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Baryshnikov Arts Middle to Proceed On-line Programming This Fall

Baryshnikov Arts Center will hold another free online season before welcoming audiences back to its theaters in spring. Mikhail Baryshnikov, who founded the institution in 2005, said the main reason for remaining virtual was a long-planned replacement of its building’s heating, ventilation and air-conditioning system, which is to get underway in fall.

The coming season will include the premieres of commissioned pieces by River L. Ramirez, a comedian and musician (Oct. 18 to Nov. 1); the dancer Sooraj Subramaniam (Nov. 1-15); Jordan Demetrius Lloyd, a New York City dance artist (Nov. 29 to Dec. 13); and the dance duo Molly Lieber and Eleanor Smith (Jan. 10-24).

This is the second round of new work that the center has supported during the pandemic. The first was streamed during its spring 2021 season, and featured pieces by Stefanie Batten Bland, Mariana Valencia and Bijayini Satpathy.

“Instead of doing virtual galas, we decided to celebrate artists and their creativity,” Baryshnikov said of the choice to focus on commissioning. This emphasis, he added, is in keeping with the center’s primary mission, which is to help artists develop and experiment “without commercial pressure.”

The choreographers Kyle Abraham and Liz Gerring will also present new dances through the center this fall. Each has made a duet in response to Merce Cunningham’s “Landrover” (1972). Their contributions, commissioned by the center and the Merce Cunningham Trust, will stream Sept. 20-30 in an online program alongside solos and duets from Cunningham’s work performed by Jacquelin Harris and Chalvar Monteiro of Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater.

Two filmed solos by the Swedish choreographer Mats Ek (streaming Oct. 4-14); and “Pigulim,” a filmed dance-theater work by Ella Rothschild, an Israeli choreographer and former Batsheva Dance Company performer (available Dec. 13-23), round out the announced slate.

For Baryshnikov, it has been “a pleasant surprise” to see that the performing arts can be successfully created, shared and enjoyed in digital forms. “Thousands of people have been watching the online programming and we got so many responses from all over the world,” he said.

There are creative benefits to filming work that would otherwise be presented live onstage as well. “We gave artists the opportunity to really be in charge of their own presentation,” he said. “It’s a new medium — you have to be a cameraman or a director besides being a choreographer or a composer or an instrumentalist or a singer.”

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Prince Harry Proclaims $1.5 Million Memoir Charity Donation

In addition to telling us his side of the story, Prince Harry’s upcoming memoir will benefit charities as well. While participating in a polo game for Sentable on August 19, the Duke of Sussex announced that he would donate $ 1.5 million of the proceeds of his memoirs to the charity. “This is one of several donations I would like to make to charity, and I am grateful to be able to give back to the children and communities in desperate need,” Harry said in a statement.

Harry founded Sentable with Prince Seeiso of Lesotho in 2006 to help children affected by the HIV / AIDS epidemic in Africa. “Our realigned mission at Sentebale is to address the urgent needs of vulnerable children in southern Africa, provide them with access to vital health services, receive the care they need and build skills to be more resilient and self-sufficient in the future,” added Harry added. In response to Harry’s donation, the charity expressed its appreciation in a statement: “Sentebale is grateful for his personal contribution, which enables the organization to continue to work fully and to continue to provide important services to vulnerable youth in southern Africa.”

The memoir, set to be released in 2022, will cover everything from Harry’s childhood and time in the military to his marriage to Meghan Markle. “I’ve worn many hats over the years, literally and figuratively, and I hope that by telling my story – the ups and downs, the mistakes, the lessons learned – I can help show them that no matter where we come from, we have more in common than we think, “he said in a statement announcing the book.” I am deeply grateful for the opportunity to share what I have learned in my life so far. and I am pleased that people are reading a first hand account of my life that is accurate and completely truthful. “

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How Aaron Dessner Discovered His Voice (With an Help From Taylor Swift)

COLUMBIA COUNTY, N.Y. — Aaron Dessner sat down at the black upright piano in his Long Pond Studio, pressed the soft pedal and played a four-note phrase that had changed his life. It was the first notes — G F E-flat F — of a music file he sent to Taylor Swift in March 2020.

Swift had been a fan of Dessner’s long-running indie-rock band, the National, and she contacted him out of the blue as the pandemic shutdown was beginning. “One night I was just sitting at dinner,” Dessner recalled, “and I got a text saying, ‘This is Taylor. Would you ever be up for collaborating remotely with me?’

“I was flattered and said, ‘Sure,’” he continued. “She said, ‘Just send anything, even the weirdest random sketch that you have,’ and I sent her a folder of stuff I’d been working on. And then a few hours later, she sent that song, ‘Cardigan.’”

“Cardigan” — which became a No. 1 hit — started the collaboration that grew into Swift’s two career-repositioning 2020 albums, “Folklore” and “Evermore.” The creative partnership didn’t end there: She wrote and sings “Renegade” for Dessner’s own indie recording project, Big Red Machine, and supplied the title for its second album, “How Long Do You Think It’s Gonna Last?,” which arrives on Aug. 27.

“We talked a lot about, how did it actually happen that we made so many songs together in such a short period of time?” Dessner, 45, said in a conversation on his lawn, looking over the pond. “It’s kind of abnormal, and it’s hard to sustain. You have this streak going, but you don’t know when the ideas or the inspiration or the spark will extinguish.”

For Swift, Dessner’s music unlocked new ideas. “The quality that really confounded me about Aaron’s instrumental tracks is that to me, they were immediately, intensely visual,” Swift wrote in an email. “As soon as I heard the first one, I understood why he calls them ‘sketches.’ The first time I heard the track for ‘Cardigan,’ I saw high heels on cobblestones. I knew it had to be about teenage miscommunications and the loss of what could’ve been.”

She added, “I’ve always been so curious about people with synesthesia, who see colors or shapes when they hear music. The closest thing I’ve ever experienced is seeing an entire story or scene play out in my head when I hear Aaron Dessner’s instrumental tracks.”

The studio is in a converted barn a few steps from Dessner’s house near Hudson, N.Y. It’s an open room with a church-high ceiling, tall windows and a woodland view, neatly set up to record any of his instruments — guitars, keyboards, drums, percussion — whenever an idea strikes. He can open it up to let in the sounds of birds, insects, frogs or the wind in the trees. Dessner has recorded most of his music at Long Pond since making the National’s 2017 album, “Sleep Well Beast.” During the pandemic, he has kept busy there.

“For someone like me who’s traveled for 20 years, rarely with more than a month or two off completely from touring, it was good to be home for almost two years, where I’m just in this beautiful place,” he said. “I’ve made heaps more music than I had ever made before. And I think it’s allowed me to elevate or push what I was doing, and take it to different places.”

Dessner founded Big Red Machine with Justin Vernon, who records as Bon Iver and is known outside indie circles for working with Kanye West. The new album also draws on, as Dessner said, “almost everyone I’ve made a record with.” That includes his twin brother, Bryce, who is also a member of the National, along with the songwriters Robin Pecknold (of Fleet Foxes), Anaïs Mitchell (whose musical based on the myth of Orpheus and Eurydice, “Hadestown,” will reopen on Broadway in September), Sharon Van Etten, Lisa Hannigan, Naeem, Ben Howard and others.

“Establishing and contributing to a musical community matters so much to Aaron,” Swift wrote. “He’s technically in the music ‘industry,’ but really all he wants to do is play and make music with his friends.”

Paradoxically, Big Red Machine’s sprawling collective effort grew into something deeply personal. As Dessner and the other musicians put together the songs, largely remotely, themes coalesced: childhood memories, lost innocence, struggles with mental health. And after years of working in the background — with the National and as a producer for other songwriters — Dessner has stepped forward, for a few songs, as a lead singer.

“I remember he was really nervous about having his own lead vocals on there,” Mitchell said by phone from Vermont. “And I was like, absolutely — you should do that. Especially given his work with Taylor over the last year, it felt like really nice to have people get a look behind that curtain, to get to know the person who’s behind a bunch of this stuff.”

Big Red Machine is not exactly a band. “To me it’s like a laboratory for experimentation and also a vehicle to collaborate with friends and try to grow,” Dessner said. “And also to just reconnect with the feeling of what it’s like when you first start playing music — what it’s like when you’re making stuff without really knowing what it is.”

Dessner’s musical fingerprint is a fondness for patterns: evocative little motifs that can interlock in complex ways. In the songs that the National has been releasing since its 2001 debut, they can be soothing and meditative, or they can hint at the agitation behind a pensive exterior. For Dessner’s collaborators, those little musical cells help spawn larger structures.

“I’ll catch myself in little patterns, where I get this feeling that you could build some sort of architecture out of it,” he said. “A lot of times there is something a little odd about the timing, or something I may have lifted out of a classical piece I heard. There’s a kernel, and then I start to build.”

For Dessner, there is also healing in repetition. “When I really started playing music seriously, I was going through a fairly severe depression when I was a teenager,” he said. “I wasn’t disadvantaged at all, there was nothing bad — it was brain chemistry. I found that playing music in this way is soothing to me. The rhythm and melody are in this circular way of playing. That’s when I feel the best with music. At some point the ideas started to take on odder time signatures, and there were more experimental sounds around them. But still, at the core of it is this emotional, circular musical behavior.”

Big Red Machine grew out of a fruitful misunderstanding. Dessner wanted to write a song with Vernon for “Dark Was the Night,” a 2009 all-star indie-rock album that the Dessner brothers produced for the Red Hot Organization, the nonprofit H.I.V. charity. He sent Vernon the sketch of a song he called “Big Red Machine” after his hometown baseball team, the Cincinnati Reds; Vernon, unaware of the sports reference, wrote lyrics about the human heart instead.

Dessner and Vernon went on to create and curate the Eaux Claires music festival in the mid-2010s and to assemble an idealistic music collective styled 37d03d (which reads, upside-down, as “people”). In 2018 they released the first Big Red Machine album, a gleefully experimental set of songs featuring Vernon upfront, full of cryptic lyrics and electronic effects, and they assembled a jammy live band for a handful of gigs in 2018 and 2019. (One song on the new album, “Easy to Sabotage,” was collaged together from boisterous concert improvisations, new lyrics from Naeem and complex computer processing.) Before touring evaporated in 2020, Vernon had convinced Dessner to play arenas as an opening act for Bon Iver.

Dessner had already been sketching new Big Red Machine tracks. Many of the new songs have a pastoral, rootsy tone, at times suggesting the Band, although they’re also often laced with drum-machine rhythms and stealthy electronic undercurrents. “I liked the idea of trying to make something that was more song-oriented this time, and more cohesive,” he said.

Vernon, meanwhile, wanted a less central role in Big Red Machine. “I wanted it to feel much more inclusive and representative of all the extracurricular energy that we’ve been putting in over the years, trying to make the music industry a little more communist or something,” he said. “And I got so tired of being lead singer guy, and I’m in another band. I was like, you’ve got so many connections. Let’s reach out and see what other people have feelings on these tracks. And I wanted to continue to support Aaron and honestly challenge him, frankly, to get out in front more. There are little bits and pieces that I show up and do on the record, and I obviously wrote some words and sang some tunes, but really, this is Aaron’s record.”

The songs often touch on loss and fragility. The album is bookended by two songs featuring Mitchell’s whispery soprano: “Latter Days,” which was written before the pandemic but imagines living through a disaster, and “New Auburn,” a reminiscence (set in the geography of Vernon’s Wisconsin) of childhood road trips, reflecting on when “We were too young to be unforgiven.”

One of the first songs Dessner wrote for the album was “Brycie,” which offers gratitude for the way his brother saw him through bouts of depression; it begins with folky guitars and turns into a prismatic mesh of hand-played and synthetic sounds behind Dessner’s gentle voice.

Dessner and Swift recorded “Renegade” in Los Angeles, during the week leading up to the 2021 Grammy Awards; days later, as producer and performer, they shared the award for album of the year for “Folklore” (along with the album’s other producer, Jack Antonoff.) Dessner already had a Grammy — best alternative album for the National’s “Sleep Well Beast” — but this was a much higher pop profile; lately he has been “approached by people,” he said.

“I love colliding with new people and learning from people, so it’s an exciting time,” he said. “But I also tend to be kind of shy. I like the idea that I could count my collaborators on one or two hands, to stay with this family feeling. So I’m not rushing out to work with a million people. It’s not really my personality.”

He added, “I’ve yet to make something where I’m feel like I’m trying to satisfy a commercial instinct. I don’t totally know how I would do it. I don’t know that I have the skills to do it.”

Not ready to gear up his own hit factory? He shrugged. “I guess I could move to L.A. and set that up,” he said. “But it wouldn’t end well.”

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‘Within the Identical Breath’ Evaluation: Wuhan 2019, or When Normalcy Ended

When you hear about filmmakers in conflict zones, you may flash on countries like Syria or Afghanistan. The movies produced in theaters of war often follow a similar arc: The documentarian parachutes in to take stock of a catastrophe. The focus tends to be on rubble, blood and suffering — the spectacle. In her short, stellar career, the Chinese filmmaker Nanfu Wang has repeatedly returned to a less obvious conflict zone in which the war for proverbial hearts and minds mostly takes place through state propaganda.

Her latest, “In the Same Breath,” is a clear, razor-sharp look at the pandemic. And, as she did with her documentary “One Child Nation” (made with Jialing Zhang), Wang vividly fuses the political with the personal. In mid-January 2020, she flew to China with her toddler to visit her family for the New Year, a trip the two had made before. (Born in China, Wang has lived in the United States for years.) Over images of fireworks exploding in the night sky, she ruefully says that “this was the last moment I can remember when life still felt normal.” And then she fills the screen with a rush of images: a blur of hospitals, X-rays, news reports and other visions from our Covid-19 world.

Back then, few — and certainly not Wang — knew that all normalcy was quickly disappearing when she briefly left her son with her mother, flying back to the States. The same day she flew out, China began shutting down Wuhan, the center of the outbreak. By isolating the city, China was trying to contain the virus and the pneumonialike respiratory disease it caused. At the same time, people elsewhere were traveling for the Lunar New Year’s celebration (chunyun), which is thought to be the biggest mass migration in the world, involving billions of trips. You know the rest of this story, or may think you do: There was no stopping the virus, though, as Wang suggests, it surely could have been attenuated.

Agilely marshaling a wealth of found and original material — as well as 10 camera people across China, some of whom remain anonymous — Wang brings you back to the first stages of the pandemic, before the Wuhan shutdown, before the virus had been officially named. She pulls out cellphone videos, collects news reports and finds some extremely eerie surveillance footage from inside a clinic in Wuhan. It’s unsettling, at times haunting, to watch people just going about their business, sometimes jammed together in celebration or just living their everyday, poignantly normal life, while others cough, stagger into emergency rooms and, in some distressing images, lie helpless in the streets.

Some of this will be familiar given the enormity of the disaster and its coverage. And there are moments here that recall the recent documentary “76 Days,” an immersive account of the Wuhan shutdown from inside the city. Yet Wang brings new insights to the crisis, and she manages to both surprise and alarm you. She also quickens your pulse, and not just through the brisk editing, notably during the short period when she’s separated from her child. But even after her husband safely brings their son home, a sense of profound urgency — and mystery — suffuses the movie as she toggles between the past and near-present, and revisits what was known and what was hidden.

To that end, as she has in her earlier work, Wang shrewdly and methodically homes in on China’s propaganda machine, showing how misinformation shapes ordinary life, how it defines a people’s consciousness of themselves and of the country. She is unrelentingly hard on its leadership. Nothing if not a crack dialectician, she repeatedly underscores the disconnect between what was happening on the ground in China, in hospitals and elsewhere, and how the government reacted to a situation that was spiraling out of its control. In speeches, conferences and smiling news reports, officials and their mouthpieces insisted that everything was fine. It was a message that, as Wang reminds you with crushing lucidity, American officials were sending to their people, too.

One of the attractions of Wang’s work is how she inserts herself into her movies in a way that never slides into solipsistic narcissism. Rather, she uses her own history and identity — as a daughter and as a mother, as a Chinese national and as an American transplant — to open up other histories and identities, telling stories that are invariably greater than any one person.

If “In the Same Breath” — the title becomes more resonant with each new scene and shock — were simply about China and its handling (mishandling) of the pandemic, it would be exemplary. But the story that she tells is larger and deeper than any one country because this is a story that envelops all of us, and it is devastating.

In the Same Breath
Not rated. Running time: 1 hour 35 minutes. Watch on HBO platforms.

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92nd Road Y’s New Season Consists of Colson Whitehead and Susan Orlean

For its first personal season since March 2020, 92nd Street Y brings a bevy of stage and screen stars, as well as a solid roster of writers, including Susan Orlean, Colm Toibin, and Colson Whitehead.

Whitehead, whose novel “The Underground Railroad” won a Pulitzer Prize in 2016 and was adapted into an Amazon series this year, will open the season with the first public reading from his new novel “Harlem Shuffle” on September 14th. He is followed by the Irish writer Colm Toibin, who will read on September 17th from his new novel “The Magician”, a portrait of Thomas Mann and his time.

Also there are Susan Orlean, who will read from her new book “On Animals” (October 25th); Louise Erdrich, reading from her new novel “Der Satz” (11.11.); and Rita Dove (November 15), former US poet laureate, who wrote about living with multiple sclerosis in her new book, Playlist for the Apocalypse: Poems.

The season also includes political actors: Supreme Court Judge Stephen G. Breyer will perform with investor David Rubenstein (September 13); and Rep. Adam B. Schiff, a Democrat of California, will discuss his new book, Midnight in Washington, with Pulitzer-winning biographer Ron Chernow (October 12).

Stage and screen personalities will also be represented: CNN presenter Anderson Cooper (21.09.), E-Street band member Steven Van Zandt (29.09.) And Broadway and TV actress Sutton Foster (13.10.) Will be stop by to discuss her new books.

For the first time in almost 50 years, 92nd Street Y will also present an entire season of dance performances in the Kaufmann Concert Hall. Performers are Hope Boykin (October 21) and tap dancers Michelle Dorrance and Dormeshia (December 16).

Current protocols require adults to provide proof of vaccination to attend live events (most events also have the option to watch online) and masks are required for anyone over 2 years of age regardless of vaccination status. For a full line-up, including some virtual-only events, visit 92y.org.

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How I Met Your Father: See the First Pictures of the Forged

Image Source: Getty / Mike Pont / Rachel Luna / Jon Kopaloff

Seven years after Ted Mosby (finally) wrapped up his decade-long story, the How I Met Your Mother reboot is on its way, and the new cast is already forming a bond so great we can’t help but imagine them all sharing a drink at MacLaren’s. On Aug. 17, Francia Raísa, who will play Valentina in the upcoming Hulu series, posted a slideshow on Instagram sharing behind-the-scenes photos of the cast on set, and the smiles on their faces are enough to make us want to do a Robin Sparkles “Let’s Go to the Mall” body roll.

“Kids, I’m going to tell you an incredible story: The story of how I met (THE CAST of) How I Met Your Father,” Raísa captioned the photos, which also featured Hilary Duff (Sophie), Chris Lowell (Jesse), Suraj Sharma (Sid), Tien Tran (Ellen), Tom Ainsley (Charlie), This Is Us stars Elizabeth Berger and Isaac Aptaker, and more. The pictures don’t give away too many details about what to expect from the 10-episode series, but we’ll patiently be awaiting more photos from Raísa and the rest of the How I Met Your Father crew soon. Take a peek at the cast behind the scenes here.

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Los Angeles to Require Masks at Massive Out of doors Concert events and Occasions

With coronavirus cases continuing to surge, Los Angeles County said Tuesday that masks must be worn at large outdoor concerts and sporting events that attract more than 10,000 people.

The new rule, which comes into effect Thursday at 11:59 p.m., means that visitors to the Hollywood Bowl, Dodger Stadium, outdoor music festivals and events designated by the county as “mega-events” must now wear masks. The rule applies to people regardless of their vaccination status.

People are allowed to take off their masks while eating and drinking, but only for a short time.

The order came as cities across the country took steps to curb the spread of the coronavirus. Chicago joined Los Angeles County, Washington, DC, San Francisco, and other areas to require masks in indoor public spaces. New York City Requires Proof of Vaccination for Indoor Dining and Entertainment Activities; Broadway will require proof of vaccination and masks when it reopens.

The new rules requiring masks at major outdoor events in Los Angeles came when the county reported that cases, hospitalizations, and positivity rates have all increased significantly. According to data collected by the New York Times, Los Angeles County is seeing an average of 3,361 new cases per day, an 18 percent increase from the average two weeks ago.

Los Angeles County has been aggressive in introducing masking requirements amid evidence that the Delta variant of the virus has spread. In the past month, people were forced to wear masks in public indoor spaces, regardless of their vaccination status.

Covid guidelines at the Hollywood Bowl have changed repeatedly over the year as the Los Angeles Philharmonic, which runs the Bowl, tried to adhere to the county’s changing regulations. It has drawn large crowds for the past six weeks. With a few exceptions, the people in the audience were maskless, as allowed by the district rules. But they tend to put on their masks when they join the hustle and bustle of people walking down the crowded sidewalks after the show.

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Nationwide Endowment for the Humanities Publicizes New Grants

The Morgan Library & Museum, the University of Chicago and the new Georgia O’Keeffe Museum in Santa Fe, N.M., are among 239 beneficiaries of new grants from the National Endowment for the Humanities that were announced on Tuesday.

The grants, which total $28.4 million and are the second round awarded this year, will support projects at museums, libraries, universities and historic sites in 45 states, as well as in Washington, D.C., and Puerto Rico. They will enable the creation of a documentary about the Colfax Massacre — in which dozens of former slaves were killed in a Louisiana town during Reconstruction — by City Lore, a nonprofit New York art gallery; the development of Archaeorover, an autonomous robot that uses ground-penetrating radar to search for buried sites and artifacts, by researchers at the University of Pennsylvania; and research for a biography of the neuroscientist and author Oliver Sacks by Laura J. Snyder, a New York-based writer and researcher.

Adam Wolfson, the endowment’s acting chairman, said in a statement that the projects, which include educational programming for high school and college students and multi-institutional research initiatives, “demonstrate the resilience and breadth of our nation’s humanities institutions and practitioners.”

In New York, 35 projects at the state’s cultural organizations will receive $3.6 million in grants. Funding will support the creation of a new exhibition on the portraiture of the Northern Renaissance artist Hans Holbein the Younger at the Morgan Library & Museum, set to open next Spring; an exhibition at the Queens Museum that will reinterpret its “Panorama of the City of New York” from the World’s Fair in context of its ties to city planning, including how urban expansion reinforced racism and classism, upon the panorama’s 60th anniversary in 2024; and a reinterpretation of the American art galleries at the Brooklyn Museum to focus on underrepresented voices. Those galleries are expected to reopen before 2025.

Funding will also support the storage of 117 Chinese opera costumes and 330 traditional Chinese garments called qipaos that were damaged in a January 2020 fire at the Museum of Chinese in America, as well as the preservation of 70,000 photographs, political cartoons and other materials documenting the 123-year history of the Jewish publication The Forward.

Elsewhere, the grants will assist with the reinterpretation of the colonial Old North Church in Boston and its congregation’s ties to slavery from the American Revolution to the Civil War, support the creation of a digital catalog of the works of Georgia O’Keeffe, and enable publication of a comprehensive, freely available print and online edition of all surviving Greek- and Latin-inscribed legislation from classical Rome by the University of Chicago.

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A Mirrored Mecca for Okay-Pop Dancers in Paris

PARIS — On a recent Saturday morning, Carla Kang, Audrey Kouamelan and Emma Letouche assembled in front of a squat glass building called CB3. It stands about 250 yards from the Grande Arche, the architectural marvel that is the signature structure of La Défense, a district of soaring office towers northwest of Paris.

Then the three women, aged 21 to 23, began spinning, jumping and swooping as they danced to “Fire Truck,” a song from NCT 127, a South Korean K-pop group. They stopped and started, often laughing, and paused from time to time to look at NCT’s original music video on their phones as they tried to duplicate the intricate dance steps.

They were rehearsing to make their own video in the coming weeks — a re-enactment of the NCT 127 original — that they will upload to a K-pop channel they run called Young Nation. Their top video, based on “Next Level” by the four-women K-pop group aespa, has more than 250,000 views.

As on every weekend, the three women of Young Nation were hardly alone.

Throughout the day, about 100 other dancers arrived at CB3 to practice their own routines. In the last few years, the pedestrian plaza around CB3 has become a mecca for dancers from all over Ile-de-France, the region that encompasses Paris and its surrounding suburbs, known as banlieues. Even on weekdays, even in the dead of winter, dancers are out at CB3, from early morning to well into the evening.

Most of the dancers are female, range in age from the mid-teens to late 20s and live in the banlieues. They are almost all part of K-pop fan groups that record song covers and dance re-enactments to post on YouTube channels. The videos, which are shot at locations around Paris — including at Trocadéro, the plaza overlooking the Eiffel Tower; in front of the Pantheon; and, of course, at La Défense — are labors of love because the groups cannot collect money from advertising: The songs, and even most of the dance moves, are copyrighted by K-pop artists.

K-pop has an urban appeal that crosses cultural and geographic borders. Scrolling through YouTube, it’s possible to find similar K-pop cover dance groups in Russia, Poland, Italy, Bulgaria, the United States and dozens of other countries.

Recent French tours by the most popular K-pop band, BTS, have sold out in minutes; in 2019, all the tickets for the 200,000-seat Stade de France arena went in two hours. Paris now has a K-pop Dance Academy where people can take classes, a couple of K-pop themed stores (Boutique Musica and Tai You), and a Korean K-pop restaurant called Kick Café.

Kouamelan, 23, said she had to commute about an hour to get to CB3 from her home in Drancy, near Charles de Gaulle Airport on the eastern side of Paris. She said she likes practicing at CB3 because “there is so much space and we can move around freely.”

The glass building has other amenities that make it attractive. It is vacant, and has been for five years, so there is no one for the dancers to disturb while they play their music, and vice versa.

The building’s ground floor is recessed on all four sides so that there is a large protected area under the higher floors when it rains. It is also surrounded by plate glass windows: perfect mirrors, just as in a professional dance studio.

The cost of using the space — nothing — is a huge draw, as many of the dancers are either students or work low-paying jobs. Professional studio time is not necessarily something their personal budgets can afford.

La Défense is also a major transportation hub: The subway, trains, trams and buses all stop or end at the Grande Arche. That last factor is particularly important, as many of the dancers travel long distances to get to CB3.

On this particular Saturday, members of the dance crew Stormy Shot had come to work on their latest project: a tribute video for the fifth anniversary of the founding of Blackpink, a female group which may be the second-most popular K-pop group.

Lucie Zellner, 23 — who organizes Stormy Shot, along with her sister, Elea, 21 — said that the group often practices between 9 and 17 hours per week. Stormy Shot has about 30 members, Zellner said, though not everyone appears in each video, and, not surprisingly, there is attrition. She added that the group had let a member go the previous week. Stormy Shot rehearsed for hours, pausing to eat lunch under the canopy of CB3 as the skies intermittently opened up. Eventually, a hand-held camera came out and one of the group’s members, Lahna Debiche, 17, filmed the others as they rehearsed.

Later that afternoon, about 10 members of the Cloud Dance Crew showed up for a final rehearsal before a later performance of songs and dances by Blackpink. Dressed mostly in black and pink themselves, the group was led by Clyde Williams, 27, who is nearly six foot five and describes himself as a “fairy from outer space” on Instagram. As the group rehearsed, Williams, whose large frame is surprisingly supple, made small corrections and gave instructions to the other dancers.

Nothing is forever, and CB3 may not be available to the dancers for much longer. A spokeswoman for the building’s owner, A.E.W., said in an email that the company could not comment about CB3’s status until later this year. But there is a work order posted on the building and, according to the website of the design and engineering company Gesys Ingénierie, it has been hired to renovate CB3 by adding five stories and some trees out front.

If CB3 does end up being renovated and occupied, the dancers may have to find another spot. Though it could be difficult to find one that checks all the boxes in the same way as CB3.

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Hulu’s Homeroom Is Devoted to Karina Sivilay Nicks

Image Source: YouTube user Hulu

Hulu’s Homeroom documentary tells the inspiring story of Oakland High School’s 2020 graduating class. Taking place during the 2019-2020 school term, the film follows a group of students as they navigate their senior year amid the COVID-19 pandemic and the racial justice movement and raise their voices to make a difference in their community. Much like how the students overcame adversity throughout their unprecedented senior year, the film’s production also stems from personal loss. The end of the film features a dedication to Karina Sivilay Nicks, who is the late daughter of director Peter Nicks.

At the start of filming in September 2019, Karina died suddenly at the age of 16. Instead of shutting down production, Nick vowed to continue with the film in her memory. “Everything kind of stopped and then I decided that I had to keep moving for my own mental health . . . for my own spiritual health,” Nicks previously told The Mercury News. He noted that Karina “was always an inspiration” as he filmed the documentary and followed the lives of the students. “I would see her in these kids. I would see kids who looked liked her, who had qualities like her. And she was always there with us.”

Following the film’s release on Hulu on Aug. 12, Nicks has also been honoring his daughter’s memory online. Alongside a promo of the poster, he wrote that the film is “dedicated to Karina Sivilay Nicks . . . who always finessed her way to the front of the stage no matter what.” He added, “This is the story of her friends and peers in the class of 2020. It’s also our collective story in so many ways.” Ahead, you can watch the trailer for the documentary, which is currently streaming on Hulu.