Yearly Archives: 2012

TENDER NAPALM

Blake Ellis and Amelia Workman give dazzling performances in the surreal TENDER NAPALM at 59E59 (photo by Carol Rosegg)

59E59 Theaters
59 East 59th St, between Park & Madison Aves.
Tuesday – Sunday through September 9, $18
212-279-4200
www.59e59.org

British writer Philip Ridley’s exhilarating Tender Napalm has made a magnificent transition to 59E59, where it is dazzling audiences in a tiny black box of a theater. It doesn’t get much more intimate than this oxymoronically titled show, as an unnamed man (Blake Ellis in his New York City debut) and woman (Amelia Workman) perform on a narrow strip of floor between two rows of people (approximately fifty in all), squeezing the performers into a ridiculously small space where they build on one another’s tales in a kind of exquisite corpse. They share their dreams and fantasies as if they’re shipwrecked on a desert island, talking about monkey kingdoms, bullets and grenades, genitals, serpents, a tsunami, and more in a mysterious and heated battle of the sexes. Whenever one of them asks, “Have you seen the view?” the narrative shifts, leading to another adventure. In short back-and-forth bursts and long soliloquies, the man and the woman play verbal games with each other, the audience never quite clear on what is real, what is imagined, and what is something in between, reminiscent of David Ives’s recent hit, Venus in Fur. The actors don’t make eye contact with the audience as they deliver their lines, instead looking out across their memory and into the future, coming together and running from one another in Yasmine Lee’s subtle but powerful choreography. Skillfully directed by Paul Takacs to maintain a breathtaking pace that avoids feeling the least bit claustrophobic during its intermissionless one hundred minutes, Tender Napalm features beautifully poetic moments that get interrupted by explosive bursts of passion, every new twist a thrilling surprise. “Have you seen the view?” the woman asks. The man responds, “I see auroras shimmering.” Woman: “I see trees with magical lights.” Man: “Asteroids near the sirens of Titan.” Woman: “Oh, smell of flowers!” Man: “Andromeda.” Woman: “Hyacinths.” Man: “‘You must be wondering why you’re here,’” leading to a long discourse on DNA, bombs, and unicorns. Ellis and Workman both deliver complex, inspiring performances, bringing to life Ridley’s (Vincent River, Shivered) razor-sharp, surreal dialogue in a rousing production that is not to be missed, especially with tickets costing a mere eighteen dollars.

FIFTY YEARS OF THE NEW YORK FILM FESTIVAL: OFFSIDE

A group of women risk their freedom to watch a soccer match in Jafar Panahi’s OFFSIDE

OFFSIDE (Jafar Panahi, 2006)
Film Society of Lincoln Center, Walter Reade Theater
165 West 65th St. at Amsterdam Ave.
Tuesday, September 4, 2:00
212-875-5601
www.filmlinc.com
www.sonyclassics.com

Filmed on location in and around Tehran’s Azadi Stadium and featuring a talented cast of nonprofessional actors, Jafar Panahi’s Offside is a brilliant look at gender disparity in modern-day Iran. Although it is illegal for girls to go to soccer games in Iran — because, among other reasons, the government does not think it’s appropriate for females to be in the company of screaming men who might be cursing and saying other nasty things — many try to get in, facing arrest if they get caught. Offside is set during an actual match between Iran and Bahrain; a win will put Iran in the 2006 World Cup. High up in the stadium, a small group of girls, dressed in various types of disguises, have been captured and are cordoned off, guarded closely by some soldiers who would rather be watching the match themselves or back home tending to their sheep. The girls, who can hear the crowd noise, beg for one of the men to narrate the game for them. Meanwhile, an old man is desperately trying to find his daughter to save her from some very real punishment that her brothers would dish out to her for shaming them by trying to get into the stadium. Despite its timely and poignant subject matter, Offside is a very funny film, with fine performances by Sima Mobarak Shahi, Shayesteh Irani, Ida Sadeghi, Golnaz Farmani, Mahnaz Zabihi, and Nazanin Sedighzadeh as the girls and M. Kheymeh Kabood as one of the soldiers. The film was selected for the 2006 New York Film Festival, but Panahi, who was supposed to attend the opening, experienced visa problems when trying to come to America and was later arrested by the Iranian government for his support of the opposition Green movement; he was sentenced to six years in prison and given a twenty-year ban on making new films, something he comments on ingeniously in This Is Not a Film. Offside is screening at the Walter Reade Theater as part of the ongoing series “50 Years of the New York Film Festival,” which continues with such NYFF vets as Abdellatif Kechich’s Black Venus and Nuri Bilge Ceylan’s Once Upon a Time in Anatolia. Individual tickets for the fiftieth anniversary of the New York Film Festival, which runs September 28 through October 14, go on sale to the general public on September 9.

FIFTY YEARS OF THE NEW YORK FILM FESTIVAL: SILENT LIGHT

The beautifully minimalist SILENT LIGHT returns to Lincoln Center as part of fiftieth anniversary of the New York Film Festival

SILENT LIGHT (STELLET LICHT) (Carlos Reygadas, 2007)
Film Society of Lincoln Center, Walter Reade Theater
165 West 65th St. at Amsterdam Ave.
Monday, September 3, 8:00
212-875-5601
www.filmlinc.com

Carlos Reygadas’s Silent Light is a gentle, deeply felt, gorgeously shot work of intense calm and beauty. The film opens with a stunning sunrise and ends with a glorious sunset; in between is scene after scene of sublime beauty and simplicity, as Reygadas uses natural sound and light, a cast of mostly nonprofessional actors, and no incidental music to tell his story, allowing it to proceed naturally. In a Mennonite farming community in northern Mexico where Plautdietsch is the primary language, Johan (Cornelio Wall Fehr) is torn between his wife, Esther (Miriam Toews), and his lover, Marianne (Maria Pankratz). While he loves Esther, he finds a physical and spiritual bond with Marianne that he does not feel with his wife and their large extended family. Although it pains Johan deeply to betray Esther, he is unable to decide between the two women, even after tragedy strikes. Every single shot of the spare, unusual film, which tied for the Jury Prize at the 2007 Cannes Film Festival (with Vincent Paronnaud and Marjane Satrapi’s Persepolis), is meticulously composed by Reygadas (Japon, Battle in Heaven) and cinematographer Alexis Zabe, as if a painting. Many of the scenes consist of long takes with little or no camera movement and sparse dialogue, evoking the work of Japanese minimalist master Yasujiro Ozu. The lack of music evokes the silence of the title, but the quiet, filled with space and meaning, is never empty. And the three leads — Fehr, who lives in Mexico; Toews, who is from Canada; and Pankratz, who was born in Kazakhstan and lives in Germany — are uniformly excellent in their very first film roles. Silent Light is a mesmerizing, memorable, and very different kind of cinematic experience. Silent Light, which was shown at the 2007 New York Film Festival, is screening at the Walter Reade Theater as part of the ongoing series “50 Years of the New York Film Festival,” which continues with such NYFF vets as Jafar Panahi’s Offside, Abdellatif Kechich’s Black Venus, and Nuri Bilge Ceylan’s Once Upon a Time in Anatolia. Individual tickets for the fiftieth anniversary of the New York Film Festival, which runs September 28 through October 14, go on sale to the general public on September 9.

DANCENOW JOE’S PUB FESTIVAL

Irish dancer and choreographer Luke Murphy is among the forty participants in this year’s DanceNow festival at Joe’s Pub (photo by John Altdorfer)

Joe’s Pub
425 Lafayette St. by Astor Pl.
September 5-8, $15-$20, 7:00
212-539-8778
www.joespub.com

The tenth annual DanceNOW presentation at Joe’s Pub will take place at the tiny, intimate downtown theater September 5-8, with all tickets a mere $15 in advance and $20 at the door. One of the primary elements that makes this series different from other fall dance festivals is that this event is competitive; each night, a weeklong residency on a Pennsylvania farm will be awarded by the audience to one of the companies, and one company from the entire run will win a $1,000 creative development stipend, a weeklong residency, and a twenty-hour space grant at the Gibney Dance Center, selected by festival producers and advisers. Following the festival’s “less is more” credo, each performance is limited to no more than five minutes in which to make an artistic statement. The lineup is wide-ranging, offering dance fans a little bit of everything every night. Wednesday’s rosters features Adam Barruch Dance, binbinFactory/satoshi haga & rie fukuzawa, Maura Nguyen Donohue/inmixed company, Marjani Forté, Shannon Hummel/Cora Dance, Donnell Oakley, Rainwater Dances/Nellie Rainwater, Erika Randall, and RG Dance Projects – Rubén Graciani, while Thursday consists of alex|xan: the Median Movement, the Anata Project/Claudia Anata Hubiak, Janis Brenner & Dancers, Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company, Luke Murphy, Portables/Claire Porter, Molly Shanahan, Bryan Strimpel, Makiko Tamura/Small Apple co., and Simone Sobers Dance. Friday night brings together Jane Comfort & Company, the DASH/Gregory Dolbashian, SARA du jour, Erica Essner Performance Co-Op, the Good to Go Girls, Jamal Jackson Dance Company, Sara Joel, Kawamura the 3rd, Amy Larimer, LOVE|FORTÉ A COLLECTIVE, and Amber Sloan, with Saturday night anchored by the Bang Group, Christal Brown/INSPIRIT, Loni Landan, Deborah Lohse, Khaleah Londons/LAYERS, MADboots dance co., Christopher K. Morgan & Artists, TAKE Dance, and Megan Williams. An encore performance on September 15 will feature the audience’s top ten favorites from all four programs.

WEST INDIAN AMERICAN DAY CARNIVAL

Extravagant costumes, loud music, bawdy dancing, and great food help make 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 3, free, 11:00 am – 6:00 pm
718-467-1797
www.wiadca.com
2011 parade slideshow

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, participating in one last farewell to the flesh prior to Lent. 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 (although the police this year are opening more areas to cross to reduce the outrageous congestion), so take it easy and settle in for a fun, colorful day where you need not hurry. This year’s theme is “Unity, History, and Culture . . . New Leadership, New Vision, and New Energy.”

SHARON HAYES: THERE’S SO MUCH I WANT TO SAY TO YOU

Sharon Hayes, still from “Symbionese Liberation Army (SLA) Screeds #13, 16, 20 & 29,” four screen video projection, color, sound 2003 (courtesy the artist and Tanya Leighton Gallery)

Whitney Museum of American Art
945 Madison Ave. at 75th St.
Wednesday – Sunday through September 9, $18 (pay-what-you-wish Fridays 6:00 – 9:00)
212-570-3600
www.whitney.org
www.shaze.info

New York-based multidisciplinary performance artist Sharon Hayes has occupied the third floor of the Whitney with the powerful and engaging “There’s So Much I Want to Say to You.” Comprising older projects with newly commissioned works, all arranged in an invitingly makeshift set designed by Hayes and Andrea Geyer that integrates the private with the public, the installation uses text, video, sound, photography, signage, and spoken-word LPs to expand on Hayes’s idea of “speech acts,” examining the state of political discourse in America since the 1960s. The first thing people see as they enter the space is a long banner that announces, “Now a chasm has opened between us that holds us together and keeps us apart,” but all the words are not visible because of the way the banner is unfurled, setting the stage for a unique journey through the many challenges that accompany free speech. Curated by Chrissis Iles, “There’s So Much I Want to Say to You” includes numerous stations where visitors stop for very different experiences. “Join Us” is a wall of hundreds of political-action flyers dating back more than fifty years and going all the way up to the Occupy Wall Street movement. In the four-channel video “Symbionese Liberation Army (SLA) Screeds #13, 16, 20, & 29,” Hayes recites audiotapes Patty Hearst made, with Hayes speaking them from memory, an unseen audience correcting every tiny mistake. In “Voice Portraits,” Hayes shows various women on video monitors but has eliminated the sound, taking their voices away, in stark contrast to a nearly hidden piece that projects onto a narrow wall the media’s text-based responses to speeches given by women, concentrating on the quality of the voices instead of the substance of what they said. In “Everything Else Has Failed! Don’t You Think It’s Time for Love,” Hayes uses speakers and posters to present five lunchtime love letters she performed in front of the UBS building in Midtown Manhattan in September 2007. In “Gay Power,” Hayes and feminist author and activist Kate Millet discuss footage of one of the first gay pride marches through the city. And in “Yard (Sign),” Hayes has reimagined Allan Kaprow’s 1961 “Yard” with political signs ranging from mass-produced declarations of support of political candidates to handwritten cries of help from New Orleans. Intriguingly, Hayes focuses on old-fashioned methods in “There’s So Much I Want to Say to You,” eschewing digital technology in favor of ancient slide projectors and records playing on turntables, with much of the sound crashing together, as if there are many voices trying to speak at once, their messages becoming garbled. The installation closes September 9, right after both conventions have concluded and the race for president heats up, when political discourse reaches massive proportions and the people’s vote, and voice, is, at least in theory, supposed to matter.

AMERICAN GAGSTERS — GREAT COMEDY TEAMS: THE PRODUCERS

Zero Mostel and Gene Wilder prepare for quite a flop in THE PRODUCERS

THE PRODUCERS (Mel Brooks, 1968)
BAMcinématek, BAM Rose Cinemas
30 Lafayette Ave. between Ashland Pl. & St. Felix St.
Sunday, September 2, 2:00 & 6:50
Series runs through September 17
212-415-5500
www.bam.org

No way around it; this is one funny movie. Written and directed by Mel Brooks (who won an Oscar for Best Original Screenplay), The Producers stars Zero Mostel as Max Bialystock, a once great Broadway producer now relegated to wooing old ladies for their checkbooks. Gene Wilder earned an Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actor as Leo Bloom, a by-the-book accountant who figures out that it could be possible to make more money from a bomb than a hit. And the bomb they turn to is the extraordinary Springtime for Hitler, featuring a great turn by Kenneth Mars as a neo-Nazi. Brooks, Mostel, Wilder, Mars, and the rest of the crazy cast — which also includes Dick Shawn, Lee Meredith, Estelle Winwood, Christopher Hewett, Renee Taylor, Barney Martin, Bill Macy, and William Hickey — don’t just play it for laughs but for giant guffaws and jaw-dropping disbelief in this riotous romp that was turned into a very good but overrated Broadway musical and a terrible film version of the show, both starring Nathan Lane and Matthew Broderick, neither of whom can fill Mostel and Wilder’s shoes. The Producers is screening September 2 in the BAMcinématek series “American Gagsters: Great Comedy Teams,” which runs through September 17 and comprises some fifty films, including such other Brooks classics as Blazing Saddles and Young Frankenstein on September 3, followed by a fab bunch of hysterical Steve Martin and Woody Allen movies.