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China’s Communist Celebration Turns 100. Cue the (State-Authorized) Music.

Yan Shengmin, a Chinese tenor, is known for bouncy renditions of Broadway tunes and soulful performances in operas like “Carmen.”

But lately, Mr. Yan has been focusing on a different genre. He is a star of “Red Boat,” a patriotic opera written to celebrate the 100th anniversary this week of the founding of the Chinese Communist Party. Mr. Yan has embraced the role, immersing himself in party history and binge-watching television shows about revolutionary heroes to prepare.

“I feel a lot of pressure,” Mr. Yan said in an interview between rehearsals. “The 100th anniversary is a big occasion.”

A wave of nationalistic music, theater and dance is sweeping China as the Communist Party works to ensure its centennial is met with pomp and fanfare.

Prominent choreographers are staging ballets about revolutionary martyrs. Theaters are reviving nationalistic plays about class struggle. Hip-hop artists are writing songs about the party’s achievements. Orchestras are performing works honoring communist milestones like the Long March, with chorus members dressed in light-blue military uniforms.

The celebrations are part of efforts by Xi Jinping, China’s authoritarian leader, to make the party omnipresent in people’s lives and to strengthen political loyalty among artists.

Mr. Xi, who has presided over a broad crackdown on free expression in China since rising to power nearly a decade ago, has said artists should serve the cause of socialism rather than become “slaves” of the market.

In honor of the party’s centennial, Mr. Xi’s government has announced plans for performances of 300 operas, ballets, plays, musical compositions and other works. The list includes classics like “The White-Haired Girl,” a Mao-era opera about a young peasant woman whose family is persecuted by a cruel landlord. There are also new productions like “Red Boat,” which chronicles the party’s first congress in 1921 on a boat outside Shanghai.

The outpouring of artistic expression comes amid rising nationalism in China. Many artists have little choice but to comply with the government’s demands for more patriotic art, with officials in China’s top-down system wielding considerable influence over decisions about financing and programming.

“It has become very important for artists to follow the political line,” said Jindong Cai, director of the U.S.-China Music Institute at Bard College. “The government wants artists to focus on Chinese works that relate to people’s lives and positively reflect China’s image.”

Critics have denounced the so-called “red” works as propaganda. But Chinese artists say that is partly the point.

“China is very strong now and people should respect that,” said Warren Mok, a Chinese tenor who is embarking on a national tour to celebrate the centennial.

Mr. Mok said he hoped to use music to remind people about the party’s success in improving living standards in China. Still, he said it was important that patriotic works are balanced with Western music and other art forms.

“Anything you do should not be too extreme,” he said. “If you’re so insecure about your own culture, your own nationalism, you close your door. Isolation is not good for any country.”

Hundreds of performances related to the party’s centennial have already taken place, and scores more are expected by year’s end.

In Suzhou, a city west of Shanghai, the choreographer Wang Yabin recently staged “My Name is Ding Xiang,” a new ballet about a 22-year-old martyr who died during the Second Sino-Japanese War. In Nanjing, an eastern city, an orchestra recently performed “Liberation: 1949,” a symphony about the Communist revolution by the composer Zhao Jiping.

Some works deal with contemporary themes, including the party’s efforts to eliminate extreme poverty and its success in fighting the coronavirus, which Mr. Xi has held up as evidence of the superiority of China’s authoritarian model. A play called “People First” depicts the heroism of medical workers in Wuhan, where the coronavirus emerged in late 2019.

Propaganda art has a long history in China, and some of the country’s most celebrated works emerged during periods of intense political control, including the decade of bloody upheaval in the 1960s and 1970s known as the Cultural Revolution. During that time, classical music was attacked as decadent and bourgeois, and many Western composers and instruments were banned.

In modern China, music and dance from the Cultural Revolution still resonates with the public, including works such as the “Yellow River Piano Concerto” and “The Red Detachment of Women,” a revolutionary ballet.

“These cultural products have their own artistic value,” said Denise Ho, assistant professor of history at Yale University who studies 20th century history in China. “For many Chinese, there is a nostalgia for certain aspects of the Mao era.”

By reviving older works, Mr. Xi appears eager to remind the public of the party’s glory days. His government has redoubled efforts to fortify ideological loyalty among artists. This year, a government-backed industry association released a moral code for performing artists — dancers, musicians and acrobats included — calling on them to be faithful to the party and help advance the socialist cause.

China’s Tightening Grip

    • Xi’s Warning: A century after the Communist Party’s founding, China’s leader says foreign powers would “crack their heads and spill blood” if they tried to stop its rise.
    • Behind the Takeover of Hong Kong: One year ago, the city’s freedoms were curtailed with breathtaking speed. But the clampdown was years in the making, and many signals were missed.
    • One Year Later in Hong Kong: Neighbors are urged to report on one another. Children are taught to look for traitors. The Communist Party is remaking the city.
    • Mapping Out China’s Post-Covid Path: Xi Jinping, China’s leader, is seeking to balance confidence and caution as his country strides ahead while other places continue to grapple with the pandemic.
    • A Challenge to U.S. Global Leadership: As President Biden predicts a struggle between democracies and their opponents, Beijing is eager to champion the other side.
    • ‘Red Tourism’ Flourishes: New and improved attractions dedicated to the Communist Party’s history, or a sanitized version of it, are drawing crowds ahead of the party’s centennial.

Mr. Xi, in a ceremony this week at Beijing’s Great Hall of the People, handed out centennial medals to 29 party cadres, including Lan Tianye, an actor often described as a “red artist,” and Lu Qiming, a patriotic composer known for the piece “Ode to the Red Flag.”

“For Xi, as for Mao, art is first and foremost a political instrument,” Professor Ho said.

The Chinese government has tried to use music, dance, television and movies in recent years to improve its image, especially among young people, many of whom have no direct connection to the Communist revolution of 1949.

A rap song celebrating the centennial, titled “100 Percent,” has been widely shared on the Chinese internet in recent days. But the 15-minute track, featuring 100 artists, has been mocked for its wooden propaganda slogans.

“Our spaceships are flying in the sky,” says one lyric. “The new China must get lit.”

Performers say they hope the high caliber of the centennial productions, including elaborate costumes, sets and visual effects, will appeal to younger audiences.

Wang Jiajun, 36, a principal dancer at Shanghai Dance Theater who plays a martyr in a revival of the dance production “The Eternal Wave,” said young people could identify with the work.

“These heroes were only in their teens, 20s or 30s when they lost their lives,” Mr. Wang said. “The stories of young people will attract young people.”

For artists taking part in the centenary, the effort has at times been laborious.

Xie Menghao, a Chinese-born graduate student in music composition in Germany, spent six months repurposing a suite of Red Army songs into a piano concerto about the Long March, a 6,000-mile retreat of Communist forces that began in 1934 and established Mao’s pre-eminence. He said he was proud of the piece, which the Shanghai Philharmonic Orchestra premiered last month, but added that the experience was “more like a job.”

“I just did what they said,” he said in an interview. “Every composer just thinks about the music.”

Mr. Yan the tenor starring in “Red Boat,” said he has found it easy to connect with his character, Chen Duxiu, a founder of the party. But he said rehearsals have not always been easy. Younger performers, for instance, have needed help better understanding the emotional experience of being part of the early communist struggle, he said.

“They don’t have the ideas to fight or sacrifice for the nation’s destiny,” Mr. Yan, 56, said. “I can do it in one take.”

Mr. Yan said he was confident that the show would have success in China and perhaps beyond.

“We’re depicting history, not just lecturing how great the Communist Party is,” he said. “This isn’t a communist slogan-type performance. It’s plain storytelling.”

Javier C. Hernández reported from Taipei, Taiwan, and Joy Dong from Hong Kong.

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‘No. 7 Cherry Lane’ Overview: A Heady Daydream in 1967 Hong Kong

As sumptuous as it is odd, “No. 7 Cherry Lane” is an exercise in harnessing nostalgia for innovation. The first animated film from the director Yonfan is a deeply eccentric chronicle of a forbidden affair in 1960s Hong Kong, as the spirit of Mao Zedong’s anti-imperialist, communist revolution arrives in what was still a British colony. Fan Ziming, a beguiling English literature student, becomes embroiled in a knotty love triangle between Mrs. Yu, a divorced Taiwanese exile and former revolutionary who now deals in luxury goods, and her daughter Meiling, a nubile 18-year-old student taking English lessons from Ziming.

At times, “No. 7 Cherry Lane” unfolds as a hallucinatory daydream, flowing with starry-eyed voice-over narration: “Look how the golden years flowed away,” reads the opening title card, as the narrator describes the time as an “era of prosperity amidst simplicity.” The Hong Kong of 1967 is rendered in rich detail through pencil on rice paper, with radiant color blooming onscreen, illustrations of bustling streets and movie theaters constituting the film’s universe. There are cerebral, erudite dialogues about Proust, French art films and classic Chinese literature that drive the liaisons at its center. The animation is often slow-moving — figures shuffle stiffly across the screen as they muse about art and philosophy, a choice that may challenge viewers accustomed to more fluid gestures. But the approach contributes to the film’s thematic commitment to nostalgia and adds a quiet elegance and slow-paced intimacy to each scene.

Fortunately, “No. 7 Cherry Lane” transcends pure wistfulness or intellectual indulgence. The film embraces a lovely surreal sensibility that bleeds through all of its details: puffs of smoke wafting off a theater screen into the characters’ world; a clowder of cats explaining Hong Kong’s floor-numbering practices; effervescent, jarring synth pop soundtracking the peak of a violent protest. These details seem minor, but they infuse an otherwise heady film with heart and levity. The movie’s bizarre and sexually explicit dream sequences, which include the abduction of a Taoist nun and Ziming being pleasured by a cat, further illustrate the film’s enigmatic quality — but they also prevent it from becoming a simple trip down memory lane. Consider this film a master class in world-building, a bewildering but poignant dream — one that will leave you with plenty of burning questions.

No. 7 Cherry Lane
Not rated. In Mandarin, Cantonese, French and Shanghainese, with subtitles. Running time: 2 hours 5 minutes. Watch on Criterion Channel.

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5 Issues to Do This Weekend

Have you ever wondered what marathoners go on in their minds during the 42.2 miles to the finish line? Then the author Melanie Jones gives you access to the thoughts of a first-time runner in “Endure”. At the location-specific performance in Central Park, viewers wear audio devices while they walk three miles (at their own pace) with a marathon runner (Casey Howes or Mary Cavett) and listen to their inner monologue.

“Literally every human experience and thought comes to life in a long race,” said Jones, who has competed in marathons and Iron Man triathlons.

Jones worked with director Suchan Vodoor for over a decade to deliver what feels like “The Loneliness of the Distance Runner” and “Eat Pray Love”.

Tickets to the show (which begins Saturday and runs through August 8) are $ 44.99; Visit runwomanshow.com for more information. And although the show is completely outdoors, it follows strict Covid-19 safety protocols. Be sure to wear comfortable shoes.
JOSE SOLÍS

Greenwich Village is as deeply anchored in music history as any other neighborhood in Manhattan; Stroll the streets and pass the places where Pete Seeger, Odetta, Bob Dylan and the like became the figureheads of an American folk revival in the 1950s and 60s.

Founded in 1987 to honor this legacy, the Greenwich Village Folk Festival once organized annual concerts to showcase established and emerging folk talent, but lost momentum in the mid-1990s. However, since the pandemic began, the practice has been revitalized with online live streams held every first Sunday of the month.

Don’t expect conventional patriotic performances at the July 4th edition, which will be streamed for free on the festival’s YouTube channel and website from 7:00 p.m. Eastern Time. The cast – including prolific songwriter and instrumentalist John McCutcheon; Diana Jones, whose latest album takes the migration crisis into account; and the music satirist Roy Zimmerman – rather follow the time-honored folk tradition of critical political engagement.
OLIVIA HORN

The Flux Quartet has excellent taste in American chamber music. For evidence, watch the first show in a recent series of two concerts recorded for the Library of Congress website. In this one-hour opening set, the group focuses on pieces by black composers who have also played an important role in the jazz tradition.

The saxophonist Roscoe Mitchell’s “9/9/99, With Cards” uses a notation system with which the composer also helped orchestras to improvise. The jubilant, lyrical quality of “Revival” by violinist Leroy Jenkins is reminiscent of his ability to write for string quartet. And the saxophonist Ornette Coleman’s “A Dedication to Poets and Writers” receives a gentle, winning interpretation.

While Coleman is the best-known name, the de facto star of the program is another saxophonist, Oliver Lake, whose music can be heard three times. (The pianist Cory Smythe is a guest at one of these performances.) As on the heady album by the Flux Quartet with the composer’s works from 2017, Lake sings on the saxophone for the feverish and happy “5 Sisters”.
SETH COLTER WALLS

CHILDREN

Instead of celebrating July 4th with a barbecue, families can join the New-York Historical Society for a barbecue.

The organization will present Independence Day @ Home With DCHM on Sunday from 11 a.m. to 12 p.m. Eastern Time. (The initials stand for the DiMenna Children’s History Museum, the association’s youth department.) From their own kitchen on Zoom, participants can watch the museum directors prepare and test festive dishes – veggie burgers, pork and chives dumplings and ice cream Know everyone about vacation quizzes.

Chefs of all ages can register on the association’s website, which also lists the recipes and equipment they need. The free program will be fully interactive and allow young historians to answer multiple-choice questions such as, “Which US President was born on July 4th?”

In addition to learning the story, the children also get a foretaste of it. The menu’s dessert, orange blossom cinnamon ice cream, is based on an English recipe in a book by Ann Fanshawe. She wrote about her “ice cream” in 1665.
LAUREL GRAVE

TO DANCE

Since the pandemic forced dance classes to go online, the Cumbe Center for African and Diaspora Dance, a studio in Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn, has maintained a strong virtual presence. After the return of face-to-face meetings, the center continues to host a series of courses on Zoom for dancers of all levels, in addition to some new outdoor offerings.

If you want to start the holiday weekend with movement, the Cumbe Calendar has many online options. On Friday evenings, Julio Jean teaches Afro-Haitian dance for beginners and Vado Diomande leads an advanced dance class from Ivory Coast. Saturday brings Rhythm and Flow Yoga with Carmen Carriker; Orisha Dance (dances of the Yoruba deities) with Tony Yemaya; and JamDown Caribbean Dance Fitness with Jennine Hamblin, aka JennyJam. (There are no classes on this Sunday or Monday.)

Payment for most virtual courses is staggered between $ 7 and $ 25; To register and for more information, visit cumbedance.org.
SIOBHAN BURKE

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Jamie Spears Stays A part of Britney Spears’ Conservatorship

The battle for Britney Spears’ conservatories continues. According to diversity, new court documents filed Wednesday showed that LA judge Brenda Penny has denied the 39-year-old singer’s request to remove her father, Jamie Spears, as her co-restorer. Britney’s attorney Samuel Ingham III filed the application on her behalf back in November 2020. At that time, Samuel said on behalf of Britney that she was “afraid of her father” and would not perform again with his involvement. Despite hearing Britney’s explosive testimony last week, the judge ruled that Jamie would keep his career charge.

Britney has been under the direction of her father Jamie since 2008, with Jodi Montgomery, a licensed restorer, stepping in as co-restorer in 2019. During her June 23 trial, Britney shared harrowing details of the abuse she suffered from the Conservatory, including being forced to tour and take medication, and not being able to marry or have children. “It’s not okay to force myself to do something I don’t want to … I really believe that these conservatories are abusive. I don’t feel like I can live a full life, “said Britney. “It is my wish and my dream that this will come to an end.”

Both Jodi and Jamie have since responded to Britney’s shocking testimony with testimony from their respective attorneys, essentially shifting the blame on one another. In addition to requesting an investigation, Jamie claims Jodi was responsible for Britney’s “troubles and suffering”. “Ms. Spears informed the court on June 23 that she was opposed to a restoration and disclosed her ongoing disputes with Ms. Montgomery over her medical treatment and other personal care issues,” said Jamie’s attorney Vivian Lee Thoreen. “These statements contradict the idea that Ms. Spears would seek to make Ms. Montgomery her permanent curator of the person.”

Meanwhile, Jodi says she was a “tireless advocate” for Britney and that Jamie, as the controller of her estate, was responsible for approving all expenses. “Practically speaking, since everything costs money, no expenses can be made without Mr. Spears and Mr. Spears’ approval,” said Jodi’s statement. “Ms. Montgomery has worked on Britney’s behalf for any expenses Britney has requested and any expenses recommended by Britney’s medical team.”

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Britney Spears’s Father Requires Inquiry Into Singer’s Management Claims

James P. Spears, the father of Britney Spears and the man who has long played a leading role in overseeing his daughter’s affairs, on Tuesday called for an investigation into the singer’s allegations last week that she was molested under her supervision, including convicting them to carry out and take medication against their will.

The court records on behalf of Mr. Spears followed the singer’s first full public statement in 13 years about the complex legal regime that oversees her personal welfare and finances, calling for her to quit conservatory without undergoing a mental evaluation .

In her remarks at the June 23 hearing, broadcast in the courtroom and streamed online, Ms. Spears blamed her management team, janitors and family for their treatment, and made explicit mention of her father.

Now, Mr. Spears’ attorneys have requested an evidence hearing and challenged the actions of Ms. Spears’ current personal guardian and court appointed attorney, saying that “It is crucial that the court confirm that Ms. Spears’ testimony was correct or not “carefully to determine what corrective action, if any, needs to be taken.”

The filings, filed late Tuesday in Los Angeles and received by the New York Times, continued: “It is also imperative that all parties are given a full and fair opportunity to function properly in the Conservatory trial before this court Responding to allegations and claims. “Asserted against them.”

The twin-pronged conservatory, which manages Ms. Spears ‘personal life and estate, was first cleared by a probate court in Los Angeles in 2008 when Ms. Spears’ father moved for control of the singer’s business and welfare amid concerns regarding their mental health and their potential for substance abuse. The arrangement is usually reserved for people who cannot fend for themselves, although Ms. Spears continued to work and perform in the years that followed.

Mr. Spears is currently overseeing the singer’s finances, along with a corporate trustee whom Ms. Spears asked last year to join the arrangement. Her personal curator, Jodi Montgomery, temporarily took over from her father in September 2019 after Mr Spears resigned due to health issues.

But Ms. Spears’ recent statement, along with confidential court records obtained from the New York Times, revealed that in private Ms. Spears had consistently urged quitting conservatories, calling it “too, too much,” according to the Reported by a court investigator in 2016, adding that she was tired of being exploited.

In court last week, Ms. Spears called the setup abusive, likened it to sex trafficking, and described that in 2019 she was forced to tour, undergo psychiatric exams and take medication before her father gave up his role as her personal conservator.

She also said she could not remove her contraceptive even though she wanted to get married and have more children. Ms. Spears referred to her father as “the one who approved of everything”.

In a second filing on Tuesday, Mr. Spears’ attorneys denied the characterization that he was in command, arguing that Ms. Montgomery “has been fully responsible for the daily personal care and medical treatment of Ms. Spears” as of September 2019. , despite some allegations made by Ms. Spears prior to Ms. Montgomery’s appointment.

“Mr. Spears just is not involved in decisions related to Ms. Spears’ personal care or medical or reproductive problems,” his attorneys wrote. Spears cannot hear his daughter’s concerns and address them directly because he has been cut off from communicating with her. “

They added that Mr Spears had no intention of returning as his daughter’s personal curator, but said he was “concerned about the management and care of his daughter”.

Lauriann Wright, an attorney for Ms. Montgomery, said in a statement Wednesday that Ms. Montgomery, as a personal conservator, has been “a tireless advocate for Britney and her well-being” with “one primary goal – to support and encourage”. Britney on her way to no longer needing the person’s care. “

Ms. Wright pointed to Ms. Montgomery’s role as a “neutral decision maker in complex family dynamics” and said that Ms. Spears’ “decision to get married and have a family was never influenced by the Conservatory while Ms. Montgomery” was the Conservatory of the person. “

She added that Ms. Montgomery was looking forward to “finding a way to end the Conservatory.”

Mr. Spears attorneys also raised concerns about the role of Mrs. Spears’s court-appointed attorney, Samuel D. Ingham III, who was hired on the case in 2008 when the singer was deemed unable to choose her own representation.

In the documents, Mr. Spears’ attorneys asked if an earlier move to make the role of Ms. Montgomery permanent was what the singer wanted or even aware of, and found that “Ms. Spears has neither signed nor reviewed the petition to appoint her personal curator, “which was instead signed by Mr. Ingham.

Citing Mr. Ingham’s earlier claim that Ms. Spears was found to be unable to consent to medical treatment in 2014, they stated, “There has been no such finding and there is no such order.” This, too, requires an investigation in a subsequent hearing, the lawyers wrote.

When requesting an investigation, Mr. Spears’ attorneys said, “Either the allegations will turn out to be true and corrective action must be taken in this case, or they will be proven false, in which case the conservatory can continue.” It is unacceptable for restorers or the court to respond to Ms. Spears’ testimony. “

Previously, Ms. Spears had raised concerns about her father’s control over her, according to the investigator’s 2016 report. She cited her inability to make friends or to date without her father’s approval; the limits of her weekly allowance of $ 2,000, despite her success as a performer; and the fear and “very harsh” consequences she said are linked to conservatory violations, the investigator said.

At the time, the estate investigator concluded that the Conservatory was in Ms. Spears’ best interests because of her complex finances, vulnerability to outside influences, and “intermittent” drug problems, the report said. But it also called for “a path to independence and the eventual termination of the conservatory”.

Ms. Spears said in court last week that she did not know she could move to terminate the conservatories. “I’m sorry for my ignorance, but honestly I didn’t know,” she said.

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With ‘Summer time of Soul,’ Questlove Desires to Fill a Cultural Void

Twenty years later, I received a note asking me to meet with my two future producers, Robert Fyvolent and David Dinerstein, about a Harlem cultural festival that was like a “Black Woodstock.” Instantly, the music snob in me said, “I’ve never heard of that.” So I looked it up online. It’s not on the internet, so I was highly skeptical. But, when they finally showed me the footage, I instantly recognized the backdrop for Sly and thought, “Oh God, this really did happen.” For nearly 50 years, this just sat in a basement and no one cared. My stomach dropped.

How did you approach turning six weeks of concert footage into a two-hour documentary?

I transferred 40 hours of footage on my hard drive, and I kept it on a 24-hour loop in my house. I have a device so I could watch it any time, in my living room, in my bedroom, in my bathroom. I also put it on my phone when I traveled. For five months, that’s all I watched and just kept notes on anything that caught my eye. I was looking for, “What’s my first 10 minutes, what’s my last 10 minutes?” Once I saw Stevie Wonder do that drum solo, I knew that was my first 10 minutes. That’s a gobsmacker. Even though I know he played drums, that’s something you don’t see all the time.

Why was it so important to include the experiences of people who actually attended?

This wasn’t as easy as people think. The festival was 50-plus years ago, you’re really looking for people who are now in their late-50s all the way through their early-70s, and Harlem is a different kind of place. You have to hit the pavement because so much of the social fabric of the neighborhood is community-oriented. One of our producers, Ashley Bembry-Kaintuck, even went to a swing dancing class to meet one person [the former Black Panther Cyril “Bullwhip” Innis Jr.] we identified.

Musa Jackson winds up being our anchor. He was one of the first people to respond, but he disclosed to us that he was just 5 years old when he went to the festival. He told us, “Look, this is my first memory in life. So I’m just going to tell you everything I remember.”

Given that the festival mostly predated Woodstock, why do you think it was so easily forgotten?

History saw it fit that every last person that was on that stage now winds up defining a generation. Why isn’t this held in the same light? Why was it that easy to dispose of us? Instead, the cultural zeitgeist that actually ended up being our guide as Black people was “Soul Train.” And so, I’m always going to wonder, “How could this and ‘Soul Train’ have pushed potential creatives further?”

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Black Dance Tales: By the Artists, for the Folks

She not only hopes to keep the archive on YouTube, but hopes to find a black-run institution to put it in an official capacity. She also dreams of the next chapter of the show (still in the planning phase): a personal version in which the guests of the online series pull together on stage.

“Stop talking,” she said. “Let’s dance! We miss it.”

Curator, performer, dance historian and author Warren – known to many as Mama Charmaine – began imagining Black Dance Stories in the early days of the pandemic, when so many in the dance world were stuck at home without work, breaking routine and social circles as usual. The murder of George Floyd, she said, increased her desire to bring black dance artists together to share their stories.

“When George Floyd was murdered, I was so empty,” she said. “My heart was hurt. And then I felt even more the urge to do something for our community. “As exhausting as this moment was, she added:” I also wanted to find some kind of ointment, and this ointment is community. “

The clear but open structure of the show enables both solo storytelling and intimate dialogues. Most episodes couple two guests, each invited to speak for 20 minutes to tell a story; in between they overlap in conversation. Perhaps they already know each other well or, as with Battle and Pittman, are just getting to know each other. The pairings, Warren said, were based primarily on when guests were available, which resulted in some surprising games.

“Introducing people is so much part of the mind,” said Battle, who has known Warren for over a decade, “that notion, ‘Oh, you two need to know each other’ and then step back to allow room for whatever comes out of it . “

“It only works because of her,” said Pittman, reflecting on the uncertain moments when guests start talking. “She has an incredibly supportive way of being that lends itself so well to a show like this. It is driven by their enthusiasm for people. “

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Intercourse/Life: Does Adam Demos Have Physique Double in Bathe Scene?

We would have expected it to be on a Netflix show called. frontal nudity? Sex / life? Yeah, but that didn’t stop us from falling jaws when Adam Demos appeared as full-size Brad Simon in the third episode, Empire State of Mind. It seems Cooper Connelly (Mike Vogel) wasn’t the only one shocked by the size of Brad’s penis, as fans immediately wondered if it was demos or not during the scene. Well, it looks like we have an answer thanks to an interview on Collider with showrunner Stacy Rukeyser. “No. This is not a body double. I mean, people usually ask, ‘Is it real or is it a prosthesis,’ ”she told the point of sale. “And I can tell you what Adam Demos says: ‘A gentleman never tells’. So we leave that to the imagination of the beholder.”

If you’re wondering what Demos actually said about the scene, he confirmed in an interview with. the lack of a body double Weekly entertainment. “I was okay with [the nudity] because you read the script and know what you’re getting into from the start. That doesn’t mean you can’t have discussions about the level of comfort they allowed us – and with the intimacy coordinator, so it felt a lot safer. “So there you have it, you never really know what is real and what is fake . Sounds like a good reason to look again Sex / lifecurrently streamed on Netflix.

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Violinist Apologizes for ‘Culturally Insensitive’ Remarks About Asians

A master class by the renowned violinist Pinchas Zukerman was supposed to be the highlight of a recent virtual symposium hosted by the Juilliard School.

Instead, Zukerman angered many of the roughly 100 students and teachers in the class on Friday when he invoked racist stereotypes about Asians, leading Juilliard to decide not to share a video of his master class afterward with participants, as it had initially intended.

At one point, Zukerman told a pair of students of Asian descent that their playing was too perfect and that they needed to add soy sauce, according to two participants in the class. At another point, in trying to encourage the students to play more lyrically, he said he understood that people in Korea and Japan do not sing, participants said. His comments were reported earlier by Violinist.com, a music site.

Zukerman’s remarks were widely denounced by musicians and teachers, with many saying they reinforced ugly stereotypes facing artists of Asian descent in the music industry.

Juilliard tried to distance itself from the matter, describing Zukerman as a guest instructor and saying his “insensitive and offensive cultural stereotypes” did not represent the school’s values. Zukerman apologized Monday for what he called his “culturally insensitive” comments.

“In Friday’s master class, I was trying to communicate something to these two incredibly talented young musicians, but the words I used were culturally insensitive,” he said in a statement. “I’m writing to the students personally to apologize. I am sorry that I made anyone uncomfortable. I cannot undo that, but I offer a sincere apology. I learned something valuable from this, and I will do better in the future.”

Asian and Asian American performers have long dealt with racist tropes that their playing is too technical or unemotional. A wave of anti-Asian hate in the United States in recent months has heightened concerns about the treatment of Asian performers.

Zukerman is a celebrated violinist and conductor whose career has spanned five decades. He was the biggest name at the Juilliard event, known as the Starling-DeLay Violin Symposium, which is focused on violin teaching and attracts promising young musicians, many of them teenagers, to take part in master classes.

He made the remarks on Friday while offering feedback to a pair of sisters of Japanese descent.

After the sisters played a duet, Zukerman told them they should try bringing more of a singing quality to their playing, according to participants in the class. When he said that he knew Koreans did not sing, one of the sisters interrupted to say that they were not Korean, adding that they were partly of Japanese descent. Zukerman replied by saying that people in Japan did not sing either, according to participants.

His remarks prompted an outcry among Asian and Asian American musicians, with some sharing stories on social media about their experiences dealing with stereotypes and bias.

A Rise in Anti-Asian Attacks

A torrent of hate and violence against people of Asian descent around the United States began last spring, in the early days of the coronavirus pandemic.

    • Background: Community leaders say the bigotry was fueled by President Donald J. Trump, who frequently used racist language like “Chinese virus” to refer to the coronavirus.
    • Data: The New York Times, using media reports from across the country to capture a sense of the rising tide of anti-Asian bias, found more than 110 episodes since March 2020 in which there was clear evidence of race-based hate.
    • Underreported Hate Crimes: The tally may be only a sliver of the violence and harassment given the general undercounting of hate crimes, but the broad survey captures the episodes of violence across the country that grew in number amid Mr. Trump’s comments.
    • In New York: A wave of xenophobia and violence has been compounded by the economic fallout of the pandemic, which has dealt a severe blow to New York’s Asian-American communities. Many community leaders say racist assaults are being overlooked by the authorities.
    • What Happened in Atlanta: Eight people, including six women of Asian descent, were killed in shootings at massage parlors in Atlanta on March 16. A Georgia prosecutor said that the Atlanta-area spa shootings were hate crimes, and that she would pursue the death penalty against the suspect, who has been charged with murder.

Hyeyung Yoon, a violinist who last year founded Asian Musical Voices of America, an alliance of artists, said Zukerman’s remarks represented a type of thinking that “dehumanizes a group of people without actually getting to know who they are.”

“It’s so prevalent in classical music, but also prevalent in the larger society,” she said in an interview.

Keiko Tokunaga, a violinist, said she and many other Asian musicians had heard comments similar to Zukerman’s.

“We are often described as emotionless or we just have no feelings and we are just technical machines,” she said in an interview. “And that is very offensive, because we are as human as anyone else on the planet.”

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Entertainment

Honk if Helen Mirren and Vin Diesel Ought to Have Kissed in ‘F9’

Cheer for the petitions. Inform the lobbyists. When the 10th “Fast and Furious” movie is made, I’ll have a suggestion that really demands more: Vin Diesel and Helen Mirren have to kiss.

This was my main takeaway from watching the latest installment, “F9,” in which 75 year old Mirren and 53 year old Diesel share a chase and show more sizzling chemistry than any other duo in the movie. She flirts with him, he beams at her, and Diesel’s obvious delight in having Oscar-winning Mirren as a scene partner is just delicious. At the end of the sequence, as her Queenie Diesels Dom Toretto was driving through the streets of London, I couldn’t help but hope that she would lean over and knock our hero.

And why not? In the previous “Fast” movie, Diesel kissed another Oscar winner, Charlize Theron. Imagine the hickey that could be developed if even more Best Actress winners were persuaded to join the franchise: After Mirren, we might romanticize Diesel with Frances McDormand! (Of course, Diesel’s serial star Michelle Rodriguez would issue a hall pass for this.)

Sometimes you have to be the change you want to see in the world, which is why I video chat with Mirren this month to direct this character linkage to her. Here are edited excerpts from our conversation.

Your scene with Vin is the best in the movie and it’s clear that he loves you. Still, I have a note: There should have been a kiss, don’t you think?

A very chaste kiss would be nice, yes.

Listen, I’ll be content with that. Perhaps part of the thrill of this pairing is that it’s so rare to see Vin Diesel in someone else’s passenger seat.

This is true. What an honor to drive and very intimidating too. Vin doesn’t make it intimidating – he was so simple and lovable – but the technology of this type of filming is very complex, and I don’t know this world at all. It was certainly a great help to have a good friend sitting next to me. And just to hear that voice!

Tell me about it.

I mean, Vin has the most incredible voice. I get a little sticky when I hear it. That velvety brown rumble in your ear is so fabulous to experience for a full day or two. It’s like hearing the incredibly well-oiled engine.

You’ve always had good screen chemistry with bald action stars – Vin, Jason Statham (especially in “Hobbs & Shaw”), Bruce Willis (“Red” and other films). Is there something about you that just goes well with this stoic action hero guy?

There could be! First of all, I approach these things with great respect for these guys because what they do is very different from anything I’ve done in my career. Her dedication and deep knowledge of how these films work is very impressive. I always feel that I can learn from them. Maybe it’s the fact that I really have a lot of respect that makes it work, but I think it’s great.

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Even so, the mood you have with Vin is a bit higher.

I think it is that we are so opposite on almost every level. But at the same time there is a great mutual respect that goes both ways. I also met Vin’s mother, who is very nice, and I think there’s something there too: he’s very, very close to his mother and obviously loves her. She is lovely, very sweet and gentle. Not like Vin, but he loves her very much!

And your character seems to love Vins, or at least have some affection for him. I think of your last line to him when he got out of your car: “Don’t get killed, OK? You are my favorite American. “

He’s not my favorite American, Vin. My favorite American is my husband Taylor Hackford. My next favorite Americans are my stepsons. But after that comes Vin.

This is your third film in the franchise after “The Fate of the Furious” and “Hobbs and Shaw,” but it is the first to put you in a real chase. What was the stop?

Oh my god, that’s why I really wanted to go to the cinema! In reality, they wrote beautiful scenes for me, and I was primarily part of the making of the character – I wanted her to be called Queenie and come from that kind of East End family I know a little about – but I wanted her to mostly sitting behind the wheel of a car, and of course that wasn’t the case in two of the films. Somehow they did it for this movie, which was fantastic.

Did you stand up for this scene every time they brought you back?

I take it as it comes. And I moan a little and moan and sniff, and it works.

And you actually had to shoot the sequence in London, didn’t you?

To be out and about on the real streets of London, my hometown, was extraordinary for me. Seeing Vin in this context was surreal: the elegance and familiarity of London and Vin there were very contradicting! But I was thrilled that the sequence was taking place in the heart of London and I couldn’t believe the mall to the Palace was closing. I’m sure the queen must have been outside with the binoculars, don’t you think how she observed everything from the top bedroom window: “Oh my god, what are they doing there?”

Or say: “Mirren again?”

“Mirren again, really? Will this woman ever leave me alone? “

How long did filming take?

Three or four days that I was involved, and then of course all the brilliant stunt driving that is obviously done by experienced drivers. By the way, I’m a big proponent of stunt people getting an Oscar. I think there should be a category for that because stunt people’s contribution to so many films these days is so huge and extraordinary.

Your film family has gotten pretty sprawling on this series, with Jason Statham, Luke Evans, and Vanessa Kirby all playing your children. Have you ever thought about who your ex-husband might be?

I don’t know if I can say that, but apparently Vin got the idea with Michael Caine. I mean, wouldn’t that be awesome? That would be just so cool and absolutely perfect. So we’ll see.

Let’s then swap that out into the ether. And while we do that, let me get back to my first request: if a chaste kiss can be arranged in the next film, would you be open to it?

With Vin? Oh my god, of course I would! But only if he talks to me before and after, because it’s the voice I’m honest with.