|
Fall
Arts Preview
In
which Metroland’s crack staff attempts to assemble
a useful guide to the fall arts scene in the Capital Region
and beyond
 |
|
George Clooney as Michael Clayton.
|
Fall
Cinema Preview
Fewer
remakes. Fewer comic-book heroes. Fewer sequels. It must be
fall! This year’s lineup of films is better than last year’s,
which was an improvement on the year before. It would be nice
if this were a real trend.
Serious—and
Not So Serious—Art House Fun
Lars
and the Real Girl
Department
of “In Every Dream Home a Heartache” department: Ryan Gosling
is an average Joe who, spending too much time on the Internet,
falls in love with a doll. If anyone can pull this off, it’s
Gosling.
Margot
at the Wedding
Noah
Baumbach’s much-anticipated follow-up to The Squid and
the Whale stars Nicole Kidman and Jennifer Jason Leigh
as sisters who, in preparation for the latter’s wedding to
Jack Black, bicker and fight a lot. (My money’s on Jennifer
Jason Leigh. She’s tough.)
The
Darjeeling Limited
Wes
Anderson returns with this quirky (of course) family dramedy
about three brothers (Owen Wilson, Adrien Brody, Jason Schwartzman)
on a not-so-spiritual train journey across India.
I’m
Not There
This
should have been a train wreck, but the early word on Todd
Haynes’ Bob Dylan biopic is positive. Cate Blanchett, Heath
Ledger and Christian Bale are just three of the six actors
who portray Bobby Z. at various points in his life.
Control
Sam
Riley is Joy Division’s late, iconic frontman Ian Curtis in
this biopic. Should be loads of laughs. With Samantha Morton.
The
Kite Runner
Drama
of an Afghani expat going home to find his childhood friend.
From the best-selling book, it’s directed by Marc Forster
(Finding Neverland, Monster’s Ball).
Southland
Tales
Richard
Kelly’s (Donnie Darko) much reviled, epic L.A. freak
show is finally getting a release. It stars The Rock, Sarah
Michelle Gellar and Seann William Scott, and the plot makes
Magnolia seem reasonable. In other words, we can’t
wait.
Oscar Wishes and Golden-Globe Deams
Sweeney
Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street
Stephen
Sondheim’s landmark musical gets Tim Burtonized in this big-budget
adaptation starring Johnny Depp. Everyone so wants Burton
not to screw this up. With Sacha Baron Cohen and Helena Bonham
Carter.
Michael
Clayton
George
Clooney stars as a corporate fixer in this high-stakes thriller
costarring Tilda Swinton; it’s directed by Tony Gilroy, who
co-wrote the Bourne films. This is why Clooney is cool.
Tilda Swinton and Tony Gilroy? That’s using movie-star power
for good.
No
Country for Old Men
Why
did it take so long for the Coen brothers to film a Cormac
McCarthy novel? Their black humor and his grim Southwestern
bloodlust seem a perfect match. With Tommy Lee Jones and Javier
Bardem.
Lust,
Caution
Ang
Lee’s political thriller, set in 1930s Shanghai, won the Golden
Lion at the Venice Film festival a couple of weeks ago. It
stars the great Tony Leung, newcomer Wei Tang and the ever-lovely
Joan Chen. It’s long—almost three hours—and earned its NC-17
rating for sex, not violence.
Things
We Lost in the Fire
The
odd pairing of Halle Berry, Benicio Del Toro and Danish director
Susanne Bier (After the Wedding) is earning early raves
for this post-trauma family drama.
American
Gangster
Ridley
Scott deploys the star power of Denzel Washington and Russell
Crowe in this based-on-true-events drama of organized crime
in the 1970s.
Elizabeth:
The Golden Age
Top-shelf
acting: Cate Blanchett returns as the virgin queen in this
costume drama costarring Clive Owen and Geoffrey Rush (reprising
his role from Elizabeth). In this one, much Spanish
ass will be kicked.
Reservation
Road
More
top-shelf acting: Joaquin Phoenix and Mark Ruffalo are men
whose lives are irrevocably changed by a road accident in
this intense, emotional drama.
Lions
for Lambs
All
about the war: Robert Redford directs and costars with Tom
Cruise and Meryl Streep in this drama about a U.S. soldier
who meets an unfortunate fate in Afghanistan.
Rendition
Even
more about the war: Reese Witherspoon and Jake Gyllenhaal
(as a CIA agent) discover that the U.S. government is doing
Bad Things in this war-on-terror thriller.
Atonement
Shades
of The Children’s Hour: Keira Knightley and James McAvoy
are lovers whose future is destroyed by the false allegations
of her teenage brother.
Before
the Devil Knows You’re Dead
This
one could be great. Philip Seymour Hoffman and Ethan Hawke
are brothers who decide that committing a “victimless” crime
is the way out of their (deep) troubles. Of course, this turns
out not to be the case.
When Are You Comin’ Back, Stranger?
Cassandra’s
Dream
Woody
Allen’s London exile continues with this drama starring Colin
Farrell and Ewan McGregor. It’s said to be more Match Point
than Scoop.
Love
and Marriage
Feast
of Love
Old
pro Robert Benton directs Morgan Freeman, Radha Mitchell,
Greg Kinnear, Selma Blair and Alexa Davalos in this “modern-day
Midsummer Night’s Dream.” Mitchell’s always a plus,
but Kinnear . . .
Why
Did I Get Married?
Diary
of a Mad Black Woman’s Tyler Perry drops the drag for
this romantic drama with Janet Jackson. If it fails, will
he ask, “Why didn’t I wear a dress?”
Dan
in Real Life
This
season’s Steve Carell-starred sad-sack romance finds our hero
romancing the lovely Juliette Binoche, only to discover she’s
dating his brother—Dane Cook. Binoche and Cook is an even
less likely paring than Simon Pegg and Thandie Newton (keep
reading, you’ll see).
I
Could Never Be Your Woman
This
one’s kind of a head-scratcher: A May-December romance with
Michelle Pfeiffer and Paul Rudd? She’s not that old;
he’s not that young. It’s directed BY Amy Heckerling,
whose lousy last film was the aptly titled Jason Biggs vehicle
Loser. Costarring Tracey Ullman.
Do It Again!
Sleuth
How’s
this for a brain-twister: Michael Caine takes the Laurence
Olivier part, and Jude Law takes the Michael Caine
part, in this Kenneth Branagh-directed remake of the classic
Joseph L. Mankiewicz thriller about a husband who sets a trap
for his wife’s lover.
The
Heartbreak Kid
The
Farrelly brothers direct Ben Stiller in this remake of the
1972 Neil Simon-Elaine May comedy, which starred Charles Grodin
and Cybill Shepherd. This is really hard to say, but . . .
I’m missing Charles Grodin already.
For The Family
The
Game Plan
The
Rock is a flashy pro athlete forced to raise one of his inadvertent
children (Madison Pettis) in this three-hankie family flick,
costarring Kyra Sedgwick as a tough-as-nails sports agent
with a heart of gold.
Martian
Child
John
Cusack adopts a troubled kid who thinks he’s from Mars in
this allegedly heartwarming drama.
Mama,
I Want to Sing!
The
old Broadway musical comes to the screen, starring Ciara,
Lynn Whitfield and Patti LaBelle. As the title suggests, Ciara
plays a girl who wants to, um, sing.
Fred
Claus
Vince
Vaughn is Santa’s underachieving brother Fred in this Christmas-themed
comedy. Will it be more like a nice plum pudding, or just
a fruitcake?
The
Perfect Holiday
More
alleged holiday warmth with Gabrielle Union, Morris Chestnut
and Queen Latifah.
Mr.
Magorium’s Wonder Emporium
Natalie
Portman is the mousy inheritor of 150-year-old Dustin Hoffman’s
eccentric toy shop in this family-friendly fantasy. It’s hard
to describe this one. And by hard to describe, I don’t mean
difficult; I mean thinking about the plot of this film makes
my head explode.
Bee
Movie
DreamWorks
Animation brings us this tragic romance of a bee (Jerry Seinfeld)
and a florist (Renée Zellweger). There’s a political angle,
too: “Bee Jerry” is incensed that humans eat honey, and sues
mankind. Why did they stop making ant movies?
Alvin
and the Chipmunks
The
trailer features one of the chipmunks taking a dump. Ha ha.
Another childhood memory down the toilet. With Jason Lee.
Only a Fantasy
I
Am Legend
Will
Smith is the last man on Earth in this remake of the immortal
Charlton Heston vehicle The Omega Man. No way can this
version be as cool; the original costarred Anthony Zerbe and
Rosalind Cash. (OK, I’m old.)
National
Treasure: Book of Secrets
There
are a lot of dumb movies coming out this fall, but this sequel
may well be the dumbest of them all: Nicolas Cage discovers
that one of his ancestors might have been in league with John
Wilkes Booth. And the papers that will clear said ancestor
are in a secret compartment in the President’s desk.
Kill. Me. Now.
The
Golden Compass
The
popular fantasy trilogy comes to the big screen, with a big-screen
cast: Dakota Blue Richards, Nicole Kidman, Daniel Craig and
Eva Green. New Line is betting this will be another Lord
of the Rings.
Enchanted
Amy
Adams is the peasant girl and Susan Sarandon is the wicked
queen in this animation-to-live-action, medieval-to- contemporary-New
York City fantasy. Sounds complicated, but it certainly won’t
be.
Beowulf
Robert
Zemeckis drops another Polar Express-style animated
epic on moviegoers with this 3-D rendering of the old Scandinavian
legend. With Angelina Jolie as monster Crispin Glover’s mom.
(Perfect casting, I must say.)
Funny Business
Leatherheads
George
Clooney takes us back to the quirky, violent world of 1920s
pro football in this romantic comedy, which finds Clooney
jousting with John Krasinski for the affections of perky (and,
undoubtedly, pouty) reporter Renée Zellweger.
Walk
Hard: The Dewey Cox Story
Judd
Apatow produced this kinda cruel parody of the life of Johnny
Cash, starring John C. Reilly. Too soon?
Run,
Fat Boy, Run
This
is the one in which Simon Pegg dons a fat suit in order to
drop the pounds and win back his long-lost fiancée, Thandie
Newton. Thandie Newton and Simon Pegg? Right.
The Horror, the Horror
The
Mist
The
Green Mile’s Frank Darabont directs this Stephen King
thriller. Gee, please don’t let it be as long as The Green
Mile. That was awful . . . long.
30
Days of Night
As
winter night descends on Alaska, vampires move in. A point
of vampire lore: Are blood popsicles an acceptable substitute
for the warm stuff? With Josh Hartnett.
Saw
IV
Stop.
It. Now.
Sad Faces
Grace
is Gone
John
Cusack has earned raves for his performance in this drama
about the effects of the Iraq war on military families.
Rails
& Ties
Alison
Eastwood (yep, Clint’s daughter) directs this drama about
a train engineer (Kevin Bacon) who befriends a boy whose mom
killed herself on the tracks. With Marcia Gay Harden.
Action
The
Kingdom
Jamie
Foxx, Chris Cooper and Jennifer Garner kick much terrorist
ass to save Jason Bateman in this set-in-Saudi Arabia drama.
We
Own the Night
Joaquin
Phoenix owns a splashy nightclub and chums around with drug
dealers. His brother, Mark Wahlberg, and dad, Robert Duvall,
are cops. You can see where this is going. With this cast,
however, the trip should be worthwhile.
Social
Action
The
Price of Sugar
Paul
Newman narrates this documentary about a Catholic priest helping
to organize Haitian sugar workers.
Darfur
Now
Don
Cheadle narrates this documentary about the genocide in Sudan.
What Is Art?
My
Kid Could Paint That
A
documentary about 4-year-old Maria Olmstead, whose paintings
have sold for thousands of dollars. The filmmaker, however,
begins to wonder if maybe her artist dad is helping the kid
out.
WTF
Postal
Uwe
Boll directs yet another film based on a video game. We dare
you to fire up the Google, find the first three minutes of
the film online, and watch them. You will not believe it.
Seriously, it’s the most unfreakingbelievable three minutes
of cinema you’ll see all year. You want a hint? It’s an extended
joke about the 9/11 hijackers.
Shawn
Stone
Check
for arts updates during the week on the Metroland blog: metroland.typepad.com/blog.
 |
|
Queen
Latifah at the Troy Savings Bank Music Hall.
|
Pop
Music
Caffe Lena
47
Phila St., Saratoga Springs, 583-0022.
Sept.
28: Detour. Sept. 29: Frank Vignola Quartet.
Sept. 30: Eastern Blok. Oct. 4: Patty Larkin.
Oct. 6: Ember Swift. Oct. 10: Jesse Colin Young
and Celtic Mambo. Oct. 12: Yarn. Oct. 13: Tom
Pacheco. Oct. 14: Willie Moak, Phil Drum.
Oct. 19: Dry Bones. Oct. 20: Martha Gallagher.
Oct. 21: Eric Andersen. Oct. 26: Garnet Rogers.
Oct. 27: Bill Vanaver. Oct. 28: Stacey Earle and
Mark Stuart. Nov. 2: Professor Louie and the Crowmatix.
Nov. 3: Bob Warren Band. Nov. 4: Skidmore Small
Jazz Ensemble. Nov. 9: Michael Cooney. Nov. 10:
Roy Book Binder. Nov. 11: David Mallett. Nov.
16: Laurel Masse. Nov. 17: Danny Kalb. Nov.
18: Mary McCaslin. Nov. 23: Paul Geremia. Nov.
24: Rick Rourke and Lost Wages. Dec. 1: the Bobs.
Dec. 7: Little Toby Walker. Dec. 14: Rosanne Raneri.
Dec. 15: Ramblin Jug Stompers. Dec. 21: Matt and
Shannon Heaton. Dec. 22: Wholesale Klezmer Band.
Dec. 28: Raquette River Rounders.
Calvin Theatre
19
King St., Northampton, Mass., (800) THE-TICK.
Oct.
7: Michael Franti and Spearhead, Blue King Brown.
Oct. 18: Billy Bragg. Oct. 20: They Might Be Giants,
Oppenheimer. Nov. 3: Martin Sexton. Nov. 9:
1964 the Tribute. Nov. 20: Tegan and Sara, Northern
State.
Club Helsinki
284
Main St., Great Barrington, Mass., (413) 528-3394.
Sept.
28: Albert Cummings. Sept. 29: Michael Powers and
Frequency. Sept. 30: Johnny Irion. Oct. 7: Kim
and Reggie Harris. Oct. 7: the Tarbox Ramblers.
Oct. 12: Two Gun Man. Oct. 13: Ralph Stanley.
Oct. 14: Lucy Kaplansky. Oct. 17: Omar Sosa.
Oct. 21: Steve Forbert. Oct. 26: Uncle Monk.
Oct. 28: Greg Brown.
College of Saint Rose
St.
Joseph Hall, 985 Madison Ave., Albany, 454-5195.
Oct.
27: the Bad Plus.
The Colonial Theatre
111
South St., Pittsfield, Mass., (413) 997-4444.
Sept.
27: Sasha Cooke. Nov. 1: Louis Schwizgebel-Wang.
Nov. 2: the Four Bitchin’ Babes. Nov. 16: Arlo Guthrie.
Nov. 29: the Kingston Trio.
The Egg
Empire
State Plaza, Albany, 473-1845.
Sept.
29: Rite of Strings featuring Al DiMeola, Jean-Luc
Ponty, Stanley Clarke. Oct. 2: Steve Vai,
Zack Weisinger. Oct. 5: Henry Rollins. Oct.
10: Mary Black, Maura O’Connell. Oct. 13: Loudon
Wainwright III, Leon Redbone. Oct. 14: Keb’
Mo’. Oct. 18: Porcupine Tree. Oct. 19: the Jazz
Mandolin Project. Oct. 28: the Charles Lloyd Trio.
Nov. 3: Robert Fripp and the League of Crafty Guitarists.
Nov. 4: David Bromberg Band, Angel Band. Nov.
10: the Subdudes, Marcia Ball. Nov. 17: Robert
Mirabal. Nov. 18: the Derek Trucks Band. Nov. 20:
Dark Star Orchestra. Dec. 11: Hot Tuna.
The Eighth Step
GE
Theater at Proctor’s Theatre, 432 State St., Schenectady,
434-1703.
Oct.
6: Sheila Jordan Jazz Trio. Oct. 20: 40 Years and Still
Singing: Eighth Step’s Anniversary Concert. Nov. 2: Quickstep.
Nov. 3: Songs from a Fishbowl. Dec. 8: Richie Havens.
Dec. 16: Kim and Reggie Harris, Magpie.
EMPAC
110
8th St., Winslow Building, Troy, 276-4135.
Oct.
19: Ghost Trance Music: Anthony Braxton 12(+1)tet.
Glens Falls Civic Center
1
Civic Center Plaza, Glens Falls, 798-0366.
Oct.
9: Foo Fighters. Oct. 13: Amy Grant. Oct. 20:
Phil Lesh & Friends. Dec. 7: Dierks Bentley.
Iron Horse Music Hall
20
Center St., Northampton, Mass., (800) THE-TICK.
Sept.
27: Indigenous. Sept. 27: the Brew, Somebody’s
Closet. Sept. 28: Roger Clyne and the Peacemakers,
the Alternate Routes. Sept. 28: Fancy Trash,
Steve Sanderson. Sept. 29: Jonathan Edwards,
Martha Scanlan. Sept. 30: Loudon Wainwright III,
Lucy Wainwright Roche. Oct. 1: John Lee Hooker Jr.
Oct. 2: Magnolia Electric Co., the Watson Twins.
Oct. 3: Amos Lee, Leah Randazzo Group. Oct.
4: Jonathan Coulton, Paul and Storm. Oct. 4:
Caribou, Born Ruffians. Oct. 5-6: Enter the
Haggis. Oct. 9: Animal Liberation Orchestra. Oct.
11: Jesse Malin. Oct. 11: William Elliott Whitmore,
Tim Barry, Josh Small. Oct. 12: Eileen Jewell
Band, Miss Tess and the Bon Ton Parade. Oct. 12:
Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit, the Whigs. Oct.
13: the Nields. Oct. 13: Stepanian, Eric
Hutchinson. Oct. 14: Peter Mulvey, Antje Duvekot.
Oct. 15: Po’ Girl. Oct. 17: Battlefield Band.
Oct. 18: BeauSoleil avec Michael Doucet. Oct. 19: Erin
McKeown, Joshua James. Oct. 19: Cold Duck Complex.
Oct. 20: Patty Larkin. Oct. 20: Kamikaze Hearts.
Oct. 23: the Kin, Pete Kilpatrick. Oct. 24:
Mates of State, Winterpills. Oct. 25: Vienna
Teng. Oct. 25: the Nate Wilson Group, Japhy
Ryder. Oct. 26: Anais Mitchell. Oct. 26: the Breakfast.
Oct. 27: Mark Erelli, Jason Spooner Trio. Oct.
27: Drunk Stuntmen. Oct. 28: Robbie Fulks. Oct.
29: Rogue Wave, Port O’Brien. Oct. 30: Mary
Gauthier. Nov. 1: Bitch and the Exciting Conclusion.
Nov. 1: That 1 Guy. Nov. 3: Sonny Landreth.
Nov. 3: Glue, Hangar 18. Nov. 4: Tony Furtado.
Nov. 6: Ryan Shaw. Nov. 7: Chuck Prophet. Nov.
8: Carolina Chocolate Drops. Nov. 9: Richard Shindell,
Lucy Wainwright Roche. Nov. 9: Parker House &
Theory, the Old Silver Band. Nov. 10: Pete Francis.
Nov. 10: Girlyman. Nov. 11: Marcia Ball. Nov.
12: Marc Cohn, Amy Correia. Nov. 13: the Samples,
Shannon McNally. Nov. 14: the subdudes. Nov.
15: Barleyjuice, Beaucoup Blue. Nov. 16: Lucy
Kaplansky. Nov. 16: the Eclectic Collective. Nov.
17: Aztec Two-Step. Nov. 18: Crooked Still,
Mike and Ruthy. Nov. 21: Andrew Jones and Spirithouse,
Frank Manzi Band, Us. Nov. 26: Tony Trischka,
Appalachian Still. Nov. 29: Tom Rush. Nov. 30:
Shemekia Copeland. Nov. 30: Mobius Band, Tigercity,
Middle Distance Runner. Dec. 1: Stephen Kellogg
and the Sixers, the Alternate Routes. Dec. 2: Hot
Buttered Rum. Dec. 3: Elvis Perkins in Dearland.
Dec. 9: Kelly Joe Phelps. Dec. 13: the Bad Plus.
Dec. 14-15: Chris Smither. Dec. 15: Black Rebels.
Dec. 16: David Mallett, Stewart Lewis. Dec.
22: the Commander Cody Band.
Justin’s
301
Lark St., Albany, 436-7008.
Sept.
27: Adrian Cohen Group. Sept. 28: Shunzo Ohno and
Christopher Wolf-Gould. Sept. 29: Vince Prudente.
Sept. 30: the Brian Patneaude Quartet.
Mahaiwe Performing Arts Center
14
Castle St., Great Barrington, Mass., (413) 528-0100.
Sept.
30: Dan Zanes. Oct. 6: Jesse Colin Young and Celtic
Mambo. Nov. 11: Asleep at the Wheel.
MASS MoCA
1040
MASS MoCA Way, North Adams, Mass., (413) 662-2111.
Oct.
13: Matt Munisteri. Oct. 20: the Teenage Prayers.
Nov. 10: Yo La Tengo (unplugged). Nov. 17: Jazz
Passengers.
Northern Lights
North
Country Commons, corner of Routes 146 and 146A, Clifton Park,
371-0012.
Sept.
27: In This Moment, the Confession, The Lie
is My Weapon, Alliance. Sept. 28: Powerman 5000,
Till We Die, Pipe Bomb, Sofa Kingz. Sept.
29: M-16 (reunion), Dan Wos Project. Sept. 30:
Cartel, the Honorary Title, Weatherbox.
Oct. 7: Cannibal Corpse, the Black Dahlia Murder,
the Red Chord, Goatwhore, the Absence.
Oct. 12: Chiodos, the Devil Wears Prada, Alesana,
Simcoe Street Mob, Underminded. Oct. 13: Graystar.
Oct. 14: Type O Negative. Oct. 17: Queens of the
Stone Age, the Black Angels, Biffy Clyro.
Oct. 18: Circa Survive, Ours, Fear Before
the March of Flames, Dear and the Headlights. Oct.
25: Puddle of Mudd, Saliva, Deepfield. Oct.
30: Down. Nov. 1: GWAR, Heal These Wounds,
Ashes of Atrocity. Nov. 3: Walls of Jericho,
All Out War, Brick By Brick, Merauder,
Apathy Arising. Nov. 4: The Academy Is . . .
, Armor for Sleep, the Rocket Summer, Sherwood.
Nov. 16: Kottonmouth Kings. Nov. 16: Suffocation,
Skinless, Immolation, Wasteform. Dec.
30: Clutch, Priestess, Puny Human.
Old Songs, Inc.
37
South Main St., Vorheesville, 765-2815.
Oct.
5: Reveillons! Oct. 13: Annie and the Hedonists.
Nov. 9: Back of the Moon.
Palace Theatre
19
Clinton Ave., Albany, 465-4663.
Oct.
6: Laurie Berkner Band. Oct. 9: Tori Amos. Nov.
1: Disco Biscuits. Nov. 3: Bob Weir and Ratdog.
Nov. 29: Jethro Tull.
Pearl Street
10
Pearl Street, Northampton, Mass., (800) THE-TICK.
Sept.
27: Robbers on High Street, Longwave, Curious
Buddies. Sept. 28: Barefoot Truth, the Old Silver
Band. Sept. 29: the Mountain Goats, Bowerbirds.
Oct. 3: Josh Ritter. Oct. 4: Toubab Krewe. Oct.
5: Man Man. Oct. 6: Gone By Daylight, Signature
Escape, Fly Upright Kite, Give ’em Hell,
Sean and Chris, Sleep with the Skeleton. Oct.
6-7: Blastermonkey. Oct. 10: the National, Doveman.
Oct. 12: Voxtrot, the Little Ones, 1990s.
Oct. 13: the Cliks. Oct. 15: Matt Nathanson,
Melee, Ingrid Michaelson. Oct. 18: the Bouncing
Souls, World/Inferno Friendship Society, Modern
Life is War, the Low Budgets. Oct. 19: the Machine.
Oct. 19: Little Brother, Evidence, Psalm
One. Oct. 20: Ryan Montbleau Band, Leah Randazzo Group.
Oct. 20: Blastermonkey. Oct. 27: the Primate Fiasco.
Nov. 1: Lotus. Nov. 7: Band of Horses, the Drones.
Nov. 9: RAQ. Nov. 10: Nona Hatay. Nov. 29: the
New Deal.
A Place for Jazz
Whisperdome,
First Unitarian Society, 1221 Wendell Ave., Schenectady, 346-8518.
Sept.
28: Jeb Patton. Oct. 12: Gary Smulyan. Oct.
26: Wycliffe Gordon. Nov. 9: Keith Pray.
Proctor’s Theatre
432
State St., Schenectady, 382-3884 ext. 68.
Oct.
5: Mariza. Oct. 7: Gov’t Mule, Grace Potter
and the Nocturnals. Oct. 14: Crosby & Nash.
Oct. 25: Clint Black. Oct. 26: Dennis DeYoung:
the Music of Styx. Nov. 1: Dominic Chianese. Nov. 3:
Golden Oldies Spectacular with Bobby Rydell, Lou
Christie, the Tokens, the Teenagers, the
Crystals. Nov. 10-11: Rain: the Beatles Experience.
Nov. 15: Mavis Staples, Charlie Musselwhite.
Red Square
388
Broadway, Albany, 432-8584.
Sept.
27: MC Chris. Sept. 29: Lotus. Oct. 3: Giant
Panda Guerilla Dub Squad. Oct. 5: Skadee. Oct.
6: Peter Prince and Moon Boot Lover. Oct. 10: Michael
Travis’ EOTO. Oct. 18: From These Eyes. Oct. 27:
Sam Kininger Band. Oct. 27: the Kamikaze Hearts.
Nov. 2: Kingscastle. Nov. 8: the Heavy Pets.
Nov. 9: Al and the Transamericans. Nov. 10: Hamell
on Trial, Blackcat Elliot, the Last Conspirators.
Nov. 16: Palatypus. Nov. 21: Peter Prince and Moon
Boot Lover.
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Mother’s,
Student Union, Troy, 276-8585.
Oct.
12: Gideon Freudmann. Oct. 26: Atwater & Donnelly.
Nov. 2: the Ashdown Brothers. Nov. 16: Bill Staines.
Dec. 1: Nightingale.
Revolution Hall
421-425
River St., Troy, 273-2337.
Sept.
28: Derek Bell. Oct. 4: Ted Leo and the Pharmacists,
Georgie James. Oct. 5: the Avett Brothers, Ramblin
Jug Stompers, Sgt. Dunbar and the Hobo Banned.
Oct. 9: Hurt. Oct. 10: the Bravery, Maggie
Mayday, Run Run Run. Oct. 11: Project/Object.
Oct. 12: the Cliks. Oct. 13: Ryan Montbleau Band.
Oct. 18: Perpetual Groove. Oct. 20: Sirsy CD
release. Oct. 25: New Riders of the Purple Sage, Wreckloose.
Oct. 26: the Alexis P. Suter Band. Oct. 31: U-Melt,
Alta Mira. Nov. 3: Thursday, Portugal the
Man, Circle Takes the Square. Nov. 6: From First
to Last, Bless the Fall, Skylit Drive, Vanna.
Nov. 17: Streetlight Manifesto, Suburban Legends,
A Stitch Up. Nov. 23: Elliot Yamin, the Last
Goodnight, Josh Hoge. Dec. 1: Assembly of Dust.
Dec. 7: Bayside, the Sleeping, the Audition.
Dec. 28: the Join, Benevento/Russo Duo.
Skidmore College
580
Broadway, Saratoga Springs, 580-5320.
Sept.
28: Soulive.
Tess’
Lark Tavern
453
Madison Ave., Albany, 463-9779.
Sept.
29: the Kamikaze Hearts. Oct. 5: Santiago, PJ
Katz. Oct. 19: the Eurotics. Nov. 2: Mitch Elrod’s
CountrySoulHouse, Dana Monteith. Nov. 9: the Black
Fuel. Nov. 16: Sunset Aside. Nov. 17: The Rev Records
First Birthday Celebration. Nov. 30: Rocky Velvet.
Dec. 28: School Bus Yellow.
Times Union Center
51
S. Pearl St., Albany, 487-2000.
Sept.
29: Alan Jackson, Brooks & Dunn. Oct. 6:
Bob Dylan, Elvis Costello, Amos Lee.
Oct. 28: Blue Man Group. Nov. 15: Bruce Springsteen
and the E Street Band.
Troy Savings Bank Music Hall
State
and Second streets, Troy, 273-0038.
Oct.
18: Pat Metheny Trio. Oct. 20: Anúna.
Oct. 26: Queen Latifah. Nov. 8: Spanish Harlem Orchestra.
Nov. 17: Songs of the Spirit. Dec. 5: George Winston.
University at Albany
1400
Washington Ave., Albany, 442-3300.
Oct.
1: Ghostface Killah, Witchdoctor. Oct. 1: Don
Preston and the Akashic Ensemble. Oct. 14: Bob Gluck,
Michael Bision and Dean Sharp Trio. Oct. 17: Lee Shaw
Trio.
Valentine’s
17
New Scotland Ave., Albany, 432-6572.
Sept.
27: Scientific Maps, Carol Bui, Tough.
Sept. 28: Amalgama, Riffamortis, Son Minos.
Sept. 29: Jaws, Purifier. Oct. 9: Kasey Anderson.
Oct. 11: Walter Salas-Humara, Anders Parker.
Oct. 13: Carolyn Mark. Oct. 17: Saves the Day
(acoustic), Single File, Dr. Manhattan. Oct.
18: Mustard Plug, Voodoo Glow Skulls, Left
Alone, Public Access, Hollywood Funeral.
Oct. 19: Peter Case. Oct. 20: Robert Hazard.
Oct. 24: Big D and the Kids Table. Oct. 27: Poison
the Well, Maylene and the Sons of Disaster, Marks
of A Hero, Atlantic. Nov. 17: the Locust,
Yip Yip, Screaming People.
Vapor Nightclub
Saratoga
Gaming and Raceway, 342 Jefferson St., Saratoga Springs, 584-2110.
Oct.
28: Steve Tyrell.
WAMC Performing Arts Center
339
Central Ave., Albany, 465-5233 ext. 4.
Sept.
29: Mallory O’Donnell. Oct. 5: Country Joe McDonald.
Oct. 12: Robin and Linda Williams and Their Fine Group.
Oct. 13: North Sea Gas. Oct. 19: Gandalf Murphy
and the Slambovian Circus of Dreams. Oct. 20: Spokinn
Movement. Oct. 21: Stephen Kellogg and the Sixers.
Oct. 26: Farmer Jason. Oct. 26: Wanda Jackson and
the Lustre Kings. Oct. 27: Robbie Fulks.
Washington Avenue Armory
Corner
of Washington Avenue and Lark Street, 476-1000.
Oct.
14: Toby Mac. Dec. 15: Brand New, Thrice,
Me Without You.
 |
|
Catalogue
32 by John Yang, at Albany
Institute of History and Art.
|
Art
and Exhibits
70 Beekman Street Fine Art Gallery
70
Beekman St., Saratoga Springs, 542-6688.
Through
Oct. 8: Works by Richard Kane Ferguson.
Adirondack Community College
Visual
Arts Gallery, 640 Bay Road, Queensbury, 743-4328.
Through
Oct. 4: Works by Drew Goerlitz.
Adirondack Lakes Center for the Arts
Route
28, Blue Mountain Lake, 352-7715.
Through
Oct. 6: On Location: Acadia to Antelope Canyon &
Almalfi to the Adirondacks by Bruce and Kathy Vogel.
Through Oct. 6: Mutations and Exaltations by
Irja Bod’en. Through Oct. 6: Paintings by John Hampshire.
Albany Center Galleries
Albany
Public Library, 39 Columbia St., Albany, 462-4775.
Through
Oct. 6: Arlene Baker and Ralph Caparulo: Weaving Meanings
and The Sublime and Mythological Wonders: All in
One Place.
Albany Heritage Visitors Center
25
Quackenbush Square, Albany, 434-0405.
Through
Sept. 27: Living Resources: Carriage House Arts Center
9th Annual Arts Show. Ongoing: Gallery of Albany
History: Interactive Displays and Cultural Artifacts.
Albany Institute of History & Art
125
Washington Ave., Albany, 463-4478.
Through
Dec. 30: Indian Ladder, A Lyric Journey: Photographs
by John Yang; Fabrica: Fiber Constructs by Estelle
Kessler Yarinsky; The Helderberg
Escarpment: A History of Tourism and Science; Iroquois
Games and Dances: Paintings by Tom Two Arrows. Full
Steam Ahead: Robert Fulton and the Age of Steamboats.
Through Oct. 14: Playing With Clay: Frank Giorgini’s
Udu Drums. Ongoing: The Landscape that Defined
America: Artists of the Hudson River School.
Albany
International Airport
Colonie,
242-2243.
Through
Sept. 30: 2007 Mohawk Hudson Regional Juried Exhibition.
Ongoing: Installations by Larry Kagan, Cara Nigro, Lillian
Mulero, Paul Katz, Ed Mayer, Ken Ragsdale, and photographs
by David Brickman.
Albert Schweitzer Institute
Quinnipiac
University, 275 Mt. Carmel Ave., Hamden, CT, (203)-582-3144.
Through
Oct. 14: Images of Peace by Paul Bouchard.
American Museum of Firefighting
Henry
Howard Avenue, Hudson, 828-7695.
Ongoing:
More than 100 years of firefighting equipment and memorabilia.
Ann Zane Shanks Photography Gallery
50
N. Undermountain Road, Sheffield, Mass., (413)-229-7766.
Ongoing:
Retrospective of Ann Zane Shanks’ vintage work of 40 years.
Arkell Museum
Canajoherie,
673-2314.
Through
Jan.: Mohawk Valley Views. Through Feb.: Fragile
Masterpieces: Pastels and Watercolors from the Original Collection.
Ongoing: Arkell’s Inspiration: The Marketing of Beech-Nut
and Art for the People.
Art Omi International Arts Center
59
Letter S Road, Ghent, 392-7656.
Through
Fall 2007: Nature/Not Nature 2007 and Bivouac,
new sculpture by several artists.
Athens Cultural Center
Second
Street, Athens, 945-1677, 945-3731.
Through
Sept. 30: When Worlds Collage, works by four Hudson
Valley artists.
Bard College
Annandale-on-Hudson,
(845) 758-7598.
Ongoing:
Feelings: Works by Martin Creed.
Barking Frog Art Gallery
90
Broad St., Schuylerville, 695-5243.
Ongoing:
Works by D. Steven Burgess, Patricia Wright, Kelsy Harro,
Linda Buerkley, David Ellis, Nate Osborne, and Diane Rehn.
BCB ART
116
Warren St., Hudson, 828-4539.
Sept.
29-Oct. 4: Vice, featuring Marco Badot, Arlene
Becker, Lynn Dreese Breslin, Chris Burden, Ching Ho Cheng,
Rick Fingelstein, John Foxx, and others.
Bennington Center for the Arts
44
Gypsy Lane, Bennington, Vt, (802) 442-7158.
Through Dec. 23: Small Works Show. Ongoing: The
Covered Works Museum, Floyd Scholz Bird Carving, and works
by Eric Sloane.
Bennington Museum
West
Main Street, Bennington, Vt., (802) 447-1571.
Through
Oct. 31: Masters of Impressionism. Through Nov.
17: Complementary Visions: Greg Winterhalter and Ray
Bub.
Berkshire Museum
39
South St., Pittsfield, Mass., (413) 443-7171.
Through
Oct. 7: East Meets West.
Bright Hill Center
94
Church St., Treadwell, (607) 829-5055.
Through
Sept. 28: Home: Painted Pages, works by Ellen
O’Grady.
Broderick Fine Art Gallery
3689
Co. Route 67, Freehold, 634-7790.
Through
Oct. 20: tutt’Itali, photographs by David
Brickman.
Capital Grille
142
Washington Ave., Albany, 368-7568.
Through
Oct. 21: Small Art, Big Heart, exhibit and fundraiser
for Starlight Foundation.
Carrie Haddad Gallery
622
Warren St., Hudson, 828-1915.
Through
Oct. 28: Works by Richard Merkin. Nov. 1-Dec. 9: Works
by Tony Thompson, Russell DeYoung, and Elise Frieda.
Center for Photography at Woodstock
59
Tinker St., Woodstock, (914) 679-9957.
Through
Oct. 21: Photographs by Iraqi Civilians, 2004,
and What We Think Now, photographs by Jonathan
Hollingsworth.
Children’s Museum of Science and Technology
250
Jordan Road, Troy, 235-2120.
Ongoing:
Molecularium.
Clark Art Institute
225
South St., Williamstown, Mass., (413) 458-9545.
Through
Fall: Gainsborough, Constable, and Turner: The Manton
Collection. Oct. 28-Jan. 21: Consuming
Passion: Fragonard’s Allegories of Love.
Clement Art Gallery
201
Broadway, Troy. 272-6811.
Sept.
28-Oct. 24: Dahl Taylor, paintings.
Clermont State Historic Site
One
Clermont Ave., Germantown, 537-4240.
Through
Dec.: Bob’s Folly: Inventing America’s First Practical
Steamboat.
Clifton Park-Halfmoon Library
47
Clifton Country Road, Clifton Park, 371-8622.
Through
Sept. 20: Art in Public Places.
The College of St. Rose Art Gallery
Picotte
Hall, 324 State St., Albany, 485-3900.
Through
Oct. 11: The Art and Design Faculty Show.
Columbia County Historical Society and Museum
5
Albany Ave., Kinderhook, 758-9265.
Ongoing:
A Portrait of Columbia County.
Columbia Greene Community College
4400
Route 23, Hudson, 828-4181.
Through
Oct. 5: Faculty Plus One.
Cooperstown Art Association
22
Main St., Cooperstown, (607) 547-9777.
Oct.
5-Oct. 31: Oakroom Artists.
Designers Studio
492
Broadway, Saratoga Springs, 584-1977.
Through
Sept. 30: The Art of the Handmade Object—Designers Studio
25 Years Later.
Downtown Albany BID
522
Broadway, Albany, 465-2143.
Through
Oct. 31: Sculpture in the Streets, works by
Don Gialanella, Maria A. Hall, Matthew and Kevin Hart,
Gary Humphreys, Steven Rolf Kroeger, Jim Lewis, and Bob Turan.
Empire State Aerosciences Museum
250
Rudy Chase Drive, Glenville, 377-2191.
Ongoing:
Local and National Aviation History, F-14 Tomcat and MiG-21.
Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art
125
West Bay Road, Amherst, Mass., (413) 658-1100.
Through
Oct. 28: The Art of Allan Say: A Sense of Place.
Through Dec. 9: Birds of a Feather: The Art of Eric
Carle and Leo Lionni.
Farmers’ Museum
Lake
Road, Route 80, Cooperstown, (888) 547-1499.
Through
Oct. 31: Ice Cream: Our Cool Obsession.
Fenimore Art Museum
Lake
Road, Route 80, Cooperstown, (607) 547-1400.
Through
Dec. 30: America’s Ancient Past: Art of the Mounds and
Canyon People. Through Dec. 30: Myth and Reality:
The Art of the Great Plains. Through Dec. 30: Folk-Art
on Fire. Through Dec. 30: Panoramas of Pride:
Nineteenth Century Bird’s Eye View of the Empire State.
Through Dec. 30: American Portraiture as Document
and Expression.
Fulton Street Gallery
408
Fulton St., Troy, 274-8464.
Through
Oct. 20: Our Community, works by David Arsenault,
Laura Beitch, K. J. Cooper, Stu Eichsan, Jim Flosdorf, James
Howard Kunstler, Phil Spaziani, and Luarin Trainer.
Through Oct. 20: The Approach Staircase Project,
works by John Connors and local artists.
Gallery 100
445
Broadway, Saratoga Springs, 580-0818.
Through
Oct. 14: works by Richard Callner.
Gallery 384
384
Main St., Catskill, 947-6732.
Through
Oct. 15: Ulalume: A Show of Modern Nocturnes.
Gallery BMG
12
Tannery Brook Road, Woodstock, (845) 679-0027.
Through
Oct. 8: Bohemia by Craig J. Barber.
Gallery on the Hudson
92
Broad St., Schuylerville, 695-6131.
Through
Oct. 27: works by Tom Tracy. Ongoing: early and recent
paintings by Tom Vincent. Ongoing: works by Susan
Reynolds and Joyce Vincent.
Gardenworks
Route
30, Salem, 854-9120.
Through
Oct. 8: Works by Laura Neadle.
Geoffrey Young Gallery
40
Railroad St., Great Barrington, Mass., (413)-528-6210.
Through
Sept. 30: Twenty-Twenty, works by Justin
Valdes, Daniel Zeller, Betsy Friedman,
S. Clay Wilson, and Neil Whitacre.
Greene County Council on the Arts Catskill Gallery
398
Main St., Catskill, 943-3400.
Through
Sept. 29: works by Johanne Renbeck. Through Sept. 29:
On the Road, group exhibition. Oct. 6-Nov. 10: GCCA
Applauds. Through Jan. 12: Salon 2007, annual small
artworks show.
Green County Council on the Arts Mountaintop Gallery
Main
Street, Windham, 734-3104.
Sept.
28-Nov. 4: Sytes, group exhibition of works
created with or using computers. Nov. 19-Jan. 6: Holiday
in the Mountains.
Hudson Valley Community College
Marvin
Teaching Gallery, 80 Vandenburgh Ave., Troy, 629-8063.
Through
Oct. 25: Here and There, architecture by Julia
Christensen, Peter Dudek, Richard Garrison, and Oona Stern.
The Hyde Collection
161
Warren St., Glens Falls, 792-1761.
Through
Nov. 19: The Last of the Mohicans. Nov. 4-Jan.
13: NATURA MORTA: Still-Life Painting and the Medici
Collections.
Image Gallery
Main
Street, Stockbridge, Mass, (413) 644-5500.
Through
Oct. 13: Sensuality of Dance, works by Marilyn
Kalish.
Iron Spring Gallery
49
Front St., Ballston Spa, 885-5855.
Through
Sept. 29: Step On It, works by Peg Hofmann
Leather.
Iroquois Indian Museum
324
Caverns Road, Howes Cave, 296-8949.
Through
Oct. 14: Cultural Contrasts: Contemporary Iroquois Commentaries.
John Davis Gallery
362
1/2 Warren St., Hudson, 828-5907.
Through
Oct. 7: works by Tom Nicholas. Oct. 11-Nov. 4: sculptures
by John Ruppert. Ongoing: works by Ben Butler,
Victoria Palermo, Dale Emmart and Laurel
Sucsy, and Delicate Balance by Sharon Bates.
Kasten Fine Art
46
Castle St., Great Barrington, Mass.
Through
Oct. 1: Ani Kasten and Michael Zelehoski in
solo exhibitions. Oct. 5-Nov. 26: paintings by John Greene
and Harold Baumbach.
Lake George Arts Project
Courthouse
Gallery, Canada and Lower Amherst streets, Lake George Village,
668-2616.
Nov.
3-Dec. 14: textile works by Cynthia Schira.
Local Color Art Gallery
961
Troy Schenectady Road, Latham, 786-6557.
Through Oct. 31: Cool Art for Hot Days.
Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art
87
Marshall St., North Adams, Mass., (413) 664-4481.
Oct.
20-Dec. 1: sculpture and paintings by Anselm Kiefer.
Through fall: Made at MASS MoCA. Through
spring 2008: Spencer Finch: What Time Is It on the Sun?;
also, The Believers. Through January: And
the angel then says: Tolerance, works by Erik van
Lieshout. Long-term: installations by Fransje
Killaars and Dré Wapenaar.
National Museum of Dance
99
S. Broadway, Saratoga Springs, 584-2225.
Through
October 2008: On Broadway. Ongoing: The
Dawn of Modern Dance: Music, Myth and Movement, chronicling
the lives of Ruth St. Denis and Isadora Duncan;
works by Frank Ohman; Two Dancers, photography
by Charles Bremer and poetry by Robert Bensen;
The Moving Figure; Just Black and White,
dance photography by Clifford Oliver; The Art
of Movement, photography by Rebecca Singer.
National Upholstering Design Studio/Gallery
231
Lark St., Albany, 434-1458.
Oct.
5-Nov. 1: Etched Transfer Paintings and Prints of Baseball
by Wren Panzella.
New York State Museum
Empire
State Plaza, Albany, 474-5877.
Through
Dec. 31: Look-Alikes: The Amazing World of Joan Steiner.
Through Oct. 21: Unseenamerica NYS: Pictures of Working
Lives Taken by Working Hands. Ongoing: Beneath
the City: An Archaeological Perspective of Albany;
December 7, 1941: The Legacy of Pearl Harbor;
Governor’s Collection of Contemporary Native American Art;
Rescue Recovery Response—Phase II; letters by
anti-slavery activist Frederick Douglass; and, Windows
on New York.
Nicole
Fiacco Gallery
506
Warren St., Hudson, 828-5090.
Through
Oct. 20: The Set Up, photographs by emerging
and established artists.
Norman Rockwell Museum
Route
183, Stockbridge, Mass., (413) 298-4100.
Through
Oct. 27: American Beauty: Al Parker and the Age of Glamour,
1940-1960. Ongoing: Vital Forms: Fads and Fancies
From the 1950s.
Oakroom Artists Gallery
First
Unitarian Society, 1221 Wendell Ave., Schenectady, 374-4446.
Through
Oct. 30: Works by Joan Krathaus, and People and
Places of Mexico by Audrey Grendahl Kuhn.
Opalka Gallery
Sage
Colleges, 140 New Scotland Ave., Albany. 292-7742.
Through
Oct. 21: Insights into Suburbia.
Open Studio
402
Main St., Catskill, 943-9531.
Through
Oct. 20: Playing Outside, works by Julie
Chase and Dina Bursztyn.
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Center
for Biotechnology and Interdisciplinary Study, 15th Street,
Troy, 276-4829.
Through
Sept. 28: Scherzo, sound and video installation
by Joe Diebes. Through Sept. 30: In the Presence
of the Body 2.
Riverfront Studios
96
Broad St., Schuylerville, 369-3280.
Through
Oct. 28: Annual Invitational Fibers Show.
St. Rose Art Gallery
432
Western Ave., Albany, 454-5102.
Through
Oct. 11: The Art and Design Faculty Show.
Sand Lake Center for the Arts
2880
Route 43, Averill Park, 674-2007.
Through
Sept. 30: paintings by Stu Eichel.
Saratoga Automobile Museum
110
Avenue of the Pines, Saratoga Spa State Park, Saratoga Springs,
587-1935 ext. 20.
Through
Nov. 11: Barn Finds. Ongoing. East of
Detroit, and New York Racing exhibit.
Schenectady Jewish Community Center
2565
Balltown Road, Niskayuna, 377-8803.
Through
Oct. 31: works by Dr. Kenneth Deitcher.
Schenectady Museum
Nott
Terrace Heights, Schenectady, 382-7890.
Through
Nov. 11: A Woman’s Touch: A Black Dimension in Art,
works by Aleathia Brown, Fern Cunningham,
Catherine Reavis, Sharon Cropper, Raymina Mays,
and Deborah Jack.
Schuyler Mansion
32
Catherine St., Albany, 434-0834.
Through
Oct. 28: Image and Identity, 2007 season exhibit.
Sculpture Now
Main
Street, Great Barrington, Mass., (413) 623-2068.
Through
Oct. 31: Sculpture on Main Street 2007.
Simon’s Rock College
Alumni
Library Atrium Gallery, 84 Alford Road, Great Barrington,
Mass., (413) 528-0771.
Through
Oct. 6: paintings by Stephen Filmus.
Simon’s Rock College
Gallery
at Liebowitz, 84 Alford Road, Great Barrington, Mass., (413)
528-0771.
Through
Oct. 7: works by Benigna Chilla.
Skidmore College
Schick
Art Gallery, 815 N. Broadway, Saratoga Springs, 580-5049.
Through
Nov. 4: Selected Art Faculty Exhibition. Nov. 8-Dec.
16: drawings by Eve Aschheim.
Smith College Museum of Art
Smith
College, Northampton, Mass., (413) 585-3587.
Through
Sept. 30: Ansel Adams. Through Sept. 29: Framework
III: Restoring the Boundaries. Through Dec. 2: The
Dream of Italy.
Southern Vermont Arts Center
617
West Road, Manchester, Vt., (802) 362-1405.
Through
Oct. 7: Modern Reveries: American Painting and Mainstream
Realism, 1920-1960.
Tang Teaching Museum and Gallery
Skidmore
College, 815 Broadway, Saratoga Springs, 580-8080.
Through
Dec. 30: Stripes, featuring works by David
Diao, Dave Eppley, Lorna Mills, Tim Rollins,
K.O.S., Rene Santos and Mika Tajima. Through
Dec. 29: West African Masquerade, photographs
by Phyllis Galembo. Through Dec. 30: Atmospherics/Weather
Works by Andrea Polli. Through April 13: Molecules
That Matter.
Time and Space Limited
434
Columbia St., Hudson, 822-8448.
Through
Oct. 1: After Katrina.
Union College
Mandeville
Gallery, Nott Memorial, Schenectady, 388-6131.
Through
Oct. 14: ReView: Five Union Alumni, the first
general alumni art exhibit.
University Art Museum
University
at Albany, 1400 Washington Ave., Albany, 442-4035.
Nov.
2-Jan. 6: recent work by RecenCehn Qiulin.
Valley Artisans Market
25
E. Main St., Cambridge, 677-2765.
Through
Sept. 30: ceramics by Brenda McMahon; paintings by
Brian Sweetland. Oct. 6-Oct. 24: Life drawings from
students in the Hubbard Hall workshop. Oct. 27-Nov. 14: Watercolor
drawings by Donna Wynbrandt and ceramic sculpture by
Cheryl Horning. Nov. 17- Jan. 3: Members Holiday Show.
Visions Gallery
Roman
Catholic Diocese of Albany Pastoral Center, 40 N. Main Ave.,
Albany, 453-6600.
Through
Oct. 26: works by John Fleming, in Visions 1; also,
mezzotints by Denise Saint-Onge in Visions 2.
Waterford Historical Museum
2
Museum Lane, Waterford, 238-0809.
Ongoing:
Born of Two Rivers: An Illustrated History of Waterford,
New York.
Williams College Museum of Art
Williamstown,
Mass., (413) 597-2429.
Through
Nov. 11: Making It New: The Art and Style of Sara &
Gerald Murphy. Through Dec. 16: Critical Encounters:
Collecting Contemporary Photography.
William K. Sanford Town Library
629
Albany Shaker Road, Loudonville, 458-9274.
Through
Sept. 30: Oakroom Artists.
Woodstock
Byrdcliffe Guild
34
Tinker St., Woodstock, (845) 679-3480.
Through
Oct. 14: Collage: A Group Show.
 |
|
Hilary
Hahn at the Troy Savings Bank Music Hall.
|
Classical
Music
Albany Pro Musica
Performances
are at the St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, Albany; GE Theatre
at Proctor’s, Schenectady; Carondelet Music Center, St. Joseph’s
Provincial House, Latham; Scotia Reformed Church, Scotia ,
www.albanypromusica.org.
Oct.
20 (St. Paul’s); Oct. 21 (GE Theatre): Autumn Landscapes,
with Capital District Youth Chorale. Dec. 8 (Carondelet);
Dec. 9 (Scotia): With Voice and Harp Holiday Concert.
Albany Symphony Orchestra
Concerts,
under the direction of maestro David Alan Miller, take place
as noted at the Troy Savings Bank Music Hall, Troy, 273-0038;
the Palace Theatre, Albany, 465-3334; Canfield Casino, Congress
Park, Saratoga Springs, 584-6920; and the Colonial Theatre,
111 South St., Pittsfield, Mass., (413) 997-4444. Call for
concert times. Sept. 27: (Canfield Casino); Sept. 28 (Troy
Savings Bank Music Hall); Sept. 29 (Colonial Theatre): A Musical
Journey to Ireland, Scotland and Britain with soprano Amanda
Boyd and piper Ivan Goff. Works by Mendelssohn,
Robinson McClellan, Britten and Haydn. Oct. 27 (Palace Theatre):
A Chinese Romeo and Juliet concert with erhu soloist Betti
Xiang featured on Chen and He’s Butterfly Lovers Concerto.
Also, Berlioz’ Symphony Fantastique and excerpts from
Wagner’s Tannhäuser. Nov. 16 (Troy Savings Bank Music
Hall): Emerging Masters Showcase with guest conductor Michael
Morgan and pianist Adam Golka. Works by Yarnell
(world premiere), Grieg and Prokofiev. Dec 1-2 (Palace Theatre):
The Magic of Christmas. Dec. 13 (Canfield Casino); Dec. 14
(Troy Savings Bank Music Hall); Dec. 15 (Colonial Theatre):
Cellist Matt Haimovitz will be featured soloist on
the Shostakovich Cello Concerto No. 1 and the world
premiere of Stephen Danker’s Out of Endless Yearnings:
A Klezmer Rondo for Cello and Orchestra. Also, works by
Schubert and Bartók.
Aston Magna
All
performances are held at the Daniel Arts Center at Simon’s
Rock College in Great Barrington, Mass., and begin at 6 PM.
(413) 528-3595.
Oct.
27: Gonzalo Ruiz (baroque oboe), Laura Jeppesen
(viola de gamba), John Gibbons (harpsichord) and Daniel
Stepner (baroque violin) will perform works by J.S. Bach,
Telemann, Handel and Buxtehude.
Bard College
Annandale-on-Hudson,
(845) 758-7900, www.bard.edu. Call for show times.
Olin Hall. Oct. 4: Clarinetist Laura Flax and flutist
Bart Feller. Oct. 11: Hungarian Brass Quintet.
Oct. 17: Graduate vocal arts student recital. Nov. 7 Music
Alive! with Joan Tower. Sosnoff Theater, Richard
B. Fisher Center. Sept. 23: Conservatory Chamber Orchestra.
Sept. 27: John Cage Tribute Concert with Merce Cunningham
Dance Company Musicians. Sept. 28: John Cage’s Lecture
on the Weather. Oct. 24: Seoul Arts High School Orchestra.
Dec. 16: Conservatory Chamber Orchestra.
Capitol Chamber Artists
First
Congregational Church, 405 Quail St., Albany, 458-9231. Concert
at 8 PM; preconcert recital at 7 PM.
Oct.
6: Music from the Wunderkind of the Court of Louis XIV: Elisabeth
Jacquet de la Guerre. Nov. 17: Romantic Salon Music by Chopin,
Franchomme, Donjon, Ysaye and Franck. Dec. 1: Christmas Sonatas
by Biber and Bach.
Close Encounters With Music
All
performances will be held at Mahaiwe Performing Arts Center,
14 Castle St., Great Barrington, Mass., and will start at
6 PM. (800) 843-0778.
Oct.
20: Vivaldi for All Seasons featuring the Camerata San
Marco, mezzo-soprano Lucille Beer, harpsichordist
Lionel Party and more. Dec. 1: the Rose Ensemble
will perform choral works of 17th-century Russia, Poland and
Bohemia.
deBlasiis Chamber Music Series
8
PM performances at the Hyde Collection, Helen Froehlich Auditorium,
161 Warren St., Glens Falls, 793-0531.
Oct.
29: Dorian Wind Quintet. Dec. 3: Pianist Pola Baytelman.
Hudson Opera House
327
Warren St., Hudson. Call 697-3365 for reservations and show
times.
Sept.
29: Diamond Opera Theater will perform Pergolesi’s
La Serva Padrona.
Jewish Concert Series
Schenectady
Jewish Community Center, 2565 Balltown Road, Niskayuna, 377-8803.
Concerts at 3 PM.
Oct.
14: Pianist Max Lifchitz. Nov. 4: Mezzo-soprano Lucille
Beer, with pianist Michael Clement.
Leaf Peeper Concerts in Columbia County
Performances
are at 7:30 PM at St. James Church, Routes 66 and 203, Chatham,
325-3805.
Sept.
29: The Stuckenbruck Concert. Oct. 27: A program of
string trios.
Music Company Orchestra
First
Reformed Church, 8 N. Church St., Schenectady, www.mcomusic.org.
Concert at 3 PM.
Nov.
4: Works by Guilmant, Schuman and Bliss. Also, organist Charles
Moose will be featured on Saint-Saëns’ Symphony No.
3.
Octavo Singers
GE
Theatre, Proctor’s Arcade, 432 State St., Schenectady, 344-SING.
Concert is at 3 PM.
Oct.
28: An Afternoon at the Opera.
Rhinebeck Chamber Music Society
Concerts
start at 8 PM, and are at the Church of the Messiah, Route
9, Rhinebeck, (845) 876-2870.
Oct.
6: The Imani Winds. Nov. 17: Ariel String Quartet.
Dec. 8: Western Winds.
Union College Concert Series
Union
College Memorial Chapel, Union Street, Schenectady, 388-6131.
Call for concert times.
Oct.
11: Pianist Richard Goode. Nov. 2: Trio Cavatina.
Nov. 14: Mendelssohn String Quartet with pianist Benjamin
Hochman. Nov. 30: Christian Tetzlaff, violin, and
Alexander Lonquich, piano. Dec. 11: Pianist Yefim
Bronfman. Dec. 16: Boston Camerata.
Schenectady County Community College
Carl
B. Taylor Community Auditorium, Begley Building; Begley Building,
Room 160; Elston Hall; or Lally Mohawk Room, Elston Hall,
SCCC, Schenectady, 381-1200. Call for times. Oct. 25 (Room
160): Musicians of Ma’alwyck concert preview. Oct.
28 (Taylor): Capital Region Wind Ensemble presents
Scherzo! Nov. 8 (Room 160): Musicians of Ma’alwyck
concert preview. Nov. 13 (Elston): Musicians of Ma’alwyck
concert and dinner. Nov. 28 (Lally Mohawk): SCCC Guitar
Ensemble. Dec. 3 (Taylor): SCCC Chorus and Vocal Chamber
Ensemble. Dec. 5 (Taylor): Weilerstein Trio. Dec.
10 (Lally Mohawk): SCCC Woodwind Chamber Ensembles/Basic
Ensemble. Dec. 13 (Room 160): Musicians of Ma’alwyck
present Schubertiade. Dec. 14 (Taylor): SCCC Wind
Ensemble.
Schenectady Symphony Orchestra
Proctor’s
Theatre, 432 State St., Schenectady, www.schenectadysymphony.org.
Oct.
15: An all-Beethoven program, including Symphony No. 5,
with pianist Wei-Jen Yuan featured on the Piano
Concerto No. 2.
Skidmore College
Filene
Recital Hall (unless noted), Skidmore College, 815 N. Broadway,
Saratoga Springs, 580-5320.
Oct.
6: Veena Chandra, sitar, and Anuradha Pal, tabla.
Oct. 7: Joel Brown, guitar, and Kristin Bacchiocchi,
flute. Oct. 12: Pianist Marc-André Hamelin. Oct. 13:
Music department showcase concert. Oct. 15 (Gannett Auditorium):
An evening with Marni Nixon. Oct. 20: Skidmore College
Orchestra. Oct. 25: 26th Annual Filene Scholorship Winners
Concert.
Troy Chromatic Concerts
Troy
Savings Bank Music Hall, Second and State streets, Troy, 273-0038.
Oct.
28: Violinist Hilary Hahn.
Troy Savings Bank Music Hall
Corner
of Second and State streets, Troy, 273-0038.
Nov.
11: Empire State Youth Orchestra. Dec. 19: Empire
Brass Holiday Concert.
University at Albany
Concerts
take place in the Recital Hall or the Main Theatre, Performing
Arts Center, 1400 Washington Ave., Albany, 442-3997. Call
for show times and venues.
Sept.
29-30: Pianist Findlay Cockrell. Oct. 8: Viola X-Treme
with Martha Mooke. Oct. 10: Flamenco guitarist Maria
Zemantauski. Oct. 13: The EastRiver Ensemble. Oct.
20: The Parnas/Cockrell Trio. Oct. 21: University
Symphony Orchestra. Nov. 10: Findlay Cockrell and Friends.
Nov. 11: Capital Collegiate Choral Festival VIII. Nov.
18: Violinist Gary Tigner and pianist Victoria Von
Arx. Dec. 3: University Percussion Ensemble. Dec.
9: Amahl and the Night Visitors.
 |
|
Mark
Morris Dance Group at the Egg.
|
Dance
The Colonial Theatre
111
South St., Pittsfield, Mass., (413) 997-4444.
Oct.
21: Ballet Folklórico de México de Amalia Hernández.
Nov. 25: Shaolin Warriors: Legendary Masters of Kung Fu.
Maude
Baum and Company Dance Theatre/eba Dance Theatre
eba
Theatre, 351 Hudson Ave., Albany, 465-9916. Nov. 3-4 and
Nov. 9-10: Brave New Dances.
The Egg
Empire
State Plaza, Albany, 473-1845.
Sept.
30: Complexions Dance Company. Oct. 11: Tango Buenos
Aires. Oct. 20: Ellen Sinopoli and Friends. Oct.
24: Ballet Folklorico De Mexico. Oct. 28: Snow
White and the Seven Dwarfs by the State Street
Ballet of Santa Barbara. Nov. 2: Iceland Dance Company.
Nov. 16: Mark Morris Dance Group. Nov. 24: Roxanne
Butterfly. Dec. 29: Savion Glover.
MASS MoCA
87
Marshall St., North Adams, Mass., 664-4481.
Sept. 29: David Neumann’s feedforward. Oct. 6-7: Armitage
Gone!. Oct. 13: Roots Music Cabaret. Oct. 20: Indie
Rock Cabaret.
Palace Theatre
19
Clinton Ave., Albany, 465-4663.
Oct.
12-14: Stomp.
Proctor’s Theatre
432
State St., Schenectady, 346-6204.
Dec.
1: The Magnificent Mazowsze. Dec. 8-9: The Nutcracker.
Skidmore College
815
N. Broadway, Saratoga Springs.
Oct.
13: Celebration Weekend Performance: Skidmore Dancers present
works choreographed by the faculty. Nov. 2: Stompin’ Soles
and Terpsichore. Nov. 16: Choreo II and Dance Production
Showing. Dec. 7-8: Winter Dance Concert.
Literary
Albany Institute of History and Art
125
Washington Ave., Albany, 463-4478.
Sept.
30: Paul Grondahl.
Art Omi International Arts Center
59
Letter S Road., Ghent, 392-4568 ex. 100.
Sept
29 and Nov. 10: The Ledig House International Writers’ Colony
hosts its annual Fall Readings featuring the colony’s writers
in residence.
Ballinger’s
42
Howard St., Albany, 598-1800.
First
Thursday of every month: School of Night poetry open mic with
host R.M. Engelhardt.
Bard College
Annandale-on-Hudson,
(845) 758-1539.
Sept:
27: Eileen Myles. Sept. 28: John Cage Tribute: “Lecture
on the Weather” (multi-media stage work based on the texts
of Henry David Thoreau). Oct. 25: Bill Berkson.
Caffe Lena
47
Phila St., Saratoga Springs, 583-0022.
First
Wednesday of every month: Poetry Open Mic with Host Carol
Graser.
Capital District Gay and Lesbian Community Center
332
Hudson Ave., Albany,462-6138.
Second
Wednesday of every month: Live from the Living Room poetry
open mic.
College of Saint Rose Frequency North Visiting Writers Series
Neil
Hellman Library, First Floor, 392 Western Ave., Albany, (800)637-8556.
Oct.
4: David Lehman. Nov. 8: Wayne Koestenbaum and
Nalini Jones.
Evangelical Protestant United Church of Christ
82
Clinton St., Albany.
Fourth
Wednesday of every month: Poetry in the Hood.
Lark Tavern
453
Madison Ave., Albany, 462-6138.
Last
Mon. of each month: Poets Speak Loud poetry open mic with
hosts Thom Francis and Mary Panza.
Monument Mountain Regional High School
600
Stockbridge Road, Great Barrington, Mass., (413)528-9267.
Nov.
5: Salman Rushdie.
New York State Writers Institute Visiting Writers Series
Events
take place on University at Albany’s uptown and downtown campuses
at 8PM. For information, call 442-5620.
Oct.
5: Richard Russo. Oct. 11: Jonathan Spence and Kang
Zhengguo. Oct. 16: Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. Oct.
17: Elizabeth Wong. Oct. 18: Nathanial Mackey.
Oct. 25: Joydeep Roy-Bhattacharya. Nov. 1: Andrea
Barrett. Nov. 8: Chris Hedges. Nov. 13: Festival
of Chinese Poetry. Nov. 15: Joe McGinniss. Nov.
27: Victoria Redel. Nov. 29: Tom Perrotta. Dec.
5: Daryl Pinckney.
Saratoga Springs Public Library
49
Henry St., Saratoga Springs, 584-1198.
Oct.
14: Saratoga Poetry Zone featuring Sarah Craig
and Bernice Mennis. Oct. 24: Writers on Reading Series
featuring Jay Rogoff.
Simon’s Rock college
84
Alford Road, Great Barringon, Mass., (413)644-4400.
Oct.
2: Joanna Scott. Oct. 18: Nathan Englander.
Oct. 25: Jonathan Aaron.
Social Justice Center
33
Central Ave., Albany, 434-4037.
Third
Thursday of every month: Third Thursday Poetry Open Mic.
Valentine’s
17
New Scotland Ave., Albany, 432-6572.
First
Tuesday of every month: Albany Poets Presents poetry open
mic night.
Voorheesville Public Library
51
School St., Voorheesville, 765-2791.
Oct.
11, continuing every other Thursday: Every other Thursday
Night Poets.
William K. Stanford Town Library
629
Albany Shaker Road, Loudonville, 458-9274.
Oct.
17, 7 PM: Tuesday Night Live Poets’ Corner features poets
and writers to present their original work at this open forum.
Film
Series & Festivals
Clark Art Institute
225
South St., Williamstown, Mass., (413) 458-2303. Call for showtimes.
Sept.
28: The Mystery of Picasso. Henri-Georges Clouzot
filmed Picasso at work, painting, in this dynamic 1950s documentary.
Oct. 5: Homage to Chagall. Harry Rasky’s documentary
portrait of the artist and his work. Oct. 19: Crumb.
Terry Zwigoff’s striking, shocking and often hilarious documentary
about underground cartoonist Robert Crumb. Oct. 20: Queen
Christina. A lecture by Robert Dance on actress Greta
Garbo will precede a screening of this, her most personal
(and possibly best) film. Oct. 26: How to Draw a Bunny.
A documentary about the life and death of New York City artist
Ray Johnson. Nov. 17: Dangerous Liasons. Stephen
Frears’ 1988 version of Laclos’ Les liaisons dangereuses,
with Glenn Close, John Malkovich, Michelle Pfeiffer, Uma Thurman,
Keanu Reeves and Swoosie Kurtz. Dec. 1: Valmont.
Milos Forman’s 1989 version of Laclos’ Les liaisons dangereuses,
with Annette Bening, Colin Firth, Meg Tilly, Fairuza Balk,
Henry Thomas and Sian Phillips. Dec. 15: Ridicule.
Hijinks, hubris and cruelty at the court of Louis XIV. Dec.
29: Marie Antoinette. Sofia Coppola’s revisionist
biography of the doomed queen has gorgeous costumes, pink
food and dreadful people. Entertaining performances by Kirsten
Dunst, Rip Torn, Judy Davis and Asia Argento.
Crandall Public Library Film Series
221
Glen St. (temporary location), Glens Falls, 792-6508. Call
for showtimes.
Sept.
25: Miss Navajo. The “Miss Navajo” contest isn’t
a beauty pageant—it’s about intelligence, spirituality and
knowledge of Navajo culture. Oct. 2: Away From Her.
Julie Christie shines in this Alzheimer’s drama. Oct. 9: In
Between Days. Korean immigrant teens adjust to
life in America in this poignant coming-of-age film. Oct.
16: Trains of Winnipeg. The experimental, avant-garde
result of a five-year art project. A meet-the-filmmaker event
with poet-turned-director Clive Holden. Oct. 23: 49
Up. Michael Apted continues his documentary series,
continuing to check in at seven-year intervals with a group
of English citizens. Oct. 30: Eagle vs. Shark.
It’s supposed to be New Zealand’s answer to Napoleon Dynamite.
Nov. 6: Offside. What’s an Iranian woman soccer
fan to do when women are barred from attending soccer matches?
Nov. 13: What Remains: The Life and Work of Sally Mann.
Documentary about the acclaimed photographer. Nov. 20: Who
Killed the Electric Car? Um, General Motors. Nov.
27: Paris Je T’aime. Multi-director, episodic
love letter to Paris. Dec. 4: Waitress. Heartwarming
comedy-drama about a waitress who pours her frustrations into
making delicious, aesthetically pleasing pies.
Edwood FilmFest
Spectrum
8 Theatres, 290 Delaware Ave., Albany, 449-8995, www.spectrum8.com,
www.ewfilm.com. Showtimes as noted.
Sept.
28-Oct. 4, noon and 7 PM: Microsodes. World-premiere
of 10 Albany-made, professionally edited short films featuring
local actors and directors: Amerikan Partizan,
Five Alpha Beatdown, Clumsy Robots,
Coin Flip Road Trip, Four, Funny
How the Seasons Change, Lost Kids, Rachel’s
Ward, The Haiku King, Tragic Donut.
Sept. 28-29; Oct. 1-4, 3:30 and 9 PM: Short Film Contest
Program. World-class short film competition featuring
live-action and animated films by internationally renowned
directors, including Robin King and Oscar-winner Bill Plympton.
And Then There Were Nun, Bitter,
Boy in Flight, Con-Time Machine,
Dead Residence, Finite, Gothic
Nightmare, Letting Go, Our Band
Sucks, Process Enacted, Shuteye
Hotel, Spider Baby Baby, 1000
Pictures of You, Under the Apple Tree,
WalkenTalk, We Could Be Models,
It’s Just Coffee. Sept. 30, 9 PM: Filmmaker
Spotlight Program. Star Trex: Enter the Brown Fist,
Vizard Mask, A Gentle Art.
FilmColumbia Festival
Crandell
Theatre, Main Street, Chatham (unless noted), 392-1162, www.filmcolumbia.com.
Call for registration and showtimes.
Oct.
18: My Country, My Country, Terror’s Advocate,
Things We Lost in the Fire, Margot at
the Wedding. Oct. 19: Radiant City,
Jimmy Carter: Man From Plains, Sneak Preview
TBA, Cassandra’s Dream, Reservation
Road. Also, at Morris Memorial: Kamp Katrina.
Oct. 20: Children’s Program, Taxi to the Dark
Side, 4 Months, 3 Days and 2 Weeks,
Lars and the Real Girl, Sneak Preview #2
TBA. Also, at Morris Memorial: Animation for Grown-Ups,
Next Generation Program, Columbia University
Shorts, Zahira’s Peace. Oct. 21: Young
Filmmakers Contest, Ellsworth Kelly: Fragments,
Persepolis, War/Dance, Before
the Devil Knows You’re Dead, The Kite Runner.
Also, at Morris Memorial: The Descendant, Kings.
MASS MoCA
87
Marshall St., North Adams, Mass., (413) 662-2111. Call for
showtimes.
Sept.
27 (Cinema Lounge): Nuremberg: The Nazis Facing Their
Crimes. Filmmaker Christian Delage used newly restored
footage of the Nuremberg war crimes trials to tell this powerful
story. Oct. 27 (Hunter Center): Grace is Gone.
New drama about the stateside impact of the Iraq war, with
an acclaimed performance by John Cusack. Nov. 2: Nosferatu.
The Alloy Orchestra will accompany, in their inimitable style,
F.W. Murnau’s groundbreaking vampire film.
New York State Writers Institute Classic Film Series
Page
Hall, 135 Western Ave., University at Albany’s downtown campus,
Albany. Call for showtimes. 442-5620.
Sept.
28: Spring in a Small Town. Celebrated Chinese
drama about a woman with conflicted loyalties, filmed in 1948
just before the Communist takeover. Oct. 4: Keeping
Mum. English black comedy about an out-of-control
household “put right” by a new housekeeper (Maggie Smith),
who may be criminally insane. Oct. 12: Paulina.
Semi-documentary about a middle-age Mexican woman who returns
home to confront the family who traded her away in exchange
for land rights. Oct. 19: Pandora’s Box. German
filmmaker G.W. Pabst’s erotically charged version of Wedekind’s
Lulu, with Louise Brooks. Oct. 26: Spirit of
the Beehive. The story of two young girls enchanted
by the monster in Frankenstein. (See Frankenstein
at the Palace on Oct. 1.) Set at the end of the Spanish Civil
War, Victor Erice’s 1973 masterpiece is being shown in a new
print. Nov. 2: The Designated Mourner. David
Hare directed this adaptation of Wallace Shawn’s powerful
play, with Miranda Richardson. Nov. 9: Cleo from 5 to
7. Agnes Varda’s pointed, affecting film about a pop
singer (Corinne Marchand) exploring the streets of Paris in
the two hours she must wait to get the results of a cancer
biopsy. Music by Michel Legrand. Nov. 16: Borderline.
Experimental British silent starring Paul Robeson, Eslanda
Robeson and poet H.D. (Hilda Doolittle) explores the boundaries
of racial and sexual identity. Nov. 30: Little Children.
Oscar-nominated black comedy. Novelist-screenwriter Tom Perrotta
will take part in a Q&A following the screening. Dec.
7: Bamako. Documentary about a group of Africans
who convene a “court” to turn the tables on the World Bank
and IMF. Dec. 14: The Awful Truth. Restored
print of Leo McCarey’s classic screwball comedy, with Cary
Grant and Irene Dunne.
Palace Theatre Fall Film Series
Palace
Theatre, 19 Clinton Ave., Albany, 465-4663. All screenings
at 7 PM.
Oct.
1: Frankenstein. The prototypical Universal
horror film, directed by James Whale and starring Boris Karloff.
(See this, then on Oct. 26, check out Spirit of the Beehive
at UAlbany.) Oct. 22: The Rocky Horror Picture Show.
Let’s do the time warp. Again. Nov. 5: Singin’ in the
Rain. Beloved Gene Kelly/Stanley Donen musical in
glorious Technicolor. Nov. 19: 2001: A Space Odyssey.
Kubrick’s mind-bending science-fiction masterpiece needs to
be seen on the big screen. Everybody sing: “Daisy, Daisy,
give me your answer true.” Dec. 3: Three Stooges Festival.
Something for the knuckleheads. Dec. 10: A Christmas
Story. No, you can’t have a Red Ryder special this
Xmas, either. Dec. 14: It’s a Wonderful Life.
Frank Capra’s fantasy-melodrama. Lionel Barrymore steals the
film as a delightfully mean son of a bitch.
Saratoga Film Forum Fall Series
The
Arts Center, 320 Broadway, Saratoga Springs, 584-FILM. Call
for showtimes and ticket prices.
Sept.
27-28, 30: 12:08 East of Bucharest. Droll, witty
comedy about Romania 16 years after the revolution which deposed
despised dictator Nicolae Ceausescu. Oct. 4-5, 7: Rescue
Dawn. Christian Bale stars in Werner Herzog’s wrenching
drama about an American pilot escaping from a Laotian prison
camp in the Vietnam War. Oct. 11-12, 14: Rocket Science.
A comedy for those who loved Rushmore. Oct. 18-19,
21: No End in Sight. Powerful documentary about
the current Iraq occupation. Oct. 25-26, 28: Death at
a Funeral. British comedy that—ha ha—kicks off at
a funeral.
Sanctuary for Independent Media
3361
6th Ave., Troy, 272-2390. All screenings at 7 PM.
Oct.
5: Lost Film Fest. A celebration of “media archeology
and illegal art” with Scott Belbin. Oct. 26: Hand of
God. Joe Cultrera’s documentary about Roman Catholic
clergy abuse. Oct. 29: Nosferatu. A screening
of F.W. Murnau’s moody vampire classic, with live music by
the Devil Music Ensemble. Nov. 14: A Map With Gaps,
Today’s Man. Two documentaries about, respectively,
director Alice Nelson’s father’s journey through the USSR
in the 1970s, and, director Lizzie Gottlieb’s portrait of
her brother’s struggle with Asperger’s syndrome. Nov. 16:
Meeting Resistance. A documentary portrait from
inside the “physical and psychological heart” of the Iraqi
insurgency. Nov. 28: Sisters in Law. A documentary
about lawyers and judges battling domestic violence in Kumbs,
Cameroon.
Schoharie Scary Horror Film Festival
SUNY
Cobleskill, Bouck Hall Auditorium, State Route 7, Cobleskill,
827-6849, www.scaryfilmfest.com.
Oct.
26, 7 PM; Oct. 27, noon-6 PM. Screenings will feature both
shorts and feature-length horror films. Festival schedule
will appear on Web site soon.
Time & Space Limited
434
Columbia St., Hudson, 822-8448. Call for showtimes.
Sept.
28: Cages. Olivier Masset-Depasse’s intense
film about a couple driven apart by the aftermath of an accident,
and how they try to repair their relationship. Sept. 28-29:
Gypsy Caravan. Acclaimed Albert Maysles documentary
about Gypsy bands on a U.S. tour. Sept. 29: The Mormons.
This documentary about LDS-ers will be screened as a CinemaLux
event, with director Helen Whitney. Oct. 5-7: Wildlife
Film Festival. Cosponsored with Scenic Hudson. Oct. 6:
The Weather Underground. Activist Cathy Wilkerson
will speak. Oct. 20-21: No End in Sight. Powerful
documentary on the Iraq occupation. Oct. 26: Full Grown
Men. A man tries to reconnect with his past. With
Matt McGrath, Judah Friedlander and Deborah Harry. Oct. 27-28:
Latin Beat 2007. Recent films from Latin America, curated
by the Film Society of Lincoln Center.
The Linda: WAMC’s Performing Arts Studio
339
Central Ave., Albany, 465-5233 ext. 4. Call for show times.
Oct.
5: Bound for Glory. Oct. 18: The Host.
Oct. 26: The Nice Lady With a Nasty Voice. Oct.
27: Rocky Horror Picture Show.
Williamstown Film Festival
Various
locations in and around Williamstown, Mass., (413) 458-9700,
www.williamstown filmfest.com.
Oct.
25-Nov. 4. Schedule to be announced Oct. 1. See Web site for
details.
Woodstock Film Festival
Various
locations in and around Woodstock, Rhinebeck, Hunter and Rosendale.
WFF box office is at 34 Tinker St., Woodstock, (845) 810-0131,
www.woodstockfilmfestival.com. Check Web site for schedule,
venue information and show times.
Oct.
10-14: The Diving Ball and the Butterfly, I’m
Not There, Chasin’ Gus’ Ghost, 3
Americas, American Fork, Aquarium,
August Evening, Begging Naked,
Beton, Billy the Kid, Black
White & Gray, Bonneville 101, The
Cake Eaters, Caroline by Committee,
Chicago 10, Choose Connor, Constantine’s
Sword, The Cool School, Dark Matter,
Fantasie in Bubblewrap, For Love of Julian,
Freeheld, Good Ol’ Charles Schulz,
Hippie Masala, The House is Burning,
How to Cook Your Life, In Search of a
Midnight Kiss, Iron Ladies of Liberia,
Iska’s Journey, Joe Strummer:
The Future is Unwritten, The Ladies,
Let Them Chirp Awhile, Liberty Kid,
Living the Blues, The Living Wake,
Making Trouble, Married Life,
Moving Midway, Neal Cassady, Neither
Memory Nor Magic, Night of the Living Jews,
Nomadak, TX, Operation Filmmaker,
Order Up, Oswald’s Ghost, Reservation
Road, Run Granny Run, Severed
Ways: The Norse Discovery of America, Steal
a Pencil for Me, Superheroes, Super
High Me, Surfwise, Terror’s Advocate,
Things Last Constant, Tomatoes of Dischord,
The Tourists, Trigger Man, Under
the Same Moon, The Unforseen, Validation,
War/Dance, Who You Know.
 |
 |
|
Kiss
of the Spider Woman at Schenectady Light Opera Company.
|
Theater
& Comedy
Albany Civic Theater
285
Second Ave., Albany, 462-1297.
Oct.
26-Nov.11: Three Viewings.
Bard College
Richard
B. Fisher Center for the Performing Arts, (845) 758-7950.
Oct.
11-14: Marat/Sade. Nov 15-18: Party Time
and The Ruffian on the Stair. Dec. 13-16: The
Jewish Wife.
Barrington Stage Company
30
Union St., Pittsfield, Mass., (413) 236-8888.
Oct.
3-21: The World Goes ‘Round. Nov. 7-18: Fully
Committed.
Calvin Theatre
19
King St., Northampton, Mass., (413) 584-1444.
Oct.
5: Josh Blue. Oct. 27: Louis CK. Nov. 10: John
Pinette.
Capital Repertory Company
Capital
Repertory Theatre, 111 N. Pearl St., Albany, 462-4531.
Through
Sept. 30: Moonlight & Magnolias. Oct. 16-Nov.
15: The Biggest Little International Play Festival.
Nov. 30-Dec. 23: Plaid Tidings.
Chapel + Cultural Center
2125
Burdett Ave., Troy, 274-7793.
Nov.
28: Bertrand Fay’s Greek Theater: The Women of
Trachis.
Circle Theatre Players
Sand
Lake Center for the Arts, 2880 Rt. 43, Averill Park, 674-2007.
Oct.
19-28: The Assassin’s New Friend.
Cohoes Music Hall
58
Remsen St., Cohoes, 237-5858.
Through
Sept. 30: Chicago.
Colonial Little Theatre
1
Colonial Court, Johnstown, 762-4325.
Oct.
4-13. The Complete History of America: Abridged.
Dec. 7-16. The Best Christmas Pagent Ever.
Colonial Theatre
111
South St., Pittsfield, Mass., (413) 448-8084.
Oct
7: The Male Intellect: An Oxymoron? Oct. 15-17:
I Love A Piano. Nov. 17: Laughing Liberally.
Dec. 1: Chicago City Limits’ Revenge of the Reindeer.
Dec 9: Flat Stanley. Dec. 13: Celtic Yuletide.
Confetti Stage
Productions
at various locations, call for dates. 253-1253.
Nov.
30-Dec 9: Marley’s Ghost.
Curtain Call Theatre
210
Old Loudon Rd., Latham, 877-7529.
Through
Oct. 6: The Glass Menagerie. Oct. 19-Nov. 17:
Sylvia. Nov. 30-Dec. 29: It’s a Wonderful Life:
A Live Radio Play.
Ghent Playhouse
Route
66 and Town Hall Road, Ghent, 392-6264.
Oct.
5-21: Over the River and Through the Woods.
Nov. 23-Dec. 9: Hair Loom: Rapunzel and Rumplestiltskin
in Dis-tress.
Glens Falls Civic Center
1
Civic Center Plaza, Glens Falls, 798-0366.
Oct.
12: Arthur Live!
Good Times Lakeview Inn
175
Lake Road, Ballston Lake, 399-9976.
Oct.
24, Nov. 14, Dec. 5 and 31: Mystery on the Lake.
Hilton Center For the Performing Arts
40
Russell Road., Albany, 453-1048.
Oct.
5-Nov. 21: Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf. Nov.
16-18: Why Didn’t He Tell Me?
Home Made Theater
Spa
Little Theater, Saratoga Spa State Park, Saratoga Springs,
587-4427.
Oct.
13-28: Side Man. Oct 14: The Dirty Talk.
Staged Reading. Nov. 18: Eve-Olution. Staged
Reading. Dec. 7-16: The Snow Queen.
Hubbard Hall
25
E. Main St., Cambridge, (518) 677-2495.
Nov.
8-Dec. 2: The Elephant Man.
Hudson
Valley Community College
Maureen
Stapleton Theater, 80 Vandenburgh Ave., Troy, 629-HVCC.
Oct.
2: The Black Jew Dialogues.
MASS MoCA
1040
MASS MoCA Way, North Adams, Mass., 662-2111.
Dec
1: 9 Parts of Desire.
New York State Theatre Institute
Schacht
Fine Arts Center, Russell Sage College, 37 First St., Troy,
274-3256.
Oct.
12-24: Arsenic and Old Lace. Dec. 7-19: Miracle
on 34th Street.
Oldcastle Theatre Company
Route
9 and Gypsy Lane, Bennington, Vt., (802) 447-0564.
Through
Oct. 7: A Body of Water. Dec 13-16: Jacob
Marley’s Christmas Carol.
Palace Theatre
19
Clinton Ave., Albany, 465-4663.
Sept.
29: The Hot Tamales Live. Oct. 12-14: Stomp.
Nov. 14: Brad Garrett.
Proctor’s Theatre
432
State St., Schenectady, 346-6204.
Mainstage:
Oct. 13: Crazy ‘Bout Patsy. Oct. 16-17:
A Year With Frog and Toad. Oct. 18: Sinbad.
Nov. 15: Last Comic Standing LIVE Tour. Nov. 18: Shaolin
Warriors. Nov. 20-25: The Drowsy Chaperone.
Nov. 27: A Christmas Carol. Dec. 4: Second
City Dysfunctional Holiday Revue.
GE
Theatre: Sept. 28: Colin Quinn. Oct. 5: Jamie
Lissow. Oct. 9-14: Tony n Tina’s Wedding. Oct.
26-27: Greg Fitzsimmons. Nov. 2: Buddy Fitzpatrick.
Nov. 24: Judah Friedlander. Nov. 30: John Mulaney.
Dec. 14: Jon Fisch. Dec. 15: Caroline Rhea.
440
Upstairs: Nov. 28-Dec. 9: Play by Play Festival
(presented by Stageworks/Hudson).
Schenectady Civic Players
12
South Church St., Schenectady, 382-2081.
Oct.
19-28: Waiting for Godot. Dec. 7-16: A
Christmas Story.
Scenectady County Community College
78
Washington Ave, Schenectady, 381-1200.
Nov.
7-16: Happy Birthday, Wanda June. Nov. 8-17:
In Darfur.
Schenectady Light Opera Company
826
State St., Schenectady, (877)350-7378.
Through
Oct. 7: Kiss of the Spider Woman. Nov. 30-Dec.
16: Annie.
Shakespeare and Company
70
Kemble St., Lenox., Mass. (413) 637-1199.
Sept.
28-Oct. 28: The Secret of Sherlock Holmes.
Stageworks/Hudson
41
Cross St., Hudson, 822-9667.
Through
Sept. 30: Hamlet.
Steamer No. 10 Theatre
500
Western, Albany, (518) 438-5503.
Oct.
12-14. Embraceable Me. Oct. 19-Nov.11: Sleeping
Beauty. Oct. 26-Nov 4. All My Black Children.
Nov. 30-Dec. 16: Nelly Bly—First Woman Reporter.
Dec. 7-16: Noise.
Times Union Center
51
S. Pearl St., Albany, 487-2000.
Oct:
23: The Wiggles: Racing to the Rainbow Live!
University at Albany
Studio
Theatre, University Performing Arts Center, Uptown Campus,
1400 Washington Ave., Albany, 442-3997.
Oct.
19-27: Letters to a Student Revolutionary. Nov.
16-Dec. 1: A Coupla White Chicks Sitting Around Talking.
|