Categories
Culture Featured Theater

What Bloody Man Is That?

The McKittrick Hotel’s flagship production, Sleep No More, has spent the last few years gaining fame and notoriety for its witchy mystique. It takes Shakespeare’s Macbeth and passes it through dreamlike noir to create a thrilling modern dance experience unlike any other. Masked guests follow actors through a six-story building like silent spirits as Shakespeare’s tragedy unfolds simultaneously across the building. It is a feat of performance, but also of engineering, costuming, choreography, and design. As Sleep No More announces an expansion through September 13th, Downtown got a chance to speak with Maxine Doyle from Punchdrunk UK, the Co-Director and Choreographer for Sleep No More, about the origins of the ghostly play. 

Sleep No More
Performer Robin Roemer. Photo courtesy of The McKittrick Hotel.

Origins

Sleep No More came from humble origins: a small production in 2003 inside an old victorian boys school. The cast was only 10 people for the 10-night performance, splitting 40 people between less than a dozen rooms. 

The original idea, Doyle says, came from Artistic Director Felix Barrett’s love of Bernard Herbert’s soundtracks to Alfred Hitchcock films, and the way that Hitchcock marries the aesthetic of noir with the kind of psychology that you can see in Macbeth. “I think it was a text we both really loved in terms of its characters and we looked more at the sort of domestic human absences of the play–the themes of ambition and guilt and particularly the sort of dramatic, codependent relationship between Macbeth and lady Macbeth. And then, of course, the really interesting sort of layer of the supernatural.”

After the close of the initial run of SNM, Punchdrunk crossed the pond for another, longer showing in Boston, Massachusetts, at the American Repertory Theater. The show ran there for four months, from October, 2009 until February 2010. By that time, Punchdrunk UK had turned its eyes to NYC. 

Punchdrunk did not build the McKittrick Hotel. According to Doyle, the site had been empty for several years following its occupation by various nightclubs of “dubious” repute. But the building’s shady reputation and open space finally allowed Sleep No More to stretch its legs. 

Sleep No More
Photo courtesy of The McKittrick Hotel

The Labor We Delight In

The current iteration of Sleep No More, which began in 2011, features approximately 25 actors and dancers. The shows run for three hours apiece, with every scene except for the beginning and the end being performed three times during each run. Each of these performances is done without breaks for any of the performers. “It’s the relationship of the audience with the performer that is very specific within this sort of form,” says Doyle, “the audience can follow a performer all the way through, they could stick with one performer if they wanted to for three hours.” In fact, doing so increases your chance of being pulled in for a one-on-one, where a performer takes a single audience member away from the rest for a scene performed for them alone. “The idea is that you need to feel like these characters live in this building–that there isn’t any beginning and there isn’t any end. And, and there’s a sort of hypnotic drive of this loop, almost a sort of purgatorial structure that the characters find themselves within.”

Casting for Sleep No More is rigorous. Most of the cast turns over every six months, and auditions can mean 1000 auditions for five roles during a two-week period. Once selected, a performer goes through eight weeks of training, learning two different roles in the cast. They will go through classes in body conditioning, contemporary dance, and yoga, but also through a kind of intellectual training. They read through the original play, of course, but also theories surrounding the play, and works by Hitchcock and David Lynch whose works are heavy influences.  

If you have seen the show, you know that parts of the performance can be brutal on the body (a scene with a man performing with his head on a table and his feet on the ceiling comes to mind), and so all performers must be prepared to perform perfectly under that strain. Sometimes twice. “I would say 85% of the company are dancers. I would sort of call them dance actors, but their training, instinct, physicality skill, comes from a sort of contemporary dance background.”

If you haven’t seen Sleep No More, now is your chance. Check here for dates and times for shows, and experience one of the most unique shows you can see in NYC. 

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Do You See What I See?

Categories
Culture Entertainment Events Featured NYC

Revisiting the Past At The McKittrick World’s Fair

All photo credit: Kenny Rodriguez or Jane Kratochvil for The McKittrick Hotel

New Year’s Eve at the McKittrick Hotel is an event to be reckoned with. The five-floor “McKittrick World’s Fair” combines spectacle, music, motion, and performance to make one of the best NYE in experiences in NYC–Pretty much what you’d expect from the McKittrick.

For the uninitiated, the McKittrick Hotel is a six-floor performance space best known for their production “Sleep No More,” a choreographed, noir retelling of Shakespeare’s Macbeth, told across six floors of the McKittrick and explored at your own pace. In addition to Sleep No More, they also have the Club Car (dining and performance space), The Lodge at Gallow Green (rooftop drinks and dining), and Manderley Bar (the Sleep No More lounge with an excellent absinthe drink list). 

Throughout the year, the McKittrick hosts events of all kinds, including plays, magic shows, and burlesque. Their New Years’ Eve party is one of their top parties. 2019-2020’s party was McKittrick World’s Fair; an extravaganza themed around bygone eras, the Worlds Fair, and around “explorers.” This latter theme was open to broad interpretation, ranging from British safari to A Trip to the Moon to extraterrestrial travelers. The NYE event featured five floors of concerts, dance parties, soirees, and experiences, through which guests wander as they enjoy the open bars and champagne scattered through the building. 

What sets the McKittrick’s events apart, especially in Sleep No More, is the inventive use of space. They craft each room into a unique experience, and wanderers at Sleep No More often experience the surreal sensation of stumbling onto moments–scenes in progress with their own feel and tone–making each doorway into a teleportation gate to another world. 

The NYE World’s Fair captures this experience. As I wandered from one room to another, I felt transported every time that I passed through a doorway or exited a staircase. One room had a dance floor flooded with red light and shadow as dozens of people danced around a band led by a woman in a spiked halo crown. Just above, a jazz band played in a softly-lit lounge with milling guests and artists in one corner. Instagrammers took pictures with the artists or of themselves posing in a bathtub in the center of the room. Through a pair of glass doors, a gothic ruin was transformed into a misty jungle with catlike performers on the prowl through foliage and over walls. 

The creative approach reached down to the details, especially the spots designed for Instagram. Plasma globes, bathtubs filled with tinsel ice, and short, wide beds drew a dozen picture-takers at a time (myself included) to pose with whatever prop had been set up in that room. That’s pretty standard fare. But, for most of the rooms, these props blended in with the decor and featured other forms of live entertainment, interactivity, or a tableau taken directly from Sleep No More. 

Which brings me to my next point–wherever you go at the World’s Fair, you are still walking through Sleep No More. It makes for an uncanny experience. Some parts, like the central ballroom, are almost unrecognizable from its ballroom and dining room set from Sleep No More, dressed up as it was as a central performance stage and party central. Others, though, like the ruins-turned-jungle, were merely repurposed, leaving SNM veterans seeing double. 

Your base NYE package is a five-floor party from 10:30 pm to 4 am, complete with an open bar. You wander floor to floor, experience, to experience, through dance parties (multiple) and photo ops. The centerpiece was the aforementioned ballroom, with a stage, performances, and an update on the New Year’s Eve countdown. For a little more money, you can purchase tickets to a showing Sleep No More earlier that day, a dinner, and a table reservation all night by the center stage. The tickets for Sleep No More are a plus if you’ve seen it before, but a must if you haven’t yet had the opportunity. 

If you’re interested in any more of The McKittrick Hotel’s events, check them out here

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Brooklyn Chop House Celebrated its 1st First Year in FiDi

Categories
Dining Featured

Where to Dine for a Memorable Valentine’s Day

You’ve got two weeks left to score a reservation for Valentine’s Day, and we here at Downtown think it should definitely be at one of these unique spots. Read on for our 2019 Valentine’s Day dining guide.

The McKittrick Hotel

 

mckittrick hotel vday

The home of Sleep No More is ready to take you on a journey this Valentine’s Day! Start with dinner in The Club Car where you’ll enjoy a three course meal, live jazz music and the option of a private train car. If you’re looking for something a bit cozier, you can drink and dine on the roof at The Lodge at Gallow Green while sitting by the fire or cuddling in a private nook. Of course you don’t want to miss the Valentine’s performance of Sleep No More, which begins at 7 PM.

 

Bell Book & Candle

 

bell book & candle

Bell Book & Candle doesn’t want vegans to feel left out this V-Day so they are offering two 7-course tasting menus, one of which is entirely vegan. Dishes will include black truffle topped cauliflower soup and surf & turf featuring grass fed filet and crab stuffed fluke. For the most intimate evening, ask to dine in the Pink Lady Room which seats two and has a private line to the bartender.

 

The Regency Bar and Grill

 

regency

If you’re getting a hotel room for the special night, consider the Loews Regency on Park Avenue. Their special three-course menu includes lobster cream soup, yuzu marinated steak and a chocolate dome prepared by new Executive Chef Serge Devesa.

 

Boqueria

 

Photo by Molly Tavoletti

What’s more intimate than sharing food? Boqueria is offering three, special menus of tapas for Valentine’s Day featuring dishes like striped bass with chanterelles and cockles and molten chocolate cake. Tapas are also a great option for a Galentine’s Day get together!

 

886

 

Photo by Ben Hon

Head to buzzy Taiwanese spot 886 to sip on a delicious Lycheé Rosé Cocktail while enjoying snacks like the sausage party (a sausage wrapped in a glutinous, sticky-rice bun) and soy-sesame glazed chicken wings.

 

Ed’s Lobster Bar

 

ed's lobster oysters
Courtesy of Ed’s Lobster Bar

Looking for an aphrodisiac? Ed’s Lobster Bar aims to please with $2 oysters all night long as well as cocktail specials, champagne deals, and whole lobsters.

 

Eataly Downtown

 

eataly vday

If you’re celebrating Valentine’s Day the day after, check out Eataly Downtown’s Winter Wine & Food Festa. Enjoy drinks and bites all over the store, including oysters, chocolate, cocktails, and heart-y dishes.

 

 

Categories
Culture Featured Music

One of Japan’s biggest pop acts, End Of The World (a.k.a. Sekai No Owari), with new tour dates

 

Sekai No Owari
Sekai No Owari

Downtown Magazine received such an overwhelming interest in this previous post by Darren Paltrowitz, we have decided to run this again with the bands new up and coming tour dates.

One of Japan’s biggest pop acts, End Of The World (a.k.a. Sekai No Owari) — formed in 2007, years after some of its members had attended primary school together. The group’s first full-length album EARTH came out on an indie label in 2010, hitting #15 on Japan’s Oricon Weekly Album chart and yielding a single that peaked at #8. The following year, Sekai No Owari signed to a major label in its native country and headlined a solo concert at the world-renowned Nippon Budokan arena.

The next studio album by the band, 2012’s Entertainment, hit #2 on the Oricon album chart and sold over 250,000 copies — double platinum certification in Japan — on the strength of multiple hit singles. 2014 brought some non-album hit singles, collaborations with Owl City and Dutch DJ Nicky Romero, and a hit documentary on Sekai No Owari called Tokyo Fantasy.

2015 included the release of the quartet’s third full-length album, Tree, which charted at #1 and sold over one million units. In support of Tree, the band headlined two nights at Nissan Stadium in July 2015, playing to close to 140,000 people between the two nights. Success also spread elsewhere in Asia as Sekai No Owari played in front of 20,000 people in Malaysia in September 2015 on the MTV World Stage, in addition to an appearance at Taiwan’s prestigious KKBOX Music Awards.

While that level of success in one’s native country — and in other regions of one’s native continent — would be enough for most bands, Sekai No Owari has its eyes set on the United States. On Aug. 17, the band made its U.S. debut at The Roxy in Los Angeles. Several nights later, Sekai No Owari headlines an intimate show at The Bowery Ballroom on Aug. 23. While hit singles “Anti-Hero” and SOS” were performed in English, the group is currently working on a new album recorded entirely in English for a 2017 release.

For up to-date tour dates click 

Band leader Nakajin, lead vocalist Fukase, pianist Saori and turntablist DJ Love all answered questions for Downtown in advance of the Roxy gig. Sekai No Owari can be followed online at www.sekainoowari.jp, in addition to its accounts on Twitter and Facebook.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lf3NHZK0ZL0&feature=youtu.be

Where did the decision come from to start recording in English and to tour the United States?

Fukase: I dream about traveling all over the world with my band members, and decided to write songs in English.

For someone that has not seen Sekai No Owari in concert before, how would you describe your live show? Is it only you four on-stage?

Saori: We can’t bring the stage production this time because it’s more of an intimate show, but we prepared many songs in English and we want everyone to hear them.

Do you have a favorite song to perform live?

S: It feels good to play “SOS” live. My favorite part is where there’s only piano playing and the vocal.

 

Sekai No Owari in concert
Sekai No Owari in concert

DJ LOVE looks like Clown from the band Slipknot. Have the two ever met before?

DJ LOVE: I’ve never met them before, but I absolutely love them. I would love to meet them one day.

Have you ever been to New York before?

Nakajin: Twice, but the both times I visited were during the middle of cold winter, and so I wanted come back when it’s warm.

Regarding your upcoming trip to New York, what are you most excited about? Is there any particular place you’re hoping to shop or a restaurant you are hoping to try?

S: I want to go see the show Sleep No More once again. Now that I can understand more in English, I want to go see the Broadway shows.

What do you wish more people knew about Sekai No Owari? Do you think that there are any misconceptions about J-Pop?

F: It would be cool for people to find out about our background stories before starting the band, and also about the DIY venue we built from scratch. About the J-pop misconceptions, I don’t really have much to say.

Is there a career accomplishment of yours that you’re most proud of? Was it playing two nights at Nissan Stadium?

S: Yeah, I would say it’s the Twilight City concert [at Nissan Stadium]. I can still remember so vividly the view from the stage.

 

Sekai No Owari in concert
Sekai No Owari in concert

How did Sekai No Owari wind up collaborating with Owl City? Had you met Adam [Young] before working together?

N: I’ve been a fan of Owl City, and our manager made an initial contact to his management. We got a good response from them, that’s how we worked on the collaboration. We never had met each other before working together.

Once you have finished this upcoming tour, what’s ahead for Sekai No Owari?

N: Hoping to come right back to the States to do more shows.

Who is the best Japanese artist that our readers may not have heard before?

D: It depends, and changes all the time. But today I feel like recommending 9mm Parabellum Bullet.

When you’re not busy with your career, how do you like to spend your free time?

S: I go to yoga, and sometimes I go to the bouldering gym with Nakajin. He shows me how to rock climb. Recently I’m really into cooking, it’s really fun.

Finally, any last words for the kids?

F: We are in the middle of production right now. Stay tuned for our next new album all in English. There are YouTube videos for “Mr. Heartache,” “SOS,” and “ANTI-HERO,” so check that out too.

Categories
Culture Theater

Five Summer Theater Picks

Photo courtesy of Central Park NYC

Oodles of events are competing for your attention this summer in NYC. With temperatures rising, entertainment options are heating up. Sports fans have plenty to keep them busy with the Yankees settling in for a home residence, but if you prefer air conditioning and plush seating to blazing sun and home runs, maybe the theater is the place for you this summer. We’ve rounded up five theatrical experiences in NYC this week that are sure to delight and entertain. Here are our picks:

“Hamlet”

Downtown’s own The Public Theater is presenting this stirring production of the Shakespeare classic until September 3, making it a summer staple. Oscar Isaac, of “Star Wars: The Force Awakens” fame, stars in this thrilling tragedy. Don’t miss the unforgettable characters and monologues in this new spin on “Hamlet.” Tickets available here.

Through September 3. Times available on The Public Theater site.
425 Lafayette St. 

“Sleep No More”

It’s never too late to experience this long-running show, a beloved interactive performance in Chelsea at the McKittrick Hotel. Harrowed as “spectacular” by the New York Times, the show brings the audience face-to-face with the “residents” as they move from room to room at their own pace. It’s eerie and dark, but promises to be an interactive experience like no other. Tickets available here.

Dates and times vary and are visible on the site
530 West 27th St. 

“A Midsummer Night’s Dream”

It’s midsummer in New York City, and that means it’s time for the ever-popular Shakespeare in the Park. Running at the Delacorte Theater in Central Park from July 11 to August 13 is the famous Shakespeare comedy “A Midsummer Night’s Dream.” The beautiful outdoor space is already magical and is being transformed into a mystical forest for this production. Tickets available here.

July 11 to August 13
Mid Central Park at 80th St., on the southwest corner of the Great Lawn

“Measure for Measure” 

Make your way to Brooklyn for a fresh and entertaining take on another dark Shakespeare comedy, “Measure for Measure.” Time Out New York gave this production, directed by Simon Godwin, four out of five stars. This haunting story of justice is worth the trip across the river. Tickets available here.

Through July 16. Schedule available here
262 Ashland Place, Brooklyn

“Groundhog Day”

You can’t talk about theater in New York without mentioning Broadway, so here’s the obligatory mention of a Broadway blockbuster. “Groundhog Day” is the reimagined musical version of the classic Bill Murray and Andie McDowell film from 1993, and the story is just as funny and fresh as it was then. The cast is fresh off their first Broadway in Bryant Park performance, and they’re pleasing audiences nightly at the August Wilson Theatre. The tunes are catchy and the characters lovable. Tickets available here.

Schedule available here
245 West 52nd St. 

Categories
Culture Entertainment

Unsettling and Senuous Sleep No More

sleepnomore

Masked audience members look on at the surreal events of Sleep No More.

The term sensory experience is thrown around a lot in the theatre world, and understandably so. Broadway and Off-Broadway shows can be deeply perceptive with their stage productions, and they can provide the audience with sensations that can’t be replicated in any other medium. So what happens when a production abandons all of the preconceived notions of theatre? When it loses the dialogue, the audience, and the stage?

Sleep No More is that kind of show; it shares very little in common with any other theatre production out there, giving the term ‘sensory experience’ a whole new meaning. Billed as “an individual experience,” Sleep No More doesn’t ask audience members to take a seat and witness a story unfold. Rather, the audience must go find the story themselves among the remnants of the fictional McKittrick Hotel. The story is loosely based on Shakespeare’s Macbeth.

Guests of the hotel (the audience) first walk into the lobby, where they are greeted by ghostly figures meant to represent hotel employees. Their pale skin, Transylvanian accents and vampire-like demeanor is only the beginning of the bizarre events that take place. Eventually, the employees lead you into an elevator to take you to the part of the hotel where the gravity of what’s about to happen begins to take effect.

Each guest is required to where a macabre mask while they trek through the hotel’s five floors of noir theatrics. With scenes that could be taken straight out of a Stanley Kubrick or David Lynch film, the surreal atmosphere engulfs the patrons in the grim surroundings. Each room traversed is filled with off-putting décor and oblique displays of the story are meant to be conveyed.

Periodically in your journey you’ll come across the production’s performers, identifiable as the only people without masks. Very little dialogue is actually spoken by the actors, but they engage the hotel’s anonymous wanderers through expressive dances and confrontations with one another. It’s up to the wandering patrons to decide which rooms to explore and who they want to follow on their excursion; whether it’s one of the villainous witches bent on debauchery, or one of the noblemen who get sucked into the enchantresses’ spells, there’s a unique perspective to be seen no matter what direction you walk.

Sleep No More is not a show for people with weak constitutions, nor is it a show for people looking for a traditional theatre event. The production features graphic depictions of ritualistic mutilation and sex, and the lack of story structure makes it difficult to find the meaning between the lines. The story is secondary to the actual experience, put on display without restraint. It would be incredibly difficult to see everything Sleep No More has to offer in one visit, but there is one thing that’s abundantly clear as soon as you walk in: there is no experience quite like Sleep No More in all of New York’s storied streets.

Production information

The McKittrick Hotel
530 West 27th Street
New York, NY 10001
Buy your tickets today.
Visit Sleep No More‘s official website.

– Alex Falls