regional High School

One of the country’s most revered string quartets will be joined by our artistic director in a program of three favorites from the classical repertory: Mo­zart’s “Dissonance” Quartet, Beethoven’s String Quar­tet in F major, Op. 135, and the monumental F minor Piano Quintet of Brahms. The Juilliard members are violinists Joseph Lin and Ronald Copes, violist Roger Tapping, and cellist Joel Krosnick, who will perform his 41st and final season with the quartet before his retirement later in 2016. Co-sponsored by Northstar Wealth Partners

Feb. 21: Stu Ingersoll Jazz Concert
Jeff Barnhart and His Hot Rhythm
Valley Regional High School

Jeff Barnhart, our jazz artistic advisor, has thrilled EWS audiences for years with his performances of hot jazz. The renowned pianist, vocalist, arranger, bandleader, re­cording artist, composer, educator, and entertainer will perform seminal jazz and pop standards from the first half of the 20th century with a top-notch band: Scott Philbrick on trumpet, banjo, and guitar; Joe Midiri on reeds; Paul Midiri on vibes and trombone; Anne Barnharton flute and vocals; Vince Giordano on bass, tuba, and bass sax; and Jim Lawlor on drums. Co-sponsored by The Clark Group and Tower Laboratories

March 6: Patricia Schuman, soprano
John Winthrop Middle School

We are delighted to welcome back to our stage the internationally-celebrated soprano Patricia Schuman. Her program, “Winter Romance,” will feature songs of love and loss as well as lighter fare from the great Amer­ican songbook and musical theater. She will be joined by harpist Megan Sesma, pianist Douglas Dickson, and a special surprise guest artist. Ms. Schuman has been engaged by the most distinguished opera houses throughout the world, and has collaborated with many of the foremost conductors and directors of our time. Co-sponsored by Essex Savings Bank and an anonymous foundation

April 3: Fenton Brown Emerging Artists Concert
New Haven Symphony Orchestra with violinist Tessa Lark
Valley Regional High School

Now in its 121st year of continuous operation, the New Haven Symphony Orchestra is one of the country’s finest regional orchestras. Returning to our series, the orchestra under music director William Boughton will perform Mozart’s Overture to The Marriage of Figaro, Haydn’s “London” Symphony, and Beethoven’s Violin Concerto, featuring our 2016 Emerging Artist, Tessa Lark. Lark won the prestigious Naumburg International Violin Award in 2012, and is one of today’s most sought-after young violinists. Co-sponsored by Guilford Savings Bank and an anonymous foundation

All tickets to Essex Winter Series concerts are general admission. Individual tickets are $35; four-concert subscriptions are $120, which represents a $20 saving over the single-ticket price for four concerts. Tickets may be purchased on the EWS website, www.essexwinterseries.com, or by calling 860-272-4572.

More program information, artist biographies and photos, and much more is available on the Essex Winter Series web site, www.essexwinterseries.com.

‘Welcome Home’ Party for Braiden Sunshine to be Held Tonight, All Welcome

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The entire community is invited to welcome home our own Braiden Sunshine this Friday evening, Dec. 18, at 7 p.m. in Lyme-Old Lyme High School.  This is to celebrate his incredible recent run on NBC’s “The Voice.”

There will be opportunities for autographs and pictures with Braiden. Presentations will also be made by students and the community.

There will be pizza and cake for all and, to top things off in the best way possible, Braiden will sing live!

For more information, contact Lymes’ Youth Service Bureau (LYSB) at 860-434-7208 or visit www.lysb.org.  The event is sponsored by LYSB.

Old Lyme Historical Society Offers Books, 2016 Calendars for Sale

2016_Calendar_coverThe Old Lyme Historical Society (OLHS) is offering its books and 2016 calendars for sale. Covering decades and centuries of local history and personages, they make unique gifts for friends and family.

The OLHS center is located in the old Grange Hall at 55 Lyme Street. For further information, visit www.olshi.com, or just stop by the Grange.

The Movie Man: “Spotlight” Explores How “Globe” Reporters Exposed Priest Sex Scandal

Spotlight_movieTonight, I look back to a scandal that has rocked the institution that preserved Western Civilization in the Dark Ages, transformed hospitals, and, believe it or not, science. Thirteen years ago, the Boston Globe revealed a series of stories to the public, and many in the world began to distrust her. What I speak of is the Catholic Church, and the priest sex scandal.

This is a New England film, as many big parts of New England life are displayed throughout it via product placement. Dunkin’ Donuts, W. B. Mason, and other familiar logos are seen throughout it. For those of us who know Boston well, many popular, yet not mainstream popular, or, rather “hipster” streets are seen and spoken about through dialogue.

We begin in 1976, in which a bishop visits a Boston Police station in regards to a priest who abused a young boy, and he assures the boy and his parents they will never hear from the priest again, and the bishop and the priest then drive off. Twenty-five years later, members of the Boston Globe have a goodbye party for one of their editors who is stepping down after the New York Times bought out the newspaper.

New editor Marty Baron (Liev Schreiber) comes in from Miami and expresses interest in going deeper into a case involving a priest, who severely abused countless children, as he feels there is something that is being hidden from the public.

How could somebody take on a church? This is the basic theme that is dealt with as the journalists from the Globe’s Spotlight section begin to dig deeper and deeper into this horrible scandal. A member of a survivor group, SNAP, comes to them, having previously tried to contact the paper many years prior. While his organization is small, comprised of only 10 members, Spotlight eventually catches on and realizes there has to be a scandal in their midst.

While they are presented with the same facts that we are today when we discuss the scandal, that perhaps only a very small percentage of ordained priests have engaged in such awful activities, they realize they need to take action because there are numerous victims out there with stories to be heard.

Several scenes take place in which the journalists meet with the survivors (as one asserts they are survivors because some ended up taking their lives) and they tell their stories. It is a completely heart-wrenching ordeal to listen to, as they describe being initially excited that their parish priest took an interest in them, only to violate the in the most unimaginable way.

Cardinal Bernard Law, the Archbishop of Boston at the time, is our enemy, despite his cheerful and outgoing personality. The stories of Church corruption in the Middle Ages suddenly return to 21st century America. Cardinal Law is reaching out to officials, taking advantage of loopholes to keep legal documents confirming his corruption away from the public’s eyes.

And though he only appears in three or four scenes, he does not have the lasting effect of the antagonizing villain that we see in other films, such as Anthony Hopkins’ portrayal of Dr. Hannibal Lecter in The Silence of the Lambs consisting of only 16 minutes of screen time, but earning the Academy Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role, and being ranked by the American Film Institute as the greatest villain in the history of film.

Many interesting points are made, as people bring up that these stories were brought to the newspapers on many occasions, but turned down. Michael Keaton’s character, Walter “Robby” Robinson, notes that he originally shot down the claims when he worked for a different section of the Globe 20 years prior, and another brings up that we all stumble around in the dark and only realize what has happened when the light enters. Boston is a tightly-knit community, one character says, pointing out that if it’s true it takes a village to raise a child, as he quips, it also takes a village to [destroy him].

I will not post a disclaimer to share that I am a lifelong Catholic, myself, and have been brought up in the Church in a very intimate manner. Baptism, CCD, First Communion and Reconciliation, Confirmation, Catholic high school, and even participated in campus ministry as a student at Quinnipiac. I do not intend to bash Catholicism, as journalists such as Christopher Hitchens might have done  when reviewing a film like this, nor do I seek to engage in apologies, but rather to show the honest side of the faith.

This film has been received well by the Church, of all viewers, especially by Seán Cardinal O’Malley, Law’s replacement as Archbishop of Boston, who claimed the investigation by the Globe prompted the Church “to deal with what was shameful and what was hidden.” Vatican Radio also shared similar words, calling the film honest and compelling. Anyone who is involved with their local church can describe how there is now a zero-tolerance policy for things of this nature, and how Popes Benedict XVI and Francis have made these events a main focus during their papacies.

I will close with a reference to Dante Alighieri’s epic poem, The Divine Comedy, since I read all three volumes this summer … to my surprise. Plus, who doesn’t feel super smart when they close an article with a quote from a piece of classical literature?

(Dante addresses a pope who is confined to be buried face down into a furnace, who is guilty of simony [buying of sacred things])

And were it not that I am still constrained by the reverence I owe to the Great Keys [1] you held in life, I should not have refrained from using other words and sharper still; for this avarice of yours grieves all the world, tramples the virtuous, and exalts the evil.

Of such as you was the Evangelist’s vision when he saw She Who Sits upon the Waters locked with the Kings of the earth in fornication.[2] Gold and silver are the gods you adore! In what are you different from the idolator, Save that he worships one, and you a score?

Inferno, Canto XIX

[1] Papacy, the “Keys to the Kingdom of Heaven” given to St. Peter by Christ.

[2] The Whore of Babylon, from Revelation 17-18

Kevin Ganey

Kevin Ganey

About the Author:  Kevin Ganey has lived in the Lyme/Old Lyme area since he was three-years-old, attended Xavier High School in Middletown and recently graduated from Quinnipiac University with a degree in Media Studies. Prior to his involvement here at LymeLine.com, he worked for Hall Radio in Norwich, as well as interned under the Director of Communications at High Hopes Therapeutic Riding Center. Kevin has a passion for movies, literature, baseball, and all things New England-based … especially chowder.