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Finding the Perfect Spot to Shoot

A member of the Teamsters union and the Directors Guild of America, Kevin Breslin is a filmmaker and a location scout for commercials. Over 20 years, he has maneuvered crews through the city and arranged thousands of shoots, including the New York Lottery’s “If I Had a Million Dollars” and Verizon’s “Can You Hear Me Now?” spots. Mr. Breslin, 56, lives in Belle Harbor, Queens, with his wife and youngest son.

Kevin Breslin.Michael Kirby Smith for The New York Times Kevin Breslin.

Q:
How much time do you spend driving around looking for new locations?

A:
I use time very carefully. I’m a quick read. When I’m driving, I’m a very visual person, so I might see something and say, “Hmm, that’s interesting.” Or in the back of my head, say that would be cool sometime, someplace. And then sometimes they’ll call, and I’ll say I remember something. And they say, “Can you find it?”

Q:
So, if a director said to you, “we’re looking for a great alley,” could you list off alleys?

You can hand them pictures all the time, files they call them, but they can be outdated. Things get done over. Including alleys. Alleys get closed down. Gates get put up. “No filming.” So you can show them anything, but is it feasible to shoot there? Has the look changed? Is it the same? There’s always a caveat: take a look at this, but we’ve got to go out and do the legwork and see if it’s still there and can we film there.

Q:
Do you worry what New Yorkers will think when the geography in a spot is askew?

A:
That’s art. Suspend disbelief. Who says it has to be absolutely linear? Who says and why? It’s irrelevant to a degree â€" that’s the fun of it, I think.

We just did the John Legend Chevrolet commercial. One minute we’re in Williamsburg, the next minute Greenpoint Avenue Bridge, then Houston Street. Next minute he’s on the highway. If anyone stopped for a minute, they’d say “Man, he is all over the map.” So what? There’s visual delight.

Q:
How has the business changed?

A:
I used to be able walk into a building, talk to a guard downstairs and say: “You know, I’m here. I’m scouting a commercial. I need to get to the roof. I need a shot.” He’d say, “Ah, the building is closed.” I’d say, “I need two minutes,” hand the guy a $20 â€" and you’d be on the roof. You got the shots.

Now with surveillance cameras everywhere, no one can help you in any way even if they want to. Now it’s impossible. You have to call â€" speak to the building manager, speak to the real estate agent, speak to the public relations department, speak to this one. So, now you’ve got to make 40 calls just to do anything.

Q:
Tell me about unusual shoots or locations.

A:
I’ve done dangerous ones with stunts. Stunts sound exciting. But you forgot something. Someone can get hurt with a stunt. We had one where we’re going to have a guy get thrown out of a window on the sixth floor. O.K. Where’s he going to land? He’s going to hit the floor.

I find the building, I find the street. I bring the stunt man. Is this a plausible place? Clear the street. Put down air bags, build a plank so that it’s level. Then the window, he’s got to take out the window and put in candy glass. He practices his steps. He’s timing it. Me and the stuntman for days. Day of the shoot we’ve got about 14 cameras going. Right before the shoot, I see him bless himself. This separates fantasy from reality right here.

Or we’re filming a big commercial in a funeral parlor. I figured out how to hold off funerals for two days. I paid the guy an exorbitant fee. Dead bodies they’re bringing in past me, in the black zipper bags to go downstairs. Two bodies have come by me. You have families grieving. They’re in the room right over there. I was having to take pictures in the rooms. I walked into one room, the makeup artist is putting makeup on an old woman who has died. And I’m thinking to myself, this is a long day. We’ll get to our spot when we can. We can’t determine when people are dying.

Q:
A lot of other cities, and of course, sound stages, fill in for New York City. What are the advantages of filming on location?

A:
People say be thankful we’re working in New York, like they’re doing us a big favor. They want the reality, or they would go to some nonunion city, or a place they can work cheaper. That’s a one-dimensional attitude. In New York City, most all of the time, you can turn the camera and there’s gripping reality. You can tilt down and see things. You’ll pan and see things. It just has an edge to it.

Q:
Do you have a favorite location to shoot?

A:
Oddly, no. Anywhere where it matters for that moment. I always like if somebody’s broke. A girl was struggling in Williamsburg. She sunk her life savings into opening up a hair salon, and we had three or four hair salons to choose from. She was so nice and she was early on in Williamsburg on Metropolitan Avenue before the total transformation. So I steered it in her direction and, of course, she got it. Not a fortune. But to her, a fortune because it paid two months of her rent. I’ll never forget her telling me, “You saved me because now I’m able to keep my business going.” And I remember thinking, “Good. I’m glad. Good for you.” Why not, it’s advertising money. Why not throw it around?

Q:
What do you like best about your job?

A:
Definitely the people. There’s too many in our monstrous city. But I’ll never forget one tiny little story. I was in Washington Heights by myself, and I have to go to the roof of a building to get the angles of the streets. And I’m thinking why do they always give me rough assignments?

I see this old woman go in. She goes up in the elevator and I miss her. So I go up the stairway, and there are two nasty drug dealers. Bad people. So, the first thing I do, I get very street smart. I just walk by them like I’m authoritative. As I get to the third floor, I see the old lady going into her apartment. I knock on the door. I tell her who I am. “I’m scouting for a commercial â€" blah, blah.” She lets me in. That’s nuts. She must be about 85. She’s being nice to me. Asking if I want coffee or tea. I’m just looking out the window.

And then I realize this could be my grandmom, so I start asking her about herself. I start looking around and she has money there. And I’m thinking, “Lady, lady, you shouldn’t have me here.” So, I said, “Look I can’t stay, it’s so kind of you,” and I said lock the door. And then I said, “By the way, don’t let anyone in again.” You can catch people off guard.

This interview has been condensed and edited.



A Bee’s Prickly Dream

A close-up of a prickly pear cactus flower.Dave Taft A close-up of a prickly pear cactus flower.

The flowers of the prickly pear cactus (Opuntia humifusa) are evolution’s answer to a bee’s dreams. They are filled with pollen, abundant in season, and easy to locate. For humans, they are also stunningly beautiful, if ephemeral. Each satiny yellow bloom lasts about a day, opening broadly in the first hours of the morning when temperatures are still relatively cool, and closing again as the sun sets. A good-sized plant displays up to a dozen two-inch flowers every day from mid-June through early July in and around New York City.

The cactus’s flower is shaped like an open bowl, with dozens of pollen-tipped stamens. Both native bumble bees and introduced honey bees find the blossoms irresistible, and are a constant presence from the moment they open. Patience pays when observing the arrangement between these partners. Finding an open flower, a bee dives in, swimming through masses of pollen-laden anthers and vibrating its body rapidly to loosen the pollen grains. It turns out this activity is hardly necessary: prickly pear cactus stamens are “thigmotactic,” that is, they are mobile, and bend inward when stimulated. The stamens proactively bend in toward the bee, dusting its fuzzy coat with pollen. This cactus pollen is eventually combed off by the bee and packaged for transport to the hive.

You can try this yourself; carefully brush a pencil against the stamens of a newly opened prickly pear flower. The response is quite remarkable.

Prickly pear cactuses thrive in sandy, rocky soils.Dave Taft Prickly pear cactuses thrive in sandy, rocky soils.

Growing in full sun in well-drained soils, the plants can be found in bone-dry conditions, in sandy, rocky and otherwise poor soils, but they are very adaptable. I have encountered them thriving in areas where the water table is right at the soil’s surface. The plant’s paddle-shaped pads are unmistakable, and since there are no other cactuses native to the New York area, identification is easy. A cactus seems like an anomaly this side of the Mississippi, but the eastern prickly pear can be found from Florida north to Massachusetts, with outliers in Texas and Montana.

In the fall, as the weather cools, the cactus pads (actually modified stems) desiccate, and become rumpled, greenish-purple strips that lie flush against the ground. This behavior prevents water from freezing and expanding in the stems, ultimately killing the plant.

Lying prostrate also allows even small amounts of snow to cover the dormant cactus. Snow is a cold but efficient insulator, and temperatures under the snow hover at just about freezing, never far below. The same pads rehydrate and spring back vertically, only to sprout flower buds and new stems as the weather warms.

There is no discussing a cactus without at least some mention of spines. Merely modified leaves, the spines of the native prickly pear are accompanied by glochids, which are fine and hairlike. Don’t let their size fool you; there are few things as irritating as these almost-invisible spines lodged in the joints of fingers or other body parts.



The Week in Pictures, July 5

Here is a slide show of photographs from the past week in New York City and the region. Subjects include Staten Island Ferry parties, the reopening of the Statue of Liberty and bits from the Weiner campaign.

This weekend on “The New York Times Close Up,” an inside look at the most compelling articles in Sunday’s Times, the guest host, Clyde Haberman, talks with Times’s Adam Liptak, William Grimes, Michael Powell, Michael M. Grynbaum, Kate Taylor and Thomas Kaplan, as well as the authors Clay Risen and George Kalogerakis. Tune in at 10 p.m. Saturday or 10 a.m. Sunday on NY1 News to watch.

A sampling from the City Room blog is featured daily in the main print news section of The Times. You may also browse highlights from the blog and reader comments, read current New York headlines, like New York Metro | The New York Times on Facebook and follow us on Twitter.



A Film Fan’s Love Letter to ‘Jaws’

From left, Roy Scheider, Robert Shaw and Richard Dreyfuss in Universal City Studios From left, Roy Scheider, Robert Shaw and Richard Dreyfuss in “Jaws.”

Jamie Benning may be both a movie fan’s greatest hero and a copyright lawyer’s worst nightmare.

Mr. Benning runs filmumentaries.com, a Web sit on which he posts self-described love letters to his favorite films. He calls the works filmumentaries, and they are essentially homemade, full-length DVD commentaries of beloved American films.

So far, Mr. Benning has covered “Star Wars,” “The Empire Strikes Back,” “Return of the Jedi” and “Raiders of the Lost Ark.” On June 20, the 38th anniversary of the release of “Jaws,” Mr. Benning posted “Inside Jaws,” a full-length inside peek at how the 1975 summer blockbuster â€" some say the first blockbuster â€" came to be.

Unlike most sleek, studio-produced official DVD commentaries, Mr. Benning’s works are meticulously crafted mashups, loaded with unusual facts and teeming with scraps of rare video and audio. Much of the material he finds by scouring the Internet, buying old VHS tapes off ebay and tapping the personal collections of knowledgeable fans. He also conducts his own interviews with extras and lesser-known production employees who would probably never be asked to tell their stories on most official movie documentaries.

Mr. Benning says “Inside Jaws” took more than a year and cost $500 to $1,000, not including his time, which he estimates in the hundreds of hours. By day, he is a London-based editor of live televised sporting events. He works on these project in his downtime, at night when his kids are in bed or during long-flights to jobs far from home.

The films have garnered a large and enthusiastic fan base, including, he says, employees at George Lucas’s Industrial Light & Magic and Nathan Hamill, the 34-year old son of Mark Hamill, the original Luke Skywalker.

He emailed with Erik Olsen about these labors of love. Here are edited excerpts from that exchange.

Q.

These are all films that seem to be of interest to a particular type of fan. I’m guessing you were born in the ’60s or ’70s.

A.

I was born in 1976, a year after “Jaws” was released and a year before “Star Wars.” So by the time “The Empire Strikes Back” came out in 1980, I was fully immersed in the world of “Star Wars” along with all of my friends, with the action figures and the bed spreads and the curtains and the lunchbox and everything else.

We are part of the VHS generation. We grew up watching these movies maybe once in the cinema, and then acting them out in the playground at school and playing with our action figures and trying to recreate those scenes you know purely from memory.

Q.

Where did you get all the material for “Inside Jaws”? There’s a wealth of stuff.

A.

After I finished Raiding the Lost Ark James Beller, who runs JawsCollector.com, got in contact with me and said please can you make one on “Jaws”? He basically sent me a list of what books I should read, what magazines I should read, and I went about trawling through all of this, picking out things that wouldn’t be a repetition of what we’ve heard on official documentaries and what’s on the documentary “The Shark Is Still Working.” And I ended up creating something that was about the local people rather than just the main players. We’ve all heard their stories before but what we haven’t heard is the stories of those people who fly by on the credits or weren’t on the credits.

So I got in contact with extras, with a laborer named Kevin Pike, who ended up having quite an illustrious career in film, working on “Return of the Jedi” and “Back to the Future,” building the DeLorean. And I spoke to a guy who snuck onto the set and ended up with a little part as an extra. In “Jaws,” if they wanted a doctor, they cast a local doctor, and that was an angle I’d never really seen exploited. We’d all heard about the shark not working and whilst I included some of that I also wanted to get this flip side from the local people involved.

Q.

Are there things that you regret you couldn’t use?

A.

For the most part I’ve got the things in there that I want. I ended up dropping some chat between Spielberg and Williams about the how the music evolved, but we kind of heard that story before, so I took that out to put in some stories from lesser known people. A woman named Rita Schmidt, who was dating the prop master, told me that Richard Dreyfuss used to get so bored on set that he would go to the local knitting shop and play cards with the ladies in the shop. There are all these little bits, but it’s difficult to find somewhere to put that material within context.

Q.

What took you by surprise?

A.

What has taken me by surprise after reading all the books and the magazines and journals and the documentaries, is finding some different perspective on a particular incident. For example, the line “We’re going to need a bigger boat.” Now, that line has always been attributed to Roy Scheider, that on the set he ad-libbed,

Carl Gottlieb the screenwriter, always gave him credit for that and said, “It’s a little disappointing i didn’t come up with it myself.” And then I found an interview with Scheider saying, “No no, Carl Gottlieb came up with that line.”

Because they were writing the script on set, the night before for the next day’s shooting. So you’ve got all these different memories of the same incident.

Q.

How long did it take to produce “Inside Jaws”?

A.

Sixteen months from start to finish.

Q.

Don’t you have a full-time job?

A.

I’m an editor in the TV industry in London. I do a lot of live productions, sports and music festivals. Mostly I work on Formula One motor racing, which takes me around the world.

I’ve got a lot of time on planes, on coaches and in hotel rooms. So where a lot of my friends are watching “Game of Thrones,” I’ll be reading or editing this.

Q.

Did you ever try to talk to Steven Spielberg?

A.

I didn’t actually. Because these things are unofficial. I’ve not got the rights to them; I make no money out of these things. It’s purely a love letter to my favorite films. I’ve always felt I need a little bit of distance from those official channels.The thing about these films is the story behind the making of story is just as interesting to me. So hopefully I’ve not offended Mr. Lucas or Mr. Spielberg, and hopefully they see these films for what they are.

Q.

What’s next?

A.

I’ve always got this mental list: “Superman,” “Ghostbusters,” “The Shining,” “Back to the Future,” “2001.” When somebody shoots a documentary and interviews the cast and crew for DVDs, there’s going to be stuff on shelves that they didn’t use in marketing and press releases, stuff just waiting for me to get a hold of. But I’m taking a break at the moment. I’m getting married in August so that’s the big project.



A Film Fan’s Love Letter to ‘Jaws’

From left, Roy Scheider, Robert Shaw and Richard Dreyfuss in Universal City Studios From left, Roy Scheider, Robert Shaw and Richard Dreyfuss in “Jaws.”

Jamie Benning may be both a movie fan’s greatest hero and a copyright lawyer’s worst nightmare.

Mr. Benning runs filmumentaries.com, a Web sit on which he posts self-described love letters to his favorite films. He calls the works filmumentaries, and they are essentially homemade, full-length DVD commentaries of beloved American films.

So far, Mr. Benning has covered “Star Wars,” “The Empire Strikes Back,” “Return of the Jedi” and “Raiders of the Lost Ark.” On June 20, the 38th anniversary of the release of “Jaws,” Mr. Benning posted “Inside Jaws,” a full-length inside peek at how the 1975 summer blockbuster â€" some say the first blockbuster â€" came to be.

Unlike most sleek, studio-produced official DVD commentaries, Mr. Benning’s works are meticulously crafted mashups, loaded with unusual facts and teeming with scraps of rare video and audio. Much of the material he finds by scouring the Internet, buying old VHS tapes off ebay and tapping the personal collections of knowledgeable fans. He also conducts his own interviews with extras and lesser-known production employees who would probably never be asked to tell their stories on most official movie documentaries.

Mr. Benning says “Inside Jaws” took more than a year and cost $500 to $1,000, not including his time, which he estimates in the hundreds of hours. By day, he is a London-based editor of live televised sporting events. He works on these project in his downtime, at night when his kids are in bed or during long-flights to jobs far from home.

The films have garnered a large and enthusiastic fan base, including, he says, employees at George Lucas’s Industrial Light & Magic and Nathan Hamill, the 34-year old son of Mark Hamill, the original Luke Skywalker.

He emailed with Erik Olsen about these labors of love. Here are edited excerpts from that exchange.

Q.

These are all films that seem to be of interest to a particular type of fan. I’m guessing you were born in the ’60s or ’70s.

A.

I was born in 1976, a year after “Jaws” was released and a year before “Star Wars.” So by the time “The Empire Strikes Back” came out in 1980, I was fully immersed in the world of “Star Wars” along with all of my friends, with the action figures and the bed spreads and the curtains and the lunchbox and everything else.

We are part of the VHS generation. We grew up watching these movies maybe once in the cinema, and then acting them out in the playground at school and playing with our action figures and trying to recreate those scenes you know purely from memory.

Q.

Where did you get all the material for “Inside Jaws”? There’s a wealth of stuff.

A.

After I finished Raiding the Lost Ark James Beller, who runs JawsCollector.com, got in contact with me and said please can you make one on “Jaws”? He basically sent me a list of what books I should read, what magazines I should read, and I went about trawling through all of this, picking out things that wouldn’t be a repetition of what we’ve heard on official documentaries and what’s on the documentary “The Shark Is Still Working.” And I ended up creating something that was about the local people rather than just the main players. We’ve all heard their stories before but what we haven’t heard is the stories of those people who fly by on the credits or weren’t on the credits.

So I got in contact with extras, with a laborer named Kevin Pike, who ended up having quite an illustrious career in film, working on “Return of the Jedi” and “Back to the Future,” building the DeLorean. And I spoke to a guy who snuck onto the set and ended up with a little part as an extra. In “Jaws,” if they wanted a doctor, they cast a local doctor, and that was an angle I’d never really seen exploited. We’d all heard about the shark not working and whilst I included some of that I also wanted to get this flip side from the local people involved.

Q.

Are there things that you regret you couldn’t use?

A.

For the most part I’ve got the things in there that I want. I ended up dropping some chat between Spielberg and Williams about the how the music evolved, but we kind of heard that story before, so I took that out to put in some stories from lesser known people. A woman named Rita Schmidt, who was dating the prop master, told me that Richard Dreyfuss used to get so bored on set that he would go to the local knitting shop and play cards with the ladies in the shop. There are all these little bits, but it’s difficult to find somewhere to put that material within context.

Q.

What took you by surprise?

A.

What has taken me by surprise after reading all the books and the magazines and journals and the documentaries, is finding some different perspective on a particular incident. For example, the line “We’re going to need a bigger boat.” Now, that line has always been attributed to Roy Scheider, that on the set he ad-libbed,

Carl Gottlieb the screenwriter, always gave him credit for that and said, “It’s a little disappointing i didn’t come up with it myself.” And then I found an interview with Scheider saying, “No no, Carl Gottlieb came up with that line.”

Because they were writing the script on set, the night before for the next day’s shooting. So you’ve got all these different memories of the same incident.

Q.

How long did it take to produce “Inside Jaws”?

A.

Sixteen months from start to finish.

Q.

Don’t you have a full-time job?

A.

I’m an editor in the TV industry in London. I do a lot of live productions, sports and music festivals. Mostly I work on Formula One motor racing, which takes me around the world.

I’ve got a lot of time on planes, on coaches and in hotel rooms. So where a lot of my friends are watching “Game of Thrones,” I’ll be reading or editing this.

Q.

Did you ever try to talk to Steven Spielberg?

A.

I didn’t actually. Because these things are unofficial. I’ve not got the rights to them; I make no money out of these things. It’s purely a love letter to my favorite films. I’ve always felt I need a little bit of distance from those official channels.The thing about these films is the story behind the making of story is just as interesting to me. So hopefully I’ve not offended Mr. Lucas or Mr. Spielberg, and hopefully they see these films for what they are.

Q.

What’s next?

A.

I’ve always got this mental list: “Superman,” “Ghostbusters,” “The Shining,” “Back to the Future,” “2001.” When somebody shoots a documentary and interviews the cast and crew for DVDs, there’s going to be stuff on shelves that they didn’t use in marketing and press releases, stuff just waiting for me to get a hold of. But I’m taking a break at the moment. I’m getting married in August so that’s the big project.



Nudity, Fake Violence and Sex Prove a Winning Combination for Park Avenue Armory

The Los Angeles artist Paul McCarthy’s “WS,” an NC-17 retelling of the Snow White fable at the Park Avenue Armory, has become the art institution’s second-most-attended exhibition. It has drawn 11,000 visitors since its opening two weeks ago despite its adults-only admission policy, armory officials said.

While it is still early in the show’s run (it continues through Aug. 4) the numbers are encouraging for the Armory, which has never presented a show with such challenging material - videotaped scenes of nudity, plentiful faked violence and explicit sexual acts - before. The exhibition, which has drawn mixed reviews, has tended to attract a younger crowd, said Rebecca Robertson, the armory’s president and executive producer. (She declined to say what the armory’s best-attended exhibition has been, saying the institution did not want to be seen as comparing artists box-office-style. But the show is believed to be “the event of a thread,” a participatory show involving swings by the artist Ann Hamilton, which ran from Dec. 5, 2012, through Jan. 6, 2013.)

For “WS” the Armory, which has developed a reputation as a family-and-tourist friendly destination, made the unusual decision, with Mr. McCarthy’s agreement, to restrict visitors to those over 17. Ms. Robertson said the reaction to the show, judging by written comments left by visitors, has tended to go to extremes, from outright disgust (“I can’t stand it”) to awe (“Brechtian.”)

“There’s a much narrower potential audience for this than for most things we’ve done before,” she added, “so I think the attendance we’re seeing is very strong.”



Popcast: Sailing the Seas of Smooth

The trumpeter Rick Braun performing recently on a Smooth Cruise on the Hudson.Michelle V. Agins/The New York Times The trumpeter Rick Braun performing recently on a Smooth Cruise on the Hudson.

Attention, mellow cruisers!

Smooth jazz began in the 1980s as a hugely successful radio format. It persists â€" and even thrives â€" as a musical accompaniment to themed boat voyages. On this week’s Popcast, Nate Chinen and Ben Ratliff assess to what extent it is also music, with new albums by BWB and Dave Koz at hand.

Listen above, download the MP3 or subscribe in iTunes.

RELATED

Nate Chinen on the Current State of Smooth Jazz

SPOTIFY PLAYLIST

Tracks by artists discussed this week. (Spotify users can also find it here.)



Big Ticket | 14-Rooms on Park Avenue for $23 Million

All 14 rooms of co-op No. 9A at 720 Park Avenue were designed on a grand scale, with plaster moldings, herringbone floors and period detail intact.Demetrius Freeman/The New York Times All 14 rooms of co-op No. 9A at 720 Park Avenue were designed on a grand scale, with plaster moldings, herringbone floors and period detail intact.

An elegantly appointed 14-room apartment at 720 Park Avenue, one of the architectural gems to emanate from the exacting toolbox of the prolific Rosario Candela in the late 1920s, sold for $23 million and was the most expensive transaction of the week, according to city records.

The residence, No. 9A, had been listed at $30 million in 2011, was briefly delisted when it found no qualified takers, and returned to the market last December with a more appealing asking price of $25 million. The monthly maintenance fees are $17,504. The neo-Georgian brick-and-limestone building rises 17 stories and has 29 residences.

With an impressive 80 feet of Park Avenue frontage and every room designed on a grand scale, with plaster moldings, herringbone floors and period detail intact, the Lenox Hill apartment has five bedrooms, six baths, and three fireplaces. A private landing off the elevator leads to a 30-foot primed-for-entertainment living room with Park Avenue views.

John Burger of Brown Harris Stevens represented the seller, Peter A. Aron of Kings Point, N.Y., the vice president of Lafayette Enterprises, a private asset management firm. The buyer, also in finance, was Steven Tananbaum, the chief executive of Golden Tree Asset Management, and his wife, Lisa Tananbaum.

Park Avenue and Mr. Burger also figured prominently in another high-end sale at yet another Candela-designed co-op. A meticulously renovated 14-into-12-room residence, No. 11B, just up the avenue at 765 Park, sold for $20,934,475; its monthly maintenance fees are $10,172. The asking price was $23 million.

This residence, renovated by Albert Hadley in a classic yet modernist mode, has 5 bedrooms, 6 baths, a powder room, 4 fireplaces, 25 oversize windows, 3 exposures and a custom kitchen designed by Carlos Aparicio. The private elevator landing opens onto a 29-foot gallery that connects to a 32-foot wood-paneled corner living room with a fireplace. The formal dining room and library also have fireplaces, as does the master suite. The kitchen has soapstone counters, Wolf and Sub-Zero appliances, and sliding glass doors to a breakfast room; there is a staff suite off the kitchen.

Mr. Burger of Brown Harris Stevens and Melinda Nix of Sotheby’s International Realty shared the exclusive listing on behalf of the sellers, Ernesto Cruz Jr., the longtime head of Equity Capital Markets at Credit Suisse Group, and Zoe Cruz. The buyer was R. Christopher Errico, a managing director of UBS. Because of confidentiality agreements, Mr. Burger declined to supply the identity of the buyer’s brokers in either Park Avenue transaction.

This week, Big Ticket includes closed sales from the previous week, ending Tuesday.



‘Dark Knight Returns’ Cover May Return Plenty for Auction House

The cover of issue No. 2 of “The Dark Knight Returns” will be sold next month by Heritage Auctions. Officials are estimating that it could sell for more than $500,000. “The Dark Knight Returns,” written and illustrated by Frank Miller, was published in 1986 and it, along with “Watchmen,” by Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons, ushered in a new era of storytelling in comic books.

“The Dark Knight Returns” imagines the future of Gotham City, where crime and corruption are at an all-time high and Batman must come out of retirement to save his hometown. But this older Dark Knight has not mellowed with age. Along the way he picks up a new Robin, Carrie Kelley, who was the first female in the role. “The Dark Knight Returns” led to a creative revival for Batman that paved the way to the film franchise.

“For fans of modern comics, this drawing is where everything really begins,” Todd Hignite, the vice president at Heritage Auctions,said in a statement. He noted that the cover of “The Dark Knight Returns” No. 3, featuring Batman and his new Robin, sold for $448,125 in 2011. The market for original comic book art, as well as original comic books, continues to boom. In 2011 a copy of “Action Comics” No. 1 sold for $2.16 million.



‘Dark Knight Returns’ Cover May Return Plenty for Auction House

The cover of issue No. 2 of “The Dark Knight Returns” will be sold next month by Heritage Auctions. Officials are estimating that it could sell for more than $500,000. “The Dark Knight Returns,” written and illustrated by Frank Miller, was published in 1986 and it, along with “Watchmen,” by Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons, ushered in a new era of storytelling in comic books.

“The Dark Knight Returns” imagines the future of Gotham City, where crime and corruption are at an all-time high and Batman must come out of retirement to save his hometown. But this older Dark Knight has not mellowed with age. Along the way he picks up a new Robin, Carrie Kelley, who was the first female in the role. “The Dark Knight Returns” led to a creative revival for Batman that paved the way to the film franchise.

“For fans of modern comics, this drawing is where everything really begins,” Todd Hignite, the vice president at Heritage Auctions,said in a statement. He noted that the cover of “The Dark Knight Returns” No. 3, featuring Batman and his new Robin, sold for $448,125 in 2011. The market for original comic book art, as well as original comic books, continues to boom. In 2011 a copy of “Action Comics” No. 1 sold for $2.16 million.



London Journal: Shakespeare’s Liars and Lovers

Johan Persson “Othello” at the National Theater.

LONDON â€" Iago was always a good liar. But I have never known him to quite as credible as he is in Nicholas Hytner’s smashing production of “Othello” at the National Theater here.

I often had to remind myself that what this eminently trustworthy-looking soldier, played by Rory Kinnear, was saying wasn’t true, even after he had told us that he was going to lie through his teeth. So you can imagine how effectively his poison, as he likes to call his cocktail of deceptions, works on his distracted commanding officer, Othello.

Mr. Hytner’s entire interpretation of Shakespeare’s oft-told tale of the Moor of Venice, which also stars Adrian Lester in the title role, is as unsettlingly feasible as its leading liar. Set mostly on a contemporary army base in Cyprus, this production makes killing use of the pressures and protocol of military life abroad to explain how the play’s homicides could happen.

If you’re a follower of Shakespeare in performance, you may by now be sighing, “Oh, not again.” It’s true that dressing up his war plays in latter-day khaki and camouflage fatigues has become all too common in recent years.

No matter how compellingly acted, such productions usually have moments of jarring disconnect, when the words chafe against the setting. You know, like when Richard III yells, “My kingdom for a horse!,” and a tank or a jeep comes rumbling in. I even felt that that way from time to time in Mr. Hytner’s celebrated “Henry V” in 2003, also starring Mr. Lester, which transplanted the Battle of Agincourt to modern-day Iraq.

That never happened in this “Othello.” Every aspect of Mr. Hytner’s version, designed by Vicki Mortimer, is deployed to propel the natural flow of the story and to illuminate character. This is not willfully topical, high-concept Shakespeare, the kind in which you imagine the director telling the cast in rehearsals, “Think post-traumatic stress disorder, guys.”

Instead, Mr. Hytner and his close to flawless ensemble use the landscape of recent films like “The Hurt Locker” and “Zero Dark Thirty” to find what’s eternally familiar in “Othello,” and by that I don’t mean only the dangers of sexual jealousy. I’m talking about how the combination of certain personalities, under stress, leads inevitably to explosion.

We understand acutely here what forces have shaped those personalities. Mr. Lester’s Othello is an officer long used to commanding others, a figure whose martial fierceness is contained by military discipline. He knows he has to be vigilant about his own behavior. When early on, he muses quietly to himself about his young bride Desdemona (Olivia Vinall), “When I love thee not love, chaos is come again,” it has an especially scary resonance.

He is presumably equally vigilant in combat. But he has also been conditioned to take those who serve him for granted. That makes it very easy for Mr. Kinnear’s Iago the underling to sabotage Othello, to whom he is almost invisible.

Mr. Kinnear, who was a vivid Hamlet for Mr. Hytner, here makes brilliant use of the anonymity allowed by the codes of military conduct. First planting the seeds of suspicion in Othello about Desdemona’s fidelity, this Iago is an Every Soldier, responding with eyes-lowered subservience (and on occasion, from a seemingly reluctant sense of duty) to his commanding officer.

As his ascendancy over Othello grows, and the balance of power shifts, he starts to sound like a drill sergeant barking orders. “Do it, soldier,” he seems to be saying, as he pushes his general toward murder, and we can see Mr. Lester’s increasingly overwhelmed Othello responding with the conditioned reflexes of the infantry man he must have once been.

With other characters, Iago has the bluff, hearty aspect of one of the beer-swigging guys, no better or worse. What’s not to trust? His wife, Emilia (Lyndsey Marshal), is in this production a fellow soldier. Accustomed to the ways of men on the base, she’s understandably cynical about the male sex in general but accepting of her husband. Ms. Vinall’s Desdemona is a spirited but clueless rich girl who has no idea what kind of world she has stepped into.

The acid test for me with Shakespeare, even more than with other plays, is whether the behavior of the people onstage corresponds to how the characters describe one another. In this production, it always, but always did. By its end, Mr. Hytner’s “Othello” has met the most essential prerequisite of tragedy: you believe that what has happened to these people had to happen. (This production is to be broadcast in cinemas this September as part of the National Theater Live program.)

Michelle Terry as Titania and Pearce Quigley as Bottom in John Haynes Michelle Terry as Titania and Pearce Quigley as Bottom in “A Midsummer Night’s Dream.”

A sense that the course of true love might end in disaster also runs through Dominic Dromgoole’s hormonally charged production of “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” at Shakespeare’s Globe, the open-air theater that packs ‘em in come summer. This being a comedy, nobody dies in this agreeably rowdy production, designed as an Elizabethan fantasia by Jonathan Fensom. But the potential for violence festers throughout, and it starts at the top of the natural and supernatural worlds portrayed here.

Portraying both Theseus and Hippolyta, the king and queen of Athens, and Oberon and Titania, the king and queen of the fairies, John Light and Michelle Terry are a combative couple, as ready to sock as to kiss each other. As for the young, human lovers who get lost in the woods, they become snarling, scratching animals before they’re properly sorted out by Oberon’s fairy lieutenant, Puck (Matthew Tennyson), who himself is clearly in love with his boss.

Lust, it seems, drives everybody mad, mortals and sprites alike. And Mr. Dromgoole’s interpretation drolly emphasizes the ungainliness of sexual struggle. These lovers are always tying themselves into knots - I mean, physically, with arms entwined and entrapped.

When the amateur actors (led by Pearce Quigley, playing Bottom the Weaver as a languorous diva) stumble through their play within the play, their clumsiness isn’t so different from that of the couples we’ve already seen. The condescending onstage audience of Theseus and company really has no right to laugh, given what they’ve been through.

But what a relief it is to do so. That feeling sums up the enduring cathartic value of “Dream,” which provides a very different release from that of the anguished “Othello.”

The Globe’s new version of “The Tempest,” directed by Jeremy Herrin, isn’t as fully satisfying, though it has moments of insight and enchantment. The production stars the wonderful Roger Allam as Prospero. He’s a ripe-voiced, appropriately magisterial wizard, but he sometimes appears to be straining (the way gifted veterans of Shakespeare are known to do) to come up with radically fresh readings of familiar lines.

The production came most alive for me not as a tale of exile, dispossession and reconciliation, as it usually does, but of adolescent rebellion. Miranda, Prospero’s sheltered teenaged daughter, is played with ready-to-bolt feistiness by Jessie Buckley.

Those supernatural boys who will never grow up, the airy Ariel and the earthy Caliban, register more than usual as Miranda’s spiritual siblings. And it is they who most captivate the audience. On the night I was there, when James Garnon’s forever thwarted, Cain-like Caliban spat into the theatergoers next to the stage, he was applauded loudly for doing so.

And when Colin Morgan’s bewitching, slightly mournful Ariel asked Prospero, “Do you love me master?” and was met with silence, someone in the crowd called out, “I love you!” Mr. Morgan has developed a cult following playing the title character in the BBC’s “Merlin.” But the connection he forges with the audience has just as much to do with our knowing, or remembering, what it’s like to feel young, restless and under the thumb of capricious grown-ups.



Book Review Podcast: ‘Lost Girls’

Kristian Hammerstad

In The New York Times Book Review, Mimi Swartz reviews Robert Kolker’s “Lost Girls: An Unsolved American Mystery.” Ms. Swartz writes:

In mid-December 2010, the Suffolk County police discovered the bodies of four women, each wrapped in burlap, on a desolate, bramble-covered stretch of sand called Gilgo Beach. The corpses were later identified as those of four prostitutes, Melissa Barthelemy, Megan Waterman, Maureen Brainard-Barnes and Amber Lynn Overstreet Costello. The work was believed to be that of a serial killer, and for several months to come, the media circus that accompanied the official investigation â€" centering on the search for another prostitute, Shannan Gilbert, who had disappeared after a nearby assignation the previous May â€" kept much of the New York area and the nation entranced. It was a gothic whodunit for the Internet age, replete with prostitutes, drugs, family dysfunction, investigative incompetence, not to mention a strange, insular beach community and, of course, the Web sites of Craigslist and Backpage, where the women had advertised for customers. Robert Kolker, who wrote about the murders for NewYork magazine in 2011, has produced in “Lost Girls” a compelling, nearly unputdownable narrative of the case and its attendant issues; a horrific, cautionary tale that makes for a very different type of beach read.

On this week’s podcast, Mr. Kolker talks about “Lost Girls”; Julie Bosman has notes from the field; Chuck Klosterman discusses “I Wear the Black Hat”; Meghan O’Rourke on her essay about authors “recording their own deaths as they happen”; and Gregory Cowles has best-seller news. Pamela Paul is the host.



In Tel Aviv, Alicia Keys Performs Concert That Had Drawn Protests

Alicia Keys performing at Barclays Center in Brooklyn in April.Richard Perry/The New York Times Alicia Keys performing at Barclays Center in Brooklyn in April.

After a performance of her song “Karma” with a shout to the audience of “Ma koreh, Tel Aviv?” (Hebrew for “What’s happening, Tel Aviv?”), Alicia Keys opened her July 4 concert at the Nokia Arena there, The Jerusalem Post reported. The show had drawn protests while in its planning stages but went ahead without incident â€" other than a cameo appearance from Ms. Keys’s 2-year-old son, Egypt.

Ms. Keys, the Grammy Award-winning R&B and pop singer, had drawn pointed reactions from organizations and individuals that have called for a cultural boycott of Israel to protest its treatment of Palestinians. In open letters, the rock musician Roger Waters had implored Ms. Keys “to join the rising tide of resistance,” and the author Alice Walker had warned her she was putting herself “in danger (soul danger)” by performing there.

Although artists like Elvis Costello, Gil Scott-Heron and the Pixies have withdrawn under pressure from planned concerts in Israel, Ms. Keys said in May that she was looking forward to her first visit there, adding: “Music is a universal language that is meant to unify audiences in peace and love, and that is the spirit of our show.”

At her Tel Aviv performance Ms. Keys was joined by the Israeli singer-songwriter Idan Raichel, who played his song “Mima’amakim” (“From the Depths”) and accompanied Ms. Keys on her song “Falllin’.”

Ms. Keys’s son popped up on his mother’s piano bench before she sang her song “No One.”

“What should we do now?” Ms. Keys asked him, according to The Jerusalem Post.

“Let’s sing!” he answered.



July 5: 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

Liu

Salgado


John C. Liu
Democrat

7 a.m.
Greets voters in Jackson Heights.

11:45 a.m.
Attends a Fourth of July barbecue, at Confucius Plaza in Manhattan.

12:30 p.m.
Visits residents of the Homecrest Senior Center, on Avenue T in Brooklyn.

3:30 p.m.
Greets voters in Brighton Beach.

5 p.m.
Greets voters in Fort Greene.

6:30 p.m.
Joins the Rev. Al Sharpton’s National Action Network at a prayer vigil for peace and public safety featuring the relatives of Jose Muniz, a Bronx man who the police say choked to death in June on a wad of cocaine he had in his mouth after being pepper-sprayed during a drug arrest; at 137th Street in the Bronx.

Erick J. Salgado
Democrat

6 a.m.
Greets commuters at the 168th Street subway stop, in Manhattan.



Video Reviews of ‘The Lone Ranger,’ ‘Despicable Me 2’ and ‘The Way, Way Back’

In this week’s video, Times critics look at “The Lone Ranger,” “Despicable Me 2″ and “The Way, Way Back.” See more of this week’s reviews here.



Monty Python Producer Wins Royalties in ‘Spamalot’ Lawsuit

Hank Azaria, David Hyde Pierce, Tim Curry, Christopher Sieber and Steve Rosen in the Broadway cast of Sara Krulwich/The New York Times Hank Azaria, David Hyde Pierce, Tim Curry, Christopher Sieber and Steve Rosen in the Broadway cast of “Spamalot.”

How many members of the Monty Python comedy troupe have there been? Think carefully before you respond, because an incorrect answer could cost you hundreds of thousands of dollars.

Mark Forstater, a British film producer who was among those who made the 1975 comedy hit “Monty Python and the Holy Grail,” was able to convince a London court that he was not an ex-Python, was not off the twig and had not kicked the bucket, and was entitled to royalties from the musical “Monty Python’s Spamalot,” The Associated Press reported.

Mr. Forstater said in a lawsuit in British High Court that there had been an agreement he would be “treated as the seventh Python” when it came to income from merchandising and other spin-offs of “Holy Grail,” and was thus entitled to one-seventh of the first 50 percent of income from “Spamalot,” the Tony Award-winning musical that is adapted from that film.

The Monty Python troupe is classically regarded as possessing six members: John Cleese, Terry Gilliam, Eric Idle, Terry Jones, Michael Palin and Graham Chapman, who died in 1989. Nobody was expecting the Spanish Inquisition, but Mr. Palin did say in a court hearing last year that the idea of a seventh member “was never going to be accepted by the Pythons,” according to The A.P.

But on Friday a judge ruled in favor of Mr. Forstater, who by his own estimate said he was due more than £200,000 (nearly $300,000).

The A.P. quoted Mr. Forstater as saying that there was “a sadness” about “having to face people who were my friends in court,” adding: “The friendship has gone. Terry Gilliam and I used to share a flat. We go back 51 years.”

Nonetheless, Mr. Forstater said of Monty Python, “I still think they are very funny.”