Five years ago, when Sue Zelickson was leaving the Ivey Awards — the annual lovefest for the local theater community — the proverbial light bulb went off over her head when she bumped into Iveys founder Scott Mayer.
"I turned to Scott and said, 'If we can do this for stage artists, why can't we do this for chefs and restaurants?' " she recalled. "You look at every charitable event in town, and who is there? Chefs. They're cooking, they're donating food, they're the most generous people around. Why not give them an opportunity to just sit there, and smile, and accept an award?"
Why not, indeed? Mayer and Zelickson sprang into action, and the Charlie Awards were born.
The two are clearly onto something, because more than 700 well-wishers filled the Pantages Theatre for last year's iteration, cheering on a winners' circle that included Lifetime Achievement honoree Lucia Watson of Lucia's Restaurant, and Sameh Wadi of Saffron Restaurant & Lounge, who was christened the year's Outstanding Chef.
Now in its fourth year ("Can you believe it? And they said it wouldn't last," said Zelickson), the 2014 Charlie Awards will be lighting up the Pantages stage next Sunday, in a program hosted by WCCO TV's Jamie Yuccas and Salty Tart chef/owner (and past Charlie Award winner) Michelle Gayer.
Entertainment will include singer Erin Schwab with the Jay Fuchs Band, and the Minnesota Boychoir performing, inevitably, "Food, Glorious Food" from the musical "Oliver." The show will begin with an interlude by the Taste Buds, an all-chef musical ensemble assembled by Steven Brown of Tilia and featuring a dozen musically inclined food professionals, including Thomas Boemer of Corner Table, Tyler Shipton of Coup d'état and Ann Kim of Pizzeria Lola.
"I love Sue Zelickson, and if she asks me to do something, I say 'Yes,' " said Brown. "She thought I was a musician, but I'm not. But there are so many people who work in restaurants who are involved in music, so we put out an open call."
The results? An opening number, the details of which Brown is keeping under wraps, although it will involve kitchen utensils as musical instruments. "And singing a cleverly reworded song, one that everyone knows," Brown said. "What we've basically done is cajole friends into doing something fun and slightly foolish."