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

SUPER SABADO: CARNAVAL!

Lila Downs will perform a free concert as part of Carnaval celebration at El Museu del Barrio

FREE THIRD SATURDAYS
El Museo del Barrio
1230 Fifth Ave. at 104th St.
Saturday, February 18, free, 11:00 am – 9:00 pm
212-831-7272
www.elmuseo.org

Fat Tuesday is next week, kicking off Mardi Gras celebrations all over the world. El Museo del Barrio will be holding a free Carnaval party on Saturday, featuring special events all day long. Mask-making workshops will take place 11:00 to 4:00 in Las Galerias and El Taller. From 12 noon to 3:00, you can dance to traditional music in the Black Box Theater, while from 1:00 to 4:00 you can don a jaguar mask made by artist Balam Soto and get your picture taken in the photo booth. Latin Grammy winner Lila Downs will perform a Carnegie Hall Neighborhood Concert at 4:00 in El Teatro, highlighting songs from her 2011 disc, Pecados y Milagros. Also at 4:00, Caridad de la Luz “La Bruja” will host a spoken-word workshop for teens in the Black Box. And at 7:00, a group of poets including Martín Espada, Jesús Papoleto Meléndez, Junot Díaz, Willie Perdomo, Mayda del Valle, and Emanuel Xavier will pay homage to writer, poet, and teacher Piri Thomas, who passed away in October at the age of eighty-three. In addition, there will be tours of the current exhibitions, “Testimonios: 100 Years of Popular Expression” and “Voces y Visiones: Gran Caribe.”

AFTER WORDS: A CONVERSATION WITH CYNTHIA NIXON

Cynthia Nixon will discuss WIT at the Greene Space on February 16 (photo by Joan Marcus)

The Greene Space
44 Charlton St. at Varick St.
Thursday, February 16, $20 ($15 with code GREENE), 5:00
www.thegreenespace.org
www.witonbroadway.com

After we recently saw Wit, Margaret Edson’s marvelous Pulitzer Prize–winning play that is making its Broadway debut at the Samuel J. Friedman Theatre, we wrote that “Cynthia Nixon is magnificent as Vivian Bearing; for all her eccentricities, Bearing should not be a sympathetic character, but Nixon turns the lonely, snarky woman, who has no real friends or family, into a delightful character who is not afraid to look death in the face.” The play deals with Bearing’s battle with stage IV metastatic ovarian cancer with both humor and seriousness. Following that matinee, cast members Greg Keller, Carra Patterson, and Jessica Dickey participated in a talk back with the audience, shedding illuminating light on the production’s creative process. On Thursday at 5:00, Keller (Dr. Jason Posner) and Patterson (nurse Susie Monahan) will join Tony and Emmy winner Nixon, herself a breast cancer survivor, for a special presentation at the Greene Space, going behind the scenes in a conversation moderated by WNYC’s Amy Eddings as part of the Manhattan Theatre Club’s “After Words” series. Tickets are $20, but if you use the code “GREENE,” they’re only $15.

DOCUMENTARY IN BLOOM — TALKING LANDSCAPE: EARLY MEDIA WORK, 1974-1984

Andrea Callard’s TALKING LANDSCAPE looks back at her experimental work with Colab (photo courtesy of the artist and the Maysles Cinema)

TALKING LANDSCAPE: EARLY MEDIA WORK, 1974-1984 (Andrea Callard, 2012)
Maysles Institute
343 Malcolm X Blvd. between 127th & 128th Sts.
February 13-19, suggested donation $10, 7:30
212-582-6050
www.mayslesinstitute.org
www.andreacallard.blogspot.com

In the late 1970s, Andrea Callard helped found a collective of artists that would come to be known as Colab, or Collaborative Projects, Inc. Among her fellow officers in the group were Coleen Fitzgibbons, Tom Otterness, and Ulli Rimkus. “Through a juicy and conflicted multi-year period of identity and structural definition,” she explains on her website, “there was experimentation in and rich discussion of accessible content, political forces, technology, equity, corporate versus union models, and material resources.” From February 13 to 19, the Maysles Institute will look back at Callard’s career by presenting the world premiere of her first feature-length film, Talking Landscape: Early Media Work, 1974-1984, which examines all those things and more in its eighty minutes. More a greatest-hits package than a narrative nonfiction film, Talking Landscape consists of several of Callard’s low-budget, low-tech Super 8 shorts, narrated in her steady deadpan, beginning with 11 thru 12, in which Callard humorously discusses “inspiration, information, transportation, the National Geographic, the Yellow Pages, and taxi cabs” while standing at an ironing board, trying to hail a cab out on the street, and walking on her hands in the ocean. In Notes on Ailanthus, she details the history of the tree that “grows abundantly in all the empty spaces around New York.” In Sound Windows, she has fun with her apartment windows. In Walking Outside, she sings a blues song while walking through green fields. Talking Landscape also includes a trio of slide shows of site-specific installations Callard was involved in. Commuting from Point to Point combines images shot in Paris, Italy, and New York with phrases lifted from books; for example a shot of cigarettes put out in a bowl of dirt on a newspaper is accompanied by the words “only time gets lost,” while a photo of the Spanish Steps features the phrase “worn by millions of feet.” The Customs House is a document of the 1979 Creative Time group show “Custom and Culture 2,” held inside the dilapidated Customs House by Bowling Green, now home to the National Museum of the American Indian. And finally, The Times Square Show takes viewers on a tour of the seminal art show held in June 1980, which sought to investigate “the need to communicate in a larger world”; the Colab exhibition comprised works by Keith Haring, Lee Quinones, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Jenny Holzer, Kenny Scharf, John Ahearn, Kiki Smith, Otterness, Callard, and others held in the then-still-seedy neighborhood. Throughout the film, Callard displays a wry sense of humor in these brief experimental works that were part of a major shift in the New York City art scene. Talking Landscape is being screened as part of the Maysles Institute’s continuing “Documentary in Bloom” series, curated by Livia Bloom, who will moderate Q&As with Callard following the February 16 and 19 showings.

AN EVENING WITH BROKAW & GRANDAGE

Michael Grandage will join with Mark Brokaw for special program and reception about theater and directing

Morgan Stanley Smith Barney
31 West 52nd St.
Monday, February 13, $20, 6:00
212-682-6110
www.stgeorgessociety.org

The BritArts Committee, the Drama Desk, and the St. George’s Society, which is dedicated to helping elderly and disabled New Yorkers of British descent, are teaming up for a special presentation on Monday night, February 13, featuring theater veterans Mark Brokaw and Michael Grandage. Brokaw, the artistic director of the Yale Institute for Music Theatre and winner of Drama Desk, Obie, and Lucille Lortel Awards, has directed such productions as How I Learned to Drive for the Vineyard, The Glass Menagerie for Steppenwolf, The Constant Wife for the Roundabout, and Cry-Baby on Broadway; he is currently preparing Rodgers & Hammerstein’s Cinderella for its first-ever run on the Great White Way. CBE Grandage, the president of the Central School of Speech and Drama of London University who has collected Drama Desk, Tony, Olivier, and Critics Circle prizes, has directed King Lear at BAM, Twelfth Night at the Sheffield, Red on Broadway, and After Miss Julie, Caligula, and many more at London’s Donmar Warehouse, where he served as longtime artistic director; he is helming the new production of Evita, which opens March 12 with Elena Roger, Ricky Martin, and Michael Cerveris. Elysa Gardner and CBE Gavin Henderson will introduce Brokaw and Grandage, who will discuss their careers and the state of the theater, followed by a reception with wine and light fare; advance reservations are required.

THE SCENE @ TAVERN: ICE FESTIVAL

Central Park Ice Festival will feature live carvings at Tavern on the Green (photo by Okamato Studio)

Courtyard of Tavern on the Green, Central Park
67th St. off Central Park West
Saturday, February 11, free, 11:00 am – 3:00 pm
212-874-7874
www.centralparknyc.org

Central Park celebrates the cold weather, which perhaps has finally arrived, with its annual Ice Festival, being held Saturday afternoon in the Courtyard of Tavern on the Green. Matthew Reiley, the Central Park Conservancy’s associate director of conservation and preservation, will give a talk about the many permanent sculptures that can be found throughout the park, and the Long Island City-based Okamoto Studio will create temporary ice sculptures of Central Park icons. “Purity. Crystalline. Evanescent,” Okamoto explains on its website. “Ice evokes romance…. Forms follow timelines of existence as they gradually change from rigid to organic, eventually disappearing, melting away.” There will also be free hot cocoa on hand to warm your freezing bones.

CINEMATIC GODDESS: THE FILMS OF RAQUEL WELCH

The Film Society of Lincoln Center places Raquel Welch front and center for long-overdue tribute

Film Society of Lincoln Center, Walter Reade Theater
165 West 65th St. at Amsterdam Ave.
February 10-14
212-875-5601
www.filmlinc.com

Chicago-born actress Raquel Welch was the embodiment of the Hollywood superstar, the supreme sex symbol of the late 1960s and 1970s. A tougher, more physical version of Marilyn Monroe and Brigitte Bardot, Welch made a series of films in multiple genres, from the sci-fi cult classic Fantastic Voyage to the shoot-’em-up Western 100 Rifles, from the literary bomb Myra Breckinridge to the caveman stomp One Million Years B.C., from the period comedy Mother, Jugs, and Speed to the sports favorite Kansas City Bomber. Her costars included Burt Reynolds, Bill Cosby, Jim Brown, Christopher Lee, James Coburn, Oliver Reed, and Harvey Keitel — in addition to Dyan Cannon, Mae West, Barbara Stanwyck, and Farrah Fawcett — but when Welch was on-screen, her impressive assets took over. Welch made more than three dozen movies, ten of which will be shown at the Film Society of Lincoln Center for the long-deserved tribute “Cinematic Goddess,” including all of the above works in addition to Hannie Caulder, The Last of Sheila, The Three Musketeers, and The Wild Party, with Welch on hand for several Q&As before or after the screening, moderated by the likes of Simon Doonan and Dick Cavett.

LAR LUBOVITCH DANCE COMPANY: HISTOIRE DU SOLDAT / CRISIS VARIATIONS

The Lars Lubovitch Dance Company will present CRISIS VARIATIONS and HISTOIRE DU SOLDAT at MMAC this weekend (photo by Kokyat)

Manhattan Movement & Arts Center
248 West 60th St. between Amsterdam & West End Aves.
February 10-12, $15-$45
212-787-1178
www.manhattanmovement.com
www.lubovitch.org

Last March, an all-star lineup teamed up for a one-night-only presentation of a new English-language production of Igor Stravinsky’s Histoire du Soldat (The Soldier’s Tale) at Galapagos Art Space in DUMBO. The production is now back for three shows this weekend at the Manhattan Movement & Arts Center, running February 10-12. The 1918 work, based on a parable about a Russian soldier who makes a deal with the devil, will be conducted by flutist Ransom Wilson for his Le Train Bleu ensemble, with choreography by Lar Lubovitch. The production features Lar Lubovitch Dance Company members Reid Bartelme as the soldier, Nicole Corea as the princess, and Attila Joey Csiki as the devil, with Reed Armstrong acting the part of the devil and Corey Dargel the soldier; Marni Nixon will serve as narrator. The evening will also include Lubovitch’s Crisis Variations, which plays off the word “crisis,” with dancers Katarzyna Skarpetowksa, Brian McGinnis, Corea, Csiki, Reed Luplau, Jason McDole, and Laura Rutledge along with five musicians performing a commissioned score by Yevgeniy Sharlat. The Lar Lubovitch Dance Company will then head farther uptown for the Harkness Dance Festival at the 92nd St. Y, where Stripped/Dressed will feature The Legend of Ten and various demonstrations, with Lubovitch discussing the creative process with dance writers Anna Kisselgoff (February 17), Deborah Jowitt (February 18) and Gus Solomons Jr. (February 19).