Friday, April 12, 2024

NYC Part Three, April 11 Posters, Theater

 Today we had a stay-home-and-read morning, but the rest of the day was busy.

We took the subway into Manhattan and made our way to the Poster Museum. It is a small museum that has thousands of posters, but limited space for exhibits. There were two exhibits on display. The larger was of travel posters advertising NYC. They were fabulous with lots of posters featuring early air travel as well as train travel. We took some photos of the early United Airlines posters with Otis in mind.









The second exhibit was devoted to just one poster artist, Dawn Baillie who is known for innovative posters for movies. She got her first break by designing the poster for Dirty Dancing. She broke a lot of the traditional rules about sizing of the photos on the page. An example would be Little Miss Sunshine with the top being just yellow. 






We lingered at the museum which is a quiet place for coffee/bathrooms in a busy city.

Then, we made a short walk to Mareluna Italian restaurant. Everything was good. We split an app of sauteed calamari and focaccia bread. Mark had pasta carbonara and Barbara had eggplant parmesan.





Then - off to the Irish Repertory Theater to see Philadelphia, Here I Come!, a play by Brian Friel. The play was fantastic - well acted, well written. But, even more of a treat was that our friend, Ciaran Byrne, was in it, playing a stuffy senator and an old priest. The play is set in 1962 in a fictitious village in Donegal. It premiered in 1964 in Ireland and came to Broadway in 1966 and was nominated for a Tony that year. It became the longest running Irish play in Broadway's history. It is now part of the curriculum in Ireland. The play centers around Gar who has tickets to go to Philadelphia to live with his aunt. His father is remote and silent. The love of his life married a richer man. But, he is torn by memories and hopes for some communication from his father. The play's cleverness revolves around two characters playing Gar simultaneously - one the public, quiet Gar and the other, the "private" Gar. The characters, played by David McElwee (public) and A.J. Shively were in synch and provided comedy and poignancy. 






Afterwards we gathered in the lobby and met 4 of Ciaran's friends from his tennis club. Then, we took an Uber home and went to bed around midnight!






Wednesday, April 10, 2024

New York, Part Two, April 9, A Day at MOMA

 April 9

    MOMA day.

    We took the D train uptown to the Museum of Modern Art where we focused on the 5th floor with the early modern painters - Picasso, Leger, Mondrian, Braque etc. We spent so much time there that we did very little on the other floors as our brains were very full! We didn't even get to the new exhibits, but we were more than satisfied.


View from inside MOMA

Picasso



Can't remember the painter, but German, pre WWII

Giacomo Bella

Van Gogh



Mondrian

Braque

Charlie Chaplin in "Modern Times," 1936

Crowds trying to see Chagall

Picasso, a painting he did not show for over 9 years because of scandalous subject.




Bonnard

Pollack

Picasso - A Starry Night


   Then, we took the D train back to Brooklyn and ate a late lunch on Eighth Avenue in Brooklyn's China town.


    

New York, Part One, April 7 and 8

 April 7

   We made a leisurely exit at the hotel, the Courtyard Marriott/Convention Center and had a fairly easy drive to Brooklyn, with the exception of the last 20 miles. We found a close parking spot and Mark, somehow, managed to get the car into a very tight space. We took our bags up the 3 long flights of stairs and did a bit of unpacking.

Looking at Jo's from Sunset Park


   Then, we hustled over to Sunset Park to catch the solar eclipse which was 90% complete. We didn't have glasses, but a nice woman gave us a pair and it was pretty spectacular. It was also festive as there were so many people there looking and having fun. (Otis went to Indianapolis where the eclipse was 100%)





Mark looking up, Sunset Park, Brooklyn



Lots of people in the park.





  Next stop - the little grocery store below us for a few things. Then we wandered over to 8th Ave to "Sammich" where we had really good and unusual sandwiches.  They were on brioche bread and impossible to pick up. Mark had a beef one and Barbara had an avocado/tomato one. Both had eggs, too. They were both really delicious.




April 8

    A busy day! We walked close to 4 miles. We took the 9th Ave subway (D) and then switched trains. 




It took us about 1.5 hours and we were just in time to meet Ciaran Byrne for lunch. He treated us at Tea & Sympathy, an English restaurant. Ciaran knows the owners and also the waiter as it's a favorite spot. Mark had fish & chips. Barbara had broccoli soup/salad. We caught up with all of Ciaran's activities as well as those of Ella, Mabel and Kate. Ciaran is in a play at the Irish Repertory Theatre. He had only one week to learn his lines/blocking etc. He was called in when the man who was cast became ill. 

Ciaran at Tea and  Sympathy


   Then we went to a nearby Apple store and Barbara had her iPhone looked at. (It goes in and out of charging) They cleaned the port (clean, though) and sold her a new wire and an adapter.

   Then we took two more subways to visit the Grolier Museum. First, we saw in the sun and had an iced coffee by the park. The weather hit the mid 70s.

View from the Apple store

Central Park


   The Grolier Club is the oldest bibliophile club in N America. They no longer publish, but they do collect books. We saw an exhibit about the history of bookbinding through the ages. It was very interesting and in a gorgeous building. We also saw the private collection of a woman librarian/archivist who has collected works mostly dealing with translation. All very interesting.




These books are in their original paper wrappings. Never been opened.

Book cover by William Morris's daughter


  From there, we walked to Serafina (Italian) for a delicious dinner which finished with 2 scoops of gelato. Mark had pasta and Barbara had salmon.



   Then we walked to 57E59 Theatre, recommended by Joann and were in the front row for King, a one-man performance by Pat Kinevane who also wrote the play. The play is part of the Origins, Irish performances over the 5 boroughs in the next months. The play was about a mentally ill man who is coping with the imminent death of his father. The word "king" had layers of meaning. Kings of England who colonized the world. Martin Luther King for whom the main character, Luther, is named. Parallels of the treatment of African Americans and the Irish were made clear. King because Luther does an impersonation of Elvis when he gets the courage. And King as the acronym for "Keep Ignoring Nasty Ghosts." Luther tells of his traumas as the play unfolds. We liked it.




    Then, we took an Uber back to Brooklyn and found that we don't have to move the car this week due to Eid.