Nonstop theater, a costume competition and
ballroom dancing will bewitch the East Village in Theater for the New City's
36th annual Village Halloween Costume Ball on Wednesday, October 31 at
TNC, 155 First Avenue. This unique festival continues as a grand coming-together
for everyday New Yorkers and artists alike. A carefree fall tradition,
it celebrates the creativity that comes with the season.
The one-night fiesta takes over all four of TNC's theater spaces, plus
its lobby and the block of East Tenth Street between First and Second Avenues.
Customarily over 1,500 wildly-clad celebrants gather for dancing, dining,
showing off costumes and viewing acts from the cutting-edge of Cabaret
and Theater. Admission is $20; costume or formal wear is required. Once
inside, everything is free except food and drink, which are graveyard dirt-cheap.
Big-Band Dance orchestras take over the large Johnson Theater. These will
inclue Maquina Mono (The Monkey Machine) and Hot Lavendar Swing Band, an
all-Gay and Lesbian 18-piece orchestra. The Johnson Theater will also have
aerial acts by Constellation Moving Company and Suspended Cirque.
With its Witches' Cauldron, the event can justifiably claim to have downtown's
most sensational Halloween cafe. The Community Theater of TNC becomes an
atmospheric grande buffet for the event, with a variety of American and
international delicacies available at peoples' prices. Holiday dishes are
contributed by neighboring East Village restaurants, some with celebrity
chefs. You can gobble couscous from a coffin lid beginning at 7:30 pm while
enjoying spine-tingling performances by performance artists, songwriters,
poets and variety artists including Evan Laurence, Arthur Abrams, George
Bellici, Norman Savitt, Richard West, Ellen Steier, Peter Dizozza and Gary
Height. The space is designed by Donald L. Brooks with lighting design
by Alexander Bartenieff.
Outside, there are bluegrass and jazz bands including fire eaters, jugglers,
storyweavers and stilt dancers, all free to the public and a gift from
TNC to its neighborhood. Inside, there is theater all evening. The House
of Horrors will be an exploration of possession and descent into madness,
designed and run by David Zen Mansley, in which revelers will be put through
a maze and duly horrified. At the Champagne Bar, libations will be served
by vampire Richard Weber, who will awaken periodically for the task.
Since its beginning in 1977, TNC's Halloween extravaganza has been a point
of origin for many of the City's most original entertainers. Six full-length
plays have grown out of playlets written for the fest and it is probable
that the theatrical movement in Performance Art began there. It has been
a launching pad for such formative artists as Paul Zaloom, Alice Farley,
Bloolips, The Red Mole, Penny Arcade, Basil Twist and Alien Comic Tom Murrin.
It is also interesting to note TNC originated the Village Halloween Parade
as part of its annual Halloween Ball. The procession wound its way through
the Village from TNC's second home at the corner of Jane and West Streets
to Washington Square Park. Now the event takes up every available inch
(both floors) of TNC's multi-theater complex at 155 First Avenue (the former
First Avenue Retail Market building) and adjoining outdoor spaces.
Doors open at 7:30 pm and indoor entertainment begins at 8:00 pm. There
will be two continuously-running cabarets. Outdoor entertainment, free
to the public, will start at 4:30 pm. Outdoor entertainment is capped by
"The Red and Black Masque," an annual Medieval ritual show written
by Arthur Sainer, scored by David Tice and directed by Crystal Field which
is performed by torchlight.
Scattered through the event will be stilt dancers, jugglers, fire-eaters,
Vaudeville playlets, Burlesque and Hellsouls. The lobby will be divided
into rooms featuring a Wiccan Astral Portraitist/Aura Reader (Eugenia Maser-Story)
as well as rooms for Astrology/Numerology readings and throwing of the
I Ching.
The entire facility will be elaborately rendered for Halloween, featuring
intricate and massive environments by leading theatrical scenarists, sculptors,
and artists including Walter Gurbo, Judy Sky, Donald L. Brooks, Alexander
Bartenieff, Mark Marcante, David Zen Mansley, Candice Burridge, Pamela
Mayo, Desiree Conston, Viviane La Corte, Adriano Moraes and Terry Ferrari.
Costume design is by Susan Henley. The audience will pass through walls
decorated by 17 muralists.
The annual costume judging begins at midnight with the "Monsters and
Miracles Costume Parade," as all revelers are invited to march past
a panel of celebrity judges. Winners will receive one-year passes to TNC
and a bottle of Moet and Chandon champagne. Attendees will be judged in
such categories as "Most Magickal," "Most Uninsured,"
"Most Hydrofracked," "Most Crony-Capitalist," "Most
Deceased Voter," "Most Fraternity-Hazed," "Most Super
Pac-ed," "Most Global-Warmed," "Most Untaxed Millionaire,"
"Most Economically Unrecovered," "Most Tea-Potty,"
"Most Solar-Powered," "Most Outsourced," "Most
Whistle-Blown" and "Most Drone-Attacked." Celebrity judges
will include Bina Sharif, Misha Shulman, Jane Catherine Shaw, David Willinger,
Garland Lee Thompson, John Gilman, Robert Heide, Romiro Sandoval, Sabura
Rashid, Chino Garcia and Crystal Field (Chief Justice).
The performers' list, in formation as of this writing, includes: Penny
Arcade, Witches in Bikinis, Victor Ruggiero, Von Duvois Dance Collective,
Mark Marcante, Andre Brown, The Love Show, Lissa Moira, The Bambi Killers,
Bob Dahdah, Len Alevante, Cobu Dance and Drum, Epstein and Hassan, Eve
Packer, Joe Bendik, John Grimaldi (NY Lyric Circus), Kevin Martin, Zero
Boy, Lei Zhou, Levanah (Belly Dance), the band Liv I Culture, Margo Lee
Sherman, Michael Vazquez, Norman Savitt with Susan Mitchell, Paganini Apparition,
Robert Fitzsimmons, Star 69, The Wycherly Sisters; two plays, "Mz
Fits" by Toby Armour and "Fright Night" by Paula J. Riley;
and TNC'S Street Theater Company.
Theater for the New City is located at 155 First Avenue, at the corner
of East Tenth Street. Reservations are strongly recommended. The TNC box
office number is (212) 254-1109.