HERE ARE SIX THINGS TO KNOW ABOUT
ACTRESS ELLEN POMPEO. ONE: SHE WAS BORN IN THE BOSTON SUBURB OF EVERETT, MASSACHUSETTS.
TWO: THE BOSTON FATES ARE SMILING ON HER. HER FIANCE´, MUSIC
PRODUCER CHRISTOPHER IVERY, GREW UP JUST 10 MILES FROM HER
CHILDHOOD HOME AND KNEW HER FATHER. (ALTHOUGH WHEN THE COUPLE
FIRST MET, IN LOS ANGELES, THEY DIDN'T KNOW OF THE CONNECTION.)
THREE: PERHAPS TO RECIPROCATE THE FATES' FAVOR, POMPEO
RETURNS TO BOSTON ONCE A YEAR. "MY SORT OF CEREMONIAL TRIP,"
SHE CALLS IT. FOUR: HER SISTER, MAUREEN POMPEO, STILL
LIVES IN THE BOSTON AREA AND IS ON THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS FOR
THE HOME FOR LITTLE WANDERERS, A CHARITY THAT PROVIDES ADOPTION
SERVICES AS WELL AS SHELTER FOR CHILDREN AND PARENTS ESCAPING
ABUSE. FIVE: YOU CAN SEE HER ON THE BIG SCREEN IN THE UPCOMING
MOONLIGHT MILE, WHICH WAS PARTLY FILMED IN MASSACHUSETTS, AND
SHE HAS RECEIVED A GOLDEN GLOBE NOMINATION FOR HER ROLE AS
MEREDITH GREY ON GREY'S ANATOMY. SIX: IF YOU WERE TO ASK HER,
POMPEO WOULD TELL YOU THAT SHE STILL LOVES THE CITY OF HER
BIRTH, ESPECIALLY ITS HISTORY AND ITS ABUNDANT GREEN SPACES. IN
FACT, SHE'D PROBABLY TELL YOU THE FOLLOWING 13 THINGS ABOUT
BOSTON.
ONE: BLESSED ARE THE CHEESE
MAKERS. I grew up in Everett. It could be
considered like Brooklyn. It's just a suburb of Boston, Five
minutes over the bridge. When I grew up there, it was a
very blue-collar, working-class Irish-Italian neighborhood.
There is a great market there called Regina, where you can get
great salami and cheese and great imported Italian things.
Ellen Pompeo's
Two Green Tips
1. IT DOESN'T
TAKE MUCH TO DO GOOD.
I used to feel completely overwhelmed by
environmental change. It's such a huge problem, so what can we do?
Then I just started realizing that if everybody just did a tiny
little bit, it wouldn't be overwhelming. Do little things, like
shutting off the water when you brush your teeth instead of letting
the water run. Or, when you wash dishes, fill your sink with soapy
water, wash all the dishes, and then fill it with clean water and
rinse them so you don't keep the water
running.
Also, I've just recently started unplugging my
espresso machine. I used to just shut it off. Now I shut it off and
unplug it. I make sure everything is unplugged if I'm not using it.
They say that even if it is not on, just plugged in, it is still
using energy.
Simple little things like that do add up and make
a difference. I really believe that.
2. ONE HAS NICE T-SHIRTS.
I love the One organization. I think that they
are really doing fantastic things, and, again, it's something as
simple as going on their website [www.one.org] and buying a
T-shirt. If everybody were to just do a little bit every day … I
think change is possible.
TWO: PRESERVATION IS GOOD. I've been to a
lot of places in this country, and there's no other place where you
feel history as strongly as you feel it in Boston. On the Freedom
Trail, you can ?nd all types of historically significant stops. It
runs through
Beacon Hill, which is a really beautiful part of the
city. I've been everywhere on the
Freedom Trail at some point
in my life. You follow it, and it takes you through the Boston
Common and by the Old State House and past the Old North Church.
The Granary Burying Ground is also right on the Freedom Trail.
That's where
Samuel Adams and John Hancock are buried, and Benjamin
Franklin's parents too.
THREE: GREEN IS ALSO GOOD. Boston
Common and the
Boston Public Garden are sort of side by side. The
Common is almost like the big lawn in
Central Park, whereas the
Public Garden has more flowers and beautiful willow trees and ducks
in the ponds and swan boats. That's just glorious in the fall and
summer and spring. I guess it's also nice in the winter - if you
like the cold.
FOUR: SPEAKING OF GREEN, THE
BEST PLACES TO SPEND A DAY
OUTDOORS IN THE FALL ARE LESS
THAN AN HOUR AWAY. In October,
the two best places to go to are the
Arnold Arboretum and
Walden Pond. Walden Pond is in
Concord, Massachusetts, which
is a 40-minute drive from Boston. It's a great day trip. I
spent a lot of time there as a child. My
brother-in-law would
take me and my brother and our friends there for nature walks
all the time. We came from the suburbs, so it was great to
spend a day just walking through the woods and having quiet
time. I developed my appreciation for nature there. It's one
of my fondest memories.
Henry David Thoreau lived at Walden Pond, so there are plaques all
throughout the woods, marking places where Thoreau was - where he
had his tent and where he liked to nature writings are about his
time there.
The Arnold Arboretum is about 10 or 15 minutes away from Harvard.
It has a beautiful trail through the woods. If you go within the
right few weeks in the fall, it's beautiful. The colors are
amazing. You will just be completely surrounded by trees -
absolutely gorgeous.
She Said…
Here's where Ellen Pompeo finds the
best of Boston.
Restaurants
Ben & Jerry's, Newbury Street;
ice cream; inexpensive; (617)
536-5456; www.benjerry.com
Clio at the Eliot Hotel,
contemporary French, very
expensive, (617) 536-7200,
www.cliorestaurant.com
The Daily Catch, Sicilian pasta and
seafood, moderate, (617) 523-8567,
www.dailycatch.com
Durgin-Park, American, moderate to
expensive, (617) 227-2038,
www.durgin-park.com
KO Prime, modern steak house,
expensive, (617) 772-0202,
www.koprimeboston.com
Legal Sea Foods, Copley Place;
moderate to expensive; (617)
266-7775; www.legalseafoods.com
Modern Pastry Shop, North End;
Italian pastries; inexpensive;
(617) 523-3783; www.modernpastry
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Mr. Bartley's Gourmet Burgers, inexpensive to moderate, (617)
354-6559,
www.mrbartley.com
The Original Kelly's Landing, seafood, moderate, (617) 268-8900,
www.theoriginalkellys.com
Uni Sashimi Bar at Clio, sushi, expensive,
(617) 536-7200,
www.cliorestaurant.com
Via Matta, Italian, moderate to expensive,
(617) 422-0008,
www.viamattarestaurant.com
Sightseeing
Arnold Arboretum of
Harvard University,
(617) 524-1718,
www.arboretum.harvard.edu
Beacon Hill,
www.beaconhillonline.com
Boston Common,
www.cityofboston.gov/freedom
trail/bostoncommon.asp
Boston Public Garden,
www.cityofboston.gov/parks/emerald/public_garden.asp
Freedom Trail, (617) 357-8300,
www.thefreedom
trail.org
Granary Burying Ground,
www.cityofboston
.gov/parks/
Harvard Square,
www.harvardsquare.com
Old North Church, (617) 523-6676,
www.oldnorth
.com
Old State House,
www.cityofboston.gov/freedom
trail/oldstate.asp
Shopping
Faneuil Hall Marketplace, (617) 523-1300,
www.faneuilhallmarketplace.com
Harvard Book Store, (800) 542-7323,
www.harvard.com
Louis Boston, (617) 262-6100,
www.louisboston
.com
Hotels
The Ritz-Carlton, Boston Common; (617) 574-7100;
www.ritzcarlton.com
Nightlife
Daisy Buchanan's Bar, (617) 247-8516
Museums
Isabella Stewart
Gardner Museum, (617) 566-1401,
www.gardnermuseum.org
Excursions Outside of Boston
Cape Cod, (508) 362-3225,
www.capecod
chamber.org
Concord, www.concordchamberofcommerce.org
Nahant Beach,
www.mass.gov/dcr/parks/metro
boston/lynnshores
Regina Food Store, (617) 387-1655
Revere Beach,
www.visitrevere.org/beach.html
Salem, Massachusetts, (877) 725-3662,
www.salem.org
Walden Pond State Reservation, (978) 369-3254,
www.mass.gov/dcr/parks/northeast/wldn.htm
FIVE: SPEAKING OF HARVARD, IT'S
A GOOD PLACE TO VISIT. The grounds of
Harvard University are so beautiful to walk around, and the Harvard
Book Store is one of the last great independent bookstores. It's
right there across the street from the university.
SIX: HAMBURGERS TASTE GREAT. Just ask Matt
Damon. Right beside the
Harvard Book Store is Mr. Bartley's, a
really old-school, greasy-spoon hamburger joint. It is in . It has
absolutely the best greasy burger you will ever have in your life.
A really nice afternoon would be to go have a burger there and then
go to the bookstore next door, pick up a Harvard T- shirt, and walk
the grounds of Harvard, particularly in the spring or in the fall,
when all the students are starting.
SEVEN: YOU CAN BUY STUFF ON NEWBURY
STREET. My favorite shop is one called Louis Boston. I
guess it would be sort of the Barneys of Boston. It's just a
gorgeous retail store in an old, historic building. They
carry men and women's clothing, and they have a nice little
espresso bar there, as well as a nice, small restaurant.
EIGHT: STEALING IS BAD BUT
INTERESTING. The Isabella
Stewart Gardner Museum is where one of the largest unsolved
art heists in history took place. It was in the '90s. There
were 13 significant pieces of arrt taken from that
museum. No suspect has ever been brought into custody,
and nothing has been recovered. It happened on St. Patrick's
Day. It's the perfect night to pull off some heist in Boston,
because all the police are at the St. Patrick's Day
festivities.
NINE: YOU'VE GOT TO HAVE A PLACE
TO SLEEP. There was an old Ritz hotel on
the first block of Newbury. Just recently, they closed it and
turned it into another hotel. Then they built a more modern
Ritz-Carlton across the street from the Public Garden. I love the
new Ritz. It has a great gym, a Sports Club/LA, there.
TEN: BOSTON HAS BEACHES. AND
BIRDS. .Revere Beach, although it is
old and historical, is dirty and not very nice. But not too
far away from there is a beach called Nahant Beach, which is
actually where my sister lives. It's like a little island.
There is only one road in and one road out. My sister and
brother-in-law would take us there as kids, and we would
other beach in Nahant that is very famous; it's called Forty
Steps. There's no sand, just rocks. There are rumors
that parts of the movie
The Birds
were filmed there.
ELEVEN: BOSTON HAS GREAT
PLACES TO EAT. There's a
restaurant called KO Prime, on Tremont Street on the Freedom
Trail, that is great. It's a tiny place.
We Said…
Here's where we
find the
best of
Boston.
LODGING
Hotel@MIT, expensive to very
expensive, (617) 577-0200,
www.univparkhotel.com.
Can't live without your iPhone?
Lost without your GPS? Then punch
this high-tech hotel's info into
your Palm Pilot. From the original
MIT robots in the lobby to the
futuristic phones in each room,
this hotel proves geek can be
chic.
Hotel 140, inexpensive, (617)
585-5600, www.hotel140.com.
Just four miles from Logan
Airport, this basic yet stylish
hotel has other great advantages to
its locale. It's in the historic
headquarters of America's first
YWCA, is next door to the John
Hancock Tower, and is mere blocks
from Back Bay shops and eateries
and South End
nightlife.
DINING
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Oak Bar, expensive, (617) 267-5300
www.fairmont.com/copleyplaza.
Boston cream pie may have been invented at the Omni Parker House
hotel restaurant, but we prefer the version served in the Fairmont
Copley Plaza's dining room. Or, better yet, when we don't feel like
getting quite so gussied up, we order a slice at the hotel's Oak
Bar (which serves the restaurant's full steak-house menu).
Trident Booksellers & Café, inexpensive to moderate, (617)
267-8688,
www.tridentbookscafe.com.
The selection of books and magazines at Trident is great, and the
café's menu - which lists everything from frittatas to fish tacos
to ice cream and doughnuts - is a real page-turner itself.
ATTRACTION
Boston's Logan International Airport, (617) 561-1800,
www.massport.com.
A distant foghorn and a symphony of croaking frogs and chirping
crickets inside an airport? Yep. Unveiled in April, artist
Christopher Janney's work covers eight stories and features giant
colored-glass walls and piped-in sound images. Janney describes the
installation as being "like an evening through the woods in New
Hampshire."
There's another restaurant, Via Matta, right across the street from
the Ritz. It's right around the corner from the Hermès store, and
it has delicious Italian food.
Also, there is a chef in Boston named Ken Oringer who owns three
restaurants. One of them is in the Eliot Hotel. It's called Clio
and is amazing. Downstairs, he has a tiny sushi bar called Uni.
There are only about six stools at the sushi bar and probably only
tables. It is delicious. Everything is super, super fresh.
The parents of a friend of mine own Durgin-Park, which is a
traditional
New England place.
Kelly's is a great fast-food seafood place. They have great clams
and lobster rolls. They are famous for their lobster rolls. It's,
like, a $40 lobster roll, the most expensive lobster roll you
will ever have.
The Daily Catch is a place in the North End where they serve you calamari in a pan. It’s pretty much only calamari and pasta — delicious.
TWELVE: ITALIANS MAKE GOOD DESSERTS. So does Ben & Jerry’s. In Little Italy, there are great pastry shops. My boyfriend, Christopher, thinks Modern Pastry Shop is the best pastry shop in the North End. When I am there, I always take a walk up
Newbury Street and hit the Ben & Jerry’s. That’s the best stop on the street, as far as I’m concerned.
THIRTEEN: SHE HAS VERY, VERY STRONG ARMS. There is a quite famous place — a place where I used to work, actually — on Newbury Street called Daisy Buchanan’s. I was just 18 when I worked there. It is a tiny, tiny little place in a basement. All the Red Sox players and the Bruins players and the Celtics players go there after games.
That was the hardest place in town to be a cocktail waitress. It was just packed, and there would be so many people in there that you couldn’t hold the tray in front of your body. You’d have to suspend the tray completely over your head. They used thick glass mugs, so it was heavy. And you had to hold the tray over your head while wearing high heels and a miniskirt. You have to wear high heels because all the guys in there are so tall because most of them are
basketball players or
football players. You develop great shoulder muscles, though.