Wiregrass Ranch High Grad Is Taking A Bite Out Of The Big Apple

Angelica Vicens has been performing since she was a little kid, and is hoping to find success in New York City as an actor, writer and producer.

Wesley Chapel’s Angelica Vicens isn’t on TV or in the movies. Yet.

However, her story is a familiar one.

You’ve seen her before, or those like her — you know, the young aspiring actor/writer/producer, who chases her dreams all the way to New York, NY, who works a day job to pay the rent, spends the rest of her time in one of the Big Apple’s many theaters hustling to put something together. And yes, she shares one of those tiny, one-bedroom, overpriced flats where the living room and kitchen are interchangeable and where she dreams of making it big.

That’s Angelica, a 20-year-old who just made her director/producer debut earlier this month, just a mere three years after graduating from Wiregrass Ranch High (WRH).

With her parents, Angel and Zulma, in the audience, Angelica recently completed a four-show run of “Twisted: The Untold Story of a Royal Vizier,” a popular musical by Team Starkid productions, a Chicago-based theatre troupe known for its musical comedies.

“Twisted” parodies the Disney movie “Aladdin,” but told from the antagonist Jafar’s point of view.

Angelica produced four shows March 31-April 2, at The Producer’s Club, a black box “Off-Off Broadway” theater on W. 44th St.  in Manhattan. Black box theaters are typically simple and square with black walls, resembling a black box, with seating for roughly 50-100 for a production that relies on the actors to create the setting and atmosphere, rather than props and elaborate stage decorations.

While she also has auditioned multiple times for parts in plays, Angelica wanted to try her hand at being on the other side. It didn’t matter than she was only 20 and at the very beginning of her career — she says she was ready for the challenge. A longtime fan of Team Starkid’s productions, she decided she wanted to do a version of “Twisted.”

“I’ve wanted to do this all my life,’’ she says. “Might as well go for it.’’

She reached out to Team Starkid for the rights to do “Twisted.” Her father Angel, who said the family has always supported Angelica’s dream, paid the $400 for the rights, and after signing the contract, pre-production began last December for a bare-bones production of a musical that has had nearly 1.8-million views on YouTube.

Angelica Vicens directs the actors in preparation for her debut as a director/producer in the “Off-Off Broadway” production of “Twisted.”

In January, although it was an unpaid gig, Angelica said more than 150 actors applied for a role in her show, and 16 made the cut, 17 if you count the replacement she had to find when the lead bowed out midway through rehearsals.

“That was a setback,’’ she said, “and a learning experience.”

She adds, however, that all of the challenges were well worth the experience.

“For me, it’s the beginning of my own personal career,’’ she said. “As an actor, you’re auditioning for other people’s projects. This is the first step seeing if I can do (my own project), and so far it has been a really great experience,’’ Angelica says. “I’m realizing that I do have potential to direct and put on comedies.”

Angel said Angelica was always ready to perform, even as a child. She would have friends over to watch a movie in fourth grade, and they would then perform it afterwards. In the fifth grade at Sand Pine Elementary, she and her friends put together an after-school show for their classmates.

“It was obviously her passion,’’ says Angel, who plays bass guitar (with Zulma, who plays guitar) on Sundays at St. Mark the Evangelist Catholic Church in New Tampa during 12:30 Spanish mass. “We are not surprised at all that she is doing this.”

Angelica’s brother Luis, a WRH junior, also is a talented singer and musician, and plays the drums, piano and bass guitar.

Considering Angel and Zulma played in popular bands in their native Puerto Rico, it’s only natural the Vicens kids would take early to performing.

Angelica was in the show choir from first grade through sixth grade with New Tampa’s Show Kidz, performed in the drama club and played the violin in Orchestra at John Long Middle School and also performed in the Drama Club at WRH.

She played the Marimba in the school band, and her junior year played Grizabella in the Jansen Dance Project (located in Tampa Palms) production of “Cats.”

While many her age went off to sort out their futures on college campuses, Angelica followed her passion to New York City, where just two weeks after graduating from WRH, she enrolled at the American Musical Dramatic Academy (AMDA), a college conservatory for the performing arts located on Manhattan’s Upper West Side. She completed that program in 2015.

“I don’t mean to brag,’’ Angelica says, chuckling, “but I’m doing what I always said I was going to be doing.”

It was at AMDA that she discovered Carol Burnett, Ethel Merman and “The Dick Van Dyke Show,”and fell in love with old variety comedy.

“I wanted to find something parallel to that in modern times,’’ she said.

She says she has binge-watched all 42 seasons of “Saturday Night Live,” as well as “Cheers,” “Frazier” and “Seinfield.” 

Whether as a writer, producer, singer or actor, Angelica knows she is where she wants to be. Her dream job would be working for a variety show, like “Saturday Night Live,”or becoming a writer for a late night talk show.

“A lot of friends of mine who always said they were going to be actors, they don’t really understand the reality of the situation,’’ Angelica says. “A lot of people trying to be in the industry believe acting is reaching a certain amount of fame and success. They think if you’re recognized on a world level, you are an actor. But, it’s about the craft, no matter the level.”

While honing her own craft, Angelica takes online business classes through Florida International University, and works 40 hours a week in the NBC Universal (NBCU) gift shop in Rockefeller Plaza’s Comcast Building.

“I’d love to be an NBC page, and be a part of that program,’’ Angelica said.

Until then, she’ll continue to sing, act, write and produce, and take as big a bite out of the Big Apple as she can.

“She does it all,’’ Angel says, proudly.

Gator Makes Selling A Home A Little Tougher For One Local Realtor

Although we live in an area with homes and businesses going up all around, the last few months have been a reminder to some, like Wesley Chapel resident & Realtor Nikki Spirakis, that the Wesley Chapel/New Tampa area is still flush with wildlife, leading to some interesting recent encounters.

When Wesley Chapel’s Nikki Spirakis was learning to become a Realtor, she thinks she might have missed the day they taught about dodging alligators while showing homes.

She could have used that training on March 29. Spirakis and a client were on their way to look at a home in Heritage Isles on Cross Creek Blvd. in New Tampa when they noticed an alligator approximately 6-feet long heading across the lawn and towards the front door of a house just two doors down from the one she was about to show.

“They didn’t cover that in real estate school,’’ she says.

Spirakis stopped her car to, naturally, take photos with her cell phone. The gator eventually made it to the front door and hunkered down. “It was like it was waiting for someone to open the door,’’ Spirakis says.

The gator hung out for a few minutes, then made its way back to the front of the house and moseyed towards the back of the house. While the houses on the other side of the street backed up to water, the alligator headed in the opposite direction towards nothing but dry land and more homes.

Nikki Spirakis

Spirakis, who works for Keller Williams, says she and some of the other neighbors weren’t quite sure what to do.

“We definitely discussed calling somebody, but I was like, this is Florida,’’ Spirakis said. “As it was walking off, everyone just figured we had our funny story for the day.”

Spirakis says her client, who had two young children along with her, wasn’t quite as fearless. While she hopped out of the car to take a look, she quickly hopped back in with her children.

They proceeded to the home Spirakis was showing, but the Realtor knew there would be no sale that day.

“She was wigged out,’’ Spirakis says, laughing. “She made sure the door was closed behind us when we went into the house.”

She did joke to one of her children that she would be a tasty morsel for the gator, but the trip around the home took less than five minutes.

That alligator was the first one she had ever seen in five years living in Florida, other than at Busch Gardens,’’ Spirakis says. “And, the house she was looking at backed up to water. We zoomed right through it and she was like, ‘I don’t like it. I can’t live in this neighborhood.’”

Spirakis says that none of the other Realtors she works with had ever experienced a gator squatter. Realtor Gail Beskid, who works with Spirakis, has said she is going to one day write a book about all her adventures during a decades long career as a real estate agent. While Spirakis’ recent encounter with hippie squatters  — “I could hear the music and smell the incense right away” — may not make Beskid’s book, her reptilian encounter surely will.

“Gail told me I definitely get a chapter for this one,’’ Spirakis says.

It wasn’t the first wildlife moment for Spirakis lately, either. A resident of the new Windsor at Meadow Pointe community off Meadow Pointe Blvd. at the eastern end of S.R. 56 in Wesley Chapel, Spirakis and her husband Erik Hajek recently encountered a cow that walked by their front yard after escaping from a nearby ranch off S.R. 56.

While the neighbors came out to watch the cow walk across the street, cowboys on horses showed up, eventually wrangling the animal and loading it into a trailer.

And, the day after Spirakis avoided the gator, a giant white owl perched itself on a fence about 10 feet away and watched her play tennis.

“I’m on quite a roll lately,’’ she joked.

Summer Camp Expo At FHCI Tomorrow

Event organizer Miriam Cook.

If you want your kids to have some amazing experiences this summer without having to spend frustrating hours searching the internet or making phone calls for options, Family-Friendly Tampa Bay hosts its first ever Family-Friendly Summer Camp Expo at Florida Hospital Center Ice off S.R. 56 in Wesley Chapel tomorrow — Saturday, April 8, 9 a.m.-3 p.m.

Admission is free.

More than 40 camps are signed up to participate in the Expo. Most are located in and around Wesley Chapel, says event organizer Miriam Cook, but camps from across the Tampa Bay area will be there, including the Museum of Science and Industry (MOSI), Busch Gardens, and the Glazer Children’s Museum.

Cook says diverse summer camp options will be presented, including day camps, sports, STEM (science, technology, engineering and math), special needs/autism, art, performing arts and academic camps. “Parents can meet one-on-one with numerous Tampa Bay-area camp directors and staff at the expo, talking with the people behind these programs to find the best fit for their child,” Cook says.

Cook notes that she’s especially excited about offering summer camps for kids with special needs. She says there will be an agency that provides resources for families with children who have disabilities and other special needs. While she didn’t specify camps for only special needs children, she says many of the camps attending the expo are “inclusive” and make accommodations to serve all children, regardless of ability.

“Right now, we have 1,200 families who have pre-registered to attend the event,” says Cook. “When families register for free tickets through Eventbrite.com, they are automatically entered to win a free week of camp. We will be donating several weeks of camp at the expo. We will also have other giveaways, as well.”

For example, each family that attends will receive a coupon for buy-one, get-one-free ice skating at Florida Hospital Center Ice, and the first 250 families to arrive will get a “swag bag.” There will be many activities for the kids, such as face painting, and several mascots will make an appearance, including the mascot from the Tampa Yankees, the Tampa Bay Lighting’s ThunderBug, and the Chick-fil-A cow.

It’s not necessary to pre-register, but it does enter you to win prizes. To register, go to EventBrite.com and search for “Summer Camp Expo” in Tampa (although technically in Wesley Chapel, the site notes that the Expo is in the “Greater Tampa” area). Florida Hospital Center Ice is located at 3173 Cypress Ridge Blvd. in Wesley Chapel. For more information about Family-Friendly Tampa, go to FamilyFriendlyTampaBay.com.

Aldi Headed For Cypress Creek Town Center N.

Wesley Chapel residents eager for the long-rumored Aldi grocery store to open have been keeping their eyes on the S.R. 54 area near The Grove at Wesley Chapel shopping center, where rumors had the German-based chain planned.

Turns out, they were looking in the wrong place.

Instead, it now appears Aldi is headed for the Cypress Creek Town Center North development across the road from Tampa Premium Outlets on S.R. 56.

According to forms filed recently with Pasco County, Aldi is proposing to build a 19,054-sq.-ft. store on the north side of S.R. 56, off Wesley Chapel Blvd. in Lutz (though the forms list Wesley Chapel as its address). Aldi filed a Development Permit Pre-Submittal Meeting request form March 27, as well as a conceptual site plan.

A previously filed pre-app form listed the Northeast corner of Wesley Chapel Blvd. (S.R. 54) and Gateway Blvd. near The Groves as a proposed site for a 17,825-sq.-ft. Aldi store.

A trendy favorite of shoppers, Aldi is a no-frills discount supermarket chain based in Germany, with over 8,000 stores worldwide.

Aldi is able to offer items at cheap prices (and doesn’t accept coupons) because of low overhead. Not every aisle has shelves, as some items are simply stacked in their boxes, shoppers need to bring their own bag, shopping carts will cost you a quarter (which you get back when you return it, saving employees from having to track down carts in the parking lot) and the store sells random non-grocery items as well.

Aldi is aggressively expanding across the U.S., and is currently remodeling many of its stores to give them a more modern look.

Just a little east of the proposed Aldi site and also making its way through the county permitting pipeline is Darden Restaurant chain Bahama Breeze Island Grill, which had it’s pre-app meeting on Jan. 30 and is looking to build one of its popular restaurants in Cypress Creek Town Center North, at 25663 Sierra Center Blvd.

The new restaurant would be 7,987-sq.-ft. with an outdoor seating area and 168 parking spaces.

Bahama Breeze, whose nearest locations are in Brandon and between Tampa and Clearwater off the Courtney Campbell Causeway at Rocky Point, specializes in Caribbean-inspired food and tropical drinks.

Porter Donates $2,000 For WC Rotary’s Honduras Trip

JD Porter (far right) donated $2,000 to the WC Rotary Club for its upcoming trip to Honduras.

The Wesley Chapel Rotary Club is planning its sixth trip to Honduras, and received a boost in that effort from local businessman J.D. Porter, who donated $2,000 to the Rotary at their March 29 luncheon at Quail Hollow Golf & Country Club.

The club has raised roughly $25,000 for the upcoming trip. A group of Rotarians will spend a week in a country that is not only one of the poorest and neediest in South America, but also the most dangerous, as one Rotarian pointed out at the March 29 luncheon (to nervous laughter, perhaps). Honduras has the highest murder rate in the world, with more than 90 homicides per 100,000 people.

Members of the club have taken the trip for five years in conjunction with Pure Water for the World (PWW), a 501 (c)(3) non profit organization whose mission is to improve the lives of families in poor countries through sustainable water solutions, sanitation and hygiene education.

Porter made the donation in the name of the Wiregrass Ranch Foundation, his family’s not-for-profit corporation, which was  founded in 2012.

He said the foundation is about, “the community, as we continue to see it grow. We started this, and we take no salaries, we just get out and raise money so we can have it available for local needs in the community. We’ve had a great time with it. And, we’ve raised a bunch of money.”

The Honduras trip turned out to be something near and dear to Porter’s heart.

He said his grandfather, after selling the first piece of Wiregrass Ranch property (which is now Saddlebrook), “one of the first things he did was he bought a boat.’’ Porter said he spent the next 2-3 years fishing in Central and South America,  in places like Nicaragua and Venezuela. But, his favorite place was Honduras.

While recently cleaning out some of his family’s old stuff, Porter says he discovered papers that listed items that his grandfather had continued to send shipments of to Honduras, items like toothbrushes, band-aids, gum, candy, “random stuff that a lot of us take for granted.”

“That’s why this clicked with me…not only is it special to give back to such a great group here, it’s almost like continuing a legacy,’’ Porter said. “That’s kind of special. So, I feel honored to present a check for $2,000 so you guys can get out there and do something awesome for people, making a difference in someone’s life who truly deserves it.”

For more info about Porter’s foundation, visit WiregrassRanchFoundation.org. For the WC Rotary, visit WCRotary.org.