Yearly Archives: 2011

1st IRISH 2011: A FESTIVAL OF IRISH THEATRE

Mabou Mines examines the life of James Joyce’s daughter in LUCIA’S CHAPTERS OF COMING FORTH BY DAY at 1st Irish theater festival

Multiple venues
September 5 – October 2, free – $55
www.1stirish.org

The fourth annual 1st Irish theater festival begins on Labor Day, comprising eight theatrical productions and five special events continuing through October 2. Among the plays are Teresa Deevy’s complicated love story Temporal Powers, directed by Jonathan Bank at the Mint; Brenda Murphy and Donna O’Connor’s A Night with George, about a woman’s obsession with George Clooney, presented by the Brassneck Theatre Company at the Times Square Arts Center; Deirdre Kinahan’s Bogboy, which follows the life of a heroin addict, at the Irish Arts Center; and Mabou Mines’ Lucia’s Chapters of Coming Forth by Day, a multimedia examination of James Joyce’s daughter, Lucia. On September 16, Terry Loane’s film Mickybo & Me will screen at the New York Irish Center, “The North Face – A Panel Discussion on Arts in Northern Ireland” will take place at the Bruno Walter Auditorium on September 20, the panel discussion “Challenge for the Actor” will be held at NYU Glucksman Ireland House on September 22, the Origin Theatre Laboratory will host “Breaking Ground,” featuring new work by six playwrights, on September 24 at A.R.T. New York Studios at 520, and the American Irish Historical Society and Tir Na Theatre will present a reading of Conor McDermottroe’s Dawnhurst on September 26.

ALL-DAY BUSTER KEATON

Buster Keaton pulls into Film Forum for a six-film marathon on Labor Day (courtesy Photofest)

Film Forum
209 West Houston St.
Monday, September 5, 1:00 – 11:00
212-727-8110
www.filmforum.org

There hasn’t been much to laugh about recently regarding America’s labor situation, with unemployment hovering above nine percent and unions on the run. Film Forum is doing its part in bringing the yuks on Labor Day with the All-Day Buster Keaton festival, screening six of Keaton’s finest silent pictures, each presented with live piano accompaniment by Steve Sterner. The festivities begin at 1:00 with the family feud tale Our Hospitality (1923), followed by the seminal Civil War comedy The General (1926) at 2:35 and Steamboat Bill Jr., with its famous cyclone finale, at 4:10. Keaton investigates film itself in the daring Sherlock Jr. (1924), paired with The Playhouse (1921) at 6:35, then must get married to claim an inheritance in Seven Chances (1925) at 8:00. The marathon concludes at 9:20 with Keaton stranded on an ocean liner in The Navigator (1924). If you’ve never seen Keaton’s sad-sack face on the big screen before, you’re in for quite a treat, and you can’t go wrong with any of these films.

WEST INDIAN AMERICAN DAY CARNIVAL

Colorful costumes, booty-shaking music, and stomach-tempting food make the West Indian American Day Carnival one of the best parades of the year (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Eastern Pkwy. from Rochester Ave. to Grand Army Plaza
Monday, September 5, free, 11:00 am – 6:00 pm
718-467-1797
www.wiadca.com
2010 parade

Every Labor Day, millions of people line Eastern Parkway, celebrating the city’s best annual parade, the West Indian American Day Carnival, waving flags from such nations as Jamaica, Trinidad & Tobago, Barbados, the Bahamas, Grenada, the Cayman Islands, Antigua, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Aruba, Curaçao, and many more. The festivities begin at 2:00 am with the traditional J’Ouvert Morning, a precarnival procession featuring steel drums and percussion and fabulous, inexpensive masquerade costumes, marching from Grand Army Plaza to Flatbush Ave. and on to Empire Blvd., then to Nostrand Ave. and Linden Blvd. The Parade of Bands begins around 11:00 am, as truckloads of blasting Caribbean music and groups of ornately dressed dancers, costume bands, masqueraders, moko jumbies, and thousands of others bump and grind their way down Eastern Parkway to Grand Army Plaza. Don’t eat before you go; the great homemade food includes ackee and codfish, oxtail stew, breadfruit, macaroni pie, curried goat, jerk chicken, fishcakes, rice and peas, and red velvet cake. The farther east you venture, the more closed in it gets; by the time you get near Crown Heights, it could take you half an hour just to cross the street, so take it easy and settle in for a fun, colorful day where you need not hurry.

MUSEUMS ON US

The Bronx Zoo is one of several New York City institutions offering free admission to Bank of America / Merrill Lynch cardholders today

Bank of America, which received tens of billions of dollars from the federal government (er, taxpayers) in the bailout and its acquisition of Merrill Lynch, is the sponsor of the Museums on Us program, which offers free admission the first full weekend (Saturday and Sunday) of every month to Bank of America / Merrill Lynch cardholders. Just present a photo ID and a valid BofA/ML debit or credit card for one free general admission to the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Bronx Zoo, the New York Aquarium, El Museo del Barrio, the International Center of Photography, the Museum of the City of New York, the New York Hall of Science, and the Intrepid Sea, Air & Space Museum. Just be sure to double check with the individual institutions to confirm the deal is in place (and that the museums are indeed open) before you go.

SNEAK PEEK: WARRIOR

The highly anticipated ultimate fighting drama Warrior opens September 9, and Lionsgate has just released a new trailer, featuring the song “About Today” by Brooklyn-based band the National. Directed by Gavin O’Connor, the film stars Joel Edgerton and Tom Hardy as the Conlon brothers, with Nick Nolte playing their troubled father, a former boxer and alcoholic. You can catch a special sneak preview tonight at 6:30 at the Museum of the Moving Image in advance of next week’s official opening.

BRAZILIAN DAY IN NEW YORK

It should get mighty crowded for this weekend’s Brazilian Day festival in Midtown

46th St. between Sixth & Madison Aves.
Saturday, September 3, free, 11:00 am – 4:00 pm
917-528-8151
www.brazilianday.com

The twenty-seventh annual Brazilian Day festivities takes place this weekend along 46th St. between Madison & Sixth Aves, one of the city’s best summer parties. The celebration of Brazilian independence begins on Saturday morning at 11:00 with Lavagem da rua 46, or the Cleansing of 46th St., with a parade and festival in Little Brazil with Netinho, Del Feliz, Showdi, and Orquestra Popular Da Bomba do Hemetério. But that’s just the appetizer for Sunday, when two stages, one at 43rd & Sixth, the other on 46th between Fifth & Madison, will be home to performances by Luan Santana, Exaltasamba, Batala Band, D-Snow, Hierofante Cia de Teatro, Formando Abara e o Grupo Capoeira Brasil NY, Gilbert Jr., Sonia Azul, Banda Tom de Deus, DJs, and many others, hosted by Serginho Groisman. Great traditional Brazilian cuisine, vendors, and arts and crafts booths will line the streets, which will fill up quickly — more than a million and a half attendees are expected, so you better not be allergic to rather large crowds.

CONEY ISLAND HISTORY DAY

Riders who take a spin on Deno’s Wonder Wheel on Coney Island History Day will receive a special gift

Coney Island History Project & Deno’s Wonder Wheel Park
West 12th St. & the Boardwalk
Saturday, September 3, free, 1:00 – 5:00
www.coneyislandhistory.org

No other part of New York City has the kind of colorful history that Coney Island has. That past will be celebrated today at Coney Island History Day, beginning at 1:00 at Deno’s Wonder Wheel Park and the Coney Island History Project. Originally scheduled for August 28 but postponed because of Hurricane Irene, History Day will begin with the induction of the Shore Theater and Lady Deborah Moody, the first woman to found a colony in the new world, Gravesend, in 1645, into the Coney Island Hall of Fame. Previous inductees include Sea Lion Park builder Paul Boyton, baby incubator inventor Dr. Martin Couney, hot dog inventor Charles Feltman, Luna Park creator Fred Thompson, Steeplechase founder George Cornelius Tilyou, sideshow impresario Samuel W. Gumpertz, wood carver Marcus C. Illions, exotic dancer Fahreda “Little Egypt” Mahzar, ride inventor and amusement manufacturer William F. Mangels, Parachute Jump designer James Hale Strong, and roller coaster designer La Marcus Thompson. History Day also features a trivia contest with historian Charles Denson, live music by the Hungry March Band, the Hot Sardines, and the Banjo Rascals, and a performance by Kae Burke of Lady Circus. In addition, attendees can contribute a romantic Coney Island story to the Oral History Project.

One of Coney’s most iconic and endearing historic landmarks is Deno’s Wonder Wheel, which has been home to young couples in love making out while looking out over beautiful Coney Island since 1920. This is not your average Ferris wheel (owner Dennis Vourderis refers to the 200-hundred ton, 150-foot-high wonder as an “eccentric Ferris wheel”); sixteen of the twenty-four cars slide from side to side while rocking back and forth and moving up and down, so you’re in nearly constant motion. Be sure to pay attention to rule number six: “Do not force your child to ride if he or she is frightened. A scared child on the ground may well panic on the ride.” Slip the carny a few extra bucks and he might let you linger at the top, where you get a spectacular view of all of Coney Island as you share a romantic interlude that only the heavens can see. This 150-foot-high national landmark was owned for years by Deno Vourderis (Dennis’s father; the attraction is co-owned by his other son, Steve), who lived the American dream by immigrating to Coney Island, working as a hot dog vendor, and eventually buying a part of New York history. As part of Coney Island History Day on September 3, all Wonder Wheel riders will receive a special gift each paid ticket and can take a goofy old-time photo for free.

The Cyclone has been flying high since 1927

We make sure to hit the Cyclone, another integral part of Coney Island’s history and an official national historic landmark, at least once every summer, and it has never let us down. We know every curve, bump, and drop like the back of our hand, but the rickety old joy still surprises us every time we take it for a spin. We like to begin in the last car, where you get thrown around like a rag doll, then move up to the first car, which is as awesome as you would imagine. Since 1927, the three thousand feet of track that make up the Cyclone have held no hidden tricks from the very start of the ride; it takes you straight up, offering a fabulous view of Coney Island, but don’t get too lost in the picturesque scenery, because you’re about to go on a killer eighty-five-foot drop. Riding the Cyclone is our favorite 110 seconds in the world; it even impressed Charles Lindbergh, who piloted the Cyclone in 1927 and said it was more thrilling than flying across the Atlantic. Coney Island has been undergoing a lot of change over the last few years, for better and for worse, but the Cyclone keeps rolling along, as dependable as ever, even if the price has gone up to $8, there is no more “ride again” discount, and the new Luna Park regulations don’t allow you to wait a ride or two until the first car is available.