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

EARTH DAY 2013: THE FACE OF CLIMATE CHANGE

The forty-third annual Earth Day focuses its attention on global warming this year with its personal theme, “The Face of Climate Change,” inviting people to go to the website, upload a photo, and tell their own story about how they’ve been directly affected by the somehow controversial topic and asking them to “be part of the solution.” Grand Central Terminal will host three days of special events, April 20-22, including presentations by Aimee Follette (“How Food Choices Have the Power to Nurture Us and Heal Our Planet”) and Patricia Moreno (“Be a Powerful Force for Positive Change in the World by Training Your Mind and Moving Your Body”), live performances by the Callen Sisters, Avidya & the Kleshas, and the cast of Annie, and screenings of such films as Dear Governor Cuomo and The Vanishing of the Bees. Among the exhibitors in Vanderbilt Hall will be 511 NY Rideshare/Commuter Link, Build It Green!NYC, Common Ground NYC, Global Justice For Animals and the Environment, Rwanda Women in Action, Sane Energy Project, and ThinkEco CoolNYC, among many others.

earth day

Over at the Javits Center, the Green Festival is open to the general public April 20-21, featuring presentations by Neil Chambers (“Resiliency and the Future of Cities”), Stefanie Iris Weis (“Bringing Eco-Sexy Back: Tools, Tips, and Tricks for a Sustainable Love Life”), Sacha Dunn (“Homemade Household Cleaners”), James Fischer (“Urban Beekeeping”), and others as well as a Recycled Runway Eco-Fashion Show and live performances by Reverend Billy and the Earthalujah Chorus and Circa ’95. Union Square will host exhibitor booths, a clothing swap, a CO2 E Drive Green Vehicle Runway Show, and live acts on April 21 and the C02 E Green Drive Project on April 22, while Solar One will have an Earth Day NY CO2 Car Drive on April 21 at 8:00 am.

HERMAN’S HOUSE

HERMAN’S HOUSE

Jackie Sumell wants to build a dream home for a prisoner serving a life sentence in HERMAN’S HOUSE

HERMAN’S HOUSE (Angad Singh Bhalla, 2013)
Cinema Village
22 East 12th St. between University Pl. & Fifth Ave.
Opens Friday, April 19
212-924-3363
www.cinemavillage.com
www.hermanshouse.org

After attending a presentation in 2001 by Robert King, the former Angola 3 inmate, about the controversial conditions in the Louisiana State Penitentiary and the continued incarceration — in solitary confinement — of Albert Woodfox and Herman Wallace, Brooklyn-born multidisciplinary artist Jackie Sumell began a correspondence with Wallace that developed into a fascinating friendship that is explored in Angad Singh Bhalla’s debut documentary, Herman’s House. “I’m not a lawyer and I’m not rich and I’m not powerful, but I’m an artist,” Jackie says in the film. “And I knew the only way I could get him out of prison was to get him to dream.” She gets him to dream by having him describe, in exacting detail, the house he’d like to live in if he were to ever be released, and she goes ahead and designs it, working with architects on the blueprints. She also builds a scale model that becomes part of a traveling art exhibit, “The House That Herman Built,” which includes a precise re-creation in wood of Wallace’s six-by-nine-foot cell, his home for thirty-six years. Bhalla, who wrote, directed, and produced the film, while also serving as director of photography with Iris Ng, never shows Wallace on camera; instead, he paints a portrait of the New Orleans native —who was first convicted of bank robbery in 1967, then of killing a prison guard in 1972, eventually sentenced to life without parole for a crime he claims he didn’t commit — through a series of recorded phone conversations he has with Sumell over the years. Bhalla also visits with ex-convict Michael Musser, who got his life back on track because of Wallace; Wallace’s sister Vickie, who is not afraid to speak her mind; and King, who helped form the Angola chapter of the Black Panther Party with Wallace, Woodfox, and others. “You look at this house, you’re looking at me,” Wallace says. Indeed, viewers might never get to see Wallace, but by the end of the film, they will feel like they know him — and will hope for his release. But Bhalla never steers the narrative into a clarion call condemning the prison system and demanding Wallace’s freedom, instead allowing those elements to be subtle parts of this intriguing tale of a very unusual relationship.

Herman’s House opens April 19 at Cinema Village with a series of special discussions all weekend featuring such guest speakers as NYCLU senior staff attorney Taylor Pendergrass, WNYC reporter Anna Sale, Five Mualimmak of the NYC Jails Action Coalition, King Downing of the Campaign to End the New Jim Crow, executive director Soffiyah Elijah of the Correctional Association, and solitarywatch.com editor Jean Casella in addition to Bhalla and Sumell.

TWI-NY TALK: DONNA UCHIZONO — LIVE IDEAS: THE WORLDS OF OLIVER SACKS

(photo by Mia}

Donna Uchizono will present two works during NYLA festival celebrating Oliver Sacks (photo by Mia}

LIVE IDEAS: THE WORLDS OF OLIVER SACKS — RE: AWAKENINGS (DANCE)
New York Live Arts
219 West 19th St.
Thursday, April 18, 8:00, and Saturday, April 20, 4:00, $40
Festival runs April 17-21
212-691-6500
www.newyorklivearts.org
www.ladonnadance.org

In the preface to the 1990 edition of his bestseller Awakenings, Dr. Oliver Sacks wrote, “It is now 21 years since my patients’ awakenings, and 17 years since this book was first published; yet, it seems to me, the subject is inexhaustible — medically, humanly, theoretically, dramatically. It is this which demands new additions and editions, and which keeps the subject for me — and, I trust, my readers — evergreen and alive.” In celebration of Sacks’s upcoming eightieth birthday (on July 9) and the thirtieth anniversary of the publication of Awakenings, New York Live Arts is hosting its first Live Ideas festival, “The Worlds of Oliver Sacks,” five days of special programs that medically, humanly, theoretically, and dramatically examine and explore the good doctor’s inexhaustible contributions to the field of science and the arts. The festival includes the world premiere of Bill Morrison’s short film Re: Awakenings; a series of talks delving into Sacks’s work with people who have Tourette’s, Parkinson’s, and hearing loss; an evening of music and dance with the Orchestra of St. Luke’s, choreographer Aletta Collins, dancer Daniel Hay-Gordon, and conductor Tobias Picker; back-to-back presentations of Harold Pinter’s A Kind of Alaska, the first with spoken words, the second in American Sign Language; and such panel discussions as “Disembodiedness: Body Image & Proprioception,” “Musicophilia & Music Therapy,” “Neurologists & Philosophers Consider Sacks at 80,” and “Minding the Dancing Body,” the latter bringing together NYLA executive artistic director Bill T. Jones, Miguel Gutierrez, Colin McGinn, Alva Noë, and Gwen Welliver.

Sacks himself will participate in an Opening Keynote Conversation with Jones and will introduce a screening of the 1974 British television documentary Awakenings, followed by a Q&A. “Live Ideas” also features a pair of works by New York-based choreographer Donna Uchizono, performed by Levi Gonzalez, Hristoula Harakas, and Rebecca Serrell Cyr: a “Sacksian version” of Uchizono’s 1999 State of Heads and the newly commissioned Out of Frame. Earlier this week Uchizono discussed her involvement in this inaugural festival while preparing for the April 18 and 20 shows.

twi-ny: How did you get involved in “Live Ideas: The Worlds of Oliver Sacks” in the first place, and how familiar were you with his work prior to becoming part of the festival?

Donna Uchizono: I received a phone call from [NYLA artistic director] Carla Peterson asking me if I would be interested in creating a work about Awakenings based on Oliver Sacks’s work. I was, of course, completely honored and intrigued while simultaneously humbled by the offer. My father had his PhD in psychology and was interested in the workings of the brain. My father had a great love for books and had a huge library. Oliver Sacks’s books were among the many books my father owned. He gave me a copy of The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat to read quite a long time ago. I had also seen the film Awakenings so was somewhat familiar with the horrible loneliness and “silent scream” of sleeping sickness. Heartbreaking. It’s quite a different challenge being commissioned to create a work about a specific topic other than a concept that is driven by oneself. The new work is turning out to be much more representational than work that I normally create, which I think is quite natural given the subject and the context in which it will be performed.

twi-ny: You’ll be presenting State of Heads, which premiered at Dance Theater Workshop in 1999. Why did you choose this to be part of your Sacks presentation?

Donna Uchizono: Coming out of a much larger discussion, the reasons for State of Heads being in the program are many and beyond the scope of this writing. But when the suggestion to move away from a program that included a play, music, and dance on one evening, to that of separate evenings of dance, music, and theater, State of Heads was discussed as a piece that may be included in the evening of dance because of its movement vocabulary. As I wrote in the choreographer’s notes, State of Heads explores the feeling of waiting and the passage of time in the state of hiatus where familiar time and scale are pushed. Using the separation of the head from the body as a point of departure, in an exploration of disjointedness and the sense of a will apart from the mind driving the movement, surprisingly created a world of endearingly odd characters. State of Heads reveals endearment in the awkward where the ordinary become extraordinary. The accounts of the patients that Oliver Sacks writes about in his book Awakenings are remarkable, where most definitely the ordinary become extraordinary and where profound “humanness” is found in the most unlikely places and time.

Live Ideas festival runs April 17-21 at New York Live Arts

Live Ideas festival runs April 17-21 at New York Live Arts

twi-ny: You’re also debuting Out of Frame, incorporating text from Dr. Sacks’s work. What was it like transforming his scientific studies into dance?

Donna Uchizono: I rarely use text in my work, but Oliver Sacks is not only a neurologist of note, he is also a well-known writer, thus it seemed natural to use his words. It was Oliver Sacks’s words that conjured up the images and movement for Out of Frame. I made a conscious decision not to view Bill Morrison’s film that incorporates actual archival footage or revisit the film Awakenings while creating the new work. I did not want to imitate but rather to create the movement vocabulary and images from Sacks’s writings. I was deeply moved by Dr. Sacks’s humane understanding of the plight of his patients. It was the idea of compassion and the need for tenderness towards the individuals that drives the work, rather than his scientific studies. The short solo seems to float between three states — the physical torque of the disease, the human beneath the dress, and the dreamlike temporary state of L-DOPA.

twi-ny: This year marks the twenty-fifth anniversary of your choreographic debut. What are some of the key differences in being a New York City dancer-choreographer in 1988 as opposed to today?

Donna Uchizono: I feel quite lucky to be part of a generation that started to show their work during the late 1980s and early ’90s. At that time it seemed as if anything was possible. We could design spaces, design programs, and find places to create. We were not yet aware of the looming financial shutdown that was about to happen. We looked around at other choreographers and there seemed to be a possible linear path moving from individual and emerging choreographer to having a small dance company. By the mid-’90s the financial wall had crumbled. I think it is much harder to make work now. Well, it is for me anyway. Young choreographers today seem to be much more aware that there is no obvious financial path. What remains the same is the need to make work.

twi-ny: You’ve had a long relationship with Dance Theater Workshop, which recently morphed into New York Live Arts. What do you think of the new venue?

Donna Uchizono: I have had a long relationship with with the wonderful and dedicated Carla Peterson, who continues to champion experimental artists. I am quite thrilled and honored to be in this Live Ideas festival, and the staff at NYLA have treated me with openness and generosity.

BOOK PROGRAM: RUSS AND DAUGHTERS

russ and daughters

Museum of Jewish Heritage
36 Battery Pl.
Wednesday, April 17, $7-$12, 7:00
646-437-4202
www.mjhnyc.org
www.russanddaughters.com

For nearly one hundred years, Russ & Daughters has been serving delectable appetizing on the Lower East Side, specializing in salt-cured herring and salmon and other fishy Eastern European delights. Stryzow-born Polish mushroom carrier Joel Russ opened the original shop on Orchard St. in 1914, moving to 179 Houston St. in 1920, where it’s been ever since. The business changed its name from J. Russ National Appetizing Store in 1920 to Russ & Daughters in 1933, and it is still run by the family, currently owned by fourth-generationers Niki Russ Federman and former chemical engineer Josh Russ Tupper. Besides caviar, smoked fish, various herrings, and multiple salads and spreads, Russ & Daughters also makes amazing sandwiches, such as the Shtetl, the Meshugge, the Boychick, the Mensch, and the Yum Kippered; our personal favorite is the Super Heebster, made with whitefish, baked salmon salad, horseradish dill cream cheese, and wasabi flying fish roe on a bagel, washed down with beet and lemon shrub. On Wednesday, April 17, third-generation owner and former lawyer Mark Russ Federman will be at the Museum of Jewish Heritage, celebrating the publication of his book, Russ & Daughters: Reflections and Recipes from the House That Herring Built (Schocken, March 2013, $25.95), discussing the history of Russ & Daughters with Saveur senior editor Gabriella Gershenson, followed by a light reception. “Ninety-nine years in business is something to be proud of,” Federman writes in the introduction. “It’s actually 106 years, if you start counting in 1907, the year Grandpa Russ arrived in this country and filled his first pushcart with herring on Hester Street on the Lower East Side. But why quibble?” When it comes to Russ & Daughters, indeed, why quibble?

TRIBECA FILM FESTIVAL

Julie Delpy and Ethan Hawke will be at Tribeca Film Festival with Richard Linklater to screen and discuss their third collaboration, BEFORE MIDNIGHT

Julie Delpy and Ethan Hawke will be at Tribeca Film Festival with Richard Linklater to screen and discuss their third collaboration, BEFORE MIDNIGHT

Multiple locations
April 17-28, free – $25
646-502-5296
www.tribecafilm.com

Tickets go on sale to the general public for the 2013 Tribeca Film Festival on Monday morning, April 15, at 11:00, following presales to American Express cardholders and downtown residents. The twelfth annual festival consists of more than two hundred shorts, documentaries, animated films, and narrative features as well as a host of talks, panel discussions, Q&As, and other special events, taking place at Tribeca Cinemas, Clearview Cinemas Chelsea, AMC Loews Village VII, BMCC Tribeca PAC, the SVA Theater, the Apple Store SoHo, World Financial Center Plaza, 92YTribeca, and Barnes & Noble Union Square. Below are only some of the highlights of this year’s wide-ranging festival; keep watching this space for further details and updates.

Thursday, April 18
Tribeca Drive-In: The Birds (Alfred Hitchcock, 1963), fiftieth anniversary screening, Brookfield Place, World Financial Center Plaza, free, 8:15

Thursday, April 18
through
Sunday, April 21
Storyscapes, Bombay Sapphire House of Imagination, Dune Studios, 121 Varick St., seventh floor, free with advance RSVP, 7:30 – 10:00 pm

Friday, April 19
Meet the Filmmakers: Tom Berninger, Matt Berninger, and Marshall Curry discussing Mistaken for Strangers (Tom Berninger, 2013), Apple Store SoHo, free, 6:00

Tribeca Drive-In: Beetlejuice (Tim Burton, 1988), twenty-fifth anniversary screening, Brookfield Place, World Financial Center Plaza, free, 8:15

Saturday, April 20
Tribeca Talks Pen to Paper: Putting the “I” in Film, with Banker White, Tom Berninger, Amy Grantham, and Josh Fox, moderated by Mark Adams, B&N Union Square, free, 1:00

Tribeca Talks: Directors Series: Mira Nair with Bryce Dallas Howard, discussing The Reluctant Fundamentalist (Mira Nair, 2012), SVA Theater 1, $25, 3:30

Sunday, April 21
Tribeca Talks: Directors Series: Jay Roach with Ben Stiller, BMCC, $25, 3:00

Monday, April 22
Tribeca Talks: Directors Series: Richard Linklater with Ethan Hawke and Julie Delpy, discussing Before Midnight (Richard Linklater, 2013), SVA Theater 1, $25, 3:30

Tribeca Talks After the Movie: Elaine Stritch: Shoot Me (Chiemi Karasawa, 2013), followed by a talk with Stritch and Karasawa, moderated by Charles Isherwood, SVA Theater 2, $25, 5:30

Tuesday, April 23
Future of Film: A Conversation with Nerdist, featuring Chris Hardwick interviewing the Safdie brothers, Lisa Donovan, Andy Goldberg, Morgan Spurlock, and David Gordon Green, 92YTribeca, free, 12 noon – 2:00

Tribeca Talks Industry: Music + Film, with Matt Berninger, Q-Tip, and Todd Haynes, moderated by Joe Levy, SVA Theater 1, free with advance RSVP, 3:30

Tribeca Talks After the Movie: Tricked (Paul Verhoeven, 2013), followed by a conversation with Verhoeven moderated by Scott Foundas, SVA Theater 1, $25, 6:30

All-star comedy panel will discuss Marina Zenovich’s RICHARD PRYOR: OMIT THE LEGACY at Tribeca Film Festival

All-star panel will discuss Marina Zenovich’s RICHARD PRYOR: OMIT THE LEGACY at Tribeca Film Festival

Wednesday, April 24
Tribeca Talks After the Movie: Richard Pryor: Omit the Logic (Marina Zenovich, 2013), followed by a discussion with Zenovich, Tracy Morgan, Walter Mosley, and Wyatt Cenac, moderated by Jacob Bernstein, SVA Theater 1, $25, 6:00

Thursday, April 25
Tribeca Talks Industry: New Filmmakers in the Digital Age, with Lance Edmunds, Alex Karpovsky, Jenée LaMarque, Rob Meyer, and Tamara Anghie, moderated by Peter Brogna, SVA Theater 2, free with advance RSVP, 2:30

Friday, April 26
Meet the Filmmakers: Adrian Grenier and Matthew Cooke discussing How to Make Money Selling Drugs (Matthew Cooke, 2012), Apple Store SoHo, free, 6:00

Saturday, April 27
Tribeca/ESPN Sports Day, North Moore St. between Greenwich & West Sts., free, 10:00 am – 6:00 pm

Tribeca Family Festival Street Fair, Greenwich St. between Chambers & Hubert Sts., including 11:00 BMCC screening of The Smurfs (Raja Gosnell, 2011) with sneak peek at The Smurfs 2 (Raja Gosnell, 2013) and guest appearance by Christina Ricci, free, 10:00 am – 6:00 pm

Tribeca Talks: Directors Series: Clint Eastwood with Darren Aronofsky, discussing Eastwood Directs: The Untold Story (Richard Schickel, 2013), BMCC, $25, 2:30

Tribeca Talks After the Movie: twentieth anniversary screening of And the Band Played On (Roger Spottiswoode, 1993), followed by discussion with Matthew Modine, Ron Nyswaner, and David France, moderated by Tom Kalin, SVA Theater 1, free with advance RSVP, 3:30

Sunday, April 28
Tribeca Talks After the Movie: Out of Print (Vivienne Roumani, 2013), followed by a discussion with Roumani, Tony Marx, Jane Friedman, and Annie Murphy Paul, moderated by Ken Auletta, SVA Theater 2, $25, 1:30

THIS AIN’T CALIFORNIA

(photo by Harald Schmitt)

Unusually made documentary tells the story of 1980s skate culture in East and West Berlin (photo by Harald Schmitt)

THIS AIN’T CALIFORNIA (Marten Persiel, 2012)
Maysles Cinema
343 Malcolm X Blvd. between 127th & 128th Sts.
April 12-18, $10
212-582-6050
www.mayslesinstitute.org
www.thisaintcalifornia.com

Marten Persiel’s award-winning This Ain’t California begins with a section entitled “The Legend,” slyly pointing out from the start that what we’re about to see is the stuff of myth, not necessarily the straightforward documentary many have taken it for. Using real archival footage, re-created scenes, animation, and contemporary Super-8 footage posing as archival, Persiel, cinematographer Felix Leiberg, and editor Maxine Gödecke tell the story of Denis “Panik” Paracek, a 1980s skateboarding legend who has just been killed in Afghanistan. His old friends reunite to pay tribute to him, sharing tales of his remarkable skill, his fearlessness, and his ability to attract the opposite sex. While doing so, they paint a fascinating picture of East and West Germany in a decade that ended with the tearing down of the Berlin Wall. “For him, skating was a liberation,” one friend says, getting to the heart of the film, which is about freedom, both on an individual and global scale. Persiel also speaks with a former member of the secret service, who describes keeping a close eye on the underground skateboard culture and attempting to use the participants for propaganda during the Cold War. The film is intimate and playful, serious and involving, even if it’s all not necessarily true. This Ain’t California won the Dialogue en Perspective prize at the 2012 Berlin Film Festival, but the key word there is “perspective,” because as it turns out, the character of Panik is played by actor Kai Hillebrandt, and Panik might just be a complete fantasy created by Persiel. Most of the other characters are portrayed by actors as well. However, Persiel does an outstanding job re-creating the importance of the underground skater culture during a perilous time in East and West Germany, as a group of punks fought the power the only way they knew how. This Ain’t California is having its U.S. theatrical premiere at the Maysles Cinema April 12-18 at 7:30, with Persiel taking part in a Skype Q&A following a special Saturday afternoon 4:00 matinee.

A DOWNTOWN LITERARY FESTIVAL

downtown literary festival

Housing Works Bookstore Cafe, 126 Crosby St., 212-334-3324
McNally Jackson, 52 Prince St., 212-274-1160
Sunday, April 14, free, 10:00 am – 7:00 pm
www.housingworks.org

Downtown New York City has served as home to many of the world’s greatest writers as well as inspiration for countless stories. Housing Works and McNally Jackson are teaming up to pay tribute to that ever-evolving culture on Sunday, April 14, with the inaugural Downtown Literary Festival, a full day of readings, discussions, signings, and other activities celebrating the written word, shifting back and forth between the two venues. Things get going at 10:15 in the morning with “On the Grid: Stories in Our Streets,” a walking tour from Housing Works to McNally Jackson with contributions from Joanna Smith-Rakoff, Sarah Schulman, Jami Attenberg, Rosie Schaap, Brendan Sullivan, Lev Grossman, Jennifer Gilmore, Kristopher Jansma, Hari Kunzru, Katie Kitamura, Amy Waldman, and others. At 11:30 (HW), Mark Russ Federman of Russ & Daughters will host a brunch preview of the four-course literary feast DISH. At noon (MJ), Eileen Myles, Colm Toibin, Wayne Koestenbaum, Corina Copp, Elizabeth Willis, John Coletti, Alice Whitwham, and others will participate in “Having a Coke with You: Lunch with Frank O’Hara,” reading selections from the popular and influential member of the New York School of poetry. At 12:30 (HW), Rachel Syme and Maris Kreizman will lead “The Recital,” a new series in which writers recite, by memory, a one-to-three-minute piece by someone else.

At 1:00 (MJ), “Fast Talking: Downtown Writing from The Paris Review Archive” gathers together readers to pay tribute to the sixtieth anniversary of the seminal magazine, including a performance of the 1968 Jack Kerouac interview “The Art of Fiction.” At 1:30 (HW), “New York á la Cart: Veteran Vendors Dish about Life on the Streets” brings popular food truck chefs and owners inside to talk street food with Alexandera Penfold and Siobhan Wallace, authors of New York á la Cart: Recipes & Stories from the Big Apple’s Best Food Trucks, including Fauzia Abdur-Rahman of Fauzia’s Heavenly Delights, Jonathan Hernandez of Patacon Pisao, Red Hook Food Vendors executive director Cesar Fuentes, and one of our personal favorites, Nick Karagiorgos of Uncle Gussy’s. As an added bonus, food trucks will be parked nearby, selling their fare. At 2:00 (MJ), Katie Roiphe, James Atlas, and Lucas Wittman ask the question “Is the New York Bohemian Dead?” At 2:30 (HW), Michelle Legro moderates “Road Trip with The American Guide, as Erin Chapman Tom McNamara, and Gabriel Kahane talk about their new take on the Federal Writers Project travel guide. At 3:00 (MJ), Nikolai Fraiture, Alan Light, Thurston Moore, Ariana Reines, and Marc Ribot will share tales of the best city concerts they’ve ever seen in “You Should Have Been There: Stories of the Best Show Ever.” At 3:30 (HW), Maris Kreizman will present “Slaughterhouse 90210: Downtown Edition,” with Carlene Bauer, Austin Ratner, Jason Diamond, and Jessica Soffer discussing their favorite New York City-based television series. At 4:00 (MJ), Kathleen Alcott, Sophie Blackall, Charles Bock, Saïd Sayrafiezadeh, Luc Sante, and John Wray join up for “South of Power: Sub-Houston Manhattan and the Vanishing Fringe.” The festival culminates with a happy hour at Housing Works from 5:00 to 7:00, followed by an after-party at Pravda with Russian literary-themed drinks, the first hundred of which will be covered by HarperCollins.