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Tag: Performing arts

  • Bono opens book tour before adoring fans at Beacon Theatre

    Bono opens book tour before adoring fans at Beacon Theatre

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    NEW YORK — Bono opened his book tour Wednesday night in what he called a “transgressive” mood, a little bit guilty for appearing on stage with three musicians who were not his fellow members of U2 and otherwise singing, joking and shouting out his life story to thousands of adoring fans at Manhattan’s Beacon Theatre.

    He even performed one song in Italian, a flawlessly operatic take of “Torna a Surriento.”

    “This is all a little surreal,” he noted at one point. “But it seems to be going well.”

    The 62-year-old singer, songwriter and humanitarian described himself as an eternal boy (born Paul David Hewson) with his fists “in the air,” a “grandstanding” rock star and a baritone trying to be a tenor. He is now a published and best-selling author, his “Surrender: 40 Songs, One Story” out this week and already in the top 10 on Amazon.com.

    Through “Sunday Bloody Sunday,” “Where the Streets Have No Name” and other U2 classics, he traces his biography from his stifling childhood home in Dublin and the grief over the early death of his mother Iris Hewson to the formation of the band that made him a global celebrity and his enduring marriage to Alison Stewart.

    Former President Bill Clinton, Tom Hanks and U2 guitarist The Edge were among his famous admirers in the audience, which often stood and cheered and sang along. For the 90-minute plus “Stories of Surrender” show, billed as “an evening of words, music, and some mischief,” Bono wore a plain black blazer, matching pants and added color with his orange-tinted glasses. He opened with an account from his book of his heart surgery in 2016, but otherwise pranced and leapt like a man who had never seen the inside of a hospital and belted out songs written decades ago without any sense he had forgotten what inspired them.

    Ticket prices were rock star levels: thousands of dollars for the best seats and well into the hundreds even for obstructed views. Compared to a U2 show, the setting was relatively intimate — handwritten illustrations on screens hanging toward the back of the stage and a few tables and chairs that Bono used as props to climb on or to simulate conversations. With warm and comic mimicry, he recalled phone calls with Luciano Pavarotti and his pleas of “Bono, Bono, Bono” as the opera star recruited him to perform at a benefit show in Modena, Italy, and once turned up at U2’s studio on short notice — with a film crew.

    Bono also re-enacted his many tense bar room meetings with his father, who seemed to regard his son’s career as some kind of failed business venture. Brendan Robert Hewson’s rough facade did once collapse unexpectedly — when he met Princess Diana, an encounter Bono described as like watching centuries of Irish loathing of the royals “gone in eight seconds.”

    “One princess, and we’re even,” Bono added.

    He spoke often of loss, of his mother when he was a teenager and of his father in 2001. But he also described his life as a story of presence, whether of his religious faith, his wife and children, or of his bandmates. After what he called the characteristic Irish response to a child’s outsized ambitions — to pretend they don’t exist — he called himself “blessed,” and added that “what was silence has been filled, mostly, with music.”

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  • Dancer in Weinstein film testifies he sexually assaulted her

    Dancer in Weinstein film testifies he sexually assaulted her

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    LOS ANGELES — A dancer in a film produced by Harvey Weinstein testified Thursday that she was “freaked out” after meeting the movie mogul on the Puerto Rican set but the presence and reassurance of his assistant convinced her it was OK to go with him to his hotel, where she was later sexually assaulted.

    The woman, who went by her first name and last initial Ashley M. at the Los Angeles trial where Weinstein is charged with rape and sexual assault, said she was a 22-year-old in 2003 when she was acting as a dancing double for one of the stars of “Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights,” a film produced by Weinstein’s company Miramax.

    She said Weinstein’s assistant at the time, Bonnie Hung, told her that she would remain with the two of them the entire time, and that he just wanted to talk about future projects.

    As they walked down the hall of Weinstein’s hotel toward a door, she said, “I started to get more worried, but Bonnie was there with her clipboard.”

    “Harvey opened it and then he went in and I went in,” she said, pausing as she began to cry. “And then Bonnie shut the door behind us. I was like, ‘oh no, what do I do?’”

    She said Weinstein quickly became aggressive, pushing her on to the bed and taking her top off before straddling her and masturbating while on top of her, despite her telling him to stop.

    The woman was the second Weinstein accuser to take the stand at the trial, and the first of four who are not involved in the charges against him but are being allowed to testify to show a propensity for such acts by Weinstein.

    Judge Lisa B. Lench told jurors before the woman’s testimony that they would receive instructions later on how to consider it.

    Weinstein, already serving a 23-year sentence for a New York conviction that is under appeal, has pleaded not guilty in Los Angeles to four counts of rape and seven other counts of sexual assault. He has repeatedly denied engaging in any non-consensual sex.

    Ashley M. appeared rattled as she walked to the stand late in the day Thursday, and began crying before any questions were asked.

    “I’m sorry,” she said repeatedly to Judge Lisa Lench, who replied that she had nothing to be sorry for and called for a short break.

    She gathered herself and began her testimony, saying she had been a professional ballet dancer who had just shifted to dancing in Hollywood.

    She said that Weinstein appeared on the set while they were filming in a ballroom, and asked her to step outside.

    Ashley M. said Weinstein talked about her giving him a naked massage, and she tried to assuage him by saying she was engaged, and that she was needed on the set.

    She said Weinstein told her he was the boss and got to decide who needed to be on set.

    The woman called her mother and her then-fiance, who told her to seek help from others on the set.

    Then someone said it was time for a meal break.

    “I thought, ‘whew, saved by the bell,’” she testified.

    During the break, she asked the films choreographer and a producer what to do, but got the sense that they didn’t want to upset Weinstein.

    “Did either of them give you any sort of help?” Deputy District Attorney Marlene Martinez asked.

    “No,” Ashley M. said.

    “How did you feel then?” Martinez asked.

    “Freaked out,” the witness answered.

    Ashley M. said when the returned to the set Weinstein was waiting there with a limo, and Hung.

    “I felt better just knowing I wasn’t alone,” she said.

    The Associated Press does not typically name people who say they have been sexually abused unless they have come forward publicly.

    Ashley M. told her story to the New York Times in October of 2017, when the newspaper’s accounts of women who say Weinstein sexually assaulted them put the movie executive at the center of the #MeToo movement.

    Thursday was the first time she has told her story in a courtroom.

    Ashley M. is expected to return to the witness stand for more questioning from prosecutors Friday, followed by cross-examination from Weinstein’s defense.

    ———

    Follow AP Entertainment Writer Andrew Dalton on Twitter: twitter.com/andyjamesdalton

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  • Noseda extends for 3 years with Zurich Opera through 2027-28

    Noseda extends for 3 years with Zurich Opera through 2027-28

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    Zurich Opera music director Gianandrea Noseda has agreed to a three-year contract extension through the 2027-28 season.

    The new deal was announced Wednesday and will keep the conductor in his post after Matthias Schulz succeeds Andreas Homoki as intendant and artistic director starting with the 2025-26 season.

    Noseda, 58, replaced Fabio Luisi as Zurich Opera’s music director at the start of the 2021-22 season and is halfway through the company’s new staging of Wagner’s Ring Cycle, directed by Homoki.

    Noseda has been music director of the National Symphony Orchestra in Washington, D.C., since the 2017-18 season and has served since 2016-17 as principal guest conductor of the London Symphony Orchestra.

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  • Lansbury’s ‘Sweeney Todd’ co-star reflects on ‘great artist’

    Lansbury’s ‘Sweeney Todd’ co-star reflects on ‘great artist’

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    Angela Lansbury and Len Cariou were partners-in-crime on stage in “Sweeney Todd” and crime busters in episodes of TV’s “Murder, She Wrote.”

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  • Review: Broadway revival of ‘1776’ shakes things up nicely

    Review: Broadway revival of ‘1776’ shakes things up nicely

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    NEW YORK — The somewhat antiquated musical “1776” has long been ripe for a radical makeover and it has found one on Broadway. “Someone oughta open up a window!” an actor cries in the first scene and that applies to both the stifling heat of the setting as well as this revival, which brings fresh air to a five-decade old show.

    A company of multiracial, multiethnic performers identifying as female, trans and non-binary have taken over all the roles in the Roundabout Theatre Company show that opened Thursday without altering Peter Stone’s script, creating little pockets of new meaning the writer never could have seen. (“We’re men — no more, no less — trying to get a nation started,” says one actor.)

    If the heroic Founding Father in a big musical not far away is Alexander Hamilton, here in the American Airlines Theatre it is John Adams, who in the stiflingly hot summer of 1776 is hoping to persuade the Continental Congress in Philadelphia to vote for the country’s freedom.

    Unlike “Hamilton,” “1776” addresses head-on the single most contentious subject in writing the Declaration of Independence — slavery. Adams, Thomas Jefferson and Benjamin Franklin want it abolished but the Southern delegates strenuously object. It is a powerful thing listening to a Black woman decry bondage.

    Crystal Lucas-Perry plays Adams like a bull in a china shop, a hectoring, impatient Adams who admits he’s “obnoxious and disliked.” But everywhere are scene-stealers — Eryn LeCroy with a mesmerizing “He Plays the Violin,” both Shawna Hamic and Gisela Adisa for their comedic timing and voices, and Carolee Carmello, here as close to a piece’s villain (other than George III, of course) who is deliciously menacing. Then there’s Elizabeth A. Davis, playing a taciturn Jefferson perfectly, not to mention a mean violin — all while pregnant.

    Show highlights include the Carmello-led “Cool, Considerate Men,” the right-wingers’ regimented dance about never compromising — where have we heard that recently? — and Sara Porkalob’s devilish “Molasses to Rum,” a chilling indictment of Northern hypocrisy.

    Directors Jeffrey L. Page and Diane Paulus have their cast leaping on tables and hurrying across the big stage, trying to add energy to what is basically a musical about a roomful of aristocrats pontificating. They make Sherman Edwards’ hit-or-miss music and lyrics — he rhymes mania with Pennsylvania and predicate with Connecticut — shine as best they can.

    There is an oblique message with the casting that had women actually been in charge back then, they probably would have gotten the job done with less fuss and fewer theatrics. Jefferson also has an awkward wordless exchange when a servant seems unimpressed by his line “We hold these truths to be self evident, that all men are created equal.”

    The most uncomfortable bit is when the Black actors are tasked with recreating slaves at auction, a jarring step that could have been done more artfully.

    Scott Pask’s set is sadly underwhelming, using mostly barrels and four wooden tables. But most egregious of all is the use of two curtains — one behind and one in front — that are pulled across the stage on a rod somewhat jerkily by the actors, making the production seem amateurish, as if it is taking place in a massive shower stall.

    The curtains are used for projections — images of protesters, war and a $2 bill — and to hide scene changes, but it is clumsy and there are slits that crack open every so often despite magnetic closing mechanisms that loudly click. These flimsy cloth pieces give way to a big, powerful set reveal at the end, but one wonders if it has been worth it.

    Otherwise, it is a very worthwhile show, a foot in the past and another in the future. A second show exploring the origins of America’s democracy with non-traditional casting is a welcome addition, especially now.

    ———

    Mark Kennedy is at http://twitter.com/KennedyTwits

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  • 2022 Vilcek Prize in Dance Awarded to Flamenco’s Foremost Dancer, Soledad Barrio

    2022 Vilcek Prize in Dance Awarded to Flamenco’s Foremost Dancer, Soledad Barrio

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    The Vilcek Foundation Prizes in Dance celebrate the contributions of immigrant dancers, choreographers, and artistic directors to arts and culture in the United States

    Press Release


    Mar 22, 2022

    Soledad Barrio receives the 2022 Vilcek Prize in Dance for her commitment to the growth and evolution of flamenco through her leadership with Noche Flamenca, and for the creative vision and technical mastery she brings to her work. 

    “Soledad Barrio is a virtuoso—her commitment to her artistry is nonpareil,” said Vilcek Foundation Cofounder, Vice Chairman, and Secretary Marica Vilcek. “Just as Baryshnikov did with ballet, Barrio has transformed the genre of flamenco with new life and energy, attracting new audiences and inspiring dancers and choreographers the world over.”

    Barrio’s performances resound with emotional intensity. She brings athleticism and physical rigor to her work, using her body as an instrument of form and sound. Barrio’s legs, torso, and arms arc and contort to meet the physicality of flamenco’s most dramatic postures; this artistic precision is paired with her exacting footwork, percussing the staccato rhythms of flamenco into the floorboards.

    Barrio was born in Madrid, Spain, during the Franco regime. She grew up dancing and performing other styles, then discovered flamenco at the age of 19. She recalls the experience as being reborn. In 1992, Barrio was living and working in Spain when she met her future husband, Martín Santangelo. One year later, the pair founded their company, Noche Flamenca, in New York. The company has become a regular feature on the city’s main stages, performing at Lincoln Center, The Joyce Theater, and Joe’s Pub at the Public Theater. 

    Barrio and Noche Flamenca return to the stage for the first time since early 2020 with ni bien ni mal, todo lo contrario, April 5 – 10 at The Joyce Theater in New York City.

    The Vilcek Foundation Prizes are awarded annually in recognition and celebration of the contributions of immigrants in the arts and humanities and in biomedical science in the United States. Prizes awarded in the arts and humanities are given in categories that rotate annually. One Vilcek Prize of $100,000 is awarded to an immigrant artist in recognition of career-long achievement and leadership. Three smaller prizes of $50,000 each—the Vilcek Prizes for Creative Promise—are awarded to emerging and early-career artists. The recipients of the 2022 Vilcek Prizes for Creative Promise in Dance are Tatiana Desardouin, Tamisha Guy, and Leonardo Sandoval

    Recipients of the Vilcek Foundation Prizes are also celebrated in biographical and video profiles shared by the foundation, which highlight the prizewinners’ experiences as immigrants, and the impact of their artistry on culture and society in the United States. 

    Read more about Barrio at the Vilcek Foundation: Soledad Barrio: “When I dance, I am my true self”

    The Vilcek Foundation

    The Vilcek Foundation raises awareness of immigrant contributions in the United States and fosters appreciation of the arts and sciences. The foundation was established in 2000 by Jan and Marica Vilcek, immigrants from the former Czechoslovakia. The mission of the foundation was inspired by the couple’s respective careers in biomedical science and art history. Since 2000, the foundation has awarded over $6.4 million in prizes to foreign-born individuals and supported organizations with over $5.6 million in grants.

    The Vilcek Foundation is a private operating foundation, a federally tax-exempt nonprofit organization under IRS Section 501(c)(3).

    Press Contact:

    Liz Boylan (she/her)
    Communications Manager
    The Vilcek Foundation
    21 East 70th Street
    New York, NY 10021

    +1 (212) 472-2500
    elizabeth.boylan@vilcek.org 

    Source: The Vilcek Foundation

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  • Tap Dancer and Choreographer Leonardo Sandoval Receives $50,000 Vilcek Prize for Creative Promise

    Tap Dancer and Choreographer Leonardo Sandoval Receives $50,000 Vilcek Prize for Creative Promise

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    The Vilcek Foundation Prizes recognize and celebrate immigrants’ contributions to culture and society

    Press Release


    Mar 15, 2022

    Leonardo Sandoval, a core dancer with Dorrance Dance and the founder of Music from the Sole, receives a 2022 Vilcek Prize for Creative Promise in Dance. A tap dancer and percussive dancer, Sandoval receives the prize for his dynamic choreography that expands the boundaries of tap as a genre. 

    The Vilcek Foundation Prizes are awarded annually in recognition and celebration of the contributions of immigrants in the arts and humanities and in biomedical science in the United States. The prizes serve the Vilcek Foundation’s mission to acknowledge and honor the positive impact of immigration on arts, culture, and society. Recipients of the Vilcek Prizes for Creative Promise each receive a commemorative trophy and an unrestricted cash award of $50,000. 

    Leonardo Sandoval was born in Piracicaba, São Paolo, Brazil. At the age of 6, Sandoval’s parents enrolled him in ballet classes. His ballet teacher recognized Sandoval’s natural affinity for rhythm and encouraged his parents to enroll him in a tap dance class. Through tap, Sandoval was able to connect his passion for rhythm and movement, using his body as an instrument to create his own music. Sandoval continued practicing tap, traveling to cities in Brazil to study with teachers from around the globe. 

    With just $500 he had saved from busking in Rio de Janeiro, Sandoval immigrated to the United States in 2013, choosing New York as his new home for its history as the birthplace of tap dance. Soon after arriving in New York, Sandoval connected with Michelle Dorrance, with whom he had worked previously. Dorrance invited Sandoval to join her newly formed company, Dorrance Dance. As an early core member, Sandoval has helped to grow Dorrance Dance into one of the country’s leading tap dance companies.

    “Sandoval’s work is powerfully grounded in experience and identity; he brings a consciousness of racism in his country of origin, Brazil, and in the United States to his artistic direction and performances,” says Vilcek Foundation President Rick Kinsel. “The perspective that Sandoval brings as an Afro Brazilian artist honors the history of vernacular dance in the Black diaspora. Through his work with Music from the Sole, Sandoval continues to build and develop the genre for future generations.” 

    In 2015, Sandoval founded Music from the Sole, a tap dance and live music company that celebrates tap’s roots in the African diaspora. With Music from the Sole, Sandoval seeks to open doors for artists whose voices are underrepresented in the dance community. “Challenging long-standing power structures that affect the way dance is funded, created, [and] presented … helps me contribute to reclaiming the narrative surrounding tap dance’s history and cultural significance.”

    Read more about Sandoval at the Vilcek Foundation: Leonardo Sandoval: Finding rhythm in the city’s soundscape

    The Vilcek Foundation

    The Vilcek Foundation raises awareness of immigrant contributions in the United States and fosters appreciation of the arts and sciences. The foundation was established in 2000 by Jan and Marica Vilcek, immigrants from the former Czechoslovakia. The mission of the foundation—to honor immigrant contributions to the United States, and to foster appreciation of the arts and sciences—was inspired by the couple’s respective careers in biomedical science and art history. Since 2000, the foundation has awarded over $6.4 million in prizes to foreign-born individuals and supported organizations with over $5.6 million in grants.

    The Vilcek Foundation is a private operating foundation, a federally tax-exempt nonprofit organization under IRS Section 501(c)(3).

    Press Contact

    Liz Boylan (she/her)
    Communications Manager
    The Vilcek Foundation
    +1 (212) 472-2500
    elizabeth.boylan@vilcek.org

    Source: Vilcek Foundation

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  • Performing Arts Workshops Providing Grant Assistance for Summer Camps

    Performing Arts Workshops Providing Grant Assistance for Summer Camps

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    The Los Angeles-based summer camp will allow up to 1,000 families throughout the nation impacted by COVID-19 to enjoy a week of camp online with half of the tuition sponsored by PAW.

    Press Release



    updated: Jun 3, 2021

    Performing Arts Workshops (PAW) will be providing Summer Camp Assistance Grants to families that have been financially or medically impacted by COVID-19.

    The center is the winner of the “Best Summer Camp” in LA Parent Magazine and has provided arts-based summer camps and after-school programs for more than 30 years. This grant will allow up to 1,000 families impacted by the pandemic to enroll their children in a week of the Live Online Summer Camp, with half of the entire tuition sponsored by PAW. Grants are available on a first-come, first-served basis.

    “We wish to do our part as a trusted member of the community and offer support in this time of need,” says Cheryl Appleman, President of Performing Arts Workshops. “Kids don’t need to have past experience to enjoy our curriculum and participate, it’s designed to engage both beginners and seasoned thespians alike.”

    The grant covers one week of the Full-Day Online Summer Camp and sponsors half of the tuition when the parent matches the remaining $150. Children must be between the ages of 5-14 at the time of attendance, and PAW offers one grant to each child in a family. Camp is available for one-week sessions from June 14 to August 13. More information on the PAW grants can be found at the following link.

    PAW allows kids to build daily activities from acting, singing and voice training, dance, guitar, stand-up comedy, magic, cheerleading, theatrical make-up, and debate. The curriculum is designed for a new experience every week, with their acting, singing, and dance teachers drawing inspiration from the most beloved musicals of our time as weekly themes.

    “Right now, when it is even more important than ever to ensure kids stay happy, safe, and connected, we’re offering the perfect blend of safe social interaction and summer camp activities right from the comfort of home by including Mini Camp Pods for families and trusted friends, where campers get to share the experience, while parents share the value and take turns at home with the Pod,” Appleman said. “By participating in camp with one of our PAW Grants or as a Pod, kids can learn, explore, collaborate, and have fun uncovering a new passion or a new way of expression alongside each other.” 

    To learn more about PAW’s Online Summer Camp or to register for camp redeeming a grant, please visit https://performingartsworkshops.com/online-summer-camp or call (310) 827-8827.

    Source: Performing Arts Workshops Education

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