Yearly Archives: 2011

HANUKKAH AT 92YTRIBECA

RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK is part of Chinese-and-a-movie double feature on Christmas Day at 92YTribeca

92YTribeca
200 Hudson St. at Canal St.
December 22-25
212-415-5500
www.92y.org

We’ve been celebrating Christmas by going out for Chinese food and checking out a new movie long before it became the fashionable thing to do, resulting in longer waits than ever to get into our favorite Chinatown restaurants, which doesn’t make us very happy. So we’re thrilled that such places as 92YTribeca offer special Christmas packages that combine the two. On December 25, the fifth day of Hanukkah, beginning at 2:00 ($25-$30), you can start chowing down on some chow mein while watching the Steven Spielberg adventure double feature of Raiders of the Lost Ark and Jurassic Park. The downtown offshoot of the 92nd St. Y will also be honoring the Festival of Lights with two other holiday events. On December 22 at 7:00 ($18-$22), the fourth annual Beer + Latke Hanukkah Celebration will include Brooklyn Brewery expert Dan Moss’s pairings of beer with chef Russell Moss’s gourmet potato pancakes, along with candle lighting, dreidel games, a trivia contest hosted by Allison Tick, and Rabbi Dan Ain answering any “December dilemma” questions you might have. And on Christmas eve at 8:00 ($13-$15), Liam McEneaney will host Hanukkomedy, with comics Sandy Marks, MC Mr. Napkins, Todd Barry, and the always delightful Janeane Garofalo. Chag sameach, everyone!

ALVIN AILEY AMERICAN DANCE THEATER: ALL NEW

Rennie Harris’s specially commissioned “Home” examines the AIDS crisis in a positive way (photo by Paul Kolnik)

Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater
New York City Center
130 West 56th St. between Sixth & Seventh Aves.
Through January 1, $25-$150
212-581-1212
www.alvinailey.org
www.nycitycenter.org

In our exclusive twi-ny talk with Robert Battle last month, the new Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater artistic director discussed his plans for the future of the famed company, explaining, “If it’s one choreographer’s work, it’s harder to do that, but when you’re choosing works from many different choreographers in one season you get the sense of that yin and yang, that stretching forward of busting the whole thing wide open but yet keeping the traditional so that the company stays rooted.” Battle certainly busted things wide open on December 13, when he introduced an all-new program of works that provided a telling example of where he is heading. The evening began with a new production of Ailey’s 1970 piece, “Streams,” an elegant, balletic dance restaged by associate artistic director Masazumi Chaya with affection for Ailey’s original and Miloslav Kabelac’s percussion-and-xylophone-heavy score but lacking deep emotion. That was followed by Battle’s own short but wonderfully entertaining 1999 work, “Takademe,” in which Kirven James Boyd, wearing a ruffled red Missoni outfit, danced wildly to Naren Budhakar’s live vocal performance in what became a fun, scatlike speaking-in-tongues verbal and physical showdown. Thus, Battle kicked things off with the traditional, then announced his arrival, leading to the second half of the evening, the explosive pairing of Rennie Harris’s newly commissioned “Home” and the Ailey premiere of Ohad Naharin’s revelatory “Minus 16,” from 1999. In the former, fourteen dancers, including rehearsal director Matthew Rushing, all wearing street clothes, gathered together in a group before letting loose, moving to music by Dennis Ferrer and Raphael Xavier in a work inspired by actual responses to the “Fight HIV Your Way” initiative. A fanciful tribute to Ailey himself, who died of AIDS in 1989, “Home” is hopeful and uplifting, an excellent lead-in to the grand finale, one of the most cutting-edge works ever performed by AAADT.

Ohad Naharin’s “Minus 16” is a highlight of Alvin Ailey’s New York season at City Center (photo by Paul Kolnik)

With intermission not quite over, a solitary man stands near the front of the stage, dressed in Hasidic clothing, slowly beginning to move as the audience makes its way back inside the theater. It’s impossible not to initially think of the racial tensions that have long existed between African Americans and the Hasidic community in New York City, primarily in Crown Heights, but as he is joined by more dancers and the music turns from the John Buzon Trio’s “It Must Be True” to the traditional standard “Hava Nagila,” those thoughts disappear as Naharin’s unique Gaga movement language takes over. The central part of the piece is an exhilarating section in which eighteen dancers (the number eighteen represents the word “life” in Hebrew) are seated in a semicircle, performing on, under, on top of, or next to their chairs as they follow one another around one by one in order as verses are added on to the Passover children’s song “Echad Mi Yode’a.” It’s as if City Center has suddenly become home to a breathtaking, rather unique bar mitzvah celebration, a riotous party that soon involves inviting audience members, including yours truly, onto the stage to join in duets with members of the Ailey crew. (We have to thank the marvelous Belen Estrada for not making us look like a complete idiot up there.) Things eventually slow down but pick up yet again in Naharin’s sparkling piece, which also uses music by Vivaldi and the Beach Boys in addition to “Over the Rainbow” and “Hooray for Hollywood.” A virtuoso work that signals a major step for AAADT, “Minus 16” is dedicated to Naharin’s late wife, Mari Kajiwara, who was an Ailey dancer from 1970 to 1984 and Alvin Ailey’s rehearsal assistant. Battle made a major statement with this all-new program, one that promises a bright and exciting future under his leadership. (“Streams,” “Home,” and “Minus 16” will all be performed on December 21 at 8:00, along with Joyce Trisler’s “Journey.” “Home” is also scheduled for December 23, 28, 30, and 31, with “Minus 16” scheduled for December 25, 28, and 31, at varying times.)

HANUKKAH AT THE MUSEUM OF JEWISH HERITAGE

Husband-and-wife-team Aaron Hartman and Alicia Jo Rabins, the leaders of Girls in Trouble, will give a special Hanukkah concert at the Museum of Jewish Heritage on December 21

Museum of Jewish Heritage — A Living Memorial to the Holocaust
36 Battery Pl.
646-437-4202
www.mjhnyc.org

The Museum of Jewish Heritage will be celebrating the Festival of Lights with two special presentations this week. On December 21 at 7:00 ($15), Brooklyn’s Girls in Trouble, led by singer-violinist Alicia Jo Rabins and her husband, bassist Aaron Hartman, will play dark tales of biblical women featured on their two JDub albums, their eponymous 2009 debut and this year’s Half You Half Me, which include such songs as “I Was a Desert,” “I Fell Off My Camel,” “We Are Androgynous,” “Bethesda,” and “Waltz for a Beheading.” (Sadly, JDub Records, which focused on music by Jewish artists, recently announced it is closing because of financial difficulties.) The concert is being held in conjunction with the museum’s current exhibit “Emma Lazarus: Poet of Exiles.” On Christmas Day, MJH will be hosting “I Lift My Lamp: A Statue-esque Hanukkah,” with arts and crafts for children ages three to ten, family-friendly tours, and a trio of film screenings, beginning at 11:00 with An American Tail (Don Bluth, 1986) and continuing at 1:00 with Alfred Hitchcock’s 1942 espionage thriller Sabaoteur and at 3:00 with Ghostbusters II (Ivan Reitman, 1989). In addition to the Emma Lazarus exhibition, also on view are “Deadly Medicine: Creating the Master Race,” “Voices of Liberty,” and “Let My People Go! The Soviet Jewry Movement, 1967-1989.”

BIAN DANG TAIWANESE LUNCH BOX

This is the last week to get the amazing Taiwanese fried chicken over rice with minced pork sauce at Bian Dang food truck (photo by twi-ny/Del-Ann Henry)

Multiple locations
Through Friday, December 23, 11:30 am – 2:00 pm
212-695-5995
www.biandangnyc.com

Every Thursday, we make the short trip from our office to Park & 53rd, where we anxiously get on the increasingly long line at the Bian Dang Taiwanese Lunch Box food truck. As we get closer to the blue truck, which is covered in cheerful, colorful flowers and was previously known as Cravings (the old name is still on their license plate), we keep praying that none of the three people inside, including the great Diana Yang, Nick Lin, and Ronald Chu, comes out with the dreaded black tape and places it on the menu over the chicken and rice, signaling that they have run out of one of the best truck lunches in the city. We spend much of our week dreaming about this dish, a connected leg and thigh marinated in Taiwanese flavoring and then flash fried, served over white rice topped with a tangy minced pork sauce. Part of the reason the line is so long is because we can’t stop telling everyone how awesome the fried chicken is, so it’s our own damn fault when they do run out before we get to order. In those cases, the pork chops are excellent as well, although we’ve yet to try the fried tianbula fish cake. The steamed pork dumplings are fairly standard, but we can also heartily recommend the zongzi sticky rice, filled with peanuts and vegetables and available in meat or nonmeat options. One thing they do run out of quickly is the tea egg, so you better get there early if you want one of these dark delights. We were crushed earlier this month when Diana told us that this will be their last week out on the street; the truck will be hibernating for the winter after lunch on December 23. Fortunately, Bian Dang does have a small shop located in Food Gallery 32 at 11 West 32nd St. that’s open year-round; in the meantime, here’s the schedule for the truck’s last week of the season: Monday on 50th St. between Sixth & Seventh, Tuesday on 24th between Park & Madison, Wednesday at Coenties Slip at Water St., Thursday on 53rd between Park & Lex, and Friday at 47th & Park.

LITTLE RED RIDING HOOD: EPITAPH

The Acorn Theater at Theatre Row
410 West 42nd St. between Ninth & Tenth Aves.
Tuesday, December 20, $51.25 – $71.25, 7:00
www.hdcny.com

The Hip-Hop Dance Conservatory Repertory Company is presenting a very different take on the classic fairy tale “Little Red Riding Hood” on December 20 with Epitaph. Artistic director Safi A. Thomas has created a brutal, violent version of Charles Perrault’s story of the girl in red who meets the big bad wolf, incorporating elements from tales by such other masters as the Brothers Grimm and Hans Christian Andersen (“The Little Match Girl”). The thirty-minute piece, which explores issues of gender, sexuality, patriarchy, and female empowerment, will be followed by a thirty-minute Q&A with the cast and creative team and a forty-five-minute reception. Premium tickets include a commemorative booklet, with part of the proceeds benefiting the Crime Victims Treatment Center of St. Luke’s Roosevelt Hospital.

AN EVENING IN MEMORY OF MICHAL THE GIRL

Friends, fans, and strangers will gather together and reach out to help at 12/19 benefit for Micahl the Girl

The Canal Room
285 West Broadway at Canal St.
Monday, December 19, donations accepted at the door, 8:00
212-941-8100
www.canalroom.com
www.thesnydertwins.com
www.michalthegirl.com

On November 25, 2011, forty-four-year-old Michal Lura Friedman died after giving birth to twins. She and her husband, Jay Snyder, had been trying to have children for seven years. “She wanted to be a mother more than anything else in the world,” Snyder told the Daily News shortly after his wife died following complications from a C-section. The tragic story of Friedman, Snyder, and twins Jackson and Reverie has captured the heart of the city. On December 19, friends, family, colleagues, fans, and others will come together to celebrate the life of Friedman, a Buddhist who recorded under the name Michal the Girl, and to raise much-needed funds for Snyder and the babies, at a benefit being held at the Canal Room. Among the performers will be Tiff Randol, Drew Blood, Cresta Kruger and Briana Winter of Kisser, Chris Goerke, Mike Beans Benigno, Todd Rengal, Mike Manza, Steve Dawson, Ben Toro, Shannon Conley, Dave Doobinin, Sarah Greenwood, and Joe McGinty. A local favorite, Michal the Girl released two albums, 2001’s Tongue Tied and 2005’s Strung Out, featuring such songs as “Blanket,” “Bittersweet,” “Transmission,” “Do Over,” and “Eyes Wide Open.” Sadly, Michal the Girl’s official website still lists what would have been her most recent performance, December 6 at Symphony Space.

NEW YORK CITY GAY MEN’S CHORUS: HOLIDAY HOUSE OF LOVE

The Town Hall
123 West 43rd St. between Sixth Ave. & Broadway
Sunday, December 18, $40-$75, 3:00 & 8:00
212-840-2824
www.the-townhall-nyc.org
www.nycgmc.org

The New York City Gay Men’s Chorus, consisting of more than two hundred gay men, will dish out plenty of seasonal spirit on Sunday at two “Holiday House of Love” concerts at the Town Hall. Celebrating peace, love, and unity, the chorus will present original songs and familiar classics, albeit with jazz and gospel twists. Special guests include Broadway star Lillias White, who won a Tony for The Life, and the first openly gay Anglican bishop, V. Gene Robinson. Chorus member Ryan Scobie has been actively promoting the shows, which take place at 3:00 and 8:00, on Facebook, promising, “You get to see me be a church lady, a lion, a sexy elf, and sing a solo. What more could you ask for?!” We couldn’t agree more.