The week's essential arts news, including Lin-Manuel Miranda on stage in San Juan, Tracy Lett's "Linda Vista," and Titian at the Norton Simon.
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[Arts & Culture]
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Aaaaand the arts season is back in full swing! Iâm Carolina A. Miranda of the Los Angeles Times, with the weekâs essential arts news ... and disco cumbia:
‘HAMILTON’ IN PUERTO RICO
It began with a standing ovation â when Lin-Manuel Miranda returned to the stage as Alexander Hamilton â and ended with Miranda in tears, waving the Puerto Rican flag. âHamiltonâ has landed in San Juan, Puerto Rico, and The Timesâ Jessica Gelt was there to capture the scene as hurricane-weary residents turned out for a splashy opening that attracted U.S. celebs such as Jimmy Fallon and Shonda Rimes. (The showâs proceeds will go to aid the recovery.) After the show, Miranda said, âPuerto Ricans are the most resilient people on the face of the Earth.â [Los Angeles Times](
Lin-Manuel Miranda waves the Puerto Rican flag at the premiere of "Hamilton" in San Juan. (Carlos Giusti / AP)
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Music and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim
Book by Hugh Wheeler
Directed by Kent Nicholson
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Originally directed on Broadway by Harold Prince
Orchestrations by Jonathan Tunick
Originally produced on Broadway by Richard Barr, Charles Woodward, Robert Fryer, Mary Lea Johnson, Martin Richards in association with Dean and Judy Manos
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âHamiltonâ was supposed to be staged at the historic Teatro de la Universidad de Puerto Rico, which Mirandaâs Flamboyan Arts Fund helped restore after the hurricane. But concerns over unrest at the university over labor issues led the showâs organizers to move the show to the Centro de Bellas Artes Luis A. Ferré five miles away. This left the university reeling: âSome people cried,â says the universityâs communications director, Mario Alegre Barrios. [Los Angeles Times](
Lin-Manuel Miranda and the cast of "Hamilton" pose at the after-party in San Juan. (Gladys Vega / Getty Images for "Hamilton")
Gelt also speaks to two of the showâs stars: Donald Webber Jr., who is playing Aaron Burr, and Julia K. Harriman, who took on the role of Eliza Hamilton, about what itâs like to play opposite Miranda, the showâs creator. Prior to meeting him, âI was terrified,â Harriman recalls. Things changed after everyone got on stage. [Los Angeles Times](
"Hamilton's" Donald Webber Jr. and Julia K. Harriman inside the Museo de Arte de Puerto Rico. (Angel Valentin / For The Times)
Plus, what âHamiltonâ has signified politically to Puerto Rico. [New Yorker](
A LEGENDARY ‘DOLLY’ DIES
Carol Channing, the Broadway star best known for her portrayal of the titular matchmaker in âHello, Dolly!â â she appeared in the play at least 5,000 times â died this week at the age of 97. âShe created the character of Dolly and she made the show,â says Jerry Herman, who wrote the music and lyrics. Mary Rourke reports on a legendary career. [Los Angeles Times](
Times theater critic Charles McNulty has a tribute: âOne of a kind, Channing was a like a cross between Marilyn Monroe and Gracie Allen, with a personality voice that could make a tune completely her own. When she sang, pixie dust shot into the air. She was an Al Hirschfeld cartoon sprung into swooning life.â [Los Angeles Times](
Broadway star Carol Channing in 1967. (Ed Kolenovsky / Associated Press)
Interesting fact: Channing was on Richard Nixonâs enemies list. [New York Times](
Plus, former Times theater critic Sylvie Drake recalls a very special lunch with Channing. [Los Angeles Times](
MAN TROUBLE
Charles McNulty also reviews actor and playwright Tracy Lettsâ latest work, âLinda Vista,â now at the Mark Taper Forum. About a âmasculine magnetâ who is also an emotional âblack hole,â the episodic, nearly three-hour work has the feel of binge-watching. âThe dramatic writing has a kinetic kick,â McNulty writes. âLettsâ dialogue is potently funny and the psychological dynamics are often riveting in their accuracy. But the overall structure is saggy.â [Los Angeles Times](
The first encounter between rockabilly Minnie (Chantal Thuy) and Wheeler (Ian Barford) in "Linda Vista." (Craig Schwartz)
BROADWAY BABIES
A play about a man-child is a perfect segue to a story about babies on Broadway: Contributor Stuart Miller looks at the infants appearing in Jez Butterworthâs âThe Ferrymanâ on Broadway. These little thespians are known for their enthusiastic toy chewing and for spitting up during interviews. [Los Angeles Times](
The real-deal babies (with parents) appearing in "The Ferryman" on Broadway. (Rick Loomis / Los Angeles Times)
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CLASSICAL NOTES
Times classical music critic Mark Swed reports that while the Los Angeles Philharmonic and the San Francisco Symphony have been dominating headlines, the San Diego Symphony has a somewhat more checkered history. But a new director â the âelectrifyingâ Rafael Payare, a former L.A. Phil assistant â has turned things up a notch. âSan Diego has had capable music directors,â he notes, âbut only recently has the symphony begun to show Californian cultural farsightedness.â [Los Angeles Times](
Rafael Payare conducts the San Diego Symphony at Copley Symphony Hall. (Nancee E. Lewis / San Diego Union-Tribune)
The L.A. Philâs New Music Group this week debuted six works commissioned from jazz musicians â part of a Green Umbrella program at Walt Disney Concert Hall curated by Herbie Hancock. The performance felt âa little off,â reports Swed. âIt was a nervous conservatism that characterized much of the music.â [Los Angeles Times](
Plus, contributor Rick Schultz checked out the âinvigoratingâ solo debut of Mexican pianist Jorge Federico Osorio. [Los Angeles Times](
LADY IN WHITE
Titianâs âPortrait of a Lady in Whiteâ is on view at Pasadenaâs Norton Simon on loan from Dresdenâs State Art Collection in Germany. Itâs âamong Titianâs greatest portraits,â says Times art critic Christopher Knight. âThe three-quarter-length, roughly life-size figure of a winsome but chaste young woman dressed in luxurious satin and dripping pearls is more accurately described as âPortrait of a Lady in Every Shade of White You Can Imagine â Plus, for Good Measure, a Bunch of Shimmering Golds.â â [Los Angeles Times](
Titian, "Portrait of a Lady in White," circa 1561. (Norton Simon Museum)
Knight also reviews Cameron Rowlandâs âD37â at the Museum of Contemporary Art. The exhibition of seemingly unrelated objects might seem âvisually chilly.â But the objects â a baby stroller, used bicycles, a leaf blower and a grandfather clock â come together to tell the story about the legacies of slavery in the United States. âItâs the first solo exhibition in an American museum for the 30-year-old artist,â writes Knight. âExpect it not to be the last.â [Los Angeles Times](
ON DANCE
American Ballet Theatre has never had two African American performers dancing lead roles opposite each other. That changed this week when Misty Copeland and Calvin Royal III appeared in âHarlequinadeâ at Segerstrom Hall. âI see it as such a huge step forward in terms of visibility,â Royal tells Times contributor Laura Bleiberg. [Los Angeles Times](
Misty Copeland, left, in L.A. last fall, and Calvin Royal III performing "Dream Within a Dream (Deferred)." (Kent Nishimura / Los Angeles Times; Marty Sohl / American Ballet Theatre)
Plus, Benjamin Millepiedâs L.A. Dance Project presented its first project in its new home on East Washington Boulevard. âThereâs no backstage, no curtain, no wings, nor much theatrical lighting,â writes Bleiberg. âMillepied treats the deficits as advantages.â [Los Angeles Times](
I’LL HAVE FRIES WITH THAT
The now-famous pic of Donald Trump standing before a feast of fast food for the Clemson Tigers? The Timesâ Jessica Roy deconstructs it. [Los Angeles Times](
Donald Trump's fast food bounty for the Clemson football team. (Shealah Craighead / White House)
READY FOR THE WEEKEND
As always, Matt Cooper has the week ahead in [art]( [music]( [dance]( and [theater]( and heâs got his best [weekend picks]( including an opera that re-imagines a terror tale by Edgar Allan Poe.
F. Kathleen Foley has the 99-Seat Beat, including âHir,â written by Taylor Mac, which is âtrip down the rabbit hole.â [Los Angeles Times](
Plus, Iâve got recommendations of my own in my weekly Datebook, including an experimental dance performance by Sebastian Hernandez. [Los Angeles Times](
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IN OTHER NEWS…
â Second Lady Karen Pence has returned to teaching art at a controversial school in Virginia that bans gay students. [Washington Post](
â Ballet dancer Sergei Polunin has been embroiled in controversy after posting homophobic comments on social media. [New York Times](
â The Craft & Folk Art Museum is changing its name to the Craft Contemporary. [Los Angeles Times](
â The Museum of Contemporary Art will close its Pacific Design Center location next month. [Los Angeles Times](
â And the Main Museum in downtown L.A. is closing. [Los Angeles Downtown News](
â Patti Smithâs photos from Frida Kahlo and Diego Riveraâs house. [New Yorker](
â A good prequel: Mexican photographer Graciela Iturbideâs photos from Kahloâs Casa Azul. [gracielaiturbide.org](
â The Simpsons took a trip to Prada Marfa. [Hyperallergic](
AND LAST BUT NOT LEAST…
The Bee Gees as cumbia-lite. [YouTube](
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