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Playoff opener Rooney has fit right in on and off the field for red-hot D.C. United 16

Planned attack

MARYLAND REVERSES: DURKIN’S OUT

NETFLIX

Turkish prosecutor says Khashoggi was strangled by Saudis 10

Above the crowd Hasan Minhaj’s Netflix series isn’t just another topical talk show 54

Got a ‘Pulse’?

PATRICK SEMANSKY (AP)

President Wallace Loh says it’s in the best interest of the university to part ways with the football coach following massive backlash over his reinstatement a day earlier 15

A new exhibit at the Hirshhorn turns your heartbeat into art 26 am

72 | 58

pm


2 | EXPRESS | 11.01.2018 | THURSDAY

PETR DAVID JOSEK (AP)

eyeopeners

ALL TRICK, NO TREAT?

LITERARY VENGEANCE

LITERARY LARGESSE

LITERARY SYNERGY

A meerkat inspects a Halloween pumpkin on Wednesday at a zoo in Dvur Kralove, Czech Republic.

You should never stab another person for any reason. However.

The sins of the mother shall be visited on the son, up to a $3 max

Asking friends to help you move is only cute if you’re a bookstore

A Russian researcher in Antarctica allegedly stabbed a colleague who wouldn’t stop spoiling the endings of books, The Sun and other outlets reported Tuesday. Engineer Sergey Savitsky is accused of stabbing welder Oleg Beloguzov at Bellingshausen Station, a Russian research center on King George Island. Savitsky was taken to St. Petersburg, Russia, and arrested, while Beloguzov is recovering at a hospital in Chile. (EXPRESS)

A man who returned his mom’s very overdue library book has paid the fine. Shreveport, La., resident Robert Stroud found a book in his late mother’s things that she’d checked out from the Shreve Memorial Library in 1934. The library waived its maximum fine of $3, but Stroud and his family last week donated $1,542.65 — what the late fee would have been by the 1934 rule of 5 cents a day — to the library, in honor of his mother. (AP)

A radical bookstore in Southampton, England, needed a way to move to its new location on a shoestring budget. So the staff of October Books came up with a novel idea: They called for volunteers to form a chain to pass books from the old location to the store’s new building down the street, NPR reported Wednesday. To their surprise, more than 200 people showed up and moved over 2,000 books in an hour’s time. (EXPRESS)

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THURSDAY | 11.01.2018 | EXPRESS | 3

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‘We wanted to tell our story’ 1928-2018 Every Friday morning, Henry Greenbaum donned a suit and carefully coordinated tie, sometimes a pocket square. His father, decades earlier in Poland, had been a tailor. For more than 50 years, Mr. Greenbaum operated a dry cleaner in Washington. He had about him a gentlemanly elegance, people who knew him recalled. He traveled those Fridays from his home in Bethesda to the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, where he would offer a greeting to any visitor who wished to meet him and an answer to anyone who had a question. Greenbaum, who died Oct. 24 at 90, was a survivor of Auschwitz-Birkenau, the Nazi death camp in German-occupied Poland where more than 1 million Jews, non-Jewish Poles and others were murdered during the Holocaust. He was born Chuna Grynbaum on April 1, 1928, to an Orthodox Jewish family in Starachowice, Poland, the youngest of nine children.

WIN MCNAMEE (GETTY IMAGES)

Md. Holocaust survivor and longtime museum volunteer dies at 90

Auschwitz survivor Henry Greenbaum of Bethesda died last week.

His father died shortly before the outbreak of World War II in 1939. In 1940, the family was placed in the Starachowice ghetto. From there, his mother and two sisters and their families were taken to the Treblinka death camp and murdered. Greenbaum was sent to a labor camp with three other sisters, all of whom would perish there. In 1944, at 15, he was transferred to Auschwitz, where he survived the infamous selection of victims to be sent to the gas chamber or to

“We promised one another, if you survive, make sure you’ll ... tell them what they did to us.” HENRY GREENBAUM, a Holocaust survivor who died last week, who volunteered at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum for 24 years. “We wanted to tell our story the minute we arrived here,” he once told The Washington Post.

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work, and then to Flossenburg, a concentration camp in Germany. As the Allies closed in, the Nazis subjected Greenbaum and other surviving prisoners to a death march. Greenbaum was liberated by American soldiers on April 25, 1945. After the war, he reunited with a brother. They joined another brother and their last surviving sister in the U.S. in 1946. Greenbaum and one of his brothers opened Windsor Valet in Friendship Heights, which he ran from 1954 until he retired in 1998. Greenbaum began volunteering at the Holocaust museum in 1994, the year after it opened. He was one of the longest-serving members of the corps of survivor volunteers. “He never wanted to scare or shock people so that they would turn away and not want to listen,” said Diane Saltzman, the museum’s director of survivor affairs, but neither did he spare them truthful answers to their questions. He would roll up his sleeve to show schoolchildren the tattoo with the number he was assigned at Auschwitz, A18991, and ask: “Have you ever heard of A u s c h w i t z ? ” E M I LY L A N G E R (THE WASHINGTON POST)

VIRGINIA

‘Awesome Eleven’ pals score $1M lottery win A group of friends who call themselves the “Awesome Eleven” won $1 million in the big Mega Millions drawing last week, lottery officials in Virginia said. Giang Kim Nguyen of Arlington buys a lottery ticket every week for the group, some of whom have been friends for 40 years. They plan to split the prize. (TWP)

THROWBACK THURSDAY

11.01.2010

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

Terrorists came close to blowing up two commercial airplanes in a mail bomb plot on Oct. 29, 2010. Saudi intelligence alerted the U.S. to the planes, which were en route to the U.S. from Yemen. Al-Qaeda claimed responsibility. ADVERTISEMENT

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4 | EXPRESS | 11.01.2018 | THURSDAY

local VIRGINIA 5TH DISTRICT

MICHAEL S. WILLIAMSON (THE WASHINGTON POST)

Endorsement from Trump full of flubs

A study found half of D.C.’s homeless women experienced domestic abuse, and the city lacks clear policies to help.

Report: Agencies lack domestic abuse policies Most D.C. departments have no strategy to deal with reports of violence THE DISTRICT The link between domestic violence and homelessness among women has long been established. In D.C., more than half of homeless women interviewed in a recent study said they had experienced domestic violence. And yet advocates say many of the District agencies tasked with helping the most vulnerable D.C. residents lack clear policies for how to handle reports of domestic violence. Of 22 District agencies that frequently interact with survivors of domestic violence, including homeless women, only two

indicated they have policies that instruct staff on how to respond to reports of domestic violence from members of the public, according to a report set to be released Wednesday by the DC Coalition Against Domestic Violence. Such overarching domestic violence policies are rare in jurisdictions across the country, but the District has an opportunity to be at the forefront of adopting such guidance, the coalition said. “I think too often domestic violence gets pigeonholed as a public safety issue,” said Andrea Gleaves, strategic partnerships manager for the coalition. “But the reality is that it impacts people across their lifespan. It touches school, it touches the workplace, across the board.” As the number of people

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seeking assistance for domestic violence in D.C. has continued to rise, city services and programs have been unable to meet the high demand, according to the coalition, which represents 16 nonprofit organizations focused on eliminating domestic violence. Of the 22 agencies that responded, only the Metropolitan Police Department and Child and Family Services identified specific policies on addressing domestic violence reports. “I hope that it sort of rings some alarm bells and lets people know that there’s a lot more that needs to be done,” said Karma Cottman, the coalition’s executive director. “We’re at kind of ground zero, and we’ve got a lot more to do in terms of our response.”

It seems like President Trump doesn’t have any trouble picturing Denver Riggleman in Congress. As he endorsed Riggleman on Monday for the open 5th Congressional District seat in Virginia, the president referred to the Republican newcomer as the incumbent. “Congressman @DenverRiggleman … is a popular guy who really knows how to get the job done!” Trump tweeted. “Really big help with Tax Cuts, the Military and our great Vets.” Fifteen minutes later came a do-over. The president dropped the “Congressman” title but still credited Riggleman for “Really big help” with legislation he could not have voted on. (TWP)

SAMANTHA SCHMIDT (THE WASHINGTON POST)

MAYORAL MUSCLE

The amount D.C. Council candidate Dionne Reeder raised between Oct. 11 and Oct. 29 in her bid to unseat Council member Elissa Silverman, I-At Large. Reeder has continued raising money at a breakneck pace with help from the fundraising muscle of Mayor Muriel Bowser, according to newly released campaign finance reports. Silverman raised $71,000 in the same period. In the most recent fundraising period, three-quarters of Reeder’s fundraising came from 87 donors who gave the maximum $1,000. (TWP)

expressline

Baltimore mayor: Police commissioner candidates are still being vetted

PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY

Man says he attacked police station to die A man charged with murder in the friendly-fire shooting death of an undercover police detective says he was trying to get himself killed when he attacked a police station and never intended to harm anybody. Michael Ford testified Wednesday at his trial that he never saw Prince George’s County detective Jacai Colson before a fellow officer mistakenly shot the plainclothes narcotics detective. But authorities say Ford exchanged gunfire with Colson before Officer Taylor Krauss shot his colleague. (AP) ANNE ARUNDEL COUNTY, MD.

21 arrested in drug ring linked to overdoses Police in Maryland have arrested 21 people in connection with a drug trafficking ring. Anne Arundel County police spokeswoman Jackie Davis said Tuesday that police seized more than 8.5 kilograms of xylazine, an animal tranquilizer that county police chief Timothy Altomare says was being cut with heroin. Police also seized 1.7 kilograms of fentanyl, some heroin and some cocaine. Altomare says the county saw one fatal overdose tied to xylazine in September. Police are investigating as many as seven overdoses tied to the ring. (AP) BALTIMORE

Just cleared of assault, officer kicks hole in desk A Baltimore police officer is accused of destroying police property worth $600 less than three weeks after he was cleared of assault charges. Charging documents say Kevin Battipaglia, 33, “mule kicked” a hole in a police station’s front desk and smashed a glass door Sunday, upon being told he had to work Halloween night. Police say he tried to cover the desk’s hole with a poster, but was captured on surveillance video. Battipaglia was acquitted of assault charges Oct. 11 in connection with the Dec. 24 arrest of a 21-year-old man. (AP)

Former Va. Democratic congressional candidate Shaun Brown convicted of fraud


THURSDAY | 11.01.2018 | EXPRESS | 5


6 | EXPRESS | 11.01.2018 | THURSDAY

local

Police probe sisters’ mystery deaths Two found dead and bound in NYC river were Saudis living in Va. FAIRFAX COUNTY Police are investigating the mysterious deaths of two sisters from Saudi Arabia whose bodies, bound together with tape, washed up on New York City’s waterfront last week. The sisters, Tala Farea, 16, and Rotana Farea, 22, were discovered Oct. 24 on a bank of the Hudson River, about 225 miles from Fairfax, Va., where they

lived and were reported missing in August. As of Tuesday, investigators still had not determined how they died. The sisters’ bodies were taped together and facing each other, but had no obvious signs of trauma, police said. They were both fully clothed. Their mother told detectives that the day before the bodies were discovered, she received a call from an official at the Saudi Arabian Embassy, ordering the family to leave the U.S. because her daughters had applied for political asylum, New York police

Rotana Farea

Tala Farea

said Tuesday. Saudi Arabia’s Consulate General in New York said in a statement that it had “appointed an attorney to follow the case closely.” New York City police sent a detective to Virginia to learn more about the sisters. Chief of Detectives Dermot Shea said they were particularly interested in

VIRGINIA

Right-wing ‘sting’ group infiltrates campaign A conservative group that creates undercover “sting” videos infiltrated the campaign of Abigail Spanberger, a Democrat in a tight race with Rep. Dave Brat in Virginia’s 7th District. The campaign said a woman working for Project Veritas posed as a volunteer and spent several weeks in Spanberger’s Richmond campaign office, performing basic tasks — and peppering her colleagues with questions that eventually raised suspicions. Campaign staffers on Wednesday confronted her and asked her to leave, a video by the campaign shows. (THE WASHINGTON POST)

finding out what happened since they were reported missing and what led them to New York City. “We are looking at all clues in their past life,” Shea said. The medical examiner’s office was investigating the cause of death. The lack of obvious trauma appeared to rule out a theory they jumped into the river from the George Washington Bridge. In its statement, the Saudi Consulate General said embassy officials in Washington had contacted the family and “extended its support and aid in this trying time.” MICHAEL R. SISAK (AP)

Swastika found Monday in bathroom at downtown D.C. high school days after deadly Pittsburgh synagogue attack

NLRB: Johns Hopkins tried to deter nurses from unionizing

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Pa. suspect is indicted on second day of burials

ISLAMABAD

Court acquits, releases Christian on death row

JUSTIN MERRIMAN (FOR THE WASHINGTON POST)

PITTSBURGH The suspect in the Pittsburgh synagogue massacre was indicted by a federal grand jury Wednesday, as members of a grief-stricken Jewish community endured another round of funerals for victims of the worst anti-Semitic attack in American history. Robert Bowers, a 46-year-old truck driver who authorities say raged against Jews as he gunned down 11 and wounded six, was charged in a 44-count indictment with murder, hate crimes and other offenses that could bring the death penalty. The indictment, which was expected, was announced on the second day of funerals for congregants who died at Tree of Life synagogue. “Today begins the process of seeking justice for the victims of these hateful acts, and healing for the victims’ families, the Jewish community, and our city,” U.S. Attorney Scott Brady said in a statement. One after another, services were held for three more victims of the rampage: Joyce Fienberg, 75; Melvin Wax, who was in his late 80s, and Irving Younger, 69. “It can’t be fixed,” Robert Libman said at the funeral for Fienberg, his sister, clutching his chest as he described the pain of losing her. “My sister is dead.

GETTY IMAGES

Funerals continue for victims of worst attack on Jews in U.S. history

‘Iron Man’ now towers over India

“Saturday was the most lonely day of my life.” The day’s other funeral was held for Wax, a retired accountant who was regarded as a core member of the congregation at New Light, which rented space in the lower level of Tree of Life. A drained-looking Tree of Life Rabbi Jeffrey Myers, a survivor of the weekend shooting, hurried from service to service. As Younger’s service was wrapping up, Myers momentarily forgot to read a letter to her family that another rabbi had sent. “After preparing for five funerals, you get a little verklempt,” Myers said. Bowers remained jailed without bail ahead of an arraignment scheduled for today.

India now has bragging rights to the world’s tallest statue. At nearly 600 feet (four times as tall as the Statue of Liberty), the country’s new Statue of Unity depicts Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel, an independence-era leader credited with uniting the fledgling nation in the 1940s as its first home minister. Known as India’s “Iron Man,” Patel has become a right-wing icon for Hindu nationalists. The $408 million colossus is also considered a trifecta for Prime Minister Narendra Modi: a nod to his Hindu political base, a landmark site in his home state, and a showcase of the nation’s status as a rising global power.

MARYCLAIRE DALE (AP)

(THE WASHINGTON POST)

The funeral for Irving Younger, 69, was held Wednesday in Pittsburgh.

My sister was murdered. There was no one I know like her. Pure goodness. ... She was the most tolerant and gentle person that I’ve ever known.” Younger had a small realty office in Squirrel Hill, the heart of Pittsburgh’s Jewish community, and coached baseball for more than 20 years. He loved to talk, and would gladly share his life story or stop strangers on the street to show them pictures of his grandson in California. One friend called him “a kibbitzing, people-loving man.” Widowed a dec ade ago, Younger had a son and daughter in California, who waited all day Saturday to learn if he had survived. “That waiting stage was just unbearable,” said his son, Jared, of Los Angeles.

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A very expensive ‘Lover’

A paperback copy of “Lady Chatterley’s Lover” used by the judge in the landmark U.K. obscenity trial of the novel’s publisher has sold at auction for 56,250 pounds ($72,000). It was sold to an anonymous bidder at Sotheby’s in London on Tuesday. Penguin Books was prosecuted and found not guilty in 1960 for publishing D.H. Lawrence’s 1928 novel about an affair between a wealthy woman and her husband’s gamekeeper, a landmark in the frank literary depiction of sexuality. (AP)

Britain’s Brexit secretary says he expects to reach deal with European Union by Nov. 21

A Christian woman who spent eight years on death row under Pakistan’s blasphemy law was acquitted and ordered released Wednesday by the country’s top court, a ruling that raised fears of violence by extremists who held protests over the verdict. Asia Bibi’s lawyer said she would leave the country. France and Spain have offered the 54-year-old Roman Catholic asylum. (AP) MIDDLE EAST

U.S. urges Yemen cease-fire, political talks In an apparent turning point, the Trump administration is demanding a cease-fire and the launch of U.N.-led political talks to end the Saudi-Iran proxy war in Yemen. Defense Secretary Jim Mattis called for a halt to hostilities within 30 days. The crisis has put many Yemenis on the brink of starvation. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo also called for the war to end Tuesday. (AP) LOUISVILLE, KY.

Suspect in grocery store shooting is indicted Gregory Bush, the man accused in the shooting deaths of two grocery store patrons in Kentucky, was indicted Wednesday by a grand jury on two counts of murder. Bush was seen on video trying to enter a historically black church minutes before shooting two black people at a Kroger store in suburban Louisville. (AP) INDONESIA

Lion Air crash search finds debris, belongings The search for the crashed Lion Air plane has found aircraft debris and passenger belongings on the seafloor, Search and Rescue Agency chief Muhammad Syaugi said Wednesday. Syaugi said the findings give the team confidence they will find the plane’s body. The location of the “black box” has been identified, he said, but strong currents hindered its recovery. (AP)

Artist arrested in Spain for red paint on tomb of late dictator Gen. Francisco Franco


THURSDAY | 11.01.2018 | EXPRESS | 9

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10 | EXPRESS | 11.01.2018 | THURSDAY

nation+world

Turkish prosecutor: Khashoggi strangled ISTANBUL S aud i jou r na l ist Ja ma l Khashoggi was strangled in a premeditated killing as soon as he entered the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul, and his body was dismembered before it was removed, a top Turkish prosecutor said Wednesday. Chief Istanbul prosecutor Irfan Fidan’s office also said in a statement that discussions with Saudi chief prosecutor Saud alMojeb over the killing yielded “no concrete result” despite Turkey’s “good-intentioned efforts to reveal the truth.” The statement was the first public confirmation by a Turkish official that Khashoggi was strangled and mutilated after he entered the Saudi Consulate on Oct. 2. It also pointed to a lack of cooperation from Saudi officials in the investigation of the slaying. “In accordance with plans made in advance, the victim, Jamal Khashoggi, was strangled and killed immediately after entering the Consulate General of Saudi Arabia,” the prosecutor’s office said. “Jamal Khashoggi’s body was dismembered and destroyed following his death by suffocation,

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LEFTERIS PITARAKIS (AP)

Official says journalist was killed immediately at the Saudi Consulate

A man guards Saudi Arabia’s consulate in Istanbul on Sunday, a day before Saudi and Turkish prosecutors met to discuss Jamal Khashoggi’s slaying.

again in line with the advance plans,” the statement read. The prosecutor’s statement Khashoggi that Khashoggi, a 59-year-old columnist for The Washington Post, was killed immediately conflicts with a report earlier this month by pro-government newspaper Yeni Safak, which cited what it described as an audio recording of Khashoggi being tortured before being killed. The newspaper claimed that his fingers were cut off and that he was killed by being beheaded. Turkey is seeking the extradition of 18 suspects in the journalist’s slaying who were detained in Saudi Arabia. It also is pressing

Saudi Arabia for information about who ordered Khashoggi’s killing and the location of his remains. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has called on Riyadh to disclose the identity of an alleged local collaborator said to have been involved in getting rid of Khashoggi’s body. Saudi chief prosecutor alMojeb met with Fidan twice and also visited the Turkish intelligence agency’s Istanbul headquarters this week before leaving for Riyadh on Wednesday. Fidan’s office said the Saudi delegation submitted a written statement and invited the Turkish delegation to come to Saudi Arabia bringing “evidence obtained during the course of the investigation.” MEHMET GUZEL AND SUZAN FRASER (AP)

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Coming soon: Roads paved with plastic What should we do with all the plastic choking the world’s landfills? One idea that’s gaining traction: Use it to build roads. A European firm is already combining plastic pellets with hot-mix asphalt to resurface roadways, and a U.S. company says once it finds financial backing, its product could be deployed in six months. (THE WASHINGTON POST)

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12 | EXPRESS | 11.01.2018 | THURSDAY

nation+world

Warming rate stuns scientists New study finds oceans have soaked up more heat than was believed ENVIRONMENT The world’s oceans have been soaking up far more excess heat in recent decades than scientists realized, suggesting that Earth could be set to warm even faster than predicted in the years ahead, according to new research published Wednesday. Over the past quarter-century, Earth’s oceans have retained 60 percent more heat each year than scientists previously had thought, said Laure Resplandy, a geoscientist at Princeton University who led the startling study published Wednesday in the

journal Nature. The difference represents an enormous amount of additional energy, originating from the sun and trapped by Earth’s atmosphere — the yearly amount representing more than eight times the world’s annual energy consumption. In the scientific realm, the findings help resolve long-running doubts about the rate of the warming of the oceans before 2007, when reliable measurements from devices called “Argo floats” were put to use worldwide. Before that, differing types of temperature records — and an overall lack of them — contributed to murkiness about how quickly the oceans were heating up. The higher-than-expected

How it was measured In order to measure the heat retained in Earth’s oceans, researchers measured the volume of gases, specifically oxygen and carbon dioxide, that have escaped the ocean in recent decades and headed into the atmosphere as it warms. The method gave scientists a reliable indicator of ocean temperature change because it reflects how liquid behaves when heated. (TWP)

amount of heat in the oceans means more heat is being retained within Earth’s climate system each year, rather than escaping into space. In essence, more heat in the oceans signals that global warming is more

advanced than scientists thought. “We thought that we got away with not a lot of warming in both the ocean and the atmosphere for the amount of CO2 that we emitted,” said Resplandy. “But we were wrong. The planet warmed more than we thought. It was hidden from us just because we didn’t sample it right.” Wednesday’s study also could have important policy implications. If ocean temperatures are rising more rapidly than previously calculated, that could leave nations even less time to cut the world’s emissions of carbon dioxide, in the hope of limiting global warming to the ambitious goal of 2.7 degrees Fahrenheit by the end of this century. CHRIS MOONEY

Report: Wildlife obliterated by human activity

AND BRADY DENNIS (THE WASHINGTON POST)

South Sudan opposition leader returns as part of peace deal

ACTIVIST INGREDIENTS

Ben & Jerry’s is taking a stand against what it calls the Trump administration’s regressive policies by rebranding one of its flavors as Pecan Resist to celebrate activists resisting what it views as harmful environmental practices and injustice. It is also giving $25,000 each to four progressive causes. (AP)

BULLEN CHOL (AP)

Ben & Jerry’s pint-size revolt

JUBA, SOUTH SUDAN | South Sudan’s opposition leader Riek Machar, center left, is greeted as he arrives at the airport in Juba on Wednesday. It was the first time Machar had returned since fleeing the war-torn country more than two years ago. He was back to take part in a nationwide peace celebration. South Sudan President Salva Kiir said Machar’s return marked the end of the country’s civil war and that peace was sure to endure.

4 dead, 19 missing after typhoon-triggered landslide crashes 2 buildings in northern Philippines

ENVIRONMENT Human activity has annihilated wildlife on a scale unseen beyond mass extinction, and it has helped put humans on a potentially irreversible path toward a hot, chaotic planet stripped clean of the natural resources that enrich it, a new report has concluded. Populations of mammals, birds, fish, reptiles and amphibians have declined by 60 percent since 1970, according to a report released Monday by the advocacy group World Wildlife Fund. The animals that remain will fight against warming oceans choked with plastic; toppled rain forests may zero out fragile species; and refuges such as coral reefs may nearly die off. That will transform life as humanity knows it, said Carter Roberts, the chief executive of the WWF in the United States, if societies do not reverse course to protect the food, water and shelter needed for survival. “The numbers are astonishingly bad,” Roberts told The Washington Post. “It’s death by a thousand cuts.” The Living Planet Report, released every two years, is a biopsy of sorts for wildlife and the numerous threats to it. The group points to overexploitation of the environment — activity such as mining and deforestation — unsustainable agriculture and climate change as some of the engines driving the depletion of species worldwide. ALEX HORTON (THE WASHINGTON POST)

Venezuelan journalist Teodoro Petkoff, ex-guerrilla leader, dies at 86


THURSDAY | 11.01.2018 | EXPRESS | 13

nation+world

‘Fear is a … powerful motivator’

Deployment to border could reach 15,000

Trump stokes anxieties over immigration, hoping to get his supporters out to vote “This is the most focused and concerted effort to use all of the powers of the presidency to shape a midterm election that I have ever seen,” said William A. Galston, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution’s Governance Studies Program. “President Trump is pushing every button on the console and he is mobilizing all of the power, including the communications power, of the federal government on behalf of his party’s campaign in this midterm,” Galston added. The president and his political advisers have decided that a base turnout strategy is the best way to preserve the GOP’s Senate and House majorities, with Trump wielding the polarizing issue of immigration as a cudgel in an attempt to motivate his 2016 supporters to vote. Trump suggested in an interview with Axios that he intends to end the constitutional right to U.S. citizenship for children born in the U.S. to noncitizens. Many legal experts as well as House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., said the president does not have such unilateral authority. Still, Trump’s move seemed designed to revive the “anchor baby” debate that he helped lead en route to his victory in the 2016 Republican presidential primaries. For days, Trump has been warning of “an invasion” of Central American migrants, even

government to advance his political aims. Instead, they argue, Trump’s long-held beliefs and policy prescriptions on immigration align with current events while also politically benefiting the Republican Party. Trump has scheduled 11 “Make America Great Again” rallies in the final six days before the elections, and immigration has become a core theme of his recent stump speeches. “We can’t let people break in and assault our country,” Trump said Saturday in Murphysboro, Ill. Jennifer Duffy, senior editor at the Cook Political Report, said she has been struck by how pervasive Trump’s language on immigration has been in the campaign’s final stretch. “Fear is a pretty powerful emotion and thus a pretty powerful motivator,” Duffy said. “Is there a downside? Policy-wise, yes. Politically, no.” ASHLEY PARKER AND PHILIP RUCKER (THE WASHINGTON POST)

PAUL SONNE, MISSY RYAN (TWP)

GETTY IMAGES/EXPRESS ILLUSTRATION

POLITICS President Trump is mobilizing the vast powers of the military and other parts of the federal government to help bolster Republican election efforts, using the office of the presidency in an attempt to dictate the campaigns’ closing themes and stoke the fears and anxieties of his supporters ahead of Tuesday’s midterm elections. Trump in recent days has made aggressive moves aimed at pushing policies that could boost Republicans next week — deploying thousands of troops to the U.S.-Mexico border in the largest such operation since the Mexican Revolution, floating the idea of ending birthright citizenship and warning he intends to halt the caravan of Central American migrants. The president has also moved to lower Medicare drug prices and suggested the idea of a 10 percent tax cut for the middle class, sending administration and congressional officials scrambling to assemble a new tax policy. The cumulative acts reflect the extent to which Trump has transformed parts of the federal bureaucracy into a factory of threats, directives and actions — an outgrowth of a campaign strategy the president and his advisers settled on as their best chance to hold the Republican congressional majorities.

IMMIGRATION President Trump said Wednesday that he would deploy as many as 15,000 military personnel to the border with Mexico in response to a caravan of Central American migrants making its way northward, doubling the figure that Pentagon officials said would be operating there. “We’ll go up to anywhere between 10,000 and 15,000 military personnel on top of Border Control, ICE and everybody else at the border,” Trump said to reporters. “Nobody’s coming in. We’re not allowing people to come in.” Trump’s comments came a day after the general in charge of the border deployment said 5,239 active-duty troops would be heading to the border with more potentially to follow, in addition to the 2,092 members of the National Guard already there. If the deployment reaches 15,000 troops, it would be roughly equivalent to the size of the U.S. military’s presence in Afghanistan. Already, the deployment is believed to be the largest of its kind in more than a century. The decision to deploy such a large number of troops in the days before the midterm elections has resulted in accusations from critics of the president that he is using the issue as a political stunt designed to fire up a base concerned about immigration.

Polling on immigration Three-quarters of registered Republicans ranked immigration as “one of the single most important” issues or a “very important” issue driving their midterm votes, just behind the economy and taxes, according to a Washington Post-ABC News poll from early October. “Immigration is obviously an important issue,” GOP pollster David Winston said. “Having said that, what’s central to where Republicans are at the moment is how the economy’s doing.” (TWP)

though they are traveling by foot in caravans, their numbers are dwindling and they are not expected to reach the border for several weeks. Within the White House and Trump’s broader orbit, the president’s advisers and confidants are sensitive to the suggestion that he is leveraging the

Prosecutors: Package bomb suspect ran web searches of targets, planned attacks for months

Official: Mafia hit man suspected in Whitey Bulger’s slaying in W.Va. prison


14 | EXPRESS | 11.01.2018 | THURSDAY

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sports

THURSDAY | 11.01.2018 | EXPRESS | 15

A decision Tuesday to reinstate football coach DJ Durkin engendered fierce criticism.

THREE POINTERS

U-Md. ousts Durkin School reverses course a day after saying football coach would stay despite scandal Initial decision blasted

UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND

MARYLAND Maryland parted ways with football coach DJ Durkin on Wednesday evening, one day after he was reinstated. Durkin had been on administrative leave since Aug. 11, following media reports that outlined a culture of abuse, fear and intimidation that allegedly took place under his watch. Maryland’s football program and athletic department have been the focus of scrutiny for months following the death of Jordan McNair, a 19-year-old football player who suffered exertional heatstroke at a team workout in late May and died 15 days later. The decision to buy out Durkin’s contract came following pushback from lawmakers and some players who voiced their displeasure with his reinstatement. Student leaders criticized the decision, as did faculty members in College Park and alumni around the country. According to USA Today, Durkin would be owed 65 percent of the $7.8 million remaining on his deal, or $5.07 million. After hearing Tuesday that Durkin would return, Marty

Offensive lineman Jordan McNair, 19, died in June, two weeks after suffering heatstroke at practice.

McNair, Jordan’s father, said he felt as though he had been “punched in the stomach and somebody spit in my face.” Athletic director Damon Evans told the team after practice Wednesday that Durkin would be leaving, according to people with knowledge of the situation. The Terrapins have gone 5-3 under interim coach Matt Canada. The team’s next game is at home Saturday against Michigan State. Maryland President Wallace Loh, who on Tuesday announced that he would retire from his post in June, said in a letter posted

The decision Tuesday to keep coach DJ Durkin had sparked sharp disagreement. For example, ESPN anchor Scott Van Pelt, a 1988 Maryland graduate, had said Tuesday on SportsCenter: “I love Maryland. It’s my university. That’s no secret. I wish I was prouder of it today.” Washington Post columnist Sally Jenkins said the school could no longer be trusted. “Don’t send your kids to Maryland to play football ...” she wrote Wednesday, before the decision was reversed. “Don’t let your son so much as look at an application. At best he will get all the wrong lessons in manhood, take courses in deceit, and spinelessness.” (EXPRESS)

online Wednesday evening that he met with campus leaders and the “overwhelming majority of stakeholders” voiced “serious concerns” about Durkin’s return. “This is not at all a reflection of my opinion of Coach Durkin as a person,” Loh said in a statement. “However, a departure is in the best interest of the university, and this afternoon Coach Durkin

Maryland suspends assistant men’s basketball coach Matt Brady six games for violating policies

was informed that the university will part ways.” Loh had been in favor of Durkin’s departure, but he had been given an ultimatum of sorts by the board of regents: If he wanted to finish the school year and reach the end of his contract, he had to keep Durkin. Wednesday’s decision to oust Durkin was made by Loh and University of Maryland officials. They informed the board of regents of the reversal but did not consult with the board. Durkin had been suspended since August while the university had the football program investigated. A report on McNair’s death, presented to the board of regents Sept. 21, outlined mistakes made by Maryland staffers, noting that athletic trainers didn’t properly diagnose or treat McNair. The school accepted the report. ESPN said team personnel waited an hour to call 911 after McNair had a seizure. Also, an ESPN story had painted a troubling picture of the culture of Durkin’s program, contending that players were routinely bullied and humiliated. RICK MAESE, EMILY GIAMBALVO AND

JONATHAN NEWTON (THE WASHINGTON POST)

Wizards limp home The Wizards, who return home to play the Thunder on Friday (8 p.m., ESPN/NBCSWA), are 1-6 after a 1-4 road trip that ended with a 107-95 defeat Tuesday in Memphis. What’s wrong? (EXPRESS/TWP)

3 Playing soft The Wizards are yielding an average of 122.4 points and are getting outrebounded by 12.0 boards per game; both figures were worst in the league entering Wednesday.

2 Shooting poorly The long-range shooters lost their touch over the summer; John Wall, below, is making 21.9 percent of his 3s and the club is near the bottom of the NBA in 3-point shooting.

1 Bickering already Familiar locker-room tensions have resurfaced. After a loss in Sacramento, Wall and Bradley Beal said too many players have their “own agendas” on the floor.

NICK ANDERSON (THE WASHINGTON POST)

Red Sox’s David Price says he won’t opt out of contract with 4 years, $127M left


16 | EXPRESS | 11.01.2018 | THURSDAY

sports

D.C. UNITED VS. COLUMBUS | 8 TONIGHT, FS1

BULLPEN REBUILD

Rooney plays like a star but doesn’t act like one He bonded quickly with teammates while leading run to playoffs

Coach Ben Olsen says famed striker Wayne Rooney, below, is “genuine” and “selfless.” ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS (AFP/GETTY IMAGES)

MLS PLAYOFFS Wayne Rooney is a world-famous English striker, but since making his D.C. United debut July 14, he has established himself on the team as just one of the lads. And what a lad. With Rooney leading the way, United is the hottest team in MLS entering the playoffs, which will commence for D.C. tonight with a knockout match against the Columbus Crew at Audi Field. D.C. has not lost in two months and, since Rooney and the new stadium debuted, the team’s record is 12- 4- 4, including 12-2-1 at home. Before all of that, United spent most weekends on the road, mostly losing. Beyond Rooney’s big numbers (12 goals and seven assists in 20 appearances) and memorable moments (a 35-yard free kick for a goal; a midfield tackle and assist in one madcap sequence), teammates and club officials agree that his efforts to bond with them and lead the young squad have contributed immensely to United’s success. “It was really his interaction” upon arriving, coach Ben Olsen said. “He is genuine. He is selfless. If those are your two traits, it makes you an easy guy to get

Nats near deal with ex-closer for Cardinals

Rooney an MVP finalist Wayne Rooney didn’t join D.C. United until the 15th match of the season, but he still was named a finalist Wednesday for league MVP in voting by MLS players, club representatives and the media. The other finalists are Zlatan Ibrahimovic (L.A. Galaxy), Carlos Vela (L.A. FC) and Miguel Almiron and Josef Martinez, both of Atlanta. (TWP)

behind and like.” Any concerns among players that Rooney, 33, would strut into their lives with his (oft-broken) nose in the air, happy to collect a big paycheck in the latter stage of a sterling career, were quickly put to rest.

“I never wanted special treatment,” said Rooney, the greatest scorer in Manchester United and English national soccer team history. “I always wanted to be part of the team. That’s it. It was important to create the right relationship from the start.” In an effort to strengthen bonds with new colleagues and immerse himself in U.S. sports culture, he entered a fantasy football team in United’s inhouse league. He didn’t worry about knowing nothing about that brand of football. Alas, his devilish teammates sometimes feed him bad intel on NFL players. “Guys are taking advantage of me again,” he said with a grin.

The Nationals were close Wednesday to signing former Cardinals closer Trevor Rosenthal, according to a person with knowledge of the situation. The 28-year-old righty missed last season to recover from Tommy John surgery. Rosenthal would be a low-cost addition to the rebuilding bullpen and might be a setup man to closer Sean Doolittle. Rosenthal worked out for teams last week, throwing 36 pitches and reaching a velocity of 98 mph, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch reported. The Nationals recently added former Marlins righty Kyle Barraclough to the bullpen. (TWP)

STEVEN GOFF (THE WASHINGTON POST)

verbatim

“I’ve never spent any time in Maryland before. We are in Maryland, right?” RAVENS RB TY MONTGOMERY, who was getting acclimated at camp Wednesday in Owings Mills, Md., a day after he

was traded by the Packers. The Ravens hope he can help a run game that is averaging only 96.6 yards per game.

Women’s college basketball: Notre Dame, UConn are 1-2 in AP poll; Maryland ninth

Clinton-Dix: I’m ready to work, ‘put on a show’ REDSKINS New Redskins safety Ha Ha Clinton-Dix, obtained this week from the Packers in the last year of his contract, says he is thrilled to be in Washington and ready to play Sunday against the Falcons at FedEx Field. “Check this out … I came here to play, I came here to work,” Clinton-Dix said Wednesday. “Even if that’s special teams or just helping contribute to this team any way I can. The No. 20 is going to be suited up this weekend and you can bet that.” Clinton-Dix said he idolized the late Sean Taylor, a former Redskins safety, and is close friends with Redskins safety D.J. Swearinger, his offseason workout partner in Miami. Clinton-Dix plays best as a free safety, which should be a good complement to Swearinger’s aggressive play in the box at the strong safety position. The Redskins (5-2) have started second-year safety Montae Nicholson in all seven games, but he is banged up and was not on the practice field during the period open to the media Wednesday. Clinton-Dix, 25, has 14 interceptions and three forced fumbles in 71 career games. He said he is eager to show Redskins fans his ability to force turnovers. “I’m happy to be a part of this organization, I can’t preach that enough,” he said. “I’m ready to put on a show. I’m ready to have fun doing it.” KAREEM COPELAND (THE WASHINGTON POST)

Caps’ Brooks Orpik (lower-body injury) out for tonight’s game at Montreal (7:30, NBCSWA)


11.01.18

weekendpass ‘Pulse’ points Rafael Lozano-Hemmer’s dazzling installations at the Hirshhorn turn your heart’s work into artwork 26

CATHY CARVER

PRE-BROADWAY WORLD PREMIERE TheNa tiona lDC.c om

DEARLY DEPARTING IN JUST 2 WEEKS THROUGH NOVEMBER 18 ONLY


18 | EXPRESS | 11.01.2018 | THURSDAY

up front

ass A quick p s t’ a h w at going on

EatBar’s burger with hash brown buns is a surprisingly tasty twist DINING Over the years, culinary thrillseekers have tried to shake up the humble burger by swapping the traditional breaded bun for pieces of fried chicken, seared discs of ramen or even whole grilled cheese sandwiches. The newest, and tastiest, variation in Washington is the $13 Hash Brown Burger at EatBar on

Barracks Row: layers of smoky pork belly, pickles and onions, covered with gooey melted cheese, and served between two crispy, well-seasoned hash brown “buns.” Critics will note there’s no beef patty, per se. And that’s fine — it doesn’t need one. The Hash Brown Burger comes from the mind of Red Apron chef Nathan Anda, who also offers a pancake burger — a breakfast sausage patty, bacon, sunny-side-up egg and cheese between two pancakes — on

FRITZ HAHN (THE WASHINGTON POST)

These buns don’t need an oven At EatBar, hash browns make a better burger bun than you might expect.

EatBar’s brunch menu. “Ever since I played around with the pancake burger, I’ve been trying to find new vehicles for burgers,” Anda says. The challenge with these buns

is to keep them from falling apart. Order the Hash Brown Burger, and you can see the crispy individual shards of grated potato that make up the bun. You start to worry that, after

a bite or two, the bun is going to break apart. But it doesn’t. “It has to stay together,” Anda says. If you can’t eat it with your hands, “it’s a ‘knife-and-fork’ meal — which isn’t a burger.” Anda says the gluten-free hash browns, made of shredded potato bound by eggs, are cooked in circular molds on a flat-top grill until they’re about three-quarters of the way done, and then tossed into a fryer to get them extra-crispy. After getting the thumbs-up from the staff, the Hash Brown Burger went on the menu in late summer, and Anda expects it to stick around for a while. “We’ve always played around with stuff,” he says, “so I don’t know where we go from here.” FRITZ HAHN (THE WASHINGTON POST)


THURSDAY | 11.01.2018 | EXPRESS | 19

up front Just Announced!

Thursday

Ariana Grande

Emo band Thursday will look back on 20 years as a group with two fullalbum shows: 2001’s “Full Collapse” on the first night, and 2003’s “War All the Time” on the second. GET TICKETS: Friday at 10 a.m. through Ticketfly.

It’s been a tumultuous couple of years for Ariana Grande, who channeled her emotions — good and bad — into August’s “Sweetener.” She’ll take the well-received album on the road next year. GET TICKETS: Monday at 10 a.m. through Ticketmaster.

A$AP Rocky The Anthem, Jan. 20, $50-$250.

New York rapper (and A$AP Mob leader) A$AP Rocky dropped “Testing” back in May, with its singles “A$AP Forever” and “Praise the Lord (Da Shine).” GET TICKETS: Friday at noon via Ticketfly.

Maggie Rogers 9:30 Club, March 25, $35.

Fresh off a headlining slot at D.C.’s All Things Go Fall Classic, Maryland native Maggie Rogers dropped “Light On,” from next year’s “Heard It in a Past Life.” The hooky electropop song solidifies Rogers’ status as a talent to watch. So does her gig this weekend as “Saturday Night Live’s” musical guest. GET TICKETS: Thursday at 10 a.m. via Ticketfly. RUDI GREENBERG (EXPRESS)

Gaffigan conducts Russian Masterpieces November 1 & 3 | Concert Hall James Gaffigan, conductor Simon Trpčeski, piano Prokofiev: Symphony No. 3 Shostakovich: Piano Concerto No. 2 Khachaturian: Masquerade—Suite

David M. Rubenstein is the Presenting Underwriter of the NSO. The Blue Series is sponsored by United Technologies Corporation.

SIDE YARDS

Capital One Arena, March 25, $39.95-$224.95.

free & easy

Union Stage, Feb. 15 & 16, $35-$49.

Side Yards For the fifth year in a row, Yards Park will transform its open space into an offbeat sideshow spectacle — complete with a big top — for Side Yards (355 Water St. SE; Sat., 5-9 p.m., free.). Aerialists, fire breathers, contortionists, poi spinners and more eccentric performers are the main attractions at this family-friendly event, which also boasts fortune tellers, caricature artists, a photo booth and more oddball activities. STEPHANIE WILLIAMS (EXPRESS)

West-Eastern Divan Orchestra

Co-presented by

Daniel Barenboim, conductor and orchestra co-founder Kian Soltani, cello Miriam Manasherov, viola Transcending the fierce political divide in the Middle East, this remarkable orchestra brings together young Israeli, Palestinian, and other Arab musicians.

November 7 at 8 p.m. | Concert Hall West-Eastern Divan Orchestra is made possible in part through the generous support of Morton and Norma Lee Funger, Dr. Gary Mather and Ms. Christina Co Mather, Northern Trust, and the Dallas Morse Coors Foundation for the Performing Arts. Washington Performing Arts orchestral performances in the 2018/19 season are made possible through the generous support of Betsy and Robert Feinberg.

Kennedy-Center.org (202) 467-4600

Groups call (202) 416-8400 For all other ticket-related customer service inquiries, call the Advance Sales Box Office at (202) 416-8540


20 | EXPRESS | 11.01.2018 | THURSDAY

weekendpass “Funny and joyous!”

My D.C. dream day

hash browns. I think Obama should get the French toast with scrambled eggs and turkey bacon. We’ll have mimosas, but Obama will just have one. He may want more, but he’ll just have one because he still has to keep up with the image.

—The Guardian

EBONY JACKSON

Michelle Obama would meet up with us and we’d go to the National Museum of African American History and Culture. I don’t know what we’d see in there — there’s just so much. We’d take a couple of selfies; I’d post them on Instagram and get a bunch of likes.

Paris Sashay COMEDIAN

WORLD STAGES

November 28–December 1 Eisenhower Theater Kennedy-Center.org (202) 467-4600 Theater at the Kennedy Center is made possible by

Kennedy Center Theater Season Sponsor

Groups call (202) 416-8400 For all other ticket-related customer service V[^bV_VR` PNYY aUR .QcN[PR @NYR` /\e <¦PR Na (202) 416-8540 International Programming at the Kennedy Center is made possible through the generosity of the Kennedy Center International Committee on the Arts.

The first time comedian Paris Sashay signed up for an open mic, she spent 15 minutes hiding in the bathroom. “My mom went and told the host I was hiding, and they both came into the bathroom and had to talk me out,” Sashay says. “I think my mom said a prayer for me before I went on.” It must have worked: On that night in 2012, Sashay overcame her stage fright and killed — something she’s been doing onstage ever since. After the D.C. native’s move to New York in April, she was picked by Wanda Sykes to star in the veteran comic’s new Epix docuseries, “Unprotected Sets.” Last month, Sashay, 26, recorded two sets in D.C. for her upcoming album “More Seasoning, Less Racism,” and her next local shows are slated for Nov. 9 and 10 at The Big Hunt. Sashay still comes home on the regular, so she has plenty of ideas for a fantasy day in D.C. First thing I’d do after I wake up is get my energy tea from Starbucks. It’s not on the menu; I made it up. I have them mix the Mango Dragonfruit and Strawberry Acai Refreshers together and put it in a big Trenta cup with no water. It’s like a caffeinated sweet drink: It gives you energy but it also tastes good.

I’d have breakfast with Barack Obama, but I don’t want to go all the way to Cathedral Heights. I’d send an Uber up to get him and we’d get brunch at Ted’s Bulletin on 14th Street. I think he’ll like the vintage vibe there. I’ll order the chicken ’n’ biscuits — there’s honey on the biscuits, and it comes with mumbo sauce and

Then I would bring back the ESPN Zone that used to be in downtown D.C. That was my favorite place to go when I was a kid. Every weekend, if I had good grades, that was my reward. I’d go climbing and get the chicken tenders and macaroni and cheese. I would also swing by Zara and buy some new boots and a jacket. I love jackets, and I need something to wear for my big show tonight. I’ll be headlining at the Lincoln Theatre. First I go back to my hotel to nap. I’m staying at the Fairmont — the rooms are just set up so nice there. My sister will come by and do my makeup. We’ll take a limo to my show, and when I get there, I’ll see that it’s sold out. I’m a little late, but I can be because I was with the Obamas. That’s my excuse for the whole rest of the week: “Sorry I’m late, I was just with the Obamas.” After the show, I want seafood, so we’ll all go to The Hamilton. I’ll have the calamari and the salmon and a glass of Hennessy and pineapple juice — that’s my favorite drink. My mom will come with a couple friends and supporters. At this point I’m making crazy money, so I take care of the bill. Everybody gets everything they want. “How many shots are we taking? Paris is paying for it!” AS TOLD TO SADIE DINGFELDER (EXPRESS)


THURSDAY | 11.01.2018 | EXPRESS | 21

weekendpass

Dating isn’t always colorblind FILM In the D.C.-set film “No Chocolate, No Rice,� Dre (Ricky Mempin) works at a gay dating app for men that has become hugely successful but is willfully ignoring — despite Dre’s pleas — the consistent racism of the app’s users. Dre, who is Filipino, and his roommate Phillip (Donovan Trott), who is black, routinely deal with men who either don’t want to date them due to their race or only want to fetishize them because of it. One of Dre’s relationships, for example, is with a man who repeatedly gives him “Asian� movies like “The Last Samurai� and has taken him to see “Madame Butterfly� multiple times. (The comedy’s titular phrase references eliminating black and Asian men from romantic consideration.) “D.C. has sort of stood out

HEATHER PEDERSON

‘No Chocolate, No Rice’ explores racism in D.C.’s LGBT community

Donovan Trott, left, and Ricky Mempin co-star in “No Chocolate, No Rice.�

as one of the more segregated LGBT communities,� says Trott, who also wrote the screenplay. “It’s a bit more racist than in other places.� Trott and director Leo Christopher Sheridan, both area natives who are black and gay, wanted to set the film in D.C. to shed a light on a national problem they see as particularly prevalent in the city.

“We’ve seen a lot of gentrification of historically black and brown areas, and it’s definitely affected the culture of dating.� LEO CHRISTOPHER SHERIDAN,

director of “No Chocolate, No Rice�

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The D.C. Center for the LGBT Community at the GALA Hispanic Theatre, will showcase works made by and for the city’s LGBT population. Sheridan and Trott have known each other since 2012. This is Trott’s first screenplay to reach production and Sheridan’s first time helming a feature. In 2016, “Leo approached me and said, ‘I want to do a movie with you, and I want you to write it,’ � Trott says. “Then he just texted me one night saying, ‘Let’s make a movie about gay interracial dating.’ � “That just spurred us into creating ideas based on personal experience and a lot of stories that we heard from people of color in the gay community,� Sheridan adds. “We tend to get a lot of fetishism. People look at [interracial dating] as kind of a fantasy, which is unfortunate, because these people are [still] people.� KRISTEN PAGE-KIRBY (EXPRESS)

GALA Hispanic Theatre, 3333 14th St. NW; Sun., noon, $12.

Public meeting for tower replacement and collocation located at 5705 Old Silver Hill Rd.

68th Semi-Annual

JEWELRY

“I think in more recent years we’ve seen a lot of gentrification of historically black and brown areas, and it’s definitely affected the culture of dating,� Sheridan says. “A lot of people that are coming into D.C. are coming from communities that tend to be predominantly white, and when they come to D.C. they see a lot of other ethnicities.� By filming in D.C., the two also wanted to show a more intimate side of the city. “I think a lot of people don’t see that people live here and have a culture here,� Sheridan says. “We really wanted to impress upon people what happens in D.C. besides what happens in Capitol Hill. We decided to really use [D.C.] as a backdrop and bring people up to the neighborhoods.� Forty-one people ponied up over $8,000 on Kickstarter so Trott and Sheridan could make the film, which will premiere Sunday during the 25th annual Reel Affirmations Film Festival. The festival, put on Thursday through Sunday by

This is Every Tuesday in Express

Less This More This

Nexus Montgomery is a partnership among the six hospitals in Montgomery County, that connects people with services to help them remain healthy and independent. Learn More at NexusMontgomery.org


22 | EXPRESS | 11.01.2018 | THURSDAY

weekendpass

GETTY IMAGES, JUST

IN COOK, BRIGHTEST

MOORE YOUNG THINGS, CECE TION) (EXPRESS ILLUSTRA

A crime wave is about to hit

Mysteries, murders and all things macabre are at the center of Brightest Young Things’ first true-crime festival, Death Becomes Us. Notable podcasters, TV personalities and experts will gather at Lisner Auditorium on Saturday and Sunday to discuss some of history’s most infamous crimes and offer their insights. “We think the reason the genre is having such a moment is people are looking at it from very different perspectives,” says Svetlana Legetic, BYT’s cofounder. “It’s a communal form of entertainment because we’re all in on solving the puzzle together.” Here are three of the weekend’s events to investigate — and what you need to do to prepare for each. RACHEL PODNAR (EXPRESS)

‘How Did This Get Made?’

‘Criminal’ with Phoebe Judge

Cold Case Files: Paul Holes & CeCe Moore

Lisner Auditorium, 730 21st St. NW; Sat., 9 p.m., sold out.

Lisner Auditorium, Sun., 3:30 p.m., $30.

Lisner Auditorium, Sun., 9 p.m., $40.

What is it? Since the first episode of “Criminal” in 2014, host Phoebe Judge has brought something different to the realm of true-crime podcasts. Instead of homing in on grisly details, the expertly produced podcast focuses on the reasons people make the decisions they do, and often explores a small piece of the criminal justice system, such as how lethal injection was implemented in Oregon (“The Job”). In D.C., Judge will present new stories scored and mixed live by co-creator Lauren Spohrer, complete with visual elements.

What is it? Retired investigator Paul Holes has risen to hero status this year for his role in helping find a man suspected to be the Golden State Killer — a serial killer who committed a spree of rapes and murders in California in the 1970s and ’80s. Suspect Joseph DeAngelo was identified using DNA technology and was arrested in April. Holes will appear with genetic genealogist CeCe Moore, who works for Restonbased Parabon. Yeardley Smith and Zibby Allen of the crime podcast “Small Town Dicks” will interview the pair about how genealogy is changing cold-case investigations.

What is it? Comedians Paul Scheer, June Diane Raphael and Jason Mantzoukas will overly dissect the 2007 Halle Berry film “Perfect Stranger,” as they have countless other terrible movies on their popular podcast, “How Did This Get Made?” (The flick has a lowly 11 percent rating on Rotten Tomatoes.) The Bentzen Ball alums’ podcast is a comedy show, so dissecting the film — in which Berry plays a journalist who goes undercover to investigate the murder of her friend — for this live recording should offer some relief from the rest of the fest’s darker subject matter. Homework: Stream or download the movie “Perfect Stranger.” Try to make it through the whole thing.

Homework: Listen to “Ten Thousand Feet in the Air” and “The Fox,” “Criminal’s” latest installments, which present a two-part story about a plane-jacking and a subsequent attempted prison escape.

Homework: Read “I’ll Be Gone in the Dark,” the late Michelle McNamara’s deep dive into the case, which was published in February, two months before DeAngelo was arrested.

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THURSDAY | 11.01.2018 | EXPRESS | 23

weekendpass Lucy Fitzgerald, left, Kenyon Laing and Amanda Jacobson drink wine and talk crime on their podcast.

3 unsolved D.C. cases The ‘Freeway Phantom’ murders Time of crime: April 1971-September 1972

IVORY HOUSE PHOTOGR

APHY

What happened: An unidentified serial killer was dubbed the “Freeway Phantom” by the media after six African-American girls ages 10 to 18 were found murdered alongside busy roads. The victims had been kidnapped while walking alone in the city, and were strangled, and in most cases raped, before being killed. So, who do they think did it? Jacobson and Fitzgerald believe the killer could still be alive. “If I were to look at suspects, I would interrogate people who are currently incarcerated because this is such

an ultraviolent and brazen crime,” Jacobson says. They also think the mishandling of evidence by police, who didn’t properly preserve DNA evidence for testing, and the fact that all the victims were women of color are reasons the case remains open nearly 50 years later. Fitzgerald is surprised by the lack of witnesses who’ve come forward but believes the case could be solved if the right person were to speak up. “You can’t tell me that nobody saw a guy pull over to the side of the road, drag out a body and then leave six different times,” Fitzgerald says.

The murder of Robert Eric Wone Time of crime: August 2006

The sloshed sleuths of ‘Wine & Crime’ The show’s co-hosts aim to call attention to cracks in the system

PODCASTS When considering future topics for the podcast “Wine & Crime,” co-host Amanda Jacobson has a guiding principle. “If it’s socially unacceptable to talk about, I want to talk about it,” she says. Jacobson’s penchant for the morbid and macabre led her to start the podcast last year with childhood friends Lucy Fitzgerald and Kenyon Laing. Their show — an unfiltered, booze-filled and comedic look at history’s most infamous crimes — is one of several podcasts taping live episodes at Brightest Young Things’ inaugural truecrime festival, Death Becomes Us, this weekend. The hosts of “Wine & Crime” aren’t crime experts and don’t

“If it’s socially unacceptable to talk about, I want to talk about it.”

AMANDA JACOBSON, co-host of the podcast “Wine & Crime,” on picking topics for the show

claim to be. Rather, they are true-crime fans who use the show as a platform to bring attention to social issues and injustices, especially racial discrimination by police and the all-too-frequent mishandling of evidence and botching of cases. Although the Minnesota natives aren’t afraid to crack jokes while talking about serious — and often heartbreaking — crimes on their podcast, Jacobson says they mean no disrespect.

“We are not here to make light of a victim’s struggle,” she says. “But we like to find cases that have at least one ridiculous thing that could lead to some sort of humorous tangent.” Each episode of “Wine & Crime” features a selection of stories that share a unifying theme. Over nearly 100 episodes, the show has covered topics such as workplace murder, cannibalism and crimes that can be traced back to Craigslist. There is one topic, though, that hasn’t been covered: D.C. crimes. Before their festival taping at the Lisner Auditorium on Saturday, Jacobson and Fitzgerald did some quick research on three of the District’s high-profile unsolved cases and shared their (sober) thoughts and theories. STEPHANIE WILLIAMS (EXPRESS)

Lisner Auditorium, 730 21st St. NW; Sat., 6:15 p.m., $30.

What happened: Thirty-twoyear-old lawyer Robert Eric Wone was found apparently stabbed to death inside the home of a college friend, where he was spending the night, about a mile from his office in Dupont Circle. Police concluded that he was also sexually assaulted before he died. The three residents of the home — the friend and his domestic partner, plus their roommate — were all home at the time and told police Wone was killed by an intruder, but investigators found no evidence to support that.

The three men were charged with crime scene tampering but were acquitted in 2010, and police have not named an official suspect since. So, who do they think did it? Fitzgerald and Jacobson are suspicious of the roommates, and argue that police didn’t secure the crime scene thoroughly. Jacobson stresses that communities should hold officers accountable in cases like this. “We need to make sure that we have detectives who are taking these cases seriously,” she says.

The murder of Kanika Powell Time of crime: August 2008 What happened: Kanika Powell, a 28-year-old security specialist at Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory, was at her home in Prince George’s County on Aug. 23, 2008, when a man knocked on her door claiming to be an FBI agent. After Powell asked to see his badge, the man walked away and, despite a thorough police search, was never found. The FBI also confirmed that no agents were scheduled to speak with Powell. A few days later, she received another visitor, this time a person claiming to be delivering a package. After Powell refused to open the door, the man left without dropping off

a delivery or note. Later that day, while returning home from running errands, Powell was shot and killed in her apartment building’s hallway. The killer has never been found. So, who do they think did it? Despite theories claiming that Powell was targeted because of her job, Jacobson isn’t buying it. She thinks it’s more likely that Powell was stalked by a stranger, given that she did not recognize anyone who knocked at her door. Judging by the failed attempts to get Powell to open her door, Fitzgerald concludes that the killer, whoever he is, “did not seem like a professional hit man and was not very competent.”


24 | EXPRESS | 11.01.2018 | THURSDAY

weekendpass

All are welcome at this table CRACK THE SKY {Baltimore’s favorite prog rockers} TONIGHT! Thu, Nov 1

Dave Alvin & Jimmie Dale Gilmore {Rockabilly outlaws} Tue, Nov 6

Monique Samuels of The Real Housewives of Potomac {Not For Lazy Moms Live Podcast Recording} THU, NOV 8

DARK DESERT EAGLES {Tribute to the Eagles} THU, NOV 15

SUSAN WERNER {Singer-songwriter} FRI, NOV 16

Die Laughing Productions

SMOOTH CRIMINAL {Murder mystery musical tribute} SAT, NOV 17

FRESH AIR {Strathmore Artist in Residence Class of ‘19 Debut} Wed, Nov 28

ANTONIO SÁNCHEZ & MIGRATION {Jazz drum machine} THU, NOV 29 11810 Grand Park Ave, N. Bethesda, MD Red Line–White Flint Metro

AMPbySTRATHMORE.COM

DINING Furard Tate wants to get this out of the way: Don’t be fooled by DMV Black Restaurant Week’s name. “This week is for everybody,” says Tate, one of the event’s organizers. “No matter what gender, color or age you are — this is an inclusive celebration of food and culture.” The inaugural event, which begins Sunday and runs through Nov. 11, aims to shine a light on the black small businesses and culinary talent that are a part of D.C.’s sprawling restaurant landscape. Tate, along with coorganizers Dr. Erinn Tucker and Andra “AJ” Johnson, teamed up after Washington City Paper published a story in March on Johnson’s forthcoming book “White Plates, Black Faces,” which details the lack of opportunities given to African-American service workers in the restaurant industry. “Dr. Tucker saw the article, emailed me and said, ‘Hey, I want to meet you, and you also need to meet my friend, Furard,’ ” Johnson says. Tucker, a professor of global hospitality leadership at Georgetown University’s School of Continuing Studies, felt a connection with Johnson’s message. As a woman of color with extensive hospitality experience, she understands the need to empower African-American business owners who want to start their own restaurants. So does Tate, who ran the nonprofit soul food restaurant Inspire BBQ and has firsthand knowledge of the challenges these owners face. His H Street restaurant closed in 2014 after a real estate developer bought the property to build condos. “It was a struggle because I didn’t have access to information and capital to be able to

KEON GREEN

The inaugural DMV Black Restaurant Week stresses inclusivity

Furard Tate, left, Andra “AJ” Johnson and Dr. Erinn Tucker teamed up to start DMV Black Restaurant Week.

compete with some of the larger restaurants that were more established,” Tate says. With a collective vision of how to tackle industry issues, Tucker, Johnson and Tate came up with a solution in June: DMV Black Restaurant Week. During the week, participating restaurants will offer three-course prix fixe menus or discounts of 10 to 15 percent. More than two dozen restaurants are taking part, including Ben’s Chili Bowl, DCity Smokehouse and Smith Commons. “There’s no way that we could have done Black Restaurant Week 10 or even five years ago,” Johnson says. “There just weren’t enough black-owned restaurants in the city.” The weeklong event also includes a bartending competition at Service Bar on Monday and a live podcast taping at Unconventional Diner on Wednesday. The biggest highlight for Tate, Tucker and Johnson is a conference ($60-$70) at the University of the District of Columbia on Nov. 10 centered on preparing the next generation of restaurant leaders. Industry insiders will

“There’s no way that we could have done Black Restaurant Week 10 or even five years ago.” ANDRA “AJ” JOHNSON, one of the inaugural event’s co-organizers, on the dearth of black-owned restaurants in the city until recently

host panel discussions on topics such as raising capital, advocating for higher pay and handling harassment in the workplace. “We believe that we can help restaurants with proper training,” Tate says. “We are providing solutions to the whole issue rather than just talking about the problems.” Among the event’s participating restaurants are allied partners that are offering their own deals during the week. These partners aren’t necessarily black-owned businesses but they embrace the week’s mission

of inclusion. “We have businesses like Anxo and Busboys and Poets who have signed on to be allied partners this year,” Tucker says. “They aren’t black-owned, but they are participating in the event and support what we’re doing.” The trio already have next year’s DMV Black Restaurant Week in the books and are planning to do additional year-round programming that offers restaurant training and education for business owners and culinary talent. For those people who just want to eat — and soon — next week’s inaugural event should hit the spot, Tate says. “If you have a friend who says, ‘I’ve never had good macaroni and cheese or food from West Africa,’ Black Restaurant Week is an opportunity for you to experience this culture and lifestyle,” Tate says. “It’s open to everybody.” STEPHANIE WILLIAMS (EXPRESS)

Various locations; Sun. through Nov. 11, various times and prices; go to dmvbrw.com for details.


THURSDAY | 11.01.2018 | EXPRESS | 25

Behind enemy lines are hearts just like yours.

Silent Night

Eye to I: Self-Portraits from 1900 to Today

November 10–25 Eisenhower Theater Music by Kevin Puts / Libretto by Mark Campbell

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Super Buddahead (detail) by Roger Shimomura, lithograph, 2012. National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution; acquired through federal support from the Asian Pacific American Initiatives Pool, administered by the Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center. © 2012 Roger Shimomura


26 | EXPRESS | 11.01.2018 | THURSDAY

weekendpass PETER MALLET

In “Pulse Room,” a sensor helps turn visitors’ heartbeats into a display of blinking lights.

Ace of hearts Q&A | RAFAEL LOZANO-HEMMER

Rafael Lozano-Hemmer’s artwork lets you know you’re alive. Through his elaborate installations, the Mexican-Canadian artist captures viewers’ biometric data with high-tech sensors (like ones used in emergency rooms) and transforms the information into mesmerizing displays. Starting Thursday, the Hirshhorn will fill its second floor with three of LozanoHemmer’s works for a six-month show called “Pulse.” In the installation “Pulse Room,” visitors touch a sensor that records their heartbeat and transfers it to a blinking light bulb. As each visitor contributes a pulse to the exhibit, previous pulses are moved forward a spot on a 211-bulb grid, and the oldest one disappears. Another piece, “Pulse Index,” captures viewers’ fingerprints and heart rates and displays them as a huge, ever-changing collage. The third installation, “Pulse Tank,” transforms heartbeats into waves on the surface of enormous water tanks that are lit from underneath to create ballets of shadow and light on the museum’s curved walls. SADIE DINGFELDER (EXPRESS)


THURSDAY | 11.01.2018 | EXPRESS | 27

weekendpass ANTIMODULAR RESEARCH

“Pulse Index” makes an ever-changing collage out of fingerprints and heart rates.

Do people follow their own individual heartbeat as it moves through the room? Yeah, they do, and it’s quite sweet — especially when people come with their families and they all move through the room together. The heartbeat is not just your heart rate — we

“People feel a relationship of intimacy with my work because they help to create it.”

RAFAEL LOZANO-HEMMER

What inspired you to make your first “Pulse” piece, “Pulse Room”? When my wife was pregnant with twins, I learned that the ultrasound machine can let you hear the heart of the fetus. So, being a nerd, I asked for two ultrasound machines so I could listen simultaneously to the heart of the boy and the heart of the girl. They created this kind of syncopated beat — they would come in and out of sync, kind of like minimalist music. And I thought, wow, the individual heart is symbolic and intimate, and it’s a biometric that tells us about our emotional state. But when it’s together with other hearts, it creates a symphony. This piece shows hundreds of heartbeats all together in a room.

RAFAEL LOZANO-HEMMER, left, the artist behind the Hirshhorn’s “Pulse” exhibit, on the appeal of his vital signs-integrating installations

measure 10 variables from the sensor, things like systolic and diastolic activity — and then we convert that into the way that the light gets activated. The attack on the tungsten filament is different for each person, so you can see that your heartbeat is quite unique. Some people definitely do follow their heartbeat, others just kind of stand there in a state of observation. It’s almost like a rhythmic meditation. Will the Pulse pieces start out blank and gradually fill up? No, we start with recordings from the past show. These pieces are coming from Seoul, so we are

bringing 10,000 fingerprints and 211 heartbeats from South Korea to Washington, D.C. Gradually, as people participate, more and more D.C. fingerprints and heartbeats will take over. We don’t archive the interactions. With the heartbeats, after 211 people participate, your light disappears. And that’s meant to be like a memento mori, a little reminder that we are on the planet for only a short period of time. Why do you think your work is so popular? Maybe it’s because people can participate. People feel a

relationship of intimacy with my work because they help to create it. It’s part of a new culture of reality TV and selfies — of witnessing your own existence — which isn’t always a good thing. I think “Pulse Tank” is where people will spend the most time. It was originally commissioned for the New Orleans biennial in 2008, and we supersized it for the Hirshhorn. The light show that projects the ripples on the wall [from each of the three tanks of water] ends up being about 50 meters [or 164 feet] wide, so it’s quite intense. How did you deal with the Hirshhorn’s cylindrical shape? I love the architecture of the museum, but it’s also a real challenge for artists because we are not used to having these kinds of sight lines and curved walls. So instead of fighting it, I adopted it. In “Pulse Room,” the lights are normally mounted in a square grid, but in the Hirshhorn it follows the curvature of the building. We also use the curvature in the ripple tanks — we had tanks made with a subtle

rounded finish that fit the Hirshhorn perfectly. What’s it like having your show in D.C., on the Mall? As a Mexican immigrant in Canada who’s created 15 jobs, I am mortified by any vision that sees immigrants as the enemy. There’s a lot of adversarial rhetoric going on right now, and I love that I have the opportunity to represent what immigrants do contribute. Also, as I’m creating these pieces in D.C., I can’t help but think about the ways in which these same biometric technologies are being used in ways I find appalling — for example, in the separation of families that’s taking place at the border. For me, it’s a beautiful opportunity to use these technologies of control and power to create connective experiences, poetic experiences, where we feel a sense of belonging instead of division and walls.

Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Independence Avenue and Seventh Street SW; Thu. through April 28, free.


28 | EXPRESS | 11.01.2018 | THURSDAY

The Anthem 901 Wharf St. SW, Washington, D.C. JUST ANNOUNCED!

PARAMORE FOSTER THE PEOPLE A$AP ROCKY AEG PRESENTS

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Soulection’s The Sound of Tomorrow feat. Andre Power • Joe Kay • Devin Tracy • J. Robb • Andres Uribe ...............................Th NOV 1

Cursive w/ Meat Wave & Campdogzz ................................................................ F 2 U STREET MUSIC HALL PRESENTS Ekali w/ 1788-L & Jaron Early Show! 6pm Doors ................................................. Sa 3 U STREET MUSIC HALL PRESENTS

Fleetmac Wood: Rhiannon’s Revenge… A Halloween Disco

Late Show! 10pm Doors .......................................................................................... Sa 3

................................... JUNE 12 On Sale Friday, March 16 at 10am ......................................................... JANUARY 20

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Lettuce with Waka Flocka Flame and Marcus King w/ Turkuaz........................................NOV 3 DC CENTRAL KITCHEN’S

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St. Lucia w/ SHAED & The Colonies ................................................................ Tu 6

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

NOVEMBER

NOVEMBER (cont.)

U STREET MUSIC HALL PRESENTS

The Dead South

MAX w/ Bryce Vine & EZI

w/ The Hooten Hallers & Del Suelo .................................Tu 20

Early Show! 6pm Doors.....................Th 8 AN EVENING WITH

Allen Stone

Chris Robinson Brotherhood. F 9 Brett Dennen w/ Erin Rae

w/ Nick Waterhouse ....................W 21

Hot in Herre: 2000s Dance Party

Early Show! 6pm Doors ...................Sa 10

with DJs Will Eastman & Ozker • Visuals by Kylos ........................F 23

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Papadosio w/ LITZ

All the Divas -

Late Show! 10:30pm Doors ...............Sa 10

Colter Wall

This is a seated show.......................Tu 13

w/ Vincent Neil Emerson .............W 28

Randy Rogers Band

ALL GOOD PRESENTS

w/ Parker McCollum ....................F 16

Sister Sparrow & The Dirty Birds

Wild Nothing w/ Men I Trust ..Su 18

w/ The Rad Trads ......................Tu 29

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

Lindsey Stirling -

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

The Wanderland Tour ........ DEC 14

6LACK w/ Summer Walker .......NOV 11 O.A.R. ......................................... DEC 15 ALL GOOD PRESENTS Young the Giant The Revivalists .............. JAN 11 w/ LIGHTS ........................................NOV 16 Steve Martin & Martin Short featuring The Steep Canyon Rangers and Jeff Babko .............................NOV 17

ALL GOOD PRESENTS

Greensky Bluegrass w/ Billy Strings ..............................FEB 1-2

Old Dominion

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

A Dance Party with DJ lil’e ..Sa 24

Ty Segall (Solo Acoustic)

Dark Star Orchestra ...DEC 1 DC101 PRESENTS

The Front Bottoms & Manchester Orchestra w/ Brother Bird ................................NOV 24

w/ Jordan Davis & Morgan Evans....... FEB 9

Beirut w/ Helado Negro ............ FEB 14 Interpol w/ Sunflower Bean .... FEB 15 AEG PRESENTS

SIRIUS XM PRESENTS

The Brian Setzer Orchestra

The 1975 w/ No Rome ..........MAY 21

- 15th Anniv. Christmas Rocks! Tour w/ Lara Hope and The Ark-Tones ..NOV 30

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Elle King w/ Cordovas ...................NOV 2 Esperanza Spalding .............. DEC 1 AEG PRESENTS

THIS SATURDAY!

Adam Conover .........................DEC 2 Edie Brickell Jewel - Handmade Holiday Tour & New Bohemians ................NOV 3 w/ Atz, Atz Lee, Nikos Kilcher .............. DEC 6 Ingrid Michaelson Trio THIS MONDAY! Inside Netflix’s The Staircase - Songs for the Season ......... DEC 12 & Making a Murderer: Story District’s Top Shelf . JAN 19 Fabrications, Lies, Fake Science, and the Owl Theory Neko Case w/ Margaret Glaspy .. JAN 26 feat. David Rudolf and Jerry Buting Moderated by NPR’s Carrie Johnson .NOV 5 Joe Jackson - Four Decade Tour........................ FEB 9 Richard Thompson Electric Trio w/ Rory Block .......NOV 8 LP .................................................... FEB 19 Ólafur Arnalds ........................NOV 14 Alice Smith................................. MAR 9 AURORA w/ Talos ....................... MAR 10 LIVE NATION PRESENTS Stay Tuned with Preet Bharara FIRST SHOW SOLD OUT! SECOND SHOW ADDED! AN EVENING WITH

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

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w/ Three Days Grace .............................................. FEBRUARY 21 Ticketmaster

9:30 CLUB PRESENTS AT U STREET MUSIC HALL

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

Yeah, But Still Podcast with Brandon Wardell and Jack Wagner..Tu 6 Justin Courtney Pierre w/ Pronoun ..F 9 Pale Waves w/ Miya Folick & The Candescents ......Sa 10

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

with special guest Chuck Todd .........NOV 15

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

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AEG PRESENTS

Bert Kreischer 9:30pm Doors .MAR 14 José González & The String Theory............ MAR 20

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


top stops

THURSDAY | 11.01.2018 | EXPRESS | 29

The best t of the nex s y a d 7

Mon.

Thu. COMEDY

MUSIC

Nikki Glaser

St. Lucia

THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF AMERICAN HISTORY

In September, comedian Nikki Glaser was the first contestant eliminated from this season’s “Dancing With the Stars.” Her loss is our gain, as it probably gave her some new stand-up material. Glaser, who used to host the raunchy talk show “Not Safe,“ will bring her unfiltered and sharpwitted stand-up back to D.C. this weekend. DC Improv, 1140 Connecticut Ave. NW; Thu.- Sat., various times, $25.

Fri. FILM

‘Hocus Pocus’ Union Market will close out its drive-in movie series with “Hocus Pocus” — two days after Halloween. So if you’re bummed that spooky season is over, extend it a bit with the 1993 teen classic about a trio of witches played by Bette Midler, Sarah Jessica Parker and Kathy Najimy. Union Market will have pre-show activities as well as food and snacks for purchase. Union Market, 1309 Fifth St. NE; Fri., lots open at 5:30 p.m., film at 8 p.m., $10 per car, free for walk-ups.

Sat. FESTIVALS

Taste of H Taste of H is a one-stop destination where you can sample nearly two dozen popular H Street restaurants, including Maketto, Sally’s Middle Name and RedRocks (complete with an open bar). There will be entertainment, too, with a DJ, live art and an auction. Proceeds benefit GrantEd, which provides funding to D.C. public and charter school teachers. Atlas Performing Arts Center, 1333 H St. NE; Sat., 7-10 p.m., $75.

FRIDAY-SUNDAY

Smithsonian Food History Weekend National Museum of American History, Constitution Avenue between 12th and 14th streets NW; Thu.-Sat., various times and prices.

Now in its fourth year, the three-day Smithsonian Food History Weekend features a wideranging schedule full of panels with industry insiders, live cooking demonstrations, hands-on activities for children, a dance performance and more. Highlights include Saturday’s “Last Call” discussion on the history of beer (complete with tastings) and Friday’s “The Power of Place” conversation, which will delve into how food has shaped regional identities.

Sun. MUSIC

Kweku Collins Kweku Collins is from Evanston, Ill., a suburb of Chicago, and his physical distance from the Second City replicates itself in his music. His meditative, introspective take on hip-hop is a little removed from the city’s street rap scene and its soul- and gospel-inflected one. Instead, Collins mixes in electronic ambiance and psychedelic rock influences as he weaves dreamlike, experimental compositions. “You can’t see my thoughts,” he sings on “Vanilla Skies.” “But I can take you there.” Union Stage, 740 Water St. SW; Sun., 8 p.m., $15.

“Hyperion,” the third studio album from St. Lucia, sounds as if Pet Shop Boys, George Michael and Phil Collins had a meeting of the minds and produced an expansive album for the 21st century. Unlike past St. Lucia recordings, the album features gospel-tinged tunes, dreamy synth-heavy ballads and lofty pop songs that are meant for a group singalong. 9:30 Club, 815 V St. NW; Mon., 7 p.m., sold out, Tue., 7 p.m., $32.50.

COMEDY

Brandon Wardell Comedian Brandon Wardell, 26, grew up in Fairfax and started his stand-up career in D.C. After moving to Los Angeles in 2013, he scored gigs opening for Bob Odenkirk and appeared on Comedy Central shows. Wardell takes an absurdist approach to his stand-up and has found a following through social media. For this homecoming, Wardell will do a stand-up set Monday and a live taping of his podcast, “Yeah, But Still,” on Tuesday. U Street Music Hall, 1115 U St. NW; Mon. & Tue., 7 p.m., $15.

WEDNESDAY

Tenacious D The Anthem, 901 Wharf St. SW; Wed., 8 p.m., $55-$95.

There aren’t many comedy duos who excel at folk and metal music too — that distinction goes to Tenacious D. Actor Jack Black, right, and his cohort Kyle Gass have been making music (and jokes) together for more than 20 years on screens, recordings and stages around the world. The “Tribute” singers’ latest project is “PostApocalypto,” a web series handdrawn by Black and a tie-in album (featuring Dave Grohl on drums) that drops on Friday.

Tue. MUSIC

Yaeji For a perfect distillation of Yaeji’s music, look no further than “Raingurl”: a house groove laced with soothing synths, sung and rapped in English and Korean, full of hip-hop bluster and plenty of what the musician calls “introspection at the club.” Black Cat, 1811 14th St. NW; Tue., 7:30 p.m., $25.

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


30 | EXPRESS | 11.01.2018 | THURSDAY

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

Sound

Sight

THURSDAY

American University Museum at the Katzen Arts Center: “Finding

Amp by Strathmore: Crack the Sky, 8 p.m.

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, through Dec. 16. 4400 Massachusetts Ave. NW.

City Winery: Antje Duvekot, 6:30 p.m.; Reckless Kelly, 8 p.m.

Gypsy Sally’s: Maya Imani, 7:30 p.m.; Stop Light Observations, Little Bird, Mikey Pauker, 8:30 p.m. Luce Foundation Center for American Art: Jenna Camille, 5:30

Anacostia Community Museum:

City Winery: Dar Williams, 8 p.m.,

“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.

through Nov. 3.

Folger Shakespeare Library:

p.m.

State Theatre: The Red Not Chili Peppers, 7 p.m.

The Birchmere: The Stars From “The Commitments,” 7:30 p.m.

FRIDAY

Gypsy Sally’s: Broken Arrow, The Bob Band, 8:30 p.m.

Lincoln Theatre: Elle King, 6:30 p.m. MilkBoy ArtHouse: Alsarah & the Nubatones, 8 p.m.

Pearl Street Warehouse: Cris Jacobs STEPHEN DONE

Band, Jonathan Sloane Trio, 7 p.m.

St. Stephen and the Incarnation Episcopal Church: Jai-Jagdeesh, 7:30 p.m.

The Fillmore: Behemoth, 7:30 p.m. The Hamilton: Rebirth Brass Band, 6:30 p.m., through Nov. 3.

Elvis Costello: Before last month’s “Look Now,” it had been 10 years since Elvis Costello released an album with his longtime backing band The Imposters. Costello has described the set of songs as an “uptown pop record.” If you’re a fan of Costello’s varied output over the decades, you’ll find something to like here, as “Look Now” has a healthy mix of upbeat pop rockers, dramatic ballads and his signature lyricism. On Sunday, Costello and The Imposters will take the stage at DAR Constitution Hall.

MilkBoy ArtHouse: Girlpool &

SATURDAY

Porches, 8 p.m.

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

Music Center at Strathmore:

Echostage: Rare Essence & Backyard

Postmodern Jukebox, 8 p.m.

Band, 9 p.m.

TUESDAY

Gypsy Sally’s: White Ford Bronco,

Amp by Strathmore: Dave Alvin &

9 p.m.

Jimmie Dale Gilmore, 8 p.m.

Lincoln Theatre: Edie Brickell & New

City Winery: Jennifer Knapp, 9 p.m.

Bohemians, 6:30 p.m.

Gypsy Sally’s: Gordon Sterling

Pearl Street Warehouse: Davy

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

Knowles, 7 p.m.

Sixth & I Historic Synagogue:

SUNDAY

Ghostland Observatory, 8 p.m.

City Winery: JD Souther, 8 p.m.

Union Stage: Lyrics Born, 8 p.m.

Pearl Street Warehouse: Danielle

WEDNESDAY

Nicole, 6 p.m.

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

The Fillmore: The Blaze, 8 p.m.

City Winery: Jackopierce, 8 p.m.

The Hamilton: I Draw Slow, 6:30 p.m.

Gypsy Sally’s: Born Cross-Eyed, The

MONDAY

Plate Scrapers, 8 p.m.

City Winery: Sarah Dash, 8 p.m.

The Birchmere: Petula Clark, 7:30 p.m.

Glenstone: “Expansion and Reopening”: The highlight of the recent expansion of the contemporary and modern art museum is the Pavilions, which display works by world-renowned artists and contemporaries who made important contributions to postwar and contemporary art. Advance reservations are required and are available through the website, through Jan. 1. 12002 Glen Road, Potomac, Md.

Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden: “Mark Bradford”: A sight-

ALEX VARSA

The Birchmere: David Bromberg Big Band, 7:30 p.m.

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

Lettuce: Funk outfit Lettuce isn’t a band that likes to sit still — or stay in one genre. The band melds electronic, hip-hop and rock sounds into its funky mix. At The Anthem Saturday, Lettuce will get even more eclectic, welcoming sit-ins from Southern guitarist Marcus King and rapper Waka Flocka Flame. Fellow funky rock act Turkuaz will open the show — and maybe members of that band will wind up onstage with Lettuce, too.

specific installation of eight abstract paintings — each more than 45 feet long, and inspired by artist Paul Philippoteaux’s 19th-century cyclorama depicting the final charge of the Battle of Gettysburg, Pickett’s Charge — encircles the museum’s entire third level, through Jan. 1; “Rafael Lozano-Hemmer: Pulse”: This three-part, interactive exhibition fills the second-floor outer-ring galleries with immersive environments that visually display individual heartbeats gathered from the day’s museum visitors, through April 28. Seventh Street and Independence Avenue SW. CONTINUED ON PAGE 32


THURSDAY | 11.01.2018 | EXPRESS | 31

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NOV 1

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

Millennium Stage Presenting Sponsor:

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No tickets required, unless noted otherwise.

antje duvekot

Reckless Kelly

w/ brianna lane In The Wine Garden

NOV 5

NOV 6

dar williams

An Evening w/

w/ antigone rising

jd souther

NOV 6

NOV 7

2 | CNN199 & Kev Brown

Sarah Dash: “A Tribute To Aretha Franklin: Queen Of Soul�

Jennifer Knapp

Obie Bermudez

An Evening w/

in the wine garden

w/ ocho de bastos

jackopierce

November 1– 14 1 Thu. | nuMori

NOV 8

NOV 8

NOV 9

NOV 9

The group presents a new Korean fusion of music with high-quality performance of their original works, which combine jazz, rock, and blues. Presented in collaboration with the Korean Cultural Center DC.

Humble Pie NOV 10

Ha Ha Tonka

Kevin Griffin

in the wine garden

(of better than ezra)

NOV 11

NOV 11

Cambodian Living Arts presents:

HEARTSTRINGS

NOV 13

Words Beats & Life Festival The WBL Fest is an annual citywide showcase of Hip Hop culture, November 1–10, which includes public events, programs, performances, competitions, discussions, art exhibitions, celebrations, master classes, and other community-building activities.

2 Fri. | Kev Brown & CNN199

Loose Ends ft. Jane Eugene

NOV 14

David Cook NOV 17

sylver logan sharp NOV 15

Les Stroud in the wine garden

NOV 16

The Gibson Brothers:

Jason Eady

“Mockingbird� Album Release Show

Album Release Show w/ Rob Ickles & Trey Hensley

NOV 17

NOV 18

Iris Dement NOV 16

Carlene Carter NOV 20

A Landover, Maryland native, producer/ MC Kev Brown is known in the Hip Hop world as a legend. He is joined by the Brussels-based Hip Hop crew of DJs, RZPRR` N[Q T_NĂ&#x;aV d_VaR_` aUNa UN` ORR[ making music for more than 20 years.

3 Sat. | D.C. Youth Poet Laureate Hear riveting spoken word performances Of aUV` fRN_´` a\] cR [NYV`a` S\_ aUR aVaYR judged by a distinguished panel of adult poets and Hip Hop artists.

4 Sun. | Top Notch In heated rounds of one-on-one battles, the nation’s most talented b-girls and b-boys defend their legacies and compete for cash prizes. This event takes place from 12–7 p.m., and Fine Lines Paint Jam begins at 2 p.m.!

5 Mon. | Marco Oliveira and Tânia Oleiro

ruthie foster

WONDER-Full™

The T’N’T Tour:

Marcus Strickland

DC 10th Anniversary DJ Spinna & Jahsonic

Tinsley Ellis, Tommy Castro and the Painkillers

“People Of The Sun� w/ Akua Allrich, Kris Funn

NOV 21

NOV 23-24

NOV 25

NOV 26

In their D.C. debut, the award-winning Portuguese fado singers explore the dualities of human experience in tales that unfold through the winding streets of old Lisbon. 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^]

Black Alley in the wine garden

Anthony David “Hello Like Before� Album Release Show

The Expendables

Matisyahu

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6 | Guilhem Desq

6 Tue. | Guilhem Desq With an unmistakable sound, he has RYRPa_VÂťRQ aUR \_VTV[NYYf NP\b`aVP Ub_Qf gurdy with traditional European folk, Middle-Eastern music, contemporary rock, Hip Hop, and electro.

7 Wed. | Comedy at the Kennedy Center: Martin Urbano In the Family Theater A “new face� at the Just For Laughs Comedy Festival in Montreal, he recently performed on Jimmy Kimmel Live! and has also appeared on various Snapchat series, including Comedy Central’s Road to the Roast and MTV’s Dear Mom and Dad.

9 | IDEA: Meghadoot The Cloud Messenger

10 Sat. | Shaun Neblett: Homage 2: The Great Adventures of Slick Rick Neblett presents the second in his 7 Homages for 7 MCs play cycle, a commemoration of the 30th anniversary of The Great Adventures of Slick Rick.

11 Sun. | Pavlina Horakova The Czech singer and her guests take you on a musical journey exploring all matters of the heart that have inspired Czech and Slovak music for centuries. Presented in collaboration with the Embassy of the Czech Republic.

12 Mon. | The 369th Experience

This program contains mature themes and strong language. It will not be streamed live or archived. Free general admission tickets will be distributed in the Hall of States starting at approximately 5 p.m., up to two tickets per person.

This band from a collection of HBCU’s pays tribute to the contributions of African Americans and Puerto Ricans in World War I through the eyes of the 369th U.S. Infantry Regiment, also known as James Reese Europe’s Harlem Hellfighters.

8 Thu. | WNO Silent Night Preview

This performance was selected by Kennedy Center Artistic Director for Jazz Jason Moran.

In commemoration of the hundredth anniversary of the armistice of World War I, this special program designed and narrated by musicologist and historian =Na_VPX DN_RYQ NY`\ SRNab_R` ZRZOR_` of Washington National Opera’s Domingo-Cafritz Young Artist Program singing excerpts from the opera. Silent Night plays in the Eisenhower Theater Nov. 10–25.

9 Fri. | IDEA: Meghadoot The Cloud Messenger In this swooning lyric poem of just 111 lines written by the immortal poet Kalidasa in ancient Sanskrit, a forlorn lover exiled from home sends a heartbreaking message to his beloved, describing the mountains, rivers, and forests of northern India.

13 Tue. | Sam Carner and Derek Gregor Among Playbill.com’s 12 Contemporary Musical Theatre Songwriters You Should Know, they are recognized for their exciting blend of the hilarious, the humane, and the poignant, as well as their unique fusion of classic musical theater and contemporary pop-rock. Presented in collaboration with ASCAP.

14 Wed. | Mark Sonnenblick Come for an intimate concert with the Grant recipient and Bistro Award-winning composer/lyricist known for eclectic scores and songs that have earned him a reputation as both a consummate craftsman and a relentless innovator. Presented in collaboration with ASCAP.

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

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 guests with disabilities.

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.

All performances and programs are subject to change without notice.


32 | EXPRESS | 11.01.2018 | THURSDAY

goingoutguide.com “The ultimate feel-good show”

JIM SANBORN

—Edinburgh Evening News

American University Museum at the Katzen Arts Center: “Jim Sanborn’s Without Provenance: The Making of Contemporary Antiquity“ is 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 of ancient Khmer antiquities, including an 11-foot-tall sculptural doorway, a life-size standing figure and the head of a reclining Buddha. They’re on display through Dec. 16. CONTINUED FROM PAGE 30

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. 101 Independence Ave. SE.

November 20, 21 & 23–25 Terrace Theater (202) 467-4600 Theater at the Kennedy Center is made possible by

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

Major support for Musical Theater at the Kennedy Center is provided by

fun + games

National Air and Space Museum:

Kennedy Center Theater Season Sponsor

Only in

XX1235_SecFG_2x.5

Kennedy-Center.org

“Artist Soldiers”: An exhibition that examines the work of professional artists who were recruited by the U.S. Army and were considered the first true combat artists, along with the artwork of soldiers, including Jeff Gusky’s photos of stone carvings made in underground shelters, that provide a unique perspective on

World War I, through Nov. 11. Sixth Street and Independence Avenue SW.

National Building Museum: “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 that also includes information on the rise in and reasons 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, Tenn.; Hanford, Wash.; and Los Alamos, N.M. — 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 CONTINUED ON PAGE 34


THURSDAY | 11.01.2018 | EXPRESS | 33

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For every platter sold, need we’ll feed someone in with our friends at DC Central Kitchen 0 *Available November 1–3

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34 | EXPRESS | 11.01.2018 | THURSDAY

45TH ANNUAL

BAZAAR

goingoutguide.com

4BUVSEBZ /PW t BN QN Giant rummage sale and silent auction Great prices on clothing, toys, housewares, books, jewelry and much more

River Road Unitarian Universalist Congregation 6301 River Road, Bethesda | 301-229-0400 | rruuc.org

It Seems Like It’s Going To Be THROUGH DECEMBER 30, 2018

SEAN SCULLY

RICHARD TUTTLE Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden: “Sean Scully: Landline� features nearly 40 works by the artist, including oil paintings, pastels, photographs, watercolors and aluminum sculptures. See the exhibit through Feb. 3. CONTINUED FROM PAGE 32

1600 21st Street, NW Dupont Circle Metro, Q St. exit PhillipsCollection.org | Richard Tuttle, Just in case You want to order (detail), 2018, Mixed media installation, Dimensions vary, 68 x 27 x 2 in. Š Richard Tuttle, courtesy Pace Gallery; Photo: Mark Waldhauser, courtesy Pace Gallery

Contemporary art projects that engage with the art and spaces in The Phillips Collection

Intersections is presented by

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�: An exhibition of four large-scale photographs and one video from the artist’s series “The Birmingham Project,� a memorial to the victims of the 16th Street Baptist Church bombing in Birmingham, Ala., on Sept. 15, 1963, through March 24; “The Chiaroscuro Woodcut in Renaissance Italy�: An exhibition of Chiaroscuro woodcuts — color prints made from the successive printing of multiple blocks, which flourished in 16th-century Italy — it also explains details of how they were created, in what sequence they were printed and why, through Jan. 20; “Gordon Parks: The New Tide, 19401950�: An exhibition of 120 of Parks’ photographs, magazines, books, letters and family pictures, through Feb. 18. Sixth Street and Constitution Avenue NW.

National Gallery of Art, Sculpture Garden: “Sense of Humor�: An

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

National Geographic Museum: “National Geographic: Exploration Starts Here�: Where and when did exploration get its start at National Geographic? This permanent exhibition showcases the greatest hits from Nat Geo’s long and storied history of discovery. Go on expedition alongside 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 3-D experience of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre. Built in the fourth century by

the Emperor Constantine, the church sits on the site where many scholars believe the crucifixion of Christ took place, 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 topsecret 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 African Art: “Good as Gold: Fashioning Senegalese Women�: This exhibition of gold jewelry — a gift from Senegal to the National Museum of African Art — looks at the production and circulation of gold in Senegal, where women have often used jewelry to exhibit elegance and prestige, CONTINUED ON PAGE 38


THURSDAY | 11.01.2018 | EXPRESS | 35

HOW I LEARNED TO DRIVE BY PAULA VOGEL | DIRECTED BY AMBER PAIGE MCGINNIS

Photo by Three Phase Multimedia

Ragamala Dance Company Ranee Ramaswamy and Aparna Ramaswamy, Artistic Directors

240.644.1100 | RoundHouseTheatre.org Bethesda Metro: 1 Block | Convenient Parking!

Written in Water with live music An intricate 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

And don’t miss...

Film Screening: The Unseen Sequence with Malavika Sarukkai November 8 at 7 p.m. Family Theater

Kennedy-Center.org (202) 467-4600

UNDAY! S E S O L C 0 - MUST 3 $ T A T STAR ORDER TODAY! TICKETS

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.


36 | EXPRESS | 11.01.2018 | THURSDAY

THEATRE Mosaic Theater Company

The Agitators Elton John, Tim Rice’s

Aida William Shakespeare’s

Henry V Avant Bard presents

Illyria, or What You Will Theatre By Kids, For Kids!

Jingle ARRGH the Way!

Disney's The Little Mermaid’ Shear Madness The Kennedy Center Theater Lab

Atlas Performing Arts Ctr 1333 H St NE, mosaictheater.org 202-399-7993 Constellation at Source 1835 14th St. NW 202-204-7741 ConstellationTheatre.org

Tonight @ 8 PM Fri, 11/2 @ 8 PM Sat, 11/3 @ 3 PM Sat, 11/3 @ 8 PM Now Playing at Constellation Theatre! Must Close Nov. 18 8 shows a week October 18 – November 11, 2018 Thur – Sat at 8pm & Sat – Sun. at 2pm

A story of rebellion and revolution. Two American icons, Frederick Douglass and Susan B Anthony change a nation while confronting their own flaws.

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

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

On stage to Nov 18: Th-Fri-Sat at 7:30 pm; Sat-Sun at 2 pm

Freely adapted from Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night—set in a 1980s NYC queer club where identity, sex, and gender are what you will. Join us with your favorite characters, a rollicking story, great songs, and a trip to the North Pole to find “you know who!” For ages 4 and older. In a magical kingdom beneath the sea, the beautiful young mermaid, Ariel, longs to leave her ocean home to live in the world above with Prince Eric.

Gunston Arts Center 2700 S Lang St, Arlington, VA 22206 | Tix & info: AvantBard.org/tickets Gunston Arts Center Arlington VA (703)548-1154 www.encorestage.org Toby’s Dinner Theatre of Columbia 410.730.8311 Tobysdinnertheatre.com

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

Nov. 16-18, Nov. 30Dec. 9, 2018, Fri. at 7:30pm; Sat. at 11am & 3pm; Sun. at 3pm November 8January 13

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

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

$20-65

Valet Parking @ 1360 H St

Tickets start at $25

“Powerful & Stunningly Beautiful”

$12 $22 PWYW to $40

$12-15 Call for tickets and info.

Tickets Avail. at the Box Office

Free Parking & Red Line NoMa/ Gallaudet Pay What You Will now available every show Group discounts available. Based on the classic animated film Great Group Rates for 15 or More Perfect for Holiday Parties!

MUSIC - CHAMBER Washington Bach Consort

Bach to Mozart

Friday, Nov. 2, 2018 7:00 p.m.

Special guest artists, the Franklin Quartet (on classical period instruments), will offer homage to JS Bach through transcriptions of his music penned by Mozart. Joined by fortepianist Kenneth Slowik, the program concludes with Mozart's famous Piano Quartet in G minor (K.478).

Saturday, November 10, 8pm

Trio Karénine makes its Washington DC debut at Dumbarton Concerts with an all French program. Hear piano trios by Fauré, Ravel, and Tailleferre, and Phillippe Hersant’s Variations on the Bells of St. Geneviève.

Dana Marsh, Artistic Director

Dumbarton Concerts Presents

Trio Karénine Joie de Vivre

First Congregational United Church of Christ 945 G Street, NW 202.429.2121 www.bachconsort.org Dumbarton Concerts Dumbarton United Methodist Church 3133 Dumbarton St. NW Washington, DC 20007

Single Tickets $35

$42 Adults $39 Seniors

$10 parking after 5 p.m. in attached garage. Postconcert beer tasting w/ Right Proper Brewing Co

202-9652000

Dumbartonconcerts.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. “Delicate and sympathetic interplay… an almost otherworldly dialogue” — Los Angeles Times

TICKETS: WashingtonPerformingArts.org

(202) 785-9727

Special thanks: Dan Cameron Family Foundation, Inc.; Gordon and Lisa Rush; Honorary Patron: His Excellency Navtej Sarna, Ambassador of India

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

16-2898


THURSDAY | 11.01.2018 | EXPRESS | 37

MUSIC - CHORAL A Farewell to Arms: A WWI Centennial Concert

Sunday, November 11, at 4:30 PM

Gretchen Kuhrmann, Guest Conductor

Mark the 100th anniversary of the end of WWI with music by composers who were all deeply affected by the war. Featuring Parry’s “Jerusalem” and Finzi’s “A Farewell to Arms” and “In terra pax,” and Vaughan Williams’ stirring cantata, “Dona nobis pacem.”

National Presbyterian Church 4101 Nebraska Avenue Washington, DC 20016 Free parking available.

$15-59 Group and student disc. avail.

For more information, visit citychoir.org or call (571) 206-8525

Free and open to the public.

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!

$36

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

MUSIC - CONCERTS Chamber Players Series & Spirit of the Season

U.S. Navy Band Harbor Winds Clarinet Quartet

Nov 3 - Music for Chamber Winds featuring members of the AF Strings and Concert Band conducted by Lt Christina Muncey. Free no tickets. Dec 8 & 9 - Join The United States Air Force Band for our annual holiday concert. Free tickets avail Nov 8 http://usafband.eventbrite.com

Sat, Nov 3, 2 p.m. Sat, Dec 8, 3 p.m. & 8 p.m. Sun, Dec 9, 3 p.m.

Program to include French, American, and Latin dance music, including Bizet’s Carmen Overture, Fauré Pavane, Gershwin classics, Hightinck’s Latin Dance, Bernstein’s West Side Story, and more!

Wednesday, Nov. 7, 6:30 p.m.

Nov 3: Athenaeum, 201 Prince St, Alexandria, VA Dec 8 & 9 – DAR Constitution Hall, 1776 D St NW, Washington, DC Central Community Library 8601 Mathis Ave. Manassas, Va. 202-433-3366 www.navyband.navy.mil

COMEDY Make America Grin Again

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

Fridays & Saturdays at 7:30pm

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

FESTIVALS Kids Euro Festival

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

SPECIAL EVENTS Saturday November 3, 2018 10:00 am - 5:00 pm

Christmas market will feature beautiful handmade glass ornaments, cookies, chocolate, wine & mead and Double Cross Vodka from Slovakia. Christmas carols by children´s choir ”Sokolík”.Traditional Christmas cabbage soup, hot chocolate and mulled wine will be served.

Embassy of the Slovak Republic 3523 International Court NW, Washington DC +1(202) 237 1054, ext.200

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

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38 | EXPRESS | 11.01.2018 | THURSDAY

goingoutguide.com

the DMV's #1 comedy spot since 1992

November 1-3

Nikki Glaser November 8-11

Bill Bellamy Nov. 2-3 (lounge) November 7 Nov. 9-10 (lounge) November 15-18 Nov. 16 (lounge) November 23-25 Nov. 29 - Dec. 2

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DMV Showcase Jason Mewes Jason Weems Deon Cole Luis J. Gomez Donnell Rawlings wellRED Comedy

Metro: Farragut North / West

RACHEL WHITEREAD

NOW ON STAGE THRU DEC 2

National Gallery of Art, East Building: “Rachel Whiteread” is an exhibition of about 100 works by the British sculptor, including archival and documentary materials on public projects, drawings, photographs and sculptures comprised of a wide range of materials including plaster, rubber, concrete, resin and paper. They’re on display through Jan. 13. CONTINUED FROM PAGE 34

through Sept. 29. 950 Independence Ave. SW.

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

By William Shakespeare Directed by Aaron Posner

MAD WORLD. MAD KINGS. folger.edu/theatre 202.544.7077

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

National Museum of 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 Jan. 1. Fourth Street and Independence Avenue SW.

National Portrait Gallery: “UnSeen: Our Past in a New Light, Ken GonzalesDay and Titus Kaphar”: An exhibition of works by Gonzales-Day and Kaphar, contemporary artists who address the under- and misrepresentation of minorities in American history and portraiture, through Jan. 6; “Black Out: Silhouettes Then and Now”: An exhibition that studies the silhouette, a form of portraiture popular in the 19th century, featuring the gallery’s extensive collection including works by Auguste Edouart, who captured the likenesses of John Quincy Adams and Lydia Maria Child, through March 10. Eighth and F streets NW. CONTINUED ON PAGE 40


THURSDAY | 11.01.2018 | EXPRESS | 39

Jazz

THE COMEDY OF ERRORS

Jason Moran

by William Shakespeare | directed by Alan Paul

Artistic Director

“WONDERFUL ...a romp of pure fun.” –MD Theatre Guide Photo of the cast of The Comedy of Errors by Scott Suchman.

KC Jazz Club

Miguel Zenón & Spektral Quartet: Yo Soy La Tradición Friday, November 16 at 7 & 9 p.m.

“UPROARIOUS.” –DC Metro Theater Arts

“REFRESHING.” “FABULOUS.” –The Washington –DC Theatre Scene Post

Photo ofofChristian ConnRobinette and Eleasha by Scott Suchman. Photo Carter Gill, Nancy and TedGamble van Griethuysen by Scott Suchman.

Photo of Justin G. Nelson and Matt Bauman by Scott Suchman.

“FUN

Jason Moran— James Reese Europe and The Harlem Hellfighters: The Absence of Ruin

a rollicking good time.” –DCist

Photo of Gregory Wooddell and Veanne Cox by Scott Suchman.

Saturday, December 8 at 8 p.m.

Discovery Artist in the KC Jazz Club

“BRILLIANT.”

Quiana Lynell

–The Georgetown Dish

Friday, December 14 at 7 & 9 p.m. Kennedy-Center.org (202) 467-4600

Photo of Matt Zambrano and Tom Story by Scott Suchman.

Groups call (202) 416-8400

Discovery Artists in the KC Jazz Club are supported by The Buffy and William Cafritz Family Foundation and The King-White Family Foundation and Dr. J. Douglas White.

Photo of Christian Conn and Eleasha Gamble by Scott Suchman.

FINAL WEEKEND!

ShakespeareTheatre.org 202.547.1122

Sponsored by Michael R. Klein and Joan I. Fabry.

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40 | EXPRESS | 11.01.2018 | THURSDAY

goingoutguide.com CONTINUED FROM PAGE 38

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 Dec. 2; “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 on July 6, 1776, through Dec. 31; “Pulitzer Prizes at 100: Editorial Cartoons”: To mark the 100th anniversary of the Pulitzers, this ongoing exhibit features work from the portfolio

NATIONAL MUSEUM OF WOMEN IN THE ARTS

National Postal Museum: “My Fellow

National Museum of Women in the Arts: “Bound to Amaze: Inside a Book-Collecting Career” is an exhibition of books assembled by curator Krystyna Wasserman, who amassed the museum’s collection of more than 1,000 artists’ books over a 30-year period. See it through Nov. 25.

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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), CONTINUED ON PAGE 43


THURSDAY | 11.01.2018 | EXPRESS | 41

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Iranian American comedian and actor Maz Jobrani is back at the Kennedy Center after a sold-out show in 2017 where he filmed his first original Netflix special.

(202) 467-4600

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More of the best long-form journalism We’re digging even deeper into politics, people and ideas

Opening Lines, Star Power, Tangent, Let’s Talk New features on Washington, newsmakers, culture, conversations with our readers

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THURSDAY | 11.01.2018 | EXPRESS | 43

goingoutguide.com

Co-presented by

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 40

through Jan. 20. 555 Pennsylvania Ave. NW.

of a box of 10 photographs by Arbus, four of which she sold during her lifetime. Two were purchased by Richard Avedon, another by Jasper Johns. A fourth was purchased by Bea Feitler, art director at Harper’s Bazaar, through Jan. 27; “Trevor Paglen: Sites Unseen”: An exhibition of photographs, sculptures and new work with AI by the activist/artist. Paglen’s photographs show a tapped communications cable, classified military installation, a spy satellite and a drone — items generally hidden from the public, through Jan. 6; “Between Worlds: The Art of Bill Traylor”: An exhibition of 155 works by the artist, a black man born to an enslaved family in Alabama, who was an eyewitness to history: the Civil War, Emancipation, Reconstruction, Jim Crow CONTINUED ON PAGE 44

NATIONAL PORTRAIT GALLERY

Smithsonian American Art Museum: “Diane Arbus”: An exhibition

National Portrait Gallery: “Portraits of the World: Switzerland” is an exhibition that features the work “Femme en Extase,” above, a portrait of the Italian dancer Giulia Leonardi by the Swiss painter Ferdinand Hodler. The work embodies the Swiss modernist approach of emotional expression through bodily movement — a theory known as eurhythmics — which transformed dance in America. The exhibit is open through Nov. 12.

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West-Eastern Divan Orchestra Daniel Barenboim, conductor Kian Soltani, cello

R. STRAUSS Don Quixote TCHAIKOVSKY Symphony No. 5

Miriam Manasherov, viola

November 7 at 8 p.m. | Concert Hall Kennedy-Center.org (202) 467-4600

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

This performance is made possible in part through the generous support of Morton and Norma Lee Funger, Dr. Gary Mather and Ms. Christina Co Mather, Northern Trust, and the Dallas Morse Coors Foundation for the Performing Arts. Washington Performing Arts orchestral performances in the 2018/19 season are made possible through the generous support of Betsy and Robert Feinberg.


44 | EXPRESS | 11.01.2018 | THURSDAY

goingoutguide.com CONTINUED FROM PAGE 43

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 including 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

Local movie times DISTRICT

AMC Loews Georgetown 14

3111 K Street N.W. www.amctheatres.com/ Hunter Killer (R) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 1:20-4:20 A Star is Born (R) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 12:00-1:00-3:10-4:15-7:10-10:00 Crazy Rich Asians (PG-13) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 1:10-4:15 Halloween (2018) (R) CC/DVS;Dolby Cinema at AMC Prime;Recliners;RS: 1:15-4:15 First Man (PG-13) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 4:30-10:00 Venom (PG-13) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 2:00-4:50-7:40-10:30 Bohemian Rhapsody (PG-13) CC/DVS;Dolby Cinema at AMC Prime;Recliners;RS: 7:45-11:00 Bad Times at the El Royale (R) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 12:15-3:40 Johnny English Strikes Again (PG) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 12:20-2:45 Beautiful Boy (R) AMC Independent;CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 12:30-3:20 A Simple Favor (R) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 1:40 In Search of Greatness (PG-13) AMC Independent;Recliners;RS: 7:45-10:45 The Hate U Give (PG-13) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 12:45-4:00-6:10-10:45 Suspiria (R) AMC Independent;CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 7:15-10:20 Mid90s (R) AMC Independent;Recliners;RS: 2:15-4:40-10:40 Nobody's Fool (R) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 7:30-10:15 First Man: The IMAX 2D Experience (PG-13) CC/DVS;RS: 12:00-3:15 Halloween (2018) (R) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 12:15-3:00-5:15-8:00-10:40 The Nutcracker and the Four Realms in 3D (PG) CC/DVS;RealD 3D;Recliners;RS: 8:30 Bohemian Rhapsody: The IMAX 2D Experience (PG-13) CC/DVS;RS: 7:00-10:15 Bohemian Rhapsody (PG-13) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 7:30-9:15 The Nutcracker and the Four Realms (PG) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 6:00-7:00-9:30

AMC Loews Uptown 1

3426 Connecticut Ave N.W. www.amctheatres.com/ Halloween (2018) (R) CC/DVS: 4:00 Bohemian Rhapsody (PG-13) CC/DVS: 7:00-10:15

AMC Mazza Gallerie

5300 Wisconsin Ave. NW www.amctheatres.com/ Hunter Killer (R) CC/DVS: 12:40-3:30 A Star is Born (R) CC/DVS: 1:10-2:50-4:20-7:30 Halloween (2018) (R) CC/DVS: 12:00-5:00-7:50 First Man (PG-13) CC/DVS: 2:00-4:50-7:20 Venom (PG-13) CC/DVS: 12:10-2:50 Bohemian Rhapsody (PG-13) CC/DVS: 7:00 The Nutcracker and the Four Realms (PG) CC/DVS: 6:00-8:30 Mid90s (R) AMC Independent: 2:30-5:10-8:00

Avalon Theatre

5612 Connecticut Avenue A Star is Born (R) CC AD: 4:45-8:00 First Man (PG-13) CC AD: 1:15-4:30-7:40 A Star is Born (R) Open Caption: 1:45

www.theavalon.org

Landmark Atlantic Plumbing Cinema

807 V Street Northwest www.landmarktheatres.com/ A Star is Born (R) CC/DVS;HA;HoH: 10:45-11:00-1:30-1:45-4:10-4:15-4:30-7:05-7:159:50-10:00 Crazy Rich Asians (PG-13) CC/DVS;HA;-: 11:10-1:40 First Man (PG-13) CC/DVS;HA;HoH: 11:05-12:00-1:55-3:00-4:45-7:30-10:15 Venom (PG-13) CC/DVS;HA;HoH: 11:45-2:10-4:40-7:20-9:45 Bohemian Rhapsody (PG-13) CC/DVS;HA;HoH: 7:00-9:40-10:10

Landmark E Street Cinema

555 11th St Northwest www.landmarktheatres.com/ Wildlife CC/DVS;HA;HoH: 12:45-1:30-4:30-6:45-7:30-9:55 Studio 54 HA;HoH: 1:00-3:15-5:30-7:45-10:00 Can You Ever Forgive Me? (R) CC/DVS;HA;HoH: 1:15-3:45-4:15-7:15-9:15-9:40 The Guilty (Den skyldige) (R) HA;HoH;Subtitled: 4:35 Colette (R) CC/DVS;HA;HoH: 1:10-4:10 The Old Man & The Gun (PG-13) CC/DVS;HA;HoH: 2:05 Beautiful Boy (R) CC/DVS;HA;HoH: 1:00-4:00-7:00-9:30 The Happy Prince (R) CC/DVS;HA;HoH;Partially Subtitled: 7:20-9:45

Landmark West End Cinema

2301 M Street Northwest www.landmarktheatres.com/ London Fields (R) HA;HoH: 1:30-4:30-7:30 BlacKkKlansman (R) CC/DVS;HA;HoH: 1:00-7:00 Fahrenheit 11/9 (R) HA;HoH: 1:15-4:15-7:15

Regal Gallery Place Stadium 14

701 Seventh St Northwest www.regmovies.com/ Tim Burton's The Nightmare Before Christmas (PG) 2D;4DX;CC;DV;No Pass/SS;ReservedSelected;Stadium: 7:30 Hunter Killer (R) 2D;CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 12:35-3:25-6:15-9:30 Indivisible (PG-13) 2D;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 12:20-3:10-10:00 Annabelle: Creation (R) 2D;4DX;CC;DV;No Passes;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 4:50 It (R) 2D;4DX;CC;DV;No Passes;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 9:40 Jigsaw (R) 2D;4DX;CC;DV;No Passes;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 2:25 A Star is Born (R) 2D;CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 12:05-3:15-6:55-10:30 Halloween (2018) (R) 2D;CC;DV;No Passes;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 1:00-2:453:40-5:35-8:15-10:55 The Nun (R) 2D;4DX;CC;DV;No Passes;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 12:00 First Man (PG-13) 2D;CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 12:25-3:35 Venom (PG-13) 2D;CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 12:00-2:45-5:35-8:25-11:05 Night School (PG-13) 2D;CC;DV;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 6:10 Bad Times at the El Royale (R) 2D;CC;DV;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 2:45-8:45 The Nutcracker and the Four Realms (PG) 2D;CC;DV;No Passes;Recliner;ReservedSelected;Stadium: 7:00 Johnny English Strikes Again (PG) 2D;CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 12:152:35-5:10-10:40 The Hate U Give (PG-13) 2D;CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 12:05-3:05-7:35-10:45 Nobody's Fool (R) 2D;CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 7:50-10:30 The Nutcracker and the Four Realms in 3D (PG) 3D;CC;DV;No Passes;Recliner;ReservedSelected;Stadium: 9:30

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 Jan. 1. 10th Street and Constitution Avenue NW.

The Kreeger Museum: “Reinstallation of the Permanent Collection”: A return of the museum’s postwar and contemporary holdings to the lower level galleries highlighting paintings by American and European modernists and the museum’s collection of West African masks, through Dec. 31. 2401 Foxhall CONTINUED ON PAGE 47

(!) No Pass/No Discount Ticket Free Solo (PG-13) 2D;CC;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 12:15-2:45-5:15-7:00-9:30 Bohemian Rhapsody (PG-13) 2D;CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 7:00-10:15 Mid90s (R) 2D;CC;DV;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 12:00-2:25-4:50-7:20-9:50

Smithsonian - Lockheed Martin IMAX Theater

601 Independence Ave SW www.si.edu/imax Aircraft Carrier: Guardians of the Seas 3D (2018) (NR) 10:50-12:00-2:35 D-Day: Normandy 1944 3D (NR) 1:10 Journey to Space: The IMAX 3D Experience (NR) 10:20-11:25-12:35-2:00 First Man: The IMAX 2D Experience (PG-13) 3:10

Smithsonian - Warner Bros. Theater

1300 Constitution Avenue Northwest www.si.edu/theaters Tornado Alley 3D (NR) 11:45-3:05-4:25 National Parks Adventure 3D (America Wild 3D) (NR) 10:55-12:10-3:35-4:50 Star-Spangled Banner Anthem of Liberty 3D (NR) 1:50 Pandas 3D (G) 1:00 America's Musical Journey 3D 2:15 We the People (2015) 10:30AM

MARYLAND

AFI Silver Theatre Cultural Center

8633 Colesville Road www.afi.com/silver The Old Man & The Gun (PG-13) CC;Accessibility devices available: 11:15-1:15-3:15-5:15-9:30 Bisbee '17 4:45-9:15 Can You Ever Forgive Me? (R) CC;Accessibility devices available: 7:15 The Price of Everything 7:00 Moynihan 2:30 The Watermelon Woman (NR) 7:30 Wanda (PG) 5:15-9:30

AMC Center Park 8

4001 Powder Mill Rd. www.amctheatres.com/ The Nutcracker and the Four Realms (PG) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 6:00 Nobody's Fool (R) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 7:00 The Nutcracker and the Four Realms in 3D (PG) CC/DVS;RealD 3D;Recliners;RS: 8:45

AMC Magic Johnson Capital Ctr 12

800 Shoppers Way www.amctheatres.com/ Hunter Killer (R) CC/DVS: 1:45-4:40-7:40-10:40 A Star is Born (R) CC/DVS: 3:30 Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween (PG) CC/DVS: 2:00-4:30-7:00-9:30 Halloween (2018) (R) CC/DVS: 2:15-3:15-5:15-8:00-10:45 First Man (PG-13) CC/DVS: 1:00-4:15-7:25-10:35 Venom (PG-13) CC/DVS: 2:10-5:00-7:45-10:35 Night School (PG-13) CC/DVS: 2:00-5:05 The Hate U Give (PG-13) CC/DVS: 1:35-4:55-7:35-10:30 Bohemian Rhapsody (PG-13) CC/DVS: 8:00 Mid90s (R) AMC Independent: 2:15-4:30 The Nutcracker and the Four Realms (PG) CC/DVS: 7:00-8:30-9:30 Halloween: The IMAX 2D Experience (R) Descriptive Video;RS: 1:30-4:15 Smallfoot (PG) 2:30-5:00-8:00 Nobody's Fool (R) CC/DVS: 7:00-9:45-10:45 The Nutcracker and the Four Realms in 3D (PG) CC/DVS;RealD 3D: 6:00 Bohemian Rhapsody: The IMAX 2D Experience (PG-13) CC/DVS;RS: 7:00-10:15

Landmark Bethesda Row Cinema

7235 Woodmont Ave www.landmarktheatres.com/ First Man (PG-13) CC/DVS;HA;HoH;RS: 1:00-4:00-7:00-9:30 Beautiful Boy (R) CC/DVS;HA;HoH;RS: 1:40-4:30-7:30-9:50 Wildlife CC/DVS;HA;HoH;RS: 12:50-1:30-4:20-7:05-10:05 A Star is Born (R) CC/DVS;HA;HoH;RS: 1:10-3:30-4:10-7:10-9:40 What They Had (R) CC/DVS;HA;HoH;RS: 1:15-3:55-6:55-10:00 The Old Man & The Gun (PG-13) CC/DVS;HA;HoH;RS: 1:20-6:50 Can You Ever Forgive Me? (R) CC/DVS;HA;HoH;RS: 1:50-4:40-7:40-9:20-10:05 Colette (R) CC/DVS;HA;HoH;RS: 3:50-9:00

Regal Hyattsville Royale Stadium 14

6505 America Blvd. www.regmovies.com/ Hunter Killer (R) 2D;CC;DV;Stadium: 1:25-4:40-7:45-10:55 A Star is Born (R) 2D;CC;DV;Stadium: 1:00-4:25-7:40-10:45 Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween (PG) 2D;CC;DV;Stadium: 12:20-2:55-5:25-7:50-10:30 Halloween (2018) (R) 2D;CC;DV;No Passes;Stadium: 1:45-4:35 The Nun (R) 2D;CC;DV;Stadium: 12:05-2:35-5:15-7:55-10:35 First Man (PG-13) 2D;CC;DV;Stadium: 12:55-4:20-7:35-11:00 Venom (PG-13) 2D;CC;DV;Stadium: 1:05-4:00-6:55-9:50 Night School (PG-13) 2D;CC;DV;Stadium: 1:15-4:15-7:10-10:05 Smallfoot (PG) 2D;CC;DV;Stadium: 1:10 Bad Times at the El Royale (R) 2D;CC;DV;Stadium: 3:45 Bohemian Rhapsody (PG-13) 2D;CC;DV;Stadium: 7:15-10:30 Hell Fest (R) 2D;CC;DV;Stadium: 1:30-4:15 The Nutcracker and the Four Realms (PG) 2D;CC;DV;No Passes;Stadium: 6:45 The Hate U Give (PG-13) 2D;CC;DV;Stadium: 12:50-4:05-7:20-10:40 Never Heard 2D;No Pass/SS;Stadium: 7:00 The Oath (R) 2D;CC;DV;Stadium: 1:20-4:10-9:45 Mid90s (R) 2D;CC;DV;Stadium: 12:35-2:50-5:10-7:25-9:45 Nobody's Fool (R) 2D;CC;DV;Stadium: 7:30-10:15 The Nutcracker and the Four Realms in 3D (PG) 3D;CC;DV;No Passes;Stadium: 9:15 Halloween (2018) (R) 2D;CC;DV;Stadium: 1:00-4:05-7:00-9:50

Regal Majestic Stadium 20 & IMAX

900 Ellsworth Drive www.regmovies.com/ Hunter Killer (R) 2D;CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 1:25-4:20-7:20-10:20 Indivisible (PG-13) 2D;Recliner;Reserved;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 12:30-3:30-6:30-9:30 London Fields (R) 2D;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 12:50-6:40 A Star is Born (R) 2D;CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 12:05-3:20-6:30-9:50 Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween (PG) 2D;CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 12:20-2:45-5:10-7:35-10:00 Crazy Rich Asians (PG-13) 2D;CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 12:15-3:10 Halloween (2018) (R) 2D;CC;DV;No Passes;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 12:15-1:152:50-4:05-5:40-8:20-11:00

Venom (PG-13) 2D;CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 12:00-2:55-4:10-6:309:30-10:15 Night School (PG-13) 2D;CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 12:45-3:35-6:20-9:10 Smallfoot (PG) 2D;CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 1:30-4:15 Hell Fest (R) 2D;CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 1:25-4:00 Johnny English Strikes Again (PG) 2D;CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 12:00-2:35-5:10-7:45-10:20 Love Jacked (PG-13) 2D;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 1:55-4:30 Beautiful Boy (R) 2D;CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 12:00-2:45-5:30-8:10-10:55 Suspiria (R) 2D;CC;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 7:00 The Hate U Give (PG-13) 2D;CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 12:30-1:00-3:456:20-6:55-9:25 First Man: The IMAX 2D Experience (PG-13) 2D;CC;DV;IMAX;No Passes;ReservedSelected;Stadium: 12:30-4:00 Mid90s (R) 2D;CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 12:40-3:10-5:408:10-10:40 Bohemian Rhapsody: The IMAX 2D Experience (PG-13) 2D;CC;DV;IMAX;No Passes;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 7:30-10:45 Free Solo (PG-13) 2D;CC;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 1:00-3:45 Silencio (R) 2D;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 3:40-9:40 Halloween (2018) (R) 2D;CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 7:00-9:40 Bohemian Rhapsody (PG-13) 2D;CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 7:00-10:15 The Nutcracker and the Four Realms (PG) 2D;CC;DV;No Passes;Recliner;Reserved;Reserv ed-Selected;Stadium: 6:00-8:45 Nobody's Fool (R) 2D;CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 7:15-10:05 The Nutcracker and the Four Realms in 3D (PG) 3D;CC;DV;No Passes;Recliner;Reserved; Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 6:30-9:15

Xscape Theatres Brandywine 14

7710 Matapeake Business Dr www.xscapetheatres.com Hunter Killer (R) CC/OC;SS: 10:00-1:20-4:30-7:10-10:10 A Star is Born (R) AD;CC;SS: (!) 11:20-2:50 Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween (PG) AD;CC;SS: (!) 10:20-1:00-3:30-6:30-8:50 Halloween (2018) (R) AD;CC;SS: (!) 10:30-11:10-11:50-12:50-1:50-2:30-3:20-4:20-5:005:50-6:50-7:30-8:20-9:20-10:00-10:50 Venom (PG-13) AD;CC;SS: (!) 10:10-11:30-1:10-2:10-4:10-5:10-7:00-7:50-9:40-10:30 Night School (PG-13) AD;CC;SS: (!) 11:00-2:00-4:50-8:00-11:00 Bohemian Rhapsody (PG-13) CC/OC;SS: (!) 7:15-10:15 Smallfoot (PG) AD;CC;SS: (!) 10:50-1:30-3:50 Bad Times at the El Royale (R) AD;CC;SS: (!) 11:45-3:10 The Hate U Give (PG-13) CC;SS: (!) 10:40-1:40-4:40-7:40-10:45 The Nutcracker and the Four Realms (PG) CC/OC: (!) 6:00-8:40 Nobody's Fool (R) CC/OC: (!) 7:00-7:40-8:30-9:50-10:30-11:20

VIRGINIA

AMC Courthouse Plaza 8

2150 Clarendon Blvd. www.amctheatres.com/ A Star is Born (R) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 12:45-1:45-4:00-7:15-10:20 Halloween (2018) (R) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 12:45-3:40-4:15-5:00-6:15-7:45-10:30 First Man (PG-13) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 12:30-3:30 Bohemian Rhapsody (PG-13) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 7:00-9:00-10:15 Bad Times at the El Royale (R) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 1:00 Johnny English Strikes Again (PG) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 1:50-4:15-6:45-9:30 The Hate U Give (PG-13) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 1:20-4:30-7:30-10:30 Nobody's Fool (R) CC/DVS;Recliners;RS: 7:00-9:45 Mid90s (R) AMC Independent;Recliners;RS: 1:10-3:25-5:40-8:00-10:20

AMC Hoffman Center 22

206 Swamp Fox Rd. www.amctheatres.com/ Hunter Killer (R) CC/DVS: 1:15-4:15-7:15-10:15 Indivisible (PG-13) AMC Independent;CC/DVS: 1:00-4:00-7:00-10:00 London Fields (R) AMC Independent;CC/DVS: 1:50-4:50 A Star is Born (R) CC/DVS: 1:20-3:20-4:20-7:20-10:20 Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween (PG) CC/DVS: 12:00-2:30-5:00-7:30-10:00 Halloween (2018) (R) CC/DVS: 1:00-2:00-4:00-5:00-8:00-10:30 First Man (PG-13) CC/DVS: 12:00-3:10-6:20-9:30 Venom (PG-13) CC/DVS: 12:40-1:40-4:40-7:40-10:20 Night School (PG-13) CC/DVS: 12:00-2:40-5:20 Smallfoot (PG) CC/DVS: 1:25-3:50-6:30 Bohemian Rhapsody (PG-13) CC/DVS: 7:00-10:15 Bad Times at the El Royale (R) CC/DVS: 9:05 The Nutcracker and the Four Realms (PG) CC/DVS: 6:00-8:00-9:00 Johnny English Strikes Again (PG) CC/DVS: 12:00-2:30-5:00-7:30-9:45 The Old Man & The Gun (PG-13) AMC Independent;CC/DVS: 12:45-2:40-7:25 The Hate U Give (PG-13) CC/DVS: 12:50-4:00-7:00-10:00 Never Heard Alternative Content: 7:00 The Sisters Brothers (R) AMC Independent;CC/DVS: 4:45 Fahrenheit 11/9 (R) AMC Independent;CC/DVS: 1:50 First Man: The IMAX 2D Experience (PG-13) CC/DVS;RS: 1:15-4:30 Mid90s (R) AMC Independent: 12:15-2:30-4:45-7:45-10:00 Nobody's Fool (R) CC/DVS: 7:00-8:00-9:45-10:30 Free Solo (PG-13) AMC Independent: 12:15-3:30-5:05-9:45 Silencio (R) AMC Independent: 12:00-2:35-5:05 The Nutcracker and the Four Realms in 3D (PG) CC/DVS;RealD 3D: 7:30-10:00 Bohemian Rhapsody: The IMAX 2D Experience (PG-13) CC/DVS;RS: 8:00 First Love (Filipino) AMC Independent: 1:05-4:05-7:05-10:05 Halloween (2018) (R) CC/DVS;Dolby Cinema at AMC Prime;Recliners;RS: 12:00-3:00 Bohemian Rhapsody (PG-13) CC/DVS;Dolby Cinema at AMC Prime;Recliners;RS: 9:15 The Nutcracker and the Four Realms (PG) CC/DVS;Dolby Cinema at AMC Prime;Recliners;RS: 6:45

Angelika Film Center Mosaic

2911 District Ave National Theatre Live: Allelujah! Alcohol Availab;RS: 7:00 First Man (PG-13) AA;CC/DA;RS: 10:00-1:10-4:20 What They Had (R) AA;CC/DA;No Passes;RS: (!) 10:05-12:30-3:00-5:35-8:00-10:30 The Happy Prince (R) AA;CC/DA;No Passes;RS: (!) 11:15AM The Old Man & The Gun (PG-13) AA;CC/DA;RS: 2:15-4:45-9:45

Beautiful Boy (R) AA;CC/DA;No Passes;RS: (!) 11:30-2:30-5:20-8:20-11:00 Mid90s (R) AA;CC/DA;RS: 10:45-1:00-3:15-5:30-7:45-10:05 Free Solo (PG-13) AA;CC;RS: 10:00-12:25-2:50-5:15-10:50 Can You Ever Forgive Me? (R) AA;CC/DA;No Passes;RS: (!) 11:15-2:00-4:30-7:15-10:30 A Star is Born (R) AA;CC/DA;RS: 9:55-12:55-4:00-7:30-10:30 Bohemian Rhapsody (PG-13) AA;RS: 7:00-10:00

Regal Ballston Quarter Stadium 12

671 North Glebe Rd www.regmovies.com/ Hunter Killer (R) 2D;CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 1:20-4:15-6:15-9:25 A Star is Born (R) 2D;CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 1:00-4:00-7:05-10:10 Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween (PG) 2D;CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 1:50-4:25-6:50-9:25 Halloween (2018) (R) 2D;CC;DV;No Passes;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 1:302:00-4:15-4:45-7:15-10:00 First Man (PG-13) 2D;CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 2:30-6:00-9:30 Venom (PG-13) 2D;CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 1:15-3:55-6:40-9:20 Night School (PG-13) 2D;CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 1:10-7:15 Bohemian Rhapsody (PG-13) 2D;CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 7:00-10:15 Bad Times at the El Royale (R) 2D;CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 4:10-10:00 The Nutcracker and the Four Realms (PG) 2D;CC;DV;No Passes;Recliner;ReservedSelected;Stadium: 6:00 Hell Fest (R) 2D;CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 1:20-3:40 The Old Man & The Gun (PG-13) 2D;CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 1:25-3:50 The Hate U Give (PG-13) 2D;CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 1:05-4:207:10-10:15 Nobody's Fool (R) 2D;CC;DV;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 7:30-10:30 The Nutcracker and the Four Realms in 3D (PG) 3D;CC;DV;No Passes;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 8:45 Silencio (R) 2D;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 2:10-4:50-7:30-9:50

Regal Kingstowne Stadium 16 & RPX

5910 Kingstowne Towne Ctr www.regmovies.com/ Hunter Killer (R) 2D;CC;DV;Stadium: 12:50-3:40-6:35-9:35 Indivisible (PG-13) 2D;Stadium: 12:30-3:30-6:30-9:30 A Star is Born (R) 2D;CC;DV;Stadium: 1:15-4:15-7:15-10:15 London Fields (R) 2D;Stadium: 1:35-4:40-7:40-10:25 Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween (PG) 2D;CC;DV;Stadium: 12:40-3:05 Crazy Rich Asians (PG-13) 2D;CC;DV;Stadium: 2:35-5:10-7:50-10:30 Halloween (2018) (R) 2D;CC;DV;No Passes;RPX;Recliner;Reserved-Selected;Stadium: 12:15-2:50 Venom (PG-13) 2D;CC;DV;Stadium: 12:35-3:15-6:10-9:15 Night School (PG-13) 2D;CC;DV;Stadium: 3:10 First Man (PG-13) 2D;CC;DV;Stadium: 12:25-3:35 Smallfoot (PG) 2D;CC;DV;Stadium: 12:20-2:40-5:00 Bohemian Rhapsody (PG-13) 2D;CC;DV;No Passes;RPX;Recliner;ReservedSelected;Stadium: 7:00-10:05 The Nutcracker and the Four Realms (PG) 2D;CC;DV;No Passes;Stadium: 7:00-9:30 The Hate U Give (PG-13) 2D;CC;DV;Stadium: 1:00-4:00-7:10-10:10 Hell Fest (R) 2D;CC;DV;Stadium: 4:10-9:05 The Sisters Brothers (R) 2D;CC;DV;Stadium: 12:20 The Oath (R) 2D;CC;DV;Stadium: 12:15 Gosnell: The Trial Of America's Biggest Serial Killer (PG-13) 2D;Stadium: 1:20-6:25 Nobody's Fool (R) 2D;CC;DV;Stadium: 7:15-10:00 Mid90s (R) 2D;CC;DV;Stadium: 12:45-3:00-5:15-7:30-9:45 The Nutcracker and the Four Realms in 3D (PG) 3D;CC;DV;No Passes;Stadium: 6:00-9:00 Halloween (2018) (R) 2D;CC;DV;No Passes;Stadium: 12:50-1:30-3:25-4:05-6:15-7:059:00-9:50 Bohemian Rhapsody (PG-13) 2D;CC;DV;Stadium: 7:30-10:35

Regal Potomac Yard Stadium 16

3575 Potomac Ave www.regmovies.com/ Hunter Killer (R) 2D;CC;DV;Stadium: 1:20-4:15-7:00-10:00 London Fields (R) 2D;Stadium: 3:25-6:15-9:05 A Star is Born (R) 2D;CC;DV;Stadium: 1:00-4:10-7:20-10:25 Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween (PG) 2D;CC;DV;Stadium: 1:45-4:20 Halloween (2018) (R) 2D;CC;DV;No Passes;Stadium: 1:30-4:15-6:50-9:30 First Man (PG-13) 2D;CC;DV;Stadium: 1:00-4:10-7:20-10:25 Venom (PG-13) 2D;CC;DV;Stadium: 1:55-4:45-7:35-10:25 Night School (PG-13) 2D;CC;DV;Stadium: 4:25-7:25-10:10 Bohemian Rhapsody (PG-13) 2D;CC;DV;Stadium: 7:00-10:10 Smallfoot (PG) 2D;CC;DV;Stadium: 1:45-4:15 Bad Times at the El Royale (R) 2D;CC;DV;Stadium: 1:00-4:20 The Nutcracker and the Four Realms (PG) 2D;CC;DV;No Passes;Stadium: 6:00-8:40 Johnny English Strikes Again (PG) 2D;CC;DV;Stadium: 1:30-4:00-7:30-10:00 The Hate U Give (PG-13) 2D;CC;DV;Stadium: 1:15-4:15-7:15-10:15 The Sisters Brothers (R) 2D;CC;DV;Stadium: 1:30 Nobody's Fool (R) 2D;CC;DV;Stadium: 7:00-9:50 The Oath (R) 2D;CC;DV;Stadium: 1:05 Mid90s (R) 2D;CC;DV;Stadium: 1:00-3:15-5:30-7:45-10:00 The Nutcracker and the Four Realms in 3D (PG) 3D;CC;DV;No Passes;Stadium: 6:30-9:10 Silencio (R) 2D;Stadium: 1:00-3:30 Halloween (2018) (R) 2D;CC;DV;Stadium: 1:50-4:35-4:40-7:10-7:20-9:50-10:05

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 Journey to Space: The IMAX 3D Experience (NR) 10:35-1:25 First Man: The IMAX 2D Experience (PG-13) 4:00 Bohemian Rhapsody: The IMAX 2D Experience (PG-13) 7:00-9:30


THURSDAY | 11.01.2018 | EXPRESS | 45

GREAT PERFORMANCES AT MASON 2018/2019 SEASON

C TH OM EM E S AL EE L!

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Daniel Hope and Friends Air-A Baroque Journey Friday, November 2 at 8 p.m.

Keyboard Conversations® with Jeffrey Siegel Music From Time of War, 1914–1918 Sunday, November 4 at 7 p.m.

October 30–November 25 Opera House Kennedy-Center.org (202) 467-4600 Theater at the Kennedy Center is made possible by

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46 | EXPRESS | 11.01.2018 | THURSDAY

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goingoutguide.com CONTINUED FROM PAGE 44

Wallenberg Place SW.

Road NW.

Virginia Museum of Fine Arts:

The Phillips Collection:

“The Precisionist Impulse”: An exhibition of 18 watercolors, prints, drawings, photographs and paintings from the museum’s collection, through Nov. 12; “Howardena Pindell: What Remains to Be Seen “: An exhibition that features the artist’s early figurative paintings, explorations into abstraction and conceptual practices, as well as personal and political art produced after a lifethreatening car accident in 1979, through Nov. 25. 200 N Blvd., Richmond.

“Intersections: Richard Tuttle”: An exhibition that 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, through Jan. 13. 1600 21st St. NW.

exhibition spanning three floors offers a chronological narrative of the Holocaust through photographs, films and historical artifacts; “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. 100 Raoul

THE WASHINGTON POST

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum: “The Holocaust”: An ongoing

Renwick Gallery: “No Spectators: The Art of Burning Man” is an exhibition of artwork created at Burning Man, the annual desert gathering and major art event, that includes immersive, room-sized installations, photographs, jewelry, costumes and archival materials from the Nevada Museum of Art. Experience it through Jan. 21.

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, through Jan. 6. 600 N. Charles St., Baltimore. CONTINUED ON PAGE 48

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48 | EXPRESS | 11.01.2018 | THURSDAY

Tradition Starts Here C E L E B R AT E Y O U R

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goingoutguide.com CONTINUED FROM PAGE 47

Stage

‘Blight by John Bavoso’: A story ‘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 Egypt, featuring music by Elton John and Tim Rice. Constellation Theatre Company, 1835 14th St. NW, through Nov. 18.

‘Anything Goes’: Cole Porter’s 1934

3423 M St. NW, Washington, DC 20007

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Award-winning musical about a boy who leaves boxing to pursue dance. Signature Theatre, 4200 Campbell Ave., Arlington, through Jan. 6.

pun-filled, nautical musical-comedy is staged. Arena Stage, 1101 Sixth St. SW, through Dec. 23.

‘Beetlejuice’: The pre-Broadway world

about a couple that moves to a new house with a troubled past and a community that wants to erase them from the map. Anacostia Playhouse, 2020 Shannon Place SE, through Nov. 11.

‘Cinderella’: A family-friendly adaptation of the classic fairy tale with Cinderella, her evil stepsisters and a smitten prince. All ages welcome. Imagination Stage, 4908 Auburn Ave., Bethesda, through Jan. 6.

‘East of Eden’: An adaptation of John Steinbeck’s novel that tells the intertwining stories of two families, the Trasks and the Hamiltons. NextStop Theatre Company, 269 Sunset Park Drive, Herndon, Va., through Nov. 18.

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

‘Heisenberg’: A two-character comedy

‘Billy Elliot’: A revival of the Tony

about a chance encounter between two

G N I M UPCO

S T N E EV

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.

‘King John’: Aaron Posner directs Shakespeare’s historical play. Folger Theatre, 201 East Capitol St. SE, through Dec. 2.

‘Long Way Down’: A staging of D.C.area native Jason Reynold’s bestselling book, starring Justin Weaks. The Kennedy Center, 2700 F St. NW, through Nov. 4. CONTINUED ON PAGE 51

EMBRACE YOUR INNER SPY

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

12TH ANNUAL PARADE OF TRABANTS

THE SECRET WORLD A HISTORY OF INTELLIGENCE

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WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 28TH

10:00 AM – 4:00 PM | FREE!

12 PM | FREE!

6:30 PM | $12

6:00 PM – 10:30 PM*

The 12th Annual Parade of Trabants infiltrates Washington, DC on Saturday, November 3! Drop by the Spy Museum to view these beloved vintage cars, win a ride, jam to German music, pick a lock, and try your hand at graffiti Berlin-Style.

Distinguished intelligence historian Christopher Andrew wrote the authorized history of MI5 Defend the Realm, charted the rise of the KGB in The Sword and the Shield, and now he has taken on the world! Join him in conversation with Spy Museum historian Vince Houghton for a look at three millennia of intelligence history.

Americans are used to seeing Soviet spies in Cold War films, but what did it look like from the other side? Tonight learn about two beloved Soviet pop culture gems from 1973 which were each influenced by the KGB: Seventeen Moments of Spring and The Plainclothesman.

Join the International Spy Museum for its annual event honoring the men and women who have served in the field of National Security with integrity and distinction. This year’s honoree is Admiral William H. McRaven, USN (Ret.)., former US Special Operations Commander.

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THURSDAY | 11.01.2018 | EXPRESS | 49

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50 | EXPRESS | 11.01.2018 | THURSDAY

TAKEANEXPRESS TOWORK. NEWS. FUN. FAST.

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THURSDAY | 11.01.2018 | EXPRESS | 51

goingoutguide.com

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

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 48

Nov 1

‘Mr. Burns, A Post-Electric Play‘:

Bellydance, Burlesque & more!

‘Peter Pan and Wendy’: Wendy meets Peter, a little boy who refuses to grow up in this adaptation of J.M. Barrie’s original story with music by Matt Conner. Creative Cauldron, 410 S. Maple Ave. Falls Church, through Nov. 3.

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PETULA CLARK Billy 8 THE OUTLAWS Crain Band 9 OLETA ADAMS 11 CHRIS BOTTI 7

THE KENNEDY CENTER

‘Rooms: A Rock Romance’: The 10th anniversary production of the rock musical by Paul Scott Goodman about an ambitious singer and a reclusive rocker who tour the world in their quest for stardom. MetroStage, 1201 N. Royal St., Alexandria, through Nov. 11. ‘Sing to Me Now’: An exhausted Greek muse hires a human intern in this contemporary comedy. Atlas CONTINUED ON PAGE 52

The Stars from

THE COMMITMENTS Jordan 2 DAVID BROMBERG BIG BAND Tice 3 RAVEN'S NIGHT 2018

A play by Anne Washburn about a group of survivors passing time around a campfire by recalling stories like “Cape Feare� and “The Simpsons� from memory. Dorothy Betts Marvin Theatre, 800 21st St. NW, through Nov. 4.

‘Anastasia’: A musical based on the hit 1997 animated feature about the Grand Duchess Anastasia Nikolaevna of Russia. The Kennedy Center, 2700 F St. NW, through Nov. 25.

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52 | EXPRESS | 11.01.2018 | THURSDAY

goingoutguide.com CONTINUED FROM PAGE 51

‘The Fall’: A biographical play about

Performing Arts Center, 1333 H St. NE, through Nov. 18.

a student-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.

‘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 Fever’: The play, by the company 600 Highwaymen, is built on audience participation. Woolly Mammoth Theatre, 641 D St. NW, through Nov. 4.

‘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 Story of Hansel and Gretel’:

‘The Duchess of Malfi and The Changeling’: A Jacobean tragedy

‘Things That Are Round‘: Callie SYNETIC THEATER

about a women who hires a hit man to off her fiance so she can marry her true love. The Lab at Convergence, 1819 N. Quaker Lane, Alexandria, through Nov. 18.

A musical adaptation produced by Oakcrest School. Gretel attempts to outwit a crone to free all the children who have been turned into cookies. The Stage at Holy Trinity Church, 850 Balls Hill Road, McLean, through Nov. 3.

‘Sleepy Hollow’: Washington Irving’s classic short story is staged. Synetic Theater, 1800 S. Bell St., Arlington, through Nov. 4.

I want a caffeine-free wake-up call.

eyeopeners

page three

Peculiar, eye-opening bites of news.

Local news that’s slightly askew.

You’ve just picked up today’s Express.

I want to get right to the news.

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

Kimball presents a dark comedy about a dentist and an aspiring opera singer facing off in a game of truth or dare. Howard Community College, 10901 Little Patuxent Pkwy., Columbia, Md., through Nov. 18.

local

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News from D.C., Virginia and Maryland.

Top stories from the USA and the world.

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Social media’s best posts, tweets and wisecracks.

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THURSDAY | 11.01.2018 | EXPRESS | 53

PUBLIC PROGRAMS AT THE

NATIONAL ARCHIVES NOVEMBER 2018

Remembering Vietnam exhibit open in the Lawrence F. O’Brien Gallery through January 2019

November 1 @ 7pm

November 8 @ 7pm

[PANEL] Vietnam Photographers: Capturing the War on Film

[FILM] Blood Road

In partnership with the U.S. Army Center of Military History and in observance of the 50th anniversary of the Vietnam War, a panel of combat photographers who served in Vietnam as part of the Army’s Special Photographic Office will discuss their role and their work.

This film follows the journey of ultra-endurance mountain bike athlete Rebecca Rusch and her Vietnamese riding partner, Huyen Nguyen, as they pedal 1,200 miles along the Ho Chi Minh Trail through Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia. Rusch will introduce the film and take questions afterward.

November 13 @ 12pm [BOOK TALK] John Marshall: The Man Who Made the Supreme Court Award-winning biographer Richard Brookhiser vividly chronicles America’s greatest judge, John Marshall, and the world he made when he became the fourth Chief Justice of the United States in 1801.

November 14 @ 2pm [PANEL] Remembering Vietnam Veterans Day Panel

November 3 @ 10am

Former Senator and Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel and Congressman Sam Johnson will deliver remarks for a program that discusses support and resources for Vietnam veterans as part of a week-long Veterans Day celebration.

[FAMILY] Native American Stories Family Day From the Cherokee to the Pueblo, 573 Native American tribes today are legally recognized by the U.S. Government. Learn about Native Americans and their relationships with the United States.

November 7 @ 12pm [BOOK TALK] Black Flags, Blue Waters: The Epic History of America’s Most Notorious Pirates Author Eric Jay Dolin shares true tales of roguish glamour and extreme brutality of piracy in America as he reveals the history lawless pirates such as Blackbeard and Captain Kidd who sailed the seas of North America and beyond.

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


54 | EXPRESS | 11.01.2018 | THURSDAY

entertainment Hasan Minhaj gives “Patriot Act” a distinct voice that sets the series apart from other talk shows.

NETFLIX

verbatim

Minhaj’s ‘Patriot Act’ cuts through the noise Hasan Minhaj has officially joined the crowded landscape of news-driven comedy shows. “Patriot Act,” which premiered Sunday, naturally shares a lot of qualities with other comedians’ shows. But here are a few ways the weekly Netflix series differs from the pack. ELAHE IZADI (THE WASHINGTON POST) It’s not tied to the news

A lot of these shows are based on the news of the day or week. Minhaj tackles just one story per episode, which lasts a little more than 20 minutes, and it seems there is only a loose peg to the news, if any at all. While talk of President Trump dominates a lot of comedy shows, that is not the case (so far, at least) with “Patriot Act.” Minhaj is serious but not caustic. He is incredulous at times, but mostly in a can-youbelieve-how-crazy-this-is way. He adds laugh lines where you would not necessarily expect them. The jokes often are in service of the information, rather than the other way around.

He speaks from his identity

Minhaj has had several career breakout moments, including his 2017 Netflix special “Homecoming King,” in which he laced jokes into the story of his life growing up as the child of Indian, Muslim immigrants in America. The deeply personal special ended up winning a Peabody Award. With “Patriot Act,” Minhaj continues to lean into his identity where it makes sense, as he breaks down topics like affirmative action and the U.S. relationship with Saudi Arabia. Minhaj also stands out in an industry where the majority of these comedy shows are hosted by white men.

It’s on Netflix

“Clearly I was part of the Manic Pixie Dream Girl coining. I find it very upsetting to be part of that.” NATALIE PORTMAN, telling Vanity Fair about the roles she took early in her career. “I was very lucky that what I was cast in wasn’t anything deliberate,” she said. “But I feel like I totally ended up in female tropes.” Portman’s role in Zach Braff’s 2004 film “Garden State” has been widely cited as an example of the Manic Pixie Dream Girl trope, in which a quirky female character only exists to inspire a male protagonist.

Although Netflix is notoriously secretive about its streaming data, it is safe to assume a lot of people go to the platform to binge shows. But a handful of comics have tried series that release one episode a week. Recently, Netflix pulled the plug on two topical comedy shows after just one season: “The Joel McHale Show” and Michelle Wolf’s “The Break.” As for Minhaj, he has said being on Netflix helped him figure out what topics to tackle. “We’ve designed this show to thrive on Netflix as a platform,” he told Uproxx. “With the way that I tell stories, I want things to always feel urgent and timeless.”

STREAMING

Obamas acquire Lewis’ latest for Netflix

Barack and Michelle Obama have acquired the rights to Michael Lewis’ book “The Fifth Risk” for development into a series under their Netflix production deal, according to Deadline. The book, which came out Oct. 2, documents the bumpy transition from the Obama administration to Donald Trump’s presidency. Lewis’ books “Moneyball” and “The Big Short” were previously developed into Oscar-nominated films. (EXPRESS)

Liev Schreiber, Lil Wayne set for “Saturday Night Live” on Nov. 10

Freeform adapting Stephen King’s “Joyland” into series

‘Red Table Talk’ proves cathartic for all involved STREAMING For years, rumors have swirled around Will and Jada Pinkett Smith. Are they secretly Scientologists? Do they have an open marriage? Some of the mystery is starting to unravel around a glossy red table at their home in Malibu, Calif. Jada’s Facebook Watch show, “Red Table Talk,” is built around conversations among the actress; her mother, Adrienne Banfield-Norris; and her 18-yearold daughter, Willow. The most high-profile guest so far is Jada’s famous husband, who appears in a two-part episode about their gossip-inducing marriage. (The first installment premiered last week.) It’s a shrewd business move for the Smiths to address long-standing rumors about their family in a format they can control. And it’s clear that “Red Table Talk” is resonating with people. A month after the show’s May premiere, Facebook ordered an additional 13 episodes, which launched with the marriage installments. As viewers connect with “Red Table Talk,” it appears that the show has been cathartic for the Smith family, as well. “You have found something with this red table and this space that I tried my damnedest to build for you,” Will tells Jada. “The space where you get to fully and honestly and thoroughly be you and to get all of the love and the praise that you deserve.” BETHONIE BUTLER (TWP)

Alex Trebek renews “Jeopardy” deal through 2022


THURSDAY | 11.01.2018 | EXPRESS | 55

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THURSDAY | 11.01.2018 | EXPRESS | 57

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trending “I know we’re all supposed to laugh at the lady who’s marrying a ghost but honestly good for her.” @BRANDYLJENSEN, tweeting about British woman Amethyst Realm, who

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Sanford, R-S.C., who tweeted Wednesday that he would be passing out pocket versions of the U.S. Constitution to trick-ortreaters. Sanford was roasted on Twitter for his unconventional Halloween treat. “I would eat it in front of you while yelling ‘THIS CANDY SUCKS,’ ” @edsbs tweeted.

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@SLADE, tweeting at Rep. Mark

“I kinda assumed they checked in with each other every year to avoid this situation.” @WUNDERKIND87, tweeting after the hosts of ABC’s “Good Morning

America” and NBC’s “Today” both went with ’80s-themed costumes for their Halloween shows. Every year, both shows’ teams go all-out on Halloween — but not with the same theme. “ ‘CBS This Morning’ must have missed the memo,” @2many2read tweeted.

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“Ted Cruz is the only person who pretends to be a serial killer to be MORE likable.”

“This once again proves that women will somehow always be blamed for the mistakes men make.”

@THEDWECK, tweeting after Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, tweeted Zodiac Killer cryptology Wednesday with the message “Happy Halloween.” A popular internet joke falsely suggests that Cruz is the unidentified Zodiac Killer. “That is genuinely funny, Ted. Kudos. But vote [for] Beto O’Rourke,” @scienceartcats responded.

@_MANISHASINGH_, tweeting after Priyanka Chopra was asked about the Marchesa dress she wore to her bridal shower over the weekend. Chopra is a friend of Marchesa cofounder Georgina Chapman, the ex-wife of Harvey Weinstein. Chopra said she chose the dress to support her friend, and “It was the right choice.”


THURSDAY | 11.01.2018 | EXPRESS | 59

fun+games Horoscopes

Scrabble Grams

PAR SCORE 145-155, BEST SCORE 236

Sudoku

DIFFICULT

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Readiness is measured very differently today than it is most other days. You will have to consider things from a different point of view. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) You are very good at making things up as you go along, and such improvisation can serve you very well as this unusual day progresses. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) If you continue waiting for someone else to get moving before you, you’ll never get much done. You must take the initiative today. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) You can approach a situation in a way that surprises even you — and the effect you have is likely to last some time.

WEDNESDAY’S SOLUTION

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) You

don’t have to do something expertly today; you just have to do it. Don’t back out once you’ve committed.

WEDNESDAY’S SOLUTION

ARIES (March 21-April 19) As you try to assemble the best possible team for a job that lies ahead, you may realize that you don’t need as many people as you had thought. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You can support someone in a way that means more in the long run. What happens may be remembered for some time.

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

72 | 58

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) What seems like a disagreement is really nothing of the kind. You and a partner are merely coming to terms with a tricky issue.

TODAY: Our next cold front hangs back to the west, leaving us with a continued mild flow from the south. That leaves us partly sunny and even warmer, as highs head for the low to mid-70s, with a breeze from the south around 10 mph. Scattered showers seem likely during the evening and overnight.

CANCER (June 21-July 22) Focus on matters that are familiar today, and they’ll help you deal with those that are not. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You’ve been laying the foundation for something very important. Today, you’ll begin to see things pan out as you had hoped.

PEARLS BEFORE SWINE | STEPHAN PASTIS

AVG. HIGH: 62 RECORD HIGH: 86 AVG. LOW: 44 RECORD LOW: 27 SUNRISE: 7:35 a.m. SUNSET: 6:07 p.m.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You may

not approach the day with as much verve as is your habit, but you can get a lot done anyway. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Someone is likely to grant you a special favor today — just in time. Before the day is out you’ll have the opportunity to reciprocate.

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

67 | 56

58 | 48

SUNDAY

MONDAY

58 | 43

63 | 47

RH

1512: Michelangelo’s just-completed paintings on the ceiling of the Vatican’s Sistine Chapel are publicly unveiled by the artist’s patron, Pope Julius II.

1949: An Eastern Airlines DC-4 collides in midair with a P-38 fighter plane near Washington National Airport, killing all 55 people aboard the DC-4 and seriously injuring the pilot of the P-38.

1968: The Motion Picture Association of America unveils its voluntary film rating system: G for general, M for mature (later changed to GP, then PG), R for restricted and X (later changed to NC-17) for adults only.

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


60 | EXPRESS | 11.01.2018 | THURSDAY

fun+games Crossword

COUPLES WITH?

ACROSS 1

Wonderland VIP

42 Embark, as on a journey

3

Newspaper employee

6

Abound

44 Org. with many specialists

4

Some picnic leftovers

47 Kidney-related

5

Timeline divisions

6

Get ready for company

7

Nine penny’s four

8

Traveling guesstimate

13 Mr., in Tijuana 14 “Come ___ the light� 15 River of Ireland

49 Seals the fate of 50 Marshmallowy drink

16 Mr., Mr. and Mrs.?

52 Skin-cream additive

19 Common English assignment

54 Offering of appeasement

9

20 Emulates Rory McIlroy

55 All gunked up

10 Dire situation

57 Faux pas

21 Hockey legend Bobby

60 Whose Shakespeare tale was tragic?

11 How some pay balances

23 Knitting term 26 Quavering effect in music 27 Adjust one’s shoelace 30 TV’s Zahn 32 On the ___ (sneakily)

65 Product box listings

15 Large pitcher

67 Christie and Karenina

21 Sun or globe, e.g.

68 Hallow part?

22 Coral ___ 24 Injustice inducer

69 Flower supporter

35 Tow truck’s target

DOWN 1

Silvery-gray shade

2

Romanian coin

38 Jazz legend Simone

56 Thanksgiving sides

39 Unresolved thing

58 Diamond problem

40 Super large wrestler

59 Like a toughto-see line

43 Fl. oz.’s 6

61 “King� Cole

44 Earn, as interest

62 Color changer

45 Oozing gloom 46 Astuteness

63 Kids game cry 64 NNW turnabout

48 Backup 51 Poems of tribute WEDNESDAY’S SOLUTION

17 20 winks 18 Set apart

70 Pie part

41 Date night option

12 Profoundly

66 Poet Angelou

33 Scarab

37 Who Lucy’s building was?

___ Blanc

53 Mer fill

25 Fly on a hook

EDITED BY TIMOTHY E. PARKER

10 Spain’s El ___

36 2018 diet type

28 Part of a checklist 29 Bygone Cadillac 31 Restricts? No, U-turn 34 Thing on the house

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THURSDAY | 11.01.2018 | EXPRESS | 61

people

AP

Toni lands the highest of all honors

BIRDS

Royals doom Sneeze to inferiority complex

@JUSTINBIEBER (VIA TWITTER)

EVAN VUCCI (AP)

Prince Harry and Meghan Markle named two of New Zealand’s kiwi birds Wednesday on the final day of their South Pacific tour. They gave the 3-day-old chicks indigenous Maori names: “Koha” meaning “Gift” and “Tihei” meaning “Sneeze.” The names came from a Maori saying meaning “the sneeze of life,” or the right to speak. (AP)

HAIRCUTS

Justin tired of being mistaken for Hailey Justin Bieber has traded in his long hair for a buzz cut, the singer revealed Tuesday via a photo on his Instagram story. Both Bieber and his partner, Hailey Baldwin, had been sporting shoulder-length blond hair. The couple reportedly got married in September in New York, though Baldwin moved to deny the rumors. (EXPRESS)

Kanye wonders if he’ll regret this photo after renouncing his political views. POLITICS?

Kanye back from the sunken place

or email circulation@wpost.com.

TYLER PERRY, telling SiriusXM

on Monday that he plans to retire his Madea character next year. Perry is 49, while the character is around 60.

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

CORRECTIONS: Spot a mistake?

Let us know at corrections@wpost.com.

verbatim

“I’m happy to kill that old bitch. I’m tired, man. I just don’t want to be her age, playing her.”

MANAGING EDITOR, FEATURES | Rudi Greenberg

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

FOR CIRCULATION: Call 202-334-6992

Jenna Dewan is dating Tony- and Grammy-winning actor Steve Kazee after filing for divorce from Channing Tatum, according to The Blast. E! News reported that Dewan was spotted Friday at a Halloween party in Beverly Hills, Calif., kissing a “mystery man,” who turned out to be the Broadway star. The couple also went to the Haunted Hayride at Griffith Park on Tuesday. (EXPRESS)

MANAGING EDITOR, NEWS | Jeffrey Tomik

CONTACT THE NEWSROOM

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

Hollywood paparazzi: ‘What is a Broadway?’

SENIOR FEATURES WRITERS | Sadie Dingfelder, Kristen Page-Kirby

HOW TO REACH US

TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD:

COUPLES

Kanye West tweeted Tuesday that he is taking a step back from politics after stating a number of right-leaning opinions in recent months. “My eyes are now wide open and now realize I’ve been used to spread messages I don’t believe in,” West tweeted. “I am distancing myself from politics.” The news comes after activist Candace Owens claimed over the weekend that West designed “Blexit” T-shirts as part of a movement encouraging African-Americans to leave the Democratic Party. “I never wanted any association with Blexit,” West tweeted. “I have nothing to do with it.” (EXPRESS)

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

Call 202-334-6200.

Beyonce saluted Toni Braxton for Halloween, posting photos to Instagram on Tuesday in which she sported a pixie wig, leather jacket, white tank top and jeans to re-create the cover of the R&B singer’s self-titled 1993 album. “Sending love and adoration to one of our talented legends,” Beyonce wrote in a caption. “How do you look better than me on MY album cover?” Braxton responded via Twitter. “I LOVE IT.” (AP)

GETTY IMAGES

HALLOWEEN

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.


62 | EXPRESS | 11.01.2018 | THURSDAY

“The quintessential American musical.”

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

— HuffPost

— Daily News

ANYTHING GOES GOLD STANDARD MUSICAL

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

INDECENT TIMELESS MASTERPIECE

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BEGINS TOMORROW

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Photo of the cast of Indecent by Tony Powell.

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