U.S., CHINA AT ODDS IN N. KOREA CRISIS 11
JULY 6, 2017 | A PUBLICATION OF
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D.C.’S GROWING GROCERY DIVIDE
Maxed out Wizards’ Otto Porter Jr. secures $106M windfall with offer from Nets 13
‘Assassinated’
The number of supermarkets in the city’s wealthy neighborhoods has ballooned in the past decade while poorer areas have lost stores — further compounding the District’s long-standing ‘grocery gap’ 4
THE WASHINGTON POST
NYPD officer is shot and killed while sitting in a police vehicle 8
Drone on Make some noise inside the building museum’s ‘Hive’ installation 16
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Funny faces ‘SNL’ star Kyle Mooney brings his awkward identities to D.C. 20 am
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MATTHIAS SCHRADER (AP)
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Demonstrators dressed as clay figures and acting like zombies protest Wednesday in Hamburg, Germany, site of the Group of 20 economic summit of global leaders that will be held Friday and Saturday. The summit is expected to draw a variety of protesters.
City salutes ‘Wayne’s World’ with epic head-banging festival
Shh! Please keep the noise down; eaglet needs to feel safe at home.
Police action has new meaning after officers let complaint slide
The city of Aurora, Ill., celebrated the 25th anniversary of locally set film “Wayne’s World” by trying to break the Guinness World Record for headbanging, UPI reported. Organizers said 1,000 people saluted the movie scene Tuesday by headbanging to Queen’s “Bohemian Rhapsody,” as the characters did in the 1992 film. The current, certified record for headbanging in unison is 320 people in Australia in 2014. (EXPRESS)
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Independence Day was unusually quiet in Columbia, Conn., as residents heeded a request to protect a family of bald eagles. State officials had warned residents that the noise from fireworks near Columbia Lake could startle an eaglet out of her nest before she was ready to fly. Last summer, a pair of eagles became the first to call the lake home since the species returned to the state in 1992. Their nest is 100 feet up a tree. (AP)
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THURSDAY | 07.06.2017 | EXPRESS | 3
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This ‘party’ could save a life REGION Laura Metro was just returning from a run during a summer vacation at the Delaware shore when her daughter, Maison, made an announcement straight from a parent’s nightmare: Maison, 6, had been playing by the pool with her brother, Clay, 3, as family friends supervised them, when he slipped under the water. “I think Clay died,” she said. Metro and her husband, Matt, sprinted to the side of the pool, where Clay had been placed after he was pulled from the pool. He was lifeless and blue. A family friend began applying the familiar chest compressions and mouth-to-mouth breathing that are hallmarks of cardiopulmonary resuscitation. As Clay recovered, his physicians told Metro the CPR probably saved her son’s life. Remarkably, the man who performed CPR on Clay said he had never had training and was only mimicking what he’d seen on television. Since that day six years ago, Metro has made it her goal to help
SARAH L. VOISIN (THE WASHINGTON POST)
Instead of shopping for Tupperware, attendees learn lifesaving CPR
Chais Ondeck practices performing CPR on a dummy during a Bethesda CPR party in May while Nimet DuFour, left, and Grace Lowe look on.
people learn how to perform CPR. She hosts what she calls “CPR parties” (“like Tupperware parties,” she said) to underscore the ease of learning how to save a life. “It’s just such an easy format — we replace the shopping with a certified instructor/trainer of CPR to do an hour or an hourand-a-half awareness course, and boom, you’re done,” said Metro, who lives in Potomac and created an organization she fittingly named CPR Party. “People are loving it.”
“This is just insanity — to see how many kids are passing away and the families are just destroyed. … We need to do more.” LAURA METRO, 42, who hosts CPR parties around the region after her now 9-year-old son nearly drowned in a pool six years ago
By own her estimate, Metro, 42, who funds the effort out of her own pocket and with donations, has helped more than a thousand people in Maryland, Virginia and D.C. learn how to perform CPR. Through Metro’s partnership with Rescue One, a local EMS and safety training organization, instructors teach people CPR, how to perform the Heimlich maneuver on children and adults, and how to use an automated external defibrillator. Metro’s goal, she says, is free CPR lessons for all Americans (certification courses can cost about $100 per person), which she sees as crucial when it comes to saving young people’s lives. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, drowning is second only to birth defects as the leading cause of the death for children ages 4 and younger. Nimet DuFour, 43, a 43-yearold Bethesda mom of three, said she’s seen other people perform CPR, but she never tried it herself, until one of Metro’s parties. “You always hope you can react and do something if needed,” DuFour said. “The more you know, the more likely you are to help somebody.” VICTORIA ST. MARTIN (THE WASHINGTON POST)
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Wieters reps the felines for Nats calendar Recent editions of the Nationals’ team pet calendar have been heavy on the dogs and, in the cases of Jayson Werth and Max Scherzer’s canine pals, heavy dogs. This year’s calendar, which was released Saturday, is no different, but cat lovers will be happy to know one month features a feline. Catcher Matt Wieters posed with the extremely photogenic Jalapeño for the February photo. The calendars are available for $20, with proceeds benefiting the Humane Rescue Alliance of D.C. (TWP)
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4 | EXPRESS | 07.06.2017 | THURSDAY
local
A growing ‘grocery gap’
expressline
More join call for McAuliffe to stay execution
the growing economic and racial inequality in the city,” said the report, by D.C. Hunger Solutions. Council member Vincent C. Gray, D-Ward 7, recently proposed legislation that would require the District to fund construction of supermarkets for chains if they agreed to locate in underserved areas. “We know that race and economics are inextricably tied,” he said. “How do we raise income levels so retailers think they can make money?” His constituents are focused on more immediate questions. In the Safeway off Benning Road, retired nursing technician Esther Simmons was in line, wondering how long it would take her to reach the cashier. Normally she shops in Maryland, she said, because the service is better. “Thank God I’m in no hurry,” she said. “Otherwise I’d put everything back on the shelves and leave.” PAUL SCHWARTZMAN
VIRGINIA The daughter of a slain sheriff’s deputy has urged Gov. Terry McAuliffe to stop the execution of the man who killed her father and a hospital security guard in 2006. The statement Wednesday from Rachel Sutphin in support of clemency for William Morva came one day before he was scheduled to be executed. Sutphin adds a powerful, personal voice to a growing number of state lawmakers urging McAuliffe to commute Morva’s death sentence. Morva, 35, was convicted in 2008 for fatally shooting Cpl. Eric Sutphin and hospital guard Derrick McFarland after escaping from custody. His clemency campaign has attracted local and international supporters who say the jury that sentenced Morva to death was not informed of his severe mental illness. In her statement, Rachel Sutphin wrote, “I have fought and will continue to fight for clemency for all death row inmates until Virginia declares the death penalty unconstitutional. I have sent my own letter to the governor showing my support for clemency.” A spokesman for McAuliffe said the governor has received Sutphin’s letter. “He is reviewing all of the materials submitted and will make a statement when the review is complete,” spokesman Brian Coy said. ANN E. MARIMOW
(THE WASHINGTON POST)
AND GREGORY S. SCHNEIDER (TWP)
MARVIN JOSEPH (THE WASHINGTON POST)
THE DISTRICT From where she lives in Northwest D.C., Angela Bradbery is 2 miles from a Safeway, nearly a mile from a Whole Foods and half that distance from a Giant. Even with those options, Bradbery was pleased to learn recently that Wegmans — a veritable Taj Mahal for foodies — is planning its first D.C. store around the corner on Wisconsin Avenue. “People are excited,” she said, though she added that she knew of no one who had been “clamoring” for another place to buy eggs. In a far less prosperous neighborhood across town, east of the Anacostia River, three Safeway cashiers served some two dozen patrons on a Friday afternoon, a number of them visibly angry about how long it was taking. “Open up some lines, Mr. Manager!” a man shouted as he waited to buy a beer. “This is crazy,” said Cuteava Chambers, 55, who doesn’t own a car. “Where else can we go?” Over the past decade, as D.C.’s population has swelled in size and affluence, the range and quality of grocery stores has proliferated in wealthy neighborhoods. But in the District’s poorest neighborhoods, the number of supermarkets has decreased, exacerbating a long-standing “grocery gap” that has grown more acute as the city has become more well-to-do. The 160,000 residents of Wards 7 and 8, on the District’s eastern edge, have a total of three full-service groceries, down from seven in 2010. That’s more than 50,000 people for every grocery store. In contrast, Ward 6, with new
AP
As D.C. prospers, supermarkets are expanding rapidly — except in poor areas
Raymond Blanks of Ward 7 often takes the bus to go grocery shopping at a Whole Foods 3 miles away in Ward 5.
apartment towers along H Street NE, has 10 supermarkets. Residents of Ward 3 in upper Northwest, where the new Wegmans is planned, can choose from eight. That’s about 10,000 residents for every grocery store. The area’s options are plentiful enough that the Wegmans announcement prompted a smattering of concern in a Cleveland Park email group about potential traffic congestion. Residents of Ward 7 wish they had such problems. Their only immediate option is the Safeway just off the intersection of Minnesota Avenue and Benning Road, which was why Raymond Blanks rode a bus more than 3 miles on a recent Friday to shop at the Whole Foods on H Street NE. “It was beautiful,” he said. At his neighborhood Safeway, Blanks said, he once asked a worker for bok choy: “He looked at me like I was a brother from another planet. They don’t carry it.”
“We can see the systemic bullcrap. They’ll take our food stamps, our cash, our credit, but they won’t provide us with adequate staff.” JOY HICKS, 36, who shops at a Safeway in Southeast, on the poor amenities and service at the few grocery stores in predominantly African-American areas of D.C.
The imbalance was the subject of a recent study that found that nearly 70 percent of the city’s supermarkets in 2016 were concentrated in its wealthiest, predominantly white neighborhoods. The remainder were in poorer areas that are overwhelmingly African-American. “This disparity reflects both
Six shot — one fatally — and another stabbed in July Fourth overnight violence in D.C.
Pr. George’s County teen’s hand seriously injured when firework explodes
THURSDAY | 07.06.2017 | EXPRESS | 5
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local BALTIMORE T.J. Smith is the face of Baltimore police: He’s the spokesman pleading with the public at news conferences to put down their guns, call in a tip or keep an eye on wily teenagers. His pleas to end the relentless bloodshed in the city turned personal when his younger brother became one of Baltimore’s latest homicide victims. Dionay Smith, 24, was found dead inside his apartment Sunday from a gunshot wound. He was the city’s 173rd homicide victim this year; there have been
three more killings since. “To many, he will be #173, but to me and my family, he’s Dion, a brother, a son, a father, a friend, a nephew, and a kind soul,” Smith wrote in a Facebook post Tuesday. Baltimore has been in the throes of a crime surge for more than two years, and the homicide rate this year is again on track to break records. From January through June, the city saw 170 homicides — just two fewer than the same time period in 1993, when the city had about 100,000 more residents than it does today. A close second for the bloodiest
ERICKA ALSTON BUCK VIA AP
Homicide victim was official’s brother
Dionay Smith, 24, the brother of Baltimore police spokesman T.J. Smith, was found dead Sunday.
ICE detainee back in custody Monday after briefly escaping in Loudoun County, Va.
year was 2015, which recorded 344 homicides, with a population of just 622,000. Police released security footage showing two men in the hallway of Dionay Smith’s apartment. Police are asking the public to help identify one of the men. Although T.J. Smith is no stranger to homicides, he said he found himself in denial after learning of his brother’s slaying. “When I saw his name come across, I just knew,” Smith said, through tears Wednesday, “but like any family member you’re in denial.” JULIET LINDERMAN (AP)
FUNDRAISERS
$266K The amount the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum raised in an effort to preserve and digitize more than 200 diaries from Holocaust victims and survivors, exceeding its goal of $250,000. The museum said Wednesday that its first crowdfunding campaign, launched on Kickstarter last month, met its goal with pledges from over 4,500 people. (AP)
18-year-old among three fatally shot in deadly 24-hour span in Prince George’s County
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nation+world
NYPD officer ‘assassinated’ NEW YORK The killer who strode up to a mobile police command post and put a bullet in an officer’s head Wednesday had ranted in a Facebook video last September about law officers killing and abusing people and warned them to leave him alone or “we gonna do something.” “I’m not playing, Mr. Officer. I don’t care about 100 police watching this,” 34-year-old ex-convict Alexander Bonds said, adding: “It’s time for people to wisen up.” He also ranted about life in prison. Ten months later, Bonds went up to the RV-like command post in the Bronx and ambushed Officer Miosotis Familia, shooting
verbatim
SETH WENIG (AP)
Killer had ranted online about law enforcement abusing, killing people
Miosotis Familia was shot through a police vehicle’s window in the Bronx.
her through the passenger-side window as she wrote in her notebook around 12:30 a.m. New York City Police Commissioner James O’Neill said Familia was “assassinated in an unprovoked attack on cops.” Familia’s partner frantically radioed for help, and officers caught up with Bonds about a
block away and killed him when he pulled a revolver, police said. Familia, 48 and a mother of three, was a 12-year veteran of the force who spent her entire career with the department in the high-crime Bronx precinct. The command post had been set up since March. “She was on duty serving
TRANSPORTATION
2 more airlines exempt from U.S. ban on laptops Emirates and Turkish Airways said Wednesday they have been exempted from a U.S. ban on laptops in airplane cabins, joining Etihad Airways in satisfying American security concerns. Details were not released on the changes, but in Turkey, CT scanners are used to take crosssection images of passengers’ electronics just before they board airplanes heading to the U.S. (AP)
this city, protecting people, doing what she believed in and doing the job she loved,” Familia New York Mayor Bill de Blasio said. Police said they were trying to identify a motive. There was no immediate indication the killing had a racial dimension. Bonds was black; Familia was black and Hispanic. She had no known previous contact with Bonds. A convenience store video showed Bonds walking purposefully toward the command post vehicle with gloved hands. Bonds was paroled in 2013 after an eight-year sentence for an armed robbery. He had other arrests, including one in 2001, when he was accused of attacking an officer with brass knuckles.
LONDON
Visible remains removed but not yet ID’d after fire All “visible human remains” have been recovered from London’s fire-gutted Grenfell Tower, but it will be months before the full death toll is known, British police said Wednesday. Three weeks after a blaze tore through the high-rise apartment building, the Metropolitan Police said 87 “recoveries” of human remains have been made, but might not be from 87 different people. Police said only 21 have been formally identified. (AP)
COLLEEN LONG AND JENNIFER PELTZ (AP)
Pro-government militias storm congress in Venezuela
MOSUL, IRAQ
ISIS control in Old City down to 500 sq. meters
“All your client has to do is stop talking in the courthouse and around the perimeter of the courthouse.”
About 300 Islamic State fighters remain in a 500-square-meter area still controlled by the group in Mosul’s Old City, a senior Iraqi commander said Wednesday. However, a large number of civilians are also believed to be trapped in the enclave. (AP)
U.S. DISTRICT JUDGE KIYO MATSUMOTO on Wednesday
ISRAEL
to the lawyer for “Pharma Bro” Martin Shkreli, who is being tried for allegedly misleading investors. Shkreli last week mocked the prosecutors, who asked that he be silenced to avoid influencing the jury.
FERNANDO LLANO (AP)
Prosecutor files lawsuit against assailant’s estate
CARACAS, VENEZUELA | National Assembly workers run from an attack by pro-government militia members on opposition lawmakers Wednesday. The militias, wielding wooden sticks and metal bars, stormed congress during a special session coinciding with Venezuela’s independence day. Four lawmakers were injured, one of whom, Americo de Grazia, was taken by stretcher to an ambulance while suffering from convulsions.
Pakistan says it successfully test-fired a short-range ballistic missile that can carry nuclear warheads
Israel’s state prosecutor’s office in Jerusalem has filed a precedentsetting lawsuit against the estate of Fadi al-Qanbar, seven months after the Palestinian man carried out a car-ramming attack that left four Israeli soldiers dead. He was killed at the scene. The office seeks compensation from his wife and four children for burial costs and other losses, which could total up to $2.3 million. (TWP)
Suspects in 2014 Malaysia flight downed in Ukraine to be tried in Netherlands
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THURSDAY | 07.06.2017 | EXPRESS | 9
Arab states meet over Gulf crisis Chocolate you snort: Sweet, but is it safe? BUSINESS People who joke that they are addicted to chocolate might be interested in Coco Loko, a “snortable” chocolate powder being marketed as a drug-free way to get a buzz. The product, created by Legal Lean of Orlando, Fla., includes cacao powder, as well as Ginkgo biloba, taurine and guarana, which are commonly found in energy drinks. Legal Lean founder Nick Anderson says he heard about a “chocolate-snorting trend” in Europe a few months ago. He ordered a sample to try. “At first, I was like, ‘Is this a hoax?’ ” he recalled. “And then I tried it and it was like, OK, this is the future right here.” That led him to invest $10,000 into creating his own “raw cacao snuff.” It took him and an Orlando supplement company about 10 tries to find a mixture they liked. Anderson said the effects last 30 to 60 minutes and are “almost like an energy-drink feeling, like you’re euphoric but also motivated to get things done.” Doctors aren’t sure what to make of the brown powder, which hit U.S. shelves last month and is not approved by the Food and Drug Administration. “The question is, what are the risks ... ?” said Dr. Andrew Lane, director of the Johns Hopkins Sinus Center. “There’s no data, and as far as I can tell, no one’s studied what happens if you inhale chocolate into your nose.”
Four countries angered by Qatar’s ‘negative’ response to demands CAIRO Four Arab nations seeking to isolate Qatar were angered Wednesday by what they said was a “negative” response by the tiny Gulf nation to their demands for ending the crisis roiling the region. Doha’s response, they said, was “not serious” and betrayed Qatar’s “failure” to realize the gravity of the situation. The announcement followed
BOOST FOR ‘MORNING JOE’
1.66M
The number of viewers, Nielsen said Wednesday, of MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” on Friday, when Joe Scarborough and Mika Brzezinski discussed the previous day’s criticism of them by President Trump on Twitter. The number of viewers narrowly beat the show’s previous record, set the morning after Election Day in November. The show averages 896,000 viewers, typically second to Fox News Channel’s morning show. (AP)
ABHA BHATTARAI (THE WASHINGTON POST)
Canada’s PM Trudeau meets Queen Elizabeth II on Scotland visit
a meeting by foreign ministers from the four nations — Saudi Arabia, Egypt, the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain — in Cairo, shortly after they said they had received Doha’s reply. They accuse Qatar of supporting terror groups and maintaining close relations with Shiite power Iran — Saudi Arabia’s nemesis. The ministers did not say what their next steps would be. They will meet next in Bahrain, but a date has yet to be set. Earlier Wednesday, President Trump called on all parties to “negotiate constructively” and
KHALED ELFIQI (POOL VIA AP)
nation+world
Officials from Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Egypt meet in Cairo on Wednesday to discuss their concerns about Qatar.
to “stop terrorist financing and discredit extremist ideology.” The dispute erupted last month when the four Arab countries cut ties with Qatar. The four nations issued a 13-point list of demands on June 22, giving Qatar 10 days to comply. They later extended the deadline by 48 hours at the request of Kuwait, which is trying
to mediate the crisis. That deadline expired Wednesday. Qatar’s response was not made public but it has called the demands, which include shutting down its Al-Jazeera news network, closing a Turkish military base there and paying restitution, an affront to its sovereignty. HAMZA HENDAWI AND MOHAMMED WAGDY (AP)
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10 | EXPRESS | 07.06.2017 | THURSDAY
nation+world
World leaders might leave U.S. behind on new trade agreements FOREIGN POLICY President Trump and key global leaders are on a collision course ahead of the Group of 20 summit in Germany this week, with Trump’s unapologetic “America First” mantra on trade and climate change running into emboldened, and increasingly
united, opposition overseas. Trump reiterated his threats Wednesday to pull the United States back from existing trade deals, while other world powers are exploring new economic ties. The European Union and Japan are expected to announce plans today for a major new free trade agreement. The EUJapan deal, which has been negotiated only in broad terms thus far, would lower barriers to exports of cars flowing in both
ALIK KEPLICZ (AP)
Summit will test Trump’s agenda President Trump and the first lady arrive Wednesday in Warsaw, Poland.
directions, as well as reduce Japanese barriers to imports of trains and agricultural products, including cheese and chocolate. If completed, the EU-Japan
Chinese President Xi Jinping presents 2 giant pandas, Meng Meng and Jiao Qing, to Berlin zoo
FINANCIAL PLANNING
trade deal would be a sign of other top economies adjusting to a new world order in which they attempt to work around the United States instead of looking
to it for direction on building global trade. Trump, with support from Congress, already ended an effort for the U.S. to reach a trade agreement with Japan and other Asian countries, and he has threatened to withdraw from the North American Free Trade Agreement and from a separate trade agreement with South Korea. On Wednesday, Trump arrived in Poland, where he is expected to receive a friendly welcome. Trump will address the Polish people today and have meetings with the presidents of Poland and Croatia, along with meetings about energy with about a dozen European leaders. DAMIAN PALETTA AND ANA SWANSON (THE WASHINGTON POST)
Pope John Paul II’s longtime spokesman, Joaquin Navarro-Valls, dies at 80
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THURSDAY | 07.06.2017 | EXPRESS | 11
nation+world
U.S., China put at odds
N. Korea’s latest missile tests Trump’s hope of relying on a potentially reluctant ally The latest
The test by North Korea on Tuesday shows it has a missile that could threaten Alaska.
KRT (VIA AP VIDEO)
NATIONAL SECURITY The Trump administration has called for “global action” on North Korea, but as concern about the July 4 missile test and its aftermath deepens, the world’s biggest players, the United States and China, are at odds about what to do next. Tuesday’s launch was a display of the North’s longest-reaching weapon yet — an intercontinental ballistic missile with a range that experts say covers Alaska. Before his inauguration, President Trump said North Korea’s plan to develop an ICBM capable of hitting the United States “won’t happen,” and he has since repeatedly talked tough on the issue. His main strategy to stop it counted on help from Beijing, the North’s financial lifeline. But with the risk of armed conflict on the rise and Kim Jong Un taunting him, Trump must now craft a new strategy amid deep divisions. In the wake of Tuesday’s test, China and Russia issued a joint statement condemning North Korea and calling for what they called a “double suspension,” a plan that would see the U.S. and South Korea suspend joint military exercises and North Korea suspend weapons testing. But by early Wednesday, Asia time, U.S. and South Korean forces were firing missiles of their own, conducting joint military exercises that U.S. Pacific Command cast as a show of “ironclad” resolve — but seemed sure to rile Beijing. Trump then took to Twitter, appearing to blame China for failing to tighten the economic noose. “Trade between China and North Korea grew almost 40% in the first quarter. So much for China working with us — but we had to give it a try,” he
North Korea’s missile range A Short range (<625 miles)
North Korea A
B Medium range (625-1,864) C Intermediate range (1,864-3,417)
B
Japan
D Intercontinental (up to 4,160) Source: Center for Strategic and International Studies
C
D
Los Angeles
Honolulu
AP
tweeted, without elaborating on the statistic. Chinese data released in April showed China’s trade with the North grew 37.4 percent during the first three months of the year compared with the same period in 2016. China said then that overall trade grew even as it complied with U.N. sanctions and stopped buying North Korean coal. Daniel Pinkston, a lecturer in international relations at Troy University in Seoul, said he saw no chance the U.S. and South Korea would agree to halt joint
Washington, D.C. Seattle
exercises, especially after the North’s latest missile test. “It’s a non-starter, it’s just not going to happen,” he said. Deng Yuwen, a Beijing-based expert on North Korea, sees a growing divide between the positions of the U.S. and South Korea and Japan, on one hand, and China and Russia on the other. “Two opposing blocs have been formed,” he said. The missile the Kim regime launched Tuesday had been in the works for years. It flew higher and remained in the air longer than previous attempts, in
Monsoon floods kill at least 20 in northeastern India, leave thousands homeless
KIM’S HARD LINE: North Korean leader Kim Jong Un vowed Wednesday that his nation will “demonstrate its mettle to the U.S.” and never put its weapons programs up for negotiation. U.S. MILITARY OPTIONS? At an emergency meeting Wednesday of the United Nations Security Council, Nikki Haley, the U.S. ambassador to the U.N., called Pyongyang’s missile launch Tuesday “a clear and sharp military escalation.” She said that while the U.S. is not seeking a military confrontation, military options are indeed on the table. “Their actions are quickly closing off the possibility of a diplomatic solution,” she said. ARGUMENT FOR DIPLOMACY: South Korea’s president, Moon Jae-in, said the world should look at tougher sanctions against North Korea and insisted that the problems should be addressed through diplomatic channels. (AP)
what experts called a milestone. South Korean authorities described the North’s test as a two-stage missile with a range of about 4,300 to 5,000 miles — enough to reach Alaska and other parts of North America. South Korean Defense Minister Han Min-koo said there is a high probability that Pyongyang will stage another nuclear test. He also noted gains in its efforts to miniaturize a warhead — both steps toward developing nucleartipped weapons capable of hitting the mainland United States. North Korean state media carried gleeful descriptions of the test. Kim was quoted as saying that the “protracted showdown with the U.S. imperialists has reached its final phase.” EMILY RAUHALA (THE WASHINGTON POST)
Volvo drives toward a future of electric cars BUSINESS Volvo plans to build only electric and hybrid vehicles starting in 2019, making it the first major automaker to abandon cars and SUVs powered solely by an internal combustion engine. CEO Hakan Samuelsson said the move was dictated by customer demand. In two years, all new Volvo vehicles will have some form of electric propulsion. The rest of the auto industry is likely to make similar moves in a few years, said Sam Abuelsamid, senior analyst for Navigant Research, with luxury automakers leading the way. Sales of fully electric and hybrid vehicles have risen a little since 2012 but last year still accounted for only 2.6 million, (about 3 percent) of worldwide new vehicle sales. Navigant predicts that will increase to more than 9 million by 2025, making up about 9 percent of sales. Volvo, which is based in Sweden but owned by Chinese firm Geely, will launch five fully electric cars from 2019 to 2021. The company expects to reach its target of selling 1 million electrified cars by 2025. The company said its longrange models could travel 310 miles on a single charge using current technology, but it is looking for suppliers for new and better batteries. Samuelsson hopes Volvo’s announcement will encourage suppliers to invest in battery manufacturing and electric-car chargers. MATTI HUUHTANEN (AP)
Ukraine says it avoided 2nd cyberattack after police seized software company’s servers
sports 12 | EXPRESS | 07.06.2017 | THURSDAY
THREE POINTERS
Grading NBA moves
RICK SNIDER | SPORTS GURU
Worth holding: Redskins needn’t release Jones yet fired his agent last month. This week Jones, a thirdround pick in 2015, hired agent Drew Rosenhaus, who’s known for pushing buttons. The Redskins won’t be intimidated or annoyed into releasing Jones before training camp starts July 27. Sorry, Matt — it’s not personal. It’s business. Jones, who is under contract through 2018, is still a solid Plan B should Kelley suffer an injury in the preseason. It doesn’t matter that the team didn’t activate Jones over the final nine games last season. He has value as a proven back until opening day at least. Letting Jones go now would be a risk, so he’s probably stuck with Washington until Sept. 2, when rosters are cut to 53 players. That would leave little time for him to find work elsewhere, but the Redskins aren’t losing sleep about that. If not for his ball security issue, Jones would likely still be the Redskins’ top runner. His 4.6 yards per carry last season was more than respectable. He
Patterson to OKC
MATT HAZLETT (GETTY IMAGES)
Running back Matt Jones is unhappy with his place on the depth chart in Washington, but he’s likely stuck there for two more months. After entering last season as the starter and being benched because of his fumbling, Jones watched undrafted rookie Robert Kelley take his job. Then Washington drafted Samaje Perine to boost its goal-line offense. Entrenched thirddown back Chris Thompson re-signed in April, so Jones is now battling Mack Brown and Keith Marshall for a final roster slot. Jones has indicated he wants his release, but it doesn’t make sense for the Redskins to cut him loose just yet. The Redskins reportedly entertained pre-draft trades for Jones but didn’t find any takers. After sitting out the voluntary portion of offseason activities, Jones worked out at mandatory minicamp and
After delaying an announcement and keeping NBA fans glued to their phones Tuesday, Gordon Hayward is headed to Boston. Here are grades for that move and two others from The Washington Post. (TWP)
Redskins running back Matt Jones is buried behind three other players on the depth chart but still has value to Washington as a proven ball carrier.
gained 950 yards on 243 carries in two seasons. Jones also fumbled eight times in 20 games. He coughed up three last season, breaking Jay Gruden’s faith in him. Without playing special teams, Jones wasn’t worth much. Kelley averaged 4.2 yards per carry with zero fumbles to keep Jones on the bench. By showing up in June, Jones avoided looking like a malcontent. He ran with the reserves and made a few smart runs, but didn’t do enough to escape Gruden’s doghouse.
Jones’ only hope is to excel in preseason games against backups. Breaking a long run or two might force the Redskins to reconsider, or at least draw other teams’ attention. It doesn’t help Jones that former general manager Scot McCloughan, who drafted him, is gone. Jones has value if he can protect the ball. He’ll earn a job somewhere by proving that in camp with Washington.
At $5.4 million a year, Patrick Patterson, late of Toronto, is an affordable replacement for Taj Gibson — who left for Minnesota — as the Thunder’s power forward. Grade: A
Gallinari to the Clippers
A three-team trade with Denver and Atlanta puts Danilo Gallinari into an awkward fit in L.A. He should play power forward but can’t with Blake Griffin on the floor. Grade: D
Hayward to the Celtics
Boston got its man after targeting the free agent for over a year, landing a star after missing trades for Paul George (Thunder) and Jimmy Butler (Timberwolves). Grade: A
Rick Snider has covered sports in Washington since 1978. Follow him on Twitter @Snide_Remarks
verbatim
“He is, without a doubt, one of the greatest players in the history of the franchise.” HEAT PRESIDENT PAT RILEY, on big man Chris Bosh. left, in a farewell statement Tuesday. Bosh, who agreed to part
ways with Miami weeks ago, won two NBA titles with the Heat. He didn’t play last season because of blood clots.
Guard Nick Young, 32, agrees to 1-year, $5.2M deal with the Warriors
Indians manager Terry Francona misses second game while hospitalized with dizziness, rapid heart rate
THURSDAY | 07.06.2017 | EXPRESS | 13
sports
WIZARDS The Brooklyn Nets have offered a four-year, $106 million contract to restricted free agent Otto Porter Jr., the maximum amount they could offer the Wizards’ small forward. Porter agreed to sign Tuesday night following a meeting the previous day. Because the NBA is still in its moratorium before free agency, the offer won’t become official until noon today, when deals are first allowed to be signed. The
Wizards will then have until 11:59 p.m. Saturday to match the offer if they want to keep Porter. Barring a reversal from what several sources have maintained for months, Porter will return to the Wizards as the team’s highest-paid player next season. The Wizards plan on retaining Porter, but there is a chance they will keep the money from the offer sheet on Brooklyn’s books for as long as possible. In addition to the two days the Wizards will
$26.5M MICHAEL DWYER (AP)
Nets ensure Porter will get a max deal
PORTER’S ANNUAL PAY
Washington is expected to match Brooklyn’s offer to Otto Porter Jr.
have to match, there’s a two-day window in which Porter would need to report to the team and have a physical, and another two-day window after that for the team to announce whether he passed. So, in theory, the Wizards could wait to officially announce Porter has passed his physical
Wizards sign rookie free agent forward Mike Young (Pitt) to two-way contract in G League, NBA
and re-signed until 11:59 p.m. July 12 — tying up Brooklyn’s cap space for nearly a week. There is some skepticism around the league that the Wizards will go through with a deal that would put them over the luxury tax line for the first time. Now that Porter and the Nets have set the price, the Wizards
The amount per year that Otto Porter Jr. stands to make after agreeing to sign an offer sheet with the Nets of $106 million over four years. The Wizards are expected to match the offer, which would make Porter the second-highest-paid pro athlete in Washington, behind only Nationals ace Max Scherzer, who makes $30 million per year. (TWP)
will get their chance to prove the skeptics wrong. We’ll have the answer by late Saturday night. TIM BONTEMPS (THE WASHINGTON POST)
Rafael Nadal advances to third round of Wimbledon for first time since 2014
14 | EXPRESS | 07.06.2017 | THURSDAY
AFP/GETTY IMAGES
sports
WIMBLEDON
Comeback victory pushes Venus into third round
Join the Public Service Commission of the District of Columbia (DCPSC) at a Community Hearing to consider the Pepco/DDOT Application to approve undergrounding of certain electric power lines and facilities in the District (Formal Case 1145).
After dropping the opening set against Wang Qiang of China, Venus Williams powered into the third round Wednesday with a 4-6, 6-4, 6-1 victory in London. She struck more than twice as many winners as her opponent, 43 to 20. This is Williams’ first tournament since a two-car crash police say she caused in South Florida on June 9. A 78-year-old passenger in the other vehicle died about two weeks later. Wednesday’s match was the 97th in the main draw for Williams, 37, at the All England Club, breaking a tie with her sister Serena for the most among active players. (AP)
Hearing Dates: Friday - July 21, 2017 - 2:30 p.m. start (Ward 8) Community of Hope DC 4 Atlantic Street S.W. Washington D.C. 20032 Monday - July 24, 2017 - 6:30 p.m. start (Ward 5) Trinity Washington University O’Connor Auditorium 125 Michigan Avenue N.E. Washington D.C. 20017 Tuesday - July 25, 2017 - 11:30 a.m. start (Ward 4) St. John’s United Baptist Church 6343 13th Street N.W. Washington, D.C. 20011
NHL
Tuesday - July 25, 2017 - 6:30 p.m. start (Ward 4) Temple Sinai 3100 Military Road N.W. Washington, D.C. 20015
Oilers sign Connor McDavid to 8-year, $100M contract After leading the NHL in scoring with 100 points and being awarded the Hart Trophy as MVP last season, center Connor McDavid has earned an extension from Edmonton worth $100 million over eight years, or $12.5 million per year. Drafted first overall by the Oilers in 2015, McDavid, 20, led the team to its first playoff appearance in a decade last season. The Oilers beat the Sharks in the first round before losing to the Ducks in seven games. (AP)
To testify at a community hearing, please submit your name and organization (if any) to the Office of the Commission Secretary by 5 p.m., 3 days before a hearing by calling 202-626-5150 or by sending an email to psc-commissionsecretary@dc.gov. We welcome walk-ins the day of the hearing. If an organization or an individual is unable to offer comments at the community hearing, written statements may be dropped off to the DCPSC at 1325 G Street N.W., Suite 800, Washington D.C. 20005, or submitted through the DCPSC website. Individuals who need special accommodations, interpretation and/or translation services should inform the Office of the Commission Secretary at least 3 days prior to the hearing at 202-626-5150.
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Cowboys linebacker Wilson arrested on assault charges
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Dallas linebacker Damien Wilson was arrested Tuesday on two counts of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon after he was accused of backing his truck into a woman and threatening a man with a rifle during a dispute with some tailgaters. Frisco, Texas, police said Wilson was arrested outside of Toyota Stadium during the city’s Fourth of July celebration. Wilson, 24, started a career-high six games last season, finishing with 35 tackles. He has played all 16 games in each of his first two seasons. (AP)
07.06.17
weekendpass Why is he being so weird? ‘SNL’ regular and ‘Brigsby Bear’ star Kyle Mooney loves disappearing into oddball characters who have a loose grip on reality. But what happens when he’s just being himself? 20
THINKSTOCK AND GETTY IMAGES/EXPRESS ILLUSTRATION
Theater goes dark
Just riffing here
July? Priceless.
Things are looking pretty bleak at this year’s Fringe Festival 24
New ‘MST3K’ host Jonah Ray and his robot pals go live. Eegah! 19
Tear out this month’s calendar of free events and thank us later 22
16 | EXPRESS | 07.06.2017 | THURSDAY
up front
ass A quick p s t’ a h w at going on
The building museum unveils its latest buzzy summer installation
EXHIBITS When architect Jeanne Gang first set foot in the Great Hall of the National Building Museum in 2003, she noticed something peculiar. Sounds seemed to float away through the atrium’s immense Corinthian columns. Standing 10 feet from someone, you could hardly hear their voice. “It feels like you’re outside in the
middle of a big field,” Gang says. At the time, Gang was showcasing a translucent marble curtain for the exhibition “Masonry Variations.” Now, she’s back for “Hive,” the latest installation in the museum’s annual Summer Block Party series, debuting Thursday. More than 2,700 interlocking paper tubes form a set of three interconnected, domed acoustic chambers. Inside, visitors can experiment with drum-like tubes and chimes, exploring how sound travels and changes. “The whole structure works like a clearing
MATT MCCLAIN (THE WASHINGTON POST)
The sound of the ‘Hive’ at work
More than 2,700 tubes make up “Hive’s” three domed acoustic chambers.
in a forest. The tubes are like the trunks of trees,” Gang says. Her inspiration for “Hive” stemmed from the geometric patterns of nature, the famous domes of the classical world and recent social movements.
G N I M UPCO
S T N E EV
ZERO DAY
“People ask about the colors a lot,” Gang says, referring to the tubes, which are silver on the outside and magenta on the inside. “The magenta paper was inspired by watching all of the pink and magenta at the Women’s March.”
Gang’s architecture and urban design practice, Studio Gang, spent six months designing “Hive,” creating digital and physical models — including one made out of toilet paper rolls — to determine the exact dimensions. Chris Maclay, master carpenter for the museum, and his team had only a few weeks to assemble the installation. That meant cutting notches into thousands of tubes of various sizes and weights and fitting them all together. Maclay, who has worked for the museum for 14 years, found “Hive” to be one of his most challenging assignments yet. “It’s like Legos on steroids,” he says. MAIA SILBER (THE WASHINGTON POST)
National Building Museum, 401 F St. NW; Thu. through Sept. 4, $16.
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Join T.L. Williams, former CIA operative, as he shares how he drew on his intel background to compose an intense thriller about a Chinese government plot to seize the edge on global power by undermining the US economy.
Calling all recruits — pack your sleeping bag and PJs for an evening you won’t forget! When the Museum lights go down, the adventure begins… Transform yourself through disguise, make and break secret codes, uncover important secrets, interrogate real spies, and hunt for a mole within your ranks!
Leakers, tipsters, and sources clue you in on how leaks and the press affect the intelligence community. Amy Fiscus, NYT national security editor, moderates an intense discussion with Peter Earnest, Executive Director of SPY & former CIA Deputy Director of Communications; Runa Sandvik, NYT Director of Information Security and former hacker; and Glenn Thrush, NYT White House Correspondent.
Craig Bauer, author of Unsolved Ciphers will explore some of the most vexing ciphers never to be cracked and invites guests to stay after his talk for some collaborative cipher-breaking.
WITH T.L. WILLIAMS TH
Ages: 9-13. Snacks and breakfast included.
THE HISTORY AND MYSTERY OF THE WORLD’S GREATEST CIPHERS
THURSDAY | 07.06.2017 | EXPRESS | 17
up front Take a ’cue from Hill Country
Just Announced! Fort Reno concert series
Penn Quarter’s Hill Country is likely to get more crowded in the coming days: The smokehouse just earned the No. 1 spot on The Washington Post’s annual barbecue rankings.
So the return of Hill Country’s Backyard Barbecue couldn’t be better timed. The event has been AWOL for the past two BILL O’LEARY (THE WASHINGTON POST)
summers, but starting Thursday, the outdoor pop-up takes over the west lawn at the National Building Museum (401 F St. NW, Thu. & Fri., 4-9 p.m., Sat. & Sun., noon-9 p.m.) on weekends until September. The menu includes sliced brisket, a pulled pork sandwich, a hot link sandwich and a new item, a Texas cheesesteak (smoked brisket in a hoagie roll topped with sauteed peppers and onions and a semi-spicy queso). The pop-up will also feature live music Friday through Sunday, yard games, beer and frozen drinks. TIM CARMAN (TWP)
Hill Country serves its smoked meats at an outdoor pop-up starting Thursday.
After rumors that D.C.’s beloved free concert series was near cancellation, organizers revealed that the show will go on. Among the mostly local lineup: punk duo Teen Mortgage (July 17), indie rockers Makeup Girl (July 31) and post-hardcore trio Weird Babies, which kicks things off Thursday.
The Secret Sisters Hamilton, Oct. 4, $14.75-$34.75.
After a rocky few years (including filing for bankruptcy in 2014), the folk duo is back with a new album, “You Don’t Own Me Anymore.” GET TICKETS: Friday at 10 a.m. through Ticketfly.
IAN FRANK
Fort Reno Park, Mondays and Thursdays in July, 7 p.m.
Rebirth Brass Band Hamilton, Nov. 3-4, $35-$45.
New Orleans institution Rebirth Brass Band has a standing gig at the city’s Maple Leaf Bar every Tuesday. The horn players have become a popular draw in D.C., too: In November, they’ll return for four shows over two nights. GET TICKETS: Friday at 10 a.m. via Ticketfly. RUDI GREENBERG (EXPRESS)
“THE ULTIMATE FAMILY MUSICAL!” —The Washington Post
Now thru July 16 | Opera House
TICKETS ON SALE NOW! (202) 467-4600 | KENNEDY-CENTER.ORG Tickets also available at the Box Office. Groups (202) 416-8400 For all other ticket-related customer service inquiries, call the Advance Sales Box Office at (202) 416-8540.
Theater at the Kennedy Center is made possible by
Major support for Musical Theater at the Kennedy Center is provided by
Nicholas Rodriguez as Captain Georg von Trapp and Charlotte Maltby as Maria Rainer, photo by Jeremy Daniel Paige Silvester as Liesl, and Austin Colby as Rolf Gruber, photo by Matthew Murphy Charlotte Maltby as Maria Rainer and the von Trapp Children, photo by Jeremy Daniel
Kennedy Center Theater Season Sponsor
Additional support is provided by The Blanche and Irving Laurie Foundation.
18 | EXPRESS | 07.06.2017 | THURSDAY
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JUL 15
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Jonah Heston (Jonah Ray) gets by with the help of his robot friends on the Netflix reboot of “MST3K.”
www.blackcatdc.com @blackcatdc JULY SHOWS FRI 7
THE INDEPENDANCE
FRI 7
TALES FROM THE ROUND WORLD BURLESQUE (21+)
A PRO-CHOICE PROM
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SUN 9
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MON 10 MUGGLE MONDAYS BUTTERBEER & THE 2ND FILM TUE 11
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WITCH TAINT LIVE!
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PKEW PKEW PKEW GARRETT DALE
THE BLACK METAL DIALOGUES
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The A-team of B-movies Host Jonah Ray is ready to raise the riff with ‘Mystery Science Theater 3000 Live’
“Mystery Science Theater 3000,” the ’90s cult TV show about a guy stranded in space who is forced to watch bad movies with his wisecracking robot companions, ended 18 years ago. Netflix resurrected it earlier this year with the same conceit and the same robots, but with a new trapped guy, played by actor-comedian Jonah Ray. Now “MST3K” is going live with its “Watch Out for Snakes” North American tour. Ray will be joined onstage by “MST3K” creator and original star Joel Hodgson, who acts as emcee, and wisecracking puppet robots Crow, Tom Servo and Gypsy. The D.C. stop this weekend will have Ray and the robots riffing on two movies in separate shows: “Eegah,” a 1962 no-budget monster flick that was skewered in a classic “MST3K” episode, and a “secret surprise film” to be revealed to the audience that night. Ray thinks the formula for the show — a combination of live performances, taped bits and (of course) a terrible movie — will play just as well in a theater as “MST3K” does in your living room. KRISTEN PAGE-KIRBY (EXPRESS) What challenges do you anticipate in bringing the show to the stage? The tricky part of any kind of live show with multiple AV elements is there’s always the possibility of a domino effect, of one cue being a little late and then everything starts to go off the rocker. But it’s what makes live comedy so great — there is this possibility of these moments where things
do go out of control and you see performers put a little bit more on the spot. It’s not just technical things that could change, though — you’ll have a whole live audience there. There’s a thing that can happen with live riffing: When the audience laughs, you slow down, you readjust the rhythm. But if there’s a movie going, the movie’s
not going to slow down to get these laughs in. By the time the show rolls out, you will have seen the movies and done those riffs a LOT. How do you keep it fresh? In stand-up comedy, you may have done the same joke 20 nights in a row, but it hasn’t been the same audience 20 nights in a row. You can’t get bored of the
joke; you have to act it out as if you’re coming up with it now, and the response you get is what makes it exciting. What makes a good “MST3K” film? They have to have been trying their hardest to make a good movie. They wanted to make a movie and they tried their best, and it didn’t really work out. How is “Eegah” one of those films? It’s just one of those movies that doesn’t necessarily make too much sense, but the movie doesn’t seem to realize that. And there are these performances where they’re just giving it all they’ve got. There’s a WTFness to it.
Lincoln Theatre, 1215 U St. NW; Sun., 6 p.m. (“Eegah”) & 9 p.m. (surprise film), $39.50-$49.50 (VIP packages $99-$299).
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20 | EXPRESS | 07.06.2017 | THURSDAY
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Don’t ask Kyle Mooney to be himself
‘Saturday Night Live’s’ resident weirdo is trying stand-up with help from his favorite characters
GETTY IMAGES/EXPRESS ILLUSTRATION
“SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE” CAST MEMBER KYLE MOONEY admits
that the idea of standing at a mic and telling jokes about himself makes him uncomfortable. “I definitely am more observational of the people around me and how they interact and less introspective about myself,” says Mooney, 32. “I just don’t know what I’d say as myself.” Thank goodness Mooney, who co-wrote and stars in the upcoming film “Brigsby Bear,” has a handful of other people he can pretend to be when he takes the stage at the 9:30 Club next week. Since joining “SNL” four years ago — and even before that, alongside castmate Beck Bennett as part of the YouTube comedy group Good Neighbor — Mooney has been building an arsenal of recurring characters based on his love of pop culture and the regular folks he comes across. LORI MCCUE (EXPRESS) 9:30 Club, 815 V St. NW; Tue., 7 p.m., sold out.
What can people expect from your live show? We want to keep it a bit of a surprise, but basically people will be seeing me doing a variety of characters and we’ll show some videos. Dave McCary, who I’ve worked with on all my videos and at “SNL” and who directed “Brigsby Bear” — we’ll be sharing the stage at parts. It’s characters that fans of my stuff would recognize, either from “SNL” or videos. What do you see as the throughline to all these characters?
A lot of the characters I play seem to be lying to themselves in some way. They maybe present themselves as confident or good at something, but in reality it’s clear that they don’t know what they’re talking about. It’s also clear you love TV — you’ve written digital shorts about things like those VH1 “I Love the 90s” specials, reality shows and sitcoms like “Family Matters.” I love [ABC’s 1990s programming block] “TGIF” and that stuff. But if you watch it from another perspective that’s not
just listening for laugh lines, it becomes a very abstract, almost psychedelic thing. You can get another layer and realize, “this is actually really weird.” Do you still watch a lot of TV? I think my first season on “SNL” I watched every single episode of “Step by Step,” and a few years prior to that I watched every single episode of “Family Matters.” Now it’s just getting to a point where I’m finding more obscure shows from that same era. One that I was getting into this year is this Disney Channel show from the late ’90s to early
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weekendpass
Millennium Stage Free performances every day at 6 p.m. No tickets required July 8 Truthworker
2000s called “Bug Juice,” which was all about middle school-aged kids going to summer camp. I’m fascinated by adolescence and that time in which kids are flirting with each other and you’re awkward and you don’t really know what you are. I’ve seen spoilers, but I think “Brigsby Bear” [opening Aug. 4] is best seen when you know as few details as possible. So is it giving away too much to say that you star as a man who decides to re-create a children’s TV series that was important to him growing up? That works. Ideally, that’s the way everybody sees the movie, but unfortunately just with how promotion works and trailers and reviews, not everybody will get to have that experience. We’ve fought creatively from the beginning to maintain as much mystery as possible. At the core I think it’s a sweet movie, and there’s a strong theme of friendship and making friends. Did making a sweet movie feel like a transition from the writing you do for sketches or videos? I envisioned the movie in my head as darker and weirder, but then in the process of writing it, the movie that it became was really natural. I got to kind of embody the character as we were writing, so maybe I enjoyed being in that sweetness. When we first started showing the script to people, they were surprised, as well, that that element is there. What was showing it at the Cannes Film Festival like? Surreal. The biggest question
July 7 Circus Harmony
July 10 Syncing Ink
SONY
In Mooney’s movie “Brigsby Bear,” a young man learns the startling truth behind his favorite TV show.
Brought to you by
Meet Kyle Mooney’s awkward alter egos Bruce Chandling: Mooney’s New York comic — a “Weekend Update” regular — is so bad at telling jokes, he’s … still bad. But he’s so insecure you can’t help but laugh and groan at his juvenile gags anyway.
July 6–19 D.C. HIP HOP THEATER FESTIVAL Presented in collaboration with Hi-ARTS These programs contain mature themes and strong language.
6 THU Truthworker: Boxed in
Interviews: Mooney hunches over and mumbles into a microphone to play his interviewing character, asking uncomfortable questions of real, unsuspecting people. In various videos, he’s questioned fans outside a Justin Bieber concert, the crowd at a Los Angeles Lakers victory parade and attendees at a reptile convention.
& Blacked Out in America Truthworker Theatre Company performs excerpts from their provocative Hip Hop theater work, which depicts the prison industrial complex through the lens of a dozen youth directly impacted by mass incarceration.
10 MON Syncing Ink Based on true events, NSangou Njikam leads us on a lyrical ride to discover what it really takes to freestyle. Directed by Niegel Smith, Artistic Director of New York’s Flea Theater.
Family Night: Circus Harmony
7 FRI
The non-profit social circus organization promotes peace through pyramids, joy through juggling, and harmony through handsprings. Presented in collaboration with the 2017 Smithsonian Folklife Festival.
8 SAT WNO Opera Institute Participants in this Washington National Opera program collaborate for an evening featuring classical singers. 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 NSO training program.
This performance will not be streamed live or archived.
IN THE CONCERT HALL
‘Inside SoCal’: Imagine if the obnoxious, disaffected skater boys you rolled your eyes at in high school got their own public access show: Those are basically the bro-y characters Mooney and Beck Bennett brought to “SNL” from their YouTube days. L.M.
I had [going in] was, “How will this translate?” But it was really positive. I’ve made a career out of stuff that I figured my friends would like, you know? So to play the movie in front of not just international audiences, but also a room full of — in my eyes — genuine grown-ups was intriguing. Seeing people I wouldn’t necessarily have thought of when we conceptualized it enjoy it, that was really special.
IN THE FAMILY THEATER
11 & 12 TUE & WED
The Bitter Game In five acts structured as the four quarters and overtime of a basketball game, this compelling play based on playwright/actor Keith A. Wallace’s youth in Philadelphia explores the experience of being Black in America as viewed through the relationship between a young man and his mother. Free general admission tickets will be distributed in the Hall of States starting at approximately 5 p.m., up to two tickets per person. These performances will not be streamed live.
9 SUN SMI Orchestra The orchestra conducted by Elizabeth Schulze plays “Short Ride in A Fast Machine” by John Adams and Bruckner’s Symphony No. 4 “Romantic.” Free general admission tickets will be distributed at 4:30 p.m. at the entrance to the Hall of Nations, up to two tickets per person.
13 THU Chamber Ensembles Participants play Dvorˇák’s String Quintet, Barber’s Summer Wing Quintet, and Persichetti’s Serenade No. 6.
15 SAT Chamber Ensembles Participants play Rossini's Duetto for Cello and Bass, Smetana’s String Quartet No. 1 “From My Life,” and Mendelssohn’s Octet.
16 SUN Chamber Ensembles Participants play Maurer’s Concertante for Four Violins, Op. 55, Debussy’s String Quintet in G minor, and Schubert’s “Trout” Piano Quintet.
17 MON Chamber Ensembles Participants play Dahl’s Music for Brass Instruments and Beethoven’s String Quartet No. 1.
18 TUE Stranger in the Alps The modern folk-rock outfit communicates the joys and anxieties of contemporary life through original songs inspired by homonyms and air travel. Presented in collaboration with Hometown Sounds.
19 WED The Washington
Balalaika Society Formed in 1988, the group is the largest orchestra of Russian folk instruments in North America and endeavors to pattern its sound and repertoire after the great orchestras of Russia. Presented in collaboration with International Music Convention of Russia.
14 FRI Chamber Ensembles Participants play Dvorˇák’s Terzetto, Op. 74, Ravel’s String Quartet in F, and Nielsen’s Wind Quintet.
FOR DETAILS OR TO WATCH ONLINE, VISIT KENNEDY-CENTER.ORG/MILLENNIUM. The Millennium Stage was created and underwritten by James A. Johnson and Maxine Isaacs to make the performing arts accessible to everyone in fulfillment of the Kennedy Center’s mission to its community and the nation. Additional funding for the Millennium Stage is provided by Kim Engel and Family, The Isadore and Bertha Gudelsky Family Foundation, Inc., The Meredith Foundation, The Morris and Gwendolyn Cafritz Foundation, Dr. Deborah Rose and Dr. Jan A.J. Stolwijk, U.S. Department of Education, and the Millennium Stage Endowment Fund. The Millennium Stage Endowment Fund was made possible by James A. Johnson and Maxine Isaacs, Fannie Mae Foundation, the Kimsey Endowment, Gilbert† and Jaylee† Mead, Mortgage Bankers Association of America and other anonymous gifts to secure the future of the Millennium Stage. Kennedy Center education and related artistic programming is also made possible through the generosity of the National Committee for the Performing Arts and the President’s Advisory Committee on the Arts.
Daily food and drink specials • 5–6 p.m. nightly • Grand Foyer Bars TAKE METRO to
the Foggy Bottom/GWU/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: There is no free parking for free performances. The Kennedy Center welcomes persons with disabilities.
All performances and programs are subject to change without notice.
Earn a Trinity MBA, bachelor’s or master’s degree to advance your career in:
BUSINESS & MANAGEMENT or MEDIA & STRATEGIC COMUNICATIONS 22 | EXPRESS | 07.06.2017 | THURSDAY
free+easy
The best ts free even th this mon
PUMPSTATION ENTERTAINMENT PRESENTS
LIVE UPCOMING PERFORMANCES
SAT, JULY 15
TOWN MOUNTAIN AND I DRAW SLOW
JESSE
ROYAL
JULY 12
Live From the Lawn: Karen Jonas and Lauren Calve
W/ RAS SLICK
THURSDAY
JULY 6
Strathmore’s outdoor summer concert series at the Gudelsky Gazebo returns Wednesday and continues with (near) weekly performances through September. Several genres are represented, including Americana acts Karen Jonas and Lauren Calve on opening night and bluegrass outfit Look Homeward on July 19. Femina (Aug. 2) is a female trio from Patagonia that finds harmony in reggae, Latin music and hip-hop. The following week, New Yorkbased Matuto mixes jazz, blues, bluegrass and Brazilian sounds.
THURS, JULY 20
PARTICLE
FRI, JULY 21
LARRY CAMPBELL & TERESA WILLIAMS SAT, JULY 22
SONNY LANDRETH
SWEAR and
SHAKE W/ CAROLINE ROSE FRIDAY
JULY 7
W/ SPECIAL GUEST TORONZO CANNON SUN, JULY 23
TUES, JULY 25
OKKERVIL RIVER W/ JESSE HALE MOORE
THURS, JULY 27
AN EVENING WITH
SUPERFLY
DISCO
A RETRO 70’S DANCE PARTY SATURDAY JULY 8
PETER HIMMELMAN
JULY 8
FRI, JULY 28
AN EVENING WITH
LIVE AT THE FILLMORE THE DEFINITIVE TRIBUTE TO THE ORIGINAL ALLMAN BROTHERS BAND SAT, JULY 29
AN EVENING WITH INGRATITUDE:
DANA TAI SOON BURGESS DANCE COMPANY
THE STEPPIN STONES
MINGO
FISHTRAP
W/ THE YOUNG SENATORS RELOADED
SUNDAY
JULY 9
A TRIBUTE TO EARTH, WIND, & FIRE
Dana Tai Soon Burgess Dance Company, ‘After 1001 Nights’ National Portrait Gallery, Eighth and F streets NW; Sat., 2 & 4 p.m., free.
Inspired by the National Portrait Gallery exhibit “The Face of Battle: Americans at War, 9/11 to Now,” the new dance piece “After 1001 Nights” will explore how soldiers cope with trauma and are transformed through their experiences in battle. Ten dancers will perform the piece, which is set to John Zorn’s “Leonard: Book of Angels Volume 30.”
JULY 8
SUN, JULY 30
ENTER THE HAGGIS TUES, AUG 1
LIVE DEAD ’69 W/ HOLLY BOWLING
LES NUBIANS UP CLOSE & PERSONAL TOUR
FRIDAY
JULY 14
LATE-NIGHT MUSIC IN THE LOFT EVERY THURS - SAT
Alexandria Birthday Celebration Yes, yes, we just HAD a big birthday celebration, but Alexandria refuses to be overshadowed by younger sibling the United States. The country turned 241 on Tuesday; Alexandria turns 268 this month. For the city’s birthday bash, the Alexandria
Symphony Orchestra provides background music; you supply a blanket or chairs and a picnic (patriotic-themed birthday cake will be available to all). Then settle in for waterfront fireworks that will make the Fourth of July seem so four days ago. Oronoco Bay Park, 100 Madison St., Alexandria; Sat., 5-10 p.m., free.
Strathmore, 5301 Tuckerman Lane, North Bethesda, Md.; Wednesdays from July 12 through Aug. 30 & Sept. 9, 7 p.m., free. JULY 14
Cinema de la revolution: America Films 18thCentury France: ‘Marie Antoinette’ Pouf your hair, strap that corset and drape yourself with lavish stones, because the National Gallery of Art is screening six American-made films that celebrate the beautiful and luxurious culture of 18th-century France. The series, which runs through Aug. 12, kicks off July 14 at 2 p.m. with “Marie Antoinette,” Sofia Coppola’s delightfully clever take on France’s last queen that’ll leave you just drooling over the magnificent royal costumes and sweeping visuals of the palace. As the French would say: Oui, oui. National Gallery of Art, East Building, Fourth Street and Constitution Avenue NW; July 14-Aug. 12, various times, free. JULY 15
5-8-77 Cornell Revisited: A Grateful Dead Dance Party Because Deadheads’ desire to hear their favorite band’s music never stops, Gypsy Sally’s will host its first Grateful Dead dance party,
Text or call:
Get started!
TRINITY WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY
202-656-5615 Learn more:
www.trinitydc.edu/ADVANCE
THURSDAY | 07.06.2017 | EXPRESS | 23
free+easy
St. NW; July 15, 8:30 p.m., free with Facebook RSVP. JULY 22 & 23
Montgomery County Farm Tour Once a year, the farms that dot Montgomery County throw
JULY 14-16
open their barn doors and let the public explore. Visiting the 17 farms is free, and many offer free activities including face painting, fruit samples and hayrides. Some bonuses, like wine and beer tastings or veggie picking, will cost you a bit. Think of it as a bar crawl, with much less alcohol and many more goats.
Living Earth Festival National Museum of the American Indian, Fourth Street and Independence Ave. SW; July 14-16, 10 a.m.-5:30 p.m., free.
This year, the National Museum of the American Indian is throwing a party for chocolate. Or rather, it’s making the cacao plant the focus of its eighth annual Living Earth Festival, celebrating Native American food traditions. The centerpiece of the festival is the Chocolate Chat at 2 p.m. July 14, led by chefs who will discuss the long history of chocolate in Native American cooking and culture. A wine tasting will follow. The rest of the weekend is filled with art demonstrations, dance performances and cooking presentations.
Various locations; July 22 & 23, various times, free, go to montgomerycountymd.gov for a list of participating farms.
Written by Express’ Bryanna Cappadona, Sadie Dingfelder, Rudi Greenberg, Kristen Page-Kirby and Lori McCue.
You’re Invited! BOOK RELEASE PARTY Fri., July 14, 6-8 PM Hosted by Green Hat Gin 1832 Fenwick Street, NE DC
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
Walker JERRY JEFF WALKER Django Garrett 13 KASEY CHAMBERS Kato Ruston 14 ROBERT EARL KEEN Kelly 15 SOUTHSIDE JOHNNY &The Asbury Jukes 16 GARY PUCKETT & The Union Gap July
7
17
THE ZOMBIES
DON DILEGO
STEVE EARLE & THE DUKES M T 19 SAWYER FREDERICKS w/Gabriel Wolfchild & The Northern Light, Haley Johnson HE ASTERSONS
18
Jocelyn & Arndt ROGERCLYNE&THEPEACEMAKERS Chris JEFFREY OSBORNE 22 23 PURE PRAIRIE LEAGUE & ATLANTA RHYTHM SECTION
20
24
BILLY BRAGG with
Vending by Bookshop $1 of each book sale donated to DC Central Kitchen
SONIA (from disappear fear)
Play TOAD THE WET SPROCKET Beta 28,29 &30 THE BACON BROTHERS 31 NIKKI LANE Steelism
26& 27
The Birchmere presents…
XX0164 1x1
where the venue will play the band’s most famously bootlegged concert: a May 8, 1977, performance at Cornell University. Recently remastered and released as a live album, the show includes a particularly blistering (and lengthy) pairing of “Scarlet Begonias” and “Fire on the Mountain.” Unlike most events in the venue’s main room, no cover or (cover) band is necessary. Gypsy Sally’s, 3401 K
This is Every Tuesday in Express
FRIDAY Aug 11, 8pm
YOUSSOU N’ DOUR The Voice of Senegal
• Wash. DC Tickets: gwutickets.com | 202.994.6800
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weekendpass
The festival’s plays are noticeably darker this year, thanks to Trump STAGE The Capital Fringe Festival, D.C.’s annual unjuried theater extravaganza, is something of a thermometer gauging the mood of playwrights and directors from the D.C. area and beyond. In recent years, the mood was light, and Fringe plays tended to be zany and intellectual, with clever musicals, remixed fairy tales and wacky interpretations of Shakespeare dominating the lineups. For this year’s festival, which opens Thursday and runs through July 30, the tenor is decidedly darker, with many of the festival’s plays taking place in dystopias and grappling with political issues, Capital Fringe president Julianne Brienza says. “I don’t think we’ve ever had that before, where everyone is dealing with a similar vein of questions with their work,” Brienza says. “That’s not to say all the plays are about social justice, but a lot of them are.” What accounts for the shift? Donald Trump. Even before he was a serious presidential candidate, Trump inspired many of the 85 or so plays on this year’s schedule. One such play is “Morningstar,” which is set inside a bunker during a nuclear apocalypse.
“With Trump’s comments early in his campaign about his potential willingness to use nuclear weapons, it seemed like a story that really needed telling,” says playwright Nathaniel Klein, who wrote “Morningstar.” The glut of dystopias isn’t just a reflection of liberals’ pessimism about America’s future — it’s also a way to look at current political issues in a new light, Fringe directors say. For example, “Lazarus,” from Unstrung Harpist Productions, imagines a world where the 1 percent can buy an expensive medical procedure that makes them live indefinitely, a situation that creates a permanent upper class. This society — with little social mobility and an entitled ruling class — should be familiar to anyone who watches the news, playwright Evan Krump says. “Unstrung Harpist’s choice to produce this play now is no coincidence, since we have in office a living, breathing brightorange example of plutocracy in action,” Krump says. Among all of the festival’s dystopias is at least one play with a happy ending: “Shinka” imagines life returning to a warscorched Earth. The aim of the piece, a theater-dance hybrid, is to inspire hope and action, director-choreographer Yoshiko Usami says. “We — all of us — can stand
ALEX LOWY
“Roseburg”
“Shinka”
VANESSA TERANV
Everyone’s anxious for Fringe
MICHAEL WRIGHT
“Lazarus”
Many of the plays at this year’s Fringe Festival, the first since President Trump’s election, are set in dystopias and feature characters grappling with social injustice and the anxiety-inducing state of the world.
The MVP of PMs? Amid all the doom and gloom, the Fringe Festival hasn’t lost its trademark zaniness. For instance, the comedy “I’m Margaret Thatcher, I Is!” features an action-hero version of Great Britain’s first female prime minister who battles Jack the Ripper, helps form The Beatles, unravels mysteries with Sherlock Holmes and invents the double-decker bus. “There’s a lot of absurdity to go around these days,” director Lucette Moran says of current events. “I hope we can give people … a moment to focus on something that is meant to be absurd for a change.” S.D.
and think about the society we live [in] and not repeat the same thing in the past,” she says. Humans’ tendency to repeat mistakes is a theme of several Fringe plays this year. “Roseburg,” for instance, looks at two historical events in Roseburg, Ore.: a speech about gun control by Bobby Kennedy in 1968 and a 2015 school shooting at a community college. “RFK had strong feelings about mentally unstable people having access to guns, and nearly 50 years later, not much has changed,” “Roseburg” playwright and director Ginger
Dayle says. Dayle wrote the play back when she didn’t even think a Trump presidency was a possibility, but he makes a cameo anyway, she says. “He’s featured in the play because the shooter’s mother was a huge Trump fan,” Dayle says. “She read ‘The Art of the Deal’ to her son [when she] was pregnant with him. Truth is stranger than fiction.” SADIE DINGFELDER (EXPRESS)
Various locations; Thu.-July 30, go to capitalfringe.org for ticket prices and a full schedule.
THURSDAY | 07.06.2017 | EXPRESS | 25
26 | EXPRESS | 07.06.2017 | THURSDAY
THE KENNEDY CENTER
DISTRICT OF
weekendpass
COMEDY FESTIVAL
indies s + a r t ie
USA FILMS
Presenting Sponsor
Vin Diesel picked the wrong planet to crash into in “Pitch Black.”
‘Pitch Black’
Do you suffer from insomnia? Talk to your doctor about Arlington Cinema and Drafthouse’s Cosplay Cinema midnight movie series. This week’s flick is 2000’s “Pitch Black,” which is like “Pitch Perfect” except utterly different. Vin Diesel leads a group of people whose spaceship crashed on an unexplored planet. Normally it’s always day there, but that’s not scary, so now night is about to fall — and bring on the scary creatures! Side effects include terror, sleeplessness and having weird dreams where you’re back in high school and you haven’t studied for your chemistry test and Vin Diesel is the teacher. Arlington Cinema and Drafthouse, 2903 Columbia Pike, Arlington; Fri., 11:59 p.m., $10.
Now thru August 13 | Theater Lab You may think you know America, but if the last year has taught us anything, it’s that there are many different Americas to get to know. Alas, there is still one thing the blue states and red states share—the need for a good laugh! Age 16+
TICKETS ON SALE NOW! KENNEDY-CENTER.ORG | (202) 467-4600 Tickets also available at the Box Office. Groups call (202) 416-8400. For all other ticket-related customer service inquiries, call the Advance Sales Box Office at (202) 416-8540.
XX0164 2x.5
This is
Every Tuesday in Express
Diane Keaton retrospective
‘North by Northwest’
Road, Silver Spring; Fri. through Sept. 7, $10-$13 per film.
535 Eighth St. SE; Fri., 7 p.m., $8.
Last month, Diane Keaton was recognized with the AFI Life Achievement Award (Woody Allen even showed up to see her get it). See why she got the trophy with the AFI Silver’s retrospective of her work. You’ve got the “Godfathers” (just I and II, thankfully); “Reds,” with Warren Beatty; and, of course, a number of the films she did with Allen, including “Love and Death,” “Manhattan” and “Sleeper,” which gets 10 screenings over the next week. AFI Silver, 8633 Colesville
“North by Northwest” isn’t Hitchcock’s best film — that would be “Vertigo,” no arguing allowed — but it’s up there in terms of suspense (and sexiness, thanks to the chemistry between Cary Grant and Eva Marie Saint). Mistaken identity leads to bad guys pursuing Grant across the country, an adventure that includes a cross-country train ride, a closer-than-expected view of Mount Rushmore and a very famous, very unfortunate brush with a crop duster. Miracle Theatre, KRISTEN PAGE-KIRBY (EXPRESS)
THURSDAY | 07.06.2017 | EXPRESS | 27
AT
Pack a picnic, bring your family and friends, and experience enchanting music under the stars. The NSO is back at Wolf Trap—the Washington area’s favorite outdoor venue! FILM & LIVE MUSIC EVENT
Fri., July 14 at 8:15 p.m.
Sat., July 15 at 8:15 p.m.
Sat., July 22 at 8:30 p.m.
PUCCINI’S TOSCA
THE TENORS
THE LEGEND OF ZELDA: SYMPHONY OF THE GODDESSES
Wolf Trap Opera Grant Gershon, conductor The Washington Chorus Children’s Chorus of Washington
Steven Reineke, conductor
Kelly Corcoran, conductor Linked Vocal Ensemble
FILM & LIVE MUSIC EVENT
FILM & LIVE MUSIC EVENT
Fri., July 28 at 8:15 p.m.
Fri., August 4 at 8:30 p.m.
Sat., August 5 at 8:30 p.m.
ORFF: CARMINA BURANA BEETHOVEN: “EMPEROR” CONCERTO
LA LA LAND IN CONCERT
JURASSIC PARK™ IN CONCERT
Emil de Cou, conductor Alan Steinberger, piano
TM
& © Universal Studios
Emil de Cou, conductor
La La Land © 2017 Summit Entertainment, LLC. All Rights Reserved.
Seong-Jin Cho, piano
TICKETS ON SALE NOW!
1.877.WOLFTRAP OR WOLFTRAP.ORG/NSO
David and Alice Rubenstein are the Presenting Underwriters of the NSO.
28 | EXPRESS | 07.06.2017 | THURSDAY
The Anthem • 901 Wharf St. SW, Washington, D.C.
JULY
KALEO w/ ZZ Ward & Wilder....................................................................OCTOBER 14 PHOENIX ............................................................................................OCTOBER 16 Queens of the Stone Age w/ Royal Blood ...........................OCTOBER 20
AUGUST cont.
Freddie Gibbs................................................................................................. Th 8 Release the Pressure Bomba Estéreo .....................Th 179 Jamestown Revival w/with Colter Wall ...............................................................F Martín Miguel, Hot Coffee, The Districts The Record Company w/ The Deadmen Early Show! 7pm Doors .................. Sa 10 Samantha Francesca & Ozker ..F 7 w/ Sam Evian & Soccer Mommy ...F 18 Mixtape Second Pride Party with DJs Shea Van Horn and Matt Bailer .............. Sa 10 Added! Show U STREET MUSIC HALL PRESENTS Out! Sold First Show Valentino Khan.....................Sa 19 Bitch Sesh Live Matinee Show! Rodrigo y Gabriela w/ Ryan Sheridan ........................................................ M 12 .....Su 16 2pm Doors. This is a seated show. Waxahatchee Amadou & Mariam w/ Palehound & Outer Spaces .....M 21 w/ Redline Graffiti ......................Th 20 Delta Rae Sister Hazel w/ Christian Lopez .F 21 w/ Lauren Jenkins......................Th 24 AN EVENING WITH Uhh Yeah Dude This is a seated show.......................Sa 22 The Chris Robinson Conor Oberst (of Bright Eyes) Brotherhood ........................Sa 26 w/ Hop Along ...............................W 26 Washed Out ............................Th 31 AUGUST
SEPTEMBER
U STREET MUSIC HALL PRESENTS
Petit Biscuit ..............................W 2 Michelle Branch w/ Haerts.......F 4 Mew w/ Monakr ...........................Sa 5 First Show Sold Out! Second Show
Added!
Little Dragon w/ Xavier Omär ...W 9
9:30 CUPCAKES
Merriweather Post Pavilion • Columbia, MD THIS FRIDAY!
Dispatch w/ Guster & Marco Benevento.......................................................... JULY 7 My Morning Jacket w/ Gary Clark Jr. ..................................................... JULY 14 MERRIWEATHER 50TH ANNIVERSARY CONCERT FEATURING
Jackson Browne and Willie Nelson
w/ Har Mar Superstar ..................Sa 9 Nick Murphy (Chet Faker) ...Su 10 Joseph w/ Bailen .......................W 13
Gorillaz w/ Vince Staples & Danny Brown ........................................................... JULY 17
American Authors • Anti-Flag • The Ataris • Big D and The Kids Table • CKY • Emmure • GWAR • Hatebreed • Hawthorne Heights • Municipal Waste and many more! ........ JULY 16 THE MOST SUCCESSFUL FILM COMPOSER OF OUR ERA
Hans Zimmer Live with Orchestra and Chorus performing music from Pirates of the Caribbean, Gladiator, The Dark Knight and more!.................................. JULY 21 Children 12 and under FREE on the lawn with paid ticket!
John Legend New date! All 6/20 tickets honored. ................................................. JULY 25 alt-J w/ Saint Motel & SOHN .................................................................................. JULY 27 Fleet Foxes w/ Animal Collective ........................................................ JULY 29 Belle and Sebastian / Spoon / Andrew Bird w/ Ex Hex ........ JULY 30
w/ Gunnar and the Grizzly Boys ...F 22
MANY MORE SHOWS ON SALE!
• theanthemdc.com
VANS WARPED TOUR PRESENTED BY JOURNEYS FEATURING
Aaron Watson
and The Common Good • Oh He Dead and more! .................F 11
Lorde ............................................................................................................ APRIL 8, 2018
w/ Father John Misty plus special guest host Grace Potter Talkin’ & Singin ... JULY 15
w/ Belle Game ............................Tu 16
Party Like It’s • Justin Trawick
Courtney Barnett & Kurt Vile (and The Sea Lice) ................NOVEMBER 7 ST. VINCENT ........................................................................................NOVEMBER 27
The Brian Jonestown Massacre ....................................F 8 The Afghan Whigs
Broken Social Scene
THE CIRCUS LIFE PODCAST 4TH ANNIVERSARY CONCERT FEATURING
ZEDD w/ Grey & Lophiile...............................................................................OCTOBER 21
930.com
SUMMER SPIRIT FESTIVAL FEATURING
The best thing you could possibly put in your mouth
Kenny “Babyface” Edmonds • Bel Biv Devoe • Fantasia • SWV and more! .........AUGUST 5-6
Cupcakes by BUZZ... your neighborhood bakery in Alexandria, VA. | www.buzzonslaters.com
Lady Antebellum w/ Kelsea Ballerini & Brett Young .......................... AUGUST 13 Santana .......................................................................................................... AUGUST 15 Sturgill Simpson w/ Fantastic Negrito ............................................ SEPTEMBER 15 Young The Giant w/ Cold War Kids & Joywave .............................. SEPTEMBER 16 1215 U Street NW
AN EVENING WITH
Washington, D.C.
Alison Krauss & David Gray .................................................. SEPTEMBER 23
THIS SUNDAY! AEG LIVE PRESENTS
WPOC SUNDAY IN THE COUNTRY FEATURING
Mystery Science Theater 3000 Live! SECRET SURPRISE FILM! Late Show! 8:30pm Doors ........................................... JULY 9
Rascal Flatts • Billy Currington • Scotty McCreery • Dylan Scott and more!. SEPTEMBER 24 Chrysalis at Merriweather Park
SECOND NIGHT ADDED! AEG LIVE PRESENTS
Tim And Eric: 10th Anniversary Awesome Tour ........................................................ JULY 19
Greensky Bluegrass w/ Leftover Salmon ................................................. JULY 22
TajMo: The Taj Mahal and Keb’ Mo’ Band w/ Jontavious Willis............................. AUGUST 9 Apocalyptica - Plays Metallica By Four Cellos .................................................... SEPTEMBER 9
• For full lineups and more info, visit merriweathermusic.com
STORY DISTRICT PRESENTS
I Did It For The Story: A Tribute to 20 Years of Storytelling ........ SEPTEMBER 23 The Kooks .................................................................................................................OCTOBER 4 Paul Weller ..............................................................................................................OCTOBER 7 Blind Pilot ...............................................................................................................OCTOBER 13 THE BIRCHMERE PRESENTS
Colin Hay ................................................................................................................OCTOBER 21 Iron & Wine w/ John Moreland ..............................................................................NOVEMBER 9
9:30 CLUB PRESENTS AT U STREET MUSIC HALL
ALL GOOD PRESENTS
John McLaughlin/Jimmy Herring: Meeting of the Spirits ....................NOVEMBER 11 JOHNNYSWIM.....................................................................................................NOVEMBER 15 Liam Gallagher ..................................................................................................NOVEMBER 29 • thelincolndc.com •
U Street (Green/Yellow) stop across the street!
3TEETH ........................................... F JUL 7 Kap G & JR Donato w/ Paper Paulk
ALL GOOD PRESENTS
The Hip Abduction .......................... Th 20
New date! All 2/23 tickets will be honored. . Su JUL 9
Myles Parrish ................................... Sa 15 Frank Iero w/ The Homeless Gospel Choir . F 21 • Buy advance tickets at the 9:30 Club box office • 930.com
impconcerts.com Tickets for 9:30 Club shows are available through TicketFly.com, by phone at 1-877-4FLY-TIX, and at the 9:30 Club box office. 9:30 CLUB BOX OFFICE HOURS are 12-7PM Weekdays & Until 11PM on show nights. 6-11PM on Sat & 6-10:30PM on Sun on show nights.
PARKING: THE OFFICIAL 9:30 parking lot entrance is on 9th Street, directly behind the 9:30 club. Buy your advance parking tickets at the same time as your concert tickets!
930.com
top stops
THURSDAY | 07.06.2017 | EXPRESS | 29
The best t of the nex s y a d 7
1551 Trap Road, Vienna; Fri. & Sat., 8:30 p.m., $35-$58.
Sat. DRINKS
Port City Old Town Pub Crawl For the fourth year in a row, Port City Brewing Company is organizing a bar crawl in Old Town Alexandria. As in past years, you can stop at any participating venue — including Virtue Feed & Grain, Pizzeria Paradiso, Union Street Public House and Blackwall Hitch — between 2 and 3 p.m. to receive your Pub Crawl pass. From there, you can stop at all nine venues (each will have food and drink specials) in any order. At each stop, find a Port City staffer to get a stamp; complete the pass and you get a free pint glass at the end of the day. Various locations
SUNDAY
Idina Menzel Theater at MGM National Harbor, 101 MGM National Ave., Oxen Hill, Md.; Sun., 8 p.m., $38.18-$47.50.
Thu. STAGE
DC Hip-Hop Theater Festival Artists from D.C. and across the country will showcase a variety of works representing hip-hop culture at the 17th DC Hip-Hop Theater Festival. Highlights include “Syncing Ink,” a play about a man who finds his purpose through freestyling (Monday at the Kennedy Center) and the double feature of “Name Calling” and “Body of Work,” two one-woman plays that explore trauma and womanhood (Friday and Saturday at Dance Place). Most of the festival’s performances are free. Various locations; Thu.July 13, various prices, go to hi-artsnyc.org/performances for details.
Fri.
MIKE COPPOLA (GETTY IMAGES)
Broadway (and movie) star Idina Menzel sings exactly what you think she would at her concerts: songs from “Rent” and “Wicked” and, of course, “Frozen’s” “Let It Go.” But she also makes some surprising choices: covering Led Zeppelin and Simon and Garfunkel, and even mashing up a Beatles song with another “Frozen” tune. See also does some of her own songs (mostly from last year’s “idina.” album), meaning there’s something for all of her fans.
10475 Little Patuxent Parkway, Columbia, Md.; Fri., 7 p.m., $46-$56.
MUSIC
Dispatch, Guster and Marco Benevento Dispatch and Guster, two rootsrock bands that were big on college campuses in the late ’90s and early 2000s, have teamed up for a summer tour that (at Merriweather) also includes keyboardist extraordinaire Marco Benevento. For Dispatch, the tour is the band’s first without founding member Pete Francis Heimbold, who worked on the trio’s new album, “America, Location 12,” but is taking time off from the road. So Dispatch’s other two songwriters, Chad Urmston and Brad Corrigan, will carry the vocal weight. Merriweather Post Pavilion,
STAGE
‘Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone’ — In Concert The Harry Potter book series just turned 20, and the National Symphony Orchestra has a timely way to celebrate. The orchestra will perform every note of the score from the first of the series’ film adaptations, 2001’s “Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone,” while the movie plays on big screens at Wolf Trap. True fans probably don’t need the nudge, but audience members are encouraged to dress as their character from the Potterverse. Wolf Trap, Filene Center,
in Old Town Alexandria; Sat., 2-6 p.m., free admission, go to portcitybrewing.com for details.
Wed. MUSIC
Incubus, Jimmy Eat World and Judah & the Lion Early-aughts bands Incubus and Jimmy Eat World are sharing the stage with alt rock act Judah & the Lion for a tour promoting Incubus’ new album, “8.” Jimmy Eat World, meanwhile, is touring behind last year’s “Integrity Blues.” Both bands were staples on MTV and “Total Request Live” back then (Incubus’ “Drive” and Jimmy Eat World’s “The Middle” are still played on rock radio today), so for men and women of a certain age, Wednesday’s show will be a welcome nostalgia trip. Jiffy Lube Live, 7800 Cellar Door Drive, Bristow, Va.; Wed., 6:45 p.m., $29.50-$79.50.
Written by Express’ Rudi Greenberg.
30 | EXPRESS | 07.06.2017 | THURSDAY
going out guide Selected listings from goingoutguide.com. Head online for venue information and more events and activities!
Sound THURSDAY Blues Alley: Jean Carne, 8 & 10 p.m., through July 9.
DC9: Lil Tracy, 8 p.m. Glen Echo Park: Mike Kamuf Little Big Band, 7:30 p.m.
Hill Country: Quiles & Cloud, 8:30 p.m. Mansion at Strathmore: Sonia de los Santos, 9:30 a.m.
State Theatre: Trevor Hall, Satsang, 8:30 p.m.
The Hamilton: Jesse Royal, Ras Slick, 6:30 p.m.
Wolf Trap, Filene Center: Natalie Merchant, 8 p.m.
FRIDAY Birchmere: Jerry Jeff Walker, 7:30 p.m., through July 8.
DC9: Eternal Champion, Red Death and Venomous Maximus, 6:30 p.m.
Gypsy Sally’s: Nocoda, Capital Funk Squad, 9 p.m.
Hill Country: Jonny Grave & the Tombstones, 9:30 p.m.
Leonardtown Square: Leonardtown First Friday: Bob Schaller & Friends, 5 p.m. Lubber Run Amphitheater: Los Gallos Negros, 8 p.m.
The Hamilton: Swear and Shake, Caroline Rose, 8 p.m.
The Howard Theatre: Ruben Studdard, Jonathan Celestin, 7:30 p.m. Bondax, Franklin, 10:30 p.m.
Yards Park: The Reagan Years, 6:30 p.m.
SATURDAY BlackRock Center for the Arts: The Nighthawks, 7 p.m.
DANNY CLINCH
U Street Music Hall: 3Teeth, 7 p.m.;
Lake Street Dive: The New England Conservatory of Music-educated quartet Lake Street Dive just played the area last month, opening for Jack Johnson at Merriweather. But because you can never have too much of a good thing, the band — which fuses pop, soul, rock, jazz and more — will return to D.C. for a proper headlining set at the Lincoln Theatre Saturday. The group is still showcasing songs off last year’s “Side Pony,” but they’re also playing new material and covering songs like Prince’s “When You Were Mine.”
DC9: Oh He Dead, 9:30 p.m. Gypsy Sally’s: Thunder Body, Joint Operation and Gang of Thieves, 8:30 p.m. Lake Anne Plaza: Lake Anne Roots Music Festival, 12 p.m. Lubber Run Amphitheater: King
10 p.m.
Allrich, 6 p.m.
SUNDAY
State Theatre: Gin Blossoms, Classified
Bethesda Blues & Jazz Supper Club: Grand Finale All Star Jam Session, 7 p.m.
Soul, 8 p.m.
Black Cat: Artisanals, 7:30 p.m.
Rock & Roll Hotel: Rooney, Run River
Fairwood Community Park:
North, 8 p.m.
Redfootz & The Red Sessions, 7:30 p.m.
U Street Music Hall: Gigamesh, Ozker,
Lubber Run Amphitheater: Akua
Frequency, 6 p.m.
The Hamilton: Mingo Fishtrap, the Young Senators Reloaded, 7:30 p.m.
U Street Music Hall: Kap G & JR Donato and Paper Paulk, 7 p.m.
MONDAY Blues Alley: Robert Mwamba, 8 & 10 p.m.
DC9: Broncho, Billy Changer and Raindeer, 8:30 p.m.
Blues Alley: Jay Williams, 8 & 10 p.m.
TUESDAY
8:30 p.m.
Black Cat: The Flatliners, Pkew Pkew Pkew and Garrett Dale, 7:30 p.m.
Gypsy Sally’s: Christian Lopez, Dead
Blues Alley: Lila Hood, 8 p.m. Hill Country: Roselit Bone, 8:30 p.m.
DC9: The Meer, Glen Echo and Rail City,
Men’s Hollow, 8 p.m.
Rock & Roll Hotel: Sir Sly, Shaed, 8 p.m.
State Theatre: Boys of Summer, 5 p.m.
U Street Music Hall: Beth Ditto, U.S.
WEDNESDAY
Girls, 7 p.m.
THURSDAY | 07.06.2017 | EXPRESS | 31
goingoutguide.com Sight American University Museum at the Katzen Arts Center: “Performing the Border”: Washington artists Clay Dunklin, Amy Lin, Susana Raab, Jenny Wu and the Street Light Circus take part in an exhibition that explores the concept of borders and boundaries, through Aug. 13. 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW.
Anacostia Community Museum: “Gateways/Portales”: Through the gateways of social justice, community access and public festivals, this exhibition explores the experiences of Latino migrants and immigrants in Washington, Baltimore, Charlotte, N.C., and RaleighDurham, N.C, through Jan. 7. 1901 Fort Place SE.
Art Museum of the Americas: “Jose Gomez Sicre’s Eye”: The museum celebrates the centennial of Sicre’s birth, through Aug. 6; “Punctured Landscape”: An exhibition of ups and downs in Canada’s history, including indigenous issues, to celebrate Canada’s sesquicentennial, through July 30; “John D. Antone: Tree With Human Heart”: A work of bronze and directcast tree leaves and branches, the tree with a human heart is meant to signify the connection and harmony between humans and the natural world, through Sept. 1. 201 18th St. NW.
THIS SATURDAY!
Art Garfunkel In Close-Up
Folger Shakespeare Library: “Painting Shakespeare”: An exhibition of the Folger’s collection of Shakespeare and Shakespeare-related art and memorabilia, including oil sketches, posters, scrapbooks, programs, prints, figurines, photographs and paintings.
Art Garfunkel’s latest world tour, with guitarist Tab Laven and keyboardist Dave MacKay, encompasses his solo hits, Simon & Garfunkel songs, cuts from his favorite songwriters, and parts of his forthcoming autobiography.
Anacostia Community Museum: Derek Webster created sculptures from scraps of wood, trash and found materials, and adorned them with costume jewelry and brightly colored house paint. The exhibition “From the Regenia Perry Collection: The Backyard of Derek Webster’s Imagination” consists of nine of his pieces created between 1980 and 1996, and runs through July 9. A highlight is Henry Fuseli’s gothic masterpiece “Macbeth Consulting the Vision of the Armed Head,” painted for the Irish Shakespeare Gallery in Dublin in 1793, and still in its original frame, through Feb. 11. 201 East Capitol St. SE.
Fashion Fair”: An exhibition of ensembles from the Ebony Fashion Fair created by Eunice W. Johnson, who helped bring global fashion to the African-American community, through July 24. 701 21st St. NW.
George Washington University Museum and the Textile Museum:
Glen Echo Park: “Land, Sea & Sky: A Minimalist’s Caribbean”: D.C.-based painter Federico A. Ruiz is inspired by the Dominican Republic’s coastline, through July 29. 7300 MacArthur Blvd., Glen Echo, Md.
“A Collector’s Vision: Creating the Albert H. Small Washingtoniana Collection”: In 2011, Small gave George Washington University his collection of 1,000 maps, prints, rare letters, photographs and drawings that document the history of the District. This exhibition presents highlights of the collection, including Small’s first acquisition: a handwritten 1905 scrapbook of a survey of the city’s boundary stones, through Nov. 30; “Inspiring Beauty: 50 Years of Ebony
July 8 at 8 p.m. Concert Hall
Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden: “Markus Lupertz: Threads of History”: An exhibition of more than 30 large-scale, early paintings by the German neo-expressionist, including the 40-foot-long work “Westwall [Siegfried Line]” (1968), making its U.S. debut. CONTINUED ON PAGE 33
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“Perspectives: Michael Joo”: An installation using multiple techniques and media by the Brooklyn-based artist specifically for the Sackler, inspired by Korean red-crowned crane migration patterns, through July 9; “Turquoise Mountain: Artists Transforming Afghanistan”: Artisans from the Murad Khani district of Old Kabul demonstrate their work and share their experiences, through Oct. 29; “Body of Devotion: The Cosmic Buddha in 3D”: An interactive installation of a 3-D model of the Cosmic Buddha, a statue of the Buddha covered in narrative scenes that create a symbolic map of the Buddhist world, explores the work and methods of studying sculpture, through July 9; “Inventing Utamaro: A Japanese Masterpiece Rediscovered”: Three large-scale works by the Japanese artist — ”Moon at Shinagawa,” “Snow at Fukagawa” and “Cherry Blossoms at Yoshiwara” — are displayed, through July 9. 1050 Independence Ave. SW.
DEREK WEBSTER
Arthur M. Sackler Gallery:
It’s your WeekendPass
Every Thursday in Express
32 | EXPRESS | 07.06.2017 | THURSDAY
THEATRE Bring the entire family to this Old Testament story of Joseph, his brothers and his amazing coat as it comes to vibrant life through uplifting song and dance.
Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor
June 15 - August 27
Dreamcoat
Toby’s Dinner Theatre of Columbia 410.730.8311 Tobysdinnertheatre.com
Call for tickets and info
"sensational ensemble... stunning..." -TheatreBloom
FREE, no tickets required
Metro : Navy Yard Station
PERFORMANCES Marine Fusion Jazz Combo
The Marine Fusion Jazz Combo will perform Joe Zawinul’s “Birdland”and “Mercy, Mercy, Mercy;” Jaco Pastorius’s “Come On, Come Over;” Wayne Shorter’s “Elegant People” and “Speak No Evil;” and Randy Brecker’s “Some Skunk Funk.”
Thursday, July 6 at 6 p.m.
Yards Park 355 Water St., SE Washington, D.C. Call 202-433-4011 after 6 p.m. for weather related cancellations. www.marineband.marines.mil
MUSIC - CONCERTS 24th Bach Festival at Georgetown’s Grace Church
Concert Band & Singing Sergeants
H H H The U.S. Army Band “Pershing’s Own” H H H
Sunsets with a Soundtrack Brass Quintet
U.S. Navy Band Country Current
Sunday:Soo Young Chrisfield, Soprano; Irvin Peterson, Flute; Regino Madrid, Violin; Foster Wang, Violin; Charlie Powers, Cello; Monday: The Madrid Quartet:Regino Madrid, Violin; Foster Wang, Violin;Sarah Hart, Viola; Charlie Powers, Cello Wednesday: Ronald Stolk, Organ
Grace Church 1041 Wisconsin Avenue, NW in Georgetown 202-333-7100 www.gracedc.org
$25 students $10 with valid ID cost per concert
“Grace Church offers one of WDC supreme concert series, its annual Bach Festival.” -TWP
Fri, July 14, 7:30 p.m. Sat, July 15, 7 p.m. Tues, July 18, 8 p.m.
Join us for our Summer Concert Series as the Concert Band and Singing Sergeants team up to present, “The Kid in All of Us”
July 14: Air Force Memorial July 15: National Harbor Plaza Stage July 18: U.S. Capitol (west) Outdoor concerts subject to cancellation. Please view our Facebook or Twitter feed for concert cancellation status
All perf. FREE, no tickets required
Visit usafband.af. mil/events/ index.asp for additional info.
Tomorrow! Friday, July 7 8:00 p.m.
The U.S. Army Brass Quintet presents a fun program that stretches beyond chamber music with a seamless cross between classical and jazz styles! All concerts are free and open to the public. BYO lawn chair. Series: Most Fridays June 2-Aug 25 at 8:00 p.m. (No show 8/18)
Free! No tickets required
Weather call: usarmy band.com or FB for info.
Sunday, July 9, 6:00 p.m.
Come enjoy a concert by Country Current, the Navy’s premier country/ bluegrass music ensemble. Don’t miss out on their high energy original and cover music repertoire! Country Current also features “must-hear” blazing hot bluegrass instrumentals!
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
Sunday, July 9 3:00 p.m.; Monday, July 10 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, July 12 7:30 p.m.
West Side of U.S. Capitol Washington, DC usarmyband.com facebook.com/usarmyband youtube.com/usarmyband Bladensburg Waterfront Park 4601 Annapolis Road Bladensburg, Md.
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
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 Guidde to the Livelly Arts! 202-3334-77006 | guideetoarts@washhpost.ccom
16-2898
THURSDAY | 07.06.2017 | EXPRESS | 33
goingoutguide.com CONTINUED FROM PAGE 31
176 portraits comprised of thousands of Lego blocks. The work centers on the artist’s personal experience in 2011, in which he was detained by the Chinese government and kept under surveillance for 81 days and then prohibited from traveling abroad for four years, through Jan. 1. Seventh Street and Independence Avenue SW.
Kreeger Museum: “Re-Vision: Looking Anew at the Art of Philip Johnson and the Design of the Kreeger Museum”: An anniversary exhibition of photographs by Cynthia Connolly, Frank Hallam Day, Avi Gupta, Max Hirshfeld, Franz Jantzen and Colin Winterbottom interpreting Philip Johnson’s architectural design of the building. Included is an exhibition of the “Habitable Sculpture,” Johnson’s cubist work inspired by a John Chamberlain sculpture and intended for construction in Soho, through July 29. 2401 Foxhall Road NW.
STACY L. PEARSALL
The Hirshhorn’s exhibition is presented alongside the Lupertz exhibition at the Phillips Collection, which looks at the artist’s career over five decades, through Sept. 10; “sunrise, sunset”: A mural by Swiss artist Nicolas Party, inspired in part by former President Barack Obama’s remark in response to the 2016 U.S. presidential election that “the sun will rise in the morning,” through Oct. 1; “Summer of Yoko Ono”: “My Mommy Is Beautiful,” a new interactive work by Ono, will span the length of the lobby. Visitors are invited to contribute photos or written thoughts or memories of their mothers and attach them to the 40-footlong canvas wall to serve as a tribute to mothers everywhere. In addition, Ono’s “Sky TV for Washington, DC” (1966), a 24-hour live feed of the sky outside, will be reinstalled on the museum’s third level, through Sept. 30; “Ai Weiwei: Trace at Hirshhorn”: An installation that portrays activists, advocates of free speech and prisoners of conscience in
National Portrait Gallery: “The Face of Battle: Americans at War, 9/11 to Now” showcases portraits by six artists — Ashley
Library of Congress: “World War I:
Gilbertson, Tim Hetherington, Louie Palu, Stacy Pearsall, Emily Prince and Vincent Valdez — of active-duty soldiers and those who have served, offering perspectives on war and its consequences, through Jan. 28.
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34 | EXPRESS | 07.06.2017 | THURSDAY
goingoutguide.com BROADWAY’S DEFINITIVE TONY -WINNING MASTERPIECE ®
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JULY 11–AUGUST 6 EISENHOWER THEATER BEGINS NEXT WEEK!
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18th-century French paintings that includes masterpieces and lesser-known works by such artists as Boucher, Ducreux and JeanHonore Fragonard, through Aug. 20. CONTINUED FROM PAGE 33
American Artists View the Great War”: This exhibition showcases posters, political cartoons, illustrations, fine prints, popular prints, documentary photographs and fine-art photographs, through Aug. 19; “Baseball’s Greatest Hits: The Music of Our National Game”: An exhibition of baseball sheet music, videos of baseball songs — including “Did You See Jackie Robinson Hit That Ball?” by Count Basie; “Right Field” by Peter, Paul and Mary; and “All the Way” by Eddie Vedder — and an audio station featuring 20 covers of “Take Me Out to the Ball Game,” through July 22; “Echoes of the Great War: American Experiences of World War I”: The exhibition depicts the U.S. involvement in and experience of the Great War, through Jan. 1; “Drawing Justice: The Art of the Courtroom Illustration”: This exhibition of courtroom drawings highlights the Library of Congress’ collection, featuring political figures, celebrities and notorious criminals, through Oct. 28. 101 Independence Ave. SE. America”: This exhibition of 50 original documents that demonstrate how and when the Constitution was amended and how attempts were made to amend it marks the 225th anniversary of the ratification of the Bill of Rights, through Sept. 4. 700 Pennsylvania Ave. NW.
For all other ticket-related customer service inquiries, call the Advance Sales Box Office at (202) 416-8540
Major support for Musical Theater at the Kennedy Center is provided by
National Gallery of Art, West Building: “America Collects Eighteenth-Century French Painting” is an exhibition of 70
National Archives: “Amending
Tickets also available at the Box Office. Groups (202) 416-8400
Theater at the Kennedy Center is made possible by
NOËL NICOLAS COYPEL
Leigh Ann Larkin, Jon Peterson, Tommy McDowell and the 2017 company of Roundabout Theatre Company’s CABARET. Photo © Joan Marcus
DECADENT.”
National Building Museum: “Timber City: Innovations in Wood”: To demonstrate recent technological
innovations within the timber industry, this installation features samples of engineered wood, architectural models and wooden walls, through Sept. 10; “Architecture of an Asylum: St. Elizabeths 1852-2017”: An exhibition exploring the architecture and landscape architecture of St. Elizabeths as it changed over time, including architectural drawings and plans from the 1850s through the 1980s, medical instruments, patient-created art, photographs, scrapbooks, furnishings and paintings on loan from museums and archives, through Jan. 15; “Wright on the Walls”: The museum celebrates the 150th birthday of architect Frank Lloyd Wright with an interactive installation by Scott Clowney and Vladimir Zabavskiy in which visitors can color in Wright designs on the walls using dry-erase markers, through Sept. 4; “Hive”: An installation of more than 2,700 wound paper tubes varying in size from several inches to 10 feet high, interlocked to create three interconnected, domed chambers. The tallest dome will reach 60 feet. Visitors may inhabit the installation at the ground level and view it from the upper-floor balconies. The smaller chambers feature instruments such as drum-like tubes and chimes, through Sept. 4. 401 F St. NW.
National Gallery of Art, East Building: “In the Tower: Theaster Gates”: An exhibition of a new body of work by Gates, “The Minor Arts,” examines how ordinary and discarded objects acquire value through the stories we tell, through Sept. 4; “East of the Mississippi: Nineteenth-Century
American Landscape Photography”: An exhibition of 175 photographic works that focus on the history of eastern America, including daguerreotypes, salted-paper prints, albumen prints, stereo cards and albums, including images of Niagara Falls, the White Mountains, Civil War battlefields and the construction of the Atlantic and Great Western Railway, through July 16; “Frederic Bazille and the Birth of Impressionism”: An exhibition of 75 impressionist works by Bazille, his contemporaries Monet and Renoir, and his predecessors Courbet and Rousseau explores sources and influences, through July 9. 440 Constitution Ave. NW.
National Geographic Museum: “National Geographic Presents: Earth Explorers”: A family-friendly exhibition divided into five environmental modules of multimedia experiences with content from National Geographic explorers around the world, through Sept. 10; “Sharks”: An exhibition of photos by National Geographic photographer Brian Skerry, videos, artifacts, models and interactive experiences on the subject of sharks, through Oct. 15. 17th and M streets NW.
National Museum of African Art: “Senses of Time: Video and Film-Based Works of Africa”: Six African artists explore how time is experienced and produced by the body. Bodies stand, climb, dance and dissolve in seven works of video and film, or “time-based” art, through Jan. 21; “Healing Arts”: An exhibition of paintings and sculptures from the permanent collection that
ADVANCE YOUR CAREER
TRINITY WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY
Text or call: 202-656-5615 | Learn more: www.trinitydc.edu/ADVANCE
THURSDAY | 07.06.2017 | EXPRESS | 35
goingoutguide.com Indian: “Our Universes: Traditional
attempt to counter physical, social and spiritual problems including global issues such as the HIV/AIDS crisis, through Jan. 1. 950 Independence Ave. SW.
Knowledge Shapes Our World”: The exhibition focuses on indigenous cosmologies, worldviews and philosophies related to the creation and order of the universe and the spiritual relationship between humankind and the natural world, through April 30; “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; “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; “Patriot Nations: Native Americans in Our Nation’s Armed Forces”: An exhibition of photographs of Native Americans who served in the United States military, through Jan. 1. Fourth Street and Independence Avenue SW.
Americans and World War II”: An exhibition that commemorates the 75th anniversary of Executive Order 9066, the document signed by Franklin D. Roosevelt that challenged the constitutional rights and led to the imprisonment of Japanese-Americans during World War II, through Feb. 19; “Religion in Early America”: An exhibition that explores religious diversity and growth from the colonial era through the 1840s, including Thomas Jefferson’s “The Life and Morals of Jesus of Nazareth,” which is also known as “The Jefferson Bible”; George Washington’s christening robe from 1732 and Wampum beads; and the cloak worn by abolitionist Quaker minister Lucretia Mott, through June 4. 14th Street and Constitution Avenue NW.
National Museum of Natural History: “100 Years of America’s National Park Service: Preserve, Enjoy, Inspire”: To celebrate its centennial, the National Park Service has teamed up with the National Museum of Natural History to present more than 50 images showcasing the national parks, through Aug. 31; “Mud Masons of Mali”: Djenne, a UNESCO World Heritage site in Mali, is famous for its architecture. This exhibition of archival and contemporary photographs and early engravings
JEF GUSKY
National Museum of American History: “Righting a Wrong: Japanese
National Air and Space Museum: “Artist Soldiers” 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. demonstrates how the city’s masons, inheritors of a craft tradition handed down through generations since the 14th century, have given the city its character, through Jan. 1; “Nature’s Best Photography: The Best of the Best”: An exhibition of photographs of wildlife and landscapes on large-format prints and in HD videos, through Sept. 30; “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. 10th Street and Constitution Avenue NW.
National Museum of Women in the Arts: “Revival”: An exhibition of works by Louise Bourgeois, Petah Coyne, Lalla Essaydi, Maria Marshall, Alison Saar, Sam Taylor-Johnson and other artists that explore ideas about strength, fear and love, through Sept. 10. 1250 New York Ave. NW.
National Museum of the American
National Portrait Gallery: “Antebellum Portraits by Mathew Brady”: An exhibition that traces Brady’s career through portrait ambrotypes, daguerreotypes and salted-paper prints, and also includes contemporary engravings and advertising broadsides Brady used to market his portrait business. Though Brady is known best as a Civil War-era photographer, he became an acclaimed portrait photographer before the war, through June 3; “Marlene Dietrich: Dressed for the Image”: An CONTINUED ON PAGE 36
3401 K STREET NW
GYPSYSALLYS.COM Open Mic night! TUE @ 8 in our Vinyl Lounge
DEADPHISH ORCHESTRA (PHISH & DEAD TRIBUTE) FRI CAPITAL FUNK 7/7 SQUAD, NOCODA (LED ZEPPELIN TRIBUTE) SAT CAPITOL ISLAND FEST: 7/8 FT. THUNDER BODY, JOINT OPERATION, GANG OF THIEVES WED 7/12 CHRISTIAN LOPEZ TRIO
TONITE!
a film by Marie Noelle
country current Sunday, July 9, 6 p.m. Bladensburg Waterfront Park 4601 Annapolis Road Bladensburg, Md.
All concerts are FREE and open to the public, no tickets required. For information about additional concerts in your area, visit us online.
ADVANCE YOUR CAREER
TRINITY WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY
Text or call: 202-656-5615 | Learn more: www.trinitydc.edu/ADVANCE
36 | EXPRESS | 07.06.2017 | THURSDAY
goingoutguide.com CONTINUED FROM PAGE 35
exhibition of images of Dietrich that demonstrate her statement: “I dress for the image. Not for myself, not for the public, not for fashion, not for men.” The German-born Dietrich has been seen as a symbol of anti-Nazism and an influential figure of the LGBT community as well as a fashion icon. Known for her androgynous roles in the movies “Morocco” (1930) and “Seven Sinners”
(1940), she achieved international fame and was honored with the Medal of Freedom for her service entertaining American troops for 18 months during World War II, through April 15; “One Life: Sylvia Plath”: An exhibition of personal letters, family photographs, objects and her own artwork from the archives at Smith College and Indiana University’s Lilly Library that show the writer and poet’s struggle to understand herself and to navigate the social pressures of the
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. 2 Massachusetts Ave. NE.
time placed on young women, through May 20. Eighth and F streets NW.
National Postal Museum: “Trailblazing: 100 Years of Our National Parks”: Featuring original postagestamp art from the Postal Service and artifacts loaned by the National Park Service, the exhibition explores the ways in which mail moves to, through and from our national parks, through March 25; “My Fellow Soldiers: Letters
Newseum: “1967: Civil Rights at 50”: An exhibition examining the events of 1967, exploring the relationship between the First Amendment and the civil rights movement of the 1960s, through Jan.
Local movie times DISTRICT
AMC Loews Georgetown 14 3111 K Street N.W.
www.amctheatres.com
Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales (PG-13) CC;DV;No Green Or Red Tickets;Reserved Seating: 3:55 The Mummy (PG-13) CC;DV;Reserved Seating: 1:15 Despicable Me 3 (PG) CC;DV;Reserved Seating: 11:00-1:00-3:25-5:45-6:40-8:10-11:15 Transformers: The Last Knight (PG-13) CC;DV;Reserved Seating: 1:20-4:40-8:00-10:35 The House (R) CC;DV;Reserved Seating: 12:55-3:10-5:30-7:50-10:20 Baby Driver (R) CC;DV;Reserved Seating: 11:15-1:30-2:30-4:15-7:40-9:50 Cars 3 (G) CC;DV;No Green Or Red Tickets;Reserved Seating: 11:00-1:40-4:20-6:50 Spider-Man: Homecoming (PG-13) CC;DV;Reserved Seating: 7:00-9:00 Wonder Woman (PG-13) CC;DV;Reserved Seating: 11:10-12:00-3:15-4:15-7:30-10:45 Rough Night (R) CC;DV;Reserved Seating: 12:00-5:10 All Eyez on Me (R) CC;DV;Reserved Seating: 12:30-3:45-10:20 Transformers: The Last Knight An IMAX 3D Experience (PG-13) Reserved Seating: 12:10-3:30 Beatriz at Dinner (R) AMC Independent;CC;DV;Reserved Seating: 11:05-2:00 The Beguiled (R) AMC Independent;CC;DV;Reserved Seating: 11:00-12:00-2:25-4:50-7:10-9:30 Spider-Man: Homecoming An IMAX 3D Experience (PG-13) Reserved Seating: 7:00-10:15 The Big Sick (R) AMC Independent;CC;DV;Reserved Seating: 7:00-10:30 Transformers: The Last Knight 3D (PG-13) CC;DV;RealD 3D;Reserved Seating: 2:20-5:40 Spider-Man: Homecoming 3D (PG-13) CC;DV;RealD 3D;Reserved Seating: 7:00-9:30 Wonder Woman 3D (PG-13) CC;DV;RealD 3D;Reserved Seating: 9:00 Despicable Me 3 3D (PG) CC;DV;RealD 3D;Reserved Seating: 10:05 Despicable Me 3 (PG) Dolby Cinema at AMC Prime;Recliners;Reserved Seating: 12:05-2:204:40 Spider-Man: Homecoming (PG-13) Dolby Cinema at AMC Prime;Recliners;Reserved Seating: 7:00-10:00
AMC Loews Uptown 1 3426 Connecticut Avenue N.W.
www.amctheatres.com
Spider-Man: Homecoming (PG-13) CC;DV: 7:00 Wonder Woman (PG-13) CC;DV: 3:30 Spider-Man: Homecoming 3D (PG-13) CC;DV;RealD 3D: 10:30
AMC Mazza Gallerie 5300 Wisconsin Ave. NW
www.amctheatres.com
Despicable Me 3 (PG) CC;DV: (!) 12:05-12:50-3:10-4:40-5:30-8:00-10:10 The House (R) 21+;CC;DV: (!) 1:10-3:30-5:50-8:10 Baby Driver (R) CC;DV: (!) 12:10-2:50-5:40-8:20; (!) 10:20 Cars 3 (G) 21+;CC;DV;No Green Or Red Tickets: (!) 12:00-2:40-5:20-7:55-10:20 Wonder Woman (PG-13) CC;DV: 1:20-4:30-7:40-9:10 Spider-Man: Homecoming 3D (PG-13) CC;DV;RealD 3D: (!) 7:00 Despicable Me 3 3D (PG) CC;DV;RealD 3D: (!) 2:20-7:00 Transformers: The Last Knight (PG-13) CC;DV: 12:30-3:50 The House (R) CC;DV: (!) 10:35 Spider-Man: Homecoming (PG-13) CC;DV: (!) 10:00
Avalon Theatre
5612 Connecticut Avenue
www.theavalon.org
The Exception (R) Limited Engagement!: 12:00-2:30-5:15-8:00 Beatriz at Dinner (R) 1:00-3:00-5:15-7:30
Landmark Atlantic Plumbing Cinema 807 V Street, NW
www.landmarktheaters.com
Transformers: The Last Knight (PG-13) CC;DVS;Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing: 12:00-3:00-6:30-9:30 The House (R) CC;DVS;Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing: 2:00-3:45-5:35-7:45-9:40 Baby Driver (R) CC;DVS;Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing: 1:45-4:00-7:15-9:30 Wonder Woman (PG-13) CC;DVS;Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing: 12:30-1:00-3:203:50-6:45-7:00-9:35-9:50 Rough Night (R) CC;DVS;Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing: 1:30-3:40 Spider-Man: Homecoming (PG-13) CC;DVS;Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing: 7:00-9:45
Landmark E Street Cinema 555 11th Street NW
www.landmarktheaters.com
Moscow Never Sleeps (NR) Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing;Subtitled: 1:15-4:15-7:159:45 Maudie (PG-13) CC;DVS;Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing: 1:05-4:05-7:05 Abacus: Small Enough to Jail Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing: 2:10-4:40 Beatriz at Dinner (R) CC;DVS;Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing: 1:15-3:30-5:45-8:00-10:00 The Beguiled (R) CC;DVS;Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing: 12:45-1:45-3:00-4:00-5:156:15-7:30-8:30-9:45 The Big Sick (R) CC;DVS;Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing: 1:00-2:00-3:45-4:45-6:457:45-9:25-9:30
Landmark West End Cinema 2301 M Street NW
www.landmarktheaters.com
Obit Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing: 2:00-4:45-7:45 Sami Blood (Sameblod) (NR) Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing;Subtitled: 1:45-4:30-7:15 My Cousin Rachel (PG-13) CC;DVS;Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing: 1:30-4:15-7:30
Regal Gallery Place Stadium 14 701 Seventh Street Northwest
www.regmovies.com
Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales (PG-13) CC/DVS: 1:25 The Mummy (PG-13) CC/DVS: 11:30-2:05-4:40 Despicable Me 3 (PG) CC/DVS: (!) 12:30-1:10-3:10-3:40-6:00-8:10-9:30
2; “Inside Today’s FBI”: A new version of the FBI exhibit “Fighting Crime in the Age of Terror” features evidence and artifacts from some of the FBI’s biggest cases, through Dec. 30; “1776 — Breaking News: Independence”: This exhibition is of the first newspaper printing of the Declaration of Independence as it appeared in the Pennsylvania Evening Post on July 6, 1776, through Dec. 31; “Pulitzer Prizes at 100: Editorial Cartoons”: To mark the 100th
(!) No Pass/No Discount Ticket Transformers: The Last Knight (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 11:40-12:40-2:55-3:55-7:20-8:55-10:55 The House (R) CC/DVS: 11:30-1:40-3:50-6:00-8:15 47 Meters Down (PG-13) CC/DVS: 11:45-4:35 Baby Driver (R) CC/DVS: 1:10-4:10-7:10-9:55 Cars 3 (G) CC/DVS: 11:40-2:35-5:20-7:50-10:30 Wonder Woman (PG-13) CC/DVS: 12:30-3:35-7:10-10:25 Spider-Man: Homecoming (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 8:00-8:30-9:30 Rough Night (R) CC/DVS: 2:10-6:50 All Eyez on Me (R) CC/DVS: 11:30-2:35-5:40 It Comes At Night (R) CC/DVS: 4:30 Transformers: The Last Knight 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 11:35-2:45-6:05-9:40 Spider-Man: Homecoming 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 7:00-10:15 Despicable Me 3 3D (PG) CC/DVS: (!) 11:40-2:30-4:50-5:30-7:20-9:50-10:30
Smithsonian - Lockheed Martin IMAX Theater 601 Independence Avenue SW
www.si.edu/imax
D-Day: Normandy 1944 3D (NR) 2:40 A Beautiful Planet 3D (G) 4:20 Aircraft Carrier: Guardians of the Sea 3D (NR) 11:00-1:15-3:30-5:50-7:15 Dream Big: Engineering Our World: An IMAX 3D Experience 12:25 Journey to Space 3D (NR) 10:25-11:50-2:05-5:15-6:40
MARYLAND
AFI Silver Theatre Cultural Center 8633 Colesville Road
www.afi.comsilver
The Lady From Shanghai (1948) (NR) 4:45 Beatriz at Dinner (R) 11:10-1:10-3:10-5:10-7:10-9:10 The Beguiled (R) 11:20-1:20-3:20-5:20-7:20-9:20 Mulholland Drive (R) 6:45 Heaven Can Wait (1943) (NR) 12:00 Casablanca (1942) (PG) 2:30 Lost Highway (R) 9:45
AMC Center Park 8 4001 Powder Mill Rd.
www.amctheatres.com
Despicable Me 3 (PG) CC;DV;Recliners;Reserved Seating: 10:00-11:45-12:30-2:00-3:00-4:307:00-9:15 Transformers: The Last Knight (PG-13) CC;Recliners;Reserved Seating: 11:45-6:30 The House (R) CC;DV;Recliners;Reserved Seating: (!) 11:45-2:15-4:45-7:15-9:45 Baby Driver (R) CC;DV;Recliners;Reserved Seating: (!) 11:15-2:00-4:45-7:30-10:15 Cars 3 (G) CC;DV;No Green Or Red Tickets;Recliners;Reserved Seating: 10:45-1:30-4:15 Spider-Man: Homecoming (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliners;Reserved Seating: (!) 7:00-9:00 Wonder Woman (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliners;Reserved Seating: 3:15-10:00 All Eyez on Me (R) CC;Recliners;Reserved Seating: 11:15-2:30-5:45 Spider-Man: Homecoming 3D (PG-13) CC;DV;RealD 3D;Recliners;Reserved Seating: (!) 8:05-10:15 Transformers: The Last Knight 3D (PG-13) CC;RealD 3D;Recliners;Reserved Seating: 1:30 Wonder Woman 3D (PG-13) CC;RealD 3D;Recliners;Reserved Seating: 10:15-4:45 Despicable Me 3 3D (PG) CC;DV;RealD 3D;Recliners;Reserved Seating: (!) 5:30-8:00-10:15
AMC Magic Johnson Capital Center 12 800 Shoppers Way
www.amctheatres.com
The Mummy (PG-13) CC;DV: 7:20-10:00 Despicable Me 3 (PG) CC;DV: (!) 11:30-1:15-3:45-6:00-7:50-10:15 Transformers: The Last Knight (PG-13) CC;DV: 11:15-12:30-2:30-4:00-5:45-9:15 The House (R) CC;DV: (!) 11:00-1:10-3:30-5:45-8:00-10:20 47 Meters Down (PG-13) AMC Independent;CC;DV: 11:10-1:25-3:35-5:50-8:05-10:25 Baby Driver (R) CC;DV: (!) 11:05-1:45-4:30-7:15-10:00 Cars 3 (G) CC;DV;No Green Or Red Tickets: 11:00-1:35-6:40 Wonder Woman (PG-13) CC;DV: 11:15-2:30-5:45-9:10 All Eyez on Me (R) CC;DV: 11:30-2:45-6:00-9:15 Transformers: The Last Knight An IMAX 3D Experience (PG-13) Reserved Seating: 3:30 Spider-Man: Homecoming 3D (PG-13) CC;DV;RealD 3D: 9:15 Transformers: The Last Knight 3D (PG-13) CC;DV;RealD 3D: 1:15-4:30 Despicable Me 3 3D (PG) CC;DV;RealD 3D: (!) 2:00-4:30-7:00-9:25 Cars 3 3D (G) CC;DV;No Green Or Red Tickets;RealD 3D: 4:05 Despicable Me 3: The IMAX 2D Experience (PG) Reserved Seating: (!) 1:00 Spider-Man: Homecoming The IMAX 2D Experience (PG-13) Reserved Seating: (!) 7:00-10:00 Spider-Man: Homecoming (PG-13) CC;DV: 8:15
Landmark Bethesda Row Cinema 7235 Woodmont Avenue
www.landmarktheaters.com
The Women's Balcony (Ismach Hatani) (NR) Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing;Reserved Seating;Subtitled: 2:00-4:50-7:25-10:00 Wonder Woman (PG-13) CC;DVS;Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing;Reserved Seating: 12:50-4:00-7:00-9:35 Spider-Man: Homecoming (PG-13) CC;DVS;Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing;Reserved Seating: 7:00-9:45 Maudie (PG-13) CC;DVS;Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing;Reserved Seating: 1:10-4:207:10-9:55 The Hero (R) CC;Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing;Reserved Seating: 1:30 Paris Can Wait (PG) CC;DVS;Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing;Reserved Seating: 3:40 The Beguiled (R) CC;DVS;Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing;Reserved Seating: 1:20-1:504:10-4:40-6:50-7:40-9:10-9:55 The Big Sick (R) CC;DVS;Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing;Reserved Seating: 1:00-1:403:50-4:30-6:40-7:20-9:20-10:00
Regal Hyattsville Royale Stadium 14 6505 America Blvd.
Despicable Me 3 (PG) CC/DVS: (!) 2:30-5:00-7:30-10:00
www.regmovies.com
Spider-Man: Homecoming (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 7:00-10:15 Spider-Man: Homecoming 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 7:30-10:45
Regal Majestic Stadium 20 & IMAX 900 Ellsworth Drive
www.regmovies.com
Captain Underpants: The First Epic Movie (PG) CC/DVS: 11:00-1:30-4:00 Despicable Me 3 (PG) CC/DVS: (!) 12:00-2:30-4:50-7:30-10:00 Transformers: The Last Knight (PG-13) CC/DVS: 12:35-4:05-7:35-10:55 The House (R) CC/DVS: 11:30-2:00-4:20-7:00-9:30 Baby Driver (R) CC/DVS: 11:15-2:10-5:05-8:00-10:55 Wonder Woman (PG-13) CC/DVS: 12:50-4:05-7:20-10:35 Cars 3 (G) CC/DVS: 11:15-1:55-4:45-7:35-10:25 All Eyez on Me (R) CC/DVS: 1:00-4:20 Spider-Man: Homecoming (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 7:30-10:45 The Big Sick (R) CC/DVS: 11:00-12:25-1:55-3:20-4:50-6:15-7:00-8:00-9:10-9:55-10:50 Spider-Man: Homecoming An IMAX 3D Experience (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 7:00-10:15 Transformers: The Last Knight 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 11:45-3:05 Spider-Man: Homecoming 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 8:00-11:10 Despicable Me 3 3D (PG) CC/DVS: (!) 1:00-3:30-6:00-8:30-11:00 Despicable Me 3: The IMAX 2D Experience (PG) CC/DVS: (!) 11:00-1:30-4:00
Xscape Theatres Brandywine 14
7710 Matapeake Business Drive www.xscapetheatres.com Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales (PG-13) CC;Stadium Seating: (!) 2:45-6:15 The Mummy (PG-13) CC;Stadium Seating: (!) 2:20-5:10-7:50-10:30 Despicable Me 3 (PG) CC;PLF;Stadium Seating: (!) 1:20-3:40-6:00 Captain Underpants: The First Epic Movie (PG) CC;Stadium Seating: (!) 12:30 Transformers: The Last Knight (PG-13) CC;PLF;Stadium Seating: (!) 12:10 The House (R) CC;Stadium Seating: (!) 10:50-12:20-1:10-3:30-6:10-8:35-11:00 47 Meters Down (PG-13) CC;Stadium Seating: 1:00-3:20-5:35-8:00-10:15 Cars 3 (G) CC;Stadium Seating: (!) 1:40-4:15-6:40-9:20 Sing (PG) CC;Stadium Seating: (!) 9:30AM Spider-Man: Homecoming (PG-13) CC;PLF;Stadium Seating: (!) 7:00-10:00 Wonder Woman (PG-13) CC;Stadium Seating: (!) 11:10-2:40-7:00-10:10 Rough Night (R) CC;Stadium Seating: (!) 9:30 All Eyez on Me (R) CC;Stadium Seating: (!) 11:50-2:50-3:55-6:30-7:10-9:40-10:20 Spider-Man: Homecoming 3D (PG-13) PLF: 8:30 Despicable Me 3 3D (PG) CC;Stadium Seating: (!) 12:40 Despicable Me 3 (PG) CC;Stadium Seating: (!) 11:40-2:10-3:00-4:30-5:20-6:50-9:10 Transformers: The Last Knight (PG-13) CC;Stadium Seating: (!) 11:30-3:10-6:30-9:50 Baby Driver (R) CC;Stadium Seating: (!) 11:25-2:30-5:00-7:30-10:00 Spider-Man: Homecoming (PG-13) CC;Stadium Seating: (!) 7:40-10:40
VIRGINIA
AMC Courthouse Plaza 8 2150 Clarendon Blvd.
www.amctheatres.com
Despicable Me 3 (PG) CC;DV;Recliners;Reserved Seating: (!) 12:15-2:30-4:45-6:45-9:00 Transformers: The Last Knight (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliners;Reserved Seating: 12:45-7:15 Baby Driver (R) CC;DV;Recliners;Reserved Seating: (!) 11:30-2:15-5:00-7:45-10:20 Cars 3 (G) CC;DV;No Green Or Red Tickets;Recliners;Reserved Seating: 1:00-4:00 Spider-Man: Homecoming (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliners;Reserved Seating: (!) 7:45 Wonder Woman (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliners;Reserved Seating: 12:30-3:30-6:30-9:30 Wonder Woman 3D (PG-13) CC;DV;RealD 3D;Recliners;Reserved Seating: 1:30-4:30 Beatriz at Dinner (R) AMC Independent;CC;DV;Recliners;Reserved Seating: (!) 12:00-2:154:30-6:45-9:00 Spider-Man: Homecoming 3D (PG-13) CC;DV;RealD 3D;Recliners;Reserved Seating: (!) 7:00-10:00-10:45 Transformers: The Last Knight 3D (PG-13) CC;DV;RealD 3D;Recliners;Reserved Seating: 4:00-10:30 Despicable Me 3 3D (PG) CC;DV;RealD 3D;Recliners;Reserved Seating: (!) 1:00-3:15-5:307:30-9:45
AMC Hoffman Center 22 206 Swamp Fox Rd.
www.amctheatres.com
Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales (PG-13) CC;DV;No Green Or Red Tickets: 1:30-7:30 The Mummy (PG-13) CC;DV: 11:50-2:35-5:20-8:00 Despicable Me 3 (PG) CC;DV: 11:30-2:00-3:30-4:30-6:30-7:00-8:00-9:00-9:30 Captain Underpants: The First Epic Movie (PG) CC;DV: 10:45-1:00-3:20 Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 (PG-13) CC;DV;No Green Or Red Tickets: 10:30-4:30-10:30 Transformers: The Last Knight (PG-13) CC;DV: 10:30-12:30-1:45-4:00-7:15-8:15-10:30 The House (R) CC;DV: 11:00-12:15-1:30-2:45-4:00-5:15-7:45-10:30 47 Meters Down (PG-13) AMC Independent;CC;DV: 5:45-8:00-10:20 Baby Driver (R) CC;DV: 11:30-12:30-2:30-3:30-5:30-8:30-10:30 Spider-Man: Homecoming (PG-13) CC;DV: 8:00 Wonder Woman (PG-13) CC;DV: 11:15-12:10-2:45-3:45-6:00-7:20-9:20 Rough Night (R) CC;DV: 10:25 All Eyez on Me (R) CC;DV: 12:10-3:20-6:40-9:50 Transformers: The Last Knight An IMAX 3D Experience (PG-13) Reserved Seating: 11:00-2:30 Beatriz at Dinner (R) AMC Independent;CC;DV: 11:10-1:10-3:20 Norman (Norman: The Moderate Rise and Tragic Fall of a New York Fixer) (R) AMC Independent;CC;DV: 12:15 Megan Leavey (PG-13) AMC Independent;CC;DV: 5:30 The Beguiled (R) AMC Independent;CC;DV: 11:40-2:00-4:15-6:45-9:15 The Hero (R) AMC Independent: 11:30-2:00-4:30 Spider-Man: Homecoming An IMAX 3D Experience (PG-13) Reserved Seating: 7:00-10:00 The Big Sick (R) AMC Independent;CC;DV: 7:00-10:15 Transformers: The Last Knight 3D (PG-13) CC;DV;RealD 3D: 3:00-5:05-6:30-10:00
Spider-Man: Homecoming 3D (PG-13) CC;DV;RealD 3D: 9:00 Despicable Me 3 3D (PG) CC;DV;RealD 3D: 12:00-1:00-2:30-5:00-5:45-7:30-10:00-10:30 Cars 3 3D (G) CC;DV;No Green Or Red Tickets;RealD 3D: 10:30-3:50-9:10 Despicable Me 3 (PG) Dolby Cinema at AMC Prime;Recliners;Reserved Seating: 11:001:30-4:00 Cars 3 (G) No Green Or Red Tickets: 1:10-6:35 Spider-Man: Homecoming (PG-13) Dolby Cinema at AMC Prime;Recliners;Reserved Seating: 7:00-10:30
Angelika Film Center Mosaic 2911 District Ave
Ponyo (Gake no ue no Ponyo) (G) ENGLISH LANGUAGE DUBBED: 11:00AM Transformers: The Last Knight (PG-13) CC;DA;No Passes: (!) 10:00-1:00-4:05-10:30 Maudie (PG-13) CC;DA;No Passes: (!) 2:05-4:40-7:30-10:15 Beatriz at Dinner (R) CC;DA;No Passes: (!) 10:40-12:50-3:00-5:15-7:40-10:10 The Beguiled (R) CC;DA;No Passes: (!) 10:15-11:05-12:30-2:45-4:10-5:00-7:15 The Big Sick (R) CC;DA;No Passes: (!) 11:15-1:20-2:00-4:30-6:50-7:30-9:30-10:15 Spider-Man: Homecoming (PG-13) 7:15-9:35 Baby Driver (R) CC;DA;No Passes: (!) 11:00-1:30-4:15-7:00-9:45 Wonder Woman (PG-13) CC;DA;No Passes: (!) 10:20-1:20-4:20-7:20-10:20
Regal Ballston Common Stadium 12 671 N. Glebe Road
www.regmovies.com
Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales (PG-13) CC/DVS: 10:20-1:15-4:35 Despicable Me 3 (PG) CC/DVS: (!) 10:00-11:40-12:35-2:15-3:10-4:50-7:25-8:20-10:00 Captain Underpants: The First Epic Movie (PG) CC/DVS: 10:05-12:25-2:45 Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 (PG-13) CC/DVS: 10:25-1:35-4:15-7:35-10:40 Transformers: The Last Knight (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 10:15-1:45-5:15-8:45 The House (R) CC/DVS: 10:30-1:00-3:30-7:00-11:00 Cars 3 (G) CC/DVS: 11:15-2:30-5:05-7:45-10:25 Spider-Man: Homecoming (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 7:45-9:15-9:20-9:25-10:50 Transformers: The Last Knight 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 12:00-3:25 The Hero (R) CC-CC: 11:30-2:00-4:30 Spider-Man: Homecoming 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 7:00-8:30-10:15 Despicable Me 3 3D (PG) CC/DVS: (!) 10:50-1:25-4:00-5:45-6:40-9:10 Tubelight (Hindi) (NR) 11:25-3:00
Regal Kingstowne Stadium 16 & RPX 5910 Kingstowne Towne Center
www.regmovies.com
Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales (PG-13) CC/DVS: 2:50 The Mummy (PG-13) CC/DVS: 12:05 Captain Underpants: The First Epic Movie (PG) CC/DVS: 10:45-1:30-4:10 Despicable Me 3 (PG) CC/DVS: (!) 12:00-2:30-3:30-5:00-6:00-7:30-8:25-10:00; (!) 12:30-5:30 47 Meters Down (PG-13) CC/DVS: 1:15-3:25 Transformers: The Last Knight (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 10:50-12:45-2:15-6:05-8:10-9:30 The House (R) CC/DVS: 12:20-2:45-5:15-8:30-10:45 Baby Driver (R) CC/DVS: 11:00-2:00-4:45-7:30-10:15 Wonder Woman (PG-13) CC/DVS: 12:15-3:45-7:00-10:15 Cars 3 (G) CC/DVS: 11:40-2:45-6:30-9:15 Rough Night (R) CC/DVS: 9:20 All Eyez on Me (R) CC/DVS: 6:55-10:10 Spider-Man: Homecoming (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 7:00-10:05 Beatriz at Dinner (R) CC/DVS: 12:40-3:10-5:20-7:50-10:20 The Beguiled (R) CC/DVS: 11:30-2:10-4:30-7:15-9:45 Transformers: The Last Knight 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 4:00-10:45 Despicable Me 3 3D (PG) CC/DVS: (!) 10:30-11:15-1:00-1:45-4:15-6:45 Tubelight (Hindi) (NR) 11:45-3:15-6:40-9:50 Despicable Me 3 3D (PG) CC/DVS;RPX: (!) 3:00 Spider-Man: Homecoming 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 7:30-10:35; (!) 8:00
Regal Potomac Yard Stadium 16 3575 Potomac Avenue
www.regmovies.com
Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales (PG-13) CC/DVS: 11:00-2:00 The Mummy (PG-13) CC/DVS: 11:25-2:05-4:50-7:45-10:30 Despicable Me 3 (PG) CC/DVS: (!) 10:30-11:20-1:00-1:50-2:40-3:30-4:20-5:00-5:50-6:508:20-9:20-10:50 Captain Underpants: The First Epic Movie (PG) CC/DVS: 11:45-2:10-4:35 Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 (PG-13) CC/DVS: 12:00-3:40-6:45-10:00 Transformers: The Last Knight (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 11:15-1:15-2:45-3:45-4:45-6:158:15-9:45 The House (R) CC/DVS: 12:05-2:30-5:10-7:30-10:10 47 Meters Down (PG-13) CC/DVS: 12:55-3:15-5:35 Baby Driver (R) CC/DVS: 11:30-2:20-5:20-8:00-10:50 Cars 3 (G) CC/DVS: 11:00-1:45-4:30-7:15-9:55 Spider-Man: Homecoming (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 7:00-8:15-8:45-10:15-10:45 Wonder Woman (PG-13) CC/DVS: 12:20-3:35-7:00-10:25 All Eyez on Me (R) CC/DVS: 12:40-3:45-6:55-10:25 Spider-Man: Homecoming 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 7:30 Transformers: The Last Knight 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 12:10 Despicable Me 3 3D (PG) CC/DVS: (!) 12:15-7:40-10:15
Smithsonian - Airbus IMAX Theater 14390 Air and Space Museum Pkwy
www.nasm.si.edu/museum/udvarhazy/
D-Day: Normandy 1944 3D (NR) Stadium Seating: 11:10AM A Beautiful Planet 3D (G) Stadium Seating: 12:35 Aircraft Carrier: Guardians of the Sea 3D (NR) Stadium Seating: 10:20-1:30-3:10 Transformers: The Last Knight An IMAX 3D Experience (PG-13) Stadium Seating: 4:30 Spider-Man: Homecoming An IMAX 3D Experience (PG-13) Stadium Seating: 7:30-10:10 Dream Big: Engineering Our World: An IMAX 3D Experience Stadium Seating: 2:20 Journey to Space 3D (NR) Stadium Seating: 12:00
THURSDAY | 07.06.2017 | EXPRESS | 37
goingoutguide.com
Phillips Collection: “Markus Lupertz”: An exhibition of 50 works by the German pop artist and abstract expressionist that traces his career from recent works back to the 1960s. The exhibition includes paintings of German motifs, works from his dithyrambic pictures and the Donald Duck series. An exhibition of specific works by Lupertz takes place at the Hirshhorn simultaneously, through Sept. 2. 1600 21st St. NW. Renwick Gallery: “June Schwarcz: Invention and Variation”: An exhibition of works including vessels, threedimensional objects, wall-mounted plaques and panels by the artist, through Aug. 27; “Voulkos: The Breakthrough Years”: This exhibition focuses on the impactful early works (from 1953 to 1968) of sculptor Peter Voulkos (1924-2002), through Aug. 20; “Parallax Gap”: A site-specific installation of drawings of ceilings of nine different iconic American buildings that can be viewed from various vantage points, designed by the architectural design practice FreelandBuck. The images are layered so that the changes in perspective, as viewers move underneath, create a parallax (the effect of shifting depth or distance), through Feb. 11. 17th Street and Pennsylvania Avenue NW.
U.S. Botanic Garden: “You Can Grow It!”: An exhibition for exploring the basics of growing plants, for solving common plant problems and for learning horticulture techniques, through Oct. 15. 100 Maryland Ave. SW.
U.S. National Arboretum: “The Bonsai Saga: How 53 Japanese Bonsai Came to America”: An exhibition that features archival images and film that tells the story of how Japan gave 53 bonsai to the United States in celebration of the nation’s 200th birthday, through Oct. 1. 3501 New York Ave. NE.
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum: “I Want Justice!”: An exhibition that explores the history of efforts to hold perpetrators of genocide and mass atrocities accountable through court proceedings, with a special focus on the ongoing trials in Cambodia of surviving Khmer Rouge leaders, through Sept. 30; “Cambodia 19751979”: An exhibition that examines the brutal policies and action undertaken by the Khmer Rouge regime, leading to the deaths of nearly 2 million people, through Sept. 30. 100 Raoul Wallenberg Place SW.
- The Economist
July 20–22, 2017 with appearances by
Smithsonian American Art Museum: “American Visionary: John F. Kennedy’s Life and Times”: An exhibition of 77 images from the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library, Getty Images, the Kennedy family archives and private collections that documents the key moments in Kennedy’s life from his first congressional bid as a war hero in 1946 to his death in Dallas in 1963, through Sept. 17; “Down These Mean Streets: Community and Place in Urban Photography”: An exhibition of the work of 10 photographers who documented U.S. cities during the years after World War II, exposing the effects of the urban crisis made apparent in the neighborhoods that exist on the margins of major cities such as New York and Los Angeles, through Aug. 6; “Donald Sultan Disaster Paintings”: An exhibition of paintings capturing scenes of industrial destruction, through Sept. 4. Eighth and F streets NW.
Stand Up, Podcasts, Sketch Comedy, Music & More!
“A TIMELY, ALMOST REVOLUTIONARY WORK.”
BY JOHN STRAND DIRECTED BY MOLLY SMITH A CO-PRODUCTION WITH ASOLO REPERTORY THEATRE AND PASADENA PLAYHOUSE
Photo of Jade Wheeler and Edward Gero from Asolo Repertory by John Revisky.
anniversary of the Pulitzers, this exhibit features work from the portfolio of Jack Ohman of the Sacramento Bee, the 2016 winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Editorial Cartooning, through Dec. 31; “Louder Than Words: Rock, Power and Politics”: The Newseum and the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame partnered for this exhibition of rock-and-roll-related media that affected politics and social movements, through July 31. 555 Pennsylvania Ave. NW.
Jane Krakowski & Tituss Burgess with the National Symphony Orchestra Pops The Daily Show Correspondents Tour with Roy Wood Jr., Ronny Chieng and Gina Yashere Louie Anderson Puddles Pity Party The Second City’s Almost Accurate to America: Divided We Stand The Improvised Shakespeare Co. Night Train with Wyatt Cenac How To Be Amazing with Michael Ian Black Judah Friedlander Aparna Nancherla Jo Firestone Brandon Wardell Boast Rattle with Kyle Ayers Mortified Reductress presents Mouth Time Live! Leah Bonnema Brittany Carney Petey DeAbreu Ryan Donahue Chris Duffy Sam Evans Jared Freid Violet Grey Stavros Halkias Benjy Himmelfarb Jamel Johnson Sean Joyce Matty Litwack Dylan Meyer Joyelle Nicole Molly Ruben-Long Cerrome Russell Paris Sashay Chelsea Shorte Justin Smith Kasaun Wilson Will Winner Brightest Young Things presents The Bentzen Ball Podcast Studio Underground Comedy
Roy Wood, Jr.
Aparna Nancherla
Louie Anderson
TICKETS ON SALE NOW! KENNEDY-CENTER.ORG | (202) 467-4600 Tickets also available at the Box Office. Groups call (202) 416-8400. For all other ticket-related customer service inquiries, call the Advance Sales Box Office at (202) 416-8540.
38 | EXPRESS | 07.06.2017 | THURSDAY
goingoutguide.com Stage
‘My Fair Lady’: Alan Souza directs an intimate reimagining of the musical in which Henry Higgins teaches flowerseller Eliza Doolittle how to speak like a member of the elite. Olney Theatre Center, 2001 Olney-Sandy Spring Road, Olney, Md., through July 23.
‘Alice in Wonderland’: Bright Star Theatre stages the Lewis Carroll classic about the adventures of a girl who falls into a rabbit hole. La Plata Town Hall, 305 Queen Anne St., La Plata, Md., through July 11.
‘Raton en Movimiento!’: A bilingual version of “Mouse on the Move,” a production about two adventurous mice and their worldly adventures. Imagination Stage, 4908 Auburn Ave., Bethesda, through July 30.
‘A Matter of Faith’: Essential Theatre stages Lachris Jordan’s drama about a woman in a coma and her husband’s decision to save her with a medical procedure his community and family disapproves of. Anacostia Arts Center, 1231 Good Hope Road SE, through July 10.
‘Ready to Serve: A Surprising WWI Story’: A personal story of unknown nurses who donned Army uniforms and served with Hopkins Base Hospital 18, where they cared for hundreds of wounded soldiers. Eastman Studio Theatre at Gallaudet University, 800 Florida Ave. NE, through July 8.
‘As You Like It’: Shakespeare in the Park presents an outdoor staging of the Shakespeare comedy about lovers forced into exile. Magruder Park, 3911 Hamilton St., Hyattsville, Md., through July 12.
‘Shahnameh: Adventures from the Persian Book of Kings’: Silk
‘Cabaret’: A production of the Tony
ARENA STAGE
Award-winning musical by Roundabout Theatre Company. Kennedy Center, 2700 F St. NW, through Aug. 6.
‘Junie B. Jones Is Not a Crook’: Adventure Theatre presents a play based on the children’s books by Barbara Park. Glen Echo Park, 7300 MacArthur Blvd., Glen Echo, Md., through Aug. 14.
‘The Originalist’: Helen Hayes Award winner Edward Gero, above, returns as the late Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia. Arena Stage, 1101 Sixth St. SW, through July 30.
Road Dance Company stages the whimsical Persian tale, written more than a thousand years ago. Wolf Trap’s Children’s Theatre-in-the-Woods, 1551 Trap Road Vienna, through July 8.
‘Shakespeare in the Garden’: Prince George’s Shakespeare in the Garden performs the comedy “As You Like It,” sponsored by Friends of Brookside
Gardens. Picnics welcome. Brookside Gardens, 1800 Glenallan Ave., Wheaton, Md., through July 11.
‘Shear Madness’: The long-running comedy-mystery set in the District, in which audience participation helps solve a murder. Kennedy Center, 2700 F St. NW, through Sept. 10. ‘The Happiest Place on Earth’: A one-man show from Philip Dawkin about a family’s quest to visit Disneyland after suffering a tragedy. The Hub Theatre, 9431 Silver King Court. Fairfax, through July 30.
‘We Found the Wild Things’: Who What Where Theater presents Andrew Reid’s coming-of-age play about seven friends and seven New Year’s Eves in their hometown. DC Arts Center, 2438 18th Street NW, through July 16.
‘When We Were Young and Unafraid’: A new drama by Sarah Treem, the writer and producer behind the HBO series “In Treatment,” about three generations of women grappling with changing gender roles in the early 1970s. Andrew Keegan Theatre, 1742 Church St. NW, through July 8.
‘Wig Out!’: A play about AfricanAmerican drag ball culture. Studio Theatre, 1501 14th St. NW, through Aug. 6.
Registration open for sketch writing workshops: July 15-16
John Heffron July 6 - 9 The Last Comic Standing champ returns! $20 general admission all shows. July 7
School Showcase
July 12
Stand-up Graduation
July 13-16
John Witherspoon
July 19
Open Mic Night
July 21
DMV Showcase
July 22
ComedySportz improv
July 23
Ryan Davis
July 27-30
Hypnotist Flip Orley
August 3-6
Tony Rock
202.296.7008 dcimprov.com Metro: Farragut North
THURSDAY | 07.06.2017 | EXPRESS | 39
entertainment
In 2017, Imagine Dragons hit the reset button STEFFAN HILL
Martin McGuinness (Colm Meaney, left) and Ian Paisley (Timothy Spall) rideshare in “The Journey.”
Back-seat drivers of peace? ‘The Journey’ imagines a fateful car ride shared by real-life political foes FILM It’s a tough time in politics. Rhetoric is raging; there are outbursts of violence. Both sides see the world in terms of black and white, right and wrong, us vs. them. Even when the two parties come to the table, they won’t reach across it to shake hands. So how can the country possibly move forward? Take a road trip. It worked for Northern Ireland, according to “The Journey.” The film, opening locally Friday, imagines what might have transpired when real-life rival political leaders Martin McGuinness (Colm Meaney) and Ian
Paisley (Timothy Spall) found themselves sharing a back seat in 2006. The men had previously led their respective parties during the Troubles, the deadly 30-year conflict that pitted those who wanted Northern Ireland to be part of the Republic of Ireland — mostly Catholics — against a largely Protestant group that wanted Northern Ireland to remain in the United Kingdom.” McGuinness, a Catholic, was a leader in the Irish Republican Army during a time when the IRA carried out multiple assassinations; later, he was the lead negotiator for Sinn Fein, a political party linked with the IRA. Paisley, a Protestant minister known for his virulently anti-Catholic rhetoric, established and led the Democratic Unionist Party. “You’re kind of making ‘The
Odd Couple’ in the back of a car,” British director Nick Hamm says of “The Journey.” “But you’re not only seeing that friendship develop; you’re also watching something succeed. These two guys did stop people killing each other. The reality was they actually did come to forge a relationship, and they did change history,” as their work led to the 2006 St. Andrews Agreement, which allowed the two parties to share power, with Paisley as first minister and McGuinness as deputy first minister of Northern Ireland. In the movie, McGuinness and Paisley end up in the chauffeured car while Paisley is trying to catch a plane from peace negotiations to his 50th wedding anniversary party. In real life, the two men did share this plane trip. But the ride to the airport is pretty much
the product of the imagination of screenwriter Colin Bateman. “A plane is inherently un-cinematic,” Hamm says. “You can’t do anything with it. And then we messed around with the travel time. We were fictionalizing that for the conceit of the movie.” That conceit is simple: When you stick two guys together in a car for a stretch of time, they just might start talking to each other as people. “If you remove from politicians the artifice of being a politician, if you’re just you in the back of the car with your mortal enemy, your worst nightmare, and there isn’t anybody around to dilute that, that’s the point of the picture,” Hamm says. “Then what do you do? You have to get on with it.” KRISTEN PAGE-KIRBY (EXPRESS)
verbatim
“The path to equality is rarely easy. But I hope you can be excited for the future. I am.” DANIEL DAE KIM, talking on Facebook about his exit from CBS’ “Hawaii Five-0” after a pay equity battle. He and Grace
Park, who also left, were offered 10-15 percent less than co-stars Alex O’Loughlin and Scott Caan, Variety reported.
John Blackwell Jr., Prince’s former drummer, dies at 43 after battling brain tumors
MUSIC A weird thing happened when the four members of the alt rock band Imagine Dragons first sat down to listen to their new album. They actually liked it. “This was the first record that I think after we created it and we listened to it, we all went, for the first time, ‘Yes. This is Imagine Dragons and we’re proud of this,’ ” says lead singer Dan Reynolds. The quartet has always been its toughest critic, but with “Evolve,” out last month, the band let it all go. For the first time, they relied on producers — Swedish duo Mattman & Robin, who won a Grammy for Taylor Swift’s “1989,” and Joel Little, who produced Lorde’s “Pure Heroine” — to helm the album. “One of our biggest flaws was overproducing ourselves. We’ve had so many conversations as a band saying, ‘How do we peel back?’ And we just couldn’t do it until finally somebody walked into the room and slapped our [heads],” Reynolds says. The new approach reflects a refreshing reset for the band, now re-entering the spotlight after a year away. Prior to their break, they spent seven years touring, which took a toll. The members feared their success would stop if they stopped. “It was sort of unhealthy for us, so this year break was amazing,” says guitarist Wayne Sermon. “I think it reflects in the music. I think the music is brighter. I think it’s cleaner. I think more vibrant.” MARK KENNEDY (AP)
JAY-Z’s “4:44” certified platinum by RIAA, based on Tidal streams and Sprint downloads
40 | EXPRESS | 07.06.2017 | THURSDAY
Sparkle bright in your apartment home here at Carver Terrace Apartments
To apply, go to deliverthepost.com or call 202-334-6100
Excellent part-time income! Reliable transportation required.
(Please press “0” once connected) Property Management Remington Place Apartments a 324 unit high rise apartment complex located on Brinkley Road in Fort Washington, MD is looking to hire a MAINTENANCE TECHNICIAN/ HANDYMAN Must have basic plumbing & Electrical experience along with Turnover of Apartments. Handyman Skills such as carpentry, painting, and drywall skills, etc. Knowledge of a variety of tools and equipment necessary. Salary Negotiable. Email resume to: jwilson@thedonaldsongroup.com EOE
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Manager of Digital Analytics. Responsible for all aspects of dev’t & implement’n of assigned proj’ts in web analytics. Take proj’ts fr orig’l concept thru final implement’n; define proj’t scope & objectives; dev detailed work plans, sched, proj’t estimates, resource plans & status rprts; & mnge custom track’g implement’n & dev’t for end users fr req’ts gather’g thru deploy’t, doc’n & rprt’g. Conduct proj’t mtgs & proj’t track’g & anlysis. Ensure adherence to quality stds & rev proj’t deliverables. Provide tech’l & analytical guidance to proj’t team to provide accurate, compelling data for all internal clients. Recommend & take action to direct anlysis & resol’n of probs. Serve as comp expert on specific tech’gies such as web analytics & enhance comp’s analytic capabilities, particularly in area of big data. Req’ts: Bach in Comp Sci or Sftwre Eng’g + 5 yrs exp in job or w/ web anlysis tools. Also req’d: 2 yrs exp w/ proj’t or prog’m mgmt skills; & 2 yrs exp mng’g others. All exp may be concurrent. Job in DC. Mail resume & cover ltr to Thomas Grady, Job#: MDA, WP Company, LLC d/b/a The Washington Post, 1301 K Street, NW, Washington, DC 20071.
Senior Data Scientist. Engage w/ internal teams to understand IT & software needs & challenges. Use data science to solve these problems. Design & develop a Spark Streaming framework to automatically collect temporary, social & other signals on all Washington Post news articles in real time. Implement & train a novel two-layer hybrid regression model w/ various regression algorithms to predict popularity of news articles. Setup a GPU system from scratch & train a state-of-the-art deep learning recurrent neural network model w/ millions of Washington Post news articles. Design & develop a suggestions system incorporating mult headline generation algorithms incl the deep learning model. Develop a novel support vector machine based statistical model to automatically ID breaking news stories on the same events. Design & implement an automatic evaluation system incorporating the statistical model to measure breaking news services of multiple news sources. Lead collaborations w/ research teams of U.S. universities. Publish & present novel approaches at research and industry conferences. Req’ts: Bachelor’s in Computer Science, Statistics or Math + 5 yrs of exp in the job or as a Software Devt or Systems Engineer OR a Master’s + 3 yrs exp in the same. Also req’d: 3 yrs exp in Java programming; 2 yrs of exp w/ Perl, Python, Hive, or Pig; & 1 yr of exp w/ R, Weka, SPSS, or SAS; natural language processing; & predictive modeling. All exp may be concurrent. Send resume & cov ltr to Thomas Grady, Attn: SDS, WP Company, LLC d/b/a The Washington Post, 1301 K Street, NW, Washington, DC 20071.
Temps of DC - Hiring dishwashers, porters & banquet staff. $11.50/hr., pays weekly. call 202-628-4100
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42 | EXPRESS | 07.06.2017 | THURSDAY
trending
MARKUS LÜPERTZ
“If my stupidity [spurs] us to READ our Declaration of Independence then I don’t mind the comments. Worth the embarrassment.” @JUSTESRAFEL, in one of a series of tweets apologizing to NPR after he didn’t recognize the Declaration of Independence. On the Fourth of July, NPR tweeted the text of the document line by line, and @JustEsrafel and a few other Trump supporters took phrases like “It is the Right of the People to alter or abolish it, and to institute a new Government” out of context, interpreting them as an anti-Trump message.
THE ARTIST’S FIRST MAJOR US RETROSPECTIVE
“The meme was created purely as satire, it was not meant to be a call to violence against CNN or any other news affiliation.”
THROUGH SEPTEMBER 3, 2017
The exhibition is organized by The Phillips Collection. Generous support is provided by
claimed credit for the GIF President Trump tweeted of himself beating up the CNN logo. The Reddit user — who later deleted his entire account — wrote an apology, calling the situation an “extreme wake up call.” He said he would stop posting “hurtful or hateful things in jest online.”
KFC UK AND IRELAND
HANA--HOLESOLO, the Redditor who
“That Hodor KFC commercial got me in the feels. #toosoon funny but too soon.”
and
PhillipsCollection.org | MEMBERS ENJOY UNLIMITED FREE ADMISSION AND DISCOUNTS. JOIN US!
Made possible through the support of The Frauke and Willem de Looper Charitable Fund. Additional in-kind support is provided by and Lufthansa.
Commitment This is
XX0164 2x3
@KINGCOLE_HARPER, tweeting about KFC’s commercial referencing
“Game of Thrones,” which has a new season coming out July 16. In the commercial, Kristian Nairn, who played Hodor in the series, is assailed by crazed KFC lunch customers. In a riff on Hodor’s death scene, Nairn’s character repeats “chicken and fries” until he says “chicken and rice,” which is KFC’s new offering.
Markus Lüpertz,Arkadien—Der hohe Berg (Arcadia— The High Mountain) (detail),2013.Private collection © 2017 Artists Rights Society (ARS),New York / VG Bild-Kunst,Bonn
The Tuesday health & fitness section in Express
“Everyone has the right to personal reflections. However, inside a former gas chamber, there should be mournful silence. It’s not a stage.”
“Is serving the American people an inconvenience for you? If so, feel free to step down.”
@AUSCHWITZMUSEUM, tweeting
at Rep. Clay Higgins, R-La., after he made a video inside the former gas chamber at Auschwitz. Higgins later apologized and retracted the video, in which he called for the U.S. military to be “invincible.”
GETTY IMAGES
1600 21st Street, NW (Dupont Circle Metro, Q St. exit)
@EVERYWHEREIST, blasting U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley for her tweet lamenting having to work on the Fourth of July. On Tuesday, Haley tweeted: “Spending my 4th in meetings all day. #ThanksNorthKorea” after North Korea’s missile launch, and Twitter users were not sympathetic.
THURSDAY | 07.06.2017 | EXPRESS | 43
fun+games Horoscopes
Scrabble Grams
PAR SCORE 145-155, BEST SCORE 226
Sudoku
DIFFICULT
CANCER (June 21-July 22) You may find yourself immersed in a tricky situation, and you had better develop an exit strategy very soon. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You’ll be introduced to something that suits you to a T, and you’ll discover there’s a related opportunity awaiting you. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You’re not about to fit into any predetermined mold. You want to assert your individuality and follow where your instincts lead. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) It’s a good day to keep things traditional and proceed as you learned to when you were young. Others will pay attention. WEDNESDAY’S SOLUTION
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) You will
be able to satisfy many tastes and expectations. Your passions are on display, and you’ll enjoy dealing with what comes.
WEDNESDAY’S SOLUTION
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) You can turn something ordinary into something extraordinary, simply by doing what you’ve known how to do for quite some time. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) You can uncover the answers to questions others have been asking for quite some time. Do you want to give them away, free of charge?
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
83 | 73
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Someone from the past will come to mind. You may feel a sudden yearning for things the way they used to be.
TODAY: Get ready for more of the same, with the added wrinkle of scattered afternoon/evening storms. Rain is probably more widespread than Wednesday, as well. Outside of the storm chance, clouds and occasional showers are a constant. Strong wind gusts and heavy downpours could be seen with any storms that develop.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) You are hungry for adventure, but you shouldn’t have to travel far from home to satisfy these urges. ARIES (March 21-April 19) A hidden door appears, and something new opens your eyes to an opportunity you had not seen before. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You can spend much less money than you had anticipated, but will it buy you what you need, and the quality you expect? Investigate.
PEARLS BEFORE SWINE | STEPHAN PASTIS
AVG. HIGH: 88 RECORD HIGH: 103 AVG. LOW: 69 RECORD LOW: 57 SUNRISE: 5:49 a.m. SUNSET: 8:36 p.m.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Take care that you don’t go over the top in your efforts to impress someone. There’s no need to do too much — no more than usual, anyway.
DAILY CODE
today in histor y
Need more Sudoku? Find another puzzle in the Comics section of The Post every Sunday and in the Style section Monday through Saturday.
FRIDAY
SATURDAY
88 | 73
88 | 75
SUNDAY
MONDAY
85 | 67
88 | 66
OF
1885: French scientist Louis Pasteur tests an anti-rabies vaccine on 9-year-old Joseph Meister, who had been bitten by an infected dog; the boy did not develop rabies.
1944: An estimated 168 people die in a fire that breaks out during a performance in the main tent of the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus in Hartford, Conn.
1957: Sixteen-year-old John Lennon first meets 15-year-old Paul McCartney when Lennon’s band, the Quarrymen skiffle group, perform a gig at St. Peter’s Church in Woolton, Liverpool.
Get more news and forecasts at washingtonpost.com/weather or follow @capitalweather on Twitter.
44 | EXPRESS | 07.06.2017 | THURSDAY
fun+games Crossword 1 5
10 13 14 15 16 19 20 21 22 24 25 26 28 30 31 34 38 39 40 41 42 44
Comic’s many Creator of Winnie the Pooh Recipe amt. Word with “residential” or “restricted” Broadcasting live Fig Be exalting? Function Increases the payroll Ball game with a rich outcome? Never quit Some art subjects Minute particle Garden dwarf Multi-country defense group Not dirty Work a pattern Squeals on bosses Vehicle Emulate a ghost Room at the top Semesters Fed, e.g. 20 years, e.g.
NO TALKING ALLOWED 46 Lack of worldliness (var.) 49 Hamlet or village of yore 50 Yarn quantity 52 Couple 53 What a finely tuned engine does 56 News one can use 57 Love and then some 58 Angel’s topper 59 Pig’s digs 60 Small drum 61 “Beware the ___ of March”
9
DOWN
30 31 32
1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8
Fill with fuel Stand Source of electricity Droop Belief in one causal principle Unlikely to move Use a light beam on Slight bites or drinks
10 11 12 15 17 18 23 24 26 27 28 29
33 35 36 37 41
42 Half ___ (dive type) 43 Revealing skirt 44 Type of surgical implant 45 In one’s old armchair, e.g. 46 UNCF word 47 Bridal veil material, sometimes 48 Toys that work with a flick of the wrist
Do the wrong thing Try, as food Leaves in, in editor-speak Cuban currency Type of tube River in Pittsburgh Reunion group Put cargo away Noted shipbuilder Secluded, quiet valleys Politician Gingrich ABC rival “King” or “carte” preceder Good buddy Unrevivable Will Ferrell Christmas film Like fresh paint Guide through the mountains Scale deduction Certain Bulgarian, e.g. Sculpted body section, sometimes
49 50 51 54
“That” partner Cola Door’s handle Back muscle, informally 55 Cubs, on scoreboards
WEDNESDAY’S SOLUTION
EDITED BY TIMOTHY E. PARKER
ACROSS
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THURSDAY | 07.06.2017 | EXPRESS | 45
people
Ed doesn’t want to miss any memes
COMEBACKS THINKSTOCK AND GETTY IMAGES/EXPRESS ILLUSTRATION
Bully expected to follow up with a solid ‘I know you are but what am I?’ Kelly Clarkson on Tuesday tweeted at a follower who criticized her appearance. The user replied to her tweet honoring armed forces on the Fourth of July with “you’re fat.” Clarkson responded with, “and still f---ing awesome.” She included an emoji of a face with a tongue sticking out. (EXPRESS) NOT OK
CO-WORKERS
Guy from ‘Wonder Years’ grew up to be rude Fred Savage’s co-stars on the Netflix series “Friends From College” say the actor won’t hang out with them, the New York Post reported. Keegan MichaelKey said Savage “has a very strict policy of not hanging out with his cast members.” Nat Faxon added, “He basically said, ‘We’ll be friends on-set, and when we wrap I will no longer be your friend,’ and he was not kidding.” (EXPRESS)
Rob posts revenge porn of Blac Chyna
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or email circulation@wpost.com.
Ed Sheeran told Britain’s The Sun that he’s quit Twitter “completely” following harassment from users. “I go on it and there’s nothing but people saying mean things,” the singer said. But in a post on Instagram Wednesday, which he also shared on Twitter, Sheeran clarified: “Loads of Hoo-har about me quitting stuff. I haven’t quit anything, I’m just not reading anything, except ‘Harry Potter.’ ” (EXPRESS)
CELEBRITY
Area woman has nerve to take just one night off Taylor Swift disappointed fans who were expecting to see photos from one of her famous Fourth of July bashes. E! News reported that though an inflatable slide was seen at her Rhode Island home, no party appears to have taken place. Swift has hosted a party for the past three years, offering up a slew of photos of famous friends each time. (EXPRESS)
Rob Kardashian on Wednesday posted a series of vitriolic messages and explicit photos of ex-fiancee Blac Chyna to Instagram. Kardashian claimed Chyna had cheated on him throughout their relationship, and that he had spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on jewelry and plastic surgery for her. “I never been so disrespected in my life,” he wrote on one photo, as quoted by Us Weekly. He also posted several nude photos of Chyna, apparently without her consent. Chyna soon responded on Snapchat, writing that Kardashian “beat [her] up.” Kardashian and Chyna’s posts have since been deleted, but Kardashian re-posted several photos on Twitter. (EXPRESS)
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“THIS IS our president. Stop #bullying him & start trusting him.”
LINDSAY LOHAN, responding Tuesday on Twitter to a tweet about President Trump’s pledge of support for ailing British infant Charlie Gard
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verbatim
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