Some ticket levels include access to Sleep No More, and on Saturday there will be a Hitchcock-inspired dinner banquet prior to the party. There will also be surprise guests, a massive dance party, and an open bar until 4 a.m. The entire hotel will be made over into a cinema-scape, loaded with surreal surprises, strange installations, dazzling theatrics, and unique performers, all inspired by the Master of Suspense. Glitz it up at the McKittrick Hotel for a frightfully glamorous Hitchcock Halloween, a three-night series of suspenseful soirées evoking Hollywood’s Golden Age. New York Public Library, 476 Fifth Ave., Manhattan // Tickets: $15 Show up early to enter the literary costume parade and contest, judged by fashion mentor Tim Gunn and local librarians Ricci Yuhico and Isaiah Pittman.įriday, October 25th, 7 p.m. Have a very literary Halloween at the New York Public Library’s Halloween Masquerade, billed as the city’s “most cerebral happy hour.” Nosh on treats and sip drinks while checking out creepy items from the library’s archive, watching spooky 16mm films, and listening to horror writers Samantha Hunt, Alice Sola Kim, Victor LaValle, and Kelly Link read their favorite scary stories. Halloween Masquerade New York Public Library Thursday, October 24th, through Sunday, October 27th // Snug Harbor Cultural Center, 1000 Richmond Terr., Staten Island // Various prices There will also be tours of different cultural spaces, plus trick-or-treating all day Saturday at all the participating museums and galleries. Halloweekend at Snug Harbor features storytelling sessions, activities like Candy Chromatography and Create Your Monster, and four days of movie screenings, from Bedknobs and Broomsticks to A Girl Walks Home at Night to Creature from the Black Lagoon. Halloweekend at Snug Harbor Snug Harbor Cultural Centerīring the tykes to Staten Island for four days of spooky movies, crafts, haunted history, and more. Opens Thursday, October 24th // New York City Center, 131 West 55th St., Manhattan // Tickets: $35 and up The whole performance features live accompaniment from the Orchestra of St. The program includes two NY premieres: the offbeat and lighthearted The Letter V, choreographed by Mark Morris, and the bright and ebullient Reflections, choreographed by Justin Peck, as well as the all-male ensemble piece Come In, originally created for Mikhail Baryshnikov’s Hell’s Kitchen Dance project. Tickets: $69–$98Ĭelebrating its 50th-anniversary season this year, the Houston Ballet will perform in New York for the first time since 2013. Brooklyn Botanic Garden, Yellow Magnolia Café, 1000 Washington Ave. If that’s not enough apple goodness, each course can also be paired with hand-selected hard ciders. Among the dishes are parsnip and apple veloute shooters, citrus-cured arctic char with compressed apples and kohlrabi, apple-stuffed sunchokes, smoked whiskey-lacquered pork belly with apple pommes anna, and lots more. Indulge in a slew of seasonal fare at the Autumnal Apple Dinner, five fruitful courses designed by executive chef Sarah Flynn. John’s Pl., Brooklyn // FreeĪutumnal Apple Dinner Brooklyn Botanic Garden Get there early to grab $5 drafts and to enter a raffle to win some of the presenters’ books. The readers include three novelists: Susan Steinberg, Mesha Maren, and Rachel Eve Moulton, as well as two authors from the anthology Indelible in the Hippocampus: Writings from the Me Too Movement: editor Shelly Oria and contributor Hafizah Geter. Head over to the always excellent Franklin Park Reading Series, which this month presents five powerhouse females. BRIC House, 647 Fulton St., Brooklyn // Various pricesįranklin Park Reading Series Franklin Park Then there are the music marathons, with performers including Ravi Coltrane, Georgia Anne Muldrow, Makaya McCraven, Kneebody, and a supergroup featuring Joe Russo, Ben Perowsky, Josh Kaufman and Stuart Bogie. Browne, and continues with the Jazz Film Series, screening Blue Note Records: Beyond the Notes and the Aretha Franklin live performance film, Amazing Grace. The fest opens with the Brooklyn Poetry Slam, hosted by activist and educator Mahogany L. Groove it out at the fifth-annual BRIC JazzFest, a week of movies, talks, and spoken-word poetry leading up to three nights of live music from 21 different groups.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply.AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |