Singer to get a second shot at the Apollo

The Charlotte Observer
Lake Norman News (University City News)
Sunday, February 05, 2012

On New Year’s Day 2011, Brandie Drumwright performed in her first singing competition, an event called “It’s Your Time” in Rocky Mount, hosted by Joe Gray, stage producer of New York City’s legendary Apollo Theater.

She won first place that day, but that’s not all.

Gray was so impressed with her performance that he decided to submit footage from the concert, along with her video submission for the competition, to Marion Caffey, executive producer of “Amateur Night at the Apollo.”

By March 2011, Drumwright had been asked to perform at “Amateur Night” that April.

“I was overwhelmed and completely excited about the whole experience,” said Drumwright, 29, who lives near Harris Boulevard and Mallard Creek Church Road.

The UNC Greensboro graduate said the Rocky Mount competition was the first time she’d ever won anything.

“It was a humbling experience, but it also made me realize my self-worth,” she said. “To me, I’m a giver, and I had to learn to accept praise.”

Amateur Night at the Apollo Theater is held each Wednesday. It presents singers, comedians, dancers and actors to the community and gives them a stage to present their work for local and national audiences.

On April 18, 2011, Brandie Nicole – her stage name – competed as the only Southern woman against a lineup of New Yorkers, but she said she wasn’t afraid.

“For me, it wasn’t a competition; it was the experience of a lifetime,” Drumwright said. “Never in a million years would I have dreamed of going, and I was committed to enjoying it, no matter what happens.”

She sang “Fools Fall in Love” as it was performed in the musical revue “Smokey Joe’s Café.” She won second place for the night.

Unfortunately, Drumwright didn’t place in the semifinals, but she has been asked to return to compete on May 25. This time, Brandie plans to sing Patty LaBelle’s version of “Somewhere Over the Rainbow.”

Drumwright said her voice has been compared to LaBelle, Deniece Williams and Fantasia Barrino.

She has been singing professionally since the summer of 2004, performing at the 2011 fundraiser for the Raleigh-Wake Chapter of Jack and Jill of America Inc., at the James Stephen III Scholarship Foundation Gala for several years, and at the 2011 Bronner Bros. International Hair Show in Atlanta.

She has sung the national anthem at the MEAC basketball tournament in Winston Salem for the past two years.

She also performs at private events, such as birthday parties, retirement parties and weddings.

She is working with local voice coach Jeanetta Deavers on writing songs for what will be her first album.

Her ultimate goal is to sing on Broadway.

The most important thing Drumwright has learned through this process, she said, is about herself:

“It’s owning my power, owning my greatness,” she said. “We can all exist in this world with our talents and lift each other up.

“This is my gift, and I have to share it,” she said.

Posted in Achievements and Awards, Charlotte Observer, Entertainment/Creative Arts, Newspaper, Traditional Journalism | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

She escaped domestic violence, counsels others

The Charlotte Observer
Lake Norman News (University City)
Sunday, January 29, 2012

Pictured: Shante Cotton

Pictured: Shante Cotton

Shanté Cotton, a 31-year-old life coach who live in the University City area, is passionate about empowering others to make their dreams come true.

Getting to that point hasn’t been easy, however. She had to overcome physical and emotional abuse by her boyfriend of 10 years and leave the relationship in June 2009.

In 1998, Cotton, an 18-year-old high school senior, was living in a motel room and being supported by her boyfriend, who was nine years older. Her mother made her move out when she turned 18, and he was there, taking care of her and paying the bills. She quickly became dependent on him.

Cotton said he professed his love to her early in the relationship and quickly began controlling all the other relationships in her life, isolating her from most of her friends.

The physical abuse began with a slap in the face in 1998 and escalated throughout the years, especially when alcohol was involved.

“I’d say I was going to leave him, and the violence would get worse,” said Cotton, who now volunteers at the Battered Women’s Shelter.

She left him in 2006; but after losing her niece and her father in 2008, in her grief she was drawn back into the relationship.

At that time, she was depressed, drinking a lot and close to suicide.

In early June 2009, Cotton thought her life was about to end when her offender held a gun to her head. He then tried to strangle her and raped her, she said. Cotton said she remembered running into the streets completely naked afterward, thinking, “I’ve got to tell someone. I can’t live like this anymore.”

Within a week, she’d placed a restraining order against him and started attending church again at New Birth Charlotte in Huntersville.

“I finally felt at peace,” she said.

ShanteCotton-pic2After overcoming such a tragic situation, Cotton knew she wanted to use her experience to help others in similar circumstances.

Last June she self-published a memoir, “Broken Butterfly,” about her struggles as a victim of domestic violence and her ability to rise above it.

Cotton is now a certified advocate for victims of domestic violence with United Family Services and a motivational speaker with the Mecklenburg County Women’s Commission’s Domestic Violence Speakers Bureau. She wants domestic violence victims to know they are not alone.

“The sun always shines bright after the storm. You can have a life again,” she said.

Through her life-coaching business, Ignyte Inc., Cotton offers free life coaching to women who are victims of domestic violence.

If you need assistance, email Shanté Cotton at shantecotton@gmail.com.

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Artisan uses creativity to build her jewelry

The Charlotte Observer
South Charlotte News
Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Pictured: Beverly Grant-Turner

Pictured: Beverly Grant-Turner

Beverly Grant-Turner is fashion forward.

The 54-year-old artisan jewelry designer and resident of Ballantyne’s Bridge Hampton subdivision became the event organizer and vice president of business relationships for Charlotte Seen, which does red carpet service and event marketing, as of September 2011.

Grant-Turner credits her sense of creativity for her recent success.

“I’ve always done something creative in addition to a full-time job,” she said.

 

On a whim, Grant-Turner turned to jewelry as a “creative and emotional outlet” in 2005, when she was busy juggling family and a corporate career.

She bought her daughters, Stephanie and Natalie, gift certificates to a bead show at On A String bead shop in Myers Park on Providence Road. Her daughters had a good time, but for Grant-Turner it was more.

Soon after, Grant-Turner left corporate America, in June 2005, and began to pursue designing jewelry full time. She also worked as executive director of the International House, a nonprofit organization that serves as a center for diversity and cultural inclusivity, on Hawthorne Lane near uptown, from 2008-10.

Then she decided to put all her efforts back into her craft.

Making that move has changed her life in ways she never could have imagined, she said.

“I feel freer and more inspired living creatively,” said Grant-Turner. “I have just been introduced to the world of couture fashion, and it has been wonderful.”

Beverly Grant Artisan Jewelry graced the runways this year during Charlotte’s Fall Fashion Week in September, with designers including Dontarius Clyburn using her jewelry to accessorize their runway looks. Her pieces also were presented to winners of various fashion awards, including Best Emerging Designer and Best Make Up Artist.

Beverly Grant Turner - jewelry - shades of amethystGrant-Turner’s jewelry was used again in November, at Pink Soles’ “Shades of Pink” fashion show benefiting Susan G. Komen for the Cure at the new Foundation for the Carolinas building in uptown, by designers such as Mikelle DeFo, Candace Friedman and Odelia Rouse.

Her pieces also were worn in “For The Love of Harlem,” a play written and scored by Jermaine Nakia Lee that played in fall at Duke Energy Theater at Spirit Square. Grant-Turner’s designs were incorporated into the play by the show’s wardrobe stylist, DaVita Galloway.

In 2012, Grant-Turner will have a photo shoot with Carmen! Carmen! salon and spa and another runway appearance at Charlotte’s Passport to Fashion in April.

But her jewelry won’t be the only thing sparkling in the limelight now that Grant-Turner isBeverly Grant Turner - jewelry - the Bahamas in charge of marketing and business relations for Passport to Fashion in 2012.

As for her jewelry, Grant-Turner is still making one-of-a-kind wearable art using quality semiprecious stones, Swarovski crystals, Murano glass, Cloisonné and freshwater pearls.

Grant-Turner uses ingenuity to create timeless pieces that are practical for everyday wear. Each piece of jewelry comes with extra-large lobster-claw clasps, meaning no extra hands are needed when dressing. Every necklace also comes with chain extensions, making it easier to get the right length.

Grant-Turner said her inspiration comes from the “strength and spiritual qualities” of every stone, and that her work becomes an extension of the inner beauty of the women who wear it.

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Her line of greeting cards laughs at life

The Charlotte Observer
South Charlotte News
Sunday, November 27, 2011

Pictured: Judy Allen Miles

Pictured: Judy Allen Miles

Judy Allen Miles, 55-year-old lifetime resident of Gastonia, has always lived her life out loud.

Miles is known for her 25 years on stage at the Haid Theatre of Belmont Abbey College and The Little Theatre of Gastonia, playing roles such as Anna in “The King and I,” Laurie in “Oklahoma,” and Truvy in “Steel Magnolias.”

She has also been dazzling the stage with her sultry sounds as a lead vocalist since 1991, when she first met her husband Mike Miles and became a part of his and his now-deceased brother John’s band, The Basics. She went on to sing with other popular local bands like The Imposters and most recently retired from a Gaston County crowd favorite, Coming Up Brass, after performing with them for four years.

Miles, the second-youngest of five girls in her family, is known as the family member with the “Ta-da! moments.” Even through what Judy calls her “homely years,” she always felt beautiful, confident and important.

And those characteristics have carried her throughout her life, giving her the confidence to transform with every role, every job and every passion.

But even Miles was astonished when her ugly duckling years became the highlight of her swan years.

She said, “I always focus on funny.”

And this is evidently so, when thumbing through her collection of Cat Eye Cards, greeting cards created by and featuring the one and only Judy Allen Miles.

Miles said her father – Bob Allen, now 90 – was always taking photographs of her family when she was a child. And there was this box full of 35 mm slides from their childhood in the 1950s, ’60s and early ’70’s that had been tucked away in a drawer in her parents’ dining room for more than 20 years.

She found a company online that could convert the slides into CDs in 2009. And from the moment she started looking at these images on the computer, Miles was laughing out loud.

At the center of her humor were the frames on her face: cat-eye glasses.

Miles jokingly said, “Guys don’t make passes at girls who wear glasses … unless the dames had pretty frames.”

Miles' secret? Photos of her at age 5, with cat's butt hairdo.

Miles’ secret? Photos of her at age 5, with cat’s butt hairdo.

According to Miles, her cat-eye glasses and signature short, choppy haircut – it caused pieces to stick up sporadically all over her head, which she affectionately refers to as a “cat’s butt hairdo” – were obviously a fashion faux pas. But the best part was that as a child she was oblivious to it.

All because she had a loving family and a great childhood.

While many would fear embarrassment and bury these CDs, Miles wanted to share the funny thoughts that came to mind when she looked at these photographs.

Miles said everyone has embarrassing moments, so why not make the most out of them?

And this is the exact sentiment she had when she realized she wanted to share the humor in her history by making silly greeting cards.

Soon Miles was persuaded by all who read her cards that she should start a greeting card company.

Old family memories quickly turned into a modern family affair with her parents and friends advising her on which cards were the best for publication. Also her husband Mike and son Garin Hyde, a 30-year-old business entrepreneur who recently created an independent film group called Vocal Distortion-Films, assisted in the creation of the signature hinged-frame and layout of every Cat Eye Card.

The company has been steadily growing since Miles picked up her first package of printed cards at Crisp Printers of Gastonia in January 2010. And in July of that year, Cat Eye Cards became a member of the American Greeting Card Association. The cards are now available in 21 stores across North Carolina and South Carolina and are also available for purchase on her website,www.cateyecards.com. Miles has sold approximately 5,000 cards to-date.

Her opinion of the experience is that it has been “exciting but scary.”

Miles said it’s extremely personal because it’s her 5-year-old face branded on every card and that makes it hard to accept rejection. But she has been fortunate to receive lots of support from local businesses.

Miles said she will always remember one sales presentation in particular. She was showing her cards and display to Karen Coffin, the owner of The Bag Lady, an eclectic book and gift shop located on Kenilworth Avenue in Charlotte, and after reading a few cards Coffin told her, “You bet (I’ll sell your cards).I believe in you.”

Just hearing those words from a stranger – and being reminded of all the people who’ve given her the confidence to be where she is now – reassured Miles that she was right where she was supposed to be.

Miles said if anyone suggested she would have her own business creating and selling greeting cards years ago, she would have called them crazy.

But with retirement only a few years away, after working 27 years in the legal department of Gaston County Social Services, she is excited about spending this next chapter of her life making people laugh.

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Sewing is the craft that has inspired her entire life

The Charlotte Observer
South Charlotte News
Wednesday, November 23, 2011

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERATo Marcia Young and her family sewing is more than just putting needle to thread.

Young, 37, of Callonwood subdivision in Matthews has been sewing since she was 13 years old.

Young decided, after intently watching her grandmother, mother and older sister sew for years and being the recipient of many heartfelt, handcrafted gifts, to ask her mother, Vera Hammond of Buffalo, N.Y. to teach her.

Young said, “My mother sat me in front of a sewing machine with a pattern and told me to figure it out.”

More than the act of sewing stuck with her that day because she has been “figuring it out” ever since.

From the time Young was in fifth grade, her mother battled with viral meningitis. Going undiagnosed for years, she lost independence, money and most importantly time.

Sewing gave back what the illness took away.

Young remembers helping her mother sew holiday and home décor to sell at craft shows in upstate New York. Sewing also helped Vera fight against the loss of eyesight by concentrating on the intricacies in each pattern.

Sewing helped Young by allowing her to take an active role in her mother’s healing and giving her an outlet to deal with the grief of seeing her mother in pain.

Fortunately after five years of battling the disease, Hammond got better. And 24 years later, Young is still sewing.

Young said, “Sewing is about the power of giving.”

And sewing continued to give her hope through her years as a domestic violence counselor, when the dark realities of life were visible.

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It also gave Young hope when she saw her premature twin girls, Lauren and Emma, bundled in blankets and beanies made and donated by Threads of Love, a Christian faith-based, national organization made up of volunteers who create and donate handmade articles of clothing and blankets to premature, sick and deceased infants.

In 2008, Young wanted to give others what sewing had given her, so she opened a sewing studio in her home, naming her business Sew Inspired. She now teaches day and evening class to adult beginners for $15 per lesson. There are fall (Sept. to early Dec.) and spring (Late Jan. to May) terms. She also offers a five-week summer term (July to Aug.), mainly for school teachers.

Sew Inspired has remained prosperous throughout the years. Young and her husband, John, who works in the financial services industry, were concerned that her business would fail in the recession.

But it was just the opposite; her business grew out of what she calls “the people’s perseverance.”

Some people came to her looking for a hobby to distract them from the uncertainty of the times. Some came looking for a way to save money by learning to mend their own clothing or create home décor when they couldn’t afford it otherwise. Others wanted to learn a new trade in hopes of making money and relieving their family’s financial burdens.

Young feels fortunate to be able to give others the inspiration that sewing has given her.

But Young believes the greatest gift sewing has given her is the ability to work from home, so she can spend more time with her twin girls, now 8. They, too, have learned to sew, entwining them with the traditions of their heritage and bringing the hope it encompasses for generations to come.

Posted in Business, Charlotte Observer, Entertainment/Creative Arts, Family and Parenting, Human Interest, Newspaper, Philanthropy, Traditional Journalism | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment