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Eric Bogosian & Michael Dorf on City Winery’s Jan. 4 Church Street School for Music & Art benefit

Photo: Christian Jensen
Photo: Christian Jensen

The Church Street School for Music and Art — as located in Tribeca — is the area’s only non-profit school for the arts. The institution has served the downtown and outer community since 1990. On Jan. 4, City Winery will be hosting a fundraiser for the school with plenty of stars present. Performers are scheduled to include Sugarland vocalist Jennifer Nettles, Sonic Youth guitarist Lee Ranaldo, screenwriter/producer Ed Burns, actor Harvey Keitel, DJ Spooky’s Antartica Symphony, and actor/author Eric Bogosian.

Downtown had the pleasure of conducting Q&A with not only Eric Bogosian in advance of the event, but also City Winery owner Michael Dorf and its marketing director Jillian Santella. Other performers at City Winery include Teddy Thompson (Jan. 1), Buster Poindexter (Jan. 13), Alejandro Escovedo (Jan. 19-21), Bettye Lavette (Jan. 29), and Marc Cohn (Feb. 14-15). Michael will also be presenting his annual benefit at Carnegie Hall on Mar. 6; this year will be a tribute to Aretha Franklin including performances by Todd Rundgren, Taj Mahal, Living Colour, Allen Stone, Kenny Loggins and Melissa Etheridge.

For tickets to the benefit show, click here. The Music Of Aretha Franklin at Carnegie Hall has a home at www.musicof.org. Eric Bogosian can be followed on Twitter via @Eric_Bogosian.

You have written and starred in plays, produced plays, written multiple published novels, appeared in a lot of film and television projects, and have even produced dance-related events. Do you have an easy way of describing how you earn a living?

Eric Bogosian: I describe myself as an author and actor.

Is there a particular project of yours that you are most proud of?

EB: The website 100monologues.com — currently featuring over 60 videotaped monologues by New York’s best actors — is a huge project we’ve been working on for over three years. I’ve very proud of it. We will keep building the site through 2018 when all 100 monologues will have been posted. The site is free and like I say, features many of the most popular and exciting actors who live and work in New York City. Take a look!

Do you remember the first show you ever attended at City Winery?

EB: I have never been to a show at City Winery. Michael and I go back to The Knitting Factory days. Because I don’t drink alcohol, City Winery has been off my beaten path.

What will you be doing at the Church Street School benefit? Any idea yet?

EB: I will perform a couple of monologues from the 100 Monologues.

City Winery is known for hosting a lot of benefits. Do you have specific criteria for when it comes to getting involved with a cause?

Michael Dorf: No criteria, there are so many issues in the world today. It is balancing out how we can spend our resources helping out. We have a platform to both raise money and awareness — I feel it is our responsibility to try and make the world a better place.

A lot of huge artists have played at City Winery in New York. I remember reading about Billie Joe from Green Day performing on-stage there. Gregg Allman had his recent residency…Is there anyone you’re still hoping will perform at City Winery?

MD: So many. We have a long list. I want Bonnie Raitt. We did a private show with Neil Young, would want that every night if we could. [Bob] Dylan, Bruce [Springsteen], oh yeah, Ryan Adams, how amazing would that be. How about a special night of Rihanna?

Before City Winery, you had The Knitting Factory. Do you see City Winery as a continuation of The Knitting Factory? Or are they entirely different venues in your eyes?

MD: Well, people have said, City Winery is a Knitting Factory for grown-ups. Yeah, there is some overlap. We had all standing shows mostly with a beer in-hand…That worked great then. Now being more calorie-conscious and having achey knees, I’d rather sit. It will be 30 years since I started The Knitting Factory and I guess both have worked in the lifecycle of myself downtown, serving many friends.

City Winery has locations in multiple cities. How involved are you in other cities’ locations?

MD: I run them all. And of course, when I say run, it is a great team running currently 750 employees growing to 1,000 employees in a year — take that Trump, that’s real job creation! I picked the name “City” so we could grow to many markets. Our business is very scalable and I am planning on aggressive growth over the next few years to more than 10 locations.

What is your favorite item on the City Winery food menu?

MD: A great burger goes with Bordeaux. But somedays I’m more in the mood for a white wine, so I go for a piece of fish. Our menu was really designed to complement your wine, not wine to go with your food. We inverted the typical process of ordering.

Do you have a go-to wine from the City Winery menu?

MD: No. There are so many different styles and favors, so much terroir. I’m a Pinot fan if forced to go to a deserted island thing.

Church Street School benefit aside, what’s coming up for you?

EB: My non-fiction book on Armenian assassins, Operation Nemesis, will come out in trade paperback in February via Little, Brown. Also I am guest starring in numerous episodes of The Get Down and Billions this coming season.

Jillian Santella: As always, we have music almost every night of the week! Some musical highlights in early 2017 include Art Garfunkel, Shawn Colvin’s January residency featuring Graham Nash, Richard Thompson and Patty Griffin, Josh Ritter and more. We’ve got a fantastic New Year’s Eve Party in our Barrel Room, featuring entertainment from Wasabassco Burlesque, open bar and light bites. In addition, we are open in the Barrel Room restaurant for dinner and drinks every day, lunch on weekdays and Sunday brunch — including a bottomless brunch drink option. We also have some exciting wine classes coming up, such as “Wine 101: Brunch & Wine Pairing” on Sunday, Jan. 8.

Will you be hosting another March benefit concert at Carnegie Hall in 2017?

MD: Yes, March 6 is the music of Aretha Franklin. It will be my 14th year raising money for music education programs, there are nine different organizations this year getting funds.

When not busy with work, how do you like to spend your free time?

EB: Gardening, jigsaw puzzles and model airplanes. But I don’t think of my time as free or not free. It’s all one to me.

MD: I love giving interviews. I spend time with my family, kids. Two are now in college and one still in school downtown. She still likes me… I will admit that I like to golf when I can early mornings, hiking and being upstate when possible.

Do you have a favorite restaurant in New York?

EB: The Odeon.

Finally, any last words for the kids?

EB: I have lived in Tribeca for over 30 years. Our neighborhood was built on music, dance and art. It is our lifeblood. For me, children playing music is a symbol of peace and love between neighbors.

MD: Shit, does that mean I’m suppose to be an adult? I don’t feel like one. Nah. I think what Lisa [Ecklund-Flores] is doing at Church Street School is critical for the community. It is more than an after-school music program and also more than just serving a rich Tribeca community. In fact, I think being in Tribeca hurts the perception of them needing funding. They offer many scholarships and the teaching staff give much more time and effort than they are paid for. They are teaching kids to practice, giving them self-confidence, unleashing an inner creative streak that they might not have developed at home or regular school. They serve a very important role in our community, especially as more music programs get stripped away from public school budgets. Add to that the very challenging Tribeca real estate issues, which really don’t allow a non-profit — or many creative for-profits — to exist. Rent and getting enough space is a huge challenge for the arts, especially downtown. Right now, they are seriously-challenged and I hope this benefit helps them through part of it. I encourage all to come.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JE781dM7kzE

Categories
Living Real Estate

Artist & Activist Noël Jefferson On Tribeca, 9/11 and the new World Trade Center

Photo by Noël Jefferson
Photo by Noël Jefferson

It’s hard to run into someone downtown who doesn’t know Noël Jefferson. The artist, photographer, filmmaker and producer has been one of downtown’s strongest pillars even before Tribeca became “trendy.”

While working towards her Master’s Degree at Columbia Teacher’s College, she moved into the neighborhood “before gentrification began,” when vacant buildings were in high supply and the streets smelled of coffee spewing out from a vacant factory. Today, the Greenwich Hotel and LaConda Verde are grounded in that very spot, where she says she can still smell that same coffee.

“The desolate area had one dry cleaners, a corner store, and one restaurant, on Franklin Street, called The River Run whose owner went to Navarre, Spain to participate in the Pamplona, ‘Running of the Bulls,’” she says, adding that she attributes Tribeca’s rise to fame to Robert DeNiro residence, as well as that of John Kennedy and Harvey Keitel.

On Sept. 11, 2001, she heard what she describes as an unusual shriek that drew her to the window, where she spotted suited stockbrokers gawking, looking south. The neighborhood was usually quiet at that time, so she knew something serious had happened.

WTC Lower Manhattan Redevelopment site, 2008 / Photo by Noël Jefferson
WTC Lower Manhattan Redevelopment site, 2008 / Photo by Noël Jefferson

“I quickly got my camera and as many rolls of film my pockets would hold, got dressed, grabbed my keys and hurried out of my apartment and onto Greenwich Street. As I proceeded south, I saw what appeared to have been the tail of an airplane hanging from a window at One World Trade Center,” she said.

“As I approached the burning towers, I overheard someone say, “Terrorist Attack!” But I didn’t believe it. How could it be? Why? Who? These were the thoughts that flooded my mind as I tried to sort it all out.”

She recalls, in that moment, feeling sad for the pilot who “must have had a heart attack and accidentally flown into the Tower.” But after returning home to find out exactly what had happened by watching CNN’s coverage of the events as they transpired, she had all of the facts, and a decision to make: return to the site, or stay relatively safe at home.

She chose the former, compelled to capture it all on camera, and stayed at the site to assist the American Red Cross on site for days after.

“My neighbor, Dorothy Drayton, and I worked with the American Red Cross, whereby Dorothy established an on-site location for residents to file loss claims,” she says. “Dorothy and I assisted in the outreach effort to ensure seniors were taken care of, such as, ensuring sufficient food and water supplies, medicine refills and filing appropriate reports.”

Those photos she took 15 years ago have since been exhibited at Museum Of Modern Art, about a dozen galleries in SoHo, in a number of other U.S. states, and even in Europe. Twelve of them currently reside in the Permanent Collection in the Humanities Building of the 42nd Street Main Library

Over the course of the past fifteen years, she continued to photograph the World Trade Center site.

Photos by Noël Jefferson
Photos by Noël Jefferson

The Oculus’ pointed claws fascinated me and soon became my photographic study, as did the ‘bird’s skeleton.'”

In one of her new works, she merges the new Oculus’ interior with its exterior, as well as the Reflection Pool with WTC Tower 1 burning in the background. In her words, that piece is intended to “give life to those who died and strength to those neighbors to the attacks.”

“The vibrachrome photos printed on steel reflect the resolve of my neighbors and those beyond, and represent both strength and sensitivity,“ she explained. Jefferson added that the ones printed on Voile canvas move as viewers approach it, creating a certain languid effect.

Jefferson has done much more than move people with her art. She has served on several World Trade Center redevelopment and planning committees. She also began producing and hosting television interviews with locals, fellow Community Board 1 members politicians and concerned residents. 

“We Lower Manhattan residents also carry a heavy heart because we too suffered, more than many might know,” she said, “We lived in a battle zone for years, with holes in the ground, a stench in the air and dust everywhere! Many lost their homes, businesses and most of all our spirit was ripped apart.”

Still, she says, the strength of the community, of the survivors, and of those that the deceased left behind is strong as steel, which led to the ultimate revitalization and redevelopment of the new World Trace Center complex.

“As the anniversaries come and go, my feelings remain the same, but my determination to fight the enemies grows stronger,” she declared. “We must fight for freedom.”

Categories
Living

Interview: Harvey Keitel, New York’s Finest

Harvey_Keitel

HARVEY KEITEL IS ONE OF THE MOST RECOGNIZABLE FACES AROUND, BUT HIS BEST ATTRIBUTE IS HIS HEART BY MIKE HAMMER Photographs by Leslie Hassler Everybody thinks they know Harvey Keitel. He’s the quintessential tough guy; the third member of the wise guy cinema’s Holy Trinity with Martin Scorcese and Robert De Niro. He’s everybody’s favorite neighborhood gangster from Mean Streets. The bad-ass bank robber from Reservoir Dogs. Oh yeah… wasn’t he that scary cop from The Bad Lieutenant? But if that’s your impression of one of America’s greatest actors and nicest guys, you’re barely scratching the surface, buddy. “No one ever became a true artist by doing just one thing,” says the iconic New York personality whose work has extended far beyond the great Scorcese, and life experience stretches beyond Mean Streets.   The Brooklyn-born, long-time TriBeCa resident relishes his diverse career and life experience, and remains determined to continue to learn and evolve with each passing day. “As actors, we’re all looking for something,” he says as people look to catch a quick glimpse of one of the big screen’s most recognizable actors at his favorite neighborhood eatery—Robert  De Niro’s Nobu. “How do we live? How do we grow? What does it mean to be heroic? How do we cope with failure? As the Buddhists say, ‘The journey is the real experience.’” Keitel’s journey reads like a movie script in itself. Born and raised in Brooklyn, he was a typical doo-wop-loving, school-skipping child of the ’50s. “They politely asked me to leave school, because I barely showed up anyway,” he admits. “I needed to do my learning elsewhere, and that’s how I wound up in the Marines.” That journey took him to Lebanon, leading patrols in what was an unstable region then, as it is today. “I have to smile about it, because the reality was that me and my fire team of three guys were all that stood between the Arab League and Beirut. Luckily, they never decided to attack.” But if they had, they would have had a fight on their hands with a Marine who believed in what he was doing there. “It truly is a special experience to put yourself in harm’s way in the interests of protecting oppressed people,” he says. “That was a very positive experience for me.” Harvey Keitel is the cover of DOWNTOWN’s Spring 2014. If you would like to continue reading the entire interview with Harvey Keitel, you can find our latest issue on newsstands.

harvey cover

Categories
Uncategorized

Enjoy The New Spring 2014 Issue of DOWNTOWN, Now on Newsstands!

harvey cover

DOWNTOWN’s Spring 2014 issue is out! Here is an overview of all the great stories and information available to you in the Spring 2014 of DOWNTOWN Magazine. Make sure to look for us on newsstands throughout the city.

COVER STORY
HARVEY KEITEL New York’s Finest. By Mike Hammer. Photographs by Leslie Hassler

INSIGHTS
REWIND. Tammany Hall: Bringing Down The Boss
VISIONARY. Larry Silverstein: A Man With a View
DEVELOPMENT. Downtown’s New Diversity
INNOVATION. Is Downtown the New Silicon Valley?

CULTURE CODE
TALENT. The Blacklist’s Diego Klattenhoff.
I’M TAWKIN’. Good Day New York Anchor Greg Kelly

PASSPORT
DOWNTOWN ON. Dubai
TRAVEL. Amazing Anguilla

STYLE VAULT
WHITE FASHION. Let There Be Light
TIME PIECES. Real Time with Million Dollar Listing Stars
BEAUTY. Iluminate Your Eyes
BEAUTY. Put Your Best Face Forward
GROOMING. The Art Of Saving Face
FITNESS. Let’s Take This Outside
PROFILE. Face-To-Face With The First Lady Of New York Fashion Norma Kamali.

LITTLE APPLE
KIDS FASHION. Spring Essentials
FAMILY FOCUS. Dishing With Downtown Moms: Tracy Anderson
DT PARENTING. The Top Five Reasons It’s Great To Be A Downtown Parent
BARCLAY’S SPOT. A Dog Eye View Of Downtown

CITY BITES
CHEF PROFILE. Alfred Portale: The Architect Of Fine Dining