Luigi Lucioni, “Paul Cadmus,” oil on canvas, 1928, part of “Youth and Beauty: Art of the American Twenties” (Brooklyn Museum, Dick S. Ramsay Fund)
Brooklyn Museum
200 Eastern Parkway
Saturday, December 3, free, 5:00 – 11:00 (some events require free tickets distributed in advance at the Visitor Center)
212-864-5400 www.brooklynmuseum.org
Don’t be fooled by the theme of this month’s First Saturday party at the Brooklyn Museum. It might be called “Youth and Beauty,” but you can expect an old-fashioned good time, as it refers to the Eastern Parkway institution’s new exhibit subtitled “Art of the American Twenties,” featuring works by such artists as Thomas Hart Benton, Edward Hopper, Gaston Lachaise, Georgia O’Keeffe, and Alfred Stieglitz. On tap for the free evening is jazz and blues from Hazmat Modine (5:00 to 7:00), a 1920s costume contest (5:30), a collaboration between spoken-word artists and musicians and tap dancer Lisa La Touche that references the Jazz Age and the Harlem Renaissance (5:30), curator Catherine Morris discussing “Eva Hesse Spectres 1960” (6:00), ballroom dance lessons from Nathan Bugh, including the Charleston and the Lindy Hop (6:00), a painting workshop (6:30 – 8:30), a tour of “Youth and Beauty” with museum guide Emily Sachar (7:00), a dance party hosted by the Harlem Renaissance Orchestra (8:00 – 10:00), Farah Griffin discussing Wallace Thurman’s 1929 book, The Blacker the Berry (9:00), and a bodybuilding showcase hosted by Phil Sottile (9:00). The young and the beautiful can always be found at the Brooklyn Museum on First Saturdays, but this month more than ever.
A CHRISTMAS CAROL
Abrons Arts Center, Henry Street Settlement
466 Grand St. at Pitt St.
Thursday – Sunday through December 18, $20
212-352-3101 www.abronsartscenter.org www.reidfarrington.com
Combining intricately choreographed movement with film projection and live theatrical elements, Reid Farrington retells classic tales in unique, entertaining ways. In Gin & “It,” he deconstructed and reconstructed Alfred Hitchcock’s 1948 thriller, Rope, with actors playing characters in the movie as well as behind-the-scenes personnel who change the set and capture parts of the film on translucent screens. In The Passion Project, Laura K. Nicoll gave a dazzling performance as the tortured protagonist of Carl Th. Dreyer’s 1928 silent epic, The Passion of Joan of Arc, moving within a ten-foot-by-ten-foot square and reaching for various wood-framed screens that pick up scenes from the film.
The New York City-based Farrington has turned to a holiday favorite for his current project, A Christmas Carol, in which Nicoll, Christopher Loar, John Forkner, Jennifer L. Reed, and Sandrine Hudi re-create the seasonal ghost story using images from thirty-five different cinematic versions of Charles Dickens’s classic tale of Ebenezer Scrooge, Jacob Marley, and the Cratchit family. As he prepared for the opening of the multimedia production, which runs Thursdays through Sundays at the Abrons Arts Center through December 18, Farrington answered a few questions for twi-ny about A Christmas Carol, his unusual staging technique, and who might get the Farrington treatment next.
twi-ny: In September, you gave a sneak-peek preview of A Christmas Carol and advised us to come to an early performance in case the production got shut down for copyright violation. Is that a legitimate fear you have?
Reid Farrington: That fear sort of waxes and wanes in me on a day-to-day basis. There are a lot of ways that I’ve historically gotten around this — there are of course fair use and parody laws, which, if it came to it, I’d be falling under. But if I were in violation, there’s nothing like the threat of being shut down to sell tickets.
twi-ny: The show features clips from dozens of versions of A Christmas Carol. Were there any you were unable to get?
Reid Farrington: I had initially intended to use all seventy film versions of A Christmas Carol for this piece — there are in fact seventy I uncovered. But this started to become impossible because some of the versions are, of course, adaptations with dialogue so far removed from the original that it would be unrecognizable to the viewer if I only used a clip. For example, I found a disturbing little [VH1 original movie] called A Diva’s Christmas with Vanessa Williams — which would just gum up the works (on so many levels). So I had to place a loose restriction on myself of using only Christmas Carols that dance around Dickens’s original text. My piece uses about thirty-five films total.
Laura K. Nicoll and Reid Farrington are teaming up again for A CHRISTMAS CAROL
twi-ny: Do you have a particular favorite?
Reid Farrington: My favorite version is hands down Scrooged with Bill Murray. It manages to weave original text around modern adaptation perfectly.
twi-ny: How did you originally come up with your unique staging technique, which involves actors capturing projections on framed canvases?
Reid Farrington: I have always been obsessed with the idea of actually walking into a movie. There’s that image from so many movies (or maybe just one?) of a little kid putting his hand through a screen — I forget what it’s from, but that’s it. I think that’s the spark that led to this obsession of having live actors interact with screen images. That flexible reality is so exciting to me.
I also love the sparseness of a projection surface. It makes the work look easier than it is. There are no wires in a projection surface, no gears, no visible computer, nothing. It’s a simple dance of light. The wires, gears, computer, and tech are hidden somewhere above our heads — very like an old movie house. The staging and actors’ movement then comes naturally out of that dance of light. It’s hard to prep how the staging will look until the actors are engaged with that light in rehearsal. This I find really exciting too.
twi-ny: You’ve now taken on Hitchcock, Dreyer, and Dickens; who will get the Farrington treatment next?
Reid Farrington: I have been dreaming of Muhammad Ali and Joe Frazier fight footage and really dancing and exploding those images. I also have an idea that my wife, playwright Sara Farrington, and I have been banging around for a while involving the big film noir movies of the 1940s. Sara is obsessed with Double Indemnity, and I think it would be a great movie to explode too.
Little did we know that when we raved about the Big Sleep’s just-released Sleep Forever CD back in February 2008 that they would take their name and album title so seriously, going into a four-year recording hibernation. At last, Brooklyn-based bassist Sonya Balchandani and guitarist Danny Barria have reemerged, going back to their roots of playing acoustic guitar and keyboards in their living room as they prepare to tour behind their first album in four years, Nature Experiments (Frenchkiss, January 31, 2012). On their website, Balchandani explains, “We took a little break, worked on stuff separately and just lived our lives,” while Barria adds, “It obviously took longer than we thought it would, but I wasn’t feeling rushed or pressured. I just wanted to write good songs.” With GarageBand replacing live drums, Nature Experiments features ten tracks, including “Valentine,” “Ghosts in Bodies,” “Wood on the Water,” and “Meet Your Maker”; you can download the song “Ace” by liking their Facebook page. The Big Sleep played Brooklyn Bowl last week and head into Manhattan on December 2 for an 11:00 gig at Mercury Lounge, preceded by DIVE at 10:00 and followed by Gauntlet Hair at 12 midnight. After we saw them at Celebrate Brooklyn back in the summer of 2007, we wrote, “The trio puts out a loud, thrilling sound, with guitar screeching over deep, darkly disguised melodies. Though primarily playing instrumentals, occasionally Sonya or Danny will sing, but their strength lies in their propulsive power; it’s a shock that it’s only three people making this beautiful noise. Live, Danny turns into a whirling dervish, twisting around and covering his face with his long hair as he tears apart his six-string.” We can’t wait to see what they’ve got going on at Mercury, where they’ll be previewing songs from the new record.
Vice Minister Xi Yan (Jennifer Lim) and sign maker Daniel Cavanaugh (Gary Wilmes) talk business and more in CHINGLISH
Longacre Theatre
220 West 48th St. between Broadway & Eighth Ave.
$31.50 – $126.50 www.chinglishbroadway.com
The current signage on Broadway is packed with some pretty major star power, with such names as Samuel L. Jackson, Kim Cattrall, Hugh Jackman, Stockard Channing, Alan Rickman, Marlo Thomas, Daniel Radcliffe, Angela Bassett, Harry Connick Jr., and others adorning various theater marquees. But don’t let that steer you away from a charming little show at the Longacre that might not feature big Hollywood names but still serves up quite a tasty treat. In Chinglish, Gary Wilmes stars as Daniel Cavanaugh, an American businessman who comes to the relatively small city of Guiyang, China — home to a mere four million people — to convince them that his Ohio company should make all the signs for their new state-of-the-art cultural center. With the help of British consultant Peter Timms (Stephen Pucci), Cavanaugh meets with the somewhat goofy Minister Cai (Larry Lei Zhang), who seems interested, but Vice Minister Xi Yan (Jennifer Lim) is far more dubious of hiring Ohio Signage. But soon the tables are turned, and Daniel finds himself joining forces with Xi — in more ways than one — as secrets are revealed about all four major characters and relationships are severely tested. Written by David Henry Hwang (M. Butterfly) and directed by Leigh Silverman (Well), Chinglish is a sweet romantic comedy about communication, in both the boardroom and the bedroom. Setting China’s economic boom against America’s continuing collapse, Hwang and Silverman focus on how language and meaning can bring people together or tear them apart. The play is filled with jokes about Chinese signs and bad translations, but at its heart it’s about honesty and being “a good man,” as Xi says to Daniel. David Korins’s scenic design keeps things moving wonderfully, as rotating sets circle in and out of one another, offering cute vignettes that make clever use of every moment. Chinglish, produced by the team behind August: Osage County, is more chef’s special than combination plate, a timely and funny look at how people communicate in the modern age.
Another holiday manages to slip into Lord & Taylor’s annual window display this year (photo by twi-ny/mdr)
Lord & Taylor
424 Fifth Ave. between 38th & 39th Sts.
212-391-3344 www.lordandtaylor.com
Inspired by an illustration found in their archives, Lord & Taylor’s 2011 holiday windows follow the story of a young girl named Taylor who seeks to answer the question “What is Christmas made of?” The display includes winter scenes (a reindeer carousel, children making snow angels, a mother and daughter baking cookies), supplemented by framed drawings by local schoolchildren and seasonal music performed by the Young People’s Chorus of New York City, including the new commission “What Is Christmas Made Of?”
Cyril Tuschi seeks to uncover the truth behind Mikhail Khodorkovsky and his controversial imprisonment in compelling documentary (courtesy of Kino Lorber)
On October 25, 2003, Russian oligarch Mikhail Khodorkovsky was arrested for tax fraud and has been in prison ever since. The controversial story of the eight-billion-dollar man is told in German director Cyril Tuschi’s political-thriller documentary Khodorkovsky. Combining Michael Moore’s rugged determination to meet with GM CEO Roger Smith in Roger & Me with a police-procedural narrative, Tuschi (Slight Changes in Temperature and Mind) desperately tries to speak with the imprisoned Khodorkovsky, but for most of the film he only gets to communicate him through letters while instead talking with his first wife, his mother, his son, former business partners, spies, and various politicians, some of whom share illuminating details about the life and career of the seemingly equally loved and despised socialist-turned-capitalist and others who adamantly refuse to say anything about the onetime head of the Yukos oil company, perhaps out of fear of retribution. Khodorkovsky is alternately shown to be a philanthropic businessman who founded the Open Russia Foundation charitable project and a ruthless tyrant whose giant ego resulted in his publicly butting heads with former Russian president Vladimir Putin, the reason why many think he is in jail — and might never get out. Tuschi supplements the film with black-and-white constructivist animation of Khodorkovsky, placing him firmly in between socialism and capitalism as he seeks to lead Russia into a new age. Featuring music by Estonian composer Arvo Pärt and narration by Jean-Marc Barr and Harvey Friedman, Khodorkovsky paints a fascinating portrait of contemporary Russia as well as of one of its most enigmatic and mysterious figures. Tuschi and Khodorkovsky’s son Pavel will be at Film Forum on November 30 to talk about the documentary and its subject following the 7:50 screening.
For the twenty-third annual World AIDS Day, which provides “an opportunity for people worldwide to unite in the fight against HIV, to show their support for people living with HIV, and to commemorate people who have died,” artists and filmmakers Jim Hodges, Carlos Marques da Cruz, and Encke King have joined together to make the hour-long Untitled, a montage that documents the history of AIDS activism, inspired by the life and career of influential artist Félix González-Torres, who died of AIDS in 1996. The film will be screened for free at museums and other arts venues all over the country as part of Day With(out) Art / World AIDS Day. The film will be shown at a number of venues in New York City, including the IFC Center, where Creative Time will host a panel discussion at 7:45 (advance RSVP required) with Malik Gaines, Shanti Avirgan, and Che Gossett, moderated by Nato Thompson. You can also catch the film at the FLAG Art Foundation in Chelsea, the Whitney, La Galleria at La MaMa, the Museum of Arts & Design, Housing Works, the New Museum, the School of Visual Arts, the Gladstone Gallery (in conjunction with Hodges’s current exhibit), the Brooklyn Museum, Exit Art (with guest speakers Zachary Barnett and Dr. Demetre Daskalakis), the Grey Art Gallery, and at Participant Inc. on the Lower East Side, where Justin Vivian Bond, whose exhibition “The Fall of the House of Whimsy” is on view there through December 18, will perform a song accompanying the screening. In addition, Visual AIDS has put together an extensive resource guide about the film, including “Suggestions for Engagement,” an HIV/AIDS timeline and alphabetical vocabulary, important links, and other information “in an effort to honor the sense of endlessness that Untitled suggests [and] for provoking both public and private conversation.”