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After a Twister Blew His Roof Away, He Performed Piano Beneath an Open Sky

When Jordan Baize emerged from his basement in Bremen, Kentucky, where he had taken shelter during a tornado, he saw the roof of his house blown off, doors unhinged, and shards of glass and insulation strewn all over the place.

However, his Yamaha piano was still intact. Under an overcast sky the next morning, Mr. Baize sat alone in his living room and started playing a song that had stuck in his mind for days.

Whitney Brown, Mr. Baize’s sister, said she heard her brother play on Saturday when she was in his bedroom packing clothes in boxes. When she started recording Mr. Baize, she recognized the tune as a Christian worship song, “There’s Something About That Name,” and remembered the words:

“Kings and kingdoms will all pass away, but there is something about this name,” a reference to Jesus Christ.

She said these texts seemed appropriate to the situation. Her brother’s house, his “kingdom,” had been destroyed, but it was not his hope, she said.

“It was healing just to know that he was still holding on to the hope of Jesus,” said Ms. Brown, 32, a masseuse and doula and a sawmill owner.

At least 88 people were killed in tornadoes in Kentucky, Arkansas, Illinois, Mississippi, Missouri and Tennessee on Friday. Twelve people were killed in Bremen.

Mr Baize, 34, said he didn’t notice his sister taping him but was encouraged by the reaction after she posted the video on Facebook.

“In these times, whether or not people around the world suffered a tornado this past weekend, we all face storms of some kind,” said Mr. Baize, an accountant and consultant. “That little bit of peace and perspective, which I had to deal with in what I thought was a personal, private moment, appealed to people all over the world in my opinion.”

Mr Baize said he fell into the basement with his two children, his ex-wife and her husband, and they huddled under a mattress just before the Friday night tornado was expected. Three or four minutes later, he said. It took about 30 seconds.

After the storm passed, he and his children spent the night at his parents’ house nearby. When he returned to the house the next morning, he made an inventory of the rubble: rubble everywhere, three or four inches of rain in the remains of the house, and damaged trees that three generations of his family had grown up on. He turned to the piano, which was covered in water.

“I thought I could see what shape the piano is in,” he recalls. “If it’s in a terrible, terrible state, I can at least play one more time.” He started playing and felt a sense of peace.

Gloria Gaither wrote the lyrics for “There’s Something About That Name” and her husband Bill Gaither composed the music. She said she was overwhelmed after seeing the video clip for the song they wrote decades ago.

“A song obviously appears in a person’s life when he needs it,” she said, “under circumstances that we would never have dreamed of.”

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Jean-Paul Belmondo, Magnetic Star of the French New Wave, Dies at 88

Jean-Paul Belmondo, the rugged actor whose disdainful eyes, boxer’s nose, sensual lips and cynical outlook made him the idolized personification of youthful alienation in the French New Wave, most notably in his classic performance as an existential killer in Jean-Luc Godard’s “Breathless,” died on Monday at his home in Paris. He was 88.

His death was confirmed by the office of his lawyer, Michel Godest. No cause was given.

Like Humphrey Bogart, Marlon Brando and James Dean — three American actors to whom he was frequently compared — Mr. Belmondo established his reputation playing tough, unsentimental, even antisocial characters who were cut adrift from bourgeois society. Later, as one of France’s leading stars, he took more crowd-pleasing roles, but without entirely surrendering his magnetic brashness.

Like Bogart, Mr. Belmondo brought craggy features and sometimes seething anger to the screen, a realistic counterpoint to more conventionally handsome romantic stars. Like Dean, he became one of the most widely imitated pop culture figures of his era. And like Brando, he was often dismissive of pretentiousness and self-importance among filmmakers.

“No actor since James Dean has inspired quite such intense identification,” Eugene Archer wrote in The New York Times in 1965. “Dean evoked the rebellious adolescent impulse, as fierce as it was gratuitous, a violent outgrowth of the frustrations of the modern world. Belmondo is a later manifestation of youthful rejection — and more disturbing. His disengagement from a society his parents made is total. He accepts corruption with a cynical smile, not even bothering to struggle. He is out entirely for himself, to get whatever he can, while he can. The Belmondo type is capable of anything.”

His leading role in “À bout de souffle” — released in the United States in 1961 as “Breathless” — was instantly recognized as trendsetting; subsequent imitators only cemented its importance. Mr. Belmondo’s mop of unruly hair, the way he peered at the world through a twisting web of cigarette smoke, and the way he obsessively massaged his thick, feminine lips with his thumb were so vivid and evocative that they quickly became global signposts of rebellion.

Mr. Belmondo was 26 and Mr. Godard was 28 when “Breathless” was being made. The film was based on an idea by François Truffaut, another icon of the nouvelle vague, and began shooting in Paris without a script. Mr. Godard used a hand-held camera — except in the street scenes, when he would sometimes mount the camera on a borrowed wheelchair — and let everyone improvise. The resulting film was rough and ill-shaped, but it had a sense of emotional honesty and verisimilitude that made it electric. Many mainstream critics seemed unsure what to make of it.

Bosley Crowther wrote in The Times: “It goes at its unattractive subject in an eccentric photographed style that sharply conveys the nervous tempo and the emotional erraticalness of the story it tells. And through the American actress, Jean Seberg, and a hypnotically ugly new young man by the name of Jean-Paul Belmondo, it projects two downright fearsome characters.”

Many critics found Mr. Belmondo’s amoral antihero a little too strong. But others found in the role a raw truthfulness and a thematic boldness at odds with the bulk of what was coming out of Hollywood studios.

Mr. Belmondo followed up “Breathless” with a series of celebrated turns for other New Wave directors and was soon widely seen as the movement’s leading interpreter — although in later years he told interviewers that some of the most intellectually ambitious efforts he had been involved in had bored him.

When he starred as a steelworker opposite Jeanne Moreau in Peter Brooks’ “Moderato Cantabile” (1960), he said the script, by the French novelist Marguerite Duras, was too intellectual for his taste. He frequently expressed ambivalence about working for esoteric directors like Mr. Brooks, Alain Resnais and Michelangelo Antonioni.

In other roles Mr. Belmondo was a Hungarian who gets romantically involved with a Provençal family in Claude Chabrol’s “À double tour” (1959) and a young country priest in “Léon Morin, Priest” (1962). He also helped his co-star, Sophia Loren, win an Academy Award in Vittorio De Sica’s “Two Women” (1961), a drama set during World War II in which he played a young Communist intellectual in mountainous central Italy.

By the mid ’60s, though, he was chafing at playing the young antihero in film after film.

“Lots of times, I’d be out with a chick and some kid would want to give me a bad time,” Mr. Belmondo told an interviewer. “I used to fight it out with them. It’s the same now. Everyone wants to say he’s flattened Belmondo.”

The turning point for him came in Philippe De Broca’s “That Man From Rio,” a 1964 over-the-top spy thriller that played like a parody of James Bond. Audiences loved it, and they loved Mr. Belmondo in it. More important, Mr. Belmondo loved doing it. Although some critics who revered the more difficult work of the French New Wave derided Mr. Belmondo as a sell out, he told interviewers that this film remained his favorite.

Later in his career Mr. Belmondo professed an unpretentious modesty, shrugging off his success, but at his box-office height in the 1960s, he was anything but modest. In an interview with the film critic Rex Reed in 1966, he all but sneered at American fans who were lining up to see his movies.

“I do not blame them,” he said, puffing on a cigar and stretching out his long legs underneath a table at Harry’s Bar in Venice. “I am worth standing in line to see.”

By this time there were rumors that despite having been married since 1955 to Elodie Constantin, a former ballerina, Mr. Belmondo was involved with other women. When Mr. Reed asked him about this, he shrugged that off, too.

“Listen, I am only 32 years old,” he said. “I’m not dead. And please remember, I am French. I am happily married this year, but next year? Who knows?”

A year later the marriage had ended in divorce. Mr. Belmondo had three children with Ms. Constantin. The eldest, Patricia, died in a fire in 1994, but their younger daughter, Florence, and a son, Paul, survive him.

The divorce was rumored to have resulted from a romance by Mr. Belmondo with one of his co-stars, Ursula Andress. He and Ms. Andress did have a long-term public relationship after the divorce. He was later romantically involved with another actress, Laura Antonelli. But not until 2002, when he was 70 years old, did he marry again, to 24-year-old Nathalie Tardivel. That marriage ended in divorce six years later. They had a daughter, Stella, who also survives him.

Jean-Paul Belmondo was born on April 9, 1933, in the middle-class Parisian suburb of Neuilly-sur-Seine. His family moved to the city’s Left Bank when he was a boy, and he grew up in the neighborhoods around Montparnasse and Saint-Germain-des-Prés. His father, Paul Belmondo, who was born in Algiers to a family of Italian origin, was a highly regarded sculptor. He later told interviewers that his son had been a tempestuous boy who had gotten into frequent scraps and did poorly in school.

The boy’s mother, Madeline Rainaud-Richard, pushed him to do better, but he resisted, Mr. Belmondo later recalled. Finally, he dropped out of school altogether as a teenager. At 16, he became an enthusiastic amateur boxer (although his famous smashed nose came not from an organized bout but from a playground dust-up), giving it up only when he turned to acting.

“I stopped when the face I saw in the mirror began to change,” he said.

For several years, until he was 20, his parents paid for acting lessons at a private conservatory. After a six-month military tour in Algeria, he returned to Paris in 1953 and was accepted into the Conservatoire National d’Art Dramatique, where he studied for three years. The school, a conservative one, didn’t know what to do with the insolent young man who sauntered onto the stage in a Molière play with his hands in his pockets.

When, at his graduation, in 1956, Mr. Belmondo was awarded only an honorable mention by his teachers, the other students hoisted him on their shoulders and carried him from the theater as he flashed an obscene gesture at the judges.

For all his flamboyance and occasional fistfights, Mr. Belmondo was said to be a consummate professional on the set. Although in later years he continued to work now and then with the great directors of the New Wave — most notably with Truffaut in “Mississippi Mermaid” (1969) — most of his energies went into mainstream favorites. Many of his films after the mid-1960s were made by his own production company.

More and more Mr. Belmondo became known for popular adventures, usually comic thrillers. And he became famous for elaborate stunts in which he took great pride in performing himself. He hung from skyscrapers, leapt across speeding trains, drove cars off hillsides. Co-stars said he seemed all but fearless. While shooting one scene in South America, he was warned that a river, into which he was about to plunge for a scene, was filled with poisonous snakes and piranha. Mr. Belmondo grabbed a chunk of corned beef and slung it into the murky water. When nothing happened, he jumped in and filmed the scene.

He said he had decided, “What the hell, if they’re not going to chew on that, they’re not going to eat me.”

Finally, an injury during the filming of “Hold-Up” in 1985, when he was 52, forced him to leave the stunts to the stunt men.

Throughout, the Belmondo cult endured, though more in France than around the world. His French fans knew him by his nickname, Bébel (pronounced bay-BELL).

No matter the scene, no matter the co-stars, whatever mayhem was breaking out onscreen, Mr. Belmondo was always able to affect a calm, cool remove, as though he was more amused than aroused by the activity swirling around him. He brought a touch of comedy to his action roles and a hint of danger to his comic roles; one could well imagine him playing the reluctant, wisecracking hero in American action series of the 1980s like “Die Hard.”

Mr. Belmondo never made the transition to Hollywood, largely because he didn’t want to. “Why complicate my life?” he said. “I am too stupid to learn the language and it would only be a disaster.”

In 1989 he was awarded the Cesar Award for best actor, the French equivalent of the Oscar, for his performance in Claude Lelouch’s “Itinéraire d’un enfant gâté,” playing a middle-aged industrialist who fakes his death and then sails the world.

By this time he had slowed his frenetic pace, making only nine movies in the 1980s, compared to 41 in 1960s and 16 in the 1970s. He cut back even more in the ’90s, when he made only six films, but this was due in part to a belated career shift. Mr. Belmondo had not appeared in a live production since 1959 when he returned to the theater in 1987. Particularly well-regarded was his sold-out run as “Cyrano de Bergerac” in Paris in 1990.

A stroke in 2001, however, forced him to stop working. Not until eight years later was he back before the cameras, shooting “Un homme et son chien” (“A Man and His Dog).” Released in 2009, it tells the story of an older gentleman who, accompanied by his loyal dog, suddenly finds himself without a home.

Late in life, when he was a little thicker and much grayer, Mr. Belmondo liked to affect some of the self-effacing modesty that was noticeably absent when he was at his peak in the 1960s.

When an interviewers asked him to explain his enduring popularity, especially with women, Mr. Belmondo responded with his usual casual shrug.

“Hell, everyone knows that an ugly guy with a good line gets the chicks,” he said.

Aurelien Breeden contributed reporting.

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Transferring Over: A Powerhouse of Black Dance Is Retiring (Principally)

Are they Black?

No. White. I had to school them.

Does Kim run the school also?

Well, the school is not part of the company. The first 10 years the company was housed in the school, but when we purchased the building, we reversed the roles. The school pays rent to the company. I kept the school for profit so I would be guaranteed an income as a single parent.

You know, the String Theory School wants to build a new location, a charter school, and call it the Joan Myers Brown School of the Arts.

Wait, they’re naming a school after you?

Yes, and they want me to develop a curriculum, so I put Ali [Willingham, artistic director of Danco3] there because he teaches the way I like people to teach — know the craft, break down the movement, demand growth and not show off. Our youth are caught up in getting the applause and not learning the craft, so when I find the ones that really want to learn, they have someplace for classes and performing opportunities.

The Black Lives Matter movement isn’t new to you, is it?

I experienced that in 1962, 1988 and 1995. Every time white folks in charge throw money out there and say, “Y’all got to help Black people,” they help us, but when the money’s gone, they’re gone. Have you noticed how every ad in Dance Magazine has a Black person? It’s like they are saying, “Look, I got one!”

Did you envision I.A.B.D. conferences as a home base for the Black dance community?

You know, the first few conferences we were a mess, but we were happy to be together. Cleo [Parker Robinson] is from Denver; Jeraldyne [Blunden] was Dayton; Lula [Washington], Los Angeles; and Ann [Williams], from Dallas. And each time we learned something about our own organizations, about others doing the same thing, and how we can help each other. Mikki Shepard pulled us together, and people said we set the plate for DanceUSA. I was on the board of DanceUSA then. I said, “I got to get away from here and start my own thing because this ain’t helping Black people at all.”

The younger members want to ignore the things we learned, and their opinions are valid, but I say experience teaches you something. I.A.B.D. was a gathering to bring us together and share stuff, now it’s a full-fledged service organization.

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The Greatest Psychological Horror Films on Netflix in 2021

Psychological horror films are a special type of scary films that go beyond simple jump scares. These films employ unsettling slow burns that penetrate the depths of our minds. Although they can depict ghosts or witches, these horror features primarily fall back on human fear and paranoia. If you want to wrap your head around a mind-boggling horror, Netflix has an extensive library of movies that will unleash all of your deep-seated fears. from Bird feeder to In the tall grass, here are the scariest psychological horrors the streaming site has to offer – you might want to see them with the lights on!

– Additional coverage from Hannah Abrams and Kalyn Womack

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Drake et Kanye West, géants du rap plus rivaux que jamais

The challenges that have since been triggered by titles and social networks lead to a long cycle of small direct and indirect provocations: Their relationship turned into one after a musical argument between Drake and Pusha-T, a protégé of Kanye West, in 2018 Way worsened that seems incurable.

Since then, the two artists have gone their separate ways, even if the bickering sometimes continues online or through albums. Backing former President Donald J. Trump, Kanye West started an ill-fated presidential race and turned to gospel with “Jesus Is King,” a Christian-themed album released in October 2019. He promised not to swear in his titles – “Donda” also keeps a promise for his guests.

Drake, meanwhile, has released regular cast titles, although his appearances are becoming rarer. In the spring of 2020, following the single “ Toosie Slide, ” which peaked at # 2 on the Billboard Hot 100, the rapper released an unplanned mixtape, “ Dark Lane Demo Tapes, ” a compilation of tracks that had leaked online. . He promised to release a studio album this summer, and a debut single, “Laugh Now Cry Later,” reached # 2 in August. The album didn’t arrive, but a three-track maxi was released in March titled ” Scary Hours 2 ”, of which one of the singles is number 1 (” What’s Next ”).

After months of cryptic hints about the album’s status as summer drew to a close and the two rap mastodons re-emerged, a confrontation with Kanye West seemed inevitable. While Kanye West was touring with ‘Donda’, Drake released a tinkered and unconventional clip on the ESPN show ‘SportsCenter’ in which he appeared to be promoting a September 3rd release.

And on a Trippie Redd track titled “Betrayal,” the rapper claimed that the excitement surrounding Kanye West’s “Donda” wouldn’t affect the final release date of his own album. This time Drake rapped, “It’s set in stone.”

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The Subsequent Act for Marcel the Shell (and Jenny Slate)

TELLURIDE, Colonel – Words fail Jenny Slate. It’s Friday night at the Telluride Film Festival and the actress has just flown from her first flight in 17 months, still foggy from quarantine, a time when she became the mother of two different but equally profound projects: a brand new baby and a full-length one Movie she made for a decade.

Slate is here for her vocal work on Marcel the Shell, the most unlikely of all internet sensations. No bigger than a nickel, this stop-motion clam with a single googly eye and shoes stolen from a Polly Pocket doll set the internet on fire when she and filmmaker Dean Fleischer Camp uploaded a three-minute video to YouTube in 2010, Illustrating Marcel’s silent optimism – “I like myself and I have many other great qualities” – attracted immediate interest and ended up receiving more than 31 million views in total. (Two more short films followed in 2011 and 2014.)

Marcel’s voice is different from Slate’s other animation works, be it Harley Quinn in “Lego Batman” or Tammy Larsen in “Bob’s Burgers”. (She spoke to Missy Foreman-Greenwald on “Big Mouth” until she resigned in 2020, saying, “Black characters in an animated series should be played by blacks.”) Marcel has a high, melancholy timbre that could make you cry as easily as laugh. (“Some people say my head is too big for my body and I say, ‘Compared to what?'”) And it was so contagious that it led to appearances on the late night talk shows, two bestsellers, and memes , Tattoos and offers for television shows and commercial sponsorship.

But Slate and Camp, who first started Marcel as a married couple but are now involved in other relationships, protected Marcel so much that instead of taking a simple payday – Slate offers that they would have helped them when they had problems with artists had – they spent the next decade turning it into a feature film.

It was an arduous process that involved a bunch of animators and designers. Friday evening marked the climax of all this work when “Marcel the Shell With Shoes On” had its world premiere. The 90-minute mockumentary shows an aspiring documentary filmmaker, Dean (Camp), who moves into an Airbnb only to discover 1-inch Marcel with his memory-tormented grandmother Nana Connie (voiced by Isabella Rossellini) and his pet. named Alan, grieving after a mysterious tragedy that ripped the rest of their community out of their cozy home.

Slate likens the process of making the film to watching one of those science videos of a flower blooming in fast motion.

“One morning you just wake up and there is a flower and it’s blue,” said Slate. “That’s what it feels like.”

Slate, a little more shy and reserved than you’d expect, is still thinking about her life after the pandemic. Slate is happier than when she and Camp first created Marcel as a fun piece for a friend’s comedy show is the result of the “love infinity loop” she is currently with her baby and fiancé Ben Shattuck experienced.

“We’ve been in the process for so long and this character has so many different roles for me,” she added. “At first I think I just had to prove to myself one more time that I was funny. And then I realized that I was doing something that was actually very personal to me. So the film tried to show that inner part of me. I just can’t believe it worked. “

And it worked. The Hollywood Reporter called it “a cute, no-nonsense movie whose message about self-compassion and community feels particularly forward-looking.” And IndieWire called it a critics’ recommendation, calling it “the cutest family grief movie you might ever see all year round.”

“Marcel” is one of the few films that debuts on Telluride and is looking for a buyer. And while it’s been in the works for nearly a decade, it’s one of many films at the festival, including Mike Mills ‘”C’mon, C’mon”, Joe Wright’s “Cyrano” and Peter Hedges’ “The Same Storm”. feel like a reaction to our current mood of fear and alienation. “I’m really excited that the film is arriving at this moment,” said Camp, who argues that the lucky timing suggests that “even before the Covid success, we felt increasingly isolated and vulnerable”.

In 2010, when Marcel first appeared, Slate said, “She was waiting to be fired from Saturday Night Live,” which she had been working on for an unhappy year. But the voice that Marcel activated was one she never used on the sketch show.

“I felt like I had given every voice I could have done to save myself, and suddenly this voice that I had never done before came out of my mouth,” she said. “In retrospect, it was a real decision to just use it for myself privately. That wouldn’t have belonged to ‘SNL’ anyway and it was this very nice opening to the belief that there is a world outside of the tiny, narrow hallway that contains what you perceive as your own failure. “

To make the film, Slate and Camp spent a year and a half recording improved audio sessions. Then their co-writer and editor Nick Paley and Camp devoted just as much time to turning those improvisational snippets into script form. This eventually became an animation (audio with music and storyboard visuals) that they could watch and perform for the test audience to make sure everything was working before they filmed the live action and eventually the stop motion animation. “Ultimately, we adjusted to an indie version of the Pixar process,” said Camp.

However, the basic premise always remained: Marcel had lost most of his mussel family to an argument with people.

“We have always liked that the overabundance of emotionality from the human world caused this major disruption in the clam world,” said Slate, adding that creating Nana Connie had long been part of the plan. “The idea was what you do when your life as you know it is broken and the only person who remembers it wouldn’t remember at all.”

It is this urgency and this heartache that gives the film its center. It’s also the creative project that Slate is most proud of. Today she sings her daughter songs in Marcel’s voice. (She thinks he’s a better singer than she is.) And while she doesn’t know what’s next for that cute but stubborn avatar of herself, it’s clear that Marcel is buried deep inside her.

“I always see Marcel as my real self and how I would really like to be if my ego and the insignia of being a woman in patriarchy didn’t get in the way.”

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5 Issues to Do on Labor Day Weekend

In 1997, the courtyard at MoMA PS1 became the main venue for “Warm Up,” a summer event that mingled art, music and design in order to draw new audiences. But things change. “Warm Up” certainly hasn’t gone away, but last fall, the institution began “PS1 Courtyard: an experiment in creative ecologies,” a program testing out ways to use the outdoor space that encourage community engagement.

The initiative’s projects include a fountain from Niki de Saint Phalle, part of a larger exhibition at PS1 that closes on Monday, and Rashid Johnson’s “Stage.” Visitors are welcome to get up on his installation’s large yellow platform and freely use its five live microphones of varying heights. By showing a microphone as a dynamic social tool, Johnson’s piece, which will be on view through the fall, indicates the many things a stage can represent: a site of protest, music making, solidarity and, most important, amplification of your voice.
MELISSA SMITH

Film Series

The maximalist moviegoing event of Labor Day weekend is “Lawrence of Arabia,” screening on Saturday and Sunday on 70-millimeter film at the Museum of the Moving Image. But for a minimalist alternative, try Eric Rohmer’s Tales of the Four Seasons — four features, each set at a different time of year, that Rohmer, the most conversation-oriented French New Wave director, turned out from the late 1980s through the late 1990s. (Together, the running times total roughly two showings of “Lawrence of Arabia.”) With the changing of the seasons, Film Forum is showing all the titles separately from Friday through Sept. 9.

Watching them in tandem illustrates how Rohmer — superficially so consistent and serene — subtly toys with structure and variation, recombining types of characters in friendships and romances that rarely develop as expected. The most summery is, naturally, “A Summer’s Tale.” Melvil Poupaud plays a commitment-phobe vacationing in Brittany who somehow winds up juggling a surfeit of commitments to women.
BEN KENIGSBERG

Jazz

In 1971, seeking refuge from an exploitive, increasingly commercialized jazz industry, the trumpeter Charles Tolliver and the pianist Stanley Cowell founded Strata-East, a record label offering artists creative freedom and relative commercial control. Though short-lived, Strata-East inspired Black musicians in other cities to undertake similar efforts. And it captured a moment in time: Nearly every Strata-East album simmers with the heat and tension of the Black Power era, delivering terse, syncopated rhythms and pushing jazz linguistics into a more spare, confrontational zone.

Cowell died last year after a prolific career, but Tolliver, 79, continues to perform. At Birdland through Saturday, he is celebrating the label’s 50th anniversary with an ensemble of all-stars, including some who recorded on Strata-East in the 1970s: the tenor saxophonist Billy Harper, the pianist George Cables, the bassist Buster Williams and the drummer Lenny White. Sets are at 7 and 9:30 p.m. The late show on Saturday, which will also be livestreamed at dreamstage.live, will feature a guest appearance by the storied bassist Cecil McBee and will be hosted by the actor Danny Glover.
GIOVANNI RUSSONELLO

Even workaholics know they should take it easy this weekend, and fans of “Workaholics” will recognize the headliner at Carolines on Broadway through Saturday: Erik Griffin, who played Montez Walker on that Comedy Central sitcom. Griffin also portrayed a stand-up in “I’m Dying Up Here,” a dramedy about comedy in the 1970s on Showtime, where you can find two of Griffin’s comedy specials. At Carolines, he will perform one set at 7 p.m. on Thursday and Friday, and two sets at 7 and 9:30 on Saturday. Tickets start at $31.25.

On Sunday at 7 and 9:30, Carolines will welcome Rosebud Baker, who released her debut special, “Whiskey Fists,” in August on the Comedy Central Stand-Up YouTube channel. Tickets are $27.25 and up.

There will be a two-drink minimum at each show.
SEAN McCARTHY

KIDS

In New York, casual basketball games are about as common as strutting pigeons. But the contest scheduled on Saturday at 11 a.m. in the Bronx should result in a lot of head-turning, not to mention wheel-turning.

That’s when the King Charles Unicycle Troupe will play — while riding its favorite vehicles — at the basketball court in Clinton Playground in Crotona Park. (Enter at Clinton Avenue and Crotona Park South.) A beloved local circus act, these guys can double-Dutch jump rope on one wheel, too.

Their show is a highlight of the 12th annual NYC Unicycle Festival, a free outdoor celebration presented by the Bindlestiff Family Cirkus. The festivities also include long-distance group rides on Thursday, Friday and Saturday, which proficient young unicyclists can join if they’re accompanied by an adult. (Details are on the festival’s website.) Experienced riders can participate in a post-performance pickup game with the King Charles players on Saturday, too, along with a free-throw basketball contest and a unicycle obstacle course.

Neophytes, however, can do more than watch. On Sunday from 1 to 5 p.m., at Grant’s tomb in Morningside Heights, the festival’s conclusion will offer instruction and youth-size equipment for children who want to give unicycling a whirl.
LAUREL GRAEBER

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Greatest Films For Adults on Disney Plus

As POPSUGAR editors, we independently choose and write things that we love and that we believe you will like too. If you buy a product that we recommend, we may receive an affiliate commission, which in turn supports our work.

While it is certainly suitable for families, there are plenty of adult films on Disney +! The streaming platform has already built a reputation as a place for families to find titles to watch together, or for adults to relive some of their childhood favorites, but there are some films out there that might be more suited to adult audiences are.

From darker entries in long-standing franchises to teen comedies with a bite to documentaries, Disney + is definitely not just for kids. Check out some of our favorite adult films on Disney + beforehand. There is also plenty of magic to discover in films with an older audience.

Do not miss these films. Sign up for Disney + today ($ 7.99 per month).

– Additional coverage from Kalyn Womack

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Drake’s ‘Licensed Lover Boy’ Arrives, as Chart Battle With Kanye West Continues

The digs, in song and on social media, continued a pattern of minor, direct and indirect offenses between the two that had existed for years, with Drake’s musical beef relationship with Pusha-T, a Western subsidiary, seemingly coagulating irrevocably 2018.

In the years that followed, the artists parted ways, even if they occasionally bumped their heads online and on records. West hugged former President Donald J. Trump, went on an ill-fated presidential candidacy, and turned to gospel. In October 2019 he released a Christian album called “Jesus Is King”. He kept his promises on “Donda” and even censored his guests.

Drake, meanwhile, released a steady stream of music, though it made itself less and less common. In spring 2020, the rapper followed the single “Toosie Slide”, which reached number 1 on the Billboard Hot 100, with a surprising mixtape, “Dark Lane Demo Tapes”, with songs that had been leaked online. He promised a studio album in the summer, and the wannabe lead single “Laugh Now Cry Later” reached # 2 in August. But the album never came out; Another holdover, the three-song EP “Scary Hours 2”, followed in March and led to another No. 1 single (“What’s Next”).

After months of only cryptic updates on the album’s status, a collision course with West seemed inevitable as summer ended and the two A-list rappers reappeared. When West toured an ongoing “Donda,” Drake appeared to be claiming a Sept. 3 release late last month with a guerrilla-style lo-fi ad on “SportsCenter” on ESPN.

And on a Trippie Redd track entitled “Betrayal” the rapper indicated that the hustle and bustle around West’s “Donda” would not affect its final release date. This time Drake rapped, “It’s set in stone.”

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Mikis Theodorakis, ‘Zorba’ Composer and Marxist Insurgent, Dies at 96

As Greece’s most illustrious composer, Mr. Theodorakis wrote symphonies, operas, ballets, film scores, music for the stage, marches for protests and songs without borders — an oeuvre of hundreds of classical and popular pieces that poured from his pen in good times and bad, even in the confines of drafty prison cells, squalid concentration camps and years of exile in a remote mountain hamlet.

He also wrote anthems of wartime resistance and socialist tone poems about the plight of workers and oppressed peoples. His most famous work on political persecution was the haunting “Mauthausen Trilogy,” named for a World War II Nazi concentration camp used mainly to exterminate the intelligentsia of Europe’s conquered lands. It has been described as the most beautiful music ever written on the Holocaust.

Mr. Theodorakis’s music made him a wealthy Communist. Having paid his dues to society, he did not apologize for his privileged life as a member of Parliament, with homes in Paris, Athens and the Greek Peloponnesus; for being feted at premieres of his work in New York, London and Berlin; or for counting cultural and political leaders in Europe, America and the Middle East as friends.

During World War II, he joined a Communist youth group that fought fascist occupation forces in Greece. After the war, his name appeared on a police list of wartime resisters, and he was rounded up with thousands of suspected Communists and sent for three years to the island of Makronisos, the site of a notorious prison camp. There he contracted tuberculosis, and he was tortured and subjected to mock executions by being buried alive.

Mr. Theodorakis studied at music conservatories in Athens and Paris in the 1950s, writing symphonies, chamber music, ballets and assorted rhapsodies, marches and adagios. He set to music the verses of eminent Greek poets, many of them Communists. He also deepened his ties to Communism: When Greece became a Cold War battleground, he blamed not Stalin but the C.I.A.

He was profoundly affected by the assassination in 1963 of Grigoris Lambrakis, a prominent antiwar activist, who was run down by right-wing zealots on a motorcycle at a peace rally in Thessaloniki. His murder — a pivotal event in modern Greek history that was portrayed in thinly fictionalized form in the Costa-Gavras film as the work of leaders of the subsequent junta — provoked mass protests and a national political crisis.