Sunday, January 4, 2009

Broadway Goes Dimmer With The Closing of HAIRSPRAY and Several Other Shows



The final curtain came down earlier today on the Tony Award-winning musical HAIRSPRAY after the matinee performance at the Neil Simon Theatre. I took the photos of the marquee earlier during the final matinee performance.
From Playbill.com:
The colorful '60s-set musical based on the 1988 John Waters film comedy will have played 31 previews and 2,641 regular performances by its close. In late 2008 original Tony-winning stars Harvey Fierstein (Best Actor in a Musical) and Marissa Jaret Winokur (Best Actress in a Musical) returned to play zaftig Baltimore mother and daughter Edna and Tracy Turnblad, respectively. On hand at the closing performance will be many former Hairspray cast members, including Laura Bell Bundy, Kerry Butler, Mary Bond Davis, Shannon Durig, Linda Hart, Jackie Hoffman, Aubrey O'Day and George Wendt, plus the show's creators, including librettists Mark O'Donnell and Thomas Meehan, composer and co-lyricist Marc Shaiman, lyricist Scott Wittman, choreographer Jerry Mitchell and director Jack O'Brien.
The other shows that closed today are Grease, Young Frankenstein, Dividing the Estate, 39 Steps, 13, White Christmas, and Liza's at the Palace (Liza Minnelli), some as scheduled, and some as a result of declining audiences in grim economic times.

Record Tourism in NYC in 2008




During the past holiday season, I made images of huge crowds inside Grand Central Station and on Fifth Avenue's shopping district. It turns out that NYC scored a record 47 million tourists in 2008 despite the global economic downturn.
From Travelagentcentral.com
New York City attracted an estimated 47 million visitors and earned $30 billion in total spending in 2008, both record highs, according to NYC & Company, the city’s marketing, tourism, and partnership organization. The 2008 figures surpass the 46 million visitors and $28.9 billion New York City attracted in 2007.
International tourism accounted for the increase, with an additional 1 million international visitors coming to the city in 2008, bringing the total to 9.8 million. This past year, NYC & Company reports it completed its planned global expansion to 25 international markets, launched domestic and international marketing campaigns, and opened new convention sales offices in California and Illinois.
Last year, the city surpassed top destinations such as Orlando and Las Vegas to rank number one in tourism spending in the U.S. for the first time. NYC & Company projects record tourism numbers will keep New York in the top spot for 2008.
New York City’s hotel occupancy rates continued to top the national average in 2008 by at least 20 percentage points despite the economic downturn. The city added 1,800 net rooms to its hotel inventory, bringing the total to roughly 75,600 rooms, and, in 2008, room demand increased 2 percent. Through September, attendance at New York City visitor attractions and cultural organizations rose 14 percent over the same period last year, according to NYC & Company estimates.
“Despite the economic challenges all cities are facing, tourism remains a bright spot for New York City,” said Mayor Michael Bloomberg. “To be sure, the ongoing downturn will weigh on New York City’s hospitality industry as people all over the world cut back on travel, but the investments we’ve made to promote New York City will continue to pay dividends, now more than ever. The number of overseas travelers coming to New York City continues to rise, and now roughly a third of all who come to the U.S. come to New York. The importance of diversifying our economy is clearer today than ever, and we will continue to make strategic investments to promote New York City and keep it the place travelers want to come.”

Saturday, January 3, 2009

"theanyspacewhatever" at the GUGGENHEIM MUSEUM

On exhibit at the GUGGENHEIM MUSEUM until January 7th is "thespacewhatever." This exhibit includes a drowning Pinocchio called "DADDY DADDY" (pictured above) by MAURIZIO CATTELAN.
From the GUGGENHEIM website:
OCTOBER 24, 2008–JANUARY 7, 2009
During the 1990s, a number of artists claimed the exhibition itself as a medium. Working independently and in various collaborative constellations, they eschewed the discrete aesthetic object in favor of the exhibition environment as a dynamic arena, ever expanding in its physical and temporal parameters. For these artists, an exhibition can be a film, a novel, a shared meal, a social space, a performance, or a journey. Using the museum as a platform for projects that reach beyond the visual arts, their work often commingles with disciplines such as architecture, design, and theater, engaging directly with the vicissitudes of everyday life to offer subtle moments of transformation.

The Guggenheim’s exhibition, theanyspacewhatever, brings together 10 artists who exemplify this creative impulse: Angela Bulloch, Maurizio Cattelan, Liam Gillick, Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster, Douglas Gordon, Carsten Höller, Pierre Huyghe, Jorge Pardo, Philippe Parreno, and Rirkrit Tiravanija. While these artists all employ markedly different aesthetic strategies and do not constitute a formally affiliated group, their varying practices are conceptually unified by a desire to shift the terms of artistic practice beyond mimetic representation, and in doing so engender a kind of activated spectatorship. Invited to collectively formulate a scenario for an exhibition, they determined, in discussion with Nancy Spector, Chief Curator, that the presentation should comprise a series of individual projects that intersect and overlap in the museum’s spiraling rotunda. This layered installation thus reflects the dialectic between the group and the individual that informs their shared histories.

This exhibition is sponsored by Hugo Boss. Additional support is provided by The Waldorf=Astoria Collection; The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts; Etant donnés: The French-American Fund for Contemporary Art, a program of FACE; and The Grand Marnier Foundation. The Guggenheim Museum gratefully acknowledges the Leadership Committee for theanyspacewhatever.

ABERCROMBIE & FITCH Flagship Store Greeter, Fifth Avenue, New York City





The store greeter at the Abercrombie and Fitch Flagship Store located at 720 Fifth Avenue. Still shirtless in December! A & F is one of the most successful specialty retailer in operation today. Photo taken December 28, 2008.

Friday, January 2, 2009

Holiday Train Show at the New York Transit Museum Gallery Annex and Store








Currently on display at the New York Transit Museum Gallery Annex and Store at Grand Central Terminal is the Annual Holiday Train Show which runs through January 19. I made these images of the train models in motion when I visited the show during the holiday season. To delight children of all ages, multiple o-gauge model train sets take a magical journey from Grand Central Terminal to the North Pole with stops at subway and train stations along the way towards the ultimate destination, Santa's workshop! 

Lionel’s brand new models of Metro-North M7 railroad cars and New York City Transit R27 subway cars, available for purchase in the Museum's Store, are being featured in this years layout, along with a new scale model of the Brooklyn Bridge, an elevated trestle, six new buildings, and an underground subway that is twice as large as last year. Admission to the exhibition is free.
Hours:
Monday – Friday: 8 AM to 8 PM
Saturday – Sunday: 10 AM to 6 PM
Closed: major holidays and for special events
Phone
(212) 878-0106
Admission
Free
Directions
Located just off the main concourse in the Shuttle Passage, adjacent to the Station Masters' Office

Thursday, January 1, 2009

Mozart's THE MAGIC FLUTE at the METROPOLITAN OPERA


Dimitri Pittas as Tamino, taking his bow



The gorgeous ceiling and chandelier at The Metropolitan Opera
We celebrated New Year's Eve by attending a matinee performance of JULIE TAYMOR's spellbinding production of Mozart’s operatic fairy tale, THE MAGIC FLUTE at the METROPOLITAN OPERA. This abridged English-language production, with four matinee performances, features colorful costumes and puppets. The production is delightful and enchanting, and kid-friendly. The new English translation is by J.D. McClatchy.
Synopsis:
Three ladies in the service of the Queen of the Night save the fainting Prince Tamino from a serpent (Introduction: “A serpent! A monster!”). When they leave to tell the queen, the bird catcher Papageno bounces in and boasts to Tamino that it was he who killed the creature (“I’m Papageno”). The ladies return to give Tamino a portrait of the queen’s daughter, Pamina, who they say is enslaved by the evil Sarastro, and they padlock Papageno’s mouth for lying. Tamino falls in love with Pamina’s face in the portrait (“This portrait’s beauty”). The queen, appearing in a burst of thunder, is grieving over the loss of her daughter; she charges Tamino with Pamina’s rescue (“My fate is grief”). The ladies give a magic flute to Tamino and silver bells to Papageno to ensure their safety, appointing three spirits to guide them (Quintet: “Hm! hm! hm! hm!”).
Sarastro’s slave Monostatos pursues Pamina (Duet: “You will not dare escape”) but is frightened away by the feather-covered Papageno, who tells Pamina that Tamino loves her and is on his way to save her. Led by the three spirits to the Temple of Sarastro, Tamino is advised by a high priest that it is the queen, not Sarastro, who is evil. Hearing that Pamina is safe, Tamino charms the animals with his flute, then rushes to follow the sound of Papageno’s pipes. Monostatos and his cohorts chase Papageno and Pamina but are left helpless by Papageno’s magic bells. Sarastro, entering in great ceremony (Chorus: “Long life to Sarastro”), promises Pamina eventual freedom and punishes Monostatos. Pamina is enchanted by a glimpse of Tamino, who is led into the temple with Papageno.
Sarastro tells his priests that Tamino will undergo initiation rites (“O Isis and Osiris”). Monostatos tries to kiss the sleeping Pamina (“Men were born to be great lovers”). He is discovered by the Queen of the Night, who dismisses him. She gives her daughter a dagger with which to murder Sarastro (“Here in my heart, Hell’s bitterness”).
Sarastro confronts and then consoles the weeping Pamina (“Within our sacred temple”). Tamino and Papageno are told by a priest that they must remain silent and refrain from eating, a vow that Papageno immediately breaks when he takes a glass of water from a flirtatious old lady. The old lady vanishes when he asks her name. The three spirits appear to guide Tamino through the rest of his journey and to tell Papageno to be quiet. Tamino remains silent even when Pamina appears, which breaks her heart since she cannot understand his reticence (“Now my heart is filled with sadness”).
The priests inform Tamino that he has only two more trials to complete his initiation (Trio: “Why, beloved, must we part?”). Papageno longs for a cuddly wife but settles for the old lady. When he promises to be faithful she turns into a young Papagena but immediately disappears.
After many dangers, Pamina and Tamino are reunited and face the ordeals of water and fire protected by the magic flute.
Papageno is saved from attempted suicide by the spirits, who remind him that if he uses his magic bells he will find true happiness. When he does, Papagena appears and the two plan for the future and move into a bird’s nest (Duet: “Pa-pa-pa…”). The Queen of the Night, her three ladies, and Monostatos attack the temple but are defeated and banished. Sarastro joins Pamina and Tamino as the people hail Isis, Osiris, and the triumph of courage, virtue, and wisdom..