twi-ny recommended events

WHETHER WE LIKE IT OR NOT

Lucy Shelby and Ariel Lauryn form quite the comic duo in WHETHER WE LIKE IT OR NOT (photo by Christopher Duggan)

Lucy Shelby and Ariel Lauryn form a wacky comedy duo in WHETHER WE LIKE IT OR NOT (photo by Christopher Duggan)

The Tank
151 West 46th St. between Sixth & Seventh Aves., eighth floor
May 12-14, 21-23, $15, 7:00
www.thetanknyc.org

Ariel Lauryn and Lucy Shelby make quite the comic duo in their screwball farce Whether We Like It or Not. The two-woman show was first presented at Dell’Arte International and then at the New Orleans Fringe and now can be seen in an updated version as part of the Tank’s Flint & Tinder season, a program that focuses on physical, risk-taking theater. In the chaotic sixty-minute comedy, Lauryn, as straight man Stella, and Shelby, as the campy Blanche — yes, they are childhood friends named after the two main female characters from Tennessee Williams’s A Streetcar Named Desire — channel such dynamic duos as Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz, Lucy and Ethel, Marilyn Monroe and Jane Russell from Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, and Carol Burnett and Vicky Lawrence. It’s Stella’s birthday, and Blanche has a big surprise for her — she has gathered many of her friends, relatives, and professional colleagues in a black-box theater where the two women are going to do a reading of Marsha Norman’s ’night, Mother. Of course, Stella is not quite prepared for a This Is Your Life moment, especially with her hated ex-husband in the audience, as well as a high-profile Broadway producer. But Blanche, the spokesperson for a national insurance company, is putting on the show to make sure that Stella continues her acting career; she suspects that Stella might otherwise give up on what she loves doing so much and return home to Indiana, wagging her tail between her legs. However, Stella has no such plan, refusing to put the kibosh on her dream, and as the evening goes on, the two women make some rather serious revelations that threaten their friendship.

Lauryn and Shelby, who created the show together, do a terrific job of improvising as they slip on props, trip over dialogue, and use a wrong name; no matter what happens onstage, they just keep going in impressive fashion. Also fashionably impressive are their glittering costumes, which evoke Monroe and Russell. Although the show is not interactive, it does have immersive qualities, as Stella and Blanche identify specific audience members as characters from their lives, either from their hometown or from the New York City theater community. At one performance, when a cell phone in the seats went off, it turned out to belong to the audience member they had labeled “Oscar,” an agent, and Shelby cleverly worked in an ad lib about how he should answer it because it might be about a job for her. It’s all rather silly yet endearing, occasionally overly ridiculous and sometimes inexpert, but still a lot of fun. Plus, there’s cheap popcorn, beer, and wine available before the show to get you in the right mood for all the wacky shenanigans.

WANDERLUST: TIDE AND CURRENT TAXI BY MARIE LORENZ

(photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Marie Lorenz will be offering free trips along the Hudson River with handcrafted canoes stored under the High Line at Gansevoort St. (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Who: Marie Lorenz
What: Rowboat trips along the Hudson River as part of “Wanderlust” exhibit on the High Line
Where: Village Community Boathouse, Pier 40, 353 West St. at West Houston St.
When: May 26, June 4 & 23, August 25, free, multiple times
Why: At the 2014 Frieze Art Fair, we found a unique way to get back to Manhattan from Randall’s Island: We took a rowboat ride organized by environmental artist Marie Lorenz across the East River to Harlem. Lorenz began her “Tide and Current Taxi” project back in 2005, giving free rides around the city’s waterways while documenting them on video. Lorenz is now offering rides along the Hudson as part of the latest High Line exhibition, “Wanderlust,” which celebrates the High Line as an ambulatory space. Three of the rowboats can be seen underneath the Gansevoort end of the High Line; on May 26, June 4, June 23, and August 25, Lorenz will lower one of the boats and take lucky passengers on trips of between twenty and forty minutes, depending on the weather, the tide, and other factors. The ride is free, but you must sign up in advance, and quick, because many of the time slots are already booked. We had a great time on our trip with Lorenz two years ago, so don’t hesitate to catch a ride on this amazing journey. “Wanderlust” continues through March 2017 and also includes works by Tony Matelli, Giorgio Andreotta Calò, Valentin Carron, Iman Issa, Matt Johnson, Paulo Nazareth, Mike Nelson, Roman Ondak, Susan Philipsz, and Rayyane Tabet.

NOËL COWARD: BRIEF ENCOUNTER

Laura Jesson (Celia Johnson) and Alec Harvey (Trevor Howard) explore an extramarital affair in BRIEF ENCOUNTER

BRIEF ENCOUNTER (David Lean, 1945)
Film Forum
209 West Houston St.
Sunday, May 15, 3:30, and Monday, May 16, 12:30
Series runs May 13-19
212-727-8110
filmforum.org

“Don’t hurry. I’m perfectly happy,” Laura Jesson (Celia Johnson) tells her rather boring husband, Fred (Cyril Raymond), as he returns to his crossword puzzle one night. “How can I possibly say that?” she then thinks to herself. “‘Don’t hurry. I’m perfectly happy.’ If only it were true. Not, I suppose, that anybody’s ever perfectly happy, really. But just to be ordinarily contented, to be at peace. It’s such a little while ago really but it seems an eternity since that train went out of the station, taking him away into the darkness. I was happy then.” In David Lean’s Brief Encounter, one of the greatest romantic films ever made, Laura, a housewife and mother, can’t stop herself from falling for dapper doctor Alec Harvey (Trevor Howard), who is also married. As they explore a potential physical relationship, Laura is wracked with guilt, especially as she keeps bumping into nosy gossip Myrtle Bagot (Joyce Carey). But the two potential lovers are so drawn to each other, filling the holes in each other’s lives, that they consider risking all they have for just one more moment together. Winner of the 1946 Palme d’Or at Cannes, Brief Encounter is told in flashback in Laura’s voice as she goes over every wonderful and terrifying detail in her mind while contemplating whether to spill the beans to the generally oblivious Fred. Written by Noël Coward based on his 1936 one-act play, Still Life, the film features terrifically subtle performances by Johnson and Howard as the daring couple; you can’t help but root for them, despite the possible consequences. Lean, who earned the first of his seven Best Director Oscar nominations for the heartbreaking film, keeps things relatively, well, lean, getting right to the point in less than ninety minutes; he would go on to helm such sprawling epics as The Bridge on the River Kwai, Lawrence of Arabia, Doctor Zhivago, and A Passage to India before his death in 1991 at the age of eighty-three. Brief Encounter is screening May 15 and 16 in Film Forum’s one-week, thirteen-film tribute to the one and only Coward, consisting of movies he wrote, appeared in, or were based on his writing, from such beloved classics as Blithe Spirit, Private Lives, and Cavalcade to such lesser-known fare as The Astonished Heart, Tonight Is Ours, and Boom!

CREATIVE ENCOUNTERS: THE KIDNAPPING OF MICHEL HOUELLEBECQ

Michel Houellebecq plays himself in satirical black comedy

Michel Houellebecq plays a version of himself in Guillaume Nicloux’s satirical black comedy

CinéSalon: THE KIDNAPPING OF MICHEL HOUELLEBECQ (L’ENLÈVEMENT DE MICHEL HOUELLEBECQ) (Guillaume Nicloux, 2014)
French Institute Alliance Française, Florence Gould Hall
55 East 59th St. between Madison & Park Aves.
Tuesday, May 10, $14, 4:00 & 7:30
Series continues Tuesdays through May 31
212-355-6100
www.fiaf.org

In 2010, French writer, actor, poet, and filmmaker Michel Houellebecq won the prestigious Prix Goncourt for his novel The Map and the Territory. The controversial Houellebecq — who has been accused of plagiarism, misogyny, and inciting racial hatred — then went missing in 2011, failing to show up for a book tour in Belgium and the Netherlands. As it turns out, the novelist merely forgot about the readings and claims he was unreachable at the time, by either phone or e-mail. But writer-director Guillaume Nicloux tells a far more entertaining story in the absurdist black comedy The Kidnapping of Michel Houellebecq, which imagines that he really was taken hostage and held for a never-specified ransom. Even better, Nicloux got Houellebecq to play himself in the film, spoofing his image as an intellectual recluse. The fictionalized Houellebecq is taken captive by Mathieu (Mathieu Nicourt), Max (Maxime Lefrançois), and Luc (Luc Schwarz), who eventually bring him to a country house owned by elderly couple Ginette (Ginette Suchotzky) and Dede (Andre Suchotzky), where Houellebecq is almost always handcuffed and chained to his bed at night. His kidnappers engage him in literary discussions, talk about bodybuilding, bring him books to read, drink wine and smoke cigarettes with him, and even procure female accompaniment (Marie Bourjala) when he asks for it. The real Houellebecq (Platform; H. P. Lovecraft: Against the World, Against Life) plays his fictionalized self with a deadpan comic turn worthy of Buster Keaton, never letting on whether anything that is happening is even the slightest bit true to who Houellebecq actually is. Nicloux (The Nun, Valley of Love) keeps the audience guessing all the way about the characters and their motives, but don’t expect any simple answers or trite resolutions. The Kidnapping of Michel Houellebecq is screening May 10 at 4:00 and 7:30 in FIAF’s “Creative Encounters” CinéSalon series, with the later show introduced by Albertine Books deputy director Tom Roberge, who has admitted to his “slavish devotion to Michel Houellebecq.” The festival continues every Tuesday in May with Michel Gondry’s Is the Man Who Is Tall Happy?, Claire Denis’s Jacques Rivette, the Night Watchman, and Chantal Akerman’s One Day Pina Asked…

NEW YORK GUITAR FESTIVAL

Ring the Golden Bells: Celebrating 101 Years of Sister Rosetta Tharpe kicks off New York Guitar Festival on May 8

“Ring the Golden Bells: Celebrating 101 Years of Sister Rosetta Tharpe” kicks off New York Guitar Festival on May 8

Who: Luther Dickinson, Alvin Youngblood Hart, Dom Flemons, Ruthie Foster, Como Mamas, John Medeski, AJ Ghent, Nels Cline and Julian Lage, Dave Douglas with Camila Meza, Min Xiao-Fen, Alberta Khoury, Vernon Reid & Laraaji, Kid Millions, many more
What: New York Guitar Festival, including the Alternative Guitar Summit
Where: Brookfield Winter Garden, National Sawdust, DROM, the Greene Space, the Met Cloisters, the New School
When: May 8 – 15, free – $25
Why: An annual celebration since 1999 of the six-string and many of its manifestations and possibilities, the New York Guitar Festival begins May 8 at 8:30 at the Brookfield Place Winter Garden with “Ring the Golden Bells,” a tribute to Sister Rosetta Tharpe, with Luther Dickinson, Alvin Youngblood Hart, Valerie June, Dom Flemons, Ruthie Foster, Rachael Davis, Trixie Whitley, Como Mamas, John Medeski, Daru Jones, Dominic John Davis, and AJ Ghent. On May 9 at 7:00, “Beauty and Noise” at National Sawdust brings together David Torn, Dither Guitar Duo, Elliot Sharp, Anthony Pirog, Ben Monder, Mike Baggetta, Dither Guitar Duo, and Patrick Higgins. On May 11 at 7:30 at DROM, “While We’re Still Here: Honoring Joni Mitchell + Carla Bley” features Nels Cline and Julian Lage, Dave Douglas with Camila Meza, Wolfgang Muthspiel, Sheryl Bailey, Leni Stern, Joel Harrison, Monder, and Baggetta. Rez Abbasi, Derek Gripper, Kaki King, and Glenn Jones will perform on May 12 at 7:00 at the Greene Space. The Met Cloisters will host an immersive guitar marathon on May 14 with more than a dozen performers at different locations, including Min Xiao-Fen in Early Gothic Hall, Alberta Khoury in Langon Chapel, Colin Davin in Fuentidueña Chapel, Dylan Carlson in Pontaut Chapter House, and Vernon Reid & Laraaji in Trie Cloister Café. And on May 15, the NYGF Academy at the New School comprises seven panel discussions and conversations, from “Contemporary Improvisation and the Electric Guitar” and “A Conversation with Kid Millions, Don Bikoff + Jeff Conklin” to “Nigel North: The French Lute of the 17th-Century” and “Saul Koll in Conversation with Ed Keller.”

LA VERITÀ

(photo by Max Gordon)

Jean-Philippe Cuerrier and Erika Bettin perform an acrobatic pas de deux in LA VERITÀ (photo by Max Gordon)

BAM Howard Gilman Opera House
Peter Jay Sharp Building
230 Lafayette Ave.
May 4-7, $25-$80
718-636-4100
www.bam.org
finzipasca.com

Compagnia Finzi Pasca returns to BAM with La Verità, a wild and wacky production worthy of its inspiration, Spanish surrealist Salvador Dalí. Previously at BAM in November 2012 with Donka: A Letter to Chekhov, the Swiss troupe created La Verità around the large-scale backdrop Dalí painted for the Metropolitan Opera’s 1944 ballet, Mad Tristan, which was offered to them three years ago by its owner. (The original is now being restored, so a replica is being used in its place.) The two-hour show is a broad mix of elements that recall Pina Bausch’s Tanztheater Wuppertal, Cirque du Soleil, Eugene Ionesco, Fuerza Bruta, STREB, and vaudeville, having a ton of fun with aerialists, juggling, acrobatics, roller skating, Bunraku puppetry, and clowns. Writer, director, and co-lighting designer and choreographer Daniele Finzi Pasca incorporates images from the mural into the show, including a wheelbarrow, dandelions, crutches, and eggs with absurdist glee while displaying the many talents of the twelve-member cast, consisting of Moira Albertalli, Jean-Philippe Cuerrier, Annie-Kim Déry, Stéphane Gentilini, Andrée-Anne Gingras-Roy, Erika Bettin, Francesco Lanciotti, Evelyne Laforest, David Menes, Marco Paoletti, Felix Salas, Beatriz Sayad, and Rolando Tarquini. A bare-chested Cuerrier shows remarkable strength holding up Bettin by the foot with his hand, Salas contorts his body into mind-blowing positions, a rhino-headed performer plays the piano, Menes dances en pointe, ballerinas with dandelion headdresses stumble about (on purpose), and various men and women lie down under the treacherous Zig Roller. Tarquini and Sayad also impress in a tour-de-force costume-changing bit. There’s not much of a narrative plot; it seems to essentially be about an upcoming auction to help the theater, but it’s often hard to understand Tarquini because of his thick accent. But La Verità is essentially just about the chaotic craziness of Dalí’s bigger-than-life persona, in a dreamlike world that melds the real with the surreal.

FRIEZE ART FAIR HIGHLIGHTS

Alex Da Corte’s giant floating baby and part of Heather Phillipson’s “100% Other Fibres” greet Frieze visitors (all photos by twi-ny/mdr)

Alex Da Corte’s giant floating baby and part of Heather Phillipson’s “100% Other Fibres” greet Frieze visitors (all photos by twi-ny/mdr unless otherwise noted)

FRIEZE ART FAIR
Randall’s Island Park
May 5-8, $29-$49 per day
friezenewyork.com

On a cold, rainy Friday afternoon, Frieze was about as comfortable and manageable as any major international art fair can get. You could take your time looking at the art, easily procure a table at one of the restaurants, and not have to wait on long lines to use the rest rooms. At the fifth annual Frieze New York, held on Randall’s Island, video, contemporary photography, and outdoor sculpture are out while large-scale painting, mid-to-late-twentieth-century photography, and performance are in. Below are our recommended highlights, in no particular order; also be on the lookout for works by Carolee Schneeman, Liz Magic Laser, Rieko Otake, Bernd and Hilla Becher, John Divola, Nancy Holt, Frank Bowling, and reverse pickpocket David Horvitz.

anthea hamilton

A troupe of mimes moves throughout the fair in a green vehicle in Anthea Hamilton’s “Kar-A-Sutra (After Mario Bellini)”

instructions from the sky

Eduardo Navarro’s “Instructions from the Sky” remained indoors because of the weather

maurizio cattelan

Maurizio Cattelan pays tribute to the Daniel Newburg Gallery by restaging his 1994 U.S. debut, “Warning! Enter at Your Own Risk. Do Not Touch, Do Not Feed, No Smoking, No Photographs, No Dogs, Thank you.” complete with chandelier and Gabriel the donkey, who recently appeared at the Met in La Bohème.

mika rottenberg

Look inside Mika Rottenberg’s “Lips” for a surprise video, right next to her sizzling “AC Trio”

roni horn

Hauser & Wirth’s staff have a tough time stopping people from touching Roni Horn’s untitled glass pieces

n dash

You can see more of N. Dash’s beautiful works of adobe, acrylic, gesso, string, canvas, and jute at Casey Kaplan in Chelsea

stories are propaganda

Philippe Parreno and Rirkrit Tiravanija collaborated on eight-minute video installation “Stories Are Propaganda”

spencer lowell

Spencer Lowell’s “New York, New York, New York” provides unique look at Queens Museum Panorama (photo courtesy Queens Museum)

alex katz nine women

Alex Katz’s “Nine Women” is significantly smaller than 1982 Times Square mural

homeless vehicle project

Perhaps Krzysztof Wodiczko’s twenty-five-year-old “Homeless Vehicle Project” could still help New York City’s homeless crisis

michelle grabner

Michelle Grabner’s untitled enamel on panel painting is a bright standout

francois morellet

François Morellet turns Galerie Herve Bize space into a dizzying experience

david schnell

Perennial favorite Galerie Eigen + Art features new works by David Schnell, including “Becken” (above) and “Pakt” (photo courtesy Galerie Eigen + Art)

fred wilson

Fred Wilson’s “Emilia’s Mirror — Act 5, Scene 2” is part of Pace installation

dewar and gicquel

Daniel Dewar and Grégory Gicquel’s “Stoneware Mural with Pipes n°4” is part of Frame Stand Prize-winning installation “Truth and Consequences”