EXPRESS_10182018

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SMITHSONIAN HIGHLIGHTS BLACK FILMMAKERS 26 today’s pape r in side

OCTOBER 18, 2018 | A PUBLICATION OF

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W2 | EXPRESS | 10.18.2018 | THURSDAY


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Thursday 10.18.18

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Grisly account Probe of journalist’s disappearance strains U.S. ties to Riyadh 10

WIZARDS SEASON PREVIEW

THE WASHINGTON POST

BIG IFs

Noise nightmare Silver Spring residents are being kept awake by Purple Line work 6

The addition of Dwight Howard is one of several changes that could help make Washington a top team in the East — as long as everything goes just right 14-15

O cannabis

AP AND GETTY IMAGES/EXPRESS ILLUSTRATION

SONY PICTURES CLASSICS

Canadian weed-lovers rejoice as pot becomes legal nationwide 8

A wild, wild life Rupert Everett lives Oscar Wilde’s final days for ‘Happy Prince’ 46 am

52 | 34

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2 | EXPRESS | 10.18.2018 | THURSDAY

FABRICE COFFRINI (AFP/GETTY IMAGES)

eyeopeners

BIG BIRD: A swan is seen Tuesday with Geneva’s landmark fountain – known as “Jet d’Eau,” which is nearly 460 feet high – in the distance. It was illuminated in blue to mark World Food Day 2018.

WILD ANIMAL, TAME EXPLOITS

THIS JUST IN

GREEN THUMB, STICKY FINGERS

Antelope coasts to headline status largely on famous name

Vulgar, irate Facebook users are also not that hot with geography

Landscaper named Gardner somehow driven to plant theft

The city of Portland, Mich. (with a population under 4,000), is struggling to explain to angry social media users that it is not Portland, Ore., WXMI-TV reported Monday. “Recently we’ve been told we shouldn’t exist, there’s no reason for our existence, why are we even here,” Chief of Police Star Thomas said, adding that comments directed at the other Portland often have to be removed from the city’s Facebook page due to their vulgarity. (EXPRESS)

A Salem, Mass., man dubbed the “Brazen Botanist” by police after he was caught on camera stealing plants from a porch was sentenced Tuesday to a year in jail. Police said Joseph Gardner was seen on a doorbell camera taking hanging plants from a home in May. Two of the three missing plants were found at his girlfriend’s home, and Gardner was arrested in August. His attorney said he had been working as a landscaper before his arrest. (AP)

A young antelope named Taylor Swift got out of her enclosure at the Sacramento Zoo on Sunday. The bongo calf’s escape led officials to briefly close the zoo. Spokeswoman Laurel Vincent told the Sacramento Bee the 1-year-old was with her mother when visitors reported her escape. Staff captured her about 15 minutes later. Vincent said the calf was named after the singer because she was “very swiftly on her feet after birth.” (AP)

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THURSDAY | 10.18.2018 | EXPRESS | 3

page three CAPITAL WEATHER GANG | THE WASHINGTON POST

PET PERMISSIONS

Persimmons forecast a snowy season ahead PERSPECTIVE Start tuning up the snowblowers, and break out the sleds! Persimmon seeds are forecasting above-average snowfall in the Washington region once again this winter. It’s the fourth time in five years that the seeds have called for an above-averagesnowfall winter in the D.C. area. According to weather folklore, the pattern inside persimmon seeds can give you a good idea of what the upcoming winter will be like. It is said that a spoon pattern inside the seeds indicates there will be lots of snow to shovel, a fork pattern indicates the winter will be mild with good eating, and a knife pattern indicates the winter will be cold with cutting winds. Persimmons are a sweet fruit that many people mistake for tomatoes. Some are grown in California for purchase in U.S.

KEVIN AMBROSE (FOR THE WASHINGTON POST)

Weather folklore is fun, but it’s often wrong. Proceed accordingly.

County looks to expand list of OK critters

The writer found a spoon pattern in seeds from this year’s persimmons.

food markets, though the most widely cultivated species are native to Asia. There is, however, one species — Diospyros virginiana — which is native to the eastern United States. As for the accuracy of persimmon forecasting: It’s not great. The persimmon-seed winter outlook for our area over the past four years has been 25 percent. The seeds are less accurate than flipping a coin for the long-range forecast. With this in mind, if you’re a snow lover like me, you may be

happy to just see and hear about snow in the long-range forecast, even if it comes from a fruit that doesn’t seem to produce accurate results. I cut through four seeds from four different persimmons cut from a tree growing in Leesburg, Va. The first seed was a blank, just white inside, but the next three seeds I sliced open had a spoon pattern. After finding three spoon patterns in a row, I was convinced of the snowy forecast. KEVIN AMBROSE (THE WASHINGTON POST)

Fairfax County has proposed expanding its list of “commonly accepted pets” to include hedgehogs, chinchillas and hermit crabs. The Board of Supervisors voted Tuesday to advertise a public hearing on the proposed change, WTOP reported. Officials said the animals are legal in nearby jurisdictions such as Arlington, and some residents already have these animals, unaware they are not permitted.

MEDIA

Redskins reporter Rich Tandler dies at 63 NBC Sports Washington Redskins reporter Rich Tandler died Tuesday night at age 63. Tandler covered the Redskins for various publications for more than a decade. The team will pay tribute to him at FedEx Field this weekend, and no one will sit in his longtime press box seat — Row 1, Seat 15 — again. (TWP)

(EXPRESS)

THROWBACK THURSDAY

10.18.2010

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

Nine years after the 2001 disappearance and slaying of 24-year-old D.C. intern Chandra Levy, the trial of her accused killer began. Ingmar Guandique was convicted, but later granted a new trial and then deported.

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local

Reckoning for D.C. Catholics

MARYLAND

Woman guilty of fraud; FBI said she cast spells

THE DISTRICT As one of 12 sons and daughters raised in a devout Catholic family, he had a gnawing feeling for almost 20 years that someday, he would learn that one of the priests he grew up around had been accused of abusing children. On Monday night, the news that one man feared finally arrived. “I never thought it would be Monsignor Coyne,” said the former parishioner, who did not want to be named. “It’s just painful to hear.” He saw Joseph Coyne’s name on a list, released by the Archdiocese of Washington on Monday, of 31 clergy members who served in the archdiocese who have been credibly accused of sexually abusing children, dating to 1948. Some of the crimes were widely known. Eighteen of the men were eventually arrested, and at least five more turned up on lists of accused clergy members in public databases. But the crimes allegedly committed by others were kept secret for decades. The list does not include those deemed not credibly accused or accused of other sexual misconduct. The revelations sent shock waves through Washington-area parishes, including St. Andrew the Apostle in Silver Spring, which Coyne led in the 1960s, and Little Flower in Bethesda, where he moved until his retirement.

D.C.-area Catholics were stunned to learn some beloved priests were accused of abuse decades ago.

Coyne was ordained in 1945 and served as a priest for nearly 50 years. On Monday, the archdiocese acknowledged for the first time that Coyne had been accused in 1992 of abusing a girl in 1962. Parishioners said Tuesday that they were astonished that they had never heard about the 26-year-old allegation. “He married my parents. He came to our house for dinner. He baptized my brothers and sister. He married two of my siblings,” said Robert Ostmann Jr., who grew up in the Little Flower parish. “My mother is devastated.” Ostmann distanced himself from the Catholic Church many years ago because of his disgust about the sexual abuse scandal exposed by the Boston Globe in

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“I gotta tell you, if somebody like [Joseph] Coyne was implicated in this, it’s got to be so widespread.” ROBERT OSTMANN JR., who grew up in the Little Flower parish, where Coyne served and distanced himself from the Catholic church because of his disgust with the abuse scandal

2002 and the church’s response to it. “I just think it’s pervasive,” he said. “I just don’t have much faith in the institution.” The Washington list comes at a tumultuous time: Pope Francis accepted on Friday the retirement

of Cardinal Donald Wuerl, the archdiocese’s leader, who said he would step down earlier than planned because of criticism he has received for how he dealt with abusive priests when he was the bishop of the Pittsburgh diocese. About 30 others prayed at Little Flower together Tuesday, many of them retirees who have been involved in the church for decades. The Rev. Patrick Lewis did not mention the list of abusers in his homily. “ W h at ’s most sho ck i ng is that the parish hasn’t addressed it today,” said one longtime parishioner, who did not want to be named. “They’ve been surprisingly mute on this entire topic, and it’s really upsetting.” JULIE ZAUZMER AND MICHELLE BOORSTEIN (THE WASHINGTON POST)

TOUGH TEST

The proportion of officers who took the Baltimore police sergeant’s exam and passed, according to the city’s Department of Human Resources, which oversees the exam. The Baltimore Sun reported that 32 of the 273 officers who took the latest test passed. It has been given every two years, and the passing rate was more than 60 percent in 2016 and 50 percent in 2014 and 2012. The city’s Department of Human Resources is assessing the latest pass rate, calling it an “anomaly,” according to the mayor’s office. (AP)

expressline

D.C. elementary school teacher accused of rape in Montgomery County

SALWAN GEORGES (THE WASHINGTON POST)

Parishioners express shock, dismay over list of accused priests

A jury has convicted an investment adviser of charges she defrauded investors out of millions of dollars, some of which she used to pay more than $800,000 for prayers by Hindu priests in India to ward off federal investigators. Jurors convicted Dawn Bennett, 56, on Wednesday of fraud charges after a two-week trial in Maryland. Prosecutors said Bennett used money people invested in her luxury sportswear company to finance her lavish lifestyle. The FBI said agents also found evidence she cast “hoodoo” spells to stymie government attorneys investigating her. (AP) MARYLAND

Beer company accused of corrupting reps, students Natural Light’s recent promotion targeting College Park has drawn the ire of Maryland’s comptroller. Peter Franchot called for an investigation, asserting large brewing companies have corrupted Maryland legislators with questionable contributions. Referencing the 77-can packs of Natural Light available briefly and only in College Park, Franchot said “big brewers like Budweiser who are selling 77 cans of beer for 39 cents each to college kids” don’t like craft brewers. Franchot said the stunt promoted binge drinking among young people. (AP) ANNAPOLIS

Sailing Hall of Fame will leave Maryland The National Sailing Hall of Fame will officially leave Annapolis for Rhode Island, barring any last-minute changes. The Capital reported the board of directors voted 17-9 Tuesday to proceed with its deal to purchase space in Newport’s historic Armory Building. The site still needs to be inspected. Despite the departure, a spokeswoman for Mayor Gavin Buckley said Annapolis won’t relinquish its title as the “sailing capital of the world.” (AP)

1 critically injured, 8 others hurt Wednesday in Baltimore County charter bus crash


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Purple Line creates a noise nightmare Silver Spring residents

BACKSTROM cannot sleep while

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SILVER SPRING The noise that jolts Annie Tulkin and her husband awake in the middle of the night vibrates their bed and sounds like a jackhammer going off intermittently inside the walls of their Silver Spring home, she said. The pounding and shaking that began three weeks ago can start at 1 a.m., 3 a.m. or any time in the dead of night, Tulkin said. Her husband sticks in ear plugs while she retreats to their quieter guest bedroom upstairs, hoping their 3-year-old sleeps through it. Tulkin has traced the nighttime racket to a massive machine hammering through bedrock while excavating a 1,000-foot tunnel that in four years or so will carry light-rail Purple Line trains beneath her neighborhood off Plymouth Street, just east of downtown Silver Spring. “You can’t be waking up babies and toddlers at 3 a.m. — that’s just not acceptable,” Tulkin said. “We all accept that it’s a construction zone. But at 3 a.m.? No.” What angers Tulkin and many of her neighbors most is that the Maryland Transit Administration appears to have been well aware that the tunneling, which is

DOUG KAPUSTIN (FOR THE WASHINGTON POST)

work continues 24/7

The Purple Line will carry passengers from Bethesda to New Carrollton, Md. Currently, its construction is keeping some residents from sleeping.

allowed 24 hours a day, seven days a week, would be particularly disruptive. In a little-known 2016 memorandum of understanding, state and Montgomery County officials agreed the tunneling would be exempt from local limits on construction-related noise. “They were fully aware that this would cause noise and problems for people,” said Tulkin, who otherwise supports the Purple Line. “They essentially decided people’s sleep doesn’t matter to them.” At a tense public meeting Tuesday night, about 30 residents received sympathy, but no relief from Maryland transit officials. Mike Madden, MTA’s deputy director on the Purple Line,

said prohibiting the overnight excavation would delay the entire 16-mile project because the tunnel’s construction is critical to the overall schedule. “We regret that it’s that disruptive,” Madden told residents. Officials said the noisiest work will be finished in about six months — too long for many. Neil Fagan said he, his wife and their 2-year-old daughter can’t sleep amid the banging. “They haven’t thought about the human beings this impacts,” Fagan said. “They just signed a waiver to let [the contractor] drill holes in the night without consulting the people it affects. It just seems immoral.” KATHERINE SHAVER (THE WASHINGTON POST)

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Rain squashes Maryland pumpkin crop

Maryland farmers say a wet summer has largely drowned this fall’s pumpkin crop. The Baltimore Sun reported soils have remained saturated all growing season. Steve Weber of Weber’s Cider Mill Farm said he doesn’t know of any local farmers selling their own crop. Instead, farmers will likely offer pumpkins imported from other states and bought at auction. (AP) Baltimore County house fire Tuesday night hospitalizes three police officers and 90-year-old woman


THURSDAY | 10.18.2018 | EXPRESS | 7

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8 | EXPRESS | 10.18.2018 | THURSDAY

nation+world

‘Prohibition has ended’ Marijuana aficionados in Canada rejoice as pot becomes legal across the country

WASHINGTONPOST.COM WORLDVIEWS

Hungary bans homeless from living on streets

IAN WILLMS (GETTY IMAGES)

CANADA Ian Power was among the first to buy legal recreational marijuana in Canada, but he has no plans to smoke it. He plans to frame it. Canada became the largest country with a legal national marijuana marketplace as sales began early Wednesday in Newfoundland. Power was first in line at a store in St. John’s. “I am going to frame it and hang it on my wall. I’m not even going to smoke it. I’m just going to save it forever,” Power said. And there was more good news for pot aficionados: Canada will pardon all those with convictions for possessing up to 30 grams of marijuana, the newly legal threshold. People will have to apply for the pardons, but will no longer have to wait five years after a conviction or pay hundreds of dollars in fees, as they do now. “This is going to going to make a real difference for people who have been unfairly impacted by the previous regime,” said Canadian Prime Minister Trudeau, who also said that he had no plans to use marijuana himself. Canada has had legal medical marijuana since 2001 and Trudeau’s government has spent two years working toward expanding that to include recreational marijuana. The goal is to better reflect society’s changing opinion about marijuana and bring black market operators into a regulated system. Uruguay was the first country to legalize marijuana. In St. John’s, hundreds of customers were lined up around the block at the private store on Water Street, the main commercial drag in the provincial capital,

Torontonians watch the “bud drop” at the stroke of midnight to celebrate the legalization of recreational marijuana.

by the time the clock struck midnight. A festive atmosphere broke out, with some customers lighting up on the sidewalk and motorists honking their horns in support as they drove by the crowd. “Prohibition has ended right now. We just made history,” said the 46-year-old Power, who bought a gram. “I can’t believe we did it. All the years of activism paid off. “ Bruce Linton, the CEO of marijuana producer and retailer Canopy Growth, made the sale to Power. “It was extremely emotional,” he said. “Several people who work for us have been working on this for their entire adult life and several of them were in tears.” Linton said Canada is at the forefront of the industry because it is federally legal in Canada and federally illegal in the U.S. Canada’s national approach has allowed for unfettered

How it works Just the beginning: At least 111 legal pot shops were expected to open across the nation of 37 million people on Wednesday, with many more to come. Mail-order weed: Canadians can order marijuana products through websites run by provinces or private retailers and have them delivered to their homes by mail. Approaches vary: Each province is taking its own approach within a federal framework. Some are operating government-run stores, some are allowing private retailers, and some both. (AP)

industry banking, inter-province shipments of cannabis and billions of dollars in investment — a sharp contrast with national prohibition in the U.S. Nine U.S. states have legalized recreational use of pot, and more than 30 have approved medical

Staffan de Mistura, the U.N.’s most senior diplomat for Syria, to leave his post

marijuana. California, the largest legal market in the U.S., earlier this month became the first state with a law mandating the expunging of criminal convictions for marijuana-related offenses that no are longer illegal. U.S. Customs and Border Protection invited Canadian media to a conference call on Tuesday so officials could reiterate that marijuana remains illegal under U.S. federal law and that those who are caught at the border with pot are subject to arrest and prosecution. Among those waiting outside a Nova Scotia government cannabis shop in Sydney River, was Canadian fiddler and singer Ashley MacIsaac. ‘I don’t need to be a criminal anymore, and that’s a great feeling,” said MacIsaac, who had been arrested for possession in 2001. “And my new dealer is the prime minister!” ROB GILLIES, GENE JOHNSON AND TRACEY LINDEMAN (AP)

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s three-year-old pledge to defend Christianity is now part of the country’s constitution. But aid groups say the constitution now poses a threat to the ideals it is supposed to protect. While Christian communities across Europe work to provide support to homeless people, Orban’s government passed a constitutional amendment this summer that bans people from “living on the streets.” The vague legislation that took effect Monday has been criticized as “cruel and incompatible with international human rights law” by United Nations experts. Hungary argues that the country offers sufficient space in emergency shelters to accommodate all individuals without a home. But human rights groups say the measures are part of a broader illiberal crackdown without humanitarian motivations. Hungary has passed many laws in recent years that have turned homeless people into de facto criminals. By Monday, many homeless people had disappeared from the central streets of the country’s capital, Budapest, Hungarian media outlets said. If individuals refuse to follow orders to relocate multiple times, Hungarian authorities can now impose fines, prison sentences or mandatory participation in public works programs. RICK NOACK

American student asks Israeli high court to overturn her deportation order for alleged dissent


THURSDAY | 10.18.2018 | EXPRESS | 9

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nation+world

Searches, leaks intensify pressure over Khashoggi

BRUSSELS

EU, Britain give talks on Brexit more time

Investigation of writer’s disappearance strains U.S. ties to Saudi Arabia

SHIFTING STORMS

Tornadoes seem to be moving east CHRIS MCGRATH (GETTY IMAGES)

ISTANBUL Turkish crime-scene investigators searched the home of the Saudi consul general in Istanbul on Wednesday in the disappearance of Saudi writer Jamal Khashoggi, and a progovernment newspaper published a gruesome account of the journalist’s alleged slaying. As Saudi Arabia’s green national flag flapped overhead, forensics teams entered the residence, only 1.2 miles from the consulate where Khashoggi vanished Oct. 2 while trying to pick up paperwork to get married. It was the second such extraordinary search of a site considered under international law to be sovereign Saudi territory after investigators spent hours in the consulate earlier this week. The account published in the Yeni Safak newspaper alleged that Saudi officials cut off Khashoggi’s fingers and then decapitated him at the consulate as his fiancee waited outside. Consul General Mohammed al-Otaibi could be heard on the tape telling those allegedly torturing Khashoggi: “Do this outside; you’re going to get me in trouble,” the newspaper reported. The searches and the leaks in Turkish media have ensured the world’s attention remains

Turkish forensic police search the home of the Saudi Arabian consul general.

focused on what happened to K hashoggi, a Washington Post columnist who went into a selfKhashoggi imposed exile in the U.S. over the rise of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. It also put further strains on the relationship between the kingdom, the world’s largest oil exporter, and its main security guarantor, the United States, as tensions with Iran and elsewhere in the Middle East remain high. Flying back home after a visit to both Saudi Arabia and Turkey, U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo remained positive about an ongoing Saudi probe into Khashoggi’s disappearance,

$900M

but he stressed that answers are needed. “Sooner’s better than later for everyone,” Pompeo said. Meanwhile, the United States received a payment of $100 million from Saudi Arabia on Tuesday, the same day Pompeo arrived in Riyadh, a State Department official confirmed Wednesday. Saudi Arabia publicly pledged the payment to support U.S. stabilization efforts in northeastern Syria in August, but questions persisted about when and if Saudi officials would come through with the money. The timing of the transfer raised questions about a potential payoff as Riyadh seeks to manage the blowback over Khashoggi’s disappearance. (AP/THE WASHINGTON POST)

Tornadoes have been shifting — decreasing in the Great Plains but spinning up more in states along the Mississippi River and farther east, a new study shows. Scientists aren’t quite certain why. A report published in Wednesday’s journal Climate and Atmospheric Science said that the shift could increase fatalities and damage because the area with increasing tornado activity is larger and more populous, said study lead author Victor Gensini, a professor at Northern Illinois University. He noted one theory: Thunderstorms and tornadoes form along a “dry line” where moist air collides with arid skies. That dry line is moving east, an idea that is consistent with climate change models, he said. (AP)

A WHOLE LOTTO MONEY

The amount of the Mega Millions jackpot after lottery officials raised the estimated prize a day after another drawing without a winner increased the prize to $868 million. The next drawing is Friday. The estimated jackpot for that drawing would be the second-largest lottery prize in U.S. history. The largest lottery jackpot was a $1.6 billion Powerball prize won in January 2016. The odds of winning the jackpot aren’t good, at 1 in 302.5 million. (AP) 2 Florida ex-officers get 1 year in prison for framing black teenager for burglaries

Leaders from the European Union and Britain shrugged off previous deadlines Wednesday, and gave themselves several more weeks to clinch a deal ahead of the separation. After the EU insisted for months that this week’s summit was key in arriving at a deal, its Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier said “we need much time, much more time.” Britain is set to depart the bloc on March 29. (AP) COURTS

Treasury staffer accused in banking report leaks A Treasury Department senior official was accused Wednesday of leaking banking reports of suspects charged in special counsel Robert Mueller’s probe. Natalie Mayflower Sours Edwards is accused of leaking confidential “suspicious activity reports” to an unidentified journalist. The papers do cite about a dozen stories published by Buzzfeed News. (AP) THE HAGUE, NETHERLANDS

Prosecutor warns Israel against leveling village The International Criminal Court’s chief prosecutor, Fatou Bensouda, issued a warning Wednesday that if Israel destroys a Palestinian Bedouin village on the West Bank as planned, it could constitute a war crime. Israel says Khan al-Ahmar was built illegally and has offered to resettle its residents. (AP) NEW DELHI

Minister resigns after harassment allegations A junior minister in the Indian government stepped down after more than a dozen women accused him of sexual harassment. M.J. Akbar, minister of state for external affairs, faced allegations of harassment and assault from women who had worked for him when he was a newspaper editor. Akbar has denied the allegations. (TWP)

Arpaio files libel suit against New York Times, claiming it undercut his chances to run again


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THURSDAY | 10.18.2018 | EXPRESS | 11

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12 | EXPRESS | 10.18.2018 | THURSDAY

nation+world Trump threatens new crackdown as more families enter the U.S. IMMIGRATION The number of migrant parents entering the United States with children has surged to record levels in the three months since President Trump ended family separations at the border. Border Patrol agents arrested 16,658 family members in September, the highest one-month total on record and an 80 percent increase from July, according to unpublished Department of Homeland Security statistics obtained by The Washington Post. Large groups of 100 or more Central American parents and

children have been crossing the Rio Grande and the deserts of Arizona to turn themselves in, and after citing a fear of return, the families are typically assigned a court date and released from custody. “We’re getting hammered daily,” said one Border Patrol agent in South Texas. Having campaigned on a promise to stop illegal immigration and build a border wall, Trump now faces a spiraling enforcement challenge with no ready solutions. The soaring arrest numbers have left him in a furious state, White House aides say. Trump has been receiving regular updates on the border numbers, telling senior policy adviser Stephen Miller and Chief

ERIC GAY (AP)

Migrant crossings hit record

A U.S. Customs and Border Patrol vehicle passes along a section of border levee wall in Hidalgo, Texas.

of Staff John Kelly that something has to change, according to senior administration officials. Trump has been pushing once

more for a reinstatement of a family-separation policy in some form, which he believes is the only thing that has worked, despite the controversy it triggered. Miller is pushing for a more aggressive stance, including changes at U.S. ports of entry that would make it tougher for asylum-seeking Central Americans to gain admission. Another option under consideration, known as “binary choice,” would detain migrant families together and give parents a choice — stay in immigration jail with their child as their asylum case proceeds, or allow their child to be assigned to a government shelter while a relative or guardian can apply to gain custody. NICK MIROFF

U.S. economy tops Davos list — with a caveat

AND JOSH DAWSEY (THE WASHINGTON POST)

ANSA VIA AP

Migrant caravan moves through Guatemala

A LATER ERUPTION

Excavations in the ancient buried city of Pompeii have yielded a truly historic find: a charcoal inscription apparently dating the eruption of Mount Vesuvius to October of A.D. 79, two months later than thought. The inscription carries the equivalent date of Oct. 17, supporting the idea that the volcano erupted a week after that, rather than Aug. 23 as had been believed. (AP)

ORLANDO ESTRADA (AFP/GETTY IMAGES)

Find challenges story of Pompeii

CHIQUIMULA, GUATEMALA | A Honduran migrant carries a little girl on his shoulders Tuesday as they pass through Chiquimula, Guatemala. More than 2,000 Hondurans are traveling in a caravan through Guatemala on the way to the United States. Also on Wednesday, President Trump tweeted that the caravan “of people from South of the Border” is a “Great Midterm issue for Republicans!” urging the GOP to address U.S. immigration laws.

Driver opens fire on North Carolina trooper during traffic stop, killing him

BUSINESS For the first time in a decade, the United States was crowned the world’s most competitive economy by the organization behind the Davos economic forum. The World Economic Forum on Wednesday released its latest global competitiveness report, which looked at 140 economies based on 98 wideranging social, political and economic factors. The organization assessed a variety of metrics, including infrastructure, information and communications technology, macroeconomic stability, health, skills and labor market. Countries were given scores out of 100. The U.S. took the top slot with a score of 85.6, buoyed by its capacity for innovation, evident in its high scores in business dynamism and entrepreneurial culture. The report also highlighted the nation’s strong labor market and financial system. But authors warned the U.S. economy is under threat from a “weakening social fabric,” corruption, and security and IT issues. It also pointed out that the United States is far behind most advanced economies in health, with life expectancy six years behind competitors Singapore and Japan. Singapore came in second, heralded for its infrastructure and openness as a global trading hub. Germany was third, notable for its macroeconomic stability. TAYLOR TELFORD (THE WASHINGTON POST)

Residents of hard-hit Mexico Beach, Fla., return home for the first time since Hurricane Michael


THURSDAY | 10.18.2018 | EXPRESS | 13

nation+world

More than 50 others hurt in shotgun attack at vocational school CRIMEA Russian officials said an 18-yearold student attacked his vocational school Wednesday in Crimea, going on a rampage that killed 19 students and left more than 50 people wounded before killing himself. R u s s i a ’s I n ve s t i g a t i ve

Committee, the nation’s top investigative agency, said the attacker was caught on security cameras entering Kerch Polytechnic College in the Black Sea city of Kerch and firing at students. It identified him as Vladislav Roslyakov. Sergei Aksyonov, the regional leader in Crimea, said the fourthyear student at the school had acted alone and killed himself in the library after the attack. The committee said all the victims died of gunshot wounds.

KERCH.FM (AFP/GETTY IMAGES)

Student gunman kills 19 in Crimea Police and medics respond Wednesday to a school shooting in Crimea.

The statements came after hours of rapidly shifting explanations by Russian officials as to what exactly happened at the school. Officials at first reported a gas explosion, then said

Death toll from floods in southwest region of France rises to 14; 1 still missing

an explosive device had ripped through the college canteen during lunchtime in a suspected terrorist attack. Witnesses, however, reported that victims were being killed by a gunman or gunmen.

Reflecting the official confusion, Russian President Vladimir Putin said the victims were killed by an explosion just as the Investigative Committee was announcing they were fatally shot. Russian news media showed a security camera image of the suspect wearing white T-shirt walking down the school’s stairs with a shotgun. Russian television said Roslyakov’s mother, a nurse at a local hospital, was helping the wounded, unaware that her son was the suspected attacker. It quoted those who knew Roslyakov as saying he was not very sociable and often put gloomy posts on social media. VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV AND NATALIYA VASILYEVA (AP)

Taliban bombing in Afghanistan’s Helmand province kills candidate in parliamentary elections

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14 | EXPRESS | 10.18.2018 | THURSDAY

wizardspreview SEASON OUTLOOK | ANALYSIS

and the Wizards — never a team to lack confidence — believe they are a serious contender. Newly acquired guard Austin Rivers, already showing that Wizards swagger, told cbssports.com: “I think we’re heavily slept on. … I get the hype of a couple of the other teams, but I think we have a chance to compete with the best of the East.” With the Wizards’ season opening vs. Miami tonight (8, NBCSWA), here are this year’s best- and worst-case scenarios. JEFFREY TOMIK (EXPRESS)

TONI L. SANDYS PHOTOS (THE WASHINGTON POST)

Possibilities and pitfalls

With LeBron James out West, the Eastern Conference is wide open

Will Dwight Howard’s health hold up?

Can Bradley Beal build off his All-Star season?

Is the bench really deeper and better?

Will a small-ball lineup actually work?

Can they improve their defensive effort?

Best-case scenario: Guess how many games Dwight Howard played last year? 81! Even with a nagging back injury, the center has been in the top five in the NBA in rebounding each of the past three seasons, averaging 12.3 boards a game in that time. The last Washington player to average more than 12 rebounds was Jeff Ruland in 1983-84. Howard will be the best center the Wizards have had in decades.

Best-case scenario: Bradley Beal was a first-time All-Star last season and finished tied for 13th in the league in scoring, averaging 22.6 points. He’s also become a more complete player, with career highs in assists and rebounds in 2017-18. He’s only 25 and is entering his prime. If he continues to progress, he will be the best shooting guard in the Eastern Conference.

Best-case scenario: The Wizards improved from 29th in the league in bench scoring in 2016-17 to 16th last season, but they still lacked a dangerous scoring threat off the bench. Enter Austin Rivers, who was a starter for the Clippers last season and averaged 15.1 points a game. With Rivers, Kelly Oubre Jr., above, and Jeff Green, who was also signed this offseason, the Wizards won’t need to rely as much on their star backcourt.

Best-case scenario: Brooks has tested out a small-ball lineup this preseason with Markieff Morris, above, or Green at center. The Wizards are loaded with athletic swingmen who can hit 3s and defend multiple positions, and a lineup with five of them on the floor at the same time will spread out defenses and open up lanes for John Wall and Beal to take advantage.

Best-case scenario: The Wizards were in the middle of the pack in defensive efficiency last season and allowed the ninthmost second-chance points. But adding an elite rebounder like Howard will help. His former team, the Hornets, allowed the fewest second-chance points in 2017-18. The three-time defensive player of the year will make his new team a top-10 defensive unit.

Worst-case scenario: The Warriors have made every team want to play small-ball lineups. Even the Cavaliers went small during recent playoff runs. But it doesn’t work for everyone and — this won’t come as a surprise — Markieff Morris and Jeff Green are not Draymond Green and LeBron James.

Worst-case scenario: On offense and defense, Wall, above, sets the tone for the Wizards. While the speedy point guard has racked up steals and chase-down blocks over his career, he’s never been known as a lockdown defender. Wall’s occasional nonchalance will hold back the Wizards defensively.

Worst-case scenario: Howard missed the entire preseason with a sore buttocks and hasn’t played a full season since 2009-10. Plus, he is on his fourth team in four seasons for a reason. He just won’t fit in with this group.

Worst-case scenario: Following an NBA trend, coach Scott Brooks is trying to limit the team’s number of midrange shots, but that’s a big part of Beal’s game. He’s not an elite 3-point shooter, ranking 77th in the NBA last season at 37.5 percent, so taking more 3s will hurt Beal’s efficiency.

Wizards predictions: 538 projects 4th-place finish in East

Worst-case scenario: The Wizards have a lot of options on the perimeter, but have limited frontcourt depth and a couple of injury-prone centers in Howard and Ian Mahinmi. Jason Smith will have to play big minutes — and that’s not good.

ESPN: Average win total based on real plus-minus projection system is 44.2

ESPN: Playoff probability is 84 percent


THURSDAY | 10.18.2018 | EXPRESS | 15

wizardspreview

For Porter, a prove-it season SEASON OUTLOOK Otto Porter Jr. remembers it all so clearly. The southeast Missouri high school gymnasium. Trophies. All the lessons imparted by those responsible for his basketball education. “One thing … that my family [instilled] in me was: ‘You’re a ballplayer. You’re not a wing player. You’re not a post player. You’re not a point guard. You’re a ballplayer,’ ” says Porter, who, at 25, is entering his sixth season in Washington. “You need to be able to do it all, you know? And that’s what I was growing up.” The boy raised to be a ballplayer was awfully skinny and not at all flashy. But he was special, and he had a chance to be better than any Porter before him, including the best of them — Otto Porter Sr. His uncles pushed him around in pickup games. His father always found something to fuss about. When Uncle Larry threatened that boy with running suicides if he didn’t pass the ball, he obeyed. “The ball couldn’t even hit the floor,” Porter says. “One game we made four passes like boomp boomp boomp boomp — layup!” That’s not, however, how

TONI L. SANDYS (THE WASHINGTON POST)

Washington challenges its highest-paid player to be more aggressive

someone with an NBA maximum contract is supposed to play. When you’re making more than $26 million this season, you’re expected to do more. As Washington begins its season tonight, Porter enters another year under the microscope — the Wizards’ highest-paid player again yet their clear third option. He’s the guy with the best 3-point field goal percentage on a team desperate for more long-range production who is criticized for not shooting enough. “We want to shoot more 3s this

year. We’ve been trying to do that for two years, and we’ve got one of our best shooters passing up shots,” coach Scott Brooks says. “It’s frustrating.” Although some NBA insiders view Porter as indispensable for his all-around game — “Guys like that are underrated and underappreciated,” a longtime Eastern Conference scout said — his career averages of 10.5 points on 8.4 shots per game are not numbers the masses interpret as star material. Can the boy from a lineage of

PORTER’S SALARY

$26M

The amount Otto Porter Jr., above, will be paid this season after he signed a four-year, $106 million deal in July 2017. The forward will be the highest-paid player on the Wizards, making more than All-Stars John Wall ($19.2M) and Bradley Beal ($25.4M). According to spotrac.com, Porter has the 17th highest salary in the NBA for the 2018-19 season. (EXPRESS)

small-town basketball royalty who learned to play the game the right way start to assert himself? “I don’t think that being aggressive is against Otto’s nature,” says his former Georgetown coach, John Thompson III. “I think that sometimes the way that the world will want him to be aggressive is against his nature.” Privately, Porter’s advocates — even those around the league — question how he’s supposed to put up more shots when Washington’s half-court sets sometimes force him to simply stand in the corner and wait for a pass. “The bottom line is he’s got two All-Stars he’s playing with in the backcourt that dominate the ball, and they should, and [John] Wall in particular,” one NBA general manager says. “He’s the third option on that team. He’s just a third option with a max contract.” Still, there are times when Porter, who had the third-highest 3-point percentage in the league last season at 44.1 percent, gets the ball and passes so a teammate can have an even better look. “I love what he does. He’s about team, so he’s doing the right thing, always looking for the best play,” Brooks said at the team’s media day. “But sometimes, the right thing is your best shooter making sure he shoots shots.” CANDACE BUCKNER (THE WASHINGTON POST)

NEW IN TOWN

Jeff Green

Austin Rivers

Troy Brown Jr.

Other key additions

Forward

Guard

Forward

The former Georgetown star from Prince George’s County signed a one-year deal with his hometown team. During the Cavaliers’ NBA Finals run last season, he proved he can be a key piece on a title contender, scoring double-digits six times in the playoffs.

The Wizards traded center Marcin Gortat to the Clippers to get the 26-year-old guard. Rivers, who averaged 15.1 points a game last season, is here to do one thing: score. He ranked 35th out of 45 qualifying point guards in assists per 48 minutes last season.

The Wizards are deep at the small forward position so they will ease their first-round pick (15th overall) into the rotation. The 19-year-old out of Oregon capped an otherwise lackluster preseason with a 21-point outing against a Chinese club.

Dwight Howard wasn’t the only offseason pickup. Here are a few other new Wizards who are expected to contribute. JEFFREY TOMIK (EXPRESS)

Wizards have eight games this season scheduled to air on ESPN or TNT

Wizards, who finished 43-39 (8th in East) last season, have made the playoffs in four of past five years


16 | EXPRESS | 10.18.2018 | THURSDAY

Coach starts using sets with all three tight ends to get better matchups REDSKINS Tight end Jordan Reed is the most unique offensive weapon the Redskins have. But entering last Sunday’s matchup against the Panthers, he had just 15 catches and one touchdown through the first four games. Coach Jay Gruden expressed a desire to get Reed more chances, and there is a wrinkle the team has recently used to do exactly

that: the three-tight-end set. The Redskins started the game against Carolina with Reed, Vernon Davis and Jeremy Sprinkle all on the field, and got two big plays out of it later in the game. “Well, it regulates the defense quite a bit,” Gruden said. “There are only so many things you can do [to defend] those three-tight end sets. … For the most part, you get base defense. Not a lot of creativity as far as blitz packages are concerned because of the threat of the run.” Reed and Davis were the team’s top two pass catchers

WILL NEWTON (GETTY IMAGES)

Gruden wants Reed more involved

Tight end Jordan Reed leads the Redskins with 225 yards receiving on 20 catches this season.

AL and NL championship series games Wednesday ended after Express’ deadline

Sunday, as Reed finished with five catches for 36 yards while Davis had three receptions for 48 yards and a touchdown. Davis, who is 34 and seventh among tight ends for career TD catches, said he’s been invigorated playing with this group. “I feel like we feed off each other,” he said. “When I first arrived here [in 2016] … I wanted to get better at some things, and watching Jordan, he’s helped me tremendously grow when it comes to running routes and making moves on defenders.”

GETTY IMAGES

sports

KAREEM COPELAND (THE WASHINGTON POST)

MLB

Dodgers’ Machado fined for baserunning incident Major League Baseball fined Dodgers star Manny Machado an undisclosed amount Wednesday for kicking Milwaukee first baseman Jesus Aguilar during a baserunning incident in Tuesday night’s NLCS game that caused the benches to clear at Dodger Stadium. Brewers MVP candidate Christian Yelich called Machado a “dirty player” after the game. (AP)

University System of Maryland’s release of probe into football team still at least a week away

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10.18.18

weekendpass The stories too rarely seen The Smithsonian’s new African American Film Festival amplifies crucial voices of yesterday and today 26

GETTY IMAGES/EXPRESS ILLUSTRATION

PRE-BROADWAY WORLD PREMIERE TheNationalD C.com

THROUGH NOVEMBER 18 ONLY


18 | EXPRESS | 10.18.2018 | THURSDAY

up front

ass A quick p s t’ a h w at going on

taffeta? Check. Cutesy wedding toppers? Check. Wedding invitations with romantic, loopy calligraphy? Check. The place also has all the fun perks of attending a wedding reception — good drinks, dance-y music and quality bites — without the cost of a present. The only thing missing is “Sweet Caroline” on repeat and your drunk uncle busting a move on the dance floor. The first thing you see when you descend the stairs is an arch of flowers, perfect for a

Doi Moi’s new cocktail bar is like a Pinterest board come to life BARS Destination Wedding, where every alcove and nook is “themed” to resemble popular wedding destinations, including Las Vegas and Paris, opened late last month in the former 2 Birds 1 Stone space below Doi Moi. Visually, there’s everything you’d expect. A robin’s-eggblue bar draped in fluffy white

I want a caffeine-free wake-up call.

eyeopeners

page three

Peculiar, eye-opening bites of news.

Local news that’s slightly askew.

FRITZ HAHN (THE WASHINGTON POST)

No need to RSVP to this Wedding

Relive your nuptials (or someone else’s) at the Destination Wedding bar.

#weddingselfie — an appropriate introduction for this designed-tobe-photographed experience. Invitations next to each alcove poke fun at each theme. “Their love is

as original as their ripped-fromEtsy perfect aesthetic,” reads the invite outside the Jackson Hole room, which has a mounted deer head and grassy walls.

You’ve just picked up today’s Express.

FRITZ HAHN AND MEGAN M C DONOUGH (THE WASHINGTON POST)

Destination Wedding, 1800 14th St. NW (entrance on S Street)

I want to get right to the news.

NOW WHAT? Metro’s backed up. Must. Kill. Time.

New beverage director Lukas B. Smith has a trio of cocktails for $9 each, which, on pricey 14th Street, qualifies as a steal. The J Rickey — a cross between a rickey and a mojito, resulting in a lightly fizzy, not-too-sweet sipper — is a standout. (Surprisingly, the cocktails don’t tie in to the specific destinations.) Destination Wedding appears geared toward bachelorette groups and engagement parties. First dates are another story — but then again, how funny would it be to show up in a white dress and meet someone underneath the floral wedding arch?

local

nation + world

News from D.C., Virginia and Maryland.

Top stories from the USA and the world.

No, no—I mean real news.

blog log

Social media’s best posts, tweets and wisecracks.

fun +games

people

Comics, puzzles and other good times.

Big-name sightings and celebrity gossip.

Great. My phone’s dead and I need to feel connected.

Just what you need. Five days a week. And it’s FREE!

sports

Highlights from every field, court and stadium.

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Who am I kidding? I need coffee.


THURSDAY | 10.18.2018 | EXPRESS | 19

Just Announced!

Margo Price

Marc Anthony

After opening for John Prine at Wolf Trap this summer, Margo Price will return for a headlining show behind her second album, last year’s “All American Made.� On it, she duets with Willie Nelson and gets political over countrified folk and rock songs. GET TICKETS: Thursday at 10 a.m. through Ticketfly.

Capital One Arena, Feb. 22, $59-$159.

It’s been five years since Latin pop star Marc Anthony put out an album, but he did drop a new single, “Esta Rico,� with Will Smith and Bad Bunny, last month. Next: Anthony’s “Legacy� tour will extend into 2019. GET TICKETS: Friday at 10 a.m. through Ticketmaster.

The Revivalists The Anthem, Jan. 11, $45-$65.

The Bridge The Hamilton, Dec. 30 & 31, $24.75-$54.75.

In 2011, Baltimore jam rockers The Bridge broke up after a decade of shows. The band’s members, who still get together occasionally to play in Charm City, will perform two rare D.C. shows to close out 2018. GET TICKETS: Friday at 10 a.m. via Ticketfly. RUDI GREENBERG (EXPRESS)

free & easy

Air & Scare Kids can get a jump on their trick-or-treating during this annual event at the Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center (14390 Air and Space Museum Parkway, Chantilly, Va.; Sat., noon-5:30 p.m., free). Besides stocking up on candy, attendees can take part in spooky science experiments, learn about creepy unsolved space mysteries at “trick-or-truth� stations, watch a puppet show or take photos with costumed “Star Wars� and “Ghostbusters� characters. STEPHANIE WILLIAMS (EXPRESS)

Photo by Scott Suchman

Perpetually-on-tour roots rock band The Revivalists will release new album “Take Good Care� next month. In the new year, the group will kick off a new tour in D.C. GET TICKETS: Friday at 10 a.m. using Ticketfly.

9:30 Club, Dec. 27, $25.

SMITHSONIAN NATIONAL AIR AND SPACE MUSEUM

up front

Sometimes the greatest act of love is letting go.

La traviata Now thru October 21 Opera House Major support for WNO is provided by Jacqueline Badger Mars.

Companhia de Dança Deborah Colker Dog Without Feathers (Cão Sem Plumas) Since founding her own company in 1994, Brazilian director/choreographer Deborah Colker has been inspired by her experiences as an athlete to combine physically daring feats with visually `a_VXV[T QR`VT[`°N[Q _RQR[R aUR _bYR` S\_ dUNa PN[ N[Q PN[´a OR Q\[R V[ aUR d\_YQ \S QN[PR

October 18–20 | Eisenhower Theater International Programming at the Kennedy Center is made possible through the generosity of the Kennedy Center International Committee on the Arts.

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

David M. Rubenstein is the Presenting Underwriter of WNO. WNO acknowledges the longstanding generosity of Life Chairman Mrs. Eugene B. Casey. WNO’s Presenting Sponsor Generous support for WNO Italian Opera is provided by Daniel and Gayle D’Aniello. La traviata is a production of the Clarice Smith Opera Series. Additional support for La traviata is provided by The Dallas Morse Coors Foundation for the Performing Arts.

Kennedy-Center.org (202) 467-4600 Groups call (202) 416-8400 For all other ticket-related customer service inquiries, call the Advance @NYR` /\e <Ă&#x;PR Na ! # %"!


20 | EXPRESS | 10.18.2018 | THURSDAY

Jazz Jason Moran

Artistic Director

weekendpass My D.C. dream day

I’d then head over to the Anacostia Community Museum. They have an exhibit right now called “A Right to the City” that I have not seen yet, but it talks about gentrification in D.C. It also discusses the history of the city and the residents who have made a home here that were not displaced or voluntarily left. I would also drop by the Anacostia Arts Center, because I never get to see it as a visitor, just as a staff member. I would spend my time shopping at the different stores that are there and enjoying the artwork from a curatorial standpoint. I would also relax in our lounge with some of the really cool and amazing visitors there.

Tickets only $19!

Crossroads Club

Mwenso & the Shakes Sat., October 27 at 9 p.m.

CARLO PIZARRO

Grab a drink at the bar and dance the night away! 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.

Camille Kashaka ARTS CENTER DIRECTOR

KC Jazz Club

Songs of Freedom

Ulysses Owens Jr., Music Director, featuring Alicia Olatuja, René Marie, and Theo Bleckmann Sat., November 3 at 7 & 9 p.m. Songs of Freedom explores three iconic voices of the 1960s—Joni Mitchell, Abbey Lincoln, and Nina Simone—and the complex ways in which they relate. Developed for Jazz at Lincoln Center by Grammy®-winning drummer Ulysses Owens Jr., the evening includes powerful vocal performances by Alicia Olatuja, René Marie, and Theo Bleckmann.

Kennedy-Center.org (202) 467-4600

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

Since her hiring as the director of the Anacostia Arts Center last year, Camille Kashaka has embraced a couple of challenges: leading the center’s day-to-day operations and helping to dispel misconceptions about the center’s Anacostia neighborhood, an area burdened by its crime-ridden past. Kashaka, 33, never had a doubt about the facility’s potential. “On my first visit, I absolutely fell in love with the space,” she says. Since she took over, the center has become a thriving venue where local artists of color can showcase their work. Paying it forward, Kashaka would spend her dream day supporting black-owned businesses that share her mission of championing marginalized communities. The first thing I’d do is go for a run. I used to live in Brookland and would run up 13th Street NE all the way from Fort Totten Metro to Rhode Island Avenue NE. It was just beautiful. The houses are so nice and it looks like nowhere else in D.C. There are also all these floral gardens that are just really pleasant.

After going on a nice run, I would head to Sankofa Video Books & Cafe and get coffee and a little snack. Sankofa is a black-owned bookstore and cafe. I love this place so much because they absolutely have a vibe that reflects my personality: books, food and blackness. I would spend time and relax with one of their books.

For lunch, I would go to my favorite Indian restaurant in the entire city, Aatish on the Hill. They have a really great lunch buffet and it’s also really affordable. The restaurant is really nice inside, and it’s also pink! It’s just a nice environment to be in while I have lunch. Once I’m done with lunch, I would go downtown to the National Museum of African American History and Culture. I’ve been there twice already, and I still haven’t gotten through the whole thing yet! I would try to visit the bottom floor of the museum again, where it starts with the Middle Passage. As a person of color, it’s hard to really immerse myself in that, so I would go and take the time to honor it the way it should be honored — sitting with the artifacts and reading the narratives. I would end my day at Smith Public Trust in Brookland and treat myself to dinner. I just went there a couple weeks ago for a friend’s birthday. They have the most amazing shrimp tacos I have ever had in my life! And there’s usually live music. AS TOLD TO STEPHANIE WILLIAMS (EXPRESS)


THURSDAY | 10.18.2018 | EXPRESS | 21

weekendpass Q&A | PETE SOUZA

Resharing his photos — with no filter

Pete Souza spent eight years photographing President Obama’s every move. Now he uses those photos to troll President Trump.

Let’s go back to the start: What inspired your first dig at Trump? Jan. 20, 2017, was a long day. After the inauguration, I flew with President Obama out to California — he got to use Air Force One one last time. A few of us turned right around and flew back to D.C., so I didn’t get home till maybe 5 in the morning. I sort of missed all the stuff about crowd size and so forth, but a day or two later, I saw a picture of the Oval Office and these gold, ornate curtains, and I was just appalled. So I posted a photo of Obama sitting on the desk talking to a couple people, and my caption was, “Kind of liked the old curtains better.” I seriously didn’t like the new decorations, but it was also a sarcastic reply to what was going on. And that started it. Why turn the online shade into a book? That wasn’t something I had planned to do, and then this spring, with everything that had been going on, I realized I had a

voice that people were listening to. And I was afraid that people were becoming numb to what was happening every day. It’s also [an end to] being subtle, and letting people know exactly what I’m doing. I’m trying to use my voice to not just make light of what’s going on, but to inspire people. The way we can fix this is that we have to vote. A lot of people stayed home on Election Day, for many reasons, and they just can’t do that anymore. The book’s cover photo, Obama in patriotic shutter shades, is quite fitting. What’s the story behind that photo? That was at campaign headquarters in Chicago in 2012. He had gone in to thank all the people working for the campaign, and a young woman handed him these glasses, and he tried them on and kind of looked toward me and I took the picture. After we posted the cover on Instagram, the woman who gave him those glasses contacted me. She still has the glasses, so she’s going

CHARLES DHARAPAK (AP)

When President Trump recently called ex-White House staffer Omarosa Manigault Newman a “dog,” Pete Souza responded by posting a photo of Barack Obama and Bo, one of the former first family’s Portuguese water dogs. The caption: “A real dog waiting for a real President.” That’s the kind of sharp-tongued sass that Souza, who spent eight years as Obama’s chief official White House photographer, has become famous for. Since Trump was inaugurated, Souza has used his Instagram account, where he now has more than 2 million followers, to post photos and captions that contrast the previous and current administrations. In his new book, “Shade: A Tale of Two Presidents” — which he’ll discuss at the Lisner Auditorium on Wednesday — he continues to juxtapose Obama and Trump via images, headlines and tweets, albeit “less subtly” than on social media. He’s not throwing shade, he insists — he’s just telling the truth. ANGELA HAUPT (FOR EXPRESS)

to bring them to one of my book events. Most of us can’t imagine what it’s like to go to work at the White House and have total access to the president every day. How would you describe the experience? People work really hard. Sometimes I feel like I lost eight years of my life — my personal life — because you invest so much physically and emotionally, and just always being there. You end up missing birthdays and Christmases and don’t connect with

friends. It’s an all-consuming job. I had a Blackberry on either my belt or by my nightstand 24 hours a day, seven days a week, for eight years. You’re always on call. What would people be surprised to know about Obama? He’s one of the more disciplined people I’ve ever met. He’s relentless in exercising every day and in eating the right kinds of things every day. But he was also very disciplined about doing his homework — he would get this briefing book every night after dinner that his staff would prepare for him. It would include the infamous [fan] letters that he read every night and memos

for every meeting he was having the next day. And he would spend three to five hours in his office upstairs by himself doing his homework. “Shade” documents the first 500 days of the Trump administration. Do you plan on keeping up the snark as we move forward? Hopefully only for two more years. I think for a lot of people, I contribute some mental health therapy in a sarcastic and sometimes biting-humor way, and I feel like people count on me to continue doing this.

Lisner Auditorium, 730 21st St. NW; Wed., 7 p.m., sold out.


22 | EXPRESS | 10.18.2018 | THURSDAY

weekendpass

Playback in the day

On any given day, try to avoid recorded sound and, well, good luck. Music, voice messages, the news, alerts at the Metro station — it all makes silence elusive. But less than 150 years ago, there was no way to capture sound and play it back. The National Museum of American History’s new permanent exhibit, “America’s Listening,” transports visitors back to the 1800s, when Thomas Edison unveiled the phonograph and kick-started the journey to music in our pockets. “We picked five moments, five people, five innovations that track the story of recorded sound up to the present,” says David Allison, a senior scholar at the museum. “It’s an area where the U.S. has been a leader, and I think people will be interested to see how it’s affected their lives every day.” TEXT BY ANGELA HAUPT (FOR EXPRESS); PHOTOS PROVIDED BY NATIONAL MUSEUM OF AMERICAN HISTORY

National Museum of American History, 1400 Constitution Ave. NW; opens Fri., free.

1877

Thomas Edison’s phonograph It must have been a real lightbulb moment. In 1877, Thomas Edison introduced his phonograph — a metal cylinder wrapped in tin foil that had two diaphragm-and-needle units used for recording and playback. Though recording instruments weren’t brand-new, none had previously been able to replay sound, making Edison’s an important first, Allison says. Within a couple of years, phonographs were installed on city streets and, for a small fee, passers-by could listen to recordings. In a nod to that type of use, the museum is dubbing Edison’s portion of the exhibit “listening in public.” Visitors can take a turn playing recordings from that era, and examine one of Edison’s original phonographs — an “extremely rare” artifact, Allison says.

Edison’s phonograph used a metal cylinder wrapped in tin foil to capture and replay sound.


THURSDAY | 10.18.2018 | EXPRESS | 23

weekendpass

1886

Alexander Graham Bell’s graphophone

1887

In 1880, the French government awarded Alexander Graham Bell a prize for achievement in electrical science, and he used his winnings to set up the Volta Laboratory in D.C. There, he began working to improve Edison’s phonograph, and in 1886 he patented the graphophone, a business dictation machine that used wax cylinders to record and play sound. “[Bell] wanted to develop a device that was primarily used for recording spoken voice,” Allison says, as opposed to, say, singing. “It was mostly for offices.” The exhibit features an original graphophone and recordings that the museum recovered and modernized with the help of outside scientists. “You can actually hear Alexander Bell’s voice, and his father’s voice, and other people’s voices that we thought were lost forever,” Allison says.

Emile Berliner helped reinvent the way music was recorded — and has had a lasting influence on one of the biggest music events of the year, the Grammys. The German-born pioneer came to the U.S. in 1870 and opened a laboratory in D.C. After analyzing the pros and cons of Edison’s and Bell’s devices, he was granted a patent for what he referred to as the gramophone in 1887. The device was unique in that it recorded on flat records rather than cylinders, and it made it possible to mass-produce sound recordings. The Grammy Awards are named for Berliner’s invention, and the coveted gold trophy features a miniature gramophone. “It was the first widely used device for listening to recorded sound at home,” Allison says. “Visitors will learn about the inventor, see the device and hear what recorded sound looked like in that moment.”

1965

Ray Dolby’s noise reduction system

2001

Most of us assume that whatever comes over the airwaves will be clear and crisp — and we tolerate nothing less. For decades, though, as devices evolved, there was an annoying, underlying hiss that tainted all audiotapes. In the mid-1960s, sound engineer Ray Dolby invented a noise reduction system that greatly elevated audio quality. It was initially sold as an add-on component, but in the early ’70s, manufacturers started making it part of their equipment. “We’re highlighting a Sony Walkman that had Dolby technology built in,” Allison says. And, if your ears are up to it, you can compare recordings with and without the hiss.

The most modern section of the exhibit, “listening anywhere,” features the innovation many of us are most intimately familiar with: the iPod Classic. First released by Apple in 2001, it wasn’t the first MP3 player, but it offered greater storage capacity and was speedier than many of its competitors. “Probably 80 if not 90 percent of the people who walk through the exhibit will have a device in their pocket where they can listen to recorded sound,” Allison says. Though Apple has largely moved away from the iPod, its legacy remains, as does that of iTunes, which revolutionized the way music is distributed to this day.

Emile Berliner’s gramophone

Apple’s iPod


24 | EXPRESS | 10.18.2018 | THURSDAY

Andrew Bird

National Symphony Orchestra Pops

Gabriel Kahane

Andrew Bird

with Gabriel Kahane Steven Reineke, conductor

Photo of Alyssa Wilmoth Keegan by Kaley Etzkorn.

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

NOV 4 H G U O ING THR Y A L P NOW ORDER TODAY! 240.644.1100 | RoundHouseTheatre.org Bethesda Metro: 1 Block | Convenient Parking!

Kennedy-Center.org

Groups call (202) 416-8400

(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.


UNDERGRADUATE CLASSES start on October 22.

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THURSDAY | 10.18.2018 | EXPRESS | 25

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Costumed in mud, Deborah Colker’s dancers embody animals that live in a mangrove swamp.

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

CANDY DULFER 21 OTTMAR LIEBERT & Luna Negra 22 SAMANTHA FISH Skribe 25 PHIL VASSAR 26 DELBERT McCLINTON

COMPANHIA DE DANÇA DEBORAH COLKER

Oct 18

The power of the powerless ‘Dog Without Feathers’ celebrates the strength of those living hard lives DANCE Hundreds of millions of people watched Brazilian choreographer Deborah Colker do her thing at the 2016 Rio Olympics. A good chunk of them were her dancers. As the “movement director” of the Summer Games’ opening ceremony, Colker marshaled a force of more than 3,000 performers, who used massive props and projections to conjure up the Brazilian rainforest and its transformation into a modern-day metropolis. She’s also the woman behind Cirque du Soleil’s “OVO,” where acrobats impersonate crickets and flies by rappelling down walls and bounding across trampolines. Her newest work, “Dog Without Feathers,” running at the Kennedy Center this week, isn’t quite as massive as those projects, but it’s just as high-concept.

Performed by her 14-person modern dance troupe, Companhia de Dança Deborah C o l k e r, “ D o g Colker Without Feathers” is based on a 1950 poem of the same name by Brazilian author João Cabral de Melo Neto. Both the poem and the dance trace the flow of the main river through the state of Pernambuco in northeast Brazil, and they both focus on the relationship between the impoverished people who live there and the richness of the natural world around them, Colker says. “When I read the poem, it was like a punch in my stomach,” she says. “I felt like, wow, how could a poem be so strong, so precise, so definitive.” To create the dance, Colker and her troupe spent three weeks traveling in Pernambuco, learning the dances of the indigenous people who live there and witnessing their difficult lives, Colker says.

“I met so many people that work with the sugar cane, they cut the sugar cane from sun to sun — very hard work for little money,” she says. “But at the same time, they are warriors, they sew their own costumes and they dance like kings.” Instead of putting her dancers in elaborate costumes, Colker coats them in mud and has them dance on a mud-covered stage, to reflect the nature of the mangrove swamps that thread through the region. “It’s like a ritual, when we cover the body with this mud,” she says. “The mud helps us to lose our reality and transport to another reality. You cannot recognize who is a man and who is a woman, and also we cannot recognize one another.” In this depersonalized state, the dancers are better able to transform themselves right before your eyes — from humans to water to crabs, and then back into human form. The dancers also conjure up other animals such as

snakes and birds, but never the poem’s titular creature, a dog. “A dog without feathers is not a dog at all,” Colker says. “It is someone without wings, without energy, without strength.” That’s what happens when people are dispossessed of their land and disrespected by authorities, as is the case for many people who live in Pernambuco, she says. However, these people are also fierce, stubborn and powerful, and that’s why Colker’s new dance ends on a hopeful note — with slums transforming into beautiful boats that sail away to freedom. “[This story] is not specific to these people from Brazil. It’s about refugees, immigrants, all the people with hard realities,” Colker says. “This is what I wanted to bring to the stage — their strength, not only their misery.” SADIE DINGFELDER (EXPRESS)

Kennedy Center, 2700 F St. NW; Thu.-Sat., 8 p.m., $29-$89.

w/Dave Chappell & Tommy Lepson

27 28

TOM PAXTON & The DonJuans An Evening with

KATHY MATTEA

Nov 1

The Stars from

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An Evening with

GEORGE WINSTON Lily 14 JOSHUA RADIN Kershaw 16&18 PAULA POUNDSTONE 19 BONEY JAMES 23 THE SELDOM SCENE & DRY BRANCH FIRE SQUAD 24&25 CHARLES ESTEN


YOU COULD EARN UP TO $1,000 toward your degree with the Fall Term Scholarship if you qualify.

Visit UMUC.EDU © 2018 University of Maryland University College

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THUR SDAY | 10.18.2018 | EXPRESS | 27

weekendpass

weekendpass

A new place for stories of struggle

“It was helpful knowing that while I was dealing with anxiety, I could still have a creative functionality that was very valuable to me.”

KRISTEN PAGE-KIRBY (EXPRESS)

‘Black Panthers’ National Museum of African American History and Culture; Wed., 10:30 a.m., $10, screens with “Integration Report One.”

turned to artistic pursuits while growing up in Northeast D.C.

rebelliousness, I never saw any black people that I could identify with,” Omawale says. This is one of several reasons the Smithsonian African American Film Festival needs to exist, Combs says. She anticipates the event becoming an annual or biennial celebration, though nothing has been set in stone yet. “It’s important to create an opportunity that is a tool for empowerment and showcases the undertold stories of black history,” Combs says. For Omawale, the festival has an even more personal meaning. To her, the event represents not only an opportunity for filmmakers of color, but a step forward for humanity. “As an immigrant, being a part of this festival feels like I’m participating in being an American,” she says. “I feel more cultura lly a pa r t of it. For me, that means a lot.”

BRINSON BANKS

A still from AJ McClenon’s “He Kind of Like Skips Over Me and Tells All My African American Friends to Go Sit Down.”

AJ MCCLENON

workshops, panel discussions and networking opportunities. Each of the first three days of the event has a theme based on an exhibition at the museum: “Making a Way Out of No Way,” which focuses on resilience and activism in the black community; “Power of Place,” which centers on how African-Americans have formed their own communities and identities in the face of adversity; and “Cultural Expressions,” which profiles African-American traditions. The last day features a mix of all three themes.

“It was important for us not to just have a jury select some of the featured films, but to spotlight the collection at the museum,” Combs says. One of the 15 films selected for competition is “Solace,” the debut feature from Los Angeles-based filmmaker Tchaiko Omawale. “Insecurity and racism is how I ended up as a director,” Omawale says bluntly. She had always wanted a career in the entertainment industry, but her struggles with an eating disorder and self-mutilation deterred her from performing onstage. She instead pursued a film studies degree at Columbia University and took an interest in directing. “I wanted to make a film for young black folks who don’t get to see themselves on screen in the way that I decided to portray us in ‘Solace,’ ” she says. The 2018 film is a coming-ofage story about 17-year-old Sole, who is sent to stay with her only living relative — her estranged grandmother — after her father passes away. Besides adjusting to her new life in Los Angeles, Sole also battles an ongoing eating disorder. Her life is further complicated after she befriends her rebellious neighbor Jasmine. The film’s cast is composed entirely of African-American actors. “When coming-of-age films dealt with adolescence and

TCHAIKO OMAWALE

In “Solace,” 17-year-old Sole (Hope Olaide Wilson) develops feelings for friend Guedado (Luke Rampersad) as she adjusts to her new life in L.A.

ALLY ALMORE

is taken from a quote from one of the white teens in attendance. “The footage was shot underwater, and then I layered it with historical clips of AfricanAmerican resorts,” McClenon says of her film. “It’s a statement to black people having problems with being in certain communities and also having access to swimming pools.” Sharing these types of stories is an integral part of the festival, according to Rhea Combs, the event’s lead organizer and curator of film and photography at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture. The four-day festival — taking place at the museum as well as the Freer and Sackler galleries and the National Gallery of Art from Wednesday through Oct. 27 — highlights films with African-American narratives, ranging from contemporary works like McClenon’s and the Netflix documentary “Quincy,” to classics such as the 1978 movie “Killer of Sheep” and the 1964 documentary short “Malcolm X: Struggle for Freedom.” Most of the films (McClenon’s included) were selected by the museum and several guest curators, while 15 were chosen by a jury of industry professionals for the festival’s competition. “There will be a little something for everyone,” Combs says, “from contemporary experimental works to documentaries and older narratives that are restored and shown the way the artist intended.” The schedule also includes

The Smithsonian African American Film Festival will include a large selection of historic and restored films. Here are four highlights.

AJ MCCLENON, left, a filmmaker who

The Smithsonian African American Film Festival connects the past and the now FILM While growing up in Northeast D.C., filmmaker AJ McClenon would spend hours taking photographs and creating art. For her, these projects weren’t just hobbies. They were her way of coping with life. “My anxiety was difficult to manage,” says McClenon, 32. “If I was too anxious to make it to therapy, at least I could do something creative, which helped me.” After graduating from high school, McClenon enrolled in The New School in New York City before transferring to the University of Maryland, closer to home, to study sculpture. There, she got into film through an independent study program and began making videos. Producing and showcasing her work provided a cathartic outlet for McClenon. “It was helpful knowing that while I was dealing with anxiety, I could still have a creative functionality that was very valuable to me,” says McClenon, who now lives in Chicago. McClenon’s 2015 project “He Kind of Like Skips Over Me and Tells All My African American Friends to Go Sit Down” is one of more than 80 films that will be shown at the Smithsonian’s inaugural African American Film Festival next week. The short film is inspired by a 2015 civil case in Texas in which a police officer was caught on camera restraining an unarmed black teenager while responding to an incident at a pool party. The title

Timely stories from the past

“As an immigrant, being a part of this festival feels like I’m participating in being an American.” TCHAIKO OMAWALE, above, the director of “Solace,” who was born in Rome and moved to the United States with her family when she was 16

This classic documentary short from 1968, directed by the legendary Agnes Varda, showcases the activities of Black Panther Party members as they lobby for the freedom of imprisoned party co-founder Huey P. Newton.

‘Four Women’ National Gallery of Art, East Building; Oct. 25, noon, screens with three other films, free.

Part of the “Say Her Name” showcase, which focuses on women’s experiences, this 1975 experimental short uses the Nina Simone song of the same name to examine and deconstruct stereotypes of black women.

‘No Vietnamese Ever Called Me N-----’ Freer /Sackler; Oct. 25, 6:45 p.m., free.

The festival features the regional premiere of this newly restored 1968 documentary about a 1967 anti-war march that culminated at the United Nations and included a mostly black contingent from Harlem.

‘Killer of Sheep’

STEPHANIE WILLIAMS (EXPRESS)

National Museum of African American History and Culture; Oct. 25, 7 p.m., $100.

Various locations; Wed. through Oct. 27, various times and prices. “He Kind of Like Skips Over Me …”: Freer /Sackler, 1050 Independence Ave. SW; Oct. 27, 5 p.m., sold out. “Solace”: National Museum of African American History and Culture, 1400 Constitution Ave. NW; Oct. 26, 10:30 a.m., $10. Go to aafilmfest.si.edu for details.

Little seen until a 2007 restoration, this 1978 film — about a slaughterhouse worker in L.A.’s Watts neighborhood — is today hailed as a neorealist masterpiece up there with “Bicycle Thieves.” It’s being presented as part of the festival’s Night at the Museum Celebration, and director Charles Burnett will attend for a postscreening conversation.


UNDERGRADUATE CLASSES start on October 22.

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28 | EXPRESS | 10.18.2018 | THURSDAY

top stops

The best t of the nex s y a d 7

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

FRIDAY-SUNDAY

Boo at the Zoo National Zoo, 3001 Connecticut Ave. NW; Fri.-Sun., 5:30-8:30 p.m., $30.

The National Zoo will be filled with more than just the usual exotic animals this weekend — some of the beasts will be kids in costume. In honor of Halloween, the annual Boo at the Zoo puts a zoological spin on trick-or-treating, with more than 40 treat stations scattered about the zoo, along with wildlife education stations and live entertainment. The event also gives guests after-hours access to animal houses and exhibits, and a commemorative trick-or-treat bag.

Fri. COMEDY

Trevor Noah Trevor Noah had big shoes to fill when he took over Jon Stewart’s hosting role on “The Daily Show.” But the South African comedian was able to win over viewers and Comedy Central — the network recently extended his tenure on the show through 2022. This weekend and next, Noah will run through his latest stand-up show, which leans more storyteller than political commentator, with multiple performances in D.C. DAR Constitution Hall, 1776 D St. NW; Fri. & Sat., Oct. 26 & 27, various times and prices.

SUNDAY

Charley Crockett Pearl Street Warehouse, 33 Pearl St. SW; Sun., 8 p.m., $15.

There’s been a movement in recent years to reclaim — and expand — the definition of country music. Texan Charley Crockett takes elements of country music, blues and soul and filters it all through his distinctive voice. After last year’s “Lil G.L.’s Honky Tonk Jubilee,” a collection of classic country covers, he returned this year with “Lonesome as a Shadow,” 12 originals that prove his own songs may one day have a place in country’s canon.

Mon. TALKS

‘Morbid Curiosity: Presidential Last Moments Preserved’

A lock of hair, a coffin fragment, a blood-stained cuff — these are just a few of the mementos people have taken from deceased U.S. presidents that have found their way into the Smithsonian’s vaults. At this talk, a pair of Smithsonian staffers will showcase some of the creepy and touching objects that people have claimed from dead presidents. S. Dillon Ripley Center, 1100 Jefferson Drive SW; Mon., 6:45 p.m., $30.

Wed. MUSIC

Take Me to the River

This new tour is the latest to offer a history of New Orleans music in concert. Multiple generations of NOLA musicians — the Dirty Dozen Brass Band, Dumpstaphunk’s Ivan and Ian Neville, The Meters’ George Porter Jr. — will unite for a revue of some of their city’s famed songs. The Hamilton, 600 14th St. NW; Wed., 8 p.m., $40-$65.

Written by Express’ Sadie Dingfelder, Rudi Greenberg and Stephanie Williams.


THURSDAY | 10.18.2018 | EXPRESS | 29

Meet our 2018 exhibitors: HEARTLANDIA Cindy Lisica Gallery | Houston, TX Monochrome Collective | Washington, DC Most Wanted Fine Art | Pittsburgh, PA BoxHeart Gallery | Pittsburgh, PA Antieau Gallery | New Orleans, LA ArtShape Mammoth | Burlington, VT Pure Artistry Works | Philadelphia, PA Walton Gallery | Petersburg, VA Sean Christopher Ward | Wichita, KS Gallery O on H | Washington, DC

the fair.

Inaugural DC Edition 10.31 - 11.4 at Union Market

Fine art, UHGHƓQHG. 1,000s of works in the $100s and $1,000s 50% DMV-based exhibitors

Buy tickets now or at the door

superƓQHGF HYHQWEULWH FRP

CENTER STAGE Zenith Gallery | Washington, DC Touchstone Gallery | Washington, DC Vox Populi Print Collective | Madison, WI European Design & Art LLC | Miami, FL Art Village Gallery | Memphis, TN XOL Gallery | Baltimore, MD glave kocen gallery | Richmond, VA YNOBE DNA Gallery | Miami, FL Gallery Orange | New Orleans, LA RoFa Projects | Potomac, MD Foundry Gallery | Washington, DC Adah Rose Gallery | Kensington, MD Susan Calloway Fine Arts | Washington, DC

Art by Gregory Ferrand of Adah Rose Gallery

FOTO KAIP-SOOL Jeremiah Morris | Mount Crawford, VA Lori Cuisinier | New York, NY Alexandra Aroyo | New York, NY The 36-24-36 Project | Brooklyn, NY James Miille | Brooklyn, NY

ARTIST PAVILION Brianne Lanigan | Arlington, VA D'Arcy Simpson | Hudson, NY Brendon Palmer-Angell | New Orleans, LA Brooke Rogers | Ocean City, MD Scott Hutchison | Arlington, VA Julio Valdez | New York, NY Julie Christenberry | Washington, DC Svetlana Nelson | Madison, AL Rod Webber | Boston, MA Daniel Stuelpnagel | Baltimore, MD Steve Wanna | Mount Rainier, MD Rogelio Maxwell | Washington, DC Joseph Meloy | New York, NY Virago | New York, NY Sarah Magida | Baltimore, MD Bruce McGowan | Montreal, Quebec, CA Stephen Perrone | Sylvan Beach, NY JJ Galloway | Annapolis, MD Dennis Crayon | Washington, DC Deming King Harriman | Brooklyn, NY Joseph Shetler | Washington, DC Noel Kassewitz | Washington, DC Kathryn Jane Leung | Manassas Park, VA Kelly Moeykens | Washington, DC Adam Chamy | Washington, DC Olan Quattro | Washington, DC Aaron Patton | Wichita, KS Fei Alexeli | Thessaloniki, Greece Mary Westphal / Armand Fogels | Alexandria, VA Chaney Trotter | New York, NY Susan Hostetler | Washington, DC Christine Ruksenas-Burton | Stone Ridge, VA ALIGUORI | Fort Lauderdale, FL Sonja Rohde | New York, NY Jaclyn Mottola | New York, NY Wayson R. Jones | Brentwood, MD Emma Repp | Seattle, WA Michael Heilman | Alexandria, VA Sheila Cahill | Washington, DC Helen Robinson | Brooklyn, NY Hannah Sarfraz | Gaithersburg, MD Sarah Jamison | Washington, DC Diana Contreras | Miami, FL Colleen Garibaldi | Washington, DC


30 | EXPRESS | 10.18.2018 | THURSDAY

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

Sound

Union Stage: Maykel Blanco y su Salsa Mayor, 9 p.m.

MONDAY City Winery: Parsonsfield & Sawyer

THURSDAY

Fredericks, 8 p.m.

Black Cat: AJJ, Kimya Dawson, 7:30

Sixth & I Historic Synagogue:

p.m.

Mountain Man, 7:30 p.m.

BlackRock Center for the Arts:

Songbyrd Music House: Fat Nick,

Kenny White, 7:30 p.m.

8 p.m.

Bossa Bistro: Money Chicha, 9:30 p.m.

The Birchmere: Samantha Fish, 7:30

City Winery: Ari Hest, 8 p.m.; Mandy

p.m.

Barnett, 8:30 p.m.

The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts: Martina

Gypsy Sally’s: The Bottle Rockets, Sarah Borges, 8:30 p.m.

Fiserova, 6 p.m.

Mansion at Strathmore: Lavinia

TUESDAY

Meijer, 7:30 p.m.

9:30 Club: We Were Promised

Smithsonian American Art Museum: Paul Pieper and Band, 5 p.m.

Jetpacks, 7 p.m.

The Birchmere: Candy Dulfer, 7:30 p.m.

City Winery: Pokey LaFarge, 6 p.m.; Scrapomatic, 8:30 p.m.

The Hamilton: John Nemeth, 6:30

Gypsy Sally’s: Gordon Sterling

Black Cat: Kikagaku Moyo, 7:30 p.m.

p.m.

Wonderland Ballroom: Reggae

Presents: The Gypsy Sally’s Jam, 8:30 p.m.

Sweatshop, 8:30 p.m.

The Fillmore: Jessie J, 8 p.m.

WEDNESDAY

Black Cat: Guided by Voices, 8 p.m.

City Winery: The Wind + The Wave, 8

KEVIN WINTER (GETTY IMAGES)

FRIDAY BlackRock Center for the Arts: Allan Harris, 8 p.m.

Calvert Marine Museum: Low Lily, 7 p.m.

City Winery: Carl Palmer’s ELP Legacy, Dupont Underground: Sounds From the Underground, 7 p.m.

Luce Foundation Center for American Art: Aaron Leitko and Boat Burning, 6 p.m.

Maryland Hall for the Creative Arts: Portland Cello Project Performing

J Balvin: “Despacito” isn’t the only recent volley in Latin music’s latest crossover moment. There was also “Mi Gente,” the irresistible snake-charmer by Colombian reggaeton star J Balvin. The song anchored Balvin’s “Vibras,” which cross-pollinated reggaeton rhythms with salsa, bachata, trap and more. Balvin didn’t stop there: He kept the Latin crossover movement going by featuring on Cardi B’s “I Like It,” a song of the summer whether you speak Spanish or not. On Sunday, he performs at EagleBank Arena.

Arts Center Showcase Matinee, 2 p.m.

State Theatre: The Machine Performs

Arts Barn: Sound Underground, 8 p.m.

Pink Floyd, 7 p.m.

Black Cat: The Damned, 7 p.m.

The Birchmere: Stephanie Mills, 7:30

Freer Gallery of Art: Hafez Kotain and

p.m.

Ensemble, 7:30 p.m.

The Fillmore: Lil Xan, 8 p.m.

Gypsy Sally’s: Southern Culture on the

The Hamilton: The Jerry Douglas

Skids, The Woolly Bushman, 9 p.m.

Band, 6:30 p.m.

The Kennedy Center: Odean Pope, 7 p.m.

Tropicalia: Kombilesa Mi and La Marvela, 8 p.m.

U Street Music Hall: Trevor Powers,

SUNDAY 9:30 Club: Big Thief, 7 p.m. The Birchmere: Ottmar Liebert, 7:30 p.m.

The Fillmore: Lilly Allen, 8 p.m.

SATURDAY

U Street Music Hall: Low Cut Connie,

9:30 Club: Jonathan Richman featuring

7 p.m.

Sight

American University Museum at the Katzen Arts Center: “Jim

The Hamilton: Jose James, 6:30 p.m.

7 p.m.

p.m.

The Fillmore: Minus the Bear, 8 p.m.

(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 with state-of-the-art technology, through Oct. 31. 1611 Benning Road.

Anacostia Arts Center: Anacostia

Radiohead’s OK Computer, 7:30 p.m.

Gypsy Sally’s: Particle, Lespecial, 8:30

1611 Benning Road: “Carne y Arena

Tommy Larkins, 6:30 p.m.; Black Tiger Sex Machine, 10 p.m.

JAY BLAKESBERG

8 p.m.

p.m.; John Hiatt, 8 p.m.

ALO: Bay Area quartet ALO doesn’t tour — or get out to the East Coast — much anymore, so Friday’s Gypsy Sally’s show offers an increasingly rare opportunity to see the Jack Johnson collaborators (see: “Girl, I Wanna Lay You Down”) blend their sharp pop and rock sensibilities with their jam-band tendencies.

Sanborn’s Without Provenance: The Making of Contemporary Antiquity“: An 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


THURSDAY | 10.18.2018 | EXPRESS | 31

goingoutguide.com

San Francisco Ballet

Helgi Tomasson, Artistic Director

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East Coast Premieres from Unbound: A Festival of New Works

BALTIMORE MUSEUM OF ART

Begins next week!

Baltimore Museum of Art: “Maren Hassinger: The Spirit of Things� is an exhibition of works, videos and photographs by the New York-based artist, who uses wire rope, newspapers, plastic bags and other found materials for her art. See her work through Nov. 25. 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; “Finding a Path — Emilie Brzezinski and Dalya Luttwak: A Conversation�: An exhibition of complementary works: Brzezinski’s tall, rough, treelike wood sculptures and Luttwak’s colored metal works that resemble plant roots. A sitespecific installation, the works take differing but interrelating approaches, inspired by universal growth and decay in nature, through Dec. 16. 4400 Massachusetts Ave. NW.

Anacostia Community Museum: “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 bettering public education and the greening of communities, and of rallying for more equitable transit and development, through April 20. 1901 Fort Place SE.

Shakespeare, through Jan. 6. 201 East Capitol St. SE.

Folger Shakespeare Library:

Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden: “Mark Bradford�: A site-

“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

Glenstone: The contemporary and modern art museum reopens with an additional 50,000 square feet of exhibition space, including a bookstore, two cafes and 230 acres of landscaped gardens. A highlight is the Pavilions, a building that includes works by worldrenowned artists and contemporaries who made important contributions to postwar and contemporary art. Advance reservations are required and are available now for visits through the end of November. Additional tickets will be released on the first of every month beginning October 1 for the upcoming three months, through Jan. 1. 12002 Glen Road, Potomac, Md.

specific 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 CONTINUED ON PAGE 32

Two programs featuring works by some of today’s most in-demand choreographers, including Edwaard Liang, Trey McIntyre, Justin Peck, and Christopher Wheeldon, plus Kennedy Center debuts by choreographers Cathy Marston and David Dawson

October 23–28 | Opera House 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

Support for Ballet at the Kennedy Center is generously provided by Elizabeth and C. Michael Kojaian.

Tweets from a little bird named Express.

@wapoexpress

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Baltimore Museum of Art: “Spencer Finch: Moon Dust�: A light installation of 150 individual chandeliers with 417 lights

hung individually from the ceiling as an abstract sculpture that is also a threedimensional scale model of the moon’s atomic makeup, with a scientifically precise representation of the chemical composition of moon dust as it was gathered during the Apollo 17 mission, through Oct. 14; “Subverting Beauty: African Anti-Aesthetics�: An exhibition that features approximately two dozen works from sub-Saharan Africa’s colonial period (c. 1880-1960) that deliberately violate conceptions of beauty, symmetry and grace. Artists working during this turbulent period in the continent’s history turned against beauty in order to express the meaning and vitality of their day-to-day existence, through Nov. 17; 10 Art Museum Drive, Baltimore.


32 | EXPRESS | 10.18.2018 | THURSDAY

SOCIAL PHOTO SHOW

goingoutguide.com

Colony Club: “Social Photo Show — Foreign Places,” at the Petworth coffee shop and bar, highlights memorable photos taken by amateur photographers and makes those photos the heart of a truly social event. Rather than looking at photos alone on a small screen and clicking a thumbs-up button, meander through a curated exhibit of vivid, large-format images. See it through Oct. 20. CONTINUED FROM PAGE 31

EVE ENSLER & ANNE LAMOTT

This Sunday! October 21

The Vagina Monologues playwright joins the bestselling author for an enlightened conversation.

final charge of the Battle of Gettysburg, Pickett’s Charge, through Jan. 1; 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 Air and Space Museum: “Artist Soldiers”: An exhibition that examines the work of professional artists who were recruited by the U.S. Army and were considered the first true combat artists, along with the artwork of soldiers, including Jeff Gusky’s photos of stone carvings made in underground shelters, that provide a unique perspective on World War I, through Nov. 11. Sixth Street and Independence Avenue SW.

STRATHMORE.ORG | 301.581.5100 5301 Tuckerman Lane, North Bethesda, MD 20852

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 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; the exhibit 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; 440 Constitution CONTINUED ON PAGE 36


THURSDAY | 10.18.2018 | EXPRESS | 33

GREAT PERFORMANCES AT MASON 2018/2019 SEASON

CO TH ME EM S AL EE L

CFA.GMU.EDU

Ragamala Dance Company

Photo by Three Phase Multimedia

Ranee Ramaswamy and Aparna Ramaswamy, Artistic Directors

Daniel Hope and Friends

Written in Water with live music

Virginia Opera

Air-A Baroque Journey

Don Giovanni

Friday, November 2 at 8 p.m.

Saturday, November 10 at 8 p.m. Sunday, November 11 at 2 p.m.

Spectrum Dance Theater

Aquila Theatre

A Rap On Race

Frankenstein

Friday, November 16 at 8 p.m.

Sunday, November 18 at 7 p.m.

A large-scale multi-disciplinary work with dance, music, text, and painting, Written in Water provides an allegory of human’s constant search for transcendence. Enjoy a FREE pre-show Interactive Game-playing Experience utilizing the Indian board game that inspired the performance.

November 2 & 3 | Terrace Theater

Photo by Shalini Jain

And don’t miss...

Malavika Sarukkai Thari—The Loom November 9 & 10 Terrace Theater

Kennedy-Center.org (202) 467-4600

Film Screening: The Unseen Sequence with Malavika Sarukkai November 8 at 7 p.m. Family Theater 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 Internavtional Committee on the Arts.

readexpress.com

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Family Friendly performances that are most suitable for families with younger children

TICKETS ON SALE NOW! 703-993-2787 OR CFA.GMU.EDU

Located on the Fairfax campus, six miles west of Beltway exit 54, at the intersection of Braddock Road and Rt. 123.


34 | EXPRESS | 10.18.2018 | THURSDAY

B FEATURED LISTING B Great Falls Studios

Art Tour Open Studio Tour

Friday – Sunday October 19-21, 2018 10:00AM – 5:00PM

Self-guided driving tour takes you to the home-based, pop-up and group studios of 41 artists in the town of Great Falls Virginia. Meet the artists, discover their creative processes, and maybe purchase a piece of art.

Sponsored by TD Bank Free brochure and map at: greatfallsstudios.com/ studiotour

Free

parking, wheelchair accessible Hands on activites.

THEATRE Elton John, Tim Rice’s

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

William Shakespeare’s

Henry V Avant Bard presents

Illyria, or What You Will Shear Madness The Kennedy Center Theater Lab

Tickets start at $25

Winner of 4 Tony Awards!

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

Call for tickets and info.

Tony Award winner for Best Musical.

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

$12 $22

PWYW previews Oct 18-20 & 22; on stage thru Nov 18

Freely adapted from Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night—set in a 1980s NYC queer club where identity, sex, and gender are what you will.

Gunston Arts Center 2700 S Lang St, Arlington, VA 22206 | Tix & info: AvantBard.org/tickets

PWYW to $40

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

Now Playing! Must Close Nov. 18 8 shows a week

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

September 14 – November 4

Free Parking & Red Line NoMa/ Gallaudet Pay What You Will now available every show

Tickets Avail. at the Box Office

Great Group Rates for 15 or More

FREE, no tickets required

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

PERFORMANCES Chamber Music Series

Cathedral Choral Society

Armistice 1918 Guest conductor Leonard Slatkin

Sunday, Oct. 21 at 2 p.m.

Chamber ensembles from “The President’s Own” will perform Shaw’s Blueprint; Ran’s Inscriptions; Clarke’s Prelude, Allegro, and Pastorale; Dring’s Trio for Flute, Oboe, and Piano; Tower’s Small; Gubaidulina’s Trio for Three Trumpets; and Montgomery’s Strum.

Sunday, October 21, 6:00 pm

The premiere of Russian composer Alexander Kastalsky’s 1917 requiem for World War I, “Commemoration for Fallen Brothers.” The Cathedral Choral Society performs with The Clarion Choir, The Kansas City Chorale, St. Tikhon’s Choir, and the Orchestra of St. Luke’s in this special national project.

John Philip Sousa Band Hall, Marine Barracks Annex 7th & K Sts, SE Washington, DC 202-433-4011 Live streaming at: www.marineband.marines.mil Washington National Cathedral 3101 Wisconsin Ave. NW cathedralchoralsociety.org 202-537-2228 / 877-537-2228

Starting at $25; stdts/ youth $15

2018.19 subscriptions on sale now! Save 10% and make plans to join for the entire season.

October 20 9am - 4pm October 21 10am - 4pm preSENT THIS ad FOR A $2 dISCOUNT ON $5 aDMISSION

www.NVHG.org

7550 RESERVATION DRIVE Springfield, VA 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

16-2898


THURSDAY | 10.18.2018 | EXPRESS | 35

MUSIC - CONCERTS Chamber Players Series

U.S. Navy Concert Band

An Evening of Music for Brass featuring members of the Ceremonial Brass.

Thurs, Oct 25, 7:30 p.m.

Free and open to the public, no tickets required The U.S. Navy Band joins the #BernsteinAt100 celebration by performing a free concert highlighting several of Leonard Bernstein’s most important works. The performance will feature Chief Musician Susie Kavinski, soprano soloist, and the Navy Band Brass Quintet.

Saturday, Oct. 20, 7:30 p.m.

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

Rachel M. Schlesinger Concert Hall 4915 E. Campus Drive Alexandria, Va.

Free and open to the public. No tickets.

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

Free, no tickets required

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

$5 Youth $20-80 Adult

Student, Senior & Military Discounts

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

MUSIC - ORCHESTRAL James Ross conducts

Mendelssohn’s Symphony No.3

Sat., Nov. 3 at 8:00 p.m. & Sun., Nov. 4 at 3:00 p.m.

Selections by Bernstein, Mendelssohn: Scottish Symphony, Jessica Krash: Cello Concerto (world premiere) with soloist Tanya Anisimova

For more information and to purchase tickets: www.alexsym.org 703-548-0885

OPERA MDLO Young Artist Institute

An Evening of Mozart German Operatic Masterpieces

Figaro in Four Quartets

Friday, October 19 7:30PM Saturday, October 20, 7:30PM

The Maryland Lyric Opera Institute presents semi-staged performances of excerpts from Mozart’s The Magic Flute and The Abduction from the Seraglio. Sung in German. English narration by Nick Olcott. The MDLO Orchestra conducted by Louis Salemno.

10/20 & 10/27 @ 8pm 10/21 & 10/28 @ 2pm

Mozart’s The Marriage of Figaro is re-imagined with the poetry of T.S. Eliot’s Four Quartets, revealing themes of love, loss, and the strangeness of time.

Fridays & Saturdays at 7:30pm

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

Bethesda United Methodist Church 8300 Old Georgetown Road, Bethesda, MD 20814 www.MDLO.org 240-427-5568

GALA Hispanic Theatre 3333 14th St NW 202-204-7763 www.inseries.org

$25

Free Parking

$20-45

Conceived by Timothy Nelson

$36

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

COMEDY Make America Grin Again

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

FESTIVALS Kids Euro Festival

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

One or more events take place daily. Saturday October 20Sunday November 4. View complete schedule at kidseurofestival.org

A Celebration of European arts and culture for kids! Free events creating imagination, joy, and friendship presented to you by the 28 European Union countries.

Held at Venues Throughout the Washington Area. For complete list of events, and venues, schedule visit kidseurofestival.org

All events are free

kidseuro festival.org

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

it’s not live art without a live audience.

TICKETS: WashingtonPerformingArts.org

(202) 785-9727

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


36 | EXPRESS | 10.18.2018 | THURSDAY

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A GESTURE OF FAITH

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Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden: “Sean Scully: Landline” features nearly 40 works by the artist, including oil paintings, pastels, photographs, watercolors and layered aluminum sculptures that reflect the structure of his paintings in three dimensions. See them through Feb. 3.

– THEATREBLOOM

Ave. NW.

IN HUMANITY – THE WASHINGTON POST

COMPELLING – DC THEATRE SCENE

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.

A chance meeting alters lives in this hit Broadway play

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“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 expeditions alongside our scientists, 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, through Dec. 31; “Tomb of Christ: The Church of the Holy Sepulchre Experience“: An immersive 3D 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 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. “Everyday Beauty”:

An exhibition of 100 images spanning 100 years representing African-American history and culture and highlighting the beauty of everyday occasions. 14th Street and Constitution Avenue NW.

National Museum of American History: “City of Hope: Resurrection 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. 14th Street and Constitution Avenue NW.

National Museum of Women in the Arts: “Bound to Amaze: Inside a Book-Collecting 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 semiprecious stone, through Nov. 25. 1250 CONTINUED ON PAGE 38


THURSDAY | 10.18.2018 | EXPRESS | 37

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OCT 18

OCT 18

OCT 19

OCT 19

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

Millennium Stage Presenting Sponsor:

Brought to you by

No tickets required, unless noted otherwise.

Mandy Barnett

Ari Hest

“Strange Conversation�

Carl Palmer’s ELP Legacy

It Came From the ‘70s Superflydisco

In The Wine Garden

OCT 21

OCT 22

OCT 23

OCT 23

miki howard

Parsonsfield & Sawyer Fredericks

Pokey LaFarge (Solo)

scrapomatic

OCT 24

OCT 24

In The Wine Garden

24 | Kurbasy

OCT 25

In The Wine Garden

OCT 26

October 18–31 18 Thu. | Howard University Jazz Ensemble As part of Howard Homecoming celebrations, HUJE is joined by saxophonist Tia Fuller for classic American jazz.

The Wind + The Wave

An Acoustic Evening w/

In The Wine Garden

John Hiatt

OCT 26

OCT 28

Richard Marx

Enter the Haggis

(two shows!)

In The Wine Garden

OCT 29

OCT 31

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.

20 Sat. | Abada-Capoeira DC and

Jenny & The Mexicats OCT 31

BatalĂĄ Washington

John Sebastian

Acoustic Alchemy

Rasputina

NOV 1

NOV 1

NOV 2-3

An Evening w/

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.

21 Sun. |

Family Night: Lana Berakovic and Maija Karklina Jim Lauderdale w/ Amelia White In The Wine Garden

Reckless Kelly

Antje Duvekot w/ Brianna Lane In The Wine Garden

Dar Williams with Antigone Rising

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.

NOV 4

NOV 5

NOV 6

NOV 6

An Evening with

Sarah Dash:

JD Souther

“A Tribute To Aretha Franklin: Queen Of Soul�

Jennifer Knapp In The Wine Garden

Obie Bermudez

NOV 7

NOV 8

NOV 8

NOV 9

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. Presented in collaboration with the Embassy of the Czech Republic.

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. 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^]

An Evening with

Jackopierce

Humble Pie

Ha Ha Tonka

Kevin Griffin

In The Wine Garden

(Of Better Than Ezra)

* BECOME A CITY WINERY VINOFILE MEMBER *

EXCLUSIVE PRESALE ACCESS, WAIVED SERVICE FEES, complimentary valet & MORE!

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.

25 | Fran Vielma

23 Tue. | Maykel Blanco y su Salsa Mayor Bring your dancing 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 England Foundation for the Arts.

25 Thu. | Fran Vielma The percussionist’s works represent his personal vision of contemporary Venezuelan jazz made in New York City. This performance has been selected by Kennedy Center Artistic Director for Jazz Jason Moran.

The Bentzen Ball Comedy Festival

27 | Melinda Hill

27 Sat. | Stand-Up with Melinda Hill The award-winning comedian, writer, and actress, whose “bubbly, adorable persona belies outlandish comedy� (LA Weekly), basically delivers smart satire on a sparkle rainbow. With Jenny Questell.

28 Sun. | .[Q AUR[ In this production from Sweden, four characters tell and present their story V[ QVĂžR_R[a dNf`°\OWRPa` _\YY N_\b[Q things move, and perspectives change through dance, speech, and song. Presented as a part of Kids Euro Festival 2018.

29 Mon. | NSO Youth Fellows Participants from this National Symphony Orchestra training program play a program of classical works.

30 Tue. | Choir ALIAS

These programs contain mature themes and strong language. Free general admission tickets will be distributed in the States Gallery starting at approximately 5 p.m., up to two tickets per person. Presented in collaboration with the BYT Bentzen Ball.

Students and graduates with hearing impairments and hearing students perform with their teachers in a program where each musical phrase is followed synchronously by emotional recital to music in sign language, thus setting untraditional interpretations of pieces.

26 Fri. | <Ăœ /\\X' AUR 6Z]_\cV`RQ

Presented in collaboration with the Embassy of Latvia.

In the Terrace Gallery

:b`VPNY =\QPN`a Hosts Zach Reino and Jessica McKenna, also known as the musical sketch duo The Zach and The Jess, sometimes improvise four musicals a week. It’s almost like it’s no big deal to write a musical. Boom! Rodgers and Hammerstein, ya been roasted!

31 Wed. | The Capitol Bones The group, featuring vocalist Christal Rheams, performs a wide variety of music from jazz to rock, with a tribute to Aretha Franklin.

This performance will not be streamed live or archived.

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

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: Mon.–Fri., 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

Please note: Standard parking rates apply when attending free performances.

KCMillenniumStage on Facebook and check out artist photos, upcoming events, and more! The Kennedy Center welcomes persons with disabilities.

All performances and programs are subject to change without notice.


38 | EXPRESS | 10.18.2018 | THURSDAY

goingoutguide.com CONTINUED FROM PAGE 36

New York Ave. NW.

National Museum of the American Indian: “Nation to Nation: Treaties Between the United States and American Indian Nations”: An exhibition exploring the relationship between Native American nations and the United States, through April 1; “Our Universes: Traditional Knowledge Shapes Our World”: The exhibition focuses on

indigenous cosmologies, worldviews and philosophies related to the creation and order of the universe and the spiritual relationship between humankind and the natural world, through Sept. 1; “The Great Inka Road: Engineering an Empire”: To celebrate the construction of the Inca Road, which linked Cuzco, Peru, with the farthest reaches of the empire, the exhibition digs into its early foundations and the technologies that made building the road possible, through

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

dispel misconceptions about the Trail of Tears, through January. 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

Local movie times DISTRICT

AMC Loews Georgetown 14 3111 K Street N.W.

www.amctheatres.com/

A Star is Born (R) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 1:10-2:30-4:20-5:30-7:15-8:40-9:10-10:00; 12:15 Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween (PG) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 1:45-4:15-7:10-10:30 Crazy Rich Asians (PG-13) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 1:15-4:10 Halloween (2018) (R) CC/DVS;Dolby Cinema at AMC Prime;Recliners;RS: 7:00-9:45 First Man (PG-13) CC/DVS;Dolby Cinema at AMC Prime;Recliners;RS: 3:30 Venom (PG-13) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 1:50-3:20-6:15-7:30-10:15 Night School (PG-13) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 1:55-4:40 Smallfoot (PG) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 1:00-3:40 Bad Times at the El Royale (R) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 12:45-4:00-7:20-10:45 The Old Man & The Gun (PG-13) AMC Independent;CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 2:00-4:30 A Simple Favor (R) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 6:10 The Hate U Give (PG-13) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 12:45-4:00-7:15-10:30 Venom 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS;RealD 3D;Recliners;RS: 12:30-4:40 The Oath (R) AMC Independent;CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 12:30-3:00-5:45 First Man: The IMAX 2D Experience (PG-13) RS: 1:00-4:30-7:45-11:00 First Man (PG-13) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 6:45-9:30 Halloween (2018) (R) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 7:30-8:15-9:00-10:15-11:00

AMC Loews Uptown 1 3426 Connecticut Ave N.W.

www.amctheatres.com/

Halloween (2018) (R) CC/DVS: 7:00-9:45 First Man (PG-13) CC/DVS: 3:30

AMC Mazza Gallerie 5300 Wisconsin Ave. NW

www.amctheatres.com/

A Star is Born (R) CC/DVS: 12:10-1:20-3:15-4:20-7:30 Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween (PG) CC/DVS: 12:10-3:10-5:40 Halloween (2018) (R) CC/DVS: 8:00-9:00 First Man (PG-13) CC/DVS: 12:00-2:30-5:30-8:00 Venom (PG-13) CC/DVS: 12:30-3:10-8:30 Smallfoot (PG) CC/DVS: 12:10-3:15-5:35 Bad Times at the El Royale (R) CC/DVS: 12:05-2:35-5:40-8:50 Venom 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS;RealD 3D: 5:50

Avalon Theatre 5612 Connecticut Ave

www.theavalon.org

A Star is Born (R) CC;AD: 11:00-2:00-5:00-8:00 First Man (PG-13) CC;AD: 1:15-4:30-7:40; 10:30AM

www.landmarktheatres.com/

A Star is Born (R) CC;Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing: 11:05-1:45-4:40-7:25-10:10 Crazy Rich Asians (PG-13) CC/DVS;Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing: 11:45-2:205:00-7:45 First Man (PG-13) CC/DVS;Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing: 11:10-1:00-1:55-4:407:00-7:30-10:15 22 July (R) CC/DVS;Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing: 12:50-3:45-7:05-10:00 A Star is Born (R) CC/DVS;Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing: 4:00-9:50-10:15 Venom (PG-13) CC/DVS;Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing: 11:30-2:10-4:45-7:15-9:45

Landmark E Street Cinema 555 11th St Northwest

www.landmarktheatres.com/

Monsters and Men (R) CC;Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing: 3:30-9:55 Tea With the Dames CC;Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing: 1:00-3:15 Garry Winogrand: All Things are Photographable CC;Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing: 1:10-3:20-5:30-7:40-9:50 The Wife (R) CC/DVS;Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing: 2:05-4:35-9:35 Fahrenheit 11/9 (R) Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing: 4:25-7:00-9:30 Colette (R) CC/DVS;Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing: 1:20-4:20-7:20-9:45 The Old Man & The Gun (PG-13) CC/DVS;Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing: 1:152:15-4:45-7:15-9:30 The Sisters Brothers (R) CC/DVS;Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing: 1:10-4:107:10-9:40 Beautiful Boy (R) CC/DVS;Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing: 7:15-9:45

Landmark West End Cinema 2301 M St Northwest

www.landmarktheatres.com/

Science Fair (PG) CC;Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing: 1:45 22 July (R) CC/DVS;Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing: 1:00-4:00-7:00 Private Life (R) CC/DVS;Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing: 4:30-7:30 BlacKkKlansman (R) CC/DVS;Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing: 1:15-4:15-7:15

Regal Gallery Place Stadium 14 701 Seventh St Northwest

Smithsonian - Lockheed Martin IMAX Theater 601 Independence Ave 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 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) 3:45-6:20-8:55

Smithsonian - Warner Bros. Theater 1300 Constitution Ave Northwest

www.regmovies.com/

First Man (PG-13) 2D;CC/DVS;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 12:40-4:00-7:40-11:00 Venom 3D (PG-13) 3D;CC/DVS;No Passes;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 12:0011:05 A Star is Born (R) 2D;CC/DVS;No Passes;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 12:30-1:003:40-4:20-7:15-10:40 Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween (PG) 2D;CC/DVS;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 12:00-2:30-5:00-7:30-10:00 Halloween (2018) (R) 2D;CC/DVS;No Passes;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 7:30-10:10 First Man (PG-13) 2D;4DX;CC/DVS;No Passes;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 12:00-3:30 Venom (PG-13) 2D;CC/DVS;No Passes;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 12:30-2:403:10-5:25-5:50-8:05-8:30-10:25

www.si.edu/theaters

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

MARYLAND

AFI Silver Theatre Cultural Center 8633 Colesville Road

www.afi.com/silver

Shadow of a Doubt (1943) (PG) Doublefeature: Address Unknown (1944) With Shadow of a Doubt (1943): 7:30 The Old Man & The Gun (PG-13) CC;Accessibility devices available: 11:15-1:15-3:155:15-7:15-9:15 Museum (Museo) (NR) English Subtitles: 11:40-4:20 Matangi/Maya/M.I.A 2:15 Mandy 7:00 Let the Corpses Tan (Laissez bronzer les cadavres!) English Subtitles: 9:30

AMC Center Park 8

Landmark Atlantic Plumbing Cinema 807 V St Northwest

Night School (PG-13) 2D;CC/DVS;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 4:45-7:20-9:55 Bad Times at the El Royale (R) 2D;CC/DVS;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 12:003:15-6:30-9:50 A Simple Favor (R) 2D;CC/DVS;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 12:20 Venom 3D (PG-13) 3D;4DX;4DX 3D;CC/DVS;No Passes;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 7:05-10:05 The Hate U Give (PG-13) 2D;CC/DVS;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 12:15-1:003:15-4:30-6:15-7:45-9:30-10:55 The Oath (R) 2D;CC/DVS;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 12:15-2:45-5:05-7:25-9:45 Free Solo (PG-13) 2D;CC;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 12:20-2:45-5:15-8:00-10:30 First Man (PG-13) 2D;CC/DVS;No Passes;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 3:00-7:00

4001 Powder Mill Rd.

www.amctheatres.com/

A Star is Born (R) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 2:30-6:00-9:00 Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween (PG) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 2:15-4:35-7:20-9:45 Halloween (2018) (R) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 7:00-8:00-9:45-10:15 First Man (PG-13) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 1:00-4:10-4:45-6:55-10:30 Venom (PG-13) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 2:00 Night School (PG-13) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 1:30-4:10 Smallfoot (PG) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 2:30-5:00 Bad Times at the El Royale (R) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 3:15-6:30-9:45 The Hate U Give (PG-13) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 7:00-10:00 Venom 3D (PG-13) RealD 3D;Recliners;RS: 1:00-6:30 Venom (PG-13) Recliners;RS: 3:45-9:15

AMC Magic Johnson Capital Ctr 12 800 Shoppers Way

www.amctheatres.com/

Cinderella (2015) (PG) CC/DVS: 2:00 A Star is Born (R) CC/DVS: 1:15-4:30-7:45-9:00 Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween (PG) CC/DVS: 1:15-3:45-6:45-9:15 Halloween (2018) (R) CC/DVS: 7:00-8:15-8:45-9:45-10:45 First Man (PG-13) CC/DVS: 1:45-5:00-6:15-9:30 Venom (PG-13) CC/DVS: 12:50-3:35-4:45-6:15-10:20 Night School (PG-13) CC/DVS: 1:30-3:15 Bad Times at the El Royale (R) CC/DVS: 12:55-4:10-7:20-10:30 The Hate U Give (PG-13) CC/DVS: 1:00-4:10-5:10-7:30-9:35 Venom 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS;RealD 3D: 7:30 First Man: The IMAX 2D Experience (PG-13) CC/DVS;RS: 12:45-4:00-7:15-10:30 Kinky (R) AMC Independent: 1:55-4:20 Smallfoot (PG) 12:45-4:15

Landmark Bethesda Row Cinema 7235 Woodmont Ave

www.landmarktheatres.com/

First Man (PG-13) CC/DVS;Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing;RS: 12:50-1:50-3:507:00-9:00 A Simple Favor (R) CC/DVS;Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing;RS: 4:05 A Star is Born (R) CC/DVS;Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing;RS: 1:00-2:00-4:00-5:007:10-8:00-9:40 The Sisters Brothers (R) CC/DVS;Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing;RS: 1:10-4:506:45-9:55 The Old Man & The Gun (PG-13) CC/DVS;Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing;RS: 1:20-4:30-6:50-7:40-10:05 The Wife (R) CC/DVS;Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing;RS: 1:40-4:20-10:00 Colette (R) CC/DVS;Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing;RS: 1:30-4:10 Beautiful Boy (R) CC/DVS;Handicap Accessible;Hard of Hearing;RS: 7:20-9:50

Regal Hyattsville Royale Stadium 14 6505 America Blvd.

www.regmovies.com/

A Star is Born (R) 2D;CC/DVS;No Passes;Stadium: 12:50-4:05-7:20-10:35 Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween (PG) 2D;CC/DVS;Stadium: 12:10-2:30-5:00-7:30-10:00

Halloween (2018) (R) 2D;CC/DVS;No Passes;Stadium: 7:45-10:25 The Nun (R) 2D;CC/DVS;Stadium: 5:05-7:35-10:25 First Man (PG-13) 2D;CC/DVS;Stadium: 12:45-4:00-7:15-10:30 Venom (PG-13) 2D;CC/DVS;No Passes;Stadium: 1:15-3:55-4:00-6:55-9:40 Night School (PG-13) 2D;CC/DVS;Stadium: 1:30-4:30-7:25-10:20 Smallfoot (PG) 2D;CC/DVS;Stadium: 12:00-2:30-5:15-7:50-10:35 Bad Times at the El Royale (R) 2D;CC/DVS;Stadium: 12:30-3:45-7:00-10:15 Hell Fest (R) 2D;CC/DVS;Stadium: 12:40-3:00-5:20 The House With A Clock In Its Walls (PG) 2D;CC/DVS;Stadium: 12:00-2:30 Colette (R) 2D;CC/DVS;Stadium: 1:25-4:15-7:05-10:05 The Hate U Give (PG-13) 2D;CC/DVS;Stadium: 7:00-10:05 Venom 3D (PG-13) 3D;CC/DVS;No Passes;Stadium: 12:45 Gosnell: The Trial Of America's Biggest Serial Killer (PG-13) 2D;Stadium: 12:05-2:455:20-7:55-10:40 Kinky (R) 2D;No Pass/SS;Stadium: 12:40-3:00-5:20-7:45-10:10 Venom (PG-13) 2D;CC/DVS;Stadium: 1:45-4:30-7:15-10:05

Regal Majestic Stadium 20 & IMAX 900 Ellsworth Drive

www.regmovies.com/

A Star is Born (R) 2D;CC/DVS;No Passes;Recliner;Reserved;ReservedSelected;Stadium: 12:15-12:40-3:30-4:00-6:50-7:10-10:10-10:30 Crazy Rich Asians (PG-13) 2D;CC/DVS;Recliner;Reserved;ReservedSelected;Stadium: 1:00 Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween (PG) 2D;CC/ DVS;Recliner;Reserved;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 12:00-12:30-2:40-3:00-5:205:30-8:00-10:30-10:40 Halloween (2018) (R) 2D;CC/DVS;No Passes;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 7:00-9:50 The Nun (R) 2D;CC/DVS;Recliner;Reserved;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 11:00 Venom (PG-13) 2D;CC/DVS;No Passes;Recliner;Reserved;ReservedSelected;Stadium: 1:00-3:25-4:00-6:25-7:00-10:05 First Man (PG-13) 2D;CC/DVS;No Passes;Recliner;Reserved;ReservedSelected;Stadium: 12:45-4:10-7:35-11:00 Night School (PG-13) 2D;CC/DVS;Recliner;Reserved;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 12:30-2:25-3:25-5:20-6:20-8:10-9:15-11:00 Smallfoot (PG) 2D;CC/DVS;Recliner;Reserved;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 1:35-4:25 Bad Times at the El Royale (R) 2D;CC/DVS;Recliner;Reserved;ReservedSelected;Stadium: 12:20-3:40-7:00-10:20 The House With A Clock In Its Walls (PG) 2D;CC/ DVS;Recliner;Reserved;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 12:05-2:45-5:20 Monsters and Men (R) 2D;Recliner;Reserved;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 12:00 Colette (R) 2D;CC/DVS;Recliner;Reserved;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 12:45-3:406:25-9:25 The Hate U Give (PG-13) 2D;CC/DVS;Recliner;Reserved;ReservedSelected;Stadium: 12:10-12:40-3:25-4:00-6:45-7:25-7:55-10:05-10:45 Venom 3D (PG-13) 3D;CC/DVS;No Passes;Recliner;Reserved;ReservedSelected;Stadium: 12:30-9:30 The Oath (R) 2D;CC/DVS;Recliner;Reserved;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 7:15-9:45 First Man: The IMAX 2D Experience (PG-13) 2D;CC/ DVS;IMAX;Reserved;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 12:00-3:30-7:00-10:30 Bigger (PG-13) 2D;CC;Recliner;Reserved;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 12:35-3:356:35-9:35 Gosnell: The Trial Of America's Biggest Serial Killer (PG-13) 2D;Recliner;Reserved;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 12:50-3:50-6:30-9:20 Free Solo (PG-13) 2D;CC;Recliner;Reserved;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 12:152:45-5:30-8:10-10:50 Kinky (R) 2D;No Pass/SS;Recliner;Reserved;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 4:15

Xscape Theatres Brandywine 14 7710 Matapeake Business Dr

www.xscapetheatres.com

A Star is Born (R) AD;CC;SS: (!) 10:20-1:20-4:20-7:20-10:20 Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween (PG) AD;CC;SS: (!) 10:10-11:50-12:40-2:20-3:204:40-6:20-8:40 Venom (PG-13) AD;CC;SS: (!) 10:00-10:50-1:10-1:50-3:10-4:10-4:40-7:10-7:50-9:50-10:50 Night School (PG-13) AD;CC;SS: (!) 10:05-11:20-12:50-2:10-3:50-5:10-8:00-11:00 First Man (PG-13) AD;CC;SS: (!) 11:10-2:00-4:50-7:40-10:30 Smallfoot (PG) AD;CC;SS: (!) 10:15-1:00-3:30 Halloween (2018) (R) AD;CC;SS: (!) 7:00-8:00-8:30-9:40-10:30-11:10 Bad Times at the El Royale (R) AD;CC;SS: (!) 9:40-12:30-3:40-6:50-10:10 The Hate U Give (PG-13) CC;SS: (!) 10:30-12:10-1:30-4:30-7:00-7:30-10:00-10:40

VIRGINIA

AMC Courthouse Plaza 8 2150 Clarendon Blvd.

www.amctheatres.com/

A Star is Born (R) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 1:00-1:30-3:45-4:40-6:50-7:45 Halloween (2018) (R) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 7:00-9:40 First Man (PG-13) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 2:00-5:15-8:15 Venom (PG-13) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 1:15-4:00-5:15-8:00 Smallfoot (PG) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 3:00-5:30 Bad Times at the El Royale (R) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 1:00-4:15-7:30 A Simple Favor (R) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 1:00-4:05 The Hate U Give (PG-13) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 7:00-8:30 Venom 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS;RealD 3D;Recliners;RS: 2:30

AMC Hoffman Center 22 206 Swamp Fox Rd.

www.amctheatres.com/

Halloween (2018) (R) CC/DVS: 7:00-9:00-9:45-10:15 More Than Funny: Everybody Has A Punchline (PG) Alternative Content: 7:00 Halloween (2018) (R) CC/DVS;Dolby Cinema at AMC Prime;Recliners;RS: 8:00-11:00

movement — a theory known as eurhythmics — which transformed dance in America, through Nov. 12; “UnSeen: Our Past in a New Light, Ken GonzalesDay and Titus Kaphar”: An exhibition of works by Gonzales-Day and Kaphar, contemporary artists who address the under- and misrepresentation of minorities in American history and portraiture, through Jan. 6; “Black Out: Silhouettes Then and Now”: An exhibition that studies the silhouette, a

(!) No Pass/No Discount Ticket Angelika Film Center Mosaic 2911 District Ave

Crazy Rich Asians (PG-13) Alcohol Available;CC;DA;RS: 11:15-5:05 The Oath (R) Alcohol Available;CC;DA;No Passes;RS: (!) 11:10-1:30-3:50-6:10-8:30-10:55 Free Solo (PG-13) Alcohol Available;CC;No Passes;RS: (!) 10:15-12:45-3:15-5:40-8:20-10:50 Strangers on a Train (PG) HITCHCOCKTOBER - RS- Alcohol Available: 7:00 A Star is Born (R) Alcohol Available;CC;DA;No Passes;RS: (!) 9:55-12:55-2:00-4:00-7:008:00-10:00-11:00 Venom (PG-13) Alcohol Available;CC;DA;No Passes;RS: (!) 10:45-1:30-4:15-9:45 First Man (PG-13) Alcohol Available;CC;DA;No Passes;RS: (!) 10:00-1:10-4:20-7:30-10:40 The Old Man & The Gun (PG-13) Alcohol Available;CC;DA;No Passes;RS: (!) 10:45-1:003:30-5:50-8:10-10:30 The Sisters Brothers (R) Alcohol Available;CC;DA;RS: 10:30-1:15-4:00-10:00

Regal Ballston Quarter Stadium 12 671 North Glebe Rd

www.regmovies.com/

Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween (PG) 2D;CC/DVS;Recliner;ReservedSelected;Stadium: 1:45-4:10-7:30-9:50 Halloween (2018) (R) 2D;CC/DVS;No Passes;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 7:00-9:45 First Man (PG-13) 2D;CC/DVS;No Passes;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 12:353:45-7:15-10:30 Venom (PG-13) 2D;CC/DVS;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 12:45-2:00-4:45-7:4510:30 Night School (PG-13) 2D;CC/DVS;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 1:50-4:30-7:2510:10 Smallfoot (PG) 2D;CC/DVS;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 1:40-4:20-6:45-9:20 Bad Times at the El Royale (R) 2D;CC/DVS;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 12:403:50-7:10-10:25 The House With A Clock In Its Walls (PG) 2D;CC/DVS;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 1:35-4:35-7:35-10:15 Colette (R) 2D;CC/DVS;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 1:30-4:25-7:20-10:05 The Old Man & The Gun (PG-13) 2D;CC/DVS;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 1:15-4:05-6:40-9:10 The Hate U Give (PG-13) 2D;CC/DVS;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 7:00-10:15 Venom 3D (PG-13) 3D;CC/DVS;No Passes;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 4:00 A Star is Born (R) 2D;CC/DVS;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 12:30-1:00-3:45-4:156:30-9:40

Regal Kingstowne Stadium 16 & RPX 5910 Kingstowne Towne Ctr

www.regmovies.com/

A Star is Born (R) 2D;CC/DVS;No Passes;Stadium: 1:10-4:15-7:20-10:25; 12:10-3:10 Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween (PG) 2D;CC/DVS;Stadium: 12:15-1:05-2:45-3:205:15-5:40-7:45-8:00-10:15-10:20 Crazy Rich Asians (PG-13) 2D;CC/DVS;Stadium: 5:55-9:05 Halloween (2018) (R) 2D;CC/DVS;No Passes;RPX;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 7:00 First Man (PG-13) 2D;CC/DVS;No Passes;Stadium: 3:30-6:45-10:00 Venom (PG-13) 2D;CC/DVS;No Passes;Stadium: 12:30-3:10-3:40-6:00-6:35-9:00 Night School (PG-13) 2D;CC/DVS;Stadium: 1:20-4:05-7:10-9:50 Smallfoot (PG) 2D;CC/DVS;Stadium: 12:20-2:50-5:15 Bad Times at the El Royale (R) 2D;CC/DVS;Stadium: 12:25-3:35-6:45-10:00 The House With A Clock In Its Walls (PG) 2D;CC/DVS;Stadium: 12:30-3:05 Colette (R) 2D;CC/DVS;Stadium: 12:45 The Hate U Give (PG-13) 2D;CC/DVS;Stadium: 7:15-10:15 Venom 3D (PG-13) 3D;CC/DVS;No Passes;Stadium: 1:00-9:30 Gosnell: The Trial Of America's Biggest Serial Killer (PG-13) 2D;Stadium: 1:05-3:506:20-9:10 Kinky (R) 2D;No Pass/SS;Stadium: 12:50-3:20 First Man (PG-13) 2D;CC/DVS;Stadium: 12:45-4:00-7:15-10:30 Halloween (2018) (R) 2D;CC/DVS;No Passes;RPX;Recliner;Stadium: 9:45 Venom (PG-13) 2D;CC/DVS;Stadium: 1:45-4:40-7:25-10:15 A Star is Born (R) 2D;CC/DVS;Stadium: 12:25-3:30-6:50-9:55 Halloween (2018) (R) 2D;CC/DVS;No Passes;Stadium: 7:45-10:30

Regal Potomac Yard Stadium 16 3575 Potomac Ave

www.regmovies.com/

A Star is Born (R) 2D;CC/DVS;No Passes;Stadium: 1:00-1:20-3:15-4:00-7:05-7:30-8:5510:10 Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween (PG) 2D;CC/DVS;Stadium: 1:50-4:30-7:15-9:50 Halloween (2018) (R) 2D;CC/DVS;No Passes;Stadium: 7:00-9:45 First Man (PG-13) 2D;CC/DVS;No Passes;Stadium: 1:00-4:10-7:20-10:30 Venom (PG-13) 2D;CC/DVS;No Passes;Stadium: 1:05-2:00-3:50-4:50-6:40-7:45-9:30-10:30 Night School (PG-13) 2D;CC/DVS;Stadium: 1:10-1:50-3:55-4:40-7:15-10:00 Smallfoot (PG) 2D;CC/DVS;Stadium: 12:55-4:25-6:20-10:30 Bad Times at the El Royale (R) 2D;CC/DVS;Stadium: 1:10-4:20-7:30-10:30 The House With A Clock In Its Walls (PG) 2D;CC/DVS;Stadium: 1:30-4:00-6:30-9:10 A Simple Favor (R) 2D;CC/DVS;Stadium: 1:45-4:35-7:25-10:15 The Hate U Give (PG-13) 2D;CC/DVS;Stadium: 1:25-4:40-7:40-10:30 Venom 3D (PG-13) 3D;CC/DVS;No Passes;Stadium: 1:50-4:35-10:20 The Oath (R) 2D;CC/DVS;Stadium: 7:30-10:00 Gosnell: The Trial Of America's Biggest Serial Killer (PG-13) 2D;Stadium: 1:35-4:006:50-9:30 Kinky (R) 2D;No Pass/SS;Stadium: 2:20-4:40 Venom (PG-13) 2D;CC/DVS;Stadium: 7:30

Smithsonian - Airbus IMAX Theater 14390 Air and 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 Journey to Space: The IMAX 3D Experience (NR) 10:35-1:25-3:25 First Man: The IMAX 2D Experience (PG-13) 4:30-7:05-9:40


THURSDAY | 10.18.2018 | EXPRESS | 39

RACHEL WHITEREAD

goingoutguide.com

National Gallery of Art, Sculpture Garden: “Rachel Whiteread” is an exhibition of about 100 works by British sculptor Rachel Whiteread, which includes 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. See them through Jan. 13.

National Postal Museum: “My Fellow 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 the Declaration of Independence as it appeared in the Pennsylvania

Evening Post, July 6, 1776, through Dec. 31; “Pulitzer Prizes at 100: Editorial Cartoons”: To mark the 100th anniversary of the Pulitzers, this ongoing exhibit features work from the portfolio of Jack Ohman of the Sacramento Bee, the 2016 winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Editorial Cartooning, through Dec. 31; “1968: Civil Rights at 50”: An exhibition of historic images and print news items that explore the events that shaped the civil rights movement when leader the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated, through Jan. 2; “The Marines and Tet: The Battle That Changed the Vietnam War”: An exhibition of 20 largeformat photographs by John Olson, a photographer with Stars and Stripes who spent three days with the Marines at the 1968 Battle of Hue of the Vietnam War. Hue was one of more than 100 cities and villages that North Vietnamese forces struck with a surprise attack on the holiday known as Tet, through July 8; “Pictures of the Year: 75 Years of the World’s Best Photography”: An exhibit

of a selection of more than 100 awardwinning news images from the archives of the photojournalism competition Pictures of the Year International (POYi), through Jan. 20. 555 Pennsylvania Ave. NW.

Renwick Gallery: “No Spectators: The Art of Burning Man”: An exhibition 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 CONTINUED ON PAGE 41

Nov. 5 at 8 p.m. | Concert Hall Kennedy-Center.org (202) 467-4600

nation + world

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

Only in

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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.


40 | EXPRESS | 10.18.2018 | THURSDAY

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

PARAMORE FOSTER THE PEOPLE THE REVIVALISTS w/

................................... JUNE 12 .................................................. FRI JANUARY 11 On Sale Friday, March 16 at 10am On Sale Friday, October 19 at 10am

THIS WEEK’S SHOWS

Jonathan Richman featuring Tommy Larkins on the drums! Early Show! 6:30pm Doors. 14+ to enter. ............................................................. SA OCT 20 STEEZ PROMO PRESENTS

THIS SATURDAY!

Steve Martin & Martin Short

ALL GOOD PRESENTS

Black Tiger Sex Machine w/ Kai Wachi • Al Ross • Lektrique Late Show! 10pm Doors .................................. SA 20

Big Thief w/ The Range of Light Wilderness & .michael. .............................. SU 21 We Were Promised Jetpacks w/ Hurry Up ........................................... TU 23

featuring The Steep Canyon Rangers and Jeff Babko .............................NOV 17

Joe Russo’s Almost Dead

with Oteil Burbridge on Bass ..OCT 20

Tash Sultana

GOLDENVOICE PRESENTS

w/ Ocean Alley ................................NOV 21

Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds

The Front Bottoms &

w/ Cigarettes After Sex ....................OCT 25

OCTOBER

Reese Witherspoon

NOVEMBER (cont.)

ALL GOOD PRESENTS

Cursive

Twiddle

w/ Meat Wave & Campdogzz ..........F 2

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

U STREET MUSIC HALL PRESENTS

ALL GOOD PRESENTS

Early Show! 6pm Doors.....................Sa 3

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

U STREET MUSIC HALL PRESENTS

Jain w/ Drama ............................M 29 Jake Shears “ANNIE”-THEMED HALLOWEEN COSTUME CONTEST! First prize wins two tickets to every 9:30 show in Nov/Dec 2018! w/ SSION & Sammy Jo ..............W 31

Rhiannon’s Revenge… A Halloween Disco Late Show! 10pm Doors ....................Sa 3 !

D NIGHT ADDED FIRST NIGHT SOLD OUT! SECON

St. Lucia w/ SHAED & The Colonies ............Tu 6 U STREET MUSIC HALL PRESENTS

MAX w/ Bryce Vine & EZI

NOVEMBER

Early Show! 6pm Doors.....................Th 8

Midland w/ Desure

U STREET MUSIC HALL PRESENTS

Soulection’s The Sound of Tomorrow feat. Andre Power •

The Brian Setzer Orchestra - 15th Anniv. Christmas Rocks! Tour

Lettuce with Waka Flocka Flame and Marcus King

w/ Lara Hope and The Ark-Tones ..NOV 30 ALL GOOD PRESENTS

Dark Star Orchestra ...DEC 1

Tenacious D w/ Wynchester .NOV 7

DC101 PRESENTS

Bastille • Andrew McMahon

DC CENTRAL KITCHEN’S

Capital Food Fight.........NOV 8

In The Wilderness • Meg Myers • The Glorious Sons................ DEC 4

ALL GOOD PRESENTS

Lake Street Dive w/ Jalen N’Gonda .............................NOV 9

Lindsey Stirling 6LACK w/ Summer Walker .......NOV 11 The Wanderland Tour ........ DEC 14 Young the Giant O.A.R. ......................................... DEC 15 w/ LIGHTS ........................................NOV 16

Late Show! 10pm Doors ......................Th 8

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

AN EVENING WITH

Joe Kay • Devin Tracy • J. Robb • Andres Uribe.............................Th 1

Chris Robinson Brotherhood. F 9 Lincoln Theatre • 1215 U Street, NW Washington, D.C.

MANY MORE SHOWS ON SALE!

9:30 CUPCAKES

All 9/22 tickets will be honored. ...... OCT 26

w/ Turkuaz........................................NOV 3

Fleetmac Wood:

(of Scissor Sisters)

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

ALL GOOD PRESENTS

Ekali w/ 1788-L & Jaron

Moon Taxi

Manchester Orchestra

Whiskey in a Teacup Tour in conversation with Ali Wentworth

930.com

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

JUST ANNOUNCED!

ESPERANZA SPALDING ...................................SAT DECEMBER 1

N E K O C A S E .........................................................................SAT JANUARY 26 D SHOW ADDED!

FIRST SHOW SOLD OUT! SECON

AEG PRESENTS

Capital One Arena • Washington, D.C. AEG & I.M.P. PRESENT

PANIC! AT THE DISCO w/ Two Feet .............JANUARY 20

BERT KREISCHER

Late Show! 9:30pm Doors................................ MARCH 14

NORM MACDONALD

....................................................... MARCH 21

On Sale Friday, October 19 at 10am

Ticketmaster

THE BYT BENTZEN BALL COMEDY FESTIVAL

9:30 CLUB PRESENTS AT U STREET MUSIC HALL

Trevor Powers w/ CORMAC ROTH ................... F OCT 19 Low Cut Connie w/ Ruby Boots • &more (Chill Moody & Donn T)....................Su 21 Alexandros .............................. M 22 Oh Pep! Late Show! 10:30pm Doors ...W 24 Rubblebucket w/ Diet Cig & Star Rover ..................Sa 27

Gus Dapperton w/ Beshken .......... M 29 Chase Atlantic w/ Cherry Pools & R I L E Y................W 31 Ezra Furman w/ Omni .......... Tu NOV 1 The Twilight Sad .......................Sa 3 The Lemon Twigs w/ Jungle Green .Su 4 Brandon Wardell Live w/ Chase Bernstein ..........................M 5

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

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

Elle King w/ Cordovas ...................NOV 2 Richard Thompson Electric Trio w/ Rory Block .......NOV 8 AN EVENING WITH Edie Brickell Ólafur Arnalds ........................NOV 14 & New Bohemians ................NOV 3 LIVE NATION PRESENTS Inside Netflix’s The Staircase Stay Tuned with Preet Bharara with special guest Chuck Todd .........NOV 15 & Making a Murderer: Fabrications, Lies, Fake Science, Jackson Galaxy and the Owl Theory feat. David Rudolf and Jerry Buting Moderated by NPR’s Carrie Johnson .NOV 5 • thelincolndc.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

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

- Host of Animal Planet’s My Cat from Hell ...................NOV 21

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

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


UNDERGRADUATE CLASSES start on October 22.

Visit UMUC.EDU © 2018 University of Maryland University College

THURSDAY | 10.18.2018 | EXPRESS | 41

TREVOR PAGLEN

goingoutguide.com

Smithsonian American Art Museum: “Trevor Paglen: Sites Unseen” is 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. It’s on view through Jan. 6. CONTINUED FROM PAGE 39

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; “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 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.

Smithsonian Arthur M. Sackler Gallery: “Encountering the Buddha: Art and Practice Across Asia”: An exhibition of Buddhist art from India, China, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Cambodia, Thailand, Indonesia and Japan, through Nov. 29; “Shaping Clay in Ancient Iran”: An exhibition of ancient ceramics — animal-shaped vessels and jars and bowls decorated with animal figures — produced in northwestern Iran from the Chalcolithic period (5200-3400 B.C.) to the Parthian period (250 B.C.-A.D. 225), through Sept. 1. 1050 Independence Ave. SW.

Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History: “Objects of Wonder”: The exhibition includes the “Blue Flame,” one of the world’s largest and finest pieces of gem-quality lapis lazuli; Martha, the last known passenger pigeon; the Pinniped fossil, a fossil of one

of the earliest members of the group of animals that includes seals, sea lions and walruses; and the 1875 Tsimshian House Front, one of the best examples of Native Alaskan design artwork, through Jan. 1; “Narwhal: Revealing an Arctic Legend”: An exhibition on the research and collaboration by Inuit and scientists on the narwhal reveals the latest in scientific knowledge on the animal and illuminates the interconnectedness between people and ecosystems, through Jan. 1; “Outbreak: Epidemics in a Connected World”: An exhibition that examines the human ecology of epidemics to mark the 100th anniversary of the Great Influenza, a pandemic that took the lives of 50 million to 100 million people — between 3 and 5 percent of the world’s population at that time, through Dec. 31. 10th St. & Constitution Ave. NW.

The Kreeger Museum: “Reinstallation of the Permanent Collection: Phase II”: Phase II of the reinstallation of the permanent collection will return the museum’s postwar and contemporary holdings to the lower-level galleries, through Dec. 31. 2401 Foxhall Road 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, Anna Ancher, Franzisca Clausen, Fanny Brate, Hannah Pauli and others, through Jan. 13. 1600 21st St. NW.

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

Virginia Museum of Fine Arts: “The Precisionist Impulse”: 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,” through Nov. 12; “Howardena Pindell: What Remains to Be Seen “: An exhibition that features the artist’s early figurative paintings, explorations into abstraction and CONTINUED ON PAGE 42

Directed by Aaron Posner

OCT. 23 – DEC. 2 WITH:

Brian Dykstra

Kate Eastwood Norris

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Howard W. Overshown

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42 | EXPRESS | 10.18.2018 | THURSDAY

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‘Blueberries for Sal’: In this play based on the book by Robert McCloskey, Sal and her mother are picking delicious blueberries to can and make desserts. On the other side of the hill, a mama bear and baby bear are filling up for the long hibernation, and the two parties run into a mix-up. Adventure Theatre MTC, 7300 MacArthur Blvd., Glen Echo, Md., through Oct. 21. CONTINUED FROM PAGE 41

conceptual practices, as well as personal and political art produced after a lifethreatening car accident in 1979, through Nov. 25. 200 N Blvd, Richmond.

National Symphony Orchestra Pops Steven Reineke, conductor

Music by John Williams

Walters Art Museum: “Japanese Woodblock Prints: The Art of Collaboration�: An exhibition of works that, though usually attributed to individual artists including Hokusai and Hiroshige, are really the products of orchestrated collaborations among publishers, artists, carvers and printers. Their distinct roles are explored, through Jan. 6. 600 N. Charles St., Baltimore.

October 23–25 | Concert Hall

Stage ‘Actually’: A provocative play by Anna Ziegler that explores consent and sexual assault on college campuses. Arena Stage, 1101 Sixth St. SW, through Nov. 18.

‘Aida’: A romantic musical, set in ancient

Kennedy-Center.org (202) 467-4600

Egypt, featuring music by Elton John and Tim Rice. Constellation Theatre Company, 1835 14th St. NW, through Nov. 18.

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

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premiere of the musical adaptation of Tim Burton’s ghoul-filled comedy. National Theatre, 1321 Pennsylvania Ave. NW, through Nov. 18.

‘Blue’: Characters Pale Blue and Inky Blue grow blue flowers in their garden

with the help of some water and songs. Imagination Stage, 4908 Auburn Ave., Bethesda, through Oct. 28.

‘Born Yesterday’: Political satire meets romantic comedy in this sharp-edged story about an opportunistic tycoon Harry Brock, who arrives in Washington with his naive girlfriend Billie Dawn to game the political system. Ford’s Theatre, 511 10th St. NW, through Oct. 21.

‘Dirty Pictures’: Rapid Lemon Productions present a bawdy stage comedy about four lives transformed by the discovery of 21 shocking photographs in a Colorado roadhouse one night in 1982. Baltimore Theatre Project, 45 W Preston St., Baltimore, through Oct. 21.

‘Drag Queen Bingo!’: Drag bingo with performer Crystal Edge. Taqueria del Barrio, 821 Upshur St. NW, through Oct. 24. ‘Entre la tierra y el cielo (Between Earth and Sky)’: A curious young girl explores the magical world of plants and stars as she breaks with family and societal expectations. Based on the life of Mexican-American botanist Ynes Mexia. GALA Hispanic Theatre, 3333 14th St NW, through Oct. 27.

‘Figaro in Four Quartets’: �The Marriage of Figaro� is reimagined with the poetry of T.S. Eliot in this new theater experience by director Timothy Nelson. GALA Hispanic Theatre, 3333 14th St. NW, through Oct. 28.

‘Friends! The Musical Parody’: Relive different moments from the 10-year run of hit TV show with this uncensored, fast-paced, music-filled parody. Amp by Strathmore, 11810 Grand Park Ave., North Bethesda, Md., through Oct. 19.

‘Heisenberg’: A two-character comedy about a chance encounter between two strangers at a London train station. Signature Theatre, 4200 Campbell Ave., Arlington, through Nov. 11.

‘How I Learned to Drive’: Paula Vogel’s Pulitzer Prize-winning play about a troubling relationship between a young girl and an older man. Round House Theatre, 4545 East-West Highway, Bethesda, through Nov. 4.

‘Illyria, or What You Will’: Shakespeare’s romantic comedy is set in a downtown Manhattan ’80s dive bar. Gunston Arts Center, 2700 South Lang Street, Arlington, through Nov. 19.

‘Jack and the Bean Stalk’: An adaptation of the classic tale in partnership with Victorian Lyric Opera Company. Arts Barn, 311 Kent Square Road, Gaithersburg, Md., through Oct. 28. ‘King John’: Aaron Posner directs Shakespeare’s historical play. Folger Theatre, 201 East Capitol St. SE, through Dec. 2.

‘Labour of Love ‘: A political CONTINUED ON PAGE 44


THURSDAY | 10.18.2018 | EXPRESS | 43

THE COMEDY OF ERRORS by William Shakespeare | directed by Alan Paul

the JERRY DOUGLAS

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goingoutguide.com CONTINUED FROM PAGE 42

production about the divide between Britain’s Labour Party and its workingclass constituency. Olney Theatre Center, 2001 Olney-Sandy Spring Road, Olney, Md., through Oct. 28.

‘Lovers and Executioners — Providence Players’: A tale about attempted murder and a woman’s revenge. Winner of the 1999 Helen Hayes Charles MacArthur Award for

Outstanding New Play. James Lee Community Center, 2855 Annandale Road, Falls Church, through Oct. 20.

‘Nevermore’: A journey into the life of gothic writer Edgar Allan Poe in this musical that uses Poe’s poetry and short stories as its base. Creative Cauldron, 410 S. Maple Ave., Falls Church, through Oct. 28.

‘New Guidelines for Peaceful Times’: A production that centers on

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a high-stakes confrontation between an immigration official with a troubled history and a refugee from the devastation of Europe during WWII. Spooky Action Theater, 1810 16th St. NW, through Oct. 28.

‘Rooms: A Rock Romance’: The 10th anniversary production of this rock musical by Paul Scott Goodman about an ambitious singer and a reclusive rocker who tour the world in

$10 TICKETS with promo code FUNNY

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their quest for stardom. MetroStage, 1201 N. Royal St., Alexandria, through Nov. 11.

through Nov. 4.

‘Sing to Me Now’: An exhausted Greek muse hires a human intern in this contemporary comedy. Atlas Performing Arts Center, 1333 H St. NE, through Nov. 18.

exploration of activist James Baldwin’s legacy through theater, and a mix of rock, rhythm and blues and jazz. The Clarice Smith Performing Arts Center, 8270 Alumni Dr., College Park, Md., through Oct. 19.

‘Stew and the Negro Problem: Notes of a Native Song’: An

‘Sleepy Hollow’: Washington Irving’s classic short story is staged. Synetic Theater, 1800 S. Bell St., Arlington,

‘Summerland’: The play tells the mysterious tale of William H. Mumler,

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‘Broadway Center Stage: Little Shop of Horrors’: The classic musical comedy — starring a meat-eating plant that craves human blood — is staged with TV stars Megan Hilty and Josh Radnor. The Kennedy Center, 2700 F St. NW, through Oct. 28.

‘Sweat’: Layoffs, lockouts and picket lines threaten a group of friends and co-workers at a small-town factory in the Rust Belt in Lynn Nottage’s Pulitzer Prize-winning drama. Everyman Theatre, 315 W. Fayette St., Baltimore, through Nov. 25.

‘The Agitators’: This play examines the 45-year friendship and occasional

rivalry between two great, rebellious and flawed American icons: Susan B. Anthony and Frederick Douglass. Atlas Performing Arts Center, 1333 H St. NE, through Nov. 25.

‘The Comedy of Errors’: A Shakespearean comedy about mistaken identities and long-lost family. Shakespeare Theatre Company, 610 F St. NW, through Oct. 28.

‘The Duchess of Malfi and The Changeling’: A Jacobean tragedy about a women who hires a hit man to off her fiance so she can marry her true love.

NAVY BAND PLAYS

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The Lab at Convergence, 1819 N. Quaker Lane, Alexandria, through Nov. 18.

‘The Fall’: A biographical play a student-

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organized movement to remove a statue of British colonialist Cecil Rhodes at the University of Cape Town. Studio Theatre, 1501 14th St. NW, through Nov. 18.

‘The Hunchback of Notre Dame’: The Arlington Players’ production of “The Hunchback of Notre Dame” is based on the Victor Hugo novel and songs from the Disney film. Thomas Jefferson Community Theatre, 125 S. Old Glebe Road, Arlington, through Oct. 27.

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46 | EXPRESS | 10.18.2018 | THURSDAY

entertainment

The king of ‘Happy Prince’ Star Rupert Everett was dying to tell the story of Oscar Wilde’s final days

‘The Conners’ faces life after Roseanne

SONY PICTURES CLASSICS

FILM Oscar Wilde has a certain kind of reputation — a raconteur with a cutting wit, a lust for life and a fondness for alcohol (he was also a writer). After his 1895 trial and conviction for “gross indecency” (read: “being gay”), he was sentenced to two years of hard labor. That’s often the end of the story. Most of the plays and movies about Wilde “really do end quite neatly at the point where he went to prison,” says Rupert Everett, the director, writer and star of the Wilde biopic “The Happy Prince,” opening Friday. “They deal with his days in the sunshine, his enormous celebrity and him being witty and funny and living dangerously.” In contrast, “The Happy Prince” centers around Wilde’s deathbed as he remembers the final three years of his life, which the Irish playwright spent in France and Italy after his release from prison. For Everett, Wilde’s death was the best way into this lesserknown part of his life. “I wanted to make this film about his deathbed,” Everett says. “I’d been quite inspired by my dad; when he died, I noticed that as the brain starts collapsing, it’s like a cliff edge and great chunks fall off. And as they fall, bubbles of memory come out and you see that person transported,

Director and star Rupert Everett reveals his Wilde side in “The Happy Prince.”

although they’re in the same room. I found that very inspiring somehow — the brain giving a last display of fireworks.” Everett’s drive to write the screenplay wasn’t rooted solely in his desire to get this part of Wilde’s life on screen. There was a bit of selfishness involved too. “I’d done some writing, I’d written a couple of books,” he says of the novels he penned in the 1990s. “My plan had always been to segue that into writing a screenplay with a view of writing myself a really whacking great part. I only directed the film when no one else wanted to take it. I just thought, ‘Well, I’ll try and put it together myself.’ ” Getting “The Happy Prince”

“If I had managed to make the film straight after I had written it, I think it could have been a car crash.” RUPERT EVERETT, on his relief that his screenplay for “The Happy Prince” took so long to get produced

onto the screen took the better part of a decade, due to the lack of interest from directors and studios. “I’m traditionally quite a flaky person, so the fact I was this tenacious is extraordinary,” says

Everett, who found fame with his role alongside Julia Roberts in 1997’s “My Best Friend’s Wedding.” “All the difficulties made me feel more confident about what I wanted to try. If I had managed to make the film straight after I had written it, I think it could have been a car crash.” Though Wilde was impoverished or ill or both during his time in exile, “The Happy Prince” is not a sad slog through the last days of a fallen idol. “His behavior in exile was great because he was not a victim of his doom,” Everett says. “He was still curious, he still fell in love — he still cruised along, enjoying himself quite a bit.” KRISTEN PAGE-KIRBY (EXPRESS)

TELEVISION

Longtime ‘Sesame Street’ resident moves out

The puppeteer who has played Big Bird on “Sesame Street” is retiring after nearly 50 years on the show. Caroll Spinney announced in a statement Wednesday that he’s handing over Big Bird and his other character, Oscar the Grouch, to younger performers. The 84-year-old joined “Sesame Street” at its inception in 1969. His apprentice, Matt Vogel, will succeed him in the Big Bird role. Vogel also plays Kermit the Frog. (AP)

Facebook Watch launching “The Real World” editions in 3 countries

Comedy Central’s “Nathan for You” won’t have 5th season

TV REVIEW ABC’s “The Conners,” a retitled reboot of a revival, made its return Tuesday with the now widely known news that its main character, Roseanne Conner (once played by Roseanne Barr), had recently died in her sleep. The cause? An opioid overdose. Her husband, Dan (John Goodman), was convinced he had gotten rid of the pills that she abused during one of the new episodes of “Roseanne” that aired last spring. Now, his daughter Becky (Lecy Goranson) has found another bottle of pills while going through her mother’s things. Dan snatches them and storms off. “Damn,” Becky says, “That’s the only thing from Mom’s closet that I wanted.” The studio audience laughs, of course, because what we still have here — even after “Roseanne’s” Category 4 storm blew through — is just a sitcom. It’s now up to “The Conners” to make sense of what happened and see if there’s anything relevant for its characters to tell us in 2018. Tuesday’s episode — which Nielsen says debuted with 10.5 million viewers, nearly identical to the revival’s May finale — was loaded with characters and jokes, and reminded us that there’s still a fine concept for a TV show here. Callous as it may sound, the sooner Roseanne is forgotten, the better the show might become. HANK STUEVER (THE WASHINGTON POST)

Michael B. Jordan to star in “The Silver Bear”


THURSDAY | 10.18.2018 | EXPRESS | 47

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THURSDAY | 10.18.2018 | EXPRESS | 49

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MD RENTALS

VA RENTALS

SUPER SPECIALS! PAY NO RENT DURING THE HOLIDAYS!*

Parkway Terrace

WALK TO WHITE FLINT METRO

APARTME NTS

Bedrooms

*Must Apply by 10/31/18. Call for details

301.830.8972 5401 McGrath Blvd. North Bethesda, MD 20852

1 BR starts at $1082 renovated $1182

1, 2, & 3 Bedroom Apartment Homes Available ! " # $ "

2 BR starts at $1210 renovated $1310

Nestled Between

WALK TO METRO | ALL CREDIT CONSIDERED

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

Mon-Fri 9am-5pm

301.830.8680

3415 Parkway Terrace Dr., Suitland, MD 20746

TAKOMA LANDING

Walk to Tysons Metro

APARTMENTS & TOWNHOMES

Great

BRAND NEW RENOVATED SPACIOUS APARTMENTS

Specials

! ""

301.841.9287 1401 Blair Mill Rd., Silver Spring, MD 20910

One BRs from $1,099* Two BR Townhomes from $1,399* W/D in Townhomes Only *Prices are subject to change

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. On-line at http://ugkcshc.com/

CALL 301.302.8066

1653 Anderson Road, McLean, VA 22102

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

www.washingtonpost.com/nominate

703.935.0495

VA RENTALS

BARCROFT APAR TMENT S Studio, 1, 2 & 3 Bedroom Apts. Walking distance to shopping & schools Laundry facilities on site All-brick construction On Metrobus route Cats welcome

703.334.9336

1130 S George Mason Drive Arlington, VA 22204

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 ďŹ tness centers *Please call for more details Walking distance

ROOMMATES BOWIE, MD - Room in basment with private BA and shower. Private entrance. No smoking. Call 240-603-9191 FORT WASHINGTON, MD - Rooms for rent. Pref female. $500-$600. Cable & utilities included. Share BA. Call 301-717-3991

WOW

arting Prices St nly From O

$

560 DALE FOREST

APARTMENTS

Free gas cooking, heating, and hot water Playgrounds Olympic-sized swimming pool Minutes to shopping, dining & VRE

703.334.9362

14321 Wrangler Lane #1, Dale City, VA 22193

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

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

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 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

NOMINATE YOUR COMPANY

! "# " $$$ 790 Fairview Avenue, Takoma Park, MD 20912

Love where you work? We’re looking for Top Workplaces in the DMV.

Concerts, movies, events, restaurants and more.

Oxon Hill/Temple Hills-Lg BRs $675-$775 utils incl. 1 per occ. 240-432-0751 or 301-455-7430 SE- Furn room, share kitchen, bath & cable. $180/week, Female pref'd. Call 301-922-6393 Waldorf—Waldorf- Newly Renovated Furnished Home To Share-Rooms from $675-$850 ALL UTILS & CABLE INCL!! NO PETS! w/d & parking avail. MPREF-Single Occup. 240.271.3006

Park your browser here. Concerts, movies, events, restaurants and more.

XX740 1x.25 XX740 1x.25

w8

XPJ1455 2x10.5 XX740 1x1.5

XX470c 1x2


50 | EXPRESS | 10.18.2018 | THURSDAY

Are you having money and relationship problems? FREE Workshops on Stress Management, Communication, and Financial Management for COUPLES. Workshops are available in Falls Church, College Park, Alexandria, and Bowie. Couples may receive up to $160 for attendance and completion of surveys to evaluate the program.

(877) 432-1669 www.togetherprogram.org

TOGETHER is a project of Virginia Tech and the University of Maryland, College Park. Funding for this Project was provided by the United States Department of Health and Human Services, Administration for Children and Families, Grant: # 90FM0077-04-00.

A brand new building in Sterling

Benefits start day one: • We’re raising the bar on wages: starting Nov 1, earn $15-15.50/hr • Tuition assistance • 401(k) with company match • Flexible work schedules for associates who are in school

Brand new jobs for you!

trending “A senator that easily flusters and snaps at debate moderators for doing their job is not someone [who] should be in office.” @JOANNYBANANY_, tweeting about Tuesday night’s debate between Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, and Democratic challenger Beto O’Rourke. Their second debate was decidedly more personal and anger-fueled than their first. When asked what non-political activity he’d done that gave insight into his character, Cruz wasn’t able to answer immediately. The most contentious moment came when Cruz snapped, “Don’t interrupt me, Jason” at moderator Jason Whitely, who, ironically, was asking about civility.

Apply online & schedule your appointment:

amazon.com/washingtonDCjobs

2019 BERNARD/EBB

SONGWRITING AWARDS

“It’s about the words and music”

“Stand still a [moment]. Take a breath. A breath not all of us can truly call our own.” @JIMORMONDE, reacting to the obituary for 30-year-old Madelyn Linsenmeir of Vermont. Linsenmeir’s family was candid in the obituary about her struggle with drug addiction, even noting her first encounter with drugs and her efforts to stay sober for her young son. The obit was praised for celebrating Madelyn’s life while refusing to gloss over the pain addiction can cause.

$10,000 GRAND PRIZE

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

“Campaigning and [tweeting] ... what hard work. What an inspiration to their employees.” @T_BYRD519, joking about the Trump Organization’s attempt to compliment “our boys” Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump on National Boss Day. The tweet backfired, with many Twitter users asking what the two actually do. Eric’s tweet about receiving greeting cards from the “girls” on his floor was also panned for a tone many found demeaning.

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.

GETTY IMAGES

Amazon is an Equal Opportunity-Affirmative Action Employer-Minority / Female / Disability / Veteran / Gender Identity / Sexual Orientation.

“Who wants to tell Joe Crowley about the concept of campaigning?” @EMKCOGS, tweeting about Joe Crowley’s comments to BuzzFeed News that millennial voters are the reason he lost New York’s June primary to Alexandria OcasioCortez. Though the politician wasn’t overly bitter about his loss, both he and Twitter users acknowledged that he failed to productively engage with millennials.

“You have to work pretty hard to do as much damage to your reputation as Manny Machado has in the last 24 hours.” @JIMROME, saying the Dodgers shortstop, who will be a free agent this winter, has hurt his value. Machado said Tuesday he’s not the type of player who’s “Johnny Hustle.” A day later, he was accused of a dirty play against the Brewers.


THURSDAY | 10.18.2018 | EXPRESS | 51

fun+games Horoscopes

Scrabble Grams

PAR SCORE 140-150, BEST SCORE 206

Sudoku

DIFFICULT

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) You are trying to bring several people together in support of an idea. They may not share your confidence, however. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) You’re going to have to lay down the law — so why not today? The odds are in your favor, and you have much to gain. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) A decision is made in your absence that affects you directly. You may be able to get someone to change their mind. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) You are likely to hear things through the grapevine today that may have you changing your mind about a very important endeavor. WEDNESDAY’S SOLUTION

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) A

portion of your winnings may have to go to someone else today, as late payment for something done for you quite some time ago.

WEDNESDAY’S SOLUTION

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) You mustn’t feel that you are settling for less than you deserve today if you say “yes” to someone’s last-minute proposal. ARIES (March 21-April 19) You need some alone time in order to work out a personal problem that has been plaguing you for far too long. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Others are likely to see through you today if you continue to do what a loved one has told you is unwise. Listen to his or her warning.

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

52 | 34 TODAY: We’re on the east side of high pressure centered over the Midwest. That means we’ll have mostly sunny skies and a continued breeze out of the northwest of up to 15 mph, with highs in the low-to-mid 50s. It will be an even chillier night with lows down to the mid-30s to near 40. Some areas of frost are possible.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) A

conflict can be resolved today, but you may feel somehow dissatisfied. Perhaps you didn’t ask for enough in compensation. CANCER (June 21-July 22) Your opinion may not be sought after, but you’ll nevertheless have several opportunities to share it with a rather large audience.

PEARLS BEFORE SWINE | STEPHAN PASTIS

AVG. HIGH: 67 RECORD HIGH: 85 AVG. LOW: 49 RECORD LOW: 34 SUNRISE: 7:20 a.m. SUNSET: 6:25 p.m.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) A rival knows

what you’re up to and just what you’re capable of — but you know exactly the same about him or her. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You are facing one or two very attractive temptations today, but neither is good for you in the long run. Self-control is your best friend.

DAILY CODE

today in histor y

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

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

59 | 42

63 | 41

SUNDAY

MONDAY

54 | 44

56 | 39

ET

1767: The Mason-Dixon line, the boundary between colonial Pennsylvania, Maryland and Delaware, is set as astronomers Charles Mason and Jeremiah Dixon complete their survey.

1892: The first long-distance telephone line between New York and Chicago is officially opened (it could only handle one call at a time).

1962: James D. Watson, Francis Crick and Maurice Wilkins are honored with the Nobel Prize for Medicine and Physiology for determining the double-helix molecular structure of DNA.

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


52 | EXPRESS | 10.18.2018 | THURSDAY

fun+games Crossword

NOT THINKING

ACROSS 1

Jog

44 Harsh, as an instructor

5

Church feature

9

Tanker spill

46 “Neither a borrower, ___ ...”

15 Describe via drawing 16 English port town 17 State something differently

Urban pollution

35 Not amateurs

51 Rage

8

Lobster or steak, notably

36 Man cave, perhaps

52 Indira Gandhi’s dad

9

Throw cash around

37 Antlered creature

53 Fence supporter

53 Like toxic food

10 Prayer recipient

39 Mountain pool

54 Words after “glom”

58 Stupefyingly silly

11 Midwest state

40 Bird in “never needed”?

55 How some like their tea

44 Some offspring

56 Words with “precedent”

59 Rematchseeker’s lament? 62 Dele reversals

12 Fully dressed 13 Ebony and ivory together

45 Hip

18 Explosion producer

46 Raucous

65 Not tomorrow

19 Author Christian Andersen

49 Be a detective

66 Site of the first basketball game

23 Teamwork destroyers

67 Indiana city or South American country

24 When roosters get loud

32 Abdicate

DOWN

37 Like creepy settings

1

Mee and yuo, e.g.

28 Ham and cheese place

2

Like some sandpaper

29 Activist Brockovich

3

Perform better than

20 Utah city 21 Guys with kids with kids 22 Held back some change 25 Member of an NFL line 26 Some plums

63 Layabout? No, U-turn 64 “___ and out!”

28 Place for an inbox

38 “Could be anything” 41 Synthetic material 42 Leopard’s spots, i.e. 43 Feline in boots

48 Provide a defeat 50 Purple? A bit lighter

57 Bad thing to expect 60 PI kin 61 Cold War, historically

WEDNESDAY’S SOLUTION

27 Garden figure

30 Warble 31 Beer containers

4 Any judge, at times

32 Cut it out

5

Menu phrase for a king?

33 Informal word after “drive”

6

Bowling item

34 Snakelike fishes

SKETCHING IS SEEING Drawing programs for all ages throughout October FREE sketchbooks available at all Information Desks For more information, visit nga.gov/community.

This program is made possible by a generous grant from the Morris and Gwendolyn Cafritz Foundation. Édouard Manet, Plum Brandy (detail), c. 1877, National Gallery of Art, Washington, Collection of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Mellon

EDITED BY TIMOTHY E. PARKER

14 “Thy,” now

47 Cronkite, for one

7

See someone interesting on your commute? Use the space below to sketch and share with #ngasketch


THURSDAY | 10.18.2018 | EXPRESS | 53

people

SOCIAL MEDIA

Ariana also broke up with her spell-check

Woke Taylor discovers early voting Taylor Swift encouraged fans to vote early in an Instagram post Tuesday. “Something I wish I knew about when I was 18 and voting for the first time: EARLY VOTING,” the singer wrote in the caption to a post with two Polaroids — one of her red, white and blue toenails, the other of her in a blue tank top with white stars. She also shared a link to vote.org and details on Tennessee’s early voting. (EXPRESS)

Ariana Grande said that she’s taking a break from social media following the news of her split from fiancé Pete Davidson last weekend, People reported. “Time to say bye bye again to the internet for jus a lil bit,” she wrote in a now-deleted Instagram story on Tuesday. “It’s hard not to bump news n stuff that i’m not tryna see rn. it’s very sad and we’re all tryin very hard to keep goin. love u. and thank u for bein here always.” On Tuesday, the singer filmed a TV special honoring the musical “Wicked” without her engagement ring. Davidson canceled a stand-up show scheduled for Wednesday at Temple University due to “personal reasons.” (EXPRESS)

Man with bad jokes returns with even more bad jokes

‘I was worried it was really true,’ says no one

Louis C.K. made jokes about his sexual misconduct while performing stand-up at New York City’s West Side Comedy Club, according to LaughSpin. “I lost $35 million in an hour,” he allegedly said to the audience. This was the first time he addressed the sandal since apologizing last year for pleasuring himself in front of several women without their consent. (EXPRESS)

Roseanne Barr, who was fired from ABC’s “Roseanne” revival following a racist Twitter rant, returned to the social media platform Tuesday night after the premiere of “The Conners,” the spinoff ABC ordered after canceling her sitcom. The debut episode revealed that Roseanne, the Conner family matriarch, had died of an opioid overdose.“I AIN’T DEAD” Barr tweeted, adding a variation of a four-letter word. (AP)

RACHEL LUNA (GETTY IMAGES)

COMMENTS

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

or email circulation@wpost.com.

MELISSA MCCARTHY, as quoted by Page Six, at an AOL Build talk Tuesday, noting that she prefers to play flawed characters

FIND US ONLINE

WHO WE ARE EXECUTIVE EDITOR | Dan Caccavaro

DC RIDER COLUMNIST | Kery Murakami

CREATIVE DIRECTOR | Ellen Collier

NEWS EDITORS | Sean Gossard, Rachel Podnar,

ART DIRECTOR | Jon Benedict

Briana Ellison

FEATURES: express.features@wpost.com

DEPUTY MANAGING EDITOR | Serena Golden

FEATURES EDITOR | Stephanie Williams

LOCAL: page3@wpost.com

NEWS AND DIGITAL EDITOR | Zainab Mudallal

ENTERTAINMENT EDITOR | Thomas Floyd

NEWS: express.news@wpost.com

COPY CHIEF | Vanessa H. Larson

DESIGNERS | Jenna Kendle, Tim Parks

SPORTS: express.sports@wpost.com

STORY EDITOR | Adam Sapiro

CIRCULATION MANAGER | Charles Love

PRODUCTION SUPERVISOR | Matthew Liddi

MARKETING MANAGER | Travis Meyer

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

FOR CIRCULATION: Call 202-334-6992

“I don’t know how to be — or I don’t know anyone who is — perfect.”

MANAGING EDITOR, FEATURES | Rudi Greenberg

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

TO NOMINATE A HAWKER AS STAR DISTRIBUTOR: Email circulation@wpost.com.

Lena Dunham revealed Wednesday via Instagram that she had surgery to remove her left ovary. “Yesterday I had a two hour surgery to remove my left ovary, which was encased in scar tissue & fibrosis, attached to my bowel and pressing on nerves that made it kinda hard to walk/pee/vamp,” the writer and actress wrote under a picture of her in a hospital bed. (EXPRESS)

MANAGING EDITOR, NEWS | Jeffrey Tomik

CONTACT THE NEWSROOM

TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD:

Lena undergoes surgery to remove her left ovary

SENIOR FEATURES WRITERS | Sadie Dingfelder, Kristen Page-Kirby

HOW TO REACH US

Call 202-334-6200.

HEALTH

verbatim

NO REMORSE

Roseanne set the record straight for a largely unconcerned world.

GETTY IMAGES

POLITICS

CORRECTIONS: Spot a mistake?

Let us know at corrections@wpost.com.

FOUNDING PUBLISHER | Christopher Ma, 1950-2011

TWITTER:

@WaPoExpress INSTAGRAM:

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


54 | EXPRESS | 10.18.2018 | THURSDAY

The Chiaroscuro Woodcut in Renaissance Italy Through January 20 Organized by the Los Angeles County Museum of Art in association with the National Gallery of Art, Washington

Ugo da Carpi, after Raphael or Giulio Romano, Hercules and the Nemean Lion, c. 1517 – 1518, chiaroscuro woodcut from two blocks in blue and black, The British Museum, London. Photo © 2018 The Trustees of the British Museum

National Gallery of Art

#myngadc | Art for Everyone | www.nga.gov


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