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 Cocktails at Sunset
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Dinner at the Park Avenue Armory prior to the performance of Die Soldaten by the Lincoln Center Festival 08. |
Die Soldaten, the iconic 20th-century opera by German composer Bernd Alois Zimmermann, was presented in a dramatic new production by Lincoln Center Festival 08 in association with the Park Avenue Armory. The North American premiere of this critically-acclaimed production from the RuhrTriennale in Germany, is the first to have been mounted outside of an opera house, and was presented in the most amazing non-proscenium space, just as the composer had originally envisioned it—in the vast Drill Hall of the Park Avenue Armory, now known as the Wade Thompson Drill hall, in honor of Mr. Thompson’s active and generous interest in the refurbishing and restoration of the Armory.
Die Soldaten has only been staged twice in the U.S. since its 1965 premiere by the Cologne Opera—its U.S. premiere by the Opera Company of Boston in 1982, and by New York City Opera in 1991 in both cases, modified to suit a proscenium stage and fit within a traditional theater setting. It took a huge orchestra, challenging score and vocal writing, overlapping and simultaneous scenes, and incorporating film, taped music and amplification, presenting enormous challenges to presenters.
“A work of atonal twentieth-century angst...to many, Die Soldaten is the great work of alienation and despair, increasingly occupying a place in past-World War II opera similar to that commanded by Samuel Beckett’s Waiting for Godot in contemporary theater or Bergmann’s The Virgin Spring in modern film.” (Jay Reise, Opera News, September 1991). |
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In The Drill Hall for the performance of Die Soldaten. |
The Drill Hall setting provided an immersive experience of the opera by allowing the full orchestra to be placed in one location with the audience and stage action. The movable seating unit on railway tracks, gave the audience a sense of the extremes of intimacy, overwhelming all-enveloping sound, and scenic action that the composer envisioned.
The evening began with cocktails at 6, followed by a dinner a half hour later. At ten to 8, we all moved down to the vast Drill Room. Among the crowd on this operatic adventure: Susan and Elihu Rose, Angela and Wade Thompson and guest Jennifer McCormick, Jonathan Bing and Meredith Ballew, Neil and Kathleen Chrisman, John and Anne Coffin, Maxwell and Mary Davidson, Andrew Fabricant and Laura Paulson, Councilmember Daniel Garodnick and Zoe Segal-Reichlin, Kathy and Ace Greenberg, Senator Liz Krueger, Wendy Lehman and Peter Wolf, Rebecca Robertson and Byron Knief, Randy Bourscheidt and Joe Astienza, Marjorie and Gurnee Hart, Dan and Estrellita Brodsky, Adam Flatto and Mary Cronson. Harvey and Phyllis Lichtenstein, Fernanda Kellogg and Kirk Henckels, Arie and Coco Kopelman. |
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Janet Ross, Coco Kopelman, and Jill Kargman |
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Nathalie Comfort, Byron Knief, Bill Comfort, and Alan and Christina MacDonald |
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Laura Paulson and Andrew Fabricant |
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Susan Rose, Rebecca Robertson, Larry McCaffrey, and Elihu Rose |
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Stephen Lash and Randy Bourscheidt |
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Phillip Lim and Kien Truong |
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G. Chris Andersen, Sun Han-Andersen, and Marjorie Hart |
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Alan MacDonald and Nancy Newcomb |
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Debra Black and Wade F. B. Thompson |
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J. Bob Alotta, Toshi Reagon, Rebecca Robertson, and Mark Patterson |
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Joe Astienza and Rob Marx |
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Randy Bourscheidt and Joe Astienza |
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Peter Wolf and Wendy V. Lehman |
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Pat and William Sandholm |
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Cindy Sherman and David Byrne |
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| The Saturday before last, Vanity Fair and Calvin Klein Collection sponsored “Cocktails at Sunset,” the annual ACRIA Hamptons event, at the home of photographer Steven Klein in Bridgehampton. |
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Ross Bleckner |
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Jessica Stam and Austin Cregg |
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Carter Cramer and Nick Dietz |
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Anait Bain, Nick Dietz, Jered Clark, Morton Davidson, and Douglas Marshall |
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Paige Nelson |
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Merideth Fisher, Matthew Masankay, and Evelyn Crowley |
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Steve Torres, Susan Cappa, and Jamie Pallot |
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Toni Haber and Nick Poshkus |
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Dan Honan, Douglas Marshall, Rachelle Hruska, Nick Dietz,and Kim Bates |
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Todd Merrell and Carmen Zita |
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Wayne Lawson and Bruce Weber |
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Vasoula Barbagiannis and Jason Lord |
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Hofit Golan |
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Karolina Kurkova |
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Calvin Klein |
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Christine Phillips and Barclay Butera |
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David Kleinberg and James Crespo |
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Donegal Fitzgerald and Tora Matsuoka |
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Jay Lambert, Savanna Hoge, and Peter Huffine |
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Elena Lusenti and Brian Carr |
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Eric Spear and David Traitel |
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Eric Valency and Josh Reed |
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Ferebee Taube, Brook Taube, Paul Forsman, and Cornelia Forsman |
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Daniel Urzedo |
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Donna Karan |
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Ingrid Sischy, Sandy Brant, and Italo Zucchelli |
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Kelly d'Halluin and Stacy Engman |
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Ben Becton and Mark Silver |
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Rob Buckley |
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Liliana Cavendish and Stewart Sundlan |
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Malcolm Carfrae and Dan Ragone |
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Michael Dare and Robert Wynne Parry |
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Selma Fonseca and Jeffrey Dread |
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Last Monday night KiptonART and Men's Vogue launched the KiptonART Music Series with an intimate concert by pianist Lang Lang at MILK Studios. KiptonART is a “consultancy” started by Kipton Cronkite. This private concert was the first of a series that are planned in tandem with Men’s Vogue.
For the event, Antony Todd had constructed a fire and-ice backdrop, with furniture done up in apple-green silk dupioni, pools of floating candles, and oversized coco palms. Waiters served mojitos. Guests gathered an hour before the performance, to take in the sunset over the Hudson from the sweeping terrace.
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Lang Lang performs to a standing ovation. |
In the group, Tom Florio (Publishing Director of Vogue/Men's Vogue), Marc Berger (Publisher of Men's Vogue), Olivia Palermo, Eric and Kimberly Villency, Gillian Hearst Simonds and Christian Simonds, Damon Dash, Catherine Forbes, Lorenzo Borghese, Thom Filicia, Billy Gilbane.
At dusk, the lights flickered, telling everyone to take his/her seat. In due course Lang Lang worked himself into a literal sweat, keeping the audience transfixed. His finale led to a vigorous standing ovation.
After the concert, French DJ Yan Ceh (flown in from Paris for the event) spun a remixed version of Serge and Charlotte Gainsbourg's "Lemon Incest," while guests bid on silent auction lots including Prada handbags, luxury creams, bespoke Ralph Lauren, and a $125,000 red Steinway piano (one of two in the world). |
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Alan Pepe and Kipton Cronkite |
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Elizabeth Cohen and Jerry Blair |
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Casey Fahey and Susan Shin |
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Billy Gilbane and Lottie Oakley |
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Emma Snowdon-Jones, Whitney Bouma Herbert, and David Herbert |
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Indira and Natalia |
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Vivienne with David Chines |
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Devin Wilson and Clay Floren |
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Elizabeth Cohen and Tom Florio |
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Cabas |
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Elissa Lumley and Michelle Edgar |
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Kathryn Bohannon and Zev Eisenberg |
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Kimberly Guilfoyle Villency and Eric Villency |
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Lorenzo Borghese and Catherine Forbes |
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Lisa Willis and David Aaron Carpenter |
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Lynette Yen |
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Mazdack Rassi, Trish Ridel, and Sara Cesbron |
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Olivia Palermo and Addison O'Dea |
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Rebecca Pokryska and Marissa Jartcky |
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Thom Filicia |
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Trish Ridel and Sara Cesbron |
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Whitney Bouma Herbert and David Herbert |
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| Photographs by by James Ewing. Courtesy of Park Avenue Armory (Die Soldaten); ©PatrickMcMullan.com (Acria & Kipton). |
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