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Entertainment

Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater Proclaims In-Particular person Season

The upcoming season of the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater in New York City Center will celebrate Robert Battle’s tenth anniversary as artistic director, the company announced on Wednesday. After the difficulties of the past 17 months, Battle is more open to the opportunity than it otherwise would have been.

“Being part of the problem-solving that took place and getting us through this way has, in a way, made me feel a bit better at those 10 years,” he said in an interview. “There’s something going through that makes me think, ‘Hey, if I go through this, I’ll definitely take the good and I’ll do it.'”

During his tenure with Ailey, Battle founded the New Directions Choreography Lab, an initiative to support aspiring and medium-sized dance professionals, and named Jamar Roberts as the company’s first resident choreographer. “When I started creating, I was fortunate to have David Parsons to speak for me,” said Battle. “I’ve always wanted to pay for that.”

His support has paid off. Roberts has created several critically acclaimed dances since taking office in 2019, including “Members Don’t Get Weary” and “Ode”. his farewell performance on December 9th was announced along with the season’s slate.

Two dances that debuted online will be performed live for the first time as part of the three-week City Center engagement. Battles “For Four”, a piece for four dancers to a jazz score by Wynton Marsalis, will make its full stage debut on December 3rd with Roberts’ “Holding Space”.

New productions of older works will also be on view throughout the season: Ailey’s “Pas de Duke,” which Jacqueline Green and Yannick Lebrun performed for a dance video in the Woolworth Building in 2020; “The River,” Ailey’s 1970 collaboration with Duke Ellington; an Ailey solo, “Reflections in D”; and “Unfold,” a recent work by Battle.

Looking ahead, Battle said he would like to focus more on preserving and sharing works by underrated choreographers: “The idea of ​​being an archive for historical works really interests me, really promoting it.”

Ticket sales begin on October 12th. More information is available at alvinailey.org.

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Entertainment

On the Street With Ballet Theater. Who Wants Purple Velvet Seats.

Most of the time, they got used to travel life enough to complain a little about equality. (In St. Louis, the distribution of touring swag upset them again.) Usually, touring dancers have to adjust to a different stage in each city, but since they brought their own this time, it was always familiar – bouncy, if sometimes hot.

It was more difficult to place this stage. At the Minnesota Landscape Arboretum, where the changing room at the Bee and Pollinator Discovery Center was next to the red barn, the floor sloped away from the stage to block the view of the dancers’ feet. In St. Louis, placing the stage at the base of an amphitheater-like canyon avoided that problem, but it was a worryingly close shave to press it in place.

Despite the company’s desire for ABT Across America to mirror the troupe’s transcontinental touring in the 1940s and 50s, it was a much less strenuous proposition. During the war, in the 1943/44 season, the troupe performed in 73 cities, 48 ​​of which were one-night stands. The tour 10 years later was similar: four months, 20 states on buses and trains, mostly a different city every day.

But if ABT Across America was shorter and more comfortable, it was significantly smaller and cheaper than the company’s touring model of recent years. “Even before the pandemic,” McKenzie told me, “the moderators were left at the expense of 130 people and hiring an orchestra.” A new touring model similar to ABT Across America’s could “add another arm to our mission,” he said . “Dancers will register. That would be extra work. “

Certainly the tour opened up space for younger dancers. “It seems like we’re pretty evenly represented in every piece,” said Carlos Gonzalez, a corps member. “It’s a great opportunity to dance and be seen and have experiences that we normally don’t get.”

And it felt good, says Teuscher, to reach an audience that Ballet Theater normally does not reach: “We are America’s company, so it is important to bring ballet to America.”

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Entertainment

For the Chocolate Manufacturing unit Theater, a Scrappy Celebration as It Strikes Properties

As the weekend Pride marches filled town, a different kind of festive procession passed through Long Island City, Queens. On Sunday afternoon, a small but enthusiastic crowd, accompanied by a live marching band and the screeching 7 train, ran – and danced – the mile and a half from 5-49 49th Avenue to 38-29 24th Street.

These addresses are the old and new locations of the Chocolate Factory Theater, an artist-run organization known for giving performers plenty of space, time, and freedom to create. After 17 years in its idiosyncratic rental building on 49th Avenue, the theater is moving to a larger – and probably equally idiosyncratic – permanent home on 24th Street. On Wednesday the founders and directors of the chocolate factory, Sheila Lewandowski and Brian Rogers, handed over the keys to the rooms, which have been rented since 2004, whose white brick walls have seen hundreds of adventurous performances. (Rogers said the next tenant will be a “doggy spa” whose owners are planning a renovation.)

To bid farewell to its long-standing home, the theater hosted two afternoons on Saturday and Sunday with performances along the street in front of the old building, culminating in the procession through the neighborhood on Sunday. The “outdoor quasi-mini-festival”, as it was called, presented more than 20 artists whose work was presented by the chocolate factory. In the performances of Justin Allen, Maria Bauman, Ayano Elson, Keely Garfield, Heather Kravas, Marion Spencer, the music duo Yackez and many others, the mood was solemn and gruff, a fitting homage to the rough room inside.

This intimate space often seemed inseparable from the work that takes place there; its quirks are an endless source of choreographic inspiration. Ask the Chocolate Factory regulars what they’re going to miss about it, and they might mention the nails sticking out of the walls, exposed radiators, or – a popular feature – the elevator shaft in one corner that houses the bright upstairs theater with gloomy basement association (also used for performances).

“I’ve always loved the elevator shaft and watched what people do with this corner, how people crawl in and out,” said Alexandra Rosenberg, executive director of the Center for Performance Research in Brooklyn, who attended both days of the festival. As house manager in the chocolate factory from 2007 to 2012, she also developed a predilection for work that wandered between upstairs and downstairs: “The basement is pretty doomy and gloomy and brings you into a kind of nightmare. It was very effective for many shows. “

On Sunday, the dancers Anna Sperber and Angie Pittman began a duet in this underground room before taking the audience out onto the street – technically the last performance in the old building.

While the rawness of the interior could be challenging, it was part of its appeal as well. “Sometimes a perfectly equipped, spotless room doesn’t really go with a messy, dirty, sweaty, smelly dance,” said Garfield, who took the audience to New York, New York on Saturday in a simple and playful dance routine.

Forced to grapple with architecture, “people did really creative things,” said choreographer Ishmael Houston-Jones, who stopped by the festival on Saturday. He remembered a work by Antonio Ramos that turned the awkward entrance – narrow and sloping – into a tunnel through which the audience stepped out at the end of the show.

“I liked the surface of everything,” said Kravas, who danced a resolute evasive solo to “Repetition” by the Fall on Sunday and disappeared into the building at some point. (To the song she did the whole thing again later.) “You really worked with walls and floors and nails and radiators. In a way, the room was like a different body. “

The room could be enchanting from afar. “I found the chocolate factory on the Internet,” Elson said Saturday after sharing a meditative passage from a recent paper. As a college student, she spent hours delving into the theater’s vast, public Vimeo archive, which contains full-length recordings of performances. Before ever visiting in person, she said it was “a space that I adored and learned from.”

Without permission to really explore, artists might not have found the space so generative. Rogers and Lewandowski, artists themselves (they used to be collaborators, married and then divorced), didn’t set the people there any limits.

“When they say, ‘Come here and play and experiment and move the furniture back and forth and don’t worry about making a mess,’ it really creates an atmosphere that is open to discovery and surprise,” said Garfield. who had several residences in the old building.

When the theater settles in its new home – two adjacent warehouses that were once a tool and mold factory – that ethos is likely to endure, along with the founders’ cultivation of local relationships. Spend some time outside the old room with Lewandowski who lives on the same block and you won’t get very far without a friendly break as she catches up with passing neighbors.

For Bauman – who presented an excerpt from her work “Desire: A Sankofa Dream” on Sunday, a strong pairing of dance and poetry – neighborly thinking is important.

“One thing I appreciate about the chocolate factory,” she said, “is that it not only sees itself as a home for artists, but also as a neighbor of the people, companies and families who are already here.” When she said goodbye was invited, she added: “I had great confidence that it would not be unreasonable for the neighborhood.”

It was a local band, the four members of Liftoff Brass, whose music fueled the move from one Queens theater to another. Lewandowski led the way, stopping to dance on street corners. Along 23rd Street, she pointed to the namesake of the Chocolate Factory, a former pastry shop where she and Rogers once shared a studio with visual artists.

But the mood was more forward-looking than nostalgic; there was a lot to celebrate. Through a rare deal with the city, the chocolate factory acquired its new building debt free, a big deal for a New York nonprofit of its size. Having a permanent facility, Rogers said, “is the only way I know for a small or medium-sized group like ours to survive long term.” The first season in the new build is slated to begin in October, he said.

As the march reached its destination and crossed the threshold of a cool and echoing warehouse, new possibilities came into view: a staircase that led to a small balcony; new corners and protrusions; Skylights let in the late afternoon sun.

“The room in the old chocolate factory is a room in each of us,” Garfield had said the day before, “so we’ll take it to the next room.”

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Business

Meme inventory AMC extends rally, jumps 17% as theater chain sells new shares

Shares of AMC Entertainment surged again Tuesday after the theater chain sold more than 8 million shares to an investment firm, the latest in a series of capital raises for the struggling company turned meme stock.

AMC said in a securities filing that it raised $230.5 million through a stock sale to Mudrick Capital Management. The theater company said it would use the funds for potential acquisitions, upgrading its theaters and deleveraging its balance sheet.

Shares were up 17% in premarket trading.

AMC’s business was effectively halted during the pandemic, with movie theaters shut in most of the country for months and major studios delaying releases during the pandemic. However, the stock became a favorite of traders on Reddit and has seen wild swings in recent months.

The shares doubled last week on incredibly high volume as the speculative activity by retail traders driven by the message board ramped back up once again.

The company has taken advantage of those price surges by selling additional shares to raise cash. The stock is up more than 1,000% year to date.

“Given that AMC is raising hundreds of millions of dollars, this is an extremely positive result for our shareholders,” said AMC CEO and President Adam Aron in a filing. “It was achieved through the issuance of only 8.5 million shares, representing less than 1.7% of our issued share capital and only a small portion of our typical daily trading volume.”

AMC has around $5 billion in debt and needed to defer $450 million in lease repayments as its revenue largely dried up during the ongoing coronavirus pandemic. Theaters were closed for several months to help stop the spread of the virus, and when the company reopened its doors, few consumers felt comfortable attending screenings, and movie studios held back new releases.

Now, as vaccination rates continue to rise and the number of coronavirus cases decline, consumer confidence in returning to movie theaters has spiked. Not to mention, studios are finally releasing new content.

Over the weekend, John Krasinski’s “A Quiet Place Part II,” the sequel to his 2018 blockbuster, garnered $48.4 million over Friday, Saturday and Sunday, the highest three-day haul of any film release during the pandemic.

For the full four-day Memorial Day weekend, the North American box office tallied nearly $100 million in ticket sales.

Still, while initial box-office receipts are promising, fundamental elements of the movie theater business have changed in the last year, including theater capacity, shared release dates with streaming services and the number of days that movies play in theaters.

The securities filing from AMC, which closed Friday with a $11.8 billion market cap, also has a risk warning for investors: “Our market capitalization, as implied by various trading prices, currently reflects valuations that diverge significantly from those seen prior to recent volatility and that are significantly higher than our market capitalization immediately prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, and to the extent these valuations reflect trading dynamics unrelated to our financial performance or prospects, purchasers of our Class A common stock could incur substantial losses if there are declines in market prices driven by a return to earlier valuations.”

—With reporting by Sarah Whitten.

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Entertainment

‘Myths and Hymns,’ a Theater Cult Favourite, Adjustments Form Once more

Listening to Adam Guettel’s song cycle “Myths and Hymns,” after a year of pandemic isolation and cautiously hoping for vaccinated freedom, you might feel of a pang of recognition in the lyric “So get me up, and get me out, and let me never return,” swelling to “I’m out of here/I am going there/I am gone!”

A little timelessness is to be expected in Guettel’s songs, a genre-hopping clash of ancient Greek tales and hymnal texts that debuted in 1998 (with a brief run at the Public Theater that has taken on a mythic status of its own) and has since inspired artists to take it up in a variety of forms as simple as a recital showpiece, and as elaborate as a book musical adaptation.

The latest iteration reunites Guettel with Ted Sperling — the music director of that original production at the Public, and now the artistic director of MasterVoices, which is presenting “Myths and Hymns” as an online mini-series whose four thematically organized episodes conclude Wednesday with the premiere of “Faith.” (The whole production will remain on YouTube through June.)

In a typical season, MasterVoices marshals luminaries of Broadway and opera for concerts and semi-staged performances of both classic gems and newer works. But no production has been as starry as this “Myths and Hymns,” whose nimble eclecticism opens it up to diverse casting. (Stephen Holden, reviewing the Public performances for The New York Times, wrote that Guettel had “created a kaleidoscopically heady musical-theater piece in which Gabriel Fauré meets Stevie Wonder, Caetano Veloso embraces Earth, Wind and Fire, and they all dance together around the tribal hearth.”)

Each of the piece’s 24 songs was treated as a discrete project — with its own cast and creative team — which made it easy for performers to contribute compared with, say, a weekslong timeline for something at Carnegie Hall. Sperling cast a wide net, not getting everyone on his wish list (like James Taylor) but gathering, among many others, Kelli O’Hara, Renée Fleming, Joshua Henry, Anthony Roth Costanzo, Jennifer Holliday, John Lithgow and the group Take 6.

“It’s a pretty incredible roster,” Guettel said in a recent joint interview with Sperling. “It might be damn near impossible to get all these people together for one night onstage.”

It’s unsurprising that so many singers were willing to join the production. Guettel’s music isn’t the material of Broadway blockbusters, but it is widely beloved for its originality, even for its difficulty, leaning toward the tradition of American art song — or even the high-level writing of golden age musical theater composers like his grandfather Richard Rodgers.

O’Hara, who starred in Guettel’s 2005 musical, “The Light in the Piazza,” as well as in workshops for his work in progress “Days of Wine and Roses,” said that the word that always comes to mind with his music is “satisfying.”

“It’s so rich, and there’s so much work to it, but it begs us to take in and understand it,” said O’Hara, whose appearances in the MasterVoices production include a luxuriously cast “Migratory V” adapted as a trio for her, Fleming and the soprano Julia Bullock. “I don’t want to be spoon-fed easy melodies and things I can hum. I want ones that get inside and kill me, really. And that’s what ‘Myths and Hymns’ does for me.”

This “Myths and Hymns” is a rare opportunity to hear Guettel’s music, which has been absent on Broadway since the lushly sensuous score of “The Light in the Piazza” resounded from the pit of the Vivian Beaumont Theater. Not that he hasn’t been busy; in fact, he’s written entire musicals.

“Two of them are finished, and they’re circling La Guardia,” Guettel said, “for understandable reasons, between the pandemic and some other complications that have come up, in terms of how and where the shows were meant to be produced.” (The embattled megaproducer Scott Rudin had been attached to “Days of Wine and Roses.”)

For now, though, Guettel has been able to revisit some of his earliest music, and in a new medium. Over lunch, he and Sperling talked more about the genesis of “Myths and Hymns,” then and now, and what may be in store for the piece’s future. Here are edited excerpts from that conversation.

Was this conceived as a virtual production from the start?

TED SPERLING From the very beginning. My concept was that it should be kaleidoscopic. I wanted a lot of directors, a lot of input, a lot of difference. I didn’t even want the directors to know what they were doing.

That reflects the music’s range. Adam, can you explain how “Myths and Hymns” took this form to begin with?

ADAM GUETTEL I had been writing these myths just because I was just starting out as a writer, and you don’t know what to write. I did stuff that was tried and true. That was enough to keep me busy. Then I came across this book in an old antique shop, and it was a tiny book, the size of an iPhone. And it was just the words to a bunch of hymns. And for some reason out of this Upper West Side Jew comes all of this music to these hymn lyrics.

So there were these two stacks of things. And Tina Landau came over one day and said, “What are you working on?” and I said, “Well I’ve got these two stacks of things,” and she listened to a bunch of them and said, “Well, why wouldn’t they work together?” And we realized in some ways that the hymns are who we would have ourselves be, and the myths are basically who we are, and that they can kind of antiphonally talk to each other.

What has it been like revisiting this music?

GUETTEL I’ve gone to see a few productions, but I hadn’t listened to it in a long time. I might have had a small case of the usual “Oh my God, I did go on a bit”; “Jesus, that needs help”; “boy, those lyrics are over couplet-y.” There’s stuff that I was a little embarrassed by at first. But I let go of my vanity and let it be what it was. And there’s the honor of being a composer who wrote something 22 years ago that’s getting done again. That’s really what you write for, so that you leave something behind.

SPERLING I imagine every writer feels with more experience that their craft grows. My impression is you have to acknowledge that you were a certain person of a certain age when you wrote a piece and you keep changing, but the piece is a record of who you were then. If you try to monkey with it too much from a later perspective you run the rusk of muddying the waters.

GUETTEL You’re operating on a patient whose anatomy you’re not familiar with anymore.

In this form, “Myths and Hymns” is probably reaching its largest audience yet.

SPERLING We’re at over 50,000 now, which is way more than we would get in a season. We are planning to package it as a single work and re-edit it, and it will be broadcast on PBS.

And with such a starry cast, will there be an album, too?

GUETTEL There are six songs that are not on the Nonesuch record [released in 1999] that no one’s ever heard, except the people who saw it at the Public.

SPERLING And one of them not even that! One of my impulses to do this was that I wanted a more complete recording. People on YouTube have been asking, “Can we please have this as audio?” It would be lovely to have a little more time with it.

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Health

The Return of Dwell Theater

As vaccinations and an announcement from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have seen many use less masks, live performances are slowly returning. While Broadway won’t officially return until September, Radio City Music Hall will reopen on June 19 to host the final night of the Tribeca Film Festival (guests must be vaccinated). Across New York, venues like Park Avenue Armory and St. Ann’s Warehouse are already experimenting with socially distant open-air performances in an attempt to cautiously revive live theater.

Last year the summer stick theater festivals were canceled across the board, but this season they’re coming back, albeit with some adjustments. The Massachusetts Williamstown Theater Festival will have all of its shows outdoors, while the Utah Shakespeare Festival requires masks and offers concessions only outdoors. While the summer art season won’t look quite like 2019, theater lovers are on the verge of a welcome awakening.

“Ring of Fire” at the Rocky Mountain Repertory Theater

This Grand Lake, Colorado theater is hosting its 2021 indoor season and opens with Johnny Cash’s jukebox musical “Ring of Fire,” which debuted on Broadway in 2006. The musical with cash classics like “I. Walk the Line and Folsom Prison Blues begin a season that lasts until September and includes Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat and Little Shop of Horrors. Starts June 4, $ 45; rockymountainrep.com.

“Out on the Main: Nine Solo Pieces by Black Dramatists” at the Williamstown Theater Festival
This prestigious Berkshires festival has shaped many future stars and premiered Broadway shows such as Bradley Cooper’s headlined production of The Elephant Man. When it returns for a personal season, the debut show will be the world premiere of “Outside on Main,” directed by Wardell Julius Clark, Awoye Timpo and Candis C. Jones and curated by playwright Robert O ‘. Hara. Each performance consists of three 30-minute pieces, all written by black writers for color performers. The season starts on July 6th. The festival tickets are priced at $ 100 each and will go on sale on June 22nd. wtfestival.org/shows-events/.

“Pericles” at the Utah Shakespeare Festival

This Shakespeare festival, which is part of Southern Utah University in Cedar City, will open its 60th anniversary season “Pericles.” This season, which runs from June to October, also features Shakespeare classics such as Richard III and The Comedy of Mistakes, as well as some off-topic themes such as Pirates of Penzance and Ragtime. The season kicks off June 21, with tickets starting at $ 9. bard.org.

“The Magic Flute” at the Glimmerglass Festival

This Cooperstown, NY opera institution is moving shows from their traditional theater to a redesigned outdoor area. The season kicks off with a new version of “The Magic Flute,” but what seems to be the jewel of the festival is “The Passion of Mary Cardwell Dawson,” a world premiere starring Denyce Graves about the life of the founder of the National Negro Opera Company in Dawson Year 1941. The season kicks off July 15, with tickets starting at $ 80 for a socially detached seat that can seat up to four people. glimmerglass.org.

“A Thousand Ways (Part Two): An Encounter” in the public theater

In December, the New York Public Theater made its debut with the socially distant piece “A Thousand Ways (Part 1): An Encounter”, which connected the audience to one another via a telephone line. “Part One” was created by Abigail Browde and Michael Silverstone of the Brooklyn Theater Company 600 Highwaymen and was the first in a trilogy. Now personal participants can experience “A Thousand Ways (Part Two)”. In this experimental work the participants are brought together and follow the instructions to create a private work. June 8th-Aug. 15, $ 15; publictheater.org.

“Send what up when it goes down” from BAM

The monumental work by playwright Aleshea Harris, which debuted on Broadway in 2018, testifies to the epidemic of the black death from racial violence. With a permeable boundary between audience and actors, the play enables an emotional experience of discussion and healing. The production is presented by BAM and Playwrights Horizons in association with the Movement Theater Company. Check the website for the June opening date; bam.org.

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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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Business

Movie show chain in Los Angeles, pressured to shut by the pandemic, is not going to reopen.

ArcLight Cinemas, a popular chain of Los Angeles-based cinemas, including the historic Cinerama Dome in Hollywood, will permanently close all locations, Pacific Theaters announced on Monday after the pandemic decimated cinema business.

ArcLight’s locations in and around Hollywood have been home to many movie premieres and are popular spots for moviegoers looking for blockbusters and prestige titles. They are operated by Pacific Theaters, which also operate a handful of theaters under the Pacific name, and are owned by Decurion.

“After closing our doors more than a year ago, today we have to share the difficult and sad news that Pacific will not reopen its ArcLight cinemas and Pacific Theaters locations,” the company said in a statement.

“This was not the result anyone wanted,” he added, “but despite a tremendous amount of effort that has exhausted all potential options, the company has no viable path forward.”

Between the Pacific and ArcLight brands, the company owned 16 theaters and more than 300 screens.

The cinema business was particularly hard hit by the pandemic. But in the past few weeks, most of the country’s biggest theater chains, including AMC and Regal Cinemas, have reopened in anticipation of the list of Hollywood films to be reopened, many after repeated delays due to pandemic restrictions. There is even a hint of optimism in the air after the Warner Bros. movie “Godzilla vs. Kong” has raked in revenues of around $ 70 million since it opened over the Easter weekend.

Still, the industry’s trade organization, the National Association of Theater Owners, has long warned that the criminal closings would most likely affect smaller regional players like ArcLight and Pacific. In March, the Alamo Drafthouse Cinema chain, which operates around 40 locations nationwide, announced that it had filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, but that most locations would remain operational during the restructuring.

This does not appear to be the case with Pacific Theaters, which two knowledgeable people said they laid off all their staff on Monday.

The response to the ArcLight Hollywood closure has been emotional, including a pour out on Twitter.

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Entertainment

The Joyce Theater Broadcasts Its First Full Digital Season

Ayodele Casel will present a new work in April as part of the Joyce Theater’s online spring season. The piece follows Ms. Casel’s celebrated collaboration with jazz pianist and composer Arturo O’Farrill at Joyce in 2019.

The spring list also includes new appearances by Brooklyn-based troupe Ballez; Ephrat Asherie Dance; and Dormeshia, Jason Samuels Smith, and Derick K. Grant. Ballez’s performance of “Giselle of Loneliness”, which was originally planned for the Joyce 2020 Pride Festival, will be broadcast live and then made available upon request. The others are filmed on stage and edited slightly before being released.

In October, Dance returned to Joyce with multiple cast members including Sara Mearns and Shamel Pitts and performed Molissa Fenley’s 1988 solo “State of Darkness” on the stage of the theater for a video compilation. Since then, Pam Tanowitz Dance and Ronald K. Brown’s Evidence company have streamed live from the Chelsea theater.

“The livestreams feel like a really big step,” Joyce’s program director Aaron Mattocks said in an interview. “It was important for the field to get some of these companies up and running again and to show that it can be done.”

The staging of works exclusively for the virtual audience is expensive and “the return is very, very low”.

“I don’t think it’s a sustainable model for the future,” he said.

In addition to the performances taped in the theater, the Joyce will stream digital programs throughout the spring from the Paris Opera Ballet, Batsheva Dance Company, Step Afrika !, Trisha Brown Dance Company, and others.

For more information, including the full schedule, please visit joyce.org.

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Health

Methods to Take pleasure in Theater Nearly

Another time would be the start of Broadway’s much-anticipated spring season. The cast would drop their scripts, the fans would plan their show schedules, and the reviewers would sharpen their pens. Sadly, Broadway and many theaters around the world are on their longest hiatus in history, but to keep the industry alive big stars are taking the virtual stage and much-lauded past productions are available to stream. These productions cannot be compared to the energy of a full theater, but what accessibility they make is not to be underestimated. The theater community is currently experiencing a devastating loss, but their ability to innovate, invent and continue to create joy gives great hope for what will return.

“Medea”
The surprising exclusion of Michaela Coel’s “I May Destroy You” from the Golden Globe nominations only drew more attention to the actor, director and writer’s unique talent. Current streaming offers from the National Theater in London include the 2014 production of “Medea”, which starred Coel as the nurse for Helen McCrory’s title character in the famous story of a woman’s revenge on her stray husband. The production also features an intense score by Will Gregory and Alison Goldfrapp, the pairing behind the music duo Goldfrapp. Available for three days to stream for $ 9.99. ntathome.com/products/medea

’25 Years of Rent: Measured in Love ‘ If your kids think “Hamilton” was the first musical to surpass the genre, introduce them to the 1996 cult hit that lasted for over a decade. The New York Theater Workshop’s annual gala celebrates Rent’s 25th anniversary with a virtual concert that brings together an impressive cast of the show’s original cast, including Idina Menzel, Daphne Rubin-Vega, Jesse L. Martin and Anthony Rapp. They are joined by an all-star cast of Rent fans including Neil Patrick Harris, Lin-Manuel Miranda, Billy Porter and Jeremy O. Harris. The program will also honor the creator of Rent, Jonathan Larson, who died on the morning of the show’s first performance at the age of 35. March 2nd, 8pm East and available until March 6th. Tickets start at $ 25. nytw.org/

“Elaine Stritch at Liberty”

BroadwayHD streaming service has hundreds of live performances (available for a monthly fee of $ 9 or $ 100 per year). A special gem in the mix, however, is Elaine Stritch’s rough autobiographical show from 2001, which combines stories about her unique life with some of her most popular songs, most notably “The Ladies Who Lunch” by “Company”. Filmed in London’s Old Vic in 2002, this bioshow recounts her Broadway victories as well as her battle against alcoholism and her many rocky romances. broadwayhd.com/movies/AW2GxBd-px3F9_4Aqe1K

‘Frederick Douglass: My eyes have seen the fame’

As part of the Black History Trilogy, a series of virtual productions from Flushing Town Hall in Queens, 2019 Tony winner André De Shields will portray Frederick Douglass in a rousing one-man performance. The transcendent “Hadestown” star also wrote the show, which examines the abolitionist leader’s accomplishments and ingenuity, as well as the darkness and horror he experienced. The program follows Flushing Town Hall’s Divine Sass: A Tribute to the Music, Life and Legacy of Sarah Vaughan by Lillias White on February 18. All performances are free. February 26, 7 p.m., flushingtownhall.org/black-history-trilogy-iii

“An evening with Ali Stroker from the Enlow Recital Hall”

Ali Stroker, who shone in her performance in the 2019 revival of “Oklahoma!” And won one of the best actresses Tony for the role of Ado Annie, will perform on the stage at Kean University in New Jersey for a night of classics the Great American Songbook. Stroker, the first person to win a Tony with a wheelchair, will sing favorites from Stephen Sondheim, Carole King, Rodgers and Hammerstein, and Lin-Manuel Miranda during the livestream event. February 27 at 7:30 a.m. Tickets $ 25, kean.universitytickets.com