EXPRESS_06282018

Page 1

A PUBLICATION OF

Thursday 06.28.18

| READEXPRESS.COM | @WAPOEXPRESS

Father, starmaker Joe Jackson, patriarch of a musical dynasty, dies of cancer at 89 56

THE BALL’S IN HIS COURT The retirement of Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy — long a crucial swing vote — gives President Trump a golden chance to cement conservative control of the nation’s highest court 15

GOP turmoil

NATIONAL PORTRAIT GALLERY

House Republicans reject their own party’s immigration plan 10

Think 2018 is bad?

GETTY IMAGES

A new exhibit revisits 1968, one of America’s most trying years 30

GETTY IMAGES/EXPRESS ILLUSTRATION

Style ambassador Jonathan Van Ness hopes ‘Queer Eye’ can transcend politics 56 am

88 | 73

pm


2 | EXPRESS | 06.28.2018 | THURSDAY

KOEN VAN WEEL (AFP/GETTY IMAGES)

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Hugo de Jonge, left, the Dutch minister of health, welfare and sport, participates Wednesday in the Dutch championship mobility scooter race at the Circuit Park Zandvoort in Zandvoort, Netherlands.

Inconvenient, yes, but you gotta admit it’s a pretty good prank

‘For the last time, Sir, you cannot be calling 911 over stale Doritos’

When it’s really, really, really important to make that flight

Police in Delaware’s capital would like to know who dropped a house onto a two-lane road. The Dover Police Department wrote Tuesday on Facebook that someone had abandoned the prefabricated home, blocking traffic at least until the next day. The department posted pictures of the home and noted, “This is not a joke.” The house was draped with a banner that said “oversize load.” Police advised drivers to use an alternate route. (AP)

Georgia police have issued an arrest warrant for a man who called police more than 100 times in three years. WSB-TV reported Tuesday that William Baccus is charged with abuse of 911. Cobb County Fire Chief Randy Crider said Baccus has called to ask them to bring him milk, his cellphone and a TV remote. The warrant says Cobb County police and fire departments warned Baccus not to call 911 “unless it was an actual medical emergency.” (AP)

Authorities said they’ve arrested a man accused of sprinting shirtless and barefoot toward a jet at Atlanta’s airport and jumping on the wing. Atlanta police spokeswoman Stephanie Brown told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution that the man scaled a fence Tuesday at Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport and ran onto an active taxiway. She said he then jumped on the wing of a recently landed Delta flight and pounded on windows. (AP)

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THURSDAY | 06.28.2018 | EXPRESS | 3

page three

A lifetime of being a lifeline THE DISTRICT It began with a love of music. Eleanor Stewart was a newly recruited vocal music instructor when she joined the D.C. public schools in 1967. “I loved coming to school and hearing the children singing first thing in the morning,” Stewart recalls. From James Weldon Johnson to Francis Scott Key, she began teaching the students not only to read the words to the two national anthems but to sing the lyrics as well. In 1993, she started a choir for elementary school boys. The year before, there had been 451 homicides in the District — mostly young black males. A morgue full of choirs. She grabbed her first 25, calling them the D.C. Boys Choir. “We kept them out of the streets because once we formed that choir, we were singing all the time,” she says. That was 25 years ago. And she’s still at it, having taught more than 700 boys how to hold a note, not a gun. Carry a tune,

Eleanor Stewart has led the D.C. Boys Choir for 25 years.

COURTLAND MILLOY (THE WASHINGTON POST)

Through the D.C. Boys Choir, Eleanor Stewart has taught hundreds

“It makes me happy to know I have touched the lives of so many young people in a positive way.” ELEANOR STEWART, the founder and director of the D.C. Boys Choir.

This July, she is taking the choir on an international tour to South Africa.

not a grudge. Breathe life into a song, belt out arias and jazz standards in half a dozen languages, enriching themselves and the lives of all who hear them. Her love blossomed into a passion for teaching. “I am a

EAT. ALL. THE. CAKE.

dedicated music teacher,” Stewart says. Not a brag. Just a fact. She is 80 years old. On July 12, she hopes to lead the choir on what probably will be her last international tour — this time,

to perform in South Africa. She has taken the choir to England, Austria, China and Italy. The fundraising efforts require as much time and effort as the rehearsals. A GoFundMe page shows they’re far from reaching their goal to make their latest journey. “I thought [fundraising] would be easier this time, since it’s an anniversary year,” she says. Despite the years of accolades, the international recognition and the personal successes, inspiring support for the organization continues to be a challenge. At a recent fundraiser, the group sang the Jackson 5 hit song “I’ll Be There,” which showed off the full range of voices in a most spectacular fashion. Stewart had groomed them, from sounding like angelic boys to confident young men, one vocal cord at a time. Stewart has brought to life the enormous potential that was untapped, gasping for just a chance. Stewart says, “I like hearing the boys talk about how the choir saved them from the streets. But also, how music opened up their minds and gave them an opportunity to see more of the world.” COURTLAND MILLOY (THE WASHINGTON POST)

SPORTS

Potomac Nationals to move to Fredericksburg The Potomac Nationals, the Nationals’ Class A Advanced affiliate, announced Tuesday that it plans to move from Woodbridge, Va., to a new ballpark in Fredericksburg, Va., in 2020. Fredericksburg will vote July 10 on whether to move forward with the plans detailed in a nonbinding letter of intent. (TWP)

THROWBACK THURSDAY

06.29.2016 A look back at Express covers from this week in history:

Terrorists detonated suicide bombs and fired guns in a June 28, 2016, attack at Ataturk Airport in Istanbul. The attack left 48 people dead, including three of the attackers. More than 230 people were injured.

GO WILD IN D.C. Free Admission / Red Line Metro


4 | EXPRESS | 06.28.2018 | THURSDAY

local

Hate crime charges for driver COURTS The man accused of plowing a car into a crowd of people protesting a white nationalist rally in Charlottesville, killing a woman and injuring dozens more, now faces federal hate crime charges. The Depar tment of Justice announced that an indictment reFields turned Wednesday charges James Alex Fields Jr., 21, of Maumee, Ohio, with 30 crimes, including one count of a hate crime resulting in the death of Heather Heyer, and 28 other hate crimes involving the attempt to kill dozens of other people who were injured. Another charge accuses him

RYAN M. KELLY (THE DAILY PROGRESS VIA AP)

Justice Department indicts man accused of Charlottesville attack

Last year’s car attack in Charlottesville caused the death of Heather Heyer.

of “racially motivated violent interference” with a federally protected activity. “Last summer’s violence in Charlottesville cut short a promising young life and shocked the nation,” U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions said in a statement.

“Today’s indictment should send a clear message to every wouldbe criminal in America that we aggressively prosecute violent crimes of hate that threaten the core principles of our nation.” Authorities have said Fields drove his speeding car into a

group of people demonstrating against the “Unite the Right” rally Aug. 12. Fields already faces state charges including first-degree murder and is set to face a jury trial later this year. He has been in custody since the rally. The attorney representing Fields on those counts declined to comment Wednesday. The federal civil rights case is not the first under Sessions’ Justice Department, but it is certainly the most high-profile case. In bringing the prosecution, Sessions appeared to assert himself as independent from President Trump — who blamed the violence on both sides and was accused of emboldening racists — and suggested that the Justice Department would continue to treat racially motivated acts of violence as hate crimes. SARAH RANKIN (AP)

ARLINGTON CEMETERY

Members of WWII bomber crew buried together

Five crew members from a B-17 bomber shot down over Germany during World War II were laid to rest together with full military honors Wednesday at Arlington National Cemetery. They were members of a nine-man crew of a B-17 downed near Barby, Germany, on Nov. 2, 1944. Three survived and were captured. One of those killed was identified in 1945. The remains of the other five were recovered in 2015 and 2016. (AP) Red Hen owner who ousted Trump spokeswoman resigns as director of local business group

VIRGINIA

Districts struck down for racial gerrymandering A panel of federal judges in Virginia has concluded that 11 state legislative districts were drawn in a way that discriminates against African-Americans and must be redesigned by the end of October. The decision is a victory for Democrats in a years-long battle over the legislative lines. (THE WASHINGTON POST)

NATIONAL HARBOR, MD.

Girl in critical condition after electric shock A 6-year-old girl was in “very critical” condition Wednesday after a suffering an electric shock at the MGM National Harbor resort in Oxon Hill, Md., officials said. The girl was shocked late Tuesday night after touching a handrail that surrounds a large fountain. An MGM employee suffered minor injuries when he tried to rescue the girl. (AP) FAIRFAX

Unarmed, naked man dies in police custody An unarmed, naked man died after an encounter with police in Northern Virginia in which the man was trying to hurt himself, authorities said Wednesday. 31-year-old Christopher Paul became unresponsive after police placed him in handcuffs and restraints. (AP)

Northwest Washington man arrested in fatal 2017 shooting in Lanham, Md.


THURSDAY | 06.28.2018 | EXPRESS | 5

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Democratic challenger says he’s not daunted by incumbent’s ratings ELECTIONS Ben Jealous, a former NAACP president embraced by Sen. Bernie Sanders, decisively defeated Prince George’s County Executive Rushern Baker for the Maryland Democratic gubernatorial nomination Tuesday in a major victory for the party’s

progressive wing. In a victory speech at an African-American museum in Baltimore, Jealous, 45, lashed out at Republican Gov. Larry Hogan, who he called a “gimmick governor,” and said he is not daunted by the incumbent’s record-high approval ratings. “We will beat Larry Hogan the same way we won the primary,” Jealous said in an interview Wednesday morning. “Talking to everyone, in every corner of

this state, about kitchen-table issues.” Jealous received strong backing and outside money from wealthy liberals, unions and progressive groups.

Two Hyattsville, Md., teens charged in gang-related fatal stabbing of 19-year-old

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He offered voters bold proposals including state-based universal health care and debt-free college. OVETTA WIGGINS, ARELIS R. HERNANDEZ AND ROBERT MCCARTNEY (THE WASHINGTON POST)

The race between county council member and progressive Marc Elrich and wealthy Potomac businessman and political newcomer David Blair for Montgomery County executive was too close to call on Wednesday. With 98.9 percent of votes counted, Elrich had just a few hundred votes more than Blair. There are about 18,500 absentee and provisional ballots in total, WTOP reported. David Trone, the Potomac tycoon, won the Democratic primary for the House seat being vacated by Rep. John Delaney in Maryland. (TWP)

United Airlines flight diverts to Dulles for medical problem; passenger dies on board plane

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Angela Alsobrooks, Prince George’s County state’s attorney, won the Democratic nomination for county executive.

PATRICK SEMANSKY (AP)

Ben Jealous vows to beat Gov. Hogan

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local DC RIDER | KERY MURAKAMI

‘Just let it be’: Metro rider’s tweets were really for the birds Each day, a stream of complaints floods Metro’s Twitter feed. “Car 6096 on the Orange Line is very hot, no A/C #”; “2 out of 3 escalators broken at Bethesda station. How many people will have a cardiac event today?!?” Many of those who complain vent about what they see as Metro’s inaction. But one morning earlier this month, an artist named Sam Husseini was relieved to find Metro had done nothing about what must have seemed like yet another gripe. The previous afternoon, Husseini was waiting for a Red Line train at the Rhode Island Avenue-Brentwood station when he noticed a bird’s nest in the station’s roof. Husseini often finds beauty in nature, even in the mold growth and stains on the walls of Metro stations, which he once made the subject of a series of photographs. When he saw the nest, he saw a connection between human society and nature. At Rhode Island Avenue, nature was being allowed to coexist. So excited was Husseini that

he rode up and down the station’s escalators trying to get a good shot while waiting for the train. When he did, he posted the picture on Twitter and tagged #wmata, sending the photo to Metro amid the usual litany of complaints. “Hi Sam,” someone at Metro tweeted back. “Thanks for bringing this to our attention. We have shared your tweet with our Office of Plant Maintenance for inspection and action.” Alarmed and picturing Plant Maintenance headed to disturb the nest — perhaps eradicating it like a gorgeous example of mold — he tweeted back: “Ack. I wasn’t complaining about that at all. I actually think it’s beautiful. I’m sorry I tagged you. Just let it be.” The next day, when he returned to the station, he was relieved to see not just the one nest, but several others, too. “We as ‘modern humans’ need the functionality of trains,” Husseini wrote in an email. “But there’s no reason why they can’t coexist with nature more intelligently.” Got a Metro anecdote to share? Reach us at kery.murakami@ washpost.com or @theDCrider.

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“Why should the ride-hailing services support Metro? Is there a tax on taxis to support Metro?” JIMOF1913, a commenter at washingtonpost.com, on the D.C. Council’s vote

Tuesday to raise the tax on ride-hailing companies’ gross receipts from 1 percent to 6 percent to help generate $178.5 million in new Metro funding

Two men charged in death of acquaintance in District Heights, Md.


THURSDAY | 06.28.2018 | EXPRESS | 9

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nation+world

House immigration bill falls IMMIGRATION The Trump administration’s sweeping immigration crackdown faltered badly Wednesday after GOP leaders watched their own members deliver a crushing defeat to a border bill championed by the president, and a federal judge ordered the government to swiftly reunite migrant families. By a vote of 301 to 121, the House rejected a wide-ranging GOP immigration bill that would have funded President Trump’s border wall, offered young undocumented immigrants a path to citizenship and partially addressed the family-separation crisis at the southern border. The vote came hours after president tweeted — in all caps — that the House should pass the bill in order to “SHOW THAT WE WANT STRONG BORDERS AND SECURITY.” After weeks of negotiations between GOP conservatives and moderates, the vote made clear how split the party remains on the issue. The measure barely

ANDREW HARNIK (AP)

Defeat follows judge‘s order to reunite migrant families quickly

Members of the House of Representatives take questions from reporters at a news conference on Capitol Hill after the border bill’s defeat Wednesday.

won a majority of Republican lawmakers, and with no Democrats voting for it, the bill went down in lopsided defeat. Lawmakers will leave for a 10day Fourth of July recess, taking no action amid an uproar over the separation policy and images

of migrant children held behind chain-link detention pens. At the same time, administration officials scrambled Wednesday to craft a response to a federal judge in San Diego, who late Tuesday ordered the government to quickly reunite migrant children

with their parents. Judge Dana Sabraw granted a preliminary injunction sought by the American Civil Liberties Union, saying all migrant children separated from their parents must be returned to their families within 30 days, allowing just 14 days for the return of children under age 5. He also ordered that parents be allowed to speak with their children by phone their children within 10 days. Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen and other top Homeland Security officials have repeatedly insisted the country’s immigration impasse requires urgent legislative attention. But the country’s border security and immigration agencies now find themselves pressed by Trump’s June 20 executive order and the new court order to reunite the migrant families they have spent the past six weeks pulling apart. The administration had touted its “zero tolerance” initiative as the definitive end of “catch and release” practices at the border that generally allow parents who cross illegally with children to avoid being held in immigration detention while awaiting court hearings. DEVLIN BARRETT, ISAAC STANLEY-BECKER AND NICK MIROFF (THE WASHINGTON POST)

3 key takeaways from Tuesday’s primaries Seven states held primaries Tuesday — Colorado, Maryland, Mississippi, New York, Oklahoma, South Carolina and Utah. Here are three major takeaways from the races. (AP/THE WASHINGTON POST) An upset in New York City

Trump celebrates

Medical marijuana in Okla.

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, a 28-yearold member of the Democratic Socialists of America, unseated Rep. Joe Crowley, D-N.Y., one of the highest-ranking Democrats in the House, even though Crowley outraised her 10-to-1 in their Bronx and Queens district. Her extraordinary upset of a 20-year veteran of Congress will shake the Democratic Party establishment.

All three of President Trump’s endorsed candidates survived challenges. Those included New York Rep. Dan Donovan, who defeated convicted felon Michael Grimm, and ex-Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney in Utah. Gov. Henry McMaster, one of Trump’s earliest supporters, survived a tough challenge from a GOP newcomer, self-made millionaire John Warren.

Voters in Oklahoma approved legalizing medical marijuana, despite widespread opposition from state Republicans and faith leaders. That could make Oklahoma the 30th state where medical marijuana is legal, though the ballot question could get sliced and diced by Oklahoma’s Republican politicians if the governor calls a special legislative session to do that.

HHS inspector general launches review of conditions at shelters for migrant kids

WASHINGTONPOST.COM ENERGY AND ENVIRONMENT

Atlantic Ocean taking over icy Barents Sea Scientists studying one of the fastest-warming regions of the oceans say changes in this region are so sudden and vast that in effect, it will soon be a limb of the Atlantic Ocean, rather than a characteristically icy Arctic sea. The northern Barents Sea, north of Scandinavia, has warmed extremely rapidly — by 2.7 degrees Fahrenheit just since the year 2000. Sigrid Lind, a researcher at the Institute of Marine Research in Tromso, Norway, and her colleagues have shown, based on temperature and salinity measurements, that this warming is being accompanied by a stark change of character, as the Atlantic is in effect taking over the region and converting it into a very different entity. The results were published this week in Nature Climate Change. The northern Barents until recently had floating sea ice that, when it melted, helped to provide an icy, freshwater cap atop the ocean. This kept deeper heat from escaping to the atmosphere, and also kept the ocean “stratified” — cold, fresher waters near the surface and warmer, saltier Atlanticoriginating waters below. The change could lead to an expansion of the Barents Sea cod fishery — but that might come at the expense of an Arctic marine ecosystem that would probably have to retreat toward the North Pole. CHRIS MOONEY

Poland changes Holocaust speech law, scrapping threat of jail for attributing Nazi crimes to nation


THURSDAY | 06.28.2018 | EXPRESS | 11

june 2018

A MESSAGE FROM METRO GM/CEO

PAUL J. WIEDEFELD Each year, tourists and locals alike take Metro to join in the festivities around the National Capital Region as we celebrate July 4th, our nation’s holiday. If you’re planning to join the fun this year, Metro is the fastest, most convenient way to get to many of the July 4th celebrations, including: • • •

MAJOR SHUTDOWN COMING SOON

Independence Day Parade along Constitution Ave – begins at 11:45 a.m. National Archives celebration – showcasing a full day of family friendly activities National Mall fireworks – scheduled to start just after 9 p.m.

The Red Line will be shut down between NoMa-Gallaudet U and Fort Totten for 45 days from Saturday, July 21 through Monday, September 3, 2018.

With all scheduled track work suspended and free parking and off-peak fares in effect for the national holiday, Metro will help you celebrate without the hassle of traffic and road closures.

*

*

Stations Closed: Brookland-CUA and Rhode Island Ave * Takoma (July 28-29 only) * Fort Totten (Red Line, July 28-29 only) •

If you use or travel through one of the closed stations, please consider alternative travel options.

For alternate travel options, visit wmata.com.


12 | EXPRESS | 06.28.2018 | THURSDAY

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National, local and international news. Entertainment, movie and restaurant reviews. Celebrities, sports, business. Places to see and be seen. It’s all in EXPRESS. Get your free copy every weekday at any Metro station or from a news rack around town.


THURSDAY | 06.28.2018 | EXPRESS | 13

nation+world Supreme Court rules public unions can’t charge nonmembers COURTS Conservatives on the Supreme Court said Wednesday that it was unconstitutional to allow public employee unions to require collective bargaining fees from workers who choose not to join the union, a major blow for the U.S. labor movement. The court in a 5-to-4 decision overturned a 40-year-old precedent and said that compelling such fees was a violation of workers’ free speech rights. The rule could force the workers to give financial support to public policy positions they oppose, the

court said. “States and public-sector unions may no longer extract agency fees from nonconsenting employees,” Justice Samuel Alito wrote for the majority. “This procedure violates the First Amendment and cannot continue.” He was joined by Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Anthony Kennedy, Clarence Thomas and Neil Gorsuch. Justice Elena Kagan wrote for the dissenting liberals: “There is no sugarcoating today’s opinion. The majority overthrows a decision entrenched in this Nation’s law — and in its economic life — for over 40 years. As a result, it prevents the American people, acting through their state

JACQUELINE LARMA (AP)

Ruling deals a blow to labor

A woman dressed as Rosie the Riveter attends a pro-union event in Philadelphia on Wednesday.

and local officials, from making important choices about workplace governance.” She criticized the majority for “weaponizing”

SYRIA

3 hospitals near border bombed overnight Fighter jets bombed at least three medical facilities in southern Syria overnight, officials said Wednesday. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the hospitals were near the Jordanian border in the towns of Saida, Jeeza and Musayfra. The attacks were part of the Syrian government’s intensifying offensive to recapture one of the final pockets of opposition-held territory, forcing about 45,000 people to flee. (TWP)

the First Amendment. It was a devastating but not unexpected loss for public employee unions. It capped a yearslong effort by conservative legal activists to forbid states from authorizing the fees. The case concerns only publicsector unions, but union officials said that because those make up such a large percentage of the labor movement, the impact of the decision is great. The unions say losing fees from nonmembers would be a heavy blow because there is no incentive for workers to pay for collective-bargaining representation they could get for free. More than 20 states allow what the unions call “fair-share” fees.

POLITICS

Bolton, Kremlin finalize Trump-Putin meeting National security adviser John Bolton finalized a deal with the Kremlin on Wednesday for a summit between President Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin. The time and place will be announced today. The summit is expected to take place outside Russia while Trump visits Europe in mid-July. (TWP)

ROBERT BARNES (THE WASHINGTON POST)

Rain complicates cave search for Thai youth soccer team

VALLETTA, MALTA

Migrant ship docks in Malta with 234 aboard A humanitarian rescue ship blocked at sea for nearly a week arrived in Malta on Wednesday evening to disembark 234 migrants. Malta opened its port only after France, Italy, Luxembourg, Portugal, Ireland, the Netherlands and Belgium agreed to take in those eligible for refugee status. (AP)

FRONT-ROW NEST

Mama flips the bird to Bluesfest

MINNEAPOLIS LILLIAN SUWANRUMPHA (AFP/GETTY IMAGES)

Crews setting up next week’s RBC Bluesfest in Ottawa, Ontario, found that a mother killdeer had laid four eggs in a ground nest right where they were going to build a main stage. There was a guard on duty around the clock and yellow tape to protect the nest before officials got the go-ahead that they were able to move the nest. (THE WASHINGTON POST)

MAE SAI, THAILAND | Thai soldiers carry a hose into the Tham Luang Nang Non cave in Chiang Rai province to pump out water Wednesday during a rescue operation for a missing youth soccer team. The 12 children and their coach, who went missing Saturday, are believed to be trapped inside. Heavy rainfall has stymied rescue efforts by flooding underground passages faster than water can be pumped out, an official said Wednesday.

South Sudan’s warring leaders agree to permanent cease-fire to begin in 72 hours

Footage to be released of fatal police shooting Minneapolis police will release body camera footage of the fatal shooting of a black man “in the near future,” the city’s mayor said, after activists called for greater transparency. Thurman Blevins Jr., 31, was shot and killed Saturday by two officers. Investigators said the officers were responding to a report of a man firing a gun. It was unclear if Blevins was armed. (AP)

Global chemical weapons watchdog given authority to assign blame for chemical attacks


14 | EXPRESS | 06.28.2018 | THURSDAY

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EAST PITTSBURGH, PA. A white police officer was charged Wednesday with homicide in the shooting of an unarmed black teenager who was hit in the back while fleeing a traffic stop, a death that has fueled daily protests around Pittsburgh. Prosecutors cited officer Michael Rosfeld’s inconsistent statements about whether he saw a gun in the teen’s hand. The East Pittsburgh officer first told investigators that the teen turned his hand toward him when he ran from the car and the officer “saw something dark he perceived as a gun,” according to the criminal complaint. During a second recap, Rosfeld said he did not see a gun and he was not sure if the teen’s arm was pointed at him when he fired at 17-year-old Antwon Rose Jr. The 30-year-old officer had been sworn in hours before the June 19 shooting after working at the police department for a couple weeks. He turned himself in and was released on $250,000 bond. Criminal homicide is a broad category that includes manslaughter and murder. Pennsylvania prosecutors typically specify what subsection of homicide they will pursue later in the case. Allegheny County District Attorney Stephen Zappala said his

JOHN FETTERMAN FOR LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR VIA AP

Take Officer charged Control in death of teen of Your Commute Antwon Rose, 17, was shot three times after fleeing a traffic stop near Pittsburgh. He was unarmed.

office planned to ask a jury to consider the highest charge of firstdegree murder. “ You do not Rosfeld shoot someone in the back if they are not a threat to you,” Zappala said. The car Rose was in had been stopped on suspicion of involvement in a drive-by shooting. But investigators determined that Rose had done nothing “except be in the car,” Zappala said. Rose was shot three times — in the right side of his face, in his elbow and in the back by a bullet that stuck his lung and heart. ERRIN HAINES WHACK (AP)

SPACE

Probe meets asteroid Unmanned Japanese space probe Hayabusa2 arrived at an asteroid 170 million miles from Earth on Wednesday after a 3½-year journey. The probe’s mission is to blow a crater in the asteroid to collect samples to bring back to Earth. The material could provide clues to the origins of the solar system. (AP)

WINDOWS & DOORS

Ethel Kennedy, 90, to join hunger strike fighting family separation


THURSDAY | 06.28.2018 | EXPRESS | 15

nation+world

Kennedy’s retirement signals shift

Trump weighs his options President Trump said Wednesday he’ll choose Justice Anthony Kennedy’s replacement from “an excellent list” of 25 candidates. Here are some of the top candidates.

Departure of key swing vote hands Trump power to push Supreme Court to the right continued viability of affirmative action. On almost every major issue the court has faced in recent years, neither the court’s liberal, Democratic-appointed justices nor Kennedy’s fellow Republican-appointed conservative colleagues could prevail without his swing vote. Although Kennedy held the deciding vote on many issues, abortion is likely to be the key focus in what is expected to be a bruising nomination battle for whomever Trump chooses. While Senate Democrats lack the numbers to deny the seat to Trump’s picks, they will ratchet up the stakes of the choice. Trump has publicized a list of 25 state and federal judges from which he has said he will choose. Among the names sure to get a close look, according to those involved in the process, all are more conservative than Kennedy. Any replacement will move the court to the right and place Chief Justice John Roberts in the pivotal role on the nine-member court. Roberts, 63, also has shown himself to be well to the right of Kennedy. Kennedy has been a disappointment to the right, which has been unable to forgive his vote to uphold the basic underpinnings of Roe v. Wade, which guaranteed a woman’s right to choose an abortion. And Kennedy has written each of the court’s major gay rights decisions, including Obergefell

LAURIE KELLMAN (AP)

Thomas Hardiman, 52: He became a federal district judge at 37. He has sided with jails seeking to strip-search inmates arrested for even minor offenses and has supported gun rights.

GETTY IMAGES

COURTS Justice Anthony Kennedy announced Wednesday that he is retiring from the Supreme Court, a move that will give President Trump a chance to replace the court’s pivotal justice and significantly shift the institution to the right, setting up a bitter partisan showdown over Kennedy’s successor. “It has been the greatest honor and privilege to serve our nation in the federal judiciary for 43 years, 30 of those years on the Supreme Court,” Kennedy, whose last day will be July 31, said in a statement. Kennedy informed the president of his decision in a letter. “My dear Mr. President,” he wrote. “Please permit me by this letter to express my profound gratitude for having had the privilege to seek in each case how best to know, interpret and defend the Constitution and the laws that must always conform to its mandates and promises.” Trump said Wednesday that Kennedy has “been a great justice of the Supreme Court.” Kennedy, 81, joined the court in 1988 and has been its most important member for more than a decade. The Californian, who was chosen by President Reagan, cast the deciding votes on the court’s controversial Citizens United campaign finance decision, the constitutional right to same-sex marriage and the

Justice Anthony Kennedy, 81, announced his retirement Wednesday. Abortion is expected to be the key focus in the nomination of his successor.

GOP pushes quick vote President Trump said Wednesday the effort to replace Justice Anthony Kennedy will start “immediately,” and Senate Republicans said they plan to hold a confirmation vote before November’s midterms, when the party is at risk of losing its 51-to-49 majority. The push to move quickly angered Democrats who remain furious with Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., for refusing in 2016 to consider President Obama’s nominee, Merrick Garland, to replace Justice Antonin Scalia. At the time, McConnell said the issue should be left to voters in the 2016 election; Democrats said the same standard should apply now. (TWP)

v. Hodges, which said the Constitution requires that same-sex couples be allowed to marry. Liberals came to value Kennedy because he was the best they could hope for. But Kennedy most often votes with the court’s conservatives: He is further to the right on law-and-order issues than was Justice Antonin Scalia; he is comfortable with the court’s protective view of business; and he shared the losing view that the entire Affordable Care Act is unconstitutional. Whoever Trump nominates to fill Kennedy’s seat is likely to share those views but not his liberal opinions on social issues. ROBERT BARNES (THE WASHINGTON POST)

Sources say Trump to name ex-Fox News executive Bill Shine as White House press and communications director

Raymond Kethledge, 51: The federal appeals court judge from Summit, N.J., was counsel to Republican Sen. Spencer Abraham of Michigan until 1997 and clerked for Kennedy the following year. He was nominated to the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in 2006. Amy Coney Barrett, 46: The appellate court judge from New Orleans clerked for Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia in 1998 and served as a law professor at her alma mater, the Notre Dame Law School. Brett Kavanaugh, 53: The Yale-educated appellate court judge for the District of Columbia recently wrote a dissent when his colleagues allowed an immigrant teen in U.S. custody to have an abortion. He clerked for Kennedy. Amul Thapar, 49: The federal appeals court judge from Kentucky is close to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell. Thapar was the first judge nominated by Trump to a district or appeals court.

Death toll rises to more than 200 in central Nigerian clashes


16 | EXPRESS | 06.28.2018 | THURSDAY

Ap p Ju De lic a ly d ati 16 lin on ,2 e 01 8

nation+world

Benghazi figure was convicted of aiding attacks, not murder

DEVELOP YOUR ENGLISH SKILLS FOR A CAREER IN THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT Native speakers of critical languages are in high demand in the US government. EHLS trains advanced English speakers to be effective communicators and strong candidates for federal jobs. Full scholarships for US citizens who are native speakers of Arabic, Azerbaijani, Balochi, Bambara, Dari, Hausa, Hindi, Kazakh, Korean, Kurdish, Kyrgyz, Mandarin, Pashto, Farsi, Punjabi, Somali, Tajik, Tamashek, Turkish, Urdu or Uzbek.

English for Heritage Language Speakers at Georgetown University ehlsprogram.org r 202-687-4455

COURTS A Libyan militia leader convicted in the deadly 2012 Benghazi attacks that killed a U.S. ambassador and three other Americans was sentenced to 22 years in prison Wednesday by a federal judge in the District of Columbia. A jury in November acquitted Ahmed Abu Khattala, 47, of murder and attempted murder in the attacks that began Sept. 11, 2012, on a U.S. diplomatic mission and nearby CIA post. But he was convicted on charges including conspiracy and providing material support to terrorists, and it was the extent of Abu Khattala’s role as ringleader that U.S. District Judge Christopher Cooper considered in sentencing him. Prosecutors had sought a life sentence; the defense sought 15 years. University of Texas law professor Stephen Vladeck, who has written about the handling of terrorism suspects, said while “there will be some who think the sentence is not nearly long enough given the crimes for which Abu Khattala was convicted,” the bottom line of the government’s prosecution was the “finality of the proceeding

U.S. ATTORNEY’S OFFICE FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

Libyan receives 22-year sentence

Militia leader Ahmed Abu Khattala is shown after his 2014 capture by American forces in Libya.

— the decided contrast between the swift and stern justice imposed on Abu Khattala by a civilian federal court in D.C., with the never-ending quagmire that is the Guantanamo military commissions.” Federal prosecutors said Abu Khattala helped plan a terrorist strike abroad that resulted in the deaths of Ambassador J. Christopher Stevens and three others and that he deserved the maximum punishment. Also killed were State Department employee Sean Smith — who died with Stevens at a U.S. mission residence — and CIA contractors Tyrone Woods and Glen Doherty, who died in a mortar attack as the assault shifted to a CIA annex in Benghazi. SPENCER S. HSU (THE WASHINGTON POST)

DRIVING THE SAUDI ECONOMY

$90B

The amount that could be added to Saudi Arabia’s economic output by 2030 now that women in the kingdom have the right to drive, according to Bloomberg Economics. Economists said lifting the driving ban is likely to increase the number of Saudi women seeking jobs, boosting the workforce and pushing up overall incomes. (EXPRESS)

The EHLS Program is an initiative of NSEP.

Abortion rights bloc to fight high court’s pregnancy center ruling


THURSDAY | 06.28.2018 | EXPRESS | 17


sports 18 | EXPRESS | 06.28.2018 | THURSDAY

PGA TOUR

Tiger’s event likely is in its final year

NBA | ANALYSIS

The Wizards’ first move

In the Wizards’ first major move of the offseason, Washington traded 34-year-old center Marcin Gortat late Tuesday to the Los Angeles Clippers for combo guard Austin Rivers, 25. The deal — a few days before the start of free agency Sunday — swaps Gortat and the final season of his contract, worth about $13.6 million, for Rivers, who also has one year left on his contract and will make

AP AND GETTY IMAGES

about $12.7 million. Here is a look at why the Wizards made the trade. TIM BONTEMPS AND CANDACE BUCKNER (THE WASHINGTON POST)

Time for Gortat to go

Better roster balance

What Rivers can contribute

Who plays center now?

Earlier in his tenure in Washington, which began with the 2013-14 season, “the Polish Hammer” formed a potent core with guards John Wall and Bradley Beal. But Marcin Gortat’s role diminished as coach Scott Brooks favored smaller players; Gortat averaged 25.3 minutes last season, a drop from 31.2 the previous season. As the team shifted to playing more wings, Gortat scoffed at developing a 3-point shot and described small-ball basketball as “just trash.” Since the beginning of the 2016-17 season, when the Wizards signed center Ian Mahinmi to a four-year, $64 million deal, Gortat openly wondered how he fit into the team’s plans. When he seemed to criticize Wall, the face of the franchise, on Twitter, it became clear that a change in the locker room was necessary.

Moving Gortat for Rivers reflects the NBA’s glut of big men and the value of guards. With Jodie Meeks suspended by the NBA for the first 19 games of next season for violating terms of the anti-drug program, the Wizards had only three guards — John Wall, Bradley Beal and Tomas Satoransky — under contract. Now the Wizards have a rotation that for the moment looks like this: Wall and Beal as starting guards, with Satoransky and Rivers backing them up; Otto Porter Jr. and Markieff Morris as the starting forwards, with Kelly Oubre Jr. and rookie Troy Brown Jr. backing them up; and Ian Mahinmi and Jason Smith at center. Throw in Meeks when he returns, and that leaves four open roster spots that Washington can fill in free agency or via trades.

The son of Clippers coach Doc Rivers averaged 15.1 points and shot 37.8 percent on 3-pointers last season. Austin Rivers, who can quarterback the team or play off the ball, is 6-foot-4 and loves to shoot. He was generally a reserve in seven seasons in New Orleans and L.A., but thrived last season while starting 59 games for the injury-plagued Clippers. By finding possessions to play Rivers with Bradley Beal and John Wall, the Wizards’ offense could potentially stretch past its midrange preference. Rivers, however, will spend the majority of his minutes with the second unit. On another note: Trading Rivers confirms the loss of stature in the Clippers’ organization of Doc Rivers, who ran the team’s basketball operations from summer 2014 until last summer.

After an injury-hampered first season in Washington, Ian Mahinmi was healthy and played decently for the Wizards last season. But he isn’t likely to start. Journeyman Jason Smith won’t play and could be waived if Washington tries to save tax money. Markieff Morris will get some time at center but won’t start there, either. Washington, however, should be able to find a couple of bigs to round out its rotation for a fraction of what Gortat would have cost. Possibilities include these likely free agents: Dwight Howard, who is going to be bought out by the Nets; Nerlens Noel of Dallas; Maryland product Alex Len, who has played five seasons for Phoenix and still offers upside; and Georgetown product Greg Monroe.

Serena Williams seeded No. 25 for her return to Wimbledon after having a baby; tournament begins Monday

For the first time in three years, Tiger Woods is set to play in the tournament he’s hosted since 2007. That’s the positive spin to today’s start of the Quicken Loans National at TPC Potomac at Avenel Farm. Whether Woods will be back playing in the D.C. area anytime soon remains in considerable doubt given that the tournament Woods founded in large part to honor military men and women is without a title sponsor at the conclusion of this weekend. “The support’s been fantastic,” Woods said. “It’s just that we haven’t gotten the sponsorship dollars.” The PGA Tour has made a stop in the District suburbs every year since 1980, save for 2010 and ’11. GENE WANG (TWP)

Ex-Nats star Werth, 39, tells Fancred Sports he won’t try comeback


THURSDAY | 06.28.2018 | EXPRESS | 19

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sports

RICK SNIDER | SPORTS GURU

The brother of New York Giants cornerback Janoris Jenkins was arrested Wednesday and charged with aggravated manslaughter in the death of a 25-year-man whose body was found in the NFL player’s home in Fair Lawn, N.J. The Bergen County prosecutor’s office said 34-year-old William H. Jenkins was charged in the death of Roosevelt Rene, whose body was found Tuesday. William Jenkins was in custody in the Ontario County Jail in New York State. The prosecutor’s office didn’t say where Janoris Jenkins was when the death occurred. (AP)

Bryce Harper’s career has some parallels with Harmon Killebrew and Frank Howard, two sluggers who played in Washington decades ago.

He hit 237 homers in 1,077 games with the Senators with four All-Star appearances. There’s still a white seat in the far reaches of RFK Stadium’s upper deck that blocked Howard’s attempt to hit a ball into outer space. The Dodgers valued a third starter in getting Washington’s Claude Osteen for Howard, and the reliable pitcher helped Los Angeles win two World Series. But the Dodgers weren’t patient enough to get the

best out of their 6-foot-7 first baseman. Now the Nationals have to decide whether to invest further in Harper to see if he is the legendary player they expected when they drafted him first overall in 2010. Killebrew and Howard show it’s best to keep Harper at whatever price. Rick Snider has covered sports in Washington since 1978. Follow him on Twitter @Snide_Remarks

NEW KIND OF PRESSURE

Smoltz playing in U.S. Senior Open

On the pitcher’s mound, Hall of Famer John Smoltz never shied away from pressure. This week, he’ll face a new kind of stress. Smoltz, 51, qualified for a spot in the U.S. Senior Open, which starts today in Colorado Springs, Colo. Smoltz, a baseball analyst for the Fox networks, might wear an on-course microphone to enhance Fox’s coverage of the tournament. But his No. 1 goal is making the cut. “That would be unreal,” he said. (AP)

Tigers fire pitching coach Chris Bosio for using what ESPN reported was racially insensitive language

GETTY IMAGES

his early years, batting only .251 with 84 homers in 390 games versus Harper’s .279 with 169 home runs in 845 games. But after five sparse years, Killebrew played regularly in 1959 to lead the American League in home runs (42) while earning his first All-Star appearance. It was the breakthrough long awaited, and “Hammerin’ Harmon” would lead the AL in homers five more times and make another 10 All-Star Games after he and the franchise moved to Minnesota. The first baseman even won the MVP award in 1969 and finished with 573 home runs. Killebrew was named to the Hall of Fame in 1984. If the Senators hadn’t waited for the 17-year-old to mature, they would have missed on one of the greats. And that’s the Nats’ greatest fear in letting Harper walk to the New York Yankees or another marquee team; their thriftiness could haunt them for a decade or more. Howard certainly showed the impact of a big bopper. He was the biggest attraction in Washington from 1965 through ’71 after arriving in a seven-player trade with the Los Angeles Dodgers.

NFL

Body found at player’s home; brother charged

MITCHELL LAYTON (GETTY IMAGES)

It’s easy to dismiss re-signing the Nationals’ Bryce Harper to a $300 million-plus contract extension. He is batting 100 points less than last season’s .319, and despite his 19 home runs he is mired in a career-worst slump. Meanwhile, Juan Soto has succeeded Harper as a brilliant 19-year-old outfielder who costs pennies versus the latter’s dollars. The team is stacked with outfielders, so maybe the insane money needed to keep Harper beyond this season would be better spent elsewhere. Then again, Washington’s baseball history says don’t be hasty. Former Senators sluggers Harmon Killebrew and Frank Howard show why the Nats should keep Harper. Killebrew and Howard both played in seven seasons in Washington, as has Harper. Like Harper, Killebrew spent his first seven MLB seasons in the nation’s capital; Howard’s tenure came during his prime. And re-signing Harper is all about betting his prime will be as good as Killebrew’s and Howard’s. Killebrew mostly struggled in

AP

History lesson: Harper’s worth huge investment

SOCCER

UEFA bans AC Milan for a year over spending UEFA banned AC Milan from European competition for one year Wednesday for overspending on player transfers and wages in one of the toughest sentences handed down for violating financial fair play regulations. Milan will be excluded from next season’s Europa League unless an appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sport is successful. The breach allegedly occurred from 2014 to 2017. Meanwhile, the Ricketts family that owns the Chicago Cubs says it is negotiating to buy the debt-ridden club from a Chinese-led consortium. (AP)

Mystics improve to 9-5 with 92-80 victory Tuesday over Connecticut


22 | EXPRESS | 06.28.2018 | THURSDAY

world cup 2018

Defending champs ousted

Today’s games Colombia vs. Senegal 10 a.m., Fox

Japan and Senegal lead Group H with four points each. Colombia has three and could advance if it beats Senegal, and both could go through with a draw if Japan loses. Poland has been eliminated. Colombia will be without midfielder Abel Aguilar (left abductor injury) today in Samara. (AP)

Germany eliminated in the first round for first time since 1938

Japan vs. Poland 10 a.m., FS1

FRANK AUGSTEIN (AP)

SOUTH KOREA 2, GERMANY 0 Everyone was waiting Wednesday for Germany to score another late, World Cup-saving goal. But it never came. Instead, the Germans have become the fourth defending champions in the last five tournaments to be eliminated in the group stage after a 2-0 loss to South Korea in Kazan, Russia. The four-time champs allowed a pair of injury-time goals while knowing a 1-0 victory would have been enough to advance because of the result in the other Group F match. Germany finished last in the group, with South Korea third. Both were 1-2-0. “It’s very, very hard to put it into words,” said Germany defender Mats Hummels, a member of the team that won in Brazil four years ago. “We believed until the end today.” It was the first time Germany has been knocked out in the first round since 1938, although the team was not allowed to enter the 1950 tournament. “It’s a dark day for German

Germany’s Niklas Sule bends over in dejection as the South Korean players celebrate their victory Wednesday.

If Japan advances by earning at least the point it needs today in Volgograd, it will be only the second time that Japan has gone through the group stage undefeated, the other being when it co-hosted in 2002 with South Korea. Keisuke Honda is the first player for Japan to score in three World Cups. (AP)

England vs. Belgium 2 p.m., Fox

football,” Germany goalkeeper Manuel Neuer said. Even in Yekaterinburg, nearly 500 miles away, the Mexican fans expected Germany to score. Their team was still in position to advance despite trailing Sweden, but they were waiting — some with tears in their eyes — for Germany to do the inevitable and ruin their chances of moving on. That’s when South Korea

stepped up. Kim Young-gwon scored the first goal in the third minute of injury time. It sent the Koreans cheering in Kazan and the Mexicans delirious in Yekaterinburg. Originally called out for offside, the goal was awarded after video review. Son Heungmin made it 2-0 in the sixth minute of stoppage time after Neuer came upfield to help his teammates. Son tapped the ball into

an empty net after a long pass. Besides Germany this year, France in 2002, Italy in 2010 and Spain in 2014 were the previous defending champions to get eliminated in the group stage. “This is a huge disappointment,” Germany coach Joachim Loew said. “But we have young players who are talented and have the potential to go forward.”

Sadly for the fans, both Premier League-rich squads sides are ready to rest and rotate. Both have qualified for the last 16 — only the group winner needs to be decided — so this Group G finale in Kaliningrad could be a glorified scrimmage. (AP)

SAMUEL PETREQUIN (AP)

Panama is hoping for its firstever World Cup win. Tunisia is seeking its first Cup victory since 1978. The match in Saransk will decide third place; neither side can advance. (AP)

BRAZIL 2, SERBIA 0

SWITZERLAND 2, COSTA RICA 2

Coach glad to toast players after a less difficult victory

Swiss will be short-handed when they play Sweden

After a scoreless first half Wednesday in Yekaterinburg, Sweden pulled away for an easy victory and overtook Mexico for first place in Group F. Both teams advanced to the knockout round. Mexico will be in the round of 16 for the seventh straight World Cup, but its fans are desperate for its first quarterfinal appearance in 32 years — the elusive “quinto partido,” or fifth game. Mexico will face Brazil next, while Sweden will take on Switzerland. (AP)

Brazil’s Paulinho and Thiago Silva scored Wednesday in Moscow to give their side a 2-0 victory over Serbia and first place in Group E. Brazil struggled in its opening matches, first held to a 1-1 draw and then needing late goals to win the other. But Brazil controlled this one. “I’m still going to have a drink tonight for sure, a caipirinha,” said Tite, Brazil’s coach. Brazil will next face Mexico in the round of 16 on Monday in Samara. Serbia was eliminated. (AP)

Switzerland qualified second in Group E behind Brazil despite twice losing the lead Wednesday in a draw with Costa Rica in Nizhny Novgorod. The game culminated with an injurytime penalty kick by Costa Rica’s Bryan Ruiz that hit the crossbar and went in off the head of Swiss goalkeeper Yann Sommer. Yellow cards for Stephan Lichtsteiner and fellow defender Fabian Schaer — their second of the Cup — mean they’ll be suspended for the match against Sweden on Tuesday. (AP)

MARTIN MEISSNER (AP)

SWEDEN 3, MEXICO 0

Both teams in round of 16 after easy win by Sweden

Sweden’s Andreas Granqvist, left, and teammates celebrate his goal.

Sky Sports: D.C. United today will confirm long-expected acquisition of Everton’s Wayne Rooney

Panama vs. Tunisia 2 p.m., FS1

Maradona says he’s OK after getting disoriented in stands at Argentina match


06.28.18

weekendpass What a time

America has had few years as tumultuous as 1968. Take it all in with the striking images of ‘One Year,’ a new exhibit at the National Portrait Gallery. 30

NATIONAL PORTRAIT GALLERY AND THINKSTOCK/EXPRESS ILLUSTRATION

Writers in residence

A new book celebrates the great authors who called D.C. home 28

Prize wieners

Think hot dogs are beneath you? Chew on these elevated franks. 32

Wander woman

The Staycationer takes a slightly confusing White House tour 33


24 | EXPRESS | 06.28.2018 | THURSDAY

up front

Wave that flag for the Fourth A successful Fourth of July in D.C. hinges on what you’re looking for — especially if you don’t have a rooftop (or a friend’s rooftop) to view fireworks from. Here are four suggestions for how to spend Independence Day next Wednesday, depending on your mood. (THE WASHINGTON POST/EXPRESS) You want to be where the people are As usual, the Mall will be the focal point of D.C.’s July 4 celebrations. Military units, marching bands, floats and giant balloons parade down Constitution Avenue NW between 11:45 a.m. and 2 p.m.

Jimmy Buffett, The Temptations and The Beach Boys are among the artists joining the National Symphony Orchestra for a free concert at the Capitol’s West Lawn, beginning at 8 p.m. The main event — fireworks over the Washington Monument — begins at 9:09 p.m.

Trail of Tears: A Story of Cherokee Removal This powerful exhibition takes a deeper look at Indian removal from the Cherokee perspective, dispelling misconceptions about the Trail of Tears and providing a realistic look at the devastating cost of greed and oppression. ON VIEW NOW | Free Admission More information at AmericanIndian.si.edu

Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian On the National Mall | Washington, DC | #TrailOfTears

Trail of Tears: A Story of Cherokee Removal was produced by Cherokee Nation Businesses, LLC.

No matter how you spend the Fourth, the day will probably end with a bang.

You don’t want to deal with the crowds Starting at 9 a.m. Wednesday, the National Park Service will host a free Frederick Douglass bicentennial celebration at his Cedar Hill home in Anacostia (1411 W St. SE) with tours, live music, recitations of the

abolitionist’s famous speeches and views of the fireworks.

You want to hear some music Pearl Street Warehouse (33 Pearl St. SW) is hosting a free day-long concert that kicks off at noon and

CHIP SOMODEVILLA (GETTY IMAGES)

ass A quick p s t’ a h w at going on

runs through the evening. The Grandsons, a D.C. band that mixes several styles of American music, plays first, followed by soul and blues band Vintage#18 and jazz/ go-go fusion act the JoGo Project. (And if you want to see fireworks, you can walk outside for a viewing party on The Wharf.)

You’re really here for the beer For the sixth year in a row, Jack Rose Dining Saloon (2007 18th St. NW) is celebrating what it calls “AmeriCAN DrinkDependence Day.” The rooftop terrace, which will offer views of fireworks, opens early at 3 p.m. with $4 specials on Flying Dog cans and $5 drafts, including the D.C. debuts of the Neon Freedom Meyer Lemon Gose and the Brewhouse Rarities Lemon Lime Pilsner.


THURSDAY | 06.28.2018 | EXPRESS | 25

up front Just Announced!

Jay Rock

Alison Krauss

Fresh off a stint on Kendrick Lamar’s “The Championship” tour, California rapper Jay Rock will return to the road to support his just-released “Redemption” album, which features Lamar, SZA, J. Cole, Future and Jeremih. GET TICKETS: Friday at 10 a.m. through Live Nation.

The Anthem, Sept. 18, $56-$126.

Alison Krauss has always straddled genres, equally at home in country, rock, bluegrass and folk settings. Her last album, 2017’s “Windy City,” found the fiddle player covering songs by Willie Nelson, Glen Campbell and Bill Monroe. GET TICKETS: Friday at 10 a.m. through Ticketfly.

MARK FINKENSTAEDT (FOR THE WASHINGTON POST)

The Fillmore, Sept. 24, $20.

Guided by Voices

Fort Reno marks 50 years

Black Cat, Oct. 19, $32-$35.

Be’la Dona

Robert Pollard’s enduring indie rock band Guided by Voices has been through many lineup changes, but seems to have settled down in recent years. In March, the group released the 26th Guided by Voices album, “Space Gun.” GET TICKETS: Friday at 10 a.m. via Ticketfly. RUDI GREENBERG (EXPRESS)

U Street Music Hall, Aug. 19, $15.

As part of U Street Music Hall’s Go-Go Returns to U Street series, D.C.’s only all-female go-go band Be’la Dona will headline, with the District’s Beauty Pill opening. GET TICKETS: Thursday at 10 a.m. using Ticketfly.

free & easy

Since 1968, Fort Reno Park has hosted some of the city’s finest rock and punk bands, including Fugazi, Unrest and Priests. A successful Kickstarter to fund Fort Reno’s 50th anniversary season means the concerts will extend into August (4000 Chesapeake St. NW; Mondays and Thursdays through Aug. 2, 7-9:30 p.m., free). Monday’s opener features a trio of D.C. bands: the folksy Lotion Princess, Afro-punk act Time Is Fire and the ’60s-inspired Des Demonas. (THE WASHINGTON POST)

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26 | EXPRESS | 06.28.2018 | THURSDAY

weekendpass My D.C. dream day

NICOLE CROWDER

in Germantown, Md. — it’s so beautiful. It’s really lush, and they have this huge orchard that’s just nothing but raspberries. I am a farmer’s granddaughter to the core, so anytime I can walk around barefoot in the grass through orchards, I’m doing all of that.

Nicole Crowder UPHOLSTERER

Right now, Nicole Crowder’s dining room is probably filled with chairs, but good luck finding a place to sit. Crowder, 33, uses the space as her in-home studio, where she’s been reupholstering chairs, couches and more for five years — at first as a side gig, and now full time. She also teaches basic reupholstering classes around town — including at The Lemon Collective in Park View, A Creative DC’s Brookland studio and AR Workshop Alexandria — and she created a collection of furniture for West Elm last fall, but most of her business is creating custom pieces for clients. It oftentimes means Crowder’s tasked with turning beloved family items into something a little more 21st century-friendly. “I love trying to marry [a client’s] aesthetic with the history of the piece,” she says. On her dream day, Crowder is stepping out of her Van Ness apartment/studio and hitting the road.

Jeff Foxworthy July 12 at 8 p.m. | Concert Hall Jeff Foxworthy, one of the most respected and successful comedians in the country and largest selling comedy-recording artist in history, presents an act that goes beyond his celebrated redneck jokes to explore the humor in everyday family interactions and human nature.

TICKETS ON SALE NOW! KENNEDY-CENTER.ORG (202) 467-4600

Comedy at the Kennedy Center Presenting Sponsor

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.

readexpress.com

XX1070 2x.5A

Missed yesterday’s paper?

I’m such an early bird. I like getting up early and having a nice breakfast at Open City. It’s right down the street from me. They [used to have] this migas dish there that I love: It’s eggs and it has salsa and tortilla. I really like savory foods for breakfast.

I’m a big road-tripper. I love on the weekends, especially, getting out of the city for a bit. So I would take a few of my girlfriends and we would just road-trip out to Butler’s Orchard for a morning of picking peaches, tomatoes and berries. Butler’s Orchard is

I really love being by the water. So there’s this beach in Maryland called Chesapeake Beach. My friends and I would go there to spend a few hours and hang out. But we really love going there because there’s this place called Abner’s Crab House right down the street. And we always go set up at a nice table right on the water. We just roll out the paper, get our crabs laid out — sometimes we add shrimp — and we just post up there for a few hours with a little wine or beer and just enjoy the afternoon. It’ll be blue crabs, king crab, whatever they have. We get the works. I love picking up plants and trying to fill up my home and my balcony as much as I can. So driving back into the city, I stop at American Plant in Bethesda. It’s this beautiful nursery. They have anything you can think of — they have trees in there! It’s wild. So I’d pick up a couple of plants from that nursery. I love Mediterranean food, so my ideal restaurant in terms of the decor and the food is Masseria over on Fourth Street by Union Market. I love that place. I could post up there forever. It’s pricey, so I don’t go often. But that would be a dream place to end up for dinner. Then I’d have a glass of wine up on the rooftop [where] one of my girlfriends [lives] — she lives in Dupont Circle and has a really nice view of the city. That’s probably it: a lot of drinking wine, eating food and just enjoying being outdoors. (AS TOLD TO LORI McCUE/FOR EXPRESS)


THURSDAY | 06.28.2018 | EXPRESS | 27

4 of July SALE TH

CHLOE PROSECCO

JOSE CUERVO SILVER TEQUILA

$11.99

$31.99

750ML

DON JULIO TEQUILA SILVER

1.75L

$21.99

$24.99

1.75L

$19.99

YELLOW TAIL CABERNET, MERLOT OR CHARDONNAY 1.5L

1.75L

$24.99

NEW AMSTERDAM GIN

TULLAMORE DEW IRISH

$24.99

$19.99

$17.99

KETEL ONE VODKA

NEW AMSTERDAM VODKA

$41.99

$19.99

1.75L

$34.99

1.5L

$9.99

Red White and Blue Frozen Sangria

MEIOMI PINOT NOIR

GRAND MARNIER CORDON ROUGE

$16.99

$32.99

750ML

Ingredients

Red Layer

750ML

1.75L

1.75L

SUTTER HOME WHITE ZINFANDEL, MOSCATO OR SAUVIGNON BLANC

1.75L

CAPTAIN MORGAN BLACK SPICED RUM 94.6

ABSOLUT VODKA 80 PROOF

1.75L

This frozen sangria recipe is layered with red, white, and blue for a patriotic summer flair. Perfect for Fourth of July!

$30.99

750ML

1.75L

MALIBU RUM

$10.99

$20.99

$37.99

CAPTAIN MORGAN SPICED RUM

BACARDI RUM – LIGHT or GOLD

WILD TURKEY 81

750ML

ELIJAH CRAIG BOURBON 750ML

MAKER’S MARK 90P

750ML

1.75L

Subscribe to Our Weekly Newsletter! Text MONTGOMERYDLC to 468311

Instructions

Blue Layer

% 2 cups frozen raspberries % 3 cups ice % 3/4 cup chardonnay % 2 ounces’ gin, rum or % 1 tablespoon cane sugar vodka % 1/4 cup chardonnay White Layer % 1 tablespoon cane sugar % 2 1/2 cups ice % 1/4 teaspoon blue food % 1/2 cup chardonnay coloring

Red Layer

% It’s easiest to blend this layer first because it stays thick.

Add ingredients to the blender and blend until smooth. Pour into a large cup or jar and place into the freezer while you create the other layers.

White Layer

% Repeat the steps and set aside in the freezer. Blue Layer

% It’s best to save this layer for last because it’s going into the glasses first. % Add everything to the blender and blend until smooth.

Assemble Pour the blue layer into glasses, followed by the white layer, and finishing with the red layer. If you feel like being a perfectionist – which I don’t recommend – place a spoon on top of each layer as your pour in the next color. Personally, I think it looks pretty when the colors start to mix together. : ) Serve and enjoy!

%

%

Sale valid from 07/01/2018 - 07/31/2018. Subject to stock on hand. Some product not available at all locations. Not responsible for typographical errors.

18-0914-02


28 | EXPRESS | 06.28.2018 | THURSDAY

weekendpass

The real authors of D.C. Kim Roberts wrote the book on D.C.’s authors. She had to, because she felt the district hasn’t gotten its due as a literary city. “D.C. has never really had that identity, despite the fact that we’ve had so many important writers live here,” says Roberts, who lives in the Park View neighborhood. “When I moved here 30 years ago, I wanted to know who they were and where they lived. It gave me a deeper sense of ownership of place.” So she started offering walking tours that include stops like “Newspaper Row” on 14th Street, and eventually decided to turn her extensive knowledge into a cultural tour of a book, “A Literary Guide to Washington, DC,” released last month. Here are seven of the authors Roberts highlights in the book, which she’ll discuss Thursday at Busboys and Poets and Saturday at Politics and Prose. ANGELA HAUPT (FOR EXPRESS) Busboys and Poets, 2021 14th St. NW; Thu., 6:30 p.m., free. Politics and Prose, 5015 Connecticut Ave. NW; Sat., 3:30 p.m., free.

Paul Laurence Dunbar (1872-1906) Alice Dunbar-Nelson (1875-1935)

LIBRARY OF CONGRESS/SCHOMBURG CENTER

Arguably D.C.’s most acclaimed writer of the Civil War period, Whitman spent his decade in the city, beginning in December 1862, caring for wounded soldiers. “He felt like nothing he had experienced in his life was more important to him than his Civil War experiences,” says Roberts, who became a Whitman scholar after graduate school. “He had already published a couple versions of his big masterpiece, ‘Leaves of Grass,’ before he came to D.C., but he later tried to claim the book would not have been possible without his experiences here.” He was bending the truth, but that indicates how significantly D.C. shaped Whitman, Roberts says.

Dunbar was the first African-American poet to garner national acclaim; before he died at 33, he published 17 books. “He was a genius, there is absolutely no doubt, but [wife Dunbar-Nelson] is not [as well] known, and she is also a genius,” Roberts says. “Her poetry is outstanding.” The couple were active during the Harlem Renaissance, and Dunbar-Nelson was a “foremother to American modernism.” They lived in two houses in LeDroit Park, one of which still stands. “It’s not even marked by a historic plaque — there’s nothing there,” Roberts says. “And I wonder if the people who live in that house even have any idea.”

Georgia Douglas Johnson (1880-1966)

Grimke was an abolitionist who moved to D.C. after teaching freed slaves in South Carolina for two years after the Civil War. She’s best known for “Life on the Sea Islands,” an essay describing her teaching days that was published in the Atlantic Monthly in 1864, and “Personal Recollections of Whittier,” which appeared in New England Magazine in 1893. In addition to writing poems and essays, she kept a diary that was published posthumously in 1953. “Wow, I wish she was better known,” Roberts says. “She is one of the best published women of color of her era. … The press was segregated then, too, and she was publishing not only in AfricanAmerican journals but also in white journals.”

“Oh, my hero!” Roberts says of Johnson, whose home still stands at 1461 S St. NW, one of the most important sites associated with the Harlem Renaissance. “Every single Saturday night she opened up her home and created a safe place for younger writers to interact with some of the older writers. And to really allow people — because writers work so much in isolation — to find strength in that connection with others.” Douglas Johnson was also a talented poet and wrote a syndicated newspaper column called “Homely Philosophy.”

HOWARD UNIVERSITY ARCHIVES

Charlotte Forten Grimke (1837-1914)

Langston Hughes (1902-1967)

Zora Neale Hurston (1891-1960)

Hughes lived in D.C. only from 1924 to 1926, but it was a vital time in his development, Roberts says. He won his first poetry competition and gave his first public readings during that period, and “he continued to keep up with his D.C. contacts long after he left.” Hughes played a prominent role in the Harlem Renaissance, the period in the 1920s when innovative African-American writers and artists flourished. “It’s a really bad name for that movement, because it implies that it only happened in New York, when it happened in several cities simultaneously,” Roberts says. “You could argue with some authority that the movement started in D.C.”

Hurston was one of the younger writers to attend Douglas Johnson’s weekly salon — and she even moved in with her for a spell. Roberts points to an anecdote that illustrates Hurston’s driven nature: She routinely lied about her age, declaring herself 10 years younger, to take advantage of free public schooling in Baltimore. After enrolling in high school at 26, she attended Howard University, where she wrote for the campus literary journal, The Stylus. Hurston wrote four novels, two books about African-American folklore and an autobiography. “She got her first publications while she was living in D.C.,” Roberts say. “She was here at a really crucial time in her development as a writer.”

LIBRARY OF CONGRESS

JACK DELANO (LIBRARY OF CONGRESS)

HOWARD UNIVERSITY ARCHIVES

LIBRARY OF CONGRESS

Walt Whitman (1819-1892)


THURSDAY | 06.28.2018 | EXPRESS | 29

AT

Pack a picnic, bring your family and friends, and experience enchanting music under the stars. The National Symphony Orchestra is back at Wolf Trap—the Washington area’s favorite outdoor venue! FILM & LIVE MUSIC EVENT

FILM & LIVE MUSIC EVENT

TM & © Universal Studios.

FILM & LIVE MUSIC EVENT

Friday, July 6 at 8:30 p.m. Saturday, July 7 at 8:30 p.m.

HARRY POTTER AND THE PRISONER OF AZKABAN™ — IN CONCERT

Steven Reineke, conductor The Choral Arts Society of Washington

Saturday, July 14 at 8:15 p.m.

Saturday, July 21 at 8:30 p.m.

Sunday, July 22 at 8:30 p.m.

BEETHOVEN’S NINTH

JAWS IN CONCERT

CASINO ROYALE IN CONCERT

Bramwell Tovey, conductor The Washington Chorus Inon Barnatan, piano Yelena Dyachek, soprano Zoie Reams, mezzo-soprano Richard Trey Smagur, tenor Thomas Glass, baritone

Emil de Cou, conductor

Emil de Cou, conductor © 2018 Danjaq, MGM. and related James Bond trademarks, TM Danjaq. All Rights Reserved.

HARRY POTTER characters, names and related indicia are © & ™ Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. J.K. ROWLING`S WIZARDING WORLD™ J.K. Rowling and Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. Publishing Rights © JKR. (s18)

Friday, July 27 at 8:15 p.m.

Saturday, July 28 at 8:15 p.m.

Friday, August 3 at 8:15 p.m.

Saturday, August 4 at 8:15 p.m.

BERNSTEIN AT 100 A CELEBRATION

THE BEST OF WAGNER’S RING

VERDI’S RIGOLETTO

HANSON STRING THEORY

Michael Barrett, conductor Misty Copeland & Tony Yazbeck, ballet dancers Paquito D’Rivera, clarinet George Takei The Manhattan Transfer & Take 6 The Choral Arts Society of Washington and more

Patrick Summers, conductor Christine Goerke, soprano Simon O’Neill, tenor Alan Held, bass-baritone Eric Owens, bass-baritone

SUMMER

Wolf Trap Opera Grant Gershon, conductor

Emil de Cou, conductor

TICKETS ON SALE NOW! 1.877.WOLFTRAP WOLFTRAP.ORG/NSO

David M. Rubenstein is the Presenting Underwriter of the NSO.


THE IRVING PENN FOUNDATION /NATIONAL PORTRAIT GALLERY

weekendpass

San Francisco rock scene Photographer Irving Penn took this double portrait of Big Brother and The Holding Company (Janis Joplin’s early band) and the Grateful Dead for Look magazine. “He was contracted to find out what was going on in pop culture in San Francisco, which was the epicenter of popular culture, hippie culture, drug culture and rock ’n’ roll culture,” Barber says. “This photo shows the musicians at the very beginning of their careers.”

19 68 ONE OF AMERICA’S MOST TRYING YEARS GETS AN EXHIBIT AT THE NATIONAL PORTRAIT GALLERY Fifty years ago, the world was as tumultuous as it is today, says National Portrait Gallery historian

THE GROUP IMAGE/NATIONAL PORTRAIT GALLERY

30 | EXPRESS | 06.28.2018 | THURSDAY

Hippies A similar version of this collage was used on the cover of the July 7, 1967, issue of Time. (The National Portrait Gallery opted to show this version because the other one is too fragile to display.) For the magazine’s cover story, which surveyed the growing countercultural movement, some reporters donned hippie clothing to try to blend in. Others probably wish they had: According to a letter from the publisher included in that issue, one writer wore a suit and tie to a party in San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park and was suspected of being a narc.

James Barber. “You had the Vietnam War, the draft, the civil rights movement, marches, student sit“People were wondering, ‘What’s next? What’s going to happen this week?’ ” That’s why, for the first time, the gallery is devoting an exhibit to an iconic year as opposed to an iconic person. “One Year: 1968, An American Odyssey,” which opens Friday, showcases 30 images of that year’s newsmakers and events. As it turns out, 1968 was also the year the museum opened — on Oct. 7, just six months after riots left the surrounding neighborhood in shambles, Barber says. If you’re feeling like you’re on unstable ground

JULIAN WASSER/NATIONAL PORTRAIT GALLERY

ESTATE OF ROY LICHTENSTEIN/NATIONAL PORTRAIT GALLERY

ins, student protests, two assassinations,” he says.

‘The Gun in America’

today, this exhibit may help give you a little context.

Joan Didion

Time magazine commissioned pop art phenom Roy Lichtenstein to create this screen print for its June 21, 1968, cover story on U.S. gun policy. “The gun is pointed directly at the viewer, which really got people’s attention,” Barber says. The bright colors and cartoonish composition make the gun mesmerizing, and emphasize its almost mythic status in American culture.

“It was a very traumatic year for all Americans,

Julian Wasser took this photograph of novelist and essayist Joan Didion at her rented house in Hollywood for Time magazine. Didion was well known at the time for her 1968 book “Slouching Towards Bethlehem,” which chronicled her life on the fringes of ’60s counterculture and pioneered the genre of narrative nonfiction. “That book is still on the best-seller list today,” Barber says.

from the president on down,” says Barber, who was a teen at the time. “Somehow we got through it.” SADIE DINGFELDER (EXPRESS)

National Portrait Gallery, Eighth and F streets NW; Fri. through May 19, free.


THURSDAY | 06.28.2018 | EXPRESS | 31

STEPHEN SHAMES/NATIONAL PORTRAIT GALLERY

OLIVER F. ATKINS COLLECTION/GEORGE MASON UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES

weekendpass

Poor People’s Campaign

Eldridge Cleaver

At the time of his assassination in April, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. had been coordinating an anti-poverty protest called the Poor People’s Campaign. The event went on without him, and culminated in thousands of people camping on the National Mall for 43 days, starting on May 21, 1968, as seen in this photograph by Oliver F. Atkins. They never achieved their goal — an economic bill of rights that would guarantee full employment and a living wage for all Americans — but the protesters have been credited with raising awareness about economic inequality, Barber says.

One of the founders of the Black Panther Party, Eldridge Cleaver served as information minister for the controversial racial equality and justice organization. He was a master of searing rhetoric, and his 1968 book “Soul on Ice” became the group’s manifesto. Photographer Stephen Shames was known for offering a nuanced perspective on the party’s leaders at a moment when many media outlets portrayed them as dangerous thugs.

Time magazine assigned artist Louis S. Glanzman to create this portrait of Robert F. Kennedy just eight hours after the shooting of the presidential candidate in Los Angeles on June 5, 1968 (Kennedy died the following day). The illustrator toiled through the night to meet his deadline, and the picture he created ran as the magazine’s June 14 cover. According to a letter from the editor in that issue, Glanzman said the experience helped him work through his grief over the assassination. “Kennedy was this very vibrant candidate,” Barber says. “He was young, he was energetic, and his death came as a total shock.”

HECTOR GARRIDO/NATIONAL PORTRAIT GALLERY

LOUIS S. GLANZMAN/NATIONAL PORTRAIT GALLERY

Robert F. Kennedy

Apollo 8 Argentinian-born artist Hector Garrido created this illustration of the Apollo 8 astronauts — William A. Anders, Frank Borman and James A. Lovell Jr. — for the cover of Time magazine’s Jan. 3, 1969, issue. “Apollo 8 was the first space mission to leave Earth’s atmosphere, and it was totally successful,” Barber says of the late-December event. “It’s a good note to end on, for America, after this turbulent year.”


32 | EXPRESS | 06.28.2018 | THURSDAY

weekendpass

Five next-level hot dogs A standard at barbecues, a necessity at ball games, a staple of the picky child’s diet: Hot dogs are a usually pedestrian casual bite to eat. But remove the “casual” element and the simple wiener becomes something more. Something special. Something, dare we say, elegant. Five area restaurants create dogs that take the humble not-a-sandwich from blue jeans to tuxedo. TEXT AND PHOTOS BY KRISTEN PAGE-KIRBY (EXPRESS)

Perroloco Colombian Gourmet

The Partisan

Ivy and Coney

Haute Dogs

Swizzler

709 D St. NW

1537 Seventh St. NW

811 Russell Ave., Gaithersburg, Md.

Fancy doesn’t have to mean elaborate. Sometimes it just means a few things done incredibly well. The Partisan’s Haute Dog ($5), which stars a link provided by Red Apron Butcher that is made from pasture-raised Black Angus cows, comes with condiments anyone will recognize: housemade ketchup and spicy mustard, plus finely diced red onion. The meat’s blistered on a griddle so the skin gets a snappy little bite to it, a nice contrast to the toasted-yet-still-squishy bun. It’s the Chanel suit of hot dogs: simple, but so well done it’s perfectly elegant.

The Chicago-style hot dog is the often imitated, never duplicated wiener. Doing it correctly is a carefully calibrated balancing act that can easily go horribly wrong. Ivy and Coney’s Chicago Dog ($4) comes topped with just the right mix of nuclear-green relish, mustard, tomato, hot peppers, onion, celery salt and a pickle. And no, you may not ask to hold anything, you wimp. And no, you may not have ketchup — what is wrong with you? Ivy and Coney even imports the buns and relish from Chicago. This is such the real deal that you might travel to Chicago one day only to find the best example of one of the Windy City’s signature dishes is back home.

610 Montgomery St., Alexandria

Go to swizzlerfoods.com for weekly schedule

The Duck Duck dog ($5.50) at Haute Dogs (which also has an outpost at Nationals Park) starts with a good base: grass-fed, antibiotic- and hormone-free beef raised in Loudoun County (veggie and chicken dogs are also available). Served on a lobster roll-style bun that’s buttered just enough to feel sinful, the wiener gets topped with hoisin sauce, green onions and lightly pickled cucumber spears for a crunchy, Asian-inspired bite. The toppings are fresh, they deliver some crunch and there’s just enough of them to add flavor without ending up in your lap.

If you went to some fancy place that gave you multiple forks and refolded your napkin when you got up and went to the bathroom, words like “caramelized onions,” “brioche” and “black pepper honey” would fit right in. It’s when you’re standing at the Swizzler food truck shoving all of those — plus a whipped blend of goat and cream cheeses and candied jalapenos — into your mouth via the Feast Mode ($8.25) that you realize they work on a hot dog, too. The truck uses grass-fed beef (you can sub in a veggie dog or half-smoke), housemade toppings and locally baked buns to create dogs that would be at home at a white-tablecloth restaurant. But then you’d probably have to use a fork.

PLAN AHEAD. STAY INFORMED. COMMUTE BETTER.

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Perroloco Colombian serves a lot of traditional Colombian dishes, including arepas, mazorca and patacones. What doesn’t seem all that traditional, though, is their “traditional” dog ($5). It comes topped with a sauce that tastes like a sweeter Thousand Island dressing, bacon bits, crushed-up potato chips and, in a wonderfully random touch, a hard-boiled quail egg. And it all works. The chips not only add crunch, but they cut the sweetness of the sauce; the bacon adds a deeper, smokier flavor; and the quail egg is … well, it’s a hard-boiled egg, but cuter. This doesn’t look like a high-end dish, but it goes far beyond the normal definition of hot dog.


THURSDAY | 06.28.2018 | EXPRESS | 33

weekendpass

SADIE DINGFELDER | THE STAYCATIONER

According to the White House website, all you have to do to get a tour of the building is to request one through your congressional representative. Since I live in D.C., I don’t really have a representative — though I do have Eleanor Holmes Norton, a non-voting member of Congress. So I called up her office and requested a White House tour. “I live here, so I can go anytime,” I said. “I’m totally flexible.” That was two years ago. I called back. I emailed. I phoned some more. But no matter how hard I tried, I was not able to get on a White House tour. Giving up on going as a regular D.C. citizen, I decided to play my media card — I emailed the White House Historical Association from my Washington Post address and got my invitation the very next day. I arrived at 15th Street NW and Pennsylvania an hour early, with all my belongings stuffed into the pockets of my cargo shorts. (There’s a strict “no bags” rule for this tour.) Thus began a strange, 40-minute security odyssey that included a metal detector and getting sniffed by police dogs. Unlike the tightly packed queues of airport security, the White House security process

scatters people across a sprawling area. Alone for most of the time, I wandered down poorly marked paths, through tents and, at one point, into what appeared to be a cubiclefilled office. When I finally walked through an unremarkable door into what turned out to be the White House, I thought it was just another security pavilion. “Where am I?” I asked the security guard. “Am I supposed to be here?” Apparently used to these kinds of existential questions, the guard assured me that I had finally made it to the actual, real White House. I never really got over that initial sense of confusion. This is, in part, because the White House “tour” isn’t really a tour at all. After you clear security, you’re let loose to wander the bottom two floors of the East Wing at your own pace. I and my fellow tourists reacted to this unexpected freedom with bovine unease. We formed small herds and shuffled around slowly, hoping for someone, anyone, to show us around. As it turns out, you have to be your own guide at the White House. The officials stationed around the building are primarily there to keep you off the furniture. They’ll answer your questions, but if you’re feeling shy, I recommend downloading a new app called

BEN CLAASSEN III (FOR EXPRESS)

Wingin’ it: The day I was let loose in the White House

White House Experience. “OK, so before Roosevelt, this room was the White House’s laundry room,” I said, reading from the app for the benefit of the assembled herd. We peeked into a small library and one astute tourist noticed that the evenly spaced books and stiff chairs seemed more like a backdrop for televised interviews than an actual reading nook. In fact, this wing of the White House feels more like a Hollywood set than a place where people actually live and work. The most common question I overheard was whether the rooms on the tour are actually used for anything. “This is where state dinners take place,” answered one guard who was stationed in a handsomely decorated, but rather small, dining room. “Really?” I said. “I mean, I’ve lived in houses with bigger dining rooms.” “Believe it or not, 140 people can fit in here,” he replied. He added that Thomas

Pro tip: Let the White House Experience app be your guide. Jefferson once used the state dining room as an office, and it’s also where Lewis and Clark planned their expedition. “Wow, Thomas Jefferson,” a gray-haired woman said to her grandkid. “Can you imagine?” We stood there for a few more moments, picturing the explorers poring over maps and drafting up lists of supplies. There’s something undeniably magical about being in a place where so much history has transpired. I also enjoyed chatting up the guard in the very room where Dolley Madison held her famous salons. Eleanor Roosevelt later held informal press conferences for female reporters there, the guard said. “She would tell the women reporters the same

information the men were getting, but she would add a little color to it, so the women reporters’ stories were always better than the dry stuff the men were putting out,” the guard said. Toward the end of our visit, I asked my fellow tourists if they’d had as much trouble booking a White House tour as I had. Visitors from Colorado, Oklahoma, Florida and Texas all told me they had simply contacted their representatives and gotten their invitations without a hitch. A group from Chile told me they requested their invitation through their local embassy. Perhaps unsurprisingly, I didn’t run into anyone else from D.C. Though it takes some historical knowledge (or a handy app) to fully appreciate the White House walk-through, I totally recommend it. But if you’re a D.C. resident like me, you may need to move to a proper state — or get a job at The Washington Post — first.


34 | EXPRESS | 06.28.2018 | THURSDAY

weekendpass

SUMMER

indies s + a r t ie

SHOWS ON SALE NOW!

TONIGHT MOTOWN THE MUSICAL JUN 28

BRUCE HORNSBY & THE NOISEMAKERS THE WOOD BROTHERS JUN 29

HARRY POTTER AND THE PRISONER OF AZKABAN™ - IN CONCERT

NATIONAL SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA

BARENAKED LADIES

LAST SUMMER ON EARTH TOUR

BETTER THAN EZRA KT TUNSTALL

JUL 2

LUDOVICO EINAUDI

INDIGO GIRLS

JUL 8

JUL 10

ESSENTIAL EINAUDI

THE WAR & TREATY

ARIEL NAVA

JUL 6 + 7

“Blindspotting” is just one highlight of The Color of Conversation series.

The Color of Conversation Film Series

WHEELS OF SOUL 2018 TOUR

SCHOOL’S OUT FOR SUMMER 2018

DRIVE-BY TRUCKERS

WITH SPECIAL GUESTS STICK FIGURE AND PEPPER

TEDESCHI TRUCKS BAND THE MARCUS KING BAND

JUL 11

SLIGHTLY STOOPID

You might think Martha’s Vineyard is a summer frolicking ground for rich white people. And you’d be right. But it’s also home of the Martha’s Vineyard African-American Film Festival, which is dedicated to supporting filmmakers of color. Its producers have teamed with the AFI Silver for an extension of the festival. The series starts Thursday with “Mr. Soul!,” a documentary about the man behind a 1968-73 PBS variety show (called “Soul!”) that celebrated black artists; co-director Melissa Haizlip will attend for a Q&A. Word to the wise: Buy tickets early for the screenings of festival-circuit darlings “Blindspotting” and “Sorry to Bother You.” AFI Silver, 8633 Colesville Road, Silver

JUANES JUL 13

JUL 12

BEETHOVEN’S NINTH

NATIONAL SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA

QUEEN LATIFAH COMMON

HALSEY

JAWS IN CONCERT

JUL 14

JESSIE REYEZ

HOPELESS FOUNTAIN KINGDOM

JUL 15

STRAIGHT NO CHASER JUL 17

THE LIFE TOUR

BOY GEORGE & CULTURE CLUB THE B-52S THOMPSON TWINS’ TOM BAILEY

JUL 18

Spring; Thu.-Sun., $15-$20 per screening/panel, $125 for festival pass.

JUL 20

NATIONAL SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA

JUL 21

CASINO ROYALE IN CONCERT NATIONAL SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA

JUL 22

JASON ISBELL AND THE 400 UNIT

HISS GOLDEN MESSENGER

JUL 24

HARRY POTTER characters, names and related indicia are © &™ Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. J.K. ROWLING`S WIZARDING WORLD™ J.K. Rowling and Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. Publishing Rights © JKR. (s18) CASINO ROYALE LICENSED BY MGM. CASINO ROYALE © 2006 DANJAQ, UNITED ARTISTS. DANJAQ. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

AND RELATED JAMES BOND TRADEMARKS, TM

TM & © UNIVERSAL STUDIOS.

Ingmar Bergman Centennial You cannot be a pretentious film snob without being able to talk about Ingmar Bergman. And you REALLY can’t be one if you can’t talk about his early work. The National Gallery is screening a good chunk of the Swedish director’s masterful output from the 1940s and ’50s. The series, celebrating the 100th anniversary of Bergman’s birth in 1918, kicks off with “Wild Strawberries,” about a man thinking back on his long life, because what else are you going to do on a train? National Gallery of Art, East Building, Fourth Street and Constitution Avenue NW; Sun. through Sept. 3, various times, free.

‘A Midsummer Night’s Dream’ “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” is one of those Shakespeare plays you can never tire of because a guy gets a donkey head and then there’s a mini-play at the end where another guy plays a wall and it’s just really funny. Director Casey Wilder Mott’s film adaptation — having its D.C. premiere — moves the action to modern-day Hollywood, where there probably is a plastic surgeon who could make your head look like a donkey’s. The director and Holly Twyford, one of D.C.’s favorite local actors, will be on hand for a Q&A after the film. Folger Theatre, 201 E. Capitol St. SE; Thu., 7 p.m., $20. KRISTEN PAGE-KIRBY (EXPRESS)


top stops

THURSDAY | 06.28.2018 | EXPRESS | 35

The best t of the nex s y a d 7

Thu.

Sun.

STAGE

EXHIBITS

‘Vocal Colors’

‘Water, Wind and Waves’

The walls of the Phillips Collection serve as inspiration for “Vocal Colors,” a recurring concert that translates the museum’s artworks into song. For Thursday’s edition, performers from Wolf Trap Opera will present pieces from all sorts of genres, including classical, pop and avant-garde. A ticket to the show includes admission to the special exhibition “Marking the Infinite” and the permanent collection galleries. Phillips Collection,

If you can’t get to the ocean this summer, live vicariously through this exhibit illustrating Dutch painters’ fascination with the sea. It will showcase 50 paintings, prints, rare books and ship models from such artists as Rembrandt, Aelbert Cuyp and Jan van Goyen.

1600 21st St. NW; Thu., 6:30 p.m., $20.

Tue.

BARS

Town’s final weekend After more than a decade as D.C.’s largest gay dance club, Town Danceboutique is closing its doors to make way for new apartments. Friday is Final Friday, the goodbye for Town’s 18-and-over night, with a drag show followed by DJs Wess and BacK2bACk on two levels. On Saturday, the closing party brings another drag show and DJs Ed Bailey and Wess spinning until the wee hours. (Both drag shows are sold out; the club will allow others to enter around 11 p.m. each night.) Town Danceboutique, 2009 Eighth St. NW; Fri. & Sat., 11 p.m., $35.

Sat. PARTIES

Backyard Beach Party The Heurich House’s landscaped rear garden is turning into a summer playground this weekend, filled with sprinklers, kiddie pools, beach balls and funky lawn ornaments. Guests can cool down with beers from Aslin, one of Northern Virginia’s most buzzedabout breweries. Admission

MUSIC

Sam Smith

AP

Fri.

National Gallery of Art, West Building, Sixth Street and Constitution Avenue NW; Sun. through Nov. 25, free.

SATURDAY

Caps Fan Fest Kettler Capitals Iceplex, 627 N. Glebe Road, Arlington; Sat., 10 a.m.-2 p.m., free.

The Stanley Cup has been won, the victory parade is over, but Washington Capitals fans are still celebrating. The team’s annual Fan Fest once again includes an equipment sale, allowing fans to buy game-used gear. There’s an open scrimmage featuring the development camp squad, and a special public skate session ($5). But this year’s Fan Fest also features Alex Ovechkin’s shiny new BFF. The team is offering Stanley Cup photo ops from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. There are rules — one photo per person or group, no selfies — but it’s worth it to get your hands on the Cup.

includes one adult beverage; kids get in for $5. Heurich House Museum, 1307 New Hampshire Ave. NW; Sat., 4-7 p.m., $20. MUSIC

Brodinski When French DJ-producer Brodinski showed up on the EDM scene, he made four-onthe-floor electro-house hybrids. He co-founded trendsetting label Bromance, which caught the ear of Kanye West and led to production work on 2013’s “Yeezus.” Since then, Brodinski has become a fixture in the Atlanta rap underground, slowing down techno into trap and moving dance floors at a different tempo. Ten Tigers Parlour, 3813 Georgia Ave. NW; Sat., 10 p.m., $15-$20.

THURSDAY

Michael Che Warner Theatre, 513 13th St. NW; Thu., 8 p.m., sold out.

If you’re used to live-tweeting Michael Che’s jokes from the Weekend Update desk on “Saturday Night Live,” you’ll have to put the phone away for the comedian’s D.C. show. Che has followed Dave Chappelle’s lead and barred phones and smart watches (they’ll be locked up in pouches). Che, who last year became the first black co-head writer in “SNL’s” 43-season history, is known for his potent social commentary and biting criticisms of President Trump.

It’s been a few years since British singer Sam Smith and his androgynous tenor helped make Disclosure’s “Latch” a sleeper hit that led to him scoring smashes of his own. Last year, he returned with “The Thrill of It All,” a breakup album that found him mending a broken heart with syrupy ballads and mid-tempo jams. Capital One Arena, 601 F St. NW; Tue., 8 p.m., $40.25-$125.

Wed. EXHIBITS

‘Fun House’ The National Building Museum’s annual Summer Block Party series returns with an exhibit by New Yorkbased design studio Snarkitecture that revisits its old designs and installations. Included in these greatest hits is a kidney-shaped pool filled with plastic balls, alluding to “The Beach,” which Snarkitecture famously installed in the museum in 2015. National Building Museum, 401 F St. NW; Wed. through Sept. 3, $13-$16.

Written by Express and The Washington Post.


36 | EXPRESS | 06.28.2018 | THURSDAY

going out guide Selected listings from goingoutguide.com. Head online for venue information and more events and activities!

Sound

6 p.m.

Dew Drop Inn: The Scotch Bonnets, 8:30 p.m.

Gypsy Sally’s: Road to Lockn’: Disco

THURSDAY

Risque, Firecracker Jam, 49 Winchester, 7 p.m.

Bumper Car Pavilion, Glen Echo Park: Mystic Warriors, 7:30 p.m.

Lubber Run Amphitheater: Aztec

Gypsy Sally’s: The 19th Street Band,

Sun, 8 p.m.

Bud’s Collective, 7 p.m.

State Theatre: Tusk: The Ultimate Fleetwood Mac Tribute, 7 p.m.

Union Stage: Mike Love, Thunderstorm Artis, 8 p.m.

The Hamilton: Start Making Sense,

U.S. National Arboretum: Rochelle

6:30 p.m.

Rice, 7 p.m.

The Kennedy Center: Stephen Stills &

Walters Art Museum: Ajay Malghan

Judy Collins, 8 p.m.

and Kyle Jones, 7 p.m.

Union Stage: Nellie McKay, 8 p.m.;

FRIDAY

That Big ’80s Party, 10:30 p.m.

9:30 Club: Old 97’s, 8 p.m.

SUNDAY

City Winery: AJ Ghent, 8 p.m.

Black Cat: The Tins, 7:30 p.m.

Gypsy Sally’s: The Cactus Liquors, Big Black Car, Rafa’s One Man Band, 7 p.m.

Show, 6 p.m.

City Winery: Keith Busey’s 70’s Best

Lubber Run Amphitheater:

McLean Central Park: Black Masala,

Revelator Hill, 8 p.m.

5 p.m.

Music Center at Strathmore: Sarah

Union Stage: Music Makes Life Better

McLachlan, 8 p.m.

fundraiser featuring Pat McGee & Friends, 7:30 p.m.

National Gallery of Art, Sculpture Garden: Joshua Bayer Jazz, 5 p.m.

Wolf Trap, Filene Center: Reba McEntire, 8 p.m.

U Street Music Hall: Blac Rabbit,

MONDAY

Union Stage: Anthony Green, Good Old War, Found Wild, 8 p.m.

Wolf Trap, Filene Center: Barenaked WAR ON WOMEN

7 p.m.

Wolf Trap, Filene Center: Bruce Hornsby & The Noisemakers, The Wood Brothers, 7:30 p.m.

War on Women: There’s no mistaking what War on Women is all about, from the band’s name down. The Baltimore five-piece

SATURDAY Black Cat: The Split Seconds, 8 p.m. City Winery: Masters of the Telecaster,

makes hardcore punk with a thrash metal sheen, but what sets it apart from a crowd of moshers and headbangers is its explicitly feminist lyrics and message. Each War on Women song is a self-contained explosion of fury — about rape culture, reproductive rights, street harassment, the gender wage gap and beyond. On Friday, the band brings those messages to the Rock and Roll Hotel.

Ladies, 7 p.m.

TUESDAY Gypsy Sally’s: Gordon Sterling Presents: The Gypsy Sally’s Jam, 5:30 p.m.

The Hamilton: Rare Essence, 6:30 p.m. CONTINUED ON PAGE 39

ROSSLYN CINEMA+PUB IN THE PARK EVERY FRIDAY THIS SUMMER/ DUSK/GATEWAY PARK, 1300 LEE HWY

June 8 June 15 June 22 June 29

JUNE Legally Blonde Wonder

July 6 July 13 (brought to you by Deloitte) July 20 The Fifth Element July 27 Ratatouille

JULY Bridesmaids Coco Amélie La La Land

AUGUST August 3 Argo August 10 Lethal Weapon August 17 The Lion King August 24 Four Weddings and a Funeral

WINE, BEER + FOOD TRUCKS

/CINEMA

LALA LAND JULY 27

VOTED BEST COMMUNITY EVENT! SUN GAZETTE/INSIDENOVA.COM READERS’ POLL FOR THE SECOND YEAR IN A ROW.


THURSDAY | 06.28.2018 | EXPRESS | 37

PUBLIC PROGRAMS AT THE

NATIONAL ARCHIVES JULY 2018

July 3 @ 12pm

July 9 @ 12pm

[DISCUSSION] Rival Friends: John Adams and Thomas Jefferson Discuss and Debate the Founding of the United States

[BOOK TALK] The Promise and the Dream: The Untold Story of Martin Luther King, Jr. and Robert F. Kennedy

The personal friendship, patriotic collaboration, and political rivalry of Thomas Jefferson and John Adams spanned five decades. The two Founding Fathers (portrayed by Joseph Doyle and Steven Edenbo) will debate each other and take questions from the audience, on topics including the Declaration of Independence, the Presidency and more. This program is presented in collaboration with American Historical Theatre (www.AHTheatre.org)

No two public figures were more crucial in the drama of race relations in the 1960’s. Noted journalist David Margolick explores the untold story of the complex and ever-evolving relationship between these two American icons.

July 17 @ 12pm [BOOK TALK] President Carter: The White House Years Stuart Eizenstat, at Jimmy Carter’s side through his political rise to the White House, draws on notes and interviews to write a comprehensive history of an underappreciated President

July 4 @ 8am [FAMILY] July 4th at the National Archives Join a tradition like no other: the annual Independence Day celebration at the National Archives - home of the original Declaration of Independence, the U.S. Constitution, and the Bill of Rights. Boo the list of grievances against King George III and enjoy a day full of family-friendly activities.

July 9 @ 9am [CAMP] Genealogy Camp for Kids at the National Archives Ever wondered about your family’s roots and who is on your family tree? This hands-on week-long camp (9:00 AM – 12:00 noon, daily) will introduce the basics of genealogy research.

RESERVE YOUR SEAT & SEE FULL CALENDAR OF EVENTS AT ARCHIVESFOUNDATION.ORG/EVENTS


38 | EXPRESS | 06.28.2018 | THURSDAY

The Anthem 901 Wharf St. SW, Washington, D.C. Behind the 900 Block of Maine Avenue, SW, on the Waterfront JUST ANNOUNCED!

JUNE

JULY (cont.)

That 70s Party featuring

THIS FRIDAY!

Old 97’s w/ Brian Dunne ............F 29

Champion Sound (Live) and Vinyl DJs Gudo • John Eamon • Detroyt ......................................Sa 28

JULY

Reminisce Live! ........................F 6 Steve Hofstetter

D NIGHT ADDED!

FIRST NIGHT SOLD OUT! SECON

FLORENCE + THE MACHINE w/ Beth Ditto .. SAT OCTOBER 6

TASH SULTANA

George Clinton and Parliament Funkadelic .Th 2 Andrea Gibson w/ Mary Lambert

This is a seated show. 14+ to enter. .....Sa 7

with DJs Will Eastman and Ozker •

This is a seated show. ..........................F 3

Visuals by Kylos .........................F 13

White Ford Bronco:

The Circus Life Podcast 5th Anniversary Concert feat.

DC’s All 90s Band ....................Sa 4 FIRST SHOW SOLD OUT! EARLY

The Bumper Jacksons • Justin Trawick and The Common Good • Louisa Hall • more TBA! ........Sa 14

SHOW ADDED!

AEG PRESENTS

Bitch Sesh 3pm Doors. This is a seated show. .......Su 5

The Get Up Kids

No Scrubs: ‘90s Dance Party

w/ Racquet Club & Ageist ...........Su 15

with DJs Brian Billion and Ozker and Visuals by Kylos .................F 10

Deafheaven w/ Drab Majesty & Uniform ........Sa 21

AEG PRESENTS

Jeremih

D NIGHT ADDED!

FIRST NIGHT SOLD OUT! SECON

w/ Teyana Taylor & DaniLeigh ..Sa 11

Sleep (performing Holy Mountain)

Mura Masa ................................F 17

w/ Dylan Carlson .........................M 23

930.com

MANY MORE SHOWS ON SALE!

The best thing you could possibly put in your mouth Cupcakes by BUZZ... your neighborhood bakery in Alexandria, VA. | www.buzzonslaters.com

w/ Ocean Alley ....................NOVEMBER 21

On Sale Friday, June 29 at 10am

AUGUST

Hot In Herre: 2000s Dance Party

9:30 CUPCAKES

ALISON KRAUSS ............................................................... SEPTEMBER 18 PARAMORE w/ FOSTER THE PEOPLE ................................... JUNE 12 Sale Friday, March...................................... 16 at 10am ST. PAUL & THE BROKENOnBONES w/ Mattiel SEPTEMBER 30

Hatsune Miku Miguel w/ DVSN ........................ SEPT 4 Expo 2018 ............................ JUL 12 Mac DeMarco ..................... SEPT 5 Courtney Barnett Punch Brothers w/ Julien Baker & Vagabon .............. JUL 24 w/ Madison Cunningham .................. SEPT 6

Echo & The Bunnymen Aid Kit and Violent Femmes. JUL 25 First w/ Julia Jacklin ............................... SEPT 10 Sylvan Esso Future Islands ............... SEPT 28 w/ Moses Sumney ............................ JUL 26 ! ADDED Leon Bridges D NIGHT FIRST NIGHT SOLD OUT! SECON w/ Khruangbin ................................... OCT 3 Arctic Monkeys Troye Sivan w/ Mini Mansions ............................. JUL 29 w/ Kim Petras & Leland ..................... OCT 4 Father John Misty Nine Inch Nails w/ Bully ..............................................AUG 2 w/ The Jesus and Mary Chain NEEDTOBREATHE & Kite Base ................................. OCT 9 & 10 w/ JOHNNYSWIM & Billy Raffoul ......AUG 17 Ben Howard w/ Wye Oak .... OCT 11 Beach House Goo Goo Dolls - Dizzy Up the Girl w/ Papercuts ....................................AUG 25 20th Anniversary Tour ...................... OCT 13 New Order ............................AUG 28 NF .................................................. OCT 14 See the full schedule at: theanthemdc.com • IMPconcerts.com •

Lincoln Theatre • 1215 U Street, NW Washington, D.C.

Blackmore’s Night

FIRST NIGHT

w/ The Wizard’s Consort ................ JULY 25

D! SOLD OUT! SECOND NIGHT ADDE

Garbage w/ Rituals of Mine

Amos Lee w/ Caitlyn Smith ...... SEPT 18 Version 2.0 20th Anniversary Tour ... OCT 22 Welcome To Night Vale .. SEPT 26 THE BENTZEN BALL COMEDY FESTIVAL Blood Orange ........................ SEPT 28 CLOSING NIGHT Tig Notaro & Friends ........ OCT 28 Lykke Li......................................... OCT 5 MADISON HOUSE PRESENTS Gad Elmaleh............................. OCT 10 Kamasi Washington ...........NOV 10 Eric Hutchinson & The Believers The Dollop .................................NOV 16 w/ Jeremy Messersmith.................... OCT 12 Jim James (Solo Acoustic) The Milk Carton Kids w/ The Barr Brothers ....................... OCT 13 • thelincolndc.com •

w/ Alynda Segarra

from Hurray for the Riff Raff ...............NOV 17

U Street (Green/Yellow) stop across the street!

Merriweather Post Pavilion • Columbia, MD

Sugarland w/ Brandy Clark & Clare Bowen ............................................. JULY 14 Dispatch w/ Nahko and Medicine for the People & Raye Zaragoza ..... JULY 21 DC101 KERFUFFLE FEATURING

Fall Out Boy • Rise Against • Awolnation and more! ....................... JULY 22

David Byrne w/ Benjamin Clementine ..................................................... JULY 28 VANS WARPED TOUR PRESENTED BY JOURNEYS FEAT.

3OH!3 • August Burns Red • Less Than Jake and more! ....................... JULY 29

Lady Antebellum & Darius Rucker w/ Russell Dickerson ........................................................................................AUGUST 2 CDE PRESENTS SUMMER SPIRIT FESTIVAL FEATURING

Erykah Badu • Anderson .Paak & The Free Nationals • Nas • The Roots and more!..................................................................... AUGUST 4 & 5

Jason Mraz w/ Brett Dennen ................................................................AUGUST 10 AUG 11 SOLD OUT!

9:30 CLUB PRESENTS AT U STREET MUSIC HALL Blac Rabbit w/ Kahli Abdu & Strawberry Sleepover ...................F JUN 29 Katie Herzig w/ Liza Anne........... Sa JUL 14

Shannon And The Clams w/ Big Huge & Gauche.......................... Th 26

Lydia w/ Jared and The Mill & Cherry Pools ................................ Tu AUG 7

Vacationer w/ Sego .............................. F 17 Ra Ra Riot - The Rhumb Line 10th Anniversary Tour...................... Sa 18

• Buy advance tickets at the 9:30 Club box office • 930.com

Phish................................................................................................................AUGUST 12 CAKE & Ben Folds w/ Tall Heights .................................................AUGUST 18 Kenny Chesney w/ Old Dominion ......................................................AUGUST 22 Portugal. The Man w/ Lucius..................................................................SEPT 21 TRILLECTRO FEATURING

SZA • 2 Chainz • RL Grime • Carnage • Young Thug • Playboi Carti • The Internet and more!.................................................SEPT 22

The National w/ Cat Power & Phoebe Bridgers ...................................SEPT 28 WPOC SUNDAY IN THE COUNTRY FEATURING

Brett Eldredge • Dan + Shay • Dustin Lynch • Devin Dawson • Morgan Evans • Jimmie Allen • Jillian Jacqueline.........................SEPT 30 • For full lineups and more info, visit merriweathermusic.com • 930.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 on weekdays & until 11pm on show nights, 6-11pm on Sat, and 6-10:30pm on Sun on show nights.

impconcerts.com

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!

930.com


THURSDAY | 06.28.2018 | EXPRESS | 39

goingoutguide.com Sight

American University Museum at the Katzen Arts Center: “Figures:

1611 Benning Road: “Carne y Arena (Virtually Present, Physically Invisible)”: A virtual reality installation from director Alejandro G. Inarritu, cinematographer Emmanuel Lubezki, producer Mary Parent and ILMxLAB that explores the human condition of immigrants and refugees. Based on accounts from Central American and Mexican refugees, the installation allows individuals to live a fragment of a refugee’s experience through state-of-the-art technology, through Aug. 31. 1611 Benning Road NE.

Kiley Ames, Janice Nowinski, Kyle Staver, Jo Weiss”: An exhibition of works by four women artists of figures in space, through Aug. 12. 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW.

American Visionary Art Museum: “The Great Mystery Show”: An exhibition that explores mystery as the secret power behind art, science and the pursuit of the sacred, through Sept. 2. 800 Key Highway, Baltimore.

Anacostia Community Museum: “A Right to the City”: An exhibition that explores the history of the changing neighborhoods in Washington, of how

8th ANNUALc INDEPENDENCE DAY BBQ CELEBRATION Wednesday, July 4th 2pm - 10pm

DJ 2:30pm - 7:30pm

BOTTOMLESS BBQ $45 PER PERSON BBQ FROM THE GRILL

Includes Burgers, Hot Dogs, North Carolina Pulled Pork, BBQ Portobello Burgers, & more!b

UNLIMITED SALADS & SIDES

Includes Watermelon Salad, Southern Style Potato Salad, Farmhouse Mac & Cheese, Brisket BBQ Baked Beans, & more!

DESSERTS

IncludesbApple Pie, Peach Cobbler, & Southern Banana Pudding

BOTTOMLESS BBQ BEVERAGES Lincoln Mimosas & Patriotic Mules

FOOD ONLY $29 per person $21 Kids 12 & Under

2 HOUR LIMIT | RESERVATIONS RECOMMENDED TAX & GRATUITY NOT INCLUDED 1110 Vermont Ave NW | 202.386.9200b lincolnrestaurant-dc.com

ordinary citizens helped change their neighborhoods through bettering public education and the greening of communities, and of rallying for more equitable transit and development, through April 20. 1901 Fort Place SE.

Art Museum of the Americas: “Art of the Americas”: Modern and contemporary Latin American and Caribbean permanent collection highlights, through Aug. 26; 201 18th St. NW.

Baltimore Museum of Art: “Tomas Saraceno: Entangled Orbits”: A sitespecific installation suspended across the east lobby that combines clusters of iridescent-paneled spheres with a

sweeping “spiderweb” of black ropes, through July 8; “Phaan Howng: The Succession of Nature”: The Baltimorebased artist, in collaboration with Blue Water Baltimore, creates an immersive environment with intense, unnatural colors inspired by toxic waste. Through this partnership, Howng highlights local environmental issues and creates programs to raise awareness about Baltimore’s waterways, through Oct. 7; “Spencer Finch: Moon Dust”: A light installation of 150 individual chandeliers with 417 lights hung individually from the ceiling as an abstract sculpture that is also a three-dimensional scale model of the moon’s atomic makeup, with a scientifically precise representation of

the chemical composition of moon dust as it was gathered during the Apollo 17 mission, through Oct. 14; “Odyssey: Jack Whitten Sculpture, 1963-2016”: An exhibition of 40 sculptures carved from wood, marble, copper, bone and personal mementos, contextualized with African, Minoan and Cycladic sculptures, and also including a gallery dedicated to Whitten’s “Black Monoliths,” a series of paintings honoring African-American figures, through July 29. 10 Art Museum Drive, Baltimore.

Dumbarton Oaks Museum: “Transplanting the Renaissance: Italian Villa Gardens in America, 1900-1940”: An exhibition that uses objects from the CONTINUED ON PAGE 40


40 | EXPRESS | 06.28.2018 | THURSDAY

3701 Mount Vernon Ave. Alexandria, VA • 703-549-7500 For entire schedule go to Birchmere.com Find us on Facebook/Twitter! Tix @ Ticketmaster.com 800-745-3000

June 28

SERGIO MENDES 29&30 LYFE JENNINGS July Clarence 1 HAL KETCHUM Bucaro 5 OHIO PLAYERS The Asbury 6 SOUTHSIDE JOHNNY & Jukes 7 MAYSA 8 CHERYL WHEELER & JONATHAN EDWARDS 11 ANA TIJOUX Presents Roja y Negro POCO & ATLANTA RHYTHM SECTION 13 DONNELL RAWLINGS 14 MELANIE FIONA 15 MICHAEL HENDERSON Karen 17 SERENA RYDER Jonas Aberdeen 19 NITTY GRITTY DIRT BAND Green 20,21 &22 THE BACON BROTHERS Kentucky 25 SHELBY LYNNE Avenue

goingoutguide.com CONTINUED FROM PAGE 39

Dumbarton Oaks Ephemera Collection to examine the transplantation of Italian gardens in the United States and explores landscape design in relation to cultural identity. On display in the Orientation Gallery, through Sept. 2. 1703 32nd St. NW.

George Washington University Museum and the Textile Museum: “Binding the Clouds: The Art of Central Asian Ikat”: An exhibition focused on the complex dyeing technique from the region that is now Uzbekistan, known as

abrband (binding the clouds), through July 9. 701 21st St. NW.

George Washington University’s Corcoran School of the Arts and Design: “Lone Prairie: Video Installation by M12,” through Aug. 19. 500 17th St. NW.

Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden: “Mark Bradford”: A sitespecific installation of eight abstract paintings, each more than 45 feet long, encircles the museum’s entire third level. The African-American artist draws directly from artist Paul Philippoteaux’s

An Evening with

COWBOY JUNKIES 29 MOTHER'S FINEST 30 An Evening of Music & Storytelling with

THOMAS DOLBY

Aug 1

KINA GRANNIS Imaginary Future

phases of the artist’s six-decade career, including paintings, works on paper and wood and bronze sculptures, as well as the notable work “The Naked Man” from 1962, in which the artist used an image of a male figure to express the pervasive discontent with Germany’s socialist politics. Deemed controversial, the work was confiscated by authorities. To mark the artist’s 80th birthday, this exhibition opened at the Beyeler in Basel, Switzerland in January before traveling to the Hirshhorn, through Sept. 16. Seventh Street and Independence Avenue SW.

Kreeger Museum: “Reinstallation

DAVE WORLD-PREMIERE MUSICAL

12

26

19th-century cyclorama depicting the final charge of the Battle of Gettysburg, Pickett’s Charge, through Nov. 12; “The Message: New Media Works”: An exhibition of five contemporary film and video installations that use music, film and pop culture to show truths about life in the 21st century, through Sept. 20; “Tony Lewis: Anthology 2014-16”: An installation of 34 original collage-poems by the Chicago-based artist, created in black-and-white from deconstructed Calvin and Hobbes comic books, through Sept. 16; “Baselitz: Six Decades”: An exhibition of 100 works highlighting the

Marking the

ADAPTED FROM THE OSCAR-NOMINATED FILM

Infinite

Sean AMANDA SHIRES Rowe 3 BILL KIRCHEN & TOO MUCH FUN

2

featuring Johnny Castle & Jack O’Dell ‘The Return of The Classic TMF!’

4

JAKE SHIMABUKURO 9&10 TOAD THE WET SPROCKET 11 AARON NEVILLE 5

Third page’s the charm.

CONTEMPORARY WOMEN ARTISTS FROM ABORIGINAL AUSTRALIA THE PHILLIPS COLLECTION | JUNE 2–SEPTEMBER 9, 2018

This exhibition is presented by Generous support is provided by Andrea and Steve Strawn and by Additional support for the presentation at The Phillips Collection is provided by Dennis and Debra Scholl, Charles McKittrick, Jr., and the Paula Ballo Dailey Memorial Fund. In-kind support is provided by Marking the Infinite originated at the Nevada Museum of Art in Reno, Nevada, and was organized by William Fox, Director, Center for Art and Environment, and curated by Henry Skerritt, Curator, Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection of the University of Virginia. The works in the exhibition are drawn from the collection of Debra and Dennis Scholl.

page three

1600 21st Street, NW (Dupont Circle)

Local news that’s…well, slightly askew. XX1230_1x2.5

Only in

PhillipsCollection.org | SUMMER PROMOTION: VISITORS 30 AND UNDER RECEIVE FREE ADMISSION! Regina Pilawuk Wilson, Syaw (Fishnet), 2014, Synthetic polymer paint on canvas, 47 1/4 x 78 3/4 in. Collection of Debra and Dennis Scholl © Regina Pilawuk Wilson, courtesy Durrmu Arts, Peppimenarti. Photo: Sid Hoeltzell

DAVE

BY SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT WITH WARNER BROS. THEATRE VENTURES, THE DONNERS’ COMPANY AND LARGER THAN LIFE BOOK BY THOMAS MEEHAN AND NELL BENJAMIN | MUSIC BY TOM KITT | LYRICS BY NELL BENJAMIN CHOREOGRAPHED BY SAM PINKLETON | MUSIC DIRECTION BY ROB BERMAN BASED ON THE WARNER BROS. MOTION PICTURE “DAVE” WRITTEN BY GARY ROSS DIRECTED BY TINA LANDAU

BEGINS JULY 13

Photo of Drew Gehling and Mamie Parris by Tony Powell.

ORDER TODAY! 202-488-3300 | ARENASTAGE.ORG


THURSDAY | 06.28.2018 | EXPRESS | 41

goingoutguide.com CONCERT BAND

WEDNESDAY, JULY 4, 8 P.M. BANDSTAND SUMMER CONCERT SERIES 1 Rehoboth Ave. Rehoboth Beach, Del.

COMMODORES

WEDNESDAY, JULY 4, 7 P.M. 4TH OF JULY FIREWORKS CELEBRATION Baltimore City Inner Harbor Amphitheater 201 Pratt St. Baltimore, Md.

COUNTRY CURRENT

WEDNESDAY, JULY 4, 7:30 P.M. HERITAGE FESTIVAL John Lee Pratt Memorial Park 120 River Road Fredericksburg, Va.

RAFA CRUZ

All concerts are FREE and open to the public. Tickets or reservations are not required. For more information about additional concerts in your area, please check our online performance calendar.

teddy & the bully bar

Art Museum of the Americas: “Transformers: Recent Works of Dario Escobar (Guatemala) and Patrick Hamilton (Chile)” is an exhibition of eight sets of sculptural works, installations and wall-based pieces. It’s open through July 8. of the Permanent Collection”: Guest curated by modern art historian Harry Cooper, the reinstallation of the collection introduces works that have not been on view for several years. Phase I of the reinstallation comprises the museum’s main floor galleries and focuses on 19th- and early-20th-century painting and works on paper. Phase II of the reinstallation, opening in the lower galleries in 2018, will focus on the museum’s postwar and contemporary art holdings, including a bold vertical canvas by abstract expressionist Hans Hofmann, as well as the museum’s collection of West African masks, through Dec. 31; “Second Nature: Portuguese Contemporary Art From the EDP Foundation Collection”: An exhibition of 38 21st-century Portuguese works in various mediums including watercolor, photographs and video, through July 31. 2401 Foxhall Road NW.

Museum of the Bible: “Museum of the Bible”: Explore five floors of exhibits of ancient biblical manuscripts, including an array of texts on papyrus; Jewish texts, including the world’s largest private collection of Torah scrolls; medieval manuscripts; and Americana such as Bibles belonging to celebrities, through Jan. 1. 400 Fourth St. SW.

National Air and Space Museum: “Artist Soldiers”: An exhibition that examines the work of professional artists who were recruited by the U.S. Army and were considered the first true combat artists, along with the artwork of soldiers, including Jeff Gusky’s photos of stone carvings made in underground shelters, that provide a unique perspective on World War I, through Nov. 11. Sixth Street and Independence Avenue SW.

National Building Museum: “Making Room: Housing for a Changing America”: An exhibition of developers’, architects’ and interior designers’ answers to the changing housing needs due to shifts in demographics and lifestyle. At the center of the exhibition is a full-scale, flexible dwelling that illustrates how a small space can be adapted to meet many needs. It comprises two living spaces that could be used independently or combined to form a larger residence,

through Sept. 16; “Community Policing in the Nation’s Capital: The Pilot District Project, 1968-1972”: A collaboration between the National Building Museum and the Historical Society of Washington, D.C., this exhibition is part of a citywide commemoration of the 50th anniversary of Martin Luther King Jr.’s assassination. It explores the Pilot District Project (PDP), a local experiment in community policing, through a collection of PDP posters, maps and other materials, through Dec. 31; “Evicted”: Created with the help of eviction researcher and author Matthew Desmond, this exhibition is an immersive experience that introduces visitors to the experience of eviction, a process of losing everything — furniture, food, heat — and starting over. It includes information on the rise and reason for evictions, and the programs available to families, children and teens to combat it, through May 19; “Secret Cities: The Architecture and Planning of the Manhattan Project”: An exhibition that examines the innovative design and construction of cities created for the Manhattan Project — Oak Ridge, Hanford and Los Alamos — examining daily life within, and showing that social stratification and segregation were still evident. It also looks at each city’s development since the Manhattan Project, and their continuing importance as centers of research and technology, CONTINUED ON PAGE 42

Bottomless BBQ $45 per person

All Express. All the time.

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Library of Congress: “Echoes of the Great War: American Experiences of World War I”: An exhibition that commemorates the centennial of World War I through depictions of the U.S. involvement in and experience of it, via correspondence, music, film, recordings, diaries, posters, photographs, scrapbooks, medals, maps and materials from the Veterans History Project, through Jan. 5; “Drawn to Purpose”: An exhibition of art in the form of illustration and cartooning created by North

American women and spanning the late 1800s to the present, through Oct. 20. 101 Independence Ave. SE.


42 | EXPRESS | 06.28.2018 | THURSDAY

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 41

through March 3. 401 F St. NW.

National Gallery of Art: “Heavenly Earth: Images of Saint Francis at La Verna”: An exhibition of the gallery’s holdings of Franciscan imagery spanning the 15th through 18th centuries that showcases the “Descrizione del Sacro Monte della Vernia” (1612), a bound volume that depicts the monastery and rocky terrain of La Verna, the site where Saint Francis is believed to have received the stigmata. The draftsman Jacopo Ligozzi, who illustrated the volume, designed overslips on five of the 22 engraved illustrations to demonstrate the changes to the topography since Saint Francis’ time, through July 8; “Cezanne Portraits”: An exhibition of about 60 portraits by Cezanne accompanied by an illustrated catalog with essays by the exhibition’s curators. This is the first full visual account of the artist’s portraits, exploring the thematic characteristics of his works, and the development of

his style and methods, through July 1; “Sharing Images: Renaissance Prints Into Maiolica and Bronze”: An exhibition of about 90 objects that highlight the impact of Renaissance prints on maiolica and bronze plaquettes. Focusing on designs by artists including Andrea Mantegna, Antonio del Pollaiuolo, Raphael, Michelangelo, Parmigianino and Albrecht Durer, the exhibition demonstrates how printed images were transmitted, transformed and translated onto ceramics and small bronze reliefs, through Aug. 5; “Water, Wind and Waves: Marine Paintings From the Dutch Golden Age”: An exhibition of 45 paintings, drawings, prints, rare books and ship models that celebrates the relationship the Dutch had with water, featuring works by Jan van Goyen, Jacob van Ruisdael, Aelbert Cuyp and Willem van de Velde the Younger, through Nov. 25. Sixth Street and Constitution Avenue NW.

National Geographic Museum: “Tomb of Christ: The Church of the Holy

Sepulchre Experience “: An immersive 3-D experience of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre. Built in the fourth century by the Emperor Constantine, the church sits on the site where many scholars believe the crucifixion of Christ took place. The Tomb of Christ, or the holy edicule, has just undergone an historic restoration. Learn how Nat Geo explorers are using new technologies including Lidar, sonar, laser scanning and thermal imaging to study this site, through Dec. 31; “Titanic: The Untold Story”: An exhibition about the evolution of deep-sea exploration that links the 1985 discovery of the Titanic with a top-secret Cold War mission, through Dec. 31. 17th and M streets NW.

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 CONTINUED ON PAGE 46

G N I M O UPC

S T N E EV

KIDSPY OVERNIGHT

NATIONAL GALLERY OF ART

goingoutguide.com

National Gallery of Art, East Building: “Jackson Pollock’s ‘Mural’ ” features a special installation of one of his murals on loan from the University of Iowa Museum of Art at its center. Originally commissioned by Peggy Guggenheim for her New York City townhouse, it is Pollock’s largest work, at nearly 20 feet long. See it through Oct. 28.

EMBRACE YOUR INNER SPY

GET TICKETS AT SPYMUSEUM.ORG/CALENDAR 800 F ST NW, WASHINGTON, DC 20004

THE MAGIC OF SPYING

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Calling all recruits - pack your sleeping bag and PJs for a night at the Spy Museum you won’t forget! Transform yourself through disguise, make & break secret codes, interrogate real spies, and hunt for a mole within your ranks!

In the real world of espionage, spies often call upon the art of magic and illusion to distract the enemy, make evidence disappear, and escape unnoticed. Join professional magician, Peter Wood, as he demonstrates the art of misdirection, sleight of hand, and other illusions used by skilled spies.

Join Dan Fesperman, award-winning author of Safe Houses, for a discussion with Karen Cleveland, former CIA analyst and bestselling author of the thriller Need to Know and Francine Mathews, also a former CIA analyst, about how he brought to life an era when women were trying to break free of the clerical roles they had been relegated to and enter into field work at the CIA.

Join bestselling author Brad Thor as he introduces the latest in his Scot Harvath series. Thor will share how he develops thrilling scenarios and draws on current events to keep his readers coming back for more.

OPERATION SECRET SLEEPOVER TH

TRADECRAFT TRICKERY TH

Operation Secret Slumber is designed for kids, ages: 9-13 (one adult required for every 2 KidSpy agents). Snacks and breakfast included.

Ages: 5+ (one adult required for every five KidSpy agents).

WITH DAN FESPERMAN

WITH BRAD THOR


THURSDAY | 06.28.2018 | EXPRESS | 43

UPCOMING PERFORMANCES

FRI, JULY 13

THE DEVON ALLMAN PROJECT

START MAKING

SENSE

A TRIBUTE TO TALKING HEADS

W/ SWIFT TECHNIQUE SATURDAY JUNE 30

W/ SPECIAL GUEST DUANE BETTS

SAT, JULY 14

CARBON LEAF

W/ SCOTT MULVAHILL

SUN, JULY 15

KING YELLOWMAN AND THE SAGITTARIUS BAND TUES, JULY 17

SLATE PRESENTS:

THE WAVES LIVE

RARE ESSENCE WITH EU

FEATURING SUGAR BEAR TUESDAY JULY 3

THURS, JULY 19

CHUCK PROPHET & THE MISSION EXPRESS

W/ JEREMY & THE HARLEQUINS FRI, JULY 20

ALL GOOD PRESENTS

NICKI BLUHM

W/ PETER OREN TRIO

AN EVENING WITH

SOUL

CRACKERS JULY 7

SATURDAY

SAT, JULY 21

CHATHAM COUNTY LINE WED, JULY 25

TAB BENOIT

W/ SCOTTY BRATCHER SAT, JULY 28

AN EVENING WITH

CHOPTEETH AFROFUNK BIG BAND

PETER

HIMMELMAN

WEDNESDAY

JULY 11

OPENS JUNE 29 An in-depth look at the year that changed the nation.

WED, AUG 1

AN EVENING WITH

DEAD ON LIVE THURS, AUG 2

AN EVENING WITH

LIVE DEAD & RIDERS 69

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Tommie Smith and John Carlos Ğ!"1 &)ğ 6 + 2+&!"+1&9"! /1&01Ņ ŕŝŚŜń 1&,+ ) ,/1/ &1 ))"/6Ņ *&1%0,+& + +01&121&,+ʼn .2&/"! 1%/,2$% 1%" $"+"/,0&16 ,# 3&! ń /!


44 | EXPRESS | 06.28.2018 | THURSDAY

THEATRE Damned If You Do

July 11 - 29

The Upright Citizens Brigade Theatre—the world’s most audacious improv troupe—returns to Woolly!

Dancing in My Cockroach Killers

Thru July 1 Thurs-Sat at 8 pm Sun at 2 pm

A celebratory Puerto Rican musical with poetry of protest. “a knock-out of a show� –MD Theatre Guide

Mamma Mia!

June 15 – September 16

A mother. A daughter. Three possible dads and a trip down the aisle you’ll never forget. Audiences around the world have fallen in love with Mamma Mia!

The Edge of the Universe Players 2 present

The Vandal by Hamish Linklater dir. by Aly B. Ettman

Woolly Mammoth Theatre Co. 641 D Street NW 202-393-3939, woollymammoth.net GALA Theatre 3333 14th Street, NW 202-234-7174 Galatheatre.org Toby’s Dinner Theatre of Columbia 410.730.8311 Tobysdinnertheatre.com

One unpredictable night from bus stop to cemetery Sat., July 7 at 2 and more—see UniversePlayers2.org

This production is presented as a part of the 2018 Capital Fringe Festival, a program of the Washington, DC non-profit Capital Fringe.

$20-$35

Coming Soon

$30-$45

In Spanish and English

Call for tickets and info.

$17 with $7 Fringe button

Caos on F Street 923 F St., NW Washington, DC

866811-4111 Universe Players2.org

PERFORMANCES

Marine Band

Marine Band 220th Anniversary Concert

U.S. Capitol, West Terrace Washington, D.C.

Thursday, June 28 at 8 p.m.

The Marine Band will perform John Philip Sousa’s march “The Liberty Bell;� Kimberly Archer’s Humoresque; Louis Cahuzac’s Variations sur un air du pays d’oc; Julie Giroux’s One Life Beautiful; Frederick Loewe & Alan Jay Lerner’s Lerner & Loewe Songbook; & John Williams’ Suite from Star Wars.

Tuesday, July 10 at 7:30 p.m.

Guest conductor and composer Bramwell Tovey joins the Marine Band for a special gala concert with works by iconic American and British composers including Leonard Bernstein, Aaron Copland, Sir Edward Elgar, William Walton, and featuring George Gershwin’s Rhapsody in Blue.

The Music Center at Strathmore 5301 Tuckerman Lane North Bethesda, MD 301-581-5100 Live streaming at: www.marineband.marines.mil

Call 202-433-4011 after 6 p.m. for weather related cancellations. www.marineband.marines.mil

FREE, no tickets required

Metro : Union Station, Capitol South, or Federal Center SW Free parking available.

FREE, tickets required

For tickets visit strathmore. org

MUSIC - CHORAL Classical Movements’ 8th Annual

Serenade! Choral Festival Mandela at 100

14 Free Concerts! Tues, June 25 – Mon, July 1 Alexandria, Baltimore, Castleton, Chevy Chase, DC

Co-presented with Kennedy Center, celebrate Nelson Mandela’s centennial with 12 choirs from Australia, Canada, India, Indonesia, Madagascar, Netherlands, Tuva Republic, USA and Venezuela: 14 free concerts, 10 world premieres in DC, Maryland, Virginia!

ClassicalMovements.com/ Serenade Free 703-683-6040 Free tickets, online & phone

STRAVINSKY’S PETRUSHKA RETURNS

MULTIMEDIA EXPERIENCE WITH LIFE-SIZE PUPPETS, VIDEO & MORE!

SAT, JUNE 30 • 8PM

“Pure harmonic convergence� - Washington Post

noi.umd.edu tickets only $29!

3GD &THCD SN SGD +HUDKX QSR @OOD@QR r 2TMC@X HM QSR 2SXKD CD@CKHMD 3TDR MNNM r ,NMC@X HM 2SXKD CD@CKHMD %QHC@X MNNM r 3TDRC@X HM 2SXKD CD@CKHMD ,NM MNNM r 6DCMDRC@X HM 2SXKD CD@CKHMD 3TDR MNNM r 3GTQRC@X HM 2SXKD CD@CKHMD 6DC MNNM r 3GTQRC@X HM $WOQDRR CD@CKHMD 6DC MNNM r %QHC@X HM 6DDJDMC CD@CKHMD 3TDR MNNM r 2@STQC@X HM 2SXKD CD@CKHMD %QHC@X MNNM %NQ HMENQL@SHNM @ANTS @CUDQSHRHMF B@KK 1@XLNMC !NXDQ NQ -HBNKD &HCCDMR 3N QD@BG @ QDOQDRDMS@SHUD B@KK | FTHCDSN@QSR V@RGONRS BNL

it’s not live art without a live audience.

Adve vertis ve i e in Th The e Gu uid ide e to the th he Li L ve velly Ar Arts ts!! ts 202--3343344-70 7 06 0 | gu guid id idet detoa oa art rts@ s@ @wa ash shpo hpo pos st.com st.c om m

16-2898


THURSDAY | 06.28.2018 | EXPRESS | 45

MUSIC - CONCERTS H H H The U.S. Army Band “Pershing’s Own” H H H

1812 Overture Concert With live cannons!

Summer Concert Series

U.S. Navy Band Commodores jazz ensemble

Save the date! Saturday, August 18 8:00 p.m.

This Washington, DC, annual tradition/Army Band blow out is set! Bring the whole family and a picnic for a late-summer evening under the stars! Our friends at the Presidential Salute Battery (cannons) will ensure the evening is a blast! Rain or shine!

Fri, June 29, 7:30 p.m.

Join the Airmen of Note as a part of the USAF Band's Summer Concert Series! Musical selections for this concert themed "Airmen of Note on Tour" will include many big band jazz classics

Sunday, Jul. 1, 6 p.m.

In 2018, the Navy’s premier jazz ensemble celebrates 49 years serving the Navy and the nation. From John Coltrane to Artie Shaw, come experience the past, present, and future of America’s quintessential art form: jazz.

Bleacher seats available at 6PM

Summerall Field Conmy Hall (rain) Fort Myer in Arlington, VA usarmyband.com facebook.com/usarmyband youtube.com/usarmyband

Free! No tickets required

Air Force Memorial 1 Air Force Memorial Drive Arlington, VA

Free and open to the public. No tickets.

Weather cancellation info: www.usaf band.af.mil 703-8295483

Free, no tickets required

202-433-3366 www.navyband.navy.mil

Sign up for Concert Alerts on our website or text “navyband” to 22828!

Ronald Reagan Building 1300 Pennsylvania Ave, NW Tix available at 202.397.SEAT ticketmaster.com

$36

Discounts available for groups of 10+. 202-312-1427

South Valley Park Amphitheatre 18850 Montgomery Village Ave Montomgery Village, Md.

Photo ID 18+; no alcohol or glass

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

Friday June 29 through Sunday July 1

Getting to Know.. The Sounds of Music: Fri. 6/29 at 7:30 pm & Sat.6/30 at 2:30pm CiB Live Band: Front Lawn: Sat., 6/30 at 5:30 pm Cosi fan tutte by Mozart: Sat. 6/30 at 7:30 pm & Sun. 7/1 at 3:30 pm

FESTIVALS Bethesda Summer Music Festival

A young man. A police station. A legendary star. And a bloodbath. Now this is where things get weird.

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$20 suggested donation

Bethesda Presbyterian Church 7611 Clarendon Road, Bethesda, MD 20814 aamsopera.com

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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

Advertise in The Guid de to the Livelly Arts! 202-33 34-7 7006 | guide etoarts@wash hpost.ccom

General seating

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16-2898


46 | EXPRESS | 06.28.2018 | THURSDAY

goingoutguide.com

NATIONAL MUSEUM OF AFRICAN ART

To Dye For

National Museum of African Art: “Healing Arts” is an ongoing 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. CONTINUED FROM PAGE 42

African-American music and other cultural expressions, visual arts, theater, sports and military history, through Jan. 1; “Everyday Beauty”: An exhibition of 100 images spanning 100 years representing African-American history and culture and highlighting the beauty of everyday occasions, through Feb. 4. 14th Street and Constitution Avenue NW.

National Museum of African Art: “Visionary Viewpoints on Africa’s

Ikats from Central Asia Closes July 29

Arts”: An ongoing exhibition of some 300 works of art from over 30 artists that offers a broad spectrum of visual expression, through Nov. 4; “World on the Horizon: Swahili Arts Across the Indian Ocean”: An exhibition of works from different regions and time periods demonstrate an artistic movement across the Swahili coast, an area of global cultural convergence for over one millennium, through Jan. 1. 950 Independence Ave. SW.

National Museum of American History: “City of Hope: Resurrection

freersackler.si.edu @freersackler #todyefor

City & the 1968 Poor People’s Campaign”: An ongoing exhibition that marks the 50th anniversary of the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. with neverbefore-seen photographs and original artifacts from Resurrection City, the small community set up in Washington, D.C., for the nation’s poor, through Dec. 28. 14th Street and Constitution Avenue NW.

National Museum of Women in the Arts: “Heavy Metal — Women to Watch 2018”: The fifth installment of the museum’s “Women to Watch” exhibition

series showcases contemporary artists working in metal. Works include sculpture, jewelry and conceptual applications of the material, through Sept. 16. 1250 New York Ave. NW.

National Museum of the American 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 April 1; “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 Sept. 1; “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 June 1; “Americans”: An exhibition of 350 objects and images that explores the prevalence of American Indian names and images throughout American culture, from the Tomahawk missile to baking powder cans, to the stories of Thanksgiving, Pocahontas, the Trail of Tears and the Battle of Little Bighorn, through Sept. 30; “Trail of Tears: A Story of Cherokee Removal”: An exhibition of that looks at Indian removal from the Cherokee perspective and attempts to dispel misconceptions about the Trail of CONTINUED ON PAGE 49


THURSDAY | 06.28.2018 | EXPRESS | 47

“SENSATIONAL.” –The Washington Post

“+++++” –Theatre Bloom

“STUNNING.”

“EXCEPTIONAL.”

–DC Theatre Scene

–BroadwayWorld

FINAL WEEKS! Must close July 8 Lerner & Loewe’s

Camelot

Book and Lyrics by Alan Jay Lerner Music by Frederick Loewe Directed by Alan Paul Original production directed and staged by Moss Hart Based on The Once and Future King by T. H. White

ORDER TODAY! ShakespeareTheatre.org | 202.547.1122 Musicals at the Shakespeare Theatre Company are made possible by the Beech Street Foundation.

Restaurant Partner:


48 | EXPRESS | 06.28.2018 | THURSDAY

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THURSDAY | 06.28.2018 | EXPRESS | 49

goingoutguide.com CONTINUED FROM PAGE 46

Tears, through Jan. 1. Fourth Street and Independence Avenue SW.

NATIONAL PORTRAIT GALLERY

National Portrait Gallery: “Portraits

National Portrait Gallery: “The Sweat of Their Face: Portraying American Workers” features approximately 75 representational works of American laborers across genres and centuries, and includes such artists as Winslow Homer, Dorothea Lange, Elizabeth Catlett and Lewis Hine. It’s open through Nov. 3.

Soldiers: Letters From World War I”: An exhibition of personal correspondence written on the front lines and homefront that shows the history of America’s involvement in World War I, through Nov. 29; “Beautiful Blooms: Flowering Plants on Stamps”: An exhibition that highlights the variety of flowering plants commemorated on U.S. postage stamps during the past 50 years. It includes some 30 pieces of artwork used to produce at least 28 flora stamps, through July 14. 2 Massachusetts Ave. NE.

of the World: Switzerland”: An exhibition that features the work “Femme en Extase,” a portrait of the Italian dancer Giulia Leonardi by the Swiss painter Ferdinand Hodler. The work embodies the Swiss modernist approach of emotional expression through bodily movement — a theory known as eurhythmics — which transformed dance in America, through Nov. 12; “UnSeen: Our Past in a New Light, Ken GonzalesDay and Titus Kaphar”: An exhibition of works by Gonzales-Day and Kaphar, contemporary artists who address the under- and misrepresentation of minorities in American history and portraiture, through Jan. 6; “Black Out: Silhouettes Then and Now”: An exhibition that studies the silhouette, a form of portraiture popular in the 19th century, featuring the gallery’s extensive collection including works by Auguste Edouart, who captured the likenesses of John Quincy Adams and Lydia Maria Child, through March 10. Eighth and F streets NW.

Independence”: This ongoing exhibition is of the first newspaper printing of the Declaration of Independence as it appeared in the Pennsylvania Evening Post, July 6, 1776, through Dec. 31; “Pulitzer Prizes at 100: Editorial Cartoons”: To mark the 100th anniversary of the Pulitzers, this ongoing 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; “1968: Civil Rights at 50”: An exhibition of historic images and print news items that explore the events that shaped the civil rights movement when leader the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated,

National Postal Museum: “My Fellow

CONTINUED ON PAGE 50

Newseum: “1776 Breaking News:

1811 14TH St NW www.blackcatdc.com @blackcatdc JUNE/JULY SHOWS FRI 29

DARK & STORMY

SAT 30

THE SPLIT SECONDS

SUN 1

THE TINS W/ TWIN JUDE

MON 2

ANTONIA W/ PEARL CRUSH

THU 5

MOCK IDENTITY

FRI 6

LIP SYNC BATTLE BURLESQUE

SAT 7

WINZDAY LOVE

TUE 10

OS MUTANTES

WED 11

THE BODY W/ BIG|BRAVE

THU 12

BOAYT (RECORD RELEASE!)

FRI 13

LET ME BREAK YOU UP (2 SHOWS!)

SAT 14

DJ NIGHT

(RECORD RELEASE!)

(RECORD RELEASE!)

WUSSY W/ PARANOID STYLE

SUN 15 WILD MOCCASINS AND FITNESS TUE 17

LITTLE JUNIOR

WED 18 PEARL CHARLES W/ FASCINATOR THU 19 KID CLAWS W/ DENTIST FRI 20

TWO INCH ASTRONAUT (FAREWELL SHOW)

SAT 21 RIGHT ROUND: 80'S ALT DANCE PARTY

June 29 - 30

MEET MATA AMRITANANDAMAYI, RENOWNED HUMANITARIAN AND SPIRITUAL LEADER

Tammy Pescatelli

from Last Comic, Netflix and more. $17-$19.

June 28 July 5-8 July 6 (lounge) July 7 (lounge) July 12-15 July 13-14 (lounge) July 20-22 July 20-21 (lounge) July 26-29

dcimprov.com

Metro: Farragut North / West

WASHINGTON, DC

ROMANE & LETTUCE

MON 23

D.O.A. W/ THE TURBO AC'S

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July 1 10:00am, morning 7:30pm, evening July 2 Morning, 10:00am

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A celebration devoted to world peace

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Dylan Meyer Showcase DeRay Davis Ryan Conner ComedySportz improv Christian Finnegan Erin Jackson Luenell Brian McDaniel John Witherspoon

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Visit www.ammadc.org, or call 240.532.2662 for more information.

MAY ALL BEINGS EVERYWHERE BE HAPPY

MON JULY 23

D.O.A. W/ THE TURBO AC'S WE ARE 3 BLOCKS FROM THE U STREET / CARDOZO METRO STATION TICKETS: www.TICKETFLY.com


50 | EXPRESS | 06.28.2018 | THURSDAY

goingoutguide.com CONTINUED FROM PAGE 49

through Jan. 2; “The Marines and Tet: The Battle That Changed the Vietnam War�: An exhibition of 20 largeformat photographs by John Olson, a photographer with Stars and Stripes who spent three days with the Marines at the 1968 Battle of Hue of the Vietnam War. Hue was one of more than 100 cities and villages that North Vietnamese forces struck with a surprise attack on

the holiday known as Tet, through July 8; “Pictures of the Year: 75 Years of the World’s Best Photography�: An exhibit of a selection of more than 100 awardwinning news images from the archives of the photojournalism competition Pictures of the Year International (POYi), through Jan. 20. 555 Pennsylvania Ave. NW.

Renwick Gallery: “No Spectators: The Art of Burning Man�: An exhibition

Local movie times DISTRICT

AMC Loews Georgetown 14 3111 K Street N.W.

www.amctheatres.com/

Solo: A Star Wars Story (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 1:10-4:25 Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 1:30-4:30-7:30-10:40 The Incredibles 2 (PG) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 12:30-1:15-2:00-4:15-5:00-6:30-7:20-8:009:30-10:20 Ocean’s 8 (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 1:25-4:20-7:15-10:00 Deadpool 2 (R) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 1:50-4:50-7:45-10:45 Sicario: Day of the Soldado (R) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 7:00-9:00-10:00 Tag (R) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 1:40-4:20-6:30-10:00 RBG (PG) AMC Independent;Recliners;RS: 12:15 Uncle Drew (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 7:00-9:35 Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom 3D (PG-13) CC;DV;RealD 3D;Recliners;RS: 2:105:15-8:15 Hereditary (R) AMC Independent;CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 12:20-3:35-11:00 Adrift (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 2:45 Supery (R) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 1:20-4:10-7:35-10:20 The Incredibles 2 in Disney Digital 3D (PG) CC;DV;RealD 3D;Recliners;RS: 3:30 Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom The IMAX 2D Experience (PG-13) RS: 12:00-3:006:00-9:00 Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom (PG-13) Dolby Cinema at AMC Prime;Recliners;RS: 1:00-4:00-7:00-10:10

AMC Loews Uptown 1 3426 Connecticut Avenue N.W.

www.amctheatres.com/

Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom (PG-13) CC;DV: 12:50-7:00 Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom 3D (PG-13) CC;DV;RealD 3D: 3:50

AMC Mazza Gallerie 5300 Wisconsin Ave. NW

www.amctheatres.com/

Solo: A Star Wars Story (PG-13) CC;DV: 12:50-4:00 Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom (PG-13) CC;DV: 12:05-3:50-5:50-7:50 The Incredibles 2 (PG) CC;DV: 12:05-1:00-4:00-5:45-7:00-8:30 Ocean’s 8 (PG-13) CC;DV: 12:00-2:35-5:15-8:40 Sicario: Day of the Soldado (R) CC;DV: 7:00 Tag (R) CC;DV: 3:25-5:50-8:20 Uncle Drew (PG-13) CC;DV: 7:00 Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom 3D (PG-13) CC;DV;RealD 3D: 3:00 Supery (R) CC;DV: 1:10 The Incredibles 2 in Disney Digital 3D (PG) CC;DV;RealD 3D: 3:00

Avalon Theatre

5612 Connecticut Avenue

www.theavalon.org

The Catcher Was A Spy (R) 1BVM 3VEE t +FGG %BOJFMT t 4JFOOB .JMMFS Hearts Beat Loud (PG-13) /JDL 0GGFSNBO t ,JFSTFZ $MFNPOT Heading Home: The Tale of Team Israel One Day Only! Director Q & A: 7:30

Landmark Atlantic Plumbing Cinema 807 V Street, NW

www.landmarktheatres.com/

Solo: A Star Wars Story (PG-13) CC;DVS;HA;HoH: 1:00-3:45-6:45-9:40 Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom (PG-13) CC;DVS;HA;HoH: 11:50-2:25-4:35-5:007:40-10:15 Ocean’s 8 (PG-13) CC;DVS;HA;HoH: 11:15-1:40-4:10-7:00-9:30 The Incredibles 2 (PG) CC;DVS;HA;HoH;No Passes: 11:30-11:45-2:05-2:20-4:50-7:20-10:00 Sicario: Day of the Soldado (R) CC;DVS;HA;HoH: 7:10-9:50 Hereditary (R) CC;HA;HoH: 11:20-1:50-4:40-7:30-10:10

Landmark E Street Cinema 555 11th Street NW

www.landmarktheaters.com/

Westwood: Punk, Icon, Activist HA;HoH: 2:10-4:40-7:10-9:40 First Reformed (R) CC;HA;HoH: 2:05-4:35 Hearts Beat Loud (PG-13) CC;HA;HoH: 2:30-5:00-7:30-9:50 Eating Animals CC;HA;HoH: 1:45-4:30-7:15-9:45 Won’t You Be My Neighbor? (PG-13) CC;DVS;HA;HoH: 1:00-2:15-3:15-4:30-5:30-7:45-9:55 RBG (PG) CC;HA;HoH: 1:20-4:20-7:20-9:50 American Animals (R) HA;HoH: 1:00-4:00-7:00-9:30

Landmark West End Cinema 2301 M Street NW

www.landmarktheaters.com/

Isle of Dogs (PG-13) CC;DVS;HA;HoH;Partially Subtitled: 1:30-4:30-7:30 The Death of Stalin (R) CC;HA;HoH: 1:15-4:15-7:15 The Guardians (Les Gardiennes) (R) HA;HoH;Subtitled: 1:00-4:00-7:00

Regal Gallery Place Stadium 14 701 Seventh Street Northwest

www.regmovies.com/

Avengers: InďŹ nity War (PG-13) CC;DV;R-S;Stadium: 11:10-2:40 Solo: A Star Wars Story (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 11:15-2:10-5:05-8:00-10:55 Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom (PG-13) CC;DV;No Passes;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 11:0011:45-2:00-2:45-4:00-5:00-7:00-8:10-11:10 The Incredibles 2 (PG) CC;DV;No Passes;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 11:30-12:00-1:40-2:303:00-5:30-8:00-8:30 Ocean’s 8 (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 10:55-1:40-4:20-7:15-10:10 Deadpool 2 (R) CC;DV;R-S;Stadium: 11:20-2:05-4:50-7:35-10:20 Sicario: Day of the Soldado (R) CC;DV;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 7:40-10:30 Tag (R) CC;DV;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 11:30-2:10-4:35-7:50-10:20 Uncle Drew (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 7:30-10:15

of artwork created at Burning Man, the annual desert gathering and major art event, that includes immersive, roomsized installations, photographs, jewelry, costumes and archival materials from the Nevada Museum of Art. Burning Man is an annual, weeklong event, a city of 75,000 people created in Nevada’s Black Rock Desert, where enormous experimental art installations are erected, some of which are then ritually burned, through Jan. 21. 17th Street and

Pennsylvania Avenue NW.

Smithsonian American Art Museum: “Do Ho Suh: Almost Home�: A major installation of the artist’s Hub sculptures — representations of thresholds and transitional spaces from places he has lived — along with a group of semi-transparent replicas of household objects called “Specimens,� through Aug. 5; “Diane Arbus�: An exhibition of a box of 10 photographs by

Arbus, four of which she sold during her lifetime. Two were purchased by Richard Avedon, another by Jasper Johns. A fourth was purchased by Bea Feitler, art director at Harper’s Bazaar, through Jan. 21. Eighth and F streets NW.

Smithsonian Arthur M. Sackler Gallery: “Encountering the Buddha: Art and Practice Across Asia�: An exhibition of Buddhist art from India, China, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Cambodia,

(!) No Pass/No Discount Ticket Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom 3D (PG-13) 3D;4DX;4DX 3D;CC;DV;No Passes;RS;Stadium: 10:30-1:30-4:30-7:35-10:35 Hereditary (R) CC;DV;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 10:45-1:55-4:50 Supery (R) CC;DV;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 11:15-2:15 The Incredibles 2 in Disney Digital 3D (PG) 3D;CC;DV;No Passes;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 10:25-4:55-11:10 BANDSTAND: The Broadway Musical on Screen No Passes;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 7:00 Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom 3D (PG-13) 3D;CC;DV;No Passes;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 1:00-10:00 The Incredibles 2 (PG) CC;DV;R-S;Stadium: 6:00-9:00

Smithsonian - Lockheed Martin IMAX Theater 601 Independence Avenue SW

www.si.edu/imax

Pandas: An IMAX 3D Experience (G) 1:20 Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom The IMAX 2D Experience (PG-13) 3:10-4:30-7:007:30-9:30-9:50 Aircraft Carrier: Guardians of the Seas 3D (2018) (NR) 11:00-12:10-2:45 Journey to Space: The IMAX 3D Experience (NR) 10:25-11:35-12:45-2:10

MARYLAND

AFI Silver Theatre Cultural Center 8633 Colesville Road

www.aďŹ .com/silver

First Reformed (R) 12:30-9:15 RBG (PG) 2:50-4:55-7:10 Mr. Soul! (NR) 7:30 Won’t You Be My Neighbor? (PG-13) 11:05-1:05-3:05-5:05-7:05-9:10

AMC Center Park 8 4001 Powder Mill Rd.

www.amctheatres.com/

Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 10:00-1:00-4:00-7:00-10:15 The Incredibles 2 (PG) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 12:00-3:00-6:00-9:00 Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom 3D (PG-13) CC;DV;RealD 3D;Recliners;RS: 11:00-2:005:00-8:00

AMC Magic Johnson Capital Center 12 800 Shoppers Way

www.amctheatres.com/

Avengers: InďŹ nity War (PG-13) CC;DV: 12:15-3:30 Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom (PG-13) CC;DV: 11:00-1:30-2:15-4:45-8:00 The Incredibles 2 (PG) CC;DV: 11:30-2:30-3:00-5:45-8:35-9:10 Ocean’s 8 (PG-13) CC;DV: 1:05-3:50-6:45-9:30 Deadpool 2 (R) CC;DV: 1:15-4:15 Tag (R) CC;DV: 12:10-2:45-5:15-7:45-10:15 Sicario: Day of the Soldado (R) CC;DV: 7:00-9:50 Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom 3D (PG-13) CC;DV;RealD 3D: 12:00-3:15-5:30-6:308:45-9:45 Breaking In (PG-13) CC;DV: 11:20-1:45-4:05-6:40-9:05 Uncle Drew (PG-13) CC;DV: 7:00-9:35 Supery (R) CC;DV: 1:20-4:15-6:50-9:40 The Incredibles 2 in Disney Digital 3D (PG) CC;DV;RealD 3D: 12:05-6:15 Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom The IMAX 2D Experience (PG-13) CC;DV;RS: 12:454:00-7:15-10:30

Landmark Bethesda Row Cinema 7235 Woodmont Avenue

www.landmarktheaters.com/

RBG (PG) CC;HA;HoH;RS: 12:50-1:50-3:05-5:25-7:45-10:00 Book Club (PG-13) CC;DVS;HA;HoH;RS: 1:45-4:05-6:50-9:15 Ocean’s 8 (PG-13) CC;DVS;HA;HoH;RS: 1:40-4:20-6:40-7:30-9:10-10:00 Eating Animals CC;HA;HoH;RS: 1:00-3:20-5:35-7:50-10:05 American Animals (R) HA;HoH;RS: 1:20-4:00-7:00-9:40 Won’t You Be My Neighbor? (PG-13) CC;DVS;HA;HoH;RS: 1:10-3:30-4:10-7:10-9:30 First Reformed (R) CC;HA;HoH;RS: 1:30-4:30-7:20-9:50

Regal Hyattsville Royale Stadium 14 6505 America Blvd.

www.regmovies.com/

Avengers: InďŹ nity War (PG-13) CC;DV;Stadium: 12:00-3:25 Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom (PG-13) CC;DV;No Passes;Stadium: 12:30-1:00-1:303:30-4:00-4:30-6:30-7:00-7:30-10:00-10:30 The Incredibles 2 (PG) CC;DV;No Passes;Stadium: 11:15-11:45-12:45-2:15-2:45-3:455:15-5:45-6:45-8:15-8:45 Tag (R) CC;DV;Stadium: 11:20-2:05-4:50 Ocean’s 8 (PG-13) CC;DV;Stadium: 11:10-1:55-4:35-7:40-10:30 Deadpool 2 (R) CC;DV;Stadium: 11:10-2:00-4:50 Sicario: Day of the Soldado (R) CC;DV;Stadium: 7:30-10:30 Uncle Drew (PG-13) CC;DV;Stadium: 7:15-10:00 Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom 3D (PG-13) 3D;CC;DV;No Passes;Stadium: 11:30-12:002:30-3:00-5:30-6:00-8:30-9:00-9:30 Hereditary (R) CC;DV;Stadium: 7:00-10:00 Supery (R) CC;DV;Stadium: 11:05-2:05-5:00-7:50-10:40 The Incredibles 2 in Disney Digital 3D (PG) 3D;CC;DV;No Passes;Stadium: 12:15-3:156:15-9:15-9:45

Regal Majestic Stadium 20 & IMAX 900 Ellsworth Drive

www.regmovies.com/

Solo: A Star Wars Story (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 12:50-4:05-7:30-10:50 Avengers: InďŹ nity War (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 12:15-3:55-7:25-11:00 Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom (PG-13) CC;DV;No Passes;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 12:401:45-2:05-3:50-4:50-5:15-7:00-8:00-10:10-11:10 Deadpool 2 (R) CC;DV;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 11:10-2:10-5:20-8:10-11:05

Gotti (R) Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 11:00-11:15-2:00-4:50 The Incredibles 2 (PG) CC;DV;No Passes;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 11:00-12:30-1:30-2:004:05-4:35-5:10-7:15-7:45-8:15-10:55 Ocean’s 8 (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 11:05-1:55-4:00-4:40-7:30-10:25 Tag (R) CC;DV;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 12:30-3:35-10:45 Uncle Drew (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved;R-S;Stadium: 7:00-9:45 Race 3 (NR) Hindi;No Pass/SS;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 11:35-3:25 The Incredibles 2 in Disney Digital 3D (PG) 3D;CC;DV;No Passes;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 12:30-1:00-3:35-6:45-9:55-10:25 Hotel Artemis (R) CC;DV;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 11:05AM Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom 3D (PG-13) 3D;CC;DV;No Passes;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 11:05-11:35-12:10-2:50-3:20-6:00-6:30-8:35-9:10-9:40 Hereditary (R) CC;DV;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 12:50-4:00-7:10-10:30 Supery (R) CC;DV;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 1:05-4:00-6:55-10:00-10:15 BANDSTAND: The Broadway Musical on Screen No Passes;Recliner;Reserved;RS;Stadium: 7:00 Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom The IMAX 2D Experience (PG-13) CC;DV;IMAX;No Passes;R-S;Stadium: 4:20-10:40 Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom An IMAX 3D Experience (PG-13) IMAX: 1:10-7:30 Sicario: Day of the Soldado (R) CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved;R-S;Stadium: 7:30-10:40

Xscape Theatres Brandywine 14 7710 Matapeake Business Dr

www.xscapetheatres.com

Despicable Me 3 (PG) CC;SS: 9:30AM Deadpool 2 (R) AD;CC;SS: (!) 10:40-1:20-4:20-7:20-10:00 Avengers: InďŹ nity War (PG-13) AD;CC;SS: 11:00-2:50-6:10-9:20 Tag (R) AD;CC;No Discounts: (!) 11:20-2:00-4:40-7:00-9:30 Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom (PG-13) CC;SS: (!) 11:30-12:30-1:10-1:50-3:30-4:104:50-7:10-7:50-8:40-10:10-10:50 Breaking In (PG-13) AD;CC;SS: 10:30 Hereditary (R) AD;CC;SS: 6:40-9:40 The Incredibles 2 (PG) AD;CC;SS: (!) 11:50-12:50-1:30-2:10-3:00-3:50-4:30-6:00-6:50-9:50 Ocean’s 8 (PG-13) AD;CC;SS: (!) 10:00-12:40-3:20-6:20-9:00 Sicario: Day of the Soldado (R) AD;CC;SS: (!) 7:25-10:15 Uncle Drew (PG-13) AD;CC;SS: 7:00-8:00-8:50-9:30-10:30 Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom 3D (PG-13) CC;SS: (!) 2:40-5:40 Supery (R) AD;CC;SS: (!) 11:40-1:00-2:20-3:40-5:00-7:40-11:00

VIRGINIA

AMC Courthouse Plaza 8 2150 Clarendon Blvd.

www.amctheatres.com/

Solo: A Star Wars Story (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 12:45-4:15 Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 1:00-4:00-7:00-10:00 The Incredibles 2 (PG) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 12:00-1:30-4:30-7:30 Ocean’s 8 (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 12:15-2:50-5:30-8:15-10:45 Deadpool 2 (R) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 1:30-4:00-7:15-10:15 Tag (R) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 12:45-3:20-5:45-8:15-11:00 Sicario: Day of the Soldado (R) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 7:00-10:00 Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom 3D (PG-13) CC;DV;RealD 3D;Recliners;RS: 2:00-5:008:00-11:00 Uncle Drew (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 7:00-9:30 The Incredibles 2 in Disney Digital 3D (PG) CC;DV;RealD 3D;Recliners;RS: 3:15-10:30

AMC Hoffman Center 22 206 Swamp Fox Rd.

www.amctheatres.com/

Won’t You Be My Neighbor? (PG-13) AMC Independent;CC;DV: 1:40-4:35-7:40-10:30 Avengers: InďŹ nity War (PG-13) CC;DV: 1:05-4:10-7:05-10:05 Solo: A Star Wars Story (PG-13) CC;DV: 1:10-4:15-7:20-10:25 Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom (PG-13) CC;DV: 2:30-3:00-5:30-8:30-9:00 Gotti (R) AMC Independent;CC;DV: 3:35 The Incredibles 2 (PG) CC;DV: 1:15-2:15-4:15-5:15-7:15-8:15-9:15-10:15 Ocean’s 8 (PG-13) CC;DV: 12:50-2:45-3:30-5:45-8:25-10:10 Deadpool 2 (R) CC;DV: 1:40-4:30-7:25-10:15 A Quiet Place (PG-13) CC;DV: 6:35 Sicario: Day of the Soldado (R) CC;DV: 7:00-10:00 Tag (R) CC;DV: 1:35-4:05-6:40-9:35 Uncle Drew (PG-13) CC;DV: 7:00-9:45 RBG (PG) AMC Independent: 1:15 Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom 3D (PG-13) CC;DV;RealD 3D: 12:00-2:00-5:00-6:00-8:00 Hereditary (R) AMC Independent;CC;DV: 1:25-4:20-7:25-10:20 Supery (R) CC;DV: 1:20-3:40-4:25-7:10-10:00 Adrift (PG-13) CC;DV: 12:45 The Incredibles 2 in Disney Digital 3D (PG) CC;DV;RealD 3D: 12:15-1:45-3:15-4:456:15-7:45 Hotel Artemis (R) CC;DV: 12:55-3:45 BANDSTAND: The Broadway Musical on Screen Alternative Content: 7:00 Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom The IMAX 2D Experience (PG-13) CC;DV;RS: 1:304:30-7:30-10:30 My 2 Mommies AMC Independent;English Subtitles: 1:55-4:40-7:20-9:55 Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom (PG-13) Dolby Cinema at AMC Prime;Recliners;RS: 1:00-4:00-7:00-10:00 The Domestics (R) 10:00

Angelika Film Center Mosaic 2911 District Ave

Solo: A Star Wars Story (PG-13) Alcohol Available;RS: 10:30-1:30-4:30-7:45-10:45 Deadpool 2 (R) Alcohol Available;RS: 12:10-3:00-5:45-8:30-11:00 RBG (PG) Alcohol Available;RS: 2:15-4:45

Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom 3D (PG-13) Alcohol Available;RS: (!) 10:00-4:00 Won’t You Be My Neighbor? (PG-13) Alcohol Available;RS: 10:05-12:20-2:35-5:007:20-9:45 Ocean’s 8 (PG-13) Alcohol Available;RS: 10:00-12:30-3:05-5:40-7:30-8:15-10:05-10:55 Hearts Beat Loud (PG-13) Alcohol Available;RS: (!) 9:55-12:10-2:25-4:50-7:15-9:35 Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom (PG-13) Alcohol Available;RS: (!) 11:00-1:00-2:00-5:007:00-8:00-10:00-11:00 My Neighbor Totoro - Studio Ghibli Fest 2018 ENGLISH LANGUAGE DUBBED;RS: 11:00AM

Arlington Cinema & Drafthouse $PMVNCJB 1JLF

XXX BSMJOHUPOESBGUIPVTF DPN

The Incredibles 2 (PG) (!) 4:15-7:15

Regal Ballston Quarter Stadium 12 671 North Glebe Road

www.regmovies.com/

Avengers: InďŹ nity War (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 1:20-7:40 Solo: A Star Wars Story (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 10:15-1:15-4:15-7:15-10:15 Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom (PG-13) CC;DV;No Passes;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 10:3011:00-1:30-2:00-4:00-4:30-5:00-7:30-8:00-10:30-11:00 Deadpool 2 (R) CC;DV;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 11:15-2:10-4:50-7:35-10:20 Ocean’s 8 (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 10:45-1:45-4:45-7:45-10:45 Race 3 (NR) Hindi;No Pass/SS;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 11:30-3:20-10:15 American Animals (R) Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 11:20-2:10-5:05-7:55-10:50 Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom 3D (PG-13) 3D;CC;DV;No Passes;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 10:00-12:00-1:00-3:00-6:00-7:00-9:00-10:00 Hereditary (R) CC;DV;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 10:20-4:40-10:55 Supery (R) CC;DV;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 11:10-2:15-5:15-8:10-11:00 Adrift (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 10:10-12:45-3:15-6:00-8:45 BANDSTAND: The Broadway Musical on Screen No Passes;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 7:00

Regal Kingstowne Stadium 16 & RPX 5910 Kingstowne Towne Center

www.regmovies.com/

Avengers: InďŹ nity War (PG-13) CC;DV;Stadium: 10:05-1:20-4:30-7:40 Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom (PG-13) CC;DV;No Passes;RPX;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 10:00-1:00-4:05-7:15 Solo: A Star Wars Story (PG-13) CC;DV;Stadium: 11:20-2:40-6:05-9:10 The Incredibles 2 (PG) CC;DV;No Passes;Stadium: 1:15-4:15-7:30 Ocean’s 8 (PG-13) CC;DV;Stadium: 10:10-12:50-3:35-6:20-9:05 Deadpool 2 (R) CC;DV;Stadium: 1:10-4:10 Sicario: Day of the Soldado (R) CC;DV;Stadium: 7:15-10:15 Tag (R) CC;DV;Stadium: 2:20-5:00-7:50-10:20 Race 3 (NR) Hindi;No Pass/SS;Stadium: 11:05-2:35 Uncle Drew (PG-13) CC;DV;Stadium: 7:00-9:45 Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom 3D (PG-13) 3D;CC;DV;No Passes;RPX;RPX 3D;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 10:15 Hereditary (R) CC;DV;Stadium: 10:45 Supery (R) CC;DV;Stadium: 1:40-4:40-7:35-10:25 The Incredibles 2 in Disney Digital 3D (PG) 3D;CC;DV;No Passes;Stadium: 10:15-11:1511:45-2:45-6:00-9:15-10:25 Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom (PG-13) CC;DV;No Passes;Stadium: 11:00-12:00-1:352:00-3:00-4:35-5:05-6:15-7:45-8:15-9:30 Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom 3D (PG-13) 3D;CC;DV;No Passes;Stadium: 10:30-11:302:30-5:45-9:00-10:45 The Incredibles 2 (PG) CC;DV;Stadium: 10:45-12:30-1:45-3:30-4:45-6:30-7:40-9:45-10:45

Regal Potomac Yard Stadium 16 3575 Potomac Avenue

www.regmovies.com/

Avengers: InďŹ nity War (PG-13) CC;DV;Stadium: 11:15-2:30 Solo: A Star Wars Story (PG-13) CC;DV;Stadium: 12:05-3:20 Deadpool 2 (R) CC;DV;Stadium: 11:00-2:00-5:00-7:50-10:50 The Incredibles 2 (PG) CC;DV;No Passes;Stadium: 11:00-1:10-1:55-4:10-4:50-7:5510:20-10:50 Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom (PG-13) CC;DV;No Passes;Stadium: 11:30-12:55-2:403:15-3:55-4:35-5:40-7:00-7:40-8:45-10:05-10:45 Ocean’s 8 (PG-13) CC;DV;No Passes;Stadium: 11:00-1:40-4:40-7:30-10:30 Sicario: Day of the Soldado (R) CC;DV;Stadium: 7:15-10:15 Tag (R) CC;DV;Stadium: 1:45-4:15-6:45-9:15 Uncle Drew (PG-13) CC;DV;Stadium: 7:00-9:45 The Incredibles 2 in Disney Digital 3D (PG) 3D;CC;DV;No Passes;Stadium: 11:45-12:302:55-3:30-5:55-9:00-9:40 Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom 3D (PG-13) 3D;CC;DV;No Passes;Stadium: 11:00-12:101:35-2:10-5:10-6:20-8:15-9:25 Hereditary (R) CC;DV;Stadium: 12:20-3:45-10:10 Supery (R) CC;DV;Stadium: 11:00-12:50-3:35-6:25-9:20 BANDSTAND: The Broadway Musical on Screen No Passes;Stadium: 7:00 The Incredibles 2 (PG) CC;DV;Stadium: 6:35-7:15

Smithsonian - Airbus IMAX Theater 14390 Air & Space Museum Pkwy

www.nasm.si.edu/museum/udvarhazy/

D-Day: Normandy 1944 3D (NR) 1:25 Planet Power: An IMAX 3D Experience (NR) 11:45AM Pandas: An IMAX 3D Experience (G) 12:35 Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom The IMAX 2D Experience (PG-13) 4:30-7:00-9:30 Aircraft Carrier: Guardians of the Seas 3D (2018) (NR) 10:00-11:10-2:50 Journey to Space: The IMAX 3D Experience (NR) 10:35-2:15-3:25


THURSDAY | 06.28.2018 | EXPRESS | 51

goingoutguide.com

Millennium Stage A celebration of the human spirit

Free performances every day at 6 p.m.

Millennium Stage Presenting Sponsor:

Brought to you by:

No tickets required, unless noted otherwise.

June 30 Countermeasure

June 28–July 11 SERENADE! CHORAL FESTIVAL 2018 The Kennedy Center and Classical Movements present the eighth annual celebration of choral music from around the world. This year’s free performances honor the 100th anniversary of the birth of Nelson Mandela.

Tyva Kyzy | Nathaniel Dett Chorale

SMITHSONIAN

28

Smithsonian Arthur M. Sackler Gallery: “The Prince and the Shah: Royal Portraits From Qajar Iran” is an exhibition of about 30 works from the Freer and Sackler collections, including recent gifts and acquisitions, of painted portraits and studio photographs from Qajar-era (19th-century), Iran when rulers used portraiture to convey monarchical power. See it through Aug. 5. Thailand, Indonesia and Japan, through Nov. 29; “To Dye For: Ikats From Central Asia”: An exhibition of 30 historical ikats, the vividly designed textiles produced in Central Asia notable for their complex technique. Contemporary designers have worked ikat motifs into carpets, sofa covers, bedding, jeans, T-shirts and socks, through July 29. 1050 Independence Ave. SW.

Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History: “Objects of Wonder”: The exhibition includes the “Blue Flame,” one of the world’s largest and finest pieces of gem-quality lapis lazuli; Martha, the last known passenger pigeon; the Pinniped fossil, a fossil of one of the earliest members of the group of animals that includes seals, sea lions and walruses; and the 1875 Tsimshian House Front, one of the best examples of Native Alaskan design artwork, through Jan. 1; “Narwhal: Revealing an Arctic Legend”: An exhibition on the research and collaboration by Inuit and scientists on the narwhal reveals the latest in scientific knowledge on the animal and illuminates the interconnectedness between

people and ecosystems, through Jan. 1; “Nature’s Best Photography: Windland Smith Rice International Awards”: An exhibition of landscape, wildlife and underwater photos selected from thousands submitted by photographers from around the globe, through Sept. 1; “Outbreak: Epidemics in a Connected World”: An exhibition that examines the human ecology of epidemics to mark the 100th anniversary of the Great Influenza, a pandemic that took the lives of 50 million to 100 million people — between 3 and 5 percent of the world’s population at that time, through Dec. 31. 10th St. & Constitution Ave. NW.

The Phillips Collection: “Marking the Infinite”: An exhibition of about 60 works from nine leading Aboriginal Australian women artists — Nongirrnga Marawili, Wintjiya Napaltjarri, Yukultji Napangati, Angelina Pwerle, Lena Yarinkura, Gulumbu Yununpingu, Nyapanyapa Yunupingu, Carlene West and Regina Pilawuk Wilson — from remote Aboriginal communities across Australia. The works all deal with fundamental questions of CONTINUED ON PAGE 53

THU

Siberia’s only all-female throat-singing group performing traditional khöömei (“overtone”) songs. Canada’s first professional choral group dedicated to Afrocentric music of all styles.

29 FRI Tiharea | La Perranda

El Clavo A trio of singing, dancing, and percussion-playing sisters from southern Madagascar. AfroVenezuelan singer Betsayda Machado and her group with infectious parranda.

30 SAT Howard University

Gospel Choir | Countermeasure

July 11 Allthebestkids

2 MON Cobla Catalana del

7 SAT Ysaÿe Maria Barnwell,

Sons Essencials Marcel Casellas leads this ensemble of classical and traditional horns, percussion, with a string bass that is known for accompanying the emblematic sardana dance. Presented in collaboration with the 2018 Smithsonian Folklife Festival.

3 TUE Onnik and Ara Dinkjian Eighty-nine-year-old Onnik is America’s most renowned Armenian folk and liturgical singer. He is joined by his son and an outstanding ensemble of instrumentalists. Presented in collaboration with the Library of Congress and the 2018 Smithsonian Folklife Festival.

Concert

An exuberant celebration featuring individual performances from all participating ensembles, as well as two world premieres conducted by Scott Tucker, Artistic Director of The Choral Arts Society of Washington. Free general admission tickets will be distributed in the Hall of Nations starting at approximately 4:30 p.m., up to two tickets per person.

Be Steadwell, and Carolyn Malachi The Smithsonian Folklife Festival celebrates Roadwork’s 40th anniversary as a D.C.-based multiracial coalition that puts women artists on the road locally and globally, with a performance featuring these D.C. artists. Presented in collaboration with the 2018 Smithsonian Folklife Festival.

8 SUN Arto Tunçboyaciyan The avant-garde folk artist and Grammy®-winning multi-instrumentalist makes a rare appearance in D.C. with music drawing from the sonic soul of Armenia and beyond. Presented in collaboration with the 2018 Smithsonian Folklife Festival.

4 WED Son Veteranos Born U.S. citizens, Puerto Ricans have been serving in the U.S. military since 1899. One of the many services offered to returning soldiers is this music therapy salsa group. Celebrate Independence Day with a salsa party featuring American veterans from Puerto Rico.

5 THU Al. Spendiaryan Qanon

Ensemble

Founded in 1968, the first collegiate choir of its kind in the world. Cool Canadian chanteurs in a world premiere multimedia tribute to Nelson Mandela. IN THE CONCERT HALL 1 SUN Serenade! Final

July 9 Grayson Masefield

Founded by musician and educator Tsovinar Hovhannisyan, the ensemble was created to encourage Armenian girls and young women to take up an instrument traditionally played by men. Presented in collaboration with the 2018 Smithsonian Folklife Festival.

6 FRI Maria Arnal and

9 MON Grayson Masefield The performance includes transcriptions and original works for accordion, including songs by Bach, Scarlatti, Mozart, Chopin, Angelis, Hermosa, and Nuevo Tango. Presented in collaboration with the American Accordionists’ Association conference.

NATIONAL SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA SUMMER MUSIC INSTITUTE Every summer, approximately 60 students (ages 15–20) from all over the United States, as well as a number of other countries, come to the Kennedy Center to attend the 25th annual NSO training program.

10 TUE Concerto Competition

Finals The winner of the competition will play with the full SMI Orchestra in the Concert Hall on Sunday, July 29

Marcel Bagés Winners of the 2016 Premi Ciutat de Barcelona (City of Barcelona Award), the vocalist and guitarist beautifully blend old and new sounds together. Presented in collaboration with the 2018 Smithsonian Folklife Festival.

11 WED Allthebestkids This D.C.-based, 10-person hip-poppyche-rock band from the future brings a message of peace, love, and inclusion, reminding us of a truth forgotten long ago. We are all the best kids. Presented in collaboration with Hometown Sounds.

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. Generous support is provided by The Morris and Gwendolyn Cafritz Foundation and The Karel Komárek Family Foundation. Additional support is provided by Kimberly Engel and Family-The Dennis and Judy Engel Charitable Foundation, The Gessner Family Foundation, The Irene Pollin Audience Development and Community Engagement Initiatives, The Isadore and Bertha Gudelsky Family Foundation, Inc., The Meredith Foundation, Dr. Deborah Rose and Dr. Jan A.J. Stolwijk, the U.S. Department of Education, the National Committee for the Performing Arts, and the Millennium Stage Endowment Fund.

Daily food and drink specials • 5–6 p.m. nightly • Grand Foyer Bars TAKE METRO to

the Foggy Bottom/GWU/Kennedy Center station and ride the free Kennedy Center shuttle departing every 15 minutes until Metro close.

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: Standard parking rates apply when attending free performances. The Kennedy Center welcomes persons with disabilities.

All performances and programs are subject to change without notice.


52 | EXPRESS | 06.28.2018 | THURSDAY

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VIRGINIA MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS

goingoutguide.com

Virginia Museum of Fine Arts: “Napoleon: Power and Splendor” is an exhibition of more than 200 works commissioned by and for Napoleon that reveal aspects of his daily life. Works and items on loan for the exhibition include major masterpieces of painting, an array of decorative arts, sculptures and engravings from the Chateau de Fontainebleau, the Louvre, the Musee de l’Armee in Paris and other world-class collections. They’re on display through Sept. 3. CONTINUED FROM PAGE 51

existence, through Sept. 9. 1600 21st St. NW.

U.S. Botanic Garden: “Wall Flowers: Botanical Murals”: An exhibition of botanical murals, through Oct. 15; “Botanical Art Worldwide: America’s Flora”: A juried exhibition of 46 original contemporary botanical artworks of plants native to the U.S. Similar exhibitions will be held in over 20 other countries, each highlighting plants native to their own country, through Oct. 15. 100 Maryland Ave. SW.

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum: “Permanent Exhibition: The Holocaust”: An ongoing exhibition spanning three floors offers a chronological narrative of the Holocaust through photographs, films and historical artifacts, through Jan. 1; “Americans and the Holocaust”: An exhibition that shows how the Depression, isolationism, xenophobia, racism and anti-Semitism in America shaped responses to Nazism and the Holocaust, through Jan. 1. 100 Raoul Wallenberg Place SW.

Virginia Museum of Fine Arts: “The Horse in Ancient Greek Art”: An exhibition of Greek vases, sculpture and coins from the eighth through the fourth centuries BC that explores the significance of the horse in ancient Greek culture and imagery of the horse in ancient myth, war, sport and

EXTENDED THROUGH JULY 7!

competition, through July 8; 200 N Blvd., Richmond.

Walters Art Museum: “Crowning Glory: Art of the Americas”: An exhibition of some 20 objects spanning more than 2,500 years including figures, ceramics and vessels that express power, identity and spirituality in North, Central and South American cultures, including the Wari and Nasca of Peru, the Olmec of Mexico and the Jama-Coaque of Ecuador, through Oct. 7. 600 N. Charles St., Baltimore.

BY MATTHEW LOPEZ | DIRECTED BY TOM STORY

Stage

‘Ain’t Too Proud — The Life and Times of The Temptations’: A new musical that includes the iconic hits “My Girl,” “Just My Imagination” and “Papa Was a Rolling Stone” for a story about one of the acclaimed R&B group. The Kennedy Center, 2700 F St. NW, through July 22.

‘A Swellegant, Elegant Party: An Original Musical Revue’: Bethesda

—DC THEATRE SCENE

Little Theatre presents a musical revue that features Broadway show tunes and music by Kool & the Gang, Streisand, Sinatra and more. Montgomery College Cultural Arts Center, 7995 Georgia Ave., Silver Spring, through June 30.

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‘Camelot’: Alan Paul directs Lerner and CONTINUED ON PAGE 55

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54 | EXPRESS | 06.28.2018 | THURSDAY

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goingoutguide.com of Tinker Bell. Adventure Theatre MTC, 7300 MacArthur Blvd., Glen Echo, Md., through Aug. 19.

premiere of Brandon McCoy’s comedy about two roommates who try online dating. Andrew Keegan Theatre, 1742 Church St. NW, through July 7.

‘Dancing in My Cockroach Killers’:

‘The Legend of Georgia McBride’:

‘Vital Theatre Company: The Wizard of Oz’: Dorothy, Scarecrow,

A bilingual musical inspired by Puerto Rican icons such as Lolita Lebron and Joe Cuba. GALA Hispanic Theatre, 3333 14th St. NW, through July 1.

A drag queen coaches a young, broke expectant father in the art of performing and transforms him from a washed-up Elvis impersonator to a full-fledged star. Round House Theatre, 4545 East-West Highway Bethesda, through July 1.

Tinman and the Cowardly Lion travel on the yellow brick road to get to the world of Oz in this show with puppets by the Vital Theatre Company. Wolf Trap’s Children’s Theatre-in-the-Woods, 1551 Trap Road Vienna, through June 30.

‘The Scottsboro Boys’: A critically

‘WSC Avant Bard: The Tempest’:

‘Entirely Elvis’: A cabaret dedicated to Elvis Presley. Signature Theatre, 4200 Campbell Ave., Arlington, through June 30.

‘Hamilton’: The D.C. premiere of LinManuel Miranda’s hip-hop musical juggernaut about America’s Founding Fathers. The Kennedy Center, 2700 F St. NW, through Sept. 16.

‘Motown: The Musical‘: The history of Berry Gordy’s groundbreaking record company is chronicled in this musical. Wolf Trap, Filene Center, 1551 Trap Road Vienna, Va., through June 28.

‘Other Life Forms’: The world

acclaimed musical about racism and injustice in the 1930s from musical collaborators John Kander and Fred Ebb. Signature Theatre, 4200 Campbell Ave., Arlington, through July 1.

‘The Vagrant Trilogy’: Three plays by Mona Mansour about the life of one Palestinian family over a four-decade span. Atlas Performing Arts Center, 1333 H St. NE, through July 1.

‘Tinker Bell’: Based on the works of Sir J. M. Barrie, a story in the point of view

Shakespeare’s classic comedy directed by Tom Prewitt and starring Christopher Henley as Prospero. Gunston Arts Center, 2700 South Lang Street, Arlington, through July 1.

‘You’re a Good Man, Charlie Brown’: Based on the comic strip “Peanuts� by Charles M. Schulz, this offBroadway musical directed by acclaimed playwright Aaron Posner brings the beloved imaginary characters to life. Imagination Stage, 4908 Auburn Ave., Bethesda, through Aug. 12.

STAN BAROUH

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 53

Loewe’s hit Broadway musical about King Arthur. Sidney Harman Hall, 610 F St. NW, through July 8.

‘On the Town’: Three young sailors on shore leave hit 1944 New York City in a mad sprint to find love before being shipped off to war. Olney Theatre Center, 2001 OlneySandy Spring Road, Olney, Md., through June 28.

Learn Today What You Can Apply Tomorrow No GRE or GMAT / Individualized admissions process / Online courses / Evening classes for working adults / Flexible course scheduling

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56 | EXPRESS | 06.28.2018 | THURSDAY

entertainment

‘Queer Eye’ doesn’t see red or blue STREAMING Imagine Jonathan Van Ness swooping into your life. Picture him tossing his gleaming, downto-his-clavicle hair and fussing over everything about you that is already gorgeous, gorgeous, GOR-GEOUS, but also just, like, a little basic and a tiny bit sad. But by the time he’s done with you, honey, you will be fierce, you will be owning it. Van Ness, 31, is a breakout star on a breakout show, the grooming czar and one-man mememachine of “Queer Eye,” whose second season is now available on Netflix. When the show premiered in February, it quickly became must-see streaming, a heartwarming hour that made even cynics sob. What first intrigued Van Ness about the new “Queer Eye” was its tag line: “Turning red states pink, one makeover at a time.” Although many progressives saw the 2016 election results as a sign to retreat into whatever coastal bubble couldn’t be popped by people who put Donald Trump in the White House, the idea of

a televised charm offensive appealed to Van Ness, who grew up in rural Quincy, Ill., just across the Mississippi River from Mark Twain’s hometown. “Truly in the middle of the country,” Van Ness says. Technically, “Queer Eye” is a reboot of “Queer Eye for the Straight Guy,” which aired on Bravo from 2003 to 2007. But really, it’s a reboot of Cinderella. There’s no put-upon heroine, but there are civilians who have let themselves go. There’s no fairy godmother, but instead the Fab Five: Bobby, Karamo, Tan, Antoni and, finally, Van Ness, the quippiest, peppiest of the bunch. Now, Van Ness is on a mission to enlighten men who have internalized the idea that cutting your toenails or applying sunscreen makes you feminine, and that there’s something wrong with being feminine. “I wish I had more of a game plan of how I’m going to, like, take down toxic masculinity,” he says. “But I think that game plan is just going to reveal itself if we keep going.” On top of the standard delights of renovation television, “Queer Eye” offers an irresistible fantasy: that if everyone in America could spend a week with these

GETTY IMAGES/EXPRESS ILLUSTRATION

Star Jonathan Van Ness hopes the show can heal political wounds

Joe Jackson dies at 89 after cancer battle

guys, acceptance would be the law of the land. Hate, burning bright as a tiki torch out in the real world, all but evaporates under the heat of Van Ness’ blow-dryer. His catch phrase is the crux of the show: Can you believe? Can you believe that Van Ness — who, as the first male cheerleader at his high school in Quincy, had homophobic slurs spray-painted on his car — can see something gorgeous in the proud owner of a Make America Great Again hat? For what it’s worth, Van Ness believes. And beneath his bubbly surface, there’s a simmering urgency: We have to believe. Because what

happens if we don’t? Take Tom, from the series premiere — a conservative, middle-aged white man whose beverage of choice is a tequila and Mountain Dew cocktail he calls a “redneck margarita.” “I do not want to know his political beliefs,” Van Ness says. “Because we’re not going to see eye-to-eye, and that’s not the point.” “Sometimes it’s just about trying to connect on what you can connect on,” he adds. “The human existence and experience is all about connection.” J E S SI C A M. G O LD S T EIN (FOR THE WASHINGTON POST)

FILM

Leto goes from villain to antihero

Jared Leto will play Morbius the Living Vampire in a film about the Marvel antihero, Sony announced Wednesday. The movie, which will not be a part of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, will be directed by “Life” filmmaker Daniel Espinosa and written by “Lost in Space’s” Burk Sharpless and Matt Sazama. The news comes three weeks after Variety reported Leto was set to reprise his role as the Joker in a stand-alone movie for DC. (EXPRESS) Disney wins antitrust approval for $71 billion Fox bid

Piper Perabo joins Netflix comedy series “Turn Up Charlie”

1928-2018 Joe Jackson, who forged a musical dynasty by launching the careers of the Jackson 5, his son Michael Jackson and daughter Janet Jackson, but whose legacy was tarnished when some of his children accused him of exploitation and abusive behavior, died Wednesday at a hospice in Las Vegas. He was 89. The cause of death was pancreatic cancer, TMZ reported. Jackson was an unlikely starmaker who demanded nothing less than perfection as he drove his children toward stardom. To a remarkable degree, he succeeded: All nine of the surviving Jackson family children have had a hand in producing major hit records, and Michael Jackson, who died in June 2009, was the most popular recording artist of the 1980s. Collectively, the Jacksons may have been the most prominent family in pop music history, but their fame came at the cost of feuds, lurid accusations and an unending stream of tabloid headlines. Over time, nearly all the children rebelled against the brutal manner of their father. In 2014, a New York Post reporter asked Joseph Jackson whether he had any regrets about his life or about how hard he had driven his family. “Not at all,” he said. “I don’t live that way.” MATT SCHUDEL (TWP)

Deadline: Paul Feig to direct romance film “Last Christmas”


THURSDAY | 06.28.2018 | EXPRESS | 57

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Are you having money and relationship problems? FREE Workshops on Stress Management, Communication, and Financial Management for COUPLES. Workshops are available in Falls Church, Gaithersburg, College Park, Alexandria, and Bowie. Couples may recieve up to $200 for completion of surveys and attendance.

(877) 432-1669

TOGETHER is a project of Virginia Tech and the University of Maryland, College Park. Funding for this Project was provided by the United States Department of Health and Human Services, Administration for Children and Families, Grant: # 90FM0077-03-00.

www.togetherprogram.org

AMP Comedy Night

trending “An entire issue of SELF magazine dedicated to ideas of Health At Every Size and weight and body positivity with Tess Holliday on the cover?! ... Big change is a comin’!” @IDAHOAMY, tweeting her excitement over Self magazine’s first digital issue, “The Weight Issue,” featuring author, activist and plus-size model Tess Holliday on its cover. The issue features what Self editor Carolyn Kylstra describes in an editor’s letter as a collection of articles “intended to challenge how we think about weight and health” and to further body positivity.

“Slack airing a commercial during halftime of the World Cup game that I’m intently watching because I can’t work because Slack is down is high comedy.” Slack, the popular workplace communication app, which had an outage Wednesday morning that lasted several hours. With Slack down, many users took to Twitter to air their confusion about what to do. As user @redcat9 noted, “People are actually talking to each other.”

$10 TICKETS with promo code FUNNY

Jay Nog {MTV, Gotham Comedy Live}

Mike Keegan Thu, July 12

AP

@WILLBRINSON, joking about

“I’m going to Korea Town today and will hug and thank every single person I run into. Gracias Korea.” @ABE_A93, reacting to the shocking outcome of the World Cup’s early

Wednesday matches. Mexico lost to Sweden 3-0, but still advanced, because South Korea defeated 2014 World Cup champ Germany. Mexico fans celebrated and showed their gratitude by hoisting Korea fans into the air and joking that Mexico was changing its national language.

Liz Russo Andrew Kim THU, July 26

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Red Line–White Flint Metro

“Not sorry [‘Bao’] forced folks to recognize that other cultural nuance exists aside from their own.” @LARRYLUK, tweeting about “Bao,”

a Pixar short about a ChineseCanadian mother whose dumpling comes alive. It sparked commentary after Asian-Americans noted that white audiences didn’t grasp how the short reflected strained relationships with parents, and the role of food in many Asian cultures.

“If there isn’t anybody who says ‘GET TO DA CHOPPA!’ in this reboot it will be an automatic failure.” @SEANTHEACORN, commenting on

the new trailer for “The Predator,” the latest movie in the “Predator” series. The above line is said by Arnold Schwarzenegger in the 1987 film, and is a fan favorite, mostly due to Schwarzenegger’s accent. “The Predator” is out on September 14.


THURSDAY | 06.28.2018 | EXPRESS | 61

fun+games Horoscopes

Scrabble Grams

PAR SCORE 140-150, BEST SCORE 213

Sudoku

DIFFICULT

CANCER (June 21-July 22) You have many questions, and you mustn’t expect all of them to be answered in the same immediate time frame. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Even routine affairs can take more time and thought than you were originally willing to give them. All must come out right in the end, however. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) The freedom you so cherish is likely to be threatened in some way today — but you’re more than willing to do what you must to preserve it. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) A family matter has you rethinking the plans you’ve made for the coming weeks or months. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) You can expect the friction to mount between you and a rival today. Take care that you aren’t simply being stubborn.

WEDNESDAY’S SOLUTION

WEDNESDAY’S SOLUTION

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) There are very real issues to be examined today, and the closer you look the more you’ll realize that a solution is indeed at hand. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) You’re likely to hear a few rumors about what lies just ahead, but you mustn’t make any firm decisions until you have investigated.

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

88 | 73

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) You can make fast work of a job that has taken others much longer to complete — but that’s because you are ready for just this kind of thing.

TODAY: Any showers and storms should clear out early in the morning as the cold front moves through and to our east. Otherwise we’re partly sunny with warm winds from the west helping afternoon highs to near 90, with only a slight decrease in humidity. At night, the air will remains rather muggy despite a light wind.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) You can do only so much to ease tensions on the homefront. What you can do, of course, is share your unique perspective freely. ARIES (March 21-April 19) You can have what you want, but only if you are able to identify it properly ahead of time. There can be no guesswork.

Need more Sudoku? Find another puzzle in the Comics section of The Post every Sunday and in the Style section Monday through Saturday.

PEARLS BEFORE SWINE | STEPHAN PASTIS

AVG. HIGH: 87 RECORD HIGH: 100 AVG. LOW: 68 RECORD LOW: 54 SUNRISE: 5:44 a.m. SUNSET: 8:38 p.m.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You hold the key to your progress at this time — but today someone may try to get it from you in order to derail you.

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

89 | 72

92 | 75

SUNDAY

MONDAY

93 | 77

91 | 78

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) You

may be afforded a fleeting glimpse of something that is usually hidden from view.

DAILY CODE

today in histor y

TA

1914: Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria and his wife, Sophie, are shot to death in Sarajevo by Serb nationalist Gavrilo Princip — an act that sparks World War I.

1968: President Lyndon Johnson signs the Uniform Monday Holiday Bill, which moves commemorations for Washington’s Birthday, Memorial Day and Veterans Day to Monday, creating three-day holiday weekends.

1978: The Supreme Court orders the University of California-Davis Medical School to admit Allan Bakke, a white man who argued that he’d been a victim of reverse racial discrimination.

Get more news and forecasts at washingtonpost.com/weather or follow @capitalweather on Twitter.


62 | EXPRESS | 06.28.2018 | THURSDAY

fun+games Crossword

BRAIN GAMES

1

Be a headliner

42 Poker buy-in

5

“What!?” look

10 Wine valley 14 Corporate emblem 15 Like a hollowedout apple

43 Eyelid inflammation 44 Be a prodder 46 Basketry willow

4

Place for antiques?

5

Surgeon’s cover-ups?

6

Decorative fabric

7

Suit type in museums

49 Gold measure

8

Marine hazard

51 Not be nosy

9

17 Opera feature

57 Ancient Andean settler

Root of taro plants

10 Munched

18 Frosty

58 Hopping mad

11 African lilies

19 Bar chaser

59 Push, as a product

12 California pro

16 Norse king name

20 Like considerate people

60 With no slack

23 Fit to drive

61 Hybrid feline

24 Adjust a chronometer

62 Polo grounds?

25 Golden things of fast food 28 Spoken 30 Prom car, briefly

63 Bring into being 64 Air freshener’s byproduct 65 Quaint paving stone

31 Speechify 33 Signal from the wings

DOWN

37 Opener 38 U-turn from aye 39 Purplish-reds 43 Make calm, in a way 44 Not yet mailed 45 VCR pioneer 46 Leaves off 47 Biblical mountain

48 Arouse, as wrath 49 River to the Missouri 50 Author Sinclair 52 Trifling criticisms 53 ___ the Red 54 Bit of medicine 55 Call it a day 56 E.R. cry

13 Port “Stop!” 21 Nemesis 22 Endeavors

WEDNESDAY’S SOLUTION

25 Celebrants’ wear 26 Anger 27 “Let’s get goin’!” 28 Without, fancy 29 Had a plateful 31 Beastly creature 32 Fish eggs

1

36 More than impressing

Sound from a mean exit

2

Singer Amos

34 Golden rule word

40 Yen fraction

3

U-turn from “fer”

35 Paradise on Earth

33 Motion picture

DCTAG Apply NOW! TIME IS RUNNING OUT! Don’t forget, all applicants must apply before the June 30 deadline to receive funds. Go to osse.dc.gov from any mobile device or computer to apply and find out eligibility requirements. For more information, call (202) 727-2824 or visit 1050 First Street, NE, 5th floor, Washington, DC. Extended hours are until 7:00 p.m. on June 19, 21,26, and 28. Saturday hours, June 16, 8:30 a.m. – 1:00 p.m. and June 30, 8:30 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.

RESEARCH VOLUNTEERS NEEDED FOR CALMNESS STUDY Doctors at the National Institutes of Health are looking for individuals who drink heavily and/or had a stressful childhood to participate in a study looking at the eīect of alcohol abuse and early life stress on the ability to feel calm. Compensation may be provided.

Contact 301-451-3862 or email niaaacgetresearch@mail.nih.gov Refer to study # 15-AA-0127

GOALLLLLLL!!! sports

News and highlights from every field, court and stadium. Only in

XX1233_2x3

41 Nostrils

EDITED BY TIMOTHY E. PARKER

ACROSS


THURSDAY | 06.28.2018 | EXPRESS | 63

people

ABC

Freeform execs feign deliberation

‘ADMIRATION AND RESPECT’

Couple auto-generate breakup statement

KEVIN WINTER (GETTY IMAGES)

Taylor Nolan and Derek Peth have broken up, the “Bachelor in Paradise” stars told E! News on Tuesday. The couple got engaged last year during Season 4 of the show. “We know this is the best decision for the both of us,” they said in a statement. “We will still be present in each other’s lives with support, admiration and respect for each other.” (EXPRESS)

No word on whether Ariana’s birthday party also required a retinal scan.

COMEDY CENTRAL

PARTIES

SECRET MARRIAGES

Tosh shows Cardi B and Offset how it’s done Daniel Tosh secretly got married to Carly Hallam in April 2016, TMZ reported Tuesday. The “Tosh.0” star reportedly exchanged vows with Hallam, a writer on his show, at a private ceremony in Malibu, Calif. The news comes after hip-hop stars Cardi B and Offset confirmed earlier this week that they quietly got married this past September. (EXPRESS)

Must be how Bond does his birthday

HOW TO REACH US

CONTACT THE NEWSROOM

TO PLACE A DISPLAY AD: Call 202-334-6732 or email expressads@washpost.com

Call 202-334-6800 or fax 202-334-9777

TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD: TO NOMINATE A HAWKER AS STAR DISTRIBUTOR: Email circulation@wpost.com. FOR CIRCULATION: Call 202-334-6992

or email circulation@wpost.com.

“Famous in Love” star Bella Thorne was not happy to find out about the show’s reported cancellation via Twitter on Tuesday. After The Hollywood Reporter said the Freeform series had been axed, Thorne responded to a tweet citing the news, writing, “If this is how I find out our show is canceled. … I’m going to be so upset.” Freeform later told Entertainment Weekly no decision had been made on the show’s future. (EXPRESS)

COUPLES

Dakota using Chris as an excuse to go to Malibu Chris Martin and Dakota Johnson are getting more serious as a couple, People reported Tuesday. “For the past two weeks, they have spent a lot of time together,” a source said. “Chris lives in Malibu and Dakota seems to love hanging out there. … They go to the beach together, and walks around the neighborhood. They seem to enjoy sharing a quiet life.” (EXPRESS)

EVANGELINE LILLY, telling BackstageOL she doesn’t want to hear male actors complaining about their superhero costumes

FIND US ONLINE

WHO WE ARE EXECUTIVE EDITOR | Dan Caccavaro CIRCULATION MANAGER | Charles Love

SENIOR FEATURES WRITERS | Sadie Dingfelder, Kristen Page-Kirby

MARKETING MANAGER | Travis Meyer

DC RIDER COLUMNIST | Kery Murakami

CREATIVE DIRECTOR | Jon Benedict MANAGING EDITOR, NEWS | Jeffrey Tomik

NEWS EDITORS | Sean Gossard, Rachel Podnar, Briana Ellison SPORTS EDITOR | Gabe Hiatt

FEATURES: express.features@wpost.com

MANAGING EDITOR, FEATURES | Rudi Greenberg

LOCAL: page3@wpost.com

DEPUTY MANAGING EDITOR | Serena Golden

NEWS: express.news@wpost.com

NEWS AND DIGITAL EDITOR | Zainab Mudallal

SPORTS: express.sports@wpost.com

COPY CHIEF | Vanessa H. Larson

PRODUCTION SUPERVISOR | Matthew Liddi

STORY EDITOR | Adam Sapiro

DESIGN INTERN | Samantha Stamas

CORRECTIONS: Spot a mistake?

Let us know at corrections@wpost.com.

verbatim

“Have men not had the life experience of being uncomfortable for the sake of looking good?”

Ariana Grande celebrated her 25th birthday Tuesday with fiance Pete Davidson and a group of friends at a hidden karaoke lounge inside the New York City bowling alley Frames, Page Six reported. “Frames has a private karaoke room with a separate entrance called the Lyric Lounge, which was completely covered before Grande’s arrival to maintain secrecy,” a source said, adding that “a birthday cake with an image of Ariana as a baby was delivered.” Grande and Davidson reportedly performed together for Evanescence’s 2003 hit “Bring Me to Life.” (EXPRESS)

Published by Express Publications LLC, 1301 K Street NW, Washington, DC 20071, a subsidiary of WP Company, LLC

Call 202-334-6200.

GETTY IMAGES

OOPS

ENTERTAINMENT EDITOR | Thomas Floyd ART DIRECTOR | Ellen Collier DESIGNER | Jenna Kendle

FOUNDING PUBLISHER | Christopher Ma, 1950-2011

TWITTER:

@WaPoExpress INSTAGRAM:

@WaPoExpress FACEBOOK: facebook.com/ washingtonpostexpress FLICKR: Join our Flickr pool at flickr.com/groups/ wapoexpress to share your view of the D.C. area, from events to landscapes and everything in between. Your work could appear in Express.


64 | EXPRESS | 06.28.2018 | THURSDAY


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