A PUBLICATION OF
Thursday 03.09.17
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Free agency plan
THE WASHINGTON POST
What the Redskins may do to replace Garcon and upgrade talent 14
Roaring together Women in D.C. and around the U.S. strike to show solidarity 4
A Trump slump
A look at who would be covered, how people would pay for coverage and other key differences between the Affordable Care Act and the GOP’s embattled plan to replace it 13
THINKSTOCK AND GETTY IMAGES/EXPRESS ILLUSTRATION
Obamacare vs. Ryancare
Gun sales are down post-election — except among minorities 10
Follow her path Get a glimpse at the life of Harriet Tubman in Dorchester County 22 am
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2 | EXPRESS | 03.09.2017 | THURSDAY
MARK LENNIHAN (AP)
eyeopeners
TRENDS
HE’S SO GROUNDED
MUNICIPAL BUSINESS
All-natural lip piercings will be a big hit with the hipster crowd
Conveniently, his discipline involved being sent to his room
Just here for the articles: City’s old web domain now hosts porn
A ski instructor at Jackson Hole Mountain Resort, Wyo., was unfazed after his lip was impaled by an 18-inch branch during a crash. Natty Hagood, 29, said he thought, “I just got impaled. And then I yelled ... ‘Hey, look, I got a new piercing.’ ” Hagood snapped the branch down to about 6 inches before being transported to a hospital, where it was removed. Now nicknamed “Lipstick,” he jokes that the crash left him with a case of “PTS-Tree.” (AP)
A Cranston, R.I., highway worker wasn’t sleeping on the job — it appears he was sleeping at his job. The worker, who had just sold his house, set up a makeshift bedroom on the second floor of the Highway Department’s building. A photo making its way around social media shows a room with a bed, a nightstand, coffee maker, even slippers and what appear to be pajamas. A city official says the employee has been disciplined. (AP)
Officials in a Florida Panhandle city say their former website has been taken over by someone hosting pornographic content. The city of Springfield began receiving complaints last week from people who were visiting the city’s old site. Mayor Ralph Hammond said the city apparently let the old domain name expire, and the site now contains porn. The city is now trying to buy back its old domain. (AP)
XPC3748 5x3
TAKING NO BULL: “Fearless Girl,” a statue by artist Kristen Visbal, faces the Wall Street bull in New York on Wednesday. The investment firm State Street Global Advisors put the statue there to highlight International Women’s Day. An inscription at the base reads, “Know the power of women in leadership. She makes a difference.”
THURSDAY | 03.09.2017 | EXPRESS | 3
page three
Cold snap will push back peak blossoms
THE DISTRICT
Former first lady surprises students
Gorilla slides onto court at Wizards game MATT McCLAIN (THE WASHINGTON POST)
THE DISTRICT The weather it is a-changin’ — and the cherry blossoms are a-changin’ as a result. Earlier this month, the National Park Service said D.C.’s famous cherry blossoms would reach peak bloom between March 14 and March 17 — potentially the earliest peak bloom on record — and the National Cherry Blossom Festival moved up the festivities five days to accommodate the finicky trees. Now, citing a colder-thanexpected weather forecast for the next seven days, the National Park Service says peak bloom will actually commence between March 19 and March 22. Peak bloom occurs when 70 percent of Yoshino cherry trees, the Tidal Basin’s most abundant variety, are at peak, the National Park Service said. Once they appear, the blooms can last up to 10 days.
MONKEY BUSINESS
Some of the cherry blossoms at the Tidal Basin are starting to bloom.
Temperatures in the 20s are forecast for this weekend, with the potential for snow. The Capital Weather Gang reported that the majority of the trees at the Tidal Basin were in the “florets extended” stage, the third stage out of six, as of Monday morning.
They also reported that there are vast differences in bud and blossom development occurring at the Tidal Basin. Some of the trees are in the early stages of bud development, while the older trees are already starting to bloom. JUSTIN WM. MOYER (THE WASHINGTON POST)
The Wizards’ 131-127 win Tuesday over the Suns had a bit of everything: three 30-point quarters for Washington, an epic 16-for-16 free-throw shooting performance by Bojan Bogdanovic and the ejection of Brandon Jennings. Oh, and a gorilla slid onto the court as play was unfolding. Video replay showed that rather than enjoying a courtside slip ‘n slide, the Suns’ well-known mascot, The Gorilla, was actually desperately attempting to retrieve an object that had landed on the court during play. (TWP)
AP
D.C.’s famous trees are now projected to bloom March 19-22
Former first lady Michelle Obama surprised a group of ecstatic students at a Washington school on Wednesday in honor of International Women’s Day. Obama posted about her visit to Cardozo Education Campus, a combined middle and high school, on Snapchat. The former first lady said she was surprising a group of girls to talk about “the importance of education in their lives and mine.” (AP)
THE DISTRICT
White House sets date for 139th Easter Egg Roll The annual White House Easter Egg Roll will take place April 17. President Trump and first lady Melania Trump made the long-awaited announcement Wednesday. Tickets are free to the public and will be distributed through an online lottery. The White House says details on how to enter will be released later in March. The White House Easter Egg Roll dates to 1878. (AP)
4 | EXPRESS | 03.09.2017 | THURSDAY
local THE DISTRICT
MANDEL NGAN (AFP/GETTY IMAGES)
Man pleads guilty to discussing inaugural plot
Protesters marched in front of the White House, Capitol and Department of Labor in D.C. on Wednesday to bring attention to women’s issues.
Standing in solidarity
ST. PAUL, MINN.
Tim Kaine’s son arrested protesting Trump rally
expressline
“Trump is afraid of us,” yelled Terry O’Neill, president of the National Organization for Women, at a rally outside the White House. “You know who else should be afraid of us? Any member of Congress who does not respect our rights.” “A Day Without a Woman” coincided with International Women’s Day and sparked conversations about women in the workforce and disparate wages between men and women. Jody Ellenby, a fifth-grade D.C. charter school teacher who skipped work Wednesday, attended two protests. “I hope to stand in solidarity with women who can’t strike today, and I hope to be a voice for women who have seen violence in the past,” Ellenby said. “I am a privileged person, but I hope to use that privilege to stand for others who may not be able to.” Women who couldn’t join the strike were urged to participate
MELINA MARA (THE WASHINGTON POST)
Women in the District and around the country go on strike to show their clout THE DISTRICT Women’s March on Washington organizers made their first large-scale attempt Wednesday to build on the momentum of their January march, calling on women across the country to skip work and take to the streets to resist the policies of the new presidential administration. The result was a smaller crowd with a harder-edged concept, which contrasted with the spirit of the earlier march. In New York, 13 women were arrested as they made a “human wall” around Trump International Hotel. Elsewhere, the demonstrations were more subdued. In the nation’s capital, protesters swarmed public spaces in front of the White House, Capitol and Department of Labor, aimed at drawing attention to women’s roles in the labor force and to criticize government actions they view as anti-immigrant, anti-Muslim and anti-woman.
Female members of Congress wore red Wednesday in a show of solidarity.
SCHOOL SOLIDARITY
1,700
The number of teachers in Prince George’s County who took leave Wednesday in support of the Women’s Day protest, forcing classes to be canceled. About 30 percent of the district’s transportation staff also took off. Classes were also canceled in Alexandria and at least nine charter schools in D.C. (TWP)
Gov. McAuliffe approves Virginia license plate promoting highway safety
by wearing red — a color that symbolizes “revolutionary love and sacrifice,” organizers said — and spend money at small and female-owned businesses. Trump didn’t respond to the protests, but tweeted to coincide with International Women’s Day, saying, “I have tremendous respect for women and the many roles they serve that are vital to the fabric of our society and our economy.” PERRY STEIN, MICHAEL ALISON CHANDLER AND SANDHYA SOMASHEKHAR (THE WASHINGTON POST)
A D.C. man has admitted discussing a plot to disrupt an inaugural ball with an acid attack. Scott Charney, 34, pleaded guilty Tuesday to conspiracy to commit assault. If he performs 48 hours of community service, the criminal record will be expunged. His attorney said Charney didn’t have any acid and “had not intended to injure anyone in any way.” Charney was arrested ahead of the Jan. 19 DeploraBall. Conservative activist James O’Keefe had secretly recorded Charney discussing the plot. Protest leaders said the group knew it had been infiltrated and the conversation was a ruse. (AP)
The youngest son of U.S. Sen. Tim Kaine, who was Hillary Clinton’s running mate last year, was one of six people arrested while protesting against a rally in support of President Trump at the Minnesota state Capitol building last weekend. Linwood “Woody” Kaine, of Minneapolis, and four other people were suspected of lighting a smoke bomb inside the Capitol, a St. Paul police spokesman said. He said he didn’t know the circumstances surrounding the sixth arrest, which was made by state troopers. (AP) MARYLAND
Dems back bill to fund Planned Parenthood Maryland Democrats announced backing Wednesday for legislation in the state to continue funding family planning services provided by Planned Parenthood, concerned the federal government will cut such funding in a Republican health-care bill in Congress. The Maryland measure would direct $2 million in the state’s Medicaid budget to family planning, as well as another $700,000 from the state’s general fund. (AP)
Maryland lead-paint bill would let Baltimore city, landlords sue for past damages
THURSDAY | 03.09.2017 | EXPRESS | 5
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6 | EXPRESS | 03.09.2017 | THURSDAY
local VIRGINIA An undercover cop in New York City bought 217 assault weapons, Tommy guns and handguns, dismantling a trafficking ring that exploited Virginia’s looser gun laws and sent sellers north on buses with bags full of weapons, prosecutors said Wednesday. Traffickers were caught on wiretaps bragging about their ability to buy guns for resale, authorities said. “There’s no limit to how many guns I can go buy from the store,” suspect Antwan Walker is heard saying on a police wiretap. “I
can go get 20 guns from the store tomorrow. I can do that Monday through Friday. ... They might start looking at me, but in Virginia, our laws are so little, I can give guns away.” Acting Brooklyn District Attorney Eric Gonzalez said 24 people were arrested, mostly in Virginia. One person was from Brooklyn, and one from D.C. They are charged in an indictment alleging a conspiracy to bring up to a dozen guns illegally into New York City at a time. Walker, 21, and others were being held in Virginia awaiting
COLLEEN LONG (AP)
Police: Gun ring exploited Va. laws
Suspects exploited Virginia’s loose gun laws to traffic weapons into New York City, police said.
Fox euthanized after attacking woman who was walking in Great Falls, Va.
extradition to New York. Police and prosecutors say they arrested ringleaders, plus straw purchasers who bought guns to give them to other defendants for resale. Most illegal guns in the nation’s largest city come via Southern states with laws that are less restrictive than New York’s. Gonzalez said that must be changed. “I find this case truly, truly infuriating,” he said. “As so long as anybody continues to peddle death in our borough, we will continue this hard work … including beyond state lines.” COLLEEN LONG (AP)
More buses. Fewer stops. Same price. Metro’s G9 MetroExtra bus operates along Rhode Island Avenue between Mount Ranier and downtown D.C. Buses run weekdays every 15 minutes from 6 to 9 a.m. and 3 to 7 p.m. •
The route operates between Rhode Island & Eastern Avenues NE and downtown at Franklin Square.
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Buses serve limited stops: just 15 heading into downtown and 13 heading out of downtown.
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For more information about the G9 MetroExtra bus, including a list of bus stops, visit wmata.com/bus or call 202-637-7000 (TTY- 202-637-2033).
A burglary suspect who ran away from police and hid inside the ceiling of an unoccupied movie theater has been arrested. Prince George’s County police say Sherrod Weaver, 26, has been charged with 12 offenses including burglary, assault on a law enforcement officer and destruction of property. Police say they saw Weaver break into a home in Laurel while officers were conducting surveillance. The officers tried to arrest Weaver, but he threw a stolen TV at one of the officers before fleeing. Police said the standoff lasted more than three hours. (AP)
Uber driver accused of abducting, raping and assaulting a passenger Saturday in Virginia Beach
The new G9 MetroExtra bus is here.
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Suspect caught hiding in theater ceiling charged
THURSDAY | 03.09.2017 | EXPRESS | 7
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8 | EXPRESS | 03.09.2017 | THURSDAY
local
Ex-Md. delegate indicted Michael Vaughn is charged with selling his vote in bribery scheme MARYLAND Former Maryland State Del. Michael Vaughn, D-Prince George’s, has been indicted by a federal grand jury in connection with a wide-ranging bribery scheme and the theft of campaign funds to cover his personal bills. Federal authorities allege Vaughn received more than $10,000 in cash from liquor store owners in exchange for favorable
legislation that wou ld ex pa nd liquor sales in Prince George’s County or edge out competitors. Vaughn Vaughn had resigned from the legislature in January after news of the federal probe of the local liquor board broke and resulted in the initial arrest of two liquor store owners, the head liquor board inspector and a member of the commission. Vaughn, who served as a delegate from 2003 to 2017, cited health reasons for his resignation.
A judge allowed Vaughn released on his own personal recognizance during his initial appearance in U.S. District Court in Greenbelt on Wednesday. Federal authorities also accuse Vaughn of illegally shifting money donated to his campaign for his personal use, according to a statement from the government. The allegations involve at least $6,000 in funds, the indictment states. If convicted, Vaughn faces up to 65 years in prison. LYNH BUI (THE WASHINGTON POST)
Nine Baltimore youths charged Tuesday after robbery shared on Facebook
verbatim
“Even though we’ve been able to reduce violent crime as much as we have, people don’t want to have it at all — and I think that’s a good sign.” INTERIM D.C. POLICE CHIEF PETER NEWSHAM, during a public forum
Tuesday. Newsham was named to lead the city’s police force last month. The appointment is subject to confirmation by the D.C. Council.
Police: Man arrested after 22-mile car chase late Tuesday from Laurel, Md., to Washington, D.C.
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10 | EXPRESS | 03.09.2017 | THURSDAY
nation+world MARINE CORPS
Gun sales in Trump slump Firearms purchases fall — except among those feeling more fearful
COOPER NEILL (FOR THE WASHINGTON POST)
POLITICS Sales of guns and ammunition in the United States have dropped precipitously since Election Day, according to FBI statistics, trade groups, gun shop owners and corporate reports, with many saying it’s the result of electing a president who has vowed to protect gun rights. However, that overall decline has been accompanied by some unusual growth: Gun clubs and shops that cater to black and LGBT clients say there has been an uptick in interest in firearms since November among those who fear that racial and gender-based violence could increase during Donald Trump’s presidency. The slowdown in gun purchases, which came at the end of a record sales year, is due in part to promises that Trump and the Republican Congress made to expand gun rights. Firearms enthusiasts and sellers said Trump’s victory removed the sense of urgency to buy that some felt under former President Barack Obama, who tried to ban the sale of assault-style weapons. At Ron’s Guns along the Red River in the northwest corner of Louisiana, owner Gene Mock stocked up on inventory, anticipating that Democrat Hillary Clinton would win the presidency and continue the push for an assault-weapons ban. Sales the
SYRIA
Marines deployed to fire artillery in Raqqa battle
An array of pistols are for sale at a store in Garland, Texas. Gun sales have fallen since President Trump’s election.
week before the election were among the most brisk the shop had ever seen. Now that Trump, who has the full backing of the National Rifle Association, is president, fewer customers are buying, and there is a glut of products. Philip Smith, president of the National African American Gun Association, said his group has seen a recent surge that appears to be driven by fear that the nation’s divisive politics could spiral into violence. “Trump is some of that reason, and rhetoric from other groups that have been on the fringe,” Smith said. “It’s like being racist is cool now.” Smith said the group has added more than 7,000 members since
Election Day and new chapters are popping up all over the country. They include one in Bowie, Md., that started last month and already has 55 members. “People are scared, and rightfully so,” said Stephen Yorkman, who founded the Maryland chapter. “They feel better if they at least learn how to shoot a firearm or own one.” Nationwide, overall gun sales are trending downward after record highs during the Obama administration. According to the FBI, background checks, which are conducted at the request of licensed firearm dealers and retailers when they make sales, dropped from 3.3 million in December 2015 to 2.8 million in December 2016. In January 2017,
there were 2 million background checks performed, compared with 2.5 million in January 2016. Sales of the semiautomatic sporting rifles that Obama and Clinton wanted to ban have slowed the most since the election, said Larry Keane, senior vice president and general counsel of the Shooting Sports Foundation, which represents gun manufacturers. Keane said the industry is used to seeing spikes in demand based on political rhetoric, both nationally and on the state level. Slowdowns typically occur after the holidays, he said, and sales were so brisk in 2016 that the industry did not think they were sustainable. T. REES SHAPIRO AND KATIE ZEZIMA (THE WASHINGTON POST)
WATER MIXUP
Too pink to drink?
Residents of Onoway, Alberta, were shocked to find bright pink water spewing from their taps Monday. The town’s mayor, Dale Krasnow, apologized to the town of about 1,000 on Tuesday but said the water was not a health risk, the BBC reported. The pink color was a side effect of a common water-treatment chemical called potassium permanganate, used to remove iron and hydrogen sulphide from water, he added. It likely got into the reservoir when a valve malfunctioned. (EXPRESS)
Panama ex-dictator Manuel Noriega, 83, is in critical condition after brain surgeries
Marines from an amphibious task force have left their ships in the Middle East and deployed to Syria, establishing an outpost from which they can fire artillery in support of the fight to take back the city of Raqqa from the Islamic State, defense officials said. The deployment marks a new escalation in the U.S. war in Syria, and puts additional conventional U.S. troops in the battle. (TWP) NATIONAL SECURITY
Border patrol may alter lie detector requirement The Border Patrol’s parent agency would exempt many veterans and law enforcement officers from a lie detector test during hiring, under a proposal spurred by President Trump’s plan to add 5,000 agents. About two-thirds of applicants fail the CBP’s polygraph, which has been called a deterrent for applicants. It was instated after more agents were arrested for misconduct following a hiring surge. Immigration and Customs Enforcement does not require lie detector tests. (AP) PUERTO RICO
Board: Government is at risk of shutdown A federal control board warned on Wednesday that Puerto Rico’s government needs to take “major emergency actions” to avoid shutting down because its cash flow is critically low. The board released an audited financial statement that found this year’s government expenses might be understated by $360 million to $810 million. The island could face a $190 million cash deficit by July. (AP)
CNN: Jon Huntsman, U.S. ambassador to China under Obama, tapped as new Russia envoy
THURSDAY | 03.09.2017 | EXPRESS | 11
nation+world
Militants in disguise kill 30 KABUL, AFGHANISTAN Gunmen wearing white lab coats stormed a military hospital in Afghanistan’s capital on Wednesday, killing at least 30 people and wounding dozens in an attack claimed by the Islamic State. The attack on the 400-bed military facility, located near two civilian hospitals in Kabul’s heavily guarded diplomatic quarter, set off clashes with security forces that lasted several hours. The brazen assault reflected the capability of militant groups in Afghanistan to stage largescale and complex attacks in the heart of Kabul, underscoring the challenges the government
SHAH MARAI (AFP/GETTY IMAGES)
ISIS claims attack on Kabul military hospital that wounded dozens
Afghan policemen stand guard near the site of an attack at a Kabul military hospital Wednesday.
continues to face to improve security for ordinary Afghans. Gen. Dawlat Waziri, a Defense Ministry spokesman, said there were “more than 30 killed and more than 50 wounded” in the attack.
IT’S LONELY AT THE TOP
4.2%
Afghan forces battled the attackers, dressed like health workers, floor by floor, he added. According to Waziri, four gunmen were involved, including two suicide bombers who detonated their explosives vests once the group was inside the hospital. The two other attackers were shot dead by security forces. A member of the security forces was killed in the shootout and three other security officers were wounded. Along with the bomb vests, the attackers also had AK-47 rifles and hand grenades. The audacious midmorning attack, the deadliest in the Afghan capital in months, drew immediate condemnation from foreign governments and humanitarian groups, and was denounced as an “atrocity” by the U.N. mission.
The proportion of Fortune 500 companies with women in CEO positions in 2016, according to the Fortune Knowledge Group and the Royal Bank of Canada. The number of women on the list dropped from 24 in 2015 to 21, Quartz reported. General Motors’ Mary Barra, No. 8 on the list, is the highestranking woman. (EXPRESS)
(AP/THE WASHINGTON POST)
Son of assassinated Kim Jong Nam, nephew of N. Korea’s Kim Jong Un, speaks out in video
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A stress-free Ikea assembly? The relationship-testing task of putting together Ikea furniture might be getting easier. According to Quartz, the Swedish company said last week it is ready for more models to have a “wedge dowel,” which allows customers to simply click furniture together in a tools-free assembly process. (EXPRESS)
Turkey shuts down Mercy Corps, U.S.-based aid group helping Syrians in Turkey
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nation+world
WikiLeaks may work with tech firms TECHNOLOGY T he a nti- secrecy g roup WikiLeaks raised the prospect Wednesday of sharing sensitive details it uncovered about CIA hacking tools with leading technology companies whose flagship products and services were targeted by the government’s hacker-spies. If that sharing should take place, the unusual cooperation would give companies like Apple, Google, Microsoft, Samsung and others an opportunity to identify and repair any flaws in their software and devices that were being exploited by U.S. spy agencies and some foreign allies, as described in nearly 9,000 pages of secret CIA files WikiLeaks
ALEX WONG (GETTY IMAGES)
Unusual cooperation could help companies like Apple and Google
Neither the White House nor the CIA has confirmed the leaks are authentic.
published on Tuesday. The documents describe clandestine methods for bypassing or defeating encryption, antivirus tools and other protective security features for computers, mobile phones and even smart TVs. The White House and the CIA have declined to confirm that the documents are authentic. On
Wednesday, the CIA said Americans should be “deeply troubled” by the disclosures. WikiLeaks has not released the actual hacking tools themselves. The group indicated it was still considering its options but said in a statement Wednesday: “Tech companies are saying they need more details of CIA
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attack techniques to fix them faster. Should WikiLeaks work directly with them?” It wasn’t clear whether WikiLeaks — a strident critic of Google and Facebook, among others — was serious about such action. Secu r it y ex per ts sa id WikiLeaks is obligated to work privately with technology companies to disclose previously unknown software flaws, because consumers would have no time to discover how to defend themselves against their use. WikiLeaks has said the latest files apparently have been circulating among former U.S. government hackers and contractors. “The clear move is to notify vendors,” said Chris Wysopal, chief technology officer of Veracode Inc. “If WikiLeaks has this data then it’s likely others have this data, too.” TED BRIDIS, RAPHAEL SATTER AND JACK GILLUM (AP)
COURTS
Judge allows Hawaii suit against revised travel ban U.S. District Judge Derrick Watson on Wednesday granted Hawaii’s request to continue with a lawsuit against President Trump’s travel ban and set a hearing for March 15, the day before the revised ban is set to go into effect. The amended lawsuit says the revised ban will harm the Muslim population of Hawaii as well as schools and employers. (AP) CHINA
Preliminary approval given for 38 Trump trademarks China has granted preliminary approval for 38 new Trump trademarks, covering everything from hotels and golf clubs to bodyguard services, public documents show. All but three are in the president’s own name. Trump’s lawyers in China applied for the trademarks in April 2016. It is not clear if the trademarks will result in Trump-branded businesses. (AP)
China wants to apply brakes on U.S., N. Korea MILITARY China’s foreign minister said Wednesday that North Korea could suspend its nuclear and missile activities in exchange for a halt in joint U.S.-South Korea military drills, in an unusually public proposal that analysts said showed Beijing’s growing alarm over the tensions. U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley said the U.S. has to see “some sort of positive action” from North Korea before it can take Kim Jong Un seriously. She spoke after a U.N. Security Council meeting Wednesday on North Korea’s latest missile launches. U.S. State Department acting spokesman Mark Toner said, “At this point we don’t see it as a viable deal.” Earlier Wednesday, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi said the North’s frictions with Washington and Seoul were like “two accelerating trains.” “Are the two sides really ready for a head-on collision?” Wang told reporters. “Our priority now is to flash the red light and apply the brakes on both trains.” Beijing also is opposed to the U.S. deployment of an antimissile system in South Korea. Wang likely renewed the dual suspension proposal in the hopes that President Trump might see it as an alternative approach, said John Delury, a North Korea analyst at Yonsei University in Seoul: “Wang Yi is putting it out there for Trump, saying ‘here’s an off-ramp to the current tensions.’ ” (AP)
Cyclone Enawo kills at least 3 in Madagascar; 500 left homeless
THURSDAY | 03.09.2017 | EXPRESS | 13
nation+world
Obamacare vs. the GOP health bill
Coast Guard, TSA could take hit to fund wall
The Trump administration is preparing to pitch House Republicans’ health-care proposal directly to the public in an attempt to circumvent a surge of opposition to the plan among conservatives, CHIP SOMODEVILLA (GETTY IMAGES)
Democrats and health-care industry groups. White House press secretary Sean Spicer said administration officials, including President Trump, are engaged in a “full-court press” to sell the bill through local radio and television interviews and meetings with stakeholders. Although key details about the Republican plan are still unknown, including cost and coverage, here’s how it compares to Obama’s Affordable Care Act. (THE WASHINGTON POST/AP)
Coverage ACA: About 11 million people are covered by expanded Medicaid in the 31 states that opted in. Another 12 million nationwide buy private insurance through governmentsponsored markets that offer plans with subsidized premiums. The national uninsured rate is below 9 percent, a historic low. GOP bill: Extent of coverage and its impact on the nation’s uninsured rate is unknown at this time.
Cost ACA: Coverage will cost about $1.4 trillion from 2017 to 2026, based on Congressional Budget Office estimates. GOP bill: Unknown at this time; Republican aides say CBO numbers are coming shortly.
Private coverage for individuals ACA: Provides income-based tax credits for consumers buying government-regulated plans through healthcare.gov and state insurance markets. The most generous assistance goes to people with low-to-modest incomes. Many solid middle-class households get no help
despite sharp increases in premiums. GOP bill: Provides tax credits primarily based on age, gradually phasing down for individuals making more than $75,000, or married couples earning more than $150,000. Credits can be used to buy any state-licensed plan. More middle-class consumers will benefit, but there is concern lower-income people would be disadvantaged.
Medicaid ACA: States that accept expanded Medicaid receive a generous federal match, gradually phasing down to 90 percent. The expansion covers people with incomes up to 138 percent of the federal poverty line — about $16,640 for an individual. Most new beneficiaries are low-income adults with no children living at home. Medicaid is now the country’s largest health insurance program, covering more than 70 million people under a federal-state pact. It remains an open-ended entitlement, allowing states to draw down funds for a portion of costs incurred by lowincome people, from children to nursing-home residents. GOP bill: Ends the higher federal
match for Medicaid expansion beneficiaries, starting in 2020. States can still continue to receive some enhanced federal payments, but only for expansion enrollees who were already covered before that. States will get a lower match for new enrollees. More significantly, the bill would overhaul the framework of Medicaid, ending its open-ended federal financing. Starting with the 2020 fiscal year, each state would receive a limited, per beneficiary amount based on enrollment and costs. States would gain flexibility to cap enrollment and change benefits. Federal payments would be increased according to a measure of medical inflation. Impacts are unclear.
Deductibles ACA: Provides cost-sharing subsidies for low-to-moderate income people who buy a standard silver plan in the government markets. GOP bill: Eliminates ACA’s costsharing subsidies, but allows people to make much higher contributions to tax-sheltered health savings accounts, to cover deductibles and copayments. Sets up a fund that states can use for a variety of
Va. transgender student Gavin Grimm wants court ruling on bathrooms before graduation
purposes, including cost-sharing assistance.
Pre-existing conditions ACA: Forbids insurers from turning people down because of medical problems, or charging them more. GOP bill: Provides protection for people with health problems. But consumers who have not maintained continuous insurance coverage face a 30 percent premium penalty for a year. States can use federal funds to set up highrisk pools as insurers of last resort.
Generational balance ACA: Insurers can charge their oldest customers no more than three times what they charge young adults. That benefits older adults prone to illness but has made coverage costly for young people. GOP bill: Insurers could charge older customers up to five times what they charge young adults. Advocates for older people argue that’s unfair.
Young adults ACA: Can stay on parental insurance until age 26. GOP bill: Same.
NATIONAL SECURITY The Trump administration, searching for money to build a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border, is weighing significant cuts to the Coast Guard, the Transportation Security Administration and the Federal Emergency Management Agency, according to a draft plan. The Office of Management and Budget proposal would slash the Coast Guard’s budget 14 percent to about $7.8 billion. The TSA and FEMA budgets would be cut about 11 percent each, to $4.5 billion and $3.6 billion, respectively. However, the Department of Homeland Security, which oversees all of them, would grow 6.4 percent to $43.8 billion. About $2.9 billion of that would go to building the border wall. Michael Short, a White House spokesman, cautioned Tuesday that the Trump administration is still working on the budget. The Coast Guard cuts include deactivating Maritime Security Response Teams, which carry out counterterrorism patrols in ports and sensitive waterways. Proposed TSA cuts include reducing the “armed pilot” program, saving $20 million. About $57 million would come from cutting a program that sends armed teams to sweep airports and train stations. Another idea is to eliminate or reduce a FEMA program that helps states and local entities prepare for natural disasters. (THE WASHINGTON POST)
More than 1,000 Greek farmers protest tax hikes, fight police in clashes in Athens
sports 14 | EXPRESS | 03.09.2017 | THURSDAY
REDSKINS MOVES
Looking internally
RICK SNIDER | SPORTS GURU
Options in free agency
On Wednesday, the Redskins re-signed one unrestricted free agent and tendered two restricted players, which gives them the right to match bids from competing teams.
DON’T LOOK FOR THE REDSKINS TO SPEND BIG when the free agent market opens at 4 p.m. today. Team president
Bruce Allen doesn’t believe in signing expensive free agents, so the Redskins might have more second-tier signings in the coming days. But maybe Washington will sign a marquee player to appease fans after the recent turmoil in the
(THE WASHINGTON POST)
team’s front office — general manager Scot McCloughan wasn’t at Redskins Park this week after missing the com-
3
bine with what the team termed, “family matters.” Here are five free agency storylines to watch for the Redskins.
TE Vernon Davis Age 33, unrestricted
He announced the news on Snapchat, and the Redskins backed it up Wednesday. The Post reported a deal for $15 million over three years.
GETTY IMAGES
2
Splashy signing
Plan B at DE
Receiving targets
Inside help
Added protection
Washington needs two defensive ends, so it could draft one in the first round and sign another with an expensive deal today. But the Redskins should be careful because their history of paying big money to defensive linemen has often ended badly. Remember Dana Stubblefield, Dan Wilkinson and Albert Haynesworth? If Washington moves on a big name, it could be Calais Campbell, a top 3-4 end even at age 30. In nine seasons with Arizona, he had 56.5 sacks. With at least nine teams known to be interested, the 6-foot-8 lineman could be monstrously expensive.
If the Redskins can’t get Campbell, they could drop one zero off the paycheck and sign Lions defensive end Devin Taylor. At 6 feet 7 and 275 pounds, Taylor, 27, offers similar length and strength to Campbell. Taylor has 11.5 sacks over the past two years, and with long arms and a 4.7-second time in the 40-yard dash speed, he can play in a 3-4 or 4-3 scheme. Taylor could be a bargain as a rotational player. The Redskins can’t get enough depth at end, and Taylor is young enough to rebound from a poor finish in 2016. He’s a decent run defender but needs more consistency in his pass rush.
The Redskins will need to replace Pierre Garcon, who reportedly struck a deal Wednesday with the 49ers, and probably DeSean Jackson, who has been linked to the Buccaneers, Eagles, Patriots and Cowboys. Washington should look to Brian Quick, a possession receiver who’s best at short receptions. He’s not fast enough to shake defenders past 10 yards, but the West Coast offensive concepts that Redskins QB Kirk Cousins loves make Quick a strong fit. Quick (6-3) is the type of big target Washington needs to draw coverage off of tight end Jordan Reed in the red zone.
The Redskins seem happy enough with their inside linebackers, but they should be open to upgrading. Buffalo probably can’t afford to bring back unrestricted free agent Zach Brown, who’s coming off a career year with 149 tackles and four sacks. Brown, 27, is in his prime but still a risk. He made his first Pro Bowl last year, but his four previous seasons were middling. Still, the Redskins can use a run-stopper like Brown, who had 97 solo tackles in 2016. His speed also allows him to drop into coverage. If Brown is left on the market for a few days, Washington should take a run at him.
The Redskins could bring in Jaguars offensive lineman Luke Joeckel to the right side and move guard Brandon Scherff to the left side for a stronger overall unit. The second overall pick in 2013, Joeckel suffered a torn MCL four games into last season after playing left tackle his first three years. That injury forces Joeckel into the bargain category, but his ability to play positions across the line is invaluable. The Redskins need to upgrade at left guard and Scherff has been expected to move there eventually. Joeckel showed in four starts last year that he’s a better guard than tackle.
Reports: Cowboys will release Tony Romo today, allowing QB to pick his next team
ILB Will Compton Age 27, restricted
The cerebral overachiever’s 106 tackles in 2016 were second on the team. Teammates describe him as a coach on the field.
1 RB Chris Thompson Age 26, restricted
As one of the NFL’s top thirddown backs last year, he averaged 5.2 yards per carry and 7.1 yards per catch with five total touchdowns.
NFL Network’s Steve Smith reports Ravens will cut his old teammate, LB Elvis Dumervil
THURSDAY | 03.09.2017 | EXPRESS | 15
sports
McCloughan’s role shrinks Source: Redskins GM is no longer making roster-related decisions NFL Less than eight weeks before the NFL draft, Redskins general manager Scot McCloughan is playing no role in decisionmaking related to the team’s roster, according to a person with knowledge of the workings at Redskins Park. McCloughan’s agent, Peter Schaffer, will meet soon with team officials about his client’s
status, according to ESPN’s John Keim. McCloughan wasn’t with Redskins officials at last week’s NFL combine, the most significant offseason gathering for executives to evaluate college prospects before the NFL draft (April 2729). McCloughan hasn’t been in the office this week. The NFL’s window for free-agent negotiations opened Tuesday. Sources close to the discussions said the Redskins have discussed how to proceed if McCloughan is relieved of his duties. Tampering rules prevent them
QB Tyrod Taylor agrees to restructured deal with the Bills
NEW YORK SHUFFLE
Brandon Marshall signs with Giants
from hiring any current NFL general manager if they decide to part with McCloughan. In the short term, the Redskins could coax back A.J. Smith, a former consultant who retired two months after McCloughan was hired, for an interim role. Smith, 68, spent a decade as GM of the Chargers. In-house options include Scott Campbell, director of college scouting; Alex Santos, director of pro personnel; Doug Williams, a senior personnel executive; or president Bruce Allen. LIZ CLARKE
The Giants signed free agent Brandon Marshall to a twoyear deal, the wide receiver confirmed Wednesday. The former Jets wideout tweeted a picture of the signed contract on Wednesday with the headline: “Done Deal!!!! #GMEN.” The Jets released Marshall less than a week ago, making him eligible to sign with any team before the start of free agency today. Marshall, who will turn 33 this month, had 59 catches for 788 yards and three TDs last year. (AP)
AND MIKE JONES (THE WASHINGTON POST)
QB Brian Hoyer agrees to 2-year deal with the 49ers
Cardinals finalize 5-year extension for DE Chandler Jones
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16 | EXPRESS | 03.09.2017 | THURSDAY
sports
MIAMI 62, SYRACUSE 57
DUKE 79, CLEMSON 72
MEN’S BASKETBALL
Hurricanes strengthen NCAA Tournament case
Kennard propels Duke into quarterfinal vs. Louisville
Runway mishap delays Michigan en route to D.C.
Star freshman Josh Jackson will sit out the opening game of the Big 12 Tournament for top-ranked Kansas after he backed into a parked car last month and fled the scene, coach Bill Self announced Wednesday. Today the No. 1 seeded Jayhawks will play the winner of Wednesday night’s TCU-Oklahoma game. Jackson was disciplined internally and not suspended for vandalizing the car of a female student last month. (AP)
Kamari Murphy had 16 points and 10 rebounds, and Miami held off Syracuse 62-57 in the second round of the ACC Tournament on Wednesday. The ninth-seeded Hurricanes (21-10) play top-seeded and sixth-ranked North Carolina in a quarterfinal today (noon, ESPN), but they might have already solidified a second straight trip to the NCAA Tournament. A 2-11 record away from home hurts Syracuse’s bid. (AP)
Luke Kennard made two clutch jumpers in the final 2:04 to help No. 14 Duke thwart a rally by Clemson and advance to the quarterfinals of the ACC Tournament with a 79-72 win Wednesday at Barclays Center. The fifth-seeded Blue Devils (24-8) play fourthseeded and No. 8 Louisville today (2 p.m., ESPN). Kennard and Duke freshmen Jayson Tatum and Frank Jackson each scored 20 points. (AP)
The plane carrying Michigan’s team at Willow Run Airport slid off a runway during an aborted takeoff Wednesday outside of Ann Arbor. A team spokesman said everyone was safe on a day marked by high winds. The team manager tweeted a video suggesting the plane skidded through a fence and across a road. Michigan faces Illinois in the Big Ten Tournament today (noon, BTN) at Verizon Center in Washington. (AP)
MARY ALTAFFER (AP)
MEN’S BASKETBALL
Kansas suspends Jackson for Big 12 tourney opener
Luke Kennard, left, was one of three Duke players with 20 points.
Tim Duncan (Wake Forest), John Stockton (Gonzaga) headline class for National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame
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Cavaliers’ Andrew Bogut (broken leg) ruled out for season
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weekendpass
THE LONG ROAD TO FREEDOM
The new Harriet Tubman Underground Railroad Visitor Center and a free interactive driving tour give fresh insights into the Maryland-born abolitionist’s struggles 22 AP AND THINKSTOCK PHOTOS/EXPRESS ILLUSTRATION
You gonna eat that?
A treasure trove
Building materials
Author Bill Schutt digs into the history of cannibalism 26
The Smithsonian pulls its ‘Objects of Wonder’ out of storage 24
Theaster Gates takes a tradesman’s approach to crafting his artwork 21
18 | EXPRESS | 03.09.2017 | THURSDAY
up front
ass A quick p s t’ a h w at going on
Make ‘Mirrors’ worth the wait Go during the week. The best time to visit is 10 a.m. on a Tuesday or Wednesday, says museum spokeswoman Allison Peck. On weekends, it can take two to three hours to see all six kaleidoscopic infinity rooms that are the centerpiece of the exhibit.
Wear comfortable shoes — you’ll be standing for a while. Here’s how it works: You’ll line up outside the museum and be allowed in at your entry time. Once inside, you’ll line up near the exhibition’s entrance. That will lead to another line farther inside.
BILL O’LEARY (THE WASHINGTON POST)
Given that “Yayoi Kusama: Infinity Mirrors” drew more than 14,000 visitors in just its first week (a record for the Hirshhorn Museum), don’t be surprised if you encounter long lines when you take in the selfie-friendly exhibit (open till May 14). Here are tips on how to prepare. EMILY CODIK (THE WASHINGTON POST)
You can’t eat inside either, so don’t plan on snacking while in line.
Once you get to the exhibition, you’ll get in even more lines for individual installations. You’re not allowed to sit on the floor, though you can ask for a stool.
worry about your purse or coat appearing in photos — you’re asked to drop those by the door before heading inside each room.
Eat before you go. Leave large bags at home. If you take a detour to store a bag once you’re inside, you’re going to lose your place in line. Don’t
Outside the Hirshhorn, there’s a pop-up cafe by local gelato and coffee shop Dolcezza, but the museum doesn’t allow liquids inside.
Prepare to be inside each room for just seconds. The Hirshhorn limits how much time you can spend inside each installation — on busy days, it’s only 20 to 30 seconds. Make the most of your time by getting your camera up and ready before the doors even swing open.
Go in groups of two or three. The museum asks visitors to enter the installations in groups. If you’re alone, that could mean experiencing them with strangers who might be disruptive or taking selfies. (Even worse: They might request you take a photo.) Go with people you know, and set ground rules about photos.
EDLAVITCH DCJCC WASHINGTON JEWISH LITERARY FESTIVAL MARCH 14–19, 2017 TICKETS ON SALE NOW:
edcjcc.org/litfest Let us tell you a story.
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WEDNESDAY, MARCH 15 7:30 PM
THURSDAY, MARCH 16 7:30 PM
SUNDAY, MARCH 19 10:30 AM
SUNDAY, MARCH 19 3:00 PM
Noa Baum: Solo Show and Book Talk
Local Authors Fair
Unpacking Parenthood: Memoir, Mindfulness, and Managing the Meltdowns
Maya Benton: Roman Vishniac Rediscovered
Selected Shorts
Author and storyteller Noa Baum opens this year’s festival with a unique presentation combining performance and text inspired by her compelling memoir, A Land Twice Promised: An Israeli Woman’s Quest for Peace.
Join us for a moderated discussion celebrating the diverse and vital community of writers living and working in the greater Washington, DC area as well as a reflection upon this year’s festival theme, “Unexpected Journeys.” This event is free and open to the public with reception to follow.
Rabbi Susan Silverman, Dr. Carla Naumburg, and Marjorie Ingall give us their takes on parenting in a discussion that is sure to illuminate and entertain.
Washington Hebrew Congregation– 3935 Macomb Street, NW
Maya Benton brings us her beautifully illustrated volume Roman Vishniac Rediscovered, offering an expansive look at modernist photographer Vishniac’s work. In partnership with Washington Hebrew Congregation
The hit public radio series features an afternoon of spellbinding short stories by established and emerging writers, performed by Tony Award-winner James Naughton, DC-based stage actress Holly Twyford, and Broadway and TV star of Ugly Betty, Michael Urie.
THURSDAY | 03.09.2017 | EXPRESS | 19
up front Tony Bennett Music Center at Strathmore, May 6, $86-$176.
Crooner and Lady Gaga collaborator Tony Bennett, who dropped a new album last year, will headline Strathmore’s 2017 Spring Gala, which supports arts and education. GET TICKETS: Friday at 10 a.m. through strathmore.org.
Depeche Mode Verizon Center, Sept. 7, $39.50-$129.50.
Next week, English electronic act Depeche Mode will release its first album in four years, “Spirit,” which was produced by Simian Mobile Disco’s James Ford. GET TICKETS: Friday at 10 a.m. using Ticketmaster.
free & easy
Fleet Foxes Merriweather Post Pavilion, July 29, $41-$56.
Fleet Foxes make their long-awaited return in June with “Crack-Up,” the indie-folk band’s first album since 2011. Animal Collective, which made a record called “Merriweather Post Pavilion,” opens the local stop on Fleet Foxes’ brief U.S. tour. GET TICKETS: Friday at 10 a.m. through Ticketfly.
Cage the Elephant Lincoln Theatre, April 11, $45.
Rock band Cage the Elephant is stripping down for its “Live & Unpeeled” acoustic tour, which will find the sextet backed by a string quartet. GET TICKETS: Friday at 10 a.m. via Ticketfly. RUDI GREENBERG (EXPRESS)
THE WASHINGTON POST
JUST ANNOUNCED!
St. Patrick’s Parade Pull the kelly green out of your closet: D.C.’s St. Patrick’s Parade takes over Constitution Avenue on Sunday, five days before St. Paddy’s Day itself. Hundreds of dancers, musicians and enthusiastic wavers will accompany floats from Seventh to 17th Street NW, starting at noon. You can reserve a grandstand seat for $15, or you can try to snag a free spot along the route — just follow the sea of green. LORI MCCUE (EXPRESS)
COMING SOON
Bruckner’s First Symphony Mozart’s Third Violin Concerto Christoph Eschenbach, conductor Nurit Bar-Josef, violin
Mozart Bruckner
Violin Concerto No. 3 Symphony No. 1
March 16–18 | Concert Hall FRIDAY MORNING COFFEE CONCERT Friday, March 17 at 11:30 a.m.
Christoph Eschenbach, conductor Alisa Weilerstein, cello T. Picker Old and Lost Rivers Shostakovich Cello Concerto No. 1 Schubert Symphony No. 9
March 9 & 11 | Concert Hall
TICKETS ON SALE NOW! KENNEDY-CENTER.ORG (202) 467-4600 Tickets also available at the Box Office. Groups call (202) 416-8400. For all other ticket-related customer service inquiries, call the Advance Sales Box Office at (202) 416-8540. David and Alice Rubenstein are the Presenting Underwriters of the NSO. The NSO Music Director Chair is generously endowed by Victoria and Roger Sant. Lead support for A Salute to Slava is provided by
BEGINS TONIGHT AT 7!
Additional support for A Salute to Slava is provided by Blavatnik Family Foundation and BP plc. The Blue Series is sponsored by United Technologies Corporation.
20 | EXPRESS | 03.09.2017 | THURSDAY
weekendpass
It’s totally blossom
The pop-up from the team behind Miracle on Seventh Street is all about the buds Why Union Square Cafe is a big deal for D.C.
FARRAH SKEIKY PHOTOS
BARS If you’ve been to the trio of Shaw bars run by Derek Brown and Angie Fetherston, you know they’re really into themed pop-up bars. The duo’s holiday-themed Miracle on Seventh Street project drew long lines to Seventh Street NW the past two years, expanding last year to take over the bars Southern Efficiency and Eat the Rich, in addition to Mockingbird Hill. Now, Brown and Fetherston have decided to make the popups permanent, in a way. Starting this month, Southern Efficiency and Mockingbird Hill will be home to an ongoing series of popup bars, with themes, decorations and drink menus changing every few months. Open now is the Cherry Blossom Pub. The team has cut doorways between the two establishments, turning them into one large bar with multiple service areas. Southern Efficiency’s decor and drink menu draw inspiration from Japanese culture, and that bar is the prettier of the two spaces, decorated with paper blossoms and more than 2,000 paper cranes. Much of the back wall is filled with a print of “Flynn’s Jefferson Memorial,” a painting by local artist Maggie O’Neill showing cherry blossoms framing the Tidal Basin. Next door, Mockingbird Hill’s space is a tribute to one of Japan’s most notable exports: Mario the plumber of Nintendo fame. The question mark blocks and piranha plants from the “Super Mario
Paper cranes and buds hang from the ceiling of Southern Efficiency, which has turned into the Cherry Blossom Pub.
Bros.” games lurk overhead, and the back room has been turned into King Koopa’s castle. “It’s nice to have a bar covered in flowers, but it’s not going to appeal to all people,” Brown says. “We wanted the other bar to be something fun and whimsical.” Senior bar manager Paul Taylor, who crafted the cocktails for Miracle on Seventh Street, also created the dozen beverages on the Cherry Blossom Pub menu. The drinks — all $13, except for the $40 Flower Power, which serves four — are permeated with a sense of playfulness, while showing some serious cocktail chops. The Neko Colada, a pina colada-style drink made with miso-infused rhum agricole, is served in a maneki-neko tiki
Mockingbird Hill looks like a level of “Super Mario Bros.” — complete with blocks and mushrooms.
& Figli C3 Carciofo artichokebased amaro and a house-made spicy ginger ale, with plenty of bright orange and ginger flavors, plus a lingering bitterness. The kitchen has a menu of Japanese- and Italian-inspired foods, ranging from gyoza and seaweed salad to caprese grilled cheese and a spaghetti with chunky “New Jersey-style” Bolognese. The Cherry Blossom Pub is scheduled to run through April 15, but Brown says they may keep it open longer if it succeeds. Still, he says, “We have a string of ideas we’d like to do.” FRITZ HAHN (THE WASHINGTON POST)
mug, with a straw protruding from the cat’s waving paw. The It’s a Me, Amario combines sweet vermouth, the local Don Ciccio
1843 Seventh St. NW; through April 15, Sun.-Thu., 5 p.m.-12:30 a.m.; Fri. & Sat., 5:30 p.m.-1:30 a.m.
EVENTS
Bring your own records to B Side
If you’ve been to B Side (8298 Glass Alley, Fairfax) in the Mosaic District, you know that the turntable behind the bar usually provides the evening’s soundtrack. To celebrate the release of Great Lakes Brewing Co.’s Turntable Pils, B Side is inviting drinkers to bring their favorite vinyl to play on Wednesday at 5 p.m. (admission is free). Six Great Lakes beers will be on tap, and customers will be entered into a raffle for a special Great Lakes turntable each time they order a Turntable Pils. FRITZ HAHN (THE WASHINGTON POST)
Union Square Cafe, Danny Meyer’s contemporary American restaurant, is headed to D.C. The spot’s second location will be part of Capitol Crossing, the development coming between Massachusetts Avenue and E Street NW between 2018 and 2020. Here’s why this spot has restaurant insiders so excited. BECKY KRYSTAL (THE WASHINGTON POST)
This place is beloved Critical acclaim has come in the form of James Beard Awards, including wins for best chef in New York City, outstanding wine service, outstanding restaurant and outstanding service. It’s also topped Zagat’s survey of New York City’s most popular restaurants nine times.
It was ahead of its time A “contemporary American” restaurant wasn’t a very easy sell when Meyer opened the Manhattan venue in 1985, when French and Italian fare was in vogue. It drew from several cuisines in building its roster of eclectic fare, kicking off a trend of modern American restaurants.
Meyer is responsible for D.C.’s relaxed service style Published in 2006, Meyer’s book “Setting the Table” is a kind of bible for the restaurant industry. You’ll see his DNA in the relaxed but polished service at such D.C. restaurants as Rose’s Luxury and All-Purpose.
THURSDAY | 03.09.2017 | EXPRESS | 21
weekendpass
His work is labor-intensive
1811 14TH St NW www.blackcatdc.com @blackcatdc MARCH / APRIL SHOWS
Artist Theaster Gates takes inspiration from skilled tradespeople
EQUINOX LIVE MUSIC & BURLESQUE
FRI 10
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SAT 11
CHURCH NIGHT (21+)
SUN 12
SAM PATCH
WED 15 ROB SHELLEY PHOTOS (NATIONAL GALLERY OF ART)
EXHIBITS Last week, at the National Gallery of Art, Theaster Gates took an ax to one of his own paintings. The end result — a glossy black canvas with a gaping wound at its center — is part of a collection of the artist’s new works called “The Minor Arts,” which opened on Sunday. The hacked piece, called “Flat Bush,” isn’t meant to convey destruction or violence, Gates says. Rather, it came out of his fascination with laborers’ skills, such as swinging an ax with precision. In fact, Gates’ preoccupation with transforming humble trades and materials into fine art ties together all 10 pieces in the show, which includes a huge “painting” made of a recycled gym floor, a massive wall of hand-cut slate tiles and several paintings made from roofing tar. Gates, 43, first learned how to manipulate tar from his father, who was a roofer. “Working with my dad was essentially my MFA,” the Chicago native says. “I thought, ‘Is it possible for roofing to act as my principle subject instead of having a muse that is, like, a woman or a dude? Could I reflect on roofing and through roofing channel all of my sculptural ambition and all of my painterly ambition?’ ” Once he realized roofing could be so inspiring, he figured, why not flooring too? For a piece called “A Game of My Own,” Gates used planks of wood reclaimed from the gymnasium floor of a demolished Detroit high school. The Rothko-esque piece symbolizes how underprivileged kids have a shrinking number of places to play, Gates says. The scrambled basketball court markings in the planks of wood echo the disappearance of the structure and rules that governed the lives of the children
FRI 10
Theaster Gates’ “A Game of My Own” is meant to represent the decreasing number of play areas for poor kids.
who once played there, the artist adds. “As much as I’m invested in color field painting, I’m also invested in the fact that black schools are closing on the South Side [of Chicago], that poor schools are closing all over the country, including in D.C.,” Gates says. Art isn’t the only way Gates addresses the issues that matter to him. His Chicago-based nonprofit Rebuild Foundation has been buying up dilapidated South Side buildings and transforming them into affordable housing, art studios and community spaces. “Artists are a part of the league of people who should be thinking about the things that are happening outside in the real world,” Gates says. The two halves of his life fit together nicely, he adds. “The work that I do in the museum ... functions as symbolic or sketch work for the things [I do] that go back into the world.” A case in point: A piece in the exhibit, “New Egypt Sanctuary
of the Holy Word and Image,” consists primarily of several tall bookshelves laden with about 13,000 back issues of Ebony magazine. When Gates first came upon the massive, semiforgotten stash of magazines, they were scattered and out of order. So he and his assistants organized them by decade, had them professionally bound and built a temple preserving the magazine’s coverage of AfricanAmerican culture over the past 70 years. “Taking urban messes that are too great in number and too costly to deal with is something seemingly the United States is not good at,” Gates says. “And so I often feel like these small projects are also stand-ins for other kinds of human experiences, where what's required is just a deep investment in things and people.”
FRI 17
SECONDHAND SERENADE DANCE YOUR SELF CLEAN
PEOPLE’S BLUES OF RICHMOND WED 22 THE REGRETTES SAT 18
FRI 24
MINUS THE BEAR
SAT 25 THE JAY-Z & BEYONCE DANCE PARTY W/ DJ DREDD WED 29
HIPPO CAMPUS
FRI 31
MOCKSTROCITY TOUR MAC SABBATH METALACHI OKILLY DOKILLY
SAT 1
UNDERGROUND
COMEDY FEST
EVERY WEEKEND AT 7PM FRI: TEN FORWARD HAPPY HOUR SAT: DR. WHO HAPPY HOUR
PRIESTS
SAT MAR 11
WED MAR 15
SECONDHAND SERENADE
SADIE DINGFELDER (EXPRESS)
About 13,000 issues of Ebony adorn the shelves of “New Egypt Sanctuary of the Holy Word and Image,” a shrine to the magazine.
National Gallery of Art, East Building, Fourth Street and Constitution Avenue NW; through Sept. 4, free.
FRI MAR 24 MINUS THE BEAR WE ARE 3 BLOCKS FROM THE U STREET / CARDOZO METRO STATION TICKETS: www.TICKETFLY.com
22 | EXPRESS | 03.09.2017 | THURSDAY
weekendpass
1
Dorchester County courthouse
3
Malone Methodist Episcopal Church cemetery
KRISTEN PAGE-KIRBY (EXPRESS)
DORCHESTER COUNTY TOURISM PHOTOS
2
Stanley Institute
4
Blackwater National Wildlife Refuge
The guiding light The Eastern Shore of Maryland harbors plenty of contradictions — some towns are playgrounds for the yachted rich, while some have homes with peeling paint and sagging porches. Rural landscapes slam into Panera-anchored shopping centers. Amid the wind farms and produce stands, it’s easy to forget that much of the Eastern Shore was a thoroughfare on the Underground Railroad, and its most famous conductor spent her early life in and around these marshes. Harriet Tubman, a Maryland native, not only escaped from slavery herself, but also escorted other slaves north to freedom along the network of secret routes, churches and safe houses. Tubman returned to Maryland — risking her own freedom — multiple times, ultimately leading around 70 people out of bondage, according to historians. The opening of the Harriet Tubman Underground Railroad Visitor Center this weekend gives Tubman’s legacy a bright new home in Dorchester County, but there’s more to discover at the end of the two-hour drive from D.C. The Harriet Tubman Underground Railroad Byway, a free driving tour, allows visitors to explore the area surrounding the new center and find a new way back into history. KRISTEN PAGE-KIRBY (EXPRESS)
THURSDAY | 03.09.2017 | EXPRESS | 23
weekendpass A self-guided tour of Underground Railroad sites really moved us
TOURS My family and I sit in our CR-V while the sounds of a slave auction echo through the car. We’re parked in front of the Dorchester County courthouse in Cambridge, on the Eastern Shore of Maryland. It’s a spot where slave auctions were a common occurrence — the docks where the ships arrived are visible at the end of the street. It’s also the third stop on the 125-mile Harriet Tubman Underground Railroad Byway, a self-guided tour that lets anyone with a smartphone travel the paths that Tubman did. The audio guide blends narration, interviews with experts and powerful re-enactments to build a picture of African-American life during the era of slavery and the years after the Civil War. (It’s available for iPhone and Android at harriettubmanbyway.org/ audio-guides.) The app narrates our way through Cambridge and out to the country, where we stop at the Stanley Institute, a one-room schoolhouse that educated the African-American children of the Eastern Shore until 1966. The school, which is open only by appointment, is closed on this lateFebruary day, so my husband boosts my 8-year-old son up to peer through the windows into the dimly lit space, with two rows of desks marching orderly down the room. My son (who was not crazy about spending his Sunday in the back of a car) perks up: The whole school, in one room? More confusing — black children couldn’t go to school with white children? The concept of segregation is easy enough to explain. The reasoning behind it … that’s more difficult. I’m not sure we did a good job convincing him that there were some people who thought that was the way things should be. The Ma lone Methodist
The path to freedom
The Harriet Tubman Underground Railroad Byway tour takes visitors to more than 36 locations in Maryland, across 125 miles of countryside and shoreline, including the five stops highlighted here (locations are approximate).
t Easton
St. Michaels
Federalsburg
Cambridge 1 2 Taylors Island
3 4
5
Blackwater National Wildlife Refuge
5
D.C.
Bucktown Village Store
Episcopal Church, the eighth stop on the tour, is down a road just wide enough to pretend it’s two lanes. The church itself is gray with wear and shuttered to visitors. Though the graveyard is still in use — some of the gravestones are recent — it’s clear that very few people visit here regularly. Some of the stones are broken; the woods are trying to take back the land. We wander,
studying the grave markers. “Look at this one,” my husband says. “Do you know what those letters mean?” U.S.C.I. I don’t. “United States Colored Infantry,” he says. Alfred Wheatley fought for a country that kept him separate from other soldiers because of the color of his skin. I kneel down to take a picture. “Hang on,” says my husband, an Air Force veteran.
He leans down and fixes the American flag — the only sign of a recent visit — so it stands straight atop Wheatley’s grave. The Blackwater National Wildlife Refuge is not Tubmanspecific, but looking out over the nature preserve, it’s easy to see what Tubman had to endure on her trips in and out of the area. It’s swampy and thick with vegetation; the trails that people hike and bike and drive now weren’t there then. We stop briefly at the refuge’s visitor center (it’s time for a bathroom break, and this is one of the few restrooms you’ll find while driving) to watch the TVs showing live images captured by the bald eagle and osprey cameras and to take a spin around the butterfly garden, which my son is pleased to see is also a Pokémon Go gym. On the whole tour, it is the only spot where we see other people. The solitude returns as we travel down the quiet roads of the Eastern Shore (it’s a good idea to have two people in the car; while the app does offer directions, they’re not included in the audio, so having someone read the directions to the driver is best). We arrive at the Bucktown Village Store, the site where an overseer threw a scale weight at a slave he was arguing with and accidentally struck the then-teenage Tubman. The injury resulted in years of headaches, narcolepsy and hallucinations for Tubman. The whole setting seems unreal today: The little yellow building is closed to visitors and surrounded by an assortment of sheds and shacks, mundane pieces of life surrounding this almost sacred ground. We listen in silence to the story of Tubman’s near-fatal injury. After three hours or so, this is our last stop, though the tour continues for another 19 stops, all the way into Delaware (and, for those fleeing slavery, freedom). We, however, leave the ghosts behind and turn the car back to the south and to the present. K.P.K.
THE WASHINGTON POST
Follow Harriet Tubman’s lead
A new glimpse into the life of a great conductor The concept of the Harriet Tubman Underground Railroad Visitor Center was, like Tubman herself, born in the Eastern Shore’s Dorchester County. “It’s been an effort of a group of dedicated folks in the community who have been working on this for a very long time,” says Beth Parnicza, public affairs specialist for the National Park Service. The visitor center, co-managed by the NPS and the Maryland Park Service on a 17-acre state park, celebrates its grand opening this weekend with two days of lectures, living history displays and activities for kids. The visitor center, which contains exhibits about Tubman’s early life in Dorchester County, sits on the landscape that Tubman knew — and the designers of the building wanted you to know that. “You’ll notice that there are a lot of windows,” Parnicza says. “We are constantly trying to tie you back to the landscape. It’s very similar to what Tubman would have seen and experienced — it’s still very much the same.” Even the layout of the building is oriented to trace Tubman’s steps: A self-led tour winds you from south to north. But it doesn’t end there — after seeing the exhibits, visitors step into the “legacy garden.” Just as Tubman returned from free territory into slave country, the meandering path turns visitors back to the south. K.P.K.
4068 Golden Hill Road, Church Creek, Md.; grand opening Sat. & Sun., 9 a.m.-5 p.m., free (open daily, 9 a.m.-5 p.m., except for Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year’s Day).
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weekendpass
Unhidden (for now) treasure
Ever wish you could poke around the National Museum of Natural History’s vast storage facility? Well, that’s probably not going to happen unless you’re a scientist of some kind. However, an exhibit opening Friday, “Objects of Wonder,” attempts to give regular folks a glimpse of the museum’s 145 million artifacts and specimens, especially those that are rarely on display. “Some of them are too big, some of them are too fragile and some just don’t fit into the stories we are telling in the current exhibits,” says Mary Jo Arnoldi, one of the exhibit’s curators. Here are a few highlights. SADIE DINGFELDER (EXPRESS) National Museum of Natural History, 10th Street and Constitution Avenue NW; opens Fri., free.
Tuxtla statuette
Enaliarctos mealsi fossil
This statuette was carved out of a jade-like gem in A.D. 162, meaning it predates the Mayan civilization. The well-preserved hieroglyphics inscribed on the artifact, which was discovered in the foothills of the Tuxtlas Mountains in Mexico, have been crucial for anthropologists attempting to decipher other ancient Mesoamerican texts.
About 23 million years ago, the seal-like creature captured in this fossil lived in a shallow inland sea over what’s now California. Unlike modern pinnipeds (such as walruses and sea lions), this animal apparently had strong front and back legs, suggesting that it was fairly mobile on land.
Martha, the last passenger pigeon There were once billions of passenger pigeons in North America, but within a century and a half of the birth of our nation, they were wiped out, mostly by hunting and deforestation. The last of her kind, Martha died in 1914 in the Cincinnati Zoo and was immediately sent to the Smithsonian to be stuffed.
Whale earwax
Tsimshian house front This 38-foot-long house front is a stunning example of early-19thcentury artwork made by the Tsimshian people, a tribe that lives in what is now Alaska and British Columbia, Canada. The artwork tells a mythical history of the family that lived inside the house. The low door forced people to bow when entering the home and made it easier to defend against enemies.
‘Blue Flame’ Weighing more than 250 pounds, this huge chunk of gem-quality lapis lazuli was mined from Afghanistan’s Hindu Kush mountains and shipped out on the back of a mule. It’s among the largest examples of its kind.
As with tree rings, the wax that collects in whale ears forms concentric layers that capture loads of information — in this case, about pollutants in the water and the whale’s age and health, among other things. The Smithsonian has more than 1,000 samples of whale earwax dating back to the 1960s that researchers have only recently figured out how to analyze to learn about the changing ocean and whale behavior.
THURSDAY | 03.09.2017 | EXPRESS | 25
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weekendpass
Sometimes, you eat what you are Author Bill Schutt really sank his teeth into his subject for ‘Cannibalism’ BOOKS What kind of wine pairs best with human? Bill Schutt actually asked that question at a wine store, while en route to a dinner party where the main course was the hostess’s placenta. The wine clerk had no answer for him. “She turned and ran away, so I picked up a nice Italian red, an amarone, and it worked out quite well,” he says. The placenta, Schutt says, was delicious too. “It was clearly organ meat. It had the consistency of veal but it didn’t quite taste like beef,” he says. Schutt, a biologist at the American Museum of Natural History, went to that unusual dinner party as research for his new book, “Cannibalism: A Perfectly Natural History,” which he’ll discuss Tuesday at Kramerbooks. While researching, Schutt
found that the practice of eating the placenta — the organ that attaches a fetus to the uterine wall and is expelled during birth — is common in the animal kingdom, but not among human cultures. “People think it’s this ancient Chinese medicinal practice, but it’s really an American invention from the 1960s that’s gaining popularity again in places like Brooklyn,” he says. Still, history and anthropology
abound with examples of human cannibalism, says Schutt, who defines the practice broadly as the eating of all or part of another person. In one example that’s 180 degrees removed from the cultural values of modern Brooklynites, Chinese children in the Middle Ages occasionally offered up body parts (usually a thigh or upper arm) for their parents to consume as an extreme demonstration of filial piety. “It was cooked in a porridge,” Schutt says. If you have the appetite for it, here are some more tasty tidbits from Schutt’s book. As recently as the early 1900s, you could pick up mummia — ground-up mummy bones — from local pharmacies in America and Europe. (Originally, mummia was made from ancient Egyptians’ remains, but once demand picked up, any random dead body would do.) “They powdered it and made elixirs out of it,” he says. “You could buy it and use it for a number of different types of sicknesses.”
March 17-18, 2017
“People think it’s this ancient Chinese medicinal practice, but it’s really an American invention from the 1960s that’s gaining popularity again in places like Brooklyn.” BILL SCHUTT,
author and biologist, on the trend of eating the human placenta
In the 17th century, Europeans would line up with cups at public executions to collect the blood of the deceased. They believed that “the more violent the death, the more medicinal value there was in the blood, which was used to treat epilepsy,” Schutt says.
Until they were forced by missionaries and government officials to give up their traditional funeral rites in the 1960s, the Wari’ people of the Brazilian rainforest ate deceased loved ones in order to process their grief. “They were mortified at the concept of burying their dead,” Schutt says. “Why would you put your loved ones in the ground to rot and be eaten by worms?” The Fore people of Papua New Guinea also ate their dead, which resulted in the breakout of a mad cow disease-like illness called kuru, which peaked in the 1950s. China has a long, well-documented history of culinary cannibalism. One 12th-century text made regular reference to dumplings filled with minced human (often political prisoners), and another book, written in 1423, detailed regional recipes for boiling and steaming human flesh. SADIE DINGFELDER (EXPRESS)
Kramerbooks, 1517 Connecticut Ave. NW; Tue., 6:30 p.m., free.
You’re invited to DC’s Irish Tradition!
FILMS Charlie & Sam The Culture of Collards Encaustic
Tickets $10
Frogman
Purchase at www.bethesda.org. Imagination Stage • 4908 Auburn Avenue
The Sandman
St. Patrick’s Parade of Washington, D.C. March 12, 12pm - 2pm Constitution Ave from 7th to 17th Sponsored by
For more information, call 301-215-6660 or visit www.bethesda.org.
For more info & Grandstand tickets, visit dcstpatsparade.com
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THURSDAY | 03.09.2017 | EXPRESS | T1
PHOTO CREDIT: KEITH LADZINSKI
T2 | EXPRESS | 03.09.2017 | THURSDAY
FOUNDER Flo Stone
STAFF Executive Director Maryanne Culpepper Managing Director Christopher Head Director of Programming Brad Forder Director of Development Jessie Brinkley Director of Public Relations Helen Strong Director of Digital Communications Saaret Yoseph Director of Special Projects Owen Davies Director of Educational Outreach Arjumand Hamid Development Manager Heidi Hermisson Programming Manager Molly Berg Festival Coordinator Samantha Plakun Festival Producer Jon Gann Festival Interns Patrick J. Foust, Daryl Gardner Jr., Lexi Gopin, Liv Gwynn, Eloise Hackett, Anna Hedlund, Yewon Koh, Adriane Nguyen
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
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WELCOME TO THE 25TH ENVIRONMENTAL FILM FESTIVAL! 2017 has br ught many new fa es and families t Washingt n, s whether y u’re a re ent arrival r a l ngtime resident, we h e y u’ll j in us f r tw weeks f engaging films, talented filmmakers, and insightful s eakers t kee y u entertained and inf rmed as we elebrate ur amazing lanet and ex l re the hallenges that lie ahead. As R nald Reagan said m re than 30 years ag , “preservati n f ur envir nment is n t a liberal r nservative hallenge, it’s mm n sense.” our o ening Night ki ks ff with Water and Power: A California Heist from executive producer Alex Gibney, wh ’s been alled “the m st im rtant d umentarian f ur time.” A great lineu f r v ative envir nmental films f ll ws, examining t i s ranging fr m the Zika utbreak t the water risis in Flint and the Standing R k r test. A signature evening f s ien e films and anels will be resented in artnershi with H ward Hughes Medi al Institute and the Nati nal A ademy f S ien es; and we’re ex ited ab ut ur s reenings at the magnifi ent o rah Winfry Theater in the new Nati nal Museum f Afri an Ameri an Hist ry and culture. Dc’s new flagshi REI st re - resents a s e ial r gram f adventure films that take us fr m N rway t Fren h p lynesia. And ur Embassy r gram is ri her than ever with films fr m many nati ns, in luding Fran e, c l mbia, and Singa re. L k ut f r ur award-winners and ur l sing night r gram featuring Seasons (Les Saisons) with Ja ques perrin, os ar-n minated filmmaker f Winged Migrati n. See a film, j in the nversati n, get inv lved, give us y ur feedba k. Visit www.d eff. rg f r m re inf rmati n n the r gram, t v lunteer y ur time and talents, r t be me a Friend f the Festival. A huge thanks t all ur v lunteers, s ns rs, d n rs, and venue artners wh have made this 25th Anniversary Festival ssible. H e t see y u at a m vie!
Chair: Susan Vitka Vice Chair: Max Williamson Treasurer: John van D. Lewis Secretary: Elizabeth Berry Barbara L. Franklin, Caroline D. Gabel, Marion Guggenheim, Anita Herrick, Annie Kaempfer, Dan M. Martin, Josie Merck, Dane Nichols, Liz Norton, Peter O’Brien, Nora Pouillon, E. William Stetson III, Flo Stone, Catherine Wyler Trustee Emerita: Joan D. Murray Ex offi i : Maryanne Culpepper
ADVISORY COUNCIL
Chair: Gregory McGruder Wendy Benchley, Caroline Beresford Katie Carpenter, Harriett Crosby Sarah Davidson, Alice Day, Lincoln Day Diana Lady Dougan, Sarah duPont, Anne Emmet, Mark Epstein, Nelse Greenway, Grace Guggenheim, Laurence Hausman, Elizabeth Kucinich, Joseph Krakora, Gay Lord, Mary McCracken, Helen McNeill, Sally Meadows, Gouri Mirpuri, Chris Palmer, Peggy Parsons, Gary Rahl, Susan Rappaport, Deborah Rothberg, Edith Schafer, Joan Shorey, Jonathan Steffert, Roger Stone, Mary Wallace, Georgiana Warner
Cover Photo: Keith Ladzinski photographer, cinematographer, and documentary/adventure s rts filmmaker. His w rk has a eared in Nati nal Ge gra hi , The New Y rk Times, outside, and thers. Cover Design: Taylor Design Collective Frog Illustration: Ben Hillman & Co.
Maryanne Culpepper, Executive Director
HOW TO FESTIVAL First time attending DCEFF? No problem. We got you covered. Here’s everything you need to know to Festival like a pro:
TABLE OF CONTENTS
READ the Festival Guide and
Festival Welcome; How to Festival . . . . . . . . . . . 2
learn all about the outstanding envir nmental films sele ted f r the 25th Anniversary Festival. H ld n to the handy pocket guide inside, with a day-by-day breakd wn f all our programs and a list of all our venue artners.
kee u and stay nne ted with all the action around #DCEFF25.
WATCH trailers f r ur 2017 films and take a l k at ur gr wing lle ti n f #envir film sele ti ns, available for streaming via our online film portal.
EXPLORE the Festival’s website
EXPERIENCE the 2017 Festival.
dceff.org t ur hase ti kets and register for our screenings and events, many f whi h are free. che k ba k f r daily u dates.
Attend 1, 2 r 10 f ur film s reenings and events taking place at partner venues across Washington, DC, March 14-26. After the Festival, be sure t kee a l k ut f r ur year-r und r grams (#DcEFF365).
FIND ut the latest Festival news and announcements by subscribing t ur newsletter dceff.org/subscribe.
FOLLOW the Environmental Film Festival at @dcenvirofilm on Fa eb k, Twitter & Instagram t
ENJOY s e ial erks, like reserved seating, by becoming a Friend of the Festival dceff.org/friends.
2 TICKETS & DAILY UPDATES AT DCEFF.ORG
Opening & Closing Nights; Awards Screenings . . . . . . . . 3 Feature Films . . . . . . . . . . 4-12 Pocket Guide . . . . . . . . . .13-16 Calendar . . . . . . . . . . . . .14-15 Venue Index . . . . . . . . . . . . .16 Feature Films, Con’t . . . . .17-18 Short Film Programs . . . .19-23 Clips & Conversations . . . . . .24 Film Index. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .25 Donors. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 Ads/Sponsor List . . . . . . . 27-28
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THURSDAY | 03.09.2017 | EXPRESS | T3
CLOSING NIGHT
AWARDS
OPENING NIGHT
Premiere Screening and Reception Thanks to The Reva and David Logan Foundation for its support of this evening.
CLOSING NIGHT Winner of the Polly Krakora Award for Artistry in Film for
WATER & POWER: A CALIFORNIA HEIST J
SEASONS (LES SAISONS)
(USA, 2017, 86 min.) Emmy award-winning dire t r Marina Zen vi h’s Water & p wer: A calif rnia Heist, a Nati nal Ge gra hi d mentary film exe tive r d ed by A ademy Award winner Alex Gibney and r d ed by Jigsaw pr d ti ns, nf lds like a real-life versi n f the 1974 film n ir chinat wn, n vering the r thless ex l its f calif rnia’s n t ri s water bar ns, wh r fit ff the state’s res r es while everyday itizens end re a debilitating water risis. Director: Marina Zenovich in person Tues, Mar 14, 6:30 PM $30 National Geographic Society
(France, 2015, 95 min.) After traveling the w rld al ngside migrating birds (Winged Migrati n) and diving the eans with whales and manta rays (o eans), Ja q es perrin and Ja q es cl za d return to more familiar ground: the lush green forests and megafauna that emerged a r ss E r e f ll wing the last I e Age. ca t ring ex e ti nal f tage f the wild, diverse, and w nderf l animal life in E r e’s f rests, this film ex l res the shared hist ry that inextri ably binds h mankind with the nat ral w rld. Directors: Jacques Perrin in person and Jacques Cluzaud. Sun, Mar 26, 7 PM $10 Carnegie Institution for Science
©PHILIPPE GARGUIL/COURTESY OF MUSIC BOX
OPENING NIGHT
Eric Moe Award for Best Short on Sustainability
William W. Warner Beautiful Swimmers Award
Documentary Award for Environmental Advocacy
Founded in 2013 by Julia and Richard Moe in memory of their son, Eric, to honor his strong interest in film and commitment to sustainability, this award recognizes a short film that best captures efforts to balance the needs of humans and nature. The award includes a $5,000 cash prize. Presented with the National Wildlife Federation and the National Geographic Winning Director: Craig Norris Winner: KOKOTA: THE ISLET OF HOPE (Canada/Tanzania, 2016, 29 min.) The story of resilient people living on the front lines of limate hange and h w these nlikely her es have managed t inn vatively ada t and ref rest their island. Director: Craig Norris in person Finalist: ONE HUNDRED THOUSAND BEATING HEARTS (USA, 2016, 15 min.) Director: Peter Byck in person Mon, Mar 20, 7 PM $10 National Geographic Society
Established by the Warner/Kaempfer family for the 2015 Festival in memory of William W. Warner, author of the Pulitzer Prize-winning book, Beautiful Swimmers, a study of the crabs and watermen of the Chesapeake Bay, this award recognizes a film that reflects a spirit of reverence for the natural world. The award includes a $10,000 cash prize. Winning Director: James Gray Winner: THE LOST CITY OF Z (USA, 2017, 142 min.) Special Advance Screening A tr e-life drama ab t British ex l rer c l. per ival Faw ett, wh disa eared while sear hing f r a mysteri s ity in the Amaz n in the 1920s, the film is based n David Grann’s best-selling b k f the same name. Director: James Gray in person Thurs, Mar 23, 7 PM $10 National Geographic Society
Established for the 2014 Festival, this award recognizes a film that inspires advocacy in response to a compelling environmental challenge. The award includes a $10,000 cash prize. Winning Director: Fisher Stevens Winner: BEFORE THE FLOOD (USA, 2016, 96 min.) os ar-winning a t r, envir nmental a tivist, and united Nati ns Messenger f pea e Le nard Dica ri travels t five ntinents and the Ar ti t witness limate hange first-hand. He s eaks t s ientists, w rld leaders, a tivists, and l al residents t gain a deeper understanding of this complex issue and investigates concrete solutions to the most pressing envir nmental hallenge f r time. Producers: Trevor Davidoski in person and Jennifer Davisson Sat, Mar 18, 7 PM $20 Reception Carnegie Institution for Science
FEATURES
CLIPS & CONVERSATIONS
SHORTS
J WORLD, US AND DC PREMIERES
Q&A
DISCUSSION
KID-FRIENDLY PROGRAMS
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FEATURE FILMS 24 SNOW (Russia, 2015, 93 min.) Russian Environmental Film Showcase Presented in partnership with Moscow’s ECOCUP Film Festival and with the support of the Trust for Mutual Understanding The harsh Ar ti limate f Yak tia, Siberia, attra ts e le seeking freed m and inde enden e. Living in s h nditi ns is ass iated with daily str ggles with the envir nment and y rself. The film f ll ws a h rse breeder wh tends t his herd n the fr zen t ndra. As he s ends less and less time in his village and with his family, he feels a stranger in his wn h me. The film will be s reened with highlights fr m the M s w Ecocup Film Festival. Director: Mikhail Barynin in person Sun, Mar 19, 4 PM FREE with reservations Q&A Carnegie Institution for Science
thr gh the lens f nati nal se rity and gl bal stability. Interviews with disting ished admirals, generals, and military veterans reveal h w limate hange stress rs – water and f d sh rtages, dr ght, extreme weather, and sea level rise – f n ti n as atalysts f r nfli t in v latile arts f the w rld. Director: Jared P. Scott in person Executive Producer: Sophie Robinson in person Tues, Mar 21, 7 PM Q&A Carnegie Institution for Science
ANTS ON A SHRIMP
ANGRY INUKJ
100 YEARS: ONE WOMAN’S FIGHT FOR JUSTICE (USA, 2016, 76 min.) The David vs. G liath st ry f a etite Native Ameri an w man wh t k n the united States g vernment and w n a $3.4 billi n settlement f r s me f the rest e le in Ameri a. Director: Melinda Janko in person Sat, Mar 18, 7 PM FREE National Museum of the American Indian
THE AGE OF CONSEQUENCES J (USA, 2016, 80 min.) Presented by Bank of America The H rt L ker meets An In nvenient Tr th in this film, whi h investigates the im a t f limate hange n in reased res r e s ar ity, migrati n, and nfli t
4 TICKETS & DAILY UPDATES AT DCEFF.ORG
Wild-T h, h t gra hers Vin ent M nier and La rent Ballesta travel t the D m nt d’urville base in Antar ti a t nveil the treas res f this immense nat ral reserve. In this de t the bi diversity and r te ti n f the white ntinent in the face of climate change, they focus their artistic vision on a rapidly transforming continent and its inhabitants, in l ding a key s e ies, the Em er r peng in. Director: Jérôme Bouvier in person Tues, Mar 21, 7 PM FREE Reservations required Embassy of France
(Canada, 2016, 85 min.) An In k filmmaker ex l res the entral r le f seal hunting as part of a sustainable and ethical industry and lifestyle that has s rted In it e les f r ent ries. Ex sing the negative im a t that anti-seal am aigns have had n the lives f these e le, the film highlights the importance of the revenue they earn from the sale of sealskins and sh ws h w the mm nity’s new te hsavvy generati n is fighting ba k. Director: Alethea Arnaquq-Baril Sun, Mar 19, 2 PM FREE Q&A National Museum of the American Indian
ANIMAL HOMES: NESTSJ (USA, 2016, 60 min.) Bird nests me in all sha es and sizes, rafted fr m a diversity of materials, including grasses, leaves, mosses, and twigs, b nes, m d, and s ider silk. And q ite a few ntain man-made materials – l rf l twine, bits f wire, even lasti bags. Ea h ne is a remarkable w rk f art, b ilt with j st a beak! The film ex l res nesting gr nds all ver the w rld, where birds reate h mes f r the allim rtant task f r te ting their eggs and raising their y ng. Fr m the pBS series, “Nat re.” Director: Ann Johnson Prum Sat, Mar 18, 1 pm FREE Q&A National Wildlife Visitor Center, Laurel, Md.
ANTARCTICA, IN THE FOOTSTEPS OF THE EMPERORJ (France, 2016, 90 min.) Presented with the Cultural Services of the French Embassy J ining the “Wild-T h Antar ti a” ex editi n, initiated by os ar-winning dire t r L Ja q et and his NGo,
(USA, 2016, 88 min.) A laimed elebrity hef Rene Redze i wh se l av re eatery N ma has been la ded as the w rld’s best resta rant, rel ates fr m c enhagen t T ky . The hef ( ne f Time magazine’s m st infl ential e le) and his internati nal team reate a 14- rse menu using only Japanese ingredients, inspired by one of the most beautiful and often forbidding countries in the w rld. Director: Maurice Dekkers Sat, Mar 18, 9:30 PM FREE with reservations E Street Cinema
AT THE FORK (USA, 2016, 89 min.) Asking the t gh q esti ns behind every hamb rger, glass f milk, and baby-ba k rib, filmmaker and mniv re J hn pa la and his vegetarian wife, Lisa, take a timely and refreshingly nbiased l k at h w farm animals are raised f r r ns m ti n. Visiting large-s ale nventi nal farms, he dis vers n heartless industrialists, but America’s farmers —real e le wh , al ng with him, are gra ling with the m ral dimensi ns f farming animals f r f d. Director: John Papola Fri, Mar 24, 7 pm FREE with reservations Q&A Doyle/Forman Theatre, 201 McKinley Building, American University
THE BEEKEEPER AND HIS SONJ (Switzerland/Canada, 2016, 85 min.) In a rural village in northern China, a father and son’s a iary lash, a t red with intima y, artf lness and h m r, e h es the nfli t between traditi n and m dernizati n. An intimate view int a beekee ing family in an emerging
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FEATURE FILMS wings f a red- r wned rane, this d mentary f ll ws the advent res f three animal families — the majesti anda, the savvy g lden m nkey, and the el sive sn w le ard. Feat ring st nning imagery and narrati n by The offi e’s J hn Krasinski, the film sh w ases remarkably intimate family m ments a t red n film f r the first time ever. Director: Lu Chuan Sun, Mar 19, 1 PM FREE National Museum of American History ind strial china, the film ex l res the l ve and tensi n between tw generati ns seeking mm n gr nd between traditi nal beekee ing meth ds and the new envir nmental and marketing hallenges. Director: Diedie Weng Mon, Mar 20, 7:15 PM $13 AFI Silver Theatre
BEFORE THE FLOOD (USA, 2016, 96 min.) Winner, Documentary Award for Environmental Advocacy os ar-winning a t r, envir nmental a tivist, and united Nati ns Messenger f pea e Le nard Dica ri travels t five ntinents and the Ar ti t witness limate hange first-hand. See m lete des ri ti n, age 3. Director: Fisher Stevens Producer: Trevor Davidoski in person Sat, Mar 18, 7 PM $20 Carnegie Institution for Science
possibilities for reconnection through a dialogue between s ien e and religi n — are ex l red in this m si al d mentary. The 1960s envir nmental m vement ins ired y ng s ientists like E.o. Wils n, cal DeWitt, and The c lb rn, s me f wh m were raised within Ameri a’s largest religi s gr : evangeli als. T day, a new generati n f s ientist/evangeli als in l des Katharine Hayh e, Ben L we, and c rina News me. can they revive the rea h and relevan e f America’s evangelical and environmental movements? Grammy-award winning m si ian Dirk p well leads arrangements f traditi nal Ameri an t nes. Director: David G. Conover in person Sun, Mar 19, 4 PM FREE with reservations Q&A E Street Cinema
BETWEEN EARTH AND SKY: CLIMATE CHANGE ON THE LAST FRONTIERJ (USA, 2016, 80 min.) In the vast wilderness f Alaska, the earth is hanging, threatening the history and culture of native peoples, nat ral lands a es, and the habitats f wildlife. The film examines h w limate hange is ra idly affe ting Alaska, and will s n affe t s all. Directors: Paul Allen Hunton and Jonathan Seaborn in person Wed, Mar 15, 12 PM FREE Q&A Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, Ronald Reagan Building
BROTHERS OF THE WINDJ (Austria, 2016, 98 min.) Presented with the Embassy of Austria This is a wild drama feat ring an eagle and a b y. When an eagle hi k is shed t f his nest, L kas res es him and ares f r him in se ret, finding a l ve denied t him at h me. B t when the day mes t release the bird ba k int the wild, will L kas find his wn release int a new life? Directors: Gerardo Olivares and Otmar Penker Sat, Mar 18, 10 AM $9 Avalon Theatre
BEHEMOTH (UK, 2015, 95 min.) The environmentally destructive impact of coal mining is laid bare in a chinese d mentary wh se st nning images s eak l der than w rds. Traveling ar nd the vast, verdant ste es f M ng lia, the filmmaker discovers a paradise soon to be lost to the open cast al mining that dev rs the land. The film j xta ses the tw w rlds in arresting single sh ts: a frame divided between the l sh grassland that still – j st – s rts a n madi mm nity with the gly grey s ars that sed t be m ntains. Director: Liang Zhao Mon, Mar 20, 9:30 PM FREE with reservations E Street Cinema
BEHOLD THE EARTH J (USA, 2017, 55 min.) America’s divorce from the outdoors — and
FEATURES
CLIPS & CONVERSATIONS
CITY 40
BORN IN CHINA J (China/USA, 2017, 76 min.) Presented with the Freer Gallery of Art Advance Screening of New Disneynature Film Navigating China’s vast terrain, from the frigid mountains to the heart of the bamboo forest on the
SHORTS
J WORLD, US AND DC PREMIERES
Q&A
(USA, 2016, 73 min.) Presented with the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting Nuclear Power Play Screening & Discussion In the heart of Russia is a hidden city, home to the ntry’s largest st k ile f n lear materials, wh se residents live behind barbed-wire fen es m nit red by armed g ards. The inhabitants are t ld they are the nuclear shield and that everyone on the outside is the enemy. one f the m st ntaminated la es n earth, this la e is alled city 40. In this d mentary a handf l f brave residents risk their lives t ex se human and environmental catastrophes that threaten the w rld. Director: Samira Goetschel in person
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KID-FRIENDLY PROGRAMS
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FEATURE FILMS Preceded by:
AS PENTAGON OVERHAULS NUCLEAR TRIAD, CRITICS ADVISE CAUTION
lanet an be fo nd in colombia. Director: Mike Slee Sun, Mar 19, 7 PM FREE with reservations Q&A Carnegie Institution for Science
(USA, 2016, 10 min.) S orters ontend a f lly-eq i ed n lear triad is essential for national defense, but critics say it’s time to reexamine the extent of o r arsenal in a ost-cold War world. Producer: Dan Sagayln for PBS Newshour
The story of four veteran athletes’ journey to explore Bh tan’s enigmati oli y of Gross National Ha iness by making the first 485-mile, border-to-border rossing of this isolated kingdom entirely by foot and bike. Director: Ben Henretig Sun, Mar 19, 12 PM FREE with reservations E Street Cinema
THE COLORADOJ
NUCLEAR WINTER (USA, 2016, 12 min.) Carl Sagan and other Cold War scientists once feared that a n lear war o ld l nge the world into a deadly i e age. Three decades later, does this theory still resonate? Producer: Retro Report for The New York Times with reporter Kit Roane in person Wed, Mar 22, 7 PM FREE with reservations Q&A Carnegie Institution for Science
(USA, 2016, 90 min.) For five million years the colorado has arved some of the most majesti lands a es on the lanet. As the lifeline of a vast ortion of North Ameri a, its water s stains nearly forty million eo le, half a dozen ities, and an immense agri lt ral em ire. The river is so over sed that it no longer flows to the sea. pla ing the river’s e ology within a ri h so ial ontext, The Colorado journeys through the prehistoric settlement of the region, the period of European exploration, the dam-b ilding era, modern ind strial agri lt re and immigration, and the im a ts of limate hange. Director: Murat Eyuboglu in person Preceded by
WHAT YOU TAKE AWAY: A COLORADO RIVER REFLECTION (USA, 2016, 7 min.) Meet Katie, one of the 40 million eo le who de end on the Colorado River, as she gains a deeper nderstanding of the e osystem… and her own la e in it. Director: Jeremy Monroe in person Sat, Mar 18, 7 PM Q&A $10 E Street Cinema
DAUGHTERS OF THE DUST (USA, 1991, 112 min.) Presented by the National Museum of African American History and Culture Cinema and Conversation: Women of the Rebellion Exploring the Gullah culture of the sea islands of South carolina and Georgia, this film hroni les two very ivotal days in the life of the peazant family, des endants of slaves bro ght from Afri a to work on the indigo, ri e and cotton plantations, as they prepare to leave the island to seek a better life on the mainland. The first Ameri an feat re by an Afri an-Ameri an woman to re eive general theatri al release, this film, now in a new digital restoration, served as a vis al ins iration for Beyon é’s visual album, Lemonade. In Gullah dialect with English subtitles. Director: Julie Dash in person Fri, Mar 24, 7 PM FREE with reservations National Museum of African American History and Culture
CONQUEST OF THE SKIES COLOMBIA: WILD MAGICJ (COLOMBIA MAGIA SALVAJE) (UK, 2016, 90 min.) Presented with the Embassy of Colombia From majesti mo ntain ranges with an ient gla iers, virgin jungles, open grasslands, and desert plains, to vast rivers and teeming oceans, Colombia is a country with some of the most extraordinary reat res and diverse habitats on earth. condors ir le the Andean skies, Jag ars rowl the forests, hammerhead sharks and h m ba k whales swim in the o eans. Birds, am hibians, mammals, re tiles, fish – some of the rarest and most s e ta lar wildlife anywhere on the
6 TICKETS & DAILY UPDATES AT DCEFF.ORG
(UK, 2015, 60 min.) A Selection from the Jackson Hole Wildlife Film Festival Renowned nat ralist and broad aster Sir David Attenboro gh investigates the evol tion of flight in the nat ral world. using ma ros o i and high-s eed filming te hniq es, the film a t res flying mammals, re tiles, and inse ts, as well as birds from all over the world. Attenboro gh travels from S otland to Borneo to find the extraordinary s e ies gra ing the skies. Director: David Lee Sat, Mar 18, 12 PM FREE Reservations requested National Museum of Natural History
CROSSING BHUTAN (USA, 2016, 60 min.)
THE DAY THE SUN FELLJ (Switzerland/Finland, 2015, 78 min.) Swiss-Ja anese filmmaker Aya Domenig, the granddaughter of a Red Cross doctor on duty during the 1945 atomi bombing of Hiroshima, a roa hes the experience of her deceased grandfather by tracing the lives of a do tor and of former n rses who were there also. While gathering the memories and resent views of these very last s rvivors, the n lear disaster
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FEATURE FILMS in F k shima strikes and history seems to repeat itself. Director: Aya Domenig Sat, Mar 18, 1 PM $9 Avalon Theatre
non-stop entertainment and instant information. B t this revol tion has a dark side. From fa tories in china, to the high-te h orridors of Sili on Valley, the film tells a story of environmental degradation, health tragedies, and the tipping point between ons merism and s stainability. Director: Sue Williams Wed, Mar 15, 7 PM FREE The Chevy Chase Presbyterian Church
FLY BY LIGHT
DEATH BY A THOUSAND CUTS (USA, 2016, 73 min.) Presented with the Global Foundation for Democracy and Development and the Dominican Republic Environmental Film Festival Eligio Eloy Vargas, a Domini an park ranger, was fo nd br tally m rdered by ma hete while patrolling for illegal har oal prod tion by Haitians farmers. With sho king revelations, this m rder be omes the metaphor for the film’s larger story of in reasing tension between Haiti and the Domini an Rep bli over illi it har oal exploitation and mass deforestation. Directors: Jake Kheel & Juan Mejia Botero in person Preceded by
THE EAGLE HUNTRESS (UK/Mongolia/USA, 2016, 87 min.) Among the isolated Kazakh tribe in northwest Mongolia, eagle hunting has been practiced by men only. B t Aisholpan, a 13-year-old girl, aspires to be the first female in 12 generations of her family to be ome an eagle h nter. Her de ision sparks ontroversy in the omm nity; this film apt res Aisholpan’s o rage as she begins her training. In English and Kazakh with English s btitles. Director: Otto Bell Recommended ages: 11 and up. Sat, Mar 25, 11:30 AM FREE East Building Auditorium, National Gallery of Art
CICLOS (Dominican Republic, 2016, 9 min.) Winner of the 2016 DREFF’s Globo Verde Dominicano Award Art and environmental protection come together in this story of a plasti artist who ses waste olle ted from Domini an streets, bea hes, and d mps as his raw material. Director: Hansel Ureña Espósito Thurs, Mar 23, 6 PM FREE with reservations Q&A E Street Cinema
DEATH BY DESIGN (USA, 2016, 73 min.) cons mers love - and live on - their smartphones, tablets, and laptops. New devi es po r endlessly into the market, promising even better omm ni ation,
FEATURES
CLIPS & CONVERSATIONS
SHORTS
FOLLOWING SEAS (USA/Polynesia/Antarctica, 2016, 94 min.) The dream: to be free—free from bosses, rent, and red tape. In 1960 Bob and Nan y Griffith set o t on their 53-foot sailboat to hase that dream to the ends of the earth. Embarking on 20 o ean voyages over two de ades, they made the sa rifi es a tr ly selfdetermined life demands while raising three hildren at sea. capt ring spe ta lar s enes with a Bolex amera, the family provides a vivid firsthand a o nt of life on the open seas. Directors: Tyler J. Kelley and Araby Williams in person Wed, Mar 22, 7 PM FREE Q&A The National Archives
FOOD EVOLUTION
FLINT (UK/USA, 2017, Work-in-Progress, 42 min.) capt ring one of the worst mass poisonings in American history on the ground and from the start, told by a leading uK do mentary filmmaker. Director: Anthony Baxter in person Sat, Mar 18, 4 PM FREE with reservations Q&A Carnegie Institution for Science
J WORLD, US AND DC PREMIERES
(USA, 2013, 59 min.) Leaving the streets of Washington, Dc to play in mo ntain streams and sing under the stars in West Virginia as part of an ambitious peace education program, a group of teenagers confronts the abuse and violence of their past lives. B t as they ret rn to Dc, ea h yo ng person fa es an unforgiving series of hurdles that challenge their efforts to b ild a better f t re. Director: Ellie Walton in person Tues, Mar 21, 7 PM FREE with reservations Q&A THEARC
Q&A
(USA, 2016, 92 min.) Presented by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute and the National Academy of Sciences As so iety ta kles the problem of feeding o r expanding population safely and sustainably, a s hism has arisen between s ientists and ons mers, motivated by fear and distr st. Food Evol tion, narrated by Neil deGrasse Tyson, explores the polarized
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FEATURE FILMS debate s rr nding GMos. L king at the real-w rld application of food science in the past and present, the film arg es f r s nd s ien e and en-mindedness in a lt re that in reasingly sh ws resistan e t b th. Director: Scott Hamilton Kennedy Fri, Mar 17, 6 PM FREE with reservations Q&A Reception after screening Carnegie Institution for Science
FORGOTTEN FARMSJ (USA, 2016, 65 min.) New England’s dairy farmers remain the ba kb ne f the regi n’s agri lt re b t fight f r s rvival in an age f artisan heese and baby greens. climate hange will demand that m re f r f d be gr wn l ser t h me. As we strive t revive l al r d ti n, we have m h t learn fr m dairy farmers.Thr gh nversati ns with farmers and li y ex erts, the film re nsiders the r le f these vital b t f rg tten farmers. Director: Dave Simonds in person Fri, Mar 17, 4 PM FREE with reservations E Street Cinema
FORT ORD: A SENSE OF
in the West are manufactured abroad and brought to s by shi . Wh lls the strings in this m lti-billi n d llar b siness? H w d es it affe t the envir nment ab ve and bel w the waterline? T what extent d es the ind stry ntr l r li y makers? Taking s n a j rney a r ss the ean, the film investigates the many fa es f w rld-wide freight. Director: Denis Delestrac Sun, Mar 19, 9:30 PM FREE with reservations Q&A E Street Cinema
GAZA SURF CLUB (Germany, 2016, 87 min.) Tra ed in the w rld’s largest en-air ris n and r led by war, a new generati n in palestine is drawn t the bea hes. Si k f ati n and liti al gridl k, they find their wn ers nal freed m in the waves f the Mediterranean: they are the s rfers f Gaza. Directors: Philip Gnadt and Mickey Yamine Mon, Mar 20, 7 PM $10 E Street Cinema
PLACEJ
(USA, 2016, 60 min.) Presented with California State University, Monterey Bay, and the Library of Congress Veterans History Project on e the largest uS Army base in the Ameri an West, F rt ord is n w an EpA S erf nd site, and a niversity f r nderserved st dents, wh have re rded ver 100 veterans’ histories for inclusion in the Veterans Hist ry pr je t f the Library f c ngress. The e l gy, mm nity, and hist ry f the Base, where Vietnam War era s ldiers were trained, are ex l red thr gh this th ght- r v king mix f new st dent d mentary and ex erimental sh rts. Sh wn with A Land f r War, see age 9. Various Directors Sat, Mar 18, 2 PM FREE Q&A National Gallery of Art, East Building Auditorium
GORONGOSA PARK: REBIRTH OF PARADISE Episode One: Lion Mystery (Netherlands/USA, 2015, 55 min.) Wildlife ameraman B b p le j ins li n s ientist pa la B ley t s lve a baffling mystery: why is G r ng sa’s li n lati n n t gr wing as fast as it sh ld? After a de ade f rest rati n eff rts, there seems t be lenty f rey f r the li ns t eat. p le’s first j b is t hel sedate a li n and t a GpS-tra king llar ar nd its ne k. By filming and tra king the li ns, p le h es t hel s lve the mystery. Director: James Byrne in person with the Ambassador of Mozambique Mon, Mar 20, 7 PM Q&A $10 Carnegie Institution for Science
HAPPENING FREIGHTENED: THE REAL PRICE OF SHIPPINGJ (USA, 2016, 83 min.) The m dern shi ing ind stry is a key layer in the w rld e n my as 90% f the g ds we ns me
8 TICKETS & DAILY UPDATES AT DCEFF.ORG
(USA, 2017, Work-in-Progress, 75 min.) Presented by The Reva and David Logan Foundation Presented with HBO Films and The Redford Center Filmmaker Jamie Redf rd embarks n a l rf l ers nal j rney int the dawn f the lean energy era as it reates j bs, t rns r fits, and makes mm nities str nger and healthier. unlikely entre rene rs in mm nities fr m F ls m, calif. t
Ge rget wn, Tex. t B ffal , N.Y. reveal i neering lean energy s l ti ns while Jamie’s dis very f h w lean energy w rks, and what it means at a personal level, becomes the audience’s discovery t . Rea hing well bey nd a great st ry f te hn l gy and inn vati n, Ha ening ex l res iss es f h man resilience, social justice, embracing the future, and finding h e f r r s rvival. Director: James Redford in person Sat, Mar 25, 7 PM Q&A $10 Carnegie Institution for Science
HAVARIEJ (Germany, 2016, 93 min.) Presented with the Goethe Institut A ref gee b at a ears: an inflatable dinghy f ll f e le, ne f them waving. The amera ans t sh w t rists n a r ise shi l king t t sea. An Irish tourist holding the camera, ship employees, Russian and ukrainian arg w rkers talk f en nters with this ref gee b at ( r an ther) and f their w rld. Director: Philip Scheffner Thurs, Mar 23, 7 PM FREE with reservations New York University, Washington, DC
HOLY (UN)HOLY RIVERJ (USA, 2016, 60 min.) F ll wing the w rld’s m st revered and reviled river, the great Ganges River of India, from its source to the sea, the film d ments its intense bea ty and hallenges. This is the story of the river that is revered by a billion people, depended uponby 500 million, and is at once a s r e f life and ins irati n as well as death, ll ti n, and tragedy.
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FEATURE FILMS KEDI
Directors: Peter McBride in person and Jake Norton Sat, Mar 25, 2 PM FREE with reservations Carnegie Institution for Science
ICE EDGE: WILD CANADA (Canada, 2014, 44 min.) central t all life in the Ar ti , i e is a mplex reati n. Yet the Ar ti i e is hanging at an alarming rate. Within the next 20 years we may see an i e-free Ar ti ean in the summer. N ne kn ws h w the life f this regi n will adapt t these hanging nditi ns. An Episode of CBC’s “The Nature of Things with David Suzuki.” Directors: Sacha Mirzoeff and Jeff Turner Tues, Mar 14, 4 PM & 7 PM Reception FREE with reservations Q&A Embassy of Canada
(USA/Turkey, 2016, 79 min.) In Istanbul, cats have roamed freely for thousands of years, wandering in and ut f pe ple’s lives, impa ting them in ways nly an animal that lives between the w rlds f the wild and the tamed an. cats and their kittens bring joy and purpose, giving people an opportunity to refle t n life and their pla e in it. In Istanbul, ats are the mirr rs t urselves. Director: Ceyda Torun Sat, Mar 18, 5 PM AFI Silver Theatre $13
A LAND FOR WARJ (USA, 2017, 55 min.) Set in the ruins of the decommissioned Fort Ord military base in California, this haunting and poetic documentary portrays the impact of the military on the land and the pe ple. Artist Enid Baxter Ry e weaves t gether murals painted by soldiers stationed at the base, archival training f tage fr m the Vietnam War era, wind-swept California coastal landscapes, and portraits of homeless veterans upying the land t day. original musi al s re by Lanier Samm ns. Shown with Fort Ord: A Sense of Place, see page 8. Director: Enid Baxter Ryce and students in person Saturday, March 18, 2 PM FREE Q&A National Gallery of Art, East Building Auditorium
KIVALINA J
IN PURSUIT OF SILENCEJ (USA, 2015, 81 min.) our relati nship with silen e, s und, and the impa t f n ise n ur lives is investigated in this film. Beginning with an de t J hn cage’s gr und-breaking mp siti n, 4’ 33,” the film takes us n an immersive inemati j urney ar und the gl be – fr m a traditi nal tea ceremony in Kyoto, to the streets of Mumbai, the loudest city on the planet, inspiring us to experience silen e and elebrate the w nders f ur w rld. Director: Patrick Shen in person Fri, Mar 17, 6:30 PM FREE Reservations requested Q&A National Museum of Natural History
(USA, 2016, 64 min) This candid and rare portrait of one of the last surviving Ar ti ultures weaves t gether bservati nal st rytelling and inemati imagery. capturing life 130 miles ab ve the Ar ti cir le, where an Inupiaq Eskim tribe is living n an island disappearing int the ean, the film p eti ally expl res the mmunity’s struggle t maintain its way f life within a lands ape and a system that is failing them. Director: Gina Abatemarco in person Sun, Mar 19, 3 PM FREE with reservations Q&A Reception National Museum of Women in the Arts
THE ISLANDS AND THE WHALES (UK/Denmark, 2016, 82 min.) A Selection from the Wildscreen Festival In their remote home in the North Atlantic, the Faroe Islanders have always relied n hunting whales and seabirds. But t day they fa e a grave threat t this traditi n, n t fr m the ntr versy surr unding whaling, but fr m the whales themselves. They have dis vered that their bel ved whales are t xi , ntaminated by the utside w rld! What n e ensured their survival n w endangers their hildren and the Far e Islanders must make a h i e between health and traditi n. Director: Mike Day Sat, Mar 25, 12:30 PM FREE Reservations requested Q&A National Museum of Natural History FEATURES
CLIPS & CONVERSATIONS
KONELÍNE: OUR LAND BEAUTIFULJ (Canada, 2016, 96 min.) A inemati elebrati n f n rthwestern British Columbia, called by Tahltan First Nation “our land beautiful” as well as “ ur mind beautiful,” inextri ably weaving human ns i usness with the health f the land. c pper and g ld mining mpanies all the Tahltan territ ry “the g lden triangle,” while hunters refer t it as “canada’s Serengeti.” This film mixes p liti s, drama, and hum r while warning f the hallenges fa ing this land. Director: Nettie Wild Wed, Mar 22, 6:30 PM FREE with reservations National Museum of Women in the Arts
SHORTS
J WORLD, US AND DC PREMIERES
Q&A
LAST OF THE LONGNECKSJ (USA, 2017, 92 min.) Presented with the American Conservation Film Festival The i ni giraffe, the tallest animal n the planet, is on the cusp of a silent extinction: This majestic animal, a symb l f the Afri an savannah, has de lined 80% just sin e 2000. The film elebrates what makes these animals unique and seeks t shed light n their struggle as it f ll ws a dedi ated ntingent f giraffe resear hers and s ientists a r ss the gl be. Director: Ashley Scott Davison in person Thurs, Mar 23, 7 PM Q&A $10 Carnegie Institution for Science
LETTERS FROM BAGDADJ (USA/UK/France, 2016, 95 min.)
DISCUSSION
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FEATURE FILMS British s y, ex l rer, and writer Gertr de Bell —the female Lawren e f Arabia—sha ed the destiny f Iraq in ways that still reverberate. T ld mainly in Bell’s w rds—Tilda Swint n reads fr m letters, diaries, and ther rimary d ments —the film grad ally reveals her remarkable story through spectacular historical footage of the region while hr ni ling Bell’s j rney int b th an n harted Arabian desert and the inner san t ms f British l nial wer. As an tsider, Bell’s res e t f r the land, the environment, and the people has never been rivaled by any ther liti al fig re. Directors: Zeva Oelbaum and Sabine Krayenbühl in person Sat, Mar 25, 3 PM FREE National Gallery of Art, East Building Auditorium
THE LOST CITY OF Z (USA, 2017, 142 min.) Special Advance Screening Winner, William W. Warner Beautiful Swimmers Award A tr e-life drama ab t British ex l rer c l. per ival Faw ett, wh disa eared while sear hing f r a mysteri s ity in the Amaz n in the 1920s, the film is based n David Grann’s best-selling b k f the same name. F r a m lete des ri ti n f this event, see age 3. Director: James Gray in person Thurs, Mar 23, 7 PM $10 National Geographic
“a mandala f life in a limited s a e.” Director: Chikara Ujiie Mon, Mar 20, 6:30 PM FREE with reservations Japan Information & Culture Center, Embassy of Japan
LIGHT ON EARTH (UK, 2016, 51 min.) A Selection from the Jackson Hole Wildlife Film Festival The spectacular and magical light produced by gl ww rms, fireflies, and l min s lankt n is kn wn as bi l mines en e - light made by living reat res. B t th se q ite familiar gl ws and flashes are j st a tiny, easily observed fragment of a previously unexplored, mysteri s realm. With Sir David Attenb r gh as h st, the film ex l res the w rld f living light he des ribes as “ tterly nlike r wn.” Director: Joe Loncraine A Terra Mater Factual Studios production in co-production with CuriosityStream. Sat, Mar 18, 2 PM FREE Reservations requested Q&A National Museum of Natural History
NALEDI: A BABY ELEPHANT’S TALEJ
MILLION DOLLAR DUCK (USA, 2016, 71 min.) Enter the strange and w nderf l w rld f the Federal D k Stam c ntest, the nly j ried art m etiti n r n by the uS g vernment. This d mentary ex l res the e entri nat re f the ntestants wh a ly ea h year f r a han e at wildlife art stard m, while als refle ting n the hist ry and hallenges fa ing the continued existence of this successful conservation r gram. Director: Brian Davis in person Sun, Mar 26, 2:30 PM FREE Reservations requested Q&A National Museum of Natural History
LONG WAY NORTH (France/Denmark, 2016, 81 min.) Set in 1892, this animated advent re f ll ws Sa ha, a 15-year- ld R ssian arist rat, as she leaves behind her mf rtable St. petersb rg life in the h es f tra king d wn and saving her bel ved grandfather, ol kine, a fam s ex l rer wh has g ne missing near the N rth p le. Defying her arents’ wishes, Sa ha flees her h me and la n hes an advent re-filled q est t ward the Great N rth in sear h f ol kine and his shi . Director: Rémi Chayé. Recommended ages: 11 and up Sat, Mar 18 & Sun, Mar 19, 11:30 AM FREE National Gallery of Art, East Building Auditorium
10 TICKETS & DAILY UPDATES AT DCEFF.ORG
(USA, 2016, 90 min.) When a baby elephant born into a rescue camp in the wilderness f B tswana is r haned at ne m nth f age, it’s t the men wh l k after her herd t save her life. This tr e st ry a t res the eff rts f the kee ers and the am s ientist wh be me tireless surrogate mothers in the struggle to save a precious ele hant life. Directors: Geoff Luck in person and Ben Bowie Sun, Mar 26, 4 PM FREE with reservations Q&A Carnegie Institution for Science
ONE BIG HOMEJ (USA, 2016, 88 min.) Trophy homes are threatening the unspoiled beauty f the island f Martha’s Vineyard. When he feels he is m li it in wre king the la e he alls h me, ne ar enter takes ff his t l belt and i ks a amera. c nfr nting angry h me wners and b ilders wh l k the ther way, he w rks with his mm nity and attem ts t ass a new bylaw that limits h se size. Director: Thomas Bena in person Thurs, Mar 16, 6:30 PM Q&A $5 National Building Museum
PETER AND THE FARM J MODERN DAY EDEN: A JAPANESE TEMPLE GARDENJ (Japan, 2010, 49 min.) Japanese gardens are internationally famed for their bea ty and re ideas. Re ently they are n ted f r an ther f n ti n - an e system f r living nat re. The garden at H nen-in Tem le in Ky t embra es many animals and plants living together in harmony, creating
(USA, 2016, 92 min.) peter D nning is the r d r riet r f Mile Hill Farm, whi h sits n 187 idylli a res in Verm nt. The land’s 38 harvests have seen the arrivals and departures of three wives and f r hildren, leaving peter with nly animals and mem ries. The arrival f a film rew a ses him t nfr nt his hist ry and his lega y, assing al ng hardw n agri lt ral wisd m even as he d bts the meaning f the w rk he is fated t erf rm ntil death. Director: Tony Stone Sun, Mar 19, 5 PM $13 AFI Silver Theatre
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THURSDAY | 03.09.2017 | EXPRESS | T11
FEATURE FILMS PLANET EARTH II: CITIES (UK, 2017, 58 min.) Special Advance Screening cities are growing at a faster rate than any other habitat on Earth. They may seem an nlikely la e for animals to thrive, b t, for the bold, this is a world of s r rising o ort nity. Leo ards rowl the streets of M mbai, eregrine fal ons h nt among New York’s skys ra ers and a million starlings erform s e ta lar aerial dan es over Rome. As the ar hite ts of this environment, an we hoose to b ild ities that reate a home for both s and for wildlife? A BBC Studios Production co-produced with BBC America Wed, Mar 22, 7 PM $10 E Street Cinema
abo t what is tr ly l rking beneath the s rfa e of o r seemingly ristine o ean. Director: Craig Leeson Tues, Mar 21, 7 PM $10 Angelika Film Center at Mosaic, Fairfax, VA
THE POACHERS PIPELINE (USA, 2016, 48 min.) Al Jazeera goes nder over to investigate the illegal rhino horn trade from the hands of poachers in South Africa to ons mers in Asia. penetrating the riminal i elines that traffi horn, from a fresh kill in Kr ger National park to a sale in Asia, the film ill minates a trade made ossible by corruption and by an insatiable demand that goes to the very to of chinese so iety. Director: Jeremy Young Fri, Mar 17, 12 PM FREE Q&A Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars Ronald Reagan Building
Preceded by
I, DESTINIJ (USA, 2016, 13 min.) A yo ng woman gra les with the effe ts of having an incarcerated brother in this poignant and imaginative animation. Directors: Destini Riley and Nicholas Pilarski Wed, Mar 22, 3 PM FREE with reservations National Museum of African American History and Culture
PRISTINE SEAS: WILD GALAPAGOS
PLASTIC CHINAJ (China, 2016, 82 min.) Presented with the Freer Gallery of Art Yi Jie’s family works sorting lasti waste from the uS, E ro e, and Asia at a re y ling lant in china. The children discover hidden treasures: a bag of balloons or magazines with i t res that give them a glim se of a different, m h ri her life. This oignant film needs no explanation: the images tell a universal story of social ineq ality. Director: Wang Liu-liang Sun, Mar 19, 3:30 PM FREE No reservations required National Museum of American History
POWER OF THE RIVER: EXPEDITION TO THE HEART OF WATER IN BHUTANJ (USA, 2016, 74 min.) Presented with the Bhutan Foundation The little B ddhist nation of Bh tan, home to the world’s most ambitio s ommitment to rote t nat re, fa es rgent ress re to dam its rivers. In this advent re do mentary, a man named “Good Karma” g ides an ex edition to kee his o ntry’s mightiest river wild and free. Director: Greg I. Hamilton in person Sun, Mar 19, 2 PM FREE with reservations Q&A E Street Cinema
THE PRISON IN TWELVE LANDSCAPESJ
A PLASTIC OCEAN (Hong Kong/UK/USA, 2016, 102 min.) What are the consequences of our global disposable lifestyle? An international team of adventurers, resear hers, and o ean ambassadors embark on a mission aro nd the globe to n over the sho king tr th
FEATURES
CLIPS & CONVERSATIONS
(Canada, 2016, 86 min.) Presented with the National Museum of African American History and Culture A meditation on the prison’s disappearance in the era of mass in ar eration, this is a film abo t rison in whi h we never see an a t al enitentiary. From an A ala hian oal town betting its f t re on the romise of rison jobs, to a california mo ntainside where female risoners fight the region’s raging wildfires,the film nfolds a inemati jo rney thro gh a series of ordinary la es a ross the uS where risons do work and affe t lives. Director: Brett Story
SHORTS
J WORLD, US AND DC PREMIERES
Q&A
(USA, 2016, 47 min.) Take an advent re with the National Geogra hi ’s Pristine Seas team, an international collection of marine s ientists and filmmakers, as they dive in the s b-aq ati world of the Gala agos Islands. Ex loring the Islands’ wild reat res —sea lions, eng ins, marine ig anas, and hammerhead sharks —they also de loy a manned s bmarine to l nge over a tho sand feet below the s rfa e, to areas few, if any, have ever seen. Wed, Mar 22, 7:30 PM Q&A $10 National Geographic Society
RACHEL CARSON (USA, 2017, 116 min.) Feat ring the voi e of Mary-Lo ise parker as the infl ential writer and s ientist, Ra hel carson, this is an intimate ortrait of the gro ndbreaking a thor who la n hed the modern environmental movement. Drawn from carson’s own writings, letters, and re ent s holarshi , the film ill minates both the bli and rivate life of the shy, soft-s oken a thor of Silent S ring, the bestseller that s arked dramati hanges in the government’s reg lation of esti ides. Director: Michelle Ferrari in person Thurs, Mar 16, 6:30 PM FREE with reservations Q&A National Portrait Gallery
RANCHER, FARMER, FISHERMAN (USA, 2017, 93 min.) A Discovery Documentary Film Presented by The Reva and David Logan Foundation From the Montana Ro kies to the Kansas wheat fields and the G lf of Mexi o, families who work the land and sea are rossing oliti al divides to find nex e ted ways to rote t the nat ral reso r es vital to their livelihoods.
DISCUSSION
KID-FRIENDLY PROGRAMS
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T12 | EXPRESS | 03.09.2017 | THURSDAY
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FEATURE FILMS Based n Miriam H rn’s b k and narrated by T m Br kaw, Ran her, Farmer, Fisherman is the next ha ter f nservati n her ism, dee in Ameri a’s heartland. Directors: Susan Froemke, John Hoffman, and Beth Aala Sat, March 25 4 PM $10 Q&A Carnegie Institution for Science
RISE: POISONED RIVER (Canada, 2016, 44 min.) Brazil’s Krenak pe le str ggle t s rvive in the wake of a massive toxic spill that has contaminated the their drinking water, h nting gr nds and lt re. Fri, Mar 24, 8 PM FREE with reservations Carnegie Institution for Science
RED DESERT (Italy/France, 1965, 120 min.) Italian dire t r Mi helangel Ant ni ni’s first l r film is set against a f rbidding ind strial lands a e, where the mentally fragile y ng wife f a fa t ry engineer finds herself in reasingly drawn t ne f her h sband’s hands me ass iates. Director: Michelangelo Antonioni Thurs, Mar 23, 7 PM $13 AFI Silver Theatre
THE RED TURTLE (France/Belgium/Japan, 2016, 80 min.) The maj r life stages f a astaway n a deserted tropical island populated by turtles, crabs, and birds are de i ted in this bea tif l, dial g e-less animated film. Directed by Michaël Dudok de Wit Sat, Mar 25, 3:15 PM $13 AFI Silver Theatre
RETURN OF THE ATOM (Finland/Germany, 2015, 110 min.) Finland was the first ntry in the west t give ermissi n t b ild a new n lear wer lant after the chern byl disaster. The oL3 lant in E raj ki, rrently under construction, has faced serious problems in lanning, nstr ti n, and safety a t mati n. The film rtrays the strange and stressf l life in a small “n lear t wn” d ring an era f n lear renaissan e. Directors: Mika Taanila and Jussi Eerola Thurs, Mar 23, 6:30 PM FREE with reservations Embassy of Finland
RISE : A VICELAND SERIES Presented by The Reva and David Logan Foundation This examination of indigenous life in the modern age gives viewers a rare glim se int the fr nt line f indigen s-led resistan e.
RISE: SACRED WATER (Canada, 2017, 50 min.) H st Sarain cars n-F x, f Anishinaabe lineage, visits and examines the Standing R k Si x Reservati n’s resistan e t the Dak ta A ess pi eline. The resistan e be ame a w rldwide news st ry as the largest gathering of indigenous people in more than a ent ry ame t gether t r te t the area’s water. In a st nning vi t ry, the Si x were able t get the nstr ti n f the Dak ta A ess pi eline rer ted. Director: Michelle Latimer in person Fri, Mar 24, 6:30 PM
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RIVERBLUE: CAN FASHION SAVE THE PLANET? (Canada, 2016, 95 min.) H w dirty are y r bl e jeans? Thr gh harsh hemi al manufacturing processes and the irresponsible disposal f t xi hemi al waste, ne f r fav rite i ni clothes has destroyed rivers and impacted the lives of e le wh nt n these waterways f r their s rvival. F ll wing internati nal river nservati nist, Mark Angel , this gr ndbreaking d mentary s ans the gl be to explore the polluting impact of the fashion industry on our rivers and solutions that inspire hope for a s stainable f t re. Directors: Roger Williams in person and David McIlivride Tues, Mar 21, 7 PM FREE with reservations Q&A New York University, Washington, DC
rem te regi n is thr st int the f t re when B livia’s leaders embark n a lan t extra t a re i s mineral, lithium, used in smartphones and laptop batteries, from beneath the salt r st. Director: Mike Plunkett Tues, Mar 21, 9:30 PM FREE with reservations E Street Cinema
SAMUEL IN THE CLOUDSJ
SACRED CODJ (USA, 2016, 64 min.) off the ast f New England, a hist ri d fishery has been ravaged by verfishing, limate hange, and g vernment mismanagement. H wever, l al fishermen are ske ti al f the s ien e and bje t t g vernment li ies that r te t the fish b t leave them fighting f r their livelih ds. The film examines the m lex lla se f ne f the w rld’s greatest mmer ial fisheries. Directors: David Abel in person, Andy Laub, and Steve Liss Fri, Mar 24, 6:30 PM FREE with reservations Q&A National Museum of Natural History
(Belgium/Bolivia/Netherlands, 2016, 70 min.) In B livia, the gla iers are melting. Sam el, an ld ski lift erat r, is l king t f a wind w nt the r ft f the w rld. Thr gh generati ns his family lived and w rked in the sn wy m ntains, b t n w sn w fails. While scientists discuss and measure ominous changes, Sam el h n rs the m ntain s irits. The l ds ntin e t drift by. Director: Pieter Van Eecke in person Wed, Mar 22, 6 PM FREE with reservations Q&A Reception Royal Netherlands Embassy
SALERO (Bolivia/USA, 2015, 76 min.) Set at the dawn f the m dern age n the w rld’s largest salt flat, B livia’s Salar de uy ni, a ristine, therw rldly ex anse f white, the film is seen thr gh the eyes f M ises, ne f the last salt gatherers r “saler s.” This
SEA GYPSIES: THE FAR SIDE OF THE WORLDJ (USA, 2016, 79 min.)
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POCKET GUIDE
THURSDAY | 03.09.2017 | EXPRESS | T13
TAKE ME WITH YOU!
ENVIRoNMENTAL FILM FESTIVAL MARCH 14-26, 2017 F O R T I C K E T S A N D I N F O R M AT I O N V I S I T
DCEFF.ORG
25 Years of Films for the Planet SCHEDULE, VENUES, & TRANSPORTATION
FESTIVAL HIGHLIGHTS
THE LOST CITY OF Z
VIRTUAL REALITY EXPERIENCE Journey to the Amazon, earth’s most biodiverse ecosystem, with “Under the Canopy.” Dive into Indonesia’s crystal-clear waters with “Valen’s Reef”.
SEASONS (LES SAISONS), capturing exceptional footage of wildlife in the forests of Europe, with Oscar-nominated filmmaker Jacques Perrin, winner of the Festival’s Polly Krakora Award for Artistry in Film. (Closing Night)
BEFORE THE FLOOD, featuring
Leonardo DiCaprio’s climate activism, from Oscar-winning director Fisher Stevens, winner of the Festival’s Documentary Award for Environmental Advocacy
FEATURES
CLIPS & CONVERSATIONS
FLINT, documenting one of the worst mass poisonings in American history, on the ground and from the start SPILLOVER: ZIKA, EBOLA, AND BEYOND, presented by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute and the National Academy of Sciences, showing how cutting-edge science is halting the spread of harrowing diseases
BORN IN CHINA, Disneynature’s newest
wildlife adventure with pandas, golden monkeys, and snow leopards, narrated by John Krasinski. (Special Advance Screening)
PLANET EARTH II: CITIES,
exploring how to build cities where people and wildlife can co-exist, from the groundbreaking BBC filmmaking team
THE LOST CITY OF Z, the true story of Col. Percival Fawcett, who disappeared while searching for a mysterious city in the Amazon, starring Robert Pattinson and Sienna Miller. Winner of the Festival’s William W. Warner Beautiful Swimmers Award. (Special Advance Screening) RISE: SACRED WATER, examining the Standing Rock Sioux’s resistance to the Dakota access pipeline
BORN IN CHINA
SHORTS
% WORLD, US AND DC PREMIERES
Q&A
DISCUSSION
KID-FRIENDLY PROGRAMS
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T14 | EXPRESS | 03.09.2017 | THURSDAY
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CALENDAR TUES. MARCH 14
WED. MARCH 15
THURS. MARCH 16
12 PM THE POACHERS PIPELINE Woodrow Wilson Center
12 PM BETWEEN EARTH AND SKY: CLIMATE CHANGE ON THE LAST FRONTIER Woodrow Wilson Center
4 PM FORGOTTEN FARMS E Street Cinema 4 PM ICE EDGE – WILD CANADA Embassy of Canada 6:30 PM WATER & POWER: A CALIFORNIA HEIST National Geographic 7 PM ICE EDGE – WILD CANADA Embassy of Canada
6:30 PM ALETSCH: OF ICE AND MEN Embassy of Switzerland 6:45 PM THE DIVER THE SWIRL (EL REMOLINO) Mexican Cultural Institute
6:30 PM ONE BIG HOME National Building Museum 6:30 PM RACHEL CARSON National Portrait Gallery 6:30 PM SMOG OF THE SEA New York University, Washington DC
6 PM HHMI Science Program FOOD EVOLUTION Carnegie Institution for Science 6:30 PM IN PURSUIT OF SILENCE National Museum of Natural History
7 PM VOICES FROM CHERNOBYL Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden 7 PM WIFV Program CANYON SONG ELK RIVER GUIDED Carnegie Institution for Science
7:30 PM UNBRANDED: AN EPIC RIDE THROUGH THE AMERICAN WEST National Geographic
14 TICKETS & DAILY UPDATES AT DCEFF.ORG
10 AM BROTHERS OF THE WIND Avalon Theatre 11:30 AM LONG WAY NORTH National Gallery of Art, East Building Auditorium 11:30 AM HORTON HEARS A WHO! THE LORAX AFI Silver Theater 12 PM Jackson Hole Wildlife Film Festival CONQUEST OF THE SKIES National Museum of Natural History 12 PM Fusion Project Earth Documentary Award Winners E Street Cinema
7 PM GALAPAGOS BY CHRISTIAN ZUBER Embassy of France 7 PM YOU’VE BEEN TRUMPED TOO E Street Cinema 8:30 PM HHMI Science Program SPILLOVER: ZIKA, EBOLA, AND BEYOND Carnegie Institution for Science
9:30 PM Late Night Shorts PICKLE SIMON BECK: SNOWARTIST THE DIVER THE DOG THE RATS E Street Cinema
11 AM Spotlight on Bird Conservation: BIRDS OF MAY MAPPING MIGRATION SURVIVING THE WILD: CATS & BIRDS A SEABIRD’S STORY National Wildlife Visitor Center
4 PM FLINT (Work-in-progress) Carnegie Institution for Science 4:15 PM JACKSON HOLE WILDLIFE FILM FESTIVAL SIXTEEN LEGS National Museum of Natural History
12 PM Conservation I: Endangered Creatures RED WOLF REVIVAL FIX AND RELEASE IN SEARCH OF TZOTZ PRONGHORN REVIVAL Carnegie Institution for Science
2 PM VIDEO ART OF MICHAEL JOO Freer / Arthur M. Sackler Gallery 2 PM HOW TO STOP A PIPELINE THE HUDSON: A RIVER AT RISK Carnegie Institution for Science 2 PM Migration Shorts SUPER SALMON BIRDS OF MAY THE HIGH DIVIDE E Street Cinema 4 PM Conservation II: Protected Places BRIGHT SPOTS THE NATURE OF MAPS PRIMEVAL: ENTER THE INCOMAPPLEUX WATER FROM THE MOUNTAIN – AGUA DE EL YUNQUE E Street Cinema
5 PM KEDI AFI Silver Theater 7 PM 100 YEARS: ONE WOMAN’S FIGHT FOR JUSTICE National Museum of the American Indian 7 PM THE COLORADO WHAT YOU TAKE AWAY: A COLORADO RIVER REFLECTION E Street Cinema 9:30 PM ANTS ON A SHRIMP E Street Cinema
SUN. MARCH 19
11:30 AM LONG WAY NORTH National Gallery of Art, East Building Auditorium 11:30 AM HORTON HEARS A WHO! THE LORAX AFI Silver Theater 12 PM CROSSING BHUTAN E Street Cinema
1 PM ANIMAL HOMES: THE NEST National Wildlife Visitor Center 1 PM THE DAY THE SUN FELL Avalon Theatre 2 PM A LAND AND FOR WAR FORT ORD: A SENSE OF PLACE National Gallery of Art, East Building Auditorium 2 PM Jackson Hole Wildlife Film Festival LIGHT ON EARTH National Museum of Natural History
6:45 PM THE SHEPHERD (EL PASTOR) Former Residence of the Ambassadors of Spain 7 PM DEATH BY DESIGN The Chevy Chase Presbyterian Church 7 PM SEA OF HOPE Carnegie Institution for Science 7 PM THINK LIKE A SCIENTIST BOUNDARIES GORONGOSA VULCAN AND POWER OF IDEAS END OF SNOW INSIDE ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE Washington National Cathedral
SAT. MARCH 18
FRI. MARCH 17
7 PM Winner, Documentary Award for Environmental Advocacy BEFORE THE FLOOD Carnegie Institution for Science 9:30PM ANTS ON A SHRIMP E Street
12 PM Shorts: International Shorts HOME AT DAWN A HOUSE WITHOUT SNAKES LA LAGUNA THE LIMESTONE CONFLICT Carnegie Institution for Science 1 PM Special Advance Screening BORN IN CHINA Presented with the Freer Gallery of Art National Museum of American History 2 PM ANGRY INUK National Museum of the American Indian 2 PM INSTRUMENTS OF CHANGE: LESSONS FROM THE RAINFOREST Carnegie Institution for Science 2 PM Presented with Bhutan Foundation POWER OF THE RIVER: EXPEDITION TO THE HEART OF WATER IN BHUTAN E Street Cinema 3 PM KIVALINA National Museum of Women in the Arts 3:30 PM PLASTIC CHINA Presented with the Freer Galley of Art National Museum of American History 4 PM BEHOLD THE EARTH E Street Cinema 4 PM Russian Environmental Film Showcase TMU/ECOCUP Program 24 SNOW Carnegie Institution for Science 5 PM PETER AND THE FARM AFI Silver Theater 7 PM COLOMBIA: WILD MAGIC Carnegie Institution for Science 7 PM YASUNI MAN E Street Cinema 9:30PM FREIGHTENED – THE REAL PRICE OF SHIPPING E Street Cinema
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MON. MARCH 20
TUES. MARCH 21
WED. MARCH 22
THURS. MARCH 23
6:30PM MODERN DAY EDEN: A JAPANESE TEMPLE GARDEN Japan Information & Culture Center, Embassy of Japan 7 PM GORONGOSA PARK: REBIRTH OF PARADISE Carnegie Institution for Science 7 PM Eric Moe Award for Best Shot on Sustainability KOKOTA: THE ISLET OF HOPE ONE HUNDRED THOUSAND BEATING HEARTS National Geographic 7 PM TIDEWATER Naval Heritage Center 7 PM GAZA SURF CLUB E Street Cinema
6:30 PM KONELÍNE: OUR LAND BEAUTIFUL National Museum of Women in the Arts 7 PM THE AGE OF CONSEQUENCES Presented with Bank of America Carnegie Institution for Science 7 PM FLY BY LIGHT THEARC 7 PM ANTARCTICA: IN THE FOOTSTEPS OF THE EMPEROR Embassy of France 7 PM RIVERBLUE New York University, Washington DC 7 PM Conversation series: AN EVENING WITH CHRIS PALMER: THE MOST IMPORTANT FOOD FILMS OF ALL TIME American University 7 PM A PLASTIC OCEAN Angelika Film Center at Mosaic
7:15 PM THE BEEKEEPER AND HIS SON AFI Silver Theater 9:30 PM BEHEMOTH E Street Cinema
FEATURES
9:30 PM SALERO E Street Cinema
7 PM FOLLOWING SEAS The National Archives 7 PM THE NATURE OF PEOPLE ENCORE SCREENING WATER & POWER: A CALIFORNIA HEIST Angelika Theater Center at Mosaic 7 PM NUCLEAR POWER PLAY: SCREENING AND DISCUSSION AS PENTAGON OVERHAULS NUCLEAR TRIAD, CRITICS ADVISE CAUTION NUCLEAR WINTER CITY 40 Presented with the Pulitzer Center Carnegie Institution for Science 7 PM PLANET EARTH II: CITIES E Street Cinema 7 PM WILD CITY: ISLANDS WILD CITY: URBAN WILD Embassy of the Republic of Singapore 7 PM STUDENT SHORTS AT AU American University
SAT. MARCH 25
FRI. MARCH 24
3 PM I, DESTINI THE PRISON IN TWELVE LANDSCAPES National Museum of African American History and Culture 6 PM SAMUEL IN THE CLOUDS Royal Netherlands Embassy
THURSDAY | 03.09.2017 | EXPRESS | T15
SUN. MARCH 26
11:30 AM THE EAGLE HUNTRESS National Gallery of Art, East Building Auditorium
12:30 PM THE ISLANDS AND THE WHALES National Museum of Natural History
6 PM CICLOS DEATH BY A THOUSAND CUTS E Street Cinema 6:30 PM RETURN OF THE ATOM Embassy of Finland
7 PM HAVARIE New York University, Washington DC 7 PM LAST OF THE LONGNECKS Carnegie Institution for Science 7 PM Winner, William W. Warner Beautiful Swimmer Award THE LOST CITY OF Z National Geographic 7 PM RED DESERT AFI Silver Theater 7 PM SILENT LAND: THE FIGHT FOR FOOD George Washington University, Marvin Center 7 PM Conversation Series: OK, I’VE WATCHED THE FILM, NOW WHAT? American University
12 PM Animation Retrospective CREATURE COMFORTS PARKING THE MAN WHO PLANTED TREES THE OLD MAN AND THE SEA TURTLE WORLD Carnegie Institution for Science
6:30 PM RISE: SACRED WATER Carnegie Institution for Science 6:30 PM SACRED COD National Museum of Natural History
7 PM AT THE FORK American University 7 PM DAUGHTERS OF THE DUST National Museum of African American History and Culture 8 PM RISE: POISONED RIVER Carnegie Institution for Science
12 PM REI Program NORTHBOUND POUMAKA: FIRST ASCENT JUNGLE ADVENTURE ON UA POA SHIFT RUNNING WILD Carnegie Institution for Science 2 PM HOLY (UN)HOLY RIVER Carnegie Institution for Science 2:30 PM SEA GYPSIES: THE FAR SIDE OF THE WORLD National Museum of Natural History 3 PM LETTERS FROM BAGHDAD National Gallery of Art, East Building Auditorium 3:15 PM THE RED TURTLE AFI Silver Theater 4 PM RANCHER, FARMER, FISHERMAN Carnegie Institution for Science
2:30 PM MILLION DOLLAR DUCK National Museum of Natural History
4 PM NALEDI: A BABY ELEPHANT’S TALE Carnegie Institution for Science
7 PM Winner of the Polly Krakora Award for Artistry in Film SEASONS Carnegie Institution for Science
5:30 PM VAMIZI – CRADLE OF CORAL National Museum of Natural History 7 PM HAPPENING Presented with HBO and the Redford Center Carnegie Institution for Science
8 PM SITE OF SITES E Street Cinema
7:30 PM PRISTINE SEAS: WILD GALAPAGOS National Geographic
CLIPS & CONVERSATIONS
SHORTS
J WORLD, US AND DC PREMIERES
Q&A
DISCUSSION
KID-FRIENDLY PROGRAMS
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T16 | EXPRESS | 03.09.2017 | THURSDAY
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VENUE & TRANSPORTATION INFO AFI SILVER THEATRE 8633 Colesville Rd., Silver Spring, Md. Washington, DC Metro: Silver Spring AMERICAN UNIVERSITY Doyle/Forman Theater, School of Communication, Center for Environmental Filmmaking, 201 McKinley Building, 4400 Massachusetts Ave., NW Metro: Tenleytown-AU Metro, Shuttle bus service to AU ANGELIKA FILM CENTER Mosaic District, 2911 District Ave., Fairfax, VA 22031 Metro: Dunn Loring-Merrifield Station; Free parking AVALON THEATRE 5612 Connecticut Ave., NW L2, L4 Metrobuses
EMBASSY OF CANADA 501 Pennsylvania Ave., NW Metro: Archives- Navy Memorial, Judiciary Square EMBASSY OF FINLAND 3301 Massachusetts Ave., NW Metro: Woodley Park-Zoo EMBASSY OF FRANCE 4101 Reservoir Rd., NW Metrobuses: D1, D2, D3, D5, D6 EMBASSY OF SPAIN Former Residence of the Ambassadors of Spain 2801 16th St., NW EMBASSY OF SWITZERLAND 2900 Cathedral Ave., NW Metro: Woodley Park-Zoo/ Adams Morgan Metrobus: 96, X3 EMBASSY OF THE REPUBLIC OF SINGAPORE 3501 International Place, NW Metro: Van Ness-UDC GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY – MARVIN CENTER 800 21st St., NW Metro: Foggy Bottom
CARNEGIE INSTITUTION FOR SCIENCE 1530 P St., NW Metro: Dupont Circle Parking: Colonial Parking, 1616 P St. and 1461 P St.
HIRSHHORN MUSEUM AND SCULPTURE GARDEN Independence Ave. & Seventh St., SW Metro: Smithsonian, L’Enfant Plaza JAPAN INFORMATION AND CULTURE CENTER, EMBASSY OF JAPAN 1150 18th St., NW Metro: Farragut North, Farragut West
CHEVY CHASE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH One Chevy Chase Circle, NW L2 & L4 Metrobuses
MEXICAN CULTURAL INSTITUTE 2829 16th St NW Metro: Columbia Heights Station
E STREET CINEMA 555 11th St., NW Metro: Metro Center, Gallery Place-Chinatown Parking under the theater
NATIONAL ARCHIVES 7th St. & Constitution Ave., NW Washington, DC Metro: Archives-Navy Memorial
16 TICKETS & DAILY UPDATES AT DCEFF.ORG
NATIONAL BUILDING MUSEUM 401 F St., NW Metro: Judiciary Square
NAVAL HERITAGE CENTER 701 Pennsylvania Ave., NW Metro: Archives/Navy Memorial
NATIONAL CATHEDRAL Charles A. Perry Auditorium, 7th floor, 3101 Wisconsin Ave., N.W. Metro: Tenlytown AU, Metrobus: 30N, 30S, 31, 33, 37
NEW YORK UNIVERSITY WASHINGTON, DC 1307 L St., NW Metro: McPherson Square
NATIONAL GALLERY OF ART 6th St. & Constitution Ave., NW Metro: Archives-Navy Memorial, Judiciary Square
ROYAL NETHERLANDS EMBASSY 4200 Linnean Ave., NW Metro: Van Ness-UDC
NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC SOCIETY 1600 M St., NW Metro: Farragut North Parking: under Building & PMI, 1615 M St, NW NATIONAL MUSEUM OF AMERICAN HISTORY 14th St. & Constitution Ave., NW Metro: Federal Triangle, Smithsonian NATIONAL MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY 10th St. & Constitution Ave., NW Metro: Federal Triangle, Smithsonian NATIONAL MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAN INDIAN Fourth St. & Independence Ave., SW Metro: L’Enfant Plaza NATIONAL MUSEUM OF AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORY AND CULTURE 1400 Constitution Ave., NW Metro: Smithsonian, Federal Triangle NATIONAL MUSEUM OF WOMEN IN THE ARTS 1250 New York Ave., NW Metro: Metro Center NATIONAL PORTRAIT GALLERY Eighth & G Sts., NW Metro: Gallery Place-Chinatown NATIONAL WILDLIFE VISITOR CENTER 10901 Scarlet Tanager Loop, Laurel, MD
SACKLER GALLERY Arthur M. Sackler Gallery Sublevel 1: 1050 Independence Ave., SW Metro: Federal Triangle, Smithsonian TOWN HALL EDUCATION ARTS & RECREATION CAMPUS (THEARC) 1901 Mississippi Ave., SE Metro: Southern Avenue WASHINGTON NATIONAL CATHEDRAL McDonough School of Business, 37th & O Sts., NW Metrobus: 36, D6, G2 WOODROW WILSON INTERNATIONAL CENTER FOR SCHOLARS Sixth Floor Auditorium, 1300 Pennsylvania Ave., NW Metro: Federal Triangle
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FEATURE FILMS Following the 8,000-mile journey of Infinity, a 120foot, hand-built sailing ket h, from New Zealand to patagonia in 2014, the i iest year on re ord in the Southern Ocean, this is a story about sailing and the raw ower of the natural world. Along the way, the 16- erson rew battles a hurri ane of i e, assumes a mission with the environmental grou , Sea She herd, and tears every sail they have. Intended for Adult Audiences. Director: Nico Edwards Sat, Mar 25, 2:30 PM FREE with reservations Q&A National Museum of Natural History
SEA OF HOPE (USA, 2017, 45 min.) Presented by The Reva and David Logan Foundation
Follow o ean legend Sylvia Earle, renowned underwater National Geogra hi hotogra her Brian Skerry, writer Max Kennedy, and their rew of teenage aquanauts on a year-long quest to establish Blue parks a ross an unseen underwater Ameri an Wilderness. Director: Bob Nixon Wed, Mar 15, 7 PM Q&A $10 Carnegie Institution for Science
SEASONS (LES SAISONS) (France, 2015, 95 min.) Winner, Polly Krakora Award for Artistry in Film Presented with the Cultural Services of the French Embassy ca turing ex e tional footage of the wild, diverse, and wonderful animal life in Euro e’s forests, now under threat from limate hange and human ivilization. For om lete des ri tion, see age 3. Directors: Jacques Perrin in person and Jacques Cluzaud Sun, Mar 26, 7 PM $10 Carnegie Institution for Science
THE SHEPHERDJ (EL PASTOR) (Spain, 2016, 105 min.) presented with S ain Arts & culture Shepherd Anselmo lives a modest but happy life in a remote house in Salamanca on Spain’s central lain, whose unforgiving lands a es are elebrated in the film. When he refuses a lu rative offer from a onstru tion om any lanning to build a new residential complex on his property, his life is turned FEATURES
CLIPS & CONVERSATIONS
u side down. In S anish with English subtitles. Director: Jonathan Cenzual Burley Thurs, Mar 16, 6:45 PM FREE Former Residence of the Ambassadors of Spain
SILENT LAND: THE FIGHT FOR FAIR FOODJ (The Netherlands, 2016, 73 min.) In cambodia, more and more fertile land is taken over by large-s ale farming industries while farmer families are fighting to kee the ownershi of their land in order to maintain lo al food se urity. Who has the sustainable answer to feed the ever-growing world o ulation? Silent Land tells the stories behind this onfli t. Director: Jan van den Berg Thurs, Mar 23, 7 PM FREE with reservations George Washington University, Marvin Center
SITE OF SITESJ (Dominican Republic, 2016, 61 min.) Presented with the Global Foundation for Democracy and Development and the Dominican Republic Environmental Film Festival Artifi ial bea hes are being built somewhere in the caribbean. A young model ex e ts some friends by the ool, a gardener and a maid fantasize about buying ex ensive furniture, a grou of street-swee ers hiloso hize about love, and some amateur golfers try to enter the ball in the hole, while tourists, between noise and ma hines, go for a little walk. Directors: Natalia Cabral in person and Oriol Estrada Fri, Mar 24, 8 pm FREE with reservations E Street Cinema
the National Academy of Sciences Like Rabies and Dengue, Zika and Ebola reside in animals and s ill over into humans. Following s ientists into the world’s hot zones, the film ex lores utting-edge s ien e along with low-te h, but tried-and-true methods to sto viruses from s reading. Battle-hardened health workers and survivors share their untold stories and leading e idemiologists ex lain how human behaviors in rease the likelihood of s illover events, and how science is learning to anticipate, and tame, these harrowing o urren es. Director: James Barrat Fri, Mar 17, 8:30 PM FREE with reservations Q&A Reception before Screening Carnegie Institution for Science
SIXTEEN LEGSJ
THE SWIRLJ (EL REMOLINO)
(Australia, 2016, 101 min.) A Selection from Jackson Hole Wildlife Film Festival Giant rehistori s iders the size of dinner lates try to find love in the dark. With the a roa h of the next period of global mass extinction, a message of hope omes from an unlikely hero: a reature, often reviled, that has survived previous mass extinctions and climatic change in a magical ecosystem hidden beneath one of the world’s last great wildernesses in Tasmania. With s e ta ular imagery and a dark-fantasy twist, this is a real-world “charlotte’s Web,” featuring master story-teller Neil Gaiman. Directors: Niall Doran and Justin Smith in person Sat, Mar 18, 4:15 PM FREE Reservations requested Q&A National Museum of Natural History
(Mexico, 2016, 73 min.) A tiny riverside ommunity in chia as, the most flooded region in Mexi o, El Remolino strikes a fragile balan e between floods intensified by limate hange and its natural bounty. Immersed in this la e, we follow Esther, a strong woman who strives to hel her family as she shares her world through the lens of her amera; and her brother pedro, a transvestite farmer who defends his identity and his dreams. Director: Laura Herrero Garvín
SPILLOVER: ZIKA, EBOLA, AND BEYOND (USA, 2016, 55 min.) Presented by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute and
SHORTS
J WORLD, US AND DC PREMIERES
Q&A
Preceded by
THE DIVER (Mexico, 2015, 15 min.) As the hief diver in the Mexi o city sewerage system, Julio césar cu cámara’s job is to re air um s and dislodge garbage that flows into the gutters to maintain the ir ulation of sewerage waters. Director: Esteban Arrangoiz Wed, Mar 15, 6:45 PM FREE with reservations Mexican Cultural Institute
DISCUSSION
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FEATURE FILMS TIDEWATERJ (USA, 2017) Presented with EARTHx Film & Earth Day Texas Sea level rise in the Tidewater region of Virginia and North carolina en om asses Ham ton Roads, a region whose v lnerability most affe ts o r overall national se rity. Ri h in diversity and histori al signifi an e, Ham ton Roads, with over 1.6 million itizens, 18 government agen ies, and Naval Station Norfolk, the largest naval station in the world, is the se ond most v lnerable omm nity in the u.S. to sea level rise. Director: Roger Sorkin in person Mon, Mar 20, 7 PM FREE with reservations Q&A Naval Heritage Center
that be ame a ity, whose 5.4 million eo le make it one of the most densely o lated nations on earth. From otters in Marina Bay to the troo of ma aq es in the ity’s B kit Timah Nat re Reserve, this film show ases the ity’s diverse and olorf l animal life. Shown with
WILD CITY: ISLANDS
Director: Pol Crutchen Thurs, Mar 16, 7 PM FREE Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden
WATER & POWER: A CALIFORNIA HEISTJ
(Singapore, 2015, 45 min.) Singapore’s coasts and islands are home to an array of fascinating creatures, such as the rare tiger tail seahorse, the yellow wat hman goby, the istol shrim and the very rare Ne t ne’s c S onge. Both films: Narrated by David Attenborough. Producer: Beach House Pictures for Channel News Asia Wed, Mar 22, 7 PM FREE with reservations Embassy of the Republic of Singapore
(USA, 2017, 86 min.) The alarming ex loits of california’s most notorio s water barons, who rofit from the state’s reso r e while everyday itizens, towns, and small farmers end re debilitating water rises, are investigated in this ex ose. For complete description, see page 3. Director: Marina Zenovich in person Tues, Mar 14, 6:30 PM $30 with Opening Night reception National Geographic Society
VAMIZI: CRADLE OF CORALJ (Sweden, 2016, 52 min.) The magnifi ent oral reefs of Vamizi, off the oast of Mozambiq e, are a niq e breeding gro nd for whales, dol hins, t rtles, and sharks. They are also the only la e in East Afri a where “mass s awning,” the ability to hel orals re rod e, has been observed. However, this fragile realm is nder threat. Feat ring st nning imagery from renowned National Geogra hi hotogra her Mattias Kl m, the film follows s ientists from aro nd the world who fight to sto the damage before it starts. Director: Mattias Klum Sat, Mar 25, 5:30 PM FREE Reservations requested Q&A National Museum of Natural History
VOICES FROM CHERNOBYL (Luxembourg, 2016, 86 min.) Eyewitness re orts from the s rvivors of one of the worst n lear disasters in history -- s ientists, tea hers, jo rnalists, o les, and hildren –re o nt the short and long-term horrors of the n lear meltdown at chernobyl. The remnants of the catastrophe are seen in the abandoned, dystopian lands a es that now mark the ukrainian ity of pri yat near the rea tor. Adapted from Nobel Prize-winner Svetlana Alexievich’s book. Official Oscar foreign language submission from Luxembourg.
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YASUNI MANJ
Encore Screening of WATER & POWER: A CALIFORNIA HEIST Preceded by
THE NATURE OF PEOPLE (USA/Mexico, 2016, 11 min.) Presented by The Nature Conservancy Resilient people adapting to climate change in coastal communities, from Mexico to Virginia’s Eastern Shore, are rofiled in this do mentary rod ed by The Nat re conservan y. In English and Spanish with English subtitles. Director: Bess Tassoulas Wed, Mar 22, 7 PM $10 Angelika Film Center at Mosaic, Fairfax, VA
WILD CITY: URBAN WILD (Singapore, 2015, 45 min.) Ex lore the wild side of Singa ore, a tro i al aradise
(USA, 2016, 92 min.) In the Yas ni Bios here of Amazonian E ador, the world’s most biodiverse forest, the Waorani, an indigeno s Amazonian tribe, is battling m lti le threats to their forest Eden: oil spills, illegal logging, illegal over-h nting and b sh markets, as well as disease and h man rights violations. The filmmaker embarks on a 1,000-mile tri by boat with a team of s ientists to s ort the laim that Yas ni is tr ly mega-diverse. Director: Ryan Patrick Killackey in person Sun, Mar 19, 7 PM $10 Q&A E Street Cinema
YOU’VE BEEN TRUMPED TOOJ (UK, 2017, 80 min.) The dee ly tro bling onfrontation between a feisty 92-year-old S ottish widow and her family and a billionaire develo er who is now the uS president, is ex lored in this timely and ex losive film. As thousands of journalists hang on every Trump tteran e, wondering what he might say next, dire tor Anthony Baxter deftly ex lores the onseq en es of his a tions. Director: Anthony Baxter in person Fri, Mar 17, 7 PM $10 Q&A E Street Cinema
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SHORT FILMS ALETSCH: OF ICE AND MEN J
ANIMATION RETROSPECTIVE
RISK AND RESISTANCE
(Switzerland, 2016, 24 min.) The Great Alets h Gla ier is the biggest of its kind in the Alps and is disappearing at an ever-faster rate. A glaciologist and an old mountain guide open our eyes to a story about big nature, small human beings, and a development that will affe t us all. Director: Caroline Fink in person Wed, Mar 15, 6:30 PM FREE with reservations Q&A Embassy of Switzerland Reception
With dazzling animation and effe ts, these Environmental Film Festival favorites capture some of the most important and enduring issues affe ting our planet, during the past 25 years. Introdu ed by Flo Stone, Founder, Environmental Film Festival In the Nation’s capital. Sun, Mar 26, 12 PM FREE with reservations Q&A Carnegie Institution for Science
Presented with Working Films Two works illustrate the dedi ation and ommitment behind some of North America’s biggest environmental hallenges and su ess stories. Sat, Mar 18, 2 PM FREE with reservations Q&A Carnegie Institution for Science
CREATURE COMFORTS (USA, 2002, 6 min.) A humourous and thought provoking view of what animals in zoos might be thinking about their aptivity and surroundings. Director: Nick Park
HUDSON: A RIVER AT RISK J (USA, 2016, 40 min.) This web series elebrates the efforts of environmentalists and their agen ies to lean and restore the Hudson River Valley and do uments the three largest threats to Ameri a’s “first river” and its surrounding area. Director: Jon Bowermaster in person
THE OLD MAN AND THE SEA (Canada, 1999, 20 min.) The inspiring tale of a fisherman’s epi battle with a giant marlin and his subsequent battle to save his prize from deadly sharks. Director: Aleksandr Petrov
PARKING INSTRUMENTS OF CHANGE: LESSONS FROM THE RAINFOREST (USA, 2016, 20 min.) Presented with the Environmental Investigation Agency EIA offi ials traveled to Guatemala with members of Maroon 5 and Guster to learn about the impacts of illegal logging and how some ommunities are fighting ba k – even with musi . Director: Steve Ellington in person Sun, Mar 19, 2 PM FREE with reservations Q&A Carnegie Institution for Science
(USA, 2002, 6 min.) A parking lot attendant loses his temper when his working pla e is invaded by a blade of grass. A furious battle ensues. Director: Bill Plympton
HOW TO STOP A PIPELINE J (Canada, 2016, 28 min.) This film explores First Nation ommunity resistan e to a multi-billion dollar pipeline designed to pump heavy crude oil from the tar sands to the Great Bear Rainforest. Director: Kip Pastor in person
GALAPAGOS BY CHRISTIAN ZUBER J (France, 1976, two 35 min. films) Presented with the Cultural Services of the French Embassy Discover the famed archipelago, as you navigate aboard a boat at the heart of the islands, viewing neverbefore-seen footage and photos of this paradise and the rare spe ies that dwell there. Director: Christian Zuber Fri, Mar 17, 7 PM FREE with reservations Q&A Embassy of France
THE MAN WHO PLANTED TREES
SMOG OF THE SEA J
(Canada, 1987, 30 min.) The story of a shepherd’s single handed quest to re-forest a barren valley. Director: Frédéric Back
(USA, 2016, 28 min.) Presented with the Ocean Conservancy How do you stop a fog? Marine s ientist Mar us Eriksen invited renowned surfers Keith and Dan Malloy, musi ian Ja k Johnson, spearfisher Kimi Werner, and bodysurfer Mark cunningham to join him on a one-week journey through the Sargasso Sea to assess the fate of plasti s in the world’s o eans. Ian cheney’s Smog of the Sea aptures what they found and makes an artful all to a tion for rethinking singleuse plasti . Director: Ian Cheney in person Thurs, Mar 16, 6:30 PM FREE with reservations Q&A New York University - Washington, DC
TURTLE WORLD (Australia, 1997, 8 min.) A lone sea turtle travels through space, her breath creating a whole new atmosphere. This be omes filled with forests, rivers, mountains and enterprising monkeys... so enterprising that they are forced to learn about sustainability the hard way. Director: Nick Hilligoss
FEATURES
CLIPS & CONVERSATIONS
SHORTS
J WORLD, US AND DC PREMIERES
Q&A
DISCUSSION
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SHORT FILMS CONSERVATION I: ENDANGERED CREATURES Take a journey a ross land, sea and sky. Join the Environmental Film Festival for an afternoon of conservation shorts that explore the future of our planet and all the natural wonders worth saving. Sat, Mar 18, 12 PM FREE with reservations Q&A Carnegie Institution for Science
RED WOLF REVIVAL (USA, 2016, 24 min.) A histori re overy effort in Eastern North carolina, highlights the struggle to reintroduce one of the rarest animals on earth. Director: Roshan Patel
PRONGHORN REVIVAL
J
CONSERVATION II: PROTECTED PLACES Journey around the world with a series of shorts that dee en our understanding of the environmental issues affe ting some of our lanet’s most re ious la es. Sat, Mar, 18, 4 PM FREE with reservations Q&A E Street Cinema
THE NATURE OF MAPS J (USA, 2017, 10 min.) An exploration of the integral role maps play in onservation, adventure and our understanding of wild la es. Directors: Bridget Besaw and Tahria Sheather
PRIMEVAL: ENTER THE INCOMAPPLEUX J
(USA, 2015, 6 min.) Texan wildlife biologists fight for the future by trans orting 100 antelo e to a new area in an attem t to revive an i oni s e ies. Director: Ben Masters
(Canada, 2016, 20 min.) Journey dee into the heart of the one of the world’s last inta t inland rainforests in British columbia’s Selkirk Mountains. Director: Damien Gillis
FIX AND RELEASE J
WATER FROM THE MOUNTAIN J
(Canada, 2017, 16 min.) A small turtle trauma centre in Peterborough Ontario canada fights to even the odds for survival that freshwater turtles fa e in a modern world. This visually beautiful film shows turtles in a way that few have seen before. Director: Scott Dobson
(USA, 2017, 7 min.) Follow the ath of water from puerto Ri an rainforests to the oastal ommunities that rely on fresh water… and dis over an amazing water treatment (e o)system. Produced by Freshwaters Illustrated. Directors: Jeremy Monroe and David Herasimtschuk
IN SEARCH OF TZOTZ
BRIGHT SPOTS J
(USA, 2016, 9 min.) Dee in the Mayan forest of southern Mexi o live two s e ies of large arnivorous bats. Join a the sear h for these rare and elusive reatures. Director: Jason Jaacks
(Australia, 2016, 7 min.) A oeti ortrait of s ientist Ni k Holmes and his work reventing extin tions on islands. Director: Jilli Rose
PROTECTING OUR PLANET Nature is amazing. To help keep it flourishing, Booz Allen Hamilton partners
with nonprofits that preserve and protect our environment. From highways to waterways, our employees work side by side with our partners to reduce waste, protect natural resources, and save energy. Booz Allen cares about the health of our planet, and that humanity is always ready for what’s next.
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SHORT FILMS INTERNATIONAL SHORTS
LATE NIGHT SHORTS
Ex erien e films for the lanet, from the around the globe. Four hand- i ked shorts from Mexi o, Sweden, peru and Botswana offer unique ers e tives on the natural world. Sun, Mar 19, 12 PM FREE with reservations Q&A Carnegie Institution for Science
Enjoy a series of quirky enviro fli ks after dinner Friday night. Bring four of your friends to see five good humored shorts. Fri, Mar 17, 9:30 PM FREE with reservations Q&A E Street Cinema
LA LAGUNA (Mexico/USA, 2016, 38 min.) Set within the rainforests of southern Mexi o, this is the story of a Mayan boy’s remarkable journey from hildhood to adoles en e. Director: Aaron Schock
PROJECT EARTH DOCUMENTARY SHORTS PICKLE
THE LIMESTONE CONFLICT J (Sweden, 2016, 9 min.) An a tivist, a miner, and a lo al land owner give us a glim se into the divisive onfli t over limestone mining in the ancient Ojnare forest of Gotland, the largest island in Sweden. Director: Petter Ringbom
HOME AT DAWN (Peru, 2015, 5 min.) An old fisherman re ounts his life, the hanging world, and his love for the o ean, as he embarks out to sea early one morning. Director: Billy Silva and Guille Isa
(USA, 2016, 15 min.) Tom and Debbie Nicholson reminisce about the parade of unlikely ets they have taken in over the years, from an obese hi ken to a ara legi ossum. Director: Amy Nicholson
THE DOG (USA, 2016, 9 min.) Sony stops manufacturing replacement parts for its Aibo et robot, as owners s ramble to extend the lives of their beloved robot-dogs. Directors: Zackary Canepari and Drea Cooper
Presented with FUSION and Audience Awards Filmmakers from around the world made 4-7 minute environmental do umentaries in 5 days. The do s feature issues surrounding oceans, extinction, animal welfare and limate hange. Sat, Mar 18, 12 PM FREE with reservations Q&A E Street Cinema Visit dceff.org for film details
THE RATS J (France, 2015, 10 min.) A natural history of the motor ar s e ies. Director: Emile Dumas
SIMON BECK: SNOWARTIST (Norway, 2016, 6 min.) British artist Simon Be k reates unique geometri snow atterns ins ired by i e rystals, s iderwebs, ferns and other natural sights. Directors: Audun Fjeldheim and Sindre Kinnerød
THE DIVER J A HOUSE WITHOUT SNAKES J (USA/Botswana, 2016, 29 min.) Two young Bushmen from Botswana struggle to build their futures in the wake of their eo le’s relo ation from their an estral homeland. Director: Daniel Koehler
FEATURES
CLIPS & CONVERSATIONS
(Mexico, 2015, 15 min.) Join Julio césar cu cámara on the job, as he re airs um s and dislodges garbage that flows into Mexi o city’s sewerage system. Director: Esteban Arrangoiz
SHORTS
J WORLD, US AND DC PREMIERES
Q&A
DISCUSSION
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SHORT FILMS MIGRATION SHORTS
Presented with the Maryland/DC and Virginia Chapters of The Nature Conservancy An evening of conservation shorts that honor the world’s wildest places and creatures, along with the extraordinary cast of characters who work to save them. Sat, Mar 18, 2 PM FREE with reservations Q&A E Street Cinema
OUTDOOR ADVENTURE SHORTS
Presented with REI Experience the extreme outdoors with an afternoon of fun, action-packed shorts that take you across remote regions and world-class trails. Sat, Mar 25, 12 PM FREE with reservations Q&A Carnegie Institution for Science
(USA, 2016, 25 min.) The tale of one determined fish presents a problem for Alaska’s renewable energy plans. Director: Ryan Peterson
BIRDS OF MAY J
BIRDS OF MAY J
NORTHBOUND J
(USA, 2016, 15 min.) Join four of Norway’s best skaters in this poetic and playful encounter with the Arctic winter. Director: Jørn Nyseth Ranum
POUMAKA: FIRST ASCENT JUNGLE ADVENTURE ON UA POA
THE HIGH DIVIDE J
(USA, 2016, 15 min.) Blood, sweat, and tears spill as bouldering champion Angie payne and veteran explorer Mike Libecki climb into a vertical jungle mayhem. Directors: Keith Ladzinski and Andy Mann
STUDENT SHORTS SHOWCASE
Wed, Mar 22, 7 PM American University FREE Q&A Visit dceff.org for film details.
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(USA, 2016, 28 min.) Against the scenic backdrop of the Delaware Bay, an oyster farming boom threatens to push the rufa red knot closer to extinction. Director: Jared Flesher in person
MAPPING MIGRATION
(USA, 2016, 4 min.) using light level geolocators, researchers examine the journeys of Golden-winged and cerulean Warblers. Director: Aditi Desai in person
SURVIVING THE WILD: CATS AND BIRDS
(USA, 2016, 8 min.) Cats may be cute and cuddly, but their impact outdoors on native wildlife is another story. Director: Aditi Desai in person
(USA, 2017, 15 min.) A celebration of the confluence of a wild place and its visionary people. Director: Eric Bendick in person
A special showcase of environmental shorts by young and emerging local filmmakers. Top picks, from the Environmental Film Festival’s 60-second #Envirofilm competition and Youth Award will be followed by films directed and produced by American university students. open to students, educators, families and anyone with an interest in seeing enviro filmmaking in action.
A SEABIRD’S STORY
(USA, 2016, 2 min.) An orphaned seabird gets a second chance after being rescued by scientists. Director: Aditi Desai in person
THE SUPER SALMON J
(USA, 2016, 28 min.) Against the scenic backdrop of the Delaware Bay, an oyster farming boom threatens to push the rufa red knot closer to extinction. Director: Jared Flesher in person
SPOTLIGHT ON BIRD CONSERVATION
A short films series and discussion that bird lovers are sure to enjoy. Get a rare look at the native habitats and migratory journeys of species facing threat or extinction. Sat, Mar 18, 11 AM FREE with reservations Q&A National Wildlife Visitor Center
SHORTS AT AFI
Sat, Mar 18 and Sun, Mar 19, 11:30 AM AFI Silver Theatre $5
SHIFT J
(Canada, 2016, 30 min.) Meet indigenous youth from carcross, Yukon who have spent the past 10 years transforming traditional trails around their community into a world-class mountain biking destination. Director: Kelly Milner
RUNNING WILD J
(USA, 2016, 7 min.) A remotely triggered camera in utah’s rugged uinta mountains captures a picture of a creature that hasn’t been been spotted for 40 years: a wolverine. Director: Danny Schmidt
THE LORAX
(USA, 1972, 25 min.) A ruined industrialist tells his tale of his environmentally self-destructive greed despite the warnings of an old forest creature. Director: Hawley Pratt
HORTON HEARS A WHO!
(USA, 1970, 26 min.) Horton The Elephant struggles to protect a microscopic community from his neighbours who refuse to believe it exists. Director: Chuck Jones and Ben Washam
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SHORT FILMS ERIC MOE AWARD FOR BEST SHORT ON SUSTAINABILITY Presented with National Wildlife Federation & National Geographic See the winner and the finalist f the Eri M e Award f r Best Sh rt n Sustainability. Tw inn vative films ffer inventive solutions to balancing the needs f humans and nature. Mon, Mar 20, 7 PM at National Geographic $10 Q&A
FEMALE FILMMAKERS SPOTLIGHT Presented with Women in Film & Video Journey through America’s toughest terrains, majestic landscapes and remote sites with a stellar tri f envir nmental films by awardwinning female filmmakers. Thurs, Mar 16, 7 PM Carnegie Institution for Science $10 Q&A
SHORT FILMS KOKOTA: THE ISLET OF HOPE J (Canada/Tanzania, 2016, 29 min.) Winner, Eric Moe Award for Best Short on Sustainability The story of resilient people living on the front lines of climate change and h w these unlikely her es have managed t inn vatively ada t and ref rest their island. Director: Craig Norris in person
ONE HUNDRED THOUSAND BEATING HEARTS J (USA, 2016, 15 min.) Finalist, Eric Moe Award for Best Short on Sustainability F urth generati n attleman Will Harris shares his ev luti n fr m industrial, mm dity wb y t sustainable, humane f d r du er. Director: Peter Byck in person
GUIDED J (USA, 2016, 18 min.) Guided r files the gentle s irit f Maine wilderness guide Ray Reitze wh shares his hil s hy f h w t live in harm ny with the utd rs t the next generati n f guides. Director: Bridget Besaw in person
CANYON SONG J (USA, 2016, 12 min.) Tw y ung sisters learn ab ut their Navaj ulture and hist ry within the sa red walls f cany n de chelly Nati nal M nument. Directors: Amy Marquis and Dana Romanoff in person
ELK RIVER (USA, 2016, 28 min.) Meet ba k untry guides and attle ran hers wh se lives are intri ately tied with elk and ther migrat ry s e ies that all the Greater Yell wst ne h me. Directors Jenny Nichols in person and Joe Rils
SCIENCE SHORTS
THINK LIKE A SCIENTIST: BOUNDARIES
Enj y five films fr m Day’s Edge pr du ti ns: Think Like A S ientist, a new series r du ed f r the H ward Hughes Medi al Institute, then embark n a climate journey to understand sn w with End f Sn w. Wed, Mar 15, 7 PM Washington National Cathedral FREE Q&A
(USA, 2016, 7 min.) Humans nstru t b undaries — ar und ur homes, our neighborhoods, and our nations — to bring order to a ha ti w rld. But h w d these b undaries affe t ther reatures? Day’s Edge Productions
THINK LIKE A SCIENTIST: VULCAN AND THE POWER OF IDEAS (USA, 2016, 7 min.) Ever heard of the planet Vulcan? There’s a g d han e y u haven’t, be ause it d esn’t exist. Producer: Day’s Edge Productions
THINK LIKE A SCIENTIST: GORONGOSA (USA, 2016, 7 min.) The story of Greg Carr and his involvement in the rest rati n f G r ng sa Nati nal park after its destru ti n fr m 30 years f war in M zambique. Day’s Edge Productions
THINK LIKE A SCIENTIST: INSIDE ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE (USA, 2016, 7 min.) J urnalist Greg o’Brien reveals his struggle with Alzheimer’s as Harvard s ientist, Rudy Tanzi, ex lains h w the disease insidi usly r bs the identities f th se affe ted. Day’s Edge Productions
FEATURES
CLIPS & CONVERSATIONS
SHORTS
J WORLD, US AND DC PREMIERES
END OF SNOW (USA, 2016, 20 min.) J in tr i al e l gist Dr. Jane Zelik va as she embarks n a j urney int the m untains f Wy ming and c l rad t dis ver the ast, resent and future f sn w. Director: Morgan Heim Day’s Edge Productions
Q&A
DISCUSSION
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CLIPS & CONVERSATIONS and im a t of the food we eat. Also feat red: This year’s winner of the E o-comedy Video com etition. Tues, Mar 21, 7 PM (Reception: 6:30 PM) American University, Doyle/Forman Theater, 201 McKinley Building FREE with reservations Q&A
horse trainer, Masters will refle t on his ex erien es riding from Mexico to Canada through some of our nation’s most jaw-dro ing – and nforgiving – lands a es to ins ire ado tions of wild horses and b rros. Wed, Mar 15, 7:30 PM National Geographic Society $25 Q&A
VIDEO ART: MICHAEL JOO Join ontem orary artist Mi hael Joo and carol H h, Associate Curator of Contemporary Art at the Freer | Sa kler for a s reening and dis ssion of Joo’s short video work Salt Transfer Cycle along with other short films ex loring the relationshi between the nat ral lands a e and the h man body. Sat, Mar 18, 2 PM Freer | Arthur M. Sackler Gallery FREE Q&A
THE MOST IMPORTANT FOOD FILMS OF ALL TIME A s e ial evening of film and dis ssion with chris palmer, Fo nder and Dire tor of Ameri an university’s center for Environmental Filmmaking. This intera tive, omm nity event will highlight om elling li s that ex lore the origins
OK, I’VE WATCHED THE FILM, NOW WHAT? Find o t how to t rn filmmaking into a tion at o r ann al impact panel, hosted and moderated by American university’s chris palmer at the S hool of comm ni ation. Among the award-winning anelists: LA-based filmmaker Samira Goetschel (Our Own Private Bin Laden, Clown de la Vie); Dc-based filmmakers Lan e Kramer & Brandon Kramer (City of Trees, Voices from Within), o-fo nders of Meridian Hill pi t res; and Dc-based filmmaker Ellie Walton (Chocolate City, Fly by Light). Thurs, Mar 23, 7 PM American University, Doyle/Forman Theater, 201 McKinley Building FREE with reservations Q&A
Creating a future where people and nature thrive together Find us at the 25th Environmental Film Festival | nature.org/DCEFF WOCRD1748 | JASON HOUSTON
24 TICKETS & DAILY UPDATES AT DCEFF.ORG
UNBRANDED: AN EPIC RIDE THROUGH THE AMERICAN WEST Join Ben Masters, the “mastermind” behind Unbranded, for an in-de th look at the roje t behind the film. A native Texan, accomplished photographer and experienced
VIRTUAL REALITY: UNDER THE CANOPY AND VALEN’S REEF Presented by Conservation International Thro gh the magi of virt al reality, jo rney with conservation International to the Amazon, earth’s most biodiverse e osystem, and into the rystal- lear waters of the Bird’s Head Seas a e in Indonesia, the single greatest reservoir of marine life on the lanet. Immerse yo rself in the wonders of the Amazon rainforest in under the cano y, soaring over treeto s and l nging into rivers as you explore one of earth’s most vital life s ort systems. In Valen’s Reef, dive into Indonesia’s Bird’s Head Seas a e, threatened with e ologi al collapse, but being saved through an innovative onservation rogram. Sat, Mar 18 & 25 and Sun, Mar 19 & 26 All Day FREE Carnegie Institution for Science Under the Canopy is made possible with support from MacArthur Foundation with additional support from SC Johnson, Tiffany & Co. Foundation and HP, Inc. Valen’s Reef is made possible with support from Tiffany & Co Foundation with additional support from glassybaby, and Vice.
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THURSDAY | 03.09.2017 | EXPRESS | T25
INDEX 24 SNOW 4 100 YEARS: ONE WOMAN’S FIGHT FOR JUSTICE 4 AGE OF CONSEQUENCES, THE 4 ALETSCH: OF ICE AND MEN 19 ANGRY INUK 4 ANIMAL HOMES: NEST 4 ANTARCTICA, IN THE FOOTSTEPS OF THE EMPEROR 4 ANTS ON A SHRIMP 4 AS PENTAGON OVERHAULS NUCLEAR TRIAD, CRITICS ADVISE CAUTION 6 AT THE FORK 4 BEEKEEPER AND HIS SON, THE 4 BEFORE THE FLOOD 3, 5, 13 BEHEMOTH 5 BEHOLD THE EARTH 5 BETWEEN EARTH AND SKY: CLIMATE CHANGE ON THE LAST FRONTIER 5 BIRDS OF MAY 22 BORN IN CHINA 5, 13 BRIGHT SPOTS 20 BROTHERS OF THE WIND 5 CANYON SONG 23 CICLOS 7 CITY 40 5 COLOMBIA: WILD MAGIC 6 COLORADO, THE 6 CONQUEST OF THE SKIES 6 CREATURE COMFORTS 19 CROSSING BHUTAN 6 DAUGHTERS OF THE DUST 6 DAY THE SUN FELL, THE 6 DEATH BY A THOUSAND CUTS 7 DEATH BY DESIGN 7 DIVER, THE 17, 21 DOG, THE 21 EAGLE HUNTRESS, THE 7 ELK RIVER 23 END OF SNOW 23 FIX AND RELEASE 20 FLINT 7 FLY BY LIGHT 7 FOLLOWING SEAS 7 FOOD EVOLUTION 7
FORGOTTEN FARMS FORT ORD: A SENSE OF PLACE FREIGHTENED: THE REAL PRICE OF SHIPPING GALAPAGOS BY CHRISTIAN ZUBER GAZA SURF CLUB GORONGOSA PARK: REBIRTH OF PARADISE GUIDED HAPPENING HAVARIE HIGH DIVIDE, THE HOLY (UN)HOLY RIVER HOME AT DAWN HORTON HEARS A WHO! HOUSE WITHOUT SNAKES, A HOW TO STOP A PIPELINE HUDSON: A RIVER AT RISK I, DESTINI ICE EDGE: CBC’S WILD CANADA IN PURSUIT OF SILENCE IN SEARCH OF TZOTZ INSTRUMENTS OF CHANGE: LESSONS FROM THE RAINFOREST ISLANDS AND THE WHALES, THE KEDI KIVALINA KOKOTA: THE ISLET OF HOPE KONELîNE: OUR LAND BEAUTIFUL LA LAGUNA LAND FOR WAR, A LAST OF THE LONGNECKS LETTERS FROM BAGHDAD LIGHT ON EARTH LIMESTONE CONFLICT, THE LONG WAY NORTH LORAX, THE LOST CITY OF Z, THE MAN WHO PLANTED TREES, THE MAPPING MIGRATION MILLION DOLLAR DUCK MODERN DAY EDEN, A JAPANESE TEMPLE GARDEN MOST IMPORTANT FOOD FILMS OF ALL TIME, THE
8 8 8 19 8 8 23 8 8 22 8 21 22 21 19 19 11 9 9 20 19 9 9 9 3, 23 9 21 9 9 9, 10 10 21 10 22 3, 10, 13 19 22 10 10 24
NALEDI 10 NATURE OF MAPS, THE 20 NATURE OF PEOPLE, THE 18 NORTHBOUND 22 NUCLEAR WINTER 6 OK, I’VE WATCHED THE FILM, NOW WHAT? 24 OLD MAN AND THE SEA, THE 19 ONE BIG HOME 10 ONE HUNDRED THOUSAND BEATING HEARTS 3, 23 PARKING 19 PETER AND THE FARM 10 PICKLE 21 PLANET EARTH II: CITIES 11 PLASTIC CHINA 11 PLASTIC OCEAN, A 11 POACHERS PIPELINE, THE 11 POUMAKA: FIRST ASCENT JUNGLE ADVENTURE ON UA POA 22 POWER OF THE RIVER: EXPEDITION TO THE HEART OF WATER IN BHUTAN 11 PRIMEVAL: ENTER THE INCOMAPPLEUX 20 PRISON IN TWELVE LANDSCAPES, A 11 PRISTINE SEAS: WILD GALAPAGOS 11 PROJECT EARTH DOCUMENTARY SHORTS 21 PRONGHORN REVIVAL 20 RACHEL CARSON 11 RANCHER, FARMER, FISHERMAN 11 RATS, THE 21 RED DESERT 12 RED TURTLE, THE 12 RED WOLF REVIVAL 20 RETURN OF THE ATOM 12 RISE: POISONED RIVER 12 RISE: SACRED WATER 12, 13 RIVERBLUE: CAN FASHION SAVE THE PLANET? 12 RUNNING WILD 22 SACRED COD 12 SALERO 12 SAMUEL IN THE CLOUDS 12 SEABIRD’S STORY, A 22 SEA GYPSIES: THE FAR SIDE OF THE WORLD 12, 17 SEA OF HOPE 17
SEASONS 3, 13, 17 SHEPHERD, THE 17 SHIFT 22 SILENT LAND: THE FIGHT FOR FOOD 17 SIMON BECK: SNOWARTIST 21 SITE OF SITES 17 SIXTEEN LEGS 17 SMOG OF THE SEA 19 SPILLOVER: ZIKA, EBOLA, AND BEYOND 13, 17 STUDENT SHORTS SHOWCASE 22 SUPER SALMON, THE 22 SURVIVING THE WILD: CATS AND BIRDS 22 SWIRL, THE 17 THINK LIKE A SCIENTIST: BOUNDARIES 23 GORONGOSA 23 INSIDE ALZHEIMERS DISEASE 23 VULCAN AND THE POWER OF IDEAS 23 TIDEWATER 18 TURTLE WORLD 19 UNBRANDED: AN EPIC RIDE THROUGH THE AMERICAN WEST 24 VAMIZI – CRADLE OF CORAL 18 VIDEO ART: MICHAEL JOO 24 VIRTUAL REALITY: UNDER THE CANOPY AND VALEN’S REEF 24 VOICES FROM CHERNOBYL 18 WATER & POWER: A CALIFORNIA HEIST 3, 13, 18 WATER FROM THE MOUNTAIN 20 WHAT YOU TAKE AWAY: A COLORADO RIVER REFLECTION 6 WILD CITY: ISLANDS 18 WILD CITY: URBAN WILD 18 YASUNI MAN 18 YOU’VE BEEN TRUMPED TOO 18
Congratulations on 25 Years of Celebrating the Environment
nationalgeographic.org PHOTOGRAPH BY GORDON WILTSIE/NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC CREATIVE
T26 | EXPRESS | 03.09.2017 | THURSDAY
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SPECIAL THANKS TO OUR DONORS
VISIT US ONLINE AT DCEFF.ORG
The Environmental Film Festival gratefully acknowledges the following Friends of the Festival who have supported the 2017 Festival. List as of January 25, 2017
EARN VALUABLE
CERTIFICATION BOOST CAREER SKILLS & EMPLOYMENT PROSPECTS Declare and share your EcoMission as a first step towards earning certification as an NWF EcoLeader! Explore our Career Center to help design a career pathway and secure a rewarding job that protects the planet!
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NWF.org/EcoLeaders
More than half the world’s sea turtles have eaten plastic waste. If we don’t act now, there will be 1 ton of plastic for every 3 tons of fish in the ocean by 2025. Help us work toward a future of trash free seas.
oceanconservancy.org/trashfreeseas Photo by Ben Hicks
26 TICKETS & DAILY UPDATES AT DCEFF.ORG
$10,000 + Grace Guggenheim Marion Guggenheim Joseph Krakora Annie and Paul Mahon Jane Watson Stetson and E. William Stetson, III Ann Stone Susan Vitka $5,000 Hannelore & Jeremy Grantham Lynne & Joe Horning Faith G. & John van D. Lewis Julia & Richard Moe Alexandra Nash Dane A. Nichols Georgiana Warner $2,500 The Honorable Diana Lady Dougan Barbara L. & John Franklin Anonymous Hausman Foundation for the Environment Anita Herrick Robert and Margaret McNamara Foundation #3 Liz Norton Peter O’Brien Margaret Parsons Nora Pouillon Nancy Voorhees Mary & Roger Wallace Catherine Wyler & Richard Rymland $1,000 Susan & Walter Arensberg Wendy Benchley & John Jeppson Jessie Brinkley & Bruce Bunting Alexander D. Crary
Harriett Crosby Kae & Don Dakin William Danforth, in honor of Marion & Grace Guggenheim Nancy Ruyle Dodge Melanie Du Bois & Andrew Oliver Claire & Al Dwoskin Mark Epstein Nancy & Hart Fessenden Wendy & William Garner Sara Grosvenor Leslie Jones & Max Williamson Annie Kaempfer Sarah Gould Kagan & Stewart Kagan Katherine Silverthorne & David Lashway Linda Lilienfeld Gregory McGruder Sally & William Meadows Barbara & Nicholas Millhouse Peter Moskovitz Joan Murray The Musser Family Fund Louisa & William Newlin Helen & Larry O’Brien Diana & Frederick Prince Susan S. Rappaport Sylvia Ripley & Chris Addison Louise & Arnold Sagalyn Nancy & Simon Sidamon-Eristoff Flo & Roger D. Stone Leslie Stone & Michael Sloan Lola VanWagenen & George Burrill Jill & John Walsh Wendy Watriss & Frederick Baldwin Mikel & Joe Witte
$500 Phoebe Andrew Gay & Tony Barclay David L. Baumunk Slyvia Blake Clarissa Bonde Robin Rowan Clarke Mary Cooper Victoria Cordova Celia Faulkner Crawford Janet & David Curtis Gail Davenport Alice Day Helen & Raymond DuBois Sarah & Douglas duPont Anne Emmet Margot P. Ernst Elinor Farquhar Joanne Flanders Juliet C. Folger Nancy Folger Elisabeth French Kim Hirose Sherry Houghton John Macomber Helen McNeill Pamela Murphy Darwina L. Neal Elizabeth Rackley Lisa Renstrom & Robert Perkowitz Marie Ridder Amy Rifkind & Bruce Brown Deborah A. Rothberg Edith Schafer Joan Shorey Michael Singer Thalia & Lynwood Sinnamon
BID ON THE TRIP OF A LIFETIME! 10-day expedition for 2 in the Galapagos Islands Details at dceff.org Provided by
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THURSDAY | 03.09.2017 | EXPRESS | T27
25 years in the front row Bank of America congratulates the Environmental Film Festival in the Nation's Capital for 25 years of showing us what can be done through the power of film. We’re honored to repeat our supporting role as a sponsor of the 2017 film festival, where the next 25 years begin. bankofamerica.com/environment © 2017 Bank of America Corporation | ARQLK3DK | AD-12-16-0311
T28 | EXPRESS | 03.09.2017 | THURSDAY
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SPONSORS LEAD SPONSORS
MAJOR SPONSORS
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FEATURE SPONSORS
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CONTRIBUTING SPONSORS
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THURSDAY | 03.09.2017 | EXPRESS | 27
weekendpass
Millennium Stage
indies s + a r t ie
Free performances every day at 6 p.m. No tickets required
Mar. 9–22 Songwriters: The Next Generation Presented by The ASCAP Foundation
9 THU Wilder Adkins
and Žan Teticˇ kovicˇ Mountain Stage’s Larry Groce hosts an evening of original works by Alabamabased singer/songwriter Adkins followed by the Jean John Trio with original jazz compositions by Teticˇkovicˇ.
10 FRI Paperwhite and
DAVID BORNFRIEND
Laurin Talese Mountain Stage’s Larry Groce hosts an evening of original songs by Paperwhite, featuring Brooklyn-based dream-pop brother and sister duo Katie & Ben Marshall followed by jazz vocalist and composer Talese.
Thanks to its recent Oscar win for best picture, “La La Land” will be expanding … oh, wait. Sorry. Yeah, “Moonlight” has expanded and extended its run at local theaters. Screens all over the area are now showing the powerful, important film about a young man (played at three different stages of his life by three different actors) coming to terms with his sexuality as he grows up in the housing projects of Miami. Mahershala Ali also took home the best supporting actor award for his role as Juan, a character whose presence is felt long after Ali has left the screen. “Moonlight” is available for home viewing as well, but, as always, the big screen is better.
20 MON Maryland Classic
The soulful jazz artist makes her Kennedy Center debut with bassist Herman Burney and drummer Nasar Abadey. She performs unique arrangements of favorite jazz standards, a brief tribute to her father’s music, and a mixture of jazz/soul originals to make your heart smile.
Youth Orchestras of Strathmore Currently in its 71st season, MCYO brings some of its young performers for an evening of classical music.
21 TUE KING Grammy Award®–winning dream soul trio KING is made up of twins Paris and Amber Strother along with Anita Bias, all three of whom write and arrange songs, crafting a unique sound with a soulful authenticity.
Presented in collaboration with the Coalition for African Americans in the Performing Arts.
16 THU The Culkin School of
Traditional Irish Dance The local Irish dance school celebrates St. Patrick’s Day at the Kennedy Center.
Presented in collaboration with Okayplayer.
22 WED The Soulquarians:
17 FRI Aveva Dese
D.C. Pays Tribute to Common
The Ethiopian-Israeli singer and songwriter performs her urban Tel Aviv sound that mixes Ethiopian music with R&B, funk, and pop.
Curated by D.C.-based conceptual artist and musician Jamal Gray and the multimedia arts collective CMPVTR CLVB, members of the D.C. area creative community come together to honor the cultural impact and influence of early 2000s group The Soulquarians. Rapper, actor, & producer Common, who is appearing later tonight with the NSO Pops, was a founding member.
Presented in collaboration with the Embassy of Israel.
18 SAT Hamid El Kasri 11
‘Moonlight’
15 WED Mala Waldron
SAT
NSO Prelude
National Symphony Orchestra musicians—violinist Alexandra Osborne, cellist Rachel Young, and pianist Lisa Emenheiser—play a program of works by Amy Beach.
12 SUN Arts & Wellness:
Joy of Motion Dance Center Joy of Motion teacher Kelly Kunst leads an evening of Pop jazz dance. Dress to move!
Brought to you by
Hailed for his talent, passion, and deep and intense voice, El Kasri is one of the most sought after maalems, a master musician in the Moroccan gnawa Afro-Islamic spiritual tradition.
Part of JFKC: A Centennial Celebration of John F. Kennedy.
Millennium Stage 20th Anniversary
13 MON Washington
Performing Arts
History Film Forum
Celebrating the 7th Art
If you viewed history class as a great chance to nap, the History Film Forum will smack some sense into you. A collaboration between the Smithsonian and the National Endowment for the Humanities, the four-day festival uses fiction and documentary films — as well as appearances with filmmakers and historians — to examine how movies shed new light on history. Highlights include “The Loving Story,” the 2011 HBO documentary that inspired last year’s “Loving”; “Edgar Allan Poe: Buried Alive,” which will premiere on PBS later this year; and a screening and discussion of “Jazz Ambassadors,” followed by a performance by the Smithsonian Jazz Masterworks Orchestra.
The Alliance Francaise is spending the middle of March as it should be spent — fighting allergies by hiding in a movie theater. The Francophile organization kicks off its Celebrating the 7th Art series with 2014’s “Corn Island,” a story of a man and his granddaughter living in Georgia (the country, not the state). The two other films in the series are Xavier Dolan’s early work “Les Amours Imaginaires” (aka “Heartbeats”), a story of romance and heartbreak out of Quebec, and “The Color of Pomegranates,” a Russian-made 1969 visual tone poem about an 18th-century Armenian poet.
National Museum of American History, 1400 Constitution Ave. NW; Thu.-Sun., times vary, free but registration encouraged.
Alliance Francaise, 2142 Wyoming Ave. NW; Sat. through March 22, times, dates and prices vary; go to francophonie-dc.org for details. KRISTEN PAGE-KIRBY (EXPRESS)
WPA celebrates their youth programs in honor of D.C. Public Education Fund’s Standing Ovation for Public Schools.
14 TUE Duke Ellington
School of the Arts The Vocal Music department Scythian Big Sam's Funky Nation showcases an array of music genres in their presentation of A Journey on the Ellington Express. This performance 19 SUN Scythian and Big Sam’s Funky Nation features the school’s Concert Chorale, We celebrate our landmark birthday with two stellar bands. D.C. favorite Concert Choir, Mellow Tones, Show Scythian (6–7 p.m.) plays roots rock music from Celtic, Eastern European, and Choir, and Sophisticated Ladies. Appalachian traditions with thunderous energy, while New Orleans’s Big Sam’s Funky Nation (7–8 p.m.) is a group of world-class musicians who are a driving force of urban, brass-driven funk. Part of JFKC: A Centennial Celebration of John F. Kennedy.
Come early! Ticket giveaways! First 1,000 fans get a free T-shirt!
Special MS20 happy hour from 5–6 p.m featuring all beer and wine 50% off at the Grand Foyer Bars.
FOR DETAILS OR TO WATCH ONLINE, VISIT KENNEDY-CENTER.ORG/MILLENNIUM. The Millennium Stage was created and underwritten by James A. Johnson and Maxine Isaacs to make the performing arts accessible to everyone in fulfillment of the Kennedy Center’s mission to its community and the nation. Additional funding for the Millennium Stage is provided by Bernstein Family Foundation, The Isadore and Bertha Gudelsky Family Foundation, Inc., The Meredith Foundation, The Morris and Gwendolyn Cafritz Foundation, Dr. Deborah Rose and Dr. Jan A.J. Stolwijk, U.S. Department of Education, and the Millennium Stage Endowment Fund. The Millennium Stage Endowment Fund was made possible by James A. Johnson and Maxine Isaacs, Fannie Mae Foundation, the Kimsey Endowment, Gilbert† and Jaylee† Mead, Mortgage Bankers Association of America and other anonymous gifts to secure the future of the Millennium Stage. Kennedy Center education and related artistic programming is also made possible through the generosity of the National Committee for the Performing Arts and the President’s Advisory Committee on the Arts.
Daily food and drink specials • 5–6 p.m. nightly • Grand Foyer Bars TAKE METRO to
the Foggy Bottom/GWU station and ride the free Kennedy Center shuttle departing every 15 minutes until midnight.
FREE TOURS are given daily by the Friends of the Kennedy Center tour guides. Tour hours: M–F, 10 a.m.–5 p.m., and Sat./Sun. from 10 a.m.–1 p.m. For information, call (202) 416-8340.
GET CONNECTED! Become a fan of KCMillenniumStage on Facebook and check out artist photos, upcoming events, and more! PLEASE NOTE: There is no free parking for free performances. The Kennedy Center welcomes persons with disabilities.
All performances and programs are subject to change without notice.
28 | EXPRESS | 03.09.2017 | THURSDAY
top stops Thu. STAGE
‘Mrs. Miller Does Her Thing’ Google Elva Miller. Take a few seconds to listen to the 1960s housewife stiffly trying to swing through pop hits like “Downtown,” a la Florence Foster Jenkins. Now imagine what playwright James Lapine, a Pulitzer Prize winner for the book of the musical “Sunday in the Park With George,” will make of Miller’s story in the premiere of his comedy “Mrs. Miller Does Her Thing.” Tony and Emmy Award winner Debra Monk plays Mrs. Miller in the show, directed by
Weekend Champagne Brunch Celebrations Unlimited By The Glass Saturdays – A-La-Carte – $29.95 Sunday – Buffet – $38.95 Voted Among the 2016 “TOP TEN Best Brunches” In Metro DC by OpenTable Subscribers
Neighborhood Party Tuesday, March 21 Welcome Spring! 50% Off Entire Menu Happy Hour Drinks All Night 202-872-1126 • BBGWDC.com 17th & Rhode Island Ave. NW
The best t of the nex s y a d 7
Lapine. Signature Theatre, 4200 Campbell Ave., Arlington; through March 26, $40-$100.
Fri. COMEDY
Jim Jefferies Australian comic Jim Jefferies made headlines last month for tearing into British pundit Piers Morgan during a discussion of President Trump on “Real Time With Bill Maher.” That moment — combined with his years of brash comedy — earned the stand-up a new untitled weekly Comedy Central series, which was
CHEF’S DAILY LUNCH $20.95 Three-Courses from the menu! Create Your Own Party Ideal For Small Groups
MARTINIS RULE! $5-$7-$10
Happy Hour Cheer Apps and Drink Selections 5-7PM
DAILY PASTA DINNER $18.95* Per Person Two Courses - Chef’s Daily Featured Pasta Mon – Sat
Show Tunes and Cocktails Monday, March 13th No Cover Charge Ever - Sing Along Presented By Theatre Washington Private Events Ask About Our “Simple Solutions Menus”
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
Ali Wong Warner Theatre, 513 13th Street NW; Fri. & Sat., 7 & 9:30 p.m., $37.50-$65.
Stand-up comedian Ali Wong was 7 ½ months pregnant when she filmed her Netflix comedy special “Baby Cobra,” in which she riffs candidly on pregnancy, feminism and more. The writer for the ABC sitcom “Fresh Off the Boat” recently announced plans to release a book of essays next year, in which she will share her personal experiences and advice directed to her now 1-year-old daughter.
announced last week. In the talk show, set to debut this summer, Jefferies will bring his international point of view to global matters, including, we’re guessing, the Trump administration. DAR Constitution Hall, 1776 D St. NW; Fri., 8 p.m., $37.50-$47.50. COMEDY
Sean Patton The DC Improv’s “Next Wave” series invites past headliners to recommend a rising comic to hold court in the club’s intimate lounge space. This weekend, that honor goes to well-traveled comedian Sean Patton, who came recommended by Ari Shaffir, the
THURSDAY | 03.09.2017 | EXPRESS | 29
top stops
Spotlight on Directors This spring, the Kennedy Center is shining a spotlight on thrilling productions helmed by some of the world’s most brilliant and acclaimed directors. Ex Machina (Canada)
Needles and Opium
SARAH L. VOISIN (THE WASHINGTON POST)
Written and directed by Robert Lepage March 16–18
As natives of the nation’s capital, Priests make music that’s often political and rebellious. In January, the 6-year-old punk band finally released its debut album, “Nothing Feels Natural,” featuring the track “Pink White House,” which came out the week before the presidential election. This concert celebrates the release of Priests’ record, along with a new one by Washington natives Coup Sauvage & the Snips, who will also perform. Also on the lineup is Virginia-based group Atta Girl.
Sat. EXHIBITS
‘George Condo: The Way I Think’ Some will recognize the work of George Condo from the album covers he has designed for Kanye West and Phish, while others will know him as a productive and often provocative artist who still finds things to say in traditional drawings and paintings. The Phillips Collection will explore the
Directed by Carlos Díaz March 21 & 22 World premiere, Sabab Theatre (Kuwait)
artist’s output with a new survey of his career of some three decades, featuring about 200 works. Phillips Collection, 1600 21st St. NW; Sat. through June 25, $12.
Mon. MUSIC
Green Day After a tour of small clubs last year (including a stop at the 9:30 Club), Green Day is back to packing arenas in support of 12th album “Revolution Radio.” Expect the Rock and Roll Hall of Famers to mix the new songs with all the requisite pop-punk hits from the band’s 30-plus year career. Before Billie Joe Armstrong and Co. take the stage, Laura Jane Grace’s punk band Against Me! will get the crowd warmed up. Verizon Center, 601 F St. NW; Mon., 7 p.m., $35-$75.
Wed. MUSIC
Devendra Banhart Singer-songwriter Devendra Banhart’s latest album, “Ape in Pink Marble,” feels as mysterious and inviting as a strange dream. The tempo dips to a reggae lull midway through, while guitar solos delicately fill in spaces with carefully chosen notes. “Theme for a Taiwanese Woman in Lime Green” encapsulates his expansive impulses, melding a chord structure reminiscent of Brazilian composer Antonio Jobim with lush strings and a modern sense of longing. Sixth and I, 600 I St. NW; Wed., 8 p.m., sold out.
Written by Express’ Rudi Greenberg and The Washington Post.
Written and directed by Sulayman Al Bassam March 24–26
Plus a collaboration with Sundance Institute
Theater by Palestinians World premiere
TAHA March 15 & 16 US premiere
Where Can I Find Someone Like You, Ali? March 23 & 24
Creative Tensions: HOME March 25
Needles and Opium, photo by Tristram Kenton
Priests Black Cat, 1811 14th St. NW; Sat., 8 p.m., $16.
DC Improv, 1140 Connecticut Ave. NW; Fri. & Sat., 7:30 & 9:45 p.m., $17.
Antigonón, un contingente épico
Petrol Station
SATURDAY
host of Comedy Central’s “This Is Not Happening.” Patton, who is from New Orleans, used to co-host the travel show “Best Bars in America” and has been working on a one-man show that’s not quite a stand-up set.
Teatro El Público (Cuba)
TICKETS ON SALE NOW! TKC.CO/DIRECTORS | (202) 467-4600 Tickets also available at the Box Office. Groups call (202) 416-8400. For all other ticket-related customer service inquiries, call the Advance Sales Box Office at (202) 416-8540.
International Theater is underwritten by HRH Foundation. Additional support for International Theater is provided by the Laura Pels International Foundation for Theater. International Programming at the Kennedy Center is made possible through the generosity of the Kennedy Center International Committee on the Arts.
XX0164 2x.5
This is
Every Tuesday in Express
30 | EXPRESS | 03.09.2017 | THURSDAY
Merriweather Post Pavilion • Columbia, MD JUST ANNOUNCED!
alt-J w/ Saint Motel ..................................................................................... JULY 27
FLEET FOXES THIS WEEK’S SHOWS
Los Campesinos! w/ Crying & Infinity Crush ............................................... Th 9 ALL GOOD PRESENTS
L METAT! FES
ALL GOOD PRESENTS
Katatonia
Pigeons Playing Ping Pong
w/ Caspian & Uncured ................Th 16 Galactic featuring Cyril Neville w/ Con Brio ..................................F 17 Galactic featuring Corey Glover w/ The Hip Abduction .................Sa 18 Tennis w/ Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever..............................Su 19 Foxygen w/ Gabriella Cohen.....W 22
I.M.P. & GOLDENVOICE PRESENT AN EVENING WITH
Sigur Rós ........................................................................................................... MAY 25 The Chainsmokers w/ Kiiara, Lost Frequencies, featuring Emily Warren .. MAY 26 Jack Johnson w/ Lake Street Dive..................................................................JUNE 11 Dave Matthews & Tim Reynolds ....................................................JUNE 18 John Legend w/ Gallant..................................................................................JUNE 20 Steve Miller Band w/ Peter Frampton ........................................JUNE 23 Luke Bryan w/ Brett Eldredge & Lauren Alaina ..........................................JUNE 25 Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit w/ The Mountain Goats ................JUNE 30 Dispatch w/ Guster ............................................................................................. JULY 7 Belle and Sebastian / Spoon / Andrew Bird w/ Ex Hex ........ JULY 30
Mr. Carmack
Late Show! 10pm Doors ....................Sa 8
Son Volt w/ Anders Parker ......Tu 11 DC BRAU, COUNTRY MALT & WILD GOOSE PRESENT
Baroness w/ Trans Am............W 12
JAMBASE AND ALL GOOD PRESENT
ALL GOOD PRESENTS
The Motet w/ Reed Mathis & Electric Beethoven .....................F 14
Rising Appalachia
Early Show! 6pm Doors ....................Sa 25 ALL GOOD PRESENTS
Biffy Clyro w/ O’Brother .........Sa 15 Betty Who w/ Vérité ................Su 16 Oddisee & Good Compny
Twiddle w/ Aqueous
Late Show! 10pm Doors ...................Sa 25
Trentemøller
AN EVENING WITH
Santana ......................................................................................................... AUGUST 15 Sturgill Simpson.............................................................................. SEPTEMBER 15 Young The Giant w/ Cold War Kids & Joywave ............................ SEPTEMBER 16
w/ Olivier St. Louis .....................Th 20
w/ TOM And His Computer .........Su 26
Drive-By Truckers w/ Hiss Golden
Allah-Las
Messenger ................ F 4/21 & Sa 4/22
w/ The Babe Rainbow (OZ) ..........M 27
King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard w/ ORB & Stonefield......W 29
• For full lineups and more info, visit merriweathermusic.com
ALL GOOD PRESENTS
Hurray For The Riff Raff
EagleBank Arena • Fairfax, VA
w/ Ron Gallo ..............................Su 23
APRIL
BASTILLE w/ Mondo Cozmo........................................................................... MARCH 28
The Pretty Reckless
D NIGHT ADDED! FIRST NIGHT SOLD OUT! SECON
w/ Them Evils ..............................W 26
Portugal. The Man
Ticketmaster • impconcerts.com
Balkan Beat Box ...................Th 27
w/ HDBeenDope............................Su 2
930.com
MANY MORE SHOWS ON SALE!
9:30 CUPCAKES
Bon Iver................................................................................................................ MAY 24
STEEZ PROMO PRESENTS
SOHN w/ William Doyle & Nylo ...F 24
2 and 3-day Tickets On Sale now.
Fitz and the Tantrums • Catfish and the Bottlemen ........................... MAY 14
This is a seated show. Early Show! 6pm Doors ......................Sa 8
50th Anniversary .....................Th 23
Lynyrd Skynyrd • Charlie Daniels Band and more! ................... APRIL 30
Kings of Leon • Weezer • Jimmy Eat World •
w/ ELM - Electric Love Machine ....F 7
The Fighter and the Kid Live
The Zombies: Odessey and Oracle
Ratt feat. Pearcy, De Martini, Croucier • Kix • Loverboy and more! .APRIL 28 & 29
The xx w/ Sampha ................................................................................................... MAY 6 Ryan Adams w/ Jenny Lewis ........................................................................ MAY 12
Ronna and Beverly Live!.......W 5
w/ Kur & Seba Yuri .....................W 15
M3 ROCK FESTIVAL FEATURING M3 SOUTHERN ROCK CLASSIC FEATURING
HERN SOUTOCK R ! FEST
APRIL (cont)
Hippie Sabotage
Collective ... SAT JULY 29
deadmau5 ......................................................................................................... APRIL 8
Railroad Earth w/ Cris Jacobs ........................................................ F 10 & Sa 11 Sunn O))) w/ BIG|BRAVE ................................................................................ Su 12 MARCH
w/ Animal
On Sale Friday, March 10 at 10am
1215 U Street NW
Washington, D.C.
JUST ANNOUNCED! FRANK/GOLDENVOICE PRESENT
The best thing you could possibly put in your mouth
C AG E T H E E L E P H A N T :
Cupcakes by BUZZ... your neighborhood bakery in Alexandria, VA. | www.buzzonslaters.com
Live and Unpeeled, The Acoustic Tour ............................................... SAT APRIL 22 On Sale Friday, March 10 at 10am
Echostage • Washington, D.C.
TYCHO .............................................................................................................................MAY 7 Empire of the Sun ..................................................................................................MAY 11 2135 Queens Chapel Rd. NE • Ticketmaster
9:30 CLUB PRESENTS AT U STREET MUSIC HALL Jose James feat. Nate Smith w/ Corey King ......Sa MAR 18 Sofi Tukker w/ LP Giobbi...................... F 24
POWERS & Bridgit Mendler w/ Nick Leng ......................................... Sa 25
Patrick Watson w/ Trevor Sensor ...... M 27 Lambchop w/ Sloppy Heads .......... Sa APR 1 Kyle w/ Cousin Stizz ............................... Tu 4 Crystal Garden
TWO EVENINGS WITH
The Magnetic Fields: 50 Song Memoir............................... MARCH 18 (Songs 1-25) & MARCH 19 (Songs 26-50)
Lisa Lampanelli ............................................................................................... APRIL 8 Welcome To Night Vale w/ Erin McKeown ................................................ APRIL 13 Aimee Mann w/ Jonathan Coulton ................................................................... APRIL 20 Rhiannon Giddens w/ Amythyst Kiah ................................................................ MAY 9 Dwight Yoakam ................................................................................................. MAY 11 AN EVENING WITH
Old Crow Medicine Show
Performing Blonde on Blonde ............................ MAY 22
• thelincolndc.com •
U Street (Green/Yellow) stop across the street!
(Boyd Tinsley of Dave Matthews Band)...F 7
• Buy advance tickets at the 9:30 Club box office • 930.com
impconcerts.com Tickets for 9:30 Club shows are available through TicketFly.com, by phone at 1-877-4FLY-TIX, and at the 9:30 Club box office. 9:30 CLUB BOX OFFICE HOURS are 12-7PM Weekdays & Until 11PM on show nights. 6-11PM on Sat & 6-10:30PM on Sun on show nights.
PARKING: THE OFFICIAL 9:30 parking lot entrance is on 9th Street, directly behind the 9:30 club. Buy your advance parking tickets at the same time as your concert tickets!
HAPPY HOUR DRINK PRICES AFTER THE SHOW AT THE BACK BAR!
930.com
THURSDAY | 03.09.2017 | EXPRESS | 31
going out guide Selected listings from goingoutguide.com. Head online for venue information and more events and activities!
Sound THURSDAY 9:30 Club: Los Campesinos!, Crying and Infinity Crush, 7 p.m.
Amp by Strathmore: Be Steadwell, Christen B, 8 p.m.
Blues Alley: Gerald Albright, 8 p.m., through March 12. Gypsy Sally’s: The Drunken Hearts, Cranford Hollow, 8:30 p.m.
Sy Smith
Capathia Jenkins
Montego Glover
MGM National Harbor: Il Volo, 8 p.m.
State Theatre: Appetite for Destruction, 8:30 p.m.
The Barns at Wolf Trap: Jim Brickman, 8 p.m. ALINA BARAZ
The Fillmore: Sal Valentinetti, 8 p.m. U Street Music Hall: Way Out West, 10 p.m.
FRIDAY 9:30 Club: Railroad Earth, Cris Jacobs, 7 p.m., through March 11.
Amp by Strathmore: Bumper Jacksons, 8 p.m.
Black Cat: Equinox, Jonny Grave & the Tombstones, Oh He Dead and Derek Evry, 8 p.m.
Gypsy Sally’s: The Mantras, Aztec Sun and Jouwala Collective, 8:30 p.m.
Kennedy Center: Elena and Samora Pinderhughes, 7 p.m.
Rock & Roll Hotel: Mae, OWEL and the Constellations, 8 p.m.
The Barns at Wolf Trap: Ari Hest, Chrissi Polland, 8 p.m.
The Hamilton: Paul Thorn, Alice
Alina Baraz: The Cleveland native makes music that washes over you. Fittingly, her lyrics dip their toes into aquatic themes. On her breakthrough single “Fantasy,” she sings, “Listen to the waves, let them wash away your pain.” Her down-tempo, moodsetting music is heavy on smoke and sensuality and lands somewhere between Sade, Lana Del Rey and Corinne Bailey Rae. On Tuesday, she plays the Rock and Roll Hotel. Rock & Roll Hotel: Strand of Oaks, Twin Limb, 8 p.m.
The Barns at Wolf Trap: A
featuring Be’la Dona, 1:30 p.m.; Mousey Thompson’s James Brown Experience, 8 p.m.
March 24 & 25 | Concert Hall
BandHouse Gigs Tribute to Elvis Costello, 8 p.m.
MONDAY
STEVEN REINEKE, CONDUCTOR
Jammin Java: Jammin Java Local
The Hamilton: Howie Day, Katie
Scene, 7 p.m.
Rose, 8 p.m.
Music Center at Strathmore: The
The Howard Theatre: Southern Soul
TEN Tenors, 8 p.m.
For Ella Fitzgerald’s 100th, acclaimed singers Sy Smith, Capathia Jenkins, and Montego Glover come together to celebrate the legendary music of the First Lady of Song, plus favorites made famous by Sarah Vaughan, Billie Holiday, and Dinah Washington.
Assembly, 8 p.m.
TUESDAY
U Street Music Hall: Hotel Garuda,
Amp by Strathmore: Carlos Nunez,
Wingtip and Aire Atlantica, 10 p.m.
8 p.m.
SUNDAY
Birchmere: Ladysmith Black
Black Cat: Sam Patch, Sean Croft,
Mambazo, 7:30 p.m.
7:30 p.m.
Blues Alley: Ronnett Harrison, 8 p.m.
Williams, 7:30 p.m.
DC9: Cameron Avery, 9 p.m.
WEDNESDAY
SATURDAY
MGM National Harbor: Sting, 8 p.m.
9:30 Club: Hippie Sabotage, Kur and
Birchmere: Laurie Anderson, Rubin Kodheli, 7:30 p.m.
The Fillmore: Robert Randolph & the
Seba Yuri, 7 p.m.
Family Band, the New Respects, Jamie McLean Band, 8 p.m.
Black Cat: Secondhand Serenade,
Drinks the Kool Aid and Andrew Duhon, 8 p.m.
The Howard Theatre: Vanessa
Kennedy Center: Christie Dashiell, 7 p.m.
Sophisticated Ladies: 100 Years of Ella & Company
The Howard Theatre: Go-Go Brunch
Hawthorne Heights, Ronnie Winter and Kenny Holland, 7:30 p.m.
TICKETS ON SALE NOW! KENNEDY-CENTER.ORG | (202) 467-4600 Tickets also available at the Box Office. Groups call (202) 416-8400. For all other ticket-related customer service inquiries, call the Advance Sales Box Office at (202) 416-8540.
David and Alice Rubenstein are the Presenting Underwriters of the NSO.
AARP is the Presenting Sponsor of the 2016-2017 NSO Pops Season.
Ella Centennial performances are supported in part by the Ella Fitzgerald Charitable Foundation.
32 | EXPRESS | 03.09.2017 | THURSDAY
ANACOSTIA COMMUNITY MUSEUM
goingoutguide.com
Anacostia Community Museum: “From the Regenia Perry Collection: The Backyard of Derek Webster’s Imagination” stars the work of Derek Webster, who created sculptures from scraps of wood, trash and found materials, and adorned them with costume jewelry and brightly colored house paint. This exhibition consists of nine of his pieces created between 1980 and 1996, through April 23.
GEORGE CONDO
THE WAY I THINK March 11-June 25, 1017
1600 21st Street, NW (Dupont Circle Metro) PhillipsCollection.org |
The exhibition is organized by The Phillips Collection.
MEMBERS ENJOY UNLIMITED FREE ADMISSION AND DISCOUNTS. JOIN US!
WIth support from the Paula Ballo Dailey Memorial Fund.
George Condo, The Wedding Pianist, 1998. Pastel on paper, 30 x 22 in. Private collection. Image courtesy Skarstedt Gallery and Sprüth Magers
Sight American Art Museum: “Harlem Heroes: Photographs by Carl Van Vechten”: An exhibition of 39 images — including those of James Baldwin, Ossie Davis, W.E.B. DuBois, Ella Fitzgerald, Althea Gibson, Langston Hughes, Bill “Bojangles” Robinson and Bessie Smith — by photographer, author and social commentator Van Vechten, who made portraits of central figures in the Harlem Renaissance, through April 2; “Isamu Noguchi: Archaic/Modern”: An exploration of how Noguchi was inspired by the ancient world in his forwardlooking sculptures, featuring more than 70 works from the Noguchi Museum in New York, that span a time more than 60 years, through March 19. Eighth and F streets NW.
American Visionary Art Museum: “Yummm! The History, Fantasy and Future of Food”: For this exhibition of food-centric paintings, sculptures, embroideries, installations and films, 34 artists joined with food scientists, farmers, nutritionists, environmental activists, psychologists, poets and humorists to explore our complex relationship with food, through Sept. 2. 800 Key Hwy., Baltimore.
Anacostia Community Museum: “Gateways/Portales”: Through the gateways of social justice, community access and public festivals, this exhibition explores the experiences of Latino migrants and immigrants in Washington, Baltimore, Charlotte, N.C., and RaleighDurham, N.C., through Aug. 6. 1901 Fort Place SE.
Art Museum of the Americas: “Jose Gomez Sicre’s Eye”: The museum celebrates the centennial of Sicre’s birth,
THURSDAY | 03.09.2017 | EXPRESS | 33
goingoutguide.com through Aug. 6; “Santiago Montoya: The Great Swindle”: This exhibition is of works by the Colombian artist, who used banknotes as his canvases, imbuing layers of meaning including political propaganda and historic events in the works, through March 26. 201 18th St. NW.
George Washington University’s Corcoran School of the Arts and Design: “Decolonizing Alaska”: A multimedia exhibition of works by a collaboration of 30 native and non-native Alaskan artists centering on endangered traditions and contemporary identity, through March 17. 500 17th St. NW.
Arthur M. Sackler Gallery:
Baltimore Museum of Art: “Front Room: Guerrilla Girls”: This exhibition is of works from the Portfolio Compleat (1985-2012) by the New York-based Guerrilla Girls, a group of anonymous female artists who have over the course of 30 years produced a body of work that includes printed projects and actions that expose sexism and racism in politics, the art world, film and culture. They appear in public wearing gorilla masks and use humor to convey information and provoke discussion, through March 12; “On Paper: Finding Form”: This exhibition of post-minimalist drawings includes four rare works by Eva Hesse, an artist associated with the postminimalists, as well as pieces by Hesse contemporaries Mel Bochner, Brice Marden, Dorothea Rockburne and Robert Smithson. It also extends the postminimalist sensibility with examples by later contemporaries Tomma Abts, Roni Horn and Meg Webster, through April 29;
George Washington University, Luther W. Brady Art Gallery: “Glenn Goldberg: Of Leaves and Clouds”: An exhibition of paintings, small ceramic objects and works on paper by the Brooklyn-based artist. Also included is a print completed in collaboration with students from GW’s Corcoran School of the Arts and Design, through April 13. 805 21st St. NW.
Glenstone: “Roni Horn”: A retrospective exhibition of sculptures, drawings, photographs, books and installations, through Jan. 28. 12002 Glen Road, Potomac, Md.
Hillwood Estate, Museum and Gardens: “Four Seasons”: This
National Museum of Natural History: “Righting a Wrong: Japanese Americans and World War II” commemorates the 75th
exhibition, by contemporary artist and filmmaker Philip Haas, of threedimensional portrait busts made from foliage and blooms, and in correspondence to the four seasons, was inspired by “The Seasons” series by Italian Renaissance painter Giuseppe Arcimboldo, through March 30; “Friends and Fashion: An American Diplomat in 1820s Russia”: An exhibition of 45 portraits from a family photo album of politician and statesman Henry Middleton shows diplomatic life in early19th-century St. Petersburg, through June 11. 4155 Linnean Ave. NW.
anniversary of Executive Order 9066, the document signed by Franklin D. Roosevelt that challenged the constitutional rights and led to the imprisonment of Japanese-Americans during WWII, through Feb. 19.
Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden: “Bettina Pousttchi: World
LAWRENCE LITHOGRAPHY WORKSHOP, KANSAS CITY
“Perspectives: Michael Joo”: An installation using multiple techniques and media by the Brooklyn-based artist specifically for the Sackler, inspired by Korean red-crowned crane migration patterns, through July 9; “Peacock Room Remix: Darren Waterson’s Fithy Lucre”: Painter Waterson created this interior as a reinterpretation of James McNeill Whistler’s iconic “Peacock Room,” only in ruin from its own excess, through June 4; “Chinamania”: Inspired by his travels in China and by the kilns at Jingdezhen, contemporary artist Walter McConnell created an installation of Kangxi porcelains similar to those originally displayed in the Peacock Room, through June 4; “Sky Blue: Color in Ceramics of the Islamic World”: The vessels on view span the ninth through the 19th centuries and demonstrate mineral colors of cobalt blue and copper green as pigments for painting and writing on the clay or as colorants in glazes, through April 2; “Turquoise Mountain: Artists Transforming Afghanistan”: Artisans from the Murad Khani district of Old Kabul demonstrate their work and share their experiences, through Oct. 29; “Body of Devotion: The Cosmic Buddha in 3D”: An interactive installation of a 3-D model of the Cosmic Buddha, a statue of the Buddha covered in narrative scenes that create a symbolic map of the Buddhist world, explores the work and methods of studying sculpture, through July 9. 1050 Independence Ave. SW.
“Shifting Views: People and Politics in Contemporary African Art”: An exhibition of contemporary art from Africa featuring photographs, prints and paintings by artists David Goldblatt, Gavin Jantjes, William Kentridge, Julie Mehretu, Senam Artists Okudzeto, Robin Rhode and Diane Victor. Each artist offers political perspectives on the lives of Africans and their diasporic descendents, through June 17; “Timeless Weft: Ancient Tapestries and the Art of Louise B. Wheatley”: An exhibition of textile works by the Maryland artist, through July 30. 10 Art Museum Drive, Baltimore.
around the world taken by Smithsonian photographer Carolyn J. Russo, through March 10. 1985 Cpl. Frank Scott Drive, College Park, Md.
College of Southern Maryland — La Plata Campus: “Selvage”: Artist Jim Arendt displays a mixed-media exhibit of paintings, drawings, prints, sculptures and more, through March 9. 8730 Mitchell Road, La Plata, Md.
Folger Shakespeare Library: “500
CalvART Gallery: “Meet You at the Beach”: A multi-media exhibit featuring paintings by Abbey Griffin, pottery by Ray Bogle and photos by Alyson Schwartz, through April 2. 110 Solomons Island Road, Prince Frederick, Md.
Years of Treasures From Oxford”: An exhibition of 50 manuscripts and printed books, including biblical works in English, Latin, Greek, Hebrew and French and illuminated and historical scientific texts, marks the 500th anniversary of the library of Corpus Christi College in Oxford, through April 30. 201 East Capitol St. SE.
College Park Aviation Museum:
Gallery B: “Beyond That”: The group
“Art of the Airport Tower”: A traveling exhibit featuring 50 large-scale images of airport traffic control towers from
exhibit curated by Nihal Kececi of Gallery NK features paintings, sculptures and photos by eight artists from the
U.S., Spain, Turkey, Cuba, Venezuela and Japan, through March 25. 7700 Wisconsin Ave., Suite E., Bethesda.
George Washington University Museum and the Textile Museum: “A Collector’s Vision: Creating the Albert H. Small Washingtoniana Collection”: In 2011, Small gave George Washington University his collection of 1,000 maps, prints, rare letters, photographs and drawings that document the history of the District. Updated in the summer with a dozen new objects, this exhibition presents highlights of the collection, including Small’s first acquisition: a handwritten 1905 scrapbook of a survey of the city’s boundary stones, through Nov. 30; “Your Next President . . . ! The Campaign Art of Mark and Rosalind Shenkman”: This exhibition of rare campaign flags and patriotic textiles illustrates how presidential campaigning developed, through April 9. 701 21st St. NW.
Time Clock”: The German artist created the “World Time Clock” over the course of eight years, traveling the globe and making a portrait of a public clock in 24 time zones, through May 14; “Linn Meyers: Our View From Here”: A sitespecific wall drawing stretching the circumference of the inner-circle galleries on the museum’s second level, through May 14; “Suspended Animation”: Artists Ed Atkins, Antoine Catala, Ian Cheng, Josh Kline, Helen Marten and Agnieszka Polska challenge perceptions of reality, through March 26; “Yayoi Kusama: Infinity Mirrors”: An exhibition of six of Kusama’s Infinity Mirror Rooms and paintings from her most recent series, “My Eternal Soul,” make their U.S. debut, through May 14. Seventh Street and Independence Avenue SW.
Kreeger Museum: “Re-Vision: Looking Anew at the Art of Philip Johnson and the Design of The Kreeger Museum”: An anniversary exhibition of photographs by Cynthia Connolly, Frank CONTINUED ON PAGE 36
34 | EXPRESS | 03.09.2017 | THURSDAY
THEATRE
The Kennedy Center Theater Lab
Regular Schedule: Tuesday–Friday at 8 Saturday at 6 & 9 Sunday at 3 & 7
Jerome Kern & Oscar Hammerstein's
January 12 - March 19
Shear Madness
Show Boat Avant Bard presents
The Gospel at Colonus Begins March 16
No Sisters Written & Directed by Aaron Posner
Solas Nua’s
Coolatully Now Playing
Three Sisters by Anton Chekhov directed by Jackson Gay
Now playing to Mar 26 Thur-Sat at 7:30 pm; Sat & Sun at 2:00 pm. Thursday – Saturday at 7:30pm Saturday – Sunday at 2:00pm Check website for complete schedule ThursdaysSaturdays 8pm. Saturday & Sunday at 2pm. March 9-26. Now Playing! Check website for complete schedule
This wildly popular interactive comedy whodunit keeps the audiences laughing as they try to outwit the suspects and catch the killer. New clues and up to the minute improvisation deliver “shrieks of laughter night after night.” (Washington Post) Hammerstein & Kern’s classic hit, featuring show stopping songs like ‘Old Man River’ and ‘Can’t Help Lovin’ Dat Man’. Helen Hayes Recommended. The legendary African American gospel musical. “Makes you want to rise and clap along!” -The Washington Post Aaron Posner’s latest re-imagined Chekhov radically intersects with its Russian progenitor—while Three Sisters plays out in one theatre, No Sisters performs upstairs in another: Same cast, same time, separate theatre… No Sisters: A wildly funny play about wildly unhappy people.
The Kennedy Center Theater Lab Student Rush Tickets Available Tickets: 202-467-4600 Groups: 202-416-8400 www.shearmadness.com
Tickets Available at the Box Office
Toby’s Dinner Theatre of Columbia 410.730.8311 Tobysdinnertheatre.com Gunston Arts Center 2700 S Lang St, Arlington, VA 22206 | Tix & info: 703-4184808; AvantBard.org/tickets
$43.50 $62.00 Dinner & Show.
Studio Theatre 1501 14th Street NW Washington, DC 20005 202.332.3300, studiotheatre.org
Tickets available online and at the box office
American premiere of award winning Irish dark comedy by Fiona Doyle.
Mead Theatre Lab 916 G St NW 202-315-1317 www.solasnua.org
Irina, Masha, and Olga bristle against the mundanities of their backwater town in Chekhov’s tragicomic masterpiece about missed opportunities and misplaced dreams.
PWYW to $35
Added Shows: Mon at 8PM Tue at 5PM Wed at 5PM Thu at 5PM
1 week left. All Thurs eves and Sat mats are Pay What You Will Buy tickets for both Three Sisters and No Sisters and get 20% off your purchase!
$38
10% discount with code WAPO
Studio Theatre 1501 14th Street NW Washington, DC 20005 202.332.3300, studiotheatre.org
Tickets available online and at the box office
Buy tickets for both Three Sisters and No Sisters and get 20% off your purchase!
John Philip Sousa Band Hall, Marine Barracks Annex 7th & K Sts, SE Washington, DC 202-433-4011 Live streaming at: www.marineband.marines.mil
FREE, no tickets required
Free parking is available in the garage under the overpass at 7th & K Streets, SE.
PERFORMANCES Chamber Music Series
Sunday, March 12 at 2 p.m.
Chamber ensembles from “The President’s Own” will perform Saint-Saëns’ Caprice on Danish and Russian Airs; Ewazen’s Trio for Trumpet, Violin, & Piano; and Corea’s Part 1 (Overture) from Lyric Suite for Sextet; and more!
NUFONIA MUST FALL
Composed and performed by DJ Kid Koala with the Afiara Quartet
Sat, Mar 18, 8pm • GW Lisner Auditorium A magical tale of “droid meets girl”! Turntables and string quartet plus puppetry, live video, and more!
TICKETS: WashingtonPerformingArts.org
(202) 785-9727
“Minuscule gestures….translate into big-screen drama [and] genuine romance.”—New York Times
50th Anniversary Season Sponsors: Dr. Gary Mather and Ms. Christina Co Mather
Special thanks: Mid Atlantic Arts Foundation; The National Endowment for the Arts; The Embassy of Canada and The Quebec Government Office The Guide to the Lively Arts appears: • Sunday in Arts & Style. deadline: Tues., 12 noon • Monday in Style. deadline: Friday, 12 noon • Tuesday in Style. deadline: Mon., 12 noon • Wednesday in Style. deadline: Tues., 12 noon • Thursday in Style. deadline: Wed., 12 noon • Thursday in Express. deadline: Wed., 12 noon • Friday in Weekend. deadline: Tues., 12 noon • Saturday in Style. deadline: Friday, 12 noon For information about advertising, call: Raymond Boyer 202-334-4174 or Nicole Giddens 202-334-4351 To reach a representative, call: 202-334-7006 | guidetoarts@washpost.com
it’s not live art without a live audience.
ise in The Guide to the Lively Arts! 202--334-70006 | guidetoarts@washpost.com
16-2898
THURSDAY | 03.09.2017 | EXPRESS | 35
PERFORMANCES U.S. Navy Band Sea Chanters chorus
Come get a sneak peak of the Sea Chanters National Tour program! The concert features a variety of music, including sea chanteys, music from “Beauty and the Beast,” a “Men of Motown” medley and patriotic tunes that honor our veterans.
Friday, March 24, 7 p.m.
Mountain View High School 2135 Mountain View Road Stafford, Va. 22556 202-433-3366 www.navyband.navy.mil
Free, no tickets required
Sign up for Concert Alerts on our website!
MUSIC - CHAMBER Dumbarton Concerts
Calidore String Quartet
The Calidore String Quartet’s program will dazzle you - Beethoven’s Quartet in F Major, Op. 135, Ligeti's Quartet No. 1, "Metamorphoses Nocturnes" and Dvo ák's Quartet in F Major, Op. 96, "American".
March 18 at 8pm
In the Wake of Beethoven
Dumbarton Concerts Dumbarton United Methodist Church 3133 Dumbarton St. NW Washington, DC 20007 202-965-2000 Dumbartonconcerts.org
$35 Adult $30 Senior
202-9652000
MUSIC - CHORAL The City Choir of Washington
Vaughan Williams Dona nobis pacem
This moving cantata written in 1936 cries out for reconciliation in that anxious time between the first and second world wars and speaks to us today. This concert will also feature a partnership with the James Madison High School Madrigals (Ms. Claire Rowan, Director).
St. Luke Catholic Church 7001 Georgetown Pike McLean, VA Free parking available.
$25-$35 Group, student discounts
For tickets and more information, please visit citychoir.org or call (571) 206-8525.
Join the Airmen Note live with legendary drummer Peter Erskine! Mar 23. Join members of the U.S. Air Force Band for an evening of music for Oboe, Trombone & Harp featuring members of the Concert Band. Mar 14. tickets:http://usafband.eventbrite.com
3/23 Rachel M. Schlesinger Concert Hall & Arts Center 4915 E Campus Dr, Alex, VA 22311 3/14 The Lyceum: Alexandria’s History Museum, 201 S. Washington St, Alex, VA 22314
FREE, tickets required Mar 23. Not req Mar 14.
Visit usafband.af. mil/events/ index.asp for additional info.
Tue, Apr 4, 8pm
Trifonov returns to the Kennedy Center in his first solo recital since 2013. The young Russian, heir to Rachmaninoff, Ashkenazy and Kissin, performs works by Schumann, Shostakovich and Stravinsky.
Kennedy Center Concert Hall 2700 F St, NW Washington, D.C. 20566 202.785.9727 | 202.467.4600 washingtonperformingarts.org
Tickets start at $30
“Monstrous technique and lustrous tone” – Alex Ross, The New Yorker
Sat, Apr 8, 3pm
One of the reigning violin virtuosos of our time, Anne-Sophie Mutter has enthralled audiences worldwide with her technical mastery and transfixing tone. National Symphony Orchestra principal keyboardist Lambert Orkis joins her in works by Mozart, SaintSaëns and more.
Kennedy Center Concert Hall 2700 F St, NW Washington, D.C. 20566 202.785.9727 | 202.467.4600 washingtonperformingarts.org
Tickets start at $30
Mutter produces “a tone that glistens like molten platinum.” – LA Times
Sun., March 12, 2017 4:30 PM
MUSIC - CONCERTS
Airmen of Note LIVE! & Chamber Players Series
Daniil Trifonov, piano
Anne-Sophie Mutter, violin Lambert Orkis, piano Washington International Piano Series at CUA
Jazz Heritage Series Thu, March 23, 8 p.m. tickets req. Chamber Players Series Tues, March 14, 7:30 p.m. No tickets req.
Thursday, March 16, 2017 at 8pm
The Washington International Piano Series at CUA presents Francesca Hurst, Molly Orlando, and the Great Noise Ensemble performing chamber music by Mellits, Bayolo, Bermel and others.
COMEDY
Orange is the New Barack
Fridays & Saturdays at 7:30pm
A musical, political satire. We put the MOCK in Democracy! www.capsteps.com Info: 202.312.1555
Ward Recital Hall 620 Michigan Ave NE Washington, DC 20064 music.cua.edu
Ronald Reagan Building 1300 Pennsylvania Ave, NW Tix available at 202.397.SEAT ticketmaster.com
The Guide to the Lively Arts appears: • Sunday in Arts & Style. deadline: Tues., 12 noon • Monday in Style. deadline: Friday, 12 noon • Tuesday in Style. deadline: Mon., 12 noon • Wednesday in Style. deadline: Tues., 12 noon • Thursday in Style. deadline: Wed., 12 noon • Thursday in Express. deadline: Wed., 12 noon • Friday in Weekend. deadline: Tues., 12 noon • Saturday in Style. deadline: Friday, 12 noon For information about advertising, call: Raymond Boyer 202-334-4174 or Nicole Giddens 202-334-4351 To reach a representative, call: 202-334-7006 | guidetoarts@washpost.com
$20 Gen., $10 Sr., free for CUA community
$36
Discounts available for groups of 10+. 202-312-1427
16-2898
36 | EXPRESS | 03.09.2017 | THURSDAY
goingoutguide.com CONTINUED FROM PAGE 33
THORN
W/ ANDREW DUHON AND ALICE DRINKS THE KOOL AID
ST. PATTY’S DAY KICKOFF PARTY! THURSDAY
MARCH 16
“IRASCIBLE, FUN AND IRREVERENT” - NPR
FRIDAY MARCH
10
the
YOUNG
DUBLINERS W/ JOHN BYRNE BAND
COMING SOON TO THE HAMILTON LIVE
HOWIE DAY W/ KATIE ROSE FRI, 3/17: SOULE MONDE FEAT. RUSS LAWTON & RAY PACZKOWSKI OF TREY ANASTASIO BAND SAT, 3/18: A GREAT BIG WORLD “AN EVENING WITH IAN & CHAD” W/ ALLIE MOSS SUN, 3/19: AN EVENING WITH RHONDA VINCENT AND THE RAGE THURS, 3/23: LAITH AL-SAADI SAT, 3/11:
THEHAMILTONDC.COM/LIVE
Library of Congress: “World War I: American Artists View the Great War”: This exhibition showcases posters, political cartoons, illustrations, fine prints, popular prints, documentary photographs and fine-art photographs, through Aug. 19; “Baseball’s Greatest Hits: The Music of Our National Game”: An exhibition of baseball sheet music, videos of baseball songs — including “Did You See Jackie Robinson Hit That Ball?” by Count Basie; “Right Field” by Peter, Paul and Mary; and “All the Way” by Eddie Vedder — and an audio station featuring 20 covers of “Take Me Out to the Ball Game,” through July 22. 101 Independence Ave. SE.
Montpelier Arts Center: “Artists on the Rise”: Work from local teens is showcased in the fifth annual Juried Teen Exhibition, through March 31. 9652
TREVOR MARCHAND
PAUL
Hallam Day, Avi Gupta, Max Hirshfeld, Franz Jantzen and Colin Winterbottom interpreting Philip Johnson’s architectural design of the building. Included is an exhibition of the Habitable Sculpture, 1999, Johnson’s cubist work inspired by a John Chamberlain sculpture and intended for construction in SoHo, through July 29. 2401 Foxhall Road NW.
National Museum of Natural History: “Mud Masons of Mali”: Djenne, a UNESCO World Heritage Site in Mali, is famous for its architecture. This exhibition of archival and contemporary photographs and early engravings demonstrates how the city’s masons, inheritors of a craft tradition handed down through generations since the 14th century, have given the city its character, open indefinitely.
DANCE
EL Squad in Concert
SUN. MARCH 26, 7PM
A magical experience for all ages. Witness the creativity of Japanese contemporary performing arts in this revolutionary “Light Dance” concert. Preview at https://goo.gl/Xjk6D8
Arena Stage at the Mead Center for American Theater 1101 6th St SW tickets at joyofmotion.org
The Guide to the Lively Arts appears: • Sunday in Arts & Style. deadline: Tues., 12 noon • Monday in Style. deadline: Friday, 12 noon • Tuesday in Style. deadline: Mon., 12 noon • Wednesday in Style. deadline: Tues., 12 noon • Thursday in Style. deadline: Wed., 12 noon • Thursday in Express. deadline: Wed., 12 noon • Friday in Weekend. deadline: Tues., 12 noon • Saturday in Style. deadline: Friday, 12 noon For information about advertising, call: Raymond Boyer 202-334-4174 or Nicole Giddens 202-334-4351 To reach a representative, call: 202-334-7006 | guidetoarts@washpost.com
PLAN AHEAD. STAY INFORMED. COMMUTE BETTER.
DC Rider Download it for FREE today!
$20-25
Presented by Joy of Motion, JICC & Japan Foundation
16-2898
the essential iPhone and Android app for Metro riders Available on iTunes or the Android App Market XX0460 5x2
Japnese Street Dance Crew
K
THURSDAY | 03.09.2017 | EXPRESS | 37
EUGENE B. ADKINS COLLECTION AT PHILBROOK MUSEUM OF ART/FRED JONES JR. MUSEUM OF ART
goingoutguide.com
Coming up at
THE TEN TENORS Mon, March 13 “If you thought the sound of three tenors was impressive, just wait until you hear what ten can do!” – The New York Times
KODO
DADAN 2017 Wed, March 15 Masters of Japan’s traditional taiko drum
National Museum of Women in the Arts: “New Ground: The Southwest of Maria Martinez and Laura Gilpin”: An exhibition organized by the Philbrook Museum of Art in Tulsa, Okla., that features 26 works by potter Martinez, and 48 platinum, gelatin silver and color print photos by Gilpin. Both artists worked from the 1930s to the 1970s, focusing on the Southwest, through May 14. Muirkirk Road, Laurel, Md.
National Archives: “Amending America”: This exhibition of 50 original documents that demonstrate how and when the Constitution was amended and how attempts were made to amend it marks the 225th anniversary of the Bill of Rights, through Sept. 4. 700 Pennsylvania Ave. NW.
National Building Museum: “Around the World in 80 Paper Models”: Drawn from a 4,500-piece collection recently donated to the museum, the architectural paper models represent buildings, cultures and countries from Austria to Wales, through April 16; “Timber City: Innovations in Wood”: To demonstrate recent technological innovations within the timber industry, this installation features samples of engineered wood, architectural models and wooden walls, through Sept. 10; “House and Home”: An ongoing exhibition that explores what it means to live at home, through May 1. 401 F St. NW.
National Gallery of Art: “In the Library: Process and Participation in the Work of Christo and Jeanne-Claude”: An exhibition of photographs of artists Christo and Jeanne-Claude, their works of art during the 1960s and 1970s and documentation of two major installations, taken by Shunk-Kender, a partnership between photographers Harry Shunk and Janos Kender, who photographed
major artists and their studios from 1958 to 1973, through April 15. Sixth Street and Constitution Avenue NW.
National Gallery of Art, East Building: “In the Tower: Theaster Gates”: An exhibition of a new body of work by Gates, “The Minor Arts,” examines how ordinary and discarded objects acquire value through the stories we tell, through Sept. 4; “East of the Mississippi: Nineteenth-Century American Landscape Photography”: An exhibition of 175 photographic works that focus on the history of eastern America, including daguerreotypes, salted paper prints, albumen prints, stereo cards and albums, including images of Niagara Falls, the White Mountains, Civil War battlefields and the construction of the Atlantic and Great Western Railway, through July 16. 440 Constitution Ave., NW.
National Gallery of Art, West Building: “Civic Pride: Group Portraits From Amsterdam”: Rare depictions by Govert Flinck and Bartholomeus van der Helst of meetings inside the Kloveniersdoelen, the gathering place of one of Amsterdam’s three militia companies in the mid-17th century, through March 11. Sixth Street and Constitution Avenue NW.
National Geographic Museum: “@NATGEO: The Most Popular Instagram Photos”: National Geographic has more
than 56 million followers on Instagram and more than 1 billion likes on its 11,000plus posted images. This exhibition tells the stories of these images and the photographers behind them, through April 30; “National Geographic Presents: Earth Explorers”: A familyfriendly exhibition divided into five environmental modules of multimedia experiences, with content from National Geographic Explorers around the world, through Sept. 4. 17th and M streets NW.
ERTH’S
DINOSAUR ZOO LIVE Fri, March 17 The ultimate playdate 65 million years in the making!
National Museum of African American History and Culture: “Ongoing exhibitions”: focusing on a diversity of historical subjects including the trans-Atlantic slave trade, the civil rights movement, the history of AfricanAmerican music and other cultural expressions, visual arts, theater, sports and military history, through Dec. 11. 14th Street and Constitution Avenue NW.
National Museum of African Art: “Senses of Time: Video and Film-Based Works of Africa”: Six African artists explore how time is experienced and produced by the body. Bodies stand, climb, dance and dissolve in seven works of video and film, or “time-based” art, through Sept. 24; “Healing Arts”: An exhibition of paintings and sculptures from the permanent collection that attempt to counter physical, social and spiritual problems including global issues such as the HIV/AIDS crisis, through Dec. CONTINUED ON PAGE 38
STRATHMORE.ORG | 301.581.5100 5301 Tuckerman Lane, North Bethesda, MD 20852
38 | EXPRESS | 03.09.2017 | THURSDAY
goingoutguide.com CONTINUED FROM PAGE 37
30; “Emeka Ogboh’s Market Symphony”: A sound installation by the Nigerian artist commissioned by the museum that emulates the ambient sounds of Balogun, an open-air market in Lagos, Nigeria, Africa’s most populated city, through March 26. 950 Independence Ave. SW.
National Museum of American History: “Artifact Walls — Art, Pottery and Glass in America, 1880s-1920s”: A
National Museum of Natural History: “100 Years of America’s National Park Service: Preserve, Enjoy, Inspire”: To celebrate its centennial, the National Park Service has teamed with the National Museum of Natural
Local movie times DISTRICT
AMC Loews Georgetown 14 3111 K Street N.W.
www.amctheatres.com/
Kong: Skull Island An IMAX 3D Experience (PG-13) Reserved Seating: 7:00-10:00
AMC Loews Uptown 1 3426 Connecticut Ave N.W.
www.amctheatres.com/
Logan (R) CC/DVS: 3:45 Kong: Skull Island (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 10:00 Kong: Skull Island 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS;RealD 3D: (!) 7:00
AMC Mazza Gallerie 5300 Wisconsin Ave. NW
www.amctheatres.com/
The Lego Batman Movie (PG) CC/DVS: 12:05-5:15 La La Land (PG-13) 21+;AMC Independent: 5:10-8:10 Hidden Figures (PG) DVS: 1:20-4:20-7:20-10:25 Moonlight (R) 21+;AMC Independent;DVS: 12:15-5:25-8:05 Before I Fall (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 12:30-3:00-5:30-8:00 Get Out (R) CC/DVS: (!) 12:20-2:50-5:20-7:50-10:05 Bitter Harvest (R) 21+;AMC Independent: 2:50 Logan (R) CC/DVS: (!) 7:00-10:10 La La Land (PG-13) AMC Independent: 10:20 Lion (PG-13) AMC Independent;CC: 1:10-4:00 The Lego Batman Movie 3D (PG) CC/DVS;RealD 3D: 2:40-7:55 Moonlight (R) AMC Independent;DVS: 10:30
Avalon Theatre 5612 Connecticut AvE
www.theavalon.org
Hidden Figures (PG) Oscar Nom - Best Picture!!: 1:30-4:30-7:30 Moonlight (R) Oscar Winner BEST PICTURE!: 12:00-2:30-5:15-8:00
Landmark Atlantic Plumbing Cinema 807 V Street, NW
www.landmarktheaters.com/
Logan (R) CC/DVS: (!) 1:00-2:30-4:00-5:15-7:00-8:15-9:45 The Lego Batman Movie (PG) CC/DVS: (!) 1:30-3:45-7:00-9:15 La La Land (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 2:10-4:50-7:25-10:00 Hidden Figures (PG) CC/DVS: (!) 12:15-2:45-6:45-9:30 Arrival (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 1:45-4:20
Landmark E Street Cinema 555 11th Street NW
www.landmarktheaters.com/
La La Land (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 12:45-3:45 Lion (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 1:20-4:20-7:20-9:50 Manchester by the Sea (R) CC/DVS: (!) 4:00-9:15 Moonlight (R) CC: (!) 1:05-4:05-7:05-9:45 A United Kingdom (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 1:00-4:00-7:00 I Am Not Your Negro (PG-13) CC: (!) 12:45-3:00-5:15-7:45-9:55 The Last Word (R) CC: (!) 7:15-9:45 2017 Oscar Nominated Shorts - Animated (NR) (!) 1:40-7:10 2017 Oscar Nominated Shorts - Live Action (NR) (!) 9:20 My Life as a Zucchini (Ma vie de courgette) (PG-13) (!) 1:45-3:45-5:45 Kedi (NR) Subtitled: (!) 1:30-3:30-5:30-7:30-9:30 My Life as a Zucchini (Ma vie de courgette) (PG-13) SUBTITLED;Subtitled: (!) 7:45-9:45
Landmark West End Cinema 2301 M Street NW
www.landmarktheaters.com/
Paterson (R) CC: (!) 12:45-7:15 Fences (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 1:00-7:00 Silence (R) CC/DVS: (!) 3:45 Mr. Gaga: A True Story of Love and Dance (NR) Subtitled: (!) 1:30-4:30-7:30
Regal Gallery Place Stadium 14 701 Seventh St Northwest
www.regmovies.com/
Logan (R) CC/DVS: (!) 11:45-12:30-1:15-2:05-2:55-3:40-4:30-5:15-6:15-6:55-7:40-8:259:45-10:15-10:45 Kong: Skull Island (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 7:00 Kong: Skull Island 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 10:00 Fifty Shades Darker (R) CC/DVS: (!) 9:35 The Lego Batman Movie (PG) CC/DVS: 11:30-2:00-4:35-7:05 The Great Wall (PG-13) CC/DVS: 2:20-4:50-10:30 The Shack (PG-13) CC/DVS: 12:40-3:50-7:00-10:10 Hidden Figures (PG) CC/DVS: 12:50-3:45-7:30-10:45 Fist Fight (R) CC/DVS: 9:45 John Wick: Chapter 2 (R) CC/DVS: 1:55-4:40-10:30 Table 19 (PG-13) CC/DVS: 1:10-3:25-5:40-7:55-10:10 Sword Art Online The Movie - Ordinal Scale- Event (NR) Event: (!) 8:00 Before I Fall (PG-13) CC/DVS: 12:30-2:50-5:20-7:45-10:45 Get Out (R) CC/DVS: 12:10-1:30-2:35-3:55-5:00-7:25-9:55 The Great Wall 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 11:45AM Rock Dog (PG) 1:35-3:55
Smithsonian - Lockheed Martin IMAX Theater 601 Independence Avenue SW
History to present more than 50 images showcasing the national parks, through Aug. 30; “The Primordial Landscapes: Iceland Revealed”: Photographs by Feodor Pitcairn and poetry by Ari Trausti Guomundsson focus on the natural beauty of Iceland, through April 30; “Nature’s Best Photography: The Best of the Best”: An exhibition of photographs of wildlife and landscapes on largeformat prints and in HD videos, through Aug. 31. 10th Street and Constitution
display highlighting the craftsmanship of American potters and glassmakers who created decorative wares, through March 12; 14th Street and Constitution Avenue NW.
www.si.edu/imax
D-Day: Normandy 1944 3D (NR) 3:15 Journey to Space 3D (NR) 11:50-2:25-4:55 A Beautiful Planet 3D (G) 12:40 Dream Big: Engineering Our World: An IMAX 3D Experience 11:00-1:35-4:05
Avenue NW.
National Museum of Women in the Arts: “Bold Broadsides and Bitsy Books”: The Dead Feminists’ broadside series presents profiles of international feminist heroes, through March 17; “From the Desk of Simone de Beauvoir”: An installation of the feminist’s works in the areas of literature, philosophy and popular culture, through June 2; “Border Crossing: Jami Porter Lara”: An exhibition
of pottery by the Albuquerque-based artist, who makes pottery that looks like the common plastic bottle, through May 13; “Chromatic Scale: Prints by Polly Apfelbaum”: An exhibition of colorful abstract prints made with interchangeable wood blocks and gradient inking that reference Minimalist and Pop art, through July 2. 1250 New York Ave. NW.
National Museum of the American
(!) No Pass/No Discount Ticket To Fly! (1976) (NR) 10:25AM
MARYLAND
AFI Silver Theatre Cultural Ctr 8633 Colesville Road
www.afi.com/silver
Hidden Figures (PG) 1:30-4:10-6:45 Little Men (PG) 3:10 Nakom (NR) 9:45 '76 (NR) 7:15 Moonlight (R) 9:20 A United Kingdom (PG-13) 12:05-2:20-4:45-7:10-9:25 The Muppet Movie (G) 5:00
AMC Ctr Park 8 4001 Powder Mill Rd.
www.amctheatres.com/
Logan (R) CC/DVS;Recliners;Reserved Seating: 12:30-3:45-7:00-10:15 Kong: Skull Island (PG-13) CC/DVS;Recliners;Reserved Seating: (!) 7:00-9:00 Kong: Skull Island 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS;RealD 3D;Recliners;Reserved Seating: (!) 9:45 The Lego Batman Movie (PG) CC/DVS;Recliners;Reserved Seating: 5:00-10:00 The Shack (PG-13) CC/DVS;Recliners;Reserved Seating: 1:15-4:15-7:15-10:15 The Great Wall (PG-13) CC/DVS;Recliners;Reserved Seating: 4:00 Fist Fight (R) CC/DVS;Recliners;Reserved Seating: 4:15 John Wick: Chapter 2 (R) CC/DVS;Recliners;Reserved Seating: 12:45-3:30-6:30-9:35 Rock Dog (PG) CC/DVS;Recliners;Reserved Seating: 2:00 Before I Fall (PG-13) CC/DVS;Recliners;Reserved Seating: 2:00-4:35-6:45-9:10 Get Out (R) CC/DVS;Recliners;Reserved Seating: 1:00-3:45-7:30-10:00 The Lego Batman Movie 3D (PG) CC/DVS;RealD 3D;Recliners;Reserved Seating: 2:00-7:30 The Great Wall 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS;RealD 3D;Recliners;Reserved Seating: 1:30-6:30
AMC Magic Johnson Capital Ctr 12 800 Shoppers Way
www.amctheatres.com/
Logan (R) CC/DVS: (!) 11:00-2:15-5:30-9:00 Kong: Skull Island (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 7:00-9:45 Collide (Autobahn) (PG-13) CC/DVS: 11:00AM The Lego Batman Movie (PG) CC/DVS: 11:15-4:15-9:15 The Shack (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 11:45-3:00-6:15-9:30 Hidden Figures (PG) CC/DVS: 11:50-2:50-6:00-9:00 The Great Wall (PG-13) CC/DVS: 11:55-6:00 Fist Fight (R) CC/DVS: 4:50-9:50 John Wick: Chapter 2 (R) CC/DVS: 11:00-1:45-4:40-7:20-10:10 Rock Dog (PG) CC/DVS: 11:40-2:00 Moonlight (R) AMC Independent;CC: 11:35-2:10-7:10 A United Kingdom (PG-13) AMC Independent;CC/DVS: 4:15 Before I Fall (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 11:45-2:15-4:45-7:15-9:45 Get Out (R) CC/DVS: 11:30-1:20-2:15-4:00-5:00-6:30-7:45-9:15-10:15 The Lego Batman Movie 3D (PG) CC/DVS;RealD 3D: 1:45-6:45 The Great Wall 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS;RealD 3D: 3:00-9:00 Logan: The IMAX 2D Experience (R) (!) 12:30-3:45 Kong: Skull Island An IMAX 3D Experience (PG-13) (!) 7:00-10:00
Landmark Bethesda Row Cinema 7235 Woodmont Ave
www.landmarktheaters.com/
Land of Mine (Under Sandet) (R) DVS;Reserved Seating;Subtitled: (!) 1:50-4:30-7:30-10:00 2017 Oscar Nominated Shorts - Animated (NR) Reserved Seating: (!) 1:15 2017 Oscar Nominated Shorts - Live Action (NR) Reserved Seating: (!) 3:40 Kedi (NR) Reserved Seating;Subtitled: (!) 1:20-3:30-5:30-7:50-10:05 The Salesman (Forushande) (PG-13) Reserved Seating;Subtitled: (!) 1:10-3:50-9:45 Fences (PG-13) CC/DVS;Reserved Seating: (!) 6:45 The Last Word (R) CC;Reserved Seating: (!) 7:00-9:30 La La Land (PG-13) CC/DVS;Reserved Seating: (!) 1:00-7:10-9:50 Lion (PG-13) CC/DVS;Reserved Seating: (!) 4:20-7:00-9:45 A United Kingdom (PG-13) CC/DVS;Reserved Seating: (!) 1:30-4:10-7:20-10:00 National Theatre Live: Hedda Gabler (NR) No Discount Tickets Accepted;No Passes;Reserved Seating: 2:00 I Am Not Your Negro (PG-13) CC;Reserved Seating: (!) 2:00-4:40-7:40-9:55
Regal Hyattsville Royale Stadium 14 6505 America Blvd.
www.regmovies.com/
Logan (R) CC/DVS: (!) 12:30-1:00-1:30-3:45-4:00-4:15-7:30-10:00-10:45 Kong: Skull Island (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 8:00-11:00 Kong: Skull Island 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 7:00-10:00 The Lego Batman Movie (PG) CC/DVS: 12:45-3:30-6:15-7:15-8:45 The Shack (PG-13) CC/DVS: 12:30-3:45-7:00-10:15 The Great Wall (PG-13) CC/DVS: 4:00-6:45-9:30 Hidden Figures (PG) CC/DVS: 1:00-4:15-7:15-10:30 Fist Fight (R) CC/DVS: 12:30-3:15-6:00 John Wick: Chapter 2 (R) CC/DVS: 12:45-7:30-8:45-10:45 Moonlight (R) CC: 2:30-5:15-8:00-10:45 Before I Fall (PG-13) CC/DVS: 2:00-4:45-7:30-10:00 I Am Not Your Negro (PG-13) CC: 12:45-3:15-6:15-9:15 Get Out (R) CC/DVS: 1:45-4:45-7:45-10:30 The Great Wall 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 1:15 Rock Dog (PG) 1:30-3:55
Regal Majestic Stadium 20 & IMAX 900 Ellsworth Dr
www.regmovies.com/
Logan (R) CC/DVS: (!) 12:00-1:00-1:15-1:45-3:15-4:20-4:45-5:05-6:40-8:05-8:25-10:05
Kong: Skull Island (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 7:00-10:00 Kong: Skull Island 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 8:00-11:00 Kong: Skull Island An IMAX 3D Experience (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 7:30-10:30 The Lego Batman Movie (PG) CC/DVS: 1:30-4:15-7:00-9:45 La La Land (PG-13) CC/DVS: 12:30-3:50-7:00-10:10 Lion (PG-13) CC/DVS: 12:10-3:00-6:00-9:00 The Shack (PG-13) CC/DVS: 1:00-4:15-7:30-10:45 Hidden Figures (PG) CC/DVS: 12:25-3:30-6:45-9:55 The Great Wall (PG-13) CC/DVS: 3:55-6:30-9:25 Split (PG-13) CC/DVS: 1:30-4:30-7:30-10:45 Fist Fight (R) CC/DVS: 12:45-3:25-5:50-8:30-11:00 John Wick: Chapter 2 (R) CC/DVS: 12:50-3:55-7:00-10:15 Table 19 (PG-13) CC/DVS: 12:00-2:30-5:00-7:30-10:15 Before I Fall (PG-13) CC/DVS: 12:00-2:45-5:30-8:00-10:45 I Am Not Your Negro (PG-13) CC: 12:30-3:10-5:35-8:15-11:00 Get Out (R) CC/DVS: 12:30-1:50-3:25-4:25-7:10-9:55 Logan: The IMAX 2D Experience (R) CC/DVS: (!) 12:50-4:00 The Great Wall 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 1:00 Rock Dog (PG) 12:10-2:30-4:45-7:10-9:30
Xscape Theatres Brandywine 14 7710 Matapeake Business Dr
www.xscapetheatres.com
Logan (R) CC;PLF;Stadium Seating: (!) 10:50-1:50-4:50-7:50-10:50 Kong: Skull Island (PG-13) CC;PLF;Stadium Seating: (!) 8:10-11:00 The Lego Batman Movie (PG) CC;PLF;Stadium Seating: (!) 11:50AM The Shack (PG-13) CC;Stadium Seating: 10:20-1:40-4:30-7:40-10:30 The Great Wall (PG-13) CC;Stadium Seating: 12:40-3:30-6:30-9:40 Hidden Figures (PG) CC;Stadium Seating: 10:15-12:20-3:10-6:00-9:00 Split (PG-13) CC;Stadium Seating: 1:05-4:05-7:10-10:15 Fist Fight (R) CC;Stadium Seating: 11:10-1:30-4:10-6:20-8:30-10:40 John Wick: Chapter 2 (R) CC;Stadium Seating: 11:00-2:20-5:10-8:00-10:55 Rock Dog (PG) CC;Stadium Seating: 11:30-2:05 Fences (PG-13) CC;Stadium Seating: 10:10-1:15-4:15 Before I Fall (PG-13) CC;Stadium Seating: 10:30-1:20-3:50-6:40-9:10 Get Out (R) CC;PLF;Stadium Seating: 2:50-5:30 Logan (R) CC;Stadium Seating: (!) 10:00-1:00-4:00-7:00-10:00 Kong: Skull Island (PG-13) CC;Stadium Seating: (!) 7:20-10:10 The Lego Batman Movie (PG) CC;Stadium Seating: 10:40-1:10-3:40-4:20-6:50-9:20 Get Out (R) CC;Stadium Seating: 11:20-2:00-4:40-6:10-7:30-8:50-10:20
VIRGINIA
AMC Courthouse Plaza 8 2150 Clarendon Blvd.
www.amctheatres.com/
Logan (R) CC/DVS;Recliners;Reserved Seating: (!) 12:40-1:15-3:45-4:30-5:30-8:00-9:00 Kong: Skull Island (PG-13) CC/DVS;Recliners;Reserved Seating: (!) 9:45-10:30 Kong: Skull Island 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS;RealD 3D;Recliners;Reserved Seating: (!) 7:00-7:45 Fifty Shades Darker (R) CC/DVS;Recliners;Reserved Seating: 12:45 The Great Wall (PG-13) CC/DVS;Recliners;Reserved Seating: 1:30 Hidden Figures (PG) CC/DVS;Recliners;Reserved Seating: 1:20-4:10-7:00-10:15 Fist Fight (R) CC/DVS;Recliners;Reserved Seating: 3:30 John Wick: Chapter 2 (R) CC/DVS;Recliners;Reserved Seating: 6:30-9:20 Before I Fall (PG-13) CC/DVS;Recliners;Reserved Seating: (!) 1:45-4:15-6:45-9:30 Rock Dog (PG) CC/DVS;Recliners;Reserved Seating: 2:30-4:45 The Great Wall 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS;RealD 3D;Recliners;Reserved Seating: 4:00 Get Out (R) CC/DVS;Recliners;Reserved Seating: (!) 12:35-3:00-5:45-8:15
AMC Hoffman Center 22 206 Swamp Fox Rd.
www.amctheatres.com/
Logan (R) CC/DVS: 11:30-12:00-2:35-3:05-5:40-6:10-9:20 Kong: Skull Island (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 8:00-9:30 Kong: Skull Island 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS;RealD 3D: 9:00 Collide (Autobahn) (PG-13) CC/DVS: 1:00 Rogue One: A Star Wars Story (PG-13) CC/DVS;No Green Or Red Tickets: 2:45-8:35 The Lego Batman Movie (PG) CC/DVS: 11:05-4:20-9:00 La La Land (PG-13) AMC Independent;CC/DVS: 1:15-4:15-7:15-10:15 Lion (PG-13) AMC Independent;CC: 12:00-5:45 The Shack (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 11:25-2:25-5:25-8:25 The Great Wall (PG-13) CC/DVS: 12:30-5:30 Hidden Figures (PG) CC/DVS: 11:55-3:50-6:45-9:45 Split (PG-13) CC/DVS: 11:15-2:00-4:45-7:30-10:15 Manchester by the Sea (R) AMC Independent;CC: 2:30 Fist Fight (R) CC/DVS: 3:25-5:35-8:05-10:20 John Wick: Chapter 2 (R) CC/DVS: 11:00-2:05-5:00-8:00 Headshot (NR) English Subtitles: 6:00 Table 19 (PG-13) AMC Independent;CC/DVS: 12:30-2:45-5:00 Kedi (NR) AMC Independent;English Subtitles: 12:20-2:35-4:50-7:05-9:15 Rock Dog (PG) CC/DVS: 11:45-2:10 Fences (PG-13) CC/DVS: 2:00-8:05 Sword Art Online The Movie - Ordinal Scale- Event (NR) AMC Independent: (!) 8:00 I Am Not Your Negro (PG-13) AMC Independent;CC: 3:30-8:40 Get Out (R) CC/DVS: 11:30-12:30-2:00-3:00-4:30-5:30-7:00-8:00-9:30-10:30 Bitter Harvest (R) AMC Independent: 11:55AM Before I Fall (PG-13) CC/DVS: 11:35-2:00-4:25-7:00-9:30 The Lego Batman Movie 3D (PG) CC/DVS;RealD 3D: 1:45-6:50 The Great Wall 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS;RealD 3D: 3:00-8:00-10:30 My Ex and Whys (NR) AMC Independent;English Subtitles: 11:15-5:10 Logan (R) Dolby Cinema at AMC Prime;Recliners: 11:00-2:05-5:10-8:15 Moonlight (R) AMC Independent;CC: 12:55-6:00
Kong: Skull Island An IMAX 3D Experience (PG-13) 7:00-10:00 Logan: The IMAX 2D Experience (R) 12:55-4:00
Angelika Film Ctr Mosaic 2911 District Ave
Lion (PG-13) CC/DAS: 11:15-2:00-4:45-7:30-10:20 Moonlight (R) CC: 11:45-2:15-5:00-7:45-10:30 Sword Art Online The Movie - Ordinal Scale- Event (NR) Japanese With English Subtitles: 8:15 A United Kingdom (PG-13) CC/DAS: 11:20-1:55-4:30 Bitter Harvest (R) CC/DAS: 11:05-4:25-10:45 La La Land (PG-13) CC/DAS: 10:45-1:30-4:15-7:15-10:15 John Wick: Chapter 2 (R) CC/DAS: 11:10-1:45-4:20 Kong: Skull Island (PG-13) 7:10-9:45 The Salesman (Forushande) (PG-13) 1:50 National Theatre Live: Hedda Gabler (NR) 7:00 The Last Word (R) 7:30-10:00 Logan (R) CC/DAS;No Passes: (!) 10:00-1:00-4:00-7:00-10:00 Table 19 (PG-13) CC/DAS;No Passes: (!) 10:30-12:45-3:00-5:05
Regal Ballston Common Stadium 12 671 N. Glebe Road
www.regmovies.com/
Logan (R) CC/DVS: (!) 11:00-11:30-12:30-1:40-2:50-4:00-5:10-6:20-7:30-8:30-9:45-10:45 The Lego Batman Movie (PG) CC/DVS: 11:45-2:35-5:20-6:45-10:05 La La Land (PG-13) CC/DVS: 1:30-4:20-7:15-9:50 Hidden Figures (PG) CC/DVS: 11:55-3:00-6:30-9:35 The Shack (PG-13) CC/DVS: 12:00-3:45-7:00-10:15 John Wick: Chapter 2 (R) CC/DVS: 12:10-4:40-10:25 Table 19 (PG-13) CC/DVS: 2:10-3:15-5:45-8:15-10:45 Moonlight (R) CC: 11:00-1:55-7:20-10:00 Get Out (R) CC/DVS: 11:15-1:15-4:15-8:00-10:35 Before I Fall (PG-13) CC/DVS: 11:25-2:15-5:00-7:45-10:30 Bitter Harvest (R) CC/DVS: 4:45 Sword Art Online The Movie - Ordinal Scale- Event (NR) Event: (!) 8:00
Regal Kingstowne Stadium 16 & RPX 5910 Kingstowne Towne Ctr
www.regmovies.com/
Logan (R) CC/DVS: (!) 12:30-1:00-2:30-3:45-4:15-6:00-7:00-7:30-9:15-10:15-10:45; (!) 12:15-3:15 Kong: Skull Island (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 7:30-10:30 Kong: Skull Island 3D (PG-13) AT;CC/DVS;RPX: (!) 7:00-10:00 La La Land (PG-13) CC/DVS: 12:15-3:25-6:40-9:35 The Lego Batman Movie (PG) CC/DVS: 1:30-4:15 The Shack (PG-13) CC/DVS: 12:45-4:00-7:10-10:10 The Great Wall (PG-13) CC/DVS: 4:10-6:45-9:20 Hidden Figures (PG) CC/DVS: 12:20-3:20-6:35-9:35 John Wick: Chapter 2 (R) CC/DVS: 1:45-4:45-7:50-10:40 Table 19 (PG-13) CC/DVS: 1:15-3:30-5:45-8:20-10:45 Moonlight (R) CC: 2:15-5:00-7:45-10:25 Before I Fall (PG-13) CC/DVS: 2:45-5:15-8:00-10:30 Get Out (R) CC/DVS: 1:55-4:25-6:50-9:30 The Great Wall 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 1:35 Kong: Skull Island 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 8:00-10:45 Rock Dog (PG) 12:40-2:55 Jeena Isi Ka Naam Hai (NR) 2:50-6:20-9:50
Regal Potomac Yard Stadium 16 3575 Potomac Ave
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Logan (R) CC/DVS: (!) 12:55-1:55-2:50-3:35-4:10-5:05-6:00-6:45-7:20-8:15-9:10-9:5510:30 Kong: Skull Island (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 7:30-10:30 Kong: Skull Island 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 7:00-10:00 The Lego Batman Movie (PG) CC/DVS: 2:20-4:55-7:30 La La Land (PG-13) CC/DVS: 3:40-6:35-9:45 Hidden Figures (PG) CC/DVS: 1:35-4:30-7:25-10:25 The Shack (PG-13) CC/DVS: 1:00-4:00-7:10-10:15 The Great Wall (PG-13) CC/DVS: 3:30 Fist Fight (R) CC/DVS: 10:10 John Wick: Chapter 2 (R) CC/DVS: 1:05-3:55-7:05-10:00 Table 19 (PG-13) CC/DVS: 12:50-3:15-5:30-7:45-10:05 Moonlight (R) CC: 1:10-3:50 Before I Fall (PG-13) CC/DVS: 2:10-4:35-7:00-9:40 Get Out (R) CC/DVS: 1:50-2:55-4:20-5:25-6:50-8:00-9:30-10:30 Sword Art Online The Movie - Ordinal Scale- Event (NR) Event: (!) 8:00 The Great Wall 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 1:00 Rock Dog (PG) 1:45-4:05
Smithsonian - Airbus IMAX Theater
14390 Air and Space Museum Pkwy www.nasm.si.edu/museum/udvarhazy/ D-Day: Normandy 1944 3D (NR) Stadium Seating: 1:35-4:05 Kong: Skull Island An IMAX 3D Experience (PG-13) Stadium Seating: 7:00-9:45 Journey to Space 3D (NR) Stadium Seating: 10:10-11:50-3:15 A Beautiful Planet 3D (G) Stadium Seating: 12:40 Dream Big: Engineering Our World: An IMAX 3D Experience Stadium Seating: 11:00-2:25
THURSDAY | 03.09.2017 | EXPRESS | 39
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NATIONAL GALLERY OF ART
Scythian
National Gallery of Art, West Building: “Della Robbia: Sculpting With Color in Renaissance Florence”: An exhibition of about 40 works by Della Robbia, his nephew Andrea and Andrea’s sons as well as the competing Buglioni workshop, including various sculptural types, Madonna and Child reliefs, portraits, architectural decorations, household statuettes and full-scale figures, through June 4.
Indian: “Nation to Nation: Treaties Between the United States and American Indian Nations”: An exhibition exploring the relationship between Native American nations and the United States, through Dec. 11; “Our Universes: Traditional Knowledge Shapes Our World”: The exhibition focuses on indigenous cosmologies, worldviews and philosophies related to the creation and order of the universe and the spiritual relationship between humankind and the natural world, through April 30; “The Great Inka Road: Engineering an Empire”: To celebrate the construction of the Inca Road, which linked Cuzco, Peru, with the farthest reaches of the empire, the exhibition digs into its early foundations and the technologies that made building the road possible, through Dec. 10; “For a Love of His People: The Photography of Horace Poolaw”: Born six years after the end of the reservation period, the photographer documented fellow Indians, relatives and friends during everyday and important life events, creating a visual history of multi-tribal native life in the mid1920s and continuing for the next 50 years, through June 3; “Patriot Nations:
Native Americans in Our Nation’s Armed Forces”: An exhibition of photographs of Native Americans who served in the United States military, through Jan. 1. Fourth Street and Independence Avenue SW.
mail moves to, through and from our national parks, through March 25; “New York City: A Portrait Through Stamp Art,” through March 13. 2 Massachusetts Ave. NE.
National Portrait Gallery: “Double
An exhibition examining the events of 1967, exploring the relationship between the First Amendment and the civil rights movement of the 1960s, through Jan. 2; “1776 — Breaking News: Independence”: This exhibition is of the first newspaper printing of the Declaration of Independence as it appeared in the Pennsylvania Evening Post on July 6, 1776, through Dec. 30; “Inside Today’s FBI”: A new version of the FBI exhibit “Fighting Crime in the Age of Terror” features evidence and artifacts from some of the FBI’s biggest cases, through Dec. 30; “Pulitzer Prizes at 100: Editorial Cartoons”: To mark the 100th anniversary of the Pulitzers, this exhibit features work from the portfolio of Jack Ohman of the Sacramento Bee, the 2016 winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Editorial Cartooning, through Dec. 31; “Refugee”: Photographs created solely for the exhibition by five internationally
Take: Daguerreian Portrait Pairs”: This exhibition showcases 14 daguerreotypes, two portraits each of seven subjects including Frederick Douglass, Jefferson Davis and John Quincy Adams, through June 4; “One Life: Babe Ruth”: This exhibition displays approximately 40 objects including prints and photographs of Ruth, personal paraphernalia and advertising memorabilia endorsed by Ruth, through May 21; “Bill Viola: The Moving Portrait”: The exhibition, the gallery’s first devoted to media art, is a selection of Viola’s works that focus on the face and the body, using metaphors of water, light and spirituality, through May 6. Eighth and F streets NW.
National Postal Museum: “Trailblazing: 100 Years of Our National Parks”: Featuring original postage-stamp art from the Postal Service and artifacts loaned by the National Park Service, the exhibition explores the ways in which
Newseum: “1967: Civil Rights at 50”:
CONTINUED ON PAGE 40
A PART OF Big Sam’s Funky Nation
MILLENNIUM STAGE 20TH ANNIVERSARY
Scythian and Big Sam’s Funky Nation Sunday, March 19 at 6 p.m. We celebrate our landmark birthday with two stellar bands. Scythian (6–7 p.m.) plays roots rock music from Celtic, Eastern European, and Appalachian traditions with thunderous energy, while Big Sam’s Funky Nation (7–8 p.m.) is a group of world-class musicians who are a driving force of urban, brass-driven funk. Come early! First 1,000 fans get a free T-shirt! Ticket giveaways! Special happy hour from 5–6 p.m. featuring all beer and wine ½ off at the Grand Foyer Bars. The Millennium Stage is brought to you by
The Millennium Stage was created and underwritten by James A. Johnson and Maxine Isaacs to make the performing arts accessible to everyone in fulfillment of the Kennedy Center's mission to its community and the nation. Additional funding for the Millennium Stage is provided by Bernstein Family Foundation, The Isadore and Bertha Gudelsky Family Foundation, Inc., The Meredith Foundation, The Morris and Gwendolyn Cafritz Foundation, Dr. Deborah Rose and Dr. Jan A.J. Stolwijk, U.S. Department of Education, and the Millennium Stage Endowment Fund. The Millennium Stage Endowment Fund was made possible by James A. Johnson and Maxine Isaacs, Fannie Mae Foundation, the Kimsey Endowment, Gilbert† and Jaylee† Mead, Mortgage Bankers Association of America and other anonymous gifts to secure the future of the Millennium Stage. Education and related artistic programs are also made possible through the generosity of the National Committee for the Performing Arts and the President’s Advisory Committee on the Arts. Support for JFKC: A Centennial Celebration of John F. Kennedy is provided by Ambassador Elizabeth Frawley Bagley, Chevron, The Blanche and Irving Laurie Foundation, and Target.
40 | EXPRESS | 03.09.2017 | THURSDAY
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For entire schedule go to Birchmere.com Find us on Facebook/Twitter! Tix @ Ticketmaster.com 800-745-3000
A CELEBRATION OF THE GREAT MOVIE SONGS AND THEMES SUN, MAR 19
Mar 11
HOORAY FOR HOLLYWOOD
THE SECOND CITY
WE’RE ALL IN THIS ROOM TOGETHER WED, MAR 22 – SUN, MAR 26
TENTHING
CHAMBER MUSIC AT THE BARNS
FRI, MAR 24
JORDAN SMITH TUE, MAR 28
NOAM PIKELNY WED, MAR 29
GLEN PHILLIPS OF TOAD THE WET SPROCKET AMBER RUBARTH THU, MAR 30
FALU’S BOLLYWOOD ORCHESTRA FRI, MAR 31
THE BAD PLUS SAT, APR 1
OVER THE RHINE
LADYSMITH BLACK MAMBAZO 16 VANESSA CARLTON TRISTEN 17 CHRIS KNIGHT & WILL HOGE Matt TOM RUSH Nakoa 18 20&21 CHRIS BOTTI Seth 23 KASEY CHAMBERS Walker N 24 RAHSAAN PATTERSON Y THE SUBDUDES 25 26 THE RIGHTEOUS BROTHERS
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AO OSHIOKA
Bill Medley & Bucky Heard
JAMES McMURTRY & TIFT MERRITT 29 ANN WILSON Heart POCO 30 31 LARRY GRAHAM OF
& Graham Central Station
Apr 1
CÉCILE MCLORIN SALVANT AND AARON DIEHL
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JOHN MCCUTCHEON THU, APR 20
AND MANY MORE! 1 6 3 5 T R A P R D, V I E N N A , VA 2 2 1 8 2
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PRESENTS:
American Art Museum: “Gene Davis: Hot Beat” is an exhibition featuring 15 stripe paintings from the 1960s by Washington native Gene Davis, through April 2. CONTINUED FROM PAGE 39
28
FRI, APR 7
THE GAY MEN’S CHORUS OF WASHINGTON, DC
An Evening with
ANDERSON LAURIE with special guest Rubin Kodheli
SMITHSONIAN AMERICAN ART MUSEUM, GIFT OF THE WOODWARD FOUNDATION
3701 Mount Vernon Ave. Alexandria, VA • 703-549-7500
5
FOURPLAY AMY GRANT
acclaimed photographers, Lynsey Addario, Omar Victor Diop, Graciela Iturbide, Martin Schoeller and Tom Stoddart, aim to illuminate the plight of the displaced throughout the world, through March 12; “Louder Than Words: Rock, Power and Politics”: The Newseum and the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame partnered for this exhibition of rock-androll-related media that affected politics and social movements, through July 31. 555 Pennsylvania Ave. NW.
Phillips Collection: “Arlene Shechet: From Here on Now”: This exhibition is part of a series that explores the intersections between old and new traditions, modern and contemporary art practices and museum spaces, and artistic interventions. Shechet’s ceramic sculptures, some created specifically for the exhibition, are included, through May 6; “Jake Berthot: From the Collection and Promised Gifts”: An exhibition of works received in 2015 from the artist’s estate, through April 1; “Jacob Lawrence’s The Life of Toussaint L’Ouverture”: An exhibition of 15 silk-screen prints created by Lawrence between 1986 and 1997.
The series portrays the life of Toussaint L’Ouverture (1742-1803), the slaveturned-leader of Haiti’s independence movement, through April 22; “ToulouseLautrec Illustrates the Belle Epoque”: An exhibition of lithographs and posters by Toulouse-Lautrec, known for his images of cabarets, cafes and Parisian nightlife, through April 30; “George Condo: The Way I Think — Drawing/ Painting”: An exhibition of drawings and drawing paintings by the American artist known for his pictorial inventions, existential humor and portraits, which demonstrates the painter’s process, through June 25. 1600 21st St. NW.
Renwick Gallery: “June Schwarcz: Invention and Variation”: An exhibition of works including vessels, threedimensional objects, wall-mounted plaques and panels by the enanamelist, through Aug. 27. 17th Street and Pennsylvania Avenue NW. U.S. Botanic Garden: “You Can Grow It!”: An exhibition exploring the basics of growing plants, for solving common plant problems and for learning horticulture techniques, through Oct. 15. 100 Maryland Ave. SW.
U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum: “I Want Justice!”: An exhibition that explores the history of efforts to hold perpetrators of genocide and mass atrocities accountable through court proceedings, with a special focus on the ongoing trials in Cambodia of surviving Khmer Rouge leaders, through Sept. 30; “Cambodia 1975-1979”: An exhibition that examines the brutal policies and action undertaken by the Khmer Rouge regime, leading to the deaths of nearly 2 million people, through Sept. 30. 100 Raoul Wallenberg Place SW.
U.S. National Arboretum: “The Bonsai Saga: How 53 Japanese Bonsai Came to America”: An exhibition that features archival images and film that tells the story of how Japan gave 53 bonsai to the United States in celebration of the nation’s 200th birthday, through Oct. 1; “Viewing Stone Exhibit: Legacy of Japanese Suiseki in North America”: An exhibition of Japanese and North American suiseki, or viewing stones — natural stones that resemble mountains or waterfalls, but are small enough to sit on a table — on loan from the Potomac Viewing Stone Group, through May 7. 3501 New York Ave. NE.
THURSDAY | 03.09.2017 | EXPRESS | 41
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STAN BAROUH
Learn Today ‘Fickle: A Fancy French Farce’: Playwright Meg Miroshnik’s modern take on the 18th-century French romantic comedy “The Double Inconstancy.” Olney Theatre Center, 2001 Olney-Sandy Spring Road, Olney, Md., through March 26.
Stage ‘A Drag Salute to the Divas: Dreamgirls Twisted’: Shi-QueetaLee’s drag revue pays tribute to music legends. Bethesda Blues & Jazz Supper Club, 7719 Wisconsin Ave., Bethesda, through March 12.
‘A Primate’s Memoir’: A play
Tobacco Players, 508 Charles St., La Plata, Md., through April 16.
‘Ella Enchanted: The Musical’: Adventure Theatre stages a musical based on the book by Gail Carson Levine about a girl cursed with the inability to disobey orders. Glen Echo Park, 7300 MacArthur Blvd., Glen Echo, Md., through March 19.
‘From the Mouths of Monsters’: The world premiere two-actor play about modern monsters is loosely based on Mary Shelley’s novel “Frankenstein.” Kennedy Center, 2700 F St. NW, through March 12.
‘Company’: Stephen Sondheim’s
‘Intelligence’: A world premiere of
musical comedy about a man contemplating life and relationships as he comes close to his 35th birthday. Port
Jacqueline E. Lawton’s political thriller about a covert operative whose cover CONTINUED ON PAGE 42
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Open House Tuesday, March 14 5:30 to 7 p.m. Visit learnmore.cua.edu to reserve your space today.
Associate’s Degrees: Paralegal Studies Human Services Administration Bachelor’s Degrees: Information Technology Interdisciplinary Studies — Majors in Social Science, Social Work, Human Services Administration Master’s Degrees: Master of Science in Emergency Service Administration Master of Health Administration Master of Science in Social Service Administration
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adaptation of biologist Robert M. Sapolsky’s book adapted and directed by Ryan Maxwell. Source Theatre, 1835 14th St. NW, through March 11.
WHAT YOU CAN APPLY TOMORROW
42 | EXPRESS | 03.09.2017 | THURSDAY
goingoutguide.com CONTINUED FROM PAGE 41
‘Ragtime’: The Tony-winning musical
is blown abroad. Arena Stage, 1101 Sixth St. SW, through April 9.
based on E. L. Doctorow’s 1975 novel. Ford’s Theatre, 511 10th St. NW, through May 20.
‘King Charles III’: The regional debut of Mike Bartlett’s award-winning play that explores what England would be like if Prince Charles became king. Sidney Harman Hall, 610 F St. NW, through March 18. ‘Midwestern Gothic’: A new musical from Royce Vavrek about a woman’s mission to leave her isolated, rural community. Signature Theatre, 4200 Campbell Ave., Arlington, through April 30.
SHIFT your expectations.
‘Night Watch’: Elaine Wheeler is a woman on the verge of a nervous breakdown, caused by fear and bad memories. Are her concerns warranted or should she commit herself to a sanitarium? Bowie Playhouse, 16500 White Marsh Park Drive, Bowie, Md., through April 9. ‘Parade’: The Tony Award-winning musical about a man wrongly accused of murder. Andrew Keegan Theatre, 1742 Church St. NW, through April 8.
‘PAW Patrol Live! Race to the Rescue’: A children’s production based on the animated series. National Theatre, 1321 Pennsylvania Ave. NW, through March 12.
March 27–April 1, 2017 Atlanta Symphony Orchestra & Chorus Boulder Philharmonic with Frequent Flyers Aerial Dance
North Carolina Symphony The Knights with San Francisco Girls Chorus
Concerts only $25!
PRESENTED BY
Plus many FREE events: pop-up shows, musical hikes, and more! Learn more at SHIFTfestival.org.
Generous support of the SHIFT Festival is provided through a matching grant from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, by Dr. Gary Mather and Ms. Christina Co Mather, and by Michael F. and Noémi K. Neidorff and The Centene Charitable Foundation. SHIFT is funded in part by the D.C. Commission on the Arts & Humanities, an agency supported in part by the National Endowment for the Arts. Additional support is provided by Abramson Family Foundation, Betsy and Robert Feinberg, Morton and Norma Lee Funger, and Daniel R. Lewis. SHIFT is presented in association with JFKC: A Centennial Celebration of John F. Kennedy. Support for JFKC: A Centennial Celebration of John F. Kennedy is provided by Ambassador Elizabeth Frawley Bagley, Chevron, The Blanche and Irving Laurie Foundation, and Target.
‘Seneca: Raton de biblioteca (The Library Mouse)’: A bilingual musical featuring an unlikely friendship among a mouse, a cat and a dog. GALA Hispanic Theatre, 3333 14th St NW, through March 25.
‘Spring Awakening’: Howard Community College Theatre Program stages the Tony Award-winning musical. Howard Community College, 10901 Little Patuxent Pkwy., Columbia, Md., through March 18. ‘The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee’: A staging of the Tony Award-winning comedy about a quirky group of students competing at a fictional bee. Greenbelt Arts Center, 123 Centerway, Greenbelt, Md., through April 16.
‘The Freshest Snow Whyte’: The beloved Disney princess is reimagined as a graffiti artist in the year 3000 in this new hip-hop musical. Imagination Stage, 4908 Auburn Ave., Bethesda, through March 18.
‘The Gin Game’: Roz White and
‘Peter and the Starcatcher’:
Doug Brown star in Donald L. Coburn’s Pulitzer Prize-winning play. MetroStage, 1201 N. Royal St., Alexandria, Va., through March 12.
Constellation Theatre stages the Tony Award-winning prequel to J. M. Barrie’s “Peter Pan.” Source Theatre, 1835 14th St. NW, through March 12.
‘The Giver’: Lois Lowry’s dystopian novel is staged by Eric Coble. NextStop Theatre Company, 269 Sunset Park CONTINUED ON PAGE 44
THURSDAY | 03.09.2017 | EXPRESS | 43
America's best comedy club!
Catch the Next Wave series
“SMASHING…even better at the Shakespeare Theatre Company than on Broadway.” —The Washington Post
Guy Torry March 9 ‐ 12
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Four nights of nonstop hustle with Guy and
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Next Wave: Sean Patton Medium Cindy Kaza Godfrey School Showcase Comedy Kumite 9 Tom Segura ComedySportz improv Next Wave: Rick Gutierrez Pablo Francisco
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THE PLAY THAT “CHANGED AMERICAN THEATERR FOREVER. FOREVER.”
- New York Times
KING charles III directed by David Muse
MUST CLOSE MARCH 18
Photo of Allison Jean White as Kate, Christopher McLinden as Prince William and Robert Joy as King Charles by Kevin Berne.
Ken Miller. $20 general admission all shows.
“TRULY WONDERFUL…a lively riff on Hemingway’s first and greatest novel.” —The New York Times
an adaptation created by Elevator Repair Service
BY LORRAINE HANSBERRY DIRECTED BY TAZEWELL THOMPSON
based on the novel by Ernest Hemingway
directed by John Collins
NOW PLAYING
BEGINS MARCH 31
Photo of Will Cobbs and Dawn Ursula by Tony Powell.
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Photo of Susie Sokol as Pedro Romero by Scott Such hman.
“INVENTIVE...IMAGINATIVE... enrichingly evocative.” —The Washington Post
44 | EXPRESS | 03.09.2017 | THURSDAY
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JOHNNY SHRYOCK
ONE NIGHT ONLY!
‘The Taming of the Shrew’: A modern retelling of Bard’s comedy with Hollywood socialites. Synetic Theater, 1800 S. Bell St., Arlington, through March 19. CONTINUED FROM PAGE 42
Drive, Herndon, Va., through March 12.
‘The How and the Why’: Critic Celia Wren called the two-character play an “absorbing and brainy drama.” The show is written by Sarah Treem, creator of the Showtime drama “The Affair.” Theater J, 1529 16th St. NW, through March 12.
‘The Select (The Sun Also Rises)’:
through April 23.
A production by Elevator Repair Service based on Ernest Hemingway’s first novel. Lansburgh Theatre, 450 Seventh St. NW, through April 2.
‘WSC Avant Bard: The Gospel at
‘Three Sisters’: Anton Chekhov’s drama is directed by Jackson Gay. Studio Theatre, 1501 14th St. NW,
Colonus’: Jennifer L. Nelson, with Marcus Harper-Short, presents the African-American musical take on the Greek tragedy. Gunston Arts Center Theater II, 2700 S. Lang St., Arlington, through March 26.
Jay Leno March 17 at 8 p.m. | Concert Hall TICKETS ON SALE NOW! KENNEDY-CENTER.ORG | (202) 467-4600
GET BEAUT Y ON YOUR OWN TERMS
Tickets also available at the Box Office. Groups call (202) 416-8400. For all other ticket-related customer service inquiries, call the Advance Sales Box Office at (202) 416-8540.
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THURSDAY | 03.09.2017 | EXPRESS | 45
entertainment
More ‘Gilmore’? Nah, all set. Netflix wants a second revival of the series — but is it necessary?
‘Good Fight’ takes aim at Donald Trump
NETFLIX
STREAMING When news broke last year that “Gilmore Girls” would return for a four-episode revival on Netflix, the internet, understandably, lost its mind. The much-loved WB and CW series never wrapped up in a satisfying way, because creator Amy Sherman-Palladino and executive producer Dan Palladino left before the final season in 2007. So the idea of seeing all of the cast members together, with the original creators at the helm, was a thrilling concept. The revival debuted Nov. 25, and it proceeded as a typical TV reunion nostalgia-fest. And above all, it provided closure. ShermanPalladino got to end the series like she always wanted. End scene. Except, maybe not. This week, Netflix chief content officer Ted Sarandos told Britain’s Press Association that the streaming service has had talks with the creators about bringing the show back. Again. “The worst thing is to wait a couple of years for your favorite show to come back and for it to disappoint you, but they sure delivered and people were really
We need more “Gilmore Girls” on Netflix like Rory and Lorelai Gilmore need another cup of coffee. (They don’t.)
excited about more, and we have been talking to them about the possibility of that,” he said. Let us stop you right there, Netflix. Actually, we’re good. First, another batch of new episodes couldn’t ever live up to the hype of the first set. It’s one thing to surprise fans with news of a revival — it’s a special event. But it’s another to make it seem like a revival could be a frequent practice. The best way to kill the magic is to overexpose it.
FILM
TELEVISION
‘Overboard’ remake nabs Anna Faris, Eugenio Derbez
‘Game of Thrones’ rock arch collapses into sea
Anna Faris and Eugenio Derbez are set to star in a remake of “Overboard,” the 1987 romantic comedy starring Goldie Hawn and Kurt Russell. The story follows an heiress who falls off her yacht and is later found by a carpenter she screwed over. According to Variety, the remake will be co-directed and written by Rob Greenberg (“How I Met Your Mother”) and Bob Fisher (“We’re the Millers”). (EXPRESS)
The Azure Window, a natural rock arch that jutted onto the sea off Malta and was a backdrop for the “Game of Thrones” TV series, has collapsed in a storm. Malta Prime Minister Joseph Muscat tweeted his “heartbreaking” sadness at the loss Wednesday of one of the main tourist attractions on the island of Gozo. The landmark also served as a backdrop in the 1981 movie “Clash of the Titans.” (AP)
FX and BBC One renew “Taboo,” starring Tom Hardy, for Season 2
The revival also shed light on some of the show’s flaws, from boring musical numbers to the disappointing reveal that Rory grew up to be kind of a monster. Would the producers learn from some of those problems? Then, of course, the revival ended on a cliffhanger: Rory revealed she was pregnant. There were a ton of unanswered questions, but it was also a perfect full-circle moment: The central theme of the show was Lorelai as
a single mom, and now her daughter will face the same challenge. It’s a fitting end for the series. But there’s an obvious motivation for why the “Gilmore” gang might want to get together again: money. At the end of the day, TV is a business. So even if the legacy of the series would suffer with more episodes, it doesn’t matter, because the financial picture will always be the most important factor. EMILY YAHR (THE WASHINGTON POST)
verbatim
“I know I can speak for the [‘Homeland’] writers when they want to right that error that happened because of storytelling.” MANDY PATINKIN, a star of “Homeland,”
telling The Associated Press that the political drama is improving its depiction of Muslims
STREAMING The legal drama “The Good Fight” — the spinoff of ‘’The Good Wife” that’s exclusive to CBS’ streaming service — has taken the lead in weaving President Trump into its stories, and it keeps raising the stakes. In last month’s debut, lawyer and Hillary Clinton supporter Diane Lockhart (Christine Baranski) watched and cringed as Trump was sworn into office. In another episode, a member of the drama’s nearly all-black law firm tells his boss he voted for Trump and is scorned by his colleagues. Most shows that debuted last fall have wrapped their production for the season that ends in spring, and movies have a long road to get into theaters. “The Good Fight,” which premiered in February, has taken ample advantage of its timing. “We have created very politically aware characters, and it would simply be peculiar if they weren’t talking about what was going on politically right now,” says Michelle King, who created and produces the CBS All Access show with her husband, Robert. Robert King says the drama hews closely to what they did on CBS’ “The Good Wife,” which also dwelled in the world of law and politics. “That had a lot of references to the Clintons and Obama, and critical depictions too,” he says. “The only difference is in degree.” LYNN ELBER (AP)
Tribeca Film Festival to close with “Godfather” cast reunion and screenings at Radio Music Hall on April 29
46 | EXPRESS | 03.09.2017 | THUR SDAY
Cashiers, Prep / Cook, Dishwasher Apply Within - Tuesday-Thursday 10A to 2P Rolling Rib - 9423 Marlboro Pike, Upper Marlboro, MD 20772
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AHC Management LLC: residential property management Locations: Arlington, VA and Baltimore, MD The Technicians will be responsible for all work tickets and scheduled & unscheduled maintenance activities; preventive maintenance work; timely maintenance and repairs of all apartments and common areas, preparation and turnover of vacant units, at least monthly building and property inspections, minor electrical, plumbing and drywall repairs, and maintenance of heating & air conditioning units in the residential units; other related duties. Minimum requirements: High School diploma or equivalent; CFC & HVAC Certification; four-years’ experience with apartment building maintenance; ability to communicate effectively; ability to coordinate long variety projects and on-going assignments; ability to maintain equipment; ability to lift at least 50 lbs.; valid driver’s license; must be able to work evenings and weekend hours as needed. Send resumes & pay requirements to HR via email to jobs@ahcmgmt.com or fax to 703-486-0653 for immediate consideration. E/O/E. For more information on AHC, visit our website at www.ahcinc.org.
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THURSDAY | 03.09.2017 | EXPRESS | 47
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Free 6-Week Summer Camp
Come Visit Us: Mon. thru Fri. 8 am - 5 pm • Sat. 10 am to 4 pm • Sun. 12 pm - 4 pm
48 | EXPRESS | 03.09.2017 | THURSDAY
blog log “When the lights came back on, the Statue of Liberty had a ‘Nevertheless, she persisted’ tattoo on her forearm.” @REXHUPPKE imaging what happened Tuesday evening when the Statue
of Liberty went dark for about two hours. The National Park Service said the temporary, unplanned outage happened because a lighting controller wasn’t properly reset. Many social media users noticed the timing of the outage — on the eve of International Women’s Day. “Apparently the Statue of Liberty lights went out due to a power failure. But I would argue women are also protesting due to a power failure,” @aparnapkin tweeted.
It’s summer camp signup season. Make the right choice for your kids with our informative guide to great experiences.
DREW MAGARY writing for jezebel .com about why she disagrees with putting jungle gyms inside movie theaters. Cinema chain Cinepolis is opening two such theaters in Southern California next week, with the idea that it will make going to the movies more fun for kids.
Wednesday, April 5 in Express
“Starburst has announced pinkonly bags. They’re the real hero America needs right now.” @CHELSEAMFRYE reacting to the news that Starburst will be releasing limited-edition all-pink packs starting in April. The company told Mashable that pink is the most popular flavor with fans of the candy. Some dared to wonder if this is for the best: “I feel like this all pink star burst thing is exactly what they meant when they said you can have too much of a good thing,” @ToriKrienke tweeted.
Thursday, April 6 in The Washington Post Local Living section
“Keep Calm and Mariah Carey On.”
XPN0075 2x10.5
@WIENERAARON
To advertise, contact KaDeana Baker, 202-334-9359, KaDeana.Baker@washpost.com or Melissa Abell, 202-334-7024, Melissa.abell@washpost.com
@STARBURST VIA TWITTER
IT’S NOT TOO EARLY
“They don’t need to be entertained when there’s already entertainment right there. ... I can just run them around the mall instead and save $39.”
tweeting using the hashtag #AddAWomanImproveAQuote, which trended Wednesday in relation to International Women’s Day. Other revised quotes that were shared include “A Rosa Parks by any other name would smell as sweet,” from @Aricka_Shuck, and “Reduce, reuse, recycle, Rihanna,” shared by @ComedyCentral.
“I do recall hearing that it’s ruff being a friar, but I think this takes it to a whole other level.” PAUL E WOG commenting on
Facebook about the newest addition at the Franciscan monastery in Cochabamba, Bolivia — a pup named Carmelo. He was adopted by the monastery and given his own set of robes and even a nickname, Friar Bigotón (Friar Moustache, in English).
THURSDAY | 03.09.2017 | EXPRESS | 49
fun+games Horoscopes
Scrabble Grams
PAR SCORE 145-155, BEST SCORE 214
Sudoku
DIFFICULT
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) In order to get the most out of your day, you’re going to have to start at the very beginning — but deciding where that is may be tricky. ARIES (March 21-April 19) You can go a long way toward breaking a bad habit, but take care that you don’t pick up another one in the process. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Someone may be trying to change your mind about a key issue, but you’re not likely to oblige. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Much will keep you grounded and on task, but there is something out there that threatens to upset the apple cart. WEDNESDAY’S SOLUTION
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Take
care that you make no assumptions about another’s behavior. You may never know why he or she is treating you a certain way.
WEDNESDAY’S SOLUTION
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You can prove your point in a manner that isn’t likely to be forgotten anytime soon. While others are busy reacting, you can get things done. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You’re looking for a little understanding. While doing so, you may uncover a clue that helps you solve a mystery. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) You may
FOUR RACK TOTAL Make a 2-7-letter word from the letters in each row. Add points of each word using scoring directions at right. Seven-letter words get a 50-point bonus. Blank tiles used as any letter have no point value. Scrabble is a trademark of Hasbro in the U.S. and Canada.
Comics
Forecast By Capital Weather Gang
POOCH CAFE | PAUL GILLIGAN
67 | 44
have to come to someone’s rescue from afar — and it may be slow going, but you’ll be able to set everything straight just in time.
TODAY: Other than a few clouds that may hang around into the morning, this one’s looking mostly sun-filled and rather beautiful. If you didn’t have a chance to enjoy Wednesday’s warm weather, today should be quite toasty (for the time of year) again. Winds will come from the southwest and west and be around 10 to 15 mph.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) You may not get all the credit you feel you deserve, but there is someone looking out for you who will do you a good turn very soon. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) You’ll be able to satisfy yourself and a loved one, even after making a quick decision that didn’t sit quite right.
PEARLS BEFORE SWINE | STEPHAN PASTIS
AVG. HIGH: 53 RECORD HIGH: 80 AVG. LOW: 35 RECORD LOW: 16 SUNRISE: 6:27 a.m. SUNSET: 6:09 p.m.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
You may be asked questions that you cannot answer — yet. Your curiosity will certainly be piqued. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) You may find yourself in a difficult situation that seems eerily familiar. This is not something you’ll want to endure for long.
DAILY CODE
today in histor y
Need more Sudoku? Find another puzzle in the Comics section of The Post every Sunday and in the Style section Monday through Saturday.
FRIDAY
SATURDAY
51 | 43
36 | 24
SUNDAY
MONDAY
37 | 24
43 | 25
SX
1862: During the Civil War, the ironclads USS Monitor and CSS Virginia (formerly USS Merrimac) clash for five hours to a draw at Hampton Roads, Va.
1964: The U.S. Supreme Court, in New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, raises the standard for public officials to prove they’d been libeled in their official capacity by news organizations.
1977: About a dozen armed Hanafi Muslims invade three buildings in Washington, D.C., killing one person and taking more than 130 hostages. (The siege ends two days later.)
Get more news and forecasts at washingtonpost.com/weather or follow @capitalweather on Twitter.
50 | EXPRESS | 03.09.2017 | THURSDAY
fun+games ACROSS 1 5 10 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 23 24 25 28 30 31 33 36 40 41
“Martial” follower “Mini” selling places Bald spot coverings Awkward, uncouth person Midwestern metropolis Combat outfit Europe’s largest volcano Enjoy, as a chef’s meal Big-time launcher Honesty, politeness, charm, etc. “Spare the rod, ___ the child” Like bad winters Steer clear of Larger-life link Native of Bangkok Bake eggs in their shells Young boy Including everything Farm tool Make someone do a spit take
42 Word with “Dutch” or “toaster” 43 Quiet sound that can mean “Look here!” 44 Piece of luggage carried by hand 46 Alaskan native 49 Alpha’s opposite 51 Employing sympathy 57 Brahman’s prominent feature 58 Divvy up accordingly 59 “Bright” thing from one’s mind 60 Certain sporting sword 61 Makers of a big V 62 Kind of year 63 Rectangular paving stone with a curved top 64 Did some math 65 Some football players
DOWN 1 2
Waugh or Guinness IRA type
3 Casserole type 4 TV’s Enterprise, e.g. 5 Russian capital 6 Stradivarius’ teacher 7 “Bolero” composer 8 One of the Marvel superheroes 9 Common garment of India 10 If you simply bask for it, you’ll get it 11 Walking ___ (euphoric) 12 Old floppies 13 Secret supply 21 Beast that imitates 22 Entertainer Lewis, with a lamb 43-Down 25 Carve into crystal, e.g. 26 Dismiss a flying pest 27 Showed up 28 Fork prong 29 Ruth’s 714 or a day’s 24 31 Closed 32 Chiffons oldie “___ So Fine”
33 Name on many jeans’ labels 34 Some British beverages 35 Bit of force? 37 One associated with dreadlocks 38 Bad “accidental” letters? 39 Apt to go into a rage 43 Marionette relative 44 Let off steam, literally or figuratively 45 Turkish lord (var.) 46 Pains in the neck
47 It makes gems appear larger 48 Actor M. ___ Walsh of over 200 films 49 Lubricated 50 Squirrel’s partner,in cartoons 52 Long, drawnout tale 53 It glides across snow 54 First inhabited place 55 The periodic table’s Pb 56 Runs at the mouth
C LIST: 15 LETTER WORDS
WEDNESDAY’S SOLUTION
Mason Means Business And So Do You.
EDITED BY TIMOTHY E. PARKER
Crossword
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for first-time clients Call today for a free price quote!
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Graduate Program Preview Night
March 14, 2017 6 to 8 p.m. Founders Hall, Arlington, VA Application fee waived for preview night attendees.
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THURSDAY | 03.09.2017 | EXPRESS | 51
people
THIRD WHEELS
‘Matt also thinks this is best for us’
Kristen opines on private life Kristen Stewart spoke to The Sunday Times of London about going public with her sexuality. (She rarely addressed it prior to February, when she joked on “Saturday Night Live,” “I’m, like, so gay, dude.”) “Considering I had so many eyes on me, I suddenly realized [my private life] affects a greater number of people than just me,” she said. “It was an opportunity to surrender a bit of what was mine, to make even one other person feel good about themselves.” (EXPRESS)
Ben Affleck and Jennifer Garner have called off their divorce, according to People. The actors, who announced in June 2015 they were separating, have decided to “keep working on their marriage after going through a recent rough patch,” the magazine reported. A source said Garner was the one who called off their divorce: “She really wants to work things out with Ben. They are giving things another try.” Another source added, “There is always a chance of reconciliation. They love each other. They also really, really love their kids, and those kids love their parents.” (EXPRESS)
COUSINS
Famous children not at all interested in sharing fame with random baby
After Arnold Schwarzenegger’s series of public exchanges with President Trump on Twitter over his exit from “The New Celebrity Apprentice,” Schwarzenegger was asked on SiriusXM’s “The Michael Smerconish Program” on Tuesday why the president seems to be fixated on him. “I think he’s in love with me.” Schwarzenegger responded. “Yeah, I think so.” (EXPRESS)
@ROBKARDASHIAN VIA INSTAGRAM
FILM QUOTES
Arnold apparently watches ‘Mean Girls’ way too often
“OMG, North. This picture is so embarrassing. Who even is this?”
Published by Express Publications LLC, 1301 K Street NW, Washington, DC 20071, a subsidiary of WP Company, LLC
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or email circulation@wpost.com.
GETTY IMAGES
INTERVIEWS
BEEFS?
‘Everything’s fine!’ says person who is so not fine A fan tweeted to Andy Cohen on Tuesday’s “Watch What Happens Live,” pointing out that Naomi Campbell and Rihanna had unfollowed each other on Instagram. When Cohen asked Campbell, a guest that episode, to clarify, she replied, “Everything’s fine, of course it’s fine,” followed by a wink. She then quipped, “I’m an actress now, Andy.” (EXPRESS)
verbatim “People would say, ‘Oh, do you have kids?’ And I’d feel like, ‘Ouch.’ I knew inside it was supposed to be for me.”
Rob Kardashian shared a photo to his Instagram on Tuesday of his nieces, 3-year-old North West and 4-year-old Penelope Disick, with his 3-month-old daughter, Dream. The photo shows North and Penelope, both grinning indifferently, reaching into Dream’s baby carriage to touch the top of her head. “Cousins love,” Kardashian wrote in a caption accompanied with a few emoji. (EXPRESS)
HODA KOTB, opening up to People magazine about her decision to adopt a baby in February at age 52
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FOUNDING PUBLISHER | Christopher Ma, 1950-2011
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52 | EXPRESS | 03.09.2017 | THURSDAY
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