FREE and by “Free” we Mean “Free”

The Year of James Baldwin on the occasion of what would have been the author’s 90th year, presented in partnership with Harlem Stage, Columbia University School of the Arts, New York Live Arts

HASHTAG #YearofBaldwin

I love giving this wonderful literary tip.  If you have not had the pleasure of reading anything by the great James Baldwin, I am suggesting that you start with Giovanni's Room which is Baldwin's second novel (1956).  It's a bold, romantic and brave story about the price of feeling and fighting for love.  

Baldwin focuses on the events in the life of an average American man living in Paris and his feelings and frustrations with his relationships with other men in his life, particularly a stunning, Italian bartender named Giovanni whom he meets at a Parisian gay bar.

I didn't want to place a big, yellow highlight marker over the word “gay” because the characters and the exploration of the pursuit of love, love lost, love found and love lost again—is just one of the elements that make this powerful story so powerful. It’s bold!

Baldwin is bold. I repeat that word again and I want you to listen to how it sounds, in your head: bold, bold, bold! 

Giovanni's Room is noteworthy for many reasons and for the LGBT community, he is applauded for it’s honesty and complex representations of homosexuality to a reading public with empathy and artistry, thereby fostering a broader public discourse of issues regarding same-sex desire.

It’s more than that!  It’s “romantic” and dare I say, hopeful.

David, a young American man whose girlfriend has gone off to Spain to contemplate marriage, is left alone in Paris and begins an affair with an Italian man, Giovanni. The entire story is narrated by David during "the night which is leading me to the most terrible morning of my life," when Giovanni will be executed.

If that has moved you to explore or if you are already a fan, brilliant---because the FREE series (Baldwin-Lorde) Ancestral Witnesses will explore the intersections of religion and African American literature produced during the social upheavals of the Civil Rights and Black Power Movements and their aftermath. 

The panels will feature papers that examine how black writers engaged religion in their efforts to imagine black liberation and human freedom, as well as how black religions have shaped African American literary visions. We define “religion” broadly to include not only Islam and Christianity, but also African-derived practices (i.e. voodoo or hoodoo) and new belief systems (i.e. Rastafarianism and the International Peace Movement Mission).

Our capacious understanding of religion is reflected in the writings and life experiences of literary figures themselves: James Baldwin and Audre Lorde.

While will be the focal points for this event, panelist will explore how religion figured in the life and work of a range of other black writers. Alongside the formal presentations, there will be choreographed readings from selected texts and possibly musical performances, given music’s centrality to both African American literary and religious traditions alike. 

Panelists at the event include:

Rich Blint, Columbia University

Alexis De Veaux, Author & Activist

Imani Perry, Princeton University

Moderating: Josef Sorett, Columbia University 

Musical performances by:

Marti Newland, Singer, Ph.D. candidate in Ethnomusicology, Columbia University

Brandee Younger, Harpist

This conversation is a part of the year-long, city-wide celebration The Year of James Baldwin on the occasion of what would have been the author’s 90th year, presented in partnership with Harlem Stage, Columbia University School of the Arts, New York Live Arts, with collaborators: The New School’s Vera List Center for Art and Politics, the School of Media Studies and School of Writing, the National Black Theater, the Harlem Book Fair, and the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture.

This event is sponsored by the Institute for Religion, Culture, and Public Life; Columbia University School of the Arts; and Harlem Stage. 

It’s free please read below: 

This event is free and open to all. A ticket is required. 

Reserve your tickets here: RSVP TODAY

MAYOR DE BLASIO AND MEDIA & ENTERTAINMENT COMMISSIONER LÓPEZ PRESENT THE 2014 ‘MADE IN NY’ AWARDS

Mayor De Blasio and Entertainment Commissioner Cynthia LÓPEZ go together like P&J and a cold glass of milk.

Their innovative yet careful management style has helped make our city busier than ever, the Made in NY Awards come at a time when New York City is hosting record levels of television production: 39 primetime episodic, digital and mini-series, including 20 new series. Add that to the 230 films that have shot in the city and that robust activity means bigger spending and that provides more earning opportunity for the average New Yorker.

The Made In NY' Awards celebrates the excellence in the New York City creative community while recognizing the achievements of individuals and organizations that have made significant contributions to the Citys entertainment and digital media industries.

The 2014 MADE IN NY’ Awards honorees are: Golden Globe and SAG Award-winning and Emmy-nominated actor and director Steve Buscemi; five-time Emmy Award-winning actor, executive producer, writer, director Louis C.K.;  Tony and five-time Emmy Award winner Neil Patrick Harris; Brooklyn-born digital design and technology consultancy Huge; MacArthur Fellow and National Humanities Medal honoree Stanley Nelson; Oscar and Emmy Award-nominated actress, activist and The View co-host Rosie Perez; Producers Guild of Americas Lydia Dean Pilcher, VP Motion Pictures, Chair, Womens Impact Network; Mari Jo Winkler, Chair, PGA Green and Rachel Watanabe-Batton, Vice Chair, PGA East, Chair, PGA Diversity; and Blue Bloods co-executive producer and Sex and the City producer Jane Raab. The Made in NY Mayors Award for Lifetime Achievement was presented to Albert Maysles, filmmaker and founder of the Maysles Documentary Center, a nonprofit organization dedicated to the exhibition and production of documentary films that inspire dialogue and action in Harlem.

“The ‘Made in NY brand has been a tremendous successbecoming a globally recognized symbol of innovation and quality, said Mayor Bill de Blasio. Were proud to honor the talented New Yorkers working in front of the camera and behind the scenes, supporting the industries that help make up our citys cultural soul and economic health, and creating opportunities for New Yorkers along the way.

Commissioner Cynthia López added: The 2014 Made in NY Award honorees are a testament to the kind of talent that is born or bred here in New York City.  They are the reason that the city continues to thrive as the creative capital. All the honorees have three things in common: they have a profound commitment to their craft, they possess an unflinching work ethic, and they are trail blazers in their respective fields. They do not follow trends; they create them. Their collective body of work promotes New York City as the invigorating arts scene that it is. It is an absolute honor to recognize these individuals at this years awards.

Putting their words in action, the City announced a generous donation of $160,000 from the Teamsters Local 817 to MOME through the Mayor’s Fund to Advance New York City to support community enrichment in local neighborhoods as part as of their commitment to New York City.

It's a tremendous show of support and a sincere investment in the future growth of the industry.

Bravo to the Teamsters who will send two graduates from the “Made in NY Production Assistant Training Program to commercial driving school in order to receive their commercial drivers licenses and get added to the Teamsters referral list in time for the upcoming TV pilot season.

The recipients are Tim Valerio, who served as a corporal in the Marines in Iraq and Afghanistan before returning to New York and who, since graduating from the “Made in NY PA Training Program, has worked as a grip, and Jimmy Gonzalez, a native New Yorker and father of two, who finished the PA program earlier this year and has been working as a set PA on an upcoming NBC comedy.

Urban Yoga Foundation: YOUR GUIDE TO YOUTHFUL LIVING!

Urban Yoga Foundation, a serene and beautiful non-profit organization is located in Harlem, in a beautiful studio on 137th st. (259 W 137th st.) This organization offers classes, workshops, and a place to really breathe, exercise, de-stress, and grow physically & spiritually. Whether you're a beginner or advanced Yogi, this place to practice will be nothing short of opening, welcoming, and accomodating to how you like to practice.

I arrived and was greeted downstairs, the studio being two flights up. It was a large yet cozy studio, beautiful floors and fresh new yoga mats, blankets, and blocks. During class, we started with a meditation, then the flow began.

We stretched, did core work, vinyasa flow, and alternate-nostril breathing (my favorite) which calms the mind and is great for relieving stress and focus.

This studio offers classes like Hatha Yoga, Restorative yoga, and specific workshops monthly focusing on aspects such as pregnancy, health, and balance. I would absolutely recommend this studio to a friend.

Namastey!

Apple gets new stuff for New Yorkers to play with!

The legendary secrecy around all things Apple is, in itself, part of our cultural Zeitgeist.

As a cynical citizen of New York, I tend to "believe it, when I see it."

So, imagine my amusement when I walked—nay, ran into more like—into a training session.

"Oh my, are you just learning about this?" I questioned, as I inserted myself inside the colorful group.

"It's Apple.  We wait too." I waited and at the end of the presentation, the young sales team actually cheered!  Perhaps their gleeful excitement was motivated by the coming holiday season.

As I turned to leave my "myNewYorkeye" curiosity got the best if me and I asked: "what's this new watch selling for?" 

In unison, three smiling Apple staff members smiled and said: "They haven't told us yet which usually means it's very expensive."

It's a myNewYorkeye—what's in it for you, moment.

September 9, 2014. 72nd street. 2:24 pm.

Montgomery. Re-invention.

Fashion designer Montgomery is relaunching her brand.  Her fashion forward work received the Vidal Sassoon Award for Style in 1995 and the Absolute Vodka Style Award in 1999.  

Her ring-a-ding spin on style has been photographed the world over with a Japanese cult following that encompasses all generations. Sixty year old grandmothers share their collectables with their four year old granddaughters.

Montgomery's stylish store once called Harlem home but the aggressive gentrification placed the artist in a situation that almost found her, and her collections, homeless.

The voluminous inspiration found in that store is best summed up by style legend Andre Leon Talley: "What's great about Montgomery is that it is exactly what it is: a specialty dress shop in the old-fashioned sense.  Go there for a full-skirted Dorothy Dandridge dinner dress -- hello Halle Berry? with a Schiaparelli-pink Salvador Dali lipstick print."

2014: Walking pass the Studio Museum of Harlem a collection of one-of-a-kind Collage jewelry (sold in the museum store) caught myNewYorkeye and that's how this creative exchange began.

She's one of three Harlem designers that have generously offered to style me for my Hollywood/Oscar/ESSENCE 7th annual Black Women in Hollywood Luncheon and celebrity one on one interview adventure.

myNewYorkeye: What should we call you?

Montgomery: My name Montgomery Harris but I like to go by Montgomery.

web-link montgomeryboutique.com

myNewYorkeye: So that would make your FaceBook just Montgomery.

Montgomery: Correct and my occupation is designer.

myNewYorkeye: I understand that a generous percentage of your sales, inside the Studio Museum of Harlem goes to that organization?  True and if so, why?

Montgomery: True.  It's part of  an organization that I feel is amazing.  It allows me to give back to the community of Harlem were I grew up.  The same applies when those pieces are purchased on-line.

myNewYorkeye: Your favorite creations?

Montgomery: My favorite creations is  Jolinda, the family group of which baby girl, is a third generation and the Toad Skin print collection.

myNewYorkeye: I'm working on a book called "failure?" which is a collection of real life stories about people who "failed" until they "didn't," asking the question what is "failure?"

So, you know the question.

Montgomery: Failure (to me) was closing my business in Harlem and almost becoming homeless.  To follow my dream of being a designer, artist, I sacrificed...everything.  And now....

I'll answer that for Montgomery since the emotion stirred in her like a cyclone,rendering her temporarily speechless. 

And now comes a phenomenal-Montgomery-reinvention. 

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