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A Guided Tour for a Wannabe Collector at Art Basel Miami

MIAMI BEACH- “Walk towards the painting,” the art advisor Liz Klein instructed, referring to a large Gerhard Richter work, one of his “Strip Paintings.”

As I neared the two-paneled photo print, the bright red, green, blue, yellow and white horizontal lines filled my field of vision, squeezing out any sense of depth. “It's an optical illusion,” she explained. Ms. Klein and Lily Siegel, assistant curator of modern and contemporary art at the High Museum of Art in Atlanta, were providing a tour of some highlights of the Art Basel Miami fair on Thursday. I had asked the two women to imagine I was a newly minted multimillionaire who was interested in collecting, but didn't know where to begin. I wanted a 45-minute primer on how to look at a work of art.

The Richter, on display at the Marian Goodman gallery, was a good starti ng point, they explained. As one of the most important abstract painters of the past 40 years, Mr. Richter is often credited with reinventing painting. Part of the generation that grew up in postwar Germany, he started his career doing photo-realist paintings and has continued playing with optics, perspective and color. At 80, Mr. Richter could be resting on his laurels, Ms. Klein said, but instead he is experimenting with a new medium. Mr. Richter's paintings are highly sought after and can command $20 and $30 million. These photo prints, which Mr. Richter calls paintings, start at a more affordable $2.2 million. For a private collector who is interested in optics, color and abstraction, “this is a beautiful unique work with a real physical presence,” Ms. Klein said.

And a highly established artist like Richter could provide some security for the skittish investor, Ms. Siegel added: “Any major institution has a Richter in it.”

Next on the walking tour wa s Anish Kapoor. He, too, is interested in optics. “Lost,” a large concave half circle in turquoise was on display at the Meyer Riegger gallery.

Ms. Siegel said that Mr. Kapoor really made his name with a commission he created for the Millennial Park in Chicago called “Cloudgate” (think of a giant silver jellybean). He has frequently produced concave circles like “Lost,” Ms. Klein said, playing with different colors and finishes. The piece has an audio aspect as well. Once again I walked towards the work, noticing how the blue erased any sense of depth. When I mentioned that it felt like being submerged in an ocean, my words bounced off the half shell and echoed.

“The idea of a physical experience makes the art seem accessible,” Ms. Klein noted. And at 76 inches by 76 inches, it could fit in an apartment. It was listed for under $1.3 million.

Next we walked over to David Kordansky's gallery. “This is a good gallery to watch for the next big artist,” Ms. Siegel said.

Ms. Klein explained that “part of what makes an artist interesting is the ability to tap into many different techniques, references and periods of art history and then synthesize them into a new language.”

Ms. Siegel called it “an intelligent dialogue with the past.” The pointed to the work of a Swiss artist, Mai-Thu Perret. Her highly polished glazed ceramics in pink and deep red reference minimalism, but through a traditionally feminine medium and colors. Another work used reflective silver, part of a trend of mirrored platinum finishes of which Ms. Siegel and Ms. Klein approved.

Ms. Perret also experimented with painting large Warhol-like Rorschach blots that tapped into a heroic, masculine tradition, Ms. Klein said. By using cheap acrylic carpet, the artist was also playing with t he industrial materials that male minimalists artists pioneered. Her prices ranged from $17,000 to $35,000.

With time running out, we made one final stop, at the Friedrich Petzel gallery to look at Dana Schutz's painting “Getting Dressed All at Once.” Ms. Schutz, who is in her mid-30s, currently has a show at the Denver Art Museum. Figurative painting has been out of fashion, Ms. Klein said, but Ms. Schutz offers something fresh. The idea of getting dressed all at once communicates a sense of the frenetic pace of contemporary life. “You get a sense of movement, with the figure butting up against the edges of the canvas,” Ms. Klein said. The artist also employs weird sculptural forms that make the limbs look as if they have no musculature, she said.

My advisers noted that her work referenced Picasso's portraits of his mistress Marie-Thérèse from the 1930s and de Kooning's undone women. “There is a very contemporary sensibility and use of color that successfully bridges the past and present,” Ms. Siegel said. It was priced at $125,000.

There were many more galleries and artists on their list, but as many art collectors note, it is easy to get so over-saturated that the individual pieces begin to merge together. Besides, everyone had to start getting ready for the evening's parties.



Midtown Zoning Plan May Imperil Historical Buildings

Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg's push to increase development in east Midtown would threaten some of the very buildings that give the neighborhood its character, preservation groups and community boards warn.

InterContinental New York Barclay, 111 East 48th Street.David W. Dunlap/The New York Times InterContinental New York Barclay, 111 East 48th Street.

The buildings include the Barclay Hotel, the Yale Club, Brooks Brothers flagship store and the Graybar Building, which many New Yorkers may think - incorrectly - are protected as landmarks already.

The proposal is intended to provide a legacy of the Bloomberg administration by ensuring that the area around Grand Central Terminal stays on a competitive footing with business centers worldwide. It would increase the maximum allowable building density by 60 percent for some large sites near the terminal. Potential density would be increased 44 percent along an 11-block stretch of Park Avenue. Lesser increases would take effect elsewhere in the area between East 39th and East 57th Streets and between Fifth and Second Avenues, although most of the easternmost residential blocks would not be affected.

Such increases in density - meaning higher potential profits for landlords down the road - would give builders an incentive to spend the time and money needed to assemble large development parcels and then empty and demolish the buildings on them. The New York City Planning Department has identified projected and potential development sites in the area (on page 26 of this PDF).

In turn, the Municipal Art Society and the New York Landmarks Conservancy pinpointed more than a dozen buildings over which the shadow of demolition would most likely fall.

“What one would not want to have happen is for the district to become solely a place about Class A office space,” said Vin Cipolla, president of the Municipal Art Society. “Great neighborhoods are not monocultures.”

It is too early to break out the violin, hard hat and safety goggles. The rezoning proposal is not yet under formal review and will not take effect immediately even if it is adopted next year. By then, a number of buildings identified as vulnerable by preservationists may well have been designated official landmarks.

Among these are the Yale Club, 50 Vanderbilt Avenue; the InterContinental New York Barclay (originally the Barclay Hotel), 111 East 48th Street; the New York Marriott East Side (originally the Shelton), 525 Lexington Avenue; the Graybar Building, 420 Lexington Avenue; the Postum Building, 250 Park Avenue; and the Pershing Square Building, 125 Park Avenue.

The Pershing Square Building, 125 Park Avenue.David W. Dunlap/The New York Times The Pershing Square Building, 125 Park Avenue.

These buildings were constructed in the 1910s and 1920s, after the opening of Grand Central Terminal transformed the character of Midtown. Collectively, they speak of the district's history as a neighborhood of large corporations and small businesses, of hotels, men's clubs and men's clothing stores.

The private, 119-year-old Municipal Art Society, which has not figured as prominently in local landmark battles in recent years as it once did, now seems to have returned to the civic fray with a list of 17 buildings it contends warrant consideration for landmark status, including all six noted above.

“We are trying to make the city understand how important it is that the past is incorporated into this vision of a soaring future - and not just remnant pieces of the past,” said Ronda Wist, the vice president of the society for preservation and government relations. “Vibrancy, diversity and character are what we're aiming to see preserved.â €

In its East Midtown Study, the City Planning Department identified aging office buildings with low ceilings as inhibiting the district in its potential for attracting and keeping jobs.

An official of the conservancy, Alex Herrera, whose 16-building preservation list includes many that are also on the Municipal Art Society's list, said, “The conservancy believes that these structures are not obsolete, low-ceilinged disposable construction, but rather represent some of the best architecture in the area, designed by distinguished architects.”

The Lexington New York City (red roof), New York Marriott East Side (green roof) and Citigroup Center.David W. Dunla p/The New York Times The Lexington New York City (red roof), New York Marriott East Side (green roof) and Citigroup Center.

Preservationists are not the only ones concerned by the implications of the mayor's rezoning proposal. In a collective statement of principles, Community Boards 4, 5 and 6 raised the question of what would happen to the pre-eminence of other landmarks if high-density skyscrapers were to start sprouting around Grand Central Terminal. “Does this proposal consider the effect on our skyline?” the boards asked. “Does the Chrysler or Empire State Building deserve any special protections?”

Both the Planning Department and the landmarks agency said they were conscious of the historical value of buildings in east Midtown. The landmarks commission is studying the eligibility of many of these structures for designation.

“The city recognizes that a significant part of east Midtown's success and cache t comes from the remarkable collection of historic and iconic buildings that are found here,” said Rachaele Raynoff, a spokeswoman for Amanda M. Burden, the director of city planning and chairwoman of the City Planning Commission. “Part of east Midtown's attraction is its mix of old and new. Our goal is to complement this existing character with a handful of new modern office buildings over the course of 20 years that may eventually become ‘landmarks' in their own right.”



Producers Back \'Pippin\'

Veteran Broadway producers have signed on as backers of the American Repertory Theater's new staging of “Pippin” in Cambridge, Mass., increasing the likelihood that the musical - a beloved 1972 show that burnished the reputations of the composer Stephen Schwartz and the director Bob Fosse - will return to New York this spring for the first time since the original production closed in 1977. Barry Weissler, the Tony Award-winning producer of the Broadway revival of “Chicago” and many other musicals, said on Thursday that he and his wife, Fran, along with producers Howard and Janet Kagan, had provided enhancement money to support “Pippin” at the nonprofit American Repertory. Such a business deal enables them to put together a commercial production of “Pippin” for Broadway.

Mr. Weissler said that no plan for Broadway was in place, though other theater industry executives say he is talking to Broadway theater owners about a house for “Pippin”; Mr. Weis sler declined to comment on a Broadway theater or timing for a possible move to New York. The revival, directed by Diane Paulus (“The Gershwins' Porgy and Bess”) and featuring a collaboration with the Montreal circus troupe 7 Fingers, began performances on Wednesday at the American Repertory, where Ms. Paulus is artistic director. The musical, about the son of the French king Charlemagne, has music and lyrics by Mr. Schwartz (“Wicked”) and a book by Roger O. Hirson.



Lhota Boasts in Washington of M.T.A. Success but Is Quiet on Any Political Dreams

Joseph J. Lhota, the chairman of the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, has been mentioned as a potential candidate for mayor following his agency's performance after Hurricane Sandy.Hiroko Masuike/The New York Times Joseph J. Lhota, the chairman of the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, has been mentioned as a potential candidate for mayor following his agency's performance after Hurricane Sandy.

WASHINGTON - As enthusiasm builds in certain political quarters for a mayoral bid by Joseph J. Lhota, no one seems more eager to highlight his achievements as head of the Metropolitan Transportation Authority than Mr. Lhota himself.

Mr. Lhota traveled to Washington on Thursday to make the case to lawmakers for federal aid in the wake of Hurricane Sandy - and to put a plug in for his agency and its nimble response to the storm's devastation.

As Mr. Lhota detailed the damage caused to the mass transit system before a Senate subcommittee, he also peppered his testimony with reminders of his hands-on approach to storm preparations, and of the time he spent reviewing the destruction during the thick of the storm.

“At the height of the superstorm's surge, Governor Cuomo and I met at the Hugh L. Carey Brooklyn-Battery Tunnel in Lower Manhattan, and what we saw there was truly unbelievable,” he said. “We watched as more than 86 million gallons of sea water flooded the two tubes of that tunnel alone.”

He added that “just as this superstorm was unprecedented, so was the level of our preparation.” He noted the agency's success at getting some buses, commuter trains and subway lines running between 7 and 36 hours after the storm had passed.

“I could not have been more proud of the work of the M.T.A.,” he said, appearing at a sparsely attended hearing convened by a subcommittee of Senate transportation committee.

But speaking to reporters after the hearing, Mr. Lhota was not eager to discuss any plans he might have to seek the Republican nomination next year to succeed Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg.

Instead, he insisted that his main focus was on trying to “get the M.T.A. back up and running again.”

“Why do you guys want to talk about politics in Washington?” he said with more than a hint of irony in his tone.

His comments came a day after The New York Times reported that Mr. Lhota, who has been praised for his role in the recovery efforts, was seriously considering a run for mayor after top business leaders in the city reached out to him to gauge his interest.

For all his efforts to deflect questions about a possible candidacy, Mr. Lhota at one point seemed to acknowledge he was mulling one, telling reporters that “the time will come when I make a decision.” But mostly, he stuck to his script: that now is not the time for those kinds of discussions.

“As you know, under the public authorities law, I'm not allowed to even talk about running for public office,” said Mr. Lhota, who was a deputy mayor under Rudolph W. Giuliani. “I have not thought about it at all.”



\'Honeymooners\' Musical To Open in San Diego

A new musical based on the beloved 1950s sitcom “The Honeymooners” will be produced next fall at the Old Globe theater in San Diego.

Ralph Kramden, the portly bus driver with big dreams and small means, will be played by Michael McGrath, the Broadway funnyman who won a Tony award for “Nice Work If You Can Get It.”

No announcement has been made yet about who will play Ralph's long-suffering wife Alice, nor their friends Ed and Trixie Norton. The musical's premiere will open the Old Globe's season on Sept. 22, with previews starting Sept. 8, the theater announced.

Jerry Mitchell (“Kinky Boots,” “Legally Blonde”) will direct and choreograph the show, which has a book by Dusty Kay and Bill Nuss, music by Step hen Weiner and lyrics by Peter Mills.

In the musical, Ralph and Norton (played by Jackie Gleason and Art Carney on TV) enter a jingle contest and, much to the chagrin of their wives, end up winning. This catapults them from their working-class jobs in Brooklyn into the backstabbing world of Madison Avenue, where they find themselves torn between success and friendship.

A private presentation of “The Honeymooners” was scheduled Thursday and Friday in New York for theater producers and others in the industry. Among those joining Mr. McGrath for the presentation are the Tony-nominated actor Christopher Fitzgerald (“Finian's Rainbow,” “Young Frankenstein”) as Norton and Leslie Kritzer (“Elf”) as Alice, Mr. Mitchell said in an e-mail on Thursday. Only Mr. McGrath is signed for the Old Globe production at this point, he added.

Mr. Gleason created “The Honeymooners” as a six-minute sketch for a variety show in 1951, and it became a half-hour se ries on CBS in 1955 and 1956. The plots usually revolved around Ralph's harebrained schemes to get rich quickly, which always came to nought, while his wife Alice, played by Audrey Meadows, said “I told you so.” In his frustration, Ralph often balled his fist and threatened to send Alice “to the moon,” a bit which drew laughs in the 1950s but which might not sit as well with modern audiences.



Trisha Brown to Retire From Making New Work

Two new dances by the choreographer Trisha Brown to be performed at the Brooklyn Academy of Music beginning in January will be the final works of her career, a spokesperson for the Trisha Brown Dance Company said on Thursday.

Ms. Brown, 76, last performed with the company at the Joyce Theater in 2008, and has suffered health problems in recent years. But she remains the company's artistic director and “in great spirits,” according to Barbara Dufty, the company's executive director. Ms. Brown, who founded her company in SoHo in 1970, has choreographed more than 100 dances and won a number of prestigious awards, including the National Medal of Arts, and in 1991 became the first female choreographer to win a MacArthur “genius” grant.

The two new dances, both created in 2011, will have their New York premiere as part of Ms. Brown' s upcoming season at BAM, which runs from Jan. 30 to Feb. 2. “I'm going to toss my arms - if you catch them they're yours” is a collaboration with the composer Alvin Curan (who will perform live) and the artist Burt Barr. “Les Yeux et l'ame” is a set of interconnected dances adapted from Ms. Brown's version of the Baroque opera “Pygmalion,” which was first performed in 2010.

The BAM program will also include older Brown works, including a recent reconstruction of “Newark,” a 1987 collaboration with the artist Donald Judd, and the classic “Set and Reset,” (1983), a c ollaboration with Laurie Anderson and Robert Rauschenberg that celebrates the thirtieth anniversary of its own premiere at BAM.

Ms. Brown collaborated frequently with Mr. Rauschenberg, who she met at the Judson Dance Theater in the 1960s, and other visual artists over the years. She has also made many of her own drawings, some of which were exhibited at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis in a 2008 retrospective called “So That the Audience Will Not Know Whether I Have Stopped Dancing.”



Jazz Impresario to Present Shows at Iridium

One of the most celebrated jazz impresarios in the country is starting over, booking a new series of concerts at Iridium in Midtown Manhattan after stepping down from his longtime post at Jazz at Lincoln Center.

The promoter, Todd Barkan, first rose to prominence in the 1970s as the club owner who built Keystone Korner in San Francisco into one of the country's best jazz stages, a psychedelic club where historic recordings were made by artists like Miles Davis, McCoy Tyner and Bill Evans. In 2000 Wynton Marsalis recruited Mr. Barkan to oversee programming at Dizzy's Club Coca-Cola, one of three performance spaces in Jazz at Lincoln Center.

But Mr. Barkan, 66, resigned in October after Mr. Marsalis reorganized Jazz at Lincoln Center and brought in two young programmers to help book Dizzy's.

Now he has entered a partnership with Ron Sturm, the owner of Iridium, to present about 10 0 shows in 2013, on Wednesday and Sunday nights.

“This is a chance to broaden my artistic horizons,” Mr. Barkan said. “Even though I've been booking shows in New York for 30 years this is the first time there's ever been a ‘Todd Barkan Presents' series.”

The series starts Jan. 2 with a Wes Montgomery tribute, featuring the drummer Jimmy Cobb, the guitarist Peter Bernstein, the pianist Harold Mabern, the bassist John Weber and the saxophonist Eric Alexander. Later in the month Mr. Barken intends to present the pianist Cedar Walton on a bill with the saxophonist and flautist Frank Wess. Nicholas Payton, the trumpet player, will also play in late February.

Mr. Barkan said he hoped over time to present more multi-genre programs - mixing jazz, blues and world music - than he had been able to put together at Dizzy's, where mainstream jazz was the rule. “This allows me to bring in a few more elements and more genres of music,” he said. “I'm exc ited about the series.”



Remembering the Helping Hands of a Subway Hero

Sometimes people do step up and help.

The story of the subway rider who the police said was pushed to the tracks and who had his photograph taken moments before the train fatally struck him - raising questions across the nation about why the photographer and other straphangers didn't pull him up - called to mind a frightening incident of a half-century ago.

Sometime circa 1964, I was an editor at the City College of New York newspaper, The Campus, and along with other undergraduates with journalistic ambitions was working late hours putting out the twice-weekly paper while trying to keep up with my schoolwork. This one morning, as I headed to school, I must have been particularly groggy from a late night at the printers. I bought The New York Times at the corner, descended the steps of the 167th Street station on the D line in the Bronx and started reading it on the platform.

I must have absent-mindedly taken a few paces, because the next thing I knew I was falling - landing right on the muddy tracks. I heard a woman's piercing scream. But as I straightened myself, someone reached down, firmly grabbed my hand and tugged me back onto the platform. I no longer remember what the man looked like, but I remember thanking him, an embarrassed grin on my face.

I did not fully appreciate the significance of what had happened. But a minute or two later the southbound D train barreled into the station and whizzed by me, and the full peril of what I might have experienced came to me in a wave of terror. I have never been able to read a newspaper on a train platform the same carefree way, and just writing these words brings back the fright of that morning.

Joseph Berger has been a reporter at The New York Times since 1984.



Video: Van Catches Fire Outside St. Patrick\'s

File this one under common occurrence in uncommon location: a van caught fire and burned for an hour Wednesday night on Fifth Avenue and 50th Street, in front of St. Patrick's Cathedral and across from Rockefeller Center. No one was injured in the fire, which was reported around 6:50 p.m. and put out by 7:48, the Fire Department said.



Blocks from Art Basel, Artists with More Modest Hopes

MIAMI BEACHâ€"As dealers in the main fair at Art Basel Miami Beach were counting up six- and seven-figure sales from Wednesday's VIP preview, participants in SELECT, one of the numerous satellite fairs here, were welcoming guests at the Catalina Hotel nearby. The hopeful artists and gallery owners who paid $4,000 to $5,000 to transform one of the hotel's 64 rooms into a mini gallery, installation space or performance venue had different expectations than their brethren a few blocks away.

“I'm hoping to find a gallery to represent me,” said Mariusz Navartil, a Miami artist whose swirling red, black and white works were done with acrylic paint and ink pen. A few doors down, Christopher Maslow stored extra canvases in the shower and masked the toilet with a covered table that held opening night bottles of wine and plastic cups.

Ginny Sykes, a mixed media artist, had journeyed with four other women from Chicago in a bi d to gain wider exposure for their work. “I asked myself: ‘Can I afford to do this even if nothing happens?'” said Ms. Sykes, whose prices range from $80 to $1,500. Her suitemate Kathleen Waterloo said that a Washington gallery had begun to represent her after seeing her work, geometric encaustic paintings, at a satellite fair in Miami a few years ago. Ms. Waterloo, whose work is priced between $250 to $850, has been enthusiastically detailing the group's adventures, artistic and otherwise, on Twitter and Facebook.

The directors of SELECT, Brian Whiteley, 29, and Matthew Eck, 24, supervised a different fair at the Catalina last year before striking out on their own.

“Here artists can showcase their work as they'd like it to be shown,” said an ebullient Mr. Eck.

Curtiss Jacobs, a Wall Street financier who founded Renaissance Fine Art on Adam Clayton Powell Jr. Boulevard in Harlem, said he was impressed with t he directors' enthusiasm. He took over two rooms on the hotel's second floor to showcase alabaster sculptures by Ousmane Gueye ($12,000 to $75,000) and an installation made of butcher block paper by Dianne Smith.

Ideally, Mr. Jacobs hopes SELECT will bring in both sales and publicity, but he was philosophical. “It's a learning experience.”



Blocks from Art Basel, Artists with More Modest Hopes

MIAMI BEACHâ€"As dealers in the main fair at Art Basel Miami Beach were counting up six- and seven-figure sales from Wednesday's VIP preview, participants in SELECT, one of the numerous satellite fairs here, were welcoming guests at the Catalina Hotel nearby. The hopeful artists and gallery owners who paid $4,000 to $5,000 to transform one of the hotel's 64 rooms into a mini gallery, installation space or performance venue had different expectations than their brethren a few blocks away.

“I'm hoping to find a gallery to represent me,” said Mariusz Navartil, a Miami artist whose swirling red, black and white works were done with acrylic paint and ink pen. A few doors down, Christopher Maslow stored extra canvases in the shower and masked the toilet with a covered table that held opening night bottles of wine and plastic cups.

Ginny Sykes, a mixed media artist, had journeyed with four other women from Chicago in a bi d to gain wider exposure for their work. “I asked myself: ‘Can I afford to do this even if nothing happens?'” said Ms. Sykes, whose prices range from $80 to $1,500. Her suitemate Kathleen Waterloo said that a Washington gallery had begun to represent her after seeing her work, geometric encaustic paintings, at a satellite fair in Miami a few years ago. Ms. Waterloo, whose work is priced between $250 to $850, has been enthusiastically detailing the group's adventures, artistic and otherwise, on Twitter and Facebook.

The directors of SELECT, Brian Whiteley, 29, and Matthew Eck, 24, supervised a different fair at the Catalina last year before striking out on their own.

“Here artists can showcase their work as they'd like it to be shown,” said an ebullient Mr. Eck.

Curtiss Jacobs, a Wall Street financier who founded Renaissance Fine Art on Adam Clayton Powell Jr. Boulevard in Harlem, said he was impressed with t he directors' enthusiasm. He took over two rooms on the hotel's second floor to showcase alabaster sculptures by Ousmane Gueye ($12,000 to $75,000) and an installation made of butcher block paper by Dianne Smith.

Ideally, Mr. Jacobs hopes SELECT will bring in both sales and publicity, but he was philosophical. “It's a learning experience.”



Ben Brantley Answers Readers\' Questions, Part 2

The playwright David Mamet with Patti LuPone, center, and Debra Winger, stars of his new play, The Anarchist.Robert Wright for The New York Times The playwright David Mamet with Patti LuPone, center, and Debra Winger, stars of his new play, “The Anarchist.”

Yesterday Ben Brantley, the chief theater critic of The New York Times, answered readers' questions about new scores, populist theater and other topics. Following is the final installment of his responses.

Q.

What do you think has happened to David Mamet? He hasn't had a legitimate hitâ€"or even a critical successâ €"in over a decade. There was a time when his newest play was a major event (even if didn't open on Broadway). - Joseph Millett, Blacksburg, Va.

A.

The question of Mr. Mamet deserves more space than I can give it here. But the short answer would seem to be that Mr. Mamet is less interested in theater as an art these days than as a platform for discussion. I failed to detect anything resembling a real character in his most recent works on Broadway: “November,” “Race” and the current “Anarchist.” Nor did I hear that singular, pulse-racing music that I associate with Mamet's dialogue. This saddens me.

I don't think Mamet has reached his sell-by date â€" at least not in th e sense that he's a terminally topical writer stuck in the era he emerged from. He's not that. The early stuff, when seen in revival, feels as vital as it ever did (though I haven't yet seen the current “Glengarry Glen Ross” on Broadway). But whether sitcom glib (“November”) or graduate-school pedantic (“Anarchist”), his work of the past decade has mostly registered as a set of position papers. And “Anarchist” appears to have no real interest in drawing in its audience; it is almost as if it were written in disdain for anyone who might expect to be engaged by the theater. (Putting this 70-minute essayistic play on Broadway, and charging Broadway prices for it, did it no favors; I think audiences might be more receptive to it if they experienced it in something more like a theater-lab environment, like the Ensemble Studio The ater's bill of one-acts.) How I'd love to see a new Mamet play that jolted, rattled and excited me the way his early work did.

Q.

I am off to London in February and am wondering if you have any suggestions of things I should try to see. - Marc Happel, New York City

A.

There's a lot to choose from in February. If you're arriving on the 15th, or later, you'll have the chance to see Helen Mirren reincarnating the role for which she won an Oscar, that of Queen Elizabeth II. But this is in a new play by Peter Morgan, called “Audience.”

If you're a fan of Harold Pinter, the new revival of “Old Times” sounds especially seductive, with Kristin Scott-Thomas and Lia Williams alternating in the two female roles. And you may be there just in time to catch Mark Rylan ce as Olivia in the all-male production of “Twelfth Night,” one of the most astonishing Shakespearean performances I've ever seen.

Q.

Have you ever been approached/threatened about a bad review? - Davis, Boston

A.

I have received hostile voice-mail messages and e-mails. They are often anonymous, I'm sad to say, as anonymous messages are delivered only by very low forms of human life, in my opinion. I have been denounced in various public forums (on television, in symposia, in print) by people who feel I have been unjust or obtuse about a certain production or performance. Elton John called me something unprintable in an interview at least once. The columnist Liz Smith once proposed in print that I be lynched in Shubert Alley, which was one of the more thrilling moments of my career. We have sin ce become friends (Liz and I, I mean; I've never met Sir Elton).

Q.

How important are Internet blogs, message boards, chat rooms etc. in shaping opinion of a production? Professional critics are just one part of the mix these days. - Larry, Chicago

A.

The cliché was always that “everybody's a critic,” but it becomes truer every day. Long before reviews appear in the traditional outlets, you can now usually discover â€" somewhere in the thickets of the Internet - reactions to shows from people who've seen them in previews. Professional critics, being held to certain responsibilities that the maverick blogger is not, tend to be more measured and usually (though not always) more accurate. I personally read criticism â€" at least by writers I enjoy â€" to stimulate a conversation in my own mind, and I like to think that's the function I serve for others. The all-mighty power of the theater critic was always a bit of a myth, though. Go back a century and look at the original reviews for “Abie's Irish Rose,” which went right under the fence of critical disdain and became a smash hit.

Q.

What are some shows that you have changed your opinion on over the years? What is the most overrated and underrated show you have ever seen? - Herbert, Bloomfield, N.J.

A.

I never disagree with my own reviews, when I look back on them, because they reflect the way I felt when I wrote them originally. But everything changes in time, including critics and the works they write about. And with great plays, from “King Lear” to “The Importance of Being Earnest,” I often find myself discovering that they aren't at all what I thought they were about when I saw them before. More particularly, when I first saw the Tony-winning Off Broadway musical “Once,” it struck me as too twee, though I loved its music and its dance. But I think I was prejudiced against it in part from having seen the movie that inspired it on the same day. When the show opened on Broadway, some months later, my original objections remained but they felt less significant. (Of course, it also helped that Broadway is such a taxidermy museum these days, that anything young and fresh assumes the status of a major blessing.)



Carnegie Hall Dream Comes True for Medgar Evers\'s Widow

Myrlie Evers-Williams, the widow of the slain civil rights leader Medgar Evers, has long shared the dream of many an aspiring musician: playing Carnegie Hall. Now, at the age of 79, Ms. Evers-Williams will get that chance, thanks to the persuasive power of the pop orchestra Pink Martini.

The band, with its savvy and somewhat campy mix of original music, classic songs and international music, has asked Ms. Evers-Williams to join them on stage when Pink Martini plays there on Dec. 14 and 15. Ms. Evers-Williams, who studied classical piano at Alcorn State University before dropping out to marry Evers, is ecstatic at the opportunity.

“It was the dream of my grandmother and then it became my dream,” Ms. Evers-Williams said in a telephone interview. “'Baby, I want you to play at Carnegie Hall when you grow up,' she would say to me.”

Thomas M. Lauder dale, the founder of Pink Martini, came up with the idea earlier this year when he heard her speak at a TEDx event in Bend, Ore. (The evening's theme: “Bending Rules.”)

“When I heard her talk about this dream from her youth, I knew I had to make it happen,” Mr. Lauderdale said by phone from San Francisco where he was preparing for a concert. “We got our start in politics, in civil rights.”

Her involvement in the concerts, he added, will help spread the word of the fledgling Medgar and Myrlie Evers-Williams Institute. (The plan is to focus on scholarship and conferences on civic engagement and social justice.)

“On a certain level, these will be the most important performances the band will ever do,” he said. “To help her write not just a new chapter in her life, but to help raise awareness and hopefully set the institute on the path to a permanent home is such a honor.”

Ms. Evers-Williams, who is a distinguished scholar-in-residence at Alcorn State, said that she was at first resistant at Mr. Lauderdale's entreaties. “He said that when they play Carnegie Hall again, I would have to join them,” she said. “I said, no. no. no. He said, yes, yes, yes.

“Thomas Lauderdale is a very persistent man.”

Just what Ms. Evers-Williams will do on stage, beyond talking about the institute, is still being worked out. She's decided against playing piano - “Time has not been kind to my fingers, which are now more than a little arthritic” - but playing the role of a torch singer perched on top of a baby grand piano entices.

“I never fully let go of the dream of me in a red dress,” she said.



Searching for Latinos in Children\'s Literature: A Reading List

Aurora Anaya-Cerda at the opening of her East Harlem bookstore in June.Brad Vest/The New York Times Aurora Anaya-Cerda at the opening of her East Harlem bookstore in June.

Where are all the Latinos? That's the question raised in an article published Wednesday in The Times that focused on the dearth of books with Latino characters that are aimed at school-age children. (No disrespect meant to Dora the Explorer or her cousin Diego, who are both hugely popular and who started as cartoons.) This is an especially relevant issue given the increasing number of the country's public school seats that are oc cupied by Latinos.

It's an also issue that has personal resonance. Sure we want to stoke a passion for reading in our young son, who turns 4 in March, and our home is filled with all the age-appropriate classics - “Goodnight Moon,” “The Very Hungry Caterpillar,” and so on. But as he gets older will he open books and find characters and themes that offer perhaps something more, something richer - a window into his culture?

I asked someone who knows something about Latino literature to weigh in. Aurora Anaya-Cerda is the owner of La Casa Azul, a bookstore that she opened in June in East Harlem and that she says is the only bookstore in New York City focusing on books by and about Latinos.

Ms. Anaya-Cerda, who was born in Mexico and raised in California, said that as a young girl she “was an avid reade r (Judy Blume, Beverly Cleary, Francine Pascal). But reading works by Chicana/o writers connected me to stories that I could relate to.”

She continued: “I began seeking out more books that reflected my identity and experience after reading ‘Bless Me Ultima' by Rudolfo Anaya â€" a book I stumbled upon during one of my visits to the local public library. ‘Bless Me Ultima' was the first book in which I saw myself. Aspects of my culture and traditions were reflected back to me, providing a new sense of pride and validation in my cultural background.”

Ms. Anaya-Cerda also shared her partial list of recommended books by and about Latinos. This is one person's list, and readers are welcome to offer their own suggestions in the comments field below.

Elementary:
â€" “Sonia Sotomayor: A Judge Grows in the Bronx / La juez que crecio en el Bronx” by Jonah Winter
â€" “My Name Is Gabito: The Life of Gabriel García Márquez/Me llamo Gabito: L a Vida de Gabriel García Márquez” by Monica Brown
â€" “Side by Side: The Story of Dolores Huerta and Cesar Chavez/Lado a Lado: La Historia de Dolores Huerta y Cesar Chavez” by Monica Brown
â€" “Waiting for the Biblioburro” by Monica Brown

Middle school:
â€" “Call Me Maria” by Judith Ortiz Cofer
â€" “The Tree Is Older Than You Are” edited by Naomi Shihab Nye
â€" “Wachale! Poetry and Prose About Growing Up Latino in America” edited by Ilan Stavans
â€" “Cuba 15″ by Nancy Osa
â€" “The Smell of Old Lady Perfume” by Claudia Guadalupe Martinez
â€" “My Diary From Here to There/Mi Diario de Aqui Hasta Alla” by Amada Irma Perez

High school:
â€" “El Bronx Remembered” by Nicholasa Mohr
â€" “The Revolution of Evelyn Serrano” by Sonia Manzano
â€" “Efrain's Secret” by Sofia Quintero
â€" “Secret Saturdays” by Torrey Maldonado
â€" “Mexican WhiteBoyâ € by Matt de la Peña
â€" “Riding Low on the Streets of Gold: Latino Literature for Young Adults” edited by Judith Ortiz Cofer



A Note for the Transit Chief: Beware the Endorsement From Giuliani

If the mass-transit chief, Joseph J. Lhota, is serious about running for mayor next year, he ought to start worrying about the enthusiastic support he is getting from former Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani. As Mr. Lhota surely knows - he was Mr. Giuliani's deputy at City Hall, after all - a blessing from his old boss is a political version of the kiss of death.

When it comes to choosing sides in major elections, the former mayor has the Midas touch in reverse. It's a wonder that recipients of his endorsements don't take to wearing cloves of garlic when he is around.

His victims are many:

He supported Gov. Mario M. Cu omo for re-election in 1994, only to watch Mr. Cuomo get clobbered by George E. Pataki. In 1996, he gushed over the Republican vice-presidential nominee, Jack Kemp (and accepted with less enthusiasm the man at the top of the party's national ticket, Bob Dole). You haven't heard much of late about the Dole-Kemp administration, have you?

Mr. Giuliani's heart was clearly with John McCain in the 2000 presidential race, and more openly so in 2008 once his own ambitions crumbled. We know how that turned out. In Kentucky two years ago, he supported a man named Trey Grayson in the Republican Senate primary, a race won by Rand Paul. He preferred Newt Gingrich in 2012, going so far at one point as to dismiss Mitt Romney as making a weather vane look like a symbol of constancy. He then touted Marco Rubio to be Mr. Romney's vice-presidential sidekick. A month ago, he vilified President Obama while campaigning for the Romney-Ryan ticket in New Hampshire, and lost that state.

We could go on.

A notable exception to the Giuliani jinx is Michael R. Bloomberg. For all his billions, Mr. Bloomberg might never have been elected mayor in 2001 had the Sept. 11 attacks not occurred. After that, a Giuliani endorsement was worth something for a while. But soon enough, political normalcy reasserted itself.

Now the former mayor has championed Mr. Lhota, a fellow Republican who is chairman of the Metropolitan Transportation Authority. Any City Hall ambitions that Mr. Lhota may have are no doubt bolstered by the high marks he deservedly received for getting the subways up and running in reasonably short order after Hurricane Sandy.

“I'd like to see him run,” Mr. Giuliani told The Daily News. That orison alone ought to be enough to give Mr. Lhota the shivers.

It is not yet 2013, but already the race is shaping up as a potentially splendid spectacle. You have to love it when Mr. Bloomberg, who has all but publicly serenaded Christine C. Quinn, is revealed to have privately urged Hillary Rodham Clinton (who doesn't even live in the city) to run for mayor. And to think that Verdi wrote how it's the woman who is fickle.

This could become one of the more intriguing mayoral elections since 1977, when the lineup was packed with political heavyweights. At various stages, they included the ultimately triumphant Edward I. Koch, Mario Cuomo, Bella S. Abzug, Herman Badillo, Percy Sutton, Roy M. Goodman, Barry Farber, Edward N. Costikyan, Joel Harnett - oh yes, and the incumbent mayor, Abraham D. Beame.

Republicans here are usually an afterthought, fitting neatly the description that Will Rogers gave of himself as a confirmed Democrat: a man who belongs to no organized political party.

But what is called the Republican Party in the city can be a handy vehicle for any outsider looking to outflank better-known Democrats, whose politicians, in some cases, have been on stage almost as long as “The Phantom of the Opera.” Mr. Giuliani, a true Republican, used the party that way. So did Mr. Bloomberg, a so rt-of Republican for a time. A full generation has been born and come of age since the last Democrat captured City Hall: David N. Dinkins in 1989.

Now Mr. Lhota is toying with the possibilities. Not that the road will be easy, as Mr. Giuliani himself cautioned. Mr. Lhota is a talented fellow. But even if he dodged the Giuliani curse, he would be running right after having presided over an increase in the subway and bus fare. That ought to make him really popular.

And should he survive both the Rudy hex and the fare raise, a rival just might remind voters that post-Giuliani, Mr. Lhota went to work for James L. Dolan, the unloved jefe of Madison Square Garden.

But that, too, need not be an insurmountable problem. If there are no Knicks or Rangers fans in the electorate, Mr. Lhota should be fine.

E-mail Clyde Haberman: haberman@nytimes.com



Technology in the Classroom

Dear Diary:

The debate on the use of technology in the classroom brings me back to my days at Lafayette High School in Brooklyn in the 1950s.

I was taking a physics class when we were told that we were to be part of an experiment that would be taught by television. Of the five lessons, there would be one lab (for a double period), one test period and three television lessons. The first 10 minutes would be for attendance and checking any homework. The last 30 minutes would be via TV. In those days there was no color TV and the largest screen that we had was 19 inches. We were all set to get the benefits of modern technology.

The reality was a bit different. We would rush into the classroom and turn on the TV to catch the last 10 minutes of “The Price Is Right.”

Then to a chorus of boos, the teacher would switch the channel and we would start the physics lesson. We could not get close enough to see the experiments, we could not ask any ques tions, sometimes the TV would go on the blink, and we suffered through a myriad of other issues that would arise.

From that point onward I have always been a bit wary of anyone who claimed that technology can solve all of our problems.

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