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tr r \ i* Hald Ovar V LOST IN i ■ AMERICA i' v-.- 1 Call Theatre for Showtime I' Rko a m u R v 4KT j) 3 6 € .8 T H a 473-7014 I T RKO GIFT BOOKS AVMLMLE AT A a TWAmES =3 ■CIREEN^OH- ■ ^ P l A Y W O U S E H f l N I2lh Sirsei and 71h Avenua 929-3350 Hold Ovar MASK R l1 a d P Q 1 3 In Dolby Blorag] Held Over GRACE QUIGLEY Call Vhealre for Showlimfls p Fri. Return to Waterloo Dally 12.1:30, 2:55,4:20, 5:45, 7:20,0:55,10:20 • FrI. a SaL MIdnIto Show “LIQUID SKY” .V THE BROTHER FROM ANOTHER PLANET 12,2,4,0,3,10.1 FrI. a Sal MIdnIla Show ' ‘BUCKAROO BANZAI*' u/overuri&z'T LUNCH DINNER BRUNCH LATE NITE SNACKS Planning a party or a special function? —Let us do all the work— Our private room can accomodate up to 60 people Call us 345 Second Ave. (20th) (212) 473-9703 _____________ Ellyn or Dan O’Hara SEVILLA 62 Charles Si. ccrror W. 4th LUNGH-DINNER FINEST SPANISH CUISINE. Open 7 d^ysa week 1pm 2am. For reservaiions 243-9513 o . / _ ^jO X ls j Cafe-B rasserie Washington Square 15 Waverly Place Tel.533’4151 THEATER FOR THE NEW CITY BARTENIEFF/FIELD CRIME STORY by Jay Padroff May 9-12th 16-19th THEATER GROTTESCO FROM PA RIS THE INSOMNIACS May 9-12th 23-26th 254-1109 <r cfi O W m CARIBE 117 Perry Street Corner Perry & Greenwich Telephone 255-9191 Hot & Spky Music and Hot & Spicy People Conch Seviche Picadillo Ropa Vieja Goat Water Currey Goat Oxtails Chops Salt Fish Mountain Chicken Rice & Beans Rice & Peas -Chicken \Caribe” Coo-Coo Fried Plantains Dasheen Fried Okra P.R. Steak Turkey Wings Buljol C o u eeched Fish Pilau Jug-Jug Peper Pot Fried Bananas & Rurn Stamp & Go Deviled Turkey Legs Black Bean Soup Souse Ham Hocks Full B a r - W I n e ^ B e e r VILLAGER DOWNTOWN ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ t ¥ Singers at Grace The Village Singers, Greenwich Village’s 70-member community chorus, will present its final concert of the season on Thursday, May 16th, at 8pm at Grace Church, Broad way at East 10th St. Admission'll $6. or TDF voucher. Under Music Director Mark Manginl, the chorus will sing a program of varied Romantic German music, beginning with Schubert’s “Mass in G.” Featured on the program is Brahm’s “Sgeunerlieder” or “Gypsy Songs,\ a collection of folk songs in wild and lovely four-part settings. And the women of the chorus will sing two Schumann songs - “Beim Abschied zu singen\ and “Zigeunerleben.\ Accompanist Is 'niomas Brown. Perform at Libraries “Duse, Heartburn and Me,\ an autobio graphical play with Stephanie Satie, will be performed at two downtown branches of the New York Public Library during May. The free event is set for the Epiphany Branch, 228 East 23rd St., on Monday, May 20 at 7pm, and the Hudson Park Branch 10 7th Avenue South, on Wednesday, May 22 at 12 noon. “Duse, Heartburn and Me,\ directed by Jennie Ventrlss, is about life in the theatre. The play evolves from the first seren dipitous moment when a child discovers she wants to go out on stage, and continues on through childhood, proceeding through training and early performances. It offers a glimpse into the great tradition of the theatre, illuminating Eleonora Duse, Sarah Bernhardt and The Moscow Art Theatre. Pianist Rita Bouboulidi continues her seven recital series, performing the com plete piano sonata series of Beethoven, on Wednesday, May 22, starting at Bpm In the Greenwich House auditorium, 27 Barrow Street. at 12:30 and 2:20, and Sunday, May 19 at 11am. Barbara Zlnn Krieger, executive director of the Vineyard, will be the nar rator and Ellen Knafo will play the piano. Also performing are Hanna Tennen, violin, Aaron Picht, viola, Jodi Beder, cello and Lyn Christie, bass. Children will have an opportunity to meet and talk with the musicians. Tickets are $4 kids and $5 adults. The Vineyard is located at 309 East 26th Street. Call 683-0696 for information or tickets. Yupanqul Concert Set Studio's Open House The National Shakespeare Conservatory says hello to its new neighborhood May 21-23, when it opens its new SoHo studio space to the public, performing Mollere’s “Tartuffe,\ a comedy of class and mores. The Conservatory is not only a theatrical company, but also a school for actors, using Its students in this production. This theatre school was founded in 1974 and was previ ously housed in the Cubiculo Theatre on 51st St. It moved to its present location, 591 Broadway, in the fall of 1984. There ^11 be a reception after each 7pm performance, with cast and crew on hand. Reservations are suggested, and can be made at 219-9874. The great Yupanqul, Argentine singer and composer, will be in the United States for only his second visit to present a concert on Fri, May 17, at Washington Irving Auditorium, at 8pm. He will be Introduced by Pete Seeger. Born in 1908, this artist of the voice has been composing and recording music for more than half a century. He counts, among his friends, here and gone, Paul Elvard, Her man Hesse, and Charlie Chaplin. First in troduced to French audiences by Edith Piaf, he has since received the Charles Cros Medal of France for best foreign record three times, though no other performer has won it more than once. Tickets for the event are available at the Taller Latinoamericano, 19 W. 21st St. For information, call 25&-7155. Washington Irving Auditorium is located at Irving Place and E. 16th St. Play Balkan Music Zenska Pesna, the highly-regarded Bal kan vocal ensemble is returning to New York, bringing with them the unique sound of Bulgarian, Macedonian, Serbo-Croatian and Albanian folk and work songs. Lauren Brody and Carol Freeman sing the program while Marcus Moskoff plays the gadulka, a Bulgarian folk fiddle. All three musicians are permanent mem bers of the teaching staff of the Annual Balkan Music and Dance Camps in Mendo cino, California. Brody also plays with the Yiddish band, Kapelye. The two women have performed together for fifteen years. Moskoff is the author of two books on Bulgarian folk tunes. Zenska Pesna will be playing at the Alternative Museum, 17 White St., on Sun, May 19, at 8pm. Japanese Art on View A special exhibit of works by Setsuko Ishii, one of Japan's foremost holographic artists, is now on view at the Museum of Holography through September 15. Ishii combines her traditional Japanese heritage with contemporary technology and produces soft garden images which she fre quently displays on the floor of her exhibit spaces. Her three dimensional art has been widely shown in France, Italy, England, Australia, and West Germany, as well as the United States. The Museum of Holography is open Wed nesday through Sunday 12 to 6pm. Admis sion is $3 for adults and $1.75 for children and senior citizens. The Museum is located at 11 Mercer St. For information, call 925-0526. May Music for Kids “May Means Music\ at the Vineyard, with a month packed with music of all kinds. The May series at the Vineyard presents eleven programs over 30 days in cluding the “Vintage Jazz at the Vineyard,\ the acclaimed classic jazz series, the Chamber Art Ensemble, Bach, Beethoven, Scarlatti, “Meet the Composer\ and classi cal music for kids (0 years and older). The classical music program for kids is entitled “Exploring the Strings\ featuring excerpts from “Trout\ “Carnival of the Animals\ “The Swan\ and “Eine Kleine Nactmusic\ conducted by members of the audience, and “Max and Moritz\ a musical story of two bad boys with text by Theo Phil adapted from famous German children’s stories by Wilhelm Busch with music by Richard Mohaupt, “Exploring the Strings\ will be pe^ formed three times only, Saturday, May 18 'Under Milkwood' Continued front,Page 11 with pacing. Abrupt lighting shifts make the piece feel disjointed at times. Instead we need to feel “the thin night darken.\ Nonetheless, for those who appreciate the work of Dylan Thomas and the passions of the common people he depicted this is a worthwhile opportunity. As Thomas said: “In my craft or sullen art Exercised in the still n i ^ t When only the moon rages And the lovers lie abed With all their griefs in their arms, I labour by singing light Not for ambition or bread Or the strut and trade of charms On the ivory stages But for the common wages Of their most secret heart. UNDER MILKWOOD: Hie East Second Street Hieatre, SO East 2ad S t llinra- Saturdays at ^ idi , SundayB at 3. nuough M a y tt.l^,l74«6& i ' Page 14, THE VILLAGER, May 16,106S