Hudson Yards provides the ideal backdrop for "Succession's" callow self-interest. Plus, bidding Sondheim adieu and "The Band's Visit" lands in L.A.
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[Click to view images]Siblings Kendall (Jeremy Strong), left, Shiv (Sarah Snook) and Roman (Kieran Culkin) scheme against one another in HBOâs âSuccession.â (Macall B. Polay / HBO) Is it 2022 yet? Asking for a friend. Iâm Carolina A. Miranda, arts and urban design columnist at the Los Angeles Times and Iâm in a fog. In addition to the usual psychological malaise triggered by capitalism and the pandemic, L.A. is [rilly rilly foggy]( this week. But weâre all-weather here at Essential Arts, so, without further ado, hereâs everything doing in the culture this week: This great stage of fools When the latest episode of HBOâs âSuccessionâ debuted Sunday, it began with a song: Kendall Roy, the wannabe media scion (played by Jeremy Strong), sings Billy Joelâs âHonestyâ while rehearsing for his bro-tastic 40th birthday party inside the Shed, a performance and arts space designed by Diller Scofidio + Renfro and located in Manhattanâs Hudson Yards development. It is a birthday rife with over-the-top absurdity. Guests entered via a hallway designed to resemble an abstracted vaginal canal, after which they are âbirthedâ into the party. An oversized treehouse structure serves as a VIP section guarded by bruisers. A fake forest is studded with actors who deliver compliments to guests. One lounge is wallpapered with wall-sized video panels of flames that make the place feel not like a warm, toasty nook, but a roasting hellscape. [The siblings of "Succession" walk through a tunnel wrapped in pink lights.]
Two of the Roy siblings emerge from a tunnel designed to evoke a birth canal inside of the Shed in a recent episode of HBOâs âSuccession.â (Macall B. Polay / HBO) The party is lavish, but it leaves Kendall, who is in conflict with his siblings and his powerful father, empty inside â as empty, if not emptier, than when it began. At the end of the night, he and his girlfriend, Tabitha (played by Caitlin FitzGerald) retreat to his apartment in one of the gleaming towers that surround Hudson Yards. Standing on the deck, Kendall looks down at the plaza below, where he gazes into the void of the Vessel, architect Thomas Heatherwickâs $200-million staircase sculpture â which resembles not so much a vessel than a beautifully up-lit wastebasket. âI think the partyâs over, yeah?â Kendall says to Tabitha. It couldnât be a more on-point. [The Vessel has been closed]( since July, when a 14-year-old boy leapt to his death from the structure, the fourth such suicide in a year and a half. [The facade of the Shed and the basket form of the Vessel are seen against a series of luxury towers]
New Yorkâs Hudson Yards development, with views of the Shed, designed by Diller Scofidio + Renfro, at left, and Thomas Heatherwickâs âVessel,â right, make an appearance in HBOâs âSuccession.â (Carolina A. Miranda / Los Angeles Times) Interestingly, after âSuccessionâ aired Sunday, Twitter seemed less focused on the plotline of Kendallâs ludicrous party than on the fact that his character lives in Hudson Yards. âOf all the emotional exhaustion in last nightâs Succession, the saddest part was knowing Kendall lives in Hudson Yards,â tweeted writer and podcaster B.A. Parker ([@parkusfarce](. âEvery choice he makes for himself is a mistake.â âit only makes sense that kendall lives and parties at hudson yards, manhattanâs most prominent hellmouth,â [wrote a Twitter user]( named @small_jawn. Alex Reid, a TV writer who tweets under the handle @botany500, [astutely observed]( âKendallâs apartment is the best casting in Succession. Heâs lost his soul and any real human connection with anyone around him, spiraling in a pitiless void of superficiality and obscene wealth. So what better place for him to live than Hudson Yards?â The [official website]( for Hudson Yards describes the $25 billion development as a ânew neighborhood [that] has not only changed the way New York looks to the world, but the way the world sees New York.â That may not be entirely untrue. But it hasnât changed the ways the world sees New York in the ways the developer likely intended. New York has frequently served as a cinematic backdrop that conveyed a richness and texture of experience â for both good and ill. Hudson Yards has instead emerged as symbol of shallow hypercapitalism. And Hudson Yards is on film what it is in real life â an assemblage of luxury shops, luxury apartments and luxury office towers buried under acres of glass, in a design so forgettable itâs a struggle to recall its profile in the Manhattan skyline without hitting Google for an image search. Guardian critic Oliver Wainwright described the design as feeling âcheap,â in [his review]( of the development shortly after it opened in 2019. That same year, Bloomberg CityLab reporter Kriston Capps revealed that the whole mega-project had been financed, in part, through a program [intended to support unemployment in distressed urban areas](. To summarize: A luxury development that is actually a simulacrum of luxury was built with investment money intended to support investment in poor neighborhoods. It makes Hudson Yards the perfect setting for the fictional Roy family, who show little interest for anything that doesnât involve hasty, ill-timed power grabs. Itâs not the first time the architecture of the place â and Heatherwickâs abominable Vessel â have been cast in this role. In âThe Flight Attendant,â HBOâs murder caper from last year, Cassie, the showâs titular flight attendant, sneaks into an apartment in a Hudson Yards tower in an attempt to solve the mysterious killing of a wealthy businessman, a death for which she has been framed. As she attempts to talk her way into the building, the personable Cassie (played by Kaley Cuoco) casually tells the buildingâs doorman that they wonât be long. âI do not want to be staring at that monstrosity any more than we need to,â she says as she waves her hand at Heatherwickâs Vessel. It is monstrous, indeed. And it couldnât be a better symbol for Hudson Yards, where the living and breathing city is sacrificed in favor of a thin patina of high gloss. And because too much âSuccessionâ is never enough: Alison Herman, who writes about culture and television for the Ringer, has [a smartly observed essay]( about the ways in which âSuccessionâ depicts wealth. She notes that Hudson Yards serves as the ideal backdrop to a global elite who have little in the way of connection, sentimental or otherwise, to place. âMany of the criticisms leveled at Hudson Yards could also apply to the Roys themselves and the rarefied lives they lead,â she writes. âTheir environs arenât gilded or garish, but they are soulless, so devoid of texture and mess as to seem slightly inhuman.â The soulless architecture, unfortunately, seems to have penetrated the makeup of the characters and the showâs narrative arcs. Times theater critic Charles McNulty reports that a program that once evoked the Shakespearean â intergenerational scheming and an angry patriarch in failing health â is [now leaning more into cynicism]( Ã la David Mamet, leaving the Roy children to circle one another in a continuous vortex of backstabbing. This has marked âa drop-off in emotional substance,â writes McNulty. âWhat is left to sustain our interest in a Lear who lacks poetic majesty and four selfish scions without a speck of the principled goodness Shakespeare highlights in Cordelia?â [Brian Cox, as Logan Roy, sits in a lounge looking pensive.]
Brian Cox as media mogul Logan Roy in âSuccession,â a patriarch whose health may be failing but isnât about to loosen his grip on his empire. (David M. Russell/HBO) ADVERTISEMENT BY The Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens
[The Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens](
Kehinde Wiley: A Portrait of a Young Gentleman A newly commissioned painting by renowned American artist Kehinde Wiley, A Portrait of a Young Gentleman, debuts in the historic Thornton Portrait Gallery at The Huntington, across from Thomas Gainsboroughâs iconic painting The Blue Boy (ca. 1770). [Buy Tickets]( End of advertisement On and off the stage The Tony-winning musical âThe Bandâs Visitâ has landed at the Dolby Theatre. The show, about a group of Egyptian musicians stranded in an Israeli town, is based on a 2007 movie of the same title. Charles McNulty says [itâs worth checking out.]( âComposer and lyricist David Yazbek infuses Itamar Mosesâ book with lyrical poetry,â he writes. âDiscreetly flecked rather than dolloped, music provides a vehicle of shared expression for grief, longing and hope â a universal language that recognizes no borders.â [ Janet Dacal and Sasson Gabay are seen sitting around a table on stage]
âThe Bandâs Visitâ is a musical that relies on âquiet clarity,â writes Charles McNulty. Seen here: Janet Dacal and Sasson Gabay in a scene from the show. (Evan Zimmerman) Playwright Dominique Morisseau withdrew her play âParadise Blueâ from the Geffen Playhouse after an unspecified incident involving a member of the production that [she says the theater was slow to respond to](. âThere were Black women, some of them young, in and out of this process, whose eyes were on me, and they were watching the Geffen, and they were feeling small and powerless,â Morisseau told The Timesâ Jessica Gelt. âAnd thatâs when I stepped in.â In a social media post, the Geffen apologized: âAn incident between members of the production was brought to our attention and we did not respond decisively in addressing it.â Enjoying this newsletter? Consider subscribing to the Los Angeles Times Your support helps us deliver the news that matters most. [Become a subscriber.]( The multiplayer online game âLeague of Legendsâ has inspired an animated series on Netflix called âArcane.â Now the series has inspired a work of immersive theater, âArcane: Enter the Undercity,â which is being staged at an L.A. warehouse. Our game critic Todd Martens checked it out, and while he was there, [got propositioned and asked to show off his boxing ability](. âItâs participatory entertainment, building upon a mix of theme parks, escape rooms and immersive theater,â he writes of the show, âand it succeeds in that it downplays reenactments from the series in favor of communal moments.â Speaking of escape rooms, [theyâre back](. Remembering Sondheim Over the Thanksgiving holiday, Stephen Sondheim, the award-winning composer and lyricist behind shows such as âFolliesâ and âSweeney Todd,â who brought a greater complexity to stories told in the musical form, died at the age of 91. Over the course of his career, he won a rack of Tony Awards, as well as a Pulitzer Prize â the latter for âSunday in the Park With George,â a collaboration with librettist James Lapine inspired by painter Georges Seuratâs most famous painting. Of his work, Gary Gardner, the former chair of UCLAâs musical theater program, once said: âWith [Oscar] Hammerstein, you felt wonderful when you left the theater. But with Sondheim, you realized the angst of living in the late 20th century.â Read the full Times obit [here](. [Stephen Sondheim poses a framed certificate in the Gothic architecture of London's Guildhall ]
Stephen Sondheim upon being granted the Freedom of the City of London award at a ceremony at the Guildhall in London in 2018. (Kirsty Wigglesworth / Associated Press) The magnitude of Sondheimâs death, writes McNulty, [feels seismic](. âSondheim deserves a spot on playwritingâs Mt. Rushmore,â he writes, âfor his contribution to the theater is as significant from a literary as it is from a musical standpoint. In truth, you canât separate the words from the notes in his scores any more than you can pry apart form from content in his shows.â Performer Josh Groban spoke with Times pop music critic Mikael Wood about [why he has been such a lifelong fan]( of Sondheimâs work. âSteveâs work stimulated the intellect; it challenged you to think deeper about yourself and about the world,â says Groban. âAt the same time, he could take your breath away with his music.â Rachel Syme at the New Yorker writes about how Sondheim knew [how to channel the grit of a woman whoâs lived]( â a.k.a. the brassy dame. As she writes, âHe never felt that women became obsolete in the theatre â not if you write them the songs.â Times contributor Barbara Isenberg chats [with five Sondheim collaborators]( to discuss what made his legacy so significant. âI always viewed Sondheim as a poet, even more than a lyricist or composer,â says choreographer and director Susan Stroman. âHe was unmatched in his formation of phrase and rhyme, and he gathered words to make people think.â ADVERTISEMENT
Visual arts Deborah Vankin has been hanging with Fabrizio Moretti, the drummer of the Strokes â who, it turns out, [is also a sculptor](. His latest work is currently on view at Sothebyâs in Beverly Hills: a sculptural installation that contains within it a work by Anish Kapoor. Vankin reports that âit looks like a glowing spaceship thatâs crash-landed inside Sothebyâs clinically white gallery.â Moretti describes it as âa melted cube.â Plus, Vankin also reports that Compound, a relatively new arts space in Long Beach, [has been rattled by layoffs](. Artist Judy Baca is primarily known as a muralist and the artist who led the creation of âThe Great Wall of Los Angelesâ in the 1970s. A retrospective at the Museum of Latin American Art adds more dimension to her career. As part of a wide-ranging discussion, [we talked about some of her lesser-known works]( such as conceptual piece for a show at the Womanâs Building in 1976 for which she dressed up as a pachuca. âBack then, nobody cared about that show,â she told me. âNobody wrote about it. Nobody spoke about it. It was like it never occurred. But it has started to get more attention recently.â [Judy Baca stands in front of two images â one of a young member of a clica and the other of Baca dressed up as a pachuca]
Judy Baca poses before a set of images she created in the 1970s. Her show at MOLAA covers her murals, but also sculpture, conceptual pieces and monuments. (Gary Coronado/Los Angeles Times)
Essential happenings Matt Cooper has [all the museum exhibitions]( to see in L.A. and O.C. in December, including prop jewels from Disney films at the Bowers Museum and a show that mixes pre-Columbian artifacts and colonial painting with contemporary art at LACMA. And since this season weâll actually be able to enjoy some holiday action outside of the house, Cooper also rounds up [the best holiday entertainment]( in SoCal. Need some Nutcracker, Scrooge or Grinch? Weâve got you covered. [A scene from Westside Balletâs âThe Nutcracker.â]
A scene from Westside Balletâs staging of âThe Nutcracker.â (Todd Lechtick / Westside Ballet)
Passages Lawrence Weiner, a pioneering conceptual artist known for installations made of boldly designed words and phrases, has [died at 79](. If you have driven along Santa Monica Boulevard, [you may have seen a work of his]( that for years appeared on the second story level of Regen Projects that read: âABOVE BELOW THE HAZE.â It was recently replaced by another phrase by the artist: âWHATEVER WAS SOMEWHERE ELSE BEFORE.â Bernard Judge, an architect who built a geodesic dome house in the Hollywood Hills, helped preserve the Schindler House and designed dwellings for Marlon Brando in the South Pacific, [has died at 90](. Fashion designer Virgil Abloh, who infused the world of high fashion with casual ethos of streetwear, is [dead at 41](. In [an assessment]( of his legacy, New York Times fashion writer Guy Trebay described Abloh as âprismatic, a designer capable of capturing the varied colors and lights of an evolving culture, refracting and then beaming them out to a waiting world.â In other news â L.A. artist Andrea Bowers is the subject of a career survey at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago (it will travel to the Hammer Museum next year). The New York Timesâ Siddhartha Mitter profiles the artist he describes as [âAmericaâs most important political artist.â](
â LACMA curator Christine Y. Kim is leaving the museum to [join Britainâs Tate](.
â The Hammer Museum has [a new restaurant]( and it is being led by David Tanis, an alum of Alice Watersâ Chez Panisse. L.A. museums appear to be impervious to my lobbying for a churro cart. (Itâs on you, Lucas Museum of Narrative Art.)
â Rob Walker on COVIDâs [design legacy](.
â [A fascinating look]( at what recent digs and shifts in archaeological practice are revealing about Pompeii.
â Jill Lepore has a great piece about the preservation of [African American burial grounds in the U.S](. It describes what sounds like a really compelling installation by artist Karyn Olivier that will mark a razed burial ground in Philadelphia.
â Josephine Baker will be honored in one of Franceâs most important sanctums: [the Panthéon](.
â [An analysis]( of the state of contemporary Peruvian literature by Camila Osorio in El PaÃs. This story is a good reason to learn Spanish. And last but not least ... Iâm here for [industrial Instagram](. ADVERTISEMENT
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