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Video: Detectives’ Killer Is Presented as a Threat in Jail

Jurors in the federal death penalty part of the trial of Ronell Wilson, a Staten Island man who was convicted of murdering two undercover police detectives, watched a dramatic video on Monday that was made inside a federal jail, showing several correction officers storming a confined recreation area to subdue Mr. Wilson, who had refused to comply with demands to leave the area.

Federal prosecutors in Brooklyn presented the video, which was made in September at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn, to show that Mr. Wilson continues to be a threat, even in prison. Prosecutors are arguing that because of that danger, Mr. Wilson should be executed rather than spend the rest of his life in prison.

In the beginning of the 25-minute video, the correction officers, who had assembled to deploy a “calculated use of force,” face the camera and say which body part they intend to subdue. One officer’s job is to try one last time to persuade Mr. Wilson to comply. Another officer’s responsibility is to toss a chemical agent inside the recreation area if Mr. Wilson does not obey. A nurse is on hand to care for any injuries.

Later an officer tosses a “distraction grenade” inside the recreation area and then the officers storm inside. They place Mr. Wilson in chain restraints and walk him toward a jail cell. Mr. Wilson flashes a smile before being placed in the cell.

Mr. Wilson was sentenced to death in 2007 after a federal trial for killing the two New York police detectives, James Nemorin and Rodney J. Andrews. That sentence was vacated by an appellate court because of prosecutorial error during the trial, but the conviction was upheld. Prosecutors are now arguing again that Mr. Wilson should be executed.



June 30: Where the Candidates Are Today

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Feeding the Pigeons, in Memoriam

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New York Today: Statecraft, Past and Present

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July 1: Where the Candidates Are Today

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In a Truck in Brooklyn, a Church Offers Spiritual Guidance

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New York Today: Monsoon Season

Today will look quite a bit like yesterday, the forecaster says.Ángel Franco/The New York Times Today will look quite a bit like yesterday, the forecaster says.

Updated, 12:48 p.m. | Tuesday's weather will probably be nicer than Monday's.

But that's not saying too much.

A mere half-inch of rain is in the forecast (nearly an inch fell on Monday), and wind gusts are expected to hit only 20 miles an hour â€" unlike Monday, when small tornadoes whipped through New Jersey and Connecticut.

A flash-flood watch is in effect through the evening, and thunderstorms become more likely as the day wears on, so bring an umbrella.

Consider a jacket, too â€" the high might not hit 80. Just another blustery summer day in the big city.

Here's what else you need to know to start your Tuesday.

TRANSIT & TRAFFIC

- Mass Transit Subway: Click for the latest status.

- Air Travel Weather-related delays have been reported at area airports. Click for the latest status.

COMING UP TODAY

- Police cadets are graduating at 11 a.m. at the Bar clays Center. The mayor will speak.

- Abe Lincoln, the Marquis de Lafayette and other patriotic statues at Union Square will get a makeover from parks workers as Independence Day approaches.

- On the campaign trail, Joseph J. Lhota will greet commuters at Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg's subway station on East 77th Street at 7:30 a.m. William C. Thompson Jr. will be endorsed by the transit workers' union at noon. Bill de Blasio will ask voters for signatures outside a Rite Aid near Brooklyn College at 4 p.m. Click for candidates' schedules.

- Free outdoor concert for kids in Madison Square Park from 10:30 to 11:30 a.m. with Big Bang Boom.

- France's junior minister of the food industry will tour a Queens elementary school cafeteria to check out the grub.

- A-Rod will start at third base tonight â€" for the Class A Charleston, S.C., RiverDogs, as he continues to mend from hip surgery.

- If skies clear, you can stargaze from the High Line with telescopes provided by the Amateur Astronomers Association of New York. Follow @highlinenyc on Twitter for weather updates.

- Free dance party at Central Park SummerStage at 6 p.m., put on by the long-running Freedom Dance Party and featuring an appearance by Cameo. Word Up!

- Mets host Diamondbacks at 7 p.m., Yankees at Minnesota.

- For more events, see The New York Times's Arts & Entertainment guide< /a>.

IN THE NEWS

- Texting while driving is now a five-point violation in New York. [Gothamist]

- Mentally disabled Long island newlyweds who sued group homes to let them live together as husband and wife moved into a new apartment and threw a party. [Associated Press]

- Time Warner is leaving the Time Warner Building. [New York Times]

- The ske leton of a Poughkeepsie schoolteacher reported missing by her husband in 1985 turned up in the walls of their old house. She had been beaten to death. Her husband died in December. [Journal News]

- A dead dolphin washed up on the beach in Coney Island. [A Walk in the Park]

- A new police precinct station house opened on Staten Island. The 121st Precinct is the first new one in the city since the 33rd o pened in Washington Heights in 2002. [Staten Island Advance]

- The Yankees' home attendance is down 6 percent, and their TV ratings are plummeting. On the other hand, they won last night, as did the Mets - in 13 innings. [New York Times]

AND FINALLY…

Beautiful baby bird alert: roseate spoonbills, two of them, newly hatched at the Bronx Zoo. Sweet little bills, suitable for sifting through mud for bugs and crustaceans. And their plumage looks kind of like strawberry ice cream.

E.C. Gogolak contributed reporting.

We're testing New York Today, which we put together just before dawn and update until noon. What information would you like to see here when you wake up to help you plan your day? Tell us in the comments, send suggestions to anewman@nytimes.com or tweet them at @nytmetro using #NYToday. Thanks!



How Many Cans Does a Recycling Bag Hold?

Dear Diary:

I was on the way to Jane's Upper East Side apartment with a single long-stemmed white rose that I had picked up at a Lenox Avenue bodega. Jane had recently broken up with her boyfriend of a year, and I figured this might cheer her up.

En route east on Central Park North (110th Street), I passed what appeared to be a small caravan of redeemers. They were not quite the religious acolytes of St. John the Divine; rather, half a dozen men and women were pushing and pulling shopping carts loaded with 50-gallon plastic bags of recyclable cans and bottles. They were heading west, presumably to the Fine Fare supermarket, and redemption, on 112th.

It's a ritual repeated all over the city. It made me wonder what kind of wealth one might acquire, daily, picking through trash. But how to inquire?

I had to be careful how I phrased the question. I popped it to the third member of the team: “How many cans does a bag hold?”

Answer: about 240. And one can do the math: at 5 cents apiece, $12 a bag, $24 for 2.

By the time I reached the Duke Ellington Circle at 110th and Fifth, there was one straggler, singing, earbuds in, apparently very happy to accompany Aretha. And also oblivious that she was losing her load, a trail of 20 to 40 empty Pepsis, Cokes and Mountain Dews in her wake. I hollered to her but she couldn't hear.

I picked up five or six - careful to tuck Jane's wrapped flower under my arm without damaging it - while I scurried to alert the cart-pusher. She was effusive in her thanks and then said, “Would you like a couple of bucks?”

Flabbergasted, I said, “Er, no, but thank you.” And in that moment I handed over the rose. She accepted my gesture graciously and promptly inserted it in a Schweppes two-liter bottle.

I was reasonably sure I could find another flower for Jane along the way.

Read all recent entries and our updated submissions guidelines. Reach us via e-mail diary@nytimes.com or follow @NYTMetro on Twitter using the hashtag #MetDiary.



July 2: Where the Candidates Are Today

Planned events for the mayoral candidates, according to the campaigns and organizations they are affiliated with. Times are listed as scheduled but frequently change.

Joseph Burgess and Nicholas Wells contributed reporting.

Event information is listed as provided at the time of publication. Details for many of Ms. Quinn events are not released for publication.

Events by candidate

Albanese

Carrión

De Blasio

Lhota

Thompson

Weiner

Group event


Bill de Blasio
Democrat

4 p.m.
Continues gathering signatures for his petition to get on the ballot, at the Rite Aid Pharmacy on Flatbush Avenue.

John C. Liu
Democrat

2:15 p.m.
Addresses the induction society at which the Harlem Children Society and Association of Science and Society welcomes new summer interns into a program that is designed to supplement their academic study and involvement in the sciences, at NYU's Kimmel Center.

Joseph J. Lhota
Republican

7:30 a.m.
Greets morning commuters, at the East 77th Street subway station.

2:30 p.m.
Addresses the induction society at which the Harlem Children Society and Association of Science and Society welcomes new summer interns into a program that is desi gned to supplement their academic study and involvement in the sciences, at NYU's Kimmel Center.

William C. Thompson Jr.
Democrat

12 p.m.
Accepts the endorsement of the Transport Workers' Union Local 100, at City Hall. Virtually all of T.W.U. 100's 39,000 workers work for the M.T.A., an agency once run by one of Mr. Thompson's mayoral rivals, Mr. Lhota.

5 p.m.
Attends a ra lly protesting federal cuts to the New York City Housing Authority with Teamsters Local 237, at City Hall Park.

Anthony D. Weiner
Democrat

1:30 p.m.
Addresses the induction society at which the Harlem Children Society and Association of Science and Society welcomes new summer interns into a program that is designed to supplement their academic study and involvement in the sciences, at NYU's Kimmel Center.

5:45 p.m.
Greets afternoon commuters, at the 72nd Street station on Broadway.

Sal F. Albanese
Democrat

7:30 a.m.
Greets morning commuters, at the 181st Street A train station.

Adolfo Carrión Jr.
Independent

9 a.m.
Visits a hydroponic lettuce farm as part of a tour of Los Sures, a 41-year-old organization that focuses on affordable housing, whose social services programs, senior housing, senior center and food pantry have been struggling because of state budget cuts, in Williamsburg.

George T. McDonald
Republican

1:30 p.m.
Addresses the induction societ y at which the Harlem Children Society and Association of Science and Society welcomes new summer interns into a program that is designed to supplement their academic study and involvement in the sciences, at NYU's Kimmel Center.



In an Online Campaign, Teaching Sex Education via Social Media

Gregory Johnson, center, looked for videos and information about H.I.V. awareness during a meeting in the Bronx. Mr. Johnson is part of a project that uses social media to reach out to gay and bisexual men. Todd Heisler/The New York Times Gregory Johnson, center, looked for videos and information about H.I.V. awareness during a meeting in the Bronx. Mr. Johnson is part of a project that uses social media to reach out to gay and bisexual men.

The online banter was too steamy to ignore.

Gregory Johnson, a soft-spoken young man using the screen name “Adonis,” talked up sex to several hundred of his closest Facebook friends this spring. Once he had their attention, he sent a racy snapshot of two square wrappers tucked int o his underwear along with a plea: Why not use a condom?

It was only a matter of time before the social media keeping friends and family connected and amused was pressed into public service. Just as antismoking ads have come to saturate the airwaves, a flurry of personalized messages promoting H.I.V. testing and protected sex have popped up on thousands of smartphones, iPads and laptops in recent months.

The online campaign is the work of an unusual health project in the Bronx, which seeks to harness social media to educate gay and bisexual men about the risks of contracting H.I.V. and AIDS. The project, called “theSEXword,” recruited seven men and one woman who is transgender to build an online forum for sharing safe-sex messages with people who would never bother to pick up a brochure. It was funded with $25,000 from the Center for AIDS Research, a joint program of Albert Einstein College of Medicine and Montefiore Medical Center in the Bronx.

“It's one on one; it's directly to them,” said Kamari Perkins, 22, one of the eight cyber messengers. “They're more receptive to someone they know than someone they don't.”

In New York City, there were 3,404 newly diagnosed cases of H.I.V. in 2011, of which Brooklyn had the highest number (983), followed by Manhattan (866) and the Bronx (662), according to city health statistics. In total, 51 percent of all newly diagnosed cases were among men who reported having sex with men.

“The objective was to reach this hard-to-reach population and do it in an efficient way,” said Dr. Viraj V. Patel, a doctor at Montefiore, who oversaw the project with Dr. David W. Lounsbury, a medical researcher at Einstein. Montefiore currently treats about 5,500 people with H.I.V. in outpatient programs, for a total of more than 15,500 p eople since 1997.

The doctors turned to Sage Rivera, 31, a community leader, who tapped people for the project with connections to different crowds, from recent immigrants to those dabbling in subcultures like Goth and graffiti. The group of eight, called peer leaders, range in age from 15 to 27 and have varied backgrounds and interests.

For instance, Mr. Johnson, 24, is popular in the cyberworld with more than 20,000 followers combined on social media sites, including Facebook and Twitter. Another is a dancer, and still another, a gay rights activist. As Mr. Rivera put it, arguments erupt all the time because “they don't speak the same, they don't have the same history.”

In a basement computer lab in a Montefiore building, the peer leaders have met weekly to share ideas and tips for getting their messages heard. They are paid a nominal stipend of $35 per meeting, plus travel expenses.

“Don't make it too preachy,” Mr. Johnson advised. “You j ust want to make it cool. You want to speak the way they speak.”

Mr. Johnson explained that he engages in the sex talk because if he just posted a message about H.I.V., his friends would skip over it. “I have a lot of friends who are H.I.V. positive, so I feel like I'm actually doing something to help,” he said.

By the project's count, the peer leaders have reached more than 50,000 people through social media. They have received back more than 1,600 responses (likes, comments, re-tweets, etc.). At their request, their friends and acquaintances have also completed nearly 300 online surveys about their individual H.I.V. testing history to collect data for research.

Teddy Reyes, 18, said that since he joined the project, he has helped persuade a dozen of his friends to get tested for H.I.V. On a recent afternoon, he began his online campaign by posting 20 funny slogans about condoms on Tumblr, including No. 6: “No glove, no love.”

“People don 't want to talk about it because it's so serious,” he said. “But if you make it funny, that gives people a way to feel comfortable about it.”



Annual Goose Roundup Under Way in Jamaica Bay

David Karopkin/GooseWatch NYC

The annual roundup and slaughter of the region's Canada geese in the name of human air safety is under way.

In the Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge and the surrounding area Tuesday morning, agents from the federal Department of Agriculture captured geese and loaded them onto trucks, the National Park Service said. (This time of year, geese are molting and cannot fly.)

No numbers were available, but based on a census conducted recently by the Agriculture Department, the target was 500 geese, said Daphne Y un, a spokeswoman for the National Park Service.

Video taken near the West Pond trail area in the wildlife refuge by David Karopkin of GooseWatch NYC and released by Friends of Animals shows workers carrying heavy-looking crates loaded with birds and putting them in the back of a pickup truck.

Hundreds of geese have been removed each summer from parks within a few miles of the area's major airports and slaughtered - much to the dismay of animal-rights advocates - since 2009, after a US Airways jet was brought down in the Hudson River by a bird strike. The government is trying to nearly halve the Canada goose population in 17 Atlantic states, to 650,000 from 1.1 million.

“The adult geese and babies were squawking loudly in distress” as they were stuffed into the crates, Edita Birnkrant, New York director of Friends of Animals, wrote in an e-mail. “That this is happening in NYC's only wildlife refuge is stunning.”

In addition to the roundup at Jamaica Bar, which is controlled by the National Park Service, there have been 322 geese captured at city parks so far this year, city environmental officials said.

The number of geese rounded up has been declining, an indicator, officials said, that the population control plan, which also includes tactics to discourage geese from breeding, is a success.



Broadway\'s ‘Vanya and Sonia\' Recoups Investment

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London Theater Journal: Trapped

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Actors and Directors for Readings of August Wilson Cycle Are Veterans of Playwright\'s Work

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You Had Me at ‘Bigger Alligators\': Times Readers Pitch Summer Blockbusters

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A New Monday for the Met, Now Open Seven Days a Week

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In Performance: Carla Gugino of ‘A Kid Like Jake\'

Daniel Pearle's new play “A Kid Like Jake” is a drama about a young couple (Carla Gugino and Peter Grosz) and their attempts to get their 4-year-old son into a good school while coming to terms with the boy's desire to dress as Cinderella and the Little Mermaid. In this scene, Ms. Gugino reflects on the differences between fantasy and reality as she watches Disney's “Cinderella” one night. The show continues through July 14 at LCT3's Claire Tow Theater.

Recent videos in this series include Steven Pasquale singin g “I Never Knew” from the new musical “Far From Heaven,” at Playwrights Horizons, and Kate Mulgrew and Kathleen Chalfant in a scene from Jenny Schwartz's new play “Somewhere Fun,” which recently closed at the Vineyard Theater.

Coming soon: A monologue from Christopher Denham of “The Unavoidable Disappearance of Tom Durnin” and a song from the cast of “Choir Boy.”



Bette Midler Hangs Up the Phone on ‘I\'ll Eat You Last\'

In character as Sue Mengers in Sara Krulwich/The New York Times In character as Sue Mengers in “I'll Eat You Last.”

Bette Midler wrapped up her Broadway run on Sunday in “I'll Eat You Last,” her hit play about the Hollywood agent Sue Mengers, and by Monday she was starting to decompress. Her voice was strained after three months of chain-smoking herbal cigarettes as the nicotine-and-pot-loving Mengers, but otherwise she seemed hardy during a telephone interview about her first role on Broadway in some 40 years. There was little bitterness, for instance , at the two-dozen theater insiders who declined to nominate her for a Tony Award for best actress for “I'll Eat You Last” â€" a decision that was one of the biggest surprises of the theater season.

“I think it's a great group, but it's not my scene,” Ms. Midler said of the nominators and other powers-that-be in the Broadway industry. “I come from another world, and I think they might have felt, ‘Oh, she's not really in our world, she's just dropping in for a cameo.' I can't get worked up about it. Besides, I already have a Tony for my Broadway concert in '73. It's one of the most precious things I've won. So, I don't know â€" it's a different crowd now, and they're four generations removed from when I was performing regularly in theater.”

If the nominators didn't embrace her, many critics did, and audi ences paid up: “I'll Eat You Last” broke box office records at the Booth Theater and recouped its $2.4 million investment in May after 8 weeks of performances, a rare feat for a play. The producers and Ms. Midler are talking about possibly bringing the play to Los Angeles, where Ms. Mengers was a major force during the 1970s and early ‘80s before retiring and becoming a popular Hollywood hostess. As for Broadway, several producers are hopeful that the 67-year-old Ms. Midler has caught the theater bug again and will consider another play or musical at some point, given her box office prowess.

Right now, though, Ms. Midler said she just wants to catch her breath. The following are edited excerpts from the interview on Monday night.

Q.

What was the most surprising part of the Broadway experience for you, Bette?

A.

I'd never done a straight play before, never, and it was very hard work â€" really, really hard work. It was dense, really wordy, and I was determined to learn every word of it â€" not just skip over bits and pieces. It took me a long time to actually know what the play was about â€" that it was a long aria with slow-moving parts, and parts with laughs and tears, and that my job was to switch gears pretty radically and seamlessly in ways that I had never done before. And this wasn't like just one day of shooting for a movie â€" you had to stay healthy, your brain had to stay sharp, and you needed enough wind so when a sentence went on like a paragraph, I could still breathe. There were moments I had to eat candy, and I would have a mouth full of saliva, but no time to swallow it â€" so I had to learn to perform through moments like that.

Q.

Was there anything you learned about yoursel f as an actor that you didn't know before?

A.

I learned to accept the audience's happiness for me, which is one of the hardest things for me to learn. I had a hard-scrabble childhood with my parents. I have a lot of baggage. To come down to the footlights and accept the audience's affection inside a Broadway theater â€" that didn't come easily to me. Sue Mengers was way tougher than I am. You go through your life, you're a certain age, a lot of things have happened to me, but I needed to put those aside and let the audience affect me in a simple way.

Q.

What was the hardest thing you struggled with?

A.

The cigarettes nearly killed me. I answer the phone now and people calling think it's my husband. And my allergies in that theater â€" it's a very old theater. And the hairspray! I never used hairspray. And the wigs! Let's not talk about the fricking wigs, that was such a saga. But the cigarettes were the hardest. When I made ‘The Rose,' I did smoke, I smoked for six months, and years later I tried a cigarette again and it made me sick for two weeks. These are herbal cigarettes, but smoke is smoke. I was thrilled, though, when I finally got the timing down to smoke two at once â€" a cigarette in one hand and a joint in the other. That was Sue.

Q.

In hindsight, do you think it was best to return to Broadway in a new play, as opposed to a classic play or your forte, a musical?

A.

I'm very happy I did a new play. To have started this part of my life with a brand new piece, a brand new character, instead of a revival, gave me such confidence in myself. All roles are great, but I really wanted to to make something of my own. I had never done that in theater.

Performing in Las Vegas in 2010.Isaac Brekken/Associated Press Performing in Las Vegas in 2010.
Q.

Any chance you'll tour the country in “I'll Eat You Last”?

A.

Like Laurette Taylor doing ‘Peg o' My Heart' until she dropped dead? I don't think so. We're in talks to bring it to L.A., which would be fun, because it'd be near my house and Sue's house.

Q.

Will you do another Broadway show?

A.

John Logan's writing in this play was so perfect for me, and Joe Mantello was such the perfect director, that it's very hard â€" if the writing was irresistible in another play, I would do it again. But I did seven shows a week and I nearly died. I begged for them to add another character, like the woman who rolled dope for Sue, but they s aid no.

Q.

What about a musical?

A.

I always have ‘Mame' in the back of my mind, and people do mention it, but I don't think I have eight shows in me. I'm too old. I think people don't understand how hard this is. Those kids who work so hard in eight shows a week, I bow to them. And I bow to the theater owners, too. They took good care of me and good care of my dressing room. I'm probably the only person who ever got a new loo out of the Shubert Organization.



London Theater Journal: Heaven and Earth

Michael McElhatton in The Night Alive, at the Donmar Warehouse.Helen Warner Michael McElhatton in “The Night Alive,” at the Donmar Warehouse.

The line is hazy that separates the natural from the supernatural in the world of Conor McPherson, a writer who whispers to the part of us that wants and fears to believe in ghosts. Watching “The Night Alive,” his beautiful new play at the Donmar Warehouse, I wasn't sure on which side of the divide I was between things worldly and otherwise. And, I thought, there's not another dramatist living who could pull off the kind of ambiguity he exercises so exquisitely here.

Since he emerged in t he 1990s as one of the theater's most promising proponents of the great Irish storytelling tradition, Mr. McPherson has trafficked regularly in the kind of gooseflesh-raising material that shows up in Halloween movie marathons. A vampire drama critic is the central character of his droll “St. Nicholas”; a therapy patient's dead wife haunts a psychiatrist's office in the wonderful “Shining City”; ghost stories fill the rural pub of “The Weir” and Satan himself joined the Christmas-time poker game in “The Seafarer.”

The devil wore a three-piece suit when “The Seafarer” came to Broadway in 2007, and as embodied by Ciaran Hinds, he cut a figure of rakish menace. In “The Night Alive,” directed by Mr. McPherson, Mr. Hinds has been reduced to baggy undershorts and remainder-bin T-shirts that strain against his beer belly. His earthy, defeated character, Tommy, describes hi mself abjectly as an eternal mooch, or freelancer when he's being less hard on himself. He is not the sort of fellow you'd expect to commune with the spirits.

The same might be said of most of the other characters in this play. Aside from Tommy's hard-drinking widower uncle, Maurice (the Tony-winning McPherson veteran Jim Norton), who owns the house where Tommy bunks in squalor, they're a classic bunch of losers, and not even the kind you call beautiful. At least three of them seem to be suffering from some form of mental illness. They're parasites, looking for provisional hosts to leech upon.

These folks belong to a breed of fictional characters that peaked in the 1960s and '70s: the depleted, disaffected, eccentric down-and-outers who drifted through plays by Shelagh Delaney and Lanford Wilson and movies like “Midnight Cowboy.” Mr. McPherson writes about the Dubli n-bred sub-species of this type with persuasive particularity.

And for the first 20 minutes or so of “The Night Alive,” I was cheerfully resigned to what I assumed would be a piquant, sentimental slice of naturalism, well-cut but familiar in flavor. Then Marvin Gaye started singing “What's Going On.”

That number comes on the radio in the mess of a bed-sit (designed by the indefatigable Soutra Gilmour) where Tommy has lived since he split from his wife and children. “Marvin!” booms Tommy, who unpacks his bulky frame into a series of almost graceful dance steps. He is joined by his guests, Aimee (Caoilfhionn Dunne), a streetwalker hiding out chez Tommy, and Doc (Michael McElhatton), his hapless and perhaps only friend.

Unhappy people cutting a rug in a snatched moment of joy is standard theatrical fare. (Remember “Dancing at Lughnasa”?) But a strange and wonderful metamorphosis occurs here. The music swells to the point that Marvin Gaye sounds truly celestial; it surrounds us, charging and transforming the very air. (Gregory Clarke did the sound and Neil Austin the lighting.) And a kitchen-sink universe has ineffably been endowed with an extra-sensory shimmer.

From that moment you expect, not so much the unexpected, but the expected rendered in a dimension you hadn't been previously aware of, one in which Evil and Grace exist in ways we can't pin down rationally. Acts of common betrayal and uncommon violence take place, including one that suggests the Devil does walk among us in what may be the scariest assault I have ever witnessed on a stage.

The pitch-perfect cast members, who also include Brian Gleeson as Aimee's sometime boyfriend, don't go all epiphany-faced on us. Nobody assumes the rapt expression of Saint Bernadette glimpsing the Blessed Virgin. Each character remains firmly lodged in the present, often sordid moment.

But as writer and director, Mr. McPhers on has planted in our minds a subliminal awareness of more things in heaven and earth than are dreamt of in any philosophy. By its end the play pulses with the possibility of redemption, if I may use a much-abused word. I do mean only the possibility; but even that nebulous hope kindles a glow, both warming and chilling, you rarely experience at the theater.

A scene from Richard H Smith A scene from “The Amen Corner.”

Rufus Norris's vivid revival of James Baldwin's “Amen Corner,” at the National Theater, follows a route that is almost the reverse of that taken by Mr. McPherson. The production begins in mid-hymn, with the gospel-singing voices of congregants in a Harlem store-front church reaching for the heavens. Then gradually, sometimes a bit too gradually, we are transported back to earth.

That earth is a cruel, blighted land where poverty and racial discrimination send people scrambling for refuge. Music, the kind you might hear in both African-American churches and nightclubs of the 1950s, offers an escape. But it ultimately doesn't offer the answer.

Published in 1954 but produced on Broadway only in 1965, “The Amen Corner” is an unwieldy and sometimes blunt play, a mix of devilish satire and earnest realism, and the only times I've seen it on stage before, it has sagged. Mr. Norris's production isn't without its dead spots. But it brings a welcome and affecting clarity to the story of Sister Margaret Alexander (Marianne Jean-Baptiste), a holier-than-Jesus lay minister who is confronted with her fleshly past.

What this production brings out so poignantly is the hunger for stability and sanctuary that drives its characters. Ian McNeil's two-tiered set â€" wh ich depicts Margaret's basement apartment and the street-level church she commands above it â€" suggests a world without roofs and of gaping windows where the neighbors gather like members of a Greek chorus.

The music â€" overseen by Tim Sutton (the show's composer) and the Rev. Bazil Meade (its vocal arranger) â€" shifts between classic spirituals, both rousing and melancholy, and sensuous, searching jazz, led by a lonely trumpet. That's the sound of Margaret's long-estranged husband, Luke (Lucian Msamati), a musician who re-enters her life with impeccably bad timing. That same music is a siren call to David (Eric Kofi Abrefa), Margaret's hitherto devoted son, who is just coming of age as a man.

The whole supporting cast â€" which includes Sharon D. Clarke as Margaret's pragmatic sister and Cecilia Noble as a pious schemer in the flock â€" is good. But Ms. Jean-Baptiste (of the film “Secrets and Lies” and television's “Without a Trace”), Mr. Msamati and Mr. Abrefa provide the play's compelling core of conflicted yearnings and wounded ideals.

“You've been uncovered, Maggie,” a parishioner says to Margaret toward the play's end. And Ms. Jean-Baptiste truly seems to stand before us with the rawness of revelation, more intense than she ever was while leading the throngs in prayer. Like many a tragic hero, she has arrived at a kind of self-knowledge, but at what price? When the gospel music starts to soar again, they're no longer playing Maggie's song.



Lou Reed Reviews Kanye West\'s ‘Yeezus,\' and He Likes It

Lou ReedChad Batka for The New York Times Lou Reed

Like him or not, Lou Reed is a man who certainly lets you know what he doesn't like (and there are a great many things that he doesn't). So is it surprising, or not surprising at all, that this rock 'n' roll contrarian and front man of the Velvet Underground would turn out to be an enthusiastic fan of the Kanye West album “Yeezus,” one of the year's most divisive pieces of music?

In a review published Tuesday at The Talkhouse, a Web site that says its goal is to “promote dialogue between musicians who may never have interacted otherwise,” Mr. Reed places himself unequivocally in Mr. West's camp, remarking that there “are moments of supreme beauty and greatness” on “Yeezus,” and that the rapper himself “obviously can hear that all styles are the same, somewhere deep in their heart, there's a connection.”

“It's all the same” stuff, Mr. Reed writes, using an expletive, “it's all music - that's what makes him great. If you like sound, listen to what he's giving you. Majestic and inspiring.”

Mr. Reed raises questions about some of Mr. West's more provocative lyrics on “Yeezus,” which he variously describes as tossed off, childish and “very funny,” and he compares the synthesized buzzsaw sound that opens the record to flatulence.

But he also praises the track “Blood on the Leaves” (which juxtaposes Mr. West's voice with samples of Nina Simone's “Strange Fruit”) as “fascinating, aurally, nothing short of spectacular.”

And of Mr. West's feral growling on “I A m a God,” Mr. Reed writes: “It's not like a James Brown scream - it's a real scream of terror. It makes my hair stand on end. He knows they could turn on him in two seconds. By ‘they' I mean the public, the fickle audience. He could kill Taylor Swift and it would all be over.”

Mr. Reed being who he is, he also finds room in his 1,800-word essay to defend his 1975 album “Metal Machine Music,” which the critic John Rockwell described in a review for The New York Times as “over an hour of screaming, steady-state electronic noise” that “will convince many of his admirers that he has finally tripped over the line between outrageousness and sheer self-destructive indulgence.”

Mr. Reed counters, “I have never thought of music as a challenge. You always figure, the audience is at least as smart as you are. You do this because you like it, you think what you're making is beautiful.”

“Yeezus,” which sold 327,000 copies and was No. 1 on the Nielsen SoundScan chart in its first week of release, has elicited critical responses as polarizing as anything Mr. West has released in his career. Reviewing the album for The Times, Jon Pareles wrote, “The music hurls Mr. West's rhymes like a catapult, an effect compounded by his vehement delivery. But the sound and attitude often say more than the actual words.”

But Mr. Reed says emphatically of Mr. West, “The guy really, really, really is talented. He's really trying to raise the bar. No one's near doing what he's doing, it's not even on the same planet.”

(Mr. West did not immediately respond to Mr. Reed's review, but, as someone who recently told The New York Times that something bearing his name is “supposed to be pushing the furthest possibilities,” he presumably appreciates this particular compliment.)



BMW Ends Support for Guggenheim Lab Project

The BMW Guggenheim Lab installed in Manhattan in 2011.Guy Calaf for The New York Times The BMW Guggenheim Lab installed in Manhattan in 2011.

In 2010 the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum announced a six-year project with BMW to create what it called the BMW Guggenheim Lab â€" three 5,000 square feet architect-designed pop-up structures that would travel in consecutive cycles to three locations â€" one in the United States, one in Europe and one in Asia â€" spending three months in each place. At every stop Guggenheim curators would invite leaders in the fields of architecture, art, science, design, technology and education to participate in programs relating to the problems of urb an living.

The first lab, which opened on a vacant lot in Manhattan's East Village in 2011, attracted more than 54,000 visitors before going on to Berlin and Mumbai. But now it turns out, that will be the last lab. BMW has ended its support of the project, which was to have gone through 2016. “BMW will continue to be a global partner of the Guggenheim,'' said Eleanor R. Goldhar, the Guggenheim's deputy director of external affairs and chief of global communications. “We are in discussions about future collaborations.''

Citing what he described as “strategic shifts within the company,'' Thomas Girst, BMW Group's head of cultural engagement, said on Tuesday that the company will continue to support the arts and the Guggenheim. “Things change,'' Mr. Girst added, “But we're still holding hands with the Guggenhe im.''

Rather than ending with a whimper, the lab's two-year journey will culminate with “Participatory City: 100 Urban Trends from the BMW Guggenheim Lab,'' an exhibition that will be on view at the Guggenheim Museum in New York from October 2013 through Jan. 5, 2014.



BMW Ends Support for Guggenheim Lab Project

The BMW Guggenheim Lab installed in Manhattan in 2011.Guy Calaf for The New York Times The BMW Guggenheim Lab installed in Manhattan in 2011.

In 2010 the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum announced a six-year project with BMW to create what it called the BMW Guggenheim Lab - three 5,000 square feet architect-designed pop-up structures that would travel in consecutive cycles to three locations - one in the United States, one in Europe and one in Asia - spending three months in each place. At every stop Guggenheim curators would invite leaders in the fields of architecture, art, science, design, technology and education to participate in programs relating to the problems of urban living.

The first lab, which opened on a vacant lot in Manhattan’s East Village in 2011, attracted more than 54,000 visitors before going on to Berlin and Mumbai. But now it turns out, that will be the last lab. BMW has ended its support of the project, which was to have gone through 2016. “BMW will continue to be a global partner of the Guggenheim,’’ said Eleanor R. Goldhar, the Guggenheim’s deputy director of external affairs and chief of global communications. “We are in discussions about future collaborations.’’

Citing what he described as “strategic shifts within the company,’’ Thomas Girst, BMW Group’s head of cultural engagement, said on Tuesday that the company will continue to support the arts and the Guggenheim. “Things change,’’ Mr. Girst added, “But we’re still holding hands with the Guggenheim.’’

Rather than ending with a ! whimper, the lab’s two-year journey will culminate with “Participatory City: 100 Urban Trends from the BMW Guggenheim Lab,’’ an exhibition that will be on view at the Guggenheim Museum in New York from October 2013 through Jan. 5, 2014.



Annual Goose Roundup Under Way in Jamaica Bay

David Karopkin/GooseWatch NYC

The annual roundup and slaughter of the region’s Canada geese in the name of human air safety is under way.

In the Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge and the surrounding area Tuesday morning, agents from the federal Department of Agriculture captured geese and loaded them onto trucks, the National Park Service said. (This time of year, geese are molting and cannot fly.)

No numbers were available, but based on a census conducted recently by the Agriculture Department, the target was 500 geese, said Daphne Yun, a spokeswoman for the Natioal Park Service.

Video taken near the West Pond trail area in the wildlife refuge by David Karopkin of GooseWatch NYC and released by Friends of Animals shows workers carrying heavy-looking crates loaded with birds and putting them in the back of a pickup truck.

Hundreds of geese have been removed each summer from parks within a few miles of the area’s major airports and slaughtered â€" much to the dismay of animal-rights advocates â€" since 2009, after a US Airways jet was brought down in the Hudson River by a bird strike. The government is trying to nearly halve the Canada goose population in 17 Atlantic states, to 650,000 from 1.1 million.

“The adult geese and babies were squawking loudly in distress” as they were stuffed into the crates, Edita Birnkrant, New York director of Friends of Animals, wrote in an e-mail.! “That this is happening in NYC’s only wildlife refuge is stunning.”



In an Online Campaign, Teaching Sex Education via Social Media

Gregory Johnson, center, looks for videos and information to post to his social media contacts about HIV awareness during a meeting in the Bronx. Mr. Johnson is part of a project that uses social media to reach gay and bisexual men. Todd Heisler/The New York Times Gregory Johnson, center, looks for videos and information to post to his social media contacts about HIV awareness during a meeting in the Bronx. Mr. Johnson is part of a project that uses social media to reach gay and bisexual men.

The online banter was too steamy to ignore.

Gregory Johnson, a soft-spoken young man using the screen name “Adonis,” talked up sex to several hundred of his closest Facebook friends this spring. Once he had their attention, he sent a racy snapshot of two square rappers tucked into his underwear along with a plea: Why not use a condom?

It was only a matter of time before the social media keeping friends and family connected and amused was pressed into public service. Just as antismoking ads have come to saturate the airwaves, a flurry of personalized messages promoting H.I.V. testing and protected sex have popped up on thousands of smartphones, iPads and laptops in recent months.

The online campaign is the work of an unusual health project in the Bronx, which seeks to harness social media to educate gay and bisexual men about the risks of contracting H.I.V. and AIDS. The project, called “theSEXword,” recruited seven men and one woman who is transgender to build an online forum for sharing safe-sex messages with people who would never bother to pick up a brochure. It was funded with $25,000 from the Cen! ter for AIDS Research, a joint program of Albert Einstein College of Medicine and Montefiore Medical Center in the Bronx.

“It’s one on one; it’s directly to them,” said Kamari Perkins, 22, one of the eight cyber messengers. “They’re more receptive to someone they know than someone they don’t.”

In New York City, there were 3,404 newly diagnosed cases of H.I.V. in 2011, of which Brooklyn had the highest number (983), followed by Manhattan (866) and the Bronx (662), according to city health statistics. In total, 51 percent of all newly diagnosed cases were among men who reported having sex with men.

“The objective was to reach this hard-to-reach population and do it in an efficient way,” said Dr. Viraj V. Patel, a doctor at Montefiore, who oversaw the project with Dr. David W. Lounsbury, a medical researcher at Einstein. Montefiore currently treats about 5,500 people with H.I.V. in outpatient programs, for a total of more than 15,500 people since 1997.

The doctos turned to Sage Rivera, 31, a community leader, who tapped people for the project with connections to different crowds, from recent immigrants to those dabbling in subcultures like Goth and graffiti. The group of eight, called peer leaders, range in age from 15 to 27 and have varied backgrounds and interests.

For instance, Mr. Johnson, 24, is popular in the cyberworld with more than 20,000 followers combined on social media sites, including Facebook and Twitter. Another is a dancer, and still another, a gay rights activist. As Mr. Rivera put it, arguments erupt all the time because “they don’t speak the same, they don’t have the same history.”

In a basement computer lab in a Montefiore building, the peer leaders have met weekly to share ideas and tips for getting their messages heard. They are paid a nominal stipend of $35 per meeting, plus travel expenses.

“Don’t make it too preachy,” Mr. Johnson advised. “You just want to make it cool. You want to speak the way th! ey speak.! ”

Mr. Johnson explained that he engages in the sex talk because if he just posted a message about H.I.V., his friends would skip over it. “I have a lot of friends who are H.I.V. positive, so I feel like I’m actually doing something to help,” he said.

By the project’s count, the peer leaders have reached more than 50,000 people through social media. They have received back more than 1,600 responses (likes, comments, re-tweets, etc.). At their request, their friends and acquaintances have also completed nearly 300 online surveys about their individual H.I.V. testing history to collect data for research.

Teddy Reyes, 18, said that since he joined the project, he has helped persuade a dozen of his friends to get tested for H.I.V. On a recent afternoon, he began his online campaign by posting 20 funny slogans about condoms on Tumblr, including No. 6: “No glove, no love.”

“People don’t want to talk about it because it’s so serious,” he said. “But if you make it funn, that gives people a way to feel comfortable about it.”



Lou Reed Reviews Kanye West’s ‘Yeezus,’ and He Likes It

Lou ReedChad Batka for The New York Times Lou Reed

Like him or not, Lou Reed is a man who certainly lets you know what he doesn’t like (and there are a great many things that he doesn’t). So is it surprising, or not surprising at all, that this rock ‘n’ roll contrarian and front man of the Velvet Underground would turn out to be an enthusiastic fan of the Kanye West album “Yeezus,” one of the year’s most divisive pieces of music?

In a review published Tuesday at The Talkhouse, a Web site that says its goal is to “promote dialogue between musicians who may never have interacted otherwise,” Mr. Reed places himself unequivocally in Mr. West’s camp, rmarking that there “are moments of supreme beauty and greatness” on “Yeezus,” and that the rapper himself “obviously can hear that all styles are the same, somewhere deep in their heart, there’s a connection.”

“It’s all the same” stuff, Mr. Reed writes, using an expletive, “it’s all music â€" that’s what makes him great. If you like sound, listen to what he’s giving you. Majestic and inspiring.”

Mr. Reed raises questions about some of Mr. West’s more provocative lyrics on “Yeezus,” which he variously describes as tossed off, childish and “very funny,” and he compares the synthesized buzzsaw sound that opens the record to flatulence.

But he also praises the track “Blood on the Leaves” (which juxtaposes Mr. West’s voice with samples of Nina Simone’s “Strange Fruit”) as “fascinating, aurally, nothing short of spectacular.”

And of Mr. West’s feral growling on “I Am a God,” Mr. Reed writes:! “It’s not like a James Brown scream â€" it’s a real scream of terror. It makes my hair stand on end. He knows they could turn on him in two seconds. By ‘they’ I mean the public, the fickle audience. He could kill Taylor Swift and it would all be over.”

Mr. Reed being who he is, he also finds room in his 1,800-word essay to defend his 1975 album “Metal Machine Music,” which the critic John Rockwell described in a review for The New York Times as “over an hour of screaming, steady-state electronic noise” that “will convince many of his admirers that he has finally tripped over the line between outrageousness and sheer self-destructive indulgence.”

Mr. Reed counters, “I have never thought of music as a challenge. You always figure, the audience is at least as smart as you are. You do this because you like it, you think what you’re making is beautiful.”

“Yeezus” which sold 327,000 copies and was No. 1 on the Nielsen SoundScan chart in its first week of release, has elicited critical responses as polarizing as anything Mr. West has released in his career. Reviewing the album for The Times, Jon Pareles wrote, “The music hurls Mr. West’s rhymes like a catapult, an effect compounded by his vehement delivery. But the sound and attitude often say more than the actual words.”

But Mr. Reed says emphatically of Mr. West, “The guy really, really, really is talented. He’s really trying to raise the bar. No one’s near doing what he’s doing, it’s not even on the same planet.”

(Mr. West did not immediately respond to Mr. Reed’s review, but, as someone who recently told The New York Times that something bearing his name is “supposed to be pushing the furthest possibilities,” he presumably appreciates this particular compliment.)



London Theater Journal: Heaven and Earth

Michael McElhatton in “The Night Alive,” at the Donmar Warehouse.Helen Warner Michael McElhatton in “The Night Alive,” at the Donmar Warehouse.

The line is hazy that separates the natural from the supernatural in the world of Conor McPherson, a writer who whispers to the part of us that wants and fears to believe in ghosts. Watching “The Night Alive,” his beautiful new play at the Donmar Warehouse, I wasn’t sure on which side of the divide I was between things worldly and otherwise. And, I thought, there’s not another dramatist living who could pull off the kind of ambiguity he exercises so exquisitely here.

Since he emerged in the 1990’s as one of thetheater’s most promising proponents of the great Irish storytelling tradition, Mr. McPherson has trafficked regularly in the kind of gooseflesh-raising material that shows up in Halloween movie marathons. A vampire drama critic is the central character of his droll “St. Nicholas”; a therapy patient’s dead wife haunts a psychiatrist’s office in the wonderful “Shining City”; ghost stories fill the rural pub of “The Weir” and Satan himself joined the Christmas-time poker game in “The Seafarer.”

The devil wore a three-piece suit when “The Seafarer” came to Broadway in 2007, and as embodied by Ciaran Hinds, he cut a figure of rakish menace. In “The Night Alive,” directed by Mr. McPherson, Mr. Hinds has been reduced to baggy undershorts and remainder-bin T-shirts that strain against his beer belly. His earthy, defeated character, Tommy, describes himself abjectly as an eternal mooch, or free! lancer when he’s being less hard on himself. He is not the sort of fellow you’d expect to commune with the spirits.

The same might be said of most of the other characters in this play. Aside from Tommy’s hard-drinking widower uncle, Maurice (the Tony-winning McPherson veteran Jim Norton), who owns the house where Tommy bunks in squalor, they’re a classic bunch of losers, and not even the kind you call beautiful. At least three of them seem to be suffering from some form of mental illness. They’re parasites, looking for provisional hosts to leech upon.

These folks belong to a breed of fictional characters that peaked in the 1960’s and 70’s: the depleted, disaffected, eccentric down-and-outers who drifted through plays by Shelagh Delaney and Lanford Wilson and movies like “Midnight Cowboy.” Mr. McPherson writes about the Dublin-bred sub-species of this type with persuasive particularity

And for the first 20 minutes or so of “The Night Alive,” I was cheerfully resigned to what I assumed would be a piquant, sentimental slice of naturalism, well-cut but familiar in flavor. Then Marvin Gaye started singing “What’s Going On.”

That number comes on the radio in the mess of a bed-sit (designed by the indefatigable Soutra Gilmour) where Tommy has lived since he split from his wife and children. “Marvin!” booms Tommy, who unpacks his bulky frame into a series of almost graceful dance steps. He is joined by his guests, Aimee (Caoilfhionn Dunne), a streetwalker hiding out chez Tommy, and Doc (Michael McElhatton), his hapless and perhaps only friend.

Unhappy people cutting a rug in a snatched moment of joy is standard theatrical fare. (Remember “Dancing at Lughnasa”?) But a strange and wonderful metamorphosis occurs here. The music swells to the point that Marvin Gaye sounds truly celestial; it surrounds us, charging and transfor! ming the ! very air.. (Gregory Clarke did the sound and Neil Austin the lighting.) And a kitchen-sink universe has ineffably been endowed with an extra-sensory shimmer.

From that moment you expect, not so much the unexpected, but the expected rendered in a dimension you hadn’t been previously aware of, one in which Evil and Grace exist in ways we can’t pin down rationally. Acts of common betrayal and uncommon violence take place, including one that suggests the Devil does walk among us in what may be the scariest assault I have ever witnessed on a stage.

The pitch-perfect cast members, who also include Brian Gleeson as Aimee’s sometime boyfriend, don’t go all epiphany-faced on us. Nobody assumes the rapt expression of Saint Bernadette glimpsing the Blessed Virgin. Each character remains firmly lodged in the present, often sordid moment.

But as writer and director, Mr. McPherson has planted in our minds a subliminal awareness of more things in heaven and earth than are dreamt of in any philosohy. By its end the play pulses with the possibility of redemption, if I may use a much-abused word. I do mean only the possibility; but even that nebulous hope kindles a glow, both warming and chilling, you rarely experience at the theater.

A scene from Richard H Smith A scene from “The Amen Corner.”

Rufus Norris’s vivid revival of James Baldwin’s “Amen Corner,” at the National Theater, follows a route that is almost the reverse of that taken by Mr. McPherson. The production begins in mid-hymn, with the gospel-singing voices of congregants in a Harlem store-front church reaching for the heavens. Then gradually, sometimes a bit too gradually, we are transported back to earth.

That earth is a cruel, blighted land where poverty and! racial di! scrimination send people scrambling for refuge. Music, the kind you might hear in both African-American churches and nightclubs of the 1950’s, offers an escape. But it ultimately doesn’t offer the answer.

Published in 1954 but produced on Broadway only in 1965, “The Amen Corner” is an unwieldy and sometimes blunt play, a mix of devilish satire and earnest realism, and the only times I’ve seen it on stage before, it has sagged. Mr. Norris’s production isn’t without its dead spots. But it brings a welcome and affecting clarity to the story of Sister Margaret Alexander (Marianne Jean-Baptiste), a holier-than-Jesus lay minister who is confronted with her fleshly past.

What this production brings out so poignantly is the hunger for stability and sanctuary that drives its characters. Ian McNeil’s two-tiered set - which depicts Margaret’s basement apartment and the street-level church she commands above it - suggests a world without roofs and of gaping windows where the neighbors gathr like members of a Greek chorus.

The music - overseen by Tim Sutton (the show’s composer) and the Reverend Bazil Meade (its vocal arranger) - shifts between classic spirituals, both rousing and melancholy, and sensuous, searching jazz, led by a lonely trumpet. That’s the sound of Margaret’s long-estranged husband, Luke (Lucian Msmati), a musician who re-enters her life with impeccably bad timing. That same music is a siren call to David (Eric Kofi Abrefa), Margaret’s hitherto devoted son, who is just coming of age as a man.

The whole supporting cast - which includes Sharon D. Clarke as Margaret’s pragmatic sister and Cecilia Noble as a pious schemer in the flock - is good. But Ms. Jean-Baptiste (of the film “Secrets and Lies” and television’s “Without a Trace”), Mr. Msmati and Mr. Abrefa provide the play’s compelling core of conflicted yearnings and wounded ideals.

“You’ve been uncovered, Maggie,” a parishioner says to Margaret toward the play’s end. A! nd Ms. Je! an-Baptiste truly seems to stand before us with the rawness of revelation, more intense than she ever was while leading the throngs in prayer. Like many a tragic hero, she has arrived at a kind of self-knowledge, but at what price? When the gospel music starts to soar again, they’re no longer playing Maggie’s song.



Bette Midler Hangs Up the Phone on ‘Eat You Last’

In character as Sue Mengers in Sara Krulwich/The New York Times In character as Sue Mengers in “I’ll Eat You Last.”

Bette Midler wrapped up her Broadway run on Sunday in “I’ll Eat You Last,” her hit play about the Hollywood agent Sue Mengers, and by Monday she was starting to decompress. Her voice was strained after three months of chain-smoking herbal cigarettes as the nicotine-and-pot-loving Mengers, but otherwise she seemed hardy during a telephone interview about her first role on Broadway in some 40 years. There was little bitterness, for instance, at the two-dozen theater isiders who declined to nominate her for a Tony Award for best actress for “I’ll Eat You Last” - a decision that was one of the biggest surprises of the theater season.

“I think it’s a great group, but it’s not my scene,” Ms. Midler said of the nominators and other powers-that-be in the Broadway industry. “I come from another world, and I think they might have felt, ‘Oh, she’s not really in our world, she’s just dropping in for a cameo.’ I can’t get worked up about it. Besides, I already have a Tony for my Broadway concert in ’73. It’s one of the most precious things I’ve won. So, I don’t know - it’s a different crowd now, and they’re four generations removed from when I was performing regularly in theater.”

If the nominators didn’t embrace her, many critics did, and audiences paid up: “I’ll Eat Yo! u Last” broke box office records at the Booth Theater and recouped its $2.4 million investment in May after 8 weeks of performances, a rare feat for a play. The producers and Ms. Midler are talking about possibly bringing the play to Los Angeles, where Ms. Mengers was a major force during the 1970s and early ‘80s before retiring and becoming a popular Hollywood hostess. As for Broadway, several producers are hopeful that the 67-year-old Ms. Midler has caught the theater bug again and will consider another play or musical at some point, given her box office prowess.

Right now, though, Ms. Midler said she just wants to catch her breath. The following are edited excerpts from the interview on Monday night.

Q.

What was the most surprising part of the Broadway experience for you, Bette?

A.

I’d never done a straight playbefore, never, and it was very hard work - really, really hard work. It was dense, really wordy, and I was determined to learn every word of it - not just skip over bits and pieces. It took me a long time to actually know what the play was about - that it was a long aria with slow-moving parts, and parts with laughs and tears, and that my job was to switch gears pretty radically and seamlessly in ways that I had never done before. And this wasn’t like just one day of shooting for a movie - you had to stay healthy, your brain had to stay sharp, and you needed enough wind so when a sentence went on like a paragraph, I could still breathe. There were moments I had to eat candy, and I would have a mouth full of saliva, but no time to swallow it - so I had to learn to perform through moments like that.

Q.

Was there anything you learned about yourself as an actor that you didn’t know before?

A.

I learned to ac! cept the ! audience’s happiness for me, which is one of the hardest things for me to learn. I had a hard-scrabble childhood with my parents. I have a lot of baggage. To come down to the footlights and accept the audience’s affection inside a Broadway theater - that didn’t come easily to me. Sue Mengers was way tougher than I am. You go through your life, you’re a certain age, a lot of things have happened to me, but I needed to put those aside and let the audience affect me in a simple way.

Q.

What was the hardest thing you struggled with?

A.

The cigarettes nearly killed me. I answer the phone now and people calling think it’s my husband. And my allergies in that theater - it’s a very old theater. And the hairspray! I never used hairspray. And the wigs! Let’s not talk about the fricking wigs, that was such a saga. But the cigarettes were the hardest. When I made ‘The Rose,’ I did smoke, I smoked for six months, and years later I tried a igarette again and it made me sick for two weeks. These are herbal cigarettes, but smoke is smoke. I was thrilled, though, when I finally got the timing down to smoke two at once - a cigarette in one hand and a joint in the other. That was Sue.

Q.

In hindsight, do you think it was best to return to Broadway in a new play, as opposed to a classic play or your forte, a musical?

A.

I’m very happy I did a new play. To have started this part of my life with a brand new piece, a brand new character, instead of a revival, gave me such confidence in myself. All roles are great, but I really wanted to to make something of my own. I had never done that in theater.

Performing in Las Vegas in 2010.Isaac Brekken/Associated Press Performing in Las Vegas in 2010.
Q.

Any chance you’ll tour the country in “I’ll Eat You Last”?

A.

Like Laurette Taylor doing ‘Peg o’ My Heart’ until she dropped dead? I don’t think so. We’re in talks to bring it to L.A., which would be fun, because it’d be near my house and Sue’s house.

Q.

Will you do another Broadway show?

A.

John Logan’s writing in this play was so perfect for me, and Joe Mantello was such the perfect director, that it’s very hard - if the writing was irresistible in another play, I would do it again. But I did seven shows a week and I nearly died. I begged for them to add another character, like the woman who rolled dope for Sue, but they said no.

Q.

What about a musical?

A.

I always have ‘Mame’ in the back of my mind, and people do mention it,but I don’t think I have eight shows in me. I’m too old. I think people don’t understand how hard this is. Those kids who work so hard in eight shows a week, I bow to them. And I bow to the theater owners, too. They took good care of me and good care of my dressing room. I’m probably the only person who ever got a new loo out of the Shubert Organization.



July 2: Where the Candidates are Today

Planned events for the mayoral candidates, according to the campaigns and organizations they are affiliated with. Times are listed as scheduled but frequently change.

Joseph Burgess and Nicholas Wells contributed reporting.

Event information is listed as provided at the time of publication. Details for many of Ms. Quinn events are not released for publication.

Events by candidate

Albanese

Carrión

De Blasio

Lhota

Thompson

Weiner

Group event


Bill de Blasio
Democrat

4 p.m.
Continues gathering signatures for his petition to get on the ballot, at the Rite Aid Pharmacy on Flatbush Avenue.

John C. Liu
Democrat

2:15 p.m.
Addresses the induction society at which the Harlem Children Society and Association of Science and Society welcomes new summer interns into a program that is designed to supplement their academic study and involveent in the sciences, at NYU’s Kimmel Center.

Joseph J. Lhota
Republican

7:30 a.m.
Greets morning commuters, at the East 77th Street subway station.

2:30 p.m.
Addresses the induction society at which the Harlem Children Society and Association of Science and Society welcomes new summer interns into a program that is designed to supplement their academic study and involvement in the sciences, at NYU’s Kimmel Center.

!

William C. Thompson Jr.
Democrat

12 p.m.
Accepts the endorsement of the Transport Workers’ Union Local 100, at City Hall. Virtually all of T.W.U. 100’s 39,000 workers work for the M.T.A., an agency once run by one of Mr. Thompson’s mayoral rivals, Mr. Lhota.

5 p.m.
Attends a rally protesting federal cuts to the New York City Housing Authority with Teamsters Local 237, at City Hall Park.

Anthony D. Weiner
Democrat

1:30 p.m.
Addresses the induction society at which the Harlem Children Society and Association of Science and Society welcomes new summer interns into a program that is designed to supplement their academic study and involvement in the sciences, at NYU’s Kimmel Center.

5:45 p.m.
Greets afternoon commuters, at the 72nd Street station on Broadway.

Sal F. Albanese
Democrat

7:30 a.m.
Greets morning commuters, at the 181st Street A train station.

Adolfo Carrión Jr.
Independent

9 a.m.
Visits a hydroponic lettuce farm as part of a tou of Los Sures, a 41-year-old organization that focuses on affordable housing, whose social services programs, senior housing, senior center and food pantry have been struggling because of state budget cuts, in Williamsburg.

George T. McDonald
Republican

1:30 p.m.
Addresses the induction society at which the Harlem Children Society and Association of Science and Society welcomes new summer interns into a program that is designed to supplement their academic study and involvement in the sciences, at NYU’s Kimmel Center.



July 2: Where the Candidates are Today

Planned events for the mayoral candidates, according to the campaigns and organizations they are affiliated with. Times are listed as scheduled but frequently change.

Joseph Burgess and Nicholas Wells contributed reporting.

Event information is listed as provided at the time of publication. Details for many of Ms. Quinn events are not released for publication.

Events by candidate

Albanese

Carrión

De Blasio

Lhota

Thompson

Weiner

Group event


Bill de Blasio
Democrat

4 p.m.
Continues gathering signatures for his petition to get on the ballot, at the Rite Aid Pharmacy on Flatbush Avenue.

John C. Liu
Democrat

2:15 p.m.
Addresses the induction society at which the Harlem Children Society and Association of Science and Society welcomes new summer interns into a program that is designed to supplement their academic study and involveent in the sciences, at NYU’s Kimmel Center.

Joseph J. Lhota
Republican

7:30 a.m.
Greets morning commuters, at the East 77th Street subway station.

2:30 p.m.
Addresses the induction society at which the Harlem Children Society and Association of Science and Society welcomes new summer interns into a program that is designed to supplement their academic study and involvement in the sciences, at NYU’s Kimmel Center.

!

William C. Thompson Jr.
Democrat

12 p.m.
Accepts the endorsement of the Transport Workers’ Union Local 100, at City Hall. Virtually all of T.W.U. 100’s 39,000 workers work for the M.T.A., an agency once run by one of Mr. Thompson’s mayoral rivals, Mr. Lhota.

5 p.m.
Attends a rally protesting federal cuts to the New York City Housing Authority with Teamsters Local 237, at City Hall Park.

Anthony D. Weiner
Democrat

1:30 p.m.
Addresses the induction society at which the Harlem Children Society and Association of Science and Society welcomes new summer interns into a program that is designed to supplement their academic study and involvement in the sciences, at NYU’s Kimmel Center.

5:45 p.m.
Greets afternoon commuters, at the 72nd Street station on Broadway.

Sal F. Albanese
Democrat

7:30 a.m.
Greets morning commuters, at the 181st Street A train station.

Adolfo Carrión Jr.
Independent

9 a.m.
Visits a hydroponic lettuce farm as part of a tou of Los Sures, a 41-year-old organization that focuses on affordable housing, whose social services programs, senior housing, senior center and food pantry have been struggling because of state budget cuts, in Williamsburg.

George T. McDonald
Republican

1:30 p.m.
Addresses the induction society at which the Harlem Children Society and Association of Science and Society welcomes new summer interns into a program that is designed to supplement their academic study and involvement in the sciences, at NYU’s Kimmel Center.