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Thursday 10.11.18

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Prime target

THE WASHINGTON POST

Critics in the media rip Gruden, saying he’s too soft on the Redskins 17

Booze and blades

Packing ferocious 155 mph winds, Michael slams into the Panhandle as the most powerful hurricane to hit the mainland in nearly 50 years 8

Hit squad? Turks say video shows a crew sent to murder a Saudi journalist 15

See it three times

GERALD HERBERT (AP)

MONSTER STORM RAVAGES FLORIDA

AP

Ax-throwing venues in D.C. will soon serve alcohol … naturally 3

The Broadway-bound ‘Beetlejuice’ musical is a twisted reinvention 26 am

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2 | EXPRESS | 10.11.2018 | THURSDAY

FABRICE COFFRINI (AFP/GETTY IMAGES)

eyeopeners

JETS STREAM: Fighter jets of the Swiss patrol fly Wednesday during the annual live fire event of the Swiss Air Force over Brienz in the Bernese Alps.

ANIMALS OUT OF PLACE: GATOR

ANIMALS OUT OF PLACE: SQUIRREL

We have to assume Florida Man is behind this one way or another

Listen, it’s 2018 and we all need all the emotional support we can get

A 4-foot reptile discovered Monday in Lake Michigan is an alligator, not a caiman, officials say. Either way, it had no business paddling around the suburban Chicago shoreline. A kayaker spotted the creature swimming near Waukegan, Ill. Waukegan spokesman David Motley said Tuesday that animal control officers are trying to determine who abandoned the creature. The rescued gator is weak, but is considered likely to survive. (AP)

Police at the Orlando airport removed a passenger who refused to get off a Cleveland-bound flight after she was found carrying an “emotional support squirrel.” Frontier Airlines said the passenger noted in her reservation that she was bringing an emotional support animal, but she did not say it was a squirrel. Frontier does not allow rodents as emotional support animals. The airline said police were called when she refused to deplane. (AP)

ANIMALS OUT OF PLACE: BEAR

“I have that bear sign out front that says welcome, but it wasn’t literally meant for the bear.” JOHN ISON, of Monico, Wis., speculating to WJFW-TV about what enticed a black bear to enter his living room early Saturday. “It’s for family and friends, not for the bear,” he added.

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THURSDAY | 10.11.2018 | EXPRESS | 3

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‘It’s not as crazy as it seems’ THE DISTRICT Washingtonians looking to have a beer, unwind with friends and hurl hatchets at a wall will soon get their chance. Competitive ax-throwing company Kraken Axes was awarded a liquor license late last month, becoming the first Washington establishment to let patrons mix booze and sharp weaponry. Two other venues plan to do the same. Kick Axe Throwing has also secured a liquor license — though it is not expected to open for business before spring 2019. Bad Axe Throwing, which has a venue in Northeast Washington, plans to apply for a license as well. “People think of us as these crazy Canadians bringing our axes down to the U.S. and throwing them around,” said Mario Zelaya, president and CEO of Bad Axe Throwing. “But you know what? You guys carry guns, and I don’t know a single person in Canada who owns a gun. Really, it’s not as crazy as it seems.” Bad Axe Throwing has not

BONNIE JO MOUNT (THE WASHINGTON POST)

Ax-throwing venues in D.C. will start serving alcohol. Seriously.

A customer tries out a large hatchet at Bad Axe Throwing in the District.

yet applied for its District liquor license, though Zelaya said he intends to do so. The company recently won licenses in Oklahoma City and Denver. In an attempt to warm city officials to the idea of alcohol in the ax-throwing range, the venues have all vowed to follow safety protocols, including having trained coaches in each lane where axes are being thrown and separating the bar from the throwing zone. Ax-throwing, a sport typically

“When you introduce alcohol, people think you’re really nuts. ... But we haven’t had any injuries, unless you count paper cuts.” MARIO ZELAYA, president and CEO of Bad Axe Throwing, which has a venue in Northeast D.C., on the pairing of alcohol and ax-throwing

89

¢

SUNDAYS

found at lumberjack competitions and Renaissance festivals, involves chucking hatchets at wooden targets and has taken off throughout the country over the past year. It’s like bowling, experts like to say. But sharper. Most ax-throwing venues offer variations on a theme: Patrons are met by a coach or trainer who will go through safety protocols with first-timers and teach them how to throw. Most places call these trainers their ax masters, or “ax-perts.” At Kick Axe Throwing, owner and CEO Ginger Flesher-Sonnier said patrons are limited to beer, wine and malt beverages and will be served only three throughout the time they are throwing. Staff will be trained to recognize signs of drunkenness, and are told to cut people off and ask them to leave the lane if they appear unable to throw safely. Flesher-Sonnier said the only injury she has seen suffered in an ax-throwing venue was when somebody in Canada dropped an ax on their foot and broke a toe — and assuring D.C. officials of its safety helped her go through the liquor-licensing process with relative ease. MARISSA J. LANG (THE WASHINGTON POST)

DINING

TGI Friday’s location at Foggy Bottom closes The TGI Friday’s near Foggy Bottom has closed, Washingtonian reported. With 294 reviews on Yelp, the location was rated 1.5 stars. One reviewer said it had “the absolute worst hospitality anywhere in the world.” The restaurant, at 2100 Pennsylvania Ave. NW, was D.C.’s only TGI Friday’s. (EXPRESS)

THROWBACK THURSDAY

10.09.2015 A look back at Express covers from this week in history:

On Oct. 8, 2015, House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy abruptly dropped out of the race to replace John Boehner as speaker of the House. Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., went on to succeed Boehner as speaker.

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4 | EXPRESS | 10.11.2018 | THURSDAY

local

Mansion killing suspect takes the witness stand THE DISTRICT Daron Wint, the sole person charged in the 2015 slayings of three members of a D.C. family and their housekeeper, testified Wednesday that his half brother lured him to the family’s home for a paint and drywall job, then said he needed help “unloading the house” of valuables. Wint, 37, told the jury that it was only because of his half brother Darrell Wint that he went to the Savopoulos home in upper Northwest in May 2015. Wint told jurors he refused to

help in any thefts. He said he stayed in a room on the main floor and did not see any other people or Wint signs anyone had been harmed. Daron Wint is charged with multiple counts of first-degree murder, kidnapping and arson in the May 14, 2015, slayings of Savvas Savopoulos, 46, and Amy Savopoulos, 47; their son, Philip, 10; and the family’s housekeeper, Veralicia “Vera” Figueroa, 57.

METRO

Man in wheelchair dies after fall on escalator

The victims, who were restrained, beaten and stabbed, were found in upstairs bedrooms. The killer then doused them with gasoline and set the house on fire. Prosecutors say Daron Wint acted alone, committing the crimes to get $40,000 in ransom. But the defense contends he was a fall guy — set up by his brother and stepbrother to take blame. Neither has been charged, and Darrell Wint has not testified in the case. KEITH L. ALEXANDER AND MICHAEL

DISTRICT OF DRAG

Mayor’s office takes over the High Heel Race

BRICE-SADDLER (THE WASHINGTON POST)

MATT McCLAIN (THE WASHINGTON POST)

Straight to the dome

THE DISTRICT | A worker is seen Tuesday on the dome of the U.S. Capitol building. The chance of scattered showers remains today as an approaching cold front merges with moisture streaming up from Hurricane Michael.

$44K

Drag queens in pumps, platforms and stilettos will race down a Dupont Circle street later this month as they have for the past 32 years, with one marked change — D.C.’s annual High Heel Race has been taken over by the mayor’s office. Since 1986, the Halloween event has been beloved for its camp and community charm. It was not immediately clear what changes the city might implement, but longtime organizer Dave Perruzza — the former manager of JR’s Bar & Grill, the starting point of the race — will be working the event one last time in an effort to ensure a smooth transition. The event, a 0.1-mile sprint on 17th Street NW, attracts drag queens and kings decked out in glitter and costumes and, of course, heels that do not appear to be made for running. (TWP)

TOLL RELIEF FOR 17-HOUR TRAFFIC JAM

The amount a construction company has reimbursed so far in tolls for drivers after one of its trucks caused a 17-hour traffic jam on the Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel that connects Virginia Beach with the Eastern Shore. The Virginian-Pilot reported Tuesday that more than 3,000 drivers have been paid so far. The toll relief fund is being paid for by Chesapeake Tunnel Joint Venture, which is constructing a new parallel tunnel. Last week, one of its trucks struck the current tunnel’s ceiling. A trip across the bridge-tunnel can cost $13. (AP)

expressline

Cellphone explodes on Cecil County, Md., bus, injuring high schooler

A man died after his motorized wheelchair fell down an escalator at Columbia Heights Metro station Wednesday, the transit agency said. Metro spokeswoman Sherri Ly said the man was using a wheelchair and had attempted to use the “up” escalator. She said he had nearly reached the top when he and the chair tumbled backward. A Fire spokesman said the man was found unconscious at the bottom of the escalator, and was transported to a nearby hospital with life-threatening injuries. He later died. (TWP) BALTIMORE

Police spokesman quits, citing ‘systematic failure’ The chief spokesman of the Baltimore Police Department has resigned, saying there’s been a long-term “systematic failure” of policing in the city, among other ills. T.J. Smith, the face of Baltimore policing at news conferences and crime scene investigations, announced his resignation in a Wednesday Facebook post. He’s been the police spokesman since 2015. Smith stressed that “some real hardcore criminals” infiltrated the department over the years and left a “lifetime of scars.” He says it’s important to “weed out those who want to tarnish the badge and the image of policing.” (AP) MARYLAND

AG Brian Frosh holds 9-point lead in latest poll Maryland Attorney General Brian Frosh, D, leads his Republican challenger Craig Wolf by fewer than 10 points in a new poll — an indication the race, which has focused in part on presidential politics, could be closer than expected. Frosh, who has touted his lawsuits against the Trump administration, earned the support of 43 percent of likely Maryland voters in poll released Wednesday by Gonzales Research & Media Services, compared with 34 percent for Wolf. (TWP)

Man charged in 11-year-old girl’s abduction, sexual assault in Prince William County, Va.


THURSDAY | 10.11.2018 | EXPRESS | 5

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local By 2032, D.C. would adopt 100 percent use of renewable sources THE DISTRICT D.C. would adopt one of the nation’s most aggressive plans to cut carbon emissions, aiming to use entirely renewable sources of energy for the city’s power grid just 14 years from now, under new legislation proposed by five D.C. Council members. The bill — which would also enhance the city’s green building standards and authorize the

mayor to enter regional agreements with Virginia and Maryland to cut greenhouse gas emissions — comes at a moment of international reckoning with the problem of climate change. A report released this week by the world’s top scientific panel studying global warming warned that time has almost run out for governments to prevent catastrophic changes to the environment. The report by the U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change stated that “there is no documented historic precedent� for government action of the kind

JAHI CHIKWENDIU (THE WASHINGTON POST)

Bill aims to speed clean-energy plan

Council member Mary Cheh drafted a bill to use all renewable energy.

needed to avert those changes. But if the outlook for an effective international response to climate change is dim, D.C.

Video showing teen in Norfolk, Va., being pepper-sprayed leads to police internal investigation

officials should still do what they can to reduce emissions at the local level, said council member Mary Cheh, D-Ward 3, who drafted the bill. “What’s the alternative — to do nothing?� Cheh said in an interview. “We either do our best and encourage others to do their best and the national government to change their position on this, or we give in and accept catastrophe.� The bill must pass through committees before going before the full council, which supporters hope could happen this year. PETER JAMISON (THE WASHINGTON POST)

FOREIGN TOURISM IN VA.

$1.9B

The amount international visitors spent in Virginia last year — a record — state tourism officials said. Gov. Ralph Northam’s office said Tuesday that international visitors reached a total of 1.1 million in 2017 and grew at a faster rate in Virginia than in the U.S. overall. State officials say the travel industry is the fifth-largest employer in Virginia. (AP)

Joseph D. Tydings, former U.S. senator from Maryland, died Monday at 90

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8 | EXPRESS | 10.11.2018 | THURSDAY

nation+world

‘We are catching some hell’

A storm chaser gets into his car Wednesday in Panama City Beach, Fla., after it was destroyed by Hurricane Michael.

A TV reporter watches in Panama City Beach, Fla., as Michael makes landfall along the Florida panhandle.

because of this impending catastrophe,” National Hurricane Center scientist Eric Blake tweeted as the storm — drawing energy from the unusually warm, 84degree Gulf waters — became more menacing. More than 375,000 people up and down the Gulf Coast were urged to evacuate as Michael

GERALD HERBERT (AP)

JABIN BOTSFORD (THE WASHINGTON POST)

PANAMA CITY, FLA. Supercharged by abnormally warm waters in the Gulf of Mexico, Hurricane Michael slammed into the Florida Panhandle on Wednesday with terrifying winds of 155 mph, splintering homes and submerging neighborhoods. It was the most powerful hurricane to hit the continental U.S. in nearly 50 years. Its winds shrieking, the Category 4 storm crashed ashore in the afternoon near Mexico Beach, a tourist town about midway along the Panhandle, a lightly populated, 200-mile stretch of white-sand beach resorts, fishing towns and military bases. Michael battered the shoreline with sideways rain, powerful gusts and crashing waves — swamping streets and docks, flattening trees, shredding awnings and peeling away shingles. It set off transformer explosions and knocked out power to more than 190,000 homes and businesses. “We are catching some hell,” said Timothy Thomas, who rode out the storm with his wife in their second-floor apartment in Panama City Beach. With the hurricane still pounding the state hours after it came ashore, and conditions too dangerous in places for search and rescue teams to go out, there were few reports of any deaths or serious injuries. A Gadsden County Sheriff’s official said that a Greensboro man was killed at home by a falling tree. Michael was a meteorological brute that sprang quickly from a weekend tropical depression, going from a Category 2 on Tuesday to a Category 4 by the time it came ashore. It was the most powerful hurricane on record to hit the Panhandle. “I’ve had to take antacids I’m so sick to my stomach today

GERALD HERBERT (AP )

Hurricane Michael slams into Florida Panhandle as a dangerous Category 4 with winds reaching 155 mph

Residents take belongings from their Panama City, Fla., home after trees fell on it during the hurricane.

closed in. But the fast-moving, fast-strengthening storm didn’t give people much time to prepare, and emergency authorities lamented that many ignored the warnings and seemed to think they could ride it out. Diane Farris, 57, and her son walked to a high school-turnedshelter near their home in

Authorities search for 2 inmates who escaped Tenn. jail after assaulting deputy

Panama City to find about 1,100 people crammed into a space meant for about half as many. “I’m worried about my daughter and grandbaby. I don’t know where they are,” she said. Hurricane-force winds extended up to 45 miles from Michael’s center. Forecasters said rainfall could reach up to a foot,

and the life-threatening storm surge could swell to 14 feet. A water-level station in Apalachicola reported a surge of nearly 8 feet. Based on internal pressure, Michael was the third-most powerful hurricane to hit the U.S. mainland, behind the unnamed Labor Day storm of 1935 and Camille in 1969. Based on wind speed, it was the fourth-strongest, behind the Labor Day storm, Camille and Andrew in 1992. It was expected to remain a hurricane as it moved into Alabama and Georgia. The National Hurricane Center said late Wednesday that Michael’s eye had crossed into southwestern Georgia as a dangerous Category 3 storm, the strongest to hit that part of the state in recorded history. Forecasters said it will unleash damaging wind and rain all the way into the Carolinas, which are still recovering from Hurricane Florence’s epic flooding. At the White House, President Trump said the government is “absolutely ready for the storm.” ‘’God bless everyone because it’s going to be a rough one,” he said. “A very dangerous one.” In Mexico Beach, population 1,000, the storm shattered homes, leaving floating piles of lumber. The lead-gray water was so high that roofs were about all that could be seen of many homes. In Panama City, plywood and metal flew off the front of a Holiday Inn Express. Part of the awning fell and shattered the glass front door of the hotel, and the rest of the awning wound up on vehicles parked below it. The hotel swimming pool had whitecaps, and people’s ears popped because of the drop in barometric pressure. The roar from the hurricane sounded like an airplane taking off. JAY REEVES AND BRENDAN FARRINGTON (AP)

Officials: Trump recently spoke to Sessions’ chief of staff about replacing him as attorney general


THURSDAY | 10.11.2018 | EXPRESS | 9

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BUSINESS Antitrust officials gave CVS the green light Wednesday to purchase Aetna, the nation’s thirdlargest health insurance company, in a $69 billion deal that could potentially transform the health care industry and change how millions of Americans receive basic medical services. The Justice Department approved the deal on the condition that the companies sell off Aetna’s Medicare Part D prescription drug business. The tie-up will allow CVS — whose retail pharmacy business serves 5 million customers a day — to turn more of its brick-andmortar locations into front-line clinics for basic medical services and patient monitoring. CVS has said that by deepening its knowledge of and relationships with patients, it could help Americans stick with medication regimens and stay out of the hospital. That new approach will be driven by the immense amounts of data generated by the chain’s 9,800 retail outlets and 1,100 MinuteClinics, as well as from Aetna’s 22 million medical members. “Our focus will be at the local and community level,” CVS chief executive Larry Merlo said in a statement, “to intervene with

58%

AP AND GETTY IMAGES

$69B deal could alter how millions receive basic medical services

The partnership is expected to let CVS use more of its pharmacies as front-line clinics for patient monitoring and some medical services.

consumers to help predict and prevent potential health problems before they occur.” The CVS merger could lead to a future in which the company coordinates transportation for patients who have difficulty showing up for routine medical appointments, Aetna chief executive Mark Bertolini has said. The acquisition is also expected to give CVS more leverage in its negotiations with drugmakers over drug prices, analysts say. Critics of the CVS-Aetna deal had worried that the merger could lead to higher drug prices for Medicare Part D beneficiaries. Opponents such as the American Medical Association also said the acquisition could heighten insurance premiums and out-of-pocket expenses more broadly.

“The AMA worked tirelessly to oppose this merger and presented a wealth of expert empirical evidence to convince regulators that the merger would harm patients,” the AMA’s president, Barbara McAneny, said Wednesday in a statement. The Justice Department said Wednesday that although the deal as originally proposed could have resulted in harm to competition, the two companies’ divestiture of Aetna’s Medicare pharmacy service effectively addresses the issue. The marriage of the two firms underscores a wider trend toward consolidation in the health care sector, and analysts said the CVS deal is likely to spur more acquisitions in the industry. BRIAN FUNG (THE WASHINGTON POST)

ELECTION SECURITY CONCERNS

The proportion of Democrats who say they are very concerned about hackers affecting U.S. election systems, compared with 39 percent of Republicans who say the same, according to a poll released Wednesday. That represents a flip from the results of a similar survey taken in 2016, when Republicans were more likely to be very concerned (52 percent vs. 35 percent). (EXPRESS) Egyptian police detain youngest son of jailed former President Mohammed Morsi without giving reason


THURSDAY | 10.11.2018 | EXPRESS | 11

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(ALLA DREYVITSER/THE WASHINGTON POST)

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THURSDAY | 10.11.2018 | EXPRESS | 13

nation+world

An expected increase in interest rates helps lead to broad declines ECONOMY U.S. stocks plunged Wednesday as investors ramped up their selling of high-flying technology and internet stocks. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 831.83 points, or 3.15 percent, its worst loss in eight months.

Although the losses were widespread, stocks that have been the biggest winners on the market, including technology companies and retailers, suffered steep declines. The Nasdaq composite, which has a high concentration of technology companies, tumbled 315.97 points, or 4.08 percent, its biggest loss in over two years. It has dropped almost 8 percent since the start of October. Stocks have slumped over the

RICHARD DREW (AP)

Stocks fall sharply as investors worry The Dow Jones fell 831.83 points Wednesday as investors sped up selling.

last week as a combination of strong economic data and positive commentary from Federal Reserve leaders sent bond yields higher as investors bet that interest rates will keep rising.

Calif. judge orders new trial for cancer-stricken man awarded $289 million in Roundup case

Big moves in interest rates tend to unsettle investors, and they can also push them to sell stocks and buy bonds instead. The S&P 500 index sank 94.66 points, or 3.29 percent. The

benchmark index fell for the fifth straight day, which hadn’t happened since just before the 2016 presidential election. Some of the big losers were stocks that have scored doubledigits gains in 2018. Apple gave up 4.6 percent to $216.36. Amazon skidded 6.15 percent to $1,755.25. Bond yields and therefore interest rates have been rising for more than two years as the U.S. economy grew strong. When yields rise for that reason, it is generally good for stocks. But eventually the high rates worry stock investors, as they tend to increase borrowing costs and cut into profit margins. MARLEY JAY AND STAN CHOE (AP)

Lawyer: Peru detains opposition leader Keiko Fujimori in money-laundering probe

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14 | EXPRESS | 10.11.2018 | THURSDAY

nation+world HAMBURG, GERMANY

KENYA

KOREAS

Suspect arrested in slaying of Bulgarian journalist

9 children among 55 killed in overnight bus crash

S. Korea considers lifting some sanctions on N. Korea

A limousine service operator was charged Wednesday with criminally negligent homicide in a crash outside Albany, N.Y., that killed 20 people. The company, Prestige Limousine, has come under intense scrutiny since Saturday’s crash outside Albany killed two pedestrians and 18 people in a superstretch limo. Police said that Prestige Limousine operator Nauman Hussain hired a driver who shouldn’t have been behind the wheel of such a car, and the vehicle shouldn’t have been driven after state inspectors deemed it “unserviceable” last month. Hussain’s lawyer said his client was not guilty. (AP)

German police have arrested a suspect in the rape and killing of Bulgarian television journalist Viktoria Marinova, officials said Wednesday. Marinova’s work highlighted corruption in the East European country. Bulgaria’s prosecutor general, Sotir Tsatsarov, confirmed the arrest of Severin Krassimirov, a 21-year-old Bulgarian citizen. Prosecutors in the German state of Lower Saxony said the suspect was arrested Tuesday evening outside the city of Hamburg. Bulgarian authorities said investigators found DNA evidence on the clothes and body of Marinova, who was killed Saturday. (AP)

Fifty-five people were killed when their bus left the road, rolled down a slope and crashed in western Kenya, an official said Wednesday. Police said that the driver lost control. The bus had been traveling from the capital, Nairobi, to the western town of Kakamega when the accident occurred around 4 a.m. “I felt the bus swerve from one side to the other and then I found myself in the middle of nowhere,” survivor Joseph Obonyo said. “There was a body near me and people were being thrown out of the bus, flying out of it like airplanes.” About 15 people survived. Nine children were among the dead. (AP)

South Korea is considering lifting some of its unilateral sanctions against North Korea to create more momentum for diplomacy aimed at improving relations and defusing the nuclear crisis, the South’s foreign minister said Wednesday. The North and South also announced measures to reduce conventional military threats, such as creating buffer zones along their land and sea boundaries and a no-fly zone above the border. The North also said it would dismantle its main nuclear facility in Nyongbyon if the United States takes unspecified corresponding measures. (AP)

FILIP DVORSKI (AP)

ALBANY, N.Y.

Operator of limo service charged in Saturday crash

A portrait of slain reporter Viktoria Marinova is displayed during a vigil in Ruse, Bulgaria, on Tuesday.

Swiss court upholds acquittal of former banker who gave secrets to WikiLeaks

Two women and a girl believed to be migrants found slain in Greek-Turkish border area

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THURSDAY | 10.11.2018 | EXPRESS | 15

nation+world

Turkish media: Video shows Saudi assassins

‘FABULOUS FLAB’

Alaskan park crowns champ of bear bods

ISTANBUL Two Gulfstream jets carrying 15 Saudis landed at Istanbul’s Ataturk Airport before dawn on the day last week that journalist Jamal Khashoggi entered the Saudi Consulate and vanished. The men checked into hotels and left Turkey later that night. Turkish media, which released surveillance camera video of the men on Wednesday, said they were members of an elite Saudi “assassination squad,” sent to kill Khashoggi, 59. Saudi Arabia remained silent as the images were seen around the world, raising pressure on the kingdom to explain what happened to the writer, a critic of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. Adding to the macabre mystery, a Turkish official said that one member of the team was an “autopsy expert,” amid earlier allegations that Khashoggi had been killed and dismembered. Saudi Arabia has dismissed allegations it played a role in Khashoggi’s disappearance as “baseless,” but it has offered no evidence to support its contention that he left the consulate unharmed last week and vanished into Istanbul while his fiancee, Hatice Cengiz, waited outside. U.S. national security adviser

MATT MCCLAIN (THE WASHINGTON POST)

Pressure grows on kingdom to explain fate of missing journalist

People take part in a rally outside the Embassy of Saudi Arabia in D.C. on Wednesday over the disappearance of journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

John Bolton, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and White House senior adviser Jared Kushner have spoken to the crown prince about the Washington Post contributor, the White House announced. The video showed one of two private jets that Turkish media said carried the Saudi group, who flew in and out on Oct. 2. The Sabah newspaper published images of what it referred to as the “assassination squad,” apparently taken at passport control. The state-run Anadolu news agency published the names and birth dates of all 15 Saudis. The footage shows some of the Saudis leaving a hotel and Khashoggi entering the consulate, walking past a black Mercedes van with diplomatic plates parked adjacent to the entrance.

$25B

An hour and 54 minutes later, a black Mercedes van drives about 1.2 miles to the consul’s home, where it was parked in a garage. The footage all seemed to come from surveillance cameras. No footage has emerged of Khashoggi leaving the consulate. President Trump said the U.S. is “demanding” answers from its ally, but did not disclose details. Senior members of Congress with access to U.S. intelligence reporting feared the worst. More than 20 Republican and Democratic senators called on Trump to order an investigation into Khashoggi’s disappearance under legislation that authorizes imposition of sanctions for perpetrators of extrajudicial killings, torture or other gross human rights violations. (AP)

After a summer stuffing her maw with salmon, an Alaskan brown bear known as 409 Beadnose on Tuesday was crowned the winner of Katmai National Park and Preserve’s fourth annual Fat Bear Week contest. Photos of bear bods were pitted side-byside on Facebook and the winner of each round was the one that got the most likes. 409 Beadnose — a name that combines her park-assigned number and a moniker inspired by her upturned snout — also took home the honor in 2015. Announcing her win over a beastly bruin named 747, the Alaskan park wrote on Facebook: “Her radiant rolls were deemed … to be this year’s most fabulous flab.” (THE WASHINGTON POST)

OVER BUDGET OLYMPICS

The estimated minimum amount Japan will spend to prepare for the 2020 Olympics in Tokyo, according to a report released this week by the country’s Board of Audit. The price tag is nearly four times the original estimate of $7.3 billion that Japan predicted when it was awarded the games in 2013. The audit also found that Japanese taxpayers will have to pay 80 percent of the final cost of hosting the games. Organizers of the Tokyo 2020 Games are disputing the new spending estimates. (THE WASHINGTON POST) Hong Kong plans to ban e-cigarettes, other new smoking products to protect public health

Will countries follow Canada on legal pot? CANADA Mat Beren and his friends used to drive by the vast greenhouses of southern British Columbia and joke about how much weed they could grow there. Years later, it’s no joke. The tomato and pepper plants that once filled some of those greenhouses have been replaced with a new cash crop: marijuana. The buyers no longer are unlawful dealers or dubious medical dispensaries; it’s the Canadian government. On Oct. 17, Canada becomes the second and largest country with a legal national marijuana marketplace. Uruguay launched legal sales last year. It’s a profound social shift promised by Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and fueled by a desire to bring the black market into a regulated, taxed system. At least 109 legal pot shops are expected to open across the nation of 37 million people next Wednesday, with many more to come, according to an AP survey of the provinces. Hannah Hetzer, who tracks international marijuana policy for the New York-based Drug Policy Alliance, called Canada’s move “extremely significant.” “There’s no other country immediately considering legalizing the nonmedical use of cannabis,” she said. “But I think Canada will provide almost the permission for other countries to move forward.” GENE JOHNSON AND ROB GILLIES (AP)

Bangladesh sentences 19 to death over deadly 2004 attack at a political rally


16 | EXPRESS | 10.11.2018 | THURSDAY

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sports

THURSDAY | 10.11.2018 | EXPRESS | 17

The Redskins’ loss in New Orleans fueled questions about the team’s discipline under Jay Gruden.

THREE POINTERS

Critics pile on Gruden Brian Mitchell says coach sets the wrong tone and team thinks ‘everything is a joke’ REDSKINS There was plenty of blame to go around after the Redskins’ blowout loss Monday night, but for some, including NBC Sports Washington analyst Brian Mitchell, it started with Jay Gruden. After the Saints embarrassed the Redskins in New Orleans, Mitchell ripped Washington’s preparedness. He said players aren’t taking their jobs seriously enough and suggested that’s a reflection of their head coach. “There were things that happened after the bye week that made me start to question a lot of things,” the former Redskins running back said. “We’ve got guys getting a break — a veteran day after a bye. Hell, you just were off for seven days and you come

back and you need a veteran day? . . . Guys are still blowing assignments, can’t keep their coverages, can’t communicate properly. “And you know what? We always talk about players taking on the personality of their coach, and I’m going to say this: Yes, they’re taking on the personality of their coach. They think everything is a joke. They think everything is easy, and they’re not going out there busting their a---- to become the best players they can be.” Gruden acknowledged that improvements are needed. “We have a cloud looming over our head with issues we have to clean up,” he told reporters a day before the Redskins (2-2) returned to practice Wednesday

Peterson has a sprain Running back Adrian Peterson avoided a major injury when he dislocated his shoulder Monday in New Orleans, and he has been diagnosed with a shoulder sprain, according to a person with knowledge of the injury. It was unclear if he will miss any games. After the game, he said he was OK. He had an MRI on Tuesday. (TWP)

to prepare for Sunday’s visit by 3-1 Carolina. On his D.C. podcast, Kevin Sheehan echoed some of what Mitchell said. Sheehan pointed to the personal foul penalty on safety Montae Nicholson that negated a third-down stop on the

Saints’ second drive as the latest example of a recurring problem of discipline under Gruden. “We’ve talked about ‘Camp Jay’ and loose Jay and no culture of where you’re fearful of making a mistake like that,” Sheehan said. “I don’t know that Nicholson will even be punished for that.” The Team 980 host Steve Czaban sees wide-ranging problems. “The number of systems on board the spaceship that is the Redskins that [are] malfunctioning or outright on fire has alarmingly tripled overnight,” he said. But Czaban also noted that the Redskins are in first place and could make amends quickly with another game “coming up in the blink of an eye, on a short week.”

JOHN McDONNELL (THE WASHINGTON POST)

Yanks exit powerlessly The Yankees managed only one win in the best-of-five series that let the Red Sox advance to face the Astros in the ALCS, which starts Saturday night. What happened to the Bronx Bombers? (TWP/AP)

3 Home runs lacking The Yankees hit a major league-record 267 homers this season. But with the stakes at their highest, they never left the yard in two home games versus Boston.

2 Starters stumble N.Y. starters were charged with 15 runs over 13 innings in four games. Only Masahiro Tanaka, who got the win in Game 2, was able to get an out in the fourth inning.

1 Clutch hitting missing New York was 4-for-26 (.154) in the series with runners in scoring position, managing only one extra-base hit. Giancarlo Stanton was 0-for-6 in those situations.

SCOTT ALLEN (THE WASHINGTON POST)

DISTINCTIVE LOOK

Kaepernick files to trademark his image

Colin Kaepernick, who is more famous now than when he was an NFL quarterback, wants to trademark a black and white image of his face and hair, ESPN reported Wednesday. The filing with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office says he wants to use the image on items such as shampoo and jewelry. Kaepernick, who started the movement to take a knee during the national anthem to protest social injustice, is a Nike spokesman but hasn’t played since 2016. (EXPRESS)

Boston’s David Price will start Game 2 of ALCS despite postseason ineffectiveness

Lenny Dykstra charged in N.J. with drug possession, “terroristic threats” against Uber driver


18 | EXPRESS | 10.11.2018 | THURSDAY

sports MLB

NFL

COLLEGE BASKETBALL

Nats gets a Marlins reliever to start rebuilding bullpen

Eagles visit Giants tonight, aim to end two-game slump

NCAA denies waiver for hurricane relief game

The Nationals on Wednesday picked up righty Kyle Barraclough from Miami in their first move to rebuild the bullpen. The Nats gave the Marlins $1 million in international slot value. In 61 appearances this year, Barraclough, 28, was 1-6 with a 4.20 ERA and 10 saves in 17 chances. He allowed one hit in 36 at-bats in June, but struggled with his command the rest of the season. His ERA was 10.24 in his final 24 games and he lost the closer’s job. Washington needs relievers after jettisoning Shawn Kelley and Brandon Kintzler late this season. The Marlins now have more flexibility to pursue Cuban prospect Victor Victor Mesa, an outfielder. (AP)

The Eagles (2-3) head into tonight’s game at the Giants (1-4) hoping to avoid their first three-game losing streak since the 2016 season. The 8:20 p.m. game is being televised by Fox and the NFL Network. A fourth loss by the Eagles would be more than they had last season, when they won the Super Bowl. The Eagles have won the past three against New York and seven of eight. The Eagles have only 12 sacks this season, hurting their pass defense, but Giants QB Eli Manning has been sacked 16 times. Giants rookie RB Saquon Barkley will test a defense that is allowing only 66.4 yards per game on the ground. (AP)

The NCAA last week denied a waiver that would have allowed North Carolina and South Carolina to play a benefit exhibition game with proceeds going to Hurricane Florence relief. “I was dumbfounded when the waiver was not granted,” Tar Heels coach Roy Williams told reporters at the team’s media day. The stumbling block is that the NCAA allows schools to play only two exhibition games, one public and one “private” — unpublicized and in a closed gym. Each school had committed to those games and didn’t want to cancel. Thus, a waiver was needed for a third exhibition. (THE WASHINGTON POST)

ESPN: Butler returns to Wolves practice, challenging teammates and calling out coaches, execs

TERPS PENALTY YARDS

93.8 The number of penalty yards per game sustained this season by Maryland under interim coach Matt Canada, left. That total is fourthworst among 129 Football Bowl Subdivision teams. The Terrapins (3-2) had 107 penalty yards Saturday in a 42-21 loss at Michigan. DB Rayshad Lewis and LB Tre Watson were flagged for second-half targeting penalties, so they are barred from playing in the first half against Rutgers (1-5) at noon Saturday in College Park. (TWP)

Officials investigating corruption in Belgian soccer carry out 57 police raids


10.11.18

weekendpass You don’t have to say ‘Beetlejuice’ three times to meet the star of the new musical 26-28

GETTY IMAGES/EXPRESS ILLUSTRATION

Still like beer?

Be careful in there

Frankie speaking

Snallygaster has a new location and close to 400 brews to judge 23

Step into the shoes of law enforcement at D.C.’s newest museum 24

Lily Tomlin is nowhere near done with her character-building career 29

WORLD PREMIERE PRIOR TO BROADWAY TheNational DC.com

BEGINS SUNDAY 5 WEEKS ONLY


20 | EXPRESS | 10.11.2018 | THURSDAY

up front

ass A quick p s t’ a h w at going on

KATE PATTERSON (FOR THE WASHINGTON POST)

The festivals next door Neighborhoods help build a sense of community, and that’s something worth celebrating at these four fall festivals in D.C. and Maryland this weekend. STEPHANIE WILLIAMS (EXPRESS) H Street Festival H Street NE between Fourth and 14th streets; Sat., noon-7 p.m., free admission.

The annual H Street Festival, which typically draws one of the biggest crowds of all the neighborhood festivals in D.C., was postponed last month as Hurricane Florence bared down on the Mid-Atlantic. The coast

is clearer for this weekend’s delayed celebration, which features 14 live performance stages plus a wide range of vendors and merchants.

Petworth Blocktoberfest 622 Randolph St. NW; Sat., 2-8 p.m., free admission.

A twist on Oktoberfests, the third annual Blocktoberfest offers

“Tour de force performance.” — Woman Around Town

“+ + + + +”

The second HyFest — organized by Hyattsville musicians and residents — offers a solid lineup of local music. Power rock trio The Effects and funk rock quartet Staycation will perform along with three other bands; Denizens Brewing Co. and Streetcar 82 Brewing Co. will sell beers; and Fresh Afghan Cuisine will sling eats.

Bethesda Row Arts Festival 2018 4841 Bethesda Ave., Bethesda; Sat. 11 a.m.-6 p.m., Sun., 10 a.m.-5 p.m., free admission.

The H Street Festival, one of the most popular neighborhood fests in the area, will get things rolling Saturday with music, dance, exhibits and more.

German beer and food along with live music and family-friendly games (including giant Jenga and giant chess). The event is free, but there’s an option to donate $20 for a wristband that will get you unlimited alcohol and food.

Nearly 200 artists will display their work along four blocks in downtown Bethesda for this 21st annual arts festival. Just about every type of art will be represented at the event — including performance art: jugglers, dancers and musicians will stage pop-up performances throughout.

(Proceeds will benefit Changing Perceptions.)

HyFest Polka Dot Park, 4320 Hamilton St., Hyattsville, Md.; Sat., 4-10 p.m., $10 donation.

“The quintessential American musical.”

“A heart-stirring reminder of the power of art.”

— HuffPost

— Daily News

— DC Theatre Scene

A PLAY ABOUT COMIC GENIUS

DICK GREGORY

TURN ME LOOSE

GOLD STANDARD MUSICAL

ANYTHING GOES

TIMELESS MASTERPIECE

IN ASSOCIATION WITH JOHN LEGEND, GET LIFTED FILM COMPANY, MIKE JACKSON, THE WILL AND JADA SMITH FAMILY FOUNDATION, BETH HUBBARD, THE PRIVATE THEATRE, ERIC FALKENSTEIN, SIMONSAYS ENTERTAINMENT, JAMIE CESA AND JANA BABATUNDE-BEY

INDECENT

BY GRETCHEN LAW | DIRECTED BY JOHN GOULD RUBIN

MUSIC AND LYRICS BY COLE PORTER ORIGINAL BOOK BY P. G. WODEHOUSE AND GUY BOLTON AND HOWARD LINDSAY AND RUSSEL CROUSE NEW BOOK BY TIMOTHY CROUSE AND JOHN WEIDMAN DIRECTED BY MOLLY SMITH | CHOREOGRAPHED BY PARKER ESSE MUSIC DIRECTION BY PAUL SPORTELLI

CLOSES OCTOBER 21

BEGINS NOVEMBER 2

BEGINS NOVEMBER 23

BY PAULA VOGEL | DIRECTED BY ERIC ROSEN CO-PRODUCTION WITH BALTIMORE CENTER STAGE AND KANSAS CITY REPERTORY

Photo of Edwin Lee Gibson by Margot Schulman.

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


THURSDAY | 10.11.2018 | EXPRESS | 21

up front Just Announced!

Emmylou Harris

Mumford & Sons

Folk and country legend Emmylou Harris will return to the intimate confines of The Hamilton for her annual benefit show for her dog rescue organization Bonaparte’s Retreat. GET TICKETS: Friday at 10 a.m. through Ticketfly.

The Hamilton, Dec. 2, $90-$250.

Mumford & Sons’ third album, “Wilder Mind,” was the British folk band’s equivalent of Dylan going electric. “Guiding Light,” the first single from next month’s “Delta,” puts the acoustic guitar back at the forefront. But the band has said the new album adds jazz, hip-hop and electronic influences, too. GET TICKETS: Friday at 9 a.m. through Ticketmaster.

An Evening with the Clintons DAR Constitution Hall, April 27, $99.50-$250.

Bill and Hillary Clinton are the latest politicians-turned-private citizens

GETTY IMAGES

Capital One Arena, Dec. 14, $44-$299.

hitting the road for a speaking tour. For this stop on their 13-city trek, the former denizens of the White House will discuss their political and personal lives, along with the issues of the day. GET TICKETS: Friday at 10 am. through Ticketmaster.

GWAR 9:30 Club, Dec. 29, $25.

You’ve been to the GWAR pop-up bar; now see the real thing when the gruesome, costumed metal band from Virginia returns to 9:30 Club. GET TICKETS: Thursday at 10 a.m. via Ticketfly.

Greensky Bluegrass The Anthem, Feb. 1 & 2, $40-$75.

Greensky Bluegrass has taken over the 9:30 Club for a winter weekend in each of the past five years. Last year, The Anthem got added to the mix. With a new album, “All for Money,” due in January, the band will return to The Anthem for two nights of improv-heavy bluegrass. GET TICKETS: Friday at 10 a.m. via Ticketfly. RUDI GREENBERG (EXPRESS)

free & easy

Orquesta el Macabeo Puerto Rican band Orquesta el Macabeo, which takes traditional salsa music and gives it a punk edge, is celebrating 10 years as a group with a tour that brings the outfit to the Kennedy Center’s Millennium Stage (Thu., 6 p.m., free). The group plans to perform songs from each of its four studio albums at the show. R.G.

Mendelssohn’s Violin Concerto October 11–13

Sometimes the greatest act of love is letting go.

La traviata

Now thru October 21 | Opera House

Mendelssohn: Calm Sea and Prosperous Voyage Mendelssohn: Violin Concerto Beethoven: Symphony No. 6, “Pastoral” Kennedy-Center.org (202) 467-4600

Music by Giuseppe Verdi Libretto by Francesco Maria Piave, from the novel La dame aux Camélias by Alexandre Dumas

Groups call (202) 416-8400

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

Generous support for WNO Italian Opera is provided by Daniel and Gayle D’Aniello.

For all other ticket-related customer service inquiries, call the Advance @NYR` /\e <ßPR Na ! # %"!

Major support for WNO is provided by Jacqueline Badger Mars.

La traviata is a production of the Clarice Smith Opera Series.

WNO’s Presenting Sponsor

Additional support for La traviata is provided by The Dallas Morse Coors Foundation for the Performing Arts.

Photo by Scott Suchman

Christoph Eschenbach, conductor Ray Chen, violin


22 | EXPRESS | 10.11.2018 | THURSDAY

Jazz Jason Moran Artistic Director

weekendpass My D.C. dream day

is super agile and loves to run across the rocks, so he’d lead the way. At one point, we’d sit down and enjoy the view of the water and take it all in.

TIM COBURN

Alex: Then we go straight to Anxo Cidery & Pintxos Bar in Bloomingdale. We love their rosé cider, grilled asparagus and pan con tomate. Chris: And we would have a Secret Service car taking us to all these places. We could run all the lights. But after that, we’d walk around the neighborhood. The weather will be not too hot, not too cold.

Crossroads Club

Mwenso & the Shakes Saturday, October 27 at 9 p.m. Atrium Charismatic singer and bandleader Michael Mwenso’s new high-energy troupe merges the highest form of raw talent while commanding a strong blues essence through African and Afro-American music and the stylings of Fats Waller, Muddy Waters, James Brown, and many other legends. All tickets are general admission—standing room only.

Kennedy-Center.org (202) 467-4600

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This is

Groups call (202) 416-8400 For all other ticket-related customer service inquiries, call the Advance @NYR` /\e <ßPR Na ! # %"!

Every Tuesday in Express

Chris and Alex Perrin FITNESS STUDIO OWNERS

From the day they met, Alex Perrin, 34, and her husband, Chris Perrin, 37, have been working as a team. At first, Chris was Alex’s personal trainer; they married three years later, and now the pair have a 16-month-old daughter, Mak, and a dog aptly named Burpee. The couple, who have coached at various studios, noticed that D.C. lacked the type of workout they prefer: a team-based boot camp class married with highintensity interval training. So they opened Cut Seven, a fitness studio in Logan Circle four blocks from their Shaw home. “We wanted to create something that would fill that void,” Alex says. The health-conscious duo are breaking some rules for this itinerary. “Calories don’t count on our dream day,” Alex says. Alex: We would start our morning with some Swing’s Coffee at home in our Chemex, and then we would head to our studio and do heart day, the hardest class of the week. Chris: It’s our cardio day. We rarely get to take it together. If we couldn’t work out at Cut Seven, we’d do yoga at Flow

Yoga Center. Alex: On our way home, we’d stop by The Coffee Bar and I’d get a whole milk latte. Chris: I’d get decaf, and definitely something to eat. Alex: Once we get Mak and Burpee from home, we’d go to the C&O Canal trail. Burpee

Alex: In the evening, we’d go out just the two of us. It’s rare that we get those date nights. We’d head over to Acqua Al 2 in Capitol Hill for some Italian and sit outside. We’d actually start at their speak-easy, Harold Black, for some cocktails. I’d get something refreshing, maybe with vodka or cucumber. Chris: I’d probably have a Sazerac or an Old-Fashioned. At the restaurant — we’re vegetarian — I’d probably have them make me a bunch of stuff. Just bring everything to the table, and whatever we don’t eat we’ll take home. Alex: We’d then go to Rocket Bar and play games and I would kick his ass. Chris: Right. We’ll see. We’d do a mini Olympics, with darts, shuffleboard, pool and Skee-Ball. Alex: We’d then head to Arlington and go to Bakeshop. They have the best desserts and are open late. We’d get homemade ice cream sandwiches. My favorite is a molasses cookie with lemon ice cream. Chris: I’d probably get one of those Oreos in a Blanket. It’s an Oreo baked inside a chocolate chip cookie. And I’d get an ice cream sandwich. Alex: We’d end the night at the Tabard Inn, and we’d eat our dessert in front of a fireplace and spend the night there. (AS TOLD TO ZAINAB MUDALLAL/EXPRESS)


THURSDAY | 10.11.2018 | EXPRESS | 23

weekendpass

New digs, new brews, same fest BEER Snallygaster, the Neighborhood Restaurant Group’s annual beer festival, has always been an evolving beast. It started (under a different name) as an Oktoberfest celebration in the parking lot of Arlington’s Rustico in 2007, then moved to Navy Yard in 2012, growing in size in the ensuing years. Now, Snallygaster has a picturesque new home on the streets of downtown D.C. along Pennsylvania Avenue NW. “To be honest, we didn’t think it was possible,” says Greg Engert, NRG’s beer director. “It just seemed like a dream to get to do this … in front of the Capitol. It’s one of the most beautiful scenes in the city in general, so what better a backdrop for this massive beer festival.” The new location is just one of the changes for Saturday’s event, which, unlike all-you-candrink beer fests, is more like an expansive, outdoor version of ChurchKey. About 400 different beers will be on offer, many of which have never been available in the city before. The other major change is the date: For its past six years in Navy Yard, Snallygaster has been held in September, with the day floating based on the Nationals’ schedule (and kept out of October in case of playoff baseball). That happened to result in several years of rainy Snallygasters and, for the past two years, very hot ones. The

move to October might pay off: The forecast for Saturday has temperatures in the 60s. “Beerdrinking weather,” as Engert puts it. The new location should also ease congestion for attendees getting into the grounds — with two entrances at either end — and make the space feel more cohesive, Engert says. In recent years, as Snallygaster expanded to three parking lots near Nationals Park, the festival started to feel disjointed and more sprawling. Now, “it’s one long space you can travel through and still feel like you’re in the same event,” he says. As usual, there will be lawn games, a kids area and local music (including Rare Essence and The Pietasters) to distract from the beer-drinking during the festival, which benefits nonprofit Arcadia. Gone this year are the commemorative glass mugs, which have been phased out because the new site doesn’t allow glass. More than 30 of the 120-plus breweries at Snallygaster have never been at the festival before — slightly more than usual, Engert says. New buzzy breweries include contingents from New York (Interboro Spirits and Ales, Threes Brewing, Equilibrium Brewery and Grimm Artisanal Ales), the West Coast (The Rare Barrel, Monkish Brewing, Great Notion Brewing) and Maryland (Goonda Beersmiths, Cushwa). “We’re always challenging ourselves to get even cooler, rarer and more intriguing new brewers,” Engert says. Rare beers are always the main draw at Snallygaster, and

Around 400 different craft beers — many rare, or new to D.C. — will be poured during Snallygaster on Saturday.

SNALLYGASTER PHOTOS

Like a fine ... craft beer, Snallygaster just keeps getting better with age

One casualty of Snallygaster’s new location: the commemorative mugs.

“It’s one of the most beautiful scenes in the city in general, so what better a backdrop for this massive beer festival.” GREG ENGERT, Neighborhood Restaurant Group’s beer director, on Snallygaster’s new venue on Pennsylvania Avenue NW

since those tend to go fast, the festival will now offer only 4-ounce taster pours of select beers. (Most beers will be available as 7-ounce or 14-ounce drafts; prices for pours vary — you pay with drink tickets that cost $1 each — but are generally in the range of what you’d pay at one of Engert’s bars.) There will also be cans this year, spurred in part by Engert finally getting Vermont’s legendary The Alchemist to join the

festival. That means you’ll be able to get a full 16-ounce can of the brewery’s highly soughtafter Heady Topper, a double IPA many credit with starting both the hazy, juicy IPA craze and craft beer’s push toward tallboy cans. (Don’t worry about the festival running out early — Engert says they have plenty of cans.) “It’s a masterpiece,” Engert says of Heady Topper, which is meant to be enjoyed straight from the can. “It is a classic beer that has inspired so many. It’s still just as delicious and singular as it was and I still haven’t had a beer that tastes like it — I don’t even think other Alchemist beers taste like it.” There’s perhaps no better place to put that claim to the test than at a beer festival with 400 other brews to choose from. RUDI GREENBERG (EXPRESS)

Sixth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue NW; Sat., 1:30-7 p.m., $40 in advance (includes 30 drink tickets), $15 admission at door.


24 | EXPRESS | 10.11.2018 | THURSDAY

weekendpass JENNA KENDLE PHOTOS (EXPRESS)

A display of historic wanted posters is a reminder that you do not want to end up on a wanted poster.

It’s like a ride-along ... with walls

On Saturday, the National Law Enforcement Museum finally opens its doors to the public — 18 years after Congress authorized its construction in D.C. The timing feels fortuitous: Police/community relations in the U.S. are less than ideal, and the museum will be a setting for thought-provoking education and conversation that could help bridge the gap. “It’s intended to be a place to learn, a place for dialogue, a place to ask the tough questions people want to know,” says executive director David Brant, a former director of the Naval Criminal Investigative Service. “The overriding mission is to strengthen the relationships and bond between law enforcement and the communities they serve.” Here are six things to know ahead of the grand opening. ANGELA HAUPT (FOR EXPRESS)

It’s an airy, mostly underground facility. Visitors enter the Judiciary Square museum at street level through a glass pavilion, then descend one level to the ticketing booths. At this point, the striking U.S. Park Police Eagle One Bell helicopter — which was used to rescue survivors of the 1982 Air Florida crash in the Potomac River — comes into view. Visitors then cross the mezzanine, which offers a panoramic glimpse of the museum, and go down once more to reach the exhibit floor. “It’s a beautiful facility,” Brant says. “The atmosphere is unique in that it’s open, airy and inviting, and everything is right in front of you: The exhibits are all viewable from every other part of the museum.”

You can take a turn as a 911 emergency dispatcher. One of the museum’s standout

interactive exhibits puts visitors in a pretend 911 dispatch center, where they’ll receive a pre-recorded call for help via a simulator. “They’ll literally play the role of dispatcher,” Brant says. After dispatching the proper authorities — one patrol car? Two? An ambulance? — visitors continue playing out the situation. If it’s a noise complaint about neighbors, the “dispatcher” might ask the caller if he or she saw any underage people, drugs, alcohol or weapons. “These are real-life scenarios, and the visitor will get a feel for what goes on day to day and the protocols involved,” Brant says. “How many of us really know what a 911 operator does?”

There’s an intense officer training simulator. One of the primary goals of the museum is to let visitors “walk in the shoes of law enforcement,”

Brant says. Up to 25 people at a time can participate in a training simulator (for an additional $5 charge); two volunteers are selected to use simulated weapons, while the others portray witnesses to a crime depicted in interactive video segments. “Most law enforcement agencies across the country use these simulators to train their officers on how to react to certain situations,” Brant says. Participants can take whatever action they think is appropriate to calm a given predicament, such as a frantic victim. “These are difficult, not-real-clear situations that around a million law enforcement professionals face every hour, every day, around the country,” Brant says. “It’s all intended to educate and leave the visitor with a sense that, quite frankly, things aren’t as simple sometimes as they seem, or as black and white in terms of decision-making.”


THURSDAY | 10.11.2018 | EXPRESS | 25

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A few law enforcement vehicles are included among the museum’s displays, but the keys aren’t inside so don’t even think about it.

High-profile artifacts include a revolver used by an officer to injure outlaw John Dillinger and a poster circulated after the Lindbergh baby kidnapping.

They outdid themselves with the artifacts.

It’s striving to be a platform for constructive dialogue.

A motorcycle used by an undercover agent as he infiltrated the Sons of Silence gang. A bulletriddled Arkansas Game and Fish Commission truck involved in a 2010 shootout. Those and about 1,000 more of the museum’s 20,000 artifacts will be on display at any given time, Brant says, and many will be housed in one of eight “history capsules” that illustrate how policing has evolved — from English jurisprudence to the American West to the civil rights era. “We have [former FBI Director J. Edgar] Hoover’s desk; we have Eliot Ness’ credentials,” Brant says, referring to the Prohibition agent who helped bring down Al Capone. There’s also a capsule spotlighting items from the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks: fragments from one of the planes that hit the World Trade Center towers, an NYPD patrol car door, a Port Authority safety helmet and a

firearm that was found melted inside a safe in one of the towers.

There’s a peaceful place to honor the fallen. The museum is an extension of the adjacent National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial — two curving, 304-foot-long walls that honor those who died in the line of duty. The first name was inscribed on the wall in 1994, and there are now more than 21,000 etched into the blue-gray marble. The museum’s Hall of Remembrance has “a beautiful seating area and reflective wall that will highlight, with pictures, those who lost their lives in 2017,” Brant says. “And then next year, we’ll honor those who lost their lives in 2018.” Visitors can learn about each officer whose name is inscribed on the memorial via an interactive kiosk; there’s also a display of objects that friends and relatives have left in tribute to the officers’ sacrifices and service.

An exhibit called “Five Communities” provides a detailed look at innovative programs developed to improve police/community relations in Cleveland; Dallas; Chicago; Somerville, Mass.; and Charleston, S.C. Brant notes that the museum will host 30 or so programs for kids, educators and adults each year, including an upcoming talk on the opioid crisis. “The ability to establish dialogue about how to move forward positively is going to be the compelling part of this whole initiative,” he says. “You can come in and get a new perspective or additional perspective than what you brought in. Not pro, not con, just hopefully new information.” National Law Enforcement Museum, 444 E St. NW; daily beginning Sat., 10 a.m.-6 p.m. (open until 9 p.m. on Thursdays), $14.95-$21.95 (free for kids 5 and under).

24

An Evening with

LYLE LOVETT & ROBERT EARL KEEN 25 PHIL VASSAR 26 DELBERT McCLINTON w/Dave Chappell & Tommy Lepson

27 28

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An undercover agent used this motorcycle to infiltrate the Sons of Silence.

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GEORGE WINSTON


26 | EXPRESS | 10.11.2018 | THURSDAY

weekendpass GETTY IMAGES/EXPRESS ILLUSTRATION

IT’S SHOWTIME! A Broadway-bound musical version of ‘Beetlejuice’ materializes in D.C.


CALLING ALL GOBLINS AND GHOULS... FOR A NIGHT!

FRIDAY, OCT. 26 8:30–11 P.M. Early bird tickets end Oct. 12 newseum.org/newseumnights

THURSDAY | 10.11.2018 | EXPRESS | 27

weekendpass How faithful is ‘Beetlejuice’ to the movie? “Beetlejuice,” like all stage adaptations of beloved films, faces a fundamental question: How much should the production adhere to the original? In the end, writers Scott Brown and Anthony King decided to use the classic film as more of a loose framework for their take on the story. THOMAS FLOYD (EXPRESS)

Lydia takes center stage

DARREN COX

Most notably, the musical expands the role of Lydia (Sophia Anne Caruso), a peculiar teen adjusting to life with her father and stepmom. “This musical really centers around this girl who is grieving the loss of her mother, and her father is not dealing with it,” says Alex Brightman, who plays Beetlejuice. “What happens when you don’t deal with that stuff is a monster appears.”

STAGE Alex Brightman is an actor aware of his budding reputation — and slightly bemused by it. The 31-year-old’s Broadway breakthrough came in 2016, when he received a Tony nomination for filling Jack Black’s shoes in the kinetic “School of Rock” musical based on the film. Now he’s taking on a role made iconic by Michael Keaton, in a musical adaptation of the 1988 hit movie “Beetlejuice.” Brightman doesn’t need to hear the question before he interjects and asks it himself: “ ‘Are you that guy now? Are you just going to be the guy that does all of the movie roles?’ ” The irony, in Brightman’s mind, is that he’s not particularly well suited to channeling Black, Keaton or anyone else, really. “I love to create from scratch, so when I can, I do,” Brightman

“It could be like Beetlejuice’s younger brother. There’s still a voice … but it is actively not the one in the movie.” ALEX BRIGHTMAN, above, on his version of the iconic character Beetlejuice, which he’ll debut at The National Theatre this weekend

says. “I’m not a good impersonator, so I’m not worried that I’ll be too good at being the guy that can mimic.” “Beetlejuice” kicks off a worldpremiere five-week run at The National Theatre on Sunday, with the show slated for a March opening on Broadway. While the title character famously has just 17 minutes of screen time in Tim Burton’s twisted fantasy-comedy, which focuses on a recently deceased couple who ask the demon for help haunting their former home, Brightman’s Beetlejuice — or Betelgeuse, as the character’s

name is alternately spelled — is the driving force of the musical. In a revamped narrative, this “Beetlejuice” focuses on the relationship between the meddlesome, manic fiend and Lydia, the goth teenager whose family moves into the haunted house. The character of Beetlejuice walks a tightrope as a villain the audience can’t help but find endearing in his quest to wreak havoc on the mortal world, with Brightman’s obvious amiability embedded in the role. “He’s always got a really good attitude,” “Beetlejuice” director

Alex Timbers says of his star. “When everyone is exhausted, he’s the first one leaping up onstage to get something done. I find him very inspiring, and I think the company does too.” Brightman, who didn’t meet Black until “School of Rock” had been on Broadway for months, hasn’t spoken to Keaton about his new part. (“I’m not good at reaching out,” he says, “mainly because of my past of reaching out to girls I thought liked me and getting shot down every time.”) But Brightman thinks Keaton would appreciate his take, which has been colored by moments he improvised throughout various readings, workshops and rehearsals over the past two years. “It’s very different, extremely different than Michael Keaton,” Brightman says. “It could be like Beetlejuice’s younger brother. CONTINUED ON PAGE 28

There’s a conniving connection That monster also plays a more active part in the proceedings here, as a devious bond between Beetlejuice and Lydia provides the musical’s central storyline. “One of the reasons I think they’re great musical theater protagonists is they’re both hucksters,” director Alex Timbers says. “They are in cahoots, but they trick each other.”

Beetlejuice gets a makeover The “Beetlejuice” team did numerous makeup tests for Brightman’s idiosyncratic demon, ranging from a slavish re-creation of Michael Keaton’s look in the film to an unrecognizably abstract version. Ultimately, they landed in the middle. “We’re giving everybody something they can latch on to,” Brightman says. “You look at it and you go, ‘I think that’s Beetlejuice.’ But we have our own thing.”


A MONSTER MASH OF LIVE MUSIC, COCKTAILS, DELICIOUS BITES AND MORE!

FRIDAY, OCT. 26 8:30–11 P.M.

newseum.org/newseumnights

28 | EXPRESS | 10.11.2018 | THURSDAY

THUR SDAY | 10.11.2018 | EXPRESS | 29

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The “Beetlejuice� musical’s cast includes, clockwise from upper left, actors Sophia Ann Caruso, Rob McClure, Adam Dannheisser, Leslie Kritzer, Kerry Butler, Kelvin Moon Loh, Danny Rutigliano and Jill Abramovitz.

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Every Thursday in Express

There’s still a voice, there’s still a thing, but it is actively not the one in the movie.� Brightman’s creative instincts have extended from the stage to the page, as he currently is co-writing musical adaptations of the 2010 film “It’s Kind of a Funny Story� and the 1986 children’s novel “The Whipping Boy.� Reflecting on how the “Beetlejuice� team shaped the character around Brightman, Timbers says: “For somebody like Alex to be such a funny writer, it helps so much. He gets what the authors are going for, he’s able to collaborate with them, with me, with such sophistication of understanding all angles of the craft.� Brightman has stretched his ambition to television as well, having sold a family sitcom to NBC last fall. The show didn’t get made, but Brightman was undeterred: He’s now sitting on four “fully fleshed out� pitches

“He’s always got a really good attitude. When everyone is exhausted, he’s the first one leaping up onstage to get something done.� ALEX TIMBERS, “Beetlejuice’s� director, on star Alex Brightman

for comedy series, plus an idea for a horror anthology in which each episode focuses on a common recurring nightmare. “I have the type of anxiety that wakes you up and says you’re not doing enough, even when I’m in a show like this,� Brightman says. “Anxiety is a serious condition that I have my ups and downs with, but anxiety and depression have led me to finding ways to combat it — and what combats it is work.�

After seeing the way “School of Rock� opened doors for him, as an actor and as a writer, Brightman hopes “Beetlejuice� can be the springboard that gets some of his projects off the ground. If that means being seen by some as “the guy that does all of the movie roles,� that’s fine by him. “When I started in New York 15 years ago, it was like, ‘I don’t care if they like me or not — I just want them to notice me,’ � Brightman says. “If you just keep your head down and work, you will have zero time to go, ‘Is what I’m doing worth it?’ And you’ll just have a product at the end of it. Good or bad, you’ll have done something. “That’s been my whole career. No one has to like anyt h i n g t h a t I d o , b u t yo u can’t deny that I’ve done it.� THOMAS FLOYD (EXPRESS)

The National Theatre, 1321 Pennsylvania Ave. NW; Sun. through Nov. 18, $54-$114.

When Lily Tomlin appears onstage at the Kennedy Center next week, she won’t be alone. “I do about 10 to 12 characters,â€? the veteran comedian and actor says. “I bill it as an evening of classic Lily Tomlin.â€? Those characters may include some of her best-known personalities, such as Ernestine the telephone operator (“one ringy dingy‌ two ringy dingies‌â€?) and perpetual moppet Edith Ann. That’s not all Tomlin will be doing. “I talk to the audience, I use video to sort of ridicule myself,â€? she says. “It’s about the world and it’s about the human condition and about everything else that goes on. If you can imagine that.â€? It’s easy to imagine Tomlin doing anything. As a writer and performer, she’s won six Primetime Emmy awards, the first three of which date back to her mid-’70s variety specials, and she’s been nominated in each of the past four years for her current role on the Netflix series “Grace and Frankie.â€? She’s also won a Grammy and been nominated for an Oscar. And she still had time to take our call after just one or two ringy dingies. KRISTEN PAGE-KIRBY (EXPRESS) When you do these live shows, do you feel that the audience is waiting for you to bust out one of your greatest hits? Maybe a little bit. They might be waiting for Ernestine or something, but I think there’s a lot of other stuff that goes on that they find very engaging. Have the characters that you’ve done for so long changed at

all? Has your approach to them changed? Some of them live in a certain time frame, but some stay current. Even though Edith is maybe pushing 50, she’s still 5½ years old. She’s just 5½ in this world. The characters live on their own, in a kind of way, but I’m always trying to make them better. I’m always working on the language.

What do you still want to do that you haven’t done? I’d like to live forever. I think there’s maybe an outside chance that could happen. I saw a picture of Catherine Deneuve’s mother; she’s 107. Her hair was white and lovely and she looked reasonably attractive and I thought, “Wow. I could aim for Catherine Deneuve’s mother’s aura.� What inspires you to keep working? I don’t do nearly as many shows as I would normally do because “Grace and Frankie� takes up half the year. I think about relaxing and stopping and laying back — and I do a fair amount of that. I just want to keep my hand in the game. I want to be dealt in now and then. But you could be sitting on a private island somewhere! I don’t want to sit on a private island! I have to do “Grace and Frankie�!

Kennedy Center, 2700 F St. NW; Wed., 8 p.m., $39-$129.

Dance Party!

Soul in the Horn with Natasha Diggs and DProsper Join us for this world renowned dance party, social gathering, and music showcase hosted by Kokayi and featuring sets by DJ Kool Flash, Niara Sterling, and Long Arms.

October 13 at 9 p.m. | Atrium

Lyrics from Lockdown Executive Produced by Harry Belafonte Directed and Produced by Gina Belafonte

In this one-man multimedia production, prison activist, actor, author, and Hip Hop theater innovator Bryonn Bain tells his own unbelievable true story by weaving together the voices of more than 40 characters. Each show is followed by a town hall dialogue.

October 18–20 | Terrace Theater

Kennedy-Center.org (202) 467-4600

Groups call (202) 416-8400 For all other ticket-related customer service V[^bV_VR` PNYY aUR .QcN[PR @NYR` /\e <ÂŚPR Na (202) 416-8540

Presented as part of The Irene Pollin Audience Development and Community Engagement Initiatives.


FRIDAY, OCT. 26 8:30–11 P.M. Early bird tickets end Oct. 12 newseum.org/newseumnights

PUT ON YOUR COSTUME... THIS IS A PARTY TO DIE FOR.

30 | EXPRESS | 10.11.2018 | THURSDAY

top stops

The best t of the nex s y a d 7

Thu.

This is still the place to taste more than 200 Virginia wines, with unlimited tastings and a souvenir glass included in the admission price. Hit the food trucks or the Virginia oyster pavilion when you need a snack. (VIP admission includes an hour of early entry and other perks.) Gateway Park,

PARTIES

Evenings at the Edge: East Building 40th Birthday Party The National Gallery of Art’s East Building, designed by I.M. Pei and home to one of the city’s most interesting modern and contemporary art collections, is celebrating its 40th birthday with an after-hours party that will take you back to 1978. DJ Kelton Higgins will spin disco tunes as guests design birthday cards for the museum, play games from the era and eat cake pops. National

1300 Lee Highway, Arlington; Sat. & Sun., noon-6 p.m., $40, two-day pass: $55, VIP: $65.

Sun. MUSIC

White Denim

Fri.

OPUS

Gallery of Art, East Building, Fourth Street and Constitution Avenue NW; Thu., 6-9 p.m., free.

SATURDAY

COMEDY

OPUS Merriweather 2018

Maria Bamford

Merriweather Post Pavilion, 10475 Little Patuxent Parkway, Columbia, Md.; Sat., 5-11 p.m., free.

Maria Bamford, one of the pioneers of the alt-comedy scene, burst into prominence with “The Comedians of Comedy,” the mid-aughts tour that featured her and fellow rising stand-ups Patton Oswalt and Zach Galifianakis. Bamford — most recently of Netflix’s “Lady Dynamite” — also has had her own inventive comedy specials, including 2012’s “The Special Special Special!,” which was recorded in her home for an audience of two — her parents.

If you couldn’t make it to Burning Man, the next best — and closest — alternative might be OPUS. Set in the woods of Columbia, Md., the festival marries flashy, future-forward art installations with off-kilter experimental live music from up-and-coming artists. A 75-foot-tall laser sculpture inspired by a Cedar Point roller coaster, a giant animated owl that recites prophetic quotes and a soulful performance from violinist Sudan Archives are just a few of the highlights of the second annual OPUS.

FESTIVALS

Portside in Old Town Festival Old Town Alexandria’s waterfront has been central to its identity since the 18th century, and the expansion of the public park at the foot of King Street should only heighten its appeal for tourists and residents. Previewing the kinds of events that will regularly take place along the Potomac, the new Portside in Old Town Festival will feature tours of the Godspeed, a

Prince St.; Alexandria; Fri., 3 p.m., Sat., noon., Sun., 9:30 a.m., free admission.

Sat. DRINKS

Virginia Wine Festival 2018 The 43rd annual Virginia Wine Festival will set up shop in a new location at Gateway Park in Rosslyn, overlooking Key Bridge.

U Street Music Hall, 1115 U St. NW; Sun., 7 p.m., $20.

Tue. MUSIC

Garrett Gleason BROCKHAMPTON

Warner Theatre, 513 13th St. NW; Fri., 8 p.m., $32.

replica of a tall ship that brought settlers to Jamestown; art displays, including an LED light performance; live music and DJs; outdoor yoga classes; a pop-up Port City beer garden and Pizzeria Paradiso location; and craft projects. Waterfront Park, 1A

After a lineup change shook up White Denim’s sound for 2016’s “Stiff,” the Austin band seems to have gone back to basics for August’s “Performance.” The album is full of the kind of highenergy, crunchy guitar riffs — and singer James Petralli’s snarling vocals — that made the group a buzzy indie blog favorite in the late ’00s. This is an album meant to be played loud, full of songs that should sound great in a live setting.

TUESDAY

Brockhampton The Anthem, 901 Wharf St. SW; Tue, 9 p.m., $39.50-$59.50.

The power of the internet is summed up by the success of Brockhampton. The (many) members of the mold-breaking boy band met on a Kanye West fan forum and began selfreleasing songs and videos. With ingenious marketing and social media savvy, Brockhampton amassed a dedicated fan base drawn to its inspired rhymes and unbridled energy, all of which led to the guys’ latest effort, “Iridescence,” debuting at No. 1 on Billboard’s albums chart last month.

Guitarist Garrett Gleason has developed a reputation in D.C. as one of the city’s most versatile guitarists, able to slide between traditional rock, jazz and out-there improvisational music with ease. On Tuesday, he’ll celebrate the release of his new album of varied instrumental songs, “Well,” in the Black Cat’s backstage space with support from local rockers FuzzQueen and experimental act Dullard. Black Cat, 1811 14th St. NW; Tue., 7:30 p.m., $10.

Written by Rudi Greenberg and Stephanie Williams (Express) and The Washington Post.


THURSDAY | 10.11.2018 | EXPRESS | 31


32 | EXPRESS | 10.11.2018 | THURSDAY

NORDIC

IMPRESSIONS Art from Åland, Denmark, the Faroe Islands, Finland, Greenland, Iceland, Norway, and Sweden, 1821–2018 THE PHILLIPS COLLECTION | OCTOBER 13, 2018–JANUARY 13, 2019

1600 21st Street, NW (Dupont Circle Metro, Q St. exit)

PhillipsCollection.org |

| #NordicImpressions

MEMBERS ENJOY UNLIMITED FREE ADMISSION AND DISCOUNTS. JOIN US! Hrafnhildur Arnardóttir / Shoplifter, Nervelings I-V, 2018, Synthetic fiber and rope, Dimensions variable, Collection of the artist

The exhibition is organized by The Phillips Collection. With generous support from the Marion F. Goldin Charitable Fund, the Barbro Osher Pro Suecia Foundation, and the scan|design foundation In-kind support is provided by


THURSDAY | 10.11.2018 | EXPRESS | 33

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

JESSIE MCCALL

Mason Bates’s KC Jukebox

Fruition: Portland, Ore.-based Fruition started as a bluegrass band but has since evolved into a rock and folk act (with a healthy dose of twang and some soul). “Fire,” a new four-song EP released over the summer, builds on the sound from this year’s full-length “Watching It All Fall Apart.” On Thursday, the band teams with fellow not-quite-bluegrass band The Lil Smokies at Union Stage.

Future Folk Folk traditions fuse with contemporary sounds for one evening in an immersive, designed space, featuring performances by:

King Creosote Caroline Shaw The Dover Quartet DJ Justin Reed

Sound THURSDAY 9:30 Club: Bob Moses, 7 p.m.

October 18 at 7:30 p.m. | Atrium

City Winery: Madeleine Peyroux, 8 p.m., through Friday Gypsy Sally’s: Vim & Vigor, Annie Stokes Band, 7 p.m. JOSHUA BLACK WILKINS

Lincoln Theatre: Years & Years, 6:30 p.m.

Mansion at Strathmore: Vinicius Cantuaria, 7:30 p.m.

MilkBoy ArtHouse: Denzel Curry, 8 p.m.

The Milk Carton Kids: Fresh off of hosting last month’s Americana Awards, folk duo

Pearl Street Warehouse: Nathan & The Zydeco Cha Chas, Boaty Otis, 8 p.m.

the Milk Carton Kids is back on the road in support of this year’s “All the Things That I Did and All the Things That I Didn’t Do,” landing at The Lincoln Theatre on Saturday.

The Anthem: Ben Howard, Wye Oak,

City Winery: The Currys, 9 p.m.

The Birchmere: The Jayhawks, 7:30 p.m.

Fu, 9 p.m., through Saturday

Dupont Underground: Yaya Bey,

SATURDAY

8 p.m.

9:30 Club: The Record Company,

Gypsy Sally’s: Mystic Bowie’s Talking

8 p.m.

The Hamilton: Eilen Jewell, 6:30 p.m.

Dreads, Shamans of Sound, 7 p.m.

Atlas Performing Arts Center: Akua

Tropicalia: Rio Mira, 7:30 p.m.

Pearl Street Warehouse: Town

Allrich, 7 p.m.

FRIDAY

Mountain, Gina Clowes, 8 p.m.

Black Cat: Joyce Manor, 8 p.m.

9:30 Club: Murder by Death, 6 p.m.; What So Not, 10 p.m.

State Theatre: ZOSO: The Ultimate Led Zeppelin Experience, 7 p.m.

City Winery: Ryan Montbleau, 8 p.m.

Amp by Strathmore: Raul Midon,

The Birchmere: The Whispers, 7:30

Riddem, 9 p.m.

8 p.m.

p.m., through Oct. 13.

Atlas Performing Arts Center: Jeff

The Hamilton: Antibalas, 6:30 p.m.

Denson, 8 p.m.

Union Stage: Perpetual Groove, Kung

Gypsy Sally’s: Trouble Funk, Nappy MilkBoy ArtHouse: Neguinho da Beija-Flor, 7 p.m. CONTINUED ON PAGE 36

Kennedy-Center.org (202) 467-4600

Groups call (202) 416-8400 For all other ticket-related customer service V[^bV_VR` PNYY aUR .QcN[PR @NYR` /\e <¦PR Na (202) 416-8540

KC Jukebox is presented as part of The Irene Pollin Audience Development and Community Engagement Initiatives.

eyeopeners

Only in

XX1242_SecEO_2x.5

6:30 p.m.


34 | EXPRESS | 10.11.2018 | THURSDAY

THEATRE Elton John, Tim Rice’s

Aida Ain’t Misbehavin’ The Fats Waller Musical Show!

William Shakespeare’s

Henry V The Arlington Players’ Production of

The Hunchback Of Notre Dame

Shear Madness The Kennedy Center Theater Lab

Pay-What-You-Can Preview Tonight at 8 pm

A Broadway musical, inspired by Verdi’s opera, about a passionate love triangle set in Ancient Egypt.

September 14 – November 4

This joint will be jumpin’ with music made famous from uptown clubs to Tin Pan Alley to Hollywood! One of the most popular & well-crafted revues of all time.

Source 1835 14th St. NW 202-204-7741 ConstellationTheatre.org Toby’s Dinner Theatre of Columbia 410.730.8311 Tobysdinnertheatre.com

October 18 – November 11, 2018 Thur – Sat at 8pm & Sat – Sun. at 2pm

Wiliam Shakespeare’s Epic battle play performed with only six actors!

Elstad Auditoruim 800 Florida Ave NE 20002 www.factionoffools.org

October 5-20, 2018 Fri & Sat 8:00pm Sun 2:30pm

Based on Victor Hugo’s novel and based on the songs from the Disney film, this musical will transport you into the heart of Paris. Audience will be swept away by this story of love, acceptance, and what it means to be a hero.

Thomas Jefferson Community Theater 125 S. Old Glebe Road, Arlington www.thearlingtonplayers.org

Regular Schedule: Tuesday–Friday at 8 Saturday at 6 & 9 Sunday at 3 & 7

This wildly popular interactive comedy whodunit keeps the audiences laughing as they try to outwit the suspects and catch the killer. New clues and up to the minute improvisation deliver “shrieks of laughter night after night.” (Washington Post)

The Kennedy Center Theater Lab Student Rush Tickets Available Tickets: 202-467-4600 Groups: 202-416-8400 www.shearmadness.com

Tickets start at $15

Winner of 4 Tony Awards!

Call for tickets and info.

Tony Award winner for Best Musical.

$12 $22

$15-25

Free Parking & Red Line NoMa/ Gallaudet October 13 performance includes ASL interpretation. audience relations @thearlington players.org

Tickets Avail. at the Box Office

Great Group Rates for 15 or More

John Philip Sousa Band Hall, Marine Barracks Annex 7th & K Sts, SE Washington, DC 202-433-4011 Live streaming at: www.marineband.marines.mil

FREE, no tickets required

Free parking in garage at 7th & K Sts, SE; Please allow extra time for ID checks at the gate.

The Lyceum 201 S Washington St. Alexandria, VA 22314, USA

Free and open to the public. No tickets.

Weather cancellation info: www. usafband. af.mil 703-829-5483

PERFORMANCES Chamber Music Series

Sunday, Oct. 14 at 2 p.m.

Chamber ensembles from “The President’s Own” will perform Lutoslawski’s Mini Overture, Vasks’ Castillo Interior, Albright’s Pit Band, Reich’s Nagoya Marimbas, Bowles’ Music for a Farce, and Herrmann’s Echoes for String Quartet.

MUSIC - CONCERTS Chamber Players Series

Thurs, Oct 18 7:30 p.m.

An Evening of Music for String Trio & Viola featuring members of the Air Force Strings Free and open to the public, no tickets required.

Engebretson

Kwamena-Poh

190 Master Craftsmen | Live Entertainment | Fine Dining The Guide to the Lively Arts appears: • Sunday in Arts & Style. deadline: Tues., 12 noon • Monday in Style. deadline: Friday, 12 noon • Tuesday in Style. deadline: Mon., 12 noon • Wednesday in Style. deadline: Tues., 12 noon • Thursday in Style. deadline: Wed., 12 noon • Thursday in Express. deadline: Wed., 12 noon • Friday in Weekend. deadline: Tues., 12 noon • Saturday in Style. deadline: Friday, 12 noon For information about advertising, call: Raymond Boyer 202-334-4174 or Nicole Giddens 202-334-4351 To reach a representative, call: 202-334-7006 | guidetoarts@washpost.com

it’s not live art without a live audience.

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

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THURSDAY | 10.11.2018 | EXPRESS | 35

MUSIC - CONCERTS PipeSpectacular Erik William Suter, organist Teutonic Titanics

U.S. Navy Concert Band

Sunday, October 14, at 5:15pm- Sponsored by the Washington National Cathedral and the Potomac, DC and NoVa Chapters of the American Guild of Organists

The Teutonic Titanics program will include three extraordinary, virtuosic organ works by Franz Liszt, Julius Reubke and Max Reger, played on the Cathedral’s 10,650-pipe organ by Erik William Suter.

Friday, Oct. 26, 8:30 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 27, 2 p.m.

Get into the Halloween spirit by experiencing the classic 1931 film “Frankenstein” live with music by the Concert Band. The film will be "brought to life" with Michael Shapiro's haunting music accompanying the film dialogue.

Washington National Cathedral 3101 Wisconsin Ave NW Wash, DC 20016 HTTPS://cathedral.org/ visit-US/directions-parking/ AFI Silver Theater and Cultural Center 8633 Colesville Road Silver Spring, Md.

Free $10 suggested donation

Free parking underground garage

Free, no tickets required

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

Free

Free parking available

$29$109

“There has to be something divine at work behind these performers!” —Anita Swiatek, concertmaster

$36

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

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

MUSIC - ORCHESTRAL The Apollo Orchestra With Cho Liang Lin, violin

Friday, October 12 at 7:30pm

The Apollo Orchestra will perform with violin virtuoso Cho-Liang Lin in a free performance featuring works by Rimsky-Korsakov, Mozart and Brahms.

Sunday Oct. 14, 3 pm

Shen Yun—a name that's become synonymous with superb artistry and unparalleled creativity in the performing arts. Following its sold-out dance performances worldwide, Shen Yun now brings 5,000 years of civilization to life in an epic concert of classical music.

Fridays & Saturdays at 7:30pm

A musical, political satire. We put the MOCK in Democracy! www.capsteps.com Info: 202.312.1555

Hearing is Believing

Shen Yun Symphony Orchestra

Church of the Little Flower 5607 Massachusetts Ave, Bethesda, MD 20816 www.apolloorchestra.com

Kennedy Center Concert Hall ShenYunSymphony.org/DC 888-90-SHOWS (74697)

COMEDY Make America Grin Again

VUSI MAHLASELA SAT, OCT 27, 8pm SIXTH & I The South African living legend returns! “A rare and mesmerizing musical mind [and] a voice that seems to have few limits” – Los Angeles Times Special thanks: Abramson Family Foundation

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

EDGAR MEYER, ZAKIR HUSSAIN & BÉLA FLECK SAT, NOV 10, 8pm LISNER AUDITORIUM Three renowned virtuosos unite at the crossroads of jazz, bluegrass, and traditional Indian music. Special thanks: Dan Cameron Family Foundation, Inc.; Gordon and Lisa Rush; Honorary Patron: His Excellency Navtej Sarna, Ambassador of India

The Guide to the Lively Arts appears: • Sunday in Arts & Style. deadline: Tues., 12 noon • Monday in Style. deadline: Friday, 12 noon • Tuesday in Style. deadline: Mon., 12 noon • Wednesday in Style. deadline: Tues., 12 noon • Thursday in Style. deadline: Wed., 12 noon • Thursday in Express. deadline: Wed., 12 noon • Friday in Weekend. deadline: Tues., 12 noon • Saturday in Style. deadline: Friday, 12 noon For information about advertising, call: Raymond Boyer 202-334-4174 or Nicole Giddens 202-334-4351 To reach a representative, call: 202-334-7006 | guidetoarts@washpost.com

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

TICKETS: WashingtonPerformingArts.org

(202) 785-9727

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36 | EXPRESS | 10.11.2018 | THURSDAY

goingoutguide.com FRANKENSTEIN: THE MOVIE SCORE LIVE PERFORMANCE WITH FILM

FRIDAY, OCT. 26 AT 8:30 P.M. SATURDAY, OCT. 27 AT 2 P.M. AFI Silver Theater and Cultural Center 8633 Colesville Road Silver Spring, Md.

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 33

5 p.m.

7:30 p.m.

Pearl Street Warehouse: King Soul,

The Anthem: NF, 6:30 p.m.

The Fillmore: Dirty Heads, 8 p.m.

2 p.m.; Josh Rouse and Grant-Lee Phillips, 8 p.m.

State Theatre: Melodime, 7 p.m. The Anthem: Goo Goo Dolls, 6:30 p.m.

The Birchmere: Keiko Matsui, 7:30

U Street Music Hall: Scarlxrd, 7 p.m.

p.m.

WEDNESDAY

The Hamilton: Morgan James, 6:30

Black Cat: Black Joe Lewis & The Honeybears, 7:30 p.m.

p.m.

The Hamilton: The Englishtown

Union Stage: Hoodie Allen, Gianni &

Project, 6:30 p.m.

Kyle, 8 p.m.

U Street Music Hall: Azizi Gibson, 7 p.m.

SUNDAY

Bossa Bistro: Balkan Beltway, 8:30 p.m.

MONDAY City Winery: Alana Davis, 7:30 p.m

City Winery: Driftwood, 8 p.m.; Missy Raines & Tony Furtado, 8:30 p.m.

Pearl Street Warehouse: The

Gypsy Sally’s: Ghost-Note, The Truth

9:30 Club: Lucero, 6:30 p.m.

Suitcase Junket, 7:30 p.m..

Band, 8 p.m.

Black Cat: CloZee, 7:30 p.m.

U Street Music Hall: Django Django,

Jammin’ Java: The 9 Songwriter

City Winery: John Lodge, 8 p.m.;

7 p.m.

Series, 6 p.m.

NateWantsToBattle, 8:30 p.m.

TUESDAY

The Anthem: Death Cab for Cutie,

EagleBank Arena: Romeo Santos,

9:30 Club: Passenger, 7 p.m.

6:30 p.m.

8 p.m.

Capitol Hill Presbyterian Church:

The Birchmere: Wynonna & The Big

Community Shape Note Singing, 7 p.m.

Noise, 7:30 p.m.

City Winery: Maria Muldaur, 7:30 p.m.; Al Stewart, 8 p.m.

The Fillmore: Johnny Marr, 8 p.m.

MilkBoy ArtHouse: Mod Sun, 8 p.m. State Theatre: The Dobre Brothers,

The Birchmere: Incognito, Maysa,

Hill Center at the Old Naval Hospital: Rachel Baiman, 4:30 p.m.

Union Stage: Doja Cat, Pell, 8 p.m. CONTINUED ON PAGE 38

Imagine your outdoor escape

Schedule a $29 Design Consultation today. Use Promo Code: $29Design

MeadowsFarms.com 703.884.1968

For over 60 years, Meadows Farms has delivered quality landscape design solutions throughout the Washington, DC region. We also offer the area’s only Lifetime Warranty on trees and shrubs we install.

Landscape Design & Installation


THURSDAY | 10.11.2018 | EXPRESS | 37

hello, holidays

CELEBRATE THE HOLIDAY SEASON IN STYLE AT SOME OF DC’S BEST RESTAURANTS!

Book all your upcoming holiday parties & corporate gatherings in expertly designed spaces that serve deliciously curated festive fare & cocktails to take the hassle out of planning. V I S I T R A M W. O R G F O R F U L L D E T A I L S & E X C L U S I V E S P E C I A L S

WASHINGTON, DC CHARLIE PALMER STEAK

1 0 1 C o n s t i t u t i o n A v e n u e N W, W D C 2 0 0 0 1 charliepalmersteak.com • 202.547.8700

Celebrate the season at Charlie Palmer Steak and enjoy 15% off all event bookings when you mention RAMW!

LE DESALES

1 7 2 5 D e s a l e s S t r e e t N W, W D C 2 0 0 3 6 l e d e s a l e s . c o m • 2 0 2 . 5 0 6 . 6 8 5 6

Le DeSales is a festive venue for your holiday gathering V>Ìi` ` Ü Ì Ü ] >VÀ ÃÃ vÀ Ì i ÃÌ À V >Þy ÜiÀ hotel. See website for group options and contact for more info to reserve your date: Zoe@LeDeSales.com.

FIG & OLIVE

934 Palmer Alley NW, WDC 20001 figandolive.com • 202.559.5004

Celebrate in style this holiday season at FIG & OLIVE DC with a variety of seating options available to offer diners the opportunity to create a range of personalized experiences! See website for details.

LEBANESE TAVERNA

2641 Connecticut Avenue NW, WDC 20008 lebanesetaverna.com • 202.265.8681

Celebrating a special occasion with family and friends or gathering colleagues for a dinner meeting? Fill out Lebanese Taverna’s online form to begin customizing your perfect event today!

THINKFOODLAB

701PennsylvaniaAvenueNW,WDC20004 thinkfoodlab.com • 202.638.1910

Receive a $100 gift card for any event booked at ThinkFoodLab for 12 or more that takes place 12/17/2018-1/31/2019.

SHAW’S TAVERN

520 Florida Avenue NW, WDC, 20001 shawstavern.com • 202.518.4092

Shaw’s Tavern is the perfect place for your holiday celebration - from seated dinners, to cocktail parties, they have everything you need to make your event special!

SETTE OSTERIA

1666 Connecticut Avenue NW, WDC 20009 setteosteria.com • 202.309.1491

Let Sette Osteria help you in arrange your next special event such as birthdays, corporate affairs, holiday receptions, product launches, networking receptions and more. Contact mzorgani@setteosteria.com to inquire about your next event!

LiLLiES RESTAURANT & BAR

2 9 1 5 C o n n e c t i c u t A v e n u e N W, W D C 2 0 0 0 8 lilliesrestaurant.com • 202.450.4824 LiLLiES Restaurant in Woodley Park offers the perfect venue for your private reception or dining affair, with banquet rooms for corporate receptions as well as private dining rooms for small family groups - see website for details.

THE MADHATTER

1319 Connecticut Avenue NW, WDC 20036 madhatterdc.com • 202.833.1495

The Madhatter, located just off Dupont Circle, offers several private rooms and bars that can accommodate large groups or small gatherings and can customize any i Õ Ì wÌ Þ ÕÀ ii`ÃÉLÕ`}iÌ° Contact to book today!

801 RESTAURANT & BAR

8 0 1 F l o r i d a A v e n u e N W, W D C 2 0 0 0 1 8 0 1 d c . c o m • 2 0 2 . 3 3 2 . 0 2 0 7

7 Ì ÃiÛiÀ> y ÀÃ >Û> >L i v À Þ ÕÀ `>Þ iÛi Ì] 801 Restaurant & Bar’s beautiful decor and friendly staff are ready to make your event a memorable experience! See website for food and beverage package details.

CUBA LIBRE RESTAURANT

8 0 1 9 t h S t r e e t N W, W D C 2 0 0 0 1 cubalibrerestaurant.com • 202.408.1600

Available for full and partial buyouts, book your holiday party at Cuba Libre Restaurant & Rum Bar before October 31st to receive early booking incentives!

ALL-PURPOSE SHAW

1 2 5 0 9 t h S t re e t N W, W D C 2 0 0 0 1 allpurposedc.com • 202.629.1894

Skip the hassle and order catering from the original All-Purpose Pizzeria including pizzas, salads and Italian-American specialities. To build your custom menu email orders@allpurposedc.com today.

ALL-PURPOSE CAPITOL RIVERFRONT

79 Potomac Avenue SE, WDC 20003 allpurposedc.com • 202.849.6174

All-Purpose Pizzeria offers riverfront private dining for holiday parties at the new Capitol Riverfront location and catering of pizzas, salads and Italian-American specialities - see website for details and book today!

ROOFERS UNION

2446 18th Street NW, WDC 20009 roofersuniondc.com • 202.232.7663

With everything from a heated rooftop to a cozy wine bar to a gorgeous beer hall/dining room, celebrate the holiday season at Roofers Union + Jug & Table for your next private event, with something to offer groups of 20 to 200 and everything in between!

MESS HALL

703 Edgewood Street NE, WDC 20017 messhalldc.com • 202.550.8780

This holiday season discover Mess Hall, one of DC’s most dynamic event venues! Book by 10/26 and mention RAMW to receive 20% off your beverage package.

OSTERIA MORINI DC

301 Water Street SE, WDC 20003 osteriamorini.com • 202.484.0660

Host your upcoming holiday events at Navy Yard’s Osteria Morini, the perfect space to gather with family and friends while celebrating with a classic Northen Italian menu catered Ì wÌ Þ ÕÀ ii`Ã see website for details.

CONVIVIAL

8 0 1 O S t r e e t , N W, W D C 2 0 0 0 1 convivialdc.com • 202.525.2870

Whether you are hosting an intimate dinner for family and vÀ i `Ã] > vwVi `>Þ Õ V ] À > >À}i ÃV> i `>Þ celebration, Convivial is the place to go for holiday cheer! Options available for groups from 10 to 175 people - see website for details and book today.

DISTRICT COMMONS

2200 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, WDC 20037 districtcommonsdc.com • 202.587.8277

Book Early for Special Rewards! Book your holiday event at District Commons before 10/31 and earn up to $500 cash back for your next event! Call 202-350-3084 for info.

ACADIANA

901 New York Avenue NW, WDC 20001 acadianarestaurant.com • 202.408.8848

Book Early for Special Rewards! Book your holiday event at Acadiana before 10/31 and earn up to $500 cash back for your next event! Call 202-350-3084 for details.

MAYAHUEL COCINA MEXICANA

2 6 0 9 2 4 t h S t r e e t N W, W D C 2 0 0 0 8 mayahueldc.com • 703.725.2341

Brighten your palette and mood this holiday season with Mayahuel Cocina Mexicana½Ã wiÃÌ> « >ÌÌiÀà v iÝ V> bites paired with handcrafted Mezcal and tequila cocktails - contact them to build your custom menu today!

POCA MADRE

7 7 7 I S t r e e t N W, W D C 2 0 0 0 1 pocamadredc.com • 202.422.2709

Poca Madre offers multiple event spaces in a variety of settings, both private and semi-private. Work with their events team to create an unforgettable dining experience V « iÌi Ü Ì iv 6 VÌ À æ L Ãսà Àiw i`] V Ìi « À>ÀÞ Mexican cuisine. Full restaurant buyouts also available see website for details.

LA CHAUMIERE

2813 M Street NW, WDC 20007 lachaumieredc.com • 202.338.1784

La Chaumiere offers 2 completely private dining rooms for £x {ä «i « i° -i iVÌ vÀ i v Î «ÀiwÝ i ÕÃ] v À fxÎ] $63 or $78/person along with a great selection of wines to pair with. Book your party today!

CIRCA AT CHINATOWN

7 8 1 7 t h S t r e e t N W, W D C 2 0 0 0 1 circabistros.com • 202.628.7777

Celebrate the holidays with CIRCA at Chinatown! Book your event by 10/31 and receive a $100 gift card toward future purchase. Valid only at Chinatown location - see website for full promotion details.

CIRCA FOGGY BOTTOM

2 2 2 1 I S t r e e t N W, W D C 2 0 0 3 7 circabistros.com • 202.506.5589

Celebrate the holidays with CIRCA at Foggy Bottom featuring seasonal menus, extensive beverage list, and a patio nestled in bustling Foggy Bottom perfect for a private affair - contact to book today!

RUTH’S CHRIS STEAK HOUSE

1801 Connecticut Avenue NW, WDC 20009 ruthschris.com • 202.797.0033

Book your event at Ruth’s Chris Steak House before 10/29 and receive $50 for every $500 spent on private dining or off-site catering! See website for details.

THE GRILL FROM IPANEMA

1858 Columbia Road NW, WDC 200009 thegrillfromipanema.com • 703.371.1007

Book your holiday event at The Grill from Ipanema by 10/31 and get a complimentary artisan cheese station for your reception ($450-$700 value) or 20% off your reception package PLUS no rental fee! See website for details.

CHIKO

423 8th Street SE, WDC 20003 chikodc.com • 202.558.9924

Enjoy CHIKO’s modern Chinese and Korean cuisine without the wait! Now also a fully licensed caterer serving the DC area, let them handle your upcoming luncheon, festive holiday party, or formal dinner to celebrate a milestone and they’ll create everything you need to provide a lasting memory!

LINCOLN RESTAURANT

1110 Vermont Avenue NW, WDC 20005 lincolnrestaurant-dc.com • 202.386.9200

LINCOLN offers a variety of unique event spaces perfect for private parties, corporate events, holiday parties and beyond with yiÝ L ÌÞ > ` Ãi>Ì } v À £ä £nä ­vÕ ÀiÃÌ>ÕÀ> Ì LÕÞ ÕÌ® see website for details & book your event today!

TEDDY & THE BULLY BAR

1200 19th Street NW, WDC 20036 teddyandthebullybar.com • 202.872.8700

With various spaces available for private events from small corporate events, to large scale buyouts, TEDDY is a distinctive restaurant located in Dupont Circle available to accommodate with custom food & beverage menus featuring local ingredients. Contact to book today!

DECLARATION NATS PARK

1237 First Street SE, WDC 20003 declarationrestaurant.com • 202.558.9802

Whether you’re planning a casual happy hour party or special event, Declaration Nats Park is a unique location that can accommodate groups of 10 - 150. Contact today to tailor the space and menu to make your next gathering unforgettable!

MXDC COCINA MEXICANA

6 0 0 1 4 t h S t r e e t N W, W D C 2 0 0 0 5 mxdcrestaurant.com • 202.393.1900

MXDC by Todd English, located in downtown DC just steps from the National Mall, is an ideal spot for your holiday party. The MXDC staff is dedicated to creating a memorable and personal experience for you and your guests - bring them your vision and let them take care of the rest!

SMITH COMMONS

1 2 4 5 H S t re e t N E , W D C 2 0 0 0 2 smithcommonsdc.com • 202.396.0038

Smith Commons is a warm, welcoming, and comfortable venue for private events, celebrations, parties, fundraisers and more. Special offer: Receive 50% off your booking fee for Private Dining and Holiday Events booked between 11/23/18 - 1/6/19.

MARYLAND THE DISH & DRAM

10301KensingtonPkwy,Kensington,MD20895 thedishanddram.com • 301.962.4046

The Dish & Dram’s private dining room along with full restaurant buyout are available for private events. Also a full service catering company, they’ll bring their services to your venu, tailoring menus to your tastes, the season and your budget! Contact zena@thedailydish.com for details and booking.

CITY PERCH KITCHEN + BAR

11830 Grand Park Avenue, N Bethesda, MD 20852 cityperch.com • 301.231.2310

Make your next event truly special with a one-of-a-kind private dining experience at City Perch Kitchen + Bar! Enjoy authentic hospitality, seasonal American cuisine and prime location.Contact their event manager to inquire about special rates for private parties and start planning your next event.

VIRGINIA GRAND CRU WINE BAR & BISTRO

4301 Wilson Blvd, Arlington, VA 22203 gcbistro.wine • 703.243.7900

Grand Cru Wine Bar & Bistro offers a large secluded private dining area serviced from its own bar. Enjoy the quaint atmosphere while experiencing their world class Chef crafted cuisine and vast selection of wines and other beverages. Book your event today!

OSTERIA DA NINO

2900 S Quincy Street, Arlington, VA 22206 osteriadaninova.com • 703.820.1128

Celebrate the holidays at Osteria da Nino! Seating for up to 160 guests or a private room with TV screen and HDMI capabilities that seats up to 50. Choose from their a la carte or family style dinner options with an extensive list of wines! See website for details.

BELLISSIMO RESTAURANT

10403 Main Street, Fairfax City, VA 22030 bellissimorestaurant.com • 703.293.2367

Located in the heart of historic Old Town Fairfax, Bellissimo Restaurant is the perfect setting for a holiday gathering! Private space available for up to 65 guests, paired with upscale Northern Italian cuisine in a warm and inviting atmosphere - contact to customize and book your event today!

WILDFIRE

1714U International Drive, McLean, VA 22102 Ü `wÀiÀiÃÌ>ÕÀ> Ì°V ÉÌÞà à U Çäΰ{{Ó° ££ä

Host your next event at 7 `wÀi! Choose from several semi-private and private dining options that can accommodate 12-120 guests paired with mouthwatering food, exciting atmosphere, and outstanding service - Û Ã Ì Ü `wÀiÀiÃÌ>ÕÀ> Ì°V É/ÞÃ Ã v À v °

2941 RESTAURANT

2941 Fairview Park Drive, Falls Church, VA 22042 2 9 4 1 . c o m • 7 0 3 . 2 7 0 . 1 5 3 9

2941 Restaurant offers several spectacular rooms perfect for private parties or corporate events that can accommodate anything from an intimate gathering of 8 to larger private events of up to 100, plus the entire restaurant and outdoor patio are also available for parties of up to 200 - book your next event today!

HAMROCK’S RESTAURANT

3950 Chain Bridge Road, Fairfax, VA 22030 hamrocksrestaurant.com • 703.385.5433

Celebrate the holidays at historic Hamrock’s Restaurant located in Fairfax City from chef-owner Bill Hamrock with private rooms available or the possibility to rent the entire restaurant - see website for details and book today.

TRIO GRILL

8100 Lee Highway, Falls Church, VA 22042 triomerrifield.com • 703.992.9200

Inviting and elegant, TRIO Grill is the perfect space for any gathering! With an expert Event Manager to guide you along the way, select Ì> Ài` «À Ý wÝi i Õà ÃÕ Ì>L i v À LÕà iÃà ` iÀÃ] ëiV > occasions, private parties, or holiday parties complete with wine pairings and hand-crafted cocktails. Host your next event during November and receive a $100 gift card!

CIRCA AT CLARENDON

3010 Clarendon Blvd, Arlington, VA 22201 circabistros.com • 703.522.3010

American bistro with a creative seasonal fare, an active bar scene, and a spacious patio in the heart of Clarendon. CIRCA at Clarendon offers a semi private room in addition to other great options for large parties - contact to book today!

OPEN ROAD GRILL

8100 Lee Highway, Falls Church, VA 22042 openroadgrill.com • 571.395.4400

Whether you’re planning a casual happy hour or special event - from holiday brunch, baby shower, engagement, birthday, anniversary, corporate happy hour - Open Road Grill has a space for you! They’ll work with you to tailor the space and provide a special menu in order to make your next gathering unforgettable - see website for details.


38 | EXPRESS | 10.11.2018 | THURSDAY

goingoutguide.com CONTINUED FROM PAGE 36

Sight 1611 Benning Road: “Carne y Arena (Virtually Present, Physically Invisible)”: A virtual reality installation from director Alejandro G. Inarritu, cinematographer Emmanuel Lubezki, producer Mary Parent and ILMxLAB that explores the

human condition of immigrants and refugees. Based on accounts from Central American and Mexican refugees, the installation allows individuals to live a fragment of a refugee’s experience through state-of-the-art technology, through Oct. 31. 1611 Benning Road NE.

American University Museum at the Katzen Arts Center: “Jim Sanborn’s Without Provenance: The Making of Contemporary Antiquity“: An

Local movie times DISTRICT

AMC Loews Georgetown 14 3111 K Street N.W.

www.amctheatres.com/

A Star is Born (R) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 12:15-2:00-3:00-5:15-6:30-8:30-9:50 Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween (PG) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 5:00-7:10-10:10 Crazy Rich Asians (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 12:50-4:00 White Boy Rick (R) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 1:45-4:45 The Nun (R) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 4:15 First Man (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 7:30-9:30 Venom (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 2:20-7:20-8:10-9:45 Night School (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 2:00-10:45 Smallfoot (PG) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 12:30-4:00 Hell Fest (R) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 12:00-2:30 Bad Times at the El Royale (R) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 7:00-10:15 The House With A Clock In Its Walls (PG) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 1:30-4:20 Monsters and Men (R) AMC Independent;CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 2:15-4:45-7:20-9:50 A Simple Favor (R) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 1:15-4:10 The Old Man & The Gun (PG-13) AMC Independent;CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 5:00-7:25 BlacKkKlansman (R) AMC Independent;CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 12:45 Venom 3D (PG-13) CC;DV;RealD 3D;Recliners;RS: 5:15-11:00 Venom: The IMAX 2D Experience (PG-13) CC;DV;RS: 1:20-4:10 The Hate U Give (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 7:00-9:30 A Star is Born (R) Dolby Cinema at AMC Prime;Recliners;RS: 1:00-4:15-7:30-10:45 The Oath (R) AMC Independent;CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 7:00-10:10 First Man: The IMAX 2D Experience (PG-13) RS: 7:00-10:20

AMC Loews Uptown 1 3426 Connecticut Avenue N.W. A Star is Born (R) CC;DV: 12:50-4:00-7:20

www.amctheatres.com/

AMC Mazza Gallerie 5300 Wisconsin Ave. NW

www.amctheatres.com/

A Star is Born (R) CC;DV: 12:40-4:10-5:20-7:30 Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween (PG) CC;DV: 5:00-7:20 Crazy Rich Asians (PG-13) CC;DV: 1:00-4:00-8:20 First Man (PG-13) CC;DV: 7:00 Venom (PG-13) CC;DV: 12:00-5:30 Smallfoot (PG) CC;DV: 1:00-3:30 Night School (PG-13) CC;DV: 12:00-2:40 The House With A Clock In Its Walls (PG) CC;DV: 12:05-2:30 Bad Times at the El Royale (R) CC;DV: 7:00 A Simple Favor (R) CC;DV: 1:10-4:00 Venom 3D (PG-13) CC;DV;RealD 3D: 2:45-8:20

Avalon Theatre

5612 Connecticut Avenue

A Star is Born (R) CC AD: 11:00-2:00-5:00-8:00 The Children Act (R) CC AD: 2:10 BlacKkKlansman (R) CC AD: 4:30; 11:15AM

www.theavalon.org

www.landmarktheatres.com/

A Star is Born (R) CC;HA;HoH: 11:15-2:00-4:45-7:30-10:15 Crazy Rich Asians (PG-13) CC;DVS;HA;HoH: 11:30-2:15-4:50-7:25-9:50 First Man (PG-13) CC;DVS;HA;HoH: 7:10-9:55 22 July (R) CC;DVS;HA;HoH: 10:50-1:35-4:20-7:15-10:10 A Star is Born (R) CC;DVS;HA;HoH: 1:30-7:00 Venom (PG-13) CC;DVS;HA;HoH: 10:50-11:00-1:45-4:15-4:30-7:15-9:45-10:00 BlacKkKlansman (R) CC;DVS;HA;HoH: 11:00-1:40-4:20

Landmark E Street Cinema 555 11th Street Northwest

www.landmarktheatres.com/

Tea With the Dames CC;HA;HoH: 12:45-3:00-5:15-7:30-9:40 The Wife (R) CC;DVS;HA;HoH: 2:05-9:35 Fahrenheit 11/9 (R) HA;HoH: 1:30-4:15-7:00-9:30 Monsters and Men (R) CC;HA;HoH: 1:00-3:15-5:30-7:45-9:50 Colette (R) CC;DVS;HA;HoH: 1:20-4:20-7:20-9:50 The Old Man & The Gun (PG-13) CC;DVS;HA;HoH: 1:15-2:15-3:30-4:45-5:45-7:15-8:15-9:45 The Sisters Brothers (R) CC;DVS;HA;HoH: 1:10-4:10-7:10-9:45

Landmark West End Cinema 2301 M Street NW

www.landmarktheatres.com/

Science Fair (PG) CC;HA;HoH: 1:30-4:30-7:30 Private Life (R) CC;DVS;HA;HoH: 1:15-4:15-7:15 22 July (R) CC;DVS;HA;HoH: 1:00-4:00-7:00

Regal Gallery Place Stadium 14 701 Seventh Street Northwest

www.regmovies.com/

First Man (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 7:10-10:25 Bad Times at the El Royale (R) CC;DV;R-S;Stadium: 7:00-10:15 Venom 3D (PG-13) 3D;CC;DV;NP;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 11:30-10:30 A Star is Born (R) CC;DV;NP;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 11:50-12:30-3:00-3:45-7:10-10:00-10:40 Venom (PG-13) CC;DV;NP;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 1:15-2:15-4:00-5:00-7:40-10:00 Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween (PG) CC;DV;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 9:05 Night School (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 12:15-3:05-9:30-11:00 Smallfoot (PG) CC;DV;R-S;Stadium: 12:35-3:05 Hell Fest (R) CC;DV;R-S;Stadium: 4:40 The House With A Clock In Its Walls (PG) CC;DV;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 11:35-2:05-4:45 The Samuel Project (PG-13) Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 11:30-1:50-4:20 MFKZ (R) NP/SS;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 7:00 A Simple Favor (R) CC;DV;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 11:45-2:40 The Hate U Give (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 1:10-4:20-6:50-7:40-10:00-10:45 Venom 3D (PG-13) 3D;4DX;4DX 3D;CC;DV;NP;R-S;Stadium: 12:20-3:00-5:40-8:20-11:00 The Oath (R) CC;DV;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 7:20-9:50 Free Solo CC;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 11:30-2:10-4:45 Halloween (40th Anniversary) (R) NP/SS;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 7:00 Bloody Disgusting Presents Sweet Sixteen and the Convent NP/SS;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 7:00

“A Right to the City”: An exhibition that explores the history of the changing neighborhoods in Washington, of how ordinary citizens helped change their neighborhoods through the bettering of public education and the greening of communities, and of rallying for more equitable transit and development, through April 20. 1901 Fort Place SE.

“Churchill’s Shakespeare”: An exhibition of photographs, posters, theater programs, personal letters, manuscripts and rare books from the Churchill Archives Centre at Cambridge, the Folger Shakespeare Library, Churchill’s home Chartwell and other collections that demonstrate Churchill’s love of Shakespeare, through Jan. 6. 201 East Capitol St. SE.

Folger Shakespeare Library:

Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture

Anacostia Community Museum:

(!) NP/No Discount Ticket Doctor Who: New Season Premiere NP/SS;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 7:30 Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween (PG) CC;DV;R-S;Stadium: 9:45

Smithsonian - Lockheed Martin IMAX Theater 601 Independence Avenue SW

www.si.edu/imax

D-Day: Normandy 1944 3D (NR) 1:10 Aircraft Carrier: Guardians of the Seas 3D (2018) (NR) 10:50-12:00-2:35 Venom: An IMAX 3D Experience (PG-13) 4:30 Journey to Space: The IMAX 3D Experience (NR) 10:20-11:25-12:35-2:00-3:10 First Man: The IMAX 2D Experience (PG-13) 7:00-9:35

Smithsonian - Warner Bros. Theater 1300 Constitution Avenue NW

www.si.edu/theaters

Tornado Alley 3D (NR) 11:45-3:05 Star-Spangled Banner Anthem of Liberty 3D (NR) 1:50 National Parks Adventure 3D (America Wild 3D) (NR) 10:55-12:10-3:35 A Star is Born (R) 4:30-6:55-9:20 Pandas 3D (G) 1:00 We the People (2015)10:30AM America's Musical Journey: An IMAX 3D Experience 2:15

MARYLAND

AFI Silver Theatre Cultural Center 8633 Colesville Road

www.afi.com/silver

Let the Corpses Tan (Laissez bronzer les cadavres!) English Subtitles: 12:20-4:55-9:35 The Old Man & The Gun (PG-13) CC;Accessibility devices available: 7:15-9:15 Museum (Museo) (NR) English Subtitles: 2:20-7:00 Matangi/Maya/M.I.A 2:15-7:05-9:10 Fahrenheit 11/9 (R) 11:40-4:20

AMC Center Park 8 4001 Powder Mill Rd.

www.amctheatres.com/

A Star is Born (R) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 1:10-4:05-7:10-10:10 Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween (PG) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 5:00-7:15-9:30 Venom (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 1:00-4:45-10:10 First Man (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 7:00-10:05 Night School (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 1:15-2:00-4:00-4:30-6:45-9:30 Smallfoot (PG) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 2:15-4:00-6:30-9:00 Hell Fest (R) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 1:45-4:30 The House With A Clock In Its Walls (PG) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 1:00-3:45 Bad Times at the El Royale (R) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 7:00-10:10 Venom 3D (PG-13) CC;DV;RealD 3D;Recliners;RS: 2:00-6:30-7:30-9:15

Landmark Atlantic Plumbing Cinema 807 V Street NW

exhibition of approximately 22 sandstone sculptures and large-scale reproductions from the artist’s catalog, designed as a simulated antiquities auction to critique the contemporary art market and its dealings in forged and stolen antiquities. The works are contemporary replicas of ancient Khmer antiquities, including an 11-foot-tall sculptural doorway, a lifesize standing figure and the head of a reclining Buddha, through Dec. 16; 4400 Massachusetts Ave. NW.

AMC Magic Johnson Capital Center 12 800 Shoppers Way

www.amctheatres.com/

Moana (PG) CC;DV: 2:00-6:00 A Star is Born (R) CC;DV: 1:05-4:10-7:15-10:30 Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween (PG) CC;DV: 5:00-7:30-10:00 Venom (PG-13) CC;DV: 2:00-5:10 First Man (PG-13) CC;DV: 8:00-9:00 Night School (PG-13) CC;DV: 1:10-2:15-4:15-5:20-7:05-8:05-9:45 Bad Times at the El Royale (R) CC;DV: 7:00-10:20 Hell Fest (R) CC;DV: 1:45-4:30 The House With A Clock In Its Walls (PG) CC;DV: 2:30-5:15 Disney's Christopher Robin (PG) CC;DV: 1:00-3:30 The Hate U Give (PG-13) CC;DV: 1:00-3:05-4:05-6:25-7:25-9:35-10:35 Venom 3D (PG-13) CC;DV;RealD 3D: 7:55-10:40 Venom: An IMAX 3D Experience (PG-13) CC;DV;RS: 1:00-4:00 Smallfoot in 3D (PG) CC;DV;RealD 3D: 1:15 First Man: The IMAX 2D Experience (PG-13) CC;DV;RS: 7:00-10:15 Smallfoot (PG) 3:45-6:30-9:15

Landmark Bethesda Row Cinema 7235 Woodmont Avenue

www.landmarktheatres.com/

First Man (PG-13) CC;DVS;HA;HoH;RS: 7:00-9:35 A Simple Favor (R) CC;DVS;HA;HoH;RS: 1:30-4:20 A Star is Born (R) CC;DVS;HA;HoH;RS: 1:00-4:00-7:00-9:40 Fahrenheit 11/9 (R) HA;HoH;RS: 1:05-3:45-9:55 The Sisters Brothers (R) CC;DVS;HA;HoH;RS: 12:50-3:40-7:10-9:50 The Old Man & The Gun (PG-13) CC;DVS;HA;HoH;RS: 1:10-1:40-3:30-4:10-6:50-7:20-9:00-10:05 The Wife (R) CC;DVS;HA;HoH;RS: 1:50-4:30-7:15-10:00 Colette (R) CC;DVS;HA;HoH;RS: 1:20-3:50-7:30-9:55

Regal Hyattsville Royale Stadium 14 6505 America Blvd.

www.regmovies.com/

The Predator (R) CC;DV;Stadium: 1:25-4:15 The Meg (PG-13) CC;DV;Stadium: 1:10-4:10 A Star is Born (R) CC;DV;NP;Stadium: 12:30-3:55-7:15-10:30 Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween (PG) CC;DV;Stadium: 7:30-10:00 Crazy Rich Asians (PG-13) CC;DV;Stadium: 12:15 White Boy Rick (R) CC;DV;Stadium: 12:00-2:45 The Nun (R) CC;DV;Stadium: 3:05-5:35-8:05-10:45 Venom (PG-13) CC;DV;NP;Stadium: 12:45-1:30-3:40-4:00-4:30-6:00-6:30-7:00-9:00-9:30-10:00 Night School (PG-13) CC;DV;Stadium: 12:30-3:40-4:15-6:50-9:25-9:55 Smallfoot (PG) CC;DV;Stadium: 12:05-2:35-5:05-7:35-10:05 Bad Times at the El Royale (R) CC;DV;Stadium: 7:10-10:25 Hell Fest (R) CC;DV;Stadium: 12:10-2:40-5:05 The House With A Clock In Its Walls (PG) CC;DV;Stadium: 1:25-4:15 BlacKkKlansman (R) CC;DV;Stadium: 1:20-4:35-7:50-11:00 Colette (R) CC;DV;Stadium: 7:25-10:15 Disney's Christopher Robin (PG) CC;DV;Stadium: 1:30 Venom 3D (PG-13) 3D;CC;DV;NP;Stadium: 1:15 Gosnell: The Trial Of America's Biggest Serial Killer (PG-13) Stadium: 7:05-9:50 Halloween (40th Anniversary) (R) NP/SS;Stadium: 7:00 First Man (PG-13) CC;DV;Stadium: 7:15-10:30

Regal Majestic Stadium 20 & IMAX 900 Ellsworth Drive

www.regmovies.com/

The Predator (R) CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved;R-S;Stadium: 1:30 Mission: Impossible - Fallout (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved;R-S;Stadium: 9:00 A Star is Born (R) CC;DV;NP;Recliner;Reserved;R-S;Stadium: 12:25-1:10-3:45-4:30-7:05-7:5010:25-11:10 Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween (PG) CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved;R-S;Stadium: 7:10-9:45 Crazy Rich Asians (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved;R-S;Stadium: 1:05-4:05-10:05 The Nun (R) CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved;R-S;Stadium: 4:20 First Man (PG-13) CC;DV;NP;Recliner;Reserved;R-S;Stadium: 7:30-11:00 Venom (PG-13) CC;DV;NP;Recliner;Reserved;R-S;Stadium: 1:20-3:15-6:05-9:00 Night School (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved;R-S;Stadium: 1:00-4:00-4:30-5:45-8:40-9:45-11:35 Smallfoot (PG) CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved;R-S;Stadium: 12:10-1:20-2:45-3:50-5:20-6:25-11:00 Bad Times at the El Royale (R) CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved;R-S;Stadium: 7:15-10:45 Hell Fest (R) CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved;R-S;Stadium: 12:45-3:15 MFKZ (R) NP/SS;Recliner;Reserved;R-S;Stadium: 7:00 The House With A Clock In Its Walls (PG) CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved;R-S;Stadium: 12:00-2:35-5:10 Monsters and Men (R) Recliner;Reserved;R-S;Stadium: 12:15-2:45-5:15 Disney's Christopher Robin (PG) CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved;R-S;Stadium: 1:30 Colette (R) CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved;R-S;Stadium: 7:05-10:00 A Simple Favor (R) CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved;R-S;Stadium: 12:35-3:45 All About Nina (R) Recliner;Reserved;R-S;Stadium: 12:15-2:50-5:20-7:55-10:30 The Hate U Give (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved;R-S;Stadium: 12:00-12:45-3:05-3:55-7:107:55-9:45-10:25 Aravindha Sametha (Aravinda Sametha Veera Raghava) (NR) NP/SS;Recliner;Reserved;RS;Stadium;Telugu: 8:00 Venom 3D (PG-13) 3D;CC;DV;NP;Recliner;Reserved;R-S;Stadium: 12:30-4:20-7:05-10:45 Venom: The IMAX 2D Experience (PG-13) CC;DV;IMAX;NP;Reserved;R-S;Stadium: 4:00 Venom: An IMAX 3D Experience (PG-13) CC;DV;IMAX 3D;NP;Reserved;R-S;Stadium: 1:00 Shine (R) Recliner;Reserved;R-S;Stadium: 1:00-3:55 First Man: The IMAX 2D Experience (PG-13) CC;DV;IMAX;Reserved;R-S;Stadium: 7:00-10:15 Gosnell: The Trial Of America's Biggest Serial Killer (PG-13) Recliner;Reserved;R-S;Stadium: 7:45-10:30 Halloween (40th Anniversary) (R) NP/SS;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 7:00 Free Solo CC;Recliner;Reserved;R-S;Stadium: 1:00-3:50-6:40-9:30 Doctor Who: New Season Premiere NP/SS;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 7:30

Xscape Theatres Brandywine 14 7710 Matapeake Business Dr.

www.xscapetheatres.com

A Star is Born (R) AD;CC;AD;CC: (!) 10:20-12:20-1:20-4:20-7:20-10:20 Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween (PG) AD;CC;AD;CC: (!) 5:00-7:20-9:40 First Man (PG-13) AD;CC;AD;CC: (!) 7:05-10:05 Venom (PG-13) AD;CC;AD;CC: (!) 9:30-10:10-10:50-1:10-3:10-4:10-4:50-7:10-10:00-10:40 Night School (PG-13) AD;CC;AD;CC: (!) 10:40-12:40-1:40-3:40-7:00-8:00-10:10-11:00 Smallfoot (PG) AD;CC;AD;CC: (!) 10:15-1:00-3:30-6:20-8:50 Hell Fest (R) AD;CC;AD;CC: (!) 12:30-3:20 Bad Times at the El Royale (R) AD;CC;AD;CC: (!) 7:15-10:15 The House With A Clock In Its Walls (PG) AD;CC;AD;CC: (!) 12:15-3:00 The Hate U Give (PG-13) CC-Closed Caption;AD;CC: (!) 9:50-10:30-12:10-12:50-1:30-3:50-4:306:10-6:50-7:30-9:10-9:50-10:30 Venom 3D (PG-13) AD;CC;AD;CC: (!) 1:50-7:50

VIRGINIA

AMC Courthouse Plaza 8 2150 Clarendon Blvd.

www.amctheatres.com/

A Star is Born (R) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 12:30-2:50-3:40-6:00-7:15-9:10-10:20 Crazy Rich Asians (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 12:45-3:45 First Man (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 7:00-10:10 Venom (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 12:45-3:30-6:15-9:00 Night School (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 2:00-4:45 Smallfoot (PG) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 2:30-5:00-7:40-10:10 A Simple Favor (R) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 1:45-4:40-7:30-10:15 Bad Times at the El Royale (R) CC;DV;Recliners;RS: 7:00-10:15 Venom 3D (PG-13) CC;DV;RealD 3D;Recliners;RS: 1:45-4:30-7:30-10:15

AMC Hoffman Center 22 206 Swamp Fox Rd.

www.amctheatres.com/

Venom (PG-13) CC;DV;Dolby Cinema at AMC Prime;Recliners;RS: 10:15 Moana (PG) CC;DV: 2:00-6:00 The Predator (R) CC;DV: 7:25-9:00 Mission: Impossible - Fallout (PG-13) CC;DV: 12:20-3:35-9:45 A Star is Born (R) CC;DV: 1:00-4:45-8:00-9:00 Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween (PG) CC;DV: 5:00-7:30-10:00 Crazy Rich Asians (PG-13) CC;DV: 1:30-4:25 White Boy Rick (R) CC;DV: 4:45-10:00 The Nun (R) CC;DV: 10:00 First Man (PG-13) CC;DV: 8:30 Venom (PG-13) CC;DV: 12:00-1:45-4:30-5:30-6:15-7:15-9:15 Night School (PG-13) CC;DV: 3:30-4:45-7:30-10:15 Smallfoot (PG) CC;DV: 4:10-6:35-9:55 Bad Times at the El Royale (R) CC;DV: 7:00-10:15 Hell Fest (R) CC;DV: 1:55-4:15 The House With A Clock In Its Walls (PG) CC;DV: 1:40-4:25-7:00-9:35 Monsters and Men (R) AMC Independent;CC;DV: 1:10-3:35-6:00 Disney's Christopher Robin (PG) CC;DV: 12:50-3:25 Life Itself (R) AMC Independent;CC;DV: 12:40 A Simple Favor (R) CC;DV: 1:50-4:35-7:20-10:05 All About Nina (R) AMC Independent: 1:45-4:25 The Hate U Give (PG-13) CC;DV: 12:15-1:15-3:15-4:15-6:30-7:30-9:30-10:30 Venom 3D (PG-13) CC;DV;RealD 3D: 2:45-8:15 Venom: The IMAX 2D Experience (PG-13) CC;DV;RS: 12:45-3:30 Fahrenheit 11/9 (R) AMC Independent;CC;DV: 1:50 Shine (R) AMC Independent: 12:00-2:30 Gosnell: The Trial Of America's Biggest Serial Killer (PG-13) AMC Independent: 7:00-9:45 Smallfoot in 3D (PG) CC;DV;RealD 3D: 12:00-2:20 Free Solo AMC Independent: 12:25-2:55-5:20-7:45-10:10 Doctor Who: New Season Premiere Alternative Content: 7:30 Exes Baggage AMC Independent;English Subtitles: 12:00-2:25-4:55-7:25-9:55

A Star is Born (R) CC;DV;Dolby Cinema at AMC Prime;Recliners;RS: 12:00-3:30-7:00 First Man (PG-13) CC;DV;RS: 7:00-10:15 MFKZ (R) Alternative Content: 7:00

Angelika Film Center Mosaic 2911 District Ave

First Man (PG-13) AA;RS: 7:25-10:30 The Old Man & The Gun (PG-13) AA;CC;DA;NP;RS: (!) 10:50-1:10-3:30-5:50-8:10-10:30 Crazy Rich Asians (PG-13) AA;CC;DA;RS: 11:30-1:15-4:00-9:45 The Oath (R) AA;RS: 7:15-10:15 Shadow of a Doubt (1943) (PG) HITCHCOCKTOBER - RS- Alcohol Available: 7:00 Free Solo AA;CC;NP;RS: (!) 10:15-12:45-3:15-5:40-8:20-10:50 A Star is Born (R) AA;CC;DA;NP;RS: (!) 10:00-1:00-2:15-4:00-7:00-8:00-10:00 Colette (R) AA;CC;DA;NP;RS: (!) 9:55-12:35-3:10-5:45 The Sisters Brothers (R) AA;CC;DA;NP;RS: (!) 10:45-1:30-4:15 Venom 3D (PG-13) AA;CC;DA;NP;RS: (!) 11:15-4:45 Venom (PG-13) AA;CC;DA;NP;RS: (!) 10:30-2:00-5:15-8:15-10:45-11:00

Regal Ballston Quarter Stadium 12 671 North Glebe Road

www.regmovies.com/

Mission: Impossible - Fallout (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 1:45 A Star is Born (R) CC;DV;NP;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 12:45-1:15-4:00-4:30-6:30-7:00-9:45-10:00 Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween (PG) CC;DV;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 5:00-7:30-10:00 Crazy Rich Asians (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 12:55-3:45 First Man (PG-13) CC;DV;NP;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 7:00-10:15 Venom (PG-13) CC;DV;NP;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 1:00-1:30-4:30-7:15-7:45-10:00-10:30 Night School (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 1:55-4:45-7:40-10:25 Smallfoot (PG) CC;DV;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 1:25-4:15-9:30 Bad Times at the El Royale (R) CC;DV;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 7:15-10:30 Hell Fest (R) CC;DV;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 2:00-4:35 MFKZ (R) NP/SS;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 7:00 Sui Dhaaga - Made in India (NR) Hindi;NP/SS;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 2:15 The House With A Clock In Its Walls (PG) CC;DV;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 1:50-4:50-9:50 The Old Man & The Gun (PG-13) CC;DV;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 5:00-7:40-10:10 A Simple Favor (R) CC;DV;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 1:40-4:25 Venom 3D (PG-13) 3D;CC;DV;NP;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 4:00 Aravindha Sametha (Aravinda Sametha Veera Raghava) (NR) NP/SS;Recliner;RS;Stadium;Telugu: 8:00 Doctor Who: New Season Premiere NP/SS;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 7:30

Regal Kingstowne Stadium 16 & RPX 5910 Kingstowne Towne Center

www.regmovies.com/

The Predator (R) CC;DV;Stadium: 1:25-3:55 A Star is Born (R) CC;DV;NP;Stadium: 12:15-12:45-3:20-4:05-6:30-7:15-9:35-10:20 Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween (PG) CC;DV;Stadium: 5:00-7:30-10:30 Crazy Rich Asians (PG-13) CC;DV;Stadium: 1:55-4:45 The Nun (R) CC;DV;Stadium: 12:55-3:40 First Man (PG-13) CC;DV;NP;RPX;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 7:00-10:15 Venom (PG-13) CC;DV;NP;RPX;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 3:15 Night School (PG-13) CC;DV;Stadium: 12:30-1:15-3:30-4:10-6:25-7:05-9:15-9:45 Smallfoot (PG) CC;DV;Stadium: 12:20-2:40-5:05-7:35-9:55 Bad Times at the El Royale (R) CC;DV;Stadium: 7:15-10:00 Hell Fest (R) CC;DV;Stadium: 12:40-3:10-9:35 Unbroken: Path to Redemption (PG-13) CC;DV;Stadium: 12:25-2:50 The House With A Clock In Its Walls (PG) CC;DV;Stadium: 12:50-3:45-6:45-9:30 Colette (R) CC;DV;Stadium: 7:20-10:10 A Simple Favor (R) CC;DV;Stadium: 12:35 Peppermint (R) CC;DV;Stadium: 1:10-3:50 Venom 3D (PG-13) 3D;CC;DV;NP;RPX;RPX 3D;Recliner;R-S;Stadium: 12:15 The Oath (R) CC;DV;Stadium: 7:05-9:30 Gosnell: The Trial Of America's Biggest Serial Killer (PG-13) Stadium: 7:30-10:20 Halloween (40th Anniversary) (R) NP/SS;Stadium: 7:00 First Man (PG-13) CC;DV;NP;Stadium: 7:00-10:15 Venom (PG-13) CC;DV;NP;Stadium: 1:30-4:00-4:30-7:00-7:30-10:15 Venom 3D (PG-13) 3D;CC;DV;NP;Stadium: 1:00-10:00

Regal Potomac Yard Stadium 16 3575 Potomac Avenue

www.regmovies.com/

A Star is Born (R) CC;DV;NP;Stadium: 1:00-1:25-3:20-4:00-6:25-7:05-9:30-10:10 Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween (PG) CC;DV;Stadium: 5:00-7:30-10:00 Crazy Rich Asians (PG-13) CC;DV;Stadium: 1:00 White Boy Rick (R) CC;DV;Stadium: 1:25-4:05 The Nun (R) CC;DV;Stadium: 1:35-4:05 First Man (PG-13) CC;DV;NP;Stadium: 7:00-10:10 Venom (PG-13) CC;DV;NP;Stadium: 1:00-2:00-3:50-4:50-6:40-7:40-9:30-10:30 Night School (PG-13) CC;DV;Stadium: 1:10-1:55-3:55-4:40-6:35-7:20-9:20-10:05 Smallfoot (PG) CC;DV;Stadium: 1:15-3:40-6:30-9:10 Bad Times at the El Royale (R) CC;DV;Stadium: 7:00-10:10 Hell Fest (R) CC;DV;Stadium: 1:00-4:30 The House With A Clock In Its Walls (PG) CC;DV;Stadium: 1:20-4:10-6:45-9:15 Disney's Christopher Robin (PG) CC;DV;Stadium: 1:05-3:35 A Simple Favor (R) CC;DV;Stadium: 1:40-4:35-7:25-10:15 Peppermint (R) CC;DV;Stadium: 1:45-4:15-10:00 The Hate U Give (PG-13) CC;DV;Stadium: 7:30-10:30 Venom 3D (PG-13) 3D;CC;DV;NP;Stadium: 1:30-4:20-7:10-10:00 Gosnell: The Trial Of America's Biggest Serial Killer (PG-13) Stadium: 7:15-9:50 Doctor Who: New Season Premiere NP/SS;Stadium: 7:30

Smithsonian - Airbus IMAX Theater 14390 Air & Space Museum Pkwy.

www.si.edu/imax

D-Day: Normandy 1944 3D (NR) 11:10-12:35 Pandas: An IMAX 3D Experience (G) 2:35 Aircraft Carrier: Guardians of the Seas 3D (2018) (NR) 10:00-12:00-2:00-4:00 Venom: An IMAX 3D Experience (PG-13) 4:30 Journey to Space: The IMAX 3D Experience (NR) 10:35-1:25-3:25 First Man: The IMAX 2D Experience (PG-13) 7:00-9:35


THURSDAY | 10.11.2018 | EXPRESS | 39

goingoutguide.com 1811 14TH St NW www.blackcatdc.com @blackcatdc OCT/NOV SHOWS FRI 12

(SOLD

PUBLIC IMAGE LTD OUT!) LET ME BREAK YOU UP: GAME SHOW

SAT 13

JOYCE MANOR CREEPYPASTIES

Companhia de Dança Deborah Colker Dog Without Feathers (Cão Sem Plumas)

BURLESQUE

SUN 14 CLOZEE W/ IHF, CHOPPY OPPY TUE 16 GARRETT GLEASON (RECORD RELEASE!)

American University Museum at the Katzen Arts Center: “Finding a Path — Emilie Brzezinski and Dalya Luttwak: A Conversation” is an exhibition of complementary works featuring Brzezinski’s tall, rough, treelike wood sculptures and Luttwak’s colored metal works that resemble plant roots. A site-specific installation, the works take differing but interrelating approaches, inspired by universal growth and decay in nature. Both artists’ works are on view through Dec. 16. Garden: “Mark Bradford”: A sitespecific installation of eight abstract paintings, each more than 45 feet long, encircles the museum’s entire third level. The African-American artist draws directly from artist Paul Philippoteaux’s 19th-century cyclorama depicting the final charge of the Battle of Gettysburg, Pickett’s Charge, indefinite; “Sean Scully: Landline”: Nearly 40 works by the artist are displayed, including oil paintings, pastels, photographs, watercolors and layered aluminum sculptures that reflect the structure of his paintings in three dimensions, through Feb. 3. Seventh Street and Independence Avenue SW.

Library of Congress: “Echoes of the Great War: American Experiences of World War I”: An exhibition that commemorates the centennial of World War I through depictions of the U.S. involvement in and experience of it, via correspondence, music, film, recordings, diaries, posters, photographs, scrapbooks, medals, maps and materials from the Veterans History Project, through Jan. 21; “Drawn to Purpose”: An exhibition of art in the form of illustration and cartooning created by North American women and spanning the late 1800s to the present, through Oct. 20. 101 Independence Ave. SE. National Building Museum: “Community Policing in the Nation’s Capital: The Pilot District Project, 19681972”: A collaboration between the National Building Museum and the Historical Society of Washington, D.C., this exhibition is part of a citywide commemoration of the 50th anniversary

of Martin Luther King Jr.’s assassination. It explores the Pilot District Project (PDP), a local experiment in community policing, through a collection of PDP posters, maps and other materials, through Jan. 15; “Evicted”: Created with the help of eviction researcher and author Matthew Desmond, this exhibition is an immersive experience that introduces visitors to the experience of eviction, a process of losing everything — furniture, food, heat — and starting over. It includes information on the rise and reason for evictions, and the programs available to families, children and teens to combat it, through May 19; “Secret Cities: The Architecture and Planning of the Manhattan Project”: An exhibition that examines the innovative design and construction of cities created for the Manhattan Project — Oak Ridge, Hanford and Los Alamos — examining daily life within, and showing that social stratification and segregation were still evident. It also looks at each city’s development since the Manhattan Project, and their continuing importance as centers of research and technology, through March 3. 401 F St. NW.

National Gallery of Art: “Water, Wind and Waves: Marine Paintings from the Dutch Golden Age”: An exhibition of 45 paintings, drawings, prints, rare books and ship models that celebrates the relationship the Dutch had with water, featuring works by Jan van Goyen, Jacob van Ruisdael, Aelbert Cuyp and Willem van de Velde the Younger, through Nov. 25; “Corot Women”: An exhibition CONTINUED ON PAGE 41

BLACK JOE LEWIS & THE HONEYBEARS

THU 18 AJJ

AND

KIMYA DAWSON

FRI 19

GUIDED BY VOICES

SAT 20

THE DAMNED

WED 24 WAVVES W/ BEACH FOSSILS THU 25 BEACH FOSSILS W/ WAVVES FRI 26

(SOLD

DERMOT KENNEDY OUT!)

SAT 27 EIGHTIES MAYHEM HALLOWEEN DANCE PARTY SUN 28

ROKY ERICKSON

FRI 2

CHARLIE PARR

SAT 3

TAKE ME OUT: DJ

TUE 6

YAEJI

WED 7

POND

DANCE PARTY

JOYCE MANOR

Since founding her own company in 1994, Brazilian director/choreographer Deborah Colker has been inspired by her experiences as an athlete to combine physically QN_V[T SRNa` dVaU cV`bNYYf `a_VXV[T QR`VT[`°N[Q _RQR»[R the rules for what can and can’t be done in the world of dance.

WED OCT 17

October 18–20 Eisenhower Theater

SAT OCT 13

BLACK JOE LEWIS & THE HONEYBEARS

Kennedy-Center.org (202) 467-4600

FRI OCT 19

Groups call (202) 416-8400 For all other ticket-related customer service V[^bV_VR` PNYY aUR .QcN[PR @NYR` /\e <¦PR Na (202) 416-8540

International Programming at the Kennedy Center is made possible through the generosity of the Kennedy Center International Committee on the Arts.

GUIDED BY VOICES WE ARE 3 BLOCKS FROM THE U STREET / CARDOZO METRO STATION TICKETS: www.TICKETFLY.com

nation + world

Only in

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GREG STALEY

WED 17


40 | EXPRESS | 10.11.2018 | THURSDAY

Capital One Arena • Washington, D.C. JUST ANNOUNCED!

MUMFORD & SONS

THIS WEEK’S SHOWS

- A ground-breaking new show in the round w/ Maggie Rogers ..............FRI DECEMBER 14

Bob Moses w/ Mansionair & Navbox ..................................................... TH OCT 11 Murder By Death w/ William Elliott Whitmore & Tim Barry Early Show! 6pm Doors ............................................................................................ F 12 U STREET MUSIC HALL PRESENTS

What So Not w/ Chrome Sparks (DJ Set) Late Show! 10pm Doors ..................... F 12 The Record Company w/ Madisen Ward and the Mama Bear................... Sa 13 Lucero w/ Brent Cowles ................................................................................ Su 14 Passenger .................................................................................................... Tu 16 Atmosphere w/ deM atlaS • The Lioness • DJ Keezy .................................... W 17

On Sale Friday, October 12 at 9am AEG & I.M.P. PRESENT

PANIC! AT THE DISCO

w/ Two Feet ............. JANUARY 20

Ticketmaster

Merriweather Post Pavilion • Columbia, MD THIS SATURDAY - FREE EVENT!

M E R R I W E AT H E R 2 0 1 8 • Experiences in Art + Sound .OCT 13

For more info, visit opusmerriweather.com

OCTOBER

OCTOBER (cont.)

Jonathan Richman

We Were Promised Jetpacks w/ Hurry Up .............Tu 23

featuring Tommy Larkins on the drums!

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

ALL GOOD PRESENTS

Early Show! 6:30pm Doors. 14+ to enter. Sa 20

Twiddle

STEEZ PROMO PRESENTS

(F 26 - w/ Bumpin’ Uglies) .F 26 & Sa 27

Black Tiger Sex Machine

Moon Taxi w/ Moon Hooch .............Sa 27 & Su 28

Big Thief w/ The Range of Light

Jain w/ Drama ............................M 29

Wilderness & .michael. ..............Su 21

930.com

MANY MORE SHOWS ON SALE!

JUST ANNOUNCED! ALL GOOD PRESENTS

PARAMORE FOSTER THE PEOPLE GREENSKY BLUEGRASS w/

ALL GOOD PRESENTS

w/ Kai Wachi & Lektrique Late Show! 10pm Doors ..................Sa 20

9:30 CUPCAKES

• For full lineups and more info, visit merriweathermusic.com • 930.com

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

................................... JUNE 12 On Sale Friday, March 16 at 10am

w/ Billy Strings ......................................................... FRI FEBRUARY 1 & SAT FEBRUARY 2

OLD DOMINION w/ Jordan Davis & Morgan Evans... SAT FEBRUARY 9 On Sale Friday, October 12 at 10am THIS THURSDAY!

DC CENTRAL KITCHEN’S

Ben Howard w/ Wye Oak .... OCT 11 THIS SATURDAY!

Goo Goo Dolls - Dizzy Up the Girl Lincoln Theatre • 1215 U Street, NW Washington, D.C. JUST ANNOUNCED!

16, 1(*2:65

...................................................................... SAT FEBRUARY 9

AEG PRESENTS

BERT KREISCHER ......................................................................... MARCH 14

JESS GLYNNE

......................................................................... FRI APRIL 5

On Sale Friday, October 12 at 10am

20th Anniversary Tour ...................... OCT 13 THIS SUNDAY!

NF w/ Nightly................................. OCT 14

Inside Netflix’s The Staircase Eric Hutchinson & The Believers & Making a Murderer: w/ Jeremy Messersmith.................... OCT 12

THIS SATURDAY!

The Milk Carton Kids w/ The Barr Brothers ....................... OCT 13

Elle King w/ Cordovas ...................NOV 2 AN EVENING WITH

Edie Brickell & New Bohemians ................NOV 3

Fabrications, Lies, Fake Science, and the Owl Theory feat. David Rudolf and Jerry Buting Moderated by NPR’s Carrie Johnson .NOV 5

Richard Thompson Electric Trio w/ Rory Block .......NOV 8 Ólafur Arnalds ........................NOV 14 LIVE NATION PRESENTS

Stay Tuned with Preet Bharara with special guest Chuck Todd .........NOV 15

AEG PRESENTS AN EVENING WITH

Brockhampton ................ OCT 16 THIS WEDNESDAY!

Death Cab for Cutie

OPENING NIGHT FEAT.

#ADULTING with Michelle Buteau

Phoebe Robinson

and Jordan Carlos ...................... OCT 26

with special guest Tig Notaro Early Show! 5:30pm Doors ......... OCT 25

Cameron Esposito, Rhea Butcher, & Friends... OCT 27

w/ Jalen N’Gonda .............................NOV 9

6LACK w/ Summer Walker .......NOV 11 Young the Giant Steve Martin & Martin Short featuring The Steep Canyon Rangers and Jeff Babko .............................NOV 17

Tash Sultana w/ Ocean Alley ................................NOV 21

ALL GOOD PRESENTS

The Front Bottoms & Joe Russo’s Almost Dead Manchester Orchestra

with Oteil Burbridge on Bass ..OCT 20 GOLDENVOICE PRESENTS

Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds w/ Cigarettes After Sex ....................OCT 25

Reese Witherspoon Whiskey in a Teacup Tour in conversation with Ali Wentworth All 9/22 tickets will be honored. ...... OCT 26

w/ Brother Bird ................................NOV 24 SIRIUS XM PRESENTS

The Brian Setzer Orchestra - 15th Anniv. Christmas Rocks! Tour w/ Lara Hope and The Ark-Tones ..NOV 30 ALL GOOD PRESENTS

Dark Star Orchestra ...DEC 1 DC101 PRESENTS

ALL GOOD PRESENTS

THE BYT BENTZEN BALL COMEDY FESTIVAL

Lake Street Dive

w/ LIGHTS ........................................NOV 16

THIS TUESDAY!

w/ Charly Bliss ................................. OCT 17 THIS FRIDAY!

Capital Food Fight.........NOV 8 ALL GOOD PRESENTS

Lettuce with Waka Flocka Flame and Marcus King w/ Turkuaz........................................NOV 3

Tenacious D w/ Wynchester .NOV 7

Bastille • Andrew McMahon In The Wilderness • Meg Myers • The Glorious Sons................ DEC 4

See the full schedule at: theanthemdc.com • IMPconcerts.com • • thelincolndc.com •

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

9:30 CLUB PRESENTS AT U STREET MUSIC HALL

Django Django w/ The Shacks........ M 15 OCT 13 SCARLXRD w/ Amazonica ............Tu 16 White Denim w/ Rotem ...............Su 14 Trevor Powers w/ CORMAC ROTH ...F 19 Azizi Gibson

w/ Jez Dior & Akeem Mimiko .....Sa

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

TICKETS for 9:30 Club shows are available through TicketFly.com, by phone at 1-877-4FLY-TIX, and at the 9:30 Club box office. 9:30 CLUB BOX OFFICE HOURS are 12-7pm on weekdays & until 11pm on show nights, 6-11pm on Sat, and 6-10:30pm on Sun on show nights.

impconcerts.com

PARKING: THE OFFICIAL 9:30 parking lot entrance is on 9th Street, directly behind the 9:30 Club. Buy your advance parking tickets at the same time as your concert tickets!

930.com


THURSDAY | 10.11.2018 | EXPRESS | 41

goingoutguide.com

JOHN LLOYD YOUNG NOV 8

Andrew Bird

HARVEY THOMAS DUNN

RONNIE SPECTOR & THE RONETTES NOV 9 + 10

National Air and Space Museum: “Artist Soldiers” is an exhibition that examines

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 39

of figure paintings by 19th-century artist Camille Corot, best known for his landscapes, through Dec. 31; “Dawoud Bey: The Birmingham Project”: The National Gallery of Art recently acquired four large-scale photographs and one video from Bey’s series “The Birmingham Project,” a memorial to the victims of the 16th Street Baptist Church bombing in Birmingham, Ala., on Sept. 15, 1963. An exhibition of those works marks the 55th anniversary of the bombing and explores issues of racism and violence against African-Americans, through March 24; “The Chiaroscuro Woodcut in Renaissance Italy”: An exhibition of Chiaroscuro woodcuts — color prints made from the successive printing of multiple blocks — which flourished in 16th-century Italy; it also explains details of how they were created, in what sequence they were printed and why, through Jan. 20. Sixth Street and Constitution Avenue NW.

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

feet long, through Oct. 28; “Rachel Whiteread”: An exhibition of about 100 works by British sculptor Rachel Whiteread (b. 1963), including archival and documentary materials on public projects, drawings, photographs and sculptures comprised of a wide range of materials including plaster, rubber, concrete, resin and paper. Several new works will be on view for the first time, through Jan. 13. 440 Constitution Ave. NW.

National Gallery of Art, Sculpture Garden: “Sense of Humor”: An exhibition of Renaissance caricatures, English satires and 20th-century comics, including works by Pieter Brueghel the Elder, Jacques Callot, William Hogarth, James Gillray, Francisco Goya and Honore Daumier, as well as later examples by Art Spiegelman, Richard Hamilton, Andy Warhol, John Baldessari and the Guerrilla Girls, through Jan. 6. Seventh Street and Constitution Avenue NW.

National Geographic Museum: “National Geographic: Exploration Starts Here”: Where and when did exploration get its start at National Geographic? Find out in “National Geographic: Exploration Starts Here,” a permanent exhibition showcasing the greatest hits from our long and storied history of discovery. Go on expedition alongside our scientists, CONTINUED ON PAGE 43

NICOLE ATKINS NOV 14

HOT RIZE

40TH ANNIVERSARY TOUR NOV 17

NEWMYER FLYER

JANIS JOPLIN & JIMI HENDRIX TRIBUTE

Gabriel Kahane

NOV 24

National Symphony Orchestra Pops

CHRIS SMITHER

Andrew Bird

NOV 30

RED BARAAT DEC 1

THE VERVE PIPE JAN 12

INTERNATIONAL GUITAR NIGHT JAN 30 + 31

ST. LAWRENCE STRING QUARTET

CHAMBER MUSIC AT THE BARNS

FEB 1

HABIB KOITÉ & BASSEKOU KOUYATE MAR 13 + 14

with Gabriel Kahane Steven Reineke, conductor Principal Pops Conductor Steven Reineke leads indie icons Andrew Bird and Gabriel Kahane with the NSO performing their music in an intimate orchestral experience.

October 26 & 27 | Concert Hall Kennedy-Center.org (202) 467-4600

For all other ticket-related customer service V[^bV_VR` PNYY aUR .QcN[PR @NYR` /\e <¦PR Na (202) 416-8540

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

AARP is the Presenting Sponsor of the NSO Pops Season.

OMARA PORTUONDO ONE LAST KISS TOUR APR 23 + 24

AND MANY MORE!

Groups call (202) 416-8400

fun + games

Only in

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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. The exhibit is open through Nov. 11.


42 | EXPRESS | 10.11.2018 | THURSDAY

Millennium Stage A celebration of the human spirit Free performances every day at 6 p.m.

Millennium Stage Presenting Sponsor:

Brought to you by

JOIN US FOR

VALET & SECURE PARKING aVAILABLE

HAPPY HOUR 5PM-7PM, M-F

RESTAURANT | BAR | MUSIC VENUE | FULLY FUNCTIONING WINERY | EVENT SPACE 1350 OKIE ST NE, WASHINGTON DC | CITYWINERY.COM/WASHINGTONDC | (202) 250-2531

OCT 11 - 12

OCT 12

OCT 13

Madeleine Peyroux

The Currys Acoustic

Ryan Montbleau

In The Wine Garden

(solo)

of the moody blues

OCT 14

OCT 15

OCT 16

OCT 16

Alana Davis

Record Release Show In The Wine Garden

OCT 14

No tickets required, unless noted otherwise.

October 11–24 11 Thu. | Orquesta el Macabeo The Puerto Rican band visits as part of its 10th anniversary tour in the U.S. The performance is a musical journey that travels through its evolution across four \Ă&#x;PVNY NYObZ _RYRN`R` =_R`R[aRQ V[ P\YYNO\_NaV\[ dVaU :bYaVÂť\_N Productions’s Flash of the Spirit music festival.

12 Fri. | Syria to Egypt: A Musical Continuum A journey on land and through time of the formative years of Arabic music, aUR ]_\T_NZ SRNab_R` cR \S aUR Z\`a important classical composers of the region, presented in a chronological order. =_R`R[aRQ V[ P\YYNO\_NaV\[ dVaU :bYaV\_N Productions’s Flash of the Spirit music festival.

16 | Tse/Sho?/What’s That?

24 | Kurbasy

16 Tue. | Tse/Sho?/What’s That?

20 Sat. | Abada-Capoeira DC and

This is a super-charged puppet cabaret production of the breakthrough Teatr-Pralnia (Laundry Theater) with Ukraine’s leading contemporary hub, CCA Dakh, directed by theatrical disruptor Vlad Troitsky.

BatalĂĄ Washington

Presented in collaboration with Center Stage, a program of the U.S. Department of State’s Bureau of 2QbPNaV\[NY N[Q 0bYab_NY .ĂœNV_` ]_\QbPRQ Of aUR ;Rd England Foundation for the Arts.

17 Wed. | The Alexandria Folk Dance Troupe of Egypt Founded by Egyptian artist Aly El Gendy in 1968, their performance method is ON`RQ \[ N[Q V[ÂźbR[PRQ Of 2Tf]aVN[ folklore. =_R`R[aRQ V[ P\YYNO\_NaV\[ dVaU aUR 2ZON``f \S 2Tf]a

18 Thu. | Howard University Jazz Ensemble

13 &14 Sat. & Sun. | Local Dance Commissioning Project: Diana Movius With inspiration from Stravinsky’s The Rite of Spring, the choreographer’s world premiere multimedia ballet probes the fall of Wall Street during aUR % [N[PVNY P_V`V` aUR [Nab_R \S accountability, and its impact on society.

15 Mon. | Zhou Family Band Coming from Lingbi, Anhui Province, the ensemble plays traditional wind and percussion music that has accompanied birth and death celebrations of people in central-eastern China for more than 600 years.

Performing as part of Howard University’s Homecoming celebrations, HUJE is joined by saxophonist Tia Fuller for a program of classic American jazz selections.

19 Fri. | Kombilesa Mi 5NVYV[T S_\Z =NYR[^bR aUR _`a free black town in the Americas, the Colombian Hip Hop group is making an electrifying fusion of traditional Palenquero music and urban rap. Presented in partnership with Lincoln Center’s David Rubenstein Atrium.

Generous support is provided by CWT <^aaXb P]S 6fT]S^[h] 2PUaXci 5^d]SPcX^] P]S CWT :PaT[ :^\uaTZ 5P\X[h 5^d]SPcX^] 0SSXcX^]P[ bd__^ac Xb _a^eXSTS Qh :X\QTa[h 4]VT[ P]S 5P\X[h CWT 3T]]Xb P]S 9dSh 4]VT[ 2WPaXcPQ[T 5^d]SPcX^] CWT 6Tbb]Ta 5P\X[h 5^d]SPcX^] CWT 8aT]T ?^[[X] 0dSXT]RT 3TeT[^_\T]c P]S 2^\\d]Xch 4]VPVT\T]c 8]XcXPcXeTb CWT 8bPS^aT P]S 1TacWP 6dST[bZh 5P\X[h 5^d]SPcX^] 8]R CWT <TaTSXcW 5^d]SPcX^] 3a 3TQ^aPW A^bT P]S 3a 9P] 0 9 Bc^[fXYZ cWT D B 3T_Pac\T]c ^U 4SdRPcX^] cWT =PcX^]P[ 2^\\XccTT U^a cWT ?TaU^a\X]V 0acb P]S cWT <X[[T]]Xd\ BcPVT 4]S^f\T]c 5d]S CWT <X[[T]]Xd\ BcPVT 4]S^f\T]c 5d]S fPb \PST _^bbXQ[T Qh 9P\Tb 0 9^W]b^] P]S <PgX]T 8bPPRb 5P]]XT <PT 5^d]SPcX^] cWT :X\bTh 4]S^f\T]c 6X[QTac†and Jaylee†<TPS <^acVPVT 1P]ZTab Association of America and other anonymous gifts to secure the future of the Millennium Stage.

21 Sun. | Family Night: Lana Berakovic and Maija Karklina

w/ Be Steadwell In The Wine Garden

Al Stewart “Year Of The Cat�

OCT 17

OCT 17

OCT 18

OCT 18

Driftwood album Release Show

Missy Raines & Tony Furtado

Ari Hest

“Strange Conversation�

OCT 19

OCT 19

OCT 21

OCT 22

Carl Palmer’s ELP Legacy

It Came From the ‘70s Superflydisco

miki howard

Parsonsfield & Sawyer Fredericks

OCT 23

OCT 23

OCT 24

OCT 24

Pokey LaFarge (Solo)

scrapomatic

The Wind + The Wave

An Acoustic Evening w/

In The Wine Garden

In The Wine Garden

John Hiatt

OCT 25

OCT 26

OCT 26

OCT 28

Richard Marx

Enter the Haggis

(two shows!)

In The Wine Garden

Jenny & The Mexicats

John Sebastian

OCT 29

OCT 31

OCT 31

NOV 1

Acoustic Alchemy

Rasputina

Jim Lauderdale w/ Amelia White In The Wine Garden

Reckless Kelly

In The Wine Garden

Mandy Barnett In The Wine Garden

The Austrian violin and piano duo make their U.S. debut in a program introducing children and their families to the world of classical music. Presented as a part of Kids Euro Festival 2018.

22 Mon. | Martina FiĹĄerovĂĄ The Prague-born singer and musician, whose original songs mesh harmonic sophistication with unpretentious personal expression, performs as part of the centennial of Czech independence.

In The Wine Garden

=_R`R[aRQ V[ P\YYNO\_NaV\[ dVaU aUR 2ZON``f \S aUR Czech Republic.

23 Tue. | La Maquina de Cuba Bring your dance shoes for an unforgettable concert by one of the top 5 Cuban salsa bands from the Island!

24 Wed. | Kurbasy The Ukrainian ensemble brings tight vocal harmonies, resonant lyrics, and phantasmagoric visual imagery from the Carpathian mountains. Presented in collaboration with Center Stage, a program of the U.S. Department of State’s Bureau of 2QbPNaV\[NY N[Q 0bYab_NY .ĂœNV_` ]_\QbPRQ Of aUR ;Rd 2[TYN[Q 3\b[QNaV\[ S\_ aUR ._a`

Presented in collaboration with the Richmond Folk Festival. The Millennium Stage was created and underwritten by James A. Johnson and Maxine Isaacs to make the performing arts accessible c^ TeTah^]T X] Ud[½[[\T]c ^U cWT :T]]TSh 2T]cTa¾b \XbbX^] c^ Xcb community and the nation.

The local capoeira leaders join forces with the all-woman samba reggae percussion band to present a joint evening of syncopated rhythms and dynamic martial art and dance movements, celebrating the vibrant culture of Brazil.

Maria Muldaur

In The Wine Garden

NateWantsToBattle 11 | Orquesta el Macabeo

john lodge

For details or to watch online, visit kennedy-center.org/millennium.

An Evening w/

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

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FRIDAY, OCT. 26 8:30–11 P.M. Early bird tickets end Oct. 12 newseum.org/newseumnights

THURSDAY | 10.11.2018 | EXPRESS | 43

goingoutguide.com CONTINUED FROM PAGE 41

and Constitution Avenue NW.

adventurers and storytellers to discover where we’ve been and how much further we plan to go. Examine artifacts like the camera Robert Peary used at the North Pole and pots recovered from a shipwreck by Jacques-Yves Cousteau. Watch video from the top of Mount Everest and Jane Goodall’s research camp. And learn the untold stories behind the discoveries of Machu Picchu and the Titanic. Come see where exploration starts, through Dec. 31; “Tomb of Christ: The Church of the Holy Sepulchre Experience “: An immersive 3-D experience of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre. Built in the fourth century by the Emperor Constantine, the church sits on the site where many scholars believe the crucifixion of Christ took place. The Tomb of Christ, or the holy edicule, has just undergone an historic restoration. Learn how Nat Geo explorers are using new technologies including Lidar, sonar, laser scanning and thermal imaging to study this site, through Jan. 6; “Titanic: The Untold Story”: An exhibition about the evolution of deep-sea exploration that links the 1985 discovery of the Titanic with a top-secret Cold War mission, through Jan. 1. 17th and M streets NW.

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

National Museum of African American History and Culture: “Ongoing exhibitions”: Focusing on a diversity of historical subjects, including the trans-Atlantic slave trade, the civil rights movement, the history of AfricanAmerican music and other cultural expressions, visual arts, theater, sports and military history, through Jan. 1; “Everyday Beauty”: An exhibition of 100 images spanning 100 years representing African-American history and culture and highlighting the beauty of everyday occasions, through Feb. 4. 14th Street

City & the 1968 Poor People’s Campaign”: An ongoing exhibition that marks the 50th anniversary of the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. with neverbefore-seen photographs and original artifacts from Resurrection City, the small community set up in Washington, D.C., for the nation’s poor, through Jan. 1. 14th Street and Constitution Avenue NW.

National Museum of Women in the Arts: “Bound to Amaze: Inside a BookCollecting Career“: An exhibition of books assembled by Krystyna Wasserman, curator emerita, who amassed the museum’s collection of more than 1,000 artists’ books over a 30-year period. The exhibition centers on books created through inventive techniques such as carving, piercing, pleating and curling, many of which are as much sculpture as book made from materials including linen, wood, and semi-precious stone, through Nov. 25. 1250 New York Ave. NW.

National Museum of the American Indian: “Nation to Nation: Treaties Between the United States and American Indian Nations”: An exhibition exploring the relationship between Native American nations and the United States, through April 1; “Our Universes: Traditional Knowledge Shapes Our World”: The exhibition focuses on indigenous cosmologies, worldviews and philosophies related to the creation and order of the universe and the spiritual relationship between humankind and the natural world, through Sept. 1; “The Great Inka Road: Engineering an Empire”: To celebrate the construction of the Inca Road, which linked Cuzco, Peru, with the farthest reaches of the empire, the

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exhibition digs into its early foundations and the technologies that made building the road possible, through June 1; “Americans”: An exhibition of 350 objects and images that explores the prevalence of American Indian names and images throughout American culture: from the Tomahawk missile to baking powder cans, to the stories of Thanksgiving, Pocahontas, the Trail of Tears and the Battle of Little Bighorn, indefinite; “Trail of Tears: A Story of Cherokee Removal”:

An exhibition of that looks at Indian removal from the Cherokee perspective and attempts to dispel misconceptions about the Trail of Tears, through Jan. 1. Fourth Street and Independence Avenue SW.

National Portrait Gallery: “Portraits of the World: Switzerland”: An exhibition that features the work “Femme en Extase,” a portrait of the Italian dancer Giulia Leonardi by the Swiss painter

Ferdinand Hodler. The work embodies the Swiss modernist approach of emotional expression through bodily movement — a theory known as eurhythmics — which transformed dance in America, through Nov. 12; “UnSeen: Our Past in a New Light, Ken GonzalesDay and Titus Kaphar”: An exhibition of works by Gonzales-Day and Kaphar, contemporary artists who address the under- and misrepresentation of CONTINUED ON PAGE 44


FRIDAY, OCT. 26 8:30–11 P.M. Early bird tickets end Oct. 12 newseum.org/newseumnights

PUT ON YOUR COSTUME... THIS IS A PARTY TO DIE FOR.

44 | EXPRESS | 10.11.2018 | THURSDAY

goingoutguide.com CONTINUED FROM PAGE 43

minorities in American history and portraiture, through Jan. 6; “Black Out: Silhouettes Then and Now�: An exhibition that studies the silhouette, a form of portraiture popular in the 19th century, featuring the gallery’s extensive collection including works by Auguste Edouart, who captured the likenesses of John Quincy Adams and Lydia Maria Child, through March 10. Eighth and F streets NW.

Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back (ďŹ lm with live orchestra) National Symphony Orchestra Steven Reineke, conductor

Music by John Williams

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

Newseum: “1776 Breaking News: Independence�: This ongoing exhibition is of the first newspaper printing of CONTINUED ON PAGE 46

ANDREW BORDWIN

National Postal Museum: “My Fellow Š 2018 & TM LUCASFILM LTD. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED Š DISNEY. Presentation licensed by Disney Concerts in association with ! cW 2T]cdah 5^g ;dRPb [\ ;cS P]S FPa]Ta 2WP__T[[ <dbXR

Virginia Museum of Fine Arts: “The Precisionist Impulse� is an exhibition of 18 watercolors, prints, drawings, photographs and paintings from the museum’s collection that demonstrates Precisionist work, defined as: “American paintings and works on paper produced between the two World Wars that employ a linear aesthetic, pronounced contours and localized colors to depict architectural, infrastructural, mechanical and often urban imagery.� See it through Nov. 12 in Richmond.

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THURSDAY | 10.11.2018 | EXPRESS | 45

THE COMEDY OF ERRORS ANTIBALAS W/ GORDON STERLING AND THE PEOPLE FRIDAY

UPCOMING PERFORMANCES THURS, OCT 18

OCT 12

JOHN NEMETH W/ JOSH CHRISTINA

by William Shakespeare | directed by Alan Paul

“WONDERFUL ...a romp of pure fun.” –MD Theatre Guide

FRI, OCT 19

Photo of the cast of The Comedy of Errors by Scott Suchman.

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THE NATIONAL ENDOWMENT FOR THE HUMANITIES

Renwick Gallery: “No Spectators:

presents THE 2018 JEFFERSON LECTURE IN THE HUMANITIES

Renée Fleming VOICES

Youssou NDOUR The Senegalese singer, percussionist, and humanitarian—dubbed "perhaps the most famous singer alive" by Rolling Stone— brings his stratospheric vocals, visionary African rhythms, and powerful messages of social activism and tolerance to the Concert Hall.

October 30 at 8 p.m. | Concert Hall Kennedy-Center.org (202) 467-4600

Groups call (202) 2) 416-8400 4

RITA CHARON,

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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 anniversary of the Pulitzers, this ongoing exhibit features work from the portfolio of Jack Ohman of the Sacramento Bee, the 2016 winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Editorial Cartooning, through Dec. 31; “1968: Civil Rights at 50”: An exhibition of historic images and print news items that explore the events that shaped the civil rights movement when leader the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated, through Jan. 2; “The Marines and Tet: The Battle That Changed the Vietnam War”: An exhibition of 20 largeformat photographs by John Olson, a photographer with Stars and Stripes who spent three days with the Marines at the 1968 Battle of Hue of the Vietnam War. Hue was one of more than 100 cities and villages that North Vietnamese forces struck with a surprise attack on the holiday known as Tet, through July 8; “Pictures of the Year: 75 Years of the World’s Best Photography”: An exhibit of a selection of more than 100 awardwinning news images from the archives of the photojournalism competition Pictures of the Year International (POYi), through Jan. 20. 555 Pennsylvania Ave. NW.

@NEHgov

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

Smithsonian American Art Museum: “Diane Arbus”: An exhibition of a box of 10 photographs by Arbus, four of which she sold during her lifetime. Two were purchased by Richard Avedon, another by Jasper Johns. A fourth was purchased by Bea Feitler, art director at Harper’s Bazaar, through Jan. 27; “Trevor Paglen: Sites Unseen”: An exhibition of photographs, sculptures and new work with AI by the activist/artist. Paglen’s photographs show a tapped communications cable, classified military installation, a spy satellite and a drone — items generally hidden from the public — through Jan. 6; “Between Worlds: The Art of Bill Traylor”: An exhibition of 155 works by the artist, a black man born to an enslaved family in Alabama, who was


THURSDAY | 10.11.2018 | EXPRESS | 47

goingoutguide.com — between 3 and 5 percent of the world’s population at that time, through Dec. 31. 10th St. & Constitution Ave. NW.

an eyewitness to history: the Civil War, Emancipation, Reconstruction, Jim Crow segregation, the Great Migration and the steady rise of African-American culture in the South, through March 17. Eighth and F streets NW.

The Phillips Collection: “Intersections: Richard Tuttle”: “It Seems Like It’s Going to Be” — an installation spread throughout the second floor of the original Phillips House galleries — juxtaposes the artist’s 41-verse poem with 41 visual works he created, one for each verse, through Dec. 30; “Nordic Impressions”: An exhibition that surveys Nordic art spanning nearly 200 years and features works by 62 artists from Denmark, Iceland, Finland, Norway, Sweden, Aland, Faroe and Greenland. It includes works by artists Akseli Gallen-Kallela, Vilhelm Hammershoi, Edvard Munch, Anders Zorn, Johannes Sveinsson Kjarval, Fanny Brate, Hannah Pauli and others, through Jan. 13. 1600 21st St. NW.

Wonder”: The exhibition includes the “Blue Flame,” one of the world’s largest and finest pieces of gem-quality lapis lazuli; Martha, the last known passenger pigeon; the Pinniped fossil, a fossil of one of the earliest members of the group of animals that includes seals, sea lions and walruses; and the 1875 Tsimshian House Front, one of the best examples of Native Alaskan design artwork, through Jan. 1; “Narwhal: Revealing an Arctic Legend”: An exhibition on the research and collaboration by Inuit and scientists on the narwhal reveals the latest in scientific knowledge on the animal and illuminates the interconnectedness between people and ecosystems, through Jan. 1; “Outbreak: Epidemics in a Connected World”: An exhibition that examines the human ecology of epidemics to mark the 100th anniversary of the Great Influenza, a pandemic that took the lives of 50 million to 100 million people

US BOTANIC GARDEN

Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History: “Objects of

U.S. Botanic Garden: “Botanical Art Worldwide: America’s Flora” is a juried exhibition of 46 original contemporary botanical artworks of plants native to the U.S. Similar exhibitions will be held in over 20 other countries, each highlighting plants native to their own country. D.C.’s is on view through Oct. 15.

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Virginia Museum of Fine Arts: “Howardena Pindell: What Remains to Be Seen“: An exhibition that features the artist’s early figurative paintings, explorations into abstraction and conceptual practices, as well as personal and political art produced after a life-threatening car accident in 1979, through Nov. 25. 200 N. Blvd., Richmond.

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48 | EXPRESS | 10.11.2018 | THURSDAY

entertainment

#MeToo was just the start

May’s Cannes Film Festival included a red-carpet march by 82 women.

RICHARD DREW (AP)

FILM After Rashida Jones exited Pixar’s “Toy Story 4” in 2017, she noted that the studio, after 25 years in business, had not made a single feature film directed by a woman, calling it “a culture where women and people of color do not have an equal creative voice.” So when Pixar co-founder and CEO John Lasseter announced his exit earlier this year after acknowledging “missteps” in his behavior with employees, he was more than another casualty in the long list of film industry power players toppled by the #MeToo movement. He was a symbol of a Hollywood culture that is dying — or at least under siege. “These giant, multibilliondollar companies, they all need a makeover,” Jones now says. “And I think people are starting to recognize that.” In the year since sexual assault allegations surfaced against Harvey Weinstein, Hollywood has been soul-searching. The Weinstein case — along with those of Kevin Spacey, CBS’ Les Moonves, Amazon Studios’ Roy Price and many others — laid bare the painful reality for countless women in a movie industry where gender inequality was systematic and pervasive. The #MeToo movement has spread, but Hollywood remains ground zero in a cultural

VIANNEY LE CAER (AP)

A year after Weinstein’s downfall, Hollywood still has work to do

Allegations against Harvey Weinstein sparked the #MeToo movement.

eruption that began 12 months ago with the Weinstein revelations, published by The New York Times and The New Yorker. “Definitely there’s been a seismic shift,” actress Carey Mulligan says. Measuring cultural change in a far-flung, $50 billion industry

is difficult. Many of the epicenters of the movie business — red carpets, film festivals, award shows — have struck a different tone in the wake of Weinstein. But some see a limit to what such demonstrations can accomplish. “It’s a great thing when you’re on the red carpet and people are

talking about sexual assault,” actress Viola Davis says. “My fear is that people feel like the focus of sexual assault is just on actresses in Hollywood and studio execs like Weinstein.” #MeToo has sought to codify permanent changes. The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences instituted a code of conduct. “Inclusion riders” — contractual agreements to try to hire diverse casts and crews — have proliferated. In an attempt to abolish the “casting couch” culture that Weinstein allegedly exploited, the Screen Actors Guild created guidelines — supported by the producers’ guild — instructing executives to refrain from holding meetings in hotel rooms and homes. Yet with everything that has happened in the last year, most observers say not nearly enough has been done to address longterm inequalities in Hollywood. “It feels like we’re moving in the right direction, but women and minorities are such a tiny percentage of this industry,” says filmmaker Nicole Holofcener. Kirsten Schaffer, executive director of the advocacy group Women in Film, believes that the path to ending harassment is through parity. “The more women we have in leadership positions, the less likely the incidents of harassment,” Schaffer says. “We’ve been living in a sexist, racist society for hundreds of thousands of years,” she adds. “We’re not going to undo it in a year.” JAKE COYLE (AP)

MUSIC

Swift dominates the American Music Awards Taylor Swift won big at the American Music Awards on Tuesday, claiming four awards — including artist of the year. With 23 career AMAs, she passed Whitney Houston to become the most decorated female artist in AMAs history. Here are some of the highlights from the show. EMILY YAHR (THE WASHINGTON POST)

Swift makes a statement Swift didn’t get too political, but she did have one message in her final speech. “This award and every single award given out tonight were voted on by the people,” Swift said. “And you know what else is voted on by the people is the midterm elections on Nov. 6. Get out and vote!”

XXXTentacion is honored Rapper XXXTentacion was fatally shot in June, and his mother, Cleopatra Bernard, accepted when he won favorite soul/R&B album for “17.” “I’m so nervous, you guys,” she told the crowd. “I am honored to accept this award on behalf of my son.”

A tribute to Franklin TELEVISION

‘Project Runway’ gets a new look

“Project Runway” has tapped supermodel Karlie Kloss as host and fashion designer Christian Siriano as mentor for the show’s upcoming return to Bravo. The duo replace Heidi Klum and Tim Gunn, who left the show after 16 seasons in September to develop a new fashion series for Amazon. “Project Runway” will air on Bravo in 2019, returning to the show’s original network after it was broadcast on Lifetime from 2008 to 2017. (EXPRESS)

Netflix renews “Ozark” for Season 3

Michael Kenneth Williams cast as lead in HBO drama series “Lovecraft Country”

An Aretha Franklin tribute video aired toward the end of the show, and a group of powerhouse singers (Gladys Knight, CeCe Winans, Donnie McClurkin, Ledisi and Mary Mary) closed the ceremony with “Amazing Grace,” “How I Got Over” and more.

Deadline: Fox developing “Rookie of the Year” remake


THURSDAY | 10.11.2018 | EXPRESS | 49

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SE 319 ANACOSTIA RD/MINNESOTA AVE LARGE 1 & 2 BED CO OP, NEW CABINETS, LAUNDRY ROOM AND HARDWOOD FLOORS. PARKING STARTING AT $835 DELWIN REALTY 301-608-3703 SE - Newly renovated,1, 2, 3, & 4 bedrooms. Central air and heat.W/D in unit. Sec 8 welcome.Call Kyle 202-297-3074 SE - Newly renovated,1, 2, 3, & 4 bedrooms. Central air and heat.W/D in unit. Sec 8 welcome.Call Cortez 202-856-6428

Banneker Place

SALES & AUCTIONS

The Washington Post for the following areas:

TAKOMA PARK - Huge Moving Sale 7227 15th Ave., 10/12 (4PM) - 10/14Linens, china, glass, marbles & more denise_jones28@yahoo.com

For routes in

Bladensburg, Riverdale and Lanham, MD

DC RENTALS Capitol Hill-11th&6th St NE area.Nr Metro & shops. Top flr 1BR, lg LR, w-w crpt, lg yd, prkg. Vouchers ok. Passed insp, ready to move-in. 202-543-2254

Call Monique Reddy at 301-728-0459

The Washington Post for the following areas: For routes in

Upper NW area in D.C.

202-715-6255

Call Dan Santos at 240-912-7978 Excellent part-time income! Reliable transportation required. I.T. Firm seeks Software Developers. Degree in CS/MIS/Eng/IT related. MS w/ 2 yr or BS w/5 yr of experience in I.T. (1) Expr. in SDLC, Mainframe Tech (COBOL, JCL, VSAM, CICS), Datawarehousing, ETL, SQL & P/SQL, Teradata, Informatica, MDM, CA7, Autosys, Control M, Oracle & SQL Server, Agile & Waterfall; (2) Expr. in JAVA/J2EE tech, Object Oriented Prog, spring, JSP, Struts, XML, HTML, IBM RAD, Hibernate, Eclipse, Weblogic/Websphere & Agile SDLC methodology. Software Developers:BS in CS/MIS/Eng/IT related. 3 yrs exp in I.T. Expr. in Web & CM appls using Drupal, Wordpress, PHP, MariaDB, GMOD, JavaScript, HTML, DHTML, Ruby, C, VB Ajax, MySQL, PostgreSQL, SQL, Web Services, Windows, Linux & Apache Travel/Reloc. Reqd. Send Resumes to: Unify Solutions Inc. 4 West Rollings Crossroads, Suite 9, Catonsville, MD 21228.

202-334-6200.

To apply, go to

Software Developer:Degree in Comp Science /Eng related. MS w/ 2 yr or BS w/ 5 yrs expr. Expertise in datawarehousing concepts, Informatica (Windows & Unix), Datastage 7.5, Ab initio Metadata Hub Manager & BO. Travel/Reloc. Send Resumes to: Master Informatix Systems, 22648 Glenn Drive, #105, Sterling VA 20164

202-334-4100. Credit cards accepted.

CAREER TRAINING NURSE ASSISTANT Med Tech/CNA to GNA 19 Days FREE CPR, First Aid & Text Book 240-770-8251 OR 301-333-6254

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Brand New Apartments in Deanwood 1 BR Income Restricted Apts. Starting at $1,251. (202) 715-1170 ResidencesAtHayes.com

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✔ Five minute walk from the Minnesota Avenue Metro ✔ Laundromat facilities on-site ✔ After school program ✔ Free summer camp ✔ Community center ✔ Gas heat and cooking ✔ Central A/C & much, much more! Application Fee $25.00

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JOBS • RENTALS • HOUSES • WHEELS • STUFF • AND MUCH MORE...

;

<

Office Hours Mon - Fri 8-5 Sat 10-2

$250 0ff 1st Month Rent & $400–$500 S/D with Credit Approved Application

WorthingtonWoods

4421 Third Street SE, Washington, DC 20032 $ % &

$

' !! !

( )

*+ ' (

! " # , %!! (

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for one adult 18 years & older or two adults $35

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JOBS


50 | EXPRESS | 10.11.2018 | THURSDAY

MD RENTALS

MD RENTALS

MD RENTALS

MD RENTALS

SUPER SPECIALS! PAY NO RENT DURING THE HOLIDAYS!*

OAKCREST TOWERS Fall Into Your New Home at Oakcrest Towers

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) * ...Going Fast, Don’t Delay!

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6004 Parkland Court, District Heights, MD 20747

2213 University Blvd | Hyattsville, MD 20783

2252 Brightseat Road, Landover, MD 20785

(202) 795-8925

A PA RT M E N T S

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WINDSOR COURT 301-289-9597 13802 Castle Blvd. AND TOWER Silver Spring, MD 20904

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DC RENTALS


THURSDAY | 10.11.2018 | EXPRESS | 51

MD RENTALS

VA RENTALS

Silver Spring – University Gardens I & II located at 440 University Boulevard East, Silver Spring, MD 20901 Affordable Independent Senior Living Facility, Age Restricted - 62+ or Disabled requiring Mobility/ Hearing/Visual features

MOVE IN NOW & GET UP TO 2 MONTHS FREE!*

Waiting List for Efficiency and 1 Bedroom Apartments will open Tuesday, October 16th to Tuesday, October 23rd. Applicants needing Limited English Proficiency (LEP) assistance or applicants who do not have internet access please call the Management Agent Office (202) 387-4367 How To Apply: In-Person at the facility located at 440 University Boulevard East, Silver Spring, MD 20901 from Tuesday, October 16th to Tuesday, October 23rd from 10:00 am to 4:00 pm EST. Bring the following: H Photo ID for all household members H Social Security Card and Proof of Citizenship/Legal status for all household members H Birth Certificate for all household members H Proof of Income (Tax returns, pay stubs, etc.) for all household members H List of Assets for all household members

Persons qualifying for accessibility features: Mobility/Hearing or Visual will be verified.

NEWLY RENOVATED APARTMENTS

1, 2 & 3 bedroom apartments starting from $1,400 Great location & pet friendly Washer & dryer in each apartment -11 .5391!##1 /!!13/%$:7 & ,:) $#((2%34' 8/9":% 6##1+ 04%:77 $:%4:9+ !1/'89#2%" * 4:%%37 $#294

FAIRFIELD

703.269.4145 7703 Lee Highway Falls Church, VA 22042

CROSSING *Call for more details

WALK TO WHITE FLINT METRO

By Fax (202) 601-4016 24-hours a day or By Mail Must be post marked by Tuesday, October 23rd

w8

TAKOMA LANDING APARTMENTS & TOWNHOMES

OPEN HOUSE!

301.830.8972 5401 McGrath Blvd. North Bethesda, MD 20852

# -">=6"/ ."=8""1 *, & 7<>=$!<0 2<!?<1<4 # Nestled Between *, & 7<>=$!<0 2<!?<1<4 # )<=1">> ,"1="! & 51/$$! :%3 # .;><1">> ,"1="!

Walk to Tysons Metro

Newly Renovated Units 1, 2, 3 & 4 Bedroom Apartments 24-Hr. On-Site Starbucks & Safeway Washer/Dryer In Most Units Metro Bus Stops on Community

Commons of Mclean 1653 Anderson Road, McLean, VA 22102

703.935.0495

CALL 301.302.8066

VA RENTALS

What can we do for you? Deliver. If you’re a Small Business, please contact one of us today: KaDeana Davage | 202-334-9359 | Kadeana.Davage@washpost.com

BRAND NEW RENOVATED SPACIOUS APARTMENTS One BRs from $1,099* Two BR Townhomes from $1,399*

790 Fairview Avenue, Takoma Park, MD 20912

What can The Washington Post Small Business Advertising Team do to drive advertising results for your small business? Consult. Target. Zone. Brand. Create. Grow response. Innovate, and more. Whether your market is consumer or B2B, a small business campaign across multiple print products can reach 51% of super-affluent adults and 41% of small-business owners in the metro market in a 7-day period.

Friday Oct 12 & Saturday Oct 13 from 10-4pm *!## 3$$<B6;CB&9 *## =BCD 3$$!&@#4 /!#4BC

W/D in Townhomes Only *Prices are subject to change 7;ED#!E ( -!'#!E % 1!;94 0#= 8BC6D#9 3$$<B;96#E 7;<>B9F -BEC;96# C& ?D&$$B9F. -B9B9F ( +9C#!C;B9:#9C ,#!"#6C 5&6;CB&9 % ?& 2A6D 2&!#)))

our business.

# 9=;/<$+ ( & ' Bedrooms

On-line at http://ugkcshc.com/ Applications for University Gardens I or II can be downloaded 24-hours a day beginning Tuesday, October 16th until 11:59 pm EST Tuesday, October 23rd

Small business is

Melissa Abell | 202-334-7024 | Melissa.Abell@washpost.com Nicole Giddens | 202-334-4351 | Nicole.Giddens@washpost.com 2677 Avenir Pl., Vienna, VA 22180 | 703.496.9867 ! ADU & WDU’s now to the Dunn Metro available Station ! Studio, 1BRs & 2BRs* ! Robust onsite ! Rates starting at $1,111* amenities: Concierge, ! Applicants must meet Game Room, NFL community qualifying lounge, pools & two & program guidelines fitness centers *Please call for more details ! Walking distance

Source: Nielsen Scarborough 2017, Release 2; Super-affluent defined as HHI $250,000+.Net 7-day reach of The Washington Post and Express, Washington metro market.

ROOMMATES

$

560 DALE FOREST

APARTMENTS

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703.334.9362

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WOW

arting Prices St nly From O

CHEVERLY-Nice room w/ BA. New paint and carpet. No Pets. No Smoking. 1 person, No waterbed. $900 all utilities & WiFi included. Call 240-838-0777 Oxon Hill/Temple Hills-Lg BRs $675-$775 utils incl. 1 per occ. 240-432-0751 or 301-455-7430 SE DC - Furnished room, share kitchen, bath & cable. $180/week, Female pref'd. Call 301-922-6393 SILVER SPRING, MD - Old Columbia Pike, 1 BR, Female pref, close to shopping center, $750/mo. 202-468-8783 WHEATON, MD - $725. Shared SFH, 1BR, Cable Wifi, AC, utilities included, furnished available. 2nd room optional. 301-503-1753. Avail Now XPA0133 3x10.5


52 | EXPRESS | 10.11.2018 | THURSDAY

trending

The Center for Health and Risk Communication at the University of Maryland in College Park is seeking African American parents to participate in a study of public opinions about Human Papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination. Participation involves one focus group interview lasting about one hour. To participate you must be: r "HF BOE BCPWF r "GSJDBO "NFSJDBO r " DVTUPEJBM QBSFOU PG POF PS NPSF African American children ages 9 UISPVHI r 8JMMJOH UP BOTXFS RVFTUJPOT r 8JMMJOH UP DPNQMZ XJUI SFTFBSDI TUVEZ SFRVJSFNFOUT

You will be compensated with a

$50 gift card for your time and travel.

To volunteer, please call

(202) 810-5990 or (202) 681-6432

“Finally a UFC fight I’d pony up the pay-per-view money to watch. I predict [that] by the end of the match the room will smell of blood, sweat and Axe.” @JENNIFERM_Q, on lawyer Michael Avenatti, right, challenging Donald Trump

A brand new building in Sterling

Benefits start day one: • • • • •

Earn top pay rates Stock awards program Tuition assistance 401(k) with company match Flexible work schedules for associates who are in school

Jr. to an MMA match for charity, as reported in a tweet from @DylanByers. It all started when Trump Jr. implied that ex-Rep. Anthony Weiner would be Avenatti’s running mate after Weiner is out of prison. Avenatti then tweeted to Trump Jr. that HE would be going to prison, adding, “Buckle up, Buttercup.”

Brand new jobs for you! Apply online & schedule your appointment:

amazon.com/washingtonDCjobs Amazon is an Equal Opportunity-Affirmative Action Employer-Minority / Female / Disability / Veteran / Gender Identity / Sexual Orientation. Please bring ID proving eligibility to work in the US.

“Of all the things to actually become real they went and made the Evil BB-8.”

Get Inspired! Make YOUR Next Step Count!!

the new all-terrain surveillance drone from engineering company Guardbot Inc. The black, spherical robot is capable of rolling itself over terrain including sand and snow, and can “swim” through water. Twitter users couldn’t help but compare it to the technology in the show “Black Mirror” and BB-8, the droid in the latest “Star Wars” trilogy.

This Unique Program provides: A path to earn your Master of Public Management degree in as little as fifteen months with our convenient two Friday afternoons and two Saturdays per month schedule.

Challenging leadership and management curriculum designed specifically for mid-career public service professionals.

To request more information regarding this and other School of Public Policy degree programs, please visit us at publicpolicy.umd.edu or please contact Michael Goodhart at 301.405.9715 or goodhart@umd.edu.

“I swear, If Bradley Cooper’s dog doesn’t win Best Supporting Actor this year I’m gonna drop out of film school.” @SLYLINGUAL24, joking about the true star of “A Star Is Born,” Charlie the dog. Grown-up Charlie is portrayed by Bradley Cooper’s actual dog. Fans fell in love with Charlie for his poise in the film’s tragic scenes.

EXECUTIVE MASTER OF PUBLIC MANAGEMENT

Now Accepting Applications For Spring 2019

WARNER BROTHERS PICTURES

@ARTHUR_AFFECT, tweeting about

“Have I told you lately how much I love thoughtfully worded songs? They can change the world.”

“Literally 30 minutes into the season and they’re trans-baiting and mocking the LGBTQ community?”

@ERINHAHN_AUTHOR, commenting

@JOSHUA_FOX, blasting “The

on Lynzy Lab’s “A Scary Time,” a song she wrote as a political satire after President Trump said, “It’s a very scary time for young men in America.” Lyrics include “I can’t walk to my car late at night while on the phone.” Lab ends her song by telling viewers to vote on Nov. 6.

Bachelorette Australia” for a scene in which contestant Bill tells bachelorette Ali Oetjen, left, that he wasn’t always “Bill.” It sounded like a set-up for Bill to reveal he was transgender. Instead, he told Ali he used to go by “David,” to which Ali responded, “Not a woman! Phew.”


THURSDAY | 10.11.2018 | EXPRESS | 53

fun+games Horoscopes

Scrabble Grams

PAR SCORE 145-155, BEST SCORE 223

Sudoku

DIFFICULT

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) You know what’s going on around you, but you may not have the first clue as to how to handle it efficiently. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) You may have put yourself in a tricky position that only now proves more difficult than you can handle yourself. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) It’s important for you to know that you can handle a certain situation on your own — even though you don’t have to. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Your opinion will prove valuable to almost everyone involved in a certain endeavor — one that you seem to understand more clearly than most. WEDNESDAY’S SOLUTION

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) You

may not be one to keep a secret today, and you have to let people know that before they reveal things that must not be shared.

WEDNESDAY’S SOLUTION

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) You want to part of the “in” crowd, but in reality, you have little in common with them, and they can offer you little of value right now. ARIES (March 21-April 19) You must be willing to face the truth today, even though it’s not likely to give you much comfort. You benefit from a realistic outlook.

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

80 | 66

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You may not be able to keep up your current efforts for long, as you will soon have to deal with a shortage of energy or resources — or both.

TODAY: The chance of scattered showers remains during the morning as the approaching cold front merges with moisture streaming up from Hurricane Michael to our south. Steadier rain is possible during the afternoon into evening, with an embedded thunderstorm or two, as the core remnants of Michael get closer.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) You will enjoy being needed at this time. A friend steers others toward you in the hope that you can help. CANCER (June 21-July 22) You fear that a storm is brewing just over the horizon, and though you don’t have specifics, you will want to prepare.

PEARLS BEFORE SWINE | STEPHAN PASTIS

AVG. HIGH: 70 AVG. LOW: 51 SUNRISE: 7:13 a.m.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Someone

who has been watching you is eager to make contact. Things take an unusual turn today. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You find that although the odds are in your favor, getting a certain job done on time proves difficult for reasons you may never have suspected.

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.

RECORD HIGH: 90 RECORD LOW: 33 SUNSET: 6:35 p.m.

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

65 | 54

61 | 50

SUNDAY

MONDAY

67 | 49

70 | 56

NR

1809: Just over three years after the famous Lewis and Clark expedition ends, Meriwether Lewis is found dead in a Tennessee inn, an apparent suicide; he was 35.

1958: NASA launches the lunar probe Pioneer 1; it fails to travel as far out as planned, falls back toward Earth and burns up in the atmosphere.

1991: Testifying before the Senate Judiciary Committee, Anita Hill accuses Supreme Court nominee Clarence Thomas of sexually harassing her; Thomas reappeared before the panel to denounce the proceedings as a “high-tech lynching.”

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


54 | EXPRESS | 10.11.2018 | THURSDAY

fun+games Crossword

GET OUT

ACROSS

38 Tokyo, once

DOWN

31 Male Fed

46 Driver for hire

1

A guttural laugh?

Throw in

Oboe ancestor

39 Plea to the Coast Guard

1

6

2

Floral necklace

33 Genius? Not even close

47 Quick on one’s feet

11 Across-the-pond airer

40 Signals with a thumbs-up

3

Wife of Saturn

34 Relatives of 33-Down

48 Future mushroom

14 Greyhound loading site

41 Quick cut

36 Huge domed rooms

50 Vino region

Handgun sheath

5

Ringlike islands

6

Palms yielding starches

37 ___ out a living

51 Moviegoers follow it

41 Outlawed pitch

54 Suffix with “professional”

15 Mountaintop dwelling

44 Move sneakily

16 State neighboring Fla.

46 Handy symbol of hard work?

7 Rope-making fiber 8

Greek war god

17 The forcing from a fixed position

48 Simon Legree and his ilk

43 Heavyweight legend

9

Beat everyone

44 Softest solid

19 Tough thing to crack

49 One way you can say that?

10 Antifreeze predecessor

20 Single-masted crafts

50 Little software program?

11 Extreme evictions

21 Crane part

52 Coal mover

12 Cheek application

23 Floyd and Cleavon 26 Fen-ish

53 Disturbance of the normal position

13 Vindictively tart-tongued

27 Exit

58 Deli sandwich

28 Scald and cool vegetables

22 Tolkien monster

59 Mary of “The Maltese Falcon”

30 Like Pegasus

23 Tips for salespeople

60 Third monastic hour

24 Arctic digs?

31 Fertilizer from bats 32 Dim going back? 35 “Deck the Halls” verb 36 This puzzle’s topic

61 Affirmative reply 62 Strike hard, centuries ago 63 Muse playing a lyre

45 Picture in one’s mind

55 Financial portfolio part 56 Fourth qtr. month 57 “New” prefix

WEDNESDAY’S SOLUTION

18 Buck lovers

25 Some surgeries 26 Every ___ king 28 Harbor bouncers 29 Washrooms, for short

EDITED BY TIMOTHY E. PARKER

42 Communion plates

4

2019 BERNARD/EBB

SONGWRITING AWARDS

“It’s about the words and music”

$10,000 GRAND PRIZE Theater, dance, music and more!

Deadline to apply: November 5, 2018 Songwriters from Maryland, Washington, D.C. and Virginia are eligible. A young songwriter under 18 years old will also receive $2,500.

For contest rules and application, please visit www.bethesda.org or call 301-215-6660.

e for th Look e to the Guid Arts every Livelyursday in ss Th end Pa Week

If it’s live entertainment you’re looking for, turn to Washington’s go-to source for what’s happening on local stages.

To advertise: e-mail guidetoarts@washpost.com, or call 202-334-7006. N14-1782 3x5


THURSDAY | 10.11.2018 | EXPRESS | 55

people

GETTY IMAGES

Cardi forgets how to use her phone

BABIES

We can assume Owen reacted by saying, ‘Wow!’ Owen Wilson has welcomed his third child, a baby girl, according to Us Weekly. Varunie Vongsvirates, a business development representative, reportedly gave birth to Lyla Aranya Wilson on Tuesday. Wilson already has a 7-year-old son with ex-girlfriend Jade Duell and a 4-year-old son with ex Caroline Lindqvist. (EXPRESS)

GETTY IMAGES

HIGH FASHION

DEPORTATION

Italy: Wait, do we really have to take him back? Former “The Real Housewives of New Jersey” star Joe Giudice is set to be deported to his native Italy at the end of his prison sentence, Page Six reported Wednesday. Giudice and his wife, Teresa, pleaded guilty to fraud in 2014. Giudice’s 41-month sentence is set to end March 14. His wife already served her 11-month sentence. (EXPRESS)

‘Three’s Company’ reboot starts well

HOW TO REACH US

CONTACT THE NEWSROOM

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

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

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

or email circulation@wpost.com.

BREAKUPS?

Shauna’s side of the story conspicuously absent Ben Affleck and Shauna Sexton are no longer dating, according to People. The 46-year-old actor and 22-year-old model were seen together several times over the summer before Affleck checked himself into rehab for alcohol addiction. “There was nothing to split from as it has been casual,” a friend of Affleck’s told People. “He enjoyed being with her but is working on himself.” (EXPRESS)

JOHN MAYER, speaking out against toxic masculinity and the “male contract” at his concert Sunday in Baltimore, in a video captured by TMZ

FIND US ONLINE

WHO WE ARE EXECUTIVE EDITOR | Dan Caccavaro MANAGING EDITOR, NEWS | Jeffrey Tomik

SENIOR FEATURES WRITERS | Sadie Dingfelder, Kristen Page-Kirby

MANAGING EDITOR, FEATURES | Rudi Greenberg

DC RIDER COLUMNIST | Kery Murakami

CREATIVE DIRECTOR | Ellen Collier ART DIRECTOR | Jon Benedict

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

FEATURES: express.features@wpost.com

DEPUTY MANAGING EDITOR | Serena Golden

LOCAL: page3@wpost.com

NEWS AND DIGITAL EDITOR | Zainab Mudallal

NEWS: express.news@wpost.com

COPY CHIEF | Vanessa H. Larson

SPORTS: express.sports@wpost.com

STORY EDITOR | Adam Sapiro

CIRCULATION MANAGER | Charles Love

PRODUCTION SUPERVISOR | Matthew Liddi

MARKETING MANAGER | Travis Meyer

CORRECTIONS: Spot a mistake?

Let us know at corrections@wpost.com.

verbatim

“You do not possess the universal ability to have any woman that you seek.”

The 2019 Met Gala will be chaired by pop star Lady Gaga, tennis star Serena Williams and singer Harry Styles, along with Gucci designer Alessandro Michele and Vogue editor Anna Wintour, the Metropolitan Museum of Art announced Tuesday. “Camp: Notes on Fashion” will be the title of the Costume Institute exhibit, which will run from May 9 through Sept. 8, with the corresponding Met Gala set for May 6. The museum said in a statement that the exhibit — featuring approximately 175 items — will get its framework from a 1964 essay by Susan Sontag, “Notes on ‘Camp.’ ” (AP)

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Cardi B has defended her decision to throw her shoe at Nicki Minaj at a New York Fashion Week gala last month. Speaking to W magazine, the rapper said she found out that Minaj had liked a comment on Instagram criticizing her as a mother. “For somebody that don’t have a child to like that comment?” Cardi B said. Defending the timing, she added: “I’m not going to catch another artist in the grocery store.” (EXPRESS)

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56 | EXPRESS | 10.11.2018 | THURSDAY

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