twi-ny recommended events

IN CONCERT: SHUT UP AND PLAY THE HITS

James Murphy says farewell to LCD Soundsystem in multifaceted concert documentary

SHUT UP AND PLAY THE HITS (Dylan Southern & Will Lovelace, 2011)
BAMcinématek, BAM Rose Cinemas
30 Lafayette Ave. between Ashland Pl. & St. Felix St.
Sunday, August 6, 7:30
Series runs through August 13
718-636-4100
www.bam.org
www.shutupandplaythehits.com

On April 2, 2011, after ten years of building a devoted following that was still growing, electronic dance-punk faves LCD Soundsystem played what was supposed to be its farewell show at Madison Square Garden. Directors Dylan Southern and Will Lovelace, who previously documented the British band Blur in No Distance Left to Run, capture the grand finale in the often bumpy, sometimes revelatory concert film Shut Up and Play the Hits. The movie is divided into three distinct sections that take place before, during, and after the massive blowout, with Southern and Lovelace weaving between them. There is extensive footage of the event at the Garden, including performances of such LCD classics as “Dance Yrself Clean,” “All My Friends,” “Us v Them,” “North American Scum,” and “Losing My Edge.” Although the multicamera approach tries to make you feel like you’re there, onstage and backstage with front man Murphy, keyboardist Nancy Whang, bassist Tyler Pope, drummer Pat Mahoney, and various special guests, it lacks a certain emotional depth, and the sound, primarily during the first songs, is terrible, although that could have been the fault of the tiny theater where we saw it more than the film itself. The second section features music journalist Chuck Klosterman (Sex, Drugs, and Cocoa Puffs: A Low Culture Manifesto) interviewing Murphy at the Spotted Pig in the West Village a week before the concert, asking inane, annoying questions that Murphy strains to answer.

But the most fascinating part of the film by far, and how it starts, involves Murphy the day after the show. He allows the camera to follow him everywhere, from waking up in his bed with his dog to carefully shaving with an electric razor to visiting the DFA offices for the first time in a year. It’s hard to believe that the night before he was a grandiose rock star but now he is walking his pooch, sitting on a bench in front of a coffee shop, and spending most of the day alone. The camera gets right into his face, showing every gray hair, zooming in on his puffiness and his deep-set, nearly dazed eyes. The film would have benefited from less time with Klosterman and more with Murphy as he contemplates his past, present, and future. It also would have been interesting to hear from the other members of the band, but Shut Up and Play the Hits is specifically about Murphy, who, at forty-one, suddenly doesn’t know what to do with his life, having left an extremely successful gig that was only gaining popularity. (However, in January 2016 the band reunited, once again hitting the road, including a fab headlining gig at the Panorama festival that July.) Shut Up and Play the Hits is screening August 6 at 7:30 in the BAMcinématek series “In Concert,” which continues through August 13 with such other live-music films as Bill and Turner Ross’s Contemporary Color, D. A. Pennebaker’s Monterey Pop, and Mel Stuart’s Wattstax.

SHAKESPEARE IN THE PARK: A MIDSUMMER NIGHT’S DREAM

(photo by Joan Marcus)

Annaleigh Ashford steals the show as Helena in Shakespeare in the Park presentation of A Midsummer Night’s Dream (photo by Joan Marcus)

Central Park
Delacorte Theater
Tuesday-Sunday through August 13, free, 8:00
shakespeareinthepark.org

Since 2013, Public Works founder and resident director Lear deBessonet has presented special short-run summer productions of classic works at the Delacorte Theater consisting of professional and nonprofessional actors, with casts of more than two hundred men, women, and children, from community organizations from all five boroughs in addition to theater veterans. The Public Theater initiative has included musical adaptations of The Tempest, The Winter’s Tale, Twelfth Night, and The Odyssey. DeBessonet also directed Bertolt Brecht’s Good Person of Szechwan indoors at the Public’s Martinson Hall. But now the thirty-something Baton Rouge native and longtime Brooklynite is moving to one of the Public Theatre’s largest and best-loved programs, making her Shakespeare in the Park directorial debut. She’s helming the Bard’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream, which would appear to be a terrific vehicle for her sensibilities but which turns out to be a mixed bag, though still fun. The romantic comedy is one of Shakespeare’s most delightful and well-structured plays, with four intersecting plots dealing with the notion of love in all its forms. Theseus, the Duke of Athens (Bhavesh Patel), is preparing to wed Hippolyta, queen of the Amazon (De’Adre Aziza). Hermia (Shalita Grant) is in love with Lysander (Kyle Beltran), but her father, Egeus (David Manis), insists that she marry Demetrius (Alex Hernandez) or face severe punishment. Helena (Annaleigh Ashford) is madly in love with Demetrius, who has no interest in her. Meanwhile, an acting troupe of artisans known as the Mechanicals — carpenter Peter Quince (Robert Joy), weaver Nick Bottom (Danny Burstein), bellows mender Francis Flute (Jeff Hiller), tinker Snout (Patrena Murray), joiner Snug (Austin Durant), and tailor Robin Starveling (Joe Tapper) — have come to Athens to put on a production of Ovid’s Pyramus and Thisbe, about a pair of Babylonian lovers, a wall, and a lion, but professionalism is not their forte. And deep in the forest are the Fairies, including King Oberon (Richard Poe) and Queen Titania (Phylicia Rashad), who are battling over a changeling boy (Benjamin Ye), along with Robin Goodfellow, better known as Puck (Kristine Nielsen), Peaseblossom (Vinie Burrows), Cobweb (Manis), and Mustardseed (Warren Wyss). Magical elixirs, mistaken identity, and animal transformation ensue. “The course of true love never did run smooth,” Lysander tells Hermia. And Puck declares, “Lord, what fools these mortals be!”

(photo by Joan Marcus)

Titania (Phylicia Rashad) finds a strange bedfellow in Nick Bottom (Danny Burstein) in Bard show at the Delacorte (photo by Joan Marcus)

A Midsummer Night’s Dream practically demands to be performed outside, and the Delacorte is a splendid home for it. Tony winner David Rockwell’s (She Loves Me) fairy-tale set features three lush green trees, a movable stone wall entranceway, a tree house where the band plays, and a playground slide amid the clouds, stars, flying insects, and backstage raccoons. The fab costumes, including a glamorous shout-out to Beyoncé, are by Tony winner Clint Ramos (Eclipsed). Tony winner Ashford (Kinky Boots, You Can’t Take It with You) steals the show as Helena, once again displaying her spectacular aptitude for physical comedy; her line deliveries, facial expressions, and wacky movements make the production worthwhile all on their own. Six-time Tony nominee Burstein (Fiddler on the Roof, Cabaret) has a ball as Bottom, who is turned into a donkey, although the play-within-a-play drags on a bit too long. Casting senior citizens as the fairies, dressed in white night clothing, is cute at first but eventually slows things down, and not even the always outstanding Nielsen can turn it around. And there’s usually sexual tension surrounding the changeling, but deBessonet has made him a young boy searching for a home. Marcelle Davies-Lashley belts out some hot New Orleans–tinged R&B as a fairy singer in a glitzy gown, but her appearances are disruptive to the narrative, taking the audience out of Shakespeare’s fantasy world. (The band consists of music director Jon Spurney on keyboards and guitar, Jeremy Chatzky on bass, Christian Cassan on drums and percussion, Andrew Gutauskas on reeds, Freddy Hall on guitar, and Matt Owens on trumpet and flugabone.) Despite the production’s disjointedness, there is nary a better way to spend a night outdoors in New York City, especially for free. As Puck relates, “If we shadows have offended, / Think but this, and all is mended, / That you have but slumbered here / While these visions did appear.”

BROOKLYN MUSEUM FIRST SATURDAY: CaribBEING IN BROOKLYN

Doria Dee Johnson

“Doria Dee Johnson at her home in Chicago, Illinois, 2017” (photo by Melissa Bunni Elian for the Equal Justice Initiative)

Brooklyn Museum
200 Eastern Parkway at Washington St.
Saturday, August 5, free, 5:00 – 11:00
212-864-5400
www.brooklynmuseum.org

The Brooklyn Museum starts preparing for the West Indian American Day Carnival events over Labor Day weekend with the August edition of its free First Saturday program. (First Saturdays is skipped in September.) There will be live performances by RIVA & Bohio Music and the Drums and Bugles International Bands Association; the mobile art center caribBEING House, where visitors can share their own stories; a gallery tour of “We Wanted a Revolution: Black Radical Women, 1965–85” with Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for Feminist Art curatorial assistant Allie Rickard; pop-up gallery talks of “Life, Death, and Transformation in the Americas” with teen apprentices; a screening of Matt Ruskin’s Sundance Audience Award winner Crown Heights, introduced by actress Natalie Paul and followed by a Q&A with film subject Colin Warner, community activist Rick Jones, and attorney Ames Grawert; a sneak peek of Cori Wapnowska’s documentary Bruk Out!, followed by a talkback with Wapnowska and Dancehall Queen Famous Red, moderated by Hyperallergic editor Seph Rodney; a Book Club event with Oneka LaBennett reading and discussing her new book, She’s Mad Real: Popular Culture and West Indian Girls in Brooklyn, followed by a signing; an Artist’s Eye talk by Melissa Bunni Elian on her contribution to “The Legacy of Lynching: Confronting Racial Terror in America”; a wukkout! movement workshop based on high-energy soca dancing; a hands-on workshop in which participants can make paintings with watercolor and salt; and a Flag Fete in which visitors can bring their own national flag, joined by female-identified Caribbean artists Sol Nova, Young Devyn, and Ting & Ting featuring Kitty Cash and special guests.

PANORAMA 2017 WRAP-UP

A Tribe Called Quest put on a superlative and moving last New York City show, a tribute to Phife Dawg and their fans (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

A Tribe Called Quest put on a superlative and moving last New York City show, a tribute to Phife Dawg and their fans (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Who: Everyone
What: Panorama festival
Where: Randall’s Island Park
When: Friday, July 28, through Sunday, July 30, 12 noon – 11:00 pm
Why: Resting for a moment near the main stage, twi-ny struck up a conversation with a few of the thousands of music fans who traveled by ferry, bus, and shuttle to enjoy the three days of perfect summer sunshine, thoughtful event planning, and spectacular music that came together for Panorama NYC. From outstanding sets from headliners Girl Talk, Frank Ocean, Solange, A Tribe Called Quest, and Nine Inch Nails to newer performers including Foxygen, Dhani Harrison, and Angel Olsen to the excellent food, futuristic HP Lab, and dance music (and free water everywhere!), all of us agreed that in more than twenty-five years of NYC festivals, highlighted by the great late 1990s Guinness Fleadh (1997–99), the Beasties’ epic Tibetan Freedom Concert (1997), and a brief flash of Catalpa (2012), Panorama NYC has outdone them all, achieving possibly the best vibe ever at a NYC-based festival. For two years in a row, Goldenvoice, which produces Coachella, FYF, Stagecoach, and many other music fests, has done a fabulous job with vendors, sponsors, staging, and transport, creating an inclusive, joyful weekend of music and art that should not be missed. Below are just a few of our many photos; you can find more from Friday here and from Sunday here.

Rev Vince Anderson (photo mdr/twi-ny)

Rev. Vince Anderson and His Love Choir brought plenty of hugs to Panorama on Sunday (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Future art and technology combine at the HPLab installation

Future art and technology combine at Ekene Ijeoma’s interactive “Heartfelt” installation (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

The glowing orb at HPLab responds to touch.

Future Wife’s glowing “Boolean Planet” orb responds to touch (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Dhani Harrison rocks a lot harder than his dad George, on the Parlor Stage.

Dhani Harrison has a harder edge on the guitar than his Beatle dad, George (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Bishop Briggs brought infectious energy to the Panorama Stage on Sunday afternoon.

Bishop Briggs delivered infectious energy on the Panorama Stage on Sunday afternoon (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

NIN and Trent Reznor brought the weekend to a close with their unparalleled raw intensity.

NIN and Trent Reznor brought the weekend to a dramatic close with their unparalleled raw intensity (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

FASHION AND FILM: VALERIE AND HER WEEK OF WONDERS

Valerie and Her Week of Wonders

Valerie (Jaroslava Schallerová) comes of age rather early in Valerie and Her Week of Wonders

VALERIE AND HER WEEK OF WONDERS (VALERIE A TÝDEN DIVŮ) (Jaromil Jireš, 1970)
Nitehawk Cinema
136 Metropolitan Ave. between Berry St. & Wythe Ave.
Thursday, August 3, 7:30
Series continues select Thursdays through August 31
718-384-3980
nitehawkcinema.com

Nitehawk Cinema’s “Fashion and Film” series, presented in conjunction with i-D magazine, consists of four movies selected by fashion designers, each preceded by a short “Designers on Their Favorite Films” prerecorded introduction. It kicks off August 3 with Czech New Wave auteur Jaromil Jireš’s (The Cry, The Joke) extremely strange, totally hypnotic Valerie and Her Week of Wonders, chosen by Shane Gabier and Christopher Peters’s Creatures of the Wind. Based on the 1945 Gothic novel by Vítězslav Nezval (which was written ten years earlier), Valerie is a dreamy adult fairy tale, inspired by “Little Red Riding Hood,” “Alice in Wonderland,” and other fables, about the coming of age of Valerie, a nymphette played by thirteen-year-old Jaroslava Schallerová in her film debut. Valerie lives with her icy, regal grandmother, Elsa (Helena Anýzová), in a remote village, where visiting missionaries and actors are cause for celebration. In addition, Valerie’s best friend, Hedvika (Alena Stojáková), is being forced to marry a man she doesn’t love. Valerie, who is in possession of magic earrings, is being courted by the bespectacled, bookish Eaglet (Petr Kopriva) as well as the Constable (Jirí Prýmek), who just happens to be an evil, ugly vampire who has a mysterious past with Elsa. Also showing an untoward interest in the virginal Valerie is the local priest, Gracián (Jan Klusák).

But don’t get too caught up in the hallucinatory narrative, which usually makes little sense. Characters’ motivations are inconsistent and confusing (especially as Jireš delves deeper and deeper into Valerie’s unconscious), plot points come and go with no explanation, and the spare dialogue is often random and inconsequential. And don’t try too hard looking for references to the Prague Spring, colonialism, and communism; just trust that they’re in there. Instead, let yourself luxuriate in Jan Curík’s lush imagery, Lubos Fiser and Jan Klusák’s Baroque score, Ester Krumbachová’s enchanting production design, and Jan Oliva’s weirdly wonderful art direction. Valerie’s white bedroom is enchantingly surreal, a private world in a darkly magical Medieval land beset by incest, rape, fire, murder, self-flagellation, paganism, and monsters, everything dripping with blood and sex. No, this is most definitely not a fantasia for kids. “Fashion and Film” continues August 10 with Gus Van Sant’s To Die For, selected by Adam Selman, August 17 with Sally Potter’s Orlando, chosen by Joseph Altuzarra, and August 31 with Douglas Keeve’s Unzipped, picked by film subject Isaac Mizrahi, who will be on hand to talk about the film and his career.

IN CONCERT — BJÖRK: BIOPHILIA LIVE

BIOPHILIA

Björk stretches boundaries once again in concert doc of innovative multimedia performance (copyright © 2014 / image courtesy of Wellhart and One Little Indian)

BJÖRK: BIOPHILIA LIVE (Nick Fenton & Peter Strickland, 2014)
BAMcinématek, BAM Rose Cinemas
30 Lafayette Ave. between Ashland Pl. & St. Felix St.
Thursday, August 3, 7:00 & 9:30
Series runs through August 13
718-636-4100
www.biophiliathefilm.com
www.bam.org

“Welcome to Biophilia, the love for nature in all her manifestations, from the tiniest organism to the greatest red giant floating in the farthest realm of the universe. . . . In Biophilia, you will experience how the three come together: nature, music, technology. Listen, learn, and create. . . . We are on the brink of a revolution that will reunite humans with nature through new technological innovations. Until we get there, prepare, explore Biophilia.” So announces British naturalist Sir David Attenborough at the beginning of Björk: Biophilia Live, Nick Fenton and Peter Strickland’s lovely film of Icelandic musician Björk’s final show of her Biophilia tour, a more-than-two-year journey in which she presented a dazzling multimedia concert experience based on her 2011 album and genre-redefining interactive app. Filmed at the Alexandra Palace in London, the cutting-edge in-the-round show features Björk performing such complex songs as “Thunderbolt,” “Moon,” “Crystalline,” and “Virus” from the hit record, accompanied by the twenty-woman Icelandic chorus Graduale Nobili and a group of visually dramatic instruments built and/or adapted specifically for her, including a pendulum-swinging gravity harp, the percussive hang, a gameleste, and a Tesla coil. In addition, most songs have related animation that ranges from the far reaches of space to deep inside the human body. Fenton, a longtime documentary editor, and Strickland, the writer-director of such fiction films as Berberian Sound Studio and Katalin Varga, often splash the animation on the front of the screen, immersing the viewer in a vast array of shapes, colors, and scientific imagery, like a turned-around Joshua Light Show.

But even amid all the gadgetry and computers, Björk is the real star, ever charming in a wild wig and futuristic costume as she sings in her engaging accent and unique voice, enchanting the audience for more than ninety minutes as she brings together nature, music, and technology in a whole new way. We saw the show when it came to Roseland in March 2012 and can heartily affirm that Fenton and Strickland have done a wonderful job capturing the feeling of being there, something that is rare in concert films. Björk: Biophilia Live is screening August 3 at 7:00 & 9:30 in the BAMcinématek series “In Concert,” which continues through August 13 with such other live-music films as Bill and Turner Ross’s Contemporary Color, Will Lovelace & Dylan Southern’s Shut Up and Play the Hits, and Mel Stuart’s Wattstax.

WHY MAN CREATES — THE WORK OF SAUL BASS

Saul Bass (middle) on the set of his Oscar-winning short Why Man Creates

Saul Bass (middle) on the set of his Oscar-winning short Why Man Creates

Metrograph
7 Ludlow St. between Canal & Hester Sts.
Wednesday, August 2, 7:00, and Monday, August 7, 8:45
212-660-0312
metrograph.com

Bronx-born graphic designer Saul Bass had a long and fruitful career designing titles and posters for movies, from 1954’s Carmen to 1995’s Casino, including such all-time greats as Vertigo, The Man with the Golden Arm, Anatomy of a Murder, and Spartacus. He is also responsible for logos for the Girl Scouts, the United Way, Bell Telephone, Geffen Records, AT&T, ALCOA, and many more. But Bass, who passed away in 1996 at the age of seventy-five, was also an Oscar-winning film director, and his legacy is being celebrated on August 2 and 7 at Metrograph with the special program “Why Man Creates — the Work of Saul Bass.” The evening, which will be introduced by visual artist and director Chris Rubino and writer Mayo Simon, is named for Bass’s hugely entertaining 1968 short, Why Man Creates, which won the Academy Award for Best Short Documentary Subject. The twenty-five-minute film traces the history of artistic, scientific, and technological innovation, divided into “The Edifice,” “Fooling Around,” “The Process,” “The Judgment,” “The Search,” and “The Mark” as well as “A Parable” and “A Digression,” using playful animation, an unpredictable score, man-on-the-street interviews, and more, taking on such important issues as hunger, the Big Bang theory, and death, all with a wickedly wry sense of humor. Also on the bill are Bass’s 1980 Oscar-nominated The Solar Film, an early look at solar energy, with Michael Oldfield’s “Tubular Bells” lending it all an Exorcist-like feel; Saul Bass: In His Own Words; a trailer reel; a commercial reel; title sequences; and a special guest. Be sure not to get there late; as Bass, who partnered with his wife, Elaine, on much of his work, noted in a 1977 interview, looking back at the start of his title-designing career, “I had felt for some time that the audience involvement with a film should really begin with the very first frame.” The Bass program, which also includes a week-long revival (August 4-10) of his only full-length feature film, 1974’s Phase IV, is part of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences’ new year-long residency at Metrograph, which began last week with George Stevens’s A Place in the Sun.