what to do new york city november 12th 2017
52 wonderful things to do in NYC in November
Things to exercise
Louis Vuitton New York Exhibition; 86 Trinity Identify; ongoing; free
We may exist biased, but New Yorkers are the savants of manner (and have been for many years), which is why we can appreciate a fashion house that has styled many generations. Luxury brand Louis Vuitton, for example, certainly has elevated and inverse the textile world since its debut in 1854, equally presented in the French-born company'south new exhibition: "Volez, Voguez, Voyagez." Located at 86 Trinity Place, guests are welcome to experience the rich history past viewing and interacting with diverse artifacts (from 1854 to 2017) sourced past historian Oliver Saillard. Wander through all three-levels of the exhibition to detect the make's past collaborations besides every bit trunks and luggage of years' past.
Gotham Storytelling Festival Kraine Theater; Nov i-7; $16
This fourth annual fest hosted by FRIGID New York features yarn-spinning shows similar Queer Memoir and the Dead Parents Lodge aslope solo shows from top tellers, including 20-time Moth Story Slam winner Adam Wade, author Jamie Brickhouse and comedian Lucie Pohl.
Twin Peaks Burlesque: The Return! Joe'due south Pub at the Public Theater; Nov 4; $15–$xx
David Lynch lovers the Pink Room take taken onTwin Peaks,Blue Velvet,Wild At Centre,Lost Highway,Mulholland Drive,Inland Empire and more, and now they return to Joe'southward Pub to present their latest Lynchian striptease. This 90-infinitesimal bear witness pays tribute to the listen-angle revival, featuring host Schaffer the Darklord and performers Anna Copa Cabanna, Bunny Buxom, Foxy Vermouth, Francine "The Lucid Dream," Minx Arcana and more than.
Fall Woods Weekends New York Botanical Garden; Nov 4 + 5, November 11 + 12; $28, seniors and students $25, children under ii gratuitous
Experience the colors of the flavor in the New York Botanical Garden's Thain Family unit Forest, a l-acre thicket that boasts sweet gums, whose star-shaped leaves turn ruby-red and purple as autumn progresses, and tulip trees and hickories that display vivid gilt yellows. During this annual serial, gratuitous guided tours volition bespeak out seasonal leafage and birds, as well as offer costless canoe trips, courtesy of the Bronx River Brotherhood.
New York Gustatory modality The Waterfront New York Tunnel; Nov 6; $100–$200
For its 19th annual edition of this well-curated culinary celebration,New York magazine and food editor Gillian Duffy are assembling some of the city's finest chefs and mixologists to present their most inventive new works. Meet the masterminds behind Daily Provisions, Gramercy Tavern, Bar Goto, Piffling Tong Noodle Shop and more—and more importantly, sample their creations. A portion of gain benefit Metropolis Harvest, which battles hunger in NYC.
How Did This Get Fabricated? Town Hall Theatre; Nov 9 at 7pm and nine:45pm; tickets beginning at $70
Anyone who'south always watched The Room, Leprechaun in the Hood or Sharknado knows that so-bad-they're-good movies qualify as their own genre. Actors and manufacture vets June Diane Raphael, Paul Scheer and Jason Mantzoukas dissect some of the worst films ever made on their How Did This Get Made? podcast, which comes to New York Metropolis for 2 live tapings this month.
Salman Rushdie Temple Emanu-El Streicker Center; Nov 14 at 7pm; $25
With the release of The Golden House, Salman Rushdie's body of work now includes xiii novels. Prepare during the Obama years, his latest book focuses on a billionaire from Bombay who moves his family to downtown Manhattan. The Golden House dissects wealth, politics and the American identity. Once you've read it, join the writer and Pulitzer Prize-winning author Geraldine Brooks for a conversation nearly the volume and Rushdie's prolific career.
Bake the Volume: Pumpkin Pie Cake and Truffles Milk Bar Williamsburg; Nov 18, 19 at 11am; $95
Thanks to the pumpkin spice lattes that Starbucks has been peddling for what seems like decades, all things pumpkin have gotten a bad rap. Simply before you burn out on fall's signature flavor, head to Milk Bar to acquire how to bake their fluffy pumpkin pie cake. Graham cracker cheesecake, candied pumpkin seeds and pumpkin ganache make this dessert anything only basic.
An Evening With David Sedaris Brooklyn Academy of Music; Nov 21 and 22 at 7:30pm; tickets outset at $176
David Sedaris wants you lot to read his diary—a fact that isn't actually all that surprising to longtime fans. His latest volume, titled Theft past Finding: Diaries (1977-2002), comprises 25 years of the essayists' journal entries. Y'all'll notice everything from salacious gossip to snippets of overheard conversations to observations on full strangers in the book. Have a peek into Sedaris'south artistic process during this volume signing and talk.
Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade Balloon Inflation; 79th St at Columbus Ave; Nov 22; free
This pre–Turkey Day ritual, held near the American Museum of Natural History, has get about equally crowded equally the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade, just we prefer it to the main consequence. Why? We prefer to weave through the crowds, walking by the inflation stations to see SpongeBob SquarePants at our own step. Inflation takes place from 3 to 10pm. Arrive subsequently in the evening, when the gigantic characters have taken shape; the crowds are at their acme, so you can also show off the famed New York sidewalk shuffle.Enter at West 79th St at Columbus Ave.
Holiday Train Show New York Botanical Garden; November 22 through January 14; $23–$28
The garden lights up with its collection of trains that chug along a most half-mile track by 150 miniature NYC landmarks like the Empire State Building and Radio Urban center Music Hall, all fabricated of natural materials such as leaves, twigs, bark and berries.
Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade at various locations; Nov 23; costless
Before America gets turnt on turkey and settles in to scout some football, all eyes plough to Manhattan during the Macy'southward Thanksgiving Day Parade 2017. The annual pageant of behemothic balloons, floats, cheerleaders, clowns, marching bands, theater and Broadway in New York performances and celebs is ane of the all-time NYC events in November. Sure, it's fun to scout in your PJs, just there's nothing like watching the procession in person.
Big Apple Circus Damrosch Park (at Lincoln Center); various dates and times; tickets first at $28
Afterward declaring defalcation in 2016 and being acquired past a Florida investment firm before this yr, the Big Apple tree Circus is dorsum. The beloved carnival will gloat its 40th season at its longtime home at Lincoln Heart. Wait to meet acts like flying trapeze artist Ammed Tuniziani, the e'er hilarious Grandma the Clown and 10-fourth dimension world record holder Nik Wallenda walking the high wire.
A Christmas Carol at the Merchant's Business firm; starts Nov 30; $45–$75
In belatedly 1867, Charles Dickens trekked across the Atlantic to spend a month performing his Christmas classic here in NYC. The Merchant's Firm Museum is reenacting this one-hour operation for modern-day audiences in its old-fashioned museum. If you call backA Christmas Ballad is enchanting now, but wait until you see information technology performed past candlelight in a 19th-century home by Dickens—or rather an actor playing the part of the British author. (Bonus: Come early for mulled wine and tasty snacks!).
Comedy
New York Arab-American Comedy Festival at various locations; Nov 2–November 4, per show $25 plus two-drink minimum
Since 2003, this festival has gathered new and well-known names from within the customs for some epic acts, and this year, their voices couldn't be more appreciated. Caput to Arab Comedy Cafe on November 2 at 7:30pm to run across all of the fest's performers: Dean Obeidallah, Maysoon Zayid, Aron Kader, Paul Elia, Luai Hodi, Ali Sultan, Ramy Youssef, Suzie Afridi, Yazen Amra, Maher Matta, Byron Sadik, Ghassan Atshan, Sammy Obeid, Dave Merheje, Mike Easmeil, Atheer Yacoub and Murad Saleh. Check out Legends of Arab One-act on November iii at seven:30pm, along with the Haram Bear witness at 10pm; and on November four, hit upwardly Arabs Gone Wild Reunion at 7:30pm and Arab Comedy All Stars at 10pm.
MOIST The Creek and the Cave; November ii; costless
All hail Abby Feldman, the intrepid stand up-upwards who doles out advice from her bathtub on her addicting podcast and video serialMOIST. She brings the tub to the Creek and the Cave stage, where she'due south joined by Sam Evans, Christine Meehan-Berg, Katie Hannigan, Andy Fiori, Ashley Gavin and Marcia Belsky.
It's Christi, B*tch! Ars Nova; November four; $15
She's your naughtiest buddy on a night out, the devil in your ear, the voice on your side by side favorite cartoon testify and the sweetest comic in town. Soon, stand-up supreme Christi Chiello will be our potty-mouthed overlord, but before so, take hold of her at this confessional hr of stand-upwards and stories.
Political Subversities The Bell House; Nov half dozen; $12–$15
This musical-sketch comedy testify lampoons politics and pop-culture with satirical sketches, political dearest songs and more. Cheque out PoliSub's YouTube channel for some laughs before catching the grouping live in Brooklyn.
Cultch War: An "I Don't Think And so Honey" Deathmatch Villain; November 7; $15–$20
Later on 50 episodes of their podcastLas Culturistas, plus two alive shows and endless debates overDesperate Housewives,Kelly Clarkson and Shonda Rhimes, divine gay plastics Bowen Yang and Matt Rogers take their armada of civilization-addled comedians to war. Picket the prove's past guests and favorites—like Dylan Marron, Tim Murray, Dave Mizzoni, Pat Regan, Alise Morales and Rae Sanni—face off in loftier-stakes editions of the show's now-iconic "I Don't Think So, Honey" rant. Is this the end of an era or a new beginning for the evil queens of gay podcastdom? The shade will be blinding.
Get Ricki! Q.E.D.; Nov 15; $8
Hosted by comedian Matt Smith McCormick, this outrageous show gives an affectionate nod to the queen of riotous daytime talk, Ricki Lake. Lynsey Bonell, Ben Conrad, Amanda Kay Holstien, Sr., Luke Mones and Mamoudou N'Diaye bring their most deliciously ghoulish material for this month's theme, "I Hate That Y'all Sleep in Coffins & Hang Out in Cemeteries...Quit Being a Teen Vampire!"
The Unofficial Skilful The Tank; Nov 19; $10
Marie Faustin and Sydnee Washington—two of the fastest, most ferocious comedians you'll see this twelvemonth—bring their uproarious podcast to the stage. Expect interviews with "experts" on topics like homo buns, divas and saccharide daddies, and whip-cracking reads of people in the audition. Hail to the queens!
LGBT
Sixth Annual New York Boylesque Festival at diverse locations; Nov 3, Nov 4; $20–$55
Club Cumming co-founder Daniel Nardicio and Thirsty Daughter Productions' Jen Gapay render with their yearly showcase of male bumpers and grinders from around the world. Over 40 burly-Q babes take the stage to strut their stuff during this two-24-hour interval celebration of the art of the tease. The fest culminates with a skintastic main event on Nov 4 hosted by the always-fab World Famous *BOB*.
Romy & Michele'south Saturday Afternoon Tea Trip the light fantastic toe Society Cumming; November four; free
DJ Vivid Light Bright Calorie-free's tribute to the still-untouchable heroines ofRomy and Michele'southward Loftier Schoolhouse Reunion has quickly get the most reliably joyous trip the light fantastic political party in town, with a consistent stream of Mariah Carey, Scissor Sisters, Bette Midler and TLC delighting a merry band of adorable acolytes (you can follow the party'southward playlist on Spotify). Share your favorite quotes and vocal requests on the DJ booth via post-information technology, and revel in the fact that you look totally cutting-edge.
Addams Family unit Values: Queer Horror Stories Tilt; November 5; gratuitous
Cap off your weekend with a free evening of thrilling tales from a stacked lineup of LGBTQ storytellers. Stepping to the mic are Ryan Houlihan, Patricia Theresa McCarthy, Jamison Daniels, Kyle Turner, Maggie Larkin, Jay Jurden and many more than.
Queerly Comedic Q.Eastward.D.; November seven; $8
Up-and-coming comic Sammie James hosts this stand-upwardly and storytelling show highlighting queer voices. This edition's lineup features Cam Mesinger, Jes Tom, Dana Friedman, Jeena Bloom, Lorena Russi Serna and Chelsea Moroski.
Dungeons & Drag Kings Talon; Nov thirty; $10–$fifteen
Anja Keister and Lee Valone host this mad monthly dark of gender-bending, kink and geek ecstasy at Talon. Witness inventive performances from Valone, Nyx Nocturne, Ravenessa, Rara Darling and Viktor Devone, with trivia hosted past Keister. Earlier the show gets started at nine, join a wild kink demonstration at 8:30pm.
Nutrient and Drinkable
WhiskeyFest Marriott Marquis; Nov 16, $275 general admission, $345 VIP
Join this massive whiskey convention with a dozen seminars from grain experts, run across-and-greets with distillers from all over the world and most importantly, vendors pouring more than than 350 different spirits for guests to endeavour.
Enjoy the Bronx Various locations; Nov half dozen-17, Price varies
A borough-focused "Restaurant Week" comes to the Bronx with special discounts and prix fixe deals at eateries throughout the neighborhoods like Mike's Deli in Arthur Artery, Bronx Brewery in Port Morris and Lloyd's Carrot Cake in Riverdale.
Momo Crawl Variety Plaza; Nov 5, $x
What's better than piping-hot dumplings in the fall? The Himalayan dumpling crawl in Jackson Heights is back with 27 unlike vendors (Lhasa Fast Food, Momo Delight) doling out their versions of the steamed and fried pockets. It will likely exist more enjoyable than any other Himalayan trek you're bound to attempt.
White Truffle Festival Ai Fiori; November 11, $450 general admission, $548 VIP
It's white truffle season, and if you can't book a flight to the northern region of Italia to enjoy the fresh-picked delicacy, chef Michael White will bring them to you at his Ai Fiori eating place, serving truffle-tinged cheese, pasta and risotto aslope Italian vinos.
Grilled Cheese Meltdown Second Floor NYC; Nov 12; $35, $45 VIP
Sense of taste your style through the best grilled cheese sandwiches the metropolis has to offer at Time Out New York 'south annual Grilled Cheese Meltdown. We've challenged New York's acme cheese connoisseurs to come up upward with creative takes on this archetype comfort food. It's an effect your taste buds and arteries won't soon forget!
Food Loves Tech Industry Metropolis; Nov 3-4, $75
The synthesis of food and tech is an e'er-present reality in our information-driven world. And aught highlights this ameliorate than this expo that investigates the time to come of food and potable through discussion panels and "all-you-can-eat experiential zones.
Theater
Meteor Shower at the Booth Theatre; Nov 1–Jan 21; $59–$159
Sketch-TV royals Amy Schumer and Keegan-Michael Cardinal star in Steve Martin's comic portrait of a California dinner office. Veteran laugh-wrangler Jerry Zaks directs a cast that too includes the practiced Laura Benanti and Jeremy Shamos.
SpongeBob SquarePants at the Palace Theatre; starts November 6; $39–$159
The porous xanthous hero of the Nickelodeon cartoon hits Broadway, defending the undersea community of Bikini Bottom via original songs past popular stars including Sara Bareilles, the Flaming Lips, John Legend, T.I., Lady Antebellum, They Might Exist Giants and Panic! At the Disco.
Bright Colors and Assuming Patterns at SoHo Playhouse; Nov 12–Jan 8; $59–$999
Drew Droege returns for an encore run of his hilarious and poignant solo show, in which an outrageous (and increasingly intoxicated) gay human has an identity crisis at a sanitized wedding of two old friends.
One time on This Island at Circle in the Square; starts November 9; $69.50–$159.50
A peasant daughter falls for a wealthy male child on the other side of her Caribbean isle in this 1990 musical legend past Lynn Ahrens and Stephen Flaherty (Ragtime). Michael Arden directs the revival, which stars teenage newcomer Hailey Kilgore equally our heroine.
The Fountainhead at BAM Howard Gilman Opera House; Nov 28–Dec 2; $35–$125
Belgian superdirector Ivo van Hove, who unsettled Broadway with stylized revivals of Arthur Miller'sA View from the Bridge andThe Crucible ii seasons ago, now deconstructs Ayn Rand's 1943 philosophical novel nearly an builder aptitude on defying critics and convention.
Film
Last Flag Flying; Nov three
At that place's no more relaxed director in American filmmaking than Richard Linklater, whose long-game procedure has resulted in such exquisite dramas asBoyhood and the "Before" trilogy. His new motion-picture show, a sequel to Hal Ashby'due south 1973The Final Item, dives intimately into the nuances of soldiering, parental grief and pride in a country that maybe doesn't deserve it. Bryan Cranston, Laurence Fishburne and an unusually quiet Steve Carell co-star.
Thor: Ragnarok; Nov iii
Singlehandedly, Chris Hemsworth has made the Marvel Cinematic Universe a much more than fun place to be: His Thor, equal parts somber Norse god and Californian everybro, deserves as much screen time every bit can be spared. This sequel brings on plenty of character actors who know this stuff needs a wink, specially the rascally Jeff Goldblum every bit the Grandmaster, whatsoever that is.
Lady Bird; November 10
Greta Gerwig's semiautobiographical comedy is miraculously free of the usual coming-of-historic period quirk; the star ofFrances Ha is only backside the photographic camera this time, writing and directing, simply she's clearly arrived at a kind of wisdom via distance. Dominating the lens with peerless openness isBrooklyn'south Saoirse Ronan, who brings to life the moving-picture show's complimentary-spirited title grapheme, a suburban Californian aching to go out home and bond with her fantasy of East Coast artiness. Before then, though, she's got some last-summer-before-college tensions (romantic and otherwise) to transition through. You will recognize this moment.
Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri; November 10
If your dear for 2008's witty, ultra-rudeIn Brugesis as unbounded as ours, yous'll need to check out Martin McDonagh'southward latest crime one-act, which is but as verbally savage.Fargo's Frances McDormand plays a furious mom who seeks vengeance for the unsolved murder of her daughter. Her first tactic is a bit of public advert.
Call Me by Your Name; Nov 24
The undeniable emotional powerhouse of this yr's Sundance and New York picture show festivals, Luca Guadagnino'due south voluptuous coming-of-age gay romance transports you not simply to northern Italian republic but to a lazy summer'south exchange of books, fruit, glances and power. Y'all may already cherish this director forI Am Love,A Bigger Splash and his unerring sense of adult sexiness. But with this 1, he's leapt into the revered visitor of Bernardo Bertolucci.
Music
Hospital Productions 20 Year Anniversary Warsaw; Nov 5; $twoscore–$50
Noise-scene bad boy Dominick "Prurient" Fernow plays a special collaborative prepare with industrial-metallist Jesu for this 20th anniversary celebration of his very own record label, Hospital Productions. The all-day issue will as well feature industrial techno duo Orphyx, Down Records founder Regis, harsh dissonance projection Skin Criminal offence and, ambient innovator Dedekind Cut. If y'all like music that fearlessly explores the fringes of both genre and sanity, this is the evidence for you lot.
Waxahatchee White Hawkeye Hall Lord's day November 5; $16
Katie Crutchfield's new album as Waxahatchee,Out in the Storm, is a far cry from her initial lo-fi audio-visual albums. Here her talent for confessional lyrics and irresistible hooks is rendered through sparkling clear production and massive-sounding arrangements—a fuller, grander realization of her vision than e'er before.
Prayers Saint Vitus; Nov 7; $17
Chicano vocalizer Lafear Seyer's distinctive vision—for which he'due south coined the term "Cholo goth"—is a vibrant one: cowboy boots, crucifix earrings, gang tattoos and a penchant for the synth sounds of '80s goth-rock. Combining his mournful shouts with beatmaster Dave Parley's industrial electronics, Seyer'south cross-cultural melancholy narrates a turbulent life navigating the San Diego gangland.
Slowdive Concluding five; November 12; $35
Don't fret if you missed Slowdive'south stellar improvement performances at Brooklyn Steel earlier this yr—The British shoegaze vets return to the city for another advent behind their stunning self-titled latest. An eight-song practice in shoegaze's best inclinations, Slowdive welcomed Simon Scott back to the drum kit for the outset time since 1993's Souvlaki. Fog machines at the ready; prepare to drift off into the shoegaze ether with some of the best who've ever washed it.
Kamasi Washington Terminal 5; Nov 22; $35–$40
Saxophonist, bandleader and Kendrick Lamar collaborator Washington reinvigorated contemporary jazz and garnered heaps of mainstream critical acclamation with his ambitious 3-hour 2015 debut,The Epic. He takes the stage behind a new EP,Harmony of Deviation.
Art
Ashley Bickerton FLAG Art Foundation; through Dec xvi, free
Famous for having ditched New York for Bali, Bickerton is no Gaughin, though he was a star of '80s Neo-Geo. This survey tracks his work's evolution from logo-covered boxes to wildly stylized, figurative paintings that parody the romantic preconceptions of tropical life.
"Eddie Martinez: Studio Wall" Drawing Center; through Feb 3, adults $5, students and seniors $3, children nether 12 free. Admission is free on Thursdays, 6-eight
Known for colorful paintings that recall midcentury abstraction, Martinez is plastering the Drawing Center with thousands of sketches that he will alter throughout the exhibition's run, a gesture that mimics his exercise of keeping a wall in his studio reserved for drawings and studies. The show also includes paintings and large works on paper.
"Josef Albers in United mexican states" Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum; Nov iii–Feb 18, $25, seniors (65+) and students with valid ID $18, children nether 12 free. Saturday 5:45–7:45pm pay what you wish. $25, seniors and students with ID $18, members and children under 12 accompanied past an adult free
In 1935, the famed artist and Bauhaus instructor Josef Albers (1888-1976) paid his first visit to Mexico. Struck by the abstract quality of Mayan and Aztec buildings, Albers began photographing Mesoamerican pyramids and temples, focusing on architectural details similar friezes and steps. He used some of these images to create collages, borrowing subtle style cues from them for his paintings from the flow. That journeying was the get-go of many made to Latin America between 1935 and 1967 and the touch on they had on his art is the subject of this survey, which gathers together the work (photos and collages along with paintings) that grew out his experiences S of The Edge.
"Edvard Munch: Between The Clock and The Bed" Metropolitan Museum of Art; Nov 15–Feb 17, suggested donation $25, seniors $17, students $12, members and children under 12 free
You scream, I scream, we all scream for The Scream, but that iconic painting was simply a modest part of Edvard Munch'due south prodigious output, which spanned 60 years and produced many other masterpieces likewise the ur prototype of high anxiety. You'll find many of them amongst the 45 works assembled here—including seven that accept never been shown in the United States.
David Hockney Metropolitan Museum of Art; November 27–February 25, suggested donation $25, seniors $17, students $12, members and children under 12 gratuitous
The lodestones of Hockney's piece of work make for unlikely pairs of opposites: London and Los Angeles; Picasso and Old Master painting. Though Hockney came up through the School of London scene during the Swinging Sixties, many of his well-nigh famous works are set in the City of Angels, where he keeps two homes. And though his compositions grow with references to the dandy names of Renaissance art, many of his stylistic clues are taken from Picasso. Somehow, Hockney has juggled these disparate influences, forging an aesthetic that'southward all his own. This retrospective mark'southward the artist'due south 80th altogether with a presentation of pieces from 1960 to the present.
Source: https://www.timeout.com/newyork/blog/52-wonderful-things-to-do-in-nyc-in-november-103017
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