1/29/2024 0 Comments Sleep no more contact![]() For the record, that’s 4 times for the Brookline run and 3 in NYC. There’s very beautiful art tucked in hallways, too, it was like getting to do a bit of museuming which I have sadly lacked in my last few trips to NYC. ![]() cummings’ typewriter and Virginia Woolf’s walking stick. They have a fabulous centennial display with all manner of writerly wonderments, e.e. Visited the New York Public Library, I had walked by many times and said hello to the lions but I hadn’t been inside. (True confession: had my very first chocolate mouse on this trip. Also there was sushi and cookies and lots of coffee. The pretzel-crusted crab cake is swoon-worthy. Also went to David Burke Townhouse which was marvelous and I only wish I’d been able to eat more, because those plates were not so small. I love food on small plates, it enables so much more tasting of things. My favorite might have been this tiny little South African Wine Bar that my wonderful NYC-dwelling sister put on a list of recommendations for me. Other things I did in NYC that did not involve official BEA responsibilities: Still have Bei Mir Bist Du Schoen playing around the back of my mind. Still brain-fuzzy and tired but getting better. I’ll post a picture of the scarf I’ve been working on for ages when it’s finished, which could still be a while. Now I’m trying my best to get back up to 100% healthy (I’m probably at 90% right now) and reading an advance copy of Kate Atkinson’s upcoming Life After Life which is absolutely marvelous so far, though I’m only about a third of the way through.Īlso I’ve been knitting since my congested brain hasn’t been up for much. And the jazz age attire required rule made everything a bit more surreal in a delicious time-warp way. There was lovely music and champagne and dancing, of course, and during the Sleep No More portion of the evening I did indeed manage to see things I’d never seen in all my previous visits. I drank a lot of things that involved ginger and honey and whiskey.īefore I succumbed to the Head Cold That Ate Tokyo, I did spend a wondrously lovely evening at The McKittrick Hotel’s Valentine’s Dance. It’s mostly gone, down to a lingering cough, but I spent most of the last week preoccupied with being good and thoroughly ill, which was not so fun. Sleep No More is produced by Emursive (Jonathan Hochwald, Arthur Karpati, and Randy Weiner) in association with rebecca gold productions.I have a cold. Reopening plans will be done in compliance with state and local government, COVID-19 protocols, and are subject to the approval of the NY State Department of Health and the Governor. Design associates are Beatrice Minns and Livi Vaughan. Expect a blend of acrobatic choreography, film noir soundtrack, and 100 rooms of detailed atmosphere sprawling over 100,000 square feet.įelix Barrett directs and designed the production, with choreography by co-director Maxine Doyle and sound design by Stephen Dobbie. In Sleep No More, audiences move freely through the story at their own pace, choosing where to go and what to see. The sensory theatre spectacle, which debuted Off-Broadway in April 2011, will be presented Sundays, Mondays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays at 7 PM, Fridays at 7:30 PM, and Saturdays at 3 PM and 8 PM. It was previously scheduled to reopen at The McKittrick Hotel October 4. Sleep No More, the Macbeth-inspired immersive theatre experience from the British theatre company Punchdrunk, will now begin its return engagement on Valentine's Day, February 14, 2022.
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