Tag Archives: columbus day parade

REPRESENTATION: ONE OCTOBER

Clay Pigeon

Clay Pigeon interviews construction worker Mark Paris in One October

ONE OCTOBER (Rachel Shuman, 2017)
Nitehawk Cinema
136 Metropolitan Ave. between Berry St. & Wythe Ave.
Thursday, October 4, 7:15
718-384-3980
oneoctoberfilm.com
nitehawkcinema.com

In October 2008, in the midst of the Barack Obama / John McCain presidential election and the mortgage crisis, filmmaker Rachel Shuman took to the streets of New York City with Clay Pigeon, host of The Dusty Show on WFMU, interviewing people as they made their way across Manhattan and other boroughs. The Boston-born, Beacon-based Shuman intended to capture a moment in time and not release the film until after Obama’s second term ended to see how life in the city changed. The result is One October, a kind of love letter to who we were, are, and will be. Inspired by Chris Marker’s 1963 film Le Joli Mai, in which the French director interviewed people on the streets of Paris, Shuman follows Pigeon, Radio Shack mini tape recorder in hand, as he wanders through Central Park, Harlem, Washington Square Park, the Lower East Side, Madison Square Park, the Financial District, the Brooklyn Bridge, Willets Point, Tompkins Square Park, and other locations, approaching a series of men and women who share fascinating details about their personal and professional lives; the Iowa-born Pigeon has an innate knack for quickly understanding his subjects, asking intuitive questions that often surprise them. He speaks with a former freelance photographer who now works construction to make more money for his family, an ambitious lawyer who wants to work at the UN, a mixed-race couple sitting on a bench, a woman railing against the gentrification of Harlem, and a homeless man who turns the tables on the soft-spoken Pigeon. “It’s always interesting to see how the random collection of souls falls together and how the next chapter bears fruit or lies fallow,” he says on his radio show.

In between interviews, cinematographer David Sampliner beautifully photographs trees, buildings, storefronts, statues, the Halloween Parade, political rallies, the Columbus Day Parade, a housing protest, the Blessing of the Animals at the Cathedral Church of St. John the Divine, birds flying across blue skies, Muslims praying at the end of Ramadan, and Jews performing the ritual of Tashlich, casting away their sins by throwing pieces of bread into the East River. The shots, which include classic New York restaurants as well as institutions that have since closed, are accompanied by a bittersweet score by Paul Brill, featuring cellist Dave Eggar. Director, editor, and producer Shuman (Negotiations) has created a loving warning about the future of a city that has been undergoing major changes since October 2008. Executive produced by three-time Oscar nominee Edward Norton, the hour-long One October is having a special October screening at Nitehawk Cinema as part of the “Representation” series, which highlights the scarcity of women directors in the industry; the film will be preceded by Jon Bunning’s fifteen-minute short The Tables, about Ping-Pong in Bryant Park, and followed by a Q&A with Shuman and WFMU host Amanda Nazario.

COLUMBUS DAY PARADE

Italian heritage will be celebrated at annual Columbus Day Parade (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Fifth Ave. from 44th to 72nd Sts.
Monday, October 8, free, 11:30 am – 3:00 pm
www.columbuscitizensfd.org

More than one hundred groups and thirty-five thousand marchers will make their way up Fifth Ave. today in celebration of the Italian heritage and the spirit of Christopher Columbus for the sixty-eighth annual Columbus Day Parade. Grand Marshal Mario J. Gabelli will lead a contingent of politicians, high school marching bands, military organizations, celebrities, and more; past grand marshals have included Paul Sorvino, Bobby Valentine, Dan Marino, Henry Mancini, Danny Aiello, Vincent Gardenia, Yogi Berra, and Frank Capra.

COLUMBUS DAY PARADE 2011

Parade and other events celebrate Italian cultural heritage (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Fifth Ave. from 44th to 72nd Sts.
Monday, October 10, free, 11:30 am – 3:00 pm
www.columbuscitizensfd.org

More than one hundred groups and thirty-five thousand marchers will make their way up Fifth Ave. on Monday in celebration of the Italian heritage and the spirit of Christopher Columbus for the sixty-seventh annual Columbus Day Parade. Grand Marshal Joseph Plumeri will lead such participants as Pia Toscano, the Sacred Heart University Marching Band, the Stony Brook University Marching Band, the cast of the musical The Italian Fairy, folk dancers, and many more; past grand marshals have included Paul Sorvino, Bobby Valentine, Dan Marino, Henry Mancini, Danny Aiello, Vincent Gardenia, Yogi Berra, and Frank Capra. In addition to the centerpiece parade, there is a cultural exhibit in Grand Central Terminal’s Vanderbilt Hall (through October 10), a wreath-laying ceremony in Columbus Circle (October 9, 9:30 – 11:00 am), a mass at St. Patrick’s Cathedral (October 10, 9:30 – 10:45 am), and a concert at the Rose Theater in Frederick P. Rose Hall celebrating the 150th anniversary of Italy’s unification, with the Petruzzelli Theater Orchestra from Bari, soprano Marina Shaguch, tenor Massimiliano Pisapia, and Maestro Alberto Veronesi (October 9, $100-$250, 4:00).

COLUMBUS DAY PARADE

The Columbus Day Parade will march up Fifth Ave. today (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Fifth Ave. from 47th to 72nd Sts.
Monday, October 11, free, 11:30 am – 3:00 pm
www.columbuscitizensfd.org

The Columbus Day Parade used to celebrate the discovery of America by Christopher Columbus. The only problem was that there were already people living there. So now it “celebrates the spirit of exploration and courage that inspired Christopher Columbus’s 1492 expedition and the important contributions Italian-Americans have made to the United States.” Beginning at 11:30 this morning at 47th St., high school marching bands, community organizations, folk groups, and more will make their way up Fifth Ave., dancing, singing, and paying tribute to the vast history of Italians in America. This year’s sixty-sixth annual parade, led by Grand Marshal Maria Bartiromo and honorees Frank Bisignano (the CEO of JPMorganChase) and Jason DeSena Trennert (the founder of Strategas Research Partners), features special live performances from PINOCCHIO, THE ITALIAN MUSICAL. Related events include a wreath laying at Columbus Circle at 9:30 and a cultural exhibition at Vanderbilt Hall in Grand Central Terminal.

COLUMBUS MONUMENT

Columbus towers over redesigned and renovated Columbus Circle plaza (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Columbus towers over redesigned and renovated Columbus Circle plaza (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Columbus Circle Rotary
Intersection of Broadway, Eighth Ave., & 59th St.
http://www.nycgovparks.org

On October 12, 1892, in honor of the four hundredth anniversary of Christopher Columbus sailing into the New World, the newspaper Il Progresso Italo-Americano presented the city with a statue of the famed explorer. Designed by Sicilian sculptor Gaetano Russo and fabricated by Fonderia Nelli in Rome, the Columbus Monument was dedicated “in imperishable remembrance.” Columbus, carved out of Carrara marble, stands atop a seventy-seven-foot-high column, his left hand on his hip, his right hand grasping the rudder behind his back, with his toes dangling perilously over the base, as he looks out upon his supposed discovery.

The Bedford Column is adorned with bronze anchors, the ship prows of the Nina, the Pinta, and the Santa Maria, and the explorer’s Italian name, Cristoforo Colombo. The east side of the column includes the following quotes: “To Christopher Columbus . . . The Italians, resident in America, / scoffed at before, / during the voyage, menaced, / after it, chained, / as generous as oppressed, / to the world he gave a world.” and “Joy and glory / never uttered a more thrilling call / than that which resounded / from the conquered ocean / in sight of the first American island / Land! Land!” Both quotes are translated in Italian on the opposite side.

Explorer watches over entrance to Columbus Citizens Foundation at 8 East 69th St. (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Explorer watches over entrance to Columbus Citizens Foundation at 8 East 69th St. (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

COLUMBUS CELEBRATION

Multiple locations
Admission: free
http://www.columbuscitizensfd.org
There are a number of special events surrounding Columbus Day, sponsored by the Columbus Citizens Foundation. Interestingly, with all the debate the past few years over Christopher Columbus and his legacy, the foundation currently declares that it is “committed to fostering an appreciation of Italian-American heritage and achievement . . . through a broad range of philanthropic and cultural activities,” with no mention of the explorer at all.

Monday, October 12 Sixty-fifth annual Columbus Day Parade, Fifth Ave. from 44th to 79th Sts., featuring Grand Marshal Kenneth G. Langone, 11:30 am — 3:00 pm

Through Saturday, October 17 Exhibits in Vanderbilt Hall, including “Veneto: The Future Has an Antique Heart,” a Bridge between Venice and New YorkGrand Central Terminal, 7:00 am — 10:00 pm