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Tracey O'Shaughnessy

Tracey O'Shaughnessy

Associate Features Editor & Columnist at Waterbury Republican-American

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38
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Location
United States
Languages
  • English
Covering topics
  • Features/Lifestyle
  • Local News

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Recent Articles

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Mattatuck Museum to honor community leaders at 15th annual Brass Button Award banquet

WATERBURY - Mattatuck Museum will celebrate three community leaders at its 15th annual Brass Button Award banquet June 27 from 6 to 9 p.m. at the museum, 144 West Main St. This year, the museum will inaugurate a new award, the Waterbury Clock Award, which will go to longtime city business owner Virg
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Sustainability, loyalty drive Southington company

Run your fingers along the edges of Maple Origin's serving bowl and you'd swear it was made out of wood. Or, if not wood, something awfully similar. The edges of the alchemic concoction are beveled, a bit like they'd been created by a lathe. The bowl is neither wood nor plastic but a mixture o
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Rev. James Sullivan exceeds fundraising goal cycling nearly 600 Mil...

The Rev. James Sullivan, pastor of the Basilica of the Immaculate Conception, has already raised $139,000 -- $39,000 over his goal - for Catholic Education in Waterbury, by pledging to cycle nearly 600 miles through some of the most difficult terrain in the Tour de France.Sullivan is not riding in t
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Greek mythology as muse: Litchfield artist turns love of Greece int...

For decades now, Thomas McKnight has held the Holy Grail that animates most artists' longing: success. The Litchfield artist has been long admired for his cool, crisp, flat paintings and prints of elegant porticos, porches and patios, an invitation to a distinctively modern serenity. But his real
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Back to first impressions: Conservators restore artwork while museu...

How can you tell if a painting is filthy? If not precisely filthy, then grimy, occluded and dim. Most of us cannot, such that the opportunity to see one of the four Monets at Farmington's Hill-Stead Museum cannot fail to give us a thrill. But to the trained eye, some of the works in the museum
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Museum’s new show proves women artists have plenty to express and m...

For a young painter poised to begin a career, Helen Frankenthaler had to consider herself lucky. She arrived in New York from Bennington, Vt., in 1948, when the place was writhing with creative juices. @Bodytype, PEOPLE:Larry Rivers was there, as was Robert Motherwell (whom she later wed), Jackso
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Granger to take stage at Palace to speak about Hollywood rearing, c...

Once, at a party at her parents' house in Beverly Hills, a teenaged Susan Granger was approached by Frank Sinatra. "He said, to me, 'Susan, because your father died before I could thank him for casting me as Maggio, I didn't get a chance to thank him,' " he said, referring to his Oscar-winning role
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Waterbury trio earn ‘Women of Color’ honors

Three Waterbury women, Joyce Reid, Akia S. Callun and Margaret Bowen are among the 100 Women of Color being honored on Friday at the Bushnell at the 100 Women of Color Gala & Awards.The event recognizes the contributions these Women of Color have made in business, education, entrepreneurship, en
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Insurance costs rise like a flood

To the shock of the many state residents who found their photo albums and sofa cushions floating around their basements last month, standard home insurance doesn't cover flood damage.I mean, the whole point of insurance - which is to protect you when everything goes belly up - couldn't possibly incl
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Waterbury to host Romance Writing Conference

The Connecticut Chapter of the Romance Writers of America will host a writing conference called “The Write Thing” at the Mattatuck Museum Oct. 6 that will include Kristan Higgins, Jamie Beck and Jason Wrench. The conference will be followed, from 4 to 5 p.m., by a tea-cup auction and book signing, o
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The hysteria of the witch trials

The hysteria that began in the Massachusetts Bay Colony of Salem between 1692-1693, claimed the lives of 25 people, most by hanging. Massachusetts Puritans hanged 14 women and five men. Many died in prison. One man, Giles Corey, was pressed to death under large stones, according to the Peabody Essex