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Page 1: What to Do in New York City in Summer 2014

5/25/2014 What to Do in New York City in Summer 2014 - NYTimes.com

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/05/25/nyregion/what-to-do-in-new-york-city-in-summer-2014.html?rref=nyregion&module=Ribbon&version=context&region=Header… 1/8

http://nyti.ms/Spelqi

N.Y. / REGION

What to Do in New York City in Summer 2014

By JULIE BESONEN MAY 22, 2014

Winter was no picnic, but the amnesia that summer provides is just

around the corner. The season’s lodestar, Macy’s Fourth of July fireworks

show, is moving back to the East River, guided by the wishes of the

Brooklynite mayor, Bill de Blasio. To witness another spectacle, find the

camping gear and clear your calendar to ensure a ticket to “King Lear,”

starring John Lithgow and Annette Bening, the Public Theater’s free

Shakespeare in the Park production. No matter the temperature, New York

is the place to be. Here’s a summer guide to make the most of it.

FESTIVALS AND PARADES

One of the first festivals of the season explores the beauty of particle

physics, cosmology and mathematics, showcased at the World Science

Festival. Speakers including the superstar physicist Brian Greene, Joyce

Carol Oates and Alan Alda will fan out to city auditoriums and inspire new

ways of thinking (May 28-June 1, worldsciencefestival.com). Then lighten

up with City Parks Foundation’s SummerStage, a free, citywide

jamboree of music, theater, dance and comedy commanding stages and

band shells in 14 parks (June 3-Aug. 24). Highlights include the tap-

dancer Jason Samuel Smith (Prospect Park, Brooklyn, June 20), the

Metropolitan Opera Summer Recital Series (in all five boroughs, June 23

and 25, and July 1, 3, 8 and 10) and Ballet Hispanico (St. Mary’s Park, in

the South Bronx, July 11, summerstage.donyc.com). Celebrate

Brooklyn is another freewheeling mix tape of performance, all at the

Prospect Park Bandshell. Concerts by Janelle Monáe (June 4) and St.

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Vincent (Aug. 9) bracket the boldly expressionistic Shen Wei Dance (July

17) and the pioneering Dance Theater of Harlem, back after a nine-year

hiatus (July 31). The festival’s benefit concerts are not free, but aren’t the

National (June 17-19) and Neutral Milk Hotel (July 26) worth paying for?

(June 4-Aug. 9, bricartsmedia.org). The notoriously raucous National

Puerto Rican Day Parade has been reined in this year, the new

mandate being that every float must have a cultural theme and that profits

will go to scholarships, not a beauty pageant (Fifth Avenue between 44th

and 79th Streets, June 8, nprdpinc.org). Go to Coney Island for the

Mermaid Parade (June 21), the nation’s largest, kookiest art parade,

and find your way back for old-school burlesque and vaudeville at

Sideshows by the Seashore (1208 Surf Avenue, Brooklyn, Thursdays and

Fridays through August, coneyisland.com). Pride Week commences with

a family night when “The Wizard of Oz” will be screened at Hudson River

Park’s Pier 46, and concludes with a parade and dance party, this year

headlined by Demi Lovato (June 24-29, nycpride.org). In the depths of

August, the Hong Kong Dragon Boat Festival in Flushing Meadows-

Corona Park in Queens is an invigorating sporting event featuring a fleet of

120 dragon-boat teams racing for prizes. Booths selling Chinese food, folk

art and crafts, and traditional music and dance from China, Mexico and

Peru, make it a vivid, multicultural urban excursion (Aug. 9-10, hkdbf-

ny.org).

MUSIC

A big tent of classical, rock, jazz and groundbreaking new music

unfolds over the summer. The Northside Festival is a forum for

discovery, Brooklyn’s answer to South by Southwest. Roughly 400 mostly

hungry, mostly local bands will step into the spotlight at a variety of

venues. Innovative speakers like Jon Steinberg of BuzzFeed and Amanda

Hesser of Food 52 will provide brain food, and local Kelso beer aged in

Jameson whiskey barrels will slake thirsts (McCarren Park and

Williamsburg, June 12-19, single show tickets start at $10,

northsidefestival.com). Lower Manhattan’s River to River Festival

Page 3: What to Do in New York City in Summer 2014

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picks up where Northside leaves off, with global music concerts at South

Street Seaport and the Bang on a Can Marathon at Brookfield Place

Winter Garden (June 22), an annual lollapalooza that always offers

something new. This year’s guests include the expressive voice project

Roomful of Teeth, Meredith Monk and Theo Beckmann (June 19-29, free,

rivertorivernyc.com). Experimental sounds also constitute Warm Up

2014, the Saturday outdoor series at MoMA PS1 (Long Island City, June

28-Sept. 6, included in $10 museum admission, momaps1.org). One of the

loveliest outdoor concert sites is in Madison Square Park, where Mad. Sq.

Music: Oval Lawn Series will be kicked off this year by the New Jersey

troubadour Nicole Atkins (June 18-Aug. 6, free, madisonsquarepark.org).

At the Naumburg Bandshell in Central Park, five nighttime dates are

sponsored by the long-running Naumburg Orchestral Concerts.

Featured this year are the Knights, a collaborative chamber orchestra from

Brooklyn (June 24 and July 22), and Christina and Michelle Naughton,

pianists making their debut (Aug. 5, free, naumburgconcerts.org). Dan

Zanes and Peter Yarrow are among the singers filling the Damrosch Park

Bandshell for a Pete and Toshi Seeger memorial concert organized

by Lincoln Center Out of Doors (July 20). Other highlights include

Roberta Flack (July 26) and Rosanne Cash (Aug. 9), as well as nights of

poetry and dance (July 20-Aug. 10, free, lcoutofdoors.org). The classical

music heard during Mostly Mozart, of course, is not all Mozart. The

monthlong extravaganza begins with the premiere of John Luther Adams’s

Inuit-influenced “Sila: The Breath of the World” and makes room for a

premiere work by the Mark Morris Dance Group (July 25-Aug. 23).

THE GREAT OUTDOORS

For the first time since public access began in 2004, Governors

Island will be open seven days a week, with 30 newly landscaped acres of

park equipped with 50 red hammocks, two natural ball fields and site-

specific art by Mark Handforth and Susan Philipsz. Bring your own bike or

take advantage of Free Bike Mornings, borrowing one for an hour between

10 a.m. and noon on weekdays (May 24-Sept. 28, $2 round-trip ferry for

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adults, free for children under 12, govisland.com). Biking works up an

appetite, hence A Bikeable Feast, combining a 90-minute ride through

the vistas of Greenpoint and Williamsburg with a four-course meal with

wine at North Brooklyn Farm near the base of the Williamsburg Bridge

(alternating Saturdays May 31-Aug. 9, $140, getupandride.com). Those

who feel that the ride itself is the destination can show up for Brooklyn

Critical Mass, a slightly less militant iteration of its Manhattan cousin,

wheeling into its 10th year. The second Friday of every month, bicyclists

gather at Grand Army Plaza near Prospect Park at 7 p.m. and dominate

the streets to show what pollution-free transportation looks like (June 13,

July 11, Aug. 8, free, times-up.org). To work all your muscle groups, there’s

no greater outdoor gym than the Central Park Circuit in the East

Meadow, a first-come-first-served class that meets several evenings over

the summer. Top trainers devise workouts around the park’s hills, dales

and rocks (through August, free, centralparknyc.org). Catch-and-

release fishing at the park’s Harlem Meer is a more meditative pastime.

Fishing poles can be borrowed and bait is free at the Charles A. Dana

Center on the meer’s north shore at 109th Street (Tuesday-Sunday,

centralparknyc.org). Farther north, in the Bronx, birders gather at Van

Cortlandt Park Nature Center on Saturday mornings. Members of

the Audubon Society lead walks and help identify a wide range of species

(through August, free, nycaudubon.org). A new waterside activity for

landlubbers arrives when the Grand Banks schooner Sherman

Zwicker, built in 1942, drops anchor at Pier 25, Hudson River Park at

North Moore Street. Visits are free, though there is a charge for onboard

oysters and drinks from the Brooklyn tastemaker Mark Firth, co-founder

of Marlow & Sons (June 15-Oct. 31, grandbanks.org). Fans of pro sports

have a full plate of baseball teams, World Cup soccer matches and United

States Open Tennis champions to cheer for, but you can root for the little

guys, too, like the Brooklyn Cyclones (brooklyncyclones.com) in Coney

Island and the Staten Island Yankees (milb.com) in St. George. Or

rustle up your own game at Brooklyn Bridge Park’s newly opened Pier

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2, with five acres of basketball, handball and bocce courts (150 Furman

Street, brooklynbridgepark.org). Spectators inclined toward a different

kind of intensity can indulge in a Gotham Girls Roller Derby match.

The league, now in its 10th year, will have its biggest face-off of the

summer with the Manhattan Mayhem against the Queens of Pain (John

Jay College of Criminal Justice Gymnasium, 524 West 59th Street, June 7,

$19.99, gothamgirlsrollerderby.com).

FILM

Short attention spans (and those who appreciate brevity) are richly

rewarded at the New York International Short Film Festival,

which is rolling out more than 60 shorts at the Landmark Sunshine

Cinema (143 East Houston Street, May 27-29, nyshortsfest.com). On its

heels is the New York City International Film Festival, promoting

underground films from 27 countries (various Manhattan screening

rooms, May 29-June 5, nyciff.com). Air-conditioned movie theaters are

indispensable in the New York summer, but at night it’s often cool enough

to recline on a blanket and lose yourself in a big outdoor screen. The HBO

Bryant Park Summer Film Festival opens with “Saturday Night

Fever” and concludes with “The Shining” (June 16-Aug. 18, free,

bryantpark.org). The citywide Rooftop Films series screens 45

independent films, like Joe Swanberg’s “Happy Christmas,” with Anna

Kendrick and Lena Dunham (through Aug. 14, rooftopfilms.com). Film

festivals are mushrooming in all kinds of unlikely pockets, like the

Brazilian Film Festival of NY in TriBeCa (54 Varick Street, June 1-7,

brazilianfilmfestival.com) or Bronx World Film Cycle in Manhattan

(239 West 14th Street, June 1, bronxworldfilm.org) or the Lower East

Side Film Festival (several downtown Manhattan cinemas, June 12-22,

lesfilmfestival.com). The American Black Film Festival relocates to

Chelsea this year from Miami and will debut Spike Lee’s Kickstarter-

financed “Da Sweet Blood of Jesus” (June 19-22, abff.com). Starting in

July, the Brooklyn Bridge Park Conservancy has a delightful lineup

of animal-themed outdoor screenings to be shown against the

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cinematic backdrop of Lower Manhattan. Vendors like Luke’s Lobster and

No. 7 Subs provide concessions for “Sharknado” and “The Fantastic Mr.

Fox” (July 10-Aug. 28, brooklynbridgepark.org). The Central Park

Conservancy’s outdoor movie offerings are leaner, but its New York-

themed series includes the weeper “The Way We Were” on the same slate

as “Rear Window” (Aug. 18-22, free, centralpark.com).

SELF-IMPROVEMENT

A D.I.Y. wind is in the air. League of Kitchens is a start-up cooking

school, a collection of enthusiastic immigrants interpreting their

homespun cuisines and culture from their own kitchens. Intimate

workshops include Bengali Cooking With Afsari, in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn

(May 31), and Afghan Cooking With Nawida, in Rego Park, Queens (June

8). Classes convene on weekends and cost $100 to $195

(leagueofkitchens.com). Good knife skills are essential for the efficient

cook; for self-improvement without loss of digits, the Brooklyn Kitchen

offers hands-on instruction on safe chopping methods several times a

month for $65. To master pizza-making, register for a class taught by

Peter Litschi and Anthony Falco, chefs at Roberta’s in Bushwick, Brooklyn,

who teach several sessions over the summer for $85 (thebrooklynkitchen).

For a crash course in cheese, enroll in an intensive, three-day weekend at

Murray’s Cheese Boot Camp. The intricacies of milk chemistry and

affinage, the history, geography, aging and pairing of cheeses are part of

the $695 package (murrayscheese.com). Composting is not just a growing

movement — it’s becoming the law. The Lower East Side Ecology

Center, celebrating its 20th year, will offer troubleshooting tips at two

seminars at Pier 46, Hudson River Park at Charles Street (July 16, Aug. 3,

$5, lesecologycenter.org). Learn how to design and make your own

strappy sandals in an eight-hour class taught by the French shoemaker

Olivier Rabbath at his studio in Brooklyn (180 Hoyt Street, $300,

howtomakebootsfromyourgarage.com). To combine art and science, sign

up for Introduction to Holography in a subterranean Midtown lab

and create your own single-beam reflection hologram ($195,

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holographer.com). Adults determined to polish their personal brands may

find their Henry Higgins at the Etiquette School of New York. At the

very least, it’s valuable to master cocktail party dos and don’ts (200 East

64th Street, Manhattan, June 26, $575, etiquette-ny.com). Or dabble in a

photography or figure drawing class offered by Greenpointers, a meet-up

organization in Brooklyn. Their Drink-and-Draw Tuesdays welcome

artists of all levels to sketch models like drag queens and rockers ($5,

greenpointers.com).

THEATER

This is really the summer to brush up your Shakespeare. Before the

endless lines begin for the Public Theater’s free Shakespeare in the

Park production of “King Lear,” starring John Lithgow, observe

Simon Russell Beale as directed by Sam Mendes. A filmed live

performance from London’s National Theater will be broadcast in high

definition at BAM Rose Cinema (30 Lafayette Avenue, Brooklyn, May

31, bam.org). Expect in-your-face carnage at the Park Avenue Armory,

where Kenneth Branagh is leading an immersive, fast-paced production

of “Macbeth.” Mr. Branagh and Rob Ashford direct, with Alex Kingston

as Lady Macbeth (May 31-June 22, armorypark.org). A welcome breather

from tragedy arrives as Lily Rabe and Hamish Linklater play the wickedly

witty Beatrice and Benedick in the Public Theater’s initial summer

offering, “Much Ado About Nothing” (June 3-July 6). Then comes the

test of the theater-lover’s true grit. “King Lear” hasn’t been staged in

Central Park since 1973 with James Earl Jones. Annette Bening as Goneril

ups the ante (July 22-Aug. 17, publictheater.org). The New York

Musical Theater Festival, at various West 42nd Street theaters,

traffics in more recent history with new works like “Madame Infamy,”

tracing the parallel paths of Marie Antoinette and Sally Hemings, and

“Clinton the Musical” (Bill, although Hillary’s character is also on stage),

nominated for best new musical at the 2012 Edinburgh Festival Fringe

(July 7-27, nymf.org). August is all about FringeNYC when 1,000 or so

original pieces trample downtown Manhattan (Aug. 8-24,

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fringefestivals.us).

After all that, you should be pretty much played out, as should

summer.

A version of this article appears in print on May 25, 2014, on page MB6 of the New York editionwith the headline: Hot Fun, Summertime.

© 2014 The New York Times Company