The week's essential arts news in coronavirus times, including video streams of performances, hard times ahead for arts labor and tips for hanging at home.
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[Los Angeles Times]
Essential Arts
March 21, 2020
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Greetings, my fellow quarantinis. I hope you have found good shelter and strong [toilet paper supply lines](. Iâm Carolina A. Miranda, staff writer at the Los Angeles Times, with the weekâs essential culture and coronavirus news:
The shutdowns
California has battened down the hatches. The 21 California museums The Times was tracking [have all shut down](. Performing arts venues [are closed](. And the virus has also [shuttered hundreds of other events](.
New Yorkâs Metropolitan Opera announced it would [cancel the rest of its season](. The Timesâ Jessica Gelt reports that while productions at the L.A. Opera are on hold, the season has not been canceled. âWe are acutely aware of and sensitive to the financial impact both to the institution at large and our hundreds of artists, artisans and staff members,â said L.A. Opera chief executive Christopher Koelsch.
[The Dorothy Chandler pavilion, home of L.A. Opera]
L.A. Operaâs programming, generally held at the Dorothy Chandler pavilion, is on hold until future notice. (Robert Millard / Los Angeles Opera)
âHamiltonâ at the Pantages has [canceled shows through April 19](. The hit musical didnât even have a chance to open before getting shut down by the virus â hours before the production was set to begin.
In New York, Martin McDonaghâs comedy âHangmenâ has [canceled its Broadway run]( making it the first Broadway production to shut down permanently because of coronavirus.
The Timesâ Deborah Vankin surveyed 11 L.A. arts institutions to find out whatâs happening with [the folks who will be hardest hit by the shutdowns]( the box-office attendants, visitor services associates and other part-time and hourly employees. All but one have said they will pay scheduled shifts through the end of March.
ARTnews reports that two weeks ago, a Bonhams employee in L.A. went to work with flu-like symptoms. On Tuesday afternoon, [an auction proceeded anyway](.
The Actorsâ Equity Assn. has launched a letter-writing campaign to urge that U.S. representatives [take emergency action]( for those working in the theater industry, while the American Alliance of Museums [has asked Congress]( to allot $4 billion for nonprofit museums. And Philip Kennicott has a really good report on how this may [affect museums in the long run]( â and how a version of a pandemic scenario was actually tested by museum leaders in 2008.
Architecture critic Michael Kimmelman looks at what coronavirus means for [our urban fabric](.
There are some rays of relief: a network of New York philanthropists have come together to form a $75-million fund for New York City arts and social services organizations [impacted by the crisis](. And the Kinkade Family Foundation has [a new emergency grant for curators]( experiencing âunexpected emergenciesâ related to COVID-19.
Plus, The Timesâ listings coordinator Matt Cooper writes about what itâs like to try write up calendar listings [when everything is closed](. âLast Wednesday morning, the cancellations began as a trickle,â he writes. âThursday came the flood.â
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Culture goes online
The self quarantines that began even before Gov. Newsom issued [a stay-at-home order for California]( on Thursday has left culture battered, but not down.
The cast and crew of the acclaimed opera âSweet Landâ from Yuval Sharonâs company the Industry [got together for one final performance]( â before empty seats and a trio of video cameras. I sat in on this particularly melancholic show, which the Industry aims to put online next week as an [on-demand video]( (partly to fill the budget gap that the cancellations have left in their budget).
[Some of team behind âSweet Landâ: Elizabeth Cline, Cannupa Hanska Luger and Marc Lowenstein.]
Practicing social distancing on the set of âSweet Landâ are, from left: Industry executive director Elizabeth Cline; opera co-director Cannupa Hanska Luger and Industry musical director Marc Lowenstein. (Carolina A. Miranda / Los Angeles Times)
Classical music critic Mark Swed selects [the best classical concerts to stream]( for the coronavirus-rattled soul, featuring Messiaenâs âspiritually effusiveâ âTrois Petites Liturgies de la Présence Divineâ and Jaromir Weinbergerâs operetta âSpring Storms.â âIt wonât be easy to resist checking your phone while listening or not to have a pit in your stomach knowing that what youâre hearing was then, and this is now,â writes Swed. âBut there are compelling reasons to try.â
Swed also watches the [first streamed concert]( by El Sistema, the internationally influential music education program founded in Venezuela, where the coronavirus has also hit. Swed notes that while the program that produced L.A. Phil music director Gustavo Dudamel, now celebrating its 45th anniversary, has been used as a political propaganda tool since Nicolás Maduroâs troubling regime came to power, the performance of Mahlerâs Second Symphony by the Simón BolÃvar Symphony Orchestra shows the institutionâs staying power.
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Andrew Lloyd Weber took to the keys â [and Twitter]( â to play âAll I Ask of Youâ from âThe Phantom of the Opera.â âOf all the semi-impromptu performances that have erupted on the internet since COVID-19 locked us inside our homes,â writes theater critic Charles McNulty, âLloyd Webberâs offering is the one that brought me closest to tears.â
Contributor Tom Jacobs rounds up [the best theater streaming experiences]( including âRed,â which stars Alfred Molina as the painter Mark Rothko, and âThom Paine (Based on Nothing),â an absurdist drama featuring Rainn Wilson. The âangst and dislocationâ of the latter,â writes Jacobs, âshould feel very familiar about now.â
Numerous playwrights are [leading virtual classes online](. âWe have the technology to do these things,â playwright Young Jean Lee tells The Timesâ Ashley Lee. âWe will adapt; we will figure out how to keep going.â
Dance Magazine has a list of performances [that have gone online](. Do not miss [this fantastic socially distant performance]( by Alvin Aileyâs American Dance Theater.
Jessica Gelt looks at [six great online visual art experiences]( on Google Arts & Culture, which features thousands of high-resolution images from more than 1,200 museums globally â which you can examine down to the brushstroke. Among her recommends: the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam, the Uffizi in Florence and the Museo Frida Kahlo in Mexico City.
And Times reporter Daniel Hernandez writes that the North Hollywood gay nightspot Club Cobra is livestreaming drag and go-go shows [to raise money]( its performers who are unable to dance and lip-sync before live audiences during the coronavirus shutdown.
[Two people look at a door to Italyâs Uffizi, where a sign announcing its closure is posted.]
The Uffizi has been closed due to the coronavirus quarantine in Italy, but its works can still be viewed on the internet. (Claudio Giovannini / EPA-EFE)
Need more? The Times has a comprehensive guide to [entertainment for the quarantine]( for a special issue of Sunday Calendar, with essays by some of our critics for ways to stay connected even as we are separated at home.
As always, you can find all the latest coronavirus news at [latimes.com/coronavirus](.
What the critics are up to
With everything closed, they are all finding myriad ways to stay entertained.
Art critic Christopher Knight is reorganizing his library â and [stumbling into artful moments](. Like the catalog for a show of works by the Italian painter Giorgio de Chirico held at the Museum of Modern Art [in 1982](. Unearthing the catalog took Knight to the past and brought him back to the present, since Giorgio de Chiricoâs âanxiety-ridden visions of vacant Italian cityscapesâ feel very of-the-moment.
[Christopher Knight thumbs through MoMAâs de Chirico catalog.]
Ninety-six paintings are reproduced in the Museum of Modern Artâs 1982 exhibition catalog for Italian Metaphysical painter Giorgio de Chirico. (Christopher Knight / Los Angeles Times)
Columnist Mary McNamara [tallies up all the ways]( in which she will make do. It involves books, sketch pads and classical choral music. âObviously, television and streaming services will play a big part in sanity maintenance during this period of self-isolation,â she writes. As well as lots of soy sauce ramen.
And Times theater critic Charles McNulty, who frequently likes to use his free time to re-read Shakespeare or brush up on other languages, says he is ready to use the time to [âdo nothing.â](
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Everything non-corona
Anthony Parthnerâs Schreiber S91 Prestige bassoon isnât worth a lot of money, but the musical director of the San Bernardino Symphony would nonetheless like it back from whoever stole it out of his car, reports Tim Greiving. As far as bassoons go, itâs cheap â Parthner describes it like, âshowing up to the Tour de France with a tricycle.â But it was âa very special tricycle,â [given to him by his late mother](.
Broadway is shut down but you can catch a tribute to one of its most iconic shows on the CWâs musical dramedy âKaty Keene,â a spin-off of âRiverdale.â Jonny Beachampâs character, Jorge, does bits of âKiss of the Spider Womanâ as his drag alter ego, Ginger. âAnecdotally, Iâve heard that many more high schools put on âCarrieâ and âHeathersâ after our âRiverdaleâ episodes aired,â says showrunner Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa. âIâll be curious to see if thereâs a jump in âKiss of the Spider Womanâ after this.â
[A scene from âKaty Keeneâ inspired by âKiss of the Spider Woman.â]
Actor Jonny Beauchamp stages a drag scene inspired by âKiss of the Spider Womanâ in âKaty Keen.â (K.C. Bailey / The CW)
Seth Rogen gets stoned. Watches the movie âCats.â And live Tweets. This is [all the entertainment I need](.
Passages
Merry Norris, the well-dressed powerhouse in a petite frame (she was 5 feet 2), who helped shape the landscape of Los Angeles as a founder of MOCA and in her role as president of the Cultural Affairs Commission in the 1980s, [has died at the age of 80](. âWe build this city building by building,â she told The Times in 1988 of her efforts to upgrade civic design. âEach building is important ... to our thrust to improve the quality of life.â
[Merry Norris]
Merry Norris attends a preview at MOCA in 2011. She helped fund-raise the museumâs initial endowment. (Stefanie Keenan / WireImage)
Genesis Breyer P-Orridge, a pioneering industrial musician who founded Throbbing Gristle, and noted conceptual and performance artist who made art of their body through plastic surgery, has [died at the age of 70](. âItâs just raw material,â P-Orridge told The Timesâ Randall Roberts [in October]( of the body. âItâs not sacred.â
Vittorio Gregotti, an Italian modernist known for his monumental projects, such as Barcelonaâs Olympic Stadium, has [died at the age of 92]( in Milan. Gregotti had been infected with the coronavirus. His designs, writes Daniel E. Slotnick, âtypically conveyed a sense of grandeur but nevertheless complemented rather than eclipsed their often antique surroundings.â
In the news
â The L.A. Philâs former associate conductor Mirga Grazinyte-Tyla [tests positive for the coronavirus](.
â Despite the pandemonium, South Coast Repertory moved ahead with its [2020-21 season announcement]( which includes a musical adaptation of âPrelude to a Kiss.â
â In Asia, cultural organizations are [beginning to reopen]( after coronavirus quarantines â albeit cautiously.
â A first look at Steven Spielbergâs [âWest Side Story.â](
â 35 African American artists on [the work that inspires them](.
â After some back and forth between the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation and the architecture school that operates in his name at Taliesin West, it looks like the school will indeed [be shutting down](.
â "...naivete, privilege and all-around crank thinking...â Architecture critic Inga Saffronâs review of the Rem Koolhaas-curated show at the Guggenheim is [the best thing Iâve read all week](.
â An incredible story of sleuthing: [This episode]( of Reply All is a great listen. (And in no way involves the coronavirus.)
And last but not least ...
Art historical techniques for [not touching your face](.
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