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Police in China Detain Canadian Pop Star Kris Wu on Suspicion of Rape

The police in Beijing said Saturday they had detained Kris Wu, a popular Canadian Chinese singer, on suspicion of rape amid a #MeToo controversy that has set off outrage in China.

The police did not provide details of their investigation into Mr. Wu. But it comes several weeks after an 18-year-old university student in Beijing accused him of enticing young women like herself with the promise of career opportunities, then pressuring them into having sex.

Known in China as Wu Yifan, Mr. Wu, 30, is the most prominent figure in China to be detained over #MeToo allegations.

He rose to fame as a member of the Korean pop band EXO, then started a successful solo career as a model, actor and singer. Though he denied the allegations when they first surfaced, they set off an uproar that led at least a dozen companies, including Bulgari, Louis Vuitton and Porsche, to sever ties with the singer.

The Chaoyang District branch of the Beijing police said in a statement on social media on Saturday night that it had been looking into accusations posted online that Mr. Wu “repeatedly deceived young women into sexual relations.” It said that Mr. Wu had been detained while the criminal investigation continued.

Mr. Wu’s accuser, Du Meizhu, has said publicly that when she first met Mr. Wu in December last year, she was taken by the singer’s agent to his home in Beijing for work-related discussions. She said that she was pressured to drink cocktails until she passed out, and later found herself in his bed.

They dated until March, according to her account of the events, when he stopped responding to her calls and messages. She has also said she believed that he targeted other young women.

Mr. Wu’s lawyer did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Ms. Du could not be reached.

It was not immediately clear if the police were specifically investigating Ms. Du’s claims. In a statement in July, the police had released what appeared to be preliminary findings about Ms. Du’s allegations. The police had said Ms. Du had hyped her story “to enhance her online popularity,” an assessment that was criticized by her supporters as victim shaming.

The outpouring of support for Ms. Du was a sign that the country’s nascent #MeToo movement continues to grow despite the government’s strict limits on activism and dissent. After Ms. Du spoke out, her supporters flooded the social media pages of several brands, threatening boycotts if they did not drop their partnerships with Mr. Wu, a campaign that quickly forced the companies to distance themselves from him.

The accusations have triggered a heated debate on issues like victim-shaming, consent and abuse of power in the workplace — concepts that had rarely featured in mainstream discussions before the #MeToo movement went global.

The authorities in China often discourage women from filing sexual misconduct complaints, and sexual assault or harassment survivors are frequently shamed and even sued for defamation. Censorship and limits on dissent have also stymied efforts among feminist activists to organize, even as trolls are given cover to spew abuse.

Yet the high-profile nature of the controversy made Ms. Du’s allegations impossible to ignore for Chinese authorities, who are always on the lookout for what they deem to be potential sources of social unrest.

The police announcement, posted on the country’s popular Weibo social media platform, immediately started trending, drawing more than six million likes.

Lu Pin, a New York-based feminist activist, said the detention of Mr. Wu was a major step forward for the #MeToo movement in China.

“Regardless of what the motivation of the police may have been, just the fact that he was detained is huge,” Ms. Lu said.

“For the last three years, a number of prominent figures have faced #MeToo accusations but nothing ever happened to them,” Ms. Lu said. “Now with Wu Yifan, #MeToo has finally taken down someone with real power in China — it has shown that no matter how powerful you are, rape is not acceptable.”

The detention of Mr. Wu comes amid a broader government crackdown on the entertainment industry.

In recent years, Chinese authorities have moved aggressively to clean up the industrywide problem of tax evasion and to cap salaries for the country’s biggest movie stars. In June, the country’s internet watchdog began a crackdown on what it called the country’s “chaotic” online celebrity fan clubs, which the government has come to see as an increasing source of volatility in public opinion.

The People’s Daily, the mouthpiece of the ruling Communist Party, depicted Mr. Wu’s detention as a warning to celebrities that neither fame nor a foreign citizenship would shield them from the law.

“A foreign nationality is not a talisman. No matter how famous one is, there is no immunity,” the propaganda outlet wrote. “Remember: The higher the popularity, the more you must be self-disciplined, the more popular you are, the more you must abide by the law.”

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From ‘Name My Agent!’ to Hollywood Profession

At some point during the pandemic, perhaps between the debut of “Ted Lasso” last August and “Bridgerton” in December, you may have happened upon Netflix’s French import “Call My Agent!” (“Dix Pour Cent” in French), a sweet yet absurd sendup of the global entertainment complex as seen through the lens of a Parisian talent agency where the agents are mostly good-hearted lovers of cinema at the beck and call of their highly demanding clients.

If so, you were one of millions who discovered Camille Cottin, the French actress who played Andrea Martel, the hard-nosed striver with the piercing green eyes who is trying to keep her agency afloat while her personal life falls apart.

The show was one of the few joys of the pandemic, one that prompted viewers to sample additional international content like “Lupin” and “Money Heist,” overcoming “the one-inch tall barrier of subtitles” that the “Parasite” director, Bong Joon Ho, referred to during his 2020 Golden Globes speech. The success of “Call My Agent!” has prompted spinoffs in Britain, Quebec and Turkey. And there is now talk of a stand-alone movie that will see Andrea Martel headed to New York.

But Cottin, 42, whose background includes theater and sketch comedy, completely missed the phenomenon that “Call My Agent!” became in the United States while she was in lockdown in Paris with her husband and two young children. Turns out, she was just as miserable as the rest of us.

“I was quite worried in the pandemic and I was a bit paralyzed,” Cottin said in English during a recent video call. “I wanted to be creative, but I wasn’t at all. Also I had the feeling like I’m never going to work again. I was scared.”

“Now you tell me during the pandemic everybody watched ‘Call My Agent!’ I was miles away, imagining that I was buried alive,” she added with a grim laugh.

Cottin was conducting this interview in a car on her way home from a costume fitting for the Cannes Film Festival. (No “Call My Agent!” fans, the fitting did not involve a fussy feathered gown like the one Juliette Binoche awkwardly donned at the end of Season 2.) Cottin’s new film “Stillwater,” in which she plays Virginie, a working actress and single mother who guides Matt Damon’s remorseful father through an ill-conceived journey in Marseilles, has just debuted to mostly positive reviews. Manohla Dargis called her “electric” in The New York Times. Vanity Fair called her performance “bright and winsome.”

But this moment in the car was far less glamorous. Her 6-year-old daughter was fast asleep, head in mom’s lap. And when the car stopped, I could see the multitasking Cottin at work, scooping up her groggy child, a poof of pink taffeta in one arm, her video call still on in the other, a bright Parisian sky in the background. She paused for a moment to put her daughter to bed before continuing the conversation on the floor of her bathroom, a compromise she made with her child, who asked her not to stray too far. Then her husband, Benjamin, came home. “The father is here!” she exclaimed. “Virginie would have had to handle that situation alone.”

After a small role in the 2016 “Allied,” starring Brad Pitt, “Stillwater” represents Cottin’s biggest introduction yet to American audiences. It just may be the role that lets her officially cross over from obscure French actress to global sensation. Later this year she will star opposite Lady Gaga and Adam Driver in Ridley Scott’s “House of Gucci,” playing Paola Franchi, the girlfriend of Maurizio Gucci (Driver). And she’s set to reprise her role as Hélène, a high-ranking member of the assassin organization the Twelve, in BBC’s “Killing Eve.”

The international community awakened to Cottin’s charms far before all of us in the United States were stuck at home. When “Call My Agent!” showed up on British television, Cottin discovered the show had found an audience across the English Channel. It was 2019, and she was attending a casting director festival in Kilkenny, Ireland, with her own French agent. Suddenly she was the center of attention.

“They were like, ‘Oh could I make a selfie with you?,’ and I was like, ‘What? You’re the James Bond casting director,’” she said, laughing.

That trip and another to London led to her casting in “Gucci” and to her meeting the producer of “Killing Eve.”

Yet “Call My Agent!” had no bearing on the “Stillwater” director Tom McCarthy’s decision to cast Cottin. He hadn’t yet seen the show when he met her. Rather, he hired her based on an audition that he said astonished him and his co-writers, Thomas Bidegain and Noé Debré.

“You kind of can’t keep your eyes off her when she is on the screen,” he said in a recent interview from France. “She’s a bit scattered, a bit all over the place. She’s funny, she’s self-deprecating, she’s empathetic. She’s tough. She’s straightforward. And I feel like after watching her for a year and a half in the edit room, every moment with her is very lived.”

To Cottin, Virginie, who is open and nurturing and always looking for something to fix (like Damon’s Oklahoman roughneck), is a near facsimile of herself.

“Virginie is the closest character I’ve had to play to me,” she said even though it’s one of the few roles she’s played in English. “We have the same energy. And until now, I’ve mostly been counted for women with a lot of more tension. A bit more in control.”

There is a disarming ease to Cottin that is evident on initial introduction and belies the icy veneer of her “Call My Agent!” character. She doesn’t take herself too seriously — McCarthy calls her “goofy” — and you realize quickly how great her potential for comedy is. It’s a skill she exhibited in her most well-known French role, playing the lead in the prank TV show “Connasse,” which means “bitch” in her native tongue. Her exploits included scaling Kensington Palace in search of an introduction to Prince Harry.

A “Call My Agent!” producer, Dominique Besnehard, described Cottin as “the pretty, biting, bold one” who in the role of Andrea “is very good at going from harshness to fragility.”

To Cottin, it’s a character she both admires and understands, yet still finds at a remove from her own personality.

“I have much less assurance than Andrea. She is more self-confident and strategic and good at making decisions,” she said. “If I have to make a choice, it will take me too long, always too long. And I will ask everybody his opinion about it.”

Cottin is decidedly not uncertain about her career, but as an actress in her 40s she is more aware that the highs she’s experiencing today may not predict the highs she will see in her future.

“Maybe if I was 20, I would think, ‘Oh my God, maybe I’m going to have an Oscar,’” she said, laughing, in a mocking American accent. “It’s never vertical. You can make a step, you can consider that you’ve been up and then suddenly, you can go down. Nothing is a straight line. I see these projects as trips, great trips. I can’t say, ‘Oh, now that I’ve done that I can tell you what’s coming next,’ because I don’t know. And it doesn’t mean that it will happen again.”

Besnehard suggested she could have a career like Binoche, taking roles both in France and the United States. “I hope the American people would not monopolize her,” he said.

McCarthy sees a much clearer trajectory.

“I predict great things for Cami and not just because of our movie, which I think she’s sensational in but it’s just her time,” he said. “You can feel it when someone’s earned a moment in their career, and put in the work, and they’re ready to take control of it.”

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Graham Firm Declares Season of In-Individual Performances

The Martha Graham Dance Company will debut new works by Andrea Miller and Hofesh Shechter in their upcoming season in New York, the troupe announced on Thursday. Miller’s first will be performed at the Joyce Theater this fall. Shechters Tanz will be premiered in April 2022 as part of the first City Center Dance Festival.

A third new piece, inspired by Graham’s mostly lost “Canticle for Innocent Comedians,” premieres in March 2022 at the Soraya Performing Arts Center in Northridge, California, and performed at the City Center Festival.

While the company made brief appearances this spring – they did a short program at the Guggenheim in April and on a mixed bill at the Kaatsbaan in May – the season opener at the Joyce from October 26th to 31st will be their full live performances. “I believe the exhilaration of being in the physical presence of our audience – experiencing this deeply personal and emotional connection with heightened appreciation – will be the unmistakable highlight of this season,” said Janet Eilber, the group’s artistic director, in a statement.

Miller’s dance, still untitled, is performed by eight dancers and set to music by the composer Will Epstein, with whom she previously worked. Shechter’s work, currently called “Convergence,” will use all of the company’s dancers; Daniil Simkin, soloist of the American Ballet Theater and the Staatsballett Berlin, will be present at selected performances.

Sonya Tayeh directs the new version of “Canticle for Innocent Comedians” from 1952. She will create the prelude, the finale, the transitions and “Sun”, one of the eight nature-related vignettes. Micaela Taylor, Yin Yue, Juliano Nunes, Kristina and Sadé Alleyne, and Jenn Freeman will do five more. The remaining sections were created by Robert Cohan, a member of the original cast who died in January; and Graham, whose choreography for “Moon” has been preserved. The piece is set to music by jazz pianist Jason Moran.

The Graham season will also feature a repertoire from its founder and inspiration, from “Appalachian Spring,” one of her best-known works, to “Acts of Light,” which has not been shown in New York since 2007.

The company tours between the two stops in Manhattan: in the USA as well as in France, Germany and Turkey. After the City Center Festival, it’s off to Greece in April and China in May.

More information is available at marthagraham.org.

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Greatest New Thriller and Thriller Books of August 2021

Whether you want to read on the beach or stay cool indoors, this August is filled with captivating mysteries and thrillers that will keep you guessing all the way to the last page. This month’s must-read selection includes books by debut authors and established favorites alike. From Megan Collins’ story of what happens when a murder visits a family obsessed with true crime, to Zoje Stage’s story of a nightmarish journey through the Grand Canyon, these novels are jam-packed with all the twists and turns, suspense, and memorable characters you can imagine can only wish. But in case you manage to read through all 14 of these August thrillers and mysteries, don’t forget to check out the July List too.

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Chuck E. Weiss, Musician Who, in Love, Impressed a Hit Music, Dies at 76

Chuck E. Weiss, blues musician, club owner and oversized character from Los Angeles, who was immortalized in Rickie Lee Jones’ breakout hit “Chuck E.’s in Love”, died on July 20 at Cedars Sinai Hospital in Los Angeles . He was 76.

His brother Byron said the cause was kidney failure.

Mr. Weiss was a voracious musicologist, encyclopedia of obscure jazz and early R&B artists, drummer, songwriter, and widely recognized villain who moved from his Denver home to his friend, singer-songwriter Tom., In the mid-1970s Los Angeles Landed Waiting.

At the Troubadour, the venerable folk club in West Hollywood where Mr. Weiss worked as a dishwasher for a while, they met another young singer-songwriter, a former runaway named Rickie Lee Jones. Mr. Waits and Ms. Jones became one item, and the three became inseparable as they wandered Hollywood, stealing lawn trinkets and joking people at music industry parties (like shaking hands with dip on their palms).

“Sometimes it seems like we’re real romantic dreamers stuck in the wrong time zone,” Ms. Jones told Rolling Stone in 1979, describing Mr. Weiss and Mr. Waits as their family at the time.

They stayed at the Tropicana Motel, a shabby 1940s bohemian on Santa Monica Boulevard. “It was a normal DMZ,” Mr. Weiss told LA Weekly in 1981, “except that they were all tan and good-looking.”

In the fall of 1977, Mr. Weiss called his pals in Los Angeles on a trip home to Denver, and when Mr. Waits hung up the phone, he announced to Ms. Jones, “Chuck E. is in love! ”

Two years later, Ms. Jones’ fanciful riff to that explanation had – “What’s her name? (Though the last line of the song suggests otherwise, it wasn’t Ms. Jones that Mr. Weiss fell in love with; it was a distant cousin of his.)

The song was a hit single, the opening track of Ms. Jones’ debut album “Rickie Lee Jones” and was nominated for a Grammy Award for Song of the Year in 1980. (“What a Fool Believes,” performed by the Doobie Brothers, took the honor.)

In a July 21 essay in the Los Angeles Times, Ms. Jones wrote that when she first met Mr. Waits and Mr. Weiss, she could not tell them apart. “They were two of the most charismatic characters Hollywood had seen in decades, and without them the entire street of Santa Monica Boulevard would have collapsed.”

In a telephone interview, she has since said of Mr. Weiss: “It was nonsense in him, he was our trickster. He was an exciting guy and a disaster for a while, as exciting people often are. “

Charles Edward Weiss was born in Denver on March 18, 1945. His father Leo was in the salvage business; his mother, Jeannette (Rollnick) Weiss, owned a hat shop, Hollywood Millinery. Chuck graduated from East High School and attended Mesa Junior College, now Colorado Mesa, in Grand Junction.

His brother is his only immediate survivor.

In his early 20s, Mr. Weiss met Chuck Morris, now a music organizer, when Mr. Morris was a co-owner of Tulagi, a music club in Boulder, Colorado. When blues performers like Lightnin ‘Hopkins and John Lee Hooker came through, they often traveled alone, and it was up to Mr. Morris to find them a local band. He would ask Mr. Weiss to fill in as the drummer.

In 1973, Mr. Morris opened a nightclub called Ebbets Field in Denver (he was born in Brooklyn), which attracted artists such as Willie Nelson, Lynyrd Skynyrd, and Mr. Waits. Mr. Weiss also took part there.

At that time, as Mr Weiss recalled in 2014, he was trying to record his own music and had a habit of asking performers to play with him. That’s how he met Mr. Waits. “And I think what happened was that one night I saw Waits doing some finger pop things in Ebbets Fields,” he said, “and I went to see him after the show. I was wearing a pair of platform shoes and a chinchilla coat and slipped on the ice in the street outside because I was so high and asked if he wanted to take me on. He looked at me like I was out of space, man. “

Still, he said, they quickly became friends.

Mr. Waits, interviewed by the Philadelphia Inquirer in 1999, described Mr. Weiss as “a human, a liar, a monkey, and a pathological vaudevilian.”

Mr. Waits and Mr. Weiss ended up working together on a number of things, in one case they co-wrote the lyrics to “Spare Parts (A Nocturnal Emission),” a barroom lament on Mr. Waits’ album “Nighthawks at the Diner ”, published in 1975. Mr. Waits produced two albums for Mr. Weiss; the first, “Extremely Cool”, in 1999, was described in a review as “a silly, eclectic mix of loosely played blues and boogie-woogie”.

Although his songwriting was unique – “Anthem for Lost Souls” was told from the perspective of a neighbor’s cat – Mr. Weiss was best known for his live performances. Gravelly, scruffy and long-winded, he was a blues man with a Borcht-belt humor.

For much of the 1980s, Mr. Weiss played at a Los Angeles club called Central, accompanied by his band The Goddamn Liars. He later encouraged his friend Johnny Depp to buy the house with him and others. They turned it into the Viper Room, the celebrity-speckled nightclub from the ’90s.

He has been asked many times how he felt about his star turn in Ms. Jones’ hit. “Yeah, I was amazed,” he told The Associated Press in 2007. “Little did we know we’d both be known for the rest of our lives.”

But the rest of her life would no longer be intertwined.

“When ‘Chuck E.’s in Love’ disappeared from the sky and disappeared into the ‘I hate that song’ desert, which it still hasn’t really recovered from, he and I became estranged and everyone became different from everyone else Cut.” Ms. Jones wrote about Mr. Weiss in her article for the Los Angeles Times. “Wait left, the short Camelot on our street corner is over. I had made fictions out of us, made heroes out of very unheroic people. But I’m glad I did. “

Later on the phone, she said, “Two of the three of us became very successful musicians, but Chuck wasn’t, and he knew a lot of people.” She added, “We think being the most famous is a win, but I’m not sure. Chuck did everything right. “

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‘The Final Mercenary’ Assessment: Nonetheless Kicking

At 60, Jean-Claude Van Damme has about as many features as birthdays. Given this productivity, the strangely addicting “JCVD” (2008) showed the Belgian thug pondering the options available to an aging action star.

“The Last Mercenary (Le Dernier Mercenaire)” comes across as one of those options on Netflix, with Van Damme showing a mischievous self-awareness about himself and the genre that has nurtured him. As Richard Brumère, a famous secret service agent who allegedly once hit a rhinoceros with his bare hands, the actor is in excellent shape. It may take a little longer to film a stunt, but thanks to Thierry Arbogast’s camera skills, the seams are barely visible in the action.

That’s a good thing, because Richard prefers hands and feet to weapons. And when his estranged son (Samir Decazza) is falsely accused of the arms trade, Richard must return to Paris after a 25-year absence to put things right. This requires multiple disguises and international locations (the film was shot mostly in Ukraine), a new load of buddies, and probably a lot of stretching.

The plot (by director David Charhon and Ismaël Sy Savané) is a bloated mix of terrorism, stolen identity and father-son healing. The middle part hangs down and not all performances pop. (Though Nassim Lyes hangs it up with a shovel to play a “Scarface” -obossed villain.) But the fight scenes are witty and Van Damme delivers his lines with just the right dose of tired good humor.

“You have aged,” observes a former colleague (played by none other than Miou-Miou), and it is evidence of the tone of the film that the comment is anything but a burn, almost a caress.

The last mercenary
Not rated. In French, with subtitles. Running time: 1 hour 50 minutes. Watch on Netflix.

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Mitchell Button Accused of Sexual Assault in Lawsuit

A pair of professional dancers filed a lawsuit on Wednesday accusing a former dance teacher of sexually assaulting and abusing them, and accusing his wife — an internet-famous ballerina who has danced with the Boston Ballet — of participating in some of that abuse.

The former teacher — who has been known by several names, but is called Mitchell Taylor Button in the suit — is married to Dusty Button, who was a principal dancer with the Boston Ballet and who has amassed more than 300,000 Instagram followers and several corporate sponsorships with viral photos and videos of her dancing.

The suit, filed in United States District Court in Nevada, claims that “the Buttons abuse their positions of power and prestige in the dance community to garner the loyalty and trust of young dancers” and said that the couple would “exploit those relationships to coerce sexual acts by means of force and fraud.” Mr. Button is a defendant in the lawsuit; Ms. Button is not, but is described as a “non-party co-conspirator.” A lawyer for the couple said that they denied the charges.

The suit asserts that one of the plaintiffs, Sage Humphries, now a dancer with the Boston Ballet, met the Buttons in 2016 when she was in the company’s apprenticeship program and that the couple sexually and verbally abused her, forced her to live with them and isolated her from her family.

“They had control over my phone and passwords to my Instagram, my email,” Ms. Humphries, now 23, said in an interview. “They had complete control over me. If I wanted to do anything, I had to ask them first.”

A second plaintiff in the lawsuit, Gina Menichino, alleges that several years earlier, Mr. Button sexually assaulted her when she was 13 years old and he was her 25-year-old dance instructor in Florida.

The lawsuit says that Mr. Button used several names, including Mitchell Moore, Taylor Moore and Mitchell Button.

A statement sent through a lawyer who is speaking for the couple, Ken Swartz, said, “Taylor and Dusty Button categorically deny these baseless claims and they look forward to the opportunity through court proceedings to disprove all of the plaintiffs’ false and fraudulent allegations.”

According to the lawsuit, Ms. Menichino, now 25, said that she met Mr. Button when she was a student at a Centerstage Dance Academy in Tampa, Fla., where she knew him as Taylor Moore. On two occasions in 2010, the suit says, she and Mr. Button were sharing a blanket while watching a movie with other dancers from the studio when Mr. Button sexually assaulted her.

Mr. Button regularly sent sexually explicit text messages, photos and videos to Ms. Menichino, the lawsuit said, and solicited the same from her. Ms. Menichino had aspirations of becoming a professional dancer, it said, and Mr. Button would reward her “compliance” with special dance opportunities, such as assistant teaching at a dance convention.

“The whole game was to keep him happy,” she said in an interview. “Don’t get him angry, or I was unworthy and I would lose my dance career.”

Ms. Menichino, now a dancer, teacher and choreographer, said in an interview that she had reported her experiences to the police in 2018 but that they told her they had found insufficient evidence to pursue a criminal case. According to police records provided by the plaintiffs’ lawyer, another dancer from the same Tampa studio reported to police in 2012 that Mr. Button had sexually assaulted her numerous times, some of them at her home; that case did not result in criminal charges, either, in part because of a lack of supporting physical evidence, the records said.

Ms. Menichino’s mother said in an interview that her daughter told her there had been “inappropriate interactions” involving her and Mr. Button after he had left the studio job.

In Ms. Humphries’s case, her mother and father said in an interview that they had sensed something was wrong with their daughter’s living situation and had flown to Boston to “rescue” her.

Ms. Humphries said in an interview that she had been in awe of Ms. Button, who was a principal dancer with Boston Ballet, and started spending concentrated amounts of time with her and her husband in 2017. But their behavior toward her became increasingly controlling, the lawsuit said.

According to the court filing, the couple insisted that Ms. Humphries sleep at their apartment regularly and eventually forced her to live there full-time and paid for her meals and personal expenses; Mr. Button told her that if he had access to her social media account, he could “make her famous like Dusty.”

“If Sage ever attempted to distance herself or disobey the Buttons,” the lawsuit said, “they would threaten to revoke their financial support and sabotage her career.”

One evening, Mr. Button sexually assaulted Ms. Humphries in his apartment, the lawsuit said, starting a pattern of sexual abuse that sometimes included violent sex acts that she did not consent to. The filing said that on several occasions Ms. Button held her down to immobilize her while Mr. Button had sex with her. And at one point, the suit says, the husband and wife got into a physical altercation that ended with him “striking Dusty across the face” because he was angry that she had had sex with Ms. Humphries.

In August 2017, Ms. Humphries, then 19, received abuse protection orders against both Ms. Button and Mr. Button, the lawsuit said.

The Boston Ballet said in a statement on Thursday that Ms. Button’s employment had been terminated in May of 2017 but declined to say why.

“Boston Ballet supports Sage Humphries who is bravely coming forward, sharing her experience to protect others, and seeking accountability and justice,” the company said in a statement.

Sigrid McCawley, a lawyer representing the two plaintiffs, said that there is a trend of predation in the dance world because of ingrained power dynamics and the desire on the part of dancers to gain approval from authority figures.

“Grooming in that environment is particularly easy for a perpetrator,” she said, “because he has full access to very young victims for long periods of time.”

Kitty Bennett contributed reporting.

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By no means Have I Ever Devi Vishwakumar Bravery Private Essay

Many people consider Devi Vishwakumar to be I have never being a problematic character. She lies, hurts the people she loves, and makes incredibly selfish decisions – that much is true. However, there is something to be said about authenticity when it comes to Devi’s character, as she is rarely anyone but herself. She apologizes (mostly) and is not afraid to be her real self, no matter how culturally inappropriate or frowned upon. For this reason, when watching the new season of I have never, I was jealous of Devi and wished I had been more like her than I was her age.

I was born in the UK and have lived in a South Asian household for most of my life, except for a three year hiatus where I lived in Southampton with my university roommates and my current neighborhood in my own apartment. Throughout my childhood and teenage life, I’d say my parents were a reasonable level of severity – definitely more so than Devi’s mother, Nalini, at least. I got to visit friends outside of school, I went to my fair share of house parties, and I even managed to convince my parents to let me go to the Reading Festival a long time ago, plus a full annual trip to Zante in Greece. But I still feel like I could have taken more risks and been a more authentic version of myself.

As a South Asian woman who grew up in the UK, it sometimes feels like you’re leading a double life. There is the “you” that you are when you are with your cousins, grandma, and your parents, and there is the “you” that you are when you are away from all of these people. Growing up, I wasn’t very open with my family about things at school, I never had male friends visiting my house or sneaking into my room, and I very rarely had friends to stay over. When I watch the show I can’t help but feel like my experience was very different from Devi’s. When I watch her transition from school to home, I have the feeling that her personality, her opinions and the way she speaks hardly or not at all change, unlike in my case.

Devi is pretty open with her family about the language she uses, and she really doesn’t hold back when it comes to swearing, sex, or dating – topics that are usually off-limits in South Asian cultures. In comparison, I didn’t even ask my mother about the periods before it happened to me, and it wasn’t because I didn’t know her; it just felt awkward bringing it up. I would never openly curse or argue about dates with my parents (to this day) even though I’ve been with my boyfriend for five years (not to mention that we live together). There are definitely more factors at play besides Devi’s bold personality, but I couldn’t help but notice all of these things that she loved to do and say without fear of judgments that made me wish I could have been fair so brave in my younger days

The only caveat is probably the episode where her nose is pierced because she is concerned about what her mom is going to say. Even then, the nose piercing is a direct result of sneaking out of her house in the middle of the night to hang out with guys, and she comes to the solution pretty quickly that she’ll “just take it out” before she sees hers Mother the next morning anyway.

I can’t help but wonder how my life would have been if I had taken more risks and been less afraid of what my family would think of some of the things I talked about, how I acted or what i did. Perhaps a more open relationship would have been the result, or a greater level of understanding of the difficulties of growing up in a Western society. Anyway, my hope for other young South Asian girls watching the show is this: Take risks. Within reasonable limits, of course, but take the time to blend the “double lives” together as best you can without worrying too much about what is being said or thought about you. Because the truth is, life is too short to live with regret, and we all could use being a little more like Devi Vishwakumar.

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5 Issues to Do This Weekend

The Bayreuth Festival remains a place of tradition, but the stage that Richard Wagner built for his operas is not averse to innovation. While the festival is returning to personal appearances this year, parallel digital presentations will again be accessible on Deutsche Grammophon’s DG Stage streaming platform. For people who cannot travel to Germany or who are just curious about Wagner, this is a boon.

The premiere stream of this year’s production of “The Flying Dutchman” costs just under 10 euros (approx. 12 US dollars) and is available until 6 pm Eastern Time on Sunday. The rest of the online festival – focused on productions from the last few years – is free.

If you’d like to see a production that wasn’t released on Home-Video, register to stream the controversial (and revealing) ring cycle directed by Frank Castorf, shot in 2016. Since Bayreuth doesn’t offer English subtitles, live or online, the current Penguin Classics translation of Wagner’s epic poem will come in handy. There is still time for the Castorf Route 66 journey through “Das Rheingold” (48 hours from Friday at 10 am).
SETH COLTER WALLS

Few things say summer in New York is as good as live music outdoors – even if it means braising in the sun. Whatever the weather, you can count on neo-soul singer Ari Lennox to radiate warmth when she performs in Brooklyn on Saturday. It doesn’t matter if she sings about hot hookups (shout “On It”, her song with Jazmine Sullivan, and prepare to blush), the joys of being home alone (“New Apartment”) or the tight budget become (“Broke”), Lennox’s songs make everyday life sound comfortable and sensual.

Lennox is headlining the opening night of Celebrate Brooklyn !, BRIC’s annual series – now in its 43rd season – which features live music at the Prospect Park Bandshell. She gets support from the rapper and poet Kamauu and the R&B singers Adeline and Nesta. Admission to the concert, which begins at 7.30 p.m. (admission at 6 a.m.), is free and is awarded according to the first-come-first-served principle.
OLIVIA HORN

CHILDREN

Summer is not just about beaches and barbecues. It’s also a time of year to celebrate books – not just for kids, but by them too.

Preschool bibliophiles and grades 1-3 will enjoy the Woke Baby Book Fair, which focuses on titles on social justice issues. On Saturday from 1pm to 3:30 pm, this free event in and around Hearst Plaza at Lincoln Center features readings by authors such as Mahogany L. Browne, the centre’s poet in residence and the festival’s curator. Expect book signing, games, baby movement classes, and live banjo songs.

Through August 15, the Morgan Library & Museum is displaying 40 accordion-style volumes written by grades 3 through 12 writers. The exhibition “The Morgan Book Project” arises from an annual program of the same name, in which pupils are inspired by the library’s medieval and Renaissance illuminated manuscripts. Using traditional materials such as gold leaf and organic pigments, students illustrate their own stories.

This year’s pick includes a magical portal that appears in Hoboken and a fairy tale king who identifies his long-lost daughter through a DNA test. You will also see a well-known villain: the coronavirus.
LAUREL GRAVE

theatre

In recent years, the Public Theater’s Mobile Unit has brought theater to underserved communities by setting up Shakespeare stores in prisons, libraries, homeless shelters, and community centers with a high-energy, space-saving approach to the classics.

After a pandemic-triggered hiatus, the program has returned in what it calls the Summer of Joy, bringing verse to outdoor spaces across town. Produced by the public and the National Black Theater, in partnership with the Department of Transportation, these free performances, currently scheduled to run through August 29, arrive at Manhattan’s Astor Place on Saturday and Sunday at 4:30 p.m., and then stop in the Bronx, Brooklyn and Queens. (You can find locations and dates at publictheater.org.)

Each show provides the stage for Healing and Resistance from the National Black Theater, Malik Works “Verses @ Work – The Abridged Mix” and “Shakespeare’s Call and Response,” conceived and directed by Patricia McGregor. The Volksbus, a municipal initiative known as a community center on wheels, also stops at every stop.
ALEXIS SOLOSKI

Today dance is just as exciting online as it is on stage (perhaps even more so during this time of Covid-19). 92nd Street Y recognized this development a few years ago through the Mobile Dance Film Festival, which is returning for the fourth time this weekend. Three programs include 36 films by artists from around the world, all shot on mobile devices.

These are not home videos like those found on TikTok. They are cinematic, immersive, and imaginatively edited, and range from 30 seconds to more than 10 minutes. Examples are Yupei Tang’s ominous, fragmented “Inception”, Maksym Kotskyi and Elena Mesheryakova’s short but impressive “30 Seconds to Fastiv” and the mesmerizing, gold-colored “Untold Stories” by Nigerian dancer and choreographer Hermes Chibueze Iyele. Another series of student works rounds off the festival, where these programs will be premiered in person on Saturday in the Buttenwieser Halle; the films will also be available on demand until August 15th. Tickets for each program and access to the stream start at $ 10 and can be purchased at 92y.org/mobiledancefilmfestival.
BRIAN SCHAEFER

Categories
Entertainment

Examine Exhibits Extra Incapacity Tales Onscreen, however Few Disabled Actors

Let’s start with the good news: The significant representations of disability in film and television programs have almost tripled in the past decade compared to the past 10 years.

However, almost all of these titles still do not include disabled actors.

This is the conclusion reached by a new study published Wednesday by Nielsen and the nonprofit RespectAbility that analyzed the portrayal of disabled characters in film and television shows published from 1920 to 2020.

The titles come from a Nielsen database that contains more than 90,000 films and television shows that premiered in the last century. Of these, 3,000 titles were labeled with important topics or content on disabilities.

Movies fared better than television – about 64 percent (1,800) of depictions of disabled characters were in feature films and 16 percent (448) were in regular series. (The remaining representations were included in other categories such as short films, limited series, television films or specials.) The database also found a significant increase in the number of productions with disability topics from 41 in 2000 to 150 in 2020.

According to the report, about one in four adults in the United States has a physical or mental disability.

A survey accompanying the study also found that people with disabilities are slightly more likely to have problems with depictions of disabled characters. Viewers with disabilities were 8 percent more likely than those who were not disabled to describe a television presentation as inaccurate, and 7 percent were more likely to say that disabled characters are not adequately represented on screen.

Lauren Appelbaum, vice president at RespectAbility, said that although the number of disabled characters continues to grow, about 95 percent of those roles are still being played by actors who have no disabilities.

“When disability is part of a character’s story, content too often positions people with disabilities as someone to pity or heal, rather than portraying disabled people as full members of our society,” she said in a statement.

Several films with disabled characters made headlines with their casting last year: “Sound of Metal”, which tells the story of a drummer (Riz Ahmed) who loses his hearing, has been criticized for casting Paul Raci, a hearing actor who is a child of a deaf adult as a deaf mentor to Ahmed’s character. (Raci said he was comfortable with the casting because his character lost his hearing in the Vietnam War and was not deaf from birth.) CBS’s adaptation of Stephen King’s novel “The Stand” also opposed casting a hearing actor, Henry Zaga, as Nick Andros, a character who is deaf and signed throughout the series.

Last fall, “The Witches,” the Warner Bros. adaptation of the Roald Dahl story, starring Anne Hathaway as the witch with disfigured hands, was criticized for its split-hand resemblance or ectrodactyly, leading to the debate over the portrayal a disability flared up again as evil.

But there were also positive representations, such as Pixar’s “Luca”, which shows a character who was born without an arm and who takes the rare step of depicting a character with different limbs without making it a defining characteristic.

The report, coordinated to mark the 31st anniversary of the Americans With Disabilities Act, is the first in a three-part series by Nielsen and RespectAbility that also analyzes representations of disability in advertising and the media perception of viewers with disabilities. These reports will be published in August.