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Entertainment

A Starry Central Park Comeback Live performance Is Silenced by Lightning

The homecoming show required everyone 12 years old and up to show proof that they had had at least one dose of a vaccine; children younger than that, who are still ineligible for the vaccines, were required to wear masks.

“When it comes to the concerts, they are outdoors — they are for vaccinated folks only,” the mayor had said on Wednesday. “We are definitely encouraging mask use. But I really want to emphasize the whole key here is vaccination.”

The Central Park show came after the city had hosted a week of free hip-hop shows, with local heroes including Raekwon and Ghostface Killah in Staten Island, and KRS-One, Kool Moe Dee and Slick Rick in the Bronx. Tickets were required to attend the concert on the Great Lawn — most were free, but V.I.P. packages cost up to $5,000 — and the show was broadcast on television by CNN and on satellite radio by SiriusXM.

The concert was programmed by Clive Davis, the 89-year-old music eminence, who, in an interview this week, stressed the role that music could play in shaping society.

“It’s vital and important that New York be back,” he said.

From the stage on Saturday night, Mr. Davis, a Brooklyn native, made a plea to the audience: “Tonight, I only ask one thing: When you’re having a great time, cheer loud — loud enough so they can hear you all the way in Brooklyn’s Crown Heights.”

The abbreviated concert came at an uncertain moment for the music industry. While some high-profile artists, including Garth Brooks, BTS and Nine Inch Nails, have canceled tour dates recently, the show is largely going on in the live-music business — but it hasn’t been easy. Concert protocols, in New York and elsewhere, have been in flux for months, as the federal authorities, local governments and businesses have adjusted to the changing realities of the virus.

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Entertainment

Metropolis Plans Central Park Live performance for the Vaccinated: LL Cool J, Santana and Extra

LL Cool J, Elvis Costello, Andrea Bocelli, Carlos Santana and the New York Philharmonic, along with Bruce Springsteen and other artists, will be at the starry Central Park concert next month, which the city plans to announce its comeback from the pandemic, Mayor Bill announced de Blasio on Tuesday.

The mayor said that concert-goers would need to show a vaccination card.

“We want this to be a concert for the people,” said Mr. de Blasio at a video press conference, announcing additional headliners – and the name – of the We Love NYC: The Homecoming Concert, which will take place on August 21st take place on the Great Lawn. “But I would also like to make it clear: it has to be a safe concert. It has to be a concert that will help us advance our recovery. “

“So if you want to go to this concert, you must have a vaccination card,” he added.

The line-up includes artists and music icons from a range of eras, genres, and styles, including the Killers; Earth, wind; Wyclef Jean; Barry Manilow and the previously announced cast including Paul Simon, Jennifer Hudson and Patti Smith.

While 80 percent of the tickets are free, proof of vaccination is required to participate. (Adequate accommodation would be provided for those unable to be vaccinated because of a disability, the city said in a press release.) Masks will be optional due to the vaccination requirement and the fact that it takes place outdoors.

Free tickets will be released to the public in batches from Monday at 10 a.m. on nyc.gov/HomecomingWeek. Others will be available for purchase on Monday.

Gates will open at 3 p.m. on August 21 for the concert produced in partnership with Live Nation, and the show will start at 5 p.m. CNN will also broadcast the event live worldwide, including on CNN en Español.

The venerable music producer Clive Davis, a native of Brooklyn, has been working on the concert since May. He had lived in New York for most of his life, he said at the press conference, but he had never seen anything like the events of the past year and a half.

“As a born, raised, and true New Yorker, I know exactly how resilient we are and how New York keeps coming back,” said Mr. Davis. “And yes, ladies and gentlemen, we’ll be back. And I really can’t think of a more fitting way to celebrate this than an unforgettable concert in one of the most extraordinary places in the world: the Great Lawn at Central Park. “

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World News

Do not park them inside or cost them unattended in a single day

The Vermont State Police released this photo of the 2019 Chevrolet Bolt EV that caught fire on July 1, 2021 in the driveway of state Rep. Timothy Briglin, a Democrat.

Vermont State Police

General Motors is telling owners of 2017-2019 Bolt EVs that were part of a recent recall not to park their vehicles inside or charge them unattended overnight after two of the vehicles caught fire.

The two Bolt EVs were repaired as part of a recall of nearly 69,000 of the vehicles that were flagged for fire risks. The recall was initially announced in November by GM and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.

One of the fires occurred while the vehicle was charging at the home of a a Vermont state lawmaker earlier this month. The other fire happened in New Jersey, a spokesman for GM said, adding that it was notified about it earlier this week.

“General Motors has been notified of two recent Chevrolet Bolt EV fire incidents in vehicles that were remedied as part of the safety recall announced in November 2020,” the company said in an emailed statement. “Out of an abundance of caution, we are asking owners of 2017-2019 Chevrolet Bolt EVs who were part of the recall population to park their vehicles outdoors immediately after charging and not leave their vehicles charging overnight while we investigate these incidents.”

Customers who have not had the repair completed should still visit their dealer for the recall while our investigation continues, according to the automaker.

“At GM, safety is our highest priority, and we are moving as quickly as we can to investigate this issue,” GM said.

The NHTSA in October opened an investigation into three reported fires involving Chevrolet Bolt EVs. The automaker is cooperating with the federal vehicle safety agency, a spokesman said. Another Bolt EV that caught fire was reported by media outlets in May, but not all the recall repairs had been conducted on the vehicle.

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Entertainment

Bradley Whitford Finds Inspiration within the Theater (and Canine Park)

4th Dog parks Everyone who knows me knows that I am completely obsessed with dogs. Which is pathetic when I was filming in Toronto and couldn’t bring the dogs, I went to the dog park. This very cute Canadian woman I saw there every day came to me and said: “Which one is yours?” And I said, “Oh, I don’t have any. I just miss my dog. I’m not at home. “And she stepped away from me like I was an elementary school pederast.

There are roles that I have played that are combinations of dogs in a dog park. When I had to play Hubert Humphrey [in HBO’s “All the Way”]I realized he was a cross between a corgi and a boxer. I’m just finding a fascinating portrayal of characters in a dog park. It’s like going into a four-legged mask class.

5. “Aretha’s Gold” My father’s mother was legally blind. She had a record player that came from the library for the blind and I would borrow it. Before every high school performance, I put on Aretha’s Gold and locked myself in my room or basement and turned it all the way up and jumped around and sang. And that became a kind of warm-up exercise. So if I’m nervous to this day, I’ll blow “Aretha’s Gold”.

6th ’92 Theater at Wesleyan University When I was with Wesleyan it was where all the student initiated productions were held and this is where I fell in love with acting. It was this joyful place that had been a church. I just got “Tick, Tick … Boom!” with Lin-Manuel Miranda, who felt the same way. There he began to write “In the Heights”. It’s just this magical place. When I first saw “Hamilton” I had no idea what kind of emotional reaction I was going to have and I remember crying after the show. And I said to Lin, “You are making the theater a church.” There’s something about the ’92 theater and the freedom of this place – and how bold you could be before trying this professionally – that nourishes creatively.

7th Yo-Yo Ma Its relationship to the Bach prelude [of Cello Suite No. 1 in G major] is amazing to me. People always say of “The West Wing”: “Are there moments that stand out?” And for many of us, it was the day that Yo-Yo Ma came and played that piece, and he was the most generous, unpretentious person. He came into a room full of probably a hundred background artists with his extraordinary cello and said, “Anyone want to play this? Does anyone want to hold it? “His aim is to break through the boundaries of hierarchy and demands in his classical music world.

That day he was playing that piece and I was supposed to have this emotional breakdown. You shoot him first and you have a shot of it, and then at some point you turn around and come to me. Technically, it doesn’t even have to be there, let alone play. And take after take after take, he plays it with all his heart. It was just amazing.

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Entertainment

25 Free Performances Come to Bryant Park Beginning in June

Once guests arrive at the park, they will have their temperatures checked and be shown to their seats, which will be provided with space for social distancing. The park has no plans to get vaccinations or negative virus tests, but is considering them as options, according to Dan Fishman, director of public events for the park.

Other organizations participating in Bryant Park’s series this summer include Elisa Monte Dance, Harlem Stage, National Sawdust, New York Chinese Cultural Center, Limón Dance Company, and Greenwich House Music School. New York City Opera singers will perform a Pride concert on June 18th.

Many groups and institutions have been downsized or completely cocooned since last year.

“We were in hibernation,” said Tom Wirtshafter, the city hall president, who ran more than 60 virtual programs during the pandemic but, like most venues, had to leave most of the staff.

City Hall, which opened in 1921, will wrap up Bryant Park’s season on September 20 with a 100th anniversary event attended by Chris Thile, the mandolin player whose eclectic tastes range from bluegrass to creek.

Tiffany Rea-Fisher, the artistic director of Elisa Monte Dance, who also curates dance performances in the park, said her company only played twice in the past year. It will perform with the Paul Taylor Dance Company on August 20, and Rea-Fisher said it was not easy to find other dance groups to prepare.

“Finding companies that were ready in terms of perseverance was a challenge,” she said. “You don’t want to bring dancers back after a year and let them do a performance – it’s all about injuries.”