тАШShow and Tell With Liza TreygerтАЩ
Feb. 7 at 10 p.m. at Union Hall, 702 Union Street, Brooklyn; unionhallny.com.
Hot off the heels of the debut of тАЬNight Owl,тАЭ her hourlong comedy special on Netflix, Liza Treyger is presenting this showcase in which her funny friends joke about their most cherished possessions.
Treyger, who was born in the former Soviet Union and grew up on the outskirts of Chicago, has made a name for herself in the New York City comedy scene over the past decade through her blunt appraisals of herself and societyтАЩs sexual politics. This reputation earned her an appearance on NetflixтАЩs тАЬSurvival of the ThickestтАЭ and a consultant gig on тАЬThe Eric Andre Show.тАЭ She recently had a supporting role on an episode of the Amazon Prime Video series тАЬHarlem.тАЭ
Taking part in TreygerтАЩs тАЬShow and TellтАЭ on Friday are Tommy McNamara, Drew Anderson, Marie Faustin and Molly Kearney. Tickets are $15 on Eventbrite. SEAN L. McCARTHY
Pop & Rock
Why Bonnie
Feb. 7 at 8 p.m. at Night Club 101, 101 Avenue A, Manhattan; dice.fm.
When the singer and songwriter Blair Howerton was coming up in the music scene in Austin, Texas, her band, Why Bonnie, made soft-spoken bedroom pop that suggested a spiritual kinship with New York D.I.Y. acts like Frankie Cosmos. But once Howerton relocated to Brooklyn in 2019, her musical compass turned back toward the West, and her home state became a main character in her music. Why BonnieтАЩs 2022 debut, тАЬ90 in November,тАЭ is shot through with nostalgia for childhood vacations, stifling heat and open highways, articulated in songs that dust alt-rock with a light layer of twang. On тАЬWish on the Bone,тАЭ the bandтАЩs follow-up from last year, the references to Texas are less overt, but the music retains an easy pace and the sense of an infinite horizon.
On Friday, Why Bonnie will perform in the East Village at Night Club 101, which occupies the former home of the legendary Pyramid Club. Tickets are just under $23 on dice.fm. OLIVIA HORN
Bill Frisell, 73, is perhaps the most influential jazz guitarist of his generation, continuing to blend a classic jazz touch with folk influences, rollicking bebop abstractions, the occasional 1960s pop cover, and his own tuneful sense of quirk. He remains predictably unpredictable.
On тАЬOrchestras,тАЭ his ambitious 2024 Blue Note double LP, his work with large ensembles sounds, at times, like light filtering through leaves, a dip in the headwaters of American music, or the moment when a midcentury spy film starts to spin out of control. Another of his releases from 2024, тАЬBreaking the ShellтАЭ (Red Hook Records), is a boldly searching collaboration with the drummer Andrew Cyrille and Kit Downes, who is featured playing the pipe organ at the Church of St. Luke in the Fields in Greenwich Village.
These shows at Roulette will find Frisell again embracing the fresh and the familiar. Over the decades, he has played with all of the ringers in this new band тАФ Jenny Scheinman, Hank Roberts, Rudy Royston, Thomas Morgan and Eyvind Kang тАФ but never in this promising configuration.
Tickets are $45 in advance on RouletteтАЩs website and $50 at the door. The concerts will also be livestreamed on the clubтАЩs YouTube channel. ALAN SCHERSTUHL
тАШClara SchumannтАЩs World of Music!тАЩ
Feb. 8-9 at 11:30 a.m. and 1 p.m. at Assembly Hall at Hunter College, 695 Park Avenue, Manhattan; littleorchestra.org.
The Mozarts, the Mendelssohns and the Schumanns were all musical families. What some listeners may not realize, however, is how impressive some female members of those households were.
In тАЬClara SchumannтАЩs World of Music!,тАЭ part of the Little Orchestra SocietyтАЩs L.O.S. Kids series for ages 3 to 10, children will encounter an accomplished composer and pianist who made great contributions to the classical canon.
In Craig SheminтАЩs script for the program, Clara Schumann (1819-96) is an energetic and spirited figure who enjoys interacting with children. (She had eight with her husband, Robert Schumann.) Portrayed by Elena Brace, Clara will converse about her life and era with the concertтАЩs host, the wacky Prof. Melody Treblemaker (Gracie Lee Brown).
The music, conducted by David Alan Miller, will include not only excerpts from ClaraтАЩs work тАФ the March in E flat and her Piano Concerto тАФ but also from pieces by Fanny Mendelssohn (sister to Felix), the pioneering Florence Price and the contemporary composer Joan Tower. Audience members, who can learn a dance and help conduct, will even hear some melodies written by men.
Tickets start at $18. LAUREL GRAEBER
Urban Bush Women
Through Feb. 7 at 7 p.m. and Feb. 8 at 2 p.m. at Perelman Performing Arts Center, 251 Fulton Street, Manhattan; pacnyc.org.
When the choreographer Jawole Willa Jo Zollar was a child in Kansas City, Mo., she danced in community revues called floor shows, which included live bands and a mix of entertainment. That eclectic structure, the variety of performance styles, and memories of joyous Black socializing inspired ZollarтАЩs latest work, тАЬSCAT! тАж The Complex Lives of Al & Dot, Dot & Al Zollar.тАЭ This dance-forward musical will be performed this weekend by her acclaimed ensemble Urban Bush Women, which is celebrating its 40th anniversary.
The Al and Dot in the title are ZollarтАЩs parents, and the show loosely follows their love story set against the backdrop of the Great Migration in the United States, when many Black Southerners moved to urban areas in the North and the West. Along with the exuberant physical storytelling that is Urban Bush WomenтАЩs hallmark, тАЬSCAT!тАЭ also features an original score by the trombonist Craig Harris, played by a live jazz band with vocalists.
Tickets start at $34 on the Perelman Performing Arts CenterтАЩs website. BRIAN SCHAEFER
Film
Snubbed Forever: Great Actors, No Nominations
Feb. 1-March 9 at the Museum of the Moving Image, 36-01 35th Avenue, Queens; movingimage.us.
Complaints that certain actors missed out on Oscar nominations last week inevitably seem small when measured against the careers in this series, which honors performers who never received тАФ or, at least, have yet to receive тАФ a single nomination. First up is John Cazale, who starred in only five movies before his death at 42, but all of them are enduring classics of the 1970s, including the first two тАЬGodfatherтАЭ films and тАЬThe Deer Hunter.тАЭ The museum is highlighting his nervy work as Al PacinoтАЩs bank-robbing partner in тАЬDog Day AfternoonтАЭ (showing on Saturday and Sunday), a tightly wound role easy to overlook beside PacinoтАЩs loudmouth virtuosity.
ItтАЩs hard to believe that the academy has completely ignored John Turturro and John Goodman, who play neighbors at a seedy Los Angeles hotel in the Coen brothersтАЩ тАЬBarton FinkтАЭ (on Saturday and Sunday): Goodman is the supposed embodiment of тАЬthe common man,тАЭ a group TurturroтАЩs self-important playwright presumes to write about. Next weekend, the museum will salute Mia Farrow (тАЬRosemaryтАЩs Baby,тАЭ on Feb. 7 and 8), Maureen OтАЩHara (тАЬThe Quiet Man,тАЭ on Feb. 8 and 9) and Joseph Cotten (тАЬThe Magnificent Ambersons,тАЭ on Feb. 8 and 9). BEN KENIGSBERG
CriticтАЩs pick
тАШEureka DayтАЩ
Through Feb. 16 at the Samuel J. Friedman Theater, Manhattan; manhattantheatreclub.com. Running time: 1 hour 35 minutes.
In Jonathan SpectorтАЩs sharp social satire, a mumps outbreak at an ultra-precious private elementary school in Northern California exposes the rift between vaccine advocates and skeptics, challenging the boardтАЩs unctuous commitment to valuing each community memberтАЩs perspective equally. Anna D. Shapiro (тАЬAugust: Osage CountyтАЭ) directs an ensemble cast that includes Jessica Hecht, Bill Irwin, Thomas Middleditch and Chelsea Yakura-Kurtz. Read the review.
CriticтАЩs pick
тАШEnglishтАЩ
Through March 2 at the Todd Haimes Theater, Manhattan; roundabouttheatre.org. Running time: 1 hour 40 minutes.
The winner of the 2023 Pulitzer Prize for drama, Sanaz ToossiтАЩs quiet comedy is set in an Iranian classroom, where a group of adults is learning English from a teacher who once lived abroad, and dreaming of inhabiting different lives. Knud Adams, who staged the exquisite Off Broadway production in 2022, directs the original cast. Read the review.
CriticтАЩs Pick
тАШGypsyтАЩ
At the Majestic Theater, Manhattan; gypsybway.com. Running time: 2 hours 55 minutes.
Grabbing the baton first handed off by Ethel Merman, Audra McDonald plays the formidable Momma Rose in the fifth Broadway revival of Arthur Laurents, Jule Styne and Stephen SondheimтАЩs exalted 1959 musical about a vaudeville stage mother and her daughters: June, the favorite child, and Louise, who becomes the burlesque stripper Gypsy Rose Lee. Directed by George C. Wolfe, with choreography by Camille A. Brown, the cast includes Danny Burstein, Joy Woods, Jordan Tyson and Lesli Margherita. Read the review.
тАШThe OutsidersтАЩ
At the Bernard B. Jacobs Theater, Manhattan; outsidersmusical.com. Running time: 2 hours 25 minutes.
Rival gangs in a musical who arenтАЩt the Sharks and the Jets? Here theyтАЩre the Greasers and the Socs, driven by class enmity just as they were in S.E. HintonтАЩs 1967 young adult novel and Francis Ford CoppolaтАЩs 1983 film. Set in a version of Tulsa, Okla., where guys have names like Ponyboy and Sodapop, this new adaptation is the show with the rainstorm rumble youтАЩve heard about. It won four Tonys, including best musical and best direction, by Danya Taymor. With a book by Adam Rapp with Justin Levine, it has music and lyrics by Jamestown Revival (Jonathan Clay and Zach Chance) and Levine. Read the review.
Last Chance
тАШEdges of AileyтАЩ
Through Feb. 9 at the Whitney Museum of American Art, 99 Gansevoort Street, Manhattan; whitney.org.
A major institutional tribute to the American choreographer and performer Alvin Ailey (1931-89), this show is also a relatively rare example of a traditionally object-intensive art museum giving full-scale treatment to the ephemeral medium of dance. But if you anticipated, as I did, that this would mean a display of documentary photographs, some archival materials (costumes, stage designs), and тАФ best тАФ extensive examples of dance on film, youтАЩve got a surprise in store. Read the review.
last Chance
тАШFlight Into Egypt: Black Artists and Ancient Egypt, 1876-NowтАЩ
Through Feb. 17 at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1000 Fifth Avenue, Manhattan; metmuseum.org.
This unusual and audacious exhibition spotlights a propensity in American culture hiding in plain sight: the attachment, among Black artists, musicians and intellectuals, to ancient Egyptian culture, myth and spirituality. Rambling across a century and a half, with nearly 200 artworks, it explores the colonial roots of modern Egyptology, the Pharaonic motifs of the Harlem Renaissance, the Egyptian iconography of Black Power and other movements of the 1960s and тАЩ70s, and sphinxes and pyramids in the work of everyone from Kara Walker to Richard Pryor. Read the review.
тАШVital Signs: Artists and the BodyтАЩ
Through Feb. 22 at the Museum of Modern Art, 11 West 53rd Street, Manhattan; moma.org.
Featuring a cross-racial and international selection of women and gender-nonconforming artists, nearly all from the museumтАЩs collection, this survey offers fresh acquisitions such as twee body-horror ceramics (a woman merged with a book titled тАЬHistoria del Hombre,тАЭ or a cob studded with toothy lumps) by Tecla Tofano. Lynda Benglis is here with a classic condiment-hued latex тАЬpour,тАЭ an almost obligatory nod to 1960s feminist critiques of Abstract Expressionism excess. And there are happy surprises, like Mako IdemitsuтАЩs video тАЬInner Man,тАЭ in which a mustachioed nude frolics over footage of a woman in a pale kimono. Read the review.
