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Scene From a Spy Novel

Victor Kerlow

Dear Diary:

Scene: No. 2 train downtown from 40th to Wall Street, a little before 10 a.m. on a weekday . The car has only a few passengers.

Me: First car, seat by the middle door, head down, reading the paper. My viewpoint of the other passengers is only lower legs and shoes. In the seat on the other side of the door is Black pants/black shoes.

The train pulls into Chambers Street. Black pants/black shoes stands up to exit. The doors open. He stands and turns to the door, and pauses a moment before exiting. A bright blue folded up Post-It note drops to the floor next to him. He exits.

Immediately, in walks Tan pants/brown shoes. He sits where Black pants/ black shoes sat. The doors close and the train moves.

I see Tan pants/brown shoes reach down and pick up the Post-It note. (Now I’m curious, so I look up). Tan pants/brown shoes pauses a moment, then unfolds the note and reads it. He reaches into his jacket, pulls out his wallet and puts the note into the bill compartment. He sits staring straight ahead until we get to Wall Street, where we both exit.

In the last glimpse I had of him, he was heading up Exchange Place at a quick walk.

State secrets being exchanged? Corporate espionage? Arranging a rendezvous? Or my overactive imagination?

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2 More Plays Added for a Troupe’s New Home

The Theater for a New Audience has announced the full schedule for the inaugural season at its new home, the Center for Shakespeare and Classical Drama, in Brooklyn. As previously reported, Julie Taymor will make her return to the New York stage for the first time since “Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark” to direct Shakespeare’s “Midsummer Night’s Dream,” with music by Elliot Goldenthal. Previews are set to begin on Oct. 19 with opening night scheduled for Nov. 2.

A production of “King Lear” is to follow, directed by Arin Arbus, with the British actor Michael Pennington (“Love Is My Sin”) in the title role. Previews for “Lear” are scheduled to begin on March 14. And Michael Shannon (“Mistakes Were Made,” “Grace”) will star in “The Killer,” by Eugène Ionesco, for the season’s final play, with previews set to start on May 17.



In the Bronx, Honoring a Virtuoso of Latin Music

For all of his accomplishments and his renown in Latin American music, Yomo Toro never allowed his fame to take away from his authenticity.

Mr. Toro is credited with the resurgence of a traditional Puerto Rican string instrument called the cuatro, and for making it known around the world as he traveled and performed with the Fania All-Stars, an ensemble that showcased the musicians of Fania Records, once the largest record company for Cuban-based music. Mr. Toro also played with artists like Paul Simon, Marc Anthony and Gloria Estefan.

But right through the day he died last year, Mr. Toro remained a modest man who stayed true to his roots, his relatives and friends said, noting that he refused to move out of his Bronx home, on West 162nd Street between Ogden and Summit Avenues, in a neighborhood that his fame and wealth could have outgrown.

On Saturday, the city renamed the intersection of West 162nd Street and Ogden Avenue in Mr. Toro’s honor,  and the northwest corner carries a new sign: Yomo Toro Place.

“Today, I am happy,” said Denise Toro, Mr. Toro’s daughter, who initiated the effort to name the street after her father. “It’s my birthday gift to him.”

The inauguration of the new street sign took place one day after what would have been Mr. Toro’s 80th birthday. And with the help of close friends, Ms. Toro, 55, organized a daylong street festival in remembrance of her father.

“It’s a way of documenting the accomplishments of a community through the work of individuals,” said City Councilwoman Melissa Mark-Viverito, a Democrat whose district, once based in East Harlem, now includes an equal portion of the South Bronx. “He represents a continuation of our history and a validation of our culture, which is a validation of ourselves.”

The challenge of preserving cultural identity, shared by different immigrant communities, highlights the underlying struggle between the past and the changing needs of the present and future, especially as the ethnic makeup of neighborhoods continues to shift and change.

Chauncy Young, a 38-year-old community organizer who runs an after-school program to educate students on the history of the Highbridge neighborhood, said that while this specific part of the Bronx was once dominated by Puerto Ricans and African-Americans, there is now a growing Dominican population mixing with others from Central and South America and West Africa. Mr. Young, who is married to a Puerto Rican, brought his 10- year-old daughter to Saturday’s ceremony. But apart from her and a few other children who came in the company of their parents, the crowd was mostly an older one.

Mr. Toro’s music and character are largely associated with the traditional values of the jíbaro, Puerto Rico’s inland mountain dwellers. He mastered many string instruments, including the traditional guitar, but he is most renowned for playing the cuatro, which is smaller and has five sets of double strings, producing a more melodic sound.

“Yomo was the connection to our identity,” said Bobby Sanabria, who played the drums alongside Mr. Toro and co-produced one of his last albums. “He didn’t read music, but he had deep knowledge of the music traditions of the island of Puerto Rico and he had what we call in music ‘big ears.’ Somebody would play an advanced bebop melody and Yomo would be able to reproduce it.”

Aurora Flores, a writer and musician who knew Mr. Toro for many years, noted that “he traveled the world, demanded a top-notch salary, and when you walked into his apartment, he had no luxuries, nothing special, like every other Puerto Rican.” The only distinct feature, she added, was a couch, where she was never allowed to sit because there were three guitars and two cuatros resting on it.

Minerva Toro, Mr. Toro’s second wife, who had been married to him for 31 years when he died, said it was the cuatro he loved most in life, and that he had used it as a form of therapy and as a way to bring joy to others. She also said that in keeping with his traditional values, Mr. Toro did not let her work.

“That’s how Puerto Rican men are. They want their wives to stay home,” said Ms. Toro, 52, who fell in love with Mr. Toro and asked him if they could be married when she was only 20. “I knew he was going to be the man of my life, and he is the man of my life.”

On Saturday, Ms. Toro the wife and Ms. Toro the daughter stood beneath the light pole that would bear Mr. Toro’s street sign. They took hold of a thin rope that was attached to the wrapping around the sign. They took a deep breath and pulled, uncovering the sign before a crowd of about 200 friends, musicians, fans and bystanders.

Then the party started.

The air became infused with the rhythm of the bass, congas and maracas, and everyone on the block appeared to be consumed by the music. Some of the older listeners, who sat on plastic chairs along the curb, tapped their hands against their bodies and rocked their heads to the beat. The more reserved danced in their places, while the less inhibited spread their arms full out into the air, shook their shoulders, and looked down and watched as their feet took off to the sound of the salsa.

“My flag takes me, my flag brings me back, my flag takes me to the island of happiness,” the vocalists sang.

Sitting on the stage along with all the instruments was a large picture of Mr. Toro. He wore a dark jacket and a black felt hat. His left arm was wrapped around a cuatro, his fingers striking a chord. He faced the stoop of his South Bronx building with a deep smile drawn across his face.



Asia Society to Present Modern Iranian Art

A new exhibition of modern Iranian art will showcase the work of 26 artists from the 1950s to the 1970s, when Iranian artists were connected to the rest of the world and influenced by global art movements, the Asia Society Museum in New York plans to announce on Monday. The show, coming just as there are stirrings of hope that Iran’s international relations will relax under its new president, Hassan Rouhani, will include more than 100 works that focus on what the museum calls the little-known pre-Islamic-revolution era.

The exhibition will show the extent to which Tehran was what the museum calls a cosmopolitan arts center, with artists participating in the Venice Biennale and other international festivals, and their work collected widely. The exhibition includes artists still at work in Tehran, like Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian, known for her mirror mosaics. Another, Nicky Nodjoumi, is described as a more politicized artist who now lives in New York. Other prominent artists included are Siah Armajani, a sculptor residing in the United States, and Parviz Tanavoli, a sculptor well known in pre-revolutionary Iran who now lives in Canada.

The museum’s director, Melissa Chiu, said the artists’ themes varied: some explored abstraction and wanted to be part of an international movement; others were more interested in focusing on politics in Iran; and some were critical of forces at work before and after the 1979 Islamic revolution. “This very period in Iran represented a real opening up and connecting to the world,” she said. “Now it is a more subdued scene.”

She added that “artists have found it hard to show their work,” and said: “Many have left the country and find themselves in Dubai and elsewhere. There was so much optimism then.” Ms. Chiu said the exhibition would be the first to examine the pre-revolutionary period on this scale by drawing together works lent from public and private collections around the world, including from institutions in the United States as well as eight countries in Europe and the Middle East. The exhibition runs from Sept. 6 to Jan. 5.



Asia Society to Present Modern Iranian Art

A new exhibition of modern Iranian art will showcase the work of 26 artists from the 1950s to the 1970s, when Iranian artists were connected to the rest of the world and influenced by global art movements, the Asia Society Museum in New York plans to announce on Monday. The show, coming just as there are stirrings of hope that Iran’s international relations will relax under its new president, Hassan Rouhani, will include more than 100 works that focus on what the museum calls the little-known pre-Islamic-revolution era.

The exhibition will show the extent to which Tehran was what the museum calls a cosmopolitan arts center, with artists participating in the Venice Biennale and other international festivals, and their work collected widely. The exhibition includes artists still at work in Tehran, like Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian, known for her mirror mosaics. Another, Nicky Nodjoumi, is described as a more politicized artist who now lives in New York. Other prominent artists included are Siah Armajani, a sculptor residing in the United States, and Parviz Tanavoli, a sculptor well known in pre-revolutionary Iran who now lives in Canada.

The museum’s director, Melissa Chiu, said the artists’ themes varied: some explored abstraction and wanted to be part of an international movement; others were more interested in focusing on politics in Iran; and some were critical of forces at work before and after the 1979 Islamic revolution. “This very period in Iran represented a real opening up and connecting to the world,” she said. “Now it is a more subdued scene.”

She added that “artists have found it hard to show their work,” and said: “Many have left the country and find themselves in Dubai and elsewhere. There was so much optimism then.” Ms. Chiu said the exhibition would be the first to examine the pre-revolutionary period on this scale by drawing together works lent from public and private collections around the world, including from institutions in the United States as well as eight countries in Europe and the Middle East. The exhibition runs from Sept. 6 to Jan. 5.



A Tame Box Office for ‘The Wolverine’

Wolverine’s claws have been clipped. The hard-working X-Men character was No. 1 at North American theaters over the weekend, with ticket sales of about $55 million, but 20th Century Fox had hoped “The Wolverine” - the sixth installment in this superhero franchise - would take in at least 15 percent more. (Some box office analysts had even predicted an opening-weekend total of $75 million to $85 million.) Fox, which said it spent about $120 million to make the movie, not including marketing costs, hopes that strong interest overseas will make up for the soft reception in the United States and Canada, where audiences are increasingly expressing their fatigue with Hollywood’s recycled formulas by staying home.

“The Wolverine,” which notably received much better reviews than the more commercially successful “X-Men Origins: Wolverine” did in 2009, was the only new big-budget movie to arrive over the weekend; second place went to “The Conjuring” (Warner Brothers), which took in a sturdy $22.1 million, for a two-week total of $83.9 million, according to Hollywood.com, which compiles box office data. “Despicable Me 2” (Universal Pictures) chugged away in third place, selling about $16 million in tickets, for a four-week domestic total of $306.4 million.

Among limited-release films, Woody Allen’s “Blue Jasmine” (Sony Pictures Classics) got off to a stellar start on six screens, taking in about $613,000 - one of the best art house results of the year.



Gallery to Pop Up in Montauk

It was only a matter of time before the concept of pop-up shop morphed into pop-up gallery. And now that much of the art world has decamped to the Hamptons for the remainder of the summer, it makes sense it would happen there. The Art Production Fund and the philanthropist Fabiola Beracasa have created what they are calling an “outdoor pop-up exhibition” located on a vacant lot at 333 Old Montauk Highway, to run Aug. 1 to Sept. 8.

“The idea was to celebrate Montauk’s legacy as a haven for artists,” said Doreen Remen, a founder of the Art Production Fund.

With the help of Gary Carrion-Murayari and Joyce Sitterly from the New Museum in Manhattan, they commissioned site-specific installations by the emerging artists Anya Kielar, Virginia Overton and Olympia Scarry. “These artists are taking into account nature, which is a force unto itself, and our complicated relationship with it,” Ms. Remen said.



Gallery to Pop Up in Montauk

It was only a matter of time before the concept of pop-up shop morphed into pop-up gallery. And now that much of the art world has decamped to the Hamptons for the remainder of the summer, it makes sense it would happen there. The Art Production Fund and the philanthropist Fabiola Beracasa have created what they are calling an “outdoor pop-up exhibition” located on a vacant lot at 333 Old Montauk Highway, to run Aug. 1 to Sept. 8.

“The idea was to celebrate Montauk’s legacy as a haven for artists,” said Doreen Remen, a founder of the Art Production Fund.

With the help of Gary Carrion-Murayari and Joyce Sitterly from the New Museum in Manhattan, they commissioned site-specific installations by the emerging artists Anya Kielar, Virginia Overton and Olympia Scarry. “These artists are taking into account nature, which is a force unto itself, and our complicated relationship with it,” Ms. Remen said.



July 28: 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

De Blasio

Lhota

Liu

Quinn

Thompson

Weiner

Group event


John A. Catsimatidis
Republican

1:30 p.m.
Appears at the Bronx Dominican Parade as a sponsor on his campaign’s own float, heading south from Grand Concourse and East Tremont Avenue.

Bill de Blasio
Democrat

8:15 a.m.
Delivers remarks at New Greater Bethel Cathedral, a church that Bill Thompson visited two weeks ago, in Queens Village.

10:30 a.m.
Delivers remarks at a second church, the Morning Star Missionary Baptist Church in the Addisleigh Park section of Queens.

1 p.m.
Walks in the Bronx Dominican Parade, starting at Grand Concourse and East Tremont Avenue.

4 p.m.
Attends Harlem Week’s “A Great Day in Harlem” at Ulysses S. Grant National Memorial Park in Upper Manhattan.

John C. Liu
Democrat

10:30 a.m.
Addresses the congregants at the Bronx Miracle Gospel Tabernacle Church on Burke Avenue in the Bronx.

11:15 a.m.
Delivers remarks at his second church service of the morning, at the Church of Pentecost in the Williamsbridge section of the Bronx.

12 p.m.
Attends “A Great Day in Harlem,” the kick-off event for a monthlong celebration of everything Harlem, at the Ulysses S. Grant National Memorial Park in Upper Manhattan.

12:30 p.m.
Walks in the Bronx Dominican Parade, starting at Grand Concourse and East Tremont Avenue.

6 p.m.
Attends the Southern Queens Gospel Festival, at Baisley Pond Park in Queens.

7:30 p.m.
Attends a birthday celebration for Rev. Dr. Cheryl Anthony of the Judah International Christian Center, at Mount Sion Baptist Church in Brooklyn.

8:30 p.m.
Attends an iftar, one of several he has been to this month. The observance is the traditional evening meal that breaks the fast of Muslims during Ramadan, at the Anjuman e Badri Mosque in Queens.

Joseph J. Lhota
Republican

2 p.m.
Attends the Broadway Summerfest street fair in Astoria, Queens.

4 p.m.
Participates in the Brooklyn South Conservative Club’s candidate meet and greet, at MCU Park in Coney Island.

Christine C. Quinn
Democrat

11:30 a.m.
Announces a citywide gun buyback initiative sponsored by the police department and the City Council, with Council members and anti-gun violence advocates, at City Hall’s Red Room.

Some of Ms. Quinn’s events may not be shown because the campaign declines to release her advance schedule for publication.

William C. Thompson Jr.
Democrat

11:15 a.m.
Delivers remarks on the implications of the recent verdict in Florida in the Trayvon Martin case, before the Abundant Life Church in Brooklyn.

12:15 p.m.
Delivers remarks at Beulah Church of God in Christ Jesus, his second church service of the day, in Bedford-Stuyvesant.

3 p.m.
Attends the Southern Queens Gospel Festival, at Baisley Pond Park in Queens.

Anthony D. Weiner
Democrat

8:15 a.m.
After several Sundays of appearing at up to four churches before midday, the candidate is addressing congregants at only one church this Sunday: Brownsville Community Baptist Church in Brooklyn.

Sal F. Albanese
Democrat

9 a.m.
Gets a second chance to address the Hampton Synagogue, this time at Sunday breakfast. As one of many candidates congregants are hearing from, Mr. Albanese has to work hard to make amends for an earlier no-show. As he explained in his apology, he once heard the synagogue’s Rabbi Marc Schneier speak in East Hampton side by side with Russell Simmons, the hip-hop mogul, and came away from that joint appearance naively thinking that the cleric must head the local Reform temple. Consequently, on July 6, Mr. Albanese said he reported there for his own meet and greet, while Rabbi’s Schneier’s followers at the Orthodox synagogue in Westhampton Beach waited, feeling snubbed, 45 minutes away. Today the candidate was telling congregants that he found the place without a hitch by using GPS, quipping that the term was short for “God Please Shul.”

2 p.m.
Attends the Broadway Summerfest street fair in Astoria, Queens.

Adolfo Carrión Jr.
Independent

11:30 a.m.
Attends the Bronx Dominican Parade, starting at Grand Concourse and East Tremont Avenue.

4 p.m.
Attends “A Great Day in Harlem,” the kick-off event for a monthlong celebration of everything Harlem, at the Ulysses S. Grant National Memorial Park in Upper Manhattan.

Readers with information about events involving the mayoral candidates are invited to send details and suggestions for coverage to cowan@nytimes.com. You can also follow us on Twitter @cowannyt.