Baltimore adolescents in poodle skirts hit the Broadway stage in John Waterss Cry-Babybut will this classic indie flick turned musical do as well as its predecessor, Hairspray? Itll definitely be a box-office throwdown between Tracy Turnblad and Wade Cry-Baby Walker (though were not sure Broadway newbie James Snyder will make us swoon the way Johnny Depp did). The eclectic group of actors will have to pull off roles once played by Ricki Lake, Tracy Lords, and Iggy Pop, so they have their work cut out for them. more at this venue
Marquis Theatre
1535 Broadway
New York, NY 10036
212-307-4100
[VOICE CHOICES]
The 7 Lights
Paul Chans work doesnt merely hang on a wallit also exists on the floors and ceilings. In reflected light and shadow, the elements of city life emerge, evoking politics, poetry, war, death, and desire. The 7 Lights, Chans first major exhibition in the U.S., takes as its underlying theme the seven days of creation, but makes it seem like a hallucination. And some of Chans work may already feel eerily familiar: His posters are displayed throughout Manhattan and Brooklyn. more at this venue
New Museum
235 Bowery
New York, NY 10002
http://newmuseum.org
[MOVIE THEATER, VOICE CHOICES]
Godard â60s!
Dear friends: Iâm sorry if we made plans this month. I have to cancel. For the next five weeks, I will be dining only on popcorn at the Film Forum concession stand during the run of its Godard â60s! series, where all of Jean-Luc Godardâs greatest ground-breaking, anarchic works from the 1960s (21 in all!) will be screened. If youâd like, you could join me tonight to see Breathless, starring Jean-Paul Belmondo as a wanted criminal who seduces the blonde pixie Jean Seberg (ooh la la!). Or we could see A Woman Is a Woman (May 11-13), in which Anna Karina (Godardâs muse and then-wife) plays a stripper who desperately wants to be a mother; Masculine Feminine (May 25-27), a raucous portrait of the â60s youth culture in Paris; or Sympathy for the Devil (May 27), featuring a young Mick Jagger at a recording session. Or just pick any dayâIâll be waiting in the lobby. more at this venue
Film Forum
209 W Houston St.
New York, NY 10014
Soho
212-727-8110
http://www.filmforum.com
[VOICE CHOICES]
African Film Festival New York
The New York African Film Festival celebrates its 15th anniversary with a lineup of 40 films from 22 countries throughout Africa and the African Diaspora. Titled Cinema and History: Africa and the Future, this year's program emphasizes history and storytelling, technology and the future. Highlights of this year's festival include a tribute commemorating the life of the "Father of African Cinema," the late Ousmane Sembène and Nobel Laureate Wole Soyinka will be honored on Saturday, April 12, at the Centerpiece Celebration with the U.S. premiere of The African Slave Trades: Across the Indian Ocean. For more information, go to africanfilmny.org. more at this venue
Multiple venues
call for schedule & venue information
New York, NY 10003
East Village
[VOICE CHOICES]
National Dance Week
If youve ever wanted to twirl like a flamenco dancer or tap your feet like Fred Astaire, National Dance Week is the perfect time for anyone who hasnt gotten moving to start! Beginning today, studios such as Ailey Extensions, the American Tap Dance Foundation, Djoniba Dance & Drum Center, Power Pilates, the Hip-Hop Dance Conservatory, and many others are offering free classes. Newcomers can try out just about every dance form known to man and then keep the party rolling long after the week of freebies is over. Theres also a performance that includes ballet, jazz, lyrical, Latin, and Middle Eastern dances on Sunday to show you how fabulously youll be able to move if you stick the program out. more at this venue
New Dance Group Center
305 West 38th Street
New York, NY 10018
212-904-1990
http://www.ndg.org
[VOICE CHOICES]
New York Photo Festival
Art-book publisher powerHouse Books makes good on its promise to commandeer much of its Brooklyn neighborhood, DUMBO, for an impressively ambitious event: the New York Photo Festival. Teaming up with the VII Photo Agency, powerHouse has corralled 12 different spaces on eight city blocks for what should be a photography lovers nirvana. The four-day event includes workshops, live performances, seminars, slide shows, and an awards ceremony. Curated by Martin Parr (Magnum), Kathy Ryan (New York Times Magazine picture editor), Lesley A. Martin (the Aperture Foundation), and Tim Barber (TinyVices.com), the festival will announce winners in categories ranging from editorial, unpublished, and multimedia to advertising, personal, fashion, and more. more at this venue
Multiple venues
call for schedule & venue information
New York, NY 10003
East Village
[VOICE CHOICES]
No Fun Fest
The big news regarding Carlos Giffonis No Fun Fest, now in its astonishing fifth year, is the noise festivals move from Red Hook to the Knitting Factory, a long-deserved promotion. Past Giffoni coups have included Japanoise legends Incapacitants, Merzbow, C.C.C.C.s Hiroshi Hasegawa, and Solmania; this year, the Brooklyn-based raconteur has lured first-wave performance artists and venue-destroyers the Haters to the city. The fest will take place on all three floors of the Knitting Factory for three days straight, making room for hometown heroes (Thurston Moore, Lee Ranaldo, Giffoni himself), old-time veterans (Tony Conrad, Hasegawa), and the best of todays experimental crop: John Wiese, Burning Star Core, Nautical Almanac, and scores of others. In a year that seems to be headed toward full-blown 80s New York nostalgia, take a couple days off: Why mourn downtown during a week when a couple hundred noise musicians are so thoroughly taking it over? more at this venue
Knitting Factory Main Space
74 Leonard St.
New York, NY 10013
Tribeca
212-219-3006
[GALLERY, VOICE CHOICES]
POOM2, A Page Out of Order M to M
The Japan Society wants to pound into submission the stereotype that Japanese women are submissive, and so it named its winter/spring season New York Womana celebration of the bold cultural contributions that Japanese women in New York have made. The season concludes with choreographer and artistic director Yoshiko Chumas POOM2, A Page Out of Order M to M, a multimedia spectacle that includes video projections, live music, narration, and, of course, danceall within a ruby-red backdrop. Her piece was inspired by Teinosuke Kinugasas A Page of Madness (1926), an avant-garde silent film set in an insane asylum. Vocalist Sizzle Ohtaka and the musical threesome Hannya Teikoku perform live. more at this venue
Japan Society
333 E 47th St.
New York, NY 10017
Midtown (42nd to 59th)
212-715-1205
http://www.japansociety.org
[VOICE CHOICES]
Old Comedy
Obie Awardwinning writer and performer David Greenspan, who was just nominated for a Drama League Award for his work in The Beebo Brinker Chronicles, wraps up Target Margin Theaters terrific two-season exploration of Greek works with an adaptation called Old Comedy (from Aristophanes Frogs). While the story itself is ancient, its themes are as fresh as ever: Set in Athens during a terrible, losing war without political leadership, the play concerns a group of heroes who go in search of a poet with the wisdom to save thema task that ends up being far more difficult than they can imagine. David Herskovits, artistic director of Target Margin, directs. more at this venue
Classic Stage Company
136 E 13th St.
New York, NY 10003
212-677-4210
[THEATER, VOICE CHOICES]
Top Girls
For women, making it into the boardroom in the 1980s was fraught with a very different set of concerns than Omarosas 15 minutes on The Apprentice. Caryl Churchills Broadway premiere of Top Girls takes us back to the decade of decadence at Londons Top Girls Employment Agency, where Marlene (played by Elizabeth Marvel) celebrates her climb to success as head of the company. With an all-star cast featuring Mary Beth Hurt, Martha Plimpton, and Marisa Tomei, the show prompts us to question whether the sacrifices were willing to make and the values we place on getting ahead in a so-called mans world are really worth the ride. more at this venue
Biltmore Theatre
261 W 47th St.
New York, NY 10036
Midtown
212-239-6200
[VOICE CHOICES]
Occupant
Originally scheduled to run at the Signature in 2002, Edward Albees Occupant was canceled during previews when its star, Anne Bancroft, came down with pneumonia. Now, Tony winner Mercedes Ruehl is onboard to portray the late acclaimed sculptor (and Albee friend) Louise Nevelsonably abetted by the excellent Larry Bryggmanin this story about the charismatic artists life and career. Though the entire eight-week run sold out while the show was still in rehearsals, its been extended another week and, last we heard, tickets were still available. (The catch: Theyre now $65 instead of $20.) Pam MacKinnon, who staged the hit revival of Albees Peter and Jerry at Second Stage earlier this season, directs. more at this venue
Signature Theatre
555 W 42nd St.
New York, NY 10036
212-2447529
[VOICE CHOICES]
Marathon 2008
Summers almost here, which means that the Ensemble Studio Theatres annual array of one-acts, Marathon 2008, is back to delight us with 15 new short plays on alternating programs. For its 30th anniversary, EST brings us works by brilliant award winners (David Auburn, Neil LaBute), talented newcomers (Anne Washburn, Amy Herzog), and established veterans (Frank Gilroy, José Rivera). Highlights include a solo piece by the always-entertaining drag artist Taylor Mac and a play titled Japanoir by the Voices own Michael Feingold. more at this venue
Ensemble Studio Theater
549 W 52nd St.
New York, NY 10019
212-247-4982