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Skirball Center Announces Its New Season

John ZornChad Batka for The New York Times John Zorn

A performance of the composer John Zorn’s “Book of Angels,” a festival of works from Chinese artists and a broadcast of “Othello” from London’s National Theater are among the offerings in the 2013-14 season at the N.Y.U. Skirball Center for the Performing Arts.

On Sept. 15, 12 groups of musicians will perform the 316 compositions in Mr. Zorn’s “Book of Angels,” a mix of jazz, rock, classical, world music and other genres. The concert is part of the worldwide Zorn@60 series celebrating this American composer’s 60th birthday. Other musical offerings in the Skirball’s new season include a concert by the Scottish singer-songwriter KT Tunstall (Sept. 24) and the return of the Joshua Light Show (Sept. 20-22), a multimedia musical performance that will feature the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion and other guest musicians.

The Skirball Center continues its role as a host for the National Theater Live series, which is broadcast via satellite from London to audiences worldwide, with a screening of Nicholas Hytner’s modern-day “Othello” on Sept. 26. The production stars Adrian Lester in the title role, opposite Rory Kinnear as Iago. Later in the season, the Skirball will show the National Theater’s “Frankenstein” (Oct. 5), directed by Danny Boyle and starring Benedict Cumberbatch and Jonny Lee Miller, and the Donmar Warehouse production of Shakespeare’s “Coriolanus” (Feb. 5). Other theater and dance offerings include a show from the Montreal-based Cirque Éloize (Dec. 18 to Jan. 5), and performances by the Polish American Folk Dance Company (Nov. 23).

Scheduled to run Feb. 20 through May 12 is Visions + Voices: China, the center’s second annual global performance series, which is to focus on Chinese artists. The festival will include works by the Tao Dance Theater (Feb. 20 - 22); adaptations of Ibsen’s “Hedda Gabler” (Feb. 25) and “The Lady From the Sea” (Feb. 26) by the all-female Hangzhou Yue Opera Company; the N.Y.U. Symphony Orchestra in a concert performance of “The Map” (May 12) by the composer Tan Dun; and in its United States debut, the National Theater of China in a production of Shakespeare’s “Richard III” (March 26-30).

More information on the season is at nyuskirball.org.



Tunnel Vision, for Art’s Sake

People shout into an intercom in the Park Avenue tunnel as part of an art installation by Rafael Lozano-Hemmer.Jabin Botsford/The New York Times People shout into an intercom in the Park Avenue tunnel as part of an art installation by Rafael Lozano-Hemmer.

Visitors tried out the “Voice Tunnel” art installation â€" talking into speakers and hearing it echo, with lighting tied to the sound’s intensity â€" in the Park Avenue tunnel on Saturday. People and Rafael Lozano-Hemmer’s interactive work took over the normally car-clogged artery between 33rd and 40th Streets. The work, part of the Summer Streets series, will be restaged on Saturday and Aug. 17.



No Show in Russia for Bloodhound Gang

MOSCOW - Memo to the Bloodhound Gang: In choosing acts of irreverent humor, keep in mind the next leg of your tour.

“Don’t tell Putin,” Jared Hasselhoff, the bass guitarist for this American rock group touring in Europe this summer, told a cheering crowd at a concert in the Ukrainian port city of Odessa. Mr. Hasselhoff, known as Evil, then wadded a Russian flag into his pants and used it as a prop in an act of scatological humor, after first handling a Ukrainian flag with reverence.

Unfortunately for the Bloodhound Gang, Russia was the band’s next stop. And If not President Vladimir V. Putin, Russians and Russian officials certainly did taken notice.

By Sunday, the authorities had canceled the band’s concert in southern Russia, at the behest of the minister of culture. Angry Russians pelted the band’s van with eggs and tomatoes on its way out of the town of Anapa, near the concert venue.

Then, a group of Cossacks, or traditional Russian frontiersmen, known for their nationalist sentiments, assaulted the rockers in an airport lounge and tried to smother a band member with an American flag, before the police broke up the scuffle.

Though Mr. Hasselhoff publicly apologized and noted that passing items of all types through his pants is a band tradition, the top law enforcement agency in Russia, the Investigative Committee, threatened to press criminal charges for desecrating the national flag. The band reportedly left via a connecting flight through Moscow on Sunday, earlier than planned.

At the show in Ukraine on Wednesday that touched off the Russians, Mr. Hasselhoff first held aloft a Ukrainian flag and passed it to a band member with the admonition “don’t let it touch the ground.” Then he crumpled a Russian flag, unbuckled his belt and pulled the flag through his crotch and out the rear of his pants.

The band’s frontman, Jimmy Pop, told the crowd he disagreed with the act, saying “Russia is better than America, so I disapprove of that.”

And then, indicating a willingness from a band whose albums include “Use Your Fingers” and “Hefty Fine” to insult people without regard to creed or nationality, Mr. Pop compared America to the sexual shortcomings of former girlfriends and set into playing the next song.

Still, Russia’s minister of culture, Vladimir Medinsky, wrote on Twitter that “these idiots are not going to perform” in Russia, and that he had spoken with the local authorities to halt the concert.

To be sure, flag desecration is illegal in many countries, but the Russian authorities have become particularly sensitive to the political overtones of Western rock acts after Madonna spoke out in favor of gay rights and freedom for jailed members of the punk group Pussy Riot at concerts here last summer.

Over the weekend, the flag stunt lit up the Russian blogosphere. Misha Kozyrev, a music critic for Dozhd, an independent television station, wrote on Facebook that he rarely agrees with the Russian authorities these days but “this is just such a case.”

“The difference between real punk and the Bloodhound Gang is that real punk is about context: here is what makes them mad, here are their ideals,” he wrote. “Jimmy Pol and company were not about context, only the form. Their goal was to make as many people mad as possible.”



A Scottish Actor to Star in ‘Doctor Who’

When a science-fiction hero has lived for centuries, journeyed to the farthest reaches of the universe and been reincarnated multiple times, how much change can he undergo in 50 years?

Apparently, only so much.

On Sunday, the BBC said that the Scottish actor Peter Capaldi will be the latest actor to star on “Doctor Who,” its long running adventure series, and will play the 12th official incarnation of a time-traveling, shape-shifting character known simply as the Doctor.

The announcement was made during a live program seen on BBC America (which shows “Doctor Who” in the United States) and closely watched by faithful viewers around the world. But it was a bit of a disappointment to those fans who hoped that, for the first time since the Doctor was introduced in 1963, the character might be played by someone other than a white man.

“It’s so wonderful not to keep this secret any longer,” Mr. Capaldi, 55, said on the BBC special. “But it has been absolutely fantastic, in its own way.”

In recent weeks, audience speculation (as well as betting odds given by British bookmakers) about the new identity of the Doctor had coalesced around Mr. Capaldi, who played a government bureaucrat with a blisteringly obscene vocabulary in the political satires “In the Loop” and “The Thick of It.”

But other “Doctor Who” fans had been encouraging its producers to consider a black leading man like Idris Elba, a star of the BBC crime series “Luther” and the HBO drama “The Wire,” or David Harewood, of the Showtime thriller “Homeland”; or an actress like the Academy Award-winner Helen Mirren, or Olivia Colman, who has starred in the British murder mystery “Broadchurch.”

Mr. Capaldi will inherit the role of the Doctor (and his time-traveling TARDIS vehicle) from Matt Smith, who has portrayed the character since 2010, and who announced in June that he planned to leave “Doctor Who” at the end of the year.

Mr. Smith was 26 when he was announced for the role. The choice was mildly controversial at the time, at least among those viewers who worried he was too young to play the character.



Denzel Washington Has Another Strong Movie Opening

A medium-budget star vehicle dominated North American movie theaters over the weekend, while an animated sequel arrived on tiptoe. “2 Guns” (Universal Pictures), which cost about $60 million to make and stars Denzel Washington and Mark Wahlberg, took in an estimated $27.4 million, according to Hollywood.com, which compiles box-office data.

While many stars are struggling to retain their wattage, Mr. Washington reliably turns out at audience. And the Universal backed “2 Guns,” an R-rated crime comedy, featured a well-tailored marketing campaign aimed at underserved African-American moviegoers. “The Wolverine” (20th Century Fox) was second, selling about $21.7 million in tickets, for a two-week domestic total of $95 million.

“Smurfs 2” (Sony Pictures Entertainment), which cost more than $100 million to make, was a weak third despite an aggressive marketing campaign, taking in about $18.2 million, for a disappointing total of $27.8 million since opening on Wednesday. A summer glut of animated movies was probably the culprit, but terrible reviews certainly did not help. To compare, “The Smurfs” took in $35.6 million over its first three days in 2011; sequels are supposed to go up. Still, “The Smurfs 2” is primarily aimed at audiences overseas, where the first film took in 75 percent of its astounding $564 million total. Over the weekend, Sony’s little blue men â€" and Smurfette â€" sold about $52.5 million in tickets in 43 overseas markets, a result that a Sony spokesman called “fantastic.”



Jennifer Lopez Nears Deal for ‘American Idol’ Return

Jennifer Lopez, a judge on “American Idol” during Seasons 10 and 11, is closing a deal to return to the show. Deadline.com reported on Saturday that her return was expected to be announced in one to two weeks, once her contract is finalized.

The Fox network declined to comment on the report. But the network’s entertainment chairman, Kevin Reilly, said last week that Ms. Lopez
had been in the mix as the producers plotted a new panel of judges for this long-in-the-tooth but still-popular singing competition. After
Season 12 ended in May, three of the four judges â€" Mariah Carey, Nicki Minaj and the last remaining original, Randy Jackson â€" exited
the show, along with the longtime executive producers Nigel Lythgoe and Ken Warwick. Three new producers, Per Blankens, Jesse Ignjatovic and
Evan Prager, and Fox executives have since decided to bring back the fourth judge from Season 12, the country music star Keith Urban. “Fans
loved him, and you can see how much he loved doing the show,” Mr. Reilly told television critics last week.

Ms. Lopez was also adored by viewers for her empathetic, constructive criticism of the contestants. “Idol” will revert to a three-judge format for Season 13; Deadline.com reported that the pop music artist will.i.am was likely to take the third chair.



The Great Fredini Dreams of a 3D Sideshow in Coney Island

Fred Kahl, known to some as the Great Fredini, is making replicas of sideshow performers with a 3D printer, hoping to recreate in miniature a Coney Island of the early 1900s.Demetrius Freeman/The New York Times Fred Kahl, known to some as the Great Fredini, is making replicas of sideshow performers with a 3D printer, hoping to recreate in miniature a Coney Island of the early 1900s.

During his years as a member of the Coney Island Circus Sideshow, Fred Kahl, 48, performed as a magician, a sword-swallower, a stuntman who could hammer nails into his skull and light lightbulbs with his bare hands, and an impresario who helped found the Burlesque at the Beach. That was when he acquired another name: the Great Fredini.

On a recent afternoon, Mr. Kahl took the train from Midtown Manhattan, where he works days as an interactive designer, to an unused fortune teller’s cubbyhole on Surf Avenue, near the Coney Island boardwalk. Above the door is a sign proclaiming his latest venture: Scan-A-Rama, a 3D scanning-and-printing studio where he produces miniature plastic replicas of visitors with a Microsoft Kinect sensor-turned-scanner and a 3D printer about the size of a microwave.

“This stuff is like magic,” he said. “It’s one of the principles of magic â€" transmutation.” He continued, “Coney Island’s always been the place where cutting edge technology and entertainment intersect: the rides, the light bulb.”

Mr. Kahl’s dream is to re-create Luna Park, one of Coney Island’s first amusement parks, as it stood in 1914 at the height of its glory, with its ersatz pagodas, Hindu temples, Japanese gardens and Venetian canal. (The current version of Luna Park was opened in 2010; a housing project sits on the original site.) His model will go to the Coney Island Museum.

“I used to think, when I retire, I’ll make it out of matchsticks or something,” he said. Then he discovered 3D printers, which recently became available commercially. He built printers from kits before acquiring a used printer, and spent six months staying up late, tweaking his scanning process. Now he hopes to raise enough money, through Kickstarter, to buy more printers for the project, which is part of the Coney Island artist incubator program.

The model will be populated by dozens of printed figurines, portraits of Coney Island’s present-day characters in off-white plastic. He already had dozens, piled in cardboard boxes: a sword-swallower, clutching her sword; a teenager, the outline of a cell phone just visible in her back pocket; two sea nymphs from this year’s Mermaid Parade. Several were friends from the sideshow: the ventriloquist with his dummy; the hangman; the man with shrunken flipper-like arms with his wife, a burlesque showgirl, both naked.

This particular afternoon, Mr. Kahl was worrying about a hammer. Specifically, it was the hammer used by Ray Valenz, the sideshow’s current Human Blockhead, to drive nails into his skull. It was too delicate to print. “I’ll definitely come back through on Saturday with a bigger hammer,” Mr. Valenz said. “Or, I got some machetes.” Mr. Kahl thought the machetes would be too thin; they settled on some flaming torches.

Some relatives stopped by, and he posed three children on the lazy Susan-like wooden platform, which is made out of wood, a bike tire, part of a car tire and a rotisserie motor plundered from a grill. “It’s very rubber bands and glue, literally,” he said.

Because 3D printers work by producing infinitesimal layers of hot plastic, there are certain constraints on poses. Limbs or objects that jut out into space, unsupported, confuse the modeling program. Chins, especially bearded ones, can be tricky to print because they jut into
space unsupported; it is best to pose looking up, bringing the chin in line with the rest of the body.”

“We try to get everybody looking up optimistically into the future,” said Mr. Kahl, tilting the children’s chins upward. They stayed still as they rotated beneath the Kinect’s gaze, their eyes wide, looking as though they had been frozen in the act of spotting an alien spaceship.

Within seconds, they appeared on a screen. “Oh my God, you guys look scary,” interjected Peter Lanfranca, 33, peering into the studio. He contemplated being scanned. “You want to get rid of this?” Mr. Lanfranca asked, patting his belly, then flexing.

Since 3D printing became more widely available, discussions of its impact have mostly focused on useful objects that consumers could print at home, obviating the need to go to Home Depot to buy, say, a shower head (estimated print time, in one study: two hours, 16 minutes), or a pierogi mold (39 minutes). There was also a minor flap this summer when firearm enthusiasts designed and printed the first 3D guns.

For Mr. Kahl, however, a 3D printer is an artistic tool. “The question I’ve been thinking about is, is it photography?” he said. Behind him, the printer was busily forming a pair of legs. “I think it could be argued it is photography.” As in photography, after all, his portraits are made by aiming rays at his subject. But because it shows mass and posture, he argued, “It captures who we are in a way that photography doesn’t.”

Mr. Kahl’s first wife was the fire-eater in the sideshow; his second runs a gift shop in Coney Island. His daughter is helping him with the Scan-A-Rama, and some of his test models were produced by the two of them scanning each other. But the only model of himself in the cardboard box that day was by someone else.

“It’s a bad scan of me,” he said, inspecting it. His smaller self wore a suit, and looked down. (This was before he discovered it was best to look up.) Its nose and cheek were somewhat eroded.

“If I was a millionaire, I’d have my shop in Times Square, next to Madame Tussaud’s,” he said, smiling slightly. “I’ve got kids in college, though.” Behind him, the printer, having produced a four inch-high woman, emitted a small, triumphant tinkle.



Aug. 4: 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.

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

Carrión

Catsimatidis

De Blasio

Lhota

Liu

Quinn

Thompson

Weiner

Group event


John A. Catsimatidis
Republican

12 p.m.
Takes his campaign out of the five boroughs and up to Sullivan County to visit Orthodox Jewish summer camps, beginning with the Krula Camp in South Fallsburg, N.Y.

1 p.m.
Moves on to have lunch with the rabbi and community leaders at the Woodbourne Synagogue in Woodbourne, N.Y.

2:30 p.m.
Next comes a tour of Camp Simcha, a camp for children with cancer, in Glen Spey, N.Y.

3:30 p.m.
Follows this with a tour of Camp Agudah, in Liberty, N.Y.

4:30 p.m.
He then addresses the students of Braslaver Yeshiva Camp, in Liberty, N.Y.

6 p.m.
Mr. Catsimatidis concludes his tour of Orthodox Jewish summer camps in Sullivan county with a barbecue hosted by Rabbi Yidel Deutsch.

Bill de Blasio
Democrat

8 a.m.
Addresses the congregation of Memorial Baptist Church with his wife, Chirlane McCray, and State Senator Bill Perkins, who endorsed him last month, on West 115th Street in Harlem.

10 a.m.
Addresses the congregation of Abyssinian Baptist Church, one of two candidates on the morning to do so, again with his wife, Chirlane McCray, and State Senator Bill Perkins, in Upper Manhattan.

6:30 p.m.
For the second consecutive evening, greets concertgoers with his wife, Chirlane McCray, at Celebrate Brooklyn!, featuring Beck in a sold-out performance, at the Prospect Park Bandshell.

John C. Liu
Democrat

7:30 a.m.
Addresses the congregation of St. Mark’s Episcopal Church in Brooklyn, the first of four congregations he intends to address on the day.

10 a.m.
Addresses the congregation of Abyssinian Baptist Church in Upper Manhattan, the second of four congregations he intends to address on the day, and one of two to address this congregation in the morning.

10:30 a.m.
Addresses the congregation of The New Mount Zion Baptist Church in Upper Manhattan, the third of four congregations he intends to address on the day.

12:30 p.m.
Addresses the congregation of New Greater Bethel Ministries in Queens, the final of four congregations he intends to address on the day.

1:20 p.m.
Is one of seven mayoral candidates to march in the annual Ecuadorian Pride Parade, part of Ecuadorian Heritage month, starting on Northern Boulevard at 69th Street in Queens.

2 p.m.
Stops by the South Bronx Community Homeowners Association block party, on 150th Street in the Bronx.

2:30 p.m.
Attends the annual Old Timer’s Day picnic and barbecue, one of two mayoral candidates on the day to do so, at the picnic area at Crotona Park in the Bronx.

3:30 p.m.
Takes a tour of small businesses, starting at Starling Avenue in the Bronx.

4:30 p.m.
Concludes his day by going door-to-door to meet voters, starting on Springfield Boulevard in Queens Village.

Joseph J. Lhota
Republican

11:45 a.m.
Is one of seven mayoral candidates to march in the annual Ecuadorian Pride Parade, part of Ecuadorian Heritage month, starting on Northern Boulevard at 69th Street in Queens.

2:15 p.m.
Greets voters with former State Senator David Storobin, who endorsed him last month, at the Brighton 3rd Street Fair, in Brooklyn.

Christine C. Quinn
Democrat

10 a.m.
Attends morning services at the Bridge Street African Wesleyan Methodist Episcopal Church, in Brooklyn.

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

12 p.m.
Is one of seven mayoral candidates to march in the annual Ecuadorian Pride Parade, part of Ecuadorian Heritage month, starting on Northern Boulevard at 69th Street in Queens.

2 p.m.
Greets voters at the Carnaval del Barrio, on 116th Street, in East Harlem. Three mayoral candidates made it there on Saturday.

3:30 p.m.
Attends the annual Old Timer’s Day picnic and barbecue, one of two mayoral candidates on the day to do so, at the picnic area at Crotona Park in the Bronx.

6:30 p.m.
Greets voters at the Rochdale Village Music Festival, featuring Grace Steel Ensemble and the Blessed Ones, in Jamaica, Queens.

Anthony D. Weiner
Democrat

12:15 p.m.
Is one of seven mayoral candidates to march in the annual Ecuadorian Pride Parade, part of Ecuadorian Heritage month, starting on Northern Boulevard at 69th Street in Queens.

2:15 p.m.
Meets with a number of Caribbean small-business owners and community leaders, at Milk River cafe, on Atlantic Avenue in Brooklyn.

Adolfo Carrión Jr.
Independent

11:15 a.m.
Greets voters outside St. Sebastian Church, in Queens.

12 p.m.
Is one of seven mayoral candidates to march in the annual Ecuadorian Pride Parade, part of Ecuadorian Heritage month, starting on Northern Boulevard at 69th Street in Queens.

Erick J. Salgado
Democrat

11:45 a.m.
Marches in the annual Ecuadorian Pride Parade with his wife, Sonia, who is originally from Ecuador, starting on Northern Boulevard in Queens.