Saturday, February 20, 2021

Save Our Stages Part 2



More performance space during the pandemic. The exciting news is that I and this series will be featured on the Urban Sketchers YouTube Channel. It's goes live tomorrow, February 21, at 10 AM EST. I've heard from a lot of theater workers who are really responding to these pieces, and the interview series I've done (which will be in the next post.)


There are some small glimpses of hope on the horizon. The State of New York will be sponsoring these pop-up performance series, and the City of New York will be allowing permits for venues to have outdoor ticketed shows. The new administration has a series relief plan in the works, and of course, the vaccine is rolling out. It's still going to be a long, long road back for all these places.






































Radio City Music Hall, home of the Rockettes, a 5960-seat music hall. Designed by Edward Durell Stone and Donald Deskey, it opened on December 27, 1932. It was designated a New York City Landmark in 1978.


































The Orpheum Theatre is a 299-seat theater that has been in the Lower East Side since the early 20th-Century. By 1904, it was the Yiddish-language Player’s Theatre, part of the “Jewish Rialto'' along 2nd Ave. In the 1920s, it became a filmhouse, but was back to live performance by 1958. Among the shows that played here were the original Little Shop of Horrors, Eric Bogosian’s Sex, Drugs, Rock & Roll, John Leguizamo’s Mambo Mouth, David Mamet’s Oleanna, and Sandra Bernhard’s Without You I’m Nothing. It has been home to Stomp since 1994, having performed over 10,000 performances before the shutdown.





The Wild Project is the smallest venue in this series with just 89 seats. The building was originally a bottle factory. When I first came to New York, there were lots of little theaters like this, where small companies and independent artists could mount a production for not a lot of money. Over the years, they’ve dwindled due to economic pressures, and during the pandemic, even more have closed.


































Queens Theatre, located in Flushing Meadows Corona Park. It is housed in a remnant of the 1964 World’s Fair, the former Theaterama, near the Unisphere. Behind it loom the Observation Towers and the Tent of Tomorrow. You might recognize those towers from the 1997 movie Men In Black, where they were revealed to be flying saucers in disguise. I used to do quite a bit of work out there.


























HERE Arts Center was founded in 1993. I worked there for several years in the early 2000s.  I believe the building used to be a mattress factory. Eve Ensler’s The Vagina Monologues debuted here. It presents dozens of shows each year: theater, dance, music, puppetry, and contemporary opera, and uncategorizable performance.





While on a cruise to Scotland in 1887, composer Walter and his wife Louise Damrosch asked steel magnate Andrew Carnegie to build a new home for music in NYC. Carnegie Hall opened on May 5, 1891, with Pyotr Ilych Tchaikovsky conducting his own music in his American debut. It quickly became one of the most prestigious venues for showcasing both classical and popular music. By the late 1950s it had fallen into disrepair and was slated for demolition. It was saved by a campaign led by violinist Issac Stern and other civic leaders. The building was purchased by the City of New York in 1960 and leased to the non-profit Carnegie Hall Corporation. It was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1962 and a NYC Historical Landmark in 1967. The building contains three halls, the largest of which is six stories tall with five levels of audience, seating 2,804. I just saw on the news today that for the first time in its history, Carnegie Hall has cancelled its entire season, at least until October of 2021.


























Theater For The New City was founded in 1971 as an off-shoot of the Judson Poets Theatre. It was named after a speech by Mayor John Lindsay that envisioned a ‘new city’ for all. It is known for presenting radical political plays and community involvement. It moved to the former First Avenue Retail Market building in 1986. The building was built in 1938 by the Work Projects Administration as part of a project to replace informal pushcart markets. These markets were crowded, filthy, and plagued by corruption. Mayor LaGuardia pushed for reform of the markets, and used the WPA to build a series of permanent marketplaces, including the First Ave. Market, the Fulton Fish Market, the Bronx Terminal Market, and the Gansevoort Market. At the time that Theater For The New City occupied the building, it was being used as storage for the Sanitation Department.





Arlene’s Grocery is a bar and music venue in the Lower East Side. It opened 1995 in a building that had previously housed a Puerto Rican bodega and a butcher shop. The venue took its name from the bodega, the signage of which still remains. It became a main component of the local NYC music scene and an important incubator of unsigned rock bands, helping to further the careers of artists such as Lady Gaga, Jeff Buckley, Lana Del Rey, Arcade Fire, and The Strokes.





Richard Rodgers Theatre was built in 1925. It’s a 1321-seat Broadway house, named after the composer who, in partnership with Lorenzo Hart and Oscar Hammerstein, created dozens of musicals, including Oklahoma!, The Sound of Music, and many more. Guys and Dolls, Damn Yankees, How To Succeed in Business Without Really Trying, Chicago, and In The Heights are among the classic shows that premiered here. Hamilton was in the midst of its blockbuster run when Broadway was shuttered.



























Guggenheim Bandshell in Damrosch Park, part of the Lincoln Center complex. Damrosch Park was named after a family of prominent musicians. It opened in 1969. In the summer it hosts Lincoln Center Out Of Doors and the outdoor dance party, Midsummer Night Swing. It used to be the site of the Big Apple Circus and Fashion Week.


Friday, February 12, 2021

Gong Hei Fat Choy

Happy Lunar New Year! It's the Year of The Ox.









Wing On Wo & Co. is the oldest continuously-run business in New York’s Chinatown. It is run by the fifth-generation of the same family and employs family members and long-time local residents. In 1890, Walter Eng founded a general store on Mott St. He purchased this building at 26 Mott St. in 1920. His daughter took over in 1964,and began selling porcelain sourced through Hong Kong. In 2015, the family was about to sell the building, but Eng’s great-great-granddaughter Mei Lum took over management of the store. She also created the WOW Project, an initiative for community-engagement and historical and cultural preservation.

More About Wing On Wo:

NY Times: Family Shop in Chinatown Stays in Family Wing On Wo Co.

The Guardian: Inside New York's Oldest Store In Chinatown

The W.O.W. Project