Best Of 2017

Arts & Entertainment

Arts & Entertainment


Best of The Bay 2017: The winners are here in a beast of a Best of.

Best of The Bay 2017

LOOKY HERE: If you're looking to suggest categories or submit nominations for Best of the Bay 2018, go here!

A lot has happened since Best of the Bay 2016, hasn’t it?

Oh, that innocent time before the storms and the strife and the divisive leadership of a small-minded despot. Let’s just say it’s been a relief to concentrate on the best of this turbulent and lately rather terrifying year.

Not that we shied away from smack talk (hey, if it’s OK for the prez…). And many of you seem to be on a similarly dark wavelength, judging by your answers to the Readers’ Poll question “Best Place to Dump a Body.” The winner? “I can’t give away my secrets.”

But the chief raison d’être for any issue of BOTB, including this one, is to celebrate the talented, the tasty — and in recent weeks, the heroic. We are honoring the heroes of Hurricane Irma in these pages — the people who helped us make it through the storm, who went above and beyond. And last week another storm hit close to home. Our creative director, Julio Ramos, continued to work tirelessly on this, our biggest issue of the year, at the same time that he had to endure the agony of not knowing how his family in Puerto Rico was faring after Maria. (He has made connections now; they’re OK, but recovery on the island will take a long, long time.)

Among the people we honored this year are those who take special care of animals. Via our Furricane Relief campaign, you helped us raise over $1,000 for Suncoast Animal League and Humane Society Tampa Bay in their efforts to care for animals affected by Irma (read more about their work on p. 34). As it happened, we’d been planning way before Irma to build this issue of BOTB around animals — specifically, the canine variety. We’re not all dog owners around here — there are cat lovers, too, and there used to be someone who kept snakes but I don’t think she does anymore — but staffers and readers kept coming up with so many dog-centric picks that a Best (Friends) of the Bay issue had to be. For instance, it turned out that our critic’s pick for Best Beach Cocktails, Grace in Pass-A-Grille, names all of its cocktails after local pups. Thanks to the patience of photographer Laurie Ross and the assistance of owners Lisa Masterson and Marlin Kaplan, we got dogs, owners and cocktails together for the group shot above.

This year’s Best of the Bay Readers’ Poll drew a record 436,000 online votes, entered by 27,300 voters. Readers could vote in more than 300 categories. Staffers and contributors wrote up more than 200 critics’ picks. They’re all in the pages that follow and online at cltampa.com/BOTB2017.

We couldn’t have done any of it without CL’s extraordinary staff, the folks that not only put out this mammoth once-a-year project but care deeply every day and every week about doing the best job and turning out the best publication they possibly can. They’re the Best. —David Warner

Food & Drink

Food & Drink


Goods & Services: Local business is good business.

Misty Thomas of Health Mutt.

Local business is good business.

People, Places, Politics: Movers. Shakers. Scandal-makers. Your picks and ours.

St. Pete Mayor Rick Kriseman with Kristy.

Movers. Shakers. Scandal-makers. Your picks and ours.

BEST "OH GOOD, THEY'VE GOT LIVE MUSIC NOW TOO"
Scott Harrell

The beer started off good, and got even better, but it was the addition of live-music events like the Rock ‘N’ Roll Swap Meet, an open mic hosted by Rebekah Pulley and regular original shows that really made this big industrial space part of the neighborhood. The sound isn’t always perfect, but the energy and the potential are both there — hopefully as the weather cools more people will be drawn to this largely outdoor watering hole, and encourage its owners to keep hosting interesting and entertaining events. 2001 1st Ave. S., St. Pete. 727-201-2278. —Scott Harrell

Noelle Mason, "Ground Control" (Mexicali_Caliexico), 8 x 6 ft., hand-woven wool
Noelle Mason
Noelle Mason, "Ground Control" (Mexicali_Caliexico), 8 x 6 ft., hand-woven wool

All she does is win, win, win! In all seriousness, Mason has garnered much attention and awards for her multi-faceted conceptual practice. Since winning the 2016 Florida Prize in Contemporary Art at the Orlando Museum of Art, she has gone on to win the 2017 Southern Prize and State Fellowship, first prize at the Fantastic Fibers exhibition, and second place at the 8th All-Media Juried Biennial at the Art and Culture Center/Hollywood. —CA

BEST ACCESSORY RESURGENCE
Sean O'Brien

Who would’ve known that we’d spend our mid-30s (and beyond) collecting buttons and pins for our lapels and guitar straps? Thanks to the comic book-inspired selection at Tampa’s Bronze Age Buttons and veteran local comics artist/musician Josh Sullivan’s wide variety of enamel pins both cute and snide, getting older (and throwing around our disposable income) never felt — or looked — so cool. —Ray Roa/Scott Harrell
facebook.com/pg/bronzeagebuttons

BEST ACTOR
Ryan Finzelber

What made Shea’s performance in Martin McDonagh’s black comedy so stunning was its microscopic precision, as if he’d prepared not just the heart and soul of his character but also every single syllable, gesture, and breath. Shea played Mick, an Irish gravedigger whose specialty is excavating seven-year-old burial sites and disposing of the contents so there’ll be room for new arrivals. Thanks to Shea, this character was a riveting amalgamation of text and subtext, dominant and recessive, contradictions, paradoxes, and ironies. Amazing! —Mark Leib

BEST ACTRESS
Désirée Fantal

For the 90 uninterrupted minutes of George Brant’s one-woman show, the brilliant Emilia Sargent was a feminist heroine, a war-loving fighter pilot, a lusty wife, a doting mother and a once-reluctant drone operator whose job increasingly wears down her self-possession and her sanity. Sargent handled all these complexities and more: her performance was mind-bogglingly moving, worrying, triumphant. She was especially persuasive in convincing us that her obsession with killing “bad guys” was warping her entire personality, threatening all her personal relationships. Her character may have been grounded, but this actress soared. —Mark Leib