Things To Do in New York City This Week
Mon, 7
The Moth StorySLAM The Bell House; 8pm; $10
Ten stories.
Three teams of judges. One winner. The outrageously (and deservedly) popular
storytelling series pits local yarn-spinners against one another, challenging
them to deliver an impressive tale based on a specific topic.
Women’s Jazz Festival: Sacred Revolution
Schomburg Center; 7pm; $25
This perfect
convergence of Women's and Black History months brings together a powerful
group of soul, blues and funk performers to celebrate black women musicians and
artists of the past, including Mahalia Jackson, Mavis Staples and Sister
Rosetta Tharpe. Kat Dyson, Christina Sayles, Jhetti Lashley, Fred Cash and more
will be tearing the roof of the Schomburg Center off and paying tribute the
only way they know how to at this special event.
Leon Bridges + Son Little Beacon Theatre;
8pm; $32.50–$49.50
Twenty-five-year-old
Leon Bridges’s clear, powerful voice and mastery of ’60s soul and R&B have
already earned him the attention of Columbia Records, which signed the Fort
Worth native at the end of 2014. This gig comes on the heels of last year's
spirited, appealingly retro debut LP, Coming Home.
This Article is Taken By : Time Out
Tue 8
International Women’s Day FUNdraiser House of
Yes; 7pm; $22–$136
A coalition
of rad womens' activism groups are joining forces for a late-night blowout to
gain new allies and donations for deserving worldwide causes. Head to a stacked
dinner and meet other badass activists, hit the bar and join a rowdy dance
party with music by DJ Cuppy and check out an outrageous variety show featuring
comedy, samba reggae and circus aerialism. You'll learn how you can support
fearless organizations like Lady Parts Justice League, Madre and Win-NYC while
having a spectacular night.
The Drunk Spelling Bee The Creek and the
Cave; 10pm; free
Spell
Mississippi without slurring a letter during this boozy event hosted by comics
Jake Flores and Blake Midgette. The walking dictionary will get a P-R-I-Z-E,
but everyone's technically a winner—it's a free comedy show, dammit!
Game of Thrones (TV) Trivia Yellow Hook
Grille; 8pm; free
Competitions
in Westeros rarely end well, but the clever folks at Trivia A.D. promise a fun,
treachery-free evening of trivia based on the highest-rated HBO series in
history. Study up on the Targaryen family tree, fine Dornish wines and
good-looking Stark sons if you and your team want to survive.
Carolines Comedy Madness Stand-Up Competition
Carolines on Broadway; 7pm; $10 plus two-drink minimum
Sixty-four
local comics go head-to-head over five shows in this round-robin tournament,
with everybody getting one minute of stage time in the first round, two in the
second round, and so on. The winner scores a cash prize, a featured gig in the
2016 New York Comedy Festival and, of course, bragging rights.
Wed 9
Big East Tourney Madison Square Garden;
various times; $10–$60
Don’t miss
your chance to be a part of the 2016 Big East men’s basketball tournament and
experience college ball like it’s meant to be played. We’re talking hardnosed,
powerful hoop played on the most epic court in the world: Madison Square
Garden. And you can be right at the heart of it.
Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey
Present Legends Prudential Center; 7pm; $10–$80
Prepare to
be amazed—no, floored—by this famous circus show, which is taking acts like
traditional high-wire motorcyclists, acrobatic dogs and cats, martial-arts
experts and gymnasts to the next level. “Legends” will highlight the most
skilled circus masters, majestic animals, exotic performers and fearless
daredevils from around the globe. Arrive an hour early for a free preshow party
in which performers teach circus skills to audience members on the arena floor.
BRIC Flix: Women Behind the Lens BRIC House;
7pm; free
BRIC house
welcomes four women filmmakers to share excerpts from their documentary
features and discuss their process. The free screening event features scenes
from Born to Fly, about choreographer Elizabeth Streb, Speed Sisters, which
follows the first all-women race car team in the Middle East; and Canary in a
Coal Mine, which documents a woman's struggle with a mysterious disease.
Book Launch: Because of Sex by Gillian Thomas
The powerHouse Arena; 7pm; free
Join
American Civil Liberties Union’s Women’s Rights Project Senior Staff Attorney
Gillian Thomas as she launches her new book One Law, Ten Cases, and Fifty Years
that Changed American Women's Lives at Work. She'll discuss how Supreme Court
cases have affected women with author and journalist Clara Bingham.
8Players at various locations; 8pm; $75–$100
Camp
classics like Death Becomes Her and sensually charged high school horror films
mash up with old-school murder mystery games at this impeccable night of
bedazzling DIY theatre. Register to participate in the "'90s Teen
Horror" experience, show up in your pre-assigned character costume, and
prepare to engage in a frightful showdown with seven strangers who will soon
become chillingly familiar.
Drunk Science Littlefield; 8pm; $5–$8
Join your
hosts Joanna Rothkopf (Jezebel staff writer), Shannon Odell (neuroscience PhD
student) and Jordan Mendoza (took some science classes) as they proceed to get
wasted and compete to present their very best scientific treatise to a panel of
comedians and science buffs. This week's guests include comedians Casey Jost,
Ana Fabrega and Joel Kim Booster. The more you drink, the more their
dissertations will make sense.
Thu 10
RadioLoveFest BAM Harvey Theater; 7:30pm;
various prices
See the
faces behind the voices you love at this second annual event. Catch live
tapings of public radio juggernauts Wait Wait…Don’t Tell Me!, Death Sex and
Money and even a live talk from A Prairie Home Companion's Garrison Keeler—or
learn about the business at talks by the medium’s luminaries. Several on-air
personalities are presenting and discussing films, and if you like some tunes
with your radio, the festival features four concerts.
Night Rooms Bizarre; 4pm, 9pm; free
Sasha
Velour, the gender-subverting, avant-garde eyebrow icon of the Brooklyn drag
scene, invites you to view her surreal illustrated visions at this new free
exhibition. View stylized images of drag divas in noirish night time settings
and witness the magic of a glam performance artist extending her gifts to a new
medium.
Slingshot’s Roadshow of HORROS House of Yes;
9pm; $17
Rolling into
town like an old-timey circus, the musicians, dancers, magicians and actors of
the Slingshot group will be unloading their most haunting, surreal and totally
dazzling acts of high-wire insanity. Jam to brassy blues while torch-eaters and
magicians take performance art to a whole new level at this rowdy, spooky
late-night of fun.
Wait Wait…Don’t Tell Me! BAM Peter Jay Sharp
Building; 7:30pm; $35
This NPR
quiz show—starring Peter Sagal, judge and scorekeeper Bill Curtis and a bevy of
comics giving sassy answers to questions about the week's news—usually tapes in
Chicago. This week, the crew flies to NYC for a special BAM edition. This
edition's lightning-fast guests include Paula Poundstone, Mo Rocca and Faith
Salie.
ReelAbilities: NY Disabilities Film Festival
at various locations; 10am; free–$18
With
screenings, panels and performances at theaters in every borough, JCC
Manhattan's celebration of film depictions of the differently-abled is bigger
and more diverse than ever. Check out documentaries like A Blind Hero: The Love
of Otto Weidt from Germany and narrative films like Margarita, With a Straw
from India during the festival's packed week of screenings.
Republican Debate Watch Party Q.E.D.; 8:30pm;
$8
A trio of
intrepid comedians—Frank Conniff, John Fugelsang and Myka Fox—helps you make
sense of the shenanigans amongst Trump, Kasich, Cruz and Rubio at this
MST3K-style viewing party.
Entirely From Memory Peoples Improv Theater;
9:30pm; $10
Massacring
beloved movies like The Notebook, Spider-Man and the Princess Bride, the Ten
Bones Theatre Company makes it their mission to reenact a full film... after
having seen it once. Cast in front of the audience and incorporating insane
rules and crowd suggestions, each performance promises to be completely
different— and totally irreverent to the source material.
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