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

DANISH MODERNITY: JACOB A. RIIS AND VILHELM HAMMERSHØI IN 1900

Museum of the City of New York will host discussion surrounding

Museum of the City of New York will host presentation and discussion about contemporaries Jacob A. Riis and Vilhelm Hammershøi

Who: Danish ambassador Anne Dorte Riggelsen, curator Bonnie Yochelson, and assistant professor of art history Dr. Thor J. Mednick
What: “Danish Modernity: Jacob Riis and Vilhelm Hammershøi in 1900”
Where: Museum of the City of New York, 1220 Fifth Ave. at 103rd St.
When: Monday, November 16, $16, 6:30
Why: In conjunction with the exhibition “Jacob A. Riis: Revealing New York’s Other Half” at the Museum of the City of New York and “Painting Tranquility: Masterworks by Vilhelm Hammershøi from SMK — The National Gallery of Denmark” at Scandinavia House, MCNY is hosting an evening of presentations and discussions on the similarities and differences between the life and careers of Danish-born American photojournalist and social reformer Jacob A. Riis and Danish painter Vilhelm Hammershøi as they relate to the movement toward modernity.

RED BULL THEATER: REVELATION READINGS

THE MALCONTENT

John Marston’s THE MALCONTENT kicks off Reb Bull Theater Revelation Readings series at the Lucille Lortel Theater

Lucille Lortel Theater
121 Christopher St. between Bleecker & Hudson Sts.
Select Mondays, November 16 – July 25, $42-$64, 7:30
212-352-3101
www.redbulltheater.com

The Red Bull Theater’s Obie-winning Revelation Readings series, in which the company brings back Jacobean treasures, is up and running November 16 at the Lucille Lortel Theater with John Marston’s early-seventeenth-century satire, The Malcontent. The all-star cast features Matthew Rauch, Marsha Mason, Kelley Curran, Christopher Innvar, and Christina Rouner, directed by Derek Smith. The series continues December 7 with Cyril Tourneur’s The Atheist’s Tragedy, starring Jeremy Bobb, Miriam Hyman, Whit Leyenberger, Bhavesh Patel, Raphael Nash Thompson, Alejandra Venancio, and Lisa Wolpe, with live music by Alexander Sovronsky, direction by Ben Prusiner, and a post-show discussion with Gail Kern Paster. On December 28, Carson Elrod and Jay O. Sanders are among the cast of Ben Jonson’s Every Man in His Humour, directed by Elrod. The 2016 readings include Thomas Middleton’s A Trick to Catch the Old One (directed by Craig Baldwin and starring Steven Boyer), Philip Massinger’s The Roman Actor (with Patrick Page, directed by Louisa Proske), Shakespeare’s Coriolanus (starring Chukwudi Iwuji and directed by Michael Sexton), Frances Burney’s The Woman Hater (directed by Everett Quinton and featuring Arnie Burton, Auden Thornton, and Nick Westrate), Shakespeare’s Hamlet (directed by Tom Ridgely and featuring Arian Moayed), William Congreve’s The Way of the World, and the sixth annual Short New Play Festival.

WHAT EVERYONE’S TALKING ABOUT WITH ABIGAIL POGREBIN: CANDICE BERGEN

Candice Bergen will be at the JCC in Manhattan on November 10 to talk about her life and career (photo by Jonathan Becker)

Candice Bergen will be at the JCC in Manhattan on November 10 to talk about her life and career (photo by Jonathan Becker)

Who: Abigail Pogrebin and Candice Bergen
What: “What Everyone’s Talking About with Abigail Pogrebin: Candice Bergen”
Where: JCC in Manhattan, 334 Amsterdam Ave. at Seventy-Sixth St., 646-505-4444
When:Wednesday, November 18, $25, 7:30
Why: Journalist and would-be actress Abigail Pogrebin, the author of Stars of David: Prominent Jews Talk about Being Jewish and One and the Same: My Life as an Identical Twin and What I’ve Learned about Everyone’s Struggle to Be Singular, has sat down at the JCC in Manhattan with such celebrities and newsmakers as Alan Cumming, Roseanne Cash, Malcolm Gladwell, Danny Meyer, and Judy Collins for her ongoing series of intimate conversations, “What Everyone’s Talking About with Abigail Pogrebin.” On November 18, she’ll be joined by Candice Bergen, the Emmy-winning, Oscar-nominated star of such television shows as Murphy Brown and Boston Legal and such films as The Group and Carnal Knowledge. Bergen, who was married to director Louis Malle for fifteen years and has now been married to real-estate developer Marshall Rose for the same amount of time, will be focusing on her recent memoir, A Fine Romance (Simon & Schuster, April 2015, $28).

DANCE UNDER THE INFLUENCE: JACOB SLOMINSKI

(photo courtesy of the artist)

Jacob Slominski will conclude Dance under the Influence season at MAD, curated by Jack Ferver (photo courtesy of the artist)

Who: Jacob Slominski
What: Dance under the Influence
Where: Museum of Arts & Design, seventh floor, 2 Columbus Circle at 58th St. & Broadway, 800-838-3006
When: Friday, November 13, and Saturday, November 14, $17, 7:30
Why: The Museum of Arts & Design’s annual Dance under the Influence series, curated this year by Jack Ferver, concludes with California-born, New York City-based dancer and choreographer Jacob Slominski on November 13 & 14. Slominski has performed with such choreographers as Faye Driscoll, Ishmael Houston-Jones, and Ferver, most recently in Chambre at the New Museum. In his piece for MAD, Slominski, whose own work has been seen at such venues as Chez Bushwick and Gibney Dance, will investigate the relationship between audience and performer, particularly questioning whether the comfort level for audiences has evolved so much that the show itself is even necessary anymore. The November 13 performance will be followed by a discussion with Slominski, hosted by Ferver.

MOBY-DICK: A MARATHON READING

Frank Stella, “The Whiteness of the Whale (IRS-1, 2X),” paint on aluminum, 1987 (© 2015 Frank Stella/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York. Photograph by Steven Sloman)

Frank Stella, “The Whiteness of the Whale (IRS-1, 2X),” paint on aluminum, 1987 (© 2015 Frank Stella/Artists Rights Society; photograph by Steven Sloman)

Whitney Museum of American Art
Neil Bluhm Family Galleries, fifth floor
99 Gansevoort St.
Friday, November 13, 11:00 am – 10:00 pm
Saturday, November 14, 11:00 am – finish
Free with museum admission of $18-$22
212-570-3600
whitney.org

Last November’s second biennial Moby-Dick Marathon took place over the course of three days at the Ace Hotel, the South Street Seaport Museum, and the Housing Works Bookstore Cafe. This year a bonus marathon is being held November 13-14 on the fifth floor of the new Whitney, where more than 150 artists, writers, curators, editors, and others will celebrate the 164th anniversary of Herman Melville’s thousand-page 1851 epic with a two-day marathon reading in conjunction with Frank Stella’s Moby-Dick series, part of a major retrospective of the work of the Massachusetts-born, New York-based artist that continues through February 7. Stella created the works for a special 150th anniversary publication of Moby-Dick; or, The Whale, containing reproductions of sculptures, reliefs, prints, and a mural inspired by the tale of Captain Ahab’s desperate hunt for the title mammal. Among the myriad scheduled readers of the massive tome are Ben Greenman, Brian Floca, Trisha Baga, Alan Light, Morgan Parker, AK Burns, Lucky DeBellevue, Monica de la Torre, Salman Rushdie, Melissa Febos, Paul Rome, Rebecca Dinerstein, Kurt Andersen, Ben Fama, Angela Flournoy, and Rowan Ricardo-Phillips, with more to be announced.

DOC NYC: HITCHCOCK/TRUFFAUT

Documentary examines the extraordinary interview sessions between François Truffaut and Alfred Hitchcock (photo by Philippe Halsman)

Documentary examines the extraordinary interview sessions between François Truffaut and Alfred Hitchcock (photo by Philippe Halsman)

HITCHCOCK/TRUFFAUT (Kent Jones, 2015)
Bow Tie Chelsea Cinemas
260 West 23rd St. between Seventh & Eighth Aves., 4:45
Saturday, November 14,
Festival runs November 12-19
www.docnyc.net
cohenmedia.net/films

“In 1962, while in New York to present Jules and Jim, I noticed that every journalist asked me the same question: ‘Why do the critics of Cahiers du Cinéma take Hitchcock so seriously? He’s rich and successful, but his movies have no substance,’” French Nouvelle Vague auteur François Truffaut wrote in the preface to the second edition of what he called “the hitchbook,” the seminal film bible Truffaut/Hitchcock. “In the course of an interview during which I praised Rear Window to the skies, an American critic surprised me by commenting, ‘You love Rear Window because, as a stranger to New York, you know nothing about Greenwich Village.’ To this absurd statement, I replied, ‘Rear Window is not about Greenwich Village, it is a film about cinema, and I do know cinema.’” Truffaut was determined to change the prevailing belief that British director Alfred Hitchcock was a maker of studio fluff. “In examining his films,” Truffaut continued, “it was obvious that he had given more thought to the potential of his art than any of his colleagues. It occurred to me that if he would, for the first time, agree to respond seriously to a systematic questionnaire, the resulting document might modify the American critics’ approach to Hitchcock. That is what this book is all about.” The tome compiled a weeklong series of conversations between the thirty-year-old Truffaut and the sixty-three-year-old Hitchcock — the talks began on Hitch’s birthday — in the latter’s Hollywood studio office, with Helen Scott serving as translator. Although the interviews were recorded for audio, no film was shot; instead, Philippe Halsman took still photos. The story of the unique relationship between Truffaut, who as of 1962 had made only The 400 Blows and Shoot the Piano Player (he was in the midst of finalizing Jules and Jim), and Hitchcock, who was preparing his forty-eighth film, The Birds, is told in the splendid documentary Hitchcock/Truffaut. Writer-director Kent Jones (head of the New York Film Festival), cowriter Serge Toubiana (former editor in chief of Cahiers du Cinéma) and editor Rachel Reichman lovingly combine Halsman’s pictures, audio clips from the original sessions, scenes from many of Hitchcock’s films (and a few of Truffaut’s), close-ups of dozens of pages from the book, rare archival footage, and new interviews with ten directors from around the world who weigh in on what makes Hitchcock’s work so special, so illuminating, so influential.

Sharing their praise are Martin Scorsese, Wes Anderson, David Fincher, Olivier Assayas, Peter Bogdanovich, Arnaud Desplechin, James Gray, Kiyoshi Kurosawa, Richard Linklater, and Paul Schrader, as they shed light on such classic films as Vertigo, Psycho, I Confess, The Wrong Man, Sabotage, Marnie, Rear Window, and others, with detailed shot-by-shot analysis while also praising the importance of “the hitchbook” itself. It all makes for an eye-opening crash course in cinema, and it’s likely to change the way you look and think about motion pictures. “It was a window into the world of cinema that I hadn’t had before, because it was a director simultaneously talking about his own work but doing so in a way that was utterly unpretentious and had no pomposity,” Gray (Little Odessa, Two Lovers) says about the book. “There was starting to be these kind of erudite conversations about the art form, but Truffaut was the first one where you really felt that they were talking about the craft of it,” Schrader (American Gigolo, Mishima) points out. “It’s not just that Truffaut wrote a book about Hitchcock. The book is an essential part of his body of work,” Olivier Assayas (Clouds of Sils Maria, Carlos) explains. “I think it conclusively changed people’s opinions about Hitchcock, and so Hitchcock began to be taken much more seriously,” Bogdanovich (The Last Picture Show, Paper Moon) asserts. And Scorsese (Taxi Driver, Raging Bull) sums up, “It was almost as if somebody had taken a weight off our shoulders and said yes, we can embrace this, we could go.” Of course, the book not only created a critical reassessment of Hitchcock but also helped Truffaut’s budding career. Narrated by Bob Balaban, the film places the work of the two men, who remained good friends until Hitchcock’s death in 1980 at the age of eighty (sadly, Truffaut died four years later at the age of fifty-two), in context of the history of cinema. “Why do these Hitchcock films stand up well? Well, I don’t know the answer,” Hitchcock is heard saying at the beginning of the documentary. By the end of the documentary, you will surely know the answer. Hitchcock/Truffaut is screening on November 14 at Bow Tie Chelsea Cinemas and will be followed by a Q&A with Jones and Scorsese, who collaborated on My Voyage to Italy. DOC NYC runs November 12-19, opening with the U.S. premiere of Barbara Kopple’s Miss Sharon Jones! and continuing with more than two hundred films and special events, including new and classic documentaries, master classes, panel discussions, and a keynote conversation with Jon Alpert and Sheila Nevins.

CANSTRUCTION

Gensler’s What’s U, Doc? Canstructure consists of 5,932 cans (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Gensler’s “What’s Up, Doc?” CANsculpture consists of 5,932 cans (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Brookfield Place
250 Vesey St.
Daily through November 16, free, 10:00 am – 6:00 pm
212-945-0505
brookfieldplaceny.com
www.sdanyc.org/canstruction
canstruction nyc slideshow

The twenty-third annual Canstruction NYC Design/Build Competition is under way at Brookfield Place, although they’re a little trickier to find this year than in the past, when they lined the Winter Garden. The architectural battle and fundraiser — visitors are asked to bring a can of high-quality, nonperishable food to donate — features more than two dozen creative structures built by teams referencing the international hunger crisis. As always, the overall construction is best viewed through a camera, but get up close and personal with the naked eye to see how ingenious many of the intricate designs are. You can vote for your favorite here. Among the impressive competitors are HOK’s “Presidential CANdidates,” Thornton Tomasetti’s “Wall Street Charging Bull,” Severud Associates’ “Spanning the Hungry Rapids,” GACE Consulting Engineers’ “The Butterfly Effect: How Far CAN Kindness Go?,” RAND Engineering & Architecture’s “Pipe Down Hunger,” and WJE Engineers & Architects’ “Yoshi’s Soup’er Mission,” although it will be mighty tough to beat out Gensler’s “What’s Up, Doc?” At the end of the competition, the structures are taken apart and the cans donated to City Harvest, so come on by, bring some nonperishable items, and help CANstruction raise upwards of 100,000 cans of food. On November 12 from 12 noon to 3:00, Jenny McCoy, a chef-instructor at the Institute of Culinary Education and author of Desserts for Every Season, will host a free presentation and tasting (of sweets made with canned food) next to Hudson Eats, right near several of the CANsculptures.