this week in lectures, signings, panel discussions, workshops, and Q&As

EMERGE

(photo by Scott Shaw)

Gibney inaugural EMERGE program features new dance, discussion, classes, and more (photo by Scott Shaw)

The Theater at Gibney
280 Broadway between Chambers & Reade Sts.
May 2-4, $15-$20
646-837-6809
gibneydance.org

Gibney Dance Company presents EMERGE this week, a new program that highlights emerging choreographers through performance, classes, and discussion focusing on the creative process. From May 2 to 4, there will be new work from former Batsheva dancer Bobbi Jene Smith, former Trey McIntyre Project dancer and Harvard Dance Center artist-in-residence Chanel DaSilva, and Micaela Taylor, winner of the inaugural GDC/Springboard EMERGE Choreographic Award. You can check out a preview of DaSilva’s Swept here. “In my mind it was this split screen of two couples who were essentially the same couple but were showing two different facets of their relationship,” she says about the piece. The Thursday and Saturday shows will be followed by Q&As moderated by Risa Steinberg, while the Friday show will be preceded by a free Living Gallery performance by Aynsley Vandenbroucke, curated by Eva Yaa Asantewaa.

TRIBECA FILM FESTIVAL MOVIES PLUS — MAKING WAVES: THE ART OF CINEMATIC SOUND

making waves

MAKING WAVES: THE ART OF CINEMATIC SOUND (Midge Costin, 2019)
Tuesday, April 30, Regal Battery Park 6, 8:00
Thursday, May 2, Village East Cinema 4, 3:45
Festival continues through May 5
www.makingwavesmovie.com
www.tribecafilm.com

Longtime sound editor and teacher Midge Costin pays tribute to her discipline in the eye- and ear-opening documentary Making Waves: The Art of Cinematic Sound, having its world premiere this week at the Tribeca Film Festival. The celebration of sound focuses on three of the best in the business: three-time Oscar winner Walter Murch (Apocalypse Now, The English Patient), four-time Oscar winner Ben Burtt (E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial, Star Wars), and seven-time Oscar winner Gary Rydstrom (Saving Private Ryan, Toy Story). “Before we were born, you’re looking at darkness. Sound is the first sense that’s plugged in,” Murch says at the beginning of the film. “Six months, seven months into the womb, it’s hearing the mother’s heartbeat, it’s hearing her breathing, it’s hearing Dad shouting from the garage. It’s making sense of the world. You have emerged into a kind of consciousness using only sound. And then you’re born. Sound affects us in a deeper way almost than image does. It goes deeper. And yet we’re naturally, seemingly oblivious to that.”

Documentary shows Ben Burtt recording a bear that will become the voice of Chewbacca in Star Wars

Documentary shows Ben Burtt recording a bear that will become the voice of Chewbacca in Star Wars

Costin was the sound editor on such major Hollywood films as Crimson Tide, The Rock, and Armageddon but left to become the Kay Rose Professor in the Art of Sound Editing at the USC School of Cinematic Arts, a position endowed by famous USC grad George Lucas. Lucas is among the many directors raving in the film about the magical work performed by sound editors, along with Steven Spielberg, David Lynch, Barbra Streisand, Christopher Nolan, Sofia Coppola, Robert Redford, Ang Lee, Peter Weir, and Ryan Coogler. They are joined by Murch, Burtt, Rydstrom, and such other sound editors as Pat Jackson, Teresa Eckton, Greg Hedgepath, Bobbi Banks, Victoria Rose Sampson, Mark Mangini, Ioan Allen, Karen Baker Landers, Richard Hymns, and Cece Hall, who describe the process of creating and adding sound, including redubbing dialogue, as well as the impact of stereo and, later, digital technology. Among the coolest scenes are those illustrating Burtt’s childhood fascination with science fiction, a look at the importance of the Beatles’ White Album, the transition from silent pictures, and the working relationship between PIXAR cofounder John Lasseter and the inventive Rydstrom. It’s a crash course in the art of sound, where viewers also learn about such key elements as production recording, dialogue editing, ADR, SFX, foley, ambience, and music. It’s also a big-time commercial for the art form and occasionally feels like an ad to study the craft in film school.

Writer, producer, and director Costin, a self-described technophobe who has a passion for teaching people how to listen, and writer and producer Bobette Buster, author of Do Story: How to Tell Your Story So the World Listens, take a deep dive into such films as Saving Private Ryan, Citizen Kane, A Star Is Born, THX 1138, Star Wars, Apocalypse Now, Ordinary People, Funny Girl, A League of Their Own, Top Gun, and Singin’ in the Rain, revealing some major tricks of the trade. But perhaps the most important thing in Making Waves is that all of the sound editors appear to love their job, smiling like children with candy when talking about certain sounds they captured and collaborating with directors. You’ll never look at — or listen to — a film the same way again. Making Waves: The Art of Cinematic Sound is screening April 30 and May 2 in the Movies Plus section of the Tribeca Film Festival, followed by Q&As with Costin, Buster, and producer Karen Johnson.

REEL PIECES WITH ANNETTE INSDORF: AN EVENING WITH GLENDA JACKSON

Glenda Jackson (photo by Brigitte Lacombe) will sit down with Annette Insdorf and talk film at the 92nd St. Y on April 29

Glenda Jackson (photo by Brigitte Lacombe) will sit down with Annette Insdorf and talk film at the 92nd St. Y on April 29

Who: Annette Insdorf, Glenda Jackson
What: 92Y Talks
Where: 92nd St. Y, Kaufmann Concert Hall, 1395 Lexington Ave. at 92nd St., 212-415-5500
When: Monday, April 29, $20-$40, 7:30
Why: While all is falling apart around her in Sam Gold’s misguided Broadway production of King Lear at the Cort Theatre, one thing shines through: the stark, riveting performance of master actress Glenda Jackson in the lead role. On Monday night, April 29, when her show is dark, Jackson will be at the 92nd St. Y to discuss her film career as part of the ongoing series “Reel Pieces with Annette Insdorf.” Jackson has won two Oscars, for Ken Russell’s Women in Love and Melvin Frank’s A Touch of Class, and was also nominated for John Schlesinger’s Sunday Bloody Sunday and Trevor Nunn’s Hedda, all between 1971 and 1976. She hasn’t made a movie since 1990’s King of the World, having spent twenty-three years in Parliament before returning to the stage in 2016. The evening will include clips from such films as Women in Love, Marat/Sade, The Music Lovers, Sunday Bloody Sunday, A Touch of Class, The Return of the Soldier, The Romantic Englishwoman, Hopscotch, and Mary, Queen of Scots. Jackson is a frank speaker, so it should be a special night as she talks about her unusual, celebrated career.

IF THE DANCER DANCES

If the Dancer Dances

Meg Harper works with Dava Fearon in If the Dancer Dances

IF THE DANCER DANCES (Maia Wechsler, 2018)
Quad Cinema
34 West 13th St. between Fifth & Sixth Aves.
Opens Friday, April 26
212-255-2243
quadcinema.com
ifthedancer.com

Shortly before the opening credits roll in Maia Wechsler’s lovely documentary If the Dancer Dances, Newark-born, New York City-based choreographer Stephen Petronio says, “The beauty and tender and amazing thing about dance is that it gets passed from one body and one soul to another. There’s something so precious and beautiful about that, yet it’s very fragile. It comes out of the body, it goes into the air, and then it disappears.” In 2014, Petronio announced his “Bloodlines” initiative, in which his company would restage iconic works by Merce Cunningham, Trisha Brown, Anna Halprin, Yvonne Rainer, and Steve Paxton. The series began with Cunningham’s 1968 masterpiece, RainForest, and writer, director, and producer Maia Wechsler and writer and producer Lise Friedman followed the production from the casting stage to three weeks of intense rehearsals with former Cunningham dancers through to the first public presentation of the work at the Joyce in 2015. “I was shocked. I said, Stephen would never in a million years do any other choreographer’s work,” Stephen Petronio Company dancer Dava Fearon says.

If the Dancer Dances

Stephen Petronio wonders just what he has gotten himself into in If the Dancer Dances

She is joined by fellow company members Gino Grenek, Nicholas Sciscione, Emily Stone, Joshua Tuason, Barrington Hines, and Jaqlin Medlock and special guest Melissa Toogood, a former Cunningham dancer, as they rehearse the piece at DANY Studios on West Thirty-Eighth St., led by former Cunningham stagers Meg Harper, Rashaun Mitchell, and Andrea Weber, who painstakingly go over every intricate motion with the dancers, training Petronio’s team as Cunningham trained them. Petronio’s dancers desperately try to learn Cunningham’s very different, unique movement language, which is clearly not easy, as it requires them to use unfamiliar muscle memory and timing that they find extremely frustrating. “Merce never told us any of these images. He never, ever, ever told us what to think or what to feel,” Mitchell explains about Cunningham’s method, which was done without music. Wechsler speaks with former Cunningham dancers Albert Reid, Silas Reiner, Sandra Neels, and Gus Solomons Jr, several of whom were in the original production of RainForest at Buffalo State College in March 1968. “It was the quintessence of stripped-down abstraction,” Reid says of the piece. Wechsler also includes rare footage of performances of RainForest from 1968, 1970, 1977, and 2011, the earlier ones featuring Cunningham, who is a treat to watch onstage, in cut-up costumes by Jasper Johns and moving amid the Mylar balloons of Andy Warhol’s Silver Clouds floating around his body. The film is edited by Mary Manhardt with Adam Zucker, who imbue the film with the pace of a dance as they shift between rehearsals, interviews, and archival clips. As opening night approaches, the cast has a lot of work still to do, everyone concerned whether they’ll be ready to perform in front of the highly knowledegable New York City audience. Through it all, Petronio, who considers Cunningham and Brown his “artistic parents” — he was the first male to be in the Trisha Brown Dance Company — primarily works with Harper from the sidelines, sitting and watching as she gets deep into worry mode, doing whatever she can to protect Cunningham’s treasured, and carefully controlled, legacy. In that way, If the Dancer Dances unfolds like a thriller about the creative process; you don’t have to be a dance fan to get caught in its grip.

If the Dancer Dances — the title comes from the start of a Cunningham quote — features an enchanting score by Paul Brill, including the beautiful song “Everything I Believe In” that plays over the closing credits, so don’t be so quick to leave the theater. The film opens April 26 at the Quad, enriched with special appearances by the creators all weekend. Wechsler, Friedman, and Petronio will participate in a Q&A moderated by Alastair Macaulay after the 7:00 screening April 26, and Wechsler and Friedman will introduce the 9:00 show; on April 27, there will be Q&As with Wechsler, Friedman, Grenek, Solomons jr, and Mitchell, moderated by Julie Malnig, at the 1:00 show and with Wechsler, Friedman, Solomons jr, and Harper, moderated by Deborah Jowitt, at the 7:00 screening, while Wechsler and Friedman will introduce the 9:00 show; and on April 28 there will be a Q&A with Wechsler, Friedman, and Fearon, moderated by Macaulay, after the 1:00 screening.

THE ORCHID SHOW: SINGAPORE

The New York Botanical Garden takes visitors to Singapore this year (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

The New York Botanical Garden takes visitors to Singapore this year (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

The New York Botanical Garden
Enid A. Haupt Conservatory
2900 Southern Blvd., Bronx
Through April 26, $10-$12 children two to twelve, $23-$28 adults, 10:00 am – 6:00 pm
718-817-8700
www.nybg.org

You have only until Sunday to catch the New York Botanical Garden’s seventeenth annual Orchid Show, which this year takes visitors to the beautiful land of Singapore known as the “City in a Garden.” Curated by Marc Hachadourian, the show re-creates the dazzling Supertrees in Singapore’s Gardens by the Bay and the arched pathways at the National Orchid Garden in the Singapore Botanic Gardens in the Malaysian country. Among the hundreds of species and hybrids are the Vanda Miss Joaquim, Singapore’s national flower, and the Vanda Awkwafina, named for the New York City-born rapper and actress who played Goh Peik Lin in Crazy Rich Asians. “One of my first memories ever is of my mom taking me to NYBG. I’m truly honored!” she tweeted.

Seventeenth annual NYBG Orchid Show continues through April 28 (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Seventeenth annual NYBG Orchid Show continues through April 28 (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

There are still special orchid events you can attend, including the Orchid Insiders Tour daily at 12:30; Orchid Evenings ($38) on April 26 and 27 from 7:00 to 10:00 with the Bronx Night Market Pop-up, a light display, dancers, DJs, and cocktails; a “Troubleshooting with Orchids” lesson on April 27 and 28 at 2:30 and 3:30; an “Orchid Basics Q&A” in the shop every day from 1:30 to 4:30; and “Crazy Real Singapore” on April 27 and 28 at 1:30, with Margaret Leng Tan performing TOY TOY TOY! on her toy piano.

TRIBECA TALKS 2019

Martin Scorsese and Robert De Niro will talk about their work together at the Beacon

Martin Scorsese and Robert De Niro will talk about their work together at the Beacon as part of the 2019 Tribeca FIlm Festival

Tribeca Film Festival
Multiple locations
April 24 – May 5, free – $50
www.tribecafilm.com

One of the most exciting parts of the Tribeca Film Festival is the Tribeca Talks section, which features discussions with actors, directors, writers, and other film-crew members talking about their craft. Divided into “Directors Series,” “Future of Film,” “Master Class,” and “Storytellers,” the talks include such cool programs as Sarah Silverman with Mike Birbiglia, Martin Scorsese with Robert De Niro, Michael J. Fox with Denis Leary, David O. Russell with Jennifer Lawrence, Questlove with Boots Riley, Guillermo del Toro with Alec Baldwin, and Hideo Kojima with Norman Reedus along with such topics as “The Art of Adaptation,” “Is Anyone Home? Location-Based Entertainment,” “The Journey of Digital Storytelling to TV,” and “10 Years of 30 for 30.” The events, some of which are free with advance registration, take place at BMCC TPAC, the Tribeca Festival Hub, the Marriott Bonvoy Boundless Theater, the SVA Theater, and the Beacon.

Thursday, April 25
Tribeca Games Presents: Hideo Kojima with Norman Reedus, Stella Artois Theatre @ BMCC TPAC, $40, 6:00

Directors Series: Guillermo del Toro with Alec Baldwin, Stella Artois Theatre @ BMCC TPAC, $40, 8:00

Friday, April 26
Future of Film: The Art of Adaptation, with Mathias Chelebourgh, Pete Billington, and Jessica Shamash, Tribeca Festival Hub, free with advance ticket, 1:00

Future of Film: Building the New Storytellers, with Ken Perlin, Lance Weiler, Alfredo Salazar-Caro, and Jeremy Bailenson, Tribeca Festival Hub, free with advance ticket, 2:30

Queen Latifah with Dee Rees with the Premiere of the Queen Collective Shorts, screening preceded by discussion with Queen Latifah and Dee Rees, Marriott Bonvoy Boundless Theater, $40, 5:30

Saturday, April 27
Future of Film: Is Anyone Home? Location-Based Entertainment, with Coline Delbaere, Ethan Stearns, and Antoine Cayrol, moderated by Loren Hammonds, Tribeca Festival Hub, free with advance ticket, 1:00

Storytellers: Jaron Lanier, Marriott Bonvoy Boundless Theater, $40, 2:00

Directors Series: David O. Russell with Jennifer Lawrence, Stella Artois Theatre @ BMCC TPAC, rush, 6:00

Sunday, April 28
Directors Series: Martin Scorsese with Robert De Niro, Beacon Theatre, 2:00

Monday, April 29
Future of Film: Immersive Storytelling Across the Mediums, with Jessica Brillhart and Aaron Katz, Tribeca Festival Hub, free with advance ticket, 1:00

Future of Film — Sharing Is Caring: Shared Experiences in Mixed Reality, with Adam May, Lucy Hammond, May Abdalla, and Amy Rose, Tribeca Festival Hub, free with advance ticket, 2:30

Master Class: The Art of Cinematic Sound, with Walter Murch, Ben Burtt, Gary Rydstrom, and Midge Costin, moderated by Glenn Kiser, SVA Theater 2 Beatrice, $40, 5:00

Storytellers: Sarah Silverman with Mike Birbiglia, Stella Artois Theatre @ BMCC TPAC, $40, 8:00

Questlove will be interviewed by Boots Riley at the Tribeca Film Festival

Questlove will be interviewed by Boots Riley at the Tribeca Film Festival

Tuesday, April 30
Storytellers: Michael J. Fox with Denis Leary, Stella Artois Theatre @ BMCC TPAC, $40, 6:00

Storytellers: Questlove with Boots Riley, Marriott Bonvoy Boundless Theater, rush, 2:00

Wednesday, May 1
Storytellers: Rashida Jones, Stella Artois Theatre @ BMCC TPAC, $40, 6:00

Friday, May 3
Master Class: Irwin Winkler on the Art and Craft of Producing, SVA Theater 2 Beatrice, free with advance ticket, 3:30

Tribeca Disruptive Innovation Award, Stella Artois Theatre @ BMCC TPAC, $50, 4:00

Prune Nourry and Serendipity, screening followed by discussion with Prune Nourry, Rita Charon, and Nina Collins, Marriott Bonvoy Boundless Theater, $24, 8:00

Saturday, May 4
Tribeca Celebrates Pride Day, with Jeffrey Winter, Wade Davis, River Gallo, Sadé Clacken Joseph, Raul Castillo, Tanya Saracho, Ser Anzoategui, Roberta Colindrez, Kevin Huvane, Lesli Klainberg, John Cameron Mitchell, Leilah Weinraub, Simon Halls, Rivianna Hyatt, Fabrice Houdart, Alok Vaid-Menon, Tre’vell Anderson, Joanna Lohman, Sarah McBride, Malcolm Kenyatta, Stacy Lentz, Kathy Tu, Staceyann Chin, Twiggy Pucci Garçon, and many others, Marriott Bonvoy Boundless Theater, $30, 10:00 am

Directors Series: Marielle Heller, SVA Theater 2 Beatrice, $40, 1:00

Master Class — The Journey of Digital Storytelling to TV: A Discussion with HBO Talent, SVA Theater 2 Beatrice, free with advance ticket, 5:30

Sunday, May 5
10 Years of 30 for 30, with Connor Schell, Ezra Edelman, Alex Gibney, and Marina Zenovich, moderated by Chris Connelly, SVA Theater 2 Beatrice, $30, 3:30

CARMINE STREET GUITARS

Carmine Street Guitars

Rick Kelly and Cindy Hulej are a mutual admiration society in Carmine Street Guitars

CARMINE STREET GUITARS (Ron Mann, 2018)
Film Forum
209 West Houston St.
Opens Wednesday, April 24
212-727-8110
filmforum.org
www.sphinxproductions.com

In the second half of Ron Mann’s utterly delightful and unique documentary Carmine Street Guitars, a well-dressed, well-groomed young man enters the title store in Greenwich Village and identifies himself as Adam Shalom, a Realtor who is selling the building next door. Shalom tries to talk about square footage, but Carmine Street Guitars founder and owner Rick Kelly barely looks up as he continues cleaning a fret. It’s a critical, uncomfortable moment in an otherwise intimate and inviting film; throughout the rest of the eighty-minute documentary, the soft-spoken Kelly talks guitars and craftsmanship with a stream of very cool musicians and his punk-looking young apprentice, Cindy Hulej. But Shalom’s arrival hearkens to one of the main reasons why Mann made the movie: to capture one of the last remaining old-time shops in a changing neighborhood, a former bohemian paradise that has been taken over by hipsters and corporate culture, by upscale stores and restaurants and luxury apartments. You’ll actually cheer that Kelly gives Shalom such short shrift, but you’ll also realize that Shalom and others might be knocking again at that door all too soon.

Carmine Street Guitars

Rick Kelly welcomes “instigator” Jim Jarmusch to his Greenwich Village shop in Carmine Street Guitars

The rest of the film is an absolute treat. Mann follows five days in the life of Carmine Street Guitars; each day begins with a static shot of the store from across the street, emphasizing it as part of a community as people walk by or Kelly, who was born in Bay Shore, arrives with a piece of wood he’s scavenged. The camera then moves indoors to show Kelly and Hulej making guitars by hand, using old, outdated tools and wood primarily from local buildings that date back to the nineteenth century. Kelly doesn’t do computers and doesn’t own a cell phone; he leaves all that to Hulej, who posts pictures of new six-strings on Instagram. Meanwhile, Kelly’s ninetysomething mother, Dorothy, works in the back of the crazily cluttered store, taking care of the books with an ancient adding machine. Over the course of the week, they are visited by such musicians as Dallas and Travis Good of the Sadies (who composed the film’s soundtrack), “Captain” Kirk Douglas of the Roots, Eleanor Friedberger, Dave Hill of Valley Lodge, Jamie Hince of the Kills, Nels Cline of Wilco, Christine Bougie of Bahamas, Marc Ribot, and Charlie Sexton. Bill Frisell plays an impromptu surf-guitar instrumental version of the Beach Boys’ “Surfer Girl.” Stewart Hurwood, Lou Reed’s longtime guitar tech, talks about using Reed’s guitars for the ongoing “DRONES” live installation. “It’s like playing a piece of New York,” Lenny Kaye says about the guitars made from local wood while also referring to the shop as part of the “real village.”

Mann, the Canadian director of such previous nonfiction films as Grass, Know Your Mushrooms, and Comic Book Confidential, was inspired to make the movie at the suggestion of his friend Jarmusch, who in addition to directing such works as Stranger Than Paradise (which featured Balint), Down by Law, and 2016 NYFF selection Paterson is in the New York band Sqürl. Plus, it was Jarmusch who first got Kelly interested in crafting his guitars with wood from buildings, “the bones of old New York,” resulting in Telecaster-based six-strings infused with the history of Chumley’s, McSorley’s, the Chelsea Hotel, and other city landmarks. Carmine Street Guitars, which is far more than just mere guitar porn, opens April 24 at Film Forum, with Mann, Kelly, and Hulej participating in Q&As following the 7:45 show on Wednesday night, joined by Jarmusch, and after the 6:00 screening on Friday and 4:10 show on Saturday.