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Thursday, November 13
1pm-3pm
Fiber Art Crafts Studio
200 Rector Place
Bring your projects, which can include—but are not limited to—knitting, crocheting, embroidery and small-loom weaving. Free.
5:30pm
Diwali Celebration
Council chambers, City Hall
Hosted by New York City Council members. Free.
6pm
Person Place Thing
NYC Department of Records & Information Services, 31 Chambers Street
The president and CEO of the NYC Economic Development Corporation, Andrew Kimball, joins Emmy Award-winner Randy Cohen for a live recording of Person Place Thing. This interview show is based on the idea that people are especially engaging when they speak not directly about themselves, but about things they care about. The result: surprising stories from great talkers. Free.
6pm-8:30pm
Force of Evil
Alamo Draft House, 28 Liberty Street
Film screening. “Force of Evil” (1948) is Abraham Polonsky’s searing portrait of corruption and conscience in postwar New York. John Garfield stars as a Wall Street lawyer ensnared in the city’s numbers racket, torn between moral reckoning and ruthless ambition. Shot on location in Lower Manhattan and the Bronx, “Force of Evil” portrays New York as both a glittering cathedral of commerce and a shadowed landscape of decay. Blacklisted soon after the film’s release, Polonsky infused the story with a political urgency and human complexity that feel startlingly contemporary. Following the screening, critics Imogen Sara Smith and Geoffrey O’Brien will discuss the film’s artistry and enduring relevance. $5.
6:30pm
Noirvember Film: The Breaking Point
6 River Terrace
Each November, movie fans celebrate the hallmark antiheroes, femme fatales, moral complexities, and the stunning black and white cinematography of film noir. Free popcorn is served, and a discussion follows each screening. In The Breaking Point (Michael Curtiz, 1950, 97 minutes) John Garfield plays Harry Morgan, a charter boat captain who takes on dangerous cargo, then faces criminal propositions and playful come-ons, stretching his morality and his marriage. The story is based on Ernest Hemingway’s To Have and Have Not, and Hemingway himself called it the best film adaptation of any of his books. Free.
6:30pm
Path to Liberty: Orders, Discipline and Daily Life - Exhibition Preview
Fraunces Tavern Museum, 54 Pearl Street
Preview reception for Path to Liberty: Orders, Discipline and Daily Life. Expanding upon the museum’s commemoration of the United States Semiquincentennial in the Path to Liberty: The Emergence of a Nation exhibition series, this newest exhibition will feature orderly books from 1775 to 1783 from the Museum’s collection. $30.
6:30pm
Nerdy Thursday
Black Gotham Experience, 192 Front Street
Nerdy Thursdays are the Black Gotham Experience take on the Harlem Renaissance salon. Tonight’s theme: War. Free.
7pm
Infinite Jest Fest
McNally Jackson, 4 Fulton Street
Third meeting of the Infinite Jest Monthly Read-Along Bash group. Read pages 199-299 (plus relevant endnotes) for this month’s gathering. $5.
7pm-9pm
The Nature of Our Times
Poets House, 10 River Terrace
Poetry reading and exhibit launch featuring contributors to the new anthology The Nature of Our Times: Poems on America’s Lands, Waters, Wildlife, and Other Natural Wonders. The exhibit of poetry and images at Poets House explores how nature shapes our lives, and how we can shape nature’s future. Free.
7pm
Studio Sips & Steps
Amanda Selwyn Dance Theatre, 412 Broadway, 2nd floor
Wander through an exhibition of performances previewing the company’s work. Performance will include wine and nibbles as well as participatory dance activities. $30+.
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