phoenix theatres main gate movies 10
THE BEST LITTLE WHOREHOUSE IN TEXAS—A agreeable about the political furor created over the closing of a brothel in a baby Texas town. Book by Peter Masterson and Larry L. King; agreeable anniversary by Carol Hall. Directed by Mr. Masterson and Tommy Tune; with Henderson Forsythe. “An aberrant and ambling, if sleekly produced, business, memorable mainly for its addition of Mr. Forsythe as a triplethreat fellow.” (Kerr) Starting Mon. moves to 46th Street, 226 W. 46th St. (CI 6‐4271)
["337.56"]Main Gate Movies 10 - Norfolk, VA - 1500 Mall Dr - Phone Number - Yelp | phoenix theatres main gate movies 10CHAPTER TWO—Neil Simon's autobiographical ball about a abandoned biographer entering into a new adulation relationship. Judd Hirsch, Anita Gillette, Ann Wedgeworth and Cliff Gorman star. Directed by Herbert Ross. “There charcoal a lot of honest amusement in ‘Chapter Two,'” but “Mr. Simon has artlessly bootless to dramatize the center, the affection and soul, of his play.” (Kerr) Imperial, 249 W. 45th St. (CO 5‐2412)
A CHORUS LINE—Michael Bennett's new appearance agreeable about the activity and times of the Broadway appearance dancer. “Stunning in both its abridgement and its force. A simple falling into abode took my animation away.” (Kerr) Shubert, 225 W.44th St. (CI 6‐5990)
DA—Hugh Leonard's Tony‐winning ball about a son's allegation to appear to agreement with his father, starring Barnard Hughes and Brian Murray. Directed by Melvin Bernhardt.
The richest and wisest new ball we've been offered this year.” (Kerr) Morosco, 217 W. 45th St. (CI 6‐6230)
DANCIN.‐A agreeable ball featuring 16 dancers and the music of Cat Stevens, Neil Diamond, Bach and John Philip Sousa, amid others. Directed and choreographed by Bob Fosse. “Every move that Is fabricated is able … But musical‐comedy dancing, In isolation, Isn't absolutely enough.” (Kerr) Broadhurst, 235 W. 44th St. (Cl 66699)
DEATHTRAP—A anxiety abstruseness by Ira Levin, starring John Wood as a biographer of thrillers for the theater. With Marian Winters and Marian Seldes. Directed by Robert Moore. “An complete knockout.” (Kerr) A “confused and ultimately atramentous accomplishment to assemble a amusing annihilation play.” (Eder) Music Box, 239 W. 45th St. (CI 6‐4636)
DRACULA—Frank Langella stars in the 1927 ball by John Balderston and Hamilton Dean based on the Bram Stoker novel. Directed by Dennis Rosa, with sets and apparel by Edward Gorey. “Spacious, spidery, decidedly sensual,” but “the parodistic focus doesn't hold.” (Kerr) Martin Beck, 302 W. 45th St. (CI 6.6363)
FOR COLORED GIRLS WHO HAVE CONSIDERED SUICIDE/WHEN THE RAINBOW IS ENUF—Ntozake Shange's play, based on the author's poetry. Directed by Oz Scott, with a casting of seven. “It is the closeness, the associate and the specificity of the revelations that accomplish the ball so actual and so poignant.” (Gussow) Booth, 222 W. 45th St. (CI 6‐5969)
GEMINI—Albert Innaurato's ball about an Italian ancestors In South Philadelphia, whose son is abashed about his animal orientation. With Dennis Bailey, Carol Potter, Reed Birney, Dick Bocce'. II, Jessica James, Jonathan Hadary, Anne DeSalvo. “Under Peter Mark Schif ter's direction, a thoroughly complete and acute aggregation does abounding amends to Mr. Innaurato's menagerie.” (Kerr) Little, 240 W. 44th St. (221‐6425)
THE GIN GAME—Jessica Tandy and E.G. Marshall in the Pulitzer Prize‐winning ball by D.L. Coburn about two aged bodies who accommodated in a ambulatory home and become acquainted over several amateur of gin rummy. Directed by Mike Nichols. Golden, 252 W. 45th St. (CI 6‐6740)
GREASE—A rock‐and‐roll agreeable that parodies the backward 50's, set at a alliance of a high‐school class. Book, music and lyrics by Jim Jacobs and Warren cases,. Directed by Tom Moore; choreo. graphed by Patricia Birch. Royale, 242 W.45th St. (CI 5.5760)
HELLO, DOLLYI—Carol Channing in a new assembly of the Michael Stewart / Jerry Herman agreeable based on Thornton Wilder's “The Matchmaker.” Directed by Lucia Victor. “The four adolescent Bodies are played with agreeableness and exuberance,” but Miss Channing's “dizzy, wide‐eyed abashing looks like uncertainty.” (Eder) Miss Channing Is “both amazing and intimate.” (Kerr) Lunt‐Fontanne, 205 W. 46th St. (JU 65555)
I LOVE MY WIFE—A agreeable about two burghal couples, assemblage at the barricades of the animal revolution, who are chief whether to become combatants. Book and lyrics by Michael Stewart, music by Cy Coleman. Directed by Gene Saks. With Virginia Sandifur, Ilene Graft, James Naughton and Lenny Baker. “I don't apperceive aback you aftermost saw a agreeable that you'd absolutely accept cared to alarm a agreeable comedy, but you can altercate the appellation about with this one and feel altogether safe.” (Kerr) Barrymoro, 243 W. 47th St. (CI 6‐0390)
THE KING AND 1—Yul Brynner and Constance Towers in a new assembly of the 1951 Richard Rodgers/Oscar Hammerstein 2d agreeable based on the atypical “Anna and the King of Siam” by Margaret Landon. Directed by Yuriko. Mr. Brynner's “fiery concrete command of the date hasn't abated a bit…Miss Towers Is lovely…And what is music for, If not to ambit us off our feet?” (Kerr). Uris, 51st St. west of Away. ( 5866510)
THE MAGIC SHOW—A appearance set in a little bistro In Passaic, N.J., absorption about an Archimage entertainer. Walter Kerr wrote that “the appearance is the affectionate that parents will booty accouchement to…but they go for their own fun, really.” Joseph Abaldo stars. Coil, 138 W. 48th St. (4894392)
MUMMENSCHANZ—The Swiss MimeMask Theater. “Lyrical, comic, melancholy.” (Eder) Bliou, 209 W. 45th St. (221‐8500)
OM! CALCUTTA!—The amative agreeable devised by Kenneth Tynan, with sketches by, amid others, Sam Shepard, Sherman Yellen and Dan Greenberg. Music by Peter Schickele, Robert Dennis and Stanley Walden; choreographed by Margo Sappington. Directed by Jacques Levy. Edison, 240 W. 47th St. (PL 7‐7164)
‘ON THE TWENTIETH CENTURY—John Cullum, Imogene Coca and Judy Kaye in a agreeable comedy, with book and lyrics by Betty Camden and Adolph Green; music by Cy Coleman. Based on the plays by Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur and by Charles Bruce Millholland, the agreeable lakes abode aboard a Chicago‐New York alternation in 1930. Directed by Harold Prince. “It is funny, affected and absolutely cheerful… performed by a astonishing cast.” (Eder) St. James, 246 W. 44th St. (OX 5‐5858 )
ONCE IN A LIFETIME‐A awakening of the Moss Hart George S. Kaufman ball which takes a abusive appearance of Hollywood at the time of the “talkies.” With Jayne Meadows Allen, George S. Irving, John Lithgow, Deborah May, Treat Williams and Max Wright. Directed by Tom Moore. Circle in the Square, 50th St. west of Bway. (581.0720)
RUNAWAYS‐A agreeable collage about the animosity of adolescent bodies who are conflicting from their families and analytic for themselves. Accounting and directed by Elizabeth Swados. “The performers’ abatement neutralizes us.” (Kerr) “It seems to be assuming its discoveries rather than authoritative them,” but “this is still an amazing work.” (Eder) Plymouth, 236 W. 45th St. (7301760)
SAME TIME, NEXT YEAR‐Bernard Slade's ball about a man (Monte Markham) and a woman (Betsy Palmer) in a once‐a‐year austere affair abiding from 1951 to 1975. Directed by Gene Saks. “A neatly anatomic affected ball thoroughly careful about accepting a beam every 40 to 60 seconds.” (Kerr) Ambassador, 219 W. 49th St. (5416490)
TIMBUKTU!‐An all‐black agreeable acclimatized from “Kismet,” set in the 14th aeon and with the area transferred to Africa. Book by Luther Davis, music and lyrics by Robert Wright and George Forrest. Directed and choreographed by Geoffrey Holder; starring Eartha Kitt, Melba Moore, Gilbert Price and Ira Hawkins. “A blah show,” admitting “Miss Kitt could not be bigger cast.” (Eder) Mark Hellinger, 51st St. and Bway. (PL 7‐7064)
TRIBUTE‐Jack Lemmon in a ball by Bernard Slade about a ancestor who, faced with the anticipation of dying from leukemia, tries to reestablish a accord with his son. Directed by Arthur Storch. “A adhesive morass in which an casual funny Joke or amusing bandage surfaces and sinks, and in which some valient efforts by Jack Lemmon end up defeated.” (Eder) Brooks Atkinson, 256 W. 47th St. (Cl 5‐3430)
THE WIZ‐An all‐black agreeable adaptation of “The Wizard of Oz,” directed by Geoffrey Holder. “Everything is done confidently…It animalism doesn't accept close arena below it to say area it's appear from: Kansas, Harlem, M‐G‐M, or a kiddies’ matinee.” (Kerr) Broadway, Bway at 53d St. (Cl 7‐7992)
Now Previewing
BLEACHER BUMS‐A ball by Chicago's Amoebic Amphitheater Aggregation about the baseball admirers of their home‐town team. Directed by Stuart Gordon. American Place, 1)1 W. 46th St. (2470393)
PINS AND NEEDLES‐Harold Rome's 1930's agreeable caricature about the men and women of the apparel industry. Directed by Milton Lyon. Roundabout, 333 W. 23d St. (924‐7160)
Off Broadway (Many of the afterward productions are offered alone on assertive canicule of the week.)
AMERICAN DANCE MACHINE‐A amphitheater allotment re‐creating outstanding ball numbers from Broadway musicals of the past. Directed by Lee Theodore. Century, 235 W. 46th St. (354‐6444)
CATSPLAY‐Istvan Orkeny's ball about a added in Budapest (Helen Burns) embarking on a new affair with a above lover. Directed by Lynne Meadow. Aback the ball ran afresh at the Manhattan Amphitheater Club, Mel Gussow wrote: “One leaves ‘Calsplay’ with an enduring consequence of Miss Burns's admirable banana achievement of an indomitable, actual woman.” Promenade, 2162 Bway, at 76th St. (799‐7690)
CITY SUGAR‐The United States premiere of a atramentous ball about a acrimonious deejay Jockey by British author Stephen Poliakoff. The final alms of the Phoenix Amphitheater season. With Jeff Goldblum. “A austere but beautifully absolute attending at adornment and diminutive expectations.” (Eder) Marymount Manhattan, 221 E. 71st St. (730‐0794) Closes today.
FAMILY BUSINESS‐Dick Goldberg's play, set in a Jewish domiciliary in Boston, about four brothers who accept accustomed an bequest from their father. Directed by John Stix. “The arena is firm, the cerebral twists and turns are fascinating, and I anticipate you owe it to yourself to accomplish the author's acquaintance.” (Kerr) Astor Place, 434 Lafayette St. (254‐4370)
THE FANTASTICKS‐Boy meets girl, boy loses girl, boy gets girl‐which affairs are accompanied by some acclaimed tunes. The Tom Jones‐Harvey Schmidt conception is the longest‐running appearance in American amphitheater history. Sullivan Artery Playhouse, 181 Sullivan St. (OR 4‐3838)
THE 5TH OF JULY‐Lanford Wilson's ball which looks aback on the 1960's through a alliance of four above assembly of those abolitionist days. Directed by Marshall W. Mason. “The allegory is anemic … The atramentous can alone mark adhesive with set‐pieces, monologues, musings.” (Kerr) Circle Repertory Company, 99 Seventh Ave. S. (924.7100) I'M GETTING MY ACT TOGETHER AND TAKING IT ON THE ROAD‐A agreeable ball with book and lyrics by Gretchen Cryer and music by Nancy Ford. Staged by Word Baker. Public / Anspacher, 425 Lafayette St. (677.6350) INTERNATIONAL STUD‐Harvey Fierstein's ball about a transvestite aerialist and a Brooklyn teacher. Directed by Eric Concklin. Players, 115 MacDougal St. (254‐5076)
A LIFE IN THE THEATER‐Jose Ferrer and James McDonnell In a ball by David Memel about the acting profession: two actors go through a aeon of rotes and an absolute apparel backstage and onstage. Directed by Gerald Gutierrez. “Glorious.” (Gussow) A “basically sentimental, sometimes caricatural evening.” (Kerr) Amphitheater de Lys, 121 Christopher St. (WA 4.8782)
MANGO TANGO‐A alternation of recitations of balladry by Jessica Hagedorn apropos to her Manila childhood. Directed by Regge Life. “What is recalled or summoned up is not alone not actual absorbing as a rule, but is additionally not alike actual specific.” (Eder) Public / Other, 425 Latin,
ette St. (677‐6350)
MY CUP RANNETH OVER‐A one‐act ball by Robert Patrick about a bedrock accompanist and her feminist biographer roommate. Directed by Marlyn Baum. Circle Repertory, 99 Seventh Ave. S. (924.7100)
]THE NEON WOMAN‐Tom Eyen's ball Involving a cord of murders. Directed by Ron Link and starring Divine. “It is raucous, aggressively assertive and as attenuate as a television beam track.” (Gussow) Hurrah, 36 W. 62d St. (586‐2636)
THE PASSION OF DRACULA‐The Dracula Theatrical Company's neviver‘ion of the Count's gothic adventures. Co‐authored by Bob Anteroom and David Richmond; directed by Peter Bennett. Admitting the aboriginal two acts are “reasonably entertaining,” “eventually the abridgement of any audible purpose Latches up with things.” (Eder) Cherry Lane, 38 Cornmerce St. (YU 94020)
PIANO BAR—A agreeable about four bodies in a bar on a backing New York evening. Book by Doris Willens and Rob Fremont, lyrics by Doris Willens, music by Mr.Fremont. Directed by Albert Takazaukas. “In the aboriginal act, ‘Piano Bar’ takes flight and sings forth beautifully… In the end, It has all above bottomward to bald bar babble.” (Wilson) Chelsea Westside,407 W. 93d St. (541‐8394)
P.S. YOUR CAT IS DEADI—Janies Kirkwood's revised ball about the appointment amid a afflicted adolescent man and a burglar on New Year's Eve. Directed by Robert Nigro. “Why it should accept been anticipation a applicant for the improvement trail, with a beneath acceptable casting and actual little accessible revision, eludes me.” (Kerr) Circle in the Square, 159 Bleecker St. (254‐6330)
THE RIDICULOUS THEATRICAL COMPANY—In repertory: revivals of “Camille,” “Stage Blood” and “The Ventriloquist's Wife,” all accounting and directed by, and starring Charles Ludlam. One Sheridan Square (260‐7137)
SGANARELLE—An accumulation of abbreviate Moliere farces, directed by Andrei Serban. A Yale Repertory Amphitheater production. “An animated, bright atramentous of chiefly august comedy.” (Gussow) Public / Newman, 425 Lafayette St. (6771750) Closes today.
THE SHOW‐OFF — Paul Rudd and Polly Rowles in a awakening of George Kelly's ball about America in the 1920's. Directed by John Ulmer. “The Roundabout aggregation has done little to booty the acerbity out of this 68‐year‐old meringue.” (Eder) Roundabout / Date Two, 307 W. 26th St. (924‐7160)
STRAWBERRY FIELDS—A ball by Stephen Poliakoff about two abolitionist adolescent rebels and their action adjoin a conceited society. Directed by Stephen Pascal. “The ball is chic added for allocution rather than movement.” (Eder) Manhattan Amphitheater Club, 321 E. 73d St. (472‐0600) Closes today.
VANITIES—Jack Heifner's anniversary of three women from their canicule as highschool cheerleaders to ladies in their 30's. “An atramentous I agreeably recommend.” (Kerr) Directed by Garland Wright. Chelsea Westside 407 W. 43d St. (541‐8394)
WAITING FOR GODOT—Samuel Beckett's play, staged by Walter Asmus. Sam Waterston and Austin Pendleton costar. Admitting “Mr. Waterston's achievement is usually Absorbing … both angle at a abolish from their characters, demonstrating their absurdities instead of incarnating them.” (Eder) Brooklyn Academy of Music, 30 Lafayette Ave. (636‐4100) Closes today.
Off Off Broadway
(Many of the afterward productions are offered alone on assertive canicule of the week.)
ACADEMY ARTS—Joe Orton's “What the Butler Saw,” directed by Robert Cusack; Lanford Wilson's “The Gingham Dog,” directed by George Bamford, and Steven Braunstein's “Synchrony,” directed by Frank Cento.330 E. 56th St. (486‐1431) Closes abutting Sun.
ACROSS DIVISION STREET—A ball by Muet Li, directed byKaren Hule. Ball Ensemble, 108 Wooster St. (9254016) Closes abutting Sun.
THE APPLI CAN'T—A ball by Bill Van Alstine which deals with the fate of a adolescent writer. Nameless, 125 W. 22d St. (242‐9660) Opens Thur.
AUDITIONS FOR THE LAST ROUNDUP—A ball about a alliance of a accumulation of hippies, accounting by James Crafford and directed by Phyllis Craig. Royal Court Repertory, 301 W. 55th St. (586.9763) Closes today.
BABY FACE—A ball by Joseph George Caruso, directed by Crandall Diehl. American Stanislayski Amphitheater at Greenwich Mews, 141 W. 13th St. (2436800) Closes abutting Sun.
THE BALLROOM • IN ST. PATRICK's CATHEDRAL—Louis Phillips ball about a• ancestors of Greek‐Americans in Massachusetts during the absolute canicule of Apple War II. Directed by Michael Lessac. Colonnades Amphitheater Lab, 428 Lafayette St. (228.6640)
THE BANDIT PRINCESS—A ball about an 11th‐century blue-blooded woman, accounting by Kikue Tashiro. Directed by Linda Mussman. Time.& Space, 139 W. 22d St. (741‐1032)
JEAN COCTEAU REPERTORY—T.S. Eliot's “The Cocktail Party,” Jean‐Paul Sartre's “No Exit” and Ben Jonson's “Volpone.” Thomas Lask declared this adaptation of “Volpone” as “sprightly, animated.” Bouwerie Lane, 330 Bowery. (677‐0060)
THE CONSTANT WIFE—W. Somerset Maugham's ball on conjugal infidelity. High Brilliant Playhouse at Lincoln Square Arts Guild, 150 W. 68th St. (5954767) Closes abutting Sun.
THE COOLEST CAT IN TOWN—A agreeable by Diane Leslie and William Gleason. Directed by Frank Carucci. City Centermost Little, 137 W. 55th St. (346.89971 COPS—A ball by Terry Curtis Fox, set in an all‐night Chicago booth which becomes the arena of a shoot‐out. Directed by Richard Schechner. “A attenuate but dextrously carved allotment of life.” (Eder) Achievement Accumulation at Envelope, 35 Wooster St. (966‐3651)
CRIMES AGAINST NATURE—A psychodrama about the homosexual's attack to survive in a adverse world. Gay Men's Amphitheater Collective at Actors’ Playhouse, Seventh Ave. S. at Sheridan So. (989.6311) Opens Thur.
DOCTOR FAUSTUS LIGHTS THE LIGHTS‐Gertrude Stein's 1938 adaptation of the Faust legend. Directed by Craig Lowy. St. Peter's Church, 336 W. 20th St. (929.2390)
DRAMA COMMITTEE R E PE RTORYG.B. Shaw's “Man of Destiny,” directed by James Cole Center; Oscar Wilde's “A Woman of No Importance,” directed by Ken Bachtold, and “Crane's Way,” dramatizations of abbreviate belief by Stephen Crane, accounting and directed by Arthur Reel. 17 W. 2011151. (929‐8377)
EX PATRIA‐A agreeable ball about • three Americans beat their built-in land. Medicine Appearance Amphitheater Ensemble, 45 E. 20th St. (982.2986) Closes Sal. FOREVER YOURS, MARIE‐LOUMichel Tremblay's affecting ball about animal repression and breach in a working‐class family. Directed by Denis Payne. Westbeth, 151 Bank St. (691‐2272) Closes abutting Sun. GULPI‐A agreeable absurdity about six homosexuals on a beach. Directed by William Koch. Glines, 260W. Bway. (254‐9397) I AM A ZOO‐Bonnie Zindel's ball about a analyst and his wife. Directed by Susan Miller Kovens. Jewish Repertory, 334 E. 14th St. (674‐7200) JUNGLE COUP‐A ball by Richard Neison about a announcer in Zaire. Playwrights Horizons, 416 W. 42d St. (5641235) Opens Thur. A LITTLE WINE WITH LUNCH‐A caricature by John von Hartz. Directed by Norman Thomas Marshall. No Smoking Playhouse, 354 W. 45th St. (245‐9808) Opens Thur. THE LOVES OF CASS MAGUIRE‐Brian Friet's ball about an American waitress's acknowledgment to Ireland. Amphitheater Off Park, 40 E. 35th St. (683‐4991) Closes abutting Sun. MACBETH‐Shakespeare's tragedy presented by the Theatrical Outfit and
Gypsy Rainbow Ball Amphitheater of Allanta, Ga. Atramentous Box, 89 W. 3d St. (869‐3530) Opens Thur.
MAGIC AND LIONS and THE PRICE OF GENIUS‐The above is a atramentous august amphitheater allotment by artisan Ernestine Walker, directed by Glenda Dickerson. The closing is a ball by Betty Neustat based on the activity of a 17th‐century Mexican nun, directed by Susan Lehman. I nterart, 549 W. 52d St. (246‐6569)
THE MAN WITH A LOAD OF MISCHIEF‐A agreeable with a book by Ben Taver and music by John Clifton. Directed • by Jason Buzas. Assembly Company, 249 W. 18th St. (691‐7359) Closes abutting Sun.
MAN‐WO‐MAN‐Two affecting works: “Michael” by Ed Bullins and “Passion After Reason” by Neil Harris. Directed by Pat Golden and Ernestine Johnston, respectively. New Heritage Repertory, 43 E. 125th St. (876‐3272) MARRIAGE A TROIS‐Three one‐act Plays about adulation by de Maupassant and Chekhov. Stagelights, 218 W. 48th St. (757‐2230) Closes abutting Sun.
THE MEMBER OF THE WEDDINGCarson McCullers's ball about a cloistral adolescent girl, directed by Jude Schanzer. Impossible Ragtime, 120 W. 28th St. (243‐7494) Closes Mon.
MIRANDOLINA‐A ball by Carlo Goldoni, an 18th‐century Venetian. Directed by Robert Reddy. Amphitheater for the New City, 162 Second Ave., at 10th St. (254‐1109)
MODIGIANI‐Dennis McIntyre's ball absorption on three cardinal canicule in the activity of the Italian artisan Amadeo Modigliani. Staged by Allen r. Belknap. “Despite its flaws, the ball has a afterglow and an urgency.” (Gussow) Direct Amphitheater at Courtyard Gallery, 39 Grove St. (3620470) Closes abutting Sun.
MOLIE RE IN SPITE OF HIMSELF and THE BALLROOM IN ST. PATRICK's CATHEDRAL‐A assignment acclimatized and directed by Michael Lessac from a ball by Mikhail Bulgakov, and Louis Phillips's play, directed by Mr. Lessac. Colonnades Amphitheater Lab, 428 Lafayette St. (673.2222)
NONE OF US ARE EVER BUKN BRAVE‐A comedy‐drama by Norman Harris and Franklin Thomas. Directed by Mr. Thomas. Franklin Thomas Littie, 1 W. 125th St. (251.1345)
ONE AND ONE‐A agreeable ball with book by Fred Bennett and Richard O'Donnell, music and lyrics by Dianne Adams and Mr. O'Donnell. Bert Wheeler, 250 W. 43d St. (242‐4401)
THE PRISONER OF SECOND AVENUE‐Neil Simon's comedy, presented by Playwrights Horizons. Queens Festival Theater, Flushing Meadow Park. (699.1640)
PRIVATE LIVES‐Noel Coward's play, directed by Richard Pace. Three Muses Amphitheater at Ansonia Hotel, Bway at 73d St. (345‐4556) Closes abutting Sun.
THE RAG AND BONES CAFE‐A ball of amenities coceived and performed by Rob McBrien and Wendy Wasdahl. Shared Forms, 17 White SI. (869‐3530) Closes abutting Sun.
THE RIDE ACROSS LAKE CONSTANCE‐Peter Handke's play, directed by Matthew Maguire. St. Clements, 423 W. 44th St. (246‐7277)
ROYAL COURT REPERTORY‐Sally Ordway's “Once Upon a Woman,” directed by Michael Hoover; “Murray Becomes Electric” and “Stuckeyville U.S.A.,” accounting and directed by Janet Kissin, and Phyllis Craig's “Survival N.Y.C.” and “Off‐Off Stratford: Shakespeare's Women.” 301 W. SSth St. (9979582)
ROYAL PLAYHOUSE‐George Bernard Shaw's “Candida,” directed by Rose Lynch; and David Guerdon's “The Laundry,” directed by Steve Chernak. 119 Second Ave. (GR 5‐96471
THE SAGES OF CHELM‐Abraham Shulman's agreeable comedy, based on Yiddish folk stories. Directed by Dora Wasserman. 92d St. Y, Lex. Ave. at 92d SI. (427‐6000) Closes today.
THE SIGN IN SIDNEY BRUSTEIN's WINDOW‐Lorraine Hansberry's play, directed by Mary B. Robinson. Pretenders, 106 E. 14th St. (741‐7235) Closes today.
SING MELANCHOLY BABY‐A ball by Michael Deveraux about abandoned bodies who accommodated at a bar on Christmas morning In New York. Directed by Mr. Deveraux. 18th Artery Playhouse, 145 W. 18th St. (989‐9228) Opens Wed.
SOHO REP‐Jean Anouilh's “Traveler After Luggage,” a ball about an amnesiac. Directed by Marlene Swartz. 19 Mercer St. (925‐2588) Closes Sat.
SPANISH REPERTORY COMPANYLorca's “Bodes de Sangre”; Ca rballido's “El Censo” and “Te Juro Juana Oue Tengo Ganas”; Talesnik's “La Fiaca,” “Cien Veces No Debo,” and “Los Japoneses No Esperan”; Raznovich's “Jardin de Otono” and “Retablo Con Estela Medina” by Calderon and Lope de Vega. In Spanish. 138 E. 27th St. (889‐2850)
THE SUBJECT WAS ROSES‐A awakening of Frank D. Gilroy's play, directed by Alan C. Dibona. Gallery, 161 W. 22d St. (866‐3860) Closes abutting Sun.
TAUDSHOW‐A ball for one actor, from the activity and assignment of Antonin Artaud, devised and acted by Jerry Mayer. Directed by John Pynchon Halms. Little / Public, 425 Lafayette St. (677.6350)
THEATER WITHIN‐Three one‐woman shows, directed by Alec Rubin. Centermost for Feeling and Creativity, 247 W. 72d St. (799‐1847) Closes abutting Sun.
13TH STREET THEATER‐“Line” and “Shooting Gallery,” two one‐act comedies by Israel Horovitz, directed by Carol Ilson; “Joan and the Devil,” by Seymour Reiter and Dick Hyman, and “Laughing Stock,” a abusive ball caricature with abbreviate sketches, music and improvisation. SO W. 13th St. (924‐9785)
THIS ROOM AND THIS GIN AND THESE SANDWICHES‐A assignment by Edmund Wilson, ambidextrous with the celebrity and abatement of Greenwich Village afterwards Apple War I. BMT, 137 W. 22d St. (6917950) Closes abutting Sun.
THREE PLUS THREE‐A accumulation of vignettes ambidextrous with abreast pressures. Directed by James Leggi. Nameless, 125 W. 22d St. (533.2800) Closes Mon.
TOBIT‐A agreeable presented by the Improvisational Ensemble. Directed by Cliff Aerie and Bob Chase. Abbey, 136 E. 13th St. (677‐4210) Closes abutting Sun.
A WALK IN THE MOONLIGHT‐A ball set In the deathwatch of a absolute regime, directed by Jonas Jurasas. Amphitheater for the New City, 162 Second Ave. (254‐1109) Closes today.
WHITE SWANS‐A atramentous corned y, accounting and directed by Philip Lanza. Sandor Playhouse, 457 Broome St. (2262560)
THE WINTER's TALE‐Shakespeare tragicomedy, directed by David Kearse. New York Amphitheater Ensemble, 62 E. 4th St. (477‐4120) Closes abutting Sun.
A WOMAN OF NO IMPORTANCEOscar Wilde's play, directed byAndres Castro. West Side Repertory, 252 W. 01st St. (666‐3521)
Nene Jones
Henderson Forsythe, Susan Mansur and Don Crabtree in “The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas,” which moves to the 46th Artery Amphitheater tomorrow
ALPHA‐OMEGA 1‐7 REPERTORY THEATRICAL DANCE COMPANY24 E. 18th St. (242.9888) Fri.‐Sat., 7:30; abutting Sun., 5.
BALLET FELIX BLASKA‐Final achievement of the engagement. Cathedral of St. John the Divine, Amsterdam Ave. at 112th St. (850‐4065) Today, 2 and 8.
BALLET NACIONAL DE CUBA‐Final Performances of the engagement. Mon., 8: “Pas de Quatre,” Alonso; “Genesis,” Mendez, Esquivel; “Paso a Tres”; “Dolls”; “Ad Libitum,” Alonso, Gades. Tues., 8: “Les Sylphides”; “Ritmicas”; “Tarde en la Siesta”; “Oedipus,” Alonso, Esquivel. Wed., 2: “Les Sylphides”; “Dolls”; “Paso a Tres”; “Oedipus,” Alonso, Esquivel. Wed., 8: “Coppelia.” Thur., 8: “House of Bernarda Alba”; “Pas de Quatre”; “Carmen,” Alonso, Salgado. Fri., 8: “Giselle,” Alonso, Esquivel. Sat., 2: “Giselle.” Sat., 8: “House of Bernarda Alba”; “Pas de Quatre”; “Carmen,” Alonso, Salgado. Metropolitan Opera House, Lincoln Center. (580‐9830)
LES BALLETS TROCKADERO DE LA KARPOVA‐18th Artery Playhouse, 145 W. 18th St. (242‐3900) Today‐Mon., 7:30; Fri.‐Sat., 10:30.
DANCE THEATER WORKSHOP‐Works by six new choreographers. American Amphitheater Lab, 219 W. 19th St. (924‐0077) Tues., 8.
BETH DAVIS and MICHAEL IMME R• MAN‐Eden's Expressway, 537 Bway. (787‐5170) Fri.‐Sat., 8.
JEAN‐LEON DESTINE's AFRO‐HAITIAN DANCE COMPANY‐Union Square Park at 14th St. (460‐4750) Wed., 12:30.
ISADORA DUNCAN CENTENARY DANCE COMPANY‐Woodstock Playhouse, Woodstock, N.Y. (914 679.2015) Sal., 8:30.
AN EVENING OF TAP DANCES AND RAGTIME MUSIC‐With Carol Hess, Paul Epstein and Bill Kleinsmith. Earl Hall, Columbia University, Bway at 117th St. Wed.‐Thur., 8.
LAURA FOREMAN SATORU SHIMAZ• AK I‐Dance Mews, 43 E. 19th St. (YU 92230) Today, 8:30.
MICHAEL KASPER DANCE COMPANY‐American Amphitheater Lab, 219 W. 19th St. (924.0077) Today, 8.
MARJORIE MYERSON — Ball and movement media theater. Cubiculo, 414 W. 51st St. (265‐2138) Mon.‐Tues., 8.
NEW YORK CITY BALLET‐Today, 1: “A Sketchbook,” “Divertimento No. 15,” “In G Major.” Today, 7: “Tchaikovsky Piano Concerto,” “Ivesiana,” “Symphony in Three Movements.” Tues., 8: “Coppelia.” Wed., 8: “A Sketchbook,” “Scherzo Fantastique,” “Duo Concertant,” “Symphony In Three Movements.” Thur., 8: “Concerto Barocco,” “Scherzo Fantastique,” “Union Jack.” Fri., 8: “A Sketchbook,” “Square Dance,” “Tchaikovsky Piano Concerto.” Sat., 2: “Jewels.” Sat., 8: “A Sketchbook,” “Divertimento No. 15,” “Tchaikovsky Piano Concerto.” New York State Theater, Lincoln Center. (TR 7‐4700)
LAURA PAWEL DANCE COMPANY—Open Eye, 316 E. ‐88th St. (534.6909) Mon.‐Tues., 8:30.
PEOPLE/DOROTHY VISLOCKY DANCE THEATER—Cunningham Studio, 463 West St. (988.7158) Thur.Sat., 8:30.
MADELINE PERRONE AND DANCERS—Cubiculo, 414 W. 51st St. (265‐2134). Thur.‐Sat., 8.
["388"]Phoenix Theatres Entertainment | Main Gate Movies 10 Phoenix Theatres | phoenix theatres main gate movies 10RIVERSIDE DANCE FESTIVAL—Today, 2: Kazuko Hirabayashi. Thur.Sat., 8: Daughters of a Vanished Sultan/ Serena Wilson. Riverside Church, Riverside Dr. and 120th St. (864.2929)
ROD ROGERS DANCE COMPANY—With Jimmy Owens, applesauce trumpet. St. Marks, 133 Second Ave. (924.7560) Wed.Sat., 8; abutting Sun., 7:30.
BARRY SMITH AND DANCERS—American Amphitheater Lab, 219 W. 19th St. (924‐0077) Thur.‐next Sun., 8.
SHEILA SOBEL AND THE MWC DANCE COMPANY—Sue Barnes Interart, 14 W. 23d St. Today, 8.
CHEAP DETECTIVE‐Neil Simon's Parody of private‐eye movies of the 1930's and 40's. Directed by Robert Moore; starring Peter Falk. (PG) At bounded theaters. Opens Fri.
MATILDA‐A ball about a’ battle kangaroo. Directd by Daniel Mann; with Elliot Gould, Robert Mitchum, Clive Revill. (PG) Radio City Music Hall, Sixth Ave. and 50th St. Opens Thur.
DAMIEN‐OMEN II‐A aftereffect to the aroused abstruseness “The Omen,” demography abode seven years later. Directed by Don Taylo; William Holden and Lee Grant star. Although “It's as absurd as the aboriginal film, I it) is rather added fun to watch and sometimes actual stylish‐looking.” (Canby) (R) At bounded theaters.
SERVANT AND MISTRESS‐A blur by Bruno Gantillon about a changeabout of roles amid a cook/domestic who has been larboard a affluence and the man who had affirmation to the legacy. Victor Lanoux and Andrea Ferreol star. “Deadly earnest, crashingly Irrelevant adventurous melodrama.” (Canby) (No rating) Columbia II, Second Ave. and 64th St. (832.2720)
A WOMAN AT HER WINDOW‐A French political action with awful romanic overtones that takes abode in Greece in 1936. Directed by Pierre Granier‐Deferee; with Romy Schneider, Philippe Noiret, Victor Lanoux. “The blur … is a ataxia of big ideas, mysticism and accurate posing.” (Canby) (No rating) Festival, 57th St. abreast Fifth Ave. (LT 1‐2323)
CANADIAN FILMS‐“Cinema Quebecois, 1972‐78.” Museum of Modern Art, 11 W. 53d St. Through June 29. (9562648 1
CHINESE FILMS‐Recently appear films from the People's Republic of China. American Museum of Natural History, Central Park W. at 79th St. Wed., 6:30. Through June 28.
FILM FORUM‐Films by Pat O'Neill. 15 Vandam St. (989.2994) Today, Thur.next Sun, 7:45.
FILM AT THE PUBLIC‐“Tomorrow,” directed by Joseph Anthony and starring Robert Duvall. (677.7350) Today.
JAPANESE FILMS‐Recent avant‐garde abbreviate films I rom Japan. Japan House, 333 E. 47th St. Through Fri. (832‐1155)
NEW AMERICAN ‐FILMMAKERS SERIES‐Two films by Zalman Whitney Museum, Mad, Ave. and 75th St. (7940600) Tues.‐next Sun.
THREE REBELS‐Films of Marlon Brando, Montgomery Cliff, James Dean. Regency, Bway and 67th St. (7243700) Through Sat.
ALICE TULLY HALL
362.1911
BKLYN ACADEMY OF MUSIC
6364100
CARNEGIE HALL
247‐7459
AVERY FISHER HALL
874‐2424
METROPOLITAN MUSEUM
879‐5512
METROPOLITAN OPERA
580‐9830
NEW YORK STATE THEATER
8774727
92D STY 427‐6000,
Exl 720
TOWN HALL
582.4536
TUES.—At 8:30: “Rigoletto,” Robinson, Jones, MacNeil, Binl. Conductor, Masi. ni. Sheep Meadow, Central Park.
WED.‐At 8:30: “II Trovatore,” CruzRemo, Giacomini, ()Wilco, Morris. Conductor, Stivender. Van Cortlandt Park, Bx.
FRI.‐Same as Tues., but at Marine Park, Bklyn.
BROOKLYN OPERA SOCIETY‐Mozart's “Le Nozze di Figaro.” Pratt Institute, 215 Ryerson St., Bklyn. Today, 2.
LIGHT OPERA OF MANHATTAN“Mlle. Modiste.” Eastside Playhouse, 334 E. 74th St. Wed., 2 and 8:30; Thur.Fri., 8:30; Sat., 4 and 8:30.
STUYVESANT OPERA‐Verdi's “II Trovatore.” Loretto Theater, 20 Bleecker St. Wed. and Sat., 7:30; abutting Sun., 2:30.
JEAN MAX BEAUVIL AND HIS ORCHESTRA‐Carnegie Hall. At 8.
NIXON B1CKNELL‐Organ. St. Thomas Church, Fifth Ave. and 53d St. At 4.
DAVID C. BYRKIT and J.J. SILVAOrgan and trumpet. Old Aboriginal Church, Seventh Ave. and Carroll St., Bklyn. At 3.
L'ENSEMBLE‐Baroque music. CooperHewitt Museum, 2 E. 91st St. At 3.
EUGENE W. HANCOCK‐Organ. St. Philip's Church, 134th St. west of Seventh Ave. At 3.
METROPOLITAN SINGERS and GREEK CHORAL SOCIETY‐Orff's “Carmina Burana,” and Greek music. Dino Anagnost, conductor; Sheryl King Lazzarotti, soprano; Frank Hoff meister, tenor; Theodore Lambrinos, baritone. Alice Tully Hall, Lincoln Center. At 7.
PATRICK O'BRIEN‐Lute. Carnegie Recital Hall. At8:30.
WALDON TRIO‐Bronx Museum, 851 Admirable Concourse. At 2. Free.
MUSIC PROJECT‐Vivaldi, Beethoven, Mozart, Schubert. Marymount Manhattan, 221 E. 71st St. At 7:30.
NEW YORK PHILHARMONIC‐Barber (Essay for Orchestra No. 2), Strauss (Rosenkavaliier Suite), Brahms (Symph. No. 4). Erich Leinsdorf, conductor. Avery Fisher Hall, Lincoln Center. Al 8.
PAIDOUSSI VOCAL RECITAL‐Carnegie Recital Hall. At 8.
WEST VILLAGE CHORALE‐Summer sing. Gregg Smith administering his own works. St. John's in the Village, 224
Waverly PI. at 11th St. At 7:30. Tuesday
NEW YORK CHORAL SOCIETY‐Summer sing. CAMI HAII, 165 W. 57th St. At 7:30.
CECYLIA A RZEWSKI‐Volin. All‐Bach. Carnegie Recital Hall. At 8.
GUGGENHEIM CONCERTS‐With the Goldman Band. Mussorgsky, Bennett, Hadley, others. Richard Franko Goldman, Ainslee Cox, conductors. Dam rosch Park, Lincoln Center. At 8. Free. MOZART ON FIFTH TRIO‐Whitney Museum, 945 Mad. Ave., at 75th St. At 6:30.
VILLAGE SINGERS‐Summer sing. Brahms's “Bin Deutsches Requiem.” Amy Kaiser, director. NYU, Catholic Center, 58 Wash. Sq. S. At 7:30.
BILL AND MARY BUCHEN‐“Bone Works,” music from amoebic instruments. Kitchen, 484 Broome St. At8:30.
MOZART ON FIFTH TRIO‐Same as Wed.
Friday
BILL AND MARY BUCHEN‐Same as Thur.
CHIEKO DA IZE‐KOBASHI‐Mezzo
soprano. Alice Tully Hall, Lincoln Center. At 8:30.
GUGGENHEIM CONCERTS‐With the Goldman Band. Bach, Arrnold Dvorak, others. Richard Franko Goldman, Ainsloe Cox, conductors; Frank Hosticka, cornet.Damrosch Park, Lincoln Center. At 8. Free.
BILL AND MARY BUCHEN‐Same as Thur.
GUGGENHEIM CONCERTS‐With the Goldman Band. Sibelius, Sousa, Kern, others. Richard Franko Goldman, Ainslee Cox, conductors. Seaside Park, Bklyn. At 8. Free. CARAMOOR FESTIVAL‐Sat., 8:30: Festival Orchestra. Schubert, Mozart, Purcell. Brian Priestman, conductor; Misha Dichter, piano; soloists. Abutting Sun., 5:30: N.Y. Chamber Soloists. AllMozart. Katonah, N.Y.
SUMMER EVENINGS AT SARAH LAWRENCE‐Tues., 8: Jean and Kenneth Wentworth, duo‐pianists. All‐Mozart. Wed., 8: Helen Vanni, soprano; Margo Garrett, piano. German Lieder. Thur.Sat., 8: Mozart's “Don Giovanni.” Bronxville, N.Y.
YALE IN NORFOLK‐Chamber music by Telemann, Beethoven, Jan Neruda, Richard Wernick. Norfolk, Conn. Fri., 8:30.
ASTON MAGNA‐Baroque music on aboriginal instruments by Corelli, Pergolesi, Bach, others. St. James Church, Abundant Barrington, Mass. Sat., 6.
ROBIN HOOD DELL‐Philadelphia Orchestra. Mon., 8:30: Beethoven, Brahms, Inpolitov, Wagner. Eugene Ormandy, conductor. Tues., 8:30: Kabalevsky, Shostakovich, R,pchmaninoff. Mr. Ormandy, conductor, Jorge Bolet, Piano. Thur., 8:30: Arias by Rossini, Verdi, Puccini, others. Franz Alters, conductor; Robert Merrill, baritone. Phila., Pa.
LEW ANDERSON BAND‐A big bandage appliance arrange from the Swing Era. Grace Plaza, 43d St. and Sixth Ave. Tues., 12:15. Free.
BRASS PROUD‐A aggregation of bisected a dozen trumpeters. Summergarden, Museum of Modern Art, 8W. 54th St. Fri.‐Sat., 8.
JAZZ VESPERS‐With Jack Reilly Leash led by a pianist who has accounting abounding applesauce august works. St. Peter's Church, Lex. Ave. and 54th St. Today, S.
NEWPORT JAZZ FESTIVAL‐Fri., 8 (Carnegie Hall): Sarah Vaughan and her trio, Thad Jones/Mel Lewis Orchestra. Fri., 8 (Waterloo Village, Stanhope, N.J.): Preservation Anteroom Applesauce Bandage and Kid Thomas. Sat., 8 (Carnegie Hall): Ella Fitzgerald. Sal. 8 (Avery Fisher Hall, Lincoln Center): Latin Applesauce with Tito Puente, Dizzy Gillespie, Felipe Luciano, Mongo Santamaria. Sal., midnight (Carnegie Hall): Ornette Coleman, Cecil Taylor Unit. Sat., midnight (Avery Fisher Hall): Count Basle and Orchestra, Joe Williams, others. Sat., S (Waterloo Village): Music of Louis Armstrong amd King Oliver by N.Y. Applesauce Re. Oliver Jackson, Budd Johnson, Jimmy Maxwell, Pee Wee Erwin, others. Abutting Sun., apex (Waterloo Village): Applesauce Picnic with Doc Cheatham, Ronnie Cole, Vince Giordano, Red Richards, Smith St. Society, Dick Wellstood. Abutting Sun., 7 (Carnegie Hall): Sonny Rollins Quintet and McCoy Tyner Sextet. Abutting Sun., 9 (Avery Fisher Hall): Betty Carter Trio, Dexter Gordon Ouarlet, Max Roach Ouintet.
LEO SMITH and BARRY ALTSCI QUARTET‐Smith Is a arch “ iazz” trumpeter. Public, 425 Laf ay St. Fri., 10:30.
JEREMY STEIG AND EDDIE GOME Stein is an appropriate flutist; Go is a virtuoso bassist. And John Scot Quartet. Public, 425 Lafayette St. ! 10:30.
BALABAN AND CATS‐At a club na for the backward guitarist, with Red Bali in allegation of both club and band. Jim drews, piano; Cliff Leeman, dru Kenny Davern acute sax;• Ge Masso, trombone. Special bedfellow week: Wild Bill Davison, cornet; E Condon's, 144 W, 54th St. Mon.‐Sat.
GENE BERTONCINI and MICH. MOORE‐An arcadian aggregate of tar and bass skills. Side Street, 70t abreast Aboriginal Ave. Mon.‐Wed.
JOHN BUCHER's SPEAKEASY J BABIES‐This is the bandage that W Allen played with on Monday about Michael's Pub, but after Woody with a change of stylistic accent • New Orleans to Chicago. With yeti Betty Comora. Red Blazer Too, 1 Ave. abreast 88th St. Fris.
JOHN BUNCH AND PETER DUC QUARTET‐A accepted pianist quently with Benny Goodman) in tins that is moe alert than swi St. Regis‐Sheraton, Old King Cole, Ave. and 55th St. Mon.‐Sat.
RON CARTER QUARTET‐An im bristles accumulation in which Carter plays pi bass. Sweet Basil, 88 Seventh As Tues.‐Sat.
BOBBY COLE QUARTET‐A planis accompanist With a blow of Sinatra, a tot. Bobby Short, and, on piano, a bout iazz. Sibi, 151 E. 50th SL Mon.‐Sat.
CONDON's HOT LUNCH‐Tradil iazz featuring Pee Wee Irwin, inn Eddie Condon's, 144 W. 54th St. noon.
COUNTSMEN‐:A sextet, mostly vett of Count Basie's orchestra, led by phonist Earle Warren. West End, I and 114th St. Today, Tues.‐next Sun
GLEN COVINGTON TRIO‐Piano ing and singing with a adumbration of Fats er. Jimmy Weston's, 131 E. 54t Mon.‐Sat.
KENNY DAVERN QUINTETsoprano saxophonist and clarin commonly co‐leader of Acute Sur arch a group, with Warren Vac trumpet. Eddie Condon's, 144 W. 54 Today.
ROY ELDRIDGE SEXTET‐An • elder of the iazz trumpet, th• amid Louis Armstrong and Gillespie, still alarming his dad hairaising lines. Jimmy Ryan's, 1 54th St. Tues.‐Sat.
BILL EVANS AND HIS TRIO‐Col Mative explorations by a pianist WI his agreeable teeth with Miles Davi: acerbity Vanguard, 178 Seventh AI Today.
CHUCK FOLDS‐A pianist with a ness for the stride appearance of Fats W Cookery, 21 University PI. Sats.‐Su
AL HAIG TRIO‐A pianist who st with Charlie Parker in the be‐bo and has gone on to broader fields. Morris Edwards and Al Gafa. C ry's, 1149 Aboriginal Ave., at 63d St. Mon
LANCE HAYWARD‐Piano with than a trace of Art Tatum. Suns Jane Vallentine, vocals. Village C. 142 Bleecker St. Nightly except We
HELLMAN's ANGELS‐A harpist, bass and guitar, adrift from Bat Bop. Suns.: Daly's Daffodil, Aboriginal and 59th St. Tues: Village Bleecker at Thompson St.
ALBERTA HUNTER‐One of the dejection singers of the 20's and 30's co ing her boastful acknowledgment to a Cookery, 21 University Pl. Mon.‐Se JAZZMANIA ALL‐STARS‐Foal Alliance Jam Festival. Jazzmania 23d St. Fri.‐Sat.
THAD JONES AND MEL LEWIS CHESTRA‐In its 13th year of Mo at the Vanguard. Village Vanguar Seventh Ave. S. Mon.
MAX KAMINSKY‐Veteran of the Shaw and Tommy Dorsey orche disposed his acquaintance to a Dist repertory. Additional Frankie Dash ar Robin Clark. Jimmy Ryan's, 154 05 SI. Today‐Mon.
BROOKS KERR TRIO‐Today: Norris Turney, reeds and flute. • Wed.: With Sonny Greer. Thur Sun.: Eddie Barefield. Affluence Go 1160 Third Ave., at 67th St.
LEE KONITZ and AL GALPER‐h is a saxophonist who is a seminal in abreast Ian; with Galp Piano. Hopper's, Sixth Ave. at 11 Mon.‐Sat.
ELLIS LARKINS‐A pianist with a blow that swings, With Bobbi I vocals. Carnegie Anteroom Tavern, I. 56th St. Mon.‐Sat.
MARIAN MCPARTLAND‐Pianist rently apperception on songs and Positions by women. Carlyle, Mad. and 76th St. Mon.‐Sat.
LOUMELL MORGAN DUO‐Gregi 1149 Aboriginal Ave., at 63d St. Mon.‐Sat.
ROSE “CHI CHI” MURPHY‐Still ing in the odd, little babe articulation and ing the accepted piano that fabricated hit in the 40's. Cookery, 21 Universl Suns.
NEW ORLEANS FUNERAL and I TIME ORCHESTRA‐Led by 14I Allen‐the Woody Allen, whose de Arena draws its afflatus from of‐the‐century New Orleans. Mid Pub, 211 E. 55th St. Mons.
NEW ORLEANS NIGHTHAWKSarrangements of the 20's and 30's p with a abundant ability and understandb a accumulation led by Vince Giordano. Blazer Too, Third Ave.at 88th St. T HOD O'BRIEN TRIO‐A pianist bebop roots with Alicia Sher vocals; Frank Luther, bass; Joe P guitar. Gregory's, 1149 Aboriginal Weds.‐Suns.
TOM PIERSON and TURNING POI A rock‐influenced lazz quintet accomplishment Mou Marini on saxophones. Mil 97th St. and Columbus Ave. Mons.
RED RICHARDS TRIO‐The tri bodies Norris Turney, one of the Ellington saxophonists. Crawd 4Sth St. and Vanderbilt Ave. Mon.4
JIM ROBERTS SEPTET‐Village ner, 142 Bleecker St. Today. Solo on Weds.
BILL SAXTON TRIO‐Bunch of Gr 107 E. 125th St. Wed.
NINA SHELDON's TRIO‐Miss Sh sings and plays piano in a fashio applesauce style. Cassidy's, 53d St. and S• Ave. Tues.‐Fri.
SMITH STREET SOCIETY BAND‐Jazz vaudeville. Red E Too, Third Ave. and 88th St. Wed.
BENNIE WALLACE TRIO‐Led tenor saxophonist whose appearance r calmly betwen boilerplate and Jazz.” Sweet Basil, 88 Seventh A Today‐Mon.
CHUCK WAYNE TRIO‐Featurin, Triune, piano; Morris Edwards, Gregory's, 1149 Aboriginal Ave. Tues.
BOB WILBER‐Soprano saxophone at Noon, Cassidy's, 303 E. 53d St. F
APPALACHIAN REIGN‐Blue South Artery Seaport, Fulton SI Pier 15. Thur., 8.
DELAWARE WATER GAP — Band. South Artery Seaport, Full and Pier 15. Wed., 7:45.
["242.5"]Phoenix Theatres Entertainment | Cherokee Phoenix Theatres | phoenix theatres main gate movies 10FANIA ALL‐STAR CELEBRAT Salsa concert. Madison Square GI Fri., 8.
GERALDINE FITZGERALD‐Th tress's “Street Songs” ambit fro pop tunes to Irish folk songs to Weill. Channel Gardens, Rock, Center. Wed., 4:30. Free,
FLY BY NIGHT STRING BANDing Bounded Coffeehouse, 4140 K Blvd., Queens. Wed., 8:30.
PATTI LABELLE‐The above accompanist of Labelle, the trio, now her own. And Maze. Avery Fisheo Lincoln Centr. Thur.‐Fri., 8.
MAGPIE‐British and Americar music. Acceptable Coffee House, Ethic, Lure Society, 53 Anticipation Par Bktyn. Fri., 9.
STEVEN MARGOSHES‐La Mann 74A E. 4th St. Mon., 9.
NEIL ROSSI‐Fiddle, guitar, Eagle Tavern, 355 W. 14th St. Thur
MARGARET WRIGHT‐Cabaret gram. Judson Memorial Chun, . Wash. Sq. S. Thur.‐Fri., IL
X SEAMENS INSTITUTE AND T FRIENDS‐Sea chanties. South Seaport, Fulton St. and Pier IS 7f30.
KAREN AKERS‐Singer. Reno Sw 126 W. 13th St. Today.
BLUEGRASS‐Today: Arena Mon.‐Wed.: Inside Straight. High in the Saddle. FrI.‐Sat.: East In'. O'Lunney's, Second Ave. al 49 BOBBY BYRNE‐Irish folk accompanist Pavilion, 130 E. S7th St. Thur.‐Sat. The Rod Rodgers Ball Company, which has afresh completed a bout of Africa, Syria and Portugal, opens a oneweek assurance at the St. Marks Playhouse on Wednesday. The affairs will accommodate two New York premieres, but the focus is on “Jazz Fusions,” which is currently actuality developed on bout for the engagement. The new assignment combines both improvised and composed ball and music, with a applesauce affair featuring trumpeter Jimmy Owens. (See Dance)
Jazz Annual
The accepted Newport Applesauce Festival in New York (which absolutely goes as far adrift as Waterloo Village in Stanhope, N.J., and Saratoga Springs, N.Y.) bliss off its anniversary anniversary on Friday at Carnegie Anteroom with Sarah Vaughan and her trio, and the Thad Jones / Mel Lewis Orchestra. It apprehension bottomward on July 2 with a artery applesauce fair un West 52d Street; in amid are such artists as Ornette Coleman, Sonny Rollins and Mary Lou Williams actualization in about every accessible anteroom about town. (For tickets and information, alarm 787‐2020.) (See Music)
Play Ball!
The Queens Museum, with its apperception on summer, will accessible a blithe affectation on Saturday on the affair of sports—not the commonest of capacity for artists. Amid the 60‐plus works on affectation are George Bellows's “Tennis at Newport,” Red Grooms's “Saskia Arena Croquet,” Saul Steinberg's “Corregated Catcher,” Claes Oldenburg's “Mitt” and Norman Rockwell's “The Dugout.” George Plimpton, in his appropriately blithe archive introduction, contributes several assets aloof to authenticate how difficult the accountable is to tackle—and proves his point. (See Art)
Just Tricks
What is appropriately alleged “The Incredible Apple of Magic and Illusion” opens on Tuesday on the bench date of the Village Gate. The show, which is acceptable to leave audiences appropriately flummoxed, consists of eight acts by all-embracing practitioners of “black magic” (from bald conjuration of duke to feats of levitation). The Italian Count Della Ragione, for example., is not alone an accomplished pickpocket but a adept of a poignantly sweet‐sounding violin composed of a burst table leg, a distinct E cord and a decrepit match‐box; a French brace alleged The Fantasios assignment wonders with a assembly of doves, scarves and afire candles; and—not for the faint‐hearted—the Peruvian archimage Riciardi saws abroad at his fair‐haired, etherized daughter, sans box. (See Miscellany)
Unless contrarily noted, the analytical judgments in this Guide reflect the appear angle of Times critics
Arts and Leisure Guide
LANA CANTRELL—Singer. Rainbow Grill, 30 Rockefeller Plaza. Mon.‐Sat. MIKE CERRATI—Jilly's, 256 W. 52d St. Mon.‐Sat.
DOLLY DAWN—Leader of the Dawn Patrol, continued citizen with George Hall's orchestra at the Hotel Taft, still in strong, belting voice. Reno Sweeney, 126 W. 13th St. Tues.‐Sat.
RITA DIMITRI—French songs done oola‐la, by a French‐Greek accompanist luxuriating In her own club. And Jan Kiepura Jr., singer. La Chansonette, 890 Second Ave. Tues.‐Sat.
IRVING FIELDS—Piano. Stork Club, 112 Central Park S. Mon.‐Sat.
SUE GREENWOOD and CARMEN APELGREN—Tramps, 125 E. 15th St. Tues.
CISSY HOUSTON—Singer, above baton of the Sweet Inspirations. Reno Sweeney, 126 W. 13th St. Tues.‐Sat.
MARILYN JOHNSON—Singer. Cotton Club, 666 W. 125th St. Mon., Wed: abutting Sun.
LAINIE KAZAN—Singer. Playboy Club, E. 59th St. Tues.‐Sat.
MICHAEL KENNEY and IVORY COAST—Tramps, 125 E. 15th St. Fri.Sat.
JANKIEPURA JR.‐Singer. La Chansonnette, 890 Second Ave. Wed.‐Fri.
ELLEN KINGSLEY‐Tramps, 125 E. 15th St. Wed.‐Thur.
B.B. KING—The accomplished dejection guitarist. Bottom Line, 15 W. 4th St. Tues.‐Thur.
MICHAEL KOZAK ENSEMBLE—Someplace Nice, 97 St. Mark's Pl. Today.
IRENE K RAL—An almighty acute and evocative singer. Michael's Pub, 211 E. 55th St. Tues.‐Sat.
BERNIE LEIGHTON TRIO—A pianist who cut his agreeable teeth arena for Benny Goodman. Cafe Pierre, Fifth Ave. at 61st St. Tues.‐Sat.
MARY MCCASLIN and JIM RINGER—A thin‐voiced yet ambrosial country‐folk accompanist and her gutter‐voiced macho partner, preceded by the Roches, a appreciably absorbing and adroit bounded folk trio. Bottom Line, 15 W. 4th St. Mon.
TRUDY RICHARDS MOREAU—A onetime diva with Charlie Barnet's bandage accomplishing it all by herself. La Chansonnette, 890 Second Ave. Mon.
NOVELLA NELSON‐An extra and accompanist who combines both talents with able personality. Ballroom, 458 W. Bway. Tues.‐Sat.
ZORA RASMUSSEN and THE BLACK AND BURNETT BAND—Tramps, 125 E. 15th St. Mon.
ALLAN RICH—Singer‐songwriter. Reno Sweeney, 126 W. 13th St. Tues.‐Sat.
EARL ROSE—Pianist, artisan and arranger. Sherry‐Netherland, Fifth Ave. and 59th St. Wed.‐Fri.
HAZEL SCOTT—Swinging both Swing Era numbers and the classics. All Baba East, Aboriginal Ave. at 59th St. Tues.‐Sat.
HUGH SHANNON—The ancestor of all the abreast alehouse singers with bottomless bag of songs you never heard before. David K's, 1115 Third Ave. Tues.‐Sat.
BOBBY SHORT—The animated adept of alehouse singing. Cafe Carlyle, Mad. Ave. at 76th St. Tues.‐Sat.
FRANK SINATRA J R.—Singer. DangerI ield's, 1118 Aboriginal Ave. Thur.‐Sat.
DOC AND MERLE WATSON and GOVE SCRIVENOR—An adorable adept folk‐rock band. Bottom Line, 15 W. 4th St. Fri.‐Sat.
RONNY WHYTE—Singer of appearance tunes. Les Mareyeurs, 998 Mad, Ave., at 78th St. Tues.‐Sat.
Art
Galleries Uptown
(Galleries, unless contrarily noted, are accessible Mons. Sots.)
DENNIS MILLER BUNKER—A accommodation show. Davis & Long, 746 Mad. Ave., at 65th St. Through June 30. Bankrupt Sats.
EDGAR BUONAGUR 10—Abstract, multi dimenslonal paintings and objects. Knowlton, 19 E. 71st St. Through July 1. Bankrupt Mons.
JEAN DAVIDSON—Abstract paintings. Paco, 26 E. 63d St. Through June 28. Mons.‐Fris., 124.
TOM DUBICANAC—Collages and drawings. Spaced, 165 W. 72d St. Through July 22. Tues.‐Fris., 1‐5.
TERESA GRAS—Chinese paintings. Galerie Internationale, 1095 Mad. Ave., at 83d St. Through Sat. Bankrupt Mons.
MARK KRIEGER—Paintings. Touchstone, 118 E. 64th St. Through June 30. Bankrupt Mons.
MARGARITA LOZANO—Pastels. Aberbach, 988 Mad. Ave., at 77th St. Through June 30. Bankrupt Mons.
EGON SCHIELE (1890.1918)—Paintings and assets by the Austrian artist. Sabarsky, 987 Mad. Ave., at 77th St. Through Aug. 31. Bankrupt Mons.
PIERRE SOULAGES—Small paintings and prints, 1951‐70. Gimpet, 1040 Mad. Ave., at 79th St. Through July 14. Bankrupt Sats.
ALEXANDER WALSH—Paintings. Lerner‐Heller, 956 Mad. Ave., at 75th St. Through June 30. Bankrupt Mons.
Group Shows
ACOUA VELLA, 18 E. 79th St.—Five painters. Through July 13. Bankrupt Sats.
BLUM HELMAN, 13 E. 75th St.—Drawings by Ellsworth Kelly, Richard Diebenkorn and Roy Lichtenstein. Through Tues.
CHRISTOPHER, 766 Mad. Ave., at 66th St.—Gallery artists. Through June 30. Bankrupt Mons.
DEUTSCH, 43 E. 80th St.—Avery, Burchfield, Steinberg, others. Opens Tues. Through Aug. 4. Bankrupt Mons.
ELKON, 1063 Mad. Ave., at 80th St.—Buckley, Ridenhour, Roth, others. Through July 14. Bankrupt Sats.
FAR, 22 E.130th St.—“Six artists and Their Models.” Through June 30.
FORUM, f 1018 Mad. Ave., at 79th St.—Manuel Ayaso, Laura Shechter, George Staempfli. Through Fri. Bankrupt Sats.
LEFEBRE, 47 E. 77th St.—“This Is the Lef ebre Gallery,” including Bissier, Jorn, Topor, others. Through Fri. Bankrupt Mons. and Sats.
L'IBI S, 667 Mod. Ave., at 61st St.—“Golden Egypt and Ancient Sculpture.” Through July 31. Bankrupt Mons.
NICHOLLS, 1014 Mad. Ave., at 79th St.—Cartoons, illustrations and annual awning designs. Through July 15. Bankrupt Sats.
O'REILLY, 35 E. 67th St.—Paintings by Fred Brandes and Joseph Drapel I; etchings by Red Grooms. Through June 30. Bankrupt Mons.
REED, 120 E. 78th St.—Sculptures by Arp, Meadmore, Calder, others. Through June 30. Bankrupt Mons.
ROLLY‐MICHAUX, 943 Mad. Ave., at 76th St.—Lithographs and etchings by Appel, Delaunay, others. Through July 1. Bankrupt Mons.
SHEPHERD, 21 E. 84th St.—English paintings and assets of the 19th century. Through June 30. Bankrupt Mons.
URDANG, 23 E. 74th St.—Gallery artists, additional new talent. Opens Tues. Through July 15. Bankrupt Mons.
WILLARD, 29 E. 72d St.—Nine artists. Through June 30. Bankrupt Mons.
Galleries 5 7th St.
FEL IX ANGEL—Drawings of American sports by a Colombian artist. Blue-blooded Polans, 40 W. 57th St. Through Sat. Bankrupt Mons.
HANNELORE BARON‐Collages and boxes. Markel, 50 W. 57th St. Through July I.
JEAN‐PIERRE CASS! GNEUL‐Paintings of women. Findlay, 17 E. 57th St. Through July 1.
JACK EARL—“Vignettes in Clay.” Portnoy, 56 W. 57th St. Through June 30. Bankrupt Mons.
MARY FRANK—Paper works. Zabriskie, 29 W. 57th St. Through July 1.
HAROLD GREGOR—Landscape paintings and works on paper. De Nagy, 29 W. 5710 St. Through Thur. Bankrupt Mons.
DAVID HARTMAN—Works on paper. Zarre, 41 E. 57th St. Through June 30. Bankrupt Mons.
FRIEDRICH MECKSEPER—A attendant of prints by a German artist. Fitch‐Febyrel, 5 E. 57th St. Through June 30. Bankrupt Mons.
YOSHIKAZU OGINO—Slitted, corrective Paper. Phoenix, 30 W. 57th St. Through June 29. Bankrupt Mons.
ZAHARA SCHATZ—Abstract wire sculptures. American‐Israel Cultural Foundation, 4 E. 54th St. Through June 27.
CHARLES SELIGER—Paintings. Crispo, 41 E. 57th ST. Through Sat.
H.C. W ESTE RMANN—Watercolors.
Frumkin, 50 W. 57th St. Through June 30. Bankrupt Mons.
WHANKI (1913.1974)—Abstract paintings. Dintenlass, 50 W. 57th St. Through June 30. Bankrupt Sats.
Group Shows
ALONZO, 30 W. 57th St.—A alternating appearance of works in assorted mediums. Through July 27. Bankrupt Mons. and Sats.
ASSOCIATED AMERICAN ARTISTS, 663 Fifth Ave., at 53d St.—“New Aptitude in Printmaking.” Through June 30.
DE NAGY, 29 W. 57th St.—Stephen Mueller, Ann Purcell, Kikuo Saito, Edward Youkilis. Opens Sat. Through July 13. Bankrupt Mons.
ERIC, 61 E. 57th St.—Gallery artists. Opens Tues. Through Aug. 31.
GENESIS, 41 E. 57th St.—“New Talent.” Through July 15. Bankrupt Mons.
GETLER / PALL, 50 W. 57th St.—Graphics by Arakawa, Dine, Ruscha, others. Through June 30.
JACKSON GALLERY IOLAS, 32 E. 57th St.—“Borderline Drawings,” or assets that access added mediums in their application. Through June 30. Bankrupt Mons.
KORNBLEE, 20 W. 57th St.—Eight artists. Through July 14. Bankrupt Mons.
LONG CONTEMPORARY, 7 W. 57th St.—Paintings from the arcade collection. Through June 30. Bankrupt Sats.
MIDTOWN, 11 E. 57th St.—Still lifes and annual paintings by bristles arcade artists. Through Fri. Bankrupt Mons.
PEARL, 29 W. 57th St.—“Five Painters on Paper.” Opens Mon. Through July 28. Bankrupt Sots.
SACHS, 29 W. 57th St.—Boothe, Ferren, Shapiro and added arcade artists. Through June 30. Bankrupt Mons.
TRUMAN, 38 E. 57th St.—Christo, Richard Tuttle, Allan Hacklin,. others. Through July 20. Tues.•Thurs., 10‐5.
VIRIDIAN, 24 W. 57th St.—Forty arcade artists. Through June 30. Bankrupt Mons.
Galleries SoHo
DAVID COTTES and ELBA DAMASTPaintings by a Puerto Rican and a Venezuelan artist. Cayman, 381 W. Bway. Through July 1. Weds.‐Sats., 11‐6.
JOSEPH CORNELL—Collages. Castelli, 420 W. Bway. Through Sat. Bankrupt Mons.
DAN FLAVIN—Drawings, diagrams, prints, posters and a fluorescent‐light installation. Friedrich, 393 W. away. Through Sat. Tues:Sats., 12‐6.
JOHN HAWKINS—Woodcuts. Alternate Space, 431 W. Bway. Through Thur. Bankrupt Mons.
VAINO KOLA—Drawings and prints. Pleiades, 152 Wooster St. Through July 2. Bankrupt Mons.
KAREN LEWIS—Large‐scale paintings of ancestors gatherings. Pindar, 127 Greene St. Through July 2. Weds:Suns., 12‐6.
STEVE POLESK IE—Works on the affair of the airplane. Meisel, 141 Prince St. Through June 30. Bankrupt Mons.
["291"]Phoenix Theatres Entertainment | Laughlin Stadium 9 Cinemas | phoenix theatres main gate movies 10TANIA SCHRIEBER—Paintings and sculptures. Jack, 138 Prince St. Through appropriately 11. Tues.‐Suns., 12‐6.
TRUDY SOLIN—Abstract Impressionist Paintings. Bayard, 456 W. Bway. Through July 2. Bankrupt Mons.; accessible Suns.
RICHARD ZELENS—An ecology work. 112 Workshop, 112 Greene St. Through June 29. Bankrupt Mons.
Group Shows
A.I.R., 97 Wooster St.—Contemporary Japanese women artists. Through June 28. Bankrupt Mons.
ARTISTS SPACE, 105 Hudson St.—“Traditions / Bristles Painters.” Through Sat. Bankrupt Mons.
AZUMA, 142 Greene SL—Ancient baby sculptures. Through June 25. Tues.Suns., 12‐6.
BRAUNSTEIN/ QUAY, 139 Spring St.—Paintings, assets and sculptures by three California artists. Through July 1. Bankrupt Mons.
BROMM, 90W. Bway—Alice Adams, Robert Coates, Helen Sorel I, others. Through June 30. Bankrupt Mons.
CALDWELL, 383 W. Bway—One assignment anniversary by 17 artists. Through July 8. Bankrupt Mons.
COOPER, 155 Wooster St.—Changing accumulation show. Through July 29. Bankrupt Mons.
14 SCULPTORS, 75 Thompson St.— Arcade artists. Through June 28. Bankrupt Mons.
FREIDUS, 158 Lafayette St.—Indoor and alfresco sculptures. Through July 29. Bankrupt Mons.
HOFFMAN, 429 W. Bway—Drawings by seven French artists. Through July 12. Bankrupt Mons.; accessible Suns., 1‐5.
KIND, 139 Spring St.—“Reviews and Previews,” works by artists who accept apparent at the arcade in the accomplished or who will be apparent abutting season. Through Sat.
LOHMAN, 55 Wooster St.— Arcade artists. Through July 1. Tues.‐Sats., 1‐5.
MILLIKEN, 141 Prince St.—Paintings and sculptures by arcade artists. Through July 27. Bankrupt Sats.
NEILL, 136 Greene St.—Works on paper. Opens Tues. Through July 15. Bankrupt Mons.
O.K. HARRIS, 383 W. Bway—Summer invitational. Opens Sat. Through July 15. Bankrupt Mons.
SOHO CENTER FOR VISUAL ARTISTS, 114 Prince St.—Six painters. Through July 29. Tues.‐Fris., 12‐5; Sets., 11‐5.
SOHO 20, 99 Spring St.—“Women Exhibiting in Boston” invitational show. Through June 28. Tues.‐Sats., 12‐6.
SPE RONE WESTWATER FISCHER, 142 Greene SL—Gallery artists. Through July 31. Bankrupt Sats.
VORPAL, 445 W. Bway—Works in assorted mediums by Escher, Agnese Udinotti, Jesse Allen, others. Through Sept. 3. Mons.‐Sat., 10‐6, and Wed. and Sat. eves. until 8; Suns., 1‐6.
WARD‐NASSE, 131 Prince St.—Weldon Clears, Bill Firshein, Jerry Hauptman, Janet Lis. Opens Sat. Through July 13. Bankrupt Mons.
Other
BLACKBURN, 110 W. 30th St.—Paintings and sculptures by 10 artists, a cardinal of whom are associated with the Studio Museum in Harlem. Through July 15. Bankrupt Mons.
CUNY GRADUATE CENTER MALL, 33 W. 42d St.—Painted bolt sculptures by Maude Boltz. Through June 30. Bankrupt Sets.
80 WASHINGTON SQUARE EAST GALLERIES—Pastel and charcoal assets by Dianne Lukash and cardboard constructions by John Stefanik. Through June 23. Mons.‐Fris., 12‐5.
GLASS, 315 Central Park W.—Still fifes by Robert Grawi and John Kritka. Through June 30. Weds.‐Sats., 1‐6.
HUBRIS, 150 Thompson St.‐Works on paper. Through Fri. Bankrupt Mons.
INSTITUTE FOR ARCHITECTURE AND URBAN STUDIES, 8 W. 40th St.—Drawings by Peter Cook and Ron Herron. Opens Wed. Through July 20. Bankrupt Sat. morns.
LOEB STUDENT CENTER, NY U, 566 LaGuardia PI.—Works on cardboard by Lily Ente. Through June 30. Mons.‐Fris., 98: 30.
NOHO, 542 LaGuardia PI.—Drawings and paintings by Ira Arthur Horowitz. and Charlie Katinas. Through June 25. Tues.‐Suns., 1‐6.
ROKO, 90 E. 10th St.—Watercolors and ink assets by Greta Schreyer and Nickzad Nodloumi. Through Sat. Tues.Sats., 12‐6.
SPACE, 82 Duane St.—Three adolescent artists alive about City Hall. Through June 29. Bankrupt Mons.
STUDIO 264, 264 W. 40th St.—Four artists. Through June 29. Tues.‐Sats., 1‐6.
Museums
AMERICAN MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY, Central Park W. at 79th St.—Watercolors of the bird ancestors alleged balustrade by J. Fenwick Landsdowne. Through July 16. “Ice Age Man: Man's Earliest Masterpieces,” a affectation of cavern paintings, carvings, engravings and sculptures re‐creating the apple of the Upper Paleolithic European hunter. Through Dec. 31. Mons.‐Sats., 10.4:45, and Wed. eves. until 9; Suns. and holidays, 11‐5.
BRONX MUSEUM OF THE ARTS, 851 Admirable Concourse—Works in assorted mediums by Bronx artists. Through July 9. Mons.‐Fris., 9‐5; Suns., 12:304:30.
BROOKLYN CHILDREN's MUSEUM, 145 Brooklyn Ave.—Ethnological and full‐scale abstruse artifacts, and natural‐history obiects. Daily, except Tues., 1‐5.
BROOKLYN MUSEUM, Eastern Parkway and Washington Ave.—More than 80 works by eight West Coast printmakers. Through July 16. Weds.‐Sats., 10‐5; Suns., 12‐5; holidays, 1‐5. Bankrupt Mons. and ‘rues.
CENTER FOR INTER‐AMERICAN RELATIONS, 680 Park Ave., at 68th St.—“Variations on Latin Themes in New York.” Through July 28. Daily, except Mons., 12‐6.
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY, Butler Library, 116th ST, and Bway—Material accompanying to the British artisan John Masef ield (1878‐1967). Through June 28. Mons.‐Fris., 9‐5.
COOPER‐HEWITT MUSEUM, 2 E. 91st St.—Embroidery, dating from the 14th aeon to the present. Through Sept. 2. Tues., 10.9; Weds.‐Sats., 10.5; Suns., 125.
FRAUNCES TAVERN MUSEUM, 54 Pearl St.—Folk art with images of George Washington. Through Oct. 31. Mons.‐Fris., 10.4.
FRICK COLLECTION, 1 E. 70th St.—A abiding accumulating housed in the abode of Henry Clay Frick (1849‐1919). Weds.‐Sats., 10‐6; Suns., 1‐6.
GUGGENHEIM MUSEUM, Fifth Ave. at 89th St.—A attendant consisting o150 oils by the backward painter Attilio Salemme. Through July 4. “Alberto Burri: A Attendant View, 1948‐78.” Opens Tues. Through Aug. 27. Paintings and sculptures from the Evelyn Sharp collection. Through Oct. 1. Tues., 11‐8; Weds.Suns., and holidays, 11‐5. Bankrupt Mons.
HAYDEN PLANETARIUM, 81st St. and C.P.W.—Laserium, catholic laser concert. Fris.‐Sats., 8:30, 10 and 11:30; Suns., 8:30 and 10.
JAPAN HOUSE, 333 E. 47th St.—Genre screens dating from the 17th aeon to the aboriginal 19th. Through July 9. Mons.Thurs., Sats. suns..11‐5; Fris., 11‐7:30.
JEWISH MUSEUM, Fifth Ave. at 92d St.—A appearance of 70 works done by artists during their bondage in Nazi absorption camps. Through Nov. 12. Serigraphs and oils by Peter Freudenthal, Swedish artist. Closes today. Mons.Thurs., 12‐5; Suns., 11‐6.
METROPOLITAN MUSEUM OF ART, Fifth Ave. at 82d St.—“Monef's Years at Giverny: Beyond Impressionism,” 81 paintings done in the actual ambiance and the surrounding mural of the artist's home. Through July 9. “The Arts Under Napoleon,” a appearance of 225 altar of French adorning arts from the aeon 1799‐1815. Through July 30. Fifteenth‐century Italian assets from the Robert Lehman collection. Closes today. Clothes, accessories and beautification for men and women, from the 17th aeon to the present, from Oriental, Abreast Eastern and European cultures. Through Aug. 27. Rubens's “Self‐Portrait with Helena Fourment and Their Child,” on loan, in a new accession of accompanying paintings by Rubens and van Dyck. Tues., 10‐8:45; Weds.‐Sats., 10‐4:45; Suns., 11‐4;45. Bankrupt Mons.
MORGAN LIBRARY, 29 E. 36th St.—Works of the Spanish Forger, a painter alive about 1900. Through July 29. “Devils, Demons and Fantastic Creatures,” assets from the library's collection. Through July 29. Fine books, aboriginal editions and manuscripts of English and American literature. Through July 29. Material accompanying to Gilbert and Sullivan's “H.M.S. Pinafore.” Through July 29. Tues.‐Sats., 10:30‐5; Suns., 1‐5.
MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAN INDIAN, Bway at 155th St.—The abiding collection. Tues.‐Suns., 1‐5.
MUSEUM OF BRONX HISTORY, Bainbridge Ave. and 208th St.—Permanent exhibits illustrating the history of the Bronx. Sats., 10‐4; Suns., 1‐5.
MUSEUM OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK, Fifth Ave. at 104th St.—“Best Bib and Tucker, A Costume History of New York Dining and Galas,” apparent in 10 vignettes. Through July 9. An educational affectation on the accountable of alcoholism. Through July 9. Tues.‐Sats., 10‐5; Suns. and holidays, 1‐5.
MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY CRAFTS, 29 W. 53d St.—“The Abundant American Foot,” a appearance of cossack from Renaissance shoes to designs by Jim Dine and Jasper Johns. Through June 30. Tues.‐Sats., 11‐6; Suns.,1 ‐6.
MUSEUM OF MODERN ART, 11 W. 53d St.—“Mexican Art,” a appearance of 80 prints, paintings and assets from the museum's collection. Through June 29. “A Treasury of Modern Drawing: The Joan and Lester Avnet Collection,” consisting of 180 works by 100 Europeans and Americans. Through July 4. Designs for complete (tape decks, loudspeakers and the like) advised by Bang 8. Olufsen. Closes today. Drawings, matte paintings, set models and sketches and stills assuming the accord of assembly architecture to the beheld appearance of a film. Through Sept. 26. Etchings by Jim Dine. Through Sept. 5. Mons.‐Tues., Fris.Suns., 11‐6; Thurs., 11‐9. The museum's Summergarden is accessible (tree) Fris.Suns., 6‐10.
EL MUSED DEL BARRIO, 1230 Fifth Ave., at 105th St.—Works by 35 Latin American artists. Through June 30. Tues.‐Suns., 10:30.4:30.
NEW MUSEUM, 65 Fifth Ave.—Works by a half‐dozen artists. Through July 8. Mons.‐Fris., 12.6, and Wed. eves. until 8; Sets., 12‐5.
NEW‐YORK HISTORICAL SOCIETY, 170 C.P.W., at 77th St.—“New Activity for Old Objects: The Art of the Conservator,” including adequate paintings and altar from the society's collection. Through Dec. 31. Tues. Fris., and Suns., 1.5; Sats., 10‐5.
NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY, Fifth Ave. at 42d St.—Rare abstracts on the New Apple from the Obadiah Rich collection. Through July 5. Tues., 10.9; Mons., Weds., Fris.‐Sats., 10‐6.
NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY AT LINCOLN CENTER—Drawings of American actors and actresses by Robert Benner. Through Mon. Mons. and Thurs., 10‐8; Tues.‐Weds., 10.6; Fris.‐Sats., 12‐6.
QUEENS MUSEUM, Flushing Meadow, Corona Park—A analysis of a aeon of sports in art, including assignment by Bellows, Diebenkorn, Red Grooms, others. Opens Sat. Through Sept. 10. Tues.Sats., 10.5; Suns., 1‐5.
STATEN ISLAND CHILDREN's MUSEUM, 15 Bank SI.—Soft sculptures and alive ball areas. Tues.‐Fris., 3‐5; Suns., 1‐5.
STUDIO MUSEUM IN HARLEM, 2033 Fifth Ave., at 125th St.—“Beauford Delaney: A Retrospective,” including 70 works spanning a 40‐year period. Through July 2. Weds., 10‐9; Tues., Thurs., and Fris., 10‐6; Sets. and Suns., 1‐6.
TIBETAN MUSEUM, 338 Lighthouse Ave., S.I.—The Jacques Marchais collection. Thurs.‐Suns., 1‐5.
WAVE HILL, 675 252d St., Bx.—Paintings, sculptures and assets by Jessica Holden. Through July 5. “Figure in the Landscape,” an alfresco appearance of Archipenko, Calder, Maillol, others. Through Oct. 31. Daily, 10‐4:30.
WHITNEY MUSEUM, 945 Mad. Ave., at 75th St.—A attendant of the assignment of Saul Steinberg, including added than 250 drawings, watercolors, collages, masks. Through July 9. A attendant of assignment by the sculptor H.C. Westermann. Through July 16. “American Art, 1950 to the Present,” added than 60 paintings and sculptures from the museum's holdings. Through Sept. 12. Sol Lewitt's “Four Part Drawing of Curve to Points on a Grid.” Through July 23. Tues.Fris., 2.9; Salt., 11‐6; Suns., 12‐6.
Photography
JAMES ABBE—“Dictatorships in the 1930's.” Washburn, 42 E. 57th St. Through July 21. Bankrupt Mons.
MARCUS BLECHMAN—Twenty‐one ball photographs. Museum of the City of New York, Fifth Ave. at 103d St. Through Sept. 4. Tues.‐Sats., 10‐5; Suns. and holidays, 1‐5.
JACKIE BORNSTE1N—Pictures taken in Little Italy, New York City. 4th Artery Photo, 67 E. 4th St. Through June 30. Suns.‐Thurs., 2.8; Fris.‐Sats., 3‐10.
FREDRICH CANTOR—Photographs of People. Also, pictures by Jean Philippe Jourdrin. Foth, 492 Broome St. Through July B. Weds.‐Sats., 1‐6.
JERRY DANTZIC—Pictures taken with Cirkut Camera, including 12 across-the-board blush photographs of American landscapes. Museum of Modern Art, 11 W. 53d St. Through July 30. Suns.‐Tues., Fris.‐Sats., 11‐6; Thurs., 11‐9.
GEOFFREY GOVE—Abstracts in color. Images, 11 E. 57th St. Through June 30. Closes Mons.
HOWARD GROSS—Pictures of bodies with their eyes closed. Truman, 38 E. 57th St. Through July 6. Bankrupt Mons.
PHILLIP LEONIAN and LYNN LENNON—Pictures of bodies walking by Mr. Leonian; “Phantasy Self‐Portraits” by Miss Lennon. Neikrug, 224 E. 68th St. Through Sat. Weds.‐Sats., 1‐6.
JAMES MARSHALL—People about the world. Camera Club, 37 E. 60th St. Through July 31. Mons.‐Fris., 1‐6.
DENNIS RIZZUTO—Montages and pictures taken in Brooklyn. Stieglitz, 34 W. 13th St. Through June 27. Sats.‐Suns., 6; Tues., 7‐9 P.M.
GAIL RUBIN (1939.78)—A portfolio. Images, 11 E. 57th St. Through June 30. Bankrupt Mons. and Sat. morns.
STEPHEN SHORE—Color photographs of the New York Yankees in Spring Training, 1978. Light, 724 Fifth Ave., at 56th St. Through Sat. Bankrupt Mons.
EDMUND TESKE AND ANTON BRUEHL—Composites of nudes, portraits and landscapes by Mr. Teske; blush photographs and portraits by Mr. Bruehl. Within, 41 E. 57th St. Through Sat. Bankrupt Mons.
PETE TURNER—Dye‐transfer prints. The Space, 154 W. 57th St. Through Fri. Tues.‐Thurs., 10:30‐5:30.
Group Shows
CASTELLI, 4 E. 77th St.—Landscapes by Robert Adams, Lewis Balt:, Robert Levin, Elliot Schwartz. Through Sat. Bankrupt Mons.
GREY ART GALLERY, NYU, 33 Wash. PI.—Photographs by Talbot, Cameron, Steichen and others, from the accumulating of Sam Wagstaff. Through Aug. 26. Mons. Fris., 12.7, and Weds. eves. until 8:30.
INTERNATIONAL CENTER OF PHOTOGRAPHY, 1130 Fifth Ave.—Pictures by associates of the Photo League, including Paul Strand, Arnold Newman, Dan Weiner. Through July 9. Constructed photographs by Pierre Boogaerts. Through July 9. Tues.‐Suns., 11‐5.
METROPOLITAN MUSEUM OF ART—Collection of Alfred Stieglitz, Including Photographs by Steichen, White, Adams. Through July 16. Tues., 10‐8:45; Weds.‐Salo., 10‐4:45; Suns., 11‐4:45.
MIDTOWN Y, 344 E. 14th St.—Photographs by Cartier, Leipzig, Tress and others of bodies arena amateur and sports in New York City. Opens Thur. Through Sept. 17. Mons.‐Thurs., noon‐8 Fris., noon‐4; Suns., 10‐1.
MUSEUM OF HOLOGRAPHY, 11 Mere, SL—Works from the abiding cone.. tion. Through Aug. 27. Weds.‐Suns.,
NEW‐YORK HISTORICAL SOCIETY. Central Park West at 77th St.—Picture of the city's poor accouchement from 1864 tc. 1977. Through Sept. 5. Tues.‐Fris., 11‐5 Sato., 10.5; Suns., 1‐5.
NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY, 20 W 53d St.—Bernd and Hilla Becher, Jar Dibbets, Edward Ruscha, others. Through June 29. Mons.‐Sats., 10.6, Tues. eves. until 9.
NIKON HOUSE, 620 Fifth Ave. —Slides and photographs of the Hudson River by Ted Spiecel. Through July 1. Bankrupt Sato.
PFEIFER, 825 Mad. Ave., at 70th St.—The macho nude. Through July 28. Tues.Fris., 10‐5:30.
PRAKAPAS, 19 E. 71st St.—“Vintage New York—Photographs from the Underwood and Underwood Archive.” Through July 21. Bankrupt Mons.
QUEENS MUSEUM, Flushing Meadow—Photographs by Berenice Abbott, Eugene Atget, Lewis Hine, others. Through June 25. Tues.‐Sats., 10‐5; Suns., 1‐5.
SOHO PHOTO, 34 W. 13th St.—Joseph Brin, Eileen King, Robert Nussbaum, others. Through June 27. Fris.‐Suns., 16; Tues., 7.9.
Miscellany
BIG APPLE CIRCUS—Eighth Ave. at 50th St. Weds., 11:15 and 2:15; Thurs. Sats., 2:15 and 7:30; Suns., 1 and 4 Through Sept. 10.
DANCE VISIONS—A alternation of films, videotapes and conversations about dance. CUNY Grad Center, 33 W. 42d St. (790.4352) Opens Mon. Through June 30.
ELVIS: THE LEGEND LIVESI—A multi‐media appearance advantageous accolade to the activity and music of the backward Elvis Presley. With Rick Saucedo. Palace, Bway and 47th St. (757‐2626)
THE INCREDIBLE WORLD OF MAGIC AND ILLUSION—A appearance including eight acts by all-embracing magicians, Village Gate, 160 Bleecker St. Tues.Thurs., 8; Fris.‐Sats., 7:30 and 10; Suns., 7:30.
“THE LARSON INFLUENCE”—Draperies, carpets and upholstery abstracts produced by bolt artist Jack Lenor Larsen. F.I.T., 227 W. 271h St. Through Sept. 16. Tues.‐Weds., 10‐9; Thurs.‐Sats., 10‐4.
STA RSHIP ENCOUNTERS—A taxertight spectacle, with the American Symphony Orchestra. Madison Square Garden, Seventh Ave. at 33d St. Sat., 2:30 and 8.
Poetry Readings
ASSOCIATION OF HISPANIC ARTS—Queens Museum, Flushing Meadow, Corona Park. Today, 2:30.
DONALD A X INN, MARC KAMINSK and HARVEY SHAPIRO—Jewish Arts Coffee House, 15 E. 84th St. Today, 6.
MARGO DESILVA and DYANA HERNANDEZ—Chumley's, Bedford anr Barrow Sts. Sat., 2.
ANDREW MARUM—Arthur's Court, Aboriginal Ave. at 76th st. Thur., 7.
PERFORMANCE READING—Tom Weigel, Mike Sappol and Free Rein. St. Mark's Church, Second Ave. at 10th St. Mon., 8:15. Free.
POEZ—Kenny's Castaways, 157 Bleecker St. Wed., 8.
BETTY SELLERS and LORNA MILLER—China Song, Bway at 54th St. Today, 2:30.
PAUL VIOLI and YUKI HARTMANViridian, 24 W. 57th St. Thur., 6:30.
JEAN BAUR WALLING and ELLIOT FIGMAN—Bragr Times, 165 Duane St. Mon., 7:30.
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