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

OPENHOUSENEWYORK WEEKEND

Thousands of New Yorkers will tour such architectural wonders as the High Line during openhousenewyork weekend (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Multiple venues in all five boroughs
Saturday, October 15, and Sunday, October 16
Admission: free (advance reservations required for some sites)
OHNY Passport: $150
212-991-OHNY
www.ohny.org

For the ninth year, hundreds of architectural sites around the city will open their doors, offering free tours of their unique spaces during openhousenewyork weekend. This Saturday and Sunday, religious institutions, museums, train stations, parks, farmhouses, hotels, cemeteries, hotels, international cultural centers, shipyards, well-known buildings, and little-known treasures will welcome thousands of visitors to spaces either not generally open to the public or not usually looked at in quite this way. Some of the events require advance reservations, and with a $150 Passport you can jump to the front of what should be some very long lines. Among the myriad participating locations are the African Burial Ground, the AVAC System on Roosevelt Island, the Franklin D. Roosevelt Four Freedoms Park construction site, the Gowanus Canal (by canoe), the Old Croton Aqueduct, Mount Morris Park, the High Line, the Gatehouse, the Eldridge Street Synagogue, the Bartow-Pell Mansion, the Chrysler Building, Melrose Commons, Wave Hill, the Mark Morris Dance Center, the Old Stone House, St. Mark’s Church-in-the-Bowery, the Louis Armstrong House Museum, the Noble Maritime Collection, and many more. Over the years, we’ve had the opportunity to see some very cool sites, so we can’t recommend this highly enough. There will also be scavenger hunts, kids activities, ghost and manhole cover tours, art walks, opendialogue talks, and other special events. Just be sure to read the details about each venue before you go, since not all of them are open both days, and some are already booked. Keep checking the online schedule as well because there are regular updates and changes in addition to web exclusives.

NEW YORK COMIC CON / NEW YORK ANIME FESTIVAL

Comic Con will team up with the New York Anime Festival this weekend at the Javits Center (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Jacob K. Javits Convention Center
655 West 34th St. (11th Ave. between 34th & 39th Sts.)
October 13-16
Friday Pass $35, Saturday Pass $45 (sold out), Sunday Pass $35, three-day pass $65, four-day pass $85
www.newyorkcomiccon.com

New York Comic Con and the New York Anime Festival arrive in town this week, continuing to grow in its sixth year after nearly one hundred thousand people showed up in 2010. Expanded to four days, this year’s festival features such special guests as actors and comedians Judah Friedlander, Fred Armisen and Carrie Brownstein, David Cross, Kevin Smith and Jason Mewes, Eliza Dushku, Chris Elliot, Maggie Q, Mark Hamill, Patton Oswalt, Seth Meyers, James Marsters, Kristen Schaal, Seth Green, and Rose McGowan and such comic-book writers, artists, and graphic novelists as Robert Kirkman, Frank Miller, Garth Ennis, Joe Kubert, Joe Simon, Neal Adams, David Mazzucchelli, Tara McPherson, Ron English, Tom Morello, and Stan Lee. Saturday is already sold out, but you can still get a four-day pass in addition to day passes on Friday and Sunday. After October 11, prices on all tickets go up, so get yours now. Below are just some of the many highlights of this terrifically geeky nerd-fest.

Thursday, October 13
NYCC Kick-Off Concert with Headliner DJ Z-Trip and Tom Morello as the Nightwatchman, IGN Theater, 7:30 (VIP and four-day passes only)

Friday, October 14
Robot Chicken, with Doug Goldstein, Matthew Seinrich, Seth Green, and Zeb Wells, IGN Theater, 5:15

Jay & Silent Bob Get Old Live Podcast, IGN Theater, 7:00 (additional $10-$35 tickets needed for entry)

Charity Comic Art Auction benefiting St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, Room 1B03, 7:45-9:45

Saturday, October 15
Nikita Special Video Presentation and Q&A, with Lyndsy Fonseca, Shane West, and Maggie Q, IGN Theater, 2:45

AMC’s The Walking Dead, with Robert Kirkman, IGN Theater, 5:15

Marvel Studios: Marvel’s The Avengers, with Chris Evans, Cobie Smulders, Kevin Feige, and Tom Hiddleston, IGN Theater, 6:30

MTV Presents Mike Judge’s Beavis and Butt-Head, with Mike Judge, MTV Theater, Room 1A10, 7:30

Tell Your Friends! The Live Show! with Christian Finnegan, Janeane Garofalo, Kristen Schaal, Liam McEeaney, and Rob Paravonian, Room 1A02, 9:00

Sunday, October 16
Conan Spotlight with Jason Momoa, Stephen Lang, and Rose McGowan, Romm 1A22, 10:00 am

IFC’S Portlandia and The Increasingly Poor Decisions of Todd Margaret, with Carrie Brownstein, David Cross, Fred Armisen, H.Jon Benjamin , and Seth Meyers, MTV Theater, Room 1A10, 11:00 am

CROSSING THE LINE: RACHID OURAMDANE

Rachid Ouramdane will explore political ideology and torture in two presentations at FIAF’s Crossing the Line Festival (photo © Patrick Imbert)

New York Live Arts
Bessie Schönberg Theater
219 West 19th St. between Seventh & Eighth Aves.
ORDINARY WITNESSES: Tuesday, October 11, $24-$30, 6:30, and Wednesday, October 12, $15, 7:30
WORLD FAIR: Thursday, October 14, and Friday, October 15, $24-$30, 7:30
212-691-6500
www.newyorklivearts.org
www.rachidouramdane.com

Paris-based dancer-choreographer Rachid Ouramdane, who founded the L’A company in 2007, will be presenting a pair of fascinating programs at New York Live Arts as part of the “Endurance/Resistance/Inspiration” section of the French Institute Alliance Française’s fifth annual Crossing the Line Festival. On October 11 & 12, Ordinary Witnesses examines torture, memory, and identity in a violent world. Ouramdane, who interviewed victims of torture in putting together the evening-length piece, writes that Ordinary Witnesses takes place “at the edges of civilization and the gateways to barbarity. The instant where people exit humanity to be cast into the jaws of torture.” He continues, “Doing a portrait of people who lived through torture is an attempt to depict the unpresentable. . . . It is about trying to grasp the imagination of those who experienced such atrocities, so that this experience does not remain hushed up. It is also about awareness of history’s repeated violence now that torture seems to be tolerated and even legitimate at the very core of our democracies.” Ouramdane will give a preshow talk on October 11 and participate in a conversation with the PEN American Center’s Larry Siems following the October 12 show. On October 14 & 15, Ouramdane will stage World Fair, an exploration of the human body as it relates to social and political ideology, performed by Ouramdane and multi-instrumentalist Jean-Baptiste Julien, with an artist talk following the October 14 show.

Rachid Ouramdane’s ORDINARY WITNESSES offers an extraordinary look at torture

Update: The son of an Algerian father who was tortured, Rachid Ouramdane has been making the sociopolitical physical in such works as Cover, Discreet Death, and Far . . . , examining memory and identity through multimedia presentations involving progressive movement. On October 11 he and his Paris-based L’A company performed the mesmerizing Ordinary Witnesses at New York Live Arts, part of FIAF’s Crossing the Line interdisciplinary international arts festival. The show begins with a man’s voice detailing his emotions — or lack thereof — as he describes his reaction to having been the victim of torture. He speaks in French, his words translated on the back wall. After several minutes, Lora Juodkaite, Mille Lundt, Jean-Claude Nelson, Georgina Vila-Bruch, and Jean-Baptiste André emerge onto Sylvain Giraudeau’s dark, bare stage, their faces blank as they walk slowly around a rectangular video frame lying flat on the floor and, in one corner, a grid of sixty spotlights that go on and off at various intervals and at different levels of brightness (at times evoking interrogation lights). The dancers occasionally stop, fall to the floor, adopt yogalike poses, and then move on as Jean-Baptiste Julien’s subtle electronic score, including the low buzz of feedback from an onstage electric guitar, hovers ominously above them. At one point a female dancer breaks into a nearly endless twirl, spinning around and around in a dizzying display of agility and sheer breathlessness; watching her, one wonders just how long she can continue, the audience wanting to call out and stop the torture but too amazed to do so. Although it does get repetitive and goes on slightly too long — perhaps echoing the repetitiveness of torture itself — Ordinary Witnesses is an emotionally powerful work that makes its purposes very clear, right from the start. There are still tickets left for the second and final performance on October 12, which will be followed by a discussion between Ouramdane and Larry Siems. Ouramdane will also be presenting his solo work, World Fair, at New York Live Arts October 14-15.

NEW YORK FILM FESTIVAL SPECIAL EVENTS: 10th ANNIVERSARY SCREENING OF THE ROYAL TENENBAUMS

The cast and crew of THE ROYAL TENENBAUMS will celebrate the film’s tenth anniversary at the New York Film Festival this week

THE ROYAL TENENBAUMS (Wes Anderson, 2001)
Alice Tully Hall
1941 Broadway at 65th St.
Thursday, October 13, $24, 8:30
Festival runs through October 16
212-875-5601
www.filmlinc.com

In his hysterical 2001 black comedy The Royal Tenenbaums, eclectic indie auteur Wes Anderson (The Darjeeling Limited, Fantastic Mr. Fox) created one of the kings of dysfunctional film families. Directly inspired by J. D. Salinger’s Glass clan (Franny and Zooey, Raise High the Roof Beam), the Tenenbaums of New York City have more than their fair share of distress. After being kicked out of the house for being a lousy father and husband, Royal (Gene Hackman) returns, claiming he is dying of stomach cancer. His wife, noted archaeologist Etheline (Anjelica Huston), is now seeing her accountant, the straitlaced Henry Sherman (Danny Glover). Finance wiz Chas (Ben Stiller) is having difficulty getting over his wife’s death in a plane crash, becoming absurdly overprotective of his two young sons’ (Grant Rosenmeyer and Jonah Meyerson) safety. Tennis prodigy Richie (Luke Wilson) is recovering from a very public breakdown and soon has to admit to himself that he is madly in love with his adopted playwright sister, Margot (Gwyneth Paltrow), who is married to strange neurologist Raleigh St. Clair (Bill Murray) and having an affair with longtime family friend and Western novelist Eli Cash (cowriter Owen Wilson). Narrated by Alec Baldwin, The Royal Tenenbaums completed an impressive opening hat trick from Anderson, who had previously made Bottle Rocket (1996) and Rushmore (1998). The marvelously funny flick — which had its premiere at the 2001 New York Film Festival — is having a special tenth-anniversary screening October 13 at the forty-ninth annual New York Film Festival, followed by a discussion with the cast and crew, including Anderson and many of the stars. Additional tickets have just been released, but you better act fast if you want to see this unique event.

EVERYDAY SUNSHINE: THE STORY OF FISHBONE

Angelo Moore and Norwood Fisher are the heart and soul of Fishbone (photo by Erin Flynn)

EVERYDAY SUNSHINE: THE STORY OF FISHBONE (Lev Anderson & Chris Metzler, 2010)
reRun Gastropub Theater
147 Front St. between Jay & Pearl Sts., Brooklyn
October 7-13
718-766-9110
www.fishbonedocumentary.com
www.reruntheater.com

When they were junior high school students in South Central Los Angeles in 1979, Angelo Moore and Norwood Fisher formed the core of Fishbone, what would soon become one of the most exciting live bands on the planet. Chris Metzler and Lev Anderson document the band’s rise and fall — and rise and fall, and rise and fall, etc. — in the stirring Everyday Sunshine: The Story of Fishbone. Using archival footage, old and new interviews, and playful animation, Metzler and Anderson follow the group — Moore and Fisher along with fellow founding members Chris Dowd, Walter “Dirty Walt” Kibby II, and Kendall Jones — through its many personal and financial struggles as it tries to deal with such socioeconomic issues as racism, violence, and the anti-liberal bias taking hold of the nation in Ronald Reagan’s 1980s. Fishbone held nothing back on such albums as In Your Face (1986), Truth and Soul (1988), The Reality of My Surroundings (1991), Give a Monkey a Brain and He’ll Swear He’s the Center of the Universe (1993), and Chim Chim’s Badass Revenge (1996), mixing in pop, punk, funk, ska, reggae, R&B, soul, jazz, and hardcore, prancing about the stage without shirts, diving into the crowd, and always speaking their mind, and they hold nothing back in Everyday Sunshine as well. Narrated by Laurence Fishburne, the film really picks up speed when it delves into the Rodney King beating and the mysterious circumstances involving Jones’s religious transformation and the band’s attempt at an intervention. The decidedly unusual tale also features an impressive lineup of talking heads offering their views on the history of Fishbone, including Flea from the Red Hot Chili Peppers, Perry Farrell from Jane’s Addiction, fIREHOSE’s Mike Watt, No Doubt’s Gwen Stefani and Tony Kanal, the Roots’ ?uestlove, Gogol Bordello’s Eugene Hutz, Parliament-Funkadelic’s George Clinton, Primus’s Les Clayool, Living Colour’s Vernon Reid, Circle Jerk Keith Morris, Ice-T, and, perhaps most informatively, Columbia Records executive David Kahne, who lends fascinating insight into what made Fishbone great — and what kept them from greater success. While you definitely don’t have to know a thing about Fishbone to enjoy this very intimate documentary, longtime fans should eat it up. Everyday Sunshine has its New York theatrical premiere October 7-13 at the reRun Gastropub Theater in Brooklyn in conjunction with the release of Fishbone’s latest release, the seven-track EP Crazy Glue (DC-Jam, October 11, 2011). Metzler, Anderson, Moore, and Fisher will appear in person at many of this weekend’s screenings, at least one of which will also include a live performance.

MoMA PRESENTS: JOHN AKOMFRAH’S THE NINE MUSES

THE NINE MUSES is an elegiac look at the journey and the immigrant experience

THE NINE MUSES (John Akomfrah, 2011)
MoMA Film
Museum of Modern Art
11 West 53rd St. between Fifth & Sixth Aves.
October 6-12
Tickets: $12, in person only, may be applied to museum admission within thirty days, same-day screenings free with museum admission, available at Film and Media Desk
212-708-9400
www.moma.org
www.icarusfilms.com

Making ingenious use of footage previously shot for other projects, Ghana-born British filmmaker John Akomfrah’s The Nine Muses is a beautiful, elegiac poem about migration and journey, both physical and metaphysical. “Every day is a journey and the journey itself is home” reads a quote from Matsuo Bashō, one of many excerpts that show up as onscreen intertitles or are read by offscreen voices. Divided into sections devoted to the nine muses born to Zeus and Mnemosyne, including Clio (muse of history), Euterpe (muse of music), Melpomene (muse of tragedy), and Thalia (muse of comedy), the film cuts back and forth between footage of men working in a hellish underground foundry, an angry Akomfrah lying down along a waterfront, staring directly into the camera accusatorily, and stunning shots of a vast Alaskan landscape of sea, sky, and mountains with one of a pair of characters in brightly colored parkas looking out at the wide, almost blindingly white expanse. (Composer Trevor Mathison is the Yellow Man, David Lawson the Blue Man). Akomfrah, who cofounded the Black Audio Film Collective in 1982, adds in archival black-and-white film of Africans and Indians arriving on the shore of a post-WWII England while also focusing on various modes of travel, including boats, trains, and planes, poetically edited together by Miikka Leskinen to capture intriguing aspects of the immigrant experience. The narration features such actors as John Barrymore, Richard Burton, Alex Jennings, and Jim Norton reading from such plays and novels as John Milton’s Paradise Lost, Homer’s The Odyssey, William Shakespeare’s Richard II and Twelfth Night, Dante’s The Divine Comedy, Samuel Beckett’s The Unnamable and Molloy, Oedipus’s Sophocles, and Friedrich Nietzsche’s Thus Spoke Zarathustra, with interlude poems by Emily Dickinson, T. S. Eliot, E. E. Cummings, Percy Bysshe Shelley, Kahlil Gibron, Countee Cullen, William Blake, and Zelda Fitzgerald. There are several live performances, with Leontyne Price singing “Motherless Child” and Paul Robeson singing “Let My People Go”; the score also features music by Arvo Pärt and the Gundecha Brothers. A self-described “Proustian” odyssey, The Nine Muses is a fascinating hybrid of sound and vision, of history and memory, that will be playing October 6-12 at MoMA’s Roy and Niuta Titus Theater; the October 8 screening at 4:30 will be introduced by Akomfrah and followed by a discussion moderated by Sally Berger.

ART SPIEGELMAN — METAMAUS: IN CONVERSATION WITH HILLARY CHUTE

92nd St. Y Unterberg Poetry Center
1395 Lexington Ave. at 92nd St.
Thursday, October 6, $27, 8:00
212-415-5500
www.92y.org

Twenty-five years ago, Art Spiegelman revolutionized the comic book industry, as well as Holocaust literature, with the first volume of his epic Maus: A Survivor’s Tale, My Father Bleeds History, followed six years later by And Here My Troubles Began, earning him a special Pulitzer Prize. In celebration of the book’s silver anniversary, the cofounder of the heavily influential Raw magazine (which he edited with his wife, Françoise Mouly) has released the spectacular MetaMaus: A Look Inside a Modern Classic, Maus (Pantheon, October 4, 2011, $35), which consists of pages from notebooks, sketches, grids, research paraphernalia, photos, letters, family trees, a lengthy transcript of the 1972 interview with his father that formed the basis of Maus’s tale of Vladek’s struggle to survive in Auschwitz during WWII, and much more, filled with fascinating personal insight. “It was hard to revisit Maus, the book that both ‘made’ me and has haunted me ever since; hard to revisit the ghosts of my family, the death-stench of history, and my own past,” Spiegelman writes in the book’s acknowledgment to editor Hillary Chute, whose interviews with Spiegelman are found throughout such chapters as “Why the Holocaust?,” “Why Mice?,” and “Why Comics?” Chute also talks to Mouly and their children, Nadja and Dash, examining the Maus phenomenon from every angle. In addition, the full-color hardcover is accompanied by a CD that contains rough drafts, videos, interviews, the complete Maus strips, a tour of Auschwitz, and other odds and ends relating to the unforgettable story. “I didn’t know that I did want to do a book about the Holocaust,” Spiegelman explains early on. “If anything, I was in allergic reaction to my own Jewishness. I don’t know that I’d go so far as to talk about it as self-hating (even though some people were angry at Maus for my lack of Zionist zeal), but when I was a kid I wasn’t sure being Jewish was such a great idea — I’d heard they killed people for that. Maus somehow involved coming out of the closet as a Jew.” Spiegelman will discuss all that and more at the 92nd St. Y on October 6 when he sits down with Chute for a conversation about the history of Maus, one of the great literary achievements of the twentieth century.