FEBRUARY 2021 Magazine | Page 2

PR FOR PEOPLE®

THE

CONNECTOR

Editorial Staff

Chief Content Creator:

Patricia Vaccarino

Published by PR for People®

Brand Manager:

Josue Mora

Copy Editor:

Lars Brockner

Chief Photographer:

Ilya Moshenskiy

Design and Layout:

Josue Mora

Photo Credits:

William Lulow, Josue Mora, Ilya Moshenskiy,

Patricia Vaccarino, and a special thanks to

Victoria Kovios for the photos of Alana Belle, to

Tamara Hegerova for the photos of Milan Heger, and to Linda Jay for the photo of her parents. Moon Apples photo credit: Brandice Worley. President Lyndon Johnson greets dancer/choreographer Agnes DeMille- photo credit LBJ Library

Contributors:

Lynn Berger, Gregg Bertram, Dave Bresler,

Peter Corning Ph.D,

Rongqing Dai Ph.D,

Bernadette Erasmus,

John de Graaf, JoAnne Dyer, Anna Faktorovich, Ph.D.,

Ron Flavin, Michael Fliegelman, Randy Friedberg, Esq.,

Manny Frishberg,

Linda Jay,

Henri P. Gaboriau, MD,

Sally Haver, Alison Harris,

Roger Hillman, Lorraine Howell, David L. Laing, Linda Jay,

Nick J. Licata, Lulow,

Dean Landsman,

Barbara Lloyd McMichael,

Joe Puggelli, Annie Searle,

Hall Stuart-Lovell, Jordan Riefe, William Thomas,

Patricia Vaccarino, and

Serena Wadhwa.

Dear Friends & Colleagues:

In the Age of Covid, people are doing things that they have never done before. Some people are trying things completely out of their comfort zones, and others are finally getting a chance to do what they have always wanted to do. The old excuse of not having enough time has been cast aside.

We’ve caught up with Singer, Songwriter, Filmmaker Alana Belle who was featured on the cover of our February 2018 Magazine. Her work The New Romantic: A Mood Film was released in September 2020 at the Northwest Film Forum Film Festival, and her debut album, The New Romantic, was released a year ago on Valentine’s Day. The Covid pandemic has inspired her to examine the true meaning of life. These days Alana is paying more attention to the spiritual core of her life and learning how she might help others to heal.

Artist Milan Heger is in love with freedom as much as he is in love with art. Before the Velvet Revolution in Czechoslovakia, he did a two-year stint in a military camp. During the long-bone-chilling winters, only the dream of freedom kept him alive. He found an old abandoned outhouse in the woods and turned this tiny cube into a private art studio. By night in the grueling dark, he used primitive tools to paint on a makeshift canvas. It was here in this cold tight space that he came to know without art, there is no freedom.

No force on earth can stop art or the artist who will pursue his/her/their work, no matter what forces try to stop him, even a global pandemic. If anything, the quietude of quarantine affords talented artists the time and focus to create new works without interruption. While people are trying things they have never done before but have always wanted to do, not everyone succeeds. Taking up art isn’t easy to do even when there is ample time. After a year of trying, if you have not succeeded at making art, try playing pinochle instead.

It’s almost Valentine’s Day! Show the world how much you care. Stay safe!!

–Patricia Vaccarino

PR for People® The Connector is published monthly by Xanthus Communications LLC, 2212 Queen Anne Avenue North, PMB #615, Seattle, WA 98109. Please send any address changes to [email protected].

Copyright ©2021 by Xanthus Communications, LLC. All rights reserved. Written content and original photos in this publication must not be reproduced in any form without permission. Requests for permission should be sent to Patricia Vaccarino [email protected].