this week in (live)streaming

POETRY FOR THE PANDEMIC

Actors Tracie Thoms and Bill Murray are among those participating in “Poetry for the Pandemic” on November 12

Who: Dr. Joshua Bennett, Mahogany L. Browne, Juan Felipe Herrera, Molly McCully Brown, Patricia Smith, Tracie Thoms, Bill Murray, Maddie Dietz, Manasi Garg, Isabella Ramirez, Ethan Wang, Anthony John Wiles Jr.
What: Poetry, dialogue, Q&A
Where: Theater of War Zoom
When: Thursday, November 12, free with RSVP, 7:00
Why: Theater of War continues its impressive online presence during the Covid-19 crisis with the free, virtual program “Poetry for the Pandemic,” joining forces with the Alliance for Young Artists & Writers on November 12 at 7:00. The ninety-minute program brings together established and emerging poets along with actors Tracie Thoms, who played Antigone in Theater of War’s Antigone in Ferguson, and Bill Murray. The evening will begin with poetry readings, followed by a discussion with the student poets and then an audience Q&A. Dr. Joshua Bennett will serve as facilitator, with professional poets Juan Felipe Herrera, Mahogany L. Browne, Molly McCully Brown, and Patricia Smith and student poets Maddie Dietz, Manasi Garg, Isabella Ramirez, Ethan Wang, and Anthony John Wiles Jr.

GRACE @20

The twentieth anniversary of Ronald K. Brown’s Grace will be celebrated this week at CAP UCLA

Who: Ronald K. Brown / Evidence, a Dance Company, Barry Brannum, Arthur Jafa, MarySue Heilemann, Theo Bonner Perkins, Kristy Edmunds, Meryl Friedman
What: Three-day online celebration
Where: Center for the Art of Performance UCLA
When: November 12-14, free
Why: In December 2012, I saw Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater’s stunning new production of Ronald K. Brown’s Grace, which was originally commissioned and presented for AAADT in 1999; I’ve also seen Brown and his troupe, Evidence, a Dance Company, perform it at the Joyce led by Brown himself. I’ve called Grace, which is a tribute to Ailey’s legacy and is set to music by Duke Ellington, Roy Davis Jr., and Fela Anikulapo Kuti, “an exhilarating, rapturous work, filled with an innate, infectious spirituality that resonates throughout the audience.” CAP UCLA will be honoring the twentieth anniversary of the piece with “Grace@20,” a three-day program that begins November 12 at 7:00 with “Celebrating Grace@20,” consisting of a screening of a recorded performance from Bard College’s Fisher Center in July 2019, followed by a live discussion with Brown and LA-based dancer-choreographer Barry Brannum.

On November 13 at 3:00, there will be an online community class, no experience necessary, to study Brown’s unique style, heavily influenced by West African traditional movement; participation is free with RSVP here. And on November 14 at 3:00, “Let’s Say Grace and Talk About It After!” is a live conversation with Brown, artist and filmmaker Arthur Jafa, UCLA School of Nursing associate professor MarySue Heilemann, artist and social justice advocate Theo Bonner Perkins, and CAP UCLA artistic and executive director Kristy Edmunds, moderated by CAP UCLA director of education Meryl Friedman. I’ve had the good fortune to interview Brown twice, and he is an extraordinary person, believing in love of community, the importance of dance as story, and honoring the ancestors. In 2015, he told me, “One thing that I have also learned is that we have to make sure we are connected to those close to us . . . and then that opens up the capacity to be connected to the world.” Grace has been doing just that for twenty years, with added relevance during the pandemic lockdown.

SOIL BENEATH: AN EMPIRICAL DECAY

Soil Beneath: An Empirical Decay streams through Primary Stages this week

Who: Chesney Snow, Kevin Hillocks, Rachael Holmes, Winston Dynamite Brown, Latra Wilson, Kimille Howard, Diedre Murray
What: Choreopoem
Where: Primary Stages online
When: November 11-15, $35
Why: Beatboxer, actor, songwriter, poet, and educator Chesney Snow will debut his Primary Stages commission, Soil Beneath: An Empirical Decay, this week, livestreaming November 11-15. The sociopolitical, multidisciplinary exploration of race and class in America was created by and stars Snow (In Transit, Oo Bla Dee), who will be joined in the forty-minute show by Kevin Hillocks as Homerel, Rachael Holmes as Dori, and choreographers Winston Dynamite Brown and Latra Wilson; Soil Beneath, which includes music, dance, poetry, and storytelling, is directed by Kimille Howard and features a score by Pulitzer Prize finalist Diedre Murray (Running Man, Eli’s Comin’). The November 11 opening-night performance will be followed by a Zoom talkback with members of the cast and artistic staff.

DOC NYC 2020

Army and NYPD vet Corey Pegues shares his surprising tale in A Cops and Robbers Story

DOC NYC
November 11-19
DOC NYC Live! free, individual films $12, ten-film pass $80, All Access Film Pass $199
www.docnyc.net
www.ifccenter.com

Forget about TV, newspapers, magazines, and online sites; if you want to know what’s going on in the world, just check out DOC NYC, the annual festival of nonfiction films that keeps getting bigger and better every year. Instead of being held at the IFC Center as usual, the eleventh edition will be virtual, running November 11-19, consisting of nearly two hundred shorts and features that explore timely issues as only documentaries can. Individual films are $12, and many come with a prerecorded Q&A with the filmmakers. In addition, DOC NYC will be hosting free, live discussions every day on Facebook, from noon to 4:00. Below is a look at some of this year’s highlights and the full Facebook Live schedule; keep watching this space for more recommendations as the festival continues.

ASHES TO ASHES (Taylor Rees, 2020)
www.docnyc.net
Vivian Ducat’s 2011 documentary, All Me: The Life and Times of Winfred Rembert, introduced the world to the extraordinary story of outsider artist Winfred Rembert, who shares his hardscrabble life through his intimately personal leather works. In the twenty-six-minute short Ashes to Ashes, Taylor Rees focuses on Rembert’s friendship with Dr. Shirley Jackson Whitaker, as the Star Wars fanatic talks about when he was nearly lynched as a teenager and she prepares for a special memorial. The close-ups of Rembert’s tired, weathered face and exhausted eyes speak volumes about the legacy of slavery in the United States.

Betye Saar takes care of business in short film screening at DOC NYC

BETYE SAAR: TAKING CARE OF BUSINESS (Christine Turner, 2020)
www.docnyc.net
Last year, MoMA hosted the powerful exhibition “Betye Saar: The Legends of Black Girl’s Window,” a retrospective of the work of the California-born African American artist whose assemblages explore racism and feminism, including the controversial 1972 piece The Liberation of Aunt Jemima. Saar, who turned ninety-four this past summer, now has another moving show, “Call and Response,” that continues at the Morgan Library through January 31. In Christine Turner’s nine-minute short, Betye Saar: Taking Care of Business, made for the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the artist discusses her process, which involves incorporating found objects into her sociopolitical constructions; several works in the documentary are on view at the Morgan, an added bonus for those in New York City.

A COPS AND ROBBERS STORY (Ilinca Calugareanu, 2020)
www.docnyc.net
“I really wanted to tell my story,” Corey Pegues says in Ilinca Calugareanu’s A Cops and Robbers Story, making its world premiere at DOC NYC. “I was, like, people gotta know that you could make a bunch of crazy mistakes, even criminal mistakes, and then revamp and reinvent yourself. But I know I couldn’t do that.” A twenty-one-year veteran of the NYPD who believed in giving back to the community, Pegues held on to a secret that whole time: that he had previously been a street-corner drug dealer, a fact he knew would ruin everything he’d accomplished. Calugareanu speaks extensively with Pegues, his 1980s crew, and NYPD colleagues as the tale plays out one piece at a time. Be sure to stick around for the credits for a dazzling surprise about the film’s re-created 1980s scenes.

CROCK OF GOLD: A FEW ROUNDS WITH SHANE MacGOWAN (Julien Temple, 2020)
www.docnyc.net
DOC NYC is hosting the North American premiere of Julien Temple’s Crock of Gold: A Few Rounds with Shane MacGowan, a portrait of music legend Shane MacGowan, the Irish punk leader of the Pogues who is renowned for his heavy drinking. MacGowan, who will turn sixty-three on Christmas Day, is now confined to a wheelchair because of a 2015 accident in which he broke his pelvis, and his speech is so slurred, from years of alcohol and drug abuse and perhaps the worst teeth in rock-and-roll history, that the film includes subtitles whenever he speaks. He hangs out with former Sinn Féin leader Gerry Adams and actor Johnny Depp, talks about his childhood and his songwriting process, shares fabulous old footage and family photographs, and tells us how much he hates “Fairytale of New York,” which plays way too much during the documentary. I’ve seen the Pogues a few times, including a 2007 show at Roseland in which MacGowan disappeared for a while, so the band kept playing until he eventually returned, a new bottle in hand, just days after he had fallen off the stage in Boston and tore ligaments. Crock of Gold is a difficult film to watch, especially for fans who have seen Shane perform live with the Pogues or the Popes; he is now a shell of what he once was, a sad testament to what should have been a much more successful career.

Bill Shannon asks audiences to abandon assumptions in Crutch

CRUTCH (Sachi Cunningham & Vayabobo, 2020)
www.docnyc.net
in June 2010, I witnessed a mind-blowing participatory work, Bill Shannon’s Traffic: A Transient Specific Performance, in which Pittsburgh native Shannon, who has the degenerative bilateral hip deformity Legg-Calvé Perthes disease, glided through the Financial District on his specially designed crutches and skateboard as he interacted with people on the street while the audience watched from a bus that followed him. In Sachi Cunningham and Vayabobo’s Crutch, making its world premiere at DOC NYC, Shannon delves into the nature of the disease, which he contracted in childhood, explores his working methods as a dancer, choreographer, and multimedia artist, and visits a summer camp for kids with Legg-Calvé Perthese. “Everybody has crutches,” Shannon says in the feature-length film. “Some of them you can see; some of them are invisible.” (And yes, that is me on the bus….)

HER NEW YORK (David Gross, 2020)
www.docnyc.net
www.davidlgross.com
Since the 1960s, artist Jill Gill has been preserving the memory of long-gone aspects of the city in her “Lost New York” ink-and-watercolor paintings. In David Gross’s nine-minute Her New York, Gill discusses her process of photographing street corners, buildings, and movie theaters, then committing them to paper in a cartoony, playful, yet detailed style reminiscent of Red Grooms, Ben Kantor, and Roz Chast. But Gill does not lament the past; instead, she enjoys the what was as well as what is and what will be, acknowledging that things change, and not always for the worst, which is not a bad way to look at the city, and the world.

NINE DAYS A WEEK (Maliyamungu Muhande, 2020)
www.docnyc.net
Part of the DOC NYC U — New School shorts program, Maliyamungu Muhande’s Nine Days a Week is a black-and-white portrait of now-eighty-year-old street photographer Louis Mendes, who hangs around Grand Central Terminal, B&H, the Audubon Ballroom, and other locations with his vintage 1940 press camera and takes pictures of people who come up to talk to him, for a price. Mendes shares bits about his life, which includes living in shelters, and invites Muhande into his crowded studio, where he shows off his photos. The film is screened with Amrit Cheng’s OK Boomer, Lillian Xuege Li’s Parklife, and Claire Haughey’s Hidden Costs in addition to a Q&A with the directors.

THE SOCIAL DILEMMA (Jeff Orlowski, 2020)
www.docnyc.net
Available on Netflix, Jeff Orlowski’s The Social Dilemma is a frightening look into the algorithms used by such platforms as Facebook to keep users clicking away, seeing exactly what the site wants you to see. Social media experts go deep into detail, accompanied by fantastical yet goofy staged scenes that reveal how we are all trapped. No matter how bad you might have thought it was, it’s worse.

SONGS OF REPRESSION (Estephan Wagner & Marianne Hougen-Moraga, 2020)
www.docnyc.net
Part of the Winner’s Circle section of DOC NYC, Estephan Wagner and Marianne Hougen-Moraga’s Songs of Repression takes viewers inside Colonia Dignidad (Colony of Dignity), a private community in southern Chile established in 1961 by German ex-pats led by Paul Schäfer. Rebranded Villa Baviera, it is now a tourist destination, not so much for its expansive beauty, but for the horrible things that happened there, particularly the physical and sexual abuse of children, some of whom are now raising their kids there and exploiting the evils perpetrated by Schäfer for profit. One returnee and one resident decide to tell the full truth, but nearly everyone else wants to either remain silent or “forgive and forget,” resulting in a gripping tale that will often have you gasping at what you see and hear.

Keytin takes Elizabeth Lo on an amazing journey in Stray

STRAY (Elizabeth Lo, 2020)
www.docnyc.net/film/stray
www.magpictures.com/stray
You can have Sounder, Old Yeller, and Lassie, cheer on Balto, Benji, and Beethoven. But the best movie dog ever is Keytin, the extraordinary golden mutt who is the star of Elizabeth Lo’s masterful feature-length debut, Stray. Lo follows the remarkable canine as she wanders through the streets of Istanbul and other parts of Turkey, living a dog’s life, in a place that until fairly recently would regularly round up strays and euthanize them mercilessly. Everywhere she goes, she meets up with people she knows and who love her, from a dock to a dangerous construction site; she also plays with such puppy pals as Nazar and Kartal. Keytin scavenges for food, cuddles up with homeless kids from Aleppo, relaxes amid traffic, and chases a cat, all with a look in her eyes that reveals great depth and understanding that humans can only dream of. The soundtrack mixes a splendid score by Ali Helnwein with snippets of poignant conversation overheard on Keytin’s journeys, accompanied by occasional intertitles with relevant quotes by Diogenes and Themistius. (“Human beings live artificially and hypocritically and would do well to study the dog.”) As I said, Best. Movie. Dog. Ever.

A THOUSAND CUTS (Ramona S. Diaz, 2020)
www.docnyc.net
www.athousandcuts.film
Around the world, freedom of the press is under attack like never before, as authoritarian leaders and dictators attempt to silence their critics and control the narrative by casting the media as the enemy of the people. In A Thousand Cuts, filmmaker Ramona S. Diaz focuses on the Philippines, where President Rodrigo Duterte’s violent war on drugs has widened to include threatening journalists who do not support him: particularly Maria Ressa, the dedicated and relentless founder of the online news site Rappler, which has refused to submit to Duterte’s brutal authority. It’s a frightening film about a remarkable woman who is prepared to fight for the freedom of the press at any cost. You can read my full review here.

TINY TIM: KING FOR A DAY (Johan Von Sydow, 2020)
www.docnyc.net
www.tinytimfilm.com
“When you look at where Herbert Khaury begins and Tiny Tim ends, nothing was ever normal from top to bottom, from start to finish, Tiny Tim biographer Justin A. Martell says in Johan Von Sydow’s Tiny Tim: King for a Day. Through archival footage, interviews with friends and family, animated re-creations, and diary narration ready by “Weird Al” Yankovic, Von Sydow relates the strange tale of Tiny Tim, once the biggest star in the world, plucking away at his ukulele as he sang familiar songs in his unique vibrating falsetto. A friend of mine recently asked on his Facebook page, “Tiny Tim: Good, Bad, or Unimportant?” This documentary might change many of the responses he received.

Werner Herzog and Clive Oppenheimer will discuss Fireball: Visitors from a Darker World live on Facebook on November 11

CONVERSATIONS WITH FILMMAKERS
During the festival, there will be free live half-hour discussions on Facebook, featuring filmmakers, subjects, and other experts digging into the issues explored in the works.

Wednesday, November 11
Fireball: Visitors from a Darker World, with Werner Herzog and Clive Oppenheimer, 1:00

Inside the DOC NYC Short List, with Thom Powers, Basil Tsiokos, and Opal H. Bennett, 2:00

Focus on Shorts, with Opal H. Bennett and Samah Ali, 3:00

Thursday, November 12
Truth to Power: Barbara Lee Speaks for Me, with U.S. Congress members Rep. Barbara Lee (CA), Rep. Karen Bass (CA), and Rep. Ayanna Pressley (MA), moderated by Abby Ginzberg, noon

Los Hermanos/The Brothers, with violinist Joshua Bell, Harlem Quartet member Ilmar Gavilán, and filmmakers Marcia Jarmel and Ken Schneider, 1:00

Zappa, with filmmaker Alex Winter and film editor Mike J Nichols, 2:00

Dope Is Death, with acupuncturist Juan Cortez and filmmaker Mia Donovan, 3:00

Friday, November 13
The Reason I Jump, with novelist David Mitchell and filmmaker Jerry Rothwell, noon

The Walrus and the Whistleblower, with Phil Demers, Jeff Ventre, and Natalie Bibeau, 1:00

Television Event, with filmmaker Jeff Daniels, 3:00

Saturday, November 14
The Dissident, with chess grandmaster Garry Kasparov and filmmaker Bryan Fogel, noon

Through the Night, with director Loira Limbal and Stanley Nelson, 1:00

Restaurant Hustle 2020: All on the Line, with restaurateurs Antonia Lofaso, Marcus Samuelsson, Maneet Chauhan, and Christian Petroni and filmmakers Guy Fieri and Frank Matson, 3:00

Since I Been Down explores incarceration, mandatory sentences, trauma, and rehabilitation through the case of Kimonti Carter

Sunday, November 15
Chasing Childhood, with Long Island superintendent of schools Dr. Michael Hynes, author and Let Grow cofounder Lenore Skenazy, clinical psychologist Catherine Steiner-Adair, and filmmaker Eden Wurmfeld, 1:00

A La Calle, with Acting Americas deputy director of Human Rights Watch Tamara Taraciuk Broner and the Promise Institute for Human Rights executive director Kate Mackintosh, 2:00

Since I Been Down, with philosopher Angela Davis, prosecuting attorney Dan Satterberg, and filmmaker Gilda Sheppard, 3:00

Monday, November 16
The Big Scary “S” Word, with philosopher Cornel West, filmmaker Yael Bridge, and author Astra Taylor, noon

The Mole Agent, with filmmaker Maite Alberdi, producer Marcela Santibáñez, executive producers Julie Goldman and Christopher Clements, and Carolyn Hepburn, 1:00

The Meaning of Hitler, with writer Francine Prose, Hannah Arendt Center head Roger Berkowitz, and filmmakers Michael Tucker and Petra Epperlein, 2:00

No Ordinary Man, with filmmakers Aisling Chin-Yee and Chase Joynt and memoirist Thomas Page McBee, 3:00

Tuesday, November 17
Calendar Girl, with fashion designer Nicole Miller, New York Fashion Week creator Fern Mallis, former InStyle editor Eric Wilson, director Christian Bruun, and producer Natalie Nudell, noon

Beautiful Something Left Behind, with Joe Primo, Vivian Nunez, Rebecca Soffer, and Carole Geithner, 2:00

Medicine Man: The Stan Brock Story, with Remote Area Medical CEO Jeff Eastman, healthcare reform activist Wendell Potter, and filmmaker Paul Michael Angell, 3:00

Beyond Resilience, with Sahar Driver, Chloe Walters-Wallace, Madeleine Lim, and Miriam Bale, 4:00

Wednesday, November 18
DOC NYC Awards Presentation, noon

Harlem Rising: A Community Changing the Odds, with Harlem Children’s Zone founder Geoffrey Canada, CEO Kwame Owusu Kesse, graduate Amber Deas, board member Stanley Druckenmiller, and senior manager and executive producer Marlene Fox, 1:00

Nasrin, with journalist Jason Rezaian, Reza Khandan, and filmmakers Jeff Kaufman and Marcia Ross, 2:00

Love & Stuff, with filmmaker Judith Helfand, 3:00

Thursday, November 19
IDFA / DOC NYC Dialogue, with Thom Powers and Orwa Nyrabia, noon

Landfall, with filmmaker Cecilia Aldarondo, 1:00

The Last Out, with filmmakers Sami Khan and Michael Gassert, 2:00

In My Own Time: A Portrait of Karen Dalton, with musician Peter Stampfel and others, 3:00

WHO’S THERE: HAMLET AND BLACK LIVES

Chukwudi Iwuji will discuss the 2016 Public Theater Mobile Unit production of Hamlet in virtual program on November 10 (photo by Joan Marcus)

Who: Karen Ann Daniels, Chukwudi Iwuji, Patricia MacGregor, James Shapiro, Praycious Wilson-Gay
What: Discussion about race, Shakespeare, community, and the Public Theater’s Mobile Unit
Where: The Public Theater website and YouTube channel
When: Tuesday, November 10, free with RSVP, 7:00
Why: In the fall of 2016, the Public Theater’s Mobile Unit, after traveling across New York City, brought Patricia McGregor’s contemporary production of Hamlet to the Shiva Theater; I called the show “a playful adaptation highlighted by a superior performance by Olivier Award winner and Royal Shakespeare Company associate artist Iwuji, who is both inspired and inspiring as Hamlet. Iwuji, who has never played the role before, jumps in feet first, giving his all, often making direct eye contact with the audience to bring them further into the story. He does a lot of shouting, but he balances that with beautifully rendered soliloquies that (almost) feel like they could have been written today.” With the Public Theater and the Mobile Unit shut down because of the pandemic, the downtown institution will be presenting the virtual program “Who’s There: Hamlet and Black Lives,” a free discussion with Iwuji and McGregor on November 10 at 7:00. It is exciting to watch the actor talk about Shakespeare; on June 29, he delivered an impassioned reading of the “Homely Swain” speech from Henry IV and then waxed poetic about the play for a Red Bull Theater RemakaBULL Podversation, which can be viewed here. The Public presentation will explore Hamlet and the Mobile Unit itself within the context of the Black Lives Matter movement and the state of our divided nation, with Iwuji and McGregor joined by Mobile Unit director Karen Ann Daniels, Mobile Unit community programs manager Praycious Wilson-Gay, and Shakespeare scholar in residence James Shapiro.

A TRIBUTE TO TONI MORRISON: SONG OF SOLOMON MARATHON READING

Who: Edwige Danticat, Jacqueline Woodson, Tommy Orange, Jesmyn Ward, Margaret Atwood, Hilton Als, Jennifer Egan, Jason Reynolds, Brit Bennett, Jesmyn Ward, Lorrie Moore, Ocean Vuong, Robin Coste Lewis, Tayari Jones, Tommy Orange, Yaa Gyasi, Louise Erdrich, Kevin Young, Andrea Davis Pinkney, Lisa Lucas
What: Virtual benefit reading
Where: Literacy Partners
When: Friday, November 27, 8:00 – 11:00 pm; Saturday, November 28, 2:00 – 6:00 pm; Sunday, November 29, 2:00 – 6:30 pm, free for a limited time with code FB2020
Why: It would be fascinating to hear what Toni Morrison would be thinking today, as Joe Biden has been announced as the president-elect, with Kamala Harris as his vice president. Shortly after Donald Trump was elected in November 2016, Morrison penned an article for the New Yorker, “Making America White Again,” in which she wrote, “Personal debasement is not easy for white people (especially for white men), but to retain the conviction of their superiority to others — especially to black people — they are willing to risk contempt, and to be reviled by the mature, the sophisticated, and the strong. If it weren’t so ignorant and pitiful, one could mourn this collapse of dignity in service to an evil cause. . . . So scary are the consequences of a collapse of white privilege that many Americans have flocked to a political platform that supports and translates violence against the defenseless as strength. These people are not so much angry as terrified, with the kind of terror that makes knees tremble.”

Morrison, who passed away in August 2019 at the age of eighty-eight, is being celebrated November 27-29 with a three-day all-star marathon reading of her third novel, 1977’s Song of Solomon, which earned her the National Book Critics Circle Award for Fiction. The life story of Macon “Milkman” Dead III will be read by Edwige Danticat, Jacqueline Woodson, Tommy Orange, Jesmyn Ward, Margaret Atwood, Hilton Als, Jennifer Egan, Jason Reynolds, Brit Bennett, Jesmyn Ward, Lorrie Moore, Ocean Vuong, Robin Coste Lewis, Tayari Jones, Tommy Orange, Yaa Gyasi, and Louise Erdrich, with introductions by Kevin Young, Andrea Davis Pinkney, and Lisa Lucas. The event is part of “Words Shape Our World: A Literacy & Social Justice Series,” benefiting Literacy Partners, a nonprofit education organization that “focuses on parents to help them build the literacy and language skills they need to succeed in today’s society while promoting their children’s learning at home. . . . Since the emancipation of people who were enslaved, adult literacy has been central to Black liberation. We will continue to do the work until racism is eliminated from our economy and education system and every family has the opportunity to thrive.” Tickets to the benefit range from $100 to $1,000, but for a limited time they are free with the code FB2020 (although a $5 donation is suggested if you can, and $20 gets you a book bundle). “Perhaps that’s what all human relationships boil down to: Would you save my life? or would you take it?,” a character says in Song of Solomon. It’s frightening that especially in the age of Covid-19, the answer is not always what you’d expect.

MTC VIRTUAL THEATRE: TED SNOWDON READING SERIES

Charlie Oh’s Long kicks off MTC virtual spring reading series/

Who: Manhattan Theatre Club
What: Virtual fall reading series
Where: MTC YouTube channel
When: Tuesdays, November 10 – December 15, free, 2:00 (available for viewing through the following Saturday at 2:00)
Why: During the pandemic, Manhattan Theatre Club has featured such online programming as mini-modules about dramatic openings, family stories, creating strong characters, earned endings, and other topics; #TalkbackTuesdays; artist conversations; Stargate Theatre; student monologues; and other virtual presentations that can be viewed here. In addition, the Ted Snowdon Reading Series in the spring consisted of online readings of Good Time Charlie and The Collapse.

The fall reading season comprises five new plays (including some commissions), kicking off November 10 with Charlie Oh’s Long, directed by Dustin Wills and starring Christian DeMarais, Raymond Lee, Daniel Liu, and Tara Summers, followed November 17 by Julia Izumi’s (An Audio Guide for) Unsung Snails and Heroes, directed by Natsu Onoda Power; December 1 by Brittany K. Allen’s Ball Change, directed by Margot Bordelon; December 8 by Stacey Rose’s As Is: Conversations with Big Black Women in Confined Spaces, directed by Tiffany Nichole Greene; and December 15 by Penelope Skinner’s Friendly Monsters, directed by Nicole Charles. The series, which focuses on developing innovative new work, is named for and supported by theater producer Ted Snowdon and began back in 1999 (when Cherry Jones appeared in David Auburn’s Proof); among the playwrights whose work has been presented in the past are Theresa Rebeck, Adam Rapp, Mike Daisey, Amy Herzog, Alfred Uhry, Matthew Lopez, Ayad Akhtar, Jocelyn Bioh, and Lauren Yee. Each free reading will be livestreamed at Tuesday at 2:00 on YouTube and will be available for viewing through the following Saturday at 2:00. MTC will also be inaugurating “The Show Goes On,” looking back at its history, later this month, and its annual gala will go virtual in December.