
Yoko Ono
Dressed all in black, except for the red flower at the tip of her men’s fedora, Yoko Ono claimed the stage last night on the eve of her 77th birthday with a primal scream that seemed to contain all at once, grief, rage and intense, existential joy. Her journey that night at the Brooklyn Academy of Music began with a poignant series of home movies from her childhood in pre-war Japan and moved from there to her provocative life as a performance artist in the early 1960’s — and then — to her epic romance with John Lennon.
Her comrades that night included her son, Sean Lennon — as well as members of the We Are Plastic Ono Band, Justin Bond, The Scissor Sisters — as well as members of the original Plastic Ono Band. That band was launched in 1969 with the hit single “Give Peace a Chance,” and that’s how Yoko ended the evening. W ith everyone singing about peace and love.
“Love everyone,” she implored. ”Hug everyone, she smiled. “Give peace a chance.”

Gregg Breinberg
Teacher Gregg Breinberg is The Whiz Kid behind the Whiz Kids otherwise known as the PS22 Choir. Made up of 4th and 5th graders from PS22 on Staten Island, they’ve performed at Madison Square Garden, sung for movie stars and politicians and melted hearts all over the world.
But for their fearless leader – what’s most important is helping students find the heart and soul of a song — and of themselves.
In an interview with OpenEducation.Net, Breinberg told writer Thomas Hanson the key to their successful collaboration is having High Hopes, Great Expectations and Kindness. And it doesn’t hurt to be a Bit of A Clown yourself. ‘Kindness and patience are #1 with me,” Breinberg said in the interview. “I also think it’s important to be willing to try things, step outside your comfort zone, embarrass yourself, make mistakes — because you can never forget that’s basically what you’re asking from all of your students at some point or another.
The kids have taught him as well, Breinberg said.
As Joey, one of the kids in the choir told MSNBC: ‘Mr. B, he’s a handful — he teaches us but we teach him — he’s not just a regular teacher — he is un-ordinary.’ Check out the whole interview with the ‘Un-Ordinary’ Breinberg and his Extraordinary work with the PS22 Choir here.
“The civility of which money will purchase, is
Rarely extended to those who have none”
Charles Dickens
Homeless waifs, overflowing poor houses, people living on the street – the London that Charles Dickens chronicled in his 19th century novels doesn’t sound all that different from the New York City of 2009. With a record number of families in homeless shelters, unemployment at all time highs and a recession that doesn’t want to let go – there are a lot of people struggling. And for those in need — it may get even harder.
A Draconian law the city is intent on implementing would require those living in shelters to pay rent — nearly half of any income they manage to scrounge up – all while trying to find a permanent place to live – and work that pays a liveable wage – a daunting prospect in even the best of times.
There are now nearly 40,000 people using New York’s homeless shelters — 13,000 of them are children, according to the Coalition for the Homeless — and that number keeps growing.
” Asking the poorest and most desperate New Yorkers to pay money they cannot spare is cruel and petty, ” said Piper Hoffman, Director of Advocacy at the Partnership for the Homeless. ” Every human being has a right to a roof over their heads.”
There are two bills pending that would make it illegal for shelters to charge rent — but they seem to be currently stalled in the Rules Committee of the State Assembly (Bill A8353-D) and another in the State Senate (S5605-A).
Linda Contes and her husband Manuel told The Indypendent they were asked to pay $1,475 last May to live in a homeless shelter even though Contes was unemployed and Manuel was working part-time. Although the policy was suspended 3 weeks later, the City’s Dept. of Homeless Services says it plans to implement the rule.
Concerned citizens should write to their State representative asking them to co-sponsor this legislation — and if they are on the relevant committee, to work to send the bill to the floor for a full vote. The Coalition for the Homeless also has a form letter to write to Governor Paterson — just go to the site and hit the link that says Action.
It’s Christmas – But there’s still No Room at the Inn…..
The members of the Senate Finance Committee are:
Chair: Sen. Carl Kruger
Sen. Eric Adams
Sen. Neil D. Breslin
Sen. John A. DeFrancisco
Sen. Ruben Diaz
Sen. Martin Malavé Dilan
Sen. Thomas K. Duane
Sen. Pedro Espada, Jr., Majority Leader
Sen. Hugh T. Farley
Sen. Kemp Hannon
Sen. Owen H. Johnson
Sen. Jeffrey D. Klein
Sen. Liz Krueger
Sen. William J. Larkin Jr.
Sen. Kenneth P. LaValle
Sen. Vincent L. Leibell
Sen. Carl L Marcellino
Sen. George D. Maziarz
Sen. Velmanette Montgomery
Sen. Michael F. Nozzolio
Sen. Suzi Oppenheimer
Sen. Frank Padavan
Sen. Kevin S. Parker
Sen. Bill Perkins
Sen. Stephen M. Saland
Sen. John L. Sampson
Sen. James L. Seward
Sen. William T. Stachowski
Sen. Toby Ann Stavisky
Sen. Andrea Stewart-Cousins
Sen. Antoine M Thompson
Sen. David J. Valesky
Sen. Dale M. Volker
The members of the Assembly Rules Committee are:
Sheldon Silver
Jeffrion L. Aubry
Daniel J. Burling
Ron Canestrari
Ann-Margaret Carrozza
Vivian E. Cook
Clifford W. Crouch
Herman D. Farrell, Jr.
David F. Gantt
Deborah J. Glick
Richard N. Gottfried
Stephen Hawley
Jim Hayes
Earlene Hooper
Rhoda Jacobs
Brian M. Kolb
Joseph R. Lentol
Vito J. Lopez
Joel M. Miller
Joseph D. Morelle
Catherine Nolan
Bob Oaks
Felix Ortiz
J. Gary Pretlow
Peter M. Rivera
Dede Scozzafava
Mike Spano
Robert K. Sweeney
Helene E. Weinstein
Liv Ullman
A rumpled bed, brightly lit and placed stage right, seems to dominate the stage in Liv Ullman’s haunting production of ‘Streetcar Named Desire,’ now playing at Brooklyn Academy of Music . It’s the place where the climatic confrontation between Blanche Dubois and Stanley Kowalski takes place, and where at night — as Stella says — ‘things happen between a man and a woman that make everything else seem unimportant.’ Desire — for sex and Desire for life — infuse this production that stars Cate Blanchett, in a heartrending performance as Blanche.
“I think we need Tennessee Williams now more than ever,” Ullman said during a recent interview at the Harvey Theatre, where the play will run until Dec, 20. “In a twitter world – we need his poetry.”
“The way I see it,” Ullman wrote in the accompanying program. “Tennessee Williams wished to pull us out of our own angry darkness, by allowing us to see, to recognize the hurt and vulnerability and the fear disguised as violence or rudeness or carelessness or what may look like madness.”
At the end of the play, Blanche moves off to stage right, bathed in light.
Ullman said she may not be doomed – but has embraced her own solitude, accepted the untenability of her situation… “Maybe now she will be alone., Ullman said. “Sometimes being alone is what a person may need.”

Orson Welles, 1937
In 1937, a mad genius stood poised, ready to unleash his vision on the world. The Crazy Genius was Orson Welles — and his production of Shakespeare’s ‘Julius Caesar’ at his newly created Mercury Theatre in New York City would bring him infamy and opportunity. Filmmaker Richard Linklater brings the period — and the genius to life in his new film ‘‘Me and Orson Welles.’
Based on the coming -of -age novel by Robert Kaplow, Linklater shows us all the fun, craziness, treachery and heartbreak that came under the rubric: A Life in the Theatre — especially if it involved the Boy Wonder who was Orson Welles in 1937.
We get the backstage intrigue, the romances and Welles as a kind of sometimes benign, sometimes cruel dictator/director. He wanted results and adoration — didn’t hesitate to cut anyone who didn’t give him enough of either. British actor Christian McCay, who stars as Welles, nails the director’s brilliance — as well as his ability to manipulate and seduce.
Zac Efron is touchingly vulnerable as Richard Samuels, the high school kid who stumbles on a rehearsal at the Mercury and gets a small part in the production. At the end, after Samuels has tasted some success, some betrayal, and some joy, he tells his friend, Gretta, who has dreams of being a writer: “It feels like we have everything before us…..” The camera pulls back in a gesture of joy and acknowledgement. That everything would eventually come to mean World War II — and for Welles — more masterpieces, fame, financial ruin — and a haunting memory of a sled called Rosebud. But in that moment, for those characters — the world was alive — with possibility and with hope.
He Who Binds Himself to a Joy
Does the Winged Life Destroy
But he Who Kisses the Joy as it Flies
Lives in Eternity’s Sunrise
William Blake
Along with her husband and artistic collaborator Christo, she helped wrap the Pont Neuf in Paris, the Reichstag in Berlin; swathed the Biscayne Bay Islands near Miami in a luscious Pink, and in 2005, she filled Central Park with 7,503 Saffron Colored Gates . Those gates transformed a barren winter landscape into something amazing and alive and created a new relationship to a familiar terrain.
French artist Jeanne-Claude – of the vibrant red hair and even redder lips – didn’t mind, she once said, in an interview, that the monumental projects that she and Christo devoted themselves and that took years to complete and cost millions — were just transient – ephemeral works. What it was all about – she said – was creating joy. Their works expressed “the quality of love and tenderness that we human beings have for what does not last.”
Jeanne-Claude died this week, at the age of 74.
Acclaimed documentary filmmaker Frederick Wiseman takes us deep into the heart of the Paris dance world with his new film: ‘La Danse: The Paris Opera Ballet. ’ Like a Degas painting come to life, Wiseman uses his signature technique – an unobtrusive camera that penetrates into heretofore closed worlds — to reveal the details that create Life and Art — as they are lived.
Among the great pleasures of the film are watching such French stars – — dancers like Aurelie Dupont and Laetitia Pujol rehearse new works; costume designers with painstaking attention to detail hand sewing on buttons and glitter; the glorious opulence of the Palais Garner where the company is based. And of course — there’s Paris itself.
Wiseman — whose other films include ‘Titicut Follies’ and ‘State Legislature’ shows the joy of creation — and also the sweat and grit that underly the most soaring works.
It’s playing at the Film Forum along with another Beauty: Michael Powell’s classic film “The Red Shoes,” which stars Moira Shearer as the dancer who must choose between Art and Life. But Don’t Choose! Just Run — and See these great works of Art before they close.

Series I - No. I, 1918
Before she became known as Georgia O’Keefe, the iconic painter of blisteringly sensual flower paintings and stark landscapes, she was just a young woman coming to New York from Wisconsin with dreams of being an artist. She wanted to free herself from inhibition — .to express all the feelings and seemingly inexpressible thoughts that were roiling inside of her. She studied art at Columbia University’s Teacher’s College under Arthur Dow, a specialist in Oriental art who taught that it was the artist’s personality that should come through a drawing, not just a realistic rendering of a subject.
In 1915, she emerged onto the New York Art World’s stage with a group of abstract charcoal works, whose purpose, she said in interviews later, were to translate into art what she couldn’t say in words – that it was through imagery and shapes that her thoughts would coalesce.
From there, she moved onto color, moving gradually from intense cobalt blues to hot pinks and lavenders – blossoming into the forms and flowers for which she later became known.
The Whitney is showing all these works – some not seen in New York since her first shows – along with some revelatory photographs taken of her by her lover and mentor, Edward Steichen.
Georgia O’Keefe: Abstraction is running till January 17. Don’t Miss It!
“Toto, I have a feeling we’re not in Kansas anymore!” It’s been 70 years since those immortal words were spoken – and to commemorate that anniversary Warners Brothers released a new, enhanced Blu-Ray version on Sept. 29.
Growing up in the sixties, watching the ‘Wizard of Oz’ was always a hotly anticipated ritual in our home. We were late getting a color television, so we had a routine. Watch the first half at home while eating a Sunday kind of dinner. Then – a quick dash to a neighbor who had the big old fashioned wooden console color television to watch the second half – when Dorothy steps out of her wrecked house into a land where Munchkins and Good Witches and Bad Witches live — and a Yellow Brick Road beckoned to a world of magic.
The new Blu-Ray digitalized version released by Warner Bros. to commemorate the anniversary and shown on a big screen in Central Park Tuesday night after the concert is gloriously vivid and clear.
And with all the clarity, you see how crafty and resourceful that crazy dog Toto was after all. The Wicked Witch is still scary, Glinda still glitters and the Scarecrow is still the Smartest One of Them All.
Seeing it once more – up there in all its Blu-Ray radiance, You fall in love, all over again.
Netflix is offering free streaming of the film on Oct. 3.

The Milkmaid
Noone knows exactly who she was now. A woman ensconced in domesticity, pouring milk — the scene may have seemed mundane. But the Dutch painter Johannes Vermeer saw something majestic and sensual — even monumental in the moment. The colors seem translucent. The level of detail makes it seem almost photographic, although it was likely painted sometime during the year 1657- 58. The painting possesses a moving luminosity. Currently on view at the Metropolitan Museum of Art through Nov. 28, ”The Milkmaid” is considered the painter’s masterpiece. She was sent over this year — along with other paintings by Vermeer and his contemporaries as a gift from the Netherlands to pay homage to the 400th anniversary of explorer Henry Hudson’s visit to the island, we now know as Manhattan.
To see more of the Dutch influence, check out the exhibit at the South Street Seaport, “New Amsterdam: The Island at the Center of the World.” And through June, 2010, The Holland on the Hudson festival will celebrate the 400th anniversary with events and exhibitions.
