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New Republic Literary Editor to Split $1 Million Prize

Leon Wieseltier, the longtime literary editor of The New Republic, is among this year’s winners of the prestigious Dan David Prize, which is given annually to honor “contributions to humanity” and carries a $1 million dollar award.

Mr. Wieseltier’s award, which was first reported by Politico, prompted some kvelling in journalism circles, including at the online magazine Tablet, where Adam Chandler â€" after noting that Mr. Wieseltier “had once explained how his cowboy boots were better than mine and called me a sheygetz in the same conversation” â€" praised him for “writing one of the finest Jewish books of all time” (“Kaddish”), having “mercilessly slapped down excessive Bruce Springsteen enthusiasm,” and making an expletive-laced two-line cameo on “The Sopranos.”

Mr. Wieseltier, reached by telephone in Israel, where he was attending the Jerusalem Book Fair, was more modest, clarifying that he will be sharing the $1 million purse with the French philosopher Michel Serres, his fellow winner in the prize’s “Present” category, and echoing the sentiments of the Nobel Prize-winning Italian poet Eugenio Montale.

“When Montale won the Nobel,” Mr. Wieseltier noted, “a reporter called him that evening and asked how he felt. He said, ‘Less bad.’ ”

Other winners of this year’s prize, which is! administered by Tel Aviv University, include the British historian Sir Geoffrey Lloyd, the French economist Esther Duflo, and Alfred Summer, an American opthamologist and epidemiologist who was recognized for “his unexpected and striking discovery in demonstrating that vitamin A has the power to save children’s lives.”



\'Natasha\' and \'Kid Who Would Be Pope\' Win Prestigious Musical Theater Prizes

The musicals “Natasha, Pierre & The Great Comet of 1812,” by Dave Malloy, and “The Kid Who Would Be Pope,” by Tom and Jack Megan, are the winners of the 2013 Richard Rodgers Awards for Musical Theater. The prizes, announced this week by the American Academy of Arts and Letters, are intended to help talented composers and playwrights get work produced in New York City.

The academy decided that because “Natasha” had been produced and prominently reviewed in New York, with a run last October and November at Ars Nova Theater, the $60,000 award would go to the theater retroactively. The awards jury happened to start considering applications right after “Natasha” received its first production, Virginia Dajani, executive director of the Academy, explained on Wednesday.

“It was complicated for us,” Ms.Dajani said. “We decided Ars Nova had invested so much n the production we’d give the money to Ars Nova so that they can in the future produce some other work, not necessarily ours. This also allows Mr. Malloy credit for having won.”

“Natasha” is an electro-pop opera with a libretto based on a portion of the novel “War and Peace.” Mr. Malloy, whose previous work includes “Beowulf: A Thousand Years of Baggage” and “Three Pianos,” and the director, Rachel Chavkin, turned the theater into a kind of Russian nightclub, packed with tables each bearing a bottle of icy vodka and a portrait of Napoleon hanging over the bar.

“I’m thrilled,” Mr. Malloy said Wednesday of his award. He had applied two times before. “Each time, I got that thin envelope,” he said. Since the Ars Nova run, Howard Kagan, a commercial producer, has come aboard. Said Mr. Malloy: “The show! is at an interesting point in its life: we are in between the initial production and the transfer.”

“The Kid Who Would Be Pope,” with book, music and lyrics by the brothers Tom and Jack Megan, is the tale of an 11-year-old boy who tries to become Pope so he can marry a nun he loves. It was among the fledgling productions showcased at the New York Musical Theater Festival in 2011.

Since 1980, 74 works have received the Rodgers prize, including Jonathan Larson’s “Rent” and “Grey Gardens,” by Scott Frankel, Michael Korie and Doug Wright.



Groban\'s \'All That Echoes\' Is No. 1

In time for Valentine’s Day, the pop-classical singer Josh Groban has a No. 1 album with his latest collection of heart-swelling ballads and tenor showpieces.

The album, “All That Echoes” (Reprise), sold 145,000 copies in its first week, according to Nielsen SoundScan, returning him to No. 1 for a third time. Holiday-timed releases have been a sweet spot for Mr. Groban, 31, whose Christmas album “Noël” was the best-selling title of 2007.

New releases fill the next two spots on the chart. Tim McGraw’s “Two Lanes of Freedom” â€" the longtime country star’s first release on Taylor Swift’s label, Bi Machine â€" opened at No. 2 with 107,000 sales, and the 45th edition of “Now That’s What I Call Music!” bowed at No. 3 with 87,000.

The lead-up to the Grammy Awards on Sunday drove some sales, with Mumford & Sons’ “Babel” (Glassnote), the album of the year winner, rising three spots to No. 4 with 54,000 sales. Downloads of its song “I Will Wait,” which the band performed at the show, more than doubled from the week before, to 104,000 sales. But the most popular track of the week was, once again, Macklemore & Ryan Lewis’s “Thrift Shop,” with 389,000 copies downloaded.

Two other Grammy performers, Bruno Mars and the Lumineers, had sales gains for their albums but fell to lower positions on the chart, since sales overall were improved for the week. Mr. Mars’s “Unorthodox Jukebox” (Atlantic) fell two spots to No. 8, despite its nearly 41,000 sales being 10 percent up for the week, and the Lumineers’ self-titled album, on Dualtone, was up 21 percent in sales, to 39,000, but fell one spot to No. 10.

Also on this week’s chart, Andrea Bocelli’s “Passione” (Sugar/Verve) fell three to No. 5 with 51,000 sales, and last week’s No. 1, Justin Bieber’s “Believe Acoustic” (Schoolboy/RBMG/Island), fell five to No. 6 with 43,000 sales, a 79 percent drop in its second week out.

More Grammy “bumps” should be reflected on the next chart, since SoundScan’s reporting week ended on Sunday, just as the awards were finishing up.



Prospect Park Lake, 11:03 A.M.

Anne-Katrin Titze

A successful skating session calls for a celebration.

Anne-Katrin Titze


A Whodunit That\'s Being Done by a Whole Class

Melvin Bukiet, center, led a group-novel-writing workshop at Sarah Lawrence College as David Calbert, left, discussed an idea.Yana Paskova for The New York Times Melvin Bukiet, center, led a group-novel-writing workshop at Sarah Lawrence College as David Calbert, left, discussed an idea.

BRONXVILLE, N.Y. â€" The first dead body simply had to be a math professor, said Rebecca Shepard, 20, a sophomore at Sarah Lawrence College.

“Math isn’t the most popular subject here,” said Ms. Shepard, sitting in her fiction workshop class at the college one recent weeknight.

But writing â€" Ms. Shepard’s course of study â€" is one of the more popular ones at this exclusive school a few miles north of the Bronx, known for it liberal arts curriculum and its high tuition.

The school may also soon be known for a mystery novel called “Naked Came the Post-Postmodernist,” which Ms. Shepard is writing with 11 classmates in a yearlong workshop, and which is to be published this year.

The book is really “one vast exercise,” the class’s instructor, Melvin Jules Bukiet, said. Each student is given two or three weeks to write a chapter, he said, with all of the writing to be finished in May. Mr. Bukiet described his role as “facilitator, muse and massager,” but said he left nearly all the plot choices to the students.

“All I told them was that it was to be a mystery on a small liberal-arts college campus,” he said. “I wanted it to have a familiar background, something they knew, but a mystery would force them to ad! dress a different type of world than their own.”

Ms. Shepard wrote the first chapter in November, having a character named Professor Davenport turn up mysteriously murdered during office hours at Underhill College, where as one of Ms. Shepard’s other characters put it, “All the students here are close with their professors.” The campus, just off a highway named 95, is populated by privileged, liberal undergraduates. It all sounds vaguely familiar.

David Calbert, 22, a senior, handled the second chapter, introducing a libidinous female medical examiner. The third chapter, by Kelsey Joseph, who graduated after she started the class, added a student who was having an affair with the murdered teacher, and also delved into dormitory culture, presenting students like Hannah, Marin and Clay and other “hemp kids” and “J Crew girls.” There are also “Ugg girls,” decked out in “university sweatshirts, pajama bottoms and Ugg boots.”

Sasha Pezenik, 21, a senior who is Mr. Bukiet€™s assistant and an editor of the manuscript, compared the ensemble writing process to a relay race.

The novel written by the class, “Naked Came the Post-Postmodernist,” is to be published later this year. Yana Paskova for The New York Times The novel written by the class, “Naked Came the Post-Postmodernist,” is to be published later this year.

“Each of us is running the race as best as we can, and passing the baton to the next writer,” Ms. Pezenik said. “We want each other to write as gracefully as possible.”

The book’s authors will be listed as the Sarah Lawrence Fiction Workshop WRIT-3303-R, the class’s official course number. The title was blurted out by a student as the class discussed two group-written bo! oks that ! helped inspire Mr. Bukiet: The straight-faced 1969 trash-novel parody “Naked Came the Stranger” and the amusing 1996 novel “Naked Came the Manatee.”

He pitched the idea and title to Tony Lyons, who owns Arcade Publishing, the Manhattan press whose authors include the Nobel laureate Mo Yan. He liked it immediately. Mr. Lyons called it “a collegiate episodic experimental fiction â€" the first book of its kind that’s ever been done.”

“We read about school shootings and the incredible debt this generation of college kids has, and how hard it is to get jobs,’’ Mr. Lyons added. “But behind all the statistics about depression and anxiety and psychological drug use, we really don’t know what these kids are thinking.”

The modest advance for the book is being contribued to the college, said Mr. Bukiet, now in his 20th year teaching at Sarah Lawrence, which he attended in the 1970s, studying under E.L. Doctorow.

On a recent Tuesday night, Mr. Bukiet took stock of the work in progress. “O.K.,” he said. “We have lots of dead people and we have a college.” He suggested new elements: maybe adding an alumni donor who is horrified at the string of on-campus homicides, or the ubiquitous crime scenes posing awkward moments for a campus tour guide leading around prospective students.

The writers sat at a round table, each with a copy of chapter six, written by Jesse Holmgren-Sidell, 18, a freshman. The discussion veered from grammar and character details to comedic brainstorming to Agatha Christie-like discussions with competing ideas for plot lines and macabre elements.

“This is gruesome but comedic at the same time,” Mr. Bukiet urged the class. “Remember, you can play.”

Inevitably, the fictional Underhill campus will wind up reflec! ting aspe! cts of Sarah Lawrence, he said. And by all means, the student writers are free to take some vengeful jabs at the college.

“There should absolutely be academic egos at stake,” in the plot of the book, Mr. Bukiet said. “I wouldn’t mind if they killed a few deans.”



Westminster\'s Best in Show Gets a Broadway Show: Banana Joe in \'Drood\' For a Night

Banana Joe, a five-year-old affenpinscher.Fred R. Conrad/The New York Times Banana Joe, a five-year-old affenpinscher.

You know how these show-business success stories go: one day you’re just a hound nobody’s heard of, the next day you’re making your debut on Broadway. In the latest chapter of the tale of Banana Joe, the affable affenpinscher who was named Best in Show at the Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show on Tuesday night, this newly-minted celebrity canine is heading from Madison Square Garden to Studio 54 on Wednesday, where he will be joining the cast of “The Mystery of Edwin Drood,” the Broadway musical adapted from the unfinished Charles Dickens novel.

Matt Polk, a press representative for Roundabout Theater Company, said that Joey â€" as he is known to close friends and handlers â€" will be filling in for Macaco, the dog held by Stephanie J. Block in Act II of “Drood,” at Wednesday’s evening performance of the show.

Macaco will still perform as scheduled in the Wednesday matinee of “Drood,” while Banana Joe is appearing on Fox News with Shepard Smith. On Thursday, Macaco will then resume regular performances in the musical.

Audience members at the Wednesday evening performance of “Drood” cannot vote for Banana Joe to be the murderer or one of the secret lovers, because that would just be weird.



Westminster\'s Best in Show Gets a Broadway Show: Banana Joe in \'Drood\' For a Night

Banana Joe, a five-year-old affenpinscher.Fred R. Conrad/The New York Times Banana Joe, a five-year-old affenpinscher.

You know how these show-business success stories go: one day you’re just a hound nobody’s heard of, the next day you’re making your debut on Broadway. In the latest chapter of the tale of Banana Joe, the affable affenpinscher who was named Best in Show at the Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show on Tuesday night, this newly-minted celebrity canine is heading from Madison Square Garden to Studio 54 on Wednesday, where he will be joining the cast of “The Mystery of Edwin Drood,” the Broadway musical adapted from the unfinished Charles Dickens novel.

Matt Polk, a press representative for Roundabout Theater Company, said that Joey â€" as he is known to close friends and handlers â€" will be filling in for Macaco, the dog held by Stephanie J. Block in Act II of “Drood,” at Wednesday’s evening performance of the show.

Macaco will still perform as scheduled in the Wednesday matinee of “Drood,” while Banana Joe is appearing on Fox News with Shepard Smith. On Thursday, Macaco will then resume regular performances in the musical.

Audience members at the Wednesday evening performance of “Drood” cannot vote for Banana Joe to be the murderer or one of the secret lovers, because that would just be weird.



The Jane Austen Book Club

A paperback edition of A paperback edition of “Pride and Prejudice,” issued by the publisher Paul Elek in the 1960s. See more covers in a slide show.

Let’s just be honest about our superficiality. Even when it comes to the high-­minded business of literature, people do judge books by their covers. Perhaps that’s why Amazon produces glossy mock “covers” for its disembodied e-books, to be inspected and decided upon alongside the traditional print offerings.

Book covers may be especially important when it comes to the classics. fter all, many of us have a general sense of, if not a thorough familiarity with, the contents within. Perhaps more than anything else, these covers show what matters to prospective buyers. Two centuries of Jane Austen’s “Pride and Prejudice” are particularly revealing about the novel’s broad and sustained popular reach. (A slide show of a dozen different covers for the novel can be found here.) Reprintings not only chart the public reception of a writer who, next to Shakespeare, may be the most popular in the English language; their wide-ranging cover art provides snapshots of both this classic novel and the modern book.

In the 19th century, a book could be purchased in assorted colors of cloth bindings, with or without gold stamping, beveled boards or gilt edges. Today, publishers desperate to retain printed-book readers are reviving gift editions of the Victorian era, when titles appeared i! n varied formats and at different prices.

Although “Pride and Prejudice” continues to circulate in the somber black associated with Penguin Classics, especially in classrooms, the novel has recently been reissued in a dazzling array of colorful outfits. In 2009, Penguin began offering “Pride and Prejudice” in a designer-cloth hardback, which decorative retailers like Anthropologie sold as home décor. That same text also appeared in a “couture inspired” jacket, complete with deckle edges and French flaps to use as bookmarks. And it is now available in bright scarlet leatherette, with a decorative A on the cover, in a hat tip to “traditional” type design. This is just a small sampling from one of many publishers offering a refashioned “Pride and Prejudice” in time for its 200th anniversary â€" a novel and a birthday, it seems worth celebrating in style.



Bill Clinton to Present Film Society\'s Chaplin Award to Barbra Streisand

Now that he’s got a little more time on his hands these days, former president Bill Clinton seems to have a reignited passion for motion pictures. First, he turns up at the awards ceremony for the Golden Globes to sing the praises of Steven Spielberg’s “Lincoln,” and now he’ll be giving a coveted film prize to Barbra Streisand. The Film Society of Lincoln Center said on Wednesday morning that Mr. Clinton will present its Chaplin Award to Ms. Streisand at a gala ceremony on April 22. Ms. Streisand, the actress, singer and director whose movies include “Funny Girl,” “The Way We Were,” “Yentl” and “The Prince of Tides,” was announced last month as the 40th recipient of the Chaplin Award. That honor has previously been given to artists like Catherine Deneuve, Sidney Poitier, Michael Douglas, Tom Hanks and Meryl Streep. The Film Society said its awards gala, to be held at Lincoln Center will be attended other celebrity guests and feature film clips and interviews celebrating Ms. Streisand’s career.

Mr. Clinton, who will soon be the subject of a documentary directed by Martin Scorsese, has, of course, been a long time fan of Ms. Streisand’s, and she has likewise been a supporter of his and of his wife, Hillary Rodham Clinton. But there was no immediate word if Mr. Clinton had seen Ms. Streisand with Seth Rogen in “The Guilt Trip.”



Lady Gaga Postpones Concerts Because of Illness

Lady Gaga performing in December.Evan Agostini/Invision, via Associated Press Lady Gaga performing in December.

Lady Gaga has postponed four concerts in Chicago, Detroit and Hamilton, Ontario, over the next week because she is suffering from severe joint pain brought on by an injury, the singer announced Tuesday on her Web site.

She said her doctors had diagnosed the condition as synovitis, a painful inflammation of membranes in the joints that involves the buildup of fluid. She had been ordered by doctors to rest, she said.

“I am completely devastated and heartsick,” Lady Gaga wrote in her statement. “I’ve been hiding tis injury and pain from my staff for a month, praying it would heal, but after last night’s performance I could not walk.”

People holding tickets to the affected concerts were asked to keep them until the shows can be rescheduled.

The singer expressed frustration to her legions of fans on Twitter:



The Joyce Theater and the Brooklyn Academy of Music Announce Cuba Dance Partnership

A new, two-year project to promote an arts partnership between the United States and Cuba was announced Tuesday by the Joyce Theater Foundation and the Brooklyn Academy of Music. The project is designed to offer Cubans arts administration training, internships and help creating a new dance work to be performed at the Joyce Theater.

The project is funded with a $215,000 grant to the Joyce and BAM from the Robert Sterling Clark Foundation, which supports the arts and exchanges between arts organizations here and abroad. Other partners in the initiative are the choreographer Ronald K. Brown and the non-profit Ludwig Foundation of Cuba, which promotes contemporary Cuban artists and culture.

Mr. Brown will travel to Cuba to select a Cuban dance company to create a new work, to be performed at the Joyce in May, 2014. The Cuban dance company will also participate in a production residency at the Joyce with Mr. Brown and his compay, Evidence, A Dance Company.

“I had an amazing time when I went to Cuba in 2001 and had the opportunity to meet some artists, so I am grateful for this awesome opportunity,” Mr. Brown said in a statement.

The program begins this month with a professional development seminar in Havana led by Joyce and BAM staff members, who will work with 20 Cuban arts professional selected by the Ludwig Foundation. Four participants from the seminar will be invited to New York this fall and in spring of 2014 for internships at both the Joyce and BAM. The Joyce and Brooklyn Academy of Music worked together in 2011 on the ¡Sí Cuba! Festival.



Goodbye, Manhattan

Andrea Mohin/The New York Times

Dear Diary:

How do I say goodbye to Manhattan on my last night after 25 years in the city of opportunity Friends had generously offered a sofa or a bed in their homes. Yet, I had felt a pull to the hotel that was my initial platform of immersion in Manhattan, the Hotel Martha Washington for Women, on East 30th Street.

In April 1987, I arrived at the Port Authority and, after a few calls to find a room, I decided to sleep one night for $35 plus taxes at the Martha Washington. The next morning, I paid two weeks’ rent of $292.40 for Room 504 with its own toilet in a clothes closet (the shower was down the hall). That left me less than $200 cash.

Once settled tat rainy day, I walked along Madison Avenue and passed a test to get a temporary assignment as a secretary for Traveler’s Insurance. I walked two miles to Wall Street to see if I could save the $1 subway fare each way (I couldn’t; it was too far) and save some of the $10 an hour I was going to be paid. The next week, I knew I needed more money and took a temporary job at Hertz that paid $15 an hour; I stayed there for over a year.

Living at the hotel offered me stability until I was in a position to rent an apartment and later buy my two-bedroom co-op on the Upper West Side. And that is why I decided to spend my last night in Manhattan at the Martha Washington, which is currently known as the King and Grove. When I checked in at the front desk, I mentioned my stay in 1987 to the clerk and showed him the brochure I had in 1987. He was so impressed that he upgraded my room and called his manager to see me.

As I was leaving for a JetBlue ride cross-country, I said to myself: “Goodbye! , Martha Washington. I will always remember you.”

P.S. When I left the Martha Washington in April 1988, I took a picture off the wall with me; it is still in good condition today.

P.P.S. Oh! And one bath towel.

Read all recent entries and our updated submissions guidelines. Reach us via e-mail: diary@nytimes.com or telephone: (212) 556-1333. Follow @NYTMetro on Twitter using the hashtag #MetDiary.



Goodbye, Manhattan

Andrea Mohin/The New York Times

Dear Diary:

How do I say goodbye to Manhattan on my last night after 25 years in the city of opportunity Friends had generously offered a sofa or a bed in their homes. Yet, I had felt a pull to the hotel that was my initial platform of immersion in Manhattan, the Hotel Martha Washington for Women, on East 30th Street.

In April 1987, I arrived at the Port Authority and, after a few calls to find a room, I decided to sleep one night for $35 plus taxes at the Martha Washington. The next morning, I paid two weeks’ rent of $292.40 for Room 504 with its own toilet in a clothes closet (the shower was down the hall). That left me less than $200 cash.

Once settled tat rainy day, I walked along Madison Avenue and passed a test to get a temporary assignment as a secretary for Traveler’s Insurance. I walked two miles to Wall Street to see if I could save the $1 subway fare each way (I couldn’t; it was too far) and save some of the $10 an hour I was going to be paid. The next week, I knew I needed more money and took a temporary job at Hertz that paid $15 an hour; I stayed there for over a year.

Living at the hotel offered me stability until I was in a position to rent an apartment and later buy my two-bedroom co-op on the Upper West Side. And that is why I decided to spend my last night in Manhattan at the Martha Washington, which is currently known as the King and Grove. When I checked in at the front desk, I mentioned my stay in 1987 to the clerk and showed him the brochure I had in 1987. He was so impressed that he upgraded my room and called his manager to see me.

As I was leaving for a JetBlue ride cross-country, I said to myself: “Goodbye! , Martha Washington. I will always remember you.”

P.S. When I left the Martha Washington in April 1988, I took a picture off the wall with me; it is still in good condition today.

P.P.S. Oh! And one bath towel.

Read all recent entries and our updated submissions guidelines. Reach us via e-mail: diary@nytimes.com or telephone: (212) 556-1333. Follow @NYTMetro on Twitter using the hashtag #MetDiary.