Total Pageviews

A Macabre Mystery: Poe Ballantine Talks About Memoir and True Crime

For several years, Poe Ballantine has written essays about his life in the small town of Chadron, Neb., for The Sun magazine. His new book, “Love & Terror on the Howling Plains of Nowhere,” is part memoir and part true-crime story. In it, Mr. Ballantine writes about his own life â€" his chronic wanderlust, the many low-paying jobs he’s held, his rocky marriage to a Mexican woman and the challenges of raising an autistic son. He also chronicles a gruesome event that shocked his quiet corner of Nebraska. In December 2006, Steven Haataja, a math professor, went missing from Chadron. In March 2007, his body was found on a ranch south of the town, bound to a tree and severely burned. Police eventually and unofficially considered the death a suicide. In a recent e-mail interview, Mr. Ballantine discussed his belief that Mr. Haataja was murdered, his approach to writing about hs own life alongside Mr. Haataja’s death, and more. Below are edited excerpts from the conversation:

Q.

Reviewers have compared you to Kerouac and Bukowski. Do you agree â€" or do you consider your influences and the tradition you’re working in to be something else entirely?

A.

I’m compared to Kerouac, I suppose, because he traveled and rejected middle-class values, but the similarities end there. I share more with Bukowski, who spent most of his life among the poor, started and blossomed late, loved the horses, worked menial jobs, revealed himself intimately to his readers, and did not adhere to any movement. Bukowski, however, was a misanthrope who never grew much and who relied too heavily for my taste on his boozing, hairy-chested persona. I’m that sensitive, honest guy who likes people, wants to know why, and who puzzles everyone by continually putting himself in harm’s way.

Q.

You’re pictured on this book’s cover and much of it is devoted to your life as a writer, husband and father. But there’s also a grisly, tragic story here about a man who was a stranger to you. Were you, or are you, concerned about how easily those pieces fit together?

A.

I knew pretty early on that Steven’s story, gripping as it was, could not stand on its own. I also wanted to avoid at all costs the myriad pitfalls of the true-crime formula. I had long been entertaining the notion of depicting Chadron and its fascinating residents, accompanied by highlights from the “Police Beat,” amusing snippets taken verbatim from the local police blotter and published in the weekly newspaper, The Chadron Record. (“1:01 p.m. Caller from Regency Trailer Court advised of a nest of birds in a nest.”) The paramount challenge of this book was the tonal integration of parts that at first glance appear to be incongruous.

Q.

You say that most law enforcement officials were “thoroughly opposed” to your interest and involvement in the case. Why did they feel so strongly?

A.

Before I’d even undertaken the book, the local police department was under fire for a lackadaisical missing person’s investigation. It must have been embarrassing for them when the body was found so close to town. By voicing the opinion that Steven’s death was a suicide, they perhaps thought their low scores and the possibility of a killer in our midst might go away. Our county sheriff, the only law enforcement officer who spoke to me candidly about the case, described the Chadron Police Department as possessing a “super-secret-James-Bond-if-I-tell-ya-I-gotta-kill-ya attitude,” and that combined with having recently lost its chief made it more prone to error than your average small-town police force. Wandering around with my autistic son poking my nose into their business must have have been an aggravation to them.

Q.

Mr. Haataja’s sisters have been very outspoken in their comments on things you’ve written online, saying they did not want you writing about their brother’s death. Did you talk to them when you were writing? And do you sympathize at all with their feelings about the book?

A.

I had little communication with the sisters or their mother. I talked to Sheila (as I call her in the book) several times on the phone after her brother was found, and she told me she and her mother and sister would not cooperate. Many friends and acquaintances of Steven were dissuaded from participation “to honor the family’s wishes.” I never blamed or faulted them for their positions â€" imagine the horror of losing a loved one and being suddenly thrown into the middle of a media circus â€" but I was perplexed as to why they did not want to know more about the outrageous circumstances surrounding Steven’s death.

Q.

A filmmaker named Dave Jannetta went to Chadron and made a documentary about this case and about you while you were writing. Did the presence of a film camera cause any problems in getting people to open up?

A.

If anything his presence helped, giving me the chance to re-interview many subjects, coax out a few who were reluctant, and fine-tune, rethink and sharpen my own account. Dave is a bright and talented young chap, and two heads are better than one. The objectivity of the camera lens was an entirely new perspective for me, rather like the philosophical exercise of learning another language. One cold, late winter night we retraced what we calculated to be the route of Steven’s last walk across that ranch, which only reinforced my belief that he wasn’t alone when he died.

Q.

Have there been any new developments in the case since the book went to press? And are you still actively investigating it yourself?

A.

Outside of my conviction that one of my suspects is a sociopath, there is nothing noteworthy to add to the case, which is officially still open. The police are still very much in the mood to move on, but the book is just out, the documentary will soon follow, the people of my town (those who don’t want to punch me in the nose, anyway) are enthusiastic about the work Dave and I have done, and I’m confident someone will come forward and the truth will one day be known. I do, by the way, continue to actively investigate this case.

Q.

In your author’s note at the end of the book, you write that you used “fictive techniques” and “committed other extravagancies” in writing it. What do you mean by that?

A.

The book appears to take place over the course of roughly a year, but my own investigation and composition spanned six years. My son went from 4 to 10 during that time, but in the book, until the last chapter, he stays 5 years old. In light of the astronomical volume of interviews, evidence, news articles, theories, notes, rumors and amusing police blotter excerpts, I’ve rearranged a good deal of it and also paraphrased in service to action, clarity and intelligibility.

Q.

You’ve said that this story fell in your lap and that you weren’t previously interested in true-crime stories. Did you read any true-crime books as you embarked on writing your own?

A.

I studied a truckload of true crime, praying for illumination, but most true crime relies on luridness and voyeurism for effect. It is also typically rife with false sympathy and unconvincing parallels between the life of the author and his or her tragic subjects. There’s good money in true crime, I’m told, and plenty of it lying around, but it’s a devil of an art form.



Renée Fleming to Sing ‘Streetcar’ at Los Angeles Opera

Renée Fleming with Rodney Gilfry in the 1998 production of Associated Press Renée Fleming with Rodney Gilfry in the 1998 production of “A Streetcar Named Desire” at the San Francisco Opera.

Woody Allen brought a reimagined Blanche DuBois â€" in the form of Cate Blanchett’s Jasmine French â€" to the streets of San Francisco this summer in his film “Blue Jasmine.” Another Blanche is heading to California next spring: the Los Angeles Opera announced Wednesday that Renée Fleming would reprise the role, which she created, in three semi-staged performances of André Previn’s opera of “A Streetcar Named Desire.”

Ms. Fleming created the role of Blanche in 1998 when the San Francisco Opera gave the premiere of Mr. Previn’s “Streetcar,” his operatic adaptation of the Tennessee Williams play. This year she has sung Blanche in semi-staged performances at Carnegie Hall and at the Lyric Opera of Chicago.

Plácido Domingo, the Los Angeles Opera’s general director, said in a statement that he was “thrilled” that the company would be able to present Ms. Fleming “in an increasingly rare operatic performance, especially since the role of Blanche DuBois was tailored specifically for her extraordinary talents.’’ The three performances, set to be conducted by Patrick Summers, will be held at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion in Los Angeles on May 18, May 21 and May 24.



Weinstein Lands a Big-Name Executive Producer for ‘Finding Neverland’

The Broadway producer Barry Weissler (“Pippin,” “Chicago”) has signed on as an executive producer of “Finding Neverland,” the first big-budget stage musical from the filmmaker Harvey Weinstein, who is aiming the recently overhauled show for a United States premiere in 2014 at the American Repertory Theater in Cambridge, Mass. Given Mr. Weissler’s track record of success, his involvement increases the odds that Mr. Weinstein will extend his powerful producing hand into theater in New York and London with “Finding Neverland.”

Mr. Weinstein, in an interview on Wednesday, said he had asked Mr. Weissler to join the project to have a theater veteran overseeing the business end of producing and allow Mr. Weinstein to focus on his self-described passion, honing the show’s new script by the playwright James Graham. The musical, based on the 2004 film about the “Peter Pan” playwright J.M. Barrie, has undergone a considerable shake-up. After a tryout production in Britain drew mixed reviews Mr. Weinstein installed a new creative team this spring led by the director Diane Paulus, who won a Tony Award in June for directing “Pippin” (which also netted a best musical revival Tony for Mr. Weissler and his fellow produces), and who is the artistic director of the American Repertory Theater.

“It’s hard as hell to do this,” Mr. Weinstein said of creating a new musical. “Barry allows me to work on the things I wanted to work on, and not worry about what lawyer to call, what actor did I have to sort out. And I don’t want to worry about rolling the show out around the world - I’ll take Barry’s advice on that. I’ve never delegated in my life, but I’ve never had Barry Weissler to delegate to.”

Mr. Weissler was not available for comment on Wednesday, a spokesman said. But other producers close to Mr. Weissler said this week that he had joined the project as much to work with Ms. Paulus again as to collaborate with Mr. Weinstein.

Last week Mr. Weinstein and Mr. Weissler gathered several Broadway theater owners, producers, and others for Ms. Paulus’s staged reading of the new “Neverland” script and score, which now mostly consists of songs by the British pop songwriter Gary Barlow. (A few songs remain from the show’s original composers, Scott Frankel and Michael Korie, whose musicals include “Grey Gardens.”) The closed-door reading starred the Tony nominee Brian d’Arcy James as Barrie and Jason Alexander (“Seinfeld”) as Barrie’s nagging theater producer.

“Jason Alexander told me afterward that we had a monster hit,” Mr. Weinstein said. “We’ve had a number of offers for theaters in London and Broadway - I think we’re in very good shape.” He said he planned to eventually open the show in London and then on Broadway. The American Repertory Theater production dates have not been set, and Mr. Weinstein said he did not know precisely when the show would run there in 2014.

Mr. Weinstein described the revised musical as “much more witty, funny, pointed” than the British production, which was directed by Rob Ashford. And the score by Mr. Barlow, who is well known in Britain as the frontman of the band Take That and a judge on the television show “X Factor,” represents what Mr. Weinstein called “new Broadway.”

“It’s not the same standard musical songs that we grew up on,” Mr. Weinstein said. “I think a younger generation will respond to this show immediately.”



Weinstein Lands a Big-Name Executive Producer for ‘Finding Neverland’

The Broadway producer Barry Weissler (“Pippin,” “Chicago”) has signed on as an executive producer of “Finding Neverland,” the first big-budget stage musical from the filmmaker Harvey Weinstein, who is aiming the recently overhauled show for a United States premiere in 2014 at the American Repertory Theater in Cambridge, Mass. Given Mr. Weissler’s track record of success, his involvement increases the odds that Mr. Weinstein will extend his powerful producing hand into theater in New York and London with “Finding Neverland.”

Mr. Weinstein, in an interview on Wednesday, said he had asked Mr. Weissler to join the project to have a theater veteran overseeing the business end of producing and allow Mr. Weinstein to focus on his self-described passion, honing the show’s new script by the playwright James Graham. The musical, based on the 2004 film about the “Peter Pan” playwright J.M. Barrie, has undergone a considerable shake-up. After a tryout production in Britain drew mixed reviews Mr. Weinstein installed a new creative team this spring led by the director Diane Paulus, who won a Tony Award in June for directing “Pippin” (which also netted a best musical revival Tony for Mr. Weissler and his fellow produces), and who is the artistic director of the American Repertory Theater.

“It’s hard as hell to do this,” Mr. Weinstein said of creating a new musical. “Barry allows me to work on the things I wanted to work on, and not worry about what lawyer to call, what actor did I have to sort out. And I don’t want to worry about rolling the show out around the world - I’ll take Barry’s advice on that. I’ve never delegated in my life, but I’ve never had Barry Weissler to delegate to.”

Mr. Weissler was not available for comment on Wednesday, a spokesman said. But other producers close to Mr. Weissler said this week that he had joined the project as much to work with Ms. Paulus again as to collaborate with Mr. Weinstein.

Last week Mr. Weinstein and Mr. Weissler gathered several Broadway theater owners, producers, and others for Ms. Paulus’s staged reading of the new “Neverland” script and score, which now mostly consists of songs by the British pop songwriter Gary Barlow. (A few songs remain from the show’s original composers, Scott Frankel and Michael Korie, whose musicals include “Grey Gardens.”) The closed-door reading starred the Tony nominee Brian d’Arcy James as Barrie and Jason Alexander (“Seinfeld”) as Barrie’s nagging theater producer.

“Jason Alexander told me afterward that we had a monster hit,” Mr. Weinstein said. “We’ve had a number of offers for theaters in London and Broadway - I think we’re in very good shape.” He said he planned to eventually open the show in London and then on Broadway. The American Repertory Theater production dates have not been set, and Mr. Weinstein said he did not know precisely when the show would run there in 2014.

Mr. Weinstein described the revised musical as “much more witty, funny, pointed” than the British production, which was directed by Rob Ashford. And the score by Mr. Barlow, who is well known in Britain as the frontman of the band Take That and a judge on the television show “X Factor,” represents what Mr. Weinstein called “new Broadway.”

“It’s not the same standard musical songs that we grew up on,” Mr. Weinstein said. “I think a younger generation will respond to this show immediately.”



Katy Perry’s ‘Roar’ Dethrones Robin Thicke

Katy Perry at the MTV Video Music Awards last week.Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images for MTV Katy Perry at the MTV Video Music Awards last week.

On the music charts, summer may be ending with a “Roar.”

After 12 weeks as Billboard’s No. 1 single, Robin Thicke’s “Blurred Lines” â€" pretty much the song of the summer, despite a vote to the contrary by MTV viewers â€" has ceded its position to Katy Perry’s latest hit, “Roar,” which last week had 448,000 downloads and was streamed 2.1 million times in the United States on services like Spotify, according to Nielsen SoundScan. “Roar” is Ms. Perry’s eighth No. 1 hit.

Eminem’s newest song, “Berzerk,” had a strong opening this week, with 362,000 downloads. But because Billboard’s singles chart incorporates airplay and online streaming along with sales, Eminem’s track was held from No. 2 by the still immensely popular “Blurred Lines.” “Berzerk” opens at No. 3.

On the album chart, the Southern California rock band Avenged Sevenfold opens at No. 1 with “Hail to the King” (Warner Brothers), which sold 159,000 copies. Luke Bryan’s “Crash My Party” (Capitol Nashville), the top album for two weeks, falls to No. 2 with 92,000 sales. The next two rungs are held by new hip-hop releases: Big Sean’s “Hall of Fame” (GOOD Music/Def Jam) opened at No. 3 with 71,000, and Juicy J is fourth with 64,000 sales of “Stay Trippy” (Kemosabe/Columbia). Mr. Thicke is No. 5 with his latest album, also called “Blurred Lines” (Star Trak/Interscope), which sold 55,000.



Gerard Mortier Undergoing Cancer Treatment

Gerard MortierPierre-Philippe Marcou/Agence France-Presse â€" Getty Images Gerard Mortier

Gerard Mortier, the opera impresario with a penchant for shaking things up in some of Europe’s most storied opera houses and music festivals, is being treated for cancer, the Spanish newspaper El País reported this week.

Mr. Mortier, 69, who led the Salzburg Festival and was the general director of the Paris Opera, is currently the artistic director of the Teatro Real in Madrid. In 2007 Mr, Mortier â€" who is known for championing contemporary works and daring stagings â€" was hired to take over New York City Opera, but he soon resigned when the struggling company slashed its budget to a little over half of what he was promised.

Few details of Mr. Mortier’s condition were disclosed by the newspaper, other than the fact that he had undergone surgery and was being treated in Germany. In the interview Mr. Mortier, who was born in Belgium, credited his Jesuit education with giving him the discipline he needs while undergoing the treatment. He also indicated that he is at odds with Spanish officials over who should be his planned successor in Madrid.

A spokeswoman for the Teatro Real, Graça Prata Ramos, said that the opera house could not comment on the report of his illness except to wish him a speedy recovery.



Gerard Mortier Undergoing Cancer Treatment

Gerard MortierPierre-Philippe Marcou/Agence France-Presse â€" Getty Images Gerard Mortier

Gerard Mortier, the opera impresario with a penchant for shaking things up in some of Europe’s most storied opera houses and music festivals, is being treated for cancer, the Spanish newspaper El País reported this week.

Mr. Mortier, 69, who led the Salzburg Festival and was the general director of the Paris Opera, is currently the artistic director of the Teatro Real in Madrid. In 2007 Mr, Mortier â€" who is known for championing contemporary works and daring stagings â€" was hired to take over New York City Opera, but he soon resigned when the struggling company slashed its budget to a little over half of what he was promised.

Few details of Mr. Mortier’s condition were disclosed by the newspaper, other than the fact that he had undergone surgery and was being treated in Germany. In the interview Mr. Mortier, who was born in Belgium, credited his Jesuit education with giving him the discipline he needs while undergoing the treatment. He also indicated that he is at odds with Spanish officials over who should be his planned successor in Madrid.

A spokeswoman for the Teatro Real, Graça Prata Ramos, said that the opera house could not comment on the report of his illness except to wish him a speedy recovery.



Will Swenson to Replace Will Chase in ‘Little Miss Sunshine’

Will SwensonKevin Wolf/Associated Press Will Swenson

The Tony Award-nominated actor Will Swenson (“Hair”) will replace Will Chase in Second Stage’s fall production of the musical comedy “Little Miss Sunshine,” the theater has announced. Mr. Chase withdrew from the production after being cast as a country music singer on the second season of the ABC show “Nashville.” His departure was first reported on Broadway.com.

In June, Second Stage announced that Mr. Chase and Stephanie J. Block would play Richard and Sheryl Hoover, the parents at the center of “Little Miss Sunshine,” a musical adaptation of the Oscar-nominated film about a couple who takes their dysfunctional family on a trip to a child beauty pageant. The show is by the Tony Award winners James Lapine (book and direction) and William Finn (music and lyrics). Previews are to begin Oct. 15, with opening night set for mid-November.

Mr. Swenson’s most recent New York show was the musical “Murder Ballad,” which closed in July. He had been announced to play Dr. Frank ‘N’ Furter in a fall production of “The Rocky Horror Show,” to be directed by Hunter Foster, at the Bucks County Playhouse in New Hope, Pa., beginning Oct. 23. A spokesperson for the Playhouse said a replacement would be named soon.



Anatomy of a Scene: Video of ‘Touchy Feely’

Some awkward moments on a Reiki table are at the core of this anatomy of a scene video. The writer and director Lynn Shelton narrates a sequence from her film, featuring Allison Janney as a Reiki healer and Josh Pais as a new client.



Anatomy of a Scene: Video of ‘Touchy Feely’

Some awkward moments on a Reiki table are at the core of this anatomy of a scene video. The writer and director Lynn Shelton narrates a sequence from her film, featuring Allison Janney as a Reiki healer and Josh Pais as a new client.



At Venice Film Festival, Errol Morris Asks, ‘Who Is Donald Rumsfeld?’

Errol Morris in Venice on Wednesday.Alessandro Bianchi/Reuters Errol Morris in Venice on Wednesday.

VENICE â€" “I’ve made a whole number of movies over the years about characters that seem to be completely unaware of themselves. I suppose in English the word that we often use is clueless,” Errol Morris said at a news conference here on Wednesday to promote “The Unknown Known,” his new film-length interview with Donald Rumsfeld, the former secretary of defense. “That’s the central feeling I’m left with at the end of making this movie.”

“What is he thinking?” Mr. Morris continued about Mr. Rumsfeld. “Is this a performance? Is he acting? Does he believe in what he is saying? I would say it’s the central mystery of this movie: Who is Donald Rumsfeld?”

“The Unknown Known” is one of two documentaries in competition at the Venice Film Festival, which ends this Saturday. It is the first year that documentaries have been included in the running.

In making the film, Mr. Morris said he was fascinated by how Mr. Rumsfeld repeatedly contradicted himself when pressed on questions about the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. In Mr. Morris’s treatment, the former defense secretary comes across as mischievous, Machiavellian and self-satisfied â€" “I was the youngest secretary of defense in history,” he says of his time in the administration of President Gerald Ford.

He also appears to be far less tormented about his place in history than Robert S. McNamara, the Vietnam-era secretary of defense from 1961-1968 whom the director interviewed in the 2003 documentary “The Fog of War.” Mr. Morris said his wife had compared the two men: Mr. McNamara was “the flying Dutchman, the man traveling the world searching for redemption and never finding it,” he said, while Mr. Rumsfeld is “the Cheshire Cat from ‘Alice in Wonderland’ and ‘Through the Looking Glass,’ the cat who at the very end vanishes and is left with just a smile.”

Mr. Morris said he had the idea for the film after reading Mr. Rumsfeld’s autobiography, “Known and Unknown.” Mr. Morris sent him a copy of “The Fog of War” and Mr. Rumsfeld responded within a week, eventually agreeing to sit for more than 30 hours of interviews in four sessions at Mr. Morris’s home in Boston.

As for Mr. Rumsfeld’s recent comments that he is opposed to military intervention in Syria, Mr. Morris, who is a frequent contributor to the New York Times opinion section, had a follow-up question: “Why now?” he asked at the news conference. “And not 10 years ago when presented with a similar question about Iraq and Afghanistan?”



At Venice Film Festival, Errol Morris Asks, ‘Who Is Donald Rumsfeld?’

Errol Morris in Venice on Wednesday.Alessandro Bianchi/Reuters Errol Morris in Venice on Wednesday.

VENICE â€" “I’ve made a whole number of movies over the years about characters that seem to be completely unaware of themselves. I suppose in English the word that we often use is clueless,” Errol Morris said at a news conference here on Wednesday to promote “The Unknown Known,” his new film-length interview with Donald Rumsfeld, the former secretary of defense. “That’s the central feeling I’m left with at the end of making this movie.”

“What is he thinking?” Mr. Morris continued about Mr. Rumsfeld. “Is this a performance? Is he acting? Does he believe in what he is saying? I would say it’s the central mystery of this movie: Who is Donald Rumsfeld?”

“The Unknown Known” is one of two documentaries in competition at the Venice Film Festival, which ends this Saturday. It is the first year that documentaries have been included in the running.

In making the film, Mr. Morris said he was fascinated by how Mr. Rumsfeld repeatedly contradicted himself when pressed on questions about the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. In Mr. Morris’s treatment, the former defense secretary comes across as mischievous, Machiavellian and self-satisfied â€" “I was the youngest secretary of defense in history,” he says of his time in the administration of President Gerald Ford.

He also appears to be far less tormented about his place in history than Robert S. McNamara, the Vietnam-era secretary of defense from 1961-1968 whom the director interviewed in the 2003 documentary “The Fog of War.” Mr. Morris said his wife had compared the two men: Mr. McNamara was “the flying Dutchman, the man traveling the world searching for redemption and never finding it,” he said, while Mr. Rumsfeld is “the Cheshire Cat from ‘Alice in Wonderland’ and ‘Through the Looking Glass,’ the cat who at the very end vanishes and is left with just a smile.”

Mr. Morris said he had the idea for the film after reading Mr. Rumsfeld’s autobiography, “Known and Unknown.” Mr. Morris sent him a copy of “The Fog of War” and Mr. Rumsfeld responded within a week, eventually agreeing to sit for more than 30 hours of interviews in four sessions at Mr. Morris’s home in Boston.

As for Mr. Rumsfeld’s recent comments that he is opposed to military intervention in Syria, Mr. Morris, who is a frequent contributor to the New York Times opinion section, had a follow-up question: “Why now?” he asked at the news conference. “And not 10 years ago when presented with a similar question about Iraq and Afghanistan?”



Sept. 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.

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.Maps of all campaign events since April »
Events by candidate

Albanese

Carrión

De Blasio

Lhota

Liu

McDonald

Quinn

Thompson

Weiner

Group event


John A. Catsimatidis
Republican

11:30 a.m.
Accepts an endorsement from New York Veteran Police Association, outside City Hall in Lower Manhattan.

Bill de Blasio
Democrat

9:30 a.m.
After a week in which he appeared to be conserving his energy, Mr. de Blasio kicks off the final week before the primary with a day of stops in all five boroughs. He starts by greeting voters on Court Street and Atlantic Avenue in Brooklyn.

11:15 a.m.
Moves on to Astoria to greet voters at the intersection of Ditmars Boulevard and 31st Street, in Queens.

1 p.m.
Heads up to the Bronx to meet with voters at the corner of Fordham Road and Webster Avenue.

3 p.m.
Travels south to Chelsea to greet voters outside of Trader Joe’s on Avenue of the Americas.

4:30 p.m.
Greets voters on the ferry from Manhattan to Staten Island, beginning at the Whitehall Terminal in Lower Manhattan.

5 p.m.
Concludes his day on Staten Island, greeting evening commuters at St. George Terminal, a few minutes before Joseph J. Lhota, the leading Republican contender at the moment, is expected to arrive.

John C. Liu
Democrat

10:40 a.m.
Brings his wife, Jenny, for the first time to one of his public campaign events while he visits with seniors citizens at the Open Door Senior Citizen Center on Grand Street in Lower Manhattan.

11:30 a.m.
Visits with senior citizens at his second senior center of the day, the N.Y.C. Housing Authority’s Louis Heaton Pink Houses Senior Center in Brooklyn.

12 p.m.
Stops in at the third senior center of his day, the Vandalia Senior Center in East New York, Brooklyn.

12:30 p.m.
Visits with senior citizens at his fourth senior center of the day, the Boulevard Senior Center in the East New York, Brooklyn.

3 p.m.
Joins more than a dozen religious leaders who have endorsed him in the race as they express their views of the city, outside City Hall. The group includes the Rev. Phil Craig of the Greater Springfield Community Church in Queens, where Anthony Weiner appeared in May comparing God to a patient GPS, and the Rev. Herbert Daughtry of the House of the Lord’s Church in Brooklyn. The Rev. Carlos López-Acosta of the Esperanza Church in Manhattan, a recent addition to the candidate’s roster of supporters, is also expected.

4:30 p.m.
Greets voters along with the Three Parks Democrats, who endorsed Mr. Liu in May, on the Upper West Side.

5 p.m.
Greets commuters during the evening rush, at the East Broadway F train station in Chinatown.

7:45 p.m.
Participates in a candidates forum hosted by Political Power Through Organizing and City Councilman Jumaane Williams, at Vivid Cafe in East Flatbush, Brooklyn.

Joseph J. Lhota
Republican

12 p.m.
Meets privately with the Council of Senior Centers and Services, a network that represents more than 200 senior services agencies, at their offices on West 45th Street in Manhattan.

2:30 p.m.
Takes a private tour of Staten Island University Hospital, on Seaview Avenue on Staten Island.

5:15 p.m.
Greets riders of the Staten Island Ferry at its St. George Terminal on Staten Island, a few minutes after Bill de Blasio, the leading Democratic contender at the moment, has been there.

7:30 p.m.
Stops in at the New York Young Republican Club’s monthly social, at SideBAR on East 15th Street.

Christine C. Quinn
Democrat

7:30 a.m.
Campaigns along with State Assemblyman Andrew Hevesi and former Assemblyman Michael Cohen, in the Forest Hills section of Queens.

9 a.m.
Greets shoppers preparing for Rosh Hashana, along with City Councilman James Gennaro and State Assemblyman David Weprin, at the Seasons Grocery store in Flushing.

10:30 a.m.
The day after demanding that Bill de Blasio respond to reports that landlords from the public advocate’s “Worst Landlords” list were donating to his campaign, Ms. Quinn steps up the pressure, holding a news conference outside a building that was formerly on the list, on Chauncey Street in Brooklyn. Ms. Quinn also presents her plan to expand the city’s middle-income housing stock the most since the Mitchell-Lama program was created in 1955.

11:30 a.m.
Appears at a retirement seminar hosted by the Uniformed Fire Officers Association, which endorsed Ms. Quinn in February, at Russo’s on the Bay in the Howard Beach section of Queens.

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

7:40 a.m.
Campaigns at the St. George Terminal of the Staten Island Ferry, along with State Senator Diane Savino; the American Federation of Teachers president, Randi Weingarten; the United Federation of Teachers president, Michael Mulgrew; the Uniformed Firefighters Association president, Steve Cassidy; the Uniformed E.M.S. Officers Union president, Vincent Variale; and first responders.

8:30 a.m.
Tours a neighborhood on Staten Island that was damaged in Hurricane Sandy, along with State Senator Diane Savino; the United Federation of Teachers president, Michael Mulgrew; the Uniformed Firefighters Association president, Steve Cassidy; the Uniformed E.M.S. Officers Union president Vincent Variale; and first responders.

12:30 p.m.
Accepts the endorsement of the Rev. Lawrence E. Aker and other Brooklyn pastors, at Mr. Aker’s Cornerstone Baptist Church in Bedford Stuyvesant. Other mayoral rivals, including Bill de Blasio, had courted Rev. Aker’s support in recent weeks, and John C. Liu attended a gala honoring the pastor in April.

3:30 p.m.
Hosts a round-table discussion on gun violence, at the Living Water Christian Center in Brooklyn.

5 p.m.
Hosts a telephone town-hall meeting on education, along with the American Federation of Teachers president, Randi Weingarten, and the United Federation of Teachers president, Michael Mulgrew.

6:30 p.m.
Attends Rosh Hashana services, along with his wife, Elsie Thompson, and the American Federation of Teachers president, Randi Weingarten, at the Jacob Javits Center on West 34th Street.

8 p.m.
Participates in a candidates forum hosted by Political Power Through Organizing and City Councilman Jumaane Williams, at Vivid Cafe in East Flatbush, Brooklyn.

Anthony D. Weiner
Democrat

11:45 a.m.
Greets voters at 13th Avenue and 48th Street, in Brooklyn.

1:30 p.m.
One of two candidates to stop by Senior Center Candidates Day, at the Goddard Riverside Community Center on the Upper West Side.

2 p.m.
Presents his “Grab and Go” plan to fight childhood hunger with school food stands, as part of his “Keys to the City” tour, at P.S. 166 The Richard Rodgers School of the Arts and Technology on the Upper West Side.

4:30 p.m.
Visits with senior citizens at the Sage Senior Center on Seventh Avenue in Manhattan.

Sal F. Albanese
Democrat

7 a.m.
Greets commuters during the morning rush, at the 95th Street subway station in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn.

12 p.m.
Visits with senior citizens at the Homecrest Community Services senior center in Sheepshead Bay, Brooklyn.

1 p.m.
One of two candidates to stop by Senior Center Candidates Day, at the Goddard Riverside Community Center on the Upper West Side.

7:15 p.m.
Participates in a candidates forum hosted by Political Power Through Organizing and City Councilman Jumaane Williams, at Vivid Cafe in East Flatbush, Brooklyn.

Adolfo Carrión Jr.
Independent

7:30 a.m.
Greets voters at the South Bronx intersection known as The Hub.

9:15 a.m.
Visits with senior citizens at the Andrew Jackson Senior Center in the Melrose section of the Bronx.

10 a.m.
Returns to The Hub and walks through the Roberto Clemente Plaza Youthmarket, a greenmarket run by GrowNYC.

10:30 a.m.
Visits with senior citizens at the Maria Isabel, Douglas Leon and 607 Senior Centers, all part of the Hunts Point Multi-Service Center in Hunts Point.

12 p.m.
Visits with senior citizens at the Melrose Mott Haven Senior Center on East 152nd Street.

George T. McDonald
Republican

12:20 p.m.
Visits with senior citizens at the St. Frances Cabrini Senior Center in the Bath Beach section of Brooklyn.

2 p.m.
Tours the River Fund, a nonprofit that provides emergency food assistance, cooking lessons, winter coats, cellphones and other programs to help those in poverty, in the Jamaica section of Queens.

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.



A New Romeo For Classic Stage Company’s Shakespeare

Classic Stage Company announced on Wednesday that Julian Cihi, a recent graduate of Tisch School of the Arts at New York University, will play Romeo in its upcoming production of “Romeo and Juliet.”  As previously announced, Elizabeth Olsen will be his Juliet.

Finn Wittrock (“Death of a Salesman”) had previously been cast as Romeo but withdrew from the production in July in order to work on the film version of “The Normal Heart.”

Mr. Cihi, who was born in Japan and moved to New York at age 17, previously played Roger in a Japanese tour of the musical “Rent,” and, more recently, appeared in “The Importance of Being Earnest” and “A Month in the Country” at the Williamstown Theater Festival last year.

The company also announced that William Hurt, who was to play Friar Laurence in the Off Broadway production, has left the show for personal reasons, and will be replaced by Daniel Davis.

The cast also includes T.R. Knight as Mercutio and Daphne Rubin-Vega as the nurse. Tea Alagic is the director, and previews begin Sept. 27 for an Oct. 16 opening.

CSC’s “Romeo and Juliet” is one of at least two versions that will be playing simultaneously in New York this fall â€" a Broadway production starring Orlando Bloom and Condola Rashad is currently in previews at the Richard Rodgers Theater, where it is scheduled to open Sept. 19.



$2 Million Grant to Bolster American Ballet Theater’s Training Programs

Students from the Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis School performing in 2010.Julieta Cervantes for The New York Times Students from the Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis School performing in 2010.

A $2 million grant from an anonymous donor will allow the Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis School at American Ballet Theater to add scholarships and broaden its training programs, Rachel Moore, the Ballet Theater’s chief executive, announced Wednesday. It is the largest gift ever made to the Manhattan-based school, according to the announcement.

Of the $2 million, up to $1 million has been pledged as part of a fund-raising effort to begin on Wednesday, called the “Friends of J.K.O. Challenge.” Over the next three years, donations to the challenge will be matched on a 2:1 basis (every $1 donation, for example, will be matched with $2 from the grant). The funds will supplement the training of dancers at the school, which provides a pre-professional ballet training program for students 12-18.

“This gift will be absolutely transformational for the J.K.O. School, which trains diverse, versatile dancers from across the country and around the world,” Ms. Moore said in a statement.  “In just nine years, the J.K.O. School has grown from 11 young dancers to a student body of over 350.  This donation is an enormous testament to the school’s growth and quality and will enable us to engage the most promising and advanced students with crucial scholarships to make their continued training possible.”

Among other things, the money will expand programming for the school’s pre-professional division and studio company dancers, allow emerging choreographers to create and produce new works, provide scholarships and tuition assistance, and help with infrastructure improvements and maintenance. The money will also benefit the school’s annual exchange program with the Royal Ballet School.



Interrupting a Prayer Under a Streetlight

Dear Diary:

As I was walking down Lexington just south of East 96th Street one recent Sunday evening, I noticed a man kneeling on one knee, his head bent. Thinking he had fallen or was ill, I asked him if he were all right. He said, “Yes.”

Then I asked him if he needed help. Suddenly he screamed at me, “GO AWAY!” I did.

When I turned up East 94th Street, I saw that he was right behind me. I was not frightened, as I had just passed a building whose doorman was standing outside watching.

The man caught up to me and said: “Miss, miss, I just want to apologize to you. Everyone always asks me the same thing. I was just praying and trying not to be conspicuous.”

Not conspicuous? On Lexington Avenue under a streetlight?

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.



New York Today: Big Apples and Honey

New York City's got the bees for the honey, but what about the apples?Emily S. Rueb/The New York Times New York City’s got the bees for the honey, but what about the apples?

Rosh Hashana, the Jewish New Year, begins tonight at sundown.

Wouldn’t it be an extra sweet holiday if the ritual snack of apples dipped in honey came from within the five boroughs?

Local honey is available. Beekeeping is now legal in the city and increasingly popular.

Vendors sell at least two varieties at the Union Square Greenmarket.

The honey at the city’s biggest rooftop garden, Brooklyn Grange, which has farmstand hours today, boasts “a pronounced sarsaparilla flavor,” according to one review.

But Big Apple apples?

“We occasionally get people coming to us with a case of something they grew in their backyard and try to get us to sell it â€" herbs, sometimes squash, or figs,” said Anika Pyle, produce buyer for the Brooklyn Kitchen, a store in Williamsburg.

“But no one’s ever brought in apples,” she said.

Still, we located at least one source.

The Queens County Farm Museum, site of the state’s oldest farm, is selling heirloom golden russets today.

“They’re not the prettiest apples,” said Sarah Meyer, the museum’s sales director. “But they’re delicious.”

Here’s what you need to know for Wednesday.

WEATHER

Nice one, Mr. or Ms. Weatherperson. Sun-dappled and warm, breezy and dry, with a high of 83.

TRANSIT & TRAFFIC

- Mass Transit: Fine so far. Click for latest M.T.A. status.

- Roads: No major delays. Click for traffic map or radio report on the 1s.

Alternate-side parking is in effect.

COMING UP TODAY

- William C. Thompson Jr. campaigns on Staten Island with teachers’ union officials and hosts a forum on gun violence. Joseph J. Lhota visits the New York Young Republican Club.

- The Democratic candidates for comptroller, Scott M. Stringer and Eliot Spitzer, take part in a “moderated forum” sponsored by the Council of Urban Professionals at 8:30 a.m.

- AARP hosts debates for City Council candidates at Fordham University (10 a.m.) and City College (6:30 p.m.)

- Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg signs bills to cut pollution from city vehicles.

- The mayor will also proclaim today to be Elie Tahari Day. You remember Elie Tahari. He invented the tube top.

- Federal and city officials kick off the 10th annual National Preparedness Month to educate the public on disaster precautions.

- On that note, Seth Diamond, a senior state official, speaks to the Metropolitan Transportation Council about rebuilding the transportation network after Hurricane Sandy.

- Brooklyn Academy of Music unveils a new bike park and art installation, including racks designed by the musician David Byrne, at 11 a.m.

- Figure drawing outdoors at South Cove Plaza at Battery Park City at 2:30 p.m.

- Yoga in the sunset in Riverside Park at 66th Street at 6:30 p.m., or Pilates at Brooklyn Bridge Park at 7 p.m. [Free]

- “Life of Pi” screens at the South Street Seaport at 8 p.m. [Free]

- “The Flag,” a documentary about the tangled history of the flag raised from the rubble of ground zero on Sept. 11, shows on CNN at 9 p.m.

- With school still out for most of the city, The Times has a guide to events this week for children.

IN THE NEWS

- As Bill de Blasio surges in the latest mayoral polls, his rivals pounded him at last night’s debate as a real-estate panderer, flip-flopper and naïve dreamer. [New York Times]

- The mayor sued the City Council to overturn a new law that makes it easier for people to sue the police in stop-and-frisk cases. [Daily News]

- Vito J. Lopez, the former State Assemblyman who resigned in a sexual harassment scandal, stands a decent chance of winning a City Council seat. [New York Times]

- The police are looking for a speedy driver who posted a video appearing to depict him doing a 26.5-mile lap around Manhattan in 24 minutes. [New York Post]

- A treasure hunter thinks he may have found pieces of a Revolutionary-era British frigate said to have sunk in the East River with a load of gold coins. [New York Times]

- The National Opera Center, providing low-cost rental space for rehearsals, auditions and even performances, opens today in Chelsea. [Crains]

- At Forest Hills, Andy Murray nearly lost to an unseeded Uzbek player but recovered to advance to the quarterfinals.

- Yankees beat White Sox 6-4. Mets lose to Atlanta 3-1.

Nicole Higgins DeSmet contributed reporting.

New York Today is a morning roundup that stays live from 6 a.m. till about noon.

What would you like to see here to start your day? Post a comment, e-mail us at nytoday@nytimes.com or reach us via Twitter using #NYToday.