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

THE INTERRUPTERS

Former gang members try to stop the violence on the streets of Chicago in THE INTERRUPTERS

THE INTERRUPTERS (Steve James, 2011)
IFC Center
323 Sixth Ave. at West Third St.
Opens Friday, July 29
212-924-7771
www.ifccenter.com
www.interrupters.kartemquin.com

For The Interrupters, director, producer, and editor Steve James (Hoop Dreams, At the Death House Door) teamed up with journalist Alex Kotlowitz (There Are No Children Here) to hit the dangerous inner-city streets of Chicago with the men and women of CeaseFire, a grass-roots organization of former gang members who are now trying to stop the violence. Inspired by Kotlowitz’s New York Times Magazine article, the two men concentrate on three primary stories. Ameena Matthews, the Muslim daughter of notorious gang leader Jeff Fort, is working with a deeply troubled young woman who’d rather fight than flee, even if it means being sent back to prison. Cobe Williams has his hands full with the angry, recently released Flamo, who thinks the whole world is against him. And Eddie Bocanegra is attempting to come to grips with a cold-blooded revenge murder he committed when he was a teenager by visiting schools and talking about turning his life around. One of the most poignant moments of the film occurs when Williams brings Lil Mikey back to the barbershop he and several of his cohorts robbed at gunpoint as he again faces some of his victims. Matthews, Williams, and Bocanegra are paid employees of CeaseFire, which was founded by Dr. Gary Slutkin, an epidemiologist who believes that violence is a disease that can be treated in similar ways, and is run by Tio Hardman, who handles his extremely tough task with intelligence and dignity as he deals with what he calls “the madness.” But in a society in which “words’ll get you killed,” as Matthews says early on, these tireless violence interrupters put their own lives on the line every day, battling a sickness that seems to have no end in sight. The award-winning film, a hit at numerous film festivals, felt a bit long at its original 144 minutes, but James has since edited it down to a more streamlined 124 minutes for its theatrical release, which begins July 29 at the IFC Center. James, Kotlowitz, Williams, and coproducer Zak Piper will be on hand for several opening-weekend screenings to talk about the film and CeaseFire. In conjunction with the release of The Interrupters, the Maysles Institute is hosting “Master Class: Steve James,” curated by Sylvia Savadjian, which continues with screenings of Hoop Dreams on July 29, At the Death House Door on August 4, and then The Interrupters August 5-11.

THE PONDEROSA STOMP: SHE’S GOT THE POWER! A GIRL GROUP EXTRAVAGANZA

Some of the greatest female singers in girl-group history will be belting it out at the annual Ponderosa Stomp at Lincoln Center on Saturday

Lincoln Center Out of Doors
Saturday, July 30, free
David Rubenstein Atrium, 12 noon – 4:00
Damrosch Park Bandshell, 5:00 – 10:00
www.ponderosastomp.com

The annual Ponderosa Stomp celebration at Lincoln Center’s summer Out of Doors festival returns this Saturday with a pair of exciting — and free — presentations that pay tribute to the classic girl groups of the 1950s and ’60s. First up is “Girl Talk,” a symposium being held in the David Rubenstein Atrium from 12 noon to 4:00 on July 30. Moderated by Sheryl Farber, Alison Fensterstock, and Lauren Onkey, the various panels will examine Ellie Greenwich’s legacy, share rare film clips of girl groups (courtesy of Joe Lauro), and include interviews and appearances by Lesley Gore, Peggy Santiglia Davison and Jiggs Sirico of the Angels, Beverly Warren, Brenda Reid, and Lillian Walker Moss of the Exciters, and others. At 5:00 everyone will head over to the Damrosch Park Bandshell for “She’s Got the Power! A Girl Group Extravaganza,” a five-hour concert featuring all of the above performers in addition to Arlene Smith from the Chantels, Baby Washington, Barbara Harris of the Toys, LaLa Brooks from the Crystals, Louise Murray of the Jaynetts, Margaret Ross of the Cookies, and Nanette Licori of Reparata and the Delrons. Oh, did we mention that the amazing Ronnie Spector and the great Maxine Brown will be there as well?

THE FUTURE

Sophie (Miranda July) and Jason (Hamish Linklater) worry about what comes next in THE FUTURE

THE FUTURE (Miranda July, 2011)
IFC Center
323 Sixth Ave. at West Third St.
Opens Friday, July 29
212-924-7771
www.ifccenter.com
www.thefuturethefuture.com
eleven heavy things in union square park 2010

Multimedia performance artist and indie darling Miranda July scored a major breakthrough with her 2005 cinematic debut, the utterly charming romantic comedy Me and You and Everyone We Know. While her follow-up, The Future, lacks many of the endearing qualities that made her first film such a success, it is still a quirky, beguiling drama that offers a breath of fresh air from the usual summer movie doldrums — er, blockbusters. July stars as Sophie, a children’s dance teacher living with Jason (Hamish Linklater), a work-at-home IT dude. The slackers spend their time sitting on the couch, both on their laptops, having offbeat conversations and pretending they can stop time. But when they are told that the sick cat they want to adopt won’t be well enough to leave the veterinary hospital for another month, they decide that this will be their last thirty days of freedom, thinking that the arrival of the feline will confer upon them the responsibilities of adulthood they have been so good at avoiding up to now. Given this last bastion of hope, they quit their jobs to pursue their dreams: Jason starts going door-to-door selling trees, while Sophie sets out to perform a dance a day and post them on YouTube. No, this oddball, somewhat freakish couple doesn’t exactly dream big. And, of course, their idea of freedom doesn’t turn out to be exactly what they had hoped. The Future veers off in way too many directions, some good, some bad, but it is held together by July’s bright eyes and lanky, comedic body even as she explores the horrors of mainstream suburban living. As with much of her performance art, she challenges the audience to stay with her as she defies standard narrative and turns to the surreal, including a talking moon. The film is nearly stolen by Joe Putterlik, an elderly man whom Jason meets through a Pennysaver ad for a three-dollar used hair dryer; Putterlik, who also is the voice of the moon, was actually discovered by July through a Pennysaver ad, and much of his dialogue is improvised and set in his own apartment as he talks about his real life. Sadly, he died immediately after shooting was concluded. The film is narrated by the ill cat, Paw Paw (voiced by July in a creepy monotone), who dreams of her own freedom, wanting desperately to get out of her cage and be taken in by people who will love her. And after all, isn’t that what we all want? As an added treat, the California-based July, who installed the fun installation “Eleven Heavy Things” in Union Square Park last year and has also written the terrific short-story collection No one belongs here more than you, will be at the IFC Center for the 6:10 and 8:20 screenings on July 29 & 30.

CHELSEA ART WALK 2011

Bernardi Roig will help light up the night at Claire Olive as Chelsea opens its galleries late on Thursday, with many special events (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Multiple locations in Chelsea
Thursday, July 28, free, 5:00 – 8:00
www.artwalkchelsea.com

Tonight dozens of Chelsea galleries will stay open late, with many featuring artist and curator talks, exhibition walk-throughs, film screenings, live performances, and other special events. Scott Ogden will guide visitors through his “Twisted” show at Ricco Maresca, Faith Ringgold will be signing books at ACA Galleries, Claire Oliver will host an opening reception for “The Devil Can Cite Scripture” (with works by Judith Schaechter and Bernardi Roig), Porter/Contemporary lets visitors get in the picture for “A Polaroid Moment Within a Portrait Apart” with Jeff Ballinger, Horton Gallery will screen Miroslav Tichý: Tarzan Retired, and Mark Wagner will cut up dollar bills and give the pieces away at Pavel Zoubok. You can also play Ping-Pong at Nicholas Robinson, get shaved ice at Jenkins Johnson, and check out concerts by Autodrone at Monya Rowe, Genevieve White at Freight + Volume, and an acoustic show at RARE from a mystery group, among myriad other activities. A two-sided guide to the second annual Chelsea Art Walk can be found here.

MASTER CLASS: STEVE JAMES

NO CROSSOVER: THE TRIAL OF ALLEN IVERSON kicks off Master Class series with Steve James at the Maysles Institute

Maysles Institute
343 Malcolm X Blvd. between 127th & 128th Sts.
July 28 – August 4, suggested donation $10, 7:30
212-582-6050
www.mayslesinstitute.org

Award-winning director, producer, and editor Steve James has made some of the most fascinating, entertaining, and important documentaries of the past twenty years, delving into the American psyche through sports, death row, and inner-city violence. The Maysles Institute will be celebrating the release of his latest film, The Interrupters, a powerful examination of gang violence in Chicago, with Master Class, a series curated by Sylvia Savadjian that begins Thursday night with a screening of James’s No Crossover: The Trial of Allen Iverson, a look back at a major event in the basketball superstar’s youth that took place in James’s own hometown of Hampton, Virginia. The film screens at 7:30 and will be followed by a Q&A and reception with James. On Friday night, the instant classic Hoop Dreams will be shown, a seminal work that follows the dreams of two high school athletes, William Gates and Arthur Agee, seeking to make it big in the NBA. The series continues August 4 with James and Peter Gilbert’s At the Death House Door and August 5-11 with The Interrupters; look for our rave reviews of both coming soon.

EIKO & KOMA: WATER / RESIDUE

Eiko and Koma will perform in Lincoln Center’s Paul Milstein Pool as part of free Out of Doors Festival (photo by Robert G. Sanchez)

Lincoln Center Out of Doors
Paul Milstein Pool, Hearst Plaza
July 27-31, free, 9:30
212-875-5000
www.lcoutofdoors.org
www.eikoandkoma.org

In the spring, innovative New York-based dancers and choreographers Eiko Otake and Takashi Koma performed the powerful Naked at the Baryshnikov Arts Center, a free, haunting “living installation” in which the longtime couple moved perilously slowly in a postapocalyptic organic environment that included tantalizing drips of water coming from the ceiling. For their latest site-specific work, Eiko and Koma will perform in the Paul Milstein Pool at Hearst Plaza, July 27-31 at 9:30, as part of the Lincoln Center Out of Doors Festival. Native American flutist-composer Robert Mirabal will accompany the dancers in the water, playing his original score live. Also on hand will be Henry Moore’s “Reclining Figure,” which has occupied the pool for years. The new piece was partly inspired by Eiko and Koma’s 1995 River, which takes place in moving water and was recently reconstructed for the 2011 American Dance Festival; water has also played a role in such previous productions as Elegy (1984), Thirst (1985), and Passage (1989). “In this most urban landscape of midtown Manhattan, we also intend to remember and imagine the ancient water all living things came from and each of us was born from,” they explain in a program note. “Finally, many recent disasters remind us that water’s seeming calm is illusory.” It is appropriate that Water is taking place in a reflecting pool, as Lincoln Center is also hosting “Residue,” a multimedia exhibition that looks back at Eiko and Koma’s long career in conjunction with their ongoing Retrospective Project, featuring video, sets, costumes, and the extraordinary structure built for Naked. The display continues at the Astor Gallery at the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts through October 30. On July 28 at 6:00, Dance magazine editor in chief Wendy Perron will speak with Eiko and Koma and show several of their short videos, including My Parents, The Retrospective Project, Dancing in Water: The Making of River, and The Making of Cambodian Stories. All events are free and open to the public.

SEX AND TRAVEL NIGHT

A scale-model replica of King Edward VII’s sex chair will be on view during special free event at Museum of Sex

Museum of Sex
233 Fifth Ave. at 27th St.
Tuesday, July 26, free, 7:00
212-689-6337
www.museumofsex.com

“Love was immediately associated with travel,” Elisabeth Eaves writes in Wanderlust: A Love Affair with Five Continents (Seal, May 2011, $16.95), remembering a long-distance college romance. Her memoir follows her from New Guinea to Cairo and beyond. In The Sinner’s Grand Tour: A Journey Through the Historical Underbelly of Europe (Broadway, May 2011, $15), Tony Perrottet limits his sexually inspired travels to a single continent: “The British Museum was only the first stop in a personal Grand Tour I’d planned across Europe, in search of forbidden historical fruit,” he explains. “Today, the entire continent is still littered with secret boudoirs, perverse relics, and ancient dungeons, many of which, I was convinced, could be found.” Eaves’s and Perrottet’s dual journeys will bring them together July 26 for “Sex and Travel Night” at the Museum of Sex, where they will read from their books and discuss the intersection between lust and travel in the institution’s OralFix bar, where the audience can partake in such aphrodisiac cocktails as the Aphrodite (good for potency and lust), the Golden Blossom (endurance and longevity), and the Lucky Devil (excitement and joy), as well as a specially devised elixir created for the event. Among the items on view will be a playful scale-model replica of King Edward VII’s sex chair.