Next steps for Notre Dame, West Coast opera talent in Europe and Adam Driver on Broadway.
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Arts & Culture
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Notre Dame burns, plus issues of race on stage. Iâm Carolina A. Miranda, staff writer at the Los Angeles Times, with your [unredacted]( report on everything essential in art (and narco novelas):
Notre Dame in flames
The world watched in horror this week as Notre Dame, the 11th century Gothic cathedral that is one of the most important cultural symbols of France, [burned](. While the roof may be lost, [the structure was spared]( â though it remains âvulnerable.â Investigators are saying the fire may have been sparked by an [electrical short](.
Notre Dame in 1937, during reconstruction to repair damage from German shelling during World War I. (AFP/Getty Images)
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Times reporters Emily Baumgaertner and Deborah Vankin have a thorough report on the crucial next steps in conservation. "The whole world is watching,â says Marc Walton, director of the Center for Scientific Studies in the Arts at Northwestern University. â[It has to be built for the next 1,000 years.â](
Times art critic Christopher Knight considers Notre Dameâs historic and cultural legacies and its place among Franceâs great cathedrals: âArchitecturally not the most profoundly beautiful nor commanding, it was nonetheless [destined to be the greater symbol](
Chicago Tribune architecture critic Blair Kamin writes that â[the cathedral has come to represent French survival]( having outlasted the Hundred Yearsâ War, the French Revolution and two world wars.â
Smoke and flame rise from Notre Dame as seen from high above on April 15. (Maxime Brunet / AFP Photo/Elastiqueprod)
Lauren Collins was on the roof of the building just last month to see how an ongoing renovation was coming along. â[I was amazed at how fragile everything was]( and how intimate its upkeep,â she writes in the New Yorker. âThe cathedral was the work of people, not machines.â
MIT associate professor Michael Scott Cuthbert reports on Notre Dameâs [incredible musical history](.
Sort of related: a 5th century church considered an architectural forebear of Notre Dame still stands in Syria â [albeit in ruins](.
And as [donation pledges pile up]( for Notre Dameâs rebuilding, many ask what about [money for the poor]( or remembering the recent [destruction of non-European cultural treasures]( such as the National Museum of Brazil or the ancient city of Palmyra.
One positive result: The Notre Dame fire helped inspire [a rebuilding effort]( for three black churches in Louisiana lost to arson. As of this writing, more than $2.1 million has been raised for the churches on [a GoFundMe page](.
The architectural forerunner to Notre Dame is a 5th century basilica in Qalb Lozeh, Syria. (Omar Haj Kadour / AFP/Getty Images)
West Coast represent
Times classical music critic Mark Swed found all kinds of adventurous opera in Europe with West Coast connections â director Yuval Sharonâs âThe Magic Flute,â âThe Outcast,â with a libretto by L.A. novelist Barry Gifford. But good luck seeing these works in the U.S. âNight after night [I attended operas that were in one way or another West Coast-centric]( he writes. âMost have little chance of crossing the pond.â He writes about the reasons why.
A performance of Mark Grey's "Frankenstein" at La Monnaie in Brussels. (B. Ulig / La Monnaie)
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Classical notes
Back in L.A., Mark Swed attended a birthday tribute to the late choreographer Merce Cunningham, âNight of 100 Solos: A Centennial Eventâ at Royce Hall and wrote: âI cannot find a metaphor for what it is like to witness what this was â a great life lived in dance being re-created without any sense of it being re-created, but [actually being lived](
Thomas House, from left, Vanessa Knouse, Joshua Guillemot-Rodgerson and Barry Brannum in "Night of 100 Solos." (Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times)
Swed also saw Esa-Pekka Salonen conduct âa climacticâ version of Stravinksyâs âRite of Springâ at Disney Hall that left the âaudience applauding [for nearly half an hour](
The show was part of a concert series devoted to Stravinksy. On Thursday, this included the score for the ballet âOrpheusâ and a performance of âPersèphone,â with dance, song and spoken drama, directed by Peter Sellars â [âthe best of many worlds.â](
Driver’s seat
Actor Adam Driver landed on Broadway this week as the hot-headed Pale in âBurn This,â opposite Keri Russell. âWhat I initially loved about the play was the theme of loss,â [says Driver in a Q&A](. âThis was written in the 1980s and it was Lanford Wilsonâs AIDS play.â
The multifaceted Adam Driver is back on Broadway with "Burn This." (Al Seib / Los Angeles Times)
A three-decade collaboration
For nearly 30 years, director Oskar Eustis and Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Suzan-Lori Parks have collaborated in some form. Theyâve teamed up again on Parksâ âWhite Noiseâ at New Yorkâs Public Theater, which explores questions of race. âThe characters are like friends of mine,â Parks tells Times contributor Richard Stayton. âYouâd never think that behind this love they have for each other, thereâs this whole other thing. [Racism is a virus and we all have it.](
Playwright Suzan-Lori Parks and director Oskar Eustis at rehearsal for "White Noise." (Joan Marcus)
Plays about our moment
This is a good segue to Eleanor Burgessâ âThe Niceties,â a âpotent debate dramaâ at the Geffen Playhouse centered on an argument between a professor and her student that explores divergent views on progressive politics. Times theater critic Charles McNulty, says it âaccurately describes a rupture that is happening not only in academia but also in politics, as [establishment figures face off against a new generation of leaders](
Lisa Banes, left, and Jordan Boatman in "The Niceties." (T. Charles Erickson)
McNulty also reviews âTiny Beautiful Thingsâ at the Pasadena Playhouse, adapted by Nia Vardalos from Cheryl Strayedâs collection of âDear Sugarâ columns. It is, he writes, âa show of deep feeling and [satisfying simplicity](
On the stage
The Timesâ Daryl H. Miller reports on [a âpolishedâ version]( of the stage musical âSinginâ in the Rainâ at the La Mirada Theatre for the Performing Arts.
Miller also writes about âFalsettosâ at the Ahmanson Theatre, about a man who leaves his wife and son for a male lover. Its lack of connecting dialogue and âfreneticâ melodies âcan be a challenge,â but when these ârelax into lyricismâ the music and words âreach deep inside and [trigger all sorts of emotions](
Max von Essen, left, and Nick Adams in "Falsettos." (Dania Maxwell / Los Angeles Times)
In the galleries
Times contributing reviewer David Pagel caught [a âgratifyingâ show]( of sculpture and painting by Julia Haft-Candell and Suzan Frecon at Parrasch Heijnen Gallery, and says Oli Eppâs U.S. solo debut at Richard Heller Gallery â[raises big questions]( about art, life and technology.â
Of Christina Quarlesâ painting exhibition at Regen Projects, he finds â[a sustained meditation]( on the complex ways our private desires and public identities interact with each other to shape our understanding of who we are.â
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Detail of “Peer Amid (Peered Amidst),” 2019, by Christina Quarles. (Evan Bedford / Christina Quarles and Regen Projects)
‘Narcos’ vs. narco novelas
When Iâm not poring over art monographs, I am watching an unhealthy number of Latin American TV dramas about drug trafficking. These are very different from U.S. shows, rendering an invisible narco state that inhales its victims voraciously, whether they intend to be inhaled or not. Itâs âthe woman who falls in love with the wrong man, the bystander who becomes an accidental witness and therefore must be killed, [the journalist who digs in the wrong place](
Carlos Mariño in "Pablo Escobar: El Patrón del Mal." (Caracol Television)
Ready for the weekend
Iâve got all the latest art happenings listed in my weekly Datebook, which include paintings by Mi Kafchin inspired by[the unreal and the conspiratorial](.
Philip Brandes has the 99-Seat Beat, which rounds up [whatâs doing in small theaters]( such as a gender scrambled take on âMacbethâ at Loft Ensemble.
Plus, Matt Cooper has the week ahead in [music]( [art]( [dance]( and [theater]( as well as [his weekend picks]( including dance by Ballet Preljocaj.
Ballet Preljocaj will perform “La Fresque (The Painting on the Wall)” at the Soraya. (Jean Claude Carbonne)
In other news …
â L.A. composer Ellen Reid has won the Pulitzer Prize [in music](. (Plus, The Times nabbed one â its 45th overall â for [investigative journalism](
â Yo-Yo Ma [stages a Bach concert]( at the U.S.-Mexico border.
â Laura Raicovich on museums being focused on [âperpetual growth.â](
â [âStill a little naughty.â]( Scenes from the U.S. Pole Dance Championship.
â New Yorkâs City Ballet has been ordered to [reinstate male dancers]( fired over explicit text messages.
â Cuban authorities have been arresting artists protesting Decree 349, a law that [criminalizes independent artistic activity](.
â Related: Artist Coco Fusco was recently denied entry into Cuba, presumably for her activism [against the decree]( while Tania Bruguera will not attend the 13th Havana Biennial in [protest of the crackdowns](.
â Plus, critic Christian Viveros-Fauné reports on [the âmilquetoastâ Havana Biennial](.
â L.A. artist Judy Baca is âheartbrokenâ over the [unannounced removal]( of one of her freeway murals.
â The Los Angeles Times has [a new book club]( hosted by veteran journalist [Donna Wares](.
And last but not least …
“I rolled up my flannel sleeves, exposing my prodigious forearms” and other scenes set in [poorly researched men’s fiction](.
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